f The Weather Tuesday: Colder Details page ttwo THE PONTIAC PRESALE OVER PAGES” ba 113th YEAR x*x«e* * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1955—30 PAGES « ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE 7? Blizzards Spread Death Around World Amateur Athlete Honored Fejkens Winner SRD x WINS SULLIVAN TROPHY—Ma!l Whitfield AP Wirephete of Los Angeles, two- time Olympic 800-meter track champion, holds the Sullivan Trophy awarded him Sunday in New York athlete of 194 Umion to the influence did most to advance the the year.”’ ‘Pay-As-You-Go’ Highway Program Backed by GOP DETROIT—Resolutions adopted at the state GOP | convention here Saturday included an endorsement of | as the nation’s outstanding amateur The trophy is awarded annually by the Amateur Athletic “amateur athlete who by performance. example and good cause of good sportsmanship during a pay-as-you-go Michigan highway program. The resolutions committee, headed by former State Auditor General John B. Martin Jr., of Grand Rapids, also recommended a state 100 Police Slay Lone Gunman Elusive Gangster Dies After 90-Minute Battle in Manhattan NEW YORK u—The long crime of sworn enemy of the law career squint - eyed August Robles ended in death yesterday after a blazing, 90-minute gun battle with police : The pint-sized gunman had been the object of an intense, three-day manhunt in the city's Puerto Rican districts, Police, rankled by the memory of hig two escapes Friday, were determined to get their man. , The elusive desperado was at last tracked down in a third-floor tenement hideaway on 112th Street near Park Avenue, Two hundred policemen sur- rounded the shabby building and pumped machine-gun, rifle and pistol bullets and fear gas into Robles’ lair. He answered their challenges to surrender -with gun- shots. At one point tear gas caused a fire in the embattled four-room -apartment._..-F-+re-nmren-~turnet streams of water into the building to quench the blaze even before | ! the shooting ended. Finally there were no more an- swering shots, Police gingerly entered the charred apartment, still reeking ef acrid gunpowder and tear gas. A priest went with them to ad- minister last rites. On the floor, in a! pool of blood and water, lay Robles, who had sworn he -~-would never be taken alive. Blood oozed from a ragged chest wound. A rough tourniquet had been tied around his left arm, pierced by another bullet. Found beside Robles’ body were four revolvers, three of which he had taken from policemen who first tried to arrest him early Fri- day. His escape touched off the + Fair Employment Practices law. The highway resolution ‘overlooked Gov. G. Mennen in Lively Fight for GOP Chair Rochester's Miss Jones Backed by Acclamation for Board Term By BURDETT C. STODDARD Pentiac Press SMaff Writer DETROIT — Sarah Van Hoosen Jones, of Rochester was named to run April 4 for a third term on the State Board of Agriculture, at the Republican state convention. Selected to run for the other post on the board, which governs Michigan State College, was Dale Stafford, now Greenville ublisher and former Oak- and County resident. old Detroit attorney, was) re-elected state chairman over Arthur T. Iverson after a lively fight on the floor of the convention in Cass Technical High School. Miss Jones, nationally-known ag- | ricultural expert, was nominated | |by acclamation, Oakland County | | delegates earlier had decided to cast their 124 votes, the largest | number of any congressional dis- trict, in a bloc for Miss Jones. Stafferd, ence Pontiac Press sports editor, defeated Frank Merriman, Deckerville farmer, and FP. Edward Geldhof, Berrien County indusrtalist. The vote was Stafford 858, Merrimag S42 and Geldhof, 22). Oakland County's delegation was pear pemgeoe in securing for Staf- ford the necessary plurality of the | 1.604 qualified delegates. It gave | him 123 votes and Geldhof, one. John Feikens, a 37-year-| Killed in Crash tS. CHARLES F. RHODES Accident Fatal fo City Woman Mrs. Charles Rhodes Dies After Automobile Collision Sunday Ella Rhodes, 62, wife of former Pontiac Police Chief Charles F. Rhodes, was injufed fatally in an automobile accident early Sunday morning at Eight Mile and South- field Rds. The accident, witnessed by two state troopers, occurred when a car driven by William Cheeks, 20, of Ferndale went through a stop sign and crashed into the Rhodes’ car. Cheeks, whe police said had been drinking, is being hbeid in the Oakland County Jail for in- vestigation of manslaughter. Both Mr. and Mrs. Rhodes were rushed to Mt. Carmel Mercy Hos- pital, where Mrs. Rhodes died an hour later. Rhodes was returned Fot a time it appeared that none of the three would be able to line | |up a plurality. Geldhof tried to | support to Stafford, but the chair | to his bome at 72 Wenonah Dr. yesterday after receiving treat- ment for four broken ribs and | throw in the towel and move his | brutses. Rhodes was police chief in Pon- Williams’ proposal to sub-| ruled each county had to deter- | tiac from May 5, 1938, to July 1, a $500,000,000 bond for an April vote. committee with the Republican-con- trolled Legwlature by backing an increase in gas and weight taxes “We recommend an expansion of the highway program to be paid for by those who use the roads to enable us to bring our main trunk line systems up fo a level com- |parable with the present and an- | ticipated traffic load and to enable us to continue the orderly develop- ment.of our county roads and city streets."’ the resolution said “The resotution is in line with e* plan suggested by Republican state senators to get more road money right away, bat drop the present distribution formula. The present division gives the State Highway Department 44 per cent, the counties 27 per cent and the cities 19 per cent Martin said the money would possibly be divided 75 per cent for trunk lines and 25 per cent to cities and cqunties. Another resolution approved by the committee praised the GOP state legislators for setting up “the most liberal workmen's compensation schedule in the country.” | The President_ and Republican Congressman from Michigan were generally commended. The committee also lauded fhe | Michigan Young Republicans for, | getting Detroit selected as the site | for the national convention this | year. j A-Testers Eye Weather LAS VEGAS, Nev. (®—Atomic | test chiefs set a weather confer- ence today to determine whether }the second shot in the 1955 test mit i issue The along mine where its votes would go. There were enough switches, | | however, including Genesee and instead, went | Saginaw Counties, to give Stafford | police students at Michigan State the nomination. | Feikens, one of the first Michigan | Eisenhower supporters, won the chairmanship over osition stem- ming from, the party's defeat last (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Czech Girl Flees Skating Troupe in British Vienna VIENNA (INS)—A Czechoslovak- | ian girl skater was believed hiding somewhere in Vienna today after slipping away from her Commu- nist-supervised team in the British sector last Saturday. Reliable western sources con- firmied newspaper reports that 28- year-old Mirlova Nachodska, who took part.in last week's world fig- ure skating championships, had disappeared with her baggage from the hotel where the Czech team was quartered, sources said she later asked asylum in the West, though it was not known just where she made the request or where she is staying now. One report said she took a taxi from the hotel te the American sector of Vienna, but U. 8. offi- clals refused te either confirm or deny that she was in Ameri- can hands , The other members of the Czech team returned to Communist-ruled Prague after a 24-hour searchfor the escaped girl. . Mirlova placed 18th in a field of 21 women contestants in the figure skating competition. ». (Agence France quoted reports that she was planning to 1950. after serving for many years on the Detroit Police Department. | He then served as instructor for College until March of last year. Mrs. Rhodes, who was born March 11, 1892, in Manistee Coun- ty, is survived by four sons, Calvin J., 30, of Pontiac; Ronald 4., #@, of Detroit; C. William, 41, of Detroit; and Glen, 38, of In- dianapolis, Ind. Also surviving are a_ brother, William Roehl, of Dearborn, and sisters, Mrs. Jennie Laughiin Rhodes and Mrs. Dorothy Luscher of Manistee She was a member of the Cen- | tral Methodist Church, Pontiac Garden Club, Tuesday Musicale and the Pontiac White Shrine. Funeral service will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Sparks- Griffin Funeral Home, with burial at Acacia Park Cemetery. Temperature Drop Forecast for Area Temperatures are expected to range in the 20s tonight after Sun- day's near spring weather which saw the mercury hit 45. U.S. Weather Bureau forecasters said temperatures” wilt-range be- tween 20 and 24 degrees tonight, rising to about 35 Tuesday. Tuesday. night's low is expected to hit between 22 and 26 degrees with possible rain or snow Wednes- day night. p Weather Bureau spokesmen said .28 of an inch of rain was meas- ured Sunday. Saturday in downtown Pontiac the mercury rose from a 24-degree low to 37. This morning, the ther- | and Mmometer registered 30 degrees at All Feared Dead’ After Crashes 16 Lost in New Mexico; ALBUQUERQUE (# — Weary and stiff with sub- zero cold, a search team probed the crannies of a huge rock pinnacle and around its base today for bodies of 16 persons aboard a Trans World airliner |which rammed the pillar. | The plane took off from | Kirtland Field, Albuquer- que, about 15 miles south- ;east Saturday morning. pict. minutes later veteran ilot I. R. Spong, Prairie illage, Kan. radioed all | was well. That was the last heard from the | twin-engine Martin 404, bound for |Santa Fe, 70 miles away, on the first leg of a flight terminating at Baltimore. The wreckage, on the cliff- | rimmed west face of the Sandia | Mountains, was spotted by James | Bixler, chief pilet for Carco Air Service. ] Rescue Service, Denver, hovered in a helicopter within 3O feet of the wreckage hanging atop the 100- foot rock tower. He said it ‘‘defi- nitely was the missing aircraft and there was no possibility any sur- | vived."’ Two big searchlights played on | the precipitous pinnacle last night to provide light for eight searchers stranded atop the rock by fading daylight. Just before dusk, bedrolls, blan- kets and food were parachuted to searchers. Meanwhile, in Vigna de Valle, Italy, the wreckage of a Beigian DOS airliner carrying 29 persons was spotted on 2 snowy mountain | peak teday, cight days after it | disappeared. |;saw no signs of life. Four those aboard were Americans. | High wind and rocky terrain | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) See Senate OK on $7,500 Raise Trim House Proposal | by $2,500; Leaders Eye | Vote by Nightfall WASHINGTON (INS)—The Sen. | ate was ready to pocket a pay raise along with its fears and vote today to approve a $7,500 a year | increase in salaries for members of Congress and federal judges. Senate leaders hoped to pass | their version of the pay legislation by nightfall and send it to con- ference for adjustment of differ- | ences with a housé¢-approved_ bill in Planes Found | 29 Missing _on Craft | Located at Last in Italy | Pulled escaping from line of fire during afternoon to take gunman August apartment. Joseph Aronowitz in Brooklyn last —————EEE | Ares . | State Traffic Toll at 9 AP Wirephote IN POLICE-GANGSTER BATTLE—A detective, left, lifts a half- naked child from the arms of his father as the pair were aided in police battle in New York Sunday Robles from his hideout in Harlem A 90-minute gun fight left Robles dead and two policemen | Col. William Gibson of the Air | wounded. Robles was sought for questioning in slaying of an ex-convict, | Tuesday. Senate Officer Dies; Solon Hurt in Collision on U.S.127 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The sergeant-at-arms of the Michigan Senate and a young Jackson businessman were killed in a weekend traffic smashup in which a state senator and the ‘daughter of another were injured. The deaths of the sergeant at arms, Goodson D. | Pilots who flew over said they Ford, 68, of Dundee, and of William H. Phelps, 26, of of Jackson, brought to nine the weekend toll on state high- | ways and streets. Mrs. Esther Bowlin, 47, died when she was trapped in a fire Saturday night in her Livonia home, bringing the total dead from week- end accidents of all kinds to 10. Ford and Phelps were fatally in- jured in a two-car collision on U-S. 127 near Mason Sunday night. Sen. Elmer R. Porter (R-Blissfield), chairman of the Senate Appropria- titons Committee, and Miss Ann | Nichols, daughter of Sen. Haskell | Nichols ‘R-Jackson) Were serious-|Ways and Means Committee meets | Sut and visibility zero. ly hurt. Porter suffered a factured jaw and many cuts and bruises, and physicians said he likely | would not be able to resume his legistative duties for at least six weeks. Sen. Don Vander Werp (R-Freemont) will head the Ap- propriations Committee in Pert- er's absence. |death and Congress Faces Fight on Tax Cut Administration Opposes Slash in Income Levy | Offered by Dems WASHINGTON «W—The House | today to’ endorse a Democratic | proposal for a $20-a-person income }tax cut that probably will set off | the first partisan clash over legis- lation in the new Congress. Although the committe's Dem- ocratic majority reportedly has | promised to vote solidly for the | Plan, the group invited Secretary |of the Treasury Humphrey to tes- which provides for a $10.000-a-| Phelps, a draftsman for Consum.| tify in closed session in advance year raise Action on the salary bill was te mark the Senate's return to | work after a 10-day semi-holiday | during which Republican legisia- | tors observed traditional Lincoln ~birthdsy celeprations with speak: ing engagements around =the country. Later this week the Senate Fi-| nance Committee plans to sched- | ule hearings on the House-adopted | three-year extension of the recip | rocal trade act. It is expected to} pass the Senate by a somewhat | more comfortable margin than was shown in the critical House votes. | The pay scale of both House | Senate members is now | $15,000, of which $12,500 is salary | and $2,500 is an expense allow: | (Continued .on Page 2, Col. 5) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Dulles Stops in Manila on Way to SEATO Talks MANILA (INS) — U. S. Secre. |! tary of State John Foster Dulles arrived at Manila today en route to the Southeast Asia defense treaty conference at Bangkok. Shortly after his arrival Dulles went into conferece with Philip- pine President Ramon Magsaysay and then issue a statement to newsmen, saying: “T have expressed to President Magsaysay the appreciation of President Etsenhower and myself for moral support of the efforts of the United States to maintain peace in Asia, given by President Magsaysay,” jof the vote. Humphrey was ex- pected to oppose both the timing jand the method of the proposed | cut, | The plan is te add the income | tax cut te an administration bill té COnliiwe present corporation and excise tax rates, now due te drop April 1, Its final passage in that form would give President Eisenhower the choice of approving an esti- mated loss of $1.400,000,000 in in- come tax revenues or of losing three billions by vetoing the cor- poration and excise rate extensions at a time when he has said taxes must be kept at their present levels The tax cut plan, sponsored by Rep. Mills (D-Ark), would give (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) It isn't that American youth | wants to shirk its obligation. Ac- cording to Selective Service offi- cials, most boys now take it for series can be held tomorrow | go to Canada with Carol Pachi, a|® dropped to 29 at 9, but climbed | morning. Czech-born Canadian skating star).' to 37 degrees by 1 p.m. (Editor's Note: Each year approxi-- {the draft and are voicing their] Teachers, parents, Selective the mock eracial see ef thelr young | frustration. Service officials have all heard the den me. ME, of 4. Ba And their uncertainty was never | gripes with which youth entérs “the y for ‘their country's future | more vivid than today when many | shadow of the draft.” safety. This articles telis how Ameri- ¥ . : : a of them feel that the threat of war > anaes —_ ‘outh ana | —ocal or global—is so real. parents alike and what war or pre: Some experts on the subject at- In Today s Press ec in the draft law could . theah to them.) tribute the current wave of juvenile ee By IRWIN SAFCHIK delinquency at least in part to this —. Bh. ss esses-esoegeres seacee ME WASHINGTON (INS)—“T'm liv: | feeling of uncertainty. Waiting Ui) CoSmOiiagyes*.: the shadow of the draft.” easily for their uncertain future,| Crane. Dr George ing in . : boys get into trouble. BAitortnte oe. ice ecsceseeeseegess ‘If it ‘wasn't for the unceftainty / Emily Post..... I could plan my life.” see pte wenn Agree tes Ustesbe, ss knowing I'll be drafted?” year, Although roughly one-third | Picbete --- -:--: In countless American homes, at |. are found unfit for military.serv. | Sports ...... soda fountains and“ in schools| ice, all must register for the | ty a netic hy satis tnsibnenaly aneet draft within five daysafter their | Wises, Bart. \ ) of uncertainty about 18th birthday. ss — POG. .soesegenerae ‘ = , «+ \ | Physical reasons ‘Shadow of Draft’ Dogs Steps of Physically-Fit American Boys After {8th Birthday At their first and later calls to military service, they were de- ferred as physically-unfit 4-Fs, or because they belonged to the National Guard, were attending college, or held dawn