The Weather Fair and Warmer Details page two 113th YEAR od THE xxekk * PONTIAC PRESM&E oy: ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE qe Homer Wins for Tigers ° i li c] ~ 4 i AP Wirephete - KALINE BREAKS TIE—A! Kaline of the Detroit Tigers is greeted | MOSa. by Coach Billy Hitchcock in Briggs Stadium yesterday afternoon as he rounds* third after slamming a ninth inning home run against the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Baltimore Orioles to give Detroit a 3 to 2 victory. (Story dn page 26.) Ike Tells of Zhukov Letters Which Offer Peace Hopes WASHINGTON (# — President Eisenhower disclosed today he has been in private correspondence with Soviet Defense Minister Zhukov within the past three weeks. He said the correspondence holds out some slim hope of betterment in United States-Soviet relations. Strike Looms at Parke, Davis ——* Eisenhower told of the |correspondence at a news conference, and said he has |a@ feeling world peace pros- }peets are on the upswing. | Eisenhower declined to give details of his correspondence with Zhukov until the Soviet govern- Mediators Renewing ment offitial gives the word. . Eisenhower and Zhukov be- | Efforts for Settlement; came well acquainted during oc- Union Rejects Offer cupation days in Berlin immedi ' | ately after the defeat of Germany DETROIT w — Federal and) in World War I. state mediators renewed today’ At that time, Zhukov once made their efforts to head off a strike piang—never carried through—to at Parke, Davis Co., a major Pro- | visit the United States. At a news ducer of Salk polio vaccine. conference last February, Eisen- The mediators scheduled seP-| hower was asked whether he _ aralé talks With the company 89d might now extend a new invita- the CIO Oil, Chemical and Atomic | tion to the Russian. The President Workers Union, The union said a membership} ing meeting of Local 176 voted 1,038: to 4 last night to reject a con-| said the United States igs willing tract proposed by the company./to confer alone with the Commu- The union also authorized its| nists regarding a Formosa area bargaining committee “to take the cease-fire but not on matters af- necessary actions to receive an fecting Nationalist China. i honorable settlement. In saying he feels » pree- | Andy Beattie, an international | pects are improving, Eisenhower representative of the union, said | said it is also possible, however, more than 50 members left the | to balance every encouraging de- meeting because no definite strike vote Was taken. The union's present contract with Parke Davis expires Sunday. A union spokesman said the pro- posal rejected by the membership by the bargaining commit- trian peace treaty—with an ad- Red Chinese air vicinity of Formosa, no reason for a meeting between himself and the British, French and Russian heads of state as a in the tee The chemical workers are de- | called it an idea worth consider- As to Red China, the President; verse development, such as the | | + PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1955 —38 PAGES Special Envoys En Route Home From Formosa Radford and Robertson Keep Mum Concerning Talks With Chiang | TAIPEI, Formosa (Pi— | Two top-level U. S. envoys) left today on the long trip| from Scholars’ Forest to the | | White House to report on their military-diplomatic jemergency mission to For- Adm. Arthur W. Radford, |of Staff, and Walter S. Rob- ertson, assistant secretary of state, maintained the same tight-lipped silence |they had kept during their three days at President Chiang Kai-shek’s suburban | retreat. An American official said they had come to strengthen ~— not weaken — Far East defenses. The official, who refused to be identi fied, said this information was ‘100 per cent accurate.” The impression was strong that | the two visiters had not advised | the Nationalists to abandon Que. moy and the Matsus. National- ist sources insisted that neither had suggested it. Nationalist newspapers contin- ued to editorialize against any sug- _gestion that Quemoy or Matsu be — given up | Nationalist fears that Robertson and Radford had come agreement on giving up the off- | Shore islands in order to seek a the Formosa Strait seemed to be Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Buick and| National Democratic Club in Washington. subsiding. | But disappointment and bitter- ness replaced these earlier appre- | | hensions in the wake of Secretary } of State Dulles’ announcement of a new open-door policy toward cease- fire talks with Red China. “We strongly believe that any | Contact with the Reds will be fruit-/ less,”” a qualified Nationalist offi- | cial said. munists want—they want Formosa | and they want to continue with | their program of world conquest.” | Robertson said he and [adford | had “‘a useful exchange of views” | | with Chiang. \ | The purpose of their trip, he said, was to consider problems re- lating to the U-.S.-Nationalist Mu- | tual Defense Treaty. Robertson de- | clined to say whether they had advised Nationalist withdrawal | | from Quemoy and the Matsus. { The Nationalist-garrisoned is- | lands lie off the Chinese mainland | within range of Communist big | | guns. Fair and Warmer Defense Heads Deny Hoarding of Fpod, Clothing WASHINGTON wW — at the by the Hoover Commission volved ‘tremendous _ trifles."’ Wilson and several other Defense Department officials yesterday dis- puted some findings in a com- mission report, released Sunday, on the food and clothing by the military. Thomas Pike, assistant secre- tary for supply and logistics, said some of the commission's specific allegations of waste were cisms leveled Pentagon in- “old, not factural, or mislead- ing .,.’’ A commission statement that the Navy has a 60-year supply of canned hamburger was chal- lenged by Secretary of the Navy Thomas, He said the hamburger available for issue will be eaten within four years and that the rest is stockpiled for use in a war emergency. | The secretaries discussed the re- port at a news conference, GM April Sales Best in History All Auto Divisions Set New Records First 20 . Days This Month DETROIT \W—General Motors Corp. reported today retail sales t the company’s history GM President Harlow H. Curtice seeking Said, ‘this applies to both new and | used passenger cars."’ Secretary of Defense Wilson says some criti- buying and handling of y its dealers during the first 20 | days of April were the highest for | the first 20 days of any month in| | } j } RO a ie SOS EES ee Soy A Re tanga No Dems Auction Off Famous Hat Curtice said each of GM’s five | tive from Illinois, starts the bidding at last night’s| St. Paul, Minn. cease-fire with the Communists in| passenger car divisions—Chevrolet, | “White Donkey’’ auction put on by the Women’s! Kefauver (D-Tenn) was knocked down at $35 at the } Cadillac—set new sales records for (both new and used cars in both the first 20 and second 10 days of | April. Curtice gave the following | figures: New cars—sales during the first 20 days of April totaled 227,377, —or-137.4 -per—cent-of the same peried last year. Sales during the second 10 days of the month “Everyone knows what the Com: | totaled 117,541, or 141.5 per cent of the same period of 1954. Sales. for 1955 through April 20 totaled 1,121,362, or 149.8 per cent of the 1954 figure for the same period. Used cars—sales during the first | 20 days of April totaled 273,682, or | 128.4 per cent of the same period | last year. Sales during the sec- ond 10 days of the month were 145.049, or 137 per cent of the 1954 figure. Sales for the year through April 20 totaled 1,377,687, or 134.2 per cent of the figure for the same period last year. “Our alltime record sales of General Motors’ passenger cars for the first 20 days of April re- flect the continuing vitality of the automobile market and the accel- erating strength in the entire na- tional economy,” Curtice said ham, will testify as att 4 + AP Wirephete The cap, donated by Sen. Estes In the | fund-raising event. - 1. | | Accused Tot Attacker, 12, Asks Freedom Will Face Sanity Hearing Terry Allen Morgan, 12, who police said beat 3-year-old Cindy Lynne Montgomery with a spiked board April 12, is slated for a sanity hearing tentatively set for May 23) in Oakland County Probate Court. Judge Arthur E. Moore approved the plan yesterday at a Juvenile Court hearing. At the sanity hearing two psychiatrists, Drs. Clinton Slated in May J. Mumby, of Pontiac, and Charles P. Barker, of Birming- to the youth’s mental condition. ieee ies Polio ‘Boosters If it is found he has a mental illness, he will be re- ferred for commitment to a feebleminded, Terry will probably be sent to the Lapeer State Home and Training School. If neither, the -youth's-ease—will + Parents Being Notified |). returned to Juverile Court for This Week on Program | i™! disposition. for Inoculations Terry, son of Mr. and Mrs. lke Proposes Farmers’ Ai Message Uraes OK for Loans of $30 Million Calls on Congress to Strengthen Chances for Non-Agricultural Jobs WASHINGTON (?\—Pres- ident Eisenhower called to- day for a “many-sided at- tack” on the problems of low-income farmers. “We must open wider the doors of opportunity to our million and a half farm families with extremely low incomes — for their own well-being and for the good of our country and all our people,” he said in a special message to Congress. The message transmitted recom- mendations by Secretary of Agriculture Benson which the President said had his ‘‘general approval.” it urged, among other things, 30 mififion dollars of lending au- thority and strengthening of off- farm employment opportunities for farmers: barely able to make ends meet. Benson's proposals were based | on a study requested by the Presi- dent more than a year ago. The President also sent Congress a re- port on this study, saying it em- phasizes the long-range nature of the problem and that it would WHITE DONKEY SALE—Waving a coonskin cap, | lower picture, Mrs. Oscar Chapman, club president, serve to stimulate continuing study auctioneer Kenneth Gray, Democratic Representa-| puts the cap on the lucky bidder, Tony Cotroned of and action Eisenhower told Congress “an immediate start is extremely im- portant."" He said in a_ nation where per capita income is the state hospital. If he is ruled’ manding a guaranteed annual wage and wage increases. The union represents 2,000 pro- duction workers at the Detroit and Rochester plants. New Tolls Planned for Straits Ferries LANSING ® — An increase in the tolls for cars on the Straits of Mackinac ferries, to go into effect April 30, was announced to- day by the State Highway De- partment. passengers, 12 years of age and older, will be reduced from 35 to 25 cents. Children ander” 12 be carried free. The present rate is $2.00 for vehicles under 17 feet in length and $2.50 for cars over 17 feet, The State Highway Department Said the difference in rates had gates at the St. Mackinac City docks, particularly during peak traffic periods, Detroit Police Official Plagued in Las Vegas LAS VEGAS, Nev. #—Detroit Police Commissioner Edward S. Piggins is encountering nothing but trouble since he arrived in this western mecca. to | ae 4 First- thieves stripped the cigar | lighter and hub caps from his borrowed car. , Then, while he lunched with the mayors of Detroit and Las Vegas, | result of the Austrian treaty nego- tiations, But he said such a meet- ing is always possible. Report Plane Crash LAGOS, Nigeria @® — A French plane with 17 passengers aboard was reported wag to have crashed near Kuba, in the Brit- ish Cameroon section of West Equatoria] Africa. In the Atomic Age DENVER (®#—The Denver Post has begun printing the daily radio- activity count in the air here. “Despite our record production, Forecast in Area Jack B. King, of 255 West Fair- Parents of children who got the mount Ave., is said by police to | highest in the world, more than one fourth of the farm families still have cash incomes of less | than $1,000 a year. Part of the assistance program would require new legislation. The President said requests for this and for necessary appropria- tions will ge to Congress shortly. Sen. Aiken of Vermont, one of i Raab Wants Occupation 'the Republican senators who got to End Before Opening a preview of the administration . . proposals, said yesterday “very of Opera in Austria little new legislation’ would be re- VIENNA ®— Chancellor Julius Wired (0 put the program into op- Raab called on the Big Four pow- | : . } ers today to free Austria from oc- in a letter to the President, Ben- cupation by early November. son said parts of the — Raab told a joint session of both | POW and other parts have been houses of his Parliament that. it | PeTating. though not fully devel- ee Aus. eching vipligh operations” le met trian nation” if it received free- | & P sm to dom before the Vienna State Opera | less than 30 of the 1,000 low- reopens its war-damaged house |'"Come counties during the year with Beethoven's “Fidelio,” a mu-| Starting July 1. sical salute to deliverance from| He said action by Congress will tyranny. be needed to: | The opera reopening is sched- 1, Authorize the Farmers Home uled for Nov. 5. | With aged President Theodor | Part-time farmers Koerner at his side, the chancellor} 2. Concentrate special funds out- spoke at ceremonies marking the | side the present agricultural ex- 10th anniversary of Austria’s lib- | tension formula to conduct pilot eration from the Nazis, The na-| Programs and to extend aid to low- Admitistration t6 Make Joans to ~ Fair and warmer here today and | tonight is the good word from the weather bureau. j Temperatures reaching a low of | | 530 tonight are due to rise again | to a high of 71-75 tomorrow. Add- ing a dampening note, the weath- | erman forecasts showers for the | afternoon, Today’s low in downtown Pon- tiac, preceding 8 a.m., was 40. The thermometer, shooting steadi- ily for the high mark of 70 pre- | dicted for today, had reached 67 | by 1 p.m. Bricker Says WASHINGTON (# — Sen. Would Halt One-Worlders his proposal to curb the treaty power should be written into the Constitution to block the designs of “advocates of world government who seek to repeal the American Declaration of Independence.” Bricker said such persons seek to achieve world govern- ment in various ways, including amendment of the United Nations Charter, and he declared: Amendment Bricker (R-Ohio) said today same—the United States would cease to be a sover- eign, independent nation. When independence is de- stroyed, our liberties are lost. “That is one of the most im- his own car was for over- parking. He y paid a $1 fine. ' “The end result is the* The Eisenhower administration has opposed the amendment. A revised version of it was narrowly defeated last year in the Senate. The Bricker amendment would provide that: 1, 'No treaty or other internation- al agreement which conflicts with theConstitution-shall__have _any jeffect; and . No treaty or exectitive agree- ment shall be effective as U.S. internal law except through legis- lation which would be valid in the absence of a treaty. Farewe) Dando. 81 Welle’ Band. Callers ‘Bill & fee. Gat. nite. Oxbow passenger car stocks in the hands of dealers remain at an abnormal- ly low level in relation to rate of sales and for this period of the year. This could very well be the biggest pasesenger car year in the history of our industry.’”’ The Need Was Clear SIDNEY, Neb, ® — The North- side Election Board was hurrying to headquarters to report on an overpass bond issue vote last night when it got stuck for a consider- able period while a freight train passed over the tracks that cross the city’s mainly traveled streets. The bond issue passed by a 341 margin. With Loving Care ALBUQUERQUE (®—The follow- ing want ad appeared yesterday in the Albuquerque Tribune: ‘For sale: 1951 MG. Carefully driven by my maiden aunt in the Mexican road race.” VERY FAST! CUSHMAN EAGLE MOTOR Scooter, 1952. Excellent cond. Best offer. Phone 4-400. Of course we mean the quick results he got, we don’t know it the scooter. Several’ calls were received and a satisfactory offer was accepted from the first insertion. What have you to sell, easy it is to get it...” QUICKLY! To Place Your Want Ad DIAL FE 2-8181 { Just Ask for WANT os field tests are being notified this week that their children are eli- gible for booster shots next month. Slips for parental consent were sent home with the children ‘this week, and ‘should be returned to the schools promptly, Second round of shots for chil- dren in most out-county schools will be given the children who got vaccine last year in these clinics. First shots for children in Pon- tiac, Waterford, Birmingham and Ferndale will be May 7. The sec- ond shots for these children will be one month lates’ Both shots will be givep in Saturday clinics. Last! Week, nearly 17,000 Oakland Count¥ children got their first shots of the polio-preventing vac- cine. The May 7 group is expected to include about 9,500 more. 1 Opening Needed for Mayor Exchange MARYSVILLE (® — Anybody know of a mayor who won’t be exchanging bailiwicks during Mich- igan Week next month? , Marysville, a pleasant St. Clair County community of 3,500, is look- ing for one. Seems that Mayor Stanley Hard- man was scheduled to switch af- fices with Mayor Anthony Kreps of Sylvan Lake on Mayors Ex- change Day May 16. But Kreps notified Hardman yesterday that he won't be able to make it. Hardman says he'll probably contact ‘Michigan Week headquary ters in Lansing to firid out if there are any mayor openins still avail- Salk polio vaccine in last year’s} have led Cindy into a partially completed home near 23 N. Strathmore Ave., where she was visiting her uncle, Wendell N. Beaird. The girl, daughter of Mr. and | Mrs. Charles E. Montgomery, of 575 E. Mansfield Ave., was found in the basement by a search party bleeding from numerous nail punc- tures. She was in critical condition. in Pontiac General Hospital for more than a week, then improved rapid- ly and was released last Sunday. Her aunt, Mrs, Wendell Beaird, yesterday said Cindy, who had her fourth birthday in the hospital, seems slightly afraid of strangers and loud noise, but remembers nothing of her tragic experience. night home and is eating well,” said Mrs. Beaird. Members of the family kept a 24-hour vigil at Cindy's side during her hospital stay, They included her parents, Mrs. Beaird and an- other aunt, Miss Mary Montgom- ery, a registered nurse. Postpone Atom Test SURVIVAL CITY, Nev. (#—The Atomic Energy Commission at the last motnent today postponed the big atomic civil defense test be- cause of unfavorable weather con- ditions. $700 Bonanzagram Bonanzagram fang whe have submitted answers to puzzie No, 7 are eligible for a $700 cash prize, Correct, answer to puzzle No, 7, published last week will be revealed Friday, Meanwhile puzzle No. 8 appears again to- day on page 2, i . | tion's red-white-red flag flew from | all public buildings. The ambassadors of the United | France and the | tension, | States, Britain, Soviet Union meet here next Mon- day to begin final drafting of the | Austrian state treaty, which is to| end the Llewellyn E. Thompson Jr. 10-year occupation, All| four envoys attef®ded the joint ses- | sion today, and U. S, Ambassador sat | income farmers. 