i itt el aa SS Se Vy The Weather Cloudy, Light Rain Detalis page two ‘THE PONTIAC PRES 114th YEAR * & & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1956 —38 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS PHOTOS INTERN» ."ONAL NEWS SERVICE qe Public Safety Buildi y ~+> New Manager Named é * 4 -€ * City to Rent Voting Machines ng Bids Sought ron Plan Work Start on $750,000 Job -% Auto Research Adva in Early Spring nces Bids Requested for 80 Units on Year's Trial Could Be Placed in Use| in Time for August Primary Election of blood. Steps toward equipping all voting precincts in the| city with voting machines were taken by the Pontiac) City Commission last night. The Commission in-| structed City Clerk Ada R.| Evans to ask for bids on Top engineers will meet day to discuss what they should expect from the ma- Huge Car Crash Machine Planned for MSU Campus EAST LANSING (#—Michigan State University is planning for a huge machine that will be able to stage violent head-on auto crashes without spilling a drop The 40-foot high laboratory testing machine will, require a special three-story building for its quarters. The machine is a device designed to exert force on various materials to test their strength and usefulness. Called in Senate Probe . Will House Police, Fire by vom sg 3 Officials, City Courts in New Structure = eS A $750,000 Public Safety Building, the second mile- stone in the city’s civic cen- ter program, will begin to become a reality this spring when workmen are expect- ed to start work on the Pike-Parke street edifice. The City Commission last on the MSU campus Thurs- P night authorized the city chine. major automotive manu-' facturers, Dow Chemical Co., Timken-Detroit Axle Representatives of*+ manager to begin to take bids for construction of the three-floor structure which will house the police de- partment, offices of the fire Father Buried renting 80 machines for a one year trial. Six of the seven commis sioners voted for the move, | the only opposition vote coming from Commissioner, Floyd P. Miles of District 4. With bids to close Feb. 14, Mrs. | Bvans said she hopes Pontiac | be able to |machines in the August Chamber Manager's Post. Pentiae Press Photo CONGRATULATIONS! — Robert St. Clair, who has resigned as manager of the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce effective March 1, congratulates John Hirlinger (right), who will succeed him. Succeeded by John Hirlinger __Robert St. Clair Resigns | voters will /election. | Exact cost of a year’s rental will | \not be known until bids are sub- ‘partment will attend the Co., American Bridge Co. , and the State Highway De- 17 House Blast Double Explosion Tears’ The machine is expected to cost | i h up to half a million dollars and, Up Marine City Home; will be more advanced and com-| Mom Rescues Children plete than any other now in ex-| istence. It would be housed in the | MARINE CITY (INS) — A fath- applied mechanics wing of the pro-| . , n posed new four million dollar me- <~ Eiled = ee ae chanical engineering building. ichildren were injured early today ‘in a double explosion which liter- Planned features will include ally store apart their Marine City the ability to exert loads of up home. to a million pounds up to 50 | ting. chief and staff and the municipal courts. Bids are due by March 8, be ready for occupancy by fall, wr peta | og. er San tr ON GAS BILL ‘BRIBE’ CHARGE — Attorney John M. Neff = poses in his Lexington, Neb. home before going to Washington today r : frame : . |building with light gray buff brick to testify before a special committee regarding a campaign contri por pared nae See tus The resignation of Robert J. St. Clair as manager of the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce, effective March 1, was announced today by Dr. George N. Petroff, presi- dent. He will be succeeded by Assistant Manager John W. Hirlinger. St. Clair indicated that his action was prompted for reasons of ill-health. He stated that he had been contemplating the move for the past six months. Manager of the chamber since October 1952, St. Clair succeeded Morton T. Scott upon his death. He) joined the staff in 1949 as* ~ assistant in charge of re-| . tail merchants’ activities. Solon {0 Submit Water Aid Bil Broomfield’s Measure He is a graduate of the U.S. Would Set Aside Fund Chamber of Commerce Nation- al Institute and holds a bachelor for Communities of arts degree from Immanuel | Missionary College. | Hirlinger became associated with the organization in June, 1953, and in his capacity as assistant man- ager has earned the praise of di- rectors for his activity in coordin- ation merchant and civie affairs. | State Sen. William S. Broomfield In a statement today, Dr. Petroff (R-Royal Oak) will introduce a bill expressed the appreciation of of- to the Legislature today which will ficers, directors and past pres- ‘ . xpand the , idents for St. Clair's “contribu- © pand the authority of the Water to study tions to the chamber and his in- Resources Commission tense interest in community de- 4Md assist local communities in velopment.”’ Before his assbciation with the Broomfield’s bill would set up a Chamber, St. Clair was a mem- $200,000,000 revolving fund from ber of the sales organizations of which local units could borrow wa- several large companies. ter and sewage financing money. Officials said today that the or- . The Senator said his bill is ganization has not yet selected a AA successor to serve as assistant ‘*!milar to ones he introduced the last two years. “For this one we manager. a will have bi-partisan support,” solving water problems, he said, “and realizing this will | Hunt for Fliers Sesser tes." A committee headed by Atty. : . Hit by Mishap | If passed, the bill will enable _ mitted, but it is expected to be around $12,000. After one year, the commission would decide whether to purchase | them for permanent use. The rent-| al cost for the year would be applied against the purchase price of the machines. The decision to try out the machines stemmed from an April 9 deadline when the city would either have to split present | precincts in accordance with the state law, or provide machines. Willman told the commission) that creating more precincts would add $7,000 to election payrolls. He said there is $48,000 allocated in the 1956 capital improvement fund | toward the purchase of voting ma-| |chines. | Commissioner John E. Carry| said, “I have heard nobody talk: against machines in my district! jand I hope ultimately we will be! jable to continue on and purchase ‘these machines."’ “I can't see how we can tell people the city doesn't have any |money for other public improve- ment projects and then turn right around and invest $100,000 on some- thing we don't need,” Commission- | er Miles declared. | Predict Light Rain Early This Evening The Weather Man predicts oc- casional light rain early tonight iwith a low-~of 32 . 26 degrees Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with little change in temperature ‘with a high near 36 - 40 forecast for the area. The winds are south- westerly at 5 - 15 miles per hour. They will become west to north west late tonight The loweSt temperature preced times a minute or smaller loads as fast as 500 times g minute. Heat and cold chambers would have temperatures ranging from 120 degrees below zero to 1,200 de- grees Fahrenheit. * * * Its many uses would include | testing of materials for automo- te bridge and building construc- tion, Seeks to Soften Immigration Act Ike Asks Congress to Admit More Aliens and Change Quotas WASHINGTON (INS) — Presi- dent Eisenhower asked Congress today to overhaul the nation's im- migration -laws and admit addi-| tional aliens to the U. S. through more equitable use of the quota system. | * * *« The President. in a special mes-| sage, recommended that the an- nual immigration ceiling be in- ~reased f 154.657 | creased from Ilo>t.6o/ to approxi mately 220,000. He told Congress: | “Experience in the postwar world demonstrates that the pres- ent national-origins method of ad- mitting aliens needs to be re- examined, and a new system adopted which will admit aliens within allowable numbers accord- ing to new guide lines and stan- dards.” Eisenhower called for sweeping changes to eliminate what he called inequities and discrimina- Lawrence Lissee, 48, was found) pution to Sen. Case (R-SD). Denying the contribution was intended sc i | te th rs ts Re md he wesw a ne at ae wife, Cecelia, 41, and children,| efore the committee. |ment fund. Joseph, 8, and John, 11, were taken FRONT ON PIKE : ‘to Port Huron Mercy Hospital suf- . The building will front on Pike fering from shock and burns. A street and will have an entrance burst main gas line is believed, the off Hill street. It will be approxi- cause of the blast. mately the size of the City Fall. The explosion scattered tim- ’ |also designed by Heenan, and will Sec * Over Case's $2,500 Fundi“*"="** 4 re Nall, . owed leceted | es eee: : , It will have @ ground floor, first One section of the nine-room, . and second floor and space pre- [orceiery Renee laveting) ees ma WASHINGTON (#—Sen. George (D-Ga) said today) vided tor a third level. The ‘home next door where Mrs. Flor. the Senate itself will have to resolve any further dis-| sround floor will house gece ence Halliday, 60, a widow, es-/ pute over who is to investigate a $2,500 campaign con- te cmmguner equad room with ee eater rock, tribution offered Sen. Francis Case (R-SD). a man on duty all the time ready a field more than 50 feet away.| George said a special four-man committee set up Timbers and other debris were/hy a 90-0 Senate vote yesterday expects Case and six ee ee 'subpoenaed witnesses to testify only at public hearings| Mrs. Lissee said she came to| a ‘lying on the basement floor with’ — +the group plans to open She managed to get cut and aid HE Also Can Get sy. i. op. Seen tres asian: ™ Blind Drunk on (Mo) said he planned to ask Way to St ati on ithe Senate Rules Commit- PARIS uw» — Any Parisian who{nquiry by (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) A tee for its backing in an To Preside isubcommittee. AF Researcher its Elections . . i he manny ene de a ge monde dcr RESIGNING POSt jmittee, sought unsuccessfully to jof his stomach may look like if he take testimony from Case about Gotham Papers Contend Gardner Will Quit Over |keeps guzzling wine, Or he can ex-|the incident yesterday. Missile Program Row amine a human liver slowly falling| George said if Hennings tries to beth of alcohol. =° ahead with the Case inquiry, to pieces in a jthe jurisdiction of his subcommit- - ltee will be challenged ‘‘and the These shock tactics are efforts Senate will have to decide the mat- [by the French government to get ter.” ithe average Frenchman to leave TO SUBPOENA CONTRIBUTOR [papers report that Trevor Gardner the cork in his. wine bottle for fennings and Sen. Gore (D- has resigned as chief of Air Force longer stretches. |Tenn) voted yesterday to subpoena research in a dispute over the gov- ernment’s cones missile program, * * FROM OUR WIRE SERVICES NEW YORK—New York news- . |James M, Neff, attorney from Lex- eas Eooe ON ‘ington, Neb., who offered the $2,500, . The stomach and liver display to Case. Sen. Curtis (R-Neb), the The reports were carried in to- is in the bustling Opera station, third subcommittee member, pro-'day’s issues of the New York which Serves hundreds of thol- jected the action as being “in de-| Times, the New York Herald Trib- Gen. Thomas M. Kavanagh advo- cated setting up a separate com- mission to administer the program. Navy Patrol Bomber Crashes in Venezuela; Search Continues ee pa e tions in the McCarran-Walter Act local communities to secure state "8 % am. was 27 degrees. The o¢ 1952. financial assistance at the lowest thermometer registered 36 degrees interest rate possible, the Oakland 4t 1 p. m lawmaker explained, It will extend the rate of the bonds to 35 to 40 The chief executive recommend- ed that Congress ~ 1. Change the immigration hase Collins Recovering from the 1920 census to the 1990, BRUCE: ANNETT that More than six billion liters of laleoholic drinks are consumed) sands a day. As he waits for his gance of the Senate.”’ train, the commuter can find out from a series of advertising panels Case was asked to appear at the same hour before both the Hen- nings and George groups. He chose to appear before the latter. years, cutting down on the pay- census as at determination for the A Navy Neptune patrol bomber ment rate, he added. NEW YORK (INS: Ted) Col erall ceiling.” increasing the was reported down in Venezuela’ Broomfield also said he will con- !ins, manager of singer kate present annual quota of 154,657 today while enroute to the ant- fer with State Highway Commis- Smith. was reported today muking immigrations by 65,000 . arctic to help rescue seven missing sioner Charles M. Ziegler tomor- a ‘Slow recovery at Doctors Hos flyers including John H. Floyd Jr. row and recommend that his de- pital following his Jan 14 heart SCTUAL EMMIGRATION 25. of Southfield Township. partment survey Oakland County attack. Miss Smith is making no 2. Distribution of the additional The four-engined plane left Pa- roads to see if more roads could further public appearances until 65.090 among countries in propor- tuxent, Md. Naval Base Monday be placed on state trunk lines Collins recovers night to flv to the South Polar - ~— Higher Prices Will Be Sought This Month Milk Official Blasts ‘Fair shortest route-to the antarctic. It carried a crew of six and a marine parachutist The plane carrying Flovd has been missing Friday and carried a crew of three and four members of a “trail party’ who were being ferried back to head- By JIM BINDER Asst. City Editor, Pontiac Press An official of the Michigan Milk a Producers Association lashed out Search planes and helicopters . Negotiations, he said, will begin were sent out from Trinidad at 3 of 17.000: member Feh. 7 to seek a raise in thé dawn today in an atfempt to locate group's right to bargain for higher price to the producer at hearings the reported wreck in a Vene- milk prices during a press con- before the Federal Milk Market- zuelan clearing ference in Detroit yesterday. ‘Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) g since MMPA cannot bargain effectively for higher milk prices. Martin ad- an increase in milk prices that will mean $2'2 million more a year to producer-members who supply the