| The Weather _ Friday: Cloudy, Mild Details page two y Mihi demi x. 2 111th YEAR| CHUUME OVER PAGES” "a * * & *& & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, eds Take 3 THURSDA Y, FEBRUARY 4, 1954 —52 PAGES AMINTERNATION AL NEWG SERVICE 7 rench Fo West Ministers Await Molotov’s Vote Proposal Hope for Serious Plan; See His Plehjscite Idea as Propaganda “ BERLIN (AP) — The Western Big Three saved their big ammunition today for the new plan for all- German elections they ex- pect from Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, They brushed aside as a trick his proposal for a pleb- iscite to decide whether the) Germans conclude a peace treaty with the Big Four now or an alliance with the West. The Westerners said Mol- otov’s poets proposal, made late in yesterday’s session of the Big Four min- isters conference, contrib- uted ‘nothing to German unity. American, British and French officials agreed that the election proposal anticipated from Molotov would have to be taken much more seriously than the plebiscite idea. Molotov was believed ready to pop his plan almost any minute. if it resembles In any way the free election proposal put for- Discuss Area's Sewage Problems . * i “i he % * ; ace K , \d ‘ SEWAGE CONFERENCE—County, state and | Pontiac Press Photo local officials met Wednesday to talk over sewage | L. Anderson, Waterford Township supervisor; Don- problems in the fast-growing areas west of Pon- ald M. Pierce, Michigan Health Department’? sew- | tiae. Looking over a county map were Ralph A. | age disposal chief and Milton P. Adams, executive | Main, Oakland County drain commissioner; Lloyd i secretary, Michigan Water Resources Commission. Dondero Elated 2nd Clinton Sewage Plant U.S. Plans U.N, Appeal to Free: Heart Patient. Doing Fine Red Captives May Carry Issue of 100 Americans~in China to ‘General Assembly WASHINGTON (INS)— The United States govern- ment today mapped plans to demand United Nations help in winning freedom for about 100 American civilians now held prisoner in Com- munist China. Final decision still must be made on whether to carry the issue to the floor of the U. N. General Assem- bly, but the chances ap- peared good in view of the strong effort. Soviet Russia is making to push the West- ern Powers into negotiations with Red China. Chinese Communist bru- tality to foreigners caught behind the “Bamboo Cur- tain” is one of the big argu- ments the Americans ad- vance against recognition of | the Peiping regime. | . Pontiac Press Phote BACK TO NORMAL—Leo J, Roy, 55, of 6897-Clarkston-Orion Vietminh Rebels. Advance Along 60-Mile Front © Strategic Military Post Guarding Laos Capital Lost in Indochina SAIGON, Indochina (AP) —The French high com- mand today conceded the loss of the important mili- tary post at Muong Ngoi, guarding the approaches to the royal Laotian capital of Luang Prabang. The command said that forces of the Communist-led Vietminh rebels occupied the post in the Nam Hou River valley as part of their advance along a 60-mile front. Muong Ngoi is 65 miles northeast of Luang Prabang. _ In tie “Same drive, the Vietminh captured two other French forts, one at Muong Sai, about 60 miles northwest of Luang Prabang, and the other at Ban Nam Bac, about 60 miles north of Luang Prabang. Muong Sai was considered import- ant because of its airstrip which. the French could use as an auxil- iary airfield, | Frequently American diplomats j Cite this brutality in conversations | 7 7 The Vietminh were repdrted to — by British — poses 0) ‘§ Advised for City and Area | with officials of other governments.| Rd., is now able to carry-on normal activities though he suffered a| be advancing ‘nthe will Perens be surprieed. | ver Caway Michigan officials suggested’ Wednesday that Pontiac | io emphasize the ruthless disregard | Pepseinss beagle upremine o-a-& pos one biog epithe a casein! We eo i ‘City and surrounding townships build a second sewage | of human rights by the Chinese driving a truck through New Jersey but was revived by heart mas-| and na ered hy French | : As the conference went into its | : | sage and electric shéck treatments, 10th session, with British Foreign | ° sn | + Co unists. Wires Press That Bill | treatment pliant on the Clinton River to handle wastes The isuwe of the 100 Americans | ’ Medical men in New Jersey believe the unusual treatmentto be antotig the first using electric oo Weate Pine Should Be Presented to from the whole Pontiac area. | Was raised in the United Nations | shock. Roy, a driver for Fleet Carrier Corp. here, is the father “ streaming toward Luang Pra- cipressell consliraiit disappoint-| House This Month - | The suggestion came after Waterford Township laid | last spring but was not taken up | six children. The above picture was taken at his home. bang. ment that Molotov in the previous sessions had not come to grips with the free election jasye on | which the Western Powers -base their plan for German unification. There was some feeling among American officials that Molotov was stalling to avoid making clear ~»Russia’s position on German elec- tions. Speculation was that he may have. been consulting with Mos- cow on precisely what line the Soviet Union should take on this issue. Federal U. S. participation in the St. Law- | rence Seaway project should be | before the House by the end of: this month. Rep. George A. Don- . dero told the Pontiac Press. sion, presided at the con- The House Public Works Com- | ferente, called by Oakland mittee voted approval for the bill, | County Drain Commission- 26 to 3, Wednesday. It already has er Ralph A. Main. Senate ‘approval. . Lloyd L, Anderson, Waterford Dondero wired: supervisor, and Johnson and An- “Committee- action marks suc- ak em oto pent ini s as sol 35, e cessful culmination of my fight | __.); using septic tanks. ‘‘We've over two decades to bring about | had complaints of pollution from r seaway construction jointly be- | Silver Lake, Scott Lake, Watkins ous policy maneuver. They did t tween United States and Canada. | Lake, Elizabeth Lake,” the super- take seriously Molotov’s promise ok ; visor said. ‘‘The situation's bad— pet he would have a new pro-| ‘For nearly 20 years I have in- | and it's getting worse fast.” ~~ xsal later on and they believe | troduced bills for this purpose in | - , this would be on free elections. | Congress. p arenas = ons —— The way Molotov _has jumped ‘Immediately after committee aan awehede i eke a ; from crag to crag without settling vote I telephoned President Eisen-| the ol ets waste. Pe down in any one valley of thought | hower assuring him his strong | has the West pondering if it isn't, support of seaway legislation was | time to try to salvage at least | | the fina] determining factor in its “smaller potatoes” out of the par-| success. : ley. legislation authorizing | tive secretary of Michigan Water Resources Commis- Western diplomats regarded the plebiscite proposal as more of a) propaganda gimmick than a seri- | Adams agreed that the only river big énough is the Clinton River. amount of even the best-treated its snowballing sewage problem before county and state officials at an afternoon meeting. Milton P, Adams, execu-*— Officials agreed putting a large | Brake Will Continue Gubernatorial Race LANSING (#—State Treasurer D. Hale Brake denied emphatically today that he would drop his can- didacy for the Republican nomi- nation for Governor to accept ap- pointment as a federal judge. “I have said from the beginning that I am in this governorship race to the end and that still stands,” Brake said. - Of the hundred, ‘at least 31 are compiled through tedious study of Red Chinese newspapers and ra- dio broadcasts and through scores of interviews with people leaving China, A handful of the remaining 70 or so Americans do not want to re- Atty. Gen. Frank G. Millard, | @™ home. These include a few mentioned for appointment in the eastern district of Michigan, said “I will not resign as Attorney Gen- eral if it means Gov. Williams will appoint a Democratic successor to me. I would consider the judge- ship if the Governor would appoint “Compilation committee report on seaway bill for submission to House Rules Committee and rules Envoy Returns to Post committee action is expected to WASHINGTON « — Ambassa-| consume 10 days Hope to get the dor John Peurifoy hurries back! bill to floor of House before end today to his post in Guatemala, | of current month. where the U. S. State Department! ‘‘Top-heavy committee vote in says it fears a bold Communist favor of bill augurs passage. plan to disturb Western Hemis- And the President's support as- phere relations is brewing. | sures that he will sign the bill.” |my deputy, Arthur T. Iverson.” wastes in the river above Pontiac might make-it ‘‘objectionable’’ as it flows through the city, Waterford could build several small sewage plants on streams in the township, Adams said, to solve the problem temporarily (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Final Decision Near on Long Controversy Over St. Lawrence Seawa By JAMES C. MUNN Associated Press Writer Penny Causes Fire NASHVILLE, Tenn, ®—A _ two- family residence owned by Leon | Gilbert was destroyed last night ilbert is chairman of the Nashville =| trie Power Board. priests still able to live in China without direct molestation, a few (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Firemen Called to Douse Burning ‘Water Wagon COPENHAGEN, Denmark ® — Firemen were called today to put out a fire in a water wagon at Roskilde: The wagon, used by a building constructor, was covered by | straw to prevent the water from “while | by fire caused by a penny in a| freezing. The straw caught fire and you plan for the future."” The Clin-| fuse box, firemen said. G ton above Pontiac might take a made it impossible to use the water in the wagon to extinguish the flames. }as @ Major campaign. Some Amer- ican officials feel that the time Killed in Crash» —_ — Broomfield Raps Comics, the Americans and other foreigners ‘ ° ait ie Cane 4. |4Sks Sen. McCarthy's Aid| ae 100 Americans are in LANSING (AP)—Rep. William S. Broomfield ( R-Royal China, exclusive of the 21 POWS |Oak) today asked Sen, McCarthy (R-Wis) to investigate Comite, ee eee | “the creators of these monsters of hatred and moral de- | Struction”—the comic books, | “Is their loyalty to our dereocracy unq present lives free of hostility toward dur system of free | enterprise?” Broomfield asked. | Broomfield said that a recent U. 8. Supreme Court | ecision invalidated most state laws designed to regulate | comic books. He asked McCarthy, chairman of the Sen- ate permanent investigations committee, to look into the rent ———*matter on the federal level. | p * | “The attention of your) dl lv aluable committee,” | d Union Lake } Broomfield wrote, “to this | | rapidly-spreading evil could | well be the forerunner to a| reawakening by the Ameri-| can people of the menace) uestioned? Have | eitee in jail, according to information | they taints of subversive leanings? Are their past and | ®re hey withdrew. Earlier, the French lifted their blackout curtain on northern Laos operations to disclose the establish- ment of an airlift to'pump men and supplies into the threatened capital. French military sources here to- 'day estimated it would take the | rebel columns at least 10 days to | reach Luang Prabang. The French were expected to make a stand | north of the city of 150,000, which the Vietminh threatened last May Split Dims Hope for Bricker Bill Showdown Vote Nears as Four Senate Factions Work in Conflict WASHINGTON «—A four-way breakup in the Senate raised new 1 ithat is destructively eating barriers today against ‘approval of Ernest Arvesen’s Car into the very core of our) any constitutional amendment on Skids Into Big Truck | economic and moral wel-| ° ” Near Fowlerville fare. | Broomfield said that the “comic Ernest B. Afvesen, 40, and his! books’’ appeal to “the illiterate, wife, Lillian, 42, of Union Lake,|the adolescent and to adults of were killed near Fowlerville late | weak character, inflaming their Wednesday when their car went! minds with violence out of contro] and crashed into a truck on US 16. ” | “What better means than this The couple had been to Lansing| ff those whe seek world con- intention has been the subject of y high Pentagon officials have re-| The Labrador deposits, now | rapidly vanishing supplies of Lake! again declines to participate. Hts |" his brakes in the middle of to ‘warmly applaud you for the | peatedly told Congress, the seaway | being developed by U. S. financial | Superior's Mésabi region. on a business trip and were return-| Test than to weaken and under- ing home, | mine the morals ef our youth?” Arvesen, as he attempted to) he asked. pass an auto, apparently jammed}! Broomfield said that he wisfied the three-lane highway to avoid magnificent job your committee is | treaty powers. The weeks-long maneuvering neared an end and showdown vot- ing approached on a proposal by Sen. Bricker (R-Ohio) to limit the scope of treaties and to provide for congressional regulation of other international amendments, Sen. George (D-Ga), leader of one of the largest of four blocs with conflicting ideas, said the chances are ‘‘very good” that Bricker’s proposal, strongly op- posed by President Eisenhower. will die in the Senate or go back on a committee shelf. omatic notes betw ‘9 | on-coming traffig and skidded into | attemptirig to accomplish in bring- = ar ease a truck driven by Roy Parder ing out of hiding subversive in| contrary, is not bluffing when it : < | of 53 W. Strathmore Ave., accord-| who seek to tear down the moral says it is determined to build the | With New York State ahd 7 ing to Michigan State Police of| and economic fiber of our -great | seaway alone if the United States | — of ae pgm eed the Brighton Post. | nation.’’ ; ; to build a gian million-dollar , power project in the International plains, a= Se | ids section of the St. Le sie gon with a lead of automobiles | Rapi - Lawrence, | said he drove for the ditch when “I don’t believe any propest- | tion can get the necessary two- thirds vote as matters stand now,” he said in an interview, However, Sen. Knowland of Cali- | fornia, the GOP floor leader cap- | taining an administration group, Canada, some scoffers to the United States participation in the St. Lawrence Seaway. Confronting the House, before its expected July adjournment, are these two choices: 1, It can follow the Senate in approving St. Lawrence legislation. If it does, the United States is as- sured a voice in the construction there is no longer any natural bar- rier to constructing the seaway. Once the river's he saw Arvesen’s car skid into Cloudy and Warmer bis mentaund tune but cout vot | Thursday § Forecast He was treated at Pontiac Gen- | Partly cloudy skies, and fairly | pushed for a vote on a series of revisions to the Bricker resolu- tion which had been cleared by the White House. Bricker himself led a group | eral Hospital for knee injuries and | warm temperatureg is the weather | which found the Knowland amend- and operation of the 27-foot-deep waterway over which much of the world’s shipping could go from the Cost of the power project, to be | borne by New York and Ontario, | multiple leg bruises. - outlook for Pontiac area residents | ments acceptable as far as they Arvesen operates an electrical tonight and tomorrow. | went, but still, held out for addi- contracting business with offices) The U. S. Weather Bureau pre- tional broadened co2gressional Atlantic to the Great Lakes. = a see ne at 24296 Telegraph Rd., in South-| dicts a low of from 24 to 28| authority over treaties and presi- (Congressman George A. Don- suming the House agrees with the field Township, | tonight rising to a high on Friday dential agreements which now are dero wired the Pontiac Press Dam Senate to permit such participe- Pigg se “ cera from 36 to 40 degrees. |not subject to Senate ratification, that the heavy vote in favor of a ae ae tion wve,. Ernest an maid ‘attend | Wednesday the temperatures | as treaties are. the bill in the House committee _ JOINT LS. CANADIAN PLAN . Walled Lake High School and Mari-| trom a low of 22 to a high of 32| Sen. Keofen ver“ Tem) Woedsesday forecasts aéepticn in Pages eee et ines: ot Latest estimates are that the [lyr is a first year: student at! degrees in this area. nes he the ta the House), i} ioe See eee ce ee U.S, cost will be about 105 mil- | Michigan State College. Mrs. Ar-| At 8 a.m. today the mercury reg- . xed . “es —— ; 2 tt didiat o vellins to vite ———<—— — a lion dollars, Canada’s share will | vesen's mother, Mrs.: Mary Autin- | istered 25. but by 1 p.m, in down- any. rally opposed enacting : INTERNATIONAL RAPIDS SECTION aa be roughly 175 million dollars. | rieb also made her home at the | town Pontiac the reading was 32) ; : Se ee F = and Actual construction, engineers es- | Union Lake address, 7388 Hardesty | degrees | anglers, . oo oe eee ae — aos 0 THE ST. LAWRENCE SEAWAY < timate, will require five to six | Rd. See s me s as es ———__—— nine. a er ~ years. ~ Funeral plans have not been | d ‘ ended. ee TT I , . Opinion is-divided as to’ the ef-| Completed but servicé will be held In To ays ' y annsunced intention 2 , [4 fect the sea wilt have on exist-| @t the Richardson-Bird Funeral) pimingham build the seaway entirely on our a. ssi Home in Walled Lake. Seb Cemsiaing....... own side of the St.. Lawrence ing means of transportation and j Gomies nageses River.” o% | , %/Atlantic and Gulf coast ports. ee gf man i ester The U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff are —— i‘ Eastern railroads, including such 16 Die in Egypt Fire De. Msatge COON8..5.6- 66 cccces sce concerned about the defense as- ited Fi = giants as the Pennsylvania: and| CAIRO, Egypt — Preatdie oe ha ‘ pects of the seaway. Should Canada "the ‘New York Central, have con-| patches reported today that 16 per, | fiev@ News -ss-+-- be a neutral in a war involving the sistently ,maintained that the wa-|sons were killed and 1,900 left| neome Tas United: States, this oe. a | * terway will be detrimental to their peeorians apogee: - smears Paterna eae x billigerent, could not expect to. use - {nterests. they ve never villages n northern ‘gypt. rts . : the canal’s facilities specifically shown to congressional | | TV Radia Pree Ay the Joint Chiets and other - Gontinued on Page 2, Col! 2) | opens tomorrow. sre at page Be Womens Pa l¢ 4 - oe ee . a A ee ‘ * * + . / , : } a tt See | mel e Foe ge ee Ore ee 7 2 eee Bi tee ey een 9 Nee jan Gd ae i Foe Vid ok afl pS we Ne wee a a: oye eae eas Rage Te Fe TWO - Gifts to Comme House _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TILTURSDAY, * ‘Beauty Contest Won Roll Call Fund Deductible tor Federal Tax Purposes | mount, won the title of Miss Pon- Sackcehel | jtiac Retail in a beauty contest Frem Our Birmingham Bureaa lecal YMCA Churc ‘ _ et alt | lcdnducted by the Michigan Joint RIRMINGHAM — Solicitation of Ec ag ee. Fim a a. Board, Retail & Department Store business contributions for the Bir Church will park a “- ; | | Employes, CIO, at Lincoln Jun- . >i} 7 P r | mingham Community House Roll Hills we | a - ; inde | jor High School Monday evening . se 1 apts | = : Call fund drive. already under aeemge en Ajai ts | She is an employee of Waite's. way, got some federal aid this play Redeemer © “es | | Shirley Allard, week p-m. Ina single game at Bar- | A, sede to Water Sk nem Junior High School. Congre- | | from the Lions AO “4 ’ \ alter P i 4 oo _ , _ gational Church will oppose St. Store, Was sec- . e chairman j i . LAS “ | from Was ton J by t James et & pa, (camere. are epee ond,. and Elaine - to the public. Fore emal Revenue service sas a re | McCracken, of ; - ationy th Simms, ,;was sibaaians d donati a t A circus act. featuring clown { caind 4 rmingham .c ummunity Hanneford, will. be the main Miss. Weaver’ nm + e in ‘ Miss -aver's deductible for eral in traction at a father and son ban- | Mictory in i ; * ™ P a ib) . ~ i y and estate tax purp quet at Embury Methodist Church | makes i. .. - . oe A “oO *$ aces tr previews years the Cam. al 6:30 tonight Following the “Life | we a in oh ais ’ . ” wt ees Wack “ re ' E 5 niunity House has been ruled ex- Under Canvas” act, Victor Ulrich toa | contest for the empt frem inceme taxon its own Will direct a Birmingham High JAMES H. PURKISS | tile of Miss Mona Lee income, bat mow the exemption School group in’ song Michigan Retail at the Sheraton- . » * e PA i \ SS B chan weomers are: \ F p cks Cadillac in Detroit Feb. 20. The ductibility by donors aera : eee 5 S — irming am | state winner will get a plane trip ff is known that many friends Sete : sag ¢ er big a 5 e to London and Paris moved rom ~ t a | en . * at the house have. felt restricted rietta. He ts in the purehasing depart Finance Director Contestants from the Pontiac the amounts of their contribu wad ape eT cenc: reeilania Mi Kua Federal Store did not enter the hans to the annual Roll Call by | Mre Pheips end their son Richard 2.1 BIRMINGHAM — James I Pur. lecal contesf. ‘They were to hold e knewledge of the former tay : “" men carey ig — feld kiss 35. of Pontiac, has been a contest in each of their stores xituati * Skinn caid Mr anc M Bianiey Brubaker form- named the city’s new director of | then a contest to select Miss Fed- » of De t making their home . ae : ‘ : . It therefore. our hope that) g: 17616 punt fee Vaecarie) mile Bre. aes e by City Manager Donald | eral, who will enter the state con- resndc eapp > the baker is with Autemotive Bin Service Co | C, Egbert. test, such frrends will reappraise t ! ct hata cant C denecw ead £ ee | support of the house in the light | daughters, Sonja, 18. Anne Claire, 22 | This follows the resignation of ormer@Detroiters whose new address is Willi . 4 l3 t am J, Johnsen, from the Additional “Birmingham and | cage act eed is with Mason 1 yors | post early in January. - ills social news on Mr. and Mre J E Charbonneau and | ; : ans " sons. George. 18. Terry. 10, of 320 Yar-| With General Motors Truck and page 20. mouth Bloomfield Village They came | i . ; : here from Detroit Charbonneau is with Coach (Pontiac Division) for the of this ruling which permits them ceuttier Pattern Co past 11 years in the accounting ° ‘ plete, tax deductibility,” he ; ~ division, and as ‘an auditor for the in qn IS LJ e added \ Mrs, Susie Stephens Halstead = past two years, Purkiss previ Yolunteers from Birmingham | service clubs met last. week with daring 6 aoe _ Begnaville, | accountant firm for a short _“ (pose Visit Property : : » Saturday at >» m, from! A graduate of Pontiac public’) the business solicitation committee wil be I ; of the Roll Call and have started Manley Bailey Funeral Home, with schools in 1937, he studied busi | as Suit Enters Second | to pursue their share of the $45,000 | buria] in Forest Lawn Cemetery. | ness administration at Detroit In- Day i in Court being sought | Mrs. Halstead died at her home stitute of Technology. With his | ng A os | this morning following a long il- wife and two sons, he presently | A Circuit Court jury of 10 women | Milky, the clown, will be the ness lives at 290 Pioneer Drive, Pon- | and two men visited the property feature attraction at tomerrow’s | Born in Malden, Ontario, she | tiac, but plans to move here short- «i 1145 Packs Si. foday us the | . had lived here for 20 years and; ly = . ” : annual Torry Carnival, to | - : ’ . ger at the chee! trom 5:38 | “88 the wife of the late Forest] Purkiss will assume his duties city’s condemnation suit goes into) | &. Halstead. Mrs. Halstead was~a! Feb. 16, Egbert said. its second day. | te 8:30 p.m. Besides Milky, will be a fish pond, penny pitch, | chest, cartoon show, car | : pirate . | Seciety of Christian Service, Sur- track, refreshments and other é a | viving are one daughter, Mrs, Wes- Pins. ley Danyo of Birmingham: three Food will be served in the dining) brothers and two grandsons. room, . L on by Mona Lee Weaver. Mona Lee Weaver, 105 W. Fair- Service for Mrs. Susie Stephens eusly worked with a Detroit public member of First Methodist Church and Sarah Allen group, Women’s Circuit Judge B. Hart- rick adjourned the trial one week | | ago but a subsequent compromise | | setUlemen( was spurned by the city | George Triangle Zoning | Called Outdated at a special meeting Monday night. | Mrs. Charles H. Meinbrecher | Testimony from the first wit- FEBRUARY 4, 1954 U.S. to Try Move to Free Captives (Continued From Page One) Bright Lights, Trattic Disturb Visitor's Driving | DE (UP)—A 64-year-ol . r baabay oe : - i = pi 4 — American women who married — _ ar sek . 4 found Chinese and have families in pie fa . 