3. Appropriate new money out- side the regular budget for ex- research, soil conser- vation, farm loans and related service. 4. Authorize 30 million dollars of loans by the Farmers Home Ad- ministration. (The report itself said these loans should be made available to supplement private alongside Russia’s I. I, Ilyichev. | and cooperative services.) Newspaper Head Scores Wilson’s Censorship Order NEW YORK (? — The head of the American publish- | ers expressed hope today that Defense Secretary Charles ship” in the Pentagon. “She slept 11% hours her first | E. Wilson will “see the error in his recent resort to censor- | Richard W. Slocum, president of the American News- paper Publishers Assn., also hit at former President Harry S. Truman’s recent assertion that the press threw a protective cloak around the Eisenhower administration. end to strikes that cripple newspapers. He said the recent “death” of the struck Brooklyn Eagle was ‘“‘shock- ing.” Criticizing ‘“‘the ever - present urge to censorship and a limiting | |of news sources,’’ Slocum, execu- | tive vice president of the Philadel- phia Bulletin, said in a prepared address at the NPA convention : “Our problem sometirhes lies more with the high-principled, loyal and conscientions pubtic setvant who just dees not realize that full operation of the peo- ple’s right to know is more im- portant than any single decision. Slocum called too for an+ recent resort to censorship in an effort to check alleged secret leaks." Wilson told a Washington news conference April 12 that he tight- ened Defense Department rules on giving out military information to keep potential enemies from learn- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) In Today's Press Birmingham Benansagram Bey le, Comtes Coenty News wetbeeee “We shall hope that our well-| |intentioned secretary of defense | will quickly see the efror in his “4 Crane, Dr ‘tals e o = ters pageusecs coowme TY & Radic Programs oven Witsen, Eart. ane Want Ads... 31, 32, 33, a — seceece M, DB, % «) Mrs. Charles Benning Succumbs to Long-Time | Hiness Mrs. Charles H. Benning, the former Baroness Olga von Roenne of Petrograd, Russia, and a public health nurse in Pontiac and Bir- mingham for several years, died Monday morning in Wilmington, Del., after a jong illness. Dr. Benning, her husband, was a former deputy county health director, in charge of the office. at Reya] Oak. Before that he had served with the Department | of Public Health in Pontiac. Dr. Benning was on the staff and | an instructor in bacteriology to nurses at the St. Joseph Mercy | Hospital. While here he served as a member of the Oakland County Infantile Paralysis Foundation and an officer of Yhe Crippled Chil- dren's Society. He had also been consulting epidemiologist at the Oakland County Tuberculosis Sana- torium. Dr. Benning is now health commissioner in Wilmington. Mrs. Benning’s first husband, | the Baron von Roenne, was a/| member of the personal guard of | Czar Nicholas Il. He died of ty- phoid fever while trying to escape | after the Bolsheviks gained control of the country. Hiding in a freight | car, Mrs. Benning, then the Baron- | ess von Roenne. made her way to | Riga, Latvia, and then to Sweden. | She met Dr. Benning while visit- | ing friends in the United States | and became an American citizen | in 1928. The Bennings lived at 148 | Edith St. when they first came to | Pontiac. Newsman Scores Censorship Order (Continued From Page One) ing too much, but insisted his di- rective did not constitute censor- ship. Slocum said the ANPA conven- tion ths year is more than an annual meeting—that it is time for, an accounting of the newspapers as “trustees of a fundamental freedom—the people's right to know.”’ Then, In obvious reference to Truman, be said: “The complaints of a few dis- appointed and disgruntled parti-| sans, even an ex-president, merit | No -deep concern.” Truman said in a Washington speech April 16 that the press has | thrown an unparalleled ‘cloak of protection”’ around the administra- | tion and “tried to keep much of | this bad management from the people.’ In discussing strikes, -Slacum said: “Some way must be developed that a single group cannot decide | gaid the city has been waiting | that the people are to be deprived | such a move by the Guard be- | Sheffield avenue of their newspaper."’ ; Prosecutor at Meeting | Oakland County Assistant Prose- cutor Gerard A. Poehlman is in Grand Rapids today attending the 23th annual Michigan Safety Con- ference. Oak Park Director of Public Safety Glenford S. Leonard will serve on one of the panels. 2 Reeretes. & PLAN TEACHERS’ DAY — Discussing plans for Pontiac’s fourth annual Business-Industry-Education | closed for B-I-E Day so teachers may visit local night. Day May 17 are (1. to r.) Ralph T, Norvell, president | business and industrial firms. of the Chamber of Commerce; Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, Pontiac school superintendent, and chairman of the Chamber’s Education Committee. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, ’ APRIL 27, 1955 Peatise Press Rhete Purpose of the day, sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce, is to give teachers a first-hand picture of how American en- terprise functions and to learn what qualifications Edward Barrett, All public and parochial schools in Pontiac will be | employers desire in their employes. Pontiac City Affairs Auto Parts Firms Refused Licenses; Study Planned The City Commission last night | refused to issue a used autol parts | auto wrecking and garage estab- license to one west side parts deal- | lishments. ference between used auto parts Actor May Reap Crop of Uranium From Homestead HOLLYWOOD «w — Actor Brian Donlevy may be a very lucky guy. About HM years ago, Donlevy homesteaded 160 acres high up in the Greenhorn mountains of Kern Courtty, -Calif.:He was ah amateur prospector then and tried to mine gold and tungsten on the property. But the venture proved unprofit- able. Donlevy hasn't been near the ed near Bodfish, some 35 or 40 miles west of Bakersfield. He was at CBS-TV studios re- hearsing yesterday when he got in a conversation with some amateur uranium prospectors. * oy . When he told them about his homestead, they showed him the new Atomic Energy Commission map of potential uranium dig- gings. “ J. “My property is right smack in the middle of what is supposed to be the best section,”’ Donlevy told a reporter. | He does gis TV show Thursday | “I'll be in Bodfish Friday | morning.” he promised. ac ‘Pontiac Deaths Julius Braeckevelt day after a two year illness. He was born Aug. 9, 1878, Thicit,. Belgium, the son of Ivo and Nathialia Verhae- ghe Braeckevelt. Mr. Braeckevellt ? had lived in Pon- acreage in seven years, It’s locat- | in Reserve Plan Ao Be Approved But House Committee Will Probably Cut Out Limited UMT | WASHINGTON (INS) The | House Armed Services Commit- tee is expected to approve today the administration's new national reserve plan without any limited universal military training. A proposal for induction of youths of 17 and 18 for six months’ training was to be stricken from the measure. This will leave in the bill au- thority to establish the training | program on a purely voluntary | basis. Volunteers for a half year | =—if such a program is set up— would then serve an additional 7'2 years in the reserves. Men of 19 or older who are in- ducted into the military services would ‘serve their two years and then be required to stay in the | reserves for six more years. Thus ithe total obligation for both cate- goriés would be eight years The Armed Services Committee, headed by Rep. Carl Vinson | (D-Ga), has studied the reserve- | | training proposal for three. months_ Julius Braeckevelt, 76. of 52 | Blaine Ave., died at his home Mon- | |terday to approve the six-month | Defense Secretary Charles “E. Wilson asked the committee yes- | draft provision for youths, but he i-conceded that it was not essen- | tial to the reserve plan itself Later Wilson told a news con- ference he has given up hope that Congress would agree to the jon a like license for ariother west | er, read a letter from the Michi- | cause the present armory site Jo] atetertt | | program er and deferred for 30 days action! Herman Hollerback, operator of a new and used auto parts business at 340 Baldwin Ave., was told his license was denied because he was operating in a side dealer. The postponement was moved to give City Attorney William “A. MRS. CHAUNCEY H. HUTCHINS — = opportunity aye — residentially zoned area. la coordinate some type of legis- lation” defining clearly the dif-| Fred: Gaukler Jr., operator of | te Motor Mart 17) E- Montcalm Ss B hi d St., was given the 30-day delay. | He also operates a repair garage Moc. “a N | at the address. In other business, the Commis- ove Or ew ene authorized the sale of three ; city owned lots in Marquette Sub- Pontiac Armory | division for $2.250 on a land con- Pontiac's new National Guard | tract and renewed four liquor li- armory may become a reality in} censes. ° ae the near future. | In addition, the Commission | *, The first step came last night | named administrators for a pack- | Mrs Hutchins when Capt. Cari G. Yarling, com- | age beer and wine license and a e mander of the 107th Ordnance | hotel license. Company, told the City Commis- An airport land lease shift was sion he had received state ap- | "proval to negotiate for a site. a iad a a (daghainr Succumbs at 8 street was referred to the city manager. Local Woman, 53 Years Public hearings were held and) ;,, - . * gan Quartermaster General's of- | the city assessor authorized to pre- | n Pontiac, Prominent fice in Lansing which cited the | pare special assesment roll for) In Girl Scout Work peer condition of the present | curb, gutter, drainage and eight- | armory on Water street. | inch concrete pavement on Port- land street from Montcalm to) Hutchins, widely known in Oakland Owen, and on Kennett road from | County and Pontiac for her inter- Wing. epublic args were set est and work with the Girl-Scouts, Yarling, accompanied by Capt. A. J, Largent, Co, M command- * The commission advised Yar- ling, president of the Armory | board of control, to discuss the matter with City Manager Walter | K. Willman Mayor William W. for | . Donaldson | for the following projects: Curb, gutter and drainage on Beverly | any te University: from Baldwin jat her home, 108 Ottawa Drive. | She was 81 years of age. She was born in Yankton, 8. D. Aug. 27, 1873 and was the from Baldwin to | daughter of Charles and Luella to Cornell avenue from Baldwin to Uni- being considered as a possible part | versity >» rite pe; Ypsilant! evenue ie m oe ee hall -~ university sceprank nue! Sanborn, She was married in F rity ac © cite | : aska ave | ° vv na Ser the ne amore. “s Pegg Fig of Motor te} Detroit Nov, 8, 1899 to Chauncey z y da Franklin road H, Hutchins, and came to Pon- Yarling said the state requires &| Colorado avenue from trunk sewer | tor to Mot | tine 83 years oe from Highland choice of three sites. He has re- —_ _—— ac] Poaiarstens avenue!) Park. as igh ported that the present building is from Kenilworth to the Belt Line Rail- | inadquate to keep pace with ‘4 7 ; | Mrs. Hutchins was a_ charter President Eisenhower's. recent-| City Engineer Lewis M. Wrenn | member of First Church of Christ, ly- ordered accelerated reserve | W4S8 authorized to prepare Cost S| c-ientist, in Pontiac. For the last timates for curb, gutter and drain- |25 to 30 years, she has onan Cooley Charges Polic Issue Tickets Charges that police officers | wholesale lots unnecessarily and | are “not cooperating’’ with busi- nessmen in District 1 were leveled | last night by Commissioner Roy V. Cooley. Ae ea any | laces. yh a sont Lge | Oakland County Circuit Judge district should be taken—over or | operation we will get illegal oper- | George B. Hartrick has issued an coerced by any department of the city,’ Dr. Cooley declared He said he had received a num- ber of complaints ‘about violation | ticket issuance from persons his district as well as “some men driving through that section of the city.” **‘Because someone is driving 3 big car is no reason for it to be — aed gaan ad voor Henge lg siggy eg | Perry to K stt and Fourth ave- t xirl § a camp, amp r- | ae trom Joalyn to Fuller. wood, on Davis Lake near La- | A memorial resolution honoring | Wholesale William C. Zimmerman, long-time | | Pontiac resident and = archi- | ticketed or impounded:” he said. | tect who died recently, was passed | __He said the ticket complaints | ynanimously._ and those of businessmen were} being investigated by a citizens | committee. Referring to the businessmen’s allegations, Cooley said “IT have been against peer. Mrs. Hutchins had been chair- man of the camp for 25 years and had been president of the council, She had donated the din- ——— ing-roomto_the-camp-and-it- = been dedicated as the Lottie E. Court Order Halts Hotchine Hall. Gravel Pit Operation At the silver jubilee of the camp last summer, a picture was taken |of Mrs. Hutchins which the camp chairman, Mrs, Lillian Pardee Balmer, placed in-the dining hall. Besides her husband, two daughters survive, Mrs. Paul J. Ziegelbaur of Franklin and Mrs. George K. Zimmerman of Pen- tiac. A daughter - in - law, Mrs. C. Sanborn Hutchins,’ and six grandchildren also survive. The funeral: will be held Fri- day at 2:30 p.m, from the Sparks- Griffin Chapel with burial follow- ing in Perry Mount Park Ceme- tery. illegal ations. Every week I get reports order. stopping Floyd Beardslee of liquor being sold on streets and from operating a sand and gravel | L other places | pit on 148 acres of land near Squir- ‘Illegal places spring out of the lrel and Square Lake roads in fact you can't have legal places.. Bloomfield Township. There is a market for it and you The township sought the, order can't control an illegal operation saving Beardslee’s planned use of like you can a legal one.” rae land violated a zoning ordi- Cooley's remarks stemmed |nance marking the area for resi- from a hearing before the City | dential use. Commission held for Michael | Judge Hartrick said the area is Samuilow, operator of a bar at | well suited for high-type residential Mrs. Chauncey H® (Lottie E.) | | May 3 on special assessment rolls | died suddenly yesterday afternoon ' ‘ | | six-month service draft. He pointed out that the com- mittee proposes setting the pay of volunteers at $50 a month instead tiac 40 years and had been a car inspector for the — unk ge ® | of the $30 suggested by the depart- ilroad. He was | ment and said he hoped this in- a member of the Braeckevelt (itive would help the program. Oakland County —-——-- Sportsman's Club. - ae Surviving besides his wife, the Pontiac Law Fraternity former Achila Dedecker, are four | Elects Officers for ‘55 children, Maurice J. and Mrs. | Omer DeCook. both of Utica. Jan| The Pontiac chapter of Delta C. Braeckevelt of North Baltimore, | Theta Phi law fraternity has elect- Ohio, Edmund of Romeo and four |¢d Philip E. Rowston dean for grandchildren.” | the.coming year. Also surviving are three sisters | _ Other officers include Robert V {and.. two brothers, Mrs. Irma , Parenti, vice dean: Thomas J,_Dil- Saelens of Detroit, ) lon, clérk of the rolls and exche- | Corthier of Chicago, Carl Braecke- | Wet: Edward A. Potere, tribune: velt of Romeo, Mrs. Zulma Vroo-| 4% Harry J. Merritt, ritual’s man and Edmund, both of Belgium. | ™4ster and bailiff. The Rosary will be recited; The sroup has approved pur- Thursday evening at 8 o'clock at | “hase of a lectern to be donated for the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. ;U%¢ i# Oakland. County Circuit | The funeral will be held Friday at | Court. ‘10 a.m. from the St. Michael's . Catholic Church with burial ir~Woman Solon First J} ) | ——— ee 7 | RALEIGH, N.C. Ww — Mrs. Thelma Fisher, who yesterday was sworn in as state legislator, claimed two ’ She is the | Mrs. Thomas Voras Mrs. Thomas (Margaret Pros- ser) Voras, 66, of 26's W. Kennett | Rd. died April 20, at her home || | She was born June 25, 1888 in | Pennsylvania and came to Pontiac | 25 years ago. She was a member | of the Pythian Sisters (Mazpah | Temple) and had been eemployed as an office worker. Surviving are her stepfather, | Louis Weaver of Centerville, Pa., | and a niece, Mrs. Raiph Forsland of Drayton Plains., Service will be held Thursday at 11 a.m. from the Donelson- | Johns Funeral Home with the Rev. |Paul R. Havens of the First} | Methodist Church officiating. Bur- ial will follow in the Drayton) Plains Cemetery. } a “firsts succeed her husband as a member of the General Assembly and the first woman to represent the Re- publican party in that body : Low ‘Red China Push for Cooperatives Plan for Slavery _ TOKYO, — The Communist} _ | agricultural cooperative, last mile lon the road to state ownership, _— embraces 13 per cent of peas- lant households in China, says | | Peiping radio. And the Central Committee of] | the Chinese Communist party had | | told the peasants of their ultimate | first woman in North Carolina to’ The Day in Birmingham Charter to BIRMINGHAM —Executive and | professional women in the Bir- mingham-Bloomfield Hills area are organizing. ; | A gervice organization — the | Birmingham-Bloomfield Hills Zon- |ta Club — will formally recieve |its charter at a dinner at Devon Gables at 6 p.m, Saturday. The club's international presi- dent, Dr. Dorothea Radusch, Min- neapolis, will address members on ‘Community Advancement by Way of Service Clubs.” Audra Francis, international vice president from Saginaw, will ini- tiate new members. Louise Brooks, head of Zonta clubs in this mod- west district, will present the gav- | ‘el of authority to the new club's first president, Kathleen Flint of the Bloomfield Hills school. The club was first organized in January under the auspices of the Zonta -Club of Highland Park. e >. oe The City Commission has gone on record against a new bill in the Michigan Senate which would give | municipalities authority to levy in- |come daxes, Under the measure, Birmingham residents who draw | their paychecks in Detroit could | be taxed by Detroit. | ‘The Commission's long-stand- ing opposition to the levy was pointed up when members voted te urge Rep. Richard Van Dusen and Sen. William Broomfield to vote against it, | Charles Mortensen, secretary of the Birmingham Chamber of Com- merce said he expects the cham- ber to also oppose the bill. Deer Bill Sponsors Consider New Try LANSING W—After one failure. | sponsors may try again today to servation commission's discretion- | | ary power over the Lower Penin- sula deer herd Yesterday, the chamber defeat- ed the bill on a 15-9 vote. Eighteen , ¥otes are needed to pass, Sen. Edward Hutchinson (R- Fennville), sponsor of the bill, said he probably would move to recon- sider the vote this afternoon, re- duce the extension period from’ 3 to 2 years and make another at- tempt to pick up the 3-vote short- age The bill has beet widely en- dorsed by organized sportsmen as giving the commission authority to adjust hunting seasons and kill reguiations to keep the herd in balance with the natural food supply. It has been opposed by many northern Michigan residents who object to the killing of does and fawns. It’s quick and easy thru Econo-RatE* Allstate’s convenient bank plan | destination—‘‘the collectivization of | Another better value from the company founded by rural economy." | | Tu Jun-Sheng, secretary general; | of the committee’s Rural Work De- | | partment, reports in the semi-| monthly publication People’s China that nearly 600,000 cooperatives have been established. * * * | Tu says “poor peasants’’ and | “middle peasants,”’ the landless of | other days, are ‘'the driving force | in the Socialist revolution in the | countryside.” They make up 70 per ; cent, of the peasants. you pay! For complete 338 Franklin Rd. development. A gravel-pit opera-| Bearers will be George R. Zei- The Weather | hi d | tion, he stated, “well increase | gelbaur, John Ziegelbaur, Charles pontiac AND vicintty—fair ana A Police department report.