. THE PONTIAC PRES OVER pags The Weather 4 Wednesday: Showers ¢ Details page two 112th YEAR . xxx * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY, 11, 1954~32 PAGES INTERNATIONAL NEWS GERVICN Attorney Dies Plan to Shorten Capital Hearing Rebuttal Witnesses to | ‘ Be in Secret, McCarthy _to Resume Work WASHINGTON (AP) Sen. Dirksen (R-Ill) today ‘came up with a new plan to) suspend public hearings on | the McCarthy-Army row after testimony from Sen.) MtCarthy. These were the main dif- ferences from an earlier | CHARLES 8. MATTHEWS Dirksen proposal: ings were suspended. tnere| Vateran Lawyer | of Pontiac Dies would be closed hearings Funeral to Be Thursday ifor any rebuttal witnesses | ‘the principals to the dis- ppute insisted should be heard. Transcripts of the closed freed to resume his own hearings | on Communists in the government Charlies S. Matthews, 73, native Michigan Bell Fails to Prove Case to MPSC © os Company Has 30 Days’ to Ask for Re-hearing | of Plea LANSING (AP) — The} Michigan Public Service Commission today denied Michigan Bell Telephone} Company's request for a| $22,306,000 annual rate in-| crease. The commission held) unanimously that the com-| | pany failed to prove that its | rates are too low. The com-| | pany has 30 days to appeal | for a re-hearing. l. Previously, the commission has granted Michigan Bell a total of $28,949,832 in rate increases since | the war door testimony would be Hearings on the current case | mage public. | for Charles Matthews, started July 2. 1953. and were | 2. With suspension of the public | ° completed last Feb, 15 hearings, Sen. McCarthy would be | Born Here in 1880 | If the rate increase had been granted, residential one and twe 7 Phone Rate Hike Denied Pilot Rescued From.Lake Dirksen Offers DR. H. CHANDLER DAVIS City Lawyer Defies Probe Professors Are Suspended] John Houston Refuse fo Reply on Commie Link Invokes 8 Amendments to Dodge Answering in Lansing Session | LANSING (AP) — John | C. Huston, Pontiac attorney land recent University of | Michigan graduate, today invoked half the Bill of Rights to refuse to answer questions on whether he is a Communist. | He was the first witness in today’s televised hearings before the House un-Ameri- can activities subcommittee in Lansing. | Asked if he wes a member in his student days, the 28- | year-old attorney invoked eight of the first 13 amend- ments to the federal Level Constitution in declinirig to Villages , answer. They included the Fifth Amend- ment, which guarantees against self-incrimination. “It is mone of your business,” he told the committee. Me re- 42 DR. C. L. MARKERT Bombers Pound Red Fortress . French Planes Three Rebel Near Hanoi HANOL (INS)—The ‘French Air Force pounded a “Red Dien Bien | Phu'’ near Hanoi today after Viet- fused to answer questions about minh troops in a series of sharp alleged Communist infiltration of attacks seized a French defense | the Ann Arbor Chapter of the post six miles from the city. French military sources said 3 AP Wirepheote Theodore R. Miller of Venice, after his rescue from Lake Michigan early today by the Coast Guard. Piloting a U. S. Air Force Sabrejet on a practice mission from O'Hare Air Base near Chicago, Miller bailed out of the disabled plane. He was picked up two hours BAILED OUT OF JET—Second Lt. Calif. sips coffee at Kenosha, Wis. later in a one-man life raft. John Kobe 3 und De Stwiskt, (lett to right) all of Kenosha Oppose Chief Points of Red Proposal French Agree to Discus Plan for Indochina Truce GENEVA (AP) — A French spokesman said today France was willing to discuss the Communist plan tor | an Indochina armistice along with its own plan, but declared strong opposition to major provisions of the | but with the restriction that he could not look into military instal- lations or personnel. | By present rules, McCarthy is restrained from conducting his own investigation pending the conclusion of the inquiry inte his row with Army officials. Chairman Mundt (R-SD) ordered the hour's delay to give. Dirksen time to work over his plan. of Pontiac and veteran Pontiac at- torney, died at | Hogpital Monday two weeks Mr. Matthews was born in Pon tiac Dec. 28, 1880 and had lived here until he moved to Clarkston 14 years ago, where he resided at 52 E. Church St Son of Col. S. S. and Anna Hill Matthews, he married Mary M Yokom in Detroit in 1912. Pontiac General He had been ill Standing are his rescuers, John Kackley, | Communist proposal. The spokesman made it clear France had no intention | at present of breaking off the Indochina talks in Geneva Arthur Godfrey will-have a check - m. from Sparks - despite the apparent East-West deadiock. Plan Discussed Pontiac, State Consider’ Work ot Orchard Lake, Telegraph | The Michigan State Highway Depattment and Pontiac are work- ing on a plan for constructing a/| grade separation to relieve traf. fie congestion at Orchard Lake Ave. and Telegraph Rd., City Man- ager Walter K. Willman said to- day. Details of the plan are not complete, said Willman, but if built the project would be the first of its kind in this area. A grade separation involves raising one highway so cars on an intersecting road pass under it. If the project is approved for) government aid, Willman ex- plained, federal funds will pay half the construction costs, with -the state and Pontiac dividing the balance. Woman, 74, Faces Court on 500th Drunk Charge LIVERPOOL, England ®—Mary Ellen McGregor, tiny, silver-haired and 74, appeared in court for the 500th time here today on a drunk and disorderly charge. The magistrate gasped when Mary Ellen's record was read out by a court official, then commented ~* He Road Viaduct New "4 Olde #4. Only S082. At least lowed any trede, , bow, Ponting. 9B 4-2i00. * explained France's | | position at a specially | called news conference as | the French National Assem- | | bly prepared to debate the government's policy on In-| dochina. Some observers thought the new mch reaction to the Communist terms represented a softening of | the position, but it was clear the main provisions of the Vietminh plan were far from acceptable to | France. A spokesman for the U.S, dele- | gation, informed of the new French | Statements, said the United States opposition to the Communist terms was unchanged. It was summed up this way: The Communist plan, if accepted in full, would represent unconditional surrender to the Communists. Sources close to the Vietna- mese delegation said the Commu- mist terms were unacceptable to Viet Nam. These reactions came as the In- dochinese talks were in recess. One Western source said they might not be resumed befove Friday. The main points of Western op- position to the Communist propd- sals on Indochina peace were the provisions for Communist - style elections without international su- pervision, recognition of the Com-- munist~ backed regimes of In- dochina and lack of military guar- antees to back up the armistice. Although the Western delegates were agreed there must be full discussion of the detailed armi- stice proposals, some of them al- ready were talking about writing the Geneva conference off as a4 complete failure on both Indo- china and Korea. Both | Mundt overrode Democratic