T | | gor ge? ii ald. + re 3 “g hit he Nes +i HF itt ie ai! et Hl 7 5 it ¥ ay = | is 1 ie ie ae aba a tat Scie] TO o Hi Hy. ifs 3 fy ib mi if il 7 uit TH Bir ti lit ‘ih , Se fi Hi Tae < Hits | pay Poa aie 3; 10] Satie fis : He net nig aha | Pe ra tesa tl a Fl es iti SB hi Tet Mitt nat lah EEL afi! Hie = r He Hat ran] 5] aH sys! SWAG, 8271053; Hay Ys. | ig ff dhe jus lf SS pegs: fete : Lee it Heth Ht Te pal ne if a isi Hula eee eg 5 cal | Tat Lat He I. Hie aii By ia) Bais FHP ay ataes et =O zt a eel Ae fi iF +h Affe fi: feten Bless Shard F qn TEE Wag aly g fa aia it E ~O a i ihe HLA ene tity ft Weeds Uh ii me fe tua Rea. iT rel i eH EP Pat cn a Ht Lf gp | tt ae ight a ail AS th ri vl pats i 2 2 oh pany sete i F usil ui E ti ites eeeter be gift aly ie yi bits iz Loe edit a3 stag i i nH, ety! till . 3 ui]. ; i Pai fs ie sl sh i i bails: His 35 55} Ailing vee Ee | S-aess sa5ti Halil iyi! saad ualyas lit ili state Hues aT rz il as} lh ; ant il t/93 tut ab Wd fel | Pet, § Les etl RCE tee THIth ata i +7 bsaag3 St) +. abst] a] 30 fyi THF i; ili a : | xs 35 itt Ts i | i i A ft Wir 1pB be ait A th Sh i" Sz }. at ith tyiist H ge Sib ‘ pay “3B setae’ “BS HIRAI OS x it ge 3 sy hd 22 aie Hah Pease an we plPies.. es ~ S28 Sbbss"ita ? iad: VU oF ip lle F ge Sup 3 Au atl s ities 599 fits cB it 7 pea i: 3] ig = 7 — aaa p nish Saath 2s g jaunt pong EG a a : Inf = <= Hides EF ogee, siti bE Toe 3 tee sbi raut .— : is s) : iH = Ure es cn vie elit pial ta int Hea Aner ras ae st el, aes fee) 3a ‘iil po de APTI E head e EA ae Pile Sti i}: ible est Be EE thea i i le if bills p aSEE? ay as [: =e o06U= tia we Wear an 5 Sind = Ll mk. S22 hi Ha. ii A. i BA ie —— rr ; aut ts Hinge sth: we H TTY Hb Bal 5 2 $23 HH F gid Lit $3 ) a. ti SS inet Tia aay Sail i S23 3 Paid ebeL ae 4 3p arog ipsa | S THIS Pa Hee S 8 ety ih ae 1 § Lt Ale att i age aFuin |S g lg ta gal +s Hr] SO fy isi Saale a fveci) S oe ital bie aaagytl | § if i +. i i any part eA cae 25 i HE idee + it~ gfe! , E alist EEE ibs? ” = g6a5% + ae i — > : 338 are FE : gti ft sii4| tem ES eh frase 7, sits & bl pice ate uae ae S E iff be “| 5 aif (5 Olin at iT ds58h aj whi HES So Fi: HE i rh He ail ; Hy on 338 bayil ay 2 ig. Re in smasal ze DB : HS it - i cl | °y i SST gdh i 25 hit at ala SB th Ta at ah oe ae pny Hila ii 23 ih 215 Bn i HE Hl\3ssa if Gat | lbddea As5° RTE see 2s ll a pat ae ie BS bata al STATE te Hilal BS ere Se lc atti ~ BS jie da iqtel ia ee abel = daft HE INE, So al Ma } > .— i; td sath feca bua Lass SLT a ahah 5 i} af se Hat oS rel Ni Hi Hy ll i ~ = latent ay ye ital ee Bil i ie halts HEH. Ec bu “HEL | SS neti SH ath walt anit rid tie —" i 5 =! spat] iii; nr 2 82: Te ii Ha f Fi Pepi, A Ha pa Hitt 8 E gi alin i de detitipet tae fh q SB ii ee ty =Eus ai if au H HAD tea : a ilar a =e A E - aii eh zu elie rt Te 9 oe —_——eyr Mg i i “ —_ oil . | —e" F _—_— — <= | ese { x fis ask ° 2 > - \ | THE PONT : Stocks Follow Col NTIAC PRESS, 0 .. Sesto: rrow Ran Wi ege Gradu AY, APRIL 16,108 4 so tr Be Ten ans |Narrow Kange ill Pi uates of 1954 3984. : prices moved ahead today | «50 bu: my Mitr the NEW mah. nd Job 954 INDEX xnsey ern tay oe ere See ss eae ee s Aple | ! tavorites soybeans 250-3.00 bu: Bee TS ges | oa irregularly feat -bunting for” Jove "tet pects for nty TO oS Rieti oot Ee dogo. togay in Ser aaa The United Prese CLASSIFICA’ SSS. : grains buyers but era Spy, tuner 38 bu; toch, taney. Only a ow) Sed prom pes Press hey . IFIC 3 ee tans eet Seasons Er ie few issues placement polled : ATION All soybean a seal omen, pane oe ete © pet ee went outside | | 4 ny TED iS | Scromn the country at 12 schedls meneame . ee AL ‘ conal futures strong. bu 1S » Higher in either direction. nationwide PRESS recent rises and schools w ‘ 6 highs with made new sea: top {am don bene Caboast ae om Nass wom was “Gueneiaa dada tees not been pee leraticr fm Memoriam =~ = = bringing the May 1 He i. No 1 * prion there ae reflected that i ete V > xy bean a top price contract | } ce ee 8 be, peege, sant | lers and equipments, a is no “recession today for professional in the have| Funeral Bi “seegcvarceeneasees oorhees-S ‘iad gee delivery si for any 8 A WH bene. Chives, Ne 1. building oils, distil- ” in job Graduates trainees. demand Funeral Directors cares FUN Ss ipl 2 SAL , j at the in wheat ranged Sis "sa-m best” a je 1 radic - issues | Se a in a dee a —— ‘ L HOME $150 EN ‘ t opening, the to 4 cents > aepeeepaen motors were | televisions and Calen are and | demand. de- Help Wanted evee 6 Plane or « WEEKLY that ember con oes. LE a fons were . Other ma) da being 8coo school de ented Female .... Do D INTANOISI t jong tor a large bisek. S eee te. 38-t Ne ba Pote- the railroads, mixed including Noses. T Business up raga Tnstrustions ot nelson-] hns Local commeny: some lease. sem: ‘y a part ef this cereal. grap oy ep rny Ema potatoes cals and aircrafts, 2 508, ORD. Roosevelt and | Work Want _iiprenssesess wees 3 FUNERAL Le) Sa com if ne os ad onl i nt tte bat Segue, Fed | ge mame omens | Members pict Chapter — ee Werk Wanted isis “risaccces | peld ot once, Opi His. mar. hour was 2% to end of the fire aoe eet ae |G abril ross ginning af 690. tm aes us eo ee a fate Baer patting Be a ye eee a a i abe Nay acm Nee ee don case: | Corp Aircraft, Chrys- ¢:90. initiation 8 pm age. eee ee Soni vecse Mount 5 Help W: j May $1.52%, oats “% e % higher, trait for fe (aP)— BaG8 s k , Union Carbide Admiral N Pfahlert _ 7 om . a year j emmane e ee iagereees sfienge Pane lor a Pre, peduced fr ‘ anted Female ; $L.06%, 80 we diag 8 weighted ave rete rade — United Air I here ews | B scientist university | ony of -s = ont Ge mas a : May , soybeans dag ell vo, aa: are, Higher were Lines. rief is with a bachelor the young taunery Service >> te hes ase pa * - 4 33.94% 3% to B \%: medi a-«, | ™ Sears - William being re oem figg: Some re — reasonable. BB. A } a bund td ard te 1 ent - See vee es oe Varrent. K. Steph where a offered $320 8 degree oy sattctteseesees = can VE ry a Comics 3 $2.75. pounds to 78 cents ag Ee ap ae eae nee |” estes coco a Factor haces age ® tiendiy woman 1 . higher, May a ove eure. Ie 0% of 5,000 (which traded ee Oakland ad Town- in the $300. A master’ have Bervice BOX REPL an appointment to te Tecall? ‘ cuscaeeo ve 30. . large, 31. General shares up at 1 a car fisranrwely erg Ty technical s Servi on ecaccacsees 1es and hy ell Ae . on / Grai cic SUTTER tral and Jectrit, New ™) rifle and that a rer iff's | wi a month ebhe. ba donne eouke cacesesssees At 1 age Ey oe ey . n Prices colpts 1.068. (AP) AND EGGS —— each val a port 22 cali- 2 enh to war compared oe oe seeesceeenees there 0 am. greomed v6 om. hong > oie ao ant each vaind at 3% were taken cap hres pared] Sete © Fer lips na, ae 2 e ae rr) 3 re- New his were of the . = occgeccemece the from a want Ls) Fg i > Ye month durin ported schools : Press at a - ) scus * wert barter Stocks En while he the eum. decline polled WANTED secret the office eee 5 b - cae after ¢ try was was vaca past . But in total re- wtd. Child. ++ 8 following in Ine 187 xe ee points are cighthe ry onan eames —— reasieek auras Wed. Misestiane med Ooo 7, 11,2 cui —, oe artic es ae (Ring teow. 33 me TS Te said. * = for ve college scarce| Wanted ve SNE BD Dogg yy pam am gg S 30.5: $: U8. “meciume | a pal ie } ag Floyd A glamor” graduates instruc- Money, Wanted ....... eupemens checks 38, ,meatams | Aus" Chal ta” Kennecott” | dora, . Perria, tel B crageaafpanpey share eee a 1 8 St, : hours, Paya, salary 7 cmc =< iam) wh ee Walled 32, of S031 evision such at the} Wit ving Quarters ma » 97, 162, er Ar 4GO | alum Lad = toe ss me ‘ty Saturd Lake El . as radio and wrd. | Roem orci o com mis- | bi rac Am Airlin . $14 LOF & ti was to ee ee guil- Talk of Wanted tracts, seeee A Potatoes am Can 125 Lid Glass... 43 fined $50 driving prompt a business Seal hn OG UR’ vs : arrivals jam & 41 ai. eh Bloomfi and $10 and ed recession RENT : pee S je hipments: ene, | Am Mage 4 3 a Mer -3i mer C id ee ee less “* — has| Rent ALS OFFERED __Help W a MN. a aa tael| ts EG 20 ay Gere oo Be «a They are more _sreduates to do} 53 anes, Purnianed ip Wanted Male _ 6 Serene wm ee $2.25: Minnesota |Am Ger . roses 383 Joseph A. first that likely to pick jobs.| pert —— "IT 4 ye we cen ares | 4 eteck | Am Rad Pe Marsh ied 3 Jessie St Bielek, 38, The comes along one of See S viata arb age Cah ¢ to take care ° Swill Eo 3 —— > - | day , was of 1% UP ; with ee canary iy ae ‘on bet ook in of small /| am ting y D ou... 23 vs in sentenced N.| sia survey Conv ee. GENERAL my home. Smelt 36 Mead oo Oakland Tech, covered =, . ford — am Soe :-- 3° pond ma wey Coun to 30 versity Purdue, Geor- Ren’ — —o ENERAL | ROUSEWORE. cmc Am T 2 Fs olny Py lw drunk ty Jail of Stanford, ra roeasiaay! OOS TARP! conten. S7ee _es, FE erav . pyod uevasvece As Te 2 Mont no = by | 315. unable to driving aft Sat-| of eee ee ae Ual- Rect Office Space eeccece ARPENTERS Labo BEAUT ‘excellent id / in White Suter bees op a 3 Met oe or cost He pay $100 ie Col “* T A ersity Rent Miscellaneous .. Fe work, sine pas ke a UTY OPERATO ake be | homer ta trade sold —— ™ Cc S01 Murre. “op bay on Township appeared bet ef Penns Iniversity, U & M, Bag ag CONT $. ry . Apply 516 R Oakland anes a inchanges conte Au Rea vo 2 at kak: Stanaback. Seaice Hiher'G, can meee leeaay a per eels Howe pecan see MAN agTY Ponuse ties reported unty sheriff's 4 mee or two, eboice ates Per vo 303 Nat Bios. Bre Vormingtin : the andrea Wellesie a Rent Lake ke Property... o toa ) goles “separement re beat. MALS tee reared finding archer aba eases cs 3, wih 380 to 300 (Bald Lime bo Met Lead... ne Tarmingion Township —— guburoan Pro ere Ms tos ora, bfe tm = DOK “ron DAY Wont RE ship, the White Lake aban- | “#6 bee. a enon aero Bako 8) wy ete: | A. Carpen sentenced dustice American . i on i 7 bp curren’ expaai iberal bom Sor peat Basie. puff that plies one Town- | 1.000 ane seosigen teenled Benguet oT me Seaton $o.2 | Rine ter, 17 Kenneth | “8 colleges or Sale Acreage «-... “a wae a Sroasiton proarem. COMBINATION 8 ney. - "Detectives De abandoned 1.0 seine ben ne = || iy én LS Ss ine and universi oh A eg * soto alliance, Thi ts oly Sort STEAM T you: im | Sines send ee | Boving Aire 622 Nort & West. 284 assessed and Coun t, to with a flood | Beater Property. pi ition for =f ony ee COOK agiy H #12 60 kA consisting sssanad | eee a 7 mo am _ ea | day for him $10 ty Jail next June bachelor’ of 279,000. Por ——. Bus. “ os 2 won hae Bh ya WAG! 7 ens o vast by W said that erson and og ng a ong — — = Betees har 33.6 Nor fee ee reckless costs Sa ceive Another or’'s degrees Exchange Py powriac brite CREDIT ~~ G00 liam . 13. Sta 23 dri tur- PINANCI “ a BO STATE B > 5690 Cedar Buell on hie fs Sound mee, See en ree Bret My Ht Pack oun 7% | area ms wil ut docte Qogress will re- neciness “ leve, cut chs OF 108 FOR wooo" TED +; from Oak Island Rd. farm at Dery see os commercial | Bead Co. th 4 mage - Wares, 32, a eee and 7,920 ee iene Ceawaets « oma, 8 ‘ ANT AND Dm F with a Pari® Mar Ae dunt tee ans te i cone aaa i Pere Piet 10 one Ae Lake et 2450 | School pled papa voy ae. Soares ant bea “SY peties DAY WArTRES ag ’ found truck, which 15 along ony, ie prime steers, quoted nomin. | Compe, ¥ oe ig Der... mee! ing Sa costs fer reckon fined teachers are prospective a teen AB DRIVERS OVER Sf WIONT $f eSameree B = SOUP tound abandoned Buell my A os Sieber” a I Ra si geg or amirraly i iouh ts moot seus ee ee eit ng apay oe Orehar sess num abe , at the back wrod be * Boch is se to o.e. | wy. BS Rae ia. 18 Joseph Syivan Lak . | rank belo most sta rise, al-| mow Tr . Cont o_ Ra. 4 The 300-pound of his She east = reuse x se eees aH J. Leavy Jus- | parable those tes they still Rent Traier spect. act MAK FOR FOO ANG _Mary's Tavera warrnies iF : up truck safe and he pring ee eee 6s Pils a... “et Tat Bloomfield uing in reli pa Sd = have on, exceD~ WAlTREss Av night were taken the pick- seedy to. 7 alll hy Ches & n Pilla Mille. ry Elmer Tow ship Colorade fields. Wanted Used eicaue an D CO wood | — cook. Nights xp > omg Ag oS Se Sea He firma | coas se agnor api Soar reporting was an ¢xception Wanted Osea, rocks 2 o7 aow ae ) on. for chotee (Mow, 28: moet! sor se, | Saag 8 Proc oem.-- 8 costs Sal 18, of Detroit Gerald| #2. that for the in Por Sale Used Care PERTEN #1 per hour Ennencan oe é _ Ths Gai Park. - at two louse san 0: ecellll pen oe 04 o—_ <.... ay urday for reckle $40 with school's hi first time Sale os aa pt TanceS—WWOTESATS XPERIENC ue Pike, te a ye said that two Siam ath goad | Coig Palm 12 a ag ~~ ait OF ican . ess driving ries were being , Classroom Paras etsy z tes 8 of on. 68 4 FE +9 D covonED woul. two miles n abandoned Oth- | , Saladle ence BS mya tg #.80- | Col Palm TE roy Rand... 316 thodist Oneten : comparable offered sala Boats Bicycles see man S) bes EXPERIENCED ' = — weekend. ot ter cattle ; 0 few + le ~~ 3} , Reo Motors... 34 | Art hu ~at Trinit engineers to - | Por ‘& Accessories - vented Oe —S_mes WarThEas, the Oe 1.000: 2 on -* ¥q3 Repub i 21. 5 re and those Bale can Pa o rr. 4 from oly r-dhonaghontongr eae eee aces :|Con O- M2 Rey eu... Ht) Ro 2 ot oe we ¥) On ectentiste, paid Per Gale Airplanes FE +2500 Experi ; , and the other Pulls tod vrealers weak nally, Reedy: | Con Pe Pt ce ty ae) eel = i pol aie | MERCHANDISE Dunn NI ‘Be itress eae Soe eS ie a: SENSE Baran! Se oe [are eee See coeny R |= ree Se Pontiac believed le ae cam heats cae o. tee -— Cont Ou... °° a oss —— Se ages in Waterf | population By 1508 faculties = Weleatine Othe aa wees "3 Betwee Sikes fash referent, * be a ceeen heifers 917 00-33. 50. wales | Cre > 6.2 Sinciair oa.” 4 see White or Clar Ww ‘ord, | lation bulg 960, he said a Por Sale B nce naasaeiees My job _ 45 and 50. Ss person end o' Driver Hu — commercial “op. — ie - ae | Curtiss ou: 3 Bos fee: as OR 3-7118 Bres. re area oebecie teacher which now the | Sais em giv sacl aa man. ee | MARRIED = comm ” ~~ Su rt in Collisi Bey & connate sally 96 Spe neces Se St. Estate. moving and Sey oak in all Sale Be eeeteend oc 5 P e referenc . Please responsible —S ; nday ision choice veal dew wens a ~ —" Sperry its $45) 8:30 Barbaros —Adv into coll schools will Sale, Sporting Goods aes ™ ont iac Pr es. Write fg "on Page Oy No ex- Morning tneee 0 | sredes 60.08 38 0, ea poe Ce... 04 Oe On eal... 4 Wed han- INSURA and asked . 14 4 . a Pee I Pp . in tores Wer Barco Nteverment™ ‘min OPTOM : off Coramerce tails. Tate and ofhice de er NCE Business Bri maple tole lanning Expansion | = wna tne Slee a, Tteretng cre 5 W. AGENCY | The fifth CSS Briefs pital. at Pontiac Stal after | The ining Expansion ees of gage e3 —— Sats, “peta Ta quired. typing re- _ 5 Huron st the Michi annual con ate Hos- jor chain t Erma ~ rm: dear father of Prari “ , Wa OY TURE, J. BL McClure Auto — Magazi re hichyy cong aia at 7.Mil Woodward _ Ey i ge Aes Skat “nde AE AMUN are paid sales personnel = X\ y-FAST/ > Feel at OR AUTO Genere ie was aon of 114 M point of average fell d that the Sears : Mack in Rudoiph Miller Mrs." Genevieve TREMENDO fata | all merch nmission on cA —o ° pA tcl wong and Hosp ated at Pon e-| The the year to the lowes continue ebuck & ea Ta aces gp Mons Free pecan. Pan. Com andis =~ cordial for you come arm ital Sa tiac trade . t its Co Dn P._ th. esday. A service HOWE ony PRE- plete es . <4 ioan “Why a loan. Y: to | cyc bruises Saturday for week journal which = ta expense also will a aa t ran 20th v behice PRIENCED emplo . program . : ae. al “Why Caraiaty” wo you Lan Seen ate a said that last |? expansion program Sil ge ae CALIPIED PERSON. wre benctn. Ther. ° hand m to Mat aca ¢ water a 67 verage last World cost = Rev. x Call POR APPOINTMENT ough j ene -ta . and your thews r at per fell Ww $325. nite atin John 1848 N. gh job : The . ny anni your loan is cco te Seginaw and |e cut al! opus Rerot | cpap ar II. The ,000,000} _Funerat Voge cn interment : pay aivey wih . co Provides wie oe 7 ighioe alata antago br Pagani The | ne tae large branch on a aoe S iLasshingey SALF! _ c with Pro Spar |b WG Car cP, |S ae arsed at Paneral WOR - BUILDING D pisverouna to be plac wetfen ores i aero "ee saert anvtin OF ANY KIND. Reel F* _ NEw Y ¢ — DETROIT und Ayes oat the 10a 1964 BARBARA, er ety woman, | Fon. ! ORK DETRO Ercan, Sra, e: siled “ake en ~petastion YOU tk s cmacane Pian and aS hg yoo | Eitan cy - “tel seat Rntae Fak soe | feoeoen CONSOLIDATED H. @MART. pril 15418, ‘34 ) Gary Educator Heads City Schools Accused of Collaborating a ee gettin ae” nl, emma ae cme ae an =e _ ow THE PO * * & & & ‘PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1954—28 PAGES an Whitmer . Will Succeed Frank DuFrain Board Makes Selection From 25 Candidates for Superintendent Pontiac Board of Educa- tion Monday unanimously chose Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, 41, of Gary, Ind., as the new superintendent of Pontiac Public Schools. He will succeed Supt. Frank J. DuFrain, who re- tires July 1, having reached the retirement age of 65. “We all agree that we re getting a real top man,’ school board sepa Glenn H. Griffin said in an-| nouncing Whitmer'’s§ ap-, pointment. “He has had 18; years of experience and we} regard him as one of the) nation’s outstanding educa- tors.” Griffin said J. continue Pontiac's superintendent of sehools Whitmer. picked from 25 educa- tors who applied for the Pontiac job, has been assistant superinten- dent of Gary City schopis since 1950. Born in Bluffton, Ohio in 1913, he graduated from Bluffton High School in 1930. He received his bachelor’s de- gree from Oberiin College and master’s and doctor's degrees from Ohio State University. He started his Cecil Cox will as cress as A + ‘Builders Show assistant | | jin home furnishings | eee “Choice. DANA P. WHITMER DR. Mark Ex-PW’s Legal Disputes Court Martial Arnfy Tries to Confront) _ Dickenson With Alleged | — Pro-Red Recording F | WASHINGTON (AP) — to confront Cpl. Edward S. | Dickenson with a pro-Com- | munist recording they claim | he made while a prisoner of | war in Korea. From all indications, the Hsecond day of Dickenson’s court-martial would pro- duce the same kind of legal maneuvering that marked the opening session yester- day.