Se ee " gasp and then he shot her. ‘Deas page me AC P! lath YEAR oe ae ae! * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1955384 PAGES sd ASSOCIATED ‘ qe > = to Crack Down on Drivers FIRES FATAL SHOTS — Robert Clendenin, above, was identified by King County sheriff's officers shots at UAL stewardess Sally Shedd as she stood in doorway of the plane in Seattle, Wash. yesterday. himself. He died later in a local hospital. Unrequited Airline Hostess, Himself SEATTLE (?— An airline stewardess was shot to death by her former boy.friend last night as she was He Played the Avenger nevis Radio Announces: e It was the first disclosure Premier Nikolai A. Bulganin pion. oe es AP Wirephote as the man who fired four fatal Clendenin then turned the gun on Suitor Slays . To get away from snowballs _ {land Ct. . |toward them as they chased him. Youth, 9, Critical James Matheny Hit Running Into Street as Snowballs Fly thrown at him by. three friends, nine-year-old James Matheny ran into the street yeterday. He was q@itically injured by a car.” James, the son of Mrs, Edna L. Matheriy of McKinley St, was playing in front of his house when he was hit by a car driven) by Sam Abcumby, 48, of 34 De-| _ Police said Abcumby, a work- er at Pontiac Motor Div., told them he was driving about 25 m.p.h, in the residential area. Abcumby said he did not see) James unti] after the James’ playmates said he ran into the street with his head turned He is in critical condition at Pon- greeting passengers filing aboard a Los Angeles-bound plane. Then the love-crazed young man, breaking away from an Air Force lieutenant who attempted to subdue him, ran frem the plane and shot himself. He, died three hours later in a hos-+ Steere Reports pital. The United Air Lines stewardess, Sally Shedd, 25. of J. A. Hogle and Co., sat down ie “Bven after it went Clendenin was one of the last of j some 40 passengers to board the He nodded and spoke to his for- mer girl friend before taking his seat next to Mrs. Loesch at the front of the plane. RUSHED DOWN AISLE Withdrawing the pistol from his briefcase, he rushed down the aisle} and confronted Miss Shedd. He pushed her into a seat-6n top of) Wide Approval Says Many Have Called Him to Back Study of City-Township Merger “Many people have spoken to me about my suggestion that Pon- . |tiac and Waterford study the ques- * \tlon of joining forces," said Frank tiae Genera] Hospital with a com- pound fracture of the skull and a broken leg. . Mmmm... WwW. Steere to the Press thig morn- ing. “Everyone thinks the matter fs certainly practical and should be investigated completely. I have had many telephone calls and have met many people in person and they all favor annexation if the various problems can be worked out sat- isfactorily. Several said the idea thad never occurred. to them and several more said they wondered why the matter hasn't been stud- ied long before this."’ ‘In addition to the members of the Chamber of Commerce com- mittee mentioned in the Press Mon- day, there are the following three: ' Air Force Lt. Norman Stout of Portland, Ore., and fired four shots. Two of the shots struck Miss Shedd. Stout said: “She was lying almost ' across ‘me. Then he shot her point blank three or four times. 1 couldn't tell which. She lit on me, uttered a “Tt couldn't get loose from my safety belt until he had shot her.” When he did free himself, Stout leaped from his seat and grabbed Clendenin. A fifth shot, which harmlessly into the plane’s side, was fired as they grappled. Stout finally tumbled Clendenin through the door of the plane and down the ramp to the concrpte field, FIRED INTO HEAD ; Clendenin, the son of Beverly Clendenin of Salt Lake City, ran about 25 yards and fired the one remaining bullet in the gun into his neck. Blood streamed from the wound but he remained standing. He re- Joaded, ran ne 2% yards and = 3 Robert R: Eldred, Barney W. Cran- dall, and E. L. Karkau. ; Juvenile Vice Probe. "Set for Discussion ‘Chief Assistant Oakland County Prosecutor George F. Taylor is in Lansing today to attend a high- with Attorney General Thomas M. Kavanagh about alleged juvenile vice activities ig South Oakland County. Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem trip, but is il. Taylor said he would ask Kava- nagh if the State Police vice squad could be made available, if need- ‘ed, to investigate the juvenile crime reports. way-safety conference and consult) was also scheduled to make the} _ PENSIVE PRESIDENT — Siill thinking over reports given him) by top Security Council advisers, President Eisenhower leaves the conference hut at secluded Camp David in the Catoctin Mountains of Maryland. Ike, who motored 22 his Cabinet today to discuss dom- estic and foreign policy, No details of the two-hour conference held yesterday were disclosed. The President, after dinner at Camp David, relaxed, playing bridge with Secretaries Dulles, Wilson Reds Execute 5 Top Brass for ‘High Treason’ Action | LONDON (INS)—The Tiflis Radid announced today that five former security officials of the Soviet Republic of Georgia had been executed for high treason. Nikita S. Khrushchev assumed dual leadership of Russia Struck by Car, police system, impact. | “* -]M. Molotov. ee ee ee To Let Contracts for Expressway miles from Gettysburg. Pa., meets| cox of such a purge since Soviet and Communist Party Chief in. February of this year. The five men reportedly were collaborators of for- mer Soviet Secret Police Chief and Interior Minister Lavrenti P. Beria._ . Beria was arrested shortly after Stalin's death in 1953 and executed for treason and _ counter-revolu- tionary activities. The same charges were made against the five whose purging was disclosed today. The date of their execution and their first games were not given. All were members at one time of the Georgian International Af- Secret Police. Beria got his start in Cheka, first version of the dread secret was born. The last publicly announced purge was in December 1954, about two months before Bulgan- in Georgi Malenkov as premier, The names of the five were given) Rukhadze, Rokava, Stavisky, Khazanf ‘and Tserteli. Beria, like former, Premier Sta- lin, was a Georgian. He was con- assume power immediately after Stalin's death. The other two were Malenkov and Foreign Minister NV: But Beria was considered too fairs Ministry which controlled_the! in Tiflis where he) sidered one of the triumvirate to! Brazil's Solons Uphold Regime of Nereu Ramos Reject Cafe’s Attempt to Resume Control of Government RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (#—Brazil’s Congress and army acted swiftly today to preserve the regime of pro- visional President Nereu Ramos against a bid by Joao Cafe Filho to resume the presidency. By sizable majorities after houses of Congress adopted a_ resolution that Cafe should remain out of office until Congress - decided otherwise. The national regime “now is |menaced as before,” said the reso- lution in a reference to unsettled political conditions which resulted in Ramos’ installation by a blood- less army coup Nov, 10. The army held Cafe incom. municade in his apartment. Troops surrounded the bujlding and barred al} visitors, Tele- phone calls to the apartment were interrupted. Troops also guarded key govern- ment- buildings but Rio remained calm. Friends of the ex-president prepared to ask the Supreme Court for an order assuring his an all-night debate, both) . Relives the was the longest since she shot her safety. News dispatches going abroad were ‘being censored, Associated dangerous since his secret police amounted to’a state within the State, so the government, army Highway Department Press dispatches from the capital were being relayed via Sao Paulo, the big industrial center southwest of Rio along the coast. Cafe took a leave of absence The change was accompanied by rising suspicion that Cafe and Luz were planning a coup to prevent Continues Opposition to Turnpike Authority The State Highway Department pressed forward today with plans in opposition to those of the Mich- igan Turnpike Authority (MTA). The highway department said first contracts wil] be let in Jan- uary or February for construction next summer of an expressway from the northern terminus of the Toledo-North Expressway at Rock- wood to Detroit. It will be extended north to Dix Avenue (U.S.-25) with a. tempor- ary connection to Telegraph Road, | the department stated. Turnpike authority plans call for using the Toledo-North terminus as a jumping - off place for the proposed north-south toll road. Schools Closing for Two Days, but Not Monday Pontiac public schools will close Thursday (Thanksgiving) and Fri-| day, Schools J, Cecil Cox said today. | He stressed that classes will re-| sume Monday morning on regular) schedule. For the past several years a teachers’ meeting has been held the Monday following Thanksgiving and school has been out, But no) meeting is slated this year, said) * Don’t Toot Your Horn ithe first move toward issuing $3,- |000.000 bonds to finance an addition Assistant Superintendent ef| the Jan. 31 inauguration of Presi- dent-elect Juscelino Kubitschek, political heir of the lated dictator Getuilo Vargas. To forestall such a coup, War Minister Gen. Henrique Teixeira Lott engineered a bloodless army coup of his own which ousted Luz and installed Ramos, the presi- | dent of the Senate. . Cafe, ‘who stepped. up from the routine of bringing before a The blonde WIDOW WEEPS AS SHE LEAVES HOSPITAL — Mrs. William Woodward Jr. weeps as she leaves Doctors Hospital yesterday en route to Mineola, N. Y., for questioning by police. The three-hour quiz 30. Mrs. Woodward broke down three times in uncontrollable weeping. Haggard Ann Woodward Talks to District Attorney MINEOLA, N. Y. (INS)—The haggard, aged face of once-beautiful Ann Woodward hovered today over the she killed her millionaire-sportsman husband. - former model, hailed only ago as one of society’s beguties, looked many years older =< annie AP) Wirephoto millionaire husband to death Oct. grand jury her story of how State and Local Officials Set Up 13-Month Plan Program Is Aimed at Cutting Traffic Deaths by 200 in That Time _ LANSING (P—A 10-point _|“action program” aimed at cutting Michigan traffic deaths by 200 in the next 13 months was agreed to yesterday by state and local law enforcement chiefs. -At a meeting called by Gov. Williams, State Police Commissioner Joseph A. Childs said “the law en- forcement officials of this _ |State have been doing a |good job, but we believe they ‘can do a better job if they are assured of the sup- port of the prosecutors, judges, press and other public groups.” . The 10-point program led off with a stiff’ crackdown on traffie law violators, with implications that many of the “tolerances” now allowed motorists would be The agreement was made unan- imously by nearly 150 representa- tives of the sheriffs, state, city and township police departments. Their program, plus other suggestons, was to be submitted teday to a similar meeting of The police and sheriffs agreed |to start Dec. 1 to: 1—Adopt a strict enforcement a few weeks than her 39 when she left Doctors Hospital in New York Set for Monday Jackson Prison Term ' Awaits County Resident, Convicted of Fraud } Morrison T. Wade, of West! vice presidency after Vargas com- mitted suicide in August 1954, was Bloomfield Township, is scheduled) released from the hospital yester-| day after an examination by eight doctors. 