“Ss _ THE PONTIAC PRES#r p , PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 —40 PAGES 118 Traffic Deaths Mar U.S Widening Work lon M24 fo Start Here in Spring . Hol Divorced Couple Re-Wed on Horseback] Michigan Roads — 3 . ’ ; Become Scene of 12 Fatalities Family Has Happy Holiday Reunion uns 2 Seer oe tI Sia aes a ae Four-Lane Highway Will | Be Built From Lake Illinois Leads Country With 16 Losing Lives Orion to Opdyke Rd. Over Thanksgiving State Highway Commis- From AP and UP Dispatches sioner Charles M. Ziegler Americans today posted a revealed today that work will begin “as early as weather conditions permit” next spring on widening M-24 from two to four lanes over an eight-mile stretch ways. A United Press count be- from Lake Orion south to and midnight last night Opdyke road. showed 118 persons had The project will cost about died in traffic accidents. $1,350,000. Fires killed 4 and miscel- The widening is scheduled to be éxtended from Opdyke down the North Perry street business route to East Huron street in 1956 at an estimated cost of over $700,000. } Orion-Opdyke section of the high- Texas 9, Kentucky § and New Rady Wiby pose, EAA Soaiors te ara “this was autayed im the scerine ‘ The National Safety Council of necessary right-of-way.” AP Wirephote | followed its usual practice of not COUPLE REMARRIED — Mrs. Maude Hodgins | mounted on their favorite horses. The Rev. W. S.| making a prediction of traffic a Epactey wil te Wil ed tee firmer besiend. Kenuth, whe ‘ween|setee (right) performed the ceremony. Hodgins, | fatalities for the Thankegiving chased in time to let the contract | married for 22 years but divorced two years ago, |a , Was on a Tennessee Walking Horse | beliday. during winter or early spring 80 | were remarried south of Ann Arbor yesterday while and his wife was"on @ regigtered quarter horse. However, the toll was’ above the the contractor can start work. . . ~ a a average for any given day and was after the frost has left the ground.” ° . az y to climb higher as reports “mais «deine commstoee.”| DOUDE Shadows Selfridge Ofticer DeferdS ¥ite\scicms com ik ve Zeigier pledged, “‘and will be ad- - ; . “SD” Day, less than three weeks A bered to.” — Protective Value of Nike teay. hen Presiden Esenbowe THANKFUL TO BE HOME — Mrs. Mildred AP Wirephote! One of the most heavily trav- lk A tment asked that no traffic accidents Orchard, of Amityville, N. Y. hugs her son William, | by his wife and two sons, one of whom, Michael,| eled highways in Oakland Coun. e In The commanding officer of the Army's 28th Anti- “The oe aren a. r 36, on his arrival at Idlewild Airport yesterday |11 months, he holds. Orchard was denied an exit ty, M-24 im 1953 averaged 8,000 . aircraft Artillery unit stationed at Selfridge Air Force hand of multigle eth eee. from Communist China. Orchard was accompanied | visa from Red China for four years, cars per day over the stretch to | Some Believe Senate Base today denied that the “Nike” has become obsolete| dents. A head-on ccllinion mar . ; _— Won't OK Kammbolz | even before becoming established as part of the nation’s Mendota. Ii.. killed five persons Jap Premier Steps Down ioe, ee ee ram sant oan RTO ; 8 wo Ore. p DS Some Snow oo — road) WASHINGTON @-—-An sir of u®! ae that Nike, ap antiaireraft guided missile, had lost Seas Alenen daieniaien alk : ‘Duein Pontiac |?" cenboner's nocdination ee TragEi uch of its protective value and was fast out-| 2) died in a head-on collision as if 0 | f a a ei: iat heave mam ° C. Kammholz, Chicago attorney, | Oded by fast flying planes and “flying bombs,” like the er - pang tay 4 mee . ; damp weather in store for them, Blood Pictures to the important post of general} V-2 bombs of World War II. »| Bad driving conditions in parts bein ; the U.S, Weather Bureau says. counsel of the National Labor Re-| “I Would say categorically that Nike is not obsolete,”| o¢ the nation played a part in the ____Frem AP and UP Dispatches The forecast for tonight is snow lations Board, declared Col. Walter C. Conway. upper Midwest,. Northeast and TOKYO — Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida today gave mixed with rhin and rain or snow Shown fo Jury , Senate | dectining | * “There are always plans —— were battered by snow up the Teadership of the Liberal party which he guided | tomorrow. There will be little to be quoted hy name, said today | bee the drawing boards even pg poh tn. i eee or aera more than eight years of the stormy postwar |change in temperature until | phossoranh Taken in| Kammholz may not be confirmed KAT GUVET when @ new weapon comes | zero at Los Angeles, era, a Japanese news ‘service reports. ; « morrow night, when cloudy skies | at all, either at this session or next | _ lout,” he said. Three members of a Kalamazoo Yoshida agreed to step down as president of the Lib-| and colder weather will bring snow| Sheppard House Are | year by the Democrat-controlled ° . “But Nike is so reveluti family whose car collided witha cleo will be a ‘ tionary | steel truck while they were re- eral party in favor of Deputy Premier Taketora Ogata oe ae ml be cloudy | Identified by Chemist | senate. al unning |and offers such a high degree of | turning from holiday visit were after party leaders decided’ 7 Yesterday rain dampened| CLEVELAND » — The position ts a key one in | Protection that I think it is going | @mong the 12 persons Killed in yesterday that this was the | Seq Releases | Thanksgiving day, with a total of showing a trail of blood spots administering the ype But Predicts Challenge to be a long, long time before it Thanksgiving traffic in Michigan. best course of action, the! . 09 in. recorded. Tempetatures | through the Sheppard house of | ‘bor law because the —_ sate is obsolete. Killed fietantly when their Cache of Beer ranged from 29 to 40 degrees in| murder were introduced by the| ¢ral counsel has exclesive power | From Williams, Other ~.. = car wae Gemelished urar Tires was reported to have conferred for during the day, causing bad driv-|fenge objected unsuccessfully to| Cte unfair labor practice Page WASHINGTON (UP)—Sen. Estes | ®t any known speed now, we can an hour and 4 minutes with high| SANDWICH, England #» — po egy cerendipr emigre wont four of them — against a union or em Kefauver (D-Tenn) predicts that pack them down ond Guve would t -before | Eighteen bottles of beer believed | “ids during me evening. | Adlai Stevenson has the “best a very high probability that we officials of his party today Tonight's low is expected to be} _ Memry St ts tar we afliciel ieee have! ‘ would be able to engage and shoot he accepted the executive board’s| to be about 250 years old have from 30-34 with a high tomorrow| W#t® 12 years experience in the r chance” of winning the Demo- them down.” been reported filed against Kamm-| cratic presidential nomination in | decision. washed ashore here in the past | of 38-42. Saturday night the low ination formall Meanwhile, the Army district oshida retain premier week. will be around 26-30. — me hegre Senate. when it con. _ engineer's office in Detroit re- . > . =~ = Ivor Noel-Hul shaeol- |, At 8 o'clock this morning the} He was a prosecution witness at|vehed in special session Nov. & | But Kefauver said Stevenson will | sorted that construction has begun in Son ship but his strengthened opposi- | Ivor Noel-Hulme, an archaeol- | ter reading was 36 de-|the first degree murder trial of | Tne Seen tae term of the |8et Competition from a host of on two Nike sites in Oakland tion in the new Diet (Parliament) | ogist, fixed the approximate age grees, rising to 41 at 1 p.m. Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard, the Bay t Democratic-appointed gen- | “f@vorite son” candidates. County, : which convenes Nov. 30 is de- | of the brew by examining the old | Village osteopath who is accused _—— ' oe be nid: | . Norman Cagle Admits termined to unseat him and end- | handmade bottles. They w of ° (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Possible oppenen ’ The sites, part of a I4-wnit pro- A Liberal party rule. : & type used 2% centuries aa Burglar Helps Himself riper 4 oe of _ are Govs, Frank J, Lausche of | tective ring around are Assaulting Remington; . : | e- . Marilyn, . i} « Me N j 7 2 For the first time in his long| The beer is. believed to have|to Thanksgiving Dinner. | cna marks and pointing pen-| [7 Today's Press | ace @ ee ee ‘a reared Ran, acer ae vere Hiss Out Tomorrow rule his opposition has enough cer |e oer tp ben any wreck fH) LIVONIA {INS) — Trustful Mrs. | “lls Were used to call attention to Re ireapeopapeceanes 2 | Michigan and Averell Harriman | (Continued on Page’2, Col LEWISBURG, Pa. @~The FBI tain votes to topple him with a non- “People ate hf al Marshall Mefcalf's policy of leav- the blood spots, many of which Borie _ erernenrerrentee % | of New York. on Page‘2, .3) wter a fader in House : were small. ONG, BOO. 5. cccccescoseceoss : charged a third inma’ confidence motion in the . Hulme reported, “say it is|i™& her front door unlocked made quite Christmas Carel ser iteeeeeseeess SB Kefauver, who battled Stevenson Radiator Has Shakes Federal Penitentiary aes a sears pn gt Y | horrible.” ee PP? ‘ giving for an in- ae -_ — basement to Cones, BD. ; ing Co. He had previously been a Harry E. and Olive Lashley Hud- Sele mas lighting contest. — joer is rsagelor ti sad whit faa. eoereiiaget te yp. | S00 and was married Aug. 15, At the beginning of the session But the most ambitious —— “a : es a ned cha ois ni During the day designed to Besides his widow, S| Te | Judge Edward Blythin excused the ‘ ; = ame cnai a ries , . / . 