7 ei an . _ China, and one aged American driving we roto : “as ¢& . . - - : ,, man who hag spent most of his lot different than ‘‘on the back 40. life in China. Alexander Richards admitted he! American authorities have re- had ‘‘a couple of drinks” when po-| ceived reports of the condition of lice stopped him Wednesday. They | most of the 100 behind the Bamboo | sentiment has developed within the said he was driving erratically. | Curtain, but a few are held in tut shoot, that didn't bother!) such secrecy that nothing has me tichard told the — traffic been heard of them. judge. “I never noticed it __ adie « ¢ te tntee driving my tractor on the back 7 ; 9" group are three Americans seized He said it was the traffic and by Chie soldiers off Hong bright lights that really bothered Kong last March. They are Don- ics | ald Dixon of International News | When Richards said he had to| S¢rvice. Richard Applegate of the National Broadcasting Com- t back to milk the cows, he was - “ee cag AST any and Ben Krasner, a r- given a suspended sentence on the | condition he do his future driving} ©ha"t seaman from Brooklyn. on the farm. | The three were captured while | sailing a small yacht from Hong Long Island. New York. is about Kong toward nearby Macao. 118 miles in Jength. and 23 miles American authorities have made at its point of greatest width. continuing efforts to intercede in SAVE °4.00 | Simms Slashes Price! BRAND NEW LATEST MODEL ‘Nationally Advertised GENERAL @@ ELECTRIC Steam >, lrons Price-Fixed at $18.95 —SIMMS PRICE— 14 Full Factory Guarantee Holding their first formal meet Serviée for Mrs. Chadles pees in the slow-moving trial ee 7 5% vo les i . ; “ard yeste y afte on ing this week. 25 young people-of “7]]{Gjen) Ste inbrecher. 59. of wi Witnesses in Land Suit 5 ths eas Geer, = waect | Steam-press suits and dresses . . . iron any cloth without dampen- the Congregational Church elected Rochester Rd. will be at noon | . o ‘ | ing . . . usé as regular iron on regular washing . . . dial tempera- officers and voted to name their Saturday. at the Verheyden Fu Say Railroad Too Near, Erwin O. Slater testified that he | ture control for any kind of fabric. Just like buying two (2) group the Pilgrim Fellowship neral Home, Grosse Pointe, with | for Single Homes sold the disputed property to the irons for less than the price of one Officers clected ‘for the high burial in Oakview Cemetery, Royal or single Mo | Jack Habel Chevrolet Co. and that school age group are Kirk Flack. Oak BIRMINGHAM — Witnesses | he never had any written agree- 98 North 2nd : a Ace . * x . » = o a president; Thomas Beck, vice She died Wednesday in Cottage | called by the Industrial Land Co. | Ment with the city concerning pur Saginaw ke Floor president, Carole Goodhue, Corres: | Hospital, Grosse Pointe Farms yesterday in Oakland County Cir- chase of the es sg b | + chal tins IB 8 Mees bine 2 ponding secretary; Dorothy Ojala.| wire Steinbrecher is survived by lcuit Court in its’ suit to. break The land is — sought by the recording secretary: and James! her husband, a son, Charles H.| the single family residence zoning | ©'Y for use as a singh nniccnin avecsne eet eusuanaaasasnneusuetasaeeaeseesony eas Taup, treasurer. Gerald Beck, Wil 3, of Birmingham: a daughter. | on a triangle of land bounded parking fot to pa ywntown | ° lam Watkinson and Richard Shel- | Mrs. Orville Hehn of Detroit, a) by Eton road and the Grand Trunk Cong: ue The —— A aged nar tops rease. platter ° «don were elected to a cCommis-) sister, a brother, and two grand-| Railroad testified the site was of | is bounded on the east by Parke . sion on faith, action and fellowship. | children * | little value for single family resi- | street on the west by the Clinton ° > Adult advisors are Mr and Mrs ee _ ; * nee . - | River, on the north by the Slater hd ° John A. Watkinson The company is seeking to have | | apartments and by a city-owned is e ES e . 7 e ' Final Decision Near | the zoning changed to business A, es to the south |e ° vm a meme and contemplates a shopping cen- | — . PA meet at 1:30 tonight a ’ § p : f te - he e r there. Previously they modified f A | : menit ouse : : e a= = on €away rojec their demand to a change allow- eams ers 5 c ay e . ~ m 1 rrace developmen e e Explorers of Boy Scout Troop (Continued From Page One) |‘ Siew a is e BS will meet from 7 to 9 BD to Heary Pteiffer, 4102 Haverhill, | e mmittees the ecrtent af the y e e might at Barnum School for thei 7 Detroit, until recently an ap- Pd ~ semoce training ree ed * age praiser for the Federal Housing Teamsters Union officials ~ . Prop s of the project: taking Authority, sald the FHA's poli- charged with extortion and bribe, © e } = ing Pow lack sav t pos cles would pet guarantee morg- (| taking will seek a delay of their . : A » " scaway will be ft ful t ZAages on property within 300-600 tral scheduled to begin Monday © = property ~e g the railmads by generating new feet of raitreads, due to hazards (in Detroit Pecorder's Court, in 9 4 - . raft I ‘ fic «vide and nuisances, order to appeal to the Michigan 4 e hac e\eT een Meored nm this pour pre rT ceirt e Ome Pleiffer stated that zoning the ~~“? e Cow |@ e eit? ee tple dwellings would Attorney George A. Fitzgerald, | © e : si : Sad: A. add -to the depreciation { adjacent cn f several attorneys defend- | ° ed ts tt © #xception. Most . ; _— ; ng union officials, filed « bd wit : ptic 1 single family homes. but a shop-; m n Cia filed a mo FILTER STYLE ° e tet co ‘ew York. Balt ping center would bring a ided con von for temporary adjournment e e Lee r Philadelphia and the others PR STE ‘ = ea He is seeking a delay in the ® S -P ' ° z . eMience to are . . . Cd a } be the Atlantic and the gulf ““ ath ie een . tnal of William Buffalino and sev- |e patter roo ~ a. dicey ihe aeaeray oil The Industrial Land Co. brought’ a wociates and of the separate | ® ° . x . s—anmie that the seaway wil eT ting heard belore Cire 2% SMOCiMtes: an arate | § F Pan COVER t traff to Montreal. almost : : re : ' fs ig " “a 7 , ; ers trial of five other Teamsters of- e rying- an ;: ul! oul 1dge rank L ) e i still “im first) place im the a ind 1 s thland from the ; ficers and business agents e } atlari when the city commission refused Recorders Judge Paul E Le FRY FCODS SAFELY and EASILY ... no risk of burns - . But S John F Kennedy $2 Tetone the land Krause granted a motion to throw § from hot grease splattering keeps burners and ¢ Pioneer Highlands D-Mass!, during recent Senate de . ~ out two of four charges against|/e stove tops clean . . prevent grease-smeared kitchen : : bate on the Seaway legislation Pontiac Deaths Frank FE. Fitzsimmens. vice presi- . walls New FILTER FRY cover of spun aluminum is © R ° With Cit made the surprising statement that _ of Teams rs Local 299 $ ideal for trying hamburgers, bacon, pork Cc ° iis Studche sho | he & y lise » . s tk emains | | y i - neil " Fe i me a quash s coedlins aeinat Nie ot @ chops, etc. Easy to clean—just rinse in , ba dims fc HH . Y 1 en- . Ps F: ’ ag > Map of the county's; new state nedy thus became the first Mas Mrs. Calvin C. Davis Nicoletti, president and business ° —_ , : 5 vs nd 98 : legislative districts published sachusetts member of Congress in Mrs. Calvin C. (Mary Alice) | agent of Local 247; Daniel J. . Two sizes fit all frying pons, 7 to 11 inch a c : Tuesday in legal advertising as more than 20 years to declare him- Davis, 80. died at the home of her KLeating, president of Local 614; | ¢ : wae ° a part of the Oakland County Su- setf for the seaway son, James Davis, 999 LaSalle St, | Samuel J. Marosso, vice president | § 98 North “(a Weres * pervisors Sproceedings contal ned a eae in Huren Gardens Wednesday at and business ageitn of Lvocal 247, e yr nat 2nd Floor 4 sight error 10°25 pm. She had been all two and Afithens J. Liuzzo, business : vest BROTHERS e The western boundary of Dis n ewage ant vears and came to the son's home 8kent of Local 241 PyTI IIIT tnct 2 (Pontiac City was drawn seven months ago from Buffalo, as a straight line Actually the | Bej Ad d Roe Vall ww horetrehetwiaal boen Nor ec teattoen (IS Being Advise ee GREATLY UNDERPRICED! % CHOICE OF BEAUTIFUL DESIGNS as Pyoneer Highlands. 1s a part fesides her husband. wh he ' (Continued From Page Uue) sesides her husband, whom shé . : IN D 1 the incorporated city, and re . . marned 52 years ago. and her son All vata ECORATOR 5 COLORS. nains in Dastrict 2 for representa: small amount of treated Wastes. James. she is survived by. fiv % TRAYS... ALCOHOL AND STAIN thon in the legislature. according state officials said . ee TV or Bed , other sons and four daughters RI SISTANT S to Lynn D, Allen county bias = Adams and Donald M. Pierce, (Clarence, Elias and Vernor of Buf 0 0 0 FASY TO land mt, will «€ < aiX . ' . , Oakland Cou = ect SIS Michigan Mealth Department's falo, Roosevelt of Mason City, W Foldin YS CLEAN state representatives § ating : M sewage disposal director, agreed Va John and Mrs Jenne Hast t > on that an'‘‘area"’ sewage plant en oof Pontiac Mrs Pernina Meadows il REALLY CONVENIENT FOLDS — me the Clinton River below the cit) (of Charleston, W. Va. Mrs. Fran would be the “ideal long-range cis King ef Columbus, Ohio, and SIMMS C FI Al IN A liga . The Weather solution.” Mrs Jemima Barnett of Ripley PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partis Su plant could be built with W. Va ¢ PRICE— Loe tontget rire ewe eesaer each township and the city paying Also surviving are two brothers te Northwesteriy winds & te 11 miles tx shar { the ete they sug and = three sisters Richard and Maker's ‘ an heowr tenight and Frida, nal James Johnson of Dunbar W. Va Own 7 _ leds te Pentio< oe . 4 nd plant. they said would Mrs. Maggie Smith of Bee. W. Va Price Tag ns fakes re of the township problems. Mrs. Roxy Barnett in Oklahoma ‘Was $1.95 eto mu the Chntoen clean tl h the and Mrs. Ella Hill of Evans, W — cau ay * f wet Pont sow t Va . 37 grandchildren and 39 great- aeoue) ae acide ‘es ® grandchildren Moc e FP ade officials sav the newly «er The body will be taken from the Downtown Temperstures ! sewage plant is st Pursley Funeral Home at 9 this 38 = enough for Pontiac s evening fo thé Raynes Funeral a. wi 5 s of sew Home in Buffalo W. Va. for serv- wean ce and burial | Wednesday in Pentis Start Work on 11-Family an — iA re ce Gus Hghen temperature Terrace at Maple, Eton Announces Plans for Lot | Mjesther Party « © BIRMINGHAM — Construcnon for Parking 100 Cars = has begun by the Bontel - ) : 2 ¥ > ° : One Year Age in Pontiac a t BIRMINGHAM — Rov Whitten Exac i] » as Pictured SS 38 =6strucuon Co of Detroit on a 11- manager of the parking lot be- “xactly Lowes! ] r ure eo. Ve ¢ . wie * +h ¢ > > H Mean temperature 349 (AML Ce | at the north- hind the Briggs Bldg, has an- Large 17 Vaxt3 Inch Size Weather—Pair __ east corner of Maple and Eaton nounce d plans to open a 100-car Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Rds . lot on the Brown street former site Useful as well as beautiful. Saves steps, Bote ia St Years e Cost estunate of the two-stery “of the Lawson and Son Lumber Protects furniture trom mess. ideal for gift 63 im 1800 16 im 191 : onl ior rself. Just 100 ha a Wednesday's Temperatere Chart brick amd franje construction if; Co yourself. at this price. , ¢ s + Alpens "fe 18 Los Angeles 86 56 $120,000 .| The lumber company was des- Brownevilie 79 67 Marquette ra . es | : aX Cadiliac 30 (20 Miami 73 “Ch troyed by fire Feb. 14, 1%3 {{@ Chicago “a 2 iiwauker 34 ‘ . Denver * it Row ovieane "0 oP Trick In Southwestern United States »3 2s 33 24 New York < FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP)--Bur- many modern buildings have walls BROTHERS wi 2 3 4 Prliteren 74 om giars entered the Western Hatch- fashioned of bricks made of mad | wage 4 $ | la . rn eries and made off gith 17 crates‘ and straw much like those men- co ; naing . 2 24 Traverse 33023. Ol hat hing TEES ~ Te « tioned in the Bible | 2 —— behalf of the captives through Brit- ain, Soviet Russia and other na- tions which recognize the Peiping _ Ee é | coviernment to ae depend- ence upon diplomatic niceties and try to generate world public opin- ion to induce the ‘Chinese to free Americans and other foreigners forced to remain in China. regime. All these efforts have failed, and Underpriced Every Day at ‘SIMMS! ne Plain End or Cork Tip at the same Low Cost! PER CARTON. 51,94 (Plus ée Sales Tax) TOBACCO —Mais Floor FRIDAY & SATURDAY! PRICES SLASHED—Nationally Famous Makes Famous Ingraham APEX 40-Hour Alarm Clock Our $2.19 best buy in, years'' De pendabvi¢ 40-hour alarm with guaranteed Ingraham movement. In ivory finish Clear - view numerals. Convex glass. Plus Fed. Tax Value T 69 a Never Needs Winding! 