2 Bond Programs Set for Discussion Final reading of a $600,000 city! parking program ordinance, and to Pontiac General Hospital are on the agenda of the city commission for its meeting tonight. If the revenue bond issue for parking is appreved, it will be submitted to the State Municipal 'Finance Commission for approval. Voters have approved the hos- jpital addition, and the resolution before the lawmakers tonight would authorize the city clerk to publish notice of. intent to issue the bends. Father of 3 Killed MT. CLEMENS i — Bernard Baranowski, 45, of Mt. Clemens, | father of three, was killed early NEW YORK (INS) — A cam- paign against the unnecessary use, Humphreys. Ike will return to Gettysburg after the talks today. organized New York Committee for a quiet city. today when his car struck a tree, ‘just south of the Mt. Clemens city | ihigh speed and went out of control | on a curve. | to be surrendered Monday at Jack-| son prison by his attorney to serve) a 4.to 10 year prison sentence for | fraudulent solicitation of charitable contributions. The U. S. Supreme Court yester- Pig refused for’ a second’ time Wade's appeal questioning validity of Michigan's one-man grand jury law. Wade and his wife, Bessie Lou, both were convicted of fraud in their operatiofis of the Society of Good Neighbors in Detroit. She was placed on five-year pro- bation and fined $5,000, Their trial lasted 104 days in 1951. The state claimed they turned) the society into a fraud against the! public, getting $750,000. Wade was the society’s managing director. Samuel Brezner, assistant Wayne County prosecutor, said he ha been advised Wade would be sur- rendered Monday by his attorney, Larry Davidow. Brezner said Davidow may plan, one*more legal move by claiming violation of Wade's civil rights in federal court, but said Wade must be in custody to permit such a move. Rainier it to See U. S. Wade Surrender —* yesterday to confer with ‘Nassau County authorities. It was the first time Mrs. William Woodward Jr. had appeared in public since the pre-dawn hours of Oct. 30 |tion room was called in to render jaid lance — sipped fruit juice as she was questioned prior to Gulotta’s jpanel by next Tuesday, Cobo, Bentley Meeting for Conference in Detroit MONTE CARLO, Monaco WW — will leave next month for a two-| month visit in the United States. | }when she fired twin shot- ‘gun blasts at herp husband whom she said she mistook} for a prowler. Mrs. Woodward, a tearful wom- an in black, broke down frequent- ly last night as she recounted for Nassau County District Attorney \Frank A. Gulotta: and police the jnightmarish slaying of the 35-year old Woodward, For three hours and 10 min- utes she relived the early morn- ing events which followed the couple’s return to their Oyster Bay Cove home from a party given by Mrs. George F. Baker for the Dutchess of Windsor. The questioning was interrupted) by her breakdowns, during which’ her personal physician.who had remained outside the interroga- The blonde mother of two boys — who has agreed to waive im- munity in a grand jury appear- presentation of the case to the DETROIT — Congressman Alvin M. Bentley of Owosso was scheduled to meet’ with Mayor Albert E. Cobo of Detroit today. Both are potential candidates for | policy aimed a porns every laws. 2—Arrest and “vigorously pros- ecute” ‘every driver involved in an accident where it appears he contributed to or caused the accl- dent by violating the law. 3—Make more frequent and stringent inspections of autos as part of regular enforcement pro- grams and arrest all drivers found to be operating unsafe vehicles. 4 — Enforce pedestrian laws imore strictly. 5—Increase the use of radar and electric timing devices to’ catch speeders., 6— Increase the use of chemical tests for intoxication. 7—Permit officers to report to the secretary of state the names of drivers whom they believe to be incompetent dirvers, even no arrest has been made. &—Use unmarked and semi- marked police cars for traffic law enforcement whenever. nec- essary. 9—Step up the training of traffic jofficerg at established police schools and seek more money from local governments for such train- ing. 10—Ask local. governments for more traffic officers. The officials agreed to report to the State Police each morning the number of fatalities in their jurisdictions for-the preceding ‘day. This will provide a daily box score of traffic deaths which will (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Thanksgiving Snow Predicted for Area The Weather Bureau said that the Pontiac area will probably be covered with snow by Thanksgiv- the Republican nomination for gov- ernor. = ” “An adequate system’ of roads redbor ting Gee S. Rep. George A. The country, ee wee 3 - —™ a increased road building, but a is the most urgent national need/@eteed “= Adequate Roads Most Urgent. Need, Says Dondero term basis is such a way that posterity pays its fair share. “A study committee recommend- ed that the issuing of bonds over a 30-year period was the most In Today’s Press oeesesebeetedsvrses 6 Sports ...... sodesuex th, SE, Theaters... cc. ccc cece ccees 33 TV — Programs... .. 33 errr errr practical (financints-plan, with the federal government to pay 90 per cent and the states, 10 per cent. “We must replace obsolete and dangerous roads with a new sys- tem of highways to_ meet the standards of safety and efficiency . « - 40,000 deaths and the destruc- tion of four billion dollars in prop- erty annually is a tragic record,” said Dondero. Half of the nation’s traffic is con- centrated in metropolitan areas, he stated, while only one tenth of our total highway mileage is in “I do not believe it is an ex- aggeration to say that during peak hours on many main high- ways travel Is as low as it was in the horse and buggy days. “Congested traffic, whether on city or rural roads, presents the same end results—public incon- venience, vexations, accidents and econogic wastes . “Good roads will pay for them- selves in the saving of life, prop- erty and cost of operation. “Using available data we can the interstate highway system 3,500 lives per year would be saved. On the average one lifé would be saved each year for every ten miles of the interstate syst Outside the interstate system, improvements are needed of ‘urban arterial routes and feeder roads serving trunk lines, said Dondero. “I feel confident that much prog- ress will be made in the coming session of Congress next January Prop-ifor the safety and convenience of ing Day. horns The city-area forecast calls for «© of auto will be the first limits. Sheriff's officers said the Rainier III, sovereign of this tiny | Cobo said Bentley ‘‘called me UP rain tonight with a -low ranging and|work undertaken by a newly- car apparently was traveling at|principality in southern France, on the long distance phone a lasked to see me. I will be glad “| from 40 to 44 degrees, There will more rain tomorrow with a high between 48 and 52 degrees. During the afternoon and evening there will be snow and =aeny falling temperatures. Snow flurries and a hare drop in temperature to 20 degrees is the forecast for late tomorrow night. The lowest temperature preced- ing 8 a.m. was 32 degrees. thermometer registered 2 at 1 p.m. Zé Lug 85 Million Tons CLEVELAND (# — Great Lakes frughters hauled 1,789,326 tons iron ore last week, bringing the traveling public and the gen- e Wonen's P rail 12, 13, 14, 15 city areas. estimiate that upon completion ot . eral welfare of the nation,” ~ dero seid. time a year ago, ‘had hauled 60,328,272 tons, ting the traffic _ i aaa ‘Against Airman _ speech yesterday. Son of First Mayor to Mark Birthday Celebrating his ninetieth birth: dav on Thanksgiving Day is Hiland H. Thatcher of 75 Cherokee Road of Pontiac's first mayor, rastus Thatcher, who was chosen for that office when the city was, incorporated in 1861, Hiland was born in Saginaw in 1865 Hiland has been a resident of. Pontiae since he was 14 years of! age, and in the insurance business, here since 1889. He and Mrs. Thatcher will celebrate their sixty- sixth wedding anniversary next Son April 7. They have a son, Hiland M.,| Thatcher, Supervisor of West ' Bloomfield i Soe Dismiss Slander | Profanity During Class Charge Is Thrown Out by Federal Judge OKLAHOMA CITY (®—Two $10,- 000 slander suits against an Air Force officer’ for profanity alleged- ly used in lecturing two enlisted men were dismissed yeste:qay by Federal Judge W. R. Wallace. . * * * Air Force sources said they were the first suits of their kind « evér filed. Wallace said language used by Lt. Col. Walter Callahan of New York was “‘extremely vulgar’’ but did not constitute slander or libel under Oklahoma law. He sustained) a motion by the U. S. district at- Congress Scored. for Investigation | Into Automation and better jobs for more people ‘ and better things for all.” The Weather a tomorrow 48.5%. East winds inereasing | to 18-25 noe. this and ng southeast wath tonight. Teday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 ‘am. 8 vg Pear velocity 18 m.p.h Digection: ou pus ? j *‘Seeeseereas : Dynamite Sticks office to dismiss the/digious 'S-'and released at Pontiac General 7|Trip to Federal Prison Archbishop Shine Dies S8Ss2aeessee2 2 Store Owner Identifies Plane Saboteur Suspect as Explosives Buyer DENVER right,’ said Lyman Brown after seeing John Gilbert Graham, ac- cused of murder in the dynamiting, of an airliner that carried | his) mother. * fe * | jham in a police lineup yesterday as the man who bought 20 to 25 ‘sticks of dynamite three days be- fore a United Air Lines plane ex- iploded and crashed near Long- mont, Colo., Nov. 1, killing all 44 aboard® Brown, 46, -- Bros. Supermarket at Kremmling — Solon Says GOP} Colo., 105 miles west of here, came to Denver at the ss request to view Graham. Dist. Atty. Bert M. termed the identification ‘‘a telling link” in the chain of evidence pageren is assembling in-en ext send Graham to the gas cham beg Keating . * CJ * ! Graham, 23, is accused of mur- ‘der in the death of his mother Mrs. ‘Daisie King, 54, in the crash.) 