| atic hazards and “eventually | Hutchins, Richard Zimmerman, warmer tonight, low near WW. Showers signed by Chief Herbert W. Stra-| sieht he aren” Dr. Edward Sanborn and Edward < h t » et x Cs , . Teak Begtheast winds. 8-12 malles a ted Saree tee eee ee “Areas suitable for the obtain- | Harley. night. uncooperative attitude toward po- ing of pr and gravel are not TedesiinlPentiac licemen at his establishment. such a rarity that unlimited com- | Boy i Condition Lowest temperature preceding 8 am It also stated he had received) | orcial activity of the king con- Good . ee am. Wind veicity 2 mpa aa “ations to ae? Liquor Co Temple) ati had been employed After Being Hit by Auto Direction East rol Commission in the last threc : A Sun rae ys nesday et 727 pr years it will occasion the destruction of William R. Eames, 8, of Fx} Sun rises hurs S32 an - : * y at 100 pm | 5 at 108 am j Moon sets Wedr Moon rises Thu Dewntewn Temperatures 6am cose 40 lla om 60 TBM ..cceces- 42 lat 64 Gm M...,000.. lpn 67 SO. Me. .tecce 82 wan ye Tuesday in Pontiac (As recorded downtowr Highest temperature 5a Lowest temperature Mean temperature 50 5 Weather—Ciear i One Year Age in Pontiac Highest tetnperature ae Lowest temperature : Mean temperature Sidieialnisine 578) Weather—Rain - Highest and Lewest Temperatures This Date in 83 Years e+ in i938 23 jn 1674 Tuesday's Temperatere Chart Alpe 58 413 Lansing 63 30 Battie Creek 62 389 Memphis 76 8 iemarek 7 S51 Miami 87 «(be Browneville 83 73 Milwaukee se 3 Chicago ¢ 466 Minneapolis 75-55 Cinetn neti 58 38 New Orleans 1 61 Clevelan 0 46 New York “a tb Detrom « % Omahe 7% 60 Duivth 67 45 Phoenix 82 55 Fort Worth 67 «4.8 are 668 “s 75 86 Weskington 83 49 -- 4 ~ Samuilow told the commission Police Chief Herbert W. Straley once told him: “I'm going to see you get your license taken away from you, Mickey.” The police report recommended the license be renewed on a proba- tionary basis . The commission by a 43 Vote. approved the lhecense. Samuilow was reminded it could be with- drawn at any time Commissioner Harry W. Latz (District 7), who voted against issuing the license, said he stood by the police report “100 per cent.” | -"“As Jong as a man runs his business properly he's not going to | be bothered,” he said. ‘‘Whep a) man gets citations be doésn't get them for nothing.” jof the mother of three girls, 9, the had taken Mberttes with them:| Cherokee Rd., was reported in good condition today at Pontiac General Hospital with possible back injuries after he was struck by an auto yesterday while riding residential values in the area. . . Demands Examination on Indecent Liberties Robert Braid, 63, of Orion Town-| his bicycle. ship, demanded examination when| Pontiac Police quoted the driv- he was arraigned on an indecent) er, Carl P. Anthony, 78, of 4773 libertiés charge before Ortion| Kempf St., Drayton Plains, as say- Township Justice Helmar G. Stan-| ing the youth rode his bicycle out aback. |of a driveway at 352 Voorheis Rd. Braid was released on $500 bond | and into the path of his car. after being ordered to appear for ‘Michigan Dream’ Set examination May 10. He ted ymplaint was arres on complain for May 13-14 at MSC 7 and 6 years of age, who said) EAST LANSING —“Michigan Dream,” a musical. about early- | day Michigan and fits peoplé, will be produced by Michigan State Jumping Beans Profitable Alamos in southern Soridra,| College May 13 and 14 as a major /. Mexico, is kept alive latgely event of the MSC 100th ‘tifiniversary the Mexican jumping year. through : bean. Each July and August resi- | set There have been reports out of Red China, however, that this “driving force’ is not unanimously enamored of state ownership. Given land after liquidation. of landlords and “rich peasants,’ they were unwilling to give it up tothe collective ideal. * : : The first step toward state con- | trol is mutual aid teams, Tools, farm animals and labor are pooled |to sow and reap on farms in a community. Members get a pro- portional share of net income. They technically still own land em- braced by the cooperative. But it Peiping to turn a cooperative farm into a collective farm, where peas- ants become nothing more than la- borers for the state. would take only a decree out of | Sears, Econo-Rate gives you both low rate financing by a cooperating bank and low cost Allstate Auto Insurance. You'll save time and trouble too. One quick transaction takes care of everything—one easy monthly payment covers everything. No fuss, no delay, no red tape. . * At the same time, Econo-Rate gives you all the advan- tages of Allstate Insurance such as “Disappearing” Deductible Collision coverage that gives greater protection against to- day’s high collision damage costs. The /arger the loss, the /ess details about Econo-Rate, contact your Alistate Agent. Or mail coupon below today! , hank Send for free booklet containing complete details about Econo-Rate. Mail handy coupon below right now! ; \ ; poo - - - - - -- - - - 5 | Allstate Insurance Company | 1 4214 St. | | Detroit 26, Michigan 140C | | presse send my free copy of the ECONO-RATE AUTO FINANCE BANK PLan | ; BOOKLET! Name. | Address. 1 Town. State 2 Phone No : Me ees oiee ane ane aan ane anenaen ane came aes Gan eee eae oe ET RUSSELL J. BOUSHELL ond ROSS LEAHY Sears, Roebuck and Co. Bidg. sTtrocK come St. — Ph. Fideral 5-046! rE You're in good hands with... List ANY MRoTECTION Bounded by Sears A+ Wie: corporotion founded by Sears, Roebuck and Co. with pass legislation extending the con- | Be Presented to Zonta Club Saturday The Standard Oil Co. has been selected to supply the city with 8,000 gallons of gasoline for opera- tion of municipal vehicles, at a price of 13 cents a gallon. * . = The St. Catherine's Guild of the St. James Episcopal Church will hola a children's fashion show and bridge tea Thursday at 1 a.m. at | the Community House. | ~ i - - | Bishop Marshall R. Reed will | deliver the keynote address at | the Secia] Education and Action | Conference opening tomorrow at the First Methodist Church. A workshop period, dinner and film | will folliew. The conference is | seheduled to start at 1 p.m. and | conclude at 9 p.m. - » * | Elaine Jones, 588 Purdy St., will spend two weeks in Paris this fall as a representative of the Birming- ham Association of the Detroit YMCA at the association's world conference Miss Jones‘is a Y board mem- | ber and a member of the young | adult group which is composed of young men and women. She will join the Kazmayer European Semi- nar tour, conducted by the Y, and | will visit England, Scotland and | other countries on the continent. In all, 3 persons will leave De- troit by plane for Europe July 23 and return Aug. 25. * Fun and fund raising is the aim of the old fashioned box social and dance which the Queen of Martyrs School PTA is sponsoring from 8:30 p.m. until midnight tomor- row at the social hall, 32460 Pierce St. A Gay Nineties Revue is planned for entertainment, along with the | box lunch auction. SHAWS JEWELERS a writing set like this } | Features both the new Electro-Polished Parker Pen and new Parker Michigan’ s Largest Jewelers JEWELERS Commissioner Floyd P. Miles, The musical, in central/ing years of study, is aimed at he santce ms. ~“ aha tet ee 24.~. Saginaw St (District 5) also said he supported | dents pick and package the world’s | Michigan in the 1870's, will have a} saving money on reserve stocks . : the police report. | sax of brincadores (jumpers),| cast of more than 100 students. | and supply problems, : Pontiec State Bank Bids. : ; 4 be e fy 4 } F i >. \ . 3 * ‘ ip? I \ 9 x 4 Fe St eas +» _ re £ " - si ” Pe Se vel . ; aT, TIE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1955 goals on the River Elbe. Is it only | Hal Boyle Says: pears aaa World Had Unity..=for a Moment #2" | about other people in another time | | where only ghosts gather in invis- ible reunion now. | | NEW YORK ® — The great fact | clasp of strange allies must carry ) th F $] 295 of history 10 years after American | with it the hope in the tired hearts | Bo or ATTENTION FACTORY - ‘EMPLOYEES If you need prescription safety glasses we are authorized to fit your needs! } ___ looked at each other and realized Governors Accept Bids one was a Russian soldier and one} WASHINGTON «— Sixteen of stroyed numerous but better- trained German armies. Dr. B. R. Berman |and Russian soldiers shook -hands | of all, ‘This ts the last one. Surely | ._. * was an American soldier, and that | Ne nation’s 27 Democratic gover- ap ie | gingerly on the River Elbe is that | now there won't be another.”’ When we met, we met warily. T/ men may be men but armies are | 0" eee mecepsed) Eovetans mrone FE TOT Matching Wedding Bands, || both sides now are shaking fists | * * » suppose the average Russian sol- : ; attend party conferences here May handsome tailored bands § at each other. : dier’s first thought on seeing the , 4/™mes. 4 dnd 5. Democratic Na- | in 14K yellow gold lewelry Departmen! NEWPORT’S HEAR NOW! New 3-transistor ‘'Royal-M”’ GEORGE'S THE SMALLEST, LIGHTEST HEARING AID IN | ZENITH'S HISTORY! As g@owerful as come bh Swe its ze. Comivor enence Operates for port 104 a week 18 @n one tiny baticry! enty 100 Gene conduction secessory of moder ste extras cosy COPAg, aids at lean t' Contense : *15° and *125° The Allies whose handclasp in | comradeship then sealed the doom | of Adolf Hitler’s ideology are now separated by mutually expressed doubts and fears. They say our ide- ology threatens them, and we say j their ideology threatens us. The dismal regret in the long view of time is that the wartime unity of the two greatest hemis- pheric powers has evaporated in a tug-of-peace ~ . For the brief moment of that handclasp at Torgau there was one world, one common victory. All the ' blood and sweat and tears it cost were repaid in a spigndid bright second And then everybody on both sides went back to being himself —and there were two worlds There have been two big worlds ever since Looking back across this crowd- ed decade, I suppose it is wistful- ly foolish to think that one moment I was among a group of war correspondents who covered the grand linkup meeting of the Amer- ican and Rugsian armies at the Elbe : \ It was sad then, and it is sad now to recall, how the purpose that had made us one disappeared day by day in the harsh discover- ies of the differences between us We were an army that ate our own sanitary packaged and dehy- | drated food and we moved in the vehicles that our own people back home had built for us The Russian moved across Ger- many like locusts. living on the land as they traveled, taking what- ever they needed. They took bread from this house, a horse from this farmer, a wagon here, a Car there * is > They were people two genera- tions. behind the Arnericans in ev- ery way but one. Each soldier car- ried a moder snub-nosed multi- fire weapon. He was a hobo in 4, first American soldier was, “‘This| ‘There was a gap between us in tional Chairman Paul M. Butler guy looks pretty much like anoth-|4 new cold world — and the gap said several other governors have er German And I do recall a young officer | saying after his first disbelieving sight of the Russians swarming | across the landscape | “Is this a riot—or an army?” But we shook hands, and broke bread and beans, drank long draughts of whatever spirits our hoarded stores or the German countryside provided, and trusted each other enough to hand our weapons back and forth It was all done with friendly ges- ture and sign and pantomime the eternal language of strangers. The war was done and we were one together What a. brief high cliff of world goodwill we stood on! Such a peak of ecstasy' But when the bread had been broken, the wine drunk, and the relief of victory and weari- | remains, despite the exultant hand- accepted tentatively, with some shake that linked our hearts and still to be heard from Needs! Exceptional Buys During Hurry in Today for Outstanding Savings on Baby’s National Baby Week! ness slept off, we woke up. . . ” Fred N. Pauli Co. dirty baggy suit—but he had fire- power, the firepower that Kad de-| Ivan Ivanovich and Joe jof unity could last forever. But 20 West Huron FE 2-7257 | surely all wars that end in a hand- ioe : GI ) | OTHER MODELS AT ) | | ANOTHER EXPANSION SALE SPECIAL! seve soet mapulary sa3% Infants’ Seersucker Sleepers 99° | @ Sanforized Cotton | Seersucker! | i The smartest |\/chair we’ve ever seen Clertine Seaver Designs 4 KROEHLER | @ 1 and 2 Pc. Styles! @ Gripper Closing! @ Sizes 2 to 8! 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Save today. ry in today and save yton’s! _ PHONES: 3 FE 8811 FE 5-8974 Reg. 69c Infants’ Shirts Reg. 2.98 Crib Blankets Reg. 5.98 Nursery Chair > and Infants’ and toddlers’ Attractive blankets with 99 Sturdy nursery chair a9 Z ’ \ shirts in. short sleeve 34° 6-inch ee I aca wire Rijn light irr’rs. te, - nty decal trim. Hurry 3065 Orchard Lake Rd. Keego Harbor rir ane wit eolids oa pa in today Rich wax birch . . ‘ ee F TS , mos, to 3 yr Hurry in! 36x52 size. Save today ve today. qour : é ‘ 3, * OPEN RIDAY NIGH * : ; Waite's Infants'—Second Floor | RRA a ae SO mt iA AM A: BE NN ad 8 SR ME Li 2 — ~ _ i . : , ‘ ? . + j / $43 , : > Ne i ‘ ii . tie ss ty " ‘ “ ~ j ee i ‘ es “= > — = = ,’ - P| 7” a x - i of i> 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1955 © MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1955 - Why Should Crime News Be Published? Newspapers have been subjected to blasts of criticism recently for what has been termed “sensationalism” in report- ing the news. More specifically, the press has been scored for its handling of news relating to sex crimes, such as the Barpara GAca rape-slaying, and to crimes perpetrated by juveniles. * * * Critics maintain that a prom- inent play of such news gives rise to ideas in other juveniles and results in further atrocities. “What good does it do?” they ask. We feel that the majority of the Nation’s newspapers believe that bring- ing such matters to light can do much good. : * * * Hiding one’s head in the sand, ostrich- like,” accomplishes nothing. The public should be made ex- tremely aware that such crimes are committed. ts should be made aware that many such brutal attacks are committed by juveniles. Mothers and fathers should be made sO aware that they may recognize the symptoms of the mental sickness that drives youths to such crimes and act in time to prevent them. * * * _An abnormal and morbid interest by a child in account of sex crimes should indicate toa watchful parent that some- thing is wrong with the child. A factual newspaper account of a sex crime will not plant a seed of deviation in a normal, healthy mind. Conversely, each new story of a sex crime should make parents take stronger precautions that —- the same thing will not happen to their daughters. Small children should be warned against strangers. They should be under constant, vigilant surveillance. Older girls should be made to realize that deviates are menaces. * * * The Pontiac Press realizes full well that daily detailed descriptions of sordid crimes have no place in a family news- paper. This paper has no wish to force objectionable reading into its subscribers’ homes. But, as long as such crimes continue to occur occasionally, we shall continue to factually report them. * * *x We hope that the question, “What good does it do?” will find an answer in the homes of our readers. coe House OK Forecast for State Road Bill ~ After weeks of bickering there is some good news from the State highway front. First, the Senate has passed and sent to the House a long delayed highway improvement measure. Second, though it faces strong opposition in the House, Lt. Gov. Hart predicts it will win ap- proval of that chamber. While speaking at Flint, Hart is re- ported also to have predicted that the Senate measure would win the approval