op- | | position to delay the start of the | hearings whfle Dirksen revises his | | motion The committee—except for Dirk- | Mr. Matthews was a graduate ‘pee of Pontiac High School and the | University of Michigan Law | School. He practiced law in Pon- tine for more than 3 years, | Sen—gathered in the hearing room | starting in with the late Jud at 9:30 a.m., the hour set for the | James H. Lynch. fachrhe to resume. } : | Mundt then announced Dirksen | One of the highlights of his ex- | | was revising his plan and said he | Periences at the University of | would not call the committee to Michigan was the fact that for order so that Dirksen could draft four years he roomed with the late his new plan. | Fielding H. Yost. | A great lover of nature, Mr Sen. MeCtellan (D-Ark) pre | Matthews had spent many hours (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Doctor Will Check on Godfrey's Hip BOSTON — Radio-TV star ' He was a member of the Presby esti Church, Oakland County and | Michigan Bar Associations, Sigma | Chi Fraternity, Michigamua Socie- | | ty and a life member of Pontiac | Lodge 810 BPOE. He is survived by his widow, Funeral will be Thursday at 1 30 | Griffin Chapel. Dr. Robert M. Atkins of the Clark- | stan Methodist Church will officiate and. burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. made of his year-old hip operation | within a week or 10 days Bone specialist Dr. Otto Aufranc, who has been handling the Godfrey case sinée the death of Dr. Marius +N. Smith-Petersen, will go to New York to make the checkup, a spokesman said fast night. The hospital announcement came after the entertainer told his TV-radio audience, “I've got to go back to the hospital and have it Pilot Dies es While Waving Greeting to Girl Friend MADRID, Spain # — A light plane carrying two Spanish air sergeants on a_ training flight (the operation) done all over | swooped low over the city today again” because there is “sorhe-| so one of the airmey could wave | thing mechanically wrong’ with at his girl friend. The plane the hip. crashed in a patio a few doors The original operation, per-| from the girl's home, killing both | formed last May by Dr. Smith- men, Peterson, replaced the shattered hip bone with a new ball and sock-*Potrigrch’s Death Told let joint covered by a metal mold. Godfrey's hips were! MOSCOW w—Church authorities | smashed in a Washington automo- | disclosed today the death of Pa- bile accident more than 20 years | triarch Gerg VI, head of the Ar- ago. |menian Apostolic Church. | Scattered Showers and Cool Forecast party lines would have cost from | 45 to 90 cents more per month, | four party lines from 50 cents te 90 cents a month, rural rates % | cents a month, business services from 50 cents to $4.25 per month fer flat rate services and from 7% cents te $1.75 for message rate increases. Michigan Bell based its petition on the rising price index since a and the possibility of a busi- ss depression shrinking its a portunities for investment The commission said oot ¢ the price level in thes United States | has risen steadily since 1890 pe out causing the ‘‘dire results”’ dicted by company attorneys rot Michigan Bell's future. The commission contended that the amount of money available for investment during inflation compensates almost entirely for French bombers and fighters lev- | air offensive launched last night } to halt what appeared to be a new DR. MARK NICKERSON REFUSE TO ANSWER—These | Vietminh drive against the Red | .ommittee member, asked ~ olin three University of Michigan facul-| River Delta and the Hanoi area t) members have been suspended | by President H. H. hatcher for | miles east and southeast of Hanoi, refusing to answer questions about | where the French maintain mili- communism before the House Un- | tary headquarters. American Activities Committee The Red-ted Vietminh forces The villages were situated 18 | ring secretly “It is the function of the people to tell Congress what to think, not ™ | eled three enemy-held villages in an Congress to tell people what to think,”” he said Rep. Gordon Scherer(R-Ohio), ton “Aren't you regularly confer- with high party func- | tionaries in Pontiac?” and “Isn't it a fact that you are the leader of | the Communist u in this | area?” 32 Students Sent Home | After Beer Drinkers the decline in the value of the | Damage Building dollar, It said Michigan Bell has had no | difficulty in securing ‘huge amounts of new capital’ at its | present dividend and earnings rate. The commission Sid that an earnings rate of 6.5 per cent on |capital is adequate for Michigan Bell and that present earnings are in excess of that, Scattered light showers and more cool weather are in store—fer—-the. Pontiac area tonight and Wednes- day, according to the U.S. Weather Bureau. A low tonight of from 38 to 42 degrees is expected, with a high of from 58 to 62 on Wednesday. Yesterday the mercury climbed | | from a low of 3% to a high of %6 | degrees here. Approximajely .02 of an inch of rain was recorded Mon day. At 8 a.m. today the temperature | stood at 45 degrees. At 1 p.m, in downtown Pontiac the mercury registered 48. REDUCED TO RUBBLE—Timberts from an 8-room farmhoule near Ellington, Conn. were scattered over | severely injured in an open field after being blown a wide area when a sudden tornado hit the area. Two occupants, a mother and son, were found j flattened, Tornado Strikes Connecticut Farm across the highway. A barn nearby also was AP Wirephote oe Brought In Monday ja search for oil j}owned by Edward T. Orosian and | s Thirty-two students dis- missed from classes today after | were the country scholhouse near Lake Orion was heavily damaged last | night by beer-drinking vandals The vandals smashed the Eaton School's seven windows with rocks | jand beer bottles and scattered debris over the floor, — Ruth Young, teacher at the grade schol, said she found pools of beer and empty bottles littering the fleor when she ar- rived to open up this morning. All of the students were sent home shortly after their arrival by school bus Oakland County Sheriff's Depu- ty Ross Miller said this is the sec- ond time in a month that the school has been broken into. About a month ago thieves stole a movie and a slide projector and $40 in cash, The school is located at 1980 Predmore, about two miles east of Lake Orion. - Northville Gas Well A large gas pocket, believed’ capable of pfoducing $5,000,000 worth of natural gas over the next | 10 years, was struck Monday near Northville by oil drillers. The well is on the Charles H. | Nerreter farm which is only two| miles from the Maybury Sanatori- jum where similar drilling is under study. Detroit Common Council was considering a plan teday te ex- plore the 905-acre sanitarium land for oil and gas deposits. The gas pocket was struck at 4,317 feet. Pressure was so strong that Washtenaw County sheriff's deputies blocked off the area be- cause of danger of escaping gas. The well was being drilled in Oil rights are Associates of ‘Detroit. Einaudi Starts 7th Term ROME (®—Luigi Einaudi today | began the seventh and final year of his term as president of Italy. | New "34 Olds 68. Only ST79T. At trast | $900 allowed on any trade. 