“113th YEAR 
  
| ize h ers and for, approximately a mil- The Weather 
Thursday: Showers 
Details page two a 
PONTIAC, 
  MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL   
» 
20, 1955—44 PAGES’ RMAKE OVER PAGES ONTIAC PRES# ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PR 
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE 
  
+ ewe kk 
  
House Facing 
2nd Showdown 
on Postal Pay May Risk Ike Veto by 
OKing Raise of More 
Than 7.6 Per Cent | 
WASHINGTQN \? — The, 
House, apparently in a mood ’ 
to risk a presidential veto, | 
faced today a second show- | 
down in a month on pay 
raises for the government’s 
500,000 postal workers. 
President Eisenhower has 
hinted broadly he will veto 
any increase larger than 
about 7.6 per cent. 
But backers of a big- 
ger raise on March 21 defeated, 
302-120, a bill to provide such an 
increase when it came to the floor House 
under procedure barring changes. 
The same bill came back te 
day, but this time opened to an 
amendment permitting the Ho. > 
to hike the raise to 8.2 per cent. 
The Senate voted a 10 per cent 
pay raise for the postal pay work- 
  lion classified civil service work- | 
ers 
Rep. Corbett (R-Pa), backing 
this average 8.2 per cent increase, | 
told newsmen in advance of de- | 
bate 
“Unless the President makes a| 
flat statement that he's against it, | # 
    
     
Stanley Mack 6year-old Who's Afraid of Polio Shots? 
“tga SOM 5 
United Press Phete | July 1, $2.1 
| marked for 15 non-Communist na- 
4 
| stan. for $3.5 Billion — 
in Foreign Aid Most of Money Would 
Go to Fight Asia Reds, 
Congress Told 
AUGUSTA, Ga. (?}—Pres- 
ident Eisenhower today 
asked Congress for three 
and a half billion dollars to 
fight communism around 
the globe—most of it to 
meet “the immediate threats 
to world security and sta- 
bility now centered in Asia.” 
The President's special 
message was dispatched to 
_the lawmakers from his va- 
cation headquarters in Au- 
gusta. Later today Eisen- 
hower planned to fly back 
to Washington, ending nine 
'days of golf and work. 
Harold E chief of the 
Foreign Operations Administra- 
tion, disclosed last month that of 
the 3'2 billions in mutual security 
assistance the administration 
wants for the fiscal year starting 
$0 300.000 would be ear- Stassen, 
tions of Asia. 
Those countries stretch in a 
great are from dapan to Afghani- 
Along that are are two of 
the major trouble spots of the 
area—Formosa and Viet Nam.   + 
Pals Adrift in Capital 
0 yt 
ee Challenge State Highway Department President Asks ‘Turnpike Group 
Wants Answers 
to Six Queries Public Hearing Slated 
Tonight in Senate on 
Quashing Toll Road 
The Michigan Turnpike 
Authority challenged the 
State Highway Department 
and the Wayne County 
Highway engineer last night 
to build a free road com- 
parable to the proposed 
113-mile toll road from 
Rockwood to Saginaw. 
If a free road can be built 
as quickly and efficiently as 
the toll road, the turnpike 
authority said it might re- 
consider its plans. 
Meanwhile, the authority 
\r Wirephote WaS embarked today on a 
DAD MISSING—N ine- year-old ,Charies Hopkins and his do 
comfort each other at a Washington police station while eftorts wert 
Charles explained, police said, that he 
his father became separated at a movie shortly after their 
in Washington from Lawrence, Mass. The pair were 
parted, the boy sent to Receiving Home and Spot rested at the animal 
Rescue League, while efforts were made to locate some of the family. Spo nt, 
made to locate his father and 
arnval 
temporarily 
    
Home and Builders Show : 
Will Open Here Thursda | = {_Sacblane. program of attempting to 
“sell” eastern Michigan 
groups on dropping opposi- 
tion to the state’s first toll 
road in modern times. 
The campaign of persuasion and 
education was outlined last night 
to the Senate Highways Commit- 
;tee and House Roads Committee. 
It was a preliminary to tonight's 
public hearing in the Senate on 
bill launched by Sen. William 
 ovahad (R-Royal Oak) to 
abolish the authority and quash the 
Saginaw-Rockwood toll road. 
The Citizens Protective Assn. 
a group founded 
‘and Fratkiin   
it will pass. Even if the President 
does make such a statement, it 
will be nip and tuck.’ 
No new word came from the 
President te a Republican House 
strategy meeting late yesterday | 
See 
litical issue of the year, 
Republican House Leader Mar- 
tin of Massachusetts said the Pres- 
ident had made it clear earlier | 
that he is for no more than a 7.6) 
per cent raise 
by it.” 
Democratic House leaders pre- in Madison, 
is first first-grade stude 
| after receiving 
° iil., 
Salk polio vaccine shot grins broadly 
dicted the larger increase would | 
be voted and said they expected 
to carry a number of Republicans | 
along with them. day in the densely populated south Oakland County area. 
Dr. John D. Monroe,*~—— : 
But Chairman Murray (D-Tenn) . 
of the House Post Office Commit- | Some 9,500 children in Pon- 
tee? author of the 7.6 per cent tiac, Waterford Township, 
bill. said “I'm fighting for the bill | 
    
  os & ta." ond teclered thet the | Birmingham and Ferndaie+ 
proposed changes would “‘distort” | Will receive their polio vac- 
the postal pay schedules. cine Saturday, May 7, in 
Parents are responsible for get- 
| ting children to the Saturday 
® . | clinics, while school buses are 
Poised on Coas being used today in the rural 
Dr. Monfoe urged pa 
500 Jets Are Included | have not yet returned plo 
in Buildup Near Taipei, | term t te echeols to do ve of 
. ence, The slips, which must be 
_Newspaper Claims | 
TAIPEI, Formosa ®—Red China| children can get the free shots, 
has 800 planes — 500 of them jets| musy be returned not later than 
— along the Fukien and Chekiang | April 29, 
acre he eek eso Mere than 8,000 children who re- 
The paper, which has some | ceived the vaccine in last year's 
sources inside the Nationalist Chi- tests are scheduled to get booster 
nese government, §aid new- types! shots in the second round of clinics 
of Russian built planes were in-| next month. | central clinics. 
800 Red Planes 
a. 
signed by parents before their 
mosa, the China News said today. | 
volved in the , buildup. county health director, said Dgqnish Oldsters He covers the spot with one hand and holds the 
sucker he got - a reward with the other. 
  
County: s Rural Siudents Outside Jurists 
Getting Polio Shots Today Will Help Here 
An estimated 8,000 first and second graders in rural 
“and he's standing | Oakland County schools were getting their first shots of 
| | the Salk polio vaccine today in 14 central clinics. 
| Another 9,590 are slated to get the inoculations Satur- Big Load of Criminal 
Cases for April Term 
Necessitates Action 
Three outside judges will help 
handle the biggest load of criminal 
trials ever assembled for one 
term of Oakland County Circuit 
Increase Income : Court, Chief Assistant Prosecutor 
iby Divorcing COPENHAGEN (INS) — Older 
married couples in Denmark are 
getting divorced in order to in- 
crease their income. Here is why: 
why: 
1. A.man gets an old age pen- 
sion at 65. - T | George F. Taylor said today. 
_About 175 April-term cases will 
be ready when a jury is called 
nexts month, he explained. 
Judge H. Russel Holland will 
preside over the criminal docket 
with the three outside jurists 
coming in successively after 
May 17 to lend a hand. 
They are Circuit Judges Archie 
2. An unmartied woman gets a| D. McDonald, of Hastings, Charles 
an at 65, 
Therefore, divorce is profitable 
for a 65-year-old husband with a 
wife who is no more than five 
years his junior, They can both 
draw pensions as single persons 
even though they continue to live 
together, 
  Voters in Keego Harbor 
Approve City Charter 
Voters in Keego Harbor ap-/ | Carland, of Owosso. 
| . | The other regular Oakland 
County judges. George B. Hartrick 
and Frank L. Doty, wil} handle the 
civil docket. 
A bill to grant the county a 
fourth circuit judge is still stalled 
in a Senate-House conference com- 
mittee. 
The House would have the new 
jurist appointed to begin duties 
| Jan. 1, 1956. The Senate would 
| have him -elected in November 
1956 which would not see him on 
| proved a city charter yesterday, | the bench here until Jan. 1957. 
It stated that a Nationalist air) aren are getting the shots free in a portion of West Bloomfield Town- 
force patrol plane last week en-| nool cll 
countered but escaped from some | = > oe 
Russian 
either MIGITs or MIG19s. of Dimes), 
are later models than the MIGI5 k ial 
which the. Rede have in large |tors and volunteer workers 
numbers and which they psed in | supplied by the National Founda- 
mass immunization program. have donated their services in the, story on page 32 in today’s Pontiac 
| with vaccine | Ship to a city. 
Elected to office were five city 
jets believed to be) tion for Infantile Paralysis (March councilmen, a justice of the peace, 
administered by doc-| and a constable. 
For complete details, 
Press. All first and second grade chil-| completing the area’s change from | 
th see the tional public housing units -in Public Housing Banned 
The City Commission last 
night passed an ordinance pro- 
ibiting construction of addi- 
Pontiac. See additional details on 
Page 13. Along if, too, is the great “neu- 
tralist’’ country of India, with in- | 
fluence the United States considers 
ot great importance in holding the 
arc against communism. 
Significantly, Eisenhower's mes- 
sage goes to Congress with the 
conference of 29 African and Asian 
nations in progress at Bandung, ber dealers, 
, Indonesia. 
a isenhower said ever the week- 
the conference provides an 
cnpertanity “at a critical hour to 
voice the peaceful aspirations of 
he peoples of the world and thus 
exert a practical influence for 
peace where peace is now in 
grave jeopardy.” ” 
As if in answer from one Com- 
munist quarter, Red China's Pre 
mier Chou En-lai told the confer- 
ence yesterday that his country 
is not .interested in “subversive 
activities” but instead is being 
“subverted by the United States 
of Ameriga.”’ 
Stassen has stated _ that 
the aim in setting aside $2,140.- 
500.000 in military and economic 
assistance for free Asia was to at 
least match the pace of industrial- 
ization in Communist China and 
other Red-ruled nations. 
$600 Awaits Taker 
for Bonanzagram Bonantagram is still waiting 
for a winner. 
The prize money has built up 
te $600 for a correct answer. A 
number of contestants have come 
up with all the letters correct, 
but missed out on punctuation. 
The puzzle originators insist that 
punctuation is an important part 
of the message, so watch your 
periods, commas and other punc- 
tuation necessary to solve the 
puzzle completely and = accu- 
rately. 
Bonantagram No. 7 appears 
again today on page %8. 
We really want to give some- 
one a $600 check, Hope you're 
the one. ‘States and West Germany 
| Fifty-one dooths are getting the finishing touches voddaiee hermarmen se promised to bring 
2,000 objectors te the hearing 
today in the Pontiac Armory in preparation for the Offjg tonight at 7:30 p.m. 
cial opening tomorrow at 2 p. m. of the second al 
Greater Pontiac Home and Builders Show. 
Thirty-five 
furniture stores, appliance shops, 
paint companies and home furnishings and dry goods 
| Stores — — ~ will be _be displaying their wares in popular do-it- 
~ yourself projects. 
| Jaycees, the profits from U. 5, Germany 
Deposit Pacts this four-day show which 
;continues through Sunday 
| will go towards the club's 
/ youth projects. 
| Fred Poole and Harry Zering are 
Also serving as co-chairmen and Dr 
Donald Bergeron has been named 
publicity chairman. Britain, France 
Must Act Before Bonn 
ms Becomes Sovereign The show also includes a spe- 
cially constructed house, directly 
BONN, Germany (®—The United: across from the Armory, whitch 
will show different stages of build- 
ing progress and will exhibit vari- 
ous types of building materials in | 
use 
Hours for the Builders’ today 
deposited in Bonn the treaties to 
restore sovereignty to West Ger- 
many and to permit Allied forces 
to remain on German soil. | 
West Germany will become sov- will be: Thursday, 2? p.m. te 1 oa 5 Lose only when <cla p.m.; Friday, 2 p.m. te 10 p.m.; 
T pation powers — take the eke Saturany,— 0am —to 10 ay | Sunday, 1 p.m. te bd p-m. 
.S. High Commissioner James | Exhibitors include: Brown Broth- 
B. Conant and West German | ets, Stewart-Glenn Furniture Co., 
| Chancellor Konrad Adenauer for- |M. A. Benson Lumber Co., Inc., 
| mally deposited the two treaties | Jacobsen’s Flowers Conny s 
signifying their governments’ | Jewelers, Grinnell Brothers, 
completion of the ratification | Poole Lumber and Builders supply 
process, Co.. A. Elbling and Sons, Corwin 
Conant declared: “I am con- Lumber and Coal Co.. Watersoft- 
ivinced that we® shall continue to ¢ners., Inc.. G and M Construction 
|work with united strength toward. Co., Detroit Edison Co., Smith 
/a common future in peace and Sales and Service, Pontiac State 
freedom.” (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) 
In practice, the Big Three pow- ———<$—$__—_——— 
| include the power to negotiate with 
| fication and on a peace treaty for 
| a reunited Germany. They wijl also 
| Germany. ers after the end of the occupation 
will retain special rights in this 
front line of the cold war. These Bentley Donates Raise 
SAGINAW, Mich. —Rep, Bent- 
ley (R-Mich) vesterday pledged his 
$10.000 congressional pay raise for 
1956 to a 1'2-million-dollar building 
fund for a new YMCA in Saginaw 
Bentley, an Owosso businessman, 
is independently wealthy. the Soviet Union on German reuni- 
keep the right of access to West 
  
All-Time Peak for Six Months in Sight   
presuma 
faster than the MIGI5, 
Attention focused today on U.S. 
Secretary of State Dulles’ state- 
ments of concern over growing 
Communist strength opposite For- 
mosa, New dispatches say it fre-| phujiders have projected the pro- 
quently is described in Washington | guction-of approximately 2,200,000 
* | cars in the April-June quarter. 
The significance of the sched- 
ules is that if the factories turn 
out that volume in the second 
quarter, the 6-months total will top 
four million for the ‘first time in By DAVID J. WILKIE 
DETROIT #—The nation’s auto 3 
iF gi 
af 2% iT fi 233% !   | 
  factories are operating at close to 
capacity levels. The volume is 
being achieved through 9%-hour 
shifts and Saturday production. 
The overtime, obviously, adds to 
production costs. But no manufac- 
turer wants to level off assembly 
operations at this time. The race’ 
for position among the various 
makers is too close right now. 
Nearly all che car makers are 
paired off in the competitive bat- 
tles. The major fight, of course, 
is that between Chevrolet and 
Ford. : 
Aside from this, however, 
Buick and Plymouth are battling 
for third place; Oldsmobile and   Pontiac for fifth and Mercury 
and Dodge for seventh position. 
The battles begin on the assem- 
  
In Today's Press 
  
  ed 
37, 88, 38, 40, 41, 42 
Women's Pages. ..14, 17, 18, 19, %, &1 bly lines. Each maker involved 
in fight for position is striving for 
the highest possible output vol- 
ume. 
Retail sales continue at unprece- 
dented levels. One leading indus- 
try publication has described the 
sales pace as ‘‘staggering.”’ The 
sales volume can be traced in 
| some degree to price cutting and 
high tradein allowances by most 
dealers. 
But high sales volume has to be 
maintained. If very many deal- 
prices on new cars they could be| 
overwhelmed by the inventories.   Sales Position Battles Spur Record Car Production 
  ers were to cut down on tradein | 
allowances and try for full list! tration figures for the year’s first sion led Dodge at last week's end, 
! tions. It bases the claim on ar 
advance report on new car regis- 
|trations in 29 key metropolitan 
afeas 
In the fight for fifth place in 
| Production Oldsmobile leads Pon- 
| tiac by only 2.328 passenger car 
cently at 18,400 assemblies., Buick | assemblies so far this year. Pon- 
had a 19,000 unit week recently.” | tiac has been pressing its older 
At last week’s end Plymouth | rival steadily since the 1955 mode! 
held third place in production for | year began. 
the year so far with 253,720 assem Olds built only eight more cars 
blies to Buick’s 246,048. The fig-| than Pontiac last month. 
ures, course, are unofficial. | A little farther down in the pro- 
Buick>has claimed official regis-| duction table Ford's Mercury Diva “Amazing probably is the word 
for the fight Buick is making 
against Plymouth for third place 
honors in the industry's produc. | 
tien and sales races. Plymouth 
has turned in several weeks re- 
quarter will show it in third place | with 129,332 car assemblies to 116,- 
in sales by almost 10,000 registra-| 327 so far in 1955. local merchafits—including builders, lum- 
banks, 
Sponsored by the Pontiac | 
Show | questions 
@ | course to follow. ] | 
| 
| } 
| 
i 
} 
| Pontiac Mayor William W. Don- 
aldson will be on hand to request 
the route be shifted a half-mile 
eastward to skirt the city without 
disrupting a site sealed for future 
residential development. 
If the suggested free road is 
just a theoretical ‘‘paper’’ propos- 
al. the authority said it would 
proceed with its plans to build the 
$164.000.000 turnpike. The authority 
contends the turnpike can be built 
in three years 
Mle public has a right to know 
w."’ the authority said, ‘whether 
ite choice lies between the turn- 
pike which can be financed and 
built relatively soon and a free 
road ‘‘paper’’ proposal which may 
have little chance of conversion 
into concrete form, or does its 
choice lie between the turnpike 
and a ‘realistic’ free road which 
can be financed from public funds 
and built relatively s 
The four members ot the au- 
| thority demanded answers to six 
before deciding what 
They directed the queries pfi- 
ssione Highway C 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) 
» Temperature Shows 
* Sharp Drop in Area Cloudy skies and a temperature 
drop arrived in the Pontiac area 
yesterday, followed by a_ short 
rain this morning and a promise 
of more to come 
After bright sunshine 
to an overcast sky yesterday, tem- 
peratures started dropping from 
the high of 66 just before noon to 
low of 49 by midnight. The 
mercury continued falling and 
hit 47 at 8 o'clock this morning. 
At mid-morning a short but heavy 
rain fell. leaving the area cool 
most of the morning. By 1 p.m, 
the thermometer reading was 47. 
For the next few days the U. S, 
Weather Bureau says there will 
be more clouds and scattered 
showers, Temperatures will drop 
to a low of 44 to 48 tonight, fol- changed 
| lowed by an expected high of 64 
| to 68 tomorrow, 
  
BIG DEMAND! 
According to the number of 
calls ‘about 25) received 
from this Want Ad there 
are a lot of people still 
looking for good used car- 
peting and rugs. 
‘APPROXIMATELY 25 YDS. OP 
carpeting & paddihg. Reason- 
able. OR 3-1861   
Whatever you have to offer, 
let an inexpensive Want Ad 
get you buyers in a hurry! 
To Place Your Want Ad 
DIAL FE 2-8181 
Just Ask for the 
WANT AD DEPT. 
      —— 
  
  Pontiac Builders Show 0 
  ' 
> 
+. & ape Thursday at. Armory 
      
  fa te    
    
      New Ordinance 
Deadline Firm City Refuses Request 
to Extend Time ‘or Air .   = 
  
Conditioning. Law 
The City Commission last night 
turned down a request to extend 
the deadline on the new air con- 
ditioning ordinance after City Man- 
ager Walter K. Willman told them, 
“We can't monkey around—the wa- 
ter situation is too serious.”’ 
“We haven't got the water,” 
said. 
“Tf you make an exception in 
ene case—no matter how small 
—you are going to be committed 
te a program of exceptions.” 
Willman’'s statements came after 
a letter was read from a South 
Saginaw street restaurant owner | 
asking he be given time beyond 
June “4 to convert his air condi- 
tioning unit to the water-consery- 
ing type. 
When the water conservation 
measure was passed in 1933, mer- he 
    
     Andy & jad nk Ss 
NO ROOM FOR ERROR — Operator of this bus must drive care- 
fully through banked snow on run connecting French Alpine resort of 
Val d'lsere and Bourg Saint Maurice. 
Sar eget tee FONE Gee ~ Chou Concedes 
on Human Rights 
  es 
    
  
refrigeration. Some chose to dig | f Club Owner 
their own wells and keep the od 7n Las Vegas 
system. 
Willman said something would! LAS VEGAS, Nev. & — Arthur 
have to be done eventually to stop | Schellang, part owner of the Las 
  private well-drilling without the | Vegas Club gambling casino, died Reluctantly Approves 
users returning the water’ to the | yesterday of gunshot wounds. De- : ; Scand. tees ae tection te pox! Bandung Resolution on 
He said the only exeeptions to | sibility he might have been mur- U. N. Model 
the June 4 deadline might be made | dered. 
for persons whose establishments| The death was listed first as| BANDUNG, Indonesia ) — Red | 
iret   
  
  were in the route of highway rights- | suicide—until 
in his home. A snub-nosed .38 cal- 
against bogus check passers WaS | note reading, ‘“Ruth—forgive me.” 
gator for the Prosecutor's Office | 
a ceak. ihe ‘Ganke DETROIT (?)—Two new leads, a deputy coroner | China's Premier Chou En-lai this 
bated more than three hours on 
the Palestine question, Seven Mos- 
lem countries offered resolutions 
demanding that the conference 
support implementation of the 
United Nations resolution on Pales- 
line, , 
Chou reportedly had refused at 
first to discuss a conference res- 
olution on human rights based on 
the U.N. charter. 
“How can I discuss anything un- 
  of-way. said that either of two bullets 
fired into Schellang’s body could 
Warning Is Issued "Stone. 60.” About Bad Ch ks iber revolver was found under his 
ec feet. He had been shot in the side 
/and in the back of the head. 
e again this week in & | in the kitehen. She said it was in 
bulletin from the Protective Com- | his handwriting. 
mittee of the Michigan Bankers 
rato for the Pr New Leads No Help The committee cited a recent 
example of a man who opened a 
: ene in. Texas and another in 
additional deposits by cash and petroit, left police no closer to 
checks drawn on another bank, (| ojution of the Barbara Gaca Schellang, 60, was found dead 
The need for constant vigilance | schellang’s wife, Ruth, found a 
Assn. received by Chief Investi- 
. val 
in Barbara Murder checking account with $100 cash 
then withdrew the whole amount. | Ji, ving today. “7 — a ee eee 
side bank were returned marked | a 1941 green Hudson sedan was | 
“insufficient funds,"’ resulting in a | found burning in Eliza Howell | 
| 200 loss to the first bank. Park, Detroit. A similar car had | 
“These individuals work fast.”| been reported in connection with 
the committee warns. ‘“Take the | the kidnaping and murder of the 
precaution to know your depositors | 7-year-old Gaca gir] March 24. 
aad exxiorsers Investigating officers learned 
e ° the car had been set afire by its 
City Considers ewper, Rey T. Edwards, whe 
j © said be paid $10 for it and thea 
Request to Hike got mad at it when it failed to 
° operate properly. A lie detector 
Taxicab Fares _ | test cteared him of any connec- . tien with the Gaca case. A taxicab fare increase which | 
would bring charges into line with! In El Paso, Tex., James Dairy, 
other Michigan cities was proposed | 40, was released yesterday, four 
at last night's City Commissiop | days after he was.seized and held | 
meeting. | for Detroit authorities, who wanted 
City A ny Ww A. | to question him in the Gaca slay- | 
ttorne itam | ing. Police learned Dairy was in Ewart was instructed to prepare Bi Peso the da ‘ . : y the girl was re- a mew ordinance which would | Korted missing 
= mew ordinance which woul umes 
_ provide for hiking fares to 35 | . 
rents for the first one-tith mile 4 States Dimmed and five cents for each addi- 
tionad ‘ono-fitth tile. as Dust Storm Also ‘‘allowable”’ under the new . 
ordinance, would be a five - cent Strikes Southwest 
cherte for each minute of waiting | AMARILLO. Tex. ww — A soil- 
. | damaging dust storm, one of the The increases compare with the | — : : : cyrrent rates of 2 cents for the | 8¢480n's worst in some sections of 
i four states today as April showers for each additional quarter mile. ide Eetied aiting to the nceth. ¢ 
| der the U.N. charter when we are 
not members of the United Na- 
tions?’’ one source quoted him as 
arguing. 
With 28 other delegation heads, 
resolution stating: 
“The Asian-African conference 
declares itself in firm support of 
the fundamental premises of hu- 
|man rights as set forth in the 
charter of the United Nations and 
takes note of the demand for a 
common standard of achievements 
for all peoples and all countries.”’ 
Chou supported an Afghanistan 
resolution on Palestine, but asked 
| that instead of including any refer- 
ence to the United Nations resolu- 
tion. the conference statement call 
for a world appeal on the Palestine 
question. 
  