3 General Electric Alarm Clock Regular $3.95 Value New modern design Ivory col or case shatterproof dial winding silent, no tic-toc .. Genera! Electric fac- wi tory guarantee Brand new. in origi- nal factory carton Unbelievable Low Price! “INGRAHAM” Sturdy Plus Fed. Tax Regular $2.19 Value Leave 3 heme and carry ST 69 Our NAP ite copied er Aecurate timekeeper precious watch at this inexpensive watch for work. for sport for vacation (Ped. tax extra) we QUINN = ca BROTHERS Manion a Never In Our History PRICED SO LOW SPECIAL PURCHASE—We Bought 1,000 Pairs to be able to Offer Such Sensational Savings on EMBROIDERED PILLOW CASES All guaranteed first quality .. made by leading linen manu- facturer approved by Good Housekeeping magazine ‘ old throughout the mation at MUCH HIGHER PRICES @ TYPE 128-MUSLIN Original $2.25 Quality GIFT BOXED y 19 Scallop Embroidered Full 42x36 inch size Scalloped 4 inch hems embroidered in choice of six colors. Fine mus- lin 128 thread count . BOX of 2 tor— l. @ TYPE 180-PERCALE Original $3.50 Quality GIFT BOXED 1 49 Lavish . floral embroidered in choice .of designs. wide scallop hem. Full size—42 x 36 inch Fine combed percale — 180 thread count. BOX of 2 for— Sale Starts the Minute You Read This Adv —Get Your Share BROTHERS Xe dak Kodak Employe’s idan for Camera Pays Off ROCHESTER, N. ¥. (UP)—An Eastman Kodak Co. employe, who received $125 for a suggestion, sud- denly saw his award mushroom into $2,444 a year later. Paul Ratigan of the production suggested that a winding knob for a certain camera be made-of plas- | tic instead of metal that required | certain finishes. During the year production of the camera increased and further refinements weré, made that were possible only because of the adop- | tion of Ratigan’s suggestion. Result: a surprise added award for the worker. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, |Wily and Ruthless s Kashani «Threatening Again in Jran By Phil Newsom United Press Foreign Editor | A spidery little man whose | rorism and assassination comes | jup in the news again this week from Iran. He is Seyed Ayatollah Kashani whose authority springs from his position as Iran's most a | ful religious-leader and from his | street gangs which roam Tehran's | Bazaar and the twisted streets of the old town behind it. Now he threatens to overthrow the government of Premier Fazlol- | lah Zahedi which is about to reach | final agreement with Britain in the long dispute over Iranian oil. | It is not likely he can make | good his threat but it would be | wreng to count out this wily | little man who at an indetermin- times. Kashani hates all Western in-|™orning during |name is synonomous with ter- | uence and he centers his hatred | 520W, planning and control department | on the’ British whom he blames | for the death of his own father. | His present threat against the | government is another supreme | | effort to prevent any agreement | jwith Britain and in a_ broader sense with the whole world. It makes little or no differ: | ence to Kashani that without agreement Iran eventually must go bankrupt and prebably fall to the Communists. Equally, he cares for lranian na- | tionalism because dream is of | \far greater Islamic state and he | | belieyes the peeple-can be wooed | from Communism just as he | would lead them from the West. | Efforts to settle the dispute be- | tenced | to death ence, ate age somewhere between 70 and 80 already has been sen- jailed tween Britain and Iran are closer | to success now than at any time since Iran seized the British-owned FEBRUARY C SPIEGEL > LOW PRICE SPECIAL! FULLY GUARANTEED! 24-0, GUARANTEE! a oe ma == BATTERY SALE! MEAVY DUTY BATTERY! "Ber Chev. 1940-53; Plymouth onl Dodge, 1936-53; Angio-Iranian Oil Company and ‘nationalized the oil industry in March 1951. In the meantime, a government has fallen, the shah was driven, from his country only to make a | | triumphal return and the issue of | | Iranian oil.has beeome global, in- | volving the World court at the |Hague, the courts of Japan and| | Italy and the world’s great oil companies. Iran's oil was seized and na- “Wwede-in Prt Remenviat- tered Orig- imetst @eg. $8.95 Srerter, a> . « 13. > LESS 5 THAN VOLTAGE REGULATORS! SAVE! Like new remenetectured eriginets! Reg. full price ts rad of colors BUILT CARBURETOR! Remenviectured Origtnats! Ve seve ‘cling cK jill ~, ie. $e.49 enna. on “41-48 6.07" “trede-in Prices. MUFFLER PRICES CUT! SPIEGEL, Inc. whet techy mefiier ie cceas aman 11S W. Seginew, FE 2-9234 SPIEGEL JiR Avto Stores Se ESL ENA IOES home! Choice Everyone’s Rushing to Rappy’s Sale! Entire Stock Men’s jackets, V3 off Ladies’ Fur Trim Coats, V3 off Ladies’. Cloth Coats, Ladies Dresses V3 off RAPPY’S 9 S. anemia St., Pontiac Men’s All Wool Sport Coats $11 and $16 $ REPRE POLE EEE: A BCE Worsted Suits $29.89 © National Clothing Co. | Men's Wear — Ledies’ Weer | he of A ee, | tionalized by the deposed for- mer premier, Mohammed Mos- | sadegh, whe now has been con- vieted of treason and accused © | of leaving the Iranian goevern- ment with a $500,000,000 deficit despite. stop-gap aid from the United States. The man receiving mugh of the credit for “bringing the two sides $4.24! Sines to fe |together where others failed is , Ha oo-8tempres. me | Herbert Hoover, Jr.. gpn of the) 30-b earrsProa duseinceror| | former United States President Before the decision to national- ize her oil, Iran received from Anglo-Iranian about $12,000,000 a year. It representetl a major por- tion of her income and the great bulk of her foreign exchange But mteanwhile conditions have changed. Other sources have filled {the gap left when Iranian oil went off the world market. | That's why eight major \ | | companies, including five Ameri- ean, have been meeting in Lon- © don in a move which actually would reapportion the world | market. Garroway as ‘Mayor’ PONTIAC ~- Dave Garroway,| | will accept the -honor of being | three times and exiled three | named i| ‘Pontiac Scouts to Name FarmersTeam | With Chemists To Boost Output “Honorary Boy Scout) |Mayor of Pontiac’ next Monday | WILMINGTON, Del. (UP)—A his ‘‘Today’’| heartening report on the results oll | And before the American com. | _| panies could participate, it was *\necessary for the Justice Depart- * | ment to rule that they would not *|be prosecuted: under U. S. anti- | trust laws. It is into that situation that the ‘ Suits poe cd Soo OG $23.85 5 | ancient Kashahi has injected him- BA $60.00 All Wool Men's fn en oe ) Topcoats ...... $24.95 § himself a martyr. Greeting Card Vendors * Carry Happy Birthday NEW YORK (UP)—You soon) |may be able to walk up to a machine, insert a coin and. have} a “Happy Birthday’ card drop | Ps out—complete with envelope. =| Greeting card vendors that work = | like cigarette machines are de- i | signed to carry 75 varieties, rang- * | ing from Christmas cards to get’ : well notes. * Next to the machine.is an album ® | that shows the card selections. You . | simply take your pick of the cards, move a lever on the machine to the correct spot and put in the coins. 3 | | The south magnetic pole is di- E | rectly south of Sydney, Australia, mera 180 miles from the south | pole. Always @ 17x19 china lavatory, chrome mixing stopper and drain plug. PLUMBING SUPPLY CO. Free Standing Closet - 3-Pc. White Bath Set ®@ Modern 5’ recessed tub with chrome trip, lever waste and tub filler © Free standing closet with sturdy seat. triple plated faucets, chain and Choice of $139.50 $ 50 Value 98 ay Complete with all 3-Pc. Colored Bath Set |} ‘icc. wc Ue figtings and” closet Reg. $26.95 — $ 1 $159.50 » Velee 09° Laundry Trays Two compartment style with stand and brass mixing fau- a Sp thru Set. 9 to 5:30 - Fri. 9-9 — Phones 100 S. Seginew Sr. Free Parking SAVEGrTEn SUPPLY CO. Modern recessed design — full regulation size — acid resist- ing enamel. $69.50 Value (Less Trim) $49 Phones: FE5-2100 FE 4-5831 seen localiy on Channel| of teamwork bétween science and | agriculture was revealed through That is the day Pontiac Scouts; a SO per cent step-up in farm | will take over the city govern- | production in the U. S. in the past ment in a celebration of National | decade Boy Scout Week, Feb. 7 to 13. West Gregarious animals are “those | when estern tiving in he rds or flocks. The increased agricultural out. | | put’ was made during a period | the nation's population ' jumped 25 per cent i FEBRUARY 4. 1954 ® In sharp contrast to this try's farm production gains, production inched up a scant five | | per cent, while the world's popula- tion was increasing by 18 per cent during the 20-year period. The figures demonstrate the farmer in this country is reaping the benefits of more leisure time for less demanding physical labor through the use of agricultural chemicals While only about 12 per cent of America’s population was engaged in farming. the nation was pro- ducing more through teamwork =, how | world’s increasing millions is | increases. heightened by the fact that man ‘is gradually pushing toward the limit of cultivatable land, ~ ! toward stepping up production per average depth. problem of feeding ane} | saininioe the elfacts ‘af paputoden | Average depth of the world's roceans ig ‘about 2% miles, with * Therefore the world must work the Pacific having the greajest THATCHER. Pontiac's Oldest lasurance Agency PATTERSON and WERNET tela :itie @\, like} PLASTIC P To Protect Your In size to tit any style chair In size to tit any aero «3% Now! Get Extra Savings on Slip Covers That Look, Fit and Wear Like Costly Custom-Mades These are Harmony House exclusives with casual good looks . . ing decorator detailing usually found only in more expensive slip covers. They’ll wonderfully brighten your furniture — really beautify your Gay floral pattern comes-in your choice of Harmony House home. Dawn Gray, Tuscan Wine, Mint Green . to the smart «multicolor stripe patterns. bargains for yourself! Sli |Cover | Sale! s * Sturdy Washable Twill *& Trim Fit Adjustments * Decorator Detailing * Reversible Cushion * Cord Welted Piping * Choice of Gay Colors ULL-OVERS Fine Slip Covers each a perfect Visit Sears today! SOFA STYLES, 18.88 Use Sears Easy Payment Pian on Chair Styles Regularly 9.98 © Regularly 19.98 . know. complement See these Matching Sofa Bed (Daveno) Covers. 14.98 Slipcover Dept.—Sears Main Floor You'd expect to pay much more for dual: purpose » staeait Quilted Coverlet Warm Cover. Gay Bedspread Reg. 11.98 Washable, 10.98 cut size Cotton filled reversible — year- round coverlet in full 88x100-in. 4 charming colors. Only et Sears will you find such verse for longer wear between Charming “Tulip Basket’ cover! green, cotton filled, 80x84-inch é “Colonial Star’ Regular 8.98 Gay Harmony House quilted coveriet washes, reverses, can be used year-round. Cut size, Brown, Pacific Blue, @ Lovely Floral Bedspread, ©@ Specially Priced for This February Sale Warm Bed Covering a value! Coverlets that re- launderings—Coverlets that warm your nights, add provincial charm to bedroom decors. et in two-toned blue, rose or cut size. Domestic Dept.—Sears Main Floor Coverlet Bedspread 7” 80x84-in. bleached cotton filling: 41-inch quilting. Mint Green, Cherry Red, Spice . eS 6 Al ates ate xi _— @ Made for Long Service @ Fitted by Experts Make your home attractive inside and out! from seven. decorator colors. © Smooth mechanism . At Sears! v # Choose Your Venetians From These Harmony House Custom-Made Blinds jeer 4Qee | (Minimum, 10 sq. ft.) Choose operating . » Custom-made to fit your windows! Better Quality Venetian Blinds .......S¢. Ft. S9e | j Best Quality Custom-Made Blinds .... Sq.Ft. 69¢ | © 154 N. Saginaw St Lacaniend w pour monty back” SEARS pra! i 4 ed nena nee Ape ae Comic Inspired By Mother ee -- Today's Television Programs - - Ja Murray “Serer eee Amused Mom SN i | ’ Channel 2—-WIBE-TV _—— — TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS Wilson foils gangsters attempt t:30—(2)—Garry Moore Show. ) He Entertained Invalid 6: 99—17!—Famous Playhouse. Mel-| to chisel in’on legitimate ticket Telerama P G . vvn Doweclas in “Anniversary raffi: 2: @@—127—Deuble or Nothing (l= arent as Boy; ained ‘ Gift.” film drama. (4)—Time aft ! 10:@0— (7'—Hockey My Lafe for Sports. Bill Flemming. «2) Detroit Re Her Encouragement é . Wings vs. Boston Bruins, timmy | ¢:39—(2)—Houseparty. (7) — The- es,

