The Weather Cloudy, Mild Details page two / ; ‘f "Kk, ASSOCIATED PRISS UNITED PRESS PHOTOS INTERVas"ONAL NEWS SERVICE q¢ — ~+ Missing County Flier ~~ ie : ee AP Wirephete MISSING IN ANTARCTIC — John Floyd Jr., 25, of Southfield Township, is one of eight crew members missing aboard a Navy plane which disappeared on a flight from a trail post 400 miles east of Little America V base. Floyd is a Navy aviation machinist. Search tor Plane’s Cre Widens Over Antarctica The search for a Southfield Township navy man lost with seven others on an Antarctic flight widened today, as more planes and men were thrown in the effort to leader said many drivers merely mated 45 miles an hour early to-| day. recover the lost plane crew from the frozen wastelands. John H. Floyd Jr., 25, of 23126 Almira, is the son of Mansure Quits srorwte"tma the nos Office in Capital morning that their son, a veteran of nine years of General Services Chief naval service, was missing on the flight. In Washington. the Navy ordered a P2V Neptune patrol bomber just back in the United States from Under Congressional, Antarctica, to return and partici- Administration Probes pate in the recovery operations. | The plane disappeared last Fri- SVASHINGTON day, and the last distress signal “w—Edmund F-.| was heard Sunday. It was be- Mansure has quit as general serv-| lieved the plane was forced down ices chief in the midst of congres-| by bad weather conditions. sional and administration investi-- Ground rescue parties have gations of has official conduct scoured the area where the ill-fated Mansure's resignation—effective Plane was thought to have gone down, but no trace of the plane or crew have been uncovered. CITED AS HERO Floyd was cited for heroism dur ing a helicopter rescue while on duty near Korea. on or about next Friday—was an- nounced by the White House late yesterday To replace Mansure, President” Eisenhower appointed Franklin G. Floete as acting general serv- ice administrator pending The flight was part of Opera. Floete's formal nomination te | tion Deepfreeze, the Navy's ex head the government's vast pedition to the pelar icecap. , rath 5 - housrkec ping) operations Flying from Marie Byrd Land to The 66-year-old Floecte. a resi- Little America with members of a dent of Des Moines, Iowa, now is trail-blazing party whose vehicles assistant secretary of defense in had broken dow n, the plane made charge of properties and installa- its last radio contact 67 minutes tions. after takeoff. Bad weather has NO CHARGES TOLD hampered search efforts. An exchange of Mansure and —___ __ 6 Die in Same Way Eisenhower letters, made public by the White House, made no men-, tion of charges that Mansure had) INDIANAPOLIS (—Indiana had recommended a Chicago Republi- six traffic deaths over the weekend can leader for msurance brokerage and each of the victims died when business in connection with a 43- his car ran off a road and struck million-dollar government nickel a tree. plant expansion project in Cuba - = Mansure has denied these charg in testimony before a House Government Operations subcom mittee. After the House investiga tion started, Eisenhower asked for a special report on Mansure’s role in the case ns Condemn It Sam L. Stolorow of the city’s proposed $690,000 Six Stores Damaged municipal parking program, last night blasted the proposal declar- n Lincoln Park Fire jing it “Socialism in its purest and LINCOLN PARK (INS) — Fire finest sen seand almost smacking raged out of control in six shops’ of Communism.” in the business district of Lincoln! Stolorow, manager of Pontiac's Park today, Outdoor Parking Co., together with The blaze was first discovered L. B. Doggette Jr., president of at 3:40 a.m. the National Parking Association, Hit by the fire were the Rose and William Coy, general manager Je-velry Store Neisner, Bros., Inc., of the Detroit Parking Assn., the Father and Son Shoe Store,’voiced strong opposition to muni- chief opponent Robelle Shops, Cunningham Drug cipal parking before a session of: Store and Vanity Fair, all on Fort'the Pontiac Real Estate Board at Street. the Waldron Hotel. To complicate the situation, the transformer which controls traffic lights at the busy intersection of Fort and Southfield, was burned, out and Lincoln Park police had to call on Ecorse police to help with’ Pontiac voters will go to the or not the city will Issue $600,000 in revenue bonds to finance 624 additional parking spaces, the traffic congestion .at the cor-” Stolorow continued by urging ner. merchants to take heed. “What fS a Can Se and Map of Search Aréa (0 OS | FRANKFORT. Ky. «®—The gov- side and slammed into the middle the expressway. Then they ran - tio) masked bandit who claimed) ernor’'s office says a moonshine of the train after the engine and home he was a member of the “Mutt! still Lt been found at La Grange forward cars had passed through BUNDLE OF RAGS and Jett’ duo) more than $6,000. State Reformator the landslide Seeeis 6 inwaee. Boo The’ Gendipliwearing el navy ‘el Leporowski, 58 stopped his car sued jacket and brandishing a O f ] Pp 7 \ on the expressway when he no- chrome - plated automatic forced pponen ts O 1 ty a Ie ki Nn g Proposal ticed something that iooked like night porter Jack Katchmar, of De polis March 5 to decide whether : Main Routes Clearing Today Bitter ly Fought Ice Coats Local Roads; Measure OK'd Schools Close Up Early in 33-33 Vote : dow . [reopen roads blocked by the worst : ala ere at ah tes ere a [oats teat Me thes Expected fo Sion terday, area drivers escaped with) Panhandle and South Plains to. _ ae a pe Legislation Banishing nl only three injury accidents plus ai day in an effort to prevent suf- | tn Pontiac) Mire 7 eck jreeen. of F d | Cont | Sell beat, ~ (397 E. Mansfield, found a way Federd ontrols — of iggeec bora eee fering and possible tragedy. lto beat the icy sidewalks. She| Warmer ‘emperatres_and al, Pines paraled the Planuiey dented er mutans Hal she!) WASHINGTON ? — A ight salting operations | by the & ' . : = i Pattie Worka Basar |to isolated areas, a hay lift toto pick up her daughter, Eileen, bill to free natural gas pro- SS Coes Road se i SS han ~d marooned cattle was being and a neighbor, Stevie Coyle, when, ducers from direct federal and y ommission leit adied and bulldozers worked to they arrived home from school. |, iis ee ile te — price controls was passed most main reads clear of ice this | morning. leurs 49 iby the Senate last night i = | — bask ures remained Ww ill the Consumer Benefit? ‘53-38 and sent to President Eisenhower. Here Is What the Gas Bill ™°"..ers ana. op Will Effect If Made Law iponents, in the three weeks lof Senate debate which WASHINGTON (#—Just gas bill do? schools were forced te close to- | day rather than risk bus trips. The forecast was for partly cloudy, but milder weather tonight jand tomorrow with 26-30 low to- jnight and a high 34-38 Wednes- a) Preceded the vote, pre- dicted Eisenhower would - | Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 29. First, it would take away the Federal Power Com. |S!8n _—_ ee tn oe \ |7e thermometer registered 34 at mission’s authority to fix producers’ prices for natural | were beaten down by margins sim- mM. Sy Other parts of Southeast Michi-, 845 sold to interstate pipelines. what would the natur. y. The low temperature today in jilar to that On final passage. Second, it would establish a “reasonable market, The Senate then accepted » fixing the rates; Yereee which the Meuse hed ap- ‘gan were not so fortunate yester-| \day. The freezing drizzle and rain price” standard for the FPC to use in AP Wirephote caused one death and sent : ! 3 ee SEARCH AREA — Cross locates Antarctic area where ground |than 500 to hospitals in the Detroit | Pipeline companies my parties are searching for a U. S. Navy plane missing since Friday on area. charge local distributors. | | Priscilla Armstrong, 7, of Scie | Distributors’ rates to con- (yigantic Power a flight (symbol and arrow) from Marie Byrd Land to Little America Township, near Dexter, died im sumers are fixed by state| for the bill, Opposing it were 14 V base. 7 : University Hospital, Ann Arbor. ‘regulatory commissions. No en : . \federal agency can touch Plant Planned allied oa Sere 3 Train Derailed icans and 24 rats them. | The vote came at the end of a by Landslide 120° 0° 90° proved 209-263 last year in place of the one drafted by its own Commerce Committee. That action bypassed another test in the closely divided House. , On the- final Senate test, 31 Re- publicans and 22 Democrats voted Motorists Must Clear Ice, Snow From Windows driven by Mrs, Wanda Maytyk, 33, of Scio Township, was unable Hospitals reported most injuries the Harris-Fulbright bill, 250,000 .Watt Unit on CASE DISCLOSURE were minor, resulting chiefly from through its regulation of “Saginaw Bay ‘land A disclosure by Sen. Francis her way to school when a car PRS yrs, Sponsors have claimed Consumers Will Build 10%-hour Senate ‘session. ' Case (R-SD) that he had rejected 4 | The warning that drivers are re- falls on the ice. Pontiac General | /quired by slate law to remove all’ and St, Joseph Mercy Hospitals Pipeline neat helt a ae a proferred $2,500 campaign con- i@ ice, snow and other obstructions) B&O Passenger Cars treated 31 people hurt in falls; | to influence the price of; LAaNnsinG w—Consumers Power tribution, which he said seemed : 4 were admitted. igas at the wellhead. ecco ge AA phecoriags Pitre Opponents have said very little, a 250,000 kilowatt generating plant! fina) tally. Case. as he had G ‘missed classes and school buses i" the way of consumer protection'on submerged land at the mouth said he would do, voted against : | WEST NEWTON, Pa. w — a ‘tt four hours early to take saad P= - et “Thy @nrrandin —— semen wa Mich [rit | Hestclll | Sescaibed jas) separ: rolling oon om a rain- SS ee | the eateanle market price’) nay ona, | (R) and Scamers «Ds wan | Assistant Sen. Lynn Franci# (R-Midland) | * : jlandslide jently numerous violations of the’ i - ' ‘law yesterday during a freezing sodden hillside struck and derailed) poatise Schools J. Cecil Cox said 'standard as a “gimmick which) ° tm ont ae oe State |e ease bill = exempt nat- /rain which covered windows with a Baltimore & Ohio Railroad pas-| 300 jeceeeny mene at Ge trot Conevation Digertment selllby ‘the Federal Power Commis thick coatings of ice. The safety senger train moving at an esti-| home 45 minutes early yester- | about 950 acres of the land to the} | company. |Co. announced plans today to build |to be intended to sway him for the A from car windows was issued to-! ibill, apparently had little effect on |day by Clyle R. Haskill, chairman ,of the Safety Committee, Chamber |of Commerce. The reminder was prompted by: Struck in Pennsylvania; One Person Hurt Most of the dispute hinged on =e. John M. Nelf of I |removed enough on. their wind- day. ; | a provision that the pipelines’ . exington, ‘shields to see directly\ahead. = | Qo _ | Some .19 inches of rain fell in| |. sale rates shéald reflect 0 In Jackson, Justin RK. WhIINE, | Neb insisted there were “no en ae ~ hick ne car was overturned, two ‘the Pontiac area yesterday and the ,, a | chairman of the board of Can- | . = Citing Section 709 of the Michi eihacw tied and (@ase asove de" fic ti as Scaled (art reasonable market price” paid strings attached" to his offer of | gan Vehicle Code, Haskil} said the = ive-day forecast ¢ “,| to producers. sumers Power Co., said the plant | the money to Case. ; railed within a few feet of the (more. Utilities companies reported aw ist will be rgest > unit ; hie siathetricted ‘cen in front, SHEE! Yourhlogheny River. The no service breakdowns yesterday. Under the FPC rate-making pro im the company’s system, | Senate leaders pushed today for at the sides and in back. Viola.