ee wisn arias. . f a % é : The Weather ~ MAKE 0 HI PONTIAC PRESS VER PAGES Contniued Cold Details page two Te 118th YEAR ‘* & & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1955 —40 PAGES samc Togas, aT mr te et 3 Blaze Clai tok ke | Area We ekend Traffic Toll: 3 De ad ¥ aims * x & “ 3 of Johnson Chil ren x x * * | * * x * 10 Others Killed | ‘on State Roads in Auto Mishaps Clyle H. Haskill Says Fatalities Doubled Three persons were killed in head-on automobile crashes in Pontiac and Oak- land County Saturday and, Eyes Road Plan Sunday. Dead are: Willard Leadbetter, 24, Auburn Hotel; Cleo W. Cal- lahan, -26, 229 E. WalJton Blvd., and Burnell J. Schlusler, 54, Leonard. Two others injured in the same accident are in fair condition in Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital. They are Miss Farnces Musser, 27, 954 Stanley Rd., and Willard Larson, 50, Van Dyke. Twelve othér persons injured in city accidents over the week end caused the chairman of the city's * Safe-Driving Day campaign to say,| | pro, approved recently by the venga teeter at Independence, Mo. “This was one of the worst .week ends Pontiac has ever seen, “The city’s traffic fatalities for the year now stang at 14, more than twice last year’s figure,” Clydle R. Haskill said. “And three of those deaths oc- curred during the campaign, @im- ing at ere Dec, 1 accident. free,” he added. Ten others killed in traffie acci- dents in Michigan over the week end were Frank L: Horton, 83, Benton Har- bor, Ruby E. Eveld, 41, Benton Har- bor Mrs, Rachef Smith, 49, Flint. Ladonna Raye Myers, 21, De- Willard Christman, 's, Toledo, and Callahan after at 2:15 a.m. on Kennett Rd., just east of Stan- ley Rd. ” Pantiac Police said skid marks indicated Callahan crossed over “the center line when the crash occurred, . Miss Musser, a passenger with _Leadbetter, was Codied held by Deputy Coroner I, C. Prevette, as a material witness in the accident. ~ Dr. Prevette said Ledbetter died immediately and Callahan was dead on arrival at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital. Oakland County Sheriff's Depu- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) | Cursing achdeat Printed ard Nixon: \I Wouldn't Say That About a Vice President — Truman LOS ANGELES (#—The Los Angeles Examiner today quotes one of its reporters as saying former President Harry S. Truman said yesterday of Vice President Rich- “I don’t even want to discuss that ————-. Don’t even mention his name to me.” Twancikes Had Higgins Says Proposed. Highway Will Not Stop, Future Toll Road Expected revenuefrom the pro-| posed Rockwood to Saginaw toll) road owuld be reduced “‘to a lim-| ited extent’’ by construction of the 32-mile Fenton to Clio superhigh- way, Chairman of the Michigan Turnpike Authority George N. Hig- gins said- today. Higgins spoke at noon before about 200 people in Flints Hotel “However, its total effect on an- nual revenue forecast for the turn-| vent the -toll road from being fi- nanced,"’ Higgins stated. — “The highway commission ‘(Charles M. Ziegler). en to build a competing express- The ffect of Ziegler’s effort, said Higgins, “‘is fine for in the turnpike The MTA chairman said in his the Fenton-Clio project be finished 39 months after bonds speak their con) semmectl ee people} much Cassady to Lion: to Lions, jattention and such an. attentive! ‘ . —* The Los Angeles Times quotes Truman: “I don’t like the ———— and I ULjdon’t care who knows it!” But ‘Truman, who arrived here yesterday, denied making the statements. A spokesman at the |Beverly Hills home of oilman Ed- win Pauley, where Truman is staying, quoted the ex-President as |saying he ‘‘would never speak in jany such way of anybody -holding jthe office of vice president.” | Both newspapers said the were Truman's response | at the airport when reporters | asked what his reaction would be to Nixon becoming the 1956 Re- publican candidate for president. he said instead: | kriow how I feel so don’t talk to |me about My. Nixon.” | Truman arrived by plane from banquet tonight to raise funds for the Truman library, now under LIKED WILLIAMS’ TALK © Reporters also askéd’ Truman if he had any comment on the Den-| \ver Saturday night by Gov. | iG. Mennen Williams of Michigan pike will not in my opinion pre- in which Williams attacked Adlai |Stevenson’s plea that the Demo- crats use a “moderate” approach to. national issues. The governor said Democrats would be “guilty of the most craven cowardice” if Seattle to address a $100-a-plate) they allowed the presidential cam-| Russians Hold 2 US. Solons in Berlin Sector Ostertag, Boland Freed by Reds After Arrest for Radio Possession ‘BERLIN (#—Two Ameri- can congressmen were held yesterday in the Russian ‘sector of Berlin for more than four hours. The in- the Allied occupation rights in this four-power city. U.S. officials disclosed that East German Commu- nist police detained Rep. Harold C. Ostertag (R-NY), Ostertag’s wife, Rep. Ed- ward P. Boland (D-Mass), and their escort officer, Lt. James T. McQueen, of Mul- lins, S.C. The party was held at pistol violated the laws of the Commu- nist state by usthg an automobile equipped with a two-way radio. |SUPPORT CLAIM U.S. authorities said that the Russians supported this claim later paign to “degenerate into a spine- less and self-defeating formality.” Truman said with a grin: “That's good. That's the way Democrats are. They have opinions and they Morrall fo 49ers PHILADELPHIA @ — Detroit Lions today drafted Howard (Hop- along) Cassady, Ohio State's great running halfback, after the San Francisco 49ers ~had_picked Earl Morrall, Michigan State quarter-| ‘back, The Lions and 49ers made their choices following Pittsburgh's sur- prise honus selection of Gary Glick, -| demanded an audience with the So- "|Dibrova, to lodge a verbal- protest. jup with Gen. Dibrova the rights : U AE commandant in Berlin, viet commandant, Maj. Gen. P. A. HARD TO UNDERSTAND Dasher indicated he would take of the Allies, especially in’ the use of official vehicles, as well as the “unjustified mistreatment’ of the congressional party. - Ostertag told newsmen it was a “harrowing experience for me but 1 woald straighten itself out. ' “It was difficult to understand the delay im getting the word down the line to any responsible author- ity. a wite was rather nervous, in the standings, tossed a) = to see which team made the! cl “i = the regular draft. Agree on Need, Accidents Galore CHICAGO “—Icy roads caused in Chicago during a six-hour period ending at 9 p.m. last night, police said, = oa were reported ‘| Heard Them Screaming, Says Rescuer ph cava * rh f an estimated 1,000 traffic accidents} |Fennville) and Van Dusen insisted of . but Not Way Legislators Debate Problem of Providing Care for Retarded Four Michigan legislators, in- cluding Rep. Richard C. Van Dusen (R-Brimingham), have agreed that emergency care must be provided. for more than 1,000 menfally retarded children await- ing admission to state institutions. But, like the Legislature, they split on means of providing the) care. The four appeared at a pub- lic debate in Detroit yesterday. All efforts to provide emer- gency care are currently stale- mated. , Sen. Edward Hutchinson (R- the Senate: plan to provide more cident challenged some of! his youngsters in happier days ONCE A FAMILY — Leroy Johnson posed with struck Saturday. His daughter, Victoria (left) and son Mark Marque (not shown) died yesterday of Tragedy Strikes City Family before tragedy Ponting Press Photos| burns received in the blaze. Richard (second from | left) died in the home, ahd sons Steven and Don- ald‘are in critical condition today from burns. Indian Newspaper Criticizes Red Bomb Announcement | NEW DELHI, India W—The Hindustan Standard said’ noticed the spotlight was missing today Russia’s Communist party chief should have [em picked another time, pla¢e and occasion to announce the, explosion of a hydrogen bomb by the Soviet Union. Nikita S. Khrushchev, now toufing India with Premiep, Nikolai Bulganiri, announced the bomb test in a speech trom a fellow who lived near rs Saturday at Bangalore. _ The Standard, a leading | newspaper in New Delhi, and Calcutta, said Khrush- | chev's use of an Indian platform for the announce- ment was “ill chosen... inappropriate and embar- rassing to his Indian hosts.” the second time the Russian lead- er have drawn critical commgnt from the Indian press since they arrived more than a week ago. They were criticized also when they attacked the West in a speech)! before the Indian Parliament. The Russian visitors stayed overnight at Ootacamund, south India’s favorite hill station, after an inspection trip of coffee, tea, coconut and banana plantations. their Indian visit two days—until | mir, * * * ment continued over what Khrush- chev said exactly in describihg the | strength of the bomb exploded. However, all but one of the Rus-, sian reporters listening to the speech reported Khrushchev said) “millions of tons.” The one ex- ception said he heard it as one million tons. * * ficials released an official text. The Soviet government's an- nouncement in Moscow said only that the test was ‘‘the most power- ful of all explosions carried out un- til now” by. the Soviet Union, lade (R-Ann Arbor) argued for the) House proposal. Sallade and Carey spoke in favor of the state buying either the Far- ds : HL aie ‘ Everything Gone! “We sold all the outs the very first pty said the Bo H vertiser who placed the “for | Try youll be. pleased ng the’ quick results you'll COLLEGE BOY'S DARK BLUE sUIT x shirts and wweaters.. » sport coat. Men's suits, 37 Lady's fitted cloth coat with es ge = All ti Avi condition ‘and able. 44-4016, To Place Your Want Ad = FE tg ust agk f WART AD gear The Standard'’s statement ‘was > Hunters’ Death Count Reaches 35 in State By International News Service Deaths from = various ‘causes reached 35 among Michigan's deer hunters today, with only three days left in the season. The total includes 10 dead by) gunfire, 17 from heart attacks, three asphyxiations, four drown- ings and another from as yet un- determined cause. Most recent victim was Ralph | Everett, 57, of Bay City, acciden-| jtally shot and killed while hunting |" in Iosco County. State Police said) | the shot was fired by E. H, Bates \of Van Dyke, who aimed at a deer and missed. Everett was beyond the deer and hidden from view. Rivera Leaving Soviet It was announced there that Bul-| MOSCOW (INS) — Communist ‘oldest throne, officially came ganin and Khrushchev will extend| Diego Rivera, Mexico's most fa- age today, mous painter, plans to leave Mos-' ment for cancer. Rivera's friends | Dec. 14—to permit a oe to oS early next month after treat- said he had been treated with com- Within the Soviet party, disagree-| plete success since arriving in all male members of the imperial Moscow in August. ‘Lost’ Spotlight . Spotlights Mixup in Detroit Autos Beverly Ave., Still Critical After Receiving Burns Saturday Neighbor Braves Fire to Rescue Youngsters on Hands and Knees A distraught mother prayed today for her two remaining children, after two others, rescued from flames and smoke, died in Pontiac General Hospital. Mrs. Leroy Johnson, 86 W. Richard 2, was found dead in their home, where fire broke out at 5:45 p.m. Saturday. Mark, 8 months, and Vic- toria, 2, hard’s_ twin, died of burns Sunday. Still in critical condition In the hospital are Stephen, 4, and Don- ald, 3. Both are suffering from severe burns, Three of the children were © by a 23-year-old neighbor, who crawled on knees and stomach to reach them. The oldest, Stephen, apparently |walked- out of the house by him- | self. Mrs, Johnson, 23, who had been making a phone call at a neigh- bor’s house, was prevented from entering by the crowd that gath- ered around the burning home. Korean veteran,. Donald Boyt, ran across the street from his home at 91 Beverly, where he was taking with his parents. The-front door had been DETROIT @—Vernon Manus, 19, Repafepunpinny | with his date last night when he from his car. Je got out to survey the damage thieves might have caused. There jwasn't any damage. -It wasn’t his car at all. He called police. Police had a stolen car report Manus’ girld friend. It was the same model, make and color, and in one of those rare instances) | Manus’ key fitted both ignitions. Mueller Assumes Post ‘as Commerce Assistant WASHINGTON (INS)—Frederick Mueller, a Grand Rapids, Mich., furniture company executive, to- day became assistant secretary of |commerce for domestic affairs. | Mueller, who was¢appointed by | President Eisenhower last Tues- |day was sworn into office by Com-+ merce Secretary Sinclair Weeks. | |He succeeded Lothair Teetor, who! resigned from the post after serv- ing since October, 1953. Hirohito’s Son Marking 20th Birthday in Palace | TOKYO (INS) — Prince Yoshi,| jarcond son of Emperor Hirohito; breken into by another neighbor. | Boyt made three trips into the |house, crawling-on his hands, knees and stomach. “After the third trip, they said all the kids were out. I couldn't hear any more screaming. So I went home,” he said. Boyt told no one who he was. It took Pontiac Police. more than 24 hours to find his mame and ad- “J don’t know who it was [ ~~ | brought out, I couldn't see them. dust ‘feel them and hear their | screams,” Boyt said Sunday. The three, were mamed as |Mark, Victoria and Donald by |Boyt’s father, Earl Boyt. He and |his daughter, Janet, rode with |firemen to take the children to the | hospital. ‘| Donald is aslathing contractor, |who served with the Army in | Korea. He is a graduate of Pon- tiac High School, @& Mrs. Johnson told police that she jlocked the doors to the small, [frame home, and went to a neigh- {bor’s to call her brother. “IT wanted him to wre _ (Continued on satel a chemi oo 2, President, ident, Hall seme st Ener Talking Politics The Imperial Palace sheerved| | the prince's 20th birthday with all) the pomp and circumstance that/ ' centuries-old tradition requires of ‘family. Temperatures Take Dive to Low Mark of Season The most severe wintry blasts of the season gripped bear on the 1956 decision political temperatures tumbling to many parts of Michigan. Neither Russian por Indian of-)/Pontiac and the rest of the state this:morning, sending the near-zero readings in Pontiac residents experienced a sharp drop from Sun- day’s high of 40 to a frigid 9 above zero at 7 this morning. A light snow started to blanket Oakland County as the took to the road and Slowed | ‘traffic to a crawl. Today's plummenting thermometer recorded the state’s first zero weather this season with Escanaba reporting a two below read-, in Pat much relief is in store as! the weatherman calls for continued cold and snow flurries today with a* high near 20. Continued cold is for Tuesday @ith a high from 20-24 foreseen. Tonight's low is expected to be 8. ‘morning rush hour traffic consin, Minnesota and North Da- kota, The forecast for Wednesday is somewhat more hopeful with the | weatherman predicting partly jcloudy and a little warmer, The lowest temperature preceding 8 ‘a.m. was 9 The registered 14 at 1 p. m. In Today's Press County News............... Editorials ...,..... bestdeG os = Sports ...c.cceceeess 28, BB, 30 by es EP rrr ere TV & Radio Programs...... b Wilson, | Eee re ere . Ike and GOP Chairman _Closeted to Consider Party Problems GETTYSBURG, Pa, — Pres!- dent Eisenhower takes the big step jback into active leadership of the ‘Republican party today as he talks ipolitics with GOP National Chair- man Leonard W. Hall. The conference could be devoted to current party problems or could |figures all over are waiting to hear \—W ill Eisenhower run again? GoP hopes were growing that he would accept renomination. His stepped-up activities in re- cent days, his appearance of physical well-being and consist- ently favorable medical reports gave reason for the President's party to cross its fingers, at | least, z On the other hand there was the virtual certainty that some Eisen- hower intimates, above all Mrs. Ei- senhower, have been telling him he's done enough for his party and country and the time has come to step aside for somebody without a heart attack in the background, . /A fifth child of Mr. and rescued before firemen arrived . : TWO ‘ ‘ THE PONTIAC. PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 98,1955 The Day in Birmingham : e ~ Pontiac Deaths Cleo William Callahan Jesse E. McBride Dies in.Cranbrook Road Blaze ILA, Teamsters Commission Agenda Lists In West Germany, 2,341,795 mo- toreycies and scooters now are Ciéo William Callahan, 25, of 229 _ BLOOMFIELD VILLAGE—Jease E. Walton Bivd. died in an accident) ©. McBride, 16, retired vice prest- "@ ; _» 'dent and chief engineer for the “eng y arg a , Palmer-Bee Co. in, Detroit, = in Summerville, ma, found burned to death in the li- , — rae Regt bp son Of brary of his $75,000 Bloomfield i my am annel] Callahan.|/jage home Saturday, in a blaze He married Loretta Perry in luka,|that destroyed both the library Mississippi in 1953. He has been @ ang adjacent kitchen. resident of the city for three years) Damage to the house at 1216 and was employed as a driver for Cranbrook Road was estimated at Pontiae Motor. | $25,000, excluding another possible Sui viving besides his wife Loret- $15,000 for furnishings and cloth-- ta and a daughter Debra Lucille, ing damaged by smoke and water. are = ae fri — ni While some firemen felt the Spas ae Oe ee | blaze. originated in the library, Wilburn Callahan, Christine Calla-| viicn contained a television set, han, Shirley Callahan, Marshall’ a . Oramelt O'Farrell, assistant Callahan, James Callahan, Bobby | ais ; ya; State Fire Marshall, said his Jo Callahan, Billy Callahan, Nellie, lavestization showta eal evee Callahan, Katy Callahan and Her- '"¥¢°'6 shel Callahan, all- of Summerville,! bested Pag om the stove could Alabama , "have. been the cause, McBride Funeral will be at 2 p.m. Tues-| %@* "%¢ & smoker. day trom the Dudley H. Moore The McBride s_ housekeeper, Funeral Home. The body Will be Mrs. Bilhe Lowe, 40, of Detroit, taken to the Peck Funeral Home in said she made McBride, a semi Hartselle, Alabama for services in| invalid, comfortable and left to the Church of God at Summerville buy groceries shortly before flames on Thursday broke out in the three story brick = residence. The fire was reported! vill by a neighbor and a passerby and, Eugene R. Churchill brought under .control in less than Eugene R. Churchill, 57, of 47/half an hour by fire trucks | | 1 ‘JESSE E. McBRIDE years with Palmer-Bee and moved here four years ago -frem Highland Park. He was a member of Christ Church Cranbrook and the Ameri- can Society of Mechanfcal Engi- Sign Aid Pact Mutual Help Contract Will Attempt to Solidify _ Freight Handling BIRMINGHAM —. Hearings and) reports concerning Willits’ street, between Woodward avenue and " NEW YORK (INS) — The AFL- Teamsters Union and the Inde-of additional right-of-way for pendent - International Longshore- widening the street between Wood- four-year mutual_ assistance pact.