oy et kkkexk* io HE PONTIAC PRE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1955 —38 PAGES 4. Terkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Syria and lerecl on the two-week trip. Polio Shots for Children Governor Heads East - INagy ‘Resigns Premier's Post in Red Hungary Ouster Expected Since He Dropped From View in February VIENNA (INS) — Imre Nagy, champion of consum- er production but accused of “rightwing deviation- ism,” was ousted today as Premier of Hungary. Scheduled to Start Tuesday ooo ee il tht ¥ = Dr. Albert ‘Einstein was taking a Atom Wizzard Dies at Princeton stroll near his ‘ He astounded the Princeton Hospital _this morning. comprised of world with his theory of relativity | Ts and headed by Princeton, N. J., home when this photo was taken| when he was 26 and later was instrumental in de- Oppenhe last year. The German-born scientist died of a gall | veloping of the first atomic bomb. . Einstein Dies After 4-Day Illness + Only Intimates Knew Physicist Was in Hospital Gall Bladder Disorder Fatal to Mathematical Genius This Morning PRINCETON, N. J. \P~ Albert Einstein, who be- came internationally fa- mous at 26 for his theory of relativity, died today after a four-day illness. The 76-year-old scientist died at Princeton Hospital at 1:15 a. m. of inflamma- tion of the gall bladder. A man who shunned publicity, he had entered the hospital Friday with only his inti- .| mates knowing he was ill. The shy, white-haired scholar was credited with making possible the atomic bomb by disclosing a small quantity of matter could pro- duce vast amounts of energy. Einstein stood as probably the foremost theoretical mathemati- cian and physicist in the world. As recently as 1950, he pub- lished a monumental mathemati. cal treatise, the unified field theory. This was hailed as a daring type ef mathematics which sought te describe the forces of the universe in a set of equations. At the time of his death, Ein- stein was a professor emeritus at | the Institute for Advanced Study imer. Over Weekend Four Die in Smashup Sunday on U.S. 12 Near Battle Creek Accidents claimed 21 lives, four | weekend. . | Traffic accounted for 17 deaths | es | i ; Hf i i i zi li | i | gf F F | EL fl ! ; : - f z i | : tt | t @ i } [ 22 i i if : af r zg E Li E é : ay g 2 | { : sl i t : errerrirr rt . { ese er eee eee torte eeteee BOD. .cccvceseseccceess * ie . 4 te: tf wt teeeee See eeeeeeeee+ eee ee eweeereeeeeeese i i eee eee eee eee Pere ee eee eens ee eee : x a < 7 ha : ‘ f ee ed ea 2 . Bisa, 3 eee. ee ? { . \e P r4 ee _— j , ne a S “See. eee Ge ee ‘World’s Loss Great’ , of dips | , 4 Accidents Kill 21| Walkouts Idle Thousands; More Strikes Threaten By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chances of settling the 36-day-old Louisville and Nash- | ville Railroad strike looked a little brighter today, but | the equally prolonged Southern Bell Telephone and Tele- graph Co. walkout remained stalemated. | And in St. Louis a new strike was added to the national of them in one traffic smashup, in | list early today by some 1,500 of the 1,800 employes at the | Michigan over a warm, sunny | John F. Queeny plant of Monsanto Chemical Co. aa} | cal physics sional subversive to refuse to answer Midnight shift employes? refused to cross picket lines sét up by Local 16 Interna- tional Chemical Workers Union after they said their contract had expired. ta57 eesswyyfee JT7TWaes 18 Observers in New England called it partial capitulation in the | ranks, as workers in five Maine | textile mills voted to accept reduc- on agreement of other demands. But management let a union- without comment; The textile workers are part of some 23,000 on “strike in 24 New England mills over pay cuts and fringe benefits. A walkout affecting 9,300 Inter- | ' | national Union of Electrical Work- | ers (CIO) of Local 450 at the Sperry Gyroscope Co. was ap- proved by a vote yesterday. The strike becomes effective at mid- night tonight, A union spokesman said the strike would close down Sperry’s Lake Success, N.Y., plant’ which employs some 15,000 workers, In other weekend labor devel- opments, a temperary — court order halted a wildcat railroad strike in Buffalo, N. Y., which had idled 19,400. Some 400 con- ductors and brakemen of. the South Buffalo Railway, a freight switching line, had walked out Friday over a contract dispute. The walkout forced the closing of the nearby Lackawanna plant of Bethlehem Steel Co., idling 18,000. An additional 1,000 railway workers were idied, BARGAIN? | she-__}i ABOUT 1,300 FEET OF CLEAN, used plywood, 12 new 2x8 firs, Pius misceilaneous lumber, $50. Call after 6 p. m. To Place Your Want Ad DIAL FE 2-8181 Just Ask for the WANT AD DEPT. | Jamali walked across go into tomorrow. Indonesian a new gna. |fewer still grow into big Iraqi Delegate Lambasts Reds Chou, Nehru Silent as Rest of Conferees at parents, he was swept to interna- tional fame hy the theory of rela- tivity which he devised at the age of 26. A revolutionary idea, it added a | fourth dimension, time, to the trio length, breadth and andung Applaud which had formed man’s basic knowledge of the measurement of BANDUNG, Indonesia ® —!| matfer. It also astounded scien- set midnight deadline go by (Iraq's Foreign Minister Fadhil | tists by disputing Newton's law of he 29 delegations. denounced international | gravitation. communism before the Asian- | It was Einstein's disclosure, |many years ago, that @ small African conference today and drew ‘quantity of matter could produce prolonged applause from many of | astronomical quantities of energy. which was so spectacularly proved Red China’s Premier. Chou En- when the first atomic bomb ex- lai and others from Peiping sat with set faces as Jamali charged) physics in 1921 and the world “international communism is @| heaped honors and adulation upon materialistic religion that breeds! the modest scientist, who pleaded: hatred among classes and peo-| “Let every man be respected as | ples.” Prime Minister Nehru's In- | an individual and no man idolized. 'dian delegation also heard the | speech in silence. “Communnism is a new form of colonialism much more dan- gerous to us than the old colo- nialism,” declared Jamali, whose Arab country is linked indirectly with the North Atlantic powers through an alliance with. Turkey. “No nation on earth is free from its effects.” Premier Mohammed Ali-of Pak-| istan, which has a mutual aid treaty with the United States, the conference room, shook hands with Jamali and congratulated him at the end of) the speech. Chief delegates were delivering | 15-minute policy statements in a which it appeared would Soekarno opened the conference with a dec- laration that the population of President Arrival of New Gnu Delights Officials of Zoo Few gnus are born in Sand and Prospects for this newest a | lor this gnu ‘ | good, ' keepers indicated, : He received the Nobel Prize in It is an irony of fate that I myseif have been the recipient of exces- sive admiration and respect from my fellows through no fault of my own.” . A professor emeritus of the In- stitute for Advanced Study at Princeton, Einstein spent the last (Continued on Page 2, Coj. 4) Waterford Township Tot Drowns in Pond A 24-year-old boy drowned Sat- urday night when he apparently fell into a large pond in the back yard of his home at 431 Hickory Lane, Waterford Township. The victim, Richard Sander.’ son Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sanderson Sr., was dead en «arrival at Pontiac General The , * efforts Water- don’t miss reading the Want || Asia and Africa, totaling more| Mospital despite by all in your favor that you'll than a billion, “‘can inject the| feréd Township firemen to revive find just what you want at voice of reason into world affairs.”"| im with an inhalator. ice Chief Frank Van Atta said the water’s edge at 7:15 p.m. The pond is about 3 feet deep, Van Atta estimated. The boy, who was missing only dead at the scene by Deputy Core ner Leon F. Cobb. Funeral service will be held t- morrow at 3 p.m. at Huntoon Fue neral Home with’ burial in Perry . Mount Park Cemetery, Dr. Robert On several occasions he advised witnesses called before congres- investigations committees that they had a duty questions. He tot’s father found him élése to ~ a. few minutes, was pronounced * a ee width — THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, APRIL 16° 1955 : : E ¥ pe i! LEE: Fa iy ; ; 3 THe Dumped over the property line by sheriff's deputies and state po- lice troopers, the pair returned by hardt”’ a $280 cacpadiane the liabilities of Rezoning of Lot to Build Relay Station on West Maple WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- SHIP — The township board has : approved rezoning a residential lot the brothers in December, | °" West Maple road near Orchard | Road. | t@ F It was reclassified to business . The Detroit Edison Co. plans build a relay station there. py Temporarily at rest after 20) “Th stownship's participation in years of trouble, the colorful his- | Chioriding roads also was discussed tory of “Fort Ziegenhardt’ and | 2 this week's meeting. but action the residents of-the area await the *@5 tabled until the neat meeting - The clerk was author. Se peal ont sete ized to approve the plat of Pine ety to their farming community. | Center No, 1 subdivision, at Mid- : @iebelt and Long Lake Rds. Trooper ts Promoted ROMEO — Trooper Lincoln Dy-| the township treasurer for $10,000 of the Romeo State Police | and the clerk for $1,000. The Com- | to u assigned to the Center-| Pontiac State Bank were desig- - nated as township depositories home before one of several evictions. The re- fusal of Chris and his brother Paul to pay an $280 | assessment after the failure of a mutual fire insur- | ance p company in 1935 touched off a 20-year legal Board Approves Prue = sm) Detroit Edison Co. Plans | | for Sunnyvale pat’ Changes Hands Again ruckus. The farm was sold to Lapeer Attorney Mrs. | Grace White to satisfy the judgment. The brothers peting on the floor of Walled Lake and friends resisted several evictions, but finally| Methodist Church is the gift of were removed, and now Mrs. White has sold the 240-| the Youth Fellowship and Bernard | acre farm for $45,000. Special Program Slated Monday Wayne-Oakland Area All-League Chorus a Include County Singers | — WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN. | SHIP—The Wayne-Oakland TOWN | All-League Chorus will present <| program at 8 p.m. Senko te) West Bloomfield Township High | School gymnasium. This is the first time the group has appeared in this area. The best twelve singers from the seven schools in the league make up the special chorus. i | Participating schools are Clark- | ston, Clarenceville, Milford, Bright- | jon, Northville, Holly and West. | Bloomfield. The program will include solos, barbershop harmony, and a flute | solo. Detroiter Helps Youth Group > ‘With Church Gilt WALLED LAKE—The new car- F. Lasky of Detroit, worshippers learned at the Easter services. Will Feature Albion Lasky, a member of the Detroit | Board of Parks and Recreation, spent several summers recuperat- | Band Milford Concert Sunday to Offer Finest in Music MILFORD — The ‘annual spring | cert Sunday afternoon at the Mil- | tour of the Albion College Band and Orchestra begins with a con- — | Chapel Plans Youth Program at Sunnyvale WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — A special youth service is planned Chapel : at 7:30 p. m. Saturday A film entitled ‘‘The Great Dis- covery” will be shown, and special + music_will be sung by the choir Pastor Rev. James Parker will deliver a message entitled, ‘‘Give the Young People What They Want.” | __ In other action, the board bonded OES Initiation Slated CLARKSTON — Joseph C. Bird cor- | munity National Bank and the | Chapter No. 2344, OES, will hoid initiation at 8 p.m. Monday at the Garkston Masonic Temple. ing from polio in the then tiny summer resort. He has remem- bered with affection the many friends he made in his youth. i Learning that the youth group | of the church was attempting to purchase carpeting. Lasky vol- unteered to supply half of what ford High School auditorium. ; pre was needed in appreciation of t The Band-Boosters of the Huron pleasant summer months of his Valley Schools are sponsoring thi8| childhood event, in keeping with the policy of providing programs of the best in music literature by recognized performers in this area. | The conductor, Conway Peters, has been directly responsible for many years for keeping Albion College prominent on the musical map. Speaker Named CLARENCEVILLE — Livonia policewoman, Mary Ford. will be the. guest speaker at the 8 p.m. Tuesday meeting of the Clarence- ville PTA. Election of officers is slated for the evening. Mrs. Lewis fo Head Jaycee Auxiliary WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Mrs. Gerald ‘Lewis has been | elected president of the newly-or- | | Banized Junior Chamber of Com. | f "is Auxiliary. Mrs. Charles Pappas is vice ama Mrs. David Freeman, Mrs. Thomas | whi Belton, corresponding secretary | i and Mrs. Gerald De Wees, treas- | secretary; Me . rs. Robert \ Wheeler \ was 5 named | | camp activit. TO HAVE YOUR... GUARANTEED 8-40 don't put it of. call Cleaners today! . ni NINETEEN die. Purmeister's - - - Burmeister'’s - - - Burmeister’s - - | Willi e ao ¢ T OPEN EVERY aa SUNDAYS 10-3 P. M TWO YARDS TO SERVE sa &B urmeis ter bs ne | 8A. M.-8 P.M. | Be ae } P + S,s0;s;OULANG - - - S s0jsIOWLING - 5.4 . Protect FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE DRY STORAGE We also offer modern Dry Storage facilities for your valuable Cloth Garments. of SERVICE in PONTIAC 35 YEARS His programs are consistently built around the proven works of | music literature. For pleasing vari- _Lety,one_can_always expect an inn} _. teresting insertion here and there | of spicy pop type music, often with | an element of surprise. The Band-Boosters will be host to the Albion group, for a 1 p.m. | dinner at the Milford Methodist | Church. The concert is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. Tickets may be purchased at the door and there is a special bargain rate for family groups. LEARNING YOUNG ... TO PLAY A Oe Sta aa eee ~ SAVINGS ~~ 16 E. Lawrence Street id It’s the all important start he gets that teaches him how to play a winning game . teaches him the values of life. The practice hat makes perfect for him is the continual practice of saving his pennies ‘til they become dollars, "depositing his dollars at a profit. Start a Savings Account with Any Amount PONTIAC FEDERAL . that PT TES | | | 7 i | a | | | | | | | | | | | | | | “T PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS ‘end LOAN ASSOCIATION ilies Service to Shut-Ins or in Bad Weather =a _ INSURED SAVINGS — To $10,000 " - Federal Savings “and Loan Insurance Corp. by MAIL A Convenient 2.% Current Rate SSI OT ESE MRC EE TT reac ~~ OF DIVIDEND Ba en ie oe etee Bod) Just think... no rubbing, ee to shine pots and pans. And. that isn’t.all. Kitchen walls and curtains stay cleaner and brighter, ) too. . Electric cooking i is clean as light. re aed Se eaage 2 bas wn been OE eae ee wqedys care St iu DEALER OR DETROIT EDISON CLEANERS 143 W. HURON ST. FREE PARKING in the big lot at the sides of our building scouring honest!... reeReey pans stay // Z, y = SPARKLING CLEAN = when you cook electrically . a Dr. Einste Governor Heads East - 118th YEAR THE PONTIAC PRE x*kxk«x * 7 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1955 —38 PAGES in Dies After Dulles Reveals Major Buildup -by Red Chinese Says Communists Now Better Able to Launch Attack on Chiang AUGUSTA, Ga. (#\—Pres- i l i f f ; | Lb ts fed 8 zg i | Tentatively OK ‘County Budget- ? f i Hue ay y EB é TRACING TRIP ON MAP—Gov. G. Mennen Williams of Michigan fraces his Middle East tour on an Idiewild Airport yesterday. The Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Syria and Israel on the two-week trip. AP Wirephete airline map shortly before leaving state's chief executive will visit Polio Shots for Children. ~~" Scheduled fo Start Tuesday = Oakland County school children will get their polio shots as originally scheduled, starting with two clinics in Rochester School District tomorrow. Dr. John D. Monroe, county health director, said this Begins Today Ex-Prosecutor Faces) pie pavis & Co., Detroit phar Court in Gun Death of | maceutical A. L. Patterson ‘lelementary school children schedule.” The shots for some 30,000 in Oakland County had been ed orproys d after it was learned late day that supplies of the vac- cine were g held up by manufacturers. Nagy ‘Resigns Premier s Post in Red Hungary Ouster Expected Since He Dropped From View in February VIENNA (INS) — Imre Nagy, champion of consum- er production but accused of “rightwing deviation- ism,” was ousted today as Premier of Hungary. The official government announcement, broadcast by Budapest radio, said agy’s “resignation” accepted unanimously by the Hungarian Parliament. Shortly thereafter, the Parlia- ment named Andras Hegedues, first deputy premier, as the new Premier. The 58-year-old Nagy also was expelled from the political com- mittee of the Hungarian Workers was| * difficulties Ps ay, Over Weekend | Four Die in Smashup Sunday on U.S. 12 Near Battle Creek Accidents claimed 21 lives, four | weekend. | Traffic accounted for 17 deaths and drowning for four. . were | Battle Creek Sunday. In addition Malenkov, and emphas- | to those killed, the two-car collision his successor, | left a fifth person in critical con- The four-death smashup occurred | on U, S. 12, three miles east of | dition. She is Lucille Hicks, 27, of | Battle Creek, State Treoper William Cram said the smashup was one of the worst he had seen. ! mT i ef? E 7 t i iif t 7 ! ~ fit ! oD =) ! , : #eE H ‘ | if ; Bie i 1 ; : . : z ye | - . & stein's death as he waited to testify before the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee on United Nations charter revisions. The ex-president said: “I am sorry as I can be to hear of it. His family has my sym- pathy. The world and the country has suffered a great loss.” Loses Office Those killed were Charles Ed- ward Williams, 38; Roscoe Hughes, 30;. Lawrence H. Buys. 20. and Joan Smith, 17, all of Battle Creek. | Other fatalities included: | Homer Bruneau, 41, of Hancock, | and Joseph Sylvester, 41, of Hough- | ton; Richard Sharrow, 26, of Houghton; Max J. Howland, 3. | of Jackson; Elton Parks, 12, of Shepherd. Mrs. Bess Truba, 64, of Detroit; Clarence Parker, 30, of Willis; Other weekend fatalities includ- ed: Richard Sanderson Jr., 2, of Wa- Suggests Salk Street CIUDAD TRUJILLO, Dominican | Republic — Generalissimo Rafael | Trujillo has suggested that one of | the streets in the capital city of | e By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chances of settling the 36-day-old Louisville and Nash- | Ville Railroad strike looked a little brighter today, but posenberg, whe were executed | the equally prolonged Southern Bell Telephone and Tele-| as atom spies. He said he had graph Co. walkout remained stalemated. And in St. Louis a new Strike was added to the national Midnight shift employes refused to cross picket lines set up by Local 16 Interna- tional Chemical Workers Union after they said their contract had expired. ta57 eesswyyfee JT7Waes 18 Observers in New England called it partial capitulation in the | ranks, as workers in five Maine textile mills voted to accept reduc- 7 tions in fringe benefits contingent on agreement of other demands. .t7 But management let a union- set midnight deadline go by without comment. The textile workers are part of some 23,000 on strike in 24 New England mills over pay cuts and fringe benefits. A walkout affecting 9,300 Inter- national Union of Electrical Work- | ers (CIO) of Local 450 at the Sperry Gyroscope Co. was ap- proved by a vote yesterday. The strike becomes effective at mid- night tonight. A union spokesman said the strike would close down Sperry’s Lake Success, N.Y., plant which employs some 15,000 workers. In other weekend labor devel- opments, a -temperary court order halted a wildcat railroad strike in Buffalo, N. Y., which had idled 19,400. Some 400 con- ductors and brakemen of the South Buffalo Railway, a freight switching line, had walked out Friday over a contract dispute. The walkout forced the closing of the nearby Lackawanna plant of Bethlehem Steel Co., idling 18,000. An additional 1,000 railway workers Were idled. WANT A BARGAIN? If you'ré the type who likes a bargain (and who doesn't) Ads every day. The odds are ,don't miss reading the Want all in your favor that you'll find just what you want at the e you want to pay. The little ad reproduced be- ABOUT 1,200 FEFT OF CLEAN, used plywood, 12 new 2x8 firs, Plus miscelianéous lumber, $50. Call after 5 p. m. - To Place Your Want Ad DIAL FE .2-8181 - Just Ask for the WANT AD DEPT. o— Seeeaeaieealae = lraqi Delegate Lambasts Reds Chou, Nehru Silent as Rest of Conferees at | BANDUNG, Indonesia ® — Iraq's Foreign Minister Fadhil | Jamali denounced international communism before the Asian- African conference today and drew prolonged applause from many o ‘the 29 delegations. Red China's Premier Chou En- laj and others from Peiping sat with set faces as Jamali charged “international communism is a materialistic religion that breeds hatred among classes and peo- ples.’ Prime Minister Nehru’s In- dian delegation also heard the speech in silence. “Communnism is a new form of colonialism much more dan- gerous to us than the old colo- nialism,’’ declared Jamali, whose Arab country is linked indirectly with the North Atlantic powers through an alliance with Turkey. “No nation on earth is free from its effects.” Premier Mohammed Ali of Pak- istan, which has a mutual aid treaty with the United States, walked across the conference room, shook hands with Jamali and ithe speech. | program which it appeared would | go into tomorrow. Asia and Africa, than a_ billion, | Acrival.of. New.Gnu.}the Delights Officials of Zoo | at Sydney zoo had some good news ‘for lovers of gnus today. They | proudly proclaimed the arrival of }@ new gnu. / Few gnus are born in zoos and |fewer still grow into big gnwus. | Prospects for this newest gnu are i | : v h }good, keepers indicated, A | . ¢ | witnesses called before congres- | Indonesian President Soekarno on the-eonference with a dec- larati t ti f an a vue ace | Hospital despite efforts by Water “can inject the voice of reason into world affairs.’ / 4-Day Illness Wizzard Dies at Princeton Only Intimates Knew Physicist Was in Hospital Gall Bladder Disorder Fatal to Mathematical Genius This Morning PRINCETON, N. J. \?—~ Albert Einstein, who be- came internationally fa- mous at 26 for his theory of relativity, died today after a four-day illness. The 76-year-old scientist died at Princeton Hospital at 1:15 a. m. of inflamma- tion of the gall bladder. A man who shunned publicity, he had entered the hospital Friday with only his inti- mates knowing he was ill. The shy, white-haired scholar was credited with making possible the atomic bomb by disclosing a smail quantity of matter could pro- | duce vast amounts of energy. | Einstein stood as probably the | foremost theoretical mathemati ; | cian and physicist in the world. As recently as 1950, he pub- lished a monumental mathemati- eal treatise, the unified field theory. This was hailed as a | daring type of mathematics | which sought to describe the | forces of the universe in a set | of equations. At the time of his death, Ein stein was a professor emeritus at the Institute for Advanced Study, SUCCUMBS AT %6—World renowned physicist | bladder disorder in Princeton Hospital this morning. comprised of world-famous schol Oppenheimer. | During his late years, he was outspoken in many causes far re- moved from the realm of theoreti- cal physics. | On several occasions he advised s) sal subversive investigations committees that they had a duty to refuse to answer questions, ee rr fer commutation of the death sentence of Julius and Ethel | te take the stands because of | “my passionate sense of social justice and social responsibili- of them in one traffic smashup, in | list early today by some 1,500 of the 1,800 employes at the | ties.” Michigan over a warm, sunny | John F. Queeny plant of Monsanto Chemical Co. | The quiet, unpretentious wizard |of mathematics and physics spent | his lifetime searching for a unified | mathematical concept of the laws - }that govern the universe. | Born in Ulm, Germany, March | 14, 1879, of middle class Jewish parents, he was swept to interna- | tional fame by the theory of rela- | tivity which he devised at the age | of 26. A revolutionary idea, it added a fourth dimension, time, to the trio |— \gngth,. breadth and width — | knowledge of the measurement of }matter, It also astounded scien- fists by disputing Newton's law of gravitation. | It was Einstein's disclosure, many years ago, that @ small | quantity of matter could produce | astronomical quantities of energy. | which was so spectacularly proved | when the first atomic bomb ex- | ploded. | He received the Nobel Prize in physics in 1921 and the world heaped honors and adulation upon the modest scientist, who pleaded: “Let every man be respected as | an individual and no man idolized. It is an irony of fate that I myseif have been the recipient of exces- sive admiration and respect from my fellows through no fault of my own.” . A professor emeritus of the In- stitute for Advanced Study at Princeton, Einstein spent the last (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Waterford Township ‘Tot Drowns in Pond A 24-year-old boy drowned Sat- ! congratulated him at the end of|urday night when he apparently | fell into a large pond in the back | Chief delegates were delivering} yard of his home at 431 Hickory 15-minute policy statements in a/| Lane, Waterford Township on arrival at Pontiac General ford Township firemen to revive him with an inhalator. Police Chief Frank Van Atta saii pond is about 3 feet deep, Van The boy, who was missing only a few minutes, was pronounced ° dead at the seene by Deputy Core ner Leon ¥'. Cobb, Funefal service will be held t | morrow at 3 p.m. at Huntoon Fw /neral Home with burial in Perry | Mount Park Cemetery, A _tot’s father found him close to the water's edge at T:15 p.m. the =. ae Dr. Albert. Einstein was taking a stroll near his He astounded the world with his theory of relativity | @rs @nd headed by Dr- Robert Princeton, N. J., home when this photo was taken when he was 26 and later was instrumental in de- | last year. The German-born scientist died of a gall | veloping of the first atomic bomb. Accidents Kill 21; Walkouts Idle Thousands More Strikes Threatened - ———{which had _formed—man's basic — -_ we on ~disease in history got under =, é 18, 1955 oungsiers Ist Polio Shots Lower Grades in South Line. Up for Vaccine as Mass Assault Starts Hundreds of thousands of young- | sters received their first inocula- tions of Salk anti-polio vaccine joday as the biggest mass assault way. The first and second graders | from Tallahassee, Fla., Angeles, Calif., trooped to distribu- | tion centers to begin the nation: | wide mass inoculation program. | But delayed shipments of the | vaccine forced other states and | cities to cancel plans to start giv. | ing their children protection against infantile paralysis this | * week. Health Department officials ex- | plained that many areas, par- ticularly in the north, would have te wait because first - pri- ority was being given te chil- dren in the southeast and seouth- | Arthur, insert, who is building | trainer from parts of wrecked Air WHO SAID DO-IT-YOURSELF? — Taking the Do- it-yourself theme seriously is Chicagoan John Mac- his own jet T-33 Force planes sold west, where polio strikes earlier in the year. Most officials received the news of delay without complaint. But | Polio Shots Start in San Francisco, Health Director | in) County Tuesday Ellis D. Sox said the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis | ‘ (Continued From Page One) was handling the mass inoculation | program “‘like-a soap opera . . changing the ground rules so you | don’t know where you stand.” |_| Shots, plus more than a In Washington, Sen. Lister Hill (D-Ala) asked President Eisen- hower to take emergency action to make sure that short supply of | as Scheduled for the program here . | Medical Society who will donate | their services to administer the| Wednesday at 2 p.m. from New volunteer workers, will turn out | Pontiac Deaths Jesse Hightower Funeral service for Jesse High- tower, 69, of 82 Hess St., will be Hope Baptist Church, the Rev. | Ford B. Reed, officiating. He died Saturday in Pontiac Genera] Hos- THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL _THE J . .| over-use of language beyond all } t Less Language, More Meaning , Top Brass Sef Government Aim for March Rites WASHINGTON (INS)—The gov- con mefats. “guttlckek | High Military Officials to Pay Tribute Today at General's Funeral “Gobbledegook."" known to all who have ever done business with the government, is misuse and WASHINGTON (INS)—Full mili- tary honors including a flight of jets overhead were scheduled today for the funeral of Gen. Peyton C. hope of comprehension. A new publication § called “Plain Letters” is to guide all federal employes. Some tips, for example, are: , Who died last week at the age of 90. say “‘trouble’’ instead of ‘eacound-| Vice President Richard Nixon er difficulty’; “hurry” rather than | “45 to represent President Eisen- “expedite,’’ and let’s just forget hower at the Arlington National “predicated on the assumption.” Cemetery ceremonies, while House Speaker Sam Rayburn (D-Tex) was Loss Hits $300,000 | March, World Var I chief of staff | The Day in Birmingham City Dog Ruling Looms as Bait for Controversy ‘BIRMINGHAM—The ‘city’s dog ordinance, praised as often as it is criticized; may be up for spotlight discussion at tonight's City Com- mission meeting. Bait for the lawmakers is a let- else” in the surrounding area, for release of an impounded dog. from a_ citizens organization, the new commission will be asked to dedicate Shain Park as a permanent park. . * - General health psoblems meets at the school auditorium at 8 - | tonight. He will give factual information on polio serum, followed by a brief talk from Mrs. Howard Rie- man on plans for administering the Salk police vaccine. While this ends reguiar meeting» for the year, parents will put on morning. She suffered head in- juries after she apparently fell out of the family car and was struck by a wheel. Police said Mrs, Vivian Wild had left the child in the car on Hunter tion, then tried to get out and fell to the street, police believed. City Driver Accused of Leaving Accident Arnett Fink, 28, of 444 E. Pike St., today was scheduled for Mu- nicipal Court arraignment on | Charges of leaving the scene of an accident and drunk driving after crashing into a police car and | striking a parked car in an at- | tempt to flee Saturday, according | to Pontiac Police. Frank J. VanAtta who was return- ing to Waterford after leaving a prisoner in the county jail. Patrolman Joggph W. Swift, 26. }said he was traveling south on Oakland avenue when Fink pulled out of. a driveway near Clark | Street and smashed into the patrol car. VanAtta said he saw Finks’ car turn off a side street and strike the annual Baldwin School fair for |2" auto owned by Richard T. pita] after a year’s illness. the vaccine wil] not result in a black market. The giant vaccination program was ordered by the foundation in order to provide the children whose ages make them most susceptible to polio with protection before sum- mer weather ushers in the infantile paralysis season. Parents, Sister Hit by Shotgun Wielder TRAVERSE CITY W — Glenn Ingersoll, 36, of Cedar Springs, was held today for investigation in the shotgun wounding of his fa- ther, mother and 11-year-old sister. | | will be held Saturday, May 7. | Getting the shots will be all first Wiggins of Marianna. Also surviv- | ‘and second graders, plus more | ing is a sister, Mrs, Annie Johnson | than 8,000 who participated in last | of St. Louis, Mo. year’s field tests but received the | inert control substance instead of | Cemetery, the vaccine. uled approximately one month after the firsr, will be given free, The third, or booster shot, Police said the shooting occured | the second, and presumably will Saturday night farm home at the father’s ________following a family arugment — Wounded was the father, Hen- ry, 56; the mother, Jennie, 52, and sister, Dorothy. Police quoted Ingersoll as saying the gun discharged accidentally when he and his father tussled for the weapon. ‘given in a six-week period, be at the option, and expense, of in Kalkaska County, | parents, are in line with recommendations made by Dr. Jonas E. Salk, who developed the successful polio vac- cine. First and second grade children Clinics for children in Pontiac | ‘and Waterford Township schools | two daughters, Mrs. Rosie Lee Jen- | The son of Mr.and Mrs. Charies Hightower, he was born in Marian- | came to Pontiac 38 years ago. pete ee _ | Arm orces ncil here, Car- ee ee ee ee ay decked: “I do not believe this is true no matter how terrible the destruction might be. I say this because I do | not believe that tough people, on ‘either side, are likely to give up in Oak Hill as long as they have anything left |to fight with. For that reason the | ns | possibility of a dragged-out con- Mrs. Earl D.-Hull | flict must be reckoned with. Mrs. Earl D. (Maude M.) Hull,| “Comsequently, I believe we 71, of 1712 Cass Lake Rd.,- died must not let the initial phases of yesterday in Pontiac General Hos- an atotnic struggle becloud pital after a 2‘3-year illness. Born and educated in Wales Township, she was the daughter of | Robert and Marrietta Lashbrook | kins of Pontiac and Mrs. Leney } Burial will be aeaey_ ued was married March] 105" tree men still will fight to 12 at the service . . x Generals Douglas MacArthur, in High School Fire George C. Marshall and Omar N. Bradley, officers whe served hae oh THREE RIVERS (UP)—Fire of | Sader March in the first global | undetermined origin caused an es | Comfiiet, and Gen. Rebert Wood as junk. MacArthur, an insurance executive, will be- timated $300,000 damage to the| a4 Bernard Baruch, industrial. come the first private owner of a jet plane. Says he: | 22-room Three Rivers High School| #t were ameng the honorary “It cost me five times as much as a new plane.” He | yesterday, school officials said to-| Pallbearers. is having the plane assembled in Van Nuys, Calif. | day. ° March, almost forgotten since his = | The officials said classes would retirement in 1921, died Wednesday. | be recessed today but would re-| He was to be buried at 11 a.m. sume tomorrow, lon a hilltop overlooking the Po- . ce) The fire, discovered by a passing | tomac, near the graves of Presix | motorist, was battled by fire units|dent William Howard Taft, Air . from Three Rivers, Sturgis and | Force General Hoyt Vandenberg Atomic Warf | Centreville for 90 minutes before | Robert Todd Lincoln, Defense Sec- are | it was brought under control. But | Tétary James Forrestal and other | the roof and the top floor of the | one-time national figures. 30-year-old schoo} collapsed onto} A flight of 14 F-84 jet fighters Adm. Carney Scoffs at | the first floor before firemen were | was to be made over the funeral | Idea That Fight Would | able to control the blaze. ‘cortege, which was to include & . ° upt. of Schools Walter Horst riderigss horse with Last Only Minutes said sections of the school erected agg = — KANSAS CITY, Mo. w—Adm. |" 1920 and 1953 were not dam- | son bearing the casket, in the tra- Robert B. Carney, chief of naval | aged by the blaze. - | dition of military services. | operations, said today he does not na Ark., and married Eula Peart subscribe to the belief that in event | Fic hi Boat Sunk ug Sep eee A ek Tabbs in Pontiac in 1923, After of an atomic war “‘it would be all iS ing un ' votive) ‘an eanmmandertn-chiet attending schools in Arkansas, he | over in a few minutes.” for the Far East, was to walk | 3 Saved by Cruiser Army | DETROIT — A 35-foot cabin} Corps cruiser rammed and sank a 16- | foot fishing boat on Lake St. Clair | yesterday dunking five persons in | he ‘—_ water. No one was in- uel C. Shepherd; commandant of The five were Mrs. Mary Baca- | 1 ; val opera |rella, 40; her three sons, Joseph | a vee ans White. |19, Peter Jr., 14, and John, 13, and; UOPS: and Gen. f i .| Police Chief | Miss Beverly Eblen, 19. All are of “ie chief of staff for the Air Force. Detroit. x Police said the cruiser was Two Motorcyclists Hurt | ned ; e ° } Ceres ter oy Wallace S.\in Seperate-Accidents—-| ‘Gerlach, a Mount Clemens insur- Two motorcycle drvers were ance broker. They quoted Gerlach as saying he was heading into the ' treated at Pontiac General Hos- sun and failed to see the smaller pital Sunday night after both werc children on May 6. Old and new Dean of 78 Poplar St. PTA boards will meet May 16 for | installation of new board members. The -Police Department's detec- | , tive bureau will be sporting the lat- est thing in police cars from here on in. The two detectives are tak- | ing first crack at what ts an inno- vation for the local deepartment, colored autos. Two new cars, one green and one blue, have been selected by) Ralph W. Moxley. | After the vehicles are broken in they will be used as patrol cars, | he said. cralt jinjured in separate accidents, ac- The five were pulled from the cording to Waterford Township keep friendly and the | A Pontiac resident from 1913 to| Jos trem falling into the hands | | 1935, ghe had lived in Keego Har- | of an enemy.” bor since then. | . ae Surviving besides her husband| Carney stressed it is the Navy's ‘are a son, James Store} Hull of ™ission to keep open the sea lanes | | in 17 Michigan counties started Waterford, a brother, Nathan of t© U-S. allies and to American Ingersoll got his gun and fired | a warning shot into the ceiling | when he believed his father was. choking his mother, police said. Two Drivers Are Hurt When Cars Collide Two drivers were injured Sunday night when their autos collided on the Dixie highway just north of M15. Treated for cuts and bruises at Pentiac General Hospital were Stewart Heard, 43, of 58 N. Perry St., and Jafhes Pelt, 4, of Bay City. State Police of the Pontiac post receiving the vaccine today, Dr. F. S. Leeder of the State | Bailey of . Health Department said Genesee} Service will be Wednesday at) County was the first to receive! 1:30 p.m. from Huntoon Funeral | the vaccine when it was made| Home. Burial will follow in Oak | available at a a oe Montana. forces abroad. He said ‘“‘nearly 25 per cent of our Army ground strength is deployed in Europe” and the Air Force has forces from Greenland to North Africa. If the Atlantic Sea chain ever was brok- | The Oakland Assessing lake into Gerlach’s cruiser. | Police. Gordon W. Hogarth. %, of De- | suffered cuts and bruises! | troit, | when his bike crashed into the) side of an auto driven by Kathina| C. Marages, 18, of 538 Union Lake | Rd. Police said Hogarth attempted | to pass Miss Marages’ auto while she was making a turn at 139 | County Assessors Plan Meeting Wednesday County Assn. of Officers will hold its an- nual meeting April 20 at 6:30 p.m. in the Hotel Waldron here. and Wiliams Lake Rds. A four-man nominating commit-| Raymond J. Zoellner, 17, of De- tee will report a slate of officers | troit, also suffered cuts and bruises | officer of | * ¢ organizational meeting of all men interested in playing here this summer will be at 7:30 tonight at the YMCA. | + , | i VanAtta gave chase and apprehended Fink a block further after notieing the police car couldn't be driven. Four Persons Injured in Two-Car Collision Four persons wére injured, none | seriously, in a 2-car collision Sat- urday evening at Auburn and Adams Rds., in Auburn Heights, Oakland County Sheriff's deputies said. Treated at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital for cuts and bruises were Harry L. Brown, 38, of 7075 Tele- |graph Rd.; and his passenge: Elford Brown, 49, of 505 Cameron Ave. Injured in the other, car woke ‘Thomas Foster, “3t--and- his wife, Geneva, 32, of Rochester. Foster stated he started across Adams after stopping and wes he was unable to stop in time after topping a rise in the road Man in Fair Condition After Car Strikes Tree Richard Callahan, M. of Oak | Park, was listed in fair condition Department laboratories Sunday noon, — . Three Persons Injured in Auto Collision Here Three persons were injured Sat- urday in a 2-car collision at Huron and Johnson Sts., according to Pontiac Police. Mrs. Margaret D. Parks, 57, of 87 Thorpe St.. was admitted’ to Pontiac General Hospital after suf- fering a broken right leg. She had been a passenger in an auto driv- the State Health| Hill Cemetery. | quoted Pelt, who was driving south en by Mrs. Marjorie Hetherington. en, Carney added, “NATO and the | security of the Western Hemisphere James Paramo would be gravely imperiled.” James Paramo, 39, 204 Frank-. . . ‘lin Rd., died Saturday in Univer- Dr Albert Einstein | sity Hospital at Ann Arbor after | © "Bor im Mexico, he Dies in New Jerse | of Frank and Eulia Paramo and | a y married Lue Rodriguez in Saginaw (Continued From Page One) | in 1936. | years of his life in the university | Church, he attended schools 7 Nias te Saginaw before coming here 15| He came to Princeton as a life | years ago. He was last employed time member of the institute in as a barber and had served as sea-| 1933, voluntary exile from his } | Born in Mexico, he was the son | A member of St. Vincent de Paul | on US 10, as saying Heard's car -was standing crosswise in the two southbound lanes as he came over a hill. man second class in the Navy dur- | 48. of 91 Thorpe St., who suffered ing World War Il. He belonged to bruises. Carrie Stockman, 78, of |... icinal 25 Cochran Pl., passenger with his | Wilson PTA and played on son, Harry E., 54, of Freesoil, |e Azepec baseball team. | Pelt said as he started to pass in front of Heard in a northbound lane, Heard’s car suddenly started. Heard's car struck Pelt's auto in the might front fender. Mich., was treated for rib injury. - Pontiac Police quoted Stockman Lae _ — bye enorme “i yaa | as saying he attempted a left turn | home , = in front of Mrs. Hetherington's . - . atitis - Also surviving are four sisters, | Lolo of Mexico, Mrs, Mary Nerio | Believe Pray —_ 'and Mrs. Marceline Garcia of Sag- | . = .inaw, Mrs. Pauline Zuniga of Berk- ers Helping ere eee | Pontiac and Cpl. Phillip, with the | Army in Japan.. Sleeping Sickness Victim * CHICAGO (P—A voung suburban Hospital. Eyes open, she stares at service will be Tuesday native Germany. where the Nazis listed him as ‘an enemy of the | state." ook stands on issues far removed from the realm of theoretical phys- ics. He said he was compelled to do so by his ‘‘passionate sense of social justice and social responsi- for next year. Alger Zapf, Royal after his motorcycle hit the rear Oak ass@psor and president of the |of an auto driven by Arthur M. | Michigan Municipal Assessors | Nelson, 39, of Royal Oak, at M59 Assn., will be guest speaker. ~tnear Cass Lake road. Schoolmarm Shuns Veils New Kind of Arab Queen AMMAN, Jordan ® — Young! His father, Talal, and his pond | King Hussein is bringing some- father. the grizzled old desert war- thing new in Arab queens to the | ' Jordan throne. Hussein, 20, is a king who pilots his own plane to troublespots in, Mastered during his years in his desert country, or whizzes| England. there behind the wheel of his own Hussein has;not been content to ries Princess Dina Abdul Hamid, 25. She is a distant cousin and a ‘stitutional monarch. Bureaucrats | accustomed to working only a half. dition today at Ford Hospital, fol- Jordan’ King, 20, to Wed| rior Abdullah, spoke mostly Arab- | ff | ic, Hussein speaks fluent English, | teacher of English literaturesat the | 4a¥ and spending much of their | ff University of Cairo. She holds a! time drinking Turkish coffee have | jf education committee. A six-team league, to play Monday and Thurs- day evenings, is planned. LJ ” s Five-year-old Kathy Wild of 3637 Shallowbrook, Bloomfield Hills, was reported in satisfactory con- road. Oakland County Sheriff's dep uties said Callahan apparent!y fr'!l asleep at the wheel. His car ran off the right side of the road, ca- reened to the left side and rammed the tree headon. lowing an auto accident Sunday 5¢ to $1. WILL BE HINCKLEY Mon. & Tues., April 18-19 00 Store - CLOSED Don’t Miss Our Full in This Paper Tuesday, April 12 Page Advertisoment | bility.” An ardent Zionist, Einstein was | among those, who, after World | War II urged the free entry of | Dina and Hussein met while at- tending school in England. Dina will be Jordan’s first queen with an advanced education, UNTIL TODAY , at Melvin A, Schutt Funeral Home | rent of a democratic Jewish com- Jews into Palestine and establish- | first to have had a career of ‘her perature “couple believes the pravers of neighbors are helping their 6-year- old, brown-eyed daughter to recov- er from sleeping sickness The .child. Gayle Russel! hes in a coma at Lutheran Deaconess The Weather PONTIAC 44ND VICINITY —( leads with scattered showers and thundershewers tenight and temorrew. Leow tonight 5° with gentle to mederate southeasterty winds. High temerrew near 76 e- morrow might mestiy cleedy with seat- tered showers and little change in tem peratere Teday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding & an “6 At § am Wir I mph Direction: Bouthrast Sun sets Monday at 717 | Sun rises Tuesday a 5 45 2 Moon sets Monda, a' O4 fy Moon rises Tuesdsy et 3 48 aor Dewntes =. Temperatures @ BO. M... 2.000. 46 s ee FB. M...cccee.-47 1 $1 OO. M.ccccoecs- 51 pa 62 a.m... ba] 10 a. m.. 58, Sendey in Portier (As recorded downtorr M temperature 62 One Year Ago in Pontisc Highest ure 6 Lowest temperature Mean tem ‘ Bighest and Lowest Temperatures This Date in 63 Years oo} im we 8 in 1875 Senday'’s Temperature (hart 6s so 45 56 By 62 43 a | 37 62 wn» Stesesessece _ ness and reported it to their pas 7 ‘again y esterday wer her parents but does not recognize | at 8:30 p.m. Funeral service will them. She screams and cannot be Wednesday at 10 a.m. from St. eat. Vincent de Paul Church, with bur- But she is beginning to move ial following in Mt. Hope Ceme- her arms and legs. Two weeks ago | tery. they were completely paralyzed. | She was given a 50-50 chance to in Head-On Crash live. Now, the doctors say, the odds have improved, * A 19-year-old Detroiter was re- ported in critical condition at Pon- tiac General Hospital today fol- lowing a head-on crash on M59 in White Lake Township yesterday. Gayle's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Paul Russel of Morton Grove, just north of Chicago. | Russell said last night Gayle’s improvement seemed to coincide with a call for prayers issued by spiritual leaders of three Catholic churches, three Jewish temples and The youth, Donald Neel, was a several Protestant churches in, passenger in an auto driven by Morton Grove and three neighbor-| Eugene Furgerson, 35, also of ing communities | Detroit. Ne : ; i - eighbors heard of Gayle’s il According to wit = quoted tors. Several pastors asked théir | by Brighton Post State Police, Fur- congregations : week ago to pray gerson 5 car smashed head-on with for Gayle’s recovery, Others men- one driven by Herman Albert, x, tioned the child in prayers at | of — Junction. church services last week and|, Witnesses said Albert swerved |from the eastbound lane to avoid an or ice into two slow-moving The Skokie News, a neighborhood | “#78 1 is own lane. newspaper, said last week, “the Furgerson is in fair condition entire community continues to pray and Albert is im- good condition, for Gayle.” according to the hospital. A pas- The Bussells are. Catholics. S¢ger_in Albert's car, Jacgu —o has been in the hospital sin | Hiica: 2. oP Ped area, is also | weeks. She entered for an appen-| "Ported in good condition, | deetamy. But -two weeks after the ~operation she developed an ailment Driver Is Injured doctors diagnosed as encephalitis, = commonly called sleeping sickness. Edwin Ketterer, 28, of Rochester, The. doctors said she a y| was treated at Pontiac General developed peritonitis after her | Hospital Sunday morning after appendix was removed, and that |cat rolled over on Walton boule- this in turn caused toxic poisoning |Vard near Squirrel Oakland in her system which caused the County Sheriff's deputies monwealth in that country. In a message to the World Col- lege of Intellects at Warsaw in | 1948, Einstein advocated a ‘‘supra- | national] organization’’ to own what | he called “horrible weapons” de- vised in-recent years. In a foreword to a book by Hen- ry Wallace, “Toward World Peace,” Einstein described the 1948 presidential] candidate as a man who ‘‘can save us from the threatening domestic and interna- tional situation.” * s s The life of this amazing intel- lectual giant was simple and mod- est. His disdain for personal glory and materia] gain were almost a legend. His baggy-clad figure, a pipe perpetually in his mouth, and | his long shaggy white hair and) twice thats whom he Tat , encephalitis. i stated he lost control on a curve. | F ae | own and. the first to appear in the country without the traditional veil, A pretty black-eyed Egyptian girl, Dina’s modern way of living is bound to have a powerful ir- fluence on social customs in Jor- dan, where last summer Moslem fanatics threw acid on women who from flakiness. Why? a known dope ‘WHY? Yeur skin is dry. You use rich creams faithfully, yet there's no relief you might as well have been putting ‘your skin treatment creams on glass! MAX FACTOR'S. GREAT NEW DISCOVERY SECRET/ KEY opens the way to new beauty DETROIT (INS) — Two Detroit} WHY? Your skin is oily. You switch ‘ men are held today in connection; from one treatment preparation to an- of eg Spe Spy with the death of a dope peddier| other, yet blackheads anf blemishes still who hgticide detectives think may| persist. Why? way for weatment arenas end lntiene 6 have been killed in an underworld ‘ flo their beautifying work! "The body of Howard E. Helmick,| im either cate, as Max Factor scientists | Having discovered the Secart Key, Max 39, "| have now proved. There’s'a chemical bar- Factor has formulated exclusive corrective acidity-alkaline balance characteristic of ms and lotions to follow right behind . for women with dry skin... oily skin... disturbed skin... divorced, They had two sons, Al- bert and Edward, The second mar- riage, in was to Elsa Ein- cn’ tsb Sak Staak, ote es lam eee tok ee oe ot| too alkaline. really te Aechntged ached ong ecctuaides a a ee : WHAT? But sow Max Factor hes ning here and now with the Secner Kev! S8CRET KEY After his second wife’s death in| out and they thought he was dead . about normal ‘pit-Prsmiial o/Ryteges, the dermasslagia vey of saying beauty, 1996, Einstein lived a secluded life | and Pe waa Go gat-jevstved Ge $150 in Princeton with his daughter | they him in a rug and Pus ran Margot, and his housekeeper- | took to the spot where he was secretary, Miss Helen Dukas, found. i ry y , . * ’ } \ ’ 4 + eee semmaretrenemataes Pome: Cheeni a re d ” nes = ae os» aw en ae Sie. ameter| « The United Nations Worid Health | are exposed to malaria and only | Organization estimates that 252, 107 million of them have any pro- million people in Southeast Asia tection against the disease. SPRING SALE in Our Shoe Repair Dept. Here are real values to help you get your shoes in fine shape , for the Spring months ahead FOR TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURS. ONLY HALF SOLES f 69 Men‘s, Women’s, Child- Attached _ren’s genuine Ook leather RUBBER aaa , | or durable composition. LADIES’ LIFTS Pre Pr. WHILE - U - WAIT OR SHOP SERVICE NEISNER SHOE REPAIR SENIOR DAY PLANNING—Ch morrow 's Milford High School Senor ~ Margaret Woodle and senior xy Tuesday has been proclaamed sen of the Senor Class take over ma ‘ Zo to the tip fund Last yé $000 se ruot than ( es WALLED LAK } > we ie, — show will be one of the atures % * ~, Oran of the annual Mother Night 7 “~~. } _ oven vram at the Lmon PTA meet - Menncew eu que lated for 8 pn tod Pa slated fo 5 nds Desdemona Ver third grade teacher, will Model There Are Hundreds of Braids to Choose McCandless. 11 N. Perry From at Appearing in garments from the Phyllis Lee Shop also on feooley Lake road, will be Mrs. Fred lreytag. Mrs. Watson Mringer, Mrs. dames Mchibben, Mrs. Hareld (Chapman, Mrs. Charles West, Mrs. Marie Zink, and Gail Woolley. Intermissior entertainment —eteeai-eeare TAT ITT under the ¢ Miss Hennetta P exhibition by a group of strations hirection of a hytter-bug mor high by Mart with Mrs students. and a vocal solo Sanderson, ninth grader Harold Welch at the piano the short busine «<« mee During and instalation vol officers wul be held ing an eciection Mrs. Edward T. Johnson, pres ident of the Oakland County PTA County Calendar” Be Smart, Look Sharp! Call Fox for fresher, cleaner, newer Ortenyille looking Tuesday atthe. nome of Mrs oa cleaning. oe ' Aebers nage ae th , Gz SIME S Big K Ree PT eats © MILLER FURNITURE—I44 Oakland Avenue oY 5 | APRIL SALE | fi i § SECTIONAL SOFAS or DAVENPORTS With or Without Matching Chairs Tops in Style and Quality Our Lower Overhead Helps Keep Our Prices Lower— Just You Come and See! Store Open.Monday and Friday Evenings Free and Easy Parking Our 19th Yegr of Greater. Value. Giving MILLER FURNITURE Where You Honestly Save 144 Oakland Ave. Careful Free Delivery 2 icine Ea Rae aiene thicat he we tthe ey pare Me iho a ; ca ‘ . THE PONTIAC . . | ed S ecking # window display for to tery. He died Sunda and Precious Jewelry Surviving are his widow Glenn : Day are AAV SOL s . . . , a daughter Mis) Audria Clark. a j Ce nd n Kern (anos Ba sdlad eTN grandchild. three sisters, Mrs. Wil Day Miiford as 95 members jan Anderson of Jackson, Mrs zement of some 6) stores. Profits; Myrtag Null of Reading. Mrs y xt repair sé r ars day of business netted more Mayme Pendell of Ypsilanti. and ¢ ev two brothers. Dennis of Detroit and I rely satisia yy Joh psilant — F a “ ohn of Ypsilanti e edto you... w ; sad. "| Fashion Show Is Planned ‘| for PTA Mothers Night the Council, will be officer Refreshmer third grade ts Will Mrs. George Sx hroeder bethet.Mugles other e-presidents, are un for the event VMirs. Wayne irs. Zink PRESS. MONDAY, mothers etery Hie died Saturday be served by — Surviving are his nephew. Wil — ye aed tele resets ood egw = NN t= RS TEL NUROM and teacher ‘ YS "| a reerat ee eee ue Additional County News bel foe. APRIT 18, 19 Residents of Keego Harbor fo Ballot on Incorporation KEEGO HARBOE—A final de 55 MAKE OVER PAGE Forym Plans Meeting burn Read nese 8 p-m. today AVON TOWNSHIP—The Avon James H. VanLeuvan of the Gak- dale Community Forum will meet land County Juvenile \Court, will at the community building on Au-| speak,on “Juvenile Delinquency." FROST IS THAWING! 4 will complete the incorporation of cision on the incorporation of a ‘he area, which began Dec 14 portion of West Bloomfield Town- aah . yeekeal residents clected a Drive a Few Extra Miles ship called Keego Harbor is in the he hater (ed approved in | hands of the voters who will go tomorrow's voting. no candidates You'll Get Many to. the polls there tomorrow will be elected to office They will face a city charter rine SOSRNS Hse (ed pe ’ . _ tions seeking the five city couneil xX ra Oo ars e and a slate of candiqates secking posts They are George Harris lelection to newly-created eity of- Benjamin ko Covey. Joseph Nich fices. ols) Wilma Webb. Chester Wolfe Samuet Whitmore. Russell G : A favorable vote on the charter ' “ ~ ren John Loveland, and John Seliman 9 a Arnold W and Southart are seeking the of jushce of the peace, and Glen 7 Smith the Soper James Sales and Sertice Lincoln-Mercury 850 S. Woodward, Birmingham Mi 6-2200 position County Deaths Otte Duguid DRAYTON PLAINS—Sertfice for Otto Duguid. 6. of 4776 Sylveste will be held at 1 30 p.m the Funeral Munger and Glen both running for Stable post are Tuesda at Huntoon Home with burial in Ottawa Park Ceme Expert Repairing for Your Watch “William F. GOODRICH F Brandt. 91 will be held at 2 pm Brandt Service for William of 8162 S. State Rd at the C. F Home Orton Coodnch Cem THIS IS THE SERVICE WE STRIVE TO GIVE Bring Your Work to Us. MR. PHIL ORENCIA . Sherman Funeral . installing , ville, with burial in » Manager Repair De partment Helfrich and on Page 8 Open Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. to 9 P. M. You're helping in change there is opportunity $4,200 per family - that’s the average amount that American families now have in Savings accounts, savings bonds and life insurance. ‘ a i . America set new records for thrift! Good wages and high employment have given millions of families a better opportunity to build up their security through their own initiative: @ 43 million people own U. S. Savings Bonds @ 75 million people now have savings in banks and other savings institutions @ 93 million people own life insurance. That's 22 mil- lion more than in 1945. And the average amount of life insurance owned per family has almost doubled. Of these and other forms of thrift, the most popular is life insurance, now owned by four out of five families. These families find that life insurance gives them two basic advantages: it is the only way to create an estate instantly, and it is a sound way to build up a cash reserve for emergencies. Life insurance can help support the family in case of the father’s death . . . cover the mortgage . help pay for the children’s education . .. provide retirement income. 1 4 Today, more than half of all life insurance benefits are paid to the policyholders themselves. Through these “living benefits,” life insurance brings America’s families opportunity—as well as security. / f institute of Life insurance Central Source of Information about Life Insurance . _ 488 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK 22, N. Y. ‘ \ ee | ae ae "eC a i S19Vd Uh EIGHT > County Deaths William Nichols $$ sisters and one brother. Mrs. Anna Fleming METAMORA — Service for Wil- CLARKSTON—Funeral arrange- ments are pending at the Farmer- . liam Nichols, 93, of 91 W. High St., will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday cnover Funeral Home for’ Mrs. quet will be held at 7 p.m. today : y “h- . on ne Lion's D ot the Pidey Pecers: iw Bo _| Anna Fleming, 84, of 177 N. Main in the Lion's Den ester, with burial in ochester St. She died Sund Honored guests will be 36 boys _ Cemetery. He died Sunday. , 2 si _— ner of Romeo Community School dis Surviving are two daughters, | Surviving are a nephew, David ¢ri¢e+ who participated in the March | Mrs. Mark Bartenfelder of Meta- P. Stewart of Clarkston, and sev- 10 boxing show. mora and Mrs. Fred Meier of! eral other neices and nephews Sponsored by the Romeo Lion's Sa ee - . Club, the program will feature presentabon of medals, ribbons America’s Most Beautiful Glasses! Complete with Frame & Lenses ONE PRICE TO ALL... Bifecals $3.00 Mere oo Rochester, two grandchildren, five Bere again—Nu-Vision presents o sensational eptical valve! fer ene week enly — we offer vea this beautiful, genuine 1/10 12KT goid- filed decorated “NORMA” style glasses in a choice of any ?-tene coler combination fer enly $11.00' Here ere Ist quality frames and top lenses made te your own exact i GUARANTEE! Your money will be refund- ed within 60 days if you are not completely satistied for any reason! You Must Be Completely Satisfied REPAIRS | YOU CAN'T PAY MORE! Why pay mere when you get the finest glasse Breken tenses éupii- im America at this amazingly lew price! All ested, frames re- yee pey here ts S11.00-—Noe extras—Ne addi- ired ‘ , ‘ thems! Here are face-flattering glasses, werth et savings te yeu! mech mere—yours this week fer enly $11. 00— NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY! EXTRA FAST SERVICE aS Pai me Tc (TERETE aa otdin bam Sens Co % a ee 1 V] is America’s Best Filter Cigarette... ~~ =——_ = f a, i i i i ee Boxing Banquet ROMEO—The annual boxing ban and a picture of the participant. Footbal] quarterback will be the speaker group to each Al Dorow Versia Stan Married in Hawaiian Islands UNION LAKE Mr. and Mrs John Stan of 229 Union Lake Rd have announced the Feb. 12 mar a riage of their daughte Versia ‘alti Florence Stan, to Aubre Lor (Si He 1s the son of Mr and Mrs wey Calvin Long of Bay Minette, Ala - : The couple were marred at the MRS. DAVID BR. CLARK Hickam Air Force Base Chapel near Honolulu. Hawatan Islands ® where the bride ts statroncd as a PTA Planning Group WAVE {@ Begin Workshops WATERFORD TOW N&HIP—The County Calendar Metamora 3 — whe Metamora Cemetery Ladies’ A third annual series of workshops ery wil a F for program Chairmen, sponsored ing of a : { Mr “ ginr " by the PTA Program Planning @ potluck ne The ar Meta a Committee, begins tonight at 8 p.m nm f ( Hospita Auxiliary w e a for n the homemaking room of the “ due Har “ a - “ : 16 W , , E . Waterford Township High School oft ets l he . Pentiac Lake O. W. Crissman, of the adult edu ' a ake xler n Group ee = l : t - ot 6 i ac a e cation department of the University hy { bs) ' 4 Por 4 = } . . Lake R A ' . : t of Michigag will be guest discus served stiles sant of the meeting, which is also The Stiles Young Home Makers ex- | onen to study group and mental ensior p ‘ a ) Tuesday at the home of Mrs Rex Boner, | health chairmen 6903 Liverr Ra ; Walerford Township The three other workshops of the The Waterford TX his a . Metropolitan Auxiita “ at 8 semes are slated for May, Sep pm Mond ay at the ? ton Hilliker. 147 Draper 8 i tember, and October. WORRIED OVER DEBTS? if yew are unable te pay yeur payments, debts er bills when due, see MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS and arrange fer payments yeu can afterd, regardiess ef hew mech er how many you owe, NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ONE PLACE TO PAY — BONDED AND INSURED “Let 9 years of credit counselling experience assist you. Hours: Daily 9 to $. Wed. & Sat. 9 to 1. Evenings by Appt. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 41'2 Seuth Saginaw St. Above Oakland Theater in the Oakland County LM STAN FROM ALL T EFFECTIVE FILTRATION KING SIZE FILTERS Bride of Richard Clark | FARMINGTON—Ruth Ernestine Hamifn and David Richard Clark repeated their wedding vows in the Salem Evangelican and Re- formed Church Saturday The ceremony performed by Rev. Richard 4 pm doublering was A. Geiger at Mr. and Mrs. Delos F. Hamlin Sr. are the parents of the bride. The bridegreom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs, Glenna D. Clark of St. Joseph, A floor-length gown with a bodice and skirt of white Chantilly lace over nylon tulle was the bride's choice for the event. It had a boat neckline, and leng pointed sleeves of lace. Sister of the bride Jane Hamlin was maid of honor, with Mrs. Fred Hamlin and Mrs, William Evans as bridesmaids William Evans served the bride- man, and Arnold Lt. Fred seated the guests groom as best Newman and Hamlin ae After a reception in the church parlors, the couple left for a trp «4@ Northern Michigan. Sign Final Contracts for New High School MILFORD—Final contracts were signed by the Huron Valley Board of Education Thursday night, for construction of the new $1,250,000 high school to be erected on the North Milford road Architects Louis Kingscott & As- sociates of Kalamazoo were award- ed the contract, and arrangements for immediate action were made at the meeting. Sketches will be presented at a special meeting. Se far, the board of education has not made any specific bid for the proposed building site, | although condemnation proceed- ings for the 42-acre plot is now Circuit Court. Carl Thrun, Huron Valley Board of Education attorney, has been authorized by the members to make an offer of $250 an acre. Also at the meeting Superintend- ent Hansen was authorized by the school board to ask for bids for four new 60-passenger buses. Much more flavor_and Light and Mild ) Effective filtration_and draws e-a-s-y Highest quality tobaccos_—low nicotine SMOKERS EVERYWHERE SAY __ Sete OR a ae eR Tee SWS ea ot ei oe ret It’s a Fishy Situation GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (UP) — | Vistors to the Soldiers Home here | were puzzled about the frequent j references to the ‘babies’ ward” | in the administration building. The center of attention turned out to Concert Program HOLLY — Arrangements already | » are under way by the joint Holly- Fenton organization to secure an- other course next winter, be the 32 babies of a tropical fish. ~~ % concert and entertainment . , } Ray Hunt, president of the as- + j ” sociation, announces that a meet- will be held next month, and an an intensive nembe "am- + , m 1 membership cam 7th + \ yily | } j | \ . —— | h \ , paign then launched. i ee Numbers on the course will again be staged alternately L\ \ and Holly. In the which recently closed over 400 member- ships were sold in Fenton iA course to Meet at Waterford It's a combination of WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The many skills and many Waterford Township Girl Scout Leaders Club will meet tonight little things that have at 8 pm. at the CAI building =~ on Williams Lake road. Members have been asked to bring copies of the constitution, bylaws, and policies for discussion, Hudson-Covert leaders will dem onstrate crafts and Waterford Vil lage leaders will decorate the ta- bles and serve refreshments caused people to speak ' so complimentary of us. — a SPARKS-GRIFFIN (Advertisement) < i Bladder "Weakness’ ————— Funeral Home - | If worried by “Bladder Weakness” [Gett: “ : | j ve Wights ‘too fr maki burn oo Thoughtful Service { @ urination) or Strong, Ci . due to common Kidney cad 4 “i 46 Williams Street tations. try CYSTEX for quick, gratifying, Phone FE 2-584! A billion CYSTEX tabiets comforting hel used in past 3s years prove safety and success. Ask druggist for CYSTEX under money-back guarantee. See how much better you feel tomorrow. 24 Hour Ambulance service Bank oh us for F000? SAYINGE. SUPER SAVINGS! Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday | PEOPLE’S | FF ann niin PRICES SLASHED! Open 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Cypress GARDENS ORANGE VALUES! BIRDS EYE Frozen FISH STICKS 1 Lb. Pkg. — DELICIOUS CUT WAX BEANS. ___Toll _ ¢ | 303 Can a SEA BROOK FROZEN Strawberries 4 Pkgs. 7 00 TODAYS BEST WAN BUYS ARMOUR’S COLUMBIA DON’T MISS THIS BACON 1 LB. CELLO. PKG. 30 Introductory Special Offer SNOWHITE FRESH BAKED WHITE BREAD 20 Oz. 10° ON RY RRR RED RET ee gir Otter Good Mon.-Tues.-Wed., Golden Poppy . Bartlett PEARS In Heavy Syrup Pe MRC RT RL eS ay tn — April 18-19-20! YQU MUST No. 2/2 "TRING THIS ! an 17¢ Without It . Pd @b-€=-“Al SEQGEPT-MAELTEI “pet > Afnua Camping Program, and sales « week. ; ita | i . z } F \ 1 I ' ‘i f \ SYLVIA J, ROUSE James Rouse of Draper avenue and Mrs. LeRoy’ Garner of Lin- coln Park are_announcing the en » gagement of their daughter, Sylvia ’ J., to Dale Hampshire. He is the ' son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. ' Hampshire of Dexter road. The } — will take place June 14 Birthday Party Held for William Coffing | 7 A surprise birthday party hon- | ored William Coffing Thursday evening when senior choir mem bers of Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church paid tribute to their choir director served and presented following at the churc? Refreshments a gift was choir practice were — m rr Carats —are+ Mr pas Mrs Ww liam G: Dunston The bride is the former Shirley ' Ann Devine daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Devine of Lindsay road. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.W.lliam E. Dunston of Qlark- ston : The Rev. Barney D. Roepcke j ‘ “MRS, WILLIAM G. DUNSTON performed the eight o'clock cere- mony Saturday evening at Orchard ’ Lake Presbyterian Church The bride wore a. lavaliere which is a family heirloom for her marriage, The floor length skirt of her white satin gown ended in a train. Her headpiece secured finger tip veil, and she -——— a lace carried ar Photographed as they sailed from New York for a two-month tour of Europe are Mr. and =i” Mrs. Abe Lapides of Birmingham. . They will visit © in France, Italy, England, Switzerland _and_in Israel. rive by Girl Scouts of America QUE “MR. and MRS. ABE LAPIDES S ponsored Scholarships Benefit } from Sales Mrs. Donald Redmond Reveals More than 4,000 of the most charming personalities ever to break down your sales resistance are making calls in Northern Oakland County this The wiles of the irresistible sales force include braids, grins, curls, lisps and a few freckles. They’ll come calling from now through | April 28th 28th in their 1955 Cookie Sale. ——* Some 350 Brownie, inter- mediate and senior troops | will provide the sales crews. Door to door salesmen of all items might well take a hint from this ambitious lot of | young girls. They've more than doubled their sales power by enlisting aid from their mothers, fathers, brothers and sisters, who have to constant requests ranging from serving as pack horses to counting and keeping track of cartons and individual boxes The girls are ready and will- ing to “sell with gq smile’’ be- causg they are sold on their own preduct. They believe in the or- xanization they serve and are fully aware of its worth and its deeds, #0 they face their project “always prepared™, succumbed In an effort to augment sales, cookie cupboards have been set up in downtown areas and neigh- borhood stores. Adult supervisign will be on hand at all times during this public sale. All the troops sell ing from vying for top hone county. , All proceeds go to the Girl Scout camping pr camp schol rwood re- larger while a lesser share of profits are used for equipment to be used by individual troops for two or more days of camping at approved camp sites Mrs. Donald Redmond chairman for the Cookie Sale urged residents to ‘“‘buy two, not just one, box of Girl Scout cookies from that little girl down the street. That eighty cents from you is* worth many-fold that to her - and the cookies are @ good, too!’ door-to-door are ms in the and She gram arships. Camp ceives the share these general Shirley Ann Devine Wears Heirloom Jewelry for Rite hya-_ arranig ement of white Tose s cinths and stephanotis. Mrs. Homer Beasley wore a lilac ballerina length gown for her du- ties as matron of honor. Other attendants were Mrs.) Raymond Devine, Mrs. Robert Devine, and Carol Devine. They wore yellow gowns Roger Johnson of Clarkston served as best man. Seating the guests were James, Raymond and Rebert Devine, brothers of the bride, and Ronald Schebor eof Clarkston, A reception was held following the cererhofy in the church par- Jors The bride’s mother wore a gray and yellow print dress and the bridegroom's mother chose a dusty rose dress. As the couple left for their honeymoon the bride was wearing a beige linen box suit with brown accessories, Upon their return the couple will reside on North Pad- , dock street. Pilgrim Group Meets in Member’s Home Mrs. J: L. VanWagoner of An- +dersonvitie road opened her tome — Friday for a luncheon enjoyed by members of the Pilgrim Group of First Congregational church. Sixteen members and = seven | guests were present as Ora Hal- lenbeck gave devotions. Cancer pads were sewn by the group dur- ing the afternoon. Assisting the hostess were Mrs Ivan Knight, Mrs. Harry Lillie and Mrs. Norman Feet. f Se oe nee THE: PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1955 The Pontiac Press Womens Section cartons for Mar) Lou McLaughlin of Mohawk road district cookie depots to receive keeps track of the records as Monita Cal- her troop to sell, houn of Spokane drive comes to one of the Donal for the ann ual Mrs. sale « hairman ys ueeh s erent, join Cathy Hunter of R est Iroquois road. Nancy Mize of Menominee road and Carol Asher of Gingell court, Intermediate and Scouts . . forces to sell Girl Scout cookies at one of Left to of Cadi llac street. senior the downto mun cookie cupboards. ight are Ed duina Palmer. Countr ‘y Club Sige i ‘ashion Show brrmiNc HAM — Mrs. Drew Mrs. Arthur J. Brandt has in-.luncheon and shower Saturday Haneline is chairman of the fashion Vited se’ a friends for luncheon when Mrs Alan Wentz and her show to be heid at the Birmingham ™ her home Tuesday. d a ore Mrs. Robert Roth will visage “on gbttes St Charlotte Wiley returned to oo i : being assisted by Mrs. Harold M Wellesiey after spending her Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Brown | Stiller and Mrs. Anthony Anzick spring college vacation with her eae prs sari aaron | Ringing doorbells out Among those who have made parents, Mr. and Mrs. George 8. Mn ‘lorea mig oom aj et of Sweetbriar (rite reservations are Mrs. Robert Turn- Wiley of Willitts street. She was a ois ri “ancos amd ne - tea |) er, Mrs. Richard Andreasen and bridesmaid at the wedding Thurs- how April 2. all (sisbnalinnaiiisl s wer ¢ ) ~ ; Mrs. James A. Coilins day of Mary Alice Hopkins to ‘ . a ; funds for camping ° ~ | We Wiltiam Travis Gibb Ii. ude il Treating for Pittateipita tH at —— ———__—_-_——-—-—On- Lt Men baines,— Ul concl Aprile 1 her parents she entertained Mrs. James McCall and Mar tend the national convention of hetcce ti tine toe i eit wt me ‘ ing - , eth Smith cr it the Needlework Guild of America , a _ Flizal nith will give an Were Mrs. Lawrence C. Howe, | ue ba ‘ and mbers.of door supper at the none of Ma ° state chairman for Michigan and le weading party Elizabeth's parents, Mr. and. Mrs Mrs, Robert N. Woodruff, presi- Jo George Wellington Smith in Frank-. | annual meet dent of the Birmingham-Bloom Barba 1 Gibson, daughrer of Mr. lin. mer { the Woman's Society field branch of the Needlework %"d Mrs. Robert C. Gibson will - 2 be married June 24 to. Frank Scott Guild. . Perkin II. He is the son of Mrs This spring convention will be Nora Perkin of Birmingham, and the seventicth anniversary of the pr Frank S. Perkin of Grosse beginning of the Guild Pointe * © * Late Florida travelers include the William G, Mrs, Walter F. Herdrich and her son, Wally. William L. Grahams, the Lerchen family and Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Hanaford Montreal are visiting their and daughter, Mr. and of son-in-law Mrs. William E. Douglas of Fair- fax road, . * St. Catherine's Guild of St. James Church will give its an- nual children's fashion show April 28. Mrs. W. A. McCurdy is gen- eral chairman, assisted by Mrs James Everett, Mrs. Raymond Wil- liams and Mrs. Richard. Dixon. ! . * * ] and Mrs. Frank J. Me- Gifinis left by plane recently for a six weeks trip to Europe, Mrs. James H. Herbst will be | hostess at the next meeting of the _| North Suburban alumnae chap- | }ter of Alpha Phi Tuesday in her | home on Harmon avenue. Cohostesses will be Mrs. J. E. | Eckenrode and Mrs. Walter L. Fry, | Jr } Mr. | Plans will be concluded for | Alpha Phi State Day luncheon at the. Women's City. Club. im Den | trot Saturday for which Mrs. Richard Speir ot Buckingham | road is taking reservations. . * ®« | Kitty Kirn and Millie Beck are) ; vacationing from Michigan State, | College in Florida. Kitty was re-| rea ' cently pledged to Chi Omega soror- | : | ity. MRS. CHARLES J. BARREI1 General chairman of the membership tea to be given by the Auxiliary to Pontiac General Hospital is Mrs. | Charles J. Barrett of Mohawk road. The tea will he held | May 11 at the Lake Orion home of Mrs. John J. Marra. Kerry Kirn, whose marriage to cys ae Ps » > the e | Th omas Butters will take place | Auxiliary President Mrs. William J. Dean mad the oP" | May 7, will be honor guest at a pointment, i \ ot Even though she is a leader, of exempt .if 1 “the all-out drive to raise Second Ahniversary ee q Pentiac Press Pheotes Girl Scout cookie sale. Class of ‘35 Plans 20th Reunion Group Will Meet June 11 at CAI in Waterford June 11 is an important date |\for members of the Pontiac High School graduating of 1935, | That the day the grad- uates will gather for a 20th year class is when | Teunion A dinner and program will be | enjoyed at the Waterford Commu- | nity Activities building on Wil- | liams Lake road. Recently elerted officers of the planning committee include E. C. Connell, general chairman; Mrs, William Tayler Jr., June class secretary; Mrs. Charlies E. Van Trease, January class sec- retary; and Mrs. Robert Peopics et Holly, treasurer. | Other committee members are Mrs. Howard Powers, Leonard Cot- |ter, Ledger Criger, Lloyd Huntley land Loel Shotwell. They are be- ing assisted by Robert Isgrigg, |Charles Foote. Mrs. William F. Nesbitt, Mrs. Myron Lockhart, Mrs, Neil McCormick, Mrs. Byron Rog- evs and William Gaddes Members of the June. Janu jand summer school classes | urged to call members of the com- mittee with information about the airy are 1 Redmond of Drayton Plains is cookie present addresses of class mem- She began lining up details and paper work in January for this bers Standish Group Is Entertained in Bennett Home Mrs. Ray Bennett, of Chamber- lain street was hostess to the | Standish Group of First Congrega- } | tiogal Church for a dessert }unch- eon Friday. Mrs. Cari Malkim assisted Mrs. Harry Manus introduced Karen Hayden who sang two solos “The Lord's Prayer” and ‘Teach | Me to Pray.” in Vrs. M TS. Rule Named proadent of Christian Service of First Methodist Church elected new of- ficers. Mrs. Clayton Rules was -named- president. Hostess for the tending the recent the Orpah Circle?’ in Your Home,” tional Charles' Legge Mrs. H. B. Harbage, guest speaker, described the work of United Church Women of Pon- tiac, Other officers who will be work- ing with Mrs. Rule are Mrs. Sig- mund Chmiloski, vice president; Mrs. Stuart Conway, recording secretary; and Mrs. Charles Ja- cobson, treasurer, ~ Those elected secretaries of the Various committees include Mrs Chester Arnold Mrs. Wendell Green, Mrs, Frank Coons, Mrs Perc Parsons, Mrs. Ernest F-ve- rett and Mrs. William Fustice. luncheon was What Is Central was the devo by Mrs message chosen Completing the slate are Mrs. Bruce Granger, Mrs. Arthur Ste- wart, Mrs. Carl Theerin, Mrs. Beatrix Vogel, Mrs. Morton Jor- genson, Mrs. Elbert Proffitt and | Mrs. Gerald Augsburger. Mrs. Harry Going, charter presi- dent of the society, was honored with a life membership to the De- troit Conference, Woman's Soci@ty of Christian Service Longfellow Band Entertains. PTA —. . Parents and teachers of Long- fellow School enjoyed an instru- mental music program when the ' school band, under the direction MW estacres ts Carol Hovt! 45 members at- | T ‘Announcement was made of the luncheon meeting to be given by the United Church Wo ‘At Cen- tral Methodist Church May 6 Also announced was the lunch- |eon to be given by the Women's | Fellowship for the Oakland County |Home Demonstration Group May 5 in the new church dining room. Mrs. William Hoyt Heads Program “Easter Dawn in India” was the title of a post-Easter program held by the women's fellowship | of First Christian Church Written by an Indian Christian woman, the pageant depicts the observance of Easter in_ India. Mrs. William Hoyt was in charge of the recent program. Others taking part were Mrs. Ducan McColl, Mrs. Ralph Grubb, | Mrs. James Vaughn. Mrs. Charies Neal; Mrs. William Elam, Mrs. | Harry Kunse and Mrs. Allan Hersee. They were assisted by |} the Rev. D. D. McColl, pastor. through the sale of cookies. lhe drive Observed by Club Tn Celebration of the second an- niversary of the Fashion - Your- Figure Club forty-two members met for dinner recently at the Old Mill Tavern in Waterford A brief history of the club was given by Mrs ‘Joseph McLeod | who then introduced the following |charter members: Mrs. R. M. Baker, Mrs. Robert Bunce. Mrs. Elwin Levitt, Mrs. Robert Quinn, Mrs. George Rinkenberger. Mrs. Gerald Rose, Mrs. Michael Wasik, Mrs. Anthony Wisniewski Mrs Ramon Zolliner. Mrs. Clarence Mil- ler and Mrs. Stanley Woijciec- howski. Mrs. McLeod a , charter member | A congratulatory bouquet from the Waterford Fashion-Your-Figure | Club was presented to the presi- dent, Mrs. T. E. Folsom Coming. Events Zdne rit Past Presidents Club Moms of America, Inc. will meet Thursda April 21 at tweive for luncheon in the home of Mrs Zoe Hollis, 9110 Evee Ave. Whipple Lake Reservations may be made by calling Mrs. James Gougeon is also The Newcomers Clud of Iraq Caldron Daughters of Mokanna, will spor a card party Wednesday evening April | 20. at 128 West Pike St. at 8 PM. Tick lets may be purchased at the door The Happy Hour Club will meet Tues fay April 19 at 1-3 t the home of Mrs Eimer Maiden, 248 ¢ ttage St sew }eancer pads Ladies Auxilias Metropolitan Club; Spirit Six. will meet with Mrs W A. Green, 223 Crestwood St.. Tuesday at 8 pm ORS bY will meet with Mrs emaw Rd Tuesday Group One |Z. Vv Ho at 730 p.m MOMS meet Tuesday William Morrell Fanny gE. Thompkins Pythian Sisters will meet ; 18 W Huron 8t skins af America. Inc., Unit Two, will at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs. 19 S Roselawn Dr Temple 41, this evening at Beant Couity Mietrict Nareee” One meet at Pontiac State Hospital Tuesday at @ p.m. for cooperative dinner. The program will be on mental health. Cora M. Eves Tent Hive. 247 of the Maccabees, will meet Tuesday st § p.m. for forme! initistion of Le is Crew. F ted the Corinne Sisterhood No. 164, Demes of entertainment. Malte. will meet pry =! evening, | a 20, at 8 o'clock @ aha Templa, In addition, James Hunt. Oak my AR gt BS land County director of juvenile services, spoke at the recent meet- ing on juvenile delinquency. A social hour followed. The Fellowship Bible Class of the Firs Baptist Church nn meet Tuesday eve- | ning, April 19, at 6:18 PM. im the Bau- cational Building. A cooperative dinner } will be served. vi ———S——— aTHE _PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1955 — pereeter se Ropes play a_ leading ’ role “bles Coters ted onptere the feneth tetote a betd onerote pete choker. $-dtalesneop— in The Alma College a cappella terian Church Thursday evening, at eight o'clock. This famous choir, made up of fifty-two voices and. directed by Prof. Ernest G. Sulli- van is on its Spring Tour, singing in six Presbyterian churches and three high schools. This choir is recognized as one of the leading college choirs in the Midwest. Its frequent concert tours and radio broadcasts are oc- casions of great musical! interest. During the past twenty five years, the choir of carefully se- lected voices has entertained many thousands of persons. The artistic achievements are a source of reaj pride to the col- lege and pleasure to the audi- ences, Patrons and patronesses for Thursday evening include Mr. and Mrs. Donald Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Robertson, Mr. and Mrs. George, Tremper, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Varney, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Aer Breakfast to be Held May 13 Mrs. Percy Hunt opened her home on Cherokee road Friday afternoon for a luncheon meeting of the Colonial Group of First Congregational Church. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Harry Pearce, Mrs. C. Henry Pur- day, Mrs. Mac T. Whitfield, Mrs. George Sutton and Mrs. Everett Peterson. Mrs. Everett Russell gave de- votionals at the meeting which | was attended by 30 members. A | discussion was held a an annual breakfast to be held 13 at Casa del Ray with Mrs i R, Wilson as hostess. Mrs. Jack Rammes has been named program chairman, Mrs. Elwood Bigler, ticket chairman; and Mrs. Harold Euler is dining room chairman Couple is Married in Presbyterian Rite Mrs. John W. Ball of Navajo | drive who has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Max Persons, in Chicago, is a patient at Ravens- ACROS this | three times around the neck and worn full! 1 Lilac flashing heauty of bright plumage in colored or multiple strands in several colors to high- beads. The first agricultural college in ; America was Michigan State Col lege, established in 1855 ~ a= Keep Your Wardrobe Fresh as a Daisy! RELY ON US TO KEEP YOUR SPRING WARDROBE FRESH AND CLEAN! e ___ GUARANTEED _ COLD STORAGE FOR YOUR FURS! GENEY CLEANERS Pickup and Delivery Phone FE 5-6107 12 West Pike Street “Mrs. Kenneth McQueens | Entertain Class Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McQueen of West New York street enter tained members of the Fellowship Class of Baldwin Avenue Evan- gelical United Brethren Church Friday evening Devotions were gittn by Paul Jones. Mrs Albert Lovse was elected secretary for the remain der of the year Mrs. Thomas White was a co- hostess for the evening William “Vann Gives Book Review Mrs. William Vann presented a book review on “‘The Saint’’, writ- ten by Elizabeth Yates Friday when the Mayflower group of First | Congregational Church met Mrs. Charles W hostess to 23 at her Mrs Heathman was members and guests Lamont street home Mary Dahl assisted the by- Mts. G. H. Hedrick. Couple in Chicago Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Liskey of) Drayton Plains are announcing the March 19 marriage of their daugh- ter, Barbara, to Eugene Reeves. He is the son of Mrs Lillian Reeves of Poplar street. The cere- was performed at Joslyn \venue Presbyterian Church Cobalt costs $2.60 a pound They can be worn wrapped two or light your spring costume. ‘Eastern PTSA ‘Names Officers | Mrs. Charlies Evans has been | 71 Force named president of Eastern Junior ; High School PTSA for the second year. Serving with her will be Mrs. Thomas Mitchel as vice-pres- | idnet, Mrs. Chris Cates as secfe- tary and Jean Kimple BS treasurer Mrs, Sarkis Schnorkian’ will be historian, and Council dele- gates are Mrs. Harold Hartt- mann and Mrs. Earl Luchenbach. The next PTSA meeting at East- * ern, to be held May 25, will be a fashion show featuring the ac- complishments of Mrs, Arthur VanRyzin's sewing pupils Fashion Show:Held | by Church Group A spring fashion show featuring members of the class, highlighted Friday evening's gathering of the Berean Fellowship class of Oak- ——— | carck Models for the entertainment at | the Corwin court home of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Reeder, were Wil- liam Coffing, Stanton L. Levely, Lexie Williams and Mr. Reeder The Rev. and Mrs. Theodore D Allebach and Mrs. Ada Mortensen were guests Refreshments were Mrs. Omar MacNutt, Mahan, Mrs. Robert MacCormack and Mrs, Reeder served by | Mrs. Quillan | —— moon Choir will sing at First Presby- | wood Hospital there. Mr. Ball left | rer] Amell, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie P., K. Boggs, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hoen- —_ Mr. and Mrs. Roy Fosbend- | stine, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Osmun, | Mr. and Mrs. Edson Doolittle, Mr. | “Others are Mr, and Mrs, Robert | and Mrs. H. E. McCulloch, Mr. | Married this afternoon in Minneapolis were Laura Thorn, daughter of the Harry D. Thorns of Minneapolis, Richard Edmund Kent, son of the Philip J. - Kents of Birmingham. The couple will reside in Birmingham. MRS. RICHARD EDMUND KENT Laura Marjorie Thorn, Philip J, Kent Are Wed 4 | BIRMINGHAM—A wedding of in-| fingertip veil, Her flowers were terest in Birmingham Saturday aft- | White orchids, | ernoon was that of Laura Marjorie Her sister, Mrs. Robert W. John- Thorn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | ston of Rochester, Minn., was ma- Harry D. Thorn of Minneapolis, | tron of honor, and bridesmaids Paras i eee | were Lynne Davidson of Birming- | Kent of Arlington drive, Birming- | | ham. Lucy Landers of Philadelphia and The ceremony took place in Geth- Nancy Sayler of Fargo, N. D semane Episcopal Church in Min-| They wore ice blue satin waltz neapolis and a reception was given | length dresses and carried bou- at the College Women’s Club. | quets of violets. The bride wore traditional | William R. Kent of Birmingham | white satin, lace trimmed with a | was his brother's best man and cathedral train, and she wore s |ushers were Richard L. = | and John W. Power of Birming- | ‘ham, William R. Nuey of Swarth- | more, Pa. and Robert W. Johnston. meee ne 12 Gudrun's husband ‘Emerson PTA Notion /Plans Banquet Uncle Tom's t pe Dinosaurs Neither Plans for a father and son ban-| Bed cover Porebearing 7: Soak Y | when members of the Emerson School PTA gathered recently at the school 24 Greek letter Evict Title Take inte 29 32 Donalgd Blundon from Leader custody 74 Tnvaded ., at Roch- Yj Re ham, Jane Geret of Minneapolis, | and Mrs. Harry H. Patison, Dr. and Mrs. John Stevens, Mr. and ‘Mrs. Richard Fisher, Mr. and Mrs, B. B. Kimball, Mr. and Mrs. | Ted Koeila, Mr. and Mrs, Robert C. Ander- son, Mr. and Mrs. Lyndon Sa- lathiel, Robert Senger, Mr. and Mrs. ee a Square Dancers to Elect Officers Campaign posters were used as the decorative theme when Do-C-Do Square Dance Club met at Webster School. It was announced that election of officers will be held on April 28. Callers for the recent event’ were Sam Joan, John Streit, Rex Lawrence, Gordon McLeod, George Harkless, Stan Hutchinson | and Charles Uligian. Mr. McLeod, Mr. Joan and Car! Donelson also provided refresh- ments. _ Decorations for the evening were handled by Mr. and Mrs./| Stan Hutchinson, Mr. and Mrs. | Philip Rowston, Mr. and Mrs. Mc. | — Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence and | . and Mrs. Streit. There are 2%, times as many traffic deaths on rural roads as on city streets. Alma College A Cappella Choir to Sing Here William D, Thomas, and Mr. and Mrs. E, G. Winn are still others. Completing the list are Mr. and | Mrs. D, R. Cotterman, Mr. and Mrs, William Herrmann, Mr. and | Mrs. Duane Lemaux, Mr. and | Mrs. Perce Secord, Grace Clark, Florence Day, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Short, Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Bly- stone and Mr. and Mrs. John E Huntziner. The program for the Concert will include : Jesu. Priceless Treasure Bach Let My Prayer Come Up Purcell Glory to the Trinity Rachmanioff God, Be in My Head Davies Halil, Gladdening Light Healy Willan Vesper Bells Ring. from Songs of Nature . Dvorak This Day, from Songs of Nature Dvorak Besutiful Savior arr. Christiansen Lonesome Valley arr. Lynn Haste Thee, Nymph - Handel Shvanda Polka 7 Weinberger Abram Brown ar Britten i Daniel, Servant of Lerd arr. Moore low g Pst Put Pharaoh in His | Place arr. Ringwald Annie Laurie ubiz A Cappella Choir Sing Maiden Bing Palmgren Sea Fever . Andrews Men's Choir The Lord Is My Shepherd Schubert Le, My Shepherd's Hand Divine . Hydn ¢ heir || WILLIAM K. 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Your coat, too, will regain its smartness, good Every coat that comes to Ogg's stylishness and color freshness when you have Ogqg’s clean and hand finish it. 4 CASH and CARRY STORES TO SERVE YOU __ 430 Orchard Lake Ave, E Pike St” CLEANERS Main Office and Plant, 379 E: Pike St. Phone FE 49593 ey, me Be CALL TO COLORS — Macksene Ferre of Salt Lake City, Utah, puz- zles over the draft notice and induction instructions she received from the U. 8. Army. The high school girl is planning to join the army after college, but she hopes it will be with the WAC’s. =I Duplicate Dresses Disrupt Protocol | House? | episode, *‘Oh, | on! THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AP RIL By MARGARET LATROBE It happens in Skiatook, in Oswego Falls and Roseville but did it have*to happen at the White faced embarrassment of it!—iden- tical dresses right in the reception line at a tea party where Mrs. Eisenhower was honored guest of senatorial wives! Mrs. Durries Crane of Washington turned up in | the exact dress worn by the First Lady. Mamie, with her inherent fine manners, put a good face on the and is quoted as saying— you've got the same dress I just love it, don't you?” But Mrs. Crane at this point was not loving much of anything, particularly the green figured, bouffant taffeta number. And from the look of it (far from slenderizing) you couldn't blame her. “I was so embarrassed I could die,”’ she murmured tater, taking her wrap and staying as far from the other dress as possibie. Which is just what any of us would have done—and I wonder why. We know perfectly well, in buying a dress and picking through the that there are about The shame of it, the red-| ; waistline, doubtful that you will fit in this size range. Not only a good spread of sizes, the store has the dress in two or three colors. So you buy it A curious reaction then takes place in the little woman's mind. | Once the creation is hers (guar- anteed to be slimming, youthful and to do something as yet un- specified ‘‘for her’’) she straight- away assumes that no other female in town could possibly own the identical dress. When her bridge partner shows up in the same rig, great is the outrage amongst the no-trumps. Both ladies put on Bad Queen scowls,. resembling each. other even further. More Delinquency Laid to Improved Reporting LANSING UW—Michigan authori ties say one reason juvenile de- linquency appears to be increasing at such a rapid rate is that efforts to report and record it also have increased Manfred Lillefors, consultant for the state social welfare department, And ene of them 18, 1955 MMe AVER PApES is apt to leave the party early | in order to stamp her pretty foot in the emporium which dared to sell a copy ef her original to that horrid woman who wears a dress several sizes smaller. responsible for the recent White House faux pas, was awfully cut up about it She vowed that such a thing would never happer again to a First Lady All I can add is ‘Look out Smithsonian Institution, established Girls—either we must accept this at Washington, D. C., in 184 by as one of life's lighter unpleasant-- Con@ressional act and governed nesses or get back to the sewing atta cae a oon r be machine It appears that there dents’ wives, displayed in glass ain't no bona fide origina’s—even (Cases in a top designer's salon. Molli« Parnis, the New York dressmaker may not be so ‘original’ as uU make out (Copyright 1955) Call FE 2-6421 Plant & Office—941 “Hello” I know I can depend on your Delivery Service.” MONITE Moth-Proof Protection F Father & Son CLEANERS Joslyn Ave. SSS SS SS SSS SSS SSS ewe ee © This valuable coupon entitties the bearer te a 2-ib. Limit Mild-Cure c lb. SLICED euqeaauay hVAB AY CASH MARKET 78 North Saginaw Street | BACON..... - BAZLEY’S BIG Choice Center-Cuts Lean-Center-Cuts | 49%. PORK ‘SALE!! Lean-Blade-Cuts 29i. Loin-End-Roas’ 45i. says Michigan is above the national average in juvenile delinquency racks, |presented by Thomas Clark, Re- 500 of them ranging from size 10 Kalamazoo Begins Grade BREAKFAST sublice ri -hairman, and/ to 16. That's what the advertise-@‘partly because our courts have pn alia Hiescass, his. De scaatts ine ent said. That's what the calor better system of reporting youth- Cc Grade ] LARGE Cc Vote Machine Drive (°x''sin"satemen lady _sasl_in_pecrog_at_your ful crime than most her sues | | SAUSAGE lb. {Chunk BOLOGNA Ib. v Cae released by the two parties said the n would be more accurate, m¢ nomical and much faster achnhines Lean-Beef ante 25. oe? a eee OPEN TONIGHT and EVERY NIGHT WHILE $75,000.00 STOCK LASTS? — OUR LEASE IS UP...FORCED TO VACATE! 2 = ‘\. (O\. 4 If — : Dottars k ‘ Li | Ls consideration of the 4 Ordinances of the | Shoulder-C ut VEAL - STEAK c lb. 2-lb. Package PURE Fresh-Lean GROUND BEEF KALAMAZOO (UP) — The Kala- mazoo County Republican and Dem committee today planned a joint drive for installa tion of voting Machines throughout the county in time for the August DETROIT w — Lt. Col. Joseph primary election next year, A. Gillis of Detroit, was elected A recommendation for the ma- president of the Department of chines will be presented to the Michigan Reserve Officers Assn county board of supervisors at its at the group's annual next meeting. The petition will be re eco- We Insure Musical Instruments \ H. R. MICHOLIE Insurance Agy. FE 2-2326 erat Detrott Colocs! Elecied c lb. yesterday convention 200 oh m4 f Qity-Charter a with ry Cw | i d in com Pabst “a Stanfields €5 Contract-c 47 Benard's 64 &Immor 47 Credit U “i one 5 42 High scfres—M 237. J Berkley 506, Shrine 973 vee | MOTOR INN HOUSE w 1 WwW Steel Eng 55 32 Resthaven a4 43) Peole’s 48 39 Urch Ty 32 Drees +H Pires wit * Gam Benson 44 4) Stroh's 12 68 High scores—i Koprince 332, E 8tem- mer 618 MOTOR INN “A” wt L Ctry View 8828 Clud “or 4a «4 eet 4838 Biter! Eng “« p weet airy @ WW Perry _— aT Se ¢ 46 41 Drewry 2 scores—L. Regvenes™ 243, 62. seen — LADIES Ww —- Lanes 4 « Doris — te 7 ’ 7 «4 Cremp Se Se | ond; | Frank Wheatley, Bill Law and Charles Ford served |® half weeks ago. | the weekend, | time out, with only one more night Moffat's handled by Tom Moffat of Wat- | kins Lake was first in the puppy | Series; LeGrande’ s “O'Leary,” sec- “Hogan of Riverrouge,’ owned by John Mehoke of Farm- | ington and handled by Ed Mclyor | was third and “Maple Ridge Nina,” Lynch of Clawson was fourth” _Cash C_ Patterson of Hazel Park | and Norm Ellis of Birmingham were judges | Bryan Thompson received fatal in- | accident.” ; of Michigan. Field trial chairman was Mr. | 2 !3- _— . Pe os 7 | Heading the list is Edgar Meads Tetreau; field marshall, Ted Stron-| Thompson, 23-year-old Philadel- Peon ee ee OO oe Coed regular guard last year | ski, and field secretary Robert | phian, died Sunday in St. Francis| overmatched or mismatched,” Baringer of Detroit. Ed Mclvor, president of the club; Chuck Benton, | ara. | 8S committeemen for the all-Irish | trial. Final Eliminations Held at Rolladium ,roller skating racing at Pontiac's and the next events on this season's race program will | | be the last of the year. On Saturday night the final race will be followed by award of tro- | phies and medals to winners. Champions also will be deter- | mined at this time by the highest- | points will decide. This weekend's winners were Juvenile “A” boys—Richard Hamlin Juvenile “B'—Dale Anderson and Pau)- Macahee._ Juvenile “C"— Micky “Dien and Kath- | leen LaLeone Close Title Race Social Katz team, employes of the Social Welfare Board. clinched the Oakland County Employes bowling league title in to roll, It took one point from Stardusters while runnersup lost one. Katz took the lead last No- W. Cobb, to Agnes secTetary. New Secretary Independent Ladies bowling league has completed its 1954-55 season and has just selected a new secretary for the coming year, Mary Hillman, president, reports. She is Mabel Lane. piel anne Baer hrosin nod | York Giant pinch-hitting ace, is mirrored in the | Babe Ruth Award he holds after its presentation Red Flame, owned and | | Sunday by the New York chapter of the Baseball | ‘Ring Injuries Are F. atal County Gridders on to Boxer From Philadelphia UM Spring Squad relay to defeat Orchard Lake St.| owned and handled by paced TRENTON, N.J. uw — The State | Walker in an interim report 10 | Athletic Commission will make a) days ago termed the fight ‘100 per formal report Thursday | boxing | Hospital, where he had been un- conse ious most of the time since on the chin in succession by Jerry Leudee of New Haven, Conn., his first March : The fatality was the first in box- ing in 1955. Final races of the fifth period | Pe ype had been National \ Rolladium rink were held during and won the All-Air Force middle- weight title last year. Broderick Boys Make Big Noise in Pin Test system. Points compiled | Boys of Monroe slammed into Ist | during the entire racing period | Place in the team handicap divi- | | sion of the state men's bowling | tournament over the weekend. cluding- | Placed Service Oil, | which had handicap Evans of Utica, Mich., the $12,500 prize money greater Greensboro Open golf tour- nament over the weekend. Evans | had a 285 and tied Doug Ford, of Miamesha Lake, N. Y., place. Sam Snead, White Sulphur Springs, W. and oe top prize of $2,200 } Major Homers Are On Rise Sunday Four - Baggers | Only 2 Shy of Record for Single Day NEW YORK #—What’s all this talk about a new outbreak of home runs? The American League and Na- | tional League combined to swat |a total of 28 homers Saturday, two | short of the record for a full slate jof eight games A look at the « Giants Getting ~ ferened Tired of Phils | Two of the 42 victories were ‘turned in by Robin Roberts and and 4-2 Scores | Johnny Antonelli was the loser in oo YORK wm — You can't | each. yon Giants if they are already a| LAFAYETTE, Ind. —The Pur- ag tired of the Philadelphia Phil- | que golf team defeated Wisconsin, lies and 42 scores. | 2344-12%, Michigan State, 29-7 and The Giants and Phils have met) Detroit, 30-6, in a quadrangular four times. Three times the Phils | golf meet Saturday. have won and each time the score! Wisconsin was runnerup, defeat- was 42, including beth games of | ed Michigan State + 2042- 1544. MEN WANTED To Train for High Salery Positions in Electronics, Radio & Television. Day and Evening Classes Allow You to Remain Fully Employed While Training. Mail Coupon or Call tor Complete WIC) 2.566] information. No Obligation. 7457 Weedward (Denevan ELECTRONICS INSTITUTE :. Il, and Mike Fetchick, {in four trips around the 6,000-yard [ean roun Country Club course with | rounds of 68-67-69-69._ Snead was always under par 70 records, please * é In the first week of last season, | the American League hit exactly | 43 home runs. In the first week of | this season, the American League , | hit exactly 43 home runs. The National League at this time | a year ago had 55 homers. There's an increase of eight (63) | after a week of the current cam. | | Paign, Bids. 8 wr Nerth ef Fes Theater . Appreved, 4-18 Township Softball Loop Signs 5 Teams — Five teams have registered, to date, for competition in the Water- ford Township Recreation Softball | League. The deadline for entries has been set as May 1 and any other interested teams should con | tact the Waterford Recreation de- partment before that time League play will begin May 16 with teams playing an average of 3 games each 2 weeks. A Little League and Junior League meeting is slated April 25 at 7:30 p.m. at | the Community Activities Building with: all players and potential man- agers interested tirged to attend These leagues will begin play June 20. All Township league game are played at the township's soft- QUALITY TOOLS ATLAS @ CLAUSING @ DELTA SHOPSMITH @ DeWALT PORTER-CABLE @ SKIL BROWN-SHARPE @ MILWAUKEE RENTALS GLENN WING POWER TOOLS 1437 SOUTH WOODWARD AVE. Five Blocks North of 14-Mile. Rood ' BIRMINGHAM MI 4-0444 DAILY 8 te 6:00 — FRI. 8 to 8:00 2 AP Wirephete Writers Association. The award goes to the out- standing player in the World Series. Rhodes was honored for his great hitting against the Cleveland Indians last fall. | ball park just off Dixie Highway ! in Drayton Plains. . REFLECTION—The face of Dusty Rhodes, New| HERE’S GOOD Four Oakland County on the| cent” in order and said Thomp- |“ listed on the bout in Which middle ewelght | sons Injury Was “an Unfortunate Practice roster ofthe -tniversity- athletes spring football and captain of the 1955 Wolverine Walker added. varsity. Jim Bates, veteran center Under a special insurance policy | from Farmington, also is included. | taken out in 1952 by the state ath-| Others are junior Mike Basford, | betic commission, Thompson's fam- | a fullback who lives in Birming- *. ¢ @ | ily will be the first to receive aj ham. but played high school ball He had been struck three times | $5,000 death benefit payment. at UD High in Detroit, and Tom The young Negro boxer had won Bullen, a sophomore from Clark- in | 104 of his 115 amateur fights be- ston. Bullen, former four-sport star professional fight here | | fore he turned pro. | at Clarkston High, is playing end. for THRIFTY MOTORISTS! Smart Looking Seat Protectors at a NEW LOW PRICE! fu’ ‘PROTECTOR UNIVERSAL COVER FITS MOST CARS he collapsed in the ring two and DELUXE FABRIC 165-pound champion in 1953 State Athletic Director Joseph BAY CITY @® — The Broderick The Monroe team had 3146, In- a Sand dis. | of Cassopolis, | including a 408 | 3144, Two other Monroe bowlers broke into the 1st 10 in other divisions. | - Merlyn Clark took over 3rd place in the actual singles with 683 and its last. Miles Kehres took over the all- events handicap lead with 2044. Max Evans Wins $190 |vember and were never headed, in Greensboro Tourney | according GREENSBORO, N. H. —Max won $190 of in the on your tapping jobs! | Procunier Tappers are the last word | in economical, accurate, high speed | tapping. They provide many unique | for 16th Va., won with a 273 MEN @ Heat Cabinet @ Special Exercise Exclusively for Men In Hotel Pontiac . YOUR WAIST LINE! @ Scientific ner Massage @ Infra-Red and Ultra-Violet Rays AL THOMAS Health Club construction features that permit | inexperienced operators to tap like experts—and experts become more | efficient. Procunier Tappers provide | many extra hours of continuous ac- curate tapping without frequent “down-time” interruptions and they produce more with fewer re- | jections, fewer spoiled pieces and a minimum. of broken taps. Check these features: 1. New sensitive double cone cork-faced | © ORIGINAL NEW CAR FABRIC e For Longer Life @ RICH NEW COLORS e For Modern Beauty © SIMPLICITY OF DESIGN ¢ For Quick Installation @ UPHOLSTERY QUALITY ¢ For Home Laundering @ COOL IN SUMMER © WARM IN WINTER Tailor your car with HY-LON washable seat cover protectors. These heavi ier, colorful upholstery fabrics help keep you cooler in QUICK — DEPENDABLE — GUARANTEED COLLISION WORK $!_ pith ton f NEW friction cluteh; the summer's heat and warmer in the winter's cold. So = to FE 5-9661 “TRU- 2. Soft, cushioned action driving pressure; | install . . . So easy to clean So easy to own at the low, low Grip” 3. Ball bearing equipped; price of . . Tap 4. Heat treated gears; HY-LON COVERS ARE TAILORED FOR A NEAT RT AND LONG WEAR 8. Special balanced gear reversing mech- anism; 6. Unique tap holding spindle support; 7. Smaller, lighter more accurate Tru-Grip Saas tap hohier: > plismeny other features: = Cutting Tools & Supplies Industrial Supply Distributors PLENTY OF OFF STREET PARKING W. Pike, Corner Gass FE 2-0108 No man can reed woihen like a book—but it's fun to turn the pages. ¢ ’ at OLIVER MOTOR Collision Shop 36 W. Pike Se. FE 2-9101_ See Robert Rectar, Mgr. for Free Estimates on All Makes of Cars , Me Distance Tee Greet (within reason) | FREE OPEN 9 to 9 PARKING Pontiac’s Motorist Headquarters TI W. Huron St. (Corner of Gass) FREE PARKING SS eee Fy TS | Defense Stocks ‘ ; Pp d se noon i a iar Nivici Wolfson May Get Foot ‘ U S rains DETROIT PRODUCE | y DETROIT. April 18 (UP) -- Wholesale = f . ices on public farmers’ markets re-_ I ) ported by the bureau of markets ¢ 1 ar S OOr Tl ay ane Are — . 2 : . “ CHICAGO w# — Secretary of ‘ Fruits’ Applies, Delicious, fancy, 5 50- NEW YORK «—Aircrafts and Lincoln . Mercury S lit; ; ; . . 00 bu: No 1, 400-450 bu: apples Jona - By MERRIYLE Avery contingent soberly claim } State Dulles’ statement that Red than. fancy, 400 bu. No i Poo. 3 25 bu. Some other defense stocks were in ; . ap ee. : ; i China is building up its military apples, McIntosh. fancy, 490 bu oe 1. demand today in a higher mar- 2 New Vice Presidents STANLEY RUKEYSER a majority of stockholder sup- $ - u: apples, Northern Spy. No ’ International News Service ort fi will further th ‘ ‘ ; 330-350 bu fancy, 400 bu. applies. | ket ’ ’ eee tated Nhat | yd Lod Lh. vt potential for a possible attack on Steele's Red, No 1. 3 75-450 pu Buyers bid up such issues as re- | Named in Expansion Economic Commentator to coneede that the Wolfson — - . ; 5 Vegetables: Beets, topped. No 1. 125- ~ o> acaba | _ » dav o ‘cision sche . : . : n Senenen: (Ee ieed. Dagan ane (pce | . bu. Cabbage. No 1. 100-125 bu. ports indicated the Chinese Reds DETROIT «UP» Ernest R we _ -_ “ — * “ —_<<. ; ~ ari cabbage, red No}. 1 50-2 rots, = eae . uled for nex riday in the Mon represent: : covering in grain and soybean fu- | topped. Wo i, 100-1 50 bu ‘Celery root, Were building up their air power Breech, Ford Motor Co. board gone, Ward & ( ican: Tale “ maton tures on the Board of Trade today. No a = —— Morsoreaish rg Opposite Formosa hein. tod iu Belm : “s ° atl ‘i . As to this, Wolfson, in his public ; : : ; 200- = F 25-17 : ‘hairman oday announce e we oindicati F i AUS W heat and soybeans showed the bens Cuions ric No 1) 90-1 ie 50 ‘ib General Dynamics opened = on . ‘ _ Ce ie ; — 1 , - Statements, has repeatedly indi- most strength, claiming more than = = fate’ mo 1. 100-308 32- 7,000 shares up 348 at 71, Douglas election of two new vice presidents , F Wolfsor the challenger. may cinted that. if he doee noi atiain ‘ents j p = y ot be et his foo tle Way into th : two cents a bushel at times, Parsnips, No | 1580-200 ‘e-bu. Potatoes, Aircraft 1.400 shares up 244 at 80 of the firm in a “major organiza i; ie 10K pte RY Any The control of the world’s second larg Ww - what Ne 1. 225-275 $0-Ib b t N 7 - 2 - OO Corn and oats were somewhat 425-6 % 100-I> eae om Ul ogre soda et Bath Iron Works 1.500 up 3 at 58's. hanal and management expan : j , Wie ahat the on mail order house this time. he me glected in the buymg movement fancy t 00 S-ib box Ne 1. 65-75 $-Ib Being 1.800 up 1'4 at 73's. and Rn - ee ii a / us by will never give up the strugyle for Corn receipts were fairly substan ase ial aniesee ee 25 nC rg Westinghouse klectric 1.500 up 1: — * * * peony rs . ~~” the rest of his life Some of Wolf tial at 241 cars, and traders Sid Turnip, topped, No 1. 150-200 bu. at 794 | i t ware Ay AS ES ns outside supporters predict shi ping dem and out of Chicago ~ ~ : ; i ‘ ON Pansien WMudes tv es group this Lear ; BS t a itl Z y ge DETROIT KGGs Avco Mig., which Is getting ROBERT P. BRIGGS tablishment of separate Lincoln helabl ' the Wolfson group will elect three : : D 1 . ; Reliable spokesmen = for the rectors Near the end of the first. hour Vcirsll,” close” moekea’ ma at into defense work more heavily, ope and Mercury divisions and the ' , eee wheat was 1% to 144 higher, May — " ¥ opened on 10,000 shares up ‘s at Utility Shareholders formation of a new special products Apart from this one) company i i é fnites—Grade A | ‘ h - pu : $2.09'2; corn was unhchanged to ®verage 45, medtum reno gr ene al It Was Friday’s most active division s the impheations of the struggle are 34 higher, May $1.46: oats were So eee ave issue unchanged. Chrysler, up . * * * . if oun far-reaching , ° : 1 om : rge r e up ™% to 4s, May 72%; rye was un-, © Jerse 34 ' eee 14 Friday, started today on | | eef urs ay senson Fagd. who has been vice ’ ’ If corporate management has in 7 c s 33 side rer ; changed to 1% higher. May 9844; T iat was receipts 8409 cases 4,500 shares up I's at 814s. | DISSEITE RINE Genera) XHANR RIE tt ome instances developed its own : Serve: cin Baaee 9 nan Commercially graded Pesidents of the Pontiac area the Lincoln-Mercury divisions as . . wpe of bureaucracy P wy a ybeans were ahead 1 to 2 cents Wiiltes=-OraderAvexire large 44, large Higher with the aircrafts were Resid oe woe ; ; t f mers ‘ hd May $2.52 and lard was un 41-44. medium 38-39 the steels motors radio-televi who are stare —_ 1 Se ta mac a Pe 0 In Or qd ee eal ee Br« —O ‘ 1 aim - C pans . > new position of vicexpresident ' t ' changed to 10 cents a hundred = doled rele 39-41, medium sions, coppers. ciemicals, bulding sumers Power Company have been the new position of : pre jent exercise their latent a rity may pounds lower, May $13.17. Market steady but overall trading dull material motion pictures, and called to the annual regional stock- and group director of Mercury and help to keep hired men executives | and supplies adequate Strength of th ” , Sp skc “Ort sons ° ae . . . “ | erkel Sponars to be dus te ‘he strong | railroads | poi cs ea eting by David - a special products divisior Victim Last Seen With on their toes utur market an tl A ' F Wisi lanag 0 » 4 ° Grain Prices Se ee: aePerene Higher stocks included New | 24rd. @ivision ~manager a William) Clay Ford, who con Man Who Later Killed Certainly the change of con r . . | company s southeast division : : CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGs York Central, Paramount Pictures, | Gerhard ud tt : ‘ il) linues as vice president and gen- if trol last vear in three railroads 2 ril . ars) . ’ ernare sal Ve neeting 1 ° J ,EMICAGO, Anni 18 VAP) —-onening Sly Meine trian Eton sae” | CS. Gypsum. Wester on eee ei ee land oral manager af the Continental Self, Wounded Wife and in ather corporate situa ner e 10 | t we rele i os a } ‘ lle 5 ! ST iceat—< 100', in Prices unchanged 93 score AA $7 Phelps Dodge, Air Reduction a : ; division, will assume the added oo . tions show, that free enterprise . is = * 92 A 57 B 5475 88 C 5425. cars nen Token ; . . Center Auditorium at 7 45 pm., . bil , . CRESTVIEW Fla P?—The bod fay, 1... 208 Be 103 99 B 8825 89 C5475 Amencan Tobacco, Baldwin-Lima- hict Rot P Br responsibilities of vice president . — Beers , Potentially is ever freer than v 196 Dec 1.06's Eggs irregular receipts 30073. whole. Hamilton U.S. Steel, General Mo- 2! “Men time and group director of Lincoln and °f 4 17 seat-old SE some of those who give lip serv De« ~ S9T*s beans sale buying prices unchanged to 1!', 7 . me executive vice president, will talk —_ 7 who had been fussing four days c me , M 251 wer UBS large whites 70 per cent ang ‘Ors United Aircraft, and RCA ' fl ' - - - Continental divisions. ' it ‘ onan ice to the slogan realized ' . ” . , . rie \ z yt le OmMpe \ mS as t > oi YT VW Ooh “y 145% Ju 241 tr As 3835 60-699 per cent As 38 Friday's stock market;was high. DUCly adeut the company s : FOC Perith hast - renee urocceel aunts \ | ' oS . a ed 36 mediums 35 US standards _ a ness and plans. and discuss recent ( eith has been elected vice area about three miles from. this \hile it is important to get a Be 144'2 Nov 229 65 dirties 36. checks 38, current re- @F With the Associated Press aver- r dant Sencrnl f , ; | De 1 Jar 252‘. celpts 365 deselopments in the elect: and President and general manager of northwest Florida town vesterday eonentation on the digzmity of | P ‘ age of 60 stocks up $1.00 at $161 80 Wea. hel a als 7 La 2 That t th , tits highest &4S industries thre lereury Division to help Ben Walton Count Sheriff Aubrey O’fership the fair minded obser, flav, 7 4 T lal pr ne average at its highes - Lath " : " : Ys ’ 46 : . 12 48 DETROIT POULTRY level ve os ‘ The company is he Iding ten such son Ford MeDonald said Margie Paul of er should resist any demagour Me , a : o . } a perce + eo ia eee, regional sessions in its Michigan Ben DD Mills has been elected Paxton about Jy miles north of tendency to bla als corporate exer Rie - Dec. . 1350 [ly live poultry up to 10 an ~~ er » area this month, Gerhard yy resident and geegral man- Crestview had been shot) three utives for trends which they did May . oa Heaevy hens 26-29 light hens 18-20 New York Stocks ' ag 4 oie 5 hen , th not originate | . So ee heavy broilers or fryers (3-3', |bs - ag ager of Lincoln division. He alsa times through the head with a .2Z- ! b . whites 35. barred rocks 37-39 ins ten tor ning crests scene) a: - vill continue as assistant general caliber pistol, Certainly, during the prolonged | : Pesiaruy wa wax - ama Ex . 242 Le B . f manager of the Continental Di . bg : ideological ayitation in the direc amir 2 - "r » ar nven ories ! CHICAGO Sexil 15 wate be A r Ree ue 0 26 ews in rie Visitor The officer reported Margie had tion of a mixed economy. the in barely steady. rec eipts in "sik, a sated, wehbe “8 oe > » = ~ . not been seen since leaving home! stitution of private enterprise was ‘yest y 161 coops 37.794 Ib) fob Allied st 9! ‘a Pontiac Police today reported PF Krafve who was assistant Wednesday might with Curry ©. taking a long term beating -payl prices unchanged heavy hens Allied Strs x 812 a breakin of the Davenport Res . "1 I “ = = 22 ht hens 16-165: broilers or Alls Chai a 485 general manager of the Lincoln. Carter 9 of Defunmiak Springs § tr 34-365 old roosters 12-125 Alyy Lid a9 sg «(aurant, 216'2 Branch St.. over the Mercury division. will be general Carter critically wounded = h The corporate executives were : AiR A 13 sé! week end when thieves ioled & \ £ id wile. Bue ma chor hin the victims, not the causes, of eae ee Am Airh 447 manager of the special products sear-old wilt ella, and shot fil . Li k Am Ca: 125 vending machine division self to death Thursday with a 2” the emotional surge in the direc Vv Am Cyat 5 5 ‘ . tion of glorifying a md towar Dealers Have 624,277 ivestoc An ae a El 4 16 Oscar Mergan of %61 Crystal A Lincoln division field” sales caliber pistol nalieeltslaatlon ol ow ward - . DETROIT LIVESTOCK Am Mot oan >) P ac force will be established in the fi McDonald said Carter had been ; foto 01 Lake Dr complained to Pontiac re Alil De abisi } e i e Units on Hand April 1, _ DETROIT April 19 Am N Gas 5 42 pohce that th a had stolen a ture. Meanwhile the Mercury di. “Boing with” Margie’'s sister, Ed individual freedom of choice. Hogs Salabie 1200 Ne Am Mad or olice Ne es at rede . ; 1 = ; Trade Paper Says Cat Salabie 2 600 An acai ‘ 126 tire and wheeHrom his auto which! Vision field sales organizations will "4 Paul about he teen-age! Speciheally the national s! Am Smelt ‘ 824 parked in Tront of his home’ represent ‘both drvrstons left bome with Carter, the officer mores tended to belittle the sights Ld DETROIT t®—Dealer inventories : ph “A. a + = Be . Sunday, The appointments were effective %4 d to show } where her sister of the shareowner—the capitalist of new automobiles hit a postwar earil Arm Tot 7 ar BU 4) . immediately worked. whether big or petty—to a fair re record high mark of 624.277 units — me : spate oar ae Roe ; 634 so Py . ca 9 Rex D. Chambers, 20, of Roch ee ee Carter left three letters. one ad- turn. it is desirable to explore on April 1, Automotive News re re demand fair for cows at Anac WA‘ se Dis C Seag 1 ester, paid a $108 fine and $15 costs dressed to Walton County Judge the reasons behind the trend 5 to weak pr ult y f Ar o 8: 784 Doug Air 796 » Trotmar nm re 4 ‘ ported today. om and odd pe a ¢ ‘a hoice Atmour & Co 186 Dow Chem 42 Saturday after he pleaded guilty to Deported Hoodlums Dan Trotman and the others t » his Unprecedentedly heavy demands The trade paper said. however,” Ib. slaughter steers and veurlings — Lal G a 2 y P . 774° reckless driving before Orion Town- four children, ‘Trotman sai . The on « orporate receipts were made 1 j ‘ 1482 Eagle P - ' | . men , that in the current new car sales oe ‘ Stall lime Sy es Aion isa ship Justice Helmar G_ Stanaback a “ received mentioned ‘Tam- 5, yroups and segments other than situation the record inventory total 1 19 Se iy 3 Fast K "82 0 arc on ome Hy trouble the owners. With the 7 : oe oy a1 ca : . “y 1 e owners ag falls short of a month's supply mercial 18 ae ae a id 194 : . Mus I es After pleading guilty to reckless = the residual claimants to net in _ ; py ~~ Ea See ao te , a atten Sertirrre —24+— = ree shomndtred— = co pep ae ——— THUS, The PEPE E MARIA, THE MTree COSY TZ WETC OS SERRATE Sed Sera nce Sek ee ee ety Reet Rete Ae ee ™ orth Branc come, they “ere taxing a beating April 1 sto kpile fails to take on cia b ia 1) $0 16 50 a ie 5 dea = x AV 573 Erte RR PY 1 rh = im - 7 , hin ‘ - » “d Siar eee “endesicabtes”* w.b0 Wer relatiwely when the labor umons, jhe burdensome aspect of the last 12 00 - matauie aun teas . ees - -. i Er us > ang fine and $10 costs te appe aw deported to Italy made plans to School Holds 1ided by political allies and by cars-on-hand record — the 602.275 Param aea hari: 7 “nas a ed =: Bocimg! Air 14 Pirestone e be fore ( rion Towr ship Justice he day for a “hunger9 march’ on favorable legislation. were becom- untts counted May 1, 1954, when ees chotce tere pee ala rn tet Salt re i: ce Sees Rome to “underline the tragic sit Mardi Gras ing increasingly powerful and in . 2 66 mmercia ] - é ‘ ” . senile hisiiuliaiitiiial ane Opening slow. Bore Warn... ea) en Bae 196 =e buy or sell in Waterford, “Alon , flexible claimants on corporate re “The latest census represented aa ‘ ee se hae rr 102) Briggs Mf salel cicalP 3. «Drayton Plains or Clarkston area Frank Frigenti. a hoodlum of the NORTH BRANCH -—- Barbara ceipts. » Dulk receip's Bris: My 332 Gen Mills 113 Mit os ea! Estate. OR Al Capone era. said the deportees Seelye and Donald Voliweiler, can = apes ocapaeel ore — = _ 5. ee . ope = ae . me " see Adv had = me “men without he pe didates from tt . PMO Mor lass ™ > = in, during mere B a - C 9 apie : = : —! ‘ co er 1 I ype ates fr 1 the sophomo cle ‘ 562.655 cars noted as of March . : meee, fh Gen Rete 33 711 sani che te ducers : ~ I ; m \ Years of social experimentation, ; = - ” ° 2 nd ca p gern ere an er ueen an ing, re 1. A year age in April there To Invite Bi Four —— An 14] GGen Te 464 Rummage sale. Redeemer Luth- H Aded ~ wy et what or . - m ‘ rd political schemes to soak the an ’ ? . . > * °F ImMmpis om get whal Ively art Ps n j were 605,911 units in stock na- g rerleal a ha c] en [Sn #7 eran Church of Birmingham. 1800 I ” Eee: Sirs a ‘ ale S , wh, ~ oo a ' rich, and to finance wars and re- tionally.” . Can Pa 10 Otlette 71 |W. Maple, April 21, 22. 9 00-5 00 ea ras in The sepool EY MNASIUTT ated international projects, the Capital Air! 28 «Goebel Br.. 82 —Adv Friday evening Miss Barbara The invehtory includes cars on or n Carrier Cp aye ciondrichi Aad . Frigenti said the march on Tatar sate tax collectors, national, state : Sots ae ~- - Case St ITS Gotdyear .. 627 ; - ' Rome was for the purpose of see- a lec: we becom display in dealership showrooms Ee : . Cater Trac 074 Grah Paige 26 Rummage sale and Resale Shop. , US Amb aah Cl Dancing was accompanied by = ni ote lai — & warehoused by*dealers and facto- VIENNA (INS)—The Big Fou eraia dtc Tiss Birmingham First Methodist ng U.S. Ambassador OPE ane niaved by The Blue Now creasingly exacting claimants on ries, used aS demonstrators, and powers will be invited as soon as rMtW YORK April is “Compiled by Church, Maple at Pleasant. Thurs. “un tere and Italian Premier Oncheitcs corporate income, = The ssociated res r 5 = f o “eipa. = apie sul in — possible to start negotiations aimed “jo ons 1S 60 APC aE ivan & Ye 2: aaY Colored streamers. balloons and On top of this. the budgets of 2S eee NY a at final settlement of an Austrian! Prev day meu a If your friend's in jail and needs) Th hoodlum explained confetti formed the decorative 'ypical American famihes were af Automotive News said, is the ‘‘cul- _ » ; Week ago 1.. 2191 mig fee Navies bail, Ph. FE 5-9424 or MA 5-403). “We intend to ynderline the trag- motif. fected by inflation and the ups mination of a steady climb ance: Mate leet. t rear weer" “ ara He 7 oo —Adv. ic situation of 500 and more de . oe and downs of the business cvcle a postwar low of 1546 607 was es Chancellor Julius Raah made the 1955 high ..... 2225 1343 724 rae a = portees send to Italy as ‘undesir M H It P d ti Accordingls in many periods tablished last November, and 1 announcement yesterday ‘and said 1988 Gad ; 203 | i149 6:2 148 § Ai F f p b ables’ after serving long = prison ay ha roaucrion competition for a share in the markedly free of dealer criticism. the Austrian question was ‘‘rela-_ 1954 los ao 1419 278 556 1089 if orce 0 10 e sentences in America and now of Willys Auto Line eustomer's dolar has heen esx The trade paper also noted that tively easy to solve DETROIT sTOCK« r - wuthout work, money and often . : ceedingly keen, and there was at new car registrations for January He said the recently-concluded (Hornblower wae Detroit Man S Case food."* TOLEDO. Ohio A spokes-; times resistance tp passing..on to and February of this year MUM! Moscow agreement on terms of. Figures after decimel pains gl one —_—+ ———— man for Willys Motors here has the customers added costs forced “ors ‘ 5 : wa el . Cr ee } . bered 916.278. The figures for two gn Austria state treaty should lpia Minera Soc 164178) DETROIT WH — The discharge of In ce Firm Mork confirmed as “substantially cor- on business by outside legislation months showed Ford leading Chev- make a Germ a ;) Kingston Produces aM bs ans _ a i surance Fi rect’ a report that the firm may taxation and umon pressure | let 197,572 to 176.064 in the race soi sei i Masco Screw* , *$° a Detroit airman as a_security risk - . aan ariain I ee anid tes a we easier to settle. Midwest Abrasive: #2. 70 has been held up by the Air Force Start of Its 25th Year Stop making passenger Vvenicles; Tf to any degree, the stock: | for’ first place. For third place 2aab Rudy Mfg" . Wolds under the name of Willys holder became the forgotten man | Buick Pl 1th 102,216 t Raab, speaking at an election Wayne screw: { on the appeal of Rep. Diggs ‘D- Employes of Allstate Insurance . bale Sh a re n uick topped ymot ee is) . e Vind A . 3 a4 ‘ ves : Under current plans, however. torces 5 ork ~orrec’ | . rally near Vienna, said the Mos- No sale bid and asked Mich) Crennent, Seladk tales . ing the life of a 19-year-old mother | out formal charge James Dairy set ncnenans pn emmeny western) Diggs said yesterday that Tal- as the largest writer of direct be made ot mn “ ir ” i "| High School ,y tre } . ely ark: un nged - - ~uts > Wi ce, Pas . who apaprently tned to commit! 4 of petroit. for questioning by | 1884 (guildery 3621, off ees, Hol bott had agreed to hold up action automobile insurance premiums CUts In f - ene. eS eee Police Set. Lester. Coykandall ; ss 1 ' L 5 9 E suiside . Detroit authorities in the Barbara | hae li At cC cent gunchanged. on the case pending further in- with a staff of nearly 10,000 until August 1 will be the guest speaker, and will Air 2.C. Terrance K. Jensen and | Gaca rape-slaying den iKtona) 19 fs unchanged Switzer- vestigation. George C. Powell, office mana- oo oo demonstrate the proper use of ~ ¢ , a franc) ‘free, 333 ’ . “i a ry = P " - s > : thew ane | a Shen they les 4 Dairy was arrested Friday,.| Denmark ‘krone 14 50° unctianged. | The” congressman said Davis’ | &¢ ‘i cir are mi plans for its City Woman Injured firearms the woman’s aid when they heard | : = : ~ Latin America Argentina (free, 724 c . “de . . - “Silver Jubilee’ year. . oe ' h : hile ourtesy | shortly before he was to leave for unchanged Brazil iffee) 127 pathanesd discharge order stemmed from a : in Three-Car Collision er screams while -on COUrTCSY | Niexico. He has not been ques- gag A An unchanged. Venezuela :boii- Charges “‘of Commumst = affilia —_ ” _ , ™ S . var } u h . . . = a patrol duty at the Mount Clemen: ‘tioned by El Paso police but has to Mecaaneed tions’ brought against him in “a Oxford Girl Injured Ruby Oen, 20. of 7 Foster St police station. denied to newsmen any connection . . letter from his wife's employer.” was treated at Pontiac (;eneral Jensen stripped off his clothing | with the disappearance and death Recover Bodies of Trio ——-— — -— | When Auto Overturns Hospital Jast night for cuts and and jumped in the chilly Clinton of the 7-year-old Detroit girl. Killed in Ocean Crash Firemen Seek Youngster | After the car in which she was bruises suffered in a S-car acci- River after the woman, and Mel- Dairy, twice convicted on morals . _ riding overturned on Indianwood dent on Howard near Edison St . sale . . SAINT GEORGE, Bermuda Who Set $1 4,800 Blaze . = . Pal ; \ ton pulled them both ashore with | charges involving minor girls. in Aa The bod 5 net fe] ’ road near Joslyn road Saturday Pontiac Police said she was a —_ ; : —_ e bodies of a ree : . ee Ee . Sermo IT nN alte ven by a life preserver. ollie now 7 is oe - airmen killed in the crash of an. GRAND RAPIDS \#—Firemen eV ae as Bernice Fe i anjpek F oe nge a 1 fe a y a a onia Hospital for the Criminally £ . : : 23. of Oxford, was treated for cuts LaVenna L. Lash, 21, of 10 ‘ woman told police she had e -47 sought a youngster today believed . : ; The Pe Insane. American B-47 jet bomber have and bruises at St. Joseph Mercy chanic St., which struck the rear argued with her husband and was despondent because he had taken their daughter and left her. Col. William A. Tape, Selfridge commander, said he would seek a soldier's medal for Jensen for his | part in the rescue. Youth Accused of Taking Liberties With 3 Girls Pontiac Police ordered a 16-year- old boy held in the Oakland County Children's Home yesterday after the youth was accused of taking indecent liberties with a 6-year-old and two 4-year-old girls. Capt. Clark M. Wheaton, chief THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1955 Ford Breaks Up » Avery Favored U. S. Foreign Aid Hit $4.6 Billion Last Year WASHINGTON (® — U. S. for- eign aid came to $4,669.000,000 last ‘year, most of it for building up the military power of this coun- try's allies. . The commerce department said yesterday this net total of gifts | and loans — after subtracting loan | repayments—was about one-fourth “—_ than in 1953, | GRAND RAPIDS u—A 500-bed | been recovered, U. S. Air Force | officials said yesterday. | They were identified as Maj. M. D. Lowry of McDill Air Force Base, Fla., Maj. George Melching Jr., of Wellsburg, W. Va.. also from McDill Field and Ist Lt. Patrick Riley of Elgin Air Force Base, Fla. a : The plane crashed into the ocean shortly after taking off from Kindley Air Force Base Friday morning. Geiger Counters at UM responsible for setting a_ fire which caused $14,800 damage yes- terday to a house. two garages and | three trailer trucks Fire Marshal Adrian P. Rigney | said a boy, about 8 or 10 years old, is believed to have started the | blaze in a motor freight garage. | Nearby residents reported having | seen a small boy playing with matches in the area before the fire broke out. No one was injured in the blaze. Wixom Man Arrested ‘Hospital Addition Asked Signal Route of A-Cloud | After 2-Car Accident | ANN ARBOR ® — University of | William H. Thompson, 65, of of detectives, said the youth lured addition to the Michigan veterans | the three girls into his home while | facility was proposed Saturday at | Michigan Geiger counters recorded | Wixom, was arrested on a drunk passage early Sunday of a radioac- | driving charge Saturday night his parents were away. The par-| aq meeting of the facility board of | tive cloud from last Friday's atom- | after his car was involved in a ents and neighbors in the area’ managers, No action was taken on began a search for the girls after | appointment of a commandant to | - pawn a te yr . a a a Ue ae eka ic blast in the Nevada desert. Dr. Gerald M. Ridenour, radio- ' signed last November, Named Pancake Queen The 6-year-old girl tgld her par- ents, according to Wheaton, she fled from the house while the youth was molesting her sister. ~ GLEN (@® — Joan peg ' 17-year-old Fennville Schoo) Man Struck by C 4 senior, has been named 1955 pan- George Mclver, 44, 290 N.| cake queen. She will rule over the | Paddock St suffered seventh annual Glenn Pancake after he was by | Festival June 24-26. The festival, a hit-run\auto on Baldwin originated ‘in 1937, was suspended near K cs to | during World War II but revived Podfiac Police. Was treated at | in 1952 to funds for a ¢om- Pontiac munity center, > versity, reported a crease in normal background. ra- slight in | Carlson, SB. of Wolverine Lake, | head-on crash on M218 near Walled | Lake. | told Oakland County Sheriff's dep- ,|diation occurred between 3 and! yties that Thompson's car crossed |4 a.m. the center line and struck his. Thompson was treated for face cuts at Pontiac General Hospital. | —_—_—_—_——— Drowns Fishing in Ditch | CHATHAM, Ont, @ — Henry Hamlin, 37, of Detroit drowned yesterday in an irrigation ditch near Chatham, Ont. from a bridge while Bec | Hospital. She was riding with Otis Caswell, | 23, of 6595 Elizabeth Lake Rd., who told Oa?land County Sheriff's depu- ties he lost control on a curve Caswell was treated for an injured shoulder. of a stopped auto driven by Mil lard E. Christain, 20, of 283 S Jessie St Christain’s auto was pushed into another forward car driven by Dallas F. Stickney, 79 of 2460 Dutton, Rochester, said police Can you afford NOT To HAVE GOOD BRAKES? SAFE BRAKES SAVE LIVES! Let Us Inspect Your Brakes Be Safe. Be Sure. Act Now. BRAKES ADJUSTED you don't have an account. WAKE VER Pts BUY BETTER—PAY LESS with a cash loan from HFC © Buy at sale prices the things you need and want now, without waiting. @ Shop for the bargains, even where @ Loans made without endorsers. Easy- to-meet requirements. One-day service, : _— f / i | Le Can t Stop GAW Reuther Pledges Union, Ford Resuming Talks Today; GM Meet Slated Wednesday DETROIT (UP) CIO United \uto Workers negotiators resumed talks with Ford Motor Co officials today with a renewed promise that their guaranteed annual wage could not stopped. The confident promise was made Saturday night by CIO and UAW President Walter P. Reuther in a speech the Cook County Ills ClO orgamzation drive be he fore “The forees fighting the guar- anteed annual wage,”’ Reuther said, “are the same ones that fought such things as pensions. They can't stop the guaranteed annual Wage, just as they couldn't stop pensions.” Reuther also repeated his charge that the National Association of Vanufacturers WAS raising a $.41.000 000 fund to conduct a cam- paign against the G > He said the NAM had denied the charge when he made it previousiv but he had photostaie evidence of the drive Ford negotiators had no cem- ment on Reuthers remarks as thes entered the negotiations. They il) refused comment on how far gotiations Rad progresse d, he ne Preliminary talks with Ameri- can Motors Corp. are expected t be resumed tomorrew and (seneral Motors officials were ex- pected to resume talks with the C10 negotiators Wednesday, Ford and GM full-scale talks’ while American the preparatory are conducting with the union Motors still is in stage Similar talks with Chrysler Corp, and auto producers are expected to begin at a later date Glee Club $0 Entertain Brooks PTA Tonight two smaller MiLFORD—The Lee O. Brooks School will hold its monthly PTA meeting at 8 pm. today at the st Hees} Entertainment will be furnished by the Sth and 6th grade Glee Club, under the direction of Miss SOs oO No Contract Necessary FUEL OIL Call Today. | Gregory Oil Co. 94 East Walton Bivd. Phone FE 5-6141 Will Buy Your Land Contract at Low Discount List Your Property With Us for Quick Sale WM. H. KNUDSEN Realtor $10 Pontiac Bank Building Phone FE 4-4516 For the Yastest relief imag- inable, use Super-Soft Dr Scholl's Zino-pads. They also remove maliceues one of the quickest ways known te 99° this month only * oo ot WHEELS ALIGNED CASTER, CAMBER, TOE-IN $7.50 BRAKES RELINED As Low As $13.95 MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS” 20 i” 2 6 perm | paren | agree | paren 5.03 9.24 S 6.65 § 7.20) 9.98 | 18.39 13.11 | 14.21 | 19.77 | 36.59 19.55 | 21.20 29.55 47k 31.39 | 34.16 09 | 9.02 A th OR that part of 4 teiawes wol excerding 350 Om thai part of @ baiame tm emcess « in @jHOUSEHOLD FINANCE —~Coysoration of Pontiae —— 34 South Saginaw St: The Kay Bidg.; 2nd Floor PHONE: FEderal 4.0535 1. “Gens made to mesideats-ef mhanky toate nd