7 taking ig the compiling of a direc- te perk 3 Le help improve classroom tech- vived by two sons, Frank and Ted Mrs. Ward had lived in Pontiac | jury while defense counsel William tory new to Birmingham, Classed Of the project. niques, elementary instructors at home and granddaughter, Carol |'1¢ years, J. Corrigan renewed his motion as another annual civic project, | members are busy acquiring the -necessary data for the cross-in-| . * . With traffic violations responsi- ble for 27 of- the 32 accidents dexed book, which will list busi-| shown in Police Chief Ralph W United Fund Reveals Gifts of Over $50 Moxley’s Ortober report, Moxley jcommented that the accident toll |has been mounting month by | month this year. He added that strict enforce- men of traffic laws will reduce that police officers do not enjoy issuing tickets and are not re- | quired to issue 9 certain number each day. Moxley said he has “issued or- ders to all officers to enforce the |laws more vigilantly than in the | traffic violations, but pointed out | will study the areas of social studies, science, music integra- tion and books and materials. “The day has been divided into quarters to enable all the teachers to meet with the various consult- ,;ants we have brought in to ad- vise them,"’ said Gerald White, elementary coordinator for the Pon- tiac schools. Webster School will be the scene of this all-day conference for ele- mentary teachers. Special education person- nel plan to meet with the ele- mentary sessions in the morn- ing and will held their own | | departmental meeting in the aft- | | comes close to edge of bluff overlooking shores of Lake Michigan. | Lynn of Drayton Plains. Also sur- | Grow of Auburn Heights and Mrs. | officiate with burial | Park Cemetery. in Ottawa ‘Kathryn Herrington 7 | The funeral will be held Satur- Be | day at 3 p.m. from the Huntoon | Funeral Home for Kathyrn Her- | rington, 88, of 559 Lenox St. Dr. | H. H. Savage of the First Baptist Church will officiate. Burial will | HIGHWAY THREATENED—Airview of U. S. 12 near St. Joseph, viving are two sisters, Mrs. Daniel of Besides her husband, and father | for a continuance of the trial, now Fremont, Ohio, she is survived | ending its sixth week. by two children, Mrs. Gaitha Mar- Pontiac, Melvin and Mary Ward at home. Three brothers, Darwin, Darrell and Virgil Hudson all of Fremont,, The stories dealt with reporters’ Ohio, also survive. | interviews — one with friends and The funeral wil! be held Satur-| relatives of the slain Marilyn Shep- day at 1:30 p.m. from the Farm.- | pard, the other a feature about a er-Snover Funeral Home, The Rev. | woman juror’s family §strugglinc A. J. Baughey of the Evangelistic | along without her while she was on Tabernacle will officiate with bur-| duty. ial following in Oak Hill Ceme-| The juror, Mrs. Lois Mancini tery. | Was not at the home when her “striking at the very foundations | of jurisprudence.” Cs * > ; past . it will be very grati-| Note particularly in lower righthand corner. Cracks can be seen in | follow in P Mount Park Cem- _ . : . Mire ete Ot S30 and over were | tying if we find that by better | °™00m- face of bluff where highway comes near drop. Erosion of bluff in|etery ‘Clerk Under Knif ietep oore Gone ae ee Y a traffic law enforcement we have | - Philosophies of what constitutes | recent years has forced abandonment of several lake-front homes. | Born in Albany, er n nite | Blythin noted pay overruling the . 505,. | fewer tickets to issue and fewer | a good junior high school program | re unicipal Court Clerk Leo F.| m,¢i campaign $525,- : = : ; i N. Y. Oct. 10, M pal ' motion. ; * | accidents to investigate. have been formulated during the . | . McDonald today is reported in| The state contends Dr, Sheppard 823 goal yesterday, with donations * ¢ ®@ past few weeks by representative | | 1866, she was the aiee : ere TH. if an arg } . good condition following an opera- | killed his wife after an affair with Two Dec. 14 public hearings | people trom this school group in | nvoy a | daughter of Lem- tion at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital.|a pretty nurse, Susan Hayes + 000.00 were set by Planning Board mem-| order to help plan the new ard |e R ° uel and Louise pa 750.00 | DFS thig week, — — le pd — e in emington Death Hersc he nh am FRIDAY nd f2s.00| Ome will consider a property | °°! ——" Herrington. She G oops the We are asking the senior high | 0 | (Continued From Page One) bos.cg| OWEER'S Fequest to resone school teachers to begin to think | a lived with her SATURDAY 400.42| Southwest corner of Southfield | about an ideal Senior high school Alger Hiss who has spent three niece, Mrs. Edith ' 350.50 and Lincoln from single to two- | Monday.” eld Coca |: V. Allen Moves 2" @ half years in the jail. His Tick for many J ONLY! 380 00 program on Monday. George V. Allen Moves 300.00 | family residence. Surrounding |) Cox assistant superintendent of i wife, Priscilla, was expected to years, also Cor- 238-30 | property owners will attend the | “4 From India to the State : nelia G, Miller 228.50 | school meet ‘him at the prison gates. | end Miss 168.00| Three property owners will also | high school will be constructed for | ‘The 50-year-old fermer State De-| _— omg . Pontiac. fea} be present when their request to/ this district within the next few’ AUGUSTA, Ga. u—President partment official, who was con- brother a 190.60 | rezone property on Woodward on | years, Cox said it was en Eisenhower today named George victed of swearing falsely when he can at Bloomfield. N bese | the south side of Colonial Court | that planning begin now. | V. Allen, now ambassador to India, told a congressional committee he , Miss Herringtorl 128.00 | from single family residence to ter- © be assistant secretary of state had never passed secrets to a Com- home W after a brief ill- 123.99 | Tace zoning, is considered. 118 T ffi Death for Near East, South Asian and/ munist spy ring, is leaving on a ednestay 2 121.00 * 8 * | raitic 5 | African affairs. probationary basis. He was orig. | "*™* Chrome-Plate 774 Three classes are meeting each . Allen will succeed Henry A. By- inally sentenced for five years, but ° ® ae Saturday morning at the YMCA Mar U 5 Holiday roade, who will become ambassa- he won an earlier release with a Herbert Lee Salisbury Electric GRILL 116.00 | craft shop and, under the direction ode dor to Egypt, succeeding Jefler-| ‘‘meritorious” record. | sehese lee Salisbury, 62, of joso9 | Of Paul Heins, are busily engaged| (Continued From Page One) | son Caffery, who is retiring. | As a convicted felon, he will be 100k Coameet tue Od, kid vas: | silo je0.60|in making small household arti * 8 6 without the right to vote or hold =e tyled es - 100.08 | cles_ ert Walker, 66; her daughter, The President announced at the publice office. terday after a 2-year illness. Pictured $ 88 - wee ‘no Mrs, Delia Mae Johnson, 37, and / jittie White House here, where he Acting Warden Fred T. Wilkin.| Born in Lapeer County Feb. 8. Gri elle aide de ani * 390.00 4 special interest group a a nephew, Joseph Williams, 38, is spending a Thanksgiving week- son said he has had his “‘custom- 1892. he was the son of Frank and | rng Bi pee hi Sop tor ‘Wilch : : aye4 works from 7 to 9 p-m. each | whe was driving. end vacation, that the nominations ary talk’ with Hiss. ag’ dead Salisbury. A farmer, ness of any Uesdethel Cleans cheents ‘ sane] Tuseday with Eric dacchesm. | 1. counted in the state toll| Will be sent to the Senate when| His itinerary for tomorrow is|he lived near and in Pontiac for |] 04.) to clean S13 | Making model beats, trains and were two Michigan residents killed | the lawmakers convene again. —_ simple: |60 years. . . 0 airplanes. in a holiday crash in Ohio, George} There had been speculation for! Eat breakfast, check out with! Mr. Salisbury was a veteran of Combination Grill & + %40| Openings remain in all classes |. Wentworth, 62, of Athens and| weeks about the shuffling of top the library and then walk to free-/ World War I. WAFFLE BAKER 32 22 | and interested youngsters may call his wife, Marion, 38, were killed | diplomatic posts. Some reports | dom, | Surviving are two brothers and = | the YMCA. |along with an Ohio man in a/| have suggested that John Sherman * * @ ' four sisters, Arthur, of Churubysco, . - ease} * 8 ¢ ' collision at Kiefersville Kentucky Republican de-/ Prison guards have described ind. and William, Mrs. George $@ 88 . oo; Resuming at 10:30 a.m. tomor-| One of Michigan's traffic mis- feated for re-electian to the Sen-/ Hiss’ prison life as that of an €X-| Dunham, Mrs. Roy Clayton, Mrs. Interchange > $tes| few is the Story Hour series at| haps derailed six railroad cars two | ate, might get Allen's post in India. | tremely cooperative inmate. | Charles Edson and Mrs. William able Grids . $100 | Baldwin Library for rs miles southeast of Plymouth in Press secretary James Hagerty _¢ @ © _ | Brown, all of Pontiac. so |through sixth graders. pple ee a a | had es ee ~| hefner elie teed oop The funeral will be held from the | — — oo Easy to sos | LAtvarion Kathioen Pilesg read) Gerald Ross, 39, Plymouth, was | cessor : risen time 86 8 on the cloth- | Kirkby Funeral Home Saturday at |] Ch@"6e. Two appliances in one. $3.2 | aloud, “The Wonderful Pot. a Dan- injured critically when his car eT as n.c., | ing issue detail. |? p.m, with burial in Mount Aven | Record low price se-se/ish folk tale; and “And to Think slammed into the dist car of a| Allen, 51, from Durham, NC../ jis goare time, they said, was hechiates . | Cemétery, } sae | That I Saw It on Mulberry Street,” | 57-car Chespeake & Ohio freight Oe oe ee eten service office; | devoted “almast’ exclusively” to’ | . ss by. Dr. ery teen - | >on from. Detroit to Toledo. 9 e Wl, enn He rose to | "eading _™ prison —— M Kelley S . Fine Chromium Plated $0.99 | three quarters of an hour, Miss, Three of the six 4 box: become ambassador to Iran iM) 1, be on hand to question Hiss Mrs. Kelley (A W.) Seencer. | 2-Slice Toaster 50° | Piket said. cars overturned, spilling perish- | 1945: assistant secretary for Pub- | on hi plane for the feture. ie|. — 'y gee | ones ables along the tracks. The lic Affairs in 198; ambassador to| entered the prison claiming his in- 2! 