’ Pal . The Weather ‘ Friday: Colder Details pagé two of ——/- =f THE PONTIAC PRESS" ; ~~ 118th YEAR xkkeweke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1955—60 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS be gt PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE House, Williams Push Road Pro e « * A | ia servances Plann School Building 2" ‘ienned State Loan,Plan Gets Senate OK Needs House Approval This Week for Spot on Ballot April 4 LANSING (?—A plan for @ 100 million dollar state ers. special study and music. { | | bond issue to underwrite local school construction was reached in the Senate, and rushed over to the House today to meet a fast- approaching deadline for action. The Senate, reversing a previous 21-8 defeat of the measure, passed it 25-7 un- der heavy pressure from the school lobby and Republi- can leaders. The House must act this week on the plan if it is to be submitted to the people at the April 4 election. The reversal was accomplished by four senators Sens. Perry W. Greene (R-Grand Rapids) and John Minnema (R- Traverse City) switched from their previous negative votes. Sen. Ar- thur Dehmel (R-Unionville), who did not vote the first time. voted affirmatively yesterday and Sen Don Vanderwerp (R-Fremont) was | rushed back from a Detroit meet- ing by sponsors of the plan to cast a cinching vote. Under the plan issue bonds and loan money to hard-pressed school districts jor classroom construction. Only dis- tricts levying 13 mills on equalized the state will valuations for debt service would be eligible They must continue to levy that amount until the state is repaid. Districts could also refund exist- ing bends ty) get lower interest rates, Negative votes were cast by Sens, Frank N. Beadle (R-St. Clair), Lewis G. Christman (R- Ann Arbor), Clyde H. Geerlings (R-Holland), Clarence F. Graeb Lenten Services Open Here Lent is a_ serious, sacrificial| First, Central, Oskiand Park season of the church year. It is 9} and Wilson Avenue Methodist time when Christians give though Churches are holding meetings to a closer relationship with God | and family suppers on Wednes- through acts of self-denial and day nights. Guest speakers and spiritual study. religious films will be a part of The traditional Ash Wednesday | the programs, services were held here yesterday | : rn hiv of God in the Roman Catholic, Lutheran | ire, a i melting: — and Episcopal Churches. | Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday All churches are stressing extra and Friday nights this week with religious services with guest speak- ‘foreign ‘missionaries as guest | speakers. The Rev. and Mrs. Leon- During the Lenten season, the [ard M. Nipper, missionaries to Fireman Dies in Blaze AP Wirephete AT WASHINGTON — Firemen carry Capt. George Flaherty from an early morning fire in Washington today. He later was pronounced dead. Seventeen other firemen were overcome by smoke in fighting a blaze in a shoe repair and hardware shop. Ten persons in apartments were routed and one man, 50, was rescued. Origin of the fire, seven | | Japan, will repert on their work at | Kobe this evening at 7:45. | Friday night the Rev. and Mrs. | Floyd Horst, missionaries to China jand the Philippines, will tell of ; their experiences. | An evangelistic Crusade will be t £ gra Dulles and Eden Bamboo Raft for Princess |Sfafe Senators a +i~4— * May Discuss. voae Offshore Isles Meet at U.S. Embassy i } Proceed With Their Own Plan Early Action Needed sponsored at the Covert Methodist | = Bangkok for Dinner Church from Feb. 27 through! This Evening March 6, with the Rev. Arthur Howard of Fent the guest | picacher: on est) BANGKOK (PU. S. Sec-| John Stainer’s “Crucifixion” will| retary of State Dulles and! be presented Sunday at 4 p.m. at! British Foreign Secretary | Kirk in the Hills on W. Long Lake Rd. It will be sung by the Ca- Anthony Eden may talk |thedral Choir with soloists Norma Over the Formosa and Chi- nese offshore islands situa- | -_ . ye | Heyde, soprano, Ariene Sollenber- ger, contralto, Harol Hough, tenor | ,; ; ced Stanley Kines. teas, tion tonight at a dinner at This meditation on the Sacred the USS. bassy. | | Pacslon will be directed by The possible effort to. | Frederick Marriott, organist and |reconcile differing Anglo-, choirmaster. The Rev. Harold C. | American views took the, . ae will conduct the | spotlight today as the eight | . . Southeast Asia Defense, = | All Saints Episcopal Church of | Treaty nations held their | a Pontiac and St. James Episcopal | second day of closed confer- pool of Birmingham will join with | y | ee ee ¢Christ- Church Cranbrook in spon- | ences. | = | soring four lectures to be given by | The conference unanimously | Bishop Richard S. Emrich at | chose Bangkok fo rthe permanent |Christ Church on the first four | secretariat | Thursdays in March. Supper will | Dulice streserd the importance | | be served at 7 p.m. and the meet- | ef Fermeca te the over-all ée- ings will be held at 8 p.m. in the fense of Southeast Asia in his church talk to the closed conference yes- Other churches that are having | terday special services during Le nd | i Se pie = “a In a sweeping review of the Far downriver beach party FLOATING DOWN THE RIO — Princess Margaret, hatless in the tropic sun, floats down Jamaica's Rio Grande river on a bamboo yesterday during her visit to Cambbean isle. Lady Hugh Foot, wife of | the Jamaica governor, accompanies the royal guest on their way to a) Princess Margaret is scheduled to sail today | to Put Bipartisan Bill on April Ballot LANSING # — The Re-- | publican - controlled House | and Gov. Williams rushed action on a bipartisan high- way program today, while the Republican-controlled Senate went off in a differ- ent direction. After Republican and Democrat caucuses, House members agreed to pass a bill calling for an Apwl 4 referendum on a 1% -cent per gallon gas tax increase and a 25 per cent increase in truck license fees, the money to be divided on the resent highway distribu- ion formula—44 per cent to the state, 39 per cent to | the counties and 17 per cent | to the cities. AP Wirephete Ped Week will announce them | Pir saat We add eels for the Bahamas, her last stop before flying home next Wednesday. | ahead with its plan for a 1%-cent greater dangers face the free a gallon gas tax increase and a | world now because of internal * . —- most ote agit Seer pressu a “fT. | mone i] Arms Debate sz" Raise of at Least 50 Pct. Sss==*"= | In the face of these dangers, he | ; » | to local units. e stressed, not only the resources | Unitke the House plan, the Sen- of Formosa but those of South Ko- | ate propesal would tet be sub- pens in nn rea, Japan and Indochina are | Ul OF awmd Ars miltted to the voters. deeply involved in Southeast Asia | ; Predict House OK on fecvcented at the Bamchak cus would provide 28 million dollars Pacts Giving Germany ‘erence. WASHINGTON (#—A pay raise of at least $0 per cent | **t year for trumklines, while Wil- y today { tors and H liams’ compromise would provide Role in Defense Plan Northern, central and southeast | WAS assured y for senators ouse members. Aj ony 16.8 millions. Asian forces, together with the | 67 per cent boost—as voted by the House—appeared| Coleman charged Williams had BONN, Germany ®—Overriding nae pire lager ve probable. . ’ a his determination to . core en for of tn Wher | Make Red China chary of start. | The Senate yesterday rolled up a big vote, 62-24, in ls ae er =i oe ee Gonmen Parilament today opened ro ae might quickty develop (favor of an increase in congressional pay from the | State Administrative Board power a a crucial three-day debate on the | Paris treaties to arm 500,000 Ger- mans in Western defense. Most observers agreed with gov- ernment predictions that the pacts China wants to avoid, he said. | He said Chiang Kai-shek’s gov- Electronic Brain ' ernment on Formosa and Syngman e . ’ Rhee's Republic of Korea must be Finds Jupiter's ner (R-Saginaw), Edward Hutch- inson ay canary Haskell L. | blocks from the Capitol, was not immediately determined. Nichols (R-Jackson) and Charles T. Prescott (R-Prescott) Sen. Robert E. Faulkner (R-Co- Joma) attacked the measure, al- though he voted for it. He said he only did so because the people would make the final decision. But, he said, the people should be warned the plan is really an “outright subsidy” for local schools ince the Loans Probably will DeV"r | to aid the relatives of six Highland . | Township persons killed in an This was denied by Sens. Wil- | explosion Feb. 15. | Plunges, Explodes iam 8. Broomfield (R-Royal | po.) giuee a9, bie wil | Oak), the sponsor, and Creighton | uta, 22, and their two small | WINDSOR, Mo. (R—-A four-en- R. Coleman (R-Battle Creek). Rebert Jr.) 19 months | gined Air Force tanker plane on a Coleman said the proposal spe-| Gloria Jean, 7 months, were | Tefueling training mission caught cifies the ‘borrowing districts must, when gasoline exploded in fire shortly after takeoff last night, might “get ——— 3 years) woodraff Rd. 11 men aboard were killed. from now, he said, but that is) , Two crewmen parachuted to safe- Also killed was Zeller’s brother- not the intention of the present inlaw. Samuel Fowler, 29, and ‘Y 88 the flaming craft neared the sponsors, . his daughter Jeannie, 3. Christman ‘argued it would be Mrs. HS. ” who better to amend the 15-mill tax degen limitation to let school districts | the money, asked Dean to “deliver | iene which took off trem borrow for longer periods and| this small expression of my sym 11. Sedalia Air Force base, thus obtain lower interest rates. pathy . . . to add to funds that) - ached on a farm‘about six miles lect | gradually col-| orthwest of this central Missouri Hollow Victory for Thugs | “S.0 oc\y a Pontiac Press photo | ‘°*™ DIX, Neb. (UP)—Burglars car- | A conductor riding in a caboose of Zeller’s sister Patricia, 16, and | ried.a heavy safe three miles into | Fowler's wife Betty, 27, which! em ® Rock Island freight train the country during a blizzard only had been transmitted by wire to) %®W the Buge craft Manting in the to find it empty, police reported. Both Sides Eying Victory in Tax Cut Ballot Today burst inté a regular_torch,”’ said _Asa Gunn, 62, Eldon; Mo., ‘‘and ‘then it disappeared over a knoll ahead of the engine. “There was an awful flash—it WASHINGTON (INS)—House Democrats appeared to be holding their own today against stubborn Republican opposition to an income tax cut of $20 for each man, woman and child. Both sides predicted victory in the fight which comes to a showdown vote late today on the floor of the House but key Republicans conceded privately that the Demo-| “They said they had parachuted crats hold the upper hand. #— from the plane at an altitude of The final vote. on the) sidious thing” which would hurt |!ess than 75 feet,” Gregory. said. measure could be delayed| the whele country. He declared: them said ger = until tomorrow, if debate is| “We simply cannot have this kind and:-the other sab ‘Check Is Sent From New York to Aid Zellers Pontiac Postmaster Leslie H. Dean has received a $5 check from a woman in Auburn, N. Y., Missouri Crash Kills 9 Airmen 2 Crewmen. Parachute to Safety as AF Craft None of the crew was from Michigan. exoplded, though I couldn't hear because of the train.” a farmer who pfessure made it difficult to open leaders, heartened by Pres-, ™ent-” pot Eisenhower's vigorous attack Eisenhower, however, retused to | [2 Today's Press on the tax-cutting proposal, called | rule out a tax reduction next year! nirmingbem ............ oui idiee 2 way up in the air. I knew) the plane had crashed and) first appeared in the tail and that, would win final approval. Armed antiriot police guarded the Parliament building against possible demonstrations as the Bundestag brushed aside the oppo- sition Socialist move on a show of hands. Socialist Deputy Carle Schmid said ratification of | the treaties would wreck any chance of reuniting Ger- many. He said the Soctalisxts were more convinced than ever | that Russian readiness to settle the German problem should | again be tested by the Western | powers at the conference table. | Replying for the government. | Christian Democrat Deputy Kurt | Kiesinger declared the only way ,to reunification: was through rati- | Chairman | | fication. West Germany must first | achieve security before it can re- | store freedom and security to the 18 million Germans in the Soviet zone, he added. Adenauer and members of his Cabinet were on hand as the ses- sion began. Diplomatic and press galleries in the chamber. were packed. | With the nation apparently split maintained. ° Dulles will visit Rangoon, capital | Wandering Moon of neutralist Burma, Saturday. He ee ; will look in on troubled Laos Sun-| NEW YORK ® — An electronic day and visit Cambodia and South | brain has “rediscovered” in record Viet Nam Monday, then fly to the time the eighth moon of Jupiter. | Philippines for a conference of unsighted by astronomers since American Far Eastern ambassa- | 394) dors Tuesday His itinerary beyond the Philip- pines has not been made public (Continued on Page 2. Col. 6) Use of the electronic device— the Univac—was anneunced yes jterday at a news conference by |Dr. Paul Herget, director of the Cincinnati Observatory Second Speaker Named | sieaas emia toy Cake: for Fluoridation Meeting | Herget said, enabled the cighth An added speaket, Dr. Chester moon to be sighted from the Mt. V. Tossy, D.DS., associate chief of the dental division of the Michi- | gan State Department of Public | Health, will appear at tonight's public meeting on fluoridation in | the Pontiac High School audito- | rium. The meeting is set for 8 p.m. Dr. Tossy is assistant to Dr. Fred Wertheimer. chief of the State Health Department's dental section, who was originally an- nounced as the principal speaker for tonight's meeting. night of Jan. %5. In 20 minutes, Herget said, the calculator plotted the astral path Jupiter has 12 moons. Astrono- mers say the great masses of Jupi- ter and the sun pull the ‘moons farther from a “true” circular or elliptic path—so the paths of the '12 moons can be predicted by “clasSical mechanical analysis only wth great difficulty | accepted in the end | Wilson, Calif, Observatory on the of the “missing’’ moon up to 1980. | ‘| selentifie | Present $15,000 to $22,500. | The measure was at ONCE could use their share of the extra 'sent to conference with the | money for pay-as-you-go construc- | House, which last week vot- | tion or to finance revenue bonds. ‘ed 283-118 for a $25,000 sal- | members of the House Both versions include boosts of | ¢, Committee, the House bill $7,500 to $10.000 for all the approx- | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) ee | -o Island Civilians Are Evacuated Sen. Potter (K-Mich) were among the 62 senatérs the raise. ' Nationalists Withdraw 2,000 From Battered Nanchishan whe voted for The five Senate conferees on the bill include severa] members who favor at least a $25,000 salary. This seemed to make it quite likely that the House figure would be Sen. Kefauver-%D-Tenn), head- | ing the Senate group. told a re- porter, “We will defend the Senate position as strongly as we can.”’| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) TAIPEI, Formosa «®—National- jist China said today all civilians = | had been withdrawn from tiny Occasional Spankings | Nanchishan, a Red-threatened 1s- : jland outpost 140 miles north of Still Needed, He Says Formosa. Has the woodshed treatment | The withdrawal seemed an al- for children gone out of style in most certain prelude to a military circles? Read Dr. Cvacuation. The island is reported Crane's cotumm on page 6 today garrisoned by some 5.000 regulars > tand guerrillas nearly down the middle, authori- 50th Anniversary Observed |ties prepared for possible disturb- | ances by bringing in 500 special | police reserves to augument the capital's 800-man force. . Officers armed with pistols, car- | bines and nightsticks stood guard | around the modernistic Parliament building on the banks of the Rhine. | Water cannon were parked at stra- | tegic street corners to sweep any blligerent demonstrators off their feet. Colder Weather ls Expected Here Spring will have to wait a little longer. The brief warm spell will | end and much colder weather with | occasional snow will arrive tonight and tomorrow, according to the | weatherman. | Following temperatures in the | 30's, and even into the 40's last} | weekend. the mercury will drop to | |a low of 12 to 16 tonight, rising | | Weather Bureau says. Friday night’s Jow, will be from 16 to 20 with rising temperatures | expected Saturday. Yesterday in downtown Pontiac | the mercury ranged from 20 to 36 | degrees’with sunny skies most) of | Today at & am. the! | Plateau where the work will be of ‘Dr. Farnham Tells Rotarians to Look to Young Members for Future Service could | land 4. Thatcher. Thatcher, now | retired, was given a plaque as a memento of his years of service. Warning that Rotarians not rest on laurels earned over the past half-century, Dr. Lucius A. | Farnham last night told the Pon- tiac Rotary Club he looked to the young members to carry the or- ganization’s service record to ‘a higher plateau.” “I talked about old fellows to- night, and I didn’t enjoy it,"’ he told 135 Rotarians and their wives at Devon Gables. “I'm interested in the young fel lows and what they are doing. I hope they will reach a higher Entertainment was furnished by the Pontiac High School senior girls’ ensemble CHICAGO (INS) = Arthur E Postmaster General Summerfield greater valpe to us, to Pontiac and to the U.S.A.” Dr. Fatnham, one of 22 charter members of the Pontiac club 3 years ago, was principal speaker memories of his fellow charter — members, most of whom are now original members were officially recognized by Dr. Harold A. long, club president. - ; _@ race between the achievements | | There were approiimately 2,000 | elvilians on Nanchishan, a three- | square-mile isiand 23 miles off the Red mainiand and the north- ern-most anchor of Chiang Kai- shek's island chain. The action follows by less than three weeks the Nationalist evacua- tion of the Tachen Islands, 200 and Arthur H. Compton. Nobel miles north of Formosa. prize winning physicist. have Army commanders had been called for world brotherhood and pressing for a finish fight at Nan- chishan. but the general staff over- ruled them because there was no possible hope of US, support in understanding as the best defense against atomic destruction Both Summerfield and Compton 'ts defense, also told 900 guests at the Rotary The island is outside the For. International Golden Jubilee din.) ™esa Strat and, im the US, : Chics” Year wide than view, not essential to the defense Wat Ls eee shi (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1)- Americans must work for peace Summerfield, citing the de- In Hot Water! Yes sir. the party who an- swered this want ad should have a good supply of hot water from now om. And be- structive pewer of the H-bomb, said the greatest challenge to the Rotary is to help bring about world brotherhood for peace. He added: “Peace must be worked for, it sides, the advertiser ts well must be earned, it must be won, satisfied with the quick re- day by: day. with. perseverance, — Loy Ra $35 cash he with imagination. with the strength recetved. ve you some- and confidence that comes from aa to sell? Try a Want the deep faith of our people.” Compton pictured the world “‘in of a new paradise of cooperative Cth “Conattion, #35, o008 W. living and a bell of mutual de- 1. : struction.” The physicist said: To Place Your Want Ad must rely on a friendliness among | Just ask for the - peoples that is based upon an un-: derstanding of each other's needs and of their good will.” ‘ ‘ WANT AD. DEPT... a ~¥ ‘ E OVER PAGES Fmd HIAN ' ~ fad Wil ~ Hearing Slated Hos Been Filed in Probate Court for. : Late Hills Man ' A will valued at Upwards of | $85,000. has been filed in Oakland County Probate Court by aftor- neys for Jolin. Endicott. 87, of} Bloomfield Hills, who died Feb. 6. ~< ¢ igantic A-Explosion | eazentc A Exeloson | Abraham Allen LAS VEGAS, Nev. (INS)—The - ‘Young Slayer ‘Moved to Jail ¢ le r ‘ 3] Floyd Diamond Ordered | But it the weather tums good a Funeral Service Set ? Held Here for March 2/ if cue 1 D Mched SH Briday for City Scrap” It will be the third blast in the current series of nuclear tests and Dealer Abraha: m Allen Hearing | Floyd Diamond, 16, confessed | slayer of 9-year-old Kathleen Mo- | Laughlin, of Farmington Township, was moved from the Oakland the bomb will be fired from al * 63, a scrap yesterday at Henry’ Ford Hospital in THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1955 The Day in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM — With the dead lipe coming «up Monday and the Community House Roll Call-drive of $52,400 still lagging. Russell B. Robing, campaign chairman, em- phasized that all contributions are | Towne will administer Holy Com- | go». }munion. All persons have been in- | tax deductible As of last might, $21,830 had been | turned in. but Robins said most | soliciters have ‘not yet turned in. . = eine *. Roll Call Drive Lagging mere oa, Dies in Detroit -as Deadline Approaches the First Methodist Church Wom- en's Society, She will tell- of the’ projects, mostly foreign, which will benefit from the offering. Rev. Harold vited. . * * ’ ge Club members hon- 1 fire. Grand Rapids Fireman Killed by Heart Attack GRAND. RAPIDS {Vanderveen, 55, a Grand Rapids |fireman, died of a heart attack | yesterday while fighting a house Boy | Fire Chief Frank.M. Burns said Vanderveen apparently suffered ‘the attack when he was overcome | by smoke (UP)—Percy" FRIDAY & SATURDAY Only! MAIN FLOOR BARGA NS Wash with a Damp Cleth f Hearings are slated for May 9| County Children’s Home to the | 500-foot steel tower and some 1100. Detroit. He lived their collections o their fellow member, Ray { i before Probate Judge Arthur FE. county jail last night on orders of troops,’ stationed in trenches only | at 214 E. lro- Siceaver, Rebeae nd Morell Palmer, at tilis week's luncheon, | Ste + Mode. . . T Probate Judge Arthur'E. Moore. | 4000 yards from: the tower, will | = quois. Rd. Hagen, who hedils business so- | — arora by City officials. | Value ; Endicott, g Detroit busin } | A series of psychiatric examina- | part in the test. One | _Born in coger licitations, urged businessmen to | having. cd ~ goers ied man and civic leader since the tions, given the youth since last Fed aircraft also will participate. | Feb. 16, 1892, he. return their pledge cards of | mayer, ety Bea rises and Ladte tia’ asduna turn of the century, was operat. — week were reported completed yes- | Pivag, WAS married 10) donations immediately. | Board of E a ing a 15-acre dairy farm at terday = mae oes Femterg of! 5 wie tte fined week of eee cloth " Lace. trim, . . , i : : . n this, the final week of the % . , | clot m, Quarton and Chesterfield Rds. THOMAS G. BRADY . a .. Pontiac and the campaign. 19 ‘special solicitors He has béen a mefiber of the | | padded. 8-M-L. Diamond, whe admitted the t & < son of | Samuel | apbc local Cemetery Board and helped | at bis death, killing within three hours of his | . 7, 4 we ana o- ‘ra cu /have been named to try and con- eddie te’ Recents tg Strong Spring Type The petition for probate listed Thomas Brady capture last Thursday, had been A | iehicisd Server Allen tact sped ane and com: G1, Employe’s Reticetnent Board FIN real estate holdings estimated at held in the children’s » n ns C f Ny . all ercial enterprise in the area. aed Catniumity © ‘il . pe ae eee =e Ald wn MAS Sat ten he ite cma set tm Commangy Ca CLIPPERS ued at $50,000, The complete listing - . er, ore 4 E ee dors business in the area in- City Co atti he 2 $1.50 | Explaining the order to hold the . . Sons Inc., 22 Congress St., in 1905 crease.” Hagen said. “but. then LOSERS Oe NEAT Quality c . the will eer pense ies on 0aS | youth in jail instead of the home, Craft Sinks--When Fires | and-the three sons were associated tu. the needs -" the Community me deg mid par de igerind _E . > ver 5 ; : . mie : a : ; ~ for the debatable T-shaped alley thing i equal shares to his three pepo 0 ae ee phew! Force Reynolds, Wife | var aeeabara “ane. Woe ae : Bere Poa eee, " Pat to which was proposed for the west- | pied $1.49 x . | e . ‘é oa we nee ud children, Mrs. Stanley" E. Read. of Death Takes Former for the other children,” held for; Into Lifeboat Mr. Allen was a member of Con- support of every en pera aating: ote fal of the Block townie By en ee Eee Ge | Ma {minor infractions and as products gregation B'nai Isrde!, B'nai Brith vie gilers , Maple, Henrietta, Martin and | piraciom $1.69 Endicott. of Cleveland; and Robert —_— ——e 62 |of broken families. MIAMI BEACH, Fila. ®—Tobac-| and a member of Scrap Iron In-| Tomorrow's World Day of Prayer Bates | R.. of New York City. Wilson Foundry The move was made for the |Co heir Richard J. Reynolds and/ stitute. ' ‘observance will be marked by a|. Lawmakers pointed out that all | Precision made Pregl 4 Me, EE . | “protection of the children and to, his wife were forced to abandon’ Surviving are two daughters. special service here at 10 a.m.~DUt two property owners involved choper ry just Elizabeth, died in 1944. Thomas G. Brady, former gen- prevent talk among them,” he their 53-foot yacht Scarlet O'Hara Mrs Jack Flashberg of Phoemx, at St. James Episcopal Church would have the necessary access: about halt price. . —_—— — eral manager of the Wilson Foun- : | early today because of a series of | Ariz. Mrs. Jack Soble of Roches. Sponsored locarly by United Church ©8tess requirements if B. Siegel | : d Willi dry & Machine Co., and widely Diamond is scheduled to appear | fires which broke out while the| ter, N.Y; one son, Daniel. at ‘!omen, the program will include ©®. of Detroit completes plans for) 7 $1.25 Value—Genuine Leather | House an | iams known in the industrial world, died | .+ 9 hearing before Judge Moore luxury craft was at sea. |home ‘and four grandchildren. Mrs, Lynn Russell, president of 4 branch on Bates between Ma- _— jlast night after several months | wednesday when decision will. be | fees oe ws | His two brothers, George of De-’ ple and Martin. Services for the The (Continued From Page One) sented a major concession on Williams’ part. Williams conceded the House bill was not what he wanted. but said | it would give the arterial system a ‘good start.’ Highway experts estimated the House bill would finance an 250 - million dollar bond’ issue. The biggest problem facing backers of the bill was how to get it through the Senate in time for a place on the April ballot } The bili would not be eligible for passage by the Senate until = ' Tuesday, at the earliest. This is ee Te ae Se ‘ a — a Push Highway Bill vrs, in, Sams Barbers, Cait California six years ago. ton, Ky., Nov. 11, 1890, and was married in Detroit in 1936 to Helen Barron of Windsor, Ont., Canada. for the city of Pontiac liness in Santa Barbara, Calif. | jade on a petition by Prosecutor Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds took to @ | troit and Herbert of Pontiac, also Frederick C. Ziem, asking that the lifeboat with the yacht's captain | survive. youth be tried as an adult instead nd safely reached the beach rl The funeral will be held Friday Mr. Brady was born in Coving- | o¢ » juvenile. | Towing and spreading a tarpaulin! gt 12:30 p.m. from the Ira Kauf- |as a sail. The Scarlet O’Hara|man Chapel, $119 Dexter Blvd Pay Hike Assured was employed at the Wilson | boating circles as an express cruis-, | burned and sank. | Detroit. Burial will follow in Macb- by Senators’ Vote Foundry, where he was later | y |er, was five miles off Miami Beach | | The Coast Guard said a fuel leak | pelah Cemetery, | developed and fire broke out at 2/ pe general manager. He wasexalt- = (Continued From Page One) ouite here from Nassau. ed ruler of Elks BPOE Lodge 810 51. he added if House conferees * 28 @ ; on two different occasions, presi: | 17. adamant, “we will have to Reynolds and the captain extin- ae morsing at Postse Georrel dent of Michigan State Elks and ake some adjustment.” guished the blaze. Another fire| Hospital — ee 6 ee | The Mouse conferees alt 82¢d up and was ext - Post American Legion Born in Mt. Olive, [Il., Dec. 23 we opin were strong backers of the As fast as one blaze was put out | 1999. she was the daughter of John Mr. Brady was one of the ong- $25,000 salary in that body. nal ed a tha: teak oes paeorion pe up. The beni extin- | Hy. an dEmilie Saussenthaler Dank- members of t ria ishers were soon empty. ; : e ag ee. 2 | jler. She was married Oct. 11, 1930 in Litchfield, In Mrs. Charles H. Nicholson Mrs, Charles H. (Julia Danklef) Nicholson, 45, of 2154 Avondale Coming to Pontiae in 1920, he ,a.m. while the vessel, known in survived by one son, @ay he thought a $25,000 salary; Reynolds assisted his wife ; beyond the original deadiine. but ie is ! mm 0 over) Mrs. Nicholson came here from leaders naar y deadline could Thomas Vale, at home; two sis- was SS ee take te the side and he and the captain | netroit three years ago. She was * be extended. ters. and one brother, Sister M. | Kilgore ( = = joined them, a graduate nurse. receiving her “Senate leaders gave the House bill only a slim chance of passing. Coleman said there is stil! no in- terest in the Senate in a bond issue or in submitting any proposal to the voters this spring ’ The Senate, Colem&n said, wil! | F write its own bill and send it to the House, meanwhile receiving the House bill for study and amendments Republicans agreed in a Senate caucus yesterday to give two thirds of the 25 per cent loca) tax increase to counties, and asked the Senate Highway Committee to con- sider using that for county pri mary roads only. The cities would get one-third of the 3 per cent This would give northern Michi- gan counties a ‘‘break.’’ and com- pensate for the fact that the state's money would be spent principally on southern Michigan trunklines, | Coleman sajd Chiang Evacuates J c ’ Cj ili th Is| nd 100 million dollars in revenue a | Nation yesterday when he appeared | q 5. vl lans set, I tied to a extend- | before Farmington Township Jus- | (Continued From Page One) i of Formosa and the Pescadores, | ' which President Eisenhower has promised to guard. t The island is outside the For mosa Strait and. in the US. view not essential to the defense of For mosa and the Pescadores President Eisenhower has prom isef to guard. . Earlier today. official sources de nied Nanthishan was being evacu which olows agai the Reds had less ened, for the ime being. the Com. ! aumist threat there. At the moment, the = situation appears less menacing than it was two days ago, when Nationalist pilots reported sighting and attack- ing more than 200 armed, motor ized funks near Peilungshan. The Reds have not thrown any air strength against Nanchishan la, Gen. Roger Ramey. whose U.S. Sth Air Force maintains a squadron of FS Sabre Jets or Formosa, conferred with top U.S and Nationalist officials todas The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly tloedy with eoccasiona! light snew te- night, terning mech colder tonight Te- morrow partly cloedy and mech colder with scattered snew flerries Tomorrow night cloudy and net quite se cold Lew tenight 1¢ te 14, high temerrew 7! te Pauline of the Order of Notre Dame of Philadelphia, Pa.. Mrs. Brady, both ef Santa Barbara the family home in Santa Barbara | will be held Saturday at 10 am trom Old Mission Church Both Sides Eying Victory in Tax Fight (ce soo ae s sponsible’ budget needs of the nation and Speaker Rayburn (D-Tex) are as- assault charge of Williamina down April 1. about three billion dollars in reve- | nue be relieved of paving any federal income taxes at all by the Demo- -eratic proposal main arguments agaifist-the pr&, Potice said Cheeks ran a stop ated They said air and nayaj} posal on the grounds that they’ sign. He is charged with not having | A Bloomfield believe everyone should pay 100 on Buses Saved in English Storm rowed through giant drifts today and rescued 100 persons marooned | the church. ali mght in three buses in northern near bimber uninjured but cold and hungry gions had drifts 10 feet deep for For the third day in succession vited all fishing craft were kept in port ~ at Bridlington on the east coast PTA Study Group Set Ill), other conferees, have support- =A Coast Guard rescue craft was ed a $27,500 figure recommended dispatched but the Scariet O'Hara last year by a special peerage ‘disappeared “in the darkness. It! The salary boost will be the first was located, at daybreak, sunk .),. ; , auc ; emer s survived by two daughters since 196 for the lawmakers. | encegt for the bow rising ‘above Mrs Julia Goetsch of Royal Oak a then iney evs | the surface. An effort was being and Nancy Nicholson, at home ‘ "__ | vot ves an | made to get the derelict into shal-| Friends may call at the C J niday evening. | Funeral service | deduction of up to $3.000 for WviNg |low water because of its hazard to Godhardt Funeral Home. 2901 Or expenses in Washington. sees navigation. chard Lake Ave. Arrangements for not affected by te pay legislation.| Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds went into | the funeral will be announced later retirement after reachi land | The Senate bift contains one ne . bonus not included by the House. ‘John Edword O'Rourke Exam Is Postponed | This would alow expenses for ne | John Edward O'Rourke, 64 sta | 2058 Knollwood Ave. died | denly at his home last night Born in Sanilac Countv March 22. 1891, he was the son of Thomas and Mary Weisenberger O'Rourke and sarried Sophia Kobliniski Jan 10, 1910 in Gaylord. Coming here from Gaslord.30 years ago, he was a member of the St. Hugo of the training at St. Louis Jewish Hos pital in St. Louis, Mo ohn Wylie, and Lawrence Vale Besides her husband and mother The Rosary will be recited at of sud pee a mile they now receive for’ (Continued From Page One) |<7ott le th in Felonious Assault because it ignores the Vice President Nixon and House | The examination on a felonious ~alled it a ‘political maneuver.”’ sured of a $5,000 raise to $45,000 Republicans clearly counted on |each. Both bills contain this. the President's strong position to | | MANGS —| “sins Purdy i charged with fring et as an are welder at te Elece- | a .22 slug which wounded her | . ; said will be a “tough battie.” GMC Truck & and Coach Division Exam on Charge niece, Mrs. Eleanor M. LaRousa, | Halleck told newsmen hower’s remarks “had a tre- ’ me eA 33. of 714 Raeburn St.. Jan. 28 a | where Jad ned w rked = siecle : Mrs. LaR eek tote Paty Besides his widow and mother William Cheeks, 20. of 20648 Aj) ee : mendous impact on the country.” r at Whipple Lake. independ. | 5* is survived by five children The proposal, which would cost ‘ernmen Court, Ferndale, demanded exami- s , ~ herr tnite e Rovere co too ence Township, about 3 a.m. and ee en hi ell Fy a demanded entrance, State Police ; ; : id . jof Clarkston. F:dward, Mrs. Steve The shot was fired after the | (Eleanor) Kenjalo. Mrs. Thomas | victim had broken a door window | (Aeeen’ McUny, alt of Pontiac and oe her fist, they explained ; Purdy, 28, has been postponed until | March 31 on request of her at- torney, according to Springfield | Township Justice Emmett J. Leib. tice Allen C. Ingle. He is accused ng present rates on corporation : ncome and excise taxes due to go | of manslaughter in a traffic acci- Failure to extend dent which killed the wife of a ‘ : t former Pontiac police chief. ot piecing A gorse ~ = not |e Also surviving are: one sister Mrs. Ella Rhodes, 62. died short- | oleed 4 a: the wind wes Mrs. Alice Nowaczyk of Pigeon: ly after arrival at Mt. oe ttered . as seven brothers. Michael and Wil- |Mercy Hospital. Charlies F. Rhodes, | 894 . liam of Vanderhilt, Vincent. Joseph police chief here from March 5 and Marcus of Gaviord. Steven and 1938 to July }. rp was trated fo Tenant. both of Slcerennd injumes receiy nm the sion a Arrangements will be announced Republicans 8€Y Fight Mile and Southfield Rds ater by the Dudley H. Moore Fu hey will use this as one of the pve, 2 oe neral Home i}two grandchildren hese rates would mean a loss o About five million persons would Driver Avoids Duck, but Wrecks Auto at-his car under control. Phere pecgeng-ag led a Ernest Adelbert Power east some taxes. | aveid hitting a white duck in the | Ernest Adelbert Power. 61. of Drayton Church PTA ‘road early today, was treated for Bitely. a mer ~~ bie ° ° injuries after losing contro! of his | died Tuesday at St ita Hospita to See Movie Tonight ee i struck celort ever. |i Lima, Ohio. DRAYTON PLAINS — Parent-| turned and caught fire. | He was born in Pontiac Aug. 2, Teacher night of the junior départ- Melvin Sterner, 38, of 4873 Keith. | 1893, the son of Delbert H. and ment of the Community United | dale Lane, an engincer with Holly |Clarabelle LaMontain Power. LONDON W — Snowplows bur- presbyterian Church Bible School Carburetor, was treated at St. Jo-| Delbert. his father was connected will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in seph Mercy Hospital for cuts and with the Oakland County Savings bruises following the accident on | Bank and helped organize the Pon- | In addition to providing an op- Sixteen Mile toad, west of De- tac Commercial & Savings Bank. ngland. The passengers, trapped | portunity for parents and teachers , quindre in Troy Township. , A manufacturer's agent, Mr in Yorkshire, Were |i. Gi ccuee matters of mutual in.) Passing motorists and neighbors | Power was a member of Baldwin terest, there will be a motion pic- who noticed the blazing auto tried | Lodge F & AM of Baldwin and | ture dealing with the value of re- ‘© put out the fire, But Troy Town- Dwight Clinton Consistory of Grand 'ligious training in the family. Par- Ship firemen had to be called when | Rapids. | ‘ ad the fire out of control. He is survived by a brother, ents of children in the fourth, fifth got Ir Me chee od Kaci sixth grades have been in-| Official birthd of British | Mrs. Dorothy Honsberger of St. | sovereigns usually are observed in Petersburg, Fla. | June and Queen Elizabeth II cele The funeral will be held Friday {brates her birthday that month, | at 1:30 p.m. from the Farmer- kLlsewhere in England snow con inued to fall steadily. Many re- he first time in many years. Seas were rough for small craft. | and “e tomorrow night 16 te %. North — . | although her real birthday is April | Snover Funeral Home with burial wt Nad ad Land es boa Three Rochester Men for Panel Talks Tonight 121. in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. | Teday in Pontiac temperature preceding 8 am Direc Lowest Bun sets Thureday at 16 pm co oo Sunes as te last Feb| 7, were bound over yes- School. This is topic two of the | Back-of-Door or Wall Style Moon rises Friday at 8 20 am terday for arraignment in Circuit | University of Chicago adult edu- ( Charged With Breokin tochester men, with bregking into a grocery store | 37. Luther C i Held in Oakland County Jail un-| Mrs. George Underwood ts chair- | , der $5,000 bond are Jack Baker, jman of the panel, and will be as . M. of 1007°W. TGhird,: Thomas | sisted by Mrs. Frank Spraker. Bell, 31, of 1458 Courtland, and WILLIAMS LAKE—"“Understand- : Sen on aS ee ling of Self and Others,” will ; Another Big Shipment! discussed at & p.m. tonight by the PTA study group at Williams Lake charged ‘ourt by Avon Township Justice cation course, “Parenthood in a Green. | Free Nation...” : Mrs. Leslie Pickup, Mrs. Glen | Sovntowe) xe Charles Alverson Jr., 25 of 123| Byington and Mrs. Marion. Ship- Original $1.99 Value yssucahienieccsn i a — weegeeesenedeste 7 pores ie Due to the Death of j = j HOLDS Abe Allen S. ALLEN & SON, INC. 22 Congress St. — Pontisc 6 PAIRS Will Be Closed Friday and Saturday ™ Ls git. i: Sad 8 Mare Ss 2 rd ee | French Cabinet — Knuckles Down Assembly Ends Crisis by Election of Faure as New Premier other two could be provided from Maple . s Ld Quarton School gymnasium has been transformed into a story- beck land for the Fair to start at 3:30 p.m. to- morrow, Besides fun for the adults, children will see, the movie, “Seal Isiand,”’ and find a Variety of games, magic, rides and surprises Co - chairmen Mrs. Robert C. | Wyatt and Mrs. Vaughan Greene, By HARVEY HUDSON PARIS u*—Faced with a mass of accumulated big problems, min- | isters in Premier Edgar Faure's new government plunged today into the task of learning their jobs quickly in advance of urgent de- cisions The Nationa) Assembly ended a 19-day governmental crisis last night by approving 309-210 Faure's bid to head France's 21st post- liberation government But only 4 of the 20 ministers picked by Faure, a Radical So- cialist (moderate), for his con- servative-toned Cabinet served In the previous government of Pierre Mendes-France. And two of the four have different jobs. While most of the minigers have had previous Cabinet experience they must catch up on the de- tals of their new posts before ven- turing far in policy decisions Faure .held the Foreign Office in the closing days of Mendes- France's term.” after previously serving as finance minister He must check out Antoine Pinay. the new foreign affairs chief. on in ternational questions Dulles, Eden Plan Dinner Discussion (Continued From Page One) but there ar, indications that he may visit Formosa t In the closed meeting yesterday | Dulles ticked off these components of the American force he said could strike anywhere in the Pa- cific A fleet of 400 warships including and) =300.000 men Five divisions of %560.000 men Thirty squadrons of Air Force jet bombers and interceptors plus other strategic forces He argued against breaking up this powerful force and assigning parts of it to Manila Pact nations He urged instead that it be kept intact, able to strike anywhere needed and that the separate na- tions add their strength to that of the U.S. Pacific force. strong reve e eee eee eee TT TOT TOO TO Oe ee eUU CUT UU TU UUCUCCUTCCUCCeCCCTT?T carriers Exactly as Pictured @ Suger & Creamer @ Coke Platter @ Knife Holder > @ Pletes—Set of 6 a colors — chartreuse and est green, permanently fired on hevay glass. Ideal as beauti~ ful, useful gift — practical for any home. 2 ee a. a 8 1] Piece CAKE SERVICE | SIMMS. added that there will be an evening meal for all. * s . A $5300 reward has been offered for information leading to the re- turn of Robert L. Perry, 30, of 1145 N. Woodward. The Detroit advertising man disappeared Feb. | 2 and his abandoned car was dis- covered near the mouth of the Rouge River + . s A breakin at McCallum & Dean television and radio store at 409 E. Maple. netted thieves $645.58, police said today. Of the total taken from a cash register $407.04 was in checks. . Entry was gained through break- ing the window in a rear door. Nothing else ,was. disturbed. $5.00 Price Slash Former $24.95 Value —NOW ONLY— Sunbeam CONTROLLED HEAT FRYPAN Jaloma A i A i - * ~~ a ea tyekeet ~ SPECIAL PURCHASE—"‘Close-Out”’ Price While Our Supply of 200 Lasts! Regular $4 to $$ Value $249 PTA's Animal . 49¢ Refills Testament | & Psalms 99 Famous King James version of the New Testament and Psalms. Leath- er cover, red edge and rib- bon marker Irregulars of $1.00 Value 4-Blade Style | | | | Scout style knife with 4 biedes. A different use for every blade. Converts Electric Razor from AC to DC . REMINGTON SPEEDAK Regular ‘m ©\ ' $5.95 ' Precision made converter to speed ' up your electric razor for better i shaves Advertised on Television! i ‘INSTANT GRIP’ GLUE ' 2%-On. ‘ Tube | Advertised on tete¥ision Mends anything, 1.000 and 1 uses Por wood, | metal, tvory, plastic leather, many others chine glass, ete Regular $1.75 Valve PENCIL SHARPENER ) 1° | ' ' | Desk mode! pencil sharp ener Pamous “Everhandy”™ penci] sharp- ener at this price. Shoots ‘em High in the Air Fly Saucers and Gun 79c Value Plastic launch- ing gun with 3 Lots of fun, Long or Short Styles || gvershorp Boll Pen REFILLS 29: for all the famous Bversharp pens. Kimberly, re- tractable Rock ette, Star Reporter, Ever- sharp Jr.. etc. Hours end Hours of Funl $1.00 Slinky Toy 719° with slink toy. As pletered. walks own stairs. AR metal, Value Featured This Weekend | Beef, Lamb and Chicken] By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | tered specials on lamb chops. Prime ribs of beet, legs of lamb | Not» many stores ‘will featuré Exclusive! Famous Name! Our Greatest Leather Belt Sale... § | Values to 2.50 @ Handsome Bold Metal Buckles @ Classic Styles and New Ideas @ Black, Navy, Tan, Natural, Brown, Many Pastels © Sizes 24 to 30 _ Wide belts ., . narrow belts... contour belts... all sole-slashed to an amazingly low 1.00! Every one a wanted style! The leathers ore a tanner’s pride . . . soft, luscious in exciting colors .. . hurry in today while they last! Waite's Leather Goods—Street Floor NO MORE SMEARING wet nails! *. as ‘ - Asks Damages LOS ANGELES «—Actor Paul Douglas, who denies that he said His Superior tion and injurious falsehood. Producer Gregory canceled a) Dr. C. A. Dwyer, Harris County | national tour of ‘The Caine Mutiny | Court Martial,’’ In which Douglas starred as Capt. Queeg, after the attributed to him in an interview |in the Greensboro (N.C.) Daily “The South stinks; it is a land of} | Two Sons; Psychiatrist sownelly and segregation,” has | filed a million-dollar damage suit. | Court action is) SAVE Up zip-lined coats WOOF 0 THAT YOU SHOP AT SEARS / AND SAVE, Values to 34% A spokesman for Gregory said the company had been doing capa- | ern tour starting Feb. 14 in Charle- Douglas denied the remark but the Daily News executive news editor said, ‘‘We think Douglas was correctly quoted.” } Burmese Reds Running | NEW YORK wW®—Burma's Am- blamed the bhassador James Barrington said in | fractures but the |. speech last night the Commu-| mother contends she did not nists in Burma ‘‘are on the run, disorganized and demoralized.'' He | said order had been restored everywhere except in ‘‘a small lo- cal area on the Thai border where | ordinamee was passed by Township to kill her sons with an overdose ag a Geeememeilaal weld o@ Of sleeping pills Feb. 16. When the ROBERT H. DUDLEY. | pills failed, she said, she strangled the last remnants of the Karen| snahip Cire; each child with a handkerchief. | rebels hang out.” ! FE 5-4171 for FREE Replace your old worn-out vacuum cleaner now with a new KENMORE vacuum... 4 154 North Saginew St. : Kenmore Cleaners 338° Take your pick of Ken- more’s famous styles including uprights, tanks or canisters —all sale priced at Sears! Vacuums, Main Floor ' ay Oey priced as low as || | Actually two coats in one... at up to $10 savings! Perfect warmth on cold days . . . zip out the lining for spring weather! Choice of attractive patterns, expertly made for comfort and long wear! Latest styling and ‘‘extras’’ in workmanship make them a terrific seller at their regular price—but you save up to ~ $10 this week at Sears! Come in now—choose your size and save! Men's Clothing Dept—Main Floor Now--Save Up to 10.07! Fashion Tailored Wool Suits 88 HERE'S PROOF TWAT VOW SHOP snorare Values te 47.50 df Many Patterns & Colors to Choose From Stylish looking suits of long-wearing fab- rics’ at up to 10.07 savings! You'll find shorts, regulars and longs in all men’s sizes! See them this week — at Sears! Men's Clothing Dept—Main Floor assortment values to 8.98! SAVE 1.10! Hercules utility slacks @ Regulerly priced at 4.98 @ Assorted Wesheble Colors @ Gabardine Fortified with 15% : Nylon @ Choice of men’s sizes 29-42 Phone FE 5-417] HERE S PROOF SAVE! I ~ * al «4 yes 44 ~ ; Yuu aere j* \\n = —e 4 Regular 3.98 Genuine Fur TAAT YOU SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE Men’s 100% Wool Coat Sweaters i * oe wre es ' d LJ * “4 £ { 'e . @ atiwa P| [SEN SR, AI FRE ae) Ra EPR A AI OG PONE TT on TE : ]IPA Ee LLL L LLL LL haat tz @ . “ a __THE PONTIAC PRESS, -THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1955 "4 qe _ - ~ nals eeeees Feature Frozen Fillets aera 2 ths. for: Fasting Lenten Days | . VELVEETA 2 Lb. Leaf 79¢ | By JANET ODELL | fish should be put on some sort of : eseeeaea Pontiac Press Food Editor perforated dish so that the juice : From feast day to fast day ... may drain off. Never allow fish to Breast O' Chicken from Mardi:Gras to Lent. . » for | | Stand in its juice for any length - fof time. Somes fish dealers know —— ap See Se abrupt Of and take proper precautions. | | change in meal planning this week. | It is something for the observing That makes ita good time to talk housewife to note. | Snow Bird aa | about fish There is no such thing as a tough OCEAN PERCH FILLET s 33: Just recently we. read an article fish. Different fish vary in the dry on Lenten meals that talked about "PSS Of the flesh: and there is a os | ee difference in flavor between the | “Meat: alternates We tike that light and dark flesh. Leng cooking Pen Ready \term better than ‘‘meat substi- jc neve; necessary: _ that. only , HERRING “¥ ~ Lb. 35 | tutes.” ‘After all, individuals often ‘hardens the fibers. All you need Seeeueeeeeean | Choose fish in preference to meat, do is cook it long enough to co- +rather than as a substitute for it. agulate the flesh. The Eskimos ; Florida, Tree Ripened | So let’s talk about fish as a meat have eaten raw fish for centuries | Sine | alternate without any ill effects } eaee ' Oakland County abounds in fish- Fillets are wonderfully easy to! filled lakes which makes catching j ter fish a commonplace thing. But ’ Lb. |we are wholly dependent on the Baked Fillets, Pioneer Style eseseeeseeeeses |commercia! fishing industnes to S enlae Panes * Loewner gave us a tip on Keeping ‘to taste . : . MOTHER! Does your child get minutes or until fish ig cooked delicate in flavor! And nutritionists rate pmo ug with salt water fish and mei , CHUNK PACK ath seafood, Most of us have never had) $).. oi | Gee es Sar al OTAN | | the opportunity to purchase fresh — Peppe' . a ONLY fish. “It is the juice from the fish 1 @ shallow baking dish with Sprnkle with parsley and bacon Breast-O’-Chicken Tuna excellent in both tz cup buttered ctumbe THE FINEST 1/3 ; |which decomposes rapidly and g)y-¢ «)! Arrange fillets on dish Dixie Highway at Telegraph Lots of Parking gives off the unpleasant ‘fishy P L Serve at once. Serves 4 ity and quality of -buildi i All The Minerals, Vitamins, Food Energy | i; <-, «2 ee ee - + prepare We think you will like , Vine Ripened ; Cleaning and cooking of fresh wa- this recipe - } | ocean fish. Chepoed parsle } Fish deteriorates -more rapidly | Crumble crisp bacon feptienal: than meat and must be stored with Slice omons very thin. Saute in | |eare. Only recently a restaurant | butter unti! just transparent. Salt OF THE TUNA kl . ; Only the prime portions of selected tuna . and sprinkle with salt and pepper a odor.’ She went on to say that | Cover with the sauteed onions and are used in Breast-O'-Chicken brand. sprinkle with buttered crumbs | It's always firm, light tender — wonderfully Bake in a 400 degree oven 12-1 3 : recipe for preparing perch fillets Tuna is such a money-saving food, you can enjoy the best every me. Choose Breast-O'-Chickea Hi-Protein Tuna in famcy solid pack of popular chunk style. Either way, you get only ? This one combines broiled fish nk sult Blue Bonnet Margarine Gives? sith ginepole crabs aa a. you find in your grocer's frozen “BLUE BONNET’ YOUNGSTERS get on: Conant the best-o'-nenal all the nourishment of the “high- Chili-Glazed Ocean Perch Fillets price”’ spread! Yes, when you put pH cage gh ra fillets SPECIAL SPRING OF FER— TIPFERED STORAGE BAGt BLUE BONNET Margarine on your ‘s cup chil sauce A jumbo-size storage bag for only 50¢ and table you give your family all the Let fillets thaw on refrigerator two Breast-O’-Chicken Tuna labels. Made of heavy, clear plastic — holds two double blankets. For your plastic storage bag, send just 50¢ and two Breast-O'-Chickea Tuna labels to Box 2-B, Hollywood, California. Offer expires April 30, 1955, Milk Minerals—the calcium ahd shelf. Cut block of fillets into 4 hosphorus—they coul parts. Arrange on aluminum foil One hast grade of the = gene on preheated greased broiler pan. | > + Sprinkle blocks of fillets with lem- spread. You also give them four on juice and spread with chilli times more Vitamin D than in the eae nrwiil>linekenltromlsodrce'| 80 order now! high-price spread, a more depend- of heat &-to 10 minutes or until | able source of \ itamin A each fish flakes easily when tested with | ; pound, the yearround,andVitamin | "York Serve. immediatly” with | BREJAST-O’-CHICKEN -xstex TUNA E. And BLUE BONNET provides all pineapple chunks, buttered and the valuable Food Energy of the | | broiled at same time fish is “high-price”’ spread. | broiled. Makes 4 servings MARE THE MOST OF IT! | In & cookbook called “The 2 Enjoy BLveE BonNetT’s nutritious Minute Cook Book"’ (Crown Pub _ rood ener'e nutritious | | Nhers. New York. 3), oor chap | Sa ; ing ‘It's smooth sprecdine and ter is headed ‘‘Quick Frozen Fish.” SO NOURISHING! All the Milk Minerals, Vitamins and | always tastes sunny -sweet. BLUE a to a — —- = valuable Food Energy of the “high-price’’ spread are in | BONNET Margarine gives all 3: tastes like something thet has tak- today’s BLUE Bonnet Margarine. . Flavor! Nutrition! Economy! en hours to prepare but actually @ | requires 18 minutes. IAAJAZ22 22222 2ALL ALA LALLA ALAA ALAA LL FARMER'S _@ * y s bye Se 4, “ ” hee 3 y * . R Pi R ‘ , : | — bed K ‘*\ 5 Fresh Dressed Donald Duck | FROZEN — All-Vegetable ORANGE JUICE Shortening CAN 69 Red Rose SALAD DRESSING — 3 9: Frying Chickens whole or cut up Salad Dressing vas 3 9 porarors 49: (\(Liitid2dtAiiA4 td A 4A A A Ae (44 = oO MD. Nancy Hanks FREESTONE PEACH HALVES Nee 29° © OOD Ms. 3-lb. Can 4 iz) 249° Crisco. Farmer's Famous Lb. e MEAT LOAF MIX 39° Small, Lean Spareribs . . » 35¢ \ Grisprite BACON 2: OD T BEEF ROAST " OO PORK LiVER...d. 55° AFARMER'S 2" 484 Auburn Ave. Free Parking Phone FE 2-019 a a oi hl ioe nth + + * 1 bee i ' Pe: \ \ .$ BISQUICK BORDEN’S CANNED LARGE 3 ok BISCUITS “10: We Reserve the Right to Limit. Quantities! hare = ATLAS atc, out Corner of Baldwin Ave. _Store Hours: ° and Walton Blvd. ares 3° S o es ee BEER + WINE Waa w. e THE PON TIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRI TARY 24, 1955 ie Chiefs Need Win to. State Boosts , ‘Research Funds ‘for Fisheries It LANSING (#— Michigan will have » Gavilan Not * Convinced He's A 2 ‘Over the Hill “ Kid Bows to Constance with a new spring suit - from the LION STORE © ‘= * but Dislikes Decision ee. in TV Bout ® 4 nara ; MIAMI BEACH, Fla. ® — Kid & Gavilan's defeat by Hector Con- stance hasn't convinced the once- mighty Cuban Keed that he’s too > |far over the hill to fight his way | * | back to the welterweight throne. “Constance, a smart, quick young. | ster from Trinidad, beat Gavilan to the punch often enough Wednes- ‘day night to score a unanimous '10-round decision over the former | | champion before a nationally tele. | vised audience Badly upset by the loss, Gavilan | told reporters the decision was as “funny” as the one against him last Oct. 20 in Philadelphia, when | he lost the title to Johnny Saxton. | This time, though, there weren't so many, on the Kid's side. Of the 13 working newsmen at the ring side, seven voted Constance the winner. Five thought Gavilan won and the other called it a draw Yamil Chade. a Cuban banker who became Gavilans managet recently, said the decision was = | ‘very bad’ and would be appealed | f | to the Miami Beach Boxing Com- | > | mission and the National Boxing | Assn. | Judge Gus Jacobson scored the | ~ | fight 97-95 for Constance. Judge | Morris Feingold had it 99-97 Referee Cy Gottfried 96-9. The | Associated Press gave Constance | $ READY WITH RIGHT—Kid Gavilan of Cuba (left) throws a left and moves back ready with his right | from Miam: Beach. Fla. The Trinidad welterweight and | hand as Hector Constance of Trinidad moves inside AP Wirephete upset the former champien, winning a Unanimous | in the 10th round of their televised bout | decision. Y - a 97-9% edge. ; Gavilan said the loss had — 7%% affected his hopes of regaining | > | the championship. a? | “Sure, I keep on fighting,” he y* | said. “I think I have another fight | next month in New York. This fun- ny decision not going to stop the Vv - ae Gavilan was winning the welter weight crown from Johnny Brat- and all jockeys assigned. *. ton in New York — grinned when| Jockey Steve Brooks accepted he heard of Gavilan’s comment the mount on Paul Andolino's un- “3 | “The people on television all saw beaten Boston Doge to omplete ™\ime win” he said. “Gavilan! the picture and make the winner Today’s suits combine color and good © | wasn’t as tough as I expected him of eight straight races. including taste... particularly if they're styled “* to be two Hialsoh Stakes. & sattd cheive by G y P k. And . col *| “Yes, it was the best fight of my &t >1 y Gramercy Fark. ANd Our N€W COl- GB | career, but I expect to do better! The same figure was quoted on lection of Gramercy Park suits offers | than that, as soon as I learn more Hasty House Farms’ Prince Noor, a choice as wide and varied as any about the American style of in- who closed with a rush under joc ' . fighting.” key Johnny Adams to win the man could wish. Color-flecked @, | °™™e ___ ny eal iT tweeds and splash weaves .. . Char- . coal Glows in your favorite fabries ... and the newest Sparkle Sprays, o | Cathedral Tones, Gold Dustings, and 7 Twilight Shadows are but a few of he the highlights. Step in now and look them over, and you'll step out with new color this # spring. All tailored by the famous Silver Shears @) for better fit and longer wear... eed A Custom Built Engine GUARANTEED 8,000 Miles or Six Months NO DOWN PAYMENT CLEARANCE! ATED "35 te ‘41 lds 8 ‘37 & ‘38 = ~~ | B | Chevrolet 40 The a 4 VAN BRAD , S EASY TERMS ‘cn || Clearance! 322: Van Heusen | a VALUE! look in-menswear. 3 36-INCH N modified version of ~ | i ilagreesd a | GAS RANGE lar...smarter, [7| i cing go SD ‘75 88 with the new neater " ‘loow in menswear. ‘a | $5.00 Down : erent, Cutts 4 WE CASH PAYROLL CHECKS tos | APT. SIZE sso » S7Q% 4 e *|| GAS RANGE.. , , * Reg. 104.95 ae 9 NV. FB » ||] PREWAY Deluxe , Charge em at No Extra Cost! - GAS RANGE $5.00 = 09" . Park Free Rear of Store ‘© |] 26-inch. Reg. $149.95 While Shopping = _| REFRIGERATORS —5QQ. Cli\No Down Payment! sun enddin ° SPIEGEL, Inc. OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS TIKL 9 Free Parking for Customers Beck of Store 115 N. Saginaw St. FE 2.9234 a .s ' Boston Doge took the Hibiscus at six furlongs and thé Bahamas at seven but never has been asked to go a distance. Brooks, 33-year-old veteran from McCook, Neb.. has never ridden the Ando lino flash but is regarded as one of the most powerful finishers on a thoroughbred. Belair Stud’s Nashua. 