a iE _ The Weather City to Extend - Parking Area U.s. Weather Bareae Forecast _ TAC Fair ang Cooler. +. ' (Detalis en Page 2) . | 7 2 : ‘ = 115th YEAR kk kk *& ~~ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, MAY-1, 1957 —44 PAGES =oum re. UNITED PRass PROTOS ee ae Here's Miss Front Page for May The month of May brings many pleasant things — balmy. days, spring flowers — and a new Miss Front Page. The nod this month goes to 22-year- old Patricia Joan Parmenter, of 5520 Sunwood, Huntoon Lake, in Waterford Township. The young lady is enthusiast, with skiing (snow and water), swimming and golf hold- ing top rating in her book. She is a graduate of Township High School and for the past three by Pontiac auditor in partment. » meets the US. number. Waterford fine days. Mrs. Kenneth R. Parmenter. A brother, Raymond, is in the Armed Forces of | . And boys, in her life, appointment at the altar one of these é fe Peatiac Press Pheote years has been employed Motor Division, as invoice Mixed ‘action Gree Seek Injunction fo Safeguard Oil Firm Data U.S. Antitrust Lawyers | Want Court to Forbid Record Destruction WASHINGTON (® Government antitrust law-) yers have asked a federal! court to forbid about 35) major oi! companies from) — may be needed in a grand jury probe of recent oil price increases. The motion for an in- junction, District Court in nearby Alexandria, Va., said possi- ble litigation “may be frustrated and wil! be seriously impaired” by loss the accounts payable de- Her parents are Mr. and with whom she has an Other County Areas Get OK State Approves Bond Issue for Pontiac City Schools A $2.7 million bond issue for Pantiac school construc- tion was approved yesterday by the Michigan meen ictpeh ce Commission. e bond revenue will make up a part of the Pontiac) million School System’s $5.2 construction program started under the current budget and to continue dur- ——fing the 1957-58 fiscal year. Negotiates for Space, on West Huron Street for 52 Cars Pontiac will add 52 spaces to its _ growing off-street parking program with the addition of a new lot off West Huron apd west of Pine street, : City commissioners last night authorized City Manager Walter K. Willman to continue negoti- ations for the lét from the Detroit Edison Co, for $25,000. Willman said the ‘city will spend $750 per car space Included are the new senior high | school, the Herrington Hills and Kennett road elementaries, and ad- ditions to the Malkim and Bethune Elementaries. The commission also approved $25,000 in special assessment bonds for Walled Lake to be used for street improvements and $36,000 in special assessment bonds for Southfield Township to be used for the same purpose. School District No. 5, which in- cludes Farmington Township, was granted approval to isstie $70,000 in notes for current operating ex- Rover's License | Will Be $1 More After May 15 Tf you want to save a dollar on the 1957 licensé for your dog, you have until May 15 to do so, ing to Pontiac City Clerk Ada R. After that date the cost of a idoesn’t require a rabies vaccina- tion before a_ license is granted as in other parts of the county, the clerk mentioned. — Licenses are available at the clerk's office in. the City Hall five: days a week from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. ~ It Matters Not the Age Cupid Ushers. In pring .DETROIT #® — Ninety- ad William - Ruff applied yesterday for a*marriage license to wed 72-year-old Mrs. Nellie B. ’ Smethers. “Nellie is partial to older men,” Ruff told County Clerk Edgar M. Branigan. “I had to do most of the chasing, though,” ~ he added. Dati, twice @. widower, iq active th the veel estate busines in suburban Highland Park: Mrs. Smethers,-a widow, lives with a a3 * __ license in-.New York yesterday, . o: fi NEW YORK {INS) — Spring definitely has arrived. Tommy | '* Manville,. the marrying millionaire, took out his 10th marriage = daughter in Detroit, Rutt said they met at's social chi for older * = ee Oe eee Opens Hearing on CAB ‘Leaks’ Sen. Jackson Charges Stock Speculation After Vote for Northeast WASHINGTON (#—Sen. Jack- son (D-Wash.) opens today a pub- lic hearing he said will show | some Civil Aeronautics Board em- ployes “leaked” profitable secrets to stock market speculators. * * ® A splurge of trading in North- east Airlines stock last Aug. 3 which ‘sent the price soaring set off the inquiry by the Senate In- vestigations subcommittee with Jackson presiding. The trading started the morn- ing after CAB had voted secretly to award Northeast the profitable New: York to Miami air route over the rival bid of Delta Airlines, The decision Was not announced offi- cially until Aug. 10. x * * As the leadoff witness the sub- committee summoned Robert R. ‘Snodgrass of Atlanta, Republican national committeeman from Georgia. Jackson said-he will be asked whether he bought 1,000 shares of Northeast stock on Aug. 3; and if so, why he did and }whether he profited. - “The subcommittee ‘will show,” Jackson said “that there were leaks in ‘connection with this award to Northeast Airlines; that CAB employes gave the informa- tion concerning the secret deci- sion to certain outside individuals; that this was in violation of CAB regulations, and that as a result of the leak there was, much stock activity on Aug. 3, 1956... . * * * -“Inquiry revealed that this was not an unusual case as there had been many _ from the CAB in the past.” “It would appear,” he added, “that some members of the CAB vestigation. Fair, Cooler Outlook for Tonight, Thursday of pertinent documents. never mind the telephone | There’s another serviceman “zona il be iad er with the il be i cok ing Judge Albert V. Bryan has, or- dered a hearing on the motion to- | morrow A dustice Department spokes. | man said the motion was based en the action of ene company which destroyed some records, He did not name the firm, but _jsaid about 35 companies were listed jm the motion. | lah delsumant’ te dctded j told The department, tn on eftante ee The king told newsmen “I can assure * * * supporting the motion, said many) companies have a practice of de- longer needed. It added that the company which destroyed some records got irid of documents dealing with oil pricing in 1955. These were destroyed unter the | firm’s “file destruction pro- | last January. that there would | be an investigation of price in- creases which followed the Suez — Canal closure. The motion specifically requests the companies be enjoined from destroying “‘any of its existing files and records relating to the: purchase, destribution or sale of. petroleum products, including all documents relating or referring to the determination, establishment, | maintenance or change of prices for crude petroleum or for refined | petroleum pears” * * Last week, Horace L. Flurry, the Justice Department lawyer’ who was handling the oll case. resigned after a disagreement with superiors over the investiga- tion. ‘Not Political Weapons CAIRO (INS) — Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn) on U. §. refusal to sel] Egypt urgently needed goods after the invasion: “Where there’s want and suf-- fering and the government is not openly hostile, food and medi- cines should not be used as polit- ical weapons either to influence or to punish.” destroying records which) | filed in Federal’ stroying records they think are no) | gram,” the affidavit added, after Hussein NEWS CONFERENCE — Seated at a long. giass-topped table in banquet hall Amman, King Hussein of Jordan, Says Crisis of palace at wearing dark news confer- Tallhuni, chief | Ended AP Wirephoto you the crisis in Jordan is ended.” Standing im- mediately behind Hussein, from left, are: Bahjat of the royal cabinet; Col. Radi Abdullah ofthe Jordanian army, and Medhat Sa Soviet Inspection Plan | More Vital Area Listed for U.S. Than in Russia Reds Could See Alaska, Western Atomic Bases; Their Industry Left Out WASHINGTON (INS) — U.S. officials today greeted ‘with mixed reaction the new Soviet disarmament proposal calling for aerial inspection of parts of Rus- sia and the American mainland. : Some diplomats studying the plan, first proposed by the Russians at the United Nations disarmament sub- committee in London on Monday, were cool towards the idea. They urgued that the plan would permit the Soviets to inspect Alaska and all of the U.S., west of the Mississippi, including several highly. populated areas, important “industrial and- atomic installations, and military bases, On the other hand, they said, the U. 8. would be_permitted to operate the open skies inspec- tion plan over only one-third the U.S.S.R., a good which would be the icy land of Siberia. U.S. Appears Unworried= “by King Hussein’s Rebuff ‘to be unworried by King Hussein’ s| | rebuff to President Eisenhower's | Middle East program. | Hussein has accepted an Amer-| ican offer of 10 million dollars to help him strengthen his country ’s| economy and finances and pre- WASHINGTON @® — State De-! sumably also to assist in meeting | Atty, Gen, Brownell announced | partment officials professed today) the payroll for his army. at Amman yesterday that Jordan from _Eisenhower's special ambas- But he told a tews conference is not interested in the Eisen- hower Doctrine. He said he had declined a visit) Starting Tomorrow Know Your Weather Remember the old rule for - lightning flash, until you hear * * _ at night as well as in the daytime? You can learn the answers to fascinating explanations and tips Press, ° far away the lightning actually was? — Do you know what is the most dangerous of all clouds, and from what directions thunderstorms of summer usually come? And do you know how high these’ thunderheads build up in summer, and whether it is safe to fly through them? Do -you know in which states tornadoes occur most frequently "and some of the things which cause them? Do tornadoes occur What is the only other country which experiences irceguas tornadoes of the type seen in the United States? the Weather,"’ a new column on weather omens, ‘signs in the sky and general information, beginning- tomorrow in the Pontiac counting the seconds after a thunder, then computing how * ~ these questions, and get many about the weather in “Know sador in the Middle East, James P. Richards. Officials here said acceptance of the program was not particu- larly important because Hussein jis in fact working along the same | lines. U. S. policy laid down in a res- olution by Congress in March is aimed at opposing the spread of Conmimunist influence in the Mid- dle East and promoting stability there. . Officials said Hussein has cut out Communist propaganda in his country as much as possible, has put known Communists in jail and has refused to establish diplomat- ic relations with the Soviet. a en The King's inability to accept the Eisenhower program is, at- tributed here to the temper of .|public opinion in Jordan, which is highly nationalistic and strong- ly opposed to any_act which would appear to link Jordan too closely with the United States. Cherry Blossoms Early TRAVERSE CITY # — Dis- trict horticultural agent Clarence Mullett says sweet cherry blos- soms on Old Mission Peninsula are at least two weeks ahead of their timetable last year. staff lied” in the course of the in-|. © suburb) ofl ‘ iwi ‘One workman was Walled —_ Dense. clouds of octid smoke ‘FUMES _ our tom the foreting coe bores a ofthe U.S. Steel after... it. was. Socked bya... / Explosion Rocks Plant in. Pittsburgh. Steel Area yesterday. 