  June Date Likely 
for Austrian Parley WASHINGTON w—American of- 
| ficials looked to early June today 
jas the soonest the Western Big 
| Three could meet with Russia at 
Vienna to restore Austria's inde- 
| pendence. 
| The meeting of foreign minis- 
ters for that purpose seemed as- 
| sured yesterday after Russia sug- 
|gested it and the United, States 
| responded that the idea was under 
  ‘‘sympathetic consideration.” __| 
In London, Prime Minister An- 
thony Eden told the House of Com- Waiting charge is five cents for 
each 1% minutes. 
The fieW" ordinance would also 
provide for the taxis carrying ad 
vertising billboards on their rear 
  
Senate Group Approves 
Extension of Trade Act 
WASHINGTON (INS)—The Sen- 
ate Finance Committee tentatively 
voted today to extend for three 
years the reciprocal trade agree- 
ments act. 
The action, a victory for the 
administration, was taken over the 
opposition of Sen. Eugene Millikin 
(R-Colo), who offered an amend- 
ment to extend the act for only two 
years. 
  Dust from one of Eastern Colo-|mons Russia had removed “one 
rado's worst dusters of the year) of the main obstacles” to an Aus- 
hung today over parts of Texas, | trian treaty, and the Western pow- 
- Oklahoma. Kansas and Western | ers were ready to examipe the 
, Missouri. Showers also fell in West} Soviet proposals. - 
| Central Texas. a ‘ea But a date and other details re- 
Meanwhile, as dust harried the | main to be agreed on. Some pre- 
midlands, southern sections of the dictions in Moscow spoke of a 
| country were generally fair with meeting in mid-May, but Western 
the only rain reported in the north-| sources there said that date would 
ern states and in the big bend sec-| be too early. Secretary of State 
tion of Texas on up into the lone | Dulles’ own well-filled schedule for Star state's west central portion. {May tended to confirm that im- —_—_ | pression here. 
Sheriff § Officers “Alberta Fears Snow 
Leave for Florida | 
Will Kill Cattle, Sheep 
EDMONTON, Alta W—An unus- 
Oakland County Sheriff's Detec- ;usually heavy April snowstorm 
tive Leo Hazen and Deputy Leon- ——— fears today of heavy PHS Band Gets 
Highest Rating Local Group Wins First. 
Division Title in State 
Competition 
Pontiac High School Band, 
under the direction of Dale C. Har- 
ris, won another first division | 
| rating at the Michigan High School | 
Band and Orchestra Festival held 
at the University of Michigan. 
The band has received no rating | 
under first division since it began | 
attending state festivals in 1983. | 
Muskegon was the only other band 
to receive a similar rating this 
year. 
The bands do not compete 
against each other, but are rated 
against predetermined standards 
of performance on preparcd 
numbers and on sight reading. 
The bands played three prepared   
published which they have five 
tation. 
Judges for the event were Leon- 
ard Falconi, director of bands -at 
Michigan State College; William 
Fitch, director of bands at Michi- 
gan State Normal College, George 
Waln of the woodwind department 
at Oberlin College, and Allen P. 
| Britton ‘of the University of Michi- 
gan. : 
Pontiac’s march was “‘The Rain- 
| bow Division’ by Nirella; their 
| required number, “Richard ur" 
by Edward German, and their se- 
ment from the Symphqny No. 4” 
by Mendelssohn. 
Michigan State College will be 
host te more than 3,000 Michigan 
junior and senior high school 
musicians Saturday at the final 
portion of the statewide band 
and orchestra festival. 
Bands from Class C senior high 
schools and all classes of junior 
high schools will take part, with 
56 bands participating. 
Class A and B school bands per- 
day. 
Going to East Lansing j 
Oakland County will be the follow- | 
ing bands and their directors: | 
Class C senior high bands—Orton- | 
ville, Gerald E. Irish; AA junior | 
high bands—Pontiac Washington, | 
: high bands— 
Royal Oak Mary Lyor’, Joseph D. 
Parker; D junior high bands— 
Ferndale, Edward Hapa.   | 
Creditors Take Ove 
Sugar Beet Refinery MENOMINEE (#—The Superior 
Sugar Refining Co., the only beet 
sugar refinery in the Upper Penin- 
sula, is going to be liquidated. 
Creditors and the management 
of the company agreed yesterday 
to go into Menominee County Cir- 
cuit Court next week to petition 
for appointment of a receiver. 
Personal property of the com- 
pany was attached last week by 
the creditors. Claims totaling 
more than $120,000 were filed. 
John Sargent, manager of the 
company, was named custodian of 
the property until the court ap- 
points a receiver. ' 
The firm, owned by the Albert 
Flegenheimer interests of New 
York, is more than 530 years old.   
  
Prosecutor Hits 
in State’s Code 
A “ridiculous” situation in the 
Michigan penal code was pointed 
out today by Chief Assistant Oak- 
land County Prosecutor George F. 
Taylor. : 
“A person who drives a car 
without gross neglect of traffic 
and safety laws, but causing an 
accident resulting in a death, . 
ean be charged only with negli- 
gent homicide, a high misde- 
meanor. 
“Yet a person who causes an 
accident which only injures some- 
one is charged with felonious driv- 
severe offense than a midsde- 
; Meanor. 
| “To make the   situation more THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 20, 1955 
  
Speaker Lauds 
County TB Unit All’ Officers, 
Renamed at Annual Trustees | The Day in Birmingham 
New Bids Will Be Taken 
on East Side High School BIRMINGHAM — Accepting ar {fied the’ board that modification 
chitects’ plans for modifying the} would bring the cost into line with 
new East Side junior high school; the estimated appropriation. No   
  
numbers, and a number not yet | 
minutes to study before presen- , 
lective number the “‘Second Move-, 
formed in Ann Arbor last Satur-/ 
‘Trattic Laws 
ing. A fetony is considered a more | 
      
  
        | 
RED THREAT—Newsmap 
locates Communist China's new 
air base at Luchiao, reported by 
Chinese Nationalists to be their 
biggest and best. It accommo- 
dates every type of plane from 
jets to heavy bombers. Bottom 
map spots Foochow, Reds’ closest 
| air base to the Nationalist-hela 
Matsu Island. Nationalists repor: 
the base is being remodeled. es 
Smog Is Linked 
to Lung Cancer After 4-Year Research, | 
Doctor Says Pollution 
Greatest Single Cause 
PASADENA W — Smog is the 
greatest single cause of lung can- | 
cer, SayS a top research scientist ' 
in the field of air pollution and 
its relation to public health. 
‘Atmospheric pollution holds the 
answer to lung cancer more than 
any other single agent,’’ Dr. Paul 
Kotin, University of Southern Caili- | 
fornia pathologist, told the Nation. | 
alt Air Pottution Symposium yes-* 
terday,   . s * “ 
His connecting smog with lung 
| years of experiments with thous 
| ands of animals under a U.S. Pub- 
I hic Health Service grant. Dr. Ko- 
tin and his research team _ con- 
ducted the experiments at the 
| USC medical school and the Los 
Angeles County General Hospital. 
| The dcientist said the study 
| showed that smog “has a pro-. 
| longed accumulative effect’’ as a 
| tumor inducer. 
‘We have no concept of the dos- 
| age of smog required,”’ he added. 
| ‘But I feel that the amount en- 
countered during an ordinary siege 
in many cities may be too much." 
His experiments have all been 
with animals subjected to artifi- 
cially created smog. 
The pollutant which is the irri- 
tant causing the cancer, he ex- 
hydrocarbon in the oxidized state 
Hydrocarbons are found in auto 
exhausts, industrial emissions and 
in gasoline vapors. 
s s : 
His conclusions. will be the basis 
for new experiments aimed at de- 
tecting which hydrocarbon is guilty 
and what chemical state it is in 
when it does the damage, he said. 
“We did find the tumor yield— 
both beningn and malignant—to be 4 
] 
gines and gasoline vapors, he said. 
“In some of the tests the yield 
was very high.”’ 
With the exception of cancer, Dr. 
Kotin said he and his research 
team found smog had no perma- 
nent ill effects on the health of 
test animals. 
This contradicts the opinions of 
some scientists that smog dam- 
ages the respiratory system. 
Capping Ceremony. 
Slated This Evening Dr. Ethan Cudney will be speak- 
|er at a capping ceremony to ke 
| held this evening at the St. Joseph 
Hospital Nurses Home for nurses   } | association, presided; greetings 
plained, is at least one type of . Meeting Last Night 
With the largest attendance in 
its history, the annual dinner of 
the Oakland County TQberculosis | 
Assn. was held Tuesday evening 
at the sanatorium on Cooley Lake 
road. : 
The speaker_was Dr. Albert E. 
Heustis, commissioner of the 
Michigan State’ Department of 
Health. He had words of praise 
for the local association and sana- 
}torium for their work, and stres- 
of case find- 
Lee O. Clark, president of the 
were extended by Joe Haas, 
sanatorium trustee; and annual 
reports were given by A. R. 
Musson, executive secretary, In- 
vocation Was by the Kev. Her- 
bert Ryan, 4 
Musson's reports showed re- 
_ceipts of $56,449.62 from the seal 
sale of the past year, an increase less is a strong advocate of free, 
of 5.3 percent over the previous 
year. 
This was the amount received | 
from 80,806 letters sent out, of 
which 27,255 were returned, with | 
an average of $2.06 from each 
contributor. Of the amount ,re- 
ceived, $47,417.68 is retained by 
| the loca] association for use here, 
| the remainder going to the state 
and national associations. 
| . Trustees chosen for a term of | 
three years, all of whom are in- 
cumbents, were Joseph C. Aus- 
tin, Lee O& Clark, Edward F. 
Ferguson, Howard W. Hutten- 
locher, C. Larry Jerome and 
Dr. ©, P. Mehas. 
All officers were retained, in- 
cluding Clark, president; Dr. A. R. 
Young, vice president, and Dr. 
Mehas, secretary. 
Home and Builders 
Show Sets Date (Continued From Page One) 
Bank.-Pentiac Cut Stone Co., Ellis | 
Builders and Supply Co., Michi- 
| gan Fluorescent Light Co., Thoro- 
Seal, G. A. Thompson and Sons, 
Pontiac Association ‘of Insurance 
Agents 
Others to have booths in the 
Show will be W. N. McCandless. 
Michigan Soft Water Co., Pontiac 
Millwork Co., Lewis Furniture Co., 
! O'Brien Heating, Pontiac Paint and 
Varnish. L. W. Bogert, Waites, 
Inc Aut« ymatic Sewing Service, 
L and B Awning Supply Co., Boice 
Builders Supply, C. Weedon Home 
Equipment Co., Lowrie Lumber 
Co., Montcalm Builders and Supply 
Williams, Automan 
Heading for Istanbul ANKARA, Turkey & — Gov. G 
Mennen Williams of Michigan and 
Hickman Price Jr., vice president 
of the Willys Motor Co., leave 
Ankara for Istanbul today on their 
  ‘tour of the Middle East. 
The two men arrived in the 
Turkish capital yesterday for talks 
that may result in establishment 
of an auto assembly plant in Tur- 
key. 
A reliable source said Price 
seeks to sound out the Turkish au- 
company finds its Israeli plant 
handicapped in distribution in, the 
| Middle East because of the Arab 
‘boycott on Jewish products. 
Michigan Liquor Sales 
Show Increase in March 
LANSING W — Michigan liquor 
sales showed an increase in 
| March over the same month last 
year but are still behind 1954, the 
| State Liquor Control Commission 
| reported today. 
March liquor sales totaled 
| $14,057,117 compared ¢o $12,993,951 
'jast year, Sales for the first three 
months totaled $34,515,251, below 
the $38,251,464 for the same period 
a year ago. 
    
  | to conform to the estimated cost, 
the Birmingham district school 
| board Tuesday night voted, to re- 
ject all bids and open ‘new bids 
at a special meeting May 19. 
Previous bids ran the cost about 
$200,000 over the school system's 
estimate. Peter Tarapata of De- 
troit, the designer who won a na 
tiona] award for his plah for the 
school at Adams and Derby, satis 
Highway Department 
Challenged by MTA (Continued From Page One) 
Charles M. Ziegler and Wayne" 
County Highway Engineer LeRoy 
Smith who have announced they 
are prepared to negotiate plans 
'for a super freeway to. serve the 
same traffic as the turppike. 
Ziegler, an ex-officio member of 
the turnpike authority, neverthe- 
| roads. 
The questions were raised in 
an “epen letter to the public” 
by William E, Slaughter, Jr., 
Justin BR. Whiting, Rollin M. 
McConnell and Francis J. Van 
Antwerp, all private citizens who 
| Were appointed to the turnpike 
| authority by Gov. G. Mennen 
Williams. 
They asked: 
| 1) How much will the proposed 
free read cost, and how will the 
| cost be divided among state, fed- 
Leral, and local goyernment? | 
| 
| obtained to pay for it, and what 
| asurances -are there that all the 
necessary approvals will be forth- 
coming at once? 
3) What is the exact route of | 
| the proposed free road, and what 
| assurance is there of availability 
of right-of-way for it? 
4) Exactly when could full scale 
| work on the proposed free road be | 
e xpected to start? 
5) When would the entire road 
be finished and ‘available for use? 
6) If this suddenly proposed free 
road costing $160,000,000 is to be 
given immediate top priority by the 
state, federal and local govern- 
ments, which of Michigan's many 2) What authorizations must be | major change will be made in 
the as yet unnamed school, which 
will cost in the neighborhood of 
$1,700,000 and is to be open in 
September, 1956. 
Asked to answer criticism that 
the school will be “‘tush,’’ Tara- 
pata sald “no more than any 
ether Birmingham school.” He 
described it as “durable” and 
'“well developed.” He pointed 
out that site development alone 
had cost about $100,000. 
In another action, the board in- 
vited AFL Local 1384, a new union 
of custodians and maintenance 
workers, and Norman Wolfe, assis- 
tant superintendent, to confer on 
the union's requests for wage ad- 
justments and a reduction of the 
present 44+hour work week to 40 
during the school year, 
a i 4 
Judge Arthur E. Moore of Pon- 
| tiac, prime mover in the founding 
of Camp Oakland for Underprivi- 
leged Children, and Jim Hunt, 
camp director, were honor guests 
at the Exchange Club luneheon 
Tuesday, where they were present- 
|ed with a $1,500 check for the 
camp's work. 
“Neo strings attached,” said 
club menibers to the judge: ‘‘Use 
it for the best good of the chil- 
dren.” 
The money was solicited in the 
| first of a series of annual cam- 
paigns to support the camp by the 
local club, in a Toothbrush Sale 
Day recently. 
“es @ & 
At its final meeting of the year 
at 8 p.m. today, Quarton School 
PTA will elect officers for the com- 
ing year and hear a talk by the 
Rev. Allen E. Wittrup, of the First 
Methodist Church, on the impor- 
tance of religious guidance in de- 
| veloping the spiritual character of 
| the child.   
ue 
. * * 
First Methodist and St. James 
Episcopal churches haye sched. 
uled rummage sales for Thurs- 
day. St. James will sell from 
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday and 
from 9 a.m. to neon Friday in 
the undercroft. The First Meth- 
odist has its sale from 9 a.m. to 
4 p.m. Thursday at the church. 
  
way projects, 
were classed ag top priority, will 
be displaced on @he priority list by 
this new freeway? 
“Unsatisfactory answers — or 
half answers — to these pertinent , 
' questions, would. in our opinion,” 
the authority said, “‘justify pro- 
ceeding with our program te build 
the toll road — after the careful 
review we have promised to make 
of right-of-way questions raised by 
various objecting groups. 
“Satisfactory answers, op the 
other hand, indicating: with some 
| suitable degree of confidence that 
the highway of the area to 
be served can met with in a 
comparable period of time by a™ 
‘free road. woutd influence the turn- | 
pike authority to reconsider our 
plans for a toll road, 
“In the public interest, our sole 
objective of facilitating vehicular 
traffic in the state and providing 
highway facilities for the civil de- 
fense evacuation of the Detroit 
area will have been achieved just 
as well if these recently announced 
free-road proposals could prompt- 
ly become an actuality without 
jeopardizing dnd delaying all the | 
rest of Michigan's free road pro- 
gram,” the authority said. 
/ Ziegler said he would try to 
answer the questions tonight 
when the senate highway com- 
mittee holds a public 
on the proposal by Broomfield. 
Slaughter was asked what the 
| authority will do if it is unable to 
‘persuade opponents to give up 
their objections to the proposed 
route. ; 
“We plan to hold public hear- 
ings,"’ he said. “It may be there 
are people who do not feel they 
are accurately represented by 
their city officials. We intend to 
digest all the data we can obtain. 
Then the authority will consider a 
course of acion. We will try to 
_sell the route before we decide on ' which previously | 
ar | While the kiddies were just get- 
ting over a bout with the mumps 
last month, a good stiff case of 
the chicken pox was waiting just 
around the corner. 
That's what City Health Nurse 
| Anf¥ce Gillette's monthly health 
report shows. Mumps cases weiter 
on the @owngrade, with 161 cases 
as opposed to the February near- 
record of 7213. 
| But chicken pox rose from 125 
in February to 141 in March. 
Other communicable diseases for 
February and March, respectively, 
were: Measles, 4, 6; whooping 
' cough, 0, 2; German measles, 3, 
7; and scarlet fever, 16, 15. 
Pickets at Sperry - 
Damage 100 Cars 1 
WEW YORK W— Pickets dam- 
aged about 100: automobiles today 
in attempts to prevent nonstriking 
employes from entering the huge 
Sperry Gyroscope plant at Lake 
Success. 
The violence broke out on the 
second day of a strike of CIO elec- 
| trical workers in a dispute over a 
~~arrrong ry s bl i . . 
breathing smoggy atmosphere cre- to Istanbul a plant now asseMD! | the highway plan, toll or free, to production of electronics equip- 
ated from gasoline and diesel en- ing cars in Israel. He said the get the job done.” | ment for the armed forces. 
| Pickets formed human chains at 
| the entrances to the plant, jumped 
!on automobiles of supervisory em- 
ployes reporting for work, rocked 
the vehicles and in one case 
| picked up a small foreign car with 
| the occupants in it, and bounced 
‘the car on the road. 
In Nashville, Tenn., Southern 
governors demanded yesterday 
| that unions and management take 
| action by Saturday to end the 38- 
|day-old railroad and telephone 
strikes now crippling commerce in 
14 states, _ 
| 
Hitler's Birthday | 
Goes Unheralded 
in Both Berlins   
      
