Oma ts SOON IE a, eRe ten EN ORR NPP RN RO Ty ee A E PON TIAC PR i WER PAGES. a lath YEAR | xk *- * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, APRIL 9, Lc aa PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS_ INTERNATIONAL NITED PRESS PHOTOS SERVICE = Hospital Trustee Replies to Article on New Addition The following letter from William’ P. Babcock, Chairman of the Pontiac General Hospital Board of Trustees, is in answer to a Pontiac Press comment which appeared in this space Friday. In question is the progress toward construction of ~~ the addition to the city’s hospital. Voters approved a/* $3,000,000 bond issue for the addition Nov. 2, 1964. x * *&* * To"the Editor of The Pontiac Press: - We wish to extend our thanks for the opportunity! _ to answer the questions raised in your front page on Friday, April 6, 1956. The question is “What ‘is biipiaten at the Pontiac City Hospital?” It hasbeen the policy of the Board of Trustees from its initial meeting to invite the-Pontiac Press to its meetings, At these meetings representatives of the Pontiac Press have heard progress reports and commit- tee reports on the building program. The reason for “inviting The Pontiac Press is so that the Press could keep the taxpayers informed of Board of Trustees’ activity. ~ ~« * * * We do not believe.that anyone can or is trying to) deny that the need for hospital beds is both desperate _and immediate. Our position in this respect has not changed. We are sure that it was not assumed by any- one that provision of funds for expansion purposes’ would provide immediate relief. Before bricks can be laid you must have plans;. in this respect the Board should be commended instead of criticized for the number of hours spent in study and consultation with architects, consult- ants, medical staff, operating staff and clergy to provide the best possible service. to future patients and their families along with the best and most efficient working conditions for hospital personnel. | In regard to activities called futile we can only, remind the Press that we are a Board of- Trustees! responsible to a City Commission and that we serve |. loraeli with limitations. One of these limitations was. the hiring of an architect; this authority rested with the City Com- mission. On November 24, 1954, Mr. Leo Heenan was hired as architect, with the provision for hiring a con- joutpost, he charged. sultant. It was the feeling of the Board of Trustees that the recommendation for the hiring of the consultant should remain with the Board rather than the architect, so Mr. William Maybury, then Chairman of the Board of Trustees, conferred with City Officials to change Ordinance 1221 and grant the City Commission author- | ity to hire the consultant, on board recommendation. ‘ke ® * * |Eballah, A spokesman said Egypt of New Raids in Strip by Eaypt | Latest Reported Death ~FoltReaches~-75-—as Tensions Continue JERUSALEM \#) — Egyp- tian charges of an. Israeli raid in the Gaza Strip and commandos kept tensions high ay along the tur- bulent Arab-Israeli borders. The latest reported toll since Thursday in the Gaza area was: 66 Egyptians and 9 Israelis killed, 93 Egyp- tians and at least 23 Israelis wounded, 1 Eeyp- tian captured. The violence continued on the eve of U. N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold’s arrival in the Middle East on ah urgent hunt for ways to restore peace, Hammarskjold received the blessing of Pope Pius XII in Rome today, He speeded up his schedule and orderéd the U. N. truce supervi- sor, Maj. Gen, E. L. M. Burns, to stay on the scene in Jerusalem. Egypt reported a one-hour clash at its Gaza outpost of Deir Hills, \Egyptian-held Gaza Strip. This change was made and the Board of Trustees. proceeded to contact consultants with experience in the! field of ‘hospital construction and planning. From those! contacted the field was reduced to, three; these men) were personnally interviewed by the Property Commit-| tee .and the Chairman of the Board of Trustees. Smith, Hinchman and Grylls, Inc., H.Roessling as consultant, was placed under contract on February 24, 1955. On March 3, 1955, the initial meeting was held with architect, consultant, medical staff" and operating staff, discussing a questionnaire of basic: information. One month later line drawings were presented to the Property Committee of the Board of Trustees, Medical Staff and operating staff. These represented by Mr. Adolf! Israet ordered secret security (Continued | on wn Page 2; Col. 7) had protested to the U. N. Mixed ‘Armistice Commission, An Egyptian army spokesman armored cars ap- proached the truce line after mid- night and Israeli soldiers crossed! on foot into Egyptian territory. The Israelis opened fire with au- tomatic weapons on the Egyptian The Arab commandos struck’ in the night at a number of south- ern Israel points in the Judean the Negev and near the An Israeli army spokesman said the raiders—called Feday- ans — killed one Israeli and wouhded at least six.. He re- ported one Fedayan killed and another captured. Jordan reported two Israelis and two Jordanians killed in qa clash six miles inside Jordan. Israel charged Egypt had _ re- ctuited the Fedayans among Pal-| lestine Arabs living in Gaza refu-| igee camps. measures and threatened retalia- straight day since Burns called for a cease-fire. One Fedayan band attacked an, : rece Fadia Israelis leased Gives Reason |Plaguing State ANN ARBOR (# — Meteorologist) retaliation raids by Arab)- Gas Overcomes Avenue and Square Lake Road were back to work today after a morning, sistant ment. dressing room, | completed, according to the own- pital Earl Agar, 52, of 335 Waldron tion measures unless Egypt guar-|Bivd.; maintenance engineer, New- antees an end to violence. The bor-|ton Bearden, 52, der clashes flared for the fourth|St.; E. Wendell Hewson. of the Univer- sity of Michigan explaines why it is that Michigan now must have tornadoes when it didn't used to be so, especially, 's-aratier ef warn aie massest+ ico in a gradually changing cli- mate. Prof! Hewson warns that Mich- igan now Hes in an expanded U.S. Tornado belt that includes the southern Great Lakes and is extending eastward. igan lie within this belt, Prof. Hewson said, He said: “The extreme weather conditions. leading to tornadoes were primarily further south and to the west in Kansas and Iowa Ohio, Indiana and southern Mich.| _ now penetrate to the Great Lakes; 7 and. New England.” Before 1946, tornadoes were most unusual for Michigan. Now warm, moist air sweeping up from the gulf collides with cold, dry air from the west which hasn't: had time to be modified by—the-ad- vancing sun. The two masses create the critical, unstable con-| dition which gives birth to torna- does. Williamson, (eft) 15, TOPS IN COUNTY — Dress Revue winner at Saturday's 4-H Spring Achievement Day is Grace 3590 Pontiac Lake Rd, Youth Show's Top Dressmaker ag i cup by Stuart Hutchins, 4-H Service Club agent and Gilbert Schrock, president of the Birmingham | Two, Scares 8 Carbon Monoxide Hits Restaurant's Employes; Air Duct Blamed < Ten employes of Ted’s Restau- rant and Drive-In at Woodward carbon monoxide scare Sunday Seven carhops, a cook, the as- manager and a main- tenance engineer had been rushed to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital when two of the girls fainted in a base- All were treated for lack of oxygen when it was discovered that an open air duct had been mistakenly boarded up by con- struction workers, The incident occurred in a-new addition where construction is only two-thirds er, L. M, Little, 70 Devon Lane, | Bloomfield Township, Treated and refeased at the hos-| were: assistant manager, of 577 Peacock! the cook, Mrs. Essie Williams, tenaw County home Life was back to normal Lincoln Junior High School Grace is a member of Waterford Junior Home- makers Club. Here Mrs, Anna B. Brown, Wash- demonstration 4-H Groups Show Projects) at 1956 ‘Achievement Day’ By JANICE HAYHOW mately 1,500 Oakland County youngsters who partici- pated in the annual 4-H Spring Achievement Day at . Fifty-two youngsters received awards for their con- tributions to achievement day exhibits. Pretty 15-year- old Grace Williamson, of 3590 Pontiac Lake Rd., took top honors at the evening Dress Revue style show. fea- ‘turing clothés the 4-H girls had made themselves. - Grace will go to State 4-H Chib week as Oakland|. Dies in Chicago. Mrs. Sewell Avery, 82,| Ill Since September; 2 Sisters Live Here 43, of 461 E. Tennyson Ave. and| the seven girls. They are: Suzen Hindle, 16, of 2833 Colon-) Israel labor camp near Kziot in jat Way; the cook's daughter, _ the southern Negev demilitarized abeth Williams, 17, of the-Tenny- zone, ‘man said. Scout Cool Under Pressure i€ killing one worker and|son address;. wounding three, the army spokes-/of Clarkston; |Auburn Heights; Wilma Clyne, 21, |pital at the age of 82. | Alexandria. 16, of Waterford Town- ship, and Eva Barnes, 37, of 215 N. Cass Ave. | said, waiting to start work at | 9:30 asm, ~—> Bearden...rushed. 7 to the _ room. when other girls screamed, ‘a hot water heater in another part of the basement, fast never knew of the incident. Oakland County Sheriff's deputies and Bioomfield Township police irushed the 10 to the hospital. 'GM Dedicates Warren Technical Center in May ‘tors will dedicate its new Techni-| ical Center May 15-16 at the 330- lacre site in Warren, north of De- troit. GM, said: stone in the country’s modern in-| dustrial history, will pay tribute) to the men and central jsearch, engineering, styling and . |manufacturing—whose efforts con- tribute so much to General Motors’ success.” {Big Florida Forest Fire . Betty Rowland, 20, Marvel Paul, 16, of) of 226 Prospect Ave.; Charlotte} - The girls had been in the room for about half an hour, Little Two of the girls fainted, he said, and Agar and nell. Mrs. Sewell Avery, wife of the former board chairman of Mont- gomery Ward & Co., and former Pontiac resident, died yesterday in Chicago's Wesley Memorial Hos- Born in Detroit, Mrs. Avery was a granddaughter of former Michi- gan Governor Moses Wisner and of \Pontiac merchant Willard McCon- She married Avery in- 1899,' and has since lived in Chicago, Avery, who fought a bitter proxy battle last year with New York financier Louls Wolfson over. trol of the mail order a ¥ Ex-City Resident; jonstration agent for Washtenaw and announced the winners before Junior High School auditorium. Kiwanis Club, Chicago during _ agent, there, T Dig Our Again” Storm Blankets Northeast: Gusts ‘Lash Southwest ‘Black Duster’ Menaces ee By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS © Another winterlike mantle of snow covered much of the northeast to- day while a black blanket of dust swept part of the southwest. Snow-weary New Eng- landers. once again started . with a compact, She was given a presented Grace with a trip to the National 4-H Club. Congress again Sunday for approxi- Saturday. County representative. Ifa winner there, she will go on to the state show and from there, if still a ~|winner, she could compete for national honors. The outfit that brought the top Oakland County 4H. award to Grace was a steel gray wool two piecer, Runners up in the dress revue were Linda Carnutte, Jeanette . Hudson, Judy Eastburn, all first year clothing; Laura Sympke and Maureen Haas, second year clothing; Paula Brunson and Glo- ria Macaluso, third year cloth- ing; Jane Booth, fourth and Judy Crawford and Mary Jane Bouck- aert, fifth, Mrs. Anna B. Brown, home dem- County, was dress revue judge a capacity crowd in the Lincoln itary Bude Increase Urged lke Asks Half Billion to Speed Up Production of Jet Bombers, Missiles — i Hib The. additional halt billion dol- i Ps i i its i bring the defense budget for the fiscal year starting July 1 to more than 36 billion dollars, for the speeded-up heavy bomber!” Families and friends visited the gymnasium there throughout the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) The men had been trying to fix Some 50 customers eating break- DETROIT (INS) — General Mo- Harlow H. Curtice, president of “This dedication, a great mile-| December. she is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Nancy Follansbee of Evangs- ton, Ill., of St. Louis, Mo.; and two sisters, | house, was succeeded by John A. Barr. Mrs. Avery had been fil since Besides her husband, and Mrs. Aria McMillan Mrs. Clinton MeGee and Mrs, Fred L. Ward, both of Pontiac, ‘New 25 Million Aid Loan WASHINGTON (INS) — Turkey will receive a loan of 25 million collars in foreign aid funds as part of the U.S. program to bolster the) - |Bureau reports. Tuesday Forecast: Cool, Possible Rain Today's sunshine will be followed by cloudy skies tonight and tomor- row according to U.S, Weather! pe It will continue to be cool. and there is a chance of rain tomorrow. | Tonight's low will range from 30 to 34 degrees, The high tomorrow will be from 42 to 46 degrees. The lowest temperature preced- program and for construction of facilities in vital defense areas. Eisenhower said the 128 million struction of additional bases for the Strategic Air Comand and for the Distant Early Warning radar network in Canada. The White House said that the President's request for additional defense funds will not unbalance the budget. Eisenhower has said he expects a balanced budget in both 1956 and 1957, © - Mikoyan in Mongolia TOKYO. ® — Peiping radio to- day announced the arrival of First Deputy Soviet Premier Anastas } ing 8 a.m, was 29 degrees, The Mikoyan in Ulan Bator, capital of \defenses and improve the living | thermometer registered 49 at 1 |Outer Mongolia, Mikoyan is wind- standards of its NATO partner.’ ‘p.m. ‘ing up an Asian tour, lars asked by the President will] Term of 12%-15 Years Given by Judge Doty After Guilty Plea John A, Curry, Perry St.; wy! sentenced to Supervisors Will Decide on Petition women of our staff organizations—re- 18-Hour Battle Subdues northeast ; “River, “Jumped fire| a several times, It was| In Today s Press Board to Eye Rochester City Vote Oakland County’s Board of Su- pervisors will appoint new mem- bers from municipalities and elect a new chairman and chairman pro the tem at their meeting tomorrow sealant Conny Cine Bete ing. County News... Editorials ee seeeennnneees eee ye ‘ Sports. dee eeeevecedsegeees 22, 28 Miata el claloe edie adie lid | Theaters | oe rhewne weeira 4 square miles in area, bringing the assessed valuation from the 3 digging out after a spring __ t ee ee ee Ey FF eae 3 3 Set Aad ee at it tad =a eRe ee Pat a ew ae i Ahh, ict . ee a " a +5 3 "at ie Ng SA aR 2 2 pes A ee “ii i" Se ey gs me oe Nate are 2 SSS BE Oe sy ef y if ee j ; eo as J 2 B: 4 ; . We £ ¥ Cf f é i e ; i, ; \ ‘ NDAY, APRIL 9, 1056 eae s ies ae Reem [ihe Dey in Biemingtom \ \Mayor's Election Takes Lead in Tonight's Action THE PONTIAC PRESS, MO Ne ~ z i ontroversial . Busts saben staf ; Virginia | : Ane firginia School’ \()nens Sessions ply on Blackstone by psn Fight for Control Looms; no tor Felix G, W. deWeldon have} Gro : t been offered ‘as a gift to the Col- Reform pOUP Pledges Se tae oy one © He indicated that he would re- lege of William and Mary School] ‘Racketeering Cleanup sansa ttigh Om. | Jease details of the “crime-wave” of Government. a : rvonproten ‘will be ‘ites cath| Witla & few days, but investi The Virginia Art .Commission CHICAGO @—A fight for con- of office at tonight's meeting. | Sit nettnh crests of seat ie merit." Virginia's governor toldinational Union of Operating En- fice for several terms, while Ingra- i. cr the college it couldn't gecept them ham is being seated on the com-| His deparfinent is also still work- without approval of the Art Cem-iboth in their mission for the first time. Dean|ing on the matter of the dag that mission opening today of a. week-long con- Beier bows out tonight as a com-|bit three-yearold Edward Rodgers eek aa ee cater mae] Tem Seman, sxaguated, fe Wee top sihdica ies ahs desea whey gt se vag narra cles ran college accept not ng x neigh- roads and hit trees. fitt bat asa permanent loan. (also was a self-styled reform 1 eae ne otra einy ta (bors, do not agree that it was their +” gee Seats That got around the law, but the |group that pledged a “hot con- duo tonight, with presence of (28 & ted Irish setter that is Vernon Clark, 52, of Flint, was | governor has a bill before him |vention” battle to clean up. cee comeany ‘tficlcis expected (termed “‘very expensive” that killed Sanday in a collision on a | to put a two-year limit on art |union they said is ruled by “vio pooh sng easel bit the boy six times. bs Leelanau County Toad 15 miles | loans. ang end seemenine: pllcae peace The boy is recovering nicely, PS northwest of Traverse City. Sculptor deWelden, who also did| TIGHT GUARD buses would be operated by the|(%? chief said in his press confer. Allan D. Thomas, 20, of New|a famous statue of the Marines} Adding to the convention's new “Suburban m —watae : Lothrop, was killed Sunday when/raising the Iwo Jima flag says: |tenseness wis the assignment to tion, Analysis of the plan for a 30-|°°"" 3 expected ' S his car missed a curve and struck| “It makes no difference to me sree Gio Neate ae muinute achedule with potential cus oni aiioete tatoo Comte will rectity this the-clock police guard tomers, hanging signs on, ther /Thorpes Elude Nef a RE (port. The chiet auggeats, aude Spread_by Mexica eee 2 by Pontiac Press! == tive May 1 starting date, Thorpes were still evading an in- was the Rev. W. R. on - . — Turning 14 Mile road into a 45- |tensive police dragnet Sunday two Pentecostal Church, Emerson at Worthley of Adams Rd. (left to right), district | 0 wide roadway may be First United days Mt. Clemens Sts. Organized in a store building at Sunday School secretary and treasurer; the Rev:-| aecmed wecessary in tonight's pected an 90 W. Howard St., a few years ago, the group _— Albert Abbey, district Presbytor and pastor Of | session, Hearings are slated on | Mr. and Mrs, Floyd Thorpe are Taking part in the ceremony ee ee received the confirmed charter June 16, 1954. The South Tabernacle, Flint: the Rev. C. C. Kirby, | 14 Mile from Greenfield to the |wanted in Michigan in connection Higinio Rivera, 25, of Latsing, church is affiliated with the United Pentecostal district superintendent, Royal Oak and the pastor, | east city limits, as well as Eton |with the embezzlement of $75,000 was killed Saturday when his car Church Inc., with headquarters in St. Louis, Mo. the Rey, Marvin P. Hestor. — from i og —— . Lr igre They fled to Mexico - plowed into a tree off M99, six "s width set at elth- . agi miles north of Eaton Rapids. : . ‘\ as er 31 or 33 feet, Police intensified their hunt over amen andrews, hot |phtogranty Tot F ound Dead Grace Receives Pontiac Deaths The way is clear now for mu-|the weekend, even stopping many } (Rte, 1) Hillsdale, was injured iar VEE VU YUU ic Advi nicipalities to take steps jointly to|tourists in automobiles leaving the ; fatally Friday night when his car plays i ome vice Mea E iF A assure—the construction _ of the|C@Pital. All hotels have been thor- crashed M34, ne . . rs. Earl F. Acre Evergreen Interceptor, according|°ughly checked. - 2 es tee ™ Coming F rom H er Dad to D. Cc. Eghert’s. lengthy oer The Interior Ministry, which han- ee oe. Honor Roll nd nsi ul case * | Mrs. Earl F. (Mabel) Acre, 63,/in tonight's agenda. Egbert points (dies immigration matters, has said e Athur C. Tufts, 16, of Muskegon, | tock, Judy ABOARD §. S CONSTITUTION of 199 Beach St., died suddenly at) out that May 1 is deadline for|the Thorpes are wanted for illegal . was injured fatally Friday night) rie, Dennis-Anne Mother Leads LA Police ®—The father of the bride had) her home Saturday. determination as to method, entry, and not. for embezzling : when a car in which he was &| Owens, Shirley er Leads a heart-to-heart talk with his) Born in Almont on March 31,| 46 submits a resolution for the|charges in the United States. = —~S Passenger missed a curve on a| man, to Lot Where Daughter “@ughter, Grace Kelly, today./1893, she was the daughter of commission's adoption, which de-| The Thorpes have been going un- tive miles north of| Laciile Is Di d A T) Joseph G. and Mary Miller Thurs-\termines to form authority der the name of Mr. and Mrs, El- ______ | Mary Hicks, B iscovere not to let people push her around. _ She aries Earl F. Acre in| with other communities to pro-/er Frank and Kay Frank. Po- , ; , uae sieneiean meses | +--+} Almont in-1915.