Detroit area, the U. S. Navy's expedition to the southernmost continent. vocated an alignment with organ- ized labor to obtain a different ap- the proach to negotiations. critics Rererring to the group, Lake said: “‘They profess to have as their objective a better price to and a Pontiac realtor,, each year in France. A liter is a Toastmaster for the annual Lin- little larger than a U.S. quart.) session of the Hennings subcom- coln Day Banquet of the Oakland Two million Frenchmen tip up (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) | County Lincoln Republican Club more than two liters of wine a. will be Bruce Annett. The event day. | . “9 will be at 6.30 p.m. Thursday, Feb bp Will lke Run Again? | 16 in the Elks Temple Annett is Average consumption by adults Read Story, Pg. 2; a former president of the club, is equivalent to 28 liters of straight Also Considine, Pg. 38 aleohol a year. ee Se [centering on his interest | Share’ Bargaining Group Farmers are ‘‘bitter,” - Lake | Washtenaw counties. Suppliers said, over the Increase spread | received about 10 cents a quart between producer and consumer | for milk in December. Lake stated that dairy farmers ta ; ibe posted) retail price?) Lake are caught in a current ‘cost-price “Because of this bitterness, said, was 22‘ cents for standard squeeze," Milk prices, he pointed farmers are easy prey for the glib milk, delivered, with discounts for out, have dropped 25 per cent since tongues of self - appointed market- quantity a February, 1952, while many cost !n& experts.” ' In regard to the association's minimum price laid down by Fed eral order. CITES PRICE SQUEFZE Later he appeared at a closed ing Administration quarters of Operation Deepfreeze ey Presic m G e oA , he dent Glenn Lake, a Lapeer Although the association exer- producers. They. propose to ac- items have inereased by 25 per sTRIKE POSSIBLE cent. ‘position, Lake referred to previous, attacks on MMPA policies: ‘une and the New York Daily News, | Gardner, who was in Miami _ yesterday to confer with Defense Secretary Charles Wilson, was not available to comment. A spokesman said he would hold a news conference this afternoon after his return to Washington, BACKED OPPENHEIMER The Senate confirmed Gardner as assistant secretary of the Air Force for research and develop- ment last Feb. 28. Approval had been delayed in 1954 by objections in the defense of J. Robert Oppenheimer, atomic scientist who was barred from official secrets as a security risk, In Washington, his resignation was traced to a still-secret scien- tific “breakthrough’’ that will put the H-bomb in the intercon- tinental missile'’s nose, Officials said Gardner has been dissatisfied with U.S. missile prog- ress ever since the discovery that the super-bomb,: once thought too heavy, could be carried by rockets of conceivable size. Whether the latest dispute can be patched up remained in doubt. ‘ : c County dairyman, told reporters or eatas) cComplish this by a strike using Discouraging Moniker that the “‘Fair Share Bargaining See ia eed chan oe organized haulers as the ‘big -NEW HAVEN, Conn. -— Ed- Committee,’ a group made up of PMC®®: : stick.” The (MMPA) has the increase probably would be passed on to the consumer if approved. same ebjective but proposes to accomplish it by ethical and | practieal means.” Target of Lake's attack on the’ Lake denied the Fair Share's air Share group was a recent claim that the association's charter it from bargaining. He mund D. Looney sought permis- MMPA members and other milk sion in Superior Court to have his producers, is attempting to ‘‘hood- name changed to Lowney. He ex- wink and bobby-trap dairy farm- RECENT SPEECH TARGET plained he is studying to be a psy-'ers by the use of distorted facts. chiatrist. half-truths. gilded promises and F subterfuge. 2 = ’ a speech in which spokesman Homer prevents Income at Wicee lek enerieia nitidabee ‘e At the same time, Lake indi. L. Maftifi of South Lyon, told the added that the MMPA does not feel Center, FES-2431. | +, cated that the MMPA will seek MMPA’s Romeo Chapter that the that it is compelled to accept the 5 — . | - a . 4 . s; ye : : . § ’ ee eM ae es ee . a e. The official admitted that the MMPA might possibly call a strike of producers if the government turns down its request for an in- crease, although he said that mem- “We have been attacked from In Today’s Press a4 : . If not, Gardner’s resignation will within and without. Consumer 5. forwarded to the White House, groups have accused us of gouging where it is expected to be accepted them. The Detroit City Council by President Eisenhower. County News.,.....,........ | : serited to dss caused an investigation during _ Editorials ............-...... 6 bers have not yet decided to do 80 J 1\-h they attempted to prove that | Income Tax Returns Prepared Sports 2%, 27, 28,-29 if negotiations fail. |we were a sprawling monopoly) Angus Campbell—Tax Consultant Sports... wwecess yp Rhy wey ‘ | , 995 W. Huron St., Open Eves. FE 2- Theaters ceee ; 16 | Of the association’s tota] mem- bringing in the Market Order to, TV & Radio Programs .... 37 bership, 12,500 are suppliers to artificially enhance prices. Farm- “North to Adventare’—0868 om Wilsen, Ear! : 16 | the Detroit rea, comprising ers attack us because the prices Adie ‘ ep ee Tnnew an! Women’s Pages...... 19 thru 33 °| Wayne, Oakland, Macomb and are hot high enough. | door, j 4 . \ 2 : 1k , - | ‘ 2 | , : : u ie ee) a ae ee d % Af : J J Nominating Petitions With Clerk 1393 in Kalkaska. In 1934, with his wife and daughter, Constance, Giates moved to Pontiac, A THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1956 Four File Cooley is presently completing! Truck and Coach Division, be- Wessen St. Woodward was born in'the Negro National Mayors, the fore becoming sales representa- ‘Louisiana and came to Pontiac in| Mellow Lane Club, and the REMA tive of Wilson GMC Co. | 1926. Club in the city and has been very Interest nm the March 5 city! primary continued to grow today his second term as commissione: “threw after being elected to the post in el. ag PEON HE i \ as four more candidates active in the Independent Voters widower, he resides at 389 Whit- ‘ equipped with a bullet trap so that ®@ The booking room and a radio their hats into the political ring’) 1952 He is past president of the Leg-| The candidate presently oper- H. Patrick Glynn, 50. a Pon- by filing nominating Petitions for, J ae islators Assn. of America, past ates a barbecue and serves as a Woodward has been the child ; ‘the 1956-57 City Commission. tiac resident since 192) lives at oound knight ef Council 600, bondsman for Oekland County. lwelfare officer for the Wells Ed- Getes represented | Distritit City Clerk Ada R. Evans re- 228 Chandler Ave. with his wile Vnionts of Columbus; past state He ts married and has one child. | 5 from 1946 to 1950 and in May, 1951, ported receipt of petitions from and two ehiidren. He is a former president of the Loyal Order of He is a World War II veteran, Dr. Roy V. Cooley, District 1 Com- commissioner, mayor protem and 44,...6 and has received the Amer- and attended Lincoln Parish Norm- missioner; J. H. Patrick Glynn served one term as mayor. ican Legion auxiliary medal of al and Industrial Institute and (District 6); John B. Woodward | Americanism. |studied three years in mechanical istrict 1); and Benjamin M Seeking a seat in District 1 after carpentry at Tuskegee Institute in tes (District 7). an unsuccessful attempt in 1950, Alabama. Glynn has been active in the automobile business here since | 1929. He was employed by Pon- ivi iMC J 3. Woodward, 52, of 153, He is credited with vanizing jamin M. Gates, was bern in Dr. Cooley, 36, wag born in| tiac Motor Division and GMC is John B. Wooc ward, 5 N oe r 8 jam a | 1 Gates, sl Valley Head, Ala., and came to Pontiac in 1927. He is married and has one son and lives at 441 Bartlett St. A graduate of the University of | Michigan Medical School the com- v Sanatorium Bill in Legislature Club. temore St. 'ward Post of the American Legion, ,,. : 4 is a Mason in Gibraltar Lodge 19,a evan eatiae aaa paneer members of the Northlawn Sports- 11 Commissioner Neil J. Elliott.| man Club, and the National He served his third term after Sheriffs’ Assn. ibeing elected in 1952 but was de- Candidate for District 7, Ben- feated by present District 7 Com-| missioner Harry W. Lutz in the - 1954 balloting. | A veteran of World War I, he was with the U.S. Department of, Justice in Minnesota in 1912 and 1913. He served one term as justice of the peace of Avon Township. | He is a member of Local 594,) | & 1 A a ea ge in og ;UAW-CIO and is automotive in-| pra ‘onfiac since : spector for GMC Truck and Coach He has served on the Oakland Division. . ev County Maternal Health and. Wel- House Gets Proposal | fare committee and Oakland Coun- to Convert Institution . ty Medical Society's bulletin com- mittee. He has been a staff physi-- cian for the Oakdale Gardens branch of the Planned Parenthood chapter of Oakland County. The candidate is a member of the Oakland County Medical Society, Neopolitan Club, Wells Edward Post 411, American Le- for Mental Patients - A bill to convert the Oakland jCounty Tuberculosis Sanatorium for use by mental patients was |introduced into the Michigan House of Representatives yesterday, 7 Pontiac Press Phote WELOOME! — Frank V. Bridge, new general sales manager for Pontiac Motor Division was honored at a reception given by the division at Bloomfield Hills Country Club last evening, to introduce | him to business and professional mén of the comimunity. Above, Bridge (left) shakes hands with Milo J. Cross, president of the Pontiac State Bank. Cee Union Favoring Parking Project Local at Fisher Body’ Tells City Commission. gion, Sylvan Lake Ledge 723, Pontiac chapter of N.A.A.C.P., the REMA Club, Pontiac Cham. ber of Commerce and the Ameri- can Medical Asson. The proposed measure was one of hundreds which poured into leg-| islative hoppers as lawmakers worked in a frantic effort to meet today's deadline, Both chambers adopted resolu. 4 a Resolution The Day in Birmingham Another local union came out »Ch 1 ef of Police Submits favor of increased municipal park-| aoe a _ : acid VIRGINIA FLOWERS DR, ROY V. COOLEY 3, H. PATRICK GLYNN ae : : ae tions which wilkpermit introduc- tion of bills later in the week provided they were outlined to | | drafting clerks by today, City Seeking Bids on Safety Building (Continued From Page One) firing weapons as high in range as a sub-machinegun. It is also More than 8&8 bills were intro- | duced in the house yesterday and jthe Senate received a flood of] Legislation. | s| Late house bills included a meas- ure establishing state scholarship all lead can be reclaimed. |board within the office of the state, LOCKER ROOM-INCLUDED A multi-purpose room for driver training and gym facilities plus a squad locker room and showers for 130 patrolmen is also slated! for the ground floor. Entering the first floor, one Will look directly at the front Gk of the police department. This floor will also Include the permit and violation bureau, | tion, | Anyother late House bill would exempt food from the. State Sales Tax, It came only a few days after the attorney gencral ruled such an exemption could be made without jamending the Constitution. The Lower Chamber also re- ‘ceived a bill to establish a 15 mil-, lion dollar sales tax equalization were bills to: | Allow townships of more than 10,000 population to establish civil service commissions. BENJAMIN M. GATES *perator’s section will be situated | here and biocked from the public Eafe Must Settle in order to insure all information| t= confidential ‘Case Disputed Fund PLAN 2 ELEVATORS is area chairman of Case's cam- paign funds. Griffin sald Case, who has said he wants the money returned to donors, told him to deposit the | | jsuperintendent of public instruc-' ,nq works after classes as a bookkeep- Pl¢.” er at Shop, 37 N. Saginaw St, tail of Central States contest March, be highly commended by every Tees introduced in the rouse PONTIAC Deaths | Establish a state-wide curfew for’ . |children under 16. Robert B. Blair jthree years . | tl lke Ma Decid 1880, he was the son of James and oe , : Addie Nance Blair. In 1909, he Socialist and a ing for the ty ot st net's ANNUAL Crime Report i\City Commission meeting, as the jcommissioners heard a resolution Chick ; isi report submitted by the Chief of recto |from Finer Body Division jaca Potice indicates on exact balance Mission meeting, has been tabled 596, UAW-CIO. ; ; ‘for a week at the suggestion of The communication, signed by between adults and juveniles “I-'Mayor Charles Renfrew. resident Harold A. Grant. said Tested for certain crimes, with) Purkiss’s suggestion came with contribution separately. He said | jas married Gabe L. Yoak said. “This doesn't surprise me, Of offences such as rape, bur- frie Saw Corporation. Before com- 3 4 yntinued From Page One I y. jwas married to Ga . Yoakum ; ; : building, one ide acatmees trom| 4 ) it has “not been mingled with ° in Knoxville, Mo. for I warned earlier that this group glary, larceny, and auto bet ing to Birmingham on Dec. 3, 1953, the ground level and the other for| eS a Eignens = a ® | other campaign funds,” alc Irs Mr. Blair came here from Chi- ae thinks ge ~ the a known to eas TL of the ne the Richards lived in Whittier, Cal. regular business. ee ee Come | De leago in 1929 and was employed at ™¢Test group than the private in- cases were cleared by arrest, the Besides his wife, Ida, at the | asserting its “exclusive jurisdic- The Argus-Leader’s publisher, | : vestor, would begin this smear report states. There was only one (yrtjs home. he leaves a son. A. C. A show-up room with special | tion" to investigate the incident. ‘John A. Kennedy, described him-| es to puter Moye The letter “respectfully request. self as “shocked at these disclos-| th spre intervogntion led” Case not to appear before any|Ures’’ about Kahler’s role in the; rooms are scheduled for the other committee and to ‘make no incident. first floor, lpublic statements on this matter”) “Mr. Kahler has no authority to The second floor will house the lcommit the Argus-Leader on any! WASHINGTON \—President Ei jail section for 30 to #0 prisoners | Neff of th ctounder!! Kennedy said in a state- senhower said today he thinks he A public waiting room nearby is)“ “°S One OF Those aE ment separated from an interview room SUbpoena by the George