280 8. Gag- tnaw, Pontiac. PE 4-3390 Free Christian Science Lectere. See ad page 2, Tt Country School E | posts Monday. for weeks, It was disclosed, have Vandalism Shuts = Houston declined te answer been converting the area inte | and added, “You have no right ee te ask that question. Whether pty underground | you like the Constitution or not, r to those at the | I do.” Preach savengnte of Dien Bien Houston, who was born in Dear- 175 miles of Hanoi. The born, was represented at the hear- French stronghold fell Friday. ling by Archie G. Leonard, a Pot- While the French planes were |tiac aftorney. Chairman Clardy hammering the Red-held villages | pointed out at the start of the in the ricefield along the Haipong-/| hearing that the committee does Hanoi railroad and highway, the | not infer any implication against Vietminh attacked a half dozen | any attorney representing wit- French outposts from the western | nesses. | side of the delta Pushing out of the Sontay-Phuly | Houston asked not to be tele- larea forming an arc near Hanoi, vised at the hearing and his re- the rebels singled out the defense | qest was granted. manned by Vietnam Na-/| It was brought out that Houston tional Guards. | has been practicing law 2‘, years The French said all but one of | and was educated at the Univer- 'the defense posts beat off the as-| sity of Michigan. | sault. Frank Travenner, committee Identify Man Killed Sac: Sis oor Sg When Hit by Auto \identified him as a member of “Is that true?” Travenner asked. Houston replied that it was none of the committee's bual- ness. | the Communist party in 1947. Carl Edwards, 68, of 6 S. Shirley Ave., was identified last night as the man killed by an auto at 12-Mile Rd. and Woodward Ave. jearly Saturday. according to a re- port from St. Joseph Mercy Hos- pital. ; Edwards’ landlady, Mrs. Minnie K. Redmond, identified him after | police found his address through a |laundry mark on his Shirt collar |He was employed at GMC Truck & Coach Division. Funeral arrangements are pend- ing at Pursley Funeral Home. Houston made a reference to th. spiritual damage being done by the committee and Chairman Clardy-said “It is not met for anyone adhering to the Commu- nist philosophy to Aalk of spiritual values.”’ Other questions ht Houston re- fused to answer were whether he knew the number of Communist clubs on the University campus ___ (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) [Pontiac Jaycees Select Oftticers for Two Years Elected last night as president of the Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce for two years was John A. Benson, He succeeds William L. Treanor. Benson is vice president of the M. A. Benson Lumber , Co. He will take office June 1. Other new officers named were Stephen Hale, first vice president, Melvin Eller, second vice presi- ent; Richard Veasey, secretary, and Alfred Hansen, treasurer. Treanor and William O'Connor will serve as state delegates. Men elected to the board of di- rectors. other than the officers, were Donald Bergeron, William Fox and Richard Gruen In Today’ s Press aes, Sirmingham OKs Porritt Land. Zoning; Plat Approval to Be Next From Our Birmingham Bureau BIRMINGHAM — Moving swift- ly through last night's agenda, the City Commission held a hearing and approved the zoning of the 40- acre Porritt property on Adams road The land will be developed by the W. E. Reid Development Co. Next step will be approval of the | Additional Birmingham news en | page 18. plat which calls for about 220 du- plex units, 20 single-family resi- dences and business frontage on Adams. Commissioners approved a re- written awning ordinance to fit in with the modern trend of lower | with one of the Y softball teams) The Army opposed this suggested buildings. The ordinance governs | to play twice weekly June 3-July | procedure. ne awnings, Marquees and canopies over public rights-o-way. Paving and sidewalks on Torry street, from Holland north approxi- nv Commission tion of off-street parking lots will be discussed at future date. | * * * | For the sixth consecutive year | |the YMCA will operate its Da-Y | | program for boys and girls 814 | years old, Mondays through Fri- | days. One period wil] operate from June 21-Aug. 6, the other Aug. 9-27 Factory visits, beating, swim- | ming, overnight trips, sight-see- a part of the activities. Registra. | thems are mow being taken, The group is limited to 70 youngsters. The Y will also operate a pro- |gram at the Y House for mem- | bers, from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. | Young men interested in signing 29 are also invited to contact ithe Y ; *. * *« A reception for prospective ing tours and craft work will be — Dirksen Offers Plan 4 fo Shorten Hearing (Continued From Page One) tested and Sen. Symington (D- Me) moved to call witnesses for testimony. But Mundt ruled that he had not convened the subcom- mittee and rapped his gavel te amnounce the delay. Dirksen proposed yesterday a motion which would have called Sen. McCarthy to the stand to re- place Secretary of the Army Ste- vens, and would have recessed the public hearings after McCarthy's testimony was in Under this plan, Ray H. Jenkins,| © inquiry committee counsel, then ; would have been given until June | 110 to study the case and report} | to the committee on whether other | | principals in the dispute should be | | called. . . . McClellan offered as a substitute a proposal] that each senator have an hour in which to cross-examine | mately 110 feet, were approved at | members will be held at & tonight | witnesses, with opposing counsel a hearing. Another hearing will be |at the Kirk House of Kirk in the | permitted four bours and Jenkins held when assessments are set up. A proposed licensing ordinance to maintain control over the opera- Navy Reports Flier ‘Presumed Lost’ BIRMINGHAM — The Jackson- ville, Fla. Naval Base has re- ported Ens. Donald R. Wilson, 23, the son of Mrs. Ralph A. Wilson of 199% Riverside Dr., missing disappearance in a fighter plane over the Atlantic neag Cuba. Donald “L. Cummings, spokes- man for the family, said Wilson's | Hills Church. > } | classes being at Cranbrook Insti- Applications are now bring re- -| eeived fer the summer tapidary unlimited time. * * . McClellan told reporters he did| not know what new proposal Dirk- | tute of Science during the week | sticking by his own. Preparation of flats, cabochons rock to the finished gem. . . > Mrs, William Lomas will be in charge of the program entitled, “Who Are the Guilty?"’ to be held | by the Women’s Society of Embury | votions will be given by Mrs. Ruth Norton. . . . ! Speaking on dress design, Mrs. | C. A. Hall, vice president of the Junior Woman's Club, will include excerpts from a thesis on “Are Clothes Modern?'’ when the group meets at 8 tonight at the Cedar street home of Mrs. James To- bias. Samples of new fabrics will be shown. Mrs. Hall is a graduate of Michi- | gan State College and Cranbrook Academy of Art, and taught design at North Dakota Agricultural Col- lege. wife; the former Peggy Kirby, had | ° mot Py been notified that his plane dis-| The Royal rmy . appeared from a formation while | Force Recruiting office, 315 W. Communist party card No. 63464 the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home Sixth St.. has announced that dur-| for the year 1947, Houston said, for John F. Godoy Jr., infant son on gunnery practice. | American Legion will work in co- | |operation in promoting the U. S. | | the aviation cadet program of the | Drug Co., the missing pilot was a| USAF and the new Reserve-for- 1948 graduate of Baldwin High You program of the WAAC and) Houston's laughing and smirk- School. He had been attending the School of Pharmacy at Georgia In- stitute of Technology when he en- tered the service about two years ago. 2 Birmingham Churches Report Thefts of Money BIRMINGHAM — Thieves hit another church Sunday. Following the report that about $30 had been taken from purses at St. James Episcopal Church, police were notified yesterday by Ivah B. Waterbury, of 535 Wil- liamsbury that her billfold con- taining approximately $20 was taken Sunday from the Christian Science Church, a few blocks from St. James. Birmingham Woman, 40, Hurt in Crash Monday Mrs. Lillian M. Kennedy, 40, of 740 W. Lincoln, Birmingham suffered lin facts leading to specialized ca- _has been changed from Thursday WAAF. | High school graduates interested | reers in the field of nursing, die- tetics, radar, and others may con- tact either the legion post or the recruiting station. s . . | The date for the regular May meeting of Poppleton School PTA to Wednesday evening The program theme for the eve- ning will be ‘Our Youth Activi- ties.” Brownie troops 232 and 259, | Girt Scout Troop 219, Cub Scout | Pack B-13 and Boy Scout Troop) | B-13 will demonstrate for parents | the kind of work they are doing. | |New PTA officers will also be | | elected. SSS | the two faculty members. Mrs. Carrie Elisabeth Daniels | beth Daniels, 8&3. of 1128 Pierce | St. will be at 2 p.m. Thursday | Service for Mrs. Carrie ere | pendent Eur and Leather Work- with burial in Roseland | Home | Park Cemetery, Royal Oak. } a fractured left hand and bruises| A lifelong resident of Birming- | in a two-cap collision at Maple and Lahser Rd. yesterday, She is in good condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac Police said a car driven by Wil- liam E.-Holliday, 38, of Clarkston | had stopped for a light when Mrs. Kennedy's car struck his in the rear. The Weather | PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Consider- adie cloudiness and continued cool with | | Daniels died this morning after a | long illness. | ham and Southfield Township. Mrs. | She is survived by a daughter, | Mrs. Helen Parks, and a brother, | A. E. Cook, both of Birm®&mgham. and two grandchildren London Estate Offering | Four Houses as Gift LONDON W®—A firm of estate | agents reported today one of its seattered light ‘showers tonight and) clients will pay 530 pounds ($140) | Wednesday. Lew tonight 88 to (42. High Wednesday 58 to 6% Nerthwest winds & te 1? miles an a Teday in Pentiar Lowest temperature preceding 8 am 42. At & am Wind velocity 15 mph. Sun sets Tuesday at 7:42 pm | Sun rises Wednesday at 5 14 a m Moon rises Tuesday at 2 p.m Moon sets Wednesday at 2.28 a in Dowantewn Temperatures oreees “4 O Weescescnc ee een eeee ¢a.m Ta. m 4a ~My cceccs “5 t BBW. nwccesecs “a Sam cam As recorded downtown) Lowest temperature . 36 Weather—Partly cloudy. 62 of rain | ing before Judge A. J. Richardson | yesterday, Raymond C. Pitts, 22. ‘of 63 Chamberlain, Pontiac, and | Grant W. Davis, 45, of 880 N. Pem- | berton, Birmingham, both pleaded | guilty. Both paid $100 fines. Pitts | was charged with driving under | |the influence of liquor and Davis | 47 With reckless driving. 72 4 ‘| 14 Dead in Jap Cyclone. {| TOKYO i®—The known dead in a One Year Age in Pontiac Highest temperature.............. si Lewest temperature.............. an Mean temperature. ............6...- 70.5 Weather—Pair Highest and Lewest Temperateres This Date in #T Years *6 tm eee 36 in 1907 Monday's T te rt Alpena 3° 3) Memphis Li Stag 3 Hicceanue : - ap Seawen Sie hes Set a oe fine, os pene Hi 8 Prentice #1 S| Les Ankeles 67 54 ‘ ‘the agents said the client has ‘‘ex- ., Violators Plead Guilty 45 orthern Japan Sunday night rose if \ to 4 today. Many persons were | | still missing. to any “benevolent person” who | will accept four London houses as | e a gift The agents, Ward, Saunders and | Co., explained that the houses are under government rent control | “which, in effect, means prewar | rentals and postwar expenses.” In a letter to the Daily Express, hausted his means in subsidizing the occupiers.” . BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Appear- terrific wind storm which lashed and faceted stones may be prac- ; ticed in all stages from the ret, | sieged him after the start of to-| } Methodist Church at % tonight ca bool ga officials about the pro- : | ard L. Davis of Detroit, an em- BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP —/at the Manley Bailey Funeral) pioye of the Concrete Wall Co., will rum for six weeks under the | and | intend to press it,’’ McCtellan direction ef Richard Hintermeis- | said ter. 1 there are enough appli. | As Sen. Jackson (D-Wash) left | cants, a daytime session may be | the hearing room. he quipped. scheduled | “this is the latest move to expedite | the hearings. Mundt told newsmen who be- | will, perhaps, never see anything day's session was delayed that he | knew nothing about Dirksen's re: | vised prepenel . Mundt said there had been no meetings with Dirksen or admin- > 7 . ‘In response to a question, Mundt said that he had not attended any secret session of GOP members of the subcommittee last night, | that so far as he knew there was none. Sen, McCarthy professed ignor- ance of the proposed changes in te Dirksen motion. “I don't know™ ahything about it,” he said. ‘‘They haven't told » about it.” Attorney Refuses fo Answer Probers and _if the Communists were suc- cessful in infiltrating the university chapter of the National Lawyers | Guild When asked if he were issued I decline to answer.” At this point, Congressman Scherer (R-Ohic) said that be wanted the record to show that Houston said, ‘Honestly, I have | ho contemptuous attitude. I have no disrespect for Congress, but for a long time, I have objected to the antics of this committee.” Last night three university fac- ulty mem bexwrs were suspended from their teaching duties when they refused to answer’ similar questions. The subcofnmittee recommended contempt citations against one of the faculty members and two graduate students who appeared at yesterday's session. University President Harlan H. Hatcher ordered the suspension of Harold Shapire of the Inde. ers Union of Detroit and Rich- were other witnesses scheduled to appear today. At the conclusion of yesterday's session, the subcommittee voted to recommend that the full com- mitee cite the following for con- tempt of Congress Edward H. Shaffer, 31, of Ann Arbor. graduate student in ¢co- nomics at the university Byron E. (Mike) Sharp, 2, uni- versity graduate student. Dr. H. Chandler Davis, 26, uni- versity mathematics instructor. Clardy said the subcommittee SIGHT TEST—Little Susan C of the tots who came in for a free | Screening Center yesterday points a | easy it is to “read” the