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Details, Page 2. THE PONTIAC PRES
12th YEAR xkxeewkk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1954 —30 PAGES
Outlines Health Problems|
co
DR. ROBERT H. BAKER os ee
State Medical Group Head
Cites Need for Physicians
to Serve in Rural Areas By WILMA GREENWAY
“The vital problem facing the medical profession today | Allegan $1,350,000, Alpena $60.-
is getting qualified physicians into outlying rural areas,”
Dr. Robert H. Baker, newly installed president of Mich-
igan State Medical Society, said today in an interview | 090, Charlevoix $41,000, Cheboygan
with the Pontiac Press.
“Wider distribution of medical care is a challenge not
only for the doctor, but for the.community, the county | $360,000, Ingham $1,180,000, Ionia
and the state. -
“Equally important, he said, “is getting new drug dis-
coveries, surgical techniques and medical methods into)
the day-to-day practicé of the average physician.”
The 62-year-old Pontiac surgeon, who was installed | Montmoerncy $150,000, Muskegon
Sept. 29 as official head of the Michigan Medical Sotiety,
pointed out that the absence of running water, elec-
tricity, laboratory facilities and hospitals often dis-
courages the modern young doctor from settling in rural
areas. | Sl ills ali. aot, lit, bel ke Tells Need for GOP Congress
ASSOCIATED PRESS
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE
Tiegler Allocates
Over 10 Million
to County Roads Plans to Spend That
Amount Here Over Two
Year Period
State Highway Commis-
, sioner Charles M. Ziegler
|plans to spend $10,176,000
on Oakland County high-
‘| ways in the next two years.
His plans were revealed
| yesterday in a report to Gov.
|G. Mennen Williams which
| stated that the department
‘expects to spend $149,762,-
976 on state roadways in
(1955 and 1956. The funds
are part of federal and state
allocations.
“This is a great deal more than
Oakland County expected to re-
ceive,’ Leon V. Belknap, engineer-
manager of the Oakland County
road commission said.
| Of the 38 counties listed in the
| report, Oakland's appropriation
is second only to Kent @ith $11,-
amounts te be received are:
000, Barry $1,615,000, Bay $2,472.-
: 000, Benzie $690,000, Branch $470.-
| 000, Calhoun $2,350,000, Cass $1.-
| $3,125,000, Clinton $1,930,000, Ea-
ton $2,170,000, Genesee $3,239,000,
Grand Traverse $63,000, Hillsdale
| $700,000, Jacson $700,000. Kalama-
| 200 $2,345,00.
Lapeer $436,000, Lenawee $7,98
000, Livingston $914,000, Macomb
$1,300,000, Manistee $440,000,
| $3,504,000, Oakland $10,176,000, Ot.
sege $350,000, Ottawa $9,239,000,
|
| Saginaw $1,909,000, Shiawassee
| $700,000, St.Clair $810,000, St. Jo-
} seph $855,000, Tascola $620,000, Van
Buren $580,000, Washtenaw $2,52,-
“Communities should be educated to the need of pro- 000 and Wexford $1,360,000
viding these minimal medical facilities,” he said, “and |
doctors should be shown how to revise their modern
methods to match available facilities.”
Reds Lied, U. 5.
Charges in Note Demands
Russia’ Pay
$2 Million for Aircraft advantages available to)
Shot Down Last Year |
WASHINGTON u—The United
States today accused Russia of
having ‘willfully and knowlingly’’
lied about the shooting down of an
American B30 bomber over the Sea Dr. Baker, who has prac-
ticed in Pontiac for 34 years
and was active in organiz-
ing the medical staff of
Pontiac General Hospital,
said that one of his aims as
president of the, association
was to reach out to doctors
in remote areas and see that
they were informed of the
them through the society.
“Primary purpose of the Michi-
gan State Medical Society is to
educate doctors and the public in
the newest advances in medicine,”
Dr. Baker stated
“Three days of our fall con- Churchill Blasts
Laborite Bevan Says Isolation of U. S.
Would Give Europe
to Communists
BLACKPOOL, England (AP) —
Prime Minister Winston Churchill
‘declared today the withdrawal of
the United States “into isolation
would condemn all Europe to Rus-
|sian Communist subjugation and
our famous and beloved island to
| death and ruin.”
| The 79-year-old British statesman
of Japan in July, 1953. It filed a y . 7 . a Pa : >| vention are devoted to present: (told the annual Conservative Party formal damage claim for $2
785,492.94,
At the same time the United!
States challenged Russia—if the
Communists deny liabilities for the
damages—to join in taking the dis-
pute to the International Court of
Justice.
Ambassador Charles E. Bohlen |
delivered the l7-page American
note te the Soviet Foreign Office
in Moscow today. ing scientific papers by world |
authorities, outlining new devel-
epments in the field of medicine
and surgery.
“Another three-day postgraduate
clinical conference in the spring
has the same purpose of bringing
is new.
“Another service is to bring the
newest in medicine ‘right to the
doctor's door’ by providing qual-
In Washington, the State Depart- | ified leaders to go out into the
ment made the note public
announced that U.N. Ambassador | and field and talk before local medical
groups, as well as Sending out in-
Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. has been | formative literature and publicizing
ingructed to’ circulate the text in newspapers, magazines and
among the members of the U.N. radio.
Security Council.
It was the second time that the
United States resorted to this ex- Still another benefit, he said, is
a medical placement bureau that
‘puts good men where they are
traordinary procedure in’ pressing | Ost Needed.”
what is clearly a campaign to get!
satisfaction from the Soviet Union|
foe the destruction of American
aircraft.
The first instance was two
weeks ago when Washington
asked some 1', million dollars
for a B29 shot down off northern
Japan in October, 1952.
The incident in today’s formal
diplomatic note occurred on July 29}
last year and resulted in 16 Ameri- |
cans dead or missing.
Physician Says Crump
Is ‘Somewhat Weaker’
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (®—Veteran In the field of new develop-
ments, Dr. Baker indicated that
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Conference here that isolationist
sentiment does exist in the United
'States in a policy described as
,Fortress America."
| But he assured his listeners the
“wisest forces over there, irres-
pectively of party, will not allow
doctors up to the minute on what the great republic to be turned
from the path of right and duty.”’
Without mentioning Anéurin
| Bevin by name, Churchill as-
| smiled the leftwing Labor leader
for allegedly taunting the Amer-
jeans te “go it alone.”
“Six months ago a_ politician
who has held office in a British
Cabinet and who one day aspires
to become leader of the Labor
party did not hesitate to tell the
Americans to ‘go it alone.’
“One cannot imagine any more
fatal disaster than that this evil
counsellor should be taken at his
‘ word.” Longhairs
to Go Sporty,
Play at Game WASHINGTON \—The longhairs
and the crewcut set rub elbows
and obdes tomorrow at Griffith
Stadium. The occasion: A concert
by the National Symphony Orches-
,tra between the halves of the
Washington Redskins-New York
Giants football game,
Maestro Howard Mitchell said he
and Redskin owner George Pres-
ton Marshall hit upon this “‘brain-
storm” during an evening of con-
versation
The orchestra, sporting evening
gowns and tuxedoes, will offer the
fans three selections: ‘‘Prelude to
Lohengrin, Act Three,’ “Hail to
the Redskins'' and ‘Stars and
Stripes Forever.”
Delay Hearings
on Dixon-Yates Senators Plan to Meet
Again on A-Contract
After Election
WASHINGTON u®—The Dixon-
Yates contract was on the shelf
until after election today ‘‘at the
suggestion,” the Senate-House
Atomic Energy Committee
political parties.”’
This was the committee's word
ing yesterday in wiring its 18 mem said,
bers there'll be no public hearings
next Wednesday, as had _ been!
| planned, on the much-disputed pri- |
“of members representing both}
vate power proposal.
Instead, it suggested the hear-
ings be rescheduled for Nov. 4—
two days after the elections. It
said ‘‘an overwhelming number”
of the legislators found their cam-
paigning duties too heavy to hold
hearings now,
The contract prevides that the
Dixon-Yates private utility group
build a plant to send electric
power through Tennessee Valley
Authority public power lines.
The Senate already is scheduled
to meet in special session Nov. 8
on the move to censure Sen. Mc-
Carthy (R-Wis)
Some Republican senators said
privately they were more than
pleased by news of the Dixon- Yates
postponement. They said they had
considered it would be a mistake
to provide such a forum for foes,
particularly Democrats, of the pro-
posal
2 rench Tricolor
Lowered as Reds
Take Over Hanoi
HANOI. Indochina « — The
French pulled out of Hanoi tonight
in advance of Communist-led Viet
minh occupation forces
French colonial soldiers brushed |
away tears as the tricolor, which
had flown almost unbrokenly over
the city 71 years, was lowered for
the last time
The last French withdrew in or
derly fashion according to plan
There was no confusion in
The Vietminh, with whom the
French fought a bitter seven.
year war, started edging toward °
the city at diwn. By midafter-
noon they were in pdssession of
Bac Mai, the big military airport
on the outskirts. At nightfall they
were in the suburbs.
Tomorrow, the red gold-starred
Vietminh flag will fly over Hanoi
under terms of the July 21 Geneva
Armistice agreement, which turned
over the northern half of Viet Nam
to the Reds. Blaze Destroys Three
AP Wirephoto
WALLS COLLAPSE—The walls of the Milam Hotel | Falls, Texas, last night. Some estimates set the
and an adjoining store are shown here as they | damage as high as _a_ half-million dollars. This
crash into the street during a raging fire which| photo was taken by amateur photographer Perry
wiped out three businesses and a hotel at Wichita | T. Gresham.
Two Are Safe, 43 Missing
After Freighter Capsizes NORFOLK, Va. (?—The Coast Guard reported this | ing for a four-day visit in his na-
morning that two men had been picked up and three | ‘Nixon to Visit
and Campaign
in California
LOS ANGELES w—Vice Presi-
‘dent Richard Nixon arrives from
Denver by plane tomorrow morn-
tive California, where he will
campaign in behalf of Republican
others sighted in the water fréth the ore-laden freighter, | congressional candidates.
Mormackite, which according to one survivor capsized
with a crew of 48 men aboard.
The first survivor picked up from the missing freighter,
the Mormackite, said the ship capsized. He did not say
when, but Coast Guard officials estimated it was prob-
ably early Thursday when
Predicts Bigger
Indictment List Capehart Says Housing
Inquiry Will Result in
More Charges +
WASHINGTON uw — Chairman
Capehart (R-Ind) said today he
expects “a lot more’ indictments
to result from his Senate Banking
Con.mittee’s investigation of post
war housing financed with govern-
ment-insured loans
The committee recessed four
da\s of hearings here late yester-
day. But Capehart ordered sub-
pocnas for five Witnesses to appear
at a hearing Nov. 9. He empha-
sized the investigation is not con-
cluded
Earlier, Capehart had indicat-
ed hearings were over except for
persons who wished to testify be-
cause they thought they were
injured in previous testimony.
A special federal grand jury here
has been instructed by Atty. Gen.
Brownell to ‘inquire into bribery
and other criminal conduct in the
federal housing program,” and
grand juries also have been con-
vered in other cities.
Capehart said indictments are
showing up almost daily and add
ed, ‘‘there should be a lot more.” winds were high and seas
rough in the area.
Both men were picked up
| 150 miles east southeast of
Cape Henry, Va., after they
had been sighted by Navy
and Coast Guard planes out
of Elizabeth City, N. C.,
which directed the Mace-
donia to the area.
Shortly thereafter the planes re-
ported sighting three more men
in life jackets in the water
Chief Boatswain Cyrus Gray,
of the Norfotk Coast Guard, said
the two others sighted were in
the same general area as the
man picked up.
The Macedonia reported hearing
met.'s voices shortly before day-
light. A boat was put overside but
nothing was found. It was later
that the Coast Guard plane sighted
the man in the water and directed
the ship to the area
Recofds in \Baltimore showed
the 6,000-ton Mormackite was in a
Chesapeake Bay collision Dec, 13,
1949 with the Horace Irvine. The
collision occurred in a heavy fog.
Damage was slight and there were
no injuries.
The ship usually
crew of 45. carries a
Three Coast Guard cutters were
sire from Norfolk to the area to
continue the search. Twelve search
planes, six from Norfolk, five from
Flizabeth City, N.C
Floyd Bennett Field.
are covering the area. NLY., also | eet PES oe Semun
California and the San Joaquin
| Valley until Wednesday, then re-
turn here with stops in Salinas,
identified as Michael Angel Hernandez, chief steward of San Luis Obispo and Santa Bar- bara.
Politicians Seek
Nevada Votes Court Rules People to
Name Man to Complete
bMcCarran’s Term
RENO w—Republican and Dem-
ocratic candidates for the two-year
Democratic
Pat McCarran’s term combed balance of late
Ser
Nevada's sparsely-settled acres to-
day in search of votes, knowing at
last they are legal nominees
After a tense week-long legal
battle, Nevada's State Supreme
Court decided the question yester-
day: It ruled unanimously that the
state's 102 thousand registered
voters will name the person who
will complete the term. The GOP
haa contended Republican Gov.
Charlies Ryssell had the right to
name McCarran’s successor
With only 2% days until elec-
tion, Democratic nominee, Alan
Bible, 44, and Republican Ernest
Brown, 51,—both Rene attorneys
—began whirlwind campaigns.
Even though the legal hassle has
ended, political overtones still rock
this desert state. Democrats were
jubilant over the ruling. They had
accused the GOP of attempting to
block the election. Republican lead-
ers denied the charge, contending the
and one from| they only wanted to make certain
te winner of an election would
hold office legally.
Highlights of Eisenhower’s Talk to the Nation
From INS & UP Dispatches
DENVER~Following are highlights from President
Eisenhower's speech in Den
“As leaders and workers
alone. We must enlist the ver last night:
in your precincts, you know
\that the members of our party cannot carry this battle
Spirited support of friends
political leader E. H. Crump, crit- and neighbors, regardless of party, who believe in our
ically ill since Wednesday, was
“somewhat weaker’ early today,
his physician said.
Crump, 9%. is suffering from a
severe heart disorder.
The Woman Pays }
GRAND RAPIDS (UP) — Mrs.|
Edna: Parish, 48, Grand Rapids. was fined $10 when she pleaded
guilty in police court to being em. |
braced while. driving an auto-
mobile.
Lifetime Batteries With 6 Year Gwar.
antee now available Phohe ME
71-5631, Holly, Clarkston, MA $-6616,
| | - i principles and objectives.
“For the cause in whic h we believe is bigger than
any political party. To this cause, all Americans, regard-
less of party, can give their
“Now, my friends, a cold war of partisan
between the Congress and the executive
won't give us these goals.
“This brings up a pol enthusiastic support.”
litics
ranch
itical fact of life.”
“You know perfectly well that you just can’t have
the drivers are set on going one car with two drivers at the steering wheel and expect
|to end up any place but in the ditch—especially when
in different directions. You
“**\ cannot have efficient federal gqvernment when the Con-
| Two Drivers at the Steering Wheel May End Up in gress wants to follow one philosophy of government and
the executive branch another.”
“In our system of government, progress is made
when the leaders of the executive branch and the majori-
ty of the Congress are members of the same political
party. The unsurpassed record of the 83rd Congress is
shining evidence of this truth.”
“History shows that when the executive and
legislative branches are politically in conflict, politics
in Washington runs riot.
politics’ sake.”
In these conditions, the
public good goes begging while politics is played for
“In this struggle, I know you will have the same
determination—the same enthusiasm—the same drive—
as you had two years ago. I know you will fight to win.”
“Only through your effort can our program continue
to advance. Only through your effort
to have the kind of America all of us so earnestly desire.” 1 we continue
¢
; Ditch, Cautions President
“Taxes have been cut
the federal payroll and got
“Our military strength
nation in war.”
of the battlefield.”
lasting peace with justice.” est reduction in history’,”
been “cut... by 11 billion dollars.” “Our people .. . now have clean, honest government.”
$4,700,000,000 — ‘the larg-
and federal spending has
‘We smoked out 211,000 unnecessary positions on
rid of them.”
does not consist of involun-
tarily recalled veterans who have already served our
“We at last have an economy ‘whose strength is
not sapped by the virus of inflation — an economy
whose strength is not dependent upon the sacrifices
“Together we shall forge ahead in this great work we
have so well, begun, determined to keep America strong
and secure—determined that this land of freedom, under
Almighty God, will not rest until we see in the world a
4 UNTIED PRESS
He leaves Thursday for Hovwston,
Businesses _ Penvyer Speech
Warns of Risks
If Control Is Lost Over 5,000 in Audience
Halt President 42 Times
With Applause
DENVER (AP) — Presi-
| dent Eisenhower, vigorously
| pressing the Republican
|campaign for continued
control of Congress, de-
clared last night he foresees
“a cold war of partisan pol-
itics” if the Democrats take
over.
He spoke to a nationwide
television - radio audience
and a cheering capacity
crowd of+5,500 persons at a
GOP rally in Denver Audi-
torium after getting a re-
port from party congres-
sional leaders on their plans
to step up the campaign
tempo. «
The President was interrupted
at least 42 times by applause,
which helped to run his TV-radio
address overtime and caused him
to be cut off the air about a half
| minute before he completed his
text
In his Denver speech, Elsen-
however cautioned about what he
called the dangers of a Nevem-
ber election outcome putting
| Congress under Democratic rule
| and leaving the White House
Republican, —_
Eisenhower said voters who put
the Republican administration in
power in 1952 “got results’ they
wanted, and he appealed for two
Cosh years of GOP control of Con-
gress to carry out the rest of his
program. ’
Eisenhower got a howling ova-
ticn when he wag introduced at
the rally here by Vice President
Nixon, who voiced confidence the
Republicans still will be in the
control saddle when Congress
meets in January.
Eisenhower was flanked on the
speakers’ platform by a group
of Republican congressional lead-
ers and Colorade GOP candidates
for Congress and state offices.
The leaders conferred with the
President for an hour before his
speech and at a news conference
later promised ‘‘a stepped up tem-
po” in their fight for control of
the House and Senate
| They avoided committing Eisen-
|hower to more than the two ad-
ditional campaign speeches he now
definitely has planned. But Nixon
said the president probably will
make another address—a farm
speech somewhere in the midwest.
House speaker Martin and
senate majority leader Knowland
publicly continued to voice confi-
dence the Republicans will win
their battle, but some members of
the party high command were say-
ing privately they are worried
was in much the same pattern as
the one he made in Hellywood
Bow]. As on that occasion marking
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)
Warm, Partly Cloudy
Weather Is Forecast Pontiac residents can look fore
ward to warmer weather tomor-
row with only partly cloudy skies.
* Tonight's low will be 58 to 62,
tomorrow's high 77 to 80, accord-
ing to the U.S. Weather Bureau.
Yesterday in downtown Pontiae
temperatures ranged from 40 to 54
degrees. Today at & a.m. the
mercury was well on its way to a
warmer day. registering 59. By
1 p.m. it had reached 70 degrees.
Boy, 3, Drives Truck
PORTSMOUTH, England (UP)
—Freddy Stanley Friday climbed
into an unattended truck standing
outside his home reversed it into a
parked car then drove 40 yards
before stopping when he saw a
policeman, Today he promised his
mother he wouldn't do it again.
Freddy is 3%2 years old.
In Today’s Press Birmingham ene rarer ?
Revie, Hal Peele eins a “*3
Building News .......0000055 15-22 | hte tee Hl eg at ORC I eer OEE a, 8
Comics ciswinie wae ee sse cies 5 eer
County News SOI HODOOBOOC iz
Crane, Dr. George ....... 4
Editertals SNS ORISCE OT ‘
eertutaanineat (EPO Ce Cee v7
| camad eee 5
Le ach Rou Coo oneeaancrcr 3
4 eaters : yee cea WO, EE
V & Radic Programs ....... ae
Witsen, Eart aie e eee as 5
Want Ads cua sesaeenye 14-29
Women's Pages .......... 67
Profit by Our 35 Years Experience tn
Pontiac. & D Cleaners, 14) W. Huron,
FE 5-61146. Pick up & deliver.
Osmen’s Tel-Ruron Shopping Center,
Open every evening «il &
Eisenhower's. speech last night sig ee
aan
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i A oe
Wie ine AR gn alr li
of Jamaica. :
da ee ae, ee oh,
. ie Sem ee ‘
feet serene © Did Jesus Come” 4
"The Day in Birmingham F
Commissioners Deliberate
on Off-Street Parking Plan From Our Birmingham Bureau tary pupils are now in atiendance
BIRMINGHAM — The City Com- | This group comprises the largest mission met behind closed doors Student aged —" cial
twice in the last two weeks for the Bo Ae i
purpase of trying to draw together) Participating in a Knights Tem
the loose ends of the Planning Plar Hospitaler Service at 4 30 pm. |
tomorrow at the Furst Presbyterian Board’ ff{-s “ert P - “gi. ;
' wert phe ot Church, will be the minister of the |
nance, but have yet to broach the church Dr- W Glen Hatiis Dr
subject. Harris will preach ae on
The much-disciissed ordinance, ‘‘Faith but Not Enough.”’ and the
which stipulates that all new or | Chancel ‘choir will sing.
expanding businesses must provide The Detroit Commandery, No.
off - street parking space. has been! | &.T., will bost Damascus Com-
hanging in the fire for many mantery, Ne. 8, K-T. aud the
months but was finally tabled for Te pate sige Aen op eg further refinements. ; both the service and a reception
A lengthy discussion on the as- to follow
sessment formula for financing a . * * *
parking lot at the southeast cor- -— After previously asking for a
ner of Pierce and Merrill streets check on both the low and second
eccupied the commission's time jow bidders before awarding the
fast week, contract for paving five streets in
And Thursday night's joint meet. | the Quarton Lake Estates sub-
ing with the Planning Board found @ivision, the City Commission *this
beth groups so involved in zoning week awarded the $22,095.75 con-
problems that the «subject of the oo Concrete Products,
parking ordinance in fell by the | '° rT 6s wayside. Prsgumante. plage try | Paving on Lake Park. Pilgrim,
will be make shortly. Puritan, Fairfax and Suffield is
e ¢ se |expected to be completed by
Record - breaking enrollment Oct. 30 ‘
figures have been announced by |
the heads of three Cranbrook
schools. Kingswood has eos girls this week in homes through
enrolled from several states, Italy, | 'e Birmingham-Bloomfield-Frank- |
the Virgin Islands and South Amer- lin area, training for their record: |
ica, according to Marion E. Good. | peri ay Drive job which
ale, headmistress. Of this total 78 >€8ins Oct. are boarding students per re More than a thousand volunteers
day students. . | Whe will bear a major share of
| the annual give-once-for-all cam-
| paign, will attend specia) training
tendance figures shows 40 stu- | sessions
These are being conducted un- Hundreds of women began meet- |
and South America. A breakdown | der the direction of Mrs. Donovan
figure by Marry D. Hory, head- J Gray, chairman of the training
master, reveals 186 boarding stu- | committee, and the following train-
dents and 154 day boys. ‘ing leaders: .
Mrs, Charlies Renfrew, Mrs.
Bethe! Kelley, Mrs, Carl Binkie,
Mrs, Joseph Dodge, Mrs. Rebert
Bouse, Mrs, Haines P. Waimsiey,
Mrs, Cassius Miller and Mrs.
Rebert Wallis. Jessie Winter. headmistress of
Brookside, reports that 214 elemen- day ~ Bea
WHOPPER SETS RECORD
his 12-year-old son fishing Wallace, Pinkham.
junior and senor, with the 55-pound 9-ounce striped
bass caught by the father in surf of West Tisbury
beach at Martha's Vineyard Island, Mass. Pop took
to “show him ‘
how to _\ THB PONTIAC PRESS,
a
: AP Wirephote
catch a striper.’ To the astonishment of both, the
father promptly hooked and landed the largest fish in
the nine-year history of the fall Striped Bass Derby.
World's record striper, a 73-pounder, was caught
near here in 1913.
'Sukos Is Ancient Autumn
Feast of Praising, Sharing Sukos will be celebrated by the
Jewish people of the world begin-
ning at sunset, Monday
Sukos is the plural of
brew word, suko, a hut The holli-
commemorates the divine
providence which sheltered the an the He
cient Israelites as they wandered
in the desert from the land of
bondage (to the land of promise
Rukos, often called Tabernac- °
les, iy also .the ancient autumn
“feast of ingathering,’” and as
such is the model after which
the Pligrims created the Amert-
can Thanksgiving Day,
Reference to Sukos can be found
in the Bibical Book of Leviticus
Pontiac Deaths
Campaign Director Mrs. J. Row-
Mrs. Bert J. Greer land Quinp has also announced that
Mrs. Bert J. (Tessis G.) Greer, | Peservations are being accepted for 78, of 155% W. Pike St. died yester- the kickoff luncheon for volunteers
day at Pontiac General Hospital. ©9 Oct. 18. An attendance of about
Born in Oxford Sept. 14, 1876, 309 is expected at the Cranbrook
she was the daughter of A. M. and &Y™nasium, Detroit Organist
Plays Selections
at Church Here Louise Pickell Titus. She has lived, Inclusion of the Red Cross in| Philip LaRowe, organist and
her entire life in Oakland County| the campaign this year for the! choirmaster of the Church of the
and was a member of the First first time makes the $186,338 sag Messiah (Episcopal) in Detroit, Baptist Church, the Dora B. Whit. 4 difficult one, said John K. Ste-
ney G of the W.C.T.U. the Venson, general chairman, But he} Will give a recital on the new
Birthday Gud and « past president pointed out that the need for a| organ-sonic organ at St. Mary's-
special Red Cross drive next spring
A son, Jay B. Greer Sao | is eliminated by the combined ap-
Paulo, Brazil survives her | proach.
Mrs, Greer will be at the Donel- | > * * sonJohns Funeral Home at 7 p.m Tomorrow will be reorganization
tonight, Funeral arrangements wil! 24” for the Embury Methodist
be announced later. Church Sunday School, All classes
: car dan ete tee ne
Hurricane Hazel :
Very Dangerous’ of the Wayside Gleaners
of
ing the ‘regular worship service
A care nursery will also operate
for children under three years of
age
MIAMI, Fla. @®—Hurricane Hazel Fourth grade through adult
whirled its 125-mile-per-hour winds, will meet at 9:45 a.m.
in the central Caribbean Sea today| "" ™ ‘e past.
stil! on a west-northwest course) Laymen's Sunday will also be
that posed no immediate threat to observed at the church with Wil- |
land. liam Ladd, Sunday School super
Navy hurricane hunter planes intendent, speaking on “Yes You
were not penetrating the great dis- Can.’ Also participating in the |
turbance because of its violence. service will be Fred McCullough. |
They were warned away from it | lay leader, Floyd Crouse, and oth
after a crewman of g@ plane was’ ers ! injured. | * e¢ @
The San Juan, P_R., Weather Bu Local club members are attend
reau called Hazel ‘very danger- | 'z the Midwestern Regional Con
ous.”” It was expected to continue | ference of Soroptimist International
Oa its west-northwest course in the this weekend at Columbus. Ohio
open Caribbean Sea today. The | Birmingham's representatives are
present course would take it south | Helen Larkin, governor; Mrs Mary
Dewey, president; Mrs Nina Noble
Church at the YMCA, will be
the Rev V. Ogden Vogt, minister
emeritus of the First Unitarian
Church in Chicago, where he
served as minister for 20 years ing false documentary evidence to
purchase an alcoholic beverage
was the name of John E Bel] 19
of 529 Chester Si
The person scheduled to appear
is James LaPine 19. of 645 Wood Hle has authored two books’ “Cult in-the-Hills on Joslyn Road Sunday
at & p. m.
Mr. LaRowe is a graduate of the
University of Michigan with
Bachelor of Arts and Master of
Music degrees lle was pro
fessor of organ at Texas State
College before coming to the
Detroit: church
following numbers He will play the
Trumpet
Tune by. Purcell: Toceatta’ by
Mereaux, Jesus, Joy of Man's
Desiring by Bach, Come, Sweet
Death by Bach; Humoresque— by
Dvorak, Prayer by Boellmann
Primitive Organ by You; Andante
Cantabile by Tschaikowsky, Song
Without Words by Bonnet and a
selection of familiar hymns
President Tells Need
for GOP Congress (Continued From Page One)
th: start of his harder hitting
tactics, the President jabbed_ re
peatedly at the Democrats without
once mentioning individuals or the a delegates tion ty t . ae opposition party by name
Report Name Correction ener “ Marton Schad | In fact, throughout his speech . s Thelma Zimmerman. Mrs. | - : in Court A : ; he deleted from his prepared text Pppearance i Foster, Irene Hanley and} .everal mentions of a “Republi-
_ BIRMINGHAM — Incorrectly re irs Eloise Fah eet can’ Congress and talked of just .
ported to the Press Thursday as , ‘ _ | Congress’ ino reviewing the ree-
scheduled to appear Oct. 29 in Jus ‘? sures minister af tomorrow's (44 Aides could offer no explana.
tice Court on a charge of possess a.m. service of the Unitarian [ion for that—which was some-
ithing he did in Los Angeles. too
o ° ~
We're backing Ike signs
popped up all over the auditorium |
when he walked to the rostrum to
start his. address, which the White
land Ave and Culture’ and “Art and Rel). House said was carried by TV
—_—— -—— gion.’ the last considered a classic aNd radio to 1,250,000 party work
A premature baby is born jin its field A coffee hour wil} fol. ers at 26.500 rallies around = the
every three minutes in the United low the service country
States, according to a survey. * . . Ms ~ ©
= = — Meeting at 130 pm Monday at There “as a burst of applause
The Weather the Rivenoak Aventie home of its “hen kisenhower said that voters
president) Mrs. Howard Estes 19 1992 were determined to “elimi
ARONTIAC AND YHINITY rents MOMS Club nit twill heme to hale penetration by the Commu Renéey. Low tonight 34 te 4: High POrts On the state convention which "St Conspiracy in eur govern
Sark we Th Gas ce ety bod Catch ends jin Detroit today Pea with ™ nt and another when he de
Teday in Pentiac
Lowest temperature preceding 4 a4
At @am. Wind velocity 20 ™ pt follow clared
menace they did not consider that
a.red herring
That was a poke at the Truman 4
.
Direction—Southwrst Presbyterians Hold administration's handling of the
Dewntown Temprratarcs subversion problem = = ae = it eo - § . The crowd cheered. too when
gs S | = Services for Week |v sat'me:saminstration toler A 4 e weve anes. . ates “no vacillation nor in action
= The Joslyn Avenue United Pres in dealing with those who,
Sun a bok of oe A n bytenan Church will hold “Spiri- by force or violence, would over
ad _ = ae gee tual Emphasis _ Week beginning throw the government of the United
pies omorrow and lasting throu gh States
Friday in Pentiac Oct. 17 .
‘Seanperature ae » Dr. Homer B Henderson of | Eisenhower reiterated that Re
Sombersiure 9 Grove City. Pa. will preach each publicans by themselves cannot Weather—Cloudy evening at ~ o clock His topics win the November election battle
One Year Age in Ponjiac will be “A Place for God.’ “Why Appealing as he did in Los An
temperature ¢ Should 1 Be a Christian?.” “Why | Beles to independent voters and
The Barome- dissident Democrats, Eisenhowe1
declared
Weether—Pair ter of Life’ “There Is a Super We must enlist the spirited sup- ements Mz n.”’ Ww \ = - € St cniis re spirited s
The bee ett Tan | Kine " ee De Pot oa Me | port of friends and neighbors, re-
6 im ie 29 in —_ Your Howes” and “Three. Gre , | Sardiess of party. who believe in
Pridsy's fomperetere Chart | Conclusions.” reat) our principles and objectives.”
at Se The choi ; The President got one of his big-
65 53 Ment ° 3 choir from the United Pres- gest hands of the evening when he
$853 Milwaukee 54 59 byterian Church of Drayton Plains | praised the administration's rec- 4 pe} anesoets = ss will give special numbers, Wednes- ord ee the foreign policy field and
3% Mew York 6 §3,day evening and the choir from | added
ma et Touts 77 eo the Oakland Avenue United Pres For the first time in 20 years
mt oreree Cay dae, Oxterian Church will sing Thurs-| there is na active battiefield any- 51 Washington 66 63 day. : where in the world.”
| Vice-pres
i (chapter 23, verses 39-43). Assaci-
ated with the synagogue celebra-
tion of the holiday are the famous
Thanksgiving Psalms of Scriptures
(Numbers 113 to 118), with their
numerous repetitions of Hallelujah
(which is Hebrew for ‘Praise
God."’)
Ceremonial objects associated
with the holiday are the lulov, a
palm branch, the myrtle, willow
and the esrog, a citrus fru. These
represent man’s dependence on na-
ture for nourishment and beauty.
It is customary to build a booth
or lean-to outside of one’s home or
upon the synagogue altar in honor
of the holiday. In this ‘‘suko”
prayers are said and sung, lauding
the goodness of God in inspiring
seekers of freedom with courage
and in sending mankind the boun-
ties of nature.
Traditionalist Jews observe Su-
kos for eight days and follow it
with a holiday known as Simchas
Torah, or the ‘‘Rejoicing over the
Law.”” when the cycle of weekly
Biblical readings is concluded with
the last verses of Deuteronomy and
immediately begun again from the
beginning of the Book of Genesis
Reform Jews observe Sukos for
seven days and on the eighth cele-
brate Shmini Atzeret (‘The eighth-
day convocation’) with rites sim-
ilar to those on Simchas Torah
At Temple Beth Jacob. the festi-
; val of Sukos will be celebrated r with a special holiday service in
which the children of the Religious
School will participate
Monday at 8:00 p.m., there will
be a precessional to the altar by
the children who will carry bas-
ket. of food to lay before the
booth which will adern the altar
for the holiday. These baskets
will then be distributed te hos-
pitals and other institutions to
carry out thé tradition of sharing
associated with Sukos,
The festival will begin at 10 30
am. on Tuesday
Beginning Monday, Congregation
B'nai Israel will observe the Succos
(Feast of Tabernacles) Services.
with the following schedule
Monday—Mincha 5:45 p.m
Tuesday—Shacharis, 7:30 am.
Religious School Celebration, 10:30
a.m., Mincha, 5:45 p.m
Wednesday—Shacharis, 7 30 a.m
Mincha 5:45 p.m
Monday, Oct
5:45 p.m.
Tuesday—Shacharis, 7 18—Mincha.,
OW am.
YIZKOR (Memorial Service) 8 45! cratic party
p.m., Religious School Celebration
7.00 pm
Wednesday—Shacharis, 7.30 a.m
Rabbi Henry Hoschander will
conduct all of the services
The annual Simchas Torah Din
ner will be held Sunday Oct. 24
at 6 p.m
The dinner will welcome home
Mr. and Mrs, Meyer Simon, who
have been traveling extensively
‘n Europe and are now spending
the Jewish High Holy Days in
Israel. Mr. Meyer is president of
the Congregation.
The Synagogue's recently elected
officers will be installed at this
time. They are: Meyer Simon
president; Irwin) Kamper. first
Milton Ressler, second
vice-pres.; Sam Levin, treasurer,
Alvin Jacobson, financial
tary; Mel Goldman, recording sec-
retary; with Sam Toby. Charles
Eilender, Edward Blumeno, Sol
Newhouse and George Surowitz,
members of the Board
The dinner is sponsored by the
B'nai Israel Men's Club with Joe
Jacobson, general chairman secre-
Sermons Preached
in Spanish, English The Light of the World Church
on Harrison St. is holding revival
meetings every night ne®@t week
at 7:30 p. m. including Sunday.
There will be two evangelists,
Barbara Shelter who preaches in
English and entertains with the
accordion and Rose Martinez who
preaches in Spanish. Both are
from Colorado Springs, Colo.
Mrs. Raymond Martinez, wife
of the pastor of the church. will
play the piano for the meetings.
Anyone wishing transportation
may call FE 46817, Mason Funeral
Monday af 3 Service for President
of American Motors
to Be at Cranbrook
DETROIT «INS) — Services for
George W. Mason, chairman and
president of the American Motors
Corp., who died yesterday at the
age of 63, will be held at 3 p.m
Monday at Christ Church Cran-
brook .
Mason died in Detroit's Harper
Hospital, where he had been under
treatment since last Monday. His
physician said death was caused
by pancreaitis and pneumonia.
A sportsman and nature lover,
Mason was active in Boy Scout
work and was a member of the
Detroit Regional Executive Com-
mittee. He also was a_ licensed
pilot for several years, flying his
own plane on hunting and fishing
excursions as well as on business
trips.
Mason, who received an hon-
orary doctor of laws degree from
the University in 195], was an en-
ergetic backer of the Phoenix
Atomic Energy project and helped
raise money for its development.
He is survived by his wife, Flor-
ence; two sons, John and George,
anu two step-daughters, Barbara
Fead Mason and Mrs. Richard
Sharpe
California Dems
Awaiting Adlai's
Speech Tonight LOS ANGELES uw—The Demo-
crats of Southern California rally
round a home -town boy. Adlai
Stevenson, in Hollywood Bowl to-
night in a key campaign effort.
The 1952 Democratic nominee
for president is scheduled to de-
Iwer the principal speech before
an expected sell-out crowd of 20.-
000
About 300) party leaders have
contributed $100 or more each for
|the privilege of having a_ buffet
supper with the former “Tllinois
governor before the program gets
under way
Last night in Oklahdma City,
he predicted a revival of Demo-
strength in the
November elections.
The 1952 standard bearer ducked
all questions here and in Okla-
homa City regarding his own poli-
tical future But he wore a big
smile as he was met at Los An-
geles International Airport by sev-
eral hundred supporters bearing
placards, *'Stevenson in °%6."’
Christian Layman
Will Speak Sunday Stanley Tam, a Christian lay-
man from Lima. Ohio. will be
guest speaker in all of the services
partner. He is part owner of the
States Smelting & Refining Co. of
Lima. God is his senior partner
and receives 51 per cent of the
profits
In 1996. Mr Tam borrow
He went broke. He prayed and
asked God for guidance. He says.
“Suddenly, God spoke to me.’ He
his conscience. Sometimes there
they are right. His business in-
creased
Mr. Tam went to an attorney
business goes to others when he |
is gone
Jail Escape Too Easy
MONROE, La, (UP) — The city
decided to do something about its
fotting. 50-year-old wooden jail to-
day after. a 90-pound woman, Betty
Grayson. 22, ripped its iron bars at the Christan and Missionary
Alhance Church Sunday
Mr. Tam states that for him. |
God is not a vision but working
money to start the company which |
reclaims silver from photographs. |
are things vou have to do because | _SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1954
Boy, 18, Admits
Double Slaying Youth Gives No Reason
for Killing Sitter, 14,
~ and 4-Year-Old Charge
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. #—'’The
boy around the corner’ was ar-
rested yesterday in connection
with the savage two-week-old knife
slaying of pretty baby sitter Lynn
Ann Smith, 14, and her four-year-
old charge.
Police Chief Raymond P. Galla-
gher said Kenneth R. Chapin, 18,
a high school sophomore who was
a pall-bearer at the girl's funeral,
admitted in a signed statement
slaying Lynn Ann and little Stephen
Goldberg.
a: * .
Gallagher said Chapin, a 6-foot,
inch electrician’s son described
by teachers and friends as a
“good ... quiet boy,’ offered no
reason for the double slaying.
Gallagher said the youth, a Boy
Scout leader who had never before
ibeen in trouble with the police,
chain-smoked cigarettes but other-
wise was calm as he explained the
slaying and readily signed his state-
ment.
Then, Gallagher said, he told
authorities where they could find
the death knife (behind a chair
in his room) and his blood-stained
clothing hanging in a kitchen clos-
et of his home.
s s s
The police chief said ‘‘there is
no question of sex being a factor
in this case. It definitely is not."’
Gallagher quoted young Chapin’s
statement as saying he began stab-
bing and beating the girl the mo-
ment she -opened the door admit-
ting him to the Goldberg 4part-
ment in a substantial section of
Springfield.
Then, Gallagher went on, the
youth heard little Stephen cry. He
went to the child's bed and stabbed
him and beat him with the wooden
knife hangle.
* . *
The bodies were found by the
youngster’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Goldberg, when they re-
turned from a night movie. Lynn
Ann had been stabbed M times.
Her neck was broken, Stephen was
stabbed 24 times. His skull] was
fractured.
The police chief said Chapin's
arrest came after a house-to-house
check of the neighborhood around
the Smith and Goldberg homes.
He indicated that a piece of crochet
thread, found in the Goldberg
apartment, led to the Chapin home.
home.
Earlier, police who described the
thread as their best clue said it
had been wrapped around the han-
die of the knife to secure better
grip. * . °
Neighborhood companions de-
scribed Chapin as a ‘quiet boy”
who traveled alone a great deal.
They said his parents always in-
sisted he be in the house by 8 p.m.
Stunned neighbors, meanwhile.
were unanimous last night in their
amazement and disbelief. Some of
the reactions were
| “He was the only teen-ager I
| would have let into my house with-
| out a thought of my children's
| safety,’ said Mrs. Gerald Baxter
* Ld LJ
Chapin’s father in a copyrighted
j interview with the Boston Globe.
| said: “I can't understand any of
| this. My wife and I are taking this
very bad, because, above all else.
lwe firmly believe that our son is |
| innocent. I pledge myself to fight
this to the end. I'll never let my
son down
| “Ken was so close to us that
we would know, without any doubt,
if any of these things were true.
| They aren't, and we will fight for
|him all the way.”’
Frederick Marriott
Will Play Carillon | | Christ Church Cranbrook is pre-
senting carillon recitals, through
the months of October and Novem-
ber, Sunday afternoons at 4 p. m
Frederick Marriott, organist and
carillonneyr for the Kirk-in-the-
Hills, will play tomorrow and Nov
7th. Mr. Marriott came here from
the Rockefeller Memorial Chapel,
University of Chicago. °
| On Oct. 17, the recital will be
| played by August Maekelberghe of
| St. John’s Episcopal Church, De-
troit. Dr. Maurice Garabrant. or-
ganist of Christ Church will play
Oct. 24th and Oct. 3st. INLAND AWARD WINNER —
Thomas Fox, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Fox, 113 Water St., Milferd,
is one of the Pontiac Press car-
riers who received the Inland Daily
Press Outstanding Newspaperboy
award. Tommy won his award for
over two years of outstanding serv-
ice on his Milford route. He's a
busy boy in other fields, too, Tom-
my belongs the the Presbyterian
church and its Senior Hi Youth
Fellowship, the Boy Scouts and is
en the working committee of the
Milford Teen Canteen, In his spare
time he's an airplane spotter for
the Civil Defense Ground Observer
Corps. He plans to become an Air
Force pilot after, he attends college.
Youths Get Jail
for Drinking Three Girls, One Boy
Draw Sentences After
Pleading Guilty
Three teenage girls were sen-
tenced to 12 days in Oakland Coun-
ty Jail and a 20-year-old youth
paid a $30 fine and drew five days
Friday after a stern lecture by
Municipal Judge Ceci] McCallum
about the group's drinking.
After hearing their pleas of
guilty to illegal possession of beer,
McCallum called the youths’ pre-
dicament ‘unfortunate and_intol-
erable."
The three girls, on probation
for a similar charge growing
out of a Sept. 4 raid by Pontiac
Police vice squad on a drinking
party at 14 Clark St., are Joyce
Gjethaug, 18, of 873 Woodland
Dr.; Doris Nightengale, 18, and
Bobbie Sloop, 19, both of 171 N.
Mill St. The trie failed te pay
$30 fines each after McCallum
sentenced them te five days and
$30, or 12 days.
Robert Franzell, 20, of 1250
Cherrylawn Dr., owner of a car in
which all four were arrested Oct.
1, escaped the extra seven days in
jail when he paid the $30 fine.
McCallum said that the probation
period for the three girls would
be increased after serving their
sentence, and Franzell would get
30 days probation.
According to Detective Raymond
E. Meggitt. ®f the vice squad,
Franzell admitted buying beer
from an unidentified man at Bag-
ley and Wessen Sts. prior to the
arrest.
Three bottles of beer were found
in the auto which Miss Gjelhaug
was driving
Club Will Celebrate
10th Anniversary The Ladies’ Club of New Bethel
Baptist Church will celebrate their
tenth anniversary Sunday at
3:30 p.m.
The Rev. L .M. Martin and his
choir of the New Light Baptist
Church in Detroit have been in-
vited to be in charge of the serv-
ice, according to the pastor, the
Rev. William H. Bell
Head Cut in Accident
Jerry Thomas, 17, of 39 E. Ber-
nard, Hazel Park, was admitted to
St. Joseph Mercy Hospital with
injuries suffered yesterday when
his auto skidded on loose gravel
and struck a utility pole off Avon
road near John R road in Avon
Township. According to the hos-
pital, Thomas has a concussion and
head cuts.
Two Nipping
Franklin Hou |
4
>
d
a
> ~wowrer,:,_-sew'TTT™'TTYr?*
Catholic loyalty to the Pope
is the cause of never-ending
amazement to many non-
Catholics. 4
They wonder how an
exclusively spiritual leader
can command the devotion |
of nearly four hundred mil-
lions of people. They can-
not explain why this vast religious
family ... representing every race,
color, language and political belief
on the face of the earth.
and grows through the ages, while
man-made empires have their day
of glory and then disappear
What is there abour this one
man that causes people to speak
of him in a hundred tongues as
“Holy Father”?
We find the answer, of course
mot necessarily in the holiness of
the man himself, but in his Christ
given office. The answer. 1s found
by tracing the history of the Cath-
olic Church ... the history of 262
successive Popes .. back through
nearly 2,000 years to Christ Him lives
We know as a matter of his-
torical fact that Christ did establish
His Church ...that He commis-
sioned the Apostle Peter as its first
head... that He sent His Apostles
forth to teach men to observe all
things He had commanded
We know from the New Testa
ment that the Church was actually
KNIGHTS OF
4422 LINDELL BLVD. Why Millions Call Him
“HOLY FATHER”
SUPREME COUNCIL
Religious Information Bureau
organized...that it was
governed by the Apostles
under the leadership of
Peter . .
ing Chriss’s truth far and
wide, long before the last
book of the New Testament
\ was written and the books
of the Bible were collected
into one volume that it was teach-
Christ's purpose in organizing
a Church was to make certain that
the good news of Redemption
would be preached to all men...
even to the end of the world. To
accomplish this with fallible men,
required that He establish a Church
—divinely protected from error in
transmitting His teaching through
the centuries .
The Catholic Church traces its
unbroken history back to the Apos-
tles—back to Christ. And Catholics
today call Pope Pius XII “Holy
Father” because he is the lawful
and historical successor to Peter,
the first Pope. He is in our time...
as Peter was in the first century
.. the Vicar of Christ on earth.
Would you like to know more
about the Pope..: why the prom-
ises made by Christ to Peter and
his successors make the Pope the
most important man in the world?
Then write today for a pamphlet |
which we shall send you free and
without any obligation. Ask for
Pamphlet No. 4-N.
COLUMBUS
ST. LOUIS 8, MO. PARKDALE NAZARENE Parkdale and Hollywood, One Bleck West of Baldwin
9:45 Sunday School 10:45 Wership Service
EVANGELISTIC SERVICE 7:30 P. M.
REV | WAYNE & WELTON Minister—FE t-¢078
CHURCH OF CHRIST 1180 N. Perry — Phone FE 2-6269
MILTON E. TRUEX, Minister
9: A.M. Sunday
90 P.M. Wednesday Eve. Service
Me ALM. Sunday Worship
871 Rebinweed Ave. “THE HERALD OF TRUTH” Bible Scheel
WXNYZ—Kach Sen. 1:00 te 1:30 FM. 7 7:30 P.M. Senday Evening Service te
FR &-7e62
REVIVAL Through Oct. 10
ot the
WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH 67 N. Lynn St.
REV. C. E. ZIKE, Evangelist
REV. CHAS. FOSTER, Song Leader
Every Night at 7:30
This is YOUR Invitation
REV. C. E. ZIKE Rev. C. D. Friess. Pastor Study
Traver as toustmaster, introduced
the Rev. William H,. Marbach
D.D., of the First Presbyterian
Church, the Rev. H. H. Savage
D.D. of the First Baptist Church
and the pastor of Bethany Bap- ing
tist Church, the Rev. Fred R.
Tiffany.
Dr. Marbach said: “I came to
Pontiac in 1931 and Dr. Traver has
helped to make my ministry a
blessing. Dr. Traver has a great
depth of character. He stands out
has lived a
lor.g time but because he has
reached. into our hearts and re-
minds us of our Savior. It is a
Privilege to know him.”
“I have been pastor of the First
Baptist Church for 35 years and
people still meet me on the street
and call me Dr. Traver,” stated
Dr. Savage. ‘‘The memory of Dr
Traver is so precious that his
name comes to peoples minds
first, at the mention of the First
Baptist Church."
Dr. Savage added, “Dr. Traver
believed in neighborhood Sunday
Schools and started the ones at
Bethany Baptist and Memorial
Baptist churches, | have stepped
| in—after the plans were all in
operation and am continuing the
program.’
The Rev. Mr. Tiffany spoke of
Dr Traver as one of his warmest
and closest friends. “I thought it
might be difficult ¢o serve as pas-
tor to a former minister but Dr
Traver has been so kind and under-
standing. He has come to me at the
close of a sermon with encouraging
and stimulating comments,’ he
remarked
A letter way read from Dr.
Traver’s son, the Rev. Roland
Traver, He wrote: “He is the
finest and best father in the
world.”
The Men's Club is furnishing the
pastor's study and in honor of Dr.
Triver calling. it the “‘Traver
Study
Clenford Haviland presented the
honor guest with a dressing gown
from the men of the church
Dr. Traver thanked his friends
fer coming, for the honor given
him, his gift and closed with a
word of mye
Church Youth Group
to Present Program A young people's Rally will be
held Saturday Oct. 16 at Bethel
Tabernacle of which the Rev. Ches-
ter Swoffer is pastor.
Services will be at 2:30 p.m. and
7:30 p.m. A pot-luck dinner will be
served between the meetings. The
youth group will present gq play,
“The Five Wise and Five Foolish,”
at the evening service. The Rev.
Lul: Yoder will be in charge of
th» program, There will be special
speakers at both services
Entomologists say the first flight
on earth probably was made by an
linsect
87 Lefeyette St.
Al Welsh
Make this a Family Altair Mr. and Mrs.
200 Families
Howard G. Artz, Pastor
Free Methodist Church
Presents
MR. and MRS. AL WELSH of Battle Creek, Mich.
In Rally Day Program . . .
Sunday—10:00 A. M.
THE ENTIRE FAMILY Is Our Theme
This Is Also the Opening Day of the Christian Life.
Burtella Green, S.S. Supt. (2 Blocks West of Sears)
Is Our Goal
Sunday School Contest.
Local Minister
Attends Meeting Biennial Convention of
ULCA Held in Canada
First Time in 36 Years
Nearly 700 delegates from 32
synods in the United States and
seven Canadian provinces are at-
tending the 19th biennial cenven-
tion of the United Lutheran Church
in America, being held in Toronto,
Canada Oct. 6 to 13. This is the
first time in %6 years the conven-
tion has been held in Canada.
The Rev. George L. Garver is
present as a visitor representing
the Lutheran Church of the As-
cension and the local members
of the ULCA. The ULCA, with
2,150,000 members, is the largest
Lutheran body in North Amer-
jea.
The delegates are struggling for
agreement on important church
questions such as the organization-
al structure of the church and the
union of America’s Lutheran bod-
ies.
Theme for .the convention § is
“Christ — the Hope of the World."'
Dr. Franklin Clark Fry, president
of the ULCA for 10 years, is pre-
siding over the business sessions.
On Sunday, Oct. 10, the dele-
gates will attend church services
at Kitchener-Waterloo, center of
Lutheranism in eastern Canada.
Delegates and visitors will be
guests in Lutheran homes there
at dinner, marking the tradition-
al Canadian observance of
Thanksgiving Day.
Sunday afternoon, the program
at Kitchener Memorial Auditorium
will be broadcast over a national
radio network, with an orchestra,
two choirs and 10,000 persons tak-
ing part. LIEUT. WILBURN LEGREE
Flint's Policeman
Will Speak, Sing ©
at Sunday School Lieut. Wilburn Legree, known as
Flint's Singing Cop, wil] be ‘guest
speaker and singer for children
at the Sunday School Rally to-
morrow at 10 a. m. at Pilgrim
Holiness Church.
For 20 years, Lieut. Legree has
been a regular officer of the Flint
Police Dept. He is in charge
of the Child Safety Division. and
supervises the traffic safety of
30,000 youngsters in public and
parochial schools.
Lieut. Legree has dedicated his
musical ability to singing Gospel
songs and has sung on both radio
and television. He sings in over
&5 churches a year at hymn sings,
youth rallies and children’s
meetings
Through the courtesy of the
Flint Police Dept. he will ap
pear in uniform.
REV. H. EUGENE RAMSEY
Additional Church News
on Page 2
Minister Will Be Installed
at First Church of God The First Church of God will in-
stall its new pastor, the Rev. H.
Eugene Ramsey, Sunday at
p.m. He succeeds the Rev. Grover
C. Johnson who has accepted a
pastorate in Dayton, Ohio
The Rev
Marion, IIl
from the Butler School of Religion,
Indianapolis, Ind. While attending
school in Indianapolis, he was pas-
tor of churches in Anderson and
Alexandria, Ind. His last pastorate
was at Delaware, Ohio
At the installation, the Rev.
Walter A. Shriner of the State Fair
Church of God, Detroit, will give
the charge to Rev. Ramsey and
he will accept. The charge to the
congregation will be given by the Ramsey was born in
Rev. W. Dale Frye, pastor of
Northwestern Church of God in
Detroit. The Rev. Mary Miller of
+ the Pontiac church will accept the
charge
After the service, a reception
will be held in the church parlor
for the new minister, his wife,
Betty and two-year-old daughter,
The Christian and
Missionary Alliance Church
(Near Orchard Lake Ave.)
Rev. G. J. Bersche, fener
Sunday Schoo! ..... 9:30 a.m
Morning Worship .. 11:00 a. m.
Alliance Youth
| Fottewehtp weeceese 6:15 p.m.
Evangelistic Service 7:30 p.m.
Guest Speaker:
MR. STANLEY TAMM, Christian
layman from Lima, Ohte Rachel Elon
Youth to Present
Special Speaker,
Holy Land Film Joseph Zacchello,
Catholic priest, will speak tonight
at the Youth Rally at the Gingell-
ville Baptist Church. Mr. Zacchello
was born in Ven-
ice, Italy and
ordained a Ro-
man _ Catholic
priest in 1939.
Russ Attwater
of the First Bap-
tist Church will
lead the singing
with Jane Ann
Fulcher of the
Silvercrest Bap-
tist Church at
the piano. Besides the speaker,
there will be a vocal solo by Sally
Sebastian of Perry Park Baptist
Church.
The Moody Institute of Science
film, ‘‘The Stones Cry Out,”’ will
be shown at the First Baptist a converted
ZACCHELLO
Church Sunday at 8:45 p.m. This
From Our Film
Rental Library
NOW IN STOCK
All
MOODY
Bible Institute
SCIENCE
SERIES
16mm Sound
| Motion Picture
Films Call Us for Rentals!
Christian —
Literature Sales
39 Oakland Ave.
i is a color flim showing an expedi-
tion into the Holy Land.
Three Choirs to Sing
for Special Services The Baldwin Ave. Evangelical
United Brethren Church will hold
special meetings, beginning to-
morrow at 7:30 p. m. and continu-
ing through Oct. 17
The Rev. Lloyd S. Scheifle of
the Grace Evangelical United
Brethren Church of Detroit will
speak each evening. One of the
three choirs, Chancel, Chapel and
Carol will assist at the services.
2:30}
He was graduated | Pastor Presents Issues
A series of Sunday night meet-
ings will begin in the Riverside
Seventh-Day Adventist Church to-
morrew evening at 7:30 p. m.
Elder Herbert E. Lohr, pastor
of the church, will present ‘“What
the Bible Teaches About Today's
Problems.” Lewis Johnson will
; }lead in the singing of favorite gos-
pel hymns.
>
FIRST
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH W. Huron at Wayne St.
William H. Marbech
Edward D. Auchard
Pastors
9:45 A. M. Church School j
11 A. M.
“CHRISTIANS AND
CHARITY GAMBLING” Marbach, Preaching
_f
THE FIRST CHURCH
OF THE BRETHREN
44 N. ROSELAWN
Repentance is Never too Soon, i
May be too Late.”
Revival Starts Sunday Oct. 10-234
Sunday School, 10:00 A.M
Morning Service, 11:00 by Rev.
George Jeffrey, Special Muste
Evening by Evangelist. 700 P.M.
Special Music ‘.
0 e——————SXSX
The Joslyn Ave. United
Presbyterian Church
Joslyn at Third
Spiritual Emphasis Week
October 10-17
Daily Services at 7:30 P. M.
Revival Services by
Evangelist Homer Henderson
ot Grove City, Pa.
“8 days with the man of
Galilee”
Seng Leader, Robert 8. Nelsen
UNITY Rev. Eve Edeen, Minister
Sunday Service 11:00 A. M.
Class Wed. 8:00 P. M.
WJLB 7:45 A. M. Daily
Unity Beoks and Literature
First United
Pentecostal Church
OF PONTIAC
ONENESS
90 W. Howard St.
Everyone Welcome!
Thurs. 7:45 P.M.
Sat. 7:45 P.M.
Sun. Morn. 11:00 A. M.
Sun. Night 7:45 P.M.
REV. MARVIN P. HESTER
“The Whole Gospel te the
Whole World”
SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY:
“ARE SIN, DISEASE
AND DEATH REAL?”
Wednesday Evening Testimental
Meeting at 8:60 o'Cleck
FREE READING ROOM
2 EAST LAWRENCE STREET
Week s 08 Fee lt
“First Church of Christ
Scientist
Lawrence and William Sts.
eee = 2 42 ete oe
How Christian Science Heals
“SERVING YOUR COUNTRY
WITHOUT PENALTY”
Station CKLW—800 Ke.
Sunday, 9:45 A. M.
Sunday School 10 A. M.
Worship Service
11:00 A. M.
Evangelistic Service
| 7:45 P.M.
t Fred Peter, ao i \
4. Calvary
Assembly Church | | 1517 Joslyn (Full Gospel)
|
|
——
THE PLEASANT
GROVE MISSIONARY
BAPTIST CHURCH 128 W. Pike St.
SUNDAY
Services: 11 A. M.
and 7:30 P. M.
Rev. S. Littlejohn. Pastor
NEW HOPE
BIBLE CHURCH Paster, Elden Mudge
CLARKSTON, MICH.
@ EVERYONE INVITED
@ NON-DENOMINATIONAL
Sunday School ........
B.T.U. « « @ @ « 6 & -«.
Evening Worship
Wed. Prayer Meeting. .
REV. A. H. MULLINS. Pastor
First Southern Missionary
BAPTIST CHURCH 368 East Wilson Ave.
9:45 A.M.
Morning Worship .....11:00 A.M.
sseees 6:45 PLM,
cesses 7:30 PLM,
. 7:30 P.M,
Young People’s Bible Study 8:00 P. M.
Attiliated with Southern Baptist Convention
Phone FE 4-8574
cn
. (‘THE PONTISC PRESS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1954 ee > . os ~~ ? . : y <
‘ . 2 Fe
‘
:
j : * = SS
| | | member wf prior service credited to| shall forfeit all his rights tm and ¢ , ‘tied with the B. th | be Ms | bis service account. | deferred retirement allowance areridl euch designated ae “a Soieae scr and shall be paid in equal menthly, e- | on peg spline oir | Savineg Pend gad :
P . | | 27. “Service means service rendered for in this section jviwing the said retirant. then such cit. { *#iments iss hdrawal | = cetatnse, his eligible velireusemh #
SG WC tie Gy Pe [tothe ity by ei"perich ts an olficer RETIREMENT ALLOWANCE options | ference git “ay, “shall be paid io is G,,.4) Retvement shall mean GULURERT Age" ang. accumulated eomiringione of m c 4 . . t 2
i | | 28 “Prwer service means service); a ar 7 rT dusabune, oon hich shal S@liowance granted under the provisions such disability beneficiary shall be trans.
| | rendered te January 1. 1006 @éte of his retirement. but not there- sabilily pension which shah ~perirmgs ; |ferred from the Annuity Savings Pund
! ; Produce . | 20 “Membership service means | Sfter. any member may elect to re- consist of 8 pension of F118 of bis | O ipenciuiry. n r-|to the Annuity Reser’e Fund. If such
{ oe = ceive his service retirement lowance ®¥erage final compensation multiplied it)--Beneficiary shall mean eny pe ' for
3 ‘7 allowance | disability beneficiary’ should die before
’ ~ hoe rendered on end efter January 2 . benefit payable throughout is 7 the number of years and fraction of | son tn receipt of a pension annuity. re- \ asinine his eligio'+ retirement " the
i DETROIT PRODUCE | | 210 “Credited service” means the, life, called a eeguiar retirement allow- Se oe ee ue ae Slat — oe of ni, | amount of bis accumulated Conthiutians
: DETROIT (UP) — Wholesale prices on lsum of the prior service and member- | ance. or hé may elect to receive the aig disability pension shall begin as of osenmont. e pre lstanding to his credit in the Annuity :
: ship service credited- to a members actuarial equivalent) computed as of i i 3 Savings F.nd shail be paid tn accord=
. public farmers markets reported by the . : service account the date of his retirement. of his regu Mie este Rots eeise ~ — a is) Annuity Reserve shall mean the ance with the provisions of section 26
. A ;
Agent for German Mill — = : 4 Buildings Destroyed 211 “Regular wmterest’ means such lar retirement allowance in a reduced- the. cn ns apeneation "tor “disability cenit coe eerdiin nc ween Section $3. Hon-Duty Diseuaey pr
aps Pruits: Apples, Crabapple, No 1, 273. . CON or aaa ths ae nal | etTteneel allowance, parable, tnsougd. | retirement filed ‘wih the Roard of lieu of any. annuity computed upon (tt, .UzT ety csecinon 31. a. alaaniiy : to Provide First Steel 1.25 bu: Delicious, fancy, $80 bu: No 1.| OS Fire Does $500,000 Greas take te Muse Oatsemnine © Weavbled. | cesshiciars, in cecardanes SiN (is Gie- |e a Che eee i ae can Caneeres the basis of such mortality tables, and | sotonecotigl who has attained bis
| * 400-450 bu; Greenings. No 1. 3.00-3 $0 ° that regular interest shell be neither visions of option }. 2 or 3. as herein. is later and shall continue to his at. fewer Interest. as the Board shall eligible ‘Yetirement age shall receive a
| for Project : Jonathon, fanc Dam ein texas. tiess than 2 per cent per annum DOr giter set forth lainment of his vgluntary retirement age | *@°?t . ent allowance as provided
<= 3g aoa a ey a eae : mere Wan ¢ per com per annum, com! CASH REFUND ANNUITY or priss recovery The said disability ‘t)--Penaion Reserve shall mean the | 965vice eee ft a disability beneficiary
i . “ . . 3.50 bu; McIntosh. fancy, ¢50@ bu: Ne 1, . ‘pounded annually . | . pension shall be subject to sections 24 Present value of ail payments to be | for oy not attained his eligible re-
' NEW YORK —The first big 300-375 bu: Northern y, No 1, 400 WICHITA FALLS, Tex. W—, 213 a ee tn ee ee ar rehab and 2 hereot . ram en account of any pension er ae age shall receive the following
. . * za ean: ucte = Re iu o cas Pty li uo bsion com- :
coder tor sire}. ty be weed om the prot ge ref wuahig ieaae, Thirteen persons were unaccounted | from af ampenations! (sts member | refund annuity portions of his reduced occent ans ae AILGoMAy earn wae a ig a the foe te Sach mortalicy botany h Refund Annuity “A cash
i .) 5 4 a : * 2 a = , j ividual account in retirement allowance an aggregate “tion 21 h i sien) irewul 7 cacti ian ‘as—Cas a 3
i St Lawrence Seaway project has 3.75 bu: No 1, 2.75-3 25 bu. Cider. No 1, | for here today after fire destroyed it aeeey Srmes tes “together with amount equal fo his arammieled con ae 8 pesca peel ie glee nate ne a tne Hosea see) ndagt na retund annuitly —_ Capos mmr
been awarded to the Montreal, oo ke - ae dea cn toe, fanc io small three-story Milam Hotel | sogeier —- thereon he im tributions standing to his credit in the the provisions of section 171° hereof u— Eligible Retirement Age stuell be ectuaria} equivalent of Paee Oe credit in
; ; a : ’ ‘apes, No s 2 2 “Compensation” means e cOM- annuity savings fund at the time of Jed. that 1 ym putt hin said ces s fu sembers othe : contributions -
i. Que. a of the Manufac 1, 85-100 pk Huckleberries, No.1, 3.00. | and ee nee ee received from the City by @ hts retirement. the difference between cabo he anell not Orecene) sstvact Pelicaunen tae nie ehelused i tte the Annuity Savings Fund et the time
, turers Steel Corp. 325 12-pt case. Pears. Bartlett. fancy. | ments person for service rendered by him to) nis said accumulated contributions and credit for the period he was receiving Cry For policemen and firemen “eligi- | Of his retirement and A
The ; . ad _ | 450-500 bu: No 1, 350-400 bu: | : jthe City. In case a member's compensa®- the said ageregate amount of annuity a disability pension provided for IM pie retirement age’ shall be age fifty- ‘bi Disability Retirement Pensian. 2
award was annoan — iy ng ba = No 1. 250-| Fire Capt. Joe Counts said, how- (ody AS AD coring fore gee | payments received by him shall be paid sects m3 tb) Paty ; Upon sets five years The Board may in the disability retirement | Deemith t1 ads),
“% m, - pM | \ | ht niary retirement ay 1e 06 ooh - : t ndredth =
terday by the local office of | 2% bu. Plums, Prune, No 1. £00229 over. that it would be “up in the |Es'compensstion act pail. in money, 10,060 persan, or Persone ae he shall he, MahoMdnc'toreiect an option ‘pro ational inteveat, during, time of *ar fis average final compensation fot 8c Manufactures Steel which, 5 | 4-bu: Quince, No 1. 4505.00 bu Water- day” before it was definitely known mean: tne average of the highest annual | Guly executed and filed with the Board | ‘Med oi sn et Oe ory other hational emergency’ extend. the Year of service “credited, Wi Til Sebo)
agent for a West German steel | ™¢!0ms. No 1. 100-1580 bu whether anybody actually died in | compensations received by a member It there be ee much bday pe | Section % In the event (1) a member S6¢ at which any member ts eligible — bari Ma Redorneg pension of one
A 3 . : Beans. green, flat. No 1, . iduring any period of § consecutive. but OF persons surviving (he reser the result of a personal injury % retire . aes rovided
mill, secured the contract in com dois bu: beans. green. Kentucky | the blaze which started yesterday not necessarily continuous, years of then such difference, if any shall be ort ccexe™ Shap vouil tall andilini: we ‘v) -Firemen shall mean employes of See ney poet Together
itive bidding with major Amer- | Wonder, No 1. 200-250 bu; . green, ; jeredited service cohtained within his 10| paid to his legal representative or OF Cumenne Be ene with the City, | the Fire Department of the City holding : ‘}) shall not ex- afternoon at 5:50 p.m h the basic pensioin (1) shall
es nd Eu teel ill No 1}, 2.00-2.75 bu; beans, Lim Ne 1) . p.m. ; years of credited service immediately JOINT AND IRVIVORSHIP lor (2) @ atsability retirant. who retired | the rank of pipeman, or fire-fighter. or ote * HG Lees dollars per annum,
ican a ropean steel mulls. 250-300 bu: beans, Roman. Ne i, 3.@9- | Counts told the Associated Tress | preceding his retirement In the event ALLO@\NCE cract section 18 hereof dies. within a [higher rank but it shall not include |Cfed mine hundred collate ber Aas
The order will provide some/325 bu; deans. Wax. No 1. 3.00- | a+ 4:30 am. today he still had | “#,>** less than 5 years of credited) Option 2 Upom tW& death of a re- period of 3 years from and after the (1) the civtlan employes of the Pire oF sections si gaa 38 :
9 t shee li 350 bu Beets, No 1, 85-100 dos behs; , _— y ~ |service. his average final compensation tirant his reduced retirement allowance | effective date of his disability retirement Department nor .2) privately em- © Peco 23_-Death Incurred in Line of
12,000 tons of t stee] pilings | fancy. 125 dos behs. topped, No four - pieces of fire equipment shall be the average of his annual com- ,nall be continued throughout the life and prior to his attainment of his ployed firemen nor 13) persons tem. Duty If a member ts killed in the
for about 1'2 million dollars. 1, 150-200 bu Broceoli, fancy, 2.50 ing wate the smoulder | pensations received during his tote! years of and paid to such person having an Voluntary retirement oa as rise reaut porarily employed as firemen during rlormance of his actual duty to the
14-bu: No 1, 150-200 %%-bu pumping water on = INZ | of credited service ; insurable interest in his hfe. as ne of the same injury oF disease Kc “| emergencies ahaha the result of illness
; i i tired and im either case ‘1! > City. or dies as th u
The pilings will be used in the | No 1. 65-100 bu: cabbage, curly, No 1, | ruins. At that time, he said, no) 215 “Final compensation” means & hall have nominated — by written |e WSs Ferrer or Gioty or duende go. Policemen shall mean employes Ci) 00 O° oP injuries’ received while in a
1.00-1.25 bu; cabbage, red. No 1, 1.25- found member s —— rate of contain | designation duly executed and filed | OF Sw sr peste ee Posty found by the (Of the Police Department of the City leave performance of hix actual duty to”
construction of a cofferdam at | 150 bu: cabbage sprouts, No 1, 1.00-1.50 bodies had been found. gre = employment with the with the Board prier to the effective tees yas have bepn the result of his | Molding the rank of patrolman. or higher in. ‘city and such death, illness of
Cornwall, Ont. Mannix-Raymond | >u. | Carrots, No 1, 75-94 dos behs; car- Jao OY 216" “Annuity” means an _anoual | date of Mcuniiens awe AND | actual performance of duty in the oe saa maples et tie Wale Dee eeeaat. ‘injuries resulting in death be piracy 4
nf aj ey = : C : =a 1 s 0 wlie a |
Co, of Montreal by the engineer. | (254, es, yt Le LM Mu, coal, | Fire Chief Eugene White carlier jamouet, vazenie, Mtl! ,mattns ai | SURVIVORSHIP ALLOWANCE | BOtadta'"in paragraphs vans irate) of, (2) rates, emplorea patroine. from he-actusl performance of ty Oy ing and construction firm which |}. 175-250 crate: celery, No 1. 75-125 |had said there was a possibility | cumulated contributions of a member Option 3. Upon the death of a re- ig, and ie) of this section shall be | Dil, ')) pettune temporarily employed 88 14 ihe City. and the feport of the
trd | doz, celery root, No 1. 125-150 doz | gyme persons were trapped in the 2.17. “Pension means an annual | trant, one-half of his reduced retire- paid subject to paracra if} of this slats & emergencies | Medical Director. ts concurred in by the
wilt build the cofftrdam. | Corn, sweet. No 1, 75-125 5-doz. Cucum- amount, payable in equal monthly in-| went allowance shall be continued | section and to section hereof x ords of the Masculine Gender) Bourg there shall be paid
f ~ .| bers, dill size. fancy. 400 bu; No 1 -blazing 75>-room hotel. Of the 27 | staliments for life. derived from moneys throughout the life of and paid to such tar The said deceaged person's accu shall imelude words of the feminine} |. accdmulated Contributions. The
Manufacturers Steel acted 5S | '%5"395 pu. cucumbers. > taney. provided by the City | person, having an insurable interest in| mulated contributions “standing to his gender and vice-versa, and words of the |. 00) visted contributions standing to
agent’ lor the German firm of | 500 bu: No 1 wy as cucumbers. guests registered, more than a doz- ("314 “Retiremen’ a.iowance’ means! his itfe. as he shall have nominated | credit im the annuity savings fund at singular number in relation to persons ine member's credit in the Annuity
ae ifelenhartic AC. of os i cibsare tenes 10 Sa ee 1350-3 68 bu | en made their way to safety by an = —— the annuity and the ep 1%, peg designation duly —_ the time of Lod a precy eg Larne oe include the plural number and | ee ings Pund shall be pfid in accordance
estlale e A. G. of Dortmund, ‘ 65- a 19. ‘Retirement’ means withdrawal and filet with the Board prior to the accordance wi provisions of sec: vice-versa | tion 26
. : Dill. No 1, 65-80 doz behs Eggplant. | gutside fire escape. In all, 14 guests | from active service with @ pension ot | effective date of his retirement tion 26 hereof Section 11 Termination of Membership with the provisions - = - aan at
which designed and developed tht | long. No 1. 125-175 bu Onions. green. t ‘third of the ro ‘bi —Widow's Benefits pe
; -4 |Fetirement allowance granted under this 182 Any member whe continues tn ib). A pension of one 3! Except as provided in sections 13 and 17 ber's final
pilings |Ne,4; 23-06 don ocho, cntens, ry. He, | were accounted for, Counts sald. | iSepir ner{iheeserice of the City on or afer the ‘aa eommeeann Gt il Sesceers Per" (ey thola any pron, oe anseah rum Smpenation shal be pala hie pee } . ; - 3 . . i i 2 “Retirant’ means any member | date he either ‘a: adquires 25 years son shall be pa a ow to COB service more than three years in a : . :
f The Manufacturers firm here 1, 15 cents Ib Parsley, curly, No 1, iremen said heavy smoke and ao ae CG aon ok faire ee ulre ye on es A egg Hl ! y lit he leaves a widow. to continue during
| oer { E jl) | 78-1.00 doz bens: parsicy, root. No 1.|Wwater damage to nearby busi-| ment iecents pavyella alcaned Wo tue cl eee eee, eb! ee eee meh. if Sddition to a widow the /Period of four consrcutive years after ney widowhood. provided. that such
said shipments from Europe will! 757199 doz Parsnips. No 1, 1.50-2.00 : provisions of this Chapter leet apes end peasy ie) of ume enreers Of said deceased person leaves an unmar | ee Sea a widow shall be the person to whom he
begin immediately, with deliveries | ‘%-bu. Peas, Black Eye. No i, 280-350 | nesses may bring the total damage |""y3; "Beneficiary means any per. “rtdited service whichever of ia) and reg child of chikiren under age 18 ye@rs. | vi inereupon ce Clary or die, he was married at the time—of his retire.