- 4 cazoote owdy wooly. Devil's Bog’ (4)—Dinah Shore B3:15—17'—Motion Picture, Agad —- : . was a child, Jan, who has emceed ae hallad rN emy Shirley Temple in Anme 3:44—(7) Weather. (2)—Sports. a opulal aliads t. ews Reon ' , ; ; countess TV shows, would imi- Loon (44—Stars on Parvae , ‘ Doug Edwards i sii ~~ ‘ i | FRIDAY EVENING j tate local vaudeville entertainers, ariely » y OonNes 1SSe c . fe News ‘ 7 ; caaline ‘ helping to make her forget her , r “s id)—New Caravan John; arms guests. (2)—Feature Film 760-7) Detroit Deadline. (2)— - oid Se cron, rele ta » > see 8: @0—'7)—Quick As a Flash. Pays FRIDAY MORNING ; sional comic, she sowed the seeds . ; wirt ,y 4 “! P k:merson, Jimmy " With Elizabeth. Betty White, De! house With Father. «4)—Art Linkletter | from high school he sought a job More in comedy 9:45—(2)—Brighter Da 3:15—(4)—Adv, Special Delivery. in show business. ; ' = \ 5 \ 7 ‘pee 8: 1 -W here's Raymond. Ray | 10:00—(4) Ding Dong Schdol. (7) )-4.39--(7)—Stu Erwin. (2) — News As social director at a New plays Cupid for teen-age ad Wixie's Wondert: anit (2% Jack | (4)—Eddie Fisher York resort hotel, 17 - year - old )—FraAnhe sneer. mirer. (4)—T-Men in. Action Paar Show | dan was required to organize the recréational activities of the hotel's guests and to appear nightly in the social hall as a | —(4)—Hollywood Breakfast 7:45—(4) News. (2)—Perry Como -Hawkins Falls. (7)—| 8:0@—(4) Dave Garroway. (7)—| Ozzie and Harriet. (2}—Mama Case of the Silent Face,."’ young , 10:30 man tnmes to “fix income tax | 11:00—(4) returns. (2)—Four Star Play-|- €harm_ Kitchen (2)—I'll Buy house. Charies Boyer, Dorothy That 8:30—(4) ‘Life of Riley. (7)—Play- comedian, delivering material he Hart in “Second Dawn,” drama | 11:15—(4) Three Steps to Heaven. house. (2)—Topper. had written himself. It was a of man's struggle against blind- | 91:30—(4)—Ask Washington. (2)—| 9:00—(4) Big Story. (7)—Family | small beginning, and the years | which followed were filled with equally humble appearances- in small. hotels, little-known night- clubs, presentation houses and - NESS. | Stnke Jt Rich ‘ : @ : Pride. (2)—Playhouse. ’ 9:00—(7)—Wrestling. Films, (4)— ' ‘ | 9:30—(4) Soundstage. (7)—Come FRIDAY. AFTERNOON back. (2)—Our Miss Brooks - Movie Quiz (T) Dragnet. Sgt. Friday hunts po hceman who disappears from 12:00 — (4) patrol car. (2)—Video Theater Comics, (2)—Vahant Lady 10:00 — (4) = Sports. (7) Chev | burlesque shows. | } Mariam Hopkins in ‘The Smal! | 12:15—(2)—Love of Life. (4)—R Showroom. = (2) — My Friend | Following the Leon and Eddie r Glass Bottle.” as nagging wife Mulholland Irma ‘engagement, other well-known } who fears for her life ' ¥2:30—(7)—News. (2)—Tomorrow’s 16:30—(2) City Detective nightclubs booked the young com- 9: 30—(4)— Theater Will togers Search. (4)—Travel Unhmuited 10:45—(4) Fights edian and he was offered guest Jr.,. Kevin McCarthy. in “Lucky | 12:45—(2)—Guiding = Light (7)}—/ #1:00—(4) News. (7)—Soupy’s On. spots on radio programs, In 17, | Tommy Jordon.” veteran's} Stars on Seven (2)—News Jan Murray co-starred with Vivi-- ‘ loyalty to wartime buddy perils | 1:00—t2+- You're What You Eat. 11:15—(4)—"Rasslin’ ". (7) — Mo-/| enne Segal in his first Broadway Town. Steve | (4)—Jean McBride i tion Pie moaeriaga (2)— —fis Academy. (2)—Theater. | show, “Music in My Heart.’ a Hildegarde, the chanteuse, an admirer of Murray's radio style, signed him for a lengthy series | -- Today's Radio Programs -- | of guest appearances on her show, | and later he entered television as | —_— ° emcee of ‘Songs For Sale,"’ “Go | Programs tirnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice =| Lucky,” “Sing It Again, “Meet | Your Match,” ‘Blind. Date’ and | , WsR, (760) CRLW, (800) Ww, «85@) WCAR, (1130) WXYZ, (1770) WIBR, (1490) “Dollar a Second.” In’ addition, —— — he has played many of the top| TONIGHT | CKLW. News WWJ. Paye Elizabeth | FRIDAY EVENING night spots in the country, in- 600 WJR News ~ WJBK. Rise @ Shine WXYZ, News. Crocker 600 WIR News cluding New York's Copacabana, | 6:46 WWJ News CKLW. Your Boy Rud WWJ) News WXYZ, Pred Wolfe | WJBK, Den McLeod ' WXYZ. Mc WCAR. Club 1130 ath La ob — 12:°45—WIR, Jack White WJIBK, Horseman the Sahara Hotel in Las Vegas, Philadelphia's Latin Casino, Holly- | } | WWJ, News WKYZ Wattrick, McKenz wood's Mocambo and the Para- Sed CKLW. News 1:@8—WJR Dick Burris wi | WWJ News €135—WJR, Clart Quer tet WXYZ. Fred Wolle | WWJ To Be Announced WWJ, Bud Lenet ae : } 5 y WXYZ Lee @mits CKEW Nees. Davia CKLW, Ginger Rogers | re — lds elem mount Theater in New York CKLW, Eddie Chase 116-9 m Music Hall | WXYZ, Lee Smits Jan has an athletic build and Y wes ; : ¢ 3% m Reynolds ig ae FRIDAY AFTERNOON CKLW, Eddie Chase his hobby is weight-lifting. Born > ww Tan Petter 7.38 WKAYZ. Osgorw Wolfe €%-WJIR. Rob Reynold le 4 Mow . Qi? WKYZ, Ed. McKenste CKLW = lin! oC vant 1-00 WIR Life . Road ww) Mi Boe: ynolds in New York City on Oct 4. 1917, | WIBK. Horsemen WINK. Cer Ringe WW). News Mulholland WYER. | McKcuxkin he is married to Toni Kelly, a’ 4 { ¢ é . \ siiidiiniainnt eiliamiaid 7.48 = Wi New CKLW, New Bud +44 —W IK Lowell Thomas former showgirl from the Copa- E ee 7 WJIKK. Tom George “abs the > , i oe = Pa House CKLW Tot David WCAR, News, Chub 7.00 WJR. Guest House | cana. Toge the r with the ir two , WXYZ. Bill Stern See WIR Jack aim Adal Perkins a Three Star _ children, Celia, three, and Howie, CKLW, Pulton Lewis ww), = Maxur CKLW. News, Walts li crane euronews , one, they live in a large home on y , Ww z Nek O 1 | “ . \ WJBK, Tom George pe ~~ a sia_WGW. ‘Ge. Siaione | WJBK, News * Long Island 2:1S—WWJ, Alex Drier WJIBK. News, G e WXYZ News. McBric 7 13—WXYZ. Show World ~ . . { w XYZ Show World WCAR New ri ee CKLW Your Boy. Bud | a } A Grier “ ° ° CKLW. Guy Nunn 81s—WIR BP WJBK, Tom George | CKLW, Guy Nunn E t Buildin ' 7 38—WJR. Pamily Skeleton WXYZ Fred Wolle WCAR, News, Club WJBK. Tom George g WWJ Morgan Bratty a4 WIR Quidine Light = . 2 8 eo - wd Music Ma ate ine os 738- WIR. Family Skelton WXYZ, Btarr of Bpace os CKLW. Dick Powell t . CKLW. Gabriel Heatter WCAR. Meassenge ° | ww. News rms an a 8.45 WCAR. Revival 2 6 WIR Ind Mrs Burton| WXYZ, Lone Ranger 7:46—WJR, Ed. R. Murrow WXYZ. Breakfast Clud WW) News CKLW, Gabriel HMeatter 3 N O ti ww, i Man's Pamily 908 _WJIR News | WXY?. Paul Winter | T:43—WJR. Ed R Murrow OW pera Ing CKLW, Eddie Fisher P s ; cCKLW. Y¥ r BR Rud | , : WWJ), Minute Parade si NV : ' y uc wws 1 Man's Family > - 8-00— WIR Meet Millie WXYZ Breakfast ¢ WORK: I George | CKLW. Perry Como CAIRO -#—Egypt is building 10 WWJ, Roy Rogers Cais Poca al Air WCAR. New | WJBK. Tom George arms factories and 3 already are WXYZ, 3 City By-Line JBK. Bob Mu NF ry M . ee a WAR aseces 1s—V Perry Mason $:00WJR. Mr. Keen in ful operation. army chief of «@ WIR N Drake WWJ. Dinan Shore taff, Lt iG sf N é ‘ 8 13 WXYZ. Sammy Kaye 9 1S—WIR Pleasart Valley a areas ol Bea CKLW. Theater sta / 7. Mohamed Ibrahim CKLW. Qabriel Hera ‘ . WXYZ, Byline Says ese pli are ning a ae WAI Se These plants are turning out WWJ. Pather Knows 9% WIR M: Page P43 WIR Arig Der , training planes, rifles, land mines CcCKlLw Crime Piehters CKLW Good Ne ( ‘at ei x e 815- WWJ) F Sinatra har a aNan Ina . } WXYZ. Band of the Day ; Das ne Rewet wd Sammy Kaye and grenades and shells 96> WIR Prte & ‘ ‘ Pet This rep vt I i i | oJ ee a “rine id 8 45— WXYZ. Vandercook CKIW, 7 Mar WEAR ¢ . 8:90—WIJR. A God! sobeteetehht DIN Joe SULLA ; ai tid “ WCAR. Temple Acace ow WIR KH » House WWJ. Bob Hope a program of = industrialization oo - eet tulle AA ‘?. t} . Ww) Presa; We Mau | 1@:08-WIR Arthuf Godtrey ue ee WXYZ, Band of the Day | Gen. Ibrahim and h:s fellow offi- w Proudly W Haul ww y — raveler Cr 4 ew Pias CKLW. Take a Numbe? CRLW. Neva, Muse WXYZ. My True Btory MCAR, News: Rhythe §:43—-WXYZ, Vandercook cers recall with bitierness th: mit CKIW, News Hemechats 215 ROW Party Te lions of Egyptian pounds squan- 9: M—WIR Civil Defense WIBK Rob Murphy WWI Road of Life 9-00 WWJ, Phil Harris ia : ; WWJ, Eddte Cantor WCAR News Te ° Cr A t e Chase wxvyz Oatie & Harriet dered on low quality munitions CKLW, Bounding Board 10 1S—WCAR. Tr e : CKLW. Ford Theater under the Farouk revi akc Oe eww) Recee ‘eoaue che e Farouk regime 10 www) ft Hope A HR ck Aa 9 20 WIR That's Rit | . 10:00-— WIR Minority of One Ww XY wy F .. ‘aundes WWJ News. H | The Naguib government has WW) Fipter Mco CcKLW M Mtoe % WIR Cal Bunds WXYZ HL Hornt : eee Ge Le eee WWJ OR! to H ar : - assisgned the army about a/ fifth a) “ wy CKLW. F. kcw ’ le 8 aY aaa 7 i—ww. } Gia of the total budget of the nation. 1015 WIR ¥ ( ' WRT Es Cire Mar J Back Wife 10.08 WIR Choraliers die ee al i c wy Ms X Mr Kensle we ' . er McOce A dozen tramngz planes have ww) T Tr . . : xing been produ 1 "\p . CKLW, Fre Martir ihea ww . 4 \ CKLW Frank Edwards ' ie wed in kg poe fac = . Ores we engi are « 20:38-—-WIR Wisard cl 0 boa Se . 15 WIR LL Paul RUS AE) Meee Ae ‘bat fF Le : a WWJ) Top 7 but Egypt hopes to produce her WXYZ, N 1 wWCAK WXYZ. Top « e Towr wn soon CKLW. Ray ardcin igs : r Browa CKLW folly we Date ’ I , } ; 1 s “N ‘ . n Ye Near future, the plar s 19 45—WJR Go Town wWCA le \ } 10% WIR Wirard Odds I © | 1) CKLW, Organae jaca Sh laa a ain’ ix. 3 e en WWJ Listen Wa gion to export land mines. shells, rifles, . ake p M j Oyen CKLW. Ne ' “p - or 11.68 WIR News WW) Phrase Pa ‘ WKYZ. Edein Ch ind hand grenades to other Arab WW News wy Moe R ar oo N “ countmes., CKILW, Nees CKLW. Queen for a lay Ww I 18 43-WJR_ Beulah . ; ; ‘s - a MESEK. Mics . 1 KLW Hes eogs : Saree CKLW. Quiet Sanctuary | Light automatic weapons have 11:18 WIR. Dance Party WXYZ. Sing Par : : AP ica Ee IE been tested satisfactorily and some WW), Guest mtare 1° @@— WIR Wendy Warren ‘ : ° 1) WIR. News have been put in use. Location, CKLW. P ke CKIW. Cu . : Co ee tt nd nat f tt k P r 3 * Ha WXYZ, Ne exac ype and nature of this wor 19:38 WW Laure \ Ms y ¢ J aia wo ? Farrell CKLW cea Ku er so far “cn been kept a top secret WwxYz « ts —-* as : * . nat 1 WIRK News } . ‘ : . . \ New x Mi K Wt VIR Bob J s mI ONE FRIDAY MORNING Alaa : “ sae auras Pa A plant for rockets is under con Seen okecm, 2 epee an EL —_ ; CKLW. Mu - struction according to informed cw 1 ® ‘ - Lt-se. WIR. Marty & Trumae SOurces, This work is directed by A ° * = , ' WXY Sports German experts Hon Kon Firm Jardine'’s ship sailed into pert So to this day. sharply at noon, a The Caspian Sea really is a g g The Pas . ; , lake because it is completely he \ a . ngle burst of cannon fire re surrounded by land. but its water is salty Fires Cannon | Th ~vtie ’ 1 inds through Hong Kong ‘to Do Penance debe eos ; HONG KONG (UP \ Brit no The Navy senicticed 1 ; shippifg firtn does public penani« pany to peel ia : per seennnennnnnnnnnnees ~ ~~ since vo int I er \ ) every day for giving its founder a much. vou can tink i ) 2 Suge sate more tht 10 urs Sp. ete one Sant | DR.H. A. MILLER a Came World War Il, and the nm the 1850's. Jardine-Mathes cannon just fell apart from non ¢ stort ‘company decided it would go 4!] use, Jardine-Matheson was glee Or tometr:st ie in ry oming to Hong Kong the ful—ne cannen, no noon round 2 i ad of the firn § But the Navy wasnt g to et 7 North Saginaw Str Se it fired a Z1-gun salute from the firm get away with that. It ena 5! _ a battered old cannon perched gave Jardine-Matheson a brand atop & Mountain on the island as © new cannon Phone FE 4-6842 , . ‘ ° s ‘ ° » REFRIGERATORS — |) |“ Thincs_ i» Sigh” < 7 i j Last Year .. . 