' The Weather Friday; Warmer Pollen Count: 3 Details page two 112th Y EAR ea ae ener ‘THE. PONTIAC PREMK OVER PAGES — taeeee PONT IAC, “MIC HIGAN, THU RSDAY, SE eTEMSE R 2 > lame Te ee 1954 —64 P AGES ASPOCLATED Pitial INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE — a ee me ee ee UNITED PRESS Te Le RED Missouri Riot Quelled After 4 Perish re Everyone Safe as Frisco Chief Jumps Tracks 191 Passengers Escape Serious Injuries When Axle Breaks SAN FRANCISCO t# — A broken axle today was list- ed as the probable cause of the derailment yesterday of the Santa Fe Railroad's Streamliner San Francisco Chief in which all 191 pas- sengers escaped serious in- jury. Between 20 and 30 per- sons aboard the Oakland, ‘Calif.-to-Chicago trai were Shaken up but only twe passengers and three crew members were hospitalized overnight. They were to be released today. The Santa Fe estimated damage at $250,000. The accident occurred at Or- wood Crossing 40 miles east of San Francisco as the train start- ed to slow for a drawbridge. The derailment was the San Francisco Chiefs second within a month. It was derailed at Lomax, fil... Aug. 22, when five persons were killed and 53 injured. toadmaster Walter Johnson gaid a dragging broken axle on one of the diesel units was the probable eause of yesterday's accident, Nine cars teft the track, includ ing the dome observation car. which crashed against a tall signal lower, ripping the side of the car and throwing 20 passengers onto the fleor. Engineer Emil Kiochn said the train was traveling ebeut v0 miles an hour: *~ The uninjured were transferred to a reserve train and resumed their journey at 8:30 p.m. last night Temperature-af 39, City Has Light Frost The official arrival of fall brought appropriate temperatures and a touch o: frost this morning. | The mercury dropped to a crisp 39 at 6 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. Light frost in the area. accord- ing to the Oakland County Agri- cultural Extension Service, was not ext@nsive enough to do-damage to anything other than possibly tomato plants Other parts of Michigan were hit hy below freezing tempera- tures, as Cadillac reported a low of 2% degrees and Grand Ma- rais, 31 The U.S. Weather Bureau fore- cast for Pontiac and vicinity is continued clear and cool tonight and a little warmer Friday. The low is expected te be 42-44 tonight high tomorrow 70-74 Yesterday's low was 41 degrees, high 60. By 1 p.m. today the mercury had risen to 59 degrees. Clean Getaway ALBUQUERQUE @® — John S. Tarr, Denver, ‘eft an insurance company through what he thought was a doorway. It turned out to be a spotlessly clean window, Doctors }any situation that might arise Santa F e Chief Derailed AP Wirephote WRECK SCENE—Goeneral view of the Santa Fi Chief derailment Chic ago bound the 17 miles west of Stockton. Calif., W ednesday as passengers and trainmen mill about the Ten cars left tracks = the diesel units, back ground. were not derailed. Court Order to Use Force Tames Square D Strikers DETROIT (INS)—An estimated 400 pickets massed at the strikebound Square D plant this morning but picket- ed peacefully in the face of a court order, empowering police to use whatever force necessary to prevent violence. With reinforced detachments of police equipped with gas masks standing in readiness, the pickets made no attempt to blockade entrances te the company parking lot or interefere with workers ente ring the plant. As official indignation at* area the strike rioting mounte yesterday, Circuit suaee| Pf oclaim Week Frank B, Ferguson gave) police full powers to candi every situation and stop! unlawful assembly at the | plant and use of autos to| block entrances. Mayor Albert Cobo, upset over the possibility of Communists di- recting the violence-ridd 1 strike, endorsed the court order to La letter. Police Commissioner hd ward Piggins said he would pro vide a force large enough to handle for Registration Mayor Urges All: Voters to Check on Eligibility to Cast Ballot Pontiac Mayor William W_ Don- alison has proclaimed Sept. 26 through Oct.2 ‘“‘Registration Week"’ here in an effort to-obtain a record } turnout at the Nov tion 2 general cleo Negotiations in the 100-day strike adjourned early this morning after | . The tast day to register in all a ‘marathon 12 Hhour session. Both Ockiand County gov att sides reported “some progress but Chartes Kelty. business agent units is Oct. 4, according to ef striking Local %7, United Fiiec-| County Clerk Lynn D. Affen. trical Workers (Ind.) said the Absentee ballots for citizens who ae abd potnts” Bincteed _pestte | Will be away on election day. but Kelly obviously referred to the{*™S" to vote, will be ready in companys insistence on an iron-| about 10 days, said Allen clad no-strike clause and the} In his prociamation Donaldson union's staunch refusal to grant | urged “all eligible citizeng to reg- one ister~so that they will be able to The negotiations were adjourned | fuifil} their obligation in the com- until tomorrow because of con-| ing election.” tempt hearings against union lead The American people's heritage, ers before Judge Ferguson. The|pe said. “is based primarily on union Jeaders are charged with] their right to select their repre- violating. an injunction § against sentatives in government through mass picketing the democratic principle of the Meanwhile, leaders of the (10- ballot.” United Auto Workers locals Allen asked alf- citizens who which have pledged their full | have not voted in the past four support to the strikers in their | years té check immediately with fighr agates| the company’s back- their local clerk to see If they te-werk movement hinted darkty | are registered, that the new get-tough policy Six months residence in the state might cause evén more vielence. and 30 days in Oakland County. At a meeting with the police com- | plus U. S. citizenship are the vot- missioner, Cart Stetiato, president | ing requirements, Allen added ate Ford Locai 600, UAW-CIO Voters may register with their | j | ter Pete, snake the | AWOL Zoo, Worth rivalry. Radiation Kills Fisherman Hurt in H-Bomb Blast Is Believed Ist Victim of Hydrogen Weapon TOKYO (® — A Japanese fisherman dusted by radio- active ash from an U. 8. H-bomb blast at Bikini |) March 1 died tonight in a Tokyo hospital Aikichi Kuboyama, radioman on boat Lucky Dragon, was believed to be the world’s first death resulting from a hydrogen bomb explosion. The fisherman had been suffering from ~ jaundice complications brought on by radiation from the Bikini bomb, Japanese doc- tors said His illness and death is a matter of great inter- national significance Yor] Japan. This country hag been bitterly critical of the United States tests, and is reported to have presented Washington with a bill for several 40, jimilhon dollars. Less than an hour after Kuboyama’s death, U. 8. Ambas- sader John M. Allison issued a statement expressing “extreme serrow and regret at this most unhappy event.” “My deepest sympathy is ex- tended especially to the family of the deceased,” the statement said, Kuboyama was one of 23 fisher- man aboard the Lucky . Dragon, which was approximately 9) miles from Bikini when the test bomb was exploded The other fishermen atso are hospitalized but appear to be re- covering The United States bas offered Japa “éne miflion dollars in dam- ages for the 23. Kuboyama's death tw expected to teuch off a wave of anty- American feeling in Japan. Noth- ing since the surrender nine years age has se stirred the Japanese people, His iiness and that of his 22 shipmates have been a national and international issye in Japan “Kuboyama is survived by his 33-year-old wife, Suzu, his 7l-year- old mother,_and a 9 year-old daugh- Miako. The exact cause of death may never be agreed upon. Japanese physicians hold that the jaundice was due directly to radia- tion sickness and his generally weakened condition Others, including an American doctor, said. the jaundice may have been due to a hepatitis infection l resulting from blood transfusions 150-Pound Python Still Loose in Texas FORT WORTH, Tex. ®—Python probably the most publicized since the serpent entered Garden of Eden, was still today from Forest Park and fanning the Dallas-Fort Pete escaped his quarters here last Saturday and nobody has been able to put a hand on him since, not that anybody wants to stroke his 18-foot, 150-pound frame. Meanwhile, however, Fort Worth was getting a little touchy about ts latest celebrity, it seemed to put two stitches in his knee. \tow nship or city clerks. Willman Predicts Steps Will-Be Taken First official response to a| front-page article in yesterday's! editions of the Pontiac Press _call- ing for “bigger, better and more modern roads’’ for this locality 8 sideration at this time. The eighth ——the widening of Paddock street— is Rot being considered. However, committee looks at the proble ms|needed to solve it,’ Willman ex- as a whole, ——— what is! * ' plained, way systems, which is not now the! case.” i omme: nting on each of the se ven | other “‘pressing needs'’ listed by | the Press,.Willman said 1. Orchard Lake widening. - “Orchard Lake is a state trunk some. 40-Year-Old Japanese the fishing: Italy's Scelba Wins Support Pro- Western Bockers Rally in Crisis « Over Montesi Scandal ROME “wh — Reinforcements ral- Hed around Italy's pro-Western government today to beat down the Communist attack over the Wilma Montesi scandal While the country awaited Pre- mier Mario Scelba's reply to Com- munist and Red Socialist demands that he resign, Scelba's 4 minor party allies said they would sup- port him Without their votes Scetha's coalition government would fall i Mt agreed to the Red demand fer a vote of confidence. But Liberals, Social Democrats and Republicans made it clear this morning that they stand by the Premier's ‘Christian Democrats in the Montesi affair. With them, the government can muster 33 of the 590 votes in the Chamber of Depu- ties. Scelha's party aléne has only DAT Mites Police throughout Italy main- tained a state of alert in case the Communists -try to exert further pressure by stirring up demonstra- tions or disorders Communist Senate leader Um. berto Terracini accused Scelba yeslerday of “being responsible for the Montest affair.’ Speaking from the Senate_fioor, he declared: “We cannet tolerate being governed by anybody under any kind of suspicion." Scelba announced he would take the floor today to answer the charges, He hag been a chief tar- get of the Reds since the tough riot police he organized while in- (Continued on Page 2, i Col. 5) to Improve City's Streets within 10 years, but the.onrder of | 5, Triple the width #f Perry | street: “ft spoke to a‘ high state | official yesterday and it is very probably on the program fer | next year.” . 6. Widen and extend Cone—""We line," and thus out of Pontiac's sole jurisdiction. 2. Clover leaf at “Orchard Lake | and Telegraph Rds.- -‘‘Also a state | trunkline."’ | 3,. Widen Voorheis road- -‘‘Voor- heir is a county —highway— from! Telegraph road out.” 4, Put Huron street under the | Grand “Trunk Western~ Railroad tracks--""That is under the | mili public. improvemént program voted last year. The entire pro- gram is scheduled to be completed WALTER K. WILLMAN In Today’s Press Birmingham 6.6 cick ids cescese 2 Bes Considine . oa raatt Comtes es6 ° | County News........ MM, ® David Lawrence .6 De, George Creme........... oa 8 Ls Wilsen Lb) 7 6 m 41 ie n = s *, oh. Lad cg : ces .- — Me a “ta * ap s . Women's Pages........ mg S ” are now negotiating with the | priority for projects has not yet | state.” “We plan to present a resolation been determined, There are sane to the convention today requesting | | things to come first, including a that all federal gasoline and motor | public safety building and a mun- vehicle taxes be allocated to high- icipal garage.’ 