{held for hearing objections to pav- The agreement pledges both ing Willits from unions “‘to render mutyél assist-/Chesfer. —~ ance and aid in joint organizational) goth Police Chiet Ralph W. efforts” in eastern,/southern and) Moxtey and the city’s new con- subject made by the Planning | Board will also be heard, In’ addition, reports on the ad-| Aim of the survey is “‘to deter- Visability of installing traffic lights, mine how much freight is being |! West Maple and Baldwin or West moved by non-union longshoremen | Maple and Southfield, will be taken and truckmen.” jup. Another ‘hearing, if approved “ILA officials refused to say | by lawmakers, would amend the whether the agreement brought the city’s zoning ordinance, reclassi- independent union closer to a re- fying 96 income bungalow res- turn to the AFL ‘which ousted it idence-zoned. lots in Adams Village of the New York, New Orleans and ~Teronte ports would be made, Hearings, Reports Tonight Chester street will dominate to- lation was-a contributing factor night's City Commission meeting./in 16 of last month's accidents, Continued from Nov. ]4 will be ° the hearing to consider acquisition Counfble to “right-of-way” viola- men's Association have signed a|ward and Bates. Another will be tion, “improper parking from Woodward to ¢d that, ‘It is the responsibility | gne was the widow of Augustus C. central regions, sulting traffic engineer, T. M. pace tion work and maintained a ridge Olticials after the | Vanderstempel, .will submit re- .« ‘ ae . of virgin white pine trees in Port}. pact was im New York | ports on the traftic flow there, Traffic Victim-Remains | Austin. . yesterday following nine months | With recommended suggestions in Critical Conditio Mrs, McGraw lived in : of tions that a joint check | for improvement, A study of the | . | ham from 2018 te 1927 Ne gro since Dies Sunday Service |s Wednesday for Kin: of Cranbrook Founder : BIRMINGHAM ~ Mrs. B Booth McGraw, 75, sister late G, Booth, who founded the vowel ted aorta died yesterday at her Port Austin home. Property damage was estimated at $19,173, The ‘following too closely’’ vio- Moxley said; with another 16 ac- tions. . ‘ ‘ | In stating the next highest. viola- parked position,” Moxley remind- of the driver of a parked vehicle! to yield the right-of-way to moving! traffic before entering the traveled! McGraw III, who died in August. * @« @ 4 One week after ne was struck by} then had alternated her yealtvaith an automobile, James Matheny, 9,) who ran into the street to dodge) " Ereen Rere pnd Pest & one brother, snowballs, was still in critical con-* Surviving — are dition in Pontiac General Hospital Roland B, Booth of Birmingham today. . jand one sister, Mrs.. Henry T, Son of Mrs. Edna L, Matheny, |Wirgman of Chevy Chase, Md. McKinley St., James is suffering Mrs. McGraw was also the sister) from a fractured skull. jof the late Charles _H., en W., and Ralph H. Booth; and the GOP Club to Meet ‘late Mrs, Alice B, Miller and Mrs. He had been active in conserva-|% . Arrangements were by the Voor- Mrs. Nile E. Havershaw [hees-Siple Funeral Home. Malta Service will be held for . Mrs. Nile E. (Anna H.) Haver Willard Ledbetter shaw at the Donelson-Johns Fu-) witlard Ledbetter, 23, of 464 Au- neral Home at 8 o'clock this eve- pyurn Ave. was dead on arrival at ning. j j ital i Whe funeral will be 7 at|P mine General Hospital Sunday born i nt, Ala. Nov. the funeral home at 1:30 p.m. with —— wh phaser ails 13, 1932, the son of Arthur W. and Molly Burke Ledbetter. The Weather AND VICINITY — Partly Coming here from Grant nearly a and windy with cccasienal three years ago, he was em- gets, oolt ployed as a metal finisher at the “ gnow flurries today, high near 2. Part- ¥ pe Fog contineed cold tomorrow. vd Th sen high temerrow 76-74. Fisher Body Division. He had pre- viously worked at farming. peer vl 18-23 mph. today and Teday in Portiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. 9 Surviving besides his parents, ate am: Wind velocity 14 m.p.h. are two sisters, Mrs, Laverne Tay- lor of Clarkston and Mrs. Bernice Elkins of Owen Cross Roads, Ala. —- Ae Also surviving are five brothers, ere Sess ees Howard of Indiana Harbor, Ind. 06 p.m. Milford of Pontiac, Eugene of ae eee teccrsase, {Us 8 Navy, Edward E. and Jas- 60. m..........10 118. m..........1¢/per, both of Clarkston. (a 2 Se at 12) Mr. Ledbetter will be taken this ge mag ait evening from the Pursiey Funeral Sige SaaS Home to the Carr Funeral Home. Sunday in Pontiac Huntersville, Ala. for service and: (As recorded downtown) ‘burial. foteet tempersteres coco BP mae ae Charles H. Openo : ~ 43 | Charles H. Openo, 81, died Sun- sows 3 day at his home 24 Kemp St. after sores “la three weeks illness, ares Tais| Born in Hartland Dec. 13, 1874, oer ee eee a ant tor ant Fempera 9 in 10 ® tion department of the Pontiac 42 Motor Division. “a itl He is survived by his wife, the ‘former Bertha Ma: + Hi ] Area Traffic Toll: Three Dead; 2 Hurt employed in the plant protec-i jay.” : shcheno, | Service willbe held Wednesday’ County, as {Continued From Page One) 4:45 p.m, Saturday on Roches- in ter road. A paqsenger in the other car, driven by Schlusier, Jonathan Bishop, 41, Romeo, was released after treatment at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital. A post-mortem was performed on Schlusier in Potere Funeral Home yesterday by Deputy Cor- oner, Dr. Wood M. Geist. Schlusler, a native of Pontiac, © Specie! Purchase! — 69¢ VALUE. | Cc 3 for $1.00 - 4 4 Gift boxed. 36 folded sheets, 24 envelopes. Beautifully em- bossed, choice of colors, , SIMAS.“&. twice as many pounds as ny using the next best product! Deli- cious low-calorie ayps candy is en- riched with vitamins and minerals. Eaten as directed, ayp$ curbs your appetite, so you automatically eat less. cuARANTEE: You must lose weight with your first box ($2.98), drug and department stores. Teese “‘Beacon’’ Flannel or Rayon Brocade | Difference Is Our LOWER PRICES ® Savings of 10°/, to 40%, ® Preshest. Pure Drugs © Experienced Pharmacists ® Certainty of Satisfaction Fong Pesrpien Serv SIMAS.“. % N. Seginacw—Main Floor tee ee eee ee eee ee ee ee E WEEK ONLY! was a trustee of the Leonard Vil- tors Truck. and Coach for many years, ° E Highway to Affec Turnpike Revenues (Continyed From Page One} Township, the predent, route | Christmas Gift Sale of - BRAND NEW SCHICK GUARANTEED : _ Flectric Razors HIC gle : 3° Brand new, fully. : anteed ng Moe shavers complete with case and cord. .Use our ja e SCHICK ‘55’ eeeaeeeee “Phe ! sata aston com. 4” iy guaranteed. ‘os . : No Trade-in Needed! Florence St. was dead on arrival from Bloomfield Township and Vil-/neers and was a Mason. He re- S : ; Tes ee ‘Adelaide B. Pratt. : to Pontiac General Hospital yester- jage and Bloomfield Hills. ceived his engineering degree two years ago on charges of Can nce district. —— The Oakland County Lincoln Re-| * * # | oe a : fe ; ‘FIRST FATALITY from the University ot Pittsburg. |*€F control. ae rele s 8 & ew Club will meet tonight at) She willbe taken from Bell | in , Michigan, June 6, oe naan _ ae _| Re-opening Thursday’ is the Sec-)7:30 p.m. at 104 Wayne St. in Pon- Chapel of the William R, Hamilton 1898, he was the son of Burt and Penge Edt oon | Besides, his widow and ae — Capt. rp are retary, of State's branch. office, tiac to begin laying plans for the Co. for service at 1:30 p.m. Wed- Grace Bunce Churchill. He has a at the time land te i of daughter, Joan at nome, he léaves ener aie — ry” from the Moved to a new location at 280 annual Lincoln Banquet sometime;nesday in the First Presbyterian been a resident of the city for SN the tre gedy over their car a daughter, Mrs. Robert J. Mauck ‘are Seagages dded that thig/Brownell, at the corner of Rorest jin February, according to Robert|Church chapel. Burial will be in years. — a a pital poll grome of Bloomfield Hills; two brothers, dea. not ated financial assist-(S'dney Ayles of Pontiac, has been A.. Sutton, president. Elmwood Cemetery, Detroit. eine besitos his parents are placed under her physician's care.| Arthur B. and Theodore, both of/toes ne we Mi inated the few bramch rmestnger | pg worth of Pontiac, John R, Churchil| Blomfield Vilage Fire Chet |" is bry wil be taken from Beil, g™H* AEreemient expires in July.|0% Doers cits A gions Hs Bomtiae’s Headquarters for of Berkley and Mrs. Betty Upton| Charles Duryea sald to’ his [Chapel of the William R. Hamilton |). . < an wins Melee 8 : of Pontiac, and seven grandchil-| knowledge, the blaze marked the |Co., Birmingham, for service at ; toe penetion wih ihe oft, 3 Latest Genuine VIEWMASTER Equipment dren. He is also survived by a| first fatality in the history of the (2:30 p.m. Tuesday at christ} Youn Sters Dead aise bs ae ay | ; sister, Mrs. Madeline Sheldon of| village fire authority. Church, Burial will follow in Wood- \ g weed. =a adi emaprectase ee re re Ideal Gifts for Young or Old Cacia, Caret|_NeBrie rere a 10 ate alinn Comey. _.___l Attar Blaze in Home | trait oom VIEWMASTER Funeral will be at 1:30 p.m . er aze in me Gauge Co., Telegraph ~ road, | i Wednesday from the Huntoon Fu.| ber former pastor, the Rev.jat 2 p.m. in the Brace-Smith Fu- : Bloomfield Township, where his | 3-D , neral Home with the Rev Duncan| George L. Garver of the Lutheran|neral Home. Dr. Milton H. Bank (Continued From Page One) son has also been employed. Color McCall officiating. Burial will {ol-|Courch of the Ascension officiat-jof the Central Methodist Church) 1. 3 was afraid of prowlers,” . * ©. 4 : | low in White Chapel C ing. Burial will follow in the South| will officiate with burial in High-| ae gag Mrs. John Matice will open her 00 1 : emetery. Lyons cemetery. land Cemetery : Chapin street home to members of 4 . 4 2 eae Mrs, Harvershaw, 58, died sud- Mr. Johnson, 24, was on a hunt-|the Past Chiefs Club, holding their 4 - 7 Mrs. Annie E. Cotcher denly of a heart attack at her Edward Pp OReilly ing trip to northern Michigan. regiilar meeting there at 8 p.m. ! Mré. Annie Elizabeth Cotcher,|home, 345 W. Sith St., Chicago, "CWO"? > said the neighbor asked|tomorrow. = a . 79. of 80 Mariva died yesterday Saturday morning. Edward P. O'Reilly, 81, of: 104) her: “Aren't you afraid to leave ; ; a Latest model viewer out... and its after an illness of one week She was born in Norway April|Center St. died yesterday after an) the children alone?” A trip to the Cranbrook Plane- 4 Che tee: euetem comes seat ona ~ Born in Wisconsin on May 8, 18, 1897 and lived here until two iliness of two months. ; She replied, “No, Stephen is very tarium is being sponsored Wednes- | shock resistant plastic. As pictured, 1876, she was the daughter of Wil.|Year’s ago when she moved to Chi-| He ws born in Hudson, Michi-| good around the stove.” |day by the YMCA, with the Y liam and Anna Marie Peterson|Cago. She was a-member of the/gan on April 27, 1875 and married) wiemen said that two: burners! US leaving af 7:45 p.m. and re-/ All Wood—$3.95 Value Holch. She had been a resident|Lutheran Church of the Ascension.|Winifred Hendrick in Lansing = ha Geel Gare Ganad ca. Tiny nn ee , of the city for 55 years. Besides her husband, she is sur-| 9993. He had been a resident of| theorized that Richard had turned ou: A total of 70 people = Viewer & 1 98 Surviving are three sons; Hiram|Vived by five children, Mrs. Jay|the city for 57 years. them en and gas from the oven | accommodated, with reserva-| Reel Case ue H. Smith of Pontiac, Marshall E.| Dearing of Snover, Mrs. Al Surviving besides his wife @re| hag exploded tions being taken at the Y office. JF Smith of Waterford T p,| Weaver of Clarkston, Mrs. George|six children; Mrs. Phillip Jordon There pe slight oo * corre Full- Color C “pos ~ Charles A. Cotcher of Lake "|Cheney of Ann Arbor, Mrs. Ward|of Las Vegas, Edward O'Reilly of] | Set. Ted C. Goines and Detec- |costs. Adults are especially invited, 4 ull: Color ‘Come to Life five grandchildren and five great-| Newman Jr. and Mrs. David Bal-|Roseville, John O’Reilly, Robert tive. Richard G. Evans of Pon. |said Edwin F. Kirbert, PMCA sec 4 Pa grandchildren, She is also survived|!ard, both of Pontiac. - O'Reilly, William O'Reilly, andj tise Police, who iavestigated |relary, = | | 9 3-D Picture Reels by two sisters; Mrs. Mary Hoff- Also surviving are a brother, Pe-|Mary Elizabeth O'Reilly, all of Sunday, said the oven showed Weutcch ETE mE " ter, H of Pontiac, and 15 . | son, Tony Olando of Benton Har- pgp ae taal ashe Noor | x Ta eh ee - grandchildren. Baby Girl Kliewer bor. Hoendliy~gged oarerrsfer dog [a if } IS : : Also surviving are three sisters, Y Also surviving are a_ brother, Griggs St., was held today.. Mrs. “™ , ae GIFT ROBES Need Not B -x pensive — Mrs. Hugh Smith and Mrs. Carroli| A graveisde service for baby girl| William H. Sartwell of Alpena, 11|°liliffe died Thursday. ca Blair of Pontiac, and Mrs. 0. M,|Kliewer was held this morning at! grandchildren, 24 great grandchil-| She is urvived by: one son. & | Weaver of Auburn Heights '|Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Shejdren, and one great, great grand-|Bruce: two daughters, Grace an ae an | Our Feature Funeral service from Voorhees-|was the daughter of Kenneth L.| child. ee tather, ‘ Siple Chapel will- be Wed and Carole Mae Lane Kliewer of| Funeral service will be Wednes-|2ames Bartley: seven brothers, we at 3 p.m. with burial following in|844 Mt. Clemens St. day at 1 p. m. from Voorhees-Siple| 4 of Ann Arbor, L. G. of Verona. tint White Chapel Memorial Cemetery.| The baby was dead at birth{Funeral Home, with Dr. William|NJ~ Donald E. of Hopkinsville, ~ «i The Rev. Paul R. Havens of First| Friday morning at St. Joseph Mer-|H. Marbach of First Présbyterian pA — poy Methodist Church will officiate. {cy Hospital. Church officiating. Burial will be|-&¥#, Orion, Ho ‘Auburn Heights: : 7 in Marlette Cemetery. mar sa ee At Simms the ONLY : en S$ % Famous Beacon Cloth in soa Medium and large sizes. % Lustrous Rayon Brocede We Chalienge Anyone To Equal These Values Men's 100% Wool & Beautiful plaids, charcoal, blue or maroon, it yen and water. Braid piping G beit. All-over two tones in navy and _fnaroon colors. Wide collars, wide self belts. S-M-L sizes. Compare with robes Choice of charcoal, ae ae pr gs be All sizes, and este inane | bien mal, Values! Pp / S$ BROTHERS . —Bar gain Basement Ld refunded. At all leading . a Sm. : De | THE PONT IAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1955 |AKE OVER P AG F. . Meany’ s = ar will merge ‘pent week Hance of this ¢ socially and politically? will it succeed? Can it seseualie factions lgng), at odds? The answers depend largely ‘on| one man, George Meany, This first of three articles by a veteran labor report- er looks at Meany the man.) ¥ By NORMAN WALKER NEW YORK ®—George Meany, erstwhile Bronx ‘plumber, became!— head of the AFL three years ago. He quickly announced his primary aim was to.arrange a ; merger with the CIO, It seemed an papcasile task. Jealousies and conflicts among ri- val unions and their leaders had doomed many prior merger at- tempts, . * * Considering all the problems, three years has been a short time. Fér Meany, with his typical plod- ding, make-haste-slowly approach, has succeeded in. steering the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organi-| , zations into a single, powerful al- liance of 16 million members. It will end a 20-year split in ergan- |bor movement will. attempt to ized labor. * * * Will the new organization en- dure? What will this formidable | combination mean in terms of new| inroads against employers, in or- | ganizing more union members, in| influencing national politics — ‘the| stated union objectives for the} merger? Answers to these questions arse ly depend on Meany, the pudgy, 223-pound, coldly practical union | veteran, Walter Reuther, dynamic! young head -of ‘the CIO, has) stepped aside and Meany, as the) undisputed choice for president of the new AFL-CIO, will be Ameri- ca’s’ No, 1 labor chief. DENIES LABOR MONOPOLY He has tried to calm the fears Keep Some Pay to Buy Drinks, Says Abstainer PROVIDENCEe R.I. «—Judge| Luigi De Pasquale, who never took) an alcoholic drink, says a man is) a fool if he doesn't keep a little! of his pay from his wife for a drink now and then. The judge’s comments ewre made in distrct court yesterday when a 49-year-old father of four ¢ame before him on a_ drunk charge for the third tiime in six months. The three charges were on complaint of his iwfe. The man said he works hard, earns between $70 and $90 a week) and brings it all home.’ D. “This is .a mistake,’ the judge said. “A-man who takes al his pay home is a fool. He should save some for himself. Life would, be pretty dreary for the average| man unless he could have a drink He ordered -an innocent plea, entered for the man and had him} escorted home. ' Judge De Pasquale, who is 60 years old and says he never had a strong drink in his life, is happily, married and has three daughters, and five grandchildren. Marriage License | Applications | Thomas Nicholas, 7275 Cooley Lake | Despina V, Mitchell, 4000 Cass Eliza- 2 beth | Carl M. Kinquist, 3715 Lincoinshire | Barbara Bedford, 88 Hill Cincle | David H Lockard, 1956 Dunind Delores M. Pacer, Clarkston Charlies O wegees, Flint Mary L. Tayjog, Lee Norman Turpin, 415 Marion Vitginia 8. Sellers, 158 Marion Marshall J. Spak, 43 Omar Dorothy J. McMahon, 21 N. Anderson | Francis G. Turcsak, 640 Peacock Delphine L. Tucker, 2276 Newberry Paub J. Baird. 390 Ferry Georgette M. Story, 82 8. Edith Rasmus B. Nielson. Rochester Katherine BE. Telemann, 1034 Fremont | Tyan A. Bisogni. 301 First Lourinda M. Harroun, 121 W. Lawrence ‘Chaties M. Sheehy, 167 Alberta Alicia A. Goldman, 583 Westbrook Darrell D. Bottoroff, Milford Myrna J. Tubbs, Milford Melvin P| Krugman, Detroit Dorothy J. Ligon, 4275 Franklin Edward D. Corneail, Lake Orion Margie A. Zumstein, Lake Orion Delores 8. Haines, Keego Harbor J. B®. Calvary, Keego ma rhec Elmer Westervelt, Wixo Patricia A. Van Hurk, “Milford Clyde C. Green Jr, 6991 Cooley Rete Marion B, Howland, 6991 Cooley Lake Amos P, Van Wagoner, — Hien N. Lavetien, Lake Ort —_ eee a |Robertson Moses is a_little ol | soring the show, as assembled |such brochures, it also will contain . i a ye WASHINGTON (INS)—The State re | written to Grandma by President |ClUde her famous “Painting Ga-' OR | Eisenhower. She also has re- ble,” on the sides of which the Department has granted permis- was placed) ont the state books, G E Diplomacy Paving Way for AFL- CIO Merger This Week ig OxPressed by some businessmen is. a complete distortion of the|CIO conventions beginning Thurs- lugging his plumber's wrenches ‘aceny apainel Lewis in that in- en determined to Use its besttall buildings, roads or natered re and politicians that the merged/facts,” says the blunt-spoken, 61-\day, followed next week by a jointjaround New York. tance, M by coura ua-{lbra: brawn and energy to/Sources, but by the standards of union federation will become ajyear-old Meany. | convention of the new AFL-CIO.| Those were the” days when llega logic yee nee ee eee agiad life of the great mass of the has won all the bi , ” “giant labor monopoly” seeking} ‘“‘It is dedicated, not to predatory; This joint conventien, | by. the | Meany's wages were the chief sup-/ arguments he’s had within the led | eatiave t = ——— jcitizens."’ F eventually to take over contro! of objectives, but to serve as a force|way, will be in an armory just a'port for his grandfather, his moth- eratfon, There have been a lot of Meany has said, “We like the —-— — ——aie the government. * . for good in the progress of our few blocks from Grand Central er and seven younger brothers and ‘them. idea of saying that America is the! “To indicate that the united la-|country.”’ Station, The rail terminal is one sisters, His father Mike, a local! wealthiest nation on earth. We are| The merger is all set. It will be|of the structures Meany helped union president and Bemoc ‘ratic MODERATE COURSE given to bragging a little bit too. | horsewhip t the Pest" of the country formalized — at _Separate AFL and build when’ a: as a young man he \ was: party precinct captain, had died.| His determination and diplomacy} “Perhaps we don’t mean it the —|Meany, Irish as they come, mar- in dealing with fellow union lead-' same as others when we say that, | ried an Irish girl, a garment work-/ers are largely responsible for! because when we measure the oe sunion member. [Pat hing together the AF L-CIO wealth of this nation we heasure| (QUICK RISE IN UNIONISM men ie eee , Hapa Pierce it by the human yardstick, not by| a - Meany’s rise in unionism WAS the new combined organization. se : swift. Becoming’ president of the The AFL. now With abow ii ew York State Federation of La-! naillion members hie been aa in 1934, he pushed 72 labor “—- am bills througti the State Legislature sxe0 On the nome ‘co fe lin one year. His achievements led | : te his selection as the AFL's na. |maon pie a eggs a tional secretary-treasurer five the “left” on the American scene years later. “| Ever since then, Meany has been. It appears likely that Meany will try to steer a middle course, to be reckoned wit shade ralegge ae Sab a mie Ane whipping the old-line AFL chief- “President. William Green was in- tains into more economic and polit- clined to compromise and avoid ical activity while taming, the CIO ‘conflict, Meany as his, chief lieu- tog taore moderate course. #itenant was constantly prodding . Green to take more. stands, So long as Meany is the domi- *\/ Gradually, both before and after D@nt figure in the new setup it, he was selected to head the AFL Will depend much on him whether | THE HEAT IS ON—In building speedier planes probe it with the new Bell X-2, shown in flight | on Green's death in November, ine Sa of lee = ue ign ” there is another obstruction besides the sound bar- over Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. Its rocket |952. Meany quietly took on all the’ ae prin are he'll mow lold-line AFL chieftains in tests of | e chances are he iu move rier. This is the so-called ‘heat barrier.’ That's engine can develop as much power as a Navy | autious! t the outset, du- istrength and, by besting them one|C@UUously at the outset, gradu-- the point at which metals start to break down and cruiser. The plane is expected to fly 2,250 miles ‘by one. has = pre ipo sally every ally consolidating the cumbersome, become useless, Our flight scientists are out to __an hour‘at an altitude of 20 miles. case earned their respect and sup- 4lliance. es | * * * ort. é | por * @ «& | oy We have a united labor move- Famous Paintings of Grandma Moses .2 ins Francisco at the 1911 —--<<<——= AFL convention, Meany tangled with John L. Lewis, head of the to Be on Exhibition in New York. ity miners ‘union. Lewis wanted the aa AFL to refuse to submit the non-: NEW YORK (INS)—Anna Mary, Business Machines, Is atso spon- {photographs of paintings usual in| Communist affidavits required by | ithe newly enacted Taft-Hartley) law. He cowed AFL bigwigs with’ such scathing language as ‘‘I don't think the federation has a head—| lits neck has just grown up and NEI r 7. OPEN EVERY ~ 7A ONIGHT TIL” CHRISTMAS ~~ woman who lives on a farm—_ by Dr. Otto Kallir of the Galerie ja summary by Grandma of her, she's also a famous painter called St. Entiennes, Watsen, an art (philosophy of life—a life that’ began “Grandma Moses’’ to whom presi-) lover by hobby, was one of the |as a farm: girl the year Lincotn: dents and generals write -fan| first to recognize the Moses tal. ran for president—1860—and today Both For $] 295 letters. ent, and Dr. Kallir held the first includes world fame in the. art haired over.” Po Matching Wedding Bands, | Beginning Tuesday some 40 of) }-man show of Grandma's paint- wore | + * | handsomely ‘tailored bands : her‘ paintings will be on exhibition ings in 1939. | It was a who rose to an-, in 14K yellow Let Federal’s 3s jin New York city, : The exhibit, entitled “A Tribute Uz S Okays Visas 'swer the attack, “None of us,” he| - Jewelry Department ' Corsetieres Give ‘ Also on display will be a note to Grandma Moses,"’ also will in-, reasoned with AFL le ag ers.y } f 9 “thinks it is a good law, But it You Expert Fit! Ki ion to three Romanian agricul-\under the Democratic system, and. ceived letters from former Presi- |95-year-old artist long ago painted |* goat Macry & Hamel Sir Win. | Several landscapes. tural experts to come to the U. S. ‘the “only way it is going to be ae ac es ite ai sa] Even tie cotalones Of the chow to buy an estimated $300,000 worth! changed is by our represenitatives re a lai EB. Ste- og SOW of hybrid cornseed and farm ma-|under that system.” | venson, Democratic presidential | wi]| be impressive—aside from the hi y So ae be ees "chinery. Just as the convention supported | NEWPORT'S rr a - meemenel The Eisenhower note was writ-| ‘on in March 1915 when Ike was ff FINE FOR STUFFING , | For fuller, rounded contours, in France; and it contains a re- well-known amateur artist, D. D. | ' Eisenhower. | His tribute to 95-year-old Gr and- | by |ma Moses reads: ‘For Grandma. HEARTS e : = , Moses, a real artist, from a rank) = Peter Pan “Inner. Circle” 3 95 amateur. With best wishes, Dwight | / . : ini es with FIRST PUBLIC SHOW FOR SOME PORK Lean, Meaty Flattering uplift and feminine curv Eisenhower.” area Dinan Cok ; re-shaped Dura-form cups . . . made to = Among the Grandma Moses pic- pr a ts =: tures to'be exhibited will be some CHOPS SP ARE : apd ericlote Site 32 to 38 : never before exposed to public’ : ; “ vView—the ‘July 4th” painting Lb 2 c : RIBS ' Famous “Hidden Treasure 95 which hangs in the White House, | . @eeeeend as .well as the picture owned by Daring three-quarter version for a rounder, | | choose figure-fashioning bras production of a painting by the BEEF . Truman. There also will be a higher bustline. Detachable strays adjust tion of“ | iL ! 2-38 B. Check hangs in te cane inf 5" Ground Beef *, ates & sade §=— CHUCK ROAST 29¢ ee ee Paris. «| Cut The list of those lending paint- | ings to the exhibit from Nov. 29 Fresh Dressed THIS VALUABLE COUPON |through December includes the Pp AN RED TOA UM |Metropolitan Museum of Art, au- es I . |thor Louis Bromfield, playwright | |? URE {Russel Crouse and Thomas J. | FRYERS e [ e [ . , em ’ dept. Stores Saginaw at Warren, Pontiac a ae aan wes a Watson. Watson, head of International | Wee. with MEAT PURCHASE wien. iS i an ha —— OPEN EVERY NIGHT to CHRISTMAS \ ADMIRAL home gifts from =) [FEDER A ~ \ ~ Nw 3 N 3- raed phonograph and radio —o. ‘Top-Front tuning Admiral 21" with stand 1 6 . spel 4-speed portable auto- matic nos 95 Terms Automatic record player that shuts off automatically after last record has play- ed. Rich-toned super-sensitive radio with top reception. Perfect for gift giving. EVEN LESS WITH TRADE the modern tuning Top-Front tuning, 95 that puts all controls within easy ‘ter reach Aluminized picture tube ae | expanded _ picture. ‘Optic Filter Sets Heclf suteratically lor record siee screen. Vi ide-range FM soi’ § - nie even with new 167 RPM. Shuts off au- screen. See it at Federal’ $ now! tomatically after last record plays. Pow- E erful wide range amplifier. —— gilt. PM speaker. = FOTIA AT ae PONTIAC dept. stores OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO CHRISTMAS THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 28. 1955. 0>vW F Burning dame Crash on White Lake Firemen ~ v _ 2 a cote OF |Your PTA Is Planning! Directors Slate | Dec. 7 Meeting Eastern Michigan Assn. to Hold Annual Event at Fenton (Will Present NORT#l” BRANCH — Under the| direction of Mrs. Gretchen Orr,) ithe Junior High Boys and Girls! choruses will present the Gilbert) and Sullivan operetta, ‘‘HMS Pina-| -_ ‘fore,” at the school auditorium on The Board of Directors of the the: occasion of the meeting of ae Eastern Michigan Production Cred-| pt a Thursday evening, Dec. 1, it Assn. has set Wednesday, Dec.) lg p.m, | 7 as the date for the 1955 annual) Those taking leading roles in ‘North Branch Choruses Operetta alg Bader, Frederick aes] Gene Rossman, Dale Bauman, Janet Schmidtke, Marilyn Rich. ard, Betty Gardner, and William Welke, Alment Almont PTA will hold its regular ane at the High School at 3! p.m: Thursday. The subject of the evening's pro- | 1-H Delegates Pledge Safety Over 1,200 at Congress Promise Safe Driving Every Day CHICAGO—More than 1,200 dele- gates to the 34th National 4-H Club Congress today pledged their wholehearted support to President |He was treated and released from truck. played 20,000 gallons of _soU TH. DRYDEN—Mr. and Mrs, % : ™ | Pontiac General Hospital last night | water on ‘the blaze. %. {Clayton Dodds of South Dryden - Stuart is active ie county 4H ia heart attack, a second call ALMONT — During the __ past bit said nel waa! Ghabieuae : * land former Almont residents wil}| Work, farms four acres at Ham- | came in te go te a house fire at ’ Mead road, Tuesday, Dec. WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP FIRE — in this blaze Sunday afternoon w three car garage blasted the root Coffee to Benefit Scholarship Fund! of Garden Club ROCHESTER — Mrs. = a Chapman will open her hom 6, Aca 10 a.m, to 4 p.m. for a “Coffee’’ to benefit the Scholarship Fund of Rochester Branch of The Woman's} National Farm and Garden As-|1 sociation. At present the club has Duane ing Michigan State University. | Three firemen were injured hen combustion in the hay-filled in and the walls out. The fire; at 482 Oxbow Lake Rd., starting Fire pcperumees: Officials Suspect Juveniles By JULIE HUTCHINS WHITE LAKE. TOWNSHIP | Three W hite Lake Township fire- men were buried under cement blocks late yesterday the jwall of a blazing, hay-filled garage when -|'s Set Sunday Afternoon Fire’ he believed the was ‘started by juveniles." The juveniles have not been fire apprehended yet but a detective | will start working on the case this morning, according to White at 4:22 p. m., mibre than three hours by the White Lake and-Waterford Township | | Eisenhower to make _ every day 'Safe Driving Day. ! * * * meeting of its stockholders, The the cast are: Jamies Henne, Ger- meting this year is to be held at! the Community Center in Fenton beginning at 12 noon. . The program will open with din- ner served by the Presbyterian Ladies of Fenton. Entertainment . during and following the dinner in lm ay City will be furnished by groups from IMLAY CITY—Muck and Vege- gram will be ‘Health and Acci- gent’ with Gildreth Glover, chair- ‘man. The public is welcome. | Set Muck Day | Troy Township Troy High School PTA meets | tonight with open house at 8 p.m. The unanimouS action was taken on a proposal made by the eight national 4-H safety pregram win- 2 jners to the first general assembly at the High School, There will be | of the Congress in the Conrad Hil- 10-minute classes in accordance ‘ton Hotel. S-D Day is Dee. 1 with student's daily schedule for | : x the parents to attend. |. Cart W. Bond, Colfax, fowa, on ; | behalf of the other national safe- tefreshments will be served. | ty winners, ask€d the delegates | to “pledge to do all in your pow- ‘er to make every day Safe Driving Day.” He pointed out that in 1954 there were nearly 10 million traffic ac- leidents in the United States and Accidental Shooting Hospitalizes Man the 4-H Clubs and FFA Chapters of local communities and the Michi- gan Extension Service. Business will consist of short. |'@ble growers will hold the ir an- financial and progress reports nual Muck Day at the Legion by Charles M. Stewart, Secre- | Building here, Wednesday morniag tary-Treasurer and members of “and afternoon. the Board of Directolt. The program is -held ‘in coopera- The main item of busaces will tion with the Extension Service and ti ae gp the Chamber of Commerce. The - a ee coun of ppeckeshronia 2 chamber will furnish the noon) ROMEO — Romeo State Police that it was important for 4-H mem- : ee y the lunch. are investigating the accidental bers to note ‘‘that these accidents expiration of the terms of Ernest : Groves Con- were the greatest single killer of Lawson, Howell and Russell W.| St. Clair County Agent, Irving struction Co, foreman which oc- farm people, excluding death from Porritt, Pontiac. | See a be eee eurred early this morning natural causes.” Other members of the Board of morning session which will open | . = j * * «& ‘Directors are Harry J. Green, at 10 o'clock with an irrigation | Gilbert Stewart who makes his | rh. eight safety winners sent ‘Washington; Ralph Davenport, La-- movie. Speakers will be Bill | home with the Don Sutherby fam-_ telegrams reporting the Congress’ ‘Peer and Alvah Howes, Davison.) Cutler, agricultural engineering | tly on Dequindre Road is in St. 11.40. 19° President Eisenhower specialist, and Roland Barlow, Joseph Hospital Mt. Clemens. He og 1) Harlow H. Curtice, presi- | specialist’ in ‘irrigation water in reported to have been hunting dent of General Motors and chair- a at Michigan State Univer. .# coat in a cloths closet when a man of the President's Committee | shotgun ace identally discharged, for Traffic Safety. General Mo- shattering bis left elbow. tors sponsor scholarship awards — _— Imlay New Era Club Seniors toGive fo Entertain Scout ee 0 n e ain ou 5 Ta geek, citadel His wife took him to the company for the natal cat winners, Three-Act Play, IMLAY CITY—The New Era] VanDen Berg, chairman, Ted Wes- eae and foe = as Ste the wtat ie nmer fora ser, Bert Eldridge, Fred Hoeksema Police post where the ambulance re state safety wi In North Branch [Scouts in the ‘Community Room, ad Emmett Anderson. . was called to take him to the hos- Michigan is Mary Jane Bombard, NORTH BRANCH — al Smiths Creek, Route 1. “Hillbilly Wednesday evening. - ** = |pita f Sa ete el. Weddin’.” The program will be “An In- | e afternoon program will have be presented by patie tee cacree Guten ax seni: oc alee renee N ame Petition Com m ittee nen at in Club's ‘City’ Movement er. Roll call will be a fact about $@rd. MSU Soils Department, and a European country. LProfessor .Knieram, nematode spe- MARLETTE — Juvamus Club hundred names, ten of which must members here arc backing a prop- be township residents in the affect- shooting -of a S:' J, Pontiac Press Phote was extinguished after | a three-act comedy, will the high school and Saturday and 10. Members of the cast are: Eu- gene Spencer Dolore: The program chairman is Mrs ‘cialist. Clifford Dorow, and hostesses will rs Margaret Lutes, N Willia neerann, Met Rhulman,: Barbara Rex- jbe Mrs. William Lenge $s. Two Alarms at Once . Mary Lou McKillop. Municipal League, Ann Arbor, told Club president Otis Harten ap- : Lake Pelice Departmen} spokes- M 1 Cros Schroeder as the 1935 recipient ‘collapsed on them. ieee. = : in, Doris Braidwood, Beverly ;Paul sche = = ar “ osition to make Marlette a city. ed area_ would be presented to the of the scholarship, who is attend- Firemen said the roof fell inside Stevens, Belle Summersett and Donald B. Smith of the Michigan board of supervisors. ithe building and before the men|_ The garage at 482 Oxbow Lake Rochester Youth Call Keego Firemen Reservations for the Coffee may, be made not later than Saturday,| Dec. 3, by phoning Mrs. Chapmah. | OL 1-441. Almont School Wing. ls Nearly Completed week, all students enrolled in the Elementary department of the AL walls, crashing outward, had bur-| ied them. Ld * * Volunteer firemen, Deloss Chi- solm, 38, of 315 Tower St., sus-' tained bruises and cuts on his arms ‘and burns on his hands. His fire |walk because of contusions of the | hip. ‘nad: a chance 6 ‘step back, the Rd. was owned by Joseph Smith, who lives at the Oxbow Grill on | Oxbow Lake Rd. He said that the learner was used to store hay for| a neighbor's ponies. Twenty volunteers from White Lake Township Fire Department, with one tank truck and one pump- |helmet, split down the middle, was er truck and Waterford Township fo Observe 50 Years |believed to have saved his life-Fire Department, with one tank Rochester 4-H Club | ithe club at its recent meeting the, WEST BLOOMFIELD—The West advantages by snealie bring: Bloomfield Township - Fire De-| ; As a city es would be en- | |Partment received two alarms ,at titled to two members of the coun- ROCHESTER — Stuart Hutchins approximately the same time Sat-'ty hoard of supervisors. (Marlette is one of six Oakland — 4-H urday night. | youths awarded a trip to the Inter-| While they were én 0 resuart: ‘Chicago reas Exposition in tator . call _for.Dewey Smith of ees ets | 5869 . Maple Rd., who suffered | pointed A. L. Morrice, Emery | Montgomery, Ward Atkins and Robert Thornton as members of the petition committee, Bert Rob- inson was named public relations represntative, City : charter must later be approved The city woud become the sole assessing unt, establishing its tya mate’ mame dl —_ cons own municipal or justice court. City residents would not pay | township taxes, . Others are: Susan Hudson, Seth Griffin, Charles Beadle, » se Receives Tri Ip Stone,* Janet Summersett, Robert | to Livestock F al I 'Stuewer and Robert Westen | ‘Township would continue to have one supervisor), South Dryden on boundaries and the city HEADQUARTERS FOR lin and John R Reads, and is | the home of Lawrence Marinack BETTER SHOE REPAIRING ise rve. their golden wedding an- in classwork as a | niversary next Surtiay with an AT REASOWABLE PRICES is active of 5602 Garden Terrace. _ | Boundries would be set at: the mont Community Schools . were) jopen house at Rowland Haill,| senior at Rochester High School. | 1. 5109 {) i ; b v ' 100 fire at Marinack's resi- time of its incorporation, by a er oe 0 —_ rreciaiiae rooms oa Plea agar ca sai P| p f Leonard from 2 to 5 p.m. | The award trip is given to the dence was caused by burning majority vote of all the property Neisner’s Shoe Repair in new elementary wing. — —_ 2) © ae jun: | ans ala e ntry Mr. and Mrs. Dodds have one Plan Band Concert, | WALLED LAKE. — The Rosary GOC Leader, 2 5 Shirts $ Social at Imlay City Altar Socety Cancer Committee of > ‘ 3 IMLAY CITY—The junior band o vues Parish wil meet at ‘Milford Staff ~ | $ Beautifully 2 and eighth grade Girls’ Glee Club |! a.m nesday at the home of | 3 af 3 of én ney City Community ‘ nae apigion Mihm 12 are Fly to Oscoda | $ Laundered Only 3 > 4 2 . aq rea ovi will make) . > School will present a combined . group | MILFORD—Mrs, George Eberle, | $ Individual Cellophane 3 concert in the school gymnasium ¢4ncer pads under the direction of; $ 4 apple ar eae \Mrs. Theodore Selby, Cancer Re-|Civilian Volunteer Coordinator fori $ Sacked and Boxed e4 me se eeamn social sponsored lief Chairman for the parish. the GOC’° (Ground Observers PPPOE POP EE POOP PPO PF OOO COR rrooroobee > by the Band Boosters Club, will follow the program, in the cafe- teria. The public is invited. Howarth Church Slates Family-Style Dinner LAKE. ORION—Howarth Baptist Church will hold a family-style roast beef dinner 6n. Wednesday, with serving to begin at 5:15 p.m) The church is located on Silver-) bell road. Announces Sale of Plant. -MARLETTE—Maurice Dusnford!” | ——— 731 North Perry at Joslyn has anhounced the sale of the) ‘ . ] “County Calendar Meet Set for Rotarians 4313 w, waton aid. on | 8) Un Pt . ; ; 516 Pontiac Trail, next to Gold Seal Creamery, to service!, Miriam ches is mentee Dec. 8 at the Ortonville will meet at the Hotel : . 