letter E. With of Birmingham Junior League. Vision today and tomorrow, from 9:30 to 4:30 p. m., a [ Saints Episcopal Church, Williams and Pike Sts. All parents with childfen between the ages of three and five are invited to bring them in‘ fer vision examinations. For Pre-School Children jaca mie have bu mat be was! Wicion Testing Continues of June 23, The evening classes = “I am not changing my motion | ‘ Through Wednesday Here Is your pre-school age child one fects, { the 10 per cent who will walk | reaches school age, are almost *—one who | #!ways correctable. The vision screening clinic wants in the world of shadows sharply, clearly defined? If you want to be sure he isn't, you still have one more day to take him in for a free sight test. The Pontiac Vision Center, which opened Monday will remain open until 4:30 p.m. today and all day tomorrow from 9:30 to 4:30. Its location is Stevens Hall of All Saints Episcopal Church, Williams at Pike Sts. It offers tree vision examina- tions for children between the ages of three and five. It is hard to believe, but one out of 10 children between the ages of three and five actually has faulty vision. Such vision if caught before the tot how the tests are con- When you take your child in to Pontiac Deaths Arthur Hinchcliff Arthur Hinchcliff, 20 School St., ( ) | died this morning at 5 a. m. in Continued From Page One | ee. ' " The body is at the Sparks-G Funeral Home. John F. Godoy, Jr. Prayer service was held today in of John F. and Eva Gomez Godoy, of 43 Ellwood Ave. The Rev. Wil- | liam J. Carolin of St. Vincent de in Mount Hope Cemetery. vived by a sister, Gloria Marie. George H. Kline iy if u the federal Constitution in declin-|@ale St., Ferndale, was arrested ing to answer “ for stealing a suit from ‘a parked The First Amendment guaran-|¢at and received a one to 15, tees freedom of speech, press and|year term. He had been: placed association. The subcommittee, |on three years probation last Dec. Clardy said, recognizes only the| 21 for breaking and éntering in the Fifth Amendment, guaranteeing | nighttime. against self-incrimjnation, as a| Carl Hyett, 23, of 2005 East 11 valid reason for declining. Mile Rd., Royal Oak, was sen Alt five dectined te ne tenced to one to 10 years for en- direct tel aaa ticing away a mincr child. He questions: “Are-you new er have yeu ever bese @ RuEE> had been placed on one year pro- ral = bation Feb. 8 for the same ofense. of any the ov by force Dr. ficient suspension duties The baby was born July 21, 1953 George Henry Kline, 67, of 15 S. Paddock St. died suddenly at his today it will stage an series of tours Thursday tt i : Telephone Calls to Boost X-Rays TB Committee to Call Local PTA . Members, Tell of Coming Drive ed Mrs. Wayne Weaver as chair- man for a telephone drive to tell local PTA families of the chest X-ray vans’ coning visit. The committee, meeting at Pon- Oakiand County Health Depart- ment, Medical Society, Tubercu- | losis Assn. and Michigan, Pontiac, | Birmingham and Ferndale-Pleas- s Es 5 i ay, ie | ive; ae : a E i li f Ch il 1 3 French Plan Mercy Lift. Holly Township Boy Hurt in Car Mishap ® 8 5 5 ¥ na rie Hie Tee ie Lidylet, pl pedi Hh [fF 739 py a 7 ee i i Brisch pleaded guilty. March 24 to breaking into the Radio Temple a church in Berkley, last Jan. 3 A companion, William C. Donnelly 22, of 3303 Ravena, Royal Oak was sentenced to 1% to 15 years for the same breakin. Immigrants who came to Amer ica in sailing ships often required seven to 12 weeks for the voyage with both parents, the Noroom duaye or dilben inde %& If one or more children under 14 occupy the same room the room. If one or more children under 14 occupy a room with only one parent, the one-person rate applies for the room, 4 If one or more children under 14 occupy a room without a parent—that is, if more than one room is needed for a family—the one-person rate applies for the second room. Bring the family for weekend of fun at the Detroit Statler! i SPECIAL STATLER FEATURES FOR TRAVELING FAMILIES * Children's pletes end silver * Balloons for the youngsters after meals * Formulas prepored © Reliable baby sitters * High chavs end crits © A besket of fresh fruit in every reem eccunied by children * Redie in every reom Red-Run Union Controls Sought Brownell Asks Power to Dissolve Labor Units Full of Communists WASHINGTON @®—The govern- ment has asked Congress for far- reaching power to dissolve Com-| munist-honeycombed labor unions. A request for this and other new antisubversive authority was sent to Capitol Hill yesterday by Atty. | Gen, Brownell, who said he has | the backing of the White House. | Brownell proposed that the Sub- versive Activities Control Board | 2Uthorities, (SACB) be empowered to disband | not only Red-infected unions, but— in a new departure—to dissolve business firms it finds are Com- munist-infiltrated and in a position to harm national security. The attorney general also sug- gested that Congress permit the government to bar subversives from privately owned defense | plants. >. * oe The union-dissolution power was proposed as a drastic substitute for a Taft-Hartley Act require-| ment that union officials file non- | Communist oaths with the National Labor Relations Board before their unions can be eligible for board services, Sen. Ferguson of Michigan, chairman of the Senate Republican Policy Committee, promptly intro- duced two bills to implement Brownell's ; The Justice Department is known to have had trouble trying to en- force the non-Communist oath re- quirement. In the seven years sitice the Taft-Hartley Act became law, the | department has investigated scores ' of cases of union officials suspect- ed of filing false non-Communist affidavits, but there have been only four convictions, and'one of these was reversed. * > According m Justice Department the difficulty stems from language requiring union of- | ficials to certify only that they ' are not Communists at the time of | filing, They say an official with | Red connections could resign from the Communist party to take the | oath, then rejoin the next day. These officials said they hoped | the union-dissolution weapon would | impel Red-domonated labor organ- | izations to purge themselves. George Clemenceau, French statesman, once taught in a girls’ school located at Stanford, Con- necticut, with amazing adhesive and is more durable than paint chemicals year or longer. The Winner and Still Champion Amazing Collinite Auto Wax TESTED UNDER ALL CONDITIONS Collinite out-performs all other waxes, polishes and coatings exclusive new development makes regular Waxes obsolete READ WHY | Collinite is an especially hard high gloss protective wax bug stain, not jaffected by heat, gasoline, oi! or many other Easily applied, requires no hard rubbing or buffing. Have you ever before seen a wax that protects a new car finish for the life of the car? Collinite does it and on any car, old or new, the lustre will hold up for one Collinite gives you the brightest, best protected car in your neighborhood Wax and Cleaner $2.50 Write, Phone or Stop Collinite Wax Products 2619 Dixie Highway, Pontiac, Mich This polishing qualities. Collinite itself. Will not rain spot or OR 3-908! —y Students Taking | © Polygraph Tests LA CROSSE, Wis. —Today you is a chair and a mysterious-look- ing machine. It is a Stoelting poly- : | At G58 8 |Senator Wants High Production Humphrey Says U. S. Economy Should Be $500 Billion by 1960 | 3 | Bosshard, It's a break in the school-day routine—a lark. “But,” says Dist. Atty. John “it wouldn't be a lark for the young man who couldn't th wife will not object to husband. I terest of the public,” he said. “We may finally get a tip, a fragment covered the New World. AAKE OVER PAGES. A 2-25 per cent rise in ‘eres | production, with plenty «* markets. Dogs and turkeys were the only | ~~ domesticated animals in North) ~ America at the time Columbus dis- —— say no to the big ques- her small charge slept unharmed uby from William A. Motley in another room. Bubert C. from Argith 1. Meee in suras wp joaia, Sugh. Tearo| Easta Bas tate hot he home “oie a dozen already— wilars, B.