2 ames St., “ 50.00 ik Wayne County Read Patrol said Yugostavia in 199; and went to) nocence and some indications are | ®* St. Joseph Mercy Hospi after | — se | Pat and Mike Tale Gets ove apparenity tell eatery wile | India in March, 1953. his immediate future might be de-| 8M lliness of. one year. «100. | gular so.6e Retelli by Twins’ P. ing. The impact threw Byroade, 41, from Maumee, Ind. | \ot04 to proving it. Born in Bay ty Jan. , Quelit oy 4 ng Y op out of his car and he was found = p05 to Egypt after serving as) ATA | She was the daughter of William | y aon BUFFALO, N. Y. (UP)—When | unconscious along the right-of. | assistant secretary since 1952. Bet at feast twe congressional | 4nd Minnie Drader Burwell. She =~ his wife gave birth to twins, who way. Caffery is retiring after 4 years | committees have indicated they | was married in Detroit July 20, , ams at oe a ee “e/were named Pat and Mike. Another holiday trip ended in| in the foreign service. may ask first call on his time. | 1921, and came to Pontiac at that | (CORD 18 EXTRA) attorney John P. McKenna sent tragedy only minutes after it be- | Until March 21, 1956, Hiss =p te. out announcements which read: gan for the Walter K. Tiede family Obi fi Shadow have to check with a parole offi- | Mrs.Spencer was a member of ' “Say, did you hear the story | of Birmingham. Tiede’s wife, Vir- | jections cer and report various details of | Bethany Baptist Church, Royal |] ttectrie {{ ~ ea , e about two Irishmen named Pat | ginia, 43. was killed less than a x e his personal life. | Neighbors, Gold Star Mothers and Dept. sRoTMER’ Floor 1s ination = jmile from their home early ves NIRB Nomination There were two charges in the | VFW Auxiliary. Inside was the vital data about | terday when their car ran off a} indictment against Hiss — that he | Besides her husband, she is sur- —— (Continued From Page One) the twins. The announcement Bloomfield Township road during! (Continued From Page One) lied to a federal grand jury when | vived by her father of Genoa, Pe er ee oe of opportunities to get his ideas | Concluded with the notation that a dense fog and crashed into a - George J. Bott ex: |he denied that he passed govern-| Tex.; six children, Mrs. Jane Til PE Pit Oo 4S ra across.” unlike the fictional Pat and Mike tree. The Tiede family had just | pared , , : ment secrets to Chambers who) iotson of Tacoma, Wash. Mrs ad who are famed for telling each started out for Chicago. | P But AFL and CIO officials have | *478 he was a courier for a pre-| Merion Carter of Mandon Lake. *; Kefauver won a resounding pri- other stories, ‘‘Pat has said abso-| Robert L. Grim, 2%, Sturgis, and said privately that, while they | ¥@F Red spy ring, and that he| wee Elinor Skinner of Toledo, mary race in Tennessee against | jut¢ly nothing to Mike.” Voigt Mathews, 57, Albion, were y lied again in testifying he did not 4 sormer Bop. Pat Gatton te what ly ing | kitled Wednead ight in a head-| Consider Kammholz able and fair, Chambers after Jan. 1, 19¢7,| 00. Mrs. Patricia Parr of Pon- —Somethina new in | had been billed as 9 tight race = Wnackuas 4d ‘on collision four miles, south of |they are not keen to have him in| ®*e. Chambers after Jan. 1. 1857! tigc.’ vrs. Joyce Gates of Clarks: | g : ont Gan Eleanor Parker Wed the job because his law clients a trial | 0". Conalee Spencer at home and | je ; . won re-election against Eaton Rapids. | have been mostly on the manage. |i & bung jury. At a second 96 semichihdeen Nightgowns for ; weak Republican opposition Nev. | HOLLYWOOD (—Movie actress, Other traffic victims: have 5¢ ending Jan. 21, 1950, he was con- : 3, strengthening his position for | Eleanor Parker and portrait paint- | ment side. And Democratic sene- | 83 on both counts. Also surviving are a sister, Mrs. ; _ dential nomination. yesterday in a brief ceremony at, [#prer, Killed when streck by © | want lengthy on the | .ppeal and he surrendered March | brothers, Alden of Alanson and ; the First Methodist Church | Car om U.8.10 north of Pontiac. | appointment—thas apparently rul- | 57?ics, “it L2o.n serving his term. |Eljay Burwell of Genoa, Tex. i But in recent weeks. he has told , Max Hutchins, 7, Fennville, | ing out action this session because | Mrs. Spencer will be at the ° friends he is not inclined to get . . . . i while | of the Senate's current informal mile. | Farmer-Snover Funeral Home un- us into the 1956 Mailmen Begin Drive a " a : There — —— | walking on M.89 near his Allegan | 8gTeement not to take up “con- = : ae wanted | Pontiac letter carriers began | County home, ie Ste M troversial” nominations. . : start organizing picking up contribution envelopes | Stratton Grier, 44, Sault Ste- Ma- oon. aie for 6 new today in their door-to-door, drive to | rie, killed —_ his pickup truck | owed oe ee ie and NEW See co Out Already , , collect over $7,000 by Dec. 3 to| struck an abutment on a rural | c ; . Be to pet paws chances of aid the fight against muscular dys- | road 10 miles south of his home. | Feepublican, acelin picture "| Simms Has Cut the Price! ‘, said’ whole Not deaetauver| trophy, according to Charles H.| Bersal A, Gunnell, 52, of cedar ite Wea lees nadie’ : depends on Moore, city chairman.. | Springs, killed Wednesday in a neither Sen,- Dougias (D-Ill) nor | pg netted yaad glace car-truck collision on a Kent Coun- |. Dirksen (Rul) of the appoint- “REVIERA” by international 7 ree eet ee ee nt before sending it to the Sen-| - fe Henry Stugris, 80, of Cyrstal | ate. Failure to officially inform ; . The Weather Lake, killed Thursday in a two- | home state senators in such cases | y Sheffield CREATED BY Lid ee | AND VICINITY car collision on M.21 r ar Fowl- | is considered a serious breach of MADE IN SWITZERLAND a eee owe er. legislative-executive etiquette. . o, a tombovew Sod" Chennnd George Kazimer, 65, of Monroe,| , 2 oe before Congress ad- Sil Haid % snow coqneemne journed last Aug. 20. Sherman ax ard killed Thursday when hit by a re he Preckbiet’ istant ® southeset 15 miles tonight. car while walking across a street — . : te: | wear hie hee telephoned Sen. H. Alexander NYLON Alencon Lace | nn pee Smith (R-NJ), Labor Committee | dyed-to-match Celanese 5” . chairman, asking nal ytres od Tricot. : At © &m.: Wind velocity 2 mph. Off Def d | committee together to re- s sels Priday at $:09 cer ends ceive and 2 95 * Geturday ot 7 ’ e nomination. not | : Fh Profection by Nike | stow erown tine.ie was sue | Bowaters at what he considered an unreason- | ge Mvcnseeee Be IL 8. (Continued From Page One) | able : ; OS Goce Tpa Heights, and 11-Mile and Frank. | | >. ar Me be oe -hoag ee me lin Rds., near Franklin village. | Ant to quit Lee Lilac. Mint, ay Each site will include a launch- next month because of tuo posshil- Choice of 4 ag bene in . A. BAI ing area and a contro! area a half- that the Senate may never con- . : Maize, Turquoise ; ity : Highest Bice jiegie = ee mile apart firm | Hi-Fashion A | A, peur teany fhatateil” 60 tac Four Nike batteries are already Jewel Colors ‘- Gue Teor Age iu Pontioc | operating, Col, Conway said. Two COMING Sapphire Biee — Ws yee aw "i peskeeacakcccods we gown. It's Fashion for © © ; Lifé, trom—the ruf- & The New suede, Maker rating to the flirty fowen . antee, (10% tax.) $1 M-around skirt, = CATALINA ae aS Cr. AA ¢ (@ SIA (a i (» Watch for it! Red = EWELRY DEPT. == Main N. Seginew —Mein Floor f 2 4 3 ye t: ln THIS OWL CASTS A SHADOW Owls see best at night—and that’s when an owl hunts for food. Here's how to make this one: 1. Calor the ow! brown. 2. Cut out this whole square, use white library paste to fasten ‘it on sitff paper. ’ , 3. Cut out the owl and the attached white bar. Cut the dark lines into the wings, so they make a fringe. With a pencil, poke rholes in the owl's eyes. * 4. Bend the white bar into a ring, pasting ends together to fit the first finger of your left hand. 5. When the ring is dry, slip it and the owl on your finger and |} go into a dark room with a flashlight. Hold the light close to the owl so its shadow will fall on the wall. You pan also us a lamp | to throw the shadow. ‘jgiami Beach, Fla., has 580 park- wg, i oy aw are DISADIED Hunter | Roseville, Mich., a Detroit suburb, At Your Druggist lis second with 396 per “ent Found in Auto HELPING You SEE | Invalid Was Unable to, Setter... 1S OUR “looked . Free Car From Rut in| Backwoods Road | By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A disabled hunter who has a special permit to hunt from his car was found by a Coast Guard “helicopter Thursday after being stuck for more than 19 hours on a backwoods road in Antrim Coun- ty near Alden. Lloyd Aemisegger. 30, of Alden, | who is paralyzed from the waist down, drove his car into the woods | Wednesday. The vehicle got stuck | jin a rut and he couldn't get it A volunteer rescue party called on the Coast Guard after a truitiess night search for the } hunter. No expense has been spared - - no opportunity over- - - to provide the fine st service possible for the care of eyes! When your eyes needattention. . . you may safely entrust their care to our modern, optical facili- ties! 7,365 as of 10 p.m. Monday. The gunfire death toll among Michigan deer hunters remained | unchanged at seven ever Thanks | giving day with only five days left im the regular 16-day big Besides the gunfire victims |seven persons have died of heart jattacks and scores have been wounded since the season opened Nov, 1). Last year 13 persons were shot to death and 61 were wounded during the season. | JEWELRY CO. 25 NORTH SAGINAW STREET OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS ' Eighteen National Guard infan- try divisions — nine in Europe, | nine in the far Pacific—were on | duty during World War II. ( se easy to buy at... KRESGE’S 5.19 MODESS Large Size Box of 48 - $1.49 @ IN NEW DESIGN—No gouze =... no chofe .. . gives you’ the luxury of @ new whisper soft fabric covering. @ IN THE SECRET SHAPE BOX—Pre-wropped for you to look like ony packoge. Corry it discreetly! @ SO EASY TO SHOP For .... AT_KRESGE'S. You buy from @ woman at Kresge's. Open Fri.