7 said it could be the basis for important negotiations which | could start the ball rolling toward a generah disarmament agree- ment. Those who held this view added that it depends on whether the Russians would be willing to ne- gotiate on the areas to be includ- ed in the aerial inspection to make it more equitable. : * o&® ot As presented by Soviet Delegate Valerian Zorin, 2,780,000 square miles of Russia would be included in the inspection area and 2,730,- 000 square miles of Alaska and ® ¢ planes, CITIES LEFT OUT ° The most important industrial area in Russia, the Urals, and the principal cities, such as Moscow, Leningrad and Stalingyad; would (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) - Pontiac Traffic Record Perfect to photor ‘ect to Achieve Distinction in Month of March . Pontiac was one of four Michi- gan cities which marked up a per- fect traffic record during. March, according to the National Safety Council, ¥ * * Hearing the council's report, and Capt. Joseph Koren, head of the Traffic and Safety Bureau, were quick to add that Pontiac has held such a record for the year. Pontiac and Lansing reported no fatalities in the 50,000 to 100,000 population class, while Muskegon claimed the: same record for the 25,000 to 50,000 group. St. Clair was the fourth city with a perfect rec- ord in-the 10,000 to. 25,000 ‘bracket. * * * “Tt is very gratifying to me,’* said Citief. Straley, “and shows with the cooperation of all the +t ¢itizens such a record’ isobtain- _jable.” ; In Today's his a Pot-0-Gold seeapevuep’ see giee Pe 4 Obituaries #s ee Ss. fi County News eter te w Editorials sreags are eeeatee oe ‘ i a a v : Sports. eee ae ; se = wee = ar Wirephote eee ee i? and 21 . This long-range picture was 4 from across | TV & Radice the M la Rivet. Col carrying barges im'-| Wileom, Haat”. J.ccs.eeceie | {be foregtound. oe ae i } — Rages sreeneee, the Western U. S. would be opened , City One of 4 in State - Police Chief Herbert W, Straley . D ‘SBvd WIA0 DV THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY. 1, 1957 Sine ante MSU fo Survey Need of Area Seeks Aid of Schools. to Determine Courses, in cas Branch An extensive sur” 'star#ed about May 15 in Oakland _and Macomb.counues by osc rey State (idicerr in cooperation , with area scheol systems to de-| termine the needs for post-high! schoo] education. Initia] plans for the survey are, announced by school officials st the two counties and by MSU ad-} ministrators. | The questionnaire survey among! children, parents and other adults, and area teachers and educ ators will have. two objectives: | ’ To survey interest of area | weideuts for education beyond | high school, 2, To determine area demands | for various courses which might | be offered at the projected MSU branch at the Meadowbrook | Farms eState due te open in , the fall of 1959. - MSU officials explain that the) survey will be instrumental in! analyzing the needs -of the area| and in planning for courses in| such fields as engineering. business’ and public service, education and} others, a * * * Dr. John A. Hannah, MSU pres- ident, has stated, ‘“‘The willing bx jgion manager in 1956, the position” | cooperation of so many Oakland| and Macomb citizens enables us to go ahead with the planning, | secure in the knowledge that we will have the best of advice and! as regional manager of the west Region, with headquarters in} Chicago, also was announced. mark has told Russia she intends Schulte succeeds Holmes. Central Region Manager Named by Pontiac Motor The appointment of Lonnie H. Holmes as Central Region mana- ger of Pontiac Motor Division, with headquarters in Pontiac, was announced today by Frank V. Bridge, general sales manager. Previously, Holmes has served as regional manager in the Pacific and Midwest, Regions. He succeeds ‘Latham Clark, who is retiring. — Holmes joined Pontiac Motor Division in 1934 and held positions of responsibility in Pontiac's Charlotte, Washington and Mem- phis zones prior to becoming the Division’s Atlanta zone manager in 1948. He was named Pacific Region manager in 1953 and Midwest Re- ihe held until his new assignment. * * * | Clark has been associated’ with 'Pontiac for 26 years. © iSTARTED IN 1931 — He joined the Pontiac Motor Di- vision as a district manager in 1931 and became zone manager in Buffalo in 1940. He served as zone | manager in Boston before being ap-/ Danes Answer pone Central Region manaees Soviet Ch ar ge Clark is a native of Detroit and attended the University of Michi- Note Goes to Moscow Telling of Intention to gan. He is married and has one daughter. He resides in Birming- 1G. J. Schulte) Stay in NATO Mid-| LONNIE H, HOLMES ‘ham, The scpcitunest 0 ke Meets GOP Congress Heads The Day i in Birmingham for E. Maple BIRMINGHAM — Commissioners drew charges of insufficient knowledge Monday when they up- proved the assessment roll for = E. Maple avenue widening. The roll was spread on the basis of 85 per cent of the cost against Faces Revolt in Party Over Economy Drive on Foreign Aid, Schools WASHINGTON (INS)—Presidertt Eisenhower meets with GOP con- gressional leaders today to renew his drive for a legislative program threatened by —— County IB Unit legislators. * : Eisenhower—tanned and relaxed his own party on such issues as for- eign aid, federal school. assistance and other spending programs. The Chief Executive is particu- larly concerned over expected congressional drives to trim the record peacetime budget of 71.8 billion dollars by slashing the tereign aid program. * * * At today's meeting will be Se Annual Meeting Learns of Record Fund Drive; Mehas Heads Officers - At the pnpual meeting and din- ner of the County Tuber- culosis Association at Hotel Wald- a a tts es el O1C OF Progress n- ron Tuesday evening, the report of | Pass. Assessment Roll Widening abutting property owners and 15 per cent against the city at large. A total ‘cost of the assessment roll ig $41,900. The city, however, has adopted a new “standard” for street projects with 87 feet designated for commercial, The Maple stretch between Hunter boulevard and Adams road is slated to be 45 feet leaving but eight feet for the spécial assegement district. Property owners said they felt they will not reap enough benefit ‘be detrimental to their businesses. Mayor William Roberts said he was not aware that any im- mediate banning of parking was planned, He reminded the group of the~share the city already hag assumed, ate GOP Leader William Know: land, who has openly broken with showed total receipts for the 1956. the Administration over the size of Christmas seals in the county, the budget. Both Knowlarid and was $68,485, the largest in the Senate Majority Leader”. Lyndon ‘association's history. Johnson (D-Tex), reported at the| Of this amount, $57,530 remains: windup of the congressional Easter in the county, to be expended for recess that voters put federal spending and taxes at the top of leducation and case finding. The problems they are concerned with ‘remainder goes to the state and now, national associations. The local budget for the com- ing year is tentatively set at. $55,900, i* * * Eisenhower, on his arrival in Washington yesterday afternoon, ‘Executive Secretary A. R. Musson’ ‘local work, principally for self-, held a conference with Secretary COPENHAGEN (INS) — Den- remaining in the North Atlantic) ~*~ * * Treaty Organization and to adapt, of State John Foster Dulles and under secretary Christian Herter in the office-stateroom of his plane, the Columbine III, Paul T. Chapman, Detroit) tuberculosis controller, was the | guest speaker. He talked on the question of finding the unknown | cases of tuberculosis in South- eastern Michigan. The existing 31 foot strip will be torn up and replaced plus an ‘additional six feet to bring it to ‘the newly accepted standard of 37 |feet. This will be a city at large cost. a en 2 Birmingham's Junior League was ‘honored this afternoon when Mayor William Roberts extended thanks |to Mrs. Gene White, league presi- dent for the group’s work, The formal presentation took place at ithe open house of the Birmingham Child Guidance Clinic. The mayor thanked league members for the ‘part they played in activating the \clinie in Birmingham. “It is something we needed Roberts said, “and your 4 guidance in makjng the new insti- Schulte joined General Motors in her defenses as she sees fit. | Eisenhower is determined to | members have done the commun- tution of maximum usefulness in| the area it is Intended to serve.’’| * * * The proposed branch of Michi-| gan State will be at the Meadow-, brook Farm, Site studies are un- der way and the construction con- ‘tract tor the first building is ex-, pected to be let within the next. year, FOOTLOOSE FLIER — Shoes are for the earth-bound, so % year-old Julie O'Brien, of Brooklyn, flies high on a playground swing. The scene will be duplicated many, many times as spring weather spreads across the nation. re United Press Photo leaves hers behind as she The gift of Mfr. and Mrs. Al-} fred G. Wilson of their Meadow-| I brook estate and a $2 million cash| endowment to establish a branch was accepted in January by governing board of Michigan 5 Siri Various advisory committees of : area leaders have been selected to ~ guide in the development of the plans. Two mothers and their 14 chil- dren piled into one car late yes-! lterday afternoon in search of a ihouse somewhere in Rose Town-| | ship which they could make into. ja home. Appoint Publisher of Adrian Telegram ‘ ier’ egret aes | Ppsiisme Ww — Appointment of ‘both employed at Holly Coach,| . Kenneth Wesley, business man- manufacturer of house as pin and secretary-treasurer of the had already left in the Knowlton Monroe Evening News, as pub- ‘ “ar to search for the same néces-_ lisher of the Adrian Telegram was Sity,,a place to live. announced today. | Fire had swallowed up their) Wesley will succeed Stuart H. eight room cottage before daylight Perry, who died Feb. 15, as pub- yesterday morning. lisher of the Adrian Telegram. He AM sf Os wisetbics of the. will continue as business manager) and secretary -treasurer of the two families escaped trem the Monroe Evening News and will! emeked ied ropue ‘enengt ear reside in Monroe. , Elaine Knowlton, 2, who suffo- xk « cated in her crib during the Wesley is a son-in-law of the: franctic evacuation, late Stuart H. Perry and for sev-| Meanwhile, other people were eral years was associate publisher thinking about the two distressed of the Télegram. \families. | Mrs, George Gibson, who lives jacross the road from the ruined Drop Threat Char ge, |house, on Pepper toad said a Man Jailed and Fined room full of clothing, food and fur- ; initure had been brought to her Joseph T. Young, 62, of 9151 Rat-|house for the two families” Col- :talee Lake Rd., Clarkston, de-|lections had started early yester- - tained Saturday for investigation day morning following the fire. Fire Victims Start Hunt for New Dwelling Place 1933 and came to Pontiac in 1936.| 4 Danish note rejecting a So- From 1936 to 1946 he held positions viet charge that the tiny nation on the Pontiac central office sales)--\s an advanced springboard and staff, | base for attack against the Soviet) was appointed zone | Union" was delivered in Moscow renee ie Kcamane City and be (Monday and published in Copen- later became manager of the {hagen today. Pontiac zone. He was appointed | = The Danish note was in — Chicago zone manager in 1956 | to da warning from Soviet Pre and has held this position until ny Nikolai Bulganin his new assignment. ; ‘month cautioning Denmark | In other appointments, Walter *sAinet permitting U.S. atomic Sect | save his foreign ald proposal. His conference today was expect- ed to be followed shortly with a television-radio address to the American people on the need Directors chosen for terms of Ithree years were: Mrs. Joseph’ J. D. Monroe of Pontiac; Joe Haas of Holly; Frank Bartlett of South ter this program. Lyon; Dr. Kenneth Gibson of Bir-| ~*~ *& * 'mingham, and Cari D. Wheaten of | The Chief Executive's physician, Farmington. 