commit: job is that of business manager . where a bullet-proof giass partition tee. Neff has said he delivered 25° “{t am amazed that Mr, Kahler re-election. separates the two sections. '$100 bills to E. J. Kahler. manager would accept unsolicited campaign! Justice courts with offices for of the Sioux Falls (SD) Argus-|contributions from a stranger at). Eisenhower strongly indicated at, the two judges, a jury room, and a Leader, as a campaign contribu. any time or any place while he is a news conference that an an-| city attorney's room with library, tion for Case still an executive of the Argus- nouncement is planned for the top floor. Neff has insisted there were ‘‘no Leader.” \come shortly after that date if he It will also have the juvenile di-|strings attached” to the offer. At that time . . ® af ( vision, the police women division. his home in Lexington, he said yes: \pf? e¢ the information he feels he needs the weights and measure section, terday, “I am glad there is an in | son an elardl |PARRIES QUESTIONS and a complete crime lab which)vestiation.” and added he has no With a smile and some times a Seeking to Find Out His | Desire for Second Term until its hearing Friday. y SSUC, * * Lt ———— jactually does have at . . the Wilson Foundry. He was a ~ ae He Parries All-Questions member of the Methodist Church C@™Paign Crvstal Lodge, Chicago. |ter, Mrs. Peggy Crigler of Pontiac jand four grandchildren. : 3 = ley ; day in the Huntoon Funeral Home lk A k C issued at Sioux Falls. ‘‘His, should have enough information by ine Rev Paull Ritiavenala? the e A 5 ongress March 1 to decide whether to seek F jciate, with burial in White Chapel to Fase Immigration , Orrontebe Haas eae ante of his decision will Mrs. Pearl Tapp Monday after a 10-year illness. rape case, with none the previoUS Richa ds, at the Sheridan address, Based on Stolorow’s charges, year, Auto thefts were up 19 pertwo dauchters. Mrs. Helen Eiker- Mayor William W. Donaldson. cent, Ibe rry, of Altadena, Calif., and Mrs. ‘sporting a red carnation, opened| : [Florence Fowler, of Buffalo, N-Y., up last night's meeting by address-| ‘a sister, Mrs. Susie Daley of Nana- ing those present as “‘comrades.”’| nee. Ont., six grandchildren and 'two great-grandchildren. and the Masonic Lodge No. 1025 Surviving are his wife, a dauch- The soning requests of Thom. as J. \Alis to change Taliaferro Estates at Westchester Way and Maple from single residence to B and of four prop- Service will be at 1.30 pm. Fri City Youth Arrested for Whisky Possession Cornelio M. Lopez. 17, of 381 Baldwin Ave., whose car was jtion to their actual immigration been referred to the planning stopped by Pontiac police last Mrs. Pearl Tapp, 45,-0f 9397 Hen-|to the U. S. in order “to elim- board, night for a traffic violation, was derson St., Goodrich, djed at 4:15 inate some of the inequity result-| The two requests came before arrested for possessing whisky, as jing from the fact that several city commissioners this week with a minor. j to developments Officers claimed they found a siness C, irst Mthodist Church will offi- Memorial Cemetery. and Madisen for a business zon- (Continued From Page One) ing rather than home use, has She was born April 1, 1910 at Countries have large quotas which jy jfers pointing Otter Lake. the dauchter of Dan they do not use while others have of the city trafficwise as reasons partially filled bottle of tequila, will permit the department to per-|/hesitancy about testifying. He has Sj 1956 C { { jhearty chuckle, he parried all ques. : < a small quotas which are usually ee aninehanwes which the are holding as evi- form ballistic alg plus pense Paea as to say where the $2500 Ign on fac § ‘tions seeking to find out what he and Minnie Bushaw Butler Hee aie = (or the 2 ang enanee . ie yi re & necessary in crirne detection. icame from “until I get permission) ‘thinks his decision may be.’ , Mrs. Tapp had attended Pon. | a. | Employment of Matthew Carey} Se ltrom my client.”’ | DETROIT ( — The Detroit) He did say he probably will give tiac High School and lived near- | 3. Creation of a special annual a. aperan. consultant for the sec- California wine growers produce Tigers announced today the sign-'his answer to the big question at ly all her life in the Pontiac quota of 5.000 to be used for ad- Pid (ecucllatautomonile parking 86 per cent of all wine consumed Argentina, Mexico LAR one LOBBYIST ing of two more players, bringing|a news conference. | Neff was registered tn 1955 with the total so far to 22 with 21 mor C| the Nebraska Legislature as a lob to be signed in the next 21 days.'to make a long explanation of his: Take Korean POWs byist for the Superior Oil Co. of Latest to sign are catcher Red decision, and that this explanation Austin, Tex. Wilson, who batted. 220 in 78 games quite likely will be given elsewhere NEW DELHI i®—Argentina and Case had told the Senate last with the Tigers last year, and Ist than at a news conference Mexico have agreed to receive the Friday he suspected the money baseman Wayne Belardi, who bat-| This seemed to indicate the pos- last batch of 20 former Korean Was intended to influence him to ted 229 in 74 games with Buffalo sibility of his making a nationwide War prisoners left behind in India, vote for the natural gas bill passed and had 10 home runs Belardi TV and radio broadcast, although I the government announced today. by the Senate Monday. He vote d also played in 51 games for San Eisenhower did not elaborate on! Of the original 88 prisoners who 2Zainst the bill Francisco, batting .269 with 13 this statement. | came here 23 months ago after Kahler yesterday quoted Neff as homers. | o « $s refusing to go to either South Ko- 58ying when he left the money, Tigers will open spring training, Also in the political field, Eisen- rea, Nationalist China or to the ‘there were to be no strings at ‘at Lakeland, Fla., March 1, Communists, 6 have been repatri- tached to the fund.” Kahler said —— jjection to Chief Justice Earl War- ¢ ated, 7 are remaining in India, that on Case’s instructions he’ and 55 were handed over to the ‘urmed the money over to John ton allocated to Pakistan by the Republican ticket if he (Eisenhow- | Brazilian Embassy Monday. Griffin, Sioux Falls druggist who United States, Beirut reports. Argentina will take 12 of the ~ == = rest and Mexico 8. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Increasing| elowliness teday followed by occasional) ght rain earty tonight. Continued mild with high 36-40, low tenight %2-36. To-| merrew partly clordy, with Little change in temperature, high near 36-46. South-/ westerly winds 5-15 miles per hour today! and tonight becoming west to northwest. late tonight. ( Today in Pontiac ete temperature preceding § am @ am: Wind velocity 4 mph) : Southwest $day at 777 am Sun sets Wednesday at 855 pm Moon sets Wednesday at 397 pm Moon rises Thursday at 605 a.m, lrecent Years of private bills for b G od ase lie aliens.”’ O ear P re, ears |the pelictol “. i y y 6. M.....-.... ile m.... 2 te = a ! aS a “ ' In addition, the President called @ By the Tile 3 & Mo. cscs e028 ifor repeal of the provision re- am = "30 iquiring the fingerprinting of @ By the Yard Tuesday in Pontiac every alien who applies for a visa {As recorded downtown) , i] Highest temperature. oneiges ss 34 hag visit the U. S. | Residential and Commercial Lowest temperature ....,. Mean temperature ee Weather—Rain, .19. Ome Year Ago in Pontiae Highest temperature. ....... alee Lowest temperature ....... : Mean temperature . Sorsmocrias Weather—Goow flurries. Highest and Lewest Temperatures This Date in 84 Vears He said he probably will want moved to Goodrich. Lawrence Aldrich of Goodrich, a Holly '‘Branch jhower said he would have no ob- Thursday in the Voorhees-Siple, , Lebanon will process raw cot- ren’s running for President on the Luther of the Silvercrest Baptist ler) decides against running again.'follow in the cemetery at Attica area. A few years ago, she mission of aliens with special tech- system revenue bonds, recom-jin the United States. nical and cultural skills regard- = less of nationality or origin. Surviving are her mother, Mrs national Now Cutting Omaha Beef Front Quarters .. ..34° Whole Sides... . » 39% Hind Quarters. . . 49° We Cut, Wrap and Sharp Freeze lt FREE Call FE 2-1021 for Barbecued CHICKEN - RIBS DAVE’S MARKET 2'cre,noo3 jaughter, Mrs. Don Masters of St.| 4. A pooling of unused quotas gnace and six grandchildren. | from Europe, Africa, Asia and Other survivors include a sister, the Pacific Ocean area to permit *atricia Aldrich of Goodrich; two their use in the following year wrothers, Kenneth D. Butler of on “a first come, first served and Leon Butler of North. basis among eligible applicants of the area, without regard to Service will be held at 1 p.m. country of birth.” 5. Elimination of the so-called mortgage on quotas system. Un- der this, visas issued under the Displaced Persons Act and other _ Special acts are. charged against immigration quotas with the re- eel that the quota for Greece is |now mortgaged until the year 2017 |The President said that a num- \ber of other countries likewise are | affected. Chapel with the Rev. James H ‘hurch = officiating. Burial will at Glenwood * -* | Eisenhower also strongly recom mended that Congress give limited |discretionary powers to the attor- ney general to grant relief for ad- imission and deportation of aliens | He said this would do away with the “undue and largely useless burdens placed upon Congress and ‘the President by the avalanche in FLOORING \ = a | Installation Royal Oak Resident Sentenced to Prison Oakland County Circuit Judge’ H.! Russel Holland has sentenced Nicholas Crowder, 18, of 8155 La- The subtle beauty, the cushioned comfort of gracious Goodyear, Rubber Flooring can lend rich distinction and long-lasting luxury to your home .. . or Business. “11 in 1934 fayette, Royal Oak, to 1% to 5 : “a Chart years in Jackson state prison. | A 7 Miami bi 1 Crowder admitted Jan, 30. to . PARK AT OUR DOOR 3 Ay Minneapolis 3 33) ‘breaking into a drive-in last Sept. BOS Ree von ao et ae Seen Ae ayton Floor Fashions 36 32 Phoentx “67” 44] ——ae we Dr y I F Uae 3s 33 8 Prancisco oa FATAL EXPLOSION — Fi be tM G Television breadcasts from a) j q L. EY N — Firemen probe ruins o arine City AP Wirephete/flying studio plane high above — , 68 32 6.8 Marie 38 30 ' ying P & S 3 Sette “ 4 2 home in which Lawrehce Lisee, 48, was killed and his wife, Cecilia, an explosion leveled it early today. Part of the wall_lies against | London were presented by the | 4667 Dixie Highway—Drayton OR 3-2552 6%; 38 Washington 61 rf 41, and sons Lawrence Jr., 11, and Joseph, 8, were injured when a nearby home, which was damaged by the blast. \British Broadcasting Company. , a ‘ i = ~ ¥ ‘ ; * _ ; = ; ; . - 1 . ‘ £ ” * » < . <-> J : ; 2 7 - i - ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS: W BUSES AY, Lie BRU any 8, 1956 | juni varsity Coaldale sdavers| hee fhe hearing as th = Measles Defer Game Junior varsity Coaldale i Farm Surplus Ls = 7 Special Witness Cloaked e , ‘in a series in which he said the} COALDALE, Pa. ® — Coaldale | 4| ‘WASHINGTON — The Senate | .uncommittee will try to Anareias and Weatherly high school had to| Payments for carrying mail Internal Security subcommittee de- , postpone their basketball game | make up 8.66 per cent of the reve- last night, Three varsity and six, nues: ot the nation’s 8 airlines. — Going on re if clined “for security reasons” to) t What extent Soviet_power op | YOUR EYES. : Stock Piles of Produce! _ Will Be Sold on Time i name in advance a witness called erates through the Communist, to testify today at a public hear- party here and to what extent oth-| are your most precious gift...}} to Speed Disposal BE SU RE | WASHINGTON ip—The Agricul- sneee Distributors Downtown and at Tel-Huroa poem ameerr armen Buy on “CCC” kK ler organizations have been de- ture Department has announced it “hairman Eastland (D-Miss) de-| ‘vised to effectuate its purposes." you are seeing properly » « « | will offer its stocks of surplus farm ‘products for sale on credit, DR. H. BUSSEY __ Hear Dr. Bussey’s Educational | Heretofore, all sales from its Optometrist Optometric Program ‘eight-billion-dollar surplus stock- ® no money down : Wednesdays at 6:15 on WPON pile had been for cash. The de-| ec Eyes Examined ; ‘cision to extend credit was made| six months to pay aesaaneck api es . —— Now Lecated at ‘in an effort to speed up disposal 40 8. Saginaw DR. HAROLD BUSSEY s }of surpluses, which, officials said, owt fe Geeks teester are helping to depress farm prices FE 4-5211 OPT OMETRIST and incomes. The credit will be extended to P i ae Lie iS ee ————-=-= | eomumercial experters who fur- pn jighemnees =a nish assurance of payment by a ‘ U. 8S. bank through the issuance of a letter of credit, or in an- ° other acceptable form. ; Credit will be extended up to; three years, but those taking ad- id the offer will be re- vantage of BUT THE TRUTH quired to pay interest. The annual interest rates until further notice will be 3 per cent: ABOUT O-JIB-WA for periods of credit up to six) imonths, 3.5 per cent for periods Mrs. Charles Scott, 9 Edgemont, Battle Creek, Mich- pes over six to 18 months and pn wrote us the following about 0-JIB-WA 4 per cent for periods from over 18 to a maximum of 36 months. “O-Jib-Wa Bitters has cer-|had to drink liquids through a ' tainly been a Godsend to je, straw. While isl bed, I develo Pe or arpa lerrisiegpl aiid so I welcome the opportunity|ed arthritis, One, day I picked a Ne ais ie ® RS to tell others|up the newspaper and saw an | ™t* — ae about it. I was|advertisement for OJIBWA | ‘hreugh extension of cred _- fafflicted with BITLERS, so thought I would | ©xPerters, it is expected tha canker sores in|try it for my arthritis. To my maximum credit benefits will be my mouth, | surprise. in one week, my mouth | Passed on to the foreign importer. i The department said the credit) even my eyes | were gone, and my arthritis was program is expected to result in constantly for/all better. In 16 years I did (savings to the government through 16 years. I took)not have a minute's relief from (reductions in storage costs on mall kinds Oo canker sores, and now |commodities which are expected oe : ¥ pes inh doit I was truly ie be sold as a result of today’s ments, costing|amaz $ Was seven years | action. , : ee ae over $2,000 ago, and I have not had a can. © = | 5 : i . 2° without mg out what was/ker sore since. I recommended | : wrong, or receiving any relief; O-JIB-WA to a girl in St. Joseph, New Processor roel at all. I couldn’t go anyplace,| Michigan, who was afflicted Mili Wor or do anything, except stay | with the same kind of sores in Military Paper Ae a giant African Lily (Sacred Lily of India) which grew from bulb to home and brood about this ter-/ her mouth, and it cleared them SAN FRAN( = - me oa a T!y-foot flower in 14 days without soil or water. Salesman gave rible condition. I began to think | up for her in a week also, I | ¢lectronics apiare =) Fee Wooley the bulb which produced, according to local experts, the I was doomed to this life of/always keep OJIBWA BIT. [Which literally feeds on ee | largest plant af its species ever grown in Kalamazoo. misery, and frankly, at times,/ TERS in the house, because once | Ted tape and paper work has been _ life seemed hardly worth living | in awhile I get a little lame, | unveiled at the Western Joint Com- ; _ I was very nervous and always|and this wonderful medicine al. | puter Conference VEW Awards Medal | Timothy J. Murphy, VF'W com- | hungry, but I would eat, and, ways takes care of it in about Members of the Radio Corp. of |mander in chief, gave him the or- then could hardly keep it down. |a week. I just can't speak too |America engineering team which to General Gruenther ganization’s Gen, Omar N. Brad-' I also had large red blotches on highly of this medicine, and helped develop it said the mde WASHINGTON ® —The Veterans jey gold medal award at a VFW) " , ” pn ae m on- . my body, which would dry and) what I have told you is God's [named “Bizmac.” may revolution’ 1) i, wars last night honored dinner in honor of members of save up to 27.01. on finest, frothest . . . crisp and beautiful Extra - Full Superwide | DACRON and NYLON CURTAINS . Tl feet wide to the pair seat anus Sui aoe We Py Be FWY WS ev E RP Ere ij NAY Sra ey ots ae yi’ ye ai r ar Winépaste FAST GROWER—Grocer Charles Wooley, of Kalamazoo, displays flake off. I finally got so sick) truth.” : ize military logistics by converting that I was forved to stay in| AVAILABLE months of military supply paper Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther for his Congress who have served in the) work into minutes of push-button “outstanding contribution to our armed forces. bed for over two weeks, All 1 could eat was baby food and AT YOUR DRUGGIST operations. inational security," i + | 60” wide x 54” long Reg. 2.29 Nylon Panels | he Sheer white beauties in all sizes! A cinch to care for. . wash beautifully, drip-dry, really make the most of every Spring window! Now at extra - big savings plus never before beauty .. . yours today in our Curtain Cen- ter — Fourth Floor. Come in today for advance selections and extra generous savings! DACRON RUFFLES NYLON TAILORED AT , . _ a 136” wide to the poir 60” wide to each panel “SWEEP STA tS a ee oo wae Reg. 12.98 72” long........ aes Reg. 2.49 63" long...........1.79 oS rAKES ae ae % Reg. 13.98 81" long. ......... 849 Reg. 2.69 72” long...........1.89 Lo Reg. 14.98 90" long.......... 8.99 - Reg. 2.89 81” long 1.99 4 ee #4 : Reg. 35.00 , eevee eee eee * _ 272" wide x 90” long. ..., .17.99 Reg. 2.99 90" long...........29 Reg. 55.00 408" wide x 90” long......27.99 Exquisitely sheer stunning white pan- els with 3” hems and 1%” side hems Dacron Ruffles for more value and to fit all windows. Just dip and they're loveliness. A finished ruffle of 734°’ done . . . ready to send Spring greet- and 124 to | fullness add to the abundance of sheer, white frothiness that always stays beautiful. Decorator ings from every window in your home! To assure your personal satisfaction tie backs Washable and extra fast be sure to bring your window sizes drying Sizes to fit your favorite win- with you today when you visit our dow. Hurry in today. Curtain Center on our Fourth Floor, save 1.02 on first quality extra sheer snow white RGLAS RUFFLED FIBE as Regularly 3.49! each 90’. @ Washable wonders, no iron- " 81 or @ 42" wide x ing with super fast drying! long. Wont a) fade or mil idew! —-caanmemcconansscie atin | Your present car may help you win *50,000 a TIBERGLAS TAILORED AG : in Plymouth’s $150,000 Lucky Motor Number Sweepstakes | 785 PRIZES-$150,000 IN ALL! The car you now own may be worth a lot Bring proof of ownership—for your 1950 i] , I “ more than you think! It might help you Win or newer car (any make)—to any Plymouth we ans nee : Sin prse= 57.000 0.98! pair $50,000, or it might help take you on a dealer, and register the motor number on + 24 Prite—world trip 50 prizes of $500 Regularly 10.98" . thrilling around-the-world trip! Those are the FREE entry blank. Not a thing to buy! + £0" 'w® by a, plus $5,000 | 75 prizes of $250 iron washable ‘ruffles. just two of the prizes in Plymouth’s $150,000 You'll find complete Sweepstakes rules at | 34 prize—$5,000 100 prizes of $100 PHONE @ 72, 81 or 90" lengths. Dec- @ Nei rt Lucky Motor Number Sweepstakes. every Plymouth showroom.* | 4th prize—$2,500 555 prizes of $50 FE4 2511 ordtor Ties’ Save now — Hurry in tocoy 4 - * . nd this advance sale! . a T PoC ce) a You can enter with S8y cer, 1950 or newer ..e > " Vi O U Fd 4 S After you've registered your moter number yes ee eee A bf : it @vesn't have to be a Plymouth. . i your present car without affecting your chances of winning. sy , | ae . _ : a : pe : r wa at rom ae ae cn et en i 2 . ’ 7 . . i ; e v | it ‘: rt rs \ \ r \ cet w- BAGH a SOL LL adie te pees _f / poy, ny . THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1956 EAP Pal seven "| Students Demonstrate 7 ! FBI Agent Causes Stir : a , LAST 3 DAYS MADRID, Spai About 1 WHAT’S MY LINE? for Ce tious Policeme ) d OF OUR STOREWIDE , , Spain —About 100 INSTRUCTIONS: Each werd le reloted te my work. Un autious Policemen | | | SHOE SALE! |university students demonstrated scramble os few os possible to guess my line. Answer CHICAGO uf — Seven police! S ) jyesterday against the Falange par- eppeors under arrow, reading downwerd. squad cars surrounded a South i Economy Shoe Store . ty and a return of the monar- ° oe Side building yesterday after a, ; 552 WN. PERRY chy, There were no disorders. ” man carrying a machine gun was, e . ee ee —_ tering the place. i : eT ° Seger) VME a Gy le! an a se of t be HEAR THE HIT TUNES ‘ont tire tone ney wa] =) M&n’s Clothing Disposal Sale! t an, H FB) t : ia IN THE M-G-M RECORDS ALBUM! going to W private industrial scoot ~ hi ial equipment - “The Screen At Ite Greatest! = pe See dirty ma-) UIT S T in COLOR and ts) chine — hues Neste All Wool S OPCOATS “came fe at | ew $pQOO || OVERCOATS replied a relieved policeman. | priced to $50 $ $ “30 | Formerly Priced to $60.00 New Guinea is boosting its ply- All One Price wod shipments to Australia, Port Moresby reports. SINUS DISCOVERY Extra Trousers Available for Some, $10 hohe, rider, eath sCreon, Povey Poon é Ly le oon, 7 Sadler tesa wrecking ncaa bes, i © 1098 Where ity Line, Ime “OPO. Send be torvibte fectel seurelgia due’ to - ‘ simas? ‘Then cam get re 3 et with Trem = T: We ; , | = Bie tes ae M4 ra) e i d Gi * which hes sow been on market j H A British Seekin udge Gives Probation 5 rears, Ther ‘have. balped s : q Douglas H. Larkins, 41, of Pon-) Boe =. = oo on tiac, has been placed on 1-year! ij i yt i I ON SALE HERE! probation and assessed $100 court ' |] accepe ae substivwses. Sold See “KISMET” at the Lead in Eur OPO [ieice rena ttcea” Cet | me Se me Starting Sunday, Februery 12th Larkins admitted Jan. 30 illegally, | Plan for Economic and _ Political Power Studied NEW YORK (®—The New York’ ‘Times said today British govern- ‘ment leaders are studying a far- |reaching proposal] to link the Brit- ‘tsh Commonwealth politically and Western Eu- economically with | Tope. ] * * ° The Times, in a dispatch from London, said the plan is still in the ipreliminary stages and has not ad- | vanced to the point of Cabinet dis- icussion. It added, however, that it is being weighed seriously by Brit- ish statesmen at high government GALLAGHER'S ssp [= Western Europe is becoming in- 18 E. Huron FE 4-0566 icreasingly divided, restless and junhappy as the East-West cold war ‘continues. British statesmen be- \lieve the division of Germany and continuing political instability in |France are the two gravest prob- Open Mon. - Fri. ‘Til 9 P.M. | lems in the West European po- - litical picture. * « ®@ t a) SPECI AL The British statesmen say a dy- 7. "4 tf ¢ ; namic new leadership is impera- mor life | yy, itive if free Europe is to Sire ¥ 43 the 4 hi vented from sinking into neutralist : ma ae" ai 8x10 LUSTRETONE [inertia or ariting into ative co] PO be operation with the Soviet bloc. It +a | A PENNY A POUND is becoming increasingly accepted ‘in London that Britain not only & Pay Just One Cent tor Each can but soon must show that lead-| “a Pound You (or Baby) Weigh. ership, AAO No Other Charges. By establishing such a union . Good for enyone not photographed during the past 9 months | Britain might restore much of her 3 7 former wealth, prestige and power ; « i in world affairs, British circles “{ feel. In addition, Western Europe's | , technical and material skill could ; PHONE FE §-0322 14 §. Saginaw | double or triple the present slow irate of commonwealth develop- ment, USE OFFER BEFORE FEBRUARY 29 BOYS’ SMART SPORT SHIRTS 2-28 Long sleeve styles in Sanforized LITTLE BOYS’ SPORT SHIRTS 1.00 Short sleeve styles in novelty REVERSIBLE COMFORTERS 6.00 72x84” reversible comforter of FEDERAL’S OWN MEN’S U’WEAR 254 Athletic shirts, 36-46; boxer or broadcloth or washable rayon. Prints, solids, novelties. Sizes 6-18. Hurry, buy now and save! gripper b'cloth shorts; 30-44; combed cotton tee-shirts, briefs. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Big savings! prints. Sanforized slubs linenes. Sizes 4-6 in the group. Hurry to Federal’s and save more! rayon taffetta. 50% wool, 50°) rayon filled for snug warmth. In rose, gold, blue, green. Save! Credit-Shop with Federal , av be - Purchase Coupons! Pay later Girls’ Sanforized blue denim jeans Styled with yoke back. stitched for longer wear. Sizes 7-14, Tots’ polo shirts in. $ long or short sleeves 2. 1 Assorted colors. 1-3 with button shoulders; 3-8 with crew necks. 253 Double General Sam Houston knew the glories of | Old Crow! Texed idol Sam Houston could quarter beef at a campfire or dine in elegance with Senator vith = flat wire! Floating uplitt lifts, Hi-jow WITCHERY © Equi as ribbon NOW IN A MILDER, LOWER- PRICED 86 PROOF BOTTLING! vaca OM can “ten, $981 $4. 43. Kentucky Straight ‘a = —_. ay CODE NO. conr no. | Bourbon Whiskey ee . Old Crow is enjoyed by millions, "i nee - t OLD Old Crow 100 Proof Bonded Kentucky in the highly popular, milder 86 Straight Bourbon Whiskey available as usuel Proof or the 100 Proof Bond. & The Greatest Nieme in Bourbon 4 Gia oLDCRow DISTILLERY CO., Div. OF NATIONAL DISTILLERS PROD. CORP., FRANKFORT, KY. - Special sale of super garment bags 1.00 57” size, jumbo or regular style, Heavy plastic, several smart eolors. SAGINAW AT WARREN PONTIAC dept. stores | OPEN MON. FRI. SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 ® . ; ; : ; ; i ' . ‘ ; ‘ e 1 fo x me aj 4 . ts . ) ‘ 5 ™ ‘< a Juv. boys’ slacks: $ ef nylon-rayen gab 2 5 Side elastic waist, pleats, sipper closure. All pre-cuffed. Sizes 5-10. er z pai pe ee ee ee ee ee a ae ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, | WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1956 “ Reds Visit in Yemen has arrived in the neighboring : ; informed the rector of the Vien- AEN Ges Arab kingdom of Yemen to further| Recognize Diplomas na Veterinary College that it is newspapers F®-'trade relations and supply arms to| VIENNA—The American Veteri- recognizing the university's di- port a two-man Soviet |Yemen. nary Medical Association has'piomas as of 1950. Wibeiddennqail 3s RAIN, SLEET or SNOW... Here's CLAYTON'S Answer to- Every Housewife's Prayer! DRYER SALE Mrs. Homemaker, now's your chance to get that new automatic Clothes Dryér you've been wanting so badly ... Look at the LOWER PRICES on these famous-name dryers and you'll see why it’s so wise to buy during this Special Sale. And, remember, Winter or Summer an automatic dryer is always best . . . Drive out today . . . or call us right now! Hamilton “c=: DRYER . “..” $1292 Frigidaire nove DRYER . “7” $1392 BOTTLE BABY — “Fluffy” is all toes when it United Press Photo? comes to handling a bottle. The stray feline, adopt- for refreshment. In control of things at last (cen- Admi Sh ° ed by the Frank De Pasquales of Cleveland, is fast ter) Fluffy settles back on the family couch. |A@mits Shooting learning the art. After a slippery start,(left) she Gorged at last with plenty of milk inside and out, | GRAND RAPIDS \—Elton R. grapples with the slippery bottle during a “paws” Fluffy stares in glassy-eyed contentment (right). | Jackson, 22, of Grand Rapids, 4 UM Research Team Martin Expects to Present ico sete tat wounded te| fo Launch Rockets {Suitable’ Farm Legislation tity Zeenat Gast ane ANN a amine Ae WASHINGTON Uf — House Re-jreturmn to the rigid price support search teams will launch a publican leader Martin said at the} rogram Pres- rockets this summer in continuing |White House Tuesday ‘‘we hoe iige “le — te esta studies of the upper atmosphere Congress can do such a good job”! mt “kept very quiet” reg by the University of Michigan. on farm legislation that President |that issue ered N Electric DRYER as Low $1299 The rockets, shooting 80 to 150|Eisenhower ‘won't even have to 7 ‘ orge or Gas e as miles above the earth, will carry |think about a veto.” Asked whether he thought the 'B) | A Mi 6) N DB) . instruments to record air temper- 7 ¢ President would veto any farm bill ature, pressure and density. | ‘The Massachusetts lawmaker ex-| providing for a return to rigid sup Choose Yours Today... During This Special Sale Event! Rocket aiadios by the university Pressed the hope to newsmen after i415 Martin smiled and said: / 3 Carat ere. praised recently as paving|he and other GOP congressional)” ,, n the way for the United ee leaders had conferred with the| ae es Soom ide Present tog tn bout nt even have sident earth satellite program. The first won't even have to think about a satellite is scheduled for launching |"°swlar weekly meeting. | Martin said the administration’s! in the 1957-58 International Geo-! oe *¢ physical Year. farm program was the principal ltopic. But he added in response} The principal feature of the ad- Since 1946 U of M experts have ito a question that there was no ministration’s farm program is a designed, built and installed com- |mention of the Senate Agriculture|proposal for creation of a soil plex equipment in about @ \Committee’ "s action last Saturday bank aimed at reducing huge crop oe including giant German | ii voting to restore rigid price sup-surpluses. The program tentative- 2s tested in this country. ports on cotton, wheat, corn, ricely approved by the Senate com- launc iand peanuts. lmitted embraces that plan along 7 — Le commer The committee vote, still subject;with other measures. arrying seven-| a inch “sounding spheres” dropped! ito change, in effect would scuttle at 400,000 feet. From radio equip-|2e *aministration-backed system / Rides Bring $1,800 ment recording the rate of fall, toothed! Sexibie price supports and) mf ty [Tetum to a prograrn of support at! GRAND RAPIDS w — Airplane| pier grande will figure air density 99 per cent of parity. lrides over the city for ‘‘a penny a! we igoarang | Parity tsa formula designed to! sound” to raise money for the | ther rockets will carry equip assure farmers a fair return in March of Dimes netted $1,800 over| age aon Jon pscateinged phen relation to the cost of things they the weekend. A total of 22 pilots © \buy. logged 1,330 flights averaging about perature by recording the rush of| Eisenhower in the past has 10 minutes and carried some 2,500 air past small holes ‘n the rocket = out strongly against any|persons. | nose, cae - : eve earner ee eae — : een a, : 7 | EASY BUDGET TERMS | 90-DAY PAY PLAN Small Monthly Payments to Fit Your Budget Take 90-Days to Pay ... at NO EXTRA CHARGE! CLAYTON'S ee. Furniture & Appliances Phones: FE 5-8811 and FE 5-8974 3065 Orchard Lake Rd. KEEGO HARBOR Rob Vets’ Hospital GRAND RAPIDS —Three Bat- tle Creek youths pleaded guilty to a charge of larceny from a gov-' ernment reservation Monday be-| fore Judge W. Wallace Kent. Or- dered to appear for sentencing Feb. 24 were Eddie J. Niles, 20; Willis LE. Forrest, 18; and Walter A, Garrett, 18. They admitted tak- ing $300 worth of re¢reational equipment from Percy Jones Hos- | pital Jan. 10. | ‘4 @ OG rinnell's | ; 4 WOME OF HAMMOND ORGANS Leading Industrialist chooses Lord Calvert Why postpone Regardless of demand, not a drop of Lord Calvert is released by the pleasure the makers until it has been blended to perfection. That’s why —H- of having « you may serve this grand American whiskey with rare pride always, , HAMMOND in your home? knowing that it’s the finest in the world. Mr. J. Caappourn Boies of Charlotte, N.C., President of Chadbourn Gotham, Inc., manufacturers of hosiery and lingerie. Mr. Bolles’ favorite sports are hunting, fishing and golf. Each bottle numbered and registered at the distillery People with little o¢ no ; | : Sun ee ree HALLMARK OF A GRACIOUS HOST Spinet Organ in less than . a month. Rent a new organ with option to buy! Ask about our Lesson Plan aie} Lord Calvert new Spinet o Organ . and Deborah, all at home: his ithe Knights of Pythias Hall, Voor-| 2" 0 ’ |hies and Telegraph Roads. father , Alfred of Altoona, Pa.; HEAR In COMFORT | Annual election of officers will fve meters eer gle SRV ibe followed by refreshments. |Mrs. Clara Worley, Mrs. Jeannette AND IN STYLE! nen cena McCauley, Goldie Garman and with the new MODEL 830 [Susan Garman, and four brothers, | Church Slates Event 4 Ger.| Al-Transistor, All-Magnetic RADIOEAR HEARING AID’ Exclusive, new ‘‘Range Monitor’’ for precise control of the power and gain you need! Unbelievable tone realiam! So tiny and ‘beautiful, you'll be proud te wear it. Call for private Seasons Sunday in Ortonville ORTONVILLE — The Ortonville! Oscar L. Meyer Methodist Church wal, have a’ ROMEO—Service for Oscar L. School of Missions Sunday, from|Meyer, 53, of 310 Sisson St., will! 4 to 8 p. m. ‘ ibe held at 2 p.m. Friday at Roth’s The Rev. Paul Hart of the Davi-| Home for Funerals. Burial will be son Methodist Church will be the in Romeo Cemetery under the di-, leader. Refreshrhents will, be Pection of Masonic Lodge no. 41) served at 6:30 p. m. \. |F&AM. He died Tuesday, =. ’ Surviving are his wife, Mary; Stewart, 8935 31 Mile Rd. Romeo; and Mrs. | tnte, three sons, Joe of New Boston; | Fred ick ~ r ta a Imlay C. of C. Appoints, \Charles of Roseville and Lawrence erick “M---Oliver, Birmingham, hospitality | poet ‘ chairman. Mrs. James Ashton on South Boulevard | MLAY CITY — Chamber of\Wille of Roseville; a daughter, | was hostess for the meeting. The group organized ete herein ei anette Wied 7M een el a ald, all of Altoona } Russell, Robert. James and Ger-| “J qui! Why go to all this trouble when it’s so easy to get money at Buckner's?” Buckner Finance You Can Park at Our Door? Pontiac Press Photo FE 8-0751 | Better Hearing _ ORGANIZE. NEW GROUP — Tea is served at the first regular mecting of the newly formed , Osage Branch of the Women's Farm and Garden ’ Assn. This is the 18th branch’ in Michigan and is 4512 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains | %- j/aponsored by the Bloomfield Hills Association. “in December at the home of Mrs. LeRoy Van- |Vaistmante wt ara capstan hha oh ant cera) | Center OR 3-1221 | [ , Left to right are Mrs. Peréy Hamiey, president derveer of Sussex. The branch gxpects to have | day meeting in the Hi-Speed res-/AlVin of Pittsburgh, Pa.; and four-| * | Other Offices: Pontiac—Walled Lake—Utica of the group, 4130 Orchard Hill; Mrs. LD. . 50 memibers. taurant. * + ; Iroc grandchildren. , 4 8 Mt.: Clemens. St: yaaa . BS bil cies ny ” Py ‘ 4 : ‘ \ + * : f z c ae n ; . 7 | ; \ j : . c~ . : } } a a . * ’ fo¢ ~ « ; Z : . ; ; : H , ey . & & ah oe ; . = i < , z 4 » 7 i : 7 a at A , Sot s ‘ 5 | me a iy : 2 ba \ ’ i gd yf \ i , F rors : * I PaaS ey = be - ee en te F vs ee a Sey eee ae A Poss = ~ i Neeser es * a f} * f ‘ | ' \ . : ‘ ‘ Pa = ¢ , 4 i THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1956 . i | ae a= ee ‘ e 2 Losses Evident | MARKETS {Ford Stock Slips| Wur@ysneys True Life Adventures | 2°%. tes: : “ = ter 5-Week «i ° . Produce 3 , Ae : ree | in Grain Market} ...r2-72%2.. malf0 Newer Low | (YA f, KPa in Cistern t DETROIT, Feb. ¢ (AP)—Latest prices : ASHLAND. Ky..@ — : | y a ier. , fancy, 5.00 . = - . ; ' back home, apparently ‘none . the 4 No 1 7 4 a ey . . ' CHICAGO — A neous sod Ae eS, Ea NEW YORE @ — Prices were! SieAOPI. mR > : = worse after a Sweek stay at the) State Dem Leader Calls lower market developed in grains/orn"Zpy, fancy, 400 bu; Ne 1, 2%-|-0Wer With a few small gains in) gr. mv =< S bottom of a dry cistern 30 feet) for Elect; f on the Board of Trade today,/3% bu PY By Mage Nag eae : AY deen. “ or ection Qatest 9 losses running to more than a) 150-2, eke 8 §6|market today. Most price changes) : ae ~ i i cent in some deliveries, oS Eg were well within a point either #" i : Buddy and Junior Gibbons re- a oes * 6 & S. "he 450 dos|way. Steels, utilities and rails shad- Ported their medium - sized mon- r “ ie eke Steg, Rear sheen sah eS ae at| ee 6 : piehioig iagparemnne| eS political u eh . y, a oil, which has been smacking out] ste ase Parner, curs Re f Opening blocks showed Benguet worker discovered a deep cistern ‘aPital of six Republican votes Parunipa, new seasonal highs almost daily) A" Fetuees fags, fab walOtt at 1% on 1,500 shares under a house next-door to the {7 Michigan which helped send for the past week, succiimbed to/ beg: No 1, 1.30-1.40 56-1b bag. .|American Cyanamid up %4.at 65 on Gibbons’ reaidence and caught the artis - mild selling pressure. That de-| 186 dor b ita! taacy,|1,000 and General Motors un- gleam of two eyes. Firemen were|*hrough Congress. . a EB Ee Ste Mad a arta (changed at 44 on 2.00 called and rescued the emaciated) tie State Chairman Sel The market received support on| }2-t3 os Sguaah, Delicous, No llother Pe Apel ory oe. ees ._ |Staebler said his party will make - the way down from buying orders 75-135 pu; No yas bu new low, 62% bid 63 asked, re leeus” en toe Placed under the previous ses-| Tomsloss. pothouse, Me.) -2.40 8-ibjin quiet trading over-the-counter. Now Lassi is romping again|? “™ajor campaign on sion's close. This made for o fair- topped, Bo 1. 2.09-2.50 bu. Chrysler, Goodrich, Anaconda, with Buddy and Junior and a hole ™4tter in an attempt to enlarge ly active trade. a ce AND i Ap GukExe~cal Allied Chemical, Westinghouse and in the concrete block foundation the state's Democratic Leon! a * Cabbage, 00-15 Baltimore & Ohio lost ground. next door is being plugged up. onal toa — Wheat near the fi 8 68 tives. hour was % to Bagel Resin) (CHICAGO, Fes 1 (AP) Pontes: Ar-| Boeing, Caterpillar, Kennecott Stacbler {dentified the six page trad Conall bey rat MT omg , ighs, de-|and Paramount were up a bit Michigan congressmen who voted 29%; oats unchanged to “lfirm, for rede slightly weeber. Gartet (cep S ‘for the bill as Reps. Clare E. Sr March HAS" eam ur See eyecare eas | dure econ Cora payne meal : : -|Admirel ....., 20.1 Mimb Clk ... 48, So 2, ort, oer Mere aaa Srarcer ort teeias 6* BSS St A-Power Bids | ice = hundred pounds lower, March mer tack esless Pieas’ reed ons |Altls Chelmer 613 foe nena tie? ’ “These six Republicans,” gaid $11.87, in 50 Ib, sacks $2.55. py Cone t & My . 68.8 “ make in Pri ge Sites Se eet ae Seven Proposals Given |i cas interests richer Grain Prices Poultry Am Ges e'si:. S14 Lone 8 chem: 124 as 2-4,000 Kilowatts protect the wage earner and hot CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO TRY f Li gi4 Lou & Nash | 86.7 | wife in their districts who use gas ! CHICAGO, Feb. 8 \AP Opening Sy avout nendy "ga 1 (AP) —Live poutey Am fed ; Hf Mack Tk Be Plant Operation for heating or for cooking. 7 : ER Mar. SW TOD cope 108.802): rx ob paying im Seb. Ea igeterew a. ee WASHINGTON (INS) — The ON SLUSH FUND? im Might hens 16-10; brolers or fryers|Amec Gon... @8 Seren a3 Atomic’ Energy an-| “We're going to tell every 203 Mar... 1.22 | 73-94: old roosters 14.5;-15.8; caponettes | A Sti .... 485 Mpls Hon ... 60.4 it han codatved householder in these | May 221.252. 1n% —— 4% Ib, 24-25, over 4% Ib. 28-30;/Armour &Co.. 15.7 Mnsan Ch 436 nounces seven pro- districts that their Repub 130, July ss. 118M ucklings 38. A a Mont Ward | 83.1 posals to develop, design, construct - 131s Barge . AU Refi ..... Murrey Cp. $18| and operate emall capacity nuclear " . co 231% Mar .....0..11.02 Livestock yoo Mig’. |) 6.9 co gas bill for them. | La May OO pet sit & Sic. 44 Net cease 3st oe as ve shes eanteaeast Vinal ee : sto Bi) Nat Dairy..... 38. isney Productions ES ae Eg ae HE Seta ay wt ABe spe, ict] mon ae st Mollet Peace Talks (sass iitacrermtsi teenie Bence SE RY ata tt. ye CAPE BUFFALO after detailed analysis of the proi-| ‘atsp) ssid he was, afer sigeay;, fe ,saiss goad and low choles |Brigge Migs... 441 Nia M Pow | 33 E AFRICAN LU USUALLY RESTS IN om —_ | (RSD) sald he was i sheets (aneen) carne: | Bris My ....., 30.3 Norf & West . 62.5 contribution Confined to Colonists Seitz Sse Gece ee ees THICKETS DURING THE DAY, AND EMERGES AT NIGHT TO URINK |tice' ranging trom 2000 kilowatts| (20%, campaign, contribution ) oniin 0 LOIONISIS bear ede EES Neaonere’ few better Burroughs 33 Ohio Ol. 3 eas HE MINDS Hi6 OWN BUSINESS UNTIL ATTACKED, | : kilowatts. Staebler said Case’s | ; 200-16 dp. “ty Sd commercial Camp Soup.... 41.1 Pan AW Air 173) FHMEN HG BECOME FORMIDABLE FOE. proposals being studied were | | ALGIERS ®—Premier Guy Mol-|“Srivin scinees 100: Can Dry... 16. ; ‘will na make the sad ee ea er BP RB , eat En ten CE) met ane [rigs Sa talks today aimed at bringing vealers 21.06-28.00: h chaise on4 pr . » JT ....06 16-6 Penney, JC... 94 ’ : - wonder ea Ned , peace anal raceme to rebeljjon- commercial rages 1600-31000 7 ad Chee. Ohi. Hs ae ; a = | Pontiac City Affairs ‘Nuclear Development thee ~ — an bat ocneee : ene no cau Ee Raa theta ee BE Ra ' 1 Mabe, Man, 1880 Mel ns Pak pegs Mollet’s contacts in his two-day-| fully established: late Tuesday, ope cee ::--HET Philip Mor... 46.3 A N F ] 2, Holyoke, Mass., 15,000 kilo) dives ! ci Peace mission were confined mostly prime 103 Ib wooled lambs 21.75 Con Bale.) Pir Pine 5 ms Ppprove ew ormu a watts a. Sinus ‘Had these six Republican Tew Motions’ he has met tave Paper Firm Sends (sition ai sa: Bt for Improvement Costs _ |uirain’ M™ SOS Resing ee, “"" 99. J osericcoo CB ” ! been men without much influence.| pe n S Gent Gu ...1038 —S. - 4) 4. Piqua, Ohio, 12,500 kilowatts. been defeated,” he said. | — Coan, Frenct-eppointed Woman Ultimatum Surnee Wises: $82 fer Mee: weal As the result of action taken last)Review was reelected to another| §, Rural Coo | cee only ca their posts and others have taken| Bis Cikesg..2. 384 Selewsy'at ane ro asl pdr amd es ee ae ee ee to the hills KALAMAZOO am PED fry) prertteeeysO pe: ic improvement projects night. The member? are: W. G 22,000 kilowatts. ‘ ° ) Ae ® — Women em-!pDu Pont se+ BOG t Reg Pap... 42 within the city will be adjusted ac- hase Gaines- N in Brief The lack of ntative | rads re pautheriand Paper Si"asto Liie 311 Sead Al RA. 03 cording to newly adopted public Keboe, Vernon K. Archer and! 6. University of Florida, ews | c represe ve Co. had a ae hey ; ; , 2,000 kilowatts, spokesmen from the Arab side is today — wan vt Gee ne Emer Red... 126 Sinclair. B88 are eae eae a — y. eee 7. Wolverine Electric Vandals smashed two a major factor hampering the Pre-|job or be fired. be a oye er evaky (@icesmant andi weal oe last night were engi- tive, Hérsey, Migh., 10,000 kilo-/o¢ ner car while parked mier’s task. The ultimatum came in a tele. | Pivestens wae z sou a port asad | bacauen lat neers estimates for 10 blacktop- watts. ; at Washington Junior High § : ee gram the company sent last night Freun Tre... 38.8 Sta Brand. 423 pe so ca me ohn ping projects within the city total- eae . ~ .|710 Menominee Rd., Mrs. La Mollet promised last night he to the United Paper Workers of e Dynem . $06 Sid Ol) Calif.. 91 pn ee aes cea oll aa ing $32,018.48. Public hearings will} The AEC said each proposal/~ nefias, of Birmingham, reported iam . new pare for| America after some 225 women oon Pas” - oa = ot 1863 ateet (bohe’ ohare Y aaiieee esti- “oe he io Se —— Rig a > naa accept ohn ge soon in place of 79-year-|workers stoutly refused to . Gen Motors , 444 > + $3. aye commission authorized ¢ : old Gen. Georges Catroux. The change hairnets ice avieur kate. pamela y Stud Pack... 82 mates have already been presented city Assessor to prepare special able basis for negotiating a| Fish Fry Friday night, 4:09 te , Sun Of1 ..... 72 to the Commission. amount of| 7:30. Adults $1.00, Children S0c, Premier allowed Catroux to with- The \Gillette ...., os: Su S assessment rolls for the following contract for a fixed and Dads’ Club, 8t. | draw without ever coming to Al- sine aiechan, — ie eee os fesesiCel<. ke ; The new schedule remains the |two-inch blacktop schedules for the assistance.” — cement ot & fee | giers ose French settlers rioted| aed ER leh wes pean mod OES bap Fina Bear a « i fee ae as last pop rsa for |following streets: —Ady. Monday protest, | 2 . i ransamer.., 7 co nine de e exceptions nager = * rn nea, i, slot ome: Re EE Gds lla] WINS ALIMONY Ors, Anna) Walter Ke Wiliman explained, |yiy, nile twcce DewSuetese! © BUSIN@SS NOLES |, 1 ror trent tit st pas Coast-to-Coast Call | Bim ST SSE be SEs eae 'F,/Mane Gotamans, 22 wile of'an| Asessment per tnt toot tor | iie Stans ibe — |. ee -I{)- | In : oe ‘ 4 : Cornell avenue . . Women employes walked out last men SU <8 Unit Prat.) $22 ie peugialiew Tax were trom $2.90 40 §9. Storm ecwer ae. (Coan tea Fegisee ie Tat, Pret eve:| Speaker at.the Thursday break Rummage Sale. Youth Ces Saves Actress’ Lif Friday when the order was issued. Interiak ne 207 Os Rubber... 83. separation, Tuesday was awarded| sessments per square foot of Fim vtront from Jeosie, to Santerd: fast meeting of the Pontiac Life), | sunnce) of and Sat. ae } e Some contended the visor hats Int Here" “fe GS Steel. $24 $500 a week temporary alimony.| area will Jump from three cents |Gerdon street from Oakland to Cor | Darling, Cleveland. be Mitchell 3 gave them headaches. The com- Int Nick .... 964 West Un Tel - 19.7/It is believed to be the second) to four cents, Prospect; end “Mawtiven cee’ hecmeg | OATH, Cleveland, Ohio agent) jam supper. Family style, $1.25, NEW YORK «®—A transconti- pany said some women wore ‘‘in- It reper .- 11- Weets xi. 39. highest temporary alimony in N. Other ch leoclas ty| treet from Raldwin to Rundell. | with the New York Life Insurance 7§¢, Pri. § until. 62 Perkins. Adv. carly today eading, tat ea a cealde tel ei nr emmen it Si Gall! HAE Whnin M'cg° 122/¥. State Supreme Court hisory:|per aquare foot of aren for com-|, The commissioners alo declared | | — § % | . 5 | we - - ’ ‘ 4 + parently hysterical “woman badiwearing the nets, requires -ce’alten’ man". at fester, 8/and second only to $700 weekly bined sewera (lormerty five cents); [Public necessities for some 4 pub-| Darling. whe ts blind. will epsstt «aa called Beverty Hilis — werd officers coset See » Tequi S$ S jeuas n't 1 ao Youngst Shak 03.7) awarded to Eleanor Holm, former our and gutter and related work lic improvement projects for sec- On the subject “It Takes Vision, fields and aviation facilities, to the apartment ae aiscam bro:| Yancey scaike 700 women | Kennecott saa | wife of Billy Rose, will be $2.50 per front foot ($2); ‘cae omnia A public hearing Not Sight, To Sell Life Insurance. Ababa learns. See || heed. 7 id at ’ 'Y iene — nette who had — sleeping pills. ed a union plea and went back to| NEW TOR Pan Oncemiee by Thep 6 io . e igs heel ogy ay hee, oe a Commotion smecting: Pg dlined i : 1 Soe ee Injuries Hospitalize s'.tinct'tem nay a3." Don't Gamble with |be boosted from $1.20 to $1.50. The New York Daily News said wear the visor hats and were sent Len Ralls UU, stocks 2145 7 176.9 Indust. 3 the call from Beverly Hills was home. Some of these, together Previous day... 251. 3 A | Other business taken up on the . 4 made by producer Fred Finkel- with a number of men employes,| Usttn "go" 3sa3 1300 724 =? Township Sledder 1 lengthy 46-point agenda last night, F : Home Security.» hoffe, former husband of singer set up picket lines. Year ago .....2178 121.1 706 158.1 ’ included adoption of resolution ar nings ; Ella Logan. os pee se on ees ies ord 1488 A ldgear-cld Waterford Town authorizing the city attorney to The attractive brunette, Cynthia 954 high..,.. 211.9 123.0 683 155 : "prepare two deeds, one for the § ? . nem lo e 1954 low .143.9 77.8 854 108.0/ship boy who was playing in the beh AM eo N.C. (INS)—R. J Sargent, 23, of 3 E. 63rd St., Man U P ym nt lromd with ia) sled yesterday eve- purchase of a parcel of land by Reynolds Tobacco Co, reported today : Detroit Edison Co. and the other "eco"! net earnings of $54,267,837, or ; . |$6.05 per common share, in 1956 com- mee a fa Pace gy hemiara rede to liquidate an encumbrance pared "with "944.826.709, equal to 4.9 cori be Tr share n revious ear. n- Soe enernl 108, caused) by,a 1822 deed, Preased from ‘814.273.1778 in 1084 to DETROIT STOCKS (C. J. Nephier Co.) Pigures after decimal points are eighths| High Low Noon ; 1¢ ,|Pital this morning. as a Broadway actess Me. on in North Ireland thia Douglas Sargent, divorced Tops in Isles ~ YOUR HOME. from television writer Herbert preset aday Charrested Se $866 426,772 last year. Board Chairman Seely \Rinesion Proguctst ; Hospital officials sald James| 7h eag cae cite Plam ‘Cnemmee, Haier estat tes ° TODAY! | = +2 | BELF. , Northern Ireland (” Ma bart Luther Jr. suffered a fractured struc ty amis- |three percent on 1983 sales, now account i The woman, quoted by police as’ Gi cccece Midwest Abrasive* Mfig.* voeee sion to investigate whether lot 16 for about a fifth of domestic production —The man in the muffler and the ruay saying she had taken two sleeping 2" in the cap stand idly on the roe ee pills and had had “‘a couple of COMM€T. eon eeeneee iright leg when he and his sled lwere hit by a car driven by Eugene L. Berg, 31, also of Water- of assessor’s plat 147 could be sold for commercial use, and ac- | NEW YORK ing Co. reported p cepted a resolution from the |°! #126.680.380 for its 1988 fiscal year. (INB—The General Bak-| today record net sales) CRAWFORD- drinks,” was taken to a hospital. hours now—just as they have stood) ford Township. The accident hap- Earnings dropped, however. from §3,-| Jasurance of All Kinds Doctors applied what they de- there every day for a year A ® H h pended on Merry fond hear Pondec board approving the replatting of (243,079, or $1.00 per common share, in 716 Pontiec State Bank . 2-83 Sisal eee pacts) mts ines) Thay wre too of Nectiern ANTCION IUITIDNITEY ice rs “| Green and Sarko No. 1 plat. (ihtte last year wn “” 2 “ent Per : em Speman Sate ot Ireland's 28,000 unemployed. | The commissioners also con- curred with the planning commis- sion’s recommendations for street layout and suggested names for the Pontiac Knolls subdivision. In other action, the commission heard the second reading and held a public hearing -on rezoning to residential 3 jots 14 to 26 Pither’s Addition and lots 35 to 37 of as Burglary Counts Jails". | Upon the recommendation of Commissioner Floyd P. Miles, a report, second reading and pub- lic hearing was deferred for two weeks for rezoning to fac- turing 1 of lots 145 to 147 of the Dixle Highway subdivision. The present three-man Board of — Berg told Waterford Township E , caallwcorkine pal digg e on Assault Charge police be es iitiving south on ma Me ad, James wh piscopal Chur ches times the unemployment rate in | Thomas E. Humphrey, 58, was his car topped hil in CS road. fo C onvene Mo d the rest of the United Kingdom. bene zuenvey mm Ponies James had been sledding down In Londonderry, with 50,000 | Munic: urt on a charge of the other side of the hill. ; n ay castle cael 4 old men ‘who assaulting his estranged wife with, Due to the ice, Berg was unable That figure is 8 Another Fivst for £4 Williams | First in Oakland County | With Complete Equipment FOR VULCANIZING AND RECAPPING All Size TUBELESS TIRES From 6.70x15 Thru 11.00x22 ° Ed Williams Tire Co. 451 S. Saginaw at Raeburn St. The Oakland Convocation of have never had a job except in the | intent to murder. to stop, he said. Episcopal churches will be held two world wars. Belfast, despite | Humphrey, 7181 Pontiac Lake Monday at St. James Episcopal its booming shipyards, has nearly|Rd., demanded examination and Church, 355 W. Maple St., Birming-| 11,000 out of work. In the villages “@S returned to Oakland County ham. The day will begin with a even, farm workers are idle. Jail when he failed to post $10,- Communion Service at 10 a.m. The main reason is the decline | 900 bond set by Judge Maurice; G d R id M A short talk will be given the of linen, Northern Ireland's biggest | E- Finnegan. The examination was ran apl § en parish and mission Women’s Auxil- industry next to shipbuilding. Irish | Scheduled for Feb. 15. , iaries by Enwin Pugh of Wales. jinen has lost ground to new tex-| Police said Humphrey slashed | GRAND RAPIDS (# — Two His topic will be “Young Girls in tiles and to competition. from his wife Helen, 48, with a paring Grand Rapids men who police say, the Episcopal Church.” ‘Czechoslovakia and Japan. This Knife Friday night at Pontiac State have admitted 24 burglaries in At the 12:15 luncheon, Mrs. Dor- decline in turn has hit the farms Hospital. A hospital employe, she western Michigan, waived muni- orthy Dengler will conduct a discus- yw nich grew the flax. . lhas. lived on the grounds since cipal court examination yesterday sion on “Recovery of Family Life; | separating from her husband two 9" a charge of breaking and en- Through Maturity of Women.” Chil-; There's /psene) haps ter the jo: months ago. fer B R f ) dren will be cared for in the nurs-, '¢** hewever. She was released from Pontiac, Earl Cool Jr.. 25, and Richard ronx e urns em ery at no charge, | Britain's wartime minister of General Hospital Monday after D. Dean, 31, were bound over to ; Reservations must be in to Mrs, production—Oliver Lyttelton, noW treatment for face and neck circuit court under $2,000 bond fg Seat in Con ress Homer Harbage, 591 Lenox St., FE/Lord Chandos—heads . develop- wounds. each by Muncipal Judge John C_| g 4-8112 by Thursday. - |ment council trying to bring new eee eae ey ‘Loucks. They particularly were NEW YORK W_—A B He : ronx con- = industry to these six counties Takes E ducation Post | charged in the burglary ot a local sressional seat remained Demo- Hos ital Medicine Food Soon Chandos will go to the United \plumbing firm where $240 worth) tie tod 4 p . States to tell American business) DETROIT uww—Dr. Warren B.\of merchandise was stolen. bee >a ay ater & areal ei Tax Squabble Cleared men that Ulster-is a fine field for Cooksey, chiet of staff at Florence Police said the pair also admit.|)" (oat gave James c. Healey a LANSING (—The state revenue d¢velopment. Crittenton Hospital, was elected ted burglaries in Grand Rapids, ¢ a AOCy ) Ove Ss two CRP commissioner said today the cur- | , ve . ey bya e Board ened ogy Most Cutlerville. Only a small portion of reg- rent controversy over sales tax Missing Detroit Medic oeraary caead ee ao a emus * cree: listered voters went to the polls, on hospital food and medicine was . . E y the death o - A jand registration had been light in caused by a "misunderstanding," BOtfles Police " Hon . ee Jamieson. anion who Chilean Group Claims the bi place. , ° Commissioner Louis M. Nims) DETROIT W — No trace hadjalso was chairman of the Wayne . Healey, law secretary to Bronx said the State Revenue Depart- been found today of Dr. Randle County Republican Committee, sut- New High for Peak | Borough Present Janes J, Lyons ment had no intention of taxing M. Mullins, 28, resident physician fered a fatal heart attack in Ann) SANTIAGO, Chile “®—A Chilean and a Democratic flistrict leader meals and medicine furnished to at Henry Ford Hospital, despite Arbor Jan. 27. larmy mountain climbing expedi-|for 12 years, will complete the un- patients. A the - a tips im Michigan and f = Rae ‘|tion says Ojos del Salado (Salt expired term of Sidney J. Fine, He said t department will, nearby states. i : * |Springs Peak) is the tallest moun-|who vacated the seat w election however, insist that hospitals pay) The physician was last seen Sat- Profs Enter Ballot 'tain in the Western Hemisphere. to the State Supreme Count bench sales tax on medicine furnished urday afternoon when he left the NILES #—Dr. S. I. Clark, West-| ‘The expedition, which scaled the|last November. ’ outpatients from the hospital hospital in a hospital-owned car. jern Michigan College political Sci- peak on the Argentine-Chilean bor-| The Republican percent- pharthacy. Police quoted his wife, Frieda,/ence professor, and Franklin Ryan, der reported it rises 23.573 feet ages have dropped from 24 in 1952 Nims said the department had a bride of four months, as saying|Mattawan teacher, have an- above sea level, It had previously to 18 in 1954 and 13 in yesterday's received complaints from druggists her husband was genremey (emcee they .will seek the Demo been listett at 22.539. jelection. The Liberal party, whose that some hospitals did not charge moody” when he left |home Satur-|cratic nomination from the Fourth Aconcague, another Andean activities are limited to New York sales tax on prescriptions to out- day morning. He tlt her, police Congressional District. The Demo- Peak—23,035 feet —fias been con-' state, received the remaining per- patients, while druggists them- said, ‘he was -‘‘disappointed in cratic nominee will oppose Rep. sidered the highest in the centages in each of the three selves do. jmedicine as a career.” . \Clare Hoffman (R-Mich). ° | Americas, a iyears, : ae ; , + ~ ie ; Wi 2 é . ae a“. 4 i -_ \ . ‘ e = / . , . j ® x “ \ ¥ * _ Spinster Adopts Seven Shoshone Children LEMONT, Pa, @—A young and State College in this centrat Penn- acute. Later, however, she cee I'm sure chiropractor. sylvania region. THIRTY-TWO ne ae a ne os 7 2 Ts OF THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1956 unmarried woman already the foster mother of two HAVEN'T THE NERVE children orphaned nine years ago, heads for Idaho soon to collect seven little Indians whom she in- tends to ‘adopt. * * The whole turned loose in Dr. Imogene er’s five-bedroom house which, she} up here all children and a mi arned couple now can fix accommodate says, “we there to living with me.’ “We all agree it will fun,’ she said. and I can give it to them. all there is to it. MUST NAME THEM “Tf there is one thing that trou-! bles me. it is that the Indian chil- dren will all have to have their, nan changed from their tribal, ones, I frankly admit it’s going to be some task to find suitable) names for these four girls and, three boys.” Nine years ago Dr, Barker, 27, took on the job of rearing two! children whose father died in a hospital where she had been train-| ing. The children, both boys, are. now 11 and 73. * * | The Indian children, who are of! the Shoshone tribe, 11 years old and live on a re tion at Fort Hall, Idaho. Dr er said. she became interested in. them when she heard a talk by a) missionary at a church i in near’ irby 5 Clubs Endorse Parking Project Service Groups Favor, $600,000 Proposal for More Spaces Five Pontiac service clubs that, lappy brood will be be a lot of “They need help, are from 1 to, difficulties Bark- and nine That's! serva-| Bark-' were In Memoriam 2 LOLA LAL ROP = In Lovina MEMORY OF MAUDE ooney vaca ago. ~ ot Not lost tet gone a: She lives with us ogee they'll be glad to hear; She will bring the children home And wil} forever a out there were seven children. - the news anyway” in a stationwagon which a- car) all areal ery “ hesitatingly, she consented to ee mae — mene | dealer in this town of about 1,000 IN LOVING | MEMORY ‘OF RAY. { e arents Ve in nite . mond Batchelor, who pass them ail, TP | Population supplied at special bar- aeas cae year age Pos ¥. (008: She promptly agreed to adopt two children in a family whose told my parents about adopti ng | described Le “IT haven’t-Md., where Dr. Barker was born. | Dr. Barker said she expects to Fort Hall next | month. gain’ terms, Other business and professional men in Lemont also have offered to lend a hand with donations of money, clothing, food and household goods. Just a year ago today, our Heay- said, ay Pather called our loved one “So far,” she ay To. ibe with him for evermore on that bright Celestial Shore Sadly | missed _by © wife and children. all seven, I haven't the nerve. But go to THEY NEED HELP towers 3 Why should a young, unmarried pbb ld FLOWERS woman undertake such great -re- __Cieees_tor_ Son. sponsibilities? __Funeral Directors 4 need help, and I can give aia it to them. They need religious a Feral Home, ore at and other training; I can give it COA ' HOME to them. Their people need religi-| — prayton on Pisine fates Om ord Tw a ous training and I intend to send DIGNIFIED SERVICES the children to Bible schools that KIRKBY ___Puneral Home- FE ¢1683 Donelson-Johns FPUNERAL HOME OND FOR FUNERALS” ARKS-GRIFPIN Sitges moughtful Service FE 2-564! Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Gervice Plane or Motor FE 23-8378 they might return someday and give that training to their people.” Director Announces New Rabies Clinics Non - profit Rabies Vaccination Clinics for dogs again will be held throughout Oakland County, it was Cemetery Lots 5 announced today by Dr. John D. ~~ eng Monroe, Pontiac and Oakland} °{! 300. cash- $600 ble! On some: County health director. } GRAVE IN PERRY Ria FARE A A iy | Cemetery _in Bection 4 E 3-031) The clinics wil] be set up in| sop saLE «4 LOTS AT WHITE various locations throughout the | Garden of Resurrection. county on the last three Sundays in | February—Feb. 12, 19 and 26. Place of clinics will be announced from week to week. Hours will be from 14 p.m. and any dog owner may have his pet vaccinated for $1.50. | Inoculation against rabies is a requirement for the issuance of 1956 dog licenses, and owners will be asked to show certificates Chapel FE 54-8526 6 LOTS. WHITE CHAPEL REA- _sonable. Call after 3:30 FE $4266. The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. of vaccination when applying for All errors should be se- - ported immediately The licenses, Dr. Monrve said. Press assumes no respon. | sibility for errors other The first round of clinics, sched- | than to cancel the charges will for that portion of the first juled next Sunday afternoon, far Pal the advertine? ibe at the following six locations ment which Bes natal ree ” ~ P b thr ie Oakland County Animal Shelter, once Cae lations 11200 E. Walton Blvd., Pontiac are = be ose to get | ' “ : number.” Waterford Township Fire Hall, Tras ake sees ae 4995 M 59 at Crescent Lake Rd., without it. Waterford Township. White Lake Township Fire Hall, M 59 at Porter Rd, White Lake Closing time for advertise- ments containing type sizes lurger than regular agate type is 12 o'clock noon the day previous to publication have been in existence in the city, Township. | own for a total of 141 years, represent- . oday ai a Troy Township Fire Hall, 2780 | Transient Want Ads may ing 500 men, today joined forces Race ten ha be cancelled up to 6:30 0 with 24 other organizations in sup- Lake Orion Fire Hall WOE the day pobieeolicatce after + | > aul, Ain porting the city’s need for addi- O | Print St Lake Goan tional municipal parking | ot. = Nip Fire Hall. | ees Lees AD RATES | . i ‘or Five Ce ee | Farmington Township Fire Hall, | y The “Committee For Five Cent oe | stl F ti j 2 $150 «81 86 82.78 Parking” received signed resolu- ARTIST IN GLASS — Thomas J. Murphy, dean United Press Phote | 71420 W heeler St. eee, 4 3 1 30 2.70 3.96 tions from Kiwanis, signed by sec-) of Stained glass window artists in America, holds window business since he was 16 years old. His | The clinics are nie fe Rie. 5 225 aes € 00 S, § Y SEC . . . unty Health De 7 Tetary William Coulacos; Rotary the design for a new window at his Boston studio work beautifies many churches throughout bless. Oakland oa caEAaiChunty : a3 uo He . om ent an ne Oaklanc Club;- signed ty James Slattery, Now 90, Murphy. has been in the stained glass the U.S Dn Gecanarians Needthen can) ome hel jah id acreta jons, by president! ; - = : sec ry; . Lior es Pp i“ ~~ | operated on a non- profit basis P. ne Harry F. Vernon; Exchange Club, i! tioned at Thule Greenland. Je : aD -- - Lan —_——— signed by president Leslie R H now home with his par | WATERFORD, TOKLAND COU HooL , i ; eis no ome - P N Ware: and Optimists, signed by N MICHIGAN . = ? lhe ) S , —— : BOX REPLIES ceubieks Tues Foxit ews of the Men in Service | eis. sv ws srs. tency stoormer,| rome ‘or TAT Day oF cG his wife, Audry and four year old A apectal election having been called _ All the members of the clubs | News concerning the four serv. Now — stationed son William Henr: | to be Meld In said school district on the 2, 3, 8, 10, 16, 25, 28, w » vot { t ‘s » i pee Got |aist day of February, 1956 . rged Pontiac voters to get ou ice men sons of Mr. and Mrs, ®t Camp Polk | a | Therefore, notice ts hereby given, thet | 32, 33, 43, 60, and vote March § for increased Jack Gambi { 721 Rockwell St Lousiana 1s Nor Now stationed at Camp Moody | ith the 10th day of February ra municipal parking. Re eas litford ; ee Y | up te $00 o'clock pm., Eastern Standart ” . has been received eat rd) Gamble, in Valdosta, Georgia ts William J. | Time. ts the last day =n hisceal ale = > “tiv: Ac “CO a 1 st register tn a — All very active in civic affairs eRe 6c } , ; Rivers Jr, 30, son of Mr and | ete lcie ote Sota at anid) lapectal H Want 4 M \ to benefit the city, Optimist’s major ones Pt C. Gamble “Mrs. William J election ; cies! thoula be elp Wante ale 6 * : ry >< ( ( } asi ~ a | Application for registration snow program centers around parks Gamble, 23) wa took his b asic Kivers of 617 S. | ence en eonship clerk of the tewn- a ae improvement in providing Pontiacrecently dis- eis a oe |Paddock St. [ aise mie ee eee tered Slupenitne Travel pelll Wikio’ aul; Kenpisy i Fy j * P | A | a : i fe children with playground facilities. oj), -0ed from the aonard Wood. | Capt. Rivers registration books of such township clerk. mient) infollCenter™ Room) 6e 1476 Exchange works closely with the a Missouri. He at leraduated from | need not re-register OMNSON, Stuart St. Boston’ 16 : riviy. 1 » “ ie 1 Salvation Army program, Lions ° tended — Jefferson p - Secretary of the Board of Education Automobile Salesmen M : “ ontiac High cretary 0 s “s : : 4 Sc t January 26 1956 ; aid blind people in and around Pt Gamble o ae Schoo! School in 1942. en- nee yNJan 30, Ped 8, 1956 . ASISIROLE . - a “ee f before he enteres — es SS ve nee salesmen who lik — Oe hae and entered the serv a ne t a . On listed in the Air SPECIAL ELECTION to make money experienced ee ra » While Mary is : ono ' ; , _ . orce the ‘ > Nou is b t the qualified ferred Full co-operation end known for their Junior Achieve ce in 1952 and B, 1932 GAMBLE Force he same ersee ot nae of Brandon demonstrator pian Kindly call for ment iys th } received his basic * © year and then re- | State of M ’ alt pg ogee re Soe) th A v program plys their learn-to- ‘ C < na — id Township Sales Manager . enhsted in 1951 | Special Elect UE) hes i NG wi ject. training at Camp Charles E jon Monday, Februs:y ps at Tow! North Chevrolet Co. ° t fichigar being an lo e — . ae ents at 617 S. Padd& St | Oakland County. Michigan — : Mans fie ! received his bast — ordinance regulating Weer neon, Detail Draftsman ; ' 3 s siruction, alterat ep molt) Clerk Faces Charges | — training at Fort Grol @ Str height. location and ares of buildings 11 Overtime Pay ] yo : . I the said Township of Brandon and pre ie _ now stationed at Leonard - Wood fe) tresses Geod | theleaid Teanshin of Brevden oP: Peanneit Pooton WHITE CLOUD u — Sheridan Fort Devens, § Missourt of Economic Education | collections of fees therefor and provid Manufacturer of machines and Township Clerk Jake Reimink will Gamble aticnd jing for es tablishing of fire iimits and automation equipment has perma- i J z Massachusetts. 3 oa . es , ; providing prnalties for t! €) siolatien | nent salaried position for machine undergo Justice Court hearing on i . ed Jefferson Jr EAST LANSING up — Economic thereof be adopted The polls of said detailer fe years Ci ex: oe - . > 817) . at Wt open J acliock Y ywerience Must knav ’ etl charges of vote fraud Feb 17 Pvt Gambk a CHARLES [High School be- Puncatonl isis new! andi crue ing elec jon will be open a a ee perience Must know shop meth. Reimink, who previously waived tended Pontiac fore entering the eld of importance in chamber Dated this jrd day of February AD with minimum supervison Fine he } ing lacked ligne School. and GAMBLE > re 95 opportunity to advance with grow- the hearing. asked and was grant. ” : SErVICe, af commerce work, a chamber of HELEN TUCKER JENCKS ing organization for an indus- ed the justice. hearing by Circuit Wes aus a o * * commerce officials workshop was ne a ee fee malate romueorarste ait 2 = oe ad on a mie i 1B56 Judge Earl C. Pugisey. Reimink ts track and basket Home tor 20 dave belore hie ard (eld yesterday ity Call C R. Rymal, MI 45400, Te sti r Te ; li © entestes * Birmingham accused of filing and certifying pe all Hi \ i meenlistment in the Army is Peter Speaker at the workshop was ; DOOR MAN. NEAT APPEARING titons for seven township officers u in the TALL se 6 ol Waller Fo Carey. Flint business: | _ Death Notices young man Age 18 to 30 Apply, adi ne MANSPFIFL 995 and took | . . ° : ce | Man State Theater after the deadline in 1955. papi re ; aD ‘ me 00S. Paddock man and chairman of the U.S. | El ReTnIG MOTOR WINDER AND SS c - : ih 1 asic training at ., Chamber of Commerce Transpor- | FE all-around repair man. Lincoin * . jCamp Polk, Louisiana tation and C ‘.», | BLAIR FER 7 1956 ROBERT B, | TN33, ——— Ludington OKs Raises ct eee ition and Communications Com | Gruden lagelss. beloved (hus: . : mittee | band of Gabe 1. Blair dear DIE h aaenibiet) . Ludington’s Lansing Hikes Price ered the Army An increasing number of lacal : city commission has voted to : au yee He Si chambers are devoting ¢ i DES! NERS ) voting a major ( = renee the salaries of the city clerk LANSING (> The price of tnd " naan ste parm oof their time to economic : a city treasurer $400 to $4,500 garbage has gone up in Lansing Wag rior to : a age has gon n Lans education,” Carey said. BL ear effective May 1 , ts “4 Fi its ‘ » this. he attended _— . | Fu- ay : ve cl ‘ meal voted to up ana “ids This puts to work the best | eral Sone Se carbawe init ; inttac gh - ; Indian fnctory workers a k 7 ‘ e can : i from $4 to $b Schowl leadership in the community to GARMAN FEB 7 1956 ALFRED CHECKERS acts orkers draw an and the cits afhers still saw they oe roe find i BR 29821 Laone St, New Hudson ind new wars to reach more and 7 : average wage o han j = i vehnner . . ; . . Mi age 27. beloved husband verag age of less than $1 @ are losing $100000 a year on col Before eoming more people with facts about our of man. dear father of . lections home, he was sta economic system ” | Sand eifrey and Deborah . ; a snes aa _ _ (Giarmar dear brother of Mrs. MEN W ANTED Aiberta Gray, Mrs Glara Worley, - « s Mrs Jeanette McCauley, Russell STOUR, MIN avihe \f } Robert, Janes and Susan Pate \ I Mr. Garman will be | AND eqroes al North arolina Discover Little Prejudice | ‘i Tn hin atecooee tn | . ie EIR lome this atternoon to the } 4 t & Yates Funeral Home | WHY DRIVE TO DETROIT? Baan Funeral arrange- ] iL. NC or Thies ' 7 ' \ > he Sparks-eariffin Fu- LAFAYETTE ENG. CO M suchghosar eae Ne ; a ! Poappeal te the 1 S Su Negroes have heen admitted to of Negroes apparently has caused . ; 2619 DIXIE HWY OR_3-0066 NOR ance rE Taguate S| hax eel oreme Court in this same case,’ the graduate level at the aniver9 no studenr problems. None have LANE. FEB 7, 1956 ELLA MAGILL. EXPERIENCED SERVICE MAN absorbed in the 6.500 member stu i P ue 2144 Willow Beach, Keego Hart- to assist om service floor Steady dent body at the Universit, of Atty Gen Wilham B Rodman has sity since court action foreed been brought ta his attention, bor Mich, age 91. beloved moth- | employment good WawKes. reply bee Nees : a he oust open the doors in 1951, act - | er of Mrs Elizabeth L Adam = | Rox No 36 _— North Carolina—with n Se UAE AA i! i . NOTICE OF SPFECIAL ELECTION er Fi will be held | > NCED WASHING 2 : ai ee anes Vie hist deer which may have smoothed the a eA bie ace Gt lent Bugs el cece = Oh a | Gesu a Ss SSN lent campus reaction thar sed | t i" Mat , } i f ! Water! Thursday, Feb ® at 2 pm hin repairman Must have ex- cohen i ; lon than raised — hool —— ie const “way for the undergraduates. a 6h “ District. Oakland Cc the C J Godhardt Funeral | 1 au spas nee e W's, culmea . M +} dict officiat- or 2 per hour " , with Rev H Bene | eee 2 Not even startled expressions f De A degree of segre tion is still , ing Interment in Green - Me vtin ati firnich references cre be seh he th WaTVTN EAT meter Kenosha, Wis on f . eS ied Gc ue low Leroy and Ralph Fraviet nd NOODECISTION plaenie : { Be INIVETSIES id- ( cay Mra iene will lie tn state Gui i 96 Oakiand Ave : = their friend John Lew Brander Wy th. i fee a ed IMistration in housing On ounmipus at the C. J Godharet Funeral EXPFRIENCED REAL ES TATE across the campus of this 161 vear. unsettled I Ae Neon shidents «<} y four-room Home, ace Harbor Mich nels nen . ay wore! te in so fis 181 year sunset, rand A THe FMzIET ii anieae tind floor of Steel TEPP. FEB 6. 