| “ese! engine and two cars re- | Temperatures are expected to|cedure. pipelines would not be) |. te bein comstrac:|” speedy investigation of whether 4 tors can be ticketed. he said. and, Maimed upright on the tracks. remain above normal in this area allowed to charge off as an ex: o ee B ay construc-, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) required to appear in court to pay, Only one passenger of the more Until Saturday or Sunday. [panes any semoentt Ores + 1GSOR: | a de viow (a punting ihe’ Best] ‘ — than 100 aboard the train required The rain and sleet was spréad /Able market price [ates into service in 1989," he said Judy Returns . soos ‘hospitalization. He was detained at, over almost the entire eastern |ESCALATOR CLAUSE He said future expansion will ; to Her Husband, Drops Divorce HOLLYWOOD wW—Actress Judy iGarland has returne dto their McKeesport Hospital for treatment half ef the country yesterday. of possible back and neck injuries. - - : = aoe The railroad said he was James Ohio Accident Death Report Found False <.vaise””” ‘Truck Crushes Detroit Sledder This would affect both new andiultimately give it ‘a capacity, lrenegotiated contracts between greater than the present capacity | pipelines and producers, and con- of all Consumers Power generating ‘tracts now in force. ‘plants. The present capacity of the, % _ | As for present contracts, the | systems is 1,560,000 kilowatts. | “reasonable market price” NEAR PRESENT SITE lhome and will drop her divorce standard would be used in check. The plant site is adjacent-to the suit against him, producer Sid Luft ing on the operation of so-called jcompany’s present generating reports, “There was no warning of the larfislide.” a B & O official said. He said normal] speed for passen- | Through an error yesterday, Ronald L. Steele, 24, of 121 Qr- chard Lake Avenue was reported t th rea was 45 Pa ” i aes q kitted in an sate colligion’ Satur” ea in the area : escalator’ clauses. |Plant on the east side of the Sag-| “She went to her sister's,” he ; day near Bowling Green, Ohio. | ; 14-Year Old Bo Dies | Many gas purchase contracts naw River where it flows into told a reporter, ‘but she came : An alleged relative telephoned, Train No. 18, eastbound from gee y \written the last few years contain| Saginaw Bay. home Saturday and we had a good, , bsuch clauses. One type provides for| The company recently announced old-fashioned talk. I guess we had lan automatic. increase in a pro-|Plans to acquire two other power|been working at cross-purposes, Using Ford X-Way; ing through hilly country about ‘ 5 30 miles southeast of Pittsburgh | Police Seek Drivér when the accident occurred at | 1:25 a.m. | but Steele and local relatives re-! the report from Ohio to The Press, Cleveland to Baltimore, was roll- | | ported the error today | Steele said that his wallet with identification had been lost about a year ago, and possibly some of his identification was being used by someone else. DETROIT (INS) Recent heavy rains apparently oid Detroit boy went sledding last caused the landslide that sent tons s 1 of rock crashing down the hill night. He didn’t return home, the railroad said. . * at the mouth of the Quanicassee. Friday and filed a divorce com- ‘plaint charging extreme cruelty. Title- Winning Couple Police in Bowling Green report ed that there was no fatality in- volving a Ronald L. Steele. | River . A 12-year- it could refuse the pipeline per- One of the proposed sites is on problems. At any rate, we worked 'ty. The other is on Saginaw Bay, .Miss Garland had moved out joining siding were blocked by the the icy slopes of the nearby Edsel , H | p k Spare ogayspy division point at Connellsville, Pa.. bankment to his death under the | NE tK Magistrate's Court yesterday why continue the east aroeey | the overpass above, “IT liked them.” jtold The Associated Press that in-|ski, 13, raced to-a@ store and) lducer’s price beyond what the| Plant sites on the Great Lakes for) “I believe I hadn't been paying [Commission considers reasonable, | future development. jenough attention to her personal (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) | Lake Michigan at the mouth of the things out and everything is = 5 Big Pigeon River in Ottawa Coun- smooth again.” : * * * s Raymond Kovalyak tired of an | 0 § 0d 30th _mainiine tracks and an ad- Sledding in a vacant lot, went to, ——— debris. However, four passenger Ford Expressway. In Wife Fancier cars were sent from the road's: ‘There, he raced down an em- | INS) — Juan coupled to the engine and took ‘heels of a truck while two play- | | Ramos, 27, was asked in Bronx passengers from No. 18 aboard to i bf bad pla; Armed Man Gets $6,000 P ger r mates watched helplessly from | 3 | After- Forcing Porter he married three women without . : | | Doo | divorcing any of them. He replied. Pete Webb, a West Newton resi-| Raymond's companions, To ny, to Un ock uf dent who went to the wreck scene,| Henderson, 12, and Bobby Kowal- Where There’ il dications there were that a big asked someone to call police be- : ere’s a Sti | * * * boulder had rolled down the hill- cause a boy had been hurt on An early morning armed rob-| bery of a Madison Heights bar at! 623 W. Eleven Mile Rd. netted aj troit, fo open the front door of the bar a ‘bundle of rags.” mond's broken body, ' Police were unable immediate- ly to identify the boy. They started ‘ ° ° , 5 It was Ray- a) Socialism Project The subject then forced Katch- they are advocating is not the Doggette and Coy spoke of free I a g a 10use-to-house search of the American way of hfe. What they enterprise in the newly-created area for his family him to a pole wits pee ave ‘doing 38 contrary to every- parking industry and charged it . according to Captain oe a ot thing they stand for, government was being threatened by “muni- Raymond's mother, Mrs, Jose- Richardson of the Madison | “Heights police. Katchmar told police the bandit, then broke into the bar safe, with: a crow bar, discovered a key to! the cash register, and then re-| moved $6,817.75 from both ; Richardson said the porter heard: another man in the bar as the’ bandit was tying him up phine Kovalyak, 38, finally learned of her son's death. She said Raymond had not wanted to of an ge ana eee go out but that bis twe friends and it will continue to do so i kept calling him. the threat of municipal parking is -- eliminated.’ Doggette declared. | The victim's companions finally “If any parking problem exists were located. They told how they in Pontiac, Doggett said, ‘I be- refused to accompany their friend lieve it is to make better use of down the embankment, how he -existing space." trjed in vain to stop his maynging Also stolen in the hold-up was 2) Coy, after explaining ho wthe Sled on the icy slope just before 32 caliber revolver, Richardson! Coy, after explaining how the it disappeared beneath the huge said private enterprise parking system Wheels As the handit left the bar, that business men and politicians: Police are searching for the Katchmar told police he shouted, ( in business, government taking of property through threat of con- demnation, and unfair tax-free sub- sidized competition.” Paul A. Kern, Pontiac realtor, angrily said, ‘With fear of being called a Communist or Socialist, I will still say that I favor mu ‘nicipal parking.” cipal intervention. “Free enterprise is doing a fine Speaking before Stolorow, both AP Wirephote RELAX AFTER OLYMPICS — Austria’s Tony Sailer and French skier Francine Breaud make a title-winning couple at @ ‘party for In Today's Press County News omad ; “ ! : eat ais g Pontiac and other cities, use truck driver, whom they believe “tell your boss that Mute and Olympic athletes in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy. Sailer, triple winner Sports x 4a, ag the parking industry “as a whip- did not know he had struck \the yore were here.” in the Alpine skiing events, was nominated hero of the winter games Theaters ... 29 Ping boy” for other problems boy. The suspect wae described as Which were concluded over the weekend. Miss Breaud, an alternate TY & Radio Fregcann tS Leelee’ Day Apeetsl “North te Adventare"—O8CR Wilante hetveen 3 to 3 years old, 5 feet. Member of her‘ country’s ski team who decorated the slopes although Wilson, Hart mM ‘Holdens nen paver inte meri’ pontiac eh And! § inches and weighing around 135 not called on to compete, was picked prettiest girl wn the Olympic ’ Wernesdar Double tame ‘ torium urs. Eve, Fed ieker ’ z Women's Pages 11, 1%, 13 Lisa & steedard Segrice or gss Oakland soo i _* pounds. i | show. “i ° ¢ % A % i t . ‘ 4 . + . { > 4 ‘ ‘ Pog ey, i {- ve : é : ! a ‘ | ? of j i f } ‘id Ps 4 \ , } THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 195. 'No Farm Plan ‘Really Helped Official Tells Growers Not to Lean on U.S. for Price Answers SPRINGFIELD, Ill. #—No gov- rment farm program ever really helped farmers, says Charles B. Shulman, president of the Ameri- ican Farm Bureau Federation. | * * «© “The American farmer is failing ‘to share the nationwide prosperity primarily because of unwise gov- ernment programs which we asked for and now can't get md of,” Shulman said last night. EMIL F. JAWORSKI FLOYD P. MILES Shulman, whose organization | claims te be the nation's biggest _ Two Nominating Petitions jm cms ai Filed With Clerk Evans ‘Republican administrations “since prices have declined by | 28 per cent while costs went up Two nominating, petitions for-103 Summit St and Emil F 2% per cent in the last five years seats on the 1956-37 City Commis- worski, 39 of 691 Stanley Ave —during administrations of beth | ner: represent} ne Distrees : were Petitions were filed last week parties.” submitted yesterday to City Clerk gor Commissioner John A, Dugan | In a speech at a Rotary Club} Going anna med by District 4. oer’ 8): Maver Wiitiam W- farm ‘night’ banquet, Shulman ” ree Sere ¥ District “ Donaldson (District 3), Commis- warned farmers not to rely on nell incumbent Floyd P. Miles, 47, of 5 | i secs | oe cai ae (Di government supports. | WINTER IN AMARILLO — Icy scenes such as Sen , - ; Don't let any one tell you any) this one were common in Amarillo in the past few It Never Fails! | Commissioner Miles has been a them have,’ Shulman said. “We, ‘resident of Pontiac since 1912 and have been looking to the Creat) TRAVERSE CITY (h—A five- the father of a 19-year-old son, grocery to set our prices and in-' week vacation to Mexico was Floyd P. Miles, Jr. ‘comes. We need to reset our; 2 . charged off today by the Cloyd) He attended the Business Insti- sights.’ | ax | ven family’s youngest boy developed Owen-Hawthorne Community Club, chicken pox. He was left witha member of the First partis () d b Sol ‘Church and the Chamber of Com-| ppose y on | Ja- United Press Phote and sleet over the Texas Panhandle and dropped temperatures to away below freezing. {? Billion Road Charge Couple in Beating and Neglect of Daughter, 8 | | | MONROVIA, Calif. Ut—A sheet|three years ago and he was award- metal worker and his wife are|ed her custody Authorities seek 'N foal accused of beating his 8-year-old her real mother. ° Compromise Plan daughter and leaving her locked) Police Capt. Ray Blair said offi- by Democrats Supports in the unheated service porch of cers found the child last Friday ’ +3 ‘their home three weeks. after she managed to knock over, Ike's Highway Program -* ‘a telephone and dial a schoolmate | seeking a seat from District 7. oovern overnment farm program has . | Oa : Deadline for petitions is Feb. 14. Relued Pr sete acne of | days after a blizzard anes 30 ee a snow Sometimes You Cannot Win is president of the Christian Litera-|\White Father in Washington instead | ture Sales Co. He is married and of to the housewife at the corner) Taylor family as virtually a total tute of Pontiac and is currently oon — loss. . ipresident of the Christian Men's, ° * Two days after setting out, the Club. He is active in the Wever- Farm Freight Hike relatives. In Arizona, every connecting rod merce. in the car burned out and the Jaworski is married and the fa. WASHINGTON u — A proposed crankshaft was ruined. So. Taylor ther of two children and has been railroad freight increase on farm) 1° ™ a new car ‘employed by the Chrysler Automo-| products would ‘‘place further bur- promise” certian thee whiciidhe (eas\ Grable oc He had his fishing tackle along, tive Body Division in Detroit for dens on the backs of that portion pjjjion dollars in new federal gaso- ,, ae Le the cord had been — 5 eas ne ested rocked but streams were in flood. In Mex- the past 18 years, ‘of our = pid tea is ee teast ine aut Other highways (anes |ileeil ts iy) her eristel belind (ec e room a