- trom Juaith A." Speer checked out as fruitless, but still] Mise frem Cyrus H Hengen leads—and this is only the fourth Mabel trom. Jone ‘Prices day of the long project. Twenty! Sith. "L ‘from Juel Peek to thirty boys can be processed; Mar * & trem Ralph 3 Hullinger soo tuecsand the cys eve| ameter Gee "a Mac 8 y high schocl. Joseph says is] Riker, gam eat De rom of crime detection. - Esther 6. irom "Burt Richard Ores Josephson t yeraph ex Prank BR trom Doris F. Emerson pert fresh from four years of serv-| «++: from Marcus Irons \Crlaninel. metipatien Devislon he “fe &y vftom Pear is "MMarrie | the Fer East. He was hired last ‘asks F, from Vincent B Carsencats month to head the new Crosse ys us City-County Crime Laboratory. gh llgy = — . * Charlene from HM. @tockford “The tests have renewed the. in- oo oon tven L.’ Devie e Not that the La Crosse County prosecutor really expects to have — es e You've had a chance to size up the 1954 automobiles. 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COGS 2 Oe a — es cae yi int cr ite rain Spo en x g | « * % sme we tkad Ay Fe dhe Res VL THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1954 — 300 Attend Federation Gathering Hear Talks Given by State and County Candidates Three hundred members and guests of the Republican Women's Federation of Oakland County were entertained with a luncheon and fashion show Monday at North- wood Inn. Chairman for the annual affair was Mrs. Bernard Girard. Co- chairman was Mrs. William Don ner. Mrs. Helen Randall presided im the absence of the Federation It's Convenient ; president, Mrs. William A. Ken- Pl nedy. Program Chairman Mrs Atmosphere Bert Norton intreduced Mrs. Food at Everett Reese whe, in turn, in- Jes Best treduced candidates fer state Granger, candidate for state sena- tor; Louis Dorman Jr., candidate for state representative, and Ralph Main, drain commissioner. Others were Lynn D. Allen, Or- i i “has Getting together for luncheon at Northwood Inn Mon- day were Mrs. Rolfe Smith of Clarkston, Mrs, Bruce Annett avenue and Mrs. W. Arthur Vernon of Sylvan Shores drive Open House to Be Held at Hospital National Hospital Week will be observed by Pontiac General Hos- pital Auxiliary with an open house on Thursday and Friday Pontiac area residents have been invited to visit the hospital and in- Esther Court 13 Holds Gathering . | and the Grand Court, Order of the Am-| | Also attending will be Mr. Ptah | lert, Mr. and Mrs. Harley Bow- ers, Pierre Shaver, Mrs. Gretta Scott, Catherine McCrindle, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Pearson and Mrs. Roy W. Wilton. | A special meeting will be held at | the Roosevelt Masonic Temple, | May 28. “You never used anything as good!”’ Mrs. Copenhaver Honored at Shower A pink and blue shower honor- ing Mr. Gerald Copenhaver was given recently by Victoria Thomas and Mrs. John Graham at the former’s home on Owego drive. Twenty-eight guests including the honoree’s mother, Mrs. L. T. Erick- son, attended. FOR PRECISION SEWING AT LO W-LOW PRICE SINGER ‘99 This famous SINGER* Round Bobbin Sewing Machine is now an even better buy than ever before. See the new features such as: e Dial Tension ¢ Hinged Presser Foot | 145 e Back Tack Stitch ¢ Lightweight Carrying Case Low Down Payment _ | dare make many oP ti ti titch cee cman the” tay fame - PREE HOME TRIAL liberal Trade-in S = SINGER SEWING CENTER Listed in your telephone book only wnder SINGER SEWING MACHINE CO. PONTIAC BIRMINGHAM 102 N. Saginaw 177 W. Maple FE 2-0811 Mi 4-0050 »| are helping to carry it out. | Homemakers when the group met spect its facilities during the after- noon and evening of these days by special appointment through Saturday. Guideq tours, demonstrations of equipment and a tea will be featured on the program. Principal sponsor of this event is the hospital auxiliary. Lauretta Paul, hospital director, and Shir- ley Dovre, administrative assistant, General chairman is Mrs. P. Eu- devtayes Mrs. Gwendell Purkiss, correspondence; Mrs. C. B. Stef- fey, reception and refreshménts, and Mrs. Ralph Babbington, pub- licity. Mrs. Arthur E. Moore of Royal Oak, Mrs. | Kenneth B. Nichols of Franklin and Mrs. Cecil McCallum of Dwight avenue were ay Yd (left to right). The occasion of Sylvan Shores drive, Mrs. Robert Sutton of Lincoln | style show sponsored by the Republican Women's Federa- tion of Oakland County. photographed ble for the luncheon and fashion show at Northwood Inn Monday. IS Se ere re oe eho Luncheon and Style Show Draw Republican Women Togeth a Pentac Press Phetes was the annual luncheon and as they approached their ta- Mrs. Cunningham Heads Homemakers Mrs elected president of the Merry Allan Cunningham was Motiday evening with Mrs. Wal- ter Wharton of Illinois avenue. Other officers elected were Mrs. Dale Trueblood, vice chairman; Mrs. Clifford Barkell, secretary: | dent: treasurer, and Mrs. Wharton, re-| President, porter. recording secretary, Mrs. Edmund Alchin is assistant | Charles Crawford, treasurer. leader; Mrs, James Roddewig, rec- Secretary of promotion is Mrs. reation chairman, and Mrs. Leon-| Ley Bennett; others are Mrs. ard Barker, community chairman.} George Fisler, missionary educa- Mrs. Cunningham, assisted by; tien; Mrs, Maurice Baldwin, Mrs. John Ridgway, gave the les} Christian social relations; Mrs. gon of table arrangements and cen-| Keith Johnston, student work; . Mrs, Percy Jones, youth work; of Central Methodist Church. Officers for the ensuing year were installed recently by WSCS| and Mrs. Howard Srigiey, liter- | of the Detroit Conference, WSCS. | ature and publications. Mrs. G. Richard Jarvis is presi- | Mrs. Richard Balmer, vice | Stalled as head of supply work; Mrs. William S. Dawe,|Mrs. Russell Vessells, status of Youth Bus Caravan and showed and Mrs.| women; Mrs. Allen Palmer, mem- Smoked Elk Other smart young Cobbies $g°5 . 4O"5 tl PAULI'S SHOE STORE Serving Pontiac for Over 75 Years ~ 35 N. Saginaw St. Officers Installed by Central WSCS Mrs. Lieyd Nixon, spiritual life, Mrs. George Hartwick was in- bership; Mrs. Robert Byrnes, pub- licity; Eda Cummings, Wesleyan Service Guild; Mrs. George Diet- rich, local church activities, and Mrs. P. G. Latimer, nominating committee. tive to the board of education, and unit chairmen are Mrs. N. E. May- Harry Baker, Mrs. Harry Martin, Mrs. Irwin Brockie, Mrs. Francis Mapley, Mrs. Raymond J, Boone, Mrs. William B. Conrad and Mrs. Mrs, Arthur Lake is representa- | tag, Mrs. Pearle Kline, Mrs. G.; | Mrs. John Garrison, vice president |Chariene Deeg and Joag Wright of Oakland Park Methodist Church spoke on the Detroit Conference slides of various projects support- ed by the society. there suite or have your old ELLIOTT Modern Styling by Elliott NEW or REUPHOLSTERED From bare frame to precisely tailored cover, is thorough, exacting workmanship. Brighten your home with a new upholstered —A good name to remember. FURNITURE CO. LOCATED, ON TE, BAGT. SIDR op mm OUTS ‘ OR 3-264! set recovered by Elliott | At Women’s Clubs Installation Auditor's Wife to Speak Guest speaker for the Pontiac Federation of Women's Clubs in- stallation dinner Wednesday will be Mrs. John B. Martin Jr., wife of the state auditor general and newspaper columnist. Mrs. Martin, mother of four chil- dren and an instructor of adult speech classes, has chosen “Stage Fright"’ as her topic, based on her experiences in adult speech class- es. A state board member of Mich- MRS. JOHN B. MARTIN JR. Pontiacers Attend Alumnae Meet igan Congress of PTA, Mrs. Martin is also a member of the Michigan Society for Mental Health and Michigan Children’s Aid Society. Lois Stachler, M. A. Morrow Wed in Toledo A ceremony Saturday morning in| — Blessed Sacrament Church of To- = ledo, Ohio, united Lois Ann Stach- Movie Shown ler and Maxium A. Morrow. : Lois, daughter of former Pontiac | TO Presbyter 1ans rags Vv. J. popes “The Church of the Empty , a gown y) Cross” ; lace and nylon tulle over satin. — the ile of a film that highlighted the “riday meet- Tc Raman gp ah thence ing of the W 's A aie al Bicomfield Hii _— — | First Presbyterian Church held at The bride's was teal om with an empire bodice of lace with| Mrs. Thomas Tillson presented a smal) wing collar. Deep bands of | the film. She was introduced by lace edged the full skirt and the | the program chairman, Mrs. Rob- train, and a lace Dutch cap held | ert Boggs. her fingertip veil of illusion. | A report on the recent silver an- Wearing a yellow ballerina-length | niversary celebration of the United gown was the maid of honor, Helen | Church Women was presented by Rickner of Chippewa road, In aj Mrs. H. R. Fraser similar gown was the bridesmaid.) gre W. HL Marbach reviewed Mary McHugh of Toledo. | the program presented by Mrs. Ellen Mertes was flower girl in| Rosa Page Welch at the Wednes- powder blue, and carrying the ring | J M day meeting of the Detroit Pres- was James Morrow. byterial held a¢ the lecal church. Best mag was Themas A. irs. D. B. Eames conducted the Stachier of "Denver, Cole., the worship service. The group voted bride’s brother, and seating the to send a child to camp this sum- guests were the bridegroom's | mer Luncheon hostesses for the brothers, James und Cari Mor- day were members of the Decem- After a wedding trip to Niagara Falls, the couple will reside in Toledo. Niblick Bowler Twelve Pontiac women spent Sat- ° in Ann A attending the Receives Award [iin sacinaar aitending, the Mrs. Floyd Schoonover received | Alumnae Assn. In addition to the the Pontiac Women’s Bowling As-| business meetings, the women. rep- sociation pin for the highest score | Tesenting the various Michigan of the year when Niblick Bowling | #lumnae groups. toured the cam- League held a luncheon Thursday | PU to inspect the many new uni- at Elks Temple. | versity buildings which have been individual as | Opened or started in the past year. Reowving — Representing Pontiac were the .| Paul B, Taylor, Mrs. R. G. Gra- ‘| ham, Mrs. Donald S. Brownlee, ,| Mrs. William A. Gordon, Miss Kate _| Sawyer, Miss Margaret Steward and Miss Marion Lehner . Amvets Auxiliary to Convene in June Announcement of the ninth annu- al state convention of Amyets Auxil- iary was made Monday evening at a meeting of Region Six of the auxiliary council. Kalamazoo is the place and the dates are June 11, 12 and 13. Hostess-for the meeting was Mrs. Cari Bragan of Auburn road. Mrs. John Allen was elected as regional president, Other officers will be elected in July. ; Attends School Alpha Sigma Nu sorority attend- PTA Activities Knit Dresses ors we eee ee at 7:30 pm Carefully me i Lares ee | Hand Blocked are asked to attend. sefTh,exseunive board of Barsh Mecer. Call FE 5-1330 2 he otek for Details! oie oh Ba Se te THE whe. Knitting Needle efiied EE 2] one rents te ewer questions on the school millage 458 West Buren rou FURS seiong in ou COLD FUR STORAGE VAULTS! Moths and Insects Mean DANGER for your fine furs. Heat Ruins Furs! eam, only * 24° | See Sons as 2 2 FS Se at" . 16 emmy an TW _ TWENTY seh =e # +o. a Walks Away Southern Michigan Prison officials Trusty Walks Chester L. Root, said, He was sentenced to 2-5 years 34, @ trusty at the north dairy|for grnad larceny from Berrien farm, walked away Monday night, | County, July 25, 1952. Fel sav. \ om Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. N. of Telegraph FE 5-4500 starts TONIGHT 2 ACADEMY AWARD WINNERS BEST ACTOR OF THE YEAR! Starvng WILLIAM HOLDEN - DON TAYLOR - OTTO PREMINGER Produced and Directed by BILLY WILDER + wren tor the screen by RILLY WILDER ang LOWIN BLUM . Based on the play by DONALD BEVAN ond EDMUND TRICINSH) . A PARAMOUNT PICTURE — —AND— BEST ACTRESS OF THE YEAR! qe PSS SS SSS TOTO CCC CCC CCC CCC CC CCC CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCTTTTTTeTTteeeeeeeeeee"rrrrrrrrvvweewnewerreeervweséew"“wnevwerwvw«ewewnvererw»;weweevw«rwewewe, POO GG SESE SESS SESS eeeeeerrreereeeeeeereerererererrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr All Request Program FRANK SINATRA Prior to the making of “From Here to Eternity,” in which Frank Sinatra played such a fine part, he was in @ picture made many years ago called “THE MIRACLE OF THE BELLS.” @ priest in an. impoverished coal town. was made in 1948 and was one of the outstanding pic- tures of the year. parable to that done in “From Here to Eternity.” FRED In this picture he plays the part of The picture Frank Sinatra’s acting was com- Curb Expenses Child Star Told Court Orders Mother of Margaret O’Brien to Spend Less LOS ANGELES w#—A Superior Court judge, noting that actress Margaret’ O’Brien’s fortune de- clined $34,623 in two years, has ordered her mother and guardian to curb her expenditures stringent- ly The onetime child star.of films, now 17, will have to get court ap- proval of any expenditures ex- ceeding $500. Under California law, Superior Court has jurisdiction over the business affairs of wage- earning minors. . € * Judge Victor R. Hansen made | his ruling yesterday at a hearing jon accounts submitted by Mrs. | Gladys O’Brien, guardian and |} mpther of the actress. The ac- | counts showed that Miss O'Brien's | worth in December 1950 was $190,- 1920 but in December 1952, had dropped to $156,297. Mrs. O’Brien, explaining the heavy expenditures, said it was necessary for Margaret to keep herself before ihe public in fur- therance of b + acting career. The accoum. were approved by the court with the exception of $1,325 in charitable contributions, which the mother said she would transfer to the estate from her own funds. Ore Miners Face Layoff ISHPEMING ® — Grover Holt, general manager of the Cleveland Ciffs Iron Co., said Monday that about 25 per cent of the company’s 1,500 Marquette range workers will be laid off May 15. He said the cutback would hit workers at the | Bunker Hill, Cambria, Lloyd, Maas, | and Mather mines. He blamed cuts in steel production for the layoffs. One-third of the accidents each year on American farms occur in| | the homes. United Press Phete OUTDOOR GIRL—Complete with buckskins, six-gun and a five- gallon hat, winsome Colleen Hulsey suns herself by the old corral in Fort Worth, Texas. An aircraft worker in the big state, pretty | Colleen spends all héer wee kends in the gre at outdoors. Bob’ S Chicken House 497 Elizabeth Lake Rd., near Telegraph Rd. jas DELICIOUS FOODS | PHONE FE 3-9821 Yvonne Has Chatter Advice for Shelley ALSO DINNERS PUT wr TO TAKE OUT! DRIVE-IN |} WATERFORD THEATER || Cor. Williems Lk.-Airport Rds. Box Office Opens 7:15 | De arilo. (Gassman),"’ Shelley said sadly. “Oh; are you?” said Yvonne. “Yes, and I've decided I'm not | going to talk about it.”’ “Now TUES. - WED. - THURS. for the first time.” For Shelley to be silent on any topic .is unusual in the extreme, Based on an Idea THEY CALL WER ANGEL FACE 5 re & DAVID NIVEN - NAGGHE McNANARA But to Yvonne, it would be the most natural thing in the world. She is in demand as a film actress }on two continents, and part of her ; success can be attributed to the fact that she refuses to fell all. + * 7 | She is unique in.an era when stars reveal everything, from their | breakfast menus to their bedtime | habits. She harks back to the time when the film famous had an aura of mystery, a la Garbo. * ~ * “I don't believe in telling every- | thing about my life,” says Yvonne. “I keep my personal matters to myself and let people guess what | kind of life I lead.”’ The only time she broke this | edict was when she made a picture | with Carlos Thompson, the Argen- tine lover. Since she had some |} money in the film, she ‘allowed a romance to be blown up between her and Carlos. But she confesses that the publicity got out of hand. As for other and more authentic romances, it's anybody's guess. | She has boy friends from here to | Persia and does nothing to encour- |age or discourage reports of her | love matches. | * * “The French have a lot of fun with it,” she laughed. ‘They call me ‘La Derniere des Femmes Fatales.’ That means I am the last of the movie vamps, along the lines of Theda Bara. When I was | at the Cannes Film Festival, I had come down to the Riviera from Switzerland with some French | friends. I didn’t want them to be bothered, so I wouldn't tell people where I was staying. The French papers came out with the news that Yvonne DeCarlo was hiding out with her lover in a chateau!” —@. @ © & I saw Yvonne on her old home | lot,. Universal-International, where | she rose to fame as queen of the | sagebrush and Scheherezade epics. | Oddly enough, she was working in |an RKO picture, “Where the Wind | Dies,"”” which was borrowing U-I's massive back lot for outdoor scenes. She reported she had just re- turned from Paris, where she had made a film in French, She said she had liked the picture but hated Ne producer and told him so. Her from France was her 16th of the Atlantic. a? by Adam and Eve! ve TOM TULLY Dawn Addams PLUS Included in one ton of paper- board are 1,906 pounds of waste paper, corrugated board, and va- rious kinds of cardboard, THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 11,1954 . pieces of luggage from his plane, | HOLLYWOOD —Two glamor girls met on an airplane flying from Europe to America. One was Shelley Winters, the other Yvonne “I'm going to divorce Vittorio | | you're using your head Zsa Zsa Reveals Betrothal to Rubi Accident Victim Dies Clara Bridges, of Detroit, died to- | day COLDWATER ye 2, in ter (INS) — Mrs. in in Hollywood HOLLYWOOD ® — Zsa Zsa Gabor says she and Porfirio Rubi- rosa, Dominican Republic diplo- mat, are engaged. made to reporters yesterday while Rubirosa was unloading her 20 in’ which they flew from New York. _ Rubirosa didn’t say much of any- thing. He is still married to heiress Barbara Watton. +. Miss Gabor said she was wear- ing an engagement ring under her glove. But she wouldn't remove the glove. And she said the ring didn't comie from Rubirosa. “It's my old ‘working diamond,” she said, adding: “We're engaged, but we cannot speak of marriage because neither of us is yet free.” She has an interlocutory divorce decree from actor George Sanders. It won't be final for a year. Miss Hutton and Rubirosa are es tranged, but no divorce complaint has been filed. Zsa Zsa says she is going to: work in television here. Rubirosa said he will be around for a couple of weeks, then return to Europe. Suit Filed in Movie of Rita, Aly Khan LAST TIMES TODAY! Dana Andrews in “The Best Years of Our Lives” STARTING WEDNESDAY FOR 3 DAYS Doors Open 10:45 A. M. A thousand-mile- trail of terror turned al miinto Teh cele! tae itlaa! as the jungle never knew! Features 12:00 - 2:30 5:10 - 7:38 - 10:10 | arse sT word ut WILD AFRICAN THRILLS! RKO-PATHE, Inc the Features 11:00 A. M. , 4:05, 6:30, 9:05 LOS ANGELES # — A four- million-dollar suit has been filed in connection with “Champagne Safari," the movie account of the African hunting trip taken by Rita Hayworth and Moslem Prince Aly Khan on their honeymoon. Defense Film Corp., the distrib- wnt. brought the court action yes- y, complaining that the film has been maliciously and wrong- fully kept from the screen. The suit was filed against Beck- with Corp., financial backers of the venture, and Columbia Pic- tures, Inc. Harry Cohn, president | of Columbia, also is named as a/| defendant. Miss Hayworth, now | the wife of crooner Dick Haymes, jis under contract to Columbia, | and the pact provides that Colum- bia must give permission for her appearance in any film. ee ee “PHANTOM or THE RUE MORGUE” RARL MALDEN - CLAUDE DAUPHIN - PATRICIA MEDINA - WA STEVE FORREST cise meen as Oy RS EDFORD ee amr t eRS peattager——f 7 henner — ADDED sittin ti bd sores © NEWS PITTI \ New Lake Theater 420 Pontiac Trail WALLED LAKE On Our Wide Miracle Sereen “HOW TO MARRY A MILLIONAIRE” in CinemaScope WITH William Powell - Betty Grable and Lauren Bacall Baa a aa a. aw. \ (rere. l Waaaasaaa. Tired of HAM and EGGS? Then bring the family here for lunch or dinner. We've 100s of Gelicious, differ- ent menus. “yim™ FRIED CHICKEN or GRILLED STEAKS Prices are surprisingly low. Food surprisingly good. Serv- ice surprisingly wonderful. Scribs DINING ROOM a 130 S. Telegraph Road a ————$— “OFF LIMITS”’—Also _ “Thunder in the East”’ STARTS TOMORROW! Houpini Coter by TECHNICOLOR America’s reol-life sweethearts bring his true story to life! rts At 2:40 — 6:00 — ALSO — This Exciting Feature A DANGEROUS ERA COMES TO LIFE! 1d E \ /ANQUISHED COLEEN LYLE PAYNE: - STERLING GRAY - BETTGER | WILLARD PARKER At !: :10 - 4:35 - 8:00 ~wrrwrre* i | TONIGHT |MANNY'S "csr* We. When Ok tibeateit Rats doe “SULLY” at the Keyboard playing your favorite requests! YOU CAN'T BEAT MANNY’S FOR FUN — =-——=— - | oe = oa = — = -—_ = a . cow ew. 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