“ Dickenson, a 23-year-old soldier Starts Thursday | Jaycees’ Annual Exhibit | to Display Furnishings, | that led to mistreatment of fellow | Construction Equipment Residents of Pontiac and vicinity will get a chance to see the latest and construc tion equipment when the four-day “Greater Pontiac Home and Build- ers’ Show" opens Thursday at 2 p. m. in the Armory at 57 Water St Thirty-four exhibits are sched- uled. The show is sponsored by the Pontiac Junior Chamber of Com- merce. The program is aimed at dis- playing preducts and merchan- dise of local firms. Prizes will te distributed to visitors daily, with mathematics teacher and coach at| 8 grand prize given each night. Pandora High School in 1934; and | pone at Rawson High School in | p. m. Thursday, 2 to 1) p. m. Fri-| ¢ 935-37. He served as principal of | ‘ erthington, Mecharticsburg and Newcomerstown High Schools, in turn, from 1937 through 1945. All are in Ohio Whitmer next was vice-principal and principal of Steubenville High School, Steubenville, O., -untit 147, when he came to Gary as vice- principal and later, principal, of Froebel School. He held the latter post until he was made assistant superin- tendent of the Gary schools, in 1958, Whitmer is a member of the Presbyterian Church, Married and the father of two children, he plans to come to Pontiac about July 1. ’ Press Publisher Named Member of A.P. Board NEW YORK (®— Members of the Associated Press elected six di- rectors at the annual AP meeting |- yesterday. They are John 5S. Knight, Chicago Daily News; mes M. Cox Jr., Dayton Ohio Daily News; Mark Ethridge, Louis- ville Ky. Courier-Journal; Dolph Simohs""Lawrence Kan, World: Harold A. Fitzgerald, Pontiac Mich. Press, and Bernard H. Rid- der Jr., Duluth Minn. News- Tribune, : Show hours will be from 2 to 10) | day, ll a. m. to ll p. m. Saturday | }i,,. D and noon unti] 6 p. m. Sunday. Displays will feature all phases | Shadish has been at the Army’s of home building including financ- | Walter Reed General Hospital here ing plarts, constru@tion materials, appliances and furnishings plus methods of insuring the home, ac- cording to William L. Treanor, Jaycee president The local National Guard will set up a modern-warfare display, Treanor said. The show is a yearly affair U.N. Disarmament Talks Will Continue UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ® — Spurred-by the menace of the hy- drogen bomb, the Western Powers prepared today for new disarma- ment talks without knowing wheth- er the Soviet Union will take part. The 12-nation U. N. Disarma- ment Commission set up a sub- committee yesterday to start the talks, in private, here Friday. It adopted 9-1 a British proposal naming Britain, Canada, France, the Soviet ‘Union and the United States to the subgroup. It rejected 10-1 a Soviet bid to add Communist China, Czechoslo- vakia and India. Nixon Denies He Outlined U.S.-Indochina Policies NEW YORK (AP) — The New York Times said today that Pice President Nixon makes a point that he did not go to last Friday’s meeting of the American Society of Newspaper Editors in Washington to launch a “trial balloon” for an interventionist policy on Indochina. A Washington dispatch to the Times by James Reston said Nixon is disturbed about some of the reaction to his controversial speech on the possibility of U. S. interven- tion in the Indochina war.* Reston wrote that points that Nixon makes include these: 1. He did not clear his notes in advance with anybody and specifi- cally told his audience that only two men were authorized to define ‘official U.S. foreign poficy—Presi- dent Eisenhower and Secretary of State Dulles. 2. He talked in the belief that his remarks would not be attrib- uted to anybody. His mistake, as he now sees it, was in allowing the reporters to talk him into attributing the speech to a “high administration official.” Reston wrote that “since the mat al editors were the host? Friday and many of them became highly critical of the guest of honor later, it is only fair that the back- ground of the meeting put on the record.” Here is the ba , as given in the dispatch When the Vice President went to the dias Friday noon, he was urged to talk frankly and to respond to questions from the floor. This he “He added that the editors could of course ‘plagiarize’ (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) from Cracker's Neck, Va., is | charged with collaborating with}. the enemy while a POW and withT- | supplying his captors information prisoners. He pleaded innocent yes- terday. | Dickenson, hort, reund-faced and dark’haired, first refused re- patriation when the Korean armi- stice was signed but later changed his mind and returned to this country. Cal. Guy Emery, Dickenson’'s at- torney, protested heatedly against introduction of documents the pros- ecution said were linked to Dick- enson, At one point, Emery asserted that Army intelligence had in- | structed prospective witnesses not | to cooperate with the defense. The |; attorney said he would call as a | witness an Army doctor who Em- | ery said would swear to this. | The dootor is Capt. William R. hadish of Bridgeville, Pa., who, ickenson, was kept at Prison |Camp No. 5 at Pyoktong, Korea. since last February. In advance of the p-osecution move to introduce the record- ings, Emery argued it was im- possible to prove these had been made by Dickenson and that the prosecution was trying to bring in material it could not tie te the defendant. Col. C. Robert Bard, the pros- ecutor, protested that Emery wasn't letting him get his case off the ground. The recordings in question, Bard told reporters, were made by Dick- enson for the Peiping radio on Jan. 1, 1952. The attorney said they were monitored by Edwin D. Yok- ley of Silver Hill, Md. A deposi- tion from Yokley was admitted as evidence. Fort Defenders Supplied by Air U.S. Civilian Airmen Drop Ammo and Food for Dien Bien Phu HANOI, Indochina (® — The thousands of valiant defenders of Dien Bien Phu—trapped by encir- cling hosts of Communist-led Viet- minh troops — received fresh strength from the skies today. American-supplied Dakotas and Flying Boxcars, piloted by Amert- can civilian flyers, swooped low through curtains of fire from rebel artillery and antiaircraft batteries to parachute tons more ammuni- tidn, food and war material of all types into the long - besieged French Union bastion. Despite cloudy, rain-laden’ skies which forced war planes te curtail radically their assaults on rebel positions, fighters firing rockets and heavy machine guns tried to knock out the Vietminh’s antiaircraft guns. They gave cover to the low-flying Army lawyers moved today | ON TRIAL—Cpl. Edward Dickenson, 23, of Crackers Neck, Va., poses for photographers, seated the start of his court-martial in Washington. refused repatriation in Korea and in the witness chair, just before Dickenson, who first then changed his mind, is accused of collaborating with the enemy and engaging in activities that led to ———— of fellow prisoners. Polio Tests Start Monday: State Society oes Health officials pressed plans for launching the Salk polio vaccine program in Oakland County Monday after being assured that the Michigan Medical Society would co-operate in the state project. Dr. William Bromme, chairman of the society's execu- tive committee, said last night that. the society has with- drawn earlier objections to the vaccine. “The Medical Society will not withhold approval from the experiment on children by mass inoculations of the Salk poliomelitis vaccine. . said Dr. Bromme. In Pontiac, Dr. John D. Monroe, director of the Oakland County Health Department, said he is go- ing ahead with plans to start the inoculations Monday. He said, however, that he plans | to confer today with Dr. Robert J. Mason, president of the Oakland County Medical Society, on the county society's attitude toward the tests Forms have been sent to par- ents of county children in the first, second and third grades asking whether they want their children inoculated. These are due back on the first day of school. following Easter vacation. Inoculations are scheduled Mon- day at Clarkston Village School, Bertha Baker School in the Huron Valley (Milford area) district, and Novi School. Youngsters of Chap- man and Novi-Stone Schools will also be taken to Novi School for inoculations. Pontiac and other county schools are to be scheduled Jater. Dr. Monroe said the final de- cision on the undertaking will rest with Dr. Albert E. Heustis, the state health commissioner. Test inoculations are scheduled for’ selected school children in 11 Michigan counties. The Michigan Medical Society (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Fenton Fire: Suspect Released in Genesee A year-old Fenton man, Michigan State*— County Offices Change Hours To Close on Saturdays _ Starting May 3; Some to Extend Friday Time All Oakland County offices will stay closed Saturdays starting May 3, but some offices will remain open until 8 p. m. each Friday. The County Board of Supervisors Monday approved the Saturday closing suggested by its ways and means committee, headed by Fred W. Smith. County offices now close at 5 p. m. Fridays and are open Saturday mornings. The committee's resolution says the county office hours will be 8:30 a. m. until 5 p. m. Mon- Smith said his committee thinks the county treasurer's cffice, friend of the court, county clerk and reg- ister of deeds offices should stay open Friday evenings. “If we find others that aren't staying open which need to, we can always specify they do,” he added Oakland County's Circuit Court has not held Saturday sessions for several months. The county prose- cutor’s: office said today it will post one man at the County Jail Aussies Rescue |. Red Spy's Wife Woman Accepts Refuge in Australia; Gunmen Fly to Russia Alone DARWIN, Australia (AP) —Blonde Mrs. Viadimir Petrov joined her ex-diplo- mat husband as a refugee from Soviet communism today after Australian po- lice jerked loaded pistols away from two Russian es- corts ushering her in tears back to Moscow. The 35-year-old woman’s last-minute switch to the free world followed a fan- tastic tug-of-war in which Australian police wrestled wildly to disarm two of her Russian guards as her Eu- rope-bound plane stopped here on the first leg of its flight from Sydney. The gun-toting Russians had tried*to muscle local offi- cials out of talking to Mrs. B hcsiand Eight hours earlier some 1,500 fay soon at Sydney fought with police in a vain effort to pre- vent her from being dragged aboard the BOAC Constellation by the Soviet Embassy second sec- retary and the two armed Rus- sian diplomatic couriers convoying She n@ade her final decision to stay after a prearranged telephone call from Darwin for her first talk with her 45-year-old husband since he fled early this month with stacks of Red espionage data from his post as third secretary and MVD secret police *chief at the Soviet Embassy in Canberra. The riotous episodes surrounding Mrs. Petrov's flight promised ser- jous diplomatic repercussions be- tween Australia and the Kremlin. Soviet Ambassador Nicolai Gener- alov immediately lodged a formal protest at the Australian Foreign Ministry, charging ‘“‘armed assault against diplomatic couriers and detention of a Soviet “official, to wit: Mrs. Petrov.”’ It was revealed at Canberra that Mrs, Petrov was a cipher clerk in the Soviet Embassy, handling From Captors Pleads Guilty G. PALMER SEELEY Seeley Pleads at Secret Sesion Prepared to Say U.S. Probably Won't Send ~ Troops to Indochina * WASHINGTON ( U P )— Secretary of State John Fos- ter Dulles called in congres- sicnal leaders today to as- sure them he will fight regarding Indochina or Red China at next week's Geneva conference. The secret session this morning at the State De- partment came amid a thundering controversy over possible“ use of American troops in Indochina and considerable uneasiness about what might happen at Geneva. If pressed, it was learned, Dulles was prepared to tell the congress men it is unlikely U. S. troops o| Will be sent to Indochina since the French are not expected to Guilty in Fraud Sentence Delayed for | Buyer and Companion in State Land Deals MUSKEGON w — G. Palmer Seeley of Grand Rapids and Mrs. Lois Porter Moon. Ley of Muskegon today pleaded guilty in circuit court of conspiracy to defraud property owners and the state of $10,000 and upwards in highway land deals. Circuit Judge Noel P. Fox con- tinued bonds of $10,000 but delayed sentence indefinitely penditig an in- That was reduced today $10,000 and upwards in a com. promise agreement between fense attorneys and assistant state Attorney Genera] Perry A. May- nard. Maynard said the state's position was not changed, however. He said the state still claimed the amount involved was $90,000. Judge Fox announced that while the “amount involved is not the essence of the charge,” he would investigate te deter- mine the exact amodnt before passing sentence. * Muskegon County Prosecutor Robert A. Cavanaugh said the in- vestigation might not be completed until the middle of May. Seeley and Mrs. Ley were ar: rested March 1. The action followed disclosures of alleged irregularities in right- of-way purchases found by the state auditor general and attorney general departments. Bulletin LANSING (AP)—Gov. G. Mennen Williams an- nounced today he_ will seek an unprecedented fourth term as chief exec- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) utive of Michigan. = A | if mot all of the meeting to out. | lining his plans and soliciting ad- could be used in an emergency, Dulles leaves tonight (6 p.m., EST) for the North Atlantic Coun- ail meeting in Paris this weekend (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Rain to Continue Tonight, Wednesday The U. S. Weather Bureau fore- casts more wet weather for the Pontiac area, with showers and possible thunderstorms tonight and Ww ednesday. A low of from 4 to 4% tonight is expected to rise to a high of 70 degrees Wednesday. Monday, the temperatures ranged from a low of 46 to a high of 65 tely .7 of degrees. an inch of rain fell on the city Mon- day. The reading at 8 a.m. today was 51. By 1 p.m. in downtown Pontiac the mercury registered 59 degrees, Our Stake in Indochina Are We Moving Toward Intervention? Issues Make U.S. Decision Difficult Indochina is concerned) allies. On| lieved at first to be not unlike top of that, Vice President Nixon,| a skirmish between MP's and on whom the President places great }. AWOL’s, trust, has said that there is a possibility we'll throw our weight| in lasted longer than Gur Bloody tour of in World War I, cost ‘The vice president to act-o-men} et Ee eee to go off half-cocked. .» |unknown number of American cas- When the Korean War began, | ualties — the figure usually given our participation consisted of two being * 150,000, rifle companies flown over from | With the possible exception of the easy life of occupied the War in 1812, it turned out to The TrumaA age be the only war we didn't win. would not permit called a war involving Ameri. | | Asiatic sad. Commie ths cans, It was a police action, be- |. vo. peave men and made. ganda. The courts martial of these men and verdicts rendered therein . against any appeasement ~ ~ an (et Take: oodward-H whith © Woodward and | Runter and ts owned by the oil company. 