- —— — - necessary sewage lice_believe _ they have changed. : Friday night) Paula Slocum, all in food ? a LOS ANGELES w—A spitcee| age pot John pred said he! ‘Surviving besides her husband nether It promises the nity would ~ again. “= _ — he | drainage ditch) ration, . lying amid shrubs, geraniufs and told his daughter, “they aren't) are four_children: Mrs. Marjorie|“‘proceed with diligence” to. per-|S4in entry to Me a fede home 18 miles} Judy Crawford took top photog- Sige rpc m ee weeds on a vacant lot was the giving you anything, and don’t let Reuther of Clarkston, Mrs. Bar-|mit the project, working with crime. - raphy honors while the health and) were prevalent in o engineers|"esting Place for the body of 4 that protocol business get you. Be bara Slater, a missionary in the|Bloomfield and Southfield Town-| . ety award went to Karen Bush.lunjon ohich aie Siaes ace year-old Susan Shaw. yourself and do what you want to Belgian Congo, Africa; Maurice|ships, and the cities of Troy, | t p ich Bynes 4-H Girl awards went to Marjorie chinery pera wearntaee ; * * 6 .jdo. You're an American and you) Acre of Royal Oak and Richard|Bloomfield Hills, and Lathrup Vil- nnocen risoner a Crawtord, Jane Booth, Judy Craw-lthroughout the country. _ Detectives were led to the spot/don’t have to do what they want! Acre of Pontiac. lage, Se . spartment and Karen Bush; electrical’ . yesterday by the child’s distraught/you to do. Also surviving are three sisters + +8 _ to Appear on Video to Douglas Lee Norland,|/DENIES RACKETEERING mother, Mrs. Jean Elizabeth ** ¢ - land a-brother; Mrs. Jennie Smith| Chief Moxley blasted the tradi- -Peters, Gerald Londel, Ga Maloney denied there was Pl Towa 35, formerly of Clinton, Kelly dropped into his daugh-|of Lapeer, Mrs. Amy Thompson of|tion of spring vacation for. all) — ILLYWOOD_ (INS) — Roy_E. i Da anarte |Marble and Sandy Wells. [racketeering in the union lowa, who previousty had told if'{a75 stdteroom for 10 minutes’Dryden, Mrs. Lula Rose of Pon.|5*ot children today, as he tried Suspect Re-enacts jtermed as “unnecessary” the po-|Coherently about how “I gassed/atter noon today. Grace, like al-|tiac, George Thurston of Fort t© ‘clear away cases in what he are 'in prison ers heey = lige her . . . I poisoned her . . . I\most every one in the wedding Shaw, Montana and ei rand.|t¢Tmed last week's ‘‘juvenile crime < » . | * ght g - a gg A Deaths | The — an alli wd roll) The selection of Swanson as a hfe about it, it's too hor-/party, slept late after a gay ev- children. wave. . did nove agro peg hae boners , _ fimeluded Judy Charlene | presidential candidate, Wilkens|"#. ning of charades, impersonations| Funeral: will be at 1:30 p. m.| One of the cases involved was “Houseparty” television show to- — Laura. Sympke, CarolyM/and Batalias said, was a “thinly| Mrs. Shaw is held in the psycho-| and si ee ~ . : nging that wound up at 5:30)Tuesday from the Farmer-Sno the $4,000 damaging of a home VICTORIA, Mex, oo bar ig ge mone Bggn ng veiled” attempt to later eleyate|Pathic ward of General Hospitalithis morning. It was the first, Fusorat Home with the Rev. Fred. while the peer were away ~ his arrival yesterday Eat MWikahip, “Sally ‘Taylor [ct't, Weber of Newark, N.J., to/0n a technical booking of suspl-|really relaxed evening she has en-/R. Tiffany officiating. Burial will) £0r the evening, Another case was | sid. . ‘the top spot upon the resignation clon of murder. « « . |soyed since sailing from New'foliow in Hough Cemetery Al-| 8 boy’s driving of a neighbor's mt 1 like a bird fi of i {York to become the bride of! mont , car for 663 miles while the owner mer ates A must feel. Her sorrowing, divorced hus-| prince Rainier II of Monaco : vacat in Florida. I felt that way on the plane coming ford and Carol Rocker. New York labor leader recently|>4nd, Prentice W. Shaw, 42, Clin-| +: * '« : found . out here and I think I'll feel that James Thompson was tops injreleased from prison and forbid-|t" attorney who flew here Satur- Sharon Lee Hartline “School authorities should view|way all the rest of my life.” maintenance and Janelden to er day, probably will learn from an Around midnight. she gathered spring vacation's timing very se- engage in union activities. ie iosy today what killed his'together some two dozen members| Sharon Lee Hartline, 8-month-old riously;” Moxley said. “At. this cles te mle ncagarall en - daughter. Coroner's attendants of her party in one of ‘the liner’s daughter of Robert and JoAnnitime of year there is nothing to ected F SBA Adviser Hints said the little girl had been dead|S™4ll private rooms. They chose|Stockwell Hartline of 314% Perry|drain off the excess ene®gy on the an ta Rock Island, = me , severdl: days. ol 1 played charades for a|St., died yesterday in St. Joseph| part of kids.” : 2 ~~ Sas midedete ico hours. Mercy Hospital after a 10-day ill-| ‘There is no sport activity in| Eaton was in Lordsburg, N. M., were James B. Lyke, Ger- of September Strike REVEALS SPOT ness. — the" between-season period,” he/at the time of the robbery but - ' Mrs. Shaw has been held since She was born July 21, 1955 and/said. “With basketball over, ground|was unable to prove it and was went BAD AXE # — An organizer Friday. Detectives said .she =: State Bea las is survived by her parents. is still too wet for baseball, track|sent to prison the false identi- Busk, q 4 i i : i g | : a | d : 8 | & i i : L: * * ; ! i FE : t Le Fis 3 ur z ¥ | ai tt i He Hil il i 7 of the Fair Share Bargaining U"able or unwilling to say what Funeral will be at 1 p.m. Tues-|4Md other outdoor sports, and the fication ofthe robbery victim. Assn. says the insurgent group of %®4 become of her daughter until day from the Huntoon Fuheral| ij t farmers “will walk the Yesterday when, suddenly under| 7 Sy | cess ac ep er i. Top Field Test. "==" "Hospital Trustee Replies iT i i [ tember unless it obtains $5.50 a e , {hundredweight for raw milk. peti oe ae ee “10: o,e A piece of buman bone was] Special awards went to Judy ae made ter Weide 101 Oe— Host to North William Glenn Kennedy 'to Comment on Addition for | Photography, | the| Homer Martin saic he believed|*e!! 0s,” sald Det. Set. Harry Han- | William Glenn Kennedy, 1%, of Coe, Thnk Fair Share pickets will act again Tea lat only a ahort distance! Association for Two-Day 315 Draper St., died Saturday in] _ (Continued From Page One) . cal displays. This award was pre- ae time the — et from~ the apartment where: she| Event a local hospital. line drawings incorporated the recommendations of Joseph O’Brien, sented Irwin Ranen . had been living with Susan and Born in Pontiac on September Pi : also charged in by pate of Detroit! Martin was a consultant when|- 26. 1954, he was the son of Dex| the meeting of March 3, 1955. Bloomfield another daughter, Pamela, 11. : : the rebelling -group within the) 1 was Pamela who last Wednes-|_ TW° Michigan dogs were win- ter and Phyllis Bower Kennedy. _The time table as outlined in The Pontiac Press Sourviving besides his parents editorial of April 6, 1956 is, for all practical purposes, not brought along. He has steadily|for winning the model business/yyichigan Milk Producers Assn. lay told officials that ething| ers in the Northern Association's the tourists. ‘ The latter award was announced The pots broke down last Tues-'~ ot other had ale mae and cay. Gal. jare two brothers, James and Dex: | correct Now let us review the time table and the id her sister was dead. A h ae “|ter Joseph. . and presented by Horace Hatfield! 4 but Fair St chained an. er rT Ww e searc | Ser Jo ph Cha | and the Bloomfield Lucky Hores|Victory in “forcing” the bara Baw wes notified and land County Sportsmen's Club was’, oot somvice was held this/Progress using the dates on which events would have mber to Launch a an eer eae ones for han-| TSanization to get the price of * + * * «8 . host for the event. ; on me even morning from the Brace-Smith Fu-occurred, had they fallen on the exact date. ° . dicraft exhibits. bulk top grade milk hiked from) He told police his wife developed) They were a male, owned bylter Hone Cowen followed in March 3, 1955—‘Green light” given to architects. Membersh Drive Achievement booth winners were|$441 to $5. The strikers had de-ja psychosis shortly after Susan|Fred Dickie of Melvindale, in the. ~ *: March 17, 1955—Tentative plans returned. Sue Tobin Frank ‘ manded a, $6.50 price. _ |was born and had once been con-| 13-inch class and Paul's Chum, . app alae re ‘+ fined in a mental sanitarium. He| owned and handled by the 10-year Connie Yvette Thomas May 7s, 1985 —Ereliminary' Diane finished: Ro . Jan. 17, 1956—Final plans presented to City Com- Connie Yvette Thomas, infant ‘three-day to Martin, former president of the : 4- . obtained an Iowa divorce last 'No-| old Paul Verhinee, Jr. son of the membership will be launched by|%" @uring their H careers. 1 | : United Auto Workers union, told|vember, winning custody of his! Detroit Beagle Club secretary, in a Vv the Pontiac Chamber of Com-| County 4H members who will |, meeting of between 400 and 500/daughters and a son, now in Clin-| the 15 a Gass. : \daughter of Chester and Erma mission. Actually, plans were presented and approved projects to the state (dairy farmers at Bad Axe Satur/ton, But Mrs, Shaw had disap-| Runnersup 13-inch, rrr re Smith of 293 Delwood St.,, by the City Commission on February 14, 1956. take their officials and volunteers will gather! show include Karen Bush, Jane “ died in Pontiac General Hospital é : t f ga me that a ~ just started peared with her daughters last cliffe’s Jerry, owned by Jack Wil-| yesterday. P * * . * * te to Chairman William| ¢ Norland, Margaret Wiggins, id, . son of Dearborn and Bill's Bambi. | Besides her parents, she is sur-| According to the time table, six to eight weeks was oa amar te, organization will seek, Chatiene Sudia, Elaine Latoft, ae pagers mer lke Asks Bipa rfisan owned by Bill Werner of Wyan- vived by two sisters and a brother; contemplated for bid submission. March 17, 1956 would to enroll new Carolyn Bowers, Lauta Sympke, . dotte. |Sue Carrol Alderson, Evelyn Jua- , members from Judy of the insurgent group. Fach class had 55 entries for \nita Alderson and Toni Alderson,|"#Ve been the date on which bids were closed; actually, ee Cj il Rj h p a tetal field of 110 beagles, all all of Pontiac. ee 19, 1956 will be the day on which bids: will be * Give, “Bemberhip now numbers! Judges for the day inctoded es COMMIsSIONELS Plan [LIVI RIGhtS Program | s wsicn were yut about « sear |, Prayer service wil be at 1 am. closed. They will be reviewed by the City Commission : oes = memmertalte_o ; anal EASHINGTON-@)-— ‘The Eisen} at — A wes setation thie. Funeral Home with. the Rev. J,,9Nd the Board of Trustees on April 24, 1956. The con- The Chamber enrolled 158 dur-|*istan ty agri Election of Officers , ihe Biggest — /Allen Parker officiating. Burial will| tract can be let by May 1, construction can start June Fi { it . § i : i E 4 7 / PETES i : al agent; M , Liv. hower administration today asked) tory, Despite weather conditions — i : , , ing a similar campaign last year./ 06" mn Ang rage tes ss - Congress to — Ching civil] the running held close te sched- follow in Oak Hill Cemetery. 1 and allowing eighteen months to construct, the date a | Mrs. Josephine Lawyer, Oakland) Pontiac's mayor and mayor pro-jrights program ing crea-| ule beth days. | of contemplated compeltion will be-November, 1957 as P County consumer +|tem will be elected tonight as the/|tion of a bipartisan commission t - i wi ’ : __ The Weather Coty conguimer marketing agent ee cd City. Comlanion|inrestionte “indieidual arieveme: | Winners here (four places and Daniel C. Williams projected in the official Board of Trustees minutes of * * ? i he = inter- , trict extens: perifite athers for their first session. reserve) qualify for t Daniel C, Williams, 69, of 3% E. : schools; onl Heronal screbes fer The only other action expected] The proposals, submitted by|ationals at Pittsburgh April 21-22. Sheffield Ave., was dead on ar- March 3, 1966 . ron Valley School agricultural in-|at the 7:30 organization meeting|Atty. Gen. Brownell, include cre- fe the ecent inctuded|"“*! at Pontiae General Hospital _ The time schedule was, public property on “tae |Structor. will a aparece of — nage = ame civil righte gue jas eee on ah an] Saturday. March 3, 1955. Although exact dates were not met Others were Roger Oberg, Ox-)mem to a one-year term n ustice Department, to . Born in Bad Axe on April 15, . ford High agricultural instructor; (resenting the city on the County/function under an additional: as- Charles Chapman for the 15-inch | 1956, hs Wek Ge aun at Jet and for each specific item, we feel that we are reasin Warren Kendall, Rochester conser-|Board of Supervisors. sistant attorney pare. class. Janett Livingston Williams. ably close to our goal of completion during Novem- ‘}vation_officer; James Mahar Presen About 300 took part in the as- . "jtiac Press; Mrs. Frank aes cucuian range brah es A third specific proposal would) sociation’s banquet and’ program. He is survived by two children: ber of 1957. Mrs. Walter Wolfgang, Mrs. Du.|R. Boyer and Willis Brewet. City|Provide that citizens who feel| Saturday night in OCSC’s club-| Mrs. Virgil Nitzschke of Iron Moun In regard to federal aid, we were confronted with a ' z tain and Charles M. Williams of ; ane Robison and Mrs, Harvey San-| Assessor W, R. Ransom, Director|their ‘constitutional rights have house at Waterford. — Milford. Also surviving are six|!{0Tmula not-adaptable to our particular area. This Ore. hee ee ie club lead-lot Finance Oscar Eckman and/2*0) seen whe thelr com. ont grandchildren and a brother,{formula penalized us for our ingenuity, namely the torne . Ewart tan! Williams pétior, son stat, Oakland County ‘home sees ann Arar by the|Plaint. Under present law, euch Couple Hospitalized Tanty .B- Williams of Supetior, transformation of a 110 bed facility into one of 198 beds. tion groups and county’ city charter. recourse is available only after Our case was not considered without merit, but met 4H leaders, tem/|can be shown that all state ad- Funeral will be at 11 am. . si . WEE BB, Biers reared. tolr trang en brent yhry judicia) rem. as Car Leaves Road Wednesday from the Voorhees-|With reluctance of a governmental agency to change a Ample Vaccine Supply ers to a two-year term. Mayor|dies: have been exhausted with- ‘ wite both Siple Funeral Home with the Rev.|formula to meet our demands. Sie ie pole Rifor Senutior Predicted . (faut %, Deslens st Move ag aa are in fair condition in St. Joseph Burial will low in White Chapei|, During the planning period all parties concerned ani DETROIT (INS)—A U.S, Public|Posts during the term just Stiles School Entered Mercy Hospital today after theit! Cometery, have been conscious of-a continuous rise in building ot temperetath ts ivessesssess Tui Health official sstentes {pleted 3 PG eggs “ costs. Of necessity, numerous changes were made to Mempensfare ssscccvscosriseris Be , vaccine __|Empty Vending Device keep costs at a minimum and still provide an adequate ° ‘Juveniles apparently id - cor = for this community. “4 J at ma in ANY PIANO - Rent o Betsy Ross or Galbransen SPINET PIANO : ; OF YOUR CHOICE ty _ $20 Deposit, $10 Monthly Cartage and Allowed on Purchase of Piano GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. . 