7. Widen Parke = Atso negotiat- ing with the state Asked if he believed the city was doing everything possible to | alleviate the situation, he stated: “We're spending all the money we can get." Willman said the state annually gives the city $556,000 fer new streets and street maintenance within the city limite—¢350,000 for new construction and $200,000 for maintenance. Te this the eity adds $300,000 yearly for construc. tion, He commented that the munici- pal league is playing an important’ part in Pontiae’s street- develop- ment “by fighting for more money for cities in ‘general and fighting for the money we have.” Avetion Sale, Saterday, Sept. 5th," TMoreys, Union Lake Re, Ocmen’s ‘Teltturen Store Open Every evening tii 9, prisoners who refused to take pari\in riots at the | to their cells Missouri State Penitentiary ¢ at | Je Jettervon City, Mb., {too ‘many safeguards directed atl Stat he ads, wait to be the committee Sen. Capehart Milton Ratner, (R-Ind), General Pleads for French Help | Grventher Says NATO Is _Insufficient_Without German Troops PARIS (INS) Alfred M Gruenther has appealed to France {yen not to insist on tions’ Germany into a Western European defense system The North Atlantic Or ganization's supreme commander “impossible condi- for the admission of West Treaty declared that German troops are needed in NATO to support the “insufficient” forces now guarding Western Europe against possible aggression His speech before 66 French businessmen at the Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Pow ers in Europe @as his first statement en German rearma ment since the French National Assembly rejected the European Defense Community treaty. Gruenther said EDC water under the dam" and added that “‘we must have a German contribution.’ He appealed to the~Ereneh not to ask for “a book full of safe guards” against the revival of German militarism The supreme commander. astress- ed that the Allied troops now guarding Western Wurope could not stall a possible Soviet invasion long enough for the West's main forces to be mobilized He told his audience “In NATO we have many safe guards against any member whe might want toe start a private war.” now Is The general declared that there is no such thing as ‘‘fool-proof safeguards’ and said it would create “an atmosphere that is harmful and distrustfu!' to have one Western nation “Grienther “predicted that the next three years would be more difficult than the previous thréé “because Soviet propaganda is be- coming more clever and effective, especially their propaganda drive to ban atontic weapons.” ze Water Softener, Salt Delivered. Flake ‘< nating Missour Prisoners Return to Cells bie ie! Af Wirephete REFUSED TO JOIN RIOT—A group of Negro | last night, hold hands above heads ax the y walk back Another group of. prisoners, hands on moved from the prison courtyard "Senate Probers in Detroit to Check on FHA Loans DETROIT \#) — The Senate Banking Committee moved into Detroit today on its cross country investigation of Federal Housing Administration operating procedure One Detroit area housing project builder and two Michigan FHA employes were scheduled to appear before committee chairman, two-day hearing. Capehart said Ratner got a total of $4, 624, 000 in nine separate loans for Lake Shore Vil- lage Ten persons were be called jot questioning on home +prevement toans (One of the 16, Daniel Pin tame of 1560 Joslyn Ave., Pon tiac, refused to comment today when asked WhY be Was being called, He did say he was sched. uled to appear in Detroit Friday, Pintame said he is employed as a shop worker at Pontiac Motor Diviston.) The tao FHA officials Schnackenberg and Fred W. Knecht were fired from the agency's Grand Rapids office for irregularities. La ter they’ were indicted and fined Capehart said Michigan has had fewer big housing seandals than most other states, However, he said the state was above average in the number of home improvement racket cases and in the involvement of FHA officials. _—s Capehart found that most big’ housing projects in Mich said he said of suburban St. Clair Shores was thej°t © hell ~* only Michigan development builder summoned for the | How they were released from their — feels Was net kmnewn — - sos From then on for six hours, ox : seheduled te} tore + Highway Patrol Restores Peace to FieryPrison 33 Guards, Prisoners Injured and 8 Buildings Burned in Outbreak JEFFERSON CITY, Mo, (M—A flaming riot at the | Missouri State Penitentiary i | | | j | + was quelled today after four convicts were killed, 30 | prisoners and three guards injured and at least-eight ~ | prison buildings destroyed or heavily damaged by fire, Heayily armed troopers of the Missourt State Highway | Patrol moved into the foggy, ; smoke begrimed prison this | morning Within a short time patrol of. | ficers reportéd all the convicts in ; troubled B and C halls were back in their cells An hour and a half tater, Col, Thomas EF. Whitecotten, director ay iit, OUIDTOER Wig Getinitety past. He said then the situation was under control and that he expected no further trouble way patrol that got the job done, and I want to add that the con. victs who lost their lives may have saved hundreds of others and the lives of many citizens."’ As the troopers, -backed upon the walls and outside the prison by police and National Guardsmen, moved through the tiers they flushed out an injured convict here and there, some apparently sefi+ ously injured The riet, causing damage esti- mated by prisen officials as near $5,000,000, was confined within walle of the sprawling peniten- tiary located tu the city, net far from the state capitel. None of the prisoners was believed te have escaped, The p.m rioting last night on the third floor a maximum security section where incorrigible prison. ers are confined in separate cells, ficers said the place “looked like a madhouse,"’ with men running shouting, howling and fighting in the glare &f fire from burning buildings As guards and state troopers moved—in; they were met with a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Mt. Clemens Blaze Sends 6 fo Hospital MOUNT CLEMENS tiINs)—Four children and two firemen were re covering in the — today from Mi fire last night in a (wo-famaily Mount Clemens flat In St. Joseph Mercy Hospital are Warden Wright Jr., 5, his brothers and sisters, Albert, 3, Charene, 19 months, and Valanda, nine months, and Sgt. Harold Lo- zen, %. and his brother Bert- ram, 4 ~~ The fire was conffmed to the dining reom, but caused ‘Ditense smoke ~ The parents of the children, Mr, and Mrs. Warden Wright, had left them alone in the house while (Continued on Page 2, Gol. 3) ‘and pellets. FE 5-042), they had gone to - work. Pontiac Surgeon to Head Michigan Medical Society A Pontiac surgeon, Dr. Robert H. Baker, will become president of the Michigan State Medical Society when the state society meets in Detroit next week for its 1954 annual session. Nine Michigan physic will receive s h its when the society opens meetings, Monday. Eight will become members of the Syear club, an- exclusive organization of Michigan doctors who have served a half century or more in the medical profession, |_of sprrectioen, sald the danger of “Tt waa the very efficient high > broke out about 7 +h emomens —— _her only children, Larry, 14. Direction ~~ un gets Thursday « Sun fiees Friday a Moon sets _ Firemen, Police Are Cleared in Death of Couper Family From Our Birmingham Bureau {amined and removed, as was- BIRMINGHAM-—Investigators to- | third body, found in the northe an day cleared Birmingham firemen | | ‘fee over the . _ y ‘ ™ ttle alice { any blrne for Seare Was made tor au ie ate Thomas Couper a believed to be in the house and her ‘two sons, who perished | by some civilians, and other men in a June 14 fire at their Brook- | ere still fighting the fire Mr wood Court home Cross was taken to St. Joseph |Merey Hospital. Pontiac, by the In a 19-page report to the City Commission, the three-nan inves tigating beard concluded that the | fire and police departments “were not guilty of any improper or neg ladder truck at 3:13. ligent conduct and they performed| The house had been inspected their dufies with commendable | for residual fire at 1:18, valuables competence at the fire | were removed, the police depart vestigation ment started attempts to locate Mr. Couper. A fireman returned ite the heme three times at hourly intervals to eheck for possible fire outbreaks In compiling their investigators received testimony ‘from 22 civilians, 17 firemen, 7 ‘poheem@h and 2 ambulance driv- Edward Hall, technical con sullant an the Geld of fire prevent ambutance which arrived at 1:14. Engine No. | left the scene at 1:59, engine No. 2 at 2:15 and the under in One recommendation was of fered by the men, While they felt that the two departments had | Ween Well managed and greatly expanded in past years, it was their opinion that “they are not staffed to ideal standards.” In order to maintain the depart ments~-atrr" mM4kimum = desirable report. the ers standards,” they suggested. that | jon-and fighting, was engaged by “the city might well give serious the committee at the start-of its consideration to the establishrnent investigation of an independent board which | . * . could perform such functions in, Clarence Heth an advisory capacity to the (city) Service Soe Clarence: Heth; 78. of iar romania? : #08 Pleasant St., will be held at James Spencer, Charles Kass 2 pm. Friday at the Kinsey Fu neral Home in Greenwood Cemetery Tuesday A lifetime resident of Birming- ham he was ast employed in the | Parts division of the H. & Ii. Man- | ufacturing Co Surviving are his widow, Ellen ‘a daughter, Mrs. Don Swaney of edge of the approved techniques Monroe: two sons, Clarence H. of necessary in fire fighting and by | Southfield Township, Robert of a hatural and jnevitable misun | Birmingham; a sister, Mrs. T. R derstanding of the events vividly pat in of eee ronal | Fugene of Tampa, ‘ aan - on the minds of those | sraniictilaren: * * 7 Mrs. William 8S. Martel Service for Mrs. William S§& (Willi Bell) Martel, 61, of TTS Bates St., will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Jieme Graveside service will be held Monday at 1 p.m. in Chicago, with and Jonathan Bal] were appointed as an investigating committee by the commission. after criticized the actions of pariinents..._.... --- Analyzing the c onelaints regis | tered. the board said it_was “cop. | yinced that much of the sincere concern felt .by He died witnesses the de- | spectators of the | fire arose from their lack of know! Mrs. Maurene Couper, #, and and Danny, 12, suffociated in the blaze which started in the den of the $60,000 home at 1189 Brookwood, They were probably dead before the fire was reported “and almest certainly before the first fire equipment § arrived,” : . . t \vergreen Cemetery stoned. burial in Evergreen emetery Lawrence Cross, 62, Mrs. Cou-| Mrs Martel died yesterday at per's father, was semi-conscious |Mt. Carmel Mercy Hospital after a when rescued by firemen Mrs./ jong illness. She was an active Gouper’s husband. a Detroit busi- | member of the USO and American Nese executive, was out of town | Red Cross This ty a summary of what the | Her husband survives iene tot Will Exhume Body ‘of Child in Probe neighbor and fees to the fire | department at 12:50 am» An elec- tric clock in the room adjacent 10 | the den had stopped at 11 » ier while an upstairs clock was at 12:48 a.m., prohably ni pate The body of a two-day-old, un of heatfused wre A police car reached the scene | at 12:32 and joined residents in| rescue attempts. but all were re pelled by heat and smoke from entering the house. The officers | broke the glass in Mr Cross's bedroom window but could not get through the aluminum screen. (All windows and storm windows were Gosed except for one downstairs.) Five minute after thy call was received, the -firm fire engine