ia the. Weather .
Partly Cloudy
Details page two
114th, Y EAR
Armed Pair Rob
Jewelry Store;
Flee With $525 Thugs Herd 4 Persons
‘Into Back Room as
Love Record Plays
Two armed thugs robbed)
a downtown jewelry store,
in mid-afternoon yesterday,
escaping with $525.
The 10-minute robbery of
Lynn Jewelers, 1 S. Sagi-|
naw St., was carried on to!
the accompaniment of love,
music.
Owner Jerry D. Lynn, 29,
of Detroit, two employes
and a customer were herded,
unharmed into a back room)
while the pair left by the}
front door.
The pair entered-at 3:35 p.m.,
LaDuke, 31, of
One of them asked
to demonstrate Manager Irving
Clarkston said.
LaDuke
graph. a phono-|
~
LaDuke teld Pontiac Police De-
tectives Richard Evans and Olin
_ Hoffman that he put on a record |
entitled “Love Letters.”
The man then raised a handker-
chief to his face and stuck a snub-|
nosed, nickel-plated pistol in La-!
Duke's back |
FORCED TO REAR :
The manager said he was forced)
to the rear where Lynn and a book-
keeper, Mrs. Carolyn Asbury, 44,
of 2625 Woodbine Dr., Waterford!
Township, were standing behind a)
counter.
From a position in front of the |
counter, the second man also
raised a handkerchief to his face |
and pulled a pistol on Mrs. As- |
bury: -
\ customer, Fred Julian, 24. of
110 Wall St.. said he was com-
manded to face the wall by one
thug.
EMPTY CASH DRAWER
Mrs. Asbury was ordered to re-
move bills from the office eash
drawer and stuff them into a store
envelope, along with petty cash
v. hich was lving.on a table, Evans
said.
The
change
jewelry to take loose
no mention of
on the victims
persons, added Mrs
\sbury showed them the
safe contained no tioney and they
left it untouched.
The four escaped the back room
by pounding on a door connecting
another store, where police were
summoned.
40,000 in Tokyo
Hear Graham Japanese Crowds Jam
Stadium as Evangelist
Warns World on War pair refused
and made
Or money
Evans
said she
TOKYO ip ts
Billy Graham today
Ichiro Hatoyama
minister
preached the evangelist
prayed for
Christian prime
of Japan, and later
gospel] to thousands
of Japanese and Americans
s *
Pohee estimated 15,000 persons
jammed the International Indoor
Stadium to sing hymns and hear
(;raham warn that ““The world will
blow itself out of existence’ un
less it bridges a gulf of sin be-
tween God and man.
Police said angther 5.000 lis
ened to the sermon on loudspeak-
ers outside, Several hundred of
these angrily beat on the doors
which had been Closed an hour be
fore Graham's scheduled appear
ince, The evangelist’s spokesmen
estimated the total crowd at
1.000
2 MASS MEETINGS
the first
meetings Graham
during a week in
He spoke in English. Interpreter.
Shoichi Ozaki translated the mes-
sage into staccato Japanese sen-
tenoes, at the same time im#ating
(;raham’s gestures.
* = of two mass
has scheduled
Japan It was
In the throng — ‘silent at Gra-
ham's request — were Japanese
1 Kimono and modern dress and
hundréds of American servicemen
in uniform, some. with wives and
habies.
Fifty policemen
four-tiered auditoryjim
useq for wrestling. guarded the
normally
—$+-——- ——
Ladies” Day Speci
Holfens Holdens .
Wednesday Double Stamp Day
A&A & Standard Service #44 Oskiane THE PONTIAC P ek
Layoff Pay Plan
Discord Hinted Bronner Reports Some
Opposition to Proposal
by Detroit UAW Men
DETROIT
of Grand Rapids
Michigan
mittee George Bonner
the Information Com-
found
some Detroit mem-
bers of the United Auto Workers
against the layoff pay plan _ne-
gotiated with the auto-makers by
the inion says he has senti
ment among
The committee was formed to
work for legislative action to
block the plan in Michigan, and
such a bill now is under study
by a committee of the State Leg
islature in Lansing.
If the Legislature turns down the
bill to block layoff pay, Bronner
said his committee will seek-a ‘ref
erendum on it in the fall elections
Bronner,-a UAW member, .is a
tool and die worker at the General
Motors Fisher body plant in Grand
Rapids. His appointment as chair-
man was announced Saturday, fol-
lowing the resignation of Dan Ger-
ber, president of Gerber Products
Co., of Fremont
Bronner -said Gerber resigned
because of a threatened union
boycott of Gerber baby food prod
ucts. Gerber has denied he was
subjected to pressure, He said
he quit because he did not agree
with aims of the committee.
spent Sunday
members from
and that 3onner said he
talking with UAW
four Detroit area plants
they expressed opposition to the
layoff pay plan. He did not say
with how many he talked
Connecticut Governor Speaks new chairman of Washington th * PONTI AC, sermon separ emery ane menioeentanarn- ane
q hs
_—_ * see
(HO ee
DISTINGUISHED GUEST — George Washing
ton warms himself at the fire of a wayside inn, in
this color drawing by AP Newsfeatures artist Ed
¢;under. lt is a scene repeated many times at the
end of a day of hard riding“by the much-traveled
Washington. Washington didn't sleep in nearly all
Washington Sa able night
(Piditor’s - Note Assuming George
teaily slept in haif the places
at claim he did what kind of accom<
fations was he likely to find im them?”
How much did an average dinner cost
a What did it con ist of? How was
he room service” Here's a factual story
that answers these and other
about the first Presiden ts trave knew
~ brooding the dense shadows and
of
almost silence the onginal
forests. the impenetrable
jungle of oak, pine. hemlock and quesion
habits) chestnut tangled with
vine. He wild grape-
knew the rivers of won
derful names. Allegheny and Mo-
nongahela and Yougiegheny. A
better painter than Giibert Stuart
would have seen much of all this
face CHARLES MERCER
Newsfeatures Writer By
AP
has tiresome old
joke that George Washington
slept here.” Actually most of bts
camp sites and resting places have It become a
on his
with the phrase that
here."’ But he did get around a lot on horseback
And when an inn was available, he and his staff
could look forward to a good meal and a comfort
face
hat
ing,
The t 4
/-MICHIG GAN . “TU ESDAY, -PEBRU ARY 21, 1956 $ —30 PAGES | PRESS UNITED
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVIC Ry
¥ it ‘puis
fond PHOTOS Ge
of Economic Plan
AP Newsfeatures Color Phote
those places which try to catch the edge of mel
“George Washington slept
aw Birth
of a New Civilization aides that almost always when he
started a
turned bad
ing o7
to quarter
and he leaned into it,
pulled low,
cold numbing the strong boot-
ed legs that clamped the
flanks
mantic the weather
rainy or sleet-
wind seemed
the general's
cocked
flutter- journey
Hot or
snowing The
to smite
greatcape
horse's
It is accurate, not just ro-
to remember him thus
general always tried to be
Zin a journey before dawn and be
disappeared. But he was a yreat It was a source of irontc amuse-|fore breakfast—to the special dis
traveler. one of thes most durable ment to the general and the strong|tress of that young aide, Col. Alex
of his time, and he saw the be men he always chose as (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) young
ginnings of a great civilization '
Washington was in
three times. He never
north than Kittery, Mec.. Just across
the New Hampshire He
never Was in Nermont, though he
visited Albany and
distance west into the Boston just
got farther
border:
ranged some
Mohawk Val
DETROIT ‘?}—James F ley . :
He never was south of his be a Negro religious cult,
loved Virginia until] 1791. Then. at morals charges
the age og 59. he rode 1,887 miles
: The Alabama-born, through the Carolinas and Georgia
traveling 40 te 350 miles a day
over foul roads in foul weather
Those who glide on super-high
today over the traces of
Washington’s America
what this means
ridden five miles attempted gross indecency
iohs the Wavne County Jail (,eorge . J
cannot realize
unless they've
on horseback, John Henry who made sever
home in the course of his*
As a younger man the general jnvestigation. At one audi-
wandered as far west as West ence, the warrant sated
Virgina, Western Pennsylvania : ; Ds : ones Je indecen and the beginnings of Ohio. He Jon mac
vances
A nine-man police raiding party
f headed by two top department of
d * Clayto Nx .
Lauds Work of Red GroOsSioae eee
NEW YORK (INS)—Gov.
Connecticut states that
devastated his state showed him the true story of
the Red Cross.
Ribicoff ‘told a campaign luncheon in New Heel senior inspector Paul re.
antivice and gambling operations
of the department. Nowlin is chief Abraham Ribicoff of to
last vear’s floods which of the viee bureau .
I Fourteen members of Jones’
flock, 11 youths and three wom-
en, were taken to police head
“ quarters for questioning. Jones’ one-time boy evangelist,
arrested at his 54-room French castle home yesterday
on a warrant charging him with gross indecency and
He was held overnight
al v
Acce
“au
cloudy
perature tonight and tomorrow
Tonis
16 degrees.
he ill
The Prophet Jones Arrested
on Charges of Indecency (Prophet) Jones, leader of
faced arraignment today on
was
In
The complaint was-signed by Vice Bureau Patrolman
palatial isits to Jones’
Predict Little Change
in Weather for Area
wding to U.S. Weather Bu
reports, it will be partly
with little change in tem-
ght's low will range from 12
The high tomorrow
from 28 to 32
five-day Michigan weather
forecast says the temperature will
average from 3 to 5 degrees below!
normal There will be only-minor r
Junior High Set
fo Open Friday Perry Street
From Other Schools
Pontiac's new Madison
High School, at 1275 N. Perry St.,
will open to about 550 pupils Fri-
day, according to Assistant Su-
perintendent c. Schools J. Ceci
Cox
The boilerhouse and two class
roam wings have
(See Bus Schedule, page 2.)
said Cox, tut a shortage of struc-
tural steel will hold up completior
of the gym and cafeteria for
few months
The Madison students will be
transferred from Weber School,
which will be converted back to
an elementary school to relieve
overloading at Owen and Haw : or County _ Building ae Court-
il closed t a Gort |
Building
to Receive 550 Pupils "
Junior
been completed,
a Legal Holiday Program Calls ‘Closing Doors -
on Some Offices .' for Big Boost
n Production Both Pontiac banks, the post of. e
fice and its branches, offices «| house will be
icelebration of George Washington’ s ' . \bertinday, Industry and Agriculture
Are Both Covered in
5-Year Project
‘along with the main library at 47
| Williams The two branch libraries.
nesday. | MOSCOW (# — Premier
Federal offices in the city will Nikolai Bulganin. urged
ery made by the postal -services)
will be special delivery and perish--Communist Party today to
approve Soviet Russia's
Probers Delving i=in in industrial production.
i Money Quiz shal, taking the spotlight
for the first time since the
oa ‘in the Grand Kremlin Broad - Investigation of Palace, filled in details of
- Lobbyists’ Activities
lished by party organs just WASHINGTON wf — A special
committee probed further today/Pfore the congress opened.
political contributions while the, gates would. vote with alacrity for
Senate edged toward a broad inthe new economic blueprint, It
lobbying and legislative influence. |
The special committee looking:
jected by Sen. Francis Case (R-
SD.) during the natural gas bill
braska. state Republican finance
chairman, for questioning about a
Neff, lawyer-lobbyist fox..the Su-| For example, it asks a 70 per
perior Oil Co. of California, cent increase in steel production
a federal grand jury are Jooking!89 to 154 per cent in basic food
into the contribution to the Nebras-|Crops.
investigation of the proffered $2,500) Another party stalwart, First
donation to Case. Deputy Premier Lavar
\dustry “all tangled up” and ‘‘ob-
meantime to lay before the Sen- solete"” and said a thorough
proposal for ‘a special bipartisan jy realistic basis.
committee of sit to undertake a | s 8; 8
| Acceptance of the proposal by)! full in the Soviet press today.
\the Senate apparently would Sse He indicated much of the bonus
|tions by other subcomittees. for overtulfilling theif quotas
Donald R. Ross, who resigned would be blanketed into the bas-
\Nebraska, told the committee Neff) 800 to 1,200 rubles ($200 te $300
‘had contributed $2,500 to the Ne-| per month at the artificial gove
|ber after talking to the state's two!
senators about the gas bill Bess = all pes sania octe o | City Hall offices will be open
|will be closed as usual on Wed-
also be closed and the only deliv- ithe 20tH Congress of the
ables.
newest five-year plan -call-
The white-goateed mar-
Senate Edges Toward |Constess Opened a week ago
the economic program pub-
into the use of “‘oil money” for| It appeared certain that dele-
‘vestigation of campaign donations, | aj. for sharp boosts in heavy
into the $2,500 offered to and re-
debate called Joseph Wishart, Ne-
like contribution from John M.
Both the Senate committee and|by 1960 and increases ranging from
‘\ka GOP committee as part of 8" TANGLED WAGES
jealled the Soviet wage scale in in-
ate GOP Commitee s |was needed to bring pey scales to
breader inquiry, Kaganovich's speechy was carried
jout prospective separate investiga-| pay workers have been getting
jlast week as U.S. Attorney from) te wage scale—now averaging
braska GOP committee last Octo-| ernment exchange rate).
With tears in his eyes, Ross tes-!
‘tified Neff had tried to hire him|P0osted accordingly. and to give $500 to his children]
connection with the lawyér-) ss
lobbyist's activities on behalf of nad more than doubled since 19
the gas bill.
Ross said he rejected Neff's em.|While basic scales had rema ployment offer and promptly re-) [nema at a standstill.
turned passbooks Neff sent to him|NORMS OUTDATED ~
on a Lexington savings and loan| He attributed the increase to association made out with $100 for) premium pay for overtulfillment
; cach of Ross’ five children. lof ‘production norms. He asserted
=o jthat the norms were outdated and
no longer a spur. to Productivity. * +
He said the average take-home
Luce Arrives
in New York City
With Toothache Kaganovich, former commissar
of railroads, also said more than
|40 per cent of the nation’s rail
\passenger cars were obsolete.
NEW YORK Ambassador, He called for development of new
Clare Boothe’ Luce came home /¢duipment, improved water trans-
{rom Italy today with a toothache, | POT and ‘creation of a uniform.
An abscess caused so much|Connected and mutually operated
swelling of her left jaw that she) transport network which would pro-
asked airport photographers not to| Vide the possibility of reducing make any pictures. problems of transport and make it
Within 10 minutes of her arrival! More economical.” 1]
thorne Schools, she was on her way to her dentist).
Madison's total compieted cost by automobile, ne Ul nt eposts will be about $1.738.431, and its After obtaining dreatment, enten Guid
pupil capacity 616. will begin making preparations a Ivy Baker, Priest, treasurer of
The structure was started June the U.S. visit of Italfan President! the United States, tells of her
16 last year. Contractors are Ward Giovanni Gronchi. He leaves for parents’ victory over poverty in
W_ Ross, Inc: Eames and Brown this country next Sunday, and) teday’s installment of Lenten
and Ballard Electric. Principal of Mrs Luce will take part in his tour, Guideposts, Her story is on page
the new school is George Yansen, while here Hts
Fear Thaw Will Bri =
ng Floods
New Snows Grip Europe LONDON —Heavy
bitter winds spread still
ery over frozen
locked in the 22nd day of its wors
freeze-up of the 20th century snows
more
Europe ane
Deaths from the weaiher totaled
at least 737
Weathermen cautiousivy said
milder temperatires might be in
the offing, but that brought
fears of widespread flooding from
thawing rivers and snows,
Italy,
tries,
nist-backed one of the worst hit coun
relief riots
eral traditionally poor mis-
today,
faced new troubles—Commu-
Demon-
strators clashed with police in sev-
Southern {° Britain too used troops for snow The winter already has cost hun-
clearing dreds of millions of dollars in
spring crops
t Frigid weather came back to ee arose
Spain. The Balearic Islands, fa- EMR ATEL a
vorite sunshine spot for tourists, | New snows covered most of
northern Italy, Rome reported a
big increase in deaths not directly
caused by the weather. One paper
carried five columns of obituary
notices. instead of the usual half
column.
lee packs blocked coastal ship- lay under thick snow. Barcelona
had thunder, hail, rain and
then a blizzard, Snow plows had
to rescue a movie unit stuck in
| the Pyrenees Mountains,
Paris shivered in its coldest Feb. |
1} on record—-8 ee W ine ping in the North Sea and Baltic,
growers in the Bordeaux ion Coal was short in towns across
ee feared half their vines were Germany. Wild boars and deer
came down into towns looking for
food,
In Today’s Press , ‘ ” . s oa towns where cold has brought new Ea ;
York that he had known “vaguely” of the work chief aide, Douglas T. (Prince) fiyctuations in the temperature up hardships , | An earthquake’ rocked a large
done by -the Red Cross, vut had never seen the Rogers, $0, voluntarily accom: 1, Saturday, when it is due to rise. Communist East Europe called) County News 9, 10 area of Turkey between Istanbul
organization in action. . aa wo chaste can pcos There will be wis flurries Wed- \out troops to keep industries mov-| Fiitortals 6 and Ankara, wrecking more than
; nae bi ee nesdz 1 Thursday > ol-* Spert . 0, 1 | 100 ses ir b> The groups work in Connecticut's flooded towns against Rogers. Sean ee St auley a aoe realy noseenie pride sh sa 3 Pad bepnetd iat apse iag r q typ f Uh 5 ” od ep] y > services Sf ayy : i vy Oo C at ung ‘ tht x | a * nA
hes . revelation, he deciared. calling the SetN ICES The warrant said Menrs obtained The lowest tempeyature preceed- ‘troops into its giant Stalinvaros; TV & Radio Programs 79 (of fright and eight persons were
indispensable and deploring that “the Red ¢ ross audenees with Jories on the pre-jmg 8 am. was 12 degrees. The’steel plant after heavy gnows| Wilson, nar : 23 Jinjured in a theater which col-
story is not known the way it should be (Continued on! Page 2, Col. 1) themometer registered 22 at 1 p.m. snarled operations , Women's Pages ~ 13, 14, 15 lapsed during the tremor, | N . —<
| i i . q a ° ‘ ra .
we if ave. . . . yo 8 % \ ‘
/ ’ . a 1 i ; <
. i » . 4 3 : ny
oe 7 i . ‘4 “oN : rm + rn sii
3 Pair Rob Motel, | |
Escape With $82 |
m fi
h
WHE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1956
4
Men Bear Resemblance
to Mutt, Jeff Bandits
of Detroit Area
Detroit's notorious “Mutt and
Jeff” stickup~ artists may be)
widening their field of operations,
Bloomfield Township Police Chief
Clark Green said today,
Two answering the general
of the pair held up the
Motel Lee, on Telegraph Road
near Square Lake Road, early this
morning. They escaped with $82.25
and a customer's gold watch from
the till.
Night Manager Raymond Tay- j.
lor, 144 W. Ann Arbor St., told
police ene of the bandits was
over six feet tall. The other, he
said, was about five feet four. ©
Taylor said the tall man, who
was carrying a .410 shotgun, told
him to lie down behind the counter
while the pair escaped. Police said) .
they were seen driving east on
Square Lake Road in a two-tone,
light blue, late model car.
Chief Green said the descrip-
tions of the two men apparently
matched those of ‘‘Mutt and Jeff,”
who have been operating in Detroit
over the past two months, but that
he was checking other similarities
in the holdup.
Jail Prophet Jone
on Indecency Counts (Continued From Page One)
tense of seeking a cure for a twitch
in the arm. The Prophet, accord- GLEANER’S MODEL — Looking at the model was broken at
of the Gleaner Life Insurance Society's future
national headquarters are Contractor J. A. Fred-
man of Pontiac, left, and Society President R. G.
Ransford, of Birmingham, as Owen A. Lucken-
bach, of the architectural firm, points to the sec-
tion being reserved for society offices. Groynd
—ameeatip
for Americanizing Army
LONDON «®—Britain affhounced smaller, fast moving combat
plans today for a new, stream-'groups, comprising both infantry
lined hard-hitting army equipped | and occ and equipped with the
with American guided missiles to} ne said dern weapons. evailable,
: | . — the new pattern of nuclear} eo sieetry bet
gade, will be set up and earmarked
to move quickly to any part of
the world.
* 6 «6
Head announced the new plans in
am which acctom-
panied the army estimates. _
The estimates call for an expen-
diture of 479 million
‘ ° *
Training in use of the American
land-to-land missile ‘‘Corporal”
will begin this year, War Minister
Antony Head disclosed.
The entire army pattern will be
revamped with the emphasis on
Schedule Hearing
on Water Aid Bills
Bills designed to aid local com-
munities in solving their long-range
formed grossly indecent acts. Minister Eden's plan to trim 100,-
000 men off the armed forces the
visit. « water needs will be the subject of /"™t six years. | a . ‘
sald ry cared stn | tenae ACEP TO! Head mid pall sagen first. Jones-refused to open the | Aji interested municipal and|Protect troops from the effects of All int pal SDC) .tomic radiation has been devel
door until the officers identified {county officials have been invited) 44 :
themselves. to attend the session in the Senate .
Police found the Prophet clad in|Chambers. ee ° a~ good inn.
flows. ‘have added 10 per cent to its land He has known far worse nights:
——= —--4WNights when he's chewed a bit of
Give $306,072 in Contracts a flickering fire. And he's known
better nights: Mount Vernon nights!
\none of the House leaders were FOF County: Road Projects when there was laughter and mu-
Lowest temperature. ... 17 _|ment to the troubled Middle East.
MPeather Snow flurries -#5 "As far as I know,” he added,
6e ‘ib tee 1a: consulted in advance either.”
Ta.m...,......132 12m. 20 Senators Sparkman (D-Ala) and Qe. m..........13 ip. m 2
$e.m........14 “|Morse said the Senate Foreign Re-
10 a. m.. Ca ations Committee was ignored to6,
One Year Ago in Pontiac and that Chairman George (D-Ga)
ie anes... ae "$3 wasn't notified of the original plans
temperature.......... 3s'to send 18 light tanks to Saudi
eather-——Warmer. Arabia. They said George was told
Mighest rey rep Bite na adhe Thisjonly when the administration or-
63 fm 1990 -2 in reig dered the tanks shipped after a
~ Scussratee hen. drtstidy of the situation. Sparkman
Alpen % w Kansas City ° 33 and Morse serve on George’s com-
‘Bismarck 4- phis Sp ap mittee. 9 :
30 1% f 7% 63 SERIE
Gereiand 1 3h iy Miveueet, 22 ¢| Students at Harrow in England
48 aha 41 @lonee obtained gunpowder in an +8 3 18). Pert trtn e " Bb Francnce ‘" #| abottive, plot to blow up. a. new ; . & Marie 71 6) ‘ : ton te 9 Traverse City 15 1s|headmaster, Says the National
Jacksonville 79. 45 Seattle 46 34'Geographic Society. pS 4 ° ‘ %
an Peale
\
‘sic and a small minuet,
Contracts totaling $306,072 have put blacktop recap on the re. | And. knowing how this whole
‘been awarded by the Oakland) paired stretch for $92,374. eaaaarn au Goan solar
‘County Road Commission for re-) troit C t _ ; "
leap and repair work on-11.5 miles The Detroit Concrete Products web of faith, he is certain there
lof county roads, according to Com- 7 miles of Lahser Road from Eight there will be better nights.
[os Salen Lee 0. Brooks. Mile to Maple Ras, | He falls asléep quickly, for he
| Two contracts were let on Ten! : The commission has prchapes will rise early and ride again.
; ___|2,220 harrels of cement, at $3.66)
bee Sor eT Oe getarn each, to stabilize Sashabaw Road H 4 Heishinn| Col) or Detrait from Clarkston Road about two,
wil re ah the existin Kennet miles north. | ST. CLAIR U—Dragging opera-|
Seen: oias dain . eee oa All projects will start as soon tiohs were resuméd today in the-St.|
aA ree mare at- cost ot |"? weather conditions aliow, said Clair River for the body of 3-year-
6. "Brooks. The commission has been old Celia- Jackson’ of, Courtright, |
: taking bids early this year, Brooks Ont, The child, playing with two!
}
’
| The A. & A. Asphalt Paving added, and contracts aré going for young cousins, feil through t
| Co., of. Birmingham, will then ‘Jess than original estimates. lice yesterday. : , oe
; i * ae ~ , i a 4
1 ¥ .
i ze /
* @ Drag for Child’s Body
m part of the landlocked’: The general goes up to bed’
unsalted beef and rolled himself
in one lice-crawling blanket before)
‘Co. received a contract to recap will be worse nights and he hopes. wine and buttered rum, the inn-| They also said they were fearful}
ikeeper's wife and her servants she might take
Mr Rounds had been ill three Cleared the table and brought in self.
Phone Tip to Williams
to Save His Fireplace
ave face bears an almost ©™O"'S his- for the war memorial hall on the
m- e “some action her-|
er,
|and interment
birthplace to make room)
xpanding Wayne University ca
pus and Williams earlier had ox NEW YORK with her husband in 1939 from
Detroit. Besides her husband she
leaves one son, Charles J. and a
daughter, Patricia Jean, both at
home; three sisters and a broth-
| She was a member of Our Lady
: ‘Queen of Martyrs Church. The fu-
DETROIT w — Workmen called neral service will be at 9:30 a.m.
\Gov. Williams yesterday to tell him! Thursday. Rosary will be said at
ish he had better rescue his marble 9:30 p.m. Wednesday at Bell Chap-
‘fireplace and walnut paneling for el of the William R. Hamilton Co.
posterity in a hurry.
They're tearing down the gov-;|Sepulchre Cemetery.
Markets Close Tomorrow continued -dragging the Rouge Riv-
er in their search for Dr. Randle
M. Mullins, young Ford Hospital
physician who disappeared from
‘his home on Feb. 4.
A hospital-owned car assigned to
Mullins was found yesterday two
blocks from the river.
The doctor's wife, Freda, said
her husband had been acting
strangely for two weeks but she
added she couldn't believe he had
will be in Holy taken his own life.
‘Short’ ls Too Long
CHICAGO (INS) — H. Gordon
up—Financial and Clarke's wife kissed him goodbye
pressed interest in saving the fire- commodity markets throughout the and left for a ‘‘short vacation’’ in
place and paneling.
ing on the two-story, brick home 22.
yesterday, the two items had not) Canadian and European markets
been touched, iwill be open as usual.
* ae
BROTHERHOOD AWARD FOR PRESIDENT
— Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson and
Harvey S. Firestone Jr. (left), national chairman
of Brotherhood Week, pose with the gold medal ,
| brotherhood award presented last night to Presi-
| dent Eisenhower for “‘outstanding contributions to ‘United States will be closed Wash-
When workmen started hammer- ington's birthday, Wednesday, Feb. South Wales. He obtained a. di-
vorce today, explaining that his
wife, Dorothy, and their two
children still hadn't returned after
two years.
= | AP, Wirephoto
the cause of brotherhood.’ Wilson accepted the
award for the President who is vacationing in
Georgia. The presentation was made at the broth-
erhond dinner of the National Cortference of
Christians and Jews in Washingtor.
i -+— 7 George Washington.”
British to Raise Flag for Our George Woshineton' WASHINGTON, England @ —, There are even many here who,early Washingtons. The American,museum and a center to foster, from the earth after condemna-jat the top of which is a line of |
|Anglo-American amith. It is at- tion in 1936 had it not been saved|three stars, and across Which are The Stars -and Stripes will fly ‘are convinced that the design of, flag will be raised.
: bravely tomorrow in this Durham/,, . | So far as is known, not a single/tracting an inereasing number of by a committee which raised a’ three stripes, Surmounting all is, the Stars and Stripes had its ori- Lmember of the Washington family American visitors, and W ashing- restoration fund here and in thea bird with raised wings which. County village in honor, say the |
Englishmen who live here, ‘of our 8!" here, and that the stern eagle! now lives here, Historians have re-iton hopes to become as popular United States, {looks something like a dove, but)
lof the great seat of the United marked that ‘the first President as that other Washington shrine,| American Ambassgdor Winthrop little imagination can make an
4 . [States was originally a Durham’ seems to have taken little interest Sulgrave Manor near Northamp-'aldrich accepted it as American|eagle of it.
For some centuries en Of bird. in his English antecevents.
that although Washington was born this year at the 242-story gray now and Washington Old Hall,|who left Britain for the American haye their origins here. Stripes, and the great seal of the
in far-off Virginia, it has some) stone building known as Washing- managed by an Anglo-Americ an Colonies in 1657. | At some time, probably before|United States government?
special claim fo him, _— ‘ton Old Hall, ancestral home of commyttee, is being set up as = AGE UNCERTAIN . '1300, the Wessingtons or Wash-| “It is surely more .than coinel-|
$79.50—14"~ Bas Weeeeseat ONLY R “Co nsellor”’
. POWE ~ Bathroom Scales SKILSAW’ 3 88
WHILE THEY LAST
\ ce
AP Wirepnote | A
SIXTEEN TONS — Literaily, this weight fell speed into the lube room of a service station
on this late model car in Pasco, Wash., which el Sunday. The driver and his young woman com-
into wrong automatic gear and backed at high penis were only Sieniys scratched. FRIDAY | ees ——. Se ———— ONLY! -
ONLY! letter, Tele ram Mix jsouth of Oakland last Friday after-
‘alue ‘Creepy Peeny’ IV. G N g |noon, killing all 40 Marines aboard. pony aie! “7ERG 0” ood ews With Bad F “May the good Lord bless you DECKER” ZE Used j in Battle Area ly WAILUKU, MAUI, Hawaii w—! and keep you and the family as
IMrs. V . you are now,” said his letter. Victoria Gomes got a iter
WASHINGTON .P — The Army and a telegram Sunday. The letter
has added to its combat arsenal|was from her son, saying he would ‘Theoretical! Freedom
a gadget it calls the ‘“‘creepy-|be coming home; the telegram re :
peepy'’—a television camera and ported that he was dead LONDON _\#—Delegates to the
transmitter designed for use in for-| Cpl. Herbert Mamari I matted the British C. aribt bewr Federation Con- ELECTRIC
DRILLS
12.
TABLE
RADIO
19”
ALL PRICES CUT %4 ward battle areas. letter shortly before the Marines fernece have agreed in principle
— : : 2 the 1 55-lircaneoor ine ‘am ’endle- to include a guarantee of religious One man could move the 55-/transport plan i ft ( amp Pendle ae ci 4 a Wea While They Last!
pound camera aTid fransmitter to ton for Oakland, Calif., saying: freedom in the proposec est In-
an advanced position under cover ‘We'll be flying over Friday morn. dies constitution. Precise terms re-
of darkness, then withdraw to safe- ing.” The plane he was on crashed main to be speeled out.
ty. A receiver set up behind the > a, $29.50 Asst. Jines would record the transmit
mr ; 1 a. 10-inch pi ‘ae ‘ } ELECTRIC ters signal on ~~
Although designed for combat!|| —§ DR. HENRY A. MILLER | RAZORS
use, “‘creepy-peepy” might be used ; Optometrist 97 commercially for TV coverage of ° VALUES fast - breakin’ news stories, presi 7 North Saginaw Street dential nominating conventions and ( ?
sports events, the Army said. ; Phone FE 4-6842 =e ete 3.95 Medicine Cabinets... .2.57
6.95 Pl. Cov. Toilet™Seats. 4.88
Youth Fills Churches. 2.65 Wire Rubbish Burners 1.88 “Better Things in Sight”
te nies ; UP Ms abet $3.29—20-Gal. 22.50 Port. Bor-B-Q Grills. 15.00
ing church membership in the ? ;
country is largely concentrated in Open Friday Evenings ; GARBAGE 4.95 Self Wring Mops... *. 2.97
they 20 to) 40 year old group) the ? CANS 8.95 6-ft. Full Rod tev, Garner S. Odell of rs froit POU e Cee CCC TOTO CTC TCT O Oe rN Step Ladder ...,....4.88
told! a) conterence [ol | yess ocult srnoe 7 8.95 “Cosco” Fold’g Chairs.5.5 Presbyterian leaders at Mic higan Closed Wednesday Afternoons 2 aso oes rn oe ose
| = = — . -Bu. Elec, Mo’ es. 6. State University.
29.95 Match. Lug’ge Set.. 14.88
19.95 101-pe. Dinner Sets. 7.55
* 7.95 'Cosce’ Baby Jumpers 5.97
4.50 “Westclox” Alarms. . 3.66
4.95 Kit. Elec. Wall Clocks 3.55
79.95 ‘Eureka’ Vac. Swp'rs 57.95
39.95 Rev. Window Fans. . 18.66
24.95 Port. Record Players,
17.55
$9.95 Electric
HAND
MIXERS
5”
THOUSANDS OF
$28.50 ‘Sunbeam’
ELECTRIC RAZORS
LADIES’ FINE
WATCHES 69.50 17-]. Swiss, now .17.00
69.50 17-]. Waterpr'f, now 17.00
71.50 Ladies’ Elgin, now 22.00
79.50 17-]. Ladies’ Helbros 26.50
75.00 14-K. Solid Gold
Benrus .. ...37.$0
$100 Finer Gruen, now... 44.50
$125 Helbros Diamond Set 52.50
$200 Gruen, 6 Big Dia... . 115.00
$4.95 Gal.
WHITE
PAINT
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Monday and Friday Evenings to 8:30
The ton, to which the family moved property at a ceremony dast Sep-| Commenting on this, Ambassa- the first President of the United! - Washingtons and Wessingtons who) after long residence here. The im-| tember. His remarks on that oc-|dor Aldrich said:
States lived inthis North Sea TO RAISE U. S. FLAG ~ ‘refnained here were loyal to the mediate English progentiro of casion gave a great boost to the} “who can resist the con oso)
coast village 265 miles: north of/ A ceremony has been arranged British crown, iGeorge W ashington was his great. \eéntention that the designs of the that here, at Washington a Hall, London. And thé community feels for the first President’s birthday) Contacts are being re-established | ‘grandfather, Col. John Washington, | |American flag and the great seal|is the true origin of the Siar and!
The age of Washington Old Hall ingtons adopted @ coat of arms,|dence that the Washington arms)
cording | ™ hich is to-be seen today in the! combined the stars, the stripes and
mere ante eae = “d library of Durham Cathedral, and|the eagle 2% centuries before. to one chronology it was e€X-| Over a doorway ot Hylton Castle. |America was even discovered, and| istence in 1183. It, tumbled into de-| ~—
it would have vanished! The dese consists of a veal, nation” rrr iiprersanate
$164.95 3-Speed
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Phoxfdgraph
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IRONING
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wy A
five centuries before it became a)
ee —
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BARGAINS 9.95 ‘Revere’ Dble. Boilers. . 7.46
7.25 ‘Revere’ Cov. Sauce
re er
6.50 ‘Revere’ Whistling
Tea Kettles _....... 4.88
10.95 Steak Knife Set. .... 4.88
10.95 ‘Flint’ 4-pc. Set now. .7.77
19.95 Elec. Frying Pan. ..... 9.97
39.95 Deep Fat Fryer, now. .9.97
19.95 Elec. Waffle Irons. 9.97
17.95 ‘C-E" Steam Dry tron. 9.95
16.95 Elec. Hair Dryer... 11.25
29.95 Elec. Coffee Maker. . 16.97
19.95 Pop-Up Toasters... . .7.88
55.00 ‘Sunbeam’ :
Mixmasters ....,..34.85
10.95 ‘Cosco’ Step Stools 8.88
6.95 Elec. Vibrators, 2-Sp. 4.95
14.95 Maireut Sets, 7-Pc... 9.97
RINGS and
JEWELRY
17.50 Ladies’ Dinner Rings. 8.75
25.50 Ladies’ Birth. Rings. . 12.75
40.00 Men's Lodge Rings. 19.95
29.00 Men’s Cameo Rings 14.50
10.95 Ladies’ 3-pe. Cost. Set 5.50
$120 Ladies’ Diamond
Wedding Sets .....59.00
77.50 Ladies’ Diamond
Dinner Rings ..... .39.00
9.95 Rhinestone Bracelets. 4.95
GENERAL WAREHOUSE CO. Daily 9 to 6
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$66.50—c3
$28.30 12-Pe.
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19.
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s
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7:
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SATURDAY
$16.05 7-Pe, “Flint”
KITCHEN SETS”
10" 5
t " dee
SAVINGS 8.95 5S-Pc. Wood Chisel .
to) BOceuo aoe vce 8.97
2.30 Ball Pean Hammers... 1.55
6.25 42° Wood Levels, now 2.88
13.25 11-Pc. End Wrench
9.88
19.95 4" Electric Drills. ..12.88
4.25 ‘Estwing’ Ham‘ers now 3.43
9.50 ‘Stanley’ Block Planes 5.33
4.35 14" Pipe Wrenches. . 3.27
7.50 Ratchet Braces now... 4.97
2-95 Adj. End Wrenches. , .1.97
1.39 Pi. Hdle. Hack Sews.. .97
2.90 Side Cut Pliers, now. . 2.33
2.95 Mechanic Tool Boxes. 1.88
--14.95 Metal, Rub. Wheel-
barrow «5 6c s kan
5.95 Gal. Intesior Paints. ..4.17
12.95 ‘Coleman’ Lanterns .. . 9.97
$13.95 2-Burner
“COLEMAN”
STOVE
$10.95 4° Swivel
BENCH
VISE
6”
MEN’S FINE
WATCHES 49.50 Swiss Waterproof ..17.00
71.50 Swiss Alarm Watch, 25.00
79.50 Swiss Automatic ... 27.00
82.50 Benrus Automatic... 37.50
92.50 Benrus Automatic. 44.50
77.50 Elgin Automatic... .51.75
97.50 Gruen Automatic,
23-jewel ......... 65.00
$150 Lord Elgin, 21-}. .. .93.50
JUST NORTH OF TELEGRAPH
a) 10: 30 to 2: 30
#€
«has just reached this desk. It is the
*
The maiden issue features a)
pte otter. = ~ _| People now are flying first class : oe i make a state visit '0| “It was Nixon's effort to counter-| Vile M- from H. H. Townsend —
‘Then again, it might have been . at six cents a mile and a bit over “"8'4"C) act the unhappy response to his) Helen I, trom Henry J. Williams
written by Thomas Jefferson. | By 1965, the study shows, there |¢our cents a mile on tourist planes.| Petrov adds that the compli- | statement last week concerning the) Thelma M. from Parris aed bd + * h 4 Bob Coline Says: , : 14 Divorce Decrees ——__~
Democracy Definition Has Timeless Quality ‘ted in Oakland || yout nave. xrrcuen "NEW YORK (INS) Vol. 1,,manity, not faith in the ‘peor’ or, and Lockheeds of the earlier /120 to 223 more 701s and DC8s and Maclean having broken a |in Oakland County Circuit Court IES DECIDE
No. 1 of the “Times of Viet Nam” the ‘working’ people. ) YOu , on
eens te | turbo- planes liké the Vis- : Donald, laus Fuchs and Bruno Ponte- | Helen from Marvin T. Webster English language paper ever Mi thadigr cap halagpreide togbyso count and the larger type Am- ee Ba ott oy Pores ont : : corve. Brexe S. from inens Ww tare ing currency in the world today,| ertean Airlines is now buying
(highly sue- democracy does not enthrone the) from Lockheed; and 515 of the (Vladimir Petrov, the Russian 5PY| Lttend Britain into signing one of|_Siward' i. Chamberlafa, pen Gna
working man any more than it| Series-G Connie, the DCi and jwho defected two years ago ‘in those 20-year “friendship treaties’”/=chameeriain
‘described as the brink afl othrenes the bourgeoisie.” y P Geraldine from Haseld! Clayton
* 8 ENOUCH MONEY? 965,
| Are there going to be enough ing shows expectations of a dozen designed to show the British man-
might have been written by Nguy- ve cry on Foe to canaeno|counle of dozen Comet IVs, three
en M. Thai, the weekly's editor! (pjus) jet transports they'll start
and publisher, Le Ngo Nhi, senior) vetting delivery on in a few years? e 707 type. editor, or Nguyen Van Thai, fea-/4 survey made by the Douglas|DC8 and Boeing 707 type
: Bobby R.
have been foggy it will be 1,034 planes of the DC-3, The airlines are eyeing the rail- cated Russian propagandists (role of a “Republican chief jus-| May L. from Milton EB. Taylor
asked that part of the (Convair and Martin types on the road rate of 2.8 cents a mile, hope, also figured that there would be (tice in the integration fight. But| shirley from Robert Berde: > ‘werld in time, but he cer- (job, plus 1,336 others engaged 1/1, make heavy inroads on this! a cry in the U.S. to stop giv- |the counter action will neeq a —
tainly have stood behind (hauing travelers on short jumps.'—o0n trade. If this field is tapped, | ing atomic secrets to Great (much bigger rostrum than the cor-| More than 4,000 seagoing ships
There will be 122 Douglases |the world airlines can use from’ Britain — what with Burgess |respondents could offer,
THF. PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1956.
Divorce decrees granted recent! HATE A PRIZE, | Th Ss known four-engined type; 282 [by 1965. | | camel's back already sorely |include:
* @ DC6Bs and Super Connies; 444 | why did the Reds decide to pry| Strained by Alan Nunn May, pees pad Reh Nees
TO MODERNIZE / Maclean just at this time? . 7
And such a clampdown would) fuigersk F from Hilde N. Lavell
Australia and has since been given
asylum there, feels that it is part thelr variations,
As for jets in 1965, the sampl- i James N. from Eloise V. Parlow
oe ae ay ; , Richa: A m Jea an
of a complex cold war maneuver; vy... president Nixon made a|: Eleanore K. trom DuWayne P. Render
French-made medium jets, a, pa |Special effort Saturday night at) Jean C. from Robert M. Anthony
IVehmen are a0 resentful of U. § |t2® Tadio and TV correspondents’) ute {rem_bersse reppegn, 0 dozen turbo-prop Brit-/Smen are so rese o" .’ >:|dinner in Washingtan to point out) Nathan trom Emma L. fr or four — prop 'foreign policy the refer to go ft H. Smith ain J, S. jets of the’ Poricy mney Prever - 5° that Chief Justice Earl Warren| Fierence BE from Clarence H. Sm tainias and 157 U. S. jets 0 to Russia to live rather than co- Others effective in six months: Raa Sn RA l(who was present) was beyond the) puny trom Jesse R. Swafford
joperate. (Khrushchev an ulgan-| aim of any political party. Patricia J. from Robert C. Storey
Raymond K. from Lollie N. Hicks
m
were sunk in World War II.
First President
Nearly Left Out When Washington Died
in 1799 Two Questions A H
a _ Arose for Monument |=
WASHINGTON-— On George
* Washington's 224th birthday, the
Washington Monument is as much
" the aymbol of the National City as
_.the-White House or the capitol,
ite
zk
+t sist ; Li
f
i
Hu A §
Finally, in 1883, the Washington).
National Monument Society was
Makes Heavy Deposit—
~ 300 Pounds of Pennies
He lugged the 30,000 coins in a
nail keg. Representing 15 years
of saving, Wood figured he had
some $300 worth. He won't know
. for sure until bank employes fin-
“ish the counting job sometime late
today. Peacetime Prayerbook
NEW YOR Kim—A committee of
rabbis has been set up to revise
the prayerbook used by Jewish
~ Gls, Reports to the National Jew-
ish Welfare Board from chaplains
and servicemen indicated a fuller
text is needed in peacetime. The
present prayerbook was drawn up
for’ use in World War II.
FYOU sue, | Fidgeting, nose-picking and a tor- menting rectal itch are often tell-
To get rid of Pin-Worms, these
ts must not only be killed, but
lhe hot ones / Now up to
5S hp Now you can have a big 312 cubic inch powerhouse
with the most displacement in the low-price field.
Most torque, too. For you that means the greatest
response—quickest getaway, swiftest passing power.
Teamed with Fordomatic in any Fairlane or Station
Wagon model, this 225-h.p. Thunderbird Special V-8
is the silkiest, quietest, thrillingest engine you have
ever commanded. It gives you more “go” for your
dough—and you can order it now! |
Leads in Safety Features
Among all cars in the low-price field, only Ford gives
you the extra protection of Lifeguard Design. This
family of safety features was pioneered by Ford after
more than two years of research in the causes of acci-
dent injuries. Doesn't your family deserve this extra
Protection against injury in case of an accident?
Leads in Trend-Setting Styling
Long, low breath-taking styling is yours, too, when
you choose a ‘56 Ford. For Ford is famous for its trend-
setting styling, its years-ahead look. Ford stylists have
given these new models an air of action even when
they're standing still. And you just can’t match Ford's
road-hugging, corner-leveling ride and handling ease.
Come in soon for a Test Drivel
You get more
“GO” for your
dough in a
Ford
V8
ubilee!
-
: Come in during our Kebruary Sales ee 2 YOUR LOCAL FORD DEALER
GREAT TV, FORD THEATRE, ww], CHANNEL 4, 9:30 P. M., THURSDAY ~ : a
\ : A _& f 4% ‘ _— ane A z Fi ! i
ero = 3 . f “ : a + 7 ee bod ® ae i*. or oe ¥ > ER } b . iy i ii 4 sia ay beat JIS ve Gp be di } \ pg ‘ rs - 8 C24 # } i ‘ ' i | : A i 4 ~ I ae
4 \ -¢@ f 4 2 : - f a ry é « ¥
‘
/
d GOP Women Hear Tow
nee Oe eae
Township officers were members of a panel discus- drive, township supervisor; Mrs. Dorcas W. Tibbals of
sion held Monday by the Waterford Township Republi- Eason street, township treasurer, and Louis G. Barry of
can Women’s Club, Looking over reports before the Silver Birch drive, township clerk (left to right).
meeting began were Lloyd L. Anderson of Lincolnshire
Waterford Township Republican Women’s-Club ing Mrs. Robert Moore, Mrs. Willis L gy ad He YW Sch edules Reviews, Meeting
gathered Monday at the South Shore drive home of Benjamin Bowman (left to right). A discussion “f ope
Mrs. L. Raymond Sampson (left). She is shown greet- township policies was held. Pontiac YWCA has two activities/high school ¥-Teens and Dorothy] sented by Mrs. F. R. Tiffany. (has not yet announced her choice of importance on the agenda. The|Spann Redmond, director of the} Mrs. John Doig and Mrs. A. H. jof a book. Hostesses will be Mrs.
Explained
by Officials Group Entertained
by Mrs. Sampson
on Monday
The problems of an ever-expand-
ing community were discussed by
officers of Waterford Township
when they met with members of
the Waterford Township Republi-
can Women's Club Monday.
* * *
Panel members were Lloyd An-
derson, township supervisor; Mrs.
Dorcas Tibbals, treasurer, and
Louis Barry, clerk. Mrs. L. Ray-
mond Sampson was hostess to the
group &f her home on Watkins
Lake. ’
Mr. Anderson said that the
1,600 acres which are in the
planning stages of development
are creating a large problem of
water, sewage, drainage and
roads,
The duties of the township offi-
cers, Mr. Anderson said, are to
serve the county as a whole and
to enact improvements which are
best for the township. A few are
hurt when new improvements are
made, but more people benefit in
the long, run, he said.
* * *
Mrs. Tibbals told of her duties
as treasurer and Mr. Barry ex
plained the office of the township
clerk.
CONDUCTS MEETING
Mrs. W. Arthur Vernon intro-
duced the speakers and Mrs. Lynn
D, Allen, president, conducted the Mrs. Robert Eldred (left) and Mrs.
caine eta , Robert White were photographed at the
Newly elected officers announced
include Mrs. Alien, president; Mrs.
Vivian Tubbs, vice president; Mrs. |
William Bedard, second vice presi-| jseries of Lenten book reviews) YWCA, will be hostesses. The final review, during Pas- ibeginning this week; the second is | 4 first is the announcement of a|teenage program of the Pontiac| Momree will serve as hostesses. |Myron L. Buck and Mrs. Harry
Aten. : * * *
| Ambler. ”
gram sponsored by the Waterford 1
ship Republican Women's Club.
Sampson home Monday before the pro-
~ Attend Annual season with a series of Tuesday)
book reviews. The reviews, held
from noon to 12:30 p.m., will be
preceded and followed by the
serving of tea and coffee, with
those attending bringing their own
sandwiches.
This makes it possible for |
teachers and business people to
utilize their noon hours to at-
tend reviews without missing
their lunches.
The first review, held today, was
thostessed by the Golden Age
|Group under the chairmanship of
Mrs. Harold Euler. Mrs. H. M.
Learned, a member of the, Golden
| Agers, is chairman of the Lenten!
ireviews.
* * *#
The first review, given by } Mrs.|
iJohn Thors Jf., was on the biog-|
raphy of Yehudi Menuhin by Rob-|
ert Magidoff. |
Tuesday, Feb. 28, Mrs. Percy!
Jones will review ‘Papats Wife’/
by Thyra Ferre Bjorn. |
Hostesses will be Mrs. Fred]
Haushalter and Mrs. John ~Mc-/
Culley.
|THIRD IN SERIES
| Third review in the series,|
March 6, will be presented by Mrs. |
Lloyd Porter, who has |
|Sholem Asch's “The Prophet’.
iHostesses that day will be Mrs. |
iCharles Harmon and Mrs. Harry * * |
Fourth review, March 13, will
be of Anne Morrow Lindbergh's
“Gift From the Sea,” by Mrs. |
William Miller. Smee and senior |
Four Area Girls
Y-Teens Parley . mpc, | Nevt on the series will be a |sion Week, will be given by Miss
|the 21th annual Pontiac YWCA) review of a drama, “Release” |Ora Hallenbeck, first vice give Wohedgy: wectat is open to _ publie
meeting ee oo by Dorothy Clarke Wilson, pre- |dent of the Pontiac YWCA, who
or the stuth fhe Pontiac] SS a . . or the sixth year, fe Fontiac; tee The 11th annual of the YWCA 1s observing the Lenten | ee Pontiac YWCA will a din-
The Rev. Richard H. Dixon Jr.,
will give an illustrated lecture on |
Europe and the Holy Land, based
on his recent trip abread. The Wa-
terford Township High School
“Skipperettes” will sing.
The invocation will be given
Brocade by the pastor of the host charch,
the Rev, Otte G. Schults. Mrs.
Baton— doseph L. Bennett will lead gtoup
singing. Miss Kathryn Vedder,
another of Mr.| president of the Pontiac YWCA,
will preside,
Mort’s willowy| Mrs. Fred Hausalter, immediate
‘ past president, will lead the clos- ;
shapings of |ing devotional service. Results of ., » . |the annual éfection of one-third of
beautiful | the board of directors will be ar nounced by Mrs. Euler, chairman
textured of the nominating committee. - * © *«
cotton and | Committees in charge of the an-
nual meeting arrangements in-
acetate clude Mrs. Harry Aten and Mrs.
William Herrmann, place and dec-
brocade—has |orations, and Mrs. Charles Wil-
Il the body (ene: Rts SA, cate a e Y \ed by Sue Houghton, Mrs. Myron
L. Buck and Kay Chmiloski. -
and richness | “junior and seniur High school * * -
of silk. It |¥-Teens will serve as hostesses at
each table.
comes in
mauve or blue Moose Group
frosted with a Holds Initiation
i College of Regents Night was chiffon gcarf Sopris ee anaeieenag le
at the hip, |Moose Chapter 360 at the Moose Temple.
* * *
Initiated in honor of Mrs. Clar-
ence Cavalier, star recorder, were
Mrs. Caude Sheldon, Mrs. Ralph
Rappuhn and Mrs. Clare Cowles.
dent, Mrs. Willis Lefurgy, secre-/
tary; Mrs. Byron Cole, treasurer; | Four teenagers from the Pontiac
Mrs. Walter Kinsler, corresponding | area attended th® annual Y-Teen
Mrs. Howard McCandless gave
secretary, and Mrs. A. W. Robin- inter Conference held this
seretary, and 3 ee. es ere tee the address of welcome, and the i) axe mia, yon pape (Bertie (acd e was given by Mrs. New members of the club are | 1. U Be DAY, Y E BRU ARY ES 1, 1956 p Mon, S 13-15 Mary's Lake neat Battl Creek Bowditch.
iin ommmtrmagael Ga =a - . . 1 | ‘Those attending were Jane Scott Sei a : Fe —_ = . Moore, Mrs. H. Guy Moats, ' Eeteyd tee Mrs. Thomas Nau member . § | ' N; on if Waterford ’
Mrs. Robert Sutton and Mrs. News From MSU oe ee or Teen Club of the Grand Council, spoke on Frederick Pickering. land ee Sarros and Marcia “Honor of the Cap and Gown.” E ‘Several musical selections pre-
sented by Mrs. Arthur Evans of
Dera completed the program. aye ae Snow. Spells Pleasure for SUMO PUG Yer es mene
Oakland County Federation of Re- een Redinond. -di- : ; i
publican Women, and Mrs. Ralph By BARBARA JOHNSON enthusiastic bourgeoise doctor and forward to, One of the me al Pigs ag ccoprat —_—— ee |
Irish. EAST LANSING — MSU's cen- was noticeably good al! eh main things as tl rnual dance to TEClor © ; oF Yr wAIN OL . s é oticeably gooc although in a + J , 2 iac YWCA. accom.
- ss ¢& . ‘ ‘ muti Ascome, o .. for the Pontiac : |
ee tennial officially closed last week, Minor role. Le ele ne bos panied them Crsoneae ews O in eres in on 1ac Assisting Mrs. Sampson on the __. a var . : { pinster Spin toa be held :
aociall commi(tee| were) MM E Given to the university library, LET IT SNOW! eG Mrs Redmond and Mrs. Sixten ; |
= = see aa museum and) information tserviccemSnon’) shownrsnew M\Contoteniiin. e niror direction at the Raymond Mather of Kalispell, join Mr. Johnson who has been Frank Luzod, Elaine Monroe, the | “| , ' I F nee, ile oe i eX e director 0 Vion ont . : : é ‘ : i eese and Mrs. William Beds . were records, Especially when it gives us a eT ene seis the ‘ us an YWCA. represented the Mont., is visiting at the home of, there for several weeks. James Nicholsons and the Lloyd . ar o & pay Tesh eS 1A spore rrehes. | ontlac : eye et siete Marvy of, ni ~
films and manu- chance for a contest. Nine coed ' "cine “ Pontiac association at the annual ee : Oe M ary McCormick = - Monroes.
scripts of histori- dormitories competed in a snow. 4 During the next couple of ‘necting of the Metropolilan Deo. a. 'reet,-and his sister-in-- Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Saunders of Mrs. James Dillard was hostess
Ste Anthony Uni: | “cal material. sculpturing contest on Saturday. "'°™> (0C® WHE Ue Gecteing hom troit YWCA, held recently at the law. Mrs Walter Mather of Roch- Hatchery road entertained a group at another affair honoring Mrs.
A 28-minute The displays depicted some major ree eke ase apd ie me will Central YWCA , eo ‘ of their son Richard's friends at Robertson, in the Dillard home on
Nar Y es Officers film called ‘The events of the term. be waiting: far ther phones to ring KF; jar Mrs Netzler and Ora On Sunday Mrs. Mather enter- their home Saturday in celebration’ West Longfellow avenue Friday
: So. : Priday, we oN tained at dinne her home hon- vi irthday yening Year We Were A traveling trophy was awarded But the dance itself, “Cinder. }allenbeck, first vice president of a wee “ " rin ; r home hon- of his fifth birthday evening:
, a bane pomter vier her ore Hundred” will to the best display, judged on orig- ella's Knight,” is not the only the Pontiac YWCA, represented they ~ ‘kh. ‘ IOP DOMSEBUES Attending the poe oe FIng | home on Voorheis road to mem- @ e Bele din inality, construction, art and cor- event MSU men are anticipating. P ; + fheuamual efore returning to Kalispell, were Steve and Tom Anthony, = : : - b asec 1 . : Md F ‘ pi g. Pontiac association at the annua , : omi
bers of St. Anthony Unit of St. we gy Mi: are relation of the thems On Feb. 29, Leap Year's extra’ Brotherhood Week luncheon given Mr. Mather will visit another Peter and ( arol Meninga, Deborah ae ng vents
Benedict Church for election of of- 4 Big. discussion’ Fatered Tinlethiethindaemint day, they will reign etroit Round Table of the sfster, Mrs. Ed LaForge, in Cur- Bead and Gary Hall, ant and Duis ea canons eee a
coe * * *# i% pthis week WAS contest were Snyder, Mason, Ab- ( will one | “c onference ¢ - Christians fran. a Mark ae ard, \ red me ' Hea be pee
ah« the blood . : ' anaes vt tees o held at the Hotel Statler Gardner, aughan Richmon _ Ladies Ald Society of Oakland Avenue Z
Mrs. Peter Aldo is captain, Mrs. BARBARA © ul Th ; ee bott, North and Seuth Williams, and « ly boaks for the a hela at) = Leaving on Friday for the sunny Charles Fraser and Linda and $ P tp < mp. Hall Thureday, Hw foe = ; : rive f } 1 : P ; Og ; ayn Peer Prey tice i Are ee mn é ae ores a 1 a ellowship Ha ursday & a.m,
Arthur Perrin, co-captain; Jane ert at fire Ute meas ortan ca West Landon, Fast Vakely, Fast 0% nea t tu it is Southland are Mr. and Mrs. John Robe ‘rt Saunders. for a dessert luncheon and sewing meet- Prendergast, secretary, and Mrs F * Mayo and South Campbell dor. fair play Home From West 1S Mair hier dad. Bloom | Ing.
Paulin Zelesnik, treasure day from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Over mitories. ee Fa ere ci fiog toad) 2 ae == * | Queen Mary Section of Needlework me jon { standi mr ,.1:400 pints were collected. Red >: Mr. and Mrs. John Swanson of field Hills, and*Mr. and Mrs. Floyd ygrg_ wittiam Shelton and Mrs. Oulid Pa meet ‘Thursday at 1 pm, Pre ae ‘ a Ee : r : = . Nincar aver 7 ig SRE ! r ?
paling ea Me oe Cross officials said that the dona- Besides all ts activity in the Birt hday Marked Hamilton street returned home-Sat- short ob Nia BE Venue They will dames Robertson were cohost- | eee ee
Se eee caer " oy ayN€ tions were far beyond what they Morning. many of the girls’ dorms by ier L. wi t urday evening from Libby, Mont.,/ Vacation in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. ogses at a gathering Sunday eve- | wedneaday ef tice. with Bre. Vorben oe Re aries Visinare ).4 : received official telephmne calls on IT€ cee they attended tHe funeral fot several weeks, : ; . Spencer, 142 Thorpe St, for schoolgirl are dining room chairmen; Mrs, expected: f } i hall a Dene ey gale ' + « & ning honoring Mrs. William Rob- | juncheon * * ‘from the men’s dorms, challenging. sharon Jnuice White dar or Mrs. Swanson's father who die : .
Bernard Stone, programs and deco-| hem to snowball fight ee V Louise) Vs es o died) Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Lerchen of ‘resem om her birthday. | _Wever, Hawthorne, Owen Community M H M The term play opened this them to snowball fights in the early of Mrs) Dorothy White of West Feb. 7 : ae ee [Club will _meet at Wever School Wednes- rating; sieag sdaaae gl min and: week and received a big recep- evening Ant an r avénue entertained.on ————— | Waddington road, Bloomfield Town- Attending the affair held at the! da at 7:30 p.m. for election of officers, Mrs. William Brandt, kitchen; Mrs. tion. Spectators jammed Fair- After this day outdoors everyone. her ve “ n : es ship, will. arrive at Sun Valley, Robertson residence on School | ®* ph Norvell’ will speak. 7 - : r nth birthday Sath ay afte | . - along wi Elmer Lippman, publicity; ‘Mrs. child Theater all three ‘nights although wet, cold and tired, .... p TA Activities |Idahe, on Friday. They will re- street, along with members of the Ln Bape ect ei te oak ne
Stone and Mrs. Theo Dobski, tele-| that it ran. os vgreed that the day was a fine. Lt |main there until the middle of/family, were Mrs. G. LaBarge;/at 130 with Mrs. Alex Burch, 14 Pair-
phone, and Joga Perrin, cancer. diverston from the usu al rotitine Thos e attending were _Glo Te Sia Juy Mn of "ine mga Siete Vor March. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Holland, Mr, and| pdb ods. OES. ‘
| The title itself, The Madwoman _ cena, pune : Sulada, » Victoria Mrstte ie baus zh, : y PTA meeting this evening J Mrs. M. Levenque, Mr. and Mrs. ', Arey plist cow thoy at one at 2. feakene
Mrs. Petrin ee on the num- of Clmillot,”” attracted many curi- SPINSTER SPIN Linda Foote, Don Lléyd, > ty llis ection’ ot oy 70 ™S;, Mrs. Wesley D. Johrison of Ludger LaBarge, the Leo La| Pederat "Savings and Loan Building.
ber of cancer pads magle for the: ous ‘stude ‘nts. Donald Bumgardner, Besides looking. back on the full Maulding. Gary White ee Ken- Bul will XP weak on Par ie Adjustments’ Soéuth Johnson avenue will leave Barges, the Harold L uningers, Mrs.' Dames oo ———— qroup
1 d the 1a ge u cooperative American Cancer. Society. iPontiac freshman, portrayed an week, collegiars have many things neth Rutenber. Vea ited te the pr LN ad ests are, Wednesday for Tucson, Ariz., to Ray LaBarge, William Shelton, leeueuen at Sccaciae ~ . ‘ © = i] i \ rye
s y ; Z 4 . oe se
w , t \ .. |
x : }
i
4 |
\ ‘ FY } i ‘ j
. ’ t . ethene -
By H. Guy MOATS
Pontiac Press Special Writer
i VALLEY SCHEDULE
ii "Tuesday's game—Arthur Hill at Mid- P| :
prides 5s games—Northern in, Pontiac
| Saginaw at Flint Central, Bay City Cen-
}tral at Arthur Hil),
With Flint Northern’s Vikings
practically assured one more vic-
tory in the hot Saginaw Valley title
race, now nearing its conclusion,
most obséfvers rate Jack Marlette’s
jerew the best bet for the 1956
icrown. Victory assurance is based FE 2-1311 41 N, Parke
-on what Northern did in the Ist) cg THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1956 |
| and Arthur Hill against Bay City
Central on Lamberjacks’ floor,
The three are knotted at 5-3.
Art Van Ryzin's Chiefs face the
toughest task. Affer Vikings
dumped Central, 69-51 last week-
end (an 18-point margin) they
have beep made favorites in the
test here on Friday night. How-
ever, Pontiac observers recall what
happened to Flint Central in its
‘return engagement here after the
80-58 on Dec. 16, Chiefs took ade-
quate revenge for that licking, 64-
‘engagement with its finale foe,
Bay City Central, Worst that can
happen to Northerners is a tie for)
the top spot, but that chance is
rather dim. |
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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla, (» — In the meantime, however, the |
| Valley spotlight is turned full on |
| three games this week, Top in-
terest, ‘locally, of course is on |
| the visit Vikings pay to Pontiac's |
Chiets, Friday night, The other
| top-rated games pit Flint Central |
added Flamingo Stakes at a mile!
and an eighth at Hialeah Saturday | began to take shape today with 15|
speedy ‘-year-olds regarded as
.probable starters? . * *
*
Attention centered on Maine
Chance Farm's Gun Shot, a win. |
ner by & lengths Saturday in
1:22 3-5—fastest time of the meet-!
ing for 7 furlongs. Gun Shot went)
on out another furlong to finish
the mile in 1:34 4-5
* & a
SANDERS FOR RENT
TRAVIS HARDWARE 486 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-8724 | Auto Racing (NASCAR) yesterday
‘raled out Sunday's standing mile
acceleration runs for U.S. sports
lruns made tomorrow.
MID-WINTER LUBRICATION | - OIL’ CHANGES | DRAIN and REFILL AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION IF NEEDED . _ —STOP IN AND SEE US —
DOUBLE STAMPS
WEDNESDAY
| take on Saginaw
| through 12 opponents te clinch
| the
| championship,
ivantage
‘County's leading point-maker in'field Hills, Warren at nd it’s a sure thing that Van
Ryzin's club is getting ready to go
all out against the Vikings in hopes
of turning the tables, "PHS has
improved greatly since that 1st
meeting and is capable of giving
the Flint club a battle royal.
After Friday's contest Chiefs
March 2
windup here, They should win
that one.
15 Now Loom as Possible
Starters in Rich Flamingo
mile of the Widener in which Nash-
ua, Social Outéast, Sailor, Find,
El Chama, Jamie K., Man of Des-
tiny, Sea O Erin and Prince Noor
competed, Time for the first mile
of the mile and a Quarter Widener
was 1:35 3-5.
Trainer Ike Mourar said Mrs.
Elizabeth Graham, owner of Maine
Chance Farm, may send Busher’s
Idol as an entry with Gun Shot.
*
: ‘Oxford at Rocheste
Milford Seeks Revenge Over Skippers
The National Assn. for Stock Car! Milford High School's basketball)
‘powerhouse will have an opportun-
‘ity to avenge its only setback of
ithe season tonight
top prep. attraction of an other-
wise light area schedule
The Inter-Lakes League Skip-
pers are the authors of Milford's
| lone defeat, a 52-51 squeaker at
| Waterford in the season opener
for both teams. Since that time |
the Redskins have breesed
Wayne - Oakland League
M oore Beats Vane P]
Madison
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mer but in the meantime planned punch last night
to do as he pleased. |
* * *
His comment was occasioned by
a cablegram from English Promo-
ter Jack Solomons. It arrived
shortly after he puffed to a 10
round decision last night over
Howard King of Reno before a
crowd which paid $8,523 to watch
the workout
* &
The cable directed Moore to get
permission from Solomons before
doing any further fighting before
the June 5 title defense against}
Yolande Pompey of Trinidad
“Well, I've got a fight scheduled
Try |
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in the season's SVC | S255=* Chiefs Hope to Upset Vikings" Fly Northern’s last Valley test is with
Bay City, at home, Only a sur-
prising upset could stop Vikings
from annexing the crown.
Central's chances rest on its |
ser vine seer ns 10 Beat Cats thur Hill, while the ‘Jacks place,
|their hope for a continued share’
jof the runnerup spot on wins
|against Bay City and Central, The
‘finale will cut the three-way knot. Last Minute Spurt Is
Win Producer; Breaks
Losing Streak
King.
erase the only biet on their record.
Don Beedle's Skippers will cour
ter with Chuck Gillis, their No. 1
‘cars: because of a misinterpreta-| Jack Minzey’ - “ts | “Tr ° | y's high-scoring Red-|scorer, and a defense designed to
ition of the rules. It ordered re- skins, spearheaded by Jim David-jhalt the basket-happy Retakine EN OVI Dog Wins | ~ | eae A json and Fred Baker, entertain) Waterford's overall record is eight} ‘
Waterford High in this evening's|winds and five losses. ‘Boxers Club || HOLE
In other games of interest
West Bloomfield’s Lakers invade
Ortonville to meet the Black:
hawks, Rochester plays hest to
Oxford, and Walled ‘Lake visits
Cranbrook for ap afternoon out-
ing. Fa
Additional contests tonight are [Reval Oak at Hazel Park, Van
Dyke at East Detroit, St. Clair at
Mt. Clemens, Ferndale St. James
Buoyed by a home floor ad-)at Madison, Grosse Pointe at Fern-|
and boasting Oakland/dale, A. E. Smith JV's at Bloom-|
Clawson,
. |class). lrelease wit k pewer off of the!
Another Fight Next Week” cscwwm | E mmetea prvi,
the 21-year-old King twice in earn-|
ing the decision in his first ring|
showing since Rocky Marciano, Spencer's
knocked him out last September.
The Reno youngster was down for
eight counts in both the first and):
ninth rounds, but managed to stay
out of trouble otherwise.
Waterford Archers
See Action Tonight
The Waterford Township Recrea-
tion Archery League resumes com-
|petition tonight at the Community
8:15 p.m.
Bill Giles was last week's high
'scorer for the men with 199 out of
a possible 250. Dorothy France led
the wdmen archers with 131,
‘The team of Sunny France, Bill
\Carland, Merle Finkle and Giles
is presently leading the league
with 18 points. Two teams are tied
w.i2nd place with 16 points each.
rague matches are conducted
jevery: Tuesday and are sponsored
-|by:the Waterford Township Rec- wrestlers have won 16
| reation Department. HEAD TO HEAD — Archle Moore, right, connects.with a short
left hook to the chin of Howard King, of Reno, Nev., at close quar-
ters during the 10th round of their non-title bout at San Francisco
last night. The light-heavy champion won a unanimous decision over
Davidson, the Redskins hope to!Deckerville at Brown City, and:
ans owned by Mr, and Mrs. Charles'on the thumb, and three-eighths
!
| B all
But he decked | uprice's 751-2146 ‘* EAST LANSING w — Michigan
State, University put on a last-
minute spurt to break a three-
game losing streak and defeat
Northwestern, 96-93, in a Big Ten
basketball game last night.
The defeat dropped Northwestern
to the bottom of the league stand-
‘lings with a 0-10 mark in confer-
ence play.
Northwestern, trailing at one
time by 29 points put a 2nd half
rally and finally forged ahead, 93-
92, with a minute and 33 seconds
left. But two free throw baskets
by Julius McCoy and another two
by Jack Quiggle with only 23
seconds left posted the winning
margin for MSU.
The §partans now are 5-5 in)
'Western Conference competition.
Bowling Clinic
By BILLY SIXTY
PITCH FOR SPIN — Until you
learn to release the thumb first,
TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER
Open Thurs. Fri, Sat. Nights Till 9 P. M.
you cannot get consistent and ef-
fective hook spin on the ball. Once
you master this important func-
tion, you're on your way up.
And to develop the action, the
type of grip used means a lot.
With a two-fingered ball, for ex-
ample, it is best to have “no
pitch” on the thumb hole, as sketch
shows, with either a conventional
eee anemia eae aS
—For FLAWLESS STYLE
—For MATCHLESS QUALITY
Choose from the choicest selection of new
and individual patterns and fabrics. We
will make your new suit in the style of your
choice—CUSTOM TAILORED to your meas-
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AP Wirephote
| FINGER a THUMB
y Prices for Spring Start at $59
HARWOOD zxsers" TAILORS &
CLOTHIERS
908 West Huron at Telegraph — Pontiac
ALTERATIONS. ING
\Lake Shore at Center Line, the lat-|
ter a Bi-County affair. |
INCREASED FINGER-
PITCH PRODUCES
GREATER HOOK-SPIN FOR POWER Best of Match | Officials reported today that the
| spring puppy match held at May's!
|Barn, Rochester, Sunday, by the’ (three-eights) or even a full-west- Michigan Boxer Club waS a SUC- erp (half) pitch,on the fingers.
cessful affair. | Have the thumb hole snug but nev-
With 41 entries (larger than had|er tight to insure getting the thumb
been expected), some very good/out first.
‘competition was enjoyed, with the) With a three-fingered grip, which|
ibest in match going to a fawn-\naturally provides a more secure
| colored bitch owned by Ralph and hold of the ball during the swing,
Florence Makin of Novi. ‘‘Tal/ljess pitch is needed on both the
|Flo’s Magnificent Imp” also went thumb and the finger holes. Almost
|winners’ bitch (9-12 months). Win- | without exception, top bowlers now
iner's dog was ‘May Wills Bullet,” use no-pitch, or even back pitch,
Williams of Rochester (6-9 months on the finger holes for a smooth
wt we
BARRE Unri 632 Cloverieat 42 45| pitch decreases as the span (thumb | SAN FRANCISCO u — Archie|with Bob Dunlap down at my home Hols,| 83 38 Briss “ ‘fo feecera) cline’ grip’ gets: wider | . s ; ie , oO 49 39 Dor- zers | Moore, a_ ple asantly plump 197 town, San Diego, next week and I pines na Saltaacnia 41 41 Comfort is paramount. In selecting
pounds, said today he'd train down figure on going through with it.” | Ed's Tav 47 40 Hammel 30 48) ; ‘ =
and defend his light-heavyweight | * e« * |Godharat 44 44 Loute's 38 Sle ball bear in mind that a narrow F b t
‘ ; iets Harbor Bar 42 45 Sportsman 4 ‘ ases easier. sure your S d 26 h
boxing title in London next sum-| Moore had more paunch than4 i Spontemerie 33 80\ STP releases easier Be y un ay; en.
Wallace 222, J Thompson 848,/ grip is right. (Copyright 19546, John PF. Ditle Co} t
A thrilling basketball contest sponsored by the Pontiac LIONS CLUB
LADIES HURON BOWL HOUSE
. wih
wil! : Proceeds for the club's Blind Polks Activities Pund of Pontiac.
62.22 Power Piping 40 44) $ L f fC id
Nat'l Coach 54°70 Gresham's as “| un l e 0 ana a
Ace Beat 49 35 Food-O-Mat 4 vo . . A
Young Ritr. 46 a Pandy's | 3 4° | Specializing in Life Insurance, This ad sponsored for the Lions Club by
alpigaed de ed enceamone, Pension Plans and Annuities M&M Mtrs 46 38 Tricker Inc 30 54 PO | IVE-IN R LS
Pete's Place aod 2 Cees ey va Official iy ae DR ‘ BLUE ay Le IVE IN
8. Felice 273, mithson i - ecter
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BEMIS OLSEN AMVETS | if you re Aes.
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‘fj
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a q corn \% lower » higher,
Humphrey is scheduled tn fly to
New York tomorrow to fill a
; hetfers; very narrow and uncertain de-| pé Nat Gyps 47 speaking engagement. He will re-|mand for steers and heifers, few early| Bett pteci sie Net Lead 16 about the man who gave his three the project. enene turn Thursday. - sales about steady with Monday's close.| Boeing air .. 732 NS’ hes bel \servants some talents. One buried| “It doesn't —_ too good to me. i eer pe a pple prey Bote ee a th 4d. The others. in-INVESTMENTS PAYING OFF |, ae . acuiries James C. Hagerty, White House|week ago; cows opening about steedy,|pona stra 186 N°.Am AY - 1a is in the groun ne rs : ane e's very
press secretary, said Eisenhower) >¥t better utility cows weak: bulls open-| porden Gl et ape ' 2) vested their talents and were able| One woman and her husband Flanagan joined his wife, who Renee ing steady; stockers and feeders slow.| Borg Warner 437 Drie on s7 to hand their master the original have made $60 so far by baking arrived here earlier. : pro y play golf tomorrow at) weak: few early sales mostly choice Briggs Mig $3) Gesnert Gl er i ile. { F T
the Glen Arven Country Clubj{i3yn¢ 1% Hlightevight, yeatiings bela Bike Az 3° Pec Oo Hi talent plus what they had earned. bread, rolls and doughnuts. An-| pers ee pe jag th | peat a vom roee we course. higher; few sales utility and commer-| Burroughs 7 = pt 8 | The Rev. Earl Atkinson, youth- lother woman earned $20 through sued a bulletin saying the
= cial steers 13 00-18.00: most sales ut Rereen pt yet o>) 8 / Friday the President played his| cows 2.00; capers and cutters |Ceumn'we = 124 Parke De |. 44 3) ful church pastor, got the idea jher sewing. jold ‘son, Rabe 7 a) ieaewne. od first round since his Sept. 24 heart mostly $.00-11 0 if 00: utility and commercial Can Pac. . 388 priser * -- 3¢4, from an organ salesman who | One family is in the ice cream |s seriously { t aade Just pick up your phone and call us fer amarions
attack. He tallied an 1l-over-par “Calves —Galable 200. Vealers opening Cater Trac (646 pris © °° 323) gave him home, literature on how business. They rigged up a motor-) «He has a grave blood dis- service on your investments. Your inquiries ore wel-
47 for nine holes. slow, uneven, Sad fesex cary Chee & Ohio m1 Philip Mor ... 444| the congregatiow could earn mon- driven mixer in the basement that| order which has been present for lett in good -| Chrysler Phill eee ‘use: viou . | Saas ap pepe ree prime im-|Cities Svi_. $82 Puttena "+ 89 ey for am organ. One suggestion Uses snow a of ice. So far) some time. He has previously come—by phone, by letter or in person
C D . T se Pabbesy 14 00-30.00, etnies’ nee cans ond I ulp - Pure Ol ... $13) wag that Of the talents. (94 quarts have sold at 50 cents hag critical periods but in the
al river raining toms to Colg Pailm.... 58.4 Repub Stl |!) 48 | vey . ay leach with a 40 per cent profit per) past has each time regained his ue Sheep _Galabie 1.009, Mo warty ales. |Col Bra A... 241 Rex Drug <1. 94) _ We didn't buy the organ,” the quart | aecagt WwW T e@ Monday, slaughter lambs more ac-|Col Gas ..... 16.1 Rey Met #1 4/- a | \ ° tive, closing steady to 50 cents lower;|Comw Ed not save 416 Rey edd -. $22 | |
for Students Rolling late ich Ged a La lambs & é - 2. ¥ WeMigan® oases ce 4 . : i ‘ Beene ee eae Us tneclcas Peedccine : diction he will be a candidate. jGoodyear manufacturing plants 2
{Masco Screw* coe 3 |
6 1
i $$$ ———_
f Sadath Ali Khan, the Foreign xice re eo yresiae ‘
Ministry's parliamentary secre- Wayne PSCC. waco 1213 p f if di Pj k
tary, told the lower House that) voeecdee tid ora cea e Ol Ison IC §
the request was made by the U.
Embassy in New Delhi.
“After full consideration, the gov- _ Markets to Close New Board Member
retary said. ; ington’s Birthday, He did not give the reasons. ; = Wednesday Feb, Co was announced today
22, Canadian and European mar- Foster is execttive vice presi
— ‘kets will be open as usual, dent of the Olin Mathieson Chem:
3-Year- Old Detroit Girl = cal Corp. He formerly served the
government as Under Secretary of
Administrator for Eco ‘Widow of Fire Victim
DETROIT (—The widow of a Edison directors declared a 4 plant protection worker who lost cent quarterly dividend payable
Mrs, Mabel Woods, 37, returned his life’ in the 50 million dollar April 16 to stockholde rs of record
tonal Guard stages a one-day home from using a neighbor's tele. fire at the General Motors trans- March 21 drive Wednesday to recruit 139 phone to find her daughter, Ber- mission plant in Livonia in 1953 The company reported net earn- a= are at full capacity last year.)
e 1995 net Income of $50.665.-
a or $5.0 a share, compared
nee or $4.54 a share in
vious high for earnings
147 in eee vot
was $19.35
Armchair adventurers have been
invited to view a free color film Commerce in f° O0 we _ travelog. “Adventure in Colorado,
DETROIT (INS) — A three-year- Files Suit for $150, 000 nemic Cooperation, and Deputy which will be presented by W.
fold Detroit girl was critically) so retary of (Delense Emerson Scott of Caro at 7 30 p.m
Thursday as part of the program of
the Pontiac Education Assiciation
meeting ‘
The film, to be shown at Pontiac
High School following a 6.390 p.m new men. _/Hinda, horribly burned. The young. filed a $150,000 damage suit yes- ings for the 12 months ‘through 0 4 to the publ The campaign, featiring oper. ster had| run to. the! bathtub and|terday. Jan. 231, 1956, totaled $26.495.966 a Inner is open to o ae ie
houses in the state's 60 armories, turned on the water in an effort’ Mrs. Earlene Degner contended or $2.45 -a share. This compared ““O7™em ae , bia oe ‘a the aiso Nay atter : is part of a nationwide National't, extinguish her clothing.
hy Guard recruiting= blitz in whic
units seek to build their strength|
to authorized levels.
The Michigan National Guard)
currently numbers 12,966 officers ,
and men. ‘
OF Oe me _ plumbing contracting firm, was for the previous 12 months.
U. S. farm mortgage debt at a neg igent in a job it was doing at
total of $8,200,000,000 has doubled| the plant at the time. She said
Although a fall or injury often |that Hickey, Shaw & Winkler, a with $2885,694, or $2 10 a share. inner on
but tickets for the ginner
Imust be purchased in advarice at
anv of the Pontiac schools, said
‘harles Beyette, PE rogran since 1945 while mortgage debts on|sparks from a welder's torch oper. is cited as a cause for a child's oe . Beyette, : EA program
homes in towns and cities has in- ated by an employe of the firm mental deficiency, most experts, “"4'7™9"
leneased 4% times. — off the fire, (deny y that this js often the case. The 90-minute movie will take
u/
: j # ‘ ‘
a
'
- c
: be i stricken son and said after a hos-|
Their theme is the Bible story choice, plowing back profits into pital bedside visit:
land County Jail by
Clar¥#@J. Adams.
Ortwine admitted Feb
second offense of driving while his
license WAS revoked
Hermann von on thaltz was the |
first man to see the interior of the
human eye through an ophthalmo-
scope which he invented, eye ex-
_perts SHY
“ Riker Bldg. Lobby
from Washington last Wednesday | >” uneha 570 pet pes “ pa kod as base oS < ao we . 8 Pp | He gave one talent each ($5) | Arrives From London £0 | Joseph A. Rauch said today, POOOOT TT TOOT TNS PADDY
for a vacation at the Calinet offi- Pe TRIES ye fryers|am Smelt... $1.6 Lone 8 Cem.. % bringing to life the Biblical story’ tranitha church fora ic amen See Leukemia Victim aan aS cer's plantation estate. . Kor gears 14.5-15.5; eee Am Tel & Tel Len Martin, G1 .. 35.1 of the talents. m the chu is mem-| ee
7. * cite alae am Viseose = # Mesa “op Pe 0 Some 43 volunteer members of pe A Pek ° The President now. plans to re- . Mee a Me ee ‘Rec. 11. An accounting will come! LOS ANGELES i — Bud Flana- C | main at the plantation until prob- Livestock Armee) OU 03 mie ou Pa A s Church of the Brethren are’ |April 22. lca) car of Mettain's top comedl omp ete
ably Saturday morning. He origi- DETROIT LIVESTOCK Armour & Co 17 ont Ward .. 89 (putting morey to use, planning to. a 4 mae
DETROIT, Feb. 21. (AP)—Hogs—Sal- ane SS i. Motor Pd .... 35 ae the profits to help pay for Ay _ jans, arrived from London by plane nally‘had intended to retutm to the! apie goo, No early’ sales Oy ter Leea cake Meelion! Be: 284 PP Those who took the money in- - Nie Seulvemias? . oe
capital three or four Gays earlier.| Cottle Salable | 609 Around’ $0, per range a Mat Bie” a 3 5 ‘church ack (Soe: * ivested it in the project of their Beis com and Gala atta laa Investment
| price.
Detroit Edison Co.
At indicated dividend of $1.80 this stock
yields better than 5% at present market
(COMPLETE INVESTMENT SERVICE t
C. J. Nephler Co.
. 818 Community National Bank Bldg.
FE 2-9119 g
Automobile Insurance
Is Very Reasonable!
\\ Wet pavement or careless-
ness may cause on acci-
clades in {he movie ne took dent. Just. one minor acci-
eight months in the Making. han 2 ie
Scott, an aecomplished photo- dent caste meh dina ie a
grapher, adventufer-traveler and ot insu won y
lecturer, has won nofice for his whole year. todoy—
travel films, and hig photography.
In 1950 he drew acclaim for | H. W. HUTTENLOCHER Agency
movies of a 5,000 mile canoe trip narvomns Max EE
which started “in Saginaw, and oe H. We Hattealocher ax E. Serns '
_ended at Aklavik, North West Ter- tammy «318 Riker Bidg. FE 4-155
: ritoty, far north.of the Artie Circle. : : .
» ee 1
4
: = ; » a be ‘ «
‘ v
. \ . ‘
a \ 4 ‘ f
Sh ie
ee > we
THE PONTIAC PRESS,., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1956
ore S ic ie oe a
\, x!
TWENTY:THREE
$64,000 Sponsor Plans
Another Jackpot Show
NEW YORK —The sporisor of
The $64,000 Question plans a new
television show with a grand prize
of a quarter of a galllton dollars.
A spokesman for the sponsor,
Revlon cosmetics, said the show
will be called “‘The Most Beautiful
Girl in the, World.” He said three
pretty girls will compete each
week with a final winner picked
onee a year. *. * * ‘
The biggest cash prize on tele-
vision so far has been the $100,-
000 top award on The Big Surprise.
The new show may start this |
summer, Revlon said.
Gleason Slips Ahead
of Como in TV Ratings
NEW YORK ® — Jackie Glea-
U.N. Group OK’s| Tallulah Receives Less | | .
MassPolio Shots! Money Than Her Maid!
; | ; By EARL WILSON
Experts Say Vaccine NEW YORK — Tullulah Bankhead and I went out frolicking
Found Safe for Usage until dawn. :
in Global Program
several hundred others at City Center. The audience's ecsatic
nS NOW '“Bravos” pulled her on stage for a curtain speech. Arms out- GENEVA W—Th 1. N, World Henn os fist ‘repented. to. stretched appealingly, the Wham from Albam cried, “DAR-
day that the American polio vac- lings!”
cine developed by Dr. Jonas E.| The audience laughed.
Salk could now be considered safe, Then Tallulah laughed.
fe" Mecron _o_ rake “The hardest thing in this play is that I can't say
| The report, by an international| ‘Dar-lings’ once.” She had that hoarse breathlessness that’s
group of 12 leading polio experts) her trademark. “You've made this such a happy moment
who met in Stockholm last Novem-| of my life that I’m afraid to wake up tomorrow—BLESS
ber, was the first official nae | you!”
national approval of the Salk vac- Our rendezvous wasn't too private—starting as it did before): There have been an annual aver-
Hollywood Headlines: :
Hint Grand Jury varie, Ken | Fe piled te Marie, Ken Hit Jackpot uv.
on Jrade Papers in Vegas With ‘Blackouts’ a! trade from southern California)
LAS VEGAS, Nev,. (®—There (some say as high as 80 per cent).
'was Marie Wilson doing her strip-| “Some 5’ million people paid to
itease with wide-eyed innocence.'see Blackouts at the El Capitan.
|And there was Ken Murray in the So you can understand why they
audience brandishing his unlighted| want to see it again.” i
WASHINGTON (®—The Senate cigar and making rakish asides. | ne |
Investigations subcommittee con * * | Perhaps the main reason for the!
siders today whether to try to force) 1+ was like old times. Little had show’s! success is the happy wed-
federal officials 2) disclose some changed but the title.. Now it was ding of two talents—the brash,|
details of the easing of East-West piackouts of 1956 instead of 1942. | | ) trade curbs. ‘SAME MURRAY ’ |wise-cracking Murray and the in-4
Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis) told the) He was the same brash Ken nocent sex of Marie. Both have |
group yesterday a contempt of Murray except that ial brush-| ad success in other mediums as)
Songress citation ‘‘should be voted” topped hair) way graying (“That's Single performers, But they are
if Secretary of Commerce Weeks hat TV did to me.’’) Sad Marie | S¢}dom as surefire hits as when)
does not produce some requested \.. still Marie—all of. her . they appear together. |.
documents, “and the case should) . se «6 : a == BOB THOMAS Probers- May Force
Officials to Give . Facts
of Sales to Russia - THE SYORY OF A
Tense {Timely ! Thrilling !
r TEEN-AGE MURDER! 7
cine and similar antipolio serums: I had a tear in my eye just from her curtain speech after) }
| Even the jokes were the same
son’s Saturday night television developed in other countries. “Streetcar Named Desire.” Stumbling backstage, I encountered|
show The Honeymooners squeaked | The experts reported about 200 Margaret Truman, Mrs. Earl Warren, Virginia Warren and
ahead of the first half-hour of the 565 of polio were caused by faul- others equally choked up—also a famous doctor who's treated. Chairman McClellan (D-Ark) in
a stormy exchange with Philip A.
Ray, Commerce Department gen-
eral counsel, hinted be also might, (Marie) ‘Here is a pome I have
writ—wroten—all right, so it’s rot-
ten."’) But they still convulsed the go to the grand jury.” KEEG O | N
+)
w THEATRE
Perry Como Show in the Trendex
ratings.
Gleason's CBS show was given ty hatches of vaccine in the United her for shingles and an ulcer, who assured her this was her : ; " acked audience the Venus have in mind a test of executive P d a 'States. But it added:
| “Except for these incidents, as-
2 rating of 25.9 against 25.5 f0r sociated with a few lots of vaccine, |
the first half of the competing | -overal million children have been:
Como show on NBC. ;
CBS moved Gleason up a. half
an hour last week into the 8 p.m.
spot to combat the higher ratings
of the hourlong Como show.
Merman to Try Drama
NEW YORK w—Ethel Merman
will leave her music at home and
instead of singing, play a straight
dramatic part in ‘‘Reflected Glory”’
on CBS-TV's General Electric The-
ater March 25.
Galileo made the first scientific
study of sunspots.
(Advertisement) ~ inoculated without mishap in the
| United States, It has recently be-
lcome clear tha this has been of
considerable benefit in reducing the,
incidence of paralytic poliomyelitis,
the rate being significantly lower |
among the vaccinated children)
than among the unvaccinated chil-
dren of a similar age group.” |
Vaccine produced on a large
scale in Denmark, West Germany |
and South Africa has been used)
to inoculate some 800,000 children,
hap being reported.
The experts said the production
jof vaccine involved a constant risk
jot accidental survival of live polio
virus unless very stringent precau-
tions were taken throughout the
process, and unless only fully qual-
Get Pep, Vim; Feel Younger ified and trained personnel ‘ was
Thousands of eouples are worn-out, ex- emgloyed. ; housed fut Socsuse body lacks ince. Fer new) The report advised countries
hares — ES = where poliomyelitis is a major
doses vitamins B, and By. In a single day health problem to plan a mass in-
as much iron as 16 dozen raw Greters d tbe of liver or 16 Ihe, of beef 7-dey0culation campaign, preferably at “pet-aoquainted” size costs little. Or get Econ-|the time of
*
TONIGHT
Music by the
fe
RRR MH HH HM MH the experts said, without any mis- up Herbert Machiz, “and let most magnificent hour.
* & kw ok, .
Then I went to a party for Tallulah at the Bernard Good-
wins, where Tallulah had an arm around Playwright Tgnnes-
see Williams.
-“T heard you two were feud-
ing,” I mentioned. :
“He knelt at my feet to-
night, darling,” Tallulah re-
plied. :
“I knelt at her feet twice,”
‘responded Tennessee gal-
lantly.
“T was her director,” spoke
ime tell you that she let me
now I'd bettér damn well
‘know what I was supposed
ito know!”
| Tallulah, sipping a bour-
|bon and ginger — for the old
South — and looking “bone-
'thin” because she felt she
‘should appear emaciated —
|was asked what she planned
to do after the party.
jagencies’ right to withhold sub
‘Clellan says should show who in Room of the Hotel New Frontier.
poe-" The Blackouts success story is.
being repeated all over again in
‘Las Vegas. (The show ran seven naed material.
The subcommittee is exploring
this country’s part in a 1954 agree-
ment to end some embargoes and
world sales of gaods to Russia.
At the time, the then foreign
aid director, Harold E. Stassen,
said the net result would be of ad-
vantage to the free world. McClel-|
lan, however, contends Russia's
“war machine” has been strength-
ened ‘by free world shipments be-
hind the Iroa Curtain. |in Hollywood.) Ken and Marie are)
being held here six weeks and can
return later this year for 8 or 12
weeks at $20,000 per week. * * *
“It's sensational,” Ken enthused’
between shows. ‘Marie and I
hadn't worked together for seven:
years. Yet we picked right up
In a letter delivered to the! sub where we left off without a)
i ae bredk-i committee, Herbert Hoover Uf gee e areoKD |
undersecretary of sate, efuted (0\" Two Saturdays ago. we broke : _ eee the record set by Sammy Davis
Washington recommended that this ee ay at ve And ast
country agree to the relaxation.| ood. Gt icourse| there's a) good
Hovetgeaid “2 Bpoke fou reason why we draw. This town is [Departments of State, Commerce — i josed io get 50 per cent of its
land Defense, and the International aver _ gel L eee ee
|Cooperation Administration, which | years at the El Capitan Theater | gg
JAMES
DEAN in Warner Bros.’
challenging drama of
_ today’s juvenile violence!
"REBEL
NATION'S | Bum
NO.THOTSPOTIE | aay
is VEGAS
KEDOWN
A CAUSE") Ne |
‘. “DESERT SANDS”
ladministers foreign aid 4 C | aseer agreed ws ee ale at pub-| Blackouts Given
lie hearings a list of items stricken . LJ
tora the it of goods embarsoed Million Dollar Deal
the year when the
disease is normally at its ebb. TALLULAH BANKHEAD
readily, “I intend to sleep till 5 o'clock in the afternoon.”
x *%* * *
I'd just. like to say that Tallulah’s performance after the'
show is as good as it is in the show. But more than that,
HOLLYWOOD —British actor, Tallulah’s doing it as a contribution to the theater. She got “DAR-ling,” she repli e d
James Mason Winning
Bout With Pneumonia
James Mason is recovering «from $5,000 or $6,000 a week in Florida for this show which,
a bout with virus pneumonia, (City Center, pays her “scale’—$85 a week.
His wife, Pamela, said ' Mason)
lhas been ill 10 days but was up)
land about for the first time. He)
lexpects to be well enough to leave at
“After she agreed to do it,” said Producer Jean Dalrym-
ple, “she called me and said, ‘I'll go through with it, but
you'll pay my maid, Rose, won't you, darling?’ ”
“Certainly,” Mjss Dalrymple said. “And how much will
that be?”
“One hundred dollars a week, darling!” replied Tallulah. Mrs. Mason said her husband
|preferred to remain in their home
lrather than heed his doctor's ad- But he said public disclosure of
items on which restrictions less
than a total embargo were either
eased or tightened, or of items
adided to the list, would amount
to “a breach of trust’ with other HOLLYWOOD « — Ken Mur- BUTTERFIELD THEATRE®:
ray's ‘blackouts,’ featuring Marie fe a
Wilson, has been given a million) ¥™ : GOLDEN JUBILEE, 16 SCREEN!
dollar contract.to appear annually | 777 fd oe bale ” ‘ | 2 / é 4 ae Voone New mm " eerTeR in Las Vegas, Nev., until 1960. sins? in tntecteinment ore NEW movies!
BIG
Western nations. He said they The contract calls for payment i, Since P06
are privileged executive branch of a quarter million dollars a year,
papers. for an eight week minimum. | i 3 . Sa gS
Sammy Lewis, entertainment di- He said he would give such in- : L rector for both the New Frontier! formation only behind closed doors,
under guarantees of secrecy. jand Riviera hotels in Las Vegas, = = 2 SS] Sm LU CD
McClellan accused Commerce $@!d Mey s troupe will alter- NOW Features at
Department Counsel] Ray of repu-| nate Detween (ne fwo ute } Sh ¢ ' oa Ria ' 1-45 5 a-oe
diating a promise to produce a} owin L | TAT. 5a 8 F I | “Blackouts’’ 8: EE list of items a U.S. policy commit- once had a seven-
tee had recommended for removal Year run in Hollywood. It was re-
from the embargo list or for other Vived for a three-week engage- The story of a fabulous guy ... a wonderful‘girl and
That's how the City Center has a maid receiving a bigger jvice to enter a hospital.
ea ~ ~———— | salary now than the leading woman.
\ cP f
a \ (a | . * ke * * ‘|
THE MIDNIGHT EARL... . |
Winthrop Rockefeller couldn't dance with Lillian Roth when.
she asked him to as part of her act at the swank Persian
Room. Explaining he was wearing (even though with his date,
Jeanette Edriss, and the Bill Gaxtons) his riding boots . . .|
‘Marilyn Monroe’s veep, ace glamour photographer Milton H.
\Greene, severed his exclusive $50,000-a-year deal with Look!
|Magazine and will now free-lance. His pretty wife Amy and)
\Daby Yosh head for L.A. soon to find a house and await MM’s!
| arrival. |
, | | kok kk |
Mike Della Rocca, who won 64G’s last Tuesday night, was,
| working in his shoe repair shop at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday . | || é N \ A " |] \T] ;|Ruth Etting plans a suit againsf MGM for allegedly taking
it. liberties with her screen bio, “Love Me or Leave Me” .. . Is
\Mrs. Errol Flynn (Pat Wymore) expecting again? . . . The =—— >, , OER | Godfrey staff is happy about Frank Parker's big hit at the : < \V/ |Desert Inn, Las Vegas .. . Joanne Francis, hatcheck gal at the 2... ¢ ; \. movie scout will check his hat : 27 AS Club, hopes some
ad | there.
“He says he can hardly wait to get home to
V. A. NYE DAIRY VITAMIN-MINERAL MILK.” Rodgers and Hammerstein are talking of Susan Hay-
ward for a B’way musical ... Ted Williams, in town
quietly, dined with Nelva More at the Raleigh Room...
Banquets — Wedding Receptions = Special Parties
Call OR 344131 and ask for Jack
Jack Decker's On US-10 in Drayton Plains
DANCING COUPLE
IN YOUR SET?
COME TO ARTHUR
it is to
25. Lawrence $t, WANT TO BE THE BEST
Dror ff raves NOW IN EFFECT
LEARNING to dance at Arthur Murray's is
fun i it’ anyway, but, you'll find it’s a double ‘ask increases up to 43.6 per cent Co. statistics indicate. Pleasure when you learn with your favor- ; - ste partner. Not only do you learn faster,
but you save money, too.
You'll be amazed how quick and gasy
the Arthur Murray Way. In your very first
lesson you learn the key step to all dances. These special 2 for 1 rates are for a lim- ited time only. So enroll now ‘and be the most envied couple in your set.
ARTHUR MURRAY Pert Jill Corey joins the Rob't Q. Lewis show March 5 as
a regular.
Gene Kelly refused to take his hat off for a photo, saylng
his movie contract permitted him to keep it on ... The new
est mood music album is called “Music to Marry a Prince By”
... Marte Wilson and Bob Fallon plan to adopt another child
... Texas oil man Ray Ryan reportedly busted a leg skiing
in Switzerland. @ Breakfast
@ Lunch
Cofeteria @ Dinner
* * * *
EARL'S PEARLS...
The penalty of success is to be bored by -
the people who used to snub you.
WISH FD SAID THAT: “The way some women talk about
their ages, you're only young twice.”—Ted Steele.
TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Taffy Tuttle said indignantly. “If
» a stranger talks to me I'll tell him a thing or two— my name
and phone number!”
They tell of the guy who dashed into traffic court, demand-|
|Ing to get on the front of the line. Seems he was double-
parked outside... That's earl, brother.
(Copyright 1956, The Hall Syndicate, Inc.)
owt, i; %
DIANA SeutzeR —~<—
Typicel Arthur Murray instructor
MURRAY’S TODAY ~—
: Men Are More Deadly ok Set?
nn rng
ie unmarried male drivers under
. oat 25. Such drivers who are married
m Insurance Statistics ‘would get off ‘lighter and girls
RICHMOND, Va. UF Insar. in the same age bracket — married
ance underwriters disagree with or unmarried — would get a de
Kipling’s famous line. They think Crease
the male driver under 25 is more
deadly than the female — aspec US. heart disease deaths de-
ially if he is unmarried clined from 169 per 100,000 in the
Proposals for reCised liability in-,1931-35 period to 163 in the 1951-54.
surance rates, filed with the state, period, Metropolitan Life Insurance
== - —
become a smooth, graceful dancer
Gd up the cash you need. Consotidate your bills. . . reduce
your monthly payments and have more money left over from
mow on. This chart shows how low your payments can be.
Money in 1 Day!
Amt. You; ts
Receive Payment
Monthly Plan
Studios tompletely Oir-conditioned | 920 West Huron Street ~ $100 | $ 5.72.
Waterford Township 175 9.87
350 19.39
FE3-7123 | 500 | 26.69
Free Parking in ten rac aat e
per month on bal-
ances under $50;
244% from §0 to $300;
%% from §300 to 500 ‘assistant to
Is the
GORDON MacRAE
relaxation of curbs. Ray acknowl-/ment ag the New Frontier and
edged he had agreed last weekend the run has been held over for
to hand over the list, but he said 10 weeks. |
this now is forbidden in view of;
Hoover's letter. = exciting music they made toget her.
couoe ey
TECHNICOLIDR There were 1,545,000 marriages.
in the United States in 1953.
Michigan CD Director
LAKE THEATER
Appointed by Williams — |
TONIGHT a ppLA sit recorded by BENNY GOODMAN / — weme \ wenre - vee. Sar
LANSING #—Gov. Williams to- ALAN JUNE » TEDOT WASOM EGWARD “LID ORY ome flcet Sow BARST INNES - MARTHA TRITON. 205GT ELMAR
Lapp + ALiyson day appointed John E. Griffin as
acting director of the state office
of Civil Defense.
Griffin, 35, of Lansing, will fill
a post vacated by C. F. Van
Blankensteyn, who resigned to
serve with the Federal Civil De-
fense Office in Battle Creek.
Griffin has served as executive
the director since
May, 1955. Before that, he headed
blood typing program and
served as chief of the bureau of
health. welfare and dispersal
a Added FEATURETTE
«WALT DISNEY’S "G I AM”
= ‘TAE J) PEOPLE AND PLACES SERIES
Me CONNELL 1 Starts SAT.
RY ,40)°) . “INVASION of the BODY S!/ATCHERS”
and “SHACK OUT ON 101”
WARNER BROS «=
WARNERCOLOR stemopmomc sopno
BEWEDICT BOGEAUS prerenn
JOHN PAYNE - RONALD REAGAN
RHONDA FLEMING - COLEEN GRAY » Bret ¥
ssees Pariner 00. Marine Engineer Wins
Algonac Village Vote
ALGONAC W—Elmer P. Jasper.
a marine engineer, defeated in-
cumbent Alfred H. Stager,; 333 to
| 165, for president of the Algonac
| Village Council in vesterday’s elec-
tion. Joseph H. McKoan ran third
with 80 votes
The non-partisan election was
only a primary, but Jasper’s nom-
ination is tantamount to election
since only his name will appear
on the general election ballot.
LAST TIMES TONIGHT!
“MY SISTER EILEEN” with janet Leigh © Jack Lemmon and
“LAST OF THE DESPERADOES"”
* Starting WEDNESDAY *
2 TECHNICOLOR
SPECIALS!
poole] Ge 2.0 us
E WANTED! ‘NOW THRU WED.!
Quiz Winners to Star
| NEW YORK «» — The $64,000
iChallenge will make its debut on
CBS-TV March 25. The new weekly |
program will be a panel quiz show TENDER
composed of persons who have 4 Poramownt presente
been high winners in The $64,000 : JANE CHARLTON
nda 1 | WYMAN - HESTON. 1
‘
43rd ANNUAL é ! - & Paramount Pretuce |
AUTO Mad s : Bogcncocoooecooocl!
Comedy Bi! Py Matinees . . 65¢ — Eves and Sundays . . 90c
= y = = = = |=
AA | SINATRA. REYNLOS | cone UW LEE mew ncn 1 State) a = noone oe TODAY
11 AM = Ll PM WAYNE ° HOL - ee e . we “The View From
THRU 8 ALSO UU] Mat. 50; Eve, Se; Child, 20c FON Head” | &
DAY, FEB. 26 | — (Oe : sun ae "ROMANCE. .. BORN OF fa WEDNESDAY Xy.s* The Command
3 big stage shows daily | i"
STARRING
WIERE BROTHERS Songstress KATHY BARR
COLES AND ATKINS =| |<
. AMPLE PARKING!!!
MICHIGAN STATE
FAIR GROUNDS
* the Man trom,
Colorado »% an BLIA KAZAN proouction | Wi See James a WARNER BROS. present CINEMASCOPE WARNERCOLOR Dean, voted
i ears, hy yon, the
Hi -JAMES DEAN- RAYMOND MASSEY movie ner, as : “Best Actor of the Year" FEB. 18 thru 26
: Rear~
\ Ph, FE 2-0244- Liberty Le mM ue i
re = with LEU CAMACHO 7 ae -
ADMISSION i : mits ee al kD soem WARNER pros « CINE MASCOPE wamescoroe ee ( (
wai ere | LORI | =e winics cot Children (Under 12) all times... $.50 FORD: HOLDEN . JOHN STEINBECK's ; |