rf 
sé. THE PONTIAC PRESS “AE VEE 111th YEAR * * x &k & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1954—26 PAGES a CIRENATIONAL NEWS SERVICE 
U. S. to Stockpile Guided Missiles in Germa Governor's Wite Injured |{J N. fo Accept 
22,000 POWs, 
Set Them Free Gen. John Hull Rejects 
India’s Condition, Seeks | 
Civilian Status for Men 
PANMUNJOM (AP) — 
The U. N. Command said 
tonight it will accept from 
the Indians 22,000 unre- 
patriated anti-Communist 
war prisoners—but not on 
India’s condition that they 
remain prisoners. 
Gen. John E. Hull, U.N. 
commander, wrote the In- 
dian Command that as of 
Jan. 23 the U.N. will con- 
= | sider the prisoners “entitled 
“Sj \to their freedom as 
AP Wirephote | Civilians.” 
CUTS RIGHT ARM—Gov. G. Mennen Williams looks worriedly at} Hull's letter was the U.N. an- 
his wife, Nancy, as the ambulance hurries them to a Lansing hos-| swer to India’s decision to turn 
pital after she cut her arm on a broken glass jar in her kitchen Fri- back to their captors all unre-| 
day afternoon. Hospital authorities said tendons and an artery were   
  
     
splay “Car of Two Squadrons j 
| ~ + to Be Equipped | 
~ With Matadors’ This Power to Retaliate = 
May Deter Red Attack, 
Says Dulles : 
WASHINGTON (AP) 
The United States is arm 
* | ing its forces in’ Germany 
| with guided migsiles ¢a-   
  Pontiac Motor to Di 
           
into basic US. strategy de- 
fined by Secretary of State 
Dulles in a New York 
speech Tuesday and af-       severed in her right arm, and the small finger on her right hand poutate’ wut pees sthetng BY ro ee RAS Se eM iad ara: * .- a ehh Ri aren firmed by President Eisen- 
may be permanently impaired. next Wednesday. —_ a — ee * : hower at his news confer- However, Lt. Gen. K. S. Thimay- + a   
  
ind : “DREAM CAR”—Styled as a “man’s car,” this Pontiac Bonneville ence the next day. 
ve. lan chairmen of the Neutral Special will-ge..an display Jan. 21 when GM's Motorama opens in This strategy, Dulles said, is 
Seek Professional Diamond ss-rscsz—2 Manufacturer Sy! Ri ie ctaahs s S|Pleyighass Top jem mee nace mm   
        
  
    
        
  
    
  
          
        
          
           
     
         
    
  
          
    
      
  . . ‘ . inside. In this connection, the decision 
Thieves in $340,000 Theft |x emm-s-- =. |!5 Sent fo Jail Features Model ese e mr <tc The Communists were expect- . ican forces helping defend Western ’ spaputetneains| Charge Man With Murder freaks yremeand og mney |: am ow fap Bee ae. —~F Chicago Man Refuses . . , " Fiberglas Body Is Used | question: 
F ETROIT (AP) Police said today professional dis-| Sei" Sierees dete uns | to Let Government See Of Wife in Hospital Hearing | in speciol Show Car for|” waa tts sea tover smut ; New York, were being sought in a reported $340,000 hold- pa ones aemene , His Payroll Records A Pontiac hospital ward became a court of law yester-| New York Exhibit gp 
up here yesterday. tien alae ee CHICAGO u—A small manufac-| day as a 29-year-old Avon Township man listened to a Lang, low and. flectlocking, os | Draws, Canin BE Ween chin 
“It seems obvious those two men knew exactly what the | Patriated POWs must be liberated | turer, who for two years has re-| justice of the peace read a warrant charging him with | rents its name, Pontiac presents |porters yesterday, He didn't say salesman was carrying and when he would have the  Ropatprpncst = oascca yelper eget aati the U. s te “prong ote the Wednesday night slaying of his wife. as a “car of the future” at the aie jewelry in his room,” said Inspector Carl Falk of the “Ser: tee United Siations ment, began serving an indefinite | About 20 patients, visitors and nurses looked on in |General Motors Motorama for 1954 | (, nany will be with BOL 
—¢ holdup bureau. mand vow to agree to furthes om |iail sentence yesterday for civil) silence as Avon Township Justice Luther C. Green bent the Bonneville Special, a competi | Matador missiles, have bean 
Anthony Seaton presi- | indefinitely prolonged captivity of | nw = ot the | torward to hear Donald G. Warner of 2645 Emmons, de- ho eas peemavtie oat fits ta |e ean ee Bee 
dent Antoville G alleries | 0%. Brismers of war would Fisher, 40, owner mand examination first degree murder charge more Glenn L. Martin 
lo ry Again of negate the very principle of human | Fisher Pen Co., was accompanied Warner was 2 + m= ¢ Utah, site of many a motor car! Co for then. Re 
of New York.and a jewelry | rights for which so many men of | by his wife and some 75 flag-wav- tiec © test trial. * The Air Force did not disch 
for 4th Judge Salceman, | Teported | the) etna ene eM A cerrendereh to toe U. & Marshals] WHOR reat AIMEE STaDDEd |= holdup said he “had a carried his hs bullet wound ow low hood, through the plexigiass | dred may otted yy feeling” he had been fol-| _cos® sulmst set sw wg wowed aide te meee a caney stich eoeees a Sena | SIE eaibes dod Woe Pz, 
Legislative Committee tne since leaving New |-pessta, and te cbvicgsty antitat- '| _ ESOS Fn nas tee Ditaen [Green's office in Rochester. After Ball Game like rear deck, this special show | The Matador is the first offen of Seeks of the Labor Department, said he In a formal statement yester- car looks its swift, maneuverable | sive guided missile to be turned of He said only two Detroit furriers,| Meanwhile President Syngman/ sq opposed the government de- day to First Assistant Oakland) 4), self. ever to = tactical unit of the Study Proposal both old friends knew of his pres- | hes today set an April deadline mand oo custistensd. grounds, |Comty Pyesscvter James G. Her po os see ee. ba It will be on display with the | United States armed forces. 
discussed proposal ence here. He said he had played that it represented an unjustified | trick, Warner tted shoot- ritically Wounded special ef General Motors | Other such missiles with greater 
fourth circuit edge here le ax-|cards with them since his arrival (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) | search and extenre. 2p adr ecegg Rendigg Ley ABE yk Se by and of the other GM Divisions on | speed and wider range are being 
pected to crop up again when Oak-| Monday. and described both as Federal Judge Michael L. Igoe’s | 30ft_ tee Cte, OOS eat ” the floor of the main ballroom in | designed or are undergoing tests. a - Prospective customers lke Holds Conference Tuling of civil contempt in 1862 was |. “Darents home, then drove| DETROIT uA star high school | the Waldert-Astoria, Jan. 21-26 When the Matadors arrive, U. 8 meets Monday. belonged to Harry Winston, a New ‘ r: of Appeals last year, Fisher, who |#>0ut a mile north of Rochester | basketball player wws stabbed in "We are proud to present this | forces in Europe : peck a three 
The board’ tive commit- | York collector i With T Advisers served as his own attorney in the | #24 shot himself. the back and critically wounded | special car, not as an example of | W4Y pane: ‘nb 
phe yew tion ‘ op case, made two unsuccessful at- The bullet is still lodged in his| ter @ basketball game last night|%t the public might expect to SS rae oe ee 
a adios os ae yon ih pieces, Seaton sald. He had dent Eisenhower held a conference | Court review of the case not strong enough to undergo |°Y ® youghs who mobbed 1 xt year, but as an example of |‘¢ bombs, the giant 280 millimeter om pee tens Saag? papa left seven, worth $150,000, in the with top military and foreign ’ surgery at this time, He is under | him and two companions, advanced thinking by Pontiac's | @tomic cannon. and the guided mis- 
But State Rep. Willlam 8.0 oo and 4, Seaton said |laid out plans for making tacti + Dull Skies and Snow pital. Mackenzie High School's team is | helps explain the constant progress | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) 
adrbobriaghe dyer Fin Sam only | he managed to loosen his bd ds | information on atomic The shooting came to the at- in critical condition at Receiving of the automobile industry,” R. M. . 
ee cain lace aieddiioas teaichee sufficiently to Jigele his telephone |available to other tree world na-|Fynactad for Sunday | ‘tis oth police late Thurs Hospital. Jacques Berlin, 17, and| Titchfield, vice president of Gen) Fahy 1 Naadling 
he ettente Oe mast be | 24 attract an operator. A bellboy | tions. y déy-morning after Warner came | 5, Davidson, 17 were both treated |", Motors and general manager . 
chatted by Feb. 32. was sent to investigate. It was also considered possible) tye vy §, Weather Bureau to tho heme. of Me parent, MP1 a nse tnderion, ahewes _— ; : Seaton said he lost three brace-|that the group discussed the Pres-| aicts cloudy skies with occasional| 284 Mrs. Floyd Warner of 123 in commenting on the Bonneville for Registration “If we can’t get a bill submitted | jets clips, two necklaces, |ident’s plan for an international | ow flurries for the Pontiac area| LU™*der. Rochester, and ad- The attack came after Mac- | Special. ox by then the matter will be dead|thece rings anda pim wits reuti|atomie pool to ture the atom te al : mitted the shooting to bis father. | kenzic defeated Central 46-36 in a ee Bonneville The deadline for registering to 
for this year,” he said, “unless value of $340,000. He said they/| the benefit of mankind. Nive of beat Ge 8 eee Oakland County Sheriff's Detec-| closely fought game that was | 5?*cidl indicate its unusual design. | vote in Pontiac's primary election someone opens the statute for | cost $207,000 wholesale. The meeting included Secretary | \. to rise to a high of|tive Mahlon France and Under by one Tt is 48% inches high is only two weeks away, said City 
amendments and we can tack & Seaton told police the men|t State John Foster Dulles, atomic | trom 18 te 22 Sunday sheriff Donald O, Menzies’ rushed| pans pega» Se eg es ng on & 100ineh wheel: | Clerk Ada R. Evans today rider’ on another bill. pushed their way into his room,|energy Chairman Lewis Strauss,| Yesterday, the mercury climbed | to the young couple’s home where era wig a base. The body a Mrs. Evans said unregistered William Nern, supervisors’ legis- | forced him into a bedroom at gun-| Deputy Defense Secretary Roger | from a low of 26 to a high of 35|they found Mrs. Warner’s body. adn dressing ied ia tee a persons wishing to vote in the 
~ ei sint out to the board that Oak. [out taped his mouth end tied) M. Kyes, Undersecretary of State | degrees in the city Later investigation disclosed} "°°" pina: Of unusual Stich om. | March 1 primary must register to point out to the board that Osk-| him to a chair. Walter Bedell Smith and Vice Ad-| At 8 a, m, today the reading| that on the night of the shooting| A crowd of 30 to 40 youths sud-| parent plexiglass canopy in her office in the city hall by land County now has more than| Seaton said he had come to De- miral Arthur C, Davis, director »f| was 28, and at 1 p. m. in down-| Warner was served a bill of com-/denly surrounded them as they| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) | Feb. 1. 
400,000 people — twice the 200,000) troit to visit prospective custom. | the Oifice of Foreign Military Af-|town Pontiac the mercury stood| plaint in a divorce case filed by|headed for Berlin's parked car All Pontiac residents who voted 
dhe de ney Sed wes 4 fairs. at 30 degrees. Mrs, Warner ae Seg OK Remodeling at UM | here at least once in the past four was named to help handle crowded Police began a roundup that con- |year need not register again. ‘i 
court dockets. , tinued until early this morning.| ANN ARBOR (UP)—The univer-| The primary will be followed 
The board of superivisors has de- H Twileve youths were held, four of | sity board of regents has approved | by a general election April_ 5 to 
providing a fourth judge for ‘ — them 16-year-olds who were taken for remodeling the Univer-| decide the seven city commission. almost three years. ox, to the juvenile detention home. | sity of Michigan Union Building | seats and two municipal court 
i — ; Edward Schulz, Mackenzie at a cost of $250,000, judgeships. on 
Seer ells Fortune “I walked out of the school a 4 
for Wrong Person pag SA : = caste Neirns wes Yeu tom iroten tp shen wx wee for Unemployment in State. — Weahceeel, ot Somt tee son Debaahey cae agmes | DETROIT (UP)—Michigan's unem srobabl 
Tos Keeler, Gi -a Grand toward me and leaned his head | is nearing the leveling-off point for the first 
Rapids fortune teller, informed against the building.” 1954, a spokesman for the State Employment i Miss Wellbeloved she wouldmeet Wille auld thet Tebichey bad| Commission sald today. ae : interesting men and live to be 4 been stabed with a knife and an He said another 10,000 workers are expected to be la 
collected $1.50. A broken off in his back, Police| Off between now and Feb. 15, but other factors 
ce OT TTT and | the number of unemployed is reaching its peak. On being taken tn custody, she Thecommissionesti-*——— 
learned that Miss Wellbeloved is a 
policewoman, 
‘The Office’ Is Name 
of Albuquerque Bar 
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. 
    