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Hap fae aE THE PONTIAC PRESS, 2 ils ee Spr eee ly ceaictei ys : ye? i MONDAY, APRIL 9, 1956 Your PTA Is Planning: Has 2-Vote Lead Tax Limitation Raise Chalks up 465 - 464; ‘Family Circles, Film, to Be Shown WATERFORD TOWNSHIP. — The Lambert PTA meeting is slated for Thursday night, with a ily Circles.” Frieda Huggett will be thodera- Nor for the panel dibcussion which ,| will follow, ° Third grade home room moth- ers will serve refreshments. Dryden The PTA here will meet.at 8 |p.m, tonight for election of officers. A musical program, under the direction of Richard Krebs, will in- clude offerings by elementary stu- dents. Clarenceville “Juvenile Delinquency” was if Paes TT i : iti ¢ “ os is 3 i F} s { fis H Dryden Clubs Slate Goodwill Speaker, Tea DRYDEN — Russell Albrecht of ‘the Goodwill Industries at Flint will speak and show pictures at the Méthodist Church here at 2 at Lambert the theme of the recent talk giv- The judge’s solution for a better youngster is having the family “eat together, live together and pray together.” ++ * @ Persons were present from other “lClarenceville Clubs and PTA groups, Set New Goals in Library Drive Planners at Walled Lake Step Up Compaign; to Meet Wednesday WALLED LARE—As the Library Planning Board moves a step eloser to its objective, decisions have been made to step up the drive here for book and cash dona- py were "He ‘wil explain the work of the Dryden Clubs. Tea will be served after the pro- Auburn Heights Club | Dinner Meeting Due breed, 6:38 p.m will be games during the evening. Final arrangements have been made for a rummage sale to be held in the near future but dona- ‘tions are lagging, Persons requiring pick-up may call Mrs, Albutn Davis, FE 2-5724, ‘of more residents in this-area. * fe * These goals were established at the latest meeting of the board in the home of Mrs. Harold Bailey, -|Im attendance was Paul Meredith, who offered legal advice to the board. While the treasury balance ie mains at a very low figure, book donations are now coming in, according to Mrs. Omar Joramo, a member of the board, The list of donors includes Mrs. J. R. Butler, Mrs, Gunnar Nettala, Mrs. Jerome Foss, Mrs. Forrest Sims and Mrs. I. F. Stott. Board members hope to estab- lish a library in a room at Walled Lake’s junior high school on Pontiac Trail as Soon as pos- sible. rent problems and to formulate new plans, The possibility of stag- said.jing a membership drive, with the! issuance of library cards, will be, under discussion. -+ship—-operations--were— $91,614 less tions and to attract the interest) The board will meet Wednesday evening to seek solutions to cur- Southfield Sets $515,000 Budget Meets No Opposition From Residents; No Tax Hike for Operations SOUTHFIELD—Budget expendi- tures of $515,000 for the coming year met with no ‘serious opposi- tion from the more than 150 resi- dents attending the annual meeting in Southfield high wheel Friday night. Funds spent last year for town- — $423,376. No tax increase is contem- plated by the Township Board for township operations, however the budget has yet to have the | approval of the Oakland County Allocations Board. Among other things the budget set aside $34,750 for road main- tainence. More money was allotted for the. Franklin Fire Department) standy-by service; $7,500 for civil defense; $25,300 for two new police cars and two additional policemen, and $10,000 for a Parks and Rec- ‘reation department, To Sell 3 Schools, Sites, Near Holly HOLLY — Three more of the rural school buildings and sites in the northwest part of Oakland County are to be sold. They are those in the former Newark and) Stony Run districts in Holly Town- ship, and the Covill district in Springfield Townahig. * « These districts now are included in the Holly Area Schools consoli- dation, and their pupils are trans- Holly or Davisburg. Thomas Woman Named ported to the new schools either at! iturned today from a 10-day Easter t Easter Vacation to Vote on Decisive Policy | WASHINGTON (—Congress re- vacation for a decisive election: year showdown on farm policy. THOMAS — Mrs. Phillip O'Dell! of Thomas was installed as secre- tary of youth work at the annual! meeting of the WSCS for Port lattended. END OF THE (DRAG) LINE? — As workmen finished construc- os Wee: tile along a 600-foot stretch on Atlantic street. Four times the main drag-line Farm Bureau to Discuss School Financing WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP-—The Farm Bureau here will hold its regular meeting Tuesday, in the basement of the White Lake Pres- bytérian Gureh, | hess meeting will follow. Alex Dal- ton will lead the discussion on “How should schools and school construction be financed?’ County B Births retnager and Mrs. re. en is Mills Rae | " ghelia — ana new “ RR ao e supper at 7:30 p. m., and the busi-| tion on a new sewer line on Atlantic street, Milford, th@y stood help- ~ Tile Work Laas as Drag Line 500 Down Four Times MILFORD—Workmen have had| nothing but trouble in laying sewer) brought in to complete the job. Workmen. would just get going on one stretch, then during the night it would rain and they would come back to work in the morning to find the drag line had slipped off the special mats into the mud again. After one flash flood recently, traffic had to be re-routed at that on the side slipped into the cave-in. New fill dirt brought if last fall heavy equipment, foreman Jack Holms. Construction of the sewer line is just about completed for the new Jack Hyman 80-home proj- ect and the weary crew is more than grateful. Ti, formerly St., was held today at 2 p.m. |#t Home for Funerals, with Deaths i in Nearby Communities there. He died Saturday at his, home in Corunna. practically disappeared in the soft mud and finally another old cater- pillar-type drag line had to be point due to. water rushing down from surrounding hills. Walls of the. 30-foot ditch -caved-in and tile fora new real estate development ‘is the cause for the sinking of according to What should have taken a few Surviving is one daughter, Aurdey at home; a son Russell of Ohio - ~ +. é = 4 * 6 R= 7 * & lessly by and watched the big 2% for the fourth time. hard work, Holms said, crane that was stuck in the mud, ton drag line sink into the soft mud days. was extended into months of,;into a main telephone cable lead- pr. ing to homes east of Milford and State University physician, report-‘ter home at St. out service over the weekend. the boom on the crane. smashed | — Suffers Face Injury in 2-Car Accident Chicago St., Pontiac General Hospital. 35, of 51 Elwood ‘St., St. 4 Two Persons Injured in County Accident Murphy,° 23, of 2460 Hoover struck a parkd car operated George Badalutz, 1048 Union sheriff's deputies, “Itions, Ella Murphy, 45, suffered chest injuries and bruises, Shewas treated and released by Pontiac. General Hospital. ; To Be Pastor's Guests: J. P. Wallace Jr., 32, of 109 W.: sufefred mouth lacera- tions, bruises and a loss of teeth in a two car accident Sunday at 1:20 a.m. on Joslyn at Madison, He was treated and released by, Police said the Wallace vehicle struck the rear of a ca¥ owned and operated by Virginia Lee Osborne, as she was making a right turn into Madison Two persons suffered minor in-. juries and bruises in a two car crash Saturday night on Union Lake road in Commerce Township.. A vehicle driven by Patrick H. road, according to Oakland County Murphy was treated at the scene for chest, head and knee lacera- | ithe bill back to the With Congress ready to act this jweek, President Eisenhower called: \Republican congressional leaders ite the White House to map strate- Huron District at Mt. Clemens re-|&Y for the farm bill fight due to cently. Three hundred members |resume in the House on Wednes-| iday. During the Easter recess a Sen- ate-House conférence committee | worked out a — of dif- fering farm proposals. PRESENTATION TO BUY BOOKS — H. W. Schone, and Dudley H. Moore, past president of the Auburn Heights Lions Club, represented the Lions at a recent presentation of a $250 check to the new Avondale Junior High School. ame prese ntation made by ,on Tuesday afternoon. secretary, annie Seintns Orenb Phote (right to left) Schonle to Tom Selhost, student council fl president, and Mrs, Reva Butson, school librarian. Moore looks on. The money was raised through. a Lion-sponsored donkey ball game in February and wil be weed to purchase books ball the school library. KEEGO HARBOR — The Roose-; Return From Ten- Day velt School PTA will present the’ ney, program) annual Mother-Daughter School will be dismissed at 2 30) land the program will-folléw at 2 2: 45 in the gymnasium. The sc hool buses will run at that time. A tribute te the daughters wal | Mental Health Film Slated for Public ? OXFORD — An educational film on_mental health will be shown at ‘the Daniel Axford Grade School | here Tuesday night at 8. be given by Mrs. Edward Pen- The story of ‘Sleeping Beauty” will be given by Eins in the fourth grades. Other items on the prgoram are: | A skit entitled “To Mother”— ’ The rhythm band—square danc- ' ing and the sixth grade giris | chorus will sing. Sharon Flem- | ming of the seventh grade will sing a solo. _ The program is under the direc- ‘tion of Mrs. Dreama Royal, music instructor of the school. All mothers and daughters are cordially invited to attend. Seventh grade room mothers and i daughters are hostesses. The showing is sponsored by | The catch-all bill thei emerged the Oxford District Home Dem- Jackson Group to Meet was pronounced “unacceptable to! me” by Secretary of Agriculture | Benser‘on Saturday after confer-| ring with Eisenhower. Press Secretary James C Hagerty said Eisenhower has not reached a final decision. Although Eisenhower has taken ‘ no formal stand on the comprom- ise bill, Sen. Aiken (R-Vt) others have said it faces qa presi- dential veto unless Congress modi- lfies its proposals to bring them more in line with the principles espoused by the administration. House GOP strategy is to send conference group ‘‘with instructions."’ That re- iquires a majority of the House to vote for a substitute which would |be acceptable to the President. Fi- |senhower said last week he would |be satisfied with something ithan ‘‘perfection.” College Kids Healthy EAST LANSING — College students generally are healthier, heavier and taller than other youths in the same age bracket, Robert Monfort, Michigan’ less When workers tried to raise the|hundreds in the area were with- ed to College health center direc- He itors meeting at MSU. venience. are out of traffic a and Rd Drive right up—stay in your car. Just one thing, please be patient they'll serve you in just a few seconds. onstration Groups. The public is invited to attend. | This is to be a visual demonstra-' ‘tion of how drugs aid in mental health. After Car Hits Tree Charles Kelty, 18, of 7045 Howell . was reported to be in fait condition at Pontiac General Hos- pital today after suffering sible internal injuries when his car left the road and struck a tree, at Airport and Wilson Streets Sun- day at 3 a.m. Waterford Township police re i ported the Kelty vehiele went off the left side of the road and wr he evidently had lost control of the 7 car. . Funeral for Frank Knight to Be This Thursday FARMINGTON (INS) — Funeral service for Frank J. Knight. 64, president of the Frank J. Knight Construction Co., will held Thursday. Knight died Saturday in his win. Petersburg, Fla. at 26701 Drake, Farm- be live d ‘ington. nd under cover pos- | if the. girl Try us WHITE LAKE. TOWNSHIP—The Jackson Boulevard Home Exten- sion Group will meet with Mrs. William Jarvis at 1p. m. Thurs- day. Mrs. Eart Halliday and Mrs. Wilfred Modjeska will give the les- son on ‘‘Care of Fabrics.” ———_—s Sheriff Irons to Speak ORTONVILLE — Sheriff Frank Irons will be the speaker when 'Farm Bureau members meet for, \their regular meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the George home on Oakwood road. “os Her dayghter Susan will | give the tribute to the mothers, | Koester | Congress Plans [Gother-Daughter Day |Announces 3 Farm Showdown! Tuesday at Roosevelt April Concerts Spring Event Friday at North Branch; Others by 100 Piece Band NORTH BRANCH — School band director, Irvin Bard, announces that the annual spring concert of the junior, intermediate and senior bands will be held at the school auditorium Friday evening. A 100-piece band, composed of the combined bands of the North Branch and Yale high schools, will give two concerts the last week in April. They will play at the Nerth Branch school auditorium Wed- nesday evening, April 25, and at the Yale school auditorium | Thursday, April 26. Albert Peppel is the director of the Yale groups, and Bard leads the North Branch bands. St. Ann Guild to Plan for Summer Bazaar | METAMORA — The meeting of St. Ann Gujld will be held at the |home of Mrs. Henry Rheaume, 4149 | Mill St., Dryden, at 7:30 pm. Wed- inesday. Plans will be made for a bazaar to be held during the sum- mer. The Guild's Easter bake sale Metted $31. FREE! SiESTat a For Family of 3 . ~ Disneyland See Details in Wednesday's Pontiac Press. ’ TRIP . IT’S FREE! No “bad” weather can touch you. BE OUR GUEST -- BE LAZY TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR “EASY TO USE — EASY FOR YOU” CAR HOP SERVICE Qur-peppy, pleasant girls will quickly take your clothes and you can relax, knowing that your precious garments will get the best dry cleaning treatment possible. Our boast is that Huron Dry Cleaners New Drive-!n Store is complete and completely different. ~-Automations=Here everything ist ‘cautomatic except the help—everything planned for your con- The drive-in window saves you: time and effort. You “‘car-hop” don't get to you immediately. We promise QUALITY CLEANING COST NO MORE! Main anes and Plant: 944 West Huron Street 2G HURON DRY CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDRY One - Day Cleaning Sevive at Main Office FE 2-0231 : "BE SURE AND ASK FOR YOUR COLD BELL GIFT STAMPS . - _T1 Neighborhood Stores to, Serve You tS tnt itera chairman, pictured” ’ note.of the session despite tremen- Senators Sketch Session Results of 1956 Legislature’ "LANSING dF — ‘The accomplish) lope crea Sarporatons —tay-whtes ments and- failures of the 1956 Leg Sen. Creighton R. Coleman of ” face the big problems of today.” make high risk loans to hard pressed businesses. Airport aid. : Battle Creek, Republican caucus rm ‘the session as “most productive’ and as writing a “proud” record. The Legislature adjourned Saturday.‘ Responsibility has been the key- dous pressures to force the Legis- lature into irresponsible and ill- ee ee Aid Program to Asia May Force Red Switch PASADENA, Calif. W—A United States program of aid to Asia might force Russia to change its policy of “forcing their way of life on others,” former ECA administrator, —told; the alumni assn. of California In- stitute of Technology. : Such a program would enable new Asian democracies to attain economic - and political stability, Hoffman said. This, he added, would force Soviet leaders to start thinking in terms of building a bet- ter life for their own people rather than forcing their way of! life on others, British Actress Weds Producer Sy Bartlett PALM SPRINGS, Calif. ® — A London romance led to marriage for British actress Patricia Owens, 24, and Hollywood writer-producer Sy Bartlett, 47. They were married ina civil ceremony Saturday at the home of oilman-producer Jack Wrather and! his wife, actress Bonita Granville. It was the second marriage for Paul Hoffman,|‘ Ryan said the 1956 meeting would go down as a “do nothing Legislature. In one area, Coleman and Ryan approached agreement. That was on appropriations. HIGHEST IN HISTORY “The budget this year will be the highest in history, necessitated by tremendous increases in pepula- tion and the betterment of hospital, educational and other vital-state services;” said Coleman. a * *” Ryan said higher education fared at the treatment than has been custo- mary.” Among achievements singled out by Coleman were: Provision of regional diagnostic centers for the mentally ill, Transfer of Wayne University from the City of Detroit to state control. A $10 a month old age pension increase. Higher workmen's compensation payments. . A constitutional amendment bar certain felons from Legislative service. STATE INSURANCE Recodification of state insurance and drainage laws. Bond issue power to public air- S Miss Owens and the third for Bartlett. ports for new buildings. tional school from Lansing. . A record large capital improve- ment program. Ryan cited a number of “things What Will Be Next? Reading Hurts Kids! TULSA, Okla, #—A Los. Angeles optometrist sa¥s children should not be allowed to read before they are eight years old. * * * the Oklahoma Optometric Associa- ition convention, said schools should have simply a “play pro- gram" for children until they reach eight. _ “Reading is a visual skill of the highest order,’ he said. ‘‘The eyes of a child are not mature enough to cope with the printed page be- fore he is eight. * * “When he is forced to _ start learning to read at five or six, he develops habits that must be un- learned at a later age." Smithsonian Institution Given Prized Termites - WASHINGTON (INS) — The _ |Smithsonian Institution anounced today it has been presented with a prize collection of 230,000 termites. The Department of Agriculture gave the bugs to the museum, It took a department scientist 46 Authorization of creation of deve- years to collect them. “The removal of the boys voca-| |__Dr, Louis Jaques Sr., addressing) which we Democrats wanted to do, but which the Republican leadership refused to do,” in- cluding: : Facing up to the problem of RIL. 9, 1956 " BIGGEST BUY OF ALL FINE CARS... Pe f THE YEAR ~AHEAD CAR! | ‘automation. Extension of state help to coun- ties hard pressed to finance - food surplus distribution. * * ” Accept the seal of quality