'Police allege he intended to collect} insurance on her, Federal officials said he admitted the bombing. Graham subsequent- \ly repudiated a statement given officers, Establish Basis for Canonizing Pope Pius XII VATICAN CITY & — More than | \for any other pontiff of modern times, a basis already has been established for the eventual can- onization of Pope Pius XII. i * ‘Vatican sources believe that the lelevation to sainthood of Pius fol- lowing his death may be ambng the quickest in the. history: of the church. The most dramatic miracle at- tributed publicly to the 79-year-old head of the Roman Catholic Church came with the Vatican an- nouncement this week that Jesus Christ. to him in a vision during his grave illness last De- cember. * * * However, well-informed Vatican sources long have said that the Vatican secretary of state has a voluminous file of letters and mes- sages from persons telling of ‘“‘pro- facts” — miracles.— that fave helped them as a result of the Pope's intercession, Waterford Resident ‘Struck Down by Car Esther Louisa Lucas, 67, of Wa- terford Township, was hit by a car yesterday at Pontiac Lake Road and Nash Street as she stepped from beliind a stopped car, Waterford Township police said today. She was hit by Vernal M. Corrie, 26, of Milfoyd, suffering bruises and lacerations, She was treated Children Returned Following Hearing Two children, found wandering on city streets at 1 a.m. Saturday, The youngsters said their = ents, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Fraley, of 249 Orchard Lake Ave., had left them alone at home. “Mommy works, and no one was home. So we went out to find daddy,” they stated. Mrs. Fraley has given up her job at a drive-in to remain home with the children, said Hunt. ‘The court will ‘continue supervision to see how they get along,’’ he added. Dr. Gariepy Awaiting DETROIT (INS) — Dr. Louis J. Gariepy, 64, of Detroit, was in the Wayne County Jail today awaiting transfer to a federal penitentiary after losing his last-ditch fight against a four-year prison term for WHITBY, England ® — Britain's (p—"' That's him, all| Brown had just identified Gra+; ; have been asphyxiated sleeping in | Nikolai Bulganin, right, and Nikita co-owner of Brown; Communist party boss, are greeted on their ar- RED BOSSES VISIT NEHRU—Soviet Premier $. Khrushchev, Likes ‘Fat Cats’ | Senate Majority Leader Calling on Texas Dems to Wage Political War WHITNEY, Tex. (® — Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. John- son had sharp words here last night for the Republican party 7 which he charged “is more re- sponsive to fat cats than the folks." An overflow. crowd of 180 pounded the tables and shouted Allan Shivers of Texas by name cision in nam ticket without any buts.”’ The reference seemed obviously aimed at Shivers, who bolted to support the GOP presidential nom- inee in 1952, The Texas governor has refused to promise advance support of the convention’s choice until he knows’ who the nominee is, He recently has hinted he might support President Eisenhower again, if he is the GOP candidate. He has stated flatly that he will not support Adlai Stevenson. = * * The big crowd at an apprecia- tion dinner for Johnson in this cen- tral Texas resort town interrupted him 21 times with often prolonged “ts omer ad none victory is in the air,” and predict- ed the Democratic patty could so: lidify political — ee awe mounted since they mange PRE a “program with @ ‘beart.” Not even Mr, Eisenhower can carry the ‘‘dead weight of the lapel ent Republican ea to win in 1956,” Johnson said “We can lose in 1956 only if we permit the Republicans to divide us or if we divide ourselves,” he “ifs, ands or, said. “Even most rock-ribbed Re- publican have to admiy that his party responds a little ‘faster to the fat cats than to the * Waterford fo Appeal mone:iCircuit Court Rule The Waterford Township Board .|has authorized its attorney, John W. Bell, to appeal a Circuit Court a city-township,. sewer-hookup dis- pute. The case was heard here by visit- R. ling Circuit Judge Eugene F. Black, of Port Huron, Oct. 24 through 26. Pontiac filed the suit Aug. 31 con- tending Waterford’s Jigen to link a proposed $2,000,000 shopping cen- ter at Elizabeth Lake and Tele- woos viet eee tate tem violated a 1935 agreement be- tween the two units. .American experts are advising Honduras how to expand its civil aviation program. newspaper reported | ™/mate of the President said Dr. Ei- decision which favored Pontiac in|: ivalescing at his home, following release REX ATWOOD ‘Atwood Transferred to Marquette Post Transfer of Rex A. C. Atwood, manager of the Social Security Ad-| ministration office here, to a sim-), ilar position in Marquette has been announced by district officials. Atwood, who lives at 168 Crest- wood Ave., has headed the Pontiac| office since 1946. He will assume his new duties Dec. 4. Associated with the administra- tion since its organization in 1937, the official had previously been manager of district offices in Salt Lake City, East St. Louis and Rock Island, Ill. The local office has a staff of 22 and annually pays out nearly $1,- 500,000 in claims. No successor to Atwood has yet named. been Ike's Brother Backs Benson’ s Remaining NEW YORK @—The New York Herald Tribune said today it was authoritativ reported that Dr. A Washington dispatch to the that an inti- senhower, ‘a long-time friend of Benson, was the most significant single factor inthe President's de- cision last month to continue his strong sppert oe — The story ‘neces that Dr. Ei- senhower, president of Pennsyt- vania State University and brother of the President, traveled with Benson in the President's plane ‘when the embattled secretary went to Fitzsimons Army Hospi- tal. Oct. 29 to discuss the explosive issue of declining farm prices.” Judge Leaves Hospital SAGINAW @® — Doctors said today they don't know when Fed- eral Judge Frank A. Picard will return to the bench. He is con- from St. Mary Hospital where he underwent treatment for an acute liver infec- tion. The judge was hospitalized nine days. Listed Regional Conditions By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS As Michigan's deer hunting sea- son entered its second week today, the gunfire death toll among hunt- ers stood at seven. * * @ Heart attacks have killed 12 hunters, two have frozen to death, one has died of exposure, three ~ Northern Lower Peninsula—1 to 25. Hunters Dead, 6 Lost as Second Week Starts 8 inches of snow, hunting good. rival in New Delhi by India’s Prime Minister Ja- Waharlal Nehru, left, and his daughter, Indira Gandhi. The Russians are in — ona mate visit. | Youths Dislike |REBUTTAL GIVEN planned as a three-hour inspection ot.;one by former State Attorney ‘|General Frank G. Millard, et Scientist's Life Professional Men Deny They Are ‘Squares’ in ‘Musty Old Labs’ DUNCAN, Okla, uf — It’s not true that the modern scientist is a “square” or that he works xzjn “musty old laboratory.” * * * ~ In a survey conducted by an Ok- jlahoma city school superintendent, some 100 high school students -| said, among other things, they coh- sidered scientists as wnsccial ap ontiac Deaths tures with one-track minds. The | youngsters also declared that sci- Mrs entists don't make much- money in comparison to the amount of THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, “NOVEMBER 22, 19004 | Square D Unit Bolts From UE Some. Workers Vote te Quit Independent Union for UAW-CIO ‘DETROIT fp—A small segment Square D Co, workers represerited by the independent United Electrical Workers has voted to bolt the UE and join of the 1,: the CIO United Auto Workers. The UAW local wag one of the ClO units that supperted Square D workers last ter, violent, 1 strike, Edward Perkola, president of the UE local, yesterday described the jSunday meeting® as a membership meeting.’ Albert Fitzgerald, national UE] < president, said, however, the vote would not be recognized because membership was not given proper notice. The UE ence belonged o ‘the CIO, but was ousted on grounds it was C ist-d The UE contract with Square D in their bit- “regular Perkola | supports the secession movement. * * * session last night, the City Com- mission hassled long and hard.with improvements at 14 Mile Road and more specific information on the desirability of either a full or.par- \Commission Discusses" Improvements, Rezoning BIRMINGHAM — In a four-hour): Hickory Grove = Way Cleared . Advertising Begins for Well Construction and a telegrams to ‘the company saying |some local officers had ‘seceded |from the union’ and no longer puns until May 20. Fitzgerald sent were in good standing. He asked ithat the company bargain only with officials still in good — study needed to get into the pro- jiome for Mrs. Nellie Ann Georges, f ession. | A group of Oklahoma engineers, | chemists, geologists and metallur-| gists quickly came to the defense) of the science profession=The te-, buttal was from some mem- ‘bers of the Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Co. technical center. The firm's technical employes said they took the students’ opin- ion of them with a grain or two of NaCL (salt). Malcolm Ross- er, editor of the gompany maga- zine, said the reaction of the work- 62, Cal.; Rev. Harold C. DeWindt of Kirk- in-the-Hills will officiate. Born in Gage County, Neb. Dec. |31, 1892, she was the daughter of Harvey and Ellen Van Laningham. 