-Sat. ‘til 9 P. M. - AT YOUR NEARBY KRESGE’S — 12.39 ~~? - Paris Accords to Bri of the Soviet-surrounded city. |ritory.. American officials said a @ “declarat intent,” specific acts to implement the dec- : ‘1 Wide Self-Rule to Berlin | american British and French | laration have not yet been decided. | ee a. a WO. 1 IN MICHIGAN The Western oo Commundens lat night announced stander Richard (Dixie) UNITED SHIRT powers say ratification | Statute to inorerse Rigen or ow 17-Jewel Parlor quired on how he slept during ‘DISTRIBUTORS een mnt Paris sccords on|of the West Berlin government. | WEED, Calif. ®—A tiny spider | his “world record” $day, 2i-hour German rearmament will bring| Although the city has a com- stopped a watch. Jeweler James} sojourti_0 feet up on an 1%inch 35 Stores in Michigan compat iar ae serere | pletely ‘organized | edministratioa, Wilmarth said it crawigd into the | platform, stoically ( “Like a compatible with the security | it still is as occupied ter- e gifts at ENGGASS! Man’‘s Wedding Band. . in 14k gold. 21-DIAMOND PAIR 169 A magnificent diamond wedding ensemble with 21 sparkling dia- monds .. . gracefully set in ex- quisite 14k yellow gold mount- ings. A duet thot will thrill any ‘woman. Exceptionally low priced for Christmas giving. “ EMERALD CUT DIAMOND ‘and 2 BAGUETTES Beoutiful flanked by two brilliant baguette dia- monds, set in an exquisite mounting of 14k white gold Only at Enggoss ‘275 emerald-cut diamond this exceptionally attractive price. Matching 3-Diemend Band $75 CVING GIFTS from ENGGASS. Pk) sh henanircoehiom For countless Christmas seasons, Pontioc shoppers who have wanted gifts of fine jeweiry .. . have always made their selections at ENGGASS .. . Why? Because every gift at ENGGASS is of the finest quolity, craftsman- ship and styling. Prove it to yourself by shopping now for al! your Christmas DIAMOND THREESOME Wedding Band s sig oe 4 5] 3 5 sBiamond ? * $40 3-Diamond *85 The newest, most fashionable creation in o diarhond threesome. Fiery 6 - diamond pair for “her’’—a handsome 3-diamond, matching wedding bond for “him.” All three crafted Lady’s Bulova With Expansion Band *29” Smarf watch fashion at a tiny price! With matching expon- Lady’s 8-Diamond Longines 195 8 fiery diamonds set around the lovely case of this nation- ally advertised watch. Depend- able, and so beautiful sion band. Ideal Christmas gift! ~ Handsomely color of yellow gold and timed with a movement of true ac- curacy! J 6” styled in reatest values in a men’s |7-jewel timepiece * thot we have ever offered! Woter - resistont, shock - re- sistont and self-winding. And look at its low price! the ~~ MUSICAL JEWEL BO : ” Plays a popular tune when the lid is opened. Double tray. Leath- aD i | 3 50 Rich, deep ebony onyx, groced with the fire and brilliance of a genuine diamond. Beautiful 10K, covered in a choice of colors. gold mounting. A ring she'll 4 wear with pride. lovely, practical gift that will appeal to every woman! PEARL NECKLACE “95 Lustrous, simulated pearl necklace to accent her wardrobe. Corefully strung. Perfect gift for every woman bn your gift list, . Wee eee eee eee ewe eeneeeaeaan Nationally Known Electric Iron “7 ia Ease her ironing tasks with this lightweight electric iron. Clides so easily. Has wide heel rest for extra convenience. Su Wirmeste *45” Mixes, whips, ‘extracts juices and does dozens of time- saving tasks. With extra mixing bow! and detach- able beaters. SSS 222 can anmamenenn eee ee SSSR SSF BBS BeBe eee eee eee THE STORE WHERE GRawopa AND GRAWOMA BOUG#! 25 NORTH SAGINAW STREET — Open Fridey Evenings AF ee ees o Free Park * ’ in Lor Opposite™ A& P aan ry a s ~ Be gee ican border and pushed from 8 Gueranteed Two Years F S th 4 tc 20 miles inland , 0g mo ers Four adults and five children -* were aboard the crash boat Har- ‘ 2 * . j mony Its skipper, Frank Cham- 3 { , South California pion, received assistance trom a < , cabin cruiser, Jama Jan, which AND ATTACHMENTS tried to tow her, but both were Reconditioned and Parts by Vac. Paralyzes Land, Sea **#llowed in the fog and did not . . know their position. Neither did an & Sewing Machine Supply Co. and Air Traffic; Boat unidentified boat that radioed the ° Santa Barbara Coast Guard, sas Rescued Dramatically ae Gwar a te vacks wath LOS ANGELES w—The worst there A search disclosed nothing fog in years continued over the eater pation of soubern Cah Fats in Suicide fornia teday. paralyzing transport tatwon on land. at yeu and inthe Dot ag Police | ait Ne Coust Guard mat u dre, Refuse to Shoot Matic rTescte { agconverted NUNN crash boat. Harmony. that) was NEW YORK, (®—Said Sisinio gro n the murk and unable’ Cruz I was despondent. I was te radio its position, Using radar. sick of living. I figured if I hit a \ ; For Free Home and radio bearings. a Coast Guard’ cop, the cop would shoot nd kill A ry “> located the craft in the thick me" Demonstration Pont re . = mists erght miles north of Isthmus Cruz, 34-year-old mechanic, had ’ Vac & Sewing Cove of Catalina Island and took that to say yesterday after police bay tom tow With at is a hithe | accused him of ey Machine Suoply (i. Uine that had tried to make 1 Driving for 15 blocks on the Ps) . 379 S. Saginaw ie tow ; vrong side of Southern Boulevaed 1 the Bronx arports were closed in * * : cluding the big Los Angeles In - Punching photographer Alan DR > U ional one of the nation’s bus- Aaronson in the nose after trying to Fal . HAROLD BUSSEY, ot Scores of trathe crashes were ram his car four times. Aaronson f > 1 the Los Angeles met had been trailing Cruz in huis car OPTOMETR T 4 ropohitan area. but only one death 3. Punching one cop in the nose > directly attributed — to the biting another on the thumb and Announces 4 ishups. probably because fog tussling with half a dozen other So P P P > prevented speed policemen ‘ Pe a mething NEW in Services $ Threy babies, each 3 months old. {After being treated for cuts and ad “gee 4 died yesterday of respiratory ail- bruises, Cruz was booked on $ ce tPF * $ ments and the coroner ordered at- charges of assault and dangerous DR. H. 8 EY > loysies. Smog was suspected of driving Us 4 ig ° . 3S P| HOUR SERVICE 4 berg a contmbutory influence but . Scmvmamanai ptometrist , = : Most lenses and trames duplicated $ two of the infants were being given “ ’ Eyes Examined’ im our taborat« ry bv expert dis 2 medical care More Cars Than Homes New sega ag oe penser ang technician We will > HARTFORD, Conn. (®—Connes Mest SE 4-521) mot spare quality 4 For the last 48 hours eve-smart- ticut's Motor Vehicles Commission § inc smog, has¥¥enched the tow Charles F. Ke . . A complete taster, etticient Optical lab with his office Have a $ town Logs ve reles area “ ‘ we ‘ elley viva! a . g ares we sta - wiste 7-point adjustment for pertect tit No obligation 4 to ee OTe (LEE MLET eR 0 Fog blanketed the Pacific coast. tor vebicles +900.000) than dwelling from San Luis Obispo to the Mex- units (700.000.) . °° + °* @ e «e ; s . — . * PAY NO MONEY DOWN 5 ’ _ FOR GIFTS! . » © That's right. join Waite’s Budget Credit Club - ° . .. receive $120 to spend immediately ° take many months to pay! ® e. be a smart Santa! Present Mom with a coveted. practical and smart New YUpfite Portable! Ie Portable 00 Base Only! © Safety Motor . . . air cooled for long quiet life, safe wiring protects children! ® Darner . . . mends, darns and embroideries! ® Non-Glare Finish . . . no reflections Or eye strain! © Lifetime Guarantee . . . parts replaced if defective without cost! @ Free Sewing Course and ABC Manual plus 5 free patterns! ~CALL FE 4-2511 TODAY! __. \ : ’ *s! ttachmemts or disc ad * New [WHITE hes White ties stite ‘ ’ , in Reverse. On t both ends of seams: , ic Dorner. Finger tip its darning and monogram m : Per- ; h by Diol oo Your Stitch Leen work elim! release ming! | \red a Stitching- All major ports bo ad ore cont loosen! on { foot W : Hinge alks uP ond ins. Self odjust- TILE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 GMAT AER RR hen create AR cans Beh. Gift Certificate .. an appropriate gift for anyone! At- tractive holiday decorated enve- lope with person- alized Christmas Stocking. inside! yew ey enn nary Save 3.29! Star Bright... 15-Multiple Wire Christmas tree lights “p65 ¢ - k a} Oa , As, 7 Pontiac s store \ © Reguier 5.96 value! F at ~ for it ; @ Underwriters’ Lab ~ . approved! br qt ) a; f= @ 110-120 volts d Smartly packaged! te 1 OO 3 on CABG ° Tai we tN as 448 % Waite's Filth Floor save 99c on reg. 3.98 fur cuffed lined capeskin gloves on 399 Butter soft capeskin gloves with warm as toast wool lining and fur cuff with side gusset. Elastic at wrist to keep out cold winds! Choose red, block and brown in your favorite fall colors. Hurry in today! Weaite's Gloves—Street Floor save 30c! Washable... super-soft plastic kid suede! Guaranteed... {Alco Kan | | moccasins Arichored with ¢€ DuPont Veoprene @ Cozily comfortable mocs with reinforced vamp! @ Fine detail and all hand laced for longer wear! ° @ Women's sizes to 9! Cheese six colors: @ Perfect gift for Christmas! Can be Worn outside! Red Black Tan Gold Blue White Weite's Hosiery—Street Floor repeat of a sellout! 300 more regular 4.98... waterproof ... weatherproof ... plaid-lined... all nylon fur trim boots 99 | 4 Smart Plaid Lining in Sizes 5-11! ! b @ All nylon boot with rubber soles' @ Loop and button closing! Brown and Black! @ Warm fur trim around the top! Slight irregularities! Waite's Notions—Street Flogr all-deluxe machine | pat irs ond heavy seams mo at all times! . =<. ! What could be more | yl thon o new . .. wonde TE for Motner | rtul WHI seemas? Hurry in ond on ger Se oaalegly simple 3 spool ma a others more complicated and ; * * a ae i ive! White mochines a. 9 low os $164.00. _— Sia ; Weaite’s White Sewing Machine Center—Fourth Floor é ’ ; , relieves tired, aching fest muscles! Silos Electric Foot Vibrator weathered Manufactured by Famous : 9 o brown HANDY-HANNAH! 6 it. Cord spots’ ESOTERICA so) J Large 3 Oz. Jar T oz. economy size.......$4 ‘fj “TA | Weathered brown spots on the surfoce of your hands | ome FEET Ji betiiiiiiih - and face to tell the world you're getting old—perhaps i ’ f ? 7 : . } ; p— , sc bed _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954... PAA f: Ht a ‘RDAiARE OPEN FRIDAY ond. SATURDAY NIGHTS ‘Til 9° P/® ras A hIVERSAR “ : Crowds to One of Pontiac’s Greatest Christmas Value-Giving Events YOUR CREDIT IS OK... TAKE UP to 6 MONTHS to Risedd deni ENE ey etd hi the laa ee J 4) 4 ' we re, Ee ¥ ‘ SANTA‘S Ns 4 Save $10 During Our Anniversary! ele HERE | = IN 3 POM-POM COATS N ‘[_TOYLAND ; Ak Fs | ecewmrderaibendn nemcccesmnmen 4 : $ AVES ~ ‘ ’ FREE! Walking Doll ; 18 cosy Crodit Terms in, asy Credit Terms! with : y t * Special sale of 49.99 genuine mouton So “. age fur pom-pom all wool poodle cloth and r % luscious fleece in beautiful new colors ® “I . . red, turquoise, beige and blue. Sale $129 Sale! Ladies’ 19 MOUTONS - ST. MARY'S ; $ $ each = 3 5 3 PAIR 3.50 nenerennaamanaung renames doll in smart att texobeaaun Bf 3% PoSSSEEGEEESESEESSS: free with the purchose of three dt ee Nr el er larierl ar aren arial ariartarhar Larlarlartartarlarlarhar lar larh ar ara are pairs of nylon hose ot 350. All ge © new shades. All sizes S # Look Your Best i in Plain and Novelty Heels a 4 ~~ ; x ~~ ; PRP A AMA MPAAMAAMAADVWOIDVWOV_d>»xwwd>.: nee 1 3h ; % Easy Credit Terms! What is more feminine than the peto!l soft pastels for holidates? Charmers in silk acetates, lovely foilles Mt will be easy to select your git = and exquisite crepes. Self values Youll be deliaed at this . ! buttons, rhinestones and ae ne ce Seen lav- Sensational Buy . peor! trims. Junior, misses’ “ oe BIG 30-INCH loge ie SUIT DRESS t xed free! SEE OUR LINE OF 99 VANITY FAIR WALKING DOLL ; TALL aint presses | 24 Nylon Slips ..... 