} ’ ae ¢ ~ r THE PONTIAC PRESS | The Weather Home 112th YEAR kk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 —28 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS | UNITED Te s Ls House Expected to OK Formosa Policy Today Island to Be Abandoned to Reds 193 Tachen Refugees Reach Formosa; Women and Children Lead the Exodus TAIPEH, Formosa ® — An old gray landing ship slid into the small, hill-grit harbor of Keelung in northern Formosa today with the first 193 refugees—many of them children—from the Commu- nist-menaced Tachen Islands 200 miles to the north. The dingy LSM carried widows and orphans of Nationalist guer- the orphan- Risk of War With China Now Greatest Since Korea WASHINGTON (# — The United States faces today greater risk of war with Red China than at any time since the Korean War ended 18 months ago. President Eisenhower and Secretary of State Dulles are convinced that taking this risk, however, affords the best long-range hope for peace in the Far East. It can be stated on excellent authority that both believe strong- ly in the probability of In his message to Con- gress yesterday, Eisenhower put the issue squarely up to Red China: If the Reds start an attack aimed at conquering Formosa, the United States is prepared to fight; if and when the Reds are ready for peace, the United States is pre- pared to make peace. The decisions which underlay this policy are decisions of a kind that in the area. peating her intent to conquer the island striking power in capturing last week the small Nationalist - held island of Yikiangshan. 4. Chiang Kai-shek appealed for U.S. help when the Reds stepped up attacks on the Tachen Islands, near Yikiangshan but more import- ant than it. The Tachens, 200 miles Guatemala Net Set for Plotters Round Up Suspects in Attempt to Overthrow President Armas ~ | a i a rz z E ipl : eu | * peace. Ques - War Hero Dies One of the six Marines who raised the U. S. flag on Iwo Jima's Mt. Suribachi in 1945, Ira Hayes, was found dead Monday on the Sacaton, Ariz., Indian Res- ervation. (Story, page 28.) A-Sub Nautilus Put in Drydock for Inspection GROTON, Com. @—The atomic submarine Nautilus goes into a floating drydock at high tide today for a routine hull inspection, paint- ing and reballasting. The Nautilus has been in the water since the launching Jan. 21, 194, 3 A Navy announcement said the 300-foot Nautilus which steamed 148 hours under nuclear propulsion in two cruises since her builder's sea trials began Jan. 17 this year, would remain in drydock here about two weeks. ° The—Navy said all her tests to date, including over 50 dives, have been “‘satisfactory.” Nuclear energy was the sole source of locomotion for the Nauti jus during her 148 hours at sea, a Navy spokesman said. The Nau- tilus is equipped with secondary diesel and electric power facilities The Navy reported the Nautilus day, firing half a dozen unarmed missiles. ried ashore. Only two men were among the refugees. They were the elderly father of a guerrilla squad leader killed at Yikiangshan and the orphanage cook. The evacuation was a Nationa- ist operation, possibly the fore- runner of a complete withdrawal from the two small Tachen Is- lands, The evacution ship on the final stage of its trip passed through waters protected by the U. 8. 7th Fleet built around four fast carriers of the Essex class. The fleet is in position to assist in the complete withdrawal of 20,- 000 Nationalist troops from the Tachens if it gets orders to do the job. » Rear Adm. Frederick N. Ki- vette, commander of the US. Formosa Strait patrol, arrived today at the south Formosa port of Kaohsiung aboard his flagship Salisbury Sound from Hong Kong. He was expected to visit Taipeh in a day or 80, : On and over the Formosa Strait it appeared to be quiet with the Nationalist air force reporting only routine patrol flights. There were no reports of surface action. Unofficial Nationalist . quarters made it plain they thought the Tachens would be abandoned to the Reds. U.S. congressional reac- tion. to President Eisenhower's message on the Formosa crisis was watched eagerly. Two-Inch Snow Blankets Area Heavy Fall Expected to Diminish to Flurries Tonight The year's first heavy snowfall came to Pontiac today, dumping more than two inches of the white, slushy stuff on the city and sur- rounding areas. Early - morning traffic was slowed to a crawl as city and county roadways were glazed over with a combination of ice and snow. But Pontiac and Oakland County crews managed to keep main roadways salted and ice free. kept at a minimum. None were reported as of 1 p.m. The State Highway Department warned, however, that slippery spots remained on nearly all trunklines. Most secondary roads were termed hazardous. Although much of the state was (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Wires Sen. McNamara to Back Ike on Formosa | | GRAND RAPIDS ® — City Man- jager George W. Welsh says he has wired Sen, Patrick V. McNa- mara (D-Mich) urging McNamara Eisenhower's message: “If Ike has enough courage to stand up and be counted, for tested her torpedo armament Sun | heaven's sake support him: Don't | “reasons of efficiency and econ- | omy” | straddle, If we fold now, we're ‘ done Prompt Action on Road Bond Issue Is Sought Sponsor Moves to Put Proposal on April 4 State Ballot LANSING (# — Sen. Has- kell L. Nichols (R-Jackson) today called for speed in placing a 500 million dollar highway construction bond issue on the April ballot. Nichols, sponsor of one such proposal and chair- man of the Senate High- ways Committee consider- ing the plan, said he hoped to obtain Senate action this week. Noting suggestions that the measure should be cleared through the Legis- ‘lature by mid-February, Nichols said “we haven't got much time and we've got to get going right away.” He said his committee had given priority to legislation to per- mit the Michigan Turnpike Au- |thority to borrow on promissory notes pending the issue of its toll road bonds, but that he was try- ing to get the half-billion dollar proposal under way promptly. A meeting originally called by Gov. Williams for this afternoon to work out a system of priorities for spending the bond issue money was postponed until a later date after Highway Commissioner Charles M. Ziegler said he was not yet ready with his figures. a ed e tu a eR ie MISS JUDY BRADLEY Probers Return Rontiea MSC Sophomore ss °° the record, have a high degree of | People are seldom, if ever, pre- safety but a low yield. Others—_| dictable. say in a new company, or what the | And since the stock market is the marketeers call “unseasoned ” | focus of so many opinions and stocks—may represent potentially } emotions, it also is unpredictable. bigger profits, but also greater Nobody can tell you exaetly what) risks. it will do, or why. * * # Moreover, it reacts to events| And there are hundreds of issues anywhere in the world. A vote in in between these two extremes. the French Assembly or a Com-| Since you're no expert, you will | munist raid on a tiny island off the | seek out the best advice and coun- China coast quite probably will be sel you can get. reflected in the rise or fall of some | stocks. might very well say, after looking to stay out of the market. They | over your financial position, “You will certainly advise you how to) haven't any money that you can buy. | afford to risk, Better buy govern-| There are fees for all this ad-' ment bonds.” a | vice, 7 iz s 3 5? 4 A i i FE 3E i ef Pe " 'PHE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 _ .|the A-bomb pushed his one-man Hicks was the only person ad- | The 125 persons attending the | |only conclusions will be based on | Township Supervisor, J. R. Hiltz | der scene in the St ard Bay Vil- « Seteaeaeeeiinneenl Scientific Eye Turned on Sam Cool-Headed A-Expert Devotes His Talents to Sifting Sheppard Case CLEVELAND (INS) — A pipe smoking professor credited with big contributions to the making of investigation of the explosive Shep- pard murder case today. Dr. Paul L. Kirk, University of California scientist hired by de- fense attorneys, plodded through the weekend in a microscopic ex- amination of the bits and pieces of evidence on which a jury found Dr. Samuel Sheppard guilty of the July 4 bludgeon murder of his wife, Marilyn. DAVID A. GREEN Fx-legislator Dies in Pontiac David Green Served 3 Terms in State House of Representatives outcome of his appeal of a sec- ond degree murder conviction and life sentence. Like the laboratory dweller he is, Kirk summed up his attitude towards Sheppard coldly and dis- passionately. He said: “I have no strong feelings about | this man one way or another. My | member of the State Legislature, the physical and factual evidence." ; The slight, 52-year-old vie | a. : ologist talked to Dr. Sam's two He was born in Bloomfield brothers, Drs. Richard and Ste- Township, Nov. 2, 1862, the son of phen Sheppard, read the trial Thomas and Martha Sandbrook transcript and went over the mur- Green, an early pioneer family. lage home on the shores of Lake 'e¢ Was married to Erie Hagerman in Bloomfield |Nov. 18, 1891. A distinguished contributor to | beth atomic energy development Mr. .Green was graduated and cancer research, Dr. Kirk re- | from Birmingham High School fused .to say exactly how much he is being paid fer hix private de es ee eye work. But he added that he | the Greens moved to Clarkston never works on cases like this for | where he was engaged in the less than $100 a day and ex- | produce business. The following penses. Kirk's cold, unemotional ap- proach to the problem of crime detection was dramatically pointed up by the fact that less than two years ago he was instrumental in obtaining a conviction in a murder! Jn 1903, he established a grocery case with some parallels to the business in Pontiac which he con- Sheppard killing. __| ducted for 20 years. He has lived That was the San Francisco trial! nis entire life in Oakland County of Cpl. Philip Watson for the slay- | and the last 50 years in Pontiac. ing of his wife. Watson maintained | that his 22-year-old bride of eight | months must have been killed by an “‘intruder,”’ as Sheppard does, He held village, township and school offices and served as presi- dent the school board in alibi—that he was out of their, ‘Areugh 1913 and again during smal] apartment at the time of the | the years 1918 and 1919. He had killing. aise served twe terms as a Watson showed sand in his | poems, a, ine Oakland County shoes to back up his claim that he Was strolling on the beach at While in the Legislature, he in- Half Moon Bay at the timie of troduced the Woman Suffrage Te Rotemner 18éf" lr. and i But Kirk also found small quan- a dgprls _ tities of blood on the shoes and , and he claimed that he had cut himself, Kirk showed that the sand had been collected after the bloodstains, and after the bloody murder. Watson, still protesting his inno- cence, is serving a term of five years to life at San Quentin Prison. The Sheppard murder is the 579th | part | as an expert in a career dating| Bloomfield Hills, three grand. back to 1935, Mother's Polio March fo Be Held Thursday The 1955 Mothers’ March on Polio will take place in Pontiac and throughout @akland County on | Thursday from 7 to 8 p.m., ac- cording to Floyd J. Shotwell, local | chairman for the National Foun- dation for Infantile Paralysis. Mothers will tour their neigh- borhoods stopping for donations at homes with lighted porches. The Pontiac Mother's March Templar and White Shrine, B.P.0O.E No. $10 and the Repub- lican Club. are a son, J. Wendell Green of bert Marcora, general chairman, Mrs. Stanley Hollis and Mrs. J. R. Gallagher. The Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce against the affliction, said Shot- well, including purchase of enough Salk vaccine to give 9,000,000 peo- ple injections this year. eee5F ij iE David A” Green, 92, a former |died yesterday after an illness of } Mary A.| -|Blankets City, Area The Day in Birmingham : BIRMINGHAM — Launching into night assured Mrs. Charles J. Shain it had no intention of aban- doning the park altogether. Lawmakers answered her fear- ful inquiries by stating that the present commission would not uti- lize the park for off-street parking without dedicating a new Shain Park, probably in the block direct- ly south. It would be dedicated for public use, while the present park is not. Commissioners noted that the suggested change is to be put to a public advisory vote April 4, a procedure not needed legal- ly. Without the elector’s appreval, the idea will probably be shelved. In other action, -commissioners amended a revenue bond ordin- ance for construction of three municipal parking lots, changing the issue from $400,000 to $500,- | 000. | * . * Charles Mercer, 68, school cross- ing guard for the police depart- ment, who has been safely guid- ing Baldwin School youngsters across the Maple - Chester inter- section since last fall, was him- self the victim of an auto this morning Police said Mercer, who lives | at 259 Daines St., was struck by a car driven by Walter B. Archer, | 51, of 1985 W. Lincoln Ave., as he “halted Maple traffic. Mercer suf- red shoulder and knée injuries and will be X-rayed. Hills |"~Archer, who was turning west onto Maple from Chester, was) | ticketed for failure to yield the} | right of way to a pedestrian in | the crosswalk. Second in a series of three lec- |tures comprising the Quarton | School family institute will get un- |derway at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow, |to Use His Aggression in a Posi- | tive Way,” and Dr. Joseph Fes- = talks on ‘‘The Withdrawn | | Child.” | | Taking on the Neighbors told police that they PEE il Fits E i | | | ii i i | : i F HE ; Two-Inch Snowfall (Continued From Page One) i | i : Hy} zi : : New Shain Park Assured If Parking Plan Carries * . * “How City Officials Work With School Officials” is the topic to be dealt with in short talks given by Police Lt, Henry Timm, Fire Mar- shall George Scott and City Health Nurse Anyce Gillette at Torry Schools PTA meeting at 8 tonight. - - * Mrs. Ford H. Conlan Service for Mrs. Ford H. (Sally Jane) Conlan, 39, of 2802 Dorches- died this morning after a long ill- ness, Besides her husband, Mrs. Con- lan is survived by two sons, Den- nis and Tommy, and one daugh- ter, Jill, all at home; her mother, Mrs. John Cannan, of Detroit; and one sister, Mrs, Joseph M. Ross, of Birmingham. To Install Officers at Chamber Banquet The 1955 slate of officers will be installed at the Pontiac Chamber also spoke last year. Ralph T. Norvell heads the list been sold. New Homes Rifled BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Reported to police today was the theft, sometime over the weekend, of $473 ih building supplies from three new, unoccupied homes on E. Hammond Lake Drive, near | Free Lecture Entitled Christian Science: The Way of Health and Security eas Ella H. Hay, C. 5. ef Indianapolis, Indiana Member of the Board of Lecture- ship of The Mother Church, The Pirst Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts. KEEP feoltiea. ia’) fe > [i UF oe NO SECURITY OR ONE PLACE TO PAY receiving $2,500 from a trucking q .. whille he was president ee firm in violation of Zalt- the owe reergrencly — r yy . Hartley Act. payments dated back to 1950. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUN itis Ryan, 70, who is free in $2,300) Ryan was president of the union 41% South Seginew St. bail pending sentencing Feb. 1,| for decades until the time it w é “Phone TELA ousted from the.AFL in the fall to THERE'S A “ROCKET” FOR EVERY POCKET... There's an Oidsmobile for YOU 3 Just look at the style! Try new “Rocket” Engine power! Admire the luxurious interiors! You'll find that Oldsmobile fits all your dreams . . . perfectly! And mighty important to any new car buyer, you'll find an Oldsmobile that fits your budget, too! Yes, there’s a “Rocket” for every pocket! 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Alan Canty, executive director ‘of the psychopathic clinic of De- | troit's Recorder's Court, said it | just doesn't happen He said any problem driver is a | social misfit when he's not behind the steering wheel also. He said is away from his car. Canty has studied reckless, problem drivers since the early 1990's, Since October, 1936, he has headed Detroit's special psy- The division, until just recently the only one of its kind in the na- who are hailed before the city's His studies have convinced him cial problem children are the | the symptoms might just be hard-| invented, most of our violation- er to find when the problem driver | | = drivers should still be rec- b= to conform to the social and legal conventions. chopathic traffic division. | tion, studies “problem” drivers | %e 's behind the wheel, he said. | people for what they really are— that well-adjusted people are also | social misfits.” | speed. Material to be dropped is loaded in the nose, | it wes shown in Washington, B.C. Problem Drivers Mistits Generally, Not Just in Cars’ He said people don’t behave | in a manner totally different | from their usual pattern. He | sald « person's personality | doesn't change. “There is one significant differ- ence. When the driver is in his own car there ig more freedom of opportunity or even antisocial traits,”’ he said. | Canty said well-adjusted people are “unlikely” to be chronic prob- | lem drivers. “If automobiles had never been ble as problem children in ty through their inability e » He said the clinical studies of “If we know from a study of an individual's life that he has made to demonstrate the | | presence of unsocial, irresponsible ‘ § - 79° Soft and absorbent Dish Towels with colorful stripe border. Fa- mous ‘CANNON’ first quality. SCOOSSSSSSSSSSSSSSHSESSSSSSSSSSSESSSSSCOSOEOES This Week's Outstanding Main Floor Special! 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His traffic | predict that he will be a problem misbehavior is’ but a symptom of | driver in the future,” he said. his personality maladjustment,” | Canty said a person might specu- | Canty said. late how many of the problem | “The same factors which cause drivers “would be given favorable | marital unhappiness, divorce and | consideration if they were pain separations, frequent job changes. | ing for a permit to carry a gun.’ economic distress and unhealthy | recreational activities contribute | this contempt or the socal ana | REAL EState Course ‘to Be Offered Here by his chronic defiance of eal The University of Michigan. in | traffic laws.” cooperation with the Pontiac Real | THREE FIRST PLACE WINNERS | 22522 OLDSMOBILE ALSO ON SPECIAL DISPLAY AT THE DETROIT AUTO SHOW, MICHIGAN STATE FAIRGROUNDS JEROME MOTOR SALES CO. 280 S. Saginaw St., Pontiac, Mich. Phone FE 4-3566 real estate business course for the | | Pontiac area beginning Feb. 2 at | | Pontiac High School. Planned for persons who intend | to enter the real estate business, | | those with general experience in| | the field are also urged to enroll, jsaid Kenneth W. Lieber, Allen | Park attorney and realtor who wid | instruct the class. To meet at 7 p.m. in room ons | of the high school, the class will | present guest speakers during the | course including John Gentile, ‘Se curing Listings and Prospects and | Supporting Information;'’ Harold | Hallet, ‘Advertising Your List ings:"’ Albert R. Saunders, ‘‘Mak- | ing the Sale—Getting the Purchase | Agreement Signed.”’ \Golfer Seeks $150,000 | \From Jack Carson | | LOS ANGELES « — A $150,000 | Gamage suit against actor Jack) 'Carson was filed yesterday by | | Louis E. Fiske, 74, in connection | i with a golfing mishap. Fiske, retired auto manufactur- NATION WIDE FIRST PLACE WINNER ETHYL *: GASOLINE jing executive, accused Carson of FARMER'S WEAPON BOY With One of the Highest FARMER'S SECRET WEAPON eens of ue eee FIRST PLACE WINNER OCTANE RATINGS FIRST PLACE WINNER Feb. 1, 1954, struck him in the | : . aid. permanently’ tapetrinn, ban] ALL GASOLINE VALUES TODAY ARE SOLELY BASED ON OCTANE RATING ‘ion pens : THE HIGHER THE OCTANE RATING THE BETTER. THE GASOLINE Grenade Kills 9 Boys PUSAN, Korea (®—Nine Korean boys were killed yesterday when: an antitank hand grenade they| were playing. with exploded, police | | reported today. 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SAGINAW ST. 0 45.54 ¢ Why Are Mice So Popol in Films, Comic Books? _By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK (INS)—Almost any- one who has had close dealings with the parlor variety of mouse will agree, I think, that this is a rodent -with no charm. ; There are exceptions, of course, as in the case of a man I knew who claimed mice were quite nice when happy. You put out a wedge of cheese in a kitchen corner, he contended, and your friendly mouse | will return your kindness by es- chewing your fruit cake, This man |recently left us, however, and I think the state took him gently out |of circulation, Anyway, what puzzles nie is why—if mice are so generally | unloved in the home—are they so popular in the theatre and the comic book? True, Mickey and Mighty Mouse and their crawling cinematic friends do not look like the mice we hear behind the walls when the lights are out, but they are mice, no doubt about it. And a mouse is a mouse, even in top hat and tails. The answer, according to Paul Terry, 67-year-old creator of Mighty Mouse (the flying super- mouse), ts not easy to put down in black and white. It has something to do with egomania, sympatica, quantum mechanics, lend-lease and Einstein's law of relativity. That is, if I understood Terry 9.30.5 50 We 30 daily d.9 30-8 OOF ri lies ore poying. Phone FE 2-0189 79 Oskland Ave. Faneral Crile? The PLAINLY MARKED prices in our displey room give assurance thot you'll be asked to pay no more for ony given service than other fomi- Funeral Home iit il & f i Hi ett : - = ef ol REE §2 z SEF 3 . I 5 < » z ( BANK FACTS Fill in the check completely, and legibly; spell correctly. Write amounts at the far left and fill remaining space with heavy lines ; besure theamount in figures agrees with the amount in words. If you make a mistake, destroy the check—do not erase. Sign a check only after it is written; and use the same signature as that on file at your bank. Properly drawn, checks provide a safe way to transfer funds—use checks to pay all your bills. If you haven’t yet opened an account with us, why not do so soon? DRAYTON PLAINS We Also Invite You to Open a Savings Account C STATE BANK COMPLETE BANKING SERVICE SAGINAW AT LAWRENCE “BRANCHES AUBURN HEIGHTS born to create. And his father was an animal-lover, which meant that as a child Paul had as per- sonal pets at home in San Fran- cisco: one sheep, one goat, one mule, 50 pigeons and 2% or 30 hares. “No,” he admitted reflectively, “I never owned any mice, I wish that I had, cute devils.” He might then have thought up Mighty Mouse 40 years ago, in- stead of 15, and beat ae Mouse to the punch! (Tomorrow: Miss Battelle learns what happens to a Rus- sian pop tune writer whe com. poses love-lyrics.) State GOP Leaders Eye Party Rebuilding JACKSON (INS)—Michigan Re- publicans say they hope to re- build their party in Michigan “along the modern progressive lines advocated by President Ei- senhower’’ following a closed ses- sion Saturday of 40 state Republi- son to plan political strategy follow. ing the party's defeat at the polls last November. to find out if Republican State chairman John Feikens intends to stand for re-election as the party's | state chairman at the state con- vention in Detroit Feb. 19. Feikens said: ‘I'll make my po- State Central Committee in Lans ing next Saturday.” GEMS GALORE— Gil re cade aaeeooe diocese fs tay province, aad fa my treatment fas wo care Tie th he rose from private to captain, he ed and happy. Once the biggest wheat ship- aa vide te Se ee Log ayens Gaba i wd likely to fail as. is the radieal | ping point on its railroad, the auto and pag is Seis mo. Sane cen aie ae ase Toe a Laan r stop, sity, one In the textbook clted the anthor | _ One doctor advises surgery enterprise sin ad a penet ber T.7 > _ elegate io U.N.’s General Assem- _ Verbal Orchids to— - in " ) 3 Tae net it fi § * ip t THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 More than. 10\per cont of Swee- population lives in the city of iH Ber ere aot: ‘ioe enone’ thom ili re aime, 4° li cles Djilas wrote for Borba, the ‘J < ; S 4 ’ policies, called wider freedom GEORGE'S - NEWPORT’S P ? , * . | of political expression ‘ 3 fo Hike Postage Given Probation |: Sec cials for the actress bride ‘ of Chief of Peko Dapcevic. ‘ . One-Cent Leiter Boost, 2-Ex-Yugoslav Officials iid bile Sho ee WEDNESDAY Higher 2nd, 3rd Class Apparently Gagged by time partisan fighting, sided with WASHINGTON @® — Postmaster Yugoslavia wp — | Salled’him on the carpet. General Summerfield has asked Communist Yugoslavia freed for- | queniy Hots met Cetsrth foreign Congress to raise the price of mail- mer Vice President Miloven Dilies oe wth Lar ing & letter from 3 to 4 cents “to ere odin Ange meet increased costs; to provide judicial gag on the two critics of | Says Dishonest to Sing " The Church On lars a a as sent | he is sure that U. S. 7th Fleet can | tion. increase in t cost a er Ses The Corner Near You... stamp would account for 237 mil- defend against any attack, even eo anes 6 Se Boe ‘ a ” ‘The letter rate would be |0¢ made with Russian-built MIG | Were disclosed, but it.was as- euppot is beta” But you Enoe oat ia lee Be silent during the probalooay per is tT pee of ceenae for those who attend, and a © for on iod. 9 uence for the community. tional e @ @ Heirs Mother Djilas, 43 and one of the gov- The American people have Yong realized the Summerfield coupled his bid for ernment’s top four men until his reat of living with, and supporting a higher rates with a proposal to Custer & year ago, was pul om aith that may not be their own. This fine raise the pay of about 500,000 let- . . probation for three years in liew Gttitude strengthens our nation, and is a high ter carriers, clerks and other of at SSmenth pctomn peyed mark of character in our people. Es by 5 per cent. At if | Dedijer, Tito’s 41-year-old offi- postal work: : cial biographer and a former mem- Ges gains fine, be erauneted 0 re ber of Parliament, drew a two- now resul “injustices ° ° ° and prevent the Post Office De-| Lavish Presents in Suit ee ape peer —s= ~ certain fringe benefits, this would mount to at least 170 millions a S ORM SASH year, the Post Office Department | said. Last year Congress went along with President Eisenhower on a postal. pay raise but ignored his companion proposal for higher mail charges designed to bring in compensating revenue. Eisenhow- er then vetoed the pay raise bill. 7 * 7 a said in a statement that “despite 2 Combination Windows recent economies and greater ef- Complete ficiency,” it now operates at a loss of between 300 million and 400 mil- Reg. $389.00 frets Saat an crease from 6 to 7 cents for the 10 Solf-Storing Windows |] sins sst'sw te administrator’ Heavy Extruded puvel , see | For All Type Windows =|) Paticr this month, Eisenhower field yesterday called for a boost shortly after midnight, a five-judge jn domestic air mail from 6 to 7 ey Se ae meee cents and second and third-class _ bigwigs of conspiring against mail rates, Tito's government by planting hos- FLEET COMMANDER — After in the foreign surviving the Far Eastern situa- tion, Vice Adm. Alfred Pride says for $1.7 Million Estate CHICAGO @®-—-The mother of the late Montgomery Ward Thorne, testifying yesterday at a deposition hearing in the court fight over his $1,700,000 estate, detailed some of the gifts she bought him. Mrs. Marion Thorne, 54, testified she bought her son an Army jeep when he was 7. Other gifts, she said, included a $5,000 electric train; a $3,500 motor boat; two motor scooters at $250 apiece; guns worth $700; a $250 horse and a St. Bernard dog which she said ate 20 pounds of meat a day. * * a She testified that between the| |” ages of 9 and 16, her son received | © a new outboard motor every year. | j Asked what he did with the old ones, Mrs. Thorne replied: “He gave them away.” “He didn’t like the teacher in| ja Kindergarten,” she testified, “‘so 1 built @ schoolroom in our home and hired a tutor for him.” Mrs. Thorne testified that her som : : i ; i : i age i. rf Hi il BUY ON EASY CREDIT TERMS— PAY IN 6 MONTHS! Ladies’ COATS Check these values for Big Savings! Best of all you get twice os many stamps with every pur- chase you make! DOUBLE STAMPS 1 DOUBLE STAMPS YARD | first ounce on air mail letters | was “crazy about trains” and took 7 $ 00 would bring in an additional 14| joy rides. million dollars a year | “We would go to Denver, Wash- He also asked an increase of | ington, and California—just for the 15 per cent on second-class mail| ride,” she said. ‘Sometimes we (mostly newspapers and maga-| would arrive in Denver in the aft FHA TERMS zines) for two successive years. | ernoon, take in a movie and boar¢ adding 8% million annually, and/|a return train that night.” 28 per cent on third-class mail| When Thorne was older, she tes (advertising matter and small | tified, he received a $5,000 automo merchandise packages), adding 73 | bile, adding: “that’s the car the million. Ragens wanted." my - . + Total area of Panama is 4.169! The Ragens, Maureen, 19, and 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. square miles, including the Canal | her mother Mrs, Aleen Ragen are . Zone. in a court fight with Mrs. Thorne 3419 Se Senteriend Plennclettc 29¢ 1.99 Mitts and Cloves... .1.00 DOUBLE STAMPS : Big savings on 39.99 all wool fleeces, tweeds, novelties. Milium MUSLIN SHEETS and heavy interlining. $49.99 Milium Lined Coats $29 ; 69.99 Chinchilla Coats ... .$39 I 7 79.99 Tall Girl Coats ..... ie First quality full size, large’ hems, 2.99 values. Lace trimmed. Sizes 32 to 40, - Branded Pillow Cases... ..49¢ 1.99 Cotton and Crepe Slips $1 | Furred COATS Le Tip Qué @sed test Jere 19, in ii DOUBLE STAMPS DOUBLE STAMPS hig apartment. Nine days before | 7 he died he drew up a second will |) / s Plaid SPORT leaving one half of his estate to| ; Maureen Ragen, one fourth to Mrs rs A Blankets Md BLOUSES Ragen, one eighth to his mother . and oncctghah to bie oust. Dirs.| (it 66 4 j* Thorne was sole heir under an os : earlier will. Reduced to clear! Group of to bb 6b veleds Rodiggernp hod j found ‘Thorne's ef $99 Fur Trim Coats. Don’t Beacon quality. ienat and dete = 2. @ Fsmiss it! Full sine. 2.49 styles. Long, % i e Z ‘ $149 Process Dyed Moutons $ 88 | "249 Greg Kidskin Coat. . $149 5 $399 No. Back Maskrats . $199 Rich Nylon Blankets... ... 7.99 DOUBLE STAMPS os ti Bo if you buy a Du0-THERM “=: NOW i i E i To 29.99 Coat Sets and Girls’ COATS @°° Mothers! Save on these reg- pyr ular $30 all wool fleece and DOUBLE STAMPS] check coats and coot sets... é . Sizes 3.to 14. anh _ TRAINING YOU DONT NEED INSURANCE crotch, white. 1 Boys’ ond Girls’ NO PAST AND ||[) SNO-SUITS EE | Ee | “FUTURE. G** Fur, MEN’S LADIES: Save! Regular 12.99 nylon gab- ardine toddler suits ... . boys’ and girls’ sizes.1 to 4. ied 5.99 values. Prints and cot- Mae 29 to 49, 2.99 Flannel Shirts. .....1.88 . 2s BUT If you drive » car: don’t chances. : ig aed . \ ¥ bed * awe yee » a wee et ae . © RSS gree tee aes Sf a a Se eS ee Sl Oe Dickinson of Detroit, seven sons, Edward of Lapeer, Harvey of Pon- tiac, Harold of Mio, Leone and grandchildren, three great-grand- children, three sisters, Mrs. Jane Smith and Mrs. Azubah Goodfel- low, both of Marlette, and Mrs. Maude Smith of Brown City, three brothers, James of Mariette, John of Brown City, and Richard of In- Jay (Nettie) Sheppard, 65, of Mar- lette, will be held at 2 p.m. Thurs- day from Bethel Church, with nike il | LE 2& 3 F Es £ z +7 Es : te Hie i = of State Universities and Allied Some 20 residents of Oakdale Gar- | *| dens yesterday sent a telegram to | Chief Assistant Oakland County | Prosecutor George F. Taylor) charging they have been “abused” by police investigating reported | violence over a school board con- | troversy. | Mrs. Loretta Baker, 47, secre- | and Jones, of Stoney Creek, Rochester has recently been Residents Charge ‘Abuse in Carver School Probe — | There are more than 6,000 public ROYAL. OAK TOWNSHIP —/ cause he had signed the recall libraries in the U.S. HEADS ASSOCIATION—Miss Sarah Van Hoosen | vice president, Institutions. petition against Mrs. Baker. It alleged that Sgt. Edward A. | Wilson ‘“obviously would be par- tial in making such an investiga- tion.” Taylor said he would look into the charge, ‘Decause above all | want to keep this investigation completely impartial.” | Reproduction Lecture to Be Given Tonight WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — “The Story of Reproduction’’ ig the lecture to be given at 8 p.m. tonight in the Waterford High School gym. The free program is open to all youngsters aged 12 and above, who are accompanied by | their parents. The lecture, sponsored by the Clara Elizabeth Fund of Flint. will be given by Mr. and Mrs. David Treat, who will use plaster models in the demonstration. Arizona's population is growing be-| at the rate of 50,000 annually. I a RED SAM'S 3293 Auburn Read, Auburn Across from AY IS DOUBLE STAMP DAY WALGREEN DRUGS mn wy TT < » A really modern kitchen includes an extension telephone Think of all the hours you spend in your kitchen! How many times a day do you have to make “a 50-yard dash” to go and answer the telephone? ® Does it make sense when you can have a kitchen extension telephone for only a few cents a day? It will save you time, steps and energy, make you a more efheient home manager. You'll find its value far beyond its price. No home is truly modern without an extension telephone in the kitchen and another beside your bed. Call our Business Office and order yours today! + " MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY ; » THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 __ (right) ! Plan Fund Campaign KEEGO HARBOR—The Mother's | March on Polio will be held from Thursday. A | porch light will stop solicitors for 7-8 p.m a contribution and standing are other Association officers, Roy Chamberlain, C. J. Dugas, elected president of the Assn. of Governing Boards | Vernon G. Eberwine, and Richard H. Plock. Miss A | Jones has announced her candidacy for re-election | member of the State Agriculture Board, governing |to the State Board of Agriculture in the Spring body of Michigan State College, she is flanked by | elevtion. (left) Hollis Rinehart, vice president, F. K. Ketper, | a associate professor in Ag- | ricultural Economics at Michigan ‘Conservation Group to Hear MSC Prof The annual meeting and banquet of the Oakland County Soil Con- servation District will be held at ston Community Center. Main speaker will be John C. State College. His subject will be farm management. Ken Brown of Lake Orion will be toastmaster, and the 4H Club will furnish entertainment. The Soil Conservation - District | is dedicated to better soil and | water management, with a goal of | a soil saving plan on every com- | mercial farm in the county. | | 2 Youths Get Probation for Assaulting Girl, 13 Two teenagers were placed on two years probation yesterday by Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty after they pleaded guilty Jan. 17 to as- sault with intent to rape. { Sentenced to spend the first 60 | days of probation in Oakland Coun- ty Jail were Charles G, Schuman, 18, of 122 Auburn Ave. and Morris jand paid a $15 L. Howe, 17, of 971 Belleviile, Bir- mingham, They had admitted at- tacking a 13-year-old girl Jan. 14 in bloomfield Township. Fined for Illegal Beer Keith Freeland, 19, of 120 E. Margret St., Detroit, pleaded guilty to illegal possession of beer | lighted | yesterday when he appeared before | Municipal Judge Cecil McCallum | fine. Pontiac | Police arrested the youth Sunday night when he was carrying a bag containing the beverage. School Tax to Be Topic | dt South Lyon Meeting SOUTH, LYON—School tax struc- | ture will bethe subject for a talk |Plated 1955 legislation on when Superintendent Frank Bart- |lett addresses the parents’ group | bond issue. MEDICAL JOURNAL REPORTS PROOF 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Clark-| ° munity room, , | of elementary school here at 8| Missionary to Speak | P-m. Friday in the school com- | Bartlett will discuss the contem- | NEW. HUDSON—Rev. Elbert M. Moffatt, a Methodist Church mis- state | sionary to India for the past 30 | equalization and just how such leg-| years, will be the guest speaker lislation would effect the school | at the New Hudson Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m: today. a YOU CAN SPARE YOUR FAMILY DAYS OF SUFFERING FROM COUGHS OF COLDS Here’s Relief So Different It Will Change All Your ideas Six Leading Cough Syrups Tested in Medical Center. Results Vital to You. Never before could any leading cough syrup — you so much. Think of it! A. new ind of cough syrup specially made, not only to relieve coughing faster and more com- pletely, but a shorten the duration of the cough! Here are Facts: After testing six leading cough syrups on patients for two years, doctors re that new Vicks Medi-trating Cough Syrup not only R meng relieved coughing spells and irritating throat dryness, but also cut the duration of the cough by as much as two full days. Cetamium is the Answer One reason for this, the report concluded, is that Vicks contains a new penetrating in- gredient — Cetamium — that carries relief- bringing medicine right to the cough-irri- tated crevices of the throat — medicates as it penetrates. In addition, Vicks Medi-trating Cough Syrup also works through the system to help speed breaking up of the cough. Doctors also learned that Vicks Medi-trat- About Cough Syrups ing Cough Syrup does not upset stomach or appetite. This teature, plus its pleasant flavor, makes it idea! for children So spare your family days of suffering from coughs of colds. Use new Vicks Medi-trating Cough Syrup. — MEDICAL JOURNAL REPORTS: Matched, point for point, against five other leading cough preparations, Vicks Cough Syrup: 1. Helped reduce the duration of. the cough by 2 full days. 2. Started to bring relief 39% faster than the average. 3. Brought more complete relief from coughs. 4. Was the only preparation tested that did not upset the stomach of a single | patient. 4 bs “Ay of Boston Clinic Report avail- { able to physicians on request. VICKS meoi-reatine COUGH SYRUP Medicates as it Penetrates REFRESHMENT REMINDER: Be sure to put Fire-Brewed Stroh’s - on your shopping list! 4 5 s / | a | \ \ ——— — = A pa ta - | ' | 4 al AMERICA i jm NLY FIRE-BREWED BEER y HIM Fire-Brewed at 2000° for Finer Flavor : sd THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 95,1955 - “ WRIGLEY’S GIVE YOUR BUDGET A BREAK with the kt gaged YOU — BRACH’S ,,’*.. CANDI Ta Brach’s Chocolate Stars * 39: Brach’s Chocolate Treats ‘x: 39°. Brach's Peanut Clusters "t=" 39° © Brach’s Peanut “a” 39° Brach’s *: Cherries "3 sx 55° The Candy Treat That's Neat to Eat New! M & M's M & M's FAMILY PACK & SITES PEANUT CANDY Made With Real Creamery Butter Vernell’ s Butter Mints 29° Ready to Heat & Eat a Se ~ — = of er , ~%& 4 — | q oe = > . . 7 too ‘ ( 3 GERBER poses DOLL BR & fet Ht ££ 7? & rf r & i 4 i a “4 . wage stg > } by S 1; i 4 : GERBER’S STRAINED BABY FOODS 4 - 39: GERBER’S JUNIOR BABY FOODS 3-43: GERBER’S DRY CEREALS Regular © Oatmeal Barley @ Rice #-0n. 17° SWANSON’S Frozen TURKEY or BLUE BONNET Yellow MARGARINE TE FIST SyHW YOU EVER TASTED! KIRKPATRICKS h 4 z "7 * —— ao * . ey 5 et = 5 / Hew! INSTANT STARLAC ry > Me) 2 ae - ony a — ~ CABBAGE or PEPPERS = cisusr_ No. 2m GO No. 2 Can 39° ight tre of ARC + Tender - California - ina AR: u + =e aeons _oo* “ee” BUTTER BEANS 303 Cans 27 iz ONLY 50¢ AND LABELS PROM ANY TWO SWANSON CANNED PRODUCTS HURRY -GOOD ONLY WHILE LIMITED SUPPLY LASTS For Salads — Frying — Making Popcorn . RAVO Peanut Oil } Pint 39° ~*~ eo. y | 5 Galen lek King ee ee SALT & PEPPER SHAKERS ve , 10¥s-0. 41: W\i\\ @* “yg Craig Mar Martin | CHLOROPHYLL @Cleans @Disinfects © Debderizes T Get 39c Retund— on 7X GPECIA CAV. Es 2 Manan ee en brush after meals—twice as effec- MEE 202695 || On Your First Box of 12 iP iS tive as ordinary toothpaste in tooth decay. WITHOUT NEW M C che — en CHLOROPHYLL DESIGN CLOROX “ae S 2G? 2 17 = 33° | 2275 —( 898 AUBURN 536 be PERRY = Saas ‘ < ; . j \ . , j : i 4 . < { a “7 ; *. ; Pee 4 “ ° * ‘ ' < % , 7 ¥ p “ we ; ie . \. = i ) \ Se + 7: P ba / : i i) ie ce ea Z joea¥ 5 * i > aie Rie gee er 4 e * a oO pis. Gi Ie Be” he ae yp ok Semat | a: ee aN. ‘Ra oe See oo Nees Pee ae ee ee Greeters See uA ¢ "OPEN THURSDAY and FRIDAY TILL 9 P. Me 4 S. TELEGRAPH OPEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY TILL 9 P. M. 59 §. ‘SAGINAW Qe? ry 9 at Lincoln Jumor = TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 THE PONTIAC PRESS, ill Be Presented Februa ~ cert W Secorid Con o eS 85 py Fe tpg HHREEAGE eeugsgate 2997 1 BegVivor cg etd o HLA] Jap anaitet pO fe ie ie RHE ta i ay “i pally BT He i a Hi Soft. i ted ie ae lini - Hea Ate EME fla. ana i i D> & Sas 43. fie He fl fregdst's 1d? : SEBi § 2 e533 nae PATHE ATE unit aenieitdai 51 rE att dite felis rH ie i nite gti eauitl i fy ‘Tne : Lydia: eae ¢ APSBRATE HE ili ue tHe tab g| EEF Sey | wees 3 2 Ste balls at WE ite ar efi E if S| ep is eee ch § Bich be nui : ix} a oat its : := oI data al ae ee _ Fp : yak ete g ¢ 4 = 3 = j ‘fs a3 as fist 7 <> Slt i 33 lif jal LT 85° f l i ey t id at ye ih 2) go Bil +f ala] £2: Arey pl hi il a di i il ditt cso patel Feast Sateen a tw EISELE ALM eh? bg: aH ded ee ! Oh i i HE b » ES fate tT pee SRE ETRE yy 1 TT Pc UME it LH But ‘i just in Hit SOOO os 5s rird sede ads id Feet . ia. . ‘cs ere Rea ELIA 3 aul Ll lil aya allel Hu tt Hilt HH SS ere aplells WN ply Me tut fas HL li i 7 it | raises gedfl. | 5 Op ANH y aviyy a4 024% = Burin 3 yliitin Tea jaa nl Th tal Hy : = fa3* ~ 3 .* - > & is i Uy Alte Hi iisa ll afi seg co i i b i ; | = | it z a ag Ea fil Hi ne ae ke i 4 bE-? i 58 5 usted 2°t ge mee | ; wv pity: | 4285 i gaa pai 2 a ees Go ie a” Bes x 7 2 if BH hs | 8 Hr iti tf Bilt : “ on | 82a if 3 ee) | | gi uidill $6 ae ia : = =! tt jet Hi ——t! = c Fe #8 33 a gat 4 : j 234 HE a ell iti 9! 33 i 2 §¢ it ‘ nid eal ih i gS in ute] i: 2 filittma |< 68 ib |S gy Sie3 iiss in ee ke rf ! lo” tya6 eee € 5984 bageesd | oo 83 82 > 5 6 £00 itl asil i ea 12 | Vals it S3 i S tata a Be qiee S22 : ee rly tate Hit & iis i a: y. 5 Hin rey; | a 2° at } EEG He g tp er z4 _ 5 -. ; , ee stl att i ln aa Ui) aed tie aie Be iL 8 id i il she : 4], O Tit 5 Hutte in ean eB | = oBsidel OB AFP ill ial L__ #6 in i} Ld éi “Corn husk” Indian tiger silk—for a slim long jacket suit from the Anthony Blotta spring collection. The collar is black velvet. The hat is by John Frederics. They’re Getting Fancier Designer Previews Ties PARIS (INS) — A man should change his necktie as often as a woman changes her mood. Dynamic young Paris designer | Pierre Cardin believes that a neck- | tie is a male's most expressive style accessory. He says it can make or break masculine elegance. A man who wants to have a 1955 look as yell as appear _ fashionably continental should faver discreet, plain ties during the day and step out with fancy neckwear in the evening. Cardin's smartest ties are most- ly plain and often made of jacket or suit materials. He shows tweed. worsted or flannel ties to go with | outfits of the same fabric. Other elegant plain ties are of velvet or suede leather. Cardin has an original idea for sweethearts and wives who want to try their hand at making ties for their boy friends or husbands. Take a length of wool or cotton fabric, edge it all around with narrow black silk ribbon, fold it lengthwise to tie size and shape and press the fold. This fold forms one edge of the tie, while the other, piped in biack, is left open. The tie can be made from suit or jacket fabric. To go with a brown suit, Cardin proposes a cigar brown wool fab- ric piped in black. For grey “> Pe ¥ Sees Bs | clothes, he suggests an elephant grey wool tie, edged in black. Cardin thinks that it is not trimmings for evening. His dress ties, to be worn with dinner jackets, are made of silk faille or velvet and beautifully em- breidered with sequins and beads. : Bs ths FFG : —— ’ \ NIGHT ‘'til 9 SATURDAY ‘til 6 ' . =—Hloom ield Park at our front door! 1662 S. Telegraph Rd. Starts Wednesday, 10 A.M. onth-End Sale! ‘FINAL CLEARANCE OF ALL WINTER APPAREL ORIGINAL PRICE TAGS ON ALL GARMENTS One in midriight blue faille, matching a faille dinner jacket, is | | embroidered with silver paillettes | | and blue beads. A dark blue velvet | tie is embroidered in dark blue |paillettes and black beads. For men who are, look or feel |young, Cardin proposes narrow | | ribbons knotted twice without loops | | to bow-tie length. } For dances or parties when a boy wants te look his best for his girl friend. Cardin has The :nost spectacular tie Cardin | has designed is for a bridegroom to match his bride's dress on their wedding day. It is made of white lace lined in white silk. Two Are Installed by National League Mrs. Millie Murthum of Judson street and Mrs. Floyd Opperman were installed Saturday in Far- | quahar Corps 6 at a ceremony held in Flint, Mrs. Murthum will serve as second color bearer and Mrs. Opperman will be junior vice president. Mrs. Opperman also attended the installation of Camp McKinley, ©) Private Party and 7 Luncheon Rooms Downtoyn Location tor Your Conyenience | WALDRON HOTEL COFFEE SHOP 36 E. Pike St. _. attractive . earnings. - _ I need a skilled, competent beauty _ Operator to mfanage my shop. Can, * offer excéllent working :conditions, Replies. confidential. a WRITE BOX 46 chrysanthemums and car- i “oha goes Ht : , Carolyn Berg of Lake Orion and Hl Bair of Ypsilanti were junior HH eo wresses rapt pn ary Mn, rk Ben was emt ‘ cornations and bye | members of Zeta spre ymochen i Lee Moyer served as best man, | Beta Sigma Phi Sorority gath- | il} and sea were Dr,|ered at the East boulevard home | |i} Witte Batr of Hamburg ond | ster in the Black Hills of South | Mareld Conger of Outed. Dakota, spoke to the group on the | jiji/ mony Joann Wilon sung Ge bride | Uotz, means. He explained te WERE 2495 NOW 12350 recital accompanied by Robert ! WERE 2995 NOW 1500 3 i] | WERE 3495 NOW 1750 OFF WERE 3995 NOW 2000 | WERE 45°90 NOW 2250 4 MORE DAYS In three days last week we sold exactly 1,373'2 yqrds of DRAP- ERY and SLIPCOVER FABRIC at $1.00 and $1.50 a yard on our Sale. . for the last three days of the Sale. Don’t Miss It! (Many fabrics sale priced at $3 yd.) KITCHEN & TIER CURTAINS. .'4 olf ODDS & ENDS—BEDSPREADS * off COTTON RUFFLED CURTAINS ‘ off ALL FABRIC REMNANTS... .50c yd. —-DRAPERY— MORE prices have been added | Date and Daytime Dresses! Juniors 9-15. Misses 10-20 Formals! © Casuals! § Wools! Women’s Half Sizes 162-2412 ————————— DON'T MISS THIS UNUSUAL SALE! Regular 15.95White Stagg Nylon Ski Jackets........ wee Regular 29.95 Tan and Blue Capeskin Jackets ........$15 Regular 16.95 Oxford Grey Wool Cardigan Jackets. ...$10 Regular 17.95 Dresses, Skirts, Taffetas & Crystalettes $10 Regular 9.95 Wool Jersey Blouses, wide selection....