The Weather Friday: C Details page two 112th YEAR s * *& & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1954—60 PAGES MIGShootsat Belgian Plane ‘Pogo Stick’ TAKES OFF STRAIGHT UP — onstration. ~ y = _ - ? _—) + © ore ; 3 Demonstrated > aw = =5. 2 AP Wirephoto The Navy's flying “Pogo Stick,” vertical rising fighter plane, moves upward in tethered flight inside the Navy’s huge hangar at Moffett Field, Calif. The delta-wing XFY-1 Convair-built plan is designed to rise vertically and turn horizontally after it gains altitude. The tethered flight was the first public dem- Grocer Foils Holdup Men: Kills One, Wounds Other DETROIT (INS) —A 65-year-old Detroit grocer last. night foiled an attempted holdup in his store, killed one of the bandits and critically wounded the other. The grocer, Frank Pattitoni, was slashed in the side with a knife and fs in serious condition in Receiving U. §. May Expel Birminghamite Businessman Awaiting Deportation Hearings; Citizenship Canceled A Birmingham businessman is awaiting deportation proceedings today after his citizenship was canceled Wednesday by Federal Judge Arthur A. Koscinski. Greek-born Christ Nicholson, 53, of 28875 Franklin, was accused by the government of having been a Communist for 10 years prior to becoming a U.S. citizen in 1942. Witnesses testified that Nichol- son, who admitted membership for 1') or 2 years, had been oust- ed from the party in 1935 for “deviating from party lines.” Former owner of the Brown Derby Drive-in, a skating rink and a picnic grounds in Birmingham. Nicholson heatedly denied ever advocating violent overthrow of the government. He told the Detroit court that he couldn't remember when he joined or left the party. Judge Koscinski, in a written opinion filed Wednesday, said: “During Nicholson's member- ship in the Communist Party, he performed yeoman services for it and scrupulously carried out all duties assigned to him.” Under federal law. citizenship can be canceled if the applicant conceals membership in any or- ganization devoted to the over- throw of the government by vio- lence during the 10 years prior to his application for citizenship. Yoshida Delays Tour TOKYO #—Prime Minister Shig- eru Yoshida tonight postponed until Sunday the start of a world tour because key legislation is pending in the Diet. “ Oomuen'’s Tewn & Country, Tel-Heren Open every night ‘til § o'clock Remmege Sele: Daity uw. Ww * Hospital. Police identified the dead man as Eddie Forte, 36, who escaped from. a Memphis, Tenn., penitentiary in 1944 and has been living in Detroit for several years as Cleao Wilkins. The second bandit was _ identi- fied as Sam Robertson, 47, of De- troit, an ex-convict. Homicide Detective Sgt. Hiram | Phipps said Forte answers the de- | scription given of the killer of | | Harvey Hamburger, who was shot | Monday while attempting to ap- | prehend a man and woman break- jing into a Detroit coffee shop Pattitoni was sitting in his store when the thugs entered. One of the bandits knocked Soatu down and then, Pattitoni said, ‘I got mad.” The grocer drew a gun from his cash drawer and opened fire on Forte, killing him with bul- lets to the head, left chest and arm, At the same time, Robert- son seized a butcher knife and slashed Pattitoni in the side. The grocer turned his fire fled, but collapsed two blocks away with bullets in the head, chest and shoulder, In all, Pattitoni fired six shots. Each scored. Soatu was hospitalized, but his condition is not serious. with a friend, Dominic Soatu, 82, | on Robertson and the holdup man | Air Academy | Site Narrowed Down to Three Lake Geneva, Wis., Colorado Springs and Alton, Ill. Listed (From AP & UP Dispatches) WASHINGTON—The Ailr Force announced today that its search for an academy site has been definitely nar- rowed to three locations— Alton, Ill., Colorado Springs, Colo., and Lake Geneva, Wis. Air Force Secretary Tal- bott made the announce- ment, saying the three sites had been recommended by a five-man board and he must make the final choice from among them. Talbott said he would make his decision only after further personal inspections by himself and his staff and that he will study thor- oughly the problems of land ac- quisition, engineering and all fac- tors at the three locations before making his choice. The academy selection board started its search at the begin- ning of April, traveling more than 14,000 miles and reading re- ports and rec dath in- volving more 400 locations proposed by civic groups and local communities. The task of choosing a perma- | nent site for the academy was as- signed to Virgil M. Hancher, pres- ident of the University of Iowa; Brig. Gen. Charlies A. Lindbergh; Merrill Meigs, vice president of the Hearst Corp; Gen. Carl A. Spaatz, first chief of staff of the Air Force, and Lt. Gen. Hubert R. Harmond, special assistant to the chief of staff for Air Force Academy matters. Legislation authorizing the acad- emy was signed by President Ei- senhower on April 1, but the idea of setting one up was conceived shortly after the Air Force became a separate service in September 1947. Fort Custer in the Battle Creek, Mich., area had been one of the proposed sites for the air academy under consideration by the Air Force selection commit- tee. * Talbott had inspected the Fort Custer area along with Michigan congressmen and other officials. At the time of his visit, the sec- retary said he considered the area an ideal choice for the academy. Missing Brother Finds Himself for Pontiac Man A policeman in Omaha, Neb., | whose job is finding missing per- | sons, found himself recently for | his Pontiac brother and Detroit sister after a 32-year separation. Harold Bessler, 49, of 8483 Cooley Beach Dr., lost track of his broth- er in 1922, his wife Vera said today. But Harold and a sister, Mrs. M. C. Houghton, of Detroit, kept in contact with each other, Mrs. Bessler explained. About two months ago Mrs. Houghton wrote to the Omaha Police Missing Persens Bureau on the scant basis that the 55- year-old missing brother once had been in the Omaha area. During his routine work, Sgt. Leroy Bessler opened the letter and realized that the person he | Was supposed to look for was him- | self. He solved the case in a hurry by contacting Mrs. Houghton, She, accompanied by the Besslers, re- turned Tuesday night from a re- union with the sergeant. When asked what the trio did, Mrs. Bellser said, ‘They talked. years to catch up on?” ‘May Shift Market Building | for More Public Parking could then be used to house Depart explained. meters, could be installed as a and sewer facilities to allow const Pontiac may dismantle the market building at 40 Mill St., reas- semble it at another location for city use, and utilize the Mill street space for additional public parking. The City*Commission will meet in special session at 7:30 tonight in the municipal court room to discuss the proposal. The city-owned building would be dismantled and carted to another lot for reassembly, according to City Manager Walter K. Willman. It ment of Public Works equipment, he If commissioners decide to move the building, about 90 parking supplement to the 250-meter, mu- nicipal lot now under construction behind the market, said Willman. Commissioners will also consider the future development of water ruction of more housing units with- -in Pontiac, the city manager stated. ~ What else would they do with 32 trip. Jet Fighter to Governor? AP Wirephete WINS NOMINATION — Former Marine fighter ace Joe Foss, who won the Republican nomination for governor in South Dakota, tries out a T-33 jet trainer at the Twin Cities Air Base in Minneapolis. Foss shot down 26 Jap planes to win the Congressional Medal of Honor. His victory in the primaries virtually assures him of election in tradi- tionally Republican South Dakota. He was in Minneapolis on a business UN. Council Thai Bid for discuss a Thailand request land’s borders. put before the U. N. Only the Soviet Union opposed the Thailand re- quest. That act foreshad- owed a Soviet veto. In the Council's opening speech, Soviet Delegate Semyon K. Tsarap- kin charged the move would hinder peace in Indochina. He said it would interfere with negotiations at Geneva on an Indochina cease- fire. France switched from its pre- vieus opposition to support put- ting the question on the Council agenda for debate. Tsarapkin said the Thai request would only serve the interests of “aggressive circles” and the inter- ests of the United States by inter- fering with Indochinese armistice talks at Geneva. Tsarapkin was not able to pre- vent the Thai ambassador, Pote Sarasin, from speaking on his complaint. But Tsarapkin'’s op- position indicated the Soviet Union likely would veto any later resolution for a peace ob- servation group in Thailand. Sarasin’s request dealt technical- ly with Thailand, but actually Thailand was hopeful the U.N. could do something to halt the Communists in Indochina. Face From the Past To her amazement, Boots dis- covers that she is the double for a famed artist's wife, who died 40 years ago. The resemblance is so close that Jacques Pallet, the artist, is able to complete an unfinished portrait of his wife, An unscrupulous art dealer and a stolen painting add suspense to this thrill-packed story with Boots. Starting Monday in THE’ PONTIAC -PRESS ‘ Will Discuss Peace Team UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP)—Over Soviet objec- tions, the U. N. Security Council voted 10-1 today to for a U. N. peace watchdog commission to study the Indochina war threat on Thai- This is the first time the Indochina war crisis has been Reds Grab Post Close to Saigon Seize Watchtower as. French Battle Ammo Explosions in City HANOI, Indochina (UP)—Com- |munist troops seized a * military j watchtower only 10 miles from Saigon Wednesday during a se- ries of explosions at an ammuni- tion dump in one of the capital's | suburbs, the French high command announced today. | The post fell while Saigon troops | were bringing the explosions under control, French authorities said the explosions may have been the work of Communist saboteurs. At the same time a number of small advance posts outside the Vietnamese capital reported en- emy sniping in their areas. Sniping chiefly has a nuisance value and is used by the Com- munists to keep the civilian popu- lation on edge. The fighting in Indochina shifted suddenly from the northern area of Viet Nam to the central section of the state. French troops killed or wounded an estimated 200 rebels on the Annam coast halfway between Hanoi and Saigon. The ground troops received strong support from French planes and artillery. Fighting also was reported to be severe near the Annam coast port of Song Cau, about 250 miles north- east of Saigon, and Red units were under attack farther down the coast. ! State Tax Ruling | Will Not Affect | Current Rates | Ruling by the state attorney gen- eral that loca] governmental units must spread taxes on the state equalized values will not be fol- lowed in determining the current allocations, the Oakland County Tax Allocation Board decided this! Morning ag it met to study budg- | ets and fix allocations. The board said that so far as the allocations under its jurisdiction are concerned rthe ruling will have no bearing before 1955, as budgets for cur- rent action already are prepared. | New ‘34 Olds 88. Only $2,207. At least $300 allowance on any trade. 280 8. Sagi- naw, Pontiac. FE 4-3390. Stevens-Dirksen Phone Calls Tell of ‘Crucifixion’ Copy of Conversations Read at Hearing Today; McCarthy Named WASHINGTON (INS) —Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (R-Ill) read into the Mc- Carthy-Army hearing rec- ord today the transcript of a phone call in which Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens said he and the officer corps were being “crucified” by Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy. Dirksen insisted upon reading notes of his private phone conversations with Stevens after a new battle was touched off on the monitored calls issue when senators were told that conversations between the Army secretary and Maj. Gen. Kirk B. Lawton could not be made public. McCarthy and his chief counsel, Roy M. Cohn, insisted that either all transcripts of monitored calls in the dispute must be disclosed or they would refuse to allow the introduction of any calls involving them, this to thwart a probe of alleged improper activities as a Navy pro- curement officer in World War I Acting subcommittee Chairman Kari FE. Mundt (R-SD) said the transcript of the May 17 meeting would be furnished to Hensel and other interested parties but would not be made public. Dirksen then won consent to read the transcripts of his phone talks with Stevens, two last Feb. 2 and one on Feb. 25. The Feb. 20 calls referred to Stevens’ concern over McCarthy's treatment of Brig. Gen. Ralph Zwicker, a witness before the Wis- consin senator at an executive ses- sion on the case of Maj. Irving Peress, who was promoted and honorably discharged after refus- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Cool and Cloudy Forecast Friday Although showers are expected to end tonight, cool and cloudy weather is forecast for the Pontiac area Friday, according to the U. S. Weather Bureau. The low tonight will range from 48 to 52 rising to a high of 58 to! 62 degrees tomorrow. Wednesday, temperatures ranged from a low of 530 to a high of 5% in the city. ’ At 8 a.m. today the reading was 54, and at 1 p. m. in downtown Pontiac still registered 54 degrees. No Commission oT Qe ae ee 40OUN PETER KOONCE Because he was married last September, in violation of U. 8. Naval Academy rules, Midship- man John Peter Koonce has been dismissed, officials of the academy at Annapolis have revealed, He was scheduled to graduate Friday. The 22-year-old Laguna Beach, Calif., midshipman said he was married at Jackson, N. C, Midshipmen may not marry until after gradua- fl Puerto Ricans on Trial Today Charged-Adter Shooting Five U. S. Congressmen Last March WASHINGTON ®—Four Puerto splattered Pleas of innocent were entered for Mrs. Lebron and her three male colleagues — Rafael Cancel Miranda, Andres Fugueroa Cor- dero and Irving Flores Rodrigues —at their arraignment March 5. They are charged on five counts each with assault with intent to kill and on five counts each with assault with a dangeroug weapon. Jailed with bonds set at $100,000 each—an amount none was able to raise—each faces a maximum pos- sible sentence of 75 years in pris- on. The task of picking a jury may take many hours. One question normally put to prospective jurors is: Have you read anything about this case in your newspapers or heard anything about it on radio— and television too, these days— that might prejudice your opinion? Mrs. Lebron said at her ar- raignment she wanted it clearly understood why she and her young companions—ali in their 20e—were there: “I would like it to be charged that what I committed was the defense of my country.” U.S. Dist. Judge James W. Morris, who had trouble under- standing her broken English, asked whether she still pleaded innocent. “Yes, on those grounds,"’ she re- plied, Candidacy Announced DETROIT #—Thomas L. Poin- dexter, a Detroit lawyer, an- nounced today his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for degrees. Congress in the 17th district. Radio Operator Killed, 2 Injured Over Yugoslavia Freighter Carries Pigs, Makes Forced Landing in Austria VIENNA, Austria (AP)— A Belgian freight plane was today near the Yugoslav- Austrian frontier, and its radio officer killed. Two of the surviving crewmen described the at- tacking plane as a Russian- made MIG, possibly from The British Embassy in Vienna Yugoslavia. (Maribor .is about 15 miles inside Yugoslavia from the British zone of Ai ) 3 aged plane altered course for Graz and made a forced landing there."’ Arsene Devreese, one of in- jured Belgians, had two fragments in his right z He was hospitalized at Graz. The dead radio operator and the other injured crewman were, being held in the care of British air authorities on Graz’ Thalerof Air- field, where the plane landed. Although the. British Embassy here said the DC3 was attacked over Maribor, Yugoslavia, about 50 miles from the Hungarian fron- tier, the British co-pilot said the | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Teacher Saves Boy From Serious Injury Quick action by a Pontiac High School shop instructor saved a stu- dent from serious injury yesterday when oxygen the boy was working near ignited, setting the youth’s clothes on fire. James Blackwell, 18, son of John Blackwell of 346 S. Marshall St., was working around an oxygen cylinder when his clothes were suddenly set aflame. The instructor, Everett Myer, rushed to the boy’s aid and smothered the fire by rolling him on the floor. Cause of the fire is not known, school officials said today. The youth is reported in good condition today at Pontiac General Hospital with first and second de- gree burns of the arms and chest. Superintendents Buck New Schoo! Plan By HAZEL A. TRUMBLE Oakland County school superin- tendents today announced that they | amendment proposed by the Mich- will not support a constitutional igan Better Schools Committee be- cause ‘it would deprive districts of local control.’ The proposal would also deprive districts of funds they now receive, the superintendents said. By unanimous approval, the county superintendents’ associa- tion Wednesday adopted a six- point resolution pinpointing its reasons for opposing this recent- ly formed group’s ideas for | school reorganization and financ- ing. The MBSC has stated it hopes to circulate petitions to get its) proposal placed qn the November ballot. The proposition is designed | jo counter the Conlin Plan (an) amendment approved for ballot presentation this fall.) William J. Emerson, Oakland County superintendent of schools | state school authority ,of school fund distribution. Now it | and spokesman for the local super-|a_ provision intendents, stated their reasons for opposition. He said the MBSC plan would: 1—Remove substantial amounts of school revenue from 15 of % large school districts in Oakland County at a time when they are hard-pressed for funds. 2—Put in the hands of a single the power is governed by a state legislative formula 3—Freeze inio the Constitution —_—- In Today's Press Mrmingham Commies 52 County News . 2 David Lawrence eee : 6 ge Crane... ces 6 6 ‘@? thre a ; 5? arkets a 43. on, 9, 5O, MI Went Ads BD Women's Pages 4, #3 for - distribution of | money to school districts which are | now provided for by act of legis- lature. 4—Guarantee permanent advan- tage to large school districts which operate a four-year college pro- gram. Encourage large places to establish colleges and discourage | smal] areas from forming higher education facilities. 