7 The firm hopes to develop the land which is in Bloomfield Town- | ship, Annexation is being consid- | ered in order that the city can} makers and will be further dis- cussed with the city manager. Po- lice Chief Ralph W. Moxley and owners of the city’s two cab com- panies. Feliowing a hearing, the way was cleared for widening West : s . In line with the season, the Com.) munity House is now taking reg!s- tration for a course in “Basic Gardening,” as part of its adult education program. Mrs. Alice Wessels Burlingame will instruct | were made today to the Metropoli- tAR ANA on 71 Actic unter Land the classes, which will be-held at for six Pythian Temple $4 will hold its regular business meeting at 8 to- night in fhe Community House. . . * Three of Boy Scout Troops B-25's boys were awarded Tenderfoot batiges at the last meeting, while 11 of the scouts received their Second Class badges. A campout at the D-Bar-A Ranch in Metamora is planned for this weekend. Meanwhile the troop is engaged in a paper drive. The final pickup will be made May 8, to tie in with the city’s clean-up week. * Edwin F. Kirbert, executive sec- retary of the local YMCA, said to- day that appeals from all branches of the Detroit YMCA tan Detroit Building Fund of the United Foundation. The Detroit YMCA board was no- tified April 10 that the MDBF had slashed thé Y's $18,000,000 building program request of $1,234,010. Kirbert said the final decision of the MDBF will be reached by nel at a base in northern Indochina. are in the Asiatic country to service planes given > Dien Bien Phu. ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘TUESDAY, AP es x aengeihigll Uae —. eo . Sie) Nagy Ses 2. sd AP Wirephote FOR OUR AIR FORCE—American supplies are | by this country to the French in support of the war unleaded from a plane by U. 8. Air Force person- |against the Red-dominated Vietminh forces now These men | battling for possession of the inland fortress of Dad’s Night Scheduled by Webster School PTA The Webster School PTA will |play host to some 230 fathers Wednesday at 7 p.m. when the group will hold its annual Dad's Night in the school. Over 500 per- sons are expected to attend the affair FHA, Tax Men Face Congress Cole and Andrews to’ Testify Concerning the A movie, ‘Dust to Destiny,” Housing Scandal * produced by the Moody Bible Ins- WASHINGTON (®—The govern-|titue, will depict the wonders of ment’s housing chief and the head | "4ture, unexplainable by modern —_ science. Also part of the evening's of the Internal Rev Servise entertainment will be provided by were summoned to Capitol Hill to- the Pontiac Boy's Club tumbling day as a congressional investiga-|team. Orrin P. Huntoon Jr., tion of the multimillion-dollar hous- | father-vice president, said the pro- ing scandal went ahead on two ‘This was his way of saying that . tinued, Nixon Denies Stating Policy on Indochina (Continaed From Page One) his rergarks were for the editors’ information, to be used by them on their own authority if they wished but not to be pinned on anybody in the administration i The dispatch continued: The things that caught the re- porters’ attention at editors’ meeting in Washingtor’ Friday de- veloped during the question period. This was when Nixon “expressed his private opinion about the loyalty of Dr. J. Robert Oppen- heimer, whose case is now before the Atomic Energy Comission’s Security Board, and said that while he did not anticipate that the French would quit in Indochina, he thought the United States would | have to replace them if necessary | to prevent Communist conquest ot | When the reporters urged Nixon after the meeting to allow the comments to be attributed to a “high administration source,” he agreed. Reston reported Nixon regrets this has led to the ‘‘trial balloon” charge, and ‘‘he feels that this suggests he was trying to take advantage of his invitation to ‘put over’ a policy the administration was not prepared to announce.“ Nixon’s view, the dispatch con- is that the administraion has been trying? to make clear since March 29 that a Communist victory in Southeast Asia would be a threat to the security of the United States and thus would justi- fy intervention by U.S. ground troops, if necessary. to block an- other major Communist conquest “ * bs “All the Vice President intended women of the church. fronts Albert M. Cole, housing and See de b ne oe finance administrator, faced Doubling the 29 runs ma yt - : stionin by Senate Fire De mt in February, questioning Banking Committee members on various phases of the situation, in- | cluding the ousting of Guy T. ( |Hollyday as federal housing com- missioner. Sen. Douglas (D-Ill) |ealled this “incredible Cole, whu has over-all super: vision over the Federal WYous- ing Administration, FHA, also was due to undergo quizzing on statements that there may have been collusion between FHA officials and builders of apart- ment projects who allegedly pocketed as much as half a billien dollars out of oversized government-backed construction Chief Vernon W. Griffith's March report lists 60 runs, 40 of those answering silent alarms for fires and fire investigations. Estimated loss by fire was $2.225 with the safme ammount estimated as in- surance paid oe 7 . | rigorous | The YMCA will be open to young- sters for a program of crafts from | 10 a.m. until noon tomorrow War in Indochina— Will We Intervene? (Continued From Page One) | leans. tag. the fact remained that this; At country said — in effect—‘Rus- | Commissioner sia. and stooges thereof, hereafter | drews of the you advance only over our dead What is our stake in Indochina as compared to Korea? a Internal Coleman South Korea after World War II. | (D-Va) After three or four years the Truman administration felt it had|tain 1.147 cases of builders w put the country back on its feet| he said sought to pay the 26 per Vv as an independent power and, ac-| cent capital gains tax rather than ceeding to loud demands that the the 52 per cent corporation income boys be brought home, pulled out | tax on excess profits. and expressed doubts that that) From his Augusta, Ga., Spcation part of the world meant anything | headquarters, President Eisenhow- to us. Into the vacwum thus cre-|er yesterday ordered that the rev- ated moved the Reds. When we enue service open its income tax fought there we fought for some-| files so the Banking Committee can thing that wag peruliarly our own. | look into the returns of these build- or, at least. had been. ers for the 1942-1953 period. Noth- This country was not nearty ing was said about permitting the just about the same tme, An- Revenue | Service was scheduled to be the first witness at a parallel hearing by the Senate-House Committee on | Reduction of Nonessential Federal We inherited jurisdiction over | Expenditures headed by Sen. Byrd Andrews has said his files ie suddenly Saturday. gram will end at 8:3 p.m. Re freshments will be served. Pontiac Deaths Robert Deneldben Sr. Robert Donaldson Sr., 65, of 1097 Berkley St., died at his residence yesterday He was born in Scotland on April 14, 1889. Mr. Donaldson was a member of All Saints Episcopal Church. Surviving aré his wife, Margery Smith Donaldson, three sons Rob- ert and Herbert, both of Pontiac, Bennett of Saginaw and “nine grandchildren. Funeral will be Wednesday at 3.30 p.m. from the All Saints Epis- copal Church. Burial will be in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. The Rev. George C. Widdifield of All Saints Episcopal Church will offi- ciate. The body may be viewed after 7 tonight at the Denelson- Johns Funeral Home. Margaret K. Thompson Margaret Kathlene Thompson, 19, of 47801 Pontiac Trail, died here She was born in Scott County, a., June 29, 1934, the daughter of William H.., and Eliza Bishop Thompson. She came here from Virginia three years ago. Surviving are her parents, five sisters and five brothers, Mrs. Ruth Davis, of Knoxville, Tenn., Mrs. Gloria Green, Mrs. Virginia Wilson, Mrs. Myrtle Barner, ‘Maudie Thompson, Marshall Thompson, Lyle Thompson, all of Dulles Will Fight Any Appeasement (Continued From Page One) and Red Chind’s admission to the United Nations. . egy is to create a 10-nation front Phu. a meeting with difomats of the 10 countries after the session. After conferring with President Eisenhower yesterday, Dulles told RIL 20, 1954 Fr, cae ert Wife of Spy Accepts i gas Asylum in Australia =e lated their diplomatic immunity. But legal experts pointed out Au- stralian air travel laws forbid pas- Dragged aboard a Russian-bound plane in Sydney, Australia, yester- day Mrs. Viadimir Petrov later was rescued by Australian police at Darwin. She and her husband, a former Soviet diplomat, are re- ported to have deserted the U.S8.S.R. and to aid western The three glum-faced Russians | powers. who lost out in the struggle arrived in Singapore by air today en route to the Soviet Union, amid strict security precautions. The trio, including F. U. Kis- litsyn, second secretary of the ee —— cCarthy Near City Brothers Face Washtenaw Court ‘April 29; Cox Told. to Get Own Counsel Two Pontiac brothers demanded examination yesterday in Ann Ar- bor on armed robbery charges and another loca] man, who faces similar charges, was turned back to his cell until he can find legal counsel. Charles Edward Ervin, 37, and his brother,.Gordon, 27, were un- able to furnish $30,000 cash bond each set by Ann Arbor Municipal Court, . They will be examined April 29 on the charge that they par- ticipated in a $4,826 supermarket holdup there Feb, 26. “Hugh T. “Buddy” Cox, 21. of 88 W. Mansfield Ave. was denied a | court-appointed lawyer in Federal Court in Detroit yesterday, when the judge learned that Cox had money in his possession, The court Cox to obtaip his own legal counsel before trying Soviet Embassy in Canberra, re- fused to discuss Mrs. Petrot's last minute switch to the free world. The strictest security precautions ever seen at Singapore were in force at Kallang Airport as the plane landed. The main plank in Duflies’ strat- | | At the Raffles Hotel, where the | Russians will remain until tomor- row, airline clerks filled in the hotel register for them while the Russians were taken into the hotel through a side entrance. Plain clothes police stood guard outside their rooms and patrolled the hotel grounds. The Australian government an- nounced it was throwing the same cloak of secrecy over Mrs. Petrov as it had ever her hus- | him for the $53,000 robbery of the | Dearborn branch of the Manufac- Accord in Row | turers National Bank April 2. ' : | An accused companion of Cox, Rumor Says Committee | An seni ice Je 2 ot Dear. to Permit Questioning born, pieaded guilty to the bank by Both Parties | robbery last week and is awaiting sentence. Both are being held on | WASHINGTON u — With only | $0.00 bond. two days to go, investigating sen| Cox's wife, Juanita, 19, ar- ators sought today to complete the | rested with Cox and Minder in rules for their public hearings to| a Dearbora home by federal probe the McCarthyArmy row. |§ agents and Dearborn Police, is As the Senate investigations sub| now free in the custody of her committee arranged a closed door | lawyer, pending a hearing in meeting today to consider the| Oakland County Probate Court problem, informed quarters said, May 3. the group seemed near an agree A phone call to Mrs, Cox by the ment that Sen, McCarthy (RWis) Ervins ted to their arrest last band, and there would be ne in- and his Army antagonists should week when they asked her to meet reporters he considers it unlikely VU. S. forces will be sent to Indo- china. He is sticking to the position that the French will have the upper| i Canberra sometime tonight. hand ip the fighting in another) ; | As she was hustled aboard the year but that meanwhile the ftré plane at Sydney, Menzies ordered world must do everything feasible | Reginald Leydin, northern terri- to Relp stem the Communist &t-| tory government secretary at Dar- tack. | win, to be ready for her arrival one pana raga to go on or stay. oc haa oe ae | While Mrs. Petrov, weeping fre- sured him there bas been neo ee ae highly poor m U. 8, Indochina pol- | tional —— rr to coud tho camean| (avail at the Darwin airport, Kis- a a ‘ treeps under | !itsyn protested bitterly The po- ¢ circumet it does | lice neither restrained the dipio- ai rule out their use in some | mat nor searched him. fetere emergency. He protested strongly against . . | permitting Mrs. Petrov to talk Sen, Edwin C. Johnson charged | privately with her husband on the |that Vice President Richard M. | telephone from his secret hiding Nixon was “whooping it up f0T| piace. Leydin conceded. and she war’ when he said last week, in| heid the conversation in a crowded a hypothetical discussion, that U. | customs office. with Kislitsyn. Aus- S. troops might be used in_Indo- tralian police, reporters and others china in the unlikely event France -rowded around. Afterward, she in- withdrew. *wrmed Leydin she wished to stay Australia. Polio Vaccine Tests 3 Windshields Will Start on Monday Found Pitted (Continued From Page One) Here Monday announced earlier this month that | The windshields of three cars it would withhold approval of the | - town Pontiac parked in downto were vaccine until it was assured the) bst : | mysteriously pitted between 9 a.m. substance is safe, powerful enough | S pm. y “i immunize backed a ree vensttie eee ‘‘tegal pA moral This makes a total of eight re- responsibility.”” | ports from the Pontiac area since 7 | yesterday morning. Three similar Bromme said careful explor- | cases were found in Farmington. ation has convinced the society and tts executive committee that terviews with newsmen. It was thought likely she be flown back to rejoin her were George F. Taylor, chief as- (m. | and to ask her whether she want. | Those making the latest reports | as intimate with the trouble in . Indochina, which began about four years before the Korean War. But by now not only is our investment tremendous but we are on record as ready to go to do Friday was to put this idea into words that everybody could understand,”” Reston reported ‘‘And the negative reaction to the possibility of using United States troops has convinced him all the more that public opinion i not yet aware of the nature of the threat to United States interests in that part of the world. “There is general agreement, however, -that the Vice President was not alone to blame in this case; that the solution is for both hosts and guest to agree before any such speech on how it is to be handled by the press father than adopting any extreme rule that all remarks by public officials must be subject to direct quota- tion.” The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Showers with possible the tonight and Wednesday. Lew tonight 45 te 1% A Wttle warmer Wednesday. High 70 an hoer. Easterly winds ‘16 to it mi Teday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a m 50 At 8 a.m Wind velocity 4 mph reetion: Bast. Sun sete Tuesday at 7:19 pm Sun rises Wednesday at 5:43 am Moon rises Tuesday at 10:12 pm Moon sets Wednesday at 7:13 am Downtown Temperateres 6 mm $1 il a. m S7 Pe mi idm 58 m.. oe 1 ipm ” 9a m..........5) 108. m......... 53 Monday in Pontiac {As recorded downtown! oy temperature.... i tempereture....:.... aie saecs, 008 iy cloudy .7 of an inch 65 46 of rin yD Ee ‘are to war In behalf of all oppressed friends. In this cate, France is | oppressed and France is our friend. We have about 3500 men in Indo- china. As of this date, none has met with harm. The French guard most of them very well. Those Amer- icans who fly the ‘‘Boxcars’’ meet with no enemy aircraft or gunfire from below. At least one member of Congress Was* suggested that these mer will not be brought home when their time runs out, and nobody in the administration has called for the eongressman's impeachment. There is pretty good reason to believe that troops in this coun- try now are undergoing training which might indicate preparation for war in that part of the world and against that type of oppeosi- tion. If we do fight in Indochina we will have the difficult task of ex- plaining to-pthe Indochinese that we are not fighting to maintain French imperialism, and not fighting the old White man’s war against the Asiatics. It will be our difficult job te. explain that if we do not fight there against fellow Indochinese, who fight fer independence from France, worse white men — from the Kremlin — will be the rulers of that coveted part of the world. It will take some explaining, at home and abroad, WASHINGTON (UP) — There is an advertising man in Washington who looks so much like Vice Presi- dent Nixon he is thinking about spouting a mustache. Mark Fostep| claims folks look at him- funny like when he signs his rightful name to autographs. Three out of four U. S. auto accidents occur on dry pavement Fools Autograph Hounds | | Walled Lake, Eugene Thompson, Byrd committee to have a look. | nk Thompson, both of Pontiac, The Banking Committee met a and Henry Thompson, of Rich- blank wall yesterday in efforts to mond, Va. question Clyde L. Powell, who has | The funeral will be held Thurs- tried to resign as assistant FHA | day at 1 p.m. from the Pursley commissioner in charge of rental | Funeral Home. Buria] will be in housing. His resignation has not Walled Lake Cemetery with the been accepted Rev. Paul Vanaman, of the An- Powell was subpoenaed after he dersonville Community Church, of- refused to testify voluntarily and | ficiating. when the committee started ques- tioning him, he declined to answer,| Steel produced in the United claiming his Fifth Amendment | States in 1953 would yield enough privilege against possible self-in-| finished steel products to build crimination. | three cities the size of Manhattan. : — AP Wirephote SHE WAITED—Frightened by a fire in her apartment, Mrs. Anna Schuster, 53, dangles on a window four stories above & Bronx, N. Y., street, while neighbors watch and plead for her ‘to wait. Fire- men arrived in time to bring her down a ladder after she refused oo in clear weather. go through the burning apartment to stairs. . . : it would be well to go ahead with the inoculation progra. 