$ 6 Robes and Housecoats now 1/3 off —CARPET SAVE $2.00 to $5.00 a square yard on first quality wool carpet- ing. There are still a few rolls left and we have added more roll ends ot... V3 to 2 OFF If you need carpeting it will pay and good you to stop. The savings are worth while. | 53 Winter Coats Values to $85 Forstmanns! Stroocks! Wool and Cashmeres! Sweaters! Cardigans! were 9.95 | || Slip-Ons! Wools! Orlons! i} Nylons! All Colors! $590 were 7.95....... $490 - | Cotton Blouses Stripes! Patterns! Colors .. . Values. to 4.98 NO RETURNS! NO LAY-AWAYS! Ae ; cia! a , Eee ; a THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 bd ‘Ttem of Furniture Must Be Harmonious Element in By EMILY POST a not Pay and to answer?” ' rather not talk about.” Dear Mrs. Post: Due to the sudden iliness of my fiance, our = MAKE FRIENDS - | Try Changing the Subject! If Question Is Bothersome wedding had to be postponed. reader asks: “Will you please| The invitations had been sent out I can say, without| aad replies received, rude. when someone asks | question that I would pre-|in a month and I would like to We are now planning to marry know how to notify the guests of no attention to the question | this. Is there a special form to try to change the subject by | send out re-announcing the new the questioner’s attention to | date, or should new wedding invita- something else. Or to someone who tions be made up. * js persistent, simply answer, “I'm | these be sent only to those who sorry but that is something I would | accepted the first Also, should invitation, or are they sent to those who declined jas well, Please let me hear from you The following form should be sent out: Mr. and Mrs. John Jones announce that the mafriage of their daughter Mary Elizabeth to Mr. Henry Worthington which had been postponed will now take place on Saturday, the twelfth of February at four o'clock This should be sen; to all who received the original invitations whether they accepted or not, be- cause many of those whe regret- ted may now be able to come. Dear Mrs. Post: I would like to know which member of the fam. ily should be served first at a family dinner table when the moth- er is serving—the father or daugh- ters aged nineteen and sixteen? It is not very important who is served first at a family table but most often, she would ‘help father Bass Lake Cook Bakes Dream Bars for Sweet Eating Fe F i Fa Es 9 5 ih Tt 3 3 f BE i +7; 5 : This novel sink made especially for|serted in the sink,-it is washed thoroughly washing fruits and vegetables is a feature| by needle sprays of water which shoot out of a new experimental kitchen of tomorrow of all sides automatically. It isn’t even being shown this week. When food is in-|necessary to turn a faucet. , as tale Bs tae Sat @ a3 J McBride Finally Gives In By MARY MARGARET McBRIDE | A few weeks ago I wrote rhap- sodically about the cosiness and beauty of winter on a mountain farm. I don’t intend to take back a word, but being a-truthful woman I think I should add a later chapter before, as my mail indicates, every third person makes for the Cat- skills. Day before yesterday a cold dis- mal rain stopped and the wind came up suddenly as it does in these mountains while the ther- | mometer dropped to below freez- ing. Soom the naked trees gleamed g 2 é Z ing volame of ap mien- tion” talk from behind the Iron oor . Force needs one millon volunteer civilian plake spre. Cone Meat Storage Time Varies COLUMBIA, Mo. (INS) — How long meat can be kept in the I hope thet you will not need this game to play while you are sick in bed, but that you can play it while you are well! . This is a good game for sick-a- beds, for it does not cause jou to bounce around, You will need some kind of cup for the holder. This can be any kind of a paper cup. I have a regular drinking freezer locker varies with the kind and quality, and whether the | temperature of the locker is kept | constant. Miss Josephine Flory, University | of Missouri nutritionist, also ad- vises that if the temperature is kept steadily at zero or below, | pieces of pork and chicken will | keep well for at least four to six | months. Beef, she added, will keep eight to 12 months. And the less the meat is cut, the longer it will keep. She said that while liver and other glandular meats freeze well, their storage time is relatively short—from two to three months. And that the fat of chicken and pork develops a poor flavor more rapidly than does a harder fat— such as that of beef. A final note from Miss S88 & A¥eixenEE BeE¥sscccc bie5E a cup, and you can also use a paper cup which is pointed at the bot- tom. ! Letter your name, initials, or a message on it for fun. Punch a/| hole near the top of the cup and/ tie a 16-inch string to it. Let's! make the ball. This is an odd ball for you rol] a small piece of THe Aim CAKA WA COP with frozen drops and the road was a solid sheet of ice. roared down the chimney with /awe-inspiring sound. The storm windows rattled, the house swayed poe Y (-2s Here’s Sick-a-Bed Game You might like to make one of these for a friend who is il. It will keep them busy and be fun. ‘ Don’t Make Trouble Never throw containers which have held spray-on products in the incinerator or trash fire. Remains of the gas propellant will expand enormously; can cause potentially dangerous explosions. CILIGRL RIO iP | Si Alc) Lt ININI OE it — Gs if 1 ii A é ? i i fi 1 & i Wy | 28 sian fk ” ’ ‘§ 8.83 sesect Nature Does Have Its Drawbacks and the picture window looking out on the lake seemed near collapse. The green water rimmed -by the brown-red mountains churned like the ocean and rose up in white caps THe E i HF aT a fi 3 tpl ili rE 4 i ig? ; ft My houseguest was just bitterly: “You've bragged teo i ie Hl af Es 3% PETUNIAI Olives, I have found, Arve nice To add a little Zoop to ric au .|Free Lance Without Boy for a While Letters May Help Explain Situation to Lost Friend BY ELIZABETH WOODWARD . Decorating Plan “Dear Miss Woodward: I liked | him from the first moment I saw | him. That was six’ months ago. | We've been going steady ever | since — but I don't like him as much as I did at first. I don't know why. We have talked it over | and he said he loves me and al-| ways will. “We decided that we would see each other only on Sundays—bu' g See the Room as, Whole By ELIZABETH HILLYER isn't for you unless it can be a See the room as a whole first, harmonious element of a complete and it's’ so much easier to put .the | Toom plan — shop a little farther pieces together. 'for the perfect color and style An attractive item in a store | ‘Dt unquestionably belong exact- can be quite a temptation, but it) Y where they will go. | A successful costume is_ al- i ways a well thought-out relating and shoes: But rooms too often suffer from lack of plan and look oddly assort- ed even though everying in them |may be good in itself. The only way to avoid this is to visualize the over-all effect of the room as you want it to be, then to make every room, element a contributing factor to-this effect. Use of Paper Gets Mending \Finished Faster If you're the type that likes to mend lingerie with a sewing ° chine; because it goes faster F i j yt etl Put a sheet of soft textured pa- buy Casi Whedon Embroider gay spring posies on | blank. But you know where he lives Use the same idea in mending You can write to him. You can | this pretty dress — it's sew-easy,| curtains, Cover the hole with a tell him in a letter that you'd like | looks so lovely! Princess style —| piece of paper and run the papered to see him, that all s not lost| so very, very flattering! Make it|area back and forth under your aoe petadintcame went to sve | with or without sleeves. — Don't 4 and continue seeing him. But) Pattern 635: Misses’ sizes 10, 12, Pull the paper away in this in- ae ee ae oe clear 14, 16, 18. Tissue pattern oa Po your curtains : a cont Me Your | fers, directions. State size —_ ee —o cao. TT Send 2 cents in coins for this y process. hid soe Oe , your pl to | Pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tree lance it for a while—to gu| Io".tpontise Prem Necilereatt with several boys and enjoy their P.O. Box Old friendship until you just can’t help | D&Pt-. P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea settling down with dhe for good | S#tion, New York 11, N.Y. Print and ail. plainly your name, address with pe INSPIRED IDEAS — Pages and Pork’s in Season pages of novel designs in our new Now is the season of pork again.| Laura Wheeler Neediecraft Cata- The Department of * Agriculture | log for 1955! Completely different says that pork and canned apple-| and so thrilling, you'll want to sauce are both good buys, so plan | order your favorite patterns. Send a meal around a pork loin for | 25 cents for your copy of this new,| Seoner or later most hearty winter dining. new catalog now! ers learn te take it on the shin. tune, first was heard in the county | western Europe, it is to first Carolina was estimated at 175,000 z hy THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANU ARY 25, 1955 "The Loadonderry Air, Irish folk |/the iin ‘eheut or’ cams wie Ponnit acreage for 1954 in North Hal Boyle Says: ot Londonderry. 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You'll want SEND YOUR FAVORITE GRADUATE : A HALLMARK GRADUATION CARD Ambulance Service _at Any Hour MEN es Easy to er both een ty Onn fey 1-4 nadia; err an tty STATIONERS © BUSINESS OUTFITTERS 123 North Seqinew St fé« FE24831 Goldy New in gle cma, Four \ Pontiac for ’55 offers you an array of values that you simply cannot match in any other car. Famous for years as. America’s finest buy . . . long outstanding for size and com- fort .. . world-renowned for thrift and reliability, this General Mot@rs masterpiece now takes top honors for advanced styling and performance, too! Pontiac’s beauty leadership is self-evident! No other car provides the distinction of Vogue Two-Tone styling, twin-streaked hood and rakish sports car lines. And you'll find that. same “new look” inside, along with an of modern luxury fabrics in exciting modern colors with regal spaciousness and full-scale panoramic vision. As for performance—well, come in and pilot a Pontiac! Let: the wondrously smooth ride, the marvelous handling ease, fabulous response of the Strato-Streak V-8 engine tell their own incomparable story. In a few minutes and miles, you'll be telling us you’ve never known anything like it! a The plain fact is that you get everything in a '55 Pontiac . . . everything that’s new and best ... everything that makes car a pride and pleasure to own. And you get it on ee i tio ANDERSON; Inc. 209 Nerth Park Bivd, Lake Orion, Michigan e? at prices that are practical for every new-car THREE GREAT LUNES Wit . buyer. You can actually buy a big, high- * Stroto-Streok v.g Power : styled, high-powered Pontiac for just a few * Vogue Two-Tone dollars more than the lowest-priced cars! Why ° Lonoromie Bodies by Fishe, : a ’ * tuxurious Color-k . not come in for the proof—right now! © Shech-Preet a Interiors and . . ing Ball Steering a motor a ee \ WITH THE SENSATIONAL STRATO-STREAK V-8 COMMUNITY MOTOR SALES, Ine. ae ‘WB Slate Street, Rochester, Michigan * HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, Ine, GHT oo ptt ai ...modestly low in price! THE 860 FOUR-DOOR SEDAN Pontiac's Lowest-priced Series! e 122” ond 124° wi die MANUFACTURERS OVERSTOCK oan. Now Look in Living a - mesh |i i SS. i. Straight from the pages of rel BTR ==> —- House’ & Garden CAN ‘FIRST I FASHION’? ARRANGED by ROWE - * The graceful new Airborne look * Modern brass-tipped legs, round and tapered *% Lineflow backs ... OPEN the newest style in back design ‘% Coil spring backs and FRIDAY aoe * Spring edge seat for extra comfort UNTIL * road porated = For sectional or sraigh at Onl y arrangement—each piece Lora 5 he amills of this double sofa is 51 * 9 ri M. , hn inches long! $15 DOWN * Gorgeous tweed fabrics in the most-wanted colors ae Roomy is the word for The bumper end double the 80-inch sofa .... sofa gives you a wonder- luxurious is the word for ful 114 inches of cloud- the deep matching chair! like seating space! y ARRANGED Here is all the.casual charm of Limed Oak. . . designed to be lived \ Nationally Advertised DOU BLE DRESSER it’s Mainline’s with! The worm, soft finish and durable quality of Mainline’s new “ 0 Caribe Group make this the most exciting buy of the year. At this MAINLINE "C ° 4a » special low price you'll be thrilled to own this beautiful suite, fea- d _B K A E aribe tured exclusively at our store. See it here as you've seen it in the — pages Atami Beautiful, Living for Young Homemakers and Guide or e Dri LARGE PLATE MIRROR 1 EASIEST CREDIT TERMS! Multicoil fine e~ spring mattress. Yes, regular §59.50 for ool $10 with pur- 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS: PONTIAC, - TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 _ a - . R FOR car’’ in the New York Motorama has been assigned a beautiful young lady who becomes an additional, of the exhibit, Betty Moor, ‘of. lass and here she is shown these young ladies Play the her special, chafge, All five of like nobdy's business. Seek Improved. Facilities at Boys’ Vocational School LANSING (#)—The Boys’ Vocational Sehod{ Has neither space nor facilities to cope with the increasing number of juvenile delinquents, a joint legislative committee reported today. The committee said the school has inadequate facilities for reception, training and rehabilitation of the boys. Rep. Harold W. Hungerford (R-Lansing) asked the Legislature to continue the committee, established last year to study possible relocation of the scheol, new located in Lansing. In a report on its activities, the committee said it polled 50 of the state's probate judges on their views toward treatment of delinquents. Most judges, the poll showed, want better classification and more segregation of trainees. Other resiits: Thirty-two judges said they would commit more boys under a broader program and better conditions at the school. Twenty-twe judges asked for outlying detention homes, foster home care er camps for youthful offenders. i Fifteen. judges Would like to see the school continued, but on a larger scale. Seventeen ji™iges asked for longer periods of confinement for all trainees. Mrs, Dwight D. Risenhower Lady a doll similar to the one In Thanks for Gift as a hobby, sent Pontiac Woman Gets Personal Letter From Mrs. Dwight (Drain Project photo. Mrs. Tinka, who makes clothes for the dolis bove | Valentine's Day present. Eisenhower MICHIGAN FIFTEEN _ Cities Face Loss of ———— Gets Underway $30 Million System Would Relieve Twelve Area Cities Engineers will begin surveys and estimating work this week on the proposed Twelve Towns re- lief drain, expected to cost around Ralph A. Main said yesterday. si provide adequate run-off face and other water in eastern corner of the i if i | i If as the cities of ao Caw- AS son, Reyal: Harel Path, oe © + 5 ra eae, Revtadien e ' comprise the “Twelve Towns.” Here ts another in Bob Considine’s exciting story of Las Vegas boisterous capital of legalized gambling. | By BOB CONSIDINE Cost of the project, Main said, would be apportioned among thé municipalities benefitting {rom the system..He also explained that many trative and legal details remain to be worked out. Actual construction work on the project, he added, is expected to begin im early 1956. was a millionaire and referred to} in print as a ‘Hollywood sports. | man” when his eyes first alighted | upon the sight of the Flamingo Hotel. He was driving out of Las Vegas 4 after looking over his race-wire ; 000 interests when he noted that a | Robbers Miss $75, P casino was being built at a point | to Take $3,000 in Coins | between the town and the airport. | DETROIT #—The FBI says the | The contractor was the Del E. burglars who broke into the Ex- | Webb Construction Co. of Phoenix, change State Bank in Carsonville and took some $3,000 in coins Sun- day overlooked $75,000 in bills, Agents estimated the loot the thieves made off with at 292 pounds. | Carsonville is in Sanilac Coun- |ty about eight miles east of San- carpenter destined to become a very wealthy power in big league baseball. By means never adequately ex- }"iaine®, Sidgel took over the modest project. would be no mere casino, a smail glorified motel-and-casino, like El Rancho Vegas and the Last Front- | jer were at that time. This, he determined, would be | the finest casino in the world and | one that would keep people hover- | ing about it . . . because of fine hotel arrangements, top nightclub acts, a spirited cabaret, good food, drink and service. He flew to New York with word to the elders in the underworld “syndicate” that they must go in with him on this vast venture. He himself pledged every penny he had and hocked his future. Encouraged by his real, the syndicate’s board of governors | @ug into their own treasuries—ac- | quired through illegal trades for | the most part, though some of the money was from their post- repeal activities in legitimate callings—and promised toe go - . toa certain They promised him $3,000,000. There was a war going on in Ew rope and Asia and the word “‘pri- orities’’ meant something. But not to Siegel. He wanted im- = When they balked he frightened % them out of their skins with his Pontiac Press Phete the doll to Mrs. Eisenhower as a i ili i] Hy : z iit ; i F ih a 3 in ig it America's | | bathed the elders in undesired pub- owned by a lanky ex-ballplayer and | He had had his dream. This | version of a downtown Fremont | Trans-America wire services. street place. Nor would it be “| “He told me one night, when-I was waiting for my money, that he | had personally killed 12 men. But} | then he must have noted my face, | LAS VEGAS (INS)—Bugsy Siegel | or something. because he laughed | independently. He stopped going and said that I had nothing to worry about. “ “There's no chance that-you'll get killed,’ he said. ‘We only kill each other’.”’ Back in New York, the ‘‘syndi- cate’’ began considering whether to do just that. For one thing, Siegel had disturbed the elders by getting so much publicity—which, in turn, jlicity. Also, he had ‘blown his | stack” on the Flamingo. But, No. 1, he had committed an unpardonable crime—that of | branching out on his own. Shortly after James R. Ragan | Sr., past owner of Continental | Press Service, largest race wire | | |in the country, was killed, the | mobs merged Continental Briney Heads County Y Unit Installed as President at Annual Dinner Held Here . Ottis R. Briney -Jr., 433 Shore View Dr., Waterford Township, was installed as president of Oakland County Town and Country YMCA at the group's annual dinner meeting recently in the Waldron Hotel. Installing officer was Clifford Drury of East Lansing, secre- tary of the Michigan State Association of YMCA Camp Directors. Other new officers include Fred J. Poole, first vice president; Jack Habel, second vice president; John A. Riley, secretary, and Max Kerns, treasurer. New directors elected for the current year include John R. Faulkner, Franklin; Harold King, Walled Lake; Gordon Walker, Birmingham, ang Frank Nigge- man, Ralph Norvell and Louis Pohl, all of Pontiac. John D. Maynard of Birming- ham, who was instrumental in procuring the site for the County YMCA unit's Camp Mahn-go-tah- see at Hale, discussed the history of the project. : the | camp alse were played. | ed vice presidents were: | Martinson, Alpena; Wal- | Channing dele, Niles, and Walter Schaible, | -}is necessary fo tie in with the federal act, Hudson explained. ! | er -coverage,” "ome alae devine ei . But’ Siegel; who had the “‘syn- dicate’s”’ old Trans-America on the coast, continued to maintain it east. His beloved headache, the Flamingo, beeame his home, even though Virginia Hill took a dim view of Las Vegas in general. He was comforted, however, by the fact that the place was netting $315,000 a month... and some day he'd get even and straighten out everything everybody. The “syndicate” wouldn't wait. As was the custom, it delegated the messy work of slaughter to another group, after doom was sealed in the meeting with Luciano—who had slipped over from. Italy .to Cuba. via Venezuela. Siegel's last days were unhappy | ones. For one thing there was the Bug's) | Supervisor Seats “ft Incorporations Cause of Cuts 60 Per Cent Reduction Required When Board Membership Hits 75 The number of city representa- tives on the Oakland County Board of Supervisors face about 60 per cent cut .when the total rea®hes % —-e ‘ted within the next few months. Pontiac’s delegation would be decreased from ten to three. An amendment to the supervisors apportionment law passed in 1943 to accomodate Wayne County brings the threat to city strength, according to Oak Park City Man- ager and Supervisor Harold K. Schone. The amendment states that, when the strength of city super- visors reaches 75 an automatic reduction in their number will take place, but it requires no cutback in the number of town- ship supervisors, At present there are 64 city and automobile (note piano keys) while taking his eyes momentarily from the pulchritude that surrounds him during a Las Vegas vacation. cago.” Dragna immediately bowed out of Trans-America. About that same time, Siegel invited Del Webb to visit him at the Beverly Hills home he and Virginia shared. Webb had begged off so many times be- | foreusually on the pretense that his mother was feeling bad —that he felt that this time he must accept. “I had an uneasy feeling all during that evening there,’ Webb told me recently. “Benny (as | Siegel was called by friends—no one dared cali him Bugsy, a name he acquired as a youth because at his contempt for bullets) seemed to want to sit in a certain part of the living room. I had a feeling we were being watched, and that my own seat on the divan wasn’t quite safe. Maybe presence saved him.” On the night of June 2%, 197, ; j and | trouble with Virginia Hill. She | Siegel returned from Las Vegas 25 township representatives A committee composed of South Oakland County officials plans to advance a stopgap measure to the county's state legislators at a meeting in Lansing tonight. The committee's plan, if made law, would prevent any reduction in city strength until the county | reaches 750.000 population. County |residents now total slightly over | “We realize -that something | should be done to give the town- | ships a bigger voice than they | Mow have,” saiq Schone. “But | we feel the present law would reduce city strength out of all | Proportion to the amount of coun- ty population they represent.” | Areas recently incorporated or planning to incorporate as cities | will soon bring the city total over | 75, said Schone, “Madison Heights would add Southfield, 6; Keego Harbor, 2; and Rochester, 2,"" he explained. This would bring the total to 79 | which, under the present setup, | would be cut back to 30. This would leave a five-person city majority on the board, compared with the present 39. | “If we can get the temporary measure passed, we would pro- | 5: my | Pose a joint study by city and feounty supervisors to formulate an amendment to the law to bring a more equa] reduction in size. “There is no doubt in my mind wanted to go te Paris and he| to the Beveriy Hills home “to that the board is becoming un- suspected she had another man there. Briefly reconciled, they spent a few. days at the Flamingo. Bat Virginia began drinking too much—a bout climaxed one night in the plush dining room when she stood up and clouted | a female guest on the jaw with a long overhand right. “You're no lady!” Sugsy shouted at her, a remark still treasured by students of gangland understatement. Miss Hill flounced off to Paris. That was June 16, 1947. But something worse had hap- pened to Bugsy. his stand against his New York colleagues and told them he was going to keep Trans-America Wire Service, and to blazes with their wish to blend it with Continental, he was encouraged by the moral support of two pluguglies who served him well in L. A.