sail es ed. os temperatures dropped to a He moved Le Pontiac two years able = a mag ear iM jwas started through Congress to-| The room, 8 feet by 10 feet.) Policewoman Alice Wood said i ptinelioorety zero and the fam 103 ao alae aa eae: ced a let- day by House Democrats. ‘they said, contained a small com- Victoria told her she had been sod . ‘e « «6 on ys di ter ing the Lisonadetl Com . * = ___ forter on the floor for her bed and jocked in the backroom the past When he got ho Taylor § 7 * a ae i ose oan ae Sa ion! to) suapend the! It would help finance a massive a light blanket for her cover. Early three weeks, eating only leftovers : n = me Taylor found = the North Oakland el Amare Se eae ral it federal-state road construction pro- morning temperatures in the area for meals and some days having is — - : ag caps ai sruck | Desseceutic Club = has been © ercgraed tx ion 8 re gram sought by the Eisenhower have dipped into the high 30's. no food at all “for punishment.” open all the time and there wasn't delegate to state Democratic con- aaa Administration. Victor R. Podger and his wife, Officers arrested the Podgers a single good picture among the ventions the last two years. bas application by railroads for a Ros i } ah ; 2ose Ann, both 30, yesterday were and said Mrs. Podger admitted $50 worth of color film he had) He is a member of the St.’ sevem per cent rate increase on | _ Tht Dill would provide a} cent | sed held for preliminary hear- navane eaten Vicsoia with the WASHINGTON \—A “no com- Ruth Podger, wore only a ripped) They reported finding Victoria! program calling for 12 and the Fraternal Order of Eagles. | 7 | Similar opposition has been §-cents-a-pound levy on all auto- \voiced by Agriculture Secretary, mobile tires, a rise from 8 to 10 |Benson and farm state congress-) per cent in the tax on trucks, men, | trailers and buses, and a new tax Horan said he was “particularly, of 3 cents a pound on camelback, persuaded" by that part of Ben- of tire-retread rubber. — ica pariah member of the Faw "aca prevenedform_prow | etme Me preset Sewn og fen "it. Mr. Porte mets endo a Olah : | ucts, farm supplies and fish. tosis, 5 Scent Mike in the girl's stepmother, was charged «,ickeq her around” and locked with two felony counts of corporal pe, in the room because she injury to a child and the father .«\.q anq came home late from with one count. Both were jailed .onoo). in lieu of $2,500 bond. * * »* FATHER DIVORCED ¢ ee Jack Jina << ian > girl’ : - nares ger as saying they couldn . | tke Gilg bes ote divorced ford to buy milk for Victoria be- Maybe Satan Knew v Faternal Wrder About ‘Sermon Topic "Effects of Gas Bill BOSTON im—An oil burner ex-| plosion filled the All Saints Epis-, copal Church with soot and smoke\ VAY, Say Senators just as the Rev. G. Paul Mussel- Cutt son's petition which cited 11 gen- man of New York was preparing to|, {Continued From Page One) (ora) increases obtained by railroads| The measure was introduced in) cause they were making payments deliver a sermon on the devil. mission to charge off the excess since 1946. These the House late yesterday by Rep. Cqytiously Optimistic on a 1955 car. She said she did e incseaces: 8) 2 Boggs (D-La) after it was cleared y P not regard the child as her’s and on Speed Law Effect dope ed SU a) iplied to agricultural prod | al : | t = hee by Speaker Rayburn of Texas and (had never liked her, he added. LANSING State officials were. | Fi Another provision, meant to pre- taled 63 per cent and came at a} fee ce r House Democratic leaders Victoria and her _halfsister, 2, were taken to Juvenile the service resumed. Commented the pipeline of any obligations to creasing. |mittee will hold hearings on the tne effect of Michigan's new speed the Rev. Mr. Musselman: ipay the producer anything more’ | bill starting Feb. 15. llaw on the highway fatality toll. | juries. | House Ways and Means Com- .gutiously optimistic today about Mary. 2. —————e i ‘This is a very startling start_than a “reasonable” price under ° : re cote ; ‘ | | COMPANION BILL I'm optimistic and hope we con (5 for the service tonight. Maybe the old contracts. Fi ought Thor ne Wil | Another highway ment tinue to have the cooperation of | as Devil had heard about the topic Pipelines would be able to get peal ce improve After a 15-minute delay, while| vent the pipeline from being caught time, Benson said, when farmer in-/ the Hall. = Bill Passes, |plan was introduced last week by the driving public,” ‘said Joseph the church was cleared of smoke,in a price. squeeze, would relieve come was falling and outgo in-| A. Childs, State Police commission- (9S to President for the sermon.” an advance determinational f | d onal from tt | N =e 'the FPC as to whether the price e ement S Cal. [Rep Palion (Da - . sei . er ‘ore the House ublic orks Childs said it is “too early” to (Continued From Page One) say whether the speed limit has the donation offered Sen. Case was ° * * 'mination to shove through a res- la bipartisan, four-man committee. MONEY REJECTED * * * others may be involved in donat- | While not ruling out ‘‘the pos- sibility of arms sales to Israel,” ‘Dulles said in his letter, “It is our belief that- the security of sia objects. * ° yy 954 decision by the Supreme Department of Commerce says a appendectoms ‘business census showed Georgia . residents spent 26.9 cents of every dollar for automobiles, accessories and service station products and 22.8 cents for good in 1954 _ fix wellhead prices for gas sold to ' . ‘companies for shipment through O Shea Satisfactory \interstate pipelines. SANTA MONICA, Calif. uw» —! Previously, the commission held Actor Michael O'Shea, under treat- that the 1938 Natural Gas Act did ment for a virus infection, is re- not give it such authority. A 41 Cacao bean output in Venezue- ‘ la now averages 228 pounds per entered St acre. day. Oakland County Democratic Chairman Carlos G. Richardson said today he has tickets available for the Michigan Jefferson-Jackson Banquet at the Masonic Temple in Detroit March 10. Adlai Stevenson, 1952 Democratic presidential candidate, will be, main speaker. Tickets are $35 a couple and $25 for one, They are obtainable from Richardson's head quarters in the Hotel Roosevelt here sion backed the legislation. (See John’s. Hospital yester-| 'separate story on this page.) . The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Cloudy this morning, partly celudy this afternoon, tenight and temerrow. Somewhat mild- er. Bligh teday 34-38, low tenight 24-30, high tomorrow 34-38. West to northwest winds 12-18 mph. today diminishing! tonight. | Townfolk Egg Students to Violence Nearo Coed Excluded From Classroom TUSCALOOSA, Ala. —Demon- opening the school to Negro The crowd next swarmed back | to the university campus, where a Sheen in Mish |called for in a new or renegotiated 7 ap ‘contract is “reasonable.” | CHICAGO wW—Settlement of the Committee. NEW YORK w—A National Air. * 28 » iter long legal fight over the The ona proposal faces ines DC6 nosed over last night at} Presumably, the pipeline would $1,700,000 estate of Montgomery 4" uncertain election-year recep: by A he Idlewild Airport after a nose wheel refuse to make a contract calling Ward Thorne appeared near today "on in Congress. anabee "ot ie cadecuea ian the natural ; iS collapsed. One passenger was hurt for it to pay more than the Com- after a circuit judge set aside the’ pemocratic leaders made it weekend . | Democratic Leader Lyndon B slightly. Among these on board mission would allow it to pass on ast will of the young mail order y mI ’s tr : the S on ee naggprioa a here _ clear they do not intend to budge Last weekend's traffic toll was Johnson of Texas called the Senate was ishop J. Shee n. o str senses _ from their position that highway pine dead, one of the lowest in re- into session an hour earlier than S B l] . Judge Julius H. Miner yesterday aigithunpag CoA feat. wee [ ] W jentered an agreed order setting | a , , ° ° a oons ill Float aside Thorne’s last will, which were, (ox | bocce: Curtice’s Daughter, |provided that three-quarters of his “There is no room for bargain- K ° in H ital an et t e Reds Steal J) estate should go to his sweetheart, ing or maneuvering.” Boggs said. weet] Ud Uc os |Maureen Ragen, 19, and her * * * MIAMI \#—Two members of WASHINGTON (®—The U. S_ by the U. S. Navy and Air Force Pippen tts tea eae nother Me evecare Us —_ Rigs the General) Motors family who be- money be returned to the original government sends a lot of balloons! are for strictly scientific studies. aa me mote Ee : oe ee pec came iil pis attending the GM ‘contributors or Given soja) hey ; | ; (Mrs. Marion Thorne, 54, sole ben- hower recommended the federal ‘‘Motorama™ at Miami were re- organization into the air, and Pentagon offi-| The Navy has two active balloon 'eficiary of an earlier will, should share be paid for out of the pro-, ported in ‘‘satisfactory’’ condition cials indicated today they don't Programs running simultaneously, receive one-eighth, and a similar ceeds of a special bond issue. This today at St’ Francis Hospital. intend to stop merely because Rus-|7h¢ Air Force recently expanded a share should be given his aunt, plan ran into strong opposition in’ Thomas H. Keating, vice presi- program it started nine years ago’ Mrs. Carol Meiousel Lind. |Congress dent and director of GM and gen- ing the money. Ite caida he mae wy Judge Miner's. order al ; it € — - eral manager of the Chevrolet Di- whom he represents, he said, ‘“Un- pues : ~ jman 8s of the wor' Judge | rs. r also Pro-r Ae stricke : sie Moscow protested formally Sun- doi ° . ° vided that the Ragens are to re- Cars Rate Over Food vision, was stricken with a diges- til I get permisenn ished ge a day about what it termed U.S. OPERATION ‘SKY HOOK’ ceive $300,000, plus $50,000 for eX. ATLANTA um — G ae re sen action in dispatching from West . The Ao recently started float- penses, from Mrs. Thorne, and that arendine nana SSE eel t Hah rails tae Harow AT : ing balloons from Japan across any settlement must have the p00 on ; ts Cums 4 sent an eunene Soe and other border nations the Palifie tel etady aie currents moott's aporovel biles than on groceries. The U.S. Curtice, underwent an emergency @ 1 eects “ huge balioons carrying at various altitudes ——_—-— automatic cameras and radio, And in what it calls the “Sky T° : equipment. A halt was demanded Hook” program, balloons much Tickets Are Availabl also to p anda-carrying ba preer than those in the trans- } cae pai rivate U. s.Pacific tests are being launched f D t R || epuiamtions yP poe Sen Anger tex of emocra a y Defense Department officials | The Pacific balloons are regu. said all of the ball lnuacked lated to stay in the air for sev- | = . eral days and remain at a nearly | constant altitude. The “Sky Hook” bags are regulated to rise rapidly to heights as great as 100,000 feet; each flight is | supposed to terminate within the daylight hours of one day. | The sky hook balloons carry in- _ strut.ie si eC in- saa} 1S Peau: 1.ients designed to record in T Lowest temperatur cedin formation. about high energy cos- . ° AB Libel PRE Oe) : . B) . strators who rocked the University students oon Kesey Saharan aieer et OF the earth . ~ ets,’ said Richardson, “We hope Violence won a victory last night While most of those taking part c chael. Wi Mrs. Carmich- Moon sets Tuesday at 2 11 pm . to sit im a block if orders are re- When a Negro coed was excluded in the demonstrations appeared to Carmichael. Mhen DUS. Moon rises Wednesday ai 830 am ° “MOBY DICK’ AFLOAT ceived soon enough.” from classes ‘until further no- be students, Dean of Men Louis ael appeared on a balcony and Jetmtiaaiie Oita = lcs valiion are cpealithe tees alltie (Cnr en eh ear “ woes hig chard core” of outsiders! (te. members of the creed threw tem pm _ 4 Navy's Sky Hooke—that is tp to Citizenship Awarded Te anbouneement of (het Or WORKERS SPOTTED gravel and at least one egg at her. 108 = zr 100 feet in diameter. The purpose to Harry S. Truman vorsily Heard of Trustees nas i ers Tusce : ‘ERY FEW STUDENTS ae of these and other Air Force bags ypy yorK . made late last night while about Workers from a Tuscaloosa area VE an - tke Monday in Pontiac RS NEW YORK & — The United 1090 students and others surged tire plant and foundry were identi-- Some tried to force their way up campus yesterday when to the balcony but were held back (An vesatdea Gowatowe) is to study weather conditions, air cratoe hy; sey, ATE . , States has a new citizen named acrogs the campus and for a time fied on the “Highest temperatrue. .....,.. 