          
   
      
   
   E Ly i Hy iu 
‘it Bs 
i! 
i it 
i : & 
id a 
z é ; 3   fil "| 
1 : ‘ | 
| andi a 
F | 
water-tight, covered 
charge of $9.36. Wiese GAGS & i PA er ba: Tare “4zaroage, nee ove ie 4 
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1954 i 
  bs % 
i 
6 
i Se eden sea a Se 
NEW COLLECTION SCHEDULE—Shown above 
is the new schedule for collecting garbage and 
rubbish in Birmingham which will start Feb. 1.      
Days of the week in the above division designate 
when residents are to have their rubbish and ‘gar- 
bage ready for collection. Change Feb. 1   
Protests Use 
of Site for Cabs Commissioner Objects 
to Parking Vehicles at 
Southfield and Maple 
BIRMINGHAM — City Commis- 
sioner James Allen brought the 
subject of taxi cabs back before 
the city lawmakers this week, when 
  rs vw 
F 
F 
Bits ga70 i 
Se 
Ewald Schaffer, director of adult 
ies, creative writing, adult and 
children’s drawing, painting, mil- 
linery, mixed chorus, sewing, sil-   MKS, DONALD WARNER 
Service for Mrs. Donald Warner, 
21, of 2645 Emmons, Avon Town- 
. | ship, will be at 10:30 a. m, Monday 
at Pixley Funeral Home, Roches- 
ter. Mrs. Warner was slain Wed- 
nesday and her husband is being 
held on a first degree murder 
charge. Outside sources erroneous- 
ly identified a picture appearing 
in yesterday's Pontiac Press as 
that of Mrs. Warner. 
  
    will also be taken for the garden- 
ing class which starts FEb. 10 
and the self improvement course 
for high school giris. 
  Kenning also reminded residents 
that collections after Feb. 1 will| will speak on “ 
begin at 7:30 am., and not 8 as 
formeriy. Complaints will still be 
handied through the DPW offices. 
7 7 * 
tion this week anJ will receive 
bids Feb, 3, The $205,000 addition 
to the elementary school will in- 
clude four classrooms, a multi- 
purpose room, kitchen, clinic and 
office space. 
* * « 
At a recent meeting the Council 
of Church Women changed the 
title of their organization to the 
United Church Women of Birming- 
ham, conforming with other groups 
in the Detroit area.   
  4 
~ The Weather 
hour 
. gradually to “je weet tonight > and becoming west te southwest 10 te 17 
i miles am heuer Sunday. 
Teday in Pontiac 
Pt temperature preceding § @.m. 
At 8 am: Wind velocity 2 m.p.h. 
t Southwest. 
Sun sets Saturday at 5:26 p.m. 
Sun rises 7:38 a.m. 
Moon sets Sunday at 6:57 a.m 
Moon rises Gunday at 4:05 p.m. & 
12 _aeerereer 2) 
  PP eee cee eee ed ee 
          | identification, and when in doubt, azines. Maximum weight of @ny|call the person who 
container and its contents is 60) check. 
_ A, 
  
A hearing has been scheduled 
by the City Commission Feb. 8 
on the vacation of a 10-foot strip 
between two lots on Willits. Abut- 
ting property owner George S. 
Wiley asked to purchase the strip, 
but the commission decided it 
couldn't sell the land. 
Fellowship of the First Methodist 
church, The Senior Youth Fellow- 
ship will look into ‘‘The Apostles’s sit back and wait until] we are sold 
out.”’ 
“| man later issued a statement modi- 
fying the aging president's warn- 
ing. U. N. Will Release 
22,000 Prisoners (Continued From Page One)* |, 
An official government 
  
month to “settle the time and 
place for a political (peace) con- 
ference.”’ 
“I could settle it in three days,” 
he added, 
“Then the political conference 
should begin right away—give it/| 
90 days, that's 180 days in all. 
After that, something must be i 
done. . 
“Our brothers are begging and 
pleading with us to come and help 
them.” 
Twice previously Rhee has set 
deadlines for the peaceful unifica- 
tion of his country, And while he 
made no threats Saturday, in the 
past he has threatened to order his 
| 18 American-equipped divisions to 
march into Communist-held North 
Korea. 
  
Enrollment Drive for Y 
Will Run Feb. 1-26 
BIRMINGHAM —Arthur Blakes- 
lee, membership chairman, has an- 
Z ii i: 
| 5 
| = 
i 
    ; i 
5 
~ b Commie Probe 
Continues Quiz 
to Ex-Membership 
  the witnesses would be General 
Electric workers. Ten GE em- 
ployes testified yesterday at a 
closed session and McCarthy later 
  
    
  af if { i 
  
i i             F — In 2nd Day in Boston; 
2 Harvard Men Testify | *crety Charles 
  
  
  g§ 
ERE E 2 iL 
i i : pa 
iy 
L- Py E a | 
: 
bE 
iy i 
ee Hi 
  
: 
g : : y 
5 ! ! | . 
Let Us Help You 
Plan Your Landscaping Rubbish Collections 
STANLEY M. BROWN 
A former Southfield 
Justice of the Peace, Stanley M. 
Brown, 34, was a 1952 Republican 
candidate for the 18th congression- 
al district nomination. 
is affiliated with the Pontiac Elks 
Lodge 810, Pontiac Civitans, Down. 
town Republican Club and Eco- 
nomic Club of Detroit. 
  
Detroiter Held in Jail 
Pending Examination 
  
l ifetbiita 
vl Fiuse ee 
| : i   yf 
  
    
GARDEN 
  TOWN & COUNTRY 
8 n 
S12 Highland R4. (M-50) Just East of Airport OR 2-7147 CENTER 
  ©. VAN DUSEN 
Seek State Legislative Post Four Republicans and three Democrats are seeking the Michigan 
Biographical sketches of two of the Republican candidates follow: 
  
  —_— Cranbrook Set 
for Anniversary Cultural Center to Mark 
50th Birthday 
With Programs, Exhibits E 
He 
ay   
  
Armery 
Jen. 20th, 8:30 P. M. 
Tickets New on Sale at 
GRIFF'’S SPORT CENTER 
FE 4-8521 
AL THOMAS HEALTH CLUB 
FE 5-9661 
DOBSKI'S BAR AND GRILL 
FE 3-9780 
Pontioc Armory 
Mr. Buckley, FE 44-4198 
Reservea $1.30 tes 
ay 3 Open Every wea a P.M.           
  
  
                
  
    
    CORRECTION Due to an error in the advertisement of Defiance Inde- 
nog Food Stores published in Thursday's Pontiac 
ress, Birdseye Frozen Mixed V 
10 oz. pkg. for 29c. This shou 
10 Ox. Pkg. es wos priced at 
“19°   
  
for, worth cushion sole. 
  
PARKING 
REAR OF 
    “ 'd ; - 
7 
t V4 “ ‘ P 7 : 
a Se x. a, ee py Tee aap avd »,   SPORTSMEN! If you Fish, Hunt, Ski, Trap, Toboggen 
BUY NOW! SAVE 13 on caps and hets. Styles for every sport! 
BUY NOW! SAVE 12 socks. Mixed wool and nylon 
and long wear. Comfortable 
Sanday 
ap LAYBAUGH S Sports Shop 
  Open 
Phone FE 4-0824 
    ————_—_—   
JANUARY CLEARANCE Coats Separates Sweaters 
OPEN SUNDAY 
2 P.M. to5 P.M. 
Alvin. Exclusive Sportswear for Ladies 
Hurpn at Telegraph 
  _ : 
   
‘Buy Church Organ DUE WEST, S.C, @#—Thousands 
of “Sunday eggs’' combined with 
perseverance to buy an organ for eeeteeeee          
  — 
  
  when the building was erected in| 
1925, Fund-raising in this small | 
community of modest incomes was | 
not easy 
The women donated to the fund} Rev. Ralph C. Claus haa 
Auburn Avenue at Jessie — 
Ist SERVICE 8:15 A.M. © 
2nd Service 11:00 A. M. 
SUNDAY SCHOOL 
  €   
  
  9:45 A. M, * | the eggs their hens laid on Sun-| 
— ———- -- days. In addition they used all the} 
—~ usual money-raising methods, in- | 
ST. MATTHEW'S cluding ice cream suppers and 
LUTHERAN CHURCH quilting bees. Twice their savings | 
were wiped out by bank failures. | 
  (Misseurt Syned) 
WALLED LAKE | But the women persevered and the 
    
  
GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Rev. Otto G. Schultz, Pastor 
Glendale and South Genesee 
SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 A. M. 
WORSHIP 9:30-11 A.M. 
St. John’s Lutheran Church American Lutheran Oonference (Nations! Letheran Ceunetl) 
treet Street at 
Sunday School 
Morning Worship ... Rev. Cart W. Nelsen, B D.. Paster 
Parsenage: Owege Drive 
KIRK IN THE HILLS 1340 West Long Lake Road 
BLOOMFIELD HILLS 
Dr. Haréld C. DeWin 
11 o’clock—Morning Worship   
  
Phene FE ¢-3408 
      
dt, Minister 
Sermon: 
“BEFORE AND AFTER” 
10 o’clock—Adult Bible Class 
11 o’clock—Kirk School 
Come and Worship With Us 
THE EVANGELICAL UNITED 
BRETHREN CHURCHES 
CALVARY || BALDWIN AVE. Paddock et Prospect Baldwin ot Homes 
A. L. Bingemen, Minister Rev. H. E. Ryan, Minister   
  
            
            
   
       
  
    
  
      