—Jack Dragna (alias Jack Ignatius, Jack 1, Jack Rizotto and Jack Dania) and a lesser and more grasping punk named Mickey Cohen. On either June 7 or 8 of that year, Dragna and possibly Cohen were braced by what the Cali- fornia ‘Crime Commission later called “two visitors from Chi- When he took | j pick up some clothes." His de- parture from Las Vegas was duly | noted by representatives of the | “syndicate’’—of which he was to | be the only member of the board ever rubbed out. He sat down in the very spot where he had seated Webb not | long before. The heavy window curtains were drawn but missed coming together completely by | about six inches. | Next to him on the divan was | his friend Aaron Smehoff, called | Allan Smiley. The Russian-born | Smiley had a small piece of the Flamingo. Elsewhere in the house were Virginia Hill's brother, | Charles, and a girl he has since married. It was a quick death for Bugsy Siegel. He hever knew what hit him—the shots came so thick and fast. But he's still very much alive along the ‘Strip’’ of Las Vegas today and his ultimatum ‘no | rough stuff in here if I have to kill a couple of you’’ remains the | way of life. (Next: A look at the men who followed in Bugsy Siegel's wake, and the fruition of the boom he set in motion.) Hudson fo Seek Extension of Social Sec State Representative Leslie H | Hudson (D-Pontiac) said today he will introduce a bill to permit ex- tension of social security benefits to state and local groups who al- ready have a retirement plan. i Hudson was requested to take} ithe action by 286 of the 351 em- | urity Benefits If the legislature passes Hud- son's bill, then the county super- visors would be called on to work ployes of the Oakland County road | out a plan for social security cov- Commission in a signed petition. Enabling legislation Wy the state “The effect will be to allow wid. said” Hudson. “In the road commissions case, an employe must be 30 years old td join the group retirement pla have to wait 13 years to join. “Also, persons whe begin work erage which would not destroy or impair the existing plan if it was to be retained. The plan would be submitted to road commission employes for a 9-day study. They would then vote, with a simple niajority need- ed to approve the program. The governor would certify the plan to,the social security admin- istration. Hudson's bill would be - retroac- | tive to Jan. 1 this year, thus ‘al- lowing persons to qualify for so- rt wieldy and should be decreased,” Schone added “But the present cuthack re- quirement would many per- sons off the board whe are in key positions and have wide ex- perience in county government. “The law as it applies to Wayne County does not make Detroit lose its power on the board as Oak- land cities might.” If the law is not changed, cuts in city strength would see Royal Oak reduced from seven members to three and Birmingham from five to two. The new formula for apportion- ing city supervisors would be:, | Population 12,500 or less, one fmember; 12.500 to 30,000, two |members; 30.000 to 65,000, three members; and above 65,000, one additional member for each 38,- 000 population. Duplicate Names Make Cousins Rivals for $4,000 RIVERHEAD, N.Y, ®—Which | William Francis Glendenning did John Glendenning mean when he made out his will? Two nephews, both’ named \vil- liam Francis Glendenning, ap- peared in Suffolk Surrogate Court yesterday to claim $4,000 of John Glendenning’s $12,000 estate. A retired handyman, Glenden- ning died last August:in Brent- wood, on Long Island, at the age of 84, His will stipulated one third of his estate should go to ‘“‘my nephew, William Francis Glen denning.” One of the nephews is a 50-year. old Queens sewer worker. The other is a 47-year-old cook who lives in Manhattan. Although the two formerly were on good terms, the Queens William | Francis said that as a result of ithe dispute they “no longer speak to each other.” A decision on the matter was not | rendered immediately. Ypsilanti Man Sentenced ' i i in Illegal Narcotic Case j | thete at a late age can’t work in the near future, 5] f + { \ | ; te \ : em ve N SIXTEEN _ Killed Mother, Boy Tells Cops ee AWOL Soldier, 20, Cuts | to etlect the highest budget in Pon Ow . tiac history n Wrists, Stumbles | Last week, the commission un ice i officially endorsed the $4,393,960 inte Police Station | budget when the first reading of SAN’ FRANCISCO (INS)—A 20 | the appropriation ordinance wa: year-old youth who said he was an | made. AWOL soldier, walked into San ia cde we a. lace! Francisco's southern police statior | means for allocating the funds today, hands dripping blood from | as blueprinted in the budget. slashed wrists and arms, and said The City Commission tonight is Expect Final OK for Record City Budget expected to pass the 1955 appro- | he had killed his mother Officers who rushed to the McKinney, about 52 former school teacher. lying dea: in “‘a virtual sea of blood’ on the kitchen floor. A trail of blood stains led through the once-peace ful cottage The youth, who identified him self as Steven McKinney, staggerec into the police station weak from loss of blood and nearly incoherent He asked first for a doctor Desk Sergeant Arthur Borland meved at once to call a doctor, but asked: “‘What for?”’ The youth held up his arms anc showed the wounds he said he in flicted with.a razor blade “I tried to commit suicide,"’ he explained. “I killed my mother. with a bottle.” I hit her The commission is also slated to receive a communication from the youth's home found Mrs. Florence | Pontiac General Hospital Board of | a widow and | j ,| mission resolution passed in No | Vernber Trustees asking revision of a com In the resolution, the board wa: i given authority to move ahead with plans for the $3,000,000 hos pital addition approved by electorate in November Changes sought concern hiring @ consultant to work with the archi- tect and an aggeement about pay- ment of interest on the bond issue an opinion and a report from the city attorney. The first concerns a plat ai Walton Bivd. and Telegraph Rd., the second a charter amendment te the retirement system. Other communications are from the Pontiac Fire Fighters’ Assn. and H, Malcolm Kahn. The fire he | | plat 13 \ Consider advertising Yor bids for | Also on the 16-point agenda are | fighters want permission for a rep- resentative to explain their request for paid holidays. Police said the youth apparently was AWOL from Fort Ord. Young McKinney was quoted by Kahn wants an audience on the subject of fluoridation of the city's water supply. A resolutivin calling \for fluoridation was passed two | weeks ago, but will not go int effect unti) April.) A report from the City Plan | Commission approving the plat for Shaw subdivision is also to be heard In other business sion is scheduled to Tabulate bids for relocation of the Clinton River channel. Hold a pyblic hearing on a | special assessment roll for a wa. ter main along Columbia avenue. Approve or reject a maintenance bond for Weissman Excavating Co., Inc. for a combined sewer on West Rutgers street the Commis- Consider a deed to Charlies U_| McManus for jot 155, assessor's a water main and fittings in East view subdivision. Consider transfer of a package beer and wine license from Isadore |Mintz to Earle W. and Llah D. Schiller at 701 Orchard Lake Ave., and a tavern license and package beer and wine license from Nellie |522 S. Saginaw St Pedestrian Killed DETROIT #—Mary Ziebron, 45 of Detroit was killed Monday when | hit by a car while crossing a De- ' troit street. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 Tonight Job Blameless | aw specialints who examined her said the condition was caused by a diabetic ailment, and the | ofher blamed old age. The state official said ‘“‘nearly '100 per cent" of skin poisoning cases clear up once the worker in Poison Case Woman Loses Fight for tiettieid’s condition never has $1,900 Compensation |'™?ve4 | for Skin Condition Thieves Take Liquor, DETROIT uw» — A 10-yearold| Money From Drug Store widow has lost her long fight to A breakin at Luftrell's Drug a a ae oe Store, 691 Orchard Lake Ave., last workmen's compensation, claiming | ~ ‘ cael tidaea $83 and aet she was poisoned by handling | valued at $20, Pontiac Police re-| | nylon in wedding gowns. ‘Legislature to Speed | — a Korean Vets Bonus LANSING (UP) — A) drive to speed up distribution of the Korean | bonug was scheduled to start. in| the Michigan Legislature today, Sen, Elmer R. Porter (R-Bliss- | field) said he would ask the’ Sen- | ate to suspend rules to pass legis- | lation on to the House which would | enable military officials to set up | machinery for distribution of the bonus early in March to seme 250,000 Korean veterans. The Senate has had Porter's | 20 S. PERRY ST. Cole to Josiah and Cleo Sheck at | James W. Nolan, Visiting deputy | commissioner of the State Work- men's Compensation Commission, ruled yesterday against Mrs. Floy M. Hetfield of Owosso, Nolan held that her poisoning was “in ne way” connected with her former work as & seam- stress in an Owosse women's shop. | Mrs. Hetfield said she became | alarmed over her condition in February 1953, after her hands at | first appeared scratched from the |material and then became swol-} len and sore. Then, she said, the | infection spread to the rest of her | body. | | Her employer voluntarily per- | | mitted Mrs. Hetfield to stay home | and paid her more than $700 in| | skin specialist advised the em- ported today Police, who went to the store to investigate a report that the front door was open, said the thieves entered by forcing a rear door | Manager of the store, Sam Lektzian of 867 Tyron St., Waterford Town- i ship, said the store probably was | broken into between the. hours of 1/10 p.m. and 1:30 a.m. today. Lekt- 'zian said an inventory would be made to discover other missing articles. Pedestrian Injured Douglas Roberts, 14, of 44 S Midland St., was treated at St Joseph Mercy Hospital last night for bruises he suffered when struck by an auto at East Pike street near Francis street. compensation. The payments were | Pontiac Police quoted the driv- stopped in October 1953, after ® | er, Don Carpenter, 16, of 3087 Adams, and other witnesses, as } ‘Area Scots to Hono bill In its possession for the nec- | essary five days required by the | constitution. The bill will have to be in wne| House for another five days aft. | : . er it clears the Senate It is ex- | a udee DR. H. A. MILLER pected to be given immediate ef | fect and will become an operating | F) } law as soon as it is signed by 5 Gov. G. Mennen Williams $ Optometrist Both the Senate and House were | : ¢ § § scheduled to convene at 2 p.m | Poet Bobbie Burns Scots of Oakland County will gather Jan. 29 in the Ferndale Community Building to honor the memory of poet Robert Burns. § Traditional steak pie and Haggis will be on the menu for the 6:30 p. m. dinner 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842 “Better Things in Sight” Open Friday Evenings ployer that her injury was not| saying the youth darted Gut. in compensable, front of the auto and was hurled Nolan said one of two Sagin- | onto the sidewalk by the impact. Bagpipe music and songs writ- ten by Burns will be played a sung during the evening. nd) —_— —_ officers as saying: “I intended to kill myself be cause I was disgusted. I wanted to get out of the Army, and I was despondent. But I didn't want to leave my mother alone. . . so ! decided to kill her first, and then kill myself.” Cowboy-Style Roundup Staged by Lansing Cops Several scout cars were called to the scene and police had to herd the cattle off highway U. S. 16 and a nearby ball park. Several rolis of snow fence served as a temporary corral. . Police said the driver, Richard Newman. of Pilainwell, escaped without injury. al h the truck hit a utility pole. It’s Simple Arithmetic: 52 Minus 4 Plus 4 Is 52 WOODLAND, Calif. (UP) — Rancher Jacob Dieteker had just loaded 52 bags of walnuts on his truck when a boy appeared at his door offering four bags for sale Dieteker paid the youth $4.50 | for the walnuts and loaded them | on his truck. Then he courted | the load again. It added up to 52 | bags. Manager Will Speak City Manager Walter K. Willman will speak at a meeting of Con- gregation B'nai Israel, Oneida and Menominee Rds., Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. The public is invited to hear the talk. Willman will be in- troduced by Mark Davis. MAN and WIF SS a Mr. and Mrs. W. Kieimola BOTH PRAISE O-JIB-WA | BITTERS “Ten days was all that i, took O-JIB-WA BITTERS tc | me the results that ) t for so long,” says Mr. Walter Kieimola, R No. 2. Ironwood, Michigan. “My wife is the one who first introduced me to O-JIB-WA BIT- | TERS. She began taking it about a year and a half ago, because her arms were swollen and very pain- ful. Her blood circulation was very tried many medicines, but nothing helped very much until she used O-JIB-WA. The pains left and the spots went away. so she has course anything fried would about kill me. O1JTB-WA BITTERS helped me right away - if 7 3 : al gi Goebel...first American beer win acclaim in Germany Director of Director Stadler takes time to enjoy « glass of Goebel in the Henninger Brewery taproce. In the background is a many-centuries-old porcelain stove. roe * Rl Phe NG < LS é et ay ‘ 4 eo ~ See £3 4 . - Henninger Brewery, Frankfurt, calls Goebel “one of world’s truly fine beers” “We have tried Goebel Beer at our brewery in Frank- furt, Germany. It is a pleasure to verify that it continues the great European tradition which we follow in our brewing of Henninger Beer. It is both light in body, dry in flavor, and altogether satisfying to the taste. “We feel that Goebel Beer deserves its place among the world’s truly fine beers.” ‘et it’s unusual-when other breweries praise Goebel . . . more unusual when you remember these breweries are in Germany, Holland, Belgium, England, Switzerland —the traditional centers of fine beers. If you haven't tried Goebel recently, ask for it next time. You owe it to your own good taste to see just how good it is. + 15 INTERNATIONAL AWARDS — ‘ . Pal g 8 Ss Ss oa 5 Sabet S “ery ta TP oe a “ | , x THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 ee oe SRYENTEEN q : wee |Sure and Only 3 Irishmen |Formosa Not Talking pe 7% ae Could Start Such a Fuss |Yeton|ke Message New Manat 7 6Yrs. j a el stare how fs | pier mabe Wome et xine’ aicarearec =| BOOST 2 POUNDS — Irishmen, and a man/tisement offering to sell a 1932| they would withhold comment on named Paul Dew was sitting on a sedan for 3% cents, In fairness t0| President Eisenhower's message ° horse there yesterday when a/ all, Doyle, Deasy and Dalton de-| unti) Coagress acted on his rec- woman falls on him through the | cide to hold a treasure nunt, winner | om»mendations. | , roof. to buy the car. Qualified . source weight health | ferent kinds of - and pilis The three Irishmen ‘are mamed| So they send Mrs. Mary Wallace ree. te pjablema with Renal Concentrate but without any resulta Since ung Jimmy Doyle, Mike Deasy and Pat|up on the roof to pull a list of | VY Wore O° the text, said Eisen- hether you are 28 or 16 yrs. old, | Rennel I have laid away my crutches , ; hower by implication excluded the| boy or girl, it's ble, just as | and my and feel much better. Dalton. Their motto is “no reason- | articles to be found in the treasure possibility of two Chinas and this| necessary. , 219 S.| Three mon 1 weighed 206 and able deal refused,” and how Dew | hunt out of a hat ti ; Oak St. Mich. writes, “l1| now 168. Seaeetiies to emi comes to be sitting in their sales-| Mrs, Wallace comes up with | “&S ® Teason for satisfaction. hove wwsed six bottins of your won- | gone ond Hagacl hes made 8 sew room on a horse is he figures they | slips of paper bearing the words| These sources were convinced| derful, medicine, Renne! Concen. | fan of me, My wait ie eetel tor . reason, see “potato,” “apple,” “‘cigarete light- |-that despite differences of view-| Goes‘more than you claim it can do.| the he ven hee er’ and “seaweed.” Then the roof | Pint an understanding exists be-| I am 1 yrs. old and have been| Make k The collapses ‘ through tween Taipeh and Washington that| troubled with overweight and rheu- | wach _— Says Quemo Att k Dew who fallg otf ba borse "| might be deeper and closer than| ™atism for years I have tried dif- | and be : from , y ac * 8 6 : appears on the surface. — | might W ld Be Smashed Mrs. Wallace and Dew are taken to a for treatment of The arable land of the earth com- - ou 2 5 jens prises only about tour per cent of | ~=WATCH THAT TAIPEH, Formosa @—The gar-| The horse escapes injury. its surface. . ae rison commander of Chinese Na-| ‘The treasure hunt and three- CIGARET TE tionalist Quemoy was quoted today | penny car are won by Alan Payne rower ther hearing Hundreds of homes are burned each year through careless smoking habits. . Be careful whenever you smoke and for full J | protection take our fire insurance policy today. Call us for free home inventory s 0 N 0 TO N E : _ blanks and insurance help. Greater power at substantial sav- ‘ , b Kenncth G ings. Scientific fitting — personal / ee | fb ee HEMPSTEAD ENVOY — Henry A. Byroade,| Communists would ‘‘definitely” in- above, of Indiana, an Assistant | vade t island near the Red Secretary of State, has been reds here coe cen alee Summons Undertaker, nominated by President Ejisen-| would “certainly be smashed.” Then Commits Suicide hower to be Ambassador to Egypt.| “We are confident,” Gen, Liu JOPLIN, Mo, @ — Donald S. Yu-chang was quoted “that we , " angements ‘ would be able to give them a big- | = iti i th f his estate and . Ike Waiting for Action pe thrashing than they suffered eee bec roe a — WASHINGTON @® — President | in 1949.” Then yesterday the 55-year-old | Eisenhower has deferred sending} The Reds were repulsed with | chemist telephoned an undertaker to Congress special messages deal-| losses running into thousands when | and said, ‘You'd better come up ing with health and highway pro-| they invaded Quemoy in October | here.” grams until Congress has com-| 1949, but at that time they em-| The undertaker found Mosby dy- id | ing in his apartment from a. gun- Yikiangshan and relatively | shot wound. Coroner W. W. Hurst i recorded th as suicide. 4 TRANSISTOR Lawyer-Derelict Flees Skid Row to Assist Judge THUNDERBIRD STYLING! ~— Run your eye over the ’55 Ford’s long, low lines. Note the huge wrap-around windshield, the massive grille, the treat- ment of head lights and tail lamps. They’re “‘years-ahead”’ styling features inspired by Ford’s fabulous Thunderbird. LUXURY LOUNGE INTERIORS! Step inside. You'll see thrilling new uses of color . . . new upholsteries, many of which make their first appearance in any car interior . . . a sweeping new Astra-Dial Control Panel . . . and all the other smart appointments tastefully blended into a delightful “luxury lounge” on wheels. Completely Stops Hyman’ Feldman that he would unfortunate. In Just 3 Days a es Se. Reckwood, Mich., woman writes; “| terribly with i soreness and irritation. Tried all kinds of pile oint- Seeee (one TRIGGER-TORQUE POWER! that marvelous internal medicine. | three daye all. bi = cae chance to bleeding. stopped. That was eighteen months and : . o,2 there han never been say rouble sme | court assistant at ; Your Test Drive will show you the most exciting response PEeion, tegemy- Gee bows of | Sober and neat irt, ever in a car in Ford’s field. You'll enjoy that comfortable Simms; Walgreen's; Thrifty; J. v.; | tie and clean Hallman Drug: Luttrell Pharmacy;| Judge Feldman, j feeling of security Ford’s new Trigger-Torque power gives you in stop-and-go traffic. And you'll enjoy the added con- : fidence of power-to-spare when passing on the open high- : way. You'll find this new Trigger-Torque power can actu- ally obey your commands quicker than you can wink. AN ANGLE-POISED RIDE! You'll discover that rough roads are “velvet- cushioned,” smooth roads seem to become far NEW Springs cushion smoother, and all handling is of extraordinary = compe ease. That’s because Ford’s advanced Ball-Joint too Front Suspension brings you a new Angle-Poised Ride. But this is only the beginning of the news PN you'll learn when you Test Drive the ’55 Ford. « = on big wheels PSI GREGG ASN OTE A ss cee Re meee ie for closet options! of smell exive cont. | [5 (O)[P2[D) ...and youll want to drive it home! | __ THE FORD DEALERS OF YOUR COMMUNITY ~ a T TV; FORD THEATER, WW4-TV, 9:30 P.M. THURS... We af ot ee | : Bes Oe Ga eka: xe © . Boom) Geoffrion most of the sea- a fa a iF i Y THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 EIGHTEEN WASHINGTON ® — Washington Referee Phil Fox has accused Ken Loeffler, LaSalle college basket- ball coach, of writing him an “un- ethical” letter eight days before he officiated at a LaSalle game. . * 4 Fox, director of the physical ed- ucation department at Wilson Teachers College here, said Loef- fler “‘questioned my honesty and integrity as an official” in advance of last Saturday's meeting of NFL Seeking Dismissal of $7 100,000 Suit Anti-Trust Legal Action Involves Broadcasting of Pro Games Sees Attorney ; “Ref Charges Coach Sent Unethical Letter 2 fourth-ranked LaSalle and North Carolina State, rated No. 2. State won, 76-73, . uy i Fox said he had turned the mat- ter over to an attorney. He de- clined to comment further. Loeffler released the text of his Jan. 14 letter Monday, because, he said, Fox's statement contained ‘innuendoes . . . very serious against me.” The LaSalle coach declared, “I | didn’t do anything wrong.”’ He said his chief complaint is not with Fox but with Atlantic Coast Conference | ; arrangements that do not permit coaches to veto the assignment of officials. s * * In the letter, Loeffler complained of Fox's officiating at last year’s LaSalle-North Carolina State game which State won by five points. Loeffler wrote that he felt Fox “definitely leaned toward North Carolina State in your calls” and, noting that Fox was assigned de- spite Loeffler’s objections to offi- ciate at this year’s game added: “I am hoping that we will have no cause, after Saturday's game, to feel that my fears were justi- lest ls Planned for Ice Fishing Law in Michigan Indiana Residents to Back Man Who Violated Old Regulation LANSING @®—A test case is de- * ° The department py of Elkhart, Ind. was arrested last week for fishing through the ice in Diamond Lake near Cassop- Minnesota's Dick Garmaker lift- ed his average to 25.0 with 351 points in 14 games. * . * Frank Ehmann of Northwestern may be asked to help | prosecute the case. RESULTS Miami - %, oes 81 Btate Arkansas Gtate Te West Virginia Virginia Tech 61 Vandoren 8s, pee Lipscomb 61 Colorade 78, Iowa State Ti Iowa 78, Ohio State 66 Minnesota 103, Northwestern 62 Wichita 80. Drake BIG 10 STANDINGS per game total of 280 points for 23.3. ; Beliveau Assumes Lead Among Hockey Scorers MONTREAL w—Big Jean Beli- veau of the high flying Montreal Canadiens, who has been running 2nd to teammate Bernie (Boom son, finally took over the indivi- dual scoring leadership in the Na- tional Hockey League. The 24-year-old center, who came out of the Quebec Amateur League two years ago, reached the top this week with three goals and three assists to increase his total- point-production to 53. Geoffrion fell to 2nd place with 30 points, Revenge-Seeking Valdes Faces Jack Flood Tonight ney i CHICAGO ‘®—Big Ten basket- WL Pet. Pts. OP lowa 4 2 67 804 470 2 067 602 486 2 #00 412 307 2 00 418 418 2 500 337 323 3 600 yo | 490 SOUR ccccotccccece 3 400 ant Wisconsin ......... 3 400 365 400 eeccaccecces 3 400 398 420 Ohio Gtate.........+. 1 4 200 380 423 . W. G. Cup- | _ | Bad Driving Record’ Shuffle By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Kentucky Wildcats stayed | well out front in the weekly As- ings today, but the other members of the top 10 underwent a thorough shuffling. * * * The Wildcats, rated the nation’s No. 1 team for the sixth straight é week, ccllected 1,037 points on the basis of 10 points for first, 9 for second etc. Of the 116 sportswrit-|trouncing Tennessee 8-66 to run | ers and sportscasters participating | sociated Press basketball poll rank-| jn the poll. 67 selected Kentucky | play once this week, visiting Van- derbilt Saturday night. * *« «& for first place. * * The poll is based on records of teams through games of Saturday, | Jan. 22. Adolph Rupp’s forces saw ac- Pr ere ~emm | ; i | ; ’ ; Halas, veteran mentor of the Chi- cago Bears NFL football team says he’s going to quit after this season. Halas, however, wants to win another championship before quitting. Summer ‘Camp’ » Retain Positions '| place in Class B, won its 6th vic- Runnerup Fives in A-B Action Clarkston Team Trips Nomads; GMC Defeats Floor Squad Clarkston retained its 2nd-place status in City Basketball League Class A standings last night by dumping winless Nomads, 51-37. Clarkston public away from a q-point 3rd-period lead by out- scoring the Nomads 9-2 in the finale. Bill Dunstan paced the winners with 18 points, while Herbert Price had 15 for the No- mads. General Motors, currently in 2nd tory in seven starts, 88-48, over Courtesy Floors. Four GMC play- ers hit double figures in scoring. Dick Muller was high with 2 points, while Bill York, Dean Rob- inson and Lynus Grant had 15 apiece. George Smith led Courtesy with 18. Lakesiders boosted their Class D record to 5-2 with a 45-27 victory over West Bloomfield Kiwanis. Bob Stallsmith sparked the victory with a 28-point performance. Lak- in DeHoco Set for UD Tackle | Gains 90-Day Sentence for Titan Gridder DETROIT @—Donald M. Fur- taw, University of Detroit football tackle may do a little summer iF to Twin Beach Names. Women Directors train. Ray Herbert Signs DETROIT (UP) — Right-hander Ray Herbert yesterday became the training at the Detroit House of Mh ls ate .