'Mrs, George had lived in Pontiac 15 years. | Surviving are a daughter, Mrs, Wayne (Elma) Cook of Pontiac and two grandchildren. Other survivors include a sister, Mrs. Minnie Bailey of Long Beach, | two brothers, Ed Harmon of Shubert, Neb. and Howard Har- seals of Denver, Col. “approved a cab. fare increase . Nellie Ann Georges ' Service will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Snover Funeral of 61 Riviera Terrace. The plantings ent on state approval and costs involved for the city. In other action, the commission which will see taxi riders paying an automatic 15 cents increas an automatic 15 cents’ increase fective Dee. 15. Commissioners okayed the increase of from 25 cents to 40 cents on the first flag throw, and al8o gave a formal nod to increasing the total number of cabs allowed. to aerate in = city, from 16 to 2. Ld] Plans for as new schools and three school additions can’t get on the drawing boards any too soon, says the Board of Educatton—and Supt. of Schools Dwight B. Ireland is currently making arrangements with architects to expedite the proj- Pending consent of cach archi- tect, the beard has approved this work schedule: Eberle, Smith As- Grading BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Last week's final condemnation proceedings, necessary because of title defects, have cleared the way for construction of a new Hickory Grove Elementary Schgol on an over 26-acre site on Lasher road between Square Lake and Hickory Grove roads. ¥ * * Dr. James Read, school board president, said yesterday that the board is now acivertising for bids on construction of a well and rough grading of the property, with work to start about Dec. 1 late in December or the first of January. A $550,000 bond issue was passed by voters in August, providing funds' for the site, building and operating costs. The present school, alone in the district, is 4 years old and has four classrooms. It is ing " scientists was, “Gosh, kids, sociates will prepare plans for an we're human too.” az . Georges waS dead on ar- SO aees currently providing educational * lava at, Pontiac General Hospital cae aath aa ee cee needs for, 180 pupils. — * * Ld Rosser maa eat instead of being) 'Monday, field and a six-reom addition at | Read said the board and Nathan buried in a smelly: lab, the4scien- es Walnut Lake Scheel. : Margett. superintendent principal ltist he knows is — to be a guy Shirley Ritchie | are i eiuaiea = Speen pai poser nia» © pameport to , eer etiicain tx sinuing Ges on om exotic lands. Service was: held in Ashland, | at Maplewood Cranbrook ® Ohio yesterday for Shirley Ritchie, ads: on Birwlighats High School|staff for next year. Never before Rosser mid the demand for sci- entists and allied personnel is ter- rific and that the starting salaries exceed all other fields except med- icine. ; Marooned Radar Islanders to Eat Turkey at Home TEXAS TOWERS, 110 Miles Off Cape Cod ® (Via Marine Radio 4. Telephone) — Hopes of Thanks-| |giving at home cheered 37 ma-|; island early today. | * A sudden break in the series of| storms that has hit the big plat- form may ehable them to get back aboard the tug El Sol by late afternoon. The group was hoisted by der- ricks four at a time in a basket last Thursday for what had been visit. A sudden. storm made it too hazardous to attempt to lower the visitors back aboard ship. The El 1 ran for safety in deeper waters lo ride out — — 5 * re were smiles among the ” persons aboard the tower after a midnight weather check led to the deeision to attempt a trip home.| Rules Wayne County Can't Pay Claimants DETROIT wn—A — of three Circuit Court judges have ruled that Wayne County is without legal power to pay claimants $58,- 000 allegedly embezzled by the late Freda G. Crofutt as a Chan- cery Court clerk. The three judges agreed the county had a moral responsibility toward the claimants, but Judges Chester P. O'Hara, and Joseph A. Moynihan ruled the county was without. legal power to repay. Judge John V. Brennan dis- sented,.says that no statute pro- hibited the county from claims brought about the wrongdoing of an employy. The majority opinion followed | 22, a former Pontiac resident. After her father’s death five pressing needs. Plans for the latter years ago, she moved to Savannah, Ohio with her mother and brother, Charles. Her parents were Charles and Dorothy Grimwood. Michigan Launches Driver Crackdown (Continued From Page One) be handed to Gov. Williams each ‘morning for a running check on ithe success or failure of the 13 meeting was over the use of marked caf is the only catch what we call the delibera violator.” Prison Camp Bids Readied for Jan. 16 new tions Department said today. i be a LANSING (# — Work will start within the next few weeks on a 600-man medium security prison at Ionia, the State Correc- Gus Harrison, director, said bull- |property are considered the most will be prepared by O'Dell, Hewlett and Luckenbach, who will also do a four-room addition at Franklin School. Linn Smith, architect for the cur-| rent Pembrook addition, will be the architect for a two-room Bloomfield Village addition and eventually, the Harlan elementary school at Adams and Wattles * * * There will be a member meeting at 8 tonight at Finances MSU Band for Rose Bowl Trip LANSING UW — Michigan State University’s. 130-piece marching band will accompany the Spartan football team to the Rose Bowl. Jack F. Wolfram, general man- pany would finance the band's West Coast trip, as it did when the Spartans made their first bowl trip two years ago. Wolfram said an itinerary is being planned which will provide for appearances in key cities along the route. Two years ago, the MSU band appeared. at Kansas City, Oklahoma City, El Paso, Tucson, Salt Lake City and Denver. The band will have a new set. of formations. for the Rose Bowl formally drawn up, policy govern- ing operation of the school dis- trict, is now being set down in writing, Read added. Construction Worker Injured by Falling Wall BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Police and firemen to aid the fellow workers of Esther Har- den, 42, of Detroit, yesterday, after he was pinnéd beneath a frame wall which’ fell on top df him while he was putting up the wall at a new house under construction at 1456 Ardmore. Harden, employed by B. and B. Construcion Co., Oak Park, suf- fered a fractured left leg and is in good condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac. Turnpike Authority ~ Meeting Tomorrow ity will meet tomorrow at 10 a.m. in its offices in the First National Bank Building, Ann Arbor, accord- ing to George N. Higgins, chair- man. Steps are expected to be taken in preparation for a Michigan Su- preme Court ruling on validity of The ‘authority proposes to build a 113-mile toll road between Rock- game. wood and Saginaw. The Michigan Turnpike Author- the act setting up the authority. dozers are expected to start clear- ing ground in about two weeks. The prison will be built in a 40- acre site a mile from the present state reformatory at Ionia, Har- rison said bids for five of the prison units will be let Jan. 16. The Legislature has already authorized construction of two 120- man dormitories, a kitchen and dining room, an administration building and a service building. It has. appropriated one million dollars to start work on the first units. Harrison said the Legislature would be asked to appropriate $1,500,000 at its next session to complete work on the first five units. handed down in_ 1954. ’ Mrs. Crofutt died in September. 1953, and a subsequent audit Mark Mayflower Pact NEW YORK (INS) — Mayflowe' in New York last night at a ban- ‘turned up the alleged embezzie- ment. 4 Group Reports Shortage | of U.S. Auto Mechanics: | quet given by the Society of May-} 1 © Truly—ours is & sacred trust ~to serve you with understanding, experience and honesty in your hour of need. Our funeral service is complete, our prices — range of all. helping hand REMEMBERING gi et ARB age a re : | af ie AS a , fn : ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22,.1955 ANN ARBOR (?—Univerlty of Mich our record of sportsmanship, and I. be- gan has expressed ” over rowdy- lieve j so. You may be ‘sure ism that developed in emo oe se be made to see that noth- | of the Michigan-Ohio State like this occurs Saturday and has to . said in letters to Howard L. is- Bevis, t of Ohio State, and ath- Dick Larkins: "otha oma yom amd your inctitutlon. an apology for the untimely conduct of one said: or two Michigan players in the game last “Michigan regrets very deeply Saturday. “I. want you te know that we unharnessed di minutes of the Ohio State game. The the y of. ers ejected from the game — not emotion which has no in the ' for any: physical act—but for argu- relationship between State and ing with the officials, have apologized © the University of Michigan. to reir teammates and to the — “permit me to congratulate you on Prema nn lh me the wikiee Ohio State’s fine . Your team de- a regrets te t igen —feated us fairly and squarely and I want vs ulate you further and compli- Connected Against Lions - Bears Experimented at Quarterback and Found Ed Brown; Unbeaten Since the Bears begin mov fuses to single out any one player League. for credit in the — drive, After dropping their first three * ¢ “We're not a team cu ane cha. or two or three,” Howe Moving in for Sth Straight Scoring Crown Three linemen Are First of 24 Players) for North Squad and 221 pounds, was picked today Indian Outfielder Man-of-the-Year' CLEVELAND «® — Cleveland baseball writers yesterday picked outfielder Al Smith as the Cleve- land Indians “Man of:the Year.” Relief hurler Ray Narleski also was considered for the award for his 9-1 record, his 20-odd games- saved and his 58 relief appear- ances. But Smith won the nod because Smith will receive a plaque at the Baseball writers’ annual Ribs and Roast Dinner Jan. 30. Olympic Games Plans Well on Way to Finish MELBOURNE (INS)—Australian To date he has completed 79 of 136 attempts for 1,237 yards and 8 touchdowns von which your “Rest assured we will exe to prevent any recurrence dent.” Bowl game. S SMILES FOR eteve_Cuch ty smiles as students display a = mates "banner at an MSU pe leading ae oenetate each with 11. * * @ Macques of Montreal is} I addition to his passing prow-| ess, Brown is a dangerous runner .jhaving carried 34.times for po yards, a 5.4 average. He has scored two touchdowns. * * * statistics show that end Har- Hill is either favored or that he breaks out into the open more} often, Hill has snared 5 of Brown's payoff tosses. End Bill McColl has of erag igpeticementic shone Schroeder 1: Marciano Wanted for Match in LA LOS ANGELES «—Matchmaker McCoy of the Olympic Auditorium says he is negotiating for heavy- weight champion Rocky Marciano) to meet the winner of the Floyd- Patterson-Jimmy Slade fizht. Marciano’'s manager will be in) Los Angeles Friday and told Mc- Coy he will discuss the matter. 