ee The Weather Thursday; Showers Jee edi THE * sage hee So Pagal Rte ~« | ES OE BRN ree eee bs “_ PO ee erer + 3 Pte vam TIAC ER A OGL OLE BS YI My A tty Man RE 112th YEAR wre Tk KKK PONTIAC, “MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1954 —52 PAGES WCart ry Blasts Army | Pontiac to Buy Two Acres From Habel | City Abandons Second Attempt to Condemn Site $78,000 Purchase Will Form Part of Municipal Parking Lot Pontiac City Commission decided by a 5-2 vote. last night to buy two acres of land at 11-49 Parke St. from the Jack Habel Chevrolet Co. for $78,000. | Only Commissioners Har- court S. Patterson and Harry W. Lutz opposed the move to obtain the property for part of Pontiac's first municipal parking lot. City Attorney William A. Ewart recommended the purchase after listing two alternatives which he con-! sidered unsatisfactory. They were: 1. Start condemnation proceed- ings against the property for a) second time, This would take from eight months to a year. 2. Drop proceedings completely, with the city losing all money | spent on the plan. Before Habel's purchase of The property, the city plained te pay about $50,000 for it. City a Be ger Walter K. Willman said bel had $61,500 invested in Ex-PW Pictured —Viyli2 “Eas Red Helper space would be within the aver] .. . age rate being paid in the Mid-! Five Fellow Prisoners west. | ° Commissioner John A.. Dugan| Testify at Dickenson said the city should get the prop- | Court Martial erty and establish a lot. Under present conditions, he stated, many! WASHINGTON (INS) Cpl persons have to pay 3% cents just | Edward S. Dickenson was pictured to park long enough to pay a/as a willing worker for the Com- bill munists today in testimony of ex- Lutz and Patterson thought the POW witnesses called by an Army price was too high court martial to describe his ac- tions as a prisoner tn Korea Wilimaa said work would start The Army. however, has not yet immediately on a 240-car metered produced the key witnesses sched- lot covering the Habel land | ind to support charges that Dick- plus property fronting’ on Fast | onson acted as a prison camp Pike and Parke streets previous. | stool pigeon to get favors for him- ly beught by Pontiac. | self The Habel property is bounded | on the east by Parke street. west! by the Clinton *River. north by the Slater Apartments and South by ¢ity-owned land. The lot will be paved and light- | ed for night parking. Another 99 rT lecture | ed on Page 2. Col. 6) |. 1. That after hearing a cane © 7 +1 by Air Force Ist Lt, John S. Quinn, | | Dickenson said he no longer doubt- led tha®the U. N. was using ‘germ | | warfare’ in both North Korea and | China. Quinn is -one of the ex- Showers Forecast for Pontiac Area ws sve ac rae is wen Showers and thunderstorms are} fare. expected in the Pontiac aréa to- 2. That Dickson said the U.-S. hight and Thursday morning, ac-| was “wrong” to be in Korea, that cording to the U. S. Weather Bu-| he, urged Attendanée at Communist reau | study groups and the reading of | . A low of from 54 to 58 degrees | books by Stalin and Marx, and that | tonight is expected to rise to a | he spdke highly of “Twilight of | high of from 58 to 62 tomorrow.| World Capitalism’ by U. S. Com- The mercury climbed from a) munist William Z. Foster. low of 3 to a high of 69 degrees | . That Dickenson told,the Chi ‘here Tuesday. Approximately 02 | nese Communist commapd of plans of an inch of rain was recorded | laid by Cpl. Thomas N. Carrick of here yesterday. | Blacksburg, Va., and three other At 8 a.m. todaj reading was|men to escape from the prison 52. but by 1 p.m. in downtown Pon-| camp in 1951, and that as a result tiac the mercury registered 76! the four were confined to a-special degrees. camp as “‘reactioparies.”’ ! } | i panel Tuesday heard five ex- POWS, two of them roomnrates of Dickenson during the youthful- | appearing corporal’s two years in They declared: Almost. Doubles Average Survey Shows Retail Sales Here Above National Level Pontiac mercMants currently are doing an annual retail business that is 90 per cent above the national average. This estimate was based on advance data for Consumer Markets, an annual market data sourcebook published by Standard Rate & Data Service. Other estimates are: 1. Annual retail sales in Pontiac total $153,264,000. This is an average of $6,976 for each household in in the city, and 90 per+ eent above the national gales per household average of $3,677. 2. The sales total» shows an in- crease of 61 per cent over the amount reported by the 1948 Cen- sus of Business. The increase for the pation as a. whole since that year has been 33 per cent. - Other estimates in the pubii- cation disclose Pontiac's current population to be 78,000 people who city.4an increase of 6 per cent since 1950. The population of Oakland County as a whole has increased 16 per cent in the last four _and now stands at 459,000. Annual spendable income earned by Pontiac — is estimated at $167,840,000 is is an average of $7,640 per household, and is 4 per cent above the national in- The eight-officer court martial | Communist hands. | types | which the handyman | shown along with an exhibit | peor ‘i United Press Phite OFF FOR FLORIDA—A contingent of state finalists in the Mrs. | leave New York | America contest, including a Royal Oak resident, | by plane for the 16th annual évent in Ellinor Village, Fla. The event opens today and continues through Sunday. Shown, left to| | right, are “Mrs. Illinois,” Mrs. Karin Greenberg of Elgin, IL; “Mrs. | | Vermont,” Mrs. Margaret Pierce of Brattleboro, Vt.; “Mrs. Maine,” ra Ruth Lucas of Portland, Me.; “Mrs. Michigan” Mrs. Ga Mouw of Royal Oak,:- Michigan; “Mrs. Rhode Island,” Mrs “Gay| Galipeau of Woonsocket, R. I.; and “Mrs. New Jersey,” Mrs. Lila Bilz of Hackensack, New Jersey. Builders Show Will Open Thursday, for 4 Day Run: A four-day “Greater Pontiac Home Builders Show” will be staged for the public in the Pontjac Armory at 27 | Water St., from Thursday at 2 p. m. through Sunday | afternoon. The 34-exhibit show is designed to display the latest |in building and home-furnishing equipment. It is spon- | sored by the Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce. Local merchants © have* Home Builders + | |most modern materials home builder, repairer and} improver. Displays will of /gone all-out to display the) available for the interested | range from new eC q ges interior wood i can apply himself to the latest in convertible Excessive Profits, Rents windows. | Through FHA Abuses The rainbow of paints available | today with the most contemporary WASHINGTON \—The National | application _Sechalques will be | Assn. of Home Builders today dis- puted charges that the govern- For additional stories, see ment is millions of dollars out of special Building Show section | pocket or.that too high rents have starting on pase 13. | resulted alleged widespread |abuses under the government's program. the hundreds of different types of The association's views were ex- figor coverings the home owner) pressed by its president, R. G. can instal! himself. | Hughes, as the Senate Banking For the woman of the house |Committee turned to hear what who ts looking for the latest in | industry spokesmen have to say gadgets, these, too, will be | about allegations that some apart- shown. Many have not been on | Ment builders raked in huge and the market previously. “unconscionable’’ profits by ob- . | taining oversized. government - The hobbyist who makes furni-| backed loans either through the ture will find a complete power | dishonesty or inefficiency of Fed- tool equipment display. The most | eral Housing Administration scientific equipment and the latest (FHA) officials. in working materials will be dem- Yesterday, Commissioner T. onstrated. , ._, | Coleman Andrews of the Inter- Gifts will be distributed to visi- asl tees Series OE te tors daily. Show hours ings rod Senate-Meuse Commities on-Re- rom 210 1 pm Thrday 2 6) Gorton tense Federal Saturday, and from noon until 6 ree _ oe Se val ’ apartment projects under p.m. Sunday. a now-defunct “middle income” housing m piled up 65 mil- lion in excessive profits by the inflated loan guarantee device. ' Andrews said his agents so far have found no evidence of tax Fire Hits Saginaw Plant SAGINAW (® — Fire caused $10.- 000 damage Tuesday at the Michi- gan Sugar Co. plant in nearby Carrollton. Fast action by fire- men was credited with confining the blaze to one section of the plant. ning a Seeks 18th District Seat DETROIT (INS) — Paul Sutton of Royal Oak today announced his | j Democratic candidacy for Congress| than ‘they would othe in the Eighteenth District, com- live \n 21,970 households within the ‘ 2 ¢ (Continued on Page, Col. 2) posed ‘of Oakland County, Royal Oak. Woman Vies for Mrs. America Title Dulles En Route fo NATO Parley Will Also Hold Strategy Talks Before Geneva Conference PARIS w — U. S. Secretary of | State John Foster Dulles flew to- ward Paris in a special Air Force a today for a meeting of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization | and last-minute strategy talks on or coming\Geneva conference. An informed, American source i. said flatly the United States would stand by its decision to op- pose an expected Russian move to turn the Geneva meeting into a “Big Five’ conference with Red China — even if such opposition broke up the conference. Leaving Washington last night, Dulles implied this would be his stand. He reiterated American par- ticipation at the Geneva parley “does not imply our diplomatic recognition of Red China.” The | United States insists the Peiping |} regime is an invited participant. | not a big-power instigator of the | meeting starting April 26. Group Denies Piling Up); Duties. due in Paris this after’ | noon, planned to see French For- eign Minister Georges Bidault a few hours later at a private dinner at the residence of U. S. Ambassa- dor Douglas Dillon. In his farewell statement in Washington, Dulles deplored what he termed the “reckless assaults’ of the Vietminh, and obvious reference to the battle at Dien Bien Phu. “It is tragic that war should be used, and the lives of so many tens of thousands should be sacrificed, as an instrument of political pol- icy,"’; he declared. ‘‘This is not a good prelude to Geneva. Neverthe- less, we shall not be discouraged, nor shall We grow weary in our search for peace.’ Fort Defenders Appeal for Milk and Fruit Juice HANOI #—Brig. Gen. Christian de Castries sent out an urgerit ap- peal today for milk and fruit juices to be dropped to the grow- ing ranks of wounded trapped in- side Vietminh - ringed Dien Bien Phu. The heroic commander of the beleaguered fortress addressed his appeal to the people of Hanoi— French and Vietnamese, The French have been unable since March 2% to get a plane in Anside the fortress be- cause of the constant pounding of the airstrip by mortar and artillery fire from the Communist-led be- siegers, That was 12 days after the Vietminh launched their first all-out assault by suicidal waves of fanatical troops to seize the northwest Indochina fortress. -|to evacuate the hundreds of wounded French Troops Into Indochina U.S. Transports Used to Land Paratroopers | in Non-combat Zone | | PARIS (AP)—The U. S. Air Force is ferrying French | paratroopers to Indochina} for dropping into besieged | Dien Bien Phu, authorita-| tive sources said today. These sources said the) American pilots would land | the troops in a noncombat | area, where French pilots or American civilians would| ferry them on to the north- | west Indochina fortress. The\. paratroopers flown | big Orly Airfield yes- | were ris U.S. Air Force trans- | have not yet arrived | The number of jumpers being | ferried and the route followed are military secrets\, The U. 8. Air\Force provided the airlift at the yequest of the French government, The American government con- siders this action compatible with S. policy and the \American military “assistance program .to France and Indochina, competent American sources said. It was learned that the U.S Air Force also will ferry French troops from North Africa to Indo- china, though American sources here considered the France-to-In- dochina operation a ‘‘one-shot"’ af- fair. The departure point from Nerth Africa, meanwhile, was kept secret. = The United States already is sup- plying the French with fighters, attack bombers and_ transport planes for their fight against the Vietminh. Some 200 American Air Force ground personnel have been stationed in Indochina to. help maintain these planes Twenty-fwe or more American civilians under private contract (Continued on _— 2, Col. 