5 of th Suandoré Cream. Sef Dprothy Amann at noon! stiles Tyesday, A musical pro-| Coffee Cup, Walled Lake 14 Main S.,. Clarkston is transferring the mamufac-, tring operation to its Crosweil ley - [12:30 Wednesday for the purpose Troy Board Meets Tonight ever his entire body and burns on his legs and hands. He was also treated and released by hos- pital authorities. said that he had a helmet on at the time of the collapse but it had: been knocked off and his coat! was cut‘in several places. ROCHESTER — The Rochester | Variety 4-H Club has been asked) to participate in the Christmas girts in the “Stitch and Chatter” Kroup have completed their | towels and aprons, according to He was! Mrs. D. 8, Wiggins, leader, Oth. taken to Pontiac General Hospital,| ers in the club are ‘in advanced — treated and released, pending fur- | ther X-ray study this morning. SUSPECT FOUL PLAY Leroy Schwinch, White Lake | Trumbie’s home, 604 West Fifth St. | officer | in charge of the fire, stated ¢ Gathering Storm’ ito Be Tuesday at Leonard LEONARD—A_ new color film, \“The Gathering Storm,”’ will be a public presentation at the Leonard| Methodist Church, Tuesday eve-| ning. The picture, a comprehensive | study of missions and the crisis facing the lands of Japan, Korea sienary organization, Blue Circle Will Meet WALLED LAKE — St. Martha’s clothing class, There will-be a meeting Thur. j|day, Dee. 1, after school at sey | Mrs, Wiggins states that a bul-| ——— |letin on African Violets, Extension| Folder No, F-H48, may be had from the Oakland County Extension of- \fice, 1260 West Blvd. Women’s Club Will Meet in Ortonville — ORTONVILLE—Ortonville Wom- en's Club will met at 2 p.m. | Thursday in the home of Mrs. AIl- ‘ton Bailey on West Mill Street. says that take-home dinners will, ‘collaborating on publicity, Christ- |Study Club will be guests. lation Department of the Cel- | anese Corporation of America, | seven members of her Milford staff recently flew to Oscoda, where \they visited Wurthsmath Air Force | ‘ | Blue. Circle of St. William's Parish |Base will meet‘at the home of Mrs. E. Krumm, Commerce Lake, at of making articles and rolled ban- dages for Catholic Medical mis- sions, : a4 TROY. TOWNSHIP=Troy Town- Board will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Town Hall. * They were guests there of Col. ‘Ralph Taylor and Lt. Col. Weston Lennon, Fog that evening can- celled the planned return flight to Selfridge Field until the next morning, | Mrs. Eberle, who with her Mil-| ford staff has been on 24-hour duty for three yéars, says she has set her sights’ on Ent Air Force Base, Colo., for the group's next flight. be served. Fi f } ORTONVILLE — Rotarians of, gram is planned: for entertainment. Eire is extending its food hy-/MOM's unit (Xo. giene. regulafions, Pybtin reports. dinner, at 6: 30 p.m. 14 will serve a 4 grandchildren. Past Noble Club to Meet 3 Troy Groups to Meet jee Chief Ben J. Moshier. | i Hew ELECTRONIC BRAIN ‘outrels this Bis DELUXE Quality NO 2 cha se. at the home of Mrs. James Mai-|bined meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday son and Miss Elizabeth McKillen. at the Troy High School. | eoaay Fair’ Planned by St. Philips’ Groups ROCHESTER—All the fun of al charge of the Altar Guild booth, Holiday Country Fair can be en-| with plants for sale; Mrs, A. L. | yen at St. Philip's Episcopal | K bian, Christmas novelties; | Church, Thursday Dec. 1, The af-| | lfair is sponsored by. the Woman's) Mrs. Vern Sutton, dolls; Mrs. ‘Auxiliary and other organizations Henry McNalley, aprons; Mrs. | i" the church. Richard Eberline, post. office; | Mrs. Fred Riley is gene ral, Mrs. Harry 0, Lang, — | ark * greens; Mrs, Harold Freeborn, yo a0 pa The fair will open at 11 a.m. | baby booth; Mrs,. Ernest Sim. | and continue to 9 p.m, A snack, mons, baked goods and Mrs. bar has been planned to serve David Hackett, candy, children and adults. Mrs. Florence | Mrs. Louls Stieb, Mrs. Helen Al-| Hoyt, who heads the committee, | sup and Mrs, Henry Duffield are! be .featured, th ll rried out with) Other booths will provide baked \Christmas. placa throughout the. %y OFF 314° = | | || HURON DRY CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDRY ONE DAY CLEANING SERVICE AT MAIN OFFICE Main Office and Plant: 944 West Huron St. FE 2-0231 BE SURE~AND ASK FOR YOUR COLD BELL GIFT STAMPS Open Tonight "til 9! Ample Free inincede Easy ( Credit Terms! - Neighbor Stores to Serve You 1536 Union Lake Rd., next to -187 N. johnson at State Pontiac State Bank — Orchard Lake at Light, Keego Marbor 59 S. Broadway at Front, Lake Orion ag At Min » ‘ ‘ - TS \ ¢@ . MARE Oven ratt THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1955 is We — is amy Bees River * bd By MURIEL” LAWRENCE him trying to open the tabinet, was attempting this feat by ing one nocking wood floors. But not my Peggy! She cleans and waxes them in one;we won't develope any exaggerat- easy operation with Bruce Cleaning Wax. And I'll be hanged if Peggy's floors aren't the talk of our block. 1 sure have to hand it to my Peggy old sought Nay his head against her hip, Eric }murmured plaintively, ‘ ‘best Mommy in the whole world.” blancing other on the toilet seat. Appalled Ten mifiutes later. her 4-year- her out, Sidling up to ‘Oh, how I Tove you, Mommy. You're the me new. devotion be- She's a little too credulous, I'm). - get it that easy. It's sensible to accept this tough reality so that ed trust in spanking’s power as a discipline instrument. a STING | A spanked child will often pro-| This is seaakiag’s cae _ The day Eric's’ mother found making a,tast change in a child’s|strikes, By arousing Eric's fear of te—and get safer, changed bathroom | #¢tion. re more humiliation, we may ‘end| To make spanking serve us, we cnn Par elas ee male caning ww on the washbow! pee er That's the el of. the line. |Spanking can take us no farther. iIts instruction extends no deeper Spanking Is Useful but No Cure-All clated, aan asked too much of spanking, Now many of us feel great fear of it, We have discarded it as a useless brutality, though the real brutality is not in spanking itself, but in greediness that wants it to teach everything. \than the rary in the skin ‘| * * *- fulness and its limitations. It’s become disreputable disci- to Wed Dec. 20° BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Mr. and Mrs. George Wesley Kothmann of Fort McKavit, Texas, have an- nounced the engagement of their daughter, Gail, to Pehr Denton Anderson. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Denton Anderson of Lone Pine- road. Both youtig people attend the University of Colorado at Boulder and are planning a Dec. 20 wed- ding there. Lydia Deary Given day party honoring her daughfer, Lydia, on her sixth birthday Sat- urday. Guests attending the birthday party were Rodney Reinhart, San- dra Jarrard, Beverly Littlefield, Donald Joyce, Larry Gorham, Lin- da Canterbury and Kathryn Sue Fowl Gone? Barbecue Meat Loaf Mrs. H. W. Shooltz Pours Tangy Sauce Over Beef te Pehr Anderson - You're tired of turkey by now. Give the family a change of meat and serve a Barbecued Meat Loaf for dinner. Mrs. Harvey Shooltz of Long Lake contributes one of her favorite recipes, « The Shooltz’' have four young- sters, three of whom are in school. Mrs. Shooltz is active in the Union Lake School PTA She is also a Girl Scout leader. Other leisure time activities she enjoys are a card club and reading. BARBECUED MEAT LOAF designed and named by Betty Miss Binnie Prizant. The very newest in hair shaping ee Cc IF YOUR HAIR IS NOT BECOMING TO YOU... YOU SHOULD BE COMING TO US - Five Stylists to Serve You—Now Open All Day Wednesday BETTY Le CORNU BEAUTY STUDIO 306 Riker Building Fe 2-521 By Mrs. Harvey W. Shooltz 1‘, pounds ground beef Mix all together and press into. a loaf. pan. Pour over it the fol- lowing sauce. \ Piquant catsup % ew 3 tablespoons brown sugar 1 teaspoon dry mustard 44 teaspoon nutmeg Mix and pour over loaf. Bake WANTS FOR CHRISTMAS! This €hristmas thousands of men will receive wallets (how many" a man carry?) and cigars (how many men smoke them—and what brand?) and liquor (what Christmas memories are left the morning after?). They : | og I'm just as cet as a peacock % cup chopped onions 4 afraid. Though spanking has prob- ° a5 bread crumbs 3 Lhe acne cer ene or ingly ended Brie’ bathroom climb Birthday Party ee | WE'VE GOT WHAT EVERYONE she manages our home. For alt ing, it has‘ not increased appre- Mrs. Raymond Deary of Wood-| 1, teaspoon sage | : ; stance, many of her friends are still ciation of his mother, We don't low avenue was hostess for a birth-| ? *s* and her Bruce Cleaning Wax for, test increased devotign to us, not) 4 Beckley. Craig Smith and Linda 45 minutes in a 350-degree oven. | will send these gifts out of a spirit of Christmas giving, } one a —— job. patina re aoe ee sing MacLaughlin completed the list. . Serves 6. out of a desire and hope to leave a lasting and favor- } both for it! : Lrallpreanngrdny aphid ers , Mr aad ia able impression. é > v.&. For lighter the world’s best one, Efic makes . JOSEPH D. AVIS George D. Why don't they send books? | : Blowalpberapend odrtiuai Suc ae P alierson of A gift of books can be as small as a single volume or as : Bruce Floor Cleaner. + 6 *@ Baritone to Be Featu red Birmingham | large as a shelf; as personel as a book of sonnets, as , Bisos hg lane oa Joseph Davis of Jefferson avenue | productions in college presenta- eeeronee, sedate as a scholarly tome. . _ —— jreached his reason with realiza a boearted ees oso pgp tions. ag dengises A gift of books, like the Christmas star itself, radiates : bad — Ge Psa at Ragrabgr ™ ‘Mr. Davis is the baritone member| ¢ = _ stad at Fesaiene eis ’ -in all directions: it shines upon the receiver, implying | Ines gained the slightest enderstand- of a quartet which will sing @ SOME) with the Censervatery Mined Dona ld J the compliment that he likes to read; it shines upon the ; ing of the protective love whieh Dy. Davis recently served with] Quartet. He has also sung lead | 97: USNR giver, warmly reflecting his good judgement and taste. ne her spanking. \the U.S. Navy. While stationed at er at ee Letroresmard He is the : With a gift of books you send laughter and leaming, Dg ia cpatked ea G0 anioy gute: lady a hag cared) Mond the direction of Valter Poole. son of ir eine aoe a world a fact and a universe , ful humiliation—and will think At present he is studying withhMr. and Mrs. Prior to entering the navy, Mr. the former! SEND BOOKS THIS CHRISTMAS | twice before exposing himself Davi is sang in opera and. ortoric! Vernellie Peppa i to it again. —— head ey the voice ‘department at| vlomas f : | =n "eden his selections Cleveland S BOOK SHOP | e e Haneef eet, ee oe | selections with the} Cleveland. OLD PROF’ 5) ' quartet, Dr. Davis will sing ‘The a” . — | Be lovelior with eted at Shower |r Dnt oem) An wa W. Lawrence FE 24 j » ‘ Janice Moriarty of Augusta ave-| win's “I Got Plenty o’ Nuttin’. ose s hostess at a bridal shower SS aaEEEEEEEEEnEEie rom ee "Ta oliday Haird = for Nancy Moriarty. “ 7 | 0 ay alr 0. ; Nancy, the daughter of Mr. “and Everyone Needs Collece ana ke a -4 Mrs. Hugh Moriarty of Baldwin a ¢ | — HAIR STYLING — Geouae ta tert caval ot cir, Sweater Supply lis a greduese. % ; : ford Paul Ayotte, son of Mr. and ee oe | . Open Evenings Mrs. Clifford Ayotte of Robiwood| inh tivtot anes ot every back: | of Harverd by Appointment avenue. The couple will be mar-| reat shopper is a supply of! University. A Tied Dec. 3 at St. Michael Church. | ° No "cal e girl ever had t March Guests at the recent shower were | a eee & . di . < y of these casual, versatile) ‘wedding is all Mrs. Ted Moriarty, Mrs. Charles) ot i Geom ! ' pss, Mrs. Jesse Debalt, Mrs. ora . -_< = ed ox planned mm ANN PATTERSON FE 2.5600 [Thompson, Mrs. Hugh Moriarty /St¥!es_ and yarns is almost end- Manila, where ye 80% N. Saginaw less. But the classic cardigan re-|he is stationed. Saino ie a rena N EW CLASSES the biggest selling item Starting category is the orion ames Th ig because it has the look Day, Half-Day, and Evening and Mrs. Albert Bucher. Others were Mrs. William Mor- iarty, Mrs. James Wheeler, Mrs. Mickey Marshall, Louise Debalt, Violet Moriarty, Everlyn Marshall and Sharon Moriarty. Completing the list were Joy Kelly, Mrs. Stan- Call for Careful Don the Poatioc Laundry Man Fluff Dry |*~ Just Send Your | Entire Family Wash The flat pieces will be returned all ironed. The wearing apporel..and-both.towels will be flutt and feel of expensive - cash- mere, yet is budget priced and can be washed as easily as a | pair of stockings. “One of the top campus styles of] the year is the dyed-to-match § -< sweater and tweed skirt. The sweat-| ler half of the combination is el |able in cashmere, orlon or wool, ‘in slipon, cardigan or twin sweater sets. Also important in the 1955 sweat- er lineup is the bulky ribbed-knit sweater in coat or pullover style, often with wide, loose turtle neck, dried and folded. Very little left for you to do. B [Italian fashion. Gregg Shorthand — Typewriting E Soe Bookkeeping — Accounting Your Best Buy near into orksiraey e tn Calculator — Comptometer ~- ‘ ere mam beloved, for wear ‘| with! Bermuda shorts. For dress-up wear, there aré many versions of cashmere or or- lon sweaters with wide boat neck- lines, short or long sleeves, with or without jewel, sequin or em- Is Fluff Dry’ PONTIAC LAUNDRY . | & CAREFUL DRY CLEADERS VETERAN APPROVED i So Frsinesslastlule| ; 4 o broidery trim. . FE28/Ol oe cate => FE 28/0! T A i iti , d “F West Lawrence Street Pontiac, Michigan H. } wo Arfe I[nlitiate - —$—$—_$_$—<—_$_$—$—$—$ $n, * Visit the : y ly Fi } ) “'Into‘Amaranth | | ,visit! . | ; | Completely Flattering... ; 2s membert were inlined into Phone Name.........+. eee a6 , ; sther Court’ 13 { the : ° : Z | eaugaley Friday evening, 3 the Abeta ye _. New ite , = | Roosevelt Temple: Address... ... seeeee BOA } “ - | Forty-five members were pres- Ad for Details — Brassaliere by Formifit & Shock red corduroy makes a ent at the meeting attended by the|"=—= high neckline princess jumper with grand officers. 'a half belted back. The front is Refreshments were served by punctuated with three pearly bu-|Mrs. Kathy Quick, Mrs. Fern tons. The cotton pettiblouse is red/Crawley, Mrs. Myrtle Tubbs, Mrs. ‘aaa white stripes with white collar | Iie Balsh and Mr. and Mrs. John’ Lifts your bustline, lengthens your midriff while it belittles your waist! EVERY BOY > AND i sand cuffs; a liman. _ | Marquisette torso sections give you the | hr] UEVERY or. ogni ian $ ' o- -thi ing s your bustline. é - Come n= nl LOVES A wonderful, completely flattering shape-maker ; i lor a wroidered ny i ; | in the Fabulous pipe Z TED’S Se eee é Try it on today! No. 38C, $10.95, } | Especially on Family Fo : fi x "| ° . ‘ : aa i AE PONTES Nights. Special menus for yorm t . ; , : ; CREATION q by buying diveee Cell Federol -4-0558 children .. . Pictures t¢& . | «from the for FREE DECORATING 7 | color, too! Family Nights . i ADVICE and ESTIMATES YOU MAY WIN a Cadillac Convertible—or a Buick are Mondays thru Thurs- . : Riviera—or a Chevrolet Station Wagon—or a com- , ~ P One ‘of our courteous representatives will be sent to your home ete Frivid: Kitct ad Lat J d ys. ; t without , Laser — Fah ge Bai Mare ' oe : - c ie ri Bi meee c rs = ; were oo : ; he He te . vid <8 other Big-Value Prizes rigidaire { oa et yh Se New Lift To Living Frigidaire Refrigerators + ‘ ; , 4 All Work Gomesseed for § Years. Ranges > Washers and Dryers. ; > : 2 é Servin - Full details and FREE ENTRY BLANKS from t Poatige HOSIERY & CORSET SHOP > 1 = WiruiamWricur || your FRiGiDAIRE DEALER : arg ‘eit STRAND THEATER BUILDING [ . __ Peraitere Staihese end: Uphelunete | , See your local C ed Telephone Directory , i 22 Years! 270 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. | } ae 14 North Saginaw St. FE 2-6921 ee y j;e— | ‘i a 7 3s is : n: 7 bol ¢ 7 } | j - i ' : ce ri ° a : ; } ~ .Y at | { : / , “ , ‘4 : . ’ f ; bsA fe ear { f ; , i { : yf Saad Hn = ‘ , /, 5 ; i = j ; ; Jr { ; j Nad fh , ) hi / : ; . hy be . i : ny Af. F ig | / ‘ y 7 é iy i A | sy . , | Al Tod : -f ve | ' ce ' : ok z : ee ‘ oo a ; / A ggce 1 \ aa ra o r ld ra ay : f :" f ‘i ~ i ; ff Pi . pay i 1 4 | F, f aces | eos = se oat : ' gi d HH THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. NOVEMBER 28, 1955 | 3 oo ~ LOWEST PRICE. EVER FOR ANY NEW TV Emerson PORTABLE TV 593 Now you CAN take it with you! Miles from anywhere . . . Emerson portable AC- DC television pulls in every channel! so clear, s0 ‘sharp, you'll think you're at the movies. Antennas built in; pre-tuned. FREE g@ COASTER WAGON | Filled With SOAP @ 225 ( Model 1168 No Money Down, $1 25 Weekly 3-Speed Portable PHONOGRAPH Plus 6 Records and Record Case bed fe Attractive simulated leather case for easy carrying. Plays 3313, 45 and 78 rpm records in all sizes. Makes thé perfect Christmas gift. - All for Only . ‘06 $79 | New 1955 Speed Queen Washer has a full capacity, porcelain. tub, equipped with aluminum tangle- } J proof, adjustable pressure’ wringer. 