12:18 “es Davis Cup Challenge Round in Australia MELBOURNE & — The Davis Cup challenge, round will be held in Adelaide on Dec. 26, 27, 28, 1956, it = decided by a votes to four Australian New Mexico [ weight Entry Holds Racks and Heads Get ‘White Sox Name NEW ORLEANS (®—Pittsburgh, shunted from football bowls for 19) years, will flaunt its revitalized ipower in the 1956 Sugar Bow! Jan. 2. - Pitt, ranked No. 13 in the nation) by this week's Associated Press) poll, has a 7-3 record. Defeats have been at the hands of top-ranking) teams. * « Fred Digby, general manager} of the Sugar Bowl Committee, an- notnced Pitt's selection today. He said the Panthers’ opponent will be either Georgia Tech, Auburn, Vanderbilt or Mississippi. That will be decided, Digby said, after the four Southeastern Confer- ence teams play their final games Saturday. Pitt's substitute fullback, Bob Grier, " he is sent into the game The 17-0 loss cost Michigan the Big Ten championship and a trip to the Rose It gave the championship | to Ohio ie Send Apologies to Ohio State ‘State and the Rose Bow! bid to bitter | rival Michigan State. Ohio went to. Pasadena last New Year's. Confer- ence es prevent the same team returning in successive years. End Ron Kramer and tackle Al Sigman of Michigan were expelled from the game, tre minutes flurry of penalties in the last three utes. boys so richly rt every effort of this inci- : Duty Daugher- “Good Luck S, pep rally Sunday after news of the Rose Bowl bid reached East aes. 13th Ranked Panthers Get Sugar Bowl Bid; SESE oof for Panthers Since Rose Bowl of 1937 by Coach Johnny Michelosen, will, In its last bowl appearance. Pitt be the first Negro to play in the routed Washington 21-0 in the 1937 Sugar Bowl. yon Bowl... a * o! . * * * | Digby said the invitation to Pitt) was made “without conditions. The Panthers closed their season| year’s 7-3 mark is Pitt's best since last Saturday with a convincing /1938, when the Panthers won 8 and 20-0 victory over Penn State. Pitt)lost 2. ‘eonquerors include Oklahoma, No.| Michelosen mainly uses the 1 team in the nation, Navy, No.|split-T offense although thé tradi- 11, and a a Fiaride No. 14.|tional Pitt single-wing pops up fre- iquently. The late Jock Sutherland, Pitt's victios oe been Cali-|who brought Pitt to national promi- ‘fornia, Syracuse, Nebraska, Duke, |nence in the "30s, long favored the |Virginia, West Virginia and Penn |powerful single . wing. State. The 267 victory over Duke! * *« * | came a week after the Blue Devils) Quarterback Conrad (Corny) Sal- upset Ohio State, the Big 10 cham- vaterra is the key man on Mich- pions. Pitt's 26-7 victory over West eclosen's split-T offense. Against Nieginia knocked the team out of Penn State, Salvaterra reeled off the undefeated class and the Sugar one off-tackle thrust for 62 yards Bowl picture. and a score. Miller Farm Boss CHICAGO #—Glen C. Miller today was named farm director of the Chicago White Sox after serv- ing five years as assistant under John Rigney. Deer Derby Attention Still holding the. lead in the weight division of the Pontiac Press deer contest is the 260 pound, 14 point buck entered by Wilfred A. Bird. a deer from the same area near) |years. Zubrick got his eight pointer | fm “ever the |beams with closely balanced points) hunters ee ee Jack Noskey, 24, of 6424 Barker Pontiac, failed to come tries were turned wali a) many returning from their trips. Noskey, whe has been hunting since he was nine years old, point|bagged the bear near Shingleton Rigney recently was elevated 260 pounder. He has brought home {fom farm director to a vice pres- aration. ident. ‘ lbasehall since 1937 when he started as a scout for the Milwaukee With no other hunters as yet! near Rose City in aw County |Brewers of the American Assn, in able to match this weight, rackland O'Connor bagged his 10 point|Wisconsin and served. for eight. and head divisions of the contest/puck about 20 miles north of New-| years. eihave been getting the attention. perry, Mich. Seven tack and twe head en: jooregcy Sa Cards’ Top Rookie Comes to '56 Terms ST. LOUIS (#—Bill Virdon, a top Rookie of the Year candidate in the National League, isthe first mem- ber of the St. ‘Louis Cardinals to come to terms for 1956. Terms were not disclosed, but the West Plains, Mo., outfielder reportedly received about $10,000 in the contract signed yesterday, a the|in Schoolcraft county. It was the his|first bear he ever got. sizeable increase over his rookie _ Salary. IMSU Takes Fitting Bows at Rose Scented Dinner rabid State fans although Williams _ |admitted he attended Michigan, The State's Spartans, picked muro ‘oilean award, for yore umorist, went to guard Em go to = Rose ra ane Robi maw a sealer whe Uichas Ohio State eliminated Michigan. 447 for state in their 1st Rose Bowl are in a’ frantic flurry of prep- game, ‘ The 44-man traveling team will The annual dinner for the football leave Lansing for the West Coast EAST LANSING # — Michigan Sfate is enjoying the Roses, ars will travel out with the Spar- ah marching band Dec, 2. To obtain tickets the average fan, applying for two, should send | ‘overflow crowd of well’ wishers in attendance. “No one mentioned Michigan | State. béfere the season started,” | sald MSU president Dr. John A. | Michigan State Athletic Office. This | Hannah. “you surprised the’ ath- will cover $5.99 each for the two letic world. Neo one could have |tickets and a 50-cent service charge! planned a more fitting climax (to cover insurance, handling and to our centennial year.” imail., Team captain and guard Carl) Saar ane (Buck) Nystrom, of Marquette was Third Best Record voted ‘most valuable player” by his teammates. for Fire Control Gov. Williams gave him the en-| |, LANSING «™—Despite the hot, graved watch. dry weather last summer, Michi- For the 1st time, the governor's! gan set its 3rd best record for wife, Nancy, wearing a state-green| forest fire control this year. gown, attended with older son, The state conservation depart- AP Wirepheote| Since then Pitt has not been able "\to build another powerhouse. This ja money order for $12.48 to the; Uclans Happy as Bow! Trip Now Official Bruins Named to Play ‘MSU; Sanders Warns Colorado A&M HM , Packs Skyline of Spartan Prowess . LOS ANGELES # — Happy over the formal selection of the UCLA football team to represent the Pa-) cifie Coast ‘ Conferencé against Bruin students staged an impromp-| tu celebration on_ the ree in! the rain today. But head coach Henry R (Red) | Sanders contributed a cautioning | note when he observed: Michigan State may well be | the best team in the nation. 1 | saw them twice on television this season and they were the | most impressive team I saw all year. “nh will take our best effort to stay in there with them.” Sanders intimated that Michigan) might have presented slightly less | of a problem for his PCC. cham- pions, but he insisted ‘‘we’d rather play the best=’ Most Coast observers, whether | |they would admit it or not, also felt that the coast representative might have had a better chance of winning in the bowl against the “t} Ten if Michigan had won the Ohio- Michigan Clash Called — Game of Week Cassady Honored 2nd Straight Time; Hayes and Wilkinson Tie NEW YORK:-(INS) — Ohio State's crushing defeat of Michigan not only was The Game Of ‘The Week in the eyes of International News Service's grid experts but produced the player and coach of the week as well. The INS panel today singled out Obie State’s 17-6 ‘ruination of Towa, UCLA's 10-1 conquest of Southern Cal., Syracuse’s 20-13 lacing of West Virginia and the | | tie of Milineis by Nerthwesterna, | For the Ist time this year lthe balloting was split down the line for a coach of the week. was performances: Coach of the week — W. kinson of Oklahoma. Play of the week—Notré Dame’ sl |17-14 victory over lowa on Paul! Hornung's 28-yard field goal with| 15 seconds remain-' two minutes, ("= Cubs to Invite 20 fo Initial Drills CHICAGO —Th® Chicago Cubs will invite 20 players to attend the the group will in- clude eight pitchers, six infielders, three catchers and three outfield- ders. Most will be rookies, Another 12 players, including the | ‘other nine pitchers on the Cub ros-! = will be invited Feb, 26 with: the remainder of the squad report- jing March 1, the officiat opening Hessel, Mich., for the past three| Miller, 48, has been active in team was held last night with an - plane Dec. 16. Rest of the regu-|day. ‘Davis Is Underdog Against Cisco Kid HOLLYWOOD (Young Kenny Davis of Los. Angeles faces the best chance he's had in the ring tonight but the odds are against him to whip nationally ranked Lieegiery Legion Stadium. The. 24-year-old 1951-52 caroe Gloves champion is a decided u derdog against the Cisco Kid, 25, rated No. 4 among the nation’s | lightweights. _(Gary. _They | were introduced as| ment said 1.151 fires damaged 7,204 acres of forest and grass land, This was bettered only in 1956 Olympic games get under x and 1951. way, that Melbourne “will be | The deparement credited ready. “more fire-conscious public’ and Mensies, in & progress report |improved fire Sehting techniques | teed by the government infor. Alton{ Even before the firing, there was|in four seasons he never had a| y managed to tie San Jose and) for the low mation bureas ‘sald Australia who couldn’tla string of sugested replacements. | winning, team. California and beat Idaho 90. | os will present the games “in ac- coach|They ranged from Hobbs, *7- Alumni discontent grew weekly cytinion Bros. (heh ee age cordance with the high stand- lasticoach of the unbeaten local high| He came here as an assistant to/but there were few if any personal| tees Jr. Col. (Ky) 5 Bivetieid 0 atds set by past hest. cities.” trying. [school team, to Johnny Lujack, an|Evashevski and was regarded as/words against Kircher. Prtsburgh (kan) . NE. pula, 65 Me stated: . to go onjassistant with the Chicago Bears.