5.99 3 + bog as er Half Slips ....3.99 | Sylow Panties. 175 ° | , sdddddddddiddddddalal | eae ar arlarvarvarlarvar sya) 4) a) a) 2 f Pia ee ww Sells regularly ot 15.99. Unbreakable plastic, . “ | SEOEEEEES DDO DSOSEOSS | Fees Gaeta wing Seat eboney Another Shipment of $3999 SCSSESSSSCCLLSLES | ___aOLLS SEEN in LIFE and on TY 7 B Special Selling! Neston Uetows Dell 1450 Tiny Teer Dele Age he ali Ciel COATS and COAT SETS C0 ATS SU ITS Complete Line of Toys and Games for girls! = = $ A grand selection of fall yp a suits and topcoats — : new fall models. Sizes a Easy Credit Terms! - } 35 to 46. Every Boy Wants One for Christmas! % St. Mary's with its fiberglas and milium lining. ) tots’, girls’ slack sets 3 to 6x; coats 7 to 14; slack sets 7 to 10; ten coats 10 to 14 LIONEL TRAINS | | | 4 Complete Line of Lionel Train Accessories TOYS and GAMES for BOYS! Basketball Set Six Wood Burning Set .. ise Mechanical Train ... 4.99 Steel Dump Truck . Girls Gift Orlon SWEATERS 3.99 : 3.99 Complete Line of Chubby Dresses and Sportswear 5 ee ‘ ae an “SUTTON HALL” fF Rock Me Baby Doll 7.99 Rita Walking Doll 2299}. od 2.99 |= Pe PRACTICAL GIFTS FOR THE HOME ® Dire» mo ' : et Gift Boned - Men's, Ladies’ —>s Playtex LUGGAGE 499 (399 | | 1999 Reg. 3.29. A practi Rey re ¥ ‘ patterns with nap- eK gift Reg. 6.99. An ap< Reg. 8.99. Ful ond : Patterns. MW: Sal etn xc — kins. long remembered. preciated a single size, a a ‘ " * Packs ei gee et om : 4 : * , > g + ee ey Se fas filing Bideiks. sleiea as i¥ sad qe vase, ese ea Boas Eis tox, ae. “ are ait anaes -sxteVVO CAN TV —EE Change the side you carry your | wise the shoulder of your coat and shoulder bag over GN@q._ Other- | the pocket will wear thin aa — & " Here’s Beauty and Grace Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Miller of Chippewa road left Thursday to spend the weekend with their son and daughter-in-law, Lt. and Mrs. for your table! , David. B. Miller of Ft. Benjamin Harrison, Indianapolis e “e * Mr. and “Mrs. Lloyd Burnes of Mark avenue and Mr. and Mrs Bruce Kinzler of Bloomfield Hills left Thursday to espend several days in New York City They will also attend the Army- Navy footbalj game in Phila- delphia Saturday. * * * Mr. and Mrs. W. Walter Smith of Maple Place were hosts at a family dinner Thanksgiving day TI{E PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26,1054 _ a six month stay in Hawaij. They also visited the islands of Maui Lauai and Oahu . ~ Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kimm of Hickory Nut road and Mr. and Mrs Roy Newton of State street left Thursday morning for Fort Lauder- dale, Fla.. to visit with Mr. and Mrs. G Woods, formerly of Pontiac * Edward 4d. Kuban, of Lake An- gelus road and Mrs. Mary Hawkes of Orchard Lake will re- | turn te East Lansing Saturday after spending a busy week in New York City en the ‘‘Mission Joyce Hocking of Birmingham Was among the students in the voice department of Olivet Col- lege who recently participated in an informa! recital Miss Hocking took part in the Italian selections which were pre- sented. French, German and En- giish songs were also included in the program ~ cs * Bob Hoffman arrived from his studies at the University § of | Netre Dame to spend Thanks- | giving with his parents, the Ev- erett Hoffman's of Center Street, Guests entertained by the family Dommie, Johnnie and Tommie: Stella Underbrink of Ottawa, Ohio, and.Mr. and Mrs. Paul Todd and daughter Diane of Lima, Ohio. cs ae “A David S. Dennis, son of the Branton Dennis' of East Kennett | road; Louise D. Ploe, daughter of the John Ploes of Lakeview ave- nue and Adolf R. Swimmer, son of the Benjamin Swimmers of Neome drive are students at Mar- | quette University in Milwaukee, | Wis. | David iy eurotied in the col- lege of engineering, Louise in the school of liberal arts and ' Michigan College of Mining and ‘Th. Pontiac Area Residents Travel Over Holiday Weekend C. Lees of Clarkston, was recently | Robert G. Pack (nee Norma Has- promoted to the rank of Sergeant! kins) of James K boulevard, who Major of the ROTC Corps at the ... born Nov. 8 at Pontiac Gen- Technol in Houghton. 7” * * 8 is the infant's paternal * grand- { Mr: and Mrs. Harold Haskins of | ae. Walnut Lake road are the grand- | } parents of two boys born during! ut of town guests who attended | November. Mr. and Mrs. Willard the Thursday afternoon wedding | L. Kennedy (nee Mary Haskins) | of Julie Terrien of Montcalm street of Mapleleaf road, chose William | and Robert K. Klopfenstein of | Patrick as the name fof their son, | Battle Creek were Mr. and Mrs. who was born Nov. 14 at Pontiac Loyaj T, Phares of Battle Creek, General Hospital. The paternal, Mr. and Mrs. Gustane Carison of grandparents are Mr. and. Mrs. | Grand Haven, Mr. and Mrs. Abram M. W. Kennedy of East St. Louis.| T. Keift and daughter Chariotte to UN,” educatiofal tour spon. Thanksgiving day were Mr. and The Smiths recently returned from | sored by Michigan State Col- Mrs. Dominic Kline of Whittemore street and children, Bethie Ann, Adolf is a student in the dental school. David Lee, son of the Alfred, William Clinton was the name ‘of Grand Haven, Mary Smith of Royal Oak and Mr. and Mrs, given to the son of Mr. and Mrs. | Melvin Klopfenstein of Niles. Married Thursday in . Oakland Cavalier Eggshell Avenue United Presbyterian 95 Church were 20-Pc. Set > Julie Terrien and Robert Choice of 6 Patterns Klopfenstein. Her parents are the L. L. of East Montcalm Easily mistaken for vitrified china, the new Cavalier Eggshell shape has five exciting new decorations. Grape above, has teal green or grey shoulders with platinum or gold trim. 20-piece set includes: 4 dinner plates, 4 pie plates, 4 sauce dishes, 4 cups and saucers. DIXIE POTTERY Terriens street, and he | is the son of the C. J. For Your Convenience Klopfensteins * Open Daily 10 A.M. to 9 P. M.—Sunday, Noon to 9 P. M. al Maule 5281 Dixie Hwy. (Near Waterford) OR 3-1894 Creek. : Julie Terrien Wears Satin for Wedding Reception Held in Church _ Following 2 o'Clock Rite Julie Terrien wore a gown of white silk crystalette over satin made by her mother as she ap- proached the altar of Oakland Ave- nue United Presbyterian Church Thursday afternoon to become the bride of Robert Kieft Klopenstein. The Rev. William Klerekoper of Detroit performed the two o'clock ceremony, He is the son of the minister who married the bride- groom's parents on Thanksgiving day 31 years ago. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence L. Ter- rien of East Mentcalm street BEVERLY RIBIAT ESTHER GILBERT Vr. and Mrs. Milton Ribiat of Burlingame avenue are and he ts the son of the C, J. Klopfensteins of Battle Creek. Imported lace medallions trimmed the skirt and bodice of the * « 7-53 ee +s announcing the engagement of their daughter, Beverly Joan, to Sheldon Gilbert, son of the Jack Gilberts of Marshall street. He is a graduate of Ferris Institute where he was | URS, ROBERT KLOPFENSTEIN oe oe fer Pe Far a hae Par arp ar) ar) are ar bar) ar) ar} Wonderful to Give—W onderful to Get! Fine Leather Wallets © Key Cases © Purses Sse Our Christmas Layaway While Selections Are Le ms oe PHILIP’S rz tuccact._ 79 North Seginew Street WCTU Outlines Activities at 18th District Session The executive board of 18th dis-| tending the Tuesday.meeting were trict WCTU met Tuesday after. Mrs. Little, Mrs. Earle Cunning- noon in the Dwight avenue home ham of Birmingham. corres- of Mrs. John Veneman. ponding segretary, and Mrs. Wil- Mrs. Joseph Green of Royal Oak, | /i@™ H. McCullough of Farming. ° district president, offered for con- ‘©. recording secretary. sideration aftdyanalysis plans for, Still others were Mrs. Sadie Pat- the coming year’s activities as ten, Mrs. Frank Clemens and Mrs. recommended by the state officers Ruth Townsend. in session during the state con- $2.50 te $12.50 Initials in Gold Free—Gitt Wrapped Style Returns deg nat pear bon peel NEW YORK (INS) — American LORA- AE need for qualified directors and {#Shion is in the grip of “bosoma- 1 to take charge of the nia,” and a noted designer thinks Infents’ Specialty Shop | pdditienn! duti we're in danger of losing the long- favored ‘long - legged Ameri- A workshop has been scheduled can look.” by the group for mid-January. Pur- | pose of the activity is to bring 718. West Huron Street © Jewelry © Chine FE 2-3220 ® Lingerie ® Linens Ceil Chapman, who's quite a and confusion lately about the A spring institute to be held in| bust line that we seem to have; February or March is also on the | forgotten the rest of the figure.” agenda. Mrs. Frank Deaver was! \Mry Chapman added that for | Proposed as new director of the her holiday collection she’s letting character building branch of tem the curves remain in their natur- perance work, | A branch for soldiers and sailors welfare will be activated. Work of Mrs. Greene has been,made a life member of the State WCTU. : S ' Mrs. Elva was appointed committee chairman, Mrs. Mason of Drayton Plains assistam, treasurer. Dec. 7 is the date for the Pon- | tiac federation meeting. Others at-! they entered the store. al places. She said “Slinky clothes are coming back." ‘Buying on Impulse ‘Not Always True Women may buy many things on impulse, but when it comes to table glassware the ladies know what they want. | A survey shows that out of 1.000 ; women who made purchases of glass stemware, 69.3 per cent had | decided what they Wanted before | of silk illusion. The bride wore the bridegroom's gift of pearis and carried a cascade arrange- | ment of white