194 ju venile champion. remained the hot favorite at even money under joc key Eddie Arcaro. Nashua made his 1955 debut on Monday in a four-horse ‘no betting’ race and beat C. F. Morriss’ to the wire in a performance that failed to impress the experts Many figure that Nashua and Boston Doge may burn each other out in the early running of the mile-and-a-furiong feature and a colt like the flop-eared Prince Noor could come on to take it all OCBC Is Remodeling Oakland County Boat Club reports that new docks for 15 to 20 more boats will be constructed this spring, At the present, work under way on the remodeling of the cocktail lounge 5 (gplichicy a oe Scum n cro! aleah Park Saturday took shape | furlong | fighter in 1951 — about the time Thursday with 11 speedy 3-year- olds getting their final workouts JUNIOR BARBELL SET A complete |4-prece set for complete body building for boys from 6 to 15 6" REGULAR BARBELL SET ' 110 Ib. Revolving Set $27.95 70 tb. Revolving Set $18.95 50 Ib. Duntbbell Set $14.95 Goons 24 E. Lawrence St. Munchausen , Brooks to Ride Boston eq annnnicn himings Wrestlers for MIAMI, Fla. ® — The $139,800! Everglades on Feb. ay at the Fla- Flamingo Stakes to be run at Hi-| mingo distance of a mile and a Pan-Am Picked SAN ANTONIO, Tex. wrestling un—The team the United States in the Pan-American ' games at Mexico City next month has been determined and starting ‘night the boxing team will be picked to represent ; | The wrestling trials wound up here Wednesday night with this contingent established for the Mex- ico City games March 12-26 114.>-pound class, Michael Krish- art, Fort Campbell, Ky.; pound class, Jack Blubaugh, Tul- sa, Oklahoma, YMCA; 136.5-pound class, Alan Rice, New York Ath letic Club: 147.5-pound class, Tom- my Evans, U.S. Air Force, Chey- enne, Wyo.; 160.5-pound class, Thomas B. Alberts, US. Navy, Nerfolk, Va.; 1743pound class Wenzel Hubzl, Los Angeles, 191- | pound class, Al Paulekas, Fort | Campbell. Ky.; heavyweight class Bill Kerslake, Case Club, Lake- | wood, Ohio . ° Evans and Kerslake were on the 1952 Olympic team Among the alternates are Frank | Bettucci, Department of the Army, Ithaca, N.Y., 147.5-pound class, and Bradley Glass. U.S. Navy. Pensacola, Fla., 191-pound class Saunders Meets Barnfather in PTTA Feature Two of the top teams in the Pontiac Table Tennis Association meet tonight in the featured match on the week's schedule at the Pon- tiac Boys Clubs. These weekly matches have been well-attended each week. The Furtney Drug - China City match tonight will bring together Sid Barnfather and Jerry Saun- } | he'll } | 123.5 | ' y Win Friday Over Wolves Target for PHS Cagers | Van Ryzin, However, Is Not Discounting Chance of Very Tough Tilt Next to the last regularly sched- uled contest for the Pontiac High School basketbal! team Friday pro- vides the Chiefs with a target at which to aim,.in hopes of clinching the Saginaw Valley Conference 3rd. place. Friday night’s encounter with the Bay City Wolves, 2nd match between the clubs this winter, isn't expected to be any easy ene for Pontiac. That's the opin- jon of Coach Art Van RByzin, whe pointed out this morning that “it can develop inte a red- hot scrap. I notice that the Bay City team beat Saginaw High | this week. So they may be defi- | nitely on the upswing and could give us a lot of trouble." A victory Friday is needed bad- ly. It would nai] down the Valley's 3rd place. but a loss would leave Chefs with the very tough job of trying to beat the leading Arthur Hill club next Friday mght on the PHS court. Jacks have already clinched the league ttle Coach .Art Paddy of Bay City probably will start his usual string, including Harold Busch, his big center and leading scorer’, Jim Chesney, guard; John Kretft, guard; Pete Carras and George Stephenson, . forwards. For the Chiefs, Van Ryzin says use Rod Treais and either Walter King or John James at for wards, and Walter Poe and Bob Johnston at the guards along with Dick Blacklaw at the pivot. Johnson has fully recovered from an attack of flu and a bad ankie, and is ready to go, Van Ryzin re ports. Reserves of the two schools meet in a preliminary at 7 p.m. with the regulars taking over at 8 o clock |a fyll-scale warm water fisheries experiment Station at Hastings as ‘soon as funds arte available, the tony conservation department said "ae director Gerald E. | Eddy said ‘present plans call for shifting the entire present. Hast- ings hatchery to warm water fish reseagch. In addition, warm water fish work will be stepped up at the department's Rifle River area and at the Ann Arbor Institute for Fisheries Research. Twelve outdoor ponds will be utilized for the research work at Hastings. . In addition, experimen- tal work will be carried on at nearby lakes. The Rifle River area will be used for expanded research on uns —* bog and mari lakes. Bedridden Babe Doubtful Entry Amateurs and Pros Vie for Golf Honors Over Rugged Sarasota Links SARASOTA, Fla. —Babe- Za- harias. the defending titlist. was a doubtful starter Thursday in the annual Sarasota Women's Open Golf Tournament The Babe, who won the Saraso- ta title in 1953. was confined to bed at her Tampa home with a virus attack. She informed tournament officials she would try to make it The tournament is to be played on the 6.277-yard Bobby Course with a par of T5. . . Jooes It's hard to pick out a favorite. but all the winter circuit tourna- ments winners are here. These are Fay Crocker of Montevideo, Uru- guay. who won the recent Miami Beach Invitational: Patty Berg, Chicago, the St. Petersburg Open and Mrs. Jackie Pung. Honolulu, the Sea Island Open. Mrs. Zahari- as won the Tampa Open. Among the top amateurs to plav in the 72-hele contest which ends Sunday are Pat Lesser of Seattle N.C, Wiffy Smith of La Canada, Calif, and Jean Hopkins of Cleve- land MSC Plans ‘Spectacular’ for Its First Big Ten Meeting EAST LANSING # — Michigan State is going all out to make a “spectacular” out of the Big Ten indoor track meet at Jenison field- house March 4 and 5. Its the Ist time MSC has hosted the conference track meet — the most important sports event na- tionally for Big Ten be- hind football. The conference swimming meet probably would rate 3rd as a head- Bowling Results SYLVAN LAKE schools wt we Tru-Bullt 61 29 Gery Window 47 4 Warwick sa 38 OC BC 47 49 James Firs 34 42 Pont Piston 465 51 | Auto Elec 80 45 Gen Mkt 42 M4 Baker 5@ 4 Doyle's 41.55 Syivan Cire 4448 Huntoon 39 57 Syivan Mkt «a @ Tons Btr Ss 60 Ind. game, series—T Cliften. 233, 575 team game, series—Tru-Built Block 895 , 3811 FLAS LADIES we wt Beare 36277 Fawne ™ 3 Tiere 4428 0 0(Cubs 7 34 Carn % 28) Lions 26 37 Does 4 Deers 25 37 Foxes 31 31) Wolves “us Ind game. series—-R. Saerkerkai 199, 406. team game. series—Tigers 715. 211 | ders in & standout contest at 10:3. | Barnfather, manager of the China City team, is the present city singles titlist, while Saunders. a GM Tech student is former Wa- | tertord High champion. He has | beaten all the top players in the | league this season except Richard | | Kuhn, | The remaineer of tonight's sched- ule matches Capitol Barbers and | Fleet Carrier, Pontiac Varnish and Short's Variety, and Pontiac Cig- | arette Service and Huron Market. | LAWRENCE, Kan. (® The | scoreboard in the new Allen Field- | house at the University of Kansas jis in step with the times. It can record basketball scores | wentreai DETRO | up to 199 for each team. re malate hae els ai eigen 4 BRAKE ADJUSTMENT Yen ~ Tecan inspect lining © epet, ciate clean and repack papel ny purl ach 146 West Huron Street \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ N; \' ’ IN WAIPEEERTOEMEEEOOE. ~ vary vols iS; FIRESTONE ott Federal 2-925) . i IMPERIAL w w Serv. Window 68 Shaw's “o Munro's 67 Cooley Lounge 47 Cooley Lanes 58 Poole’s 43 Gresham's 86 Prue's i] Griff's $0 Cottage Pies Indiv. game—H. Johnson 205. series — GQ Bradley 5876; team game series— Service Window 876. 2531 Tenda wandas wte wit Red & Tom's 533 30 Levi's 38 46 Louise's 57 37 Pont. Rec 30 53 Genery’s 61 32 Genesse 61 Indiv game—N. Green 175. series—M. Lafnear 445; team game, series—Red & Toms 766, 2138 F.Qe. we L Bobbie's 87 27 Mac & Jims 38 44 Ottmar's > 30 ace® Drive 3 Louise's «4 @ Lindsey's % Greenwoods 4241 P.OEF 28 55 Indiv. game. series—-M. Kretchen 261, 473; team game. series—Bobddie’s 742, 3031. MOTOR INN BB w w Perry Water SS Miller “7 Stroh's “ 45 Norwalk Line “54 Paul's Elect. “4 Dobdski's 52 os Mig 43 Goebel's | joter Inn Rec 42 12-Hi 4 Loute’s Bietr Trane Drewry’s Chuck's Sve " Jeck's 8! 2° Indiv. game—Mike Andonien 2271 series —J. Fisher $85; team game—Gpike's Mig 991, series—Chuck'’s Serv. 2842 NATIONAL geocast LEAGUE w T PTS GF GA oi B 8 7% 192 128 IT ...... 33 17°00 78 162 119 coe 332 18 18°64 121 116) coess- {ee 20 30 20 60 146 160 New Yok’... 4 30 16 4 «130 181 in. 11 6 8 1 og Y's Ts line sports event for the league. Athletic directors and other big brass of the conference also will be in to discuss such matters as the football television problem and eligibility. Kellogg Center for Continuing Education has been booked near- ly solid for that weekend: by track teams and others flocking to the campus Athletic director Biggie Munn has canceled al] plrysical education classes scheduled for Jenison field- house for the latter part of that week % give Cy Meerman and his ground crew a chance to pretty up the place. The place will be gay with bright green artificial grass, multi-col- ored marking lines and pennants of the Big Ten schools, To give the spectators a better break, MSC track coach - Karl Schlademan has arranged to move more of the events toward the middle of the fieldhouse. Dark Horse Added fo Handicap Field ARCADIA, Calif. W—Longshot surprises are no strangers to the *# $100.000 added Santa Anita Handi- cap and Thursday another dark horse was added to the probable lineup for the 18th running of the mile and a quarter classic Satur- day. Six Fifteen, a lightly weighted and lightly regarded 5-year-old, joined the handicap ranks His owner, Jack McElroy. gave the go-ahead signal after Six Fif- teeii worked 4 mile and one-eighth fm 1:51. Brown Leads Tourney MIAMI, Fla. W — The North- South Winter Open Golf Tourna- ment for Negroes went into its fi- nal Thursday with Clifford Brown = of Cleveland leading the amateur division and two golfers tied for the pro lead Fine Used Cars at Real Bargain Prices! Schutz Motors, lac. DeSoto-Plymouth 912 S. Woodward, Birmingham > aT Tubeless Tires - All Makes aa Milford Will Vole Marc on $1.2 Million Bond Issue MILFORD — At a special elec-| lect tax revenue to pay off the tion March 22, Huron Valley resi- | balance of the present $650,000 dents will be asked to approve aj| bond issue voted Sept. 29, 1962. $1,250,000 bond issue to finance After that, payments would begin construction of a new 4-room sen-| om the new bond issue, but until jor high school. that time, only interest would Approval will be asked, at the | be paid en the proposed $1,25¢,- same time, of a special millage to | 000 bend issue. finance the bond issue. At a special meeting recently. The first in a series of spe- the site committee, headed by Mrs. clal meetings of the Huron Valley Jerold Oaks, recommended that School Board will be held to. the new high school be located on night, te see plans fer the new a 42-acre plot between Milford and high school and discuss costs Highland. The school board accept- and location. 'ed the recommendation, and ne- Architect Louis Kingscott and S°lations have been started for Associates of Battle Creek will pre. @cduiring the land, in case the sent. drawings of the proposed bond issue is approved. school.at the meeting. A representative of the owner of | the land is expected to appear be- advise the school board on presen- |the Huron Valley district, and tation of the bonding table. Thrum | would be the most economical for has been school district _ building purposes. He also stated Attorney for the Huron Valley dis- | ‘at with this much space, a large trict for the past five years, ac- scrimmage field could be con- cording to Harold Hansen, auper- | structed, saving the big field in intendent. | Milford for regular home games and band concerts. There would be parking space available for approximately 700 cars, Officials estimate that the Hansen explained that it will take the next three years to col- THE PONTIAC PRESS, ~ 2 Dryden Couples a "MAGIC sae e, .