tl FF um ¢q Tuesday: Colder Details page two 112th YEAR . PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1954—~28 PAGES INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE Te kkkke Senate Resuming Debate on Censure Chrysler, Union Meeting in Effort to Cancel Strike Body Division Is Set to Walk Out Tomorrow; 100,000 May Be Idled DETROIT (UP)—A last- ditch meeting was called to- day in an effort to stave off a strike which could wreck Chrysler’s comeback bid in the automotive sales field. State and federal medi- ators also were on hand as Chrysler officials and CIO United Auto Workers union officers made a final effort to settle issues which threatened to idle as many as 100,000 Chrysler em- ployes. ~ Some 30,000 UAW members em- | ployed in the Chrysler Automotive Body Division were ready to strike at 7 a.m. tomorrow unless settle-| ment is reached. The company, third - ranking among the industry's ‘big three,” | Said a walkout in the body division | would snuff out Plymouth produc- tion almost immediately. After | that, they said, a prolonged walk- out would spread paralysis through- out other divisions which turn out Dodge, De Soto, Chrysler and Im-/| # perial automobiles. ' The body division dispute was met the only ominous cloud on the Chrysler labor scene. De aan “a ae. | Thirty-five men were safely faver of a strike and only yester- day Plymouth employes voted overwhelmingly to do likewise. Olen Manley, president of UAW | ~~ : Local 51 which represents some | . 8,000 Plymouth workers, said the , | membership was “pretty steamed | ’ U up’? over a Series of long-smoul- dering grievances. Among them. were charges of a “speed-up"’ on the assembly lines. | The Plymouth and De Soto strike | rot ill be - iy the intemattinel ~— ‘The, Bomber Cracks Up in body division strike already has' Woods Trying to Make been authorized, paar Balti Bigzest stembling block in the | ‘ONGiNg at ne: | path et setiling the bedy Givisien | nA TIMORE —Five persons dispute was a contract for 350 | - office workers. They formerly | were killed and the sixth critically were employed by Briggs Mane- | injured in the crash of an Air Force facturing Co., which was bought (825 in a woods about three miles = yaer inet year, west of Friendship International Robert Conder, Chrysler vice Airport last night president in charge of industry re- | Re ox whilele reached tht lations, said the company has of- acue past , he fered the office workers the same Scene about 12 hours after t contract now in effect in other | crash, found five bodies. A sixth, Chrysier offices. He charged that) stil] alive, was flown to Bolling the union was demanding certain Air Force Base near Washington . oct achuse hin Gis Soasties of tua! in a helicépter. His condition was other Chrysler pacts. reported grave. The plane went down about . Downpour Continues 10:15 last night, but an air search had te await daylight hours and Ov 1 En land it took almost an hour for ground e gy g parties to reach the wreckage LONDON #® — Continuing heavy} after it was sighted from the air. a floode =A ~~ elon The plane was trying to make counties of Eng a ales " i today and some farm areas re-|#" emergency landing at Friend ported disastrous losses of crops | Ship when it went down. and working time. Seamen Rescued From FROM HALF A SHIP—Crewmen aboard the broken Soto workers previously voted in = half of the tanker World Accord gather on the starboard rail as a lifeboat rescues them yesterday in the storm-tossed Irish Sea off the Welsh coast. removed from this part » a, Ps Saturday Is Big Day Angry Irish Sea 7 i ; * d . oe y - * os Plan to Free 13 Ready for More Debate May Be Hinted in Dulles’ Talk Secretary of State Will Deliver Major Policy Address Tonight | WASHINGTON (INS) — |Secretary of State John Foster Dulles makes a major foreign policy ad- dress at 10:30 p. m. (EST) tonight amid nationwide indignation over Red China's jailing of 13 Ameri- cans. Dulles may provide a hint on how far the U. S. js, willing to go to win freedom | for the men sentenced to long prison terms on AP Wirephote MeCarthy Now Will Face Third Conduct Charge Utah Republican Says on Watkins Attacks From AP and UP Dispatches WASHINGTON — A new charge faced Sen. McCar- thy (R-Wis) today as he re- turned from the hospital for renewal of Senate de- bate on whether to censure him for his conduct. Sen. Bennett (R-Utah) said he would offer the new charge, ready have been recom- mended by a special bipar tisan committee. trumped up spy charges. | HOPE FROM HOSPITAL—Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R-Wis) holds Chicago will be broadcast | Washington Sunday, with his injured right arm in a sling. The debate and telecast nationally on censure charges against the, Wisconsin senator was held up 11 Of the group of prisoners, 11 are American airmen and two are — bor his right elbow. i | AP Wirephete | |of the ship, which broke in half as hurricane-force gales and wind-whipped seas battered the British | Isles. Another seven crewmen, marooned aboard | radie, which declared yesterday: | ‘the sinking forward section of the World Accord, | “We will not cringe before the | TULSA, Okla. (P—Affable Grandmother Nannie Doss some miles away, also were rescued . Live Reindeer, Santa Claus to Be Yule Parade Features Something for every member of the family will be fea- tured in Saturday's presentation of the Pontiac Retail Merchants Assn. Christmas parade, John R. Riley, parade marshal, said today. More than 500 high-stepping musicians from nine area schools, Santa Claus and a Miss Pontiac will participate in the big parade. The annual event will also on réligious and Wilson Denies Quitting Rumor Defense Chief Claims He Has No Intention of Resigning Cabinet Job By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Defense Secretary Wilson says “there isn't a blessed thing” tol rumors he will quit his cabinet post the first of the year. Asked to comment on Washing- | brace of live reindeer and boast dozens of floats based toyland themes. —————* Each band will be preced- ed by a convertible bearing a placard with the band’s Mame so spectators can easily identify each unit, Riley said. Scheduled to take part are the high school bands from Pontiac, Lake Orion, Waterford Township, | Oxford and Walled Lake, plus the Avondale High School band from Auburn Heights and a massed band of musicians from Eastern, Lin- |coln and Washington junior high | Fermi.,, sejf-exiled Italian physicist schools in Pontiac. | Cupid, Comet, Dunder and Bit. | zen will clop down Saginaw street as they haul Santa Claus’ sled. Santa and the reindeer wilt halt | near the Oakland County Court. | The Air Force identified one of |i. gossip that he plans to turn; hewse after the parade. | threats of aggressors.” + (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) | Ala. 1945 ; civilians and all were seized dur- | ing the Korean War. The State Department dispatched a vigorous demand for release “forthwith” of the prisoners but Red China summarily rejected it. The protest was made to the Peiping regime through the British government which maintains diplo- matic relations with Red China. The reply came via 'Peiping G randmoth ar Is Quizze in Death of Four Husband signed additional statements last night that she used .,| rat poisoning to snuff out the lives of four of her five The State Department has said husbands. it will take other steps to try to ; force the Chinese to release the| , 22 calmly smoked a cigarette as she described in 13 but there have been no indica- gtr hea declared | County Atty. J. Howard¢——— last week that the U.S. would seek | Edmondson said a murder : : soon toe ee Wot (cee, wat bo aed oder alifomnia sible peaceful means ‘against the 49-year-old Since then, there has been a/| plumpish, jovial widow for | growing demand for more drastic | the Oct. 6 death of Samuel ina | _|FInany LiTting and drink of spouses from four states. measures. Senate Republican | Doss, 58, of Tulsa. leader William F. Knowland called! pamondson said the other poi- | for a blockade of the 3,000-mile | soned husbands and the dates) .,. . « China coastline in retaliation. they died are: } Visibility Much Better; He added that he did not be- Frank Harrelson, Jacksonville, | Air, Highway Traffic Eased After Five Days Harley Lanning, Lexington, N.C. | | 1952 | LOS ANGELES, @®—A heavy ° | Richard L. Morton, 64, Emporia - ge ic | eC Kan., May 19, 1953, | siege of fog in southern California, The prosecutor, with city offi- with strong doses of smog added in Dies of Cancer cers and Kansas and Oklaboma'the Los Angeles area, appears to | agents, has questioned the woman | be lifting. | since her arrest Friday night and | Visibility improved last night aft- said investigations into the deaths er the fog had slowed highway, sea . of four of her relatives probably and air traffic for five days. The Atom Bomb Was First Suggested to U. S. by! Enrico Fermi in 1939 | CHICAGO u—Fellow scientists | today mourned the death of Enrico will be undertaken |Weather Bureau reported that He identified the relatives, | clearing weather could be expected whom he said succumbed under | today, although low clouds were strange circumstances, as Mrs. | Predicted for the morning hours. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) | “Bulletin LANSING (AP) —The | State Supreme Court i who became the architect of the atomic age. Fermi died of cancer yesterday at the age of 53. If he had been spared ‘a few more greed yr held today that local Los Angeles International Airport man Lewis L. Strauss of t tom- . resumed operations early yesterday ie Energy Commission said, “‘he property taxes must be after being closed down during the might have been saved by medical] assessed on the state | night hours. The secretary's talk from | 8 bulky manuscript in his left hand as he sits at his home in | days which McCarthy spent in Bethesda Naval Hospita| getting | detail how she administered the poison into the food > Coastal towns went to work | the dead as the pilot, Maj. Wayne ‘his defense job over to Sen. Fer- | clearing away the debris left by |G Shearer, 30, of Cornelius, Ore., | guson (R-Mich), who was defeated five days of gales which smashed | whose wife lives at Annandale. beach buts and boats, knocked holes in sea walls, blew down) hundreds of telephone poles at sea. | In the still-rambunctious Irish) “tly. Sea, the tug Turmoil labored to-| The plane was last heard from at| leave was started and is being ward Belfast with the forward-half | 10:14 last night when it radioed| circulated by. those desiring to of the split Greek tanker World | the Friendship tower it was out of | embarrass me.” Concord. Lifeboats rescued seven | gas. Nothing more was heard of! w seamen from this half of the ves-| the craft, which was returning to/} sel and took the other 35 crewmen) Andrews Air Force Base, near off the stern segment, Tugs stood| Washington from a training mis- by to tow the stern half as soon sion to Tulsa, until a search plane as the seas permitted putting a| spotted the wreckage in a dense | woods this morning, salvage crew aboard. and | trees and caused at least 10 deaths| ™*" 9ad three Army personnel Police reported that from | Wednesday night until last night there were more than 2,000 traffic accidents in Logs Angeles County, | most of them blamed on the fog. “The kiddies can talk with Santa | techniques derived from his own | and his helper and pet the reindeer | discoveries.” there,”’ Riley. said. | The Nobel Prize winner's con- Karen Huff, Miss Pontiac for| trotted release of nuctear energy 1954, will greet Santa at the pa- made atomic power a reality. He equalized valuation which generally is higher than the county equalized values. | for re-election, the former presi- dent of General Motors Corp., said: Va. Identities of two other crew- Bennett's charge is based on Mc- Carthy’s attacks on the special committee and its chairman Sen. Watkins (R-Utah), and on McCar- | thy’s describing the special Senate session as, among other things, a “lynch party.” ‘treatment of an injured right el- | well,” | pital’s main entrance, | charge, McCarthy have denied |tentions, suggested | Of delaying things so be no vote before the (Continued on Page 2, Cal. 3) Temperature Drop, tle other weather change ig pre- dicted, | Snow flurries and cloudy skies * | will continue through Wednesday, the U.S. Weather Bureau says. The low tonight will be near 24-28 with a high Tuesday of 34-38, Tomorrow night the mercury is expected to | dip to 22 degrees. | Over the weekend, .28 of an inch of snow mixed with rain fell, .11 on Saturday and .17 Sunday, The high and low for Saturday ranged between 32 and 37, with tempera- tures ranging Sunday from 33 to 44, This morning in downtown Pon- tiac, the mercury stood at 34 de- |grees at 8 o'clock, hitting 36 at 1 p.m, “There im't a blessed thing |" ' to it. I have ne intention of re- | ficial party in the parade, | rade’s formation, then join the = first suggested the possibility of signing. The story that I will Others in the party are Mayor | I an atomic bomb to the U.S. gov- ernment in 1939. Three years later the atomic pile he built at the University of Chicago pro- vided the key to the manufacture aboard were not learned imme- William W, Donaldson, H. Wayne Gabert, president of the retail mer- | chants organization, and Jacquel- | | ine Dubay, North S ric Assn. | ilson was reached for com- ice eon Orth Side CIC ASSN. | ot the A-bomb. ;ment. Saturday night in Bloom- Private burial services are to be | field Hills where he was spending | held today in Oakwood Cemetery, the holidays with his family. | Pella Elected to Head (hires He also was asked to confirm | Europe Steel-Coal Unit Just 12 days before his death the accuracy of an article in an the Atomic Energy Commission upcoming issue of Fortune Maga-| STRASBOURG, France #—Giu-| named him the winner of its first Doctor Tells M urder Jury About Sheppard's Injuries CLEVELAND (#—A physician testified today Dr. Sam- | *@™inistration post. uel H. Sheppard had injuries on his mouth, face, fore- head and ribs when he examined him the day Sheppard's wife Marilyn was slain, last July 4. But as to the possibility Dr. Sheppard suffered a spinal injury, the witness said “I | zine stating he took a million dol- |seppe Pella, former Italian premier = special award for nuclear lar loss on the forced sale of his | forei is . | work, Eat thee x th carne ab S008. jant foreign minister, was unani | Son of an Italian railroad offi- | Wilson had to sell his interests in | "°C" elected president of the | cia) Fermi was born in Rome company he formerly headed | *iX-nation European Steel and Coal Sept. 29, 1901. He studied at the win Senate confirmation to the | Community’s Assembly today. Universities of ho —— and ~ : Gottingden and came professor Pella succeeds the late Alcide de | of ical physics at the Unt Gasperi of Italy. There was 0 | versity of Rome in 1927, At Rome, contest in the election, first item on | he and fellow scientists succeeded the agenda of the Assembly's spe- | in splitting the uranium atom and cial session, expected td run until | also learned that the speed of neu- Thursday ‘or Friday. |trons could be slowed and the amount of radioactivity they pro- | duced increased. “A lot of writers,” Wilson said, “have made the statement that the stock declined in value after I sold it and that I therefore came out head on the deal. The contrary is true, of course. I sold my stock at about $65 a of a spinal cord injury.” Sheppard's abdominal re- flexes also were impaired, said the witness, Dr. Rich- ard Hexter, a West Side physician. He took the stand today Bay Vill osteopath, who is charged with first degree murder | in his wife's death just « couldn’t make a diagnosis - share and it now ts selling for : F ; He was awarded the Nobel In Today Ss Press over $90. On the basis of 40,000 Prize in 1938 for his leadership Birmingha ? poomngepe- we ol in this work. He went to Sweden Royle, Mal... tr 77"""**"***"""45 | over a million dollars — but no- we was ctiticiaed Coaster, ss eanesedea ee wseset® | bedy writes much aboot that.” = ve and Corisemas Carel 17 y ; in the Halian press for refusing Soman’ was 288? y~ Fortune Magazine reported Wil- to wear a uniform or give the County int :. & |80n sacrificed a great deal more Fascist salute at the ceremony, Sine if $ | money than that to take the gov- Shortly afterward, Fermi took Emily Post...... : +-l® [ernment job. Fortune said when reapennlitg . Junior ‘Spier ey é agg his wife Laura and two children to Hero ell os ‘et | Wilson quit General Motors to take the United States, where they Lawrences, David........... «-@ | the defense job he swapped a $200,- i : , Markets .....6...... 2 2 remained, Patterms ....,......-.c.c1.... 44 [000 a year corporate salary for appear today after they were named winners fn |City, Utah; Sara Ellen Spare a. ss ses sees aeseweeees ms, te | $22,500 federal pay check. He also Osmen’s Tel-Heren the National 4H Club Safety Program. A $300 /and Filla Blossom, .18, a2 Mas competion & gave = am SIAN _in_noameal ot ® Open everp.evening ‘til & }General-Motors- scholarship was awarded to each, {ts Want Aés..........9%, 28, 3 eA ge | HOCK cash bonuses that went Left to right (front): Peggy Pfefferkorn, 18, West Wome’ Pages.cseesres..08,' 1, a9 | with the GM — : "Fuse and pelts PEs-oui” Friendship, Md.; Flovene Richardson, 17, Cedar y t ‘ ' ° ’ 5 eR 4-H Club Members Win Scholarships He Will Ask Resolution Two censure counts al-. eae” ee ae ee” ae nade Ry a Na Fa stad ol THE ‘PONTIAC PRESS, ———O— MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1954 Maple Alley, y in Birmingham _ Paving Bates Due for Discussion Tonight From Our Birmingham Burrau BIRMINGHAM A petition ask ing for construchon of an alley south of Maple avenue to extend east from Bates street will again of the hounded Martin bring up discussion on use south half of the hy Maple, Henrietta Bates strect§ for is presented at tonight s City Com mission meeting Bates street will| remain the cen ter of discussion as lawmakers take up a petition from Wabeek-Jacob son Corp. requesting pavement construction en the street, running north from Willits street for about 30 feet A hearing date probably will be set on Vacating the west half ol Elm street adjacent to city-owned park property. In conjunction with this, lawmakers will discuss ¢% tension of the access drive of Hat rison Floor Covering. 999 Hunter North to Web&8ter, and construc tion of another access drive north from Webster Extending the |ease-on the Walker Gravel Pit property until tne end of December is another question to be taken up, as is a * 15-page report on the Columbia re lief Sewer. Lavender from England. TV trays, spice cabinets, herb vine- gars, dolj hammocks, bath pillows and gifts of all sorts will make up the two-day Christmas bazaar al Redeemer Lutheran Church this Wednesday and Thursday. all Mhen i parking parking will be sponsored by the Kiwanis Club - * * Men and older bevs at al James Episcopal Church will at- tend a laymen's meeting to greet new Sulfragan Bishop = Archie Crowley, at & p.m. tomorrow at St. doha Church in Detroit. * * * current news items will bring the Ruth Shain Class in Internationa] Affairs up to date on the Formosa question, | Western European Union and the United Nations refugee program, when if meets at 10 am. tomor- row at the Community House Giving reports will be: Mrs. H. | \ Knight. Mrs Clarence Lee, Mrs. Sam Cohen, Mrs. Lucille Jans and DeHull Travis. Travis, who was on the legal staff during the Nuernberg war crimes trials. wall speak on that subject, % * * Discussion on Police Chief Ralph Wo Monley an Exchange Club member. has arranged for a representative i,om the alcohol tax unit of the US Treasury Department to address the club at its noon luncheon meet ing. at the Community House to morrow * « * Mrs, Jennie M. McMillin FRANKLIN Service for Mrs Jennie M. McMillin, of 26620 Wood lore, will be held at 10:50 am Wednesday at Bradshaw Funeral Home, Lafayette, Ind | with burial in Green Bush Cemetery there CAMP FIRE HEAD — Mrs Harold H. Hartman, of Seattle, Wash. was vlected national presi dent of the Camp Fire Girls at the meeting in Kansas City Editor Assassin Escapes Prison Slayer Calmly Walks Out Door of Ohio Pen; Serving Life Term COLUMBUS, Ohio *—The who assassinated Don R. Mellett council Mo man It will run from 10 a.m. to 7 jo, body will be at the Bell Chapel crusading editor of the Canton p-m. with a luncheon served from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Wednes- day, a snack bar on Thursday This year Mrs. Herman Fiebig and ,» years ago from Long Beach Penitentiary yesterday by of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. until 9 p.m. today Mrs. McMillin, who moved here 1925 made from the Omo (Ohio) his second escape Daily News in calmly Mrs. Alvin Knorr are directing the (Cait died suddenly at her resi- “alking past two guards _ affair. * . Ld Oakland County Probate Judge Arthur E, Moore will be a guest at tonight's 6:30 dinner of the High Twelve Club being held at the Community Mouse, and will speak on Camp Oakland. oa . The name of William F. Gieg son of Mr. and Mrs. Charies F Gieg, of 1757 Winthrop Lane, was added to the Western Reserve Aca- demy ponor roll for the marking period ending Nov. 15. - * Ticket purchasers for the Jean Goldkette piano concert originally scheduled for this Wednesday night are being notified that the con- cert has been postponed until March 15. Goldkette’s appearance ~ Wilson Accused of Union-Busting dence this morning She is survived by one daughter, Mrs. L. A. Faunce of Franklin and a niece, Mrs W.C_ Dockins of Veedersburg, Ind Quiz Grandmother in Husbands’ Deaths (Continued From Page One) Deas’ mother, two sisters and a step grandson. After making her confessions Edmondson related. Mrs. Doss de- clared, “My conscience is clear He said it was a comment she uttered after cach formal state- ment. The only surviving husband is Charley Braggs, of Alabama City, ‘Ala. Edmondson said Mrs Doss told him the marrage to Braggs mn 1921 produced four daughters two now living. They were di- vorced in 1928 County Investigator W. A. Lang said Mrs. Doss gave the following * ° reasons for poisoning her spouses UAW-CIO Officiol poisoned Lanning by doping ' Placing of Order Strike-Bound Plant DETROIT (UP)—Defense Secre tary Charles E. Wilson was under fire by the CIO United Auto Work- ers union again today Wilson, blasted by the UAW for his preelection “bird dog” re- marks, was accused this time of “actively participating in strike- breaking and union-busting” by awarding a contract to the Kohler Co, of Kohler, Wis The latest charge was voiced in a letter to Wilson by Emil Mazey. | connection with the deaths of her the secretary-treasurer of the interna-! sisters her mother or Harrelson’s “' to the tional union. Mazey said he was “shocked to learn’ that the De- | ceded Harrelson in death by two fense Department has placed a $2,000,000 order for 155-millimeter shells with the strikebound Wiscon sin firm. “The placing of this order is a stab in the back to Kohler work- ers,” Mazey said. “A strike for economic justice has been in progress at the plant since April 5, 19s4.” o Mazey demanded that Wilson “right ‘this wrong by canceling the contract with the Kohler Co until such a time as the company sits down with the union and works | _ out a fair and equitable collective -” bargaining agreement. - The Kohler local had about 3,500 -employes, on the job when the strike was called. Since then. the firm has continued an estimated 50 per cent production while em- ploying about 2,000 persons. The Weather PONT! AND VICINITY — Cloedy with a tenes ht and tomer- row. Colder tonight. Lew tonight 24-28. High temerrew 24 te 54. Temerrew night partly cloudy and continerd cold, lew tt te ™. Dewstewn Temperateres OO. Ma. nccooees- ”® liam “ FG, Moccvcccee- BE SEM... . cssccess B ©. Moscccese ipm OB B..cccece- 3 “er WD Oy Bevccoccess 33 ; Teday tn Pontiac Lewest temperature preceding 8 am BI At 8 a.m.: Wind velocity 16-20 mph Direction “ Sun sets y et 601 pm Sun rises Tuesday at 7:40 am Moon sete Monday at #43 pm Moon rises ‘Tuesde} at 11:27 am Senday in Pontiac (As recorded downtown) temperatare........ | temperature............- £4 , Snow, rain, 17 inch @oor FA coos 97.8 ce ] 61 » 2 2 ed jood. She said she poisoned him on a Tuesday or a Wednes- day and that he died the following Friday *. a . She said she had been jealous of Lanning because he was popu- lar with the women. That was the same reason she gave for placing the rodent killer in the coffee of Morton, a native of Okmulgee Okla.. and of Indian descent She claimed Harrelson beat her so she poured liquid poison into his jug of corn whisky | Edmondson said she denied any 24-year-old grandson, *who pre- months She was quoted as saying she poisoned Morton because ‘I lost my head and blew up when I , found out he had been running around with another woman and had bought some rings." * 7 Edmondson said she told him she poisoned Doss’ twice because “he was mean to me.” Once she poured ‘‘a lot of poison on his prunes.”’. After eating them he went to the hospital for 23 days The day after he returned, was quoted, she gave him | tablespoonful of poison in a cup of | coffee ; | Doss drank the coffee and died | the next day at the hospital recalled. “He sure did like prunes.” he ate them all.” Vandals Hit Schools in Troy Township | Vandals broke into two Troy Township elementary schools over is the weekend, and rarfsacked sev- | denunciatory eral desks in search of money. Stuart Baker, Township School superintendent, said today. and the Colerain School, at 4970 | John R., were broken into by |‘*youths looking for money, valu- jables and food.’ Kitchens at both schools were raided, Baker So far. no estimate has been |made of the dagame, Baker said. | But. outside of ransacked teachers’ | | desks and broken glass. little dam- | age was found. GOP Club to Meet | Lincoln Republican Club wil) meet ete rencetay- oS 2: m—it-the-chun- j | Lafayette St. President John Wil- quet, according’ jo Mrs. | Tedcastle, sect¥tary. Patrick Eugene McDermott. 55 joined a party of departing visitors and walked out of a penitentiary honor dormitory in what prison of ficmals indicated was a well-planned escape. . . 7. An automobile which pulled up to the pen just as McDermott walked out with an attractive wom an Visitor whisked ‘the fugitive away McDermott was convicted of murdering Mellett the night of July 16 1926. The Canton editor was shot down as he put his automobile in a garage at his home. Trial tes- timony developed that McDermott was sent to Canton by a Massilon man to “beat up an editor.” The shooting climaxed a Daily News editorial campaign against police protection allegedly given to vice operations. . 7 * Turned over to authorities by his brothers in Nanty Glo, Pa. Me- Dermott was found guilty of first- degree murder. with a recom. mendation of mercy. That gave him an automatic life senjence He escaped in 1929 by sliding to the ground on a rope made of clothing. He was recaptured the next day McDermott, like dormitory inmates civilian clothes McCarthy fo Face New Censure Move (Continued From Page One other honorary sion automatically ends Christmas Eve. The Senate had seemed near voting state when McCarthy hospital Republican leader Knowland of California this weekend called on the Senate to reach a deci- sion by Dec. 11, saying he be- lieved there was “a growing demand” tor the Senate to dis- pose of the ixsue and turn to the consideration of what he termed more important matters. Bennett made public yesterday his new charge McCarthy accused the Watkins committee of acting as the ‘“‘un- wiiting handmaiden.”’ ‘involuntary agent” and “attorneys-in-fact” of she the Communist party and of imi- a tating Communist methods in its report recommending he be cen- sured These actions of McCarthy's, the she resolution states, ‘‘are all contrary to good morals and_ senatorial she ethics and tend to bring the Senate said. “I fixed a whole box and into dishonor and disrepute, to ob- struct the constitutional processes of the Senate, and to impair its dignity.” The Watkins committee held that McCarthy had obstructed the legis- lative process by failing to cooper- ate with a Senate elections subcom- mittee that probed his finances in 1951-52, and by contemptuous and attacks on its mem- . . * It also recommended he be cen- sured for what it called his ‘‘inex- 'one-man hearing last Feb. 18 | The Senate resumed debate on ,the McCarthy censure issue today ‘with the prospect of two more immediate changes in its member- ship that might affect the final voting lineup. ‘ Sen.-elect W. Kerr Scott (D-NC) |was on deck to be sworn in at | noon {EST) as a new member to succeed Sen. Alton A. Lennon (DNC). And there were strong ney (D-Wyo) also might take wain--the oath at the.same time to re- | eler, West Germany's ambassador |) |ty register of deeds office at 1 Place Sen. E. D. Crippa (R-Wyo)./to the United States, speaks to- ‘ tte 4 Although neither has spoken | morrow at the University of Mich- $1 son Is expected fo appoint commit-. Publicty-on the issue, both Scott +igan on “Germany — partner of tees for the annual Lincoln Ban- and O'Mahoney are regagded as | the Free World.” The ambassador Robgtt likely votes for censuring Sen. | will hold @ press conference short- | normally wears It sets out that State Accidents Claim 16 Lives Traffic Accounts for 11 Weekend Fatalities; 2 Die in Plane Crash By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS least 16 Accidents claimed at lives—1ll of two of them in an airplane crash— them in traffic and over Michigan's rainy. snowy week end P One of the victims was a 10-year- old girl who Tell from her bicycle into the path of a car. Another |was a 17 year-old youth whose mo- toreycle crashed with a car | A minister-pilot and his father were killed when their plane crashed Sunday night inte a rain- soaked field outside New Buffalo. They were the Rev, Frank Grun- der, 35, of Akron, Obie, and his father, Alfred, 53, of Chicage. Joann Hawley, 10, of Detroit was killed Saturday night when she fell from her bicycle into the path of a car on a Detroit street Walter Zebrowski, 61. of Detroit was killed Sunday night when he was struck by a car while crossing a street near his home David Simon Jr, 55, of Owosso was fatally injured Saturday night when his car hit an embankment on a dead-end road in Shiawasee County John M. Roy, 24, of Ann Ar- ber, was killed Sunday when he lost control of his car and crashed near Ypsilanti. Ernest Schroeder, 62, of Mon- roe was fatally injured Saturday night when struck by a Michigan Bell Telephone Co. truck while crossing U.S25 south of Monroe Leo Kangas, 60. vice president and director of the Citizens Bank in Flint, and Francis Lee Board, % «oof Detroit, were killed Satur- day in a twocar collision four miles south of Standish Carl Stuckey, %%, of Bronson and Mrs. Ethel F. Stuckey of Sturgis were killed Friday night in a two-car crash south of Men- don. Benjamin F. Homes, 63. of De- troit was fatally injured when hit by a car while crossing a Detroit street Friday night Four-month-old Frances Lee Smith died in a fire that swept through her Detroit home Satur- day. Arthur Sample. 17. of St. Clair Shores was fatally injured Sunday when the motorcycle he was driv- ing collided with a car in St Clair Shores. Sally Kopydloska, 63, of De- treit, was killed by coal gas fumes Sunday. Pelice said the damper of a) living reom space heater was closed, backing fumes into the house. Two-year-old rt Ramsy was found playing with rat poison in the kitchen of his home in Melvindale Saturday. He rently ate some of it and died a time later Robert's 65-year-id grand moth- er. Mrs. Gertrude Spencer, was notified of the tragedy and was | rushed to the Ramsay home. She returned to her own home Satur- day night, suffered \a heart attack and died early Sunday Death Takes First Negro Prosecutor _ GRAND RAPIDS w — Percy J Langster, 64, said to be the first Negro county prosecutor ever elected in the United States. died yesterday in St. Mary Hospital after a short illness He was elected prosecutor of Lake County in 1948 and served ‘one term before he was defeated on the Democratic ficket in 1950. He also ran in the recent Nov. 2 election. but lost Langster Was admitted to the bar in Newaygo County in 1932 He began practicing law at White Cloud and moved to Baldwin, the Lake County seat, in 1947. Car. Strikes Pedestrian at Downtown Corner Seth F. Thomas, #, of 21 Ja- cokes St.. was treated at Pontiac General Hospital for leg injuries Sunday night after he was struck by an auto at Huron and Perry Sts., according to Pontiac Police. Driver Marion D. Hester, 31, of 1540 Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion, was ‘quoted by Patrolman John Lyons as saying he didn't see the pedes- trian crossing the street when the motorist attempted to turn from Perry onto Huron. Cigarettes, Coins Taken in Gas Station Breakin Airport Service Station at M59 Baker said the Troy Union o os ” nd Airport Rds. in W. lord . ; cusable”’ and “‘reprehensible’’ trea | # - in Waterford | School, at 1340 E. Square Lake Rd.., | ment of Brig. Gen. Ralph W. | Township was broken into over the | Zwicker in questioning him ‘at a| Weekend by burglars who took | cigars, cigarettes, candy, flash- ‘lights and $6 in old coins, accord- ing to Waterford Township Police Chief Frank J. Van Atta. | The breakin was discovered by, P&troimen William’ Stpkes and John Forbush in a routine check |about 3 a.m. . The owner, |W. E. Jacobs of 3819 Iris Rd., Clarkston, told-police he closed the | station about 10 p.m. Saturday. | ' | ‘The Board of Directors of the | ‘"dications that Joseph C. o'Ma. Ambassador to Speak | ANN ARBOR #—Heinz L. Krek- (ly before his lecture. | Sun Puts on Dog | in Triple Mirage Sunday Morning In case anybody besides Er- skine Evans, of Drayton Plains, | saw three suns Sunday morning don't worry We checked and there is still only one sun Evans called the Pontiac Press yesterday “and reposted that he was looking at what seeméd to be three suns Actually, three did appear, in a kind of rainbow-like mirage. The triple image, called a ‘‘sun- dog,” is a fairly common occur- rence, according to astronomy experts. It is caused by atmospheric con- ditions similar to those which make rainbows visible So relax. A sundog makes in- teresting viewing, but it really isn't) there | oe Dulles May Bare PlanstoFreel3 (Continued From Page One) lieve a blockade would bring on all-out war. President Eisenhower. who re- turns to Washington late today from a vacation at Augusta. Ga.., refused to comment on the Know- land proposal. Presidential News Secretary James C. Hagerty said the Dulles speech “had been planned for a week’’—and, therefore, is not in any sense an answer to Know- land - The blockade proposal won sup- port from two other Republican senators, Frank Barrett of Wyom- ing and Milton: Young of North Dakota However, Sen. John Sparkman (D-Ala), a foreign relations com- mitteeinan, said he does not see ‘how a blockade would hold out hope of getting our prisoners re- turned."" He expressed satisfac- tion with the protest made to the United Nations by U.S. Ambassa- dor Henry Cabot Lodge In New York, Lodge pointed out that decisions on what to do about Peiping’s actions rest with the President and secretary of state. At the same time, he labeled as “wholly erreneous” a printed report which said that Red China's latest “barbarism” Was not to be taken up at the U.N. There was anger both at the State Department and Pentagon One official pointed out that the men were captured during’ a war and were thus entitled to treat- ment as POW's and not as “politi- cal’ prisoners. It was recalied— that the Communist spy chief in South Korea was released to the North’ Koreans after the armistice despite a long list of war crime charges against him. 3 Teenagers Injured in Two-Car Crash BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP | — Three Pontiac were treated for cuts and bruises at St Joseph Mercy Hospital. Pontiac last night following a two-car acci- dent at the Woodward Ave.-Square Lake Rd. intersection Injured was John H. Briggs. 16 of 649- Homestead, driver of one of | the autos. and two of his passefi- teenagers gersgNorma Batton. 17, of WS. | Ast and Gerald Johnson, 15, of 9% S| Astor Police said Briggs. traveling north on Woodward, was crossing | the intersection with the green light when struck by the car of | Blair A. Jestice, 27, of &27 Pensa- cola, Pontiac, heading east on | Square Lake Rd ‘Naval Reserve Unit Changes Meeting Dates The United States Naval Re serve Legal Unit which meets, bi- monthly at the USNR Training | Center, 469 East Bivd., Pontiac. is | changing its meeting dates to the "second and fourth. Tuesday night of each month Reserve officers of any of the | U.S. armed forces who are tawyers | or who are interested in legal acti- vities, are eligible for membership. | Promotion and retirement points | may be earned | | Reserve officers interested | should contact Farrell E. Roberts | |at FEderal 2-6410, or Stanton G.| a at LIncoin 1-0426 in Royal | |iar with the appearance of Shep- Local Man Held Pontiac Deaths for Investigation “wan 'm-.m m » William O. Huntwork, 70, 101 W. Strathmore St.. died Saturday in Faces Vandalism Count; | Pontiac General Hospital after an P illness of four weeks. Companion Is Sought | Born in Carson City, Huntwork in Beating came to Pontiac from Newberry 24 years ago. He was ‘a retired employe of Fisher Body Division. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Beverly Fay and Mrs. Mon- A 24year-old restaurant waiter was beaten by one of two men whe caused considerable damage to the Elder's Drive Inn Sunday nie Anderson, both of Pontiac, and morming, according to Pontiac two sons, Elmo of Pontiac and Police Kenneth of. Saginaw. Also surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Jessie Graves of Tampa, Fla., | and Mrs. Rebecca Carder of Dry- den, and three brothers, Truman and Charles, both of Marion, and Walter of Jensen Beach, Fla. Other survivors are 10 grand- children. Service will be Tuesday at 10 /a.m. from Pursley Funeral Home, the Rev. David Mortenson of Mari- mont Baptist Church officiating Burial will follow in Johnsons Cemetery at Snover, Mich., where | graveside service.will be held. William O. Huntwork Mrs. Joseph G. (Gertrude) Me- Gaffey, 75, 23 Parkhurst, died Sat- urday after a two-year iliness. The daughter of William W. and Sarah Merrell Ballard, she was born in Oakland County. She was married ineDavisburg June 2, 1902. and came to Pontiac 45 years ago from Detroit A member of Pythian Sisters, she also belonged to Fannie Thompkins Temple No. 41. Surviving are three nieces, Mrs Mildred Chatterson of Drayton Plains, Mrs. Myrtle Parkinson of Au Gres, Mich., Mrs. Arna Car- -—- lisle_of Chicago, and two nephews. Ray Allen of Drayton Plains and Floren McGaffey of Sylvania, Ohio. Funeral service from Kirkby Fu- neral Home will be Tuesday at 2 Sheppard s Injuries p.m.. the Rev. Paul R. Havens of (Continued From Page One) First Methodist Church official wr wie urcn ol ting. taken there for treatment after | Burial will follow in Perry Mt telling investigators a bushy. Park Cemetery. haired man who killed his wife alse injured him in two scuffies. Thieves Enter Home The witness also said he spoke of Birmingham Man with Sheppard, and he said Shep- pard’s responses were “normal.” BIRMINGHAM — Thieves yes- What he described as a ‘marked ‘erday entered the home of Harold edema —a swelling—appeared on 1. Anson. 1712 Derby Rd.. through Sheppard's mght cheekbone and, & unlocked window, after first his right forehead, Hexter pulling wires from the outside said. and Shepard also had a ‘elephone box, police reported to- black eye day A felt neckpad was around Shep- escaped with nothing. pards neck and the osteopath SS ee moved his head “‘with some diffi- culty.’ Hexter said However, the physician con- tinued, he found ne discoloration and very little swelling when the neckpad was removed. Detective Thomas Mitchell said the pair, Benjamin J. Smith, 26. of 114 Forrest St. 1s being held for investigation of malicious destruction of property and another man is being sought for investigation of felonious as- sault. dames Terry, 24, of 27 Whitte- more St., waiter at the drive-inn who suffered two broken teeth, face and head cuts when hit with a chair, said the pair broke chairs by hurling them at fix- tures. one of They dumped mustard and cat- sup on the floors and tables and smashed bottles by throwing them at the walls. One of the men ripped the telephone from the wall, he added Terry told Mitchell that the two men began their spree after the waiter questioned them about tak- ing a carton of book matches The pair fled in a waiting auto with two other men and a girl, police said Mitchell said that Smith also has been sought’ in four traffic violation warrants. Doctor Tells Jury over There were severa] smal! abra- sions on the inside of the doctor's mouth. Hexter said. Hexter said Sheppard's brother. Dr. Stephen Sheppard, asked if he wanted to see X-rays that were taken of the osteopath’s neck and spine The examining physician said he did not. because he was not famil- pard’s neck and “I thought an examination of X-rays should be left more to an expert.” Lion’s Den Hosts Teens LYONS, Neb. # — Lyons has established a teenage center called the “‘Lion'’s Den.”* Genuine CHICAGO boys’ in biack brand At Simms the ONLY Difference Is Our LOWER PRICES ®Savings of 10% to 40% Freshest. Pure Drugs *Experienced Pharmacists ®Certainty of Satistaction [SIKAS, 98 N. Saginaw—Main Floor 12 Ladies’ Sizes—$7.98 White cowhide shoes, Precision ground blades with quick GREGG SHORTHAND MACHINE SHORTHAND (Stenotype and Stenograph) HIGHER ACCOUNTING _ COMPTOMETER and CALCULATOR er New Classes Today, November 29 | ei .- BAY, HALF-DAY, and EVENING Classes Continue in Ail Departments Throughout the Year Life-Time Employnient Service Free to Graduates VETERAN APPROVED | a W. Lawrence Btrest, Pentise ~ =~ Phaus VE 2-301 Call in Person or Return This ad for Bulletin . stop points. Chrome plated. f Not Cheap Of{-Brands — But GENUINE :- \ FIRST QUALITY os is Se ——. ~ eee, Girls’ and ledies’ in white leather, men’s and Genuine Leather Shoes Girls’ Ice Skates ave ‘7” Sizes Snow Too Late for Deer Hunters | Death Toll Mounts to 17 in Below-Par Season; Open Kill Wednesday By UNITED PRESS Snow fell throughout most of Michigan Sunday night but it came too late to salvage a generally sub-par deer hunting season. Both hunting pressure and deer | kill are expected to be down from | last year when the season ends Tuesday at 7 p.m. The’ general snow was the first in Michigan since Nov, 1 and the first during the deer season. Warm, rainy weather has made condi- tions poor throughout most of the season. State Police reported hunting deaths rose to 17 when gunfire wounds killed Marvin Gilbert, 27, Onaway, Saturday. Nine hunt- ers have been killed by gun- | five, while 8 have died from heart attacks. ' In addition, 37 hunters have been injured, _ The conservation department pre- |dicted 15 deaths and 60 injuries | during the 1954 season. Meanwhile, hunter attention turned to Wednesday's ‘‘any deer’ kill. More than 70,000 have been given permits to hunt during the oge-day season, but well below this number are expected to go into the field. Shooting starts at 6 a.m. 1,000 Attend Dinner for Williams Victory DETROIT (UP) — Nearty 1,000 persons were on hand last night for a ‘‘victory’’ banquet given for Gov. G. Mennen Williams and Sen- ator-elect Patrick V. McNamara Labor leaders attending the din- ner pledged to support Williams if he becomes a “favorite son’ candi- | date for the U. S. presidency or the vice presidency in 1956 Finlay Allan, secretary of the AFL Detroit Building Construction Trades Council, told the Demo- cratic governor he would ‘‘find us solidly behind’’ him in 1956 “And at that time it will be on ' a national basis,’ Allan said ' ; Texas has 24 counties of which 191 are producing oil and gas “ Men's 6 Boys’ 3 to 12 Ledies’ & Girls 3 to 9 O66 6 e-a) 6 «6 .. $3.59 to 4 ae Address Genuine Leather Shoes Boys’ Ice Skates Men's Sizes te 12, $7.98 steel : with — hardened N a= THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. NOVEMBER 29. 1954 Holiday Magic Dry cleaned color bright GENEY CLEANERS Pickup and‘ Delivery Phone FE 5-6107 Pa . 12 West Pike Street : detags ie Mrs. Marion Holland Drace St. groom. | Wer the ceremony, the bride chose a floor-length nylon over | slipper satin gown, with long | tied a cascade of white roses, | orchids and lily of the valley. specialist in) Pontiac Lake MOMS no.} . a to Sponsor Card Party local moving! will be served Re See S| tate. 0 te Cae | A dessert luncheon Gaukler Storage MR. AND MRS. CHARLES M, CASE Barbara Elaine .Holland Wed in Thursday Rites Elaine | Sister of the bride, Mrs. Bert ning in a candlelight service at the First Congregational Church. | Hickerson of Clarkston. Marie Val- of 310 | lentgoed of Kalamazoo and Hattie is the mother of the bride. Mrs. Florence Case and the | maids. late Vern Case, also of: Roches-| Lyle ter, are the parents of the bride-| served the bridegroom | sleeves of chantilly lace. She car- | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — wo | Pontiac Lake MOMS Unit 60 will - sponsor a benefit card party and ALLIED SO-cent gift etchange at 1:30 p.m. | an times, me | Wednesday at the home of Mrs. | Lorena Ogg. Elizabeth Lake road. SHOP Barbeque Sauce — 55 sa 4 8° MORTON sAnYens Mazola Carton of 3 29° Dawn Fresh Mushroom Planter’s Hi-Het Steak Sauce with Peanut Oil Gollon $ 2 Wild Root Cream Oil HAIR TONIC Medium 59: Size FELSO 2 Ug, Pgs uy Jennsitte of Rochester, Mrs. Ralph Maitrott of Rochester were brides- Buchanan of Rochester as best ;}man, and Tom Case of Auburn | Heights, Jim Reed of Rochester. | Bert Bartholomew of Big Beaver | and Don Pexley seated the guests. Flowef girl was Elaine Case, and | William Holland was ring bearer. After a reception at the Amer- | ————— | ican Legion Hall, the couple left | |for a trip to Niagara Falls and | New York. They will live on North | Rochester Road when they return. County Deaths Anna Akree ROYAL OAK—Service for Anna | Akree, 86, of 626 Hawthorne St. | will be Wednesday from the Miller Proceeds of the affair wil] be |@%4 Son Funeral Home, Brazill, |ased to buy Christmes gifts for | Indiana, with burial in Union | Cemetery, Brazill. She died Satur- ———— | GRY. Surviving are three daughters, | Mrs. Harry Taylor of Clarksville, | Ind., Mrs. Rance Vaughn and Miss Lorene Akree Royal Oak and three sons, Hugh of Pinckneyville, I., | Lawrence of South Bend, Ind. and Lemuel of Brazill Colin Houston BERKLEY — Service for Colin Houston, 67, of 1939 Cambridge, will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday |from the Virgo Kinsey Funeral | | Home with burial in Roseland Park | Cemetery, He died Friday. | Surviving are his wife, Mar- garet B., a daughter Margaret H of St. Thomas, Ontario, two sons, Colin J. and Allan N. at home, | two sisters, Mrs. Bessie Taylor of St..Thomas, and Mrs. Jean Coates, | Saskatoon, Sask., and one brother, | Allan of Windsor Ramous G. Brinkeb Sr. LAPEER—service is pending for Ramous G. Brinker, Sr. 63, of 1312 Sutton Rd., who died Saturday in| Flint, Surviving are his widow, Violet, | a daughter, Mrs. Russell Sickels of Lapeer, two sons, Ramous, Jr. of Lapeer, and Cpl. Robert G. Brin- | ker, USA, in Korea, four step- children, Mrs. Borji Lagerquist, of | Mt. Clemens, and Terry Arnold, Larry Arnold and Garry Arnold, (all at home, 10 grandchildren, and two brothers, Elmer of Pon- tiac, Clare of Lapeer. Safeguard Your Sight With Scientifically Prescribed LONG CREDIT EASY TERMS a Walled Lake Ist Prize at Chicago ROCHESTER — Cupid's Bow, owged by Dodge Stables of Roches- ter, won first prize for harness Cattle, sheep and swine will be judged at the 55th international live stock show in the Chicago am- phitheater today, in preliminaries to selection of grand champions. Steer classes for Aberdeen-An- gus and breeding classes for Short- horns, polled Shorthorns and Here- | fords will be among those judged | first, followed by a variety of other | breeds. bride of | Bartholomew of Big Beaver was | — Thursday wa matron of honor, and Mrs. Joseph ' Oxford Guild to Sponsor Cooking Demonstration | OXFORD — The Congregational | Church Guild will sponsor a cook. | ing school at 2 p.m., Wednesday in the Veterans’ Building. A cooking expert from Consum- ers Power Co. will demonstrate | food preparation, and door prizes | will be awarded. -_ — > TWIN BEDS! BUNK BED | ~ we IT'S ATRUNDLE BED! Js e Voting Today on Bond Issue, es Tax Boost Although voters will read on the Proposal that they are voting a Troy Union PTA to Hold Festive Two-Day Bazaar PTA will hold its annual Christ. mas Bazaar Friday and Saturday at the school. will be the toy auction to start | at 7:30 p.m. Friday, when used | toys, painted and repaired to look | like new, will go on the block. six mill tax increase to finance the bonds, the actual tax increase | will only be three mills. The proposed bonds would be spread over a 15 year period, with the last five years callable. This would permit full payment in ten | years, if valuations in the area | increase as expected. Both the school bond issue and | the millage “increase financing it | have the approval of the PTA| . | Sroups of the district, the Citizen's | _ | Advisory «and Save Our Schools | committees, and the backing of the board of education. |Missing Berkley Man Found Dead in Car | BERKLEY — Cari Foley, 4, of | 1237 West Blvd., missing. since | Friday, was found dead in his | parked car early Saturday. Keith | Tietz, his brother-in-law, discov- | ' ered the body at 6:05 a.m | Mr. Foley is survived by a wife | |and two daughters. Girls Plan Canvass WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The | | Neighborhood Girls Teenage Club | are planning to canvass homes and take orders for baked goods. Pro- jceeds will be used to buy toys } and favors to be given to shut-ins }at Christmas. <- => ie and Saturday. They will include | the country store, Three mills currently being lev- | linen, candy, white elephant, grab | fed for debt retirement are being | bag, book store, Christmas deco- | discontinued. | rations, plants, toys and refresh- ments. TROY TOWNSHIP—Troy Union| ' Big feature of the 2-day affair | Booths Will be open both Friday baked goods, FAST RELIEF HEADACHE When you suffer trom pain off Headache, Neuraigua or ‘ Muscular aches you want re bef and you want a fas! .. That's Bayer Aspinn! A tab | tet starts disintegrating almost the mstant you take &— therefor is ready to go to work with amazng speed WONDER Ser BAZ A FR ASPIRIN Don't Saffer Another Minute What ever you skin trouble may be. Head te foot Safe for children SALVE end SOAP Gunninghams Slate Dance at Leonard LEONARD — Addison Township Service Women’s Club will spon- sor a modern and ald time dancing party at Rowland trem 9 p.m. to 1 a.m, Saturday, — JOIN NOW... for a Merry Christmas in °55! Why pay for Christmas long after it is over with? Join our Christmas Savings Club for 1955 now ... save each week in regular amounts of your own choosing, Next year at this time you'll have a sizable check to spend on gifts. PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS | 16 E. Lawrence St. DRUG STORES | Trundle Bed Outfit As a compact bunk or trundle bed, as graceful twin beds, it’s sensational at thi get the two luxuriously springs, guard rail, and ladder! And colonial sty!- ing, maple finish enhance your room! Don’t miss this big, sovings-offer! 108 NORTH SAGINAW the handsome matching chest is included! You also s fabulous low price. And comfortable mattresses, *89* Chrome Dinette Amazing value! Beauti- § fully streamlined dinette with plastic table top! Phone FEderal AIL ‘49° $1.00 Weekly! NO DOWN PAYMENT... EASY TERMS: | ig} <4) i will FLOOR YOUN -_ oa. CHOICE SOS > “.W All 5-Pes. — —_—- - ‘ ~~ 7 « & o ie 4 i : es —) ——— ee ee a! f Oe, ee Oe 4 Se * ‘ Em oom f ( d V4 ‘es R , wee t 4 ' La | pad MIA a : j ue oa a $ z ted 5 | Pretty Skin Couple Married in East Result of aan Fa | Women Can Take town of white Chantilly type Ince Hint From Eating Give Feet of ey te was held = | Habits of Baby headpiece fashioned of matching . lace trimmed with iridescent se- Py ra malrsauhdeaiplaned Big Start quins and seed pearts, in is not propaganda Louise Shakarjian, | stetricians—it's true. An infant's to Beauty | bridegroom, was ate athe ‘skin is the softest, clearest, most | Alice Derderian and Shirley Nel- | satiny stuff in the world. And it's Special Care During Poa tot Pentine, Sooveiad to me oon ee Winter Leads Way attendants * ames women's length gowns | skin would thrive on. He eats plen- to Summer Appeal in aoetaee las tg ene ee | ty of health-giving foods—no fried Home to school, one class to | Or yetjow metus end (ene | foods or rich desserts. He’s washed another, up to the corner and back, a ce bg | & Ge purest of senge evtey day. gym class, dancing—a teenager | rosebuds. He's kept warm and comfortable works her feet hard in a short| Arthur Ajodoian of Niagara Falls | and is not subjected to debilitating day. Her footwork may not be as | Deeg. vest man and seating the cold weather, sain or office soot. fancy as Gene Kelly's, but it's just | the ies Misiieay la Pecan But it’s not long before the tn- as hard. Gulino of Rochester, NY ° e ’ fant's skin begins te look dike Though they work hard, feet sel-, | A dusty rose lace dress with Personalized Gift! | --c=-se'm som wire dom st the tention they deserve | Ma Semin ad wits in the world where the rest of us r a] : 5 go all Keeps Ice or Food Cold dwell, —_ cuyaing ts de. wtster with