of Gov. WILLIAMS, now touring the Near East. : * * x Major features of the bill as it went to the House are 1.5 cents increase to six cents a gallon in the State’s gasoline tax and a 10 per cent boost in truck taxes. Additional revenue expected from the bill is estimated at $35,000,000 | a year. The big improvement over the Sen- ate’s first version is in the emphasis on arterial highways and in the new alloca- tion f As it now stands the rh 4 measure provides that 75 per cent of the additional revenue will go for State trunkline construction and 25 per cent to the cities and counties. ~*~ *«© * This rewritten bill should be reported out to the floor at the earliest possible moment and should be given quick House ap- proval. It will get that if the Representatives keep in mind how serious the traffic problem has become in Southeastern Michigan. Hospital Gets New Device Thanks to careful search by its gov- erning board, Pontiac General Hospital will have a modern machine to keep hearts pumping during emergencies in surgical operations. * * * Search for such a device was started some months ago at the request of the hospital's medical « staff. Originally it was decided to buy two machines known as defibrillators. On record is a case in which one of these machines kept a patient’s heart going for 103 hours before that organ re- sumed normal functioning. * * * In its search the board not only dis- covered a more satisfactory machine than the first one considered, but a com- bination defibrillator and heart pace- maker. The two machines can be used separately or in combination and should greatly reduce the danger of heart com- plications in surgery. It is good to know that the hospital's board and medical staff are co-operating to keep the institution’s equipment up to date. . The Man About Town Big County Growth Official Directory to Point Out Quite Remarkable Gains Good speech: One with a good beginning, closely followed by a good ending. An advance peek at the proofs for the annual official directory of Oakland County, put out by County Clerk Lynn D. Allen, shows some mighty interesting facts. Quot- ing from it, “Without doubt now the fastest growing area in Michigan, and probably in the entire United States, is Oakland County.” The book will contain many pertinent facts about our county and the method in which it is governed. It has a list of all county, city, village and township officers, together with the principal state and national officials, over 600 names. Mr. Allen tells me the book will be for free dis- tribution. If you would like to receive a copy, write him. It will be out in May. Batting averages of the five leading hitters in the American League on Wednesday morn- ing follow: BH OPet. 7» 4 v1 =«.438 12 «(388 16) = a” «(a Receiving his Kiwanis pin for attending his one thousandth meeting is R. C. Cummings, which means 19 years and three months of ~ consecutive meetings. Back from a few days in that modest big city, Arne L. Hulet says St. Louis claims to have passed the mil- lion mark, and has an outlying growth re- sembling Detroit. A phone call from Jason Kilbride of Rochester says a pair of woodpeckers have been drilling square holes in trees around his home for several years. He recently chiseled out one they had just completed, converting it into the customary round hole. The birds refused to accept his ideas of architecture and drilléd another square one beside it. Pontiac politicians tell me that the first Oakland County office seeker to campaign with an automobile was defeated, and was not surprised, as every time his machine frightened a farmer’s horse he felt that he lost at; .- least one vote. Right now, in these days when there's so much printed about it, I have word from the U. S. Gevernment Printing Office at Washington that for 30 cents they will send you an official manual giving sugges- tions for a wide variety of home shelters for family protection in an atomic attack. Hearing her dog bark just after daylight. the other morning, Mrs. Melvin Bingham saw four deer browsing on the’ strawberry plants in the rear of her home on the Dixie Highway just notthwest of Pontiac. Verbal Orchids to— Emmett Short of 155 Elizabeth Lake Road! eighty-fourth birthday. August C. Schoof “Now Promise You Won’t Rock the Boat” - David Lawrence Says: Commies Reverse Stand on Outlawing Atom War PARIS—French officials whose business it is to follow minutely the changes in the trend of Com- munist propaganda throughout the world have lately observed an im- portant reversal in the attitude of the Soviet agitators with respect to atomic warfare. Heretofore there has been a steady stream of inspired news- paper and magazine articles, as tH , 3 if ; i + i ri ; | 1 1 ‘I : | Fi Hil Eby a ai es : “i bis? ao F zi i : in + ds Bz ; gF aay i ates Fe Hi : i £3 : i ui Fy re ui 2 PEE: “The problem is to know if humanity will accept the ruins and the destruction and the death of hundreds of millions of human beings, misery for those who sur- vive, the probable creation in this case of monsters and also the pos- sibility of the abolition of all life on this planet.”’ t if i] rea H ¥ j s3 raea; 2 : ; 3 if pis ite fiat ‘| Lt i E ccf 5 ath ies bee? i l and warning French Communists that Americans are trying to frighten the masses in Europe with their hydrogen bombs, He sald: “It's a great mistake for the ommunists to overemphasize the danger of atom warfare because if there were an t&tomic war only the capitalists and the imperial- ists will be destroyed.” s . * Thorez went on to denounce talk of the dangers of atomic war as an attempt to make pacifists out of the masses — including the Com- munists. What is the significance of this new approach in Communist prop- aganda? It has been the basic dogma of the Communists that communism will achieve an inevit- able triumph everywhere. So, if you admit that the world will be destroyed by atomic warfare, it is the same as admitting the defeat Voice of the People Henry Borque Berates Senator Neely’s ones Sead Shes Ste letier is critical of order. Senator Neely nor the weak. The majority are too en- Sermon on the Mount. There can ‘©oks like Harry Truman is | be no peace or blessing of God until the violence inflicted upon speechless creatures is wiped out. Ann Francis 60 N. Hilldale Dr. ‘Law Protection Is Good as Ideals of Enforcers’ There was never a time in his- tory when. laws made by man were upheld unless there was full scale law enforcement. Shady lawyers, who are on the fringe of society, are bought, and too often the culprit is allowed free- dom because of the practice of these schemers. When a man or numbers of men and women feel they must pur- chase a revolver or gun for their own protection of life and property then it says the law enforcement is weak. When a man rules without ideals then he is weak in his perform- ance. And his duty is not for the protection of man, but for hire. And when a man is bought for protection then the ideals of that servant is bought with the pro - tection According to the height of the ideals bought, just so high is the protection gained. Leona L. Gould 9593 Dartmouth Rd. Clarkston, Route 1 Says $378 Too Much Tax on Three-Bedroom Home Just a word of warning to any- one thinking of building a house In order for us Yo have a three- of communismi, too. mt Ces teeta al oes ak have the aaseteer come slong and The new line, therefore, keeps eminent doctors denounced Put & $246 tax on it at 70 per cent * hammering away for disarma- animal research as useless, cruel This was a year ago ment by the West, a bam on its “ang 9 mowey-making racket. Pe" there was no wiring, or use of atomic warfare and the Today doctors cannot talk plumbing in the house. dangers of atomic fallout but ne = against animal research because New we are informed that eunphasis is given any longer to =the vivisection dictatorship will next year the taxes will be $378. banning nuclear tests by Eure: persecute and destroy their live- Does anyone in Pontiac pay that — _ Mheod. Newspapers and maga- §© much property tax? No one we Maybe the Communist leaders times refuse to present articles have talked to, even the big now are afraid they might have opposed to animal experimenta- homes on Iroquois and Ottawa, been making pacifists out of their tion. There is no freedoni of the and ours is on the east side of following inside as well as outside press, therefore, the public de tows. We have had two ap Russia. But, whatever the reason, mot know the fgcts. _ praisals on the house, so we curiosity here. animal cruelty. Will God's wrath We have appealed to the board (Copyright 1965, New York Herald visit us? Only a few humans of review, the city manager, city Tribune Ine.) defend the rights of wordless attorney and commissioner, but Case Records of a Psychologist Jilted People .. . Able to Pick Topnotch Steve didn’t believe the surefire law of psychology that if you go through the Proper motions, you'll begin to feel the corr ng emotions. But tt worked! You jilted folks are really lucky for then you can pick out topnotch sweethearts without being blinded by infatuation. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE €ase-0-315._Steve_W.. aged “21. was engaged to be married, but his sweetheart eloped with an- other man. So Steve got soured on women and developed a cynical outlook. But his good moral home training still kept him on the beam, so he attended the young people's meet- ings in a church in Miami where he was employed. “Dr. Crane, I want to tell you more about Steve,” the youth counselor for this church informed me. “Your newspaper column has long been my mainstay in advising the young folks in this big church. 33 3 pi Are Luckier “And he tells me he just can't understand what he ever saw fh his first sweetheart to make him want to mzrry her, for this new girl far exceeds her on all points.” Actually, you jilted men and women are often lucky if you simply take advantage of your soured outlook. - Fer then you ean view the op-— posite sex with a detached attitude instead of having your judgment blinded by a mad infatuation. Too often we fall in love fast and thus can’t analyze our sweet- hearts impersonally. The jilted person, however, takes but a interest in the op- posite sex.’ So that is the ideal time to size up all the eligibles ri 11,01 u Fe H : if ? Than Others Sweethearts trionie ability to act the proper role for a few hours on a date. And if you just act the way you'd like to be, then soon you'll be the way you act. That is an axiom It .really works. To help analyze: your prospects, send for my 200-point “Rating Seale for Sweethearts,” enclosing Always write to Dr. George W. Mickapen “enclosing a hong, Se . ene self- 7. —T and cover costs when you cone for one af his psychological 8 a dime to charts. (Copyright 1955) er—plus —— Attack on Eisenhower's Religious Life none will do anything about it. Ii highest tax in the neighborhood Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER (International News Service) coming back to the wars like the Spartan youth who hid the wood- pecker in his hat. In an off-the-face speech in Kansas City he said he has been in politics all his career and some of his life. He might, despite those denials, be willing to run as veepee to Adlai Stevenson. We know the old fire-hoss still smells the smoke. This time it could be political arson. Once having lived on govern- ment property you have a decided rent-phobia, Was the piano GI? ae a If Stevenson decides to accept the Democratic nomination who does he want as a stalking hoss in the November derby? There is no constitutional em- bargo on a man nominating him- self for high and dizzy office, ac- cepting that nomination and _ poll- ing his mirrored delegation. There is no amendment or marginal notation that disquali- fies a man from stashing snow- balls in the deep freeze and throwing them out of season. Portraits” By JAMES J. METCALFE Dear one, if there is anything . . . That I can do for you... .. . Or just a ray of Or if your heart is ppy but . . . You want it to be base. set by Nazi move. 20 Years Ago PLEDGED tr s s She is not made to be the ad- miration of everybody, but the happiness of one.—Burke. Smiles Jones: I wish my wife were a dentist. Bones: Why so? Jones: I'd love to hear her say Ist Drink Always Taken Because Person Is. Weak By WILLIAM BRADY, ™. D. The young person who takes his (or her) first drink, smoke, ‘‘goof ; ‘ quite different from that which you and I saw when we were growing up. What with the ready availability of beer, wine and liquor, the in- sistent idea that everybody drinks at least an occasional social glass, if lit a Hit | STS Te | aS 2 custom-made PERMANENTS You'll be amazed when you see the hidden beauty in your hair brought to life with one of our very own custom permanents. Individual Hair Styles Created Just for You by Tony and Carl New Hair-Drying Comfort! Relax and enjoy new hair-drying comfort with our “Beautaire” air- conditioned hair-dryer .. . like ae sun and breeze on a summer y. P® FE 3-7186 OO OOO OOO OO EOOSE OOOO OOOOOOSEOS8OS8HOSEOSEEEOOECS 1@ eeeeeeeceoeeosesooeoesooseeosseeeeeee COCOCOCOCO OE OCCOETSASOOOEESEEEOOSEEEOOEOOSEEEES —o——— ———— / The engagement of Carmel Ursula Jensen | jof Edwards- | / ville, lil, to ‘Daniel Joseph Hackett Jr., is announced by her sister, Mrs. :Ray ( Rathert, also of Edwards- ville. He is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Hackett of Ouego drive. She is the tg “How to Make Your Wedding Go Smoothly’ Come in, write or phone for this booklet. There is no charge. Pearce Floral Company 559 Orchard Lake Ave. Phone FE 2-0127 ' = PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL Va S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. Enroliments Available in Day or Evening Classes. Write, phone or call in person tor Free pamphiet. PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 x daughter of Villiam A. Jensen of Bowen, Queensland, Australia. in One Dish | Timesaving By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor We had the nicest letter recently from Mrs. Ambrose Talley. She said some very nice things about the recipes we print in this column and sent one of her own for us to ‘renin | a ae presents the deep-sculptured go in solid silver 4 Y). de } / 0 Me 4 Lb 3) I asure = 1 — 21 af ative 5 8) 5 y 22 Wi ls 9 24 Cicatriz 26 Great Lake 27 Bmall ‘Scot ) 7) © Alarm 32 Of the torrid 7) ail zone 34 Cling te — : 1 iS Landed rs ui3 iw "4 MD 4] ) property % Busy insect rh 37. Hebrew wi) py pI measure 39 War { of al 2 o] Greece 40 Semiprecious oll eae vel o) 41 Exist ‘4 t a raror os " <_< : Bread Ap ead ” soa ne =" Chemical =e res ron affix i bale mere oH 52 Seed ves e! than enough 41 Goose genus $3 Reraldic band § Dash 42 Canned meat - nie d 6 Tenant 43 Demigod 3 sreakwater 7 Perform 44 Indigo __ bd ASTerisK & Large book 46 Girls name. 57 Sair ab) 9 Funeral notice 47 Revise DOWN 10 Beep 48 Prevares the cfentric 11 Source of table wheets ventron 5@ Butterfites Park F ree Rear of Store Alvi: { TELEGRAPH at HURON Famous ‘Cooltimer’ suits for Spring and all sum- mer long. Short or long jacket styles, lined to match the blouse which completes the outfit. Ex- quisitely detailed in Navy with White, Cinna- mon with Natural. Sizes 10-18. 29” Mother will adore a gift from Alvin’‘s BETTY JEAN CLARK ry Sales Innovation Pay | Just the right shades for our stock- to figure out a way to help custom- | } to pay attentton: } around the house may be much 28 W. Huron St. FE 2-7257 | Man., Tues., Wed. 10 to 6—Thurs., Fri., Sat. 10 to 9—Sun. 2 to 5 _ ——e - we ° »" - x ‘ } » + ; ; APRIT, 27, 1955 Women’s Chorus Sings at Church at the Ridge road are cee lear JATUICE Keinert announcing the McBroom —————— Banent Is Home engagement of their daughter, Both sacred and secular music | was presented when Pontiac Wom- en's Chorus sang in a program | Methodist Church in Walled | Lake The chorus divided into four groups for the selections, whic’ “were directed by Charles Hutton. Mr. and Mrs. irs. Paul McKibben was accom- Glen Clark of pamst Soloists included Helen Tom, Velva Wolfe and LIKE MEW h WRIGH UP TO 50% NOW On Your Re-Upholstering Choice Fabrics and Colors WILLIAM T 6183 Jamesen, Belva’s Beauty Salon Drayten Plains , John Brady returned home Furnitere Makers & Uphoisters Betty Jean, tO Saturday after a months’ stay at “All Work Guaranteed for 5 Years” Benson W. ph Merey Hospital. He is 270 Orchard Lake Ave. of Mr ind Mrs John Savedge. He ts B rady of East Iroquois road int dani the son of tom PERMANENTS Satedge of Thorpe street. *6 50 sev +] (°° { December ) - - nedding ts i i Vo { ppointment Necessary) ’ P anned, . Williams Lake Rd. | 3 Contour Hair Lindsy ~ Styling, Tumsanes é Cutting and Shaping le OR. 3-9702 s Off we were,” told me, ‘king our brains out to get “Here “kn she he ones to wear with black and{the ones to wear with pas tels \and with beige, and the blues and mauve. “But after we bad the colors just right, the customer some- | times didn't benefit, because it was so complicated, and the sales people were sometimes too busy to explain which color goes with what. “Everybody in the field kept say ing, ‘There ought to be a better way to do it.’”’ Miss Kennedy worked for months | and finally caffe up with that bet ter way. She designed a transparent pack age which held a pair of stockings So that you could see the shack Clearly, and in the transparent package was a color card, showing 3 W. Lawrence Street the shades to wear The woman who wants stockings wear with a peacock blue suit for example, can see at a glance the proper pair. It's the same old rule: “Don't tell 'em—show ‘em!’ Miss Kennedy illustrates a prin- | elple to which all women ought fr you Want ings and Ot NEW her Courses CLASSES 7 PONTIAC n This Ad for Bulletin “Address VETERAN APPROVED GREGG SHORTHAND HIGHER ACCOUNTING MACHINE SHORTHAND TYPEWRITING Comptometer and Calculator MONDAY, MAY: 2. Lifetime Employment Service for Gastuates re Phene F E 2-3551 te dream up a_brilliant idea, you can't do it by grabbing seme- | thing out of the blue sky. You have to (1.) Stick to the field you know well. (2.) Fill a | specific need—that is. see what | problem everybody is complaining | about and direct j;vur attention |}to solving that, (3.) Work and | work until you come up with the solution. Copyright 1955 718 West ® Jewelry @ Lingerie @ Ceramics Infants’ Specialty Shop | ota Mae Gift Shop FE 2-3220 Doll Up in Evening A divine something to wear less conservative than your out- e anen door wear. But don't shoot the budget on a fabulous item, . from You will find that our Permanents Leave vote Hair More Lustrous and Seft, with More Shining Hig $9.00 CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP 116 N. Perry St. Phone FE 2-6361. ee tee Answers te Previews Purrie wit iInitieia SitTiale aeisotiatel fepsielele (E>) Jackie Rae Studio tte Rh Bfely — Sant er presents e& . Sec aer trey | IN “CINDERELLA” _ bot? Bist lela laime T a@ fantasy By h¢-= BORGOS JUNIOR DANCE STUDENTS Stott ete te Sunday, May 8th — 3:00 P. M. N]T tiae High School Auditorium ohn Lig mtotetetetete Mrclass an Gale by Seadoute And @ Split Highly Trained Hair Stylists Await CAndre Beauty Salon for @ Overprocess Ends PERMANENT Is Supreme” to Serve You OPEN WEDNESDAY ALL DAY — FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 P. M. No Appointment Needed! Immediate Service INTRODUCES THE 3 MOST f@ MAGNIFICENT PERMANENTS wir *10”- 12° Complete with Cutting and Scyting @ Bleached @Dyed @ Dry @ Brittle ed Now you can have a wonderful x CREATED by ANDRE “Where Service and Quality 4 ine 2 e FE 5-4490 Bank Bidg. State @ Generally Abused . NO MATTER HOW BAD THE > CONDITION OF YOUR HAIR 3 $40Vd WIAD DW EIGHTEEN * } | \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1955 Shades of dirndl days: paper stripes with winding ivy in paper summer " cotton. MARY MURPHY Geatured in “TE DESPERATE WOUR™ g Paraminm! Picture filmed in wistavestow Color by Techucvloe These ciry Summereties of scrubbable twill hove been crafted for compliments! Cork ‘a crepe soles insure oll-doy wearing comfort, and the spicy colors blend with your favorite cosvol oftire, “495 The oll-oround cosuol, equally smort for home ond street weor. Cork lightened soles end cushioned plotiorm for walking ease. Elastic side gores mold the shoe to your foot. Colors oftuned to your wordrobe needs. Todd's Shoe Store : 20 W. HURON RUTH HAIGH CUSTOM LAMP SHADES PICTURE FRAMING OLD PRINTS 165 Pierce St., Birmingham Mi 4- 2002 wall- la glazed chintz make a fresh-as- Several Pontiac residents are busy making preparations to leave Friday on a European tour. Taking advantage of the trip sponsored by the General Motors Girls’ Club are Mrs. Silas Wattles of Delaware drive, Roy Wragby of Kinross road, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Mary Cangel MOLLS—Score. Again! ANOTHER , NEW DECORATOR! Thanks to the people of Oakland County for their loyalty, and their confidence in our decorating ‘department. It has become nec- essary to increase our staff. We are happy to announce the appointment of MARY CANGEL who has had ten years of training and experience. Her most recent affiliation has been with the Studio of Detroit. GOOD TASTE need not be expensive. Call us for professional assistance with your decorat- ing problems. Our service is as close as your telephone. Fine DRAPERIES and FLOOR COVERINGS Since 1941 Park Right at the Door! OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS 1666 S. Telegraph FE 4-0516 National Drapery - | Chippewa road didn’t just bask in | sun during their four month | went house | | the | stay in Florida. | hunting and were lucky enough to | at Hollywood. | ' | | | | Shirley Ruth Baylis of Spence Grover John Farns- | C. Wilcox of Old Orchard drive and |Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Silk of South Johnson avenue. Others leaving on the plane | trip are Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Clement of Rustic Lane, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bullen of Rebertson court and Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Hudak of Lake- | side drive. Before they return to Detroit on | May 15 the group will Visit Lon- | don, England; The Ant- werp, Belgium; Lucerne, land, and Paris, France. . * * and Mrs. W. J. Morris of Hague; Mr They find one that will fulfill their needs The couple recently returned to their home here and will remain until December. = * s The Edward W. McCaul family of Bloomfield Hills were among recent arrivals at the Homestead, Hot Springs, Va. = - 7 Gertrude E. Thomas of East Princeton avenue has returned to her home after visiting for three months in Tucson, Ariz. She was the guest of her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce J. Thomas, and their three children. Mr. Thomas at- tends the University of Arizona. | street and | worth of Birmingham are among students at the University of Michi- gan who have been initiated into Phi Beta Kappa, ‘‘top’’ national honor society Requirements for such an honor whole college career. s s * Mr. and Mrs, Willard Johnson, Mr, and Mrs. Emil Broestie.and Mr. and Mrs. Adrian C. Ish, all gan State College A Cappella Choir Concert recently in East Lansing. Kenneth Ish sang a solo ‘ Wayfaring Stranger” as part the program at the college and is a member of | Beta Zeta Chapter of Theta Chi aterm * s Diane Dailey, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Ralph FE. Dailey of West | Shere drive, attended a regional assembly of the Indiana zegion of United States | National Student Association. The gathering was held on the campus of Denison University, Switzer- | is a nearly all-A record during the | of Dover road, attended a Michi- | He is a sophomore | Granville, Ohio, “where Diane is| Paul with the U. . S. Alr . Force. * * + The Rev, and Mrs. Franklin Racing of South Castell street were hosts at an open house re- cently “honoring their son, A-2C Paul L. Racine, He has been enjoying a 30 day | furlough after serving | 15 months in | | | Danve er, Colo, Johnson of Lik eral Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Mrs, left Sunday for England attending college as a freshman. oe he will serve for two years Dereen Martha was the aame chosen by Mr, and Mrs, Denald eview avenuc, Sylvan Lake, for their daughter bern April 21 at Pontiac Gen- Personal News of Interest in Pontiac paternal grandparents, and Mr. and Mrs. Willis M. Brewer of Rosshire court are the maiernal grandparents. +. * ~ Mr. and Mrs. William F. Ruby of Miami road announce the birth of a son, Kurt Walter, April 23 at Women's Hospital, Detroit. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. | Walter Jury of Columbiaville and ‘ohnson of | Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ruby of Hall- /Ramona terrace are the iniant’s! man road. : Nancy .Kefauver applies a deft | art classes there and has been commissioned Helen’Cate Tells Bridal Attendants Evening Ceremony to Be June 25 at Bethany Baptist | Bride-elect Helen Cate has re- | vealed the bridal attendants for her June 25 marriage to Richard L. Corl. Mrs. Ricketts will be matron of | honor at the ceremony to take | place at Bethany Baptist Church | at 730 p.m. Bridesmaids will be | Gretchen Pearson and Jean Ford, with Gail Beesley, a cousin of the bride, as a junior bridesmaid. Helen is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Cate of West Huron street, The prospec- tive bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs Cliden Cori of Elwell. He is currently serving in the U.S, Air Force. The announcement was made at a recent miscellaneous shower | given by Mrs Neil Ricketts at the Voorheis road home of Mrs. | Ricketts’ mother, Mrs. Ralph Carr. | For the shower, Mrs. Ricketts | used pink and white decorations | with a centerpiece of white gladio- li, snapdragons and carnations. The bride-elect’s mother poured. Local guests invited to the af- fair inctuded Joan Cooper, Caro- lyn Dalley, Mrs, Stanley Cum- berworth, Mrs. Roy Linn, Mrs. Vernell Duffy, Mrs Eugene Ca- rey, Miss Pearson, Mrs. Find- | lay Crowe, Mrs, William Tiberg, | dudy Tiberg, Mrs. Cate and Mrs. Carr. Out-of-town guests were Mrs. Corl and Mrs. Richard Carlson, | both of Elwell; Mrs. Louis Fodor | 0f Dearborn; Ann Ross of Belle- | ville; Lois Whyte of Detroit; Mrs. Douglas Treais of Ypsilanti; Mrs. | Thomas M, MacKay, the honoree’s | grandmother, of Royal Oak; and Mrs. Albert Beesley, her aunt, also | of Royal Oak. | Another miscellaneous shower | will be given for Helen at Rotunda Inn Saturday, by Mrs. Max Cly- | mer and Mrs. Leanora O'’Beay. | | | One American child in five | goes to a hospital within a year’s time and the durafipn of the aver- | brush to her sketch-on canvas-in-her newty-*to do~a~ portrait of Women's Army” “Corps age stay Is five “days. | opened studio in Washington. Tenne. ssee Democ rat | the senator conduc 4s The wife of Director Irene Galloway. Trinity- Methodist Church of Keego Harbor was the setting Fri- day evening for the marriage ot| Patricia Anne Rose and Charles T. liength gown was made of Val Hoffman | and fashioned with a mand The bride is the daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. Percy L. Rose of Lake- | ‘side drive. and’ Mr. and Mrs. Stan- | ley Hoffman of Exmoor road are the bridegroom's parents guests. |the skirt A headpiece secured her ve jnylon tulle |pearls. White roses, carnations Flowers and palms decorated ' the altar for the 7:30 ceremony —— EDERAL’ Open Monday Fri. and Sat. til 9 Versatile “Triple Play” styles for summer in f s i .. LACK CASH? _ BRAS Nylon tatteta long 7>°° Triple styling too, in this embroidered nylon taffeta bra with an underwired cup. Special drawstring adjusts perfect- ly for any neckline. Embroidery trim. White. -Sizes 32 to 38. Try it on! line bra Bra-s-lette in nylon taffeta $7 O Versatile Bra-s-lette with a neckline to wear with any style . . . scoop, stra less or square. In wonderfully washab nylon taffeta, with embroidery trim. White. Sizes 32 to 38. See it now! Our corsetiers are | experts with your figure problems! USE PURCHASE COUPONS. IT’S EASY! “PON TIAC decorated with se The bodice of the bride's waltz | lace arin collar with a tiny bow at the neck- | line. The sleeves were three-quar-| net skirt. jter length and nylon tulle formed | il of ed and voor Pair Takes Trip to Northern Michigan performed in the presence of 150 | hyac inths formed the bridal bou- | quet. Nancy Rose only attendant. She wore a bal- lerina length gown fashioned with bolero jacket. She wore pearl jewelry and a nylon net headpiece and carried an arrangement of blue and white dasies | Joel Englund was best man, and | seating the guests were Jerry Hoff + - | man, brother of the bridegroom, jand James Rose, brother of the bride. ; A reception was held following | the ceremony in the church par- | lors. The bride's mother wore a | rose crepe dress with navy ac- cessories and a corsage of pink | | The ‘hedegrocen’s mother chose an avacado dress of imported silk shantung. Her accessories | white and she | white roses. Kenneth Young was soloist, |companied by Mrs. Young. | When the couple left for a wed- trip to northern Michigan the bride was wearing a gray wool _| suit_ with Davy _ and yellow_ acces- | ding tories. Sheriff Addresses ‘Anna Gordén Unit Oakland County Sheriff Frank Irons addressed the Anna Gordon service at United Presbyterian Church. those atending, sentatives from four WCTU groups. She was accompanied by Mrs. recent gathering were led by Mrs. | Theo Allebauch. was her sister's | lace bodice and a tiered nylon | The gown was topped by a lace | were | wore a corsage of | . ac- Mrs. Fred Lempke sang for including repre- George Killen. Devotions for the Cotton Is Very Posh flower print in wide stripes. Beauty Clinic by Edythe McCulloch LIPS navy little experimentin rules in mind wi an expert. Generally the natural shape of your lips is the best line to follow unless your lips are bad- misshapen. ly Apply your lipstick directly from the stick. With practice it corners of the upper lip and using one swift stroke toward the middle. Now press lips to- | ange this gives proper out- for lower lip. If thin lips are your fault, carry the lipstick over the line a trifle. Do not accentuate the Agar dl 8 bow, that went out with the IT girl. Phone Edythe McCulloch Beauty Shop. FE 2-7431 608 Pontiac Bank Bidg. PERMANENTS The basis for every hair style ... hold it in shape, easier, longer. Short Curl Permanents $450 6” No Appointment Necessary IMPERIAL lecarc Salon 20 E. Pike St. FE 4-2878 | - | | | LANOLIN PLUS Liquid LANOLIN PLUS for The How LANOLIN PLUS Nerd Woter Shompoe LANOLIN PLUS Hond Lotion LANOLIN PLUS Liquid Cleenser There Is _ One Genuine _It stops dry skin overnight and continued use _ ends your dry skin worries for al] time. $1 plus tax, wherever cosmetics are sold. LANOLIN PLUS Cleensing Creom For Dry Skin LANOLIN PLUS Superfatied Soap |3 cattes in box) LANOLIN PLUS Al! Over Body Lotion LAMOLIN PLUS Sunten Lotion LANOLIN PLUS “Sudden Dete”* “ LANOLIN PLUS Seby Ov LANOLIN PLUS Liquid Moke-Up LANOLIN PLUS Lipstick a. a SILVER ARBOR We have a complete se- lection of China, Glass- ware, Pottery, Lam Planters and GIFT ITEMS. 5281 Dixie Hwy. Bavarian China d-Pc. Place Setting DIXIE POTTERY (Near Waterford) For Your Convenience Open Daily 10 A.M. to 8 P.M. and Sunday Noon to 8 P.M. BARONET Delicate Touches of Silver — on White Truly Beautiful 8.50 OR 3-1894_ _ Start, subsiding later. May wheat —greup—from —Pontiac Board | THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1955, / Grains Decline in Active Trade CHICAGO \—Most grains de- clined on the Board of Trade today although the new crop wheat de-. liveries put up good resistance to the selling pressure. Dealings were quite active at the was under fairly severe pressure for the second straight day. The distant soybean deliveries also be- came weak, dropping more than a cent at one time. Corn and oats suffered minor losses. Wheat near the end of the first hour was unchanged to 1% lower, May $2.10; corn unchanged to %%4 lower, May $1.43'4; oats unchanged to % lower, May 73%; rye \% to % lower, May 99; soybeans \% to 144 lower, May $2.51'%: and lard un- changed to 5 cents a hundred. pounds lower, May $12.40. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, April 217 (AP)—Open today Wheat Rye | i ie #88 ; sf rs z FF i 4 3 : CHICAGO POTA CHICAGO, April 26 Arrivals old stock sales, € 50; Idaho utilities $6.35: Montana Rus- sets unwashed 65.50: Minnesota North Dakota Pontiacs washed and axed $4.25-485; Wisconsin supplies mod- merket firm ; earlet track sales. new : Plerida round reds, spotted, in sacks $425; Cuba round reds 18-6.50. 50-Ib. 100's § DETROIT EGGS DETROIT, April 36 (AP)—Eggs. f. 0 b Detroit, cases included, federal-state grades Whites—Grade A jumbo 48. large 43- 46 weighted average 444% medium 39-41 May 210% May ...... % July 1.95 bet AC OIOR IC 1.01 Sept 195% Sept 103% Dec «-108% Dec 1.06% Cora Soybeans May 143% May 251% July ...... 146 July 241% Bept 143% Sept 2% De 137% Nev - 3.31% Oats Jan meee P| MSY) oo44e 3% Lard July OFM DOIN hice cckcs 1277 | Sept eT cot a 13.65 Dec ........, 69 Oct Wi. cccess 13 Nov... ..eeee 12.75 | Chrysler Official Speaks at Meeting The Detroit Chapter of the Na- tional Asssociation of Cost Ac- countants will meet on Thursday Statler Hotel. James C. Zeder, vice president en- | large 33-4 wtd. avg. 09 | 37-40. medipm 4-38; Browns—Grade A extra large 39-40 | large 36-39 at 6:30 p.m. in the} ballroom of the! wid. ave. 40; gr B large 36-40 wid avg. 38%. Browns—Orede A jumbo 44, large 41, medium 38; grade B large 38; grade C Checks 33-4 wtd . 33%. Commercially graded Whites—Orede A extra large 40. large grade B large 35‘. medium 34-35, grade B weak. Trading dull and sup- plies more than ample Heavier receipts due partly to increased production and decline in hatchery demand. CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO. April 27 (AP) — Butter steady. receipts 1.368.642: wholesale buy- unchanged 93 score AA 86 7% | oo B M5; OC SM, Cc MS receipts 37.570; wholesale Prices unchanged to % lower e whites 70 per cent and over buy ost a6 37: -€99 per cent A's 365. mixed | 36 5 mediums 4: US standards 34: | . checks 315; curregt re-/| gineering, Chrys- ler nomics of Auto- motive Engineer- ing.” Zeder’s working career ZEDER started on the assembly line of the Maxwell Motor Company, which | was later absorbed by Chrysler | Corperation. As a result, he brings 6 “thie” cost ~accotintants varied” automotive -experience of over 20 | years. } Zeder resides on Orchard Ridge, | Bloomfield Hills. Pontiac and Oakland Inductees Leave Leaving this morning for Army processing at Fort Wayne, Detroit, were 15 Pontiac an@®Oakland Coun- ty draftees: Local draft. board officials said the men will probably take their basic training at Fort Knox, Ky., | or at Camp Chaffee, Ark. John Collias, 191 Auburn Ave. | was named leader of a 5man sa while Robert D. Meyer, 2600 Pine | Lake Rd., will head the 10-man|/ contingent from County Board 67. | Besides Collias, inductees from the local board were: Gerald P. Gatten, 446 8 Anderson; Gerrit Hoogenstryd, 04 E Beverly; Lat- tamore Hughes Jr, $33 Harvey, and Lawrence L. Pennington, 111 W. Tenny- son ke Orion; Robert E scadden, La David MN Prayne. Birmingham. Gordon B. Squier, Lake Orion; Richerd L. Wiles, Lake Orion, Terry G. Pisciy, 2790 Sun- detiand, Pontiac. Gien BE Jeans, Oxford: Laurence W. Christoson, 3675 Oskshire Rd Pontiac: Praénklin M. Gage Jr. Lake Orion, and Chester A. Westergard. 