fuji chrysanthemums and English ivy. Charlotte Ward was maid of hon- or and the bride's cousin, Judy Terrien was junior bridesmaid. Their ballerina length gowns, velvet head: | lage. Renata Keiss of Toledo sang the bridal recital. John Larson of Kal- amazoo was best man and seating the guests were Gene A. Zerlaut of Grant and Phillip Kinsella of Sylvan. When greeting guests at the church reception, Mrs. Terrien was wearing a champagne colored bro- cade street length dress with black accessories and a corsage of lav- ender pompons. Mrs, Klepfenstem wore a street length dress of dusty rose with Winter white accessories and a corsage of white A tailored navy biue flannel suit with white trim, navy blue ac- cessories and a corsage of pink pompons was chosen by the bride for her honeymoon trip te Western Michigan. The newlyweds will re- side in Ann Arbor until the bride- groom enters military service in January The bride is a junior in the University of Michigan School of Nursing and is planning on re- turning to her studies. He is a graduate of Western Michigan College of Education in Kalamazoo and he took his gradu. | ate work in chemistry at the Uni- versity of Michigan. | CALL FE 5-6330 Why struggle with your husbend’s shirts . , . when it costs so little to send them to us! DRESS SHIRTS Expertly Laundered and Beautifully Finished oS Small additional charge for pick-up and delivery! “SSS SSS SS SSS Ss Se ees ee ee ee ee Se Se ee eh ° 4 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS: - iy 8 7 % 570 N, Perry St. % 469 Elizobeth Loke Rd. - | & 158 Auburn Ave. 1995 Coss Loke Rd. — — — APPAREL for WOMEN ' Nights ‘til 9:00 P.M. planned. —+bridal gown and were repeated on affiliated with Kappa Sigma Kappa fraternity. The bride- the cap which held a fingertip veil elect attends Wayne University. A May 29 wedding is Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gilbert are announcing the engage- ment of their daughter, Bsther Zita, to Morton Golditch, ‘son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Golditch of Detroit. They are planning an early October wedding. ‘Problem Faces Teene A girl just beginning her teens “rites of her discomfort over her undeveloped figure. Most of her friends look like young ladies and she feels awkward because she doesn't yet Both sides of this problem are common: The girl who seemingly lags behind her classmates and the Fame of Corner Turns to Dust SAN FRANCISCO (INS)—Little Jack Horner achieved fame by sitting in a corner but the modern housewife usually finds that cor- ners contribute nothing except to catch dust The San Francisco architectural firm of Malone and Hooper have done something about this . . . provided just what every home- rs one who develops before her friends up when she's in the sixth grade and another doesn’t grew until she's starting high school, se do girts round out at different ages. The embarrassment concerns not being completely ‘average,’ which No one ever is. There are no exer- cises that can start a girl on her path to a woman's figure before | her body is ready. There are medical treatments, true, but these are for the very rare girls who haven't matured at all as they enter their twenties. No young teen-ager need seek a doc- tor. Her problem is waiting Fashion Show Slated by Alumnae Plans are being made for a card party and fashion show to be spon- soted by the alummae of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital at St. Benedict Hall, Wednesday evening. Co-chairman of the event, which | will begin at 8 o'clock, are Mrs. | Orrin Yvntoon Jr. and Mrs. Wayne | Dengate. Mrs. Nicolo Gagne is publicity chairman; Mrs. B. A, Beck and Mrs. Alfred Wagner ‘have charge of tickets and the decorating committee is headed by Mrs. Ray Pardee and Mrs. | Arthur Chambers. | Models will include Dorothy Wil- liams, Mrs. Richard Hoover, Mrs, | Ben Sweeney Jr., Catherine Mc- Manue, Mrs. M. A. Calbi, Bradley Lewer, Brian Jackson, Martha Ann Dengate, Saliy Huntoon and Eliza- beth Rowston. é Woman Plumber Makes Good HANOVER, Mass. (INS) — The only licensed woman plumber in the state of Massachusetts is a 47- year-old Hanover Center housewife who thinks there should be more female plumbers. Mrs, Grace Norwood points out that history tells how the lead pipes which carried water to the palaces of the Roman emperofs were made by women. And she hopes her own record will make it easier for modern women to enter the plumbing field. Mrs. Norwood had to study three years and pass the master plumb- ing examination to qualify for her license. She said one of the prob- lems she encountered was the fact that most people thought it was 4 gag. and another problem was to break down the prejudice of male plumbers who thought plumbing was no place for a woman. Private @ Party: Rooms many courses she can take. She may wear a padded bra, if she . wishes. It will make her clothes | Accommodations fr fit better. She can start making — large or small may have styles that fit her | figure but are still appropriate to Convenient Downtown her age. Location She may select camouflaging styles, pleated and ruffled blouses worn with jumpers. The very popw- lar shrug sweaters that look like boleros and button at the neck can make a girl appear to have @ Waldron HOTEL Coffee Shop 36 E. Pike | LION’S CLUB RUMMAGE SALE DEC. 2, 3, 4—THURS., FRI., SAT. 9:00 A. M. te 8:00 P, M. Corner of Auburn Ave. at Saginaw St. 11-13 Auburn Ave. This Ad Sponsored by Rendell's Shop | QPEN FRIDAY and SATURDAY ‘TIL 9 P. M. Color-Phone Makes Your Phone Beautiful— Makes a Fine Gift!- Vew Model Covers Over the . Cord, Too! $< 50 Ivory Gold Red Green White Gray Now you can make your telephone fit right in with your color scheme . . . makes it a good looking accessory in amy room... new hard plastic cover even goes over the cord too . . . choose from most popular House and Garden colors . . . get several... for yourself and for gifts too... jie ’ * . id | THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954 raak* 2%, : LJ..1,] | A CHRISTMAS CAROL - ; ro By Charles Dickens Secret Parleys to Be Held|* peas . . Tepe 2000 Urges Aims 7 ee . : ‘ ps oa A 'P ° T Ik Red | Clow, 34, a , a 3 on Atomic Contrél Agency : |Pact in Tatk 10 Reds inia’ ‘car “scare Wednsiay : . .» . | While hunting deer: He went hunt- UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. w —) --President Eisenhower. picked a | WASHINGTON & — Sen. Flan- ling again yesterday and died of a Encouraged by a unanimous vote |New York industrialist, Moorehead |ders (R-Yt) has fold the Russians | i in the U. N. Political Committee, | Patterson, as his special ambassa- as ~~ | they should go along with the U.S. | the United States is looking to/|dor for atoms. Patterson will work ” 5 pete plan for disarmament under _ in- new secret negotiations for the |out of the State Department and | Cfitn | Spections so that the people of the quick formation of an international | will be assigned exclusively to the | y Me Vb | world can be freed of the cost of | atomic energy agency. negotiations, ‘ ‘ he | arms. The 60-nation General Assembly Patterson got his first baptism | ~-. * . ge In a Voice of America Thanks- = is Slated to meet next week and | in international negotiations earli- | - giving Day broadcast beamed di- give final and unanimous approval | er this year when he served as the | Out ene very swell eoroles — ° ue Soviet — Flan- to the U. N. endorsement of Pres- U.-S. representative on the U- N.} a ders sai merica covets no new ; er’ hich | mode o very lorge mistake. » ++ when tne goor flew territory but is spending “huge toms cage ——— = ee a Garda cal Christmas Eve is @ tine for He get es fer os” rest you open. At the sight of sums” on Sees sche she ; The Assembly's Political Com-| eventually banning atomic weap- | singing, and naa the ee let nothing —_ little coroler | fears further Russian aggression. : mittee voted unanimously Wednes- | 0ns corolers : dismay .. . , dismayed. : day for a resolution approving cre- | ss ¢ 8 -_———— T TRATED ty ie LTTE - _ The alternative to a costly and ation of the agency and calling! The subjects of disarmament they were not satisfied with parts | be no link by which anyone could | for an international scientific con-| and atoms for peace have been! . - j 7 ; , SS *ir views | c a veto in the agency opera- ference by next sammer kept separate by the U.N. at the jo t and would press their views | cast " ” * * special request of. the United |in the coming negotiations. They | tions. Long and hard negotiations Alive From Concrete : dangerous arms race, he said, is | Man Exhumes Frogs plaining that two frogs jumped out the U. S. program for world dis- when he tore up a concrete strip | armament. The Communists have | which had been in place twenty Countered with disarmament pro- Eo posals based on pledges rather than no. | specialist 7" The United States already has | States, and the United States is | want the agency made repsonsible | are in prospect. | ROANOKE, Va. — John J years the U S. plan for policing through | lon -distance movi ! set up machinery to pursue nego looking for & new representative | to the General Assembly and the Kealey, manager of d florist’s OO the use of inspectors ° 6 n"é tiations with the Soviet Union, lin disarmament talks which will Security Coufhcil. The United | More than 100,000 differeht kinds greenhouse, knows all qbout plants Americans of college age at- which still has not entered the plan | be resumed in January States ‘and its atomic partners, ‘of sea shells are known and but admits that fre in full and .with other interested | The Russians voted for the reso- | Britain, France. Canada, Belgium, | named. They range in size from | puzzled countries.. These talks likely will | lution sponsored by the United | Australis S have him tending college were about 4 per cent of the total in 1900, but have A camel's temperature can in- crease as much as 11 degrees Van LINES, ine, a and South Africa, do not | the microscopic: to some weighing! ‘I don't see how they got air, | increased to about 25 per cent Fahrenheit without injury to the = —- Cio 2 i The take place in Washington. ‘States yesterday- but served notice agree and are insisting there must! more than 500 pounds. | food or water,” Kealey said, ex- today. animal. : OF | + ~y a4 | TAKE YOUR PICK-TAKE YOUR\[4-44- of Any Extra Charge i of Any Extra Charge “a BUNK BED OUTFIT © Includes 2 Bunk Beds © Springs © 2 Mattresses © Guard Rail, Ladder jam) BUNK BED, DINETTE) > SET or RANGE | |r ‘cas’ paner ABSOLUTELY FREE!