5—Eatitle certain wealthy dis- tricts to grants of monies which they are not now receiving. 6—Take away from the Legisla- ture “Policy power’’ which re- quires that districts in order to receive monies must guarantee a certain educational performance. Dr. A. J. Phillips, executive sec- retary of the Michigan Education Association, spoke before the super- intendents Wednesday and stated that the MEA is appropriating a fund to “fight this proposal” if it does get on the fall ballot; Osmen'’s Tewn & Countey, Tel-Heren | Open every night “Ml 8 o'elpek shot up by another plane | en elma 0 Soe 4 % 4 4 ? ar ie aN HAg DW, Explained to 15 Recruits by Chief Ralph W. Moxley From Our Birmingham Bureau | week approved a resolution to be BIRMINGHAM—An explanation | Placed on the Aug. 3 ballot. which of the various phases of the local | would amend the city charter civil defense program and how City Engineer L. R. Gare, the auxiliary police division fits | Mingham's representative into the overall picture was given | authority, recommended the to 15 recruits by Police Chief | ution which will provide Ralph W. Moxley ‘last night ble permits for the laying of the The auxiliary police group is ™4!"s They ape now revocable one of the first to reorganjyze under Claude Stevens, attorney for the city’s revitalized program the authority, said the change is prompted in part by last year’s, necessary inasmuch as the proj- Flint and Milford tornadoes. | eet will be financed by revenue Moxley explained that the two | bends ae over a period of most important tasks in case of s ©« »® an emergency would be handling Faculty and students of Cran- first-aid cases and traffic ditee- |b -50k School will hold their third reso- tion, ‘annual open house and tea this At such time Moxley said, “there | Saturday afternoon. Parents and would be a tremendous traffic | friends will view athletic demon- problem, inasmuch as Woodward, | strations, arts and crafts exhibits baseball game be- and Hamtramck - and a varsity twen Cranbrook High School in addition classrooms Additional Bloomficid Hills soc jal news on page °9. . labora- Southfield and Maple all have been designated as major evacuation for inspection and special band streets.’ and glee club Concerts have been He stressed the importance of) panned keeping the group active until an * ° * emergency should arise. ‘We have | planned an.extensive training pro Michaei K. Munyan Funeral service for Michael R. gram to keep active mght along, Munyan, infant. son of Mr. and he said “because interest twanes' Mrs. Donald A. Munyan, of 1395 ial Holland St., was scheduled for | Moxley said-the men will be 10 am. today at the Spiller-Gram- used at sporting events and pa- er Funeral Home, Clawson, with He Park rades. Regular monthly meetings burial in Oakview Cemetery will be held and cach man will | died Tuesday in Highland spend one evening a month rid- |General Hospital. ing with police officers in a pa- | trol car, dune 15 is the next scheduled merting date. Lewis C. Jarrendt, Oakland | County civil defense director, spoke | on how civil defense in the county ties into the state program. Local | Deputy Director Roland Reese out- | lined operations for the city, brief- | ly explaining functions of the nine Belgian Airplane other departments Continued From Page One) bd 8 : ine ident took place at Murska So- bota, only 12 miles from the Hun- garian border. The Austrian, Yugo- slav and Hungarian borders are all in this general area A second transport in the pig- lift operated by the Sabena Air Line flew on to Belgrade without ineident The Belgian Legation at Belgrade | quoted the crew of this second | | plane as having intercepted a mes- Mr. and Mrs. Orla B. Munyan, of | Troy Township, and | Stamp, of Birmingham ‘MIG Shoots Down The nine-member group within the Birmingham-Bloomfield-Frank- | lin Counci] on Community Services will make its recommendations re- | garding recreational facilities and needs for teenagers in the area, at a meeting scheduled for June 15 Charles Kass, temporary chair- man ef the council, said today the nine men and women will give their report following over ‘Stevens Phone Call ‘forehand at which Mc( tories and dormitomes will be open | Surviving also are grandparents, | press interpreted as a capitulation Richard} declared | do something jto leave it /make a , Mundt, | House aide W. B or White House aide Gerald Mor- | Used Word Crucified | (Continued From Page One) 1 ing to say whether he was a Com- | munist Zwicker complained that because | | he refused to tell McCarthy who 3ir- | was responsible for the Peress pro- in the | motion and’ discharge the senator tongue-lashed him and suggested | irrevoca- 4 that he was “unfit to wear the ) uniform Dirksen read transcripts of three calls, two from Stevens to _ him and the final one from him | to BMevens, The first, on Feb. 20, involved Stevens telling him that McCarthy | had asked him if he ‘‘would ac- cept a subpoena’ the following Tuesday and Stevens replying ‘‘I will take it under advisement.” Stevens said: “‘It wound up with his subpoenaing me for,10 o'clock Tuesday morning Dirksen said the conversation related to a hearing two days be- “arthy ques- tioned Brig. Gen. Ralph W. Zwick- er. commandant of Camp Kilmer, 'N. J. where Peress had been sta- | j tioned. Stevens had accused Mc- “Carthy of “abusing” Zwicker. Stevens concluded that day's telephone conversation by telling Dirksen: “I can't sit idly by and sce this whole officer corps cru- cifled.” The next call) Dirksen said, was | Feb 25. a day after Stevens met with McCarthy, Mundt and Dirk- | Sen, and agreed on a ‘‘memoran- | dum of understanding’ which the by Stevens . In this call. Dirksen said, Stevens “I'm going to have to| and it may | I'm not going | where it is. TI think I've been absolutely crucified and the services along with it.” Stevens said he ‘will have to statement’ and, when Dirksen asked him whom he had talked to, he said he had spoken to “Dick and Karl" and ‘Charlie | and Jerry.” He referred, apparently to Vice} ; President Richard M._ Nixon, Potter and either White (Jerry) Persons | be drastic Stevens said he feared that the | press “is going to say | was just calls Highest and Lowest ‘Temperatures “This | sage from the attacked plane say-| & yellow belly” and while he did cil was asked to take on the | ing Soviet fighters were after it. | Bot “want to do anything precipi- responsibility by a group of 30 | However the pilot of the second tate’’ be would have to de some- civie leaders, concerned over the | plane had not seen the attack and| thing. increasing juvenile problem. | knew nothing about it except what! Dirksen concluded this call by three months of study, The coun letters were presented, 20 young- | Sters received swimming awards | and members displayed skills in | | trampoline agrobatics, swimming TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUN Deaths in Nearby Communities nothing’’ position on monitored This could prevent introduction of any transcripts of calls in the saieneysy over Pvt, G. David hine. McCarthy said it is essential that records of calls involving Ste- vens, Army counselor John G. ‘Adams, and Gen. Lawton, com- | mander of Fort Monmouth, N. J., to ‘“‘break'’ Lawton because he | had ‘cooperated’ with the Mc- | Carthy committee's spy res Sey Breee: Cite ‘Witness’ on Draft Act Conscientious Objector Refuses to Do Hospital Service GRAND RAPIDS uw — A Muske- gon member of Jehovah's Witness- es today faces a federal indict- ment charging him with violating the Selective Service act. He is Thomas W. Pomorski, 2, who was classified as a conscien- tious objector by hig draft board, but ordered to report for a year’s duty at Northville State Hospital in lieu of military duty. U. S. District Attorney Wendell A. Miles said Pomorski refused to report to Northville, claiming he was @ minister and exempt from forced labor under the draft law. as a minister only five hours a week, Cecil Brown, 37, of Kalamazoo, was indicted by the grand jury for the theft of tank plans stored at Kalamazoo by Ingersoll Products Division of Borg-Warner Corp. Theft of checks from the mails was charged to Leo L. Banach, 41, Pa Grand Rapids; Peter Kalleward, of Kalamazoo, and Francis J. id 58, of Kutaw Johnson, 26, of Newbern, Tenn., was indicted for the trans- | portation of a stolen car from Gary, Ind., to Battle Creek, Mich. 200 Attend Open House, Induction Program at ‘Y’ An estimated 200 persons at- tended the Pontiac YMCA second annual open house and induction program Wednesday night. During the 2-hour program “Y" Mrs, william Herfert ARMADA—Service for Mrs. Wil- liam (Julia Frances} Herfert, 75 of 74551 Spencer St., will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at A. M. Tiffany Chapel, with burial in Willow Grove E, 3, 1954 Home, Clarkston, with burial in| Lakeview Cemetery. He died at | home Wednesday. | Surviving besides his Edith, are two sons, Lavere of and Lyle Vinton of Clarks- widow, | od He died Wednesday in a Detroit traffic accident. Mr. Baker was president of. the Oakland County Crippled Children® | Society as well as a member ol! several other organizations. Sur- | viving besides his widow, Jean are two sons, Phillip C. Jr. and Brian D.:* his parents. Mr, and | Mrs. Lyly E. Baker; and a broth- Cemetery. She died Monday in a | ton; two daughters, Mrs. Marcellus | €!. Richard, of ee, Ot Naya Oak, be introduced to prove his charge | Mount Clemens Hospital after an that the Pentagon officials planned extended illness. Surviving besides her husband | are two sons, Carl of Almont and | Harold of Davis, four step-grand- | children and eight grandchildren Hugh McBurney CASS CITY — Service for Hugh | McBurney, 80. who died at a hos- pital here Tuesday, will be held at 2 p.m. Friday in Douglas Fu- neral Home, with burial in Elkland Cemetery. Surviving are two sons, Morton of Rochester and Wesley of Cass City; a daughter, Mrs. Mavis Mi- nard of Ortonville; two brothers, William of Cass City and Armand of Bellegrave, Ont.; three sisters, Mrs. Richard Bayley and Hollis of | Cass City and Mrs, Frances Gra- vatt of Houston, Texas; nine grand- children and four great-grandchil- dren Mrs, Joha Y. Brown CASS CITY — Service for Mrs. John Y. (Theresa Marie) Brown, 74, who died at a hospital here Wednesday after a long illness, will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday burial in Elkland Cemetery. Surviving besides her husband are three daughters, Mrs. John Guinther of Cass City, Mrs. Archie MacPhail of Detroit and Mary F)- len at home; four sons, Charles and Willis of Greenleaf Township, and Donald and Emerson of De- troit; two sisters, three brothers, 26 grandchildren and 14 great- grandchildren, Henry E. Young ROYAL OAK—Service for Henry E. Young, 73, of 616 S. Wilson Ave. will be held at 1 p.m. Friday at Kinsey Funeral Home, with burial in Oakview Cemetery. He died Wednesday. Surviving besides his widow, Ma- tilda, are a daughter, Mrs. Eugene Nelson of Royal Oak; three sis- ters, two brothers, five grandchil- dren and one great-grandchild. Clyde E. Cushman WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Service for Clyde Emmett Cush- man, 77, of 9566 Bonny Briar Rd., Pontiac Lake, will be held at 2 in Holbrook Methodist Church, with | B. Wiesler of Los Angeles, Calif. i= Mrs. Claude A. Crusoe of | Northville; and ten grandchildren. William M. Bradicy | HOLLY — Service for William Merton Bradley, 47, of 202 Oak- rand St. will be held at 2 p.m | Saturday at Bendie Funeral Home, with burial in Lakeside Cemetery. Hospital, Ann Arbor. Born in Illinois, Mr. Bradley was a Holly resident for the past 20 years. Surviving besides his widow, LaVon, are his father, Albert A. Bradley of Payne, Ohio; a daughter, Mrs. Marjorie Addis of Holly; jand two grandchildren Julius Valentino HAZEL PARK—Service for Ju |lius Valentino, 28, of 450 Sonoma St. will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at Ashley Funeraj Home.with bu ria} in Roseland Park Cemetery He drowned Sunday in a Northern Michigan lake. Surviving besides his widow, Betty, are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James V. Valentino of Detroit. She died Wednesday. Surviving are two daughters Mrs. Albert Mongeon of Ferndale and Mrs. Fred Moore two sons, Howard of Flint and Har- old of Tucson, Ariz.; and three grandchildren George W. Horn FERNDALE—Service for George W. Horn, 61, of 3016 Horton St. was seheduled for 2 p.m. at Wessels Funeral Home, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. He died Tuesday in a_ Detroit hospital. Surviving besides his widow, Hil- da, are two sons, Francis of De- Md.; and a grandchild. Phillip C, Baker ant St. will be held at 2 pm. Saturday at Spillgy Funeral Home, riew Cemetery. He died Wednesday at University | a sister. Irma of Payne; | Mrs, Katherine Hillier FERNDALE —Service and buri al for Mrs. Katherine Hillier, 79. of 285 W. Breckenridge Ave. will | be held Saturday at West Branch. | of Flint; | today | ROYAL OAK=Service for Phil- | lip C. Baker, 3, of 301 S Pleas- | 2 Novi Townsh Township Men Are Arrested Two Novi Township men at being held today in Oakland Count jail for dnvestigation of breaking and entering of the Dr. Goldberg Day Camp at 41390 W. 10 Mile | Rd., Novi, early today. | Oakland County Sheriff's depu- ties arrested Gene Hill, 43, of Ten | Mile and Beck roads, Novi Town- | ship, an employe of the camp, at. |his home, and Hill implicated Ward | R. Drouillard, 35, of 43771 W. Grand tiver Ave., Novi | Drouillard directed the deputies to the home of Kenneth H. Hopkins of 19320 Gerald, Northville, a junk dealer, who said Drouillard, Hill and another unidentified man_ left tools and a .22 caliber mfe and two small portable motors with him. Hopkins is not being held The tools and other articles left ; with Hopkins have been identified as those stored in a shed at the camp. A door hasp was broken by thieves for entry, deputies said Pontiac Deaths Edward A. Raduchel Word has heen received here of the death Wednesday of Edward | A. Raduchel, 76, in Snover. | Mr. Raduchel lived in Pontiac 10 | years before going to Snover, and | was employed at GMC Truck and Coach Division. At that time he resided with his daughter, Mrs. John P. on Oliver St. Thomas, | J ‘. t |} Surviving are his widow, Esther, whom he married in 1910; Mrs | Thomas and anether daughter, | Miss Margaret of Pontiac; three | brothers, Herman of Marquette, troit and Thomas of Baltimore, !the Rev. Gustave of Lapeer, Rob- ert of Snover; a sister, Mrs. Paul- ine Fairchild of Pontiac Arrangements are by the Mavis Funeral Home of Sandusky. The body will be taken to the Evan- gelical United Brethren lanes at 112 30 —— for service at 2 ish m. p.m. Saturday at Sharpe Funeral with burial in Oa | Pa ing Witnesses Tell of Night Breakin Three Pontiac Women Charged With Burglary of Restaurant Three Pontiac women charged with nighttime breaking and enter- were implicated by witnesses » & cuit Court today who said t saw ¢t n force thetr way to a restaurant at. 490 S. San- ford St. April 22 Buddy Sabourin. 16, of 352 Com- munity Ave, told the jury of six men and six women that he and two companiion watched the break- in from he back porch of a nearby home and called police after the women entered the building. Charlotte M. Guinther, 27, of 77 Douglas St., Martha Hols- worth, 21, and Claudine Carter, 1%, no known addresses, claim they saw three boys running from the building and entered to investigate. Oukland County Assistant Prose- cutor Homer George Gerue called seven Witnesses to the stand be- fore he rested the state's case this morning. Defense attorney Mitchell L. Ba- cow said he expects to call three defense witnesses today before Judge Frank L. Doty turns the case over to the Jurors for a verdict. ‘. Arresting officers testified today that they arrested Mrs. Guinther and Mrs. Holsworth inside the res- taurant and confiscated quantities of candy and chewing gum. Miss Carter was arrested while wait- ing outside the restaurant in an auto, police said. The three are free on $500 bond. Jackson Officials Visit Pontiac to See City Hall Jackson City Manager Joseph Warren and Mayor James House were in Pontiac Wednesday af- ternoon for a tour of the new city hall conducted by Pontiac City Manager Walter K. Will- man. Jackson is in the process of planning a new municipal build- and the officials were in- terested in learning from Pon- tiac's experience, Willman said In the morning they inspected the Royal Oak City Hall, Will- man | adde d he had heard on the rad) we ; 2 5 The action was prompted by the ae cate a plone eae been | | saying Let me call Kari. and handicraft. temporary closing of the Commu) oo ine pies rem Hickey 10 Be The fina} call, on Feb. 29, was| One of the highlights of the nity House Ranch Room, used by ‘ x os eee - opened by Dirksen saying: “I had | program, a handicraft display un- | a hell of a time rounding the -m | evidently members of the | for a meeting. Dirksen said that “‘not a emul’ | | knew about it but Stevens repligd | | that “they will probably have some | scout photographers around.” ' wrade for the use of the ea ° owing ar uungsters . Ing . government since May 24 ip’ — of rowdyvism there in anuary Th. . . : {| The incident came while Prest- | subcommittee dent’ Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia | Was on @ state visit to Greece ; Yuyoslav outbreak ~ A special service at 4.350 p.m. to morrow, will honor all the men who have worked on the new First | “ Presbyterian Church building Fol- Drunk Driver Pays Fine lowing the service, refreshments BIRMINGHAM — } . Appearing be- Senators were informed that > served in the social hall. . will be ser = : “ ot ae . fore Justice John J> Gafill yester conversations ee Army poi Reg’ : day, Russell E. Dubois 26. of St retary obert . Stevens a ular June bevieres morting Clair Shore aha Maj. Gen. Kirk B. Lawton were | ot the Birmingham Business air Shores, pleaded guilty to a |charge of driving under the fl blacked out. Women's Club will be held to- ‘ g under the influ night at the Community House, | °OC° of liquor He paid a $100 © Army special counsel Joseph N Dinner will be served at 6:30, | 'De Welch said the Stevens-Lawton with the business meeting to fol _ — calls were covered by a_ presi- low. The speed with which 3.000.000 dential secrecy order for bidding | ° Passengers are handled daily on | inclosure of conversations between | To facilitate the construction of British railways is attributed to. members of the executive branch water mains for the Southeastern | the compartment type coaches with | of the government. Oakland County Water Authority their numerous doors. the great Sen Joseph R McCarthy and | project the City Commission this "UMber of alternate +trains and his chief counsel, Roy M_ Cohn: | the method of collecting tickets) then made