    ard (Whitey) Nelson left yester- | in cattle and sheep on the confusing, the maximum prison tee “We want friends along the 
The Weather day for DeLand, Fla., where they, Alberta rangeland. term under both charges is two Aids sponsored by the local chap-| Six Red China Divisicns | route, not enemies,” Slaughter! BER B IN 7— ll pick | ” ter of the American Red Cross East and West Ber- PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cleeay.“!!! pick up a prisoner for re-| The snow, which began Monday | years. PE d ; P lled F om North Korea. said. lin, which almost never see eye 
a ale a a ek here and ranged-up to 16 inches in the} Manslaughter can be charged This evening's graduates were FU r | He was asked what, would hap- | to eye found a common bond to- 
morrow 64-68. Cloedy and cooler with he men, traveling by auto, will Calgary area, caught farmers and| only when a person is thought recruited by sss John C. Logan, TOKYO W — Radio Pyongyang | pen if communities along the pro- | day Neither had any intention scattered showers tomorrow night, lew pick up William Sander who is/ ranchers off guard. Many had/ guilty of excessive negligence, us- chairman of service groups. — said the pullout of six Red China | posed route were given the power | whatsoever of celebrating Adolf 
— charged with breaking and enter-| turned their stock out to range | ually-where drinking is involved. | WeTe trained 7 Mrs. Lewis 7a divisions from North Korea was to veto it. _ | Hitler’s birthday 
— tccaeeraes” penecawes a aw | ing in the nighttime here. |pasture during recent warm It, carries a 15-year maximum | iels, Marie ey and Mrs. Vern completed today. | “Ifa coalition of municipalities | Tho Fuehrer would have been 66. 
Mia wind velocity “12 mph edt, trip Came at an ,opportune | weather. | Prison commitment. Abbott and Mrs. to oni aed fat The Communist broadcast heard | west of Detroit—including Dear-| ten years ago he had his last 
Directlon” Boutheast ve nn | tame for Nelson whose brother was Saitama Citing # hours of classroom train. |", Tokyo said the withdrawal, | born, Garden City, Livonia, Ink: | celebration — a modest one — in Bun sets Wednesday at 7 19 pm ed ill a . lere yniv H . ; Whi Hy 31, in-| ster, so on can 
ee }few hours after the Pay aaah on Audrey Hepburn Denies Two Men Charged ing and 40 hours of hall training. _— roping anaerig™ red nic us pelt of N she the shell-rocked bunker beneath the 
on sets Wednesday at 5 28 p.m 5 . ae ' ° hie wil week a the ee , KS | orthville, Reichschancellery Garden which _ Moon rises Thursday at 4 47 am. Pontiac. Undersheriff Elmer Mc- She’s Expecting Baby The nurses aids wi "|! and 1.758 pieces of artillery equip- | never build a toll road,” Slaughter | only 10 days later became his pyre 
Quern said attempts to notify Nel. | _ M blood donor program, at St. Jo- | ment. said, “because we would lose all! Though most evidence points to 
47 son are being made. ROME W—Screen star Audrey) YY | a ec seph Mercy Hospital and for) the potential traffic.” Hitler's death “ yt Hepburn says she is not expecting the Civil Defense program. bli “All states preceding us-in build- ; rat he betty ta the . a a baby. Charged with pessing more than | Tes wilt be served following the | ASks U.N. to Establish and. the burning of his body in the 
Well-Driller Is Killed a oe 8 ing toll roads had the right to fix garden, he is still having a hard me Tired of repeated rumors and | $1,104 in bogus checks, a Roches-| graduation ceremony. ‘Headquarters in Korea their own routes where they would | time becoming a legal Tuesday in Pontiac as Rig Touches Wi column items that she and her | ter man and a Detroit man waived | | . ae g touches Wires ey do the most good for the most peo~; The W: (As recorded downtown) a husband - Mel F: w—South K mi- est Berlin courts only re- Wiedienk temaeeataes os oe Ctor hus el Ferrer expect| examination when they were ar | So ut First Aid Teams | SEOUL orea's se ple. If we are to be subjected: to | cently” started 
Mighest vemperature sss 8) MONTGOMERY « — An In-| their first child, Miss Hepburn is-|raigned on an: uttering and pub- | SCOUt First At jofficigl newspaper, the Korean Re- | oiitical i: ones precesdings te do Micon wemporetare - 875 diana well driller was electrocut- sued a formal statement today. /|lishing charge Tuesday before {to Compete for Trophy | public, demanded today that U.N. rn tees an roy be clare him: légally dead. 
2 we A Sen ed yesterday when his well-dig-| ‘As much as I should like to| Orion Township Justice Helmar ; ; | military command headquarters be a ay road. Hi : 
on gs licinoe ng in Pontiac ging apparatus fell against a high have a baby, I have not been ex-|G._ Stanaback. a Right first aid feams repre ioved trom Japan to Korea. Slaughter said letters had been Ridgway to Head Kaiser 
Lowest temperetute "|)) 4g. tension wire on a farm four miles, pecting one and dp not expect one| The pair, Shirley Davis, 40, and | senting the four districts of ae | “It is becoming increasingly |. sent te all city mayors, village Auto Plant i : 
w eantnee hagee uhewers * northwest of this Hillsdale County now,” said the actress. She and | William Worden, 30, have admitted | Valley Boy Scout Council I clear ihat-Japan is not an.ally of| presidents, pepper A meget n Arger itina 
— community, ° _ ‘Ferrer are in ‘Rome to film “War 35 checks in Oakland Coun- | Compete for the Red Cross trophy the United States and cannot be} county read’ De | Bp ww t ; passing ; VENOS AIRES (INS) U.S, Mighest ead Lowest pnporetaree, This The victim was Charles Hutch- and Peace.” ty within the past month. Robert at_a first aid meet Saturday in depended upon if the Communists| trofit city commissions, planning Army Chie? of Staff Gen. Matthew 
a2 mm 1952 20 in 1902 ins of Rt. 2, Fremont, Ind., just C. Miller, chief investigator for | Washington Junior School. strike again in Korea or elsewhere | commissions and legislators (|B Ridgway will become head of 
Tesstay's omperatare Chart pod of the Michigan-Indiana Polio Strikes in Detroit the Prosecutor's Office, said 29 of | Pontiac District be repre-|in Asia,” the Republic declared | along the proposed route inviting’ | the Kaiser motorcar factory in 
Brovnevile St fi New Queens 2 ot rT. the checks have been recovered. | sented by two teams, both from jin an editorial. them to “meet witir our engi- | Argentina when he retires. this 
$ ge new Yor i D ; d DETAOE © — A Syewddlan wae wittin oh a Dent) Tew © want on |: aria en Somaya ee August. 
— Teeenee *{- Dozing Driver Injure mother of three is Detroit's first | Bank. Avenue Presbyterian Church. | Grain Firm Expands “We have had very few requests | “The former Far East command- 
De Ma? gt Lows 63 | — | polio victim since announcement! Both were bound over for ar-| The teams were ‘selected by ‘ for a meeting.” he said. “I am sur-| er, arrived with his wife on 
Bere & 3) OWOSSO u#—A doze at the wheel | of the Salk polio vaccine success |raignment in Oakland County Cir: | eliminations in which most of the) SAGINAW W# — The ped agp! ge lB edged visit to Buenos Aires 
$3 3 | Cost Robert S. Elliott, 33. facé and| Apri) 12. Mrs. Hilda Stacho was|cuit Court next Monday. They | district units competed. ___\| Grain Co: is extending; its expan-|for more response. Now we announced to newsmen 
$3 cy of Sy | Knee cuts. His car hif a tree and | admitted to a Detroit hospital for | were returned to jail after failing Edward Leland, council execu- sion program to incinde ‘a ‘new | wilt try to arrange these ‘meetings | his “to join the Kaiser 
* 7 ds) utility pole. Bag treatment, 4 t post $2,500 bonds each. g tive: will present the trophy. , wharf and grain loading tower | ourselves.” 4 4” Conporeyjon. ry é , : "y re 7 ‘ " 1s , : * 
py ‘im, * Paige e we 4 : gAZ , * ‘ ' ‘ ge tecony a ‘ ' 
z ( f° . x 3 / e ae b) he | ef is " Pts ao ‘ es 
7? ah YS fee at wre es r* e ; ; i te Si a "     
          
    
  
    
         
       i et ees ais , | il ie oe Ol 
  
    JUVd HINO IW Hal Boyle Says: 
Russia Didn’t Invent Roller Coaster NEW YORK «®—So far the Rus- this business I still haven't learned | though fewer are now being built 
sians haven't claimed they invent- what people want.” leach decade. 
ed the roller coaster. The old tunnel of love boat trips; «as jong as there are amuse- _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 
Australia Will Activate | *. «@¢ i 
2 Divisions for Defense | 
CANBERRA, Australia B— 
Prime Minister R. G. Menzies told 
the Australian House of Represen- 
tatives today his government soon 
will propose the raising of two 
divisions to be ready if war breaks 20, 1955       
     
   CONSUMERS POWER CO. showing a preference for riding on | 
“I can’t understand why this 
  If they ever do, they're going to 
have to fight Joe McKee, who at 
67 is the acknowledged dean of the 
roller coaster industry. 
“The first roller coaster in his- 
tory was built in Pittsburgh in 
1904," Joe recalled. “And I got; — 
started in the business as a car- 
penter the following year.” 
In 51 years some 600 roller 
coasters have been built through- 
out the world, Joe figures he has 
had a hand in designing or build-   
ing about 300 himself—more than) tic AMERICAN : i? 
any other man. iS6 AMONG THE MOST 234 
Only 18 men—ell. t AND eTitcr ALY ee Th ’ “Only men—all carpenters— - IN LIFE HER £iz ° 
have ever had anything to do with| CUBS LEARN THAT HER WORD IS LAW, cy BEEF Here’s a Special Two-Day Offer 
designing~ roller coasters,’ Joe 5? @eeee ese 
  said, “and there are only four 
now left alive. I’m the oldest. | 
‘The roller. coaster grew out of 
the old scenic railway. We had 
nothing to go by, so we operated Thurs. 
by male of thumb. . ‘REMUS Only - as Low § 50 
“The four of us have kept a few e rl erators i 49 
things about the business to our- ' Butter ee with Meat Purchase | 5 
selves. The Lord knows we strug- 
gied hard enough learning them. 
There never has been a graduate | ride the kiddie coaster. | 
have died out in most amusement 
younger generation isn't growing | | parks and been replaced by faster | 
up now,” sighed Joe. “‘Why in my | | Tides geared to the tempo of an 
day no young fellow would think of | | age that dreams of rocket and 
taking his best girl on a kiddie | space travel 
He'd be looking for more| But McKee sees no immediate | 
I guess after bed years in ‘demise for the roller coaster, al- thrills.       
(ut Disneys True Life Adventures 
MOTHER KNOWS, BEST. OF ALL MAMMAL MOTHERS   
      
             
      - 
we CUBS MOST IMPORTANT. IS TO CLIMB THE NEAREST 
TREE WHEN-AND WHEN- 
MOTHER SIGNALS THAT DANGER if} IS NEAR. ‘ 
i | 
  
engineer connected with the roller| @ 
coaster field.” | 
McKee, now general superin- 
erat tine Seeeeae aes earn atte Pain of Arthritis ana Rheumatism | ELECTRIC WATER HEATERS...‘ 534° coasters, 
* * 7 | 
‘The roller coaster has been my 
whole life,” said Joe, whd has 
shrewd. twinkling eyes bendath a 
thatch of thick white hair. ‘I even 
met my wife Maggie on a’ roller | 
coaster, That was back in 1909 in| 
Cincinnati.’ . 
The older roller coasters were | 
built on a simple figure eight pat- 
tern and cost only about $30,000 
Because of the rising value of land | 
the newer coasters now loop about | 
like a pretzel. They average about 
a half mile in length and cost 
from $100,000 up. The cars .on some 
coasters reach a peak speed of 
50 to 3% miles an hour. 
McKee, who often acts as a con- 
sultant on thrill rides, gets a bit 
steamed up whenever the safety of | 
roller coasters is questioned. 
“If you just sit down in the seat   
and stay there,” he said, “YOU'RE | 
FAR Safer than if you were in an 
automobile. You can’t get off the! 
track, and you can't get hit from |_ 
       
        
        
  _— 
’ ' 
Sn) 
— 
: 4    
   
    BEDROOM FOR 
DOWN 
EASY TERMS | mission reported’ today. 
| whelations. 
NEED FUT : UF YOU pe SHORT        
     Went ALKS rigs OF THEIR 
S FOREVER 
pe, OBEMENT FROM LONG TRAINING - & CUBS REMAIN ALOFT SOMETIMES 
. FOR DAYS.FINALLY HUNGER FORCES THEM TO 
N.THE GROUNG..AND THE START OF THEIR ADULTHOOD. 
    
| ing rubbish illegally. 
served warrants. . .to clean up the 
debris and the rest did so upon re 
quest. ..,"’ the commission stated 
There were 6,697 permits issued 
to move equipment on highways 
and 170 for movement of houses 
Money from fines is turned over 
to the ‘State Library Fund and 
i not to highways.” the 
sioners pointed out Truckers Pay 
$8,953 Fines, 
Costs in 1954 
Some $8,953 in fines and costs 
| were paid last year by truckers! 
who violated operating restrictions, 
the Oakland County Road Com- 
Trucks totaling 698 were stopped | 
and examined for probable viola- 
tions, with 206 warning notes issued 
and 168 actual tickets. 
Fhe teket breakdown shows - There’s Logic for You 
HASTINGS, Neb. (UP) & Two 
tots were discussing what they 
pn 17, oversize vehicles with- | other: ‘Would you try to find the 
out permits plus companies with- owner and give the money back?” 
eut permits; and 95, overweight | <.\4 the second youngster: ‘Well, 
oe ee ot 2 ee 
Twenty -three were caught dump son, I sure would.’ 
   
wy MAN'S. 
  
LIVING ROOM © 
  
           
   ‘PIECES 
    “Some were | ment parks,”’ he said stoutly, ‘‘the 
roller coaster will last, You can’t 
have a park without a merry-go- 
round and ¢ a roller coaster.’ ’ out in Southeast Asia. 
United States’ 
tion’” in the area.   Menzies said he had received 
assurances in Washington of the, 
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There are two roller coasters at | "Peed: sling —— blood. This glow illustrates how | neuritis, neuralgia or muscle in- s | 
the park McKee supervises—one 
regular size, the other a smaller 
one for kiddies. To Joe's great | 
sorrow More and more teen-age | 
boys and their girl friends ‘are! Mj-101 
OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY EVENINGS ‘TIL 9 P. M. 
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Outstanding construction. 
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On — STORES DELIVERY ASK FOR Pontiac’ s STORES 
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  17 E. heron St. 2 STORES      18 W. Pike St. CUSTOMERS 
yefj ' 
O olds 
Initiation, 
Program 
8 New Members 
Join Chapter 503 
at Special Session 
Seventy-five members and guests 
attended the meeting of Areme 
Chapter 5303,.0ES at Roosevelt 
Temple. 
Initiated into the order were 
Mrs. Leonard Berglund, Mrs. Ray- 
mod Goins, Jacqueline Breen, Mrs. 
Donald DeLong, Mrs. Raymond 
Boyer. Mrs. Daniel Peterson, Mrs. 
Joseph Waring and Mr. and Mrs. 
Donald Hetherington 
Edward Pritchard, past pa- 
tren of Areme Chapter and sec- 
ond vice president of Oakland 
County Association was honored 
and presented with a gift by Mrs. 
Sidney Fellows, werthy matron 
of the chapter. 
Mrs. LaVon Rydon sang several 
solos accompanied by Mrs,’ Claude 
Kimler. . 
Gifts were presented by the hos- 
pitality committee to members 
who have birthdays during Febru- 
rary, March and April. 
Mrs. Fellows announced an 
Oakland County Association 
brunch to be held April 28 at 
11:30 a.m. in the Waterford Com- 
munity Activities buliding. Cards 
and a style show will follow, 
Following the Monday meeting 
refreshments were served by Les- 
ter Oles, Edward Pritchard, Wil- 
liam Pfahlert and Pete Shaver. 
Let Baby Choose 
The trgditional baby spoon has 
a large bowl, a small curved han- | 
dle. Some babies find it easier to| 
start feeding themselves with a/| 
more modern model—small bowl, | 
conventional handle. Let him try |   
pick his favorite. Wd WIA av 
  LF 
The annual membership tea sponsored by St. Joseph 
either, or one of your spoons, and' Mercy Hospital Auxiliary was given Tuesday at the Bir- 
a ______4mingham home of Mrs. Charles O'Connor. m@»   
  registers Mrs. Edwin Gaukler 
Membership | for the coming year. 
  chairman Mrs. Sylvester Stauffer of Birmingham (seated) 
‘to Celebrate 
  THE PONTIAC PRESS        
Womens Section   
  WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1955 PAGES 16-21   
Pentiace Press Photes 
of Voorheis road as a member 
Malkim PTA | <—   
Thursday Fathers of students attending 
Malkim School are looking forward 
to Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. 
when they will. be honored at a 
“Fathers Night’ celebration. 
George Janes ts chairman of the 
affair sponsored by members of 
the PTA. A program, including a 
travel movie, is planned for the 
evening. 
A money making project has 
been arranged te raise funds   
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Dandison 
of Perkins street have returned 
for a scholarship being sponsored | {fom a four month vacation in 
by the PTA Council. | Tucson, Ariz. En route home they 
The scholarship will herp pay the stopped at Colorado Springs and 
expenses of a deserving boy or gir! Denver, Colo., Cheyenne, Wyo., 
who plans to become a teacher. | #%d lowa City, lowa. 
Mrs. William Mihalek is chairman Jo 
of the project and Mrs. Edga:| Charles Saxton, son of Mr. and 
TerMarsch, Mrs. Stephan Turner) Mrs. Howard Saxton of Avondale 
and Mrs. Charles Heinisch are | avenue, is assistant director of the 
other committee members. | Wayne University Mackenzie Un- 
A social hour will conclude the | ion musical ‘‘Devi] May Care.” 
evening. Serving on the refresh The 16th annua] musical is be- 
ment committee are Patricia Kohl-| ,; Thu: “ett 
hese, Lucitie Ameden, Mrs. Mi-| store cream, Tetmay ent   
a 
  
Pi fraternity at Bowling Green Col 
lege of Commerce, Bowling Green, 
Ky. 
7 7. . 
Mr. and Mrs Gerald Hunt of 
West Iroqueis read are announc- 
‘Swish Petticoats 
Through Soapsuds Petticoats get prettier and pret- 
tier with each new season! And 
the fresh spring crop is no excep- 
tion 
Cottons, which make such com- 
fortable coolers for summer   Ss ai, 
Mrs. Donald O'Connor of Birmingham greeting Mrs. James Harrison (center) and 
served as hostess for the tea. She is shown| Mrs. John Daneke both of Birmingham.   
Personal News of Interest in Pontiac 
ing the April 16 birth of 9 son, 
Steven Lewis, at Peatiac General 
Hospital, 
Mr. and Mrs 
Houston, Texas, George Curtin of 
are the infant's 
maternal] grandparents 
| . ° ° 
Lorre Lynn was the name chosen 
| by Mr. and Mrs. Stanley B. Smith 
Jr. (nee Barbara Weber) of Dear- 
born for their daughter born 
| April 11. 
Grandparents are Mr, and Mrs. 
Stanley Smith of Dearborn and Mr, 
  
    ~ - Serving tea to Sister Mary Rosella (left) and Sister|Woodward avenue, Bloomfield Hills. Two hundred mem- 
Viceta of the hospital is Mrs. James Q. Goudie of North| bers attended thé affair held from 3 until 4 o'clock.   
Travelogue on Holy Land Presented By MARY ANGLEMIER 
A vivid portrayal of customs and 
life im the ancient Holy Land and 
the day 
shown in the natural color motion 
picture, ‘‘A Trip to the Holy Land,” those of present was 
at Grace Lutheran Church by Ste- | 
phen A. Haboush, assisted by 
Madame Haboush 
Appearing in costume, Mr 
Haboush, a native Galilean shep- 
herd, gave his Bible Land musical 
travelogue to an enthusiastic audi 
ence. 
The pictures were of old Jeru- 
salem with its ten foot wall, 
gates and buildings, the pilgrim 
age ‘of all creeds to the Stations 
of the Cross every Friday, and 
the new King David Hotel which 
ts completely modern. 
The flowers pictured in the gar 
den of the hotel were all familiar, 
roses, poppies, phiox, dabiias, 
zinnias, snapdragons. delphinium 
eanterbury bells, marigolds and 
water lilies in various shades. 
Beautiful in color was the Charch 
of the Nativity in Bethlehem, ,built 
where Jesus was born, 1,800 years 
ago, the oldest Christian Church in 
the world 
Relics made by hand 5,000 
years ago were displayed tn the 
museum built by John D. Rocke- 
feller dr. 
Other scenes shown at the Mon- | day meeting were the Mount of 
| Olives, Garden of Gethsemane, the 
harvest 
Mosque of Omar, and the Temple season, close-ups of the 
area where the Lord's prayer is 
inscribed in 78 languages. 
Haboush displayed tapestries 
worked with gold and silver 
threads and other curios. 
In the second part of the pro- 
gram, the Sea of Galilee and the 
Doctor Outliries 
Test of Maturity | DALLAS, Tex During the intermission Madame | 
| in which they were written. Last evening the musical trave- 
logue was given at 7:30 at St. 
Trinity Lutheran Church on Auburn 
avenue at Jessie street and 
tonight Mr. Haboush and his 
wife will present the program at 
[hillsides as the 23rd Psalm welt hee ms 
sung. | 
| By giving these musical, illus | 50 A d } is | 
trated lectures, Mr. Haboush hopes | tten surrounding hills were pictured, 
also the road te Jericho, and the 
Dead Sea which Mr. Haboush 
| says has become alive with valu- 
|} able minerals. 
| 
  His closing pictures were of shep 
'herds tending the sheep on the 
jto secure funds to found an In| ° 
— | stitute of Biblical Research in Jeru- Pj la r C | ub 
salem so that the Holy Scriptures | 
| might be studied in the atmosphere | 
‘Dinner | Mr. Haboush was born in a vil- | Mrs. A. C. Kirby opened her (INS) —Emotional] | lage by the Sea of Galilee and as | Maceday Lake home Tuesday eve- 
| maturity is a mighty hard thing| he grew up, took care of his fath- ning to members of the Pillar 
to measure, but one doctor has 
|a few yardsticks to help in the) 
task, 
Dr. William C. Menninger, gen- 
eral secretary of the famed Men- 
ninger Foundation at Topeka, Kan., 
told a recent Dallas audience that 
| the following were maturity check- 
points 
Capacity to accept reality; abil-| 
ity to get more satisfaction from | 
giving than from receiving; ability | 
to be relatively free from anxiety | 
and tension; ability ta handle hos-| 
tile impulses, and knowledge of | 
how to love 
He also said that ‘‘unless nations 
can learn to’ control hete, there 
will be more Wars.” ' er’s sheep. 
Coming to America before 
World War I, he was educated | Present. 
in universities here and abroad | The program for the evefiIng 
majoring in and | Was & book review given by Mrs. 
specializing in the historicity of A.W. Selden on “Always in Vogue,” Biblical literature. In 1923, be | Written by Edna Woolman Chase 
became an American citizen. He 20d Ilka Chase.-The book is an 
has visited his ancient homeland ®ccount of the former’s experiences 
many times taking pictures, ‘uring her years on the staff of a 
many of which first appeared in | "4tional magazine. 
the National Geographic Maga. Devotions were given by Mrs. 
zine. - F. Hire. The hostess was assist- 
| 
The Rev. Otto G. Schultz anit | wait tive, taht Comebah Oat une. 
he thought the pictures helped to | Selden Club for a cooperative dinner. Fif- 
ty members and guests were 
interpret the Scriptures and would, The May meeting of the club give more meaning {o the study | will be held at the home of Mrs. of the Bite. ’ Harold Haskins at Walnut " 
  tions of magazines and papers are 
requested. Alva T.-Harre}i of South Jessie 
street has been initiated into Beta   Saturday. Charies is active in a (weather, come in delightful curve-' and Mrs. Carl Weber of Dover 
a ag, Mrs. TerMarsch and| student chapter of the American | pleated versions—very slim and road. 
rs. Lyle Young. Seciety of Civil Engineers and; chic. } Mrs. — Sneed .— many Mackenzie Union com- | You can keep them pert as a| Handbags, as well as shoes, chairman a paper to mittees, of course. with “k sh | show their colors this spring. If 
held April 29 at the school. Dona- ./* a Gate ceaachas, Mae Me ie acy, |through soapsuds. And they drip-| your suit and shoes are navy, try 
dry, retain their pleats, and never} @ handbag in olive green, mauve 
‘need ironing! or red. 
  