arrived. An erder to drop hove was given te the truck en route, bet was changed te “ladder res eue” gt 12: M4, whee firermrcn were “paformed that perscuy were in side the bower, Between 12 % and 12 “4 a ladder from the engine truck was used} to remove Cross from the home and he was placed tn the first police car; a Royal Oak ambulance service was called, and a second police car and the--fire depart "s ladder truck arrived From 12:57 to 1-@2_ firemen broke the bathroom ahd master | bedroom windows and played wa- | ; , ter into ae totam yroien pre Lie Tests Clear vented entry or inspection Three Suspects \in Howe Slaying A general alarm was sounded at 1:62, During the next eight BIRMING HAM — Still pursuing | any leads which might locate the | tomorrow and taken to Pontiac General Hospital for inquest ithe case, requested the post mor tem There is reason to believe that weans of violence Dr said will aid in prosecution of any per- son charged with criminal act re sulting in the death of the child, he added Avon Township, was never iden tified after it was discovered. At that (time Dr. Prevette stated the baby died of a skull fracture and cere bral hemorrhage. ep minate, additional efforts were made te gain-entry. Two bodies | were seen on or near the lava- Royal Oak. with burial | identified girl found last July 19 in Avon Township, will be exhumed a coroier’s An order for removal of the bady for examination was issued by the Oakland County Proséctor's office after Dr. Isaac C. Prevetie, acting | cent of the cost Oakland County deputy coroner in| above the limit set in FHA law, the baby came to her death by Prevette A post mortem is necessary and The child, found near Hamlin in and was buried two days THE PO 2 | Pontiac Deaths ‘James R: Dewey James R. Dewey, 51, of 44 West | End St. died ‘suddenly at St. Jo b geph Merey Hospital yesterday. The son of Herbert and Carrie Brooks Dewey, he was born May _|72. 1903 in Port Huron, Coming here from Greenville 38 years ago, he was a member of the Oakland County Sportsman's Club and As- sistant Scout Director of the Bald- win Rubber Troop. Mr. Dewey was last employed as Press Operator at the Baldwin Rubber Co. Besides hig mother, he ts sur- vived by three sisters, Mrs. How ard Phillips, Mrs. Irene Couture and Mrs. Wilfred Ritchie, all of Pontiac The funeral will be held Satur- }day at 2:30 p.m. from the DeWitt |C. Davis Funeral Home with the | Rev. William H. Marbach officiat Pontiac Attorney John A. Till-| ing. Burial will be in Perry Mount som,-of 230 N. Saginaw St., was | Park Cemetery honored .. hy. the Michigan "State | Bar members Wednesday for his | Mrs. ‘William Hart years of legal practice. Tillson,- who has spent his entire tegat| “Mrs. William (Maude E.) Hart career here, was among 167/76, of Three’ Rivers, Mich., died veteran lawyers honored at the | yesterday. group's annual meeting in Gran@| A former resident of Pontiac, Rapids she lived here five years with her daughter, Mrs. Ruth Phipps. Bor in Stanwood, Iowa, she was the daughter of Franklin and Anna Caldwell McClelland, She married William Hart in 1900. Surviving besides Mrs. Phipps are four other dayghters and a son, Mrs. Cecilia Peterson, also of Pontiac, Mrs. Maurine Wickens of Battle Creek, Mrs, Helen Achen- bach of Pontiac, Mrs. Maxine Da- vis of LaPorte, Ind., and William Hart of Three Rivers. ~Fhe—body--wtlt be brought here from the Austin Funeral Home in Three Rivers on Friday, Funeral services will be Saturday at 1:30 4008N A, THASON Prison Riot uelled After 4 Are Killed (Continued From Page One) hail of rveks and bricks. Some prisoners were shot, | Three guards were injured, One, Jefferson Gentry, was beaten un- conscious by the rioting convicts. Another, Ctarence Bietzet,- appar: ently was. beaten or thrown from some height. A third, Oscar Car- | rington, was shot in the foot. They ran in and grabbed me p.m, from the Huntoon Funeral and pushed me outside just as the | Home. Burial will follow in White shooting started," Carrington re. | Chapel Cemetery. lated - The dead prisoners were identi- Robert Cramer Hodges fied as Robert Cramer Hodges, 29, for- merly of Pontiac died Monday at Dotty Vincent Hospital in San Benito, Texas Born in Pontiac Dec. 1, 1924, he was the son of Edward B. and Fay Maybee Hodges. Mr. Hodges’ fa- ther was formerly an automobile dealer in Pontiac. Except for the last few years, he had spent all of his life in Pontiac Besides his parents vived by a_ sister, (Marian) Benter Jr and a brother, land, Calif. The funeral will be held Satur- day at 1:30 p.m. from the Farmer- Snover Funeral Home, The Rev. William H. Marbach of the First Presbyterian Church will officiate, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. « Sandra Ruth Mert Graveside service will be held Friday at 11 am. at Ottawa Park Cemetery-for Sandra Ruth Morris, the infant daughter of Harold and Nona Ruth Austin Morris of 9857 Norman Rd. Clarkston. She was dead-at birth yesterday at Pontiac General Hospital Besides her parents, she is sur- vived hy a brother, Mark and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Tennis Morris of Pontiac and Mrs. Fred Everett of Ortonville Arrange- ments were by the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Hethe Lulu A. Selden Funeral for Lulu A. Selden of 643 Northway Dr. will be held to night at 7:30 p.m. from the Sparks Griffin. Chapel. The—Rev. Tom Malone of the Emmanuel Baptist Church will officiate Following the service Mrs. Sel- Don Manning, 19, serving a rob bery term from Cooper county J. C. Swink, 3, serving a car theft term from Dallas county. Walter Lee Donnell, serving a robbery term from St. Louis William Garrett, 29, serving a four year grand larceny term from Cass county Prison officials sald they did not know what set off. the. riot “but Whitecottén said it apparently was touched off by a ‘very small group of the maximum security section in E hall He said he did not know how they got out, but one of them, Wil- liam Delapp, 19, Seattle, Wash. would be questioned closely, A few weeks ago, Delapp stole a set of cell block keys from a guard, but the theft was discovered before any trouble developed Fires set by the convicts still were smouldering in the blackened ruins of prison ——. Senate Investigators Check Detroit FHA (Continued From Page One} igan were FHA-insured for 100 per or 10 per cent he is sur- Mrs. Albert of Pontiac James E. of Sun- but that many in other states had been insured for as much as 150 per cent of the cost That, he explained, gave builders a @© per cent windfall profi In other words, after paying ati "he costs out of their loan the still had @ per cent left and ten arit®had to pay rents based on the full 160 per ceént- loan The Indiana senator estimated; that ‘‘windfall profits and home loan frauds under FHA totaled at least $500,000,000 ten Will be sent to Harrisburg, Tl. Capehart said, however, he | ' : : for services and buariat-on Satur- w hance of court tien it eS * aa day. She died Tuesday after an against builders who by fraud or otherwise get loans exceeding costs in the building of rental projects. The statute of limitations (time in which prosecutions or other court jagtions may be taken) is three years under the FHA law. And the ltitle under which housing develop- ment loans Were made_expired in 1950 illness of several months Marvin A. Spurlock Sr. Marvin A. Spurlock Sr., 68, of 92 Home St. died last night at Pontiac General Hospital. Born Feb Tenn. he was the son of E. F. and Nancy Watson Spurlock and mar- tied to Virgie Land in Nashville, PONTIAC. PRESS... “THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, | 1954 18, 1886 in Gassaway, | Near Decision etme arin, ures" '£Q) Recall Senate surviving are three sisters, Mrs. : = Solons May Convene Mary Ross of Owen Cross, Ala., Wednesday to Consider Mrs. Beulah Siris of Nashville, Tenn. -and Mrs. Callie Mercurio of McCarthy Censure St. Louis, Mo, The funeral will be held Saturday at 3 p.m. form the Huntoon Funeral Home with the Rev. H. H. Savage officiating. Burial will follow in White Chapel Cemetery. “| posal to censure Sen. McCarthy Italy's Scelba Given | 384 rice, secretary! ot the Senate, said he hopes to know by Backing in Crisis (Continued From Page One) terior minister under Premier Al- cide de Gasperi in 1948 broke the back of the Communists’ cam- paigns of riots and violence. The government has faced a serious ¢risis gitice Piero Piccioni, | 32-year-old son of former Foreign Minister Attilio Piccioni, was ar- rested Tuesday and charged with manslaughter in the 1953 seashore death of the Montesi girl. The nearly nude body of the beautiful 21-year-old party girl was found on a beach at Ostia, near Rome. There were reports that her death was connected with wild sex and drug parties allegedly involv- ing ranking Italian political and timing of the order for a politically pre-election session gs. §& gm nit Bas s ve on their front feet? E ; i ge z i i City’s Yearly Pooch Parade to Be Held Here Saturday not have reached their 17th birth- day by Saturday. Three to Conduct Bloomfield Hills School Survey BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Merriil O. Bates, secretary of the Board of Education; Douglas L. Jocelyn, board trustee, and Supt. of Schools .| Eugene Johnson will conduct a complete survey of the school dis- trict. ~The move was authorized by the the board this week and is expected to-aid in future planning of the en- tire school program. The comprehensive study will in- clude investigation of possible land purchases for future schools which the board discussed at length at its meeting. Members contemplate .| sites om both the east and west sides of the district. social figures. Reception to Honor Dem State Candidate A reception for Victor Targon- ski, democratic candidate for state auditor general, is planned Sept. 2% from 2 to 5 p.m. at 1561 E. Muir St., Haze} Park to introduce Targonski to Oakland County resi- dents. Some 14 other county in state candidates wil] be introduced. The public is invited to attend, It’s a Snap... Mouse Traps 10c Velue Heavy steel ng c kills lertaatis:. s Hardwood base. Easy to set. wee Victor Ret Traps... 29% 9 N. Sagincw —2Znd Floor wwewwwweveveT If Perfect You'd ‘Pay $1. Regular $1.00 Value 69° Famous x4 Scout bottle a ° SIMAS AANA IODROAPOAAL ~wrrrrererereng''''''rrgTtgTTTTYTvTTC",, PQS GSS SSS GSS VOU C CUCU UCC CCCCCCCCCCCN a i hn th Ai i i ti Ai Mi i hi it iti Ni Mi hi Mi hi i i i Ni hi hi hie i i i i i i i i i i il LPPEPUE SPOOF OE PCV OO TTE “wevreerrrrervrvrvewrwervrert.e BIRMINGHAM — Two hearings | highlighted this week's planning board meeting. In one, it was de S| cided to recommend to the city se Commission that lots on the west side of Eton road between Hazel |and Cole streets be rezoned from | single family to income bungalow ..¢0| Originally Edward M. Rader. Thursday at 443 pr Moon fiees Friday at 358 a m tery floor by firemen on a ladder murderer of Doyle Howe, 24, who Capehart blamed looseness of| Tenn. Dec. 12, 1907. He was a i ee < was found dead of a shotgun blast | administration for what he de-|member of First Baptist Church Engine No. 2 arrived at 1:11, /@d robbed of $61 Sept. 12. police | scriped as “this one grand grabland the First Raraca Sunday dropping and laying additional have cleared through lie detector | bag ’ He said there was nothing | School Class. He was also a mem- hose. Between that time’ and 1-18 | tests. three youths who were with | wrong with the law as originally! ber of the Modern Woodman of firemen entered the master ay Howe hours before the killing. drafted, but’ that it had been} America m and discovered the body of | Howe was shot in the back of , Strengthened by congress this year. In 1926. he came to Pontiac and the Couper's dog. The tw . ithe head, at a service station on a runtil his retirement was employed found ni —. ta: neal ne bodies | Woodward at Chapin, where he! The rings that medicine bottles by the Pontiac Motor Divistos for" simp _ ______ | worked. He had lived at 971 Bon. leave on marble bureau tops often Th W |naville St. can't be washed off. The rings are e eather : There were no witnesses to the etched into the marble by acids in PONTIAC AND ViCINery— 2 a.m. sl Hh Testicines. iF. night Friday. Qutte coot hen ro . : ne ees ff night, 42-44. Warmer Friday, high ‘78-74. 