1953 Perfect... New Zi i} ; : /Famous Name Brand . . . Terrific Value . . . $159.95 > —- e - - \ d b MICHIGAN FLUORESCENT LIGHT CO. > sb Se ee eee eel fl ‘ge 4 Py bes , = ae . THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1954 Peay i t FOR THE 416 ORCHARD LK. PEOPLE NEAR SEARS TELEGRAPH AT GREEN The immortah, words spoken by : Abraham Uincoln in his famous WE GIVE HOLDENS R ED TRADING STAMPS Gettysburg Address bring to mind RARE Ty GY the words of the Apothecary’s a “Oath. For just as Lincoln's speech - was motivated by his dedication to the freedom of all peoples— the Oath of Pharmarcy is dedi- cated to freeing all from the shackles of pain and disease. It is fitting that we, as pharmacists, re-dedicate ourselves in service “tor the people’ on the occasion of the observance of Lincoln’s 148 N. SAGINAW W. HURON AT COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF GIFT vatentines| CHOCOLATES ie LARGE SELECTION OF BEAUTIFUL <{ Be ro) VALENTINE HEART Boxes . ri yo | Ae T0 cm CROOMSTICK ‘Seaforth’s Solid 1 00 Try inhalation therapy with the . ASTHMANEFRINe Nebulizer and Solution ‘A’ @ Inhalant on a 10-day money-back guarantee So easy to use—just inhale the mist-like vaper directly into the affected area. Let us tell -xou about the welcome relief thousands of users are finding with AsthmaNefrin after other meane had failed. Shaving Lotion TAA FP AA AA AA SP § ou New Revion JEWELED LIPSTICK $2.00 Value ] a - ) f ‘100 Vitamin A 25,000 Units 100 Liver Iron Capsules with B12 100 Hi-Potency Multiple Vitamins with B12 Only Make This 24 Hr. Test Enjoy blessed relief from swollen ching joints, arthritis, rheumatism, jitica, Mimbago or neuralgia — or HAND CREA Only ] ’ $4.00 Value }C Bonne Bell Ky Plus 30 Cream Only 3 Tabu” Solid ecisenal Feoaches and trainers for muscle ness, strained ligaments, painful sprai: and bruises. To set safe, quick relief, simply a this pleasantly scented liquid EXTE NALLY wherever you feel pain — limb ‘joints, shoulders, neck, bac Note how’ much more comfortable you feel all day, ow many hours of restful sleep you get t niwht. “My patients and I are more than pleased. Warmth supplied soothes and! produces circulation to carry off toxins, Nothing compares to Muscle-Aid_ for relieving es suffering from arthritie ." states T. T. Conner, Shealathnrieict. Philadelphia. Money Back Guerantee Get Moscle-Aid today from your - W\Drugeist. Use half the battle. If you! ‘are not delichted with results, , return w/ A tor refund. Regular y or size bottle $2.00, or Special Snir. $1.00 Muscle-Aid AT THRIFTY DRUG STORES aes % = Gite or HERD RY DESERT FLOWER - TOILET WATER Nite ath etominer 8 DOO Prince Matchabelli Col. $2 up , Yardley Dusting Powder $1.75 aN Tussy Midnight Cologne $1.25 Kleenex ; Pox ef 300 25c Citrate of Magnesia ANG ES Old Spice Set ..........$1.65 ’ Zippo Lighter .........$3.50 Kings Men Set ......... $3.10 Boxed Cigars ..._ from $2.25 Yardley Shave Bowl $1.25 br della vs Pint -Tr. Green Soap 29° $1 .25 Serutan Granules 69° $1.38 Lady Esther rf 4 Purpose Cream 98¢ Jergin’s Face Cream Seen >| | &Te Pepsodent 100 Quinine TE) Values | Tooth Paste & ——— 100 lodine Ration Toblets . _ 3l¢ 2 vt 69: 98° | ICE CAP 100 Unicaps..... $311 3 gipo Lalke 100 ABDOL withc |= $310 -GRS Ne ‘ = } ; . 79 100 Combex Caps $432 ) 0c Barbasol | | "PIPE saz f) stave Gan | $189 [ 100 Natele Ceps 2°59 4 4100 Multicebrin .. $508 | Pt. Cod Liver Oil RSE ABS Hot Water S0ce ABDEC Drops. $351 Dr. itanie ” _ Bottle 100 ABDEC Cops $507 Tooth Brush ‘1 120ce Homicebrin 9 126 39: 98° SOce Polyvisel ... 9399 > 4 : | ) ; ' ~~ i en 2 ae cr ea ee ea ree- 4 Byars ee a ™ re” i tied tits oi zi i s E ry * J : 4 ; ¥ ae » | er } 4{ 4 bow fl ; a 4 “ 7 é \ amie ee | . ‘ | ‘ | ”“ REE ig “THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4,105) rged to Help Plan School Buildings (IMT | e - a — + re — CNESIZ ~ Hunting Cause [Noted Traveler to Speak ares iperey Wien oF macncsi | % p = ~ Hunting Cause No aveler to Speak Roosevelt PTA Superintendent Grange Meeting Set MACYS Seay | Tonight at Rochester High | | Oonight at Rochester High | ., for Saturday Night fe ROCHESTER «| LP of Water Leak ESTER ~ anh of 1:39 mewn Schedules Fair Asks Lay Aid | orrosvruur ee im the high audi. ae : ; ‘ i aks trandon | . torium this montli’s Wildwlife Ser- Grange 973 will meet at % p, m E Workers at Rochester | ies will present Francis R. Line, Queen, King Contests, Says People Who Have Saturday at the grange hall for | Ex +, | noted traveler aj Y Pr a regular Meeting ot pect to Reach Main ae with Movies to Be Featured | Studied Problem Have itn honor of Boy Scout Week, £ photographer ° ° waite Ae Later Today the National Georgrahic, Line at Annual Affair Vital Data, Ideas get eer 7 a a ; veler ¥ cial program and a l’ontiac scpu ROCHESTER — Water depart- -- ae his whe ‘ tours KEEGO HARBOR — Roosevelt : ROCHESTER “Community executive wilt present awards to tment workmen should know later ‘ q ~ 7. | articipation m= the planning of : members of the troop f oh PTA fair, featuring king and queen today if-there is a leak or a com-| Known as the creator of epic - ne er 5 | ‘hool buildings is just as -im-/ Refrehments will follow the pro- plete break in. the North Main films, he filmed a motion picture’ | ih ey pple: end, mothe | ‘| portant as ils interest im promot.sr gram . street water main, according to/| on Finland prior to the outbreak a a Coot UM ort ty hott Noe ling a bond issue’ we ee Robert Slone, ‘village manager. of World War IJ, Shortly after he | ; held = ~~ school Saturday he- | ‘This sistenwae was made this NET TEE TT ee Although the water was discov-| went into the Pacific, picturing aig —o P ue . aM week by Donald Baldwin, super is WS 6.) - : Wee — + on ered gushing up through the} centers of the world struggle, and sai aah linipalcg ie ena intendent of Rochester schools Bas YRS /\ : cman the New York Cen-| his “Circle of Fire” became Amer- Donald Weed are ‘co-chairmen of chin. he said that cofiiniitite Ta be Kee ¢ - bad = ‘ We : : the ninth annual event which is | - “i a ba Railroad tracks Sunday, bad} ica’s leading film on the Pacific a ae ie funds $ —— people, in conperation with pro- gy - weather, old railroad tracks be-| war zone. vole . raise Sunde tor | ‘ fessional faculty members. would @ - ea Make Your Hair the ra : - neath the street and lack of spe-| Tonight's film will be “Sheep, | Prarects. ‘be asked to help plan the pro- @ + rk ‘ ae a | cial equipment have hampered Stars and Solitude,’ which in 1950 Latest project is an electric posed school buildjags : - & Smartest of All With 4 operations, was voiced in 23 foreign languages | basketball score board recently SS : ry : -RGHE + , ‘ople , The water main is. buried 16 and distributed by the International installed in the gymnasium, ee BEETS VAN ani sel We have-many peopk who e Our New Ideas Fresh : : Film Divisofi’of the U. S. Depart. * | : . Mr. and Mrs. Henry Van Ler-| have spetit hours and days touf- bad from the feet below street level. ment State to the yest of the Campaigning is -going on this berghe of 215 West Lafayette St.,| lng ether comnmunity Chools bed a: Water supply to residentcs and ana a t epic in American FRANCIS R. LINE «| week among candidates for king Romeo, announce .the engagement | and formulating ideas as to what . North American Beauty ~ business places from Fifth and life aE + - | and queen of the affair. Queen of their daughter, Betty Rose, to| they believe wedld be best io - d Fashi Sh : " Main north to Romeo street was M : 2 Cute. chairman of the . |candidates are JoAnn Harbaugh, Dr, A, J. Phélan M.D. Dr. Phelan | building platiy for Rochester. a = + an ion ow... r cut off temporarily during the Hiewathen & jn eaid that this a . ] Shirlee Hawver, Carol Krielach, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. “Groups of mothers interested @ . a digging operations, but Slone said a tamlis presentation and ati come | U | ucation Peggy Lowe, Carelyn Rabel, Jean Phelan of Trenton. The couple plan” in better educational opportunities @ AVON : BEAU I c SALON a he did not believe pressure would ‘ Randall and Shirley Sias a wedding jin June. +for their children and their neigh. & a munity era people are urged to : £ { ! ’ r ‘ be reduced today, participate | ! Candidates for king, a new con- ~~ —_——__- | borg have valuable information we P= 1008 N. Main St. Rochester * OLive 2-811] ~ : test for the fair, are George Dea- | should utilize,"" he said Cotton hag more than 1,000 im- | cat, Feed Heh Decale’ Slneteton, Roche fer Man 4 jshould uulve” he said .¢ | (ARS SSSSSESRSR EERE SEER eee portant modern uses harl h, Hillary Van¢ r i _ Charles Smith, Hillary VanCoever- . week to help plan the new ele —— Ta | —— County Deaths . ing, Karl Weber and Orland West. Ch ad . Th { mentary building Will include) Mrs ® ‘ : nie Evening Program Offers Fair booths will offer hot dogs, | arged in ine | Sarmex Bociare Mies, Felli, eile 4) Relax in Comfort | * Mrs. Augusta Sleeper * ~ barbecues, brownies, — coffee, ROCHESTER — An unemployed os vi Crurise un mt fy = 2 E ] IMLAY CITY ice be tire New aheargf Course home made candy, popcorn, ice |_ Kone rfan will hoe aoe en oo Wat are a pal we in a Home of Your Own } i —Se ‘Irs. } < aign- dso i and Mrs. ale Mar- . | Augusta Sleeper, 80, a cal by MSC Pro | oreama and ginger ale. | men today before Pontiac Judge | tin. and when buying remember . . | Imlay City resident, was at 3°p.m. ors . , | Others will include fish ponds, | yiaurice FO Fi ? ai solecte » the preside ~ to be | Y . ‘HESTER—\ Chute. di- Maurice FE. Finneg: breaking Selected by the president of ° sure— | today at Lester Smith and Son Fu- marae . ov d ted néedlework, beauty shop, home | ‘i ae he _ no te - the Woodward Parent Teachers’ | neral Home, with burial in Imlay = of the Rochester adult ned canned and baked goods, cotton. eu Gulla sh ares a conmine 4 Association, they will work with DEAL WITH A City Cemetery. She died Monday cation program said today that candy, grab bag, gift shop, potted | Rochester. Police Chief Sam How- + a faculty committee comprised of R t A LTOR f in Manistique. evening classes are still open. plants, jewelry, ties, white ele- lett Douglas Lund, elemenjary coordi ROCHESTER Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.| 4 new class, “‘Discovering Your, Phants and comic books. Phillip Kaminski, 43, of 133° nator; Lois ‘Thompson, Florence Call or See \ Beryl Songerath of Pontiac; three Personality,”’ meets on ne Winding up the evening will be | Terry, is accused of illegally en- | Mortimer and Honora O'Connor, ° , : Insurance Agency sons, Emerson of Durand, Robert “s At saaliees ted by Michi | pie and cake walks, movies and tering the home of Mrs. Neldaj Lund will serve as chairman, ‘of Manistique and LeVerne of Hills- nights and is instruc Pa -|'a dance from 9 until midnight. Carmicheal at 337 Drace, Rochest- Thi roun iN present plan- ROGER B HEN RY ! 511 Mein St., Rochester dale. Nine grandchildren and eight | gan State College professor. —_—_—_—_— OC jer on Jan. 31 and taking an $800) ning pale ial a ma jar = . i OL 2-0111 grandchildren. The course is a study of basic 'Debatin Teams diamond ring. ing of working drawings by the -- Broker and General Sales Agent Mrs. George Boughner personality characteristics and (’ g : He was arrested in Center Line | architects, 511 isin St.. Rochester OL 11-9111 | LAPEER—Committal service for ~ ere shggee= ! Await Decision pomereny ay ost eed Be | Baldwin said that it is hoped that ——E — _ oi SS Mrs. George, (Estella) Boughner, | life, Lectures, discussions and | tbe State Detective Ray McCon- other members of the community 4 a former Lapeer resident, will be | films will be used as instruction on State Contest nell of the Romeo post. Howlett) wit) fect “free to offer. suggestions a : 4 i at 10:30 am. Saturday at Baird| materials. | Said today that the ring ‘which ty -any mi¢mber of this commit | at 10 a.m. Saturday at Coats Fu- reading SKills for adults, lets Gveth nnd | Gazette American Legion Home. 96 Installing Team. op a ottom i er | H. ith ; _- | Shop, driver training, first aid and|W!th a five-three » Water ' Church Ra. from § to 8 p.m. Pridsy./ Rebekah officers for 1954 include a MOE. Third, Rochester _—/ Gone ye een eee chad | golf improvement course. | ford is third with four-four, South- | 1+ wil He open to the puplic. | Mrs, Elsie Mathews, noble grand; “ OL ive 2-9411 ey | Side Lemetery, _ a ' field is fourth with three-five and | Rochester i Stree Stary Groner. vies grand: a . Ww . Van Dyke last with no wins ao eae Ce = irs Minnie Earl. oe cretary had a — Lae ie s j ) | = . : or to Churc wi sponse : _ 3 je F.ari, secretary, ise + EY AE ‘. sili snes — vile esi aad 70 Dads Sons | The top teams are now awaiting nike oole at the c. Webter sore Sater Mrs. Grace Cripps, treasurer EA. i | ter, Mrs. Gretchen Oeschger of ‘ the decision of the manager of | @y. beginning at 10 a.m Mrs. Jobe | Oddfellow officers include Otis 4 | Drayton Plains, ‘two nieces and | , | the Michi ~ Gilmore is chairman ‘ saat = | ichigan High School-Earen- | arte A >in : EXPERIENCE || emt [Attend Methodist |e joer to enich wil eter | coq ditt 2am Maacy ay vee era eon Boek, a . _ Covert Methe “8 ile ‘e grand; Gle Shook, sec- | —— e Banquet Monday sate Wumemenis. |Rolda bam ‘supper Peay kaginkioa if retary, and Ernest Cargill, treas- OLive 2-0811 | FARMINGTON—Service for Mrs. ‘ |S pm Mrs Verlin Reed is chairman dee . Ive 2+ COUNTS ‘Charles H. (Grace, Halsted, 72,| .ORTONVILLE—Some 70 fathers | / in a y s Nex Se _ ? | of 28519 Grayling St. will be at | and sons attended the annual com- | | ’ | |2 p.m. Saturday at the Spencer J.