  Pontiac's MacDowell Male Chor-_ oes. Ee —   |us today announced the complete m8 
program . for its annual 
Concert Saturday. This 24th an- 
nual MacDowell 
song festival will 
take place in Pon- 
tac High School 
Auditorium stari- 
ing at 8:15 p.m. 
MacDowell Chor- 
us will sing 
“Wanderin’,” 
“Black Is the Col- 
or of My True 
Love’s H air,” 
MacFARLANE ‘Down in the Val- 
ley,” “Nobody Knows the Trouble 
I've Seen,” ‘“‘Oh Miss Hannah!"’ “A 
Spirit Flower,” ‘‘Roving,’”’ “Synco- 
pated Clock,” “No Man Is An 
Island,” and “Cindy.” 
The chorus will also sing 
“Hunter's Meon,” “Waters Rip- 
ple and Flow,” “Tenebrae factae 
sunt,” and “O Ged, Our Help In 
Ages Past.” 
One of the special numbers Mac- 
Dowell will sing is entitled “A 
Dream,”’.a melody written by Ed- 
ward Grieg and arranged by Noble 
Cain. Cain dedicated his arrange- 
ment to the-Michigan Male Chorus 
Association of which MacDowell 
Chorus has long been a member. 
Featured with the chorus this, 
year will be Phyllis MacFarlane, a 
lyric soprano. 
Miss MacFarlane, whe is a 
graduate student at the Univer- 
Michigan, will sing the 
  & ry 
Chorus all set for the concert 
      also be purchased at the door. William Knoll of West Ruth 
> “ - MacDowell Chorus Lists Saturday Program 
  ning are Lane VanderHoek of Beverly 
street, Catl Matheny of Voorheis road and| School auditorium. Phyllis MacFarlane is   
Three members of the MacDowell pore yin y whens jo oxamsdnee 
Saturday eve-| sored by the chorus, and be presented 
beginning at 8:15 p.m. in Pontiac High 
f Fy avenue. The|the featured soloist. 
   _— we 
  
    
Only Boss Should Open 
Girl's Desk 
Others in the Office 
Don’t. Have Same 
Privilege 
By EMILY POST 
A young woman asks: “Isn't 
a secretary's desk considered pri- 
vate property? In other words, 
does her employer or anyone else 
in the office have the right to go 
through the drawers of her desk 
in her absence?   | } 
} 
} 
: | 
| | | Mrs. Vaughn Talks on ‘Friendship’ Women of the Moose held a 
jformal Friendship Chapter Night 
| Monday evening at Moose Temple 
Mrs. Margaret Vaugh of Dear- 
jborn was the speaker. She dis- 
lcussed ‘Friendship.’ Mrs. Mary 
| Squeirs of Detroit sag a solo ac- 
lcompanied by Mrs. Lillian Mi- 
| chaels 
Mrs, Michael Blahat, friend 
ship chairman, introduced Mrs. 
Howard Candless as acting sen 
ler regent. 
The ritual work was done by 
various friendship members from 
Detroit, Flint and Pontiac 
| Mrs. C. J. Cavalier gave the ad 
dress of welcome and the response 
was given by Mrs. P. A. Cornell 
  “This has had a good deal of 
discussion here at the office and | 
we would very much appreciate | | of Flint Corsages were presente: 1 
your opinion on this matter.’' 
Answer: If her employer has 
reason te open her desk in order 
to find something he needs, he | 
has a right to de so, and she 
should not leave anything in it 
that she does not wish him to 
see. No one else in the office 
would have a similar right. 
Dear Mrs. Post: The other eve- 
ning my parents had several 
friends in for bridge. I greeted 
them when they arrived and 
shortly afterwards excused myself, 
left the room and went to another 
part of the house to read. 
“At 10:30 I went to bed. The 
next morning Mother reprimanded 
me for not going into the living 
room to say goodnight to her 
guests, and said that she was 
ashamed of my behavior 
“Mother is a stickier for 
etiquette and somethimes carries 
it te an extreme, se I would like 
to hear from you whether I was 
rude in not saying goodnight te 
these guests. 
Answer: No, you were not rude. 
It was not necessary for your 
parents’ guests to know what time 
you went to bed, and furthermore, 
it might have disturbed their play- 
ing had you gone in to say good- 
night. 
Dear Mrs. Post: Will you please 
tell me the correct reply to make 
when calling someone on the tele- 
phone and the person on the other 
end asks, ““Who is calling?’ 
Deo you say, “This is Mr. Doe” 
or “Henry Doe,” or if a wonran, 
de you say, “Mrs. Jones” or This one also can be raised and 
“Helen Jones?” lowered, and swings in a wide arc 
As to ceiling fixtures them- 
Answer: If you are telephoning selves, they, touch the extremes 
to a friend you would say, “This 
is Henry Doe” or ‘This is Helen 
Jones.” If you are telephoning . 
on business you would say, “This 
is Mrs. Jones” or “This is Henry’ 
Doe of Blank & Company.” 
  
  Get Ready Now! 
Finest quality all-leather 
luggage made for those 
vacations. 
KIMMINS     Leather Goods , Light-providers nght now simply 
| ==, =   There is a masquerade at your feet when 
you appear in this new fashion for spring. | stained glass windows.     
Today's Lamps Created 
in Wide Variety of Styles Home lighting, not so long ago 
came largely from variations on 
a Single theme . 
Almost every light source was a 
table lamp, and the big differences 
depended on whether the lamp was 
modern or traditional! 
These sketches were made 
from the new lamps and fixtures 
for spring, without any special 
effort to hunt down the unusual 
or extreme, and this form is poised on a mount- 
ing of walnut and brass 
The new bullet lamp sketched is 
unusually tall and has handsome 
pierced brass shades. 
Outdoor lighting is a subject in 
itself, but among the new designs 
is a lamp post, which can be used 
either outdoors or as decorative 
lighting for a hall. 
  
A favorite movie star, a _ red- 
head, loves to wear red. And why 
not? Pink for auburns, bright coral 
come in the most amazing Variety | for the titians 
of designs The brilliant colored kid pumps took like 
  
Costume Change 
If there's room in your handbag 
cos- 
Take 
along a stout envelope of ropes of 
When you take the jacket make your work-to-evening 
tume do a real turnabout 
beads 
off, put on the beads and no one 
will suspect you ever saw the in- 
side of an office ‘Taimee Surola 
Entertains Club 
With Slides | Taimee Surola entertained mem- 
bers of the Soroptimist Club of 
Pontiac Monday evening when 
the group met at the Oakcliff driv 
home of Mrs. Raymond Swack- 
hamer 
Miss Surola, a club member 
recently returned from a_ five- 
week visit to the Hawaiian Islands 
Flowers were flown in from 
Hawaii for the occasion and a 
South Sea Island theme was car- 
ried throughout the buffet 
Guests of the meeting were 
Kay Wenzel, a former member; 
Mrs. Glenn Valance, Marie Keeper 
and Mrs. J. Connell Langford 
  
RUTH CUSTOM LAMP SHADES 
PICTURE FRAMING 
165 Pierce St., Birmingham HAIGH 
OLD PRINTS 
MI 4-2002 
      
       
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. APRIL. 20. 1955 
to those participating by the 
Friendship members 
New members initiated = in 
honor of Mrs. Richard Muck 
were Mrs. William Hallanbeck, 
Mrs. Robert Hatfield, Mrs. Anna MAKE OvEsi and your meaning, . 5 
  | of his grasp is your language. A 
happy day Announcement was made of _ 
Friendship Symposium to be held Town names of Frost, W. Va., 
at Saginaw on May 1. The next and Frostproof, Fla. indicate vari- 
meeting will be held May 2 ations in U.S. climate. 
  
SHAPE, STYLE AND HAIR CONDITION are the 
    Three Brandrup, Mrs. Kuth Dorrance > " ; ead ‘Mics, Sickars Dateen “alae Factors in Hair Grooming. May We Help You? 
Others were Mrs. fiena Hawley I ermanents ‘ . from $5.00 
Mrs. Edward LaBarge. Mrs. Har “ 
old Raison, Mrs. Magalien Spak CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP ) ,OCTO V \ a ar ifs : _ > 
Elizabeth Suttcn 116 N. Perry St. Phone FE 2-6361. Opposite Hotel Roosevelt 
-. 
  
     
     
  Andre Beauty CSalon No Matter How Bad the Condition of 
Your Hair... Now You Can Have a 
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Magically Easy to Manage! 
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Complete with Cutting and Styling 
“WHERE QUALITY AND 
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2714 
Open Wednesday All Day— 
Friday ‘til 9 P. M. ( reated by 
Expert Operators 
Await to Serve You! 
Vo Appointment Needed! 
Immediate Service! 
Phone FE 5-4490 
2nd Fleer Pontiac State 
Bank Bidg. 
  
    
There's the strictly modern, the 
traditional, the stark and tRe or 
nate, the sternly functional, and 
the whimsy and almost everything 
between. 
The pin-up lamp strides ahead 
in its usefulness by reaching an 
arm farther out into the room 
than it did, as the upper sketch 
shows, which means that a hang- 
ing light can be almost any 
where. a «= i 
of design with the two sketched 
at upper mght. The simple one 
ts Swedish, of opal glass with oak -f- 
fittings 
The other shows the return of 
the chandelier, and is really one 
of the least elaborate of a col- 
lection which features sparkling 
crystal, There are crystal insets 
im the bowl, and the finial and 
leaves are crystal. 
Some lamps set their minds to 
the task at hand and do it so well 
they're leaving the studios and 
workshops for homes 
One of these is the Scandanavian 
adjustable lamp at lower left. It 
moves in any direction at the touch 
of a finger and stays there. 
Table lamps in general are 
slender and have rather shallow 
shades and elegantly simple 
bases. This same outline, just 
past, was less interesting than it 
is now that it has been given 
more detail. 
| The base of the lamp sketched 
looks like a slender gourd with its 
white shadings on brown ceramic, 
  
  Nowadays man can’t live on 
bread alone. It takes a lot of 
    
This is why: 
Clinics ere the quolity... comfort... 
fitting shoes! Clini ere priced te 
please your budget, too! 
Af wrytes 3% te 10 AAA te € . 
Some styles 3 te 12 AAAA to E 
GENUINE GOOCDYEAR WELTS 
  THE CLINIC SHOE }} miu ag VU Powsdee 0 Uhite 
61 dace of urs tought hy nation™ | 
  Get on expert fit in Clinics today? 
$7.95..89:95 /£ re 
*,..0¥00 any other brand, excording te © survey by © leeding nurses’ journal, 
| Pauli’s, Shoe Store | 35 N. Saginaw St. | 
. Serving Pontiac Over 75 Years ae || 
       
     
   
        
ss | 
‘y | 
Style Mo. 411 - 
| white gloveth, $8.95 
    MAPLE at BATES THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 
COME SEE 
KASPER OF ARNOLD-FOX 
‘AND HIS INSPIRED 
SUMMER COLLECTION 
OF DAYTIME — 
AND EVENING 
| ORIGINALS 
  BIRMINGHAM       
  ASPERS> IS HERE! 
  
2-Hour Free Parking 
HAVE YOUR TICKET VALIDATED AT JACOBSON’S WHEN YOU MAKE A PURCHASE 
      
    +} 
  
   ee a 
) 
  
4 
—___—cher—tetegraphed Governor alp h H. 
—————Hig “Only regret, he explained, 
sneer tient an nent ad tess a 
  
Many Useful Tips on Fishing, 
Hunting Seen at Sports Show By JACK PATTERSON tailers should actively sell mer-| Not the least advantage of pat-| Hardesty ironed out the crudities 
Pontiac Sportsman's Show which — =. merely pape A | tering around in such a place is‘ of our technique . the point that 
Saturday night w from re is mach to be said for either | the opportunity to pick up usefu! | we were able to flick a cigarette 
ee = ies _ view, but in this case proponents | tips from experts of one sort o1 | out of Chuck Rogers’ mouth at a 
almost every standpoint, very | of selling won out, the cash regis-| another. Now while we cheerfully | distance of 30 feet. Chuck aged 
much a success. There were = | ters jingled merrily, and we heard | concede ‘that we know most any-/| visibly during a series of false 
spots, to be sure, put it show | no complaints from the public. | thing worth knowing about every-/ starts but survived unscathed. 
be borne in m | Entertainment wes hard to | thing, we must admit to a nian * * * 
that fer mest = schedule because the hours of | ineptness in the principles under: | The whole secret of shooting a 
the local exhibi- greatest attendance were almost | lying the manipulation of @ spin | jus where you want it to go lies 
tors it was a 1st) impossible to predict. As a mat- |" rod. lin lining the rod up with your 
time proposition.| ter of fact, total attendance was We'q always supposed that (nose. It is easy to keep it lined 
They had much] smaller than had been hoped for. | what fish 7 caught with the de- as with the haga ul 
to learn and did) The numbers that did turn out, viee were “winayhommers of | he ri yin se of ond nee 
just that during | though were substantial and from their race. If we could cast | And this alignment does away with 
the s of oa within 10 feet of a fish it quali- | the normal tendency to let the rod progress Of what we could gather everyone   
  the show. | he, a time. On the strength fied, to us, as pinpoint accuracy | tip drift either to the left or right 
There was of pie , results, a bigger and (and often as not was subse. Naturally, if the tip wanders from 
me , quently so described). the line of sight, the plug will some debate as | better show ig in the making fo! 
PATTERSON to whether re-|next year. , 
Ohio Wild Life 
Official Quits 
Under Pressure Toledoan Fined $500   fall correspondingly wide of the A sh ractice “iod wit A = - sik dow od & h Ben aiming point   
A rod properly lined up will 
shoot the plug straight and by 
overcasting. slightly, the line can ‘Drayton Dog Wins 
Brittany Club Honors. © sect ine cast airecty on | target, 
A Brittany spaniel owned by a 
  It is surprising how a few min 
open derby stake of the Michigan | faulty habits. While it is improb- 
Brittany Club's field trial last week- able that a half hour's practice 
, will turn an average caster into a 
end at Pontiac Lake Recreation contende? for Hardesty's national   
  . sae é ; area. | casting crown, we believe that af 
in Michigan Case, ets | Jippo, a 20-month-old Brittany, ter such a session he will find 
Suspended Sentence was tops in a field of 19 dogs. himself making better casts than KILLER — he has ever made before. This is 
lene i - | remembering that a good cast is 
TA Managers Meeting by definition, an accurate cast. 
Is Scheduled April 27 | HELENA—About 28,000 of Mon- , | ; * | Second Class A baseball man-'tana's 34,000 deer hunters last 
' | agers’ meeting has been scheduled season were successful. 
'for 7:30 p.m., April 27, in the TOLEDO w—Maurice Kocher re- | Here's one of the 
signed as a northwestern Ohio| “killers” of the | 
member of the Ohio Wildlife Coun |Great Lakes. 
cil yesterday. | The snake - like 
'creature is a The Toledd sportsman and oil lamphrey eel, } 
       
     
   
   
    
   
         
       
   
    
   
           
company executive was given 4 which is blamed Parks Recreation Department 
$500 fine and a suspended 6month for the great de- | Office. in ccc, Auto Safety Glass 
jail sentence and was placed on cimation of lake | Preliminary plans for the open- Replaced Proseriy, Quickly 
probation for two years Friday trout in recent > 7 ing of the ‘season and adoption FREE—! LB. COFFEE 
by U. S. District judge Ralph M.| years. It was of the various phases of the by- ie aaa 
Freeman in Detroit. taken in a smelt- laws will take place. This is a Insurance Claims Honored 
Mr. Kocher had previously | dipping net at very important meeting and all'l Hub Aute Glass Ce. pleaded guilty to violating the Port Huron by | teams should be represented 122 Oakland Ave FE 46-2066 
migratory bird act by trying to W. H. Morgan ——       
hunt over a baited marsh near 39 West Strath- 
Erie, Mich., last November. more, Pontiac. 
“In order to avoid further em- /t is 16's inches 
barrassment to you and members ong. as shown 
of the Ohio Wildlife Council, I by the ruler 
hereby tender my resignation as a * lon gside it. 
member of the council,” Mr. Ko-| Morgan's son Powerboat Champion 
CONCORD, Calif. uw—Bud Wiget 
P= (of this city is mighty proud of his 
=> Colonel Green Star Island Trophy, | 
emblematic of the high point title 
in outboard motorboat racing in 
| Florida during the winter. The 41- | 
ot —-wainut—rancher—-comptied+ 
} 2,000 points during the American | 
Power Boat Assn.'s campaign. | 
Wiget had five consecutive wins Lausche. (above) and 
Charies Kimball 
were other 
  On Saturday governor Lausche 
indicated he expected an immedi- 
  
  members of the : apna SUNRAE—The spartt minnow that ate resignation from Mr. Kocher, _- in his c service runabout oxlens, comets, Gets, teste 0nd ast the 0 te 
and Monday he wired the Toledo- party, on the Se, | Crosswind fect contour and balance are the seeret. Ne fest 
an: “Your resignation as a mem- | smelt - dipping —_———_-—— Sad "ue, tray fam sgpen” Torus Sonrtieg 
ber of the OWC is hereby request- | 'P- Pontiac Press Phetes| MIAMI — Florida got $1,191,924 “™"e-Sare. Oo Bet 
ed." | from the first 21 days of racing at s} | at Order. 
Tropical Park in Coral Gables the ALLIED INDUSTRIES 
current season. 342 9th Ave, Hopkins, Minn. 
  at the Park Lane hotel here and 
dictating a statement. 
Although Mr. Kocher explained 
he considered himself the victim ° ° 
of circumstances and the innocent 4 Eddie Meier 
arty in the case, he said he was 
er aupaslien, GEORGIA HUSHPUPPIES 
“I do not wish to do this be-| Hushpuppies to accompany fish 
cause of my business affiliations are a southern creation but, like 
and I do not wish to pursue it al} good things their appeal 
further,’’ Mr. Kocher said. |hes become universal! Here's a 
was that he was ending 20 years "ecipe that comes oe the 
Of service in the interests of con-| Georgia Game and Fish Commis 
servation in Ohio | sion which you will like. It is un- 
In all of the publicity surround-' usual in that it features cheese. 
ing the incident, his version of the aoe noe ge ea |' ole cRY he was conferring with associates un 
H FACTORY 
REBUILT and NEW 
       , 
        
      “New Low Price No Down Payment 
New Car Guarantee » Buick, Chevrolet, Hudson, Dodge, Ford, @ 
Oldsmobile, Pontiac, 38 te ‘47, DeSote, @   
INSTALLED IN 
  ‘ . Mix 5 cups cornmeal with 2 hrysler ymeow 
. ine rey a the ‘tind. dy panne ba table. ONE DAY Free Towing—No Bleck Deposit ~ . i spoon ng powder, easpoon 
‘Takes Fishing |iuaioasian™@ ast! § MOTOR EXCHANGE CO. . Great Lakes ishing diced, 2% cups water, 1 can con- |@ 401 S$. Seginew _ Phone FE 3-7432 @ | Drayton Plains man, Douglas, utes of doing things the right way | 
| Squires, 2460 Pauline, won the can overcome well ingrained, but | 
TTrilliiliiiiiiitiititititiiiiii oon,   
   i” ' 
& 
MAKE THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1955 THIR OVER Pages.   
   
    
     Sharkskins GABARDINE 
SUITS Won't Bag — Won't Sag 
mF All Wool 
FLANNEL 
SUITS Solid Blues, Greys, 
Browns, and Fancy Colors 
MEN'S 
Sport    
  
    
  en Es. 
Drop by the spoonful into the ‘Ticense Bill Killed | Swe" “*°~"""™~" |Nensencenensnenenenenencestssessst . LANSING \#—A bill to require pan in which the fish were fried. neh | pat 
fishing licenses on the Great Lakes When golden brown, remove and 7 By, . rT pa - 
was soundly defeated in the house drain on absorbent paper. If fried oa, : < ”\ 
-yesterday for the 13th time. in deep fat with the fish, the hush- b , 
Rep. Kenneth O. Trucks (R-Bald- | puppies will float when done. h ly VA | . ESI 
4 Sites DRIVE SAFELY moved to cut off debate after it 
appeared the bill had little chance Race Honors Mare 
of passing. The vote was 65-35. OCEANPORT, N. J.  — The 
a first American thoroughbred mare 
to win more than $100,000 was Miss 
| Woodford. In four years of racing 
LITTLE ROCK — Bull Shoals | she started 48 times, won 37 races 
dam, the fifth largest in the U.S., | and $118,270. Only twice did she | | 
has created a pool which has be- | fail to run in the money.       Heavy Bass Fishing 
« 
come one of the most prolific| A stakes race honoring this great 
. bass fishing areas in the middle | mare is run annually at Monmouth 
south country. Park.   
  
FORD or CHEVROLET...... *] 2” 
PONTIAC or PLYMOUTH.... 9] 4°° 
Factory Bonded Shoes $2.00 Extra 
Other Make Cars at Special Prices 
Seat Covers \\\ 
\ _. .* 
YD cme, 97% —— DISTRIBUTOR of 
Service Station Equipment 
@ Globe Hoists 
@ Champion Air Compressors 
@ Bink’s Spray Equipment 
@ ARO Lubrication Equipment 
@ Atlas Lathes and Saws —s" Z 
@ Chicago Pneumatic Tools All 1954 Seat Covers— 
@ Heinwerner Hydraulic Jacks | While They Last! 
* Proto Tools Fibre or Plastic \W Price 
@ Blackhawk Porto Power : 
PONTIAC MOTOR PARTS: MacDonald, Inc. “Parts Headquarters for the Doctor of Motors” 
Automotive Parts and Equipment . 370 South Saginaw St. 
84 South Perry St. § Phone FE 2-0106 FE 5-6136 or FE 5.6137        
        
Sa Car, Only eeee one 
  
      
  ‘ Opposite Economy Furniture       
  \ 
pe ee SO eS ea SS SOI By ee fs es oe ee ee ba ae hi ” s > ee A ee         Also selection of imported Wool] 
SPORT COATS at... $22.75 
      
  Block's Sprinkler Water repellent 
Poplin §3” 
Jackets... .cee--eccccee--0e 
  
Open Wed. Thurs. Fri. & Sat. 
Nights ‘til 9 p.m. 
  