essential . Jobs in_ industry or on the farm. But now they are fit for service —perhaps surgery has corrected a physical defect—or they have quit, the Guard, won their college de- grees, or their jobs are no longer _ Lessential. * Congress will probably lower the cut-off date to 26—which now ap- plies to those who have not been deferred — for those deferred for and for those who | the draft to overtake him. fages of 18", atid 26, but the new jrules will not take effect until | July 1 The American teenager certainly is not denied all control over his |own fate. Even today, he need not sit around waiting helplessly for served ig the Guard \4 a between the Se From Line of Fire Tol Nearly 400 in Pacific Storm; 4) Die in U. S. Worst Storm of Season in Plains States Veers North Into Canada (From Our Wire. Services) Violent storms spread suffering in ithree widely separated parts of the world today. Nearly 400 persons are dead or missing on the third day of a blizzard which blasted the western Pacific from Formosa to the Kuriles. At home, what is de- scribed as the worst blizzard of the, year roared north- ward from the Great Plains intag Canada, leaving at least 17 dead and others missing; and New storms battered ships in European waters, and dumped snow on the continent and in England and Scotland. Sudden veering of the blizzard from p states into the north apparently has spared populous east- ern states from the storm. It left behind snowfalls up to Duluth's 28 inches; snowdrifts as deep as 12 feet in Nebraska; blocked highways in at least four But authorities feared Nebraska ministers who left Goth- | eaburg Saturday afternoon and a | Wessington Springs, S.D., rancher | who braved the shrieking blizzard jat 2 a.m. yesterday to see if his | sheep were all right, None of the jmen have been seen since. The eastern Dakotas felt the full fury of the -storm yesterday. Pierre, South Dakota's capital, got a 13-inch fall driven by a 52 m.p.h. | Wind with gusts up to 73. Falls | ranging to Huron's 10 inches and Watertown's 7 immobilized all transprtation, with roads drifted A band of rain extended today from eastern Texas to the eastern 'Great Lakes region. | The line of freezing weather /early today dipped sharply south- | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Reds Threaten 2 Chiang Isles | ‘Commies Push Buildup Despite 3-Day Attack by By SPENCER MOOSA TAIPEI, Formosa «®— Three straight days of Nationalist air at- tacks have failed to stop the Red ‘buildup of the Taishan Islands threatening nearby Nanchishan, reliable reports said today, A second Communist buildup has begun on the Fukien province , coast opposite the strategic Matsu | Islands 100 miles west of Formosa, the Defense Munistry’s information service said, -®Nationalist pilots reported sight- ing a submarine today off Red- held Pingtan Island, 80 miles west of Formosa and southeast of Foo- chow, However, they said it sub» merged before they could identify it, i } } | Meanwhile, Nationalist officials set up 26 civil air defense cen- ters here to work out plans te minimize bombing casualties if war comes, (These developments followed ‘ three straight days of naval and Bs \w ee ue VP aE ee epee W Se 3 ~ City Hospital ‘ ~ Planner Named Bloomfield Township Man New Architectural Consultant | A 42-year-old Bloomfield Town- ship-man with a long background - of hospital planning and design has been .named>architecturalconsult- |. ant for Pontiac General Hospital. Adolph H. Roessling, 42, of the Detroit architectural firm of Smith, Hinchman and Grylls, Inc.. will | serve as official representative of | the hospital board of trustees in| conferences with architect Leo J. | Heenan concerning, design of a new | $3,000,000 hospital wing. | Maybury said Roeessling was named at a special meeting Sat- | wrday. Maybury said his fee is | “within the limits authorized by | the City Commission.” In a resolution passed last Tues- | day, the Commission authorized hiring of a consultant at a fee of | not more than $20,000. a portion of which will be substracted from Heenan's fee. Roessling. who lives at 6153) Eastmor, Bloomfield Township, | served first with New York archi- | Pe tects York and Sawyer. During World War II, he served as chief of engineering with the | Army Corps of Engineers, assigned to the surgeon general's office. He | had charge of all planning and con- | struction of hospitals and clinics in| known dead and scant hope is held the Middle East. | Later, he was hospital consult- | ant in Washington for the surgeon | Lines reported that the luxury general. Cleveland Returning to civilian life, he hi idori planned the new 17-floor Henry rong Maru in the East Ford Diagnostic Clinic in Detroit. The - He also planned hospitals in New England and South America. He is currently working on two hospitals in the west Detroit suburban area. State Senate Officer ls Killed in Collision — (Continued From Page One) er Power Co. and son of a Jackson contractor, Harry W. Phelps, was | driving alone. The political figures were in a car driven by Porter, who is a Blissfield farmer as well as a state senator. - Mrs. Ella Rhodes, 62, wife of former Pontiac police chief Charles Rhodes, was killed Sunday in a two-car collisioin on the outskirts of Detroit. Rhodes was injured seriously in the crash. Gerald Back, 17. of Dearborn Township, was injured fatally Sunday whee the car in which he was riding was rammed in the rear by anether vehicle, which | failed to step after the accident. | Police sought the driver of the | second car. Wilbur T. Leggitt. 39. of Romulus, | died Sunday after being injured Saturday night in a car-truck col- lision on U.S. 24. Margaret Zook, 16. of Clarksville, was killed Sunday and her two sis- ters and brother were injured when their car skidded through a bridge railing and plunged down an em- bankment in Kent County Virgit Lee Rebinson, 3, pt Renton Harbor, was killed Satur. | dropped in 18 plane flights from [ham as treasurer of the group, day when his car ran off a rural | Kinloss yesterday in livestock re- | according to Clare G. Fuller, com- read and relied ever five miles northeast of Benton Harbor. Carney A. Sanders. 62, of Rose- ville, was killed Friday night when his car crashed into a utility pole | on Van Dyke road in the Detroit suburb of Warren Township. Mrs. Laura Ewing, 52, of Sag inaw, was injured fatally Saturday when the car in which she was rid- ing collided with another on M21 near St. Johns in Clinton County. Legislature Session Will Be Shown on TV EAST LANSING (INS) — Michi- gan State College television station WKAR-TV tomorrow will make the first live telecast of a session of the State Legislature The station will televise a Wash- ington's birthday speech in the legislature by actor Thomas Mitch- elt at 2:30 p.m. Mitchell will speak briefly at the joint session at the invitation of the lawmakers. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partiy cloudy tenight and temerrew and colder ight. Lew tenight %@-24, high temer- row near 35. West te southwest winds er oa te 8-12 miles tonight. Partly cloudy with Httle change tn temperature pass, said police. Ike Attends Church YANO SV Blizzards Hit Three. Areas Around Globe (Continued From Page One) ward from the Great Lakes region into northern Texas and thence westward to the Western Plateau. A vielent blizzard which biast- the western Pacific frem Formesa te the Kuriles today fer the third day left more than 385 persons dead or missing, mest of them fishermen, At least four Japanese are for the others. In Manila, American President iner President went to to proceed, Aboard were 14] pas- sengers and 2% crew members. Another interisland steamer. the Nanshuimaru, with 171 aboard, was awaiting help from the U.S. seaplane tender Salisbury Sound, which was sent out from Okinawa. Japanese freighter stood by LONDON @®—A storm-battered | freighter sank in Genea Harbor | today and another was grounded | several hours off blizsard-swept Dover as new snows raked Scot- land and blanketed Europe. At Genoa, the 4,147-ton Swedish | freighter Nordaniand sank with a | 600-tog cargo of carbide. Two gap- |ing holes had been torn in her bull: by one of the most severe storms to strike the area in years. A res- cue vessel had spent 36 hours try- ing to pump water from the Nord- anland to keep her afloat. Her #- man crew had abandoned ship Saturday night. - The 7.1T3ton Italian freighter | Monviso crashed onto rocks under the South Foreland cliffs at Dover +early today, but tugs wrenched her free at midmorning. Four more inches of snow fell in northern Scotland. already | floundering under a thick white blanket from almost storms last week. Fie tens ef fodder were | lief missions. Avalanches took two more lives in north Italy yesterday, and a res- cue team failed to reach 29 workers marooned by snow in the nearby ‘Val Malenco. Woman Slightly Injured When Train Hits Auto Mrs. Eingrid Femtegjeld, 29, of | 3 N. Axford St.. was treated by | a Private doctor for slight injury | last night when the auto in which | She was riding was struck by a slow-moving train at Huron St. and the Grand Trunk Railroad. Witness, quoted by Pontiac Po- lice, said her husband, Kari, ta- tempted to cross the tracks while warning signals were flashing. His auto was struck by the train and spun into another. driven by | Howard FE. Evans, 2%, of 29 Lin- 'coln St.. waiting for the train to WASHINGTON uw — Recovered Eisenhower attended continuous Family of Six Injured in Auto Collision Sunday A family of si xpersons was treated at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- in a 2-car collision at Eighteen Mile and Crooks Rds. in Troy Township. Treated for cuts and bruises were Trinidad J. Martinez, 30, of 4853 Jamm Rd., his wife, Carmen, 25, and children, Teresa, 2, Linda Marie, 4 months, Annette, 4, and Rudolph, 3. Martinez, who was ticketed for “‘Tfailing to halt at @ stop street, ac- cording to Troy Police, struck an auto driven by Jerome B. Davis, 29, of Detroit, who was uninjured. Feikens Is Winner in Republican Fight (Continued From Page One) November. The Oakland group gave him 100 wotes and the re- maining 24 to Iverson, The Feikens-Iverson battle was nearly even until balloting reached the six congressional districts in Wayne County, where both men Feikengs took Wayne 314 to 121 and Iverson quickly conceded, He moved successfully that Feikens’ election be made unamimous, then appealed for all state Republicans to get behind the chairman. Feikens asked for “everyone's suppert” in gaining ground in the spring election and preparing fer the 1956 Presidential cam- paign. state-wide Republican group in the One candidate, given ful] support by Oakland County, was defeated for nomination. Jackson County Circuit Judge John Simpson lost to former State Treasurer D. Hale Brake in a floor fight to win a chance to run for State Supreme Court justice. Oakiand gave its 124 votes to Simpson, who conducted a grand here in 1952, but 681. The other high went to incum- and W. Carr by ticket se- delegates included: blic Instruc- , incumbent, of attorney. Member of the State Board of Education—Stephen S. Nesbet, of Fremont, incumbent. Mrs. Peter Gibson, of Monroe, was unanimously re-elected as state vice-chairman | The initial meeting of the new | |State Central Committee, which | | was selected at the convention, will | be next Saturday at Lansing. An attempt is expected by the four Oakland members to win elec- tion of Chad Ritchie, of Birming- | mittee member of Oxford. | Other planned business signifi- cam to this area is the picking of |a national committeeman to suc- ced David W. Kendall, of Jack- son, who is retiring to assume duties as general counsel of the U. 8. Treasury Department. The Oakland group Saturday in- structed its committe members to introduce the name of former State Senator George N. Higgins, of Ferndale, for the post. _ Convention chairman of the coun- ty delegation, Pontiac's Robert A. Sutton, said he felt the group con- | ducted itself in a manner which | should help considerably toward | the nomination of a county man to a major state administrative post in 1956. ‘‘We certainly didn't make any enemies,” he stated. Temporary chairman of the convention was Mrs. Helen Dean,’ of Grosse Pointe, the first woman | te serve in the position. The speech nominating Taylor was given by Oakland County's State Senator William S. Broom- field. County Superintendent of from a cold he caught a week ago | Schools William J. Emerson gave President terian Church yesterday one of the seconding speeches for Judge Simpson. temerres night, tow t2-26. Teésy in Penticc ‘ Lowest temperature preceding 8 am 30 At @ am: Wind velocity 15 mph Direction Southwest Sun sets Monday at 612 p.m Sun rises. Tuesday at 7:19 a.m Moon sets Monday et 5.26 p.m Moon rises Tuesday at 6:58 a.m If you would like to have you. The skills and knowledge ployment wil] result. Your + and your future secure. DAY, HALF-DAY, 7 W. Lawrence : A “WHAT CAN YOU DO" prospective employer asks this question, we can help Institute will help you to apply your high school or college education in such a way that permanent em- CRG * Qh, thud _ VETERAN APPROVED the right answer when a which you acquire at the services will be valuable & EVE, SESSIONS j , Visitors Are Welcome ih pital Sunday for injuries suffered The convention bécame the first- -|enactment of a military reserve @ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1935 Draft Awaits Youths — After 18th Birthday. . (Continued From Page One) military service out of the .way as soon as possibie. But what about the draft situa- tion in the months ahead? The Pentagon says it intends to ask Selective Service to furnish about 14,000 men a-mdnth during the next four years. That would indicate a slightly lower average induction age than prevails today, especially if the services fail, to meet their voluntary enlistment goal of 2,100,000 men during that period. About 2,200 physically fit Ameri- can hoys celebrated their 18th birthday last Jan. 13, most of them unaware that the President of the United States was discussing their future that very day in a message to Congress. But it wasn’t only their future that the chief executive had in mind. He also was thinking of the estimated 2,200 able-bodied American beys who reach the & . | nae Waterford Man | “ge Dies in Detroit Six-Month Illness Ends in Death for Pontiac Merchant Louis D. Sadler, 37, 3162 War- ringham, Waterford Township, died | of cancer Saturday in Ford Hos- pital after a six-month illness, Manager of Shinner's Market for veteran of World 2 | War II, he had! NEW AMBASSADOR — John lived in Pontiac: sherman Cooper, former Republi- age of 18 every day of the year— | amd of the 160 million Americans | | whese freedem and safety de- | peads on them. | President Eisenhower said in his message: “The military security of the | United States requires armed forces, disposed and alerted for in- by units ready for mobilization, as- sured an adequate pool of trained | manpower .for necessary expan- | sion Then, the President went on_ to | ask—Congress for a& four-year ex- tension of the draft law and for | plan that would affect the lives of American youth for years to come. Here's how the reserve program would work: training | | every summer, followed by one | | | A four-year hitch would entail an additional two years in the |ready reserves and two years in the standby reserves. Six years of active duty would mean an addi- tional two years as a standby re- servist. Second, there would be the men who enlist in the Navy or Marine Corps reserves before they are 19. Within two years of their enlist- ment, they would be subject to a call to 24 months of active duty, after which they would have to remain in the ready reserves until eight years had passed from the | date of their enlistment. | The third choice would be to wait for a draft notice, spend two | years on active duty and six more | in the ready reserves. These men | would ali serve in the Army, un- | less the Navy, Air Force or Ma- rines are forced take men through | Selective Service. They would uridergo only six months of active duty, but they would be paid only $30 a month and then would have to serve in the ready reserves for the next nine and one-half years Failure | to meet the reserve requirements | ¢xecutive, legislative and judiciary would result in a call to active duty. Other features of the President's reserve plan include_an attempt to strengthen National Guard units by requiring their enlistees to take basic training in one of the active services. Eisenhower also asked Congress for legislation that would permit the states to maintain troops in addition to thé National Guard. He wants to see the creation of or- ganized militia units ready to aid | in civil defense and to replace | Guardsmen called into federal | service. t | MARTINELL’S Venetian Room 138 South Woodward, Birmingham (Jest Seath of Maple) | Featuring Italian and American Foods You'll enjoy dining in our Venetian Room with its authentic Italian atmosphere! Cosy i, formerty chet Chan ares Fewre meer intel you've eaten mine! Take-Out Food and Private Parties — # Call MI6-4853 quneaY “ pee rs i m a lin White Chape!