it plain that they re- after passengers leave trains fuse to depart from their Dearborn Man Held; depart trom their ‘Examination Demanded Rd. der the direction of Harvey Gris- | wold, crafts instructor, will be on display Saturday from 8 a. m. until noon for persons who were unable to see it last night. on Rubber Check Charge Albert Moye, 17, of 312 Fisher | demanded examination on a| bad check charge Wednesday be- | ‘fore Municipal Judge Maurice P. | Finnegan, and was remanded to, | Oakland County Jail after he failed | to furnish a $100 bond. Examination of Moye ona charge | of cashing a $28 bad check May 17 will be held June 16. Anne Dudley Bradstreet, Massachusetts Bay Colony, was for Two Breakins We don't want to start a ‘price-war’ BIRMINGHAM — A Dearborn quality, long-wearing MATCHED UNIFORMS that will bring crowds man is being held by police for srraigoment Sxlunias before dius “STURDEE” d tice John J. Gafill, He as charged Nationally Advertised Bran with breaking and entering in the at two Birmingham es tablishments earls Tuesday nghttime Three typewriters 11>) ballpoint several blankets and sweat and other items were taken w hreakins ats the Forbes Printing Ca. flo FE. Frank) and _. NOT ‘Off’ Brand... NOT 2nds.. . NOT Re Napkins aun No 7 f _ fs Close-Outs—Every Carment trom Our ra — ‘el Regular Stock. Specially Priced Det | { John tra ££) SS Friday and Saturday find his aba = 41 ‘ ed " 5 , ‘y! | we with the certainty of complete satis : oo | \\/ . \) faction. Fully guaranteed both by the famous . mul t af \ fam maker and by SIMMS. ALL SONFORIZED, Birmir ! t wade A 1 J washable fast color yt {f the typew. rm oon a _ police tele I f;agor has d ! brea Our Regular S229 VALUE—*Sturdee” Brand 1 lens Our Regular 82.88 | ALLUE—*“Sturdee” Brand PANTS 17 Sizes 29 to 42 NOW—These Will Return to The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY —Clouds and cool tenight with showers ending this evening lew © Ita Briday mest! cloudy and cool high %& te 4 Winds shifting nmertheriy | te 2! tenight and Iridar Tedavy im Pentiar l Si 7 we nae " All Sizes 14 to 1 At i x a 4 f siar Brey ¢€ z twiil Ore type Direets r * ea ' butfor tlap pockets, full a +4} Cy ! Su et Friday a a lengt ta ved for full ease Moon ‘te T aya 4 and mmrort foon ri Fricav at & a temprrature Weather—Partiv clouc be One Year Aco in Pontiac Highes: temperature a Lowest temperature + Mean temperature eeneGte 66 Weather—PFair BUY D ad . Date in 8% Years Requlor Pri Monda ' 06 tm 1895 39 im 1926 9 ces on y Wednesday's Temperatere Chart Battle Creek 62 51 Los Angeles 77 62 — Bismarck 46 41 Memphis ae 62 Rrownevilie 92 16 Miami a4 (74) . Buffalo 63 $2 Minneapolis 65 49! Chicago 63 81 New York ao «(62 Cincinnati 2 61 Omahs 67 $1 Oenver 47 4 Phoenix 100 60, Be Detrott 67 68 Pitt«burgh 65 80 B R '@) TH E 9) $ Ha Se 46 Bt. Lowi . TY ail 4 63 Traverse City, 60 49 ' > We ton 44 Baltimore “83 & . Kenees Chis 79 54 Tampa a7 6 98 North Saginaw Se. of thrifty buyers this week-end. Fully Guaranteed of the | For the beach, country club . | | “all or ‘the first voman writer in America. | = SERIES aE | and LOWEST PRICES on Matched Uniforms in Over 10 Years! | but we are determined to maintain our reputation fer the BIG- GEST BARCAINS IN TOWN on men's work clothing. Here's a typical savings on famous brand, - | | Matched Shirts & Pants . . . and Robes by Rabhor Will Make Father’s Day Remember! a Day to Long RABHOR’S MOORESVILLE TERRY CLOTH ROBES . or a step out of the shower—Rabhor’s famous thick thirsty terry robes—unconditionally washable in a smart array of colors—White —Yellow— Blue—Red— $10.95 RABHOR’S NEAT WEAVE ROBES A smart distinctive robe in beautiful stripes . and washable too . in durable cotton seersucker . and just about the best lightweight-type robes he'll love for hot summer wear— $6.95 Rabhor’s Mooresville Washable RAYON ROBES He'll look and feel like a millionaire in one of these rich-looking Rabhor robes made of completely washable rayon fabric wrinkle resistant . and fast vat colors. Attractive plaids in many wonderful colors. $10.95 Serve You Two Fine Stores to DOWNTOWN STORE 51 N. Saginaw OPEN FRIDAY "TIL 9 P. M. OPEN TIL 9 P. M. 4 every father has HIS day! Better! TOWN & COUNTRY EVERY NIGHT Tel-Huron Shopping Center — nn en —— ae a a ee ey THREE_ - THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 3, Ios MAKE ay : ; | of the trio fired into the air. ini ; | Grand Rapids, The institute if - Ev. Farm Operator Old Landmark to Go , —— Peerene Fate | | Sas dice a Gack Shieksand '75 Ministers at Institute oe ee curse” in problems | el. ate . . | FREMONT W& — Members -of | hootin ire arm | GRAND RAPIDS w — Some 75 facing pastors b George Coen, M ust Rebuild | the Fremont Grange have decided , "SON, 9 . cam, me ee | Christian Reformed ministers from A ° W ll to sell their 61-year-old, two-story: AYSON, Ariz. &—When three | ning Coen, 30, went home for his! the United States and Canada are| Extra parts for automobiles are ncient a | brick Grange Hall which they built | um slingers tried to shoot up|own guns and, in a scuffle, 36 attending a four-day institute in|called spares in Britain. ¢ LEXINGTON, Ky. w—A farm | in 1893 and build a smaller, modern | this cattle town, they forgot about year-old Ralph Garrells was shot | ; structure on a new site. The old) the new firet alarm. lin the hi : eee =e Poms with the | Grange Hal) has been a local land-| The rats is stead shots in ‘sapid | Prsadie was hospitalized. And | P ‘ La umpty-Dumpty ta of putting | mark. succession. That's exactly what one | peace canie back to Payson. } SALE Prices Every Day at Simms = the wall together again. | — j Until 10 P. M. er | and SUPER - SPECIALS for Plies | FRIDAY and SATURDAY Rewtim| Sm DRUG DEP’T. SPECIALS NOT a Pint... NOT a Quart... but a ANOTHER SHIPMENT ARRIVED! Mereworth Farm was ordered to rebuild a historic stone fence, us- | ing the original stone. Its explana- tion that the stone is now buried in q road bed and in the walls of a home wasn't acceptable. The farm filed suit yesterday for a declaration of rights after the heirs of Joseph P. Dolan, who owns the farm, threatened to can- cel Mereworth's 50-year lease un- less its terms were met. The pre-Civil War fence circled the 269-acre farm. FRIDAY — SATURDAY — MONDAY NIGHIS LADIES WEAR Everything You Need for | Repeat FUN in the SUN] of a ~Lower Priced at Simms! Sell- Out! FULL Y2 GALLON Ideal for Small Lawns—14-inch ; Coconut Oil = Plastic POOLS | Self Sharpening -- Ball Beari Plastic POOLS rpening ng | C Ideal for | 44x36 $95 ~ Regular $14.95 Value! } . Pontiac's 2 | <4 $ | Hard Water ( Inch | ~ we T ] 88 Billows and billows of | Durable plastic provides hours | : ~ es i ee cleansing and health- ‘ ‘ 2 ow F ful suds. Big family atte . i _ size at a record low Operation and long life — - NEW SHIPMENT ARRIVES! : Reporter Declines Story, | Great Style Mayor Gives It to Paper Selection! LINCOLN, Neb. u—Veteran Lin- WASHABLE coln Journal City Hall reporter Phil Wadhams passed up a story yesterday. So it fell to Mayor Clark Jeary to see that the paper got it. The story was about a resolution | the City Council passed congratu- | lating Wadhams for his ‘‘consist-| ently high plane of reporting on) city affairs rendered since 1913, | and the spirit of honesty, integrity | and cooperation which has aeess} characterized his work.’ 4 Cotton Frocks Sizes 12 to 20—16'% to 24% yt a 2 for $5.50 hour ial door | 2S eS AMERICAN MADE! 8 - inch enjoyment tor little tots all | joy . Ss . rubber tire wheel, 4 blade self- 9) Summer ion é. sharpening reel, tool-stee!l bed 47x37” Plastic POOL 98, Complete with pump ... knife, full ball bearing for easy 75x48” Plastic POOL — With 9 inch Sides...... 5 Blade Reel—Ball Bearing—Full 16-Inch Size 16-Inch Lawnmowers Solid Rubber Tires Every dress guaranteed a co: ‘best “yy ° a e . . _e@ e e * e ° * * . an | ° : - | : EY) i : ° . j e + e great value. Many styles, Simms Main Floor — $ 88 ° ° ° many colors. Ideal for home SPECIALS .p! Quality 250 Tablets & Full Pint $ 100 Tablets $ vaieieniag iii ; BREWERS ° ° © MILK e PYTIT IIIf) Friday and Saturday Only i 10-inch wheels, ‘5 - blade YEAST ° 70 fe s ° — 3 Cut-O Retractible Ball Point cutting reel, spring cap oil- e * + Ski ve wt PAPER-MATE ers, self-adjusting ball bear- c: ° ° rae “MOBY DICK” ings. American made : - ° Pp E N SWIM FINS sa eae ont Full Pint $00 Tablets 60c Size c $439 95 uxe Quality OJIBWAY 1ODIN SYRUP , | ; | Lawn Mower | BITTERS RATION OF FIGS Child's a t | 98 Sizes Sizes , $ 1 == 98: 39 f Swim “like a fish” — faster, | Ty $ ' easier and better. Snug-fit, | adjustable strap. Anyone can Quality : : : Regular $1.69 learn how the first time they ; @ a. | It the ta use em. Easy running. 5 blade. ball 4 /| . . | mous PAPER- bearing mower with all de- 4 pts t oer COMBINATION SPECIAL if luxe features American 4 : : j pond a hes sie Matched Sets |] made. . ° ° . : ; proof and “me MASK and FINS : : 2 ¢ : = _ proo o . e | + eehern — | A {{@ tnd $1.00 Sixe $ 70c Gauntlet ¢ Bottle of 100 & Giant Size ; : ankers, uni- . Pt | Pridey oa . = BROTHERS in come : pope e A.P.C. 8 LL | : Set. only ° rf 4 Why poy more? Full bottle of }( ~—-—— [jb J | sane ‘Abele $7.95 ? | F H T 100 5-grain Aspirin Tablets ot = iy osiery Lees ' tien es | Provides unsinkable safety for aca Ae $1.00 Logi —— = ci ahis low low pics = ame . cL , oy tor parents. All with ad belt ane ee — — ven. 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Over 1,000 pieces including shower curtains, kitchen curtains, drapes, etc, No limit—buy all you want Pestroy 6% DDT Insect Killer Full 3 9 c Quart 6% D.DT. Coating for a doors. etc. Kill flies, mosquitos roaches, moths and other in- sects naw cenuecacaencnersedsskesewsecuees REDUCES AIR BORNE GERMS Special Purchase! 12 Oz, 5 < Plastic Bedspreads . Sprayway Room Ss Saw. | $ 29 s ee . > ; Zo | —: er T Deodorizer Bomb B Ss7Stg 2. REGULAR $3.00 VALUES! Choice of florals or solid colors. Protects and beautifies any bedroom. No limit—buy all you want. S.; {Ke BROTHERS In Assorted age Eliminates offensive room. Your choice os "de Cc pene. Large 12 ounce spray SIMAS.£.. 98 N. Saginaw St. —Main Floor | 1) Yes, you save $4 on this tent when you buy at Simms. Standard 5 x 7-foot size—3'2-foot tall. Heavy waterproof-treated canvas for use in all weether. Ideal for camping trips and inexpensive enough so you tan afford one for «BS | MAS § the oe ahora batk-yard fun. Our supply is limited——we urge proript action because there will be no Sports Dept. —ind Floot more at this low price Tax Ve ntti we gt PO Es Feeney: & __THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE. 3, 1954 “4 | that more won't follow. Commu- regrouping of forces, policing of| mats have insisted from the be- a | nist lope saw kids —_ the neva arley ports, watching Red China's fron-| ginning that there caf be no cease- a vaun ue shirts rocks . : . tral : Youths to Rally Saturday tet vitor, om mpvet Le ene on a a needy to supervise’ implementation . . u av. yY government's main building during P t 5 -“.@ « of agreements reached in Geneva. in | ansion | BERLIN (INS)—Some half mil- carefully patrolling the streets as|the June 17 riots. S$ a gain The new difficulties were regard-| Western of fi¢ials argue that ; ; ‘lion East German youth—members | their- comrade members parade| With this in mind the Commu ed as extremely serious in view |Communist nations cannot be neu- é . of the Commuhist ‘Free German | their strength. Carrying the usual | nists are constantly taking pre- ; of the importance attached to the tral in a dispute where one of the j Barns Hold Industrial | Youth” organization — par TE pecan calling for peace, 4n-| cautions to keep the youth in line. Delegates Deadlocked policing problem. Western diplo-| parties is Communist. : | through the streets of East Berlin | nounced Communist theme of the| But, despite all these measures, cos : A Classrooms, Lily Pond | e lake — with a combined popula- ° j Agreement on this key point ap- : : As part of the plan to keep the | e p tion of about 13,000 — bought a 20- ; And striding with thei 2 0g0 ane Isp ay peared remote as the nine-party ‘ . @ ; de x w r com = e cs room mansion, complete with a youngsters on the Communist side, : Far Eastern conference prepared | V $50,000 pipe organ and six fire-| Red leaders have prepared a pro- | aed Gita wane Pes H Id | id H for another secret session today. | is tops * Mt places. Tt ts on a Tii-acre ‘site| ram of sports, folk dances and rights to train and fight eid inside angar The deadlock developed at yes- f that includes four barns. movies, among other activities. pt sn’ be ght along terday’s closed-door meeting when | ee¢ er. ; ‘Three months from now the man-| Bat Western officials expect is Pg bole lah a oa = —| HELP — Prince Wan Waithaya-| Russia insisted that the Commu- | WV sion will be the elementary school! gee several hundred thousand of Behind the scenes, diehard Com- siete vy s Fly he kor foreign minister of Thailand, | nists must be represented on any ty : for about 256 youngsters. There! ihe Communist youth will sneak | munist recruiting agents will put yest ea the _ on en said his country would ask the UN | truce supervision commission. The | ' > will be nine classrooms. across the heavily guarded sec- the pressure on the Communist monstration a vertical t to send a peace-observation com- | Western Powers firmly said no. be . Fe a | tor border to peek at life in free | juniors to join the People's Police, ga gle t es te muttee to determine the extent of | ee m4 VM {; pehee on aay vecome «| West Bertin. | or Volkapolizei. This force is So- | tethered flight ineide the Navy's] "4 threst from bedochina | Molotov : fiasen igen ity of O il 9 P. M. Friday! ouse and someday may become a = : — i ov reflec rity 4 gymnasium. High school classes Western youth organizauions are a Oke cine Foote, ater huge hangar once used for the problem when he told the con- pen ll e i¥Be ru ay. : in industrial arts will be held in| preparing to meet any of the | Sl = ae. walienal : arts workshop. the —_ way of life. | fired from his job and when he | Cables prevented him from turning eal ice di ' ‘ posed agency. — 4 Greenhouses and kennels will be | British, French and American | ‘Ts to find @ new job, the state- A inta ‘its ~~ horizontal dive lice oe cis st Another difficulty arose yester- pe! . biology and botany laboratories. | : i hand at | Tun employment offices and plants ight position, experimental ’ n a day when Pham Van Dong, vice } e ‘ ; The vast mansion kitchen, with its| SOUS, "Olvmpic Stadium on the tl! refuse to help him. So, either [Plane rose oa hgh as 100 feet. | Fre Dense oe rainy. wnich ya [Premier of the Communistied Vie] ERE pantve “s three pantries, wi ; A pi F he joins, lees lest. ane y , minh, dec neu- 4 ters for the dietitian who serves | Western side to entertain during & deias, or he Bees to the Went veloped, it will allow large vessels | Scheduled to remain open until aft- tra; nations supervisory commis- 4 all district schools. The 50-cabinet | track and field exhibition arranged And many are choosing the (to carry their own air cover, and|¢r Labor Day, is an animated map | sion should be given only one task our le $s linen room will be a storeroom.| in competition to the Communist-| West. Since May, 1960, approxi- | give infantrymen cover from small showing best routes to travel from —controlling the entry of arms | y £ : The lily pond will become a sand | planned athletic events. mately five full regiments of the ‘cleared spaces right behind the ned Dewroit area eid spot iM /and troops from the outside. pile. Is, resigned | Yaunted People's Police have | front lines. the nation. Also scheduled Sunday| He got quick support from Mol- 9 f E’ Nobody has yet figured out just | tome a ant oe Paced fled to freedom, a total of 9,628, is the first public showing of “‘Dear- otov, but France's Foreign Minis- can t eet, y exactly how to use the pipe or- | with a gigantic tug-of-war for the | Imcluding high ranking officers. The Suez canal is about 100/ born Holiday” a Ford-produced va- |ter Georges Bidault declared that 4 gan, complete with chimes, so it) miles in length. It wag opened in| cation color film showing the city |the commission should control all rot will remain undisturbed in its first-| "ads ef young East Germans, The Kremlin isn't fooling itself ' 1969, as a vacation and holiday spot.| phases of a cease-fire, including | rr floor room. | also are planning additional ———_—_—________ Seinen. The entire remodeling cost will| events to attract the youth. , 7 be around $50,000, school officials; But the West faces a tough task. ° ‘ say, and the result will be a facil-| Patroling the rank and file of ror | ity worth $300,000 without counting | Communist youth will be the elite gore Crown Dad With a Gift’. - the land that may someday Pro- | corps — the nearly 200,000 truly e kinds of elastic to give com- bequeathed the estate to Western | Reserve University, which sold it | to the school board. i. { her husband 10 years earlier. She | ' { The youngsters will be the | watchdogs of the organization dur- | ing the rally, taking roll-calls and | 20th, Father's Day! plete leg freedom with fine figure control. Of elastic nylon net or nylon tissuenet, ; | rayon satin classic front, i | lacy elastic finish at the | legs. S-M-L. White only, | ® | . ) Gosserd Y * Paneled so it ial ’ ’ smooths your \e tummy... \ unbelievably! | Open °til 9 Friday Night! . Seated low so be active .. . be attractive a: : yet be comfortable in it holds you the letest, most populer ection dress for summer! DACRONS! Nylon-Dacrons! in... becutifully! R: iy NYLONS! NYLON-ORLONS! UMCOSS LEB | @ Wide assortment of Solids. Small Checks : | and Famous Fishnet Check! Curved end lacy so it - @ Popular Black Rain, Waffle Checks, never. never Puckers in Baby and Bubble Type! binds your «4 legs! - >» @ Famous Lenos for cool weave and cool ” . comfort! 