3 OV ‘ Lowers temperetere .. ee Blond i atone irae « pris Harry S. Truman, ldefied police firing tear gas. university officials were cursed py a handful of the students led Weathered rmetag via * ® car tiade satellites. Truman answered, ‘I have al-‘immediate comment on the’ Hundreds of students and others’ More hundreds, some waving Saltimere 3 ene re ss Balloons hav . _ ways regarded Harry S. Truman board’s decision, reached at an assembled at the flagpole square Confederate flags, milled around smn : 2 a] Meliwenkee 28 26 a past fae — réleased in as a great American president and emergency meeting closed to news- in the heart of downtown Tusea-jnear the school’s Union Building Buttate 33 Ome MO Ae ae J rom Brazil, Panama, felt that 1 would be honored to papermen. loosa, chanting “Keep ‘Bama and refused to obey police orders Chicago — +] 4 Piviabe‘eh a “ ue ah ages and Okinawa. This'go through the rest of my life By invoking the police power of white.”’ Police Chief W. C. Tomp- to disperse. Dediwer 42 22 8. Francisco 62 40. . me tt Force started balloon bearing that name.’ the university, the trustees laid the kins was spattered with an egg as a s _ i sine - pal als from Europe and plans ————— groundwory for a legal defense if he directed his officers in moving The demonstration began break- : ‘Boughton 36 12 Traverse City 34 25 +f release some from Alaska and) Denmark's meat exports have they are ¢harged with violating the demonstrators out of — the ing up about midnight as news of , City @ ~— 34) Hawan. been increasing. ‘ terms of a 1925 federal court order street, the trustees’ action spread. se ; re , : . a : \ : ; ‘ t. \ rd / ’ & » '¢ % >) * { 2 ~ -£ | Police said the child, Victoria whose mother called officers. | The Day in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM — Priorities have been set up for Birmingham's park- ing lots development with lot 3-A at the top of the list. A lot im the southeast quadrant comes next, and then lot No. 2. — Parking on the south of Hamilton will be deferred until there is det inite financial means, commission- ers concluded in their resolution that received a favorable vote. All lots will be for ground level parking with possibly a structure on 3-A, sorth of Hamilton be- tween Ferndale and Park, if fu- ture needs demand it. Commissioners named David C. Pence, Pontiac attorney, to pre- pare condemnation papers for ac- and Henrietta on the south side of Merrill and was approved last August. Condemnation proceeds only if land negotiations fail. Financial details discussed in re- lation to the lots included the city manager's report that the pre- ferred plan for the southeast quad- rant lot would cost the city an average of $1,200 per car space. That would be for let 4-B, using an odd shaped sector at Brownell and Forest but not interfering with possible building on the Woodward frontage of that block. Plan for 4-A cuts into the front- age lots, but would provide 88% ra- ‘ther than 64 car spaces of 4-B, but would also be reasonable in cost, the city manager said. Dulles Opines and ragged undershirt and a light severly scratched and bruised. All on Israel Policy | _ Says U.S. Stand Should | Preserve Both Jewish | and Arab Friendship WASHINGTON up—Secretary of ‘State Dulles says U.S. foreign pol- licy “embraces the preservation of ‘the state of Israel’’ and mainten- ance of ‘‘our friendship with Israel and the Arab a | | This statement of general Amer- ‘ican aims in the Middle East was contained in a letter Dulles wrote ‘to 40 Republican Congress mem- bers who had joined in urging that Israel ‘‘be allowed to obtain in the open market such weapons as would assure her protection against aggression.” The letter was made public yes- terday when five of these GOP lawmakers called at the State De- jpartment. After the conference, Rep. Scott of Pennsylvania told ‘newsmen he and his four col- lleagues were reassured by Dulles’ \letter | Congressional pressure built up lon another front yesterday as 87 Democratic House members got together on a statement urging ‘months ago. The Democratic statement said Israel seeks 59 million dollars worth of arms ‘‘strictly for pur- usual with the announced deter noses ollscitdctense.” The Israeli request was made jolution to authorize an inquiry by 112. Egypt completed an arms- for-cotton deal with Czechoslovakia ‘last year. Under that deal, Egypt worth of Communist war gear. * * * dor Abba Eban visited the State arms bid and reportedly to argue Declining to say) again for a security treaty. rest upon arms alone but rather on ‘Court that the FPC had a duty to the international rule of law and upon the establishment of friendly relations among neighbors . , .” Suggestion Awards ported in satisfactory condition. He majority of the present commis: fy All 3 Divisions Employes at all three of Pon- tiac’s General Motors Corp. plants shared in a record total of GM suggestion awards last year by learning $275,412.83 for 3.535 ideas approved. | It was incorrectly stated in yes- ‘terday’s Press that the figures ap- plied only to personnel at the Pon- tiac Motor Division Other plants whose employes ent to the home of Dr. were awarded cash prizes were) the GM Truck & Coach Division and the Fisher Body Division. ports. \Set. Parking Priorities at Commission Meeting: | Plan 4-C would utilize three | Woodward. lots but car-space ‘cost would go up to $1,650, he esti- mated ‘tentatively. The commission approved resolu- tions against proposed state legis- lation for a 40 hour work week for police and an extra “Kelly Day” for firemen, which would re- duce their week from 67% to 63 hours. Oak Park and Berkley have passed similar resolutions, Informal hearing on whether quiring property for parking Lot | Webster Street should cut through 3A and for Parking Lot No. 2.|Hunter Boulevard was set for Feb. The latter is to be between Bates'27 after discussion on Wrigley's request and possible aid in traffic congestion = nearb, y, Lincoln, A change of managers is tak- ing place at Forest Lake Country Club during the time the club resigning after several years, and the newcomer, to take over on the Feb. 20 opening, has not been announced. © . = Only the Grill Room is currently open for Saturday and Sunday skaters and tobogganers, * * *. Thursday is a free day for Holy Name School students. Sisters and lay teachers of the school will be attending an all day teachers’ institute session at the Shrine of the Little Flower. * * @ Louise Cuyler, professor of mu- sic at the University of Michigan, will talk on her recent year in Belgium, where she did lecturing and research at Thursday's meet- ing of the Birmingham Musicale at the Community House at 2 p.m. Mrs. Marcus W. Frost, chair. man, has also slated violin mu- sic by David Cerone and piano music by Joan F, Bevins, Hos. tess chairman is Mrs. Robert C. Gibson and teg chairman, Mrs. Raymond F. Giffels. * » * Child Study Club of Birmingham will meet Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Melvin Dadd, 883 Madison. Robert Fer- guson will speak on the Importance of Wills, * «« @* W. Carlton Scott, of Long Lake ‘road, was slightly injured recently jin the crash of his airplane near Acapulco, Mexico. Scott and passengers Otto Seif- fert, and Mr. and Mrs. Guillermo |Adame of Acapulco were in the plane which overturned on landing when Scott left the runway to avert a collision with another plane at Sihuatanejo, 100 miles north of | Acapulco. Pontiac Deaths — | Allen N. Brown - Allen N. Brown, 45, of 2126 Pon- tiac Rd. died suddenly in his home cut traffic deaths but that he was intended to influence his vote OM that Israel be allowed to buy the Sunday. He was born July 6, 1910 |U.S. weapons that it requested Wellingford, Vt. the son of Harry iJ. and Bessie Merrill Brown Sr. | Mr. Brown had lived in the Pon- tiac area 36 years and attended Pontiac High School. He was a jveteran of World War II and was employed as the Pontiac Motor Di- vision as a foreman. He leaves his wife, the former Edna J. Brown; his mother, one Case has said he asked that the bought about 80 million dollars prother, Harry J. Brown of Pon- itiac: four sisters, Mrs. George Mil- ler of Lansing, Mrs. Bryer Bemis- | Yesterday, too, Israeli Ambassa- 10, of Royal Oak, Mrs, Philip Dor- -man and Mrs, Nelson Fields, both Neff declined to discuss whether Department to press his country’s of pontiac. Mr. Brown is at the Pursley |Funeral Home where service will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday. Dr. \William H, Marbach of the First Presbyterian Church wil] officiate with burial in White Chapel Mem- The effect of the bill is to nullify states in the Near East cannot orial Cemetery. Mrs. John H. Dunn Service for Mrs. John H. (Ida Lillian) Dunn, 55, will be held at 19 a.m. Wednesday from Our Lady jof the Lakes Catholic Church, Wa- | terford. Mrs. Dunn died in Bloomfield | Hospital Feb. 2 after a long illness. ‘She was born July 15, 1900 in Bay City, the daughter of William and |Maude Spooner. She had lived in Pontiac 18 years, coming here from Holly. | Surviving are her husband and one son, William Hitchcock Dunn of Lake Orion. | Mrs. Dunn's body is at the Kirk- by Funeral Home France now is Europe's leading 'milk-producing natidfi, Paris re- \ } BUDGET rine cal water heater. Attractive whit enamel jacket with black trim Galvanized steel tank... si HOT WATER all you want —when you want it! with an automatic WATER HEATER | ty American-Standard Here's a. fast-working, Weenie $ 7 6 5 0 ONLY | for all homes. See it today. plus instellation EAMES and BROWN CO. SS £. Pike ; FE 3-7195 \ a ; . Gg 7 eae Seating Girt Hunts for Games That Include Dancing Dinty Won't By ELIZABETH WOODWARD jhave earned a romantic new nick- “Dear Miss Woodward: I'm go- ‘out the name of one lover and one the Duke of Windgor, it will mean there's jonly one couple left, ‘And’ name for the rest of the “Y ening. ‘You Wi | | ing to have a Valentine party— and at the ones I've been attend- ing this year (we’ re Juniors in high school) all they want to do is dance. They just aren't interested) in games. “I'm wondering clude dancing. The only one we know is making the odd party dance with a broom. Do you- know of any? | nl Answer: Yes, indeed, I doAnd | aren’t you the lucky hostess, though? At least you know ahead of time what you can count on your guests wanting to do, At so many parties, guests have a way of plunking themselves down in couples and daring the party to come to life. Don't you give your guests a chance to sit down too long. When they've all arrived, start them off on -a Heart Hunt. HEART HUNT Cut out dozens and dozens of red and white hearts, and hide ‘em all over the house. On the ‘‘go”’ signal, the boys must find the red hearts, and the girls the white ones, and no getting the colors mixed or tell- ing where they can be found. Give them 10 minutes to track down their quarry, then cali them all back and count up. The girl and the boy with the most might get a heart-shaped box of candy as a prize. BROKEN HEARTS Now pass out red paper hearts that have been cut in two, jig-saw fashion. Let the guests start to) dance as they will, but at the sig- nal, form two cireles, the girls in- side and the boys outside. Couples nearest each other start trying to match their heart halves If it’s no go, the girls move on to the next lad and so on around the! circle, until they've all found the r partners, LEAP-YEAR TWIST Reverse the old ‘Cinderella’ pro- cedure by having the boys toss one of their shoes into the middle, then the girls must scramble for a shoe and try to fit it on its rightful own- er, HANG ON HEARTILY Here's a variation of the old “Going to Jerusalem" game. Cut out big red hearts and hang them at strategic points on the walls. When the music stops couples must dash to touch a heart (and only one couple to each heart, now). Since there is orie less heart