* & 4 Wed in Recent | Church Rites DRYDEN — Two'recent wed- dings at Dryden Methodist Church have been announced by parents of | the brides | Helen Conn was married to Wil * liam Noakes of Detroit, Feb. 15. |She is the daughter of Mr. and | Mrs. LeGrand Conn of Dryden. He | is stationed with the U. S. Navy in Rhode Island. Janet Hamlin and Pat Donelly | | were the couple’s attendants | On the same evening, Janet’ | Johnson and Harold Hamlin spoke their nuptial vows. Janet is the ' daughter of Mrs. George. Johnson {of Dryden and Harold is stationed with the U. S. Navy at Norfolk, | Va. Phyllis Johnson and Randy Wil- liams served as aftendants | | Teachers Seek Salary Increase Rochester Group ‘Asks Boost in Minimum of | $350 in 1955-56 ROCHESTER—A $350 increase in -the minimum salary is being sought by Rochester teachers. | * CHECK YOUR HAT RECENTLY? — You might THURSDAY, FEBRUARY - STANLE Mrs. George C. Clark IMLAY CITY—Service for Mrs. George C. (Ethel M.) Clark, 69, a lifelong resident of Imlay City and | Pontiac, will be held at 2 p.m. Friday from Lester Smith and Son | Funeral! Home, with burial in Im- lay Township Cemetery. She died Tuesda y: Surviving are her husband; two sisters, Mrs. Myrtle Utley of Flint, Mrs. Carrie Weyer of Imlay City; and several nieces and nephews. Elwin Bishop Jr. ROCHESTER—Service for Elwin Bishop Jr., infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Elwin Bishop, 131 E. Fourth St., will be held at 11 a.m. Satur- day at the Pixley Funeral Home, with burial in Babyland Cemetery. dred Bishop of Rochester. David Miller HOLLY—Service for David Mil- ler, 8-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. George Miller of 1525 Rattalee Lake Rd., will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at the Dryer Funeral Home, with buzial in Beebe Cemetery. He died Tuesday. Surviving besides his parents are three brothers, John, George | and Stephen, a grandfather, Gus- taf Miller of Fenton, and a great- great-grandmother, Rosina Gokee., of Petoskey., | cover about 44% to 5 acres. | Voting in March will take place school. and landscaping would | The Board of Education has re- ceived a petition from the Roches- A new angle will be injected in | ter Education Assn. spins that the plans. The. Board of Educa- the minimum teacher salary in tion has agreed that the present 1955-56 be adjusted from $5 30 to high school teaching staff and prin- | $3.9. cipal Erwin Johnson will work with The teachers have further re- the board and architects in plan-, quested that the number of in- ning the new building. The custo-| crements on the salary schedule dial personnel will also be asked to | be increased to a salary of $6,000. contribute constructive suggestions. Teachers with master’s degrees Superintendent Hansen said that | would be on a schedule extending if it is possible to build a multi- ) from $4,100 to $6,200 as proposed. purpose room at Brooks school out| fn presenting their proposals, of revenues from the proposed bond teachers emphasized that both Gov. issue, he would urge that it be/G Mennen Williams and Supt. of done. This would permit the im-| public Instruction Clair L. Taylor troduction of film strips as part have recommended a minimum of the visual aid program in the | salary of $4,000, with a maximum teaching curriculum there. | of $9,000. The board of education has re- ferred the matter to Supt. of ‘release 22 rooms from the | schools Donald C. Baldwin for present high school in Milford, | study im conjunction with the taking the pressure from the | 1955-56 budget. | Baldwin estimated that sucf an In the beginning, the hi ‘adjustment in the salary schedule would not be using all 40 rooms, | would require approximately but by 1960 every room would be | 000 in additional funds. ... .. utilized by high school students, officials estimate, These present lcmety soon would be used now Rochester Band Slates by part of the junior high group. Mid-Winter Concert at Baker Elementary, Highland) ROCHESTER—The High School ‘Junior High, and ét the White | Varsity Band of 70 members will | Lake Town Hall. | present its annual mid-winter con- | cert in the high school gym Tues- Third Wildlife Tour day evening. Given in Gym Tonight The two part program will begin at 8 p.m. The group is under the ROCHESTER—The third in the series of film wildlife tours will direction of Ward T. Reid have a cousin to the white rabbit Jefiery Bergemann holds here under your fedora. Similar antics are expected at the Waterford Township Lambert School PTA Bazaar, scheduled for 5 p. m. Saturday at the school. Magic *is nothing new to -onlookers (1-r) Mrs. Arthur D. Heiple and Mrs. Dale Mclntyre, Ike's Highway Expansion A few days ago, the Grange served notice that it will make a concerted effort to have this levy removed from motor fuel not used on the highways. Teday Matt Trigcs, assistant legislative director of the Farm WASHINGTON (INS)—The great bulk of President Eisenhower's proposed 101-billion-dollar highway program is of course earmarked for rural roads but the major farm organizations aren't sold on the plan The American Farm Bureau Fed- eration and, to a lesser degree, the National Grange have in fact expressed open opposition. lie Works Committee. The National Farmers Union, Triggs said: “Any reason that third member of the farm oF- | may have existed for collecting the ganization big three, favors a | federal gasoline tax on gasoline vastly expanded highway bulld- | used for non-highway purposes has ing program to be paid for out | disappeared. ofthe federal treasury. But in “Gasoline used on a farm is one forthcoming testimony NFU Will of a number of farm production say that the President's program | supplies—gasoline, fertilizer, farm does not ‘fit the bill. machinery, and feed. There is no Farm opposition appears to stem relationship between these produc- from the fact that the organiza- tion supplies and the use of high- tions don't like the 2 cents per| ¥4yS or the cost of constructing gallon federal tax on. gasoline | highways.” It takes gas to operate farm| In his special message to Con- tractors and in a year's time the | &ress Tuesday, Mr. Eisenhower tax take from this source. runs | Said financing of his 10-year con- into many millions of dollars | struction program “‘should be : based on the planned use of in- creasing revenues from present in testimony prepared for pres- entation before the Senate Pub- Bureau, took fhe same positiong | be given at 7:30 p.m. today in the gas and Diesel oi] taxes, augment- ter Plan Brings Slate Supper at Drayton DRAYTON PLAINS—A cafeteria supper will be held. starting at 5 p.m. Saturday at the Drayton Plains School. The affair ‘is spon- sored by the Blue Star Mothers Chapter 10, and proceeds will be used to benefit servicernen. To Hold Patron Night County Calendar : The zoung acufi roup of Big Bearer Priday for an evening of games meet at 8 p.m, study and I wish to personally thank the Republican voters who cast their ballots for me during the primary voting on February 21st. Helen H. Reese Treasurer, Wateriord Township Avon Wa | high school gym. “Where the Deer and the Ante- lope Play” is the title of the en- Mertainment planned by Cleveland ‘and Ruth Grant. The program is | jointly sponsored ghey adult ediu-| Supervisor C. E. Miller gave an | cation program the hig optimistic report on the township | © : water system at the board meeting Zone Board to Meet last night and predicted the town- | ship will be in the water business | by spring, with the approval! of the | State. Miller said the first of the two well drilled some weeks ago Optimistic Talk to Board AVON TOWNSHIP — Township , Engineers made a request at the last reguiar meeting to put down two test wells about 500 feet apart. The wells are on the five acre area earmarked for the Avon Township ed im limited instances with tolls.” Triggs said AFBF believes that the tax on non-highway usd gas- oline is inequitable and discrim- inatory. As a matter of fact, he pointed out that farm bureau has already to | recommended the tax-writing water system in southwest Avon, | , . ‘ _ | House Ways and Means Committee and will serve a two square mile thet higt i , a -highwz sed gaso area from Livernois road through noe ebb thet td Lona | dott to John R road exempted from the levy The board gave its approval to AFBF. largest farm organiza- the name of Murl VanGilder for tion in the country, takes the posi- fire chief of the Avondale Fire tion that the questions of present Department. j}and future needs for highways By WILMA GREENWAY There is a dread disease that They have been told that Marie attacks without warning, striking has — at the most — two years to live. % a AYE : ix «this «2 ark Human lives hang on that ques- tion — and among them is the little Mafie Mean, three- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mean of 1534 E. Wattles 2 sister, Linda, whom she to To the Voters of Independence Township aii edvined by J @m not going te seek another THIS IS NOT TRUE! _ is being circulated that I term as your supervisor. - “But I do know that God-is here,/cult for an ordinary workingman and I believe he'll help us. We're like Floyd Mean, an apprentice |Not giving up.” carpenter who must rely on his Not giving up is more than sim- | weekly earnings to pay the soaring _| “I don't know whether there are ply a matter of mental -courage. | medical bills. miracles or not,’’ Marie's mother, There are physical things to be There are, fér instance, weekly eee — — te 2 4 Leukemia Threatens Life of Troy Tot | the shocking news last month. Evelyn, said through her tears.|done, also, many of them diffi- 24, 1955 —_ a ~ a wes 3 a ° «4 +e 6) Pentiag Preas Phote general chairman of the bazaar, they've both been using a little of the same in the many preparations they are completing numerous booths are planned, including a cotton candy machine, a’snack bar, and also a resale shop }and baked goods sale. Besides “Magic by Stanley” Farmers Organizations Condemning | Program | should be the primary responsi- bility of the states rather than the federal government. Sen. Dennis Chavez (D-NM) raised another possible objection to the program from the farmer's viewpoint : Chavez said it is reported that on proposed superhighways there will be access roads only at in- tervals. He added: “A farmer, or stackman or businessman might have to go 50 miles or so out of his way to get to the superhigh- way.” Maintenance Expert Surveying Schools ROCHESTER — William Carter, building maintenance consultant from Michigan State College is spending the week in the Roches- ter Community Schools surveying the total maintenance program. He will study methods being used, equipment, types of ma- terials, and the administrative organization, A meeting of the custodial staff will be held in order to receive his recommendations Church Guild to Hear Talk on Palestine FOUR TOWNS — Elizateth Rus- sell Guild of Four Towns Method- ist Church will meet at 8 p.m day at the church. Pictures and a talk on Palestine will be pre- sented The square dance group of the church will meet at 8 p.m. Friday for their monthly dance. New- ‘comers are invited. to- trips to the blood specialist, with blood laboratory work, medicine. There are three pres criptions to be purchased regularly, one of them, cortisone, costing $15 a bottle. counts, Later, as the disease progres- | ses, there will be blood trans- fusions, hospitalization, more tab- oratory work, additional prescrip- tions, Meanwhile Marie's mother, only 22 years old herself, and her daddy 26, watch the calendar and read the medical articles in the paper ‘in the hope of finding news of a cure. - One thing the pretty Mane has gained by her illness. is a host of friends Every day she gets carts in the mail, many of them from people she has never seen. Sometimes strange visitors call at the house, just to wish her well. Neighbors have joined togeth- er and bought her qa new tele- | vision set to keep her amused during the hours that she trels Blue Star Mothers made a gift of $25 to help pay medical ex- penses. And on March 11 a community dance will: be held at Colerain !School. John R. at 18 Mile. Rd., with the proceeds earmarked as |a gift fag Marie | “People have been