1 in efforts to stamp out polio. “It (the society) is interested in cooperating with any public health expériment that holds promise of good for our citizens,” he said. The society's announcement apparently removed ail barriers against proposals to vaccinate 100,000 of Michigan school children in nationwide field tests of the newly-developed Vaccine. Plans have been made to give injections to certain school children in Bay, Calhoun, Ingham, Kent, Lenawee, Macomb, Monroe, Mus- kegon, Oakland, Ottawa and St. Clair Counties. . Washtenaw county originally had been scheduled for inoculations but it withdrew April 10 when the medical society announced that it would ‘withhold its endorsement until further investigation, “Tt is likely that certain children — perhaps between 100 and 150 in the nationwide test — will react adversely to the penicillin content in the vaccine,"’ Bromme said. “This is not alarming,” he added ‘‘nor is the possibility that other children will react adversely tb other ingredients-among the 28 included in the vaccine.” ; Oakland Prosecutor to Seek Re-election Oakland County Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem announced to- sistant Oakland County prosecu- tor; Robert Miller, investigator for the prosecutor's office; and Dave Breck, a deputy clerk. Taylor said he found about a deten on “I thought this pitted windshield business was a lot of hooey, but now I'm convinced there's some- thing to it," said Taylor. All three cars were parked near the Oakland County Courthouse. Birmingham Driver ‘in Royal Oak Crash A Detroit motorist and one from Birmingham were involved in a collision this morning in which three persons were injured at Woodward avenue and Lafayette in Royat Oak. Frederick P. Pew of 5240 Wing Lake Rd., Birmingham, driver of one of the cars was uninjured. His auto collided with one driven by Daniel Myers, 55, of 3873 Iro- quois, Detroit. Myers was admitted with a frac- tured arm to St, Joseph Mercy dale, were treated for minor in- juries. Reds Elevate Ex-Foe quished enemy at Stalingrad, a key role_in expanding the Communist East German army, BUI 20] RET.NG HOME LDERS SHOW be alldwed to question one another ; and other witnesses. But the in areal) Ms ge og but were met formants emphasizéd that a hitch | ‘Dst . vit Police. in the arrangements was possible. The issue involves how far Mc | Carthy will step to the sidelines while the subcommittee, which he heads. investigates his dispute with | top Army officials. s + For Best Chaice Buy Your Bulbs Early GLADIOLUS . McCarthy and two o his sub committee aides planned, mean while, to provide during the day a ‘bill of particulars’ outlin | ing what they will attempt to prove against top Army oficials, plus a reply to the Army's charges that McCarthy and the aides ‘‘sought by improper means’ to get spec ial favors in the Army for Pvt. G. David Schine, former unpaid subcommittee consultant. McCarthy and his aides. Roy M ‘Cohn and Francis P. Carr, have accused Secretary of the Army | | Stevens and John G. Adams, Army | general counsel. of using ‘black mail" tactics in efforts to halt | subcommittee investigations of the Army. LILIES TUBEROSE CANNAS TASKER’S 63 W. Muree PE S-6261 *t" f DANGEROUS! Overloading your wiring system can start a fire in your home. Be careful of this and other causes of fire. Don't smoke in bed — Don't use flammable cleaning fluide— Don't leave junk in the cellar or atte and Don't let children play with matches. Help Sparky prevent fires in your home and on the job. Sparky says, “Den't gamble with fire —the odds are against . * . | | Sen. Mundt (RSD), who will | preside at the inquiry, has said |the bill of particulars approach |was adopted to hold the inquiry | within limits, and to give each | side a final opportunity to expand |or reduce its original accusations. | Mundt told reporters yesterday | he is “confident” the televised hearings will start on schedule | | Thursday. He said the special sub | committee staff predicts it will | | take 10 days to two weeks of morn | ing and afternoon hearings to com | plete the job | you!” | Publish es a . public service by the An average bathtub has a 45 gal- | Pontiec Press in cooperation with lon capacity. The Advertising Council $$ $$ ————_ No room duarge for diildren under 4! This plan is in effect every day of the week, every week of the year ot Statler tr If one or more children under 14 occupy the same room with both parents, the regular two-person rate applies for the room. If one or more children under 14 occupy a room with only one parent, the one-person rate applies for the room. . ¥ If one or more children under .14 occupy 4 room without a parent—that is, if more than one room is needed for a family—the one-person rate applies for the second room. \ Hospital, Two re with Myers, Albert C. Ross, 37, of 7404 Merkel, Detroit, and Robert G. Bring the fomily for weekend of fun Brown, 35, of 1425 W. Troy, Fern- at the Detroit Statler! SPECIAL STATLER FEATURES FOR TRAVELING FAMILIES © Children’s menus © Children’s Mates and silver © Balloons for the youngsters after meals * Formulas prepared ® Retiable baby sitters © High chairs and cribs © A basket of fresh fruit in every room occupied by children * Radie in every room * Delicious box lunches prepared mn a \toBe Examined Pe ee ee ey, 4 Allotment Board Picks Chairman County Treasurer Gets Post at First Meeting Monday The Oakland County Tax Allo cation Board chose Charies. A Sparks, county treasurér, as chair- man at its first meeting Monday afternoon The six-man board met briefly in the county court house and ad- journed until May 3. The board must split the 15 mills of taxes allowed here be- tween the count?, school sys- tems aad townships which want to spread taxes not voted by the public. The government units have turn- ed in tentative budgets; but until the county board of supervisors sets &n° equalized value on the county, the tax board can't pro- ceed. The supervisors passed a tentative county budget of .$6,513.- 164.834 Monday and sent it to the tax board Sparks; Robert Y. Moore, chair- man of the county board of audi tors, and William J. Emerson superintendent of Oakland County | Schools, are automatically mem bers of the tax board because of the jobs they hold. Probate Judge Arthur E. Moore has named James S. Thorburn, of Royal Oak; Har court S. Patterson, of Pontiac, and Howard Warner, of Farmington as the other three members Taipeh Cosmopolitan Except for Night Life TAIPEH — More than 3.(00 foreigners now live in Formosa, the majority in Taipeh, giving this capital city of Nationalist China some of the cosmopolitan atmos phere which once prevailed in Shanghai and other former treaty ports on the mainland There is no chance, however, of Taipeh ever becoming the Paris of the East as was Shanghai. The government's austerity program prevents that Air Force Missile Range Extended to 3,500 Miles WASHINGTON un—The Air Force plans to extend its 1,000- mile-long guided missile range in the Atlantic Ocean by 3,500 miles The test range now stretches from Florida to Puerto Rico. The projected extension would carry it to tiny Ascension Island, in the south Atlantic midway between Brazil and Africa Ex-Willkie Aide Dies NEW YORK ® — Russell W Davenport, 55, former Fortune magazine editor and aide to the late Wendell L. Willkie in his 1940 campaign for president, died of a heart attack last night at his Man- hattan home. One Coat Liquor License Renewals on Agenda of Commission Pontiae City Commission tonight is scheduled to consider renewing class C, tavern and hotel liquor licenses for” 194. Renewal of 27 of the licenses was deferred last week on request of Commissioner Floyd P. Miles. He requested time to study the legality of the last 12 class C liquor-by-the-glass permits issued. Miles stated he thought the last dozen licenses might be illegal because they increased the total over the 2% allowed by a city ordinance. Including the 12 ques- tioned by Miles, there are 35 class C permits im Pentiac. Last week City Attorney William A. Ewart said he considered the Pontiac ordinance illegal because it conflicts with a state law al- lowing one class C license for every 1,500 people in Pontiac. Un- der the state ruling Pontiac could have up to 4 _ licenses, Ewart said. This doesn't mean that Pontiac must have M4 class C places, said the attorney, but only that an or.) dinance setting a lower number would probably be illegal. In other action the commis- sion is expected to appoint two e its members to fill vacancies on the City Pian Commission and the beard of trustees for the city retirement system. Two citizens are also slated for appointment to the housing com- mission and the Fair Employment Practices Board. Commissioners are also expected to consider Pontiac's off-street parking problem. Cost estimates are expected for planned construction of: Ypsilanti from A water main in E Baldwin to the PO @& WN Ralirced Curb. gutter” d@retinage and related work on Lengfellow from Baldwin to University, om Geeond from Joslyn to Barkel!. and on Tennyson from veoire | to Highwood A communication from Municipal Johnson regarding his resignation from office is expected | planned Judge Odin H. | } | | | A communication is slated | from J. A, Fredman, Inc., re- questing a change in the con tract for censtruction § of northside branch library. Public scheduled hearings are the on special assessment rolls for re- cap on: Bouth Boulevare from the Belt Line Railroad to yke Walten from Perry to the west city mits Montcalm from Baldwin to Perry Kennett from Baldwin to the west city limits Paddock from the Railroad to Jessie A bid is. slated from the Pilgrim Holiness Church for purchase of the west 95 feet of lots 123 through 127 inclusive of Hillside Manor Sub Michigan Airline division Declarations of public necessity | are expected for | .Curb, gutter, drainage and related | work on Tennyson from Josiyn to High- | wood | Qrade. gravel and necessary culverts | on Highwood frem Sheffield to Prince- | ton: Princeton from Highwood to - the} east line of Glenwood Estates Subdivi- sion and Leurel from Sheffield Princeton A request is scheduled from the | Northside Community Club for al _THE PONTIAC PRESS, TU ESDAY. APRIL 20, 1954 festival and permission to display fireworks July 3 through 5. Confirmation of special assess- ment rollg are expected for: Storm drain in right of way and aliey from Marrie Lake to Montcalm: in the south side of Montcalm from Young to Portland: and im the north side -of Montcalm from Wing to Portland A communication is expected from Pontiac Township asking the Commission to declare Mount Cle- miens road a primary road Confirmation is scheduled of a special assessment rol] for a wate min in Sheffield from Baldwin to University. A public hearing is scheduled on the XM. §. labor force was in the In 1890 &bout 20 per cent of 4-64 age bracket, but that pare accounted for 30 per cent in 1950. a special assessment roll for curb, gutter, drainage and related work | on Hazel Bend. from Belmont to | Jessie. | Michigan was the first state to} permit women to serve on juries, the act passed in 1915. Maine and | | Utah legislatures followed shortly thereafter, with similar enabling acts. Optometrist > “Better Things in DR. H. A. MILLER 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842 Sight” | - Closed Wednesday Afternoons ———— - ——— © OUR 43rd YEAR Visit PACKARD’S 1954 Packard Clipper Special Club Sedan wha wna Se Clipper tion— JUS 1g? on son ine Spallenges COmPOrT other car in the MAZUREK MOTOR SALES 245 South Bivd., East Pontiec, Michigan est of all automatic shifts. Come in and see the new Packard Clipper—1954’s BIG BUY—at our showroom now. C= SEE the 1954 Packard Clippers year’s most challenging new cars. Here’s true Packard quality in the medium-price class, with Packard's trend- setting contour styling and more power, comfort and fine-car features than ever! You have a wide choice of models, colors and fabrics. Optional Packard power fea- tures include Packard Ultramatic, the fin- sre is for the 1954 Packard Clipper Special Club scitooent, cing wanes | aus = $2557" in Pontiac vary slightly in a pe Munities due to shipping Manufacturer's a VREELAND BROS. SALES & SERVICE 490-500 Ponticc Trail Walled Loke, Michigen — — = k How can a cigarette with so much flavor be so mild? Because Cavaliers give you an extra length of the world’s aristocratic tebaccos . . CAVALIER’S MILDNESS . supremely fine, light, mild tobaccos. There is no better natural filter — and no finer source of flavor! So try Cavaliers! Inhale — and feel that mildness! Taste that flavor! That's a Cavalier! ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THE Bs ‘CAVALIER “100” This attractive, red metal humidor contains 100 king-size CAVALIERS. It’s air tight, convenient. Only CAVALIERS offer you this perfect way to have cigarettes always fresh and flavorful! KING-SIZE CAVALIERS ARE PRICED NO HIGHER THAN LEADING REGULAR-SIZE BRANDS - CAVALIER’S FLAVOR SEE WHY among thousands of smokers interviewed, 8 OUT OF 10 SAID CAVALIERS ARE j : “ -t ss a : Have you noticed how many people are . smoking king-size Cavaliers? Try them! Feel their smooth, easy mildness as you inhale! Taste their fine, refreshing flavor! See why so many smokers are shifting to Cavaliers! F YOU'RE seeking greater cigarette mildness, there's an important clue for you in the discovery of thousands upon thousands of smokers. It is this: when these thousands of smokers were asked to compare king-size Cavaliers with the cigarettes they had been smoking, 8 out of 10 interviewed said Cavaliers are milder! These comparisons were made by many different groups of smokers throughout America — and were made with all the other leading cigarette brands, _ When you try Cavaliers, you'll see why. Inhale and feel that light, easy Cavalier mildness! Taste that fine Cavalier flavor! It may be a revelation to you .. . that a cigarette’s smoke could feel so mild and taste so good! Don’t put off your introduction to this new smoking pleasure! Try Cavaliers today! 