4 Full guarantee: - 2 } AUTOMATIC SKILLET WESTINGHOUSE Thermostat Controlled, even heat gives uniform results. ® Bacon ® Chicken ©@ Fish Billets © Chops _ ® Griddle Cakes © Pot Roast ® Spaghetti and Meat Balls ® Rarebits © Italian Pizza © Upside oD Down Cake ®@ French Fries © Doughnuts @ 8 Shrimp © Popcorn. REGULAR ‘PRICE $29.95 NO DOWN PAYMENT. Many i b=) eee ‘J > TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE FOR OUR ( ~ MATTRESS OR SPRING Musical Rocker “Matched Tables SQ» . $ 4” Made of hard wood, strong, Limed oak, beautifully made . with raised edges, plastic tops. durable. Plays nursery tune aS = Gocktail, end and step-end you rock. ; styles, , s Magnus Student Accordion ' Not a toy, but a true guar- anteed musical instrument. $ 95 eee buy this Magnus s10”° accord at d price below what you'd pay for a toy. Bright New Lamps = Smart New Chairs a | SH°> Ideal for gift giving! Modern, Black Nubian steel frames classic, dramatic or conserva- with color-bright plastic up- tive! Take your pick ,.. get holstery and spring - filled several! seats! Famous Name INNERSPRING MATTRESS REGULAR PRICE ..... * 2... $34.95 YOUR TRADE-IN ......... "15,00 imogin® : the-cloc* serves "OU und ‘modem As iets g luxurious 9? ad : at this price: Rock-0-Lock Chair Maple. Bunk oN (With OTTOMAN) $ 49” 7) : rite back to any posith > Mapi k : ‘ Make it & comfortable C C aple bun , Can be used mas for dad! Choice re eatoady as. twin beds ot’ bunk style. FREE - Parking a | Tonight AZ ~ tn Our Until ice Lot “10” 9 BCE wea tan : ore Round Bobbin Electric Portable SEWING MACHINE! . With this Royal you can MAKE: many things you've just wished - for, before! Make children’ $9 clothes, ‘clothes for yourself, draperies and a hundred things * —electrically! a A : ; A i v. * i { , r : : . if ~ G i ' . : | 3 F P / : / ; iy a \ f + i f 7 . $ : ; { rie \ ; fo ' . uv | { yt : | fi! f } : ; 1 ¥ + +t —- so binneny ead = : i ; | _f ; ; dinette set for the ids. Table and two Airs. J : THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1955 - Russian TV Viewers Beaming Rapt Njerboat of U.S. Newsreels - “ ns lained in a phone into the film can unused. Way out to Valdivostock—4,000 . MOSCOW (INS)—Amertcan tele-/has been an American “baby dee. snorted: ‘What a are they show- Shakespeare at Stra tford, ,the bull-fight material sent from)al,” he comp! vision newsreels are making a hit/py,”” pre-toddlers in a crawling ing—American floods, cabot Conn., Nashua beating Swaps at | America, Russian viewers have|call ‘to Moscow, “no Amerikansky| After the “Amerikansky kino-| miles east on the Pacific Coast. in the’ Soviet Union. race, Instead of indignant outcries|@"d tind bad thing they Washington Park; a Pennsyl- |seen Bette Ford, American girl kinozhurnal.” ; zhurnal” plays to the estimated) V,«uivostock began telecasting’ Since signing a contract for U.|about exploitation of babies by un-|can find? * ¢@ vania lumberjack rodeo; water |matador, a Venezuelan schoo for} Not too many months ago a Ra-| 400,000 Moscow-area set owners in mid-October, Moscow flew some S..newsfilms a few weeks ago,|feeling capitalist parents, the next The New England floods, the| **ling in Florida and California; |aspiring matadors and a bullfight'ain Moscow commentator dis-|(about half of the national total) fijms out to’ get them started. Mescow-TV has been showing a|morning’s subway meee Wag Cir Tampico ew Engl and he Wiha an ice show in Atlantic pte in Spain. missed American televison.as aj|the print makes the rounds of the| But the manager was disappoint- anne of life im the West-\thusiastic, ing “Ind. fire all appeared. But| St; Louls children’s circus; a Video Moscow steers ear of| “daily = “ es: 11 other Sovies TV outlets: |ea: : "= “ fellow | the view of Detroit's new-car nvd- |controversy and politics in present-/sadigm, 00d, more es . > whe pe ya poe me it ene ccnginlt Map tow 20 sear els and the solar-powered tele- |ing the a ious sea There are blood.” Leach fa ae Kiev, | Further gains in fertilizer con- Viewers haye diodes the station j phone circuit in Georgia. « also some other taboos. Shots of a ledge-sitting, would-|) Kharkov, Gorky, Sverdlovsk, |sumption are forecast for Holland with lett t the would crawl right out ‘and | oq States as a lively hard- aul. Amsrihaeae wm on ar'| Win,””, one straphanger confided | ut-loving try. Unexpectedly popular has beer! “You just sent Russian “‘materi-ibe suicide in Manhattan went back’ Omsk, » Tomsk, Minsk and, finally, ‘in 1956: (American cinejournal), The unani-| *® Ser fellow traveler in the met- | (4. roe MORE | : . . . 3 QUICK — DEPENDABLE _ - GUARANTEED . especially—more sports, including mous vertlict: “Give us more!”| *® sey ae : COLLISION WORK “ine wees cne:|. | alla dt EYS set is Ae ee Nhat Soviet televiewers have sten VAY S QUALITY! rom enne a 27 fa : OUVER oroR Sylmar Wome. Ke eater iGirl Sets Fire | GIFTS FOR MEN...IN THE SEASON'S BEST STYLING i — Se are : her. Robbing Church . Brother Reports Theft After She ‘Refuses Him | : a Split of Take , | 0 UTSTANDI NG NAPERVILLE Mm w—Further | OPPORTUNITY [sees say, started a church fire while jon a mission to rob poor boxes. Penney buyers pick sportswear teams for you... expert fashion know-how saves you hours of shopping time! $100 per week salary while training. for ot ee coreer with Mutual of. Omaha. ties, Was picked up on a telephone | , ; |tip supplies by her 15-year-old, | brother. Damage to the First Meth- | Here is a lifetime Opportunity for the Bf Pais church was. estimated at right man. Your earnings increase each. F30..sana deputy “state. year in our business, plus security for can opaerp eo el a you and your family right from the start. — 0 ge Page < his, j | nvestigat o charges ave | been filed. E If you can’t earn $7,600 at your present ff} McFarland said the ei, who g detai Sat it six ? job in 1956, you should investi gate this Bors “after’ the fire’ told -this opportunity. | areas chareh to cop © P CONTACT PAUL WILLIAMS FOR | seersting "no eaning osc MEN‘S WATER-REPELLENT ~ CONFIDENTIAL inal , [match onto a pile of Guaieg SUEDE LEATHER JACKETS , cloths. She fled after taking $6] A EE. 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Talent Up -for Grabs oday of Minors Dissension aera ees a @ COLUMBUS, Ohio A rhubarb between the American Assn, and|league | the International League threat- : ened today to erupt into an open) , clash between these two triple-A| circuits as delegates of the minor! leagues gathered for their annual, =: Georgia Tech to Test Pitt 3NFL Teams “among American Assn. directors, a proposal by the Milwaukee club _ given the slightest chance and ‘the Bears out of first place in the winter baseball meetings. In a pre-convention session to transfer its Toledo franchise to Miami was sharply rebuffed al-|- though the official announcement given the press was that the pro- posal “‘is still very much alive.” “It’s a hairbrained scheme that has no merit and absolutely no chance of being approved," an as- pea gy official, who did not wish 2,150 air miles from Denver to Miami, That is equivalent to one-|, ton, the nearest city to Miami, is 1,100 miles away.” be identified, stated heatedly. Win Over Middies Lifts Shuffled Army to Heights WEST POINT, N.Y.,: Nov. 28 (@—Army’s upset victory over Navy, culminating another master- ful job of personnel changes, today elevated Coach Ear! Blaik and his. Cadets to new heights of football achievement. : Saturday's 14-6 triumph over the Midshipmen at Philadelphia _re- called the 1953 season, when an Army team with a remade lineup! . beat Navy 20-7. | : The biggest change on the plains above the Hudson River this year was Blaik’s shift of Don Holleder, a great end in "4, to quarterback. Saturday, Holleder exploited a weakness on the right side of the Navy line to bring the Cadets’ from behind after the Navy had scored early in he first period. Blaik also moved Flay Goodwin from guard to tackle and back to guard, Dick Stephenson from cen- ter to tackle and All-America) Ralph Chesnauskas from guard to tackle to end. And Pat Uebel, who scored three touchdowns against Navy in ’53 and one each in the past two games, played both half- back spots and fullback -at one time or another, In the light of these moves, Army's 6-3 record wa’ amazing. The Army checkerboard lineup ‘resulted from a lack of depth, Blaik pointed out today. Adjustments were necessary be- cause of the lack of depth since Hazzard Named to New Position State’s Research Head Going to Pennsylvania Fish Commission LANSING — Albert S. Hazzard, director of the Conservation De-| partment’s Institute for Fisher- jes Research, will become assist- ant executive ‘director of the Pennsylvania Fish Commission Dec. 1. Dr. Hazzard had been in charge of the institute since 1935 when he came to Michigan from Salt Lake City where he had been associate aquatic biologist with the U, 8, Bureau of Fish- eries, He received bis doctor's degree in toology from — University in 1931. As head of the institute, a sec tion of the department's division of the cribbing incident which all but wiped out the Cadet squad just before the 1951 campaign. After taking a 42-7 licking from Navy that year, Blaik said it would take Army five years to regain ithe heights. The five years are up but Blaik said today they are still not back to where they were before the incident. Cotton Prexy Pleased Wit Bowl Choices TCU and Mississippi to Match Identical 9-1 Records DALLAS w—Cotton Bow! Presi- dent Felix R. McKnight very mod- estly termed the upcoming Texas \Christian-Mississippi clash as “a very swell bowl game” and said it would be for the football cham- pionship of the South. td] * * He wouldn't claim the Cotton Bow! engagement Jan. 2 between the Horned Frogs and Rebels as the best bowl game in the coun- try, but said pointedly that “We have two fine teams that com- piled impressive 9-1 records against strong competition.” Mississippi was invited as visit- the Army-Navy game was over in Philadelphia. Navy was a strong contender for the visiting spot in the Cotton Bow! but stepped out jof the bow! picture when it was| McKnight) ‘was in Philadelphia for the game beaten by Army, 146. and was receiving reports from the! Cotton Bowl office on the results, lof other important games involv- ing Cotton Bow] vrosnects. . * * to participate in a bowl game but McKnieht said the Cotton Bow! had not contacted or invited Army anyway. Foor, fish and fisheries with offices in Stt*" Ann Arbor, Dr. Hazzard played, an important‘ role in shaping | many of the policies governing the ch management of fish in Michigan. He gained national recognition for) his work and is author of many many| technical and popular articles on'D fish -and fishing. ; MA ASTERN CONCROPNCE. de As WL Tt Pet, Pts, OF Cc 7 21 «8 mM 1s? Washington 7 3 0 20: 198 178 New York 45 1 444 216 104 Chicaco Cards 43 1 444 «197 1% Pittsburgh 46 0 4 171 Philadelphia 3.6 1 XR Bit 21 WES N CONFERENCE jos Angeles -@ 3 1 687 9A -9n0 ieago Bears 6 4 0 6 256 221 Raltimore | $ 41 SS 1% 184 5 5 0 Seo 213 238 San Francisco 2 z . 3 174 MR Detroit 3 MO 191 20 ef get Sb Rear Hag Raltimo: Chicago Cards 83, Ch New York 34, Cleve! Baltimore at Los Cards at we and at Pitts! ho apg a Washington Bears Troun ced.at Own Game, Says Card Back CHICAGO up—When you're a Cardinal, part of the job is beating the Bears,” said veteran halfback Charley Trippi after the Chicago) Cardinals had trounced their cross- town rivals, 53-14. * * * Trippi might have added “in spite of the odds,” but it wasn’t necessary, The Cardirials weren't were 164-point underdogs, “We beat them at their own game,” said Trippi, ‘with blocking and good tackling.” Tt was a costly loss and knocked Wesftrn division of the National Feotball ‘League. Los Angeles’ Rams defeated the Philadelphia the closing minutes, the crowd screamed ‘‘pour it on.” Only when the final gun went off did the realization set in that ing team by McKnight as soon as/ Army decided it would’ not want} in Sugar Bow! ‘Panthers’ _ Mark Best Since Rose Bowl Club cot 1938 NEW OREANS w—Pittsburgh's meeting with Georgia Tech in the Sugar Bowl Jan. 2 may show whether the Panthers, once, the scourge of collegiate football, are on the prowl again. The 1955 Pitt team hung up the university's best record since 1938 in winning seven games and losing three. The 1938 squad, last of a jstring of great Pitt teams, won eight an lost two and gained eighth place in The Associated! Press poll {nat year: 4 The late Gok theres molded his last great squad in the 1938 aggregation, From 1931 to 1938, the Panthers won 64 games while los- ing only 9 and tying. 5, The 1937 team was named national cham- pion, finishing first-ahead of Cal- ifornia in the f AP poll that season. And the 1936 team went to the Rose Bowl and Climaxed a over the Washington Huskies. *. & 8 The Panthers put in two other showings in the Rose Bowl during that stretch, losing 47-14 to South- ern California in 1929 and bowing to the Trojans 35-0 in 1932. |- By contrast; from 1939 to the start of the 1955 season, Pitt won only 60 games against 84 defeats, a dismal showing for a team re- garded among the nation's elite for so many years. . Pitt fortunes began to perk up in 1952 with a creditable six vic- tories and three losses. Two of the victories were over pérennal pow- er Notre Dame and Ohio State's Big 10 entry. Pitt's record dipped to ‘only three triumphs in nine outings in 1953. And in 1954, the Panthers won four of nine, but illness to Coach Red, Dawson may have hurt Panther| spirits. * * * Johnny Michelosen, hero of the great Pitt teams of the late ‘30s, succeeded Dawson at the begin- nng of this season and took a brash step in assuming command. He junked the traditional power- based Pitt single wing, mainstay. of the Panther offense under Suth- erland and Dawson, and installed the faster and more deceptive split-T. The results bore out Mich- |elosen’s Sem NHL's Clubs 5 Clubs Duel for 4th great season with a 21-0 victory) a game in Poe Grounds yesterday. Will Receive Bonus Picks Detroit and Frisco Get First Choices From Regular Draft PHILADELPHIA ®—America’s top collegiate football talent’ will be tapped by the pros today as the Natinonal Football League holds its earliest player draft meet- ing in history. Commissioner Bert Bell opened ithe annual player selection meet- | AP Wirephoto OLD PRO TRY — Halfback Ray Renfro (26) of the Cleveland attempt to grab forward pass from Otto Graham during wild-scoring | Teams seesawed to a 35 to 35 tie. Sooners Get 6 on All-Big 7. League Team This Is a Record for Players From Single, Team KANSAS CITY w—The. Univer- breakers in Big 7 Conference foot- ball for many years, came up with a new mark in The Associated Press’ conference All Star team’ today. * * * Coach Bud Wilkinson's Sooners, in the Orange Bow! against Mary- land, broke their own All Star rec- ord in first team personne! by plac- |ing six players on the No. 1 unit. Last year they set the mark at five first teamers. The nation’s No. 1 football team also won 5 berths on the second mythical unit, a total of 11 for the 2 teams—also a-record for the selections. - Led by their unanimous choices —guard Bo Bolinger and halfback making the first team were Edmon Gray, tackle; Cecil Morris, guard; Jerry Tubbs, center, and Bob Bur- ris, halfback. On the second team Oklahoma scored with John Bell, and Cal- vin Woodworth, tackle, and backs Jimmy Harris, Clendon Thomas and Billy Pricer. Sharing first team spots with the Oklahomans were Harold Burnine, Missouri end and the nation’s No. 1 pass receiver; Lamar Meyer, Red Wings, Leafs Tied for Playoff Position With Boston Point Shy * By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS With the Montreal Canadiens traveling in front at a fast clip and the New York Rangers and Chicago Black Hawks not too faf Colorado, end; Laverne Torczon, Nebraska, tackle; Doug Roether, | Kansas State, back, and Rex Fis- cher, Nebraska back. The first backfield is a unit of great runners, passers, scorers, blockers and defenders. sity of Oklahoma Sooners, record) who will represent the conference | Tommy McDonald—other Sooners Browns leaps past Herb Righ, New as Giant defensive back, in Veramee the Target! By BRUNO L. KEARS last year’s records of basketball, jteams in the Inter-Lakes Confer- ence has made ‘league coaches defending champion, is again the team to beat. Jays under coach Bob Watts,’ 'walked off with the IL title with an all-junior team. It posted a 12-4 mark and 8-2 league record last year. Every regular from ‘that team is back plus several ‘newcomers who will add height to the already tall Jays. Eric Leighton, 6-4, ceriter, and | forwards Len Lamb and Ray Filar, both §-3, give Southfield the tallest front line in the loop. Despite this height, pint-sized guard combination of Bob Evans (5-8); and Ken Moser (57), that led the Jay scoring. Evans, all-league guard, was top scorer with a 14.7 average. ing six feet, and Jerry Londal and Chuck Gorman, two inches taller, Southfield. coaches, figure Walled Lake and Berkley will complete the upper division of the league. Niles Freeland of the Vikings has junior center Larry Hughes and forward Bob Hess plus three other lettermen as the nucleus to push! Southfield. Hughes getting 290 last year. forward from Dick aan? Joe Barnes. Waterford is ready to move out of the cellar and am = high as Srd, but Berk 6-4 Bruce Gentile and ge a Zalenski is in the way. Coach Don Beedles’ Skippers apart in the battle for second place, the tight race for the fourth qualifying spot in the National Hockey League's playoffs has gone almost unnoticed. : * * * A glance at the standings today shows Detroit and Toronto dead- locked for the position, each with 19 points. The Boston Bruins oc- cupy the cellar just’a point back. *The Leafs moved out of the cel- lar by beating the Wings last night, 2-1. Boston's slumping Bruins suf- fered their third shutout in four starts as they fell before the Hawks 6-0 Meantime, the Canadiens rallied for two goals in the final period to tie the Rangers, 3-3, and hold their! 6-point advantage. Chicago trails New York by three. lit was a Chicago team that may| {© << ~ deprive Chicago of a ar awaited) — championship. Hilltoppers Open With Titans in ‘56 MILWAUKEE « — Marquette University wil lopen its nine-game 1956 football schedule against the University of Detroit .at Detroit Sept. 22. College of The Pacific and Indiana replace Michigan State and West iVrginia on /Mar- quette’s schedule next year. / The schedule: At Detroit,’ Sept. 22; at Wisconsin, Sept. 29; at Tul- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A pitcher, a jockey; a fighter.and support when 200 sports writers take pencil in hand to vote for the professional athlete of the«year in the S. Rae Hickok poll. ; Those in the running are Johnny Podres, pitching here of Brooklyn's first World Series success; Eddie |Arcaro, who rode Nashua to fame; unbeaten world's heavyweight champion Rocky Marciano, and Doug Ford, pro golfer of 1955. The winner will receive a $10,000 diamond-studded belt. Podres is the 23-year-old Cinder- ella athlete of the quartet. He completed only five games as the Dodgers eased to i a a one-sided Na- 7 a Podres, Marciano, Ford Arcaro in Line for Award tional League pennant victory. But) a golfer figure to draw the most) , |jto come in the World Séries he beat the Yankees, 8-3, in the third game and shut them out, 2-0, in the deciding game. lary that Nashua would be the best 3-year-old of 1955 Marciano, 31, and with one $10,- 000 belt, has won all 49 pro fights Ford, 33-year-old New Haven, Conn., tative, won $32,000 during 1955 while playing 121: rounds of tournament golf. 20 Grid Teams Unmarred ih Season Finals NEW YORK (®—Top-rated Okla- homa and third-ranked Maryland; led 20 college football teams through an unbeaten; untied sea- son. They were the only major teams through unscathed "as 1 jeach chalked up 10 victories. TEN GAMES And PA 3 m { it was a. Lettermen Steve Klamik, stand- give added reasons for fearing Most everyone, except the two Arcaro, 40, predicted last Febru-| Looking at present: rosters and g00d reserve help. Chuck Gillis be contenders but Jerry) while Farmington regroups along with! forces after losing 12 letter win- (6-4), | Harnack, Gary Meeker (6-2), six feet, ‘Southfield Boasts All-Veteran Quint; Rated ‘Team to Beat’ in Inter-Lakes |have seven lettermen plus: some! overlooked. The - Abes may no! “spoilers,” Jerry Kruskie and Clayton Roth, ners. ‘aware of one thing. Southfield,| both 5-10, could turn the tables) on Southfield. All“of the teams take the court | against its ing this morning ‘with the_ first jorder of business the bonus choice ‘draw, an out-of-the-hat contest with ‘the winning team earning first - ‘crack at any eligible grid draftee ‘in the nation, * * * } Only Green Bay, Pittsburgh and |the Chicago Cardinals will partici- |pate in the bonus draw since all - jother ‘teams have won it since the plan was initiated in 1947, and are lineligible to try again until every ‘franchise has made the lucky selection. * * Coaches and general manager ;will select @ total of 37 players, t ‘including the bonus pick. This calls » for three rounds of the usual 30- ‘round draft by the 12 league teams. held at the annual NFL meeting in January scheduled. for Los Angeles, non-league foes - Plaead| 5S Ae | Despite the return of six: veter-| except Van Dyke which waits um. pay explained the early draft ans, Van Dyke seems to have been til Dec. 6. . | OUTER COURT MEN — Two leading guards in the Inter-Lakes Hess, on the league’ s| League this year are Jerry Kruskie (left above), Waterford’s versa- 2nd team, scored 179 points with tile 5 foot 10 inch athlete, and Bob Evans (right), sharp shooting Southfield senior who stands 5 feet 9 inches. Evans took all-league Freeland is looking for help at honors and was top scorer last year. Little League Readies Reply W ILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — At-, jtorneys for Little League Baseball, lindividual entry today for the 17th ‘Cleveland. giinc., today prepared their legal annual NCAA cross country run! answer to. a $300,000 breach of over the four-mile MSU manta suit filed by the organiza-| E. Stotz, Peter J. McGovern, president of the organization, said a reply to the suit would .be filed in Lycoming County court by . the corporation's attorneys “within a few days.” League.” many clubs. McGovern, however, Baseball, Little Inc., office. tion's deposed comme eee Carl McGovern made the. comment| last night * after Stotz filed his $300,000 suit and opened - head- quarters for a new organization under the name of ‘Original Little Leagu | against Stotz Bening a separate! _[ithe: team title. State Runner Is Top-Rated in NCAA Event EAST LANSING «®—Host school ‘Michigan State had the favored) course. | Sophomore Henry Kennedy, who came to East Lansing by way of| Toronto and Glasgow, Scotland, has been unbeaten in dual com- petition and championship meets so far this season. The slight Scot won the Big | Ten, IC4A, and Michigan AAU meets and set a course record over the four-mile MSU route with a time of 19: 28.3, Coach: Karl Schlademan said Kennedy is in top physical shape for the run but a light fall of Stotz said he planned to offer snow and a slippery course may | franchises to 3,977 Little Leagues prevent any records from being |Jan. 2 after the famous Tourna- | across the country and has been broken. receiving offers of support trom| Al Frame, defending - champ | ‘from Kansas, is expected to give said no Kennedy a good run “for Ist with specific action was planned by, Rich Ferguson of lowa another top ;contender. Kansas State also is favored for jwas made necessary by competi- ition from the Canadian League. The Canadians complete their sea- come south of the border waving big money in the faces of Ameri- can college stars before the NFL has even apportioned the players to their clubs. In order to give the American pros “an even break” in competition with the ‘;Canadians, Beil and ‘his league members decided on this early meeting, * * As usual, the identity of the on the agenda. Who will the lect if they win the big prige? The concensus of expert ovinion is that the Packers and Steelers” have designs on Howard (Hopalong) Cassady, Ohio ° State’ talented runner, while the Cardinals appear to covet Earl Morrall, the master quarterback of Michigan State's multiple offense. Another possible choice, should a lineman be desired, is Bob Pelle- grini, Maryland’s all - purpose center. LJ * * In the regular draft, teams will make their selections according to their standing in the league as of yesterday's games. The |ast-place team draws first and the first- place team picks last. Ties are resolved by a toss of the coin, with the loser getting the initial toss in alternate rounds, Teams pick in-this order: Detrolt ‘and San Francisco tied, Philadel- and Chicago Cardinals tied, Green Bay, Baltimore, Chicago Bears. iI 4s Angeles, Washington - and Spartan Fans Offered Rose Bowl Excursion | Spartan fans can follow their team right into the Rose Bow! on a holiday tour offered by American Express. Reserved seats for the big contest between Michigan State and UCLA on New Year's Day are included in a 13-day escorted trip. The holiday group leaves Chicago Dec. 26 on a streamliner for a cir- cuit through the West that includes a full day at the Grand Canyon before arriving in Los Angeles on Dec, 29. The big game takes place on jment of Roses parade in Pasadena, for which the group will have |srandstand seats. Saturday’ s Late Football Seéree Arizona 7, Ariz, State (Tempe) 6 il Enstis 25. Pensacola Navy 14 ort Sill 2, Fott Bliss 19 Prairie” View 21, Southern, La 19 \Whittier 2%, San Diewo State 6 | Fresno ‘State 20, _ Hawait 18 National Football League litle Chase Enters Fina Two Weeks With Six Teams in Running By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | The 16%%-point favorites who got| the Rams’ 23-21 victory gave them Exactly half the 12 teams in the skunked were the Chicago Bears,;a 6-3-1 mark compared to the 33 National Football League still have | who had taken the Western Con- | rd a chance for a title with only two, 'ferenee lead with six straight vic- “ s9 weeks to go, and it's no wonder | tories. Their neighborhood rivals, ee ‘Cardinals, admin- Bears’ 6-4. The kicking specialist who had two tries blocked on him?. None other than the Cleveland ‘Browns’ The remaining 27 rounds will be . son in early November and then - bonus choice is the big mystery - Packers, Steelers or Cardinals se- . iphia, Pittsbureh, New York Giants ° Eagles, 23-21, to take over the 4 when you consider the goings-on ‘the . / division ee . }sa, Oct. 6; Boston College, Oct. 13; 21) | in the pro football set. listered a 53-14 shellacking which'Lou Groza, who has kicked more * ¢ College of : The Pacific, Oct. 20; 3 lenoc cked the Bears right out of first three-pointers in the NFL than any Maybe - fact that the Cards|Cincinnati, Oct. 27; at Indiana,| 18-72 Ever heat, “ot a team favored by’ place. ‘man alive, The second blocked won wasn't too’ surprising. But to|Nov. 3; Kansas State, Nov. 10; at 29 0 1612 points getting whipped 53- 14?| Taking over were the Los An- kick left Cleveland with a thrilling roll up 53 points in a near-blizzard| Holy Cross, Nov. 27. Shepherd 21+ § How about a player kicking three/geles Rams, who had Les Richter|35-35 tie with the New York Giants yesterday, which made —s — jmevens ae cames' 2 =®/field goals in the last quarter. thejon their side. He booted field goals|and a 7-2-1 record in the Eastern difficult, amazed the crowd’ | Solunar Tables Trintty ae 21 34 last one to win the game with 7/from 17 and 10 yards out to in-|Conference. : { 47,314, é : _ seconds ta play? And whén was'crease Los Angeles” lead over Phil- * ¢ © Best times for fishing and hunt- First Big Effort Tops the last time a pro kicking special-|adelphia to 20-7. Suddenly the Ea-| The Washington Redskins: are for the Cards’, final touchdown in Owner-Coach George -Halas of the Bears .was groaning all week that the situation was ripe-for an upset since his Bears had won six straight. Although Papa Bear was suspected of crying wolf, the cant: were j jammed ba gamie time. When eet wants sad 51 yards ing in the Pontiac area may be judged from the following periods set up in John Alden Knight's so- lunar tables: = AM, P.M. Minor Major Minor Major 8:18 ie 5 cies WEDNESDAY Oxbow lake a few days ago. The A. .M. Minor ir Minor Major 6:300=—a; 6:45 12:28 before bringing it to the boat. RE Let CA A OSS inches in length. The angler fought the big northern for 45 minutes , 24:30.3 for the five mile course. Pontiac Press Phete LONKER-— Late season pike fishing isn't too bad, after all. Just look at what Ed Greniewiski, 9775 Elizabeth "Lake road, took from fish scaled 10 pounds and was 36 EAST LANSING — Henry Ken- nedy, Michigan State's Scottish- sophomore distance runner, made his first major collegiate effort a memorable. one by win- ning the IC4A cross country cham- pionship_in near record time of : 1 ist saw two of his efforts blocked in one game, the second with the score tied and 25 iS, Te- maining? All these things happened in the NFL yesterday, and they left both conference races snarled like grandmaw’s ball of yarn when the| kitten = through playing with it. gles struck for two quick touch- downs and it was 20-21 with 1:58 left to play. . The Ay took the kickoff and winged down the field on four straight pass completions by Norm Van- Brocklin. Richter kicked ‘his third field goal from the 26 and right behing at 7-3 after their wet 7 <: of : one, PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 28, 1955 { ” £ ¥ 4 eg >. . A $700,000 oe office ‘building is na om Welter Title = for Kumasi, Gold Coast. me eee ne -: »Aaod YIA0 INVW arenes BONUS IN SAVINGS eet e. PENN BONUS tenven in WZ TASTE You Could Pay MUCH MORE for WILLIAM NEW YORK (INS?t~ A young, | football talent representing six ma- |jor conferences and two leading in- |dependent teams, Navy and Notre Bout Looms as Fight of Year ‘Danie, ‘comprises the 1955. Inter Basilio and Ex- Champ a America. DeMarco Matched an d It is a markedly young team, . including three juniors. and has Time Wednesday an average age of only 21. ‘line with the modern trend to fleet, streamlined backs operating | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS hf hed hes behind a bulky brusing, If Carmen Basilio and Tony De- brawny cross-section of collegiate |most 217 pounds, the-backfield 133. “| and newspaper sports editors.. _for- jfabulous halfback, Howard (Hopa- teard wall, the line averages al- The Big Ten, with three play- ers, and the Pacifie Coast Con- ference, with..twe,, dominate the | team compiled from recommen-. | dations of INS football experts | from coast to coast assisted by | coaches, scouts, broadcasters Two players, Navy's brilliant end, Ron Beagle, and Ohio State’s having to wear a leather brace to fore ‘the season started. Opposite end, Ron Kramer, who moved up | of Oregon State and Bruce Bosley INS Picks Morrall. Kramer jong) Cassady, are repeaters from ger ‘of Oklahoma and Hardiman ich ‘the 1954 All-America. Beagle enjoyed another outstand- ing the handicap of protect a wrist bone broken be- him in the line is Michigan's giant from last year’s 2nd team. » Between these two All-America | flankmen are. tackies John Witte = West oh esa 2 areas Bo Bolin- Marco repeat their savage battle of June 10 when thiey meet for the; jsecond time Wednesday at the |Boston Garden, their welterweight Ititle match should be the ‘ Lacae: lot the Year.” * * * By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The bowl picture was four-fifths jcomplete today, chock full of vete- Basilio won the championship|ran post-season performers, while |from DeMarco at Syracuse, N. Y- the abstainers and the lesser lights jin June but now he must face of college football tucked away jrough and ready Tony in ‘the their equipment ‘til next season. jex-champ’s home town, On the Only the Gator Bowl, among the strength of his 12th-round technical five major attractions, is without |knockout victory five months 880, 4 pairing. And the selectors are Basilio is rated a 9 to 5 favorite. expected to make their move to- -In the first match, DeMarco day, with Auburn and Tennessee ooze Basilio in the first and third |. ading the rumor list. rounds but: was dropped twice in ithe 10th and out on his feet when! Except = as! spas and Orange the referee stopped it in the 12th. howls, whose programs are printed, Both wellers are teae! + - UNITED lhe | ‘ 000 in’ the) the last six (6) months of each fisca STAT AMERICA Oliver Mellin, 47, of 19 Willard "8! 1957; $35,000 in each of the|year, shall net be less titan ‘one-sixth|~ STATE OF) MICHIGAN financial years 1958 thru. 1960, $40,000 in each| (1/6th) of the total amount of interest COUNTY Fon rad . leur pleaded guilty to- drunk driv-| Of the years 1961 and 1962, $45,000 in}maturing on the folowing January first, | b. CITY oO z issue, - each of- the years 1963 thru 1965, and the amount so set aside for mae Nu STOMOBILE PARKING ‘S¥STEM Section N REVE Surge Forward wets isccame ins ies Sh ee | pal Judge Cecil McCallum. He was The bonds “of sua ee mesating in month during each fiscal year, shall not; KNOW aL MEN B E PRES-|of NTS. that the Pon jand ‘ k be less than One-twelfth (1/12th) of the) Ciw adopted. ' Boe | fined. $100 the years 1960 thr [euTS. that ® . as as : 5 : 4 ie Se u 1970 shall be sub-jamouat of principal meturing on the|County Michigan. hereby acknowledges passage, = Ai Association Predicts '56 os: ‘Delicious, fancy 5.00! pends Mas . : _ {ject te redemption prior lo maturity January first immediately following that it is indebted and for value received IO oer en 2 r- thhe ote > NEW YORK (p—Rails and steels - Pleadi guilty to simple la at the option of the.city, in inverse/such fiscal ‘year, and if there shall be|promises to pay to the bearer hereot) ay and City Clerk said city, and 5 ° ~ “4 F .50-4.00 bu es rt een: a J y 4 T'numerical order, .on any one or more any deficiency in the amount previously| (or tf thir bond | ase to the boos publ once in me mnting =) Receipts Will Be Bigg : No t| went ahead as the stock marketiceny, 21-year-old James Vanderver putoreat payments dates on and after|set aside, then the amount of such de- reatelered noiaee ate outa sum Of | Dregs, a newspaper of general > in Hi ri 8PY-| moved higher in early trading to- f 3610 Baldwin Ave. was given a odds lose’ than the satite fetus ‘then| requirement. In added to the currersion the first day of January AD, 18- —. prc nape ote oy, ae ae in istory . bu 90-3.50 bu; | day ‘15day suspended sentence and outazanding shall be called for redemp-|shall also be set aside in monthly in-| and (0 pay interest thereen, olay = rane tl ord shail become t : . = . _ on at any time prior-te January 1,|stallments for the purpose of creating! Foe msl ffective i diately on 4 doption.- = ; 225-278. bu, seal 8 # ‘placed on probation for 90 days by 1965. Each bond called to be re-ja reserve in seid Bond, ond Interest | nti bald. annum from the date wre Section 25. if any section. paragraph, | "NEW YORK. — Christmas| case.‘ Pears, Bosc, fancy, 400 bu; Ne. 1.| Gains ran from fractions to a/Pontiac Township Justice Robert defi’? uray feet ed interts, peeviomdnetg iyegeend ed caren laste on bly 1. 18 ood ery ianuery ead |ordinance a en : é 2 . . Ktetl z La 7 a : , . ” . * LU -_ a Le : business up 5 to 20 per cent over oa ea *; De bu. ws) zener. ” point or better in fairly active W. Hodge, at @ premium in accordance with the) $10,000 60 during each year commencing Talv in each veat. wie principal and shall not’ affect’ any other. part ‘of -this | "last year to an ail-time high—that’s| | Bort "mise: Reels, No; 3, | trading. The ticker tape which re-| 4¢ your friend's in jail and need comou ing sepotate, te O1 lea cor|i taser wail See eee hail equal|the sovenuce hereinshter. specifie (eeeticn 16. Ordinance a. 100¢t : ‘the prediction today of the National|}2> che... °% ts’ bu ports transactions lagged briefly pail, Ph. PE 5-9424 or MA 5-4031 | Janu pemaery i) ieee, wer bere p6s.000.00, ond if a1 any Gime thereat Le ae LO etree iv /by repealed in its entirety and all other : ; hb, TS - | we ; aw? DAM, Fa. ms - January 1, id reserv : ; | : : Retail Dry Goods Assn, pr his hy 1 sea "een = the early rush a up. — Adv. $20 if called to be redeemed on ot ae preety Shall Me ee ea th ceed Americe “a. : 6 = -. it aa prteomt pagaeress Page: yg ge ag | ’ *.*# “egg: wg ee ee ‘| within the first quarter hour. | 4, sites © seneery 1, 1962) but before reserve ments Se to re-/Gpon presenjation gnd ‘surrender of this S a are hereby lgpeee. _ Reporting results of a survey of Cag eye a ag = Gautifiowes.| as + es | Hayride Partles. Food furnished. 510 if caticd 19 be redeemed on or earliest possiale time. if any additional ong aginst mary iced attached Meyer Prewa see oe Cet * member stores, President Philip M. 4.50 crate: } " 100-150 doz. debs. |” Among opening blocks. Sperry FE. 2-3231. —Adv. atte ciara ee 1, 1965 but before pean af equal pane baer hod eee’ is bond is one of @ series of bonds | : ov. 28 1955 . u . J < e 7 ; sea —s nuary 1. ne authorizing ordinance sha rov i cept a | | ¥ = Talbott of the NRDGA gave this —— —_ Bo. 1: Rand was..up—z at “2434 on 10,000) : $5 if called to be redeemed on or for a coanparable amount of Seaeres | ane —— penes Lene ee eros tot gic. . rundown on Yule prospects: peed tnd ‘share and later extended this’ Improved earnings are reported | als oe, 1, 1967 : : hecokhe! Moneys oe Bond and In- | consecutively in the Gizest onset ba Cece . ; Ho ag: . , : 7 . i Z | Tine! rel = etice of redemption shall be given|terest Redemption und ‘may We used| maturities from _ inclusive, “" Bighty-one per cent of the. na- = < $0) gain. Pennsylvania Railroad was by Eire’s deep sea fishermen. ito the. “holders, of the bonds to be re-|for the redemption of bonds: provided.| agerexating the. aprincival sum, oot ok? | a 0 ices : | ‘ | r s ay 77 on 18,000 shares. U.S . ra =~ ~ | deem y publication of such notice not}that except in case of, refunding. no| Hundre ie : : : ‘ thon's department,. chain and doz bchs.” 50) up “47a <0 2 ‘ ee less tham thirty (30) days prior to the bonds less. than all the outstanding issued by said City of Pontiac under andi ees es beak ~ | bu. bs./ Steel also improved its opening CITY OF PONTIAC. MICHIGAN —|date fixed for redemption at least gnce bonds of said issue shall be called for|pureuant to-and in full conformity wih) SINGER, NOV 26. 1986. MRS i , specialty stores for a def. “| orice of 58% Pt 5 600 phares _ ORDINANCE. NO. ‘1292 in a-newspaper or publication circulated|redemption unless the city shalb heve| me, SP vathaaee an ia No wa ice B lee Rachester Ba. Lake. inite gain in Christmas. sales portale 8 : ae Pp » Up “4 On 9», SI S.. An caters te aewons = ear > in Looe! City of Detroit, Michigan, which|on hand in said fund suffictent “moneys of" the Michigan Public Acts of 1933, ax ville, age 64: beloved wife of i ‘ - he j e€ ab- | carr as @ part of 1 {th t otherwise appropriated or , i . - over last year’s booming Christ. (dry. ‘ bag; No. 1, : -_ Gainers of a point ot better 1D-| lishment, operation and maintenance of| notices of tee aaie ei aenieipal wean | pledged) (Gn exeens (st tha amount. of os epreees ihe = Bete or cocereaiky ~ Hed bad Lompool eee Betty ‘Fora, | i mas 185 50-lb bag @.'1 .85-| cluded Bethlehem Steel, Youngs-|Automobile Parking System No. 1 in a/pfovided, that where any bond shall be Interest. and principal maturing within|Commission’ of said city, on the ——— | a ie eed: se : | season, 1 § ) M Iola Sherwood; “dear sister : . ‘ltown Sheet & Tube, Seaboard district to be correspondingly numbered,| registered, then notice of the redemption|the next eighteen (18) months from) day of —-——~. 1955. for the purpose of Mrs. lela Cadieex. Penerel And not a single merchant polled i ee bl " Lie = 2S in the City of Pontidc, Michigan: To|thereof shall be given by registered mail|the redemption date, and for the pur-lof improving. enlarging’ and extending service will be held Tuesday, Nov, ! 80-1.00 dos. hs. snips. -Railroad’ and Zenith, the latter on regulate and control parking on thejaddressed to the registered holder thereof|pose of determining the amount Onlihe city’s existing automobile parking 29. at 2 p.m. from the Bossardet- ; by the NRDGA expects a decline. 1.80-2.00 4) bu. Peppers, haw bl oo = t public highways and on public parce at the address shown on the*bond regis-|hand. moneys tn the reserve shall nOt! facilities in Automobile Parking District! Mabiev Funeral Home with Rev. . "+f the 211 stores with estimated 1, .75-1.25 pk. basket. 4 a favorable earn ngs re port, areas owned and/or operated by the/tration books of the Director of Pinance!be considered as appropriated or pledged INo. 1 in satd city 7 | Ellis Hart offiicating. Interment , 3 i ste rith e: 1:50 50 Ib. bag; “No-~4, 1.25-1.35 50 An exceptional gainer, Mont-|‘lty. in said district: To provide forjof the city, which notice shall be mailed|In any case where moneys are available; This bond ts a self-liquidating revenue! ity Lakeville Cemetery. Mrs. Bing- ‘annual sales of two billion dollars bag. Pumpkins, No. 1, 1.00-1.25 bu —— Ward , the improvement, enlargement and ex-|not less than thirty. (30) days prior tojfor, the redemption. of bonds, stch)pond is not @ general obligation ot er will lie im state at the Bos- “‘yeporting to the NRDGA study, 28 ishes, black, No. }, 150-2. : radish-|gomery Ward, moved up more |tengon of existing automobile parking|the date fixed for redemption Bonds, moneys may be used instead to purchase} said city. and’, does not constitute an, sardet-Mabiey Purteral Home, Ox- | ng to P 3A study, es, hothouse, No. 1, 1.50 doz. be! rad- 9 : rl i A _itacilities in said district; to provide for|so called for redemption shall mn ‘ponds on the open market at the besi/indebtedness of the said city within anv’ . ford, Mich shes than 2 points in anticipation of to p 8! not bear p | nv’ per cent expect 1955 Christmas ishes. red, fancy, 1.00 dos. behs; No. }, cal - A lthe issuance and sale of revenue bonds|interest after the date fixed for re-|price or prices obtainable, bul not in|constitutiona: statutory or charter limi: GaLLAHAN, NOV. 27, 1959, CLEO< i 5 : “5.85 doz, behs; squash, Acorn, No. 1,/ day's directors’ meeting. jto defray a part of the cost of suchidemption, provided funds are on hand excess of the then redemption’ price./tation. The principal of and interest) William, 229 BE. Walton Blvd, aged sales to be 5 per cent higher than 25 bu; |impro Ss. enlarg S and exten-|with the paying agent to redeem the When the principal amount owing upon ous se bernie of tail carien ere payable; 95. bela Rushed of Lovetta in 1954,"" said Talbott. : Air Reduction 375 Goodrich , .. 163 Sls: to provide for the retirement and|same The principal pf said bongs and)any | bonds shall be reduced to ethe/fi0m pac tiv'gystem No 1 ‘including) Callahan; beloved son of |= Mr. pe ' . oe eas Allied Chem.. 112.4 Goodyear . 64.2 security of said bonds; and to provide|the interest thereon shall ‘be payable, amount of the reserve therefor, then! ire improvements. enlargements and| and Mrs. Robert L. Callahan: re Eighteen per. cent look for in- b toes i Allied Strs .. -89.7 Grah Paige 17 for other matters relative to said systemiin lawful money of the United Staves| the principal of such bonds shall be eytencion thereof! remaining - after de-| dear father of Debra Lucille = creases Of 10 t. The f Allis Chaimers 67.8 Gt Nor Ry 43.1 804 said bonds. : of America at the National. Bank of|paid from such reserve, {Goctine the reasonable expenses of the| Caliahan: dear brother of Mrs : ; } ee ae . The remain- . 1 fiom Ltd dp Gt West 8 ... 21,3 hocidere leeauea ne veoh Pontiac has Detroit in the City of Detroit, Michigan,| 3. Replacement pane ou of the #4-|admini:trat:on operation and mainten-; James Hann. Wilburn, Christine ng sto eX PeoVvo! i oom . . Greyhound , 146 and is now operat-jupon presentation and surrender of said|/ maining revenues in the Receiving Fund) ance of said system. and the payment: , : id ; res expect higher lume = Am Airline. ., 23.7 Guid oil 85.3 (ng within the district hereinafter de-|bonds and attached coupons as they there shall be next set aside in equal'of both the princioal of and interest on) se Shy “wellie, ‘Katy aad. Bere * varying percentages up to 20 per Can ....-4T Hersh Choc .. 474 fined as Automobile: Parking District No.|severally mature _ {monthly instaliments in a fund tobe said bonds d'on any additional bonds, shel Calahan. | Funeral service cent. Nineteen per cent of the re- ery cabbage, No. 1, 1°25. Cyan . 615 Holand P ... 47.4/). the following parking meters, to-wit:| Section 6 The Mayor and City Clerk: designated “Replacement Fund.” a sum of equal standing which maw be issued | will be held Tuesday, Nov. 29, at : No. 1, 1.50-2.00 bu; Endive, bleached, No.|Am Gas & El. 494 Hooker El 402. (*! Approximately 471 meters located/of the city are hereby authorized and,not less than $1,000.00 per year com-/Dursuant to the terms of said ordinance. 2 p.m. from the Dudiey H. Moore porting stores says that their)1, 2.5¢ 3.00 bu. Escarole, No. 1, 1.50-) Meters: 2: a Hooker El pf 104.4!" pasate highways. directed to execute said bonds for and|Mencing with the fiscal year beginning iss secured £¥s epeceurety first lien on Funeral Home, Auburn Heights, } Christmas sales will be identical! 2 >¥: ¢searole. bleached. No. 1. 2.50- as .. Hoot Her» 145), (D! Approximately 332 meters located/on behalf of the city by -respectively|January 1 1956, until such fund shail) "7. “bonds of this series maturing | Mr. Callahan will lie in state after ' . " : 300 bu. Lettuce, bibb, “No. 1, 150-175 Rad - 223 In cent ... 65 in the area described as follows’ Lots signing and attesting she same and to af-|reach at least $10,000.00, to build Up 4 1) Vears 1960 thru 1970 are Rabiee: to 7 pm. this evening. Following to those a year ago." pk. basket: lettuce, butter, No. 1}. 2.50- Seating 6 M2 trgust Ray 512 Nos | thru 7 of the Clinton Addition: | fix the seal of the city thereto, and to/Teserve for any replacements to tbe 835-\ redemption prior to maturity, at the service here he will be sent to . 1.00 Me: lettuce, he. No, a 2 50-3.00 A Smelt ai ae Lae eg, = Lots ue aad 6 ot Remeeeee se Ko. 45. |execute the interest coupéns to be at- i which may (become) pecesssty from Gotion phon prior to maturity at int] . Peck Puneral Some in Warteelle a | , 3 ; 3-doz crate; lettuce, head, No 1, = ‘ _ 2 of sa ssessor’s| tached y ¢ e|time to hd bd veys shail! : F | ( The NEDGA president sald 5 2.00 bu: lettuce, leaf, No. 1. 1.78-1.25 bu; |Am@ Tob. ...- 7 ae ce, 914 flat No. 45 which hes west of the Clin-|g to sald bonds by causing to belie used from said fund to make SHH DEKE Gpchiesehl aad ak Dar hte imterest (08+. Ala. with services at Church of 00 bu: lettuce, leaf, No 1.78 ‘lam Vt 494° Inspir Cop 60.6 affixed thereto their facsimile signa- ment dates ,on and after January 1. God on Thursday at Summerville per cent of the stores will spend | Romaine, No. 1, 1.25-1.75 bu. - = 731 Int Bus Mach 395 (ton River and north of the southerly|tures Upon the execution of said bonds|Feplacements. said fund shall be re- 1939 provided that no bonds less than) “Ala, with service at Church of the same amount on Christmas ~ 6 Int Harv 36.2 ne Of said Lot No.$ extended eastwardly:|and attached coupons, the same sivall be stored to the sum of $10,000 00 as soon the entire series then outstanding shall | the Dudley H. Moore Puneral promotions as they did y ~ ; s2¢ Int Nick .. 80 res that vet sal ae hee : of saididelivered to the Treasurer of the city baer — pnerenties _ AOR ees sree racemrtiee) at say ime Home. Auburn Heights, Mich . ¥ a year od ‘ ¢ SSESSOr'S at No. 45 which lies gener-|w " ae mprovement. Fund, ut of the'P o uuary 1, 196: ndj| -_ ce Bnpdesiateenaeligactides pethet Maarten bE ago, Forty- cent id Pr uce 33 int Bilver : ‘ns ally south of a line beginning a asl torcasiiver sald 1ssaae” ona —— remaining reverues in the. Receiving! ca.led to be redeemed shall be redeemed CHURCHILL, NOV. 27, 1955, EU- : , *. y per said they DETROIT PRODUCE 159 «Int Tel & Ter 281 northwest corner of Lot No 7 of the'coupons to the purchaser thereof as|Fund there may be set aside in any 86. the yark! value thereof and stcrued) gene R.. 41 Florence, age 81: be- : planned te spend more than last le DETROIT, Nov. 26 (AP}—Prices Pri- 474 Isl Crk Coal 307 Clinton “Addition and extending thence|hereafter determined by the Commis- mene etter meetine use reairemes s hee ae ay Oremlume a sccosdence pethet to es ee year, and only seven pet cont | BS it TApeies, Delicious tency me *Jacobe . a — omar | Geet prohpehe ined eal ar soon receipt of the purchase price |i" fund to be designated - iprorement|| as if called teens iedeemed on or after R Churchill, Mrs. Betty Upton, - ars cy 5 “¢ O ohns an... : ad . ; : = = = anuary 1, ut ore January 1 M Don r : . _ reported smaller promotional is Neat cg no No 1! 413 Jones & L. $16 feet to @ point: ‘thence north 2°28) Section 7. The bonds herein authorized Fund je such eeebies the eee 1962 brother rae robe cred budgets, . \ “13 Kennecott’. . 1171 "est 67 feet to a point, thence south)shall be -sold in the mans provided piace a lopaheel heh ae a used {or| $20 if called to be redeemed on or after don and Charles Churchill. Pu- . oe yes on: uppies Mcintosh, | 15894. Kimb Clk 467 is ws shes ioe feet ee the westerlyjin Section 12 of Act No. 94. Michigan psychi roel bpeaniats extensions), January 1 1962 but before January 1. neral service will be held Wednes- . 50- . . * ‘line of sak i No. 1, which area with “ti and repairs to the system 1 \ fs The survey {ound that promotion. 23 B1, M2129 508,08: 27% Shi Rome an Balter Ocal UL, te” St Boica'h. “lh hte Ab Sueteal ceva fae grzrmee costing He cant “Gabe sata S.scsetti| | tee Mamioen, Yara ae ce | ‘3 5 . . . : bog! ” Bon es 1] ~ hereafter be known as ‘Aulomobile! co lin sai eceiving Fund at the end of! anuary 1, but before January 1,) ' al aris will be concentrated, age Pool ee ge gn apa ge Hk bu: | Briggs Mfg. a Lenn wr. i is)|Parking Area No 1” but will be agi bop pone sepaonlhodty cenerel Ovliee te iany fiscal year after ail periodical), 1067, ee Tocsruane be Brey Slam 9 me | in a on gifts for“ the. home and) 1 300-350 bu. Cider, No 1, 2.00 "$0 | Bris My 3.1 Ligg & My 676 \mes referred to herein as “Area No. 1";ledness of the city within any state con- eee te seule ee ee es te sel January 1 Weer Tedeemed) e865, after, tery. Mr. Churchill will_lie in “practical” items. Generally, the|4-ea! case Pears, Bose. fancy, 4.00 bu: Budd Co 204 Lockh Aire 50.2 and [stitutional .provision or statutory or|* chokes eller ae ih? ° t| Notice of redemption shall be state at the Huntoon i , sd No 1. 300-350 bu }Calumet & H . 133 Loew's Whereas, it ts nécessary. and advisable|charter limitation. The principal of and omeee St gt Gaen eurplas exceed io 'the holders of bends called to be re-| Home , pattern shows. little change from a “Vegetables, misc —Beets, No 1. 90- 163 Lone 8 Chem. 67 '® incorporate into one system all ofjinterest on said bonds shall be payable ee ee ed ts ther ch surplus may ing deemed. by publication of such notice) COTCHER. NOV. 27, 1958, MRS. vear ago. The great majority will doz bchs: beets, topped, No 1. 100-1 | Lorillard . \the automobile parking facilities now or solely from the net revenues derived 5 : eee . jnot less than thirty (30) days prior to} Annie Elizabeth, 80 Mariva 7 ; jority wi 4 ital Airl 404 hereafter located wit t sed city to be used for the regulation and| | 5 ; . & E bu, Broccoli, No 1}, 150-200 ‘s peta Lou & Nash . 882 located within the limits of/from the operation of the’ system. in- the date fixed for redemption. at least 79. dear mother of Hiram place about the same promotional Cabbage, No 1 ‘250 bu: cabbage, (carrier Cp... 833 sao tre |. 29.3/s8!d Automobile Parking District No. lleluding future improvements, enlarge- control of traific within the city The/once if a newspaper or publication elf) Smith. M 1 -E. Smith and | curly, No 1. 178-225 bu. cabbage, red jCase, Jt. USS tin. Gl 33 including both on-street .and off-street ments and extensions the: ion |remainder of such Surplus Pund, may bejculated in the City of Detroit Michigan. | smith. arshall - th emphasis as last year on such cale- No | 1715-225 bu. cabbage. sprouts. Ne cater Trac... $4 May D Str 41.6 {#ciliues. and jeure the payment ars the | priocigal “ transferred io fone or more of cae wuice carries as a part of its regular) — ee ee | *gories as practical items, gifts for i pipet 50 i a, Re, aS fp ees eae in McGraw H. 722 oo is necessary and advisable land interest on the bonds issued here-| *™er® Droqaosptcas heer age, No 1. 125-178 bu. Endive. No t./Gen Dyham 61.1 Pure Ot 37.1\ing Sysyem No. 1" as hereinafter defined.jand ad peri Pages the Commission pong and Interest Redemption Purid,/from time to time by the Commission Jr.; dear brother of Mrs. US| 1.50-2.00 bu endive, bleached, No 1, 2.50- te A : is : : ministered by the City Manager over and above those being accumulated /of sald citv so as to pi 3 Smith, Mrs. Carroll Blair and Gen Elec 526 46.) e term “automobile parki produce the fore <7 week and 111,916 in the like }3.00 be. gucarele. Wet. 140-308 bu: Gen Mills a14 Repub stl 50 i\facilities shall be construed to ee pal such apes Negba, mais eeetl for the payment of the next maturing /«oine amounts Mrs. O. M. Weaver. Punera q a ; scarole, ched, No = a. |G, ex < . 05 ow ' ; ‘OM-/|principal and interest, and moneys in is md may be registe as service will be held Wednesdays, 1 week. Track output th week eta aaa Pg gtfaotas Soe Mem HORE Ear EM Poec es Sanit ath ieee artes Sls hy Cemoceitin tart Reta de BUR areae| | Feat a, Tae = de s, : . be uu uce, . 5 ey To 4 5 " i und and the peration am ainte- : iv nee Voo . with W306 lant wcek end 18.408|SRe ot Ot ememe Ren fgen Time... 33 Rock Soe 30 pega keer Ulonenparer (merpogayel withlaccordance wish enforcement @rdinances| nance Pund may be invested itm United of said city. and such registration noted Paul R. Havens officiating. In- , X 486 | 1.25-1.75 bu ' rat of Safeway St §3.4/sccommodation of persons . employed from time to time in effect States Government obligations In the| Finance and nerest by said Director of terment in White Chapel Ceme- < a in the comparable 1954 week Goebel Br... $4 St. Jos Lead 43.4) rein or having business to transact! eo: 12.. Parking fees shall be a: event of any such Investment. the se- be vaiid aless” afer me transter shal) tery. Mr. Gratopp will le in It t Canadian tput 6.17 STOCK AVERAGES : Itherein, while on such business fe dow si fet eek venicle curities representing the same shall be books and likewise aoied: ee the on state at the Voorhees-Siple Pu- pu nadian output at ca NEW YORK Nov. 28—Compiled by the ‘a. The tera ‘revenues end “net ja) The fee for parking in all metered xépt on deposit with the bank or trust herrof Transferability by delivers Leeds neral Hote cars and 85) trucks against 6.109 Associated Press cece : revenues" shall be construed as defined/within said Dist me paeite ts onde company having the deposit of the fund ‘be restored bv recistration to the bearer.| HAVERSHAW. NOV. 26, 1956, AN- : » it.) 18 60 CAT@ GRAIN | : ? shall J ive from which such purchase was made Negotiability of the int % th @ . cars and 823 trucks last week and Indust Rails Utt! Stocks| CHICAGO Nov ve ‘AP, — Open to- | Py ea coe noes Michigan), cents for ed@ph sixty minutes o> and the income therefrom shail become not be affected by ret jstrat Se oe a ay Fee as a oe | 3.803 cars and 659 trucks in the Prev day 2547 14674 oth 3, day pe jPublic Acts of 1933. as now amended. \fraction thereof. | |a part of such fund | Tt is hereby certified. recite ‘de-| Pa laoreet etal tea | ; . ucks In Week ago 352019630730 «1774 Wheat - March, .... ele, 3 Nmese exe are peta Sl (b) The fee for\ parking In’ metere| Section 17. The city hereby covenants) clared that all acts contlitcos sma tines Dey sl no gear Red comparable 194 week ‘Month ago ||,. 2386 1249 715 1687 Dec i 290%, May . 3'<|“Automovile Parking System No vi I spaces in said Area& Nos } thru 4 shall|and agrees with the holder or holders, |Péauired to exist happen and be per-|’ Wig ver ” Mrs a perme Ward's said GM will account for Year ee en 302.2 1136 666 1481 March , 2023 Jub oy ese autamebiia earkiaes tacililice skein ven ve ve biti o each sixty minutes|from time to time. of the mands) herein ormet, ir ceen son ane im the issu-) Mrs..Ward Newman Jr. and Mrs. = . : + igh .... 287 424 37 115 May. 2.699 e-- a8 i ra ction thereo ‘ proposed to be issued, that i! will pune-|) 0 so is series. existed F : . 30.6 per cent of this week's car 195 low (11) 203.1 1149 672 1488 July 190% ie ene ee erent new 6c Mexect¥er|| Tha [fees provided in subdixieten! (a) |(ualty perform) SU Gets ent required hare apoened ‘and have’ been performed! Peer’ Dextrom. Mra. sdary Oe- éutput; Ford 26 per cent and sss — +e 2119 1233.0 683 1352 Sept. 192'e March . .. 112 jfollows: . = unded 48 above shal! apply between 800 oclock/to the system and said bonds required ouired om and manner as re- land. Mrs. Jennie Lind : | ow ceoes 1439 TUTE 55.4 Corn— May . . 1.13%) Beginning at the northwest corner of a.m and 6:00 q’clock pm. on all days|}by the constitution and laws of he IN WITNESS WHEREOF the C -| ee cal corviss aah be held Tees: 4 Chryser 19.1 per cent. It puts | = ——, 1.23%, July 110%| West Huron street and North JehueonlGeh Gar Tpesrae of toons ee of Menta and Lar chatter ost Pontiac Oakland County Mickigun. Fed day Nov 29, at 1:30 p.m. from 4 2 P March , a? = ¥, nar of July. r y,|said city an v this ordinance. that/its C : 2 R ee, i . = rea American Motors (Nash - Hudson)| In some large U. S. forest in- Mavi 0 13a c a 10 ee [ico ge Wy Abeelsbrangg Heep ard Movonar aku Mice d and Christmas: pro-|it will acquire the improvements, en-|to. be siened In Serecunente ioe oun av, Gosres L ourver ate at 1.8 per cent and Studebaker-| dustry plants, 75 per cent of the Sept. / 131% Jan. ....,.., 10.97|Johnson avenue to the "north line of cag Ulam san ousehuinsia: parti Sisal eceting hie commas S aerkine foatues ry corgarats as its’ City Clerk. and ficiating. it in South eS : : Oats— | ic rking feex|existing automobile v al 4 © seal to Y = Packard at ? aaparcent. lentire tree is used. oe as Pon pedi) re Dee it crt eastwardly slong/ahall be effective. The Pees. provided|in said District No 1. as set forth nito aod has ceused. the “caneted te “nh ry aorne Doneaen- ee |the northerly iine of Howard street and/in subdivision ib) above shall’ be effec. Section 3 of this ordinance and will/ferest coupons to be executed with = will lie in state at t! on- a. oP PP erga line Exvenece: \¢ the easterly line itive in Areas 1 thru 4 between the hours|have the same in operation within|facstmile signatures of ity Mayor and ae | o path addock street: thence south.!of g:00 am and 6:08 pm_ provided!six 16: mronths after the delivery of Gos Clerk al. as of the! first dav of JOHNSON. NOV. 27, 1955, MARK Seek -— — ener Lead nalts that said effective hours may be ex- the bonds herein authorized the Uety Se eretor rc Jetfory, 86 W Lagtrpr soo — ; : ock streets (O\tended by the Commisst = t- will t sell. lease mortgage or t INTIAC loved infant son o Roy H. SAMUEL L. i dlaepetdasdhedeiarty a een S| The above lesa thal be deemed to be any cmaater dispose of the syscem oF By - M =>.) Leal ochre ps Sacral over : a y one ¢ .south-! minimum fees and may be increased by anv substantial. part thereof, unit all avor \ rother of Steven and Donald, ' : erly line of Osmun street and said line : nay Ves By ----. - -=--- ° Puneral arrangements will be an- < a . : PUBLIC AUCT ON extended to the easterly line of the | reach earest coeter shall provide a save Ubaeeet Ceramic neon pala a) dull ICOURGH Clerk | nounced later by the Pursiey Fu- , Grand Trunk Western Railway right-of-|mit of not to exceed sixtv minutes|Said > city further covenants — and Number _ Ie Reve) RO jway. thence northwardly along theland each meter in said Areas Nos 1 agrets with the holders of said bonds, On the first dav of mas JOHNSON, NOV. 26. 1965, RICH- MARKET PLACE OF TOP VALUES ! jensterly line of said right-of-way tolinry ¢ shall provide such a time limitithat 1 will maintain said system in 19 ihe Cis’ of Pontiac wal ke” ard Glenn and Vietoria Lynn ° jthe southerly line of Orchard Lakejas shall be fixed by the Commission (rood condition and operate the same'County. Michigan. will pay se Sortctecla ‘twins, 86 Beverly St.: beloved ‘ we . : Dhcogeeadl ee a cure the If any other off-street automobdile|in an efficient manner and at alhereof the sum of — i’ mah tac infant son and daughter of Mr... Tues.: ; : Ito the westerly” ae of geuth sonacen |necnine facilities for public use are reasonable cost. to long as any of sale! leetul money of the United States of roel eller yee Pa fe gmat 5 . te atandl ( 4 g 14 3 i sf f = v i - ues.- Wed.-Thurs.-Fri. et 10:00 A. M.. (E.S.T.) avenue: thence northwardly along the parking thsrein shad ba lcosipar isss fee eer (ane eee icce ius aun: Somer ice, A ae in the City| Penais a beara by rs : westerly line of South Johnson avenut/those charged { seins para nle wine of parking meters in said system|interest due on that da same being the rangements will DECEMBER 6-7-8-9 1955 i land ecross Went Huron street to thelwee ft thea 4. after px tet BO Aes low oe crber now installed and to| bile Per giue on that day on its: Automo- later by the Pursley Funeral ’ Yy y < eet uted be knew |sideration to the accommodations. Onl ye installed under this er Ginetes or| No ae Taase Peran e — __Home. ‘ : . hs n a3) While any of the bonds herein author-|change the location’ thereof, if the/ This coupon ‘is not ; -| KLIEWER, NOV. 25, 1955 ANT One of oe art pany roe =~ Most Modern Mechanired lae-paperm sd Cee ot nevcimatie it ined are outstanding, the city shall) seme would reduce the net revenues_of Said city, is parekic aeiare sbiiestion girl, B44 Mt. " i, bet ‘a i - : he system bel a sum equa | eee } =| loved oun n Americal . . . Consisting of feted eka Dinrice Non? jhave in effect an ordinance providing;Of the syste Ow q ain revenues’ as set forth in the bond| . Leable, weary Kliewer Orave- lfor tye enforcement of the above park-|150% .of the largest amount of prin-|to which this coupon : eee > ees shall be acquired theling fees. which ordinance shall pro-|cipal and interest thereafter ma uring inl enbject to the iidemetive arotieimne Ms side services will be held today at ie owing improvements. enlargements|yide penalties for parking in any @fv fiscal year on all bonds then out-/said bond saa I Perry Mt. Park Cemetety. Pu- and extensions to the existing autoM0-|/metered space without the -payment anding or authorized, which are pay- | neral arrangements by the Voor- ULTRA - MODERN FOUNDRY, TOOL ROOM, MACHINE PSO OCC SCC OCC COC CC CCC CCUCCCCCCUCCTCCCCCTUCCVCUCCCCUCC TUT. 4 > > > > > > > 4 > 2 > > a > 4 > a > » > > > > ‘ SHOP a NG °. nl : | H P and MATERIAL HANDLIN E UIPMENT ; ioe persiee facilities in said Sota Eo ae therefor. Said ordinance shail) See Te eer ae Leblh area eats City, Clerk Mayer hees-Siple Funeral Home. ; : ; | ners inbt be less efficacious therefor than the) : t which usually * REGISTRY LEDBETTER. NOV. 27, 1985, WIL- 4 Machinery and Equipment Formerly Comprising the lana tonekenuossu Sm ciensttien|(ctee eo now would. be iiened ‘by private comganies|!" Whose Name Registered | “Nard. 464 Auburn Ave. age 23: 4 - to be located on the following geacrined |v met engaged in # similar type of business; : —_ - i ‘beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Ar- | > HINE Oo property. to-wit: y Section 12 The rates hereinbefpre to protect the revenues of the system) a - thur W. Ledbetter: dear brother { > . b e The eguihwesterly 1968 feet of Lot 6 [foramtiohned ace estimated to be gotticlent areine. anv Mats in emeeeee eill Date of Fe ~- —- 2 ot Edward € asper, Howard, ‘ 3 : Ely ‘ 4 o provide for the payment of the ex-|the overation of the system. that it wi t egistration Eugene Ledbetter, Mrs. Laverne 7 (A DIVISION: OF WILLYS MOTORS, INC.) : ee eT tone tat ane Denses of sdministration and operation| ofeoere EA ead Sa euch records = a | -Trayler and Mrs Bernice Elkins 4 e : é Eee of the avstem and such expenses for statements and accounts 8s Ee tt t = H Mr. Ledbetter will be taken thie ; 74 W. WILSON AVE. e PONTIAC, MICHIGAN jthe northwesterly 10 feet of the remains the maintenance thefeof as) may pelquired by Act. No 94 Michicen Public ees evening from the Pursley Puneral 2 ling portion of Lot & the southwesterly : “ lActs of 1933. as now or hereafter amend- Sicnature of Aa ‘ fi 16.1 f ¢ 0 necessary to preserve the same In good that ti will promptly file with the of Director of Finance Home to the Carr Funeral Home. ' ‘ $715 000 000 R ‘ f St ef honeseor'y) Prat es ae ena tee ek one the imiereat caen cdeinal purchasers of the bords @ copy of the City'ef Pontiac @ Guntersville, Ala.. for service and ‘ 4 , ’ ep acemen a ue i A ra ssessor’s Plat No. 35: and Lots for the payment ‘of the interest upen of each annual statement which it ts ae ; ‘ l Plat Neca thru 102, of Assessor's and the principal of all bonds payable! quired to file with the Municipal Finance a = NARRIN. NOV 28. 1955. MRS. JES- , ELECTROMELT FURNACE: Moore Lectromeit Fur- DUST COLMECTORS: S-Pangbdrn No. CH? and t- \ : : therefrom, as and when the same shall/Gommission and will also tile with! Section 20 The proceeds of sie D., 140 8S. Andrews Ave.. Lake y mace, Type 5. Size QT. os 20 Type CK Dust Collectors jmecteains paving, lighting. 328 Installed|pecome due and payable. and for the uch DuTCHABErE a copy of the annual au- Miackack 20 «The proceeds of the sale Orion, Mich. a 83; beloved > NNEALING FURNACES: %Surface Combustion RY EQP'T: 3 Hest ied,, typtoebl coe ater ene oral Cremer of 8 reserve fer the parment ait of the syitemn ceriified by a Certified lissucd. ponds herein authorized to be mother of Mrs. John Ridgely, 4 jem Besirouoting Furesces. Industrial Cir- and Cut ety be knees ca ed eerie rine (of Principal and interest ss required In/pyoie Accountant. within Yatnety (90) |State Barn! pe, tepesited in the Pontiac Mrs. Robert Fortney, James B, ‘ quiet c Air Roller Hea Furnace. 2 Push Type . 98 ‘ore pss ™ nown as utomobile Parking|this ordinance; and to provide for such|ahys after the close of cern fiscallee ~ ank and/or the Community Na-| Elgin E. and Austin R. Nerrin: | é ‘urnaces, ‘ Flask Bushings. $280,000 ef Foundry Machine Repa ree ° : but will be sometimes here- other expenditures and funds for the euar: cd that it will furnish’ a copy of here Bank in the City of Pontiac. dear sister of Mrs. Willard Van- j 5 « CUPOLAS: 4-Whiting No. 10. Model B Cupolas: 4— one Replacem Parts, Alloys, Refractories. 210 aa erred to as “Area No. 2 system as are required by this ordinance |the foregoing statement and audit to "any inex baat beth of, which banks are! Riper and Walter Downey. Pu- j > Hepa C.F.M, Blowers; 30-Bull Ladies; 5- Tilting it Hoists, 1,250— Foundry and Factory Trucks. 43 larea. a Boebinestonly mapprpgeany Lacrleeay Rates shall be fixed and revised from/pondholder upon payment of the actual Corporation © Fron senate soearemee a oes Gee Leger i ! . : oe {time to time by the Commission so as) ral) 6) 8 moneys there lay. Nov . e p.m. from | ‘ OVENS: 5-Coleman Tower Core Ovens; 3-Coleman a ital ta ie Sa = had aL ws jto be located on the following described ito produce the foregoing amounts. and|be- Ny Sach orensouahie raed as “yi shall first be transferred to the Bond Allen's Puneral Home, Lake Orion. | 2 «5 est J eorcher my em Ovens; 3 Coleman and PRE-2-4-C. s @ansin kus Com | eet tn i— ee. 88 and the| ‘D0, “Ut covenants and agrees to main-|present the full financial condition ot oe en ons pespcte gree) Pund, any Leh coe ne _— KS eg « | ‘ere ens; 6—Coleman ste Dry- : al ate ‘tain at all times such rates fo r \the system to the holders of bonds and, ecrue terest paid 10) officiating e 3 ing Ovens, a Kraan ht fare 36 feet ‘measured on Pike/facilities furnished by the poll pond al. include auditor's comments on the Coed city by the purchaser of said bonds | Cemetery. Mrs. Narrin will lie 3 SAND MIXING & RECLAIMING: 4—Clearfiela No. ated He No. 56, of Assessor's Platisnall be sufficient to provide for the| Manner in ence the hed Py meee aed ee of such proceeds shall be in state at Allen's Puneral Home | 2 themal 2 oR Geller. Beardsley "T’hiser te. ey aod paw | ae Din oto Pennsytvania 6"'x6"" Hort- including paving. lighting, 148 installed auen 14. The revenues of the system af this ‘ordinagce in Teswect lo the sev- hereinbefore “ssccinee end Say eeuieere, On 34 Kemp He We si: eetoved i $ Seusavey aolrel Shea beinors es Ne. 16ty Sand CRANES: 2-10 Ten Elec, Traveling Bridge Cranes Mreitiies ikerene icin octkas are on and after January 1. 1956. are hereby |“"Saction 18 Ghue ane of the hoods! use paid ool dale ces ers nee shall neenane oe ue sdf : eld 4 H xers; Allis-Chalmers No. 24-10 = Elect ie Bid : pledged for th s How-| her s sh . pF upon authorization of uneral service © { 2 Core Crusher; Link-Belt No. 502-20 sina Wevec: a srevemne Tee* Fcc hac | shall be known as “Automobile Parking ee funds SO GTP A ssi rn rod iol bbe Oe oar: the Commission provided. that satd Com- Wednesday, Nov. 30 at_2? pm 2 ~=siBartiett & Snow Sand Screens; Alreators; f—Sand ; ; Area No. 3° but will be sometimes here-laside into a fund to be known as the able Hoe the revenuen of the svstem|ce nce shall not authorize the payment {rom the Brace-Smith Punere 2 = Storage Bins ep to 20-Ten Capacity; 1¢—Bucket [ip referred to a6 “Aron No. 3” | ‘Receiving Pund™ of the system, and/shall be issued which shall have a prior Of ANY such moneys for construction Home with Dr. Milton Bank offi. 2 Elevators. cr as off-street automobile parking| shall be transferred therefrom _peri-/oF ¢eaual standing therewith. except as Hitt until there shall have been firs: ciating. Interment in Highland 4 AND 8 RS: Beardsley & Piper 19" DB With lee vpe located oa the Solewing areurfeed odically into separate and special funds, |hereinafter provided The city, nei Hat ail A bod, the eer a Cemetery sar Wile > a ad Out 3 oa ap . j ’ n BC) as follows ave the right to issue additional bonds, statement to the effect that the OREID LY. NOV 27.1955, AR . ‘ern-? H Bea y iper Type ipreperty, to-wit 1. Operatio: % of equa. standing in a sum not to ex-)sum so to be paid is in full or partial P. 104 Center St. age 81: - > ‘ 8 jisiingere, Inte Lots Nos. 8 thru 11, and 27.‘of Asses-| Out 4 the po gett agony line \ceed . $40,000.00 for the completion of payment of a contract shiigation in! loved husband of Winifred O'Ret!- > yn $ 7. waatenal one 0. 113; } Pund, there shall be first. set elds d the project herein described in event)connection with safd- project and that ly, dear father of Rev. Pr. - ’ 4 v atic te Ben aren, tore Blowers paving, lighting, 81 tnstattedieach month into fund to be designated] to” or taontieie gt eke shall prove the city has received the consideration; ~ ward O'Reilly, John. Robert, Wil- 2 LL ON international Overs. 14°xt2" syahipnde prgedtdy ane aca kine arse “Operation and Maintenance Fund,” alshall aise have we right to ‘Issue atlas beni Leet Araets Sean sae LeeneNt of Me ane weary Lage the ® Asst. Roll-Overs. Up to 12" - Said parking areaisum sufficient t 1 i ; engineer shall also show the amouni‘ dear brother of Mrs. Fram x 4 Ps o provide for the pay-jditional bonds payable from fhe netlog. ¢ 4 2 vier $ ee 4- Milwa ae oi known as “Automobile Parking/ment for the next month of all currentj/revenues of the system! for the purnose of. construction estimates which have Kenna. Puneral ser be wh 7 2 fi ene ae No. en ND ana 2~Mil- area 6s ~ Pooh a Ue gence hereinjexpenses of administration and opera-|of improving. enlareing /and/or extendins hoteles Soereres him for ned Pabeaege og A eer loent a bh yl a" . . 4 pay an ¢ amount of the balance am. fr a Q ARE iu 13> Rebing and mpnens , Shakeouts. Section 4. The commission does here- nee the Aandi prose ye ee San pace mea ee ens ie which will be required for the, comple- Catholic Church with Rev, Fr. sie". aI2", 2 as" 32", 32""x Pata, by adopt the city engineer's estimate of eet as mséy ‘ : ohed ; tion of the project . M Blake officiating. Internment 24K?" "48" and 24x34" Sizes nati. 34 , 5 necessary to ‘preserve the system in good bonds herein authorized: provided. that - in Mount Bt Cémeter: Reci- : OLT SQUEEZE: %-Osborn, In thon: un : 15 years and upwards as the period of|repair and working order. ‘The Commis.|50 such additional bonds of equal ‘stand-| Section 21. The gaid Automobile Park-| in Mount Hope Cimetety. 5 : % ational and Mi. including Cincinnati. Ne. 2 C&T Diamond 36” F: usefulness of said pro: ing s' ven:\ing System N i tation of the Rosary will be held : waukee: Jolt Squeere and Squeere Strip ace, project and also/sion at the beginning of each fiscal year,|\"% shall be issued un.ess the net reven-/ing Syst o. 1 Revenue Bonds shail, it Mr. O'Reill = tig Fees ere Cees 0s the sald engineer's estimate of $633.75@/ahall adopt budget covering the Jore-(t0e tet, She then law preceding fisealingy ve erers soil the Municipal Fi- st? pee he a roid Presses. ner, yaeat mh e as the cost of said project (including No| going exper S ®-ivear plus 50% of the estimated.additionat| nance ommission of the State of i o8 BEMLGSCRT: ssnenotc na, reit eed 1 teat’ Figtenita taevions ents weemaey,$ anaes, nego "ine Seal gee A ced the "ondtt yl handy Cet eaten Ae Beeeahe aeee ne) A alea ae ne - ‘ . / : th | of w mf wry : eg Lpro such titiona ndsiand the Director of Y is. hereby | te * TUMBLING BARRELS: 12-Tumbling Barrets, In- MY A, i000 Gal, Owclae Propane "Tuan: igs.ons timates are ‘on file with the City Clerk. ee a ct ae nae by alate to be Issied. for the first full fisea!|authorized and Sinccted te pate eeplice| the church for sesyice. i _ ?- for 48"xt8"x20 Cu. Ft, Tum- hye Steel, x _. Ete. Tons of Wire. 1000— . Section 5. There are hereby author- Comeuenion ane. en oe gy lems to at ane 190" of tee Tatnent aa iat tion to said Commission for such #p-| La lecheeal hie ead 17 et rs ‘ans. Lockers, Benches. Factor: nd ived to be issued and sold pursuant : a oc Armee ount of) proval Z ' TA Roselawt, age Tl: dear - 5 , . for type Binet aft ro an ent, cageee rege y manage * : the erastsisun et (hat So on bochigen an — —, for mee a code ee Tnesl eae pope a a Dvr Section 22. Anv ‘unexpended. balance: mother ol Mrs. ned = Heusener, = Blast ace . 10H, > boratery ment Precision Tools, bite Acts of 1933, as amend 1 x ’ ha 4 of the proceéds of the sale of the bonds| © Mrs. e rnold, rs. pula ; wll andere " x bostremests, Perishable Toots and Supplies. bonds in the Denregate principal sum ve. time “mn ecld’ Gperation and aloes. oT Ge svitees sed nent additional] herein ‘authorized, remaining after the! Blanchard and Ton 4 a of six hundred thousand dollars ( a : ' na icompletion of the project, to the extent) dear sister of Win, H. Sartell, . - $600.-|nance Pund, the amount Included for|Donds then being issued. Such additional /or"'S%9 999 9¢ may ‘be used for the im-| - Punerah service Sill Be hed i ta ti te tn i i Nh lh Nh al hn hn i in tel ee he he he hh bi i hi Ni i il COMPLETELY EQUIPPED X-RAY DEPARTMENT AND FIRST AID ROOM : p : . d 000). for the purpose of paying a rtithe 7 net tevenues shall be estimat b } ' BUSINESS MACHINES @ OFFICE FURNITURE @ FIXTURES oe), forthe, Purpent of paving a partithe payment of the cost of enforcement! retiaicred ‘professional cusineer vexpert-|Drovemjent, enlargement’ and/or eieo:) Neneh eystrheas-opte Panera’ hn | r unds e. s ’ $ eg u- ‘ fs = aid from available funds!15°, of the gross revenues enced in such matters and not a regu-|sion of the system. if such uae - shall rom the WRITE r — a } to said system.| 9 Bond and Interest Red ti ‘ar officer or employee of the city No|be approved by the Municipal Finance with RE Cs mu 7] mWin wl WNSPRCTION | . $|Sai¢ bonds shall be Known a6 “Autome- Pund. Out of the remaining revenuss|if' the cht chal “thas bei Getantt tn peer grrqpiee Dipole # Gragrearey Peay 8 wi BOd Tar ‘ Hal 9A.M bie stem No, 1 Revewuelin the Receiving Pund, there shall belmaking any payments to’the O njshail be paid immediaiey e ® PHONE sid AF | . te be dated as of Pebruary|next set aside monthiy into » fund toland Maintenance. Pu : ee ee eee ~ Jil : "TOR AUCTIONEER ros 4 Pp. M. DAILY umbered consecutively|be designated “Bond and Interest Re-|Interest Redemption Fund. “Permission aes oc os h tat net more than HLLUSTRATED — ) er . UNTIL eae maerwipelcomretion Fund.” 6 sum safticiont, t6/57 use’ mate ef shchigan tor such oieetl os fair market value, of said bonds. be} 5 , r the payment of t rine ie e of Michigan ‘or suc r . } . /. DATE coupon bonds in the denomination ofjof and interest Papen afl bonds’ payable|state commission of agency as shag |Any: bends so acquired by D gpone yt oe | DESCRIPTIVE po pay gency oh nd. shall | oF won he pap ga ae to/from the revenues of the system as and have Jeremenes wet issuance of Me gr we shall be a ily, er “in| : : bonds} to issue suc ditional a cine SALE Setter tet forth im the" sone form’ shui prove tbat the "amount vo ac ase Sgetuaty “"Saleted i "vondules| derive trom the revere tec) Rey, hu tr ot r inter vi “the existence “ f ‘ , * erest ft a tate or rates’ to belfor interest on the bonds herein author- permitting the jaseance erect. Hons on-street and off-street parking meters, inter “wat ti raid Lake Come. . f Lod nern ir hereafter determined not exceeding 4% lized, in. each month durin ! . ; g the first) Section 18 The ‘bond and the sum of Y annum, | attached there is hereby set aside s 2 Z / : , en | in payable on July 3, 19: = six (6) months of eoch fiscal year, shall coupons herein cameemed to be/ issued, ! $33,750.00 to defray that Laas of the the Pursiey Punere) £. . . 7 * « eo 8 . - ‘ se ry \ i ss