1] B nosy — becoming Bj h southerty en Friday | g P] B d | irmingham Plan Boar Lowest perature preceding § am *T M. (Reg. U. &. Pas. Off) Owens-Corning Pibergles i Wece wer mes sven(Hears FR g Requests re ' Cals ezonin u @ Friday and Saturday for terrace zoning to secure financing for construc- " | tion of two family units. ture ee aa _ #25) Because the land faces a built up business area, financing for Highest and Lowest Temperatures This singte family a v4 33 im 1896) have permitted only lower quality Chart frame | ouses. * pos Instead of one six-unit terrace, cost of $10,000 each. of planning director Robert S. Boat- e2es2rsleis25 Ssstssesses $$ oumer of the property, had asked He is now able Rader proposed to erect three two-family homes, at an estimated The board followed the thinking man_in_the other héaring, and de- jnied a petition for rezoning the | lsouthwest corner of Lincoln and | | Southfield road, from single fam ily to terrace classification. Beatman felt that such a move would affect surrounding prop erty, whese owners would prob- ably request the «same stoning changes. He ° surmised VT: that Southfiet@| north of 14 Mile road probably is @ 15x20 @ 16x20 not destined to become a major @ 16x25 @ 20x20 artery, like the portion south of 14 |] @ 20x25 Mile road, and therefore any Ee 4 2-inch Thick Filters —— density should be- restrict an 3 oa * 99¢ It wag recommended that the petitioner change the request, ask- ing instead for income bungalow zoning. A previous hearirig to restrict residential density in business zones was also discussed. but wil! be taken up again at the next board meeting. 4 Guaranteed 1ST ocaxte you need. 98 North Saginaw (Replace Clogged Fasanes Filters Now! Nationally One-Inch Thick. Self-seal edge fits tighti¥ "fo frame, prevents design for top efficiency in all make furnaces. Advertised Filters "AR FILTERS Only @ tamous “DUST STOP” brand by-pass. Scientific No limit——buy all Full Pint RUBBING ALCOHOL 9 Full Pound Moth Balls or Flakes 24° 1000 Tablets V4-Grain Seccharin 29° $1.25 Size ABSORBINE JUNIOR 59° NOT a Pint... ideal family NOT a Quart. FULL ONE-HALF GALLON Coconut Oil Shampoo Pontiac's Hard Water Billows and billows of cleansing and healthful suds. Big _ size at a record low price. -buta... for 500 Tablets YEAST 59% BREWERS Full Pound HOSPITAL COTTON. 59° | . of. 75¢ RUBBER GLOVES 33° Fult Pint WITCH HAZEL 17° 100 Capsules COD LIVER iY —_ ce tg erm tp ~ -~ -- = ~THE MIDNIGHT EARL... 5 . -« Marsh, “is merely a strong headwind.” Pr PRE SBrankeree Leo Durocher | of Pork for Blind Guests v , =~ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TITURSD Ar lati hs flanked’ by railings will lead Nets 100 Pas Cent Plus || city Sets Aside Portion | past the flowers and shrubs P la (cards. in braitle will be located ats . CHARLES-€11 Vu intervals along the rail to describe | ty Theasurer ( SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UP)~The |). sacle ; Batted Against Skelton (board of park commissioners voted to By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—I've-been spending a lot of time with Laraine Day's husband Leo Durocher—I'm just lucky, I guess set aside a portion of Leeper | Park fer. development of a scent | | the garden tor the, blind, Grand ¢ A series of | the worid Oulee dam its said to bey, largest. concrete {ported he collected a 100) per 4 ied for the 19 rh pe IN) before any pul-upon (Carprcy to complain Ave than structure la chandd SEPTEMBER to mu MAKE OVER im excess was made’ Cars Lead Double Li e tury Fund had driven ences and penalties machin LEBANON, Ind. {4) — Clifton q pea ‘vent of the nation-| Porter, shoe repair shop . owner, New York -drivers get. more pent in the United | and Lowell Greene, market opera- | warnings trom Connecticut police car lor the purehase} ter, own cars of identical make, [than those from any other state of automobiles, ac-| model and color and with the | with those from Massachusetts and 1 study issued. by the | same extras | Rhody telatid following in that We Were both on Red Skelton’s TV show. Leo achieved a life- long ambition on it. He'threw.an umpire out. AndI.. . well . . I was the umpire Lee bounced around our rehearsals knocking on wood | about the World Series. Red walked around in his stocking feet telling jokes. Besides bubbling over with enthusiasm about baseball, Leo | proved a gifted actor and story-teller. * * * Leo told Father Edward J. Carney of Lawrence, Mass. a friend of the Skeltons, about when Pope Pius, — waremal) Pacelli, visited St. Louis. Leo was pre- sented to. the Cardinal, who asked what he did. “I play baseball with the St. Louls Cardinals,” said young Lippy. “Cardinals — ah! — but of a different type!” replied the future Pope teo has a humility. On the TV show he batted against rookie pitcher Skel- ton and that reminded him that when he played, he was a very consistent hitter. “I always hit .220,” he explained. He told us at rehearsal he was sure the Pittsburgh Pirates would beat the Brooklyn Dodgers in two vital games— and of course they did. x * * “Those Pirates!” He clapped his hands to his head. *‘You look at them. LEO DUROCHER You say, ‘This is like playing the Bloomer Giris.’ “And yet they beat us 8 or 9 games. They did the same to the Dodgers. They did the same te the third-place Milwaukee Braves!” Leo shouted. x * * Frank Sinatra's agreed to play the Copa 3 weeks starting Dec. 23, Copa boss Julie Pedell announces . . . Mrs. Recky Marvianeo, got penicillin and was_sent back to Brockton after the fight, | and advised to see her local doctor. Reeky, incidentally ap- peared to have a special wax covering for his injured beak on Eddie Fisher's TVerc,,Sunday night. The Stork Club management's hoping to take over Gogi’s| LaRue and make it a steakery, also preventing rivals from getting it. . . Slapsie Maxie Rosenbloom | irritated a theater mgr. He told the au- dience, “If you think: 1 stink, wait'll you see the picture.” Eileen Barton's black-face Jolson type | act at the Copa is the newest sensation | . Financial news: TV Whiz Jay Jack- | son lost $18,000 on a driving range near | Waverly, Ohio, and Peter Denald brought | in 3 new dry holes in Nebraska . | Marion Colby of “Pajama Game” is host- ing WABC's early morning show, “Mar- ion’s Memo.” _. * x * Ezzard Charles belted a bass at Basin | Street as though it were Marciano... | Jeff Chandler sold four songs to Walt Disney . . . The elegant Doug Fairbanks | - Jr.'s going into the movie popcorn biz | in England. | The brother of a former boxing champ slugged a pretty local model and put) her in the hospital . . . Gary Crosby's gotta be back in college Sepf. 26... job ‘cause he didn lke the commer job ‘cause he didn’t like the commer- | cials. t | * x * | covering from a kidney ailment . ‘ Sugar Ray Robinson got mad and fired . Last week was the best in months for . . Gary Cooper’s writing his memoirs, with MARION COLBY some of his staff . B’way shows . George Scullin. Mae West sipped a straight milk at the Mermaid Room. * * x EARL’S PEARLS. It's terrifying to speculate on what the children of the next generation will have toe do te shock their parents. WISH I'D SAID THAT: “A snore,” defines Joe (Spindletop) TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: A confirmed bachelor, figures Danny | Crystal, is a guy who invites a girl to his apartment to dust his | etchings. “These days,” says Richard Hayman, “it’s hard to tell whether you're walking behind a man who needs a haircut or a woman Pat Wymore (Mrs. Errol Flynn) is ré=# = “SEARS A, ROEBUCK AND CO. 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AND 2 OLD TIRES Trade-in Price Trade-in Price Down Payment =e 2 TIRES Pius Tax | 4 TIRES Plus Tox | Set of 4 6.70x15 | 24.95 | 48.95 | 5.00 9 5 et A cine 6.50x16 30.95 59.95 ' 6.00 for ‘ “710x115 | 28.95 | [7 6.70x15 7.10x15 28.95 | 56.95 _|_ 6.00 ares sw - & vie *5 7.60x15 32.95 64.95 7.00 AND 4 OLD TIRES top uneven tread wear Let us ALL TIRES, ALL SIZES MOUNTED AT NO EXTRA COST! a lance your wheels today! aoe Auto A Perry Si Basement UP TO *5 TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE! First to Start — Last to Finish! who just got one.” . That's earl, brother. (Copyright 1954) 5 Aircratt-Industry~ Tops Others. in Employment WASHINGTON (UP)—The §air- craft industry today is the largest toll manufacturing employer in the — Ge wer, & rented) United States, according to Planes, | —_ acietel_pebication. of tie Alrerat | Shower ts More Tring — | Industries Association. The nation’s plane manufacturers Than Bath, Doctor Says OMAHA (®-—It takes four times | have surpassed the automobile in- as a bath says Dr. Howard A.‘ manufacturing employer) in total Rusk, chairman of the department | manpower, with more than 823,000 workers, the magazine reported. | of physical medicine and rehabili- | tation at New York University. Automobile makers today em- | That's important to two million | ploy approximately 786,000 per- sons. - | Americans crippled-by heart dis- | The aircraft publication, quot-| ease, Dr. Rusk told a University | ing recently revised U. S. Bureau of Nebraska medical college au- | of Labor Statistics figures for | dience. Taking a bath instead of a | March, listed the other largest|shower is one way cardiac. vic- U. S. manufacturing employers, in| tims can conserve their overtaxed order: blast-furnace, steel works | hearts. Dr. Rusk also confirmed some- and rolling mill industry, 594,000: thing many a bed-ridden patient families of workers, approximately During World War II, the air- craft industry was the lafgest user suach energy to ae & ball gan an it does to walk to a bathroom. | R. Uz Expecting Then You Should See Our $gul to $10.71 MATERNITY DRESSES = Clean -eweep- ing wiper blades with a molded rubber er Saver More Power for Your Battery Dollar! ALLSTATE BATTERIES O# — AND OLD BATTERY @ Nation-wide service guarantee card @ Fits any 6-volt car in town! 24-MONTH GUARANTEE Shop! Compare! You get more power at lower cost per guaranteed month with Allstate batteries. Reploce that old bat tery, now—before.it fails. Save towing and recharging costs! 39 plates, 80 ampere hours 788 capacity. Fits most cars! Bach 18-Month Guarantee capacity. Fits most cars! Good! 24-Mo. Guarantee capacity, Most popular cars 1088 Buch Better! 36-Mo. 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Formerly 2.75 ie | Permanent type. ‘Higher boiling point than other well- arbi lityt Foot oper= known brands. Greater reserve aac fights rust, dom releases corrosion - J | Theo Be (SIXTEEN .. Wife Missing, wc flicting reports from neighbors | aed nephew ote mising =| Nationalists, Reds “ «Fire 2,000 Rounds Morse home Police said ‘Morse married a 15; TAIPEH, Formosa-® — Chines ago and has been hving w th her | Nationalist artillery of Quemoy Husband Held sess: Sows 2S-%) in Canton Township. He said he/ and Communist big guns on the State Man Questioned met her while visiting relatives | nearby mainiand fired upwards of ; and searching for his wife in Ten- | 2.000 shells last night in a savage in Suspected Murder —= | hour dong "dbel, of Mate on Trip | He told detectives he had been |man said today. DETROIT INS) “= "Claude w. assured by an unname d attorney’ le described the exchange as th; heaviest since the fighting broke . : that his first marriage was y¢ d| * : Morse. 