| tion is in no way binding on the ers’ Pondgratz hit for 17 points as his team downed the Hornets, 46- 31 in another ‘‘D’’ contest. tans end Meteors vs Boys’ Club (Class D, 1 pm Eastern: 8:30 p.m., Eastern). cL A Hannah Against IV Legislation MSC President Feels Solons Have No Right to Force Issue LANSING (UP) — Michigan John A. would sponsor a bill to require the two Big Ten schools to tele- vise football games “if the schools want such a law.” Hannah indicated he felt the legislature had no right to force the schools to televise athletic con- tests and other said Lindsay admitted his resolu- colleges, but said he would at« tempt to “put some teeth’’ in | | the bill if it is proposed. 50 Regattas in NY it i F SET; i fateh A E i eT Rae eee} ne cit il i Be 2: fi lina State exchanged positions this week, the Dons moving from third to second and the Wolfpack drop- ping from second to third. . first-place votes and 812 points. The Dons were idle last week, but resume competition this coming TONIGHT’S GAMES—Lakers vs Spar-| | | Wolverines vs Siay-| | beaugh’s end Irwin-Rosa vs Bad Cats, | (Class tion twice during the past Week, edging Louisiana State 64-62 and their record to 11-1. The Wildcats San Francisco and North Caro- Co * San Francisco (12-1) received 14 N. C. State (16-3) squeezed by Wake Forest and LaSalle, but fell victim to arch-rival North Carolina 84-70 to account for the decline. The Wolfpack, which accumulated 771 points, faces Villanova Satur- day hoping to avenge an earlier setback. . . * Fourth-ranked Duquesne and La- Salle, No. 5, also switched posi- tions. The Iron Dukes advanced a notch on the strength of a vic- tory over St. Bonaventure. La- Salle, meanwhile, slipped back atft- positions, GW, ninth a week ago, defeated Maryland and Virginia Tech, while the Utes, in advancing from. a 10-place tie, turned back Wyoming and Calorade Maryland fell two notches to eighth after its 75-53 loss to George Washington. UCLA, idle all week, climbed from a 10-place deadlock to ninth, while Mlinois A&M. rounded out the top 10, The Illini, seventh a week ago, dropped a 92- n Standings Leaves Kentucky Alone er bowing to North Carolina State 76-73. George Washington, No. 6 and Utah, No. 7, both moved up three 80 decision to lowa and skidded three places. The leaders with first-place votes in parentheses: a RSE ik we A ma ae 1l—Marquette (4) 13—Missouri (1) 15—Deyton (2)... ccc cece 16—Northwestern .... it md , 18—Vanderbilt (1) 19—lowa ae 20—Niagara 41 Gophers, lowa By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Northwestern's reign as kingpin of the Big Ten basketball race was short-lived—only 48 hours. Minnesota and Iowa were back today in a tie for the loop lead which has been making the rounds in the conference like a night club table-hopper. Four teams have been No. 1 in the past three weeks. ia * * Meanwhile, Tulsa moved into in the Missouri Valley Conference, and Colorado pulled a full game ahead of the pack in the Big Seven and West Virginia strengthened its grip atop the Southern Conference. * ~ s Monday night’s action, in fact, produced only one upset. That was (D.C.) 84-81 in 42 at- feated Georgetown, undisputed possession of first place at Miami Beach where Miami de-! matched Regain Lead marked their first in the Audito- rium there since the start of last season. Northwestern dropped into a third place tie with Illinois by ab- sorbing a 102-82 pasting at the hands of Minnesota at Minneapolis. The tremendous point production the Gophers all-time scoring record. Bill Simonovich, Minnesota's 6-11 operative, shot for 28 points, 20 them in the first half Gophers showed ASS lf Clarkston ,.. .-e-- 161333 O—Oa | ee Nomads ...... : -.42 617 3-37 : CLASS B GMC zs ...-36 18 24 20—88 Courtesy ...... . © 16 12 11—<* CLASS We BSwe@l6 so cou-ccceas ss 410 7 6—237 B vocccccecccees: 812 64 Mormets .c.scccees eeecees @ 8 611-31 LOROTO oon ccc ceceeseenes 131015 6—<4 COMEBACK aT 11 — Barbara member of the 1952 Olympic swimming team, takes a breather as she listens to some her trainer, Jim Campbell, in Washington. The Ii-year-old miss who went to Washington to get herself in shape for the Pan-American Games next Stark, youngest instructions from © for Barbara. AP Wirephote March in Mexico and the 1956 Olympics, wants to) regain the 100-yard backstroke title she lost last year. Campbell is holding a rubber rope and a rubber airplane tail whee] which he uses in daily workouts St. Michael's Shamrocks, seek- ing their ist suburban Catholic League basketball title since 1952, go to Orchard Lake tonight to meet St. Mary’s Eaglets in an all- important league contest. s = Both St. Michael and St. Mary are currently involved in a dead- lock with St. Benedict for the g | r g az g ; j i i i fiitl ai | E* i : E i | z fi 7 Bivize = ‘f _= fy i TH “it i z 5 P i d if F g ¥ i i E ? i i a ff 3 i f i St. Michael, St. Mary (OL Clash: in Crucial SCL Tilt 14.9 | points. | Teaming with Keller at forward ; Will be Joe Wilhelm, while Bud | Schwartz will be at center and Marty Keller and Bob Anderson will start at guards, Eagles’ lineup will -have Pernicki and Pat Ryan Santa Anita Maturity Scheduled Saturday ARCADIA, Calif. # — This is the week racing fans here look forward to Saturday's $165,000 San- ta Anita Maturity for 4year-clds over a mile and a quarter. Eighteen are still eligible from a list of 961 hopefuls originally it i i gS Filer ee eeeeeeee Se de al cu Chevrolet Will Be Pace Car in ‘S00’ Test INDIANAPOLIS ®#—For the first It was announced Monday night at the regular annual Pacemaker |Dinner, that a 180 h.p. V8 Bel | Air convertible wil] be driven on the pace lap by) T. H. Keating, FLEE : =e i : they meant business. Northwest- Ohio State, which now occupies the league cellar, was nothing without its top scorer, Robin Free- man, who ranks No. 2 in the coun- try, and fell easy prey to lowa Area Loop Tilts Milford, Clarkston in W-O Battle; Utica and S. Lake in Bi-County First place is at stake in the Wayne-O akland and Bi-County the Uticans i = i j fe ul i Sct a § pee | 4 | E ry z He Ror gre ggg eey -amee: ee é THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 Baseball Contract-Signing Pace NCAA Television Body Begins Meetings Today Tough Task Awaits TV Body in Satisfying ‘All College Factions college athletics, meets for the first time today in an effort to develop pendently if the NCAA continues wa g am e-of-the-week — AP Wirephote KING, QUEEN OF BOWLING —Syivia Wene, |the National Match Game. tournament in Chicago, 26-year-old Philadelphia saleslady, and Steve Nagy, |Sunday. Nagy won $2,000 by overhauling Detroit's bowling alley operator, admire their | Ed Lubansk iin the finaj round, with 307.17 points trophies after winning their respective divisions of |to Lubanski's 303.34. . Wants One More Title Quickens|cerce: wick sco ais Om 4 Musial Wants to Finish\[oronto Signs 2 P ’s stars, yi y > faire eset Sn Ee cm oe| Argonovt, Defy, Big 8 Host of Ma jor util he achieves one great ambi-) “ym only 34,” Stan explained icy Against | rs A ree up his brilliant career with 3,000/ pe, major league hits. That is an| paseball : achievement attained only by the elite. 8 ts eae have reached my 37th birthday. | official stand on the signing of Na- “I realize that in the old days tional Football League players, * * « hey sai to 1955 Terms Tio Mh, Login Continal's extatunt- |r an a ee ee today announced that . through when he turned tackle Gil . eS ing outfielder and slugger esti-|in those days, it was a common) Mains of the Detroit Lions and Bob Lemon of Indians mates it will take him three years | practice for players to cheat their| guard Bill Albright of the New } Inks $50,000 Pact to |‘, 3% such illustrious 3,000-hit| own ages. When an old timer ad-| york Giants have been signed for : artists Become Top Earner | Hans Wagner, Eddie Collins, Na-|38 or 3%. A player today can't| ‘2 195 season. poleon Lajoie _ By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | Paul Waner. He'll begin his 14th\ed to. It’s a simple matter to| Manager Harry Activity on the baseball contract-| active big league season next! check him. two players had i z f ; ; 3 z : ? i g if i i play with wi dont, tomer’ Peeemers|OCSC Riflemen {Big Class Signed _ | esisent ert cn nob secant -. caeatiea In. Finish on Top for Dog Traini tempt to work out a noraiding $50,000 te make him just snout Gen in Weekend Test ng pact American League's highest paid . Southern Michigan Obedience ° player if Ted Williams sticks to Oakland County Sportsmen's Training Club officials are Spahn Receives Award his reti delight- So i 5 * Club smallbore rifle teams fin- | LSA, Okla. @— ' irement from the Boston “* | ed with prospects for the start of | TULSA, . @—Warren Spaha, Red Sox. ished 1-2-3 in a 4-way match with oring T , ight. stylish southpaw of the Milwaukee . * © ® the Brewster Club of Detroit last | ~,. . ter, | weekend Already we have 50 or more | Griggs Memorial plaque Monday ; dogs entered for start of the class | night for being the major leaguer Hank Greenberg “the best OCSC’s ist team won actual | work,” said John Eicher. “There |to bring the most recognition to player in baseball,” received a| scoring honors with a 951 score, | are at least a dozen different | Oklahoma. : ise ¢ foul 4 by OCSC 1 Ne. 2, — including one big eter | r American League signees! 913, OCSC Juniors Brew- . Dobermans, Springers, a included outfielder Hoot Evers,| tier, as, ame en Retrievers and Collies are also SANDERS Baltimore; pitcher Don Larsen and ; ; among others on the roster."’ NT first baseman Dick Kryhoski,| 1m handicap scoring, OCSC team | Eicher reported the training dem- FOR RE New York; outfielder-first baseman | No. 1 again was high with 1,032. | onstration, last week, attracted be- TRAVIS Vic Power and pitcher Art Cec-|OCSC Juniors were 2nd with 1,011, | tween 175 and 200 persons, “prob- carelli, Kansas City, and outfield- | OCSC No, 2 was 3rd with 987 and/| ably the biggest audience we have HARDWARE Brewster trailed with 963. * High gunners for the teams were The National Leaguers to come | Kjell Danielson of team No. 1, 193; had for this sort -of thing.” aus pitchers Ken Lenmar *™4|Philgas Wins Forfeit, Walker and first baseman Norm " Larker, Brooklyn: pitsbers Ar‘! Merchant 5 Victors third baseman Charley Harmon, Cincinnati and infielders Eddie| Philgas and Waterford §Mer- Misia and Vern Mergen, Cilenge. |. as Wi Bes. In Boston Monday Manager Mike | Ketball League Monday night. next fall if a nationally controlled ges George Halas, Pi in Pro Football, | eae). este sieac teSecin |cony sey ons etet trom Peet ” And throughout the Midwest and rge a as, 1oneer in To OO a 7 | aid he’s looking forward to seeing | ¢@%y Way on a Srfeit from Poole 12 other states, resolutions are pend- . Ted Williams when the team re|Lumber. Waterford Merchants 11 North Perry St. ng im Megilatures demanding tO CJuit as Coach After 1955 Season — |rrety spring trinine arch 1 |handed> Johnsen-Anderson Eng “aiaeT more freedom of tax-supported at Sarasota, Fla. neering its 8th straight loss, 45-27. FE 2-9557 universities to televise football CHICAGO # — George Halas, ae coach. He'll bso oh Halas continued. ‘‘Remember he aes a * *¢ — Birra Bernard Heaney = the man who made the éountry Burgundy Room (Halas was a single-wing player at Co-| | iams announced voided usually high personal Bo li R | “T”’ conscious, is quitting as coach | T2"ters for, players’ meetings and |lumbia who set the pattern for to- tirement at the end of the 1954) foul total and bucketed 14 points Wiing esuits ot the football study) and that takes in|day'’s great quarterbacks. If it|S¢90n, but Higgins still is hopeful | to take scoring honors. Al Cuthrell * Chicago Bears. football all: year round.” wasn't for Luckman, you probably | the lanky slugger may reconsider. | added 13, while Sam Frazer had 9 | LAKELAND LADIES A pioneer of professional foot-| ‘I’ve had some of the greatest | wouldn't have heard of guys like . for the Engineers. | Duteh 47 35 LeChte 3 24| ball, Halas won six National | players,” 2 aE, referring gig many beg van Brocklin, Spartan Athletes Aid ne highlights is COLLISION Godhardt 45 26 Helen's 35 37 titles record | Particulary to Bu og Turner, | Y. tye Bobby Layne.” . ted Wednesday night as unde- | ’ Bolincd 3 3 Govertens = et On conan th bree saa 97 | Bronko Nagurski, Red Grange, Be-| The Bears haven't won a title Olympic Fund Event feated Drayton Drug meets 2nd_ Hammel 45 27 7 39 © i ties in 29 years. attie Feathers, Jack Manders, Ed| since 196 and Halas would like| fast LANSING — International| Place Harry's Recreation at 7:30 | Der-t it 38 Owens 3 * * ¢ Sprinkle and Sid Luckman. "| nothing better than winning this | cooperation got a big shot in the | p.m Lee. game caten e” wamer see | ‘He wants to make it seven cham-| “Sid was one of the greatest,” fall. arm at the recent United States | $20; team game, series—Oak Cleaners | pionships before quitting after the Olympic Fund track meet staged enka — 1955 season | Miss Faulk to Turn Pro | in Chicago. Among Michigan State | Hoot Takes Salary Cut say Forirmrees eo rs Shoot Cres fing ttugh er paces|_ BALTIMORE wFarmer Der EAST TOWN. COLLISION Avon $5 28 Mandaiart 38 44 ee Se pee Se fe TAMPA, Fila. ® — Mary Lena/so Uncle Sam's boys can go to the | Tigers outfielder Hoot Evers, a er . can Football Assn. in two Faulk of Thomasville, Ga., 1953 | 1956 Olympics, were two Austral-| 10-year veteran of the major | Bear and Wheel Soy Set S| rats tee on Se x becuse iM QUSC TOUMMCY — | Recs’ Aimee Gor chamois |ne_ partes ibe’ Keven ope |iecget, Soat'an ected Fa eee Frome sod Asie Seaifieniag — <2 38 neotk 17. caine | the National Football League. First and a U.S. Curtis Cup team mem- | and high jumper Doug Stewart, and| pay cut in the contract he signed | Dorethy White 418; team game—acker| At 57, Halas, who's greatest thrill annual official archery golf ber last year, will turn profession- | two Canadian distance runners —| yesterday with the Baltimore Ori- | 35 Elizabeth St. Ph. FE 4-5941 Fey kine Co. O78, seriee—Chuck’s Ghack | was a 73-0 championship victory | tourney at Oakland County Sports-/ al next month. | Selwyn Jones and Henry Kennedy. ' oles. —— over Washington in 1940, feels he | men's club, during the last week- : wi w 1| Should step out of the coaching | .nq attracted a very good field,| Pont. Rec. 5438 Calabrese 36 44 ranks. . . e No. 4 42 38 Beavers 32 47| ters, make deals and attend drafts, | ty-one shooters’ turned out. They a ek, 214, Han | but coaching fs a year round job | inchuled men, women and young DeNoyer eh. series—Pete Townsend $44, now that I've molded a con- Belen Debeyer 618; team game, sertee— | tender it’s dine tb Gn,” Malan |e nt where wore Go- ‘é ” j ai ssa Keen, termined tn all three divisions See the glamorous “‘hardtops HURON BOWL “Ay ses Russell Payne and Dale Hill tied Drewry $0 28 Fidler 4133; About that 730 victory, ‘“It| for top honors with 35 shots for A National 50 28 =Burder 38 oe 1 ” a wasn't winning the game the way | the %"‘hole” layout, which. aver h d b k SS’ SR eB Srey renin te me Sve oe that put adventure back in motoring! io pana ‘331 MtClem. 38 g| the entire country T conscious and, | “hole.” Whi" Huron 42 a 14 €2/T believe, it was the biggest reason| Mrs. Genevieve (George) Marks viii ——<—<———= Joe Puertas 602; team, game-Netional | for the great influx of the T forma. | led women with 36, while the jun- Coach 963, series—Drewry's tion in college and pro ball.” jor winner was David Cross, with IPeRiaL » Who'll be the new coach? a sparkling 25. 5. 8 . * * —-- > Munro's oa Posters | “It's too early to speculate,” California and Stanford play foot: 4 oe = oe o said Halas, “but I'll tell you this.| ball each year for the Stanford w's 42. Cot 2 it to be a‘ axe . series—G. Bradiey 212, 566; team e—Cooley ; 2473. COUNTY EMPLOTES we wt Social $1 21 Lacky 41 31 Jets 44.27 Gutter 3 Brats 4438 Sugar 32 40 Kounty 43 20 Harts m8 4 Pushers 42 29 Alley 25 47 Heads 42.30 Roadsters . 25 47 Ten 41-30 Upsets 25 47 Carcustore, ti 21 Gems 12 60 Indiv. Green 177, series— R. Collins 453; m game, series—Social Kata 705, ised. FISHER HILL we. wt Valley 57 23° Alibis 42 38 Lotan 57 23 Humphries 37 43 Liberal 51 28 Baldwin 37 43 + @s 47 32 «Hilltoppers 4% Fabricating 4634 «Steffen 3% Hub 4435 Gang 27 Tavern 44.35 Bob 21 Se Pals 43:37 Mary ie ?. 7. ws i} Norman's i) ro ‘ % X-Col a ' 455; team game, series—Merle Normans 587, 1690. EAGLES ‘ wth wt ; Las tee Estee 3 and SUPPLY CO. oni 3 Tern ih 140 N. Coss Ave. FE 5-8163 Cass 43:2) Green 4 oT : Indiv. . - —_ _P. Seq Powler's Sessa They’re America’s most exciting new cars —Custom Royal Lancer, Royal Lancer and Coronet Lancer. Nothing on the road can match them! m 4 | af DODGE RIEMENSCHNEIDER BROS. _ EE dressing room at City Center. room. “Oh, Gloria deal on. “Well, tress?” GLORIA “I was born to be!” Her eyes lit up. On the way out she posed with Harry Layton, the door- man, who said I might call him “the door manager.” She gave some women her autograph and I guess she was nerv- ous, for one of them said, “I can’t make it out.” x * didn’t have a drink. fired by Arthur Godfrey. ~*~ *« * * THE MIDNIGHT EARL... Walter Winchell rejected a Comedy Hour” spot . . “Battle Cry” will cause talk . McMullin at The Chambord. Ni New Actress Gloria Gets a VanderBuildUp By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—“Unknown young actress” Gloria Vanderbilt; 20th Century Culture and I'll always remember her New York debut . different than other unknown young actresses’ debuts She wasn’t the star—but the photographers stampeded to HER | NEW DELHI, India «#—India Thus did she launch her N.Y. acting career at $85 a week (the City Center scale which is paid to everybody). one of the Weire Brothers remarked, Miss Vanderbile proved it’s possible to become an overnight star without being . Dorothy Ma- lone’s sexy scenes with Tab Hunter in garet Truman dated Detroiter George . for ‘twas Diplomatically, she decoyed them to Franchot Tone’s dressing “Give her a peck on the cheek!” bawled the photogs to Tone “No, this is enough!” Tone said, wrap- | but old as civilizations go. * ping an arm around her slim waist I want more than THAT!” said, affectionately. Tone good naturedly chased the photogra- phers out. * * * * Gloria Safier, Miss Vanderbilt's man- ancient, sometimes dead culture. ager, told me that there’s a Hollywood | ‘ | In New Delhi, the central gov- It'd be exciting to say she was a bad) ernment is organized around a| actress and snooty—but I felt she played | mode} 20th-century parliament. But | her smallish part believably—and sare- ly she was unusually warm and coopera- | ment still centers in the ‘“‘pancha- tive with us muddlers of public opinion. | yats,” or patriarchal village eld- Afterward she left for Njno’s Larue for | ers. | a supper party—dateless, by the way. As | she was tripping over a few flashbulbs | in the hall, I said: do you still want to be an ac- x * At Larue, Gloria sat with Joan Fontaine and Shipwreck Kelly, Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney and others, and had a supper of sliced tomatoes and lettuce. She As “Colgate . Mar- Lake _ . Sidney Kingsley N 420 Pontiec Trail . ml Florida vacation te WALLED LAKE change “Lunatics and Lovers,” al- Q On Ger Wite Miracle Serece . “pare cmnmh bh. nm * rs rm N Aw Panis” \ TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: When you buy tickets to “Pajama |p Etteadeth “Terie ay” Game” they don’t ask if you want orchestra or balcony—they N cas . “ eT meted ie ° THE WILD” - te Celer with . \ Maa ea a: N Pre-5,000 B.C. _—_| Just Celebrating Village, Found in Northern Iraq have found the site of the oldest prehistoric village yet discovered —one dating back before 5,000 B.C. The University of Chicago gaid the site was wmeovered af M’Lefaat, 2% miles east of Mosul sity of Chicago's Oriental Institute. Test diggings indicate the set- tlement consisted of pit houses— pits with floors and hearths, but witheat walls. Archeologists be- lieve the pits possibly were cov- ered with tents, or even sod. The inhabitants apparently had not reached the pottery age. How- ever, they had good flint tools, mortars, Prison Discharge eight months for breaking and en- Yesterday he was charged | with: A $20,000 arson of a hard- ware store; theft of a suit and topcoat from a used car lot office; theft of a bottle of perfume from Boy Loses Own Life | Trying to Rescue Dog PORT HURON, Mich. ® — Six- year-old Mark Leslie was faithful to his,dog to his own tragic end. Mark and two playmates and the at MOTOR BAR and LUNCHEON BUFFET FINE FOODS, ALL YOU CAN EAT ALL YOU CAN EAT % BREAKFAST OPEN FOR BUFFET ANNOUNCING New SERVICE “eevee eneeevne ORDER YOUR FAVORITE DRINK FROM THE MOTOR BAR 6 A.M. to 9 P.M. SANDWICHES 11 A. M. te 9 P. M. 1 A. M. te2 P.M. SP.M. te 9P. M. MOTOR BAR and GRILL GRILL 1.25 eee Fal UARY 25, 1955 - | Indian Republic {s5 Tomorrow | Stands Beside Ancient Civilization will be a five-year-old republic to- morrow—young- as republics go, Five years after India's consti- | tution took effect—more than two | |years after the granting of inde- | pendence by the British—this mam- moth Asian country offers the con- trast of a vital, new state and an . * . THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JAN PLAYS ROUGH — Italian movie star Anna Magnani cracked one of her costar’s ribs and swelled the jaw of another while filming “The Rose Tattoo,” in Hollywood. in the villages most local govern- English remains the general | working language of the govern- |ment, and most literate Indians | use jt. Hindi, the officia] language, | is receiving more and more prom- | inence; but many Indians complain it is becoming too hard to under- stand, They say too many words from ancient Sanskrit are being incorporated into it. «. . * The bicyle and the automobile bring modern times to the cities. The bullock cart and the pack cam- el keep even the busiest thorough- fares in touch with the past. New homes and factories—using the latest in architectural designs —are springing up in Indian cities and the countryside, Beside the new structures stand the countless ruins of fortress walls, palaces and tombs—mostly centuries-old relics of the moghuls. . - . An Indian businessman goes to | work in the latest in Western dress, or an Indian outfit modified | by Western influences. His wife | silk sari her ancestors wore. Quake Jars Missouri, Tennessee, Arkansas POPLAR BLUFF, Mo. @® — An earthquake shook the corners of Tennessee, Missouri and Arkansas early today, but no property dam- age was reported, the highway pa- trol said. Mo., to Blytheville, Ark. clings to the filmy, swe. | | Ann wasn’t mad at anyone, say- ing: “It's in the script. When I play I play.” New Statler-Hilton Hotel to Open in Dallas Soon DALLAS (®—A 22-story, 1,000- room hotel in downtown Dallas will open late this year as the Statler-Hilton—the third name it's had since plans were announced for its construction. Sales Manager Max Peck said the name is a combination of the original title, Dallas Statler, and the Conrad Hilton, which the fi- nancier gave the structure after purchasing the Statler chain. Philippines Get Gunboats MANILA &—The Philipine gov- ernment has received the first of six American gunboats through the U.S.