6039 Lakeview, Pontiac New Type of Truck Seat Reduces Road Vibration |; DETROIT w — A new type of truck seat, incorporating torsional rubber springs has been developed by a Milwaukee concern. It is said to provide greater freedom from road vibration and shock | than conventional seats. Its manu- | facturer says it is also adaptable to farm tractor and heavy con- struction equipment. If adopted by truck makers it would be an extra- cost item with a retail price of around $100. - Clyde Woman Injured Mrs. Emma W. Ellis, 2, of able to stop in accident. Vascassenno hurt. equipment will be received at the office of the Township Clerk, Water- ford Township, 40° West ron Street, Pon , Oak- land County, Mich May ®@, 1 at w be Publicly different items noted. Two (2) automobiles equipped as fol- wat Make of Car: Genera] Motors, Ford or rysier Year: 1966 Model: 2-door—Standard 8 mesh and/or automatic trans- mission Heavy Duty battery and generator Heavy Duty springs Derestiona! signals eee ae aS tires ) fubber cushions front and rear Deluxe steering wheel The right is reserved ¥ the Town- tee - j lings 38. heavy ducks 22 j}and small lots good te cheice 710-1040 |b fed heifers 18 08-22 60 | ers 1675-1725 mainiy 1700-1725 on »Weekly Output of. Power | per pound fob. Detroit for No. 1 qual- | Market steady on hens Demand just fair and supplies short of full needs for | good colored hens Rough hens generally siow to clear Pryers about steady. Sup- | plies plentiful and @ good range of siseq, available. Demand rather slow. # CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO... April 24 (AP)}—Live poultry firm on bens. etipts in coops 103.710 Ibi; fob 1% lower to 1 higher: -37; light hens 16-17, brotlers or fryers 29- 31 = roosters 13-125; caponettes 42- “0 Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT. April 36 (AP)—H salable | 600. Trade slow, barrows and gilts open- ed 25-60 cts. lower, sows 80 cts. lower; choice 1658 up to 1775 16 25-1700 260 280 300 tbh down 16.38: 14.00: 400-800 Ib. Ib. 12 00-13 08. Cattle salable mented small 300-400 Ib. 13.75- 13 00-1325; 500-600 860. Fresh receipts sug- ated carryover from Mon- day's near-record run: trade siow on al | classes. around steady: cows making up about 35 per cent receipts: few to | | chetee 881-1235 Ib fed steers and yeer- | oO | tings 20 00-2480; odd head 25.50: utility | Doug Aire head and commercial 1400-1950. odd utility end commercial 13 00-1860 utility and com- mercial cows 1200-1400, few 1450: can- hers and cutters § 00-1200. shelly can- and commercta! siaughter bulls 13.00- | 1650. eutters down to 11.00. Calves salable 250. Trade slow, about steady; early sales to average choice vealers 1800-2600: wtility and commercia] 1100-1800. culls down to 800: om Monday. a few fancy prime vealers sold at 29 00-30 00 Sheep salable 600. Small carryover froth Mondsy: not done to establish market, good to choice 95-104 Ib. shorn sisughter lambs 18.00 and 19.50 respectively. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO. April 36 (AP)—Salable hogs 12.000; moderately active 25-60 lower*on choice No 1 and 2 grades 100-230 Ib. butchers: these scarce: alt other butch- ers slow mostl? "SO lower: sows 25 lower: most choice 190-230 Ib butch- | choice No 1 and 2 grades under 220 Ib ; a few lots of these 1735-1740; and 26 head choice 104 Ib. at 1750; most 230 270 Ib. 16 00-1675; 280-310 Ib. 15.50-16 00; heavier weights scarce, a few lots up to 340 Ib. down to 1475; sows under 450 lb 1350-14675: @ few choice 335 >. and lighter 15.00-15 25; bulk I> 12.25-13 50 ~~ alae “VO: aie 400. steers and heifers slow, steers weak to mostiy 50 lower than Mondsy’s gen- eral market: heifers weak to 8@ lower; grades 23.00-25.50: load lots mixed good and choice 22.25-22.75; commercial and good grades 16.50-22.00; several loads high choice and prime heifres 24.15-24.50; a load of prime heavy heifers heid above 25.00: most good and choice heif- ers 19.00-23 25; some commercial ‘ers down to 16.00: a few good young fed cows up to 17.00; utility and commer- cial cows 11.75-15.00; bulk canners heavy bulls 13.00-13.50; hotce ers 20.00-26.00; top. 00 spar- utility and commercial vealers if ee i 2 33 oe bh bite Up 17 Per Cent Over ‘54 il #3 i 233 z TE t, an : (yetterday 878 coops. | Cc Mart Irregular in Early Deals Yesterday's stock market was strong with the Associated Press average of 60 stocks up $1.50 at a new record high of $166.80. The push ahead yesterday was powered by earnings reports, and changes in individual stocks today were influenced by operations re- ports. New York Stocks (Late Merning Quetatiens) The Associated Press to 61806 18 30 day futures 2.79%, up 1/32 of a cent; Great Britain 60 day futures 2.78%. up 1/32 of a cent; Great Britain 90 day futures 2.78 23/32, up 1/32 of a cent; Beigium (franc) 199%, unchanged; x » 28% of @ cent, un- ; Germany (western) (Deutsche unchanged; Holland (guild- STOCK AVERAGES NEW YORK, April 27— Compiled by mae ie. at Oreee Penney, F. A. Bantz, J. F. Brown, 5|J. I. H. Herbert, A. W. Hughes, Prev. day ..... 2249 136 2.8 166 Week ago .. 2236 1376 727 1664 Month age ,,.. 218.1 1263 705 188 Year ago ...... 1635 66.6 589 1200 1965 high ,,.... 2249 1376 1728 166. 1985 low ....... 303.1 1149 672 1488 high ...... 2119 1230 683 158.2 1954 low 109 TT IH8 84 1086.0 FOREIGN EXCHANGE NEW YORK, April 77 (AP)—' exchange rates follow (Great Britain in dollars, others in cents): Canadian dollar in New York open market 1 1/1g per cent or 101.06 % U. 8. cents, off 1/32 of a cent. : t Britain (pound) $2.78 31/32, 1/32 of a cent; Great Britain GM Reports Auto Exhaust No Health Peril BUFFALO, N. Y. (INS) — De- creates no more: threat to health than it did in the 1920s. GM research laboratories re- ported that analysis of hundreds of air samples in Detroit and Los parison eral large cities during the 20s. Current monoxide ratings were ruled “far below’’ the level indus- trial hygienists consider a health problem. GM officials credited this to the fact that modern motorcars ex- haust about a half as much monox- ide as their 1920 counterparts. Lodge Calendar Special communication of Roosevelt Lodge No. 510, F. & A. M, 22 State Street, Thursday, April 28, at 7:30 p.m. E. A. de- gree. John R. Parr, W.M. Adv. Special Admiral ...... 264 [nt Tei & Tel.. 27 nar Reduce... ata Isl Crk Coal., 214| Lodge No. 60, F. & A. M., Clarks- Alleg L sti . 47 (Johns Man... 86.6) ton, Thurs., April 28. Family night. Aled Ch ..7, 984 xouse Sb o--: 3 | Potluck 6:30 p. m. Work in PF. C. Allied Gtrs.... $8¢ Kennecott ..107.2 | degree. 8 p. m. Richard Snover, Allis Chal dees Le Kimb Cik..... 48 |W. M aay abe Am ...t1g3 Nresee G8... 381) °° ~~ , hon Airin nx m1 a ee Hi N = B - f aes LOP Giess.... 12.6 se Gren El. ta LD McN&L... 303 ews in orie Am M & Pay 334 Ligg & My.... 663 aS Am Motors... 115 Lookh Aire... #3 Poatiac Police today reported the Am Koo. BE cone @ Cem... 61.4| arrest of Loren L. Smith, 19, of Am Seating. . 331 Lorillard .... 2231/1797 Manse St., last night at Bag- Am Smelt - 669 Mack Tex... 22:3 7 Am 81 re - 32.4 Maren Pieid... 384 id and .— Sts. and charged Am Tel & Tel 1814 artin cee m with illegal possession of al- - M 31 oS ean eed ee el, Anac Cop... 612 Mid Con Pet . 108.4 ae. as Ch 1386| Harry C, Elder of 2285 Bedford Assd Dry G. 294 sorodly ~y 4 Rd. reported to Pontiac Police to- Ten tik. a en eed 38! day the theft of a Mauser Werke oi Magwel : ae etme oe 5-shot automatic, stolen from ry Aveo Mig... 76 Murray Cp 33 | restaurant at 565 S. Saginaw St. Bald Lims.... 183 Net Bise a8 Beech Mut ”.. 38 wie. we ing. ¥ - Bendix Av.... 872 noe ge | $4 ¢ | $258 during a ‘breakin of a room Bei’ Bteel...143 Steel -... 8 ¢) occupied by J. W. Long of 249 Boeing Air. ae NY air Bre 33 Nebraska Ave., last night accord- Bond Strs... 17. Nia M Pw. 333| ing to Pontiac Police ah oes | er ett _] . . a "uy. - 33 Nerot Atria + paid a $75 fine Tuesday after he Budd Ce a Oliver Cp ‘a pleaded guilty to driving under Gales em. '. 137 Qeene Th Ol 1B the influence of liquor before Compe Wy 3. lg 8 Bloomfield Hills Justice Alva J. m Pes |... 304 Phelvs D 53.1 | Richardson. Capital airl |. 31.4 Bhileo Fd Carrier Cp: ie Bee ert” | After innocent te a Cater Free. 148 +4041 driving —under—the—influence of elanese . 1 92 charg ‘uesda Charles — ~ 333 ong 1 ‘33 sneer ¥. of hens tinal eS f m * ’ Ches & 50 Millis 58 See x w tre pileer en 594 | was released on $200 bond pending Chrysier 80 = Proct & OG .. 9717/ examination py 10. Cities sacl 7 — esuas pH ts fall and Clerk e cece If your s Rand... 496 friend needs Climax Mo . 116 Bem feiing . 16. | bail, Ph. PE 5-0424 or MA 5-4031 Coca Cola .. 12323 oe ee — —Adv. ow Ge 133 Rey Tob Bs. “¢| Rummage sale at Christ Church, Con Hale SF Rock spe... 276| Cranbrook, Lone Pine Rd. Bloom- Con Pwptt's 1104 Sefeway St ~e field Hills, Thurs. April 28, 9 a. m. Cont Bak .. 391 3 ag'Bap |. soe | (0.2 p. m. Clothing and household ee ee iy moor tet... ee articles. —Adv. Cont ou 00.4 ane ae si? sale, * Copper Rng . 416 2 Rummage Ipen's, women's, Corn Pa _ hase. Ss children’s clothing and household Crue St 8, “Bnclair OM! goods. Sisterhood of Temple Beth ¥ ° Bocon e Det Bais 31 Bou Pac a se | Jacob, corner Orehard Lake and <. m3 Searte Wo. 8 Exchange St.. Thurs, April 28, 9 Dow Chem .. 481 try ....... @1\/to 7 p. m. Priday, April 29, 9 to Du Pont 187 Sta brand - © 3pm —Adv. Eagle P .. 342 «4Bta OF xs Sel Bast Air L... sed Ou fun.” 1148 Rummage cole ot Old Bus Sts- El Aute L .. 416 8t4 205 tion. April . — Adv. © & Mus tn +1 aonnd 2S == Emer Rad 143 Stew Wer... 231) Rummage sale, Lake Orion Ercell-o” waa Su, Ot. 13) Youth Center, Pri. April 29, 9 to Paird Mor | 261 sein @ Ce... $18/|5; Sat. April 30,9to 12. —Adv. er oa Fee | es fuenes sole, Caan ggg Mi he ~ $45 | shoes, hats and misc. 143 E How- Gen Elec TES 8 oy oe ard. Priday and Thursday, 10 a. m Gen Pds .. 84 : Gen Motors i Trane ag ae Hy to 9 p. m. —Adv Gen maiee . ae Un Carbide .. 3 $ Rummage sale, St. Mary's Unit Gen Tel $1.3 On Pee IT -41 of St. Benedict Church at K. of C. Gen ne «+ SG Dam Aire "| 94 | Building, 295 8. Saginaw St. Pri. Goebel Br .... 41 United Cp .... 66| April 29, 9 to 1. —Adv. Goodrich <... e586 Unit Pruit ... 90.8 . Seen Ries «83 BS Beye so: oe] Remmmere, males Stevens O tNor Ry... 41. Ge = as oat Exchange St..7 p. m., Pri, Apr. 29 Gt West 8... 23 Ug Bteel pf ..1646| ~ —Adv SS ee a vs To -o-ac- 186 y — , -seee an new Friday, April neonday lunch- Hayes Mf 16 Hersh aaa Walgreen oo 3 {| eon, Wilson Avenue Methodist oar Ng bers w ve Eve... 200 corner Gold Hooker El 1 weetg A BR 303 Star Mothers, Chapter 34. Serving oud Her..... 142 Wwestg El ... 761 11:00 to 2:00 Bi Come os SS ws Mot ge Intend Sti... 134 Wise Ei Pw ..¥4/ J C. Penney Retains a Nes el Y ine Marv..... 318 Young saw 31 Directors, All. Officers Int Paper.... 964 Zeuith Rad ..111 J. C. Penney Co. stockholders, Int Sllver.... 68.4 Int Bus Mach 435 at their meeting April 20, reelected 10 members to the com- pany’s board of directors. Named to the board were: J. C. L. W. Hyer, G. E. Mack, E. A. $| Ross, H. H. Schwamb, and H. F. Torrey. W. M. Batten was elected to replace F. W. Binzen, who re- tired. , At a meeting of the directors, following that of the stockholders, company officers were re-elected as follows: J. C. Penney, chair- man of the board; A. W. Hughes, president; G. E. Mack, executive vice president and treasurre, and F. A. Bantz, vice president and merchandise manager. a > after decimal ts are hths Pigures poin — Baldwin Rubber* ... 170 «6180 x SS Products* . 38 a ~~ | caecnae 33 33 Midwest ee- 60 iz) Rudy Mfg* . eceee 33) 0CO344 Wa Screw oe 13 14 sale: bid and asked. ‘Insure Crawford - Dawe-Grove Insurance of All Kinds 716 Pontiac Stete Bank Bidg. With..... Ph. FE 2-8357 communication Cedar | _ | Seasonally adjusted level of 15 bil- Steel Output Nears | dustry may set a new production ‘| against a deadly combination; | strong current demand, consumer —adv. | Mercury Division Sets Business Nears Peak Set in ‘53 Larger «Firms Regain Losses of ‘54, While Small Ones Lag WASHINGTON, Apri? 26 —Bus- iness almost, but not quite, climbed back to its 1953 peak dur- ing the first quarter of this year, the Commerce Department report- ed today. The department’s monthly anal- ysis of the business situation said very large businesses—worth SO million dollars or more — had mostly regained all ground lost during the 1953-4 business down- turn, while sales of smaller firms were lagging somewhat. . . * But, the study added, a revived flow of new orders to small and big businesses alike indicates that broader recovery is in the offing. A big increase since last sum- mer in the public’s spending mon- ey, resulting from higher wages, longer hours of work in factories, more employment, and tax cuts, was the basic cause of the upturn since last fall, the department said. * ¢ * The public confidently used its increased disposable income — up 9 per cent since last summer — in heavier spending. This rising consumer demand, including the home construction boom still in progress and increased spending by state and local governments, offset declining federal spending. Businessmen responded by halt- ing the downswing in their new plant and equipment spending plans, and by reordering new goods instead of liquidating inven- tories. In March, the Commerce Depart- ment said, sales by retail stores continued to advance, reaching a/| lion dollars. That made the first quarter of this year the biggest sales quarter on record. March employment in 48,700,000 nonagricultural jobs was up a quarter of a million from Febru- ary. : However, nonagricultural em- ployment was still 2 per cent low- er than in the March, 1953, boom period. . Record High Level Two 14-year-o'd Explorer Scouts, both members of Pontiac District units, will attend the 1955 World Jamboree at Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, in August. Dennis Jenks and Larry DeMil- ner, both Eagle Scouts, were chosen from over 700 explorers in the council to represent this area. DeMilner, a 9th grade student at St. Michael’s High School, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin DeMiiner, 3704 Lincolnshire, Lincoln Heights, and a member of Sea Scout Ship 5, sponsored by First Congregational Church. Jenks, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bigelow, 10142 Dwight, is a ninth grade student at Wash- ington Junior High School and a member of Troop 244, sponsored by Grace Lutheran Church. They compiled the highest scores UAW Extends AMC Contract Union Agreement Seen Clearing Way for Fight With GM, Ford DETROIT uw — American Mo- tors Corp. and the CIO United Auto Workers have agreed to ex- tend their present contract to Aug. 12. The agreement was announced yesterday by Edward L. Cushman, American Motors director of public relations, and Leonard Woodcock, director of the UAW's American Motors Council. It -had been re- quested by the union, The agreements, covering wages, pensions, insurance and _ holiday pay, were scheduled to expire June 1 and July 1. ed The union reportedly request: the extension so it could devote most of its energies to negotia- tions with General Motors Corp. and the Ford Motor Co., which began earlier this month, Both GM and Ford were sched- uled to resume talks with UAW bargaining teams foday. _ The UAW filed formal notice yesterday with state and federal mediation services that a ‘‘dis- pute’ exists between the union and General Motors on p contract changes. Union spokesmen described the notice as routine. NEW YORK ® — The steel tn- record this week but it is still losing a struggle to keep pace with | demand, Iron Age, national metal | | working weekly, said today. | Operations this week are esti- | mated at 96 per cent of capacity, | which would be just 8.000 tons un- be the high of 2,324,000 tons 23, 1953. exceed estimated production, and | it would take just a slight nudge | to set a new mark.” They said it was required at least 30 days in advance under Pontiac Explo Plan to Attend - | tour New York City and Montreal, the | Taft-Hartley law before a union in competitive events at Eastern Junior High School, in which 22 finalists took part. Runners-up in the scoring, who will be alternates, included Ed- ward Barnum, Post 35, Farming- ton; Michael Gravelle, Troop 67, 1321 Malcolm; James Rozek, Troop 112, Walled Lake: Richard Trom- | bley, Troop 71, Mount Clemens, and Arthur Kaminski, Troop 89, for China Talks Sen. Smith Endorses Dulles’ Plan to Meet With Red Leaders WASHINGTON «—Sen. H. Alex. ander Smith (R-NJ), a strong | backer of the Chinese Nationalists, | Utica | today endorsed a move for face-to- , |face talks with the Red Chinese Judges for the competition. ' on a possible Formosa area cease- which covered every phase of fire. | Scouting and outdoor knowledge. | smith. a Foreign Relations com- included Ralph Foreman and mitteeman, said he thinks Secre- |Harry Boorn of Pontiac, Ervin tary of State Dulles took the right | Schilke of Rochester, A. G. Barke tack yesterday in announcing the jof Utica and William Barnum of | United States is exploring the pos- | Farmington. sibility of such discussions. | The boys will first attend a pre-| Dulles’ statement was received | jamobree training camp at Gary, | with approval in London and Paris Ind., Aug. 10-13. They will then | official quarters. But at Taipei, a Nationalist spokesman voiced dis- | Canada, and travel by boat on the appointment, saying: “We strongly St. Lawrence River to Quebec and | believe that any contact with the | by car to Ottwa. Reds will be fruitless.” rE t : 4n View, said “I think we should be ae a a ne came aie willing to sit down and talk with the Communist Chinese on the . i scheduled AM§- | uestion of obtaining a straight . | cease-fire.” | Scouts representing some 50 na- | 2 “In any question where proper- ty is involved, the Nationalists must be represented,’”’ he added. “I think this country is_in the tions will be at the jamboree, the first one to be held on the North | American continent. | All expenses for the two boys | - will be paid by the Clinton Valley mood to-gtop the Kiting now. Council, according to Edward Le- | . Smith said he thought Dulles had try to find out if Red China's Break All Records |x i» sx | units, highest volume in industry ‘‘Personally, I think it would be | vehicles. allies through thick and thin.” The total for the January- March quarter consisted of 2,104,- 282 vehicles were built. These in- = |drawn an “important distinction” i: ssaeiinmiinl | between cease-fire and other talks in saying this country intends to Auto, Truck Sales | Premier Chou En-lai was sincere in proposing a two-nation confer- ence to seek relaxation of Far ; DETROIT we — Factory sales; Sen. Bridges (R-NH), Senate of cars and trucks in this year’s GOP Policy Committee chairman, first quarter numbered 2.364.918 | told newsmen: . history. | a great mistake to sit down in any The total included g record. CaMference and ignore the Chinese breaking March output of 894,597 Nationalists who have been our Drop in New C 498 cars, 259,729 trucks and 691 fOp In NEw Lases | coaches. { Di N f d In the same 1954 quarter 1,718,- 0 iseases 0 e A 1 decline i | cluded 1,432,767 cars, 284,485 trucks erneeel ee = ee eee | and 1,030 coaches. | Exports for this year's of communicable diseases was noted in this week's reports issued quarter included 79.179 cars, 44,457 by Dr. John D. roe, health Sruckes end Wi exactions, dx te secede, for Pontiac and Oakland , ' | County for | parable 1954 period overseas ship- | Figures for the week ended ments included 62.212 cars, 43,300 1 aes Saturday, with comparative totals = ” aia for the previous week and the | ete same week one year ago, are as Mercury's New Division | (jiows could legally strike. The current Smashes Previous Marks Ponting te ver iy “9 ee ree. ee Mercury marked its first week | cnicken SOR sei seess bats “" “sy , as a separate Division of Ford Measies. ... 