pro- posal for promoting the sale. of prime state farm products, Mandatory motor vehicle safety Linspection. : A state chronic disease hos- pital. State matching funds for local medical clinics, A chronic. diseases research A $1.2 minimum wage. Resettl t grants for the job- HERE'S DRAMATIC PROOF WINDSOR V-8 OFFERS MORE THAT'S NEW THAN ALL COMPETITIVE CARS C THAT THE CHRYSLER OMBINED! eet Yours for the price ofa medium price car... or even a. fully equipped “low price” carl less in distressed areas. Tightened industrial safety laws. * * * A state labor relations law, Adequate unemployment com- pensation. Williams, Harriman | to Attend Capital Dinner WASHINGTON — Governors Williams of Michigan and Harri- man-of New York will be dinner companions at a Democratic fund- raising $100-a-plate function here April 21. ; * » * Both are regarded as potential presidential nomination candidates. | They aren't down for speeches at) the dinner, however. i CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES TALLEY MOTOR SALES, Inc. 32 S. Main St., Clarkston rs “PowerStyle” = instant Heating System* | YES | NO | NO | NO | NO | NO % Ane ance 9 re 8 ons el CH RYSLER | — BIGGEST BUY OF ALL FINE CARS! MAple 5-5141 1001 N. Main St., Rochester OLive 2-9111 The Democratic_national com-| mittee announced that Williams | and Harriman were among sev-/ linvitations to attend. eral governors who have accepted’ THE SENSATIONAL ino EUREKA poly cart” Roitt Easily From Room Te Reem On 4 Rubber Swivel Ball-Beering Wheels Only EUREKA Gives You ALL These Advanced Features New Double-Size Throw-Away New Style Deluxe Tools with Paper Dust Bag Light Vinyl Hose New Cyclonic Air Action New Easy-Glide Rug Nozzle New Zip-Clip Open-Easy Top New Step-On Toe Switch - New 4 Rubber Swivel Wheels New Power—Lighter Weight 4 + SPECIAL. INTRODUCTORY KING-SIZE TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE See live demonstration at our store at once, _ With New DOUBLE-SIZE Throw-Away Dust Bag «. + New Powerful CYCLONIC Air Action... Dramatic New Styling in Decorator Colors! Exquisite new beauty—modern design—modern new features. throughout! New DOUBLE-SIZE throw-away dust bag provides for more cleaning power...lets you do twice as much cleaning... reduces replacement bag costs 50%! The new 1956 EUREKA Super Roto-Matic’s powerful new 7. CYCLONIC Air Action prevents clogging of dust j bag—keeps suction power at high cleaning efficiency. | | 95 Complete with New Deluxe Tools , { i i j 3 | REGULAR PRICE $69.95 HURRY! Only timited Number! i i : | eee ME-305-51 NY +} 1 i. ‘ ~ NORGE Special-of-the-Month! - On this 1956. e RGE UTOMATIC . ee . Look ot These Great NORGE Features! ® Exclusive Time- Line Automatic Control ® Perfect 5-Way Active Warm ___Water Rinses! # For Limited Time Only a A BRAND NEW.’56 & Built-In } Suds Saver — "2 YEARS TO Lerge box of famous “all’’—the modern detergent made expressly for automatic washers—given with every Norge washer at no extra ~tost! “All” has many other uses cround the house, too. : -_ | Box of ff included! Your Electrical Appliance Specialist NE GAB OPEN MONDAY snd FRIDAY ‘ "NIGHTS UNTIL PM. oes Work \ ! : sd é I % 23 8 Por ™ ey Pe a? oe | yd 5 A ee a ee ‘ tal aes f gf d cul : d ? , THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 9, 1956 iis iy, fad as i) ij PEOn COE. OR ge aa ‘ , os Railroad Emplo Hoffa Moves South Chests Death 3 Times for. Organizing Drive |, xzazony, ses comnes ‘DETROIT Wh — Thé Teamsters|*4ing to work. His train was in Union's James Hoffa plans a trip|? Collision. Thirteen were killed, south which he says is.to be for| Ut he escaped injury. - intensive organizing with the help} He, and others, transferred to ot the Lonshoremen's Union. 7 * * collision. Again, he was not in- Hoffa, a vice president of the! tured. is n offer|Teamsters, made known his plans} A few days later he fell asleep 1. ds now bel argh Joye in an interview in which he indi-| while smoking.. He suffered leg et no con oy oo cated the role of the longshoremen | burns—not serious. : é no elastic belts, or|™ay be vital. inter bends, 2 folds rupture! + oe geared hecige yt Pp be A up lly Pe porno rl ae ports so we can halt nate fo 5 my i fe wees Bg Any}/0ading of non-union ports. It's as . . Fav eet ihe|simnle as that.” Clothing Contracts m for 30 so Re rnpayd an in the lime- nO cost... If 7 Oro ee ee teed eee veiw ne| WASHINGTON (INS) ~ A Sen- eee be se tcltop control spot of the Teamsters Rengsrgpcamine a ae : "truss for. your|Union, An offer by Hoffa of a big|D#™8s . oe yo dolls i ale. are ruptured just}joan to the Longshoremen’s Union|"0" W!). millions of collars | write | an’s Appliance fieured in the picture. The Army contracts awarded to New Co, Koch Bldg. 2906 Main) - |York and New Jersey clothing - ‘Bt. Ks City for their|4F1-CIO is not on the best terms), trial, : ra pia ad with the Longshoremen's Union. | - © ee However, after the recent Hono-| public hearings by: the investiga- meeting of the Teamsters’ top tions subcommittee are set for to- brass, Beck announced he was still| morrow as a continuation of the pin the leader's position and Hoffa group's search for graft in mili- “SYLVANIA TV another train which also had a) TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR: | | JUNIOR EDITORS ee re ot HOLLAND IN SPRINGTIME—1 Katrina Among the Tulips =: WO OEE DOWN agreed. tary _ procurement , i proc " aT ELECTRO MART 4 Chief Counsel Robert F. Kennedy ie ae ‘Graham to Ask TV Ban told newsmen yesterday the in- FE 2-3781 ; Trial quiry stems from tips obtained, Lt ‘of Proceedings at Trial |otter eartier hearings on alleged , DENVER (INS) -- John Gilbert | “payoffs” by Chicago hatmaker | Graham was scheduled to ask/ Harry Lev and other contractors; Denver District Judge Joseph M.|to Army procurement personnel. | What better time to visit Holland than in spring when the tulips are in bloom? : Tulips thrive there and the Dutch have been growing them for, J several hundred years. They are shipped all over the world. The display of lovely blooms attracts many visitors, and here is| ff MeDonald today to ban all tele-| that can make you feel yes, ge Sn burning /Saturday to have signed an affi- |davit that TV coverage would| ‘aoa wane remaining before the start of. the fommon Kidney and Biad- bir SS dk Bek ser aie seoeeed. secondary Sapo as hendache and nervousness, such cases usua, Saeiecomminraet. acid po mag and . bitten Grek rrevens today under money-back guarantee. - how much better you feel tomorrow. ” i airliner. in retail value last year. vision coverage from his: forth-| under investigation except icoming murder trial. ithey were located in New York, | in-gold. 00 en Graham, with just one week| Brooklyn and southern New Jersey. | For the first of a series of cutouts on Holland, color this picture trial, was said by his attorneys Oj Output Record 2 ud ° vice " 2 ue a ‘ . r " as Ha 1 “4 . e ite. 7 “ey thor = , blowing up pd Pong net = Toonthe "of es |through the dotted lines of the edges of the basket too, and then you " Ow" bs vt i ; jnearly 10 per cent more than the} {first half of 1954 and 20,000,000) Unde the handle. Didmonds rose 5 to 7 per cent tons above the comparable period in 1953. He did not identify the firms Katrina, a Dutch girl of Veere, gathering some of her tulips for sale. / to say In years gone by, tulip bulbs were sometimes sold for their weight iwith crayons. Remember tulips come in almost all colors from white jon cardboard and cut out all the parts carefully. CAIRO — The Middle Mae's ee The single flower at the right top corner can be slipped into = i : i } J besa! i pac ite thar. ° - : ne Cu G G he can put the big spray of flowers at the upper left into the basket, Fold the two bottom panels forward, and the left panel back. | Then Katrina will sit up properly. Betty J. Curtis of Birmingham submitted this idea. Send your | and FRIDAY ‘til 9 | (Violet Moore Higgins; AP Newsfeatures) Tomorrow: A Dutch Windmill That Turns for You \" for Junior Editors to this newspaper. It may be worth $10, Another Hollywood Attraction Mr., Miss U.S. A. Contest to Show Muscles, Curves | HOLLYWOOD (INS)—Hollywood,;"‘clean and jerk cocktail,” “‘squat | through red to a purple that is nearly black. Then paste the picture aoe ee ee ~~" ~ DRY. CLEANERS IT’S SPRING CLEANING TIME 1. Garment is clean and color free of ony dingy cost. 2. Garment contains no odor from any source, a may be removed safely. Garment is free from ell Garment is well shaped and hangs properly. cae No wrinkles, seams or button impres- sions. . Pleets are sharp and even and size is correct. 7. Alterations and minor repair. 8. Buttons and occessories correctly replaced, ° 9. Garment is completely wearable. 10. Customer's special instructions have been carried out. © Special Attention Given Draperies, Blankets, Formals, 2-6424 Knitwear (Boxed) : CITY WIDE PICK-UP and DELIVERY QUICK SERVICE - PLUS ON REQUEST! | ____ MONITE WE GIVE Office and Plant | sia ao HOLDENS | 941 Joslyn, at me extra cost RED STAMPS Pontiac . $e.6OUN, the original home of crazy cocktail | fizz" and ‘passion fruit juice.” 2 es b : ) Aly r Pp parties, will have something new in| aia =e ra i Ena. REs> Ces ‘that field next Wednesday—an aft-Home Attracts Wildlife " ™ A Clay, OKp On ernoon bash featuring vegetable; SHATTUCK, Okla. W — George Ny DEp Ary |juice potions swoozled by muscle Howlett is wondering if there is! F. Y, Ou Ma Op , meri in swim suits and bathing|something special that attracts! Th : R é beauties in bikinis, |wildlife to his home. A family of 1 - ie / Or , vas found making i Oleg, FREE J tue cccasion i a reception for [Firee%tn ine atic. As san ag that Just Look at These Low Prices! i ? oe Sorta : = ws ger tage ea bape | situation had been cleaned up, a | carves whe will perticipate bn family of skunks bedded down un-| | the Mr, and Miss U. S. A. contest der the house. After some ticklish and pageant fo be held April 14.{™2"CUvers, that family was in the Shrine Anditorium in Los |°V'*'¢d- | | Angeles. Sporting the mightiest muscles| Itching Tortur e ‘of all will ‘be Paul Anderson of Toccon, Ga. the “strongest a0] PROMPTLY RELIEVED Fectory ‘Clos oe on earth,” who will be an added) S$ jattraction in the program “staged| A doctor's formula—soothing anti- 4 iby physical culturists from across/ septic Zemo—promptly relieves the ithe nation, itching, burning of Skin Rashes, : t a Eczema, Psoriasis, Ringworm and Probably the only puny spect-| Athlete’s Foot. Zemo stops scratch- Englander mens at the-reception will be re-| "8 epee ej ‘ Ortho-Bilt iporters, who also aré required to/ ‘Ng of irritated skin Beauty Rest -j ‘OPEN MONDAY — FRIDAY ‘TI SE jaro }wear the “formal” attire of bath-) \ing trunks for men and bikinis for! = /women, STOP ITCHY SCALP However, all except the cou- DANDRUFF | testants themselves will don nor- | EXCESSIVE HAIR LOSS | | mal attire for the contest judging Scalp “Breathe” Again! one week from tonight. The win- | D casrd name oclrancal se amare ners—"Mr. U. 8. A.” and “Miss comeves etiy Sees See en, | i U. 8. A” — will receive cash ne - medici Hkeadoc- | pach of $1500 and other peoninthnd ome paar oar wo tare and > Sotho oile that T | and cleanse aw: ©. | | pete. ay scales. Try Glover's second Mange Medicine tonight ~ then | Only one jarring note is indicat-| jhem yon) eee and feel hear ang senip COMPLETELY REVITALIZED. ed for the so-called cocktail party| } % druff ia checked, Hair Wednesday. Although no hard ii-| peneghnar poory vine our ecal een ne pola ros < que wil be served there wil be] iets: Rosser | ef . Seno - 3 & iS The «Jewelery of Your Lyes'! Serta, Restokroft : PERSONAL! l Sofa-Bed PERSONALITY GLASSES © FAST SERVICE _ @ Fully Guaranteed @ Shop Us and \ Compare @ NO APPOINTMENT L9 , M, NECESSARY @ Your Prescription Filled @ Glasses Repaired - -@ Safety Glasses ON OPTICAL CO. ats OPTICIANS # 7 SEE THE AMAZING NEW GAS RANGES for 1956 see With Automatic TOP BURNERS THAT WON’T LET FOOD BURN: heat in the automatically pee etoeeeece pan is controlled g SET IT AND RGET IT... AT'S AUTOMATIC EEE HERE ARE MORE . AUTOMATIC FEATURES— TEMPERATURE CONTROL x Automatic GRIDDLE CONTROLS NN, * Automatic OVEN LIGHTING * Automatic OVEN TIME AND END BOIL-OVER! END SCORCHING! END BURNING! jae wccccwccces cesses ccuccssenccedsesod NO OTHER RANGE PROVIDES MORE AUTOMATIC COOKING! SEE THEM TODAY-BUY NOW AND SAVE «beta BiG ALLOWANCE ae FREE INSTALLATION bap genes ss ete ene ee eee sc hn ewe wees este eeees mts pie pana f | \. ie js ies ae & ks ld . oA a, ¥ : sie yh et a3 . ) i) ij ‘ oft wae i | : ; ry s e ' | , I j | 2 if | if * { f| ‘ ; fi ‘ 4 Ir a” " 7 Bidris teense en gti och Ate A Be a fs ri on i ry ‘ peer We i oh. ' aa mg ‘i . or “ ." i ‘ ai , | ba ' i it nei F, i Ati Vee a f ee ea "ff not : si? a nf i YS pa a \ 1 f “f ] / ah j ; J / { i ie ‘ ¥ or \ é ad : uM ‘ * ea. Me ey \ ; Voy ‘ ; i Fad ° \- } THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 9, 1956 | THIRTEEN Chapter No. 4 (Condensed) .... The Truth About Cancer Cancer Treatment Eyes Com in one treatment unit and made che’ elements are taken up relatively large amount$; (2) these and stored in. certain tissues in} elements occur in nature in stable phages). At last, the dead ma- lignant cel's-are replaced by fi- \broblasts—faithful u > {that we call scar tissue. ' ABSOLUTELY FREE to all ‘who write for it. This FREE BOOK fully explains the causes, ill-effects and danger in neglect of these painful and ertppling- conditions, drugl which has been applied in many thousands of cases... .. - This book is yours WITHOUT COST or obligation. It may be the means of 5a Both For *12°° Matching Wedding Bands, handsomely tailored bands in 14K yellow gold. Jewelry Department — GEORGE'S NEWPORT’S & — preven: ess method of treatment Theoretically, this principle all cancers. And at first it was hoped that it would. rounding normal tissue. | this fact continues to be the units of repair! ‘should make it possible to cure/ WHAT'S MY LINE? INSTRUCTIONS: work. Un. enow na ww = Peter | byt PEE rTP Ff SF Say Cambodia ‘Enchanted’ by about 50-million-dollars-a-year aid from the United States, of which nearly half is devoted for main- major limitation in the use of X-rays ang radium in treating @ancer today. . Still, many kinds of cancer— those that can be brought into reasonably direct contact with ithe rays—can be destroyed en- tirely. Recently, streams of minute lelectrical charges from the atom- ismashing betatron-have been di- jrected at cancers in human pa- ‘tients. Early returns seem to | Show that these streams can be ‘concentrated largely in the tumor area. Thys an even greater selec- ‘tive action can be exerted than jhas been possible before. | Again, it remains to be seen whether this new technique will save lives which conventional X- rays cannot. . SOME ISOTOPES GOOD There are 98 elements which ‘occur in nature and which make jup the entire fabric of our world |—lliving and non-living. An isotope is a twin brother to an element looking liké his brother in every way, and differing only in weight. Happy Is The Day When Backache Goes Away.... N ageing bh he es kb aA, ‘be, or aches and pains may come on with over-exer- tion, emotional upsets or day to day st: anc strain, And folks who eat and drink un ly eellpe sometimes suffer mild bladder irritaor ... with that restless, uncomfortable f If you are miserable and worn out becal * of these discomforts, Doan's Pills often helr r sooth. by their pain relieving action, by thei ing effect to ease bladder irritation, and by their mild divretic action through the kidney? tending to increase the output of the 1f Some elements (like radium and uranium) and a number of iso- topes as found in nature are un- stable. They emit streams of particles and rays, some of which can affect living tissue as X-rays do. Such sub- istances are said to be radio-active, jand about 40 natural isotopes have jthis property. | Recent developments in au- | elear physics have made it pos- sible to produce over 500 radio- | active isotopes. But only a half- | | dozen isotopes have so far proved | uséful in treating cancer. continuous | Commie China PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (#— Cambodia is becoming increasing- ly enchanted with Communist China. On lottery ticket stands through- out this capital, pictures of the sold alongside those of beaming Prince Norodom Sihanouk shaking hands with Premier Chou En-lai recent royal coronation are being/N tenance of the 35,000-man army, | navy and air force. - Wheelchair Winners CHICAGO (INS) — The . Pan of Red China during the prince's fort as Well as Cure| Here’s EXTRA concentrated just where it is most!’ Ig is not unresisonable to ex- I p needed—in the “target.”