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Waites Men's Shop—Su eet Floor peed . ; ee a tte | : THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1954 : Hebrew University Dedicated in Israel JERUSALEM (INS) — Construc- tion of the new, $30,000,000 home for Hebrew University went for- ward today following formal dedi- cation of the site to the develop- ment of world Jewry and the democratic world. The campus, replacing one of Mt. Scopus which is cut off by Jordan forces, is scheduled to be completed in’ seven years. The dedication ceremonies Wednesday were attended by Israe- li President Izhak Ben-Zvi; Dr. George S. Wise, American scholar and chairman of the university's board of governors; diplomats, scientists, and Jewish leaders from all over the world. The Mt, Scopus campus is on the Jordanian side of the 1948 truce line. Despite the fact that Israelis are supposed to have access to the university buildings, they have been able to maintain only a small force of caretakers. Calvin College to Honor 2 Retiring Profestors | Ctudents Invest |freedom’s Anniversary GRAND RAPIDS w — Calvin . : Detroit, area Armenians will College Thursday wilt honor two| $1,000 in Stocks celebrate the 36th anniversary of retiring professors who have com- pleted a total of 80 years of teach- ing at the Grand Rapids school. They are Dr. John P. Van Hai- Girl Economics | Armenians to Celebrate their country’s independence Sun- Center, 5705 W. Lafayette, Detroit. day at the Armenian Community | Speaker for the event will be cdward Sahagian, executive chair- man of the American Committee for the ‘Independence of Armenia. Detroit Council Approves Buying Warren Airport DETROIT w# — The Detroit Com- _| mon Council has approved a pro- posal to purchase Warren Airport in northeast Detroit for $95,000. The purchase is considered the first step toward the realization of a new major city airport. The Detroit Aviation Commission said immediate improvements on the T4-acre suburban field would total $50,000. ‘ The photographic industry con- sumes most of the silver mined. ee _ ELEVEN . Wants Conventions in ‘56 CHICAGO @— Business, city and political leaders planned to meet with Mayor Martin Kennelly today to map a drive to bring the 1956 Republican’ and Democratic hational conventions to Chicago. is ; a t. uf *. ha. raed B.F.Goodric LOL ba . = Hese’s the first tise ever created to meet « woman's need for safety. We're the one most like- ly to have flats or blowouts. Because we're always running errands w school, meetings, store. SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO Dx, ‘ yo 5 re wings strops » nylon. trimmed slips —2tor’®3 Cool and fresh as angel's ... and just as heavenly with NO IRONING. Cotton plisse sudses clean, dries quickly. Camisole shoulder . White, sizes 32 to 40. 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Weists: 26-34 Gale groin line mesh supports 98 Weists: 26-38 Corset Dept—Second Floor Elastic Waistback, button suspenders. Prints, stripes, solids. Sizes | to 4 Button suspenders, comfy elastic waistback. Many colors. Sizes | to 4 9 te 18 Months Sundresses Sizes 3 to 6x Other Sunsuits priced te ... a. Boys’ Cotton Sunsuits 69° b. Tots’ Cotton Sunsuits 98° @ Cotton Plisse Topper Sets @ Honeysuckle Cotton Infen('s Dept-—Sears Main Floor monty bok SARS made for summer fun-time! washable Honeysuckle cotton playwear 69» 3” 98s 98s eeeeee 3.98 54 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-417] | Saliyadtion pucnenites ov prot Re tne eevee, *: ae ee PERE Sg. He am. tdi a y oem? . we} et. ' * re, ap he re > F & ag é . ‘ sy a sain sah i» * ° a ? > * i, > - _ ' { . : | ‘ “Svd GAO aes 2s ee oo - THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE, 3, 1954 ‘ | sid — South Céréling Poy r rene | Trap Bad Check Artist he police said. Get The company said the oil, for use 4 Goes Al With pe The Spartan Herald obliged. It| P “Where are you?” ached: the an- Thieves Big ‘Hout im causiey y ad apparently was ? 4 ong wi UGQe [set in blackface type on the front; CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UP)—A| gry store owner. DES MOINES « — They may be | — k : SPARTANBURG, S. C. @ — Sec = any, the ral ee bus dispatcher unwittingly help-| “At a friend’s,"’ said Harrison. | ‘using tank trucks now in thievery | mauled away in tank trucks. THANK HEAVENS! Most viral sy Circuit Judge J, Frank Eatmon | ‘is headline: Jurors, this 1s the | ed to trap a-bad check artist here.| Just then the bus dispatcher’s - : are acid indigestion. When it strikes ‘told jurors in a civil action they | Story You're Not to Read.” William Harrison of Bentree, W. | voice could be heard in the back- i vos a company reported to! From less than a million in use take Bell-ans tablets. They conta: i | might read any part of Spartan | Va., telephoned a store, asking for | ground. Police were at the bus sta- ,?°U* that someone took 30,000 | in the early 1930's, there are to-| the fastest-acting medicines known | burg newspapers except the ee Potassium salts are found In| delivery of some goods for which| tion pronto taking Harrison into! 84llons of road oil from its storage | | day more than 4,000,000 tractors | J14 gas Get Bell-ans today. 25¢. of the court trial they were con- | most _of the fertile soils. he previously | had _Sven a phony custody. ‘tank here in an eight -day period. | on American farms. Record DAYS Sale! tar muslin sheets peace at home and abroad.” He Te) sa =a pa “ia i mee Sie ert Improbable Situation Keeps floors shiny through even the hardest traffic a 1195 8. 88 - a QS e ah Me 83 ee 0 . “t eg. Il. : : _ - MONROVIA, Calif.» — F.C. [| 1 gallon size also avai Linen Dept, Hanchette, a letter carrier, stepped § - o available, Reg. 2.80 ....... 2.44 a mi. DS nee a “~ Maia Floor witiite : up to the-state motor vehicle office Half-gallon size, regularly 1.60 am epee 6% 1.44 ae ele ne, ter eae \ S a. p-dn nearby Pasadena to buy his H cen. anemel. i ii . | bd e new automobile license tabs His ousewares—Sears Basement Sa e e Linen owe ing new tab number—0061890 * Gal -s ed — > . \ Clothes He removed the old tab from his “9 vane nsect Pins license plate to put on the new Sprinkler 5 Spray $ one. The old number—0061890, Said sca id ae Reg. % @ Regularly 49c Yard . _ the stunned motor vehicle bureau oe 7. Doz. sd : officer, “It was ~ billion to one 1.99 he @ Smooth, Almost Lintless . | . (oO neé > | Le zkproot and Aeroso bomb in short of Or ek Gk has 2 »_ DDT, cee Ee All linen crash—thirsty and strong. Well stitched sel- handles tor ere eaagik “ol vages won't ravel or tear. Border colors of blue, .red, 6 fE ease! &-quart'! fion! 12-08 srdwood! yellow of green! See it now... save at Sears! oe your money back SEARS 154 W. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 —_— man Ocean- Flight Passenger Lacks Only Earmuffs By LAURA Z. HOBSON International News Service HONOLULU (INS)-+-Flying about | four miles above the Pacific, 1| asked if I could try on and inflate | the yellow nylon life vest — as if we'd been alerted to “ditch” | into the ocean | The persen I asked was only | W. A. Patterson, president of United Airlines for 25 of its 27 years, so permission was forth- coming | | “But not aloft,” he said. “I'l)| send one over to the hotel later.” We'd just had the life vest demonstration, mandatory at take-off on all over-water flights, and I'd asked him whether this drill might not scare the day- lights out of any nervous pas- senger. “Sometimes it does,’ he said “Once I saw an old fellow about 70. who'd never been up before, clutching his life vest im both hands for the wholé 2,600 miles, holdjng it out in front like a bouquet of flowers." That got us going on the psy- chology of fear about flying, and from memory I told him of an Use 2-Eared Hearing Aids Deaf Youngsters Get Help From Device Like Human Ear | SANTA FE, N. M. (INS) Teachers at the New Mexico School for the Deaf are using powerful “4 told us over the plane's loudspeak- | |soon,” he said conversationally. | ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE. 3, 1954 article I'd recently read some- where that put safety statistics into unforgettable terms. If a baby were born aloft, it said, and stayed put in a modern plane day and night, landing only to refuel—that baby would be 76 years old before ‘statistical death’ eccurred. “I must dig that out and read it,” Patterson said delightediy “The usual charts and tables just, don’t put it across.”’ All airlines try to forestall ten- sion of the inexperienced passen- ger. United's “Flight Information Packet,” for instance, shows a colored picture of a DC7 engine | head, with blue and red flames shooting out of the exhaust stack. “Don't jet it concern you,” the text reads. “It's. part of ‘the normal operation during take-off | and climb.” | An “alarming” change of sound in the engines is dismissed as a mere “gear shift aloft,” and using the landing gear in flight is an extra “air brake.” But these tension-pacifiers don't | always come via print and picture. | Not long ago, on another long | flight, the captain matter-of-factly er why the “fasten seat belts’ | sign had just flashed on. “We'll be running into a storm “You can see the thunderhead now, and it'll jar us a bit when we pierce it, but we'll be in the clear soon after.” i dar? It was like butting at a black brick wall, but his casual briefing certainly gave the air to many potential jitters behind the seat belts. On this wonderful flight to Ha- waii, however, nothing was jarring “two-eared” hearing aids these days to teach speed to hard-of- hearing youngsters The school has long been using | hearing aids to capitalize on what- ever residual hearing a youngster may have, but the dual-micro- phoned, dual-eared ‘‘stereophonic” aid is an innovation. Experts feel the new aid is specially valuable because it re- produces sound somewhat as a ‘“‘normal” hearer hears it. The usual hearing help gathers sound from a single source but the stereophonic device, being two- eared, picks up sound much as human ears do. Principle of the device is two microphones mounted eight to ten inches apart, Each mike picks up sound which is then relayed to the proper ear of the student in cor- rect amplification. Thus, the stereophonic hearing aid may ecuable ai deafened youngsters to hear sounds “as they are,” rather than in the same distorted fashion caused by at ‘all. I forgot about my life vest until I was handed one next day I slipped it over my head like a yellow horse-collar, fastened the tapes and then yanked down on the two pull tags In a flash I knew why our genial host hadn't let me inflate in the \plane. A loud hissing as the vest automatically sucked in air — I had fully expected that But I'd had no idea or warning that there'd also be a sound like a pistol shot right at the head while inside plane.” Outdoors, in a life raft, maybe it wouldn't sound like a firing squad or the crack of doom All of which leads to the one and only suggestion I could ever dream up for improving the deluxe DC7 and its equipment: “How’s for a nice pair of heav- ily padded yellow ear-muffs to match those trigger-happy life vests” his ear trouble. This is important to learning, speech, because youngsters tend to speak sounds as they hear them. For this reason, children trained by the new technique often learn to speak more adequately. Expe- rience indicates many will be able to attend regular school classes fol- lowing a period of remedial in- struction at the New Mexico School for the Deaf The famous circus gorilla, Gar- gantua, died in 1949, and his skele- | ton is now mounted in the Peabody Museum at Yale University. | OPEN HOUSE EVERY EVENING | 825 W. HURON | See the Latest TV Demonstrated! Get a Good \|l| useo Tv |I| HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. |] 825 W. Huron. FE 4-2525 PRICE Spec tally Priced at see eeee $2.49 Dungsrees | OD & Spring Style PANTS... SALE—25-50° off Men’s Better—Reg. to $40.00 SUITS--Cool Weaves 22° ‘SPORT SHIRT SHIRTS and PANTS to MATCH q 98 Es. 7 di Ea. MEN’S WORK CLOTHES Reg. to $6.95 CONN'S SMASH | Washable ha 1.69 Shirts, lue Chambrayl OQ 2 for $6.50 *37 CLOTHES 71 -N. Saginaw SEARS . ie] a:itla @ 1, lige od < \é@ Wa 1 Power Mowers Craftsman Gasoline Model nm cr 104.50 $11 DOWN Easy-startir 3! } engine run 4 hours on |-quart 13! “Ma gic Control” handle ad justable speed rewind starter! 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AND—with Cross Country Fence —there’s that low price tag. Check Sears 44.44 With Durable Coss Cunty CHAIN LINK FENCE ——— i, Leta AOD tA me 4 2 ‘ ‘ Keep Them in Sight... thie bee GUARANTEE Cress Country Fence ts guar- = Pere - anterd to be’ free from: lower prices on completely erected fence, lastolhalien detects im material and ed key chuck. install ! ns ee ee nk cae ie alled by Sears experts! Asrenged fer Sp cs, well on any, fence cK Fence Yard—Sears Parking Lot and Financed . —- bad —_— 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE5-A171 eee ea ee ee ‘THURSDAY, , JUN TE 3, 1954 ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS LIGHT AND DARKNESS—One of the marvels | Wednesday night in the auditorium at First Baptist of science, the “Snooperscope,” was demonstrated | Church LOOKING AT A BAR OF STEEL—To the human eye and to mind, nothing is more solid than a bar of steel. But George Speake allows t audi- which Speaker Uses Scientific - Paraphernalia ence to listen to the | ' | | | of molecules in a bar rush to Demonstrate Passages of Scripture By LULU OGDEN ! Speake saves Nowadas it i Believing that dramatic interpre. | fashionable for people to say that tations help put across the funda-| the Bible is out of date mental philosophy of religion, the “T agree. it is out of date. It Institute of Science has; is so far ahead of science that T Moody assembled a stage full of scientific paraphernalia on the First Bi: doubt if we will ever catch up with iptis it Church auditorium. platform to SPEAK ( es a magnet to begin | ' , " hee demonstrate and explain difficult’ b's Hlustrat of how everythit passages of Scripture he say leaving its imprint on the molecular structure of: the George Speake is the scientist who manipulates the gadgets and | “@!s ©! ES TSE EPEELLETS as he does so he explains and finds Over a loudspeaker he allows no inconsistencies in the passages = the audience to Usten in on the which he Throughout his talks and dem onstrations which are given each “Actually 1 the same pr night this week through Friday, quotes “rush of molecules’ a nmgnet induces within a metal rod. ciple usec his basic theme is the Biblical | put on a tape record he say admonition that men will be held Invisit et responsible for what they do on) ehanye the 1 lar rocture of earth. the tape ! the i Student's Perfect Crime at U-M Not Too Perfect ANN ARBOR A—A 21-year-old Univ f faced @xamination today Municipal ¢ } stemming from what he hoped would be ‘a » t « the theft of final examination papers Robert H. Weir. a business Gr ange ay de 1Y $500 bond administrs! net at 1anded the eXaminat In a signed confession, Weir told police he conceived the idea of the “perfect crime” after watching a imotion picture depicting one last Saturday. Setting about to steal a set of final « Dap \ \ detection, Weir found that the Business A tra! } ny Wa usually empty on Sunday He broke into the buil nashed a giass door to an instructor's office, and | 0 nation pape He told police he copied the examination 4 . before returnir them to the office. f Afraid he would forget the answers, Weir said he wrote them on a plece of paper and took them to the examination. He said an instructor noticed him copying the answers. He said he left the reom before the examination was finished and chewed up the writ ten answers. He said he then went to his room to teleph theft. He put down the receiver to answer a knock at the went back to the phone and told his father “the police } for me.” Police said they became suspicious of Weir when the instructor who caught him cheating reported his actions during the examination. one his father about the door and then just come thre the tape loudspeaker He quotes Charles F General Motors re port his behef that one will be able to plas that have left thet walls of stone when the W 1 of your Ve s played back over duce nee Kettering earcher, to day bar Vor indelible mark and mortar sup cienhce on Speake has been lecturing for six years for the institute, and as a part of audience participa- tion, picks up whispered conver sation with a “sound telescope.” He causes a bass voice to rise to a high pitch by feeding helium into the speaker's lungs. With a up SCENES “Snooperscope”’ he from the picks darkened room which he reproduces on his tiny television set within the ma chine He observes: that the cvnic has scoffed at the Bible verse which reads “Darkness and light are both alike to me Psalm 130, 12. His an- swer is that if by a finite mind man ean do what he does with the snooperscope it is easy to t eve what an nfinite mind can do Tonight he alll speak on “Was Among otber the sun- a Flood?" will the There demoastrate ultra-violet things he power of light tht the audience will than a millian volts of througn body, his finger-tips sent his blazing from Truman Cancels Talks to Work on aegis LEVELLAND 1 rer Presi dent Harry S. Truman has can- celed a speech he was scheduled to next Tuesday at a luncheon ored by organized labor here. Truman said rive spol < Expressing regret, last night he was calling off all h June and July appointments n order to catch up on back work on his memoirs for Life magazine. Because the speech was can- celled, the Cleveland Labor Com- mittee for Human Rights called off the Human Relations Institute, a joint CIO-AFL enterprise, The speech was to have been the main jevent. | showed | three PONTIAC, (Editor's note This is the first of two stories explaining Pontiac Board { Education's reasons for asking yters to approve eo 10-year tex pre gram to help pey operating costs and bulid new schoolrooms June is bustin’ out all over— and so are Pontiac public schools That's one reason Pontiac Board of Education will ask voters June 14 to raise total school taxes to 18.45 mills for the next 10 years. Schoolmen say this will build least $9,000,000 worth of classrooms about at The extra tax, schoolmen say, will also raise several million | doliars to help pay day-to-day operating costs, School officials say they just can't make ends meet, with present unless they let classes twite their size or put on half-day sessions for school building needs, | income , grow to students As Chicken Pox, Measles Zoom New Cases in County Double in Past Week, | Health Report Shows Oakland County battled twice as many new cases of measles and chicken pox last week as the before, reports showed today The weekly report, Dr. John D. Monroe, county health director, listed 160 new measies released by cases, compared with 87 the week | before. Chicken pox struck 62 coun- ty people, twice the previous week's 27 Most other diseases stayed about the same, the report showed Mumps dropped stightly: but a) few more cases of Rubella (Ger- ;man measles) and tuberculosis were found The county report, covering the whole county except Pontiac, reads as follows Week Ending Pa May May Week 22, 64 30, ‘53 Chicken pox 62 27 92 Measie 160 87 175 Pneumonia ‘all forms 9 7 RMeariet fever ] ” s Tuberculosis (all forma) & } Whooping cough ‘ ? Mumps P } a) a] | Rubella 10 f 42 Hepatitis 2 5 2 | Diarrhea 1 0 1 Encephalitis Sas 2 ® Rabies ‘in anmimals).... 