1 15 Talks between the UAW and | Motor Company by breaking all PUT oY - = American Motors on a new con- | previous daily and weekly produc- | Scarlet fever .......... 17 12 ° tract for some 18.000 workers got |tion records, F.C. Reith, vice Mammy gE under way April 13. | president and general manager, | Whooping coun 0 3 1 chalked up in the week of March | The extension provides for holi- | annour ced today. oe Prev Year 7 | day pay for July 4 and continuation} Production of 10.634 Mercurys in| Week Week Ago Iron Age said, “Oftentimes mills | of the cost-of-living formula. An|the week of April 1823 was 579 fiche P™ ccc Soak | adjustment in wage rates may be higher than the previous peak of Pacemeic coos is 2 i made June 1, based on the con — in the week ending Tuberculosis ‘att formes 1 138 sumer’s price index of April 15 pre- | April 2, Reith said. | Whesping cough ... pared by the U. S. Bureau of! It marked—the third-week-this-Rhneumatic fever 0000 1 UT Labor Statistics. year that Mercury output has ex- 8 | gine, with indications the mills will be “on the defensive for most of the year.” It views the industry as “up attempts to rebuild inventories, hedging against a probable rise in steel prices in midyear, and some hedging against steel labor trouble.” “Export demand, already strong. will get stronger, Steel producers are now using so-called defense- reserve facilities to bolster out- put,”’ said the publication. Record 10,634 in Week DETROIT #—Ford Motors’ Mer- cury Division reported yesterday the record output of 10,634 passen- ger cars in the week ended April 23. This compared with the pre vious peak of 10,055 units built in the week ended Apiil 2. Also reported was a new single day’s record output of 1,890 cars on April 20. The previous one day mark was 1,855 cars built Sept. 10, 1953. The agreement stipulates, how- ever, that the annual improvement factor payment will not be made on schedule June 1. In common with all other matters, it will be subject to further negotiations. National Steel Reports on Quarterly Earnings PITTSBURGH — National Steel after all charges, for the quarter ended March 31, 1955, of $11,203,461, equal to $1.52 per share. compares with net earnings in the first quarter of 1954 of $6,420,225, equal to 87 cents per share. Sales in the first quarter of amounted “t6 — $150,307 S01 pared with $130.445,704 in the simi- lar period of 1954. The provision for depreciation, depletion and amortization amounted to $9,197.- 341 compared with $8,297,382, and the provision for federal taxes on income $11,900,000 compared with oie in the first quarter of 194. se The Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor was unveiled Oct. 28, 1886. ube? 00% Get Ready Now for Spring Driving! Tire Co. 25 Pine St. Corporation reports net earnings, | This | com- ; ceeded 10,000 cars. A new daily | high of 1,890 Mercurys was set on Charter Is Presented ‘April 20, compared to the previous New Cub Scout Pack |record of 1,855 set September 10, Cub Pack & 5 by Cre oa | foot School PTA, received its char- ter Tuesday night from Van Briad- wood, Pontiac District scout execu- tive. “Business Notes Robert H. Wilkinson led all rep- | Mrs. Fred Wheeler, PTA presi- resentatives of the Columbus Mu- | dent, presented the charter to Jack }tual Life Insurance Co. in the} Bennett, committee. chairman. United States in volume of busi-| James Mitchell, Nick Smirnovs ness produced during March,!|and Kenneth McClellan received amounting to $206,000. Since Jan. | their bobcat badges, and Pat Glynn 1 he has produced ost half aj and Richard Seelye won wolf million dollars of written and | badges. A gold arrow award was placed business. made to Erhest Humphreys. + BONDIFIED MONEY Free Prescriptions ORDERS SOLD AT ANY TIME Delivery Service DARRELL'S DRUG STORE OAKLAND THEATER BUILDING | April 27, 28, 29, 30 MH Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat. Visit Our New Jewelry Counter for the Lotest in Costume Jewelry. We Are Specialists LL TTT ARLE SE Compere Our Prices for the Lowest — Our Merchendise for the Finest. oe Courtesy & Service Is Our Slogan Open Daily 8:30-10; Friday, Saturday ‘til 11 DARRELL'S DRUGS, Inc. 37-39 S. SAGINAW, CORNER of WATER «In Oakland Theater Building BE 4-2505 FE 5-4521 ‘hie | WAG DW 4 Zo) J i } : Aaa: | SEE TURNER For Top Value Used Cars A-1 Buys "$2 Ford cus. 2 dr. $ 699 53 Pont. Cat’lina.$1299 46 Cadillac 4 dr..$ 199 53 Dodge Cor. 44.$ 999 *$2 Buick Riviera.$ 899 50 Hudson cpe...$ 199 *52 Chev. dix. 2 dr.$ 599 53 Ford Victoria.$1144 *49 Plymouth 2 dr.$ 499 *S3 Nash sedan ..$ 899 ’51 Ford cust. 2 dr.$ 344 52 Chrysler sed..$ 899 ’52 Pont. Cat’lina.$ 999 — *51 Nash 2 dr.....$ 199 ’54 Ford Victoria. $1699 53 Buick Riviera.$1399 "51 Hudson 2 dr..$ 244 *53 Chev. dix. 4 dr.$ 844 ’53 Stude. hardtop.$1099 'S3 Ply. sta. wgn.$ 999 ’47 Willys sta. wg.$ 299 53 Chrysler 2 dr.$1199 ’53 Ford rnch. wg.$1199 "49 DeSoto 4 dr..$ 199 51 Packard 4 dr..$ 744 '48 Kaiser 4 dr...$ 199 *S1 Chrysler 4 dr.$ 644 53 Dodge h’dtop.$109 50 DeSoto 4 dr..$ 444 Ayo Ford 2 dr.....$ 199 53 Ply. club cpe..$ 844 53 Chev. Bel Air.$1399 54 Ford cust. 2dr.$1199 52 Dodge 2 dr...$ 544 54. DeSoto 4 dr..$1444 Cheapies . $99 ’46 Buick 4 dr. .....$99 .$99. °47 Pontiac 2 dr....$99 .$99 49 Studebaker 4 dr.$99 48 Chev, sedan... 48 Nash 4 dr. ... ’47 Plymouth 2 dr.. Convertibles ‘53 Ford convert..$1199 54 Ford convt.... 46 Pontiac convt.$ 144 53 Ford sed. del..$699 53 Chev. stake ...$54 53 GMC 1 t. pick.$599 .2 BIG LOTS 464 S. Woodward, Birmingham 134 Mile at Woodward MIdwest 4-7500 Liberty 9-4000 JOrdan 4-6266 Liberty 9-4001 52 PNmouth 2 dr.$ 599 || “51 Ford 34 t. exp..$299- HAROLD TURNER, FORD - $1799 |) ‘51 Pontiac convt. $ 644 ]! Pick Any One You Can't Go Wrong at 211 S. Saginaw St. Your old car_shoyld more than make the down payment. Over 90 other late models to choose from. 14 Down, 18 Pymts. *31°’ ‘51 Pont, 8-2 dr. Std.... ‘52 Chev. 4 dr......... . ‘51 Pont. 8-2 dr. Hydra.. . $745 0745 9745 ‘51 Dodge 4 dr........... $745 | '52 Chev. 4T. Pkup........ $745 | '51 Merc. 4dr. Overdrive. .$745 4 Down, 18 Pymts. *25°” ‘51 Chev. 2 dr.......... .. ‘51 Ford 2 dr......... — ‘SO Chev. Sta. Wgn....... $595 || ‘92 Stude. V8-4 dr........ $995 ‘51 Pont. Std. 8-2 dr.......$595 ‘50 Olds 88 4 dr....... .. 099 | Down, 15 Pymts. *19” ‘51 Nash4dr...... ‘50 Olds 4 dr.... ‘50 Pont. 4dr. 8..... sewte G ‘49 Pont. Sta. Won........ $395 '50 Ford 8-2 dr........... $395 a Ply. 7: eer ee $395 MATTHEWS HARGREAVES “YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER” 211 S. Saginaw St. FE 4-4546 SEE ONE OF ve | Cactus Petes WHATS IT ||}GONNA\ BE A “Stay at Home” summer because the old bus | 1953 Ford Victoria. One owner. OUR NEW LOT 809 S. Woodward Ave. Good Cars, Fair Prices 1954 Pontiac Chieftain deluxe 2 door sedan. $1595 1951 Studebaker coupe (Commander), heater, overdrive. $495 1950 Mercury convertible. A real good one. 1950 Ford 4 door sedan, 8-cylinder, Radio and heater. 1949 Cadillac coupe. Beautiful 2-tone. right. Priced 1953 Dodge Coronet 4 door sedan V-8. Radio and heater, 1949 Dodge 4 door sedan. One of those good ones. $290 1954 Ford custom 8-cylinder 2 door. heater. $1295 Radio and Radio and heater. Fordomatic. $1275 1952 Ford 2 door. Ready to go. Radio and heater. $795 1954 Ford 8-cylinder. Ranch wagon. heater. Priced to sell quickly. "CY OWENS" 809 S. Woodward Ave. FE 4-7469 Radio and BIG SALE April 22 Through April 27th 1955 Chrysler New Yorker De- luxe fordor. Power Steering, power brakes. Power Flite trans- mission, two tone paint, radio, heater afd white wall tires. Save over $600 at $3450 NEW MODELS 1955 Chrysler Windson Deluxe fordor equipped with everything. Power steering, power brakes, Power Flite transmission, radio heater, directional signals, back up lights and white wall tires. () "54 Chev Bel Air.$1499 —*51 DeSoto 4 dr..$ 544 New and Used Combined 51 Pont. dix. 2dr.$ 499 53 Ford 2dr. ....$ 899 radio and || ‘ 1955 Plymouth Savoy fordor with two tone peint, tinted glass, special chrome trim, heater and windshield washers. $1975 1955 Plymouth Suburban Station Wagon fordor Paim Beach grey, all special chrome trim, radio, beater, 1954 Ford V8. Low mileage one owner. Clean interior, light tan finish. Has every thing you need. $1225 $2495 42 Other Models to Choose From ‘1954 Models 1954 Studebaker Commander Club Coupe Beautiful light blue finish, interior spotiess, ra- dio, heater, white wall tires, directional signals, overdrive transmission and back up lights. $155 windshield washers, air foam cushions, Power Flite transmission and may other accessories. 1954 Cadillac 62 fordor, two tone grey and white. Interior in new condition Equipped with power steering, power brakes, power windows, electronic eye, white wall tires, radio, and heater. Low mileage. $3550 1954 Chrysler New Yorker Deluxe Hardtop. One of the finest used cars on our lot. Power plus beauty; power brakes, power steering, power windows. Power Flite transmission, and the Bew 235 horsepower V8 engine. Finished in a dark metallic blue. Interior done im an attractive two tone combination with leather trim. Radio, heater white wall tires, wonderful features of this truly fine automobile. 1953 Chrysler Windsor. Excellent inside and out. Equipped with radio, heater, power steering. white side walls, directional sig- nals, and back up lights. $1250 $2695 1953 Nodels 1953 Plymouth Club Sedan. Ex- cellent condition throughout. Minimum of accessories but Maximum miles left for you. $810 and tinted glass among some ether 1953 Plymouth Station Wagon Truly a fine automobile. Two tone green with white side wall tires, radio, heater. turn signals aod window washers. $1295 1953 Dodge Hardtop. Nice bright two tone paint combination; red bottom and cream top. White side wall tires and all the special chrome {rim the Coronet model has to offer. V8 engine, Gyro- Torque transmission, large heater and turn signals $1250 1952 and Older Models $775 $875 + . ° % 9 4 . Rad Hy P = " : Trucks. 50 Chev. 4 dr.......... . 395 |] 1951 Lincotn 4 door. Radio and heater. Hydramatic. ||| 1901, pirmoutn cranwreoy Con- 1042 Plymouth Mardtep Beautt. 1042 Pord Custom Ya. Tee. tone ‘49 Lincoln Clb C $395 $495 see tan marsai ssa beck sitciceal cigeaie tad’ beck'cp tinal ‘nguait"Poriek thewees ’51 Ford dump oo $499 50 Chev. De [= pick $299 Inco n pe ses je eens up Lights. lights. out $875 1951 Mercury Club Coupe. This ts a one owner with 29.000 actua] miles. Beautiful black finish and equipped with radio, heater and Merc-O-Matic transmission. _— $915 - AT- KELLER-KOCH Phone Llberty 9-4585 USED-CAR LOT Woodward and 1314 Mile Rd. Open From 9 to 9 BRIGHT MONTH END SPOT| BUICK SALES ARE SOARING So, during OLIVER’S 5th anmiversary big, giant used car sale, we have picked out our best cars and priced them at wholesale prices for our BIG HAT BOYS won't go, or the time of your life with one of | these GOOD USED CARS. FOR YOUR NEXT USED CAR} OUT THEY GO ‘Name Your Own Deal] from the RETAIL STORE *S4 Pontiac Radio. heater and Hydramatic. A sharp one owner beauty. *S4 Ford Customline 2 dr. with radio and heater. Save many dollars. CLEARANCE. 80 CARS TO GO TOP VALUES-TOP TRADES wonderful retail customers. making Oliver Motors, Inc., $995 1953 Chev. 2 dr with radio and heater Low mileage. WE’RE OPEN TILL 9 P.M. This is our way of saying “thank you” for Pontiac’s busiest dealer. $1195 1953 Pont. 4 dr Dix 8 Hydra- matic. 2 tone blue. $1,795 $1,595 54 Pontiac deluxe 8 4 door... ccc. se eee ee S149 Phone FE29101 fer . A good warranty from - pF 106} C ; — _ _____L ] 54 Chevrolet 2 door deluxe, R & H:......-SU4 |]? § $2095 . 1951 Mercury Coupe atk *49 Chevrolet *S1 Pontiac 1 att a {| an established deater. _ ; demonstration -drive;— 53 Olds 88 tudor hydramatic ......eeeeeee- $1399 1954 Pord Country Squire 8 Radio and pags The perfect oe piece cag Arg = pass. Wgn. Ford-O-Matic. 1953 Chevrolet 4 Door Sedan second cas ee nats. $795 ’$3 Cadillac hardtop, sharp .....eseeeseeee- $2495 : '53 Pontiac 8 deluxe 4 door ........eeseee0 $144 $595 a en $495 1954 Chevrolet 4 Door sedan 'S4 Ford 53 Dodge 53 Dodge Coronet tudOr .......ceeeeeeees: $1033 tase Desoto t,t Custom 8e- ment specials 1051 Ford 2. tm Radio and z a ather trim ess. = . eater o rust. 1950 Ch . yensiomatis. very lye mslonay. piscine he “ecquomy. "S3. Ford custom & 4 O00 2 ces a0 0 wm coe n $1111 ve evrolet Bel Air Hardtop $1,695 $945 53 Mercuyytpardtop, Mercomatic .........$1555 | : ’53 Chevrolet deluxe 4 door, clean........46- $ 999 ||] The ’55 Buick 1s really $1595 Get our high appraisals oe ad ; _ 1951 Ford 2 Door Sedan 52 Buick SO Chevrolet '52 Packard deluxe 300 4 door .........00- $ 989 fat ao the fine trades before you deal any- em eed eer ee | | oes eS ae é yn Ow. @ car comfor' an eater. y or eo s. 5 ; | t d 1 x 4 d a s} ec eeeeees 88) | ; e . where. 1950 Ford 2 Door Sedan $1,195 $395 AC MevEREn HEtTENe S 5DO%, =OTE SSA T] ste here | '52Henry J, R & H, whitewalls....¢......- $ 444 | 1950 Hudson 2 Door Sedan 47 Buick 52 Ford '51 Dodge Coronet club coupe.........00+- $ 555 |} Special $245 D hate, and, enter tow cot ar aah mae snd eater. 11 051 Pontiac Chief 8 R & Hosseeesseeeeeee: $ 666 $595 ee own ; 3 o er me in now 1950 Buick 4 Door Sedan $95 $895 ‘51 Pontiac deluxe tudor, hydramatic «+..++. $717 |] est puck ar atio and for our chance inner ‘ant Look 3m ‘sett lca (3) ’51 Chevrolet deluxe P. G.....eeseeees $ 699 || , LT ] . —_ , . ; 1950 Buick Z Door Sedan i: at oe 3 and 2 ar. emt ana | | (90 Olds: 88 deluxe tudor... ceeeeeeeeeaees $ 599 |. $1095 1953 Ford 4D ee oS re 805 | | 0. Olds 88 deluxe fordor ....-... Seeeeeee 8 554 | $795 $2395 OF oor Sedan . '30 Buick super tudor ......-+.eeeeeseecees $ 499 eS eee oe oe Spring. is te hore: "Merry an tas 1953 Ford Victoria 1953 Nash 4 Door Sedan SEE THESE CARS AT LOT NO. 1 150 S. Saginaw St. “CY OWEN'S” - - PE 3-410] FE $-3588 *SO Oldsmobile Radio, heater and Hydramatic. Drive it and you'll buy it Bel Air 2 dr. with radio and heater. Very nice car. $1,095 53 Pontiac Catalina with radio, ay ed and ' Hydramatic. “Goodwill Panel. Here ts fust the thing | for the businessman. $595 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE “Goodwill Used Cars” 15 Cheapies No Money Down BRIGHT SPOT | Jerome Olds-Cadillac CASS at ORCHARD LAKE s $1695 1964 Chev. Bel Air 4 dr. with radio and heater. Clean car. $295 1950 Chev 4 dr. Needs a little engine work. 1952 Nash 2 Door Sedan or ss | | $145 $595 $395 | '53 Chevrolet ‘31 Ford To Choose From || ss SVmNa aaa naming aoe $1595 1954 Pord 2 dr. Customline with Ford-O-Matic, 2 tone — OLIVER BUICK “WHERE PONTIAC BUYS ITS BUICKS” Your FORD Dealer FE 8-0488 FE 8-0488 . oo | 65 MT. CLEMENS ST. FE 3-7117 s FE29101 | 4 210 ORCHARD LAKE AVE, FE2-9101 - t { ; | = / I , ba t : | —_— ae -l FR NT et ae oo as, Ee NTS A Ee MERTEN MN MNO MEESE IS | Mei — a ee P ower eC CUT OC CUCU CCC CCCCCC?C! AF Children Inoculated MANILA @—Hundreds of chil- dren of U.S. military personnel were given the Salk antipolio vac- cine yesterday at Clark Air Force Base. The serum was flown from Alameda Medical Depot, Calif. nil P. M. BICYCLES Schwinn Columbia and English Made Bicycles EASY TERMS! Small Down Payment 6 Months on Balance BICYCLE PARTS and ACCESSORIES whizzer plus tax REBUILT Whizzer MOTOR BIKES 98"... EASY TERMS! Small Do ayment 12 Months on Balance Mon. & Fri. Nights _THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL_ ~ 27. 1955 Cummings Top Comedian Despite ‘Show = st 185° Children’s Wheel Goods of All Kinds We Service What We Sell All Types of HOBBIES and SUPPLIES SCARLETT’S BICYCLE SHOP 20 E. Lawrence St. FE 2-7221 NOW You Too Can Have the Best in BIG SCREEN TY! The All New 1955 SPARTON | 21" Table Model TV wa “169° STEFANSKI Radio & Television Sales and Service FE 2-6967 1157 W. Huron St. WCAR, News, Music WPON, News, Shaniey 7:15—WWJ. R. Mulholland ; Ger Nene - WCAR, Sign Off ++ tf 3 “29 ; Ranger CKLW. Gabriel Heatter WJBK, Gentile 1:45—WJR, EB. R, Murrow WWJ, One Man's Pamily CKLW, Les Paul . Show Stoppers CKIW, True Det 8:15 WWJ. Frank Sinatre WXYZ. Show World 8.30 WJR Pop Concert WWJ, Barrie Craig WXYZ, John Vandereoot CKLW., Sentenced | 8:43-WXYZ. Just Easy 11:15—WJR, CKLW, Sportsmortem WPON, Zee & Orville 11:30—WJR, Mil. Strength WXYZ, News. Top CKLW, Jim Dunbar WPON. Sports THURSDAY MORNING WCAR, Coffee ce WPON, Rise ‘n' Shine 6:45—WXYZ, News 7:00—WJR, Jim Vinall WXYZ, Osgood, Wolf CKLW, Guy Nunn, David 7:15—WJR, Music Hall 7:30—CKLW. Terence O'Dell WCAR, Coffee With Clem WPON, Rise ‘n' Shine $:30—WJR, Music Hall 845—WW), News WCAR, Radio Rev. §:00—WJR, Wm. Sheehan =WIR, it, Melody WXYZ, Girt Marrice WWJ, News, Lazarow % wxY2, " Wolf WCAR, Song Parade . Toby vid CKL 11:00—WJR, Arthur WJBK, Med WWJ. Strike It Rich Es enh PSE CKLW. Florida. USA. ¢:36—WJR, It. “Voice WJBK, News, McLeod WWJ, Bob Maxwell WCAR, News, Sones CKLW, News, -David WPON, News, Party WPON, News WCAR 10:15—WWJ, Joyce Jordan ; t CKLW, WPON, Pontiac Party seen! 10:33 WWJ. Pran Harris WCAR, WXYZ, Whispering Sts. CKLW; Mary Morgan WCAR, Bham. High 1@:45—WJR, Break the Bank WWJ Break Bank ww. ww, Godtrey | WWJ. wwii 11:15—WXYZ, Curtain Calls ww, WPON, Hymn Time 11:30—W JR, Make Up Mind WWJ, Phrase That Pays CKLW, Queen for a Day WPON, Pontiac Party 11:45—WJR, Second Hushand ww. ww CKLW, WWJ, Second Chance WCAR, News, Carousel CLEVELAND . -EVELAND, w—Attorneys for 7, 7:45—WWJ, News ' t:15—WWwJ, Bt : : Energy Commission was involved CKLW, Toby David Peal fan 6023 VA ay Belen emai Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard’ go to WWJ, News 4:30—WJR, Music Hall Speaker Rayburn (D-Tex) called 8:00—WJR, Jack White CKLW, News, Music | WWJ. Widder Brown court today in an attempt to win f | WWJ, Bob Mazwell | WCAR, News WPON, Music Artistry or a VOice vote on passage. WCAR, News WPON, News Sika Seer ‘eo — another trial on-a claim they have, py, pp sponse from the sparsely | ¥ WJ, Woman $ sparsely wae vs - ume IIS —WIR, Farm Roundup CKLW. George Wright | UNCovered new evidence indicating | ponte Gather cone Oarehy! \ CKLW, Austin Grant 5:00—WJR. News he was wrongly convicted of kill-| a r was barely | WCAR, N’Day Caller ww, WPON, Luncheon Musie CKLW. 12:30_WJR, Time Out, Music|} Weow WXYZ, News, Music CKLW, Your Boy Bud WCAR, Harmony Hall wwii, 2:06—WJR. Mrs. Burton