| pect that some day drugs will be c oset Ss ace he gpranagye Ng Mage lt et net ean te Sine, € ' ments are single a eancer humans : target with this precision, ly. or you: Eee pict fig ny Bendy Bh nolfhimeeennti hy worgphiny AT THE LOWEST }\ . most . : eee lta Brg Beggar 65 ay Meee lheag So edn fos) STORAGE PRICES out the hopes that they excitedipresent; they merely prolong. life * g at first. Yet the few things theyland make the advanced stages of WE'VE EVER can do, cancer more bearable. ——= ~~ Frio pe yee Kageit 2 Agger bins ADVANCED CANCER : Vi * " ven What about that remaining half Store all your winter woolens in HORMONES INVOL of all cancer patients who can-/f this Bargain Storage Box. Holds PROTECTION Hormones are in some way i-|not be cured at present, regardless up to % garments. Pack in AGAINST volved in cancer. Just how ISiof when or how they are treated?] dresses, suits jackets, skirts tar Roms clans. Zot Ki le cinepiy [shew cxdeel bas been Nehisoed WE bionkets, ski: suits... ANY- MOTHS x modify * cant coslaeneas povent achievements THING except fur trimmed and HEAT : hi an th tn ween ee ee ee a ; . FIRE od of the breast—the com-| Caused by extensive cancer can We Store It in Our monest Gert of the dheanae| St Ne OHEAS oe complete ——VAUL THEFT! ng em relieved by surgery—and usually | the prostate—is the third most] Sy quag 7 “uur operations Big Storage Box'Only $1.95 ment with hormones does help,| So sometimes the proper nerves Pius Cleaning Charge! et though the results are not as con-jare SABI Sut, Cre hem _ : ae ight _ ‘is “s which act as barriers to nerve] Insured for $100,000 an Jeanna tcc | ewble omer, de, neat] We Give Gold Bell Gift Stamps! : no longer @ sentence to un- : oi trolled by elther surgery or irra- jolie Sear at = aes for varying periods by elimina’ pos- ing the major source of female with sex hormones—the Either gically, or their functioning cells ! are destroyed by X-rays. Or the hormones are suppressed ad- ministering the male sex hormone, But attempts to control breast THOMAS ECONOMY] FURNITURE CO. Wits Of Kinney Tues. So if nagging backache makes you fee dragged-out, miserable...with restless, sleep- less nights...don't wait...try Doan’s Pills., the same happy relief millions have en. | Radioactive cobalt “acts on Tiv- \ing tissue very much as radium does. Since it is cheap, large gotSer overte years. Get Dean'eF ills today: | quantities of it can be assembled) “if they don’t IS TO USE MOBILHEAT . . your furnace . , . cleaner give you the maximum in quality fuel oil—top value Mobilheat, I’m movin MORE HEAT THAN EVER BEFORE! It's pre-tested for give me gf YES, EVEN “FIDO” KNOWS HOW IMPORTANT IT . because Mobilheat gives burning . . . designed to J) heating comfort. It's top- for your fuel dollar! | ! a reas ov mn roe, ots SS | recent trip to Peiping. aS ee U.S, Secretary. of State John V E r ‘ ' es Foster Dulles bypassed Cambodia 8 : on his recent swing through South- : , east Asia but did visit neighboring | SaCMIGAN CREDIE COUNSELLORS ena orange Tor payments yeu cos : | Thailand and South Viet Nam. atterd, regardless of how mech or how many you ows. Ls CONTINUED Both of those.countries are feud-| "y_ : i ing with Cambodia and it could) NO eer OR gy REQUIRED | | ee well be the source of expressed : i Cambodian fears that the United Denavtonp Aesnetes CreGit Counseiless oo States is indirectly trying to pres- “Let 9 Years of Credit Counselling experience assist you" Prcntet . sure it into joining the. Southeast Hours: Daily 9 to 5. Wed. & Sat. 910 1 Evenings by App't. : Asia ‘Treaty Organisation. That MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS ! | / ! 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Orders! eg Ample Free Parking ... Easy Credit Terms pu 3 Le ee Otto * Schultz and Rev, Otto G. Schultz and his family who will be making their home in Wisconsin. The Altar Guild, Ladies’ Guild, Ushers Club, Fellowship, Lutheran Laymen's Leagte and Walther League sponsored the- party. Chairman—of-the—farewell_tea—at—Grace—Lutheran Church Sunday was Mrs. Stanley Hanson of Holly. Oth- ers (left to right) on the committee assisting were Mrs. Robert Schapler, Mrs. Martin Rummel of Birmingham and Laura Bowmaster, The afternoon affair honored the : The Rev. Otto. G. Schultz, pastor of Grace Lutheran Church, is shown with his wife and four children. Mi- chael, the oldest son is studying for the ministry at Con- Rev. Mr. Schultz will become pastor of Our Redeemer Lutheran Church. He will assist in the building of a Lutheran school and church program. During his pastor- Pontiac Press Photo Kay W alser and . Arthayg Lar of the young peaple’s group, the W alther League, they assisted with arrangements for the affair. The tea which was held in Fellowship Hall of Grace Lutheran Church Coming from Holly to at . 4 cordia College; Helene, his daughter, and another son, ate in Pontiac, the present church and parsonage were Stephen and three-year-old Jonathan are pictured, The — built. | family will leave soon for W auwatosa, Wis. where the mermnsisiaiicien « a PRE OF 0 Ponsice and Sorop-. tor of the hospital's social service department are (le "bth serve ‘elubs, have made Mrs. Arnold Hillerman, president of Soroptimist chs for its contest and Mrs, Fotis Takis (center) president of the Zonta : le rein big Tae" well tea at Grace Lutheran day afternoon was Stanley Hanson (left). He has been a member of tion for many years. Photographed. with him were Mr. and Mrs. LaMott Felshaw. | “MONDAY, _Attending a: farewell tea for their pastor's family Sunday afternoon were Warren Norlund, Tom Hepler, Womens Section APRIL 9, Event i in Connection With Mental Health Week was to-honor the Rev. and Mrs. Otto G. Schultz and four children, Michael, Stephen, Helene and Jonathan. The Schultz family will leave soon for Wauwatosa, Wis. where pastor Schultz will be minister of Our Redeemer Lutheran Church. «+ son (left to right). Members Pastor’Given New Post in Wisconsin Grace Lutherans Sponsor Event in Fellowship Hall The Rev. and Mrs. Otto G, Schultz and their: children, Mi- chael, Stephen, Helene and Jona- than, who are leaving soon for Wauwatosa, Wis,, were honored Sunday afternoon with a farewell tea in Fellowship Hall of Grace Lutheran Church. LJ = * The Rev. Mr. Schultz, pastor of Grace Lutheran nearly 13 years, has accepted a call to Our Re- “There are four pages in today’ s. Women’s Section deemer L uthe ran Chure h, Ww auwa- tosa.. He preached his farewell sameiideimen amie ge ae ie S€TTTNOT Ssumday THGITUNG. More than 600 friends, neighbors and members of the congregation arrived between the hours of four and seven to bid the Schultz fam- ily goodbye and wish them well. Pastor Schultz attended Con- . cordia, Edmonton, Alberta, Can- ada, and was graduated from - Concordia Seminary in June 1941, His first call was to Zion La- theran Church, Maple Heights, Ohio, a surburh of Cleveland, where he was ordained and in- | stalled in August 1941: Pontiac Press Photos tend the fare- parents of Vrs. Otto G. Schultz. The tea , : a ; . ahs During his ministry there, he did Church Sun- was git en by grou ps oF the church to post-graduate work at Western Re- henor The Rev. Mr. Schultz who has ac- serve University, Cleveland. the congrega- cepted a call to Our Redeemer Lutheran on os is eae ts ng ‘ . ‘ as pastor of Grace Lutheran, Pon- ure wemarose ' Church, Wauwatosa, Wis. tia. In the twelve and one half years of his ministry at Grace, the mem- bership has grown from 175 to )1200. In this same period, a par- sonage and the present church was built at a cost ~ef-$259.90¢ PRESENTED GIFT Roy Woods, chairman of the eon. = ‘gregation, presented a farewell gift to the Rev. Mr. Schultz. Mrs, Emiel Koop gave Mrs. Schultz a igift from the Ladies Guild Arrangements of pink and white PAGES 14-17 1956 ‘State Hospital Planning Open House = National Men-, In connection with } tal Health Week, Pontiac State Hospital is planning its 10th annual open house * = « * This year, d6ver and above the usual program of activities, the hospital is sponsoring an essay contest which is open to all high school students in Oakland, Sani- lac, Tuscola, Shiawassee, Huron, St. Clair, Macomb, Livingston, La peer and Wayne counties. Legion Auxiliary | Holds Meeting The eighteenth district of the American Legion Auxiliary met Friday evening at the American Legion Home in Berkiey with Mrs Norman Weisman of Royal Oak district president, peeing. > x Mrs. John Rites of Detroit, president, spoke to mer : have PTA groups. gtadioti, stock, daisies and carna- tions were placed around the Hall and centered the tea tables, The children’s table where juice and cookies were served The title of the essay is ‘What says to their school ‘appointed if-! was covered with a daffodil yel- My Visit to,Pontiac State Hospital structor, and final entries must be) low organdy cloth; the cofiee and Has Meant te Me.’’ The aim of submitted to Pontiac State Hospital. tea table was laid with mint the contest is education of teen- on or before May 138. green organdy, both cloths floor agers regarding mental health and) Winners will be notified by, length. ——— the treatment of mental illness June 6 Chairmen for the afternoon af. fair were Mrs. Stanley Hanson and Mrs. Martin Rummel. They were assisted by Mrs. Rubert Schapler and Laura Bowmaster. Serving at the punchbowl were Judges are Dr. Ivan A. LaCore, a \Mrs, Herbert Hampel, Mrs. Gwen lmedical superintendent of Pontiac °SS her home on South Johnson ,Gallo and Mrs. Ernest Fater State Hospital and Dr. Anne Beck-/8vetue at a miscellaneous-shower | ASSISTED AT TABLE Soa clinical director. Thursday, evening, honoring bride-| 44, Roy: Woods , Mrs Martin thers, all department heads at eléct Janet Lee Gortner. ‘Rummel, ‘Mrs Emery Mitche i, reg hospital include Marguerite M.| Guests attending were Mrs, Rus-| Mrs. Freg Zittel, Mrs. Arthur Parrish, Dr. Harold Housman and ¢e]| /. Gortner, Mrs. Dan Peters, Kaphengst and Mrs Henry Wallace Each school will select twe essays and these will be for- warded to the hospital for de- termination regarding final awards. Janet Lee Gortner Honored at Shower Mrs. Thomas-C. Lewis was host- Douglas Burleigh. Irene. Peters, Mrs, Robert Beltz, assisted guests at the tea table, PRIZES DONATED Mrs. Louige Chapman, Mrs. Clara! Sponsoring the farewell party Prizes fave been donated bg elton: Me: Freak Vierk, Mrs.jwere the Altar Guild, | Ladies’ community organizations interested| ~, le Atlan Stee ok (suud, Ushers’ Ciub, Fellowship, af anke, iLutheran Laymen’s League and «| Mrs. Richard Dawson, Mrs, Phil-/ Walther “ League ip Mazer, Mrs, Charlies Garven, , Schul , Mrs, Lilien Colby, Mrs, Russell pares tor Weemtiens wanes Duncan, Mrs. Art Witsoe, MY.) @. next two weeks. Richard Lyski, Mrs. Joseph Kush- jon, ‘Mrs, Clyde Watts, Mrs. Al-|: bert yoo on Charles Woon and|meetin Mrs, Fred Schram completed the guest list, PTA Activities. jin- mental health and by hospit loewantnations Interested students' . are asked to have their reserva- tions in by April 15. Members of the Board of Educa- tion in various communities have shown interest in the project as. Hh hicsiiheendeel mfierertine - ae ti 4 i ie ] ao rhe gisie , b dpc d ile . "1 i" j he os) y ‘ pad , d feeey j j ups | “ ee be / / | { f - / , / A / ' r 4 A ’ | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 9, 1956 “$ i a Se a a a Si $64,000 Question’ Brings Out the Ham s oF goer 3 *. jexports,. i j uiz Show Wi inners Catch Spotli ght Pevert-trac | | FIRST AID [| parks- i i PHYLLIS BATTELLE Challenge,” is taed thes the eetenece of $0400 tahad ‘wast af thelr pileg mene? Suddenly, your old: car doesn’t 4 S Griffin hy FANUM BATTELLE stow, “The in which the|don’t like us to say that.” >» dAaway. pinviat cme tor “FUNERAL HOME top winners of "The $64,000] Past winners have- a chance to cae S58 oa 8 —— SICK ROOM and =f Question” into a hotel room, make even*more money and glow! «neq O'Hanlon, ‘the Stafen| And with the single exception of “Knowing you can have what} INVALID BEDS 4 “Thoughtful Service” lightly with Scotch and soda pop,|once again in the limelight. — [Island policeman who knew $16,000/Gino Prato, who landed himself! you want replaces the desire to ; & ue ' add:a sprinkling of spotlights—and|wappy CROWD worth of Shakespeare, admitted his|a good position as a goodwill am-|have it. You tollow?"' MEDICAL and. 46 Williams St. Phone FE 2-584] [/what have you got? Each happy in his or her own|™oney was all gone. “After all, for a firm that makes ¥ ; . _ * * @ ay lenght a00 drink andi“ Sve chiitren—bet we déa'tishes heels, cach member of the) Break INDUSTRIAL . af _‘M-Hour Ambulance Service Ham, that's what. Pure, tasty,| 50°. .0ned to bring down the crys-|SPend it foolishly, unless you callibonanza gang has the same job/A Mean Break iB orinst ai suppuizs | : well-seasoned ham. tal chandeliegs in the sqate hotel. |* Pew car_foolish,” and status in life, \ |. CLINTON TOWNSHIP (INS) —) . Ask Steve Frohlich, the $32,000 ee 8 OTHERS SAVED As Frohlich, the seed-selling Phil-|several thousand Clinton Township Hi +) 2.3027 JO 4-6847 d eee "| expert on American history, who | Ging Prato, the glorious shoe-| Red was the only one who has|Sopher, pointed out: homes were without water today, 1621 S. Woodward Ave. a paren ' oa: was lounging against e pillar in |aker, sang lustily over the din|spent-all his winnings, | ~ “wnen you win suddenly more |Presumably because of a break in ff — 5 Doors North of 10-Mile ; ; a suite at the Hampshire House, of tinkling glasses. Gloria Locker- Me- money than you ever had before,";@ Water main. Efforts to locate | Royal Oak ; =) eman where 18 past winners of large’ | ian the bobby-socked spelling ex-|Cutcheon, Dr. Joyce Brothers, Jim money doesn’t make you |#0d repair the break so far were *4 : ' cash awards were - collected. pert, giggled profusely. make in vain. |. aoe ete é pa Krelteer, the | ) fe CE: Se ee PH mde he says, get the| STandma from Camp Mill, Pa., a + | | SSREirsos Ses Scscnsc-:]| A HEARING AID Without CORDS |} ; are many opportunities for advancement. net sel wanes eae SX hel“aa indy,” was he usual] ‘ | 4 saaiiie SE ant pt malts ra ee ee NO SEPARATE EAR BUTTON @ NO CORDS © NO CLOTHING NOISE q a0 saat = “ee epee "geen be wrong, I oe, © hes — Hear at Ear Level! Enjoy Complete Freedom in Dressing and Action! enrolling in evening ' wont Hear the better way.with Dahiberg’s new MIRACLE. EAR powered by a new, tiny ENERGY CAPSULE. , ‘ MIRACLE-EAR—made possible by the miracle transistor is 4 a April 24, 7:00 Speedwriting is the Shorthand Written ~ with abc’s. 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In fact, results were so thor- ough that sufferers were able to make such astonishing statements as “Piles have ceased to be a |- gents of an roblem!” And erers were a very of hemorrhoid conditions, some of 10 to 20 years’ standing. amon All this, without the use of new healing narcotics, anesthetics or astrin- kind. The secret is substance (Bio- Dyne*)—the discovery ofa world- «famous research institution. Al- ready, Bio-Dyne is in wide use for healing injured tissue on all parts of the body, This new healing substance is offered in suppository or ointment form called Preparation H.* Ask cial applicator. Preparation His sold at all drug stores. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded, “Reg. U.S. Pat. Ort, George E. Myers, director national civics relationships lcipal of the school, will organize these suf- | de-variety | Homer Ferguson Takes Oath.as Military Judge WASHINGTON (®—Homer Fer- guson, a judge, senator and am- bassador in a long public career, returns to the bench today as a judge of the U. S. Court of Mili- tary Appeals. Chief Justice Earl Warren ar- Court building. The former Michigan senator who is 67, has just completed a year’s service as ambassador to the Philippines. He was chairman ROY. CAPSULE ‘on unbelievably small, light hearing aid. It gives wonderfully TC POWER NEW clear hearing—eose of concealment—wearing comfort—free- INVENTION dom in dressing. se eyes MIRACLE-EAR is the answer for the many who need hearing DEAFENED! help but have been reluctant to wear a hearing aid. . . or it brings a new freedom to the experienced user. SEE IT. TRY IT. There is no obligation. it can open- the door to a new life for you. De. Come In. Phone or Mail the Coupon for Appoiniment - SOHO SSEHSSSESE DE SEHEHEESSESESEEEERESEEHEES FITZPATRICK’S PHARMACY, 33 W. HURON, PONTIAC Phone FE 2-8383 or FE 3-717) * SMALLER THAN MOMO. .ccecctewecceeessererareusces oerete Phone. teeeeee ¥ eee eT ey ry ee eee eee ee i *eeeer | (250,000 IN PRIZES FREE! NOTHING TO BUY -—-NOTHING TO WRITE! Enter this fobulous GOLD BELL BIRTHDAY CONTEST TODAY! It’s easy, it’s simple, all you ¢o is get an official entry blank end—- F xz: Mail In Your Name relate Address PINEAPPLE & ‘GRAPEFRUIT DRINK ingthe Help Needed to Organize’ , Enter Used Car Office on Saginaw Street ~- of the Senate Republican policy committee when he was defeated|Saginaw St. was entered Saturday) P DOCTORS PRESCRIBE SPECIAL LAXATIVE TO EASE le PAINFUL ELIMINATION WHILE SHRINKING PILES ' leclion to @ Ghind tema The on of Preparation H also make Petro-Syllium®, a specia] "O Tee ag type laxative prescribed by doctors for hemorrhoid sufferers. Softens {the Senate in 1954 by Democratic|according to Pontiac hard dry stool and assures easy elimination without pain. Ask for |Sen. Pat McNamara. He had been Petro-Svllium. c circuit judge for Wayne County (Detroit) for 12 years before 1942. oe Can Giant PIE | FILLING... 46 Oz. | q | 4 WAYS TO WASH... AUTOMATICALLY ! UGHTED MASTER- MIND BIAL lets you wash « full or part load of everyday wear on the Regularcycle—aod afel/ orparticedof extra-care washables may be washed on the Fine Fabric cycle. Part loads save up to Li gallons of water per jead/ There's even an activated soak cycle for stains. EXCLUBIVE SPIRALATOR ACTION 7? vides extra-thorough, yet gentle washing for any fabric. 7] | All clothes travel in « 1-way spiral path ali through the tub without tangling, wear and tear. All germents are washed uniformly clean. MODEL ADE tw POWER RINSING begins with Whirting Sprey Rinse, follewed by Beep Overfiew Rinse. Flushes sel up, away from clothes! 