44. @ Canton Township {hat his first marriage was voll) around Quemoy Sept. 3 carpenter was held today for in pbecs ause of discrepancies in the fi - Sh « vestigation of murder in _ the feense and he was thetdfore Tree strange disappearance of bis wite j to marry again . who was last seen Aug. § on amo tor trip ;through Indtapa for the 21st straight day, the De Sheriff's office detective Rich ; ; t:AND RAPIDS WM Ar fense Ministry announce ard Novak said Morse voluntarily GRAND RAPI fs st istry announced 1M. Maris. widow of a Grand Rap-| Lt. Gen. Chang Ti-ting, army submitted to three successive lie ids businessman, left an estate of | spokesman. said the &ir force de detector tests yesterday and failed | ¢; 29000. The value of the estate | stroyed six Commvanist gunboats to satisfactorily ans ewer questions | wa. disclosed ‘Wednesday in an, Wednesday on all three occ antahs nventery—tited in Probate Court Communist planes have pot chal Mrs. Maris died Feb. 2. The é&-|lenged Netionalist attackers, but | Chang said Red aireraft were sited | Feieeadiay and Wedtieseay tear the | } Tachen Islands, 350 miles north of | —s broke the Qriental mo | Quemoy Nationalist planes and warships | took over at dawn today, bombard Merse claims his wife desert ed him and hitch-hiked teward jtate will be shared by 118 bene Kentucky after he had stopped | ficiaries his car at the intersection of U.S. highways %4 and 31 in » i nopoly on silk making back in the , - indi . = ~ 5, mm isixth century when two monk The average man, earnitig $4,500 “Though Morse told detectives his | lrisked torture to smuggle out a) annually, is rquired to work two relations with his wife had always is w of the forbidden sikworm eggs | hours and 40 minutes per day to been pe asant. There were con ' from Persia pay his taxes. ne i. o. WKC Phone FEderal 3.7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW Hollywood Steel Bed Frame . Se -; aa oe Neatly Packed > a for Easy Carrying I Reg. $12.95 Limit—2 Per Customer! of g - On easy rolling casters oD justable to fit twin, While They a size Lest! 10-Pe. Maple Finish Bunk Bed Outfit High Quality Extra Heavy Construction You Get All This: You'd Expect to Pay Over $90 © 2 Full 39-In, Maple Bunk Beds GS at 95 © 2 Comfortable Mattresses § e < eD © 2 Resilient Steel Springs © Ladder and Guard Rail © 2 Feather Bed Pillows 44 OF ca are Coimplete Ready -to- Slee p—Nothing Else to Buy! MIRROR CLEARANCE! Complete Wat A Size for Each Room Manging 28''x36" Size $4395 30°48" Size .. s41°5 36x48" Size .. 332G5"5 All Are Beveled Mirrors Each One a Bargain Heavy . Removable Glass Top Twe towel bere ter guest lowéls With a sim pie motion the clothes | bin lifte out may be used for eoemetics Whilet ries. ke 95 -an army spokes | tng Amoy and other Red bases | Leaves $1,250,000 Estate | Within artillery range of Quemoy | DOUBLE DOOR WARDROBE All Metal Construction THE PON’ iM, AC Red China Army to Recruit Force ‘of 450, O00 Men HONG KOS ping says that China's Ked Army 150.000 men a reinforcement and replacement to the sem orees.” This replacement pool to be re cruited between Nov. 1 and Feb ® heralds system of recruiting “will recruit » cHange.in the Reds }_The—Comraiunists bave three types of army force—the Red ar mies, the provincial armic and the militia * . > The provincial forces jlately to have security itroops for coastal and border de fenses. Policing of the countryside seems to have been lelt te the militia The Reds have never disclosed their system of replacements, but it appeared that the Red armies use both the provincial forces and, the militia as agencies for picking aut soldiers suitable for seem become lop serv we Tin& gave them soldiers not only of eed physical stock but smarter than the average and saf er material for Communist indoc ‘ trination Only! i" TERMS TO FIT YOUR BUDGET! SPECIAL FACTORY PURCASE! Never Before at This Low Price te “Reauty-Sleep” Ke INNERSPRING : MATTRESS Slightly Irregular It Perfect Would Sell tor-$22.95 Spy? | cee NOW... Free Delivery Beautiftal reemy @eubie deer wardrede 18” deep, 22° wide, 6 high. Reinforced deers AN metal constrection Sive Invited PRESS; ‘on Display in Philly | yesterday _tion of the 25th anniversary of the ode oc e Good Friday sq J « Offer Thi , Sattrday $459 © Full-er—T win @PFhene Orders THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1954 - ‘Vatican Stamps Go Soviet Exploded PHILADELPHIA W®—The first H ydrogen Bomb international exhibition of Vatic an TOKYO W—A leading Tokyo | stamps goes on display today at|newspaper today quoted Japanese | the National Philatelic Museum iscientists as saying Russia prob Francis Cardinal Spellman, arch; | ably exploded an H-bomb recently bishop of New York, and.a well-|on Wrangel Island, only 500 miles known stamp collector, presided | northwest of Nome Alaska. at a private dedication) The newspaper Asahi said scien- of the exhibition tists have “almost conclusive evi- | One of the largest collections of | dence” of the Soviet H-bomb test. | Vatican stamps ever assembled Moscow announced last Friday } the exhibition took two years of | that it had tested another atomic | planning. It includes a collection | bomb, but Japanese scientists say | of rare ‘errors,"’ stamps with | the-explosion Was ef such magni printing or manufacturing flaws. | tude that it must have been aj} and a number of Roman state | hydrogen bemb..- stamps issued between 1852 and | . * * 1870 | Radioactive rain has fallen in, The exhibition is a commemora- | horthern Japan almost daily since | i | Saturday. Asahi said it was borne | jsouthward by air currents ,origin: | tican City lating on the Siberian mainland | within the city of Rame. | Intelligence reports have indica- | oo 2 ited the Russians are using Lider ef o° Island as a base for ‘esting guided*t“~ Royal Visitors Depart | missiles and othér weapons, the NEW YORK uW—The Duchess of | Dewspaper reported. Kent and her daughter naa — ; Alexandra, Iett—for—heme_yester Moisture is the main cause of | day on the Queen Mary after a| Peeling paint. The mositure often | brief tour of the United States and| comes frem ‘inside the —house-— | ‘from n the kitchen or the bathroom.! « fitst postage stamps issued by Va as a tiny sovereign state / } | Princess | ! i ! Canada. Japanese Say fe KING SIZE or REGULAR SAME HIGH Buaury SAME LOW PRICE 4& This Beoutiful Domestic Sewing Machine Is Yours For Only" One Dollar When You Buy the Bedroom or Living Room Outfit NO MONEY DOWN! st & \: SS @ Ne St tees Bown @ Nene Sold te x Dealers Nationally Known stic Phone FEderal 3-7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW * — ‘ | AMERICA’S MILDEST CIGARETTE AT THE LOWEST POPULAR PRICE LIVING ROOM-BEDROOM STEPHANO BROTHERS—AMERICA’S QUALITY CIGARETTE MAKERS SINCE 1898 , ——- rae ‘Sorority Appoints " TWENTY-SIX Vd WAN ~ THE PONTIAC PRESS, _THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1954 New Committees New committee members were appointed at a recent meeting of|- Alpha Chapter of Beta Theta Phi sorority held in the Elmhurst drive home of Mrs. William T. Hurlburt, Mrs. Ursal Meeker assisted the hostesses at the cooperative dinner. Mrs. William Ward was a guest. Appointed to serve on various committees were Mrs. John Kinz- ler, Mrs. Beecher Connell, Mrs. Harvey Peck, Mrs. L. Z. Monroe, Mrs. Emil’ Mailahn, Mrs, Meeker, Mrs. William Davies, Mrs. Leslie Cross, Marie Schimmell, Mrs. Glenn Grim and Mrs. Lloyd Os- wald. r E f ert ealth-Tex inte beauti- handsome shirts, shoulder easy dressing. In petterns and solid igs te i CECILE’S 4% Dixie Hwy. OR 3-7224 ry Eagerly awaiting a Michigan State football game are | Lawrence-Heitsch of West Iroquois road (le{t) and William schedule to Judy Robinson of East Iroquois road and Nancy Will Feature Flynn Flynn of West W alton boulevard. Sisterhood Has Silver Tea Sisterfiood of ‘Temple Beth Jacob held a silver tea Tuesday in the Ottawa drive home of Mrs. Afthur Opening prayer was given by | Mrs. Sanford Saperstein and greet- ings were extended by—Mrs.Her- man Dickstein and Rabbi Saper- stein, Program chairman, Mrs.-Harold | Chapman, introduced Judith Dick- stein who played piano selections. Speaker was Mrs, Theodore Wiersema, English teacher at Lincoin Junior High School. The content of her speech on “Citizenship and It's Trends,” was that the women of today have come She stated that they have de- veloped as citizens and that they have accomplished a great deal. She believes the Women of the world could be the possible solu- ition to peace . . ho woman would vote to send her son to war. She also said that women are not the weaker sex, but that they lare held down. However, she said, they have courage and are work- ing towa~d equal rights. Clean Inside of Bag All handbags should be as pre- sentable on the inside as on the outside, Not only should the lin- ings be refreshed, but the fixtures should be kept brightly shining a long way in suffrage but they stil] have a long way to go. Your pocket comb, compact and They are explaining th the | Aldrich of Dwight avenue, (left to right) MSC coeds, 4 re | eany oui} ea Eek Pe | { eae : 4 wor : ak th ba HE “608 | tS a “eee aay - Hi.” | ~Kramp, Pat Web- lipstick may need checking, too. ‘> MALING SHOES Tip Top Tips on Trapping Timid Tommys! 1. Drive a erasy chopped heap! = Make cool, cool conversation! 3. Be an absolutely Avid Ava! or just wear maling’s schoolgirl sports with the new, nervous lo-cut look! od ay’? hd a Maling Shoes 50 NORTH SAGINAW STREET ‘Open Friday Evenings B. B. Dardens of Adams road, Chairman of orientation at Abbott Hall, Michigan State College is Trixie Darden, daughter of the Frederick Election Held by Philatheas Loyal Philathea Qlass of First Baptist Church elected officers Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Eugene Haire on West Huron street, Mrs. Nellie Monroe conducted the election at which Mrs. I. 0. Wideman was named president. Mrs. Neil Allen will serve as vice president; Mrs. Peter Hudson, secretary; Mrs. H. E. Morris, as- sistant secretary; Mrs. V. R. Davis, treasurer with Mrs. Hazel Jewell assisting ; Missionary treasurer, Mrs. Jo- seph Songerath, assisted by Mrs. Mable Wiser; Mrs. -Lula Halsell, reporter; Mrs.’ Herbert Fieming- ton, teacher with Mra. R. <A> Van- cel assisting, complete the list. Roller Hat Shown The familiar roller takes its place among important hats this fall. It's in felt and velvet, and vivid colors like pumpkin and tur- quoise. 4 Spartans Well Backed by Pontiac Students as Season Approaches + Football Fever Grips MSC Campus By MARILYN SHEARER Cheering the Michigan State Spartans at Macklin Field this fall will be Mary Chase, Bob Cotter- man, Betty and Carol Wortmian, Derottiy Bell, Dick Price, Kenneth and “Ish, Nancy Welch ‘ang Mr. Mrs. Theodore Carlson, — Others will be Bob Gerdon, Kent Webb, Gail Mac- Laren, Nancy Dickinson, Don- ald M. Traxler, Dick and Kathryn ster, Richard Smith, Verne Hampton, Trixie | 3 Darden, Law-'4 x . rence Heitsch MARLYN James Brown, William Moreau and Jay Elkins Buying hot dogs, taffy apples and most of gli hot coffee at the games scheduled for late fall will be Richard Emsworth, Barbara Sheppard of Birmingham, Jesse Huthwaite, Dorothy Joan, Bar- bara Hunt, Paul Mores, Maureen Kelly, George Kimball, Elaine Pinca Janet Tay, Nancy Al- antes MF Istyle Show ‘New Fashions “Fashions and Figures’ has been chosen as the title of the second annual fall style show of Fashion Your Figure Club. The ctub will present the show Sept. 30 from 8 until 10 p.m. at St. Benedict Hall General Chairman of the event is Mrs. Reule Baker. Committee chairmen are Mrs. Park Nique and ‘Mrs. Robert Bunce Hostesses include Mrs. Joseph McLeod, Mrs Robert Quinn and Mrs Cunningham. Mrs. Frank Anderson will be commentater at the show and club members, Mrs. Goler Cham- bers, Mrs Harold Hopper, Betty Maddow and Mrs. Bunce. are members whe will model the fashions. ve dances will be given by a local studio as part of the program and refreshments will be served by St. Benedict ladies. Tickets may be obtained from members or at the door. MOMS Install New Officers Mrs. 8S. Edgar Thomas was in- stalled as president of MOMS of America, Inc. unit two at a dinner held Tuesday evening in Stevens Hall, Other officers installed were Mrs. Harry Luxon, first vice president; Mrs. John Brewer, second vice president; Mrs. Cart Cox, record- ing secretary, and Mrs. F. G. Van Horn, corresponding secretary. Mrs, Clarence Hickmott is his- urer, and Mrs, David Clark, Mrs. Chester Brown, Mrs. Maude Place and Mrs. Eyank Jones. Installing officers were Mrs. A. E. Kirkwood of Dearborn, first vice president of the state board and Mrs, Bert Hardy, of Fern- dale, second vice president Mrs, Carl Leonard was guest soloist for the evening. Save Pretty Mats Potholders make satisfactory sub- stitutes for hot-dish mats for every- day use. Save the pretty mats for company, Not just another hansomely tailored 100% — Wool Coat! Lay oe Now We suggest you select your children’s coats now while sizes and colors are :available. in weight, Kenwood fleece coat—but—a A small deposit holds Warm as toast, light coats can be worn for -many seasons. of growing room!. Pretty A. COAT and SLACKS in coral, blue. brown or red Pretty flared beck. Sises 3 to @ Matching Hat 4.99 B TODDLERS’ SET im og no Dainty embroidery — Matching bonnet. 