/|:‘2.se2c" = With the Purchase of This | ‘qyummmpemommgmmmmnn Porcelain REG. *250 FR ELIVING ROOM OF) Geese DP “Not as Shown » atemeanel =» BEDROOMSUITE] cote i ae WINCHESTER 30-30 Carbine ji’ TAKE YOUR PICK! With Your Choice of 5-Piece , 41 Selected Items CHROME DINETTE We at TERRIFIC : aR Sg i | : UNTIL NINE! Discount Prices ! . The House of Discounts PARK FREE | and ARE PROUD 0 ANYTHING WE ADVERTISE! 125 W. HURON ST. oH be ae PLENTY or Fret Pankinc “Where Wrigley's Used to Be” muawry or . ~ . > : ax . 7 : ; ; : - y~ ' . pen , ae a he: t stole in cash and a ! . ve. Dec .++1D.4@ | Idaho Ruusests 3 85-3 90, ant cor out mocteres Sept. 3, 1929, when i | mecklace. Entry was gained! UM Z | ist Belie es pean countries have recovered | vance later in the season. Inquiries to the hospital about r 6 | reached $157.70. j oologis 1eVv fticten Pontiacs, washed and waxed, 240; Colo- ; | through an unlocked window | ow tly from the effects of Potatoes—Fewer that the rado Red McClures 3.00 ‘ | The bond market was steady at ona ° F Mal World War Il to join the United will be avail- report brought response | Couple Collects : pie weet Sey | iatieees! Sinisa Vcten valeed fs en ae overt olsen years, “with emphasis on the (birthday next Tuesday. have quietly rejoined their bat- | chairs in the United States. cdiaaa: teninwe ee ee ane Net Dairy 377 | Rummage sale, First |which it uses for defense, “but smaller figure.” His health will be drunk in pubs | talion at Phanrang. Whiteman, a horse trucker in| perporr, nov. 4. (AP)—Prices oe Nat Lead - 8 | fan Church, Sat., Nov. 27, 8 re they're the only ones.” Mansfield, a recognized congres- | 2"d clubs throughout Britain. The | panera eS a 2 ‘ this Albany County village, is a pound fo.b Detroit for No. !/ penguet 11 Nes St v. : Southeast two houses of Parliament will mountains after a dispute over g quality live poultry up to. 10 NY Air Brk .. 20 The said that two armies | sional specialist on Asia. itical situation in ) Gallector, Fortunately, his wile | “est, mene ts-t2, ght “type 13-14: | Beime’Ai, ge! XY Sut. 8, | At your friend's tm jail and meeds| 4, pero” van war | Said he does not believe Congress 1 ® session of tribute Te aes sens Premier | shares his hobby heavy broilers or fryers (2%-3 Bohn Alum 19 Norte West.. 471 | Dail, Ph. PE §-5201, C. A Mitchel | ° ‘Tes omging open aaah Asiatic aid yi dep tf tie caste endl ensvingna, Gray Cresece 58: beavy ducks 23: sense | Bend Sirs 183 We amar... 43 —Ady | 2M4 the battlefield was covered approve an PrO-| There will be gifts for the| Ngo Dinh Diem and Acting Chief Whiteman ant Gates a——<_ == 28.4 Nor Pac 7 by thousands of their iny bodies. | Tam patterned on the postwariqogughty old Prime Minister | of Staff Gen Nguyen Van Vy rar sohap t: Market steady. Receipts | Buad Co 141 Reve aurne 1n4|. Central Market, 14 E. Pike. We| The report added that they were | European Marshall Pian. ranging from a few tea leaves to! _ se myfrney Eh. He alee |‘ * Ment demand. Light carryovers «=: | Cave n'm ins hie Ol... «72 / Rave, fresh _ all about the same size, but one | “A Marshall Plan.” he said. check for something like a mij-/ They now have resumed their bes n Memsian letoh, that ben | Rertcct, Toasters, frvere email ducts. | Gimpy wy oe Sus mer 0 8 PRS Raa | nue Tut Daskete | group was biack and the other |“would not be feasible in Asia /tion pounds. This $2,800,000, to be duties awaiting a decision by Vy } . Can Dry 132 Owens 1 O.. 98 | brown, and it would cost far too much.” | whether they should cys: Market steady, trade light ; spent as Churchill pleases, rep- - > odie par wayan when Supplies ‘barey sample to short for fant bl ey pee er i372 Willson Local 658 U. A. W. C.L O. Pref, Hertwer sold thet the resents a worldwide shower of | There is a possibility they will be — . under 12 pounds. Tom fully ample and | cores)” tee pierce tf | ge ap m2 E lawrence St |Sameness in size indicated the donations to the Sir Winston |let off with a reprimand. ‘T never thought I would ever | « light carryover expected Cotor Tree |. 903 pete Den: i) 3 3pm. 21% E Lawrence St. ot the e 0 Churchill Birthiey Prosntation| The diescasion revelved sround it,” he said. Celanese . 3.2 Pe rec wee —Ady. | frogs were same species, fund, One is that Churchill | Premier Diem's differences with CHICAGO POULTRY Cort-teed 248 Pepsi Cols 155 the report stated. Color, he said, guess ee ee collec. | CHICAGO. Nov. 24 1AP)—Live poultry | Ches @ Oh... 383 oe eee Rummage Sale, Friday and Sat- ,., apres raped Now Scarcer There will use the money to set up a new Chief of Staff Nguyen Van Hinh. Ditech iD gat yong ol soem en etn te): rae t 7 Gute Cop _ eee = id | urday, 10 a.m. 297 Oakland pte He said ttoo that it was unlikely international humanitarian fund hos sre ts Pag gr—ag side deny and rein nen | SRS gd Se (SE are Se ee amma oar a Te | STANTS NOM, Ne | te Petes Mele et nt Sete arse ree New York antique store. Since | 35 Gan taneee SEATS scene tenoee> | Cones: a “97 ine be | te | nce : 2 , “ Agee honed b4 . ; | tiac Lions Club. Sale for the Blind | of both armies. were reported | ing from Newfoundland and one | round of affairs of state. The birth- | a . the” Miscissines” te wid nore | overt) “Sh tunder's tb is Coie Pum. QT pore'Ou... ea | Relief Pund will be held December dead. He said the poisonous frogs. | breeder says it is because of fed-| day coincides with a formal open- State industrialist Dies —_—_—_—_— | Cot Gas 18¢ Radio Cp... . 3% | 2,3, 4 Fall PE 2-2775 or Midwest if they had been present, would | eral registration ing of the new Parliament. , . = = ‘ip addition. the Whit in Livestock Conn OR 3.4 Repub st! .. es | 49680 for pickup of your rummage | have been immune to their own| Only five purebreds are left here * ¢ ¢ GRAND RAPIDS #—Mantfred R. . emans have Consum Pw. 444 Rey Tod B 3a2 or deliver to 492 S. Saginaw. Adv compared with 30 in 199 when The usually late-to-bed Churchill |Carisen, 55. president of Down, oe ok Geel Doldhe, oe Cont’ Bak: 374 ge See Lend. 38 ———. Poe suggested that the probable | five breeders exported more than| Will start his birthday celebration | Inc., and Foam Rubber Co. of dog eyes, a -| DETROIT. Nov 2 /AP)— Hogs, salable | Cont Cas 74 St Reg Pap . 35 © wed | dead 100 pups a year. Harold MacPher-| with a special cup of tea. The tea | Grand Rapids, died of a heart at- rose medallion and carved ivory 125 Berrows and gilts mostly 28 Nigh: | Crue st! 302 Scovill MI | 32 anta Claus Visit 2 tor the frogs were a tack Tuesday night at Butter- The or: enue steady: bulk choles 170-340 | Curtics Wr... 13.9 AL RR... 702 poisoning, by some means, of| son, well - known Newfoundland|—two spoonsful in a grubby, pieces. rugs are handmade i verrows = “1050. | 20 © Sees .. 384 Sears Roed... 186 “ merchant. doesn’t think the indus-| Screwed up envelope with a little | worth Hospital. He was 55. Cari- Imperials. sorted choice 1 and 2 190-220 Ibs 1950: | Doug Aire’. ol shat On =: to Be Delayed their swampy habitat. “It is pos- , The dex } , scattered sales 250-300 ibe 1728-1838: | Dow Chem. 44 gunciair O.... 473| Y ible too that there was a mass | try will recover until regulations | sugar — was sent to Churchill as| sen was a native of Copenhagen, Whit oon home. It used to be a| ms it s-i538. ae tare PY gon tec... sea FOF $100 Finders movement of frogs away from the | are revised “the only present I can afford” | Denmark. eman - it 0 be B “Cattio—Saladie 200. Calves 100. Large-| gest air L082 Ry... m4 Before Newfoundland joined Can.|by someone signing himself “An barn : ly & cow Pun; market mostly Bast a a ees ; poisoned area. giving the impres- c , We Gant have a dog. bet 1| tenitereg® sui commercial end good | ratte : BY ee 3s Two 12-year-old boys, who turned | sion of a battle, ” he concluded. | ada registering the dogs was a| Old Age Pensioner. To Work for Norway tubaght W'would make a nice dog | sreses enevet; most Sa eas ee Ss Me if Sid Brands... rat | over to authorities a $100 bill they | ———— — simple process, done on pa-| Organizers of the birthday fund FREMONT W— John Weichelt 3 house, so we put it in the yard,” cial cows 1000-1200; canners and cut-/gnq John |. 276 Std Oil Ind... 91.7| found in a hardward store, will | per. Today, however, the pups| said the Prime Minister, touched ‘ ’ ters bulked 600-10.50: some lightweight | Erie RR ..... 199 Std Oll NJ...1064/ have wait five more months | must be either tattooed or nose-| by the gift, was reserving it to be | former executive in the economic Mrs. Whiteman explained. Ry and commercial walle 11501406; | SrcUhLO ---- 2 Ord Ol OB... G18 before calbecting the money printed. MacPherson thinks tattoo-| drunk in bed as an eye opener. | research department at Gerber ectnipiashincieisias ena ata, . *| Patrd Mor . 723 Stevens J =10) . . cad conaston; igh chetee and ‘Gries Pree. te et ont: BH) tiac Police said today. Mrs, Charles A. Landon ing is cruel and-he says New- * Products Co., has been appointed Auto Makers Beating chotee,38.00-00-60: wiilty and commercial | Gen ‘prey “""7" ig! Sutner, Fep--- 903| The youngsters, Warren Norlund| _MARLETTE — Service for Mrs. | Sst on oe Sane aa owent Karl Marx Reburied sultant by the serve 11.00-19.00; some light culls 1000 down Gon Pas || 174 Syiv BI Pd. 462/00 142 Lincoln St.. and Wayne/| Charlies A. (Frances) Landen, 89, y t govern- ’ Sheep—Salable ) Market mostly oe too much a : Weichelt will November ‘53 Totals si spice tics SS Erg Ss ISG ie stuns te sn na abn of |S, war ba a2. pm ty at Sife of Memorial. [mere = om hemes a ; prime * : arsh Funeral with ° BETROET © Ward's Autemo-| Site inde en Cased aden | Sm See ni Tron Air BT) Tee ice, ms Promptly noth trial ta, MicLelth Corustery. te Black Widows LONDON ©The bedy of Kori pect tive reports said today the pro. “"* sustuie BeuSNS iden Tire a Toca Cres ma The money was placed with the | Hed Wednesday. in North Like Marx, father of cnmion, has | tes and, School tenes wil be aus and duction of motor vehcicles for No-; CHICAGO LIVESTOCK | Goedel Br 3 Un Carvide . 