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Huron Street 5 FE 4-1555 FE 42511 our OF TOWN DEALERS SAMUEL'S APPLIANCE STORE 429 theadvay Ave, Dering. sega Mca EASY DOES IT -BET \ ow ro : é Ans “st 4 { it ee oe ae brow ‘and sighed: “It\sng “THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 9, 1956 . Oy dy ol x ee Wins Mast % social seale in pro- ar It’s A HABIT -— ‘Give this young man four minutes and he'll run you a mile with tine to spare.: Australia's John Landy, world’s: i * uf Tl for » 289 total, ' 7 a 239 Vv amateur stylist who had z i Ha a raeit edbvate ne igi i ngs g i ine efi 4 hese . be raasital a foe tting front : er you ‘are Bae 5 jocked out on a football or & fresh case- See oe stn Sad Ton aie pend to entertain, Bal soccer stars, 1 - 8s j _ bul ites Jl all whines are all wrapped up i the -@8, actors, cartoonists and eee g I maintain it is also the function of sports col- : _ wmnist to entertain, to amuse, to relay interest: oe ee P v tions of modern life. ae - We are all in the same boat, more or Sa: dean < sapaciitens wane at Jor Louks Iaeitton on Bre re ne & he hetly Snebine tax (6b. _ There is also a spuriously pious strain of wri in é the mail condemning Joe because he likes to bet few and an ot his es gee wens was second fastest in history _ “I remember WINNER AND NEW CHAMP Snead-winning in playoff. -raised high by wife Ilene after+winning the Masters Golf tournament at Augusta, Ga., yesterday with 289 total. The score tied the highest ever to win the Masters. Snead and Hogan tied at 289 in 1964, with — Jackie Burke Jr., gets his hand \Finale in Dixie anne.’ singles. Bows to Deacons at “Durham, N.C. 8-5 in Saturday Game DURHAM, N. Cy Blowing a fat lead, Michigan's touring Wol- verines bowed 85 to Wake Forest jline’s two bases-full home runs in = The Tigers put the game away Pontiac High opens its 1956 base- sixth, scoring six runs on seven in| te for ball season Tuesday afternoon at his No. 1 problem—catching. John- son has never backstopped in high school varsity competition. ee * . = Chiefs Meet Cranbrook: in Baseball Lid-Liffer ‘ 4 mons or Chuck Mcllrath at 3rd comprise the starting infield. |" Bob Murphy, lone holdover from the 1955 season, is slated for left field and Willie DeWalt will patrol | Kue icenter. The other outfield berth is/|1 ded Tigers Sweep Houston, 6- with four runs gifs 478 Two Aces Same Day on California Course Pittsburgh Pirates in and then come home for the season's opener April 17 against Cleveland. DETROIT (A) HOUSTON (TL) AB R I . ABRH Kuent,ss 4 1 2 Adams.cf 4014 3,88 1 @.0 Phillips2> 3.0 6 ‘orgeson,Ib 4 0 Smith rf 4006 Ka) rt 3% mas. 3601 Boone Jb 3.6 4 Ree,!f 400 fatfield.3> 2 2 Pattone 3 0 6 Tuttlecd 9 1 ter.lb 20 0 horter,c oe Kutyna,p 6 0 6 Belar +4 406 d 111 40 reey,p 606 kp 21 Amaro,ss 301 A-Small 1 © 0 Beard.p 600 Aber,p 1 © © Walker,tb 2 06 06 6 20 1-4 Totals 36 610 Totals A—Piied out for Gromek in 6th. B—Doubled for Kutyna in @th. DP—Thomas, , Unaasist. ed; Aber, fiche and’ T BB- Beard 3, 1 Kutyoe 1, Piercey 1, ir 1 ek 4, Beard 2, Aber . oy 1 B Beard &-4, Gro mek 0-0, Kutyna 1-1, Aber 1-1. Piercey 0-0 8 5, Gromek 1 in 5, Kutna 1 in 3, Aber 3 in 4 Pheroey, | in 1 . WP. sher, Mets Want Manager The Mets, Class D boys base- ball team which will compete in .jthe city leagues this summer, needs a manager. Anyone interest- needed/ ed in piloting the Mets this season call Jack Douglas at FEderal 4-9449. -Track Great { AL WATROUS, Oakland Hills ; i be pe ; = By BRUNO L. KEARNS ‘ sticks most in Al’s mind is the .- ' | ) ers Ses cone Fg Age outstanding round . a pros a master on was the greatest of them all,” _ ST. LOUIS (INS)—Glen Cunning-, in theory revamp- {dean's list of professionals in Oak-|said Al. He was referring to : ham, one of America's that if America is |land County is an honor belonging| Hogan's 67 on the newly remod- q ‘track greats, with the rest ef the /to Al Watrous at Oakland Hills. jeled course in "51. , : on AAU. athletics, i must a * * ¢ * *« « a the group its ideas.” His 27 shccessive years at the} Right now Al is looking for- - statements fol-| fine Oakland Hills club is a record : _ ‘The 46-year-old minister who & lengthy statement on the|bardto match, peared in St. Louis subsidized ath-| Al had.te go a long way back Memorial Church night by Avery] to remember when he got his tay ot a president! feel of a golf club. “Must have » interview with newsmen. the Olympic Committee. been about five years oli,” he ~ |The famed miler the. sald. 7 Gescribed the AAU = Special statement released) ‘1 ice most other pros, he started : Bramdage sttacked! in “the caddie ranks and in 1920 4 . ' in hysteris| pecame caddie master at Red Run. * * * Harris Stops sors Resin Pcbretees gy, cared ad's joo 2 Cen : 2 if sour grapes” to|Rapids and after one year at | : world. Meadowbrook, his long term at | Na lan Xer charged that the — wan tae ates terms of a “gen- | _ During the which | Gets TKO Over Bryan a tas: too many | Yo oo Kelley in Fifth Round but hold out their lh Gj fat New Detroit” Club wt 4 wae IhOUN Given : the National DETROIT ws — ! : Athletic Association to ; Me ok under “wrsacin = EIQG on LaBua Gow fom Cannés, the final solution, “but at} |’ : : Sat Yangon Fak MeY, least it is a good beginning.” | Meet in TV Bout in pa swekont Sat.| He emphasized that today a per-| N.Y, Tonight; Spieser > preety year manent SO ar chek &. tan ant Wed ni Sho : urday night stopped canont living ‘ iw , hscause of a bed cut over Kelley's|®0", 0, ‘Deech athlete. He added in nesday eye. ‘ athlete. ; added : : ae that under current conditions an ASSOCIA PRESS Fee De Ca te date a nee Sires ow oh bis personal Seeman. Gite’: Catan, ‘de | for City Boxing Club. it drew a privileges to the AAU “and must!) tog) 91. middleweight crowd of 1,074 fans and a gate iinuckle down to their dictatorial Agta amgenionay Se a and arbitrary z winning streak to an even 20 to Detroit, won a night at the expense of more ex- 4 decision in four rounds over Jackie LaBua at New! (Tomorow we present Tom 8h a span 146, Flint as ori GMC Wins Two York's St. Nichol 4 va (Du-| te_** Orchard Lake Country Club). _ Watkin’ pro debut by being thelin CIO) League —_|mont-Tv, 10 p.m. EST). 4 better infighter. Watkins is a for-| : ara ® 3 . Os Gee ewe Cage Playolls It's a good test for Calhoun, of n ans eX ‘Chuck Taylor, 137, Detroit, won)" — White N. Y. for the 2% : ‘& unanimous decision in six routds| “The GMC 594 day shift_team} Pein wie terete a | «ver Tetry Book, 133, Milwaukee. | won the UAW-CIO League basket-| y. has mixed with some of the} An awesome array of track stars oe 4 . _ [ball pldyotfs Sunday afternoon at/y etter middleweights including|from ‘Pontiac High invades Flint > Mat Trials Jefferson Junior High gym with) Gene Fullmer, Gil Turner, Rafael|Central afternoon for the : twin victories over Fisher Body Lo|xgerenting and Willie Pastrano.|jst Saginaw Valley Conference dual cl. =. “> [Rastrano has grown rapidly in the|meet of the season—and on the g at Normal Thursday General Motors, once-beaten in [heavyweight ranks since. basis of Friday's results at Mt. 3 the double - elimination tourna- * *¢ @ Pleasant the ore vg, Paar “YPSILANTI, Mich. @ — Nearly; ment, downed the Fisher quintet | Chuck Spieser, % fourth-rank-|to the safety t . ; 100 entries have been received for| in the opening game, 57-47. Dale jing grey coum contender, Wally Schloerke's thinclad ‘power- the Olympic regional wrestling) Davis chalked 19 points for |trom Detroit, and aggressive Joey|house romped over everything : trials here April 13-14. GMC while Titheriage |Rowan, 21, Phoenixville, Pa.,|sight Friday at the Saginaw-Sagi- : ‘Tournament officials said they| topped the losers with is, should furnish some fireworks|naw Arthur Hill Invitational Re | expect 150 entries for the meets) Fisher Body, regular season|Wednesday. (ABC-TV, radio,jlays in the Central Michigan Col- at Michigan State Normal's Bowen|champion, put up a stiffer fight in|10 p.m., ) in their 10-rounder|lege fieldhouse. fieldhouse, Several states have en-|the required 2nd game, but lost|at the Detroit Olympia. The rec-| The Chiefs rolled up 61 points, tered teams for the Ypsilanti tour-|,cain, 59-56. Mel Taylor poured than Flint nament, the last of several qualify-|23 points-to-pace GMC. Hubert ng meets across the nation. gc.|Price and Titheridge led _Final tryouts are slated April 25-| with 14 points May 5 in Los Angeles. : # State Man Wins AAU Title NEW HAVEN, Conn. —Richard| was 49,2 set by Dick Cleveland | Says Al Kaline ‘Not Interested in Measuring, Checking Distance of ag dl Is for Mantle, | Be hs i ka # ‘ tac aCe) My / ees, : a png anys a foo ie ps. fe asco pcg pA poke gay apt: ae f . eo ; ‘ ) | \ mm “THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDASAPRIL. 9 + 19356 Grace Gets White Fox] Hollywood Headlines . Stole From Norway OSLO, Norway # — Six snow white polar foxes have contributed | fo, an evening stole for Grace Kelly, deg diab aoe. present from Norwegian residents in’ Monaco, The newspaper Aftenposten printed a picture of the stole, which is more than seven feét long. It will “be sent with a ‘special courier from Oslo tonight. : The stole was made by a firm in Oslo upon request from Norwe- gians in Monaco, who asked Expert. c on Shakespeare | EARL WILSON se YORK-—I met} a happy cop. Punning Patrolman Redmond O'Hanlon of “The $64,000 Challenge” TV show told me he’s devising “Shakespeare for Short Pants” to. interest kids in Shakespeare's puns. One he likes is from “Cymbeline”: “Golden lads and girls all must - As chimney sweepers, come to dust.” “Personally,” grinned the cop who copped $16,000 on “The for | $64,000 Question” and is on the new show also, “I know more “the most beautiful white fox stole which can be obtained in the) whole country.” * CONRAD A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE md BLACKJACK KETCHUM, DESPERADO ‘sterring HOWARD DUFF - VICTOR JOR | ! i | | BARN DANCE] Every Saturday Nite (K. P. HALL, 18 W. HURON) Starring Buddy Sanders along with Bit Martin—end—_the_Revin" Ram- Shedd. blers. Guest is Frank OF THE YEAR! acy | Ewell ‘North LINE PE A cave —~——PLUS——-- _ a mm Ling MADISON - PRESTON | | Tue Lasy CinemaScorE Couoe av TECHIMICOLO® TUES., WED., THURS. “All That Heaven Allows” & “One Desire” garters. Meyers studied them gotta start wearin’ socks” .~ THE MIDNIGHT EARL. —— ‘Asnas and other friends of Fred. lduring the circus TV show... jrence Welk’s auto sponsor gave each jof his musicians a new car. IT’S THE LAUGH RIOT | about lipsticks than night- °, sticks.” Redmond as a boy was called Red. With the Red Cross—in the war, he got called “Rev- erend O'Hanlon.” Now, of course, “Revion O'Hanlon.” . TV whiz Jack Lescoulie gave Publicist Lee Meyers some gold “Now I O'HANLON . Drame—Goach-Betty_Cashman. has a course called Successful Self-Expression. One question admiringly and said, is:If you..were introduced to yourself as a total stranger, what would your reaction be?” She asked this of several famous friends, and Tallulah Bankheatl answered: “I'd- adore it.” x * ~ Our “Prettiest Girl in America” contest led a friend to submit the picture of “Miss Dallas, 1926." She piscina second at Atlantic City but got pretty famous - ae anyway—did Miss Rosebud Blondel, known to the whole world now-as-Joan Blondell. : In Houston (at the Houston Club), Comedian Joe E. Lewis was handed a drinkby one of the oilionaires. Joe E. told him, “If you’ don’t mind, give me a glass of money instead” . Olivia de Havilland and Pierre Galante, the Parisian journalist; -expect—their— baby about July 14—“Bastille Day.” Suavest-looking guy in town in a din- ner jacket: John Daly. There'll be a Fred Allen Ward—for performers—at the N. Y. Cardiac Home, financed by Harry Hershfield, Max Victor Borge was offered a million to iput his one-man show in Cinemascope . « . Three circus elephauts ran loose ‘backstage at Madison Square Garden Law- Hopes t Interest Kids Nasal Irritation imay be a souree of big trouble for "| |ducing. substance from the insects. | School Dunce Hailed Insects Cause Allergy Study Reveals Asthmatics Are Victims of Disintegrated Dust CHICAGO (INS) — Small insects] allergy sufferers. *, ee A Northwestern University medi- cal research team reports that nearly 30 per cent of the patients with asthma or hayfever symp- toms tested in a study were sen- sitive to insects. The doctors said ‘a a prelim- inary report to the American Academy of Allergy they be- lieve the patients were allergic te the tiny disintegrated bits of insect dust inhaled from the air and the soil, Stuffed-up noses and runny eyes resulted, +—Drs. Allen —Feinberg,—_Samuel) Feinberg and Garlos Benaim-Pin- to studied the problem in the aller- gy research “taboratory~at— the Northwestern Medical Center in Chicago. They reported: “Since there exist tens of thousands of insect species, the problem of diagnosis and treat- ment are tremendously compli- cated. We have found so far that | patients who are sensitive to one insect, as shown by skin tests, are usually sensitive to a number of other insects.” The specilaist added, however that they had “* ging’ re- sults in de-sensitizing a small num- ber of patients with injections of weak solutions of the allergy pro- ‘as Genius Composer PARIS-~——An—eight-year-old—or-) phan girl who is touched with genius. has stirred the imagina- tion of France. She is Minou) Brouet_of La Guerche, Britany,! jwho has lived with foster-parents since her parents were drowned! when she ™ a baby. * cy siasauaid a dunce at school, she stayed home to compose mu- sic and to write poetry which has' been acclaimed’ as great. A collection of her poems has) JOAN “Just walk the meat) Keenan Wynn, a rare-steak man, told lthe waiter at Bruno’s Pen and Pencil, past the broiler slowly.” . w,* EARL'S PEARLS... Nature does her best to teach us. The more we overeat, the harder she makes it to get close to the table. * * * * WISH I'D SAID THAT) Any politician’! tell you—the trick) is to hit the taxpayer without hitting the voter.—Jewell (Kan.)| jRapunlican. * * kok * TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Bob Olin tells of a clumsy do- it-yourself fan:-“He’d need a set of instructions if he wanted! to hit his thumb with a hammer.” | That's earl, brother. 4 (Copyright 1956, the Hall ‘Syndicate, Inc.) fs eee ie Seventeen Area Drivers ‘Lose Operators License Goodrich, Oak Park, and David D. Seventeen drivers had operator's Kage, Royal Oak licenses suspended or revoked in) Also placed on financial responsi- recent action announced by the bility for reckless driving was Michigan Secretary of State's Of- Gilbert Penley, Royal Oak. License fice / of Wayne L. Hoyt, Keego Harbor, ‘ was revoked one year for negligent Placed on financial responsibility operation. for driving under the influence of} jens liquor were: John J. Jalbert, 70 . . : Gage St.; James B. McKinney, Soviet Teachers Chided 52 N. Paddock St.: John J. Red- MOSCOW (INS)—The Teacher's mond, 283 Luther St.: Lewis B.|Gazette, a Soviet education news- Schad, 302 S. Pleasant View Dr.;|Paper, said editorially today that) 4 | If the progam is adopted,—it; 'been published in Paris. An im-| presario has offered $47,000 (0 conservative with the $5,500,000 jsettlement she received from Win- take her on. a world tour, but | she just wants to stay at home,) |writing and composing. : The last composition she wrote ‘at school, on what she had seen in a meadow, she began: “I saw jan immense beast with green) lhair. The beast had two tine| curly ears -but—teacher, who is | always short-sighted, insisted they | were apple trees.” their marriage is -Liz ‘tells mé that her married), Joe DiMaggio Is Sought tor Role of Connie Mack By LOVELLA 0. PARSONS HOLLYWOOD. (INS) -- Joe Di Maggio has been to star in the life story of Connie Mack for Al Lichtman and Jules Levey. Come to think of it, Joe's profile is. very like that of the late baseball great. Joe Di Maggio is first choice to play Mack as a young man. Of course, he hasn't said yes, but he has conferred with Levey, Virus has struck Lis Taylor, whe had to leave the set of “Raintree Coupty" and go home. I was interested in the two wed- ding rings she is wearing these days. Seems they're both from the same husband, Mike Wilding, who saw the second wedding band in a_jewelry store and bought it for Liz because he liked it. Guess Mike wants to make doubly sure safe and sound. brother, Howard, is leaving for While in New York Maureen O'Sullivan had an interview with John Costello, Premier of Ire- land.” How well Iyremember_my! interview with him in 1948 — a and intelligent man, Really think Pearl Bailey is better than she’s ever been in her life. was. Mike Todd with Martene the Robert. Mitch- Henry Fonda is just as happy At Ciro’s to hear her romantic interest in: Marguerite Lamkin, sister of writer Speed Lamkin. i Lena Horne sailed. on the SS Liberte for five months in Europe. Most northwesterly of the so- called New England group of states is Vermont., Ve CRYSTAL FAL WW—A addition to the Iron County Hos-' pital here has heen authorized in| a special electioh, The vote was | 2,511 for and 877 against a millage) increa.e to finance the $175,000) erqnen. ALLS evel heabaiencabmnipeniimneniions Are as Besse. M4-bed | g 5 35 Auburn Ave. FE 4.8240 “The New Movies and Fresh as Bright Itself’’ NOW Thru. FRIDAY Features at 1:68 - 4:81 - 7:08 - 0:49 SPECTACULAR Surpasses anything ever filmed before? ‘Mexice City-to-enrolt in the Uni- versity of Mexico to study art for two years on the GI Bill of Rights. WEDDING GUESTS? The beloved Sir Winston Church- ill has rented La Vigie, one of the show places at Monaco, for the +season. It is owned by the casino in Monte Carlo and overtooks the! harbor, beautifully located. i Although England sent no titled | representative to the Kelly-Rainier | wedding, I am _ told that the Churchills. may be guests. The Aga Khan is another expected ar- rival. Lord Beatty and his wife, the former Adele Dillingham O’Con “nor;-wilt have their yacht an- chored in the bay and they will attend, So, in spite of the lack of top official representation, the wedding will not be without its distinguished guests. Winthrop Rockefeller’s millions and himself will belong to Jean-| ' ette Edris in late June. He'll wed ithe former model in her hometown le. life for many years and it has been rumored again and again that they would marry. This news of their approaching nuptials I re- ceived from someone to whom the bride-to-be revealed her plans. The much publicized Bobo, who was recently in Hollywood with jher S-year-old child, is being very jnie, I hear tell she’s made some |good investments. BobBy cocKTat. “ony” LOUNGE 22 w. Huron Huron Bowl Bidg. Come Out To-Night! (Mambe Blues) LEWIS} .,. Star Capitol Record singer. Reo erding and stage sensation you'll surely enjoy. 