4) City Renews 7 Liquor Licenses Commissioners Vote 5 to 2 for Renewal; Five More Up Next Week Pontiac City Commission voted five to two last night to renew for this year 7 of the 12 Class C liquor licenses issued last year. The other five permits approved in 1953 won't come up for renewal until next week. Seventeen Class C_ liquor-by-the-glass_ licenses is- sued prior to 1953 also were re- newed. Six more of these will be acted on next week. |. Some 15 tavern, three hotel and five club licenses also were renewed. Action on the last dozen permits issued had been postponed one Floyd P. Miles of District 4. Miles said, although the licenses were issued legally under state law, they exceeded _a_city ordi- nance limiting the number to 24. It is his feeling, he said, that the extra Class Cs were approved against the wishes of a majority of Pontiac citizens. Licenses ques- tioned by Miles, but approved last night were: The Stadium Inn, 352 Oakland Ave.; Barr's Bar, 334 East Bivd.; Chico Bar, 374 Frank- lin Rd.; Greg’s Restaurant, 505 E. South Bivd.; Jet Bar, 716 Woodward Ave.; Clar’s Bar, 900 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) \In Today’ s Press week on request of Commissioner } ROBERT T. STEVENS _ oo. oo JOSEPH McCARTHY Vaccine OK d by Dr. Monroe to Begin Monday Dr. John D. Monroe the Oakland County Health De- partment, said today he is con- vinced the Salk polio vaccine is perfectly safe for children. ' The health official further point- ed out the vaccine tests will begin in Oakland County Monday if the county receives the vaccine in time He made the statement after confering yesterday with Dr. Robert J. Mason, president of the Oakland County Medical Society, and Dr. Douglas L. Wake, chair- man of the society's public health committee. The concensus was that we 4Sre satisfied that only safe vaccine will b- used and we will go ahead with tle inoculations next Monday pro- vided we get the vaccine in time,” said Dr. Monroe. He said every batch of vaccine will be triple-checked before being released “The vaccine will not be passed along to us until it gets a final check by a special advisory Com- mittee of leading medical author- ities,’’ said Dr. Monroe He pointed out that the indepen- dent body headed by Dr. Thomas Rivers of New York, a prominent (Continued on _Page 2, Col. 4) County Health Director Says Tests Are Slated Claims Hensel Pushed Charges Air Force Flies | Hearing Figures {9 Dodge Probe- ’ Committee May Ignore Accusation Made on Eve of Hearing WASHINGTON (U P )—~ Senate investigators may have to decide whether Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's ex- plosive, last-minute charges against a top Pentagon of- ficial will be considered for« mally in the burning Mc- Carthy-Army row. McCarthy dumped his surprise accusations against Assistant Defense Secretary H. Struve Hensel in the lap of the Senate Investigating Subcommittee on the eve of televised public hearings scheduled to get under way at 10:30 a. m. (EST) Thurs- day. . In the meantime, McCarthy is putting the finishing touches on @ ‘non-political’ speech he will make in Houston tonight. In a formal answer te Army charges against him and his aides, the Wisconsin Republican charged the assistant defense secretary with master-minding the Army's case to head off an investigation of himself for “‘mis- conduct and possible law vicla- Hense| immediately accused Mec- Carthy of “lying.” He dared Me. OE ——#+c arthy to repeat the charge without | Congressional immunity so Hensel could sue. McCarthy, in Texas, re- fused to do so—at least for the | present Acting Subcommittee Chairman Kart E. Mundt (R-SD) has im + sisted from the eae that the in- weotgation should. dea] only with ~ Summary ef the lesuse in the McCarthy-Army battle appears on page 4. issucs directly related to the . director of | Army's charges and the reply of | the McCarthy side to them. He declined fo comment imme- diately on whether he the Hense| allegations relevant to the inquiry. McCarthy claims they are de- signed to show motivation for the Army's attempt “to discredit the subcommittee” but if the is- sue is raised formally it will have to be decided by a ma- jority subcommittee vote, Mundt said everything is all set (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) McCallum Assumes Judgeship May 1 Municipal Judge Odin H. John- son last night submitted his resig- nation, effective May 1, to Pontiac City Commission. Commissioners accepted and immediately appointed Cecil Mc- Callum, elected to the post April 5, to start serving his term May 1 rather than at the starting date on July 4 Johnson said the court's docket was in good shape ahd suggested the appointment of McCallum to« | prevent a backlog of cases from piling up. Glass Firm Tells Causes of Pits in Car Windshields By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS : A national glass company has offered a tangible ex- planation for mysterious windshield pockmarks plaguing Michigan motorists from Detroit to Cheboygan. A team of experts from the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co., one of the nation’s largest producers of windshield glass, attributes the pockmarks to the general deterioration of older cars and driving conditions. investigation after receiv- ing complaints from motor- country. After the examination of 150 autos marked in the mysterious epidemic sweeping the country, the glass company announced: ““Fiying sand, cinders, gravel, or the materials used to de-ice snow covered roads could and very probably did cause the pit or crush marks found in the cars examined at Mount Pteasant.” representative te the auto indus- ‘ts ee *. 41, 2 @& ters % ‘ Bi] TV-Redie Preer mM | Want Ads aura, o Wemen's Pages *, 7%, 81, edt try ih Detroit, said an investigator was sent to Mount Pleasant yes- | terday. Most of the Michigan re- ports of damaged windshields The experts started their ists in various parts of the) W. L. Tomlinson, the company’s | have been concentrated in the Mount Pleasant area. “Generally, it was found that os ee eS ee Pe Riminghamn ‘on Increase in Tax Limit at June 14 School Election From Our Birmingham Bureau |i BIRMINGHAM— Something new will be added at the June 14 school election. Board of education members were notified by the Oakland Coun- ty School District last night that the question of whether the county district should come under the pro- Additional Birmingham and Bloomfield Hillis social news on 0 VW. M ust Decide in the school auditorium, under the direction of Carl Wonnberger English department head. Two separate casts include the following from Birmingham: Cyn thia Cole, Gail Christie, Henry Beam, Elizabeth Steggall, Penny Greer, Martha Buhs, Barbara Aik- ens, Katherine Bigge and Judith Wood. . > . Missionary Society of Redeem- page 31. visions of the Special Education | Act, designed to encourage the} education of handicapped children, will be placed on the ballot. | In order to carry out the pro | posed program, voters will also | er Lutheran Church will spon- ser a rummage sale in the base- ee a ee ea ~ ment of the church from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m, temerrow and Friday. . . > Winner. of a regulation softball | for gathering up the most choco- | late eggs at the YMCA's ss be asked to approve and increase | Faster egg hunt. was Michae en the limitation of school tax | Emery of 311 E. Southlawn. ae assessment by 1-20 of one per ‘Bolling, 1166 Henrietta, found 12 cent of the assessed valuation as equalized, or 4 cents per $1,000, The four-year terms of school | board members Wylie Groves, and | Richard Sauerbrun will expire al that time. 7 . Performances of “Family Por- trait," a play on the life of the family of Christ, will be presented Thursday and Friday by Ergas- terion, Cranbrook School drama | group. It will be given 1 at 8:15 p m Commission Renews 7 Liquor Licenses ‘Continued From Page One) 8S. Saginaw St.; and Chief Poa- tiac Lanch, 78 Baldwin Ave. Miles said the Police ment, clergy and Pontiac Manu- facturer’s Assn. were all against issuance of the last 12 permits. Commissioner Dr. Roy V. Cooley of District 1 said he didn't think | the police could express an opinion’! and that the manufacturers and clergy were not entirely opposed Cemmissioner Harcourt 58. Commissioner John E. Carry of District 6 said if the. permits were not renewed owners would not be given back their old tavern licenses | and would be forced out of busi- | ness. John A. Dugan, commissioner from District 5, and Mayor William | W. Donaldson of District 3 said | they didn't feel the last 12 could be removed and the first 23 ap- proved. - Dugan said he thought the question was cither to remove the liquor trade altogether or renew all licenses which meet regulations. Pattersen and Miles voted against renewal. Three class C licenses were ap- proved conditionally for 30 days while plumbing changes are made to comply with a city inspection department order. They are Art & Lil's at 924-26 Joslyn Rd., ‘the Glenwood Restaurant at 734-36 Glenwood Ave. and Salfi's Bar at 164 .N. Perry St Renewal of a C license for Nick's Restaurant at 732 Glenwood Ave was delayed one week while a check is made to see if the es- tablishment is violating state law by being too close to a church A conditional 30-day renewal ef a tavern license was also given for the Pullman Launch at 724 Glenwood Ave. while the business conforms to an order from the building department. Michael Samuilow owner of Mickey’s Bar at 338 Franklin Rd was given six months to take up residence inside the city limits or sell his business A tavern license for Johnny's Tavern at 76 W. Huron St. was transferred from John Hendry to Gerald L. Blaylock. A SDM package beer and wine license at 1091 Joslyn Rd. was transferred from Nicholas Loula- kis to Christ Pantel Ae recommendation by the Police Department against renewing a club license for the Sylvan Lake Elks Lodge at 153 Bagley St. was deferred one week for stud) The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Showers and thunderstorms tonight and Thers- day Lew tonight 54 te S& ’ High Wa te 62 degrees Seetheast te seuth winds 15 te 20 miles an heur shifting te west te northwest Thursday. Teday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding & am 52 At 8 am.: Wind velocity 10 mph Directton: South ®un sets Wednesday at 720 pm Sun rises Thursday at 541 am Moon rises Wednesday-at 11:09 p.m Moon sets Thursday at 8 am Dewntewn Temperatures sO a 42 50 oe 74 52 lpm 76 60 66 Tuesday in Pontiac {As recorded downtown) Highest temperature. 60 Lowest temperature - 4 Mean temperature, Weather— Mostly ‘elouay 02 of an oon One Year Age i Pontiac 59 ™ Depart- | . | 41.5) eggs to place her in high spot for | | the girls. Second place winner with 24 was Phil Isbell, 524 Southlawn, who won himself a Y T-shirt. Continuing its vacation program, the Y will feature a croquet tourna- ment starting at 10 a.m. tomor- row. YMCA T-shirts will be given the winning boy and girl . > City commissioners approved the paving of Derby from Eton te Coolidge and St. Andrews and | Edenborough from Pembroke to | Derby, following hearings this week. Planning board members have discussed methods of traffic con- trol in Pembroke Manor Subdivi- | sion and will meet with residents | of the area next Tuesday. Moving to close St. Andrews and Eden- borough to through traffic, the board favors vacating Edenbo- rough from Buckingham to Win- demere and St. Andrews from | Pembroke to Derby. | > . 7 Three new directors will be | elec ted at tonight’s annual dinner meeting of the Chamber of Com- merce, replacing William H. Breech, Roland W. Reese and Dr. | Thomas Y. Watsen, whose terms expire. The meeting will start at | 6:30 at the Community House. 7 . . | (Cotten Carnival, the annual | children’s fashion shew spon- sored by St. Catherine's Guild of St. James Episcopal Church, will get underway at 1:30 p.m. tomer- row at the Community Heuse. Between 4 and 56 of the church members’ children will model | summer fashions. Co-chairmen of the event are Mrs. Pell Hollings- head and Mrs. Frank Alien. >. 