|his ‘chief strategist. Together they e #6 remaster a RR ee Sate but WSClAlmost ever successful prepjhad a fine 7-3 record at WSC in| “It was a hard decision to) EADTERN. Rng IB Sere out and will|coach in the state’ has been men-|1951. Alone, Kircher was 46 forjrelease a perfect gentleman we Sateen i # = plete @ successor.itioned. <° t three years running, then 1-7-2. |Al Kircher,” sid a WSC state-|Bosion 0000000000: 33 aw the games. With a year to go, fall. ene ce eo ee, ment on the discharge. “However, |* re eat pivinice = _ Preparations are well on the way to assistants,| Stan Bates, the WSC athletic di-| He junked the single wing and|we believe circumstances dictate |S Lows cee BR ae completion. were|rector, said nothing has been done|went into a split-T offense this sea-|that we employ a new football|Minneafoite 0000000000003 7 ga Recalling that all previous Olym- ‘fresh-/about a -new staff. json, It seldom worked and the coaching staff.” ulate ey eee piads had been held in Europe or >. 8 Cougars were thumped 50-12 by, * [Wo gatas, ches the\U, 8., Menzies pointed out that do,”| Kircher, who got the job here ih|USC, 130 by Kansas,, 550 by President C. Clement French! no a the “Olympic movement now has “T don't even know|1952 by popular demand when For-|UCLA, 14-7 by Oregon State, 30-0 said the decision to relieve Kircher! ney pars acurouse become a great world force em- coaching|est Evashevski quit to go to lowa,|by College of the Pacific, 35-0 by was made on Bates’ recomenda-| New York ‘at Boston bracing 87 nations.” was 8 man everybody liked .but/Oregon and 27-7 by Washington. tion, ec “yy A ~ - Michigan State in the Rose Bowl, | Hayes of Ohio State and Bud Wil- | All-Star Team | Halfback Gary Glick Among Three Aggies on. First Team’ “ DENVER, Nov. 22 w—Talented halfback Gary Glick and two team- mates who've kept Colorado A&M lin front this season were picked jtoday by The Associated Press on the Skyline Conference All-Star team. é * * * : Other A&M players on the honor ‘team are center Bob Weber, the only junior to make the grade, and guard Dan Mirich, The nares. already assured of at least a ‘for :the championship, were ne jonly team represented by three ‘players. Except for Weber, all the honored players are seniors. Second-place Wyoming landed |quarterback Joe Mastrogiovanni, a standout for the past three seasons, and Clarence (Bugs) Carter, picked for the second successive year at end. * * * Third-place hoary is represented by its two rd-running senior backs, Herb sakins and Lou Mele. Denver's fourth-place Pioneers have two repeaters from last year Horvat. Other .first stringers are tackle Reed Henderson of Utah State and guard Doug Dasinger of Montana. New Mexico and Brigham Young, which have yet to win a league game this season, failed to land a player on the first team. Their leading candidates were guards — J&éy Weenig of BYU and Jerry Nesbitt of New Mexico, who were picked on the second team. The closest choice was at quar- terback where Mastrogiovanni edged Jimmy Bowen of Denver, who was named on the second team. Mastrogiovanni was given the nod on the strength of his versatility including place-kicking, blocking, running, passing and de- —e ability. *.* * Clear standouts in the selection were Glick, Ross, Horvat, Carter and Weber. Glick was especially valuable to A&M in its 1-point * lvictories over Wyoming and Den- - ver, He also sparkled with indivi- dual scoring bursts against Okla- homa A&M, Brigham Young and others. a URLOSU Riot man and end Ron Kramer. Skover said the last two minutes were the most out-of-hand he had ever seen in a Big Ten game. He refused to say why Sigman and Kramer were banished. From ithe press box it appeared: ae the two Wolverine linemen were testing too vigorously one of “the officials’ calls. | Football Games | for This Week THURSDAY Colgate at Brown Wyoming a Denver Cornell at Pennsylvania Williams & Mary et Richmond Texas at ae Utah State at Virginia Tech at Virginia Military Tulsd at Wichita FRIDA West Viriginia at N ‘ coneline St. (mM) SATURDAY Army vs Navy at Philadelphia Holy Cross at Boston College soOUTR Auburn at Alabama Clemson at Purman Georgia at gia Tec -Mississippl at prt cartaoog State Tulane at Louisiana State Piorida at Miami Vanderbilt at Tennessee South Caroline -at Virginia MIDWEST Oklahoma at Oklahoma A&M . SOUTHWEST Baylor at Rice South'rn Methodist at Texas Christian —$——— jCisco Andrade of neighboring +Compton in a 10-round fight at the! pomtees al Colorado at Colorado A&M Brigham Young at New Mexico Notre Dame at Southern nis 5. There are 3 Sports Pages i n today’s Pontiac Press Unusually Active Season Looms for PWBA Keglers year for women bowlers in the: |Pontiac area, according to Peggy ‘Bender, secretary of the Pontiac |Women's Bowling Association. | Five tournaments of local, state \‘ and national interest will be open Nov. 19 and entries close Nov. % of this year, Two tourneys begin competition Feb. 4, 1956. The Michigan State Elks Ladies event is scheduled at Muskegon, with Dec. 17 the dead- i eran } ba to area beglers during the com | al This will be an unusually busy|line for entries. The 18th annual 'CYO Catholic Women's tourney will ‘be held in Detroit, with entries ‘locking up Jan. 71. The PWBA's 23rd annual city tournament will be held at the ‘Huron Bowl beginning March 3. ‘Entries close Jan. 28. | Highlight of the season, the an- nal Women's International bow!- in end Larry Ross and tackle Ed - ipeag hice a: aan Aen a te, Pt ee "THE: j » PONTIAC PRESS. ‘TUES SDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1953 8 > prices on the Detroit Farmers’ Market | ae , included : ~ Soybeans See | MARKETS GM Sparks Rise - Lossin Sales ccna ous i SHOCK Market - CHICAGO us—Soybeans. retreat: 5 bapa fo tee | NEW YORK w+The Stock Mar- ed under, an expanded selling’ sale package jots movement on the Board of Tradeig, “No 1. 3.50-4.00 bu: apples, green-| iby growers and sold by them in Whole-|ket advanced today with motors PRUITS— Apples: Delicious, faney 8.00| displaying the most vigor in the ~~ ise. . ings. fancy, 3.25 bu; No. 1, 2.50-3.00 bu ae today,, dropping as much as two apples Mcintosh, taney $35 ba. ho. 1 * * & ; ray ' . : 5 ak. 250-300 bu. appless, Northern § 8py, | as ; . j cents’ before stabilizing and mak-|fgncy, 400 bu: No 1, °3.00-3.80 bu: ap: It was the first concerted ing a small recovery ples, Weil River, fancy. 2.00 bu; Me. 1 strength the stock market has roy 75 bu; apples, Wagener, No shawn since early last week when Wheat also was quite weak al- 300-380 bu: Cider, No. 3, 200-250 4- “eal case. Peats, Bosc, fancy. 400 bu: No. 1,/it approached the old record highs. fig ape ‘ » 300-3 5 ri y ‘ though there was no pickup in the ; 0 bu: pears, Kiefer, fancy, 3.00 Prices .were up between 1 and 2 . / . bu. No. 1, 200-250 bu | slow trading in this fereal. Feed VEGETABLES, misc: Beets, No. 1. 90- | points ° ‘at the 125 behs: “eets, topped, No. 1, 1.00-1.50 best, but there. were grains resisted the’ -dewnward bu. broccoli. No 1, 150-200 t2 bu Cab- few stocks that did so well. bage, red. No. 1, 125-175 bu; cabbage! trend even though they weren't sprouts. No. 1, 100-150 bu Carrots.| General Motors and Chrysler o. 1, 85-100 doz behs; carrots. able to make any forward prog- 35, No 1. 150-200 bu. Caulifiover, Gominated the motor division. a Obed ress. : o 1. 200-250 doz. Celery, No 1, 400-| UU. §. Ste 0 crate. No. 1, 1.00-1.50 doz bchs sie . he Wheat near the end 6f the first Celery root. No. 1, 85-100 doz ‘bchs. that generally higher section. Un- » No 1, 150-200 bu: jon Pacifie made a better than | carrots, top hour was 3 3 r ‘em- lour was “s to “4 lower, Decem- ooinower No. 1 200-250 doz Celery was well ahead in . ber $2.03%4; corm une Sees to 14 No. 1, 400-450 crate. No. 1, 100-150 average gain, but other rails ower On1.. : 1, doz, behs. Celery rpot. No. 1, 1.00-1.50 - lower, December $1.25's: oats “8 goz’ bene Egeplank No 1,’ 100-150. Were steady. to 14 lower, December “61%: rve. bu Fennel, No. 1, 125-150 doz bcehs |Horseradish, No. 1. 350-400 pk basket. | Among higher stocks were Beta- “he c ia wer Ce i unchanged to '2 lower, December Konirabi, No 1, 100-150 doz. behs lehem’ Steel, L.1I? sevbeans 1/4 to 15s lower,) Leeks. No 1, 100-150 > behs. Ogions . ANe 3 January §2.34%s.. and land 5 - 12 dry. fancy 200 $0-lb bag. No 1, 1 63. Kennecott Copper, Union Carbide, JGNUaTy de.odo 2, al < . 85 $0-lb bag. onions, green, No. 1 85- gp — a op aan : cents « hundred lower, De.|190 dor. techs Posies curly, No Southern Railway, Standard Oil nts a hundred pounds lower, De : . : ; cember $11.20 18-90 dos. behs Parsiry Root, No. 1. (NJ), and General Electric. oid .et, - 0 doz bens ) * ; 150-200 'g bu Pepper ' = : Grai : Pri 1 75-125 pk basket ator The Associated Press average of A 1150 50 Ib. bag Wo. 1, 125-135 $0 Ib “he bes a eee : i } rain rices bag. Pumpkins. No 1° 100-125 bu Rad- 60 stocks yestefday was down $1.60 i recs. i — black, me 1-150-200 bu radis sh at $177.40. It was the third straight romerecemns fi G TRAD es tt io $0 tec wehis oon Ishen red fancy. 100 doe bch. No '1,, 1088 for the average. The record. CHICAGO, Nov 22. +AP) Open to-| 75-.85 doz. behs: squash, Acorn, No 1,! hj fi > Cf 2 day : bs ,2.00-1.25 bu squash, butternut, No. #, gh for the average came Sept. | Wheat— Dec 65 |100-125 bu. squash, delicious. No 1. 23 at $181.50. one . ee March .. 67%. 100-150 bu; squash, Hu No 1j ‘ arc 205%, -+May . c.1. 67 4100-150 bu Tor atoes hothouse. No 1 | May ,. 202% Rye— |} 2 30-2.50 8-ib basket; tomatoes. outdoor New Yor Vee 191%, st : wales Spo 2 1, 100-1 50 pk basket. turnip, No 1 k Stocks ~ Marc 114% 75-1.28 doz. behs: turnip. topped. No. 1! Dec oc Peete MAD TIT Tiga hy a May | 133% Dec. 11 25 ene Sepa ima ee Man Allied Strs 585 Jones & L491 July j- 138's WE 133 yor: lastard No 1 Allis Chalmers 666 Kennecott 1214 Foes ri sore -- TT 25) No. 1, 100-225 bu. Mustard. No 1. ajum Ltd 108 ‘ Sept 1.33% March alee rs 11.28 200-275 bu. Borre!. No 1 1.00-125 bu hicos 77 4: Kimb Clk 40-3 . tom May . 11.45 sninach, No. 1. 250-300 bu BSWisSS am Airline 236 Mroper art ——— | cnere No. 2. 100-125 bu. Turnip. NO am Can ass Tears Ae 00-2.75 bu Am Cy 60 aia A ‘ ETTUCE AND SALAD GREENS Cel-'am Gar k Fl 4g) Loch Aire. 491 e roil ison 0 es lerv cabbage. No. 1, 125-175 bu Endive. Am M& Fd) 252 Loew's. red a | No. 1, 150-200 bu Endive, bleached. No Am Motors” ge Lone 8 Chem 652| j1. 2.50300 bu Escarcle. No 1, 150- Am N Gas 57 Lorillard 206 4 Lied 2.00 bu; escarole, bleached, No. 1, 250-'Am News ogg Lou & Nash 854 4 - ent IVI |3.00 bu. Lettuce, bibb. No. 1. 150-175 Am Rad. 221 Mack Trk 292 pk. basket, lettuce. butter. No. 1. 