5 'She haa 6 been the hey eo oS GLORI A- BROOKS Delectable entertainer’ making « ‘nh you 'n you. Coming Soon BILLY FARRELL RONNIE GAYLORD res turn appearance just to please you woo Ly wy ar somaried ” nS A TUR DA Y— “THE KETTLES * THE OZARKS” and “RED SUNDOWN” - mye ave iy G Mat. #@¢ Eve, Ite Child 2e ONLY 2 DAYS LEFT TO SEE JACK as PETE KELLY gia” PETE KELLY'S = demise i os WEDNESDAY 2 All Time Greats! “HONKY TONK” . and “BULLY, THE KID” * NOW and DATES FOR DOLORES Snapshots of Hollywood collected) lat random: Dolores Gray has been| having dates with Cosmopolitan) magazine's Jon Whitcomb who has | painted ber as she is in “The | Opposite Sex." DANCE to BILL WISE Music No Cover, No Minimum No Door Charge Dentists Would Stop School Candy Sales PORTLAND, Ore. ® — The |Oregon Dental Assn. wants the sale, of candy and sweetened soft ——s banned in public schools. The move is aimed at carteliinal tooth decay among children, said) \Dr. Harold Kramer, president of ithe association, |would be the first time such a ban} ‘has been. state-wide, Two major} ‘cities, Long Beach Calif., and Chicago, have adopted the plan, | Kramer said. Plastic Phone Poles NEW YORK — Plastic telephone} |poles, coming into use this year,) jmay some day become common-} ‘place, says the publication, Chem-| ical Weck. Made of glass-rein- forced resin, the laminated, hollow Juanita P. Simpkins, 88 N. Sanford) St.; and Fred Campbell and How-| ‘ard K. Wilson, both of Reyal Oak jnseswere suspended for ha-ual Licenses were suspended for ha- Doors Open Daily at 10:45 A.M. bitual negligence in the cases of Keith A. Campbell, 995 W. Huron St.: Donald E. Clark, 290 N. Pad- deck St.; Paul R. Coulter, 275 § tEdith- St. Renald-— 0. Jorgenson, 255 Shirley Ave.; Edward E. Phil- lips, 449 Linda Vista _Dr.; William ,C., Buckler, Ferndale; Donald H PRICE 40c ‘til S P.M. 50¢ Nites-Sun. Children 20¢ NOW PLAYING THRU WEDNESDAY! Russian teachers trying to break! pole weighs only about 125 pounds) the myth of Stalin in the schools: ‘and promises many advantages to) |must do more than merely parrot|offset the relatively high initial the speeches of Soviet leaders. cost. | Box Office Opens 6:30 P.M. ‘ Phone FE 4-4611 Drive-In Theater 2150 Opdyke Road LAST TIMES TONIGHT! Ce Ba, LADD ALLYSON ‘THE MIcCONNELL ae oat SAMUEL GO! MINCHUM DWN. __Dinie Hwy (US-10) 1 Bik. North BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:30 Paramount presents HUMPHREY TONIGHT! ALL ACTION! BOGART AS YOU LIKE HIM: ROUGH! TOUGH! MEAN! FREDRIC BOGART ..: MARCH in WILLIAM WYLER’ S Production of THE DESPERATE HOURS O-etarre Arthur Kennedy - ‘Martha Scott: ‘Dewey Martin Gig Young: Mary Murphy Produced end Direqted by WILLIAM wvier _ALSO_—_IN-TECHNICOLOR! The Big Technicolor Song-Businese Musical ! J. , ; é ” Yess am \ * of Telegraph Road FE 5-4500 TUESDAY * The Postcard Killer Strikes! “POSTMARK FOR DANCER” with Terry «SHOW STARTS 7:15 P.4— They're looking for | WOMEN! They're looking tor MONEY! They're looking for A WAY OUT! —wrwvrweererrtrrTT Cee Te ee eC TC ee eT ee lll li lll ln ll cl i ll th Me de i th da ervey YISTAVISION WEDNESDAY! PPS OS SS PSST eT ee Se CeCe ee Te Te ee ee TO OCC TO TCT TS COC COT CCT CCT CCC CC CC CCC CCT MAN WilH THE ‘ “ y ri tf i te a i i i i tl Oe Ot : 3 : ih A ae: i Al ll, ll, ili ill, it, ill tl ll lle al POP SSG SEF ES ED EEE PEE SEE ED EE EEE DDE DEE EE EEE EDD PPP PPP PEEP PPP PP PPP PEABO _A film by Otto Preminger - GOIDEN ARM me 4 ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 9, 1956 eo Te es DONALD DUCK : SRNL x. Voigt Rete gdb lal sia Se Me aire . __ By Walt Disney roe Pa | od ie 58 bee By V. T. Hamlin | ‘ F 5 # FO: BLARNEY \ BREATHING DOWN OUR { ME! NOW MEBBE write, Your husband js going to paint the house... 9 BOARDING HOUSE , } SH LISTEN, SON, WE AIN'T IN THE BARN IZ SS DANCE LEAGUE/~ MELISSA A GOES FOR THE PLUSH~AND Boy SHE ASKED MEHOW 2 % i Se) << Z >> : ee tee ea! 1986 TA Rog, 0S. Pan. OF es. : - = bs us oh * . a ‘ioe, ’ ti by REA Service, me. fog, By Ernie Bushmiller HER EYE . USE THis LATER IF WE, WEXNER CT ee ee ic HAMBURGER / DEAD EN ALLEY dt eee ag arr Ue, aw LRM EE APR-9 BUSHAM ALP CAPTAIN EASY 7 — : By Leslie Turner FIRST HE MUST LOCATE. YOU SEE, I LOST ALSO, LWISH 10 DISCUSS ( WHAT KIND. OF tie WIDOW OP THE MAN WHO £2 OF MRS, DOLE \ YOU HAVE CERTAN “ER ALTERMTIONS ALTERATIONS YOU BOYS ALL | gown PLAN T | SENTIMENTAL | | IN A SMALL SHOP BESIDE SET ON EASY'S prea Og ND EXANDSD THE PLANT, WHICH SHE HAD- i CSAS GG GULL : . nL ane F | Wie e™ [XIOW TALL 15 a Bb a THIS DOLL, HANNIBAL @ 4-43 OUT OUR WAY ASSIGNMENT WE IN AL EMPIRE! | AK’ SUGGESTED I PRESERVE] |/) — AND HAPPY AS AS THE sive t WHERE wer * | r} } POSSIBLE HUSBAN D START ys & PP aia a Nailin et i i ee TE JiR NES RA a eaiaeinn (arte ‘ Hea Lis HALL-*DO YOU MIND TELLIN’) TALKING TOTH’ /| YOU GIRLS ME ‘TH’ "TOP WE! DO HOG TH’ \-——— OF ALL RIGHT UNDER TH’ } BATHROOM-- 7 WIN= 1 MAYBE IT’S - SHUT ONE OF HIS IT QUICK? TRICKS TO GET YOU E }} THERE! AZ j f ii. = git ‘| BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES - By Edgar Martin li ibd & ta = THERE'S ONLY ONE -_-_—- SS . = oe aN WAY TO FWD WM! SAOULDN'T BE WARD On-4, GEE! YL. BET Hf . are | JO FWD GUY STERLIWG AOYVTAING..\. gas | W @ LITTLE | RWER TOON LIKE THIS. : 4g i 3 | NG Ny co ’ ye ’ | »~ > By Dick Cavalli LIFE'S LONGEST MINUTE onus witnn cs iumgue rect : Cte’ ‘é 2 : ae DIXIE DUGAN pew PF eaewi LO MY OWN CK CUAL! 4.4 © 1956 by NEA Service, Ine. an : | By Charles Kuhn | E, WiLL YOu | |.>.AN' TELL SAMMY )] [SORRY, SAMMY, T° |] |...8UT IF YA DON'T MIND, JUST] | 4 € RUN OVER | ITH’ BASS DRUMMER || [CALL YOU AWAY MUST HAVE TH’ BASS DRUM BACK] | 'DLIKE T'SEE HIM? }| |FROM.YOUR MUSIC...)] [SO 1 CAN GET MY DISHES DONE.” ) § | PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES 2 : * Every Day in the Pontioc | f D) ; wait 4 ; Press Wont-Ad Section 3 ) Take advantage of this easy way ——— oye dl gaia tence s | —————( Sy 4 ie Bee : : : ‘i é - 2 é 5 Pte: hg wa. - : John Morris ———- tek -FE-2-8 4.84 3 HOW THEY GET THAT'S A Os Sity __,\( CERTAING ATTN TUOE!)S I6N'T / | md | 2 i pps ; f ee: oe | i ee : Fag bay 4 3 yi é a '* % mn een epee HES y rita es mm f ifs Ge eee ye es ¥ : algal opps ar = ; | zi ee - : , PRESS. |» ¥, APRIL 9, 1950 | ”, APRIL 9, : oN r Ss. } IONDAY , A : ag epeheey Iz " bd fobs _ agit wget f i i 4 es ee seh y = sisi nat. hadi a : , Amere PO Aa eat we hin ote nba . whe eae ces : ee seqpeepks i : f yy pet rae = ‘ fee i i a2 4 ! i porep # : tf ~ i 1% U UL t ife a , ss i % - * || What's a ret Haggling | World Market ts tbe in bore é ; : all his . n rising pric lebt is paid, his r mother ‘The the deb until thei : WASHINGTO} apretigp ee, athe: bondage itd. tor. ae in several 's fancy into last fully Es- brides 8 is at Alaskan . i king v0 —e the Kenai, : is turning me - | Among — KETS |Profit-Taking areas tie aS o ‘ ; aaa » Says thout begins | MA , Info Grains tonal Gera, Soe, ha cian, and atthe bt. =e Aircraft Gains fe E222 Cuts Into Gr : Seer igo Pa ie tand peck: w — Profit- in ane a hal cf an sly pvedorat wed Laben, bis to , t Srfer: ete] CHICAGO .@ —. Pre a i might cost $50, lt En ene ee ae peers ars and | : y Sy Pages prices dealings migh' goats. cated |sis, brother, ins Leah in j mime Lean oe| C nervous CO ee er as ers ee | -| active, today. sa bargain. $840. win each totle wri their } : alr- “ N of . 48. is high as “a hel. Aris bought | men oe seme GE Dr BN ees Si cg a Ne! sinew ran ng [a Sah Be \ NEW the stock market : Me 1! whe yey ooh oee Taker a a a ~ |wives, paying Christiani i : of par wi F brides. | crafts boosted rs carly dealings. tise steady ‘tse: which fn some —. blamed on re nab Saxons, _ er ae j a * were stimulated by hee meer are roigee) gouodiryy ager wnt A maiden broug is i: The aircraf may : : Parsnips, | nits) Whe . Oats ¢ pay San aRnare aia the | of a wid es | ee a een lhe eat Heh boa" peter ees meu valine. king, which ng. many reriote tribes, out: nar se On ee in 1 Me 1, 1.80-1. bu; tad: sisted the of profit- j after Among be the ane he highly mars | as a ~ e bisa Re Lieige ih M4 es enatned tie oot eed gars. Doom wee @ cane. a sage went elsewhere, i se, No Q ‘| brokers : of ofa —mat stem of ~onatianel-. ak +> 8 | nee ts. 30.80, strong ‘te. Abe highe A large to pinpo' fog and ter. G@ Deliah) ebleghcn yg > Pharkes at home; + {WO stration as published @ | re ye a & tt pelts 20.50, radar through > ear &/ John ( County east James home: 19° litre figures, Ho looked oe Se eee os Rilo 1° lowed planes lies during choice. who had St. Clair her home with) Jr, and also at The ews, showed tions) What young Avvo Mig i... is 3 higher. ships and the Al many and itlof St. held at esday, Aubrey, ot 4 ve N car registr r for the 4 m Snio”” : - 403 Ooking * f for : were ttention il be bee: ava atom ter, John Gaffkay Oak; | omoti new of the yea’ road : “Balt & Cute . a > 044 ® kness There ial a seats. | wi] :30 p.m, ship Ci \brothers, Joh of Royal 224,009 nonths At sculpturing—being ‘ =. ae caght Motor Pa : ai News in Brie bis see War Il. aes Po ten ramp tears “ Se still here oe Imlay died Sunday aft ren end a Gerweute dancer reoghs aed os vision’s priest ra ormy hone | why Bee me Me Cp... $18 while irls Volunte wes de the top in line | puris . Bowen lfour sisters, . Marie- of |" the 109,- added tn ond : pecing Alt ... 3 Murrey CD. -+- 717 , driving Ya- Girls then, ir places tery. Mrs : t, Mrs re Cossin of} | cainst of January with Artis War One ad Ge ... Oe ory Bios - a8 with revoked, ssar I Job = inven their for. the |tery. illness. : lof Detroit, rs. Claire 'Ithe end Chevrolet $5,775. World - One - $03 Not ae) ; was Garden|Vq mova to take price er a long by a daughte Orion, M Ann Schroder showed with After ane Dee Sl : ines, in «3 fat Dairy. oe heiavgy 4 of 3020 and'tor Snow Re m —jhave te the regular is survived som Howard | ke and Mrs. oe and Ford Division last year ee ee ae ae _— ieee 0 RE Ret :° ities Sean 2 guilty tofor Sne _N_Y. jun-| and pay — home; a grant | etrolt, 42 and ee ae Artis read got # pris Baike .. 90.2 Nat Atte $3 mae pleaded failing vol seats. - * te- Lilah, at and. one City. t the end topped day world's teach 2 ; bran Bolte .. Mes Ehee -- ¢ Saturday after im- eyes ged girls a * voninen Huron Sonnega Garden Warden A tions, the to : | Budd Co. ..... 303 fie M Pow... 33/0 ee aaa wcuy: BE nin yester fet seprentecate oe ae ae iW {or rord Division rere ill sede ee ogee 1 & ®. 4 Ria Ys West... a6 was jailed and $25 Jus- ‘Ten eT eas ll hit. this auction br stival fund z | r, Daria IP — Service : F to 176,064 this year’s rd sculptor, University be ac- : ; pn ge BR : bs pert 3 yaeeg a $100 fine Township teered. for 10-inch fa The into the fe: t bringing ae ay requested IN TOWNSH eight-month- 197,572 figures for in thi Syracuse would ; | Compd WY ‘1a Nor Pee s....: 4.1 pay by Springfield : when a d ly $15,000 expenses 0 t mU-) of Ann herself tribu-| AVO Warden, Mrs. Wik)" other showed Buick tions students , . yy 38.4 wot Airine..: 3 posed J. Leib _— t Fred) y the expen: greates a ee pie vat mgt registra pantera sold Can ee Ol ai’ 3 Emmett or! llc ty. rintendent at/help pa world’s gree Mrs, flowers, for| Dai r of M n, will wo months 90,355 ; Oldsmo- He Artis : aaa”? 304 Owens fit Gi. 53.3\ tice to a charge oft|com Superin to work at of the work ati. ead of a fund daughte Frankson the with *s 75,286; 413| cepted, period var~ See 2: tag Ovens DH res guilty fluence Streets the girls log the| some t to Cincinn: that inst in gements | old Warden, 2638 from the! jiace Plymouth's with 72, that _peric work to var : ps vas A oe ow an... Pleading the in 454 N. put Iping unclog is*\sical talen . be placed Arran ral liam . Tuesday Home, against place _ During _ of his na- Cone, ++ ©. Panh Epl a under 35, of Healy hour help He. had Ss : hi tions 4 children. rs Funeral’ at 2 p.m Funeral - ty fifth ‘~ $1,321 pieces and received i Cater Ohie . 61 } Parke Da ri $4 | driving Lews, a $100 1.49 an : lot, help. | itish Ss p ri Brothers | be 1. Moore Cemetery, bile Jac’s 5ST, tt makes several leries his figure, San ea. ney, 3.C.... 4 Lonnie paid $ parking 1 for d Br oe Muir Bro udley H. t. Avon Pont na of & art gal for Cities Svi oe 4.7 naey. 2%. . 2.5 liquor, St Saturday Hills Jus- municipal ency cal! Strande Bay are by nout D 1 in M * died sudden- against strations -~February ious recognition : Chrysler ip .1064 pe i Cola . Sa iw ot, eld an emerg * Tokyo ’ one, Almont, : | with buria. infant Total regi January: with tional One. at Clark Rguip .106.4 paar 6 ensues @ /Sagina’ ied by Bloomfi sued ———— ted in é British Home, E; Wigent Frank! er. The home. is year's compared "The Quiet Master | Giuett Pee... ace Sf oe nose fine Richardson. Assist Floa TINS) = The is nioraps ce for Rochest ot ber for th 879,190 period. |The ” un- : Seat ERS --: 888 Pht oF. A. J. were ive to TINS) freed th — Servi LaMella yesterday * Aas | oried ware » 1955 he ee ae | Cove ae etn. 88 thee $20 costs 23,'800 Arr illage | "TOKYO was at the) wWHLFORD of 1975 Lal m.)'¥ by her paren pe la the same 15 a After degree, in | Colg A. 264 poe POR a 00 fine and Wallace, 23, ‘ Torn Vi Changsha ud bank he — at 1:30 p. urvived by and Mrs. 916,278 Col Brd vee SS vee A $1 John aded ado- ~@ — Aniship mam here t E, Wigent will be ins Fu- She is s ts, Mr, Mr, a find . oe 42,9 Pit te G o 1S Saturday by who ple ld Torn kia.” UP orning fro Bay wi ince Route 6, Hutchins ial ndparen’ rd way, and gia able to or — in cas Ea coves SF wh, sseers $06 paid Park, Bloomfie’ RIGHT, 0! e to this| m h of Tokyo stuck —si Dr., “trom the with buria her gra sin of One f Fulton, . to ilpturing a postal a s 36 Bulle ee Highland West. C.) prum rsons cam: to! mout d been | Wednesday ‘fro terviiet, "er | Arthur Frasin Frasier 0 rs, 1eS first as later as pe Pe pub Bil"... 4B84l of before Elmer 800 pe terday hter had ie, Wal ~ Prayer) 44 Fred d brothe: e fe worked and Jersey . P pt ‘ave 107.8 ~ = A — Reo 43 guilty Justice charged) timated town yes residents freig 7 . me Sey “he Cemetery tonight| and Mrs. Stes on rem . | day York Oty tor in a poo A es Eee --:- $4 ‘ownship was in-| do-torn ight is| March. 27. * * the China Watervii t 8 p.m. alin: and four aret L., | at Ho | - | New operator | eee Ay phe o iT le. Wallace nder the torna: 200-Drumr the debri vessel of ny|in V will be ai ird . Funer: Tl; Ann, Marg: farden, all 60 ing metal lathe plant, i Cont Mot... 18 Seleway Si... # win driving whe we egy beara thee day's. twister, rol agg tenes © a tug lecrvide ichardson - B Re nad Sad tae or ans) —_ Pres City defense od wet Cont ‘on psy 7 f oR fe tg. oH ees at hana. women’s | sat we last = lives. ie Navigation plied fre bd endl Pee Ric Ray and —_en WASHINGTON . c ore tie 4 be — to the Sioux = wee ion. 2 Men's, Id | s' imed Serre, fi igh tides. ome, Stan . Mrs.| % ch ceram Deere. 30 See pee... Be sale. wtus lean iohich tain bane —gaete it by hig ~: Mrs. for Eisenhower tig hare Sinee ef Somme Deno, | o> ge MA shell Os. $2] Rummage 's clothing, buys. | w response “We can boat, aided 4 IN—Service ly, 45.) dent nual spring a brief of Sou ~ Dis cvseng 314 Shall l= 61.6 children’s wonderful 5} ‘The H. C. King. he" - V n CLARKSTO Louise) See atitor his anny ing along - Indians * * ine Di c _ a2.6 Sim ‘air O : 78-6 and new— Jacob. 5 id Mayor le enough. & (Lucy » will be for , carryi ors — college Bow chem = o— Rand sgh] goods, Soave new April 9, 0:20 to| thank these people y Li e — pry ee ng Be a amma with and inte SS eure iy Du — as s Oil A. a 61. Ww, 4 Thurs., 2 e 7 a ‘ m, $ ‘ome, ? ‘ sorted of "STA Bed Of Ind... $13 8. Sagina Wed., — —Adv , = 1:30 p. Funeral H t. Park! ing as structor is a new teach- East hag » 4 Oe On te) ee m. Tues., es Siple Perry Mt. arly tional crises. * * Artis feel artists and of Hl &'Mus sss tS os Hal Be D. m. ames Epts- 1 with burial in ye tein | ’ nd the in molding future utiful things amt Bt Raat ips ts Mas "Be| (py sh= meman (soe ie So Ret rs Pasa oo nl ce os bn R 4 3 : 7 : 2 all Pope + GC ac € Bite BR... He Qwift & Co... 8 —,€ 355 W 12,9 a.m yay orig rR ICAS ANSW M sodiny gene ¢ for =* "i br oe eS him on piel : ee Fair Mor "... 40 Texas Co... 36.5] COPS: ren Ge eee av | F M Dearie: AL ING PROBL A county re we Fea nag —0 5 Me built especially nk A = i Food ‘Mach ".. 65.6 Thomp Pa. m8 oy seemed m2 oni r yay i ah. * oat HOLS SQUE is survived hters, Mrs. ly, |tage.. bui of the swa ; my. Y | C 4 Preepot. Sul. 33.6 Tim R ‘Ar. 8 lea 8 — eds) Gan bee 1 ee TE THE GROTE: — two 4 Wanda — oe one cab, 7 OCKR Niece sere Frew Bake 27 aus fare 35) ean ; ’s in ogbrgie ny “4 . an! “ =. COULD oe AB TREE. rage — a son, or National ae visit to his ro 7] Y r Guorantee Gen—Blee—rvrs-oa¢—2EADM ood. 418 S on tue ee ~aav| & | 3 pes oO of Clarkston; Soar Weothors, It is his since Full Yeo Gro- site) Underwood". 41 Ph. FE es. BA Sidon - loom arkston; fo Springs, fing retreat oF One athe? ee pang 7 i 11.3| bail. ig Productio s., of of Berring of! orite gol is expected next ants. Re- Gan Ges as Unit Aire. as ay | ‘ | Walt orm s Reserved Charles Peel ington, Elwin and eee in the From and Restaw reese No Gen shoe 3 Unit Fruit... 30.:4 : fl OLN 1, bahene dm = of Farmi of | Pontiac, | spring golf t any time ery Stores ly one ~sons ar) “Bee jaiter e Kil-| in more than a pg po! Agno “= Gen Tel... 4 ve Ges Cp... ne Earnings ST 1 Wa rsburg, gy Doris days heart att main Oem Time ... 2. Us Rubber”. 002 conde, Wire ; a ae Mille sisters, M icks and) seven September on | signs used. See oS oe wine “** 353 ee . 7" a ee ie and thre Smma Freri ac. | since his Washington : Gorse - at Van al a a NEW | YORK I of $1,018,406, equal SG cal —— all of Ponti ie tn dur beck ah the first pe od) Rox Bu. Bide. FR GOO? Soe a et acer, ae sid Solas Gwe | Steen a] her Es Comoe Gra reve 45. ia” eee ty a a nt Yankees cs ple A eee | Werk “i 44.2| : Selects * whe York = Sam | Sot eS Wong ae 3 = a n gp MP omg wad ppg oa Be eae in. 1954. AP) Amerada ih meptee Grace's —_— a oo baseball ; eaecunea™ 5-9495 a 5.9498 e geen UB, “ aa t i" va Gi : : ‘gs Holland . * 4a young nae 19:2 YORK ue ome for , rrr 648. ‘ilm star hite NOW HAVE 5-9496 gg > ee nith Rad ep Toports Lane ey maple fE 7—F and w WE fe Rend . 