| Memorial Ceme- | would each get a $5,000 pay raise | probably make mere trips home. 23 yeers. can United States Senator from He was a mem- | Kentucky, is the new United States Ambassador to India-and Nepal. Congress Faces Fight Over Wage Tax Cut SADLER ber of Jimmy Dey Post Amvets | and Retail Merchants Association. | Surviving besides his widow are four children at home, Robert. Ronald, Linda and Sheryl. Also surviving is a brother Silas (Bill) Sadler of Pontiac. Funeral service from Huntoon | 1:30 p.m., the Rev. Roy Lambert each taxpayer a $20 cut for him- of Pontiac Lake Presbyterian | .j¢ and each of his dependents Church officiating. Burial will be ; including his spouse, on income +earned-after next Jan. 1. | If finally adopted, the cuts would be reflected first in with. holding tax deductions on the individual's first 1956 pay check. Those not subject to withholding taxes could make the deductions when they pay their taxes. Republicans called the Demo- , cratic propesal ‘‘a political move" and termed it ‘absolutely irres- ponsible.~ The bill and the amendment may reach the House floor Thursday Predict Senate OK | on $7,500 Pay Hike © (Continued From Page One) ance. Federal district judges now get a straight $15,000 The House-passed pay bill pro- vides for $22,500 in salary and | the $2,500 expense fund for a total of $25,000. The Senate ver- sion as reported from commit- tee would give each member $22,500 in pay, plus travel ex- penses to cover five round-trips a year between his or her home and Washington. The vice president and speaker be identified, said there is question” the tax-cutting amend- | ment will pass the House and per- haps the Senate later But Sen. Byrd (D-Va), chairman , Of the Senate Finance Committee which would consider it, promptly | | announced that he opposed this or | |any other tax reduction until the | | federal budget is balanced. All Feared Dead in 2 Members of Congress have beer wary of voting themselves pa) boosts. despite increasing™ com- plaints that some have gone in the ‘red’ trying to maintain homes and offices in two places and meeting higher living costs. The House, whose members face re-election every two years, voted | nevertheless, 283-118, for the pay hike. Senate sources forecast that two-thirds of that body would sup port the somewhat lower $7,500 in crease. (Continued From Page One) | Made it impossible for helicopters to land and it was a rugged trek | for searchers on skis climbing to | the scene, 60 miles northeast of | Rome Fog and bad weather hampered For a senater living on the | West Coast or an equivalent dis- %C@rch operations most of last tance from the nation’s capital, | “ek the Senate gimmick of five Today visibility finally cleared round-trips heme at government | 29d the wreckage was sighted high A key Democrat, who declined to | “no | The Day in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM — Hearings will highlight much of tonight’s City Commission meeting, with one to amend the off-street parking ordi- “< topping the list. s lor small several years, he was Yorn in De- south of Maple, in the west por- troit, the son of Donald and Lil- tion of the block bounded by lian Tuttle Sad- Maple, Henrietta, Martin and ler, He married Bates, is scheduled, Two letters | Muriel Mann in! ef objection to the proposed al- La Grange, Ind.. | ley already have been filed. March 25, 1939. | .| In other action, lawmakers will award bids for construction of the oS Eton relief sewer and will discuss Pontiac High improvements for Hazel and Bow School and navy ers streets in the Adams Village s Pembroke Schoo! PTA members | will hear talks on the superior child and on the parents’ role in the learning process of ali chil- j;dren at tonight's meeting at &. | Speaker will be Dr. Victor Goert- zel, Wayne Mental Health Clinic | psychologist. LJ s s Ruth Shain Ctass in International flairs begins its new semester at A stant action, quickly reinforceable | pyneral Home will be Tuesday at; (Continued From Page One) / 10 a.m. tomorrow in the Commu- nity House. Mrs. Charies Shain | wilt speak on ‘Middle Europe and | the Satelite Countries."' Interested persons are welcome. | * ¢ *« | Fifty hebby exhibits will be displayed when Baldwin School PTA meets at 7:30 tonight— hobbies that are shared by Bald- win children and their parents. In addition, four musical acts will be presented, There will be &@ nursery = small children. 7 s Red-faced workers at the Auto- mobile Club of Michigan, .275 S. Hunter Blvd.. phoned police Satur- day afternoon to report that the 198 commercial hcense plates they believed stolen had been found aft- er all, behind stacks of other plates | Discovering the glass front door broken Saturday morning they checked, found the plate numbers were not in sequence, and reported them stolen, Nothing else had been amendment would revise | Lawmakers May Amend New Parking Ordinance Melvin J. Deer and Miss Aline Harbison of Birmingham: and Mrs. George C, Humphrey of Luding- ton; and two nephews, W. Dale Harbison of Birmingham and Fre- Thailand Fears Invasion Force | Prime Minister Says 20,000 Rebels Poised for Attack on Border BANGKOK ® — Prime Minister | Pibulsonggram said today 20,000 so-called free Thai troops are as- | sembled in bordering Yunan Prov- ince of Red China poised for a jump-off against Thailand. The Thai field marshal addressed a news conference as heads of ‘three delegations arrived for Wed- inesday’s opening of the three-day ‘conference of the Southeast Asia | Defense Treaty Organization. . s . Pibul told the 220 correspondents the free Thais are headed by for- mer Thai Prime Minister Pridi Phanomyong. He added that Thai- moves by them unless Red Chi- nese troops joined in an attack. The Southeast Asia defense or- ganization was formed in Manila with the aim of halting Commu- nist aggression. Pibul said Thai- land favored a strong organization dedicated “‘to peace in this part of the world."’ He said Thailand had been able to handle internal problems result- ing from subversion and Commu- nists infiltrating frem Red China “but the danger to Thailand is be- ginning to increase.” “Autonomous Thais in Yunan have set up a military academy at Cheli and will use Yunan to jump off against us."’ he said. “If we don't do anything about it commu- nism will move across the Mekong River and dominate all of South- east Asia. . 125. of 789 Southfield. .whoese 1 Crashes Located disturbed in the building, said me fete we C+ Fred's Coach rome moose Antes. Gets College Post Funeral arrangements are pend- ing for John Dinwoodie Anderson, | body + Kenneth O- Hulstander, feet hall will arrive at the Manley Bailey | and basketball coach at St. Fred- Funeral] Home today. | eriek's High School in Pontiac, has A Nestenant im the Michigan °C" named assistant football line Air National Guard tied _ | coach at lowa State College, ac- dently Saterday Sear roken tae cording to an Associated Press re- navigator on a training flight port out of Ames, la., today near Dayton, Ohio. The 31-year-old Hulslander, a Survivors include his widow.| 1951 graduaté of Western Hlinois Connie. and his parents. Mr. and state College at Macomb, Uil.. Mrs. James M. Anderson. all of replaces Will Heiss, who resigned Birmingham: and one brother, Lt te take a baseball and football James R., with the U.S. Air Force | job at Denver University. in Japan | * Hulslander, who wilj report to lowa State March 1, came to St Nathan C. Harbison expense would almost match the (OM the Sassetelli crest of Mt-| coi tor Nathan C. Harbison.| Fred's last fall from Eastland extra $2,500 expenses in the Teresina in the Umbrian Appen- 89. of 739 Forest. will be at 3 p:m.| High School in Roseville. . His House bill. Senators living in dn . ee Tuesday at the Manley Bailey Fun. football team was winless in 9 Maryland, Virginia and other The wreckage wen al en chitude | Home. with burial in Crooks games. playing one tie, while his nearby states would get much Cemetery, Troy Township. He died basketball team concluded its of more than 6,600 {eet, most of it buried by snow. but enough of its wing and tail were Mhowing to make confirmation definite The plane was enroute from | Brussels to the Belgian Congo and | was only 16 minutes out of Rome Airport when it disappeared Feb. 13 The four Americans were Paul | Leroy, Lake Hiawatha, N. J. a geologist; Robert Singer. Brooklyn N. Y.. an engineer for the Socony- | ! Vacuum Oil Co.; E. J. Suter, who | | lives near Brussels; Mrs. G. Guer- | |riert, now a resident of Rome, sec- | retary to Marcella Mariani. Miss less in travel allowance and Little difficulty in working out a compromise in conference was ex pected. A salary commission created by Congress and _ representing the branches recommended pay of $27,500 for members of Congress and district judges. The Senate bill would boost the salary of chief justice by $9,500 to $35,000 a year, associate justices by the same amount of $34,500. and increase pay for other appel- late judges from $17,500 to $25,500. | Italy for 1953, who also was aboard tures come-to-life in - a 3-D realism. Travel Miller’s Furniture - 144 Oakland Ave. | ag A | mals, cowboys, etc. tor (eae : THE NEW |@ dren i DEMON. New | Beautyrest | \3 °° Normal Firm ase. vs. © Par. ovr. BUILT FOR SLEEP | Complete OR GUARANTEED AGAINST STRUCTURAL | ¢ Selection NI) : DEFECTS FOR 10 YEARS Extra Firm SAME PRICE! SIMMONS COMPANY Mattress or Box Spring | ; season last night with its sixth victory in 15 games. = Saturday. Surviving are three nieces, Mrs mTTITIIIIIIIIIIIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiig | In Pontiac .. . It's SIMMS for Genuine “Sawyer” 3-D Color Stereoscope 2 Makes full color pic- ‘ Over 400 Choose from Pontiac's greatest selection. See before you buy. t itles. “ CAMERA DEPT. —Main Db Lb bldebebelebtettettttttttLititiit se 5 ~~ ‘ . } land could handle aggressive -} BA Rae Polls in 12 townships will remain open until & p.m, today allowing registered voters to cast ballots in primary elections, Candidates from both parties in Waterford, Springfield, Pontiac, Novi, White Lake, Avon and Troy townships are seeking positions on the April 4 ballot. contests for party positions on the ballots. They:-are Commerce, Groveland, Hoily, Lyon, Milford Southfield and West Bloomfie townships. Dublin PTA to See Travelog Tuesday WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — Dublin School PTA Fathers Night will be a double-barreled affair Tuesday, featuring the old and the new, An old-fashioned potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. will start off the night's activities. Under the heading of ‘new’ will be a showing of the latest travel adventure movie of Howard Shel- ley, outdoorman, conservationist and photographer, Shelley will take his viewers on a flim trip into Ontario's Algoma country. A short business meeting will precede the movie. North Branch Couple Wed in Church Rite NORTH BRANCH—Leona Prze- kop and Thomas Ruhiman spoke their marriage vows recently at a Nuptial Mass at SS. Peter and Paul Church, Leona is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Przekop and Thorhas is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ruhlman, All live in the North Branch vicinity. was Joseph Ruhiman, and Chartes Dhooghe was an attend- ant. Junior attendants were Do- : lores Prackop and John Repic. A wedding breakfast followed the morning ceremony, and a recep- tion for 250 guests was held in the evening at the IOOF Hall in Clif- ford. The couple will live in an apart- ment on Franklin street. Panel Discussion Set @RTONVILLE — A panel dis- cussion with teachers and parents participating will be held at the 8 p.m. meeting today of the Bran- don | Township PTA. | a 3 n Open Until 8 as Voters Pick Candidates “(Clifford Peck ' Sharp contests. are expected in Waterford, and. Troy townships, and White Lake Township has a large slate of both Democrats and Republicans for its first primary since abandoning the caucus sys- tem. Clese contests are also expect- ed in Pontiac and Farmington townships... . Caucuses to select party candi- dates in Addison, Brandon, Inde- pendence, Oakland, Oxford and Rose Townships. Lynda Marshall, Speak Vows WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — St. Trinity Lutheran Church of Pontiac was the setting for the wedding Sunday afternoon of Lynda Lee Marshall and Clifford J. Peck. Lynda is the daughter of the Fred Marshalls of 2827 Wiliams Lake Rd., and Clifford's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Howard Peck of 6511 Highland Rd. The bride wore a navy blue street length dress, with navy and white accessories. She carried a Peck was his brother’s best man. Following the ceremony a re- ception was held at the home of the bride for relatives and close friends. An airman second class in the Air Force, Clifford will leave from Camp Kilmer for England on March 10. MES. RAYMOND E. FRICK Mrs. Joyce Lewthwaite of Fen- ton has announced the recent mar- riage of her daughter Marilyn Joyce, to Raymond E. Frick. He is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Clayton A. Frick of Clarkston. The cere- mony was performed in the First Baptist Church of Holly. Mrs. Gordon Babcock of 238 Lawton St. has revealed the engage- ment of her daughters, Theresa and Susan. Theresa is engaged to Neil R. Braun, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Braun of South Lyon. Susan is engaged to Douglas Loftin of Swartz Creek. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Loftin. No wedding dates have been THE PONTIAC PRESS, Deaths in Nearby Communities Mrs. Michael Wellman LAKE ORION—Service for Mrs. Michael (Marquerite C. S.) Well- man, 69, of St. Petersburg, Fia., was held today at Downs-Metz Fu- neral Home, St. Petersburg, Fila. She died Friday. Surviving are one son, Arnold of St. Petersburg, formerly of Lake Orion; one daughter, Mrs. Mar guerite Johnson and one grandson, Lee Johnson, both of Grosse Pointe. Mrs. Frances Lanko UTICA—Service for Mrs. Fran- ces Lanko, 99, of 40770 Van Dyke, Sterling Township, was held at 2 p.m. today at the Trinity Lutheran Church, with burial in Utica Ceme- tery by the Schwarzkoff-Milliken Funeral Home. She died Thursday. Surviving are a son, Anthony of Sterling Township, two sisters, Mrs. Ella Schneider and Miss Julia Sippel, both of Royal Oak, three brothers, Otto Sippel of Utica, Ernest Sippel of St. Clair, Rev. William Sippel of Waterloo, Ont., seven grandchildren and 11 great- grandchildren. Harry E. Ellsworth MILFORD—Service for Harry E. Elisworth, 72, of 300 First St., will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday from Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, with burial in Highland Cemetery. He died Sunday at his home. Surviving are his widow, Hazel; two sons, Frank and Keith of Mil- ford; one daughter, Mrs. Jean Martelle of California; one broth- er, Russell of Detroit; and six grandchildren. Carrie N. Marsh HOLLY—Service for Carrie N. Marsh, &%, of 446 East Rd, will Eleanor Mesany of Royal Oak and Mrs. Hoppey Sorensen of Holly, Cropping Practices Are Cause Increased Milk Production Is Predicted by Agriculture Department Experts WASHINGTON (INS) — Agricul ture Department experts confident- ly predict that output per dairy cow will continue to increase be- cause a rapid change in feeding patterns is boosting the supply of proteins and other nutrients. The latest’ official report on the dairy situation said cropping prac- tices, employing the latest soi] con- servation measures, are improving generally. Expectations are that many of the acres diverted this year from been a sharp increase in the amount of grass silage fed per cow. Both have a high content of protein. As for the immediate outlook, milk output for the year is ex- pected to be about the same as in 3 * ¥ Officials say that milk consump- tion has been increasing signifi- cantly, partly because of somewhat lower retail prices and partly be- cause of the new special school milk program and other promiotion efforts. . Even s0, they freely admit that production this year probably will | continue to run ahead of demand. | This means that the government wil] have to continue skimming off some of the surplus to bolster prices. But official thinking is that price-supporting purchases of butter, cheese and the like will be much smaller than in either of the past two years. Agriculture Secretary Ezra Taft Benson's position is that the dairy products in the year beginning April 1 stay where the Agriculture Department has | pegged them—at the same dollar and cents level Badley, 77, of 10500 Milford Rd., will be recited at 8 p.m. today at Dryer Funeral Home. Requiem Mass will be said at 9 a.m. Tues day in St. Rita’s Catholic Church, with burial in Mt. Elliot Ceme- tery, Detroit. He died Sunday. There are no known survivors. Name Ernest Marshall Station Agent at Imlay IMLAY CITY — Ernest Marshal! of Charlotte has been appointed agent of the Grand Trunk Railroad here, replacing W. B. Onyon who retired the first of the year. Marshall has been with the Grand Trunk for 43 years, the last | four as agent in Charlotte. He will also be agent for the Railway Express. County Calendar yten Plains — Baptist Pn t will meet for — at am. Tuesday at the home of Mr Mehiberg, 3 BSashadaw Rd The 9606th Air Reserve Squadron will | meet at 7:30 pm. today in &t. James High School The Blue sear Unstone will hold their | regular meet: et the heme of Mrs. A.W. Dalrymple, 2356 Willow Beach, at 7:30 p.m. teday The VFw Auxiliary of Post 2706 will | meet at the Memorial Hall at 8&8 p.m Tuesday The seceutive beard of the Roosevelt Women's | dood] PTA will meet at home of Weed, 185 Roslin ot 8 pm. Tuesday “Bafety” will be the ef speaker Mrs. Vernon Smith of at Ag Tuesday the rim Co-hostesses will be Mrs. R. aches and Mrs. i. Weterferd T MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1935 Rotary Birthday | to Be Observed Waterford, Ortonville, Romeo Clubs Marking | Golden Anniversary Several. Rotary Clubs in the Oak- land County area will mark the | 50th anniversary of the founding of their organization with meetings | tomorrow and Wednesday The