7 7 “Friendship Night’ will be held at 8 tonight at the Masonic Temple jon North Woodward, when OES, Ch. 220 honors the Oakland County Assn. Initiatory work will be exem- plified by guest officers from al- most all chapters in the county. |Guest of honor is Mrs. Walter | Weitzel, marshal] of the Oakland County group and member of the loca] chapter A special song written by Elsie | Hilliker, past grand organist of the | grand chapter of Michigan, wil] be sung by Dorcas Little and Joyce Ramsdell 7 ° ° Voiney A. Parker Service for Volney A. Parker. | 71, of 11685 Suffield will be at 3 p. m. Saturday at Sullivan and Soft| Funeral Home. Royal Oak, with burial in Acacia Park Cemetery He died today at his home Mr. Parker is survived by his widow. Lillian; two daughters. Sulvia at Widman of Royal Oak; a brother. two sisters and two grandchildren. City Retail Trade Shows Heavy Gain (Continued From Page One) come per household average of 9.24%. Spendable income is de- fined as net income after taxes. Consumer Markets also contains a breakdown of gross income by consumer units. A consumer unit is defined to be a family of indivi- dual who is not residing with re- lated individuals or families. The breakdown shows that of Pontiac's 25,900 consumer units 3,940 have incomes of $1,999 and below; 9.830 have incomes of from $2,000 to $3,999: 6,920 have incomes of from $4,000 te $5,999 and 5,210 have incomes of over $6,000 a year. | Consumer = Markets contains |estimates for all U. S. cities over | 10,000 and cities with daily news- | Papers or radio stations. It will be published May 1 Birmingham Man Hurt in 15-Mile Road Crash Carleton D. Cole, 42, of 1528 E. Maple Rd., Birmingham, was in- jured last night when his car crashed into another making a left | turn across his lame on 15-Mile |road in Troy Township. | Norman J. Schweiger, 22, of 433 >| John R, Clawson, told Troy Town- ship Police-he was turning teft off |15-Mile onto Troy and did not | see Cole's car approaching Cole said he was unable to avoid | the collision. He was treated by his | own doctor They Must Be Burning department was fighting a when the fire truck Chief Frank Jacobs his crew stood by helplessly while the truck became a mass of twisted steel home and Mrs. John! PAUL SUTTON ‘Dem to Seek House Seat i in 18th District The Reyal Oak City Democratic |Committee announced today that | Paul Sutton, 43, of Royal Oak will |seek the Democratic nomination for the U. S. House of Representa- tives in the 18th District A native of Albuquerque, N. M Sutton came to Michigan in 1944 after his Army discharge. He is a radio actor and has been chair- man of the Royal Oak Democratic Committee. Sutton is a past commander of wife and two children live at 39 Hawthorne, Royal Oak. McCarthy Levels New Charges in Probe (Continued From Page One) now for the hearings to get un der way on schedule Thursday. The last major preparations were cleared away Tuesday afternoon when the subcommittee formally agreed on ground rules permitting free cross-examination by wit- nesses — as McCarthy demanded —and when McCarthy and his | aides submitted their forma] coun- ter-charges Under the rules, McCarthy will or voting of the subcommittee he was allowed to select a re- placement—Sen, Heary C. Dwor- shak (R-Idaho)—with full sub- committee rights. In the 18page, 46-point “bill of particulars’ on the Army charges, McCarthy denied he. Cohn, or the subcommittee staff director. Fran- cis P. Carr used ‘improper | means’ to get special treatment for Schine as the Army alleged. McCarthy accused Hensel of tak- try to block an investigation of himself by charges he was the ‘‘dominate | | force” in organizing a ship's supply firm whiJe a Navy procurement of- ficia] in Worla War II The McCarthy statement said his investigators have established that Hensel drew at least $56.526 in three World War II vears from a private ship supply firm operating with government priorities. Hensel was then a high Navy official. Hensel replied: “The allega- tiens that there has any- | thing illegal er even unethical in | my financial er governmental history is beth malicious and dis- honest ... Sen. ee knew he was lying . Hensel said the 356.000 was a| paper profit and he had withdrawn | only @nough to pay state and fed- | eral income tax on such profits. He said it was ‘‘malicious and dis- honest"’ to call his dealings ‘‘illegal or even unethical.’”’ He said the firm did no business with the Navy. “Sen. McCarthy is pursuing his usual tactics.” Hensel] said in a statement. ‘‘He is cornered and is attempting a diversionary move. The attempted smear is his fa- vorite method and he is running true to form.” California produces 230 differert | crops in carload ots. Dr. Monroe Okays ~ |Polio Vaccine Test (Continued From Page One) research coordinator in the field of biclogy. Dr. Monroe's statement followed assurances of the vaccines safety yesterday by Dr. Albert E. Heus- tis, state health commissioner. Dr. Heusties said that on the basis of evidence he has the vac- cine is ‘safe and ‘‘we are guing the American Legion. He and his | take no part in the deliberations | which he regularly beads. But | ing a hand in the Army case to | the subcommittee on | ahead’’ with the vaccination pro- gram. Oakland County is among 11 counties in Michigan that will test the new vaccine The county tests are scheduled to get underway Monday in Clarks- ton Village School, Bertha Baker £_hool in the Huron Valley Dis- trict, and Novi School. i The Michigan Medical Society Monday night withdrew earlier ebjections to the new vaccine and assured the state health commis- sioner it would cooperate in the program. . Local chapters of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis are kelping county health authori- ties in the mass inoculation pro- ject. ‘U.S. Air Force Flies Frenchmen to War (Continued From Page One) - | port planes carrying supplies to Dien Bien Phu, but no American Air Force personnel have taken part in the flying operations in the combat zone. Oa Sunday 25 speedy U. 5. Navy Corsair fighter-bombers were transferred from the American carrier Saipan te a French air base on the Viet Nam the battle In addition to this emergency aid, the United States has been ; sending a billion dollars worth of | military and economic assistance |to the French and Vietnamese in | Indochina. lke May Visit Detroit President Eisenhower will be in- vited to attend a Detroit civic din- |ner in honor of Roger M. Kyes, | former deputy defense secretary, land Joseph M. Dodge, retiring | federal budget director. The din-| ner is scheduled for May 12 or 14! at Hotel Sheraton-Cadillac Other Michigan notables vor y for invitations include Charles E | Wilson, U_ S. age a al | Arthur Summerfield. . master general; and Pisa ii (and representatives. Four-fifths of the U. S of wine normally are exports | cleared ithrough the port of San Fran- cisco. AP Phete OTTAWA ONT. — Daphne Price, 19, former University of Michigan coed, reported she spied on fellow students for the FBI while on the campus at Ann Arbor. She is a | Canadian national. also are piloting some of the trans- | ter. Some 600 teachers and princi- pals of Pontiac Public Schools turned out Tuesday for this spring's ‘‘curriculum conference” at Pontiac High School to discuss ways to help children learn to read better. Speakers were Dr. A. Steril Art- ley, director of the University of Missouri's child study clinic, and Dr. Paul Witty, Northwestern Uni- versity professor. “Some children grow faster than others intellectually, as well as physically,” Dr. Artley said. “Y can't fit the same size dress to | all 10-year-olds girls. By the same token, you can't fit all the chil- dren of any age with the same reading program.’ . Artley urged teachers not to slow learners too fast. He it’s all right if children enter- ing the third grade have only fim ished the first half of their second grade work; if they've learned the first half thoroughly. He suggested junior and senior high schools revamp their pro- grams s0 = can carry Glass Firm Reports “on Windshield Pits (Continued From Page One) nated, to its Creighton, Pa., re- 'search laboratory for analysis, | Tomlinson said | In Grand Rapids, plate glass win- dows were added to the mystery | Tuésday Gordon Vander Wheel, assistant | sales manager of the White Prod- }ucts Division of C. L. Bryant Corp.. said pockmarks appeared in | windows of the company plant in Middleville He said he heard a snapping sound Tuesday and then saw the peckmarks appear. Four insurance companies agreed yesterday to pool informa- tion on the pockmarked windshields | and to ask Michigan State College to make chemical tests. Theories on the cause of the pes- ky pockmarks range from road conditions to recent H-bomb tests.* He said “automobiles are being built tighter today than ever be- fore. Consequently the inside holds heat and the outside cools eff faster. This change in tem- perature is what causes windows te crack.” Used car dealers on Detroit's famed Livernois Ave., reported nu- merous pockmarked vehicles yes- terday. Dealers said the pockmarks also hit car finishes. One said the pockmarks started out as pin-sized pits but grew to a dime sized hole in a matter of hours. : INDOCHINA AIR LIFT—A wounded member of the French defending force at the besieged interior | are shuttling wounded to the French headquarters Indochina fortress of Dien Bien Phu is taken from | | area of Hanoi and are returning ‘with reinforce- AP Wirephete TEACHERS’ CONFERENCE—Pontiac Public | conference; Dr. A. Sterl Artley, University of Mis- Schools’ 600 teachers and principals met Tuesday | souri, speaker, and J. C. Cox, assistant superin- to discuss ways to help children learn to read bet: | tendent of Pontiac Public Schools. Comparing notes were William Wright, left, Whittier Sthool principal and co-chairman of the | not shown. City Teachers Study Ways to Improve Reading Skill | dren will learn to read more easily | derstand their surroundings and Pontiac Press Phete Another speak- ler, Dr. Paul Witty of Northwestern University, is Pontiac Deaths | Earl N. Jeffery Eari N, Jeffery,. 73, of 771 Monti- _ Williams Maps : Ath Term Drive Governor's Campaign to Be Based on Need for Time to Finish Job DETROIT w—Democratic Gov. G. Mennen Williams will base his campaign for an unprecedented fourth term as Michigan's chief executive on the premise that the job he set out to do “is not yet finished.” Williams formally announced his candidacy in a combined radio and television hookup from Detroit last night. If the 43-year-old heir te wealth succeeds he will be the first four-term governor. in. Michigan's 119 years of statehood. Among work still to be done, Williams listed: = Preservation of prosperity, mere school facilities, more and better. paid school teachers, better roads and more state po- lice to patrel them, improved tax and election laws, fair ent’ ployment practices legislation and a revision of what he termed “antiquated” labor laws, The fourth-term ar.nouncement wound ap speculation that the gov- ernor might run against Repub- lican Homer Ferguson in the lat- ter’s bid for re-election to the U. S. Senate. Speculation was shifted to- for mer Senator Blair Moody as a Democratic opponent of Ferguson. Criticism of Williams’ announce- ment sprang up quickly from Re- publican leaders. John Feikens, GOP state chairman, issued «a statement in which he said the governor was seeking a fourth term “‘because he was ordered to do so by Walter Reuther, Gus Scholle and other leaders of the CIO-PAC.”’ -—— Try SIMMS tor Your BEST Possible PICTURES high schools [Funeral will be at the Spaulding | reading “clinics” to help older stu- | and Son Funeral Home, Ferndale, | dents with reading problems. |with burial im Chestnut nie | He reminded teachers that chil- | Cemetery, Bradner, Ohio Mrs. Keller is¢survived by a} if books deal with the things | daughter, Mrs. Katheryn K. Hop | they're interested in. He told how kins of Royal Oak; two sons, | he and other officers taught thou- | Leonard of Ferndale and Lawrence | sands of U. S. Army recruits who | 0 at home, eight grandchildren couldn't read to read fourth pair land five great- -grendchildren. books in eight weeks. by using films and pamphlets about “Pri- | Ervie L. Marshall ——— EES Funeral for Ervie Lee Marshall, interests. Dr. Witty said children should |3, of 31 Crawford $t.. who died learn to read for study purposes, | Saturday at the Pontiac General | Hospital will be Thursday at 2 to understand themselves, to un- p.m. from the New Hope Baptist Church. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery with the Rev. Jessie Long, assistant pastor of the New Hope Baptst Church officiating. The body will be at the Crawford street residence after 7 p.m. to night. She was born in Pontiac on April 30, 1950 the daughter of George and Bertha Jones Marshall, who sur- vive her. Other survivors are a sister and two brothers Elevita, Drew, and George Henry all at home. Mrs. Ruffus Perry Mrs. Ruffus (Plennie) Perry, 38, ot 89 Orton St., died at her resi- dence Saturday, She was born in Opélika, Ala., on June 6, 1916, the daughter of Gus and Plennie Buchanan Bennett. Mrs. Perry came here from ial lika, ten years ago. Surviving besides her baad the two daughters, Mrs. Eunice Gean Mickens and Harriett Bennett both of Pontiac. Also surviying are two brothers, John Henry Bennett of Louisville, Ky., and Buster Bennett of Opelika, Ala. Prayer service was held at the Carruthers Funeral Home and funeral service will be ed at 8 p. m. from the fun- eral home this evening. The Rev. William Bell, of the New Bethel Church will officiate, The body will then be taken to Opelika for burial. just for fun. Pontiac High School's A Cappella Choir, directed by George Putnam, opened the program. A brief talk by J. C. Cox, assistant superin- tendent of schools, followed. William Wright. Whittier school principal, introduced Artley and John Thors Jr.. PHS principal. presented Witty. Teachers met in smaller groups Tuesday afternoon to talk over special reading prob- lems in the grades and courses they handle. City to Pay $78,000 for Habel Property meters will be placed in the former County-City Market, bring- ing the total number of city meters to 801 . (Continued From Page One) the total] number of city meters to 801 Pontiac is obligated to repay to Habei all court costs incurred by him in fighting the city’s suit te condemn the land. These costs were included in the purchase price. Necessity for short-term on the site was pointed out in 1950 in a study prepared for Pontiac by Oscar Gunderson, Wayne Coun- About two-fifths of U. S. men from 70 to 74 years old are em- ployed. Bigger—Better—Brighter SUPER-SIZE Prints All Standard Rolls One Low Price Bring your films to Simms tor ( taster service... sharper prints. . greater savings. $8 N. Sagincw —Mein Floor & Beautiful New Shop Tel-Huron Center OPEN "TIL 9 P.M. Every Night Use Your Regular | Osmun Charge Account i Town & Country other obstacle arose when Habel = purchased the ; mntnemarrees | COURSES OFFERED denied by both the Circuit Court | and Michigan Supreme Court and IN condemnation proceedings to . sequre the tand wore sumorieed |! Tay, Half-Day and E¥ening School ot March 2. 1984" « Circuit || Check the courses below which interest you and mail Court jury returned a verdict of || to us today. We will send you our Bulletin imme- “no necessity” -— —_—~-? - diately. demn the | t aie pubic parking is nec-|| [_] Higher Accounting [] al essary in Pontiac. () Business retarial B. Hartrick called . : as wth, “tcondetent” and 9 Administration (_) Shorthand Co eet ition lors new|| CL) Bookkeeping Typewriting trial, a decision on which is still (_) Comptometer and Calculator White the suit was im progress ° te sell te Pontiac - ween st cares || == CPhe Hasinedb Mille ed hm» sin oct sate Hs Laren Bt, Pot Pees FE 2-08 his building. Commissioners balked’: at losing Chee Hees HOeeereeeresene-eee COrseersee eos eerebenees eeeree part of the market which they Name Address ee part of the municipal vereran APPROVED [ f f Mi eeBa y x) ad ~ ao = ae ee = 4 * ; \ \ i ‘ j AY x t % ral re : . : ; aa ms “ ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1954 = pal = Program Benefits Senior Clizes, Mental Patient Others aes a a (Reiter's Note—Thie is ing fies Why mat trl comspunty garden-| Wil td years to his Ip and i the two years since Mrs. Bur. church organization has suggest- om can bo 9 :henutiabe pareicl. eotuiy eatee” Seen the “may” pnsses “of voluoteer. ers, such &8 the National Farm and | terest to those years.” ~ ‘started this program it} 4 that all members of the | gram,” Mrs. Burlingame states. cughout Oehiand Couaty) Garden Club members, to serve? Not only patients in hospitals, but | has slow but steady prog-| church become associated with “. . . the goal is te get the pa ie wes as She approached the administra- ress. She has had more sediior citizens in some way also individuals shut in at home requests traneter courages patients always to give By JANET ODELL look. | 22” of Michigan State College with | can benefit from this program of |to start new groups in different The Women’s Auxiliary took up| “" © we ete | eee 6 tan Ge ing shea far-sighted 10 hex ovata the cas wt ext, rap Tralnd, | plaes than wha mane. Bull aiy challenge by sending two ss | nny etl |e ecu Hower verre Wrecncie martiegumet Chien, (nnn Sel REG: their enthusiasm for the good|healthy in its functioning before | workshop and then by inaugurating pecan evldears, cas poag c— = a new vocation; dozens of Women’s oe courses at ae per ee As has been stated, the first in-/ home. Renal Fam, sn Carden he | Seacs en, poe to: [popu ear t's er | See Hepa“ a te | setae owl eel the children’s shop néw way of giving service in the Burlingame would act as director | tunity for all to serve. If mental | tion of Mrs. C. R. Gatley @ STOUP | horticultural therapy. Just start- field where they are most ac-| of the workshop. hospital work is yot to their liking, |of Pontiac National Farm and| ing is a group at the Presbyterian || °!94 Cooley Lake Road EM 3-260! complished; and, most important] In August of 1952 the first work | individuals may work with chil-|Garden Association members and/vijage (for old folks) and next Children’s COLE of CALIFORNIA Swim Suits of all, many patients in mental | Shop of five days’ duration was of-| dren in orthopedic hospitals, with | Mrs. William Hyland, on the list is the Northville Mental Open Evenings -_Gentaze 11 A.M. t0'9 P.M, hospitals, children in orthopedic | fered. It was sponsored by the De- | elderly citizens in institutions, or |the Birmingham National Farm Hospital. Hospitals, aged residents of the | partment of Horticulture, in co-| with that nice old lady down the and Garden grpup, work weekly in Interested individuals from the Oakland County Convalescent | operation with the Department of | street who can’t get around much. | the occupational therapy workshop| 4.014 Arboretum in Boston and - Home and isolated shut-ins have ; “When you're interested im | 28d in one of the wards. ° con Pardes’ Usivaniiy aatied Coming: Junior Recital May 2nd learned to look forward to tomor- plants, you're interested in te- County Convalescent Hospital |.he course in East Lansing. Queries A portrait of Candy Land . .. “Remember When . . .” ae. morrow. Yesterday is bypassed | out on Telegraph road enjoys the | about the new therapy program Plus Favorite Vaudeville Routines. When Mrs. Burlingame moved and tomorrow becomes the all- | program through the efforts of {come to Mrs. Burlingame con- “JACKIE RAE” STUDIO jo East Lansing some years ago, important day,” explains Mrs. St. James Episcepal Church of stantly. She devotes full time to STUDIO on 5. Telegraph ot ¥ FE 2-212 ~ ghe decided to take advantage of Burlingame. Birmingham. The national | the work five days.a week. . pectin ‘the college courses available and a : ‘prepare herself for some kind of | 2 eee career in her later years. Among ‘the courses she took was one in greenhouse production in the Horticulture Department. * This course so fascinated her that it became her major interest. Fol- lowing that, membership in_ the National Farm and Garden Club was not enough to provide an out- let for her new interest, and she became a lecturer upon the sub-| into practice at the Pontiac State jeet, “The Good Way of the! Hospital, with the blessing of the Earth,’ sponsored by a Detroit hospital personnel. store. But she wanted more than fn the summer of 1953 a second that. five-day course was given, as well | @ The more she talked about and|as a shorter course, with an even éxperimented with the field of|jarger enrollment than at the | § horticulture, the more she realized | original workshop. " iis possibilities. It is an ideal » ing developmen occupation for older people, since Ri ter i “is each person can set his own tempo All over the country individuals | § of living, and there is no compe- are hearing about this program of | & — horticulture therapy, which is de- | # Furthermore, there ts an op- | fined as the “application of a hor- | » portunity for such persons te be- | ticultural program as a therapeutic | § come self-supporting or to supple- | aid toward the goal of. improving | ©. } ment their pensions by selling |a mentally or physically ill pa- } seme of the flowers or produce | tient’s condition.” they raise. A number of attempts to do Mrs. Burlingame is a vital per- | Something of this nature had been son herself and takes a great deal | made in veterans’ hospitals in the gi interest in her fellow men. In| past few years, with varying de- Cher earlier undergraduate days she | grees of success. had had some courses in. occupa- But this is the first time tional therapy. any regular training has Now the idea came to her: Why| offered or not combine this new interest in| gesting of has State Sale Starts Tonight! ee =Dloomfict “ Sunday 2 to 5 = ASHION SHOP Park at our front door! me S. Telegraph Rd. After Easter g Clearance entire stock of finest wool coats, toppers, suits, special groups of dresses, at very drastic reductions... . ! VY : 3 AND YA. ont Spring Suits Spring Coats te $99.00 ; *hA 74 te $99.00 : *59 719 ¥y growing things with the older idea 2 oe uel al . ee ee We elie eee ll -™ ef occupational therapy and use it to help people who need a look ty are leading the way. j into the future if they are to get well, or even to live happily at all? STYLED FOR ker a eae ale }: SPRING! ia of going into ths new work ‘ Short Curl discussion of this new therapy. The State Federation of Garden Permanents Clubs is providing a scholarship 4 ‘i for one student in this new course 4 $650 SS >, fisors three workshops throughout workers. ff, us Oakland County has been set up as the pilot county. Michigan No appointment necessary State College will provide the demic and technical training, hospitais of the county will Beauty Salon |) prarical ‘answers to the many 20 E. Pike St. FE 6-2673 || Testions that are bound to crop | & %. ,.* 7. _ Monthly workshops fer all EVERGREENS — + and SHRUBS | . ’ “Every American is a joiner,” || Sone Anna , — Mrs. Burlingame says. “If you can | | 2 . Ra. get him to join a garden club, you | 9 PERT N PRETTY... a r a i a fe Dress suits, costume suits in Forstman, Juilliardandim- Strook, Forstman, fine wool fabrics, hopsacking soft Me | ported fabrics. Bardley tweeds, silks and wools, wool fleece, beautiful pastels and whites. All top fashion * crepes. Misses’, Jrs., half-sizes. coats beautifully tailored! | , q | Cottons so new , se $0 imaginative they'll brighten your whole Spring Toppers | Spring Dresses : eee hoe Values $ $ $ Values $ , $ $ summer! to $59.95 to $39.95 , Polished Cotton: ; ; ; , olished Cottons Beautiful fashion toppers in pastels, whites and navys _— Dresses for now and summer wearing, afternoon and in boucles, hopsacking, eyelash wools; fine fleeces. late-day wear, casuals, navys and colors in silk lingns Many new coats at manufacturer's close-outs'! and imported materials! and Jewel Trim Sizes: 7 to 15 $ 98 ' 10 to 20 : 14% to 22% e ’ *, “2h y Women’ s Half-Size Dresses se Values to 39.95 ‘94 Navys and nt combinations. Many — styles, 14 14% rele ALL SALES FINAL! SS Oe errl Cl SENSATIONAL NU-VAC! VACUUM CLEANER | IT NEEDS NO DUST BAG! COMPLETE WITH 8 LASOR-SAVING t COMPLETE TTACHMENTS For cleening rugs. ooo floors, dusting, belstery, spreylag, weziag a demothing. VAC SEWING and MACHINE Co. 379 S. Saginaw | ceived the draft card he is hold- A BIT LATE—Frank Rezendes. | 21, of Centerville, R. I. finds he's +F"’ after the shooting is over. Rezendes, who served as a com- bat infantryman in Korea, re- ing while on 30-day furlough. He enlisted in 1950, without waiting to FOR FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION OPEN FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 P.M. ARMY JOE'S six SURPLUS} f 32S. Saginaw St. FE 2-0022 | NEXT TO THE STATE THEATER TARPAULINS Waterproof — Mildew -Proot $3.50] 10x12 4.20] 12x15 5.40] 12x18 7.20 | 15x20 FISHING SEASON OPENS SAT., APRIL 24! => Hip Boots... . $995 Vis ai Rain Jacketsr»- $395 Rain Jackets nyio , $59 Tackle Boxes “x."524° 1 Gal. Red With Spoutse een 95 Gas Can Wool Sox........ 39 Get Your Fishing License Here! CHEST WADERS, Reg. $21.95. $19.95 COLEMAN LANTERNS .........$11.95 $12.00 18.00 21.60 30.00 ATTENTION: Scouts and Scout Leaders §) coaches aren't the only school of. We Carry.a Complete Line of Camping Equipment— Tents—Blenkets—Sleeping Bags—Air Mattresses, etc. PAINTERS’ DROP CLOTHS for RENT! JOE'S save SURPLUS te 2c0zz" | hear the result of his draft exam- ination Pontiac Scouts \the Macomb and Oakland | | of the geology school at the Uni } +university since 1916 Tops in First Aid Flaming Arrow ae Wins First Aid-O-Ree of Clinton Valley | The Flaming Arrow Patrol of | Boy Scout Troop 7 became the champion first aid team of the | Clinton Valley Council recently when it scored highest in the First | | Aid-O-Ree held at the Consumers Power Co This is the first annual contest co-sponsored by the council and American Red according to Willard H chapters of the Cross | Wells, Ottawa District executive Troop 7, sponsored by the | Bethany Baptist Charch of Pon- | tiac, competed against eight | teams from various Macomb and | Oakland districts for the Red | Cross plaque. | Second place was won by the | | Eagle Patrol of Troop 23, spon- | sored by the United Presbyterian | Church of Auburn Heights. Utica’s Apache Patrol of Troop 80 took | third place honors Others winning successive places | are the Explorer Troop 100 of Cass | Lake, the Eagle Patrol of Troop | 76, Selfridge Air Force Base, and 6th place went td the Panther Pa- | trol of Troop 66. Pontiac Tied for 7th place were the |Raccoon Patrol of Troop 109, | Farmington, and the Flying Eagle Patrol of Troop 103, Hudson Covert | School Present New Cadillac to Geology Professor NORMAN, Okla. # — Football ficials who get Cadillacs Dr. Victor E. Monnett, director versity of Oklahoma, was surprised yesterday when a big, shiny sedan was presented to him by former istudents from Oklahoma and Monnett has been teaching at the PRESCRIPTIO GUARANTEED TO MEET UNITED STATES GOVE SPECIAL! La Lidia ! | AT SAME LOW PRICE! , & < Te hate ee —_ Now. for the first time you can get the SAFETY GLASSES that you need, at the one low price of $10.98! Price includes your choice of 100 styles, shapes and colors, with SAFETY lenses, pre- cision ground and polithed te your individual needs Our SAFETY lenses are scientifically hardened. Each lens is rigidly with the ,Colmascope and U. 8 Government 8tee! (a steel ton %” inspecte Ball Test in diameter is dropped from «& height of 50° on the lenses) to meet strict requirements of the Bureau of Standards SAPETY lenses .Our SAFETY lenses are special! y designed to protect from injury the eyes of jndustrial workers ehildten and ‘(Bifocals. if desir specifications No. “OGG-501-B"- for sportsmen “ee additional.) READING GLASSES. . . only $898 Our regular classes are still enty $8.98 regardless of the lens strength required. with the ffame ef your cheice. OPTICTANS—Over 3,000,000 Satisfied Cou . Branches In Many Principal Cities of U. & ‘end or Geel Founded 1904 yi! mare GLASSES (Bifecals,’ if desired, £4.98 additional.) Broben Wests cuptieates. Frames prices. ~ No Appointment Necessary! No Switching! No Extras! Boers: 8 & M.-5:20 P.M. Dail Aub CLASSES UNION MADE! . N RNMENT SPECIFIC ATIONS OUR FORMER PRICE —~$20-$25 Our Price Now Only: YOU CAN'T PAY MORE __NO MORE, NO LESS Eto anyone who can pur- / for rA than the price 4 quoted in this advertise- y ment. 4 off f teed by Fy Reward offer sade. ao, ms twe leading Insurance companies Ts" PRE IPTONS tons w Ise fill oe i.” at te exmr price Your prescrip- 3% S$. SACINAW. ST, Kpy Bidg., Guite ‘20? Cor. Saginaw and Pike Sts. tnel. Wed, hm gr e- im ® P.M. NLESS you've tried it yourself, U you're going to find it hard to believe. But when you press the pedal of a 1954 Buick with Twin-Turbine Dynaflow,* joy reigns—and so do you. You feel the joyous thrill of command- ing instant response, the solid “take hold,” the firm authority of your acceleration. You feel a joyous exhilaration at the utter smoothness of the forward carry -—a completely infinite smoothness that is there every inch of the way. MILTON BERLE STARS FOR BUICK—See the Buict Berle Show Tuesdey Frentngs This stunning “hardtop” model is the Buick Sesciat Riviere—V8-powered, end priced just a few dollers above simile: models of the “low-price three“T TAKE THE WHEEL -just for the joy of it - (Quother hig hediow for Crying a'54 Buick) And you feel a deep and abiding joy at the simplicity of it all, the ease with which you drive, the blessed restful- ness of travel with a fruly automatic transmission working its wonders. As we said, you'll find this hard to believe — until you try it yourself. Until you try TT Dynaflow with the stepped-up V8 horsepowers of the 1954 Buicks. Until you try it with the new buoyancy and the new handling sureness of the improved Million Dollar Ride. Until you try it with the new visibility, the new luxury, the new “look of tomorrow” styling that OLIVER MOTOR SALES _— are part and parcel of every 1954 Buick. So, we want you to be our guest at the wheel of a 1954 Buick with Twin-Turbine Dynaflow this week. During April, 1,500,000 people will guest-drive the 1954 Buicks, and join the Thrill Of The Month Club by °. doing so. We cordially invite you to join them, for a real thrilJ. Call us today. *Standard on ROADMASTER, optional at extra cost om other Series BUICK the beautiful buy | WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM am 210 Orchard Lake Avenue Phone FE 2-9101 Pontiac, Michigan * f NOW ? Make your own Traffic Test an Nw OUR a = BRIGHTER YOU SEE IT ON TELEVISION! Johnson's Wax “Life With Father” — show how Hard Gloss Glo-Coat starts brighter floor polish. Your own traffic test will prove it! because Johnson’s Hard Gloss Glo-Coat dries brighter and harder than any other floor polish! © Withstands family wear and regular | damp-mopping. @ Nothing as bright! Nothing as hard! Nothing lasts as long! @ Johnson’s Wax : recommends it to beautify . floors for keeps! TRY IT? The I choice with American housewives by 2 to 1 because . iid AT-ENDS— 4 oe SCUFFED-UP TV Programs “Robert Montgomery Presents” and and stays brighter than any other ar ae! SS, ee Soe a wee eS 3 * ore...’ . ih i i BH é f “ Bex a i gif z ; FE F ae reg THM ite 5 ¥ yi ct B8 | Gideons to Mest Mrs. Maurice Bradley as hosts. id fi FrPIE Ti WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — Gideons of Pontiac Camp and aux- iliary will meet at Sunnyvale Chapel Thursday at 7:30 p. m. with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Evans and Provide Parking Waterford Ordinance Now Requires Space for. Shoppers’ Cars WATERFORD TOWNSHIP>-New businesses in Waterford Township must provide sufficient parking space for shoppers under an amendment to the township zon- ing ordinance adopted recently by the Township Board. The ordinance now requires that businesses provide at least three squaré feet of parking space for THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, ‘APRIL 21, 1954 _ 1 Businesses Must Pee Beth Ellen Wells Is W rene Church in First Naza DRAYTON PLAINS—Beth Ellen Wells of Drayton Plains became the bride of Paul Jankovsky of Jewelsburg,. Colo., Saturday in a ceremony in First Nazarene Church of Pontiac. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Garland Wells Sr. af 6075 Wilson Dr. Paul's parents are Mr. and Mrs, Woodrow Jan- kovaky of Jewelsburg.¢ The ceremony was attended, by For her wedding Beth Ellen chese a fleor length gown of embroidered net and nylon tulle each square foot of ficor space in nei we buildi lem such as that currently faced in namereus metropolitan areas, according te Lieyd Anderson, township supervisor. business frontage standards were changed All *future buildings along state or federal highways must be set back at least SO feet from the front property line or at least 100 feet from the center of the highway. In other commercial districts, buildings must be set back 3 feet from the property line provided that they need not be set back farther than existing buildings in the block. School Lists | In another amendment adopted, | RADIATION EXPERTS—Inspecting a lead-lined | Detroit Memorial Hospital, checks construction in concrete block in one of the X-ray rooms at the/| the control room. Following these visual inspec- new Oakland Hospital in Royal Oak are Dr. James tions Monday the three used a Geiger counter to) Leftstrom (left) and Norman Horowitz of the | measure radiation through the walls to determine | department of Wayne University. Clark | that construction was safe. The $4,000,000 hospital Warren (in window), chief of X-ray technicians at | is slated for completion in January. Student to Get College Fund o sert luncheon, will get under way at 1 p.m. Those attending will even see birds swinging in large pink hoops. Brass pails will hold pink-sprayed spruce trees. . Workers feel that the event will be one of the biggest and most affairs of its kind ever held here—and hope it will be the most successful. Over 500 tickets have been dis- tributed, with most of them report- ed sold. Proceeds will go for a $250 schol- arship for some worthy senior in the Huron Valley School System. As an added inducement for mothers, a special nursery will be set up at the home of Mrs. Charles Shepherd, 934 Hillside Dr. Mothers may leave their children there at no cost. fe the Beart of Drayten Pisins PTA Meeting to Feature An All-Scout Program WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — An all-scout program will be the feature of the Jayno Adams PTA Guaranteed DRAYTON JEWELERS & 4. DEXTEOM, Prep. meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Scout troops in the program will be the Brownies, Girl Scouts and Cub Scouts, sonsored by the Jay- no Adams School, and Boy Scout trobp 105, sponsored by the Sasha- baw Plains School. The executive committee will serve the ments. Gary sive you Registered Pharmacists on duty at all times te PHQNE OR 3-1433 €all On Us at Anytime DRAYTON DRUG STORE 488 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains Dedicated © ‘to Health Fast, Prompt, Courteous Service. Ph. OR 3-1433 ia jae Ss et _ _. 8 STORES TO BETTER SERVE YOU HWY. — 388 NELSON — 277 BALDWIN ‘ig PHONE FE 44171 AND OR 3-7362 s Look to Your Appearance... _. Others Do! Almont Students to Do Minstrel Show ALMONT — Featuring the sev- enth and eighth grade glee clubs of Almont High School, ‘Blackouts a °S,’" a minstrel show, will be presented at 8 p.m. Friday in the school auditorium. Interlocutor for the evening will be Gary McAlvey. End men will be Dick Steenson, Jim Iolancaie, Emery, Larry Wudarcki, Mickey Forsyth and Tom Hart. Also in the show will be a trained animal act and musical selections by Norma Jean Repphun and Rex Brown. Melvin R. West, music instruc- tor, will direct, and Mrs. Frank Trott will provide piano accompani- ment. VFW Post 4102 Will Install New Officers Monday DRAYTON PLAINS — Joint in- stallation of new officers will be held by the men and women of David Belisle Post 4102, VFW at 8 p. m. Monday. Frederick Verhey will be instal- led as commander, and John Ver- hey and James Belisle as senior vice commander and junior vice commander, respectively. r Others are Fred Barett, chaplain, and Lloyd Busch, quarter-master. The women’s section will install Mrs. O’Dell Stockton as president; Mrs. F. W. Mackinder, senior vice president; Mrs. Ted Garneau, jun- jor vice president, and Mrs. Frank Koches, treasurer. Rounding out the list are Mrs. Eari Wood, chaplain; Mrs. A. B. Warner, guard, and Mrs. Gerald Urick, conductress. County | Calendar Auburn Heights Community Club will have a card rty at its club house on South a road at 8 p.m. tomorrow The public is invited. Elina Smith Past Matrons’ Club will meet Thursday at the home of Mrs Howard Johnson, 6590 Chureh St., for 8 1 p.m. luncheon. rch will sponsor from 6 to § p.m. Fri- & pancake su is invited. day. The pu Young people of the Methodist Church will sponsor a penny supper at the church Friday oleae, Trey Township Troy wefu will meet at 1 p.m. to- morrow at the home of Mrs. Viola Ehie for a lunch ett A bust ses- Center “nother reiler skating party ats rol ata Lake Orion roller rink "teks. A bus will leave the chapel at 7 p.m for those * Tine etfair is open to the public. Pontioe Lake Mons Unis 40, will hold benefit card y at Dixie Recree- in Drayton Child Study Group Honor Students Huron Valley - Milford | High Class Names Two Orators | MILFORD — Hono. students | were announced Euron Valley-Milford High School | senior class by Erwin Johnson, | principal. Arlene Caswell has been named valedictorian, with a near all-A average for her four years in high school, and | Robert Beadle | has been selected | as class saluta- | Garden Party May Make 4g Give Socio-Drama $250 Scholarship Available | MILFORD—A fairy tale ending to some senior high school student's wish for a chance to attend college may come about from a fairyland | “Pink Dream Garden” card party tomorrow For weeks, members of the Milford Garden Club have been | at 8 p. m. tomorrow. collecting shrubs. trees, sumac and milkweed pods and spraying them pink in preparation for the big party in the legion hall. The affair, beginning with a des-*— | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — A | socio-drama, ‘The Missing Hand— | shake,”’ Lambert School Child Study Group | children's manners, will feature Mrs. Ernest Mallery, Mr. Rudolph Waara, Mrs. Claude Holcomb, Bet- ty Vernan and Ralph Bergemann. Following the play, a panel dis- cussion wil] be led by Mrs. Ruth Spurlock, a Red Cross social work- er. Also participating in the panel wil] be Mrs. Ruth Ermel. Mrs. Eli Voydanoff, Mrs. Wilbert Winkelman and Edmund Windeler. The meeting is- open to the public. Brown City High Juniors Wind Up Play Rehearsals BROWN CITY Rehearsals were concluding today for a three- act comedy to be presented by the Junior Class of Brown City High School Friday and Saturday nights. Included in the cast of the play, “Papa. Says. No,"’ are Marilyn Wood, Eari Crake, Janet Spangler, Lloyd McClellan, Sally Campbell and :‘Nancy Bryce. Others are George Hilborn, Rob- ert Kalbfleisch, Larry Kerr, Mari- lyn Turner, Janet Stone, Marlene Welch, Ella May Scott, Sharon Bur- gess and Richard Gould. Mrs. Josephine Gill is directing. Therapy Technique fo Be Demonstrated WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — Staff members of Pontiac State Hospital, headed by therapist Mar- guerite, Parrish, will demonstate a new method of treatment at the Waterford Township PTA Planning Committee meeting at 8 p.m. to- day. The new method is said to help the patient to adjust to hospital life and to future living experi- ences. Tonight’s meeting will be held in the high school gym, with no admission charge. PTA to Discuss-Polio Vaccine Trials Thursday Polio vaccine trials and the tu- berculosis X-ray programs will be discussed at the Donelson School PTA meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow. Refreshments will be served by will be presented by the | The play, about the problem of | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP— torian | Tie damahbes ot Mr. and urs.| Lyall Caswell of 151 Ruggles St. in Highland, Arlene has a | | ARLENE scholastic average of 3.96. Highest possible average is 4.0. Arlene has been active for four years in the high school chorus and has been a member of the Foreign Relations Club. She also specialized in business administration and is now workin, in the office of the Board of Educa- | tion where she wil} continue after | graduation. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell J. Beadle, of 134 Houghton 5St., Milford, Robert's scholastic aver- age is 3.80. Also a member of the chorus, he is president of the Youth For Christ organization of the school and is active in track. basketball and football. Bob pla ns to attend Wheaton College, Wheaton, Tl., next fall to study evangelistic 7 work. Both of the hon. fe “4 or students have" been at Milford ROBERT during their entire high school work. ; ‘Thursday Meeting Set by Farmington AAUW FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP The local branch of the American Association of University Women will hold its regular meeting Thurs- day at 8 p.m. in the home of Mrs. L. M. Sowers, 26605 N. Farming- ton Rd. Speaker will be Mrs. Leslie It- tershefer, past president of AAUW at Ann Arbor. : Waterford Center PTA to See Quebec Films WATERFORD ‘TOWNSHIP — Pontiac lawyer Archie Leonard Will show films of Quebec at the Waterford Center PTA meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the school. Piano selections will be played by Earl Mitchell. f FAST RELIEF NEURALGIA ever satin, with a tiered skirt, sweetheart neckline and a short train, : She also wore a juliet cap with setd pearis and carried a white prayer book and a bouquet of stephanotis with an orchid and satin streamers. ae $ ba he a MRS. PAUL JANKOVSKY Serving as maid of honor—for, the bride was a sister, Bonnie Wells of Pontiac. Bridesmaids were Regina Wells of Pontiac, and Jo- a Moody, a cousin of Knoxville, Tenn. Junior bridesmaid was Bev- erly Wells Serving as flower girl was Wendy Dortch, a niece from Pon- tine, Riing bearer was David Cannon. John Snyder of White Plains, N. Y., acted as best- man for the bridegroom. Jerry Williamson of Detroit and Gilbert Wells of East Lansing served as groomsmen. Ushers were Rod Apple of Penn- sylvania and Jerry Hailey of Day- ton, Ohio. A reception was held at Roose- velt Lodge with Mrs. Mildred Sorn- ig and Mrs. Doyle Dortch as host- esses. The bride donned a black and white checked suit with black and white accessories before the newlyweds left for a honeymoon trip to New York. They will re- side on Murphy street in Pontiac upon their return. The bridegroom is attending General Motors Institute at Flint) Tau Alpha fraternity Avenall-Allen Rites Read at | Pinckney Church METAMORA — Married last Thursday in a ceremony in Pinck- ney Congregational Church were Doris Jean Allen and William Avenall Jr. The bride is the daughter of Mr and Mrs. Lyle Allen. William's paents are Mr. and Mrs. William Avenal) Sr Serving as attendants were the bridegroom's sister and her hus- band, Mr. and Mrs, Mosie Bour- geous of Waterford Township. The bridegroom is a graduate of Metamora High School and is now employed at Pontiac Motor Division of General Motors. The bride. a graduate of Dryden High School and County Normal School at Caro. is now a teacher at Thomas. She has taught for four years in the Greens Corners, Rock Valley and Thomas Schools. The young couple will make their home in Lake Orion until) their new home in Waterford Town- ship is completed. Walled Lake PTA to Hold Open House WALLED LAKE — Walled Lake | High School PTA will hold an open | house to allow teachers and parent to get acquainted Thursday eve- | ning. | Teachers will be in their rooms | from 7:30 to 8:30, and National | Honor Society members will escort | parents to the rooms. Election of new officers will be held at 8:3 after which Superintendent Clifford H. Smart wil speak on the prog- ress of new buildings in the district. Mrs. Lawrence Lougie will be refreshment chairman assisted by Future Homemakers. Corsages and boutonnaires will be presented to all teachers by Mrs. Wilbur Chur- chill and her committee. Richardson Farm Dairy 7350 Highland Rd. Invites You to Stop in and Try Our Line of °Tasty Sandwiches *Fountain Dishes °15 Flavors of Ice *Baked Goods *Party Snacks *Fresh Dairy Products . Group to Offer 3-Act Comedy Ortonville Players Set Play for Tomorrow and Saturday at 8 P.M. ORTONVILLE “Lunatic at Large,”’ a three-act mystery-com- edy will be presented by the Orton- ville Players tomorrow and Satur- The production is sponsored by the Ortonville High School Junior Class and will be presented in the school auditorium at 8 p.m. both days. Appearing in the cast are R. D. Perry, Sue Himes, James Bush, Martha Cook, Kenneth Jesse, Beverty Allen, Pat Klingler, Mar- ilyn Frick and Ruth Ann Vander- werp. Others are Clifford Filhart, James Ware, Shirley Watts, Robert this week for the| 11. be is a member of Phi | Ish. Derwin Sander, Jacklyn West- lake, Nancy Killiane, Marie Buz- zard, Dorcas Koester and Noreen Saunders. Rounding out the cast are Mary Kendall and Joy Lou Kintz. Monday Club Elects New President ROMEO — Mrs. George Mc- Keough was elected president of the Romeo Monday Club at its 60th annual meeting this week. Other officers named were Mrs. James Winborn, vice president; Mrs. Lester Poosch, recording sec- retary; Mrs. Lloyd Campbell, as- sistant recording secretary; Mrs. Bruce Lindsay, corresponding sec- retary, and Mrs. James Church, treasurer, The new officers will assume their duties at the final meeting of the year, scheduled for June 7. At Monday night’s meeting the club voted to purchase white collars for some 40 girls in the Romeo High School Mixed Chorus. This would complete the choral robe project which the club initi- ated more than a year and a half ago. Farmers can double their pro- ‘duction of cranberries by increas- ing the number of bees per acre. 6 Scholarship a Winners Listed Students to Get 2 Weeks at Interlochen Naitonal Music Camp \! ROMEO—Six winners of two- week scholarships at the National Music Camp at Interlochen were named by a special committee last night. . They are Janet Friedhoff, Jerry Schmidt, Gloria Heath, John Streeter, Jim Steven and Doris - Tank. Alternates are Velma Layh, Mary Jane Dupont, Barbara Mos- cow, Curt Moore and Charles Blank. Proceeds from the Interlochen concert held this month provided several of the scholarships. The remainder were donated, either wholly or in part, by large organ- izations or business. Members of the screening com- mittee included the high school principal, two music instructors and representatives from churches and civic organizations. Green’s features Sriestens in SUMMER’S PET COLORS! You'll purr with pleasure when you feast your eyes on new, superbly-styled Hood Sun-steps in summer's pet colors. With every step, they say beautiful things about you. $3.95 wp Sam Snead won the Mas- ter’s Tournament. Stop in and get your entry for the McGregor Driving Contest—Open until May 18th. Green’s Next te Bank in Drayton Plains SO MUCH SO LITTLE Superb look, light and value. Dramatic charcoal black tri- pod crowned with natural cloth shade. White per- forated ach filter. 3- way light. 23” h. Shade 18”. smart enough for your living room, this Modern’s lasting beauty be as be- years as is appealing White perforated t-filter. 3- way t. 46%” high. DRAYTON PLAINS You Will Enjoy Shopping at Drayton Home Furnishings: “The Friendly Store” Open Friday Evening Till 9:00 P. M. LAMP for MONEY... From Our YOUNG MODERNS by LIGHTOLIER OR 3-2300 Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. N. of reco FE 5- 4500 EXCLUSIVE!! AT REGULAR PRICES! DRIVE-IN SHOWING! GREATEST MOTION PICTURE OF ALL TIME! [ Soo move you are hkely to see for the rex of your lves Lift Magece “The most colossal movie ever made - Leek Mageccee M-G-M Proudly Presents 1 QU0 a Wo TECHN ICOLOR ‘ Black Fury = <— 7:30 P. M. ( - Quo Vadis (. ess , me, 9 P. M. ‘an. ROBERT TAYLOR- DEBORAH KERR LEO GENN .. PETER U STINOV Rewsee Play by Jeers Lee Mawew ond BN: Bemenen, Suan. be 4 an the Newel by Peneyh Premieres -Direpred by MERVYN LeROY - thio BARA NDRALENE Aa MGM Pieters with David Oa Lie + Directed and Photographed by Ted and Vincent Saizis i i (I. ( i » | College Colors on Cars ST. PAUL @—Blue and gold | colors of the University. of Minne- sota will appear on 1955 Minnesota license plates. The state now has more than a million cars. Two let- ters and four numbers will be used, the letters designating the congressional district in which the plates are sold. When cuckoo eggs hatch in the nests of host birds, the young ecuckoo usually ejects the young of the host bird. 2150 Opdyke Rd. Ph. FE 4-4611 BLUE SKY ; DRIVE-IN THEATRE NOW SHOWING! LIKE JUNGLE BEASTS . they fight for the love of an Outlaw Queen! HOWARD HUGHES were DEVILS CANYON VIRGINIA MAYO: DALE ROBERTSON a. STEPHEN McNALLY- ARTHUR HUNNICUTT = cory TECH NICOLOR — » EDMUND GRAINGER mcm Produced by EDMOND GRAINGER exo FREDERICE GAZLITT BREWRAR + oivecree oy ALFRED WERKER « ALSO. 14 ‘MURIN ESENE We ae WOODMAN, TED SHERODNNN ane SIQNEY SKOLSKY. SHYLY ROME 2" caren REFRESHMENT STAND AND REST ROOMS os HEATED IN AND AROUND PONTIAC Good Food — Friendly Service Catering to Banquets and Private Parties PURE FOOD “itca™ and BAR = Saginas —ecross from ee A "BEER — WINE — ~ LIQUOR. "manTéic Dive = Just Past City Airport RAEL'S scstivaier 6225 pighane Serving Dinners and Snacks in Our Dining Room or in Your Car - *FEATURING* © ltalian 5 © Spanish Steak @ Beast Fresh @ Chicken and Sea Feeds Home Cooking Like Mother Used to Make! Home Made Bread and Pastries FRANK & ESTHER’S a ger tea. LOG CABI % re. Dally wes. thre Sat. Clesed Sen. & Mea’ DRIVE-IN rotwnde room. DANCING Frt., Get, Sun. Bves. Bob’s Chicken House 497 Elizabeth Lake Rd., near Telegraph Rd. Chicken Dinner, $1.35 Rooms for Banquets. Parties. Business Parties Feed te Take Out FE 3-982! Beer— sWinaathenee MALONE’ S ms, Super-Thick Malts, 30 Pork Bar-B-Que, 35¢ Hot Dogs, 20 Cuirh Service 11 A.M.-12:30 P.M. Closed Mondays Henry’s Bloomfield Inn Parties # Only, Spot Per Reservations 130 S. Telegraph DRIVE-IN Bokiwin — ee DELICIOUS FOQDS CHOICE WINES AND LIQUORS —FAMILY STYLE DINNERS— SPORTSMAN INN On US-10-—Ar?t Waterford, Mich. Phone OR 3-9325 HURON ES FIRST TIME! AT REGULAR THREE YEARS IN THE MAKING! Thousands in the Cast! Filmed in Rome! anne HNIC OLOR ster’ TAYLOR + to KERR Score Music Scores High in Film Hits : By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD w# — “If you no tice the background music in a movie, then it's not 4 good score.” This old saw can now be rele- gated to the file of outdated cliches, along with “What this country needs is a good 5-cent cigar.’’ For years, people in Holly- wood have been saying that a movie's score should be unnoticed to be effective. ‘Taint true, says one of film- dom's most accomplished score makers, David Raksin. - - - “I agree with William Wyler, who has told me_that the music can amount to one-third of the ef- fectiveness of a movie,”’ he re- marked. ‘‘Consciously or uncon- sciously, the movie fan is aware of the musie in a picture, and the emotional experience is heightened by it..1 have seen pictures that could have been much more suc- cessful with more music. “On the other hand, there are scenes with are better without scoring. I can recall in ‘Smoky’ there was a shot of the horse rear- ing and making a great deal of noise. | pleaded with the producer, Robert Bassler, that i: didn't need music. But he insisted and so I wrote the loudest piece of music I could. It was so loud and keeping with the action that it wasn't no- ticed! That was the perfect tribute.’ > a > Raksin has just finished the score for the Hecht-Lancaster film, “Apache,” and he promises it will be as sexy as any heard in films. How does he do it? With a medie- val instrument called the recorder. “It's actually obsotete,'' said. the composer, “but it's enjoying a comeback now, I play it myself Miss Japan of 1953 as well as Tok- yo’s number-one fashion model, will soon make her movie debut. She's due for a role in the movie titled “My Aill.”’ to a clump of trees for more than an hour before being rescued. A fireman and policeman failed in efforts to reach him, Then Scout- master Bernard Helwig Jr. and an- TONIGHT DANCING 4 =©6- JAM._- SESSION MANRNY’S "ssi You Can't Beat Fun at Manny's teers aa aan, Or Every Day! & New Lake Theater NOW SERVING 420 Pontiac Trail OYSTERS on the WALLED LAKE HALF SHELL On Our Wide Vision CEATORING TER STROLLING — URDAY NIGHT. IN THE TITTLE rr . NO. 1 IN TOKYO—Kinuko Ito, PIII III Z iettie rE F Phone: An African Decumentary OR 3-1907 OR pees 7 Waeeaaaas PTrtititiit tl) EAT MORE LUNCH 921 W. Huron Street Next to Huron Theoter EVERY DAY LOW PRICES WANTED TO BUY USED MAGAZINES We Sell Novelties, jokes and Tricks Piper's Magazine Outlet S~Aebera Ave. Fish and Chips 50° and I attend meetings of the Re- corder Club every three months; sometimes 70 people show up “I needed some kind of instru- ment for a love scene in the woods with Burt Lancaster and Jean Peters. The recorder was perfect. It has a very sexy sound with an outdoorsy quality. It is also the closest thing to the Indian stone flute, so it fits right into the story, which concerns an unregenerate Indian.” Tokyo Students Answer Poll on War Attitude TOKYO w — The Kojimachi junior high school in 4 fashionable Tokyo section near the imperial palace polled its 230 graduates on war. About half were boys and most said they would fight. Four girls said they would join the war effort, 10 said they would kill themselves and the rest said if war came they would like to get out of Japan. BaBaa a aim, WHERE GOOD FRIENDS MEET © BEER ® WINE ®@ CHOICE LIQUORS ® DELICIOUS COCKTAILS LIBERTY COCKTAIL LOUNGE 85 North Saginaw TM. ‘Oo 4 *S*LL ELE LALAAAALAAAAALAZLAA (Rio AnuA AAA AA Att ttkhttetltttiés — P 5 4 Salad, Bread and Butter... . | ees ere Phone FE 5-8331 ) Featares At: 1:15 ( Toda pabece Today Thru Saturday Today : akland a ™~ . coler by Techreco.os 6 20. So Se eee = — ae WOMES MASON - NET LEIGH - ROBERT AGER ety Owected by HENRY HA/HAWAY - Screen Play by DUDLEY NICHOLS “VESUVIUS EXPRESS” as ~~~STARTING FRIDAY! ~~~ BURT LANCASTER = MALA cowens "His Majesty O'Keele” | | “GERALDINE” | PPPAPLD BAA LARA A ALPE tO Cinema Scope Special SP FROM wt BLACK LAGOON : Strand Now Thru Fri... The killer of “Shane” At: 11:90.1:58-4:58-7:40-10:%0 ———_ Also At 12:30 3:00 — 6:10 9:00 P RYAN: FLEMING vivian LUNDIGAN DRIVE-IN WATERFORD |E=a] THEATER Cor. Williams Lk.-Airport Rds. Box Office Opens 6:45 WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY ROBERT MITCHUM LINDA DARNELL JACK PALANCE Ser lis. si Ca _ RRATURES: 11:20 — 22S — $80 an OS. ML) SAT.- tun and "PRISONERS OF TI eee Hate li ies ia i bs] = - Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO (AP) today Wheat 116% OS atvces 2.14 Soybeans PU ccccece 212 May . 3.92 Sep ....... 18% Jly ........ 3.90 BSR ..cce 3.20% Sep 295 Corn ot OES. 2.70 eee oa aren 2.75% , Mere 1.53% BOP «..ccoce 1.53 dly 21.50 Dec . 1“ Sep 19.00 Oats . Oct 17.00 May .,..0+.. 3% Nov 15.80 el seceueacs 2% Soybean Oil BED cececsece 72% ay. 14.58 MOG icceseees i a. eee 4.50 Rye 13.38 May ....... 106 eee 12.38 Nee 1.09 12.15 Bep 112% Business Briefs The appointment of an assist- j4 $0 bu; ap Northern Spy, fancy, 5.00 bu; No. 1, 2.0- 4 7138 dos. bchs rots, topped, bu; fancy, i rrota, . a @6-1.50 bu ana he 1, 1.25-1.50 dos. behs. horseradish, No. 1, . basket hs. onians, dry, No 1} beg: onions, green, No. | behs. onions, sets. No. 1, bag , chs. Parsnips No. 1, 1.00-1.50% bu Pota- 90-1.10 §0-lb. bag; potatoes, Radishes, 90-1 .00 2.50-2.75 No. 1, .65-90 dos, dbchs DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP) troit for federal-state graded eggs Whites’ A large 45-46, wtd avg #5‘2; medium 41-42 wid avg 41% 2B, large 40-42, wid avg 1 Browns: A. futhbo. 49 wtd avg 43 medyum 40-41. wtd avg 40% B. large 41. C. large 31. Checks 29-30 wtd avg 28 CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO ‘AP)—Butter steady re- ceipts 1.209.520; wholesale buying prices unchanged. 93 score AA 5675, 92 A 56 75 90 B 55.5. 889 C 54. cars 00 B 55.75. 9 C 45 Eggs steady to firm: recetpts 16 855 wholesale buying prices unchanged to 2 cents higher US standards 4: current receipts 31.5 dirties and checks 305 CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO (AP) —Potatoes arrivels on track 438, totgi US. shipments for Priday T70; Saturday 552: Suncay 6 old steck supplies moderate: demand slow, market dull; Idaho Russets $3 25 Red ‘River Valley Round Reds $2 15-25 new stock supplies moderate, demand good; market firm; Florida Round Reds $2.15-20. Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) —Hogs— Salabie Barrows and gilts active, fully 25 cents her: sows steady to 35 cents higher 180-220 Ib. barrows and gilts 28.25 28.50 bu most sorted cheice | and 2 lots most 225-260 Ib. 27 25-28 00; ims. 2625-2700; other weights scarce gows under 400 Ibs. 2§.40-25.50, 400-600 I» sows 22 75-24 00 f Cattle—Salable 500 Market uneven slaughter steers and heifers thy steady but less active than earlier in the week; cows and bulls active. stron '» stockers and feeders scarce. steady ‘fost choice fed steers and yeariities 2: 06 25.50; mostly good fed steers 20 0% 22 few utility and commercial steers heifers 1600-19 00. bul utility and com te 14.00. smooth young cows of heifer type up to 1600: canfiers and cufters mostly 1000-1150. bulk utility and com mercial bulls 14 00-1650. Unt weight cut ter bulls down to 1000 or be) Calves—Saladie 150 No early sales vealers; very arrow and indifferent demand bie $00 Very small fresh moderate carry about oe receipts. increased by eves; sleughter. lambs opening steady but demand rather narrow scarce. ed. scattered : sales i lots goed and choice shorn slaughter CHICAGO LIVESTOCK slow but closed fairly active, steady to most decline on weights under ®; sows 25-50 lower: two loads choice I» to 38.40: bulk 260- ~28 00 heavier weights Tengéed as low as 25.75 for 400 Ib. but- so Ie sows 72 50- to 5@ sows steady to weak steady. vealers steady s mostiy prime 1.18) ib steers 28 00 @ few loads high choice to low prime 26.50-27 50: bulk good and~ choice steers Prices paid fob De- | jumbo, 49-52, wtd avg 48% large 43-44, | US. large 36-38: US 355 — 4 300 few 265-300 | and mercial cows 1200-1350: heavy Holsteifis ' CHICAGO (AP) — Salable hogs 4.000 | most choice | Aircrafts Pull Stocks Higher | | NEW YORK w—Aircrafts pulled | the Stock Market higher today Douglas reported its latest three- |}month profits double the vear-ago period It Ope ned up; four points at 116 on a block of (1,100 shares and continued to extend its than five points almost gains to more weanwnie ready buyers. Mail order firms and -farm implement concerns in modest demand. Motors stilines and chémicais narrowly mixed Other plane - makers followed suit. Boeing jumped more than t¥o points and United more than one, Republic Aviation was up three-quarters at ene time. Among the risers were U,_ 8. were railroads were Steel, Bethichem, General Mo- ters, Goodyear, Montgomery | Ward, International Harvester, Philco, American Telephone, Al- lied Chemical, General Electric, and Standard Oil (NJ). | Lower were Studebaker, Distil- \lers Corp., American Can, West- inghouse Air. Brake, Ametican Cynamid. Kennecott, Con_ Edison and Santa F: | New York Stocks Figures after decimal points are cighths __ ‘THE PON Stockholders Need Better Plan Dissolution Sense of Proprietorship | | | | Saturdgy night at the VFPW Hail, | National Lead Co., once remarked . 524| Drayton Plains. Kirby Milleur and | to me that in all his management | planning he considered the stock- Ss . * vt Ps FIRST AID EXPERTS—Ralph 8. Forman, first aid chairman of | the Oakland County Chapter, American Red Cross, presents an en-|-First Aid-O-Ree. The youths (left to right) are Russel] Rentfrow, graved plaque to members of the Flaming Arrow Patrol of Boy /| 12; Eric Anderson, 14; David MacDonald, 12; Norman Gideumb, 14, Scout Troap 7 for taking top honors in the Clinton Valley Council | and Dave Kimball, 13, patrol leader. TIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, ‘APRIL 21, 1954 er Pentiae Frees Phete By INTERNATIONAL NEWS | SERVICE One of the unsolved problems in | the realm of management is to put in the hearts and minds of the 6's Lodge Calendar Special communication Cedar steels and oils found | Lodge No. 60, F. & A M. Clarkston, er list to sell the company products, April 22, 8 p. m. Examination for | MM degree. Fellowcraft practice to follow. Elgan R. Wood, W. M. | —Adv } News in Brief ews in Brief Reckless driving cost Peter P.| Notch, 533, of 165 Mount Clemens | St., a $75 fine and $25 costs yes- terday when he pleaded guilty be- | fore Orion Township Justice Hel- | mar Stanaback | Stephen R. Kovocik, 19, of De- troit, paid a $75 fine and $25 costs yesterday when he pleaded guilty | to driving under the influence of | alcohel. He appeared before Orjon Township Justice Helmar Stana- back. If your friend's in jail and needs bail, Ph. PE 5-5201. C. A. Mitchell, | or Ph. MA 5-4031, Guy Carter Modern and old time time dance, | million owners of corporate stock in the United States a better sense of proprietorship The problem has many practical facets. The lack of an ownership awareness among small stockhold- ers has militated against the suc- cess of specialized merchandising plans to circularize the stock hold- and thus in effect convert the mod- ern corporation into the spirit of a consumers’ cooperative The original Henry Ford was impatient with the petty capital- ist, and used te say that the When corporate executives take their hair down, they disclose that too many stockholders have a/| sense of impermanence in their | role. At any given moment, they tend to be bored with anything ex- cept immediately visible dividends or an opportunity to sell out at a profit. . ; One uncommonly sage corporate manager,. the late Edward L. Cornish, one-time president of the holders who intended to retain their company holdings rather than those who wanted some dramatic | incident, such as a melon cutting. aS an opportunity to get out. If, im ome way or another, stock ownership can be endowed with a better sense of proprietor- ship, it would be helpful to the survival of our free-choice tco- | nomic society. | | More should be made of the) cooperative nature of the modern | corporation, which pools the sav- | ings of many thrifty persons in order to buy better labor-aiding tools té6 help employes produce more and hence earn more, while providing customers with more and better goods at less cost. The success of a corporation is measured in a consumers’ plebis- cite at the market place, where customers turn thumbs up or thumbs down_or proferred prod- ucts, Similarly, the same human beings, who are customers and workers, can sithultaneously occu- py the roles of capitalists. To the extent they do, corporations .be- come akin to consumer coopera- tives, and lose much of the emo- tional unpopularity of capitalistic engines of great wealth. The human eye weighs about a weight of about 7 grams at maturity. Happy Is The Day When Backache Goes Away.... Nagging backache, loss of pep and energy, heed. and dizziness may be due to slow- down of kidgey function. Doctors say good kidney function is very important to good health. When some everyday condition, such as stress and strain, causes this im nt function to slow down, many folks suffer nag- 7 my backache—feel miserable. Minor biad- r irritations due to cold or wrong diet may cause getting up nights or frequent passages. Don't me kidneys if these — Doan's give happy relief from these diseom- forte—help the 15 milesof kidney tubes and fil- ters flush out waste. Get Doan's Pills today! nual efficiency drive which 21.00-28.68 comercial grades down to| | | 8 amet senegal 18.08> good an dchoice heifers 20 90-25 00 ee oe al mace ~ starts today, according to R. | utity “ana commercial cows 1225-1800 + 4!? Reduc mM ee ae W. Budd, president of Great | cenners and cutters #503200. mostiy | Allee L Stl 3$ LOP Giass 8 | Orchestra. Public invited. 