’ ee ee a ees ee eee ' + a / The Weather ' oe . Y | | : : Wednesday: Cloudy aad Cold as . i ' ee ct j Bette page . ‘ - : ‘ | ‘ lath YEAR kk kee PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1955 —26 PAGES AseocATRD Fuusa "UNITED Passa rs Boston Felo ns is Hold Guards Hosta Beauty and Utility Combined in Newest Pontiac: | > Bein. + MAKES Wilson, Radford Safari, the new Star Chief custom station wagon, | 59 inches high. The Sarafi is being introduced at | combines the luxury of a fine passenger car with the General Motors Motorama in New York. the utility of a station wagon. The two-door car, | customized interior is DEBUT AT MOTORAMA — Pontiac's | streamlining are shown in this rear view, is only? — Its finished in hand-buffed | whose unique styling innovations and ultra-modern | léather which matches the exterior body colors. Will Be Quizzed Scheduled_for Production Soon ! New Pontiac Station Wagon Makes Bow Senate Armed Services Committee Seeks Facts | The Pontiac Safari, a new two on Defense = WASHINGTON (INS)—The Sen- ate Armed Services Committee de- cided today to call the nation’s two highest defense officials for a secret briefing Thursday on the door station wagon, was. announced by Pontiac Motor Division today. at the General Motors Motorama of 1955 opening Thursday in New | York City. Only 539 inches high the sleek, powerful Safari is Pon- It will be one of the feature cars | “It is ideal for modern living where the family car must serve | several purposes, with the added | assurance of having the finest | looking moter car on the road.” Horizontal design lines across the roof accentuate the width of | {the Safari. Unique side window | chromé Silver Streaks maintain the Pontiac custom car motif. Panoramic styling of the rear windows is another feature of the Safari. The station wagon has chrome roof bows, genuine two-tone up- holstering, and rich carpeting. Turnpike toGo. East of Pontiac | Authority Rejects Plan | for Alternate Route; | Financing Ready Michigan's first highspeed turn- pike, between Flat Rock and Sag- inaw, is expected to pass south and east of Pontiac. The Michigan Turnpike Author- Nationalist Isle Assaulted Today by Red Chinese Tiny Outpost Attacked ‘by Full-Scale Force, Believed Captured TAIPEH, Formosa (#) — Communist forces struck Yikiangshan by air, sea and land today and Nationalist China indicated the tiny outpost might have been captured. / ‘A Defense Ministry com- munique said Yikiangshan, a stepping stone to the Na- tionalist Tachens some 200 miles north of here, was garrisoned by “a few brave guerrillas” who late today — still resisting brave-| ys was considered likely here the | island had already fallen, or that | The U.S. 7th Fleet patrols the waters of the Formesa Strait, but re was neo indications what steps—if any—the United States might take. The United States is committéd to the defense of Formosa and the Pescadores, but has never said what it would do if any of the Na- | tionalist offshore islands was in- vaded. Yikiangshan js eight miles north | of the Tachens and five miles south |of Red-heid Toumen Island. From | Yikiangshan the Reds could ham- | mer the Tachens with 155 mm | its capture was imminent. | { Fired Shot } | | | | SEWARD ROSSMAN Shoots at Auto, Wounds Girl, 17 Suspicious Farmer Hits Jo Hall, Auburn Heights, | With Shotgun Slug A 11-year-old Auburn Heights girl Oxford farmer fired a shotgun slug | into the car in which she was) riding with four other teenagers. The girl, Jo Ellen Hall, was list- ed in fair condition with a back wound by Pontiac General Hospital] authorities, — Stories of the shooting differed. Four of the youths and the Ox- | ford man were being questioned | by authorities today. j e 4 or 5 Jailors in Breakout Try Officials Attempting to Reason With 20 Inmates in Solitary Cellblock BOSTON \# — Desperate state prison inmates toda seized at least four gu as hostages in a breakout attempt. The prisoners involved were all in the prison’s soli- tary confinement cellblock and were described as the institution's most danger- ous inmates. The welfare of the guards was not immediately determined. They were being held in the solitary confinement block, where 20 pris- oners were trying to use them in bargaining for freedom. Warden John J. O’Brien, Otis try to neeson with the prissiere Meanwhile, fully 20 state police- men, armed with riot guns ard | was wounded early today when an clubs, stood by a short distance from the solitary confinement area, known as the Cherry Hill section. -Warden O'Brien said he believed five guards were taken as hostages —three when they were making others when they went to investi- gate their colleagues failure to re- turn from their rounds. Fallon, however, ceived word from inside the wall ge Prisoners Grab - ee ~—e —— ee a oe, a tional Pontiac Streak motif is war-or-peace outjook around the | tiac engineers and designers inter- Exterior finish is in brilliant new | guns, just as they have bombarded wuld. pretation of a family dream car. | styling and ee gray firegold and turquoise colors, | ity announced yesterday afternoon | yixiangsgan from Toumen. | ee Maybee, 18, of 2627 Frank. that four guards were being heid. Defense Secretary Charles E In announcing the new two-door | 8'Ve5 added appea radi- | -ombined with white mist, in two-| that it had decided against amy There are reported to be about | 5”, Rochester, told Oalland Coun. About 100 policemen — local, ty Deputy Sheriff Harry Jones and| "t@te and metropolitan district Wilson and Gen. Arthur W. Rad-| model, R. M. Critchfield, Pontiac tone combinations alternate route west of Pontiac, be- , : 20,000 Nationalist troops guer- ford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs general manager, said, “In the oe pal hy Safari's front hood | Mounted on a 122 inch wheel-| cause such a route would add $6,~ | rillas te Tachens, an prado Detective Leo Hazen that he was| Commiission—steod guard at the of Staff, will face sharp question-| Safari, which is ¢cheduled for pro- a | base, the Safari has an over-all 000,000 to the cost, without produc- | jink in Chiang Kai-shek’s chain of | driving the car and had “become| Prison's perimeter as O’Brien, ing on proposed military manpower duction soon, we have combined| A distinctively slanted rear | length of 204.3 inches and is power- | ing sufficient additional revenue at | offshore islands. lost’’ while riding around after) Whitey and Fallen entered the cuts and Far East policies the luxury and panoramic styling | compartment deer is trimmed | ed with Pontiac's 180 h. p. Strato- toll gates. e skating last night on Silver Lake.| *lltary confinement block. Committeemen said ,that the of our passenger cars with the | with verticle parallel chrome | Streak W-8 engine. The Safari authority emphasized after Master tetty Rastan-Sust Maybee said he went to the farm! Most of the men were issucd riot — So Army, Navy and] utity of the station wagon. | bars, and rear fins with Time | will list for $2.74. Ptr sg Seay wremmanta cord ae eae home ef Seward Reswman 45, of | guns and rifles from the police and Air wi quizzed at later dates, , along with their military chiefs. | . | : = = arta Gipnaneg cath ot 200 bombs in 22 minutes. - olla Pal re pages “ — a pr ea — . The committee wants this gen- Bank Reveals Ancient Felt Hat ‘Winter Shrieks Detroit at Fiat Rock? and run. | ed followed this p= heavy ask directions. He said he got no | half long and with their regulation eral background before delving — : | ning to Saginaw, via Dearborn, | *rtillery barrage on Yikiangshan | response to his knocks, returned | Pistols. into new maspewer legisiation. Makes Unusual | Pontiac and Flint, ana Peden apparently & Pre- | to the car and began driving away! State police moved info the pris- ° invasion. p President Eisenhower has asked War Memorial . 1h eaid stale meashees Sound alenr | jo — when the shot wes fired. jon about @ half-dozen large cases continuation of the draft and a cross ation | Tiny Yikiangshan has been sub- marked “riot equipment.” ‘These universal military training pro- gram for youths, plus an expand. ed reserve available for imme- diate call to active duty in an emergency. Questioning of Wilson, Radford and the secretaries of the three military branches could lead to Record Business Checking | BUCHANAN (UP) — This Ber- rien County community's most un- usual monument is an old felt hat | Commercial California, Coast Bears j | F ° Mill and Job Shop. | Community National Thirty-seven years ago, Holmes For the first time in the history | Marble, owner of the shop, turned | Winds Up to 104 M.P.H. By UNITED PRESS Over Billion in ‘54 at | that hangs in the Marble Planing) Brunt With Rain, Snow, | the review of overall foreign pol-| of the Community National Bank | the business over to his brother, the route now are not route stakes, but were put. up to facilitate an aerial survey. | Preliminary plans indicate the | route, passing west of Detroit and Birmingham, will cross over some- where between Birmingham a | Pontiac to pass this city to the | east | jected to repeated bombardments since Nov. 1 when the Reds re- portedly fired more then 3,000 shells at it from Toumen Island. Its capture would be both politi- | cally and militarily important for | jit would give the Communists a | victory to tie in with their oftre- | peated threats to liberate Formo- Rossman told authorities that | he heard a noise and looked cut a rear windew te see a car backed up te « 500-galion gaso- | line tank in hig yard. He said gasoline had been taken | ready for distribution if needed. One of the 20 occupants of the prison's solitary confinement sec- previously from the tank so he| tion where the trouble broke out is got his 16 gauge shotgun and load-| known to be Teddy Green af Bos- ed it with a deer slug. When he/ ton, notorious bank robber and es- icy which various senators have | o¢ Pontiac the volume of business |Clvde. when he enlisted in the| Winter went on a coast-to-coast | The Turnpike Authority said to- | sa. returned to the rear door, he said,| cape artist been demanding. Members of the Armed Serv- ices Committee feel that they, as much as the Foreign Relations in its commercial-checking depart- ments exceeded one billion dol- lars in 1954. Transactions in this department Army at start of World War I. } | his hat om @ nail in the shop and commented, “I'll come back | Before he left, Marble hung |at the California coast with winds | up to 104 miles an hour, torrential rains And heavy snows. |rampage today, striking hagdest | day that Michigan and. New York banks had agreed to advance $13,- 000,000 on promisary notes to fin- ance surveying, planning and let- Peiping Mission the car was driving off at a high Green has been there since No- rate of speed. He said he fired at) vember, 1953, when he led an the car's gasoline tank. The slug passed through the car's armed but abortive breakout at- tempt. - Committee, have a responsibility | for the | ting of contracts for a toll turn- | to s@utinize global defense plan-| 4 C_ Girard, president, reported | yegr totaled $1,017,000,000, | seme day and pick it ap.” trunk and seat, striking the girl in the back. She ning. The Armed Services Committee holds an organization meeting to- day. . Keep Hubby Happy, He Won't Crack Up BOSTON (#—An insurance exe- cutive says a hearty kiss can go a long way toward preventing highway accidents. Charles Ray, vice president of Markel Service, Inc., which sures trucks and buses, said yes- terday the difference ‘between a good driver and a bad driver is marked by “a good breakfast, a in- | to the annual meeting of share- | But Marble didn't come a gripped the Midwest, rain and |holders of the bank, held this! He was killed at Argonne shortly | | morning. before the war ended. Resources at year end were| His hat, now gray with a 37. $78,271,000 with capital accounts of | year accumulation of dust, still ) $4,292,000. At year end the bank | hangs in the shop. It has never | had 65,800 active commiercial -and| been taken down. snow fell from Texas to North |wat predicted for parts of the Southeast. The U.S. Weather Bureau issued special warnings of from | savings customers with over 18,000 — of snew in the cen- | individual loans outstanding to bor- (| d = d C ld 36 | rowers in commercial, mortgage, | ou y an 0 eT tin —— parts § of | and monthly payment departments. | “ Net earnings for 1954 were || p { F t $627,000 or $4.18 per share. This S on lac orecas | Was met after income taxes of | The weatherman predicts occa- $336,000 and after providing | gional snow flurries. cloudy and $101,000 for the Bank's pension | poider for Pontiac tonight and to- and profit sharing plans. The western storm roared over most of northern California and forced a Japanese freighter, the Nichirei Maru, aground in Hum- boldt Bay. The 6,684-ton vessel reported it Saginaw ° | Such a scheme, the authority Across the nation, a cold wave | pike running from Flat Rock "FE H f | | Dakota, and frigid, snowy weather | S8id. would save $3,109,200 in in-| | terest charges, because the notes | would bear. interest of only 1.7 |per cent and would delay from next April to next January the issuance of $184,000,000 in 3% per cent bonds to finance the project | The authority decided at a meeting here yesterday to ask the Legislature to approve the plan whereby notes would be is- sued first and then bonds when construction is ready to begin. Jusfin R. Whiting, an authority 9 Senators Disagree. With Knowland, Who Labeled Trip ‘Failure’ WASHINGTON ®—A majority of | Senate Foreign Relations Commit- |:tee members indicated today they |are hopeful Dag Hammarskjold's | mission to Red China may lead | ultimately to freedom for 11 U.S. | airmen imprisoned as ‘‘spies.” | None of nine Democratic and Re. Dividends declared during 1944 totaled $210,000. . All members of the Board of Di- . e Low tonight will be around 20 | was in no immediate danger, but with a high tomorrow 26-30. Thurs- | 4 Coast Guard cutter was standing day night will be somewhat colder | by. Meanwhile, two fishing boats happy home atmosphere and a/ rectors and officers were reelected. with snow flurries and a low 14-18. / were reported overdue at Eureka, hearty goodby kiss."’ ; (* ' In downtown Pontiac yesterday, | “lif. member, said .banks had offered | Publican senators interviewed the note plan, without a state | agreed with Sen. Knowland (R- supreme court test of the turnpike | Calif), the minority leader and a |law, because they considered the | committee member, that the U.N |congested route “so potentially | secretary general's trip was a) profitable." “failure b® any fair standard or) yardstick." underwent sur- gew this morning Others in the car were Clement C. Berger, 18, 3035 John R., Bir-| mingham; Edward Drogosh, 17, | 2321 Longview, Rochester; and Syi- | via Maybee, 16, James’ sister. | They said they had driven to| Utica, Mount Clemens and other | places during the night. Army Seeks Recruits for Pack Mule Outifts CHICAGO W—The Chicago re- cruiting office has issued a call) for recruits for two mule-pack out- fits at Camp Carson, Colo. “All is nof atomic in the Army,” the office said. ‘“‘The mule has more than proved its military worth in terrain that will turn back Ask Supreme Court . . . . Trial in Assassination PANAMA (®—Supporters of ex- President Jose Ramon Guizado to- day pressed for the Supreme Court to take over from the National As- sembly hearing of charges impli- cating Guizado in the murder of his predecessor in the presidential chair. The drive got under way yester- phe when Atty, Alejandro Pinango petitioned the court to assume the job on the grounds that the charges | against Guizado resulted from ac- | tions allegedly taken while he was foreign minister. Under Panaman- ian law, only 4he Supreme Court can try Cabinet ministers while the Assembly has the power to try Ray also told a meeting of the 7 New England Commercial Vehicle Hmmm... .. *|temperatures ranged from a low | ee ee oe Assn. that a recent company sur-| TRENTON, Ont. (UP) — Mrs./| of 16 to a high of 24 with clear | were clocked at Blunt's Reef vey showed that “unhappy home | Henry Black, 73-year-old farm | Skies and sunshine most of the Lightship in the area and heavy | the much-touted jeep.” presidents. : Arrival of 4 U.S. Planes Several said it's too early te tell. Others said they didn’t yet have enough facts on which to Help Rushed life caused by nagging over mon-| owner, married one of her former | day. | snow in the California mountains ey, inlaws and behavior of chil-| hired hands yesterday, The bride-| | At 8 o'clock this morning the dren were the main factors behing | groom was 24-year-old James Mc-| mercury stood at 16 degrees ris- a poor driving record.” Speaker Challenges Pontiac Realtors to Se]] People Homes Instead of Houses Hetiying president, Will H. Challenging the realtors of today! homes, our families . . . nicest made chains a necessity of trans- continental highways. A rare Francisco, while in Bureka, al- ready shaken by an carthquake last month, the winds blew out more than a dozen heavy plate glass windows. Eureka caught the, brunt of the shrieking winds dnd heavy rain. thunderstorm hit San | to sell “homes*tidt houses,” Dr.| thing you can save for your old Tennyson Guyer spoke before a age is yourself.” Knudsen was presented a gift from the board by Harcourt S. Patter- The cross and the steeple were removed -from the city’s St. Jo packed audience in the Elks Tem-} tate Board. _| occasion, Howard V. Heldenbrand jseph Catholic Church when the Serving as toastmaster for the | gon Others appearing on the evening | wood toppled over the main tele- program included Bruce Annett| phone cable between Eureka and who spoke briefly as president of |5an Francisco, cutting communi- introduced Josiah R. Hiltz. and Cra- Guyer is from Findlay, Ohio. He | . cations for a while. Feeneare the Michigan Real Estate Board. en a we Henan circus pot ‘ Pp e ~~ A fast-moving snow storm ministrator and“is now a news In Today's ‘TeSS . | fer aswamed the gavel as the new ere ae ck ea, Cae commentator and public relations| Birminghem ...---..--.---------« 3 | peeaiiemt for the coming year, ‘ director. Comics ee Ris cociauicce sal Invocation was given by the Rev. In the East, temperatures in Choosing the topic, “There's Conky wy, vsvvveveccer i John: H.. Hoar. amistent pestor of ee a Ne Place Like Home,” Dr. Guy- : “te Pontiac's St. Benedict Church, Mu- York City, while snow was er sald: “There's nothing wrong sic, & violin and piano duet, WaS| giseg tor parts of | Virginia, with the kids today that a good presented by James Y. Vander-| wore Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky example can't cure... real 'sall and Teancesec. when people have a te The dirty, weather yesterday ‘work .. . amewer to world -| contributed to plane crashes fs to reinstate our pride in our iwhich apparently claimed 17 lives. wo . het , jetatet “ . ey y / ‘ . ’ ‘ . vi *s J ar ’ ; 8 ; if 5 j / : - ao € he f Fi ‘ : i A a ea RR ee a aE eee Si i dee ea ty) oer CE A a Ee Sp os) zs lspire began listing. A giant red- | = - | tes in northern Scotland to join to Scots Isolated by Raging Storm LONDON (INS)—Great Britain Lentered today the second week of its worst winter weather in eight years. Reports of more snow, storms, ice-covered roads, hail and floods came @to London from the | | Scottish highlands to the channel | coast. More helicopters were sent to Caithness and Sutherland coun- | those dispatched yesterday. The | Royal Navy alse ordered a fri- | gate to proceed urgently to Wick, | on the North Sea coast of Caith- ness, - The. planes and shif were to aid in rescuing and supplying some 70,000highlanders isolated by bliz- zards in towns and villages over.a 3-700-square-mile area. — All roads were blocked in. the mountainous area and rail service was suspended. Food and other supplies’ were -rumming short in many localities. Doctors have been unable to aid desperately ill base a judgment. Sen. Humphrey (D-Minn) said | that if Knowland has any private | information about the mission ‘‘his | first duty is to inform the secre- tary of state and the Foreign Re: lations Committee.” Sen. Morse (Ind-Ore), a new member of the committee, said: “I am pleased to stand with President Eisenhower and follow |his advice on the Hammarskjold mission, rather than follow Bill Knowland."’ . In a statement last Friday, Ei- senhower cautioned against “im- petuous words or deeds” which he said might “endanger the .lives”’ of the captive airmen. He said: “We must support the United Na- tions in its efforts so long as those | | efforts hold out any promise of | j | Rules for Lattimore WASHINGTON W®—U. S. District Quiets Costa Rica Front SAN JOSE, Costa Rica ‘#—The battlefront in Costa | Rica’s war against rebels quieted last night after the arrival of four U. S. fighter planes to bolster President Jose Figueres’ forces. Two of the three planes reportedly used by the insur- gents promptly flew to Nicaragua and were seized by the po ——— Nicaraguan government. Despite rebel radio claims of big victories, a general staff communique said no fights of any sort were re- ported yesterday in north- western Costa Rica, the only previously active front. Unoffieial sources indicated that | the government wag getting ready for a big push in the Santa Rosa area, about 20 miles from the Nic- araguan frontier in the northwest- ern part'of the country. HAO > Spirits Advice Costly to Prof U. of M. Educator Tells $14,000 Ghost Story to. Circuit Judge | DETROIT W—A_ University ot | Michigan history professor com- | plains that the investment advice | Although Mrs. Elizabeth Sears’ two-year-old son avoided serious injury whe he was locked inside the family automatic ldundry dry- er, the incident prompted her to air the matter so other families might aveft tragedy. Mrs, Sears said the tot, Michael, playing in the basement recreation room, apparently crawled into the front - loading dryer and was Rescue of Tot From Dryer ‘Narrowly Averts Tragedy crawled into the dryer and I locked him in."’ The little adven- turer ‘was hurriedly removed. “There he was, looking through the glass and laughing like the dickens,” Mrs. Sears said, “Thank heavens Bill didn’t turn on the dryer.” - Mrs. Sears, whose husband, Ru- fas, is a General Motors Truck | and- Coach Division employe, has he got from the spirit world cost | locked in by a brother, William, 5, | four other children and cares for him $14,000. Prof. Albert Hyma testified in Cireult Court. yesterday that he lost the mioney on advice he got | from departed -souls through the medium of the Rev. Lillian Lee, | pastor of the Interdenominational | Church ‘of Christ in Detroit. The spirits of the departed, he | said, talked to him through an | aluminum trumpet held by Mrs. | Moments later, William reported to his mother: “Mommie, Mike GM to Increase Educational Aid jtwo more. The home is at 252 | W. Chicago Ave | She said the other children were watching Saturday afternoon tele- vision programs and she was tak- ing a moment out during a busy the near - tragedy océurred, “I thought my experience might method of locking the door can be Lee while she was in a trance. | Scholarships, Grants devised”, she said. -~Hyma said that in 1937 he was advised against selling some $1,600 | worth of stock he held in a com- pany that shortly afterwards went bankrupt. In 1947, he said, the spirits ad- | vised him to invest in an oil drill-| itg support of higher education, ac- | ing venture, He lost $4,200 on that investment, he said. Then, Hyma said, later that year liott of State May Speed Up Tree Planting Work Child Struck by Car | Seven-year-old Sandra Page of | 117 Cadillac Ave. suffered a con-| cussion yesterday when she was | struck by an auto driven by Ger- ald N. Trissell, 24, of 4880 High- land Rd.. at Summit Ave. and Jetferson St., according to Pontiac Police. She is reported in good condition at Pontiac General Hos- Patrolmen Howard Lenigan and Thomas. Hereford quoted Trissell and two witnesses as saying the child ran out in front of the north- bound auto from behind a parked a truck. The Weather | PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly cloudy with cecasional snow flurries ¢elder with occasions! snew fler- ‘ — os 14-18. Nertherty winds 16-15 tenight. Today in Pontiac —— temperature preceding 8 @.m 1 At @ am.: Wind velocity 15 mph Direction: North Sun sets Tuesday at 5.28 pm Sun rises Wednesday dt 7:57 am Moon sets Tuesday at 12:53 p.m j Moon rises Wednesday at 4:31 a.m Coe eee eee eens RP eeeE ee el eee to Colleges in New $2 Million Plan ‘Coondog’ Name NEW YORK «—General Motors ] ust Too M uch plans to add $2,000,000 a year to cording to Harlow H. Curtice, GM president. The program contem- plates four-year scholarships to students and grants to 306 colleges and universities throughout the | country. Awards under the scholarships phase of the program will range up to $2,000 annually, depending upon “demonstrated need.”’ In addition private colleges and uni -| versities will receive grants-in-aid equivalent on the average to some $500 to $800 annually per student. The quartet, all of Detroit, convicted of the March 21, fatal stabbing of Alfred Jones; a Ferndale gas station attendant. Greenville Legion Faces Liquor Board Hearing permitting gambling on its pre- mises. Chairman’ Frank.’ Biackford said the charge was based on | testimony taken during the com- mission's dismissal case against John P. Zachem of Grand Rapids, an investigator accused of cun- Baltimore Water Loss 2 Million Gallons Daily BALTIMORE (@®—As much as | two million gallons of water is leak- | ing out of the Baltimore water ZY system every day be done about it the city’s acting but nothing can until 1956, chief ‘ ° 7 for ‘Horsethief | TOLEDO « — Being called | “Coondog”’ is @ little provoking, } Municipal Judge J. Parker Ed- | wards conceded yesterday in find- |ing Julius Lewallen, 41, guilty of ' threatening bodily harm and ear- |rying a concealed weapon. | Lewallen was arrested after a fellow brakeman on the Nickel | Brewster, Ohio, complained that charge..He waived examination on |day to read the newspaper when her act. THE PONTIAC PRES (see * . VERSATILE — Marguerite~ Piazza, internationally known opera | Singer, goes into one of her dance routines with partner Jack Bunch at a New York night club. Marguerite, who has abandoned her opera singing, does a strip tease and sings New Orleans jazz as part of White Pine Mine Now Operating Beliéve Copper Depos One of Richest Tapped in North America Pine Copper Mine, potentially one tions, the company said yesterday. The deposit is estimated at 309,000,000 tons of ore, carrying 1.1 per cent copper. Construction of the modern mine Fy if: ti Frage hee Puzzled by Signers on White House Note i eas ! i i Hy | i ii 1 fs; yl z z ; i 2 i*fiz ; I i z rH =f ei | Fi li z cj | ct if z i Lp lhe Hj E a Ht bt fess WHITE PINE (UP)—The White seph Mercy Hospital after an ill |ness of one year. of the largest copper mines in| Born in Utah, Ala., April 6, 1906, North America, has started opera- she was the daughter of Jor ; ris of Chicago, Frank Byrd of St. .|R. Davis Funeral Home Wednes- |day from 3:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., Pontiac Deaths | Mrs. Dave Hill | Service will be held Thurday at 2 p.m. from the NeW Hope Baptist it | Church for Mrs. Dave (Julia) Hill, |48 of 456 Harvey St. The Rev. Ford B. Reed will officiate with burial in Oak Hill : Mrs. Hill died Jan. 13 in St. Jo- and Annie Watkins Harris. She | came here from East Chicago, | Ind., 25 years ago. She is survived by a son, Jor- den Brown of Pontiac. Also surviv- ing are three brothers, Robert Har- Louis, Mo., Emanuel Busby of East St. Louis, Ill., and six grandchil- dren Mrs. Hill will be at the William Robert E. Peters Robert E. Peters, 68, of 189 S. his | Mrs. Catherine Wanpoole of Penn- sylvania also survive. The funeral will be held Thurs day at 2 p.m. from Sparks-Griffin Chapel with the Rev. George Garver of the Lutheran Church officiating. Burial Perry Park z ar g James Potts UESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1935 School Building ‘Aid Proposed Broomfield Wilt-Present Amendment Proposal to Raise $200 Million Sen, William S. Broomfield (R- Royal Oak) told the Pontiac Press | today he plans to present a con- stitutiona] amendment, calling for a $200,000,000 bond issue for public school construction, to the Michi- gan Legislature Wednesday after- If approved by the Legislature, proposal will go to the voters Injunction Hearing on Pickets Adjourned Hearings were adjourned to Feb. 7 yesterday in an attempt by Sim- plex Industries, located on Twelve Mile road in Southfield Township, Loca] 157, UAW-CIO. A temporary restraining order was issued Dec. 2% in Oakland County Circuit Court. 30 of 530 in ony Kaas ye Be 4 onto Baldwin Ave. from Mont- | lealm St. against a traffic according to Pontiac Police. She | urday employes went on strike Dc. 1 without giving ten-days notice and taking a formal strike vote as The Day in Birmingham 4 From Our Bureau BIRMINGHAM — City Attorney Forbes Hascall was authorized at | last night's city commission meet- | ing to prepare the proper resolu- | tion for putting a recreation board- sponsored $110,000 revenue bond issue to a public vote in April. It would pay for construction of an outdoor year-round facility at Eton Park—uppermost, an artifi- | cial ite skating rink which would be in operation next winter. Dur- Consumers Gas Boost Illegal Attorney General Says Rate Hike Was Made Without Hearing | crease imposed by the Consumers | Power Co. on natural gas custom- |ers was dechared illegal today by | Atty, Gen. Thomas M. Kavanagh. Kavanagh notified the state Pub- ~|lie. Service Commission that it could not approve escalator clauses in rate schedules increase rates without notice hearing. its rates would be increased a- proximately two per cent because of the higher cost of gas which it The order was issued by the commission without a hearing. Kavanagh held also that the cost adjustment clause could not be in- corporated in later rate schedules even after a public hearing, and public utility may occur without prior notice and hearing.” City Attorney to Prepare Resolution on Bond Issue LANSING (—A recent rate in- | said ‘‘no increase in the rates of a | "| Suffers Broken Elbow When Struck by Auto Mrs. Mary Byrd, 59, of 89 Hill-| side Dr., suffered a broken elbow | Monday night when she was hit | by an auto attempting a left turn | signal, | was treated at Pntiac General | | required by law. ... | Hospital and released. the plant, the firm asserts, block- ing the driveway so trucks can't and threatening injury to work The an order lim- iting pickets to six at once, ruling out 38 Hi i d Ey BE bg cumulates, Dr. Jones said. | According to Patrolmen John Ly- | ‘ons and Géne Felker, the driver, | | Christ Lauinger, 42, of 172 Dresden | | Ave., said he didn't see the woman ah Shell Station at Eton 14 Mile last Friday, and M ae Pilgrim road bome of Mrs. S. M. Vass. s . Thomas Edward Coon : Rosary service for Thomas Ed- ward Coon, 29, of 2078 Manchester Rd., will be held at 8:45 tonight, and prayer service at 8:45 a.m. Wednesday at William Sullivan Fu- neral Héme, Roya] Oak. Requiem Mass will be read at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday in St. Columban Cath- olic Church, with burial in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. He died Sat- Surviving are his widow, Del- phine; two children, Ellen and Pat- rick at home; his parents, Mr. and Mrs, J. Edward Coon of Royal Oak; three sisters, Sheila of Royal | Oak, Mrs. Nancy Smith of Indian- _ until the accident. Lauinger, who apolis, Ind.. Mrs. Earl Edwards of |was not held, said Mrs. Byrd the Walked out into the street from behind parked cars. Seattle, Wash.; and his grandmoth- er, Mrs. Charlies Matthews of Roy- al Oak. Elliot’ New * Plant and Showroom 5390-5400 Dixie Hwy. Waterford, Mich. OR. 3-1225 S and for you alone ! Elliott’s expert craftsmen will style and create on exclusive piece of furniture for you. Over 30 years of experience enable us to capture the exact details you desire. Visit our.new showroom and let us show you some examples of the fine workmon- _ ship you will receive from Elliott's. Open Evenings by Appointment ANNOUNCING NEW SERVICE examination agg > aw when ar- og yng er at MOTOR BAR and GRILL— . a pending hearing Jan. 2%. sd LUNCHEON BUFFET ................ $s] 25 nome ue arom at he oe FINE FOODS, ALL YOU CAN EAT Pontiac Saturday t- ening a young woman who had DINNER BUFFET been sleeping. The woman's FRIED CHICKEN $2 50 screams attracted several of the hotel’s residents who chased John- SEA FOODS son and seized him in the basement ‘ PRIME RIB ROAST BEEF } aa of the building. They held him un- CHOICE OF BEVERAGE til police arrived. eed B ng ged , ORDER Y FAVORITE DRINK FROM THE MOTOR BAR to Attend Meeting , . BREAKFAST - 6A.M.to9P.M. : Members of the Oakland County GRILL OPEN FOR SANDWICHES 11 A. M.te9?.M. ————> Board of Supervisors will be in LUNCHEON BUFFET 1LA.M.to2P.M. —— Lansing Jen. 2 theouah 21 40 ate DINNER BUFFET == ss P.M. to 9 P.M. s State = of . os ‘ ™ é anes! MOTOR BAR «= GRILL €d to be elected president for 1955 Soe ‘Hotel Perry. , at an ‘election of officers Jan. 27. ok in Oe #0 it. # FUNERAL HOME 110 WESSEN ST. PHONE FE 3-7374 Ambulance Service at Any Hour ‘Happy Is The Day ‘When Backache Goes Away... . ncigegias backache, loss of pep and energy. Me ow oho dizziness may be due to slow- e+ eee wee ag * as stress and strain, causes this Gaeetana * funetion to slow down, many folks suffer nag- feel miserable. Minor blad- > diuretic, Used successfully by millions for + over 50 years. pidge wp mgt Amoerp mmet Feta tal THE PONTIAC PRESS, | Smithsonian Building 3 Over Half Million aoe | Added to Institution in 1954 WASHINGTON (INS) — More than a half million objects, from prehistoric: times to the inaugural and wedding dresses of Mrs. Eisen- hower, were added to the Smithso- nian Institution in 194. tary of the famous institution, told the annual meeting of the Board of Regents today that the additions will be of great help to the hun dreds of scholars who visit the Smithsonian yearly. The great majority of uddi- -tiens, Dr, Carmichael said, were for the soological collection. These included such major items as 1,500 small mammals collected in Korea by the Army medical services; 3,500 skins of birds from Thailand and Cuba; 1,042 reptiles and amphibians from Egypt; 5,760 marine from the Caroline Islands; and 100,000 mosquitoes from Thai- land. Botanical collections were in- ereased by more than 24,000 speci- mens from the Fiji Islands—as well as many from Brazil, the Tyukyu Islands, the Isle of Pines, Mexico, Tonga and Malaya. Dr. Carmichael said the collec- geologitat ‘Bureau of Standards’ "’ for U.S. scholars. Added to geological collections were such items as a white and black opal from Australia and large crystals of little-recognizsed gem stones from Brazil and Low- er California. Major additions were made \to fossil collections, Carmichael said, by suclr-contributions as 500 mol- lusks from the Lower Cretaceous period, which was about 100 mil- lion years ago; 7,500 prehistoric monsters ofthe Devonian period (about 300 million years ago); and groups of starfish-like animals from Oklahoma and Ontario. The ‘Smithsonian obtained in Wyoming an outstanding collection of mammal] fossils from the Eocene and Paleocene periods (the dawn ages. of present-day life forms), Carmichael said. Through an exchange, the in- stitution acquired a series of 22 specimens and casts of primi- tive jawiess fish, represented in fossils from rocks gathered in Nerway and Spitsbergen. Additions to the historica] collec- tions, included a ane-horse open sleigh with the date ‘1769,’ which TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1955 ~ American use of prescription. million pounds in 1949 066 million’ ee ee pounds today. --- ee oo lady ha ny TP We do catering — Call FE 2-6242. Fruit Punch - made to order. Bowls and cups for rental. BAKERY DEPARTMENT “DINE OUT! At Pontiac’s Finest ccleas! and Lunch Counter WEDNESDAY’S SPECIALS: Roast Prime Rib of . Beef Au-jus.. Individual Chicken Buttertop Bread (i stititi(‘(‘(‘((#(‘((###.. 2 for 35¢ Date Nut Breed ..—s«_—sd_a........ ee. Wf. 35¢ Pineapple Bran Muffins ........... 6 for 27¢ Parkerhouse Rolls §................ doz. 35¢ Sugared Fried Cakes ................. doz. 43¢ Lemon Torte Cakes ea. 65¢ Wedding — Birthday — Party Cokes Mede to Order ~* 3 fortabelp the! milesct these disesm- | tions in the Smithsonian make up| W@S Said to have been associated fo milset Liner tabs ana : ’ , Ne enn Ost Deane Fab teteyi| the nation’s “great biologieal and| “ih George Washington's New Jer. sey campaign. Dr. Carmichael said the most important costume additions were the inaugural and wedding dresses of the first lady. During the year, the Smithsonian conducted explorations in Venezue- la, the Fiji Islands, Arctic Islands and Mexico—as well as many lo- calities in the U.S. Optometrist 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842 Nixon to Wipe Windshields in Polio Campaign HILDEGARDE AND HER MOM — Frau Frieda Wulfestieg flew all the way from Berlin to see the DANGER! Winter is the worst season ef the year for auto acci- dents. Even the best of drivers can skid on icy streets! Be sure you are fully protected both on your own car and against harm to others. State laws are severe. . Don't lose row right te drive b of Kenneth G SEMESTEAL United Press Phote comedy, ‘Silk Stockings.’ The actress, ‘ noted ~ . : atten Better Things in Sight performance of her daughter, Hildegarde Neff, at! chiefly for film work in U. S. and Germany, is WASHINGTON (—Vice Presi-| the Boston opening of Cole Porter's new musical | making her American stage debut } Open Friday Evenings dent Nixon, who worked his way) ———ae INSURANCE i The vice president will donate | | ‘ ndan A . said. But. when he noticed tire lena ‘ileal windahd lds at qj seed ple Coolidge Secretary ‘Friendship Ends epair tools on the floor behind | j Closed Wednesday Afternoons | e ae wn rice B the front seat of Noland’s car. he| station here Wednesday as a new, { It etween Troope?, | yreame suspicious | a Fee lil i | March of Dimes drive begins. 0 gricu ure ies Pp ] pn a ie | tAbvertt * (Abveitienmant) his services in formally initiating . a Toting Booze Why havent you got that in the FAST RELIEF, MABAL CONGESTION ASSOCIATED WITH HEADS COLOR BAY CaueE SYMPTOMS OF. a “‘pumping for polio’’ phase of} SAN ANTONIO, Tex. w — Dr . : trunk?’ the trooper asked. ‘“‘What's | the campaign which will be held| William M. Jardine, secretary of | AFTON, Okla. W — Friendship) ine trunk? in various cities throughout the na-| agriculture in Calvin Coolidge’s fades fast when one of your! Noland nervously replied. “Oh Teun With Agencies tion between now = Jan. 31. | Cabinet and former president of | fmends arrests you nothing . ae ° a = | Kansas State College, died here That's what hapened to Russell The trooper decided to have a | Di ] Thi E bl le is to fill gas ta and gen-| Monday | Noland, 41-year-old farmer from) jgok for himself ISp aying 1S m em erally act as an sa, en at a| Dr. Jardine, a_ self-made man | Maud, Okla., when he was appre- In the trunk were 19 cases of AMAZING NEW . TREATMENT. A+ Face F cE TRIAL agen — w ie will "me who rose to an outstanding figure | hended “i State Trooper Bert whisky, a case of wine, a case of | Th ds have d fast relief with our sensational, ——.- ee a ieee aw —_ Meech Ba Pome s profit to the in agriculture and education, was eoee: } Noland was transporting | gin and a case of malt beer. They || om sreenoms of, eg Fg —* rw p ~~ 4 . . an early advocate of farm cooper- | <-- ©45®S of liquor from Missouri} ali bore Missouri license stamps drup rs Solnans of nose and throat, temporary loss of smell and taste, temporary Anglemter -Strait, Maynard Johnsen Daniels Agency March of Dimes officials are atives and corporat into Oklahoma—a dry state The friendship ended there hood 9 hearing. can't think le or see well at times, when are Ine. Laselle Agency, torists to tell Nixon tc | a poratons. ; e Pp enaer used by congestion. No matter how oth yen bese Inc. Thatcher -Pattersen- = ° His vari activities included} The State trooper stopped his es -— - iis pena bare ¢ You oath iT TO ¥ ELF Austin-Norveill Wernet “fill ‘er up for polio.” = — = | hhx he dri l A new variety of yOpcorn ex- | THIS SE TREATMENT, FOR A 7 DAY : Agency W. A. Pollock those of surveyor, farmer, farm —ne pe ete eo § i vi : i S S 5 it ty illlw ton & claudyla] 22252; gf 3 28 ofa! ail ia 2 ei EAN Een | CEEOL re: . (il ab gz it g) Uy eas Me wi ll: SEaHE Ann EA | BSE + HH Pp Sepa] OSE ep Sr elgg 8 ee Sali] dge SS edsa liv ||| [22 tid Selle HR BB ire! Pool be LS Se Me EE Sze 3 HW leetitt] BOs Sap ecch, E CATT iu gi} WSS Bea 4d & ss eie|i | Sec e Many En ub ela) a retiy ei * WSS uge “EE i if Sass ae ey) i Te es ’ (eel HED aii oe ® = TH : "I Hue SF ie | sya 2 WLER! gel Ah bu in Wilt seg italia ___— JL Lee =" | 3 o Pal bie ai iy beet 3 BS ie 2255, pu gh it oie bpia? TET te £3 23743 ~ tft g2 Efe ; — | Tea aa seaalnitl faneliGy Bera LATE ne ee | pate li lt giana a. + il i: angie 52 3% we Bellis il i HE Bialy 5's wo 5 bln av st a 7: OzS: so fe ir a SHAG i |Ee! Hy 3: id 7 n- gaSstlivy PLEAS LIT He GEE aT eee nut i fie Fee at ce iia a HB ley! a a 4 = 3: HE sik Seg ul id gia*j H ia] — en a] ib - i alg ifs nt CERF Brepehy yeedgsiicets BpEj|ses Se ci ee | agi Aa ita i i glean tl “ll fe Hit dct inall date cone il - 4 ee ete ple vhine fi Hd Hin rile ge agreed oe seule tiee eel apy | a ben de ge Sgt ae in ule ete t Ey ape |iale|e 2 ean th dialling (fe il Gal |i 7 ReMi iat ates ile) i Ae pat ne Mey i oe El os ax rit la =f ai] tal v He Te ST i 2 ith He NG) agg ry fu wee : se Thee | sit En liga i wa ie Ha ke SL Gace (ct) Sa ee a] 5 ut We 1 itd, ise $ i i ey Lee ee i: vite i iyi dha <3 33 lip aH aff = + Eitet i el iialit: = = FR these ett Ui re AE ile be Rai : ae cl ile ll si Et Ad fis BS & ale i i Ay yi is4is ml ‘SER Ale ia al ile Ne fi iL TF && aH pre oe Ee ‘i te ity inHG i poe at leat ‘ f = snfuil cblugtantedi, crane Kiet yet Leb jee te of aaa Tr a TEE Fs 3 = gi i; i! Fi il ite etl omen auunalits aT nia i rfl = din setts. } i ie Sai E Han int ils eli Heit ah ate eas Sy EDORENG or ig FITerrec ay evened tie LP ned irfettad coh a “ie tae = oo Ft tine ii Hl pede 2a ie a Hh aa ea eet TRANG eta i Ele ieee ae ee tee ie © ea & 3 U it at ie alley ine ide ie fi Ls i ee Fig GG eee ial i cei bane iter Hallebileaiieben EEE A gfe i ait rei Lt da a5, Aly: ai by dave Sh iff pital ils eel pal ili aij falta iit Eis if: ut pall thy fie s age i uf a e|3 lee et i Be i Legg cares (psi et ga il he ee jie ee = en ici ee ee ie Mie ea eat Reanim fie ue iit 4 = Ea a qe pee ets [8s 38S ie ne a i lt il “7 Hale sl i HL at ie 4 eS SH: i HEGE EY lasatubul eS Tad Hee fe Wa ay sed Fe a ok 4 SB ey ; ls; {: gree si ruin) BS a: falas oe 5 if ; is she | yu =; Sidue rn age it anaes ait hill HE hae he ie Ee ate 4 | ageeSgiee8gze"d? SD poe 7 28 48 i gis 3 asf HT EE Wl HH Bl ls 4 . lee a et ri . mw ” m + = —