Devies os “Researchers,” announces Sid Allen, “have now developed a s J . . rae Gale miracle drug which, when taken under a doctor's supervision, 2:15_WIR. Perry Mason won't make the common cold any worse.” That's earl, brother. Piain Bill 2:38—WJR, Nora Drake WPON. Club T 2:45—WJR, Brighter Day 3:00—WJIR, News WXYZ, Ed. MacKenfie 3:15—WJR, Rosemary 3:30—WJR, Helen Trent WJBK, 3:45—WJR, Gal Sunday 4:00—W WXYZ, Wattriek, McKgnzie | 5:15—W WCAR, Carousel Warm Up Time He merely makes bedrooms the size of closets —Dodge City Globe. | (Copyright 1955) Sam s Attorneys Lorenzo Jones oo Marriage Pays Hymns News, Woman Draws 5 Votes | $10 MillionIssue | 3149 W. Huron PONTIAC’S FIRST TV SERVICE DEALER! “BLAKE RADIO AND TV SERVICE Authorized Factory — for 15 Different Manufacturers FE 4-5791 in House Test F AWSHINGTON «# — A 32 vote Pepper Young Don McLeod in Court Today Trying to Win Second | which has 435 ee ae of Trial for Sheppard ON whom were somewhere else. A New Evidence ‘bill authorizing a new 10-million- | dollar headquarter for the Atomic | Right to Happinese JR, House Party Backstage Wife Eddie Chase , Call FE CGV TV Ar For Factory Authorized Service 4-1515 993 Mt. Clemens ing his pregnant wife Marilyn last | 2udible. July 4. “The vote in the affirmative The state will insist Sheppard's! was three. the negative two, and chief defense counsel William ad the bill = passed, ” Rayburn Corrigan bring in “new facts, | snapped in evident irritation. | Nes, Music JR, Scores, Music Jim Deland WASHINGTON «f breaking ceremonies brary will be held May Will Break Ground for Truman Library library site in Independence, Mo, five blocks from the former presi- — Ground for the 8 on the Washington. Queen Club Member WASHINGTON (INS) — Queen | |eight times, is a great-grandchild lof famed artist James Abbott Mother Elizabeth of Britain has | McNeill Whistler accepted an invitation to an honorary member of the Ameri: | can Newspaper Women's Club of when her Majegty’s acceptance WWJ, Minute Parade 12:48 —WXYZ, Charm Lady the WXYZ, Breakfast Club WPON. Pa 5:30—w tinee | Father than new theories based on| se a old ‘facts,"” Saul S. Danaceau, as- | nad biipnd ya po cord is | | “e sistant Cuyahoga County prose cut made on how individual members | Newswomen Elect dll aduesegedlpreiaiimealilataimaall 1 declared. ote mother’s Day.” Mrs. Blalack, * + w Shortly before, a count of noises | Corrigan cakd he would produce | by the Speaker on another vote | affidvaits from five persons, in-| had recorded 46 mémbers present. cluding Dr. Paul L. Kirk, professor| Rep. Gross (R-Iowa) challenged of criminalistics at the University) Passage of the Atomic Bill on of California. grounds a working majority of the a grandmother . and portrait were presented to the | 4,,. State Poets to Convene FLINT (#—The This was announced tonight ciety of Poets will hold its annual convention here Saturday and Sun- “Dr. Kirk is the main one,”’ | | House — 218 members — was not Corrigan said, referring to the na-| Present. tionally known crime expert who| His challenge was upheld and | flew here Monday trom Berkeley, | final action on the bill was put | Calif eff until Thursday, when maybe | more members will be present. a ee Michigan So- Kirk Was hired to make -an in- shoe These Library, Inc., made his announce- Club by Lady Makins, wife of the | British ambassador, who is an as- | ; Funeral Is Conducted sociate member of the club. The presentation was made at services were held yesterday for Francis S$ tractor and former mayor of this Iosco County Community. a > > ; ° turn ‘the first spadeful of earth , ; , pumen v1 ake TV: May 8 is T 's Tist. birth- the Club’s 23rd anniversary party. CTOR day, Af ceremonies at the : 7 SUED, $ste'n irthday“aaner toring | Launches Campaign 1 the former president will be held nor andm y GENERAL sLaCTRIC se i ieee beanies ot to Ho as ; City. HOLLYWOOD (INS)—A 51-Year- ; The library, for which $1,100,000 | old grandmother is launching a - ces already has been raised by a non- reagatorsne teat. Pe cally : profit corporation, will house Tru- | the nation’s grandmot y- > - 825 West Huron Se. well a his personal library of| Mrs. Theresa Blalack said she " FE 4-2525 book consiting of some 10,000 to|is taking signatures on-a petition AAA 12,000 yolume. i calling upon President Eisenhower * %. t wee ee ae eed Bs poe — Xs % 4 ed Cp ete a MX . Emil Kontz, president of the De- troit Baptist Missionary Society, will preach the baccaluareate ser- mon at Hillsdalé College’ com- mencement exercises June 5. WHITTEMORE W® — Funeral | . Horton, 91, retired con- HILLSDALE (#—The Rev. Mr. ‘ dependent investigation. Yesterday | 7— he said Sheppard was innocent. | * * a | Ward's TV Service TV, Radio, Car Radio FE 2-2976 46 N. Hilldale OPEN EVENINGS He has theorized that Marilyn Sheppard was killed by a left- | handed man, that the bone-deep | and numerous gashes in her skull | were made by a heavy flashlight, that she bit the hand of her assail- SAVE OVER Picture NO MONE 50% Tubes! 1 Year Guarantee — RCA License Y DOWN! 1 YEAR TO PAY ~*~ Efficient Quality Service FIRST HOME CALL ony $90 All Other Calls. Regular Price $3.00 Parts and Additional Labor Extra a INSIDE ANTENNA KITS. . Tr , 7 > —_— 4 T d / T ] 1s 3 4 : —_— _ - = < | oday's Television Programs Writer 2 Hotels Behind I esent Script $ rnucks, etc. | ; , 7 4 % | Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV — Channel 9—CKLW.-TV in Boo -Boo To n | f 3 Sroctaiow jorments —— » for testing ... special | TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS | j:30—(7) Who Said That? Merri- THURSDAY MORNING — mprovemen 2 hand 4 all th | j:00—17) Kukla, Fran and Oltie.| 4" Smith, author of “Meet Mr. | __ ; me DESL WELSOR : - ee mese | Puppet Show. (4) Sonny Eliot sarge al Carisle ene Today. ‘2) Morning} Las VEGAS—This is not only a boom town but a boom-boom! Writers Must Match $ the trained TV techni- Variety guests. (9) Stage. Musical} ~ town Bob’ ° 4 add to the - oe | ob’s Acting Mastery $ 6:15—(7) Dinner Theater. Little variety. (2) I've Got a Secret.) 99-17) Todd Purse Show (4) ‘Did you come out for the boom-boom?" I was asked by one 9 Y > ry business | Rascals im “Nightingales.” (9) Quiz with Garry Moore, host. Romper Room. (2) Garry Moore. | of the atom reporters who was here for the big explosion. | to Get Best Program 3 man's investment in Sea waree News. (4) News> me President's Press Con-| :39—(2) Arthur Godfrey * * * * By WAYNE OLIVER 2 shop and trucking facil- au ‘ (2) 2 3. mm oy j i a ew - I 1) ~) iliams. (2) News. Ken erence. Pres. Se aenet talkeg - (7) | Wixie’s Wonderland | You should write the funny side of the atomic bemb, NEW YORK #—Bob Cummings 9 ines. He will always do at to newsmen. (9) Paragon Play- 4) Homé | he suggested. “It’s getting less menacing all the time. For | is one of television’s ablest come- q best lo serve you es lO =) & yor 6:25—(4) Sports. Bull Flemming. Sep pace Fairbanks Jr., in = , the first time, troops are less than two miles from it. The | dians and one day may have a > oo, ok ci ‘ i (2) TV Weatherman. Dr. Ev- we ae Baad the rien (4) | 10:38—(2) Strike It Rich time may come when it may not be too frightening—just show to match his talents. , re es os Ae eret Phelps wands vente Me ap rid 11:00—(7) Story Studio. 4) Car-| sort of a large-size Leo Durocher.” His —— Sunday night show 2 and reasonable cost. ards ‘reafes lle of s se ; 7 val : ; a . toons. (2) Valiant Lad on N js a Vast improvement ¢ 6: 30— (7) Disneyland. Dav y| guest. (2) Blue ‘Ribbon Hose ms. (2) Valiant Lady * * * * over his first TY veatare in which $ Arr, Crockett Goes to Congress, Bout. Heavyweight bout: Ezzard | 11:15—(2) Love of Life How far away will the reporters be who have ringside seats?” | he played ‘the nole of Mr. Bean- 54 > Ww E > Fess Parker and Buddy Ebson in} Charles vs. John Holman Hit:30—(4) Feather Your Nest. 12), aSked my wife who, for a very good reason, was ‘not playing blossom, a scatter-brained real es- 3 $ BEWAR $ part two of story of early Amer- ‘ its Pest Ofc Awards Search for Tomorrow 7 roulette just then. (She was broke) tate salesman. But that still is $ $ THE SERVICE > ican hero. Davy helps Indians = | “Se ht Jes.” plied ti faint praise 58 > 4 ’ 2 ‘ fa , . Awards given to top newspaper | 4)- (2) Guid : ven or elg mues,” replied the ; ; ; $ 4 BARGAIN! 4 (9) Western Theater. Film. (4) 11:45—(2) Guiding Light The current Cumminys show has 4 é $ Eddie Fisher. Songs. (2) News People of Detroit for the best atom, ooroallee mom aa when : hil ri { 3 | eee s : . oe!) Ct . “ j IMENTS is i WiaPIOUS Ane POPPI III ISTO STS ows Edwards stories of 1954. (9) Chuckwagon THURSDAY AFTERNOON Oh, well, Earl, you can cover it Just qeiontful but the pace is unven 2 Musical and variety, country . as well in New York then,” said my own), { at times it * bad! “St 3 Spoasored by the 6:45—(4) News Caravan. John] style. (4) Mr. District Attorney. | ?*60—(7) 14 O'Clock Comics. (4) Gracie Allen. Oe. ie fees as a 2 | Cameron Swayze. (2) Perry| Mr. D. A. upsets dope peddler’s Maxwell and Hart. (2) Inner Was the most recent episode in 3 OAKLAND COUNTY Como. Songs. aiierane fo dekeaud ee tae, De | EEE * * * * which Cummings as ie b cotiins $ ELECTRONIC j . . commercial photographer and lady > 7:00—(9) Million Dollar Movie. vid Brian stars 12:15—(4) Drama +2) Road of The boom-boom has added much to killer extraordinary, sets out to > ASSOCIATION | Peter Graves, Andrea King in| 9.99 7, iolywod 4 Jalepy Life. the boom in this Times Square-In-The- |help nephew Chuck win his girl $ | “Red Planet Mars.” (4) Request! “Races. Films. 19) National (12:38—(4) Hour of Shows. (2) La- Desert. The lowly get “bumped off” | back trom a college rival 5 fee Bem TY Saeke | Performance. Kathleen Crowley,| News (4) Amos 'n’ i King-| dies Day 7 overcrowded airlines to make way for| The script didn't even wait to § Phil Terry in “Girl Not Wanted.” a v3 - ~ Celebrities. There's an hour delay on telegraph its punches—it sent them A fish rounds up ‘“‘Ready Made |,. 7) Chi Kitche . (2) Arthur Godfrey and His} Family” to earn ‘place in his eI KE CTS long distance. I'm two hotels behind in ahead air mail, special delivery Friends. Jack Carter subs for! 14h uncle's will, (2) I'm The |1:30-(9) Prayer, Sign On. (4) covering the new spots with diagrams attached You knew vacationing Godfrey with Mc] taw. Mystery starring George| Jean McBride. (2) Linkletter’s | The new $8,500,000 Riviera Hotel will | Wat the surprise ending would be , Guire Sisters, Frank Parke = a“ before the premise had been : rT.) Raft | Houseparty. spur the other boys on to greater build-| Bobby Van, .dancer, Steve Gib- } ; ing efforts—and they'll all try to top completed son and his Red Caps, guests |10:15—(9) Yesterday's Newsreela 1 (9) artis Laine Liberace , . eatin | on show dedicated to Spring in| Old films |2:0—47) Stars on Seven. (9) Mary ; cioce & neces an Tee fo HARDWOOD | Manhattan Morgan Show. (4) Ted Mack's Beautiful Vivian Blaine of “Guys instance, tore a telephone direc- . (7 ~ ~ . — ne Ee . ” - tory in half. Uncle Bob consolingly 9:20—(7) Mr. Citizen. Woman ee OBO Cummings Show Matinee. (2) Big Payoff. er cag rn am pig ahoe _— told Chuck it wasn't really a mat- | COCK | Al L overcomes fear of fire to save FP! : ag°. | 2:30—-19) Toby David Show. (4) cms P , ter of muscle but of leverage. But lives of families tra “ comedy. (9) China Smith. Far Geeatest Cin. ©). Bob Crosby ner at his opening—and thereby dis- | Bob ldn't do it himself. He kept e ppe d ‘ m < sre : s - é r , , e e apartment house in ‘Seven Be- restern adventure ae Dan Show. VIVIAN closed some ef her past. trying it later at his studio as I ABLES low Midnight.”” Perry Com eine eee ge a la x * * * Schultzy, h reta watched — =. y ao pee: re-enacted before Judge Watts. /}2:45—(4) Conerning Miss Mar- REG tl Y = ary: Sea Genuine MARLITE finish—stays sents award. (4) My Little Mar-| (9) scortsman's Holiday. Ed-| lowe “Liberace and I started out together with Jay Mills’ orchestra !™patiently. You knew long before |] jike new for years — unharmed gie. Margie tries match-making| ward Brigham Jr., director of . . . {in St. Paul back in ’39,” she said. “Jay has since died. it happened that Schultzy finally |] py alcohol, frut juices, or heet and nearly finds herself part of K Muse : { Natural 3:00—(7) Heartthrob Theater. (9! We were just kids getting about $40 a week | would lose her patience, take the |] up to 300 defrees F. a double wedding. Comedy with ee ee Thursday Matinee. (4) Hawkins . . ; : directory from Cummings and np | : : History at Battle Creek shows neta : The band would hit for a bar at intermissions. Do you re- i : Gale Storm, Charles Farrell, ; Falls. (2) Brighter Day. te ; | it in half herself "7 a Geis fete wildlife in native haunts in ; . member what we used to do Vivian It was the same when Cummings John Hubbard. Gale Robbin “Land of Rushing Waters.” 3:15—(4) First Love. (2) Secret) asked Liberace | persuaded one of his slick chick g ing I | aske¢ : rs - 0 slick ¢ ‘ .8:00—(7) Masquerade Party. Quiz _ ; pol ‘I sure do,” he replied. “Went roller- | girl friends to pretend to make with famous guest hiding behind 11:68—17) Soupy s On Variety }3:30—(4) World of Mr. Sweeney | skating ” play for Chuck’s rival to take him Reg. make-up. (9) Theater Playbill with Soupy Sales. (9) Good | (2) On Your Account |away from Chuck's girl friend. It $19.95 . “Man on the Roof,’ story of| Neighbor Theater. George Zucco * * * * | . . was inevitable she really would young couple caught in confu-| in “Flying Serpent” (4) News '3:45—(4) Modern Romance THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN N.Y fall for the fellow herself and Bob ‘ . ° : | sion of the atomic age. (4) Tele-| Paul Williams. (2) News. Jac! 4:99—(7) Captain Flint. (9) Lét’s : > Usooc _ would end up losing his own girl HARDWOOD vision Theater. Ray Rhodes| LeGoff | Make Music. (4) Pinky Lee. (2) Garry Moore hired the three gag writers ‘friend trying to help Chuck keep ! liege student mistreated Lobe s ( ) ee bin elie Gecaune he is dif-|!0:15—(7) Feature Film. Film aici me oye eee i isn't that the Bob Cummings C FFEE ferent in “A Seacoast in Bo-| TBA. (4) little show. Drama. |4:38—(9) Howdy Doody. (4) Howdy wants Josephine Hull to come out oo show is so bad. It's just that % . , - - : oe : 9 - - a irem rs “Picnic” . . hemia,”’ news production of play -? Miss Fair ‘Weather. Betty) Doody. (2) Welcome ‘Traveler. | tren ™ nal ee ey han “fon oe pr 15 |could be one of the best if the | | ABLES previously presented. (2) The Wright. ' 4:45—(7) Ricky the Clown . ; ene ; ene . th | writers would match Bob's mas- Millionaire. Champion cowboy |). oy Nikiwaich "Thesver. bc pounds to play Benny Goodman in the 'tery of the double take, his tim- ||} The very finest in hardwood— h oe 11:30—(2 ightwat Theater. | 5:e@—(7) Auntie Dee. (9) Justice | ¢ijm bio ing and genuine acting ability enhances any living room taxes ms ee pa a Fabian of Scotland Yard. “Man| (Colt 14) Adventure Series. (2) a R . “ey Square Garden an wins from Headquarters ve ets Shorty * * * * and million dollars in “The Story ———_ Merchant's Cent Swap $ of Luke Fortune” with Hugh |11:30—(4) Tomght. Variety with |5:30—(7) Action Theater. 14) Ten- Venessa Brown limped through her TV . O'Brian. Coleen Gray Steve Allen | nessee Erne show Thursday night—someone dropped Costs Him One Icebox : = ‘ a gun on her foot during rehearsals UTICA, N.Y. W—Fred Schwend- | Reg. 12.95 F ; omenery Prinz appears om “FBI in Peace er went into the appliance busi- -- Lloaays Naalo Frogra%ms - - viwiniu: oo ess in 1919. He celebrated his | 2-TIER HARDWOOD enjoy her beauty. , 36th anniversary yesterday. To publicite, the event, he an-| 0 Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject te change without notice. Kitty Kallen opens at the London | nounced that anyone who brought | C RNER TABLES ——— ——— —— = Canny ae — | Palladium May 9 “ee Eartha Kitt had in a 1919 penny would receive 3% e Regular $ 95 | wae. ee) CKLw, see) WW, case) WCAR, (1190) WXYZ, (7%) = WIBK, (sso WON, seas a big Copa opening, singing all the | cents in trade. $21.95 132 | . ; 7 | Eartha Kitt-enish songs she made | Coin Collector «Arthur Repple ., _— If TONIGHT CKLW. J. Vas K WCAR, News, Rhyth THURSDAY AFTERNOON | pple | , ¢o_wiR. Hainiine WPON. News WJBK. News, T. George boo_wim poms of tite popular. Joe DiMaggio ringsided, ‘rummaged through 40,000 coins|| HASSOCKS 30% OFF | WWJ, News | 10:13—WWJ, Gildersieeve ee ee ee ee | awd fan Mulbcliand without MMonroe .. . “Mr. Reberts” | we found 87§ such pennies. He | Wrox Mewes Caw Seok Seen Se, ee Ce CRLW, Mewes Living drew cheers at a super-secret sneak pos gts cen for a refrigerator. The WPON a te & Orville | 9:30-WJR. Mrs. Paige WJBK. Tom George preview here. . _ thal tac) 6:15—WJIR, Clart CKLW. Good Neighbor | WCAR, News, Lent “I'm glad I didn't say $36." Ww, Bud Lynch 16.30_WJR, White House Rpt wom. Bob cs i | WPON, News, Platter ’ CKLW. Eadie Cha hn 115—WJR, Ma Perkt | = al ™ — - : 5 " r erkine = ‘DB: | WCAR. Sports nmi liiai ai "—cin teas io. WXYZ, Paul Winter Dorothy Dandridge heads for Paris in Kill Right to Work’ Idletime Gerenade | 19:45_WJR, Around World WPON, Goes Calling Ba plad) hemes! COE) June, after her Waldorf stint Th | scree . WWJ, Biars Sing WCAR, Harmony Hall =| eune, al . = asin i re | JEFFERSON CITY W-A move ww ® Malhollané 13:00—WIR. News WAd— WIE, A. Godirey iWin. De tales famous Roseland building on Bway, due = - j te ban the union shop in Missouri | The U d Furni ws foeen pt es WXYZ, My True story CKLW. Eddie Cantor to be torn down, got a six-year repfieve. ROSEMARY |has been killed }+2 by a House ————— WPON. Sports WJBK, News, Gentile Saat ck = Gieeiue TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: An architect has found a way to | committee. | €:45—WJR, Lowell Thomas WPON, News, Sports WCAR, News, Temple 1:45—WJR. Guiding Light make closets as big as bedrooms SSS —— —_— ant, and that the murderer in- To Preach at Hillsdale «Lueyded right-handed. ond-degree murder charge Dec, 21. Under the life prison sen- tence required by such a verdict, Sheppard, 31, would be eligible for parole in 10 years. sexual attack. Sheppard is Sheppartl was convicted on a sec- last ; Mere Cee ce a Famous Make USED TV SETS Only $5 Per Week! HAMPTON TV om W. Berens FE 4-255 OUTSIDE ANTENNA KITS. .......$7.95 Hours: 9 to 9 Daily METROPOLITAN TELEVISION -— 919 Orchard Lake Ave, | 4 —_—_ ee