-Philippine Mutual Defense As sistance Pact, i Conrad Nagel in Hollywood for New Movie By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (®—"‘After you've the movie town, matinee idol and many years, He is back a film return in “All That Allows’’ with Jane Wyman and Rock Hudson, Nagel was one of the pioneers of Hollywood. He helped colonize Beverly Hills when that towr was no more than a string of bean fields, He was a founder of the Motion Picture Academy and its president for a few years. He head- where civie 8a S¢ j ii gs g d z i § | | | } WHAT'S MY LINE? THE PONTIAC PRESS =~ N.Y. Journal Americon HORIZON PICTURES present PATRICE MUNSEL EXCLUSIVE! FIRST RUNI 3 “‘MELBA’ IS ‘THE GREAT CARUSO’ OF 1953! PATRICE MUNSEL IS BUT TERRIFIC!” “A massive melange of mighty music!'*1. rms “Highest rating! Patrice Munsel makes her film debut and a triumphant one it is!"s1. sees “The whole production gleams with elegance!” —Lovella Parsons WY. Moreld Tribune ma % my sumptuous “A spirited and production happy carnival that wefind _ of light and enjoyable vd familiar n every : reaped!” Potice “A treat! Lav- -Munsel is ishly mounted, prepared to handsomely give a happy costumed time to both production!” ears and eyes!" = N.Y. Werld Telegrom & Sua “Family movie medal award” —Porents Magerine Ks a = S 25 E. Lewrence St. if you've never WiLL YOU ACCEPT don't be side- eee Tug 700 ray’s now and be @ star on the dance floor. Studios open 10 AM TRIAL LESSON? artnur muRRAY School of Dancing Phone FE 2-0244 = QOUR © Bitte field Thee ze a New eS ,) ToDay ‘Eta, DOORS OPEN 10:45 A.M. F ON OUR NEW GIANT SCREEN! DEAN AND JERRY TAKE OVER THE CIRCUS... 1. THE MOST HILARIOUS SHOW ON EARTH! 3 DEAN MARTIN ... LEWIS 3 RING CIRCUS ¢ VISTAVISION w= WALLACE FORD a ELSA LANCHESTER mms JOSEPH JERRY PEONEY - sy ot tomate ty OOM MCGUIRE - & PRRRMOUEET PICTURE TODAY Thru RIDAY . TONY CURTIS — JULIA ADAMS SAT. IN “6 BRIDGES TO CROSS” 10:38 Sendays at 19:28 Phone FE 5-8331 Yale SS he Also: “Witness te Murder” 7 TUES. i WED. 4 THURS. “= = 2 Giant Attractions — STARTS TOMORROW! TEMPTATION IS A THING s ee ee “is a er Fe re Starts = 150 = 4:30 7: eee ode SP - 1ap Ne te dl CALLED MONEY AND A | ~— da Conquering Forgetfulness a Science to By MARGARET LATROBE A friend of mine once enrolled in a memory course. He could scarcely recall his own name, con- stantly forgot where he parked his with great difficulty remembered where his office was, This course might have done him inestimable good, except that he forgot he had enrolled in it. And never got to take the course at all. . On television the other day I heard a teacher of memory ex- plain how his more than 20,000 students learn to remember things. “Darling, don’t forget to call the Joneses and ask them to drop by, and bring a leaf of bread soon or they won't bloom— and don’t forget your dental ap- pointment is today and . . .” And the careworn husband can remember the whole string of chores. If he knows how to recall them to mind, that is. By using the Remember © imagination, by associating one thing with another, by visualizing the object to be remembered, you can easily leave home of a morn- ing, sure of -having naught but praise from the little woman keys to imprint itself in your brain, associating keys with some other well-known object you can’t a4 ; AF see : tie, blue necktie with blue sky— | lovely weather that day—or some [—RAIN-TOss ' “If it ever rains so hard that I have to wear this outfit, I don’t expect to go out!” Stason of the University of Michi- atom to man’s best use was an- nounced over the weekend. The fund is a private, non- '| profit corporation which seeks to develop and promote peacetime use of atomic energy throughout the world, Walker L. Cisler, presi- dent of the Detroit Edison Co., is its president, Jefferson Davis was never brought to trial. After being kept ” |imprisoned for two years, he was PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 by Ernie Bushmiller - ry OH, SLUGGO---I GOT A NEW 4g) Capture Ammo Plant TEHRAN, Iran ®—The Iranian army announced today it had cap- tured a secret ammunition assem- bly plant in a Tehran suburb. A Russian-born but her husband was said to have woman was arrested Z Gaye. 1956 ty EA Gert, be Tee © 8 oe “I didn’t know the Joneses wer ehaving trouble, but I wouldn't let that old gossip think she had a scoop on me!” by Galbraith Ld No SPUR LINE THE LOOK AT ‘EM!! ALL ALONG THE RIGHT OF WAY FARMERS ARE FL, gia 2,4 edad (Advertisemtent) UcaTcH P FiRsT=I MUST FX HIM- MY HAIR, WITH .| WILDROOT PIGGY \— IT'S MADE OF RUBBER ba 2g \ WHAT'S THE . ADVANTAGE OF THAT @ IT SQUISHES by McEvoy and Strieber LONG ‘TO GET HERE —oy, , tl, 7 — ? - —_ 2. F- Cape. F088 by SEF Geren me FT Bng US Por - by T. V. Hamlin AS ; . ad NEIGH HAT, HUNGRY AS THEY ALWAYS ARE... » CAKES! by Carl Grubert ee oe ~ Phone FE BAKER & HANSEN Richard H. DeWiu Donald FE. Hansen Res. FE 2-5513 Accident Insurance Fire Automobile Insurance Liability Insurance Life Insurance Burglary Insurance Bonds—All Types Plate 511 Community Nat’! Bank Building 4-1568-9 Res. FE 5-3793 Insurance Glass Insurance “A ‘HICK TOWN’ is one where there is no place to GO WHERE YOU SHOULDN'T BE” —Robert Quillena— News in Brief 115 State St., while the auto was parked in front of Webber’s home, according to Pontiac Police. ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25,1955 | War Scare Hits Grain Market CHICAGO # — A grain market | which has shown occasional signs of war jitters over the 10 days looked as if it might be de- veloping into a first-rate scare to- da Robert Lewis of 60 Douglas St. | reported to Pontiac Police today that someone stole a voltage regu- | lator from his auto while it was parked in front of his home last night. Two hubcaps were stolen from {an auto owned by Archie Smith ‘ot 34% Augusta St. last night | while the car was parked in front of his home, Pontiac Police report- ed. principal STOCKS — BONDS Consult us for first hand information in Stocks and Bonds We maintain a direct line to a member of all with up-to-the-minute quotations service available at all times. C. J. Nephler Co. 414 Community National Bank Bidg. FE 2-9119 The Happiest Homes Are Financed the “Capitol Way!” Low-Cost Charles W. Richardson of 2910 Sunderland, Waterford Township, reported to Waterford Police today that thieves stole two dark green fender skirts and a radio antenna in front of 4475 Highland Rd. last DETROIT LIVESTOCK BE355 g2¢238 g * 3 2 $ }. | te it | t 3 i rise : ist f sé 3¢ i x J she He ; fs é Sis HH a k f fe $5 5° $3 = 86 sii; He ips g é E a tlt Bat bi i i z 23 fo Hi ea i d ; : i ! i 2 os 5 i 5 F ' i Le H F rT H : te i lt pit : hie ¥3 i ‘ Sat es ad i or YOUR CAR? This may be your cor— fellow—but in any case be sure you hove liability and collision insurance. it might be the other FE 4-1551 § i 3 i Mea Ht Na * i Hed ‘ Fi E - g d ‘ aj from his auto which was parked Picemed to be ig 5 for the mo- .| also appeared to be some new -| speculative buying. y. é In very active dealings all grains forged ahead, soybeans again showing the strongest tone. Beans were up around 4 cents at one time. Feed grains lagged, slipping below opening prices as the ses- sion progressed. Wheat near the end of the first hour was % to 1% higher, March $2.32%; corn “% to % higher, March $1.54%%; oats unchanged to % higher, March 77%; rye 1 to 1% higher, March $1.23%< soy- beans 1% to 3% higher, March 2.80; and lard 3 to, 10 cents a hun- dred pounds higher, March $12.85, Brokers attributed the demand for grains to the Formosan situa- tion. Routine grain news, which was certainly not very bullish, ment, There was a good deal of short covering in all pits and there | MARKETS | Produce settee rt )) reens. Celery cab- iu. : Collard, No 1, 1.00-1.50 bu. Kale, No 1, 100-150 bu. Gwiss chard, . 100-125 bu. DETROIT EGGS DETROIT. Jan. 2% (AP)—Egegs. f. 0. b. | cases included, federal-state Whites Grade A jumbo 45-49 weighted yer . | stock market turned lower. . | inereased and the ticker tape ran average 46. large 39-40. wtd avg 2 medium 35-26 wid. avg. 35%: grade Bi large 36 | Browns: Grede A jumbo 43-45 wtd | avg. 44. large 37-34 wtd. avg 38. medium | 35; grade B large 34; grade C large 29- | 30 wtd. avg. 30 i Checks 29-30 wid avg. 29 } Market steady. Supplies moderate and ample as trading dull. The best interest appears to be on the lower priced of- . . Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, Jan. 35 (AP)—Opening grain w Sep 1.28% Ueber 233 Soybeans Mag . cece 2.28% Mar . 271% AF a. cceses 2.13% May 2.76 st: cecee 9.18% dlp ....-e. 2.73% ee 2.56% MBF access SB6% BOW. occccc 20 May ..cca0 1.57% Lard Jly 1.59% Mar 12.85 Sep 1.55 May 12.85 Oats diy 12.75 WOOF cccsce T™ Boybean Ol) | Pree 76% j\Mar ... 11.95 CE vccccccce. 1% May ....... 11.88 Rye Se 11.64 PORE cence 23% Gep ........ 11.28 MOF scacecs 5.2 Gc cwveres 11.00 eeeee Shortwave Network fo Protect Frontier MONTREAL @— Thomas W. Eadie, president of the Bell Tele- phone Co., of Canada, announced today a new microwave communi- cations network to protect Cana. da’s northern frontier is under con- struction by the Canadian govern. ment. Known ag the “Over the Hori- it is formed of 3 to 3 miles, Eadie told the Ca nadian Club. The new type of transmission requires from 10,000 to 20,000 times bd | N <= > : ; ‘New Wilson GMC Co. Parts and Service Facilities Shown Above at Oakland and Cass Avenues. Approximate Completion Date Feb. 15, 1955 GMC TRUCKS. SOLD AND SERVICED BY »O Stock Market Turns Lower ~ NEW YORK ® — Some shares lost 2 to 3 points today as the Volume mounted asi the selling behind several times during the session. The steels, motors, oils, cop pers, chemicals and rails were down. The aircrafts, strong earlier, also dropped. In late'morning, Bethlehem Steel was off 2%, Republic Steel 1%, Douglas Aircraft 24, Boeing 1%, Chrysier 1, Union Carbide 1%, Standard Oi] (NJ) 1% and Ken- necott 14%. Sunray Oil was off 1% and Mid- Continent Petroleum 3% following announcement of details of their merger agreement. Brokers and market analysts noted that the market faced a number of problems including the strong possibility that credit would be tightened further and the un- easy situation regarding Formosa. Some suggested a new test of the recent lows was in order. Others looked for a highly selective mar- ket. New York Stocks ferings such as uncandied and ungraded offerings Adams &x 406 Int Tel & Tel me ; + Admiral 27.2 Jacobs ‘ CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGs nage + wu tae ws CHICAGO, Jan. 25 (AP) — Butter Alleg L Btl 3097 Jones & L 7 steady; receipts 935,904, wholesale bay- Allied Ch . 034 Kelsey Hay 2.6) ing prices unchanged; 93 score AA 57:| allied Strs $5.2 Kennecott ... 103.4 | 92 A 57; 00 B 56.25; 80 C 56; cars 90) ails Chal 71.6 Kimb.Cik .... 39.7 | B 56.7%; 88 C 865. . Alum Ltd ... 1% Kresge 88 ... 31.7) Eges steady to firm: receipts 10.124:| alum Am . 686 Kroger ...... 483) wholesale buying prices unchanged:| Am Airlin 216 Lehn @ FP .... 194 U. S& large whites 345; mixed 45; me-| am Can 40.6 LOP Glass ... 674 diums 33.5: standards 325: current| am Cyan 52.7 Lib McM&L .: 15.6 receipts 33; dirties 30.5: checks 305 Am Ges & El 434 Ligg & My ... 45) Am Leco 20.7 Leckh Aire se CHICAGO POTATOES Am M & Fdy 25 pode) s be ge CHICAGO, Jen. 24 (AP)—i(UsDA) — [| 4™ Motors .. 13 seats Potatoes: Arrivals old steck 319, new | 4™ N — =a pr epong al a stock 13; om track 478 old stock 13: tetal| A™ Re cn bulk. ae U.S. shipments Priday 738, Saturday $54, | Am Seating .. 20.¢ Miarat Em 318 | Sunday 11; old stock supploes light. de- | A™ Sme 37 MM 2 > Sr tl mand slow, and market barely steady; | A™ St! Fd : seené a 54.3 | new stock supplies light, and no track | Am Te! & Tel — Mia C Pet 108.7 | trading. Carlot track sales, old stock, | 4™ Tob 2 Pa. al Iadho Russets 94.38-4.78; Idaho utilities Am Woolen . 208 Mid Bil Be il $3.05: Oregon Russets $4.65; Minnesota | 4™ Zinc bs he wary ‘ al Month Dabste Fentioce washed snd | Anse Wb C388 Motor Pd... 334] me hon) hems — Armco 8ti 70.1 Motor Wheel 234) Armour & Co 4.6 Motorola . 46 P. Assad Dry GO 28.1 Mueller Br 42 ou Atchison = ag Cp 33.1 Atl Refin Nat ise “4 CHICAGO, Jan. %. (AP) — /USDA)— Atlas Pdr $0.5 Nat Cash R ..1036! Live aru & one to firm; receipts 9 | avo Mig ... 61 Nat Dairy 314 epg lll Zt cone. Sai | Bald Lime 133 Nat Gyps ... 408 Deavy hens 1052 Maht hens 13105, | Belt @ Oh... 38 Nat Lead 54.7) son Mg x - 135-148: | Beech Nut 29.7 Nat Steel 58 yee and teeeeete ar roosters 12-| Bendix Av . 102.3 Wat Theat .. 97) ott ame St Benguet ll NY Air Brk 246 Beth Steel... 108% Wy Cent wa POULTRY Air.... 7.6 wis w Pw 5 DETROIT, Jan. 25 (AP)—Prices Bohn Alum.... 21.23 wort & West 51 | per f. 0. b. Detroit-for No. 1 qual- | Bond Strs, 168 No Am Av “4 ity live poultry up to 10 am =| Borden ...... 64.4 Nor Pac 66.2 | wy hens 23-24, light hens 13-15;| Borg Warn.... 36.2 Nor Sta Pw 162 heavy broilers or fryers (2%-3% Ibs): | Brist M 29.1 Nwst Airlin 19.1 Gray Crosses 31-32; caponettes (44-6 - 213 Ohie On 2 Ibs.) 32-34% : Budd Co 16.4 Oliver Cp « 155 Market full steady on hens with mod- | Burroughs 23.6 Otis Elev «24 erate receipts moving Pryers and | Calum & H... 11.1 Owens m GI 108 caponettes steady wi supplies fully|Camph Wy... 27 Pan A W Air 1758) ample to a fair demand. Can Dry..... 15 Panh 72.2 Cdn Pac.... ™® Param Pict 374 Capital Alri... oss Parke 5 Natty Fur Caps Warm SP ine pa OS Poli ‘ Cater Trac.... 84 Pepsi Cola 18.1 State Policemen’s Ears | Celanese °° 3 Pheine Da . ico - 97.4 LANSING @® — The Michigan > ia a “ as Philip Mor... 403 State Police are issuing natty fur| Sua "nw |. 167. Pileny “Milt. Rs ca’ their cold = eres it G... 4 pS to officers for weer | Se bre... 1163 fen ho.’ ae ther wear. Clark Bauip .. ee Pullman... 6a Climax Mo . Pure Oil...... 6 Commissioner Joseph A. Childs aan fe a be oe” said the caps have been used this | Coca Cola .. it Rem Rand... °33.6 Colg Palm ... Holding... 28 winter as an experiment in the SSi¥ co. .''. 162 Repub sti. 7 Lower Peninsula. eo Pict...) 98 “Officers from southern Michigan | Ss, FS B08 S33 satewsy i.... 39 posts. who were sent north for| cont Mot ... 124 8t Jos ... 03 deer season duty liked the caps| Cont Of! .... 706 & Reg Pap... 383 v0 4 Copper Rng . S14 Mf.... 343 so well,” Childs said, “‘that now) Gorn pa ..... 82 coed’ ak BD 15.4 Crue Sti .... 332 ars > .. 7 we have issued them for optional Gunn Drug .. 322 Shell Of ..”: 58 cold weather wear throughout the| Curtiss Wr .. 18 Simmons . @i state.” pa wr on oH Racial 2 : sis r Beag . 32. ac Li «ome | ale le Sou fee i oi 7 J ots BS BPS TF lnseee . with black fur earflaps. Du Pont ....189 Sparks W ..) 54 ey P 775 gw 42. gece i motes One Discovery insulin revolution air L ... 3.7 Std -. 39 of Bast Kod ... 60.6 Std Off Cal % ized the effective treatment of| i Auto L ... 394 S4 Off Ind 45.6 diabetes. El a@ Mustn «4 Std Off NJ . 1084 Pmer Red ... 13.3 Std Off Oh .. 437 Ind John ... 30 Stevens JP .. 366 frie RR ..... 2¢@ Stew Wer |. 47 Bx-Cell-O .,. 87 Stude-Pack .. 123 Paird Mor... ¢ Sum OH ..... evs Firestone ..... 113.3 Swift & Co .. 44 zeeees Se... SY Sylv El Pa ... 43.7 Tre ..: 36 Texas Co... a6 2 Gen Bak ..... 111 Tex GO Sul... 385 Gen Elec .... 466 Thomp Pa ... Gen Pas ..... %.4 Timk R Bear 50.1 Gen Mills .... 67 Tran W Air .. 24 Gen Motors .. 963 Transamer 38.7 Gen Ry Sig 5 Trent C Pox 226 Gen Refrac .. 282 UnGerwad ..... 4.7 Gen Ghoe .... 5302 Um Carbide 0.7 Gen Tel ..... 383 Un Pac ..... 106 Gen Tire ,,... 47.7 Unit Air bin 346 Gillette ...... oe Unit Aire ... 624 Goebel Br .... 85 } rg KS 6 Goodrich ..... 62.5 } on O21 Grah Paige .. 2.1 Gas Im .. zee Gs Bo Ry ... 388 US Lines ..... 4 Gt Wet 8... 216 US Rud ..... 41 ae . . 41° US Bteel +: oe ou . 6.2 US Steel pt . 1619 Ha mrto(«#«#«g «7.2 US Tob. 483 Holland P ... 158 Van Real ... 332 Homestk 4.1 Welgreen . 6 Hooker Ei 23.6 Warn B Pic 8 Houd Her 13.6 West Un Tel ™ Cent ..... 005 Weste A Bk . 284 Indust Ray .. 40.5 Westg Ei ++ Inland Sti ... 3 White y om 7. Inspir oF eee 1 Wise Bi ~~ 12a int tary... 30h Yoee me Tow’ on6 it eo ee Tew me int Gaver 1. G38. Eeotth Roa. Gan | withdrawn the money from a bank Open Hearings in Cone of Immigration Officer US. Will Bui Spanish Pipeline From Ships to Bases MADRID, Spain #—Uncle Sam is going to build a 600-mile, 40- million-dollar ‘“‘Big Inch” pipeline in Spain to supply jet fuel to five American air bases in this coun-| ‘ineé try. A British firm has been awarded a five - million - dollar contract to The pipeline will stretch from Rota, on the Atlantic, to Zara- goza, northeast of Madrid. It will supply jet fuel to a Navy air sta- tion at Rota and U.S. Air Force bases at San Pablo and Moron de la Frontera near Sevilla, Torrejon Work has already started on the | bases at Torrejon and Zaragoza. American military officials said that when the line is completed, naval tankers will unload the jet fuel into storage tanks at Roja for pumping later into the pipeline. Robbers Grab $5,040 Just Taken From Bank DETROIT W—Two armed robbed a Detroit bar owner of 040 yesterday just after he a Russell Pellegrine, Pointe Woods told police the robbed him in the parking lot in the rear of the National Banh branch at St. Jean and Mack. Fe 2 oO i in Near Fatal Stabbing i ’ 5 i cf il aF ¥. E fs e it 32° alabisiti 4 i # i i | 5 a)" 8 Bei _ SLgEESEaaEs FE ELaee DETROIT STOCKS (Hornblower & Weeks) aon Oe eee oe ee Baldwin Rubber* ..... aa Kingston Preaucte? ae ; Masco Gerew* ..... oeee 3.0 31 Midwest Abrasives... 62 «78 Rudy Mfg. ......... 4a a 4 a /B ¢ a nme en ; gg ee tS BEE Sr y ad . X OS ae LS ee, peas 7 tas bit Na, Investment Facilities Just pick up your phone and call us for experienced ' service on your investments. Your 5 ‘by whens, by lettte.or in porren./ tural Trades. Proposal No. 2—Contract for Piumbjng, Heating & Ventilating Work No. 3—Contract for Electrical 1955, at the office of the . 1160 Biake- way, Ann Arbor. Pians may be seen at the office of the Architect in Ann Arbor, at Builders and Traders Exchange in Detroit and and at the Dodge Reports in Detroit and Flint Pr must be submitted on forms f Architect and shall be accom, by « certified check or bid bond im the amount of five per cent of the 1 submitted. Checks or bonds will be able to the Boatd of Education, District No. 8 Novi Township. County, Michigan. All irm for a remain f thirty days after opening of the bids A cheek in the sum of $25.00 must be for each set of ms and specifications, same to be re- unded when and specifications are returned one week after bid opening The of Education reserves the right to reject any or all bids in whole or in part and te waive any informalj- ties therein. BOARD OF EDUCATION, School District No. 8 OVWidY 421 oens OVWINYUIN | -0o~ rf he i EB fis & hee a $y =i] ' f F pe i i Hh t r H | ?: i H : sf BESS 5 =F 2s ois ab You Mage Tips ore welcome —_ ° a? pao: Oe Sa a ene ee es eee eS eee eee, CR OS A CO, ge ee en "om 4, = > : ws a ees 5 aa * a, ’ re ; ie ffoere. = . Po [oe ae aI # a m yi — ; ae 44 ae. rk . ? : > $ ‘ . , Nay ‘ ' ‘ . A i : THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25,'1955 c ___ TWENTY-THREF In Memoriam 2 Help Wanted Male Vai Work | ) Wanted Real nh eee 4 Jol . n londdabeie Prey A. JOLINSON, Realtor FE 42533, to ITT _ > ee + ; , . Z =~ : ‘ ee ; ' Z| , eaten see So a.m. af PE 3 | es Bo : A 7 ' eweenerss W F ha r A sales, trainee...,... yy aes Pe eit < ee = 2 , ~ F 4| Midwest Employment o he. FING FO pe r Hoe , . , FAST Action! - : . * .) Ww ING ING A > 4 a : If you have the contract—we have ~~~" | 6 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. 8ER PE 60227 - Clark Real Es- +6402. Ask for ° w ~ | : : : ce afi: Donelson-Johns| , NEED A cater pt F.REISZ | teat ae W. Huron 8t. FE 2080) Edw. M. Stout, Realtor 3 TIN. Saginaw St. PH. PE 5-8165 | son St. onlbens si aMBULANCE ground Pe etm | Et Highest Prices Paid |" "Seer Bre wht" "| noon Pag ARS FRE niful Ber = RETAIL SALESMAN = e. 5-415, days. Evenings Phoughtfu ctl pen) y oan 20 for jecal | Seleswoma ced on ty On,iand, contracts. eet our FREE SSUATT ROUSE NORTH OF FOR: | _ Sef fun FE 43904 Voorhees-Siple bese, Some bockheeptkp and ‘ot. | 0 commission. Best sales deal Tumpuson 425 (ACRES | wICHOLIB & HAROER co Peaties. ee ae Ee ey Stree es FUNERAL HOME | flosr sling experience desiree brome wc ry ee ee ten tO 2 W, Huron ot. __re $um|~ PHONE OL 1-665] | -“Soous AND BATH UPPER: Ambulance oY he Motor —. By? Mr Pints Sher your i plus’ commis- “Well, it beats taking our exercise outside in the snowy Unlimited $ casity lend contract set tots, tare. FE Sie tier bP _— ~ A) TIME STUDY oe i courteous actza. For immediate |CLARK REAL ESTATE| $'tuts “57 men Pints Se Boy pmmect amp save | ex ‘idee | Stenographer ct | TSN emt E aubure Ra. | bet iO Sem rand’ ® pm. gig Poatioc Granite & Me BOND EMPLOYMENT AGENCY Income Tax Service 17| Hobbies & Supplies 24A) A. fOHNSON Realtor Bree, FE 2100 — Pass _| fee yep Oakland “Ave, weer “se ; ~ —~ Paha FE 4-2533 LAKE FRONT HOME. BETWEEN |; ROOM AND BATH WEAT AND INCE MEMORI | TV SERVICEMEN| Marking Girl SAVE MONEY | "crane scrabble “tt peist| 1704S, Telegraph Rd. | ‘mix, "im, tte Gude, schoo | ralianle Pov 1. "Couple ony’ oon erry ———_ rain | pm tece eases a: | empl pare Ms “are Sera tiees ‘or ab: | M2 dhe hate pottery Pu iste | 50, MORTGAGES | ‘ln sit iocet wine thee SF ie ex Lots 5 at 918 : v one sho 4. Marking OO” a |) . TEXTILE session before July ‘ S ROOM UPPER TILE BATH. mon eneey | GaeD CAR SALESMAN. MOOT BE | fos'oe Tei sod ae Sopa PETER | Shae dead etal aati tare oA ya ed BO a _ FE +ste WANTED: MAN TO CUT CARS wo Ra ay AP ODT DEWrrr, “BY APPOINT. na, PE 3-066), _ B. D, CHARLES 7 ROOMS FineT FLOOR DUPLER Sipe ee hanno Om dived | car 701 Oakland Aves ARTHUR S Pav esetene 1° Linebary. Call) Bobownio movie projector, 001.80; | PR seus: Eve, PR S40 | Reed this ae te veer Sot canes te catedry eet WAITRESS a Laundry Service 18| RETINA 2h witn P2 leos, ace, | *O.GET THE MOST FOR TOUR | pockst, Buyers wen cnen a soar ie ue ceas ee = BOX REPLIES Biva. South: No phone ‘calls. Spi as Socangpena pee terre teak, | ea sues pace OW. meres | nee of nomes, Terms stam eat frnisbed. Avalabe aie phone calls. Spit UNUSUAL arms, @ ALL ma.| Suz, terms, PADDOCK FILM | sh Plone PE $4916 ASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS | about March 1. Pontise Press ROOMS AND BATH. EMPLOYED | _ Woodward Oak. ‘ Tovgors: fis, week end we co | Racchent copervanty, Sct | _ WAITS Bea_3, Ponting Prose. _ Elec. — Sewers Cleaned ee es FNS D URNITURE cat Ng ig a cau. Aoutr © Williams st. |3 a Michigan Slate Employment ployes benefite Apply Per- WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY | ee eorvice. No results, no Walt w: : na = WANTE } — — notes ak BATH PRIVATE gd itnen furnished. tose to Te a0 ‘Te pm. hes. oZ= onse geste gate oe | cme Physiotherapy ZIA| Paic’emn wast prompt cour entrance, adults. 121 W. Law- | _ Murce. . m. [) and paym Roto-Re Sewer Cleaners |___ * BYSUUNSE’PY teous service (ind the, hia HAVE. ty P| sages. DE Dox m 7 Bet wart mee, seeity EXPFRIENCED COOK. APPLY IN | —\, ry price ., 08. ROOMS, . person. Tomahawk Restaurant, | Work Wanted Male 10 FURNACES DAY 8 eve MAE | L & S SALES CO ger geen owe, Call 3. A. Tur- | _cuulren, PE sotet after 3. | lor Pan EXPERIENCED y ¥YPIST POR | A] CARPENTRY. PLASTIC AND| We sre a local company not Elm 6. Fe +a00i,_ AnD CARL AED CorrTT, aie | — ee. Wert! Gell weston F Room 5 WODERN “Korean Vets—Non Vets eee, work, Write Poo: | floor tile « specialty, PE $4004. | amateurs. We repair, re- ig hg P14 FE 22008, COMPLETE = ean OE Ne ean Fant. : Fe en a neces “Also eles “rebuild Service 22|WAFTED_ TO BUY alt TYPES : furn, 11 §. Johnson 6 T. - | SxP GIRL OR 9 - YEAR - OLD BOY oe sepate, repuilé Television furniture re ‘ 1E Se —ly_furn,_1i chosen, _ |" and . 8 Ra. SALESMEN care of child im our home. PART WORK ee Men ones ~~ | RT: wap eirewen| Real Estate Service [7 Rooms AND BaTH. NEWLY | off ELDERLY LADY FOR HOUsE- ipietpes 6 MraBoocts| stort; mnetall pipe work. FE Oe Tin FE SERVICE | "cabinet sink, Phone PE ¢004. | wos ss trate your present home| Secieswaher 4:30 apt 1 |@ ROOMS. MCELY FORW, HOME Sales peciiien open. onpertensed ‘as coum aad ~ A H J M. Wtd. Miscellaneous 28 © .* 2¢¥ or used house? We buy, J ROOM. WELL FURNISHED heat. Deposit and references re calseman te an ehderiy ‘ea Ham. ATE. PLEASE | FURNITURE REPAIR AND RE FinanA | ell, and trade property from |” Adults. References FE 25262| quired, MY 3-2800, aily parersea TIMKEN = ——— = Ctl Pe bee APTER 4-30 | fishing expertly done. Modern GUARANTEED TV. Rs ~~ ~~~ | NW. Detrott to Pontiac. We build | before i1/or after ets epee mace’ per, |e reas | isan Sees, O | Bors Ratio 8 TY ae ae TET cE CS | Shales Sigsia Sis eater er | 7,5, ¢ ROOM APS, UATE: Joe | emt, Roweve Ustera. ~ RPENTRY. KITCHENS REMO 18SING Poor: SCC ton. MY ~ v E vailable - Gutaile, shine Mr. Janta, FE/ fr sow iene a Cian cm een oe tasks and fel HOME SERVICE CALLS @anvED— noo Ven eve. | Conan eccenes, ‘cr em ou. | OF ewes eee OAS. KEY “en Sandwich doop Wik Joslyn Poo: | Tooms. Attics finished. Repairs. | Sraims tnstalied. PE 24137 Free par oe ee Werier PE e203 | divide to sult. Many commercial |@ NICE CLEAN BOOMS. PRI | ELRBLING & SONS EM 34775. octimates, MITCHELL'S TV WTD: GOOD USED KITCHEN st Van nmaci lakefront. Adults, OR 34047. | | CHOICE OF TWO 2 “ i GIRL FOR GENERAL STOCK | CARPENTER & CABINET NEW | PLUMBING AND HEATING HS | 2 B. Pik» FE 22671 | cabinet sink. Phone FE ¢0084. | os Orchard Lake Rd... Pontise | ROOM FURNISHED, HEATED | hours Ol heat 900 and 975. & Pee ne marking. High school graduate | fn Pe ie Soe * Se PE SUT. OR | “Typewriter Service 22A Money Wanted 28A _FE 2414 ‘WE sate |" apartment in | Keego, Harbor v7 Euuabeth Lake Rd. EM _ work. 16M. Saginaw, | GA WORK WANTED. PLASTERING nn aan amcor 00 | LET US SELL YOUR HOME, WE |i BASEMENT APARTMENT FoR |¢ ROOM AND UTILITY. RANCH REAL ESTATE Ate ART. Part time only. OR 32276, PR teen, FE £600 Leo Lesty| | TYPEWRITERS RENTED, "wi epee rie CURITY | 42.800. bavs pavers waiting, you want |? men. bo drinkers, clove i PE} ype. Meee, curve end tet Seve -0251. TYPEWRITERS roa MA- @antEeD ¥O 009 AT| OL oF FHA. financing. we buy | ATTRACTIVE } ROOMS. PARTLY 4 ROOM ALL MODERN. +78 ea : OFF [AN DESIRES JO : > | _8 per cent. OR 3-4i97. oo Se net 9 Ses Ritbe Cf Ge) Guratened, Private euwante. peal = North . ; g w : to Rent 29 you. Call , move tomorrow. month “Pe 7-8132. aFikt * stem sa la : ent. $15 per week. All utilities Ss O ve. rn ‘KER ANE E! CHRISTIAN FAMILY OF 4 DE Russell Young furnished. OR 8000. MODERN 4 rnished om ak SANDY NISHED 3 ROOM | Commercial property spare time on seam ae 7? Have “Sian, : SLIPCOVERS DRAPES & BED- a a Marge 18. Reasonable 412 W. Ruroo On FE 44525 Diapt, ice private beth. itso per _Take. Rent or sell. on A you Wished some well known firm HAVt A FAMILY. WILL DO ANY : TRIMMING AND REMOV- sLIPCOvEss, FR 54-5797. rent. 1, Pontiac Press. Open Eves. till 9 Sun. till 5 week. wes ee ee ae ) ROOMS AND SATE wt i. Experienced Recapper | Siguity ‘wih "S" quarknteed. sm | Sonic. "= "ST: FE | ah prep estimate, FE 4008 FE Saari, scr Govets, MATER COUPLE WITH 10 MOS. — Write Ponting Press Box No, 32. | trences. required, Baer seni be capable of turning out | cme?—a position in which char | EOREAN VETERAN WANTS ANT Sats. PRECISION WACH—FILED on. re old baby desire 5 room| Larger nomes for smanier, enty | MEN. 4 OOOD CLEAN MEATED| K. G. HEM STEAD Li, es 2 bese cre semegered gate | Sep gatventer beipet, te. “MY | DW. Puaater Fe “Phat coagiate ® EM] unt. house. Close in.| Bemes or incomes, large, dows ce ERRACE-5 WOME | PROT GSTS so4 | Kail or part time position wit «| aye” wires, All gtestecete bockiboeping “7 — Reasonable rent. Will| pazments ote scarce. "ee lotr | & bath, heat & bot water furm- | em. Close to and_ down MAN WK F 24 ae } «a Traveling | work. OA tem. BM 3200 0 Lost & Found peep oN give excellent care. Ref- parties concerned. Call us. po| ished. Privete eatrence 7165 E. — Reteqensee, Pontiac The Pontiac Press a sterview | Write, tee ; Menaret, ew pone. Va cath. Your WaNT TO! erences. FE 8-1215. DORRIS & SON LUXURY 3 ROOMS AND BATH. S RdoM FOR WANT ADS Fi iy aes Phas Bookkeeping & Taxes 14 _fiichagen Beovse- REALTORS | COOP MEMBERS| Pa -s0r2._ ee Avaliable “now: 858" per mouth, ACCOUNTING &# TAX SERVICE Near Airport Adults. OR 3-1943. |* Edw, Ha FE 2-260? aes ‘| MAHAN HAS BUYERS | gopgaw s Rooms. FULL BATH. | 30S" SE Ee NCES oe, Casinew, PR beees, 1's fen a Se sone. 8. Rd nb se nF ta | oe vant SEU From 8 a.m, to 5 p.m. NEEDED An errors shoud be re] STENOGRAPHERS Hn i g fer thet portion of the Statistical Typists ax: DRA A! tans en ve vertisement fae has been Comptometer Operators Noaaibiaes Refinishing 16A pad “are made be sare te Must be Experienced a ner aiid APPLY GOOD WORKERS WATCH the Help Want- ‘ed columns for jobs the are after, Advertise YOU cin Help /Ads ! Dial FE 2-8181. } ; 5 | ; 3 k. > alae See a a | TWENTY-FOUR, |_ ed _er ss THE PONTIAC PRESS! TUESDAY RERUN ere 4 Rent Houses Unfurn. 36 Beautifal City’ Home. bedroom home. 2 fur- ~ J e EDWARD B. KEITH THE LAKE MAN and exchanged r ent call OR 3-1676 after 6pm — Te a -_. room modern house. aterfor area. 045 month. OR }-1268 use, $125: also two bedroom Immediate ession FE or FE 23108 HOUSE. NO CHILDREN Close in. $40 mo FE fe a i> LAKE. MODERN. 2 s, shower. 2 blocks to vil- 859 weekly furnished sf /.. o ee Aogae 6 —e b -guecogs lights water r . Walters Lake area PE — For Rent Rooms — 37| a . CLEAN DESIRABLE room. and parking fur- _Bished. PE 32-0000 28 8 = a FRONT ROOM FOR | 190 6Flotence. FE UTTRACTIVE ¥. ROOM FOR LADY. ed le. Dr & Mrs. HURON HOTEL. mod rooms by day or wk. W. Huron &. Ph. FE Harry Pool. 3 ROOM AND BATH — HOTEL AUBURIN Also 1 or 2 room Apartments. Cooking i oe. 4 «Auburn Ph. FE 2-239. HOTEL ROOSEVELT NEWLY DECORATED ROOMS $410 EE 8 to Pe 5-818 For. Sale Houses 43 Anchor Real Estate Model Phone FE 3-0504 = SMART BUYS MONEY MAKER 1 mile from the courthouse 3 room apartment and 4 room apart ment which brings in a nice in come Must be seen to be ap preciated Cal) and let us show you Priced at $8,840 with $1,002 down ; LOVELY LIVING S room home with 2 bedrooms just 4 miles from the city on @ paved street $5600 with §1.442 18 down, Bee this soon CRAWFORD AGENCY OPEN EVENINGS 53's W. Huron FE 41548 NICE HOME Good location near Joslyn Large 2 bedroom bungalow Expansion attic Ful! basement. Oj] furpace Tile bath I's car garage 50 ft lot $11,800 terms : Near Lincoln Jr School Lge new 2 bedroom bungalow Oi! furnace Immediate possession $8950 §1.- 50f down ” PONTIAC REALTY 137 Baldwin FE 54-8275 ANNETT OFFERS $6,000-——$1.200 Down West side modern home in city Extra large living room rugs and drapes kitchen. bedroom screened porch Full basement tubs automatic water heater fur- | nace, fenced rear yard. ga | rage. Reduced Price, $7.950 Large 5 room 2 story home in excellent condition re- mode) kitchen. full base- ment. I's car garage, rear fenced yard North side near GIs—$100 Moves You In! fsvLvaN LAKE NOTHING ELSE MOTORWAY DRIVE na Fee Sale Houses 43 eee r sale by owner, % brick, % TO PAY! | frame home, frame garage, ‘s CIVILIANS $1,150 | block from restric bedrm brick duplex homes. beach, % bieck from bus line. full basement, gas or oil beat. pubiic schools and $7> month includes every | tran to same available, thing Mode) daily 10-7 p.m city sewers. Home includes large Bivd., between Perry | peccrage A engpare tg! ae Sey — wv in ares. e e, — ae en with gg a nook, utility | room off kitchen includes Bendix washer and dryer, 2 bedrooms | with full oath up. Priced to sell | at $12,000 Living room ca ri and draperies included. Wil! sell cash to existing haha, or down payment with terms E 41348 FOR COLORED FAMILY Attrac’t « 3 bedroom modern home, almost new. Oi) furnace 1 car garage, Price $10,500. terms. For information call Mrs. Spears FE 5-8963 Russell A. Nott. Real- tor 170 W. Pike 5005 WARD's ORCHARD : Lovely large. 5 room ranch bome. attached 2 car garage. Many mod- ern features, gag heat, a back yard fenced y owner. 5-6307 $950 DOWN. NEW 2 BEDROOM | with lake priv- lleges Large living room, exce!l- lent kitchen, ample closet space bath Choice of tile interior and exterior colors Utility reom forced air furnace. elec. water heater, copper plumbing. Full price $7900 At $11,960 we know of nothing comparable in comfort, appearance and a- tion 3 bedrooms oak = floors, basement with recreation space oil furnace garage Fenced yard Approximately $3250 down | J.C. HAYDEN 86 EF. Walton Bivd FE 68-0441 Realtor __ Open Eves. WATERFORD . glass block features roomy kitchen gas furnace 170x127 corner setting Bide’ entrance to at- tached garage LET US SHOW of your visits | ABOUT $1.200 DOWN | a 5 room bungalow. built in construction — overall . Utility room. Approx 18 miles west of Pontiac Sacrifice price of $6,450 with $1,170 down. Roy Annett Inc. us. 37183 —Gpen Evening? end Sundey 1-4 _ Bateman North End be amared at Kampsen Realtors FE 4-0528 371 8. Telegraph Eves & Sun ort radacacetancim tm DRAYTON PLAINS Fiye room nearly new, iy with oak Evenings til 8 pm . Muren rr 4 see ALL LARGE ROOMS on Roselawn St., this § For Rent Miscellaneous 42 °. FOR E SPACE. “the Poe peers or FE room, 2 bedrooms basement, heat and is handy to school, bus ‘and stores This property can be bought for $10,000. terms. YOU INVESTORS development. and surrounded by 1% acres of land, soned com- | A. Taylor Bordering a large new housing main city thoroughfares, we have | EAL __ For Sale Houses 43 {So"batinnd Ave. \* KNUDSEN Indian Village room. breakfast rm., — Ma gees 2d a > i Call us for full particulars. Dwight St. WM, H. KNUDSEN ‘FOR PROBLEM- SOLVING use Classified Nice 3 bedrm. home with sun and ist basement stem ra Pea Dt parochial & public schools | H ‘ cod" ves ne | Humphries | $2,000 Down—Vacant | REALTOR FE 2-0474 New 3 bedroom home 24242 93 NN Te! ! set Menta tep Me BARR Bia eels room n, . = — fast nook, oak floors, fuli DO IT YOURSELF STARTER basement oi] heat. Close to song ory nn _ es school. 613.000 delivery. No mortg costs, low ‘ . | down payment and monthly Brick Ranch | payments, We will build a, gout Ultra modern 5 room brick or our _ We 8 home on % ese. living nance the work 1 or ee eee | ee ite with last bar, room bath ROBERT CHAPIN CONSTRUCTION e_— sehed a d builder and licensed heating seatien er. room. 2 fireplaces, laundry |___ FE ©1131 or PE $347 room. work story, |, IDEAL BUSINESS FRONTAGE i : ~) ri ‘ f y rit i i 5e ' Z =) r=) a, = Z , i ; fii. if x8 i gr® HH lf , : i Hitzt (be i if i Sd 3 “7 if bunga cs 1 bath electric hot water heat- er and 1% car garage. Located tn | e@jads! To voice a need, or) : es an offer — dial FE . ’ . | $1780 DOWN NEAT. CLEAN rooms, bath. . basement. 2 car garage Unfurn- ished up. $7500. NEW IN ‘51. Four rooms, bath utility room, of! AC furnace Wil- Hams Lake privileges. $7196 dn 4 room, Delco oil SPACIOUS 3 bedroom home. 2 car garage, down B. D. CHARLES, Realtor a Northwest suburban subdivi- sigs sion, FE 4-0521 Full Price: $10,700.00 with 709 | 1717 8. Te Open Evenings down to @ qualified veteran Co-operative | Estate Exchange WEST SUBURBAN Bee this house today. 4747 8yl- Beautiful 4 room modern block vester |; home. Fully insulated. large util- ity, ct gronag 9 blagy eon blinds. | r e home you have mn look \ M. A. for and only $1,000 down ~ CLA EAL ESTATE ENNEDY 1927 E » N ial *“*How much for half a haircut?’ | 43 we eee eee GI—No Down Payment Civilians, low down payments. Low monthiy yments New modern 2 and room Homes Cc. PANGUS 1919 M-15 Ph. Ortonville 134 Reverse Charges Gl PLUS MTG se _tent, fas heat, carpet, FE eel SACRIFICE On account of illness owner will sell his equity in his new 3 bed- room home near lake, close in, needs small amount of interior aw <- $1.280 for EMBREE & 1865 Union Lake Rd Union Lake Vi $5,800. his equity. GREGG EM }-4383 lage INCOME PROPERTY plus $140 per houses, two front has 2 bedrooms and api. dase- — with eutometic heat and bot i. 5 bedroom heme with ™ acres lecateq about ee et a ry for rent rooms for . automatic heat and hot water with obaceg beth, will take smaller in trade. IRWIN & ROS Close to Sears—my. oh. my, what | REAL ESTATE CO-OP ERS win Avenue _ PE 20604) =FE 23-2161 ON —_— } ' | For Sale Houses 43 LLLP $300 DOWN New 2 betroom house, full base- ment. unfinished interior, lake privileges Williams Lake Gar- d-ns OR 32837 | 1 412 W. Huron Open Eves ‘till 236 N. Sagine Eves. PE 6-831: Eves. FE 21317 of FE 23-183 ( 6261 Andersonville Rd. Maurice Watson, Realtor 428 W. Fourth, Rochester OL 66971 YOUNG EXECUTIVE PARADISE This 8 room home is custom uilt for an architects own home. = | rooms th natural fire- | lace. ente room, full | sement with rec. room, com- lete with . 2 private rooms ‘or maids quarters or apartment. this is an outstanding buy at only $17850.00 make an sppoint- ment today. ACRE This large 4 bedroom home its teday's best buy, room and — bath rooms basement. can you jmagine a home like this for — $0580.00 full price with easy rms. down payment to GI. further information. call Russell Young REALTOR FE 44625 ih. __ Sun "tih § LE BARON ee Pull basement. Gas Ser- EARLMOOR BLVD dows CUCKLER REALTY PE 44081 re$0i2 FE 410 OXFORD AREA to ogorostate, Only $2,000 EAST SUBURBAN ment. ;EO. MARBLE, Realtor Waterford OR_3-1268 ROCHESTER AREA epg Nag @ rm. modern home on large 602 er this one 160 jot with fruit & shade. Living- 4 bedroom brick ley ~ Gab ‘hiere. Best of tesotine. " walls, nicely decorated —oe a heater a eee scar ._tasulsted Priced at only $10,800 on terms.| Purm® and screens. “ee eee Ste: OTTER LAKE Kiraer @eu 8 rms. & bath on high sightly poww roo 1 - ‘Terden and orchard with laxe | {00M modern. full base, Home —- rm. walls. 80° lot. In good sec- closed front porch down, ¢ bed-| 00 of city, handy te stores rms. & bath up. Pull basement | SU a good ‘value at 98.308 GI RAY O’NEIL, Realtor past a few more of these 3) vee vis ae > Fe | wins Soin Ege toa | Cooperative Real Estate Exchange eet eoere Sets| SMART BUYS recreation rm. Gas heat. aulo'gas =A MONEY MAKER down including ¢ ° , 7 room frame on gored cuoet. 3 John K, Irwi Task Coeaied, mig trom cour onn KR. irwin, ip 9 buy at G8.e4@ with $1,002 e 1925 : - : 1 ’ = mal ETE | FOR THE HANDY MA nn — 2 lots. Bathroom 5 be fin- ished. Fiztures in. has lots Li of possibilities Must be seen to be tated. This is « real K ‘CRAWFORD Established 1916 po : meg resasi ots enn SS taco breakfast nest tear bus line FISHER BODY for $6,950. es room bungaige. full’ beth ott MOVE RIGHT IN. Only $1,500 down | me™ '* a or for this newly decorated 3-bed- 7 Sraieewornal ari’ | | PERRY PARK 7 cin Ss be | Shae Se See | WEBSTER SCHOOL AREA. This + OFF IOSLYN ne irag tee abies | $87 tre coe earn, ae pods athe yy oak Thues collings. built in bath, shade tress and es An in 900. mo. Available for ©. I. loan. ‘| JOSEPH F. REISZ 5% W. st. PE 20280 BANKBOOK BAT- TERED? Revive it with Want Ads! Sell things you're not using, or the spare room, by FE28181 for an ad GILEb . $595 DOWN 3 ik 4 New, modern 2 <3 block a ae i Hh } i F ; F : rj = = LAKE ORION. $1000 DOWN Lake home. 3 rooms, oil fur- pace. basement. porch. 80 ft. lake ont WALTER GREEN. Ritr_ MY 32-5831 3. ROOM MODERN HOUSE. large lot, on main highway, $500 _ down bedroom. cinder- home, lake privileges. Only $1500 down 2215 Pontiac Trail MArket ¢1444 or MArket 42602 C. ALGRIM, BROKER 49345 Pontiac Trail ~~ BOLIDAY FARMS HOMES ORiano. }- STOUT'S Best Buys TODAY ESTATE For the executive or pro- fessional man. 18 acres of beautiful land located with- in five miputes of Pontiac Large majestic brick home with 8 rooms, surrounded tall shade trees The master bedroom is 24 feet long with large walk-in ce- dar closet ull basement garage Five room house. Many other features. too numerous to describe in this limited space. $35,000, with terms. EVERYTHING CL ANER AIR* the than 22 od ie 2 E 8 ili | H Stout. Realtor pry a p= be tl. St ves Close in Suburban Gay. attractive for the large family. a five bedroom hom: ith breeseway and 2 car xurious big living ‘room w picture win- dow. area. 2 baths. large kitchen with lots of per. Jot at s3ie00 Por dota eat] ‘Mr. Allen, FE 5-120) “BUD” Nicholie REAL ESTATE TR East Side | | a _ For Sale Houses | 43 “OPEN HOUSE I Q. HOMES The yg Oe our re Bo minds thei these homes are su- one that a bone ee e are wd t. Located at 118 Madi- son Joslyn. TWO FAMILY MA Pive lovely rooms and fi e of your own, plus @ y 3 ent up. SUBURBAN BUNGALOW VACANT Excellent home with exceptional- ly _. rooms, 15x20 living room oll heat and 1% car garage. BEAUTIFUL SYLVAN VILLAGE SIX ROOM BRICK H Ez OM. y family heme with spe- cious —, " — on » ee . y ment. one bedroom and bath own. 2 bedrooms up and nice glassed in rear 2 car gerege Sell on terms. or take home or con- tract ie. WE SELL - WE TRADE DORRIS & SON REALTORS COOP MEMBERS 782 Ww. Sere _ _. ¥® +1587 A HOME OF YOUR OWN Woodward Estates Near 8t. Joseph's Hospital A fine 2 bedroom home very neat and clean. $0500 with terms (,oo0d 3 bedroom heme. all on one floor, 2 lots. full besement, double ga- rage. $10850. terms full basement corner jet. garage. $11. with terms. Good Value $8050 with $2450 dewn 2. bed- room, unfinished upstairs, full basement gas t. Webster School District Ofte fine family living. Com- fort w many & ment, to truly ou ree or four bedrooms. $16,000 By appoint ment please $1,000 Down Your choice of siz (6) locations $400 Down 23240 shell house and large lot Your chorce of locations. WE BUY AND L LAND CONTRACTS NICHOLIE AND HARGER CO. Open 8:30 ‘til 8:30 33.W. Mureo 8. Pb. FE $4103 GATEWAYS to HAPPINESS YOUR WISH | cS ? f i 8 it ; i REALTY CO.. REALTORS FE 2-0263 Dally 1 te € THE “MACEDAY” 3 BEDROOM “BUD” Nicholie REAL ESTATE SYLVAN.LK, VILLAG Wonderful lake view and \ from lake | | | | | | | j | | | ww) | Co-operative Real Estate Exchange | 1 floor home. 6 = corner Fisher Body, 2 fenced in back __ $2,500 down. FE 23-7239. _ $ ROOMS, 2 LOTS. NO yment, no interest P.O. Box $35, Pontiac. FOR BETTER HOMES In the country yet close to school. New bedroom ranch type home with full basement, oil furnace, aluminum screens and storms, breeseway and 2 car garage Sit- usted on approximately one acre. $14,000 with terms. evenings call Mr. Joli, FE ELIZABETH LAKE Estates, $3,550 down, lovely five rooms, ? bedroom home, gas best, nice lot 176x200 foot acelient neighborhood. Evenings after 6 00 = po Snyder, OR 3-1975. car attached garage. Near Lake Oakland. $16,500 with terms. OFFICE OPEN #6 A. JOHNSON, Realtor FE 4-2533 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. — r round home on Middle Straits Lake 5 rooms and beth on « beautifully wooded 100 ft. jot. Finished in knotty liv- ardrobe features throughout home fer you and your family. A good buy at $10,500 with low down payment. Shown by appoint- ment on) Mi ’ JOHN J. DYER 8065 Commerce Rd EM BATTL 7 ROOM HOUSE AND PORCH. Unfinished basement. 2 lots. Con- venient to mail store, school bus and iakep rivilege Price 7500 easy EDWARD B. KEITH THE LAKE MAN EM 3402 West Suburban 3 bedroom ranch style home with part basement, oi! heat. electric water heater, extra large 1 car garage, and a nice lot 860x260. On black top roads, near Williams Lake. $8,500 with $3,000 down. F. C. Wood Co. Realtor Corner Williams Lake Rd & MSO OR 3-1235 Office Open 9-5 After 5 Call OR 3-7038 eee Near Utica Large 4 room home with unfin- ished attic, living room 14x22 and kitchen 14x12. Minimum amount of expense will modernize at only $4,000. Home and Business 5 room home with full basement, Herd garage plus a 24x30 cinder sell or trade for west of Pontiac. IVAN W SCHRAM FE 5-5091 or FE 5-2564 Open Evenings and Sundays 1111 Joslyn, Cor. Ird Realtor Co-operative Real Estate Exchange Templeton BIG BEAVER AREA 2 bedroom fully modern. including trays, large rooms, stairway to unfin- ished attic Priced at only 87.900 with substantial down payment. PONTIAC LAKE 2 bedroom modern home Water- front. Priced at only $6950 with $1050 down K. L. Templeton, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lake Rea FE 4-456) Open Eves. Sun. 1 to §& Birmingham “A lot of house for little money* —'three bedrooms. full basement, . Priced at $13,900. Benjamin and Stephens Inc. Midwest 4-3232 JOrdan 4-5728 OPEN 9AM TOS P.M LARK $15 DOWN. MACEDAY LAKE — 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 2? on ith, olf furnace, living part base- and clean with $1,750 DOWN. CANAL FRONT RBe- tween Elizabeth and DOWN, DRAYTON PLAINS You can move right in 2 room $1.000 AR — ee CU MR en ee ee ee ee ee __For Sale Lots —46/ Sale Business Property 49 - ove ore Rent-Lease Bus Prop 49A RED HORSE eS ee et Ideal Ranch Homesite a= Opportunities 51 eee Fs eras ots—$15 Dn., $15 Mo. fe ee a ee |= SE EP ts eR FE, $-5001 or FE $-2564 | pp Po a ee an Realtor Rest Batate a PE +3000. For Sale Acreage 47 ACREAGE 125 sere farm with 4 acre lake. $34,500. 11 ac: pear Clarkston. Full 2. $2,500, #0 acres on Sashabaw Road. $250 per secre. Giroux & Hicks REALTOR 4395 Dixte Hwy. Drayton Piains OR 39701 OPEN EVES. UNTIL 8. sUN. 1 TO 56 ae AREA FA - TERMS Maurice Watson, Realtor in few ¥ and foom opm ist floor, 3 bedrooms Also sm fil ot ag- ag 343 ; ' Hts 3 I 3 “f i a g bY» | 32 SR AND 202 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG Loan Company $9" Community Notional Paig. ours ae Leo ’ TEAGUE FINANCE CO. : —_ or ou name it. price $1,960, gt DAMS REALTY CO. Auburn rE PE 21900 OR 32420 FOOD MARKET over iS THE “BIRD” TO SEE Here's a real mepeyineher fer LOAN CO. FE 2-9206 Need Money? woe ct” OF your tetephens. FE 0-812] Sans att Pai mas Home & Auto 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER, MICH. LOAN $28 TO 4500 poem s3| LOANS Extra Fast Service You can borrow $20 . $500 quickly signature Sragieiate peso Us HOUSEHOLD FINANCE win agian pu omay Big MONEY. for People Who Work A SPECIALIZED LOAN SERVICE $25, $60, $100 up to $500 lf your weekly family in- come is between 635 and necessary qo ne money repayment GENERAL PUBLIC LOAN CORPORATION 69 W. Huron St. Phone FE deral 3-7181 JANUARY BARGAINS Pree gets som sate sti’ Furniture 2 ° iG ek SS: Se Oe. Se Seer SELL: . Practically new. FE ¢-0386. . _ = —_ . PINE. RADIOS ---ti0. FE cs z ] 253 2 fi : = 5 i = Se NPU ein * Bs g - noes oi] furnace. 2 i i] yourself, PETRO HEAT RVICE. "Tecoslated with Trailer pachange PE 2-3200. After hours | jen, HOLLINGSHEAD VARIETY store. 7 miles out Baldwin. A Ww IN PHOTOGRAPH- te equipment and dark room supplies? See Classifications HOBBIT SUPPLIES 24A and tune aon EQUIPMENT, 614. * | Use ooR gg YOUR poked b Ot, BURNER, 4 ALMOST plete stock soil, sewer crock and “He must be serious, he called Mother and asked her how much I was earning!” “LUMBER a and Rocklath, 1°'x6"’- Sale Household Goods 57 * MONEY | WAITING You May Borrow $25 to 0 $500 erer t ah Wels BUCKNER FINANCE CO. Conver A SAGINAW & HURON ue RUMP ELECTRIC JANUAR Y BARCAINS ALL NEW MARCA mattresses chanside We buy, sell and {, cashange . every- “Oakland Fe Furniture PRICES SLASHED Customatic Cc LAYTON’S | iances “Snir ‘. OMT 6.1300. Seat em i gue kt oak ae or al eoLtp WALNUT OVAL TOP oc st . $3. 66 Waldo, >-boss. say ft nerd A RANGE NEW, vULLY deepweil. mae tenet. Naa] MgNRO ~ LOW. INTEREST ited for fam: Le ar single fly should See H. G. PETERSON 1310 State Bank . Phone 5-8406 or FE oS pam EEF Ly 5 Munro Electric. rA-| USED Gas RANGES: $29.50 AND MM Electric, 1060 Swaps 55 CASH FOR YOUR VACANT CITY lot. FI 5-3060. 6x® Linoleums oc eeeessoees se = Marcil <. 140 S. Saginaw Hie 92 Gal. Electric wan chest, chrome dinette WAYNE GABERT’S APPLIANCE home near lake. Geo best, | — Call after 6 a at oer - For Sale Clothing 56 LIVING sil'ss. 3. | ALASKAN SEAL PUR COAT. $150. PE 5-9219. Or PE 2-7872 LADY'S FUR COAT. pas 16 - Reas 23-2304 . ngs | E ral i f ef i seksi i is i re a t PEE : i by ag al i ail "ARMSTRONGS LINOLEUM YD, . 4¥5 1 Ft. wal Tile, - 2s SYERS, 141 il. wv HURON Pre-Inventory Sale Floor model Ironrite bed biades for only $12. NDREDS OF SIMILAR BAR GAINe IN ALL KINDs OF HAND ‘OOLS, ELEC- TOOLS. TRIC - IANCES, PAINT L HES at 60.95 ° e ‘ sie. CRUMP ELECTRIC 3 ROOMS OF NEW AND USED FURNITURE GooD | ~~wrrenwn ALL OUT ~~ ro: ’ CLEARANCE $14.30 General mechanics. ts Ic SAW SPECIAL ; " blade; safety power clutch; cuts 224 on “ — ange: complete with full o tion $34.50 value for ‘caly $24.15. TODAY'S BEST BUY: high {ground Dedo ETc. WAR EHOUSE CO. og FR CONE Eg > RENTAL FE 2-007] THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE CO. hobby supplies—check our new “Hobbies and Supplies” No. 24A, RED OR 3-1566, after 3. TWO & GALLON ge i. A standard. Pincumbe. Park 8 OA~ 8-2976. | Thursday. a TION DOORS. WHITE Dogs Trained, Boarded 70 118, Cedar side wail CHURCHES ‘INC. 25 PER CENT BOARDING | BATHING AND CLIP ping. Te M Perel. rE zen. Boas § cA 5. cATS. PRIVATE, ROWE yy "Hay, “Hay, Orele r rahe & Feed 71 71 Bring your materia! list now. ed] Paul St Cyr Lumber Co. BURMEISTER’S LUMBER TWO YARDS atti BURMEISTER Northern Lumber Co. 6120 Bogie Lake Rd - EM 32731 1-3 3. JET Pore $69.50. 1-3 will custom build to sult you. wr LIONEL & AMERICAN | novom FLYER TRAINS Broker. PE 6-1131 or FE 5-3479 = es F. J. PBOOLE CO. FLORIDA ROOMS — centers. All types of 1661 8. Telegraph Ra welccuma Clarkston Burke Lumber INSULATE NOW AND SAVE MONEY M. A. Benson 349 N. Saginaw St. FEderal 4-252) Cash roR Cerrone | CONGA _ wae my CRONIN FF PT. TILE ite EACH ond VINYL Smith’s, 257 S. Saginaw METAL CABINET SINK, $11. : — 1954 PAINT COLORS AT 25% DISCOUNT INTERIOR FLA INTERIOR SATIN FINISH INTERIOR GLOSS ENAMEL BLAYL COAL & Y co $1 Orebard Lake Ave. FE 37101 — FURNACE WITH Ph rry Se eee ee eee eeeerereese st Cee eet eeeeewasnettoeee 2233 95 flat wall paint . #2 0 eat interior se semigioss 63 1 gal. ulpment. Best ¢ ee, seat is FT. PRODUCE “RACK. LAKE- side Packing House Super Mar- ATER. os| Sale oes eee 65 2 np ain AIR {EELLOO COMPR’ SET OF 6 maton MODERN MU- Philha STORM SASH Ea ~~ SAY NE :IGH (BOR! t MICH. ¢ CHAINSAW DISTRIBUTORS We have used chainsaws sell from 99.50 eee BALES OF CECE MU ¢0793 after — hay. ed _ day all day. 5165 N. M BALED HAY AND STRAW. 7s sais WHEAT pM, Me A bale. Milford. MUtual 40624. , a BALES COO® CORAM MF ane, ye mi. west. 1316 W. Annual Winter ial WE WILL PICK inn, TopAaY. "KING 1 prof Soon ¢aSs6~ Moly. Hold Everything!!! ALL NEW CASE 400 HOUGHTEN’S 528 N. Main, Rochester. OL 19761 ~ SAY NEIGHBOR! MICH CHAINSAW DISTRIBUTORS tegmtik, “few, ty tame cal fiers Doris Machinery: PR 4 Earl 8. Mastick ~ = a Mutor a uu PECL AL 7 PRICE ON FREEZERS WF MAYE 20S. ‘snanb EW ise n as. re +110 “7 ING BROS. _PONTiAc RD. AT OPOTER _ SPECIALS 1 D.C. Case tractor with plow and cultivator, 1B. A. C. Case tractor with S.M. mower. 1 1946 Ford Fesgeag® \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 ee — a Wanted Used Cars 88) For Sale Used Cars 91 CARNIVAL by Dick Turner) For Sale Used Cars 91 __For Sale Used Cars ol For Sale Used Cars on For Sale Used Cars 91 THE HIGH DOLLAR | #0, BUME sPmctal, “3 DOOR — , West Side Used Cars , | MB PONTIAC. For high grade used cars We Sate ake, "ST, Core on° 19 Ponti str. & 2 door. Extra “Goodwilf Used Cars “tote doer igo men Pe DOOR ti. @ . - : rs) PONTIAC HYDRAMATIC 086 Sapa eo a ee ee gist tie || OHARPER) ss poxtiac |i H. J. VANWELT | capittae ing ely equip isi Peatise sedan Th | ee | Mae trian rae aie, Spe Sk A ball ower tena aes Iset Biok, ‘pec sedan. | ome an | $1,795 seo! to cash PE oi, ae the: best from | CHEN. . . 2 eee aa BILL SPENCE backup fights Exenient oe | iset Chovie Sedan’ delivery SH ARP PONTIAC inet 7 Room, WYDRAMATEE 1 USED CARS _tion_ EM H enn “te mate fo cheers Pow, t RETAIL STORE _4 pm Von AYQRAMARIS Cee ese uuar Cans. 54 Chev. Bel Air wip as sone Puy ‘eu | | . | 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 37117 "ee PONTIAC ¢ 1 DR mas. 1008 mee OR 3-451! F ’ ‘ equi | ; 2 i cA . WOW BOYING CLEAN CARS | Wu'er “equipment windows | a.” ented ee $2,195 POET hae tatavord. “Boca spead | —E#v08. BOB FROST INC. heater and werglide Radio, heater, ceaneala: FE Mercury Monterey Brilliant red | condition. PE +-8405 ee E xceptionally Clean 850 8S. Woodward Birmingham 1.489 2-2425. - | bottom with white top. power | 49° PONT. 4 DOOR PULLY 1948 Pontiac 8 door sedan. c TRON. | ‘1 OLDSMOBILE “8s” 510 ‘Down | stenring. power brakes. white side equipped Mydramatic. | cwser.| patie heater. ydrematic. A eerie Cone ns MICHIGAN’S werd Birmingham payments, 48 8 O'Maue a i063 PONTIACDELUXE_MYDAE- walla, This "one “Fou as WANTED; GARS_ ‘bo TO ; Ae _ward w ‘4%. OM products. FINES matic dark green. 4 door Excel- | 68 Oakland __ FE 22351 : a ae | THE mio FavED LOT, BECT S400 eee. $2,195 offer x a _ * vest too SARE? al) vou need to 4 9 et WANTED TATE MOO MODEL WRECK WOODWARD AND 1} MILE ROAD fas coupe, with roaien "hscter, | py Baty Side wats walt oe Saari Bf cme, Ne A ones on plan as low cars U S power steering power rein, cosets. R34 miles. Spotiess sess” wie aon i me "Faia chain, 23200 ‘bagley “Auto, P piled OLIVER | B ¥ This car ie ust ke ewe fy tor coeap PE oh. 1982 ~ Somat 3 8 “angF ran Det | ee 2 1951 Plymouth Sta. Wagon 1954 PONTIAC 4 DOOR STAR.| JUze, jess than 23.000 miles, A-} one {ODBL 00 dl . 5 Cehief, exce condition, $895. Call between 8:30 | ey aad et | sear ue tee| ‘02 Chev. 1B) CedaiagCluy Cour She secenass a PK ee ae oe ne par ronnie sranbanoy EE be sS—| "See M&M Motor Sales | Fordor deluxe with radio On ter ace Pi a ee Ce 1 Bee ee val ee 3 MOBILE | scrrssn.tyat ome mgteisgs | heater and Powerglide |, Hi er Soret. cetera sateaains OM, Ob hc | ie sToDeNREER. 5 Does Wh APARTMENTS "WANTED — LATE 3 MODEL | Sharp. Ge Soe eee * 133 $1395 ISL PONTIAC FORDOR. $10 Dows | dove. debak ; ars Trback's auto Parke FE S-101| $795 — | "Pontiac 3 a Chieftain’ 8 Deiuxe |_Woodward.birmingoam. “| | CarkwerStugd ates f With storm & Yoloses windows. | Wanted Used Trucks 89 , ‘ 1963 Pont. Chief Del. 4 dr with radio. heater, hydramatic Birmingham —} Pn af ararbe “bee gt seat Teme OS Soe | eee LIVER : full iso Sub, “double floors. many WANTED LIVER ole . Meg | WE MAVE CLEAN CARS. ALL | OLIVER 4 new q terms. (‘37 % TON FORD PANEL. MA “Where Pontiac Buvs Its Buichs” t ye Py P ‘ a 95 See | S wie” a| ( ‘( )\\ANATINIITY | 752.........----8- $1,398 * ete tee ge Used Trucks 90| 210 ——— ars 7 et ee COMMUNITY Oldsmobile oe 4 dr Green beivom, | oe Pont. ‘52 Pont ers laced cclesten hey en reata) | PE _>0ie! 7 MOTORS Seite tea tar, signals’ This te Chieftain deluxe 8 Hydra- ° plea. 1953 CHEVROLET PICKUP. LIKE pe is = ~ | : ® really sharp 1 owner. atic tud ith 2t Fordor Cheiftaip 8 deluxe s © wil) take your contract. car. Siti or re. so ee TE Goodwill Used Cars Boor. 1955 by NEA Service, Ine 803 N. Main, Rochester blue finish, Very site Hydramatic. Spotless 2 ; sre Fo or eseg Wratezs, “htt | 91 CHEVROLET % TON PICKUP. ‘54 CHEVROLET | “Note the good strong material in the Ace pants I'm OP OLive $6321 92 wee eee eee ee. $743) car. : tone paint, See it. ord Trailer Sales 44 8. Woodward, Birmingham. | 3 door, radio heater end very | wearing, Mr. Higgins!” NO MONEY DOWN eth eames Macioer anerdiinn Coa | $1,395 1 Mile Gouth of Lake Orion on 4-36 | 19 Ye TON, DODGE | PICKUP. "> | eS i custom chrome wheel discs. Real- “ « $1095 et aE. | $1,295 | For Sale Used Cars 91| For U 9 Studebaker, 1947, Champion coupe . | i FORD 4 TON PICKUP, EX. | | RRR = aS ~~ e Sele U sed Core : SCHUTZ Pp ON TIAC ies, sean eae o-dbass PY PONTIAC | 148. $145. 4 DOOR. MOTORS INC hee $1,095 | where Pontiac Burs Its Buicks” = Ti FORD PICKUP. GOOD CON- RETAIL STORE | ‘54 Chev, Bel Air | "$@ick stat and!'gceg Sraxes By PDesote - Birmingham Piymout| Buick Super Riviera Coupe with 310 Orchard’ Lane "Ave “Wie orchard Lake Ave : clean inside out. Mt Clem: — = ‘i : Privaie ower. EM 30130 = a PE TTT | (The popular sport compe model | wane ioe ‘c CUSTOM. 2 ean beltes and heak — PE 20101 71 Spen ull» fe i HIEF i FORD % TON PICKUP. 630 | CHEVROLET ti powEnGLiDg | been “OU 8S tone. Fordomatic Radio and heat- 5 ee PE 30101 4 _£°"Woodward Hingham. "| 2,47, deluze, Good condition. = $1,589 ~~ sll E. 4, TERMS 30 Stude. Clb Cpe. .,$375 | powriac. 1980. 4 poor. Per-| “Goodwill Used Cars” i MOBILE HOMES CHEVE. | TON PA =. cuevnouer 1951 CLUB COUPE. MICHIGAN'S ie ePORD, Cc CONVERTIBLE. | 914 AT ECONOMY "SO Pontiac 8 Sed ...G495| Fascha tite tpediahts.. beck j in $800. 2141 ge gg Rd. FE Beet "en ae f pad ee. . E INEST - i ER nn WE FINANCE 49 Hudson sedan 5. $145 | goat a $200 whitewall Special Sale On ; 1 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE. sis me THE BIG PAVED LOT a an Sreetaeen 1983 Packard Clipper. sharp. ‘48 Olds sedan ...... $245 | pontiac 1954 CUSTOM STAR. From soos devas ‘st models 8h 5 Wosdtand Dinan | Tener Reine a tro wie, | WOODWARD AND I) MILE ROAD | —ineham.— | 1853 Cherie, Bel Air) Radio and | 47 Pontiac sedan ...$100) chief Cotaiine, G90 mi Fully | to “choose from. WILSON GMC 8% _payments. FE 45075. peatar and | FLEETLINE E., RADIO. 1984 FORD, i: vonno- om ‘ee i Zee re —— =a PONTIAC New and Used Trucks | TAYLOR CHEVROLET | 50 Stewnouse-a “DOOR, 6600 ing. ‘Directionals. ” Good. condi. | 1983 Dias rvs Power steering, fulty GLENN'S 54'Olde #8 o... $1505 RETAIL STORE 809 S. Woodward is Chevrolet deluxe sedan. " shape. OA *2710. ties. “OW D-Tied bet. 6-8 1959 sige radio heater, over. MOTOR SALES | bs oes. emma 65 Mt. Clemens st. FE 31117 ee : WRECKED 0 CHEVROLET < und rive. 3 = . ne FE 4-4531 Grevroist gpecial 3 oor, | Soot. fnew tires amd tubes. Ru GIVE US/A TRY isis Ford V8 Overdrive, radio! 1 11) BROWN, Realtor : 53 Ford 8 Sd. ..... $1195 | “eeupe se SPORT .|1982 FORD F-1. CHASSIS AND ses = CHEV isi “Wall Shia To Give you a Real Buy 1952 Mercury hardtop. radio, heat-| 254 5S Saginaw 8t. PE 4-7371 | +c CC kner-Studebaker fat Towa sprod aciesitun em Seieata'* “wien | CRE, ad trate oe Pe Pisa ran i aah 95 | Biri MI 4-3410 imeeceerne BST re = gees | PAULSON [me Sieger "Eb BSc kd 000 tran ¢ Ss ee TOPIC cess sccccecssccees b ou! % 3 " rt Fl ne uic Tl. ceceee zone,rene. GOOD CON. BS Ait “plenty Other Late Model and” Cie a {esi Nast Radio, beater, overdrive. Oe ae | eaten taniae, insane | ’50 Pont. 4 dr. ...... $495 OLIVER Sst pe | eee tae, en al “ per BREE A mata tee | CTT ee | MO Hudagn 4 dr... $245 § 26-FT. SEMI-VANS. VERY GOOD 4 146 CHEVROLET FLEET LINE , 49 Ply $ a gad AYA 0 “i ‘49 Pont. Baie oe ethut Vind 53 Chevrolet 2 Dr. r We, she pore” t.945 "5 wre lt ees Tudor and fordor models. 195] Béatt "Monra ON. THIRD FLOOR yt 5 TS oa Ai lA eo yy =—— 30 Hudson FCONOMY USED CARS | Radio and heater. Your wens Scheie ae Radio and heater. | Excel-| sama sumer _P5 e307 | RIEMENSCHNEIDER'S, Jerome S) sors $375 MICHIGAN’S ent transportation. BEAUTY CONTEST “Good o ll bf ” . SEDAN DELIVERY ne ent = rr Bale ah Lot $195 OLIVER 30 constants from all over the city | Orchard Lake Ave. at Cais! '53 CHEVROLETS conn FE SOUS OLIVER EXCELLENT CONDITION $895 to $995 WOODWARD AND 1b MALE ROAD '53 Olds saa alle Ad es: "oagee exe ; 595 pte wd ‘ CHEVE. 210 SERIES, WOULD “cn WoT? » |“Where Pontiae Buys Its Buicks” ; heady to go, *S Deeler. | “consider cheap trade in, PE $-3664 Rocket 88 sedan. Immacu- |, Gevter, 6 ae, Rete Goodwill Used Cars 220 Orchard Lake Ave. se CHEVIE. ‘52 DELU POWER | “Where, Pontiac Buys Its Buicks” pee wing 0000 | Open till 9 p.m. LARRY PONTIAC fa tae ater | ond et ately clean inside and Out. | uy pease ve ¢ ar. mete, | __'S2 PONTIACS Pe sotet ; RETAIL STORE ~~ GOOD FE sie _| Don't miss this one. nestor ant Grremete IMS | Sedels, A gosd weiten® ‘ “| *51 STUDEBAKER 3 ‘Sl HUDSON HORNET. $10 DOWN 1953 Dodge 6 cylinder coupe . $995 . xe 4 JEROME —=—s i ceoenrs. re emit! tRaNSPORTATION | “e sssume permente, tot 8. Wane $1795 with “radio.” hester and 993 CHAMPION. 4 Rochester Ford Dealer C Ow REASONABLE isis LINCOLN CAPAT HARD TOP. OLIVER ° _ PONTIAC WASHIROTON. 38D FLOOR 1-071! = 19t2 $225 EACH. 2 door, full power. Excellent con- 1952 Chevrolet. Radio, heater . abies STEVENSON THAN 30 YEARS A Y ens wi WwW. Huron ee 23 =%, deceased. Sacrifice and Power Glide $798 RETAIL STORE | oa; SFODSR ARE —< Sano AL Se 9OR Your Ford Dealer” | "Bargam FE Sea” "8" | teRcORY 33 MONTEREY —3 ha | ~ —"_ gl el eee mee one re | ene a eee, call efor | omat = — , . 14000 miles. Perfect. FE —. a ee 1952 Nash Rambier Station ‘ M! Lake Orion Motor Sales eo oo “Goodwill Used Cars” | itmncuny ite 3 BOON Like r") a weve ad ; = Man aie oon ‘51 DE SOTO “"Carkner-Studebaker | {"ei, “=e O4 Sel shor | Mm, Doses «er. Rosie ont ' Used Cars 91 GOOD CARS { foot: Tadie and heater. “Solid Birmingham MI-4-3410 Y O8Ds Se Be © TOUR DOOR. | 109 mem 6 oF. . 9345 ~~ ai CLUB COUPE. $10| OLDS ‘so “ss.” RADIO. HEATER, Chrysler Radio, , PAIR PRICES ~ “Pham ieee) eames Re gees | SARS deta ow | OLIVER 1949 Plymouth. A good] _ RETAIL STORE = Tester ee refused.) Phone 2 ean | : ymouth. g pa: ” 8. ; $0061 or OR F ‘48 Buick one and only © OE. Gomove O_ PB PTT —_ see a sax: | Riemenschneider Bros. Fordor with radio, heater | $135. nee Se nereeet | OLIVER | |secteeuccnernan Dodge- and Dynaflow. . heater, Powergiide end oli inn’ Ga Goh beavees ote Yes, choosing a used car is all a matter of tast 1952 Nash Rambler (wag-| steering and seats. ’ es oS Sie 8:30 Plymouth g Is a r of taste, $195 , on). A little beaut $1,989 50 Merc — . a . and we will do our utmost to fill your needs. So, ; , y: — “Goodwill Used Cars” The Cars With The why not come in today and make your selection at x $695 MICHIGAN’S Club Coupe with radio we s Forward Look” Harold Turner's. FINEST heater. Runs good. $3 PACKARD 232 S. Saginaw St. | _OLIVER 1952 Oldsmobile 88 4 dr. THE BIO SAVED, Lor $395 2 door, radio. heater automatic Phone FE 2-9131 Pie wan | A beauty with power | WOOOWARD AMD 13 MILE ROAD 31.305 “A-1" Buys Hardtops | whe [Oecnars S p.m. . , | rE audi steering and power teary! adi gheetey sod = OLIVER | PONTIAC | 53 Ford 2 dr. ....$844 52 Buick ........ $999 | brakes , , Lake Orion Motor Sales | j ioniy, fapoin Gate fied section! See the Want - os poe 3 ee 5 Na apg Oe ‘ | THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY,’ +) JANUARY 25,1955 eo ai eet eT ae Fred Allen Gets Perméaent Seat on Pons) -- Today's Television Protein’ Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 1—-WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS :00—(7) Little Rascals. ‘Pig Skin Palooka,"’ ‘‘Three Smart Boys.” (9) Capt. Video. Adventure serial. (4) Time for Music. Jane Palmer sings. (2) Kit Carson. Carson prevents gang from con- trolling town in “Incident at Wagontits.” :15—(9) News. Austin Grant. News. Paul Williams. :25—(4) Weather. Sonny Eliot. :30—(7) Ramar- of the Jungle. gon Hall in “Jungle Venge- ance.” (9) Follow That Man. Ralph Bellamy in “Hide and Seek.” (4) Traffic Court. Re-en- actment of cases before Judge Watts. (2) News Ace. Ken Cline, Van Patrick. 6:45—(2) TV Weatherman. Dr. Everett R. Phelps. (4) 6:50—(2) Sports Digest. Chuck Davey. 7:00—(7) Kukla, Fran and Ollie. Puppet Show. (9) Lone Wolf. Mike Lenyard finds murder on (4) Stage 4. Thomas Mitchell as father whose concern for his fishing trip in “Memo: Wife.” daughter creates crisis in their village in ‘‘Nobody’s Fool.” (2) Frankie Laine Show. Music, va- riety. :15—(7) My Story. Drama. :30—(7) Cavalcade of America. Paula Raymond as Dr. Eliza- beth Blackwell in “Petticoat Doctor,”’ story of first woman to get medical degree in United States. (9) Guy Lombardo. Mu- sic. (4) Dinah Shore. Songs in penthouse setting. (2) News. Doug ‘Edwards. :45—(4) News Caravan. John Cameron Swayze. (2) Jo Staf- ford Show. Songs. :00—(7) Jumbo Theater. Ann Harding in “There's No Place Like Home.” (9) Bishop Sheen. Discussion of Marriage. (4) Mil- ton Berle Show. Berle goes into big business with aid of Eddie Fisher, Faye Emerson, Fred Clark. (2) Life With Father. French consul comes to dinner and upsets the Day household, Leon Ames, Lurene Tuttle star. 8:30—(7) Twenty Questions. Jack Carter, guest guesser. (9) Mary Morgan Show. Work of Detroit Police. (2) Halls of Ivy. Dr. Hall ~= «8 ~ rescues track team on eve of meet. Ronald Colman is president Hall. 9:00—(7) Make Room fer Daddy. Daughter Terry gets her first big crush on a visiting actor, Danny Thomas, Jean Hagen star. (9) Pick the Stars. Ama- teur Show. (4) Fireside Theater. Dennis Morgan, Virginia Grey, Arthur Franz in “No Captain Material."" How airline pilot risks his promotion in act of -mercy. (2) Ray Milland Show. Prof. McNulty dreams of riches through uranium strike while on vacation. 9:30—(7) Elgin Hour. Alan Bunce, Janice Carter, William Redfield, Polly Rowles in comedy of fam- ily life and politics ‘Family Meeting.” (9) Theater. E. G. Marshall, Philip Abbott in “Thunder in the House."” Drama of father who finds his children complete strangers. (4) Circle Theater. Father, at, 65, discovers his children are total strangers in ‘Thunder in the House.” (2) New Red Skelton Show. “Mary McCarty helps Red's ‘‘Love Thy Neighbor” campaign. 10:00—(4) Truth or Consequences. Jack Bailey host on stunt quiz. (2) Danger. Joey Walsh in “Death Trap,” drama of boy who uncovers murder plot while on Canadian hunting trip. 10:30—(7) Stop the Music. Music quiz. (9) Big Town. Mark Ste- vens in newspaper drama. (4) Showcase of Stars. Sally Pear in romantic drama, “‘A Model Young Lady.” (2) See It Now. News commentary with Edw. R. Murrow. 11:00—(7) Soupy’s on—Variety, Bill Lawrence, guest. (9) National News. (4) News. Paul Williams. (2) News. Jack LeGoff. 11:15 — (7) Armchair Theater. Flora Robson in “Good Time Girl.” (9) Good Neighbor The- ater. Sidney Tober in ““The Chi- nese Cat.’’ (4) little show. Jay y in “The Fix.” (2) Movie Date. Secrets of Governor Cat- tle. 11:30—(4) Tonight. Variety with Steve Allen WEDNESDAY MORNING 7:00—(4) Today. (2) ' Morning Show. 9;00—(7) Breakfast Club. (4) Romper Room, (2) Welcome Traveler. :30—(2) Breakfast with Murphy. 10:00—(7) Wixie’s Wonderland. (4) Ding Dong - School. (2) Garry Moore. (4) Way of World. (2) Arothur | Godfrey. 10:45—(4)Sheilah Graham. 11:00—(7) Story St . (4) Home. 11:30—(2) Strike It Rich. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00—(7) 12 O’Clock Comics. (4) Tennessee Ernie. (2) Valiant Lady. 12:15—(2) Love of Life. 12:30—(7) Beulah. (4) Feather Your Nest. (2) Search for To morrow. 12:45—(2) Guiding Light. 1:00—(7) Charm Kitchen. (4) ‘Nancy Dixon. (2) Portia Faces Life. 1:15—(4) Sonny Elliot, (2) Road of Life. 1:30—(4) Bruce Mayer Show. Ladies Day. 1:45—(9) School. 2:00—(7) Stars on Seven. 2:15—(9) Man's Heritage 2:30—(9) Myrtle Labbitt. (4) Jean McBride. (2) Art Linkletter. 3:00—(7) Theater. (9) Wednesday Matinee. (4) Greatest Gift. (2) Big Payoff. 3:15—(4) Golden Windows. 3:30—(4) Qne Man's Family. Bob Crosby. 3:45—(4) Concerning Miss lowe. (2) (2) Mar- 4:00—(7) Capt. Flint, (9) Justice Colt. (4) Hawkins Falls. ( 2) Brighter Day. 4:15—(4) First Love. Storm. 4:30—(4) Mr. Sweeney’s World. (2) On Your Account. 4:45—(7) Ricky the Clown. Modern Romances. 5:00—(7) Auntie Dee. Songs. (4) R, Q. Lewis. 5:30—(7) Laurel & Hardy. (9) Howdy Doody. (4) Howdy Doody. (2) Pirate Pete. (2) Secret (4) (9) Folk Pinky Lee. (2) -- Today's Radio Programs - - Programs furnished by stations listed im this column are subject te change without notice. WPRON, (1468) Win, (708) CKLW, (888) wwii, (ase) WCAR, (1138) WxYz, (it7®) WJBK, (1498) TONIGHT WXYZ, Ed. Morgan o:15—WJIR. Kiteher Club WJBK, Tom Geor, et , CKLW, J. Van Koreas. WPON, News, Music notes Pasa a... wi ewe WPON, News, Records WWJ, New 10:15—WW.. Gtldersieeve 9:38—WJR, Mre. Page wxYz, Wottrick, McKensie| WXYZ, Top of Town WPON, 8. Kaye 1:15—WJR. Ma Perkins CKLW, News CKLW. Harry Wismer 9:43— WIR. Pete & CKLW. Musical Airs WJBK. Don McLeod CKLW, Good Neighbor WCAR, News, Music ww a Tit Dance Orchestra 1:3%3—WJIR, Dr. Malone CKLW, Story Time 0.28—- IR Care Quartet CKLW, Country Style tig + 1:45—WJR, Guiding Light Dick Summers, who won “Talent | ra the mito U—-WIR, Rowe wxYz aay True eters | ome tee Burton Scouts” several weeks ago, was al . ww. ie CKLW, News, Homecha . Talk WXYZ, Top of Town wJBK. News, Murph WJBK, Tom George CBS mail boy. He’ s been promot CKLW. News, Sports WEAR News Temnie” WPON, News, Eddy ed from stamps to the Jack Pan 6:380—W JR. WPON, News, Piper Paul 2:15—W IR, Show Jan. 31 and Feb. 4 Ww, Bes Mutholland 11:18 — rah — Pinal 10:15—WWJ, Joyce Jordan WWJ. Plain Bill 3 w. ie ae STARRING WCAR, Magic Music Wave. Top of Town 10:30—WWJ, Fran Harris ee ack Webb emcees Decar Larry Gentile 7:16—WWJ, Music Guy Nune Gabriel Heatter WJBK, Larry Gentile 7:45—WJR, Ed Murrow ww, WJBK, L. Gentile 6:08—WIR. Stop the Music WWJ, People Are Funny WXYZ, Show Stopper CKLW. Treasury Agent $:15—WXYZ, Show World 9:15—WJIR, Bing Crosby ter Brains 11:38—WJIR, Pe W, Phil McKellar WXYZ. News. Top of Town WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:38—WIR, Agricit. Voice WJBK, News 7:18— a 3 ant, Rat WJBK. Gentile, Binge pm dae Osgood, Wolfe Z, Osgood. Wolfe wee Gentile ane Binge CKLW. Terence O'Dell 7:45—WWJ, News CKLW fowy Varid $:00— WIR, Jack White WWJ, Bob Maxwell WJBK, News, Gentile WCAR. News WPON, News, Music $:15—WJR, Bud Guest $:38—WJR, Muste Hall 6:45—WWJ. News WCAR, Radio Rev. WXYZ, Whispering Sireets CKLW. Mary Morgan Pontiac High 1¢:48—WWJ Greek tne Bank WXYZ. Girl Marries WCAR, Gong Parade 2:3—WJR. Nore Drake L. Jones 2:46—WJK, Brignter Dag WW) Marriage Pays WCAR, Harmony Hall 11:00—WWJ, Strike It Rich WXYZ, Mod. Romances “Te wenty warrea woBK: News, WXYR Bd enzie WCAR. News [adv Song WCAR, News, Carousel WPON, News, Party 3:15—WJR, Aunt Jenny 11:15—WXYZ, Companion 3:38—WJIR, Helen Trent 1140—e2m, ‘<_ & ume | Wonks plo WWJ. Phrase Pave - 3:46—WJR, Our Curtain Calls WPON, Pontiac Party 11:46—WJR, Rosemary WWJ. Second CKLW. for ODay WIBK Newnan Meirod 12:00—WJR. Jack White WwW, News CKLW. Break the Bank WJBK. News. MeLeoe WCAR, News WPON. News 12:18—WJIR, Farm Roundup WW, Rt. te Siceeen 4:00—WJIR, House Party Backstage Chase WJBK, Dom McLeod WPON, Sports, News é:lsa—wws Stelle Dallas WCAR, Talk Sports WPON, Club 1460 4:38—WJR, Music Hall WWJ, Paye Elizabeth WWJ, Widder Brown WCAR, N’Day ‘aller WJIBK. McLeod WPON, Music WCAR, Carousel 12:30—WJR, Time Out, Musie | 6:45—WWJ, Women in House SL ge me oe _ WwW Gedéree CKLW, our 5:00— News WJBK, Don McLeod Ww), News, ‘Deland 12:45—WXYZ, Charm Lady WPON, Farm Mkts. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON JR, Road of Life ww. News, Mu WXYZ, Peul Winter CKLW, Newa, Living Unmentionables | |'Peter Pan’ Set: Wages Pending Gloria’s Comedy Hour Role Lacked Polish of Professionalism NEW YORK (INS)—Fred Allen now owns the ‘Whats My Line” job permanently . Mickey Raoney’s tiny son Timmy will make his show biz debut Sat- urday with Don O'Connor... . Why so much travail for the “father” TV shows: “That's My Bey,” “Life With Father,” “Father Knows Best?” Walter Slezak is looking for TV writers for a serie# built about his Giselle MacKenzie's musieal fun with Jack Benny asserts she has far more talent than the hit parade utilizes. ... The “Peter Pan’’. deal is set, Mary Martin's getting $50,000 to star, say NBC gnoopers. Gloria Vanderbilt in her comedy hour playlet with Franchot Tone was a somewhat uneasy actress whose occasional flashes of earnest professionalism were hardly enough to indicate a polished performer. The TV camera also did cruel tricks with her famous hamien Far from a triumph. . Various related and unrelated DeMarces cluttered TV at iden- tical moments last night, with the five sisters of said name on the Comedy Hour, and Tony & Sally DeMarco on Teast of the Town. The latter tandem were about as stylish as is legal, just about the only such team to stay modern and smart in what essen tially became an outmoded ball- room diversion. Latest Nielsen list is led by the “Babes in Toyland’ Christmas Spectacular: “‘Lucy’’ and Gleason in that ‘percentage’ order; but in “number of homes reached"’ it was “Lucy’’ ahead of the spectacular 14,759,000 to 14,569,000—and please don’t ask us to unscramble that tower of rating babel... . wrote for next Sunday's Holly- wood-based General Electric Treatre ... dan Murray takes a week off from “Dollar a Second” and Dagmar fills in; after which Murray may take over a new quiz show Friday after the fights, its length regulated by how long each fight lasts. Nominations” Feb. 12; Alan Hand- ley, rapidly becoming NBC's un- tangler of such confused one-shot shows (he saved ‘Dateline’ al- most single-handeley) was tapped to produce. The show Red Buttons planned until he went to the hospital has been re-scheduled for next — Mac to Be Feted by Los Angeles on 75th Birthday LOS ANGELES «#—Los Angeles is all soldiers, Gen. Douglas MacArthur, 75 tomorrow, State and city dignitaries and perhaps a million plain citizens— if advance estimates prove cor- rect—will be on hand to greet MacArthur on his arrival by plane ie BOOM—