FE 5.4952) | 4% 
Special! S 
1] Pr. 
$39 
  Coats     
    
Linens 
  
or spert coat—a men’s plastic 
Rain Coat with a self material pooch for 
handy carrying. Contains no rubber, will 
not crack, dry out, or rot. 
      
pecial! 
2 Pr. 
$70 
  Block's Southland Sport Shirts. 
Plain and fancy colors... One of 
the largest selections in town. 
  Colo teed 99 
fast. ares eoerce--e ‘2 
SPECIAL PURCHASE 
Men’s Gabardine Slacks, Solid and Fancy Colors Open Wed. Thurs. Fri. & Set. 
Sizes 28 to 42 
1 pr. $3.99 --2 pr. $7. Nights ‘til 9 p.m. 
00   
Victor's 3S. Saginaw St. ss FE 5-952     
—TEREE ——*#® +2e perehase—of -2—-suit-t— -—— 
     Sd | 
    THIRTY-TWO 
  - Keego Harbor Residents Vo 
Approve Budget 
for Waterford 
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1935     
te Approval of City Charter I   
1 biew é a : eee 2 i 7. J ‘ he se ‘Dance Set at Goodison 
   
  F Officials Elected 
fo Seven Posts. Women Support °scorso one. | sponsored by the Baldwin-Goodi- 
1son PTA will be held in the rilti- 
  - Waterford Sho | Purpose room of the Baldwin 
a | School, beginning at 9 p.m. Satur- 
Pe ae | day. 
Increase of $100,000 a Incorporation Assured Jaycee Auxiliary to Aid a, 
Brought On by Growth, % by 86 Ballot Margin in 3-Day Home Exhibit 
Says Supervisor 
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The 
1955-56 budget of $415,555 has been 
approved by the Waterford Town- 
ship board. 
Last year’s budget was $302,103. 
Tremendous growth of the 
The charter was approved 289 29-May 1. FORD. m township, requests for more and ; PP The wives, memberg of the AA RE MMENDE 
more services, and an increase to 203, a slight margin of 8 votes ; newly formed Jaycee Auxiliary, 
@ Fresh Sea Foods in personne! are the primary 
reasons for the budget increase, 
Supervisor Lieoyd Anderson point- 
ed out. 
  j ; 
    in Turnout at Polls 
KEEGO HARBOR—Voters here 
yesterday approved a city charter 
for their area, and elected offi- 
cials to the latest addition to Oak- 
land County’s new cities. 
  carrying the proposal. 
Named to office were five city 
councilmen,   April 29-May 1 
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The 
Waterford Junior Chamber of 
Commerce wives will help their 
husbands conduct the Home and 
Garden Show scheduled for April goat SEgeeaa an @ 
Nationally teonareid 
{mm 
    will work with refreshments, 
has been announced. 
John Chase, 
man for the show, has revealed it 
@ Prime Steaks 
snare @ Chicken G&G Turkey general 
  The appointment of a radio and | ROBERTA McINTOSH Dinners 
| telephone man, and four additional | The balloting marked the final) Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Mcintosh | {Mat early all of the 55 indoor patrolmen, as recommended by | movement in a change in status! of Keego Harbor have a ou t ve * Delicious 
| Police Chief Frank Van Atta, was which formally began Dec. 14,! the engagement of their daughter, ° Specialties : a 194, with a vote of electing a! Roberta, to Cpl. . Eugene Pool,| Exhibits of merchandise of all 
Also on the agenda was the charter commission, and separat-|tsMC. He is the son of Mr. and} home and garden associations, LUNCH—DINNERS preliminary approval of the Wat- 
kins Hillis subdivision piat, lo- 
| cated north of Lakewood Drive 
) in Drayton Woods. 
, . The board also approved Coro- 
nado Manor, subdivision plat at 
Scott Lake and Pontiac Lake 
| Roads, subject to water and sewer 
installation and approval of the 
Oakland County Road Commission. ing from West Bloomfield Town-| vrs Earl Pool of Cooley Lake| garden decorations, gifts, sport- ship. | Road. No date has been set for| ing goods, appliances, and land- 
Elected to the city council yes- | i. wedding. | scaping and building material will terday were Benjamin Covey, 322; : be present at the show, the first 
Wilma Webb, 306; John Loveland. | of its kind in the vicinity. 291; Samuel Whitmore, 251; and | It will run from 611 p. m paling ae ae Son - Floral Talk Slated | Friday, April 29; from 1-11 p. m 
ve $s ‘set. af Waterford PTA Saturday, and from 1-11 p.. m. 
Russell C. Greig, 198; John Sell- Sunday, at the CAI building. 
WATERFORD CENTER — Mrs. eg Open Every Day! 
NOW SERVING 
OYSTER on the 
HALF SHELL   
  Pontiac Press Phete VOTING ON CHARTER—One of the nearly 500 
Keego Harbor voters who went to the polls yesterday | workers Mrs. Ralph Odell, Mrs. Claude Kimler, —_——<——— oe ee ee 
; Banquet Room. | to approve a charter and elect city officials is Mrs. land Mrs. Clyde Fellows. 
Charies Leaf, (right). Oakland County added 
Checking her registration at| another city to its list when residents approved 
  | 
man, 159; Joseph Nichols, 130; and — 
George E. Harris, 113.   
      
  
  
  
  ! . . td ace ~f)} } | i —<—_ <> 
ee ee ee Arnold Soper defeated James | Ruby Dunstan of Pontiac will be | barn Fire Cost $3,000 5 ¢ ° to display fireworks, and the re- . . cf Southart for the justice of the | the speaker at the Waterford Cen-| GOBLES  — A fire destroyed Phone: 
quest from’ Howard Blakemore ‘for Retired People Display Talent | ° peace post, 221-180. Gien Munger (ter PTA meeting at 8 p.m. Thurs- the barn of Ralph Beatty east of OR 3-1907. OR 3-9309 
renewal of the Kiddieland license } ge constable, polling 270 bal- day in the school. Gime an seeueusese 
on Elizabeth Lake Road was ° . compared to 134 for Glen E. : : : Jeeeeeesssem 
Samet Rochester Woman Captures First Prize) sms" _See will demonstrate floral ar — ° e ° e The officials will be sworn into | exhibit. The flowers will be given . “ C S office at ceremonies Monda t. dur Union Lake Firemen |for Painting in Kundig Center Art SHow |e: s\rnenies sony ugh. sway during te meting © EAT IN 
An Oakland County woman, Mrs. Waterford Township and Sylvan YOUR CAR 
—— Display New Tanker Nellie Reed of Rochester, took first 
prize in the Southeastern Michigan 
  FOUR TOWNS—The new 1,000 
gallon tank trunk for the Union | 
Lake Fire Department has been | 
completed, and equipped for all | 
emergencies. a 
The converted oi] taker was re- | 
conditioned by the members of | 
the fire department, and will be | 
used to supplement the neighbor- 
ing equipment for grass fires and 
other calls. 
The truck will be on display Arts and Crafts Spring Exhibit in 
Detroit this week with her paint- 
ing, “‘Forgotten.”’ 
Kundig Center, activity center 
for people of retirement age 
which is supported by the Detroit 
Archdiocesan Development fund, 
sponsored the show. 
Over 1000 items displayed in 
the week-long exhibit included 
oil paintings, ceramics, needie- 
work, silver and copper cfaft     “Sunday afternoon—at—tnion Lake 
and Cooley Lake Roads. 
Gerald Fettig has been ap 
pointed a member of the Union | 
Lake department, 
membership to 25. 
County Deaths Mrs. Glenn Carey 
WALLED LAKE — Service for | 
Mrs. Glenn (Jean) Carey, 45, of { 
1304 Pontiac Trail, will be held at | 
1:30 p.m, Friday at the Richard- | 
son-Bird Funera] Home. She died 
today. 
Surviving besides her husband 
are a daughter, Sally Jo and a 
son, William C., both at home, four 
sisters, Mrs. Glenn Hanmer and | 
Mrs. Dwight Jennings, both of St. 
Charles, Ill., Mrs. Maynard Har- 
of-San Benite,-Fexas, and 
Mrs. Wellington Coe, of Walled | 
Lake. 
Mrs. Matilda Jane Witt 
WIXOM — Service for Mrs. 
Matilda Jane Witt, 68, 29700 
Wixom Rd., will be held at 2 
p. m. Saturday from the Caster-| 
line Funeral Home, Northville, 
with burial in Oakland Hills 
Cemetery. She died today. 
—Sarviviag—are—a_ 
Witt of Wixom, three daughters, | 
Mrs. Hazel Farley, also of Wixom, |       
  
    
Mrs. Dorothy Thompson, and 
Mrs. Ruth Parra, both of Walled 
Lake, two brothers, Howard 
Greer of Northville and Byron of 
Fenton, a_ sister, Mrs. Nelson 
Rich of Pontiac, and five grand- 
children. 
Mrs. Francis Chartier 
ROCHESTER—Rosary for Mrs 
Francis (Ann) Chartier, 50, of 
3111 Livernois Rd., will be recited 
at 8 p. m. Thursday at the 
William R. Potere Funeral Home. 
Requiem Mass will be said at 
10 a. m. Friday at St. Andrew 
Catholic Church, with burial in 
Mt. Avon Cemetery. She ditd 
Tuesday night. 
Surviving are her husband: 
two daughters, Mrs. Dorothy 
Bartholomew of Rochester, Arlene 
at home; one son, Leonard at 
home; two. brothers, Martin 
Zarnick of Pontiac, John Zarnick 
of Rochester; two sisters, Mrs. 
Rose BufStick~of Pontiac. Mrs. 
Josephine Cole of Cleveland, Ohio; ! 
and one grandchild. 
  
SHOES ‘~ FAMILY. Orthopedic Shee Specialist 
TURPIN-HALL FAMILY SHOE STORES 
4464 Dixte, Drayten Plains 
9848 Unien Lake R4., Union Lake   
    
  raising the 
|public meeting Tuesday at   aid Dbasketweaving. — 
Mrs. Reid's prize-winner was a 
sad, true-to-life painting of an old 
man sitting on the edge of his bed 
in a squalid room. 
The painting, Mrs. Reid said, 
was done from memory of a sim- 
ilar photograph she had seen long   
West Bloomfield 
PTA to Discuss 
Traffic Problems 
WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- 
SHIP — Traffic problems and fu- 
ture road needs of the area will 
be discussed by traffic engineer 
E. W. Campbell, at an 8 p.m. 
the 
West Bloomfield High School. 
Also present will be Township 
Supervisor H. M. Thatcher, and 
traffic study director J. D. Car- 
roll Jr. 
The West Bloomfield League of 
Women Voters is sponsoring the 
meeting 
Brandon School PTA 
Officers Are Installed = by Secretaries — ago, which particularly impressed purpose of the exhibit is to show 
her with its air of dejection. 
The “forgotten” man de that people of retirement age and 
| over are still very much useful as 
the situation that Kundig Cen- | citizens in the community. 
ter,~ the sponsor, is fighting | “By showing some of these ex- 
against. | pert works,” he —— _ 
| The Rev. W. F. Suedkamp, di-| PC ight Purctene ites tor ef rector of the center, Said that the | derly persons.” 
Entrants in the contest all 
ranged from 64 to % years in 
age. The exhibit is held twice 
a year, the next one having been 
set for Oct. 23. Bosses Fete 
i from the i 
contest will be shown after Sunday 
at the J. L. Hudson Company 
in Detroit. 
Oakland School Group | "\iry Reid, a housewife, has been 
Holds Annual Banquet painting ne shot fies years, & 
. ° | ing n ng y. 
in Bloomfield Twp. sie has a srmall studio in. the 
Oak. P@sement of her home at 330 Au- 
|burn Ave., where she also does 
| work in ceramics and stoneware. 
Her most recent painting, is one 
| of world-famous Dr. Albert Ein- 
| stein, who died Monday,   
Nearly 200 members of the 
land County Association of Educa- 
tional Secretaries entertained their 
bosses Tuesday night at their an- 
nual spring banquet held at Devon 
Gables in Bloomfield Township. | 
Dr. Walton E. Cole, pastor of | 
the First Congregational Church, | Meeting Slated 
a othe Power of the Positive at Crary School Attitude.” 'to List Courses He said people labor under 
self-imposed limitations and that | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — 
all things were possible if peo- | Scheduling of classes for the 1955- 
| Wee could emly believe ix thenr }56 school term for junior high stu- 
selves. \dents at Isaac E. Cary Junior 
Invocation for the evening was! High School is beginning this delivered by Philip J. Wargelin, | | ok 
  
ORTONVILLE Tncumbents 
Karl Robinson and Mrs. Elmer 
Seelbiner were returned to of- 
fice of president and secretary at 
an installation of Brandon Town- 
ship School PTA officers Monday 
night 
Other officers are Leland Grov- 
ensteen, father vice president; 
Mrs. W. G. Lee, mother vice 
president, Charles Sayre, teacher 
vice president, and Mrs, Leonard 
Austin, treasurer. Lake on the north, the City of 
| Sylvan Lake on the east, the Grand   of the program committee, has 
jalso arranged a plant exchange 
for part of the program. Room 
| Trunk Western Railroad on the | mothers of fi t grade il ill 
| south, and the village of Orchard | supervise the social howe .* 
| Lake and Cass Lake shoreline on 
| the west. | 
The ares tettesd coc. |AUburn Heights 
Peataine 2 porulation et 2200 1A to Install | 
School district boundaries will j Be gh oes em | New Ofticers tion. | AUBURN HEIGHTS—Mrs. Cecil 
If the charter had not been ap- | Denison will be installed as presi- | 
yed_in yesterday's balloting, dent of PTA at Auburn Heights |   
         GOoOoD 
FOOD     jthe candidates would not have School at an 8 p.m. meeting Thurs- 
jbeen placed in office, regardless day. 
lof the number of votes received.| Other officers 
3-Way Program Set |ss-?tstatins. 
by Waterford PTSA father vice president; Mrs. William 
| Lewis, teacher vice president; Mrs. 
Erbie Hupp, secretary and Mrs. 
Lester Oles, treasurer. 
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The | stalling officer. Refreshments will 
purpose of the program of the high | be served. 
school Parent-Teacher-Student As- 
sociation Wednesday night will be | 
three-fold. 
N WHERE to be installed, 
mother | 
  
@ 
oO 
O \e) 
FRIENDS 
MEET will play and demonstrate its 
marching ability. 
Teachers will be in their class- | 
rooms from 7:30 to 8 p.m. for 
interviews with parents, The 
ness meeting will begin at 8 in the 
auditorium, and will include elec: 
  
  
        
  
Viola Y. Bain Is Married 
in Arizona Church Rite WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Mr. 
and Mrs. Elmer Bain of 5521 Tubbs 
Rd. have announced the marriage 
of their daughter, Viola Yvonne, 
,to Marvin Duane Siders of Lake- 
wood, Calif. 
Marvin is the son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Marvin Siders, also of Lake- 
wood. 
The ceremony was performed in 
| Yuma. Ariz., at the Calvary Luth- 
eran Church on Easter Sunday. 
For the wedding, the bride wore 
a gray suit with pink accessories 
and a matching corsage. 
The couple will live at 1970 Pine 
Ave. in Long Beach, Calif. 
They plan a vacation trip to visit 
the bride's parents sometime this 
summer. 
  
       
      4528 . 
4 | @m—_-HI-CHAIRS $9.95 w» WELCH STROLLERS—BUGGIES f 
' 
Small Down Payment—Easy Monthly Payments! - 
Karen‘s Toyland | CRIBS 
  Dixie Highwoy 
    
presented 
  principal of Lincoln Junior High) 4 ineeting has been planned for 
Music was provided by the BoyS time the curriculum for next 
Ensemble of the Pontiac Senior) year’s ninth grade students will 
Sommerville served as program! parents of the present eighth 
chairman. eee x 
| were introduced. They are, Bar- | Counselors and teachers will be 
bara Roberts, president; Thelma at the school to give assistance in 
Predmore, recording secretary; |next year. 
| Jeanette Washington, treasurer; | eran 
| retary; Loie Baker, 2-year board Walled Lake PTA 
| member, and Marion Porrit, also 
| Calvert was named to the 1-year | 
' board post. | 
' outdoorsman Dennis Glen Cooper 
will show his color film ‘Touring 
Lake Junior-Senior High PTA at 
8 p.m. Thursday, 
in the junior high auditorium. 
| During the short business meet- 
the nominating committee, will 
| present a slate of officers for the 
} eee eee eee 
Sudan Missionary 
DRAYTON PLAINS—Rev. J. B. 
Van Lierop Jr., active with the 
Africa, will be the special speaker 
at 8 p.m. today in the Community 
The Rev. Mr. Van Lierop, whose 
early friendship with the local pas- School, Pontiac. Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at which 
High School and Mrs. Virginia’ be explained. 
New officérs for the coming year |to attend this meeting. 
Viola, vice president; Anna Marie | the selection of courses offered for 
| Dorothy Irwin, corresponding sec- 
| 2-year board member. Angela J. to See Travel Film 
| WALLED LAKE — Lecturer and 
Glorious Michigan’’ for the Walled 
The program will be 
ling, Mrs. Paul Witte, chairman of 
|coming year. 
to Speak at Drayton 
Sudan Interior Mission in North 
United Presbyterian Church. 
tor, W. J. Teeuwissen Jr.,   
  from 
| | where the fathers of the two'men 
| public ts invited to attend. 
County Calendar   
IN | _MRS, MARVIN SIDERS 
Meeting at Metamora 
to Discuss High School 
METAMORA—The possibility of 
building a new high school for a 
onsolidation of several school dis- 
tricts, including the Dryden-Leon- 
  
  ard-Metamora area, will be dis- stfictel beard ef the Four , | Methodist Church hola cussed at a public meeting at 8) meeting st 8 pm 7 7 
p.m. today at the Metamora! {nip win attend sub -diatrice meeting School. | the Carne Methodist Church at 
Interested residents ha a » have (ten ee ed Th | invited to participate. | tee charem os 8 pm. Friday. 
4 " - 7 
- oi si i a, 2 | BEER 
tion of officers. e. | WINE 
Oxford Rotary Set |& * tiquors been_urged | for F ing] Night 9 DELICIOUS a\4e SV Sw ses COCKTAILS 
  of Minstrel Show 
OXFORD — A _ near - capatity 
crowd filled the Oxford High 
School auditorium last night when 
the Oxford Rotary Club presented 
the first performance of its two- 
night minstre] show, to benefit the 
club’s scholarship fund. 
Specialty acts introduced by 
Robert Parenti, interlocutor, in- 
cluded the ‘“Curbstone Serenad- LIBERTY 
COCKTAIL 
LOUNGE 
85 North Saginaw 
‘Baa La a a a. ers,"’ a barbershop quartet from 
Pontiac. 
The show will be repeated at 
8 p.m, tonight. Tickets are availa- 
ble at the door. [¥4e¢4LALLALAALLAAALAAALAALALAL £2 
< 
Lkdidededeidededede de ddd ded diddedided 
  
    
          
  COCKTAIL 
LOUNGE 1222 W.. HURON ST. 
Huron Bow! Bidg. 
  NEW ENTERTAINMENT for your pléasure and enjoyment 
all this week. 
DELORES CAROL 
With new, fresh 
songs you will be 
delighted to hear. 
a comic MC who 
keeps your interest 
in life's happy side. 
             
       PETE FLORE With His “Mel-Ajirs” 
for Music to Keep You 
_ DANCING     
  
  Russell Sherman, | 
Mrs. Max Wilson will be the in-| 
  ST COURTEOUS SERVICE 
A sandwich and coke 
A male and hot dog 
A tull meal is good at— 
Fi-MAR DRIVE-!I STAURANT 
Dixie Hwy. Lake Road      
0224424420) 
PIZZA PIE 
A Treat tor the Whole Family 
’ 1S VARITIES TO SELECT FROM 
Fime, tasty Malian feeds prepared fer you to 
take cut. 
Joe’s Famous Spaghetti House 1088 West Heren &t. rR 3-T306 
Open 6 P.M.-3 A.M.—Sun. 3-17 P_M.—Clesed Mon. 
i a‘i ’ ee ee 
Baldwin - 
RESTA et Montcalm 
DINNERS 
Drive-In Service 
“Take Home” Orders 
Counter Lunches GIANT MALTS 
SANDWICHES 
SODAS 
Open 7 Days A Week 
Sundays 5 P. M - 12:30 A. M. 
GOOD FOOD — FRIENDLY SERVICE 
Catering to Ranquets and Private Parties 
PU R & FOO RESTAURANT 
end BAR 
© Breakfasts — Luncheons — Dinners 
53 Seuth Saginaw — Across from Jerome Motor Setes 
Open 5:30 4. Mite 2 A. M — Clesed Sénday 
BEER — WINE — LIQUOR 
DELICIOUS HOME STYLE FOOD 
*& Steaks *Lunches * Dinners 
* Homemade Pies and Donuts 
MARTIN'S onven 426 W. HURON ST. 
Old Heidelberg Inn & Cocktail Lounge 1727 South Telegraph Road 
Remodeled for Your Dining Pleasure 
Business Men's Luncheons — Delightful Dinners 
Open 7 A. M.- 2:00 A. M. Specializing in Cocktails. 
 Scrib's DRIVE-IN 
130 S. Telegraph   
      
Dick & Jim fevite Tee te 
DINE G@ DANCE PRI . SAT. . SUN, 
ie Band 
Dancing Every 
Pri... Sat., Sen. 
Senday Matinee 6-9 
FOR BUSINESSMEN’S; LUNCHEONS 
| CS simme Decker > sre 
FAMILY DINNERS 
At Reasonable Prices jack 
      
   7 ee ee oe te MP ee Py 
TVA HIAO IW T LEOURG =! UX THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1955   
  
      
    
      
   6 Day Sale from Wed., April 20 Thru Tues., April 25 ; i Metal f or LESS “ALWAYS THE BEST FOR LESS at 
Al — §£ 4\76 
  
es + = «| ~ rs Pe 4 4 
rs a ee * a = Pa bd | 
ra) ee: , oT: ‘ : y | ¥ = 
r OR ; 
' CHEER : ~~ << 
“M : X w : ‘ L y 0 USE oe |e BLOCK EAST OF TELEGRAPH 
| Gy AM. ‘Ti o PM. HILLS BROS., CHASE & SANBORN, cos | DAILY 
BEECH-NUT OR MONARCH — a ¢) A.M, ‘TIL 5 P.M. 
BC re) bs be * E We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities 
Choice of Pillsbury's Best Pillsbury's Best 
Grinds s=— FLOUR CAKE MIX 1 LB. piiisbort® 95 CHOCOLATE FUDGE C AN fn a BAG WHITE OR YELLOW 
: $999 | 3 2 89° ee gz Custom Grou “6 oe 
ee _TOM 5 COFFEE 1 LB. BAG o aa a, °-0°° QUICK DELICIOUS C 
BEIPOOPORO ROP OR coagoenoee SRR S ; 
bese Rear Sa Sooners Minute Potatoe PKG. 7 9 
’sP P| Hunt’s Prune Plums xvavysrue 3 e j Pi | J s 
Libby’s Pineapple Juice ,,<“-., 29 Send in 7 
PARD DOG FOOD 3%; 2 es: 29: 
MEXICORN °=: 15 Pure Vegetable 
~tOG CABIN 
Pancake ete SHORTENING 2 
vi vo ' 7 y 
: 4       
    
  |   
    TANT COFFEE. ;c cor DP? INS 15¢ OFF ....6 OZ. JAR BERL 
p h MONARCH 35° sestets 
Shortcake CCICMES ice. no. 2": can eee 
SWIFT'S PREM" 02250" 35° 12 OZ. CAN ee 
KRAFT DINNER “'cisc' 2» 25° & CHEESE <5   
    
  
    
      
   
                   
                    
  SOLID RED RIPE 
Garden Grown 
OMATOES f 14 OZ. PKG. 
       CUSTOM BUILT su. $989: 
Grass Seed ™ 2 
~~ | Green Pride Grass Seed 22 $489   
      
   STRICTLY FRESH DRESSED 
FRYERS 45 Tender, Meaty 2-3 Lb. Chickens 
FULLY CLEANED AND DRAWN 
PORK LOINS — TASTY RIB CUTS ~—s Loin Cuts. . 49c Lb.       
   