Waterford-Drayton Club will | turn its celebration of the golden jubilee into a rally of representa- tives of other community service organizations for a noonday din- ner Tuesday. Qarkston club member and past district Rotary governor Lleyd C. Megee will be the speaker at the CAI building in Waterford Township. The Romeo Club is planning a special program and banquet for | 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Romeo High School auditorium.. Cutting of a giant birthday cake will open the program, with mem- bers, their wives and special guests receiving portions. Six scenes in pantomime de- picting important events in the history of Rotary International will be enacted by members of the local club under the direction of Mrs. Philip M. Stone. Newsman Russell Barnes will be the speaker. Club president Ken- neth Mosher will act as master of ceremonies. At 6:30 p.m. Tuesday dinner is planned by the Ortonville club, at the Masonic Hall. Oakland Coun- ty Circuit Judge George B. Hart- rick will be the speaker, and com- munity singing will be led by How- ard T. Burt. The boys quartet of Brandon | Township High School will present several selections. ‘Calvary Women’s Unit to Sew for Missions WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — | Calvary Baptist Church Women’s | intendent with the National Park | Missionary Fellowship will meet | at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday at the! home of Mrs. Delphert Wright on Elizabeth Lake road. Following the business meeting, the group will sew hospital coats CHARLES M, LEESON Waterford PTA Slates Speaker Charles M. Leeson Guest at Fathers Night to Be Held Thursday WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Charles M. Leeson will be the guest speaker at the annual Fath- ers Night meeting of the Waterford Village PTA at 8 p.m. Thursday at the school. Regional supervisor of the State Conservation Department's Parks and Recreation Division for South- eastern Michigan, Leeson will speak on “Our Park Program.” His speech will be illustrated with colored slides, ang the film “Michigan Deer Story” will also be shown. Open house for parents will be held beginning at 7:30 p.m. Mr. and Mrs, Victor Lindquist will lead singing, and fathers will handle every detail of the pro gram, including serving refresh- ments. Leeson, formerly a project super- Service, is a graduate landscape | architect College. IF irst Prize Won and roll bandages for mission! a¢ Flower Show aries. Members will bring worn | sheets and old white shirts for this purpose. Youth Fellowship Picks Officers in White Lake WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP—Joan Cardona is the new president of | the Youth Fellowship of the Pres- byterian Church. Other officers are Gary Himies, by Area Woman WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Mrs. Oliver Dunstan of 159 Hillcliff won | first prize in the corsage division | at the Michigan State Floral Assn. | 35th annual convention and show in Detroit yesterday, Mrs. Dunstan is the owner of the Dunstan Floral Shop at 4M W. Huron St, made of yellow roses. from Michigan - State . Her winning corsage was ‘Pick Oxford Nominees | at Caucus Saturday OXFORD—Nominees to seek vil-| lage office positions in the March 14 election were selected Saturday afternoon in a caucus. Ted Pearson will seek the pres- ident's post; L. V. Nichols, elerk; Mrs. Eleanor Bossardet, treasurer; | Clare Fuller, assessor, and Albert | Sage, Clifford Vennard and Homer | Hight, trustees. Mothers to"Hold Sale KEEGO HARBOR — Members| Rave been asked to bring dis-/ carded articlés for a white’ ele- phant sale to the I p. m. Tuesday | meeting of the Mothers Club of | Roosevelt High Scheol. The group ; will meet at the home of Mrs. Victor Golding, 1740 Beechcroft. ‘ City Wide Pick-Up and Return of Students Appointment 8 A. M. ~- 10 P. M. February 28, 1955 is the or interest. charge added. Buy your dog license by NOTICE BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP TAXPAYERS the 1954 County and School taxes without penalty After this dete taxes are payable only ot the Ook- lend County Treasurer's Office, Pontioc, Mich., with « 4% penelty and 42% per month interest the penalty, alse have proof of rabies vaccination. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP TREASURER lest dey for payment of Feb. 28, 1955 and seve ARNO L. HULET, - $AVINGS INSU Many years ago tiny saplings were planted . . with consistent growth have become a mighty forest! ginnings of a secure tomorrow, today... HERE, add to it regularly .. . EARN 2°. OPEN A RED TO $10,000.00 PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS \ 16 E. Lawrence Street ae s ai Aa eee RS a ae | AOWTH Pekin tebe oo ee ashes * HAVE MADE i THESE GIANTS © OF THE FOREST! = | carefully nurtured . . . and a “Plant’’ the be- a SAVINGS ACCOUNT © AND WATCH IT GROW! et by, ae 9% a (1) ho Current ay4 fa used electric, treadles, and other known brands during this clearance only! sure! Famous White Sewing Machines! . .. at excitingly low prices! Choose from trade-ins, floor samples, demonstrators, standard and deluxe Whites Now at stunning low prices Hurry in or call FE 4-2511 Reg: $1114 White Electric Reg. $ Reg. $269 Deluxe White Full Rotary... ... $215.20 Attractive rich finish maple desk model! Console. ....... $88.50 Walnut console! Full set of attachments! Reg. $244 White Full Rotary Desk Model. $219 Mahogany finish. Lifetime guarantee! 244 White Desk Model. .... saeee $219 Rich walnut finish! White walnut finish Attachments! 1 Year Reg. $69.50Used Elec Console A-1 Condition $52.95 Free Service! $59.95Used Franklin Walnut firmsh. N Reg. Rotary Machine. . ew foot control! $49. Full set of attachments! B Reg. $89.95Used Grand Rotary Round Bobbin $59.95 utton holer! Sews reverse! Regularly $ $30 Values Hurry in Tedey fer Greatest Sevings! Cell FE 4-2511 wo ck.’ Jerome sTavgNO ean DETROIT uw — Thieves escaped the robbers tock 42 cones of Whisky with $4,000 in whisky and ciga-| and 500 cartons of cigarettes. He rettes after forcing open a skylight said they did not touch a safe at the Conant-Caniff Teontaining $2,000, ” ‘TIME TO FIX IT Right ! ' Every watch. or jewelry piece brought to our store for repair receives the skill, knowledge and exacting work of Mr, Orencia. Over the years he has | built a reputation of doing ex- cellent work, the kind” that makes every customer complete - ly satisfied. And Mr. Orencia produces the when promised . . work + On time. Bring your repair work here. You too join the thousands who acclaim his skill and craftsman. ship. Mr. Phil Orencie Graduate Wgtch Maker will ALWAYS FREE EASY PARKING RICHT AT OUR DOOR AT TEL-HURON NYE RS sm ancl uy CENTER former State Treasurer D. THE "== [Black Seeking “High Court Post | Judge Wants Dems to Pit. Him Against Brake at Convention Saturday PORT HURON (UP) — Circuit Judge Eugene F. Black, a former Republican, said yesterday he will | seek Democratic nomination as a Supreme Court judge in protest to} of | the Republican nomination Hale Brake. for the post. | “Even the thought of a bigtoed Brake on an already wheezing ju- | dicial process is enough to call for | vigorous counfér measures,”’ Black | said. ‘With the events of Satur- | | day (the Republican nomination of | | Brake), I*am quite willing to run | | on the Democratic ticket."’ The St. Clair County Demo- cratic Committee had asked | Black for permission to submit his name for the nomination at the Democratic convention in Grand Rapids next Saturday. Black was elected state attorney general on the Republican ticket in 1947 and served unde? the late Gov, Kim Sigler, He later broke with Sigler on grounds the gover- nor failed to keep his promises to “clear up the state government.” He helped Democratic Gov, G | Me nnen Williams defeat Sigler at | the next election but did not com- plete his break with the GOP until Williams appointed him to the cir- | cuit court last year. The cutapohen judge has tan- SHOP NOW AND SAVE! Hus BROS “F HILLS BROS. E COMEFE REGULAR or DRIP 6 Limit 1 Can REAL GOOD FRESH PACK DILL PICKLES: Direct from Maryland FRESH OYSTERS 89° NBC Shredded Wheat... .............. Maxwell House Instant Coffee. 6 Oz. Jar $1.59 Jiffy Biscuit Mix ...............Lg. Size 29c Borden's Biscuits... . .. Pkg. 10¢ PACKERS LABEL Qt. Jar DEMING’S RED SOCKEYE SALMON 210° Sree (3°69 CREAMETTES s MACARONI 3. EOPLE’S-—First of the Week FROZEN ORANGE = 10: JELLY Your Choice None Sold to Dealers! Elderberry 20 Ox. $ Grape Jors Crabepple Yeon '¢ Cheiee 19 qq -¢ St Gril RESH SEALSWEET JUICE RUBY-BEE PURE 29° RATH’S 412 LB. CANNED PICNIC CHERRIES C PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1955 gled with leading state Republi- can figures on several other an He had a Leypengrs with Brake while serv torney general und ogee en Sigter largely because the gover- nor backed Brake in the squab- | Fermer GOP Gov, Wilber M. Brucker started suit against Black | ’ asking $500,000 for slander but lat- | er dropped the suit. | Another frequent Black target has been Postmaster General Ar- thur E. Summerfield, a former |GOP nationa] committeeman from | Michigan. Nicaragua President Ready fo Rip Nixon | MANAGUA, Nicaragua (INS)— | Nicaraguan President Anastasio So- | |moza indicated today he would | | speak bluntly to visiting U. S. Vice | President Richard Nixon about the U. S. role in the recent dispute be- tween Nicaragua and Costa Rica. Somoza renewed his claim that | {the invasion of Costa Rica was} | purely an internal affair and lashed | }out at his personal enemy, Costa | tucan President Jose Figueres, as | “a crazy man.” The Nicaraguan president de- clared that Nixon could do a great deal to ease tension in the ex- plosive Central American area. His words indicated he would express the view to Nixon that the U. S. let him down in the border dis- pute. However, U_ S. officials traveling with Nixon are expected to tell Somoza with equal‘ bluntness to keep his hands off any future move- ment against the Figueres govern- ment or face renewed action by the Organization of American States, American Writer Held in Knifing of Roman Student | ROME WW — An American jour- nalist, Donald Allan. 33, of Wash- ington, D. C., was being held to- |day in a Rome jail in connection with the stabbing of an Italian student. | The student, identified by police as Adalberto Spinosa, was stabbed in the neck and chest early yes- terday. Hospital attendants said his condition was critical. Police said the student was knifed in front of Allan’s apart- ment when Spinosa and Allan’s wife, Marjorie, 32, returned to- gether in a taxi from a gay for- The police said they were hold- ing Allan in Rome's Regina Coeli (queen of heaven) jail ‘‘as re- sponsible for the knifing.” No formal charge was placed against him. Allan has been living here for two years and has worked on oc- casional assignments for News- week magazine. He was formally a correspondent for the United Press in Madrid. Spinoso has worked part time for an Italian movie magazine. Father Dies Watching Son Win Cage Game ALPENA (UP)—Gus A. Adams, who had been warned to avoid ex- | citement because of a bad heart, died Saturday, seconds after watch- | ing his son score four points to | give Alpena Catholic Central a 57- 53 basketball victory in overtime. Adams slumped in his seat just as the overtime period in the game on Alpena and Romeo ended. His son, Jack, rushed to his fa- | ther's side to find him _ dead, Seek Hot Rodder in Detroit Death Friend of Victim Tells | ‘Bumper Tag’ Game DETROIT WwW Police today sought @ youthful hot rod driver who they said caused the death of one teenager and the injury of an- other attempting to lure them into a high-speed automobile game of “bumber tag.” Killed was Gerald Back, Dearborn Township. He was riding with Lorne C. Johnston, 18, of Detroit, early yes- jterday, when their ‘car was rammed in the rear by another | vehicle carrying five occupants. The impact powered Johnston's car. over a curb and sent it crashing into a tree. Johnsten sufferéd cuts and’ bruises. 17, of The car that hit the two youths | sped from the scene without stop- ping Johnston said he and Back were en route home from a_ bowling alley when they pulled along side the second vehicle at a stop light “This guy at the wheel—I saw | later he had real red hair—kept | gunning his motor like he wanted | to race,’’ Johnston said. “‘My motor’s pretty new and I) think too much of my car to do that,"’ he added. ‘‘I ignored him.”’ “When we stopped for a sec- ond light I pulled behind him and he backed up and started push- ing me “After that, the guy would pass | me, then slow down in front. saw the kids in the car. They all looked excited “I ducked into a lot of side | streets and tried to duck him. But the kept right after me. . He'd get behind me and bump... must) have done it four or five times. ‘I didn't want to go too fast be- cause I had a new motor. But 1] really wanted to get away. “Finally, we were back on Warren near Outer Drive and we were going up a little rise. I could see this guy coming through my rear view mirror. “This car kept gaining on us and then it hit. ber." Police said Johnstons’ car was going from 40-45 miles an hour. The second car was doing about 15 miles an hour faster, police said. Under the tracks of American railroads are more than one bil- lion cross ties—enough to circle the earth with a SOfoot wide boardwalk. ~— BES [vc (an Get The “NORMA” America’s Most Beautiful Glasses! OWE PRICE TO ALL.. Here again—Ne-Visien presents & sensational eptical valee! Fer ene week only — we offer you this dbeaatifel, genuine 1/16 1TKT gold- filed decorated “NORMA” style glasses in a choice of any *%-tene: eoler combination fer enly $11.00! Mere are ist quality frames and tep quality lensrs made te your own exact You Must Be Completely Satisfied! Broken dupit- cated, frames re- a you por. fo 0 patred’ and replaced tons! Bere at savings te you! Ne Mere! “SAAT LE Gdife YOU CAN'T PAY MORE! iy Se case, ctee ee Gan on Oe Te America at this amasingly ts 'Sil.6o — Ne Extras — Ne adi _NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY! EXTRA FAST SERVICE lew price! glasses, worth a> wen keenly thao How He Tried to Avoid ° That's all I remem- | ‘Free Kissing’ Sets Off Controversy in Berlin BERLIN (INS)—A bitter contro- versy-is raging in Berlin over the old German clustom of ‘‘free kiss- ing” at carnival time. In letters’ to Berlin newspapers, a Briedland man advised against ‘Free _kissing”’ on hygienic grounds. A Potsdam woman, and Seek Jackson Escapee wr ivioen ditdiale JACKSON (UP)—Police through- | said Wrather; of Jac , Was serv- slang ~ plaice. mad ds ing three to 15 years ta_breaking Wrather, 26 , a Jackson prison trus- ‘and entering. Se — other readers, called it “immoral.” | Ut yom are mantie Sole’ cbtclalonn ont secsees tet panmene And a Berlin girl said that ‘I like | you can afferd, regardless of mech or how many you owe. hew NO SECURITY O to take part in-the fun, but when | H ONE PLACE TO Ease en ng ik my boy friend starts kissing other | girls. . .I think it’s horrible.” | “Bets. of credit counseling experience assist you.” ; a Hours: Daily 9 to §. Wed. & Sat. 9 to 1. Evenings by Appt. __The Port of New York authority || MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS a ‘| 41% South Saginaw St. ’ Above Ockiend Theater — helicopter passengers a Faso in the city area by 1960. The GOOD: HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC Pontiac’s Oldest and. 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Blonde Oak or -grained Mahogany Finish extra. — SMALL DOWN PAYMENT —EASY TERMS He (OOD Ze 51° West Huron Street _FE 4.1555 HOUSEKEEPIN of PONTIAC "Open: "til 9 PM. Friday si bet es Alaska has maintained its own National Guard since 1949. > Riker Bldg. Lobby —Luncheons— RIKER FOUNTAIN in ba Measure Carefully Check on the number of gallons of water your washer holds, even if you have to contact the manu- facturers. Then use at least one tablespoonful of detergent for each gallon. There are 16 tablespoonfuls to a cup, *5 Values to $14.95 7 End of Month Clearance DRESSES ‘8 ‘10° to $19.95 DRASTIC CLEARANCE BRAS—Famous make. Small sizes. Cotton or nylon. Values to $2.50 ....cec cscs ceececececteeeeees $1.00 SUITS—Dressmakers’ styles in faille. Now into spring fachions: Wore te: $4099 5 «vn ces es cdee ices Y PRICE WOOL GLOVES—Broken sizes and many colors. Where SUGR cic cciecieleie o crciclelercrele cisiels slavcinicrerereisis 89 Pr BOUCLE BLOUSES—Assorted sizes and colors. Values to $7.95 cc. c cect cc cece tec ete cceceeees $4.50 NYLON HOSE—Sheer dark shades. Broker: EGG). . MON. in America! up, or slip! 32-36, A; 32 to 4, B; 32 to 40, LET FEDERAL’S CORSETIERES FIT YOU CORRECTLY ...SOON! i eS ee properly fitted in your new Exquisite Form bra in either of these new styles. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1955 Weddings Take Top Spot in News * MR. and MRS. JOSEPH A. ULLOM Bride Wears Satin, Lace for Rite Jean A. Campbell Weds J. A. Ullom at St. Michaels before an altar decorated with ar- Birthday Party Given Saturday GIRLS’ NYLON DRESSES With Can-Can Petticoats. Toddlers’ i end 3 through 16, $5.98 up BOYS’ SUITS Man tatiored or Estons in gaberdine or flannel. = $7.98 » GiFT_WRAPPING SALE on SHOW SUITS . t Mildred Robak Says Her Vows at St. Michaels St. Michael Church was the set- ting for the Saturday wedding of Mildred Rose Robak and Theodore Goemaere Jr. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Andrew Robak of Cham- berlain street, and his parents are the Theodore Goemaeres of Third street, She wore a gown of white lace over satin and carried a bouquet ot white carationgs and white Rev. Havens Talks tions and sketches of the life of Mark Trask planned the eve- ning’s games and group singing. Mr. and Mrs. William Farrell, Mer- ton Brummett and Alfred Jackson _| Were named as members of a committee on missionary pro}j- ects. Mrs. Dudley Colby assisted the hostess, The Rev. and Mrs. Pauw Married Saturday in } St. Hugo of the Hills Church were Virginia O’Brien and Charles Goodwin MacGregor. She is the daughter of the James C. O’Briens, and his parents are Dr- and Mrs. William W. Ss | MacGregor of % ry Feacroft. BIRMINGHAM — Virginia R t PONTIAC HIGH SCHOOL TUESDAY, MARCH Ist, 8:30 P. M. THURSDAY, MARCH 3rd, 8:30 P.M. Tickets available at Arthur's of from Any Member. MRS. CHARLES G. Virginia O’Brien Is Wed MacGREGOR Lighten Your Hair... Oil Shampoo Tint to Remedy Faded or Lifeless Hair Expert Bleaching and Tinting Open Evenings Y by Appointment otdys Permanent Wave Shop 12 Scheel St. ... hold it in shape, easier, longer. Short Curl Permanents trom $6°° No Appointment Necessary IMPERIAL Beauty Salon 20 E. Pike St. FE 4-2878 ———e WHITE SAND exectly es featured in Vogue... this cling-pump exclusive in White Sond calf . . . color of desert moonlight. Trimmed arid lined with beige-toned paisley, applied via the very new tand-away cowl coller for a s dimensional Distinctive footnote to your resort or Spring-parade pions. (Also in Block Patent.) : _ Shoe Salon—Mezzenine Floor “Tuesday and Wednesday Only! TLIO, 4 SPECIAL VALUE DAYS TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY ONLY! BRAND NEW BETTER DRESSES Dresses That Regularly Sell for More , TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY ONLY! } BRAND NEW SPRING BLOUSES Blouses That Regularly Sell for More | TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY ONLY! | ) BRAND NEW SPRING SUITS Suits That Regularly Sell for More 23.00 @ Fitted jackets, long jackets "| @ Rayon and acetate tweed | @ Flannel, shantung , @ Novelty, pockets, buttons, cuffs | @ Novy, new spring shodes @ Junior, misses’ ond women’s sizes Suit Selon—Second Floor } _MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1955 a)” ° & i -_ ed OS a ee a ALL ABOARD—Jason Miller, bus School, welcomes 5-year-old Nancy Atkins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Grover C. Atkins Jr. of 3399 Lapeer Rd., aboard for the trip home from echesl. Typical driver for Willis transportation 5s busses 10 years Fentiae Press Phete committee chairman has a pro- of the men who operate Pontiac's second-largest | &ram of his own ystem, Miller has without an an accident, driven school Public School Transportation Is . Largest! in Pontiac; Has Near Perfect Safety Mar If someone were to ask you to drivers have a set of regulations are you'd be stumped, or come ad with the wrong answer. As a matter of fact, even the! man who runs the outfit was sur-| prised to find he heads an organiza-} tion that rolls up nearly two hun- dred million passenger miles each | year. That organization, the trans- portation section of Pontiac Pub- lic Schools, is bigger than it looks. For an idea just how big, consider that the system: T —Transports 1.500 pupils to and school on Opdyke read from school each day them all within less hours. —Operates and maintains buses and two automobiles. —Covers some 3,000 miles ot | roads and streets in the suburban | Pontiac area. —Costs about $55,000 a year to | operate } —Has a safety record which misses being perfect only because, an occasional child stubs his toe! climbing aboard A. Stanton Levely, superintend- ent of transportation and put- chasing for the Public school sys- tem, is in charge of the setup. | It's a big job, he reflects, but the organization runs smoothly. | “Our biggest problem,”’ Levely | says, “is trying to please every- one.” He added, however, that both pupils and parents have been very cooperative, with the result that the growing operation is able to function effectively with a minimum of trouble. Discipline is not a big problem either, Levely said. Pupils and’ A. moving than two 4 Auto Firm Watchman Wounded by Burglar DETROIT (UP)—A Lincoin Park auto sales agency night watchman lay in critical condition at Wyan- dotte General Hospital today with | a stomach wound he suffered while trying to fight off an armefi ,bur- giar The victim, Allen C. MCormick, 58, also was pistol whipped during the scuffle late Saturday. Police said the gunman scribed as being in his late teens apparently hid in the agency of-| fices shortly before closing | and was spotted by McCormick -—+ de- | | Seheelbus transportation, Levely each day. paere the Pontiac corps passengers have been riding with | Safety in the keynote for pointed out, and his drivers at- tend classes each year at which safe’ and responsible operation are majer topics. This year's course of four weekly sessions starts March 3, with George Hos- ler of Michigan State College as instructor. Typical of the men who operate Pontiac schoolbuses is Jason Miller of Drayton Plains, driver for Willis | ports 190 pupils to and from school driving about 4 A Canadian by birth, School Most of his older miles Miller in 1945 him all their school vears, and he knows almost all by name When asked about his prob- lems, Miller was hard pressed to think of any. About the most serious difficulty he has is when A quiet, | unruffled man of 51 who looks at least 20 years younger, he trans- motor; a new pupil misses his stop, and | the run. Driving does get a bit difficult | federal aid program, whereby the ____. | for the presidency in 1952, has | would impose greater responsibil- ity in the states. | Incidentally, neither the Gore nor | the B. name the second-largest transpor-| governing conduct on "buses, and | is still on the bus at the end of Se tation system in Pontiaic, chances disturbances are not comimon. at times in the spring, he reflects, | cars in order to get past with his bus Miller, with three little girls of his own, has no discipline prob- lems. “I know the kids, and they know me,”’ he said, ‘‘and we get along fine.”’ One thing does bother him, | Miller admitted. ‘I can't under- stand how the kids lose so much stuff, and why their parents don't make them look for it.” Removing lest articles from his bes is a daily chore, the driver said, adding that most of the forgotten items were articles of clothing. “They leave boots, caps, umbrellas and scarfs all the time . .. I bet I've found a million gloves.” With that, Miller stood up and reached for his coat, preparing to go out and warm up his bus to haul 190 hungry, glad-to-be-loose youngsters home for supper. Each jumbled 1 YINGLF a | 1] word is re- 2 LALF a leted te my 3 ODLH CL work ..... 4 LeEYL Ho Tearrange os few as possi- ble to guess 5 STIRW | my line. 6 ROGAN . 7 SELNON 7. 8 MASL Answer: 9 TAM coffee 10 KLEAN © vr 11 CASTLEET i | 1955 Wieitc by Dinu, te 12 EERREEF =| Subdivision, Streets. Named for Residents Nine persons prominent in Pon- tiac civic life will be memorialized with streets bearing their names in a new S0-acre cast side subdi- vision, itself named after two long- time Pontiac educators. The new subdivision, now under initial Construction, is located on .| when mud gets anxie-deep on some | ally in federal aid for highways on | 6f the back roads he travels in|a matched basis, with the states | Pontiac Tewnship. OOften, he re-| putting up 40 per cent and the | marked, he pulls out bogged-down | federal govefnment 60 per cent. | plan also recommends collection of - PON NTIAC, ———— Strong Backing Seen for Plan Opinions on Financing) Differ in President's Expansion Scheme By Merryle Stanley Rukeyser MICHIGAN p _SE) "EN TE EN- ‘\Solons Set to ,StudyRoad Proposal (Editor's Note: This ts the sixth in @ series of articles about Civil De- fense activities in the Pontiac area.) By ARNOLD 8. HIRSCH Phe trigger that could start the chain of action which might save | an American city from nuclear | destruction might be tripped by an | alert observer in the Ground Ob- | INS Economic Commentator WASHINGTON — Congress will soon turn its searchlight on the blueprint of the Eisenhower Ad- ministration, prepared by Gen. Lu- | cius D. Clay, for an improved na- 4tiona] system of highways. While there appears to be vir- tually unanimous support on the the modernization, expansion and | improvement of highways, there) are significant diffgrences as to| modes of financing the program. | At least three major types of | financing schemes have been for- mulated. The Clay Pian has been char. acteriggd by critics as a gim- mick for bypassing the Federal maximum debt limit prevision. It would be implemented through a public corporation, which would have a call on the Federal Treas- wry for funds in the event that the flow of revenues from the twe per cent gasoline tax proved insufficient. Incidentally, the earmarking of | the tax for this purpose raises ba- sic constitutional questions. The | fees from filling stations and mo- tels operating along rights of way. As alternatives to the Clay Plan, which soon will be audited in testi- jmony before the Senate Public Works Committee, of which sen. Gore (D-Tenn.) is chairman, the and Sen. Harry F_ Byrd, (D-Va), who broke party | lines to support Mr. Eisenhower a different financial proposal. In contrast with the Clay Pian, beth the Gere and Byrd schemes }each other in numerous particu- lars, would disturb the existing | states get some $600,000,000 annu- Sen. Gore, opposing the Clay/|—— blueprint for a separate corpora- tion, would discount expected fu- ture increases in Federa] gasoline revenues resulting from population | increase, expansion in the number | of cars, and expected .incréase in | | overall gasoline consumption, and | would boost Federal aid by about | a billion dollars a year of addi- tional funds. Sen. Gore would raise the Fed- eral contribution from 6 per cent te 75 per cent of the tetal. Sen, Byrd, as chief Senatorial guardian of | the financial con- science of the nation and a stalwart defender of the balanced budget concept, would go further in height- ening states’ rights in this field. With the Federal Government near its own debt limit, Byrd would expose the illusion that the national treasury is a horn of plenty, into which the states and localities can look for assistance. Instead, Byrd proposes repealing the Federal two per cent gasoline tax, and inviting the states to take this revenue di- rectly, and use the proceeds to finance the great highway rehabil- itation program. Byrd is not only batting for states’ rights, but, also for the pay-as-you-go principle, Byrd has prepered figures te show that, on the alternative Clay bond financ- ing plan, of every $1.55 raised by the gasoline tax, only $1 will ke for reads, and &5 cents for interesf, (Incidentally, Sen, Byrd would continue the existing lim- ited Federal aid, and would re- enact a “4: cent gallon Federal gasoline tax to finance it.) Sen. Byrd has also attacked the Clay Plan on the ground that it would preempt estimated increases from the gasoline tax for 20 years, from 1966 to 1987, with the ex- ception of about $600 million which | is committed to go to the states, as at present, for matching funds | for their primary, secondary and | urban systems. Sen. Byrd charges ithat this is unrealistic, and over- looks the need for continuing ex- pansion of highways after the pro- server Post in downtown Pontiac. | By picking up his phone, the sky- watcher atop the Oakland County | | Office Building within seconds | | talks to the Air Force Filter Cen- ter in Grand Rapids. If his description of the aircraft sighted warrants, the volunteers at | —e- . 2 ‘So > Se" (Observers Here Could after plotting the plane's course on a huge grid map. The direction center has au- thority to order jet interceptions inte the air te inspect and posi- tively identify any unknown air- craft. Guided to the observer-spptted plane by radar operators at the direction center, the rocket- equipped jets are ready to act immediately if the unknown plane proves to be an enemy attacker. The Pontiac post, supervised by Arthur J. Heaton, is manned on the average of 14 hours a day by approximately 100 volunteers. Hea- | the filter center will pass it on} ton says 168 people serving two. Hill and in the grass roots for | ‘8 an Air Defense | Direction Center | hours a week would Provide the | manpower for age. A total of 13,000 volunteers man 700 observation posts in both Mich igan peninsulas. Officials say man power total must be doubled to provide adequate aircraft detection | ' for this area. The Ground Observer Corps, comprised of more than 375,000 volunteers across the nation, is part of the nation's defense force, named Continental Air Defense Command (CONAD). CONAD ts a jeint command composed of elements of the Army, p, Marine Corps and Air Force. CONAD jis headed by Gen. Ben- jamin W. Chidlaw, who is also 24-hour-a-day cover- Pentiag Press Phete ON THE LOOKOUT—Guy Crites, 17, 49 N. Hilldale | ounty Offite Building to the Air Force Filter Center Dr. Ueft), describes an-airplane sighted from the | in Grand Rapids; Recording the information ts Ground 2 ne Corps post atep the Oakland Arthur J. Heaton 78 Tregent St post supervisor. Tale of Red Locomotive No Story of Success idren's story in the United States about the little engine that COULD. | Here in the Soviet Union there's a story about the locomotive that won't. The newspaper ‘Soviet Estonia, printed in Tallinn, tells abou it Last April the railway workshops in Tallinn took the locomotive of a concrete factory fer repairs. Soon the word went out to ‘‘come and get it.” * * 7 ‘But as soon as the locom tive engineer got into the cab... it refused to move forward, and would only move backwards. When they attached a load to the loco motive it stopped moving alto- gether — either forwards or in reverse. ... *- se * “Won't you take it? It's all) right, really,” the failway men) started to wheedle. ‘You know every sick man, after his recovery is still weak and takes his first steps with great difficulty, And this Voting Light in Detroit; Only 100,000 Expected DETROIT (INS\—Early voting was reported light today in De- troit's spring election primary with election officials predicting less than 100,000 persons would go to the polls. Many precincts reported only one or two votes cast after the polls opened at 7 a.m. Last voters in line at 8 p.m. will get ballots. The biggest battle is expected to take place in the race for Wayne County Circuit Court. Balloting will cut the total down to four men posed new major, road building plan has been executed. | who will bid for the two vacancies in the April runoff election. division will contain 379 single- family homes. Here are the namesakes of the | streets: Harry A. Maurer, who serv as city clerk from 1921 to 1947. H died in January, 1954. Dr. Charles N.-Neafie, who re- tired as director of. public health | in 1952 after. 35 years of pubtic | service. He is now health depart- ment consultant. W. Kuhn, whe retired after 24 years as fire in i id ’ ¢ . f | chief and 34 years with the fire department. | Frank J. Dufrain, superintendent | of schools frori"1945 until his re- | tirement last June. He joined the | school systent in 1921. Samuel M. Dudley, former prin- cipal and long-time. teacher at jac High School, as tet n J941 after 30 years of service. ohn H. Thors, Pontiac High principal for the past 25 years and «| with the system since 1921. Osear Eckman, city finance di. rector, a post he has held since ‘ 1938. For five years prior to that | he was city auditor. Judge-Arthur E. Moore, judge since. and in? juvenile work. % starts slowly. But it will improve “But the concrete factory peop! refused to take the locomotive and left it for a ‘final treatment.’ “Then in October they received ja telegram to ‘come and take your locomotive, It is in shape.’ wonderful ° . > “Again the people from the con |crete factory decided to test the | locomotive before taking it away. | And again they had to buy tickets | motive remains under repair to return by passenger train “The next telegram was ceived in November “At first the locomotive ran very re- capricious locomotive.” | MOSCOW «—There’s a chil-|is a big locomotive — naturally it al but then it again began to demonstrate its old caprices, It preferred its favorite backward movement. But, in addition, it had a new whim speed Having acquired full it didn't want to stop. Only with great difficulty could they stop it because the brakes would not take hold. But when it stopped — it decided to stay stopped and not move again . > + “And since that time the loco- “And soon it's April again and they will celebrate the first anni versary of this operation on the Mandon Rd., Give First Warning of Attack commanding general of the Air }Force's Air Defense Command LADO). The Ground Observer Corps, al- theugh if is a cooperative enter- prise between the military and | civilians, is the military responsi- bility of ‘the ADC. Radar and the GOC provide the initial warning which sparks the tentire defense system. The GOC supplements the radar web, which is generally limited to line-of-sight’ ‘coverage. At long ranges, the radar beams do not scan close to the ground, thus are not effective in detecting low- flying aircraft. Too, they do not penetrate obstacles such as moun- tains or buildings These restrictions leave gaps in the electronic defensive cover- age which can be filled only by heman eyes in observer posts, The cost of filling the gaps with more radar equipment would be — prohibitive, officials say. The Pontiac post reports an average of 3 planes daily to the filter center, Heaton says. In the aircraft flash message, the spotter reports the number of aircraft, type plane, altitude, direction and any other pertinent information Although the post boasts 100 vol- unteers, Heaton says many of them are not too In order to bolster his staff, he has scheduled talks before local groups and clubs to interest more are teenagers who steady volunteers “We would especially lke to get nightshift workers. We necd peo- ple who could serve from 2? to 4 a.m. after getting off work at l a.m he said Heaton is appealing also for housewives who could spend two |} hours a week at the post during the 6 am.