than) the number of couples, somebody is left out. winning pair. BUSTED ROMANCES Write down on slips of paper enough names of famous lovers and heroines of history to go around. They needn't match. Pass them out Duplicates of these names should be ke pt in two bows, and someone KKK KKK Ys Treot We ae if you would) know any games that would in- Take away another, heart and continue until there is a! | meeting on the question of vot- | = srar CLEANERS ‘should interrupt the music to call Cleopatra may not be dancing with hereine who must’ drop out. Since. two odd ones left. | \ | Ise . Looking to expanded activity by the Pontiac League | of Wonien Voters are Mrs. John Borsvold (left), presi- dent of the Pontiac group; Mrs. William Haber (center) | of Ann Arbor, member of the organization committee of | the Michigan state board, and Mrs, Errol Horner of Official Mrs ton, D.C, League of Women Voters of the United States, will speak Wednes- day ‘evening at the YWCA s Ww = Mrs. Horner, field secretary of the Said: “Actually, has not studied the question ‘of available information from other) leagues throughout the country en's organizations, was interviewed | AVAILABLE DATA Saturday, following a special meet- “The local league could, ana ing here with state and local board), . members of the League of Women has, made that sort of information Voters. Mrs. Horner says that an open tiac.” * * * | Mrs. Horner also feels that “the | local league might, if it felt there was time enough to plan such a 'meeting properly, be ing machines is the type of ac- tivily in which the League of Women Voters participates. Asked what the Pontiac LWV work for an open community could do to help clarify whether Pontiac should add more voting ° districts to accommodate the rap- Pair Honored idly growing voting population, or b Gi y Girl Scouts KH ht kk Kk eK KT at Tea Party your Mathai 24 to The board of directors of the Northern Oakland County Girl - Scout Counci! honored Mrs. John Ua Mf ;Stuart Douglas and Mrs. Allan Monteith at a tea Friday (LEAKING The tea was held at the Chad- " wick drive home of Mrs. Richard Pas Balmer. Mrs Edwin J. Lally, Prompt Pickup and Delivery council president, presented each with a gift from the board in ap- Give Gold Bell Gilt Siamps preciation for past service in. the Girl Scout office. Past Presidents Mrs, William A Gorsline and Mrs. Ivan Wilcox pre i100 T Waltea FE 2- 0661 an a _ : Oe ay Ve ES the % guests attending , ap . Me . Your Spring (| Skirt. oF ; New paste! wool skirts in luscious solids. checks and tweeds. Size 8 to \¢ iS = Qr 6595 16 25 at Other Skirts . . . . . 16.95 t $35 9 FREE REAR TELEGRAPH at HURON q | voting machines. But, it does have | _, who will address that have worked for and secured) area leaders in men's and wom- voting machines in their counties. available to the citizens of Pon-) “nk ab: AC PRESS, _TUESD. LY, They can. dance together until __ ‘dollars load doughnuts everybody will Washington, D. C., secretary of the National League of A meeting will be held Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the YWCA where Mrs. Horner will address area leaders of men’s and women’s organizations, Women Voters. of Women Voters to Speak == Stee Errel Horner of Washing-; buy voting machines, Mrs. Horner, meeting, where the whole question ing. She will be assisted by her’ as May 25-27 and mother-daughter ‘of voting machines, and whether! — including Laura Belz,| ~ the Pontiac league or not they might be purchased | for this community, might be dis- ‘ussed."’ Mrs. Horner added that, in her 8 o'clock; she would like to tell | | members of the league and their | guests, “the extent of the LWV today and the scope of th? work | we're dajng.” She will also an- swer questions from the floor. A | social hour will follow. Elizabeth in charge of the Wednesday meet willing to! THIS VALENTINE D | Say it with Sctid-Fowgrs World wide talk at the YWCA Wednesday at | | Arbor, Halsey, membership Wright, chairman of the Pontiac. LWV, is|Harry Killian, first vice president |will be held at the home of Mrs. Your F.T.D. Florist f i \ ~ f FEBRU ARY 1956 (Copyright, 1966 1 Mrs. Scott Bakes | Cabbage and Meat _ | With Cheese Top By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Home Editor | Here's a new version of corned: beef and cabbage, one you can fix in a casserole. It's served often in the Birmingham home of the od Seotts. Mrs. Scott is another wheel- chair cook. An auto accident | twelve years ago paralysed her | and took off her feet permanent. | ly. Her husband says it hasn't stopped her doing things. Making her own bread and other pastries, weaving and crocheting are other accomplishments of this courageous woman who has the use of anly one hand. CORNED BEEF AND CABBAGE By Mrs. Guy Scott — medium heed spenen, shredded ean corned beef, shredded Grated cheese | Cook cabbage in salted boiling: water until tender. Mix in casse- role with shredded -corned beet. Fill casserole half full of milk.’ Bake in a moderate oven 15 min-| utes, Cover top with grated cheese | and return to oven for another 15- 20 minutes. Serves 4. Alpha Alpha Hears Party Plans Report | Members of Alpha Alpha Chap- Ponting Prous Piste | ity met recently in the YMCA. | i in the Pontiac Federal and Loan Building. Mrs, Plympton reported on the prizes. j Mrs. Alex Morris, \breakfast as May 6. Mrs. Barney Habel, Mrs. William Wright, Mrs, Arnold Denison, Mrs. New Sylvanites Hear ‘William Miller and Mrs. Dorothy! Talk on Child Clinic | Shufeit. — Mrs. Erwin Nichols of Garland Consulting with Mrs. Horner at avenue was hostess to the New [the Saturday session were Mrs. |Sylvanites Club Thursday evening. John Borswold, Pontiac LWV pres-| F. R. Wollaeger, of the Oakland ‘ident; Mrs. William Haber of Ann County Child Guidance Clinic member of the organiza- to the group,.giving @ brief, tion committee of the Michigan history of the clinic. A question | ‘LWV; Mrs. Harry Aten, local item/and answer period followed his. ‘chairman; Miss Halsey, Mrs. | talk. Mrs. Shufelt and oa The next meeting of the group. Alex Pittsley of Warwick avenue. | —————— | ‘ . i of the Pontiac LWV¥. Flowers -By-Wire | Take a tip from America’s Valentine couple, the busy George Montgomerys (Dinah Shore to you). Often separated during the year, they keep their love glowing by sending Flowers-By-Wire on all appropriate occasions. Try it yourself this year. Just visit or phone your F.T.D. Florist — and send a heart full of happiness to your valentine. He guarantees telegraph-fast worldwide m delivery, Look for the famous 7 Mercury EMBLEM. / DINAM SHORE — Star of the "Dinah Shore Show for Chevrolet, NBC-TV, Tuesdays and Thursdays. GEORGE MONTGOMERY — Star of “Cattle King”, Allied Artists release and “Huk", United-Artists release. Phone or Visit so SEND FLOWERS-BY-WIRE JACOBSEN'S FLOWERS 101 North Saginaw Greenhouses and Retail Storé at Lake Orion Ph. FE 3-7165 PHONE PRARCHE FLORAL CO. Flowers for Every Occasion Delivered Anywhere in the World PEARCE’S, FE 2-0127 Flowers for Every Occasion a9 Orchard Lake Ave. new wonder dress thet washes like cotton soe Cashmere -Soft DACRON Shirtwaist Casual Cy Permanent Pleats! Magic is the word for this dress of kitten-soft dacron that washes and dries ten times faster. The pleats stay in forever! Your favorite coat dress styling — so easy to get on and off — stitched, tucked everywhere companion through this busy season and right into Spring. Hurry in today for yours green navy bodice and set-in sleeves. Your 12-20, 12¥%2-22'%. Waite's Dresses—Third Floor of Fashion CLEANSING CREAMS _ +1 S@rTee tr rive TA Tussy Emulsified Cleansing Cream far dry skin aah) es gentle, thorough cleansing! Tussy'Pink Cleansing Cream {or normal and oily shin., Tussy Dry Skin Freshener... . dissolves grime, excess oil. | AFTER- CLEANSING LOTIONS REG. $1.75 SIZE $1... = LamireD Tree refreshes and braces. Tussy Skin Lotion... stimulates normal and oily skin. Wai te's Cosmetics—Stree! Floor AO DW St. Francis College of Brooklyn is a fine batten The San Francisco Dons go aft- Its basketball coach, jovial, popular Danny Lynch is er their 43rd straight victory to-| i PONTIAC PRESS, T UESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1956 » ninth straight week, of the regular season seems secure. fornia and Illinois in the past week first. Lightly regarded College of the solidified Dayton’s runner-up spot. The only other undefeated major the Pacific hardly figures to extend The Flyers hold a sizable lead over college team, St. Francis of Brook- : ps got only 16th place in the vot- Julius Doubles Count small, too. He stands a mere five feet eight night with a solid vote of confi- rather 8 from the nation’s sports Dens topped the Associated Press the defending NCAA champs to- the third- pace Vanderbat: inches. But there is nothing small about the St. Francis dence team, nor its coach. Latest NCAA statistics reflect the rise of a team which, only a few months ago, rated scarcely any at-| tention. The Franciscans lead the nation in fewest fouls committed and, oddly enough, also lead in re- bounding percentage. In addition, they are tops in point separation margin between themselves and their rivals. _. A MODESTLY DEFT CREW, THESE TERRIERS The seven men who make up Lynch’s front line intrinsically are fine shooters, excellent rebounders and crack floormen. They all can hit on jump shots, driving layups and tap-in plays. Yet, not a single one seeks point-scoring honors, nor the spotlight. Whether they are ahead by a point, or by 25, they continue to look for each other, seeking the best. play possible. This is Lynch’s secret of success. LYNCH A NERVELESS, SNOOZING SVENGALI Completely relaxed at all times (his wife, Helen, had to wake him from a nap to get him to the St. John’s game), Danny never takes his basketball problems home. The only time he’ll discuss basketball in his Greenpoint home is when his six-year-old son, Danny Jr. (a walking encyclopedia on basketball), tries to give him some advice. Danny, who starred at St. Francis in 1938 as a brilliant backcourt star, met his pretty wife during) his undergraduate days. They married while he was) coach at St. Francis Prep and, in 1948, when Joe Bren- nan retired, Danny came back to pilot his Alma Mater. Chiefs Face Critical Period for Hopes in Valley Race SVC STANDINGS ‘ paign is ahead of Pontiac's high va school Chiefs this weekend. 343 «310| It's one of those “make or} 303) break” situations. ee 32 3] After Pontiac's 71-61 loss last | week to Arthur Hill, Coach Art | Eastern plays Bay City H | in tonight's only tht lavelving & Valley) Van Ryzin’s club ts faced with | elubd. the necessity of taking on one of | Friday's games—Centra! at Pontiac: . Northern va Arthur Hill et Flint; Bay) the leaders, come Friday night. @evGuee fF e * - City Central st ies Saginaw East-| Flint Central's Indians, who bat- HIGH POINTERS — Julius ey (15) eae high enough to top tered the Chiefs 80-58 middle of | Michigan's Ron Kramer (27) a rack ern at Muskegon Proabably ‘the m most critica] pe-) last December come here for the ley Conference basketball cam-)| of play. The Flint tribe has a 5-1 mark there's a lot of seething determin-| . * 8 in Hot Finish jeues in Van Ryzin’s ranks to Sonny Grandelius, M. S. U. back- State : pone the ist Indian victory. field coach, will be the incipal Arijzon: ui The PHS mentor hopes to sharp- speaker at Avondale High s Judson’ s 8-Point Rush en his club’s shooting eyes. Pon..Athiectic Banquet, to be | tiac's average fell off considerably, school wee at 6.3) Saves Big 10 Leaders , in the Hills game. Better, and) Serving as master of ceremonies, Against Hawks |more consistent, control of re-/will be another football personality, . bounds and general defensive play Lou Zarza, who is now ; jis being stressed in the week's fessional scout and color announcet for Harry Wismer's radio By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 5), Milinois is still in Ist place in Only one Valley club ts in ac. casts: what is turning out to be a stirring tion today. Saginaw plays at Mid-) Along with his talk, Grandelius two-way Big Ten basketball race land, the SVC's “‘trial horse'' op- will show color movies of the thanks to the clutch playing of Paul ponent. Midland has been men- Pose Bowl game. Judson, tioned as a possible future entry in} The [linois captain fired iy (te league. Grandelius was as thur Hill to Flint Northern; City Central to Midland and S& night to pull the Mini from the ee eke a a ever Indiana at Champaign. The triumph was Hlineis’ 6th against | no losses in conference play and ’ aR popes Teacher of Youth! ax-| 22a kot Heh hind the ‘Little Mo’ Becomes Pro Madison for its 5th triumph in six) games and Michigan State pulled) CHICAGO . — Maureen (Little in combatting juvenile delinquen into 4th place tie with Ohio State Mo) Connolly, one of the greatest cy," she added by thumping Michigan 86-76 at women tennis players of all time.) [ jttle \te wit) the national out East Lansing. turned professional yesterday “to goor junior championshiy 1 among the Trailing by as much as 13 points promote Ms nnis among the youth of wa. rank, writers and broadcasters as the poll and their stranglehold on the jnight, _ } from eighth place by virtue of vic- Jewelers Rout 2222s ks ‘Temple dropped from seventh to ‘ninth after suffering its first defeat! isaw Kentucky move up a notch votes in parentheses: McCoy Hits Af Dons Rol Along on Top, Aim for No. 43!