83% of the polo game — tors whe were Bostwick field, Long island, said Cavaliers are milder, Ril enlelle ee rs, ES aE RS Te eR Ne _ ae z * ia i 4 4 OE NTO LT TT Te TT ao ee ee ed ”*v Save 5lc on Waoden TROUSER HANGERS set of 3 QOS i Reg. 2.98 Travel Kits. Wide Reg. 1.50 ideal space savers z opening. Satin and taf- Clamp on style. Use with any a eeese te & Unbreakable type. Cet yours today! Street plastic fittings. Street Floor. Floor. / Get Your Children’s Play Togs Now! Fancy Halters and Shorts ie Ea. 99: : No iron fabrics. 7-14, subteens 10-14. Assorted colors. Shorts—'2 boxer style. - Cirl’s Fancy Pants—knee length ..__. . 1.59 | Full cut, assorted colors, 7-14; Subs 10-14. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1954 _ Se Repeat of a Sellouti Bamboo Basket 99° 2 sturdy handies. Dozens of uses! Useful laundry hamper! Down- stairs Store. Save 3.95 on Douglas Dinette Chairs 3.99 Reg. 9.95 chairs, Chrome or wrought iron. Easy to clean up- holstery. Grey, black,. green, yel- low. Downstairs store. Seve 11.99 on Douglas Dinette Tables 18.00 Reg. 29.99 tables. Plastic top, heat and stain resistant. _Mother of pearl and burl patterns. As- sorted colors. Downstairs Store. Seve 2.96 on Handy Utility Cart , 4.99 33 shelves. All screw construc- tion. Porcelainized top. Red and yetlow. Downstairs Store. Seve 1.96 on Kent Bathroom Scale 4.99 Reg. 5.95 value. Non-skid, easy to clean. Magnified dial — easy reading . Tweed - rubber safety mat. Downstairs Store. * Prepare tor Washdcy! Clothes Line . ox Sturdy cotton — 75-ft. Length and quality guaranteed. Down- stairs Store. Enjoy a Clean Sweep! Corn Brooms = 99° Top construction. Long-wearing value. Buy several for the house. Downstairs Store. Reg. 6.98 value. Foolproof lock- ing device can't collapse. Easy opening and closing. tron on either side, Downstairs Store. Comet Whistling Teakettle and 3-pc. Saucepan Set ea. 99° All aluminum outfits. 6-cup per- colator . . . 99c. Covered cake pan available. Downstairs Store. Save 2.51 on Indiscrete Cologne 1.99 Reg. 4.50 value by Lelong. Buy now for Mother's Day. 8-oz. size. Street floor. “Facial cm 20 99° Adapted to hard water. ferent types. Many aromas. Street Floor. _bath in each box Usually 59c each Bubble Bath 3 for 99° 20 envelopes of fragrant bubble Assorted floral scents, Street Floor. Usually 2 for 25¢ Toilet Tissue 10 tor 99° a. Seve 1.01 on Seaforth Shave Lotion 2 Reps. 99° Seve 1.00 on Fancy Stationery 2 for 99° Save on Appropriate Notes A tor 99° Seve lic on Boxed Wrapping Paper 67 Colors: White, green, Reg. |.00 sise values. Spiced Reg. —_ a —_. Five varieties to choose from. Pape? for all occasions. 30 sheets Full length zipper. Jumbo, regu- yellow and blue. 850 sheets to a light—-spiced right. Fresh-cool- and sates White. pink and White, pink and,blue. Get your to a box. Assorted colors. Buy lar suit sizes. Store your winter roll. Street Floor. crispness, Street Floor. bive. Street Floor. supply now. Street Floor. today and save. Street .Floor. garments. Street Floor. t. Pa Seve 141 on Quilted Garment Bags ‘Lod Quilted front with zipper en- closures. Store to 3 blankets. 3 colors. Street Floor. Seve 23c on Space Saver Blouse Trees i hi Holds 5 blouses on 1 hook Chrome plated. Buy several at this price. Street Floor. Seve 101 on Famous Warner Bras 1.99 Reg. 3.00 value. Nylon bras with special bias cup for firm support. Adjustable straps. A-B-C. 32-40. White only. Second Floor , = Seve 99c on Cotton - Shorty Pajamas 1.99 Reg. 2.98 value. No iron cotton plisse. Boxer shorts with bere midriff tops. 32-38. Prints, stripes, solids. Second Floor. Seve 99c on Rayon Jersey Pajamas 99° Reg. 1.98 Shorty type. No iron- ing, cool, haable.. S-M-L, pink and blue. Street Floor. Save 199 on Boys’ UNLINED Campus Coats 3.99 100° wool with white trim. 8-18. Blue, black or green. Second Floor. Sport Shits 99° Reg. 1.59 short sleeve. San- forized cottons, full cut. 6-16, 3 types. Second Floor. . Soren L337 Reg | 69 value. Sanforized denim. Full cut, zipper fly. 6 to 16. Second Floor. Cellophane Wrapped Boys’ Underwear 2 for 99° Knit underwear, full cut. Guar- anteed washable. Small and large Second Floor. Seve... 30c on Girl's Cardigan 1.9 Corton cardigans Guaranteed washable. Full cut, 3-6x, 7-14. 3 colors. Second Floor. Seve 2.99 on Crib Mattress 6.99 Reg. 9.98 vaiue. Innerspring Crib Mattress, Water repellent cover. Regulation size. Second Floor. Sturdy Full Panel Infants’ Crib 24.99 Double drop sizes. Plastic teeth ing rail. Adjustable springs. Birch and maple. Second Floor. Seve on Reg. 9c Girls’ Panties 3 for 99° Brief style, full cut. Cotton knit or lace trim rayon. 2-14 in 4 colors. Second Floor. Save on Reg. 39¢ . Boys’ Briefs | 3 for 99° Sanforized stripe chambray. Knit backs, full cut. 2-8. Second Floor Save 59c on Summer Play Shorts 5 Girls’ and boys’ shorts. Denim, plisse, chambray. Sanforized, boxer style. 3-6x, assorted colors. Second Floor. Seve 99c on Girl's Polo Blouses 99° Reg. 1.98 value. Sanforized cot- ton knits. Full cut, sleeveless. 7-14, white and pastels. Second Floor Reg. 1.00 to 5.00 Children’s and Adults’ BOOKS 27 °-1.49 Topnotch reading material to provide hours of enjoyment for young and old. Street Floor. Save 99c on Rayon Tricot Gowns 2.99 Munsingwear gowns. Full cut. long-wearing, 32-40. Assorted colors. Lovely gifts. Second Floor. Fifth Floor. Save 50% on Values from 25c to 10.00! FAMOUS OPEN. STOCK DINNERWARE 20% OFF Buy those extra pieces that you need from well known china patterns such as Spode, Blueridge and Candelwick. Choose from cups, soucers, creamers and sugars to platters and salt and peppers. Also many other odd pieces. !deal for cottage or home. i 2.99 Hand - picked Bamboo. Crash- proof cord—trouble free opera- tion. Decorative valance conceals rolled up blind. Easy installation! Fourth Floor. Seve 50c on Ist Quality Pillow Ticks 99° Reg. 1.49 value. Colorful, fully zippered ticks. Many patterns and colors. Feather and down proof. Fourth Floor. Save 99c on Sturdy Traverse Rods 99° 28 fo 48” extension. Reg 1.98. First quality, all steel. ideal for Spring housg cleaning. © Fourth Flogr. . Save on Reg. 149 Uphols‘ry Squares 2 tor *I1 First quality 27 by 27. Many colors to choose from. Numer- ous household uses! Fourth Floor. Save 6.98 on Luxurious “Royal Scott” Blanket 6.99 | Save 1.20 on Redwood Cornice Boards 1.99 Reg. 3.19 value. Improve any 6 for 99° First quality. Ovat’ or oblong Large 72 x 84 size. Reg 9.98 ndow. Paint lor desired. Flowered design. Ri Large size , wshua! 90%. ond 10% wool. | Covet condy to cusvible..| fe skeser or ‘vanky. prio | and absorbent pile. Long lasting coer washable. Fourth — Fourth Floor. Floor. material. 6 colors. Fourth Floor. loor. . | 2ior 99° Save on Reg. 98 Bath Towels thick towels. Soft Save to 99c on Little Girls’ ‘BLOUSES and SKIRTS Ea. 9X Sanforized washable cottons. Blouses—puffed and sleeveless styles. 3-6x, assorted colors. Skirts— 3-6x, gay prints. Outfit Miss ond Mr. today! Second Floor - Special Purchase! Values to 7.98! Men’s Spring JACKETS 3.99 Unlined rayon-acetate. Crease and spot resistant. Water re- pellent with satin yoke. 3 tab- rics. S-M-L. Gabardines, checks and Slub yarns. Street Floor Save on Van Raalte PETTICOATS 3.90 Precision tailored Pleated ruf- fles — feminine touch. Elastic waistband. S-M-L, 2 colors Second Floor. 4 and beveroge pot. Floor. Save 4.96 on Famous WOODBURY DINNERWARE re. DADO Reg. 29.95 value. Service for 12 plus 6 extra cups For the home or a gift. Fifth Save on Reg. 1.19 Bun Warmers 2 for 99° Plastic and wicker style. White, yellow, blue, rose. Handy article for the home. Fourth Floor. Save on Imported Linen Dish Towels 6 for 99° Part linen and part cotton. Washable and colorfast. 16 x 27. Stripes and checks. Fourth Floor. Linen Dish Towels 5 he Imported Irish linen. Washable, colorfast. ‘18 x 26. Stripes and checks. Cet your supply today. Fourth Floor. . Save on Luxurious Guest Towels A for 99° Floor. Super absorbent. Cannon Mills first quality. Matched or mixed sets. 18 x 26, 4 colors. Fourth e A for 99° Famous Cannon first quality. Dozens of uses “bout the house. Extra thick, in host of colors! Fourth Floor. _ Save 22c on Ist Quality Seersucker 3 d° yd. Reg. 59c value. 30° wide—full bolts. Assorted prints and solid colors, No ironing. Fourth Floor. Save 32c on Delighttul Rayon Taffeta Od yd. Reg. 89c value. 45” wide—full bolts. 24° summer colors. Wash- able. Fourth Floor. ; Values to 99.00 Foam Cushioned Chairs 09.99 Upholstered cushion chairs. Damask covers. Fringe trim on 4 sides. 3 colors.. Fifth floor, ing ‘tailored. Save on Reg. 1.00 Matching JEWELRY ENSEMBLES 2 tor 99° - Large assortment of matching neck- » feces, bracelets, pins ond eorrings. in frosty white;brilliant stones, g Or summer costumes ot a gs. Street Floor. , Price! Accessorize New tow the blinds down for privacy? drapes, furniture. 2Yo'x6? ... FXO vecseeeeeee 1,09 99¢ Fx 5x6 6x jeaeees 1. L49 Split Bamboo Roll-Up Blinds Handy 2 Ft. by 6 Ft. aah: Natural Color Bamboo How con you get refreshing cool spring breezes into your home, cut sun glare, keep . Easy . . .“with bamboo blinds. Whet‘s more, bamboo blinds lend their own wood texture and natural tone to the setting . . . accenting the The perfect answer for sun porches and summer homes. And at- ‘Waite’s low price you can get them for every window in your house Made with brass pulleys, complete with hooks, cleats, screws... ready to put up 7 x6 eoeeeeeeeereae 3.99 8x8? occceceeeee 459 é 7 Satie 1.18 on Fashionable 1.307 Get your spring or summer bag now! Choose from boxes, pouches, or satch- els. Available in Beech, Benedictine, | Navy, Red, Brown or Black. Hurry in today. Street floor. a po trgieese , aN * ; SAVE! CLIP THIS AD s Po a ee ee ee eS Set. Your Garden Aflame With This Blazing ROYAL RED MAPLE GROWS Special ANYWHERE By Mail In Spring, this thrill- ing ROYAL RED MAPLE biases in bloom with hundreds of firey seariet flow- ers in Pall, Jack Prost turos the leaves into a beauti- ful crimson ‘‘bon- fire”. You get choice young 2-4 [{t. stock Grows up te 70 feet. Adds thrilling beauty, shade, VALUE te your property Order three at sensationa! low mail-order price of enly $2. SEND NO MONEY! Pay postman gost plus CO.D post- age We pey’ postage on prepaid orders Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back. Hurry for free gift! FREE GIFT! Order teday and get abeotutely free a beautiful Red Bark Flewertng Degweed. KRUSE NURSERIES, Dept. é3410, Bicemingten, Lilineis (3 fer $2) 0 $1 each Print Neme O38 fer $2 pies tree gift oo Governor Signs , 7 Acts Into Law One Permits Korean Veterans to Serve Fund Trustees LANSING w# — Gov. Williams today signed seven legislative acts into law, including one permitting Korean War veterans to be mem- bers of the state and county boards of trustees of the Veterans’ Trust Fund. Th ebills: Permit taxpayers te bave per- sonal assessed on the tax date, Jan. 1, or om an aver- age monthly inventory of the pre vious 12 calendar months, in- stead of the prior fiscal year. Remove the requirement that real estate acquired by municipali- ties for slum clearance must be sold at public auction. Allow the redetermination of in- land lake levels in the same way as the original determination was made, Allow the State Aeronautics De- partment to lease land at the Lan- sing Airport for 50 years, instead of the resent 20. Authorize village councils to coatract for reair and extension otf municipally ewned lighting works out of revenues. Impose a 10-cent—an-acre annual tax on state military land in Craw- ford, Kalkaska and Otsego Coun- ties Housewives Set to Vie for Title of Mrs. America DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (UP) ENJOY NEW oe RAVEL LIVING” = ye? a To - CANADA'S NEWEST LUXURY PLEET AWAITS You Every conce:vable comfort for the treveler when you go the Maple Leof Woy. New sleepers with duplex toometies, bedrooms, convertible to suites. New, restfy!, individve! rec lnong sect cooches CNR 5 famous cuisine, of course For Reservotions — Medical Science Now 2°02." Stops Bleeding Piles Marshal Timoshenko in Byelo russia. Marshal Bagramyan in Without Su e Latvia and Genera] Antonov in rg y Ceorgia New York. N. Y. SBencial~! Medical comand has developed a harve t 3. In Peland Mesceu's most ovick-acting wender dr us calle< oo : REC TORAL, that is taken interna!l!y*and important satellite, two Soviet gore right to the feat of the trouble. It does awey with the old fashioned mesey, Army officers, Ma al Konstan disagrerableto-use cintmesta suppes_| tin Rekossovsky and Gen. Ed- tories, etc. that @ Neale or no reloef. : Uenaiey tp best @ Min dnee, blscding with ward Ochab, now hold the bal any accompenying ifritation and soreness ance of pewer in the new ly- begins to disappear and in a tew days more if com ely gone I has been elected Politburo tested in thousands of cases without any _ . ~ return of bleeding. even years afterwards 4. The same is true of Red Bul- garia where two Russian-trained | na eng pa qe onder a generals have been promoted to Hallman Drug: Luttre!! Pharmacy: §} membership in the Politburo Thrifty; Walgreen's: Siankster & Ht CMore promotion of Red Army ° . urtney &. > . o Drug. Keegacgaueen along these lines are expect ton Pains: Aubafe Ged in the other satellites } However, Malenkoy, in addition OUR MOST AMAZING | WATCH OFFER! | Bnellon PHOTO IDENT >” EXPANSION WATCH the fir ime in arte : top Army otficers ; ~ rty COM, is also faced ‘om The recent purge of Auguste Lececur, No. 2 ¥rench Red, is the first act im the unfolding oes. The whole Red undergreund in France is mddjed with strife and dissension. According to French Cominform scouces, bigger and purges of Malenkov's brewing not only in also in Italy, Ger gium and Satellit bloodier enemies’ are France, but many, Bel states It is lations with Red China that Malenkov's failure to achieve supreme au thority in the Red world is clearly demonstrated. Stalin's attitude towards Mae in his re however _ Tse-tung was that of a ‘‘Marx- ist-Leninist teacher" and super- jer revolutionist. His advice was ee BAND WORTH $11.50 IT’S AN EXPANSION WATCH BAND! IT’S A PHOTO IDENT! A ss9s0! $1150 WATCH WORTH BAND WORTH *71.00 BOTH ror ony $29» NO MONEY DOWN YOU GET BOTH Your Photo FREE We will take your pic- ture in 60 seconds with the new Polaroid Cam- era for your new Photo Ident. 50¢ WEEKLY « 5 Phone FEderal 3-7114 28 NORTH SAGINAW eee Rep ‘rom Russia Show Malenkov in Uphill Struggle for Absolute Power lto the growing political strength; accepted by the Chinese as from PARIS (NEA) — Russia’s Pre-| of the Red Army, mier Georgi Malenkov has even | with a widespread rift in the C bigger headaches. backgrounding }inform, the political arm. NOW! New| THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL | whic h usually predicts the strat- i egy of the Red diplomats. -+ the) a are not expected to ne- on Korea—just | 20, 1954 ‘Pigeon Came to Dinner and Now Won't Leave eriousty SALEM, N. H. &—The gotiate vieeon! Must Save Indochina - affect the a of Detroit as much as they affect the destiny of Paris, London, Brussels, Ottawa |} and Canberra.” Hannah Says U.S. = se nt. an agreement that came to dinner is still on He said from*Indochina the Reds a st « ; " . fi 7 T j oie e+ he me back bere . | DETROIT W—Dr. John A. Han-| 00 — a thal! x an oracle. The bird has gone by the name nah says.the United States cannot — _ | . urces igen oii: wi aur ak Surmece Capture Town baa e geen _ a Bos-| permit Indochina to fall into Com- | ae ee oe ote — et fis NGOON, 2, on aine Railroad train crew! munist hands. thority, From the very day of\ RANGOC Burma & | found her stowed away aboard a sate | would put the free world, he said, Stalin's funeral he treated Réd Burmese army announced today it) northbound freight. Dr. Hannah, assistant secretary | in a precarious position, China and Mao with notable re-| hyd captured a key ‘stronghot}~ ‘The trainmen turned her over of defense and president of Michi-| - wee ee spect and even deference commanding a supply route into | to Bemis, 84-year-old station ageft, | ©" State College, paid the U ened Largest animal ever to inhabit Not that Mao shows any signs southern Thailand from Karen reb-| who took her home for feeding States would be committing “ the earth or its waters is the of wishing to break out of the els and their Chinese guerrilla al-| and nursing great and tragic mistake” ifit Per sulphur-bottom whale, which Soviet embrace. But the Chinese lies But when he turned her loose mits Indochina to fall | sometimes weighs 150 tons, sur- have. plans for rapid indtts The army said troops operating | she refused to go. She's still on Speaking before the Detroit Eco-| passing in weight and size even trializ the back porch today, waiting for nomic Club, Dr. Hannah said | the giant dinosaurs of the Age in the southern Tenasserim coastal strip had'seized the town of Myaw- adi as part of a drive launched ation for which they require equipment. If they receive it from Russi basic do not dinner as usual, a thev wilb eventually look elsewhere, early in April to clear the area} It costs about $40 an acre to es- Vader the circumstances, ie is of the rebé] tribesmen and the tablish and maintain permanent , trade with the West — especially Chinese pasture land. in industrial eQuipment and stra tegie goods — that Russia seeks at Geneva. | PONTIAC HOME Malenkov, faced with grave do- B U iz S S OW mestic and external difficulties ILD R H Wants the West to pull lus chest-, } ‘ ») ‘ yy ‘ nuts out of the f ; ' ' Judged by the Soviet press — “The tragic events in that area' of Reptiles gacahensenee ss cdessessanseesssccosoesoryae=ss Paul M. Snover © 0000000090000 0000000000000 000000080000000008 : Founded on Progressive Principles F Farmer-Snover 3 FUNERAL HOME : 160 W. 