6n6 Surviving are three sons, Nor- been dug up and reburied in a dif- | Somber’ io. 190) cm Jenuary 20th, vember, will come to 501.700 cars| | cwmcago, Mor 24 ‘AP —aaanle nage | Gorge IE Stitt ug 'S?| Gene glurm a, recetpt fer their {man and Gordon of Marlette, Dr.| Wooded ArEas _|terent plot in London's Highgate | ose wtinoet penaty 20 Oo , < year ‘ a and Pe tae ayn — peak | oven ese @© taco tc ence tor | Oran Paige . 2 Unit Aire *! tind. They would receive the $160 Alfred Landon of Detroit; three Cemetery. A bigger site was need- iS ats 7 a a [om level a Jecember, | closed slow only strong to 28 higher, | Ot No Ry M1 © daughters, Mrs. Victor Longfield of MADISON, Wis. (UP)—The “‘la- for 1988 to avoid penalty. the said sows uneven prices averaging about Orevhound 13@ Unit Prus s after 30 days in the event no “ss ed a large memorial to be All County taxes and school taxes ae ee — 4) | Steady; arowhd 80 head choice mostiy | Oulf Ot! at =a 31! ome claimed it, the boys claim Midland, Mrs. Albert Anderson of | trodectus macatans’’—black widow | erected shortly. unpaid as of January 20, 1988 will be | Ss year's pet nnc ee ae ne i's 200 W hewtehore 10.89, mest — Gane ar US Smelt = Ypsilanti, Mrs. Walter Tarrant of spider to you—is seldom seen in! The coffin was moved in the guages to goer (4%) cent —— compare with p' 10n O As) Seer - : ; co. | Mey were told. Saginaw. Two sist . Wil- north resident | darkness early Tuesday ~ — rough County ané cars and 762.228 trucks in the like ings, bulk choice 230-370 fo 1? 50-18 28. | Nome on a2 Wem B pie. ea However, the boys were. notified | liam Winder Mrs. Bitten Dowoen aa a tans iy an schoo! taxes mar se pase the cuy month of 1953 & few 280-510 Ib. 1700-1750: most choice | Moud Mer .. 127 WeNe ™ He : ' * | according to a University of Wis-| gravediggers, working by the light frecsurer’s Office tnroagh Pobresry 3 } ~ ~ ore sows ter 16.00-16.78; bulk | 1! Cent ..... 87 wees a - 3} | this week — when police retrieved | and one brother, Arthur Ander-| consin spider. expert. of of] lamps. Officials said the | 1955 with accrued fees. Ward's estimates this week's as-| 425-600 Ib. 15.00-18.00; good clearance | Indust Ray .. 804 gnite 244 the notes signed by an officer — of Kippen, Ont., also MARJORIE B. WILSON. : Balable cattle 13,000: “salable calves | Inland St! ... @9.2 Woolworth a5) - — : . sur-| Prof. Herbert Levi, of the uni-| home office, in okaying the trans- ‘Treasurer. —s at psa yin 16.128 | ok cennhaar shecee ene’ hatiees ime. Inspir Cop .. 36 Yale b Tow 83 | that a mistake had been made | Vive. versity’s zoology department, said| fer specified that the reburial For. 3a. 1984 oem Last Wee a ke ae rately active: steers lew prime and be- gl at Yngst bw S ,| and ce oe customary — Dare. Nowten Jones the black hay is mang Ml must take place at night. Also re- ) u trucks were ee verage good to « choice grades period months instead the state, likes lodgings buried in the new site were the corresponding 1953 week 52,227 | average and high pe steers slow. STOCK AVERAGES 3 days. SOUTH LYON — ar for ther away from man than bodies Marx's wife Jenny; | > ie aie yan U. §. factories | 3 ee rain seedy te neene, cen | Atbocated Prem 7 |, Further, since “the money was |75"" ag held at 1 p.m cnlag at southern relatives nine panies tarry Line and Hel BUY A r vu. 3S. eg | ers @ it steers about steady 30 35 found on private property, it will , , In the south, the spider beds | ena Demuth, family | have built 4,814,180 cars and 922.- several loads high choice to low prime | vious Indust. Rails Util. Stocks | ® the Phillips Funeral Home, with ‘ buildi ‘ a servant. 064 trucks. In the comparable 1953 | prime ‘Heere SAAG-IRT. some higher: Week ago. eT? 1s 87 int] oe ca an Gee a i of the burial in South Lyon Cemetery. vod eons as ae Marx died ae exile 7 7 period, 5,718,996 nd 1 101,681 | #°°4 and choice steers 21.00-27.98: com- | Month ago......183@ 081 625 1339 the fate She died Monday. from arienpmiiens oo » TOLOS | mercial to low good 17.0020 78 choice Year ago. ....1436 80.8 $6.1 108.7 $100 Dill . —— Levi said the spider serves a| Germany in 1883 at the age of 65. = s were built. pg Fn No ge mies Be ee Ee ‘ager tain, tae, ea aie ee aca v Seaith on eee. useful purpose. Its coarse web/| His most famous book, “Das Kap- SS choice heifers 2025-2425: commercial | 1953 high 1518 936 585.8 1163) . ‘ makes dandy cross-hairs for opti-| ital,"" is a bible of communism. | Lar Forei G to low good 158 50-20 00: utility and com- 1953 iow 1302 735 S05 08.5) Norlund and Mrs. Monroe Car burg. cal work. John W Morgan, of ge gn roup mercial cows 9.80-13.00; canners and | michael, said the youngsters : “Connie or - cutters 7.50-9.75; utility and commercial | DETROIT STOCKS Arthur J. Erickson the Marx Memorial Committee, Studying at Renssalaer | bulls 12.00-14.50: good to prime vealers ; ; should have been told of the six- - 17 00-22 00 — KEEGO HARBOR—Service for | Finally Says Thanks said the monument to be erected se Salabie sheep 1.800: fairly active. | Figures after decimal points are eighths| month waiting period in the first over the new TROY, N. Y. (UP)—About one of High Low. Noon Arthur James Erickson, 59, of 2741 grave will be of | ’ | slaaghter lambs steady to 8@ higher: | pejawin Rubber* , rT} 4 place, , for Sweater of Wwwi rit go undergraduates at Rensse- oe moped = — ipec Navigation’ .. 144 154) “It's the of the + Willow Beach, will be at 3 p.m. polished ya granite with bronze laer Polytechnic Institute this fall | ts'o0-2000. utility to low good 1405. | Gerty-Michigan® 22024) principle thing.” |Saturday from C. J. Godhardt} BOSTON (UP) — It took Harry] "ures on the base came from abroad. 17.00: culls down to 9.00: a deck of good | Kibeston Products*.... 37 31 Said Mrs. Carmichael. “The boys | Pyneral Home, with burial in | Fifty-one foreign countries are \°,Tortly,(hetee 98 Tp, shorn lambs So | Aidweet Avrasive® ©” G4 were honest enough to turn the|Perry Mount Park Cemetery. He | Ser o& New York City 37 years) pis. Tree Soles , | | Rudy Mfg* ve 37 4 | to the police.’ to offer his thanks for a sweater a represented by 193 students, re-|!¥ st) 1900: good and choice sheer | Warne Berew® +3 $.,| Money over died Wednesday. Planned | ported Dr. Richard A. Waite. Jr, | *4 ead mised erades 1 *No sale: bid and asked | In explaining the situation, po- woman knitted for him. by Cub Pack I dean of students. assereninatien iene . —— lice again praised the honesty of In World War I he received @| The nine dens of Cub Pack 51 ‘ Sixteen Central and South Ameri- Foreign Exchange Bills Dyed Green Trap ‘the pair, ‘Hotel Manager Named sweater knitted and donated by | presented skits on “Adventures in ( can nations sent &2 students, Vene- | ew 7 ‘Pilferin Store Emplo | Also lauding the boys honesty, GRAND RAPIDS (UP)—Charies; Mrs. L. L. Haywood of Worcester, | History” at their Wednesday night ; zuela and Colombia leading ‘vith wore ce Pach “Great, Britain in| 9 ploye | was Arthur Barnes, owner of the | J, Mack, 28, became the new man-|Mass. He wore the sweater meeting at Donelson School. . 19.each. Cuba sent 18 and Brazil We — MATTYDALE, N. Y. (UP) — A| hardware store, who said he would | ager of the Rowg¢ Hotel here yes-| throughout the campaigns im/ Guybmaster Lester McKinney an- 4 Eighteen students are Canadi- market - 32 per cent premium or | Mattydale police caught a thief stick by the original agreement|terday succeeding Paul F. Mor-/| France and when he returned to nounced at the meeting that the No Mon 3 16. Chin si Wierenens Purope, Great’ Britain: ipoud! gave | Tecently when the green came off) made between police and the boys ris who will leave Dec. 3 to” be-/the United States attempted UM| noch again will sell Christmas ey at ans; a off 118 of a cent Grest Beta 3o| some greenbacks. and will give the youngsters the|come manager of a Rochester, | successfully to contact Mrs. Hay-| toss this year. j ) Greece leads ropean TEP | Great Britain: 60 dar forest aren; | Harold Halpen, the manager of | money when it is returned to him | N. Y., hotel. Mack came here from | wood. ‘ —1— Bobcat Award was presented Down! | resentation with six students. | \:1¢ of a cent. Oreat Britain 90 gay fu-|@ drug store, thought his safe was | by authorities next spring. Cleveland where he was assistant This year Seiber finally reached |. ronald Hepler and a Wolf Badge ExXeven others are former residents | tures 2.7. off 1/16 of cent: Belgium | being pilfered, and told the sherif’ manager of the Hotel Statler. | Mrs. Haywood’s husband ay of. of Tron Curtain countries. France elvan? ey Ee it : fered his sincere though end Gold Arrow went to L. G. ES a ey wenees Dow Nome Petenon [pn neyo (inter eyo Me liaoees "SS Ae QBN Adeution. Suits Service | Ste ears weet ES aye ane cpltaied Wen come | MIDLAND w-Dr. F. C. Peter. , 91, Takes a , Petter bag fuga! iescedee $.55e tn deeetG St. | bills i the safe, son, assistant to the executive vice| TRAVERSE CITY (UP)—Erwin| tiunter 4. Wasn't Lost weeky ng pe » 0. (UP)—The}| irons) 1934, unchanged: Switseriané |’ A few hours later Hal president of the Dow Chemical Co. Mid Sliver Arrows were given to Mid Society, which offers} ‘trene,, ‘tree! 23.34, unchanged: De>-|ticed that (1) the money was miss-| today named Giestee of Deo) nat Gant ie. Os BRISTOL, Conn. (UP)—Missing| Badger and Byron Temple. In and guidance to patch | "tain "Americn’ Argentine “ree: 7.34| ing. and (2) one of his employes| industrial relations, Dr. Peterson |Tel> Tl. both of East Jorden) 2 to, in 9 wood. | addition, 25 service stars were M-24 et has 4M changes wci='Fa inne va |sas rier green A couldn | maccets Lier Bane wae | T® Ce Ronvmorn er tind Lag Gout elie act ert , Buckhorn Loke bs ee larceny conviction re | sistant manager of thé company's | day. They were married Wednes-| home and explained, “I wans't lost bay = ea gl alg changed. adenine | : __ [Texas division, = ss ny ant East Jordan. I was just squirret hunting." | the Dee. 22. om mae: oo _— eee ivan a — ——— ’ ~ ee +— oe _—_ —— — _ —— +— 5 ——- — es + it —E ree ad | - R a , 1 } ' ; t . im . ' . . \ — | ‘ ee ee ‘3 : ne ee ' . an {> es a gpa SO Ne Oe a Se Fe ae ne Eee On aes ee on a ee ee ee ey, Pe cs) me