     
   SEALD-SWEET Fresh Frozen 
ORANGE JUICE ia 6 OZ. | | v mm. NO SUGAR CAN fae , = BORDEN'S CAMPBELL’S Frozen <seGeeen Peon” 2 = 3%: 3 BISCUITS 
SOUPS 525007 3 as “1” |scuin} Ready To Bake! 
  te a 
  
     
  
  
    
    ET Seabrook Farms 2 c SLC e | sccbrook Farms ; 3% us he CENTER CUT | MOUNTAIN GROWN St herri 
ra Ww rries -_ PINCONNING MICHIGAN Sliced in Sugar Syrup! 
    
  _. TANGY FLAVORFUL 
: ar 719. | a4 = *1" Shes 655. BEF HEARTS. 15. BEEF TONGUES 19: 
sy TUNA snssicce = 65: ‘ie - ut FRANK STANDING RIB geet MARGARINE — of Beef Tender, Delicious 
PACKED IN QUARTERS | Beef at Its Best! ; 
1 LB. 
AY, CTN.       
  
    
      BREAST Q) CHICKEN 
Chun EMER PACK, TUNA & 
          
     THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1955   
z Z S   
Produce 
on 
ported by the bureau of 
    
  DETRO:T PRODUCE 
DETROIT, A 18 (UP) — Wholesale 
farmers’ markets 
ets: | MARKETS |Major Divisions 
Pruits: Delicious, fancy, 5.50- 
@.00 bu; No 1, 400-450 bu; a: s, Jons Showing Gains NEW YORK 9 — The stock 
  
  
  liams 
complaints that Gotschal’s leader- 
ship had been ‘‘disappointing.” 
Meanwhile, the | LANSING (UP) — Gov. G. Men- 
nen Williams will delay action on 
reappointment of three conserva- 
tion commissioners until mid-May, 
executive aides revealed today. 
But reappointment continues to 
appear ‘‘almost certain,” the aides 
said. 
Williams, under fire himself 
for one phase of his conserva- 
tion program, let the April 1 ex- 
piration date of the three terms 
| lapse to “investigate” criticism 
ot Commission Chairman Law- 
rence Gotschall, Baldwin. 
Capitol observers had predicted 
March 9 that Gotschall, Peter 
J. Calcatera, Norway, and George 
A. Griffith, Grayling, would be re- 
named before April 1, but Wil 
hesitated after receiving 
Williams and 
  were higher in early dealings on | £0 "4.5 _ abo" bu: Ne it e338 ba. market was higher in early deal- 
the Board of Trade today and he a Pompe — wo}. | ings today with prices up between 
strength in that pit helped prices aS ae tg te 5 specs | 1 and 2 points at the best. 
of other grains and soybeans. 1 Gomgtablen: Beets, fopped. No 2.1 28- | Most major divisions were up 
Reports of dust storms in parts | tavbege. red, Nol 1.30-2 60 bu. Carrots, | including steels, motors, railroads, 
of the southwestern winter wheat | no 1, 1100-1 ge iy “porseradiahy” No. i, | oils, rubbers, aircrafts, radio-tele- 
belt was a buying influence in| pom “Odious “dry No 1, 90-110 $0-ib | VISIONS, and utilities. 
the bread cereal. bag; onions sets, No 1, 2.00-300 32-Ib Today’s rise“marked the 11th 
= ig 4 f'T'so ay Aang Gasca: | Straight advance for the market as Soybeans were helped somewhat | xo \ 225-278 5$0-Ib ba potatoes. No 1. measured by the Associated Press 
by reports that processors have | $25.6 28 {00-0 bag. | Riper goers si» ; average of 60 stocks. 
raised their bids 1% cents for box: ‘rhubarb, hothouse. ns ai 9438 oe dia ™ 
cash beans in the country. How- | 5 utabagas. No t,t e average yesterday rose on 
ever, prices in that pit did a cent® at $166.30, the highest level 
hold above the previous close in| DETROIT EGGS the average ever has attained. 
most cases. pDeTRorr. April 19 geo ne tob| It was the sixth straight record 
troit, cases include ederal-state rk 
Near the end of the first hour | grades: high mark, 
wheat was % to % higher, May | Whites—Grade A jumbo 80. large 40-| American Cyanamid was one of 
$2.11%; corn was % higher to 4 us: groan Sie eal wk | the better gainers up 1% at 53%. 
lower, May $1.45%; oats were up| Browns—Grade A jumbo 45, large 38-|/0n an opening block of 6,000 
% to %, May 73%; rye was un- | 3) e's foe Seao wid avg. Jo's, | Shares. The company reported first 
changed to 4% higher, May $1.00%4; | grade C large 34-35 wid. avg. 35. | quarter earnings equal to $1.02 a 
soybeans were % up to % down,| Checks 34-35 wid. avg. 34‘2. | share as compared with 87 cents 
May $2.52%; and lard was un- anes one ca jarge 34. large | last year, 
changed to 3 cents a hundred | 40-43. medium 31-41. | Chance Vought Aircraft, on the | pounds lower, May $13.00. Og gg ior A extra large 42. large ‘other hand, fell back 3% at 45 =| 
{a block of 2,500 shares after re- 
Grain Prices CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS porting first quarter profits equal 
  Rye 
211% 
195 
. 1.97 
3.00 
be 146 
147% 
144% 
1.31% cnasse 2-02 va 
83 MAF 000-00 33 97 
87% July ......-.13 25 
veces 20% Gop ..<. 13.45 
    
6M P blic Relations 
  
  
    ceipts 1.636.074; wholesale b 
se Cc 54.75. 
Eges weak: receipts 30.74 
diums 355: U 8 unchanged; 93 score AA 57 
90 B 54.75; 89 C 5425; cars 90 B 55.25. 
buying prices 1 to 1', lower 
| whites 70 per cent and over A's 375, 
60-68 9 per cent A’s 37, mixed 365, me- 
standards 355 
ties 34.5; checks 34; current receipts 35. CHICAGO (AP) — Butter steady: 
prices 
Z : uying 
92 
4; 
Us 
  
, ‘Poultry 
poultry up to 10 am. DETROIT POULTRY 
DETROIT, April 19 (AP)—Prices paid 
per pound {ob Detroit for No. 1 quality 
  
      
        
  re- 
57 
wholesale 
large 
dir- 
    to 65 cents. a share as against; 
$1.20 a year ago. 
Lion Oil was up 2 points after 
reporting earnings equal to $1.70 
a share in the first quarter this 
year as against $1.12 a year ago. 
Other gainers included Bethlehem 
Steel, U.S. Rubber, Boeing, Repyb- 
lic Aviation, RCA, American Tele- 
phone, Kennecott Copper, Interna- 
tional Paper, Southern Pacific, 
Texas Co., and American Airlines.   
  
    
          
    
     
         
             
        
     HH he 77-30. light hens 18-21; 3 
eave beehens or ia (3-3% lbs) New York Stocks Osmun St., was scheduled today to . 
Whites 3132. © few 3438, Gray Crosses (Late Morning tions) appear for arraignment in Mu-| WASHINGTON  — The Fed- 
4-35; ponett ( “ 6 
45-46: oid Caer. 10-15; ducklings 35. Adams Ex .... 441 Int Paper e74nicipal Court on a drunk driving eral Power Commission has den ied 
en ew 0 $ Breeder turkeys: —_ a; = ames reg ele . me Int Silver 16 | charge after his arrest yesterday | request by the Panhandle East- 
t stead _ Farm offer eae Int Tel & Tel 273 : ineli i 
; ccurne’ Suppiion barely ample te sbort | Alleg L Gt... 476 Jacobe. ““g |by Pontiac Police. ern Pipeline Co. that it be allowed 
Demand fair. Fryers easy Supplies fully | pies cae ae cont nao % to cut its daily delivery of gas 
ample Dem pated SORT Allis Chal ..., 794 Melsey Hay .. 30 Williamson's Bar hop new to the Detroit area tin, fee resistance although aoe Johns M 3 O84] : a : 
og weights clearing. —— on ans Se Jones & L.. 39 | located at 613 Osmun at E. Blvd.| FpC Commission Examiner 
ee aa ARR occ. 18 Seay: ates S| Exes SSIES. —AdV. | Glen R. Law ruled yesterday that 
cae ice ee tie poul- am cya Kresge 8 8.. 308 | Rummage sale and Resale Pp. |the company must maintain its 
eeecagy: on hens, weak on young | Am Ges & El 434 Kroger |. S02) Birmingham First Methodist | daily delivery of 125 million cubic 
stock: receipts tn coope 267 \yeesying | A™ M & Pay 327 LOP Glass .. 136 Church, Maple at Pleasant. Thurs., feet of gas. Panhandle had asked 
pest unchanged: heavy hens | 28-28, en. ae ae ue - 2.6 April 21 from 9 to 5. —Adv. | that the delivery be cut to 87's 
¢ hens 16-17, broilers or fryers -l am Rad rv at 1 million feet 
38: old roosters 12-125, ceponettes 42- | am geating 332 [ore 8 Cem se6| Rummage sale at Grace Luth- . 
45; ducklings 25 Am Smelt .... 50 = Panhandle sought to reduce its 
‘ : Lorillard 227/ eran Church basement, S. Gene- ns Am Btl Pd n : | Detroit deliveries on the premise 1 Mack Trk 24.2 | 
Livestock Am Toon reg Marah Tid "308/98 PO AGy, [that American Louisiana would , . - 2 
reclosing aise "Gop": BY MOY Patrw s8t3| a0 your friend's tm Jail and necde |the Detroit area, ‘The eurt held 8 on . r 
nec W&C ,. 586 your s the Detroit area. court he 
DETROIT. April 20 ‘AP)—Hogs—S4@-/ Armco stl |. 784 alo ba Bi bail, Ph. FE 5-9424 or MA 5-4031. | 1), uest W remature 
lable 450. No early sales | Armour & Co 186 wont Ward .. 002 —Adyv. | req as P . 
Rare oe ig et ae Asea Dry G = : joter Pd BI } 
‘or sixty per ce chison Motor Wheel 31 | + ° inly of utility to good sleugh- | at) cst Lin 396 497 -Wh 
ter steers and yearlings: trade slow to} atl Refin *..367 Muller Br |. 374 Check Anti ite Talk 
tering on cows: odd head and small lots aveo Mig .,. €1 Nat Bisc a 2) —T DETROIT w — Dr-Atonz 6 
to choice 9241150 Ib sisughter | Bald Limes ,.. 19.1 Nat Cash R .. 44 Moron, president of Hampton In- 
iin 20.00-26 50: utility | malt @ Om .. 46 Nat Dairy 4 i rr ; 
—T” ceaneael neers end yearlings | Beech Nut ... 317 foo orm . 34 0 a y n ay stitute in Virginia, says the United 
comm ae . 2 
18.60-10.90: few wtiluty and commer-|menguet 7.) 1 Nat Stel |... 703 States has partly offset anti-white 
relations in Detroit. In his new po- | cial cows bulked at 18 00-16.08; can; | Beth Steel .. 1366 ao ae oe as BOSTON uw — Ivan L. Wiles,| utterances to be expected this 
sition he will supervise GM press eam ane ee aad 13 00- Pee ned ee Hoy NY Cent - 6 general manager of Buick Motors, week from the Bandung confer- 
10.00. sates 150. Trade slow —_ - 1642 Ror Se Wee said his company will have pro-| ence by sending more university- 
Youel will coordinate the public | Cu" jooa te average choice vealers | Bots, ur”’” 313 No™heAY -: $$3| duced 465.000 of this year’s model | trained American Negroes to 
relationg work of the corporation | 18.00-25.00; utility and commercial 1100 | Brigg My —--. 33 Sta Pw. 167| cars by the end of May. That would| Asian and African countries. 
and the GM divisions 1800: late Tuesday, a few prime veal- no, Balke .. 27 Nwst Airlm | 21 t the output of the t 194 
: ag . ers up to 30 68. ces. Market net cstad- | BUdd Co : 221 Qhiod = 704 op outpu the entire Guate Bank Be. Got 
Thomas Groehn, a member jeep —Sa. Burroughs 29 | model year Report of Condition of 
lsh {Calum & . 136 Otis Elev 64 . 
) of the GM public relations staff Campo Wy ..312-Pa® AW Alr 186 Wiles here for the opening of PONTIAC STATE 
since 1943, succeeds De Lorenzo CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Coe tin wa Param Pict... 412) General Motors’ Motorama, said: —$ executive charge HI —salable 1 * - . . 
ss - . ied gry hal eh to made Carrier Cp ... 63.2 Ra ir - x | - BANK 
‘ and radio relations in Detroit. higher on butchers; sows, steady aie | bome tree a Pe eh a”? Fes | eer aes 2 ee eee of Pontiae in the State of Michigan at z: y rs Aer i ; | 
higher; most choice 180 — . pacer 2's | Celanese. ..... 234 Phelps D>. S74} ¢ ~— y approaches the 308,000 the close vf business on April 11 
eral decks No 1 
Mrs. Stahle to Address ety we 1780.17 75. 260-200 Ib 16.50-| Certteed  ... 266 Philco | 392| mark. Some people have ex Published in accomfance with e 
{ - Y 1700: 200-320 ib 1600-1650, weights up Ches & Ob ... $02 Philip Mor... tae pressed amazement at the made by the Commissioner of the Bank- 
Talidcwn 10 16:30, most eowslumcerl| come COP. (eer au Pet... ... ing Department pursuant to the pro- 
Walled Lake WwSCS et -15.25: few choice around | Chrysler - 82 Pilisby Mills... 584| strength of the automobile mar- | visions of Section 82 of the Michigas 
450 Ib 1400-1 : Cities Sve . 1 pit Plate G..,. 723 a 1 itutions ect. 
LAKE Mre. E. H. | ets ears” 1880, larger lots | Clark Equio $82 Proct & O... goa, ket: yet it is not so phenomenal | UD*nci#! Instituctous 
— "eau ot - eanable cattle £,000. Serable calves 300; | cimatu? -- Bg Radio gee “| when you look at the remarkable | Cash. balances with other 
REEee ee ee ee re eee ng. | ait senues famiy. actient soomes steeer | Coca Cola | 1234 Rem Rand -.. 047) economic growth of our country | Penks.  ipeuting inn items 
@t the 7:45 p.m. Thursday meet-| so niger. mostiy steady to Stone, fuuly | Col’ Ger.” teg Repub Stl... 851) tm the Inst decade and = half. | in process of collection. $ 2,601,438 25 
ing of the Walled Lake Methodist ieodg: © tend of prime 1,187 Ib steers | Con Edis _ 507 Reyn Met .- 153.6 | United States Government 
Church WSCS at the church. — 32.00: a few loads and lots high choice hConsum Pw ws Rey = x ep “Since 1941 the number of family pci ar ment Ce 
Election ¢ officers will also be and prime steers 2600-3000: two toa’ | Cont Can... 7 Safeway St... 453 spending units with incomes in| opigations of States and — 3 Pg Gnas 19 50-28 28 mostly | Cont Mot se ine —- Boe 376 \ the $5, and upwards bracket | _ Political subdivisions. . 167,242.15 
4 { ont anne t Jos Lead... | P he bonds t 
$0.00 ao; coversl mrieie; good end Copper Rng 432, st Reg Pap .. 41.2) has increased 10 times, from 2,100,- a yea 50,600.00 
good _ Corn sles Seab A) RR 4 + ” and discounts (in- 
Planned Quick Tri ogg ae ae ust: wane Crue Stl .... 438 Sears Rood .. o21 —— cluding $349.97 overdrafis) 6,736,819 01 
P and commercia] cows pe genee rt “s- Seige a is peal _ . el Wiles said the auto industry's Bank pr ape 
- ne 6 ee Re ee” gt Ee el tel pele oa OO Saeeeene ° 
POPE AIR FORCE BASE, N. C. mere and cutters Soyer ig no Disc Seas 31 Sinclair 0. $83 | custom of changing models an-| purniture and ; 
(UP) — Mike Waller, six-year-old | prime _ronters_ 10.00-38 o mriitty ond Dee Chem °.. 48? gou Pac si7| nually exerted a tremendously im-| fixtures... --- $122,000.57 sets 
com of T. Sgt. and Mrs. Rex| commercial erodes etn for the | Du Peat 176 Sparks Ww ¢1 portant stimulus on the national | peal estate owned other 2 eel 
Waller, set out early to visit his| week: good and choice ee et me Air tae Spe rT ad 706 my. ota bank premises...... 14.407 64 
t Col bus. Ga | steers and feeding steers 20.00-2: Fast Kod ||. 786 Bread | FI econo 
: grandmother at Columbus, Ga.,! salable sheep 2.500: slow market not | gi Auto L".. 423 Oil_Ind | 45 ; otal Assets .. $ 23,566,346.1¢ 
. . t &. slaughter sheep 2 a3+Wire Business Better —— ” 
bundle of clothes. Mike and Sneezy } seeady gp gs lower iA — em | a Pato ins in + nella mes n= Bs } —" ens and 
ter - ‘ 
were Yound perched on the wing and lots geod to prune woure a inet 110 | Brie RR .... 243 Stude-Pack 131} _BATTLE CREEK ™ — The} carvaliens $10,.241,396.94 
of an F-80 jet plane waiting for |e goed and choice wooled jambs dirty | 7O™ Mor .. 278 Sm, ere T° | United Steel & Wire Co. says a ite of individuals, 
~ | . ‘4 5 1 wift Oa B. ' 
the craft to take ff. | fleeces 19.00; a few cull to choice shorn — . oe Sis Sylv El Pd .. 445) larger demand for steel dairy rtnerships, and corpora- oe 
o slaughter ewes 4 50-7.50. |Gen Bak 107 Texas Co 100 ; fons ..... Soe . . 
——————— Gen ree cc) 24 Tex @ Sul ., 402|/Cases, grocery carts and bird Depeatts of United States 
! | Sen Mail : 1 Tenn Bear ta ragre ntributed to a steady a ae ae 322,569 34 ills bate z * 
; ; increase in business over the last | Deposits of States and po- 
Gen serres” : 3 Treseseet : a. several months More png tog SeeShe gah as 
| = 8: o mks. . 
BONDIFIED MONEY —_—s_ Free Prescriptions [ om Te) nnsee A eed nn aes Other 4 (certified 
ORDERS SOLD AT ANY TIME Delivery Service |Gen Tire ... 87.2 oe Carbide ++ 922 net! officer's checks. et¢.) 211,354.72 
: | aiette ...7. 704 Un Pac ...... 44 C p th deposits. . ; . | Unit Alr L 476 a 
pa Sita sitet Gaara tie 'te] — LOUMY Deaths [own nines ta 
ia he a oi se oalt Prat on Mrs, Heleman Pratt Total Liabilities inet in- 
. [ y 2 Un G I > 223 s . cluding su nate = . | 
Gaskese : i US Lines.’ 937) ROYAL OAK — Rosary will be} ligations shown below)... $22,750,530 87 
Quit Ou 692 US Rub ..... 482 said for Mrs. Heleman (Patricia st” i i US Smelt ... 554) - eae CAPITAL ACCO’ 
| DRUG S ORE a vs Steel _243| Ann) Pratt, 30, of Honolulu, Ha- | Capitare ..... -+-8 200.000 00 
; j - 18 Steel pf 1656 | waii f ident of h PPIMB ooccccrccsecctevceces 5 | Holland P .... 153) OS Top meaty waii, a former resident of south | cadiviaed profits : 197,480.23 
OAKLAND THEATER on seeee <a Van Raal 383 Oakland County, at 9:15 p.m. Fri- (and retirement 
Houd Her lac. iss WAR B Pic. 19 | day at the Armstrong Funeral} Sccount for preferred = 44 4 im Cont ee weet vail 8 Phin . nhditienal eaptel) ..:-..-.--- 
“ze est Un Tel 105 ome roit, wi iti | Indust Ray... 68.1 w A Bk.. 272) ay e : Accounts...$ 806,815.23 
April 20, 21, 22, 23 Inlanc StI... 148) Weste Rit -, aa] | services in Christ the King Church,| 7°t*! C*ptte! ’ ’ , Inspir Cop ... ae —- Mot ... 403) Detroit, and burial in Holy Sepul- Liabilities and Captl- 
Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat. Tet Mery... 385 Yuet 8h & T se4|chre Cemetery, She died Monday.| ‘y ae 
Int Nick |... 644¢ Nat Bus Mach 439 ¥ Common stock with total 6 Surviving besides her husband os s eee 
y STOCK AVERAGES _ are her father and mother, Mr. NDA NEW YORK. Aprtl 20 — Compl 7 _| Assets ‘pledged or assigned The Associated Press. and Mrs. James McPeak, two chil- | “3"*, Bure’ liabilities and Shoppers 1s 18 60 | dren Elizabeth and James, both at} for other purposes....... $ 800,000.00 Yndust Rails Util Btocks | p, tw : Rot Loans as shown above are 
Luncheon S$ ial Prev. day ....- 2236 1376 725 166 — o sisters, Mrs. rt after deduction. of re- 
u pec Week ago <1.' 208 1337 718 167) Bair and Mrs. J. L. Conrad, both Besigtoreneencnnis 141,488.35 ; ont a Every Day Special | vor Pt gee 1612 944 $91 1188|0f Detroit, and a brother, James Michigan M.-F. ro 
Kosher Corn Beef | 1985 high.,,,.. 2238 173.6 727 1663) McPeak, also of Detroit. ts States and po- 
1985 low ...,.. 2031 1149 67.2 148.8 Fitteal subdivisions)........ 12,548.00 | 1984 high ...... 2119 1230 683 158.2 . L wm A. Bu fer, of the 
W84 low sevens WOH THE 84 18° Meeting at Brooklands | 2oT:R Ee itement is true. and 
} | DETR TOCK 9 that the al matement ts true, and 
: atomblower “@ Weeks) | BROOKLANDS—The Brooklands | tras state ot the matters, heretn | igh ‘w Noon 
KODAK Your Prescriptions | J ricures rer secima: points are"sishine | PTA will meet at the school today | Siy'tnoviedge and peli 
F With Gerity-Michigan® ..... “31 -34/ 8t 8 p.m. A speaker from the Oak- Correct—atrest: 
FILMS ted [ier cemeers --: 3S $2] land County, Crippled Castiren’s we CRORE 
—— TIDEVELOPING|f — Mecwracy, | Sco ay HE Ejeet pat wa mre] am COPE es P | y co 4 34 4 ki en will se Directors. ; | Wayne 6crew..... 14 14 14 
| *No sale; bid and asked. refreshments. State of Michigan, of Oakland, 
scribed 
C3 . ere lth day a — age a 
ereby am an o 
GIFTS and ee IF FIRE SHOULD HIT YOUR HOME = |)" sesso % % “ttice w. conxs . fi : : 
Hospital Supplies . . Notary Public, Oakland County, Mich. 
CARDS | Beerieg = are ees WOULD YOU BE iomueiome NOTICE OF 
For Ev cas FINAN lA Y Notice is hereby given of a scheduled Every Occasion Household Supplies i LL public hearing. to be held br, the Pontise —— - Zoning Board at the Township 
PROTECTED ? tees crs pin" cconer the toto Open Daily 8:30-10; Friday, Saturday ‘til 11 , changes fy the Zoning MAD’, - change from C- 
‘ Don hance. 20, 21, 22 of Galloway Lake Farms ‘ou. 
J , vig C ‘ To ~ from ai to R-6—Lot 12 of 
' INSURE WITH... |) eupersinor's Pint mo. — sntorenteg are requested 
- eae P Present. A Zoning Map to- 
37-39 $. SAGINAW, CORNER of, WATER Crawford-Dawe-Grove ore gene Se eros oes In Oakland Theater Building h n Ki ‘Glare and may’ be examined by” thoes | 
nsurance of A inds \ GORDON HAMILTON, ~ 
*  - § . BE 5-4521 gon aes ” q Charrmg. | | ; i[ 716 Pontioe State Bank Bldg. Ph. FE 2-8357 ORETA v. BLOCKY ye . : = — . April 6, 20, 1965) 
j = ’ ; ‘ 
* \s * } ‘ + ' : i 7 f 
> i t ¥ 1 ‘ : (    
     
    
     Lodge Calendar   
Special communication of Roose- 
velt Lodge No. 510, FP. & A. M., 22 
State St. Thursday, April 21, at 
7:30 p.m. F. C. degree. John. B. 
Parr, W. M. —Adv. 
News in Brief 
Justice Robert W. 
  