2 to 4 Open. Thursday, Friday and Plenty new colors, adorable styles. 39.99 = 39. 79 Exclusively Ours in Pontiac! “Best for Children” Tel-Huron Shopping Center George | A demonstration of | modern torian; Mrs, William Jones, treas-|.— Edwards,| ~ chaplain, Directors are Mrs. Emory) & drich, Judy Rebinson, William Flynn, June Lind, George Mac- Duff and James Panks. The social funetions of college life “Will be enjoyed by Ronald Ridgway, Jerry Roddewig, Jack Simon, Maureen Slosson, Suzanne Swartz, Verne Vackaro, Georgia Lee Anderson, Dennis Beach, Lou- ise Billings, Elvira Bisogni, Eve- Mrs. Petroff Is Hostess for Meeting Mrs. George Petroff opened her Cherokee road home Tuesday aft- ernoon to members of Child Study Club Group Three for a coopera- tive luncheon and meeting, Mrs. William Hurtburt, Mrs | Charles Janter, Mrs, Richard Mc- | Partlin, Mrs. Donald Rath and! Mrs. Lester Wray assisted the hos- tess Mrs. Pauli German, president af the Women's Kederation, spoke briefly, explaining the individual club's reaponsibility te the fed- eration, Mrs, Maxwell Shadley and Mrs. Wray are federation representatves from group three, It Wag announced that the Mich- igan Child Study Convention will be held in the First Methodist Church of Ann Arbor, Oct. 277 and 28. Mrs Roy Jones, Mrs. Ward W Ross and Mrs. R, George Taller- day were named delegates to the state convention, The next meeting of the group will be held Oct. 3% at the home of Mrs. Ross on North Berkshire road, Dr, Dana P. Whitmer, su perintendent of schools, will be speaker. Silver Tea Held lyn Bochnig, Charlotte Booth, El- len Boston, Judith Bradley, Gerald Breen and Morley Burts, Others participating in the cam- pus activities wil) be Barbara Chapman, Darwin Deiderich, Ken- neth Ferguson, William Kester, Ar- men Googasian, Cynthia and Wil- iam Hamm, Phyili¢ Head, Janice Hoekman and Janet Allen. Gatherings at the Union ‘will ida Milton of Keego Harbor. Rochester’ students attending Michigan State College are Bar- bara Robertson, Mary Lee De- Baene and Roger Forbush. | Marge Price of Auburn Heights |has returned to the campus to take up the duties of treasurer of her senior class. Marge is also a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Ease Messy Task. Washing an eggbeater needn't be a messy job. Rinse it promptly under cool water. Then crank the blades through hot soapsuds — without letting the cogs and han- | die become | soaked TO G&T IN OUR HORRY! ce We're Looking for the “Most Photogenic Baby in the Pontiac Area” by Sisterhood Sisterhood Congregation B'Nal Tsracl opened the season with an annual Silver tea, Sept. 14, held in the home of Mrs Morris Blu- meno on Ottawa drive, The program was presented by Rabbi Henry Hoschander who spoke on the “Readings of Solom Aleichem.” Chairman for events slated this year are Mrs. Morris Bletstein, Chanukah brunch; Mrs, Stanley Elbling assisted by Mrs. Edward Blumeno will take charge of the Ater Pary; Mrs, Abe Avadenka, bake sale; Mrs. Marvin Finkel- stein and Mrs. Alvin Jackson, Ad book; and Mra. Lawrence Weston, bazaar Playsuit Pajamas The teenage set will like new, very short pajamas that look like playsuits, They have scalloped skirts and separate rompers, DONNA MARIE RONKETTO . Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Ronketto of North Marshall street announce the engagement of their daughter, Donna Marie, to Gerald A. Sten- wall, He is the son of Mr. and Mrs: Alex Stenwall of South Francis street. No’ date has been set tr |f the wedding. te ——s 3 Mos. te 5 Yrs Baby Portrait CONTEST Phene in, enter your baby In eur Portrait Contest! Ii costs you-nothing .. we take a FREE obligation. Ph. FE 8-1461 For Appointment Now! FIRST PRIZE Besutitul 1954 SPEED QUEEN Free Portrait Lech Entry ie Alles MICHIGAN ° Ever-Soft SALES CO, 208 $. Telegraph Rd. at Veorhals FE 8-1661 Open “th 9 — SPEED °~ QUEEN .. + Gaihene @ Sencar teh i a es —— —— | *10” Cherry FE 5-9955 Scturday “*tit-9.P, M. 13 Wet Bapen. Cah fomnie— We Dare You e Try ItOn... Berry Brown, Seal Grey, DIEW’S SHOE STORE “The Best Friend Your Feet Ever Had” ~ “= ste, ‘ PY “e - bd - LUBELERS an AAA-B. ¢ ae THE PONTIAC PRESS: THORSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23. 1954 MAKE OVER PAGES... From Our a or N Fall Collection! . Every hat in this group formerly sold for $3.99 SMART BAGS Keevier $2.00 TAKE ELEVATOR TO SECOND FLOOR During Our Great ..... Anniversary Sale! $1 49 i \ LADIES’ and CHILDREN’S HOUSE SLIPPERS Special Group $] 00 Pair Shoes That Sold Up to $6.99 é Shoe Department Vain Floor , — ? | , >, ANNIVERSARY SALE! : : WS COTTON ry Plaids @ Solids @ Combinations @ Washable @ Sizes 3 to 6x @T told ‘ WY » $00 nF Regular $3.99 Value SKIRTS “BS Sespender Siyle s] 00 @ Flannel Plaids @ Sizes 4 to 6 Regular $1.99 s . e Take Advantage of This SALE... For Layaway on ~ 100% Wool | 4 et Sizes ¢ to 6z Legying Sets. , owbizes 7 to 14, Coat Only he -* Regular $19.99 ve Sane Lee F abulous: and styling all new and impressive !— 100% wool—Famous mill fabrics. Values to 24.99 $ Values to 39.99 Full length Toppers, fitted and boxy styles, many with genuine mouton collars and cuffs. Full alpaca linings. Zip-outs featuring the new Glas-Glo and Milium linings. All richly and warmly interlined. Colors: Red, Peacock, Royal, Taupe, Grey, Nude, Winter White, Mauve. Stzes ¢ to 15 8 to 20 The values are outstandinig—The fabrics ~ if ® Fleeces e © Zibeline ® Checks Values to 29.99 } © Tweeds 3 Ways to Buy-— -@BUDGET @LAY-AWAY NOW ! At the very beginning of the season ! Spectacular savings on FALL and WINTER APPAREL for WOMEN and CHILDREN! Here are values beyond comparison. Come early to the greatest savings event of the Year! Fall Fashions! Many Below Wholesale Cost! Values to 12.99 ® Failles © Taffetas ® Wool Jersey owoos $ Oo) _ &£ © Men’s Wear Sar enue Values < ~ ubby Tweeds to 16.99 © Crepes © Velvets O() ° Matelasse Values to 19.99 Choose from one and two-piece styles featuring day into evening, elegant cocktail, basic, casuals and can- can petticoat styles in flowing fall colors. Sizes 9 to 15 10 to 20 161 to 24%. _@CREDIT™ HERE ARE-OUR UNDERWEAR ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS: Nylonized Slips $pso ris for Tailored, Lace Trim Regular $2.99 NYLON TRICOT Half S Slips—S lips? °° or § 2 for Regular $2.99 Lace and Pleated Trim. SHEER Nylon Panties.... DB ‘ 5] @ Nylon Lace Trim @ Applique Trim 99c Value NYLON TRICOT s - / 39 or § 5 - HALF SLIPS a or — . ee: Regular $3.99 GOWNS .... °°? 2 SS Regular $3.99 P AJAMAS. ., $59, $5 @ Bright New Colors for Regular $3.99 BLOUSES MIRACLE SAVINGS! New Fall Tailored Styles Exquisitely Made @ Dacron, Pique $5 a“) for $< B00 | @ Prints @ Broadcloth Regular $2.99 Value “® Leading colors Sizes 32 to 40 t TERRIFIC VALUE VKIRT Up-to-the-Minute Styles @ Rayon, Gabardine @ Rayon flannels ** @ Nubby tweeds @ Newest colors @ Sizes 24 to 30 SWEATERS 3.994 8-700 _ @ Luscious colors © Sizes 34 to 40 Regular $6.99 Value CORDUROY JACKETS @ All popular colors @ Sizes 32 to 40 $99 4D ty $500 Regular $3.99 Value Featuring the New “Jack” Shirt "Regular $4.99 Value $999 oD hor “s°*: , ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL!—51 Gauge, 15 Denier Pr. 69° REGULAR $1.19 VALUE, all first quality. _ . 3 Pairs for $2.00 New fall colors. Sizes §'; to 11. a4 aad \ - THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPPEMBE: | eit flashing light to attract boy and CONSUMER PRI INDI girl fireflies together, Numerous (All Items) {H '=s Lifes Secrets” . . little fish living in ocean depths N6rga77 a9 100 ' — — What Is the Mystery of Headlamp Fish? |<: stsviis tae ions | “PRPRIBT | 8) : ~ bs Perhaps Dr Harvey speculate ‘ 4 35 anneal M a : 2 : se the position of the lights prov ide > i | | an 1gs eep Oo In ut t e nswer identification for romance in the | j t . = | ae: : e blackness of the deep ; ie WN t 1 2 : 3 i | ! ght ed “nates, The phosphorescent “and cold light which nature has Of the main illuminators of the sea 2 ee 8 | | “oor _ vogea How scientisis = granted to many living things, es-| Fireflies produce their light from The light-giving reaction is like] '0@-— Ltt td | Sonene homes Eh A hooray & of pecially in the sea. the same two chemicals, but the! the twitch of a muscte. and like a} | | —— Suess Bigeln ay B.. BF . . * luciferin of fireflies is probably | muscle the light cells will grow 108 7 } ] | Massachusetts Marine L ry Man has been intrigued with this different from that of thése| tired and weak from repeated per] } | j . a i | } By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE | M4tural light from the time of his —- - vate ee et t! an acl of - . 'eol-— Pita dt ’ e , e : e | WOODS HOLE. Mass. w — The earliest observations and wonder-| These sea animals, about the ral =p Se eee ae See oe _ =xer ere 4 ri n oe : mystery light of the dark sees! ings about his world, Now science | size of big bird seed, can be kept | Me Workings of the human engine i i t. i 4 sprang into glowing bluish light as is beginning to find the explana-| in the dried state—and—wilt ive; of muscle? Thal is one purpose of | -1Qdb— —- a TTT | " , we | studies ‘ ! } the seientit mixed two chemicals] ar ious Mame foe aes oy oe ant Sined wih water fee "a anpal DELUXE ELECTRIC UTILITY TABLE { in a blackened room. _ eee as ™ | 102 Soe 28 i in TENSILS : © aan ay tl >| Mysteries of this cold light are By. careful chemical treatment If cold light could’ be made eyn-i, ti ; 7-PC, SET OF KITCHEN U ‘ y in ne glass being explored by Dr. E. Newton the lucife . be e aa thetically—and there is ao good | | May | beak irride t lich ir fuciferin can be extracted 100) i { ‘wha, cort roy poli Harvey of Princeton University and also their luciferase When | ‘ hance that lufieerin might — be veruge ——— pay ™ Tee } a ¢ her ¢ je re h and associates who spend their these two liquids are mixed, you duplicated™then man could solve 19 195) 1952 1953 1954 2B : B This was exactly the light you) summers here at the Marine Bio-/ gut the wondrous glow as though | te secret of another engine’ of sec in sea water if you've ever} logical Laboratory working with| thousands of the animals at once | | } PRICE INDEX tr — | r swam at night or watched as a|lamp-bearing animals and organ- were lighting the sea —— }sumer price index 1 ty» lol @ ELUXE UALI j y f boat knifed through the water. It’s| ism from the sea. In life. the : . . during ~t firxt half of (4) - 4 , 5 , se animals shoot thew teal it Al during ‘ ( alf ) the light like that - except for! Two chemicals create the light—| luminescence out into the. water Steals Rabbit, Also Feed {iis iit wince nid lea al 4 color — from yellow firefli¢s. Or | jelférin and luciferase, an enzyme] as @ boat passes or the water is, SCRANTON, Pa u®-A thief with} was 1028. low point for the vs t i CH FE A E N S EMBLE LI from dead tree stumps glowing in or accelerator of chemical rea-| disturbed. Why they do it is aj) foresight broke into Louis Fen-) year period The inedes based { the dark because of fungi growing | tions. Both have been isolated in| conundrum- perhaps to warn, their; Rala's barn here-and -stote-a@targe | on the THT WW Tigiire of 100) Data i \ — them. | pure form from a..tiny crab-like| fellows away. | white rabbit. He also made off with; eompiled by UR Degictsssetit oof [ It is bioluminescence, chemical creature, cypridina, which fs’ one Fireflies apparently use their a 50-pound sack of rabbit feed Labor . , | Don’t Worry | NOW! | 1G 95 About Layoffs INDIVIDUAL SLEEVE LENGTHS ror ) SHOP NOW! 7 | e Now..