1956 PEARL. 9397 Busy ground hoor location with Traditionally white Southern brother emt through the usual { ; v . Te Henderson, Goodrich, Mich Nice. parking Bai “port. Wo Hure uhiversity. hectic oe : Veer ~, LMATULONIERg MIG ALAR, the central e 45, beloved daughter of Mrs sible J tity urof. 3 oat ninod ve moto vollege far ampu a mat a as iy ee y es FI RST CLASS TOO! Coy) DN - eee reeatio i Litiet : { 8. on Masters fe maker on small prog v The wiet cod ha m Se “rf : \ lean Weaver said thi presence ne ter of Misa Battie bet h { Dies Journerman preferred was thrown into sharp relief this found oul” Biand said _ . - , f | Kenneth D Butler and Leon | Superior Metal Products nive smiling that if ; 1 : ORDIN AS! anni te ‘ | ler Funeral service will be i | Manutactur! pong pa at a Univer- ™_ : s a different or : u a8 ENO Re oF a 2 i> | Thursday, Feb ®, at } p e from aus ie Rd papi Heights, i, abama, where rioting (7OMm Oleh scnoo OAKLAND ct PAUTHEGAS ’ : o | the Voorhees-Siple Chapel with Michigar Racal = ; be ee : wee AN ex t | : uth officiating - EIVCULTER students greeted the admission of Their first semester grades at 7%! eae Halt. Gael cee said four new | Ber 188 ant sea oCemc ere FIRE FIGHTER : ; le Section @ ’ 4 { d for two a t th City of . Ponti Salary 84.433 to a Negro coed, the university were about aTerage, t ‘ here is ame i a wings? ons "| woncheet intel mineral! Home | - | tart ° Bi eh Sch hool “diploma or erry ere . a Scattering of C’s and B “ TCHS é _ that the voting — - - eqitivalent requitd, Age 21-28, The oma live within a cou g of d B's. Jerk fo the provisions of pars es for id election will be as fol-1 \ time th service may be deducted ocks of N “aroline ee -ren’ ete of (his se.ctor, and exce In lows | = F c from age! Height 67 to 76 inches ple of ock of orth Carolina And we weren't hand picked. ttiose ti ccances where a lower speed is Precinct No Dravton Plaine School _.. Card of Thanks 1 Weicht proportional. Applicants College in Durham. a state-sup- We're just average students," : iinkice or is posied No 2000 Sashabaw Rd we TAKE THIS METHOD TO must have been resident of city ported institution for Negroes Leroy explained, be — Wil recince Nou 3 poneison, Bchoela i: MAY WE our heartfelt thanks and Mice City, Hall, 3e South Park, ; ; f he, 1200 West Huron Stree | ! H A —— Brandon, 18, also lives within easy fey —_, ativer of re ihelsanievat | liPreciict) Nol 3) | Wwarertore center appreciation to our friends and | , This fall they met no unpleasant sp he following, but School. No. 1002 Airport Rd neighbors for their kindness, sym distance, . RSP ‘ Ae ai coal gee ne eee ales i ' thy, flowers And contributions | ; j incidents of difficull adjustments drive at @ speed a eae No 4 Waterford Village variag the illness and bereave- | : ; : rhool, Nc Steffens Bt ; WANTED BEST to an all-white cerhpus. aii Gate high:l) Precinct: Ne an coche Lake Bebool ment of my beloved husband, and = | : hej ; @uring the day- No. 2518 ‘Williams Lk. 2d ° brother, Wesley H_ Rich. Special | They trained their sights on the COLLEG FE, OUTLOO : Bene at tlams b Rd. ara thanks to Rew Collycott for the | d JALPAG FE, AMOK | ice is further given, that the Boar ~ beautiful service, his prayers and | University in Chapel Hill, some 12 . : state highways'of Education of said school district has ae of Tee Ries eenkelo unl TE gales distant : The university’ administration’ * he night hours. estimated that three million five hun- ee pinicy Funeral Home (orice: 0 . 2 7 “ be take effect thirtyid ’ oll 5 : has taken this View. “We treat dass as ym date of Hi culection, i iia a erate Sait ives Saar meas eae en Beek mice Micredic ide oc icatior am t ‘ \ SSar} 4 = ualified b, ‘ esic- ae 4 B. Frazier Sr. explained why ithem lke any other students,”” said ; a Be a is at tr is £ ee rowed for the project for which said} ee Wien ee Mg MANY a Hed met ute of Ponies the wanted his sons to go to the Dean of Stude nts Fred Weaver 3 en Re ae Lam oe onas are ta be sues RORNBOR friends' and neighbors during our Guaranteed salary. commission white university, “I wanted them | ‘“The re is no special treatment for vite ie Hes es ihe Febru- Secretary of the cb t OerA Hoa Ez oe aihedaumel Be av eared Ut ve the - best . ; ooo Board of Education - hanks to ome Extension | fics hospital 44 and durgi- » weve § oe oct eae | eth Qa bg nol sbectal equine BERT AM KEACHIE, of said School District Club. Ladies club of, Methodist ! eal rurance Be cuMe 4 hate - wate had to offer. iments, « ship Cler& | Dates January én, 1936 1 church of Lakeville. and Rev insom at Hotel Waldrom Tues & . : = Ss i . Feb &, 1096, \ Feb & bs, lo86 Eddy. Clinton Barrett family Weds. from 3 p.m. to 8 p m : A . , ° J oe ee ee Pe \ | A A Soi / * (4 \ i ete rr we ee aan 0 ry __Help Wanted Male 6 FULL Tia SHOR SALESMAN. necessary o « A Malings shoes, 50 N ine w HOUSETRAILER » SERVICE “AND parts Thoroughly experi- enced (237 eens — Trailer Ex- _change, 8. Teleg _ FE INSPECTOR ice : Engineer, no degree it Experienced in surface plate and production checking of aircraft parts. Steady work in expanding M. C. MFG. CO. 118 Indianwood Rd. Lake Orion JOBS FOR MEN | Mead gardener. ........... Station manager apenorGac Accountant trainee , .... ope ml traimee . - 566 5e-8.05 ce CARFER CENTER B-l Riker Bidg. FE 38-0416 JOBS FOR ae Genera) 5 Accountan! ustrial Salesm: MIDWEST EMPLOYMENT SERVICE #06 Pontiac State Bank Bidz. FE 5-0227 Machine Designers ~ Tool Makers Medium size expanding Co. has openings in a new research and. devel- oping center in your lo- calitv. Salary, excellent working conditions. Pre- vious experience neces- sary. Phone Walled Lake MArket 4-1586 MAN FAMILIAR WITH LAWN mowers and engines tor grind- ing and repairs Suburban Sales and Service 6465 Telegraph at Maple Birmingham MAN THOROUGHLY enced in industrial refrigeration and alr conditioning Some tech- nical training desirable. Age 25 to 40 Apply Personne] Dept.. Gener- el Motors Proving Ground, Mii- ford. Mich MIDDLEAGED cashier in restaurant aaiaaaaa Tet 4-4) TIME. ee a a dressed young men in training at once. To rep- resent seventh largest corpore- tion $45 week start, vs, expense plus commission. No canvassing no collecting, no delivering. Ap- -_EXPERI- “MAN AS NIGHT References ply at Roosevelt Hote! Perry St Room 118 Ask for Mr. Kostick Thur, 7 30 pm PINBOYS EVENINGS AND WEFKE- ends Motor-Inn Recreation. FE $-6032 x Publishing and C0 Advertising Co. in Pontiac now expanding additional sales representa needed to call on old qd accounts tn Pontiac and « yp area Steady employ above average earn- for top-caliber men Sat. Feb. 11 bet 12 noon Pontiac City Index __ 67 Oakland Ave Pontiac Mich PONTIAC EMPLOYMENT SE masa for over Established $ years Two tives 10 am 18 (a _Huron #2551 RE pi ABI I PERMANENT Are you interested tn sound dig- nified sales work? Offering im- mediate earnings, promotion, and future You may qualify and be properly trained with income dur- ing training period. Married man with reliable car preferred. Call FE 2-281! 6 to 8 pm _ only REAL FSTATE | SALESMEN 2 men full time Sales = xrperience helpful. Right men will make $10.- 000 first year R. II. V AL UET, Realtor 345 Oakland A FE 53-0683 Co-Operative Real Estate Exchange ~ Real Estate Broker or Salesman Increase your earnings on each sale AND WIDEN YOUR INVEST- MENT OPPORTUNITIES One Commercial and One Industrial Specialist OF HIGHEST CALIBER WITH SEVERAL SUCCESSFUL YEARS BACKGROUND WILL BE INVIT- D TO JOIN A TEAM OF HARD HITTING SPECIALISTS IN OTH- ER LINES Firm is owned by members profits go to members No in- vestment required. Option to par- ticipate in all investments with capital gain advantage Firm has had many years diver- sified experience owns modern completely equipped. well located office building: has competent secretarial staff and ample capi- tal for investment. Profits last year broke all previous records Sound good? Write us a letter to Box 35, Pontiac Press We may both be glad you did Strict confidence will be observed 3 MEN For responsible position with large nationa] distributing orzan- tration in Pontiac area Some - chanical aptitude helpful. If you are available immediately see erm ployment manager between the brs of 10 am and $ pm Apply 1064 W Huron __ SALESME N_ 30 For SALESMAN | If you are selling tn other fields Uke shoes insurance. appliances and so forth and want to in- crease your income, here is your bie opportunity Se'l Fords and Mercury's for an aggressive deal- ership Car furnished Good work- DISTRIBUTORS Part time con- appointment, Box ing conditions. health insurance plan, and other benefits Seen training, sales direction. sales as- si anes are made ee eilable Don't iss this opportunit LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES MY 2-2611 ~Salesmen. Real Estate Have openings for alert roung ienced mise. ting Siisting advertising & contacts Earnings unlimited To Bur—To Sell—io Trade YOU BUY IT—WE LL INSURE IT MAHAN REALTY CO, REALTORS Co-operative Real Estate Exchange a fs 63 1076 w. Huron DOOR TO BRANCH _____POST_ OFFICE STEEL BROKERS WANTED. AP- ply Trans American Freight Lines Inc. 267 So. Bird. E Pontiac STORE CLERK Small auto and paint supplier will pay $240 per month to start for sober middle aged man to assist manager. Will do selling. counter displays, some stock and delivery wark Must have drivers license and ability to handle cash drawer GRAEBNER Fmplovment Agency 313 ‘Pontine Btate Bidg. FE 5-027, NEXT = — ee ___Help Wanted Male 6 SALESMAN Full = vests Py [ese expert. ence an: porta, Write Pontine 7 Greenleaf Press Box 37. SUCCESSFUL FARMING HAS AN out for Finis Service Man in this and surrounding counties. eomenen ne investment, ne age limit. Must have farm beck- ground, dependable car, Above average coroner: For interview see Mr. Stuart at Roosevelt —_ from 6:30 to . p.m, Wed, Friday TRUCK DRIVERS Experienced driveawa: a ers only, for long d trips ust have tleranase' show ln; ele expe ence. Must be physically fit, and able to pass 1.C.C. phy- sical and drivers’ test. Apply 9 am. bei ay to Friday eat Guard House Fleet Carrier Corp. 586 6, Bivd. East Pontiac VILLAGE CLERK of village clerk This ® full time position with a min! 40 hours per week. Dutle performing adm: work of clerk, tax assessor @ building Inspector, inspection of all tien, plumbing. electrical work, and sanitation im the village. Ap- plicant must have own transpor- tation, Jd experienced and ca- e 0 ull to be determined rience and ner Ones or ‘phone. M Jo) WANTED SALESMAN AT ONCE, W Dinnan, 66 W Huron 8t. WANTED SINGLE MAN TO work on rk lem. 18 or older. 4-673. _Help Wai Wanted | Female 7 ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE CLERE Unusual opportunity for po gn lady wtih oookkeepin, ing experience to Wor! enlal people in modern xford Area Interesting oe versified work Immediate open- ing day week Ca and 6-2 2588 as AMBITIOUS WOMAN EARN pasanoe beautiful ster- Bavarian china, No canveseee FE 26175 or Cai necessary 2- ba BIRM!NGHAM {MMEDIATE OPENI oe General office, secre book- keepers aod waitress ae “wo do- mestic Birmingham Employment Service. 139 W. Maple, irming- aam M. 44254 Bor KI CEEP ER for automobile dealership, Pon- CR @ tiac Bookeeping machine expertence preferred, ut will train qualified person. For @ poihtment phone Mr. Shafer, FE _5-4101 or JC rdon 63158. _ CURB & FOUNTAIN GIRLS, 8U- per Chief Drive-In. FE 23-6851. 1115 N Telegraph EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. 3s. 35 years or over. Days. Apply 46 __ Auburn _ ‘|RST JOBS ARE IMPORTANT See Betty for the right start. FIGURE CLERK FOR Doctor's Office é GE NE RAL OFFICE for UN Stu on 6260 OF re E BEGINnER for Psvychiatrts 6226 NICE PE RSONALITY to answer phone ee 200 CLERK TYPIST for small office $225 VOID EST 406 Roeee ae Bank Bidg. #2271 ~ FORD MOTOR CO. Tractor and Implement Division BIRMINGHAM HAS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR Steno- Secretaries Clerk-Typists . APPLY 2500 FE. Maple Rd. Birmingham OPEN WED TILL 8 _ Sat 9 TILL GENERATL OFFICE “wORK InN real estate office. Must be ec- curate typist: “Apply tn own hand- writing, stating age and expe rience Box 33,_ Pontiac Press HOUSEKEEPER FOR MOTHER- less home 4 bors 5, 9, 10 and 13. Will consider couple. No drinkers. Must live in OA $-2205. x HOUSEKEEPER FOR MIDDLE:-.._. aged retired teatlemen Eary work good pay Living in pres ferred, but not absolutely neces- sary Write. Phone No., dress, age. experience. Pontiac Press, Box 111 HOUSEKEEPER WANTED | FOR motherless home Rochester, OLive 2-477 : “JUNIOR SEC RETARY $250 Modern office wants bright young girl with lite shthd WIN take girl fresh out of school See Nancy at Career Center. B-1 Ri- ker Bldg FE 8-0416 VARRIED WOMEN _ With children who cannes accept ordinary to se of car necessary No collecting! deliver- ing of invextment. High earnings. For appointment call FE 2-4456, a DEDEAGED LADY TO CARE fo t® children for working mone: erie in. After 8:30, OL 2 1 MIDDLEAGED WOMAN TO work in convalescent home. Some No heavy work, or floor scrub- ; in $48 per month, room and board More for Write, giv- Press. Bor pius home than for wages detail Pontiac ing tr MOTHERLY TYPE more for home than wages live in FE 40731 PENSIONER quarters for light 2-6764. 1025 James PONTIAC Jobs for Girls Be CEPTIONIST ~~ WOMAN, Must “PRIVATE LIVING duties, FE small office, $200 for real estate PTIONIST firm newer phone and type $208 RECEPTIONIST-CASHIER, Itte RF‘ toning $108 FILE CLERK, lite typing $200 FIGURE CLERK for ad agency $225 SFCRFTARY for ad agency .. $275 SECRETARY. no shorthand $300 SECRETARY to executive BOOKKEEPER INERS— Pontiac 313 Pontiac State Bank Bidg, Phone FE 35-9277 PONTIAC EMPLOYMENT SERVICE if W Huron : _ FE 4-2551 POSITION OPEN FOR EXPERI- enced medical laboratoty techni- cian Registration 1 in new hospital not necessary FE 2-$121. Pontiae Osteopathic Hospital __ PROFITABLE CAREER FOR WOMAN OVER 30 Are you proud of your home an@ your taste in home furnishings? a en you may be jist the wom- ae take over permanent, dig- d position tn Pontiac, Neo em ence needed. If you have cag, personality and can de vote 24 hours an evening: to show. n Troucseau Linen Write ta Mrs Johnston at 921 E. Kennel- worth, Fitnt, Mich Heegoes! the.