~ bu. Peppers, Cayenne No 1, 63-100 pk: to a half million dollars. Besides | son except @ retirant. in receipt of a (2! pect iret. may. at any time priet | ooch aueh child shall receive @ pension pon cease to be a member ment from service, if his retiment
scheduled to be completed about age ice . lg : . °S | Sension oF retirement allowance payable | {0 the effective date of his retirement. | Of ag equal share of one-fourth of his Section 15 Optional Retirement from preceded his death as provided for in
: peppers, hot, No 1. 1 00-150 bu; peppers, the el t ba { this but not thereafter, by written declara- U the marriage | Service Any member who has attained fit y-
mid-December—before the port of | Pimento, No 1. 1.50-1.75 bu. peppers, hotel, a shoe store, barber pursuant to the provisions or SNS tton duly executed and filed with the fie CO Otte at af ane 18 years of [Dis eligible retirement age as detined | it aneer ora suieieh pray —ag aolom
Montreal closes for the winter. sweet, No 1, 100-150 bu; peppers. red. | shop. department store and a eo “annuity reserve® means the Board. in the manner and form pre-| any such child his pension shall termi- | ' sections 2 ‘us may retire trom City | cr to the provisions of paragraph if) ‘
sweet. No 1. 100-150 bu Potatees. No irm li -ribed by the Board, elec th 2/ edistribution rvice upon fis written aplication to |} :
1 135-150 50-Ib bag: pote Me 1, | music were demolished. fe sage a aly’ cnanity “com: | previded for in section 18 1 hereof and oy Fg Seve hg = oe maining eligible |the Board setting torth at what time not | of this section gg Ae Sees wis = :
E bag , pkins. ii F : : od ‘ less than thirty da r | «er Children's nefits ow ;
| t N A A ted cotee be Regubin ory No 1 *s-96 C ts said two of his firemen bie Flow EN = RPh ng tore tee mee Aaa co be deena pice chudren the event peg no widow, | Dinety days sawenausel ars ee la Living. If. in addition to a :
eg po “pehs: . * 95. red inor injurie see adopt ttoned and filing thereof he desires to| child or children under age eig 4
S 10 p in an cee Seach henm ie 1 beer se suffe A m j “a -. cng “reserve means the al — enpiaair| = as Leas tp oe or &. uf heme We pein Boag ats, re oe be retired | years also survive the deceased member, =
~ bu; squash, Butternut, No 1. 1.00-1.25 preagat value of all payments to be » th —, wee - a thea ta ana Teon shall have attained age 18|, Section 16 1a) Compulsory Retirement each child under age eighteen years .
. 4 bu: squash, Delicious. No 1, 1.00-150 bu made en account of any pension com: | saryi penelbeaaey | = he ef years wa this unmarried child of chil-|from Service Subject to the provisiosis | shall receive a pensiam | equal te ©
rt U e wash, Hubbard, No 1, 1.25-1.75 bu: uted vpen te becle Of such mortality | fective dete af the prier to bers ve. |dren under eae 18 vears 1 each re-|f paragraph ‘b) of this section, any | proportionate share of one-fourth the
cask Malan Me 1 los Gea: oreca $ ewer : and other tables of experience. and regu-|iement hi: OS ceenet eption |corve @ panelon, of = ee his final | Peliceman or fireman member who has | deceased member's final compensation. s
= ee eee Cee birement, his previews seston sf option if there be Sttained age sixty-two years and any | |f any child dies, marries, or attains age . |
£ lar interest. as the Board shall from " leompensation. Provided, that
: - sq . i i 2 and nomination of survivor bene | member | oth | o
DETROIT u—Gov,. Williams, in| yomatoes. fancy, 125 14-Ib bskt: ‘ . . : es ees ort tirement age’ sha {Cry shall be automatically revoked mere — -— ee oa paoatte oe Cay service whe Ses bualeok age [Geman us maata 46 eee
a surprise move last night ap- | 75-100 14-Ib bskt; tomatoes. No 1, 2.00- 60 t embers other ®* of the date of such death or year ees } share of one-half of | *!xty-five vears shall be retired forthwith | - ehildr der e eighteen years,
: oer ON l 250 bu. Turnip, No 1, 1.00-130 dos mae echiueen aus arenes For police-|@!vorce. If any mémber, who has an age lh gid ae Rg Upon marriage, |bv the Board. provided. that thix pare ut os oveee an bey ome sseaiee
; pointed a young Detroit Negro law- | pcns. Turnip, topped, No 1, 1.50-2.00 bu. men and firemen members voluntary re- = ——_ —_ tor - _ dees or attainment of age 18 years of — =n os tes 7 oe nt rere 4 pension greater than one-fourth .
f : ake . . = rs ae Ys The | section oree, es while in nell termi- cer 0 y appol yer as a judge of Wayne County paltttuce and saled greens: Celety cab DETROIT « — The nation’s | Brement oce sal oe xationdl interest | service of the City prior to the effec. | eale ‘and seoe ube a redistribution | bY the Commission ee paeks andar tena ae
Circuit Court. age, No 1. 125-175 bu. Endive. Mea: | auto factories this week will build | during tme of war engageq in by the|tive date of his retirement. the saii/by the Board to his remaining eligible | | 0) Ettenin of Series Ube ee graph shall be subject to the provisions
The a intee is 34-year-old | 300 b Escarele. No 1 100-158 bu: | 58.717 Uni States. or other national emer-| survivor beneficiary shall immediately | chiidren under age 18 years In no case written request of a member who has | { ragraph if) of this section, and to
. ppo as ed , ceurala Weakest passenger cars and 15,841 | gency extend the age at dich eng |receive the same retirement sllevenes | shail amy child of anid doscased porsen |atlained Mic See a cémpeioery Temee | elton 86 .
Wade H. McCree, a. member o ' . ; : |trucks, Ward's Automotive Reports | ‘'4*s, of members eligible to retire jas the said survivor beneficiary would |receive @ pension of more than one- | Met) ectorcne tt toe Mee approved by | (d)—Children’s Benefits if Widow Dies . untancaren
. x Lettuce, head, No 1, 2.75-3.25 3-doz crate; ae + ans any employe of hi i naation
the State Workmen's Compensa-| Lettuce, leaf, No 1, 150-175 bu. Ro- | said today. - PP 7 oa Prine calf vero Po oe veri] = oa ae Lnporiapelineresry = fourts “ we —_ —— be neither a his department head. the Roard may oF Remarries. If there be ge at
ey for the last two | ™#ire. No 1, 75-1.25 bu pipeman, including probationary pipe: retired. rsuant to the provisions of | widow nor children eligible to pensions continue such members in service for if the widow dies or remarries. ir
tion Commission for the last pu Pp tod *, | the ¢ dving child of such
= ; reens Cabbage, No 1, 1.00-1.25 bu Last week assemblies numbered ; man, of higher rank It shall not include | this Chapter, effective the day preceding | provided for im paragraphs ‘b). ic) and pefiogs not to extend beyond (1) the/|the youngest surviv e ©
years. Collard, No 1, 1.00-125 bu. Kale, No 1 & 5 a any 1) civilian employe of the fire ' lid) ef this section surviving the said | Member's attainment of age seventy | deceased member shall have attained age
. No }, 5 bu. » No 1.164.115 cars and 16,912 trucks. In i d fire | he date of his death, notwithstanding | ‘all be paid to| Years. or (2) four years from the ef-| eighteen years. then this child or chil-
lowa-born and Hawai and Har-| 100-125 bu Mustard, No 1. 78-128 bu | 1) comperabl 1953 week 116,476 ad -oapdaeear ga eg | Pree arn em, that he may not have attained his voi a —— Sao .” gue ae - fective date of this Retirement System, | dann under age cightocn: years, f he
vard-educated, McCree was named | 9"si Ne } SS oe Fig aa ye p40 | ployed asf fireman «during «an UNtATY retirement age. tae member |gent mother, whom the Board s| whichever is the later date |\eave children. shall each receive in
Dea : = 108 tl ss Chard. No 1. 100- | cars and 23,926 trucks were built. | enersenc who has an option 2 election provided | Gent marlcr tion to have been actually Section 17 Service Retirement Allow- jiey of all other benefits, ¢ as
to fill the court vacancy left by] 125 bu Turnip, No 1, 7-125 bu. 226 neicliccan an meana any employe | in a section 18.2 » — ——— dependent. upon him by reason of ance Upes retirement from service, &| provided for in paragraph (a) this
f * rt t holding the | 'Y res pursuant to provisions o r ical member who has ten or more years of coc as
the recent death of Judge Adolph | | Ward's said mew model change. | of the police department holding the | ih ' "Chapter, he shall within 90 days | sberace of corning, power Cue J Wei/une: service credited to his service aecount | tre Grceaseg' member's fins! compensa
F. Marshner | ever preblems kept assemblies (tonary patrolman or higher rank It immediately preceding the effective | isin of his final compensation shall receive a service retirement allow- (tion but im om t shall the tota
| . , e a n [ ee thi |shall not imelude any (1) Civilian em- date of his retirement. but not there-|""\1, The total of the pensions provided ence which shall censist of ' sas cA oa cues cae uae
- This was the first appointment | ; expectations week. | pioye of the pyiee Soperment, a) pri- after, have the right to make any | for ti paragraphs (bi. fed, 1) and op | tat Anoeity , Aa ann my yhich shall | ee ace nm Sree Umea oe ———
man ) per- | electi - rvivors | L verte ulvale e mem- ss
Ford also contributed a slightly ‘*'«ly employed police : (3) per- election of option provided for in sec | = sec payable to the su 4 roc Sere Tecctenttor te pkirertas a venta It tt be more than two children oe
N the circuit: bench on tem employed as a policeman | tion 161 hereof id jon election ed person
of a Negro to t Russell Morris, 26, of 657 Lucille, lower volume as some of its | during er eanenny to become pe Satan re of the aan | euceed oe ate maximum to his credit im the Annuity Savings | ower tvinhe under age eighteen years.
Michigan Walled Lake, pleaded guilty yester- 227 The masculine gender shall in- > Pund jeach ch ~ i ; . = tion of lewenant in Pu at the time of his retirement, e
. ‘ftimins _ pleaded guilty yester-| Ferd Division factories started | _,277 Je, mecculine gorges al he Nis Feuirment Ne reurement cues, [sngse! So™ ice bepartment of Pite "ol asic, Pension "A Sanic pension of |t0 proportionate. share of one-halt Governor Williams, announcing day to reckless driving and was changeover work. singular number in relation to persons jg on account of the death of @ mem- | Department. whichever compensation is one hundred dollars per annum: and | 4 net's tinal “A
his selection in a statement from fined $30 and $15 costs by Orion. shall include the plural sumber andy. ‘iy ‘any benefits ere paid under higher, as fined in the City budget for) ic) Membership Serviee Pension A tion. If any child dies, marries, or attains
é é ; ; S . | Ward's noted that U. S. output so vieq vores Section 23 hereof on account of his | the fiscal year in which the said person | membersiiip oe pension equal to | age eighteen years. there shall be @ re-
_ansing, made a point of stressing | Township Justice Helmar G. Stana- ach ss ait: ; od | ‘TERMINATION OF MEMBERSHIP dasih ted As used in this section 23. the |one-one hundred Mirty-fifth (1/135) his | distribution by Board to the su’
' sai ‘ + ar s year running far behi | Section 1! Except as otherwise pro-- . ‘pn term ‘“widew means the person to average final compensation for each | children under eighteen years, but in
icCree's youth. He said the late oo k. ‘that of The vided in tnis Chapter, should any mem- rou ors owner wee continets a “ham the said deceased person was year of membership service credited to no event shall any child receive more ;
Judge Marschner himself was 33 . ast year. igures show | per separate from the service of te ie eee ee ie ne cutres 35 years of | married at the time of Ais last employ-| the members service account pot to ex-\than one-fourth the deceased member's __
: | Roger H. Murphy of 721 Cort- assemblies through Oct. 9 th City for any reason, except to become 4 y |ment with the City and it shall include ceed thirty years. provided that the una} tien in any one r. :
hen he took offi . . : is year " efedited service, or (b) attains age 03 | som, y yea
when t office. ; : a retirant or his death, he shall there-. bg & Widower whom the Board finds to be membership service pension when added | any penefits ble under this re
The intment came ax & sur: wright St., told Oakland County | will total 4,93,835 cars and 795,598 | upon cease to be a member and his years and has 10 or morq years of |tuaiy and permanently disabled and toto the basic pension shall not exceed raph shall be subject to the provisions
icin: Spiesobonatsionel ae ; Sheriff's Deputies yesterday that | trucks. In the com ble 1953 credited service at the date of his said | credited service, whichever of (a) OF have been dependent upon the said de-/nine hundred dollars per annum. or |S reara: ft ory this section,
prise to politicians. Several other” tga ae imine Pe- | separation from service shall be for-| ‘b) occurs first. and im either case dors | cogsed person for at least $@ per cont the arount of this annuity. whichever | 1, aot ,
; ; : took a portable radio,| riod 5,004,283 cars and 973,834 | felted him. In the event he is reem-| not have an option 2 election provided | 4¢ nis support amount is the greater and seetsen .
possible choices had been men- |. . tne . : ed the City he shall again be- for in Section 182 in force. and (1) dies DISABILITY | ‘d)—Prior Bervice Pension A_ prior), '¢'— t Parents’s Benefits. If
| ploy v y CONDITIONS FOR or
tioned i lation linens, china and. bed clothes from | trucks were built. come @ member of the retirement sys- while im service of the City prior to the RETIRANTS | service pension esual to one-n there be neither widow. nor children
ie ak ~ political im his ear while it was parked at ‘2180 . tem —— his — Pigsos oa remy Ps — bara of his Lge eager and = | Section 25 (a) At ‘least once each) bend bis eversae final ——— ~~ age hee gga — .
Politicians also saw mica =| : ~ hi as cur within a period years 7m | leaves a widow. or in t case of a fe- the first & years following each vear of prior service © ited to. benef unde provisions
{ portance to the choice in view of Dixie Hwy.. Waterford T Ip. | . after the date he last separated from male member leaves a widower whom fae Forcotcondiairgd ot ra memes with a the member's service account. provided, | this section, there shall be paid to the
it? :.,;Murphy said the stolen articles | eves a |City service, the credited service for- the Board finds to be totally and |disability pension or retirement allow. that if the membershiv service when | dependent father andor dependent
Detroit's large Negro population | te ul Heited by him at the time he last permanently disabled and to have been | ance and at least once in each 3 year added to the prior service exceed thirty | mother of such deceased member, as the
\ . ; 9 : _were valued at $140, ; seanroted from Cry service shall be Gependent upon the said female member period thereafter the Board may. and/vears then the membership service | Board after - investigation shall de-
and the impending Nov. 2 election. . 5 restored to his credit. In the event 8 | ter at least 50 per cent of his support | upon his application shall require any credit shall be reduced so that the | termine to have been actually depend-
Fi | The annual meeting of Pontiac i eopter becomes a poy gl * oes the said widew or widower. as the case | disability fretirant who has not attained total of membership service credit ent upen such deceased member
Chapter No. 228, OES. M Oct VOLUNTARY RETIREMENT may be, shall receive a retirement al-|his voluntary retirememt age to undergo|and prior service -eredit ts not | absence of earning power due to physi-
‘G t Whisk ‘ R | pter No. 5 . Mon., . lowance computed in the same manner |& medicel examination to be made by Of | greater than thirty years. provided | cal @isability, a pension of one-sixth
a iskers Kevea 11 at 8 p.m. Virginia Salthiel. Sec. Thi aes canna ar garter Ta clemney meetice. | all respects as if the said member | under the direction JS the modiog! ai | further that the total pension portions. the 4 rs final P
: Tunnel, Bridge leeway ast iretdinewachag two Blooms: | ment age and has 10 or more years y, ts Bosrd ehiity Ronefit tor the via ke ee ee
| oe urned red. Her auto collided | social event to his aceumulated contributions stand- retirant is receiving a disability pension City | Petirement After wiimtnt * : ‘ or the period. he was receiving &
| w | iv e ; \ rovided for 1 aragra ta) of thts ‘hi—Prior Service shail mean service femer . s fefhte = Retirement disability retirement pension rovided
with a truck driven by Lawrence : Ing to his credit in the annuity savings P r in D ph Age (a: Tinom retiremens for tisahilts | ¢ P
| Hopps. 45. of 2161 E. Bristol. Flift | Mrs. Zurcher said she carried tuna at the time of his retirement, the Section 202 his contri ge to the Oh rendered. a: Ae officer Polarity ware aperhaedl 52 yl lcactings ter At ‘shall mel be 20. paragraph ‘bi, he
Pps, . '* s . int, bet Huity savings fusd shall be suspende City rior to the effective date Of | i wnwe pnaneficinre . m > given servicé credit
the $25,000 wosth of jewelry in a @ifference ween his said accumulated 7 : Le Lei alae jcmflite henef wha it) hes ettained the period he was receiving “ posed and his balance in the said fund at the s dment ‘
inoue ae nice ws oriee areregate tome of nis retirement shail remain lige aurea cate Service shall mean | tor, . ered Wonee hn ew can ls | Tetirement allowance provided for in | cecaes peeesene ‘\s Mim chan te a therein and: shell be accumulated at service rendered as an officer or em | 4, SE path eet ae, RS *ecive a | Section 22, paragraphs ia) and ib) .
| from the pension reserve fund to sue Fs ges lM iclltry pu ploye of the City since last becoming | cervice pettrament stinwence secording | ipa Aad ame City Commission
| | a member of the Retirement System to the nmeewiainn: 7? apetion 04 this 6th day of October AD.
i tig alan) Lost aa) | suitcase from her suburban home
to her town apartment. She planned
. .
Lions Gwen Namesake to make up her mind there which) person or persons as he shall have death U ttaining his voluntary re- “ | 1954 A nominated by written designation duly tir t Land a = mulated contribu- (j) —Regular Interest shall be interest, «hi Meticerment Pefoee Eicthia Reticn.
ALEXANDRIA, La (UP) — The jewels to wear, but thieves stole executed and filed with the Board cant ocean eee irameterned from the &t three per cent per oer ee jment Ave Tron retirement for dicahitte | ADA R EVANS
/ ss eee . | j rom her parked car ‘If there be mo such designated son OF | the annuity ed annually, for a period of three years | se provided fac in
in your hands—particularly when a |
LET'S MAKE good joke falls flat.
A WISH AND : it
Hal Boyle Says:
4
"7
Told to Behave Avoid Loud, Disorderly
Partying, Workers Are
Cautioned
WASHINGTON ®—Employes of
: the Federal Communications Com-
i mission have been cautioned to
| avoid loud and disorderly partying,
drunkenness, brawling or any other
conduct which might result in ‘‘un-
favorable publicity’ and so reflect
on the federal service.
. These directives are contained in
a circular which the commission
quietly circulated late last month
as a tollowup on the Budget Bu-
reau's inauguration of a general
n designed to maintain a
cicse.check on the conduct of per-
som: on the federa] payroll
White House aides in Denver last
week confirmed that such a pro-
gram had been inaugurated and
described it as designed “to pre-
vent loose practices” in govern-
mental agencies. Murray Synder,
assistant press secretary, said
there was nothing in the Budget
“that deals with the
private lives of government em-
The FCC's followup circular,
made available for inspection by
an individual employe, disclosed
that the commission on Sept. 17 had
ggeae g
ie 1 i al g
g
i] i Tr a ly i
; z
i ir- by knockouts,” ! 7
: m provides for NEW YORK @®—‘Fate knocked
my brains out,” said Lou Nova.
Ay 38 the retired heaVyweight
boxer, who earned half a million
vanished dollars in the ring, has
traded his ‘cosmic punch’ for a
punchline, He is trying to make a
comeback in a new career as a
night club comedian
- His act is a satire on boxing, and
he is billed as a ‘‘professor of
puriology and fistiology.”’
Coached by Frank Fay, the Ja
mous monologist, Lou has high
hopes of carving new renown in)
the entertainment world. -
‘After all, my family has been
in it for some time,” he said,
settling back and lighting a long
cigar. ““My father was a pianist
with the San Francisco Symphony
Orchestra, and his father was a
professiona] violinist,
* * *
“Since I quit the ring in 1946 I
have been i 18 pictures and 5
stage shows, and any number of
radio and TV programs
“I've even been commentator at
several high society fashion shows
That's really a switch. I don't
know of any other boxer who's
done that."
Finding a fresh career is an
economic necessity for the 6-foot-
2-inch onetime ‘‘blond adonis,"’ who
fought at 203 pounds -and now
weighs about 240
“I had 8 pro fights, lost only 5,
and won more than half of them
he recalled. “I
grossed about $500,000, That figure
looks good on paper, and I still
wonder where it all went, . * *
“But the manager gets a one
third slice, the income tax’ takes
most of what you make in the
fat years, and you have a lot of
expenses eating at you the public
doesn't reglize
“The odd thing to me is that |
realized the danger of boxing—
making big money but winding up
broke. In 1941 I had $100,000 salted
away, and thought I'd never have
to work the rest of my life. Isn't
that something? Here I am, still
slugging away. “I kept my maney in the bank
instead of putting it to work. Then
inflation ame along, and gradual-
ly gobbled it up. Fate knocked my
braing out."
cf a
tt was in 1941 that Lou reached
the peak. He lost to world cham-
pion Joe Louis on a_ technical
| knockout in the 6th round, a referee
Veteran Fighter Lou Nova
Now Nightclub Comedian verdict which he still thinks was a
bit hurried
“But Louis was in his prime
then,”’ he said, ‘and he was the
greatest of them all
“I was born 10 years too soon.
Rocky Marciano is a tough, cou-
rageous fighter, but he hasn't had
to fight the kind of men who were
around 10 years ago
“Joe Louis himself said I would
have knocked out Marciano, and if
I had''—Lou grinned cheerfully—
“I'd be lighting my cigars with
$10 bills."\
* . *
Lou has one advantage over most
night club comedians. He can
squelch hecklers by saying, ‘‘look,
you know I do my own bouncing
here.”
“Night club work is a real chal-
lenger,”’ he remarked, ‘‘They say
the lonesomest place in the world
is the center of a boxing ring,
bui you're even lonesomer undef
the spotlight on a night club floor “In the ring you can at least
lean on somebody in the clinches.
You got company. And it’s easier
to throw a new punch. than & new
punchline.” * J *
Nova loves the memories, of his
fighting years. He says boxing is
no more dishonest than ‘‘any other
profession,” and has no more
crooks or cheaters in it than law,
medicine, or business
“The only difference,"’ he said,
“is that you lose more blood being |
a prizefighter.’
4 City Health Officials
Will Attend Convention
Four members of the city health
department will attend the annual
convention of the American Public
Health Assn. in Buffalo beginning
Monday
Attending will be Charles S, Co-
hen. city sanitarian; Dr. Charles
Neafie, health department consult-
ant, Mrs. Mary Bufrell, head
nurse, and Betty Tuuk, head of the
public health laboratory
SIDE GLANCES by Galbraith
“Don't get your hopes up too hi
be « pro football player when I grow up!" |
gh for me, Professor—I'm going to |
by McEvoy and Strieber | }
IRON OUT OUR DIFFERENCES $10 YOU THATS AtL t FED TO —1 THINK WE CAN
S OU---GAN— WITH YOu ~—
| cisco KID
WOW =--A
WISHBONE
You'RE mY FIRST
eus!
RJ ; THAT TRIGGE
CISCO 16 POISON!
SUT 1LL GET EVEN!
COME ON, PANCH BRANN
by Carl Grubert
ae RIVER Or FOR THEIR / Ete)
| .
¥v 4 - é a)
‘ . at are
ai oe
ga?
is f- ars.
4 “i ~ © *
Cape. 1984 by NEA Bersee tee T Mt Meg UB Per OFF by Edgar Martin
1 WANT MY FRIENDS 10 MEET You! f'2 10 LOVE To MEET You’LL LIKE POP AND GANDY.... 3 YOUR MBN FRIENDS
THEYLL LOVE You JUST AS MUCH BUT GIRLS SEEM
AS 1 Do!! £¢ TO RESENT ME' +
A raft FOR INSTANCE WHY
DOES THS BANNER
RATE SOCH A
16 TORTURING MY. HEART!
SAY SOMETHING ... I WANT
DAY. ROMT.CARNS! HA WELL NOW DVSCUSS THE RELATIONSHIP
Rer!
OH, YOu FLATTE
3
~— =
aa a OL By OPA ne ee
YOUNG PRINCE
———,
sara
I'D LIKE TH’ BIG RED OR
BLUE BANDANAS /’’
WHO STARTED SUCH 1 SENT OUR HERO OUT
WT WERE GOWNS
SNAKE AMES HAS
BEEN TARNISHED
BY TIME?
‘A POST OFFICE T paBll gaa OOPS ! THE MAGIC TOE ; NESTERDAY TO PUT UP 7 mat Sic eo on JHE STORM WINDOWS |
sell WILLIE HESTON AND JP” yi : We z hag’ pre Hh My 3 IM.
LEANDER THE
KICKING ART,
AND TELL THEM
HOW WE YALES
+ DSED TO DRUB
i \e ano irs \3 i
oe Bac ! 2 -
lg! oe
VTHEY MAY NOT BE SO
VERY LADYLIKE...
) ; 4
‘ ——— = ape te
“The: brake? That stick you threw out back there was
the brake!"
oo he oF
/
at ‘ nee Oo fete * ja. ee ee Alp ony GS een