¢‘ertis! By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS No. 1 college basketball team in No, 1 spot at least until the end; Victories over two Loyolas, Cali-'The Dons received 14 votes Leal LM Fi 86 ] 6 | Ive, 60- The only changes in ‘= select 10 The leaders, with first-place Over! Kramer; State Shares 4th Spot 1, San Franciseo (74) 2. Day (TT) gear ssnrensreo stig hai eels ed ' ines. | i4¢|_ EAST LANSING # — Michigan Freadbeaph pied ui cea at a soy State is in 4th place tie in Big ‘of the season, 67-66, at the hands, ‘ Kentucky 310 ‘Ten basketball standings today. lfrom 10th to eighth after turming 10 Alabama (5) jback North Carolina, and Alabama | * Booth Quintet jot Muhlenberg; Duke vaulted & Cs ‘thanks to an 86% defeat of the | a ..--+.-s 187 University ef Michigan last night. Th d 16 1. Bt. [Parr CF a 1 The victory lifted the Spartans . jmoved into 10th after downing 12. North Carolina 4) mys enerestacge inte a tie ‘with’ idle Osi . ic Holy C Bas ie- Ohio ame for 10th Win Georgia Tech. North Carolina! {{ Relea ce a: - 113 for 4th place. Each has a 43 habe out of the top 10. let sere aie cw "{) ord in conference play. Michigan n Francisco amassed 1,166 jy Jowa ... Minow ts 34 Sun Life Posts 70- 60 points, on the basis of 10 for a i UCLA woe sea” cee * first- place vote, 3 for ‘Second, ete. 30, encianatl i oe : a It was MSU’s 4th successive Decision Over Stone’s ———$_$—<$<_—— Sa | basketball triumph over the Wol- | verines in a span of three years, in City Basketball jin sity Baexe YM CA Swimmers Win ee bee te ss. League-leading Shaw's Jewelers, , manner and runner-up Sun Life) ikept pace in city adult American) division basketball] games Monday ‘night at the Pontiac High gym, |5Wimming teams scored easy vic- | Pontiac's YMCA prep and junior _than twice as many points as bveezed along in their accustomed 1n Two Duals at Bay Ci ty Michigan's big gun, Ron Kramer. | McCoy scored 41 points on 14 The visitors fared well in their field goals and 13 free throws out '1lst competition away from home. of 16. Kramer got eight field goals ‘tories over the Bay City “Y"’ tank- |The junior swimmers captured sev-'and hit on four of seven free | The undefeated Jewelers posted ,. in dual meets Saturday at Bay en Ist places, led by Dennis Rob-'throws, but, as usual, led the their 10th victory by thrashing City. It was Pontiac’s 2nd suc- ‘erts who won two, while sinking) Wolverine scoring. lowly Booth Homes, 75-40. Shaw's cogs of the season against the up- Bay City, 50-29. | Michigan jumped off to a quick balanced attack was led by Bob ’ State foe, ‘McManus who scored 17 points. = Sun Life remained two full | It wag even more decisive in 6-0 lead, but within six minutes \the prep meet. The Pontiac tank-,the Spartans had gone ahead and lers took six 1st positions and four stayed there. The halftime score ST yo games behind the pace-setters with a 70-60 win over Stone Front. Mel Taylor and Hal Trott | sparked the winners with 23 and | . i | JUNIOR yard freestyle-Won by Dale Fox'shots from the field, against Mich- | ere White (BC) Ind; Zielenski Tel | \3rd; Bill Cashion iP), 4th Time —- 24.7 22 points respectively while Don Williams topped Stone's with 18. | Summary: late in the game MSU widened the jedge to 74-60. 42nd spots to submerge the Bay was: MSU 44; M 38. At one time 1 ‘City squad, 50-24. Michigan State averaged .385 on igan's .337. ee ther two points for MSU at East Lansing last night points and Kramer 2 riod of the current Saginaw Val-| PHS 2nd tilt of the final round | As the Spartans beat Michigan: 86- 76. Illini Victor S's Sows iis Sports Figures Appear: Pontiac beck n't anne wat Yellow Jacket Fete Jacket athletes and are e school athletic office. W oolpert Sees Russell, Jones All-Americas | America backfield ace at Michi inois’ y r ‘ » = last eight points Gther Ereday (comets) send cok gan State and played professional! + football for the New York Giants, inaw _Eastem to Muskegon High.’ Zarza has coached at Michi All-America players. and ! isco's court success » past so the © game rd jf 31 for Courchesne, The two reais ' against judges, Artie Schwartz and Leo the |Birnbaum, scored it 2-2. So did midway in the 2nd half, Illinois America *« “| the regular women's division na- whittled away at the Indiana lead _. tionally a year later, to set up Judson’ s on's heroics. | The three-time national women's ee _ jchampion and three-time victor at British } Vout | Wimbledon will join the advisory Reasons Given staff of a sporting goods company Fights Cratty | Cuban Tonight wien, onus of Utah Team css for Downfall eines Mo, 21 ac mating has nocache k ri nding in July “ 1954 SALT LAKE CITY ip LONDON i — A 21-year-old Briton who quit his job in an an- Appearing at a news conference, azo the University of Maureen said in addition to rep- kethall team was riding tique dealer's shop to become a resenting the firm (Wilson Sport was ranked No. 3 in fighter steps into the ring tonight against former world welterweight champion Kid Gavilan. This is the make-or-break fight will do some touring, giving uals _ *- * in the career of unbeaten welter- on tennis and instructions at high Today the Utes rank ‘weight Peter Waterman, who'schools and Playgrounds. " the conference and are nowdhere to will match his youth and strength, against the experience of the crafty) | Cuban veteran. pee ee Many experts here think Gavi- ing Goods Co.) her main objec- and was supposed to breeze tive will be “to promote tennis second straight Skyline ¢ among the youth of America. 1 title and perhaps national honors be found in The’ Associated Press “T think all of thi s will help also poll, _ * * * What has caused the nosedive lan is past his prime and that Red Top vs. Jorgensen this potential ehampion Waterman must win if he is to climb up the world inader Davis, ninth-ranked featherweight, ies and the {uct thas the 2 h and Paul Jorgensen, 10th ranked, Canference 1s better balan Cc amps on Card; meet here tonight in a 10-rounder most people figured.” HOUSTON \w—Tedd y URGE Top) One Title at Stake Ee BOSTON wh .— There are two champions on the bill but only one boxing title is at stake tonight at Boston Garden. Bobby Murphy of Boston, box ing’s “Rookie of the Year’ for 1955, takes on titlist Jackie O'Brien of Hartford, Conn., in a match for the New England welterweight crown, | In a companion 10-rounder, Lar-, ry Boardrian, a 19-year-old from Marlborough;-Conan.. goes against world lightweight champ Wallace (Bud) Smith of Cocinnati in a* non-title scrap. | Neither bout will be televised. Saver's a Golfer, Too INGLEWOOD, Calif. —Chicago Cubs’ outfielder Hank Sauer won, ‘the Southern California Baseball Players’ Golf Tourney at Ingle-| wood Country Club yesterday, shooting a 70, He had five ae an me perl course. Unregenerate! Gophers Hel t Trojans fend the Gr ee wine JM yy ana gym. Poole’'s Jerry Bradley Taik ind plaxed on Bryant Leads Ft. Worth “Tl give vou two reaso Utah Coach Jack Gardner Cage Results MONDAY COLLEGE BASKETBALL BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | FAST Temple 6? Duguerne 48 Colgate 79, Pittsburgh #8 Penn State 88 Lehigh 6 | Connecticut @4 Maine «&f L | } fassachusetts 61, Amiierst 56 The South, suh, hasn't SOUTH jconstructed after all, Kentucky tJ r } serene at ander st jas healthy as ever in the Tulane 110 Missis: Satate 72 jeastern Conference baskethall 1 Louisiana State 1! MIDWEST bitous Vanderbilt TiMnols 92, Indians f acre owa TR Wisconsin 74 ‘ ei cnlaas State 84 Michigan 76 | It looked as if Vandy, ssourt 85 : : ) Kansas Sta: lauiivate 52 this week's Associated Pres Oklahoma A&M 65 St. Louts 63 was set to free the SEC Steubenville 92. Lawrence Tech 73 me Monday Night: . Results ited Kentucky's démination Me A 47, Doria In lover after Vanderbilt minary 48 GM Tech % YMCA COMMI ne nenreele ibounced off with a j { sieraay! Night's Results ‘ ark. Waterteed RI-Y Blue 19. St. George 17 prarn: & * * Stone Baplis! 21, Lake Orion Hi-¥ 20 Phalant Clab 24. YMCA Trojans 23 But ‘Bama another @hded that nonsense fast night 88- ok Hoopsplitters 34, Clarkston Hi-¥ 20 Swishers 35 Pirst Baptist 25 sil Rules the SEC Ay THE ASSOCIATED PRESS cond nine-game streak snapped hy Ok- s O'Shea pac ei to 6-1 and left them just a game ve Tide rolled up ahead of Houston (5-2), Mississippi 76° Inow that Alabama has upset ; Tide Vandy ic TWO 'Stylish’ Bent bondage under Col, Adolph Rupp YMCA INTRAMURAL | BASKETBALL § (Kentuckians. Rupp himself admit- berth it commands, action 13st They were Sateh-A-Mq, owned by “e de 1 some W. H. Jarret of Indianapolis, Ind., Jud- and Bill Wade, owned by brothers 2(GSe eunt) Ze WOM syueX “9 Briggs and Chatley Gehringer of an important facctor.”’ Donley said yee stav W. V. (Bill) Garner, a Baton -1¥) Sulzoos ‘1ejue0 0} popsuts pue St. Rouge physician, and Wade Gar- Jajunqy Joy paqyyeq “enTy peptey Lions’ NFL club; University of any Elk, or at the lodge offices. - saw its mer of Bastrop, La. “W431 8B “Ala _QoH—d *JINSAU, Wilde ats in their own ors With 25 In Class D American lodp action preee ant ortoton ” preesteicens ven e7 MICHIGAN MICHIGAN STATE ° at Lincoln Junior High the Spar- Top Pro Golfer Will tnd, Time 29.0. GFP oO FP ol Buick, 64-53, or" orthodox breaststroke—Won by | stern.f 6 012 McCoy.t 1413 41 tans upset Iver GBulc as’ B -P T T (Dens Roberts (P); Johnson (BC), 3nd. Tiljotson.f 6 212 Fergusonf 1 2 4 +Dave Grubb headed a well-balanced, BY-FQSS tourney rai rae freestyle —Won by Jerry Pow- ete ere Sip : eestyle-Won by Jerry Pow- Lingle eterson.c D160 offense with 18 points, Oliver's Until Feb. 23 iss ie oral Meyers ee aod: third? lahoma A&M 65-63. That cut the } Billikens’ Missouri Valley record ’ Pace Field Trials | HERNANDO, Miss. (PR — Two 7 strong and stylish bird dogs had CASEY STENGEL ght. for ~o NCAA the U.S. Field Trial Assn.'s all.) C. Let Hunter swing away? D. Put in a pinch-hitter for | Others who have confirmed in- Donley said, “it will be a record high marks in the judges books in ige stake today. Hunter? n . 