|™munity banquet in the Methodist 90-Day Ban Started Jan. 21 |» | Heeney Funeral Home, with burial | Church Monday evening. 'b A P| | in Oakland Hills Memorial Ceme-| Included in the program was a y von ayers St D ( . t h I R . d | tery. She died Wednesday in Mt.|community sing, led by Howard | ROCHESTER — Reserved seat Tay- Og a C Ss alse _— Mercy Hospital, Detroit.| Burt, a saxophone solo by Carol | tics will mu on sale ‘cmharroe . . | Surviving besides her husband | Burt, a film about the State Con- | , : b S thf Id Q t are & son, Dr, Lee H. Halsted of | servation Department, and selec-| or ane a P tion », y Ou Ie i uaran 1ne Farmington and a grandson, Lee | tions by a quartette. | Avon Players will stage aa] . SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP — An_ one ef the forthcoming vaccination | H. Jr. Speaker for the evening was the | arama “Kind Lady” in the audi- | increase in the number of stray clinics new: aa nhagly i boom — | torium of Rochester High -School | dogs picked up has resulted from _The first clinie ts slated for ‘Panel E lains Election who spoke on ‘‘Casting Shadows. | Feb. 19 and 20 - | the quarantine imposed on South. Fire Hall 3, 13-mile road west of xp On the program committee were Written by Edward ‘Chodorov- the ‘field Township by the Oakland Southfield road, Feb. 1° and 14 Proposals at PTA Meet Charles Sayr, John Hunt and L. play will be directed ' by George | County Health Dept., according to| The second will be held in Fire | WA D NSHIP — A M. Boutell. Long. Ticket sale is being directed | Supervisor William Roeser. Hall 2, 9 Mile road wast of Tele- | Py rend OR tn at cae by Mrs, Charles D. Stewart and | The health department recom- graph road, Feb. 20 and 21 | our neighborhood pharma- | Panel —_ = educa to be! Mrs. Darrel] Bordine. mended the 90-day dog quarantine, Clinic charge will be $1.50 per 7 330-332 Main Street Rochester Mich ; cist has had years of schdol- sa pare the — Feb 5 | an A U { Courses Reserved seats will be sold to- Jan, 21 after several township res-! dog. The immunization lasts one ° 4 . . ° ing. exptrience, and training ies tay night SS aa can ee . . morrow at a local drug store. idents had been bitten by rabid year. OL 2-2121 — OL 1-9642 : an is ‘Weds. | ing of the Waterford-Township Jun- at Southfield Hi h ‘ strays. | Roeser said the dog warden will ' - : - eer 3 ; | tor High School ureni Piechees g Thomas WSCS to Give Roeser reported 112 dogs halal up stray or unwanted dogs. |, k Be waar a Ee When-you have a prescription | Organization. SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP — F th d So B ' picked up by the dog warden - > filled, you know it will be 1! The panel discussion followed an | Registration of the spring semes- other an n ‘anque last a — to 68 i right — his accuracy and in- [| open house. Refreshments were | ter adult evening program will be| THOMAS—A father and son ban- =a ae Ss tegrity protects «your health. || served by Mrs. Frank Smrcina. |held at Southfield High School|quet will be held Saturday at 7| 208s Wlhost pg are Dope .| from 7 to 9 p. m. Monday. Classes | p.m. in Thomas Community Hall = Ewe. see —— V/s 40. Y M be hi | will begin meeting Feb. 15. “The event is sponsored fina: Roeser sald. The - P ne- . ‘ PURDY’S a Een ee, Tentative plans call for classes! as WSCS, Melvin Mott will act| ure, we (Mere dogs wearing = Ng Certificates Awarded in bookkeeping. shorthand, typing, | as toastmaster. , “4 DRUG STORE |) cass cry = are ening |e Oe aac — a Meeting Of | and English for the foreign born: must be kept on home. premises or . | _ Plan Dance Saturday 321-Main St. Rochester Tyler Lodge 317, F&AM here Tues- | day evening, Chester, Muntz, who | served as worshipful master dur- year_membership certificates to | his, father, John Martz, M. D. Aute | Home nursing and first aid will | 'also be offered. There will be no \fee for these two classes. - =| ing the past year, presented 40-| 41) courses except painting will | |meet for two hours on Monday ‘nights: Painting will last three | AUBURN HEIGHTS — Commu- nity Club in Auburn Heights will be the scene of a dance Saturday at 9 p.m. There Will be modern and old-time dancing with Harvey on a leash if not within a fenced-in area or dwelling. Roeser advised Southfield dog- owners to have their pets . vac- cinated by a veterinarian or at) Telephone number to call is FL SAVE REDUCED PRICES!!! WATCH FOR OUR AD | NEXT WEEK... Mitzelfeld- Eggleston has purchased the and Arthur Atwell. ‘hours on Monday nights. | The older Muntz in turn pre: | Further information may be ob- sented to his sori his past mas- tained by calling FL 1-3555, ne Lapeer Pie Champ Perry calling. 1-3551, | 4" JOINTER, Was $42.95 ...:.. 6” JOINTER and PLANER, Was $89.95. . 8” TILTING SAW TABLE MODEL, $44.50 7 $9495 DRILL PRESS, was $49.50 .. 772° 12” DISC SANDER, 35" | $43? Was $53.95 ......... SHAPER, was $69.50 fo Compete in State LAPEER COUNTY — First and | second place winners in local | cherry pie baking contests will | ols r} ° ’ DALE and NINA compete in a county-wide contest | at bbgrerbtrgion Brand fl te ies 6 Lapeer Comey] mAVE re 11" DRILL PRESS, $4960 | 10" BANDSAW, = $60 || raring heat be MARTIN | [xi recsve' opener paid too FORD F-8 TRUCKS was $54.50......... SO | Was $5450.00... a0 TR Apparel Shop for ||] 20 Se aad ment Thar’ ond 10.00x20 TIRES—CAST WHEELS g° TILTING ARBOR sgE20 | 8° Tilting Saw Tablo— it 4 Fast Liquidation! || ———— a | : £00 SAW & STAND, $107.75 OY =| 4” Jointer and Stand... it A Real y t SALE STARTS 1 Leek Level . 895 | / Buy! SHOP SMiITH—Complete $199" F “4 Week from Today! F p sarees . ; oe . : . Less Stand and Casters —~Was $259.50 a oe NOW aes q Pam Pe etye LARRY JEROME j yee i, RY ; sou shes BURR HARDWARE Asrealishen|ill Beauty Shoppe ©) |W or non me i i PP erore HT one ox. PPO 7 iy eh ie cet 8 wines ol nah sy wor Sy 429 MAIN ST., IN ROCHESTER, MICH. "F ; on a-2508 lew Phone: OL 2-7226 awit chai Main Gerest at the Bridge. OPEN EVES. OL 2-9711 s Free Parking tm Rear of Stere . New Located at 1586 E. Aubarn—Breekland = —. ownEn — ee a | . * es = : _ : : i . ohne Z 7 3 f Ff: | : | : ips . ) f iL A ail akin. “~ Study Club ~ Honors Past Presidents “Memorial Is Read’ by Parliamentarians for Mrs. Bacon A history of the Parliamentary | Study Club given as a memorial to Mrs, Hiram Bacon was. read, by Mrs. E. D. Moessner when | members of the groupr met Wednes- | @ay in the Masonic Temple for | the annual Past Presidents Day program Mrs. Moessner said that the club was organized %--years ago with | five members. Mrs. Joseph Pan- | ter, parliamentarian emeritus, was one of the members A skit depicting the right and wrong ways of conducting a meeting was presented by Mra. Otte Deyo and Mrs. Stanton Lev- ely, A quit called “Two for the Points” was given by Mrs. Ho- mer Feneley, Mrs, Levely and Mrs, €. W. Mossey. Mrs_ Mossey Whs announcer for the program. The origin of parliamentary law J was presented in the form of a. tableau by the past presidents. | Taking part were Mrs. HN. Wat-| gon. Mrs. Moessner, Mrs Deyo, | Mrs. Gemmell and Mrs. Robert MacLaren Others were Mrs. I M_ Lewis Mrs, Mossey, Mrs. Levely, Mrs R. Ear! Springer and Mrs. Feneley Material for the program was provided by Mrs. Watson and was formulated by Mrs. Mossey. Mrs, Gemmell told of ber re- cent trip to Scotland on board the Empress of Scotland. Mrs. James Hampton. president announced that Mrs Paul Gorman Mrs. Ivan Wilcox and Mrs. Aden Tharnton will be in charge of the, annual luncheon of the club. Guests for the afternoon included Mrs. William Kramer, Mrs. Virgil Struble and Mrs, Clarence Failing. | Director, Aide | Honor Guests | Lauretta Paul, director of Pon- | tiac General Hospital, and her as- sistant, Shirley Dovre, were hon-| ored guests Wednesday when mem- | bers of' the Women's Auxiliary to Pontiac General Hospital met with | Mrs. T. Eugene Miller of Edge- | wood Park ere Mrs. Miller is first vice presi- | dent, and chairman of the book | and magazine cart of the auxiliary. Two new members were intro- duced to the group. They were | Mrs. Gertrude Conti of Middle Straits Lake-and Mrs. Charles W. Heathman of Drayton Plains Mrs. Russell Eakles, chairman . } _.. EY THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1955 | Pentiae Press Phote SUSAN KAY ALLEN. and MRS. RALPH E, ALLEN Cake Honors 3-Year-Old When Susan Kay Allen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph O. Allen o Cooley Lake road, celebrated her third birthday recently, her grand %. MRS, EF. L. HOWARD JR. Shirley Knowlton of the notions eart, secured volun Wed jn Owendale teers for her project from the book cart group. Mrs. Harold King pre- Shirley Irene Knowlton, daughter | mother, Mrs. Ralph F. Allen, made {- her a very special birthday cake Made in four layers, two choco late and two. pink marbled, the cake is frosted--4a blue icing “Ruffles and ‘lace’ were madeé with a cake decorator A seven-inch doll was inserted in the top: and given a bouquet of vari-colored frosting flowers. Sit +ting on a large mirror, the cake gave the appearance of an old fashioned lady in her best dress Auxiliary President Will Attend Meet - Mrs. Robert W. Crowden of Oli | ver street will attend the Great | Lakes Command Council meeting of the Canadian Legion British Empire Service League this com- ing weekend at the Hotel Detroiter Mrs. Crowden is president of the Ladies Auxiliary Convention Club” which covers eight states. She ts a hfe member of Detroit Post 16, | Canadian Legion and is serving ithe auxiliary this year as third term. president. CLEA AA AAA LaAAA AAAhdA hhh ddd dun \ | PHS ‘Future Teachers’ ls } Ata receat meeting of the Futuré Teachers Club of Pontiac High School, Virginia Baker was elected president. Other officers elected were Carol Opland, vice president; Leonard Berry, secretary; Karen Anderson, treasurer; Judy Palmer, historian and Sharon Zielke, re- porter. Virginia will keep a scrap- book of Future Teachers activities. Vera M. Adams was present at | the meeting to invite members to a tea to be given by the Delta Kap- | pa Gamma Society on Feb. 10 in | Crofoot School. ; | On Feb. 24, Future Teachers, | Future Nurses and the History | Club will have a tea at Pontiac | High School. Pioneer Highlands Group Plans Dance Club Elects 1954 Ofticers --—_~+-—_-——- ? f A teenagers dance with a valen- | j |tine theme is planned by Pioneer | Le * Highlands Civie Association for VIRGINIA BAKER Friday evening. OT ~ as The dance, which will be held Has Heart Surgery jat Knights of Pythias Hall on, . : ie. Wendell Ellis, son of Mr. and] Voorheis road, will be from 8&8 . ‘ o'clock until 11. Chairmen are | Mrs. Leslie Ellis of Pioneer drive, | T. B. Elkins, Mr. and Mrs. Robert | is convalescing in his home after | Tricker, Mrs. Emma Wohlgemuth | undergoing heart surgery at Har- | and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pote. per Hospital jn Detroit. ; oye i 47-440L.p* we Bid Son. ; * Evie e e 7 , aod %. ~~ . eee pra 3 eters tet ‘ sees iA) CG¢ - oh yo en e i | s s | Rebuilt in One Day! if Why ruin. your health | ite sleeping on that old sag- : ging mattress? Call to- | ; day see how little it costs to have it made | like new! New Custom-Made Mattresses Pillows Renovated | Old Mattresses Rebuilt a& | | ¥ . xTord Mattress ll . 