'Dr: Howard McC, Snyder, said the| Officers elected for the coming 12 days at Augusta were ‘‘very year were president, Dr. C. P. ‘beneficial’ to his famous patient. Mehas of Birmingham; vice presi- The cough, which has plagued the’ ldent, Dr. A. R. Young of Pontiac, J. McGrath was named zone mana-| @%¢s on her soil. ger of the Chicago zone, succeed-| Danish Premier Hans Christian ing Schulte. John F. Malone was Hansen's answer said: named to head the Cleveland’ -the Soviet government's con- zone, succeeding McGrath. iception of the North Atlantic The Camp Fire Girls, and the Baptist Church in Rose Center also have brought gifts, The two families used the Gib-| son house yesterday as a head-| quarters during their search for another home. The house which burned to the ground yesterday was the tem- porary home for the two tami- lies, The- Knowltons rented the house and moved in March 9. Several weeks later, the Benja- mins moved in with their seven children. “We have been neighbors off and_| jon since 1950 when we lived in \Oxford,”” said Mrs. Benjamin. . * * * The Benjamins had moved in with the Knowlton’s temporarily, waiting for a house nearby te be vacated, - Funeral service for Elaine will! be held at the Dryer Funeral Home in Holly tomorrow morning at 10. |Treaty Organization is based on) a fundamental mistake. NATO is jand will remain a defensive alli- | ance. Denmark could not associ- ‘ate itself with a policy having aggressive aims.” * * * Hansen told Russia her fears \were groundless and ‘that every nation had a right to adapt its defenses as it saw fit, Hansen told Russia that the crushing of the Hungarian upris- ing by Soviet troops had lessened Danish hopes of increased East- West cooperation. Quarles, Douglas Take Oaths Today WASHINGTON (#— In the pres- ence of President Eisenhower and top Pentagon officials, Donald A. Quaries was sworn in today as deputy secretary of defense. James H. Douglas took the oath as secretary of the Air Force at Golfer Finds Stolen Jug of Dangerous Acid LANSING # — A missing jug of dangerous hydrofluoric acid was \found in a Lansing park last night iby a golfer practicing his swing. | | Police had put out a warning) ‘that the acid: stolen from a Lan-, sing wholesale chemical firm, was potentially dangerous. * * * An official of the Carrier- ‘Stephens Co. described the-acid as. ‘very volatile, very corrosive and| highly dangerous.” He said it could ‘eat through flesh to the bone and jpossibly cause ori * * >The golfer aaied a five-gallon plastic jug containing the acid ly- ing in weeds in St. Joseph Park on the west side of the city. ‘Police were notified and an em- ploye of the chemical firm recov- ered the acid. Police were questioning juveniles suspected in the dangerous theft. School, Health Funds House. * * * each of the two men in turn and presented them their commissions. the same ceremony at the White Meqr Lebanon Eisenhower thrust out a hand to President stnce inauguration day, and treasurer, Frank =<" of Jan. 21, has virtually disappeared. South Lyon. Overflow of Sabine River Causes Oi Well Shutdown DALLAS ots upper Sabine!Texas floods. Latest victim report-! River, at its greatest height in| ‘ed was Earl Thomas, 27, a prison ‘history, went out of its batiks| trusty who was sent out to “make; around Gladewater but the threat!tracks” for bloodhound training of major floods on. other Texas and drowned in a flooded ravine. | rivers eased slightly today. - Absence of further damaging) Oil wells irt the petroleum-rich| rains west of the Sabine helped re- Gladewater area stopped pumping lieve flood threats on the Solo- because of high water. The river,rado, Nueces, Guadalupe, Trinity flowed out jt a mile and Brazos rivers. on the southwest side “of town. * * There were fo residents in the immediate area. ile, the drowning. toll climbed to 13 in the 14 days of * evacuated in some low areas, the floods crept over bottom land disaster area ‘only a few weeks “ew ago, and some persons still were Civilian Pilots isolated by high water. Spot Sixth Fleet * * “The river is easing on out," he said, “Eleven families have evacuated as a precaution, PARIS (INS) — Main units of the U.S. Sixth Fleet were reported sighted today by civilian airlines pilots, France Presse said, ‘Panter, Dr. C. A. Neafie and Dr.| But families still were being, fields which were in the drought been and ity a great service by bringing it to us." * + e Persons not season members us- ing the Springdale Golf Course, be asked to pay for extra rounds this summer. City Manager ‘Harold K. Schone said that under the present set-up it is entirely possible for a person or group to monopolize the course for the day at only one fee. The proposed icharge for additional rounds is 50 cents. a * * Jonella Z. Curd | Widow of William C. Curd, Mrs. | Curd, 72, of 967 Ridgedale, died ‘yesterday in Bloomfield Hospital. ~ (She . was a native of Texas. Private service was held this ‘afternoon from Bell Chapel of the — R. Hamilton Co. with Parkview Memorial Piao al spate There are no immediate surviv- ors. Red Inspection Plan Exposes Vital Area (Continued From Page One) be left out under the Moscow | plan. The state department had no official comment on the proposal land indicated that if any was forthcoming it would be made by Harold E. Stassen, who is rep- resenting the U. §. at the London '| talks. * * * Officials said that one hopeful indication of the possible serious- ness of the Russians was that the proposal was presented formally to the meeting in London 24 hours before it was made public, é of threatening to kill a man, was “One man, Earl Van Lew- ordered to serve three days*in the ven, of Davisburg, even called and county jail and pay a $75 fine yes-offered a two story house tb. the terday. ifamilies,"” she said today. Young pleaded, guilty to creating|——; 7 a disturbance when he was ar- raigned before Municipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum. He was. arrested by Pontiac Po- lice after a local bartender and another citizen disarmed him of a loaded rifle after a threat against man was reported missing yester- Ray Fetteringer, 32, of 1173 Vine- day—a week after he took off in wood St. ihis single engine airplane on a The charge was reduced when flight to Elkhart, Ind. Fettinger declined to file ‘a com-| William Layne, manager of the A large audience in Royal Oak last night heard four experts make a somber comparison of available state funds with skyrocketing needs in education and mental health, Michigan Man, Plane Missing One Week GRAND HAVEN —A Michigan t *& Speaking at George A. Dondero High School were Dr. James W. May Fall Below Needs S=: "=" si" “You've been moving around quite a bit,” the President told) act, Quarles has been secretary of the Air Force and before that was assistant secretary of defense for research” and development, Doug- las moved up from undersecretary of the Air Force. a cut of about $20 less per pupil than school boards counted on in drawing up budgets, Miller hit the present school aid law, saying it forced schdol * seats mpccdedae ts | . '$7.8 Million for State tal ball gazers,” with the resuit,in Military Spending Bid that an unforeseen decrease in| wASHINGTON — The De- Jordanian crisis. Agence about 60 miles off the Lebanese’ The exact whereabouts of the atomic- muscled fleet centered around the carrier Forrestal had been unknown since the fleet pulled out of French and Italian ports last week at the height of the AFP quoted the pilots who landed in Beirut as saying-they saw the. Forréstal and some 30 other units’ of the Mediterranean fleet off the Lebanese coast. The pilots said the ships and jet aircraft appeared to there will be several more before s all over with. If it keeps go- _ ou jo ie mats wh ot te tape sentatives of the U. 8., Russia, Britain, France and Canada. The French delegate was not as feticent as the U. S. repre- The main part of Chahewsine is sentative in commenting on the protected by levees. Child Hit in Driveway, Injuries Prove .Slight Lewallen Joel Benjamin, — Grand Haven Airport, said Donald| Miller, director of the State De-| sales tax revenues “has the whole|fense Department today included a be maneuvering. R. Miller, 38. of nearby Spring| partment of Administration; Dr.|program in dire straits.” . . {$7,830,000 appropriation for Michj-|_ Si | ships detached fron Se ceed Povseahile, eon bik ep 2] renee artis ot Ba turrReny Lake, took off the afternoon of| Paul L. Lowinger, of Detroit's new| Hilberry said the number of!gan in asking for new|main body of the fleet and docked) — sien by Jean Mahew, of 3085) °° , he said. The Weather April’ 23, He was reported miss-|Lafayette Clinic for mental health; | College enrollees has tripled tolauthority to spend $1,561,388,000 on|esterday in Beirut for a three) i To hat a tag) This is likely to be the U ing yesterday-by his wife, June 26.. Norman E. Borgerson, Deputy! 129,000 since 1930,. and promises/ military construction. day visit Township. ee position when all the Pell S. Weather Bureae, Report | Layne said authorities at the| State Superintendent of Public In-|to hit at least 307,000. by 1975. Michigan projects in the request, Mrs Mayhew er Waterford the new proposal are com | hONTIAC AND VicTNITY Svar? snd Indiana Airport reported Miller did struction, and Dr. Clarence B.| “The needs for trained peoplejall Air Force, and the amount/Price of Milk Drops hrownabip’ police the was backing) °C Aueticen officials are draw qegter _ Galchs, - toe. 1-0. Temmerevinot atrive. Hilberry, -president of Wayne State| are fast outstripping our supply./sought, include Kinross Air Force her driveway next to the ing what winds at 19-15 wiles an hear becoming); Mrs. Miller said her husband,/ University. I know of no college that in any|Base, Sault Ste. Marie, $1,118,000;} DETROIT (INS) — The price of|Benjamin home when Lewallen from the fact there is a new pro- iy ot 18-13 miles aa a salesman, frequently went on ex- ere tonigh ; Miller warned that an expect- , TODAY IN PONTIAC tended seles trips. She said she be- ed 3335.8 million In unrestricted Lowest temperature preceding 6 a.m. came worried Saturday when he 63. aCUls- $8 am: Wind velocity 13° m.p.b. = telephone = bjs ‘Sun sets Wednesday at 7.31 p.m. Unfinished School state revenues this year may be. “unduly optimistic.” Sun rises Thureday at 5:26 a.m. Moon sets Wednesday at 6:32 p.m. Moon rises Thursday at 7:20 a.m. ga m Downtown Temperstares 1» Damaged by Fire what is -needed,” he told the audi- 9. Miriceccs..8% 13M... ccecoee SEE” ence of 250 at a public meeting oa eegggar ae ar eae #3; MADISON HEIGHTS — - Fire de- ‘ 2* aR stroyed part of the Lessenger Ele- sponsored by several county edu- Tuesday in Pontiac foo recorded downtown) streets here late last night, WORGID aise dpenbscesctss ve! Lowest toon cs oavecceteceses 48 Mess wanperstere =... #5) According to Capt. Joseph Sloan +: Weakiar- per cent general a) 25 years, an additional tiac General Hospital. They received the injuries when their car, which was going west on Maple road, struck one driven by Joseph A. Deimling, 46, of 2765 Benstein Rd., Walled Lake. as he pulled into M » road from Hag- igerty road, sake Oakland County For Office Supp! BACKENSTOSE The union said unresolved BOOK STORE "| 7 E. Lawrence $ Seputy reports. — : SPECIAL PURCHASE! Slight Irregulars of Breezeweight Blankets in Chatham's Exquisite ‘“‘Summer Rose” 99 Reg. $5.95 if perfect! Pattern! 72x90" size, fit full or twin size beds You save almost $2.00 on each blanket because of unnoticeable tiny irregularities which will not impair the service or wearing qualities of these blankets! ! A breeze-light blend of rayon, cotton and orlon—all the blanket many fami- lies need from spring to fall; also good». to have as an extra throw for cold win- ter. Like all Chatham blankets, it washes beautifully. Mothproof, too. 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Crisp Washable Cottons in Gay Summer Plaids by Adele Ideal for Mother’s Day 12-20, ee fe non ‘3 nm TRC ti nnn * é (Above) A gay woven plaid cotton dress in the sleeveless golfer style. Pert buttons to the hem. Sunshine colors. (Right) Short sleeve woven plaid cotton with ‘criss-cross neck and buttons to the hem. Sun-drenched colors. Charge Yours at Waite's—Daytime Dresses . . . Third Floor As Seen on TV! . , playtex’ mold nhold Jn AnD Convent #08 EVERY. woman your size . . . this new Playtex Girdle is for you THE PONTIAC PRESS. 1; 1957 _ MAKE OVE! General Electric Walkout Ends 20,500 Return to Work After Company, Union) Agree to Arbitration LYNN, Mass. —A decision to arbitrate’ differences has ended a five-day, strike that idled 20,500 working on defense contracts at the five Lynn and Everett plants of General Electric Co. * * * The factories make jet engine parts and steam turbines, * * * 1 A committee of 15 clergymen| ‘summoned management and un- ion negotiators to try for a quick settlement of the strike. The grievances, ‘now to be gent to .arhitration, involved compul- sory overtime, suspension of a shop steward and company policy of employe transfers. The union involved is the International Un- ion of Electrical Workers. * * * Meanwhile, a Genera] Electric work stoppage went into its sev- enth day at plants at Hudson Falls, N. Y., and nearby Fort Ed- wards, N. Y. The plants employ — about 1,625 workers, Of that num- ber, the United Electrical Work-, ers Union (independent) — be represent 725 a * * Members of the snion’ Local | ie BARREL OF FUN — Cadets of St. John's the bucking. At left, front, Military School, Salina, Kan., try to shake “Cow- -boy’* Sammy Bertram loose in a training session © for rodeo riding. A barrel suspended on four ropes ects | as the Ensim = Boys’ tugging provides . At left, rear, is Fred Blair, of Albuquerque, N. M. Ronnie Ziatz, of Pueblo, Colo., is at right, front, and behind him is Roy | Cox a Denver. ——— i was sold to the union for $6,000, Off ! owner Mrs. Everett Earp, icial Birthplace OF H.S.T, [55 eens” ats. “Ere” ary "Purchased by HT AW ia w fom Earp is Sandy , Bertram, Sammy's twin. They are frorn Santa Fe, N. M. s Bad News Day IONIA &® — In-one day Iona County Supervisor Bernard Ardis ‘had telephone calls notifying him _ WEDNESDAY) MAY India Searches for Oil and Gas of Himalayas and gas, “This is the beginning of “lgreat venture,” Nehru messaged the drillers. 