1 fi . } “hoped” John Landy of Austr: ue as “North to Adventure” a fast moving all - color chronicke o life of artists, author, and pho tographer Fred and Sara Mach The situation is serious indeed. lhors de combat by the AAU. Now @tanz while in Alaska raising sev- ‘the brass has gotten itself into a ©" lively sled dogs for Walt Dis- corner. The promoters want top "CY competition in the mile—tradition- From the birth of the litter, ally the glamor event of the in- ¢hrough the weaning, gathering door campaign. grass off the tundra to bed But with Ron Delany of Villa- them down and melting: ice into nova running only as fast as win- water, breaking them to har- ning requires—and that isn't Very ness, and finally running them fast without Santee—the mile has as a team, the Machetnaz’ life weird strategy. The Old te sor's record of six pennants in Browns Sign Collegions Poole Lumber in Waterford Town- SCVe? years with the Yanks speaks t for itself, however Here's a case where Stengel to Give Brooks Erdelatz Aides Mey made the right move in helping’ his club beat Clevelattd in a vital game last season. what would you lost much of its luster. Santee {won't be on hand for at least two more weeks until the AAU decides Both Seegoo.and his son sook literally “‘went to the dogs”. whether he’s innocent or guilty of gah. who is the puppy hero ot _ chars zes of accepting excessive ex- a Disney film, will be on hand fe: pe nses. the personal appearance OO Nickets yen be available al the Snider Signed — serum One-Two Punch Join Cavalier Staff BROOKLYN R— The world ANNAPOLIS, Md. (B—The Unt- versity of Virginia appeared to be in line today for almost an all Navy football coaching staff, at the expense of Eddie Erdelatz, Nav. head coach who last week signed a new five-year contract. jtheir one-two batting punch signed tract calling for a ‘‘fine increase." The Dodgers were careful in d@é- , scribing the pact which brought A reliable report going around a Snider, their slugging center field- this Naval Academy town today into the fold, They wouldn't was that two of Erdelatz’s veteran say whether it called for more, assistants, Len Eishmont and Dick less or the same amount received Duden, are about to join Ben Mar- ines bss i me uy s Jim Konstanty (R) and Gil Me- ~~- 0 ' i ton D TI J & J 2 6 Dougé (R) to follow . : ss ate 1 el § 4 Beatt 2 ove 27 a a a t hy catcher Roy Campanella, who tin, a former Erdelatz assistanf ype Bar eS sw aterford 17 oe signed as “the highest priced Dodg- who last Saturday was named head er ever” Jast month for an es- football coach at Virginia 600 Dads, Sons Expected for Big Elks Sports Party Preparations were completed to- tives; but no Detroit Red Winge. _day for the Ist Father and Sen Wings have an NHI game to party in the new banquet room play, hence can't send any one ‘of the Pontiac Elis. No. 810. The here, Donley reported. |affair, with an expected attendance Greckiaur will mecacnt the oueata ‘of some 600, takes place tonight mu pres Ruts lat 7 o'clock There will be no speeches, says Heading the list of prominent Donley. guests, including: more than a An added attraction, designed |score of sports celebrities, is Lieut. especially for the youngsters, will |Goy. Phil Hart. Hart has told John be some magic, by Dr. H. A. iDonley, co-chairman with Lou Miller, | Creekmur, that he would be here. “If we have 600 there tonight", | vitations include toastmaster for the event. Our biggest, here | Lyle Smith of Detroit; ‘Spike’ tofore, was 525. Good weather fs the Tigers; members of the ‘tickets were still available, trom ueiene and MSU representa ‘ Orchard Lake avenue ~~ TWENTY Vacationists in the United States) by do 8 per cent of their traveling'1,018 miles per round trip. automobile, averaging about Vincent’s Dining Room 3449 Orchard Lake Rd. Opposite Keego Theatre RECOMMENDED BY DUNCAN HINES SPECIAL WED., FEB. 8 Complete Dinner $1675 PRIME ROAST of BEEF au Jus »~ i ‘The Court Jester’ Helps | London Poor Fund Drive THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1956 Former City Man- [Hollywood Headlines: Released by Police Disney to Avoid Cliches } ' \ in First Western Movie | A 39-year-old former Pontiac man, who voluntarily took lie de- ved as tector tests.here concerning a hit- By BOB THOMAS Sor. the| fire time’) Helleven’ esta NEW YORK — “Jackie Gleason fight with CBS!” exclaimed and-run death Dec. 18, was not ran , ; a kiss from his lad Wale ty Georgie Jessel at a meeting of a committee planning to cele-| charged with the crime, authorities HOLLYWOOD w—Walt Disney Kathleen Crowley id a of brate Gleason's 40th birthdsy Feb. 26. “Why, he wouldn't fight said. has embarked on his first West- a 6 _ with CBS any more than I'd go out with girls!” The tests Friday and Saturday ern movie with a determination) «But we're not going to have ° a ¢ . it were “inconclusive,” and there to avoid the horse opera cliches. lot of loving and sraccching = Dis- Wn — rr a Phil Silvers’ thow clobbered ems the mas for investigation, Oakland 9, y'nral'y, want grin te ey nat pcre Tt as | ka , © save the ers. eee Berle 25 = pi aay _Jremeee Frederick C. Redskins won't be slain in'whole- resent it.” \ ‘ lowest rating ever. e always zi . Sale lots. | er nen a | Sanna — hought Joan Bennett one of Jack Decker’ ‘Ss On US-10 in Drayton Piains . a Get im the click at the office — find out where the oft for in'a big hurry — at lunch time. gang takes @ Breckfast @ Lunch @ Dinner \the prettiest girls in America_ ‘and weren't surprised to see ithe picture of her dtr., Melin- \da Markey, on the cover of a BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! emt, | WINNER of the AUDIENCE AWARD Court Jester” \for charity in London next week and Danny's attending. Danny and partners’ll make $1,000,080 on the picture, but Paramount spent about $1,000 in overtime Wed. night, cause Danny, doing special appearances, had such a good time he stayed on stage miore than ait hour. * * x * Gwen Verdon of “Damn Yankees” has her next show picked out — a musical “Roxy Hart” based on “Chicago”, which Gin- ger Rogers did as a film. “Country Singer” Elvis Presley from Tennessee, whom the CBS “Stage Show” grabbed though he records his hits for RCA-Victor, is only 20. Gonna be the new Johnny Ray, you watch! ° x &* k * Rocky Marciane listening to his Brockton buddies, the investigate the death of Wellington ' M 14, of 3655 Joslyn Rd. oes to kiss the girl! who ‘was struck down while walk- ing home on E. Walton Bivd, to Wed Apr. 18, 19 in Monaco Rites | nouncement of what could be the the Wagons,” the story of a pio- |) biggest Queen Elizabeth to Prince Philip) ‘There'll be no cavalry,” he an-| came simply yesterday in a phone nounced. ‘“‘And the Indian fight |! jj call from Grace Kelly's secretary comes in the middle, not at the |) fj to want to announce the date of their | They race toward a gap, where; marriage as April 18 and 19. The safety lies, | rites will be held in Monaco with) | the civil ceremony on the 18th and they want something. So Fess the religious ceremony the follow-/Stampedes a herd of horses right) ing day. \this time.” | custom in. Monaco, the tiny Medi-| terranean principality over which them, but we aren't going over- the prince to treat a mule. “Kind and gentle,” said a Missouri mule- tamer. The farmer was. The mule wouldn't budge. “Like | this,” explained the Missourian—belting the mule on the skull with a club. “But you said kind and gentle!” pro- gotta attract his attention first.” x * * THE MIDNIGHT EARL. . . i * * | i] in cruise ships . . . Bing Crocsby told Mitch Miller his choice of.the. best male singer: Tony Bennett .. . Clare Boothe Luce reportedly will resign when Ike makes his announcement. February 18th Is —WEST PONTIAC KIWANIS— “2, iy All the Panc f a « _tain. Make family—at This Space Donated by: PONTIAC DRIVE-IN Theater akes ‘n Sausages You Can Eat! x &* * * | | ] | 5 4 MIAMI BEACH, Fla, i — The!ting conflicts it a date for the. the PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS BUILDING W. Huren at Genesee BLUE SKY D Theater RIVE-IN | | | | parently is determined to avoid let- trio — called The Three Gayles ... A scandal] mag offered a H'wood actress her choice of any fur coat, for the “lowdown” on the Rubisora-Barbara Hutton story .. . Broderick Craw- x & & *& WISH I'D SAID THAT: “Sometimes a husband pulls the N. Saginaw St., was fined $100 wool over his wife’s eyes with the wrong yarn.”—Joe Marsh. |sentenced to 15 days in jail TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: June Valli says she saw “I'll Cry Pleeding guilty yesterday |Tomorrow,” and when the picture was over there wasn't alsarge Of driving under the dry throat in the house. It’s Sarah Vaughn's observation: Copyright 1956, The Hall Syndicate, Inc.) AFL-CIO merger, appeared today to|lion-member union group. and a good bet| to weather certain storms ahead. pig auto workers union, Ss . « e and was) former chief of the CIO, is basking ® A pile of differences faced the|in the Florida sunshine with one-/in Municipal Court Feb. 16. AFL-CIO. Executive Council at win: time rival AFL chiefs without, 80! ter sessions re It nobody|far at least, pressing several quar- seemed too worried they would rels in which he is involved. torpedo the recent merzer * * George Meany, AFL-CIO presi-- One concerns the federal aid to! dent, is riding herd on the squab- | equcation plan being bles among union leaders. He aP- the Ejsenhower * | | buildings. Both Meany and Reuther want, considerably more money — but have split over an amendment pro- posed by Rep. Powell (D-NY) to Soviet scientists have explored a aoe <= + districts. LJ .3 ( cial segregation in schools 60.3% of our patrons are sent to us by relatives and friends! é Yes . . . that's right! According to survey, 60.3% of our patrons are referred by friends and relatives who wear Kindy glasses! The reasons are simple . fidence, trust and satisfaction. Our patrons know they can depend on Kindy eyewear for quality, accuracy and performance. They know their friends and relatives will be impressed by the wide selection of Kindy fashion ‘firsts’ . . . dependable service, too! DR. SPENCER OATES, Optometrist 13 NO. SAGINAW ST. Take a tip from our many satisfied friends. Enjoy the comfort and service of beauty-prescribed, controlled- quality Kindy eyewear—today! “ASK A FRIEND ABOUT 9:30-5:30 daily 9:30-12:30 Wed. 9:30-8:00 Fri. « « CONn- and will enjoy the friendly, spent on segregated schools. * * i] | Reuther and his Detroit labor leader rival, James R. Hoffa, vice wwesident of the teamsters union, | also are at odds over work juris- terson, 13, broke through the ice. ithe auto industry. Mexico's silver output now ex- a ceeds 100 tons a month. Dornan Brothers—heard about a farmer who asked how leave for her family home in ‘re & @ change of pace for Fess. |) Philadelphia. She sails April 4 for The famed Monaco, tested the farmer. “Sure,” said the mule-tamer, “but you Name City Manager | to Sanitation Group yesterday accepted an appointment Joe Louis will return to show biz as straight man for Leonard re the chniond nateae Cae ‘Reed .. . B'way jokesters give copies of “A Night to ‘Remem- tee of the National Sanitation Foun- ber” (about the sinking of the Titanic) to friends embarking dation. Dr. Joseph D. Moiner, of the De- is studying the water, sewage and | Singer Sunny Gayle's estranged husband manages a new ‘drainage conditions in six south- jane Michigan counties. Fine, 15 Day Term ford will record the Gettysburg Address. [Given James W. Jones “A college girl may be poor ment before Pontiac Munici-| le history but great on dates.” That's earl, brother. hares tence in Oakland County Jail. Serving from 7 a.m. te 8 p.m.| A F L-C I O Seen to Wea thersenters Plea of Innocent, Adults .... $19 Dresent, Future Squabbles) cu 1 wm Date Set Children... To raise funds for the Chil-'two months old dren's work of the Club, Aunt be taking hold Jemima will be here in person’ to bake and serve and enter-| Cass Ave., pleaded innocent to win-| develop into issues dow peeping at arraignment before although only|that could divide the new 15-mil-'Pontiac Municipal Judge Maurice; Walter Reuther, who heads the leased on $100 bond. supported by Sanford St., paid a $100 fine yes-| administration, |terday on a charge of driving un-| calling for an outlay of 250 mil-|der the influence of liquor. (lion dollars in each of the next) She pleaded guilty at arraign-| 'five years to help build new school’ ment before Pontiac Municipal | \Judge Maurice E. Finnegan. such federal aid—in fact both want Antarctic Oasis! ban such aid to segregated school strange Antarctic oasis covering jabout 200 square miles, The mid-! Here again both are against ra- day temperature there rises to 77, but degrees Meany thinks the Powell rider plant life, the broadcast said, ad- would wreck chances of the educa-' ding: tion aid plan clearing Congress and radiation and the heat of the rocks (Reuther insists upon advance safe- makes the snow melt early in the guards that no money could be spring.’ No further explanation ee ‘diction in nonproduction phases of of Lake Sabbatia and in quick suc-; ‘all six were hauled ashore. (Advertisement) Police said they will continue to. Ang the hero (Fess Parker) even Trust Walt to do things differ- jently. It seems incredible that the ‘prolific producer hasn't tackled a LY/) YEARS o " as legend. ‘Davy Crockett’ was historical with some legend thrown in, and his |) &/ TH US 1 1TS OuR GOLDEN JUBILEE OF LOOKING FORWARD ~ WIN THEATRE PASSES! forthcoming “Great Locomotive | , | Chase” can be called a Southern. |) ¥J HOLLYWOOD w — The an-| Now he’s shooting ‘“‘Westward Ho ij | | wedding since that of neer drive across the plains. it reporters: jend. But the settlers don't form | “Miss Kelly and Prince Rainier 4 Circle to fight the Indians off.‘]) ff ) “The Indians aren't just killers; | linto their charge. Each Indian’ “There are other detail iscrambles to get a horse for him-' nm s ot Self, and the attack is broken. The separate ceremonies are the SOME BLOODSHED if “We'll have to wound a few of NEW MOVIES! BIG SCREEN! rules, The Bishop of board. Yakima Canutt (action ad- King of the Wild Fron-| tier gets to play a doctor in this) one, and he has some romance) SAVE YOUR TICKET. STUBS! Each theater every day will list 4 ticket numbers in this ad and in box office window. If you have ticket stub with one of these numbers, present at box office of designated theater and you will receive 2 passes to see the next attraction. 160 PASSES WEEKLY! THE PEOPLE S CHOICE TODAY’S LUCKY STUB NUMBERS! Monaco will celebrate the Roman Viser) wanted to explode one of | OAKLAND STRAND STATE Catholic nuptial mass. |the wagons fora spectacular scene. | 133,020 177,619 62,748 . Miss Kelly is scheduled to finish But I told him settlers wouldn't || 133,390 177,743 62,758 “High Society” with Bing Crosby be carrying that much powder.” |}! 133,691 177,891 62,786 and Frank Sinatra March 10 and Disney said he planned the pic- 133,901 178,003 62,793 LAKE THEATER | AN i TONICHT City Manager Walter K. Willman INDIAN GIRL . as a fire-orrow! The appointment was made by ~ (©) B) al Ine James William Jones, 38, of TONIGHT Failing to pay the fine at ar-| je Jones began verving a 9-day sen. PY SO-phis-to-cats “THE LAST FRONTIER” and | s—20 MMM x No Cover—No Mihimum 4 DELL’S INN * VES S SEES TT. e * Chloe A. Williams, 35, of 286 N.| TODAY thru FR THE INDIAN FIGHTER AND THE fierce _ “THE HOUSTON STORY” - « @ love as DAY! | BARN DANCE MEER NSH NASH eS arte CingurT TODAY THRU WED. || = \ SSS eae LONDON W— Moscow radio says ~\ THE DEADLIEST KILLER: ~ CHIEFTAIN OF THEM and there is primitive! “A high degree of solar) pesert bay sands CO-FEATURE s=== — | \E, Finnegan yesterday and was =| Pontiac Water and Mili Sts i : portera heal gag arise | | * LAST TIMES TODAY x | ate law and will be examined | SAT. NIGHT ‘Municipal Co FEB. 11, 8 to 1 | % | Vice and Violence “INSIDE DETROIT” | * | er Also “FURY AT GUNSIGHT PASS” Levy Fine of $100 BUDDY SANDERS . : for Drunk Driving His ORIFTWODD Bos The Fescipa’ Lagion’s| Grentegs Adventure! Juanita P. Simpkins, 30, of 88 N. U-ALL-COME 4 as given. Sapo human chain was formed and, of a floating time-bomb. in ~ —_ MATINEES #0c — EVES. 500 STARTS WEDNESDAY! “The Phenix City Story” “Many Rivers to Cross” a | i 4 a 6 Break Through Ice mt TAUNTON, Mass. —John Mas-’ es They're the DOORS OPEN 10:45 ‘cession five wettid-be rescuers also fire and fuse fell through broken ice. Finally, ENDS TODAY! “Amertea's Wiekedest City!” KINDY GLASSES” eeceenreo oy WARNER BROS. Cine WARNERCOLOR: SrrreopHome SouND 1 DAVID FARRAR-LYLE BETTGER-TAB MUNTED | Ma Ver Ix “THE YELLOW ROSE OF TEXAS” — AND THE MAN WHO TRACKED HER DOWN! w'The RETURN of | WANTED women! JACK SLADE” a NY ca oe TE PME aes OF A UL = easy me =H i ae | (“Slow down. George. They've got PLENTY of . | V. A. Nye Dairy Ce., Vitamin-Mineral Milk” . ? 4 ee cclis snarting John Mari Neville fe - : f hes =2- ALSO) --- 3:24-8:36 Ericson Blanchord Brand Sh am pet fier eae PLUS A THRILLING CINEMASCOPE ADVENTURE! Aas i | | et-fortane who courted » high-bore beasty! | . THE KINGS THIEF || GREAT ADVENTURE OF INDIA cad Sc] “KING of the 32 oS =| soe Wren rsent Goeas | TYRONE H BER ~RIFLES” ae 1 | POWER K Y | STARTING THURSDAY } e 5 . iu i » Tl verry Technicolor-Deluxe Lure of the Wilderness | MOORE - and Cinemascope i “SHIELD: FOR MURDER” a » ap * ie ge a es Signi nmi: RANE MMe ET Ss at ee ee ee eee ee i ee ee ee e793 a ag . s : Sat J a wr NTY-TWO AY TNHATAY wl Dow Declares Dividend “MIDLAND ~The Board of di-| holders of record March 23. rectors of Dow Chemical Co. today) “_eweeeeerrrvrerrrereree cents a share on common stock. 'It is payable April 13 to stock- declared a quarterl dividend of 25. : a Detroit to Get ‘SB Meet tia eatery Reel a BOAO, § DETROIT «#—Detroit has been! 2 $ awarded the 1958 natiunal conven- % Meet Your Frivads in the ition of the Veterans of Foreign q > | Wars, $ Riker Fountain 3 2 __ Riker Bidg.Lobby ¢ us is buying Argentine The Happiest Homes Are F inanced the Low-Cost Whether you're thinking of building or buying a hore already built —- let us show you how our low - cost mortgage loan can ease the way to home-ownership. Capitol Savings & Loan Co. 75 West Huron St. — FE 4-056] ette, a Memphis Commercial-Ap employe who wound up on page Automobile Insurance Is Very Reasonable! dent. whole yeor. H. W. Huttenlocher Max E. Kerns 318 Riker Bidg. Wet pavement or careless- ness may cause an acci- Just one minor acci- dent costs much more than your insurance policy for a Call today— H. W. HUTTENLOCHER Agency FE 4-155) -STOCKS— BONDS Consult Us for First Hand Information in Stock and Bonds We maintain a direct line fo a member of all Principal exchanges with up-to-the-minute a service available at all times. C. J. Nephler Co. 818 Community Nationa) Bank Bldg. FE 2-9119 —= 714 Community Nat’] Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 Richard H. DeWitt Donald E. Haken Res. FE 5-3793 Res. FE 26513 Accident Insurance Fire Insurance Automobile Insurance Life Insdrance Liability Insurance Paty slass Insurance Burglary Insurance 's—All Types Lo BAKER & HANSEN “This is the mark of a regi admiral man: Steadfastness in the face of trouble.” —Ludwig Beethoven are ee Onn Oe rs regardless of hew mech er how many you ewe. NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ONE PLACE TO PAY Member American Associ @ on of Credit Counsellers “Let 9 Years of Credit Counselling experience assist you” Hours: Daily 9 to S$. Wed. & Sat. 9 to 1 Evenings by Appt. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 41% 6. Saginaw st. Wt yee are unabie to pay your payments, debts or bille when dee, see MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS and arrange fer payments you can Above Oakland Theater | Lunch served 11 to 1 Wed. St. John’s Lutheran Church. ser i (ea ce $1 oo Bought - Sold Pontiac Office 716 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Other Offices Ann Arbor Ford Motor Company Common Stock Quoted Prospectus on Request Watling, Lerchen & Co. Telephone FE 4-2895 Jackson PRIZE-WINNING MOUSER — Here’ s Georg- peal newspaper one of her own Buick’s January Sales Second Best in History " FLINT «mh — Buick ported yesterday livered 51,367 new cars in January. Midsouth Cat F “working class.’ The big alley cat is the mouse AP Wirephote anciers Championship show, in the Gas Stocks Rise in Market Sales NEW YORK uw—Natural gas and pipe line issues rose in an other- wise mixed stock market in early trading today. Passage of the nat- ural gas bill by the Senate spurred prices of affected issues but there seemed no carry-through to their rise. The rest of the list was peppered with fractional gains and losses in moderate activity. Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line leaped almost 4 points at the open- around 2 points. E] Paso Natural ern Natural Gas and American Natural Gas were up fractionally. Opening blocks included Socony off 4% at 70 on 2,000 shares, Gen- eral Motors unchanged at 44% on 6045 on 7,000. Steels were mostly lower and rails were mixed. After five straight days on, the upside the Associated Press 60- stock average dipped 20 cents yes- terday to $177.40 as the market performed irregularly. Volume, 2,230,000 shares. New York Stocks weeks at Named at a recent meeting of State Forests Yield ithe society's Easter Sea] Commit- tee, Austin will spearhead the an- Moores. nual appeal for funds to provide ,ANSING Cosson 6 state eds Fairetailere tga services for the crippled and han- forests produced a record $596 to be held ‘dicapped, scheduled March 10 to April 10. $596,545 in Timber in timber products last year, = \State ‘Conservation Department Stating that he was honored to said today. be chosen chairman for the work, Austin said “Success lies not with one man'of “weed” The department said good mar- ket conditions, better technical use, species and stepped-up _____ or committee, but with the helping planting had increased yield. The company reported it as the second best January in its history The ree January retail sales total is 33.796 units delivered dure ing the first me onth of 1955 NOTICE OF ‘Pu BLIC SALE 2255 Pontiac &70 Catalina Cou i gine No sale to he held xi) pm at 3 Ma irhlg 7. 1986 GMC TRUCKS “Built in Pontiac by Pontiac People” WILSON GMC CO. Oakland at Cass, Pontiac (Advertisement STOP SCALP ..: ITCH Glover's —_ Medicine ae — Gadel fainegheie’ Uline falling hair. Untike corenies tonics a vt dreesine. Clerer. sine — ee Laren chapter prescript: sal avant wothing Leeper chet Ss clip etiulae the st lover's 60. Kalemazoo | “breathe” again. second Vanes Mediine to tonight then sererin hair and a rCOMPLETELY. KE ITALIZED. Itch is gone. Dandruff is checked. Mair stops coming out because your scalp can Glover's Mange Medicine at alldruggiats, Money back guarantee. ¥ ‘hands of all interested in the well » being of crippled children In 1952, public timber jing then settled back to a gain of Free rete hothouse 9.00. Gas rose about a point while North-| 2.500 and Westinghouse up 4, at) #6 however, was the best in two = vielded $280,000 worth of timber. cent MARKETS Produce bee dai tre dbs andi yi 4.00 bu; Jenatnen, anc ; ‘00 MacIntosh, eae 400 bu; ‘ABLES— Beets, 1,50-2.00 bu. , +f he 2.00-2.56 black, No 1, 1.80-2.00 bu; hothouse, No J, "Rhubarb, hothouse, “fancy, 1, 10-80 5-ib box: 1$-1.25 bu. 00-2.40 8-lb Siapeaasl No a 2.06-3.60 bu. GREENS Zale, No 1, 1.00-1.50 bu. LETTUCE AND SALAD GREENS—Cei- try Cabbage, No 1, 1.00-1.50 bu. bu. Dry >. Hubbard, we 1 ertteagal EGGS DETROIT, Feb. (AP) — —— cases poy fi eral tate 8 Whitee—Orade A ier apes 6. Extra 34. Checks 33-34, wid avg 33 Wites" cont seer at 2 | . * , «iP Carrier C ‘44 arke . e top the range. Caponettes steady ‘mobiles are balanced to the closest, 9° Gurrent. Trends in Child Cas, JL. Olay RR 3}.$ Supplies ample to the regular butcher limits now known in the automotive ¢; igance.”’ Cater Trac . 63 5ros! Cole jag race. No reecipts or prices on fryers) industry | suidance, _ Ches & Ohio ses Ffirer 399 Oder ‘industry. Chrysler 73 Pbllce -. 32.3) Hi a Presently head of Chil trepgs iCities Bvt 601 ae cl 4 1| CHICAGO POULTRY Services of Lafayette Clini¢g,~ De- Climax Mo 643 Proct & G 692 CHICAGO. Feb. 6—(AP'—iUSDA) Colg Palm 6 u Chrysler Forms Plants [roit, Dr. Simson has a b ‘ground jCol Brad A 25.1 Lede ad 3 ee pest Secon cece rer ieer, Teel Into Manufacturing Unit in both medical and teaching fields. Come na’. S43 Repub st 42 paying prices unchanged; heavy hens De he w lc . ox « 24-25; Nght hens 18-168; broilers or fry- SETRO Before coming to Hetroit, he was ee oon Ca Lee 821) ors 23-24: old roosters 145-188; eapon ROIT @ Chrysler Corp director of the” “Guidance Center DE: cme S SIMEON scneum Pow , os belowarm +1: 3R ylettes under 4% Ib 24-28, over 44 iy 38. ‘announced today the formation of and superipténdent. of Dayton Re- —— icone Mot @4 ®t Req Pan 422 30, hen turkeys 38: tom turkeys 32. . ea at ar] 'a new manufacturing group within ceiving Méspital for Children, Day- : es aiobde piel ee ; : tt ‘the corporation, designated as the 'on, Shio - f ea en e ecte ee we, ete Shen oa = m3 Livestock \Engine and Transmission Group. e is a former director of Kala- 824 sinclir 0 587 DETROIT LIVESTOCK | It is composed of five manufagMazoo Children’s Center, and | Ai d f { h [Dow * chem aig Socony Mob. 7 DprRorr Ped 1 (AP) — 1U 8 De- i} \faviaeg plants in Detroit and “ve served seven years as instructor in 0 | a e C 0