332 West Huron St. FE 2-7695 it a 5.95 100% NYLON AND DACRON linen or batiste finish. Fine lace or em- broidery adorns them. Short or cap sleeves! — White or pastel. Sizes , / 32 to 38. Bleuseo—Lo wer Floor 8.98 and 10.98 BUDCET PRICED COTTONS in broadcloth, cham- bray, pique, pol- jshed cotton. Torso, pencil slim or full skirted unpressed pleats or simply flared styles. Sleeveless, and three quar- ter sleeves. Solids, _ plaids and prints: Junior and misses’ sizes. Budget Cotton—Lower Floor . cap. 48 N. Seginew St. ., FIRGT IN BLOUSES «AIST I COTTON: 24.95 19.95 to 39.95 sided at the refreshment table. Box Social Is Held by Square Set Club | \of the Cedric Knowltons of Owen | dale, exchanged nuptial vows with | ‘A 3C Edward L. Howard Jr. in Owendale Saturday. He is the son | of the Edward L. Howards, also of I hed f PIPILLLALLLLLLALLLELZAALA~LAABALLAL AL AL A A Added Rost! A Valentine box social was the | Qwendale © TV Stoo! | event of the evening when mem-| The bride is now residing with © Extra Seat : bers of Square Set Qub danced | her grandparents, the Arthur Bur- © Foot Stool Wednesday evening in Wever gesses of Joslyn road, while her © Vanity Seat School. Sid Oison was master of ceremonies. Mary Anderson arranged the heart decorations and callers were Mr. Oison, Bill and Melvin Nor bert Harry Anderson Jim Thomp- son and Sam Joan. Mr. and Mrs Bill Norberg and the Max Millers, were in charge of refreshments Mr. and Mrs. Perc Secord were welcomed. as new members and guests included the Emmett Pen- nelis, the Larry Lauers. the Bob Laphams, the William Nesbitts the Raymond Kellers, the Russell Pay- nes and the Ralph Norbergs husband is stationed in Honolulu. © Fireplace Stoel Slip Covers Knitted to hug your furniture ...expertly tailored for long For the wedding ceremony in Owendale Methodist Church, Shirley wore a blue-gray wool sult with red accessories and a corsage of red roses and-a white orchid. Her: sister, Janice her honor maid in a gray wool suit with navy accessories and a cor sage of red roses and white carna fons. Paul D Howard was best man A reception in. the lors followed -the_ceremony . ARST I DRESSES BEAUTIFULLY PRINTED DRESS- ES. Elegantly tai- lored in almost weightless fabrics. Sleek skirts, curv- ed bodice, jackets or boleros are new this spring. All sleeve lengths, new necklines, In a flourish of spring colors. - Junto r, misses’ sizes. wear. Wine, green or blue in charming ‘Fern’ pattern, apg was church pars Eagles Aerie Sets Penny Supper Date Doris Strickland reported on the Eagles Aerie 2887 Auxiliary bene fit dance Wednesday at the hall on Highland road Final plans were made for a penny supper to be held Sunday from 2 o clock until 6 for members and friends. Nardis of Dallas COTTON SEPARATES De Cor | 3 Better Dresses—Mezzanine cs Kiddies’ Pin-Ups Eagles Aerie dance and floor Shop a ee SS Saeeet $929 ~ show was announced for Saturday 48 N. Perry Brery Guiness Set at the hall to honor their 56th . Pontiac Hotel Lobby . . Your kiddies will love these charm- : anniversary. _ ff ing cut-outs in gay bright ‘colors Zz ——— = 2 Choice of 16 sets of Nursery Walt = 5 Disney. and Western characters 6 Strong washable compo-board . « covers 24° x 28" of wadl.space. Just : ; the thing for nursery or rumpus ah S r r lA : room , - at Rosehberger’s now! RS Others 39.95 L Square Model Se | te 119.00 e@eeeees Friday. and Saturday : $4.49 Round.............°4 . 4 9 irls B il You'll find dozens of uses for these practical lovely Hassocks ernas used and enjoyed by every member of the family. Sturdy calf-lke plastic cover . easy to clean with a damp cloth. Two ears for . Red easy moving . . . built to Starnd.wp under heavy use' Choice of L Sizes Suede er Plastic Tablecloths Sofa Pillows pried land fashion wise. 4 bo 9 Slightly Imperfect For career, yet At a Miracle Low Price : eminine as a Size 54 x 54. Low 69: x § , ‘ change of = Ij Men's and Boys LADIES Only SID Qh mind 100% -_ OXFORDS S HOES @ee our tremendous selection of gias- , | wool f abric $s pees tie table cloths! Dozens of exciting Decorator-styled pillows in choice pee “te eel ‘ tt s and colors io launder- of many 8 des js ‘ nte ‘ - : $ . ; $ & gay patterns and col = 1 =. — B cnciggabolirog raquo ried! iacick = ing wipe clean © lo Pull size 18” x 18” ‘eNbice of : 7 \ cloth! Perfect gift anytime! more than a@ dosen luscious colors. & lengths, sheath : —— , srral tt iste tees tte ‘pece = I | ae gi — * ct hasenbereer's} foal OO Ne treatment. jewel : - Sizes 6 to 12 Sizes 4's 16 9 : a , trims, novelty io Brown moc-toe. Goodyeor | A forge assortment \ Always Come to F pockets, collars i welts. * choose from, \ ae _ cuffs. feee a = _ t | =r misses’ and wom- es \ bk en's sizes. “ . . or aN | \ Befere Vew Decorate spice 4 ‘\ \ > : \ Suit Selon—Main Floor , WT 722 eee eee ede etitt2Lg2t2itities, : nips gi = a ‘ ‘ f a = . 5 ae \ Spartan Gridder Quinlan ‘May Take Boxing Whirl EAST LANSING (UP) — Bill Quiinian, 215-pound end on the Michigan State footbal] team, may get his first Grack at collegiate boxing when the Spartans tangle ‘with Iowa State’s NCAA cham- pions Feb. 13, MSC coach George — ns — of last year! Now GREATER *5 87 To Sam Benson} CLOTHING OUTLET 20 S. PERRY BETWEEN PIKE & WATER 1 Hour Free Parking in Hubbard Garage Sam Benson Says— THANK YOU! My January Business has been terrific! Way ahead I'm going to do the same thing in February! LOWER PRICES! Will Save You Up to $20! NEW SPRING SUITS 99" te yh - TOPCOATS a | f" te 33" PANTS -- JACKETS All Priced to Save You More in My Side Street Store Makris said today, ne? Makris, who tutored Chick} Davey, Chuck Speiser and Jed! Black from cOllegiate to profes- | sional ranks, said the towering | sophomore may be called upon | to fill in-for heaveyweight Jack Braves Still Make ‘Hot’ News Reilly, who is moving down “to the 178-pound slot to replace in-| aes Latiner Signs With Steelers — — Pro Offer | { | PITTSBURGH uw — All-America hatfback Johnny Lattner of Notre ' Dame has signed a contract with | the Pittsburgh Steelers of the Na- | tional Football League, the club | announced today. | Steelers declined to disclose | the cash terms of the contract | with their Ne, 1 draft choice. A club spokesman said Lattner was signed last night by head : coach Joe Bach at South Bend, The spokesman said the Steelers were elated to have signed the 21-year-old Chicago athlete who re- | vealed previously had received two | tentative offers from representa- | tives of Canadian pro teams. Van- | couver and Ottawa were reported | interested in signing him. | Lattner was quoted as saying he was ‘‘exceedingly happy’’ to get a | crack at the NFL and Steeler rep- |resentatives said he undoubtedly | would play at least one full season | with the club before being called ‘into military service, Lattner,a | senior at Notre Dame, is an ROTC | student. Ted Perva Wins Main Event in Wrestling Card VALUES! watch Wednesday night's 3-bout mory. | eiding fall over Stan Holeck of | Northwood, Canada, at 22 min- utes, 14 seconds of the main | event. | Detroit's Bert Ruby and Sey- | mour Koenig of New York battled | to a draw in the semifinal, while | Johnny King of Rochester was awarded a decision over Sid Hayes of Manchester, England, in the opening bout. Hayes was disquali- fied by referee Al Thomas of Pon- tiac for illegal tactics. 1187 A Bruin for Bruins! is going to give the Boston National Hockey League seven-foot mounted black a mascot. Gov. Cross will Irish All - Americas. Quoted as ‘Happy’ With | AUGUSTA, Maine — Maine | Troy Knocks Out Ward Put Cooper on in Clinchless TV Bout By JOE FALLS DETROIT «&—How's this for a boxing oddity: a clinchless fight. It happened last night at Olympia Stadium where smart Willie Troy, 159'2, Washington, D. C., secured his position as Tth-ranking middleweight . by knocking out Detroiter Moses It's Time Out! “The bum tells me I don’t gradu- ate, dear . . . don’t ask my why!” See Rose Bowl Films Oakland County chapter of the Michigan State College Alumni Club will present color movies of the Rese Bowl game and parade | Feb. 16 in Pontiac High School's | | | } Mustachioed Ted Perva of | | Pittsburgh won the 3rd and de- | | More than 400 fans turned out to auditorium, Tickets. will go on sale at 7:30 | wrestling card at the Pontiac Ar) pm. at the auditorium door, and the program will start at 8 o'clock. from Covington, Ky., signed with 5 Little Rock, Detroit Southern Assn. Bowling Results «rm team: + . He batted .351 in 85 games for WEST — WED. “A” w | the Indian Town Gap (Pa.) team Heren Mae. ss Weiss ™ last year while in service. He also +. berr ’ ; Nl Coach 47 OBrien Hig a5 | hit 27 home runs. Perry Frndly 47 Deans 2 Hoffer, a Xavier university grad- Plater Res ‘ Nae Chews Natit 33 | uate, hats and throws righthanded. Buerders 42 Peoples Mkt 18 Se = Indtv. game—A. Asplund 223, series— M. MeNett, J. Ppertas 568; team game, sertes—Perry Market 1004—2741. WEST HURON HOUSE we Ps. Poeoles 42 20 Clad “se” 33 3¢ Oatl. Coin 42 26 ~Thrombly 35 33 cv 4126 Steel Eng a4 34 Welden's 38 30 Sve. Windew 31 37 Drewry's 87 31 Perry Mkt. at West Side 35 32 igh Life 26 42 Haselten's 35 82 Frenchy's 11 37 Indiv, series—L. Rethbarth 279, D. 668. AUBURN MERCHANTS re f ere-£: . 3 ce 40:28 Check's 33 34 C @ H Ltr, 38 2 Bouck's 31 37 Auction 38.26 Aub. Cad 29 39 Aub. Mig. 43731 Aub. Freit 21 42 By Request --- A Repeat Performance ‘of Our GRAND OPENING SALE! One of Pontiac's Greatest Selection of Values in Automobile SEAT COVERS —- SARAN FRONT SEAT 7” ONLY or 1 5’ PLASTIC 3 Passenger Coupes Sealtuft 3-D Trim ALL PLASTIC $2.43" $3 28 Custom Line Values to $45.50 colors. ON SALE FREE GIFT * This Set of SARAN as pictured in choice of Fadeproot, wipes off;.a $29.95 value. —e | : >. -~ Ss q . $19.95 “ : FE 5-4503 136 S: Saginaw St. My? > =f ‘ Open Daily 9 to 9. — With the Purchase of Each Set of Seat Covers Your Choice of FLOOR MAT, CUSHION, ARM REST COVERS FREE ih - Save on Convertible Tops ARKET TIRE CO. SEAT COVER DEPT. Corner of Chase St. 30 Minute 0 Lf While You Weit BUY ON BUDGET! ~ NO MONEY DOWN! At These Low, Low Prices _FE 4.8272 Ward, 161, at 2:42 of the 8th round. Referee Lou Jallos never had an | easier time of it. Not once did he | have to step between the two fight- ers. As a matter of fact, Jallos’ hard- ;est assignment was tolling ten lover Ward's limp body and then trying to haul him to his feet. A left and right pat Ward down for good but he was a victim of |exhaustion more than anything | else, He simply punched himselt | out. Ward's defeat put a damper for the time being at least on his dream of going into big time. In the early going Ward carried | the fight to the taller Troy, who started extremely slow and seemed surprised by Ward's punching pow- er. This went on for five rounds with Ward building an advantage on officials’ score cards. Then Troy's experience began to tell. Normally a counter puncher, he carried the fight for the 1st time in the 6th round. Ward, fight- ing only his 2nd 10-rounder, quickly tired. Troy: kept up a stream of light but effective punches and Ward finally crumbled in the 8th, falling face down. It was the lst time the young Tigers Obtain Rookie Fielder From Service DETROIT Ww — William Hoffer, la 22-year-old outfielder just re- | leased after two years in military | service, has signed a contract with | the Detroit Tigers | Hoffer, a 6-foot-2, 190-pounder $55 and $59.50 SUITS and TOPCOATS .. $65 and $69.50 SUITS end TOPCOATS ... $75 to $85 __ SUITS and TOPCOATS . . ’ $55 imported ; TWEED TOPCOATS ... Odds and Ends! Special / $55 te $65 ALL-WOOL SUITS, Now OPEN AH iWaiver List, Get Detroiter had ever been floored. | Thomson's OK Ex-Giant Believed to Have Agreed to Salary Close to $35,000 NEW YORK @—The Milwaukee Braves, after recently obtaining | Danny O'Connell from the Pitts- burgh Pirates afd then acquiring Bobby Thomson and Sam Calde- |rone from the New York Giants, | continued to hog the “hot stove | league’’ spotlight today, > Ld s Thomson wasted little time in reaching a salary agreement yes- terday by phone with General Manager John Quinn. The best guess was that he would receive close to $35,000, which would make him one of Milwau- kee's highest salaried players. Veteran catcher Walker Cooper, | a 13-year National League veteran, | was placed on the waiver list by | the Braves, | ‘The New York Yankees didn’t figure in any transactions, The Brooklyn Dodgers. brought their list of contented piayers for that they had signed three more pitchers—Preacher Roe, Erv Pa-| lica and Ben Wade. Other players who agreed to terms yesterday included: catcher | Wes ‘ Westrum, second baseman | Ron Samford, outfielder Ray Berns | land first baseman Gail Harris, Giants; pitcher Bob Rush, Cubs; | outfielder Jim Rivera, White Sox; | infielder-outfielder Vic Power and | pitcher Ed Monahan, Athletics; | outfielders Hoot Evers and Charles | Maxwell, infielder Ted Lepico and pitcher Bill Werle, Red Sox; out-| fielder Gene Hermanski and pitch- ers Cal Hogue and Vernon Thies, | Pirates; pitcher Duane Pillette and Rocky Krsnich and pitcher Herm | Wehmeier, Redlegs; outfielders | Gil Coan and Kite Thomas and | 1954 BOWLING TROPHIES harry h. ackerman 43 S. Seginew St. Next to Ocklend Theeter 194 to 18 with the announcement | §_. catcher Joe Tipton, Senators, verybody’s climbing _ on the cushioned bandwagon Sines 514 to A—EEE Priced $ from 1%, l A? DIEM’S 12 West Huren. SHOE STORE y Pontiac’s Largest Exclusive Men’s Store . The Hub’‘s Annual Store-Wide Sale S ne = 843 . $53 nw $63 Now / UB CHARGE ACCOUNT a ® 30 Days ogo 8 ® 60 Days ? @ 90 Days No ‘Carrying Charge! : @ brings you the finest assortments of nationally known brands of clothing —at fcoinendous savings ~is drawing to a close —dont’ miss it! -