300 million * * * profits, if any. * * ¥ ss search. yan foothills. three million barres a year, Romanian Crew Sinks Test Well in Foothills romanian drill biting into the earth of the Himalayan foothill? has embarked India on an ambi- tious government search for oil Prime Minister India plans to spend more than (63 million dol- lars) to hunt oil during the second five-year plan, started in April .| 1956. Areas of eastern India, Bengal and Assam—which have India’s only producing field — still are staked out for private enterprise. The government wil] control the rest of the country and take the India is calling on severa] na- j tions, both Communist and non- Communist, to help in the big A Romanian crew ran the drill which began turning near Jawala- mukhi, a hill town in the Himala- All officials warned against over optimism. It is only a test well. India's production is less than Mora, of Washington. He ig sec- Russia, the United States, Britain, Canada and West Germany have given help. The Soviet Union drew up the oil exploration program to fit In- dia’s second five-year plan, Three Russian crews, with Russian drill- ing rigs, will start work soon, Politician’s Daughter Still on Critical List WASHINGTON York congressman's daughter who reportedly shot “herself in a down- town hotel yesterday remained in 4 critical condition today. ~* * * : Police said Mrs. Malcolm Hurn, 27-year-old daughter of Rep, Wil- liam B. Williams (R-NY), locked herself in a ladies: room of the hotel and shot herself in the ab- dom@h with a .22-caliber rifle. Mrs. Williams told newsmen|°—™ her daughter had been depressed and under medical care for sever- al months. She said the young woman was married April 2 to Malcolm Hurn, a Utica, N. Y., advertising man. both in Qtica and Washington of- fices of her father, who has repre- sented New York's 24th Dist. since 1951. . ‘Mora to Talk in Detroit _ DETROIT & — Trends in inter- American relations will be dis- cussed before the Detroit Ec- onomic Club Monday by Jose A. a reatary general of the organiza- drop in the world’s oil bucket. {tion of American States of the Pan 332 voted 395-346 to continue a The wee framed ‘by a white of the death of three relatives and| India spends 750 million rupees American Union. strike yesterday. | LAMAR, Mo. (INS) — The birth. picket fence, hag been marked by a fourth call that an aunt had (almost 158 million dollars) in for-| * * vane eat of Harry S. Truman — aa sign ‘since Truman became fajjen and broken both hips. Calls | *@n exchange each year for pe-! The New York slain small white frame house in Lamar President. on the deaths of two aunts an electric motors and san mere — was purchased today by the! Russell Letner of St. Louis, Mid- an uncle were made for fluorescent lights. The work) United Auto Workers Union which west Regional UAW Director, and within the space of two hours. stoppage grew out of a dispute | plans to make it a shrine to Mis- John E. Rinkenbaugh of Kansas over reduction of piecework parts souri’s first president. City, represented the union at the in one department. | The one and a half story house; sale. age of &. George ‘Washington died at the di] troleum products. to Ardis| * * * ‘ train technicians. Alumni Slates Edwards DETROIT W — State Supreme American and British oil com-|Court Justice George Edwards will panies cooperated in a program to be principal speaker Thursday at ithe annual reunion of the Detroit Experts from Romania, Soviet | College of Law Alumni Assn. FEDERAL’S| ‘tans Ni a NR sleet. dryer 148 en ee dryer: does more than - just dry, it rotects your clothes and lets dry in any weather! weet bows air flow system blows i lirectly into tumbling clothes. Nylon lint +in loading door, At great savings now! ivered and Serviced List 249.95 198 auto. washer All- ree revolving agi lator Laundromat automatic washer c —_—— Oo eed tae r, and cleans itself! The famous B * ‘test proves the Laundromat pgives , M shen w results. Features look-in loading door, Bs 0 ' vibration } and limit ‘control switch. Hurry, savel = * Delivered, Installed, Serviced; yee Warrenty ae Gas Workers, Gulf Reach Agreement of the Guif Refining Co. and Local 1389 of the Oil, Chemical and Atomie —~A New! \gasoline and fuel oil companyies tear session culminating in t, said the settle- Mrs. Hurn had been employed | colt oor hadi 2% days’. pay for holidays, four week nebo an paid balidaye a year. Dump Problem Solved DETROIT (#—The problem of where to dump Detroit's vast quan- tities of industrial waste is being solved with transport of the ma- terial as fill for a Canadian real months ago. ‘estate development oh Peche Is- - * * land. A Detroit engineering firm Ratification of. agreement was, which contracted for the work ¢sti- scheduled for today. If the agree- imated that a million cubic yards ment is ratified, it will end the of waste will have been dumped lagt of strikes against seven major) by the end of the year. The project will require 5,000,000 cubic yards of fill. DETROIT # — Representatives Workers union today announced an agreement in a labor dispute that shut down the company’s Detroit area plants almost two supplying the Detroit area. Hyman Parker, state labor me- diator, \who aided in a 12-hour nent followed the pattern of earlier scan am the other oil we Ne ‘The workers bi receive. 5 per eisner’s 42 N. Saginaw St. x = NO MORE MORNING Sealy POSTUREPEDIC POSTUREPEDIC’ is amust! — if you want to wake up in the morning refreshed, alive, really ‘Tested—you owe it to yourself to try a Sealy Posturepedic! + World's only mattress designed in cooperation with leading orthopedic surgeons .. . scientifically engineered for healthfully firm support ... Sealy Posturepedit promises you the most comfortable night's sleep you've ever had and relief from morning backache*—or your money back! Take it from us—the best mattress you can buy is your best buy! 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MAY 1, 1957. for Bride-E lect Norma M eyelrs By MURIEL LAWRENCE Bride-elect Norma Lee Meyers) The letter says, ““My 5-year-old) was honoree at a miscellaneous 8Tandson js being raised by the : modern theory of ‘free expression. shower given Monday evening by 'Two days ago, hé insulted an, old Mrs. Claude Goff in her home on friend of mine he had met for the lfirst time, * * * “When she offered to untangle a daughter of Mr. and string for him -that had gotten and Mrs:-Harold. Meyers of La-'snanNed jn a toy, he told her to g0| peer, will exchange vows May ll|home — that he. didn’t like her. at First Baptist Church in Lapeer His mother justified this by calling with Milton Ferrett of Metamora. jit his ‘honesty. ’ What do you think - | Seminole ,avenue. Norma, «.* * of such “training?”’ Attending the shower were Mrs. * * * Meyers, Mrs. George Blackerby.) ] think it is pretty hard on the) - Mrs. Mike Chires, Mrs. James little’ boy Meyers, Mrs. Allen Greenlee, ; Mrs. Ted Blackerby, Mrs. William If his parents continue to en- Mevers. Mrs. Hattie Goff, Mrs. Courage such uncontrolled expres- Arthur Gotf, Mrs. Albert Slater,| sion, he is going to attract more Mrs. Vitgin Myers. Mrs, Pearl criticism than his 5-year-old con- Cook. Mrs. Ellwood Jears, Mrs | fidence can take, Dayton Pender, Frances Goff and) One of these days his ‘‘honesty’’ Diann Meyers - will provoke somebody else to a —— “free expression’ of resentment Swiss Jabor ie geting more jthat will shock him rather cruelly. ‘Such an experience could end, not overtime _ ‘only in distrust of his parents’ abil- “lity to protect him, but in rejection of honesty as a reliable quality. bd * * * _ It's unfortunate that the theorists at “-epq lof “free expression” ever suggest- Maes depends on “his doing or saying anything he feels, Because it isn’t true. FALSIFIED FEELINGS His emotional] lealth, like ours idepends not on telling other peo- ple what he feels but on his know- ing what he. feels. It is when we make him falsify his feelings that ithe moral damage is done—when| * ed that a child’s emotional health) So long as we*respect his right to dislike her, we can ask- him to I refrain from expressing; the feeling w when the expression is unwise. Se what we might say to this little boy whe must learn when | silence is golden is this: “It ts all right for you to dislike Grand- ma’s friend. It is all right for you to wish she'd go home. t lyou. want to be disliked yourself, don't tell strangers you don’t like jcontrols on a child's free expres-| sion, whether it be a wagging tongue or a kicking foot, are sel- ree Expression’ ‘Hard or Child “But it was unwise to tell her so.\dom motivated by interest in "his t just started her dislixing you and honesty. ishing you’d go home. So unless} They are far, more interested in using him to express their own re- sentments of conventional] author- ity.. Not daring to defy it them- selves, they take a second-hand satisfaction in the child's defiance of if. They themselves are victivns of emotional ishonesty. hem.” * * * Parents who refuse to put any Panhellenic Tea Fetes Senior Girls in Area Schools iStressing the fact that sorority life taught them scholarship, lead- ership and sociability were Mavis O. Allen presided at the silver services at the recent affair. Perfume should be kept away from heat and out of the -sun- Married Saturday in St. Michael e Mrs. Lewis L. Irwin served as) Sally general chairman of the tenth an- Maureen nual Panhellenic Tea for senior * LaBarge*and girls of Pontiac area high schools ‘ mes Allen held at Pontiac Federal Savings Ja bee = and Loan Building. Dubre. S tk daughter Mrs. Edward W. McGovern was ‘of Mr. and moderator of a panel discussion. Mrs. Louis’ F. LaBarge of East Tennyson ‘Fors of the University of Michigan, Marcia Smith of Western Michigan| avenue. Mr. University, Chris Selden of. West-| and Mrs. ern Michigan University, Barbara Francis Heil of Michigan State University Mercha i and Carol Young of Michigan State) mere nt of University. ‘ Elizabeth ve * bs * 7 Lake road Mrs. Howard Owen spoke of t ’ philanthropic work of Panhellenic. are James Mrs. R. L. Bronioel and Mrs. Ralph parents. MR. and MRS, JAMES A. DUBRE Church were | Want Your Clothes JU sjepecceteles f to Look .Expensive? | | “Paris fashion. experts suggest avoiding certain styles when buying cheaper clothes, to avoid a “cheap” look. Do not buy draped dresses, since draping must be done ex- ipertly and fitted to your individual figure in order to look well. _ x * * Also avoid eccentric prints, which are rarely elegant. Chogse plain fabrics that are what they say they are rather than imitations of ex- pensive clothes. bewd i tits in palm of Pure latex bag capande te Nossle and traveling cane. ree ae tuck ft in purse like your "sommes. Dees delay, send ne ay. EVANSTON HOUSE Bex 83, Harper Station, Det. 18 re THE WA) TO TELL THE GREATEST ‘LOVE STORY |. immediately we make him PRETEND to like! light. Heat and light cause evap- Grandma's friend when he doesn't| oration, and may change the scent like her of the perfume, completely. Sepa FS 5 AARNE te — ’ “A Mere Shadow of Her Former Self” . . . 1 2 | cs = | e | .| =) d the need for losing pounds, and That's because she realize began taking “Relax-A-Tron” the easy wuy to treatments lose weight ... no drugs or tiring exercise. Fear . You feel the relaxing, energiz- : | following their marriage Saturday ‘her sisters, as bridesmaids. > | Michael Church at 10 a.m. s > Honeymooning at Niagara Falls|Nancy, Cathy and Judy LaBarge, Their lare Mr. and Mrs. James Allen’ ‘ballerina-length gowns of dotted \Dubre. The ceremony was read by| swiss were in yellow, pink, blue’ ithe Rev. Joseph Immel in ‘St./and orchid, respectively, * ™ * The bride, the former Sally La-| Their tiny nose veils were ‘Barge, is the daughter of Mr.