2 Zen Corp n red wi ily ave ROM a gray wed- 96 L a ATES me a ia ae bain gyn wr ana Prince | Hid tT rac FEDERA | il ot production it increase Ke Pe tic FE ‘ : - : eae oh inf iy, ens deg ot Sc ey oa | pence Spasassemod | Ass dust. : 74. 90.91 t outle’ inier, the’ : ise wtemclere N : Previous aor... oe ri ws ites _— * ) Foreign Envoy Rome.” Ss was aan toemee | ‘ a= $50 nae Week, ce ie 4 m3 a2 Spanish "Capital Today beontlgeren Be SS tacneet Tru | .. mie Toee Reh ate. tana 789 lens ives in ish Roman, made } 1996 high....... eis jas ft 2 1488) Arrive S$) — Span which also dress. orf Rig 3888 nee INGTON Ba berto Mar- 1% n’s wedding P ns ] 1968 Tow ore preces ths reign Minister in’ Washington "4 ; ay ian Delegation = 1a. go. Nephier Se Oe ees Fore! ; arrives -making sta A® ion . = ‘C.J. Nev poin iw Noo Artajo t-maki j mbod China > Figures after decim _ 2 Shee for a préc . ish i : Ca ed in Red a { ae Oe. aa “ts 13 visit the first time isited this ‘f Repo ‘S) — Peiping sem —— Balgwin tert. Ocha. ‘a ihe weet Jo rank has vi visit is o4 2 TOKYO ‘a Cambodian ae bee Se takes © Dace ‘te 1L6 115 | official of jo’s 10-day © rede ‘ei d today: a in Peiping Howell ect. et 1g 118 14.7 |country, coe about ook the x corse arrived 4 iow wel Fen oi bene 7 47 11) aimed to U ah, fe sport sai ~ Raty Mee. ae ee 5 Pres vagina “e radio the minister and be . Wayne Serew ane Ces. Franco pts sion included *No i pr smcnen Acce Oil Increases _ assis’ Wife | id | Whale Iceland's whale On ier Wedding Bi | REYICAVIN = losin the big.| Rainier GINS) Ship 4 largely catches in com-| ping Magna’ has accepted | Socade -— sone 608 964. Whale wife Christine | pared with 00 fn. 164, Whale : oll pi bes ¢ ' (before: oF Br j : | hi neral trrangements by the Wil: oe send ot Oe —— to contractor Hal Hayes,' iene re unk own and the vai a “ehh liam PF. Davis ral Home. HOLLYWOOD, Fila. (INS) — : _— : wud, rae8 oat tn * ee port and that said child should be plecea| WIOENT, APRIL 17, 1986, PRANK “Selfishness and greed in human patice ” under the jurisdiction of this Court, , 1975 LaMella' Dr., Route 6 a" ye "| cendiarism, He said the fire might) “He is the most wonderful man’ “tn tne name of t e of the State Mittord. age BF: beseree Raph d society” exist-lhave started from an overheated|I know. We expect to be married, pA pa one og Mw My of Helen Wigent and Mrs. Rich. ence Blue Cross-Blue plans, but there is no definite date. I)held at the Juvenile Court kha rd Peettit: dear drother of said A. Navarre furnace in the basement, e ' nd Charles Wigent, Mra. Orvie Quick a Joseph » Michigan * * * have several public commit-|County, Service Center, Court House An. Mrs. Myre as ba sae insurance commissioner. og Rely Brag ia wah of d Mrs. Prank Weil fe Firemen fought the blaze for|ments.” Pontine ta, said County, on. the 17th day peak” Braver oxttne ei te : fending more than an hour in below freez- the y ons. vet are horeny soa eagtes. Oe 2. fam. 8 Nee ee cin {ne _wemperature. They carried at e ilors etur manded 16 ppear personally at “said peeegeees Chena) wm ference of Blue Cross in Holly-|jeast a dozen residents down lad- d il Rel eri +t 1 Wigent will be taken wood, Fla. Navarre called the| gers. n later Rereet,| “this summons and notice rg, SOS Tg a Funeral ic bi) ° plans a “noble experiment, which| ‘The alarm was turned in at 4:28 ee week previous to said hearing in The a one Rev mir y = ag pg were hampered by “innocent a.m, by Washington, 24, ome n er’ Uar a ao aomeeyee printed and clating. Interment in Watervieit blundering and sometimes misap-|, resident. ashington told Witness, "the Honorable Arthur &. by the Tacherdeen-bite saetel plication of legitimate purposes.”| ficials he heard “a rushing) NEW YORK (INS)—Five Rus-|Moore, Judge of said Court, in the City Home, Walled Lake, enn He . cai 1 gi tlor: ted 1 in th of Pontiac In said County, this 3rd day . : splitting sound like an explosion an sailors granted asylum in the | or sora A.D. 1956 WILLIAMS, APRIL 7, 1966, Dan. o's «© When firemen arrived they said|U.S. last October -left for the | 84! UR EB. MOORE, fel C., 336 E. Shetfieid Ate “If present methods fail, a com-|the fire already had a good start/Soviet Union in the company of|“ ““* ©” grate 3. Vat CASSENNO, 69: dear father | of | M vif -. ,pulsory fax-supported plan may|with 50 foot tongues two Russian diplomats over the Deputy nee, liams; phy myry of stanie ; rf weekend. suventie vision. Williams, Funeral service aet 8 Well be a substitute experiment.” | spreading up through the struc-| e! ‘ % , 3086 held Wednesday, April 11, at 11 . ee The sailors were among nine of tea tadegs 4 REOULAR, Ma B aa Hom Sith Rev. Bawa ng . i ¢ Independence To p Boa ha: -" BUS DRIVER SAVES THREE —iinembers of the crew of the Soviet 't!4 Apri Fn Rey mage: board: White Chepel Cemetery. bar. Wil. Paul L. Kimbrew, 27, a bus|Tanker Tuapse allowed into the| Moved by Tucker sui by Snade Og eS A driver for the Chicago Transit Au-|U.S. after they were captared |{f2' ,\he Poard set up a thitd precinct, : thority, said he saw the smoke'in 1954 by Chinese Nationalists. |mencing at the NW corner of Section 4, WORDEN, APRIL 8, as og mg PONTIAC HOUSEWIFE, 1956 — mean paint brush is Mrs. Bert O'Dea of 74 |_E. Walton Bivd. Mrs. O'Dea is a sterling example of the new do-it-yourself housewife. She cares for “husband, three children, and leads an active” magazine selling campaign in addition to doing Swinging a door painting, all the painting‘of her house and garage plus in- Spare time? ‘Oh, yes,” says Mrs. O'Dea, “I love, to cook, garden and read.’ And just who says ~—nodern homemakers spend their-time—eating- @ box of candy in front of the television set? Bosh! ® oF varnishing and a little sanding. as he were shot. 2 : f one-minute, single-ring ceremony) £ Police said the boy told them alien” od rg Dovey in ined in the bride's Fitth Avenue home. °° man burst into the house pidinees GC cimeeae tenia. Tes There was no “obey” in the cer- shouted at his mother she wetichildren were Killed in the. fire, ton. me which the couple cpg but several others were Paved!" sced about a family the Ba gea2 to the boy's story, when their mothers dropped them) ,130°5 ide ‘said: “We want a big fam- . the man and then both she and the) Coroner Walter E. MecCarron|"¥ maybe six, ae ul — were’ shot. te ox gdh on we ee the ‘Build |Calitornia, with his wite “going . the head, Mrs. Pollard in the|ing’s 36 small flats. Mrs. Ann Pac ad forth to Nee ‘o ' chest, pe Griggs, the building manager, said masrioge v second eo esx 61 &@ week among the beautiful Gabor nk “Se oe ee only peracns Hived in the brick! ons Magda Gabor was | Pelee also took into custody /strueture. the | — “= woman they identified as Smith’s/To PROBE FIRE’S ORIGIN Gallucei, New York City industri- — Cammhanetnw wite, Mary, 29. McCarron said evidence that the/alist. They are on a six-month Eu- lower section of a fire escape had/ropean been wired to a bolt in the wall we en en ae matron of honor yesterday. Chief Fire Marshal Albert H Petersen estimated damage at will be married this month in Los) was past. “A woman screamed, ‘save my babies,’ "’ Kimbrew said. ‘She was on the second floor. I stood below while she dropped three children me. “The third one, about 3, knocked ol | me to the ground, but neither of us| . . The mother was res- 35. \Eva Gabor ——— Weds Surgeon Deaths Last Night sous, CALIENTE, hae (AP)—H- lario * the Philippines in New York City +—-NEW- YORK Actress “Eva Gabor and Dr. John E. Williams, Beverly Hills, Calif., . surgeon, jwere married here yesterday and left by auto for a honeymoon in Connecticut. “Tt was the third marriage for the glamorous 31-year-old actress jand the second for the bridgroom, * * * Magistrate Louis Kaplan, a Ga- bor family friend, performed the n|when they found. out that a few honeymoon. “The | third sister, Zsa Zsa, was I and founter of the Puulipine een, an organization to help the aged. BOSTON :— Mrs, Frances Lovering Adams, 87, widow of the late Charles Francis Adams Ill, who was secretary of the Navy under President Hoover. eee S CARLO, Monaee Bete John. head of the colo f-—4 ah Bn, of the gr Tribune, whe was in Monte Carlo er the wed- ding of dines Kelly. NEW YORK—Mrs. Adolph pon. 80, wife-of the founder and —s chairman ‘of the Paramount Pictur ST. LOUIS—Willam C. Haines, eolorful weather expert who Coenen Adm. Richard B: three jar @x- peditions 6 retired assistant eueveewagiet at the St, Louls Weather ureau. Wired for Trouble NORTH BRUNSWICK, N.J. W— A helpful patrolman stopped a motorist here and helped him tighten up a loose license plate with wire. Both were embarrassed days before, another motorist had been fined for using wire to attach a plate, STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the bate Court for es County of Ockiand, Juvenile Division. petition concern- itaenhiser ond Wilma Commenting on reports, that she Twenty of the crew remained behind when their companions were repatriated to the Sovict Union. An assistant director of the Church World Service, Jan Van- \hoogstraten, said the five men arrived Saturday at Idlewild Air-| port surrounded ‘“‘by about 20 thugs, obviously from the Soviet .|United Nations delegation and New . ’ eorner of the Township; thence South Red Cross officials cared for an| York consulate.” alone, the West Township line to the ae wal LJ ‘ownahip; nee j-iestimated 125 persons at an emer-| | * se ¢ ; [Rast to “the SE gerne i Bection fy) gency aid headquarters. Vanhoogstraten, whosé service thence North NE corner provided clothing, food and jobs for ‘the men, said they appeared happy to remain in this country Monday. Eighth Member of Family Dies of Crash Injuries . NORMAL, Ill. (INS)—The eighth member of a Mexican family has died in a Normal Hospital as the result of injuries suffered when the her} family from McAllen, Tex., a , ‘The child, Irma Mendoz, who survived the crash last Friday, died last night in Brokaw Hospital. accident when he had seen them last -“ to _|Princeton, crashed into a tractor. |‘ The giaimed the. lives! ot" of her parents and five other chil-|)ot4 ‘at Wagner, pa said child, Petition having been filed in. this Court alleging that. the present where- FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 28181 — 8 Es rr He at cal = TENOGRAP ~ TWX OPERATOR STENOGRAPHER PIST— Position Open TY PURCHASING OFFICE : fact. ~tafent son oF F js jer iy: brother _ ll al Dexter doen Kennedy. Prayer service was is m at 10 om, f Brace-Smith Funeral Home. - terment it. Cemetery. Funeral ararngements by the Brace-Smith Fun Home. 6, 1956, CHARLES A., 120 bt Lake age ‘1; beloved husband Buelah itehen; dear brother of Bloaso: Houser and Mrs. Nellie Downs. Puneral serv- ive w held Monday, April Funeral me. Interment Lakev' Mr. Kitchen rtkowtac, ai Samity” vequcete toms * _ were be_ made to the Heart Pund. SEELY, APRIL 9, 1956, 1 Beely will He Voorhees-Siple Pune’ IOMAS, APRIL 8, after thence south along West line of Sections 4 9, 16 and 21 to the BW corner of Section 21; thence East along the East Township line ‘thence North along the Bast Town- ship line to the NE corner of the Town~ ship; thence West alon the North Township line to the point of beginning, the voting booth to be located at the Number 2? Fire Station located at the corner of Sashabaw and Clarkston Roads all in the Township of Independence. Purther; Precinct Number one shall con- sist of the part of that part of the Township —_y at the corner of Oak Hill and Ha Roads thence West a the Northern ‘ownship line to the of Section 28; ‘penne west to NW corner of Section 28; thence north to the point of beginnin "“Srecinet Number Two shall In the matter of the petition concern- —_ Wo, 14531. aan Kile Dwight Ward, father of said Petition havi: been ses in tivis court it whereabout, ing Darlene Ward, Alias Pearce, minor,| Jean, 2638 Frankson, on F¥p.. beloved _—— "anu inter of Mr, and Mrb ‘orden; dear sister Biv s Ana, Margaret Loujse Irene, er oh Ray, Jeri Lou Worden. will Funeral | be held Tuesday, ‘aoeit 10, at 2 p.m. from Dudley Moore Funeral Home, with Rev Albert Eddy of- fietating. Interment in Mt. Aven Cemetery. Baby Daria le tn state at the Dudley H. Moore Funeral Hohe, Auburn Heights. for the ba ype emg “Gad uelghbors, during ger silnde cent Sortqremsat. sincerely, mrs. Mildred Stone snd family, Purther; emoria’ ben th —— a — In M mn 2 an a Roa is; ence alon: 2 o es of nig mang 27 and = *, eet oF bog a yg te the South Townsh: ine; wggenae along (he th rnahip line to the oe ite wife Jeneva, tnd Ga deugh- - J a, 2 Rohr ha _. — -_ Weldon” Road thence Weet along Waldon a sill, a. 4 whe Road to point of innit esed away Ape 1963. boi J. QOEBLER, From this wor, pain and Town! 9. 1088 To the iand of peace and rest, e . God has taken you, dear husband STATE OF MICHIGAN—In_ the Whete you have found eternal bate Court for the County of Sakinnd, rest Juvenile Division. Bed) wite At there were replies set + the Press office in the Boy Scout - 3 % 1% 1, 15, 16, ae Weta 19, 31, 38, 25, 37, 28, 32, APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. 40, 56, 58, 59, 60, 61, 64, _“Witre's DEPT. STORE 65, 66, 75, 78. ARTIST AND DISPLAY | LAYOUT MAN. MUST PUL! rt time, Ma: eee, 5 ©. Saginaw. eer — 3 ence, Dy the-Round- Ree- phan ais f hand, die cast diemakers. BE UALIFIED IN LAYOUT AND CO SHANFIELDS. FE elp Wanted WRITING. WRITE bio Wachine Help none BOX 31, PONTIAC Skilled help. Machi [FURNISHED | ae help with an invalid PRESS GIVING FULL DETAILS OF TRAIN- ING, EXPERIENCE AND BACKGROUND. $8hours. Excellent work- ing conditions. Top rates. Mold- Rite Engineering MAN AND > wire. Co., 45241 Grand River, leaves. FE 32-4082. Novi. Phone Northville WER, WOMEN. YEAR ROUND OF. 1462. route. Earn #2 to $3 per hour, i ART OR x necessary; Apply ~™, > na time. $1 Ay per hr. Call after : - SAL ESMEN AT ONCE a =: eaTint BALES Men or women to séll_real estate. A FEW MEN win ¢ Good pay, Unlimited op- Opening for two. Experienced . MECHANICAL . Must be neat in ap- preferred but i eaenry If ABIL HELPFUL. APPLY 1064 pearance One ey renced man you are willin > = oe Ww. ron OnE — oo veseen. See come is unlim poly ane. ae: ee ass AND IN- a Ask be a a CR AWFORD etraile: WANTED: Ei ‘Appi Mali cone Co. ' ramey, 7 ae, Toate: Peter 5% W. musty one FE 4140 emt oatiens oe _sin. Must Bats eeeereeion, | Employment Agencies 6A positions on our sales immediately. No over. night traveling. 64 $4200 pitiar” mar Help Wanted Female 7 BIRMINGHAM us arran, GS ried | men. 3 to a. #6. ations AIRLINES 3 OPENINGS a i iate full or fie in advertisement “Write Pontine ue ‘er i : tien. Rational rolertee eypiats, Vyeneral oftice ae of Sees ore Son ant sears cai: ae A Rear gent rear AMBITIOUS WOMAN EARN 685 Bireeden en reagen, a to Ah ng ge sight man weekly hendiing beautiful ster- ings aut . ling and fine —— china. tight Gee neg, i Ee. aeust poo Ba Bs tovere Hotel Wa- _— P PE Dts or 5 have trans é eed. Moor 4 “ pOLIshER. Ande ~ 2-627. Hurop &t. "rE - Buick, Utica, Michigan, RE BABYSITTER. 6 DAYS A WEER, Service. ‘ww. Be _Dublie 3- enings and ays off, OR : 3i2s, “Call_after GIRL WANTED a SITTER IN ViciNttY OF No experience needed. Must be RS Lake and Union Lake Rd. wel groomed. $ days. Birming- DIEMAKE wl Nig Ao ah Sia nreess Ra. Service, roti W. Huron. 551. TOOLMAKERS | #21 * LJ Tool Machinist | seinen exces JOBS FOR GIRLS air DAY aie A’ qeamaniae to start. 8 OFFICES IN MICHIGAN Call + SS eT dovens of high paying NIGHT SHIFT ASHIER GROCERY STORE Offering ns OVERTIME with experience on National Cash _ pag eg around Pon- * ee awe Register. Apply in person. sve | RECEPTIONIST, cashter...... $200 roux Grocery, 1538 Union Lake RECEPTIONIST, typing.....- $725 PONTIAC | RECEPTIONIST, steno moa $38 PRECISION ' CLERK-TYPIST RECEPTIONIST. ewneny'd... S388 TOOL p Diversity ene: Greait or | 38; SECRETARY, will train $300 762 Orchard Lake Rd. collection oo, background helpful - rt ideas eerie er oe 5 oeen) omens, Reyer & FIGURE CLERK. no type... $185 Rictine: rg BA, Sheet etal MICHIGAN {DIT COUNSELORS pln Te RY RY F ; bof me: 41% 8 w — above Oakland | SECRETARY ‘to cident. 4 A iy House ; Theater eebioes’ ie: BS _ COUNTER GIRL. prow CONEY GIRL FRIDAY. v2. $250 Island. 147_N. gR CLERK 8 ops $300 7 BOOKKEE > ach. Pas cionT 8 ASST. BOOK R for auto deaier....... $345 EXPERIENCED BEAUTY OPER. ator. Part ti 2-5231. GRAEBNER’ S—Pontiat LY FOR “EXCLUSIVEL 313 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. Phone FE 56-0277 GRAEBNER'S GIRLS" a ee WAITRESSES . Apply — 4p.m. Elks Orchard Lak TENCED CSE. BIRMING- iy. growing, at ire & SON eras” ster par i> LAYOUTS AW’ CED WAITRESS. AP. fitters. be able to tack im person. The Hangar Res- mu oan on work — e arent, At Airport. NCED WAITRESS, FOR for MAple 58-7851, OBS FOR MEN SE TRAINEE ECHANICAL ENGINEER... ham Community House, Midwest MECHAN a - mse: OFrice MO MGR, TRAINEE “CAREER CEN Riker Bidg. s = TER £0416 ~ LEARN TO B EA PRIVATE SECRETARY RNI- days. ture salesman. Good salary and x RIENCED WAT 7 You need no.experience to be the steady og et resses wanted. Martinelii's resteu- ~ foram bgt 4 > & we references, ress. y's rn! rant. 138 8 Woodward, Birming- ve a inown ‘er- Fes Wars ialgne = | geppigehct“wowne—roe | tet permease wket : A x! MAN ony s Se, bennave 3 any. ne. autom wes’ tise State ank Bendy werk” Vacation with, par, see Sn codiee. or ire Bldg, PR S-0237 inerring Pe ban rane Ee c api meee RECEPTIONIST eneral farm work month L ERICAL, T be 7 Giehbosre” °2 big Dobet, 3460 Dutton a. och: Se ie Digeegnt sur. erences, ry aee einer mater Att. ing age, experience, and pay ex- R L Riker hice. Food Plan Salesmen ia SF eatin Press. FE 8.0416. We are tr need en OT is al wo IN LAUNDRY PONTIAC who ate Setistieg with their No neces- Ours age tween § and 10 a. —d — ot commission. me tne Ballaers® een or ilegraph, bear Or Or- " W. Huron refer ‘ vel, Seeslion corn rd Se tie Center. rT ‘ aa: SMAN . Tor, wholesale distributor. Will be rénees. "Mi ase. | ° Contacting retails store ore riage bre Riker