3 a 0 | Mononucleosis iInfectious! eee 2 i) e| | Rheumatic fever 2 ° 1) Pontiac shared the county's in- crease in mumps and chicken pox, also released by | — showed 22 new cases | The city report, Dr. Monroe, of chicken pox last week — com- pared with only six the week be- | fore three Measles hit 10 Pontiac people, times the previous week's cases. The city report follows in full: Week Ending Past May May | Week 22, 34 30, 5) 6 ® ® 4 i] 16 21 2 0 1 0 10 0 4 0 4 1 3 Whooping " cough siatgiere 0 2 a to Come to Mackinac. LANSING up — Left out of a delegation to invite Pres. to make Mackinac hig 1955 summer capitol, Gov. sent his own President today The official dered in Washington, D. C., day by hower Island hams the Tues- 1 legislative delegation. Wiliams telegraphed the Presi- dent “IT would have been most happy to be present and join personally in extending this invi-| tation to you in behalf of all the people of Michigan, But the ernor of the state was not invited to Participate. Therefore, let me take this means of assuring you of Michigan's sincere welcome.” Frogman Now Recruits GRAND RAPIDS Up Chief 'Petty Officer Rdébert D. Massey, a veteran of 13 years with the Navy who was a ‘“‘frogman” in the Korean War, has been assigned to Grand Rapids as commandant of the mI aval R ecruiting Station. week | county health department | Eisen- | Wil- |. invitation to| invitation was ten- | KOV- | MICHIGAN School Tax Glenn H. Griffin, school board | president, points to these facts: | 1. The number of students in! Pontiac public schools (now 15,800) will jump to 17,000 by September and keep going up. Estimates show school enrollment will grow to 23,000 by 1964 2, Next fall's 17,000 students | will jam schools to the limit. Several more permanent class- rooms and five portable class- | rooms are being built this | summer. They won't ease the squeeze — just contain it, School men are renting an extra} building for two classes of children crowded out of Bagley School. Li- braries, storerooms and basements are being used as classrooms, The new building program won't do away with these makeshift rooms —but it will keep a roof of some sort over the heads of students | ] Plan What will the 10-year cost the taxpayer? Griffin says the ballot would au thorize a tax increase of 6.25 mills over the 15mil] tax limit from 1955 through 1957 and 8.75 mills from 1958 until 1964 Actually, this will be a net increase of only about 4.25 mills ($4.25 for each $1,000 werth of property) for the whole peried, holding the totaj school tax rate at about 14.45 for the next 10 years, program Here's why The present total school tax rate, 14.5 mills, debt, 2.5 voted for new buildings, and 9.75 for operating costs. The two - mill debt tax ends this year so if the 6.2>mill levy took over next year, it would put the tax rate at 18.45 mills. The 2.5-mill building tax would expire | GIFT FOR GRANDSON—President Eisenhower receives a model COHN UNDER LENSES — Photographers in 1957 — the year before the new } voted increase would rise to 8.75 mills . “We plan to byild at least 100 more grade school rooms, 10 multi-purpose rooms, a new 48- room senior high scheoj and 48 junior high classrooms,” Griffin said, | “The school board has kept its | promises to the people of Pontiac so far. “The people gave us a two-mill henge tax that raised $1,665,000 from 1948 through 1952. With this money we build 45 elementary rooms. | “They gave us a 2.5-mill building | tax to run from 1953 through 1957 —a program that will 2,660,000. We've already built 4 elementary classrooms, 14 junior high claserooms, a three-story Pon- produce | | tiaec High School addition and five temporary classrooms with that money. “We have no bonded debt. We don't want any.” Sriffin explained that the school district isn't asking for bond issues in this election “We're not labeling the extra millage we're asking for either building or operating specific pur- pose,”’ he said. ‘‘We want it flex- ible — so if building costs run |heavy one year, we can avert | some operating money — and vic includes two mills for Classrooms and two, multi-purpose | versa School officials say Qheyve a good, sound school program now. The tax increase, they say, wont | gold-plate any doorknobs. But it will let them keep on with the present program of full-day classes in safe, soynd classrooms. ja city health department report} truck for his grandson, David, from Gomer Bailey, of Denver, Colo.,| the last 17 years, Bailey has driven | selected by the meen industry as the “Driver of the Year.” Inj|a chargeable accident. United Press Telephoto more than 1,150,000 miles without I TNE EE ** ° TOPCO OPO eee ere eee eeeee® ‘go to work” & .s0@4 ess te on Roy |r) are Sen. Everett Dirksen (R-Ill); Ray Jenkins, Chairman Sen. Carl Cohn (back to camera) as he is cross-examined by special counsel Ray Mundt (R-SD); Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo) and Sen. Harry Jackson | Jenkins | at the McCarthy- Army hearing. At the committee p table (l to | (D-Wash). Ly- Member of Irish Senate Explains De Valera’s Decline Dr Goga e of leaders in the fie t Iris pendence and member of the Irish tobtography was published recently under the title “It Ismi This lime of the Year at All By OLIVER ST. JOHN GOGARTY Let me at the outset that like all political articles, this article is biased, prejudiced and tendentious say I am _ prejudiced against de Valera, and glad that he has now been ousted from power in Ireland by John Costello. I am prejudiced against de Valera because he is humorless, vain and power-loving. I have always been wary of a man who cannot smile. An Englishman once asked me: “Why, if de Valera is as black as you have painted him, is he well received by the Irish people?” I answered so “For the same rea- 1 that vou hailed King Arthur— they were both washed up De Valera was born in New York twhere the Chrysler Building now stands. Then he taken to | Brooklyn; but as _hard-to-fool Brooklyn did not think he was in- | dispensible, it was decided to send | him to Cuba. Cuba was so dilatory |about appreciating him that he was | finally sent to Ireland to live with his mother’s people sow was it was felt that an | unknown alien like de Valera should be given a chance. A humorless, argumentative char- acter witheut the Irishman's In Ireland, 'Griffith government. sentiment for land and possess- ing an incredible vanity, he was | unique. Arthur Griffith, the father of the Free State. the man who took Eng- land's hand out of the Irish pocket, was so starved for personnel that he made another ,alien, Figgis. who was born in Calcutta. chairman of the Constitutional Committee. Figgis, whose vanity and ambition were unbounded, left a loophole in the constitution which permitted a man not born in Ire-| land to become President or Prime | Minister. Through that loophole de Valera came Jeaten constitutionally by six| votes by Arthur Griffith, de Valera organized a revolution against the Thereby he Darrell | |did more harm to Ireland than Oliver Cromwell did, for Ireland now had more to lose. In 1932 de Valera abolished the Senate, stating that a unicameral government was the best of all systems. For a dictator, so it is. But in 1933 he put the Senate back again, filled with his rubber stamps. In explanation, he stat- ed that he stood where he had always stood. A wag replied: “So does Nelson's Pillar.” Recently, de Valera declared an election and went to the country | with the plank of one party this party) against a coalition which is more suitable for the, country. | The country threw him out. Even | when he contradicts himself, he is not right! I am afraid that I cannot say that the Irish do not want to be jbossed. And yet John Costello, |the new Prime Minister, is far |from being a dictator. Irish born, he is a very distinguished lawyer; a graduate of the National Uni- versity of Ireland, and holder of honorary degrees in law from the universities of Fordham, Ottawa and Montreal. The recent election was fought chiefly on the issues of inordinate taxation and the high cost of living. It is my opinion that the recent election has lifted a black cloud from Ireland. I hope it wont loom up again. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1954 MAKE UVER.P ‘ parades The 530-year-old Im ’ . Twenty mg utes later she was For ettin Tools Saves ready to repair the pump when he Reds Use Peace Gate perial palace there has been Woman Finds Justice turned loose when word got to the 9g 9 | realized he didn't have hijs tools. | TOKYO (P)—The famed “Gate | turned by the Communists into a | Bit Trying at Times . judge, who had ordered her out Man Needless Work | While he went to get m, the of Heavenly Peace,’ built 537) museum. The hilltop summer of his courtroom for interrupting | LANSING (UP}—Lyle McDonald, | thief stole the pump. ; NEW YORK Uf An absent- | ering | “I'm glad he didn't wait until years ago at Peiping for grand| palace, with its temple of 5 000 | during a hearing who manages the Warren Dunes! : ceremonies of emperors, has been | Buddhas where empress dowagers {| Minded bailiff slipped handcuffs on} Rack in court she cried hysteri-| State Park ngar here, says he's|! had the pump fixed,” McDonald redecorated and now serves as the | of the Ching dynasty, once held | a woman turned over to. him out- | cally, “Now I'm a convict — and | oddly grateful to ‘a thief who stole | or ee . rostrum for Mao Tze-tung, Red, court, now is a tourist center | side Coney Island Magistrate Court|1 came here to have somebody | the park’s outdoor pump Sound travels faster in warm air China's boss, when he views ' Peiping broade asts boast. jand led her off to the court cell. arrested who hit me in the eye. MDonald said he was getting than in cold. YOU ALWAYS SAVE AT unninghams Real Comfort In The Car, On The Beach, In The Hi PRL EU € ~~ ECPERERCE & It's the greatest idee in comfort the Medera Home § A... inoterng! Pt it in i Wrought Iron Magazine Rack pad 1 "SALE DAYS THRU SUNDAY vuneieneeeneiey by paper automobile builder =n keeps Joanie Cornelous, of Richardson, Minn., busy. The car she is | building has a Nash body, Chevrolet frame and an Oldsmobile engine j 19,000-Mile Cruise Is Ideal Way of Spending 65 Days By AL GRAHAM the ship for landlubbers, private ABOARD THE S.S. INDEPEND-| parties, etcetera. And was I go- | ENCE AT SEA (INS) — This is| ing to attend the Captain's re- | a de luxe assignment: Traveling| ception that evening? cogs 19,000-mile = from New I learned that Thomas Cook & York taking in Mediterranean Son also had a dozen employes on ports and getting = close-up of board just to make sure the pas- | =— countries such as Egypt and ‘engers had fun on shore at all | . our scheduled sto . Sunning themselves daily aboard “How would you, like to handle this American Export Lines luxury their chore?’’ asked the cruise di- ship are 450 happy passengers, €M | rector. “Such as sending two air- joying a respite from their cares conditioned trains and two air and troubles in their beloved tours into every important part of America and marveling at the India and = Pakistan, switching sights as they go along | people around from Tour 0-16 to| Every evening, as the sun Bors | 0.45, changing dollars into fifteen down, the passengers forsake the | kinds of currency and working out open air swimming pool and their | | every detail of shore trips in twen- deck games and head for the cock- I ty cone.” | tail lounges as this ultra-modern | liner ploughs through the blue , The way I felt, browsing in waters of the Mediterranean bed at high noon, I said “No | tote x Regulor $2.00 ans alas Gatk.. Ge nuusle thanks, I'll keep my own job — | I don't them.” . starts and the dancing begins .. . pat eavy ™ Ee ‘any |; in joyful competition with the | One quick pass through the on- Refreshment Set — 7 PIECE Beverage Set Big Half Gallon! ICE CREAM bingo games and the “horse deck buffet in the pool cafe later | races.” What fun! What a life! | on knocked all resolutions pertain- | They. say newspapermen “meet | ing to counting calories out of my such interesting people” and, | head. How we eat! believe me, it's a fact. This is the life! Days blend into other days. One never notices the passage of time. You ask yourself: | “What date is this?’ Yau don't | care, anyway. They say one of the | secrets of living a long life is “the | art of relaxation."’ And do we re- lax! I shall now go and have an} “el belto” at the bar and luxuriate | in the thought that the cruise is to | last 65 days It's ‘a dream cruise.’ A prosperous business man 7 sidied up alongside me at the bar a few days after we pulled out of New York and opined he'd lke to be a newspaperman himself. He remarked that judging from what he'd seen of me’ reporters don't get too much sleep “How can I sleep?’’ I countered “Here I am, going to see King Tut's tomb, Karachi, the Hima- layas, and the French Riviera | SERVICE bathing girls and the street called | Straight in Damascus and Capri All Makes. Work and Alfredo’s spaghetti in Rome Guueneed And to say nothing of what I'm seeing on this boat.” PHONE Next morning when I was hav- ing breakfast in my cabin, the FE 4.2525 | cruise director burst in. He looked at me pityingly. What fun 1 was missing! Seems the 12 H AMPTON boys and girls on his staff were setting up all kinds of fun — ELECTRIC COMPANY bridge games, canasta and — 825 W. Huren scrabble, = tours | of —— ‘Age $“FOR THE HOME| : Jest Hong Up DE-MOIST ROSE AIR-DRIER S| PRAY Seats wp meistre$ 169| , rebietion $469 Closet-style metat case. Odor- No mbing © No matt © see lese—Does not drip. Drys out Don’t miss, the greatest | thrill show on (and off) earth! Comfortebie, soft USHION | HAT a $449 mora 59° Choice with | Straw — choice of colors UG K LL RS cas, = for beach or garden weer. . 8 i t ASH TRAY Grip Action 69° Assorted Cc Suction cups end ribbed | Colors 29 see STs Tat | Sod tye ah tor pre rent ili — "24 tech ageinat cigerette Dest preot..kxtre strong = Skeedoo Spray 98° ZIPPER Aerosol type insect bomb, a DDT AMR. Moth Killer 5S ¢& Travel Bag | a sim $498 Bolt Insect — size 98° aeoue wg. | Ant Buttons 23° land 3S. thes hang wrin- Stop ant migration now—casy to use. cog wih tse spe 1 Shoo Repellent Stick 39° spece saver. Ne work ... No worry... Stop insects NOW! 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Het, tod ) ded ¢ r . ° Peet efockon, Pope ight mf S MSE Shoe White its own pan ine jiffy. \ Liquid and Paste By bd y SELLE ‘a hth Wht thy CH LBE yy WY bits GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 30 South Cass FE 5-4123 | ME fy i Ma abiidbaodiil, ‘ih hi j RBA Sse 8-DIAMOND BRIDAL PAIR 6-DIAMOND ENSEMBLE 175” 3 finely cut-brilliant diamonds in lux- uriously carved 14k yellow gold ring. 10-DIAMOND DOVETAIL SET $1.75 Whey ‘89° Located in Court House Block $1.50 WEEKLY 45 NORTH SAGINAW STREET spectacle of a lcrowned Elizabeth II and_ this | | | quered Mt a TIIF PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE. 3, 1956 \ Year for England Marked by Joys, Some Tragedy | LONDON (UP) — A year ago | the unhappy role that Neville thrilled to the woman | today the warld young proud nation joyously proclaimed ja new Elizabethan Age For Britain this first year has | been one of triumph and tragedy The blazing pageantry of the Coronation was marked -by what seemed an omen of good fate when the news reaehed London that day that a British expedition had con Everest. Today Sir Fd- mund Hillary lies stricken in the same Himalayan mountains The year saw Flizabeth her- self make a 50,000-mile tour of her empire round the world and, if ever a sovereign conquered, this young woman did with beau- ty, graciousness and a shining integrity. It was a year that saw the fab ulous Winston Churchill afflicted iby what is now generally ayreed | ‘was a mild stroke. There is gen eral acceptance here that this may have been the last year in pub lic office of this giant figure of the first half of the 20th Cen tury : | Modest, mild-manhered Roger | Bannister made athletic history as | the year drew to a close by achiey ing one of the great yoals of sport — running the mile in less than four minutes Britain's hopes of glory in the skies came crashing in bitter tragedy. The heralded Comet, first jet passenger plane in the world, was grounded after a series of mysterious explosions in flight. It was a year that saw Britain lfind an @conomic stability that | seemed impossible a few years | back. The pound sterling again be | came a strong world currency. The last traces of rationing disappear July 3 when housewives can buy meat freely for the first time in | 13 years Britain became an atom power to be reckoned with. She could not match Russia or the United States in development of nuclear weapons but she tested her own devices on the wastlands of Aus she was beat $ 50 tralia and at home ing America in converting atomic energy to electricity But the great struggle be- tween the Communists and the free world caught this tiny island square in the middle and there- in may have lain the greatest tragedy of the first year of the Elizabethan Age. As it closed there was the ugly spectacle of a widening rift be- ling periously close to assuming @ tween Britain and her American ally and there were those who felt Anthony Eden at Geneva was com Chamberlain played at Munich 3ut Britain, as always, was pre- ‘pared to defend herself if need be. On the surface she was pros perous, happy and optimistie as she had not been for years And just ahead lay another bit 'of wondrous pageantry from they past | | On June 14 in St. George's Chapel at Windsor the Queen is to invest Sir Winston Churchill with the full Tr affic Jam \s Such honors of Knight of the Garter | ,in a magnificent ceremony to be | | attended by the knights of that,| most honored eompany of_ this venerable nation. Confusing Identity HARTFORD, Conn. (UP)—A man sentenced to seven years in fed- 'eral prison on a narcotics charge just couldn't believe that a former “member” of the gang was actu- ally an FBI agent. ‘‘Why, he was such a nice boy,” he said. in All Languages LONDON (INS) — Police chiefs of seven major European cities agree that no matter what you call it the big law enforcement head- ache is the same the world over. In Germany, it’s ‘‘verkehrsves- topfung.”’ In the Netherlands, it's ‘‘verkeer- sprobleem.”’ In the U. S., it’s a “traffic jam.” The top police officials of The i — ne —————ag Hague, Amsterdam and Rotterdam in The Netherlands and of Ham- nyrg.. Hanover, Frankfurt and Munich in West Germany recently assembled at Scotland Yard ‘to swap strategies on their problems. “All big cy police chiefs in the world have the same trouble,” said Hamburg’s hulking Bruno Georges “Everything in’ a modern city has grown except the size of its streets They are like full-grown men try- ing to be comfortable in the same suits they wore as boys.” Four-fifths of Bolivia's people Llive at 10,000 foot altitudes. | ILE ENN ALWAYS FIRST Q Cotton Leno Sport Shirts 198 in air-cooling system! cause air circulates through the leno VENTILATED! Mesh Weave Men’s Combed The sport shirt with the built- stay comfortable longer be- freely weave. Te pees You Choice of smart mesh pat- terns in a variety of your fa- vorite shades. Sanforizedt and dyed for no-shrink, no- fade washing. S,M,L, extra large. Stock up during Penney's Sport Shirt Fair!. + Maximum shrinkage—1%. and BLUE @ GRAY @ GREEN YELLOW @ TAN e@ WHITE ALWAYS QUALITY! OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 9 FIRST . RESISTANT! 