- : smarter than ever! /. | TOWNCRAFT” Styled Dan River COTTONS! » Abe Real beauties, Towncraft® tailored in Dan River SHIRTS shadow ground... weven plaids with the famous Wrink!-Shed® finish! Just check that price tag— Smarter in many ways...thé fine washability and you'll say these are values indeed! Machine washable! right-fitting proportioned sleeves, for instance! But ML.LXL. smartest of all is the brand new high styling by . Penney’s Towncraft®...the pick-stitched collar and pocket flaps, the adjustable cuffs, the fine color- matched rayon-satin yoke lining! Choice selection of nine vat-dyed shades. Neck sizes S, M, £, Xi in several sleeve lengths. ; Machine Washable Rayon Gabardine SPORT | 298 me « 34524. Sten Ditcluding Sti’ | COOK BOOK New DORMEYER {72% gener. COFFEEMAKER ¢ PARKING Pontiac's Own Parking Lot EAST PIKE STREET —— LINED COMBED COTTON HEEKSUEDE® , | Handsome Lightweight ee 9.90 REVERSIBLES O() A luxurious fabric! Combed ¢ cotton imported heeksuede ; ' in a*good-looking water re- O() ° oes ae . , 3 Si pellent a. = fully shee orton -_. ; ; = izes rayon as knit col- a T alnivaly | 36-46 —~ lar, eaffs and waistband to 3 Ways to Buy... COME IN-TELEPHONE IL THIS COUPON , Style, warmth, and a lot of value ... all yours! This ncn Pr Pe cat a new viny! is always soft, never sticky, and has remark- Sizes 36.46. : oa : able resistance to wind, rain, and scuffing. Stains wipe Like two jackets in one! Penney’s smart’ style of : off with an ordinary wet rag. Made top sliainheniess rayon and acetate in a neat check or splash weave. - with thick quilting and warm, snug knit trim. White, . , It's water repellent, wrinkle resistant and it reverses | 3 _blue, saleniins,. pink, red. : = to. solid color rayon and nylon sheen. Sizes 36-46. ° : ! 108 NORTH SAGINAW : e . ee. J -. THE Air Crew ‘Flies’ to ‘England and Back Strict GG Rules in 3 and One-Half Hours Using Gadgets CARSWELL AIR FORCE BASE Tex. (NEA)—A_ Strategic Air Command crew settled itseif on the cluttered flight deck of a B-% Air Force bomber here recently ‘Their destination: Lakenheath Engtand and back to Carswell a 2%-hour mission. But only three ahd a half hours after take-off the ..crew__.was-——back ‘on. — the ground” at Carswell, its mission successfully completed Actually, the crew members never get into the air, .although they experienced all thé sensa tions of flight with a few emer gencies thrown in for good. measure. What they flew was a Curtiss Wright Dehmel Simulator, a de vice of the type now in wide spread use for training pilots and crews in normal and emergency flight procedure, both for military and commercial aircraft * » * In the mock B-36 cockpit. largest simulator buili so far. 500 miles of wire, 1200 vacuum tubes 273 servo motors reproduce every + thing that ¢ees-on during artuat flight—inciuding sound , Outside, an instructor at ' electroule “o@ eon sele" flicks switche« and turns dials to make propellers run loose, engines conk out, of other bazardou, conditions. For the Lakenheath mission, the B-36 crew had a brand-new gadget —-a “ten-toone” switch that makes certain things happen ten times faster than normatly What it does is speed up the fuel depletion meter and flight engineer's clock during cruise con ditions, so long-range can be simulated § without the tedium of flying the long-range ‘‘distances"' of which Ut bomber capabie ; Thus. on the Lakenheath—mis sien, ground check. take-off and climb were at nerma! rate minutes), the cruise neceasary ¢check- points and a half hours at TrMessions itself is accelerated We've proven you sell more clothes with low prices and small profits than high prices and long profits. That's why we sel and (urtis thea Mrs. P group immense | to a target | tions." SYNTHETIC and lamling wert i% minutes) New Zealanders Form Association of Homeless WELLINGTON, NZ Women unable id homes for Néew Zealand Homeless Associ ation with Auckland and Christchurch Miles said the women sireets FEIGHT—Deck of a B36 as Wright st: families are organizing into branches Welling organizer of the association adopt ed three resolutions to present to » New, Zealand government That intmigration be | unti} housing needs of people | ready in the country are satisfied |} no more homes be shops. factertes and offices 444+ re tanger Festi evbethorn orders via tactentyshipow took two! the curtailed taken over as! courts | headline —on—one without accommoda conceived by ept for vrew Courteous Policeman Esteemed by Visitor | FREDERICKSBERG. Va Wt | Fredericksburg police gave a tle quarter and got one in turn A traffic patre out-el-gtate car ol cheery parked and instead of a summons he }@ cautioning courtesy card on windshield returned by “My thanks to a courteous man Attached was 25 cents A Mere Coincidence al WATERBURY. Conn. # | Waterbury two stories on the same page read: “to | S10) Theft Proved by State into | lice." The other read Tur 1 fie.** - |Dinner Planned as League | fit spotted an ihegally put the Next day the card was" mail with this note police " Jt was signed ‘‘ Missouri." T Republican publish a Turks Leh in } May Be Eased 2 Firms to Sell Polio Vaccine to Drug Stores. | About Oct. 1 { distribution Oct. 1, since it has neither funds nor authority to con ; a Meetings will be held in Wash | inden Thursday and Friday by ODM's health resources advisory }ecommittee and the blood subcom- The latter is expected to a report and recommenda- meerning the GG dilemma. officials said they are uncertain that [the unre- of GG would signifi mittesr make thons ODM highly stricted sale cantly afféct the Salk vaccine tests NEW YORK ¢p—Strict cont: | in view of the fact that the end of over use of-samma glo jlin (C444) the potio season is approaching. $ against polio witt-agfidPentl bet” Polio foundation spokesmen cited relaxed suormewhat about Oct. | these reasons for feeling that re One or two pharmaceutical firms | lease of GG would not materially have announced “they will be affect the vaccine trials selling some of it through drug Net very much may be avail stores ther [xectors could obtain it for youngsters whose parent wish or can afford GO shot Widespread use of GG, might affect the scientific testing to learn how effeetive the Salk p »VaCCiU has been this <tr, Hut spake men for the National Foundation for Infantile Parals iid thes did net e&pect tl id be much effect Phi the sittation The woclbn is been given to 400.000) youngsters in throughout the country What happens to them this polio on will be eompared with what young htere than test areas happens to nonvaccinated sters, in the same to see whether and he conterred protection The areas, mw much the vaccine Vaccine stimulates production of antibodies against pol 4 GG is a medicine tained from the blood of px. an prey hous! posed to pp ) 1 which con wie (it, shots can give rainst sick ness Or paral, sis from polio The clearest a ser whether the ks can be had if taing antil temporal tectum a polo var (Hat .en to children in the test I pollo foundation has been -Lusiog up all supplies of GG, turn them over to the Office of Mobilization which con- trols GG distribution, The ODM has reconimended that use of GG vaccine test le horse be discouraged in ATT HS The foundation's contracts to buy GG expire Oct. 1 The ODM says it has no choice but to hift its control over GG =) Tar as possible able, and cost may be a deterrent to widespread use The peak of the polio season has probabby passed If physicians do give GG in vac cine trial areas* they are being | asked to keep ppeords of individual | jildren. Thése records can then be taken fnt® account when statis tics on the vaccine are assembled later’ this fall a GG is also a useful medicine against measles and_ infectious hepatitis, a liver disease. Soviets Find kife Deep in the Pacific LONDON uW—Moscow radig re- ported today that Sovie¢: scientists have found living sea creatures nearly seven miles deep in the Pacific ocean, near the Kurile Islands The broadcast said the discovery was made during a recent expedi- ition te determine the depth of the Kamchatka-Kurile the ocean bed The broadcast said zoologists on the expedition established that there was life in the deepest part |of the great depression. It added: | “They also discovered that a considerable part of the organic substances produced by algae in |the upper levels of the ocean are cohsumed at night by animals which come up from the deeper parts. ‘These deep sea creatures were of great antiquity.” No description of the animals was given. depression in} PONTIAC PRESS, T HU RSDAY, SEPTEMBER | 23,1954 | » a Ill F | | — A really modern kitchen includes an extension telephone Think of all the hours you spend in your kitchen! How many f z times a day do you have to make “a 50-yard dash” to go and answer the telephone? Does it make sense when you can have a kitchen extension | telephone for only a few cents a day? It will save you time, steps and energy, make you a more efhcient home manager. You'll find its value far beyond its price. No home is truly modern without an extension telephone in the kitchen and another beside your bed. Call our Business Office and order yours today! MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY Sauctioe t MEN'S STORE = 19 N. SAGINAW so mony That’s why we're called the CLOTHING-VALUE-KINGS of PONTIAC! Take a tip—SHOP HERE FIRST! COMPARE! SEE HOW YOU SAVE! A rere velue at our” You Don't Need the Cash! Hard Finish Year ‘Round OUR FINEST SHARKSKIN SUITS They — Sell for $60 We "repeat ; Only our = 250 store: -bu , Compare: ying + Shop BE SURE TO SEE THESE! here "a power cot first Opular Style With All the Young Fellows! ONE-BUTTON _ §UITS a’wearing ‘em! § TO PAY _ patterns! They're oll anywhere near 8 67 price! They’ art “ Fe in Nassau flannels! i § looking ae, reins gabordines! “New floke They Should Sell for -$50 38” EVEN AT THESE LOW PRICES YOU CAN BUY YOUR NEW CLOTHES ON BARNETT’S EASY BUDGET PLAN! | | CHARGE IT --__ SAME AS CASH This Suit Has 2 Pants You Don’t Need Cash! See Hou Z HARD FINISH SHARKSKIN Year-Round Weight TWO - PANTS SUITS We Could Sell Them for $55 Yes, 2 ponts at ven, § 3.54. Smart styles, § good looking patterns. A tremendous value! Gu Sam / ’ ce Talk About Value! Look! FINE IMPORTED TWEED TOPCOATS 5 You'd Expect to Pay $55 for Them You'll agree these are the smortest cocts you've ever ra) PP OM seen in our great store! are, too, and well worth at least $10 to $15 more! .Be-sure to see them before you buy yours! 