| cured and Mrs. Louis F. LaBarge of neadpieces. Each carried a basket | East Tennyson avenue, James is of spring flowers in shades that! ithe son of Mr. and Mrs. Frances *| matched her gown. :| Merchant of Elizabeth Lake road Ronald Withelm served as best For her wedding Sally wore a man. Seating the guests were gown of tissue satin fashioned | Floyd Weiss, Douglas LaBarge | with a basque waist and full | and Leroy Mirovsky. | skirt that fell | sweep, into a chapel _ | For her daighter' s wedding Mrs. ; . LaBarge chose a gown of gray Venetian lace edged the'jace over pink taffeta with pink scooped neckline and the short) accessories. Sally LeBarge Becomes Bride in St. Michael Rite | |. se. to matching crown - style, 559 haul LAKE TWO DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETROIT AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS ing effect gf Relox-A-Tron pounds disappear. as *|sleeves of the gown. Floating pan- . els accented the sides of the skirt. | ~*~ * & | A pill-box headpiece of seqyin and seed pearis held Sally's finger- top veil of silk illusion. Her bri- jaccessories, Her corsage was. also Her corsage was of pink roses and white carnations. * * * Mrs. Merchant's choice was a gray and pink print with blue of pink roses and white carnations. %¢ Beauty Salon Stapp’s know me al siZeS ehubby, long and lanky. they romp with, — youngsters need a firm footing . . . firm counters for balance, flexible soles for maneuverability, quality feathers that hold their shape. Plus Stapp’s expert fitting service Shoe shown size 4-8, 6.50; 814- ] “yOvENTLE BOOTERY | 28 E. Lawrence Street nildren come in| and, with very few exceptions, so do Stride Rite shoes It takes. all kinds of youngsters:to make a world. . . ' and they all need properly fitted shoes. extensive size and style range enable children to be accurately fitted whether they are short and are at both stores: Tel-Huron. PP'S (Open Fri, and Mon. Eves to 9). 3’ Every Week Is Baby Week at The Margaret Ann Shop lt a foo oa Stride Rite’s ‘Unlike the frisky puppies YA Riker Bldg —Rear of Lobby FE3-7186 Stapp’s shoe - fitting superiors Downtown « or CN OL ALLL LAL ALLL ALE AA ALA NL AA ell OPE * HERS: Bo-Peep: ruffles trim b crotch, white with red. 5S, M, L, XL. at Both Our Stores -- HIS: Nautical motif. bands, adjustable shoulder straps. a ae A ge FAMILY SHOE STORE 928 W. Huron’ Street ees Fri, -” Sat. Eves to 9) Ft te nee aE KNIT-PIQUE SUN SUITS elasticized leg, adjustable straps. Pink, tgare or white, white with red. Sites +5-M-L-XL. ib and pant. Sap tennis * 250 Ls Snap-fastened crotch, elasticized leg. Biue with white, navy with 2.50 daisies and snapdragons. BRIDAL ATTENDANTS -| Attending the bride were Doro- Buying Tablecloth? id ‘ithy Burch as maid of honor and =| {= beuquet was of carnations, Other Carter Knits Ah evening reception was held at Amvets Hall. - | MADISON, Wis. (INS) — Meas- ure your table first before you! ¢ choose a new tablecloth. A table ee should be large enough 40 \six inches hangs over on —— side, plus the hem. ME eee i Pee PPP ate aaa aan Pin Check Kimono. closing through ribbon | Snop bows. Pink, Blue, Mint, Yellow Pin Check. Size: 6 1.69 —- The cocoon shape cop! or the cope require height in hat. Only tall girls con corry brim plus coot fullness. Nothing Jess -than a perfectly ensembled outfit. gives that great chic every fashion-conscious wom- $ an wants. Wide-at-top needs a ‘ . ’ ;| narrow, tall headdress unless worn 28 West Huron. St. ‘ F E 2 re + V4 by a very tall figure. : | (| , What will it |. the round, emerald cut or marquise? Each | . diamond has a personality all its own. Fifty- eight facets give great fire to the round —as contrasted with the cold, calculated beauty of the emerald cut — the icy glitter of the mar-. : quise. Our Diamond Experts will show you. | how a diamond can suit your particular type. i ¢ } . Pontiac’s Oldest Jewelry ‘ Store i “The Store Where Quality Counts” Gift Packag ge: 1 towel, z2 wmitilelin. Blue, pink. yellow pincheck trim, 2.50 GALLAGHER Music Go.\ landy-t Pink, . Yellow or Mint Pin Check. Esta, he 1.85 ind Shirts, : Tie or fasten, Soft cotton S-M-L. 79¢:-1, 00 ee — Monday and met 2 are ‘m 9:00 q ic rave pees fea iat as er tle a = “mena, ay tn Mig Fon ler . fe , Kimball — Lester— Gul oc ; | : Buy Now aa Save! _ All these fine pianos guaranteed 10 years — lace in Michigan and tuned.| et * ite “ay d oe pes eg oe Ses : You'll thrill te the odmiring glonces — ond second looks — ‘you'll get when you're wearing your Sun-steps originally devel. oped by 8. F. Goodrich, A combination of smort styling, rich colors, ond foct-pleosing comfort will moke Sue-steps your feverite for work, ploy, or just taking & easy. Come in ond soled BE Goodrich Ur Steps: TODD'S SHOE STORE Shoes for the Entire Family 20 W. Huron St. FE 2-3821 your pair today. : WASHINGTON (W—A_ two - bil- | measure. Close Scrutiny: House Committee Sees Long Discussion Ahead; | Fears Federal Control lion-dollar school construction bill came up today for close scrutiny by the House Education Commit- tee. Chairman Barden (D-NC) said he expected members would “have a lot of questions to ask’’ and he had no idea how long the committee would work on the * * * Congress took its Easter recess, some Southern members ex- pressed fear of federal control. In, addition, some economy- ied that the government should start a new spending program to add to a record peacetime budget. Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Tex- |as, Senate Democratic leader, list- ‘ed several bills yesterday which ihe said would not be taken up by 'that body until the House com- pleted action on them. One of the ‘measures he mentioned was the school aid pil. * The schol measure, as ap proved by subcommittee, would authorize: | L. A‘ five-year program | million dollars in annual pall to the states to help build public | schools, BEGINNING CLASSES GREGG SHORTHAND ACCOUNTING TYPEWRITING COMPTOMETER AND OTHER SUBJECTS MONDAY, MAY 6 Day, Half Day and Evening Sessions VETERAN APPROVED The Business Institute 7 W. Lawrence St. PONTIAC Phone FE 2-3551 Call im person or return this Ad for Bulletin ee ee Pee Cee eee ee 2. A 730-million-dollar fund for. construction bonds of local com-| munities unable to market their| bonds otherwise at reasonable in-| terest rates. | | 3. Federal advances of funds up to a total of. 150 million dollars cies. FEPC Voices Protest to Slashes in Budget LANSING @® — Proposed bud-' get cuts will mean cutting its edu- cational program and slowing the processing of compaaints, the state Fair Employment Practices Com- mission complained yesterday. The commission asked for $229.-| Republican budget. 5 In preliminary discussion before ‘minded congressmen have doubt-|. sto state school financing agen | ‘The commission reported that 15, claims of discrimination in em-|said' the husband, Neil, were adjusted since its| hitched the- wire to a series of evaeal ‘DOLPHIN’ GIRL — Taleahed a Dolphin” opening today at the “Rebel in Town.” Both pictures runs in the area. Pair Discover i uf The experienced parent is one | chiatrist is someone who figures 'who has learned to sleep ring bi: exactly what you're saying — at so. much per word.—Eafl Wilson in Their Bed NEW YORK @®—A Bronx baker and his wife found a blonde -bar- maid lolling in their bed yester-| day. She was munching a cracker and enjoying a fruit cocktail. The baker, Edward Hennessey, 30, and his wife, Betty, 26, re- turned to their apartment after al long weekend on Long Island.) walked into the bedroom and there was the shapely stranger propped up in bed. * * * . She was wearing Mrs. Hnnes- sey's louging robe. “What are you doing here?” the astonished couple blurted. The blonde casually dipped up a_ spoonful of fruit and nibbled thoughtfully on the cracker. “I'm tired,” she said, While Hennessey sputtered and/ his wife stormed, the blonde slow- ly continued her snack. ~< ! Finally she finished and stood up. — * * * PP “I'll think I'll get dressed now,” Sepia Loren sar "Mee eit she said. “If you'll just step out Mrs. Wheaton Starts = Press Post Today Ashton Jr., 37, was taken into his wife called police. ~.-.. WASHINGTON @ — Mrs. Anne ‘court on a shoplifting charge. * * * | Wheaton, back from a vacation, pore hig topcoat was flipped| Police said she identified herseif! |takes over her new job today as) associate press secretary in the woman to serve in the post. | No formal ceremonies were. scheduled for the occasion. Mrs. Wheaton will occupy the! executive wing office previously | used by Murray Snyder, now in al top Defense Department press | post. A former newspaperwoman from Utica, N.Y., Mrs. Wheaton | has been director of women's pub-| | licity for the Republican National | Committee. Woman Electrocuted | While Watering Garden | se NORWALK, Calif. w@ — Mrs. Mary Thompson, 26, was electro- § icuted while watering her garden. 247, had $207,381 recommended by Sheriff's deputies said her wet Gov. Williams and is earmarked feet for $137,928 under the, proposed| | strung by her husband to keep the touched an electric wire | dog out, of flower beds. Detective Sgt. Ray H level. MODERN’S - - - _@ SECTIONALS @ SOFAS ~ @ CHAIRS: @ TABLES @ LAMPS | * CARPET @ All Our New: . Spring Merchandise . Ingluded \ \“ = “SALE SAVE UP T0 A 50 as © 9 Clode-outs : \ ° F loon, Samples | No Money Up ‘to 36 Months’ to Pay on FURNITURE or CARPET © | TELEGRAPH Mab 9:30 TO 9:00 iT. 9:30 TO 6:00 WED. AFTERNOON ii Bloomers Conceal open, revealing a pair of spacious ‘government purchase of school| White House, She is the first pink bloomers strapped around was reported in good condition and! whether they were had | | B SALE WEDNESDAY. T HRU SATURDAY on the billing - are having first of the er x * The nonplussed couple stepped out. | In a few minutes the blonde; came out, wished the Hennesseys_ ; good night and said: “I'm going | now,’ But Hennessey erabbed - and, wo Stolen Suits PHILADELPHIA (# — Austin as Marion Darmanin, 23, an un-! | employed barmaid. She told them | she entered the apartment via a’ him. dumbwaiter earlier in the day be-. - Two store officials testified that! suse she was hungry and had no |Ashton wag poking two suits money. (men's, price $70 apiece) into the) ‘ ‘bloomers when he was. spotted. | heres booked on a burglary’ The magistrate held him ‘on %5,-' Catfish in Cotton Patch |000 bail for court action. EDCOUCH, ‘Tex. W—Ray Guinn judge 3 in Good Condition ANN ARBOR w — Federal Dis-/ Wet out in his cotton patch and jcaught six catfish on a hook and itrict Judge Frank A. Picard, 67.))..° tie said he didn't know “adventur- lresting comfortably today at St./ous catfish” that swam in from \Joseph hospital where he is under-|a flooded canal after. weekend \going treatment for a kidney ail-|rains or displaced catfish cumped) } Blonde Lolling | === Paint Peeling! Here's a tip! If you want the whitest house in the neighbor- hoof, paint it this year with O'Brien's new”75” House Paint, | Actually gets whiter the longer it'son, Covers in one coat. Easy brushing. Made with special Pre-Shrunk Oils, it looks better } longer. Also available in colors, uit PaT LALLY WoUsE of cote WALLPAPER O'SRIEN PaIMTs 1028 W. Huron FE 8-0428 ment. bya small tornado. U. S. No.1 Florida Red _ TIP TOP COFFEE POUND. An ‘NEW POTATOES YOUNG, TENDER BEEF SIRLOIN or CLUB STEAKS 39 T-BONE STEAKS .... “ 69¢ GERANIUM FRESH GROUND Beef Hamburger 3,, $400 PLANTS Large Bologna. . can 29° HO 9 D5 ~ CENTER CUT PORK CHOPS "69 RED ‘ROSE Crem Style = 10°] LAWN ROYAL | I a . SEED GELATIN DESSERT VAN CAMPS _ Mansion Royal TUNA : _ 4e 89 a PURE BLACK BOSTONIAN Cond PEPPER : DOG FOOD 6 | i os. ¢lunenur | ) rs 7 Con. Si OLEO ni lhe # I : pea a je Hats =“ , 2 : . ~ in Raid on Still | Discovered on Farm in| St. Clair County After 18-Month Search | | PORT HURON w — Three men were arrested last night in a raid on what federa] agents said was the biggest still to be discovered in| Michigan since 1938, Charles R. Peterson and Leonard Coker, of the Chicago office of the Federal Alcohol and ‘Tax Commis-| sion, led the raid on the still found on a farm near Yale in northwest) St. Clair County. Coker said the still had a ca- pacity of 7,000 gallons. Arrested and held in the St. Clair’ County jail on liquor law violation) charges were William DiNardi, 34, of Yale, Ralph’ J. Orzel, 23, of Detroit and Thomas Bounce, 42, of Detroit. lmure appearance * States with bringing war nearer ukoy assured afby deciding ‘'to: station atomic i May Day gathering ‘in Mos-funits on territories of other coun- jcow’s Red Square today that Rus-firies.”’ : sian military forces have “‘all thef But much of his speech, modern means of ‘combat nece broadcast by Moscow radio, was isary to rout any. aggressor.” illed with protestations of the Zhukov also accused the West-§Kremlin's. peaceful desires and ‘ery powers of rejecting Soviet§pleas for peaceful coexistence peace bids and charged the Unite As ‘usual, the Kremlin _Parad-! ‘Arlene Dahl Sues Movie Firm Says Photos Go Too Far NEW YORK ® — Red-haired|cent lay of the stage who under screen siren Arlene Dahl says pro- no circumstances would play a motion pictures, for her latest! particular part.” mavie are too revealing for a re-! No, she replied, spectable actress like herself. | “I would -not The shapely star. made a de-| | couldn't do that, My in State ~“Su-/would not permit it.’ preme Court yesterday. She testi-| fied as trial din bh illidn- >) | dollar damage out neniost Cabana 2 Have Near Escape eo e uw — Soviet -Defens er Georgi Zh but added: modesty Coker said Dinardi, owner of the | farm, was arrested at the time of; the raid. Orzel and Bounce were arrested shortly after when they ‘approached the farm. St. Clair County sheriff's depu- ties and state police aided in an 18 months investigation which uncov- ered the location of the still, Coker said, _ He said the still was concealed ‘in an artificial hayloft in the barn. Dinardi, Orzel and Bounce were! to be arraigned today. They're Cheaper by the Dozen— Refugees Taken_ TUCSON, Ariz. (» — Mama Czapar got more than she bar- gained for when she and her hus- band agreed to sponsor a Hun- garian refugee family * * * At the railroad station the other | night, a Hungarian family of six stepped off the train. Then two more Hungarians, both men. Then, a couple with two children. All 12) were bound for the home of Mr.} and Mrs. Frank Czapar. * * * | The Czapars, none of whose rel- atives escaped from Hungary,’ agreed to the extra family of four Catholic Relief Service said the child has athma and needs the climate of the Southwest. * * * One family is living in a house | owned by the Czapars, the other with Mrs. Czapar’s daughter, the two men with the Czapars them- selves, “We always got room for one more,” said Mrs. Czapar. “‘Be-, sides, We own a grocery store.” Friendly pacieareal | at the last minute because =| Houses Small Riot | PHILADELPHIA (®—They call it the Friendly Restaurant, and the management is pretty proud of that reputation, Yesterday be- | gan as did every other day, ev. erybody real endl. | * * Magistrate Court, pleasantries among,a couple of groups of men and girls turned to jéers and then to even worse. Saucers, plates and Then, according to ‘adie | salt shakers whistled back and. forth. * * * i c A’ police’ sergeant tried to breaki§ Kroger Store 750 Perry St. Pontiac it up. He took a beating. IN Bia. Cities Serviee............ 42 N. Perry St. ............... Pontiac Somebody sent out what gesse’s Pure ..... i : \ LeClaie\ Sinclair’ Ser......... ++: 2685 Lake Rd............ Pontiad - Corders Yexace ......... , $500 Elizabeth Lake Ra. eves Pontion Rens 3783 Elicabeth, Deke RA... ... 0.605. Ponting tshouldt be allowed to go so far." | Commented the jtdeze: | to be considered — a | Kroger Store E. Meple & Mentor Bird: Soll bia Pictures Corp. wo Affer Lake Ordeal Her handsome hysband, Fernando Lames, was a specta- tor. * ° a Miss Dahl, 31, alleges the mov- ie firm piel up composite ad-| vertising shots showing her pretty! |were rescued from the cold wa- ters of Lake Michigan last night iafter a boating enthusiast, scan- bead attached to some ot the lake with binoculars from woman’s scantily clad body. The!|® 14th floor apartment, spotted pictures were for the film “Wick.|*"™ patterns and colors. oe See ou a 0 8 “a 2 & @ & e ae ee ‘SPECIAL CLOSEOUT! le PRICE. Plastic - aie Reg. 2c oe Reg: dc oe ee "8 eR ES OS HeReee 2 ee PROTECT YOUR INVESTMENT wel, : ee LOW COST ag Ue Takes $0° Lith Time to Do Business This | Jes og + Low Cost Modern hud a oN, Perry « sacle: Branch Offices at W. Nelie ot Tilden, Q Brazil's coffee shipments have been runtiing ahead of a your |ago, Rio de Janeiro learns. 13 NO, SAGINAW ST. 67, N. hie T an ae 7 1 Walled Lake, ussy: de “Pussy exeam deodorant. You'll like the deodorant that's , “Acid Controlled” so it doesn’t irritate normal skin or " geid-damage clothes. Stops odor instantly, checks perspi-_ _Fation, too. Seve $3 on the handy 6-pack. : | ‘Tasey stick deodorant: Made from « non-seid formela, " Tusey Stick Deodorant can’t acid-damage clothes or skin; either. It stops odor 24 hours—swithout elosing your pores! ones waar KINSEL’S Saginaw, Pontiac Wey price sale limited time only odorants. Price plus tex, oe —a ee aa aE ~ Com Futures the end of the week the impending announcement THE PONTIAC. PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MAY 1, 1957 Start Strong CHICAGO w — Corn futures started strong on the Board of Trade today influenced by. reports|* that the Department of Agriculture is pretty well sold out of the feed grain at bin sites. Traders ‘said an official an-|fancy. nouncement of the government’s ie on oe nent ee Reports of caused’ buying and short covering in the Chicago market and prices firmed. “Near the end of the first hour old wheat was % to \ lower, May ‘MARKETS Oils Ste Boost fo Stock Market NEW YORK um — Gains by oils and selected issues gave the stock market a slight boost as it went to the upside early this afternoon Pep A g : f3 z i $2.20, new wheat 4% lower to % higher, July $2.0942, corn was % to % higher, May $1.28%, oats were unchanged to *s higher, May 67%, rye was % lower to % high- er, May $1.20%, soybeans were % lower to % higher, May $2.40%, and lard was unchanged to 10 cents a hundred pounds higher, May $13.22. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, May 1 iAP) -» Open to-+ CHICAGO, April 25 old: arrivals 67; shipment 610; i Lticctie ics f r) 3 £GG8: Large 11.50-12.00 30-dor. case: medium 16.00010.50: small, 8.50-9 00, CHICAGO PRODUCE Florida round reds br antjin Detroit Auto Accident | _ (AP)}—Potatoes ,|to require them to wait until after) : a | jhe Lodged in Throat jpirongies Young Girl | in fairly active trading. a bit. . same range. Relaxing of tensions in the Mid- ‘|dle East was a help ta the oils, particularly those with resources in that area. Steels, which have en- -/joyed a recent rise, were off on . profit-taking and also on predic- ¢ |tions that the sluggish demand for '|steel is likely to continue through the second quarter unless the auto industry orders more steel, gains among chemicals, track 346; total US | ‘Tai; (Late Morning Quotations) fective immediately, rather than they won reelection. ithree-Year-Old Killed But most leading steels were off Gains among leading issues ran s from fractions to 2 points or so. -|Losses were kept in around the Rails, motors and aircrafts wre mixed. - There were some fair} momen a $200 bond. New York Stocks a illegal place at 24% Cross St., News i in Brief Uses Washes ee, 24, of 325 Branch St., was freed on a $500 Della of felonious assault with | al knife Monday. Municipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum set the exam- ination for May 8. Martha Stanfield, 31, of 44 W. Rutgers Ave., paid a $100 fine after she pleaded guilty to a drunk driving charge before Municipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum. Claude Moerehead, %4, of 710 Hemingway, Lake Orion, _ was ordered to serve 30 days in the county jail after he failed to pay a $100 fine- for drunk driving Mon-: day before Orion Township Justice Helmar Gs Stanaback. Orion Township Justice Helmar G. Stanaback ordered Garnet Howell, 45, of 55 Burdick St., Ox- ford returned to jail until May 7, when he will be examined on a charge of drunk driving. Howell pleaded innocent and failed to Alexander MacLeod, 53, of Rose- Ville, pleaded guilty to’ loitering in April 20, and paid a $30 fine when |he was arraigned before Municipal ' Judge Cecil B. McCallum. Put Off Hearing co rims name ON Fired Official ‘Clair L. Taylor, state superintend- lent of public instruction, who urged. May 20 Set as Date to Review Dismissal of Owosso School Head OWOSSO # — A taxpayers pe- tition for an injunction to void the Laingsburg school board's firing of Superintendent Keith R. Reed was postponed until May 20 yes- terday. Cireuit Judge Michael Carland ordered the delay at the request of both sides, In firing Reed, the board blamed him for “confusion, lack of discipline and civil disorder.” | The controversy was carried to both sides settlement. In another development in. the strife-torn district, a citizens group has petitioned for a recall election against school board member Robert Tisch. ; The petition sets the election deadline for next Monday but the school board majority has taken to. seek a peaceful) ton Tea Party next Monday to simulated* Boston Tea Party as the opening act of ‘‘a new Eng- Boston Men ‘te Re-Enact Soene BOSTON i#—~A group of Boston! businessmen—their heads capped with colored bands and Indian feathers — will re-enact the Bos- spark sentiment for slashing the federal budget. 5 as Indians will stand near ‘the site of Griffin Wharf, scene of the orig- inal tea party, while the two-mast- ed schooner ‘Tabor Boy’ pushes gently into Boston harbor for a short distance, * * *. Then the staid businessmen with the feathers on their heads will toss empty tea crates into the wa- ter. The crates will carry such leg- ends as:: “Waste in Government” and “Super Bureauracy,’’ ac-. cording to the national affairs committee of the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce... * x. * The committee is sponsoring the land tax rally day."’ Chairman Paul Rothwell said dollars a year, all of it te go ta schools, 4 ‘Rep. Adrian de Room (R-Owos- so) said there was some talk of {tripling the beer tax to provide) another sevet millfon dollars, The triple tax would amount to about nine-tenths of a cent per. bottle. HIKE MILLAGE. Amendments to the sch, 1, bill would hike deductible imil/ nail ‘Tea Party’ to Point Uri Need for Budget Cuts A troop of Boy Scouts dressed/ AEC Head Gets Strong Support into the sea, and made the world ring with’ the patriotic exploit of the Boston Tea Party. “No ne'er was mingled such a ~ draught In palace, hall or arbor, As freemen brewed and tyrants quaffed That night in Boston in Boston harbor. a 11 Committeemen Urge Murray Be Reappointed in Letter to Ike on —— _ Judge Finds Flaws in Warrant to Send Scott Back fo California . DETROIT w — Cireuit Judge Miles N, Culehan has’ postponed until Friday a hearing on the ex- tradition of L. Ewing Scott to bee: ifornia, * * * ‘ The hearing, scheduled fer yes- terday, was delayed when Judge Culehan found fault with the extra- dition warrant signed by Gov, ee Mennen Williams, Judge Culehan said the war- ‘| rant was “too elaborate to suit me and I'm not going to order a man returned to another stafe for trial unless the papers are ecorrect.’* “He said the extradition wore ; should list only one crime, but WASHINGTON (INS) — Support for the reappointment of Atomic Energy Commissioner ‘Thomas C. Murray was building {up steam today. However, a Senate member of ave to be tapped to finance the increases, he said, but Demo- “erats preferred liquor and beer industry. - Both Democats and Republicans agreed to-boost state aid next year}, weenie, a aes: Friandsen ni heh been told it be outside the Aeronautics Board (CAB) yester-| day rejected plans of North Cen- tral Airlines, Minneapolis, -to take! over Lake Central Airlines, indian @ * : get lage dn school taxes from 2% to 3 : in outstate districts and from|*1%° aoe om 2 million dot % to 2% miles ‘in Detroit, = ago, estimates Tan st pach =i. Ao Piorer school districts with | jon dollars, but, bales tax collec- Assessed valuation would |tions have beer/ falling -below ex- ‘to benefit by thie Proposal. = ‘he paid 4 i ee as 2 eer ae \. ane Co that the’ warrant signed by Wil- liams in Lansing last Thursday listed three, Scott is charged with murder in the disappearance two years age ‘ ay: | aamniras . 123 Homestk ..... 7 no action to arrange machinery for), i “grass the congressional atomic commit-'of his wife, Evelyn, 63, from their sae Te as Oo veal Me cars — Mage, |Ailied 0121.. SRA NGeowh 2 388| Norrie Wright, 30, of 646 West.|the vote. If minority board mem-| (ne, PutPose is to engender —— indicated he did not expect Bel Air, Calif, home. He also is TE Baer 20 nye 17% |¥-0.B. Detrott, cases included, tedersi-|Amee gett *-+- $3¢ Indust Rey gs |brook St., pleaded innocent to a bers seek to hold the election, itSiing “wasteful and u ssary|President Eisenhower to name charged with forgery and grand pe “2188 wey |. 1.19491 State ee acide A. jumbo 30-43,| Alum Lea 10 nd Bt oars ‘reckless driving charge Tuesday /e@ality is expected to be TUES" | items"? from the $71.8 Billion fed-|Murray—who is sometimes in con- theft in connection with the man- — new) July ......