-4 pm “I know a lot of women could put in two jhours a week. And it isn't eald, | either We've got heat on all the time.” + ‘Te acquaint the public with the ; j hours post and how It operates, Heaton and his chief observer, Cliff Koskimen, have scheduled an epen house March 15. The importance the Air Force puts on the GOC program was Lemphasized recently when it as- signed a staff sergeant here to serve as liason man As now planned, Pontiac will become GOC headquarters for Oakland, Wayne Macomb, La- | peer, Livingston, St. Clair, Washte- counties some posts in Lenawee. Shiawasse and Genesee-counties will also be under the direction of the Pontiac quarters Two other Air will join S.Sgt sky here in directing the posts in these ibe and Monroe head- Force sergeants Nicholas Chizew- 90 GOC counties Two Youths Sentenced for Possessing Beer West Bloomfield Justice Elmer C. Dieterle sentenced two youths, charged with illegal possession of to five weekends in the Oak- land County Jail and six months probation Pleading guilty Saturday Gerald T. Tremper, 18, of 1126 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lake, and Donald G. Pongratz, 17, of 919 Milford beer were THE TIAC PRESS, MOND AY, FEBRUARY 21, ‘ Grains Continue Slight Losses CHICAGO spite the fact the market will be_ closed tomorrow, Washing- ton’s birthday. Wheat near the end of the first hour was ‘« to ip lower, March $2.22%; corn 4s to 34 lower, March $1.12%; soybeans ‘4 to 2 cents lower, March $2.76; and lard ? to 5 cents a hundred pounds higher, March $11.65. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN (AP) Open CHICAGO, Feb. 21 ing | grain Wheat May >........ 115%) Mar ....00.. 233% July 117%, WAY wesc: 221% Sep 118 July wooo 2.06\4 Soybeans Bep eo+ae 2-00% ar. 276 Cora y re, ae Mar eoose 150% July 2 69+ May 152*. Nov 2 49% - 154% Lard + 143% Mar 12 65 — May 12.75 Mar ers 16% “ae Oil May z 14% Ma 11 88 July oa -10% tas 11.66 Ry Sep 11 42 Mar oe 313% - —— | Experts estimate that colds cost | the United States about five bil lion dollars a year. COCKROACHES One Full Yeer Guarentee | From Houses, Apartments, Gro- cery Stores and Restaurantsa Re- main out only three hours. No signs used | Rox Ex ( Company | 1014 Pent. St. Bk. FE 4-ocen || Will Buy Your Land Centract at Low Discount List Your Property With Us for Quick Sale WM. H. KNUDSEN Realtor $10 Pontiac Bank Bldg. Phone FE 4.4516 t You asked for it slow but per-/ e | weight canne | weTe l publishing Richmond also faces prosecution for driving a stolen car across [ MARKETS | ,~ ' Produce ‘ DETROIT PRODUCE DETROIT,: Feb. 21—Wholesale prices | on public tarmeri’ markets reported by the Bureau of Mar kets Pruits: cious, fancy, 5.50- + 00 bu: No |. 7-4 ‘oe: — Tes , Jonathan, fanc ‘u e 1, = sistent downwat in duane bu: age tency. 460 u; No 1, 3 25- Ty rg ren orth- renewed itself on t rd of trade.n2e: Soy wot 300-480) bu. apples, today. Losses Were not large but | Steele's Red, No. 1, 3.25-3.75 bu the market failed to show any), Coqee asters ont 06-160 bu: | ability to put on a sustained rally. spbboce ea. Ne 1 190-3 F0 bu Carrots » Moisture j to . No. 1, 1.00- u elery root M in the southwest winter | VPP, 09-150 doz Pennel. No 1, 1.00- wheat belt, an expanSion in re-/| 125 bu Horseradish No 1. 6 69-4.00 pk Leeks, No. 1 00-1.50 doz be ons, cepts of cash grain, spowienee that dry, No 1 Vee 1.35 50-lb bag Porenipa. some soybean processors Cur-| No. 1, 125-150 ‘4 bu Potaters, No ; : 1.35-150 50-lb. bag: potatoes; No. 1 2.60- tailed operations and a general! 399 100-\b bag | Rhubarb, hothouse, lack of éommercial demand com- = Ne “gr - at Pg 5-lb> box. . utabagas ol . u bined to point the market lower e . ° Dealings were fairly active de Livestock ~ DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT, Feb 21 (AP!—Hogs salable 1200 Market uneven: barrows and gilts under 280 Ibs 25-50 cents mostly 25¢ lower than last Thursday heavier weights about steady sows 25 cents lower. most choice 170-230 lbs 16 23- 1675. largely 1675 for choice 1 and 2 dround 190-226 ibs some sorted choice ls 1700: most 230-260 Ibs 15 50-16 25, 260-300 Ibs 15.00-15 50, 12.00-14 50. Cattle salable 2.100. Calves 300. Steers and heifers uneven. steady to weak, some bidding lower; other classes mostly steady; most early sales mainly choice fed steers 2500-2650 small lot high choice 1183 lbs 27.50; most early sales largely good fed steers 20 00- 23 00; load mostly choice fed heifers 22.15 some utility cr commercial steers and beifers 13.00-17 bulk utility end low commercial cows ai 50-13 00; canners and 10 00-11 50; some light- 950 down: vealers mostly bulk good and low choice 323 00- few high clioice and prime indi- 00. mostly utility and low interests cutters mostly steady 30 00 viduals up to 33 commercial 16 00-23.00. utility mostly 6 00-15 00. Sheep salable 1.400 Market active. slaughter lambs around $0 cents higher, cull an under 106 Ibs 22 80-2390; most rime, largely choice shorn slaughter mes No 1 and 2 skins 21.50-21 90: few eull to aces eaughter ewes 650-800, choice Ue tweight ewes absent Arrest Sheds Light on Series of Crimes DETROIT «-— Police in subur- ban Livonia say they uncovered a whole series of crimes yesterday |whéen they seized Billy L. Rich- | mond, | $600 in worthless checks last De- 34, for passing more than cember Richmond was driving a car stolen last November in Denver, Colo., they said. The license plates stolen from a Walled Lake resident. After admitting the thefts and the bad check charges, police said, Richmond casually mentioned that he Lake Christmas Eve without divorcing his first wife, the mother of his two children. The | Second wife is now in West Veir- | ginia he said. Held on a charge of uttering and (cashing bad cheeks), state lines. And if his two wives decide to press charges, he may also go on trial for bigamy Heads ‘Oxlod Branch OXFORD — John Wenger has | been appointed branch manager of the secretary of state's office, it has been announced in Lansing. During 1954, the 26.7 per thou- sand infant mortality rate in the United States set a record low. Now available Testing and Pre-Checking Service For Your APPLICANTS or EMPLOYEES Consisting of ® Personnel and Aptitude Tests, etc. CALL FE 4-4469 Evenings FE 5-1582 EMPL FOR QUALITY YOU CAN DEPEND ON... JAMES A. MARTIN, Director to Atty OWWNEO BOND OYMENT AGENCY CALL BOND Need money ? Bills to pay : +) Call HFC today ! Get $20 to $500 on your signature, car or furniture — YMENT PLANS Loans te pay old bills, taxes, YeoOet ne |p 12 | pes fuel, repairs, @ny good reason * | mat | 5.08 = 34 Loans made without endorsers $ 58 100 §S 6.65 § 7.20 9.98 | 18.39 , Fast, friendly, one-day service 300 | 19.55 | 21.20 | 29.55 54.78 . 800 | 31.39 | 34.16 | 48.09 | 90.02 pater h cement nd wi Houschold’s charge is the monthly vate of 3% om consumer finance company palace mot exceeding * Oe 9 0 EO en 7 Call or‘come in today! we ncesng $500, 0nd K% on ony romeinder. - Money when you need it USEHOLD FINANCE a 3% South Saginaw St. The Kay Bidg., 2nd Floor PHONE: FEderal 4-0535 - i + : Loans qnodi to residents of nearby touma oe \ : : ne ‘ * s ' \ ‘ ; EGO iy ig 7: ee : { | aa ¥ gts, i early sales sows | married a Ruth Anderson | jof Walled Rails Leading Market Climb NEW YORK (#—The stock mar- ket was led higher in early trading today by the railroads. Aircrafts, coppers, and motion picture itended to gain ground. Oil and | rubber producers were mostly low- er. Steels and motors were trregu- lar \ Gains extended to more than a point while losses were generally limited to small fractions. Trading began at a fast clip and the high-speed ticker tape soon began to run behind the flood of transactions. The mar- ket was mixed while the tape | ran late for a brief period, Then the pace slackened and prices | began to move upward. chemicals issues also |’ , Se Among the large opening blocks were New York Centra] Railroad | 35% up Ss on 10.000 shares; Penn- | syivdnia Railroad 2542 up “% on 10,000 shares, Southern Pacific 59 up % on 3,500 shares and U:S. Steel 78% off ‘4s on 3,000 shares. Climbing higher were gee Steel, Chrysler, Boeing, Corp., American Telephone, ars | ;conda Copper, DuPont and Gen- |eral Electric. Lower were Good- | year, General Motors, Con Edi- | son, Santa Fe, Standard Oil (NJ), Sinclair Oil and U.S. Rubber. New York Stocks | | | Nixon is is in deep conversation with : Revelers Riot in New Orleans Police Use Gas, Billies to Subdue Violence ms ms ss ar — Mor 7eé < pS Admire. = restone 6 Admiral, --- 30% Duvetens ... 88) in Carnival Crowds amea ce... 9) Gon Bee he —_ _ fed C . 1 uy > oe iv: Allied Strs $62 Gen Pas ..... 164 NEW ORLEANS # Cc ival ale Chel we Gen ai soos MOG crowds rioted in the French Quar- um tors .. ; i Alum Am .. 102 Gen Ry Big 454 /2¢° early today forcing police to Am Airlin 36 Gen Regrec .. 993/ use tear gas and night sticks to m Can .. Gen ue ; Asn Cyan : $43 Gen Tire || 36 Subdue the milling throngs. m Gas 1 43 tlette . .... T16 ; > — ai cea tae | . Veteren Officers described the Am M & Pay 3 Goodrich . ... 646 | Triot as the worst in their memory otors il Goodyear re am 6 Gas «® rah Paise 26 | and before ‘it was quelled seven | Am Red 252 Get No Ry 394 oficers wefe injured and a score | m ating 35.4 t West 6 23.5) Am Smelt 4 Grexhound ... 18 | Or more persons arrested. m 8ti Fa 316 ull Oi)...... 68.3) Am TelkTel 100 Mayes Mi.” 37| Thousands of natives and visi- an Tob 627 Soreh Chee... 41.2 tors milled and screamed in the m joolen 265 oliand F...,. 161 . } pea pros: 21. Homestk |./)) 445 | Darrow 700 block of St. Peter St., Ane Cop. 53 Meoker Ei.::; 334| near Bourbon in the heart of the nac 62 oud Her..... 16.1 : Armco 8t] 73 «tl Cent... o¢ | Right club aaa Armes & Co 156 —— Ray.... 3 bd sed Dry O 203 Inland Stl..... 13.3 preset 135.3 Inspir Co 43)| Patrolman Roger Leoncavello re- Atl Cst Line .. 381 Imteriak I... 33.4 ported the riot started after he at- t 7 Aveo Mie aS “t a Mary... . 73 tempted to arrest 18-year-old Law- Bald Lime .-. 168 Int Feoer asec #02} rence Morrison of Arlington, Va eit coe S Geevet.. cco. Beech Nut... 992 tht Tel & Tei se7| The officer said five New Orleans oe Av....117 Isl Crk Cost:- 21 | youths accused Morrison of at- nguet 11 Jacobs on | Beth Bteel 21 Johns Man tempting to force the lock on their | Boeing Air . %7 Jones & L ae car. | Bohn Alum 223 Kelsey Hay ne i Strs 112 > ae Hundreds of excited tourists and | } rcer s) adn Warn 362 arp oe ... Hi bar patrons surrounded Leoncavel- | Bri ‘ & 11 Briggs Mig wes ioe Gun 312 '0 and Morrison as the two scuf- Budd Co 197 Lib McN&L... 16 | fled, and the officer put in a riot Burroughs m7 Leg & My 625 | all. Calum & lay Lockh Aire s | C Campb Wy 301 Loews 205 | Squad cars and the police crash | ican Dry 183 Lone 8 Cem 636) San Po 33> Lorillard truck responded and in the ensu- | Capital Air! 396 een eid ay | ing fight officers were bitten. parblge ® we Martin Gl 411 | punched and otherwise pushed | we Trac an4 a nay Po around before tear gas and night | ee 334 wid Con Pet 1022 sticks brought the crowd under | Com Tl PS ... 336 wad St! Pa 40 Cort-teed .... 38.3 Monsan Ch....1164 | Control i mo Mont Ward. 781 * 6¢« soe . 22 | Saezeter ms Moter Wheel | 30 Patrol wagons were kept busy *° .. Be4 i Clark Equip |. 69 Stuciier Br. 435 hauling those arrested to the First Climas Me : 3 Murray Cp 33.1 | District police station where they e .. N » : Cove Cola... 130 oan Cash a “ were booked on various charges s +ee- 161 Nat iry 1 : Colg Palm... 686¢ Nat Qype..... S01 Morrison was treated at a hos cos Ste. .. 80 Nat Lead .,.. 607) pital for lacerations of the head sum ee N Stee . " Cont Bex... Se a Thee : 1 = booked — — bur- ‘on an ee | r 44 ary, simple ttery onca- Cont Mot .,. 137 “W¥Cent...... 361 erty os : : dame — oe saw 0 a Pe 33.6 ve a mina mage to an opper Rog 14 or vest | Corn Pd e6¢@ Nor Am Av .. 614 automobile Pleo Ringe a8 _ - 0 | Police said 45 minutes after the LJ r or ee z [es Edis 337 Nwat Airlin .. 325 first outburst was suppressed, they s C Seag 24 Ohtle Ot re | we same im- Doug Aire 129 Oliver Cp -. 161 igh called again to the | Bow chem “6 Otte Bev AH mediate vicinity where crowds a ‘ont 175.2 ens It} Ol ..311 urled sSes Eagle P . 3441 Pen A W Air 202 h missiles at bu and cars Bast Air L 447 Pann EPL ... 46| The weary officers answered Er aunt ee Parke De.” 344 | three more complaints in the same El & Mus In 46 poner jc... 8? | general area during the night and Emer Rad 16.1 RR 252 End John 36, Pepel Cola .,, 19.4 | Scores of complaints in other parts | Erie RR 22§ Pheips D .... 833|/0f the French Quarter. Ex-Cell-O 952 Phileo ....... 30.3 STOCK AVERAGES NEW YORK, Feb. 21—Compiled by the Associated Press 2 61818 Indust Rails Util Stocks Prew day . 2183 1283 Tle 1809 Week ago 2181 1233 715 1804 Month ago 2993 1184 «683 1528 ear - 1804 850 $872 1138 1954-56 high.... 2195 1251 715 199.9 1954-55 low 1439 778 554 1080) 1983 high 1818 936 858 1143) 1983 low... 1302 735 SOS 095 U. S. Markets to Close | Washington's Birthday NEW YORK (®—Financial and commodity markets throughout the United States will be closed Wash- ington’s birthday, Tuesday, Feb. 22. Various livestock reports will ‘| be gathered by the Dept. of Agri- culture. TERMS! Wayne Your Electrical Appliance Specialist T21_N. Saginaw St. Foreign Exchange NEW YORK, Feb 21 (AP)—Poreign | exchange rates follow (Great Britain in @ollars, others in cents): Canadian doller in New York open merkett 3 15/16 per cent premium or 101.939% U.S. cents. up “% of a cent Europe: Great Britain (pound) $2 78'. unchanged; Great 2.77 31/32. off 1/382 of a cent: Great Britain 60 day futures 2.77 13/16, off 1/16 o fa cent; Great Britain 90 day futures 2.77 23/33. off 3/32 of a cent: Belgium (franc) 1.99 9/16, off .00 1/16 of a cent; Prance (franc) 28 of a cent, unchanged: Germany (Western) (Deutsche mark) | — unchanged; Holland ‘guilder) 26 25. unchanged; Italy (lira) 16% of a gent, unchanged; Portugal ‘escudo) 3.50; un- chang Sweden krona) 19.4, changed: Switzerland franc) un- ifrees | Britain 30 day futures | af o ~~ » THE VEEP IS IN DEEP—Vice President Richard | Toledo sugar cane field in Cuba during his Caribbean a | worker at the aie ‘News in Brief An was ransacked | and $18 reported stéfen in a break- | in at Taylor Auto Paint and Equip- | | ment Co., 137 W. Huron St., Sun- hea Pontiac Police said _ entry made by breaking glass in the } oa door. } | | John L. Taylor, 22, of 212 Branch St., faced arraignment in Municipal Court today on a driving under the | influence of liquor charge. He | was arrested after he was involved | in a minor accident at Lull and — Sts., yesterday. |. Articles valued at $65 were re- | ported stolen from her car and | garage Sunday by Mrs. A. M. |Mobrearty, of 202 Ogemaw Rd., Pontiac Police said. Listed as missing were four tires, a blanket, dress, jumper and sun glasses. | If your friend’s in jail and needs bail, Ph. PE 5-5201. C. A. Mitchell. —Adv. | Te buy or sell in Waterford, ‘Drayton Plains or Clarkston area |see White Bros. Rea] Estate. OR /3- 7118. —Adv. | ‘Test Applications Deadline Is Sunday Sunday, Feb. 27, has been set as the deadline for applications from —_: men and women of Michigan | to take advertising aptitude tests | | being sponsored by the American Association of Advertising Agencies for the ninth year. dents, or people working im ad- | Vertising or allied fields, between the ages of 19 and 25, are eligible | to take the work aptitude tests. | Those interested should contact | Richard J. Farricker, chairman of | the Michigan AAAA Examinations | Committee. His office is located at 710 New Center Bldg., Detroit No special or previous prepara- tion is necessary to take the apti- tude examinations being held |March 5 at | Michigan Statae College and the University of Michigan Chrysler Moves Keller | to West Coast Office DETROIT W — Robert T. Kel- ler, vice president of Chrysler | Corp., has been placed in charge tt awton. | of the corporation's west coast au- | tomotive plant operations, L. L | Colbert, president, announced to- day Keller, 42, is the son of K Keller, Chrysler chairman. He bes been a vice president of the firm | since 1953 and has held a number |of manufacturing posts since he | joined the corporation in 1934. | | Colbert said a resident corpora- | tion officer was assigned to the Wayne University. a3. unchanged; Denmark (krone) 14.50, | west coast because of great eco- | tivities Building on Williams Lake Latin America: Argenia (free) 7.24, un- changed; Brazil (free) 1.35, unchenged; Mexico 6 62 ore Venesuela (boli- dollar 17.40, un- Controlled Heat Automatic FRYPAN WAS $2495 Wayne Gabert’s Price 19° Gabert FE 5-6189 | nomic growth of that region in re- | cent years, ‘Packard Gets 2 Awards for 1955 Developments NEW YORK (UP) — Packard won two awards at the Universal Travel and Auto Sports Show yes- terday for its 1955 models. It was presented the “‘outstand- ing automotive advancement of the year” award for development of the Torsion suspension system in production cars and the 1955 gold cup for ‘individuality of styling in the luxury car field.” Initiation Is Tonight CLARKSTON — The Joseph C. Bird Chapter 244, OES will hold its initiation and a reception honoring Mrs. Margie €onrad, grand repre- sentative of the state of Idaho in Michigan, at 8 p.m. today at the! Glarkston Masonic Temple. Plan Pancake Supper ROCHESTER—The fifth annual Pancake Supper, sponsored by the -Men’s Club of St. Philip Episcopal Church, from 5:30-7:30 p. m. Tuesday. The affair is open to the public. ACCOUNTANT will be held | Sionary_ Mission Group Named at Lakeland Church WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The | & 24 members of the Lakeland Pres- | byterian Church at a recent or ganizational Society. filiated with the Women's Gen- meeting decided to | | Patching Materials aes or cold. call their group the Deborah Mie | oemnier aeceiinetiions must be at-+— _They will _be—af-}*sehed_to NOTICE TO BIDDERS Sealed proposals will be received by the Board of County Road Commissioners Bow co 1955, 8 requirement of Bituminous through Classified | adst a a! # & 1955 a ° ¥- ¢ Ex y - UOSS- amine Death Notices H, PEBRUARY fs | enix abbie See Ft Sp a sy "ioe hoe Bird and Mrs. Jean < dear wrother of | one, ° Puneral . service te State Attorneys Hint at Wednesday. Feb. 33rd st reser ‘ . . LJ ‘Sensational Testimony’ | Home, Milford with Rev. Ropers in Trial Today. Mich Mr. Elsworth is i state at the Pacharasen Bade’ Pe- BIRMINGHAM, Ala. W&—State nerel Home, SiWerd. | attorneys hinted at more sensa- 7 tiona] testimony to come today in w Cc. 2929 Molden Ot ot — Albert Fuller's trial for the mur-| f2%, Sette wasted der of racket buster A. L. Pat- en Se ag } sorecn: inom, Wiliam jag and bar” A Columbus, Ga.‘ taxicab driver, Geaemp, and Beet Pee q - . aq Mr Belle Parker, Mrs. James R. Taylor, faced another Fiormace Berryman and Mrs. Rose round of defense cross-¢Xamina- i held Wednesday. Feb Tre at 1:30 tion intended to break down his | Pu. ot the Dencigsn~Jeane Pe- story that he saw Fuller fleeing | wandusa ie. senna ; - te t Oak View © . immediately after Patterson was maven Gian. stich. bie Paleed slain, et the Donelson-Johns Puneral * . * Home. Defense attorneys sought to show . that Taylor had made contradic- PEBRUARY 20. 1955. EL- tory statements that would dis- accds Siac r oeakn a Bn] credit his identification of the de- deat daughter of Mrs. Lena, Roebl; . dear mother of C. W., Ron ald J., - fendant. Olesa D. ond Calves 3 ~ ~ _ Fuller was chief deputy sheriff a ake. Ske bee at Phenix City in the days when} an. Wiliam “Roehl” Puneral ee crime free oe | Peo ra att mM et Spares: SS — | there is one of three de rit Chapel with Ba {fic ermen ug Ri >E3 ct d fendants charged with the June 18 | Acaste °? oth tines Pony . will & ise Expecte killing of 5 (crusader who had) Sicre-crlne ‘riers haat sworn 0 * « ~ in Auto Stocks SADLER. PEBRUARY 19, 1955, . Y aperial prosecutor Cecil Deason | Louis D. 3162 Warringham. age During Month said yesterday the state would| 31. peloved husband. of Mire 3 _| present witnesses to prove vice in er er ig le ay DETROIT «*—The nation’s neW was wide open when Patterson Sadler, dear son of Donald W. |car dealers now hold stocks total-| was siain and Fuller had much (BIR) Gadier. Puneral me will ing well above 500.000 units, Aute- i . the ; be held Tuesday, Ped. 22nd at siotive News naperkell Madey to lose if the town was cleaned ob ak: a4 tae Weenneen Paneek I . Home with Rev Roy Lambert of- The trade paper said today its ee ee “ : Indicted with Fuller were Arch Chapel Mr. Sadier will lie in state customary monthly survey showed | | Ferrell, former prosecuting attor- Huntoon Punera!l Home. — aoe _— new nigeahnt ney at Phenix City, and former eb. 1, but that a further check! arty. Gen. Si Garrett, the man ___ Card of Thanks 1 indicated a further rise later in Patterson would have suceeded LLL LP the month in office. Ferrell is awaiting’ trial. | SuRVIVED Ag ig a The Feb. 1 figure of 464,020 | Garrett is being treated for a men- to extend their thanks and biess- compared with 9 revised Jan. 1 | tal disorder at Galveston, Tex. tee Yeotor cr De ie Dept. | count of 362,381 cars. The paper | Rt tote said: “New car stocks have Mf h d W. moved upward continuously since out h an oman Flowers 3 @ postwar jow of 157,607 units was - = _ nied Me Neronte ‘Jailed for Break-In | ies ToT ze +o “At this moment, they exceed wn teen) Ore an what .under norma! conditions} Three 18-year-old youths and a might. be regarded as a 30-day|mother of the same age were Faneral Directors 4 | supply, but pa the su i tara Su Ge writion 4 vo area coreg SF si pot Be 0 a buildup | To p Justice Em J. Leib| irevy Puneral Home =—s_—«w PE: © 1883 = eceeraceet for the spring mar-|for arraignment in Circuit Court Cg ay gre my : Feb. 28 on a breaking and entering Pursiey Funeral Home, PE ¢i3i) “So far few dealers have been | charge. Donelson-Johns heard to complain of overheavy- oan : Accused are Mrs. Rosemary An- PUNERAL SOME inventories. On the contrary, there | gerson Robert Isaacs and David “prerexeD FOR FUNERALS” are many who still say they do : CHAPEL J. LeMaster, all of Royal Oak, Thoughtful Service PE 3-004) not have enough cars, although | ciitford L. Morland, of Detroit some feel they are handicapped Oak wail ee ; by an unwieldy selection of mod- per i = Ric waal - Voorhe sSiple els.” a FU AL prehended in Tucumcari, N, M. Qmbwance Service or Moter B . Feb. 8. "Es on The quaret is accused of break- usiness Notes jing into the Deer Lake I b Monuments 4A Eugene E. Piche, Royal Oak, is |Co., in Independence Township; BUY GIRECT AND SAVE 1 of 14 Wrigley Store managers | the Waterford Hardware Store and| wise Gyanite ® Marsie named as winners in a Nationa) 4 Berkley grocery store. Citizenship Award program spon-| The are held in Oakland County sored by the National Association | Jail under $5,000 bond. Cemetery Lots s of Food Chains. 2 ¢ GRAVE at Piche manages Wrigiey's store Tqx Board Sets Dates Ba ecdef te tek = at 45 $. Telegraph in Pontiac. ~ Also receiving an award was| CLARKSTON—The Independence | Herman L. Ziolkowski of Detroit, | Township Board of Review will manager of Wrigiey’s Birmingham March 8, 9, 13 and 14 from BOX REPLIES store at 635 S. Woodward Ave. ~! |9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the township At 10 a.m. today ; “ offices. there were replies at ory RNC Od Or | rare ot cman — Fae | | the Pree oftce te : e, | Date Court for the County of the boxes: ly was appointed special assistant | ?“7°"!* Pate rman ‘is: welstinn. 0a to the president by the American| ing Floyd Diamond, —Cause Re. 1, 1, 12, 14, Ti, 28, 5, Motors Corp. Black joined Nash-| “To. Neuse D.emond, mother of said @, 78, 82, 110. Kelvinator in 1943 after 23 years | child with the Ford Motor Co | Gecee uueeuee waa tee Big Pores bouts of th of Four Pontiac are | emit is lll and pig ego z a men A&Fe | violated a law of the State, and that Help Wanted Male 6 among 40 Michigan credit union | said child ry be placed tnder the ~ . managers attending a 3-day con-|° In the matter “a on people of the AIRLINES NEED MORE MEN ference at Haven Hill Lodge. They | 8'#'¢ of Michigan, you are hereby noti- See our ed under 8, Airlines | fied that the hearing en said petition __Tragning jare Albert W. Marble, Harry J. | wil! be held at the Court House in the ALL AROUND T TRUCK BCHANIG | Woodman, GMC Truck and Coach | Sn) day’or'tarcn. “a tees: on the serun > Ai ae (credit union managers; Francis | o'clock in the forenoon. and you are . Ont ay pe Schneider, Pontiac Motor Division | hereby. yore = ee pereeeely Treva pai Btn pay 3 credit union manager: and George | Tt. deing impractical to make personal _Green &.. Boston 14 ~ | service hereof this suthmons and notice AWNING —s representing Lyon Co. | snail be served by publication ef a copy epeed tues te coll the ur hain credit union of Detroit. The per- one week previous to sald hearing tm the elummum awning of the mart Pootiac Daily Press a newspsper printed | Leada furnished pp mooeny | sonnel practices and management | and circulated in said County - to on nee controls, began today oo g ee be price Raggi due! ms. — of Pontiac, in said County. this 8th day | Gem PaMILiAR WITH or vary 5 | drafting prectice to check Specialists to Speak Lia true copy, ARTHUR B MOORE. ive ef precision. small de- F G PAULINE & HEWITT toon pt ge ay oe on ruit rowing Deputy Probate Register vance. MC. Manufacturing Co. WATERFORD TOWNSHIP sevenne Breese Feb. 21. °85. | ime “eee é . . iN. _- ic’ fruit growers from 15 counties in| sTATE OF MICHIGAN — In the Pro- ORIVERe Witt EQ SwaErr TS 4 southeastern Michigan will gather tea oe County of Oakiand— Snes Report ready for wort, at the Waterford Communities Ac- | In the matter of the petition concern- TralLen ConvoY te ing Francis. Jerry Carol May. Temmy | ona s ° r road for an all-day ——_e | ay 11348 Sue Risinger miners “Cause FAP ERIENCED DRIVER SALES Wednesday |e sre ro. Risinger father of said ou Waren 8 and 8 am. Walk- Specialists. in related fields will fect having, been filed in this er's Cyraners. Lake Orion. _ rt al t the present where- HELP US FIND THIS TEACHER be on acare — — the pie ge yy Recoil of big Mighoe tim piece: pans: Gia te On cette growers roblems raising a | children ts unknown and the said ehil- Alesees vd eduaintetre’ healthy crop of fruit, and farm dren are dependent upon the publie for | Fel, Nesensl “samener peamina | management questions | be placed under the Juriediction of thie Bi sah depending lan 3 | Court = : Morning session will open at | In the matter of the people of the oo Permanent & - er 10 a.m. with a talk on “Orchard | fied that the bearing. on sald’ petition those who quality. Write im con- mae,” by MD peer Rey | 2 ee Oe oe ee igaa, Buildin, Detreti_ ‘te Mich, . ity tiac 1 id Count = a Ftc Hutson. The State Department of | isth day of March, AD i9sh at two} f EXPERIENCED ON Agriculture tree removal pro- |} Sitoy commanded to enpess perseneily + yl slevatasien ereby commanded to appear persone) ur gram will be outlined at 10: t sald heart ine Co... 118 Incianweed Ré.. Lake ; and at 11:15 there will “ig . Tt —— —— to make personal ~ NEW POLICY coun service hereof this summons and notice IE \Y ( CY panel discussion on will Irriga hall be s public : opy ‘ <3 tien Pay?” ee week pil Ltgron geindlad yg PER CENT DOWN b Pontiac Daily Press a newspaper printed Tan TO PAY 3 Aft : E A and circulated tn said County | EPOSITS = ernoon session will include a PP bongg the Honorable Arthur E | Lawe siness meeting at 1 p.m., fol-| Moore. Judge of said Court, tn the City haa aoe - 4 | of Pont t A Cor his 18th 4 “Hohon : psc by — tea = im- | of Ponreety "a" D. iss” . sone, fase . a br ment, mark apples, a q , raftsmen aay aS ple storage cooperatives, and | PAULING wrt Judee of Propete poe ¢ 7. wan is: frigeration. A film, “Gateway to a eee ene Driver & 8 Baucation nan Oe Health” will be show aves “en . oo etee : n. Pes. 21°35.) Giese, > nal : 4 Ww. fluren sors PART TIME JOB Sai Se Fe al elie ON THE BARREL you get by selling things pe mM RA a rm SS patch Oe. ~ s THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1935 . U y cn PAGER. —_ =i - _ “See ee . — ~ Pretty Parisienne Produces Male -- Today's Television Programs -'- Fabr ic Designer | one nooner Began at Bottom ; - wr 2 _ DALLAS, Tex. & — An Indian _. Myna bird famed Happy is the of- ficial greeter of the Dallas Mer- chandise Mart. From his cage in the lobby he greets all men with “Hi” and whistles at the women. pe REGISTRATION NOTICE or BIENNIAL SPRING AND SPECIAL ystery Bob Considine Says: Fontainebleau Has a Bar With Underwater Window Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 7—-WXYZ-TV wiz ze Amerycans—zey say, ‘Who, Have seldom heard a polar bear |!s something to behold, and the 4. 1968 ’ TONIGHT’S TV 9:00—(7) Wrestling (9) Holiday. |10:30—(4) Way of W Te Qualified. Bectors of Tp: ' : ay orld. (2) Ar- . OF PONTIAC, . o, a : a .| Travel films (4) Medic. Work of} thur Godfrey. Coens of Pangget,_ State st michigan | 60817) Atte Rascals. Dogs Is | ublic health nurees gahuted in y She Says Americans MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (INS)—So| you draw an “X” on the picture _ formity. with “Michigan Election = oe sae "pita may | “Mercy Wears an Apron” (2) |10:45—(4) Sheilah Graham. Gave Her Hard Time many people have written so many postcard of the hotel, as close to eR ee] ee a in Producing Thriller things about the Fontainebleau, | your room as possible, you don't! ‘e a] ean, Gey of any reguiar or| (ene Autry. Gene thwarts rob-| I Love Lucy. Lucy snares bit |11:00—(7) Story Studio. (4) Home. in Frogucing IAriner | «America’s largest resort hotel: | even have to sprinkle salt on it to }y- opis e or primafy iection | bing in “The Carnival Goes} part in movie-and gets to play | ~ ; ; . that there a be receive for registration the name of any ore 11:30-(2) Strike It Rich By WAYNE OLIVER would appear to make it dry. : rim sald City, not eiready| West. a death scene. Lucille Ball start. : NEW YORK wW—A gay Parisi-| 200g left to say. This must be Ae Sam Goldwyn once said, upon may apply to all 1A oe ie cen . NE “|true. I have been here for two | viewing a s al be’ i srr, that I 'san teccive 20 hames| Neg. Dra Wilhamee ee (| Ome) ee (Gy Nr ony Ross| TUESDAY AFTERNOON —enne, pretty and platinum blonde. ‘days and nary a soul from the purpose, “What'll they think ct he ti inter- ~ . ’ 7 « a ne ies a yoy the thirtiesn éay gefore| , - rm ness. Music, variety with Jack | 12:00—(7) 12 O'Clock Comics. (4) ‘s the —— rm ard Ush publicity department has ap- | next? { 6:30—(7) Wild Bill Hickok. Ad- Adventures of Sherlock Holmes on : h any reguiar, special or official primary; 6: ! : 10K. Arthur, host (4) Robert Mont-| “Tennessee Ernie. - (2) Valiant | ns proached me wit the scoop that . ‘ election and the day of such election. venture with Guy Madison (9) , American television. the Fontainebleau is America’s Fontainebleau is so well booked Notice ts Rereeg Given That 1 wil The Passerby. Ben Cooper in| S°™mery Presents. “Coming of | Lady. | She's aynamic Nicole Milinaire, largest resort hotel. The boys sure . that a friend of mine named Al RS eee TT naa | “Love Trom a Stranger” (4) aig ao a 12:15—(2) Love of Life. |who gave up a profitable fabric| are content= , Steele is i ae lection vided Section 10 J i s hile over for him de business f ear ; a cabana Mare! ri Guapeer {Port 2 ras. Act Ne 206. Publie ede ied ed and he fears future (2) Decem- | 12:3 — (7) Béulah. (4) Feather |, “ether an cultat cand Pi ins owners should be So COM-| addition to swarms of inmatee— | Pualte, Acts of 1905 and Act No. 108, in “Helen's Holiday,” David| €? Bride. Lily is jealous of her | Your Nest. (2) Search for To- Sheldon Reynolds in the production | - one of whom threw herself ‘to 2 Grom o e'ctech on, watt! § c'eeck pm.| Wayne, Joan Lorring (2) News| Mew admirer’s beautiful secre-| Morrow. of Foreign Intrigue, | _ The Fontainebleau cost 14 mil- her death off her wedgies today pd grea hil aco geared a | Ace. ni hires handsome French | 12:45—(2) Guiding Light * * « | Hon dollars, It is _— sande at prochensen-rty = — reg s " - ° . r “ » depend on price joa praeoe cae nerd Cry 8 6: 4519) Frank Conners. Music | fac " | 1:00—(7) Lunchtime Drama. (4) sagen Pag he fim cuionea! a cae areca or the | Nations, Music Hall and Chock “4 we The nome of no person bus on ectual The Chuckles, guests (2?) Weath- 10:60—(7) Boxing. Featherweight | Rob Maxwell Show. (2) Portia wy iscmnides fa produce sh Sher-| Side that commands g splendid | Full-o’-Nuts in New York, Feeistration, wand. entited under the} erman. Dr. E. R. Phelps. ane is) Genin thee eri Faces Life. |lock Holmes series last year. view of the taxi ramp. One of its | You get an odd feeling after Both For $] 295 constitu suc . . » & y = to cn a a cee election, shall be) 7:00—(7) Kukla, Fran and Ollie.| pout: Rinzi Nocero ys. Rafael 1:15—(4) Sonny Elliott. (2) Road! Nicole admits that in supervis- ars affords a drinker a view bucking the crowded elevator a bit : enter ECTOR UNABLE TO MAKE ‘Puppets (9) Hopalong Cassidy. | ~ Meretino (2) Hockey. Red Wings | of Life. ae an abe peccae ee owinnns ‘oie ee eee gai y-ray age tier jomne Rondemaes ty tailored ‘lam PPLI: — ii ; mate | swimme ° , ‘ Sec. am acer vas We ukahis ta Bill Boyd in western (4) It's a} ys. Boston Bruins. |1:30—(4) Good Cooking (2) La- she ae a few difficulties | se of your ‘oo should say, in 14K yellow gold. make persong! application for registra-| (reat Life. Denny's new girl | dies Da in the beginning. In recent days the only swim-|"Stop at = men’s furnishings, Hee teense tae ecetip City or| friend is lover of outdoor sports | 1@:38-(4) Secret File, USA. East i “Ze French work very well be- mers we noticed were two polar | Please.” Jewelry Department Village in which his lesa! residence is German police kidnap young boy | 1:45~(9) School Broadcast. | cause zey know me,”’ she explains. bears accompanying a king pen- - But the service at the Fontaine- . rior to . ” i" , . ™ . Close of registration before any election| up athletics, Michael O'Shea,| i” “Mission Hansel. 2:00—(7) Stars on Seven. (4)| Dut Thad a lettle trouble at first | guin blequ is splendid, the architecture GEORGE'S and she talks his pals into taking | ty or V William Bishop, James Dunn (2) 16:45—19) Ringside Review. Chris, Bruce Mayer Show. , — Cart, of Rr n mr idence Your Income Tax. Aid in filing| Schenkel interviews (2) Featur- —— tes 1Gke is zat blonde?’ Now zey are my speak plainly, but one of the two oT btn uate hotel poner fo the ration affi-| return. ette. Walt Disney's ‘‘How to , — best fans.” mentioned just above said an in- . NE WPORT'S * 2. * teresting thing as he dived into the | Sign announcing its name, Catch a Cold." 2:30—(9) Myrtle Labbit Show. (2) Jegally authorized to sdminister/ 7:15-9(7) My Story. Drama. louse : Interiors for sherlock Holmes, , pool. ‘‘Kee-ripes'’’, he sereamed po tot o Clgrt® os “Foonshig. 