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At first I didn’t pay much atten- tion to this bit of gossip. I was too busy looking through my own mail me thinking. For a long time I had heard that The Wali Street Journal! helps get ahead, “Is it really true?” I asked myself. “Can 8 newspaper help & man carn more 6 aed Well, to make a long stety short, I tried it and IT DID. Withixs year I added $2000 to my income. This in The You get quick warning of any new trend that may affect your income. cl, m-barpenpeebearptbil 5 tect $7000 to $20,000. It is valuable to ama] business owners. It helps young men get ahead. r The Wall Street Journal is the complete business DAILY. Has larg- staff of writers on business and fi The only business paper served by all four big press associg- | tions. It costs $20 a year, but you can get a Trial Subscription for three | months for $6. Just tear out this ad | and attach check for $6 and mail. Or tell us to bill you. Published daily right in the Mid- west to bring you vital business and | Washington news immediately. Ad- dress: The Wall Street Journal, 711 W. Monroe St., Chicago 6, III. PMP é-2@ Rep. J. No Contract Necessary FUEL OIL Call Today Gregory Oil Co. 94 East Walton Blvd. Phone FE 5-6141 story is typical. The reports | Journal come to you daily. | People nowadays often live be- yond the biblicaP span of 70 years. The wise man ensures that he will not outlive his in- come. A retirement policy of the Sun Life Assurance Company of “anada will give you a guar- anteed income for as long as you hve. Start saving loday —call George E. Wood Agent 26% W. Huron, Room 11 FE 5-563! Office. If no Answer Call OA 8-2693 Insure Today— Tomorrow May Be Too Latel Pontiac's Oldest Insurance Agency 609 Community Not’! Bonk Bldg. FE 2.9224 ‘ — i —— ee — eee Grain Prices Lower Today CHICAGO (#) —Grain prices dropped in active dealings on the Board of Trade today. Soybeans and wheat, the leaders in yester- day’s sparkling up-turn, fell the most today. “The war-scare” which swept over the market yesterday was completely absent today. Helping to abate it was Secretary of State Dulles’ statement he considered it unlikely American troops would be sent into Indochina. Wheat near the end of the first hour was 1% to 1% lower, May $2.13%, corn 4% to % lower, May $1.52%, oats unchanged to % lower, May 76%, rye % to 1 cent | lower, May $1.06%, soybeans 4 to 58 lower, May $3.93 and Jard 10| fits: “fece: to 65 cents a hundred pounds| lower, May $21.60 Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO (AP) — m today Wheat 1 16'y ay 214 Boybeans Jiy 212 May 3.92 | Sep 215% Jily 390 Dec 220% BOP «i uccacy 295 Corn MOG. Secace 2.70 May 153 JOR cence 2.75% | Jily 1.534% Lar Bep 152 Jily 21.50 Dec 146 Sep 19.00 Oats Oct 17.00 May ........ 16%. Nov 15 60 INy . 72% Soybean Oil | Bap 728 May ase | Des 74% Jily 14.50 | Rye Sep 2s BOOS Sarees 106 Oct 12.38 | pd erie 1 09 Dec 12.18 } Jai Term Fails fo Halt Thomas | Former Congressman | {ccs ay | Seeks GOP Nomination Po NEWARK, N. J u—Former | Parnell Thomas, jailed | during his last House term, today | ‘tries to win Republican nomina- tion to his old seat in Congress to $28.00. in New Jersey Primary | #3,0°,'o 57 on a pro-McCarthy platform. \ Thothas’ bid for a political come- back in the wake of a prison term | for pocketing congressional payroll | kickbacks in 1949 features an other- | ‘wise tame New Jersey primary election The 59-year-old politician-publish- er is running against incumbent Rep. William B. Widnall (R-NJ) | | in the rural ith District. Widnall has the support of party organizations. a . . | The Thomas-Widnall race and statewide referenda on bingo and | raffles have generated the lion's | share of pre-primary fireworks. Polls were opened at 7 a.m., | EST. They will close at 8 p.m | Thomas, who said he ‘never jonce’’ met Sen. Joseph R. Me- Carthy (R-Wis) would only know |him from his pictures, has cam- paigned on a pledge of ‘1,000 per cent’’ support of the Wisconsin Re- publican and his Communist-hunt- | ing methods | “*The time has come."’ Thomas said today, ‘‘when you need more | drive, more McCarthys, more Mar- | tin Dies, and more Parnell Thom- ases."’ > 7 term in the House in 148, six days before he was indicted. The fol- | lowing year, after two days of trial, he changed his plea from innocent to no contest and was sentenced to 6 to 18 months in federal prison Thomas was paroled in 1950 aft- er serving 8‘; months and was pardoned, with all citizenship rights restored, by President Tru- man two years later He now operates three weekly Newspapers in and around his hometown of Allendale. He has promised that. if elected, Lhe will follow the lead of Mc- | Carthy, ferret out Reds wherever they may be, and plug for the outlawing of the Comunist party. Auction Ziegenhardt Equipment Today He was re-elected to his seventh | o LAPEER i — A sheriff's auc- | tion of livestock and equipment on the Chris and Paul Ziegenhardt farm was scheduled for today. The sale is to satisfy a $3,750 | judgment obtained by Mrs. Grace | CHICAGO 206 | MARKETS | Produce DETROIT PRODUCE DETROIT (UP)—Wholesale prices on public onl. markets. Pruits: « Onietens, fancy, 4.00- 6.00 bu: 3,60@-4.00 bu; apples, Greenings, No. nt 2.26-2.76 bu; . fancy, 400-5.00 pei oe apples. Steel's = fancy, 4.00- 4.50 bu; No. 1, 2.50-3.00 bu. Vv bies: on topped No. 1, bu; . 1.25 dos behs carrots, No. fl 1.50 bu. chives, No. 1, dos. behs. horseradish, No. 1, pk. basket. Leeks, No, 1, 1.06-1 behs. enians, dry, Ne. 1, bag: onions, green, No. 1, Nes 1 80-1 behs. onions, sets, No. 1, No. 1, Exes medium, 45-90 dos. behs. large, 14.00-15.00 12.00-13.00; small, 30-dos 10.00-11 DETROIT EGGS (AP)—The a gra - Detroit by state graded eggs Whites: A, jumbo, 48%, large 43; medium 40; small 32. B, large 38-41, wtd avg 40% C. large 31 checks 30 CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO (AP)—Butter steady ceipts 1.246.226; wholesale buying prices unchanged: 93 score AA 66.76: a A 86%; ur 68 C 54; cars 90 B 55.75; 88 Eggs steady; receipts 16.936; wholesale buying prices unchanged to 44 cent low- er U_ 8S large 365-38; U. S&S medium | 345, U 8 standards 33: current receipts | 315: dirties 30.5; checks 30 re- CHICAGO POTATOES (AP) — Potatoes arrivals of track 439; total US. shipments for Friday 770, Saturday $52; Sunday 98 = stock supplies moderate: demand market dull, Idaho Russets §3 25 Red River Valley Round Reds §2 15-25 new Great Britain 60 day futures 281 15/32 unchanged; Great Britain 90 day tutures 281%. up 1/16 of a cent (franc) 1.98%. off 00 1/16 of a cent; Prance (franc) .28% of a cent. un- changed; Germany (Western) (Deuteche mark) 23.85, unchanged, Holland (guil- der) 26.43, une ; Italy (itra) .16% of a cent, unchan Portugal ‘escudo) 3.50, unchanged; en ikrona) 19.34. unchanged: Switzeriand ‘franc: (free) Denmark (krone) 14.52, Latin America: Argentina (free) 17.24. unchan, ; Brasil (free) 190, un- chang Mexico 8.04, unchanged; Vene- zuela (bolivar) 30.03, unchanged Par East, Hong Kong dollar 1765, un- changed . Mexico Business Reacts Quickly to Peso Deflation MEXICO CITY (INS) — Mexi- can businessmen feared today that §. White, Lapeer attorney, for the | the devaluation of the Mexican | Ziegenhardts occupying the farm after she purchased it several | years ago. | The Ziegenhardts lost their 240-| acre farm near Marlette by re-| | fusing to pay a $280 assessment in the 1935 bankruptcy of a Mutual Fire Insurance Association. ‘Mrs, White purchased the $40,- 000 farm for $13,000 at an auc- tion ordered by the Michigan ‘Supreme Court in 1948. The elderly brothers were evict- ed from the farm April 8—by 36 | state troopers and Lapeer Coufity sheriff's deputies. They are resid- ing at the farm home of William L. Mathews of Burlington Town- ship. The sale today is to be super- vised by Sheriff Clark Gregory several deputies and Capt. Ear Earl | Secrist: of the state. police post at Bay City. cattle, some pigs’ and farm ma- chinery. “ae % PONTIAC HOME BUILDERS SHOW oi ‘The ‘farm includes 18 head of peso may have serious economic repercussions. Treasury Minister Antonio Caril- \lo Flores announced the devalua- tion Saturday and since then prices on American goods have been climbing. Distressed businessmen = im- mediately predicted that the U. 8S. would place higher duties on exports and Mexican businesses In some localities, therey w ere mysterious commodity shortages and sharp jumps in price on cer- tain commodities. Articles such as chocolate, pow- |dered milk and prepared foods were fast disappearing from super market shelves. Other hard-to-get items were canned godds and olive il There was panicky buying in merican cigarettes; and avail- \ ex: Beigium | ’ Trading Keeps Mart Irregular NEW YORK i — Selective trad Motors and chemicals tended to ease, as did some farm imple- ment companies. Steels, oils, utili- ties, aircrafts and railroads were mixed, Mail order houses found some ready buyers. Strong demand was- evidenced for Vanadium, Climax Molybdenum and General Electric. Zenith Radio was under selling pressure. The market opened fast but with changes g-enerally minor fractions. There was no continua. tien of yesterday’s sharp shake- out, which witnessed a late tape eof one minute for a brief period. Yesterday, losses of one to three points were frequent among steels, motors, railroads, air- crafts and chemicals, Among today’s risers were Beth- lehem, U. S. Steel, Goodrich, Sears Roebuck, Montgomery Ward, Schenley, Philco, American Tele- phone, American Cyanamid, West- inghouse, American Tobacco, Santa Fe Rajlroad, Texas Co. and Pan American Airways, Slipping slightly were Youngs- town Steel, Chrysler, Packard, U.S. Rubber, International Harvester, Boeing, United Aircraft, Public Service Electric, Kennecott, Dow Chemical, Du Pont, New York Cen- tral, Sinclair Oil and Eastern Air- stock supplies moderate: demand | lines Reds gre market firm, Florids Round | & Se New York Stocks estock Air Reduce 23.2 Kennecott 763 Alleg L 8ti os 4 _ e 4 16 c Allied Ch = ot ib Me ® HICAGO LIVESTOCK Allied Stre 422 Ligg & Mey. 642 CHICAGO ‘(AP}—Butcher hogs sold | ais Chal $1 Leckh Airc 32 =| — i3 - — active trade today | gium Lid $71 Loew's 13.2) steady to 25 centsiaium Co Am 18 Lone 6 Cem .. 35 | i ‘remained unchanged from| 4). air 12§ Marsh Field . 277) at $28.40, paid for two choice Am Cen rr Martin GI ... 217 Am Cyan av.g May D Sir ... 304 190 to 240 pound butchers brought|4m Gas & BE] 36 Mead C 334 10 to $28.35 with 250 to 300 pounders | am Loco 14.6 Mid Cont Pet jag $ Sows were bought at M & Pay 26 Monsan Ch 53 Am y Mont Ward oe Balable receipts totaled Rad Th! mt r Am Motor Pd 184 Am Smelt 341 Mot wheel 235 Receipts im the cattle section totaled | Am Sti Pd 296 Motorola 335 1.000. salable head, consisting mainly of | Am Tel & Tel ‘645 wguetier Br 24 cows. They sold steady to weak at|Am Tod 61.1 Wash Kelv 136 | $1200 to $15.00 for utility and commer-/|Anac Cop 345 Nat Bisc 371 cial types with a few high commercial | Armour ® Net Cash R 711 kinds up to $16.00. Canners and cutters | Atchison os Nat Dairy 70 moved at $900 to $12 00 Atl Cst Line 103.2 Wat Lead . 4 Steers and heifers were quoted nomin- | at] Refin 33.7 Nat st! . $02 ally steady with a few head of high | maid Lima 9 Nat Thea 65 choice and prime steers $26.50 to $28.00.| mait & Ohio 196 NY Air Prt 201 | Only 100 salable arrivals showed up in | Benguet 7 NY Central 21.2 the sheep section. Both lambs and Beth St! 615 Nie M Pw a5 were quoted nominally stead Mostly | Boeing Airp 7% Norf & West 404 choice 75 pound native spring lambs | Bohn Alum 23.6 No Am Av 263 | were taken at $26.00 Bond 8trs ie mer taal . 33 USDA—Salable hogs 4.500: fairly ac- | Borden 3 athe tive. mostly steady on butchers; sows | Bore Warn $3.4 pot Att | curcera $36 10° So, mestty ‘sose'e|Bren Balke |. 135 Peckard utchers - mostly , for choice No. 1 eae 2 sreces: around | 7 . Le ela bs two loads §28.40; most -300 ib $27.50. | Bu P - 2400. bulk 310-278 Tb $26 25-27 25 most | Can Dry a oa oO 950-600 ib sows §23.00-25.75. a few $26.00 i - : ry Pepsi Cola |) 15 food clearance | Cater Ah 804 Phelps D - | BSalabie cattie 1.000: calves 200; slaugh- le i : 178 Phileo .. BB ter steers and heifers nominally steady. pe =r y os w36 Philip Mor.... 40 small fresh reseipts slaughter cattle | Che’ Obie pills Milla. .... 30 mainly cows: this class steady to weak; , Chrysler 602 Proct Gam _.. 75 | bell ls and a on ae ape tus? ice . rid : Polimen . chotce an steers re 1 -§ chotce 925 @b steery $2400. few sales | Cluctt Pea 336 Radio Cp.. 27 commercial ‘to low choice steers mixed | COM” Palm 432 Rem Rand... 17 yearlings and heifers §17 00-23 50; utility | Coil Gas 141 Reo Motors... 26 and commercial cows §12.00-15.00: a few | Con Edis 432 Repud st! . $l high commercial up to $1600: canners | Con G-E 282 Reyn Met . 67 and cutters §9.00-1200: a few utility | Cons: um Pw 433 Rey Tod B.... 38 to low commercial bulls ae $0-15. 80. | Con Pw Pf 4‘) 1095 Seovill mf . 2 good and choice vealers $20 00-28.00; cul) |Cont Can 635 Seab Al RR... 48 to commercial grades $8 00- 20.00 pene oy os roaely — . 62 . ont J . 2 Sheep 100; slaughter lambs and sh | Corm Pd 73.4 Gimmons 39 Mominally steady: mostly chaice TS | 8 244 Binciai native spring lambs "$28 00; a load most ~ | Crue ul inciair Oll... 41 ly good 97 ft wooled lambe carried | Curtiss Wr 9@ Socony Vac... 42 | Det Edis 31 Sou Pac 0 from alg AE the week $23.50; cull to/| Doug Aire 110.4 Sou ‘Ry “ good ewes $5 00-700 Dow Chem .. 364 Sperry Se ~ DuPont 1222 = Brand 7 i 6 | Gast Alr L 22.5 t 1. alif.. 614 Poultry Cee Kod 183 Std Ol Ind... 813 Bi Auto L 415 i coe DETROIT (AP The following prices | El @ Mus In 3 Suth Pap... 384 . 7 ¢ PB End John 274 Swift & Co “43 were paid per pound, fob Detroit for’ erie RR 166 Sylv El Pa Mé No 1 quality live poultry up to 10 am Ee. Cell-o 646 Texas Co 604 Mens heavy type 23-26: light type 20 eept Sul 604 Thomp Pd - 62.2 Heavy type broilers or fryers 3-32 IDs. | Gen Elec . 113.1 Timk R Bear.. 404 whites 26-27: grey crosses 28-28's. barred | Gen Pds ..... 42 Transamer - 20.4) rocks 28‘: Caponettes 4's-6 Ibs. Gen Mot .. 684 Eg mt C Pox.. 20 — Gen\Ry Big 275 nderwood 28 CBICAGO se = 3a oe oe et Jen & Rub 42 Un Pac 113 | CHICAGO (AP)——Liv Oillette €35 Unit Air Lin.. 225] oung stock; weak on — Boca A U D | Goodyear 62.2 alt Airc... 55.2 | fower. heavy bens 22-33" fight hens 18- | OF8h Palge ~~ oe Ot West 6 194 Unit Pruit. see 407 . a fryers or nw Ng 3. n° old roosters Greyhound 137 v 8 Lines 45 ° Oulf OU . 467 @ Wee... 333 Holland F . 135 U 8S Smelt 47.2 . Homestk - 392 U 8S Bteel “44 Foreign Exchange Hooker Ei .'. 69.2 Wa 21 NEW Houd Hersh 153 Warn B Pic 15 YORK ‘AP)—Poreign exchange | pug mot P W Va Pui 20 rates follow (Great Britain in dollars. | 1) Cent “61 West Un Pi 30.6 others in cents) . Canadian dollar in New York open — Stl ... 422 Westg A Brk.. 26 = * pir Cop .. 24.5 Westg El «3 market 1%s per cent premium or 101.87's | Int ery 2 Woolworth 04 U8. cents up 1/32 of a cent. Int Nick |... r-4 Yale & Tow... 41.4 Europe: Great Britain (pound) $2.81) rn: Paper || 64.7 Young 8 & W 414 29/32. unchanged: Great Britain 30 day|int TelaTe! 