- 11140) weighted average 41; extra large 289: Am Airlin’.... 183 a be 28.7 \before Municipal Judge Ceci] B. tioned eral budget flict with his colleagues—for an-|agement of her estate. duly 20% Sn Hed 3\s-38. wid avg 30s; medium Am Can, || 43.2 Int Bus Mch 89 | McCallum and Petition signers have said they " other term. le cee 129% 33-35, wid ave 33%; email 28. Grade Blam Cyan. 18 int Mery... 36.7/ um and was freed on a per- ~*~ * * = - * &: March 2.16% mas 13.10| #rwe 33-35, wtd “ Am Gas & El. 385 Int Nick .....1122 sonal bond until trial May 9, ~ will seek an injunction, if rieces- ~ * * Scott, missing for 11 months, was neds ~s90% Sur 1355 ms: Grade “‘ large 35. Grade C..am M & Fey . 375 Int Paper 4 sary, to force the board-to arrange | Rothwell said his group feels Sen. Albert Gore (DTenn)lerrested =< the Detroit-Windsor Bem. oe. ie = "Ghecks 11%4-20 —* * Am Nae. a4 In Bele Tei 33 ‘ Siheed C. Brogan, 28, of aoe a 9 peepee Million dollars | ued that Eleeshower gener-lborder Apri 15. ° a a Whites: Grego "A. teres 33-38; medium An Beating a o Bon deste ter ee of eee oe after! _ |e raat Py —— pera ally has failed to reappoint Truman : m 8me s j essen : ay. : 49- Ki H a4 administration holdovers who have ~ a : : = wa re eee ee is Een 115.1\pleading guilty to driving without! Press Lake Search ioe. performed well in government) 144s Failways will issue | as —_—— jin te. BS Oe | 74 license yesterday before Water- ~*~ * * agencies -irqund-trip fares at l'¢ times .the CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS =— A Viscowe 38 Krouer, , 1 ford Township Justice Willis D. f G . d On display will be the tea urn . 7 “ single ticket fare for distances ~ ae SUNCAOO. Beer} CAP) — Cotenge| Anse W BC’. LOP Sias . 75-4|Lefurgy. Or ar sman which King George, 3rd, was us-| Gore made = vie- over 300 miles, to ° encourage receipts 982,000 ¢: wineieaate et igen ce ne EE Se mi | ing at the time of the original tea| Orously defending “ter, heavier travel, n ures en are hing Cea: Cate |Atchison 41 Loew's WT ee opt ag CHARLEVOIX uy — An na| Sty ie ITS. oe me e b= | one ss money ou oe 90 B 87%: 88 C BT's. |Atl Refin <.). 51 Lone 8 Com 33.7 Linda Vista Dr., pleaded guilty be-| =—= | Principal speaker at the rally; ™#kers, urging Murray's nom- (juniic bearing to be held by the Water~ Bees, obowt, steed? receipts 23.000; /Arco Mig <::.. ($8 Loriiard 1 3ifore Springfield Township Justice) ——- paar today for @/wilt be U. S. Sen Byrd (D-Va),| mation for a second term. fora hip Hall Wednestay, May & 1987 os = . ‘oas' n, A eae . ' ‘ownship nesday, Anderson Laboratories rv Soa ie Amit ams Beeece” o“ty Bebe” Sal -mmatt J La yesterday to reckon omed ances in Lake|s subject: “The budget can be! The letter, sent to, Eisenhower|¥. 2" pty ia sauce. ine following Burned by Explosion; 29, checks 28's; current receipts 30 a ee be > won a poe $7.10 0 and paid tot of 35, pa mol ae poe on. ny eed Justice Emmett J.' treated for shock and exposure. [no direct constitutional responsi- “I make my own appointments.” = = — Creek and Louis Myers, 38, ef 2739 ola roosters 09 Deckings 3 tee ase = eae |_ Two boats and a helicopter from| bility to the people of this na- Te Boar dot, beueation a a Bloom Hudson suffered burns and in- light and barely ample. Con N Gus 424 Penner. JC .. 88 | Pleading guilty to drunk driving,|TTaVerse City searched for Witt] tion. . ; \iaiuls, Scuhtanm «SG seketee coated jertas va tho binet. ‘Thty a eee oar 7s Con Pw Pt Pepsi Cola ... 228 James J. Hunt, 44. of 64% Jack: | Without success. ’* © & arge onirac Or isewers and Sa ae ee ee taken University Hospital |. 4.5m .. 96.2 Piize : ian = : ditios ye ee | ogee By o~ B83 | con Pw Pf Pheips 0... #4.) 808 St.. was sentenced to serve} = tablet marks the spot whe ag ond rouge sreding os the site . Arbor where their (4% . W715 Phileo 3 days in t rmeriy stood Griffin Wharf. Tt Bienentieys wap Cesceibes ac ae. and "aecirebie "uass| Cost Bak. | Bt Phin Mor’... S33), Gave Wn the, Oakland County You'd Only Known— records that that in Dee. 1773 * i. a an TUpICy li “ses woth 00 at she tee : ,» aere Cont Can . 464 Phill Pet 43.7 Jail w he did not pay a $100) ‘about og “I The fire that followed the ex-|* dete ub soones ee Sree «oe ree ee #4) ne set by West Bloomfield Jus- Stocks, Worth Millions B. SS Se ere ra Bigomiiela "‘Rills gh plosion burned theinterior of the queass peuurar Pag. 445 Pret '& GO ... s#2itice Elmer C. Dieterie Monday. | as Indians boarded. the the|, DETROIT « — A federal grand|Sepool., Andover | Ros Long Lake Road). , brick and concrete) cmcaco. May 1 (AP) — Live poultry Corn Pd 3 | nage | oy Ind .. $35'6 p.m. at the church, 1669 West/ With a market value in excess my charge with pulling his gun/borsky said ugceeeges found, sa a te kash caaaiaile al Gab Geek Joneph J. Simons, manager ofjfece iin: wee tod beers HOG IBS oe SE Ree Te dopa clk ree iene Fes of $2.855,000 on his investment (on {wo suburban patrolmen. | Fe the petition Gonsalves bought/Sf fitetiteg, ss. Seepast 1" ope Gen 1 ~ & Pack 72 — i : spe the Firestone Store at 146 W. Hu-| Cattle — Sainple 850, red sects and|Gen atotors 424 O8''Rut a5 erg a a $1,400 electric organ, a $300 cash-|"efunded | upon “return of plans ‘and : (heifers slew, about steady: Gen Tel - 45 08 Steel’... 624 Rummage Sale, Cat., May 4 be-| In the interim his dividends | Superintendent Jack Harvill said) pesiticat in good condition ron St. for the past/three years, tive fully steady; bulls strong to $8/Gen Time . | 26 Walgreen. 29.4 ginnt t 10 till 2. at St.| would h ted t ddi- McClell ‘ jmere coat, a $4,300 car and took/ten (10) days of the opening of bids. left his Pontiac position today to|cemts higher: choice fed steers. 22.00. Gen Tire... | 802 warn B Pic. 24 ing a a. m. at ould have amounted to an addi- ellan station officers dis- | le $4,200 vacation. ” peteped Bidder will be required oie 23.50; load 1150 Ib fed steers 23.75; Gillette .... 42.4 West Un Tel . 18.1 Paul Lutheran Parish Hall. Joslyn’ tional _ larmed and arrested Robert V.. urnish satisfactory Performance Bon become assistant fleet sales man- to choice fed steers 20.50-| Goedel Br 4.5 Wests A Be .. 31 1/a¢ Fourth. Gonsalves built 18 houses injand Labor and Material Bond, each in ager fof Ford Motor Company's Bee: Se Pg a Ay a oe i ‘care: (Zi yesterday at a street! ypsilanti Township of Washtenaw] ‘ifa:tM2unt, Of 00% of, the contract ear 3 White Mot _ : \infersection where he was | Great Lakes tt 16.00-18.00 utility cows 13:60-18.0. cane or we Ry ar “3 we —— bs ee tt ane. rida: Friday. — eel ix 2 Get. Webelos Badges, _ two Grosse Pointe Park por Comy == [LAP proposals submitted ae ey name Simons, 32, been with Fire-|ners and be ; commercial Gt West § -.. 20.5 Yale & Tow .. 28-4) 5 . |men at gunpoint. : © pe o" stone nine years. With his wife, Sie Galabte 200 Weoters ome J Guf on | ute Zenith Rad il |¢ oa oe ye, Maple), Chaieen Cub Scouting Awards Rised oie graduated from the Fd i Ht ae Board of maucation eserves ole — = two —_ —* = “ao ee 20.00-24.09, Holand F ... 10 : Free parking. —Adv. Jon Gary and Howard Warren,'police academy less than two. uca or F ges ties therein to ‘waive say informali~ joey, 4, makes home stands: . members of Cub Scout Pack 8,'weeks ago. He had been a . 26333 Springland ‘armington =|, Salable 1,500. Karly sales STOCK AVERAGES Sisterhood of Congregation B'nai ssigned “BOARD OF EDUCATION He will be al a the old] eagnrre Sars lower’ (reese page NEW Fear "comoins by the As-|Israel Bake Sale Thereday, May = som ~~ oes hay to on peal aaagi duty. > Solution to Problems DISTRICT NO. 2 26 nd, bidding a eee socia ress 2nd, from 2 to 6. Farmers Com-|Cei e Webelos e, the rles French and Patrol- BLOOMFIELD Bs, MICHIGAN a. ie ee a , Warren and bulk these unsold; ay —— fadust. Shen oe ASked munity Market on Pontiac Lake| highest award in Cub Scouting, at|man John Brosnan, the suburban WASHINGTON os —— JOCELY : : poral for deck $3, Ibs No. 2 pelts; deck Net Change 4.9 +1 UNCH +.3/Road. = —Adv.|the monthly pack meeting Monday. | officers said Ricard drew his gun — President May 1, @ "ST. | meets Cot Samper gree 3ee1G [Pee aes’... Seat 133 1 ies] jeer tices’ as ..rneme of the meeting was|when they tried to question him|4@fan Hatcher of the University INVITATION FOR BIDS Ai T lane Buzzes = “ — Week re! aeaeel- 266.0 1235 74.9 180.8 bail, ror fe ooeae, a ‘Swiss Family Rebinson.” Mrs.\about driving at high speed through of a has urged business wh ‘ y of Pontiac. acting a and P. CHICAGO LIVESTOC ee ee es ot wee —Adv.|Roland Stephison. president of the|Grosse Pointe Park. aad education to. join with Con-/iSrowh ihe Punting eusieg Comsie. Bridge Linkin mS see man staat iat with ccang Bet Bie serner| Cole School PTA, accepted the _ * * can af ie ans Ghose St oe oe a eae ‘Ol g g srovelp. eglivk. generally steady on ail) 1987 Morn 22! es ssi fee tors. ommage Sale Thurs Corner pack charter from Lester McKin-| Harvill said a warrant wdtld be ome Of the nation's schools with-if5: ‘ter the ceertee siding, and trim ae hogs: in butchers over tor 240 1262 696 i716 N. Baldwin & Indianwotd —Adyv. re ‘ out “further intrusion by the fed-|painting in the Lakeside Hofnes| Hous- Detroit, Canada 240 ib,; and strong on lighter we =F eile : yr he Bo tin it comniission- sought charging Ricard with as- eral government." ing Project, No. MICH ail, located “at . ? seston rs . z ch a e 2 os% nek inter P DETROIT STOCKS Sa ale sate wilbanaiinls ot with & deadly ‘weapon. . Bn a le ~ ge som, re tons wil "be ready Cc. J. Nephier Co} Sovi tS bs aa ngressional Dinner’ of-Assn.- Ex-) : ond 50-|Pisures ster decimal potn's ~~ YS vie u L _--‘leeutives of Michigan last night he formation eal: ——< oe ot @: alien Elec. & Equip. C a, ao | Pa ifi House eaders OK Plan a urged the three groups to form a eeecigds tnseaee’ Z Or. as * . ee . : Sy : Dalawin Rubber Co. .... * 16 142 ncrease in acl IC e , . oe compact and action - minded sia tia May 1. 2. "57. Ib, ar Co... : 34 24-4) L om we Hik group’’ to solve the crisis. ‘ = GL. oe “Mor co s Eh. as _ . I qd u i] T ax 1 e ] ,0C ms |. Hatcher suggested that the fed- | BRISBANE (INS) The U.S.| The Prophet ee ita i naval commander in the Pacific eral government surrender to the | “ae 6 126 12. : ad states some of the sources of tax- See EE Lyi et seer elf qAnente: S tate Schools' promis pellgeaary eolriyret er| oie sales bi bid sind take = me a ae waters in increas- the ee of —_ Pe = is, at least, wo ae x * LANSING (> — Prospects im-| Meeting in separate caucus, |the sthools in their’ rightful and choice Corunna School District |. Adm. Felix B. Stump, USN, told} proved. today for House passage|House Democrats’ stood firm traditional place in their local | IP Under State La '|a Brisbane news conference that) of a bill to-help solve school finan-| against any plan to add to — communities,” he declared. : low ut neer WS reports of the sighting of Soviet ~ preseegy with a boost in beer and whisky taxes, Hatcher also said state and local Ww AIT U TiL| is increasing and their scope taxes. - ities should abandor the N ‘LANSING 0 — The Senate yes-|SUbs _. |AGREE TO BOOST authori in is viden js , Rep. Allison Gieen . (R-Kings- “ pee eon Sees bills 3g Pe ee in) majority, leader in the Re Ren Einar Bartandeen (D-Esca- — ae cee ae ri rs. 2 schoel Thonies commemorati publican-control se, said a/naba), a Democra Mithey should nae re the general school laws olf amniveraary of re Bertie of the|GOP coucas yesterday to|educational matters, said his Col-laiong. with ‘ther items on, the! TOO LATE! the state, to a taking .o \ Geral Sein. dectared: support his bill calling-for such in-| leagues agreed to a one-quarter budget, : gee of a pace by tee 7 ee “We have a pretty good estimate |creases, if Senate leaders along. 