9 till ' ‘ Allted Ch a8 0CLib McN & L 87 ; La 10.00 up. utility and commercial bulls : 306 Lies & M 67\1 a.m —Adv kes Greyhound Lines. The 5 Tage mostly 1625 down: good and | Alls Cnal s0¢ Ligg & Mey... O81 -| ice vealers 20 00-2500; cull and com- | “* seats - “a ae | campaign will re-emphasize the | DOS; "Srades 8 00.19 oe AlemCo Am 46 Leow's ca. af] _Remmage St.. Mary's Unit, St. basic principles of on-the-job Penna Mahara a — lambs | Am Po 2 Mack Trucks. 13 ¢| Benedict's Church, Friday, April conduct and efficient service | ished on sheep pcod te mon cae, | Am Cyan n jf Marthe Ol... 328/23, 9 to § p.m. 25 E. Lawrence at to the traveling public wooled lambs 2250-2625, a few loads | A™ G8 & : obec | Perry. —Adv oan choice oa. prime beer’ iny es “eat | Am qiac®y,,- Het Menem, 33) Perry | ad - © 14.00-22 06 § several load “hy a a ’ | Frank Lioyd Wright, world- | 904 and choice to choice and prime he P caret Loe = eg oer Val-U-Way Food Stores an-| . } «. Mont ard 611 tamed architect. will t a | 20.) skin shora lambs 23 25-2480. not | am smelt 146 Mot Wheei 2 — the opening of the newest | ‘cheat Dewelt’s Séaunie Teas established on slaughter ewes Am 8tl Pa 5 Motorola | 38.5 | member of our Chain Community | ‘i ~~ — ed Het Ao has A) Poked food {| Super Market, 3286 Auburn Ave., | m Tob 621 Murray Cp... 195! per we ae ple May 27 under the sponsor Poultry Anec Cop 347 Nash Kelv 136| Auburn Heights. See the Val-U- | ship of the Detroit Chapter. of DETROIT POULTRY ataiowe evs Nat Dairy... 304| W&Y Pood Ad on pages 6 and 1.| American Instititute of Archi- DETROIT (AP)—The {oliowing prices | Ati “Refin |.. 336 Nat Lead .. 467/ today’s paper —Ad* tects. Tickets may be secured by | Str? Paid per lb fob. Detrot for No. 1| Atlas Pdr 41 Mag ol -- $0.2! ; quality live poultry up to 10 am Avoe Mig 5 NY Air Brkt 20.1. writing the sponsor at 120 Madi- Hens: Heavy type 23-26. mostly 26 | Bald Lima a7 NY Central 20 t errors eed son Ave., Detroit, or by. phoning light type 19-20. mostly 20. Heavy type| Balt & Ohio . 194 Nia M Pwr. 286) tO . . in w - Readies dn trrere ai ne te ee ee $94 Nort & West . 46/ Church, Exchange St. entrance. Odward & e ryers 3-3% Ibs. whites 28- | Benguet 4-14. > Am v 27 =| —Adv 37, grey crosses 28-28%. Barred Rocks | Beth st! 614 Nor Pac ed a F ae = —— 4%-5 Ibs 33-35. mostly | Boeing Airp 26 mee: Ma Pw... 1¢5 R = t | ormal ceremonies ded i cklings 32. Heavy ducks 25 Bohn Alur 224 Nogsthw Airl... 81 mmage sale urda rom | icating Turkeys: breeder turkeys “haste type Dead errs 134 Ohio OU a13| 9 - "til 1 en AA burn | the new Sun Oi] Co. Ltd., re- | hens 40 Brict My 24 © Packard 4] a. m. p. m. at the Au finery at Sarnia, Ont., will be | Budd Co 13 Par Am iw Aw i Heights Community Clubhouse, 220 ; » urr d y c } _ held May 15 with Canadian Gov- | Guicago an” rtp a steady (CRM EH RY Parke Dav! 323 | S. Squirrel Rd. 2 — a4 ——— ‘ r 13 e 7 . _ . ernment and company officials on youne sock; weak on hens receipts | Gan vt 6 Pa RR . 6 . i coops ) paying prices 2 cents ee tr} > j taking cs oy te cated lower: heavy hens 22-23 Rent hens 18- ar tae so Pheips D- ‘ #+| Sales of: New Cars The nery 1s located on ryers of broilers 23-27: old roosters | Celanese 174 Phileo 39 . | 16- ‘ a 196-acre site on the east bank | | Ches & Ohio . 336 Philip Mor 40.5 e of the St. Clair River. It is the Cee eve oe? Pills Mills". 383 Reported Higher newest industrial addition to Sar-| Foreign Exchange —cismax Mo 483 Pit Pave GI... S04 PF . oca la 2 et nia's rapidly growi: “Chemical NEW YORK (AP)—Poreign exchange | Co Palm 431 Pullman - 48 ale : . Valle ” y ng } rates follow Great Britain in dollars. Cole Gas 4 Pure QGal...... 662 Sales of wed passenger cars ¥y. | others in cents Con Edis 4325 RKO Pic . 6 |shot up to 159,500 units in the ———————EE_ anadian dollar in New York o OE 283 Radio Cp 2772 f . . arkst 0% per leunt tind Toe Pp 433 Remi Rand... i? irst 10 days of April, according US ceote up 1/92 of a cent 7 "| ConPePt 45 1004 Repub St... $1 to Ward's Automotive Reports. Ou S 0 p on nrene rarest Britain ‘pofnd) $281| Cont Can 642 Reyn Met. : 3 Th unchanged: Great Brifain 30 day | Cont Mot ® ey Tob : 7 e it s isti «futures 261 11/16. up 1/32 or & come |Get ou. A Detroit statistical agency W lt p . Great Britain 60 day futures|291 18/32. |Corn Pa 14 | Bears Roed . e | abo the total was 7.6 per cent nehange Great Britain 00 fay futur Cruc stl 24 e 1] ‘ 2 \ ‘ a on airy [ 281%, up 116 of a cenf: Beigtum | Curtiss Wr 97 Sinclair Ot... 411|@bove the first 10 days:of. March ene 198% ot 00 1 16/of a cen Det Edis 31 Soecny Vee ; 426) and started April off at the: fast- p c (franc %. 0 ent 1- | Dox Aire 1 parks y Three youthful bandits, one changed Germany ‘Weste Osatecke IDs Sv ches 356 Sperry s8.5| est sales clip since last July when a - > , mark) 2385. unchanged land il- | DuPo 123 Std Brand 32 , i rainpny nied ri toi and gol der) 2643, unchanged. Ital Miter 16% | Rast Atr 1 227 Std Ot! Calif.. 61 a very were sold in the 10- stac escaped wi of a cent. unchanged: Port 1 teseudo astm Kod $7.5 StdsOtl Ind 81.3| day period. : s 3.50, unchanged: Sweden ‘krpna 934 | £1 Auto I 41 Std O1l NJ , f 000 about $75 last night in a holdup unchanged: Switzerland (frabc: (free) | Fl & Mus In. 2 Studebaker 6s| The upsurge may bring 500, of the Walton Dairy ‘Bar at 228 eo Denmark ‘krone) 145 Ex-Cell-O es swift & Co $3.6) plus new car deliveries for April, ’ , 5. : ni Treept 8 exas ° ° = bene Bivd., according to Latin America Argentina (free) 724.|Gen Ele 1126 Tex G 8ul 91 | the agency -said. ontiac Police. unchanged; Brazil (free 190 ar Gen Pads 616 Thomp Pd . 64 unchanged. Vene en Mot i . 411 Mrs. Annie Donelow, waitress changed =e a8 4 —— Ven Gen Me os Timk R Bear _ . . suela (bolivar) 3003. unchanged n T : Tran W Air 1 | di t ] B ownhoist who was alone at the time, said | Gen Time 304 Trensamer. ay ndusiria r 3 4 Gillette 544 Twent C Pox.. ee the trio entered the dairy bar at H K : C Goodyear 22 Underwood”. 278| Declares $1.25 Dividend at : . Grah Paige 13 In ar Os. S about 11:45 just before closing enry alser 0. Gt No Ry Pf 525 Unit Air Lin.. 22.4 ; { time and demanded the day's re- Gt West 8 . 195 Unit Aire 55.6 NEW YORK @® — Directors 0 ceipts lj A f S | [oe 137 United Cp.... a Industrial Brownhoist Corp. Tues- = Gulf Ot 567 Unit Tuit.. 1 One of the youths jumped over ists Se S, q es |Hotlana F 138 U 3 Rub : 335 ee pooper Homestk 3a.5 U 8 Smelt . @ the counter, rifled the till and The Henry J. Kaiser Co. reported | Hook El Pf .1004 U 8 Steel 447| mon stock plus an extra of $1 handed the money to a second | today on its 40th anniversary that | Houd wiersn 1S LOS Tor ic | dy’ |a@ share, payable May 3 to holders holding a paper bag, The third, it now has assets totaling $925.000.- jut Cent 81 Weekesbe i _ of record April 23. d Stl ... 4 Ae a false mustache, kept | 000 and annual sales returns of | insptt Cop... 25. West Un tel.. 396| The directors said payment of kel-plated revolver ‘‘point- | more than one billion dollars bfiey = ee ee 2s jthe extra was in ling with “‘the ed at me,” Mrs. Donejow said. |. Jts anniverary report also said | Int Paper 67 Woolworth : oe new management's announced de- | Int Tel&Tel 172 ngst Gh & 414 The waitress, who said she was | about 68,000 employes in 116 plants | Onn. Man @ termination to pass on to the “very frightened.’ sdid the youths | share a yearly payroll of $271,-| cecmnee wreces stockholders as liberal a percent- walked out of the restaurant. but | 90.000 and about 57.00 persons | [Marabloqer (al Weakal age of current and accumulated she could not tell police how they | OW" Stock in its diversified indus- | Pisures after decimal toon te ths | earnings as prudence will per- made their escape. ” | tries | Baldwin Rubber* . 112 11¢6}mit. Earnings for the first quar- > | ‘ | :-¢ 8 t ‘ 4 Two were wearing black leather| The firm gained national prom-|6..",Sacngan’ ..., | G3 43g] ter_were reported as $237,372. gloves, gray fel _|inence during World War II for | Kingston Products*..., 26 32 - y felt hats and dun its large vol { shipbuildi Masco Screw*...... 2.7 3 : garees, but the waitress was un- | Ar sol ume 0 ‘te Midwest Abrasive* 62 «67 | After t war, it invaded the| Rudy Mfg-....... 36.0 O37 able to describe the third. All were | | Wayne Screw. ee njured early this when their cars collided ogy one chen ‘Lake road near Northwestern Highway. 17 and ® years old, she | 2Utomotive industry. Auto production facilities have | been concentrated in Toledo since | the company merged with Willys- | Overland Motors, Inc. Wilson Foun- | dry Division in Pontiac is a sub- sidiary of Willy’s Motors, part of | the Kaiser holdings ee Calls on Van Fleet | WASHINGTON w — President eT *No sale; bid and asked SOFT WATER You can own a Badger Auto- matic Water Softener for as little as $5.00 a month! Neo Down Payment Elimination Guaranteed! Rust AUTOMATIC . PAID IN FULL! tn Case of Accident . Auto Insurance Pay the Bill! 2% grams at birth and attains}. of D&C Fim | Fruehauf Group Which. Took Control Informs | Stockholders DETROIT uw» — The Detroit & Cleveland Navigation Co. may be purposely steered toward dissolu- tion by a new group of directors who seized the company helm from Detroit financier George J Kolowich. Alfons Landa, Washington attor- ney and member of a group which won control of the company yester- day, said he had informed stock- holders of the intent to dissolve D. & C. and return its estimated $7,000,000 in assets to them. Pos- sible liquidation of the company was proposed by Landa when stockholders were asked to vote against continued Kolowich control A final decision on. dissolving the company, however, would be up to stockholders themselves. z i i | La hauf choices for the board were Myer S. Fine, -head of Associ- | ated Theaters of Cleveland, and Eugene H. Freedheim, director of | the De Vorn Manufacturing Corp. of Cleveland. Kolowich and John A. Hamilton both were re-elected. Ouster of Kolowich from control | of the company, onetime operator | of Great Lakes passenger vessels, | ended a months-long bitter proxy | fight. Phone Is Bipartisan DALLAS, Tex. (UP) — Texans, whether Republican or Democrat, | who want to contact their piliti- | cal party's state chairman can do) it by calling the same telephone number. Republican Chairman Al- | vein H. Lane and Democratic | Chairman Wallace Savage share | the same office here. They are law partners. “| | | _ (As advertised in TIME) ’ pee age L] Seve office time and Cherokee Rd., who said the || & ray her J. L. Hudson |} @ purchase clothing || § WORLD'S ; t she tired the|] g FASTEST ear back from had been vaca- ~ FILE Pat Pine St. Pontiec. (I @ (om edn. dearing |} Baer merat ~ pection || B sPeeo-rnes 16 Maccabees Detroit, ko By D. W. LaUG E Bldg. a ¥. General Printing & Office Supply 17 W. Lewrence St. Pontiec, Mich. The increasing need in every home today.for protection from fire and petty thievery is apparent with the large number of SENTRY Your Home 4 SAVES sold to homes throughout the United States There are séveral very definite reasons why so many SENTRY SAFES afe sold to homes: PIRST—The quality protection from fire” Needs a Safe— A SENTRY SAFE (1790° for 1 hr.) and theft with heevy gauge steel plate. SECOND | —the low price, only $59.75 delivered here in Pontiac. THIRD— the convenient size—outsige 24'2x17'2x17'2", insidg 15x12 ax FOU 12" metalescent color GENERAL PRINTING & OFFICE SUPPLY trractive, modern appearance, painted a bronze now @3/7> TAKES UP ALL SLACK #ROM PLUG TO IRON 17 W. Lewrence St. Me Operation Front-Wheel ignment! Hulslander's to survey the military assistance programs in the Far East, especially in Korea and Formosa. , CADILLAC a ee ee ee Crawford-Dawe-Grove | Insurance of All Kinds 716 Pontiec State Bank Bidg. Ph. FE 2-8357 Soft Water Service 3984 Walton Bivd. OR 3-9614 zee i © , a E oe } ~ i * - ,