171 Yngst Sh & T 706 futures 281 11/16. up 1/32 of a cent. | Johns Man 635 DETROIT STOCKS (Hornblower & Weeks) Pigures after decimal points are oli roo High Baldwin Rubber* rie "I Dac ae ee Gerity-Michigan* .. Kingston Products’. ~ —Wweannwnwe ~ telatetatetad | *e4 wow weansaw o sale; vid. and “asked. Consumers Calls {Stockholder Meeting Pontiac area residents who are shareowhers in Consumers Power Co. have been called to the annual regional stockholders meeting by D. H. Gerhard, manager of the company’s Southeast Division. Gerhard said the meeting will be held April 27 at the Stevens Hall at 7:45 p.m. D. E. Karn, president, will talk briefly about the com- pany’s business plans and discuss recent developments in the electric and gas industries. A short film on atomic energy will be shown, along with several exhibits, some of which will con- cern the 75th anniversary of the invention of Edison's incandescent light bulb being celebrated this year. The company is holding 10 such regional séssions in its -outstate Michigan service area this month, Gerhard said. He said that about Senators Speak Tonight CHICAGO @—Senators Kennedy (D-Mass) ahd Douglas (D-Ill) were listed as chief speakers tonight at 1,300 state and national party lead- ers were expected to attend. : Thomas Jefferson died on July 4, 1828, just 50 years after the adoption\ of the document which made him famous jn American his- tory, a eK VwFetewe se 6 WHE SF £4 €.- 822 ON \* ‘highly competitive” __THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1954 against Washington. lost, 9 to 3. MICKEY HITS ANOTHER—He’s batting only 125 but when Mickey Mantle hits ’em they stay hit. fielder holds a souvenir in dressing room at New York Sunday after | belting ball on fly 470 feet against centerfield wall for a triple | Yankee baseball writers said ii was the first | time in their memory that the barrier had been hit on the fly. Yanks AP Wirephote 511 Community Nat'l Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & HANSEN | Richard H. DeWits eee | Donald E. Hansen The New York Yankee center- | Business Notes: New Car Stocks Nearing Record Average of 14.3 Autos Held by U.S. Dealers; Sales Gaining | New automobile stocks reached Lodge Calendar Special communication Cedar | Lodge No. 60, F. & A. M. Clarkston, April 22, 8 p. m. Examination for MM degree. Fellowcraft practice to follow. Elgan R. Wood, W. M. —Adv. News in Brief Phillip A. Kempainen, 30, of Far. mington, was fined $100 and asses- sed $25 costs when he pleaded guilty to reckless driving yester- ‘near postwar record levels on April 1, with a total of 604,156 units, | according to Automotive News. | The postwar high of 606,387 was | reached last Nov. 1. On March lof this year, stocks in pail |hands, in storage and en route from the factories totaled 578,122 | units. the April 1 stocks were at postwar record levels. The Detroit trade paper said the average was 143 cars per dealer against 13.4 on Nov. 1, 1953. It noted also that |increased numbers of new car deal- ers are going out of business. At the same time it reported new car sales are continuing to in- |crease, with indications the April | total may top 500,000 Construction in the first quarter in southern Michigap reached $225,219,000. a 25 per cent in- crease over the same period last year, says Dodge Marketing re- ports. March construction was 78,057,000 or 6 per cent higher than March 1953, but 19 per cent below February construction. Packard Stockholders Face no Dividend in ‘54 DETROIT w—The Pa®kard Mo- tor Car Co. said yesterday that its modernization program and a auto market | might. prevent dividends to stock ‘holders this year. James J. Nance, preside nt, made the statement at the com- | pany's annual meeting. He and jall other company officers were | re-elected. Company spokesmen said that the stockholders approved a pro- posal to change Packard common stock fron no par to $2 par value. He said it would enable the com- pany to take advantage of a lower federal transaction tax on par value stock, less than $100 a share. GMC to Display Trucks, Buses at Chicago Show The biggest combination truck and bus show ever staged by GMC Truck & Coach Division will be one of the features of the Gegeral Motors Motorama in Chicago April 24 through May 2 Philip J. Monaghan, division general manager, said the exhibit has been designed “as a salute to the Midwest area, one of the larg- est truck sales markets in the nation."’ “We're showing examples of every size truck from a pickup to a highway diesel capable of hauling 100,000 pounds,’’ Monahan said. A total of 24 trucks and four buses will make up the exhibit which will cover 22,000 square feet of the International Amphitheatre. Besides fhe vehicles will be 13 colorful, animated exhibits illus- trating the division's special en- gineering and styling features. Restauraht, Gas Station Broken Into Monday A gas station at 2021 Auburn Ave., Pontiac Township, and the nearby Tom-a-Hawk Drive Inn were broken into and several coin machines were smashed open, ac- cording to Oakland County sheriff's deputies. The amount of money taken was not known, deputies said. The breakins were discovered early today. Begin Work on GE Plant - eS Mayor Harry On an average-per-dealer basis | day before Farmington Municipal | Judge John J. Schulte. Failure to pay the fine will result in a 30-day _ sentence, Schulte said. Reckless driving cost Grady Thompson, 35, of Northville, a $50 |fine and costs when he pleaded jguilty yesterday before Farming- ton Township Justice Allen C. Ingle William Beaumont of 3098 York, Avon Township, told Oakland County Sheriff's Deputies today that someone took 50 feet of new garden hose from his back porch sometime over the weekend. Res. FE 2-5513 Accident Insurance Automobile Insurance Burglary Insurance Bonds—All Types Res. FE 5-3793 | Fire Insurance Liability Insurance , Life Insurance Plate Glass Insurance ' “HE WHO WEARS HIS MORALITY BUT AS HIS BEST GARMENT WERE BETTER NAKED.” HOME LOANS to buy or refinance Whether you’re planning to build a home or purchase =" an existing home — ask about our easy method of financing! 10 to 18 Year Terms on Our Own Plan! CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN C0. After pleading guilty to drunk driving yesterday before Avon Township Justice Luther C. Green, Stephen Kovacik, 19, of | Detroit, was fined $90 and assessed | $10 costs. Kovacik will spend 90 | days in Oakland County Jail if he | fails to pay the fine and costs. If your friend's in jail and needs bail, Ph. PE 5-5201. C. A. Mitchell, or Ph. MA 5-4031, Guy Carter. Rummage sale, Redeemer Luth- | eran Church of Birmingham, 1800 | W. Maple, Thursday and Friday, April 22 and 23, from 9:00 a. m. to) 5.00 p. m. —Adv. | Monday Rough for Youngsters Five Area Small Fry' Are Victims of Playtime | Accidents Yesterday was a bad day for the kids. Two-year-old David White, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack H. White of 277 Elizabeth Lake Rd., was admitted to Pontiac General Hospital with cuts on this fingers, His condition today is reported as good. The boy cut two fingers of his right hand while playing with a tey truck, Debra Dvek, 2, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clint Dvek of 1376 Park- way, suffered forehead injuries when she fell on a concrete floor at her home. She was treated at Pontiac General Hospital. William Knight, 6, son of Mr. and Mrs. James M. Knight of Beardslee Dr., Lake Orion,. re- ceived a fractured leg yesterday 15 West Huron FE 4-0561 Complete Investment Facilities . . . at Your Finger Tips Just pick up your phone ond coll us for experienced service on your investments. Your inquiries are welcome —by phone, by letter or in person WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. Mamber New York Steck Eachenge and other leoding exchanges PONTIAC OFFICES 716 Pontiec State Bank Building FE 4.2895 ‘STOCKS — BONDS Consult us for first hand information in Stocks and Bonds We maintain a direct line to a member to-the- at ‘all. of all principal exchanges with minute quotations service a times. NARA A RAAAAAAAA AAA C. J. _Nephler Co. i } 414 Community National Bank Bidg. when he raced to a toy airplane first and his companion, Peters, 10, of 640 Johnson Dr., fell on him, He was released from the hospital after treatment. Thomas Kilian, 11, of 999 Be wick Blvd., Was treated for hand injuries which he received when he os ‘ Have you checked ance protection lately? We'll be glad to review your cover- age and bring it HAVE YOU ENOUGH up-to-date — no your insur- é | : was hit by a baseball yesterday. GM's Stock Gains Help Boost Market An upsurge in Genera] Motors’ stock value was creditéd today with playing a key role in the cur- rent advance of the stock mar- ket. : Ward's Automotive Reports said GM stock now is bringing nearly tthe same price as the 4953 high of just under $70 a share. At the start of this year, the stock sold for as low as $58.75. “GM's advance has been an im- portant factor in the current bull market and the attendant rise of the industrial averages to a new Ward's quarter - century high.” said, INSURANCE ? obligation. H. W. Hl ENLOGHER Agency 318 Riker Bldg, mee pei DETROIT EDISON COMPANY Common Stock Yields More Than 5% Having paid continuously since 1900, | this stock offers an excellent investment in growing Michigan utility. Telephone: WOodward 2-2085 FIRST OF MICHIGAN a { 4 Corporation Pag aees Member Midwest ané@ Detroit Steck RUHL. BUILDING — ae NEW YORK : Pe " | With Geiger Counters - Lilly, urged the beard to reject Pinkerman said construction of the petitions for annexation. the 220-bed institution, located at Lilly pointed out that the peti- 13-Mile Rd. and Woodward, is on a ee Sousa a a ee Jen. 5~“with ne ' He also said that there was no| ble delay.” * affidavit filled to prove nobody! Radiation tests are run by plac- < lives in the area. The board turned / ing a smal] quantity of radium ; down the petitions. in the room to be tested. The | Geiger counter is placed on the 4 Huron Valley Two Extension Groups 1| Hold Potluck Luncheons ALMONT — Extension Group and Extension Group II met }last week for potluck luncheons in the homes of Mrs. Howard Halsey Radiation Experts Check |X-Ray Rooms at Hospital Opera-TV Star Sings for Rotary Clarkston Group Hears | Rose Lumetto, Plans Concert May 6 CLARKSTON — Members of Clarkston Rotary Club, meeting last night in the Community Center. ‘| heard selections by a Detroit opera Detroit Municipal Opera Co. and television artist, sang ‘Sari Waltz’’. from the operetta “Sari’’ by Kal- man, and “‘Seboney”’ by Lecuona. The concert will be sponsored in It will consist County Seniors Get Ford Scholarships Two Oakland County high school seniors are among 78 children of Ford Motor Co employes in Mich- igan who were awarded four- year college scholarships by the Taken to Senate Brownell to Appeal for Full Authority to Use Such Evidence Brownell wants authority vested in his office to order the, use of evidence gathered by tapping telephone lines in national secur- | Annexation Proposal Pontiac City Commission last night took under study a request from Oakland Coanty asking the city to annex about 100 acres of Waterford Township as a site for ‘the proposed new County Court- house and Office Building. The plan was explained to com. missioners by the county ways and | the proposal and 31 against. | with a charter prevision which | Mmits special assessments on THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1954 Wire-Tap Fight Milford Voters OK — Equalized Tax Plan MILFORD—Voters here in a special election Monday approved a amendment to the village charter to equalize the amount each property owner must pay for public improvements under special assessments. With 106 votes cast in the elec- tion, 75 voters ‘were in favor of The amendmeat will de away vacant lots to % per cent of the assessed valuation of the lot. Village councilmen found it im- possible under the 25 per cont limitation to make public improve- ments, such as installing sewers, on streets where vacant lot owners refused to waive the limitation. The Roman empire did not maintain prisons for punishment but to hold prisoners until trial or Brooklands PTA to Meet, ‘Hear Program of Songs BROOKLANDS The April meeting of the Brooklands PTA will be hetd at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the school, with a program fea- turing songs by a group of girls under the direction of Mrs. Mar- garet Stoddard, music teacher. Refreshments will be served by execution. fifth grade room mothers. Deaths in Nearby Communities Maurice Heary ROYAL OAK — Service for Mau- rice Henry, 65, of 114 N. Gains- boro Ave. will be at 2 p. m. Wednes- day at Kinsey Funeral Home, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. He died Sunday at a Detroit hos- pital. Surviving are his widow, Mary Ann, three daughters, Mrs. Luck Kerr and Mrs. Ray Muzeck of Royal Oak and Mrs. Raymond Kulpa of Ferndale; a son, William M. of Troy Township; two sisters and nine grandchildren Henry Roberts METAMORA Service for Henry Roberts, 69. a former Meta- raora resident who died Saturday in Detroit, was held this morning from St, Gabriel Catholic Church, Detroit, with burial in a Detroit cemetery. Surviving besides his widow, Alma, are a son, Raymond: his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Roberts: are six sons. Ronald, Robert, Rich- ard. Roy, Roger and Russell, all at home; her mother, Mrs. Mary Burgal, of Detroit and two brothers Floyd Greenman ALMONT — Service for Floyd Greenman, 66, who died Sunday at his home near here, was scheduled for 2 p.m. today from Muir Bro- thers Funeral Home, with burial in Ferguson Cemetery Surviving are a brother, Earl, of Almont and several nieces and nephews Mrs. Claude Postiff FERNDALE—Service for Mrs. p.m. Wednesday at Spaulding and Son Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. She died Sunday at her home. Surviving besides her husband are four sons, Th®mas of Fern- dale. and George. Richard and yesterday when they pleaded ty to illegal possession of before Orion Township Justice | Ferndale Helmar Stanaback. Detroit Claude ‘(M. Caroline) Postiff, 64, of 1066 Withington Ave. will be at 2 pli au EB College Coed Spending Vacation in New York Church to Hold Sessions for Prayer, Bible Study SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP — St. Mark's Evangelical United Breth- Wednesday at 8 p.m. The Men's Brotherhood of the church will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. ‘Washtenaw Tot Killed as Car Strikes Tree SOUTH LYON — An 18month- old Washtenaw County girl, Pame- la Cross, was killed yesterday when a car driven by her mother | struck a tree. Mrs. Donald Cross of Northfield Township and a 7-month-oid daugh- ORTONVILLE — Miss Virginia | tee NOTICE TO be the County Read Commission. ers of the County of Oakland at their : Telegraph Read, Pontiec, until 10:00 o clock, a.m., Bast- April 28, they will read for furnishing received by as to r contents. ~ reserves the right to reject eny of all to waive defects to accept that. in the opinion of the is im the best interest and to the edvantage of the of ty Road missioners the County of Oakland, M . and ef the County of Oakland. ARD OF COUNTY ROAD or THE NTY OF OAKLAND, MICHIGAN T O. FELT LEE O. BROOKS BOL D. LOMERSON April 20. "#4 NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE — iven by the undety signed that on pel hun 1004, at o'clock se 2 oS Sogo ieee .e bearing serial number 4018838, will be held. for the highest biider AFPADIVIT IN COMPLIANCE WITH ATE LAW AND CITY CHARTER i . being duly sworn, end says that he was & candi- of of Pentiee his cam expenses were as follows Specify below from whom contribution received Nome Meagher, Phyllis Tokarski and alae , means committee and other offi-| four brothers, Joseph. Urban and | nonai Detroit: ter. Ruth Ann, are in critical con- ait : —— Rufus Ov . — cials in a meeting at Hotel Wal-| Michael, of Detroit, and Bertle of Caretyn “ home \ Rd ogg tail dition in University Hospital, Ann make a e ee tn The winners will he sea Winners, chosen from more than | dron The property lies between | Lapeer; a sister, Ella, of Detroit: ; Arbor. A son. Donald. 7. was als0 | ions Se “this “deponent ‘os such conds- b> ae ee Both groups had the lesson | 590 candidates for the scholarships, | Te} and the city's|and five Pr a sisters and a grandchild injured in the crash ‘eat choice of participa All |‘‘Lines and Designs in Dress.”’ = grandch: ; M . Further deponent sayeth may choose any college or uni-| West Bculevard 1 Mrs, Arthur Kuecks wh ee peand ot Bterinien o the Presenting the lesson were Mrs.