3* ’ i Aa UC , / 3°’ \ 749 WW THE PONTIAC PRESS, THU RSDAY, SEPTEMBE R 23, 1954 wre Se “Rochester Area Planning Commission Submits Guide eee + ~, BIE Bi GOOD HEALTH Only the Finest! This Is Our Never Changing Policy! You may be SURE: we use only highest quality pharmaceuticals in fille ing. your prescriptions. This we will never change—for your. good health’s sake, or our good name! OL 1-5611 PURDY’S Drug Store 321 Main St. Ask Coordinated Future Growth Main, Secondary Roads Seen After 8 Months _of Consideration ROCHESTER After eight months of study and consideration, | the Rochester and Avon and Oak- |land Townships Area Planning Commission has prepared a general development plan to guide and-eo- ordinate future growth in the area of these two townships. | It is being submitted to the Oak- | land County Road Commission, the | Macamb County Road Commission, the State Highway Department, the Planning Commission, the ‘Origin and Destination Survey, and the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Author- ity. : These agencies have not been asked fer action commitments eon the plan, but fer opinions and judgments. preliminary thinking to various tests which will prove the several | items to be either correct or wrong. We felt that the experienced judg- ment of official agencies, will be THURS.-FRI.-SAT. SPECIALS ONLY MEN’S 3 Yard Suede Flannel Sport Shirts 2 POCKETS | $457 Sanforized. Rayon satin lined yoke. Many patterns and colors to choose from. Open ere fara Friday. ‘til 9 P.M. - 320 Main OL 2-0811 Rochester of extremely great assistance in our.making an early determination of this matter,” a coyering letter with the plan stated. “Since transportation routes, and especially the location of the major and secondary highways, very strongly effect decisions on all other aspects of the plan, we would like to initiate discussions with you as to the probability of which high-| way Tines will be most important as traffic carriers, and the need for certain extensions and additions to the present system,” it con- tinued. The plan outlines Rochester Read, a possible route paraiiel te the New York Central Rail- read, as an eastern alternate to US-10, and Crooks Riad as three major north-south highways, with Livernois and Adams Road as secondary routes, East-west plans would limit the use of Auburn Road, and improve Walton Boulevard, between Pontiac and Rochester. South Boulevard is indicated for future limited access. \Carol Perkins, Bruce VanDusen Exchange Vows METAMORA — Carol Rick Per- king and Bruce Buick VanDusen, Jr. were wed Saturday in the . First Presbyterian “Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Perking of Wy @ Real Estate © omissing, Pa., i groom js the son of Mr and Mrs Theron VanDusen of Metamora. Mrs. John Morrison was matron VanDusen, sisters of the bride- groom, were attendants. Phillips VanDusen was hig brother's best man, with Charles, David, James and Richard VanDusen, all broth- ers of the bridegroom, and John Mofrison seated the guests, Beautiful Table Setting Let us create a center- Insurance “For Every Need™ DALE end NINA | MARTIN OL 2-976! 412 Main S$. Rochester eg ee = | ee > | tist Church wag the scene Saturday Under Arm Bags Shoulder Bags Box. Bags Pouches Open Fri. & Sat. Nights "i 9 P. M. and |i} Legion Head Installed IMLAY CITY — Ciifford Roy has been installed as commander of American Legion Post 135, with nner gg al senior vice com- Detroit Metropolitan Area Regional | » “Our objective is to submit this'|é ge Ba of honor, and Ellen and Katherine | School, t ROCHESTER — Anne Janoschka and Richard C. Stouffer exchanged wedding vows Saturday morning in St. Andrew's Catholic Church. .—- The bride is the daughter of Mr and Mrs. Joseph Janoschka, of 3309 Livernois Rd. Mr. and Mrs. Max Stouffer of 310 Red Oak are the parents of the bridegroom. The bride's gown of chantifly Rochester Kiwanis Schedule Kids Day ROCHESTER — National Kids Day as suggested by Kiwanis In- ternational is being observed Sat- — and Rochester Kiwanians going to be on the Village va selling peanuts to raise funds for The Boys and Girts Com- mittee, At 10 a.m. the Kiwanians are putting on an hour and half movie show at The Hills Theater. All children are invited to the show One of the committee's latest local projects wag taking 80 young | °" musicians to hear the United States Marine Band play at Southfield High Schoo} last week. PTA Plan Canales Names Five Officers WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The all-township PTA m Plan- ning Committee this week elected the following officers: Mrs. Lyle Crowley, Lambert chairman; Mrs, Richard Raber, “ Stringham, co-chairman; Mrs, George Bailey, Waterford, treasurer; Mrs, Francis Davis, Drayton Plains, secretary; Mrs Eldon Rosegart, Williams Lake publicity in the high school, Extension Club Elects Home Extension Club. Mrs. Ches- BROWN CITY—The First Bap- AL i rE Brown City Couple United jin Double-Ring Ceremony of the double-ring nuptials of Ar- j Hin ># | Miriesen : 312 Main St. Rochester Free Parking Rear of Store ee ~~ } mu —s 3: os - ; ; ~ ‘OL 2-2121 — OL 1-9642 Furniture at _ Always at Its Finest RNISHINGS Next workshop is set for Oct. 18 —— ee ee — Saturday Vows E xchanged in St. Andrew's Church lace followed princess lines, with inserts of accordion pleated ny- lon tulle. Her beaded tiara of “paced pearls held a full finger- length veil. Beverly Fairchild was maid of honor, with Mary -Ann Stouffer, sis- ter of the groom, and Beverly Schlatter as bridesmaids Best man was Duane Peltier, with Jim Green and Edward Jan- oschka, brother of the bride, seat- ing the guests. A breakfast followed at Sytvan Gien Ina, with a reception later for 200 guests at the Motes Pontiac. . After a pm honeymoon through northern Michigan, the couple will return to East Lansing; where they are Michigan State — stu- dents. County Calendar The Blue meg tears ine 0 ts sponsoring & su « from %-?-3e ——_ at the ne Drayton Plains afer Sashabew public - vited. Waterteré Tewnship Bive Gter Mothers are sponsoring ham end turkey dinner, beginnin =3 |e Saturday, a Drayton Piains be roceetis § wi used for ~E- gifts for fA and women the ares. The Cheery Chums of Waterford wil! meet et the home of Mre Rudy Voss on Lessing street at € 30 p.m. Priday for « cooperative supper and business meet- Watertora Community Church Mens Beacen Club wi!) meet at €30 Gaturday for supper e+ the : TChapel Memorial Cemetery. County Deaths Mrs, Carrie E. Johnson UTICA—Service for Mrs. Carrie E. Johnson, 79, of 3645 Ravens- wood Rd., Marysville, will be at 2 p.m. Friday at the Schwarzkoff- Milliken Funeral Home, with burial in Utica Cemetery She. died Tues- day, Surviving are three sons, Her- bert of Marysville, Claude of Utica and Fred of Battle Creek, Linda, Joan Miller UTICA—Service for Linda Joan Miller, four-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.“ Exigar O, Miller, 16690 Kingston St. Frazer, were held at 2 p.m. today at the Schwartkoff- Milliken Funeral Home, Utica, with burial in White Bir- mingham. She died Monday. Surviving besides her parents are one sister, Deborah, and grand- parents Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Ren- ton of Detroit, and Walter A. Miller of Birmingham. James L. Lotche DRAYTON PLAINS — Service for James Lee Loeche, 81, a former resident, will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at the Coats Funeral Home, with burial in Drayton Plains Cemetery. He died Wetinesday Surviving are his widow, Marie and stepchildren Mrs. Esther Sage of Clarkston, Clayton Soncrainte, and Dr. Kenneth Soncrainte of Waterford Township. Elweed H. Bowdlear HUNTINGTON WOODS—Service for Elwood H. Bowdlear._4, of 13124 Winchester Ave, will be 3 p.m. Friday at Spiller Funeral Home, with burial in Acacia Ceme- tery. He died Tuesday at his home. Surviving are his widow, Dor- othy; a daughter, Mrs, Fred James of Royal Oak; a son, C. Leslie of Livonia, and one grand- ehild, rc Mrs. Helen Reiter FERNDALE — Rosary for Mrs Helen Reiter, 50, of 1526 Marshall Ave. will be recited at 8 5. m. Thursday and prayer service at 8:30 a.m. Friday, at Spaulding and Son Funeral Home, Requiem Mass will tbe at 9 a.m. at St. James Chieth with burial in Mt Olivet Cemetery. She died Werinesday at her home, Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Russell H. Bradley of Oak Park; three sons, Anthony J.. John M., and Peter P. all of Ferndale; three brothers and two grandchildren, Bowling Starts Tonight ROMEO—The Women's Bowling League will open its season tonight at 7 with six local teams, Six other teams of the league will bowt at 9 p.m. Officers named for the 1954-55 season are Mrs, Burt Battani, president; Mrs. John Ra- chow, vice president; Mrs. Norbert Leach, secretary; Mrs. Marvin Blackett treasurer and Mrs, Chartes Alkan, sergeant-at-arms. ‘| Rds. and Holiday Farms No jschool board also passed. ng ey Waterford Sets | Sanitation Rules Township Board ° OKs! Ordinance to Regulate Septic Installations | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — An} ordinance to regulate sanitation in | Waterford Township was approved | by the Township Board at a meet- | ing this week The measure calls for minimum | sanitary facilities, provides for in spection, and sets up permit fees It specifies rules for private septic tanks and their connection to public sewers and water wells According to the ordinance, existing septic systems not con forming to the new requirements must be altered whenever posst ble, In other action, the board ap- | proved Calvin Warner as an active | volunteer fireman and Edward Al len and Ronald Ruffatto as pro bationary volunteers Two plats—Crescent Lake Woods at Crescent and Elizabeth Lake 3 at Pontiac and Créscent Lake Rds were approved. A_ resolution to continue sharing half the cost of school crossing guards with the North Building Halted by City Commission | of water mains and new homes in the northern area of the city SPECIAL * ONE WEEK ONLY * | ROCHESTER designated as critical water area will not be permitted before Oct. 1, 1955, the City Commission has de cided This includes the area north of the Twelve Mile Road, west of the Grand Trunk and Western Railroad Co. tracks, north of Webster Road and east of the railroad Water was to have been supplied for the area by the South Oakland County Water Authority by Oct. 1; but this date has now been ad vanced one year by the Authority. Church h Merger OK'd ORTONVILLE — The Methodist Church of Ortonville will observe ite THh anniversary Sunday, The program will include.a ser- mon at 11 a.m. by Marshal) R Reed, bishop of the Detroit Annual Conference of the Methodist Church, A basket tunch will follow at 12:30 p.m County Births imtey Cy ond Mre Lelend Bissett ase the | * of @ som. Michael Lee born | : 1 Distinguished Service... : - William R. Potere : : FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service 339 Walnut OL twe 1-5151 Cure ——- ROCHESTER Opposite Pr. > No More Worries With Oil Eating Trucks After Buying One = of Our Used Trucks Low Mileage TRUCKS ROCHESTER FORD DEALER “for More Than 30 Years—A Good Plece te Buy” The fact is, for just a few dollars more than you'd pay for one of the so-called “low-price three,” you get in Buick a whale of a lot more automobile—more room, more comfort, more ride steadiness, more V8 power. And that “more automobile for your money” goes for every Buick in the line—the low-priced Speci, the high-powered Century, the extra-spacious Super, and the custom-built RoapmMaster. And the proof is in Buick’s booming sales figures! yAQAANUULNNNAAT wut WM, a > You want a car that will keep its style in the years ahead, and return more dollars when you sell it: That's today’s Buick—for with the year-ahead styling that graces this winner—and with all the solid value built into this great automobile— you're bound to command a higher MARTON BERLE STARS FOR BUICK 00 The Bin) Revie Show Attemate Twoutey Evenings resale price when you sell it. Drop in—look over this beautiful buy— and learn the clincher: With our tremendous volume right now, we can offer you the top allowance on your present car. So you're way ahead on all counts! ye 210 Orchard Lake Ave. Phone FE 2-910! . OLIVER MOTOR SALES _ Pontiac, Michigan eo fe Crissman Chevrolet Co. 755 S$. Rochester Road OLive 2-9721 Larry Jerome Main Strect ot the Bridge OPEN EVES. Ou1-9711