4:30—(7) Name’s the Same. Pane! | !!:@—(7) Soupy’s On. Variety (9) ' verte: , She says, are filmed in Reynolds'|as he hit the water My favorite shop, a Bronx hat | — - —-— Sty ot View ngy Rag ge ole quiz with a ype oa | National News (4) News. Wil-|3:68—(7) Theater. (9) Tuesday studio Eclair north of Paris where| The old kings of France would | Store named ‘De Classe, has been | jor to any election or primary elec- ; | liams (2) News. LeGoff Matinee. (4) Greatest Gift. (2) a replica of famed Baker Street | have loved this Fontainebleau, Did | topped by a Miami laundry catia See v Before Y Bu ton. The notary public or other otticer names (9) Million Dollar Movie. | Big Payott. | nder her direc-| they ever have a cofice shop as|“Helpy-Selfy.” s ou Buy m ee een eee ot | “Lady with a Lamp” (4) Tony |11:16—(7) Armchair Theater. | was. constructed uader her direc. . ; Sounds like the first Chinese Bame on the or sign . ; : 3 a 3: 4 - |tion, Exteriogs away from Baker | big as Madison Square Garden—| °* is ’ t otticer and designate) Martin. Plays clarinet on flying| George Sanders in “Scandal in |3:15—(4) Golden Windows. tamil s ; : a : — | Street are filmed mostly in London. | operated 24 hours a day? Did they | !aundromat. UNREGISTERED PERSON NOT trapeze (2) News. Doug Ed-| Paris’ (9) Good Neighbor The- 3:38—(4) One Man's Family. (2)| .. lever hav salon named the | : VOTE a I Our exterior shots in London ea | . of election at} Wards. ater. Bela Lugosi, Wallace Ford! Bob Crosby Show ” “‘be- | ‘‘Boom-boom Room'’? Did they | Jack Low, manager of the Royal ony clostten ov @lection in this| ,_ ; . in “The Ape” (4) little show. . are ery deeficult,”’ she says, ‘‘be- | have ball-pol ili ial | York hotel, Miami Beach, gave an Trade-Ins Accepted! State, or im any District, County, Town-| 7:45—(4) News Caravan. John ong ‘aahwakat® 3:45—(4) Concerning ?-iss Mar-| cause our show is a period piece. | V¢T have balJ-point quills at their | 98 he Miami | asy Terms! om or Village shall not} Cameron Swayze (2) Perry| Ann Sarg in “The Umbrela” (2) |We can “aly nx 8 y of desk? Well, we have. | interesting statement to the Miami | r Friel! Seseive — 6 Miss Fair Weather. lowe. shoot Sunda, | He ine nie de aa | ree Home Trial! name is not registered in the roe Como. Songs. a? ___ | maybe 4 a.m. to keep from having I'm not kidding about the ball i — F ~4 ive - 1 Open Every Evening - book of the precinct in which ers :38—(4) Tonight. Variety with | #@@—(7) Captain Flint. (9) Justice ; jorne announced in New York that fo vate, , tas provided under Act 108./ g-99(7) TV Readers Digest. a> _ onight. Variety wi Colt. (4) Hawkins Falls. (2) automobiles on ze street. And then point quills, Long, frilly, beauti- | she lid’ cancelled lite contract (6 stl se smepmarmon || Te ere” arama cea | eA Breer Da. yi ww ta a eng | meee Lee sess cae thea ha : In | 11:45—(2) Weathervane. | , |re accommodations. pea change "recigence ‘within “the by bus driver (4) Caesar's Hour. 4:15—(4) First Love. (2) Secret | stops ze buses.” | independence with, or rarth-shak- | in. Vow | < neatadiy thal | Foran we he transfered to nis new | Sid's version of supercolossal TUESDAY MORNING Storm. 7 ¢* es | ing treaties. Such plumes sent vr. Low denied y ccarens by. ecnding, the Clerk | Jiolivwood musical epic with 5 | Te as «| Ronald Howard, son of the late{ artuterrate and’ ereundreterer | Sch reerevotions hed ever bere SYLVANIA signed request, stating his | may oe a ap — epic — 7:00 — (4) Today. (2) Morning | 4:38—(4) Mr. Sweeney's World. (2) | Leslie Howard, plays the role of| beth — te the a in the | Tequested, then said, “Miss MOTOROLA {he "addrem from which be was lest asa ag Reiner 2) Show. : | On Your Account. |Sheriock Holmes and H. Marion! Place de ia Concorde. | Morne makes the point that she | GENERAL ELECTRIC ee eck ek ee places money while ‘panting 8:38—(2) Morning Show. 4:45—(7) Rickey the Clown. (4) | Crawford portrays Dr. Watson in| But at the Fontainebleau hotel | ™ 8 Neste. Well, Don Newcombe through the last address. werd = through old trunks 9:00—(7) Breakfast Club. (4)| Modern Romances. the series based on the works of the tip of the quill, have been | and Rey Campanella of the = H RGcress, ward and_ precinct Bumber on ; Romper Room. (2) Welcome|,.. /- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Nicole | found inefficient, is imbedded into | Breeklys Dodgers are Negroes 4 tion | 9; , 5:00—(7) Auntie Dee. (9) Go to the : and they were here for a press | cara, ana.shail place the erigisal regis. | S.¥0~(7) Voice sining Emad Miiatan Museum. (4) Pinky Lee. (2) | ‘Pinks both are ideal for the roles. | the neck of the gold-plated ball | Tuesday.” | SLECTRIC CO. pawns np Ne gg game ge ye = "enon. nine dust free, |#:30—(2) Breakfast with Murphy. | Robert Q. Lewis. | Point. Works a lot better than the | $25 W. Huron FE 4-2525 (30) Gaye next preceding any ¢ or] livan, tenor, sing from One cord of pulpwood is needed | quills used by Jefferson on the | How about a bully sportsman- Primary election ‘unless such ear sae Verdi, ‘America the Beautiful” | 1@:¢8—(7) Wixie's Wonderland. (4) | 5:36—(7) Rocky Jones. (9) Howdy |to produce the powder for 90,000 draft of a rather important declara-| Ship award for Mr. Low? j;—_—___ aera eee be waa cvaul cameoaion shall} (2) Talent Scouts. Arthur God-| Ding Dong School. (2) Garry | Doody. (4) Howdy Doody. (2) Pi-| rounds of Garand rifle ammuni- ltion or by Shakespeare on a few | Fatt remains that if Miss Horne. | ; be accepted the next full working/ frey host. Moore. rate Pete. | tion. compositions he wrote, And after | Who is married to a white man, ap- | inquire about our Gay}, provided mol = ee : , RENTAL-LESSON PLAN wd) any te vote in any : | Peared here she could not ride in Sownship, Ci or in which he : jany but the last three rows of Complete Plan $10.00 Sk ny San par see ' ! ‘Senators Extremely Rude; “white or | seats in a bus nor take a ‘white BELL-FOUGHT 5 -- Today's Radio Programs-- ‘ena FEMClY HUGE, a hae aveny ew On ‘ON ELECTION Y xacaDd. swan new an- ACCORDION sTUDIOS Sec. 20. Any registered elector who “A ene | do, Fla., airport, a modern mar- Call FE °-5201 2, Seas vines ip Soshe'| Programe’ furnished by stations tied .tn this column are subject to change withoat note. |IMOSt Citizens Shocked (i ee | oor ase ee temas election preemet of the same Pp. . - —— the room marked ‘Negro Women.” Cuy or Village “to have his wtration WIR, (780) CKLW, (800) wws, (ase) WCAR, (1138) WXYZ, (ite) «= WJBK, (1490) WPRON, (1468) By PHYLLIS BATTELLE barroe or day - dreaming iain > transferred on any ¢ pelt tyes * WASHINGTON (INS)—It strikes | half-closed eyes. election day by @ request over trent TONIGHT wv , Good ; : e—a his or her mture tor ouch wweneter oy, Van Cures cue, — wsem. wens. pel oll me—admittedly on surface pe tang ‘The other shiny desks, ar. FOR udm the precinct in — he . ~~ 10:15—WJR, World Neighbors WPON, TBA WPON, News, Platter yation—that senators are a rode | Fanged in neat semi - circular tee itester ef ciection fn chasse ef | CRLW. Bowe, Sports WWJ, Glidersiceve 10:00—WJR, Arthur Godtrey { 1:15—WJR. Ma Perkins and unsympathetic bunch. | TOws, were mute mahogany testt- PStscee| eee (“ER aes Len ae Mies Soe eerereee | INSURANCE ° Seas ee cohen registration record ; WPON, Off Record cuLw. “a ‘Git boo tee individually and off-duty, and it are rude. What they don't want te See itepecter shalt certify such tect upon | “WW Bee Lyncnen | “west wisest? One | WCAR. News, Temple a, or is said they are as kind as the! near, they don’t have te, and if ound rokeeeh ond the cppiicant for trans- Lee ae CKLW, Counvy Style aie 1:45—WJR, Guiding Light next man te their methers. But ie old bud N Wayne ts ° SE RV | CE fer an tase be permitted to vote in| CKLW, Eddie Chase WJBK, L. Gentile 1@:15—WWJ, Joyce Jordan the Senate chambers, as I have such for that election only. The} WHPON, Idietime Serenade | 1.08 wsR News 2:00_WJR. Mrs. Burton ing a speech, it's a good time to Spplicetion for transfer shall be filed Ww, Charis Levis 10:30 WXYZ, Whispering CKLW, Davies just observed and thousands of | ge: seme werk dene cuteide : with the Township, City or Village Clerk | @¢:398-w JR, . CKLW. Kuren, Sports WWJ, Fran Harris WJBK, T. George ‘| visitors have observed before me . s Call aes ae Sospomtaues.| Wye i WPON, Hews ae en ee POM. Mews. Beaty their lack of manners is nepal "| We've all heard a lot about ee a . When the name of any street in «| WJBK, Dinner Music 11:15—Ww Sports bl Ing. | ,, us Township, City or Village has been| wWPON. sports WWJ. Mayer, Muste 00:08—WWJ, Break the Beat en po ba Masoa They talk whee their fellow. senatorial courtesy,’ but it turns ft shell be the duty of the CKLW, Manbettan Music : out to be different from what aynar onnson Towtenip. City or Village Clerk to make! 9:45 wsm, L. Thomas WPON, Manhatten Muste — 2:9 WIR, Nora Drake senators are talking. They walk | mother had i nd. It means, the ° Se chatge Snow Guaseeen ‘secores | “aE, ae. = 10 WWH, strike I Rich WHS, Le Jones es | out in the middie of intense |e r sep mi ———— ov . General Insurance and it shall not be necessary for the : WPON. Sports w to roel aan WCAR Wah Boeri Pr lion. Thaw dc uel aes me, one sen. c : Snot cote te ba clgatt ww, ybter’ = WIBK. D. McLeod WPON, Club 1460 | ees their Se ay here fully avoid stepping on another's 807 Community National Bank reepect, “when the sesident house num-| WKYS, Red TUESDAY MORNING WCAR, News, Sone 2:45-WIR, Brighter Day | : toes. but only in the official sense Phone FE 4-4523 yg any section of a Township, City| CKLW. Pulton Lewis Jr. ¢:80—wR, v WPON, News, Party WWJ. Marriage Pays or their coughs when coughing, >such as if one senator objects to ~ CF Vinee re tant the tiem of| WROW. News Om chealey Ww, Bop Maxwell 1:15 WXYZ. Companion WCAR, Marmony Mail and generally act ina manner | 2 i serail appointee in his own change . . . Hymn Time _ w becoming . eaves eee Se se -_" ration ar a 1:15—CKLW, Guy Nuns po hf aay Nuna 11:30—WJR, Make Up Mind WW) woles ioe = the cort com | stdte, the other senators will St eetsieiniaemmememiameaetatommmnaeamemammmimmiemmememememenee may be made by the Clerk or upon WWJ. Nation Bus. — ae eee WW5. Phrase That Pays WYK. Ed. McKensie gressman. to be agreeable. But being PONTI AC’S FIRST election day upon proper * 7:30—WIR, % WxYz, tain Calls jews, Carousel i ° Fe a WWJ, Morgan Beatty Saige Bg ho CKLW, ween for Day 3:18—WIR, Aunt Jenny I visited the Senate wing of the | agreeable in the Emily Post tradi Feb, 31, 3% 1955) CELw, pH, tter WJBK, tile, be Party 3:20—ww, Pepoer Teme capitol the other afternoon = what | tion—nix. ear ae per np ga ONY WJBK. L. 1 Musie Mail ‘aN. Seemere WJBK. Don McLeod promised to be an especially ac-| In the British House ‘om- TV SERVICE DEALER ! ere OT ene County o Oakiand— we 5 ig i! °: CAR, Cott a - ore. Becond —- 3:15—WJR, Gal Sunday e| tive day. The Senate was deciding | mons, the mother of parliaments, 2 fle Division CKLW. In Fmt Be : n News, WWJ. Right to Happiness | whether to approve or amend the they switch the procedure. They “inthe mete, se Seather ond Devereh | §:00—-WSR, Worthe qenaeten, doen Watts “ta 4:00—WJR, Musie Hail Formosan Defense Treaty. can jeer and boo and call each BLAKE RADIO AND TV SERVICE Re ee a CRLM. Break ime maak | WEYz™Wasnstatctencis | Not wishing to disturb what I] other names, but they are pro- aan & Beney. an) exiw. pba aos wean, ye Mcleod Se wring frees naturally contemplated would be a | hibited from writing Jetters or read Authorized Factory Service for 15 Diflerent Manufacturers Cee aint ee present wherer] O:00—WWS, Bort of AD WCAR. News WPON, Hews WPON, Sports heated controversy or a thoughtful | ing newspapers in the House.|7 3149 w. Huron FE 4.5791 abouts of the father of said minor chil- YZ. Show World WPON., News igh — — 4:15—WWJ. Stella Dallas | discussion of the matter, I moused | This sort of tempestuous technique Sr Ne ean the pee fer ep “an wali | “enya wear eee CKLW, ‘Austin Orant whet ane |into the spectators’ balcony which | if far superior, seems to me, If | ——————— ——_— i om said children should home WCAR, Noonday Caller . , ber. Immedi- at an as- fl Bag Fn jurisdiction of this WoBK. —' WON, an maew WPON, Luncheon Serenade | 4:30—wws, Widder Brown | OV@THangs the cham you throw an uppercut . c . ~ ~ bd : re . ST me oe pete | ae wR, sew sp] Genet mat stom Tmo he | SEAR Bessie ‘| Mey my car were ached by 8 lait, tat Ie shown Your ee at eu cenee 0:00—W. Perry Come WCAR. Hoare Revival CKLW, Bud Davies 4:43—WWJ, Woman in Home | th { Sen. Wa Morse) which ly walk out on him— fed een eid at the Court Mouse ia the 8 Hour 0:00-Won, meus WJBK. McLeod iaiw. @isree wean at of Sen. Wayne But you simply ¥ ony of Pontiac tn said County, on the pat St pele WWJ, Minute Parade AR, Harmony Hail cane. wees was obviously mad about some- | well, that's rude! _. Oth day of March. A.D. oa you are | WEOM, News, Off Record WATE, Decektent Chub 12:45—WXYZ, Charm Lady wWwsomewss. Detens thing. So’s to get the full impact of| | stuck around the Senate the For Service Sores comasented to appear personally | 9:15—WJR, Bing Crosby WCAR, News. m Sees nee. te: pg hf -. bao what was nettling him, I closed my good part of an afternoon and ai said hearing. 1] 9:20—WJR, Amos ‘n’ Andy WPON, News, Music —_ WCAR. News eyes and concentrated. nothing changed much, . ae hett ca) tm samanens GOa wotice were: American B nme tage Bagg on sy TUESDAY AFTERNOON WPON, News, Serenade : ae sors ter Morse Sen. M k haranguing; Call # rT < . zs e copy " one q 5 5 . Sena Lt) . ee ad estes tee | Oxoe Tadie Cantor 9:30.WJR, Mrs. Page 1: 08_WJR, Road of Life "ELw mie oe oe Orcron, bet let _a New Yorker | sen Long ae colliege letters, C&V-TV Pontiac ~——993-Mt;-- Clemens ewspaper printed ; CKLW, Good Neighbor, , Ww, Fe cee ee — i = ane ana eurcsiated tn cold County. | iat Wom Tone, Beate WON, & Kaye WHEE, Poul winter’ | WCAR. Carousel tell you his five-syllable oratory | tnd Sen. Knowland kept listen- ——— Witness. the Honorable ee cue |) WXYZ, Ed Morgen 9:45—WJIR. Pete at Joe CKLW. Musical Airs 5: 0—-CKLW. Eadie Chase | takes some getting used to, and | ing or day-dreaming. Now and = +p oti said County, this 18th day a | it was minutes before he let go | then a straying senator would ‘ BRAND NEW of February, A ATHUR ® MOORE. Bug Stop at Her Door ‘Beli T De ths the gun on himself. The note said: | the simple phrase—“some reser- | pop in one of the many rear SAVE Ch tree SOY ng Tee OS Premels : eve wo a “It's five o'clock in the morn-| vations must be attached”—and | doors and with a look that clearly Papeputy Probate Register, Made Too Much Traffic - ing. It's raining. Everything | 1 got what he was driving af. He | bespoke the sentiment ‘Oope— OVER Juvenile Division Feb. 21, °35./ TONDON (INS) — Mrs. Ada Murder and Suicide looks hopeless. Something seemed | didn’t go for the treaty, too soon,” backed out again. to have ‘snapped in my mind./ Aji very well, I thought, but he Then my brain and heart started | needn't be so belligerent about it. pounding. I took all the sleeping | Then I opened my eyes and leaned tablets I had in the house and | over the balcony balustrade to see ~pUBLIC BALE ic { Awsworth, Nottingham- . ‘ be held 2502 N. Wood | shire, ree ied She full support of | KALAMAZOO (UP) — The shot- ie = To ° = . Royal “Oak om March 7th at | gun deaths of Harold Conrad a2. 1985 | Police and the municipal council | ; 1951 Ford. Motor No. BIDA242342. Club | Coupe. ward, 1:00 p.m. TUBES 1 Year Guarantee — RCA License % ——— et Pee 3h when she asked to have a bus | Vasserbery, =, an8 Ms house! ioven tehiets of digitalis (a heart | how the rest of the boys in the | you're looking at parliamentary 10” TV PIC. TUBE. .$ 9.75 NOTICE OF S aa eee eubite| Stop moved away from her front| keeper, Mrs. Susan Boehm, 50,| stimulant which counteracts the | Senate were taking it, procedure through rose - colored ne as : exch. NO be held in the Municipal | door. in Vandenberg’s home Saturday | affect of sleeping tablets.) I'm! Well, friends, they weren't, Only | glasses.” 12” TV PIC, TUBE... 11.75 exch. ‘March 22.| She complained that young| were an apparent murder-suicide, | all mixed up. Have to say g00d-|/two senators besides Morse were sees 14" TV PIC. TUBE... 13.75 exch. MONEY paste eeneer. | Couples waiting for the bus usced| sheriff's officers said today. bye now to Sue (Mrs. Boehm), the | in the place, and they were Russell| (Tomorros: Eleanor Dulles — 16" TV PIC. TUBE.. 15.75 exch. Grace Avenue and Puller her garden “as a petting parlor,”| Officers found a note in Vander- | cause of it all.” Long, Louisiana Democrat, who/ sister of the secretary of stat 17” TV PIC. TUBE... 16.75 exch. DOWN sett aby the Pontise City Commission | Strange men took shelter on the | berg's handwriting which indi- ———— appeared to be writing letters, and | tells Miss Battelle about her pet| 19° TV PIC. TUBE. 18.75. exch. {s, 1858 as follows: front porch and women used her | cated he shot Mrs, Boehm with a| ‘The Sinai peninsula is the Asi- | William F, Kowland, California | project, building the morale of W/] 20” TY PIC, TUBE.. 19.75 exch 1 Year a Late, eqpberves PF emm. | window ledge as a cosmetic table 16-gauge shotgun and later turned atic portion of Egypt. Republican, who was either lis- Berlin.) 21” TV PIC. TUBE... 20.75- exch. to Pay! ee eee , Metal Tubes $1 more each. Electrostatic Tubes $1 more each. {~ (ITS A BIT COOL, ALLATION . .. $9.95 — (Ne Tubes Sold te Dealers) No Longevity Theories CHICAGO (INS) — Mrs. Marie Lindstrom of Chicago, who will be (GEARLESS SOSDICK P?- CHARMING F ONLY $3.00 sve DE ANTEN by ‘ : ee