| versity. with full tuition and fees ay eee Mre, Edith L. Craig ROYAL OAK—Service for Mrs.| Guatemala was established as a and sworn to before -me. Michigan State Youth Band at | Anderson Scully, Mrs. James Bur-| ..\4 City Manager Walter kK. Wile | FERNDALE-—Service for Mrs. | arthur (V ’ ° _— ee East Lansing for aay le ay | Paid. m today cald an officiel mack L. Oak, © a OT Lil ae ee | this 12th day of April AD 1 stedy. | gess. Mrs County winners are Martha Louis re Seaits | art - i .. will be held at 2 : mnt pels ee McBroom of Walled Lake High| So" oss yesterday after county [P= Wedersiny st tha Rpesteiag (On, ins at a Hele Fo. puniic hearing tarbe hed Oy the Wale no“, "Commission expires, Hovember system during the School and James Frederick Bar- | °% lerday after — ya s ing | neral Home, with burial in Ever. | ‘ot¢ Tewnship Zoning Board ot the/ 5, | Ape 30. ‘00 year. Highest | supervisors voted to the | and Son Funeral Home, with burial , ‘ Se ee ee - — 4 — Pag ed Coun Ca en ar | rate of Berkley High School. e. support in Roseland Park Cemetery. She green Cemetery, Detroit. She died = ll. tts te cenetter the lated points were four ae mov ; Sunday in Highland Park General mie ae otice ts hereby hure- at: | died To edd a new Sect to be aas| & L given that op Thurs marking periods. Farmington Township P ; Seckue the land blicly ow Monday at Highland Park | Hospital. Section 5.144 day. the third day une, 1964. at Other band members who will go| 4 smettiry for those whe assisted in| Metamora Girl Married |... iieh ted | eee le eddition to her. husband che |Ocnee onn be nate, Sette on SUEY | Sih Ts comaenes ty 0 mesine OF to Michigan State College this | hela a: 6) ph png hy a F oe ny the ssion | Surviving are two brothers, Le- ead requiated by the = - | for the Home Loan Board in Room held at ¢.30 pm Wednesday at Our Lacy in Angola, Ind., Monday | and the Waterford Township Board is survived by three daughters pand i approved | SF1. Mom Beat Beard summer on their own are Havrilla Sorrows School. It is sponsored by ’ ” Ip land Anderson, of Ferndale and Leis and Phy asi _—_ Social Welfare and . gat. ga Rome a the Wiseman end Mary Ain Squire. the Exchange Club METAMORA — Married in An- is required. Waterford Township | St. Clair Anderson. of Nova Scotia, oa fa has = at — lees Wetlare sg moe od gan bg application of the Pontise Pedered. Sav - A joint metallation ef new officers of | S0la, Ind.. Monday were Shirley pervisor Lloyd L. Anderson said | and two sisters, Mrs. Frank Ken- aad aetun —— Toit, | mesimem number of chiiéren cared Ser ign _end ian Sameatatoom, _Peatioc: 3 Lake Ori the afternoon and Women's Pel-| Fick and Charlies Goodw The the township supported the annex-|nedy and Mrs. Howard Neilsdti,” ; Also the following changes to the Zon-| home office from 16 East Lawrence ion Students lowshi will be Wednesda so both Harry Ralph Lock ing Ma Street, Pontiac, Michigan. to the im- evening ae patter ot toe t con. | bride is the daughter of Ray Fick atten. of Ferndale. weed | To change from Residential Dis-| mediaie vieinity of the intersection of Win Top Speech Awards | metices! Ciefst [i "iat"inuates | of Metamora. Her husband is trom Mrs, Raymond 4. Grunch | | ALMONT — Service for Harry | itis "aa fet Set remter 22 and | oman Menus, ef. fnp perms LAKE ORION — First place | & *4 “= u | Arkansas. Almont Farm Bureau BERKLEY — Rosary service for as —— will | ine no iy 300 feet of log number 39 to maintain e braneh offien, at te ratings were received by Lake | .,7p* Munters Crees J and Literary | | The newlyweds will make their) binideg Meeti Potluck Mrs. Raymond J. (Helen E) at 2 p. m. Wednesday at Muir | { “Sw Corner of Dinie Mighway end | intention end specific chic. y | cub will at home of Mré.| home in Flint ing, otiuc G h. 3. of 17 Brothers Funeral Home, with! scott Lake Road tions to the should be Orion entrants in three of five di-| Elton. Stocker Wednesday, with Mrs | . sTUNCH, , Cambridge burial in Almont Cemet He | , 2. Te change from Commercial District | with the Home Bank Board at least ia Mh he eet el eee eee ALMONT — Mr. and Mrs. Thom- | Ave.. will be held at 8 tonight and died Saturday ery IE namgee yg 94 a 1 Bast | 0 days before - se a Nae speech contest in Romeo recently. | wecs wi Lem ‘Yoshida Won't Resign as A. Borland and Mr. and Mrs. | prayer service at 9 am. Wednes 1, |, dest by his widow Buddivision. sterfore has been received by the Home. ses Winners Bette Kempht, Janice | asd Wecs at 2 pm. Thursday with a | A. D. Borland were hosts for the | day at the Sawyer Funeral Home. | yjiidred: two sons, Ralph of Howell PR glial ial “| Gate. of the “hearing, the hearing will eae ied wares me ai re. | reeves aad refreshments TOKYO #—Prime Minister Shig- | April of the Almont Farm | Requiem Mass will be sung at | ang Kenneth et Goan ine dengh- wie copy of the Orémence ond the | de dispensed om. Any pp ceive letters and dicti +o Kenge Master eru Yoshida reportedly told his| Bureau last week in the Commu- | 9:30 a.m. Wednesday at Our Lady | ters. Mrs. Donna Sanday. Mrs | ® ened € is on file tn the etfvee ond cube any ovlaenes at such hear- banquet next month. They will ee ere cease Seeety eens, | Caenet_ today he bes ue intention nity Room of the local library. ot LaSalette Church, with -burial | shirley Dietlin and Dora, all of| examined by anyone interested | or! te lieu of sech apyesrence. evidence participate in the regional contest | siticere ,Thereday. feliewing o 1 pm of resigning despite the widespread| President Robert Currey con-|in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. She | Almont, and Mrs. Marilou Le- DSIT STEWART may be submitted in esveren 2 early in Mayz Cifford Cartwright. 3384 Words Pda shipping scandals that have rocked | ducted the business meeting. which | died Monday in a Detroit hospital. | cluyse of Romeo, and his mother, Lous G Danny, AND LOAN . Dr. his administration. followed a potluck supper. Surviving besides her husband | Mrs. Frank Stark of Imlay City. weer a ae nk PONTIAC. April 28, "34 . Death Notices Cemetery Lots 5|__-Help Wanted Male 6| Help Wanted Male 6| Help Wanted Female 7| Help Wanted Female 7| Help Wanted Female 7 Help Wanted 8| Work Wanted Female 11 _ ATTRACTIVE LOT IN PERRY . - > : eee eee pl eaeuaeueeee_ecee eee eee ~ an Price BEAUTY OPERATORS TYPIST KEAL ESTATE EXPERIENCED COLORED WOM- Mihevert, oft Berkey age 88: te: | pesmesoesa a = Salesmen MANICURISTS SALESLADIES Must be capanie ‘Prefer wih in EXPERIENCE reer “eM Per bow loved ¢ of Mrs Y ; ; Specialist im hair tinting and aren some tase coca DREFERR ‘ Bonaldadh vierttlered father "of BOX REPLIES Engineering Additional personnel needed for| 2 ecg Eine Beauty stu- ALTERATIONS es se eee as willingness wun aphid itke part time job after 12:30 Donaldson. Punera) will be held new department at dio _Tel-Huron g center = ~h y. Pormer | etic men aa 25 and We pel Call Weeds. ae a shoppin: OFFICE ent position in Christian environ- _C ees Ar Fath oot | | At 10 am. today Chec -: WAITES :— |od.zon Bat voor eer ; ment to dependable perven. Salary 80, oF eter etye hess | URL DESIRES OF J reh with ‘ er . . erence: wired Puffs is on A Member of the Real a C. Widdifield offici- here Sen see Dente Bhagat to dependent on your ebuity end echanee. We cop of ote | ne ae, OS et oe i Interment will be at Perry t were replies at Outs reputation end long | ——— CLERICALS K G * vertising & commission r ere socoptenen. Se cers. ge ont . jount Park Cemetery. Mr Don- the Press office in Opportunity for product en- ee cares —s by exten-| COMBINATION STEAM TA BL - ys. Hempstead. Realtor high. All asemte betd Grocseqragh ay , “8 , aldson may be seen after 7 p. m. Lala a nivscleae aaeaien a het — Fe oes COOK. Openings 102 East Huron Street strictest, confidence on Matinee ot ie - forall roe ay Donelson- the following boxes: perience. preferably in com. and above average eernings Di-| AND DEPENDABLE. GOOD FOR pa tabY to -< PE +6 m " _ LAWRENCE W ences FE 4673 8 = EYMAN. APRIL i8_ iss CLARA marcia) vonical oc rested 6 | ate Oni? Wet | 6 6 TED’S New dren. gare for bows ten weses HOUSECLEANING On OPTICE Elizabeth, 204 E. Rundell St. age 3, 10, 11, 12%, 15, 16, 17, organiza . gg aa oe | at tiac Hote! 4:00 1 TED’S . @ thas wages _cheaning % Thorpe. FE 2-096) sah, t of Mrs. Dor- 23, 27, 2B, 32, 75, 84, 86, area offering a permanent day or Tuesday for an inter-| RESTAURANT AND DRIVE-IN ° ~~ LADY WOULD ILIKE WORK BY othy Keller and Richard Eyman. ’ _ if you are quali- view appointm WOODWARD AT SQ. LAKE RD. ontiac REAL ESTATE\SALES- FE +eem 13._E_ Pike ot.| day _or_ week PE 4442. Funeral service will be beid |} 97, 162, 113. Fea. rite us giving ful : : DAY WAITRESS. MOREY'S GOLF FOR EX?AND- instructions g| MIDDLE WOMAN WANTS coll _ Michael's Church. _inter- appointment will “ee” ar. ig ee One na of SSesmores Fhe baxe Store AC TREMENDOUS EW ~ 2. son eves was ™ Recitation of the _—— business, i PROGRAM PRE- | ACCORDIONS LOA PREE TO| MIMBOOR 4 S&C tid at tae Woosh ile Pet | WRITE BOX 30 | Saint Sed Seams | | DISHIUASHER |Full (5-day, 40-hour] ewaven wus" feam | ScScrisestoar Sivvath S| ware wismns—c Un TALES Spm Mm tees Ce The Pontiac Press THE PONTIAC PRESS Sresicus acne enema KITCHEN HELP week) and part time Pea dat ER _#ts0s st factory | OR 39406 | washing and ironings, FE $-6306. state at the Voorhees-iple Pu- State ‘age etc. Write Box 10,| ¢ PM to 12 AM Apply in per! sales positions available| MENT. FE ¢ise, 7\ tae ce Rade! WASHINGS ALSO CURTAINS, PID! APRIL ia, i984, FOR WANT ADS YOUNG MAN” MECHANICALLY rk = in the following depart- can _ 1 |. See, Maer precio wets | 9 7 AND 61; beloved husband of Mrs. Elsie 1A EXPERIENCED SINGLE MAN| Rochester . : Apply ia person Sfire| ments: RELIABLE | SIRTER. PONTIAC ey ee : <6 IRONTINGS AND B Piddington: “dear father of DIAL FE 2-818! Coee Line ca tare: salts ren | OSRERS | WANTED — EVERINO _Bigiere, 100 W Maple, Bam. , _working couple, FE 34038. free wine Uulies Tot" Bor‘ | "stretching curtains PE 0077 Soames’ cre a From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. shee o:t0 ror ie after 7 PM as ‘Daren Mary's Tavern 37 Baldwin ive Coats. Suits. Dresses. ge p Bk sc Ga pg — gd ng og di ald a wil be held Weaneeday, Apen Argentine Rd. Howell, Mich. _Theater_2033 Dine Hey | EXPERIENCED SALES ORL POR | Accessories. Sportswear | sxpertence Apply to Mr car'| Work Wanted Male 10) Country club. Porte rears old and 4 ist at 2 p. m. at the Donelson- AN errere chew a EXPERIENCED REPRIOERATION | YANTED WORK OF ANY KIND | ladies ready to-wear Sam Benson Foundations Fagg lane a Mig. Co. ie. scans aia: ~mamos | wears size 14 dress Exeelient P ik Te cee ce immediately The _—_man_wanted: Call PE ¢2000.___ wre anna S$ p.m.|_ 20 8 Perry __ ata — a.m. end 12/41 CARPENTRY AND PLASTIC [eereeen: er as ot dington is at the Donelson-Johas ae ter cede : JANTTOR WANTED AT 300 5 |" ID iake cnates of dairy bard, cock might, “OR Millinery WAITRESSES APPLY iN PER-|~ CruUENT IW >— | wurrr woman wise Day Puneral Home. ogy _ a pad a wages nae Mais eas ak oe Must be abi. to cperete making Sesst — — ‘ son only, after 5 p. m. Old Mill CEMENT W ORK work. . r THOMPGON, APRIL 17, 1964. maR- for that of "he _for Mr. Parks. : machines. Good waces and new | owps w ra Openings in office for per- Tavere Hotel. sexs Dixie Hwy. ations. basement floors| WASHINGS AND CURTAINS PICK Greeseeny ate reed || Retort ar yee | |MIDOLEADE OAV SLATION | wena -soghaoetve SMBT | puereeage Fatt sons experienced in han- | WomEN FOR PLEASANT TELE: | labor MY ema ' “O°? | Soe eet SOT TSS carn : iak TO WORE Hi a = CABINET MAKER & CARPENTER | “Unie parents. work FI ° Set fae Davia hare lors, || the error. "Ween" cancel, | |MAN TO WORK IN AUTO PARTS | Ail'ume baie it rou ere witog| EAU Say Soitrn “Neet bie | ding cash and Office de-| Eome. Satery ples commlosten, Be | Kitchens 0 specta.ty. FR. sass. | —Thue_perente_wort. FE 30) Grows, ‘Dre. Virsinie Wilson, Mra. | J Some ore made be sure te Must be experienced, “Wollerback a eee Seay pore tp Yoel a ot wegee MA $090. tails. Interesting variety | Be Speck oe Ar tree CARPENTER, YEARS OF EXPERI Building Service 12 4 wi ’ wom. : ’ . y ; iy Freak, Ms Lyle and Men: “ee ae Fon RIDING STABLE 208 2 SALESMEN tn for dey work. $1 per nour.| Of duties. No typing re- Bool. frit tn ene Ae ane RY 2 Sao! Se be ot ve . Pureral will be — Tun takal hand (ot 'Commerss ot 4 Am, be SED WATTRESS. ACE quir - AITREES WANTED TP. MM. TO +-4019 r rooms, dormers. addi < ot rmgreday, April 22 1064 at | § ments containing type cise | 84 : $480 WEFKLY "& Ina’s rill, . ni CC CARPEN nT a anie tions. Custom building, FHA qifieisting. ‘Intarmont. ot Walled type to tS wale ween tne ( OPTOMETRIST TANGIBLE AND INTANGIBL S reas oe Le ceady werk. one Pes ee WOMAN FOR GENERAL OPPIDE phone CARPENTRY AND. TILE WORK rASPH I 4 , is ( ME . N 7 ° - 7 y Lake Cemetery. . — ¥ orevious to publication = area © clare jre.| We will add to our ta ge al per oe he aay RR have commercial back- +1534, gh Livingston * aicenLY-WAn WANTS PAInt- 53, ae PBN ean mm mae meg || __lst_Sox 92 Poutioc Prove. plete training Ages 2788, mate | es Was ground. Good working | sesce_ Go GW, Lecresse S| ine TE t-cais or terms. Pree estimates. O_& W. he Meseerions 2 pn the | | OPENING FOR NEAT APPEAR-| fied Commit Experiehced Waitress conditions ; modern well-| “TE , WOMAN | WANTED | TO EXPERIENCED CARPENTERS — Arenal rene Co eae _in - ee — car, $% asedfld nag my for ad- Apoly in, person, Hillv Acres lighted work ' oR he Live a gg eg — old wants A N N ‘ASH WANT RATES qualify For appointment tall Pur | _ment “* mA m1 i a cee. Ot 3-003. 1 DERLY MAW Drath Brick block and stone work. fire- m™ MEMORY OF LT. 1 Dav 3 Days 6 days _ler Brush FE 2-2318 ~Te-N ¢ gg ag ot . WOMEN WANTED so mel, ae Mg no og AND es & specialty FE 5-802. hee a (7) Salesmen Brion Lake Road, off Commerce peer seta ry, paid AI gg RO ll ng qitet 13 "om : * need residential x. ee Yo yey P ORTER WADDITIONAL 8 ALE 1| senenat—wooswon—eray| “CCXly;, Sales Personnel) See. Ueccery tal mre kar “and rubbish haut- mM 3507 ney se 4 Her mcsishamnnna vi Gu’ PONTIAC AREA YOULL EARN | ents. _ eneeliont wag-| are paid commission on gaat Berver seiee Oe 33. a “3 Sere. Ymmesione service se el-Huron| MINIMUM ° es. after 7 p.m 2-7081. If ne : Gat t $3 $3 oy p Pontiac ; —- salary’: APPOINTMENTS ph pd . Gal bos OUSEWORK. LIVE Petes cores sold. answer Fe §-0060. fonan=a9 Pundrionred Walle PR Roth. FE v1. . “a days work week.| LY AND ANNUAL BONUS.| tn OL 24881 of OL 2-874. mplete am of | WHITE MIDDLEAGED LADY TO | _¢#7* . Comple in| QUALIFICATIONS 99 P progr chiles AN WANTS LAWN WORK FE | _vlece & coment wo-y OE 2.7008, Rirmingham Office iudes: paid vecstion: staployees| NEAT AND ADORE: ot Bg ty SY cot-| employee benefits. Thor- houvekepinn Murt Be. neat Mina | 4012 after 8:30. Loc < Ph. Midwest 4.0844 nts Tel Magen Witlemen’s| wrni _WE| 1 lve, fond of cpildren oneetent| OUgh job training with State ected and '— ag A re ee Wi HORON "12°70 «PE cham | person Ml +63 pay. TOMER WANTING WORK 1% | "oscar enon) EARS ee oe Sraleatont ‘ aes z= . large or too small. ran 370 H ’ _MR. RUBIN MARRIED WOMEN WIDOW - 9 deve, overage 06.50 on heur.| Pimms oo chore! cuereting PLO) ooth. Ph. PE 4-000 amitton Winkleman:s Help Wanted Female 7/ {7,,1opomtis,.to"" No coavese-| Please apply at the Tel- WaxerED LADY TO" CAR oa oo Or oas coat — BRICK BLOCK Any CEMENT ji ACCESSORIES _ing OR 37148 after 12. | :~Huron project Tuesday. debs while mothe Fi — I, I 5 Al creel nal __Help Wanted Male 6 Saicswoman, One with eapertence| ant PAE tan te a to 396| wApril 20th, or Wednes-| woitan FO CARE FOR INPART, | paterii awe} Call Me If You Need aapaaana te rred. Position ts permanent| Set. No Sundays or holidays. 8/ (lay, April 21st, to discuss | and light housework. No cooking. | out Reasonable 1. Ca werk ° rpenter i ave Wayne St. Next to Consumers. ce no Washine but to stay on WE 2.. Save méne- hours Pave sdlary comm CIABCE WHITE WOMAN 5 the opportunities at ines * Golf and. Ridin 3. Someone to do good work AR ne} greens roe © Wink] te | _Somimeree ona Ant Reet. Of Pe ctom or e| Sayt bugarr’ Drom deal direct ARTHUR S $woePM. inkieman S 5 oe, 43M. Saginaw. work 2? dev « and Masen_wort. work Live in . SALESWOMEN : or oe ¥ . PE 54-7546. Ful ; >! ane pert A B A who have ad selling «perience. Apply $14 Pontiac APPLY ry watt | «|= (Sears, Roebuck & Co. 9 working conditions 1M MH, Saginaw y 4) Giese ae eee ee