  
  
  
  
  
                Williams Stalls Renaming 
of Three Conservationists commission drew more fife today 
for ‘‘overdoing” Michigan's refor- 
estation program: 
  
General Manager. 
  Lloyd McLaughlin, 40, of Auburn | 
Heights, paid a $100 fine and $25 
costs Tuesday after he pleaded 
guilty to driving under the influ- 
ence of liquor before Pontiac 
Township 
Hodge. 
Hershel Lankford, 43, of 387 
  |in September. 
the present model year. 
Denies Panhandle Bid 
to Cut Gas Deliveries   
  
  
  Dr. Paul Herbert, director of 
the Michigan State College Conser- 
vation Department, said Williams’ 
decision to double the number of 
trees to be planted in the next 10 
years is an “assinine scheme.” 
Herbert called Williams ‘‘the 
finest conservation governor we've 
ever had,”’ but claimed the ex- 
panded forestry program is “‘con- 
trary to wise game management.” 
Pontiac Production 
Matches 1954 Total The 287,744th 1955 model Pon- 
tiac, a turquoise and white mist 
Star Chief Custom four-door se- 
dan, rolled off the assembly line at 
Pontiac Moter Division during the 
second week in April, it was re- 
vealed today by R. M. Critchfield, 
This automobile, significant be- 
cause it exactly equalled the total 
output of 1954 model Pontiacs, put 
the GM division six months ahead 
of its position last year. The last 
| 1954 model Pontiac was produced 
Critchfield said he is confident 
\the high demand for 1955 model 
Pontiacs will require production 
of more than 550,000 cars during 
  
    Death Notices CAREY, APRIL 20, 1955, be 
Glenn (Jean), 1304 Pontiac Trail, 
alled , age 45: dbeloved 
wife of Glenn Carey; dear moth- 
Bally liam C   
4d, at 1:30 pm 
Richardson-Bird Puneral : 
Walled Lake, Michigan. Mrs. 
Carey is at the Richardson-Bird 
Puneral Home, Walled Lake. 
PLEMING, 17, 1955, ; 
Anna, 171 N. Main St. Clarkston, 
Michigan; age 84; dear aunt of 
David P. Stewart, also several 
other nieces and nephews. Fu- 
neral service will be id Thurs- 
day, April 2ist, eat 1:30 pm 
from the Parmer-Snover Puneral 
Home with Rev. Robert M. At- 
officiating. Interment at 
Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston 
Michigan. Mrs. Fleming will lie 
in state at the Farmer@nover 
Funeral Home 
Card of Thanks 1 o~   
IN GRATEFUL APPRECIATION 
for the kindness and sympathy 
shown us during our recent be- 
reavement. The fam of Roland 
R. Dennis wishes publicly 
thank Fire and Police Dept, Ma- 
rine Corp League, Jimmy Day 
Amvets and other organizations 
A special thanks to friends and 
nevgbioors for thelr many acts of 
_ ss. Mrs. Roland Dennis, 
r 
_ family. & Mrs, Herman Dennis and 
In Memoriam 2 
IN LOVING MEMORY OF BESSIE 
Arnett. w passed away April 
20, 1064 
While she peacefully sleeps.   
  
Her memory we shall always 
keep. 
Badly missed by daughter, Rosie 
_ Bogan and family - 
IN LOVING MEMORY OF WIL- 
liam Mamerow who passed away 
April 20. 1952 
He was a fiower too sweet for 
earth. 
Sent here but for awhile 
Ged marked him when He gave 
him birth 
And took him with a smile 
Sadiy missed by bis lonely wife 
__Anna Mamerow. 
3   Flowers 
FLOWERS 
3484 juron | FE 2-8301 
SCHAFER's FLOWERS 
123 AUBURN FE 
_ Funeral Directors 4 DUNSTAN'S 
W. Huron St   
23-3173   
  
AIR - AMBULANCE - GROUND 
Pursiey Funera) Home, FE ¢121! COATS FUNERAL HOME 
Complete facilitles. OR 37757. 
__Drayton Plains —Watertord Twp. DIGNIPIED SERVICES 
Kirkby Funeral Home FE 41882 
Donelson-Johns 
“DESIGNED FOR BU NERALS™ 
._SPARKS-ORIFFIN CHAPEL 
Thoughtful Service FE 3-544 
Voorhees-Siple 
FUNERAL HOME 
Ambulance Service. Plane or Motor 
FE 28378 
    
  
  
  
Monuments 4A OO 
BUY DIRECT AND SAVE 
Pontiac Granite & Marble Company 
269 Oakland Ave PE 27-4800 
Cemetery Lots 5 
@ CHOICE FRONT CEMETERY lote. 9600. FE 41888. 
              
  
€GRAVE LOT WHITE CHAPEL. _FE 23010 after five. a 
2 CHOICE GRAVES IN PERRY 
_ Mt. Park FE i WHITE CHAPEL. TWO GRAVES 
or Excellent buys. LI more. 
167     
The Pontiac Press 
FOR WANT ADS 
DIAL FE 2-8181 
trom 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 
All errors should be re 
ried immediately. The 
ress assumes no respon 
sibility for errors other 
than to cancel the charges 
for that portion of the 
first imsertion of the ad 
vertisement which has been 
rendered valueless through 
the error. When cancelle- 
tions are made be sure to 
get your “kil) noumber.” 
No adjustments will - be 
given without it. 
day previous to publication. 
Transient Want Ads may 
be canceled up to 930 a.m. 
the day of publication after 
the first insertion.   
      
              
  Help Wanted Male 6 
AMBITIOUS MAN 
Por career opportunity, Unlimited 
advancement. $325   
. Call Mr : : 
Life Insurance Co. of Virginia. 
PE 2-0219. 
ARE YOU ACT! 
an uniimited future. J. 
be gage wll W. Huron 
A-1 Thread Roller 
Supervisor Capable of workirg t- 
erances Steady work 
tec Press Box 62.00 
BAKERY ROUTES 
PERMANENT ESTABLISHED 
RO OPENING DUE 
COMPANY GROWING THES 
WELL PAYING 
APPLY THEMSELVES. 
EXCELLENT PAY TRAINING 
PREFER APPLICANTS 24 TO 35: 
MARRIED, NEAT, WITH PLEAS- 
ANT PERSONALITY. AND IN- 
TERESTED IN WORKING WITH 
THE PUBLIC. APPLY 8.30 AM 
TO 10 P.M OR 3% PM. TO 6 
M 
196 W. HOWARD 
CAB DRIVER. FULL OR PART time. Nigh! shift. ae ime paid 
insurance Apply 101 Huron 
COST ACCOUNTANT 
Excellent opportunity $400 
College men apply now 
For summer placement... . 
BOND EMPLOYMENT 
53% W. Huron  __—sCwFE:s«4-4469 
CARRY OUT BOYS FOR FULL 
time appiv im person Sfire Bros. 
180 W. Maple Birmingham 
235 OR OLDER. R. 
FE 
  
close tol 
Write Pon- 
  
GAB DRIVERS 
SO CARETAKER 
bldg Must be married 
vre cf age in 
Experienced in 
work Salary dependent upon 
ability. Do not apply unless you 
Want a steady job Referetices re- 
quired. Apply in person only Ken- For apt 
over 50 
peath. 
_neth G Hempstead, 102 E Huron, 
COST ACCOUNTANT 
Excellent o- rortuni’ $400 to $500 
Mechanics 5 $190 
7ump and Paint $90 
Landscape experience $350 
Station attendant $300 
FREE DEPT 
Photographer no exp. s 
Salesman. no exp salary $325 
BOND EMPLOYMENT _ FE 44469 
DRIVERS WITH EQUIPMENT TO 
pull housetrailers WANTED AT 
ONCE. Report ready for work 
4423. Disie Hwy NATIONAL 
TRAILER CONVOY INC. DRAY- 
TON PLAINS 
EXPERIENCED SINGLE MAN ON 
dairy farm. Must have knowledge 
of farm machinery. OA 82187 
DRIVER S SALESMEN FOR 
driving cieaning routes Apply in 
person 485 3 Sanford at 8 in 
the morniy? a ; 
EXPERIENCED EAVESTROUGH- 
er and genera! sheet metal wort- 
ANDERSON SHEET METAL, 
Brownell & Birm MI 
EXPERIENCE) PRESSER ON 
woolen garments Appivy Fox Dry 
Days or eves Spedafore Bros 
Market 706 W Huron St 
Exp. Short Order Cook 
Capeble of managing counter 
HOMADE FOOD SHOP 
__™ N Saginaw St 
          
   No Sundays or holidays 
__Diner Birmingham Mi 4 
FARM HELP OA er a 
Full time men’s clothing 
salesman. 25 to 50 yrs. 
Apply in person, Robert 
Hall Clothes, 200 N. Sag- 
naw. 
FIRST CLASS COLLISION MAN. Others~ do not py Butch's 
Collision ae Elizabeth 
“ 
FILLING 
STATION ATTENDANI 
Wanted for 
midnight shift 
Must have 
experience ! 
TELFEGRAPH-MAPLE 
SUNOCO SERVICE 
6515 TELEGRAPH & Dine 
43624 
FULL TIME FIREMAN & CARE- taker Por building in Highland 
Park Living quarters furn. 406 
_Riker Bide ee 
GFN FARM HAND SINGLE 
Chuck Fredricks PLateau 2-3404 
GISHOLT TURRET LATHE OPER-   
  
30 Seeewun 
SS2S858 
Se2ane 
Bsssss       
  
BARGAINS GALORE 
in Want Ads for you! 
Read Classified daily to 
fill needs economically. 
  
  
      
  
  
wociton Sales or. Tt. 
Matthew Hargreaves. Chevrolet. 
_FE 5416" AMBITIOUS YOUNG MARRIED 
man for sales, Must have car. 
For interview. PE 2-0143. 
ASSISTANT MANAGE 
rking lots and garages. Excel- 
t references required Starting 
salary $65 ver week with oppor- 
tumty for advancement. Age 18 
<a ,Anely earns from, A. pm. Onlv vou are 
~ ry, 
    
Lake Rd. 
Money! 
You can turn into k 
cash anything ah 
to “sell! To place a For 
Sale ad, call FE 2-8181. 
a 
  ators Must be thoroughly experi- 
enced. Appiy tf Ts only No 
phone calis Daniels anulactut 
ing Corp.. 2677 Orchard Lake Rd 
iROOM OR FARM HAND TO 
care for saddle hourses Ejderiy 
mah preferred. Like steady work 
Good wages ard & room 
Outland’: Riding Stable W. 14 
Mile Rd between Lahser & Tele- 
_ graph Rd _ 
Ir. YOU ARE NEAT APPEAR- 
ing. married and have car, I 
have a year around job that will 
pay you 82.75 per hour for as 
many hours gs you wish to work 
Also guarantee with car allow- 
noe Call) Puller Brush, FB 
  
JANITORS To work in new city hall. Starting 
salary $2,977 annually Paid sick 
leave, vacation and pension plans 
Apply at personne! office 52 E 
_ Pike, before 5 p.m. Fri. April 22 
MEN INTERESTED IN TRAIN- 
ing for TV jobs see our ad under 
. classification 9 this paper: 
MAN WANTED FOR USED CAR 
_ lot. 312, W. Montcalm 
MIDDLEAGED MAN 
den work. At 
41600. FOR GAR- Cranbrook. MI 
  
MAN WITH % TON 
truck for 2 hrs 
afternoon from 
p.m. Delivering bundles to 
carriers Apoly in person 
mM pson Fred 
Circulation Dept. 
Press 
MAN PICKUP 
work each 
to 4 
to 
  
With late model car to work with ‘ 
  manager. Good sala: if you 
qualify. Call at 8 N. Telegraph, 
near W. Huron. 
MIDWEST 
    Collece crad 
Advertising trainee . 
Investigation trainee . . 
Driver sales . . 
Managem 
Midwest Employment 
#6 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. 
FE 59227. 
eg ee   
  
     
  PART TIME 
Mine’ ad Wae"baesd cor      
t Estate 
a San FE 196 
r WRENCE W, GAYLORD   
      
RQUTE MANAGER. OGG CLEAN- 
er: _379 E Pike 
SALESMEN WAN TED 
Young aggressive ~~ — 
ti anent . 
fer cedangerh gy = leading dept. 
stores for those who 
ious and are seeking valuabie 
training in the retail siness. 
APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE 
Sears. Roebuck & Co, 
SALESMANAGER- FOR WELL ES- 
tablished real estate office. Must 
be capable of assuming ful] re- 
sponsibility of a new, modern, 
well furnished office. Excellent 
location, ample parking. Write to 
Box 81, Pontiac Press Pe con Sats : 
SALESMEN 
We will give you factory train- 
ing salary commission, and 
bonus 
Jacobson Motor Sales 
HUDSON & RAMBLER DEALER 
SAW MILL MAN. 3399 LAPEER 
. > STEADY EMPLOY- men * be steady worker 
Appiy Gresham Cleaners. 605 
_ Oakland, __ - oe 
SINGLE MAN T& WORK ON farm. experienced with dairy and 
modern machinery. No drinkers. 
_MA_ 5-821. 
2 REAL ESTATE SALESMEN 
WANTED AT ONCE! 
RAY O'’NEIL, Realtor 
718 W Huron Open 
Phone FE 37103 or FE 5-7292 
ROUTE DRIVER. OGG CLEAN- 
ere 379 E Pike 
REPRESENTATIVES WANTED IN 
the Pontiac area between 25 and 
60 to represent large multiple line 
insurance organization. We train 
you. Operate from your own home 
if you wish Nationwide claim 
service. Complete casualty bar 
accident and health and iife pro- 
gram to seil Write Mr. Jamie O. 
Gould, 257 Orchard Lake Ave., 
district manager for appointment. 
ROUGH CARPENTER EXPERI- enced only. To work In Rochester 
and Pontiac area. OLive 32-7531 
OLive 1-6474 after 6 pm 
SHEFT METAI FABRICATION 
supervisor Tool and tie maker 
and designer background Jeb 
shop experience Wil consider 
anything within 30 mile radius of 
_Ostord OA 62400 
STOCK ROOM ATTENDANT 
Physically fit pensioner wan 
full time. Light duty work. MI 
SALESMAN 
Experiencet man over 3 With 
FE 6-0176_ 
TRUCK DRIVERS 
Experienced 
Driveway, tow bar, and 
saddle and individual 
tractor brokers for over- 
the-road driving. Good 
working condyions. Sen- 
tority rights. Welfare in- 
Pension. <An- 
vacafton with pay. car   
surance 
nual 
Must 
house 
PLEET 
CARRIER 
CORP. 586 South Blvd. East 
Pontiac, Mich. 
SALESMAN FOR HARD HITTING Gealership for Dodge-Plymouth 
cealer good pay. demonstrator 
pian experienced preferred but 
not necessary, Wil] train people 
Willing te sork MY 2-361) 
WELDERS AND MACHINISTS 
hands Flint Tool and Mfg Co, 
407 Hadley St Holly, Mich . 
WANTED MARRIED MAN ON 
diary farm Must have milkin 
experience Good home and ¢ 
Wages 3320 Rochester Ra 
WANTED SALESMAN TO SELL 
heating. gir condRioning and wa- 
ter softeners Prospects furnizhed, 
FE 6070. eves. FE apply   
Good deal! 
4-6509 
WANTED GENERAL STATION 
mechanic appiv in person Mara- 
then Steticn Union Lake and 
Commerce Rds 
WANTED MAN TO TEND BAR 
Bith some previous experience 
Must have references. Morey's 
Golf & Coumtry Club 2280 Union 
Lake Rd. Off Commerce Rd. Ne 
telephone calls 
YOUNG MAN FOR SATURDAYS 
- pane in renta] business. FE 
Help Wanted Female 7 
A BETTER PARTY PLAN SELL- 
ing Pezev Newton cosmetics. Part ¢ > ‘ 
commission Fc: - wointmen $2711 betw-r 8 an: '% noon - 
BOZOM PRESSER ALSO WASH- 
er Fog iaundry Steady job Beck Cleaners. 332 orth Woodward, 
Birmingham MI #1313 — 
BAR MAID STEADY. NIGHTS 
Must have transportation. Good 
wages pleasant Jae to work. 
_ Schoeller's Bar 5 
GOOD COOK FOR 2 ADULTS NO 
heavy work Live in. Call after 
_5 00 FE 25814. 0 CAFETERIA WORK. EXPERI 
ence not necessary Must be re- 
liable. Pauls Good Food. U8. 10, 
_at M15. MA_5-O711. 
CAR DRIVERS. 25 OR OLDER. Steady and part time. Company   
  paid insurance and mileage 
bonus. Apply 438 Orchard Lake, 
3 to 6 p m 
CAREER GIRLS 
WORK NEAR HOME 
We have jobs available for you 
near your home, 
Peceptionist - glamor fob ..... $250 
Doetor's asst sw eae eee $225 
Secretary to sales mer........ $325 
Engineering secretary . ......$325 
Secretary. beer se ceesescess $275 
Rapid typist , ...... gecsecees: $200 
CALL OR COME IN TO 
Midwest Employment 
406 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. 
Ss. 5. a 
CLERK-TYPIST 
Desire experienced person “for 
handling records in personne! of- 
fice 7 ing required. Pleasing 
personality. Must be.21 years. or 
Apply Personnel office, 
neral Hospital. 
CUSTODIAL WORKER To work in new City Hall. Start- 
ry ing 5 $2,431 annually. Paid 
sick leave. vacation and 
=. Apply at Personne) Office, 
2 E. e. before 5 p.m., Fri., 
April 22 . z 
COUNTER GIRL. FROM 9:30 P.M. to 4 a.m. Joe's Coney Island, 31972 
_W. Huron 
COOKING AND GRILL WORK. NO   
Sun's. Apply m perme. Hilly Acres Dairy, 366 W. Maple, Bir- 
m   
tian 
in church office. Must meet pub- 
lic well, handle confidential mat 
ter, do typing. general filing, 
simple bookkeeping and mimeo- 
gers. Call 33169 on 
‘ urs.. or Fri. between 
9 and 12 noom, to arrange inter- 
  
  at _guard 
      
                 
    
[ruman Back Home 
After Trip to Capital INDEPENDENCE, Mo. «®—For- 
ther President Truman was back 
at home today after appéaring be- 
‘lore a Senate Foreign Relations   / ——— _THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL   
20, 1955   
Godfrey Firings Aimed at Return   
arn   
--Today's Television Programs --   
subcommittee considering possible | 
revisions in the U.N. charter, 
Truman said he enjoyed the trip | ~, 
  
        
  
  Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WW4-TV Caannel 7—WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW-TV 
  
TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 
  
  
    :00—(7) Masquer: -arty - oo— onderland ‘o Washington because “it gave | . neous ) Masquerade | ae = te: : ae nMad = me a chance to do a little explod- |6:00—(7) Little Rascals. ‘Hi ; a 4 a ., ~ e-| Ding Dong School. (2) Garry 
ing.”” Neighbor.” (9) Capt. Video. Se- ed i we — pe eae seit . ° vad € e , 
He said he thought he made his-| ial. (4) Time for Music. Sch - young couple caught a 10:30—(4) Way of World. (2) Ar 
ee Leal ged ig — |6:15—(9) News. Austin Grant. (4) | uncertainty of atomic age. (4) thr Godfrey. 
lo ai a setae . oe | News. Paul Williams Theater. Young couple's ro- | 10:45—(4) Sheilah Graham. 
ee re a vet nue nture of | mance is aided by ghost of | 11:99(7) Story Studio. (4) Home. 6:30—(7) Superman. Adventur Mf | Revolutionary War soldier in 
| man of ‘ature, s = Week. “Gramercy Ghost.” (2) The Mil- | 1:30—(2) Strike It Rich. 
| oan ese ve Srodie > ° 7 * lionaire. Family man _ nearly es . | ou : = m5 . 
Print Postca rds Vou Lindin — (4) ore | loses life as resulf of gift of mil- | THURSDAY AFTERNOON 
iiacage eee erent ve | lion dollars in “The Story of | 12:00—(7) 12 O’Clock Comics. (4) 
[ Kes ie © a ace.) Fred Malcolm.” Tennessee Ernie. (2) Valiant . en ne, Van Patrick. . - : —— Lady. 
° 45-12) TV Weather D 9:30—(7) Who Said That? Jacque- | 
ia te “4 on R. Pi ‘ atherman : line Susan, Boris Karloff, guests. | 22:15—(2) Love of Life. 
TIVE “ee as | (9) On Stage. Musical variety 19:39 (7) Beulah. (4) Feather gf 7:00-(7) Kukla Fran and Olle,| With George Murray host. (2)/ your Nest. (2) Search for To 
COLORS! | Puppets. (9) City Detective. Rod | I've Got a Secret. Garry Moore.| morrow. 
Cameron in “Bad Night in :00—(7) Sales Meeting. Don Wat- | 12:45—(2) Guiding Light. 
Lover's Lane’ (4) Amos ‘n =" -t ~~ are Play _ (2) = & ght. i i! é rick , : 9 aragc I. a 
| Andy. Kingfish and Sapphire | : ae Passes Od) The Is Your |#0—(4) Bob Maxwell. (7) Charm 
un o soil YY « ar ae ‘ eer . : ; - 2 . 
sad for . ut = marital Life. Ralph Edwards with life Kitchen. (2) Inner Flame 
prob sith “ - ini Happy Ste- | story-of surprise guest, (2) Box- 1:15—(4) Sonny Elliot. (2) Road of 
sens Soy at RiverFrail Z er | ing. Lightweight bout: Jimmy Life. 
Se tet ey | Carter vs. Orlando Zulueta. with the NEW life and wilderness in northern ares ——— ‘ ji: 30—(2) Ladies Day (4) Jean 
I Ontario. 10:30—(7) Bob Cummings Show. | McBride. 
a. ‘u av’ ya . 9:15—(7) My Story. Drama Cumming$ play glamour 1:45—(9) Cartoon 
: photographer in “Bob to the | (1 St Sev (9) M 
SPIRIT POSTCARD 7:30—(7) Disneyland. *‘The Story Rescue." (9) Chuckwagon. West- = os io H = ath 
PRINTER of Donald Duck,” rise of famous ern style variefy. (4) Mr. Dis- aaa bac ) Our 
Mow you can print duck from voice with no body to} trict Attorney. Mr. D.A. saves Sodas 
lnbets and tags in ap 0 famous movie star with clips| small boy’s life and uncovers |2:30—(2) Art Linkletter. (9) Dol- 
colors at one time with new from cartoon? in his 23-year building fraud | larama. 
binations ad be ee Sedinan woes ee “ws - 10:45—(2) Sports Corner. Chuck |$:00—(7) Theater. (9) Th 
ple and Prints anything you — ee Davey interview | Matinee. (4) Ted Mack Matinee. 
Can write, type or draw on a sheet Man." (4) Eddie Fisher. Song tans , | (2) Big Payoff 
of —no stencils or ink re (2) News. Doug Edwards. 11:00—(7) Soupy’s On. Variety. . . 
aia lien for low-cost busi- eewit) Hews Caravan ‘ohn (9) National News. (4) News | 3:15—(4) Golden Windows. 
Fas aay ova Geena Cameron Swayze. (2) Perry) Williams. (2) News. LeGoft. |3:30—(4) Greatest Gift. (2) Bob 
Come ie ond see ft todoy! Como. Songs. 11:15—(7) Feature Movie. Feature Crosby. 
8:00—(4) Request Performance a TSA. (9) Good Neighbor 3:45—(4) Concerning Miss Mar- 
Thomas Mitchell plays wise old Theater. “Hot Rhythm ‘ (4) lit- lowe. 
. tle show. “ oce ; *ssion.”’ GENERAL PRINTING man wf p iosopt! y help un 5 ~ : wale ee ‘Wright. | 4:00 (9) Justice Colt. (7) Capt. 
& OFFICE SUPPLY sure lady in “Afraid to ~ : Flint. (4) Hawking Falls. (2) Live Arthur Godfrey and 4}:29—(2) Nightwatch Theater. Brighter Day. 
Friends. Salute to new movie Fabian of Scotland Yard, Charlie | oe Ww. “ ; . 9 7 Lawrence “Strategic Air Command” at! Chan in “Dangerous Money.” 4:15—(4) First Love. (2) Secret 
a ieee cee ee Saaee 4) Tonight. Variety with | * : - with Jimmy Stewart aA te ey we | ¢:30—(4)-Mr. Sweeney’s World. (2) Steve Allen. Jimmy Rushing 
$:30—(7) Mr. Citizen. Allyn Ed-} guest | On Your Account. ROTODEX wards narrator { story about . 4:45—(7) Ricky the Clown. (4) 
privat citizen who he Ips fellow THURSDAY MORNING Modern Romances. 
- ian. “Late for Supper story .7:0@— (4) Today. (2) Morning 00 untie Dee Let’ 
the Key to Modern F 0 ark t aa ~yed girl <} 7 5: (T) A - = 
- ee ee a ae Make Music. (4) Pinky Lee. (2) 
Card Fung who fell from train | during y:q9 — (7) Todd Purse Show. (| Sagebrush Shorty : _ Naren She tries to protect Romper Room. (2) Welcome | :55 17) Cowboy Show. (9) | 
Vern from burlesque dancer by “Travelers. Howdy Doody. (4) Howdy 
posing as policewoman. §:30—(2) Robert Q. Lewis Doody. 
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  } 7:45—WJR, E. R 
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8:15—WXYZ, Show World 
WWJ, Frank Sinatra 7:15—WJR, Music Hall pf 8 _ ee Me WXYZ, Wattrick, McKenzie b =. } ’, Pre artin i 
8:30—WJR, 21st. Precinct 7:30—CKLW, Terence O'Dell} WCAR, News cee saa oa WWJ, Barrie Craig WPON, News = z 
WXYZ, John Vandercook 7:45—WWJ, News ‘ :13—ww 
CKLW.. Sentenced | .CKLW. Toby. David 12:15—WJR, Farm deed lf Lan) Len, | 2 : ww aye Elizabeth 8:45—WXYZ. Just Easy | 8:00—WJR, Jack White 4:30—WJR, Music Hall | WWJ. Bob Maxwell €KLW, Austin Grant WWJ, Widder Brown 
9:00—WJR, Perry Como     
-- Todays Radio Programs - - Programs furnished by stations listed im this column are subject te change without notice. 
    win, (68) caLw Ca wwii, «oo WCAR, (1138) WXYZ, (ite) WIBK, (i490 WPRON, (1468) 
| TONIGHT CKLW. J Van Kuren WPON, News. Magic Carpet WXYZ, Paging New 
. ‘WPON, News } | KLW, News, Living 
| 6:00—WJR, Hainitne = 9.15—WJR. Kitchen Clue WJBK, Tom George WW), News 10:15-WWJ, Glldersleeve WCAR, News, Lent 
CKLW, News, Sports CKLW, 8 Kaye | 9:.38—WJR, Mrs. Paige WPON. News, Platter 
WPON. News WXYZ. Top of Towr | CKLW, Goot Neighbor 
a - WPON News, Zee & Orvi WJBK, Bob Murphy 1:15—WJR, Ma Perkins 
aa age ace 1e¢ 3% WJIR tol tte House Rpt 9:45—WJR, Pete and Joe wxyYz, Baer aa 
WKY Lee Quits WWJ "Nes WCAR, Temple Acad. ee eee ae CKLW. Eddie Chase CKLW, Dance Orch WPON. Goes Calling WCAR, Harmony Ha 
WCAR, Sports 10.45— WJ Ar 1 World 10:00—WJR, A. Godirey | 1.38—WJR, Dr. Malone 
WPOXM Idietime Serenade WWJ. Stars Sing WW), McBride, Peale CKLW, Eddie Cantor 
XYZ, My True Story 
CKLW, Homechat 6 %—WJR, Sports faa oo WIR News WCAR, Tiger Tunes 
B WWJ, R. Mulholland M 7 : ~ sl WJBK, News, T George 1:45—W IR. Guiding Light 
sige CHEN NEE WCAR. News, Temple WCAR. Warm Up Time The imformation you want at ee BEON Ncesyepotts ery an ae 2:00—WJR, Mrs. Burton 
the flip of a knob... Your 6:45—WJR. Lowell Thomas 11-15-WJR. Sports gina woeiice Pceedhcoaas CKLW, Davies 
business needs this index card WXYZ, Music Show CKLW. Sportamorter . - WPON, News, Eddie 
system in a beautifully WPON Art Van Damme WPON. Zee & Orville 10:30 WWJ. Fran ag hay WCAR, Tiger Game si . Ww A y 1 Bt 
styled rotary index. Requires | 1.0—w JR Guest House 1 te WIR Mi strength | CkLw Mere heeeaen” 2:15—WJR, Perry \ hree Sta \ r no more desk space than your weak Ge castes WXYZ Ress, Top WCAR. Boham. High WWJ, Plain Bill 
| 10:45—WJRY Break the Bank 
      CKLW. Fulton Lenis | WPON Sports 2:30—WJR, Nora Drake keeps records clean, | WJBK. News. Sports ' — WWJ. Break Bank ww, aon Jones 
private; two WCAR, News, Music | WXYZ, Girl Marries WXYZ, Martin sizes to suit [| WPON News. Shaniey THURSDAY MORNING WCAR, Song Parade WPON, Club 1460 
your needs. 7:15—-WWJ R. Mulholland 6:00—WJIR. Vinall. Melody | 11:0@0—W JR, Arthur Godfrey - 
Complete CKLW. Gav Nunn WWJ, News, Lazarow | WWJ, Strike It Rich *wwar Marriage Pe “wi with 500 WCAR, Sign Off WXYZ, News, Wolf WXYZ, Companion : a = 
cards, $9.95. | 7:30-WJR._Choralters | Deer” pornos WIBK, News Mcleod” =| 4SB— WIR, News, Hymne Sargertt Ses" WCAR. Coftee _ 'WCAR, News, Songs i" ee ee = CKLW. Gabriel Heatter REWS MUNK [aw On, awk, 
WJBK. Gentile 11:15—WXYZ. Curtain Calls 
WPON, Hymn Time 
11:38—WJR, Make Up Mind 
WWJ, Phrase That Pays 
CKLW, Queen for a Day 
| WPON, Pontiac Party 
| 11:45—WJR, Second Husband 
WW4J, Second Chance 
12:@0—WJR, Jack White : | 
| ¢.20— Wer agricit. voice | 3:15—WJR, Rosemary 
WWJ. Bob Maxwell H 
CKLW, News Dearie 
WJBK, Gentile, Binge 
WPON, Rise ‘nm’ Shine 
| 6:45—WXYZ, News 
| 7:00—WJR, Jim Vinall WXYZ, Osgood, Wolf 
CKLW. Guy Nunn, David Murrow 
WWJ, One Man's Family 
CKLW, Les Paul 3:20—WJR, Helen Trent 
WWJ, Pepper Young 
WJBK, Don McLeod 
Peace 
WWJ. Dinah Shore 
WXYZ. Ghow Stoppers 
CKIW, True Det 3:45—WJR, Gal Sunday 
WW4J, Right to Happiness 
4:00—WJR, House Party 
WWJ, Backstage Wife 
    WCAR, News WCAR, N'Day Caller WPON, Music Artistry WWJ, Bet Your Life WPON. News WPON, Luncheon Musie 
WXYZ, Sammy Kaye 12:30—WJR, Time Ou 6:45—Ww, } 
i _~W \ ues ~~ t, Muste baton a = — CKLW Mem —— orviile | 8:15—WJR, Bud Guest WXYZ, News, Music CKLW, Geo wri 
WPON, News WCAR, Coffee With Clem |. cKriw’' Your Boy Bud 
    
  or Pearl Wainut (9) | nim-“Fames-inetead of “Jonas *—   
Wilson Busted Story Everyone Hates. 
of Salk Polio Vaccine Drooping Rating By EARL WILSON 
NEW YORK—While in bed with a spring cold, I’ve been thin 
Milton Berle, Sid Caesar 
Among Once-Top Stars ing back to the strange way “we” broke the Salk Polio Weal 
Story in January 1953. ; 
I can hear you say, “You must really be sick, Wilson, to claim 
Whose Polls Plung@d 
NEW YORK (INS)—Plungin 
audience-ratings the nz that.” 
Now you got me mad. I'l! have to tell it. 
tion's second most looked-at sh x * * * 
Well (he began bashfully), on Friday afternoon, Jan. 23, (from        
    
Can Heve the Best 
in BIG SCREEN TV! 
The All New 1955 
SPARTON 
    1953, I interviewed actress Lilli Palmer about her shew, 39th a . ~ 
“The Love of Four Colonels.” is in audiefice pull, according ” to surveys) turned amiable Arthur 21 Table Model TV 
For no reason—except the Lord was being good to me—Lilli Godfrey into TV’s most proficient : 
suddenly said: one-man firimg squad last Friday $ 9 
“Isn’t it wonderful about them finding the new polio vaccine?”| TV circles feel his lightning Priced 
“WHAT?” I almost jumped out of my chair. This was type axing of six ‘gang’ stars fr 
startling news. and three writers was based sole om 
“Anita told me’—Playwright Anita Loos, ang b how she found !y on an effort to get his shows , 
out I'll never know. “They're announcing ben K " 0 _ ranks of the top y 4 it here Monday night.” en on the dial parade ‘from which 
a y . x z all Godfrey shows have been fidioc & Television 
absent since September, with the : I burst away as soon as was decent, exception of ‘Talent Scouts Sales and Service 
hoping to break the story Monday fore- which.zigzags in and out of rat- FE 2-6967 
noon ahead of the meeting. —. . 1157 W. Huron St. ; , s0dfrey isn't alone with his 
I hadn't one fact—just an actress [PARES 5. 0 EES == ers 
rumor. Weekends are the worst time 
for reporters to dig. You can't find 
people, or phone numbers. I long-dis- 
tanced professers of medicine at Yale, He isn't the only one who has 
slipped according to surveys. 
(Along TV row they call 'em 
‘ulcer-veys’) 
  About 9 p. m. Sunday I Qrst heard the name of Dr. Jonas Salk. 
* * * * 
I phoned Pittsburgh. Dr. Salk was believed at the railroad ing of 64.7, which has been topped 
only twice (by “Peter Pan'’ and 
the Academy Awards telecast) 
But about midnight a sleepy New England professor, 
whom I awakened, yawned “Yes, we have a possible vac- 
cine,” called it a “dramatic advance,” said they expected to 
try it on “thousands of children,” and mentioned a secret 
meeting at Hershey, Pa., where Dr. Salk had reported on his 
vaccine “most enthusiastically.” 
“To publish it now would be premature,” 
* * * 
“The prematurer the better”.is a columnist’s motto 
a copyrighted story. 
There was hell to pay. The science writers jumped on me. 
They'd been saving the story to run AFTER the meeting. 
Poor Dr. Salk. The N.Y. Times story didn’t even mention him. | 
And—blush, blush—I goofed, misread my notes, and called sharp. With the TV audience in- 
creasing (one TV manufacturer 
estimates 5,000,000 new sets will 
be manufactured this year), with 
  and whistlestop in the country 
he added. and with more star-type shows to 
top gets stiffer daily. 
Take “Mr. Television” Milton 
Berle. Berle's Neilsen rating in 
; 1951 was 61.5. In 1952 it was 46.2 
{In 1953 he hired new writers, 
| climbed to 58. Last month's ratings 
jplace Uncle Miltie well behind I wrote | 
    
son tat 54) and George Gobel. 
When Berle was undisputed king. 
nobody'd heard of Gobel. 
Take Sid Caesar: He was Czar 
jof the Saturday channels slightly 
more than a year ago. He broke 
up with partner Imogene Coca 
|stating “‘We've done as much in 
\ the limits of one show as we can.” 
Sid has yet to regain his top status 
(though he's giving Godfrey keen 
;Monday night competition) and 
4 Imogene’s no longer in the top 
lten 
| ‘Flying Saucers’ Book 
-Author Talks in Detroit THE MIDNIGHT EARL... 
Dick Haymes, having straightened out his tax problems, Is 
taking legal steps to ask for the quashing of his deporta- 
tion proceedings 
* * * * 
Pat Ward will get a hearing April 74 
eon her request for a cabaret entertain- 
er’s license . . CBS bess Bill Paley, 
who shelled out 250 G's toe build Jackie 
Gleason a cafe set, lost his pass and 
had trouble getting into the place. . . 
Arnold Stang’s squabbling with his TV 
boss and may not appear on the show 
Tuesday ... Marilyn Webb of Rice 
Institute, Houston, was chosen as 
Sport Magazine's Campus Queen.   
  scientist Desmond Leslie, has been 
| reprinted in 12 languages and is ir 
its 13th printing. “This is now a basic requirement for a saloon singer.” Mention- 
ing the do-it-yourself craze, she adds, “Some composers even | 
write their own songs now.” —     
    RCA VICTOR 
Harvard, Johns Hopkins, trying to | Television is a precarious field PHILCO 
coax admissions out of them . . . try- |where you can slip and still re ADMIRAL 
ing just to understand them. | main on top. “I Love Lucy’ be- AVA 
Words like “antibodies” throw me. LILLI PALMER ee the best cy ; DUMONT 
“Bodies” I understand. ive years back it zoomed to EMERSON 
|No. 1, with a sizzling Neilsen rat- css 
station taking an overnight train to N. Y Today ‘Lucy’ is still No. 1. None- 
I had him paged at the station—and missed him. theless it has slipped, with an | 
It looked bad. It looked worse than I look with a cold. average rating of 57. — 
Why? Competition is razor- 
TV outlets in every metropolis | 
* | chose from the battle for the | 
ee Ootpareeetting “Tomics Jackie Giea-7 
* * * * | Aig of vp wor Ae home 
MARILYN WEBB Grace Kelly refused to pose in a bathing | | cieions Ss ane 1 eed Gi wane. 4-D 
| suit at the Sahara in Vegas, but OK'd toreador pants _ Tos-| ites and tidden in their spece rawer $ 95 
canini’s given up his island home in Italy . . . Daily Double: craft, will speak in Detroit May CHESTS . 
comic George DeWitt and Hope Hampton at El Morocco . 3 and 5 at 8 p.m. in the Institute 16.95 
Are Polly Bergen and Jerome Courtland gonna reconcile? | of Arts. Ls 
. Danny Thomas undergoes a apne disk apace: tion next Tickets to George Adamski's 
month. | lecturé are on sale at Grinnell’s 5-Drawer ; 95 
* * * * | music store hére .The book, co- CHESTS 
lw Celeste Holm, doing a French song at the Persian Room, says, ritten by Adamski and Britist: Reg. 18.95   
OLE L LY 
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  Joe E. Lewis’ gal friend, Kitty Koppett is occupying the same / 
hospital room he recently vacated . . . Erika (Jelke case) Steele 
will call her autobiography “Scarlet Telephone.” (It'll be ghost- | 
ed by Jim Taylor of Cue). 
Earl's Pearls. . . 
Cesare Siepi’s new English sports car doesn't have a | 
windshield—but it does have a wraparound monocle. ;) 
WISH I’D SAID THAT: “When a married man pulls out a, 
fat wallet, you can be sure he has two things—a camera and a) 
| child.”—Carrollton (Ky.) News. 
* * * * 
TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Taffy Tuttle told Denise Lor she 
was going to buy a color TV set: “But can't decide what colors. 
Phil Foster reports a néw gambling game in a huge Miami TELEFUNKEN Hear This Amazing Hi-Fi AM and FM Radio 
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BLAKE RADIO & TV SERVICE 
  
    
Scouts to Take 
Canadian Trip 
| planned May 6-8}for explorers of 
Clinton Valley t 
| Clemens Meth Aiist Church, where | 
those who w WPON Rise ‘n’ Shine j 5:00—WJIR, News | 9:15—WJR, Bing Crosby 8:30_WJR, Music Hall | WCAR, Harmony Hall WW4J, News, Deland 
9:30—WJR, Amos "n’ Andy | 6:45 wwJ. News | 12:43—WXYZ. Charm Lady CKLW, Sgt. Preston 
ate te iba a WCAR, Radio Rev. WPON, Farm Mkts, WEAR, Kows WXYZ, Pres. Conf 9:00_WJR. Wm. Sheeh . News, usic 
CKLW. Eddie Cantor | “ww! blinute Parnes 00 5:15—WJR, Scores, Muste 10:00—WJR, Tenn. Ernie WXYZ, Breakfast Ciub | THURSDAY AFTERNOON WWJ, Jim Deland 
WW), Pibber McGee WCAR, News, Rhythm 1:00—WJR, Road of Lite WCAR,_ Carousel 
WXYZ, Ed Morgan | WJBK, News, T. George WWJ, Ross Mulholland 5:30—WJR, Music Matinee 
| | will t 7 Frida ° - will meet at p. m. Friday, . ~ Clinton Valley May 6 Russia Is Increasing 
Cars carrying the scouts will 
. cross the Blue Water Bridge at | 
Port Huron and drive to Sarnia, | 
. Ont., % A Canadian fmotor trek is aan Se oes he tet oy 
the Polymar rubber plant at 
Sarnia, then drive to London for 
Junch with Canadian Rover Scouts 
| there 
Following a tour of London the | by Scout Council 
The tour will/leave from Mount 
to make the we 
  
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      | motoreade will travel to Chatham, 
| where the scouts will have supper | 
| with Canadian scouts of that city | 
and pitch camp for the night. 
| After Sunday morning church) 
| services, the group will visit Point | 
| Pelee, then cross back to Detroit. | 
| Scouts who wish to make the 
| trip must have reservations in to) 
2 the council office, 5344 W. Huron | | many countries. 
On Saturday, the scouts: will tour ' . | what they call 
capitalism, No Hollywood products Exchange of Movies 
MOSCOW i®—Russia is increas- 
|ing its exchange of movies with 
Soviet authorities like to import 
“realistic” films— 
showing the lives of workers and 
peasants and usually laaabeating | 
are shown here except old captured 
ones taken in Berlin during the 
war — like Greta Garbo's “Ca- 
mille” and ‘Waterloo Bridge’, 
with Robert Taylor and Vivien 
Leigh. 
Sometimes films of lighter vein, 
especially French are also import- 
ed nowadays. 
  At any one time, there usually 
are about 25 airplanes flying across 
the Atlantic Ocean.   . by May 1. ; 
    
      
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A phone call finds your 20% OVER ‘hotel: “They give you your key and bet you can't find your 
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