La 
St. Trinity ce the Associate Reformed Presby- 
Lutheran Church terian church here, The women of 
Missouri Synod =| the church began an organ fund | Wa   
j 
  REV. VIRGIL RALEY | 
Association to Elect © ©. A. Gerken, Paster MA 4-1575 || hens cooperated on Sundays 
3 8. and Bible Class O60 a. m. {| Twenty-eight years and $17,000) . 
»+ 80:65 &. @. Ti later, the church installed the | ()ff T d 
—m p= | icers [uesday 
® tal SCA menor PTET OM —_- * er The annual election of officers of 
the Oakland County Holiness Assn. | 
} ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH will be held Tuesday at 1:30 at the | 
j (The Church of the Lutheran Hour) + | United Missionary Church on Pros- | 
Joslyn at Fourth ® | pect street 
Welcomes You! 4| The Rev. Virgil Raley, pastor of 
930 A M—@unday School 10:45 A. M.—Morning Service the Ferndale Free Methodist 
George Mahder Pastor Phone FE 5-0404 Church, is the guest speaker for 
Watch “This Is the Life’—@unday, 1:30 P. M—WJBK-TV the afternoon and evening services | 
j a ee ee ee eee ee ee me ee ee ee | which will be held at 2:30 and 
; . . / 72% pm. 
The Rev. Mr. Raley began his 
Christian work in southern Cali- 
fornia in 1940. He came to the 
Ferndale Church three years ago. | 
He also was announcer for the 
Light and Life hour, world-wide 
radio broadcast made by his de- 
nomination for-two years singing 
with the male quartet on the pro- 
gram. He is a graduate of Seattle- | 
Pacific College 
    First 
Assembly of God 
210-216 N. Perry St. 
Rev. Wesley Wibiey, Minister 
  S| 
  Sunday School 9:45 A. M. 
Morning Worship 11 A. M. 
Evangelistic . 7:45 P. M. i their synod presidents to @ con- 
ischeduled for August, THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1954_ 
Seek to Repair 
Lutheran Split Missouri and Wisconsin | 
Synod Leaders Confer 
on Points of Contention | 
MILWAUKEE  — The need, 
to heal a breach that threatens | 
to split two major branches of 
American Lutheranism treme |   
ference table this week, | 
Dr. John W. Behnken of St. Louis, | 
president of the Lutheran Church. | 
Missouri Synod, met with the| 
Rev. Oscar J. Naumann, St. Paul, | 
president of the Evangelical Joint | 
Synod of Wisconsin and other! 
states 
The top level conference was) 
suggested by Dr, Behnken last | 
October in a plea to a spedia) | 
convention of the Wisconsin synod 
That body charged the Mis- 
sourt synod with having caused 
a “break in relations” and dis- 
cussed ending the Lutheran Syn- 
odical Conference, oldest inter- | 
church group in the nation. | 
However, it put off action until 
the 1954 Synodical Conference, | 
after Dr 
Behnken requested a delay in| 
which leaders might seek a solu-| 
tion 
The Wisconsin synod charged | 
in detail that the Missouri synod | 
encouraged ‘“‘religious unionism” | 
in cooperating .with “unorthodox 
church bodies'’ — that is, permit- 
ting joint prayer with persons of 
| different beliefs 
Other criticism by the Wis- 
consin conference involved =the 
Missouri synod’s toleration of 
Bey Scout and military chaplain 
activities, which Wisconsin syn- | 
od opposes. 
Missouri is the larger synod, 
with an announced membership of 
1,900,000 persons. Wisconsin synod | 
claims 314,000. Their synodical con- 
ference, which includes the smaller | 
Slovak and Norwegian synods, | 
represents about one-third of the 
country's Lutherans. 
  
Nazarene Activities | 
Show Good Gains Substantial gains in every phase 
of international work of the Church 
of the Nazarene were reported in 
year-end statistics released today 
  | Luccock, Yale University Divinity 
| School; Paul J. Tillich, Union Theo- | 
| them at U.   —— 
Sunday Sermonette 
GETTING A FRESH START 
There are two ways of getting a fresh start in life. 
One is to go in an entirely new direction; it is to adopt 
different values and standards, to break with old ties, to start 
in a new type of work, to associate with a different set of 
companions; in short, to alter drastically the whole pattern 
of living. 
The other way of getting a fresh start is not by setting out 
in a new direction, but by getting new depth. It is to put into 
more effective practice the values and standards one already 
has; it is to discover mpre satisfaction and fulfilment in the 
work one already does, in the place one already lives, and with 
the companions one already has. In a word, it is to make the 
most of opportunities already at hand. 
Two automobile drivers who want to get to Detroit may 
never arrive—one, because he is on the wrong road, and the 
longer he drives the further he gets from his destination; the 
other, because though he is on the right road, his tires cannot 
get traction on the icy pavement. The one needs to change his 
direction, the other needs to put on skid-chains. 
Similarly, one person. may never get what he wants from 
life because he is traveling on the wrong road, and another 
may be robbed of satisfaction because he isn't making progress 
on the right road. The one needs a new direction, the other a 
new depth     
Pastors to Hold 
State Meeting 15th Annual Conference | 
Scheduled Jan. 18-20) 
at U. of M. 
The 15th annual Pastors Confer- 
ence, sponsored jointly by the 
Michigan Council of Churches and | 
the University of Michigan Exten- | 
sion Service, will be held Jan. 18- 
20 at the University of Michigan. 
Speakers will include Halford E.   
  
  logical Seminary; Antonia UH. | 
Froendt, editorial secretary of the | REV. FORREST ASHCRAFT 
| World Council of Churches, and 
Edward Stasheff, associate profes» Ohio Pastor to Conduct 
sor of speech at U. of M. 1 h . 
x, |Church of God Services 
Thompson, executive director of Starting Monday at 7:30 p. m. 
stewardship and benevolence of the Rev 
the National Council of Churches, | Springfield, Ohio will conduct evan- 
and James B. Edmonson, dean | gelistic 
emeritus of the school of educa- 
of M. 
In addition to the lectures, five Fis: Bivd and the pastor is 
seminars will be held on church the Rey. Grover C. Johnson 
management, and pastoral prob. | 
lems 
The pestoral conference is pre- 
ceded by the annual meeting of 
the board of directors of the Michi- 
gan Council. 
Expected to attend from the Pon- 
tiac Pastor's Assn. and the church clude Jan. 31 
  
CHICAGO — Ten churches in   CAPT. VERNON VIE 
  Speaker Slated 
for Men's Club Local Salvation Army 
Leader Will Address 
New Organization 
Guest speaker for the Christian 
| Men's Club Monday noon at 12:05 
}p.m. in parlor E and Fat Hotel 
| Waldron will be Captain Vernon 
| Vie of the local Salvation Army. 
/by Dr. S. T. Ludwig, gereral sec- they are from are the Rev. Carl the fashionable Beverly Hills and 
retary of the denomination, with W. Nelson of St. John Lutheran, | Morgan Park neighborhoods here | 
Dr. William H. Marbach and the participated in the seventh annual | habited island off the coast of 
Rev. Edward D. Auchard of First Pulpit Interchange sponsored by | Korea is being made into a “boys 
Presbyterian, the Rev. Maynard the Ridge Ministers’ Fellowship. | town” for homeless youth by the 
Each minister preached at the Methodist Committee on Relief. Reformed, and the Rev. Duncan D. | church of another denomination. | It Will be a memorial to William | | headquarters in Kansas City, Mo. 
Nearly 30% million, which is a 
per capita giving of $118.33, the 
in the history of the de 
        
  
    
  
    
    
    
  
  
  Oesterle of Bethe] Evangelical and 
  
  
        to Funds for Known as the Lantern Club for 
more than 10 4years, the name 
| was changed recently and a per- 
}manent organization formed. By- 
laws ha've been adopted by the 
| group and a charter membership 
is being established. 
men and pastors 
churches. A definite program of 
outstanding 
planned. 
In former years the Lantern   
  
Forrest Ashcraft from Club was composed of those who 
might care to attend with no def- 
services at First Church mite membership or membership 
of God. The meetings will con- Co™mittments. However, the Chris- | 
tian Men's club will have a mem- 
The church is located at 25 §._ bership and concurrent obligations. 
Officers of the new group are, | q 
Floyd P. Miles, president; Dr. Wal- 
ter Godsell, vice president; A. L. 
secretary and William R 
Chicago Churches rao ‘rssirer 
in Pulpit Interchange Methodists Building Korean ‘Boys Town’ 
Ey Religious News Service 
PUNSAN, Korea speakers is being © 
An unin-   | Church-Missouri Synod when he as- 
| sumes the pastorate of Hope Lue 
| theran Church here next February, 
| ely continue under the new pastor, 
| the Rev. Edgar M. Kirschenmann, 
| who has been serving as Vacancy 
| pastor, states. 
Hope Church maintains a twor 
room parochial school. 
Rev. Mr. Jenking has been pas- 
tor of St. Andrew Lutheran Church, 
Charlotte, N. C, ae 
  
} 
| THE FIRST CHURCH 
OF THE BRETHREN 
47 N. Reselawn 
Rev. LeRey Shafer, Paster 
eo M, 
Merning Message 11:00 A. M. 
Evening Serviee 7:00 
Wed. Prayer Service 7: 
    
  
  
CHURCH OF THE 
GOOD SAMARITAN Town Hall, E. Pike St. 
JUANITA PARRIS, Paster 
Moved to 199 Auburn Ave. 
D. A. V. HALL 
Senday Evening Service 
Mareig Phillips ef 
Speaker 
Stiver Tea Teeedey, Jon. 19th 
Mrs. Eisi¢ Parker, Revel Oak, 
Speaker 
  
First Progressive 
Spiritualist Church 16 Chase Street 
Sunday Service 7:30 P. M.   
Guest Speaker 
Topic: 
“The Doors” 
Mid-Week 
    Wednesday, 7:30 P. M. 
~ = Aer > 
  
      
    
        CHRISTIAN SCI — Sete ee ok mi lB 
Fr 
" “LIFE” 
| Wednesday Bvening Testimonial S| Meeting at 8:40 Clock 
FREE READNC ROOM 
t EAST LAWRENCE 6T. 
Open Weekdays: 11 te & 
Fridays Unt © FP. M. 
First a of Christ       
  |   
  
How Christian Science Heals 
“WHY BE AFRAID?” 
    
    
        Morning Topic: nomination, was reported. < . 
“Our Christian A.M. Monday, 1:45 P. M. During 1953 membership climbed McColl of First Christian. In the evening, a rally for young | Hamilton Shaw, a Methodist sem- | 
“ + Wht 258,000, @ gain of more than 3/_ Others will include the Rev. | oie of the churches was held | inary student, who was killed dur- |CKLW (890kc) Sunday 9:45 AM, 
Heritage Holy Communion , eadhgesnng Fred R. Titfany of Bethany Baptist, | Pere quit’ | tng the Inchon landings while serv. | Sreaing Teste: Dr. W. Wetson Youth Service feet goes. Tine Sapest sean Sate Oe the Rev. J. Allen Parker of New: ot, Tut) Methodist charch, where eas @ unvel aie to Genarel| 
+ Pe Sham, 15S, OS \eme. 117 in samba a ot | man wy oy “7 Donald E-| Coron Gilkey 2 yaar “d ban._| Douginn MacArthur. canes ational | Morris John ethodist, i * . } 
Dr. W. Watson, “Sources of Power” “Visit the Cherct ee pate poe, Sto ont | 6 G ot A ‘ \"The Rev. Fra te omaha mA er Peer A 
of the Old Fashioned Gospel” ‘has 265 missionaries and 1,150 na-| pra a ae ey nec ren {Secretary of the fellowshi p and | Island and the first of a series | I 
Sunday School sone Cees oe Youth Ree: + +f agony — ' tive workers on 25 foreign fields. | 2) Fhany we —— pastor of St. Andrew's Reformed of buildings that eventually will | Ch 
Morning Werhip ..11:000.m, Evening Werhip ... ane —— ee F Ponti ministers , oye | house about 1,000 homeless Ko-| urch 
— CHURCH OF CHRIST are members of the association | iit of the ecumenical movement. | pleted on it. Others are expected f EAST HURON ot PERRY Sesto of 1180 Sesiyn Ave. for Worship BACH LORD'S DAY MORN, 11 a.m, || U9 *xPected to go are the Rev.'7. interchange symbolizes the | to be finished as rapidly as sup- 0 Serviers Each Lord's Day Evening........1:8 P.M. Arvid Anderson of Christ Lutheran, | 2: 1+ of thet exists | plies can be obtained . Thus saith the Lord Stand Yo im the and seu and ask for the “sit ithe Rev. Waldo E. Hunt of st. —- : omons | ime Christ entra et t pate” caere le the goed way, cad walk ye shall find rest Andrew Episcopal, and the Rev. cungregetions various — The Korean government has ar- 
Paul Deems, T175 Elizabeth Lake Read ye 1-ee0g || Walter Teeuwissen Jr. of the | mations. We look forward | Fanged to send to the island boys, United day when religious leaders of other | found on the streets of Seoul, Tae- 458 Central 
Rev. Milien MH. Bank, BD. D., Rev. John W. Mulder, ne — remytrinn. faiths come and share our wor-/ gu and Pusan who are without | 
ship services." families and have no means of || P'n "ste tae’ tte Pe . . M— . 7 5 
WESLEYAN METHODIST (orsec5’%: talamend MTT ee at Bases in 38 Nations | Rockefeller Adds |'    
    
¥ 
    
                 
             
    
  
  10:00 Sun School Rew, C.D. Fries,  § W.Y.P.S. 645 ae 
11.00 Worship Pastor Evangelistic 7:00 || rene recited by Provestan Rome (Divinity School Air Transport Service} CAMBRIDGE. Mass.—John D. 
= Br E Bible Re-Bindi en sh) ere © Sach be len Me Ee ee cee MORNING WORS ON, 10:45 A.-M. xpert e Re-Binding ported. revitalizing Harvard University’s 
Sermon: “I Believe in God” o is th 0 dan meee The gift was announced by Dr. 
Dr. Bank, Preaching Christian Literature Sales 39 Oakland _ || "e new year,” he said. swan Tt gh tegen 
    
  YOUTH 
EVANGELISTIC 
Officer in Charge, 
Captain Vernon Vie 
      
  
First Social Brethren Church 
of Pontiac . 316 Baldwin Ave. 
Sunday School 10:00a.m. Preaching, 11:00a.m. 
Evening Service, 7:30 p.m.; Thurs, Prayer 7:30 p. m. 
Saturday Service, 7:38 p. m. New Pastor, Rev. Cart FE 2-s548       
                  
  
      
  
“THE CONCEIT OF 
PETER” 
Dr. H. H. Savage, Preaching 
This Service Will Be Broedcast 
at 11:00 A.M, Over CKLW 
         
     
     "KENNETH A. HUTCHINSON 
11:00 A. M. MORNING WORSHIP 
“REVEALED BY FIRE” Worship .... 
Pilgrim Y. P.    
          Sunday School .....945 a.m. Youth Service......6:00p.m. TABERNACLE 60 Tilden at W. Huron. 
Preaching 11 A.M. & 7:30 P.M. 
Youth Groups 6:30 P. M. 
Sunday School (all ages) . .. .10:30 a. m, 
E. C. Swanson, Minister 
we 
            
  
87 Lefayette Se. 
10:00. m............Benday Scheal 
11:00 a.m....,....Morning Worship FREE METHODIST Church of Light and Life Hour 
(2 Blocks West of Seers) 
    
Meeting Tuesday, 1:30 and 
7:20 p. m. Rev. Virgil Raley 
of Ferndale, speaker. 
  
  
  
        I]   
  FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Cor. E. Huron and Mt. Clemens at Mill St., Pontiac 
(Oppesite Pest Office) . 
Malcolm K. Burton, Minister 
10:30 A. M.—“THE GENERATION TO COME” 
  
   
       
     
   
          
ow. Se: 
8. eee ee eeee 6:45 p. m. 
Evening Service ............'7:30 p.m, 
“The Little Church with the BIG HEART” Rey Overbaugh, 8. 8. Supt. 
ak The Rev. Mr. Burton, preaching 
    
Evangelistic Hour . .. . 
SERMON 
P.M....... “THE | 
      Midweek Prayer Meeting Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. , 
     PARKDALE Sunday School and Worship. .... .9:45 A. M. Tee ee 
SUBJECTS 
A.M.......“THE CHURCH IN THE WORLD” it ji 
        
        
          
       
       
           
                 
    
         
     
     
    
   
        
   
            
  tee ke. 
  \ 
  
yon a 
‘learance Plan Aid “SHE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1954 
  
   Devote Series 
           
    
      : 
PS 
es 
. 
: 
ee 
eal 
BRE 
Spies 
henge 
tte 
oe 
‘ SEG 
ae 
pee 
bi 
ad 
i 
: 
‘ 
  FEED & SUPPLY CO. 
order is over 55.00 we deliver free. 
An orders after they 
are received. to Textile Use Lapeer Meetings Also 
Discuss New Fabrics; 
Are Open to Public 
  
  rier,” a motion picture on com- 
munity improvement, will be show 
at 8 p. m. tomorrow at Trinity 
Methodist Church. 
          by the Youth Fellow- | legislation to be considered by oy | Howell police department. 
               
  3 Township Body 
{to Bid for Funds Wants Federal Help 
Clearing Sub-Standard 
Units at Oakdale 
ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP—Pians 
to seek federal aid for the clear- 
ance of sub-standard homes in Oak- 
dale Gardens were initiated this 
week by the Royal Oak Township 
Board. 
The township, which now owns 
the housing project, will ask $70,140 
in government funds as the first 
payment on plans and actual con- 
    
ty for this year. 
He said this will be the first farm 
  ah » | Meeting to Discuss 
School Bond Vote TERFORD 
  Auburn Heights MOMS 
Will Meet Monday 
AUBURN HEIGHTS — Mrs. Alta 
Scantland and Mrs. John Fruytier 
will be hostesses when Auburn 
Heights Unit 19, MOMS meet Mon- 
day at 8 p. m. at the American 
Legion Hall. 
An official from the Oakland 
+) 50" of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. 
Plan 3 Lectures 
,|in this area is being planned by 
        
  10 Ibs., 1.10 25 Ibs., 2.50 f candlelight | struction of new homes in the west . ceremony at 7:30/ Eight Mile community. Oakdale 
Sunflower Seed Ib. . . .25¢ * p.m., a reception|Garders is a former governmen 
SALT ‘ — Mi cceseding te Supervisor George we ee ‘ Park Shelton Rock Salt o¥eoe ee 1.55 Hotel. 8. pA = pon eS 
aoe me ooo eee i. division of slum clearance and Flake ee . : urban development ef the U. 8. 
Salt Pellets ........ 2.00 ’ Bouts and Home Finance 
a Ag acy. : 
Plans for the proposed 
DOG FOODS — P . . . are being deuwn up by David § 
Regal Dog Ration 1.9 Club Names Head |‘Stiffening of Farm Prices ney, trey ea Flakes . . .2. i ° ’ are approved the govern 
Grines Dog Meal... 2.85 || pORTONVLE, — me ows Shows Ike Plan Is Right! |e: ry bar seeininis ot tm Pecks Bog Meal ; ee aan pray “Pageants 4 tay wr WASHINGTON (INS) — Senate| legislation would be necessary to CakTownship peying the balance. 
Friskies F Mrs. Earl Lewis. Agriculture Committee Chairman put a flexible support program in ownship obliga 
Rest Clb Dog Manl-2.80 "Others elected were Mrx, Harold | S07 tai aiening farm prices n| ‘tt sce the 394 agriattral | ern ‘is imposible unt the Millers aops Schmidt, president; . w act—which becomes automatical- | sub-standard homes replaced 
me ktue nay 3.40 Weber Ware, secretary; and Mrs.| ence" of the rightness of Presi| ty effective again next danaary declared Horkey. 
Fromm’s Dog Meal . .3.40 — ns also discussed final| Ct Elsenhower’s flexible farm) upen expiration of the present The plans call for replacement of | 
Vitality Power Pak . 2.20 plans for the Monday visit of the| "Aiken said farm prices rose in| Tandatery suppert law—carries construction of single homes, mul. Red Cross Bloodmobile here such provision. tiple dwelli ' " small 
Vitality Body Builder 2.65 to wabe of ho Presents Maw | “SS nia a repertr be, wal| eae eae as scans Kibble ..... 2.90 . with a resultant boost of one-half | push for enactment of a new flexi- | , 
| [Vitality Professional 2.85 ||/Congressional | ot one per cent in the farm index. ble support law embodying the | ——— 
‘ Rowena Kibble .... .2.90 Highlights Ree senator _on on lc coon on eee program Novesta Church Elects 
’ Cousin’s Kibble ..... 2.90 : egvaun seesumentetieas by ta: | ee Officers at Cass City 
, Cousin’s Dog Meal .. .2.65 ||| for This Week tredacing a bill to give the Com- ‘Holly Adds 2 Policemen | cass crry — church and Sun- " P in Kibbled P moedity Credit Corporation an : y School w e 
A Meal 2.80 |) KEEGO HARBOR — “The Bar-| (isc, one and three-fourths bil | tHOULY seca e cu palicemen | at the maul meron af the No- 
° | nem force. They are Robert Prose | Vesta Church of Christ this week. 
of Mil-| Chairman of the board is ED- of Holly and Charles Sharp don Bruce; clerk is Mrs. Audrey 
Horner and treasurer is Mrs. Mack 
Little. 
Sunday School officers include 
Keith Little, superintendent; Fer- 
ris Ware, assistant superintendent; ford. Sharp was formerly with the 
County Calendar   Marybelle Bruce, secretary; Joyce 
Little, assistant secretary,, 
| Joan Atkins, treasurer. Drayten Plains 
Devid Belisle Post 4103, VFW. members 
wi @ social mooting Bester as 
pm their hall in Dray Plains and| the third largest crop total on 
  MISS VIRGINIA J. REXFORD 
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Rex- 
ford of Sashabaw road, Dray- 
ton Plains, announce the engage- 
ment of their daughter, Virginia 
June, to Daniel C. Stough Jr., 
Stough Sr. of Highland Home, 
Ala. 
A March wedding is planned. 
Fruit Growers   
MSC Professor to Talk 
on Color Improvement 
at Meet Here Tuesday 
A series of three meetings cov- 
ering topics of interest to growers 
county extension agent. 
First of the programs will be 
held at 8 p. m. Tuesday in the 
Social Welfare Bidg., 1260 West 
Blvd. when Dr. Donald Hootman 
will speak on “Improving Fruit Organiza- County Office of Civil Defense is 
scheduled to address the group. 
The public is invited. 
rm 
l| BOB'S   
Acting as moderator will be Mrs. 
  Helen Vann, president of the Chicken House 
”  ceneweeintnioe Noon-Day 
Auxiliary to Meet Lunches 
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — —> 
Metropolitan Ladies Auxiliary 62 a Parties, 
will meet Monday at 8 p. m, at) 
the Waterford Township CAT Build. Business Portion 
ing. Mrs. Burton Hilliker and Mrs. | 
Leland Barker will be in charge || 
of refreshments. | 
KF ) Sunday Menu 
Special 
Dinners     
  
         Vv )    
     Complete Dinner 
Roast Turkey 
   HEIDELBERG 1727 &. Telegraph Read      
      
  
  
  Color." 
A Michigan State College staff | 
member, Dr. Hootman will tell 
the latest methods and techniques 
of improving color in fruit. 
In addition, Kar! Bailey, district 
horticultural specialist, will discuss | 
latest methods of fertilizing my 
trees. 
Dates and topics of the other two 
meetings will be announced later, 
Haugard said 
The 1953 harvest gave the U. S 
record. 
  
  
  PROTECT YOUR HOME 
INVESTMENT From 
Fire — Storms — Tornadoes   
        Michigan Fruit and Orchard News   
    
  of the sale. 
4. Before you sign, be sure that the name and address of the firm is 
  These 
printed on the contract. 
5. If promises are made verbally, be sure that they are presented in 
substance in the contract. 
6. Retain a copy of the contract. 
7. When you are satisfied that the job is completed, only then should 
you sign a completion cert 
8. Pay your bill by check or money order made out to firm. Don’t pay 
cash to a salesman unless you get a bonafide receipt bearing the name 
of the company he represents. 
9. Compare price quotations with those of other firms. 
10. Beware of inferences that because a loan is insured by a Government 
agency the agency guarantees material and workmanship. 
BETTER BUSINESS BOARD ‘Ts ificate. 
of the 
   Precautions 
May Help You 
Avoid Fakers! 
1. Deal only with firms whose dependability can be established by 
intelligent inquiry. 
2. Be sure the salesman represents the company he claims to represent, 
3. Don’t sign papers before you understand the terms and conditions gr my mg 2K ER By ve a. = well 
riddles 
go something like this 
man, baker nor 
farmers give 
AGENCY, INC, tons of grain a Our Personalized briefly then gives 
Service on Every Policy body else. hahaa 
504 Pontiac Bank Bldg. seine tacemcdiins araamtinee 
FE 5-8172 — ties. He tests Dan Lazelle Sete te dep 
      
      
   
   
   
       
   
   
     
  PONTIAC CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 
Phone FE 5-6148 TF tt aye F +i? j 
Thu F He   
i ‘t Hh: i s 
i HH     
if g.3   
i ;   
  Fox and Hounds | Woodward at Long Lake Road, Bloomfield Hills 
Phone Birmingham Ml 4-4800 
NOW SERVING 
LUNCHES 
  
  
  
on the Hillcrest farm of the late 
C. A. Smith Sr., near Chester, by 
his son, C. A. Smith of Grand 
Rapids, near the spot on Hillcrest 
farm where HC Larry is buried. | | 
  Its a Treat to Eat 
At 
| Les Hutchinson’s 
| Cafeteria 4541 DIXIE HWY. Gene Shaw, Mgr. 
                
  
  
L 
    
   $514 cu $155 @ 
Valapar Semi-Glone in 
$578 cat 
UNION LAKE FEED & SUPPLY 7215 Cooley Lake Read 
Delivery Service 
EM 3-4812 
      The Best 
The Bes 
a 
        PROOF POSITIVE 
1,000.000.00 In Used Cars Sold in First Yegr of the 
‘AUTOMOBILE SUPER-MARKET 
Volume Sales and Bargain Prices Make 
Phone MY 2-241]     OVER 
         
  ANDERSON, INC. Lake Orion           the Super-Market 
Place to Tfade a Used Car 
t Place'to Buy a Used Car       
              
      
7 Congressmen 
Fight Pay Hike Raise to $20,000 a Year 
for Solons and Judges 
Expected to Pass 
By WILLIAM F, ARBOGAST | 
WASHINGTON «®—Congress ap- 
peared likely today to vote, prob- | 
ably next month, for substantial | 
pay raises for its own members / 
and for federal judges, starting 
next January 
A protest from Congress’ own 
ranks that the pay already may be 
too high seemed to represent only 
@ smal| minority’s view 
But a special commission's rec- | 
ommendation that the legislators’ 
annual gross income be hiked to 
$27,500 may be scaled down to $20,- | 
000 or $22,500; still a sizeable boost 
over the present $15,000.   
| 
House Majority Leader Halleck | 
(R-Ind) predicted that Congress 
would approve a pay raise, al- 
though not necessarily the full 
amount recommended 
Ooutspoken opposition to the | 
raise came from Rep. Burdick | 
(R-ND( and Rep. Hoffman (R-| 
' Mich), but neither seemed optimis- | 
tic about chances for blocking it. | 
Burdick disagreed with the com- | 
mission's finding that congressmen 
are underpaid. } 
“Most of us are overpaid,” he | 
said. ‘Fifty per ‘cent of the mem- 
bers couldn't make back home 
what they're getting here. This isn't 
hard work, We horse around for | 
two months getting started and | 
waste another month finishing up 
and then we take a vacation for 
four or five months.” 
During the six or seven months 
that Congress actually is in session, 
Burdick said, “Many members 
spend little time here, and when 
we're not in session, many of them 
travel around the world on junkets | 
paid for by the taxpayers.” 
Burdick said he wouldn't oppose | 
the boost if there is a roll-call vote, | 
putting members on record public- 
ly, if the raise is made effective 
not before next year, and if the 
same percentage of increase is giv- | 
en to the blind, the aged, the crip- | 
pled and others receiving public | 
assistance. 
“Of course, those conditions wot | 
be met,”’ Burdick said. “The fel- 
lows who vote for this raise won't | 
get it if it is made effective next | 
year, because they won't be back.” 
This is a congressional election 
year—a fact which apparently wor- 
ries some members who favor the 
raise 
Hoffrhan predicted that if Con- 
gress raises its own pay, it will 
encourage other government work- 
ers and employes in private indus- 
try to demand higher wages 
That, he said, would set off ano- 
other round of inflation 
Halleck said in an interview he 
favors a roll-call vote. 
There was no publicly-stated con- 
gressional opposition to raising the 
pay of federal judges, also recom- 
mended by the commission. 
Five Killed in Head-on 
Auto Collision in Texas 
BOWIE, Tex, @—Five persons, 
including four members of one 
family, were killed last night in 
the head-on collision of two auto- 
mobiles. 
    
    
  
| Cellist Reunited 
With Long Lost 
Stradivarius NEW YORK @®—Concert cellist 
Gregor Piatigorsky and an old 
friend were ogether again — re- 
united after a strange combination 
of circumstances that bridged year 
and miles. 
The old friend is a 1712 Stradi- 
varius cello with which he parted 
12 years ago, 
Piatigorsky flew in from Los 
Angeles yesterday to meet his 
mother-in-law, Baroness Germaine 
De Rothschild, who came from Eu- 
rope to restore he valued cello to 
its owner, 
At Idlewild Airport the baroness 
| handed him the instru5S5 t, and the 
giant musician smiled and fingered 
it fondly, 
. 
He had left the cello at the Paris 
home of the baroness during the 
war. I wag looted by the occupyin 
Germans along with other Roths- 
child art treasures 
The art works were recovered, 
but it was not until two months 
ago that the cello was discovered. 
A violin maker in Aachen, Ger- 
many, had gained possession of it. 
The old craftsman studied i, sus- 
picious at the smal] price he had 
been asked to pay for it, He soon 
recognized it as a cello given Pia- 
tigorsky by music lovers in Berlin 
in 1927, 
The German wrote Piatigorsky, 
addressing the letter simply to the 
cellist, United Sta es—without men- 
tioning city or state, Eventually th 
letter reached Piatigorsky, who 
sent photographs and other infor- 
mation to satisfy he violin maker 
that it was, indeed, the missing 
cello, 
Declining to say what he had 
paid for its return, Piatigorsky 
yesterday said the German 
“extremely decent’ about it. 
While chating with newsmen 
about the instrument, Piatigorsky 
mentioned that he was a native of 
Russia and, mindful of the inter- 
national situaiton, commented 
“IT think I had better change my 
name o Pat O'Gorsky.” 
Amvets Post Elects 
New Commander Bemis-Olsen Post 113, Amvets, 
elected Douglas Logan to command was 
the post for 194 at an annual elec- | 
tion this week. 
Also elected to office were 
ert Gilbert, senior vice command- 
er; Charles A. Pote, junior vice 
commander; Mrs. William Bab- 
cock, adjutant; and Virgil Roberts, 
finance officer. 
Installation for Logan, who re- 
places Robert E. Pote as com- 
mander, and other officers, will 
take place later this month. 
A new post home on Oakland 
Avenue is nearing completion and 
  
7 . 
Improving in U. S. NEW YORK @—United Nations 
official Dr. Ralph J. Bunche says 
he has noted improvements in race 
relations within the United States 
in the past few years. 
Appearing last night on a CBS 
The dead: Herman Whitecotton, | television program (Ed Murrow 
40, Bowie nightwatchman; his 
wife, and two of their sons, Joe, 14, | 
and Herman Jr. 9; and J. 0.| Peters, Nocona, Tex., driver of the 
second car. 
A younger Whitecotton boy, 
Thomas, was injured, 
Huron, Michigan, Eire and On- 
tario are all names which derive 
from the American Indians.   
  
Income Tax Service 
Blackwood-Schaefer COMPLETE REAL ESTATE SERVICE 
975 Baldwin. FE 2-4638 
    
  show) Bunche, principal director of 
the U.N. Department of Trustee- 
‘| ship, said numerous froms of dis- 
crimination seem to be disap- 
  
Huge Trucks Collide, 
Kill Two, Injure One ASHLAND, Ohio @® — Two huge 
trucks collided head-on last night, 
the other a hitchhiking sailor — 
and critically injuring a third man. 
. 28, of West 
Hie 
  
  | Rob-      
   
    
  
    
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1954 
DER MARK=S   
.% aS Ok   
                                              | 
                                                                             | 
tsa NATO NATIONS 
om RUSSIAN CONTROLLED ing YUGOSLAVIA i 
pa 4 f ‘ it | 
OTHERS Fewtey EE * a z AP New steatures     
By WARREN BENNETT 
AP Newsfeature Writer 
When the Big Four foreign min- 
isters meet Jan. 25 in Berlin to 
take up again the thorny question 
of peace treaties for Austria and 
Germany, observers will be hop- 
ing for the start, at least, of agree- 
ment on a treaty for Austria but 
see little or no chance of ending 
the stalemate on Germany. 
Reasons for this are implicit in 
the continuing cold war between 
East and West. Measured by the 
scale of power politics, Austria is 
little and inconsequential in the 
affairs of Europe but control of 
Germany is the key to control of 
the continent. 
Russia, these observers be- 
lieve, will insist on partition of 
Germany as long as the East- 
| West duel continues. Uniess, of 
course, the Kremlin can maneu- 
ver it se that all of a 
Germany might become a Red 
| satellite, 
The stand of the United States,   forthright. They insist that re- 
unification of Germany be on the 
basis of nationwide free elections 
as the first step toward agree- 
ment on a peace treaty. 
The West calls this Moscow pro- 
posal the cart before the horse. 
| The reasons for the Kremlin's in- 
| sistance and Allied opposition on 
| this point are obvious. Any really 
free election would sweep the   
‘Communists from power in East! Russia suffered a severe defeat | 
Germany and install an all-Ger- 
}man government hostile to Mos- 
|cow and friendly to the West. 
The Soviet government has united — Big 4 May Agree on Austrian Treaty; 
Hope Dim to Break Berlin Stalemate | interests of Russia in Germany at,a later five-power conference, in- 
|the present time. | cluding Red China. 
The Russians now have absolute| This assessment is based on the 
control over about one third of. the | belief that Russia under Premier 
country. This is a valuable piece | Georg Malenkov is not basically 
of real estate with a hard working | different than it was under Stalin 
population and a well developed |The men in the Kremlin did not 
industry. Each year this satellite | stop being Communists because 
makes a substantial contribution | Stalin died. . 
to the economy of Russia and its| When domination of Europe and 
bloc of little buffer nations. } eventually the world is no longer 
There are other considerations| a Kremlin objective then, these 
besides the economic, To invade | observers say, will be the time to 
West Europe, Russia would have |hope for agreement among the 
to drive across Germany to the Big Four on the question of Gér- 
Lowlands and France. To retaliate, | ™any. 
the western democratic forces 
would have to cross Germany and 
Poland before reaching the Soviet 
border, Moscow knows, too, that 
no one launching a drive into the 
heart of the Soviet Union can do 
it without the active assistance 
of German industry and a large 
German army. 
In this sense it is still true that |   Family Strike | 
Is Settled—Son | 
Will Get Raise ST. LOUIS W—The George V 
Harrison family is back to normal 
today 
the Russians — leaders and peo- | Harrison settled a four-day strike 
| ple alike — fear the Germans a crag = ae ee 
| despl tant hammering | against his venetian blind factory 
- = | yesterday. Here's what he did: 
Fired his wife from employment | shi German and = - p between the |at the factory and declared ane 
should return to her status of 
, long es Moscow can keep housewife and mother of six chil-| 
Germany partitioned — with one | aon and promised his son a raise part wholly under the Commurist | The elder Harrison agreed t 
htumb—it can prevent Germany | ion » contract with the AFL Car- 
penters Union. That will mean a 
    Mackinac Bonds 
Sold Out Fast 
| offered yesterday 
|chairman of the 
| company 
  \ rr . ai he    
      
  Delivery Held Up Until 
State Court Litigation Is 
Settled 
.NEW YORK 
underwriting Straits of Mackinac 
Bridge bonds, said today it may (INS)—A_ spokes- 
| be Monday before an accounting of 
yesterday's sales can be made 
Nearly $80,000,000 four per 
cent, #-year revenue bonds were 
and they moved 
so fast clerks fell behind in noting in 
their subs riptior 
160-member 
the { nion 
group 
issue represents a 
actually underwriting 
Norman 8S. Downey, Union vice 
president, said orders came from | 
all types of institutions and indi 
viduals. He said the issue was 
“all sold out’’ last night. 
Downey said the bonds were of 
fered on a ‘‘When Issued’’ basis 
because of litigation in Michigan 
The legality of the bonds 
before. the courts 
has been challenged 
| Michigan Supreme Court 
Meanwhile. Prentiss M 
bridge authority 
said he hopes construction on the Brown 
five-mile bridge can begin in the 
spring 
It will include the world's second 
longest suspension span 
§2 Million TV Fire 
Injures 23 Persons NEW YORK (INS)—Twenty-three 
persons were injured — five seri-! 
ously — and two million dollars | 
in new television sets destroyed | 
today in a five-alarm fire that} 
swept through a -four-story, block 
long warehouse on the New York 
waterfront 
Twelve firemen and three police- 
men were hurt when an 80-foot} 
high wall collapsed, burying them | 
in debris. Five of the firefighters | 
were rushed to a local hospital 
in serious condition 
An official of the CBS-Columbia 
Co., a subsidiary of the Colum- 
bia Broadcasting System, said the 
blaze destroyed between 3.800 and! 
4.000 TV sets and 8,000 cabinets. 
He estimated the loss would set 
production back 12 
weeks. 
The blaze apparently started 
when a crate which was pushed | 
near a watchmen’s kerosene stove 
ignited and the fire spread rapidly 
through the three-section ware- 
  Causes of Lung Cancer 
| Still Not Determined 
PHOENIX, Ariz. @—More peo- 
substantial raise for George Jr..| pie get lung cancer in New Orieans 
get | and St Louis than in California. and smoking may not definitely | an hour. be a cause recovery of their eastern territory.| ates. jdarrison, received pM : 
size of the state of Indiana off! tory, remarked to Tom Hathaway, | tor of Germany's eastern border and business agent of the union sti 
| Save most of it to Poland in com-| " «1 guess I can't collect my three|" Jy /pensation for a much bigger slice | years’ back pay now.” |of Poland the Soviet Union took} “That is a domestic matter now, | scientifie for itself. | lady,” Hathaway replied ; : ' i that | causing role of cigarettes is must 
| 
in the West German elections | 
when Chancellor Konrad Ade- Arm in 2-Cor Crash nauer’s policies of i . SANTA MONICA, Calif. @—Ac- 
wih the West were overwhelm | tor George Raft is in St. John's | apne. | Hospital for observation after in- | 
These observers believe that! juring his right arm in an auto 
Minister Molotov accident. 
Raft said he was pitched for- 
screen of diplomatic | ward last Saturday when his car 
think his real| was struck from behind by an- 
be to destroy western | Los 
| the 
    
With Michigan’s 
   
Coldest Winter days GEE Forlified FUEL OIL Most 
and nights too inconclusive to accept. 
  
In the middle ages, the 
often had a chair at the head 
the table or on a dais beside 
bed which served as a seat 
authority similar to a throne. | THATCHER, PATTERSON & WERNET Pontiac's Oldest Insurance Agency ¢          
    
  
      Make FOSTER’S Your 
HARDWARE, PAINT TOOL HEADQUARTERS WE FEATURE: SHERWIN-WILLIAMS, 
PONTIAC PAINT and SUPER KEM-TONE 
We Are Open Evenings and Sunday 9 to 2 
Fo y, ter 2», HARDWARE and 
°   
    
  SPORTING 1651 8. Telegraph Rd. 
Our South Saginaw Store Is Opea 
8:30 to 6 — Friday to 9         
  
  
MIMEOGRAPHING PHOTO OFFSET PRINTING — ater eg op | 
FORMS — POSTAL CARDS — LEGAL FORMS — PRICE 
PONTIAC LETTER SHOP 710-712 West Huron Street Phone FE 2-992! 
    
  
  
  
RELAX on Your VACATION 
in Florida this Winter!!! 
BUT... Don’t leave until 
you know you are fully 
covered against 
BURGLARY. 
CALL US ABOUT FULL 
COVERAGE AT LOW COST... 
—pfaorson AGENCY      : 
— 
aa       General Insurance 
4012 E. Pike St. FE 4-3535 
  
    
      
           
         
    
Now... 
Complete Paint Job Material Included 
Infra-Red Ray Baked \¢] —_ — a a                  
           
     
       
   Michigan’s pst stop 13 Mile at Woodward LE 5-1100 
       
  
     
     
              
      
             
                
       
       
   THIS IS 
MISERABLE 
WEATHER But not half bad 
if you use our 
new service... 
DRIVE UP— 
BANK— 
DRIVE AWAY S61 
Bake. 
  
       
VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 
    ahs —_— 4 be 
      vanish when you step into a home 
com heated with better qual- 
ity Gee Fortified Fuel Oil. 
The amazing                
     
     
        
     
     intense heat, burn cleaner and 
longer, me gies you of er 
economy as 1 as a cleaner, 
ose and more comfortable 
     - For Prompt, Courteous 
| = Pheer a 6-818! 
           
          
    
          This service was instituted to serve those COMMERCIAL ‘ 
DEPOSITORS who must of necessity drive to the bank and 4, 
have to cope with a traffic and parking problem. To expedite FI 
the handling of payroll and change requirements, it will be 
necessary that we be informed of such requirements at a 
- FE 4-3591 Extension 2 sufficiently in advance to avoid con- j 
gestion at the curb. q 
; = | Here’s How to Use It k 
Make out your deposit slip and endorse all checks i . Give 
a5 
12 ee A MU RA! og 
         
    
      
        
     
  eS 6 ae bee eit Y a. 4 = ot Of eee ee ~~ 
* ee ee “~ ee Pe seep ae ek bs . 
    THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1954 
Orion Township Hall | 
Breakin Reported |, BFS! peti a Rit, Maki ESE: United States this week will con-| fice of the aughaa 
Thieves forced open a door | sist of 114,882 cars and 24,789 en muvee meees, 
the Orion Township Hall and took | trucks, Ward's Automotive Reports 4 mar 
about $45, yesterday from the su- | said today. 050 N. Hunter Boulevard, 
pervisor's office, according to Oak- The agency compared this with a ee, 16, rag 
land County sheriff's deputies. | revised figure of 118,825 cars and 
Mrs. Marcella Schroder of 225 25,226 trucks built last week. In| INVITATION FOR BID6 
Coats Rad., township treasurer, said . : =| ‘The City of Pontiac, aeting by and 
Pp the comparable 1953 week 110,885 RA AB... tiuing’ Commins   
  
                 
      
Port'+s b..-5 Ph oty   
  money in her desk and the desk | cars and 27,893 trucks were aSS€M-| sion, and hereinafter referred to as the 
| of Supervis Ferris Clark of 515 bled Pontiae Housing Commission, will - re- 
Le@hady Tans. Orion Townshi . . ceive bids for the construction of an 
n Township, was _ ——— ——| Equipment Storage Building; installa- 
jtaken by the thieves who pried | REGISTRATION a to ot tn 6 Vo ay map 4 ae oF ed 
jopen tre o.fice window with the | ial art 1066 eee tne tinieeeanea Building: 
me tool uscd to force open the | Ay bers eo electors of the Cnty | moraliotion of wall agenets Siamese, aed 
. o om Liac chigan . s ling . 
door Notice is hereby given that in con-| the paving of play areas, all at the 
["Datvetives Leo Hazen and Delos | {257 i Stgartigad Ei ‘ek | wil’be tecied wait 88 Pi BT” on Anderson said that they suspect | will ‘upon any day except Sunday or! the 18th day of February, 1064 at 535 
4% r of rt . . nae legal holiday, the day of any regular Branch Street, Pontiac, igan, at 
juveniles of ransacking the offices or special election oF prithary election | which time and place all bids will be 
receive for registration the name of | publicly opened 
|any legal voter in said City of Pontiac) porms of contract documents are om 
' ~ : : r 
't Cocs Without Saying, [not already registered who may Spply| tiie at the office of the Pontise Housing 
to me personally for such registration. | Commission, 535 Branch Gtreet. Copies 
tad s | Notice ts hereby further given that I) btained by depdaitin 00 
cs a Tough Customer will be at the City Hall om Monday with oo . “Pontiac Uh ay —— ated 
Heer ag au ; February 1, 1954 from 8:30 a.m. until 9) for eagh set of documents, Such de- 
I \S um—The customer who | p.m. the last day to receive registrs- | posit will be refunded to each person 
’ n the gl tons and transfer of registrations by|/ 4). returns them in good condition 
‘ e glass out of a juke | , j iea ti 5 0 
| persona! app tion within ten (10) days after bid opening. 
1 a cigarette machine with | Deted Jenvary 14 1080 A Bid Guarantee and Performance 
} 't ADA R. EVANS 
a beor bottle refused to leave even ‘ City Clerk and Payment bond will be required. Not 
aner fire = 6. 18, ‘S4| tess than the minimum salaries and 
tevern owner fired a gun Jon. 3 weges as set forth in the Specifications   must be paid for this work 
  
  
  
    
      
  
      
  
  
  
       
     
  
  
       
      
    
    
  
  
  
    
    
    
  
            
    
           
  
      
  
  
      
  
    
  
    
  
  
      
  
    
              t. ree tt to the floor i ~ a . 7 
, » the owner, annoyed Pg be ergy iy for areht- eeu rot ce chek ae or mi of 
*noched ha + patron in the head rases. will be received vy the Board. of fies. waive any informalities in the bid- 
F with a club Education, Scheo istrict No rac- 
- ne 3 ste 3 s a ae } > < No bid shall be withd f od 
nographic details. ; ee 4 Sgt bar ahaa The customer left in a huff and 7 Riconafiold Bile, oity of piocm- of thirty (20) @ays Subscquent lo the 
; The Reciprocal Support Act, now - : « 4.4 i . _ | Paid Hills. Bloomfield Hills, Michigan | openin; of bids 
in effect in 4 states, provides a School buses account for about the Wine pry win oe ae Deted NTiAG BOUSINO. COMMISSION 
. means for persons eligible for sup- 7 per cent of annual U. S, bus | West, Maple Road. Bloom wadnns, Fer ave Director 
: 2.2 echt i . 
} port —— — proceed- output. Plans and Specifications will be avait Jan. 15, 16, "84 
ings agai a inquent person 
responsible for those ™ i 
he resides in another — " | In Memoriam 2 ___Help Wanted Male 6 
INDEX | _ AITICTIAT Gat BC 
In describing a sample case LOVING eOY essed UNUSUAL SALES h s T. Young who passed ain wa : 
* ga explained that rye TO calls “sad memesion” of a dear Po OPPORTUNITY 
‘ County woman separa or. son gone to rest and the ones r well quail Fe man, to 
: a ae ee . -oPcic ~ e represent IBM me equipment 
i divereed trem bet hesband could + ‘ ! | CLASSIFICATIONS — | ee REA Sh cos tte atiy | SGC in Rogues tet ores 
| | missed y om and D roth- ° 
s Knowledge of electrical 
; here charging him with non-sup- T k ( B | d C | d ers. Mr. and Mrs. Edmund | Seeenal” This peek 
4 Dionne b 
3 port. The warrant would be for- MAR KE | S an Ompany ecom es 0 ge a en ar ANNOUNCEMENTS IN LOVING MEMORY OF PRI- “¥ ott sett cette won “ 
: warded to the out-state jurisdic- e ; vate Huge Bickerstaff who was Intervie Monday January 18, 
Ld 8s Card of Thanks .....-+-.s-se0% . I . 
ional court where the man re Produce Rapidly Growing Industry so"siersnes| REE | Ra og | ReS Ighekade” a oer 
sided and he would be given a le Temple, 22 State, Monday eve- | Puneral Directors ...... oT 4 Whelever eles oe te do. we * : 
hearing there on his obligation. DETROIT EGGS (Editor's note: This ts another in {other companies from steel sup- ning, Jan. 18th. 8 P. M. Refresh- Cemetery Lots eeeeec ces . shall never fall to think of you International Business 
@ series of articles on various busi- — . i ments. Svea Pfahlert t 7 Sadly Missed by, Family H ¥ 
DETROIT (AP)+The_ following prices ness establishments in the Pontiac plied by us,” King said. ‘We . » Secretary. Machine Corp. 
The Oakland County Courts per dozen were paid To.b. Detroit by| area) lh ventuall | mertorM. NT iN LOVING MEMORY OF EARL 1008 W. Thiré Avence 
would then issue an order requiring | pest secstvers (canes inemaeee) per ones freee ioe 4 to have all the| ° . = nem ~~. passed away Jan Funt, Michigan 
2 ots oO eral-state gr ay: > > » a . ~ancerns | . —_—— , —_ 
the man to pay a certain amount | Writes, grade A jumbo, 58; large. 33. By ROBERT F. MAHER | ror some - “id Sno COHEEEDS News in Brief melp Wonted Pomale w.sccuee : et = i ng on 
for support of his family. | weighted avereen OO grade “4-| Since it was founded seven years | Th a “le } Help Wanted “tt os And day by day I miss him more, Islan Ru. Milford Rt, No. 8, 
. This action saves the county a/ jumbo. 86: large, 60-81, grade C, large, 880 Pontiac Tank Co., Inc., has’, ” Rape gees b apne fad Fire caused an estimated $25| Insiructionted Mais. =° Sedty wioned’ bp hie ee “Bee eee a oa uw 
great amount of time and money, | 42, Checks, 41-42, wtd avg 41 moved three times because of bus- wrapping sheets of or pps! ray to an apartment building | Work Wanted Pemale .......... 12 Blowers 3 ae anoeaite mecessary. 1968 ¥. 
> ‘ ; | > ; wets 4 ‘ 5 5 8 at . arence St. yest ay, > aie 
Roberts explained, since under the | CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS j meus expanmen and has estab- the heads and then hand-welding cord t Pont ri ~ De ot en caLnellit ~~ 
old procedure a warrant would be) cyicago (AP)—Butter steady; re- listed another plant in Wapakoneta thom A te: { three : ing to Pontiac Fire Depart- SERVICES OFFERED SCHAPTER'S — FLOWERS. Interested in becom water 
issued and the man extradited for ceipts 1.171.054, wholesale buying i rtees | Ohio, | thet - 7 — of t rs welders. ment. Firemen said the blaze was Suidine Service - 123 Conoral Directors” 4 softener dealer for ar mane 
‘ h ore AJ : ! - ne me cleane > . , ‘ aan c oes ate . ‘ ( 
sc oan cer oS SEA Toe bn vas tat eta eo sinc es cea Saeed eties Setoe| Pee tee ck | ee | Ee eee is on ase s t by president 5 wr. OOKRCePinNg B PBKCG . .+icseres . g program. Car p > 
E ; jout about 80 t 90 . . : . — Chiropodists cee ereeeee 15 appointment cal) FE 43574 
Boy, 7, Hit by Car atta ta” pita sited Mt, Theodore McNec, a welding © one day. Otcannet of Lake Orin. | eomertat een Donelson-Johns | agra Tecnico (ney 
igher; U.S. large 46.5; U.S. mediums 45; | gineer; vice president Donald Kin Pi ; =* e Uric. — FUNERAL HOME full time Experienced enly. Rob 
. afr y ’ U dards é.| ‘ re teste ; Laundry Service ...... soweoess is wen at. . 
nf ee “3.3; checks and Sittin a "P| head of sales and material pro-| aod then painted “pelore delivers te Se ee En Moving a Trucking —s . oo ee nae. - a . 
Suffers Head Injuries euneeee penevens eng eagge db deagwoni is made. y | ee r-rel " > arb yoo Photos * Accessories .........-- _ Voorhees-Siple 
| ivan i er, pi uction man- an ounty Jail yesterday arm Television Service .. eres 
CHIC. (AP) — - t ’ 
Nichols Cutean, 7, of 727 Port- os on track 247: total US shipments er. oe bw employes ordinarily jaaee $115 with costs. He pleaded Gyitiionee es: se ie) eR UNERAL HOME NEEDED 
* %e | supplies moderate a fair; w plant 4) , > 
land $t. suffered concussion, head market ‘about steady. Colorade, ied me: Basement fuel off tanks, un- | and they've ps aging sched Ic we Tesashig Justice te ort : 
: ures ; Ida t -55; Min- | derground | or . eimé a. NOTICES 
_~ a i os oe Resota- North Dakota “Pontiacs 140-50; | 500 te ie oe tanks from | orders such as a rubber lined, | Stanaback. If his fine is not paid) ,. “ Journeymen 
F struck an 0; tana Russe ¥ , gallon eapacity, chemical storage tank with | he { dd 1 60 da et & Pound ° “4 
in front of 736 Wing St., according - steel septic tanks, bulk storage | 1% 900 as | noes on acorns YS Bi] = Retiens & Perse % The Pontiac Press Millwrights 
, . gallon capacity, produced il o € 
to Pantine Police. tanks, production welding and | for : | 2a". ; 
He is reported in good condition Poultry steel fabrication aré specialties . Bove o poageet. | Clarence F, Treadaway of 21604 WANTED FOR WANT ADS Machine Repairmen 
at Pontiac General Hospital. asiemeitt ciae maaes one ,| of the organization. : Rs ogy tor products are sped to, John R., Hazel Park reported to/ wra. chia to Board a 4 
Herman J, Tank, 28, of 892 Stan-|¢¢ > Detroit for No eens ine _ ‘their destination by a company | Pontiac Police that an auto bat-| Wid Housetiold Goods --------- 31 an 
ley Ave., driver, told police he did | powiiry , a 10 a.m. RST today ~ nae pleat “tr one Sanford owned fleet of seven trailer trucks.| tery, valued at $15, was stolen a oe ee a DIAL FE 2-8181 
not see the child in time to avoid | 20-22 canted gt ae be moved poo wl ba ps ee, | Oar products turned out in the from his car Friday night while Gane ving @ artefs .....20.. Toolmakers 
striking him. Three witnesses were | {,_ unde: whites, 3-31 erey crosses. | is summer to sheades : tergor| fam include septic tank forms, | it was parkd in a lot at Franklin) wra wee eee a From 8&8 a.m, to 5 p.m. 
quoted by police as saying the | _~ . site | industrial furnaces. building trusses | Rd. and Rapid St. Wd. Contracts, Mtge ....-- 2 
boy darted in f CHICAGO POULTRY we }and truck bodies. illiam Martin , Bs All errors should be re APPLY 
oe Schied n 7 of the auto CaNCaGo (AP)—Live poeiery eteady to Michigan sales account for about; Distributorships have been Ww . of 4130 Airport Wanted Real Estate 324 The 
m par cars. firm on hens: steady on young stock; | 50 , : have set | Rd., Waterford Township, told Oak- assumes no 
—+ firm oa hens steady om young stecs: {50 per_cent of total business. with | up in Cleveland; Ohio, indianapotis, }Tand County sheriff's deputies y ee site Sach ao charges 
Cnetanged, heavy hens 24-36. light beng | we Femainder being spread out-/Ind., and Detroit ape ounty sherill's deputies Yes | ment Apts Purnished ......+..« 3 ons bce ~ 4 PONTIAC 
Huron Valley Schools 18-19; fryers or broilers 24-27; eld roost- | state, according to King. . terday that someone took $27 in| pent apts Unfurnished ....... 6 tor Get = Soe 
ers 17-19; ducklings none. uarters and half-doflars fro Rent Houses Furnished ...... 33 MOTOR 
e q s ma vertisement w has been 
Sponsor PTA Meeting Some of the mashinery witlined giass jar, in. his dresser dra ot Houses Unturnished |... 36 Yes 
Livestock by the Ieesl tedestry taciudes 8 unty - )" pperks ‘tretn a vent fan pero me wth Beard Soosc eens ae et DIVISION 
WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — ' forming roll capable of rolling «fire in the f of the Ponti Coavalescent es a a 4 
will a PTA meet at $| DETROIT (AP) — — Salable %.| 10 feet wide, and a circle shear WALLED LAKE — Rosary for Motor ; yesterday, Rent Office Space ...... "1 employment fice 
p. m, at Hill Road School Not enough hogs early make © ™8r| which cuts half-inch steel cir- | TI E. lt “ac | causing an estimated $200 damage, Por Rent Miscellaneous .. a a. = -_ a 
A business meeting will be fol- atta, oad ase cles with 12 foot diameters. Rosebud St., will be recited come — to Pontiac Fire Depart- ema werare vom oo ha = ate 
lowed by movies. Refreshments last Thur day: et ow r at 3 BD: ent, ; ‘A SALE 11 noon 
. a oF ry e form all our own heads for |T°¥ &t 8 p.m. at Richardson-Bird | . p » eee 
will be served by third grade room Rg special tank work but heads for | Chapel. Further service and burial If your friend's in jail and needs | or Sale Houses cececceee @ Transient Wast Aés may A RARE SELLING OPPORTUNITY 
mothers fully 50 cente tugher; cows and or | : pail, Ph. FE 5-5201. C. A. Mitchell. Por Sale Lake Property ........ 44 we eanceied to 0:30 the for honest, hard-working man 28 
oe ful! steady: stockers and feeders searce,|OUr fuel ofl tanks are made by | will be Tuesday at Goshen, Ind. He | —————_---- : Por Gale Resort Property 6 day of gubtication to $0 with old progressive 
? = casea: enelce apd prime fed steers | died yesterday at St. Joseph Mercy | State Bank No. 807 Suburban Property 454 ly rated nursery company 
New Haven Man Killed |= sven. ious iiet ib. steers 3800: Hospital, Pontiac : | mapert st. Cuneo sal ~~ onl ements 4 CASH WANT AD RATES Thoroush’ trotaing ta felé. “Lib: 
most good fed steers and yearlings 18.00- | 7 | Survivi . PONTIAC STATE Per Gale Porme  g Lines 1 Day 3 Days 6 days oa mission Cat eoscutial. 
DETROIT @ — Walter Stein- 33.00; severe! loads bod and chcioe 100 | end M ng are his parents, Mr | BANK Gale Business Property _....... “0 2 $1.2 86 gee 62.82 _For interview. phone FE 26800. 
brink, 43, of New Haven, died | snd commercial steers and heifers 12.50-| | rs. DeVoit Althouse; a} ‘ Por Sale or Exchange ... ... 60 ‘ 1.60 12 488 OWING 
shortly after driven hi | 17.00; most utility and commercial cows | daughter, Mrs. Sharon Stutzman of | of Pontiac im the State of Michigan at 5 200 69 6.0 to ocean, ve wil train 3 
brother invin of Romeo dl att |e coe oe Wiss edansts ont ewe | Indiana; a son, Jack also of In-| 1953 —————E—E— EE FINANCIAL ; i$ ts $3 Sor orgentsation 3h "Felegrapn 
wen } . * . - | 
’ ’ , | te tly §.50-11.50; jana: ’ | P > cord ] en) ee 2 bet 9 & 10 
a road in northwest "Macomb | Serer tt omit te Taken Off State jdiane: “and one’ grandchild. Also} mace by the Commissioner of the bank-| Bauman Oppervenuee -- a BARBER Ww 
iwe " . 00; s 8s > s . ! secceccccee 
County last night. The brother Tatee longa ged, yatta 10.90-13.00; a fee Pole ep vidal "| WiSioan af ection aa of the havenlgan Money oe heen eS Birmingham Office —_¥E 90 _. 
: inancial institutions act ortgage Loans ...... oe a | . 
Calves — Salabie 75. No ss early ; | ; H 
| sales. Compared last Thursday Yeaiers| Texas Is Also Released. mr and Mrs: Emile 2.-Sytvein ¢| “tans acts te aaah: NEW 
| Monday later markets fully steady at +8 i r my ee) men ond cnet foams STEUER VE 
| advance; bwk good and choice vealers From Restrictions for Melvin street, Rochester, are an-| i ceaeren af oatieation... 1,957,307.81| Por Sale Housetratlers ...... 8 379 Hamilton 
| Sra very’ scatee cnatce eae pee vie Vesicul Ex h nouncing the engagement of their| United States Government Rent Trailer Space ......,..... 86 CAR SALESMEN 
| > P enn ae P » fons, irect 
| 3 OSE, cae telah, vekters 13.00-22.00; ar Exanthema \daughter, Barbara, to Orlie E. cuatanterd et. “Ps sa1so0et| Auto Service sco, -% ae ye ee er oe 
| er eeacce bre 6.00-10.00 ne ’ } ; | Groesbeck, son of Mr. and Mrs. | Obligations of | States and Wanted Used Cars .. mite te —- ihe teeebe Pematan as riced 
| meee — Balabie 108. Thursday's mar.| WASHINGTON (INS) — Two! Fred Groesbeck of Drayton Plains. e Denieel, suntivitoas. ‘ig, TST] Wanted Used Trucks .....--. a) ) from _ $1,695 up. oF 
| Ret econiative ‘market, Com o make «| states — Michigan and Texas —| No date has been set for the | .. “ling 9423.61 overdrafts) 6,289,486.82 Aad eh wl - | BOX REPLIES TOP PAY PLAN 
| evenly ae nd or more, higher: pus | have been freed from quarantines | wedding Beak yromincs 9109.900.14 Bale Motor Scooters ......+++++- 63 Guarantee plus liberal commission 
|e “monly 3.6) acen, Cutty vod lio on the he os one png Della Louise Schonebeck — vers $314,931.41 For sale Bieyeiet cetteccaees ss : se ealigemeigae KIMBALL 
| good’ wool skins 1 ; most choice | exanthema, leaving areas of only | arererre: p ene Boats & Accessories ............ 66 th t 
and prime shorn lambs No. 1 skins . . ROCHESTER -~ Prayer servi — 218,600.55 ere were replies a B 
9.50-30.50; slau 5.00-10.00. seven states still de p 3 service etna othe For Sale Airplanes ............. @7 . ros Ine. 
clapaane ‘ — controls under federal | t4¢ Della Louise Schonebeck, in- indirectly Torening Trasepertation Otters , + the Press office in YOUR NASH DEALER 
. : | fant daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Carl] Pan Dremises or other or . the following boxes: © W. Lawrence 9% Coss 
on pean I nagae seni att -aeane, eee 5,500; ue Omehe feck Yas ah of | Schonebeck of 49570 Mound Rd., Other tutes 35.71 MERCHANDISE ; ad NEW LOCATION 
Seensen, Mick. ‘braneh. Phone [| mocertely active: PUncice’ 190-230 qb, | 1952, it has spread through 42 will be Monday at 9 a.m. at Pixley! otei Assets $20,203,138.55| S*Sps & 8. 10, 14 15, 18, %, yg tS 70 OPERATE 
- tT; mo choic - f ’ mn - , . : sdecceseveses 
Optical" eoiies woe butehers 8 50-26.28; top 26.50 sparingly; | states and the District of Colum- Funeral Home, with burial in Mt.| ..., ice of tmatvn Sale Bot earn as 10 29, 33, 46, 48, Si, 78, 79, farm, Must know eo aon yf 
eee ee ee ee ee etnce soit; 200-300 wm. | DIA Avon Cemetery. The infant died| ais’ pertnerships, and Por Sele Miscellaneous 2.20... 7 Si, 96, 87, 98, 91, 96, 96, - Se and medeen Welle 
. end slightly heavier 25.78; 200.330 Ie. . yesterday at Pontiac General Hos- icrPorations : $ 8.744,012.67 Sele astent Goods .......-.... 7 99, 102. references rence and when 
j mune | 21.25-23.25: good clearance The Department of Agriculture, | pital. me Supers of endwwidusts, a ) -neoey ——— sseeceeee bh] evailabie G. R, Correll, 46400 W. 
; Balable cattle 1,000; calves 200; fairly! powe immediat - , Poms pS, ane cespera- Sale re Equipment ; - Ten Mile Road. Northville, Mich- 
, active and mostly steady clean-up trade ver, ely launched Surviving besides the parents are Deposits of United States Ss eeeaaien Sand "Teovet & Due ~— , 8 
; = 2 Co ay ae a nation-wide campaign to stamp | two brothers and four sisters. Government including Wood, Coal & Puel ...... tielp Wanted Male 6 é TIME Es 
50 per cent of small run cows; few sales out VE, and hag been success- Mrs. Arthur Cunningham Deposits Of Btates and po- —— Sees Teatneds Board .... salesmen. pe ex- 
‘ commercial and good sieers and mixed| ful in getting many states to | LAKE ORION — Service for MFS.| peposits ‘of bank... “tInGT.98 2 SALESMEN record “hone hay” Rel 
Utility steers 15.00; a load of choice 1,000] Pass laws to combat it, The dis- | Arthur (Marguerite) Cunningham eee ee ; 119,473.95 ‘apppintment ieee - 
ane ee diaer othe and enen| nee, wy CumnEMy traceable to | 71, of 752 Cartwright, Pontiac will | »a%¢ officers’ checks ete.) 210,348.85 —— $150 to $200 Weekly “ie 7 
utility te low good grades 12.00-18.00: the feeding of raw or uncooked |be Monday at Allen's Funeral ae Se ee Fag Comte TOES sccereecasten Wo wil eéd two men (0 our sales RAY O’NEIL, Realtor 
u an om. i - ; v o* 
Siow ee ee ened ow Ee pest garbage to hogs. Home, with ‘burial in Evergreen Other MWMabilities............ 208,736.24 Wanted Livestock.. panne ee oe some leads 7% Ve “2 a 
canners and cutters 090-1100: utilty 46] When states are under quaran-| Cemetery. She died yesterday at|  Titng “Subordinated ov: mee er A, hy — A Sorted’ sutomasle, Sistas: | Member 
. ; , eludi bord . see cove 
INSURE NOW choice and prime veaiers 29.00-30.00; | tine, strict restrictions are placed | her residence. figations ‘shown ebove)...919,$30,100.27| Sng Ferm Susipmens ....+0.... Sovansement Gail Sern for Serre 
snd utility 12001700, 00-28.00; cull | on the interstate movement of live | _ She had made her @ at the | capitese CAPITAL ACCOUNTS eee ee, PER cud B Center 
- “ ! P CEDIGOI® ocr cccveweqcess Qhestassnaspenaies EXPPERIFD — werwsie 
Janes A. Taylor Agency || ostien Soe one tesa | begs and unprocessed parts of) Pontes ote Or 2M years, com. /Sa@pag Soccer Sete eXoeuercey wewawre, | _ Siuig Sauk © mt Wwe 
m e Orion. ° . 18 ’ = : a oD. _ = 
ORCY T| Thursday; ‘a few lots of rood to’ prime | BOGS. ing from Lake Ori foe tee pm SR tae OPTICAL DISPENSER ..D. GRINDER HAND ON PRG. 
1210 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. ot one 020-5158; mein 300 iown:| The seven states stil] have ures Surviving besides her husband| count for preferred capi. eat otices EXPERIENCED. SECRLSeT oP. duction. MUIberry ¢-1161. 
‘8 ~! \ : shern 2 } rtunity. Salar 
FE 4-2544 lambs absent. enil to good and choiee| UNder quarantine are California, are two daughters, Mrs. Melvin) “? scorers SHE , For henson. Mich. branch, Thandle 200 home 
laughter ewes §.50-7.25. Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, |Cemter of Flint and Mrs. Glen | Total Capital Aceounts...¢ 676,950.18| ALSHOUSE, JAN. 15, 1954, THOMAS persed. King siiesl' Co. tise W. OR 3- m * 
: New Jersey, New York, and Penn.| Miles of Pontiac; two sons, Howard | Total Lisbiities-and Cepi- oa alled La Chicago ‘Ave... Chicago, rr SNOLE MAN “Akal ERPERT 
t “Reliable INSURANCE Protection” syivania. and Clayton of Pontiac; 12 grand- tal Accounts....... $20,202, 138.55 on ROUTE MAN. MUST BE NEAT ence with dairy cows, . 
Wm. W. Donaldso children, one sister and” two| coaster see ten teat” tPeerk th fen ner ny. 08 pet . ’ ay. t 
valu aes 000. to ‘ . 
. n Agency Bac brothers. par ates osama 08 0 of pa are Face gars, Opertine sates. Cal | SALESMAN WANTED 
714 Community Notional Bonk Building _ DUSINESS Diels Mrs. Jennie A. Meacham — | M0, Dine liabfities “and Ding it # o'clock the Richard ELECTRICIAN $8,000 TO $12,000 
. Pontice 14, Michigan ORTONVILLE — Prayer service | for other purposes........ $ 798,312.50 ifr See th oe. Licensed electrician, Prefer man Bec onvE, ¥ Ex. 
hes. FE5-6424 Phones tor Mrs. Jennie A. Meacham, 65, |“Sit, “ataecion' at) te Mr Alenoaee wi en Mp taken | wiih Haowiedes of cecuroics | you ean suppers &, good, sues 
: Office FE 2-9673 American Airlines flew a total | who died suddenly yesterday at| serves of......... 491,471.20 Home, Goshen, Ind., for fnnersl 2 weeks vesahion por year, Apety record and in 
of 3,289,972 miles in ? Deposita of the Gtate of service Tuesday a.m. at St. John's Office, General be- 
7 passenger the home of a daughter, Mrs. Vern | “Yitchigan tincluded in De- Catholle Church. Interment in Hospital, 461 West Huron St ° zo 
; OS BUR a p> fag making it the first. airline | Roman of 4688 Groveland Rd., Or-| posits of States and po- _Oak Ridge Cemetery, Goshen, Ind. — SALESMEN s ua perign worth 
i , “ pass the three million mark|tonville, will be tonight at 8 at! { ‘Wm. "A. Bevenk. cashler, of the Card of Thanks 1 PRE int qrmewrae - S bg Ey 
hg =, |"in a single year, the company /C. F. Sherman Funeral Home. Fur-| *bove-named bank, do solemnly swear) 0 mew Work in closéd territory. Sell Tim- ented. repeat used 
4 sit ASery e esman * announced today, The figure is | ther service and burial will be held that i sally sd. correctly 4 + te "hiple Peneral Rome,” and ment. encotlont Seat appertunity " fer in plants "pe throughout 
"| an increase of 13.2 per cent | at McGregor, Ming. the. tras nate sof, the. several meteors) = tas tesent eT pe — raauiened fender” i anne . 
over Semana. eee Seen By Surviving are five other daugh-| best of my knowledge ang bene _fainer ‘The ‘Les Pond “Pemily, firm. Bee Mr, Janke for inter progreniv.” ferme red 
Pontiac company. Previous airline in 1952. ters. Mrs, Mary Anderson, Mrs. ee, AS. Oncater. In Memoriam 2 wan an hice, & Sens. gon. commaege 
“ ¢ —— ~ ra PONTIAC OP- 
real estate, and con- Dorothy Groth and Mrs. Hazl Os- we. aoe o eration of citss “A common © poy . who 8 one . 
A steody | Cunninghams Drug Stores to- | well oll of Minnesota, Mrs. STUART & WHITPIELD LOVING MEMORY OF BARL : for .. record of 
selling offered te the mon day announced the appointment of , Blanche Ferlita of California, and ien,| ae at Teplion ‘heh ho wy 
E. Raymond Sage as advertising | Mrs, Fi ice D of Cla igo = ee, CF See You're not forgotten father, dear, P come, Garne . rite 
director who worked + o As long as isfe nd. soe Prose ‘Bex ; . Sage, Pypey | as |five sons, Abe of lowa, William ie mth day gt Tanuary. 1064, and £* eS newer het WTD. MECHAN. 4 
; yan-|of Minnesota, Earl serving with | heresy sven missed : feat once Wonltelt : 
Box 17, Pontiac Press dotte News ntl 1960, re |the army im Korea, Charles of| Sievert ane bank on Sow __amboen sod asi a Tn 
. . ——— - : places retired ad director Arthur | Minnesota, and'Caro of Iceland; | Notary Pubiie, Oakland County Mich m] ee eT ee singe ge . 
" L. Jayne. and four brothers. iy commiagen clyees Gems ie 4 | \ Ts. ago Jan Vi Beaty mated by $400, . e + 4 
+ i . George Beum and A car Write Pontiec Press Bér si. we y \ ; 
- F ‘ / ' 
- 
-