250- Ami Tel&Tej 1805 Martin. Gl 32 6 a 3 3.00 bu: lettuce, he‘. No. 1. 250-300,Am Tob 765 Lente of eh pd ‘ re 3-doz erate. lettuce. head, No. 1. 150-|Am Viscose 636 . DETROIT (INS) — Detroit Edi- 200 bu: lettuce. leaf, No 1 175-125 bu. Anac Co OF ere tic an » son Co. has declared a quarterly, Rom#ine, No 1 125-175 bu . armour @ Co ist Midi SU Pa. 561 dividend of 45 cents per share, an _ ~ Arms Ck 29) Mpls Hon 58 : « Atchison 140 Monsan Ch 446 inerease of five cents over the 40, Livestock: . au Cat Line 436 Mont Ward "102 4 cents paid since July 1953. : 2 Sy Motor 7 Od DETROIT LIVE K Aveo Mig - $7 Mueller Br he board voted the dividend! perrorr Nov 2 arn Hogs—Sal- zee Ohio i ates Cp a6 i] able Jan. 2 [eee e 400, not enough hogs eaNy to make} py . Nat ise . 6 pay 36 to stockholders of ee eet eee eee aT inwer Benguet... sl2 Net Cash R 38.1 record Dec. 20, 1955, \* Cattle—Salable 450 Fres caiptl| Soe a ees Mat Dairy 9 «|Mostly cows; trading fairly active; uttl- 7 at Gyps s0 6 Net. earnings for the 12 months 'iiy"cows strong to ‘Sic higher: general Bond Strs 1 Nat Lead ending Oct. 31 were reported at,cow market new tally $1.60 higher for!Besg Warner.. 443 Bx Contes! sit “ 5 wo dav all other classes cattle fully) . la ‘ow early $26 million, compared With |ctcedy. few smell tots high goed to prime| Briggs Mic 333 wort & Wes 21 million the previous year. fed steers 20.00-23.00. only 5 head choice Burroughs 267 No Am Av Po : : : jand prime 1116 Ib steers at 23.00; few'Calumet & H 126 Nor Pac 7 emer and utility steers 12.00-1400; bulkiCamp Soup .. 425 oe Airline . 184, A : utility cows 1000-1150, canners and!Can Dry 16 jo Ot . 3 ! Yule Toy Sales to Pass cutters mostly 8.00-10.00; few lightweight Can Pac 312 Pac G & El 502 | olpe . anfiers down to 7.00; some cutter and'Carrier Cp §27 Pan AW Air . 17 $25 Million in State ‘utility bulls 800-1200: commercial bulls Case, JI 181. Pann Ep! 795 esse Cater Trac ... 85 ‘aram Da “384 2 Calves—Salable 200. Vealers opening \Ches & Ohio 553 Parke th If all the toys Michigan young: 's:caay but market not fully established Chrysler 97 Pa RR 51 sters find under their Christmas| peecoent small early receipts; few choice|Cities Sve 56.7 Pepsi Cola: 23 — nd prime individuals up to 30.00: some|Climax Mo 684 Pfizer . 403 trees were put in one heap, the’ high prime held higher. good and low, ‘col'mra A 127.6 Phelps D 57 vile wa be wi 25, 98 |choice 1800-2400; few scar and com-|Col Brd A... 236 Philco~ 325 F uid be worth about $ 5.254,- jmetcial grades 11.00-17.00 Col Gas 16 = Philip Mor 000, according to a NewYork fi-| Sheep—Salable 800 No early sales |Come Ed 42 Phill: Pet 22 nancia) expert |Receipts mostly slaughter lambs Leos no se Proctt & G 98 6 ' t. i ron N Ges . 336 Pure Oil 374 Charles S. Sargent Jr., vice pres- CHICAGO LIVESTOCK |Consum pew ses RCA 2 «4 * P; ] c ident of a toy factoring firm, pre- ie eee aa —tAP) es 3 Cont on 92 Seana a . er Salable hogs most mixed No * the dicts that Christmas season sales and 3 butchers under 220 Ibs. eround 25 Gate ore mo Sey toe Boe will bring the state's retail toy re- ©¢™t* higher early to order buyers bit! Deere (33 ‘Selewers ne trade on these lv lerately active . Safeway St 48.4 » 4 n. only, mete Det Edis 37 1 ceipts to $41,400,000 for the year. otnerwise market slow, only steady to pis ¢ pap AP) pea keedienrnd 6 Ml. Per capita sales will reach about tong on butchers; sows mostly trons to Doug Airc... 813 Sead Al RN tot higher: only fair shipping ovtlpt: bu’k Dow Chem © 535 Sead Al RR un $20.20, he said, 13th highest in the alee No. 2 and’ No. 38 190-220 Ib Dy Pont gig Sears Roeb 17 U.S butchers 11.75-12.28: several hundred Bast air L | 477 Shell Ou 69 . . |mixed No. Is, 2s and 3s 12.80-12.75. Bast Kod a2 Simmons —— —————|45 head mostly No. 2 220 Ibs at 1299:|\5) auto Fite | aeq ‘Sipelair O .. 563 " (Advertixement) mont — = Tb ewe it 11.25-11.75; 280 Emer ad ... 121 Socony Mob hip | . around 606 bdr} ase es i. ‘ies ea tates to cur tore Oe 1160 © |Pirestone™ “+ 324 Sperry Rand 216 Salable cattle 22.000; calves Pood Mach .. 57 - St4 Brand... 361 ‘choice and prime steers and good quai! Freepot sul |. 91 Std Of Calif 83.6 e [ecto moderately active. strong tO Preyh Ira . 402 St Oil Ind 49 |mostly 25-60 cents higher: other steersiGen Dynam | £67 Std Ol NJ 147 | slow, steady; heffers active 25-75 high- Gen Fiec . s1) Stevens, JP. 27 ler; cows and bulls steady to 25 hicher:|Gen Pda |. gg Stud ‘Pack 10.2 vealers fully steady; early trade on Gen Mills. 704 Suther Pap “44 stockets and feeders steady; @ bad of Gen Motors | $07 S¥i#t & Co. . _ me around 1,100 Ib steets 24.50: | Gen Shoe .... 5176 Sy'¥ El Pa 44.6 ra joads prime steers 23.25-2409; Gen Time .....314 Texas Co as By a Wall Street Journal | bulk Seates and prime steers 19.00-23.00. Gen Tire 7 g71 Tex G Sul... jeommercial and good grades 14.50- Gillette "go Thomp Pd “ |19.00; a load of prime mixed yearlings Gobel Br ,... 5.4 L68"_W Air Subscriber - | 22.50; a load of prime heifers 21.78; |Goodrich |... 73.7 TTansamer «23 | mest , chetee end prime heifers 19.£0-| Goodyear | 616 on ease tea to low cholce 17-$0-19.00: | Grah Paixe 17 og : Since I started reading The Journal, | seine and commercia] cows 9.25-12.00:/Gt No Hy - 3 — rs Li 188 my income has increased from $9,000 |Anner and cutters €.00-9.75; | utility|Gt West 8 212 Unit ‘aire ane jane commercial bulls 13.00-14.50; veal- oe 47 P; to $14,000 a year. ers 23.00 down; two loads mostly choice Guif Oil .. . 83 behead ruit Sai The Journal helps me in other stock steer-caives 22.00; a load of good Holland P 85 ts waa \ light yearling stock steers 19.00. | Homestk - 312 Op mel. sa too. For example, an automo- | galabie sheep 2.500; general trade|/ Hooker i ..° 326 Yo, Baal” 3 tive article helped “me trade in my rather active: slaughter lambs mainly | TH Cent . 627 Waletaen ae ld t th ht A J higher than late last week; ‘sheep|Ing Rand .... 59.2 warn B Pic 20 1 old car at the right time. An article | steady to $0 higher: bulk good to prime |Inland 8t! ... 872 west Un Tel | on building supplies gave me ideas woces mambo round nd Ib down 18.00- jcass a -.-313 weste A BE a uble deck choice amd prime Int Bus Mach 389.4 . on remodeling my home and showed };3 jy 1908: a few prime lambs 20.00; Int Harv Mi weet, a se 6 me how to save $700. jeull to low good grade 10.00-17.00; Int Nick 7.2 Wiison & Co . ta Articles on food oad clothing point | mainly choice — High med shorn lambs Int Paper 110.2) Woolworth one . around 92 to 100 No. 1 pelts 19.00- Int Shoe ot Young S&Ww out the things to stock up on in order 1950; cull to hess slaughter ewes Int Tel & Tel. 28 younest 8h wie to save money. Articles on taxes *-650. -—— oo - ‘os Ee 7 + guide me on what to do to keep my taxes down, ; ; The Journal also gives me a better Poultry te jocks 25-26; caponettes (3-1 Ibs.) 30-33, | Wayne They wonder where I get my inside | Arras 42-43; geese 28-31: ducklings 30.| °No sale; bid dope,” 31; heavy ducks 28, Muscovy ducks: hens 39 w reports in The Wall Street Journal | Martet steady — light on fry-| leben Assoctoned * come to you daily, you get quick ers, a on hens, ¢ on capons and | geese, active on caponettes particularly _ warning of any new trend that may | heews weights, aon on Voucks | affect your income. You get the facts | | ducklings. ee ee aa oe te | Week 4] in time to protect your interests or 5:1 ee oe Se — seize a profit. The Journal is a won- | Turkeys: Market steady. Careful and/1955 high... erful aid to salaried men making | Recet pts appear adequa 1954 high $1,000 to $20,000 a year. It is valu- | | aati 1954 low able to owners of small-business con- | i CHICAGO POULTRY ;steady to firm on hens; steady on ca- Previous day . 252 ago «..987.2 136.5 73.1 re limiting supplies for Sy eees needs. 1955 low. .......203.1 + 211.9 123.0 68.3 155.2) ..143.9 17.8 55.4 108.0 was also one of its most eligible) , Goodyear, Boeing,) DETROIT stocks 'C. J. Nephier Co. Figures after aoctmal points cn eighths gh Lo ; T ~ w Noon understanding of what is going on, error’ — Poteet Prices|Baldwin Rubbers... 1s hes in the world. In conversation with | paid per pound f.0.b. Detroit tor No, 1,/Gerity-Michigan® — 25 #3 other men I find that I know how to quality live poultry up to 10 a.m. Kingston rage . 27 33 Heavy hens 25-27, light hens 14-16;|Masco Scre 3 3.2) interpret business and government heavy broilers or fryers (2%4-3%4 Ibs): | Midwest Abrasives 12 | 82 trends a little better than they do, | Whites 23, gray crosses 24-25, Barred | Rudy ar Sees cy ie and asked. heavy type young hen turkeys (includes r ES This story is typical. Because the [pects — TOCK AVERAG Pres. 22—Compiied by, Tr 15 15 60 inoeet. Rails Util Stocks: 0 4.3 73.0 1774 240.4 126.5 71.2 io 66 200. 267.4 130.1 (75.7 ist 5 hh 114.9 «67.2 1488 (AP)—Bufter to ambitious young men, |ponettes and young stock; receipts in|steady; ip ilb); f.0.b, payin rices unchanj complete business DAILY. Has larg- 2 cents higher; ery hens 20-24. Slight 54.25; cars 90 B roosters tions. It costs $20 a year, but you, ee aetnlinnes rent receipts . ean get a Trial Subscription for three | CHICAGO POTATOES and attach check for $6 and mail. shipments Friday 631, Saturday 548.| netroit,” cases Or tell us to bill you. |Sunday 10; supplies moderate for Rus- grades: west to bring you vital business and |ct track sales: Idaho-Washington Rus- $514, medium dress: The Wall Street Journal, Hejacs US. No, 1 washed and waxed|!#rge 50-53 _wtd. - 711 W. Monroe St., Chlenge 6, Ii. ea unwashed, one car mixed most-|* " Pur 12-2212, tae No. 2 $2.00 with = U.B. No. 1 am 581, enantio = ee Why Buy insurance Insarance spreads losses among thousands of assureds, those whe want peace of mind and those who do not care to Gamble with Luck! Buy Insurance! - Actually rates are so low you cannot afford to take chances. grade C large Checks 31-35 — Whites — Gr to two cents r Call Ue On Any Insurance Problem Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD cerns, It can be ‘of priceless benefit | CHICAGO, Nov. 21 (AP)—Live poultry clean & wedi AND EGGS 48 i ie 1,164 (Friday 1,042 8,326) in yrices unchanged to %e higher; The Wall Street Journal is the /°°°Ps {Priday e Sclecee 44 0: on ced * | Fort Davis has television reception,"’ Harvard Col- lege of Cambridge, Mass., is think- jing .of locating its big, new tele- buy- A 58; 90 B 56.75; 89 C 57.25; steady: receipts 16,805, staff ters jhens i broilers or fryers 21-22; old es, about re of wri on business and | | 4.5-15.5; copenatien under 4% | eee. buying prices unchanged to 1 finance, The Fees business paper in. a 25, poe 4%) Ib 27-29: hen turkeys | lower: , U5. le ree whites 00-99.8 yer cent terved ress associa- {35-3 oung tom turkeys ove: Tb/ A's mix mediums by ail four big P be H : . . standards 42; | oe 29; checks 28; cur- CHICAGO, Nov. 21 (AP}—Potatoes:| ~ DETROIT EGGS months for $6. Just tear out this ad arrivals 224, on track 308; total U.8.