2. % /RAYON and ACETAT Gabardine SLACKS. Smartly tailored slacks of:a fine, 93 husky fabric that’s crisp and full bodied. Most important, the fabric has been treated to resist non-oils stains .. just wipe those stains off with a damp cloth! Wrinkle resi: t- ant, too. You'll wear these slacks for dress or work with equal ease. Select from blues, tans, greys, brown and green. Sizes 29 to 42. Cuffed. ~ SUMME in lhe te ton lied ST ae ~ Sbeenes. saat bb ae diana inte ah ke a Ps 2 nats " a Rept oe a = ¥. “ " “ sila. * SSE ¢ i> Ls S Fae Se eS = Ey iat” ~~» > aot > . PURE SLACK SLACKS 9 Classic wool gabardine slacks for dress and sports wear. All wool gabardine drapes handsomely, resists wrinkling, springs back into shape, has a crisp, luxurious hand. Smartly styled with con- tinuous waistband, reversed pleats and saddle stitched side seams. Penney's has these out- standing slacks in grey, green, tan, blue, light blue, cocoa, skip- per blue and brown. Sizes 29-42 ‘Smartly Styled femmes | mpemre sp ME ip tinctive : Acetate-Rayon SHEEN GABARDINE SLACKS These handsome slacks are tailored of a superb 14 ounce sheen gabar- dine fabric. It is treated so non-oily stains wipe off with a damp cloth. Wrinkles hang out due to the rich, soft texture of this fabric. Select from Penney’s huge array of dis- colors now. through 36. Sizes 29 ‘THE PONTTAC PRESS, MAPLE LEAF DAIRY ° in = PONTIAC with the plastic-coated milk carton! EASY TO OPEN Your milk is seoled in Se push the corner nim te breok the seo! ond lift the forl tobs te opea. EASY CORNER POUR Mekes pouring eoner... Gives you teespooniul con- trol without spiliing @ drop. No Qushing of drip- ene LEAKPROOF, Too No meny shopp ng bom or retrgerctors Our new plostc cooted milk carton is leakproof becouse the sides ond bottom ere “welded ite each otter, COMPLETELY STERILIZED This famous trade-mork on / every corton 1s your guer- entee of sanitory pockeg- ing. Eoch corton is com- pletely steriized whed we Fill it in the doiry. MAPLE LEAF DAIRY 20 E. Howard St. | always do. Way to Enrich | which an oil or semi-liquid fat is | en cookies | combined with more hydrogen to| *. ’ WHEAT GERM CORN MUFFINS — Corn muffins made with wheat germ and steaming bowls of canned soup add up to a tempting and nutritious lunch everyone will enjoy. If you use the muffin mix, just add the wheat germ to the dry mix and go ahead as you Honey Pairs Off. With Lemons, ‘Puddings, Too Honey is a good mixer. For Corn Muffins: ieee Corn muffins served warm are | which honey pairs off oun opal sour delicious for lunch and they are | | lemon especially tasty with the nutlike) Nothing soothes a threat-tickling flavor of wheat germ. Wheat germ | cough as quickly as equal parts of adds so much food value to breads | jemon juice and honey. It is a that they are a real nutritious | | home-made remedy that can be bonus to any meal. quickly stirred up. Wheat germ contains protein, | in do ewectened 4wi thiamine, riboflavin, niacin, vita- honey—have you ever tried it? min E, iron, phosphorus and the The beverage is smooth and natural oil of wheat germ. These | mest delectable.c For a little nutrients are vital for good health | change, try serving it hot, and should be included in meals | . everyday. Lemon and honey - sweetened Buy wheat germ at your gro-| sauces go well over cottage pud- cer's in vacuum-packed jars and | dings, apple dumplings, hot ginger- plan to use it in menus each day. |bread, and Brown Betty. Guard the health of your family| Have you ever tried pouring with wheat germ honey over the lemon sherbet you Wheat Germ Cora Muffies |. 2¢fVe for a bancheon despert? Dol : It will cause much comment on 1 cup sifted all-purpose flour 3 teaspoons baking powder your clever idea cae They Won't Forget ‘4g teaspoon paprika 3 tablespoons suger % cup yellow corn mee! 'y cup wheal germ 1 eg leup milk 00 3 tablespoons melted shortening Cri p N t C ki Sift flour, baking powder, salt, ris u = paprika and sugar together. Stir} Brown - sugar flavor and flecks in corn meal and wheat germ. In a bowl, combine egg and milk; add melted shortening. Add egg-milk mixture to dry ingredients and stir until dry ingredients are just mois-| | tened. Fill greased muffin pans; ° 2-3 full. Bake in 425 oven 25 min-| } utes. Makes 10 muffins. 1 of chocolate make these cookies something to remember. Crisp Walnut Drop Covkies 1%, cups sifted fiour a teaspoon baking powder a teaspoon salt 2 cup butter or margarine cup firmly-packed dark brown sugart teaspoon vanilla eee 2 cup finely cut semi-sweet choce- late ‘, cup chopped walnuts Typ eo of Fat | Sift toget the flour, baking Not So Hard | powder and salt, Cream butter, | brown sugar and vanilla; beat in to Understand | egg thoroughly. Stir in sifted dry ingredients un- Do all the terms used in con-| til blended; stir in chocolate and nection with the various kinds of | walnuts. Drop by teaspoonfuls on- shortening confuse you? Perhaps |to greased baking sheet. Bake in the following explanations * will |375 oven 10 to 12 minutes. help. | Remove to wire rack with spat- Hydrogenation is a process by/| ula to cool, Makes about 3'2 doz- change the soft fats to harder fats | Creqmed Carrots, Celery of the desired consistency. Testurated refers to a p-xess Delicious With Roasts | Cut raw carrots and celery in| of beating or whipping a fat to} give it a creamy consistency. nectenl | pieces about the same size; cook | Vegetemte _ together in a small amount of | boiling salted water just until ten- | fats made from vegetable oils euch as cotton, bey, corm of der. Drain and add to a well-sea- | peanut offs. soned cream sauce Meat fats refers to fats rendered| fT into a casserole, top with | from tri.nmed fat from pork (lard) | pyutt®red crumbs and brown in a/| and beef (suet). Animal fats are hot oven or under the broiler the :*me a; meat fats. Delicious for a company meal | Butter and margarine are about | featuring roast beef or lamb; good | 80 per cent fat. When used to| with chicken or duck, too. replace a 100 per cent fat or shortening in baking, a correction sould be made to increase the fat content of that to sho. ‘ening. Honey comes in different flavors, | depending on the floral source used by the honey bee. ————$$—<—$——— —E—EeEeEeEeEeEeeeEeE | 78. ° OAKLAND PACKING HOUSE MARKET ;.,i..s. | RETAIL DEPT. STORE HOURS: Mon.—Tues.—Thurs. 8 A. M. to 5 P. M. Wed. 8 A.M.-12 Noon. Fri., Sat. 7 A.M.-6 P.M. WHOLESALE DEPT.: Phone FE 2-9114—Free Delivery 7 A. M. ‘til 4 P. M. Daily BEEF and PORK SOLD AT WHOLESALE PRICES FOR Home use HOME SMOKED Bacon Squares 39%. MILD, STORE TASTY CHEESE | Bologna 451.) 291] GRADE 1 LEAN SLICED BACON 39:1 i IRST CUT | 49} o BOSTON BUTT PORK STEAK 5 5i. TENDER, JUICY ROUND STEAK 5 5i POT ROAST OF BEEF (Any Cuts) 42i. TI ‘BY JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Foed Editor I have before me the twentieth | ‘}and the thirty-first editions of the Settlement Cookbook (Simon and | Schuster $2.95). One is the cook- book with which I started house- | keeping; the other is the 1954 edi- | tion of the same book Lately I have been looking over several older cookbooks, most of | Which were published in the twenties, Miss Shelley of the Pon- tiac Library thought of me when she was weeding out her shelves at home and gave me rsome older recipe books What a difference there is be- tween the cookbooks of today and those of a quarter of a century ago. A comparison of the two shows what a long way we have come in the food field. A couple of years ago the Set- tlement Cookbook celebrated its half century of progress. It was originally published by of women working in a Milwaukee | teaching Settlement house. book | a group} My nev TURSDAY, JU NE | Saanierents the.ways of American | life. The beard of directors men!) refused te allocate $18 for the wemen to publish a } (all | | series ef cooking lessons for the pupils. Undaunted, the ladies went out and sold advertise- ments, then combined the ads with feed lessens for their stu- | dents and many of their own | treasured recipes. . The result was the Settlement | Cookbook. The first edition sold | out at once, and the demand has never diminished. To date, more than a million copies have been sold all over the world. Any profits are used for philanthropic purposes Simon and Schuster now pyblish the book, although it was for years | put out by a Milwaukee publish- | ing house I was raised on this cookbook mother considers her edition to be the one really good one. I {happen to like the one | have. Your Choice---Four Famous Brands Chase and Sanborn—Defiance Maxwell House—Hills Bros. COFFEE 98° } new 3, 19.3 6+ »|Quarter Century Shows Big Change in ‘Cookbooks | this | ex- No doubt women who buy edition won't want to change it for any other, During Prohibition the edi- tiens omitted all recipes calling for wines and liquors. Later editiens included them. In facts when a reader recently ;sent in a request for a Dandelion |Wine recipe, it was to the Settle- iment Cookbook that I turned Sure enough, there was the recipe, | : ino doubt the one my = grand- | ; mother used many years ago. The editors have kept the in the book: Beer soup, Wiener | Schnitzel, Schnecken and how to make your own sauerkraut. But the new is also there: Chiffon Cakes, pressure cooker meals, freezing foods, and a whole section of recipes using sugar substitutes just recently available It's a fine cookbook—it always | bas been. It is a shert course in nutrition. It has all sorts of interesting household information from how old | 3 to start a wood and coal fire in a coal stove (honestly) serve @ niaid. I know the recipes are good; , to how to meal without a the years. They tested in home kitchens before being printed in the ‘book. They are a mixture of what we would term plain ordinary food and gour- met food. TTPC COOGEE TUER Pater eesreere JUMBO Size 27 Cantaloupe Sweet, Tender, Fresh CORN 30. Michigan ~CATSUP Fancy Home Grown Lettuce . 2 Fresh GREEN BEANS. Extra Fancy, Long Cucumbers Armour’s “Banner” Tra-Packed BACONE 991, 19 Donald Duck GRAPE- VICE Lean and Tender STEAKS ® T-Bone--Round--Swiss Sirloin--Rib 99° 49° Roll Rib Roast “49 Ground Beef 3°99 PADAFORE BROS. MAT, — yi Peter Pan PEANUT BUTTER 12 Oz. Tumbler 29° Well Trimmed of POT ROAST Fat and Bone 39 WEST HURON STREET Getic ame yrs DAF ORE x AEN a AT NEAR THIRTY: sIxX maya WaN0 THE PONTIAC PRESS, —- Seal eed = @ mn FRENCH STRAWBERRY PIE—You can make the best of French strawberry pies with no trouble at all. Substitute strawberry preserves for part of Why Slink Into Back Seat Bake Potatoes for Clever French Chefs? | You hear so much about good French cooking — you admit they are tops in this art — but once in awhile you'd just like to outdo them with a few improvisations of your own. Take a French strawberry pie, for instance. It's made with sweet- ened berries, thickened and spread over a layer of softened cream cheese. Here's how you can make it even better. Just substitute strawberry Tutti-Frutti Pudding ls Extra Nutritious Put extra nutrition into fruited vanilla pudding by preparing it with nonfat dry milk powder. Tutti-Frutti Vanilla Pudding 1 3%e-ounce package vanilla pudding preserves or strawberry jam for part of the sugar needed The result is a wonilaltil blend of fruit flavors, and you haven't moved outside your kitchen door to collect any exotic ingredients. | It's an easy recipe, it's your own American version, and here it is. Your-own French Strawberry Pie l quart fresh strawberries 2 tablespoons sugar sugar s cornsterch Dash salt 1 tablespoon lemon juice % cup strawberry preserves or siraw- berry jam 1 3}-ounce package cream cheese 1 baked and cooled 6 pastry shell ‘a cup heavy cream, whipped Wash, drain and hull strawber- ies. Save half of the choice ber- ries and sprinkle with 2 tablespoons sugar. Crush the remaining ber- ries and measure. Add enough water to measure 1', cups berry liquid. Blend ', cup sugar, cornstarch and salt together in a saucepan. \% cup nonfat dry mils powder . : . 2 cups water ; . Stir in berry liquid. Cook over low 7 ri * pi aoa poe ine cherries lheat until clear and_ thickened, ‘s cup chopped figs stirring constantly, about 10 min- Stir pudding mix and non-fat/ utes. Remove from heat. Stir in dry milk powder together until| lemon juice and strawberry pre- blended. Gradually add water.| serves or jam. Add a little red stirring until smooth. Cook over | food coloring if you wish. Cool medium heat, stirring constantly, | until mixture comes to a boil and | is thickened, about 5 minutes. Fold in chopped cherries, raisins and figs. Pour into individual serving dishes. Chill. Makes 4 servings. Wise Cooks Use Green, Red Color in Casseroles URBANA, Ill. (INS) Those | one-dish meals are such a standby in busy homemakers’ lives that a set of “rule of thumb” prin- ciples have been devoloped for them. Patricia Wyatt of the University | of Illinois home economics depart- ment gives these pointers on mak- ing casserols of leftovers or ae available cheaply or in quantity: 1. White sauce, meatstock or condensed soups make a good 1i- | quid or base for many dishes. If the greater part of the dish is ‘of some bland food, such as po- | tato or rice, and the smaller part | of some strong-flavored foods such as cheese or onion, the casserole | will be very tasty. 3. Small amounts of such things | | strawberries parsley, minced green peppers or onion juice give interest to the | dish. Tasty sauces, especially | tomato. also often give this touch. 4. Color in various foods, such | aS peas, green peppers, pime ntoes, or carrots, makes the | attractive. tomatoes dish more Finely shredded green cabbage is delicious added to chop suey or chow mein LOOK at These WEEK-END SPECIALS Apple Trees .... ea. 98¢ Peach Trees .... ea. 98c Pear Trees .... ea. 98c Cherry Trees . ea. $1.25 FULL LINE’ of POTTED PLANTS Everything for the Flower Box Vegetable Plants 35c Doz. j or 3 for $1.00 LEWIS BROS. FARM MKT. 0673 DIXIE HIGHWAY NEAR M-15 JUNCTION } }/4 ture over the berries in the shell. Chill 3 Meanwhile work cream cheese with a fork until soft. Spread carefully over the bottom of pastry shell. Arrange the choice strawberries in the cream cheese, points upward. Pour the cooled strawberry mix- pastry to 4 hours, or until firm. Spoon whipped cream around inside of pie. as crisp buttered crumbs, chopped | , }1 cup sugar for of frozen substituted for the fresh berries, then omit the 2 tablespoons of sugar. This pie is best served the day it Is made. The cream cheese layer may be omitted if you wish 16-ounce package may be One |Add Dash of Marjoram It is a good idea to buy mar- | joram in powdered form; this way its fine flavor is quickly absorbed and thoroughly distributed through the food on which it is used. Try sprinkling a little powdered mar- joram over snap beans or green | peas. ‘Enhances Roast Lamb Mint Surprise is delicious with| roast lamb. Cook 1% cups (No. 211 can) of crushed pineapple and 5 minutes. Tint this a delicate green with vege- table coloring. Then stir in 4 or 5 drops of peppermint the sugar needed, combine with fresh berries, thick-| en, cool, and pour over a softened layer of cream cheese on a —— pastry crust. of the main reasons is that these sumer’s budget. Packers can pur- chase all foods necessary for pop- ular corned beef hash, for exam- ple, prepare and can than the homemaker can cook it in her own kitchen Buying in mass production makes possible the lower selling prices of canned items. butcher to sell canned meat prod- ucts — another means of avoiding stiffer markups on these foods For the economy-minded shopper canned meats are all meat, all edi- ble — no bone, no waste. That's Last year a new “high” was reached in the consumption of canned meats. Americans ate about ninety million pounds more canned meat in '53 than in '52. | And now indications point to a continued increase for this current year. Why this steady upward trend | in the canned meat industry? One | products are easy on Mrs. Con- | it for less | Grocery stores need not hire ® THURSDAY, JU New Canned Meats Spur Steady Increase important in budgeting amounts | items. Today there are more the tedious | and costs. And, too, preparation has all been done for you — saving long kitchen hours. There is variety galore to be found in canned meats. Beef- steak and gravy, bacon spread, corned beef and cabbage, meat balls in gravy to name just a few, are es of prepared Ammonia-Chalk Paste Makes Fine Silver Polish You can make your own silver | polish by adding ammonia to | whiting or powdered chalk until the consistency of a paste. To remove stains, rub the sil- ver with the polish, then wash in | warm sudsy water. Rinse well in clear hot water and rub dry with a soft cloth. Want to dress up that vegetable soup: Brown and cook tiny ham- burger balls in a little fat, then NE 3, 1954 in Sales than 70 different canned meat products being sold. \ Canned hams are gaining stead- ily in popularity. This item, with the exception of the smallest size, must be refrigerated. These hams range from about under two to about sixteen pounds. The trend now is to the smaller canned hams for the smaller fam- ilies. Read the labels for style of ham, for some canned hams are hickory smoked for that special spread. Bake pancakes on a_ lightly greased griddle or frying pan, turning cakes once. Serve hot with butter and heated maple syrup. Note: Place pancakes on baking pan and keep warm in slow oven until all the cakes are baked. Raw Spinach, Cabbage Are Rich in Vitamin C When spinach and green cabbage | flavor are eaten raw they are a good | Luncheon meat, long a_ best-| source of vitamin C, but most of |seller, is highest in the canned | this vitamin is lost when the vege- meat line. The popular 12-ounce j tables are cooked. size is readily available from a | Young tender leaves of spinach number of meat canners. taste delicious in salads. If your Bacon, a highly perishable fresh | family is tired of plain slaw, team meat item, is now offered as 4 | the cabbage with pineapple, orange canned product, and in addition | or apple for a change. a delicious new bacon spread has . been added to the line Ever dice avocado and mix it Bacon Pancakes | with cut-up fruit for a dessert? Using 2 cups of your favorite | Dress it with a combination of pancake mix prepare batter ac-|orange or pineapple juice, honey | in one can (3% oz.) instant bacon | Don’t Worry if Potatoes ‘Bleed’ Red Coloring Don't be alarmed if the potatoes’ you are washing in the sink or | boiling with their skins on sudden- ly start ‘‘bleeding.” Actually, what is happening 1s that the thin coat of reddish wax in which they were encased when they came to market is coming off The is perfectly food experts, red coloring safe, according to and serves the dual purpose of making the potatoes more attrac- tive to the eye and preventing shriveling The ‘fed wax is used only on those potatoes which have a naturally reddish hue. A color- less wax is used on plain white potatoes. YOU'RE RIGHT WHEN YOU BUY RIVAL D0G FOOD i ikekeh A? | price add to the soup. |cording to label directions. Blend! and lemon_ juice. Deeee-licious! | Wisely and Well | One of the finest treatments you can give a fine potato is to bake it | wisely and well . but not too long. Then serve it with simple elegance, split open with a big gob | of golden butter to compliment the | mealy whiteness of the potato. “ Or add a touch of spring by mix- ing tiny slices of tender green onions with rich cream and adorn the opened potato with this tasty mixture, Be sure to use the green part of the onions. There's plenty of flavor in these stems and the color adds eye appeal, so important to eating pleasure The cook-in-a-hurry can pre- duce baked potatoes in 45 min- utes or an hour (depending upon the size of the spuds) if she wants to push the oven up to 450 and keep it there. Potatoes baked at this temperature are mealy and have nice crisp skins. But a word of warning ... they | should be pricked with a fork and | lightly rubbed with butter or mar- garine before baking to prevent | bursting open from the high heat. On the other hand, in a slower ;oven they rarely split, but take longer to cook, With oven meals it's customary to allow at least one and one-half hours for the po- tatoes to bake if the other food is being —— at 350 or less. Hills Bros. COFFEE We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities! ‘save 550¢ f with coupons packed aside, SURF BARGAIN PACKAGE BIRDS EYE lb. Breast-0-Chicken TUNA CHUNK STYLE “goo CANS OREM IDEM LE Sp FROZEN Fish Sticks...........-. KCC!" << > BREAST Q CHIC RAN” Pkg. 49< J9 GIANT SIZE SURF Large #21 Cans Early Garden Yellow Freestone Peaches C Fruit-Rice Dressing Wonderful With Ham An invitation to real @ienectiene pleasure is this colorful casserole of ham and fruit-rice dressing Your family will enjoy a feast they won't forget in a hurry, and you'll be delighted to learn how | simple it is to make Here is a serving suggestion Ham and Fruit-Rice Dressing Buttered Broccoli Hot Bisc Perfection Salad Rhubarb Meringue Pie 2 cups hot cooked rice 1 tablespoon butter or margarine wits | Treesweet 46 Ox. ORANGE JUICE 29: Ocoma Boned Chicken or Turkey «=~ Large Grade A 1 cup orange segments (2 medium or nges) 1 small tart apple dic 's cup seedless raisins 3 tablesspons brown sugar . teaspoon ground cloves | 2 center sitees of ham inch thick 2 tablespoons honey Combine rice and butter and toss | lightly wth a fork until butter is melted. Add oranges, apples, rais /ins, brown sugar, and cloves | Spread in 10x6x2-inch baking pan ed (l'a cups) Cut ham into six pieces, and place over dressing, Prush with honey, Cover Bake in 350 oven about 45 min- utes, until apples are tender and i|ham is glazed. Yield: six serv- ings «Wk Broiled Fresh White Fish Homade Meat CHEF'S Ke Do Cate Pontiac's Finest Cafeteria and Lunch Counter! =| FRIDAY’S SPECIALS Mushroom Sauce LUN Hormel BACON Sliced Traypack 65° 29° SPECIAL DAILY ring—Call FE 2-6242! Loaf with Special: Apple Pie....... Ea. Cc 6 Gg. Hot Butter Top Bread. Flaky Butter Rolls Glazed Donuts .__. Date Bread “ot ee eee Punch made to order. 144-146 NORTH BAKERY DEPARTMENT Pineapple Coffee Rolls Wedding — Birthday — Party Cokes to order. Bowls and Cups for Rentel. HOMADE 000 sxop Jocko PEANUT BUTTER 2 Ib. jar 09: 35¢ 45c 28c ... Ea. 35¢ ..6 for '33c Fruit ee ee “ee ee @e@ SAGINAW STREET HOLDENS e Defiance 49°. HAMILTON EGGS All Pri Fancy Remus Fresh os LAWL _|GREAMERY BUTTER Tomatoes for Seven Days! Hot House ces Good Extra Large 27 Size Mild or Medium PINCONNING CHEESE Semi-Boneless PORK BUTTS For Roasting Cantaloupes ea. U. S. Choice---Blade Cut Beef Pot Roast U. S. Choice Lean, Meaty BEEF SHORT RIBS 19: ; 884 W. Huron Farmer Uses His Plane | to Alert Fire Fighters | TOLLAND, Conn. (UP) — A farmer Emest Kupferschmid, used | By CHARLES M. McCANN we ee {and closer to complete cooperation his light plane to call attention! tajteg Press Staff. Correspondent | with the North Atlantic Treaty Or- to a fire Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia cer- Kupferschmid spotted a plume of | tainly is an active man. smoke in the distance while flying | in his plane. Tae smoke was pour- | discuss He has just gone to Greece to the proposed Yugoslav- ing from the upper floors of a/Greek-Turkish military alliance. house, Kupferschmid nearby houses until one woman | finally called the fire department. | By the time firemen arrived, | Kupferschmid was on his way| home. | “buzzed” | He is trying to settle Yugosia- via's bitter dispute with Maly over the Trieste territory, Pros- pects for a settlement look good. He is bringing Yugoslavia closer | ganization if not actual member- ship in it. At the same time he is patching up, to some extent, Yugoslavia's relations with the Iron Curtain countries. Finally, he has just squashed, without the least trouble; a threat- ened revolt in his own Communist party. Tito also is a remarkable man. PER PACK A Quality Cigarette at a popular price Mode by Stephano bros Phile., Pe. Long an outlawed Communist, he | assumed the leadership of the Yu- goslav partisan movement in World War II. He fought both the Ger- mans and the Italians. He threw young King Peter off the throne to become hig coun- try’s first president. Finally. he is the only Commu- nist leader who ever told the Kremlin to go fly a kite and got away with it: The 3-667-ton Yugoslav navy training ship in which Tito cruised to Greece—with an escort of four destroyers—dropped anchor at Pi- raeus, the port for Athens, yester- day morning. During a six-day visit Tito will be the guest of King Paul and Premier Field Marshal Alexander Now the friendship treaty is to be turned into a firm defense alliance. Italy objects to the defense al- liance because of the Trieste dis- pute. But there seems to be good hope for an early settlement with the help of the United States and ship Board, Lahser Road. Inkster Road. NOTICE! To the Electors of Bloomfield Township YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that by an action of the Town- the Township of Bloomfield has been divided into four (4) Election Precincts: as follows:* PRECINCT NO. 1 Polling plece at the Bloomfield Township Hell, 4200 Telegraph Rood. Bounded on North by South Side Square Lake Road and also the North Section line of Section 7; East by Adams Road, South by North Side of Quarton Road, West by Inkster Road. PRECINCT NO. 2 Palling plece at the Bloomfield Village Fire Hell, on Bradway Bivd., East of Lahser Rood. Bounded on the North by South Side of Quarton Road, East by Adams Road, South by 14 Mile Road, West by the East Side of PRECINCT NO. 3 Polling plece at the Wing Leake School, ‘ Maple and Wing Lake Roads. Bounded on the North by South Side of Quarton Road; East by the West Side of Lahser Road; South by the 14 Mile Road; West by PRECINCT NO. 4 Polling plece at the Hickory Grove School, located on East Square Leake Road, East of Woodward Avenue. Bounded on the North by the Township Limits; East by Adams Road; South by North Side of Square Lake Road and also the North Section line of Section 7; West by Township Limits ROBERT H. DUDLEY, CLERK OF BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP steel worker. He was severely wounded as a soldier in the Austro- Hungarian army in World War I. He emerged in World War II as a leader of a ragged army of patriots which swelled to a total of 300,000 and fought the Germans and the Italians with brilliant suc- cess, * He reached a crisis in his life in 1948. Soviet Russia was trying to bleed Yugoslavia economically and, in foreign policy, make it completely subservient. Tite rebelled. He revealed him- self as a Yugoslav first and a | It was predicted confidently that he would be crushed. Instead his | prestige inside and outside Yugo- | slavia was strengthened. He is a |Communist still, but now he is | firmly on the side of the West. Switch Sermons | AVON, Conn, (UP)—Ministers of the three local churches skipped | the usual Bible sermon one week and preached traffic safety in- Our Former Price $20 - $25 OUR PRICE NOW ONLY— COMPLETE Wit# yoitoe bifeca!l glasses. bie! ; a MOST ASTOUNDING OFFER IN OPTICAL HISTORY See Far and Near with Same Glasses! Here is the mest amasing offer te you folks whe wear er need The lenses of your cheice, spectall your individual needs, pilus the frame ef your ¢ at the sensational lew price eof $13.56! require different kinds which may net be sultable fer your that will give you the greatest perl cpt. ing; one-piece Ultex with the Wider field of vision, for mechanics and farmers; Flat-Teps which permit yeu te see ever and under the bifecal segment fer greater comfert. quality and are usually sold by ethers fer $20-875! extra pair new. may never be repeated. ef Bifecais! Discard Sale positively ends Saterday, FOCAL Different types ef pee and cheese the pair All glasses SPECIAL PE THIS WEEK ONLY! ® Deuble Vision tallered te , complete ple your eld bifecais rypteks fer read- are top | Get the Jane 5, 1954, and FRAMES AND BIFOCAL LENSES ore No Less SINGLE VISION CLASSES Our single vision glasses are still only $6.96. All glasses are complete with the frame ef your choice ples lenses individe- ally greand te your exact requirements. Regardless of the prescription er jens strength required, the price remains $6.98, ipeeo angte ONLY $8.98 “ee ore! ° You Can't Pay M $1,000.00 REWARD We will pay $1,000.00 te any ene whe can purchase glasses here for mere than the price quoted in this ad- vertisement. Broken Reward offer ranteed by Frames twe leading enden, Eng- lan4, Insurance Companies. Kay Bidg., Suite 202 Cor Optical Ce. can satisfy you. te saft yeur persensiity and facial ceonteer from assortment carried by any optics! heuse in America. ONE LOW PRICE OF $8.98! Lewest prices. | All Glasses Union Made! Neo Appointment Needed! Ne Switching! Ne Extras! 3% $. SACINAW ST. + 2 Doors So. of Pike St. & Sag. 2nd Fleor Next te Household Finance : BRANCHES IN MANY PRINCIPAL CITIES 100 STYLES, SHAPES AND COLORS If you have any particular cheice in frames er moentings, King At King you may select the style REPAIRS | OCULISTS’ lenses duplicated.| We alse fit! repaired and replaced. OPTICIANS—OVER 3,000,000 SATISFIED CUSTOMERS Hours: 9 A. M.-5:80 P. M. Daily Incl, Wed. and Set—Open Fridey Nights ‘tt 9 P. M. and Pike Sts. East Side of &. tens at the same price. prescription prem the widest a Alt. AT | te” : Your FLAT-TOP pty filled. Fer Men In THE US. AND CANADA Phone: FEderal 5-908! COMMANDANT Alfred C. Richman is the ‘new — Vice Adm. commandant of the U. S. Coast Guard. He succeeds Vice Adm Merlin O'Neil, who is retiring Texas Hen’s Giant Egg Has Another Egg Inside BONHAM, Tex. (UP) — A ben at the Tim Fogle farm near Ivan- hoe laid an egg within an egg. The outer egg, which had a white and a yolk,” was accidentally broken by Mrs. Fogle's grand- daughter, Rozelle Baker. Inside was another egg of normal size, according to Mrs. Fogle The outer egg measured 9% by 8% inches. City Takes Initiative MARSHALL, Minn. ® — The city of Marshall has found a way to handle people who don't handle shovels after snowstorms cover their sidewalks. The city clears the walks—and then submits a bill. Premature Status Gets ie | ° tcket | went in to enlist in the Air Force. | AF Man Parking Ticket | a. sign said “reserved for mill | DETROIT w — Traffic Referee tary vehicles.” Arthur figured his | | John M. Wise promptly dismissed | car would qualify by the time he | ‘an dilegal parking charge when got back. But there was a ticket | Arthur Bensmiller's mother ex- plained | : |. tions, Arthur, 18, pulled into the parking | to court because he was in Texas, | taking Air Force basic training. sewn | space at the Federal Building and | Byilding 2 Giant Ferries | Officials describe’ the 310-foot | in height. a modern aS UNCOVER Dans... _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1954 Tito Is Remarkable Man, Is a Red on Side of West craft as the biggest ferry ever built on the West Coast. It will for Puget Sound Service ,,.. added to a fleet that was ex- SEATTLE (~The State of Wash-| panded recently by the purchase ington, which already owns one of of two automobile and passenger the world's biggest ferry fleets,| vessels from Maryland. is building a new two million dol-| just the same. Arthur. didn't come! jay ferry for Puget Sound opera-| There are 43 peaks in the Can- \adian Rockies 11,000 or more feet 99 55 99 miracle, A Product of Generel Foods From the world-famous Gaines Research Kennels - A NEW TASTE SENSATION IN CANNED DOG FOOD! a \ * Now - Gaines combines horsemeat and other rich meat nutrients in a new high-energy formula! How your dog will love Gaines’ great new canned dog food! And Gaines assures your dog of every food factor that Gaines scientists find necessary for bounding energy and vital health from head to tail! 0 If you'd like to see what a real meaty aroma can do to your dog's appetite, just slide a dish of Gaines Canned Dog Food under his nose at his next feeding. When that dog of yours gets a taste of it—and when you see what it can do for him—both of you will become Gaines boosters for life! CANNED DOG FOOD FOR THE VITAL HEALTH OF YOUR DOGI FOUNDED 1904 ce] * ' E es ee ee 8 eS SS SS ee Se Se ee SE OE ee eee ieee is ae — ‘ . ad hd + cs ce C7 hl , * a rare e , 4 -FORTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1954 : —— samen — a - “ . ; - P = | - ° elected as president of Avon Play- | | Evening Ceremony Unites (2 cs vem ae | ed Res . | 1 Dis shed Service .- ne - . ~ groups recent annual meeting. | e ¢ istinguishe ervice .*. . e Borhes ( : ( . . : ee | a Mr. and Mrs. Donald Brann of 269 pl M lt d h h Other officers include ; . * Red Oak St. announce the birth of as 2 Ou e In I Or urc Mrs. W. L. Shaffner, vice presi- e . e otere e se we = Magoon of Roches- 0 al if ay | SOUTH LYON—Lois Jane Pich- Both are graduates of South dent; Mrs. Darrell Bordine, sec- @ l lam e ~ ter announce the birth of « son, William ler of New Hudson and Leslie M Lyon High School in the class of retary, Mrs. Henry Purdy, treas- ‘ ; John, May 29 2 ns : a 953. The : ; , urer; Mrs. Robert Halbach, cor- ba. i 7 ae . . tead of South Lyon were marfied 1953. The brid loyed by | Wrer: Mrs. Rovert Ha , | DDT Mixture Will Be ge ang amie gion) ony aged (ee erga | FUNERAL HOME r ! las riday a ning cere- . . i anh ¢ Spread Over 104,960 asa Es They will reside at 10084 Rushton Jackson, Mrs. L. A. Bachor and |] agaputance Service 339 Walnut OLive 1-5151 => ‘ mony at Christ Lutheran Church, Rd. where the bridesroom is in Mrs. Tom Everhard, new board | Oxygen Equipped ROCHESTER Opposite P. O. Sen . . * - — Acres in Michigan Milford partnership with his father and| Members. | a “First Line Your family’s ‘first line , of defense” against edge coupled with our any hour, doy or night. PURDY’S Drug Store 321 Mein St., Rochester Midwest's first in destructive attack on the vasion of the moth EYPsy lands of the Eaton . Clinton county The money also will be used Ingham area whether the spraying was suc- cessful and whether the infesta |not been reported west of Pennsyl- lvania before its Michigan discov ery two weeks ago C. A. Boyer, chief of the Bureau of Plant Industry of the State Department of Agriculture said the Central Airtines Co. of Ya- kima Wash... had four planes in Michigan already and hoped to start Friday to spray with a DDT kerosene mixture GAIL PARTEE ‘Award for Grades recognition for having attained th highest rank scholastically of any member of Jordan Hall dormitory at University of Michigan The orah Bacon, dean of women. Gail award was made by Deb in chemistry Phi national honor society initiated into Phi Beta has earned a degre¢ | She ws also a member of | Kappa Phi and was The bride is the daughter of Mr Fer her wedding the bride chose a gown of white eyelet shaped headdress and a silver, engraved cross, gift of the bride- groom. She carried white gla- mellias and lilies of the valiey. Pichler of New Hudson gown of pink organdy and carry wearing a immediate families and close friends A reception is scheduled for the couple Sunday at the home of the bridegroom's parents. The newlyweds teft for a seuthern trip, the bride wearing pink puckered nylon with white ac cessories and ai corsage from | her bridal bouquet. brother fo Hold Round-ups Lake Elementary Schools _wil] be holding annual kindergarten round- ups All 5-year-old children who will ities can plan necessary space and teacher arrangements in advance Children who will be five years Wixom; Tuesday, Commerce; Wed- nesday Glengary Thursday, Walled: Lake: and Friday teach at Union Lake School. Avon Players’ President Re-elected to Position ROCHESTER—Gordon H. Miller of 5730 N. Rochester Rd. was re- Twin | ~. a and intra-red baked machined, sanded, masked ana painting. Complete choice of colors f D f a“ Michigan's ‘Little Legislature” organdy in a circular waltz WALLED LAKE — Beginning Oo e ense laid down $150,000 yesterday for length. She also wore an elbow | Friday at Union Lake School, and the campaign in cities and farm length nylon net veil with a cap continuing all next week, Walled No Money Down! : later this summer to operate ! serious illness is your t 1.600.000 a A . ; be entering schools next fall will All Work Guaranteed ° liens iiclliees eceies | U M Student Given [Peeve BS, Sie imei at Rome be registered so that school author , e as 4 tO é 7 é c doctor's skil! and knowl- Southern Michigan to determine was the bride's sister, Ila Mae « ” Spruce up your car with a mew paint job sprayed on just like at the factory! Each car ts before including metailics prime LANSING 5” — West Coast air and Mrs. George Pichler of New es ae — enemy we ae Pica Hudson. The bridegraom’'s parents . J INFRA-RED BAKED et i ae tok etter e's Walled Lake Schools : Michigan land in a concentrated lee a 7 en ‘ a e a e 00 $| S FACTORY - QUALITY PRICED AS LOW AS $59 tion has spread farther. Two ere ‘ —_— : . 2 professional SE | traps will ee set to the square > Fn ailiees . ing cream colored gladioli edged old Dec. 1, 1954 are being asked Dust-proofed DeVilbiss spray booth and infra-red drying compounding his pre- PrP FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP —j| with pink to be registered. Two registration oven. Most complete facilities 1m North Oakland County! . We’ ' j : , Gail Partee, 20-year-old daughter Serving as the best ee ¥ 7; the periods for each school are Stop im of call us today scriptions ere oa The moth and its larvae (worm) : brother of the bride, Thomas Pich- | p) ed at 9:0 ¢ and at 12:30 ; ; of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Partee — panned & a.m. and at 1o:-W your service ond his ot has been a destructive pest in "| ber Stanley Clark seated the 5m The schedule is | EXPERT BODY and FENDER REPAIRS New Bupiding fer Collision & Paint Werk Only |New England for 80 years. It has | W4s recently awarded a CUP 10 | guests who were members of the Friday, Union Lake; Monday, | FREE Estimates a Car | Ph. OL 1-9711 Available 7:00-5:30 . . . Weekdays 7:00-12:00 . , . Saturdays The spray attack should take five to seven days if weather conditions are good, Boyer said. Kappa in April er Auxiliary Collects | ge newest of CONGR F ee the “hie Legisla " ye > ite (k.mergency Appropriations Z — REMEMBER F 2 |Commission) that if the pest were F UNAS in Wooden} f or J UJ N 7 B R D FS an d » SOMEONE ‘ fs not attacked at once every product we DAY of Michigan which “‘must stand Church Crusade This Sunday ts set | out doors’ will be quarantined by AUBURN HEIGHTS With | = aside to remember | the federal govennment and prob haccda itis heal dw eccuaben nt, got $10 CLOTHING | serico0 9" received by the United States, | more than six billions came from Britain The United States has demanded: | Johnson has re signe d°as tri-county | and Montmorency Counties. = eeemcens - The Koffends hadn't expected . j so quickly and, being up- didn't hear the front door knocks at the | OMAHA uw—A telephone repair- | Sends City $300 ito Pay Jail Bill man swiftly answered a trouble | call from the John Koffend home | S sELES oo | over 800 million dollars from Rus- | aes The city here sia in settlement. The Russians re- | Jail never had a boarder like this him portedly have countered with an ‘before. He has sent City Treasurer stairs, offer of 300 million, The two coun- | Leon V. McCardle $300 to pay for| Pel! ring nor the tries are still disputing the | back door Boll s | his year's lodging behind bars | How to get“in? The repairman | McCardle said the money came | hooked his test phone onto the line with a rambling, partially illegible | and called the Koffends to let him Michigan CAP to Attend Battle Creek Maneuvers Optometrist letter which appeared to be signed | i 'Calsi C. York Hotel i i 4 é ‘ j BATTLE CREEK — Michigan | Dallas Sign Says Safe Open Civil Air Patrol | © “1 spent a year in Los Angeles| Burglar Helps Himself | are expected to assemble in Battle | jail six or four years ago and was! pU QUOIN, Ib uA sign above | Creek Friday for a weekend wing ‘locked up for trying to forge and|the safe in Leo Hindman’s hard- | training maneuver, ja second time for trying to look | ware store reads: Between 4,000 and 6,000 Michigan | for q job,’’ the letter read. “I nev-| ‘Safe not locked. No money in members of the CAP are expected | er was given a bill to pay ex-|safe. Just turn handle and open to attend the annual training ex-| penses for locking up, and knows the door.” ercise. Tactical problems scheduled someone has to pay for jail keep. | Someone followed those instruc- 'for the maneuver include a mock | “Good luck to the city of Los/tions, Hindman told police, and 7 North Saginaw Street Lenzinger } Cd members of. the Phone FE 4-6842 “Better Things in Sight” Closed Wednesday Afternoons atomic attack above St. Mary’s| Angeles and thank you for good helped himself to $300 in cash and Soda aneatind nie ee oe 7 |Lake near Battle Creek ‘eare in jail” = "$400 in _checks. | \ SEAT COV ER’ .' 100% Seran Plastic! | Reg. 49 | Reg. 1.75 Deflector Mirror $125 27¢ Smartly styled i§ 42" Chrome : plating. CR2107 CR2806 TRIPLE BONUS! *% FREE Tube (Worth up to $3.85) . Auto Baby Seat Sturdy! $4.25 * Your Old Tire Worth Sete! 20% Discount Regardless of Condition! * Mounted Free! Real comfort for baby in any car! - Steel frame. Quality cloth » 2N2261 DAVIS Safety Grip Guaranteed 18 Months! Reg. Price Sale Price® DAVIS ana Ride or Super Safety Guaranteed 2 Years! Installed Free “Seat Cushion Was 26.95 & todene Reg. Price Sale Price® Sie Tire & Tube Free Tube |Add bright, colorful beauty to your car with these Wiz- Reg. 98c 75° oo PP as diay bes Bite 670 Is 19.85 13.56 ! . ® ° be ° Lj lard aay Club Plastics—our finest! age s a He Saty seects) 62080 (139.48 ceents 1780 (1088 | quality and beauty you want in a cover at O Miriity Tong - wearing colorful fiber. 6.00%16 21.10 14.76 650216 21.70 15.00 | Carnival price N6429-87 Plastic sides. Soft filling Other Sizes and White Sidewalls Other Sizes at Similar Savings! Westline Fiber Deluxe Fiber 2N2115 Available at Similar Savings! * Plus Tax and Old Tire EVERYTHING FOR LAWN AND GARDEN! SAVE ON HUNDREDS MORE! Lawn & Garden Tool Specials! Famous Brand Casting Reels Economical Solid Glass Casting Rods ‘Mowing Value at Low Cost! Lawn Mowing LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON ; GRASS HOOK. Reg. 1.00. Steel : (A) Ocean City “1501.” Level wind, Wizerd $699 b aohebie Csndie views $] 6? n ae y =o pe q”) oo In 3 and 5'y’ = : : ¢ and Mower (B) “Miles Bay.” V73% ’ wsaat “Wildcat” GRASS WHIP. Reg. 1.05. Dow- ’ (C) South Rend “300.” For the mas-§ (B) Famous Heddon. 4's’, 5’, and ae a ter angler’ Vi377 144 size. Viege-8 rie ate seoel blede. = (D) Langley “Streamiite” Designed] (C) t'» Selid Giass Beginner's Rea. Top features found on higher | HOSE NOZZLE. Reg. 1.00. Brass. Easy, smooth, sturdy operation by the experts’ Vi4se 12 .5e Viexe 2.98 priced motors. High-dome en- § Adjustable. Cutting height adjusts from 1'%4 HE) Friveger: “ Hemaitt.” Gvistondes) 1B) Shetcspesre “Wondered.” ix 4eC : 1- a Servi Visie ba] =? 4 3° st V je6e- ? . ea "Teele ae ry - ni eth ga aia Reg. 1.05. to 2". Rubber-tired wheels roll (Ff) shakenpeare Ne. 1950 (E> Phniso. 31; ate 7 snd pre . fo mowing pentection al- omfortable grip. ' | vi nO Vi130-% . ; anced power - performance with F CRASS SMEARS. Regular 98c. quietly Self - sharpening stee hon from sve te 32.95! ‘ Other Reds frem 1.%% te 17.95! 1'a HP. engine. 2X1330 Sturdy. blade 16° cut. 2K1213 at S A WIZARD —___ 3 DAY SAVINGS FROM OUR STOCK OF 1500 OUTING NEEDS! COUPON Worth Purchase of Res. 2 39 / $179 G Spinning Reel Better balance Ms . Easy to handle Tennis Racket Anti- ’ 3X3126 ; Back!ash' $750 3 DAYS LP, on . $625 LIT ONE__ WITH COUPON mien Sree Full bale pickup, adjustable drag » 1. 380-4 60 apt market advanced in the early af CHICAGO —Rains in the south- western winter wheat belt, with fancy 46 bu an _3 30 more predicted, caused scattered Q¢ PPDME es Rea % bu |ternoon today in a moderate Amar selling in wheat futures on +} ney ar a fairly broac fror . Vegetables: Asparagu . i ao board of trade today abchs Cabbage, 175 200 t Chive Gains seldom got past a point z No 1. 100-1258 dos behs Leens N Corn held firm on good cash de- 150 doz bens Onions. green in key area Lasse generally mand. Oats held about steady. in-, , * ee Rope Senter del u *- were confined to smaller fractior fluenced by steadiness in the bread ; 5¢-!» One: pathlees Mo 1. 08 225 0% Husine maintained a pace in ba ci ¥ ed f 1 z cereal. Soybeans started lower and ; n oradishes white No? 200.128 doz the neighborhood of vesterday then firmed, with some buying in- | Dots , Rhuperb hothouse i 00- | 1.430.000 shares when the market 412 5 rnube 4 fluenced by export reports 60-18 doz behs Tomato r No Wa. fer a little ; y = I not } 1 286275 8-Ib bak Turn No | ? Near the end of the fir OUT, 180 dog behs The f ! tee and rut wheat was \ to 4s lower than the head ee i ae AP ae bees | De were the most) pop d ead } $0 $50 3 ; teed previous finish, July $1 %'2, corm No 1 175250 ¢ ettuce af cm nd there ene ‘ 2275 2 bu Romaine N l { was \ to 4 higher July $1 o5'. Greer 8; pach N } wrt : Po opertort ihe oats were unchanged to's up. July fermees No blo tis me oe es eae liad i 3 > + ta ‘ I 6%., rye was \ to 1 cent lower tu Gorrel Nol. J ' irink July 99%, soybeans were 1 cent Ne Pe Ee The motor ind railroad re higher to %s lower, July $3 66% DETROIT EGOS narrowly mixed as were the ¢ and lard was 13 to “) cents a DETROIT (AP) The ! wing | pers. and radiotelevisior — pe en wer paid f t D a i Paab, oe - hundred pounds lower, July $17 4 Ee) sisas eeeeieerel ft nee eee { Rubber was fairly aet F ea) of federal state graded exes at higher prices, Dr Pepper in a ° . Whites Grade A jumbo 45 48 weighted | Standout in its division ‘nd amor Grain Prices disviae EDtae hae Tee exn Gt; ons ; ‘ ent = + all 29 other gainers were [ teel CHICAGO GRAIS grade B laree } » aig 14 (,oodrich United Aiteraft [ ber : a ' ! Pentiac Press Photo — CHICAGO (AP) Opening grair I wns Grade A ; 4 arge 4 - | 4, oh, . 4 , | ; Wheat soe aha: : a wid ava 4 eas ell 29 . mic me ting " eo Rleatyn WELCOME CHEVROLET DEALERS — Ap vimately TO) Pon B. Hargreave who recently acquired the Chevrolet agency in Pontiac wi es a R« eat grade B large 7 de ¢ alee Amer Hi oObacet “he [houh af , mess tM re “} ret t} ‘ ? ’ Pac Jats . i a ; ‘ a - iT “ . wccng : rs i” f, t beau } id prof btpft no were yur ts of e Chevrolet Motor Shown above at the event are tleft to right) Matthews: William W | é : Os 2 ‘ ects 20 32 wid ave 2% Vi) ane Pex | it nad ivi , «ct t ae nfie { ty ' > . Dec... 19894 Bet 2 681 : : I) on al a ¢ tail party at Bloomfield | Country Club Wednes- , Donaldson. Pontiac mayor, Ray B. Johnson, Chevrolet Division zone Mar .. 2OlLy Ne 24 Trust = { nv Ti cent — oye | Corn ar @'. CHICAGO BUTTER AND BOGS P Spot When AM GETINEND pe eM was in honor of Fk ¢ Matthews and Wilham manager. F A Hoel, regional manager for Chevrolet; and Hargreaves. July os 1 84', Lard CHICAGO / AE mits - ve ackard and tudebaker Aere _ 7 . on peony a a ' 2311242) wholesals nye price active and mostly higher affer it \ « ae “ nebaner ‘ we AA 567 62 A M4 ! ~ = ° ° s i F ' ° F Thursday Holiday shortened week re - oes : aia M ake / ¢ a x, ; =teas : or e « pany s | WASHINGTON «—Paul Crouch _ ted in active market slaughter steers | Anec Cos Stuste, ¢ 4 * q | ( blo Like BS Svinan Like outdoor advertising had four per | farm machinery activities, it was | ae etfers mostly steady cows and , ‘> Nat ‘ , ' er each Network dio Fi ‘ \ y ren- former Communist who often tes- | bulls fully 50 cents lower stockers 9r || Anec » a 4 — wa Ist cil toe ne manacer of the tone ' work radi was |announced by O. L. Wigton, gen- | tifies for the government, says he apera gi: "ss oo ea . load prime | Atchison 1ou 2 Nat De Auto Club Poritae division office | 2088 SIN per cent eral sales manager of the Division ” ! * 5 ulk chot to low t!] Cat - j Nat lea ‘ ; Th > , ri was able to recognize and identify | prime fed stecrs and yearlings 3250. | All Refine Sie ai on June Anite Club) President The new office will coordinate ih © : ‘ ' ’ 2 ® he i ! > — = = a Gelendent in-0 Pallsdeiphia. trial | ooo sur ana sens ccore lisence | ccna : at Pe. it area 3 Milli th hi ! coe an rales ne eigh were ve ood steers 750-7200 | Avoc fy NY A rk ve tritiuite ale “or of Communist party leaders even | severs! small lota high choice and prime | eld Lima ee Lroawn will become save OP thi | ion e IC e itors and dealers in eight | fi _ | 730-803 Ib heifers 2256-2300 by) Bait . ii P ‘ states, as we as though he had denied at an earlier | ,, , wh vik com, | Balt & Obi 25 Nia M | newWly-established Auto Club Bu ercial and good fed hetfers 1450-2000 | Bendix Av ) Nort A A 4 DOLGELAS € BROWN : ‘ ait e \ trial that he knew the man. bulk wttiiy and commercial cows 1250. | Benguet 4 No A Ay ‘ PARAM a mr olf in Mexico | s Ps PS | 1450 young commercial cows of heifer | Beth 8 6A6 Ne Pa ‘ Alst } , , | John J. Dzorni, jtype up to 1750 canners F tters | Borin * 4 Nor & , ‘ ' " i t Is al ‘ “ - ! ’ and utter * \ ! a Ff . . . > Crouch issued an explanation! mostly 1000-1280 | mixed cutter. ana| Bonn A on Ti issociated with Auto Club in the! DETROIT «rs A ee i Gas i! . | Bend § : A. boon t (INS) utomotive non yesterday of alleged discrepancies cali ele ibn most utility ans _— cA ‘ Lie Packard Pontiuie att Le, . Automon regional manager in his testimony involving a David | 4e*" bulk good and choice 3eee00 A. | Brieas Mie ea farce on et ev \ bere ews Wregeted) Ut ame A, Spel peacailae : stockers and teeders 20 00-22 00 Brist M Parke Das a SMES UN plant today as turning out the) ters at Birming Davis, first at a 1949 perjury trial! ©)... ga) . ran Raike i lpeecoe cok Brown wall take et e of the the 41 +f hich of 4] : = {Hi Bridges, West C long- | = _watabie 1b) Vealess slew de: | peda Ce K ‘ * onth vehicle the year. | ham, will be re- ol arry . West Coast long- | mand narrow no early sales Compared | p Ae ; Pa KR Birmingham a m when ats of Dexpit retanicd slinct ' monal ie . shore leader, and later at a Phila- | a eet geeaete slow. unevenly | Calum A&A H , r ‘ eg emibinith: : 7 ; Bid pite curtatled pre « my ote yional sa ia man- - | bad A] ® lower mostly $190 200|) Camph W ; ich ne is ae HV cause of the holiday weekend, the ager of the new deiphia trial of nine Red leaders. | lower on commercial to prime grades | Can Dr . fF . in Birmmngham os completed inf trad te timat {fice > ~ bulk most! che : ' » M acle Paper estimated that by office Atty. Gen, Brownell said last) 360 ‘t.0 } ice vealers late 2140-/ Cdn Pac et) eee o \ t i ' Pont : 7 ; ew high choice and prime 2700 | Capital A ’ ee as . “ ; ot nMac ¢ week Send a total of 3.955.559 units Also transfer- oe ee he Pees ace on ee and wiiny Hapa tp! ors Ih ast ‘ ; wee inager f we Sears and) wil} have t . n prod i in in ij red fr m the Bir y = utility 0 06-15 90 i "late cil < V ive cat renluces ciuding ‘ o e - alleged discrepancies he said were | gg Ae a Cater T a ® Proct (en afr Chit © fer oN enor nd 480.317 t sy minehaik head reported to him by columnist | unchanged today c operee et fee Ches & 01 paul as ear I hatin WW, y Browr eee TRS: SNS eee ple ‘ Joseph Alsop. In his statement yes- | *!8ueter lamb trade very spotty. spring | Chrvalet Pure OU “ rowel This week's output was estimated | quarters of — the ° 3 J > y etty apris ~ : iK » foun rie ay: 1% , ° terday, Crouch, now an immigra cae nail ! strome. shorn old erop Cumen Me ae Soars i ( I - estan County Motor at 91596 cars and 16.681 trucks | division will — be DZORNI a . 2 * unevenly weak ¢ ) . ime h) y lul ni th ‘ by ry F 1 1 - . - = tion service employe criticized Al- sheep scarce sinentiitne veel t ng Clertt Fee : a - “ i " t \ moat Flor a Rota! of ML204 coment Tos : : tapes: 8 regional enes cilia | arid chetce sprin lamt > ~ Coca Cola ' Utomobile Club. of lichigan full v this i P nite ~ G S§ *h Ss S| sop and other columnists who have | short deck high cash ta Witiee ba. ies Colg Pa “4 Repub Stl ' Ponti Th r " col) Meee \ year Re PUe re niative: io. 6@ ted: June 2, 1954 ‘ eran : : aGute AVERSLEN t { Regular $26.95 ADA R EVANS ete , ; , Sia aa t , at ant 4 : City Cierk |, Heavy hens 23.25 light her 19 mpile . ent of a athe bee Daan Ree aC an eat , ewe York Central protested bi 3-PC. COLORED BATH SET $1795 ——— ' 5 ' 1 : ne EAN 2714.28, Barred Rocks ; Net chanue , ferty catter th block held by - tice of Special Assessment 29 10 «4 tes 16), 4 11¢ duck N I aan S , ist , Complete with chrome fittings ¢ 50 NOW Curb, Gutter, Drainage and | "* = + turks Ag ae a ble ro a ome les ' ad ‘ i he : . , Week 1 l ae seat ‘ § sea ed work on Second AvVenue 28 , “ Mont? ? ee ‘ fed , Vien . Y ' $159.00 Value Less Seat dosiyn Avenue to Barkell oa m ; . ° CHICAGO POULTRY ieee sie ' ; ee eee er , 21x32 AuiBradihae (Ga fh Pri ' ; ‘ 0 Bat the election tispectors re Cast Iron nas Ww Ww Mr ren waters - . . y Alexander Mutre ae can g he Soca hs me TROT Pie ine jected the challenge vesterday GAS HEATER Double r f ernbiewer d ef A pera Rescoe Rose Cole | er. 32 ; ee - a rnd Willian White, president: of c t t rrett enr Ie naki 9 Byror f : - = m é en ie N i war Ge i A ne . - the railroad, issued a statement 30 Gallon Automatic ompar m : TiPoe arte Ick ' . F ‘a Saunty Cort M Imbler Sidne A . > A SN ‘ hinting that the paoatter might be SINK m Barden Frederick Newtor sida sa : taken to court Omer 8 Cannon. George ion K t Se Ma Bcres : 7 ' rlete with e xing \ f ' @ Safcty Pilot chrome. White E 1 Ve a ° Finish neme Reg. $59.50 ‘4a” Slight feed and to all persons interest Atiiw Abia . na \ CST fOr oy) if ' bd fee: That the roll of the «6 i . : = 5 R d 7 b smert heretofore made | ! , M ‘ ‘ cla ed confidently that) th bit ecesse u t Aa f Screw i ‘ ssor fer the purpose of in U 0 e arge . R 11] . 6a) { th ap \ a nb ' . fought proxy battle was Uover A G q ted Yall r race fon decide should be pa mi wit fio i pra tie specia: assessment for the Alvin * WH t f SAO Rethune . ; Ve I f yf fur Cautter @rainase tet is five on $1,000 bond te Foreign Exchange ras @ AGA Approved | ™Periections avenue Rarkell fee! day after he waived examination NEw YORK OAR result t sul Reg. Price r {fice fer pu . ‘ ou rat . att I nnounced foal ten Mader ‘ a fo theft charge before + = : ‘ . D Aline gieaxt clare $69.50 Value (Less Trim) $59.50 WASH BASIN Less $1000 $21.95 Value! Trade-in a hereby given that the : ; ein 4 rent | nd ihe Assessor of the | Oval Out fee Toho bk Breoneagee arke ' { ' } iac lw ert at the! 4 pari A The vet the SGCLD00 ire rt in sa City n the - . attire re : m1 ( "1 Ac ole ra) if Wy oS Tele E ase a ok ract from the Army for manu Ace ¢ of . Detroit Tank Plant in Center Line ee | FACIITE Of 79) millimeter. shells rraph Pad) was stru t coear | won the Natior Serie ry s won the Na ety Cr EZ OF PUBLIC BALE Gibson said it has been making Wednesday a h atte pted t . \ i a ur : - OO nag age gg eM but that the Army, reducing the | graph, according to Pontiag Police Corp. annuuneed today FHA T | hl re ie be held for _ humber of suppliers, asked for | St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, at- | I ; mae ‘ erms Arai able pughest bidder. Inspection |* now bids after the endef hos- |tendants said Cole is in good con. |) Chrysler said the aw wisi Full Stock of Soil Pipe and Fittings — Everything in Plumbing Suppli oy ———— and sale. tilities in Korea. Gibson failed dition today with a chest injury presented n about a mont! to . ¢ Pp g 9 u g upp es ; iaseures oiscouer| 10 submit low bid on the larger Donald [Medill 23 of Olt Cass. the tank plant in recagninon of ats 100 S. Saginaw St. Free Parking Free Delivery ATION shell Lake Rd Keego Hartor driver i safety record 0 ® ho 00 816 Maccabees Bid “ : - : > Detroit. Michigan - ———— - _ of the car, said that he saw Cole , rt citation is the highest safet Open Mon. thru Sat., 9 to 5:3 Fri. 9 9 P mee: FE 2 21 FE 4-5831 =_—- mane The: Republic an party dates its but could not avoid him. Mod ward given to an industrial plant ' . June 2. & '64| Organization Back to 1854. was not held, the Nathonal Safety Council. Hi ; ‘ 2 * en ee ee oes Gene eect — —— = — — ‘Soe ae x St