mary an eche, pain er - + v | t rather than ) Keeps Food Hot—Snacks | rad tte ae a . ee ee ee SEY 95 , where everything acts on the skin Insu “food bucket is so useful... keeps ice for hours First, skin beauty begins inside. | > her feet a start toward beauty mg ee nee het or od now you can || An unbalanced diet lacking in basic |” while she's doing something else— get immediate delivery . . . from our stock .. . receiver || minerals, vitamins and elements such as homework. Unlike hands, mails tn addressed t card for personalized cover .. . | will produce a skin no specialist feet don't have to be free while the plain cover that comes with the bucket can be used can save. their owner laps up textbooks as a secving tray or coaster for punch bowls, mixers, First move is a weekly soak in and en ee ee wae yen | the basic seven inte her diet if she a shin the inside out. ce : + Pentiae Press Pheote W } Arriving at Bethany Baptist Church to} } , & p : GGS Peewee poy ers pire make final plans for the annual church Mrs. Robert Sickels of Scott Lake road and FE é ee brain, let gne foot at a time soak in a small pan on the floor. While nS cipeggn » Sive the feet a or cabbage; potatoes or other vege-| bazaar and harvest dinner are (left to right) | Mrs. Earl Eddy of Liberty street. The affair poring Evisnetem out brush or a pe 24 West Huron wie Gok gay ae ee Mrs. Edward Lewis of Williams Lake road, | will be Thursday from I] a.m. until 7 p.m.| gy g, - Open Till 9 P. M. Friday and Saturday pote ling tap lghe ——* ici; Pack Mie cede Geo and butter or fortified margarine. ; ‘ Cat the galls straight across. “Saond" te cine cr iee n| According to Gentleman Bazaar, saleleall This’ be easy after thelr sot ves ravages that need to be re- ening soak. ermanen plexion left by drying sun and| “How do I tell a lady?” a dis-| mended, consign the gloves to by Baptists your stomach, assume the tele- water must be repaired. Soap and/| tinguished gentleman once said.) work duty Bethany Baptist Women’s Society phone-call pose for a chapter or $ 00 cleansing creams are a teenager's| “By her gloves and her shoes.” | When you extend your hand or wi) hoiq its annual bazaar and|'°: lie on your back on your bed P WwW aids here No woman can escape the truth | cross your ankles, your gloves and harvest dinner on Thursday with your feet resting high on the ermanent ave and u of these words, particularly a| Shoes speak for you They should Unusual merchandise at the |“. While your tired feet rest, Shop S teen r te designed to dn tha cnt im: | mature woman who must depend | speak the most cleanly, tactful booths will include Mexican feather |YOU brain will benefit from the va Soe Haircutting and Styling ext leaving. the skin @ry or | upon being carefully turned out | word of your habits pictures, wood fibre flowers, and | headdown ee @rawn, as soaps do to many | rather than being able to lean on a costume dolls. your ted with your te on ANNALIESE women, It makes a geod lather | the exotic touch. Mrs. Habel Heads In addition to these, aprons, | off, give the feet some exercise and the tube is easily carried in Bt ts net a hew truth. One of | ho greeting cards and jewelry, 8 | while you bone up on Spanish. Ro- , Beauty Shop the purse te places where a the most venerable of folk songs XMAS Works p pastry shop, candy store, gift tate your feet so your ankle mus- woman may be unwilling te use asks “Who's going to shoe your | shop, market basket filled with | cies get the kind of exercise they 80% WN. Saginew FE 2-5600 any old soap. pretty ttle fect and whe's | Members of Clarkston, Rochester canned goods and delicatessen | renerally lack. Next te Bantey Market (Over Tasty Behery) The thind skin-care principle is| geing te glove your pretty Uttle | and.Waterford branches of Wom- | Hems, and a fish pond will be | Then, with a touch of foot Ge wine ane of conmistion Geol, hand ...°" . len’s National Farm and Garden| ‘estured, powder between the toes, the feet Open Evenings by Appointment cosmetics are any woman's —r Association have been invited to| Luncheon under the direction of| will be as fine as a left hand with ogmate ‘weg cau | ane red “on sd ty ated Cran werk se |Mr,Bavard visite mrvd|s amend with the help of « beauty specialist | CA" complete & good appearance sored by Pontiac branch of the |torium trom Ii am. until 2 p.m. : + and painstaking application make | Twin it. - associaon Fellowship Hall wilt be the scene |MOther Should High-Schoolers— powder, lipstick, rouge, eye shadow | Careful selection starts glove) srg. Barney W. Habel is general | of the turkey dinner from 5 o’cock ar k; and eyebrow pencil of real value | Soe care. Comfortable and wise | chairman-tor the event which will |unti| 7, under the supervision o| Make Decision ; for a handsome skin. fit, good taste and durabilitY)}. “held fom 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. its fo-chairmen, Mrs. Earl Eddy ° HEALOII See what becoming things ——_—— should be the touchstenes. on Wednesday in the Waterford and Mrs. Robert Sickels. Booths: Nd Stick to It Beauty : h Competition Is Aid Sant guttetes be te Community Activities Building. will open at 11 a.m | Some things are very hard t0|] "tsp nathan, Mois to Tardeues’ : (competition. Set up a pool with! taprie er leather gloves. But |Workshop. She will be assisted by Baby. )" friends with a prize of © new! sometimes » costume calle tor | Mrs. Arthur T. Wilson, Mrs. Fran! Av, Honored neighbor pate Baby's lovely Seat Best Gift of All. ¢ BRAS and BRITCHES Mouse or belt for the future waist-| 4 yetle trippery. Select it with |Cis Jenkins and C. L. Leonard all He ad he eeards. | || Let Your Child Learn Accordion |line. Compete not on a pound-for-| 5 srostieal eye. ot Lansing. | Janiee Astena's citizenship class} T™ Cd bis feet aret” she 1h pnnnnnn~mnnncnan --aHake by FORMFIT |pound basis, but to make the win-| * ”~ | The workshop is being offered held a graduation party and pro-| “%Y* You see her baby in booties ||} “Lewes. GPP PLAN |ner the first to get down to her Painstaking care is the final | in cooperation with the extension | gram recently at Pontiac and mittens. Now you know that ©¢ Privete : | proper weight and hold it for a| and constant next step. ‘Shoes department of Michigan State Col-| School for members who became | 2#”Y'S feet and hands are cold Leasens ; | week. must be reheeled the minute they | lege Those who attend will learn | naturalized in court recently even when he's warm, and that > a $19% ; +++ proportioned te make the mos? of the | os start to blur out Dan tae | ees ey ant wither bane New Americans honored were| 200° tits to oithoet testa. a. . , ; | ‘ polished or steamed often. decorations, arrangements | Maura Land, Alice Shafto, Queenie letting without booties. = ede — —~ ‘ creat Yous Sgure—Why weer bees snd Don't ueeze Sty must be aired and kept in un-| and gift package wrapping. Beam, ivy Wettes, Aguas Wie ead y jor eu ce dered to| 0 , Lol loved on Ta a AL on . 00-198 be. Cab ogg ag ( wer div pon re driver’ Head la K another , after Hos-| Ashley; Sane ff SAMUEL Bo é ber Ay to % lo of the -first | carrots caro Ne Ti wo elas ee Caste hig 8. | mae ers school| MSC Delegati IN | 12 Mile omg at saladiebedt ond) tt? i dene ot re a3 et, paid Exrope iy December — Y ag Decem- | ee rab on bebe ound 2 Salata OEE the list aan Pontiac Police Sessions 1On at | ship in Farmington t and Parvell J. 0 oH} ny $f pak Bo eee i lower rear Steel Ls tel <<... —— fo | Vandals broke a Birsrion eal “Exploring b Oakland County Town-| and Hil Broa, ache. 1s Ly 80 to 1% lower ber 825 nged | 100" ono, 10438 bu 100-180 dow. airlines, as ceuceniuled ie but | DY bic 472 S. San t window of cation,” will the Future ties quoted sheriff’ service Rosyland Stoddard i en ee ybeans 1 , Decem ;_rye SS pk. Kohir = » and moti in Fe chee! aout St a | school bring of Edw | E Das other 3 depu-| Sohne will be held ‘Tue year of en uary to 2 ber $1.25%4; | Pa < taets. Wo 1100-13 ee | = si on ple meet | Perry St t -» owned superin ™% M “ driver Bets ful time ex Md po $2.84%: cents low 25%; Pesqersos dies - No i. e-1 rede Bg | Maki gns were tures. All | _, over the unian of bers of their tendents lichigan ing Lee tailed , of Detroi! . Thiel at me Punesel the nang. ee. Py of hendic area. cents andrea lard ." Jan- eet a - Speak a hero | steels ns progress rall, . | H. D. M weekend. 21 Michig boards of a mem- the area ecigg st ‘ as say- Mr ry Mo oome a w start ee } $14 to 32 - 1 hie Ne 1. a had sing bag. cals, nd raiis wa along wi Point . McLaughlin feren State tion to he Lee auto at ison may be . ee from v 05 is lower, |? 5-180 S0-ib M%4-bu dos. P behs. | 2 radié-te ere oil ith , Milford of 8960 , Nov. 3 lege for , pped but did told deputies pananel: at the Otfic a | dan tee tag u Mesttaee Hg es enced ng ith that someone 1 reported saaty|_ Dr. Dana P. White or 8 cob: |thecroning set Kiperte| Ma |. Bree nec ain Pri | hott ba. atte aa No 1a 9 aoe York Ce metals, sieratis, | ued at outboard his 12-f Sentay tendent of P. Whitsier ._ oo ; appceuchiadr RACE. HOVEMEER . mee ices | Ritabagas No 4 black. a L 126.1 aoe ak issue, nonin Friday's | Cou at $200, ac motorboat ~ = Lol . superin- Cc : me 88: Ave., 7 ee Nn P . Riv- BAKER - whee Nov - Pyar beige aie Rey , a | . ares up Snead today a nty sheriff's —— to Oa z = represent ig, board s, and lass to Vi Gear ster wile of Clare. oe MACHUS SHOP Rae Sara ta eee we te in ra | oa ieee ta town ah al arse rl Sc an a =F tis ce range May. “fea see = pom 4 =4 ore ae: ire iea8 hieh war | bockn aire. meio ee tere, Mrs. Carvis A raga ag Dated oppareanity nM e| Des. Wesley. Matte Mat apoesrance Apply Malin ry KING STREET 1 and gved chars Kgl Bo cir 4! tease Gn 33 | D’Arey his bi Arcy of Al Oak Mrs. Carrie Mardot off j =a — “Malthews Fu and * as JRronT0, ws, a ane Reurs 18.00-34.00. eari7 Yogi og a. tome 11.4 of Ki brother ric Edna of ven — 24, 1984 foie ue Puneral Riki . CANADA bn Tara cod omnes posth a a‘nw ine onda a | rented ingston, a ._ Frank ty, three Whitmer Royal H. L 7 P.M. at Coats house = = light 10 oo. f 13 & Tr 23 at re stil aes ta = °_ Sepallinagrcagy mostly 8 a 5 | lowing Ironwood still bei thews of brothers. of Imlay ADA R a Rev ts ings ty ‘or bustier atest stead’ cinern ‘T30 Maran Piid... 313 | Ne See cee ng | imagen of en » Cecil chy cle fe Ouse, Part Com Interment = ean fine ok bts See a aa _R 7 fol- t af Branch, _Mat- Notice “ie ae phere intl ag Me metery t Zon oon ase plentitel. “it a Stat ses usi gE repented today lal ft | Matthews, of “Ohio, a Mat | can coe, Cronos nt | Satascrnl “ae | St ae wha caty ——— fedg hae ie Sas | ngunce caives| 8 ness Note phn. Hawle Rochester a sd Absalum | 50 Werk en Sccleies anal inet Sis Sashes |e Essie “ie ‘Sppetmamen Gate enhabte ; cull oe } EB. -4 J 50.000 os Arcy, said y, daughter seven Saginaw Whitfield Relat. Card jence % vacuum c ' , tility CP associates at fered that her of Ben| WA Edward N To: M Street to Edt Street from of Thank Sion plan offered cleaner vady but ma + ad sf, te an tment store . natior the _ inj ribs and father suf-| 5 TERFORD oon — M ) a. Corp. St. rt no cae 1 "call PE 2010. Employers cmca mee not tal estaniohed ees mn will re. |e a eee wales Willams Lae” Neen Qh tn Cummingn Charles « “t.-4 Benson tor, eur tind i ge “ LET Attention AGO LIVEsTocK cinaiad <0 ue 4 re- home lronwood cited Lake 6, Marion ries so Terry. OD SS oo potgheese 14,000; pa Her from Rd. of J. aan wane us yoga ee hy y. com to pay- uncle a on the at 8 will 133 | Ber & TA oD a olke., & SOLVE to mostly ty active (AP) ' toda pany offic: two weeks ing , Frank hunting Smith p.m. os be Ine J OE ney Swope ly of Wy ords. and Your stances up more ive a woevens strong Papelseserd treated Oboe: a Sites ae ey 2 Benes: Poreat, “Clarence, Mead, me Ce ia :.- e # oy: goes SS Payment will be e for head ~ themed at 9 &. High Home, Brace- Grace. Marvel. A x wikins, Duel? in M " er Reterences Snates ae . some stes Wednes- mployed made ochest rick m Mass will ontiac, | "a2 Aken . Louis emorian RIED Applicants No 1 a> to 2 lower carts, part-ti throughout to all Garden ook be sung not and te 8. J. Sutter, i Dn Lowa ' 2 ep seroma Pre-T. choice pray ix erly, | less me and 194 Plans ship White at St. — ot bay RE go Bronson MEMOR : 6a 6 FOR ested ap gh aa om than othe: while Benefi Club , with burial Loko Pat. | Assessor i - ey terested, take ago. Fegan) fina in the othes years of age. ; 8 es ae a rs employed etery for of the porod Ts JAMES the a age. oe 0 chert Gut Tyo small year it Affai . He in Mt. Sean. | alee ang egy Bpecial Who loved away 1 Should a work, eB war ate ems he the ler paymen will ‘Trecet ROCHESTER. wr ear |e of the Bn tne Cty ts game, knotbey year others — 5% both tp to ins: s few $30-380 th IT 78- paymen ts. Officials said benefit —A Bridget; conctt ie Satta tee Com: Thoughts U year taht ain ae ie Er ee ee Dna sales in ts are jals said the Coffee ° include hi special = no Permanent “ue @n one BRR «few ont 194 a res Rochest scholarshi Hour to | “@¢? > one son, his mes S. a, -H-- ‘missed At. Eermeneet yeu public. pes o aa pm 1700-17 ult of F fund ; and ‘ widow from curb. tor and by wife ever man around 7: good > Bone ” ee ee of the | tr twe Archié of Pon. |™ et Ls Cl es Mr_end rite and chidres work for a _Stulebaker =P Farm and Cardy Atociton il nr. Pikey ot Poni Pon | See, See Spee fet St, Bre APPLy y.renson Bend, In ackard tomorrow 10:30 will Connors of portman ities tor public deughter day that Y id. caauitea P.M at the a.m. to 3 of Detroit ee: | commintee tad te te pubiie | Alwa eghiey irene Semin, “wh Fred two exports ikesell home p.m. Mrs. : PBs gp B mag ~ ney that way. rs ago who F Tho soul lines of to | ington. 3285 of Mrs. vamaaeeaen a of the 2 wee . Novem- | Circulati mpson . Nov POULTR by a Popper thse ae West Rd. J J. Grace Deasmter SD. tee rag ag hh Pew in ani unselfish FT lation De =f , MON. 38 KAP) Y Dee single divi be pended Some 150 _ Wash- Mrs. Clare _ review Ry -— Municipal 4 my ee and ‘he Ponti pt. RY trot for ees paid 1. sion issued invita Grace, J eacace an hy HR —. g ree =, of —— r equal you me Pr broilers ge tor Egg The etfecti to tions A » 38, for interested a a ee ite the a ess Cresees or fryers om. qe new ve | the members have ve., will of 32911 Adams Dated: ay will be time Gh< died t came ae Se Get Rene 18, hee give y export garden and been | Wedn be Grand ) | -7 yg pene ae —— = = to an | bene 1%, teawy | deal SS ee tair ee ednesday held River 24, 1884. Sadiy moet m, 4-4 yy Hi Grav | repres pany world will | sell, conpenstred attend ot | Methodist at 2: oa ag . everyone's ““Tarkeye: Mart Pfau te poor at = direction 0 and de | Haynor o Fred = Sire, Bike Meio hrc, Farmingion ® Evens. get ees and and , exis. reported abouts al ot Vi will be | Commi ot the — and —d the Thayer Funeral Hon burial Notice Nor “ee : me steady. N pany . Hutchin ice Pres- ttee ays and ive Home by | 2” of 6) Flo | Carryover: ae said son, the . Means Sunday. Cemet in North Recap Special ~ eure wers hourly Pies seo coe com- - ery. She West SS Tescragh Reed bom a pA CHICAGO Motor er Corp a Surviving died Sven ma 3 » aE - stony receipt apr mer: mic Spy ne pri | Pigures after sala Pina ag Bred Lei ona nee tree i an" Applicants ma h te fot aaa "any soage ta8, (reer. ae an merged last Palawin Joos pees Ge age gy Merilen husband | oT, talrarae _ Funeral PE 23173 FE cy Satya. | ; yester- a“ Stude a Alto and Dale Adams age ys > = Harold Direct ‘ - 7 RIK « 4 C. Navigation High —_— children. Calif G. ry mimes Jerome L. rece, Bon Prutow, ors 4 heave ts “S ; Car F - 1s .. also two of Cufford Mme /———— V scope trailer ; ‘ lips WwW. Masco n Products . 144 18.4 grand- Nathan rE Robert Ward. oorh 10-12. . move r al (over 8 Bb. s; Woman Midwest 2 & Dorts Mrs. wy Re! ee : Saf chien | r + 38, (under — Hu Maven Abrectey®” ... a 3 33 Race one te oll pao Nichols FUN s-Si cer ; p rt Wa Mfg.* 1 2. 31 _notiee: te all Be = 4 Cars INE pie bb.) 1. : yne Screw? 1 3 ae persons Ambulance “RAI of used tw ) : contr 7 | "iota, ba ane a fs # lenda = i nersotore Interested. take > One gee fas sales “to © ; : = =~ 1 : the E.R, - E 2-831 , ——— =< 3 Ht] armas mreeame Se f | eenacenene. Berane, af éatraying Donel ct tor | Aen = was “wad Orion T o oro 1 om. Church W } ma! 4 could be ch tbe Commie: son-loh app yanted Female f ——- Hospital at Pon ip. Mra cheon BCs will * = SE. borne _“pestoNED Fe n¢ $0 TO RAR 7 ' : : . when for scalp tee General Prev. de ; meen Sens from a io toe NED POR PUNER - 70, 8 WEEELY TO : | ew a Sapper General fen ie iE at ale pies pees = nar See kere ~ ear cou 110.0 4 Wt a . is now on at ily A ‘ 7 ae omer, ago... seas pow 66h sen | ° inspection tile pare Lots _ 446277. mily car necessary. Dee t WHEN YOU "dl Formosa i 1983 3 133 28° 143 | aoe . thet the Part : RTs AND interview. ‘Ml | NEED _foman sa ea ee —— Pa kes ome ‘= Here’ BED MONEY. , , eee oe Hoe Extension : sees moved, Bar to fill “future vecun re's of —$20 - over in 1895, ~ eae bam| ama BS ms Sata ae noes tet 3 = ? tenes in. "iows vacancios “in” tie 3 at you do . tier Work! War Tt by the Flatfish 5 508 uy on home for a will persons interested te | ~ of } 2 yr off . Si to tod | win 7 fee © Detinek Dated: es Salary es faly time | oe ice. tionalist be replaced halibut ue sad : ™ swovember’ 2 BOX a sandierafe be you need Tell telephone Chinese. ae and _ flounder. poostanet. the saws ©. 6758. ™, heard. au REP on gar tose’ | fs 5 us or cal “Na- on one dab, have ° sole Troy ‘ heart ; 1984. LIES loca start, a eNO “= much 1 San’ visa ces both * | Soha i pool et _“ a SS { ry ENDORSERS R aecommeety on i are ei head as ads, school $0 pm. 5 Girl ba 8 SvaEe. Pad j a side with : will Nov Tao ese th were Cass NS ON miinesnd of the bead Photo flash bulbs “_ = Presa office in. t LOA at @ CHOOSE SALARY, C | @uctd commercially the following ; ’ A States YOUR O R OR FURN in 1930. in the United i, boxes: WN ITU ‘ %, M, ; ° P ‘Saaltary Special = 4, 6, BB, B, 28, centeemere guey | lenin : ltdeatode Scan mens 7 SSS E BN Payments Ge +.) Payment i trem te A 1 . “, 99, 94, m4, } - inctude