| nerRorr, Nov. 21.—(AP)—Eges, f.0.b. included, federal-state sets, demand slow; market dull; for Published dail: the M Ys) | : Whites—Grade A jumbo 58-66 weight- ished d 7 right in the Mid- reas demand good, ‘market steady; car- ad) average] 00%. a e bee wid. ots. 45-48 wtd. ave. 474, ts limited iffert an Washington news immediately. Ad- fsies reported; Red River ‘Valley Pon-|s™sil 36-38 wtd. avg. 37%. grade B. avg. 47%, ‘small 36-38) 006; OS. Ko. 3 61.40; Wissensin| SS. Srp Sts; Erade B laege 00-6) wee.) Me. rowns — Grade A jumbo 56-62 wtd. large 52-55 wtd. avg. 54"; | a 48 — 38; oar B ae $2; 4-40 wi ~~ * wd. oe 33 graded: cis A extra large 56, | large 02-86, medium 40-45; grade B large Co. today announced plans to build .i A extra 55, large 50- a new 15 million dollar turbine Browns — Grade 56, Dace searye ~S, small . Rae beneed et firm. ces ran uncha, x, Jpigher. vee Ky tet plant. . ances g an eman ‘or ay : " trade is excellent, Supplies clearing upon Work on the project is sched arrival and generally very TV Hinders Harvard FORT DAVIS, Tex. (—Because} Australia has become the free’ “the worst possible|world’s' eighth largest . — Director Donald H. Muc . so have | tid the telescope. whieh wil paid sit pee cectecn tea H.W. HUTTENLOCHER Agieny ——_,—- ey ing re-election today, formed a Department for 33 years. “ Studebaker Prices 3 pew administration will in aera TN lay on ‘the battlefield, Ba t| -_ * @® lernments since last December. News B ' f ‘series. The President classic V-8 1 pe —— n rie four door sedan is priced at $2,268. Japan's dominant: lower house Top price in the station wagon line| Wut Disneys True Life Adventures | THe ArRicAN PANGOLIN IS A HARMLESS NOCTURNAL FORAGER FOR INGECTS.... Distributed by King Features Syndicate. (After Jailbreak. Complications Hurt Caused Amnesia LOS ANGELES (#—Russell Ton- gay, swimming instructor impris-| oned in Florida because of the div- ing death of his 5-year-old daugh-| ter, has surrendered here after es-/| caping in New Orleans Nov. 13. || * Florida authorities said the State iene k KA , Cabinet there is expected to decide > <—eee it wr" today on what action to take in Tongay’s case. The ex-swimming coach has asked that he be -al- lowed to. remain here to obtain treatment for a long ailment. ‘CLAIMS AMNESIA ‘LATE MODEL Prisoner Claims Crash’ TYPEWRITERS: Adding “Wachines to RENT! | Tongay told -reporters last night Ask About Our jat police headquarters that he walked out of a New Orleans res- Rental Purchase | taurant while a prison agent was Plan! . : © Copyright 1958 Wilt Disney Productions CAUGHT UNDER THE KNIFE-LIKE SCALES OF THE TAIL. paying the bill and hitchhiked to the West Coast. He said that two hours before his escape the prison | TISDALE car had been i an accident and) and did not even know that he was escaping. 1-22] é pital ae night and he Pra = : i he tion by see UNTIL_ MOLESTED! THEN IT ROLLS ITSELF INTOA [Aty Herb Weiner. He was SAW-TOOTHED TRAP. WOE TO THE MOLESTER THAT is booked at the prison ward of Gen- eral Hospital as a fugitive. At the time of his escape Ton-| a —|gay had been taken to New Or-| leang¢ for diagnosis and treatment] APAPPPPPEN AAP Pen He was jhe incurred a head injury that! OFFICE MACHINES caused temporary amnesia. He claimed he did not remem- 460 W. Huron. f7 5.0101 ber anything prior to the accident : Sales-Service-Rentals He said that upon arrival in Los GMC TRUCKS Angeles he looked up a minister “, it in Peas he had known while he was in the an _s Marines in World War II, stayed by Pontiac People with him awhile and then went tof - WILSON GMC Co. ; : the Washington Hospital in Culver) World R.ghts Reserved ‘City for treatment. Oakland at Cass, Pontiac Police picked him-up at the hos-|-—————-— Vv. Breakfast-Luncheons © 4 Meet Your Friends in the 4 RIKER FOUNTAIN : 4 4 Riker Bldg. Lobby te i th i ln a le tl Mi di tS Perv YS ‘Hatoyama Wins Veteran’s Grave Search, Reviewed at Traftic Club : Japan Flection A twice wounded World War I returned to Europe last summer veteran's account of his search to find the grave of the man who Prime Minister Issues for the grave of a slain comrade- was killed beside him. i in-arms was told in- words and pic-| The successful search, docu- New 5-Point Program tures last night before 74 mem-! mented in colored slides, touched Favoring West Ideals bers of the Pontiac Traffic Club.; almost every military cemetery Narrator of the unusual quest on the Continent, Barnett told his . was Albert Barnett, a resident of audience TOKYO w& — Prime Minister Keego Harbor and a member of Ichiro Hatoyama won overwhelm: the Pontiac Motor Division Traffic new right-of-center administration Barnett’s story began 37 years with his newly merged Liberal-| Democrats and immediately an- ®%° When he fell wounded into a Jump for 56 Autos nounced a long-range five-point Shell hole while serving with the program. Canadiah Army in France. The | SOUTH BEND, Ind. W—Stude-| 5 Oo Cc . » ‘Stranger with whom he shared poioh of Studebaker-Packard Corp. a Although the ‘five points hint at *the hole was killed while trying he . : nations and perhaps at dropping to get belp for the wounded Bar- |"9* @nnounced price increases some American occupation re-| nett. ranging from $75 to $104 on its 19564 forms, it is expected Hatoyama's; Fulfilling a pledge he made as sedans and station wagons. be even friendlier to .the United _ | The division said prices start at EVERYTHING YOU NEED COMES FROM THE PAGES OF THIS BOOK A bank book is the. answer to all your financial needs and dreams, With a savings ac- count, you can have a strong and safe future! CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN CO. 75 West Huron St. FE 4-056! - States than his two previous gov-| $1,678 in the six-cylinder Champion |® divided on a straight 288-150 party) Brent Calhoun, 21, of Leonard, ‘ : vote with 29 absent or “abstaining pleaded guilty to reckless driving is $2,306 for the V-8 Pinehurst , (0 retain Hatoyama over his only yesterday before West Bloomfield rival, Socialist Party President Township Justice Elmer C. Die-' The prices are factory list to Mosaburo Suzuk:, The vote will terie. He was committed to jail which must be added federal ex. | model. probably set a pattern as Japan for 39 ¢; ays after failing to pay cise’ and state taxes, handling | enters a new era of _ two-party his: fine of $40 and $20 costs. charges and optional at politics based on bitterly opposed | | items. right and left-wing groupings. | Lonie Eason, 32, of 28% S. Sag- Studebaker announced a reduc- | Since the war, the House -was'inaw st: pleaded innocent yester- tion of $35 in the price of automatic | split into three or four shifting and 4, ay before Pontiac Municipal transmissions for the President uncertain major ¢ af aaa Judge Cecil McCallum when he and Commander: series and $25 for| |was charged with possession of the Champion series. Air? condi-| Miss De Weerig number and betting slips. He was uoning units are cut $100 for. all! freed on $50 bond pending ap-' models, and Stunt Man _earance Monday. | oss | Prices for Studebakers new Wed i 1N. Nevada | John Nevenzedl, 70, of the Roose-| Hawk series, the sports type cars, foo |velt Hotel, and Florence Nevenzell,|will be announced when the series VIRGINIA CITY, Nev, “P —(58 of Lake Orion, were charged |is introduced later. _|Movie actress Yvonne, De Carlo is) : with embezzlement yesterday be-| er = :|honeymooning in this historic Old! tore Waterford Justice W illis D. poy: mining town today with a Holly-| > Edison Names es Gerber ae col atune man Bobet Morgan. | LeFurgy. Pleading innocent, they) The 3 |were told to appear Monday, and to Board of Directors -vear-old actress an d bond was set ‘at $500. - | DETROIT —Daniel F. Gerber, Donald E. Hansen Res. FE 2-5513 "BAKER & HANSEN INSURANCE > Phone FE 4-1568-9 Richard. H. DeWitt Res. FE 5-3793 Now Located at 511 Community National Bank Bldg. As of December Ist We Will Be Located at 7 1 Community National Bank Bldg. Morgan, 40, drove to Reno and) | iwere married yesterday at cn If your friend’s in jail and needs President and board chairman of Episcopal chapel. Actor-Rory Cal paij, Ph. FE 5-9424 or MA §-4031 ithe Gerber Products Co. of Fre- ‘houn gave the bride in marria —Ady. mont, has been elected a director ‘and Charles Hayward was be lof Detroit Edison Co. |man, The couple have to be back yg fons, Parties. Food furnished. Gerber will fill the unexpired jin Hollywood later this week for| —Adv. term of George R. Fink, former ‘film work, . . Automobile polish and wax serv-' president of Great Lakes Steel and se lice. Complete Blue Coral wax job,' s ; Miss De Carlo, one of Holly- $1250. 4-hour service. FE 45-9193. seman opnpanl Fink resigned wood's most traveled performers, | : —Adv. | . ; spinsters, Her name had = Firm Official Earnings linked romantically with many). . men, inching a ermne ie M. P. Graham, 64, Dies | OETROEE me ested on an industrialist, Moslem Prince i ~ roi ison Khan and Peter Townsend, ace | b DETROIT (#—Matthew P. Gra-/Co. reported net earnings today of ly rejected suitor for the hand of am, 64, vice president of Thomp-} $25,941,559, or $2.40 per share of Britain’s Princess Margaret, son Products, Inc.,.died Monday in common stock, for the year ended Miss De Carlo acquired an 8-/@ Grosse Pointe Hospital. Oct. 31. This compared with $21,- year-old stepdaughter by the mar- Graham formerly was associated | 369, 810, or $1.98 per share of com- riage. Morgan is - muirerer. with the: Alamo Engine Co., Hills- jmon stock for the previous 12 | STOCKS —_ BONDS Consult Us for First Hand Information in Stock and Bonds ia a PS Be Pee ae | ij quotation service We maintain a direct line to a member of all principal exchanges with up-to-the-minute available at all times. 818 Community National | C. J. Nephler Co. Bank Bldg. FE 2-9119 eee a 2 eta ee dale, the Vanblerck Motor Co.,, months. The company also de- Miss De Carte