wonderful,” | Marie's young mother said, ‘and _ jwe'll never be able to thank them enough. “But there is one gift that we value above all others — and that is the gift that can’ save Marie's life, the gift of prayer. “Twelve churches have her on (their prayer lists, and I know “Tf.a cure is found in time, not will saved. “I have faith that this can be accomplished by prayer for Marie and for the success of men who have delicated their lives to find ing the cure for leukemia.” Q Friday Services. | Setin Villages World Day of Prayer to Draw Churchgoers in Rochester, Romeo Churches in Rochester and Ro- meo will mark World Day of Prayer with services Friday Protestant churches of Rochester will participate in the services which will be held at St. Paul Methodist Church from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Each church will have an ‘hour period. At noon there will be a round table discussion of prayer, and a sing-spiration is scheduled from , &9 p.m. Romeo will observe the day with special services to be heid in the First Congregational Church to morrow. The first service will be held at 1:30 p.m.. for adults, and another is slated for 2:45 p.m. for children Mrs. William Phillips will have charge of the children’s service, with youngsters from the Romeo schools allowed to leave classes to attend if they wish. Village President Philip M Stone issued a proclamation today Once In a Lifetime Sale MEN’S and BOYS’ JACKETS Reg. to $10.95 a for STRADIVARI RUGBY VAN HEUSEN FREDWIE Open Fri. & Sat. ‘til 9 320 Main St. Rochester urging local citizens to join in the PSE Rare se services of fellowship on he first|=-S—i—SSS:SCSstst— % > about =? nervous manner on the Meets With Ward Co. reed “hrtchman. “Funeral Serur- ee Ft i Sag — == en } = Board e we J. NDLIN Trading — ty with | fancy. 4.60 bu: i SST D8: | eee ability Co owe ing Stockholders in Florida Besver? sruneral Home. bos iNSPRCT Rig CED OR ns Sing oe NDLING ae tegory Church. , werk. . C, Manufactur- me te cher tame bogen to ran | 1 ante seomet et, 18: a to Discuss Control Plan) {rom tne =, oe ie igen Co... 118 tindianwood Rd.. Lake ve train. Call Royal Oak. aunaane oe lle pecli aor Saag Rag net Lag bender bide full-scate rally. oe | JACKSONVILLE; Fla, (INS) Se minum & tum Worn. 6 cr_Wrne Footine Brees “Box 6 as the pace slowed con- | root, No. 1, 1.00-1.50 dos. Penner No. Most cereals were highe the Financier Louis E. Wolf mi Z , a 5 uf hag EXPEMENCED COOK. APPLY In [SS losses overshad- | gog. “x ™ re nt est o 5.00- opening. Best gains were ae =i in | fighting re park piu ck pe ‘ “pene, “i beet a ee Pree WFelegraph, Dawes Ban menremt : é 1 dos. : | ‘ont- a. nic, 81; be- M ; ELDERL a a behs. On ; , MAN WESTERN AUTO ERLY LAD Whe Bank cf Eneiend ra = |e eags ene, dry a mest se soybeans and wheat. Oats lagged. | gomery Ward and Co., will meet rei aan Ey M . ; store = Cine noe lend fy home than wages. MY sist bank discount rate for he polar Aare = : : ery 50-Ib. bag. ner the first few minutes of with Florida stockholders of thé . Jacob Bchiavd, Bawerd oie a ge Kppiy No. Gp age WAITRESSES ' = \-) e . : z oe * aa ee ee ‘ Seeeee pate — —~ Ye. bag. rading, however, buying dried up mail. order house today to discuss eae eed Sehinns, Utica. Rochester or ows, i ae oe acle bus h, this time a box; Rhubarb ise - and soybeans fel n race Jenkinson MAN ply r —_ : hol No. 1, 1.00-1.25 ell back under the details of hi and Mrs. TO WORK IN USED pe y, after 5 full percentage point from 3% to $% SS No.1. 1.30- previous close, Wheat, corn and — service will be held Friday, Feb- ae worker pole =e lg Tevern Hotel. 3638 4% per cent. The action caused ise ve VU ‘ppet Ne} 1S rye held on to a part of their The Jacksonville conference is Vincent ge Paul Church. Intern: fet cteady. maistiongsl colts, Ne phone tagger aglino-angies in the Lon- | Egss: Large. 13. a 30-dor. case; Sains. < the first of several scheduled | ei St North Branch Cemetery, cniidren. Contes Don Bird. be mei | epee ate cere t4 eee ese bow. . 00- - ee age . : 800. .00-7.00, | Wheat Heer the end of the first gage the country. Officials tien of the Rosary Will be hela MAN TO WORK IN PARTS DEPT cell cor C30. ome than ported surprising Sally DETROIT. Feb. 23 | March $2.18%6: cera % to 1% nigh thetic to Wolfson’ corte - arrengements "Se = meme iy te lean writing. and abit HOUSEKEEPER. EXPERIENCES steadiness e (AP) —Bges. ton. 5s s Huntoon y earn fast. Apply in f genera! and codking 58: if as a ea scned at ether meting | TN Ee ie | Bia on and most Whites: Grade A rye % to! 3 2 : LADY TO | CARE. POR = ae: | average” o6, large | ey sa ote ative higher March $1.09; soybeans el and a third te Usted for San | dune Destut Sint” seine, MIDWEST 8. week, Re Mouton 2 eas minimise . large 48. changed to Francisco, Marc Sylvan Lake, - i We specialize fter 6 = English sain age we |” prowns: Grade A jumbo. $082, wid avg | ¥-09: and eae hare pee Sessi oie wile: of Mr "Caseles “th. Miche i Van eo ee MntFGhG PLAT vicr- - ties. The trend Socal higher ic large (30-40. “a cr oS Af hundred pounds lower, March! tively a eae scheduled _tenta- eases saa wanes — Julia tne POR YOUNG MEN pans ps Hc requires receptionist ' 8 . ks Chi March 9--and} belovec waughter of urance Sales trainee $300 and leasing voice interest | 36-40, wtd avg 37's $12.45 : cago, ; _Mrs_ John Machine rsonality required. Trans- _ Growtag inttndion he that comenry |Ecgeniny, ntye enue Yaad Nebr | | for Detroit, March 11. eg | as 1 og a ig im that country lity large whites and browns, | ° - Meanw ome. Kee; * termed. mach. designer and salary ex which is | eppeclaiiy h priced G P eanwhile in Springfigtd, TH. at- | go Harbor, Michigan Ventilation engi s $10,000 pant. rite Pontiac Press Box not present in the U. 8. (Suppiies of + are Boner A agehemnnon 4° rain Prices torneys for Sewell Avery head of | Michelson ennounced later ‘ Sewer and water foreman ‘e today, financial circules said. —«Mulstion. | Belance of offerings steady | CHICAGO GRAIN Montgomery Ward, have filed ant Bt crening or the Ces | ee Sreteele eet ietnnrs tees ini short emand fai , ardt F y. Leon's 1¢ Nevertheless, the “big board’ active. Frise sresture Nregulr: _ oe Fed. 34 (AP) — Opening | appeal with the state supreme | Marbor, Michigan. “8° Midwest Employment inate aoe eT es : reacted sympathetically with the CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS Lier, BAG Mee oun - seeking a review of a Chi-| silacilieas” “iy ”~" jaacial amet Povenmea 4 wanes Dhouseksepe? chemicals, utilities = sengienrn aaa ite “— pane coc : 2 iy May rine | of igre ruling that section 35) jena 3138” Knolie ood 23, 1965, MEN NEEDED FOR BOOKKEEP- Bore ent P © Press. iar Sion and most MiN- buying prices unchanged: 93 wholesale gep 1001.) 303 + July 1B | | on nois Business Corpora- coe ik ele bee ee ing and typing. Ficor and tele- NO INVESTMENT — es were depressed, Rail- $7: #2 A 57: 90 B 86.79; 8 C 85.8; car Oi ceseaue Sou. serbsens Act is unconstitutional. Sophia O'Rourke; dear {father of futur for jenouse roads, aircrafts, radio - television , "| eo™ re | OME nor | This section permits the classifi- Ser. Barvmend OReurbe, Baward Phese for appoint pg Me NO CANVASSING and oil stocks were mixed. | act Pucca ercay anand tess bee. May . ee ie cation of directors and their elec- tBieasor! Kenjele and ‘Mre PART TIME JOB RE ASTER ; Among the losers were Bethie-| medism:” at a (f2: mined 43 oo —_ = 3 | tion to staggered terms—consid- brother of Michael Willlam, fap cen be Cae i ee song Wal’ Brice caw peeeoek, Enon Boneh General Moneta, Aaren | rte 308° checks So; Certnt‘Tveopte Doster". gs [gred a barrier to Wolfson's chances| Yinrest.ereuy Steven, Clemani |, mest woreoesian | SiuuTbarecear aa alee persona: ‘ ican Telephone, Radio Corp., Boe- a 1s Mas 1262 to take over Montgomery Ward.) — fiic* ,Nowecnye gg SALESMAN FOR STORE” 35 TO PE ¢3e00 belore Iz noun SO S Rtotde end Eanern {Shine eersor: rouiray ot Meseeel nat tists | HOBEEREErN Wbp © OS® | "Een tert its cee 5 ; DETROIT, Feb. 23 (AP)— peid LS 114) | Y Moore Fu. SAL ———E } ing 2 adults. s in cons. | yfligher were Curtiss = Wright, i tre peutey at's t etal € Laiendar Sichipet riers tr” OSS, | ny i : y seen. joors We % aos = Leew’s end Consolidated ra PB mis a type 17. heavy Spring to {0 Test Special communication of Pon- . wrens oo "ok ot lepproval, and a RSES. SALARY Distillers, Adm | 7 uburn = ce crosses 30's. Sip” Barred | | tiac Lodge No. 21, P.& A M. Pri.) POWER. FEBRUARY 22, 1986 ae oa Alen kere, | MEDICAL LIBRARIAN TYPE , 5 to 6 Ibe, ponettes, Feb. 25 to confer the M. M. degree. Eroest Adelbert, Bitely, Mich- Far Sh mace whe quslity. Kesas . 3. & HARVEY ‘Ledge opens at 4:30 p.m. Dinner| Weloved Brother of Iwas tan n, * BOOKKEEPER. FC $350 New York Stocks CHICAGO POULTRY | at 6:30 p. m. Irwin W. Mills, W M. tcoere owe, tnd Mra an EN SELLING AND DE = oe service wi live lan Credit. fol 2 , (Late Morning Quotations) stead Po. Si 1A r— tee y USINESS P ti R led —Adv. be held Pridey, Peb. 25th at 1 30 ay ts to retail florists pari low up. type $225 Amira. -+ 288 Bemudix av...1148 coor tna Tylor RG romorions Kevea ome Reral “Home, Interment in. Petry House inc {a2 Bogie Lake Ra Bookkeeper trainee AE Aee Lb. aes So gw svees wu petals eee: eee can 22.5-. — News n oo Mr Power will le a cA EEN san Ow mer ENT AGENCY | Allied Ch... 06 PB he yf and broilers 28-30, Industry Wonders How at Fish | rie im state of the Parmer-Snover Ysa SALARY aii 2 uron rE Allied Strs "|. 55.4 Bonn i 823 ® eaponettes 36-37. | ef y r jome 5 <4 estimate ecc't $400 RECEPTIONIST. LADY. 25 io = Me Ghee... es en ee --. Much of Gains Due to ere Dallas Branch of 85 Earitmoor coerce Shi eet clerk pone aber Teeonee cer el, Alum Lid a ° on ievovks pe e dept 7 an ao ae Borden . 1 Livestock ot C. E. Nordquest Bivd. reported to Pontiac Police ROWSTO™, FEBRUARY 23. 1955. ENT ounce stores, Good position in Portrait Am Airlin |.) Borg Warn .. 36 Early Auto Spurt : toda Viola Mae 48 Po : ‘ _FE +s studio. Kendales Studio 14 8 Sm ieee ... BS Brit My 30 pavnew cevenewen pu be shift superintendent of the as- y the theft of two wheel discs iaieeel wily a Peers 1 ce ARE AL. EST. berger de am Sm. ss a Tok” ae TF. Pet. 4 (AP) Mogs—Gaianie NEW YORK Industrial lead-| roeage plant at Fisher Body-Pon- , ig his auto which was parked). 00. Geer, mother of | Harold SALESM ae = RELIASLE _ WOMAN OLY As 2 Bu 106. . NW t front : . 5 ina nkton, : PY die os) IPG, a m riess home am teco vg 33 perees he ms pone o 0 early sales, undertone sround ergs look to spring to test this win- was announced today by M. t of his home last night. ogg Poo — dr. Rownton. a - ty for two aemaressive aise ater} p aoe wages “rE pes pees oro Compe wy “ me aq Taste —Salabie 100. Market mostly ter’s little business boom. | — | Pleading guilty to reckless driv- Mrs Dorothy Strett: dear “ene wt resea tee Dreterred but TWO WOMEN BETWEEN 35 AND Am Hi Ges .. O23 Can Pac ee ee Serres a Ty. | nt they aren't entirely — Nordquest has been with Fisher ing yesterday before Farmington persion a ae Seed Posen Powe — tast-develoving jl gE on gad ns Mg Ml am Red, 82 Copial Ain y Market sive and spotty. fa Thuredey: bout is: How much of the gains. Body Division since 1947 and prior Judge John C. Schulte, Harry! (ie Huntoom. Punerel a” Eo All inquiries held in striet coo. for one Hving tm vicinity of Dray: Am Stl Pd.... 31.1 Case JI 1 slaughter steers and heifers weak to 50c to his transfer to Fisher-Pontiac Dahmer, 33, thie Huntoom Puneral Home with fidence ton Plains. Apply in person at Am Tol & Tel 1901 Gaer Tres gE? tlie ager te tte Md after a are due to the auto industry's early | in 1952 he held N ill of 127 E. Main St.. a Alsen officiating Inter- A G ELIOTT & SONS 044 W. Huren Bt geccee . . * supervisory orthyv enced . at T North western Am Woolen... os Cen s. 33.6 and lecders slow. weak; bulk “mostly timing of production? And how tions at the Fisher and da _ to 10 Highland, Michigan. Sirs, Eee at Middlebelt oe ae a ee Am Sine...... 4) oo Bre