608 Loe lg ee millage, ftom : oe eee oe t ted t new ‘school a ; and to exténd by a year the dead-|0f the number of Russian subma-| The measure would slap? an | sig for the carreat yebr come out CAB Rejects ee : line for benefits under the: Korean;Tines in the: Pacific. additional 5 ‘per cent excise tax of the stafe’s general -fund. . ke ) ; ) War Veterans Military Pay act. |- He added, however, that it would] -on whisky and double the $1.26- es to Take Over?Airlines | Senators killed a be a mistake fo ‘say just where per barrel tax on whisky. It gir gia WASHINGTON un — The: Civil ai Ne aithe ae meee te Ee ae aie oe ee St as Another (ax ‘source would et 7 baasy hd “ i f Ht | 1 : x (4 i pret ‘support of speaker Sam Rayburn ‘ate Foreign Relations subcommi . ing 1 i t i - reported . and will be oie {rom the chair- tee on the Near East, is making ee oe a —_—* * . e ° A s * 3 z | iron. ; ed his parents or returned home nanship. a fact-finding tour of the area. He ; ws danger mene Co arrived in Cairo Monday, In po ING ear | S The commemorative exhibit | by this time if he were ative. The “Sam Rayburn is the best The senator said he and Ambas- | has been set up in the main ro- father said: Dae aerate haeiesnannane’camaanease===ngeansat tang aaemannnnse f tn ia os " hese sador Ray mond Hare were re-| tanda of New York's P 4h ‘We far we many never set bas Boy, 3, Struck by Hos f uller told this correspondent. Qeived “hospitably and courteous- By RENNIE TAYLOR Also amion 5 inati ‘hich show vaia Station, It depicts the his- | again.” ; H ‘ms Ht ; ed “hi y 3 : ry REN} g the 165 detected|inations which ed 688 of the . i : [ag Father Died : Be ia backing tae te the BIH. Be [iy at the. Egyptian -President's: AP Science Reporter heart cases and the cases which| group, had abnormal heart shad-| tery and growth of the inddstry | Count Barattieri said he places! D Hour Earlier are most of the national commit- ¢4mi}y home on the outskirts of Science Reporte ‘developed among normal people|ows but further tests determined| since 1857... no credence in a theory that Vit-- ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. # — A a Cairo and that the talk ranged os ANGELES W—A study of in the 30 months there were 26/ that 544 of them had no cardiac! The importance of the Kelly-Bes-| tT had gone to the water ski-|3-year-old boy was hit by an auto: Fireworks are anticipated at the over everything from Egypt's do-| hidden heart disease showed to. deaths from coronary disease. Ex-) trouble. Thirty months later 60 of semer discoveries is shown by the ing spa of Cypress Gardens, Fla.' mobile yesterday just an hour aft- upcoming meetings which wiliMestic program and future plans) day that aVailable medical tech-| amination techriiques detected ad-|these 544 had either heart dis- immediate rise in American steel The Count said his son was notier hig father was killed in a truck bring former President Truman.|to Soviet arms deliveries, the Suez iques can spot only a smal] per-| vance signs of coronary trouble injease or potential cardiac trouble ; : adept at the sport and had taken accident. | titular party leader Adlai Steven- Canal and Egyptian-Israeli rela- pan of scomingty healthy only 6 of the 26 or were dead. Not all of these page piesa eduction ot] OFlY six water skiing lessons, | The father, Delfinie Gonzales, ss 7 son and most Democratic gover- Uons. | people who are about to develop * # * |deaths, however, were from heart Bessemer " Steel hed reached 2.8! we 29, was killed when the truck he 4 nors to Washington. « *® * | that trouble. ' These findings were reported to, causes. valilion tons. ‘The 01% bad became . a was driving — out of control, At a $100-a-plate dinner Saturday *'] did not detect any note of bel-| Among 1,652 people found by va-| the California Medical Assn. by a} Dr. Goerke said the tests . indi- the world’s greatest. steel producer, Square D Union Head overturned and pinned him be- night, the featured gubernatorial ligerency or arrogance about! rious procedures to be normal, |group of investigators headed by cated the prevalence of heart dis- neath the Wreckage. An hour lat- speaker will be Michigan's G.| anything on the part of Nasser.”’| heart fs se developed within 30'Dr. L. S. Goerke, assistant dean|ease among the general popula- = eieetion “i held. Urges Men to Return er, David Gonzales, unaware of Mannen (Soapy) Williams, who is! Humphrey said. “[ found a man! months in 52 of them and potential | of the Public Health School of the| tion is 73 per 1,000 persons. * DETROIT (INS) — Paul Silver, his father’s death, ran into a- anathema’ to Southern Democrats willing to talk freely about all) heart disease in 46 others. Thir-| University of California at Los An-: The American Iron and Steel In- president of United Auto Workers downtown stre¢t and was struck because of his strong backing from, problems." | teén of these 1.652 actually died of | geles. Detroit. Will Host 42 stitute, which is sponsoring thé) sca} 351 will try today to per-|bY a car. He received minor in- _AFL-CIO Vice President Walter) The senator said he told. Nasser heart trouble in the 242 years. | The electrocardiogram had a ° commemorative -activities, noted suade employes of Detroit's Squa juries. , tok ft |the United States “wants to see * % & ° — [batting average of only 293 per! DETROIT—More than 30,000 vis-|that Kelly and Bessemer filed sep-'r) Company to return to their jobs Butler said he expects a stormy !ranquility and peace in the Mid-| a; the same time 30 out of 80/Cent in diagnosing heart disease] jtors are expected to attend 42/4°@te patents. Kelly contested Bes-| 41, grievances are processed Catholics Jam Church three-day session over Dixie Sen./dle East . . . and that the Ameri- people who originally showed sus-| in normal people who were found/cgnventions and trade shows in|*©™er’s American rights, and con- through collective bargaining ma- . i chinery, BETROIT (INS) — Over 10,000 John McClellan's maneuver to tack can- attitudes always was and) picion of heart disease had no car-|'0 have suspicious signs. It Detroit during the month of May. — me Ue saerenepr __— a right-to-work rider ‘on pending Would continue to be in opposi- diac symptoms after the 30 showed abnormal readings in 249) . The Detroit convention and tour-|he had earlier invented the process The plant has been closed since, persons are expected to jam St. civil rights legislation. tion to colonialism.’ months. And 11 out of 165 people) Persons who later were found to) ist pureau says there will be only at = Eddyville, Kentycky, iron! ), + Thursday as the result of dis-| Aloysius’ Church and Washington oo _ | ~*~ *® * spotted as heart cases in the ini- have no heart trouble. one day during the month when a|WOFrks. * |ciplinary action taken against 30 to| boulevard in downtown Detroit to- i Americans use more than. 70) Humphrey said he also empha-|tial test turned out to have nor- * x &, , convention or show isn’t in prog- ~_ * * 40 employes for , their part in a/day for the annual May Day for = billion pounds of paper a year. |sized that the United States: mal hearts 2 years later, The study included X-ray exam-jress—May 30, a legal holiday. But Bessemer was the better) wildcat strike, Mary celebration. \ 3 | | : 3 . | ; Death Nofi ces | _ Help Ww anted Male — 6 __ Help W Wanted Male 6 6) _Help \ Wanted Female nale 7 Help Wanted 8| Employment Agencies 8A! Work Wanted 4 emale 11| - Building Sérvice 12| - Garden Plowing 16B ; ~ iinet . ~ POLL LLL AA ell Cetin : | WANTED BY THE POLICE! | CLEAN COUPLE TO HELP OP- 2 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING GARDEN PLOWING F Rm RSE ie AR W ASHERS W TD. * Sentitiog applicants for pene. | AO ih fe Ts E Leundry. Sa ' From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. eres 2 ees ee See | ee TIME CHogsE. YOUR OWN | Car, sCoT? EMPLOYMENT |-SARN 70 DRIVE THE SANE ; _ = Bt. Pe PE 43001 Landscaping 18A : ‘ Sun department “ior depertaen | SABYSIFTER, 1 TO 1 FM. | SOURS, MARE UP TO W050] Agency ter experienced cleaning TRAINING SCHOOL CUVER FE 5-9591 N ~ , All errors should be re- store department ‘for depart “an 608_N. East Blvd. _ Aekee te Se it eae help, male or female Ses Or- | pus vE 3a28), Res. FE 6-164 we aad ents, cement races sold. red. 1 2 oried immediately. The §| tion’ Write Pontiac: Press Box 8l, SRE Par, AT ITEMS EXCLUSIVELY | ~“P8fd_Leke Ave, FE OO gk gy RE = 1 ROTO 7 JILLING se pon ae nieces rsa ne eae OME TIES. te 4 io. . = nomic: cs - siblity for errors other FIRE FIGHTERS expeubes id. Kit furnished free. ae, eg ths FE 8080 . Work Wanted Male 10 ALU = - ; : than to eancel the charges CITY OF PONTI EM }- lg : : ihe wan | ALL TYPES CA TBs our of ist | CITY OF PONTIAC, | |canmen. FULD TOE + rt | agate cin | evelyn Sez: Fast arms "om oO | "rss Fes, FE) Po vettise- ons ! a - tient which has been ren for fire fighters, Applicants must| fenced, “References. Apply Me- a Siriaas wuxe-woutmn| - 4) x ¢ 14 “ ; ALUMINUM SIDING “PLASTERING chy — Roce oles ose pone ‘el service allowabie _ Midwest we Birmingham. garments. Exp footy Fox Dry |. ARE YOU =": , Get my ue. before er bo D. MEYERS. EM 30163, H school. graduate uiva- = a oe . Muro : : Brices; are de ante” He f| lent. Apply tn the Personnel of | COUNTER MARKING & ASSEM: |g oura te a T0 ws ayour kill nomber, No bi irl wtd. f je t SALESLADIEs, AGE % TO 45, . ‘fe Bajustments will be. given fice. City Hall, 35 8. Parke. —_ Apply ie oaruaer Beck plant. | exp. in better dresses and = FOR RE AL? . wah Seek iz ‘without | : LOOKING FOR, A GOOD”. JOB?7?? Woodwant, Bh: { Near to vork eves, ¢ te 9. +. 5. theese” ve repair ptete : ontgomery, 2 ff a. Weotws a ic eid Fash : he aie Cininiig dane tet etverees Ml@west wese12 ous GIRL WANTED. MUST BE wer ee Ova F 1 ianity- ; ments containing type sizes #/ MARRIED MAN WITH GAR aa7,| (* oT *Bei by “ef Mab & Pontiac No ‘Night Work or a real opportunity ig larger than regular agate neat appearing. Established route.| fore rive: im Pontiac All Permanent Waving to be a:- Z type is 12 o'clock noon the 3 ae, day. $100 per wk. 2 an. abe 80 New I a OD : toy ‘ be day previous to pubiication. Call Puller Brush’ FE 32-2318 DISH WASHER ony 5 a pean er, SWEETER GREETER'! “ oo mecHaNI — CHRYSLER PRO- & kehen help fot evening work. : |. Lobby receptionist. PBX & Transient Want Ads may DUCTS EXPERIENCE, SEE ™ . j cancelled 6:30 a.m. ee “CLAR Satan __5171_Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains. - PERSONELL rey po typing In a fun job. - - _the day “of pubtiention after j] SALES. 32 8 MAIN,’ ‘CLARE: EFFICIENT SECRETARY, DOC-" INTERVIEWER of we fo ee ; a | OR ———_ the first insertion. sTON poe office. bd wee Neen es * a a ronson SICTORE YOUt MECHANIC WuaT BE Bog MUST BE EXPERT an al. some eping knowl ; 20-28 to lady between one As. ® gir y io an art ‘CASH WANT AD RATES carburetor, electrical and tuneup. | -Co8*- "= 43873. pa By MD galery, te decorator. Lines 1-Day 3-Days 6€-Days Apply in person. Homer Hi EXP. COUNTER GIRL backgrouna and Die to typing. $250.- : ry pry $2.76 ae Orford, Mien. mn. PE 5-0651, ‘most im 4 oun ag 86, $2. MECHANIC WITH TOOLS, ¥ Bee. my Bicharas , i Hi sis bos Ege oe new mar | SSO ) Biggs Fe (Qhance for mature gai whe 335 405) 6: Pur . PART TIME | over and do job for busy ; ER $8 $8 if REALESTATE OR PERMANENT WORK. |R IST — TYPIST WITH} ~ exec. $328; we Ss SALESMAN __ ’|gepoouret ’ | Slessant architectural office, 6 8. its fae tees ae, ERIENCED. Putt, | "ope Desedy work, y in fay. a0 hour week. 18 fo 30 yrs Bea sten to w staff of TIM ALESMEN to. work on rson, ’ i 4 , HOUSE it oe oo ‘nee Call’ Mrs. Bowditen.| : — " a - pol = - 7 4 2 + 4 ms on ties, Member Multiple’ UXP. SILK FINISHER FOR DRY a SMACK DaB IN. THE BON REPLIES — fj) Seyler, Call for sypamntment= | Been Cleaners. 208°. Woodward. | Center at Gis N. Sagionw ie now |< ig one eau S t RAM, Birm: m interviewing 8-25, kills. Busy 2, 3, 8, 9,16, 25, 28, 29, FE : : mall order plus} - * es manager 7 EXPERIENCED WA i. & od needs YOU, 9325. 34, 35, 58, 60, 62, 63, 65,2! ROUTE SALESMAN | tunen, #46 Joulyn. days. gommission/ Vacations. Those tn- , 76, 77, 79, 83, 86, 90, 96 West side & lake area, ambitious SiPERIBNOED GOET ORDER = = : oi YOU'RE THE TOP » oe ae "| Married man, 24 to 38 yrs. old to| cook. Also. manage. Located in| VAOATION MONEY UNLIMITED! When you. sasiat the pres. | 100, 103, 116, 112, 116. menage & operate @ well estab-| Michigan's 8 cen-| Avon Cosmetics mw ae y. know typing and short- lished retail ¢effee & grocery| ter. Salary and comm’ Open | nity to earn to woekiy Ary — route. Good references, neat ap-| to right man. Write Pontiac Press} commiss where ~ tele Wanted . Male 6 pearance Plessant pe &| Box 104. : : | OF Ww ¢ ability to manage your own time necessary. All ses with transpartats Rpg Fwy CW ey l Permanent Donition with 41 yr. old firm. ‘0 plus commis- sion & borius. eave & vaca-| © — foto outdid work. Me- ag benefits Phone Mr. Grifter, gow Hors — WA _1-4560, Detroit aoce helo it ahaa Real Estate Sales Two orpertoneed sales — call lerenées. 66 per pony = | - Boriney fan 338 Orchard : : BaB ; . , s Manurex ek Motor “gt g.| Zone, Lewis, Sales Mai FE Pontiac, = steady, for home than wages, C plus com eRe GAYLORD REAL ESTATE Es after 3:30, oe ‘ . $400. © oi tas “Mich, “SO x: