é , THE PONTIAC PR (Details Page 2) 7 | [ar ; 118th YEAR kkkk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1955—30 PAGES“ ~__¢scourap mand ovare pale FS 4 . 3 “Predicts Senate OK for $21 Billion Road Plan + Hail, and Winds Batter Coastline of South Florida Damage Set $200,000; Fort Lauderdale Area Hard Hit by Storm FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (? — Homeowners and public utility crews cleaned up today in the wake of a violent hailstorm that thrashed along 125 miles of the southeast Florida Coast and caused damage esti- mated at more than $200,- 000. . | “The storm struck Fort Pierce about noon yester- day and swept southward to hammer Fort Lauder- dale and Miami Beach with hailstones and furious winds. Hurricane force winds 75 miles per hour were reported at Broward International Airport here and gusts in the city were estimated as high as 140 miles an hour. bery stripped of foilage and “There isn’t a grapefruit, orange, avocado or mango left in the area where the hail fell,"’ said Orville Revelle of the Fort Lau- derdale Daily News after a tour of the city, where 1.47 inches of rain feil DENVER @®—Dust blowing off the Western plains clouded the sky over parts of seven states to- day, and high winds were ex- pected to continue through tomor- row in some areas. Forecasters said the worst dust 7-Year-Old Boy Saves Girl From Death in Lake A frail 7-year-old boy heroically held a 32-year-old girl above six feet of water for 10 minutes in Lake Orion late yesterday until other rescuers arrived. “That's all EF could do, I just couldn't let go of her and let her drown,” said Howard Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Johnson of 132 S. Bellevue. From a dock near hig home, he reached pretty, blonde - haired | Debra Elaine Schrah, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Schrah of 146 S. Bellevue while he yelled | for help 10 minutes, plunged into Lake Orion's icy wa- ters and pushed the two boys out, nearly losing his own life. City Manager Missed A-Test Willman Back Home With Only Tan; Atom Shot Postponed Looking tanned and not the least bit weary although he hadn't been | Manager Walter K. Willman re- ernoon from Nevada. go off in a civil defense exercise at | Yucca Flat at 5 a.m. Tuesday. | Between briefing sessions and the | bus rides, he didn’t have much | time left for Sleeping in his Las | Vegas hotel roorh. minus 10 minus minus 8 . 115 9 o's « ._» Then he the hill to take you back to Las Vegas.’ The winds weren't just right.” At Survival City, the model town to bed since Monday night, City | | ington, visited famous shrines in An atomic bomb was slated to Above, students from Washington High are at the Secret Now Out: Prosecutor Ziem Has an Alias Oakland County Prosecutor ; Frederick C. Ziem thought . he | was to be the speaker at a Hazel | Park Service club meeting yes-| wasn't so sure. | The attorney doing the honors | went over a_ background fitting | Ziem to a “T."’ But concluded areas were eastern Colorado, west-| built at the bomb site for civil de- | by saying, “Now in his second ern Kansas and western Nebras- ka. Some of the powdery silt was wafted into the Dakotas. It was being settled by showers south- ward in the Oklahoma and Texas Panhandles. Local patches of blow- ing dust also were predicted across the Rockies in Utah. ~ In Colorado the wind abated somewhat this morning from ve- locities which sent dust as high as 17,300 feet yesteflay, with gusts at Lander High of 78 Degrees ls Expected Sunday Fair and pleasant today, to- night and tomorrow is-the weather outlook for the Pontiac vicinity. The forecast says temperatures will be to 45-49 degrees tonight, rising to a high of about 78. No rain is in the offing. The mercury ‘hit a low of 47 this morning before 8 o'clock, rising to 70 degrees by 1 p. m. lke Names Aid Chief | WASHINGTON @® — President Eisenhower today selected John, B. Hollister, Cincinnati Repubii- can lawyer, to head the new agency which will take over most fense test purposes, the crowd was rapidly dwindling. Civil defense workers and invit- ed observers: had dropped from Tuesday's peak of 1,500 to about 600, and military parficipants were down from 2,800 to 1,800. The postponements have been caused by weather conditions, which must be just right to insure that no radioactive fall-out will be deposited on towns or cities. Cherry Blossoms Open Already on Traverse Bay TRAVERSE CITY # — Sweet cherry trees at Old Mission on Clarence Mullett ‘said the next 3 or 4 days probably will tell whether or not there is going to be a good cherry crop. The buds should be out of danger if killing frost does not hit bef foreign aid activities on July 1. pe | terms as prosecuting attorney, I | give you my good friend Fred | Nicholson.” | An embarrassed silence fell over | the gathering. Finally a George | Gobelish voice. somewhere in the rear drawled, | “So there’ you are.” He hn wy Warn Spot, but Do Job All Same er helping cover the civil war in ing Co. He sent the following cable | tonight with a shipment of film | to NBC: ; “I am nearly died when was in circles in central police station where big fighting outbreak for five hours by Binh Xuyen mortars and machineguns.” He said he was going back to the seene of the fighting to ‘‘do my best for giving you full satisfac- tions.” Meanest Man in Town GADSDEN, Ala. (UP) — Mrs. John Miller said a “‘considerate”’ motorist stopped his auto when ber children's baseball rolled into the street. The _ motorist, however, picked up the ball and drove off with it. One Limit Catch! Pontiac Man Stays Home for His Catch; North State Offers Fine Sport, Weather zZ ? g g tt slise i +P TP explanation for the perfect weath- sonably low water offered a com- bination that was pretty hard to beat. Even that virtuous char- acter, the. dry fly purist, found AT MT. VERNON — Students from three Pontiac turned to his desk yesterday aft-' Junior High Schools, on their annual trip to Wash- = tomb of the first tomb are (left Lewis and Janet the area Friday. : : | ee ee TILILT . i (! Associated Press Fhetes fer Pentise Press president at Mt. Vernon. Inside the to right) Lymnnee Benter, Stephen Thomas. | - No; Paralytic | | | land County contracted pa This was revealed today by Dr. John D. Monroe, county health: director, whose staff information contained in Polio Found in Vaccinated Group Here ralytic polio. has finished compiling local the massive report on the vaccine trials issued April 12 at Ann Arbor. All first, second and third* graders in Oakland County —35,987 children in all, were included in the study group. Of this number, 8,- | 243 received the three-shot iseries of vaccinations, 8,291 hots, 1 shots. : |mer.. Four were in the group | which got dummy shots, and the | other. four had no shots at all. | Of three non-paralytic poilo cases, two were children who did not get shots, and one had re- ceived the vaccine. The Salk shots are not designed to combat this variation of the diséase, which produces no crippling ef- fects. Eight cases, originally reported other diseases. One child who had been vaccinated and was believed to have polio turned out to be suf- fering from measles. The tests in Oakland County pro- duced no major reactions to the shots, and only a -few children complained of minor ill effects, such as soreness of the arm for a few days or headaches. In Washington, Dr.- Salk was working with other medical experts today on a case-by-case. study among the 29 children afflicted after receiving the shots. All polio vaccination was halted officially in California today pend- ing a final decision by U. S. Public Health authorities and virus ex- The top batter in the American } rit : [ aT; if tj qT), tit ist ‘ H fi] 4 i as polio, were later diagnosed as | Ford Appears - {st GAW Target & | | | Contract One Week as Showdown Nears appeared marked today to be the first of the nation’s Big Three anteed annual wage by the CIO! | United Auto -Workers: | Evidence that union leaders pri- - vately have singled out Ford for |a showdown fight on the year- }around -pay issue mounted when |the UAW notified General. Motors | Corp. yesterday it will end their | five-year contract June 7 instead | of May 29, - The move leaves the Ford pact first to expire in the automotive | Industry—June 1. The Chrysler- UAW agreement doesn’t end un- » ti August, , and GM. the first week of the month. If the union had no contract with GM the first week in June it might not be able to collect some 242 mil- lion dollars in dues. Experts have said the cost of a strike on the guaranteed annual wage issue, if it comes, has fig- ured in union policy planging. A Ford strike would involve 140,000 workers. GM has 325,000 hourly rated employes. Yesterday's action extending the GM pact. was routine under terms provides for a 30-day notification period by either side before termi- na tion. Any walkout called within- this period would be in violation of the contract. ' Slight Quake Jars’ Chile SANTIAGO, Chile (—The Chile- an capital was shaken by a slight tremor today, No damage was reported, Not one of the children who. received all three shots, By added, ‘The buses are coming up| 'eTday. After the introduction he! of the Salk polio vaccine in last year’s field tests in Oak- | got dummy shots, 19,044 re-|_ Union ot GM Extends. a ~NEW YORK (INS) — Dao Duc ceived no shots at all and| Mui is a Viet Namese photograph- | 409 received only one or wo | Pontiac Students Visit Famous Shrines in Nation's Capital WREATH AT LINCOLN M EMORIAL/— Pat Walsh, student president at Lincoln Junior H School, and. student vice | president, Judy Horton, 15, pose re the huge statute of Abraham Lincoln after placing a wreath at j \ Mee Q ’ + ri r 14, (left) the memorial. % G HONOR ‘UNKNOWN SOLDIER’ students from Wever — Three | Junior High School view the wreath placed by classmates at the Tomb to right are: Ronnie Mouser, 15, Saigon for the National Broadcast-| Eight children.in the study group| DETROIT w — Ford Motor Co.. °! ‘he Unknown Soldier Friday at Arlington National Cemetery. Left contracted paralytic pollo last sum- | student council treasurer; Delores Gustavson, 14, student council secretary; and Glenn Fuller, 14, student auto makers pressed for a guar- council president, who placed = iain at the tomb. a0 DaiFired by Viet Namese Provisional § Assembly Backing Premier Diem Ousts Emperor SAIGON, South Viet Nam uA —', Also seen a meaningful was the |An especially summoned Provi- fact that Walter P, Reuther. UAW |Sional Assembly fired Bao Dai to- and CIO president, entered the| day as South Viet Nam's Chief of Ford negotiations with the UAW | State. on annual wage talks yesterday. | It was Reuther’s first appearance |olutionary Democratic Forces of | in current negotiations with Ford | are Nation,’’ also ordered Premier | The As¢embly, dubbed ‘‘the Rev- Phils, Redlegs in Swap PHILADELPHIA (UP) — The Philadelphia Phillies today traded catcher Smokey Burgess, pitcher + Steve Ridzik and outfielder Stan) | Palys to the Cincinnati Redlegs for catcher Andy Seminick and| outfielders Jim . Greengrass an Glen Gorbous. It was a straight player deal with no cash involved. | | New Proposal Scraps Bigger lke Program | Sen. Gore Says Bill | Will Pass; Hike in Gas | Tax Included WASHINGTON (INS) — Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenn) predicted today that the 4 | Senate will approve a 21 bil- lion dollar, five-year “first | installment” on a highway construction program. The Senate Roads sub- |committee, which Gore ‘heads, recommended yes- terday that the parent Pub- lic Works Committee, and ultimately the Senate, adopt the program. In doing so, the subcommittee scrapped the Eisenhower adminis- tration’s proposed 10-year, 101 bil-. lion dollar blueprint to improve the nation's highways. Although administration sup- porters are expected te line up behind that plan, Gore was con- fident that he would have enough votes to push his own measure through. The subcommittee vote was 6-3, Gore stressed that the legisla- tion would be merely “the first installment’’ and that there would be future steps taken afterward ‘‘to bring al} categories five-year | | of highways and roads to adequate standards."’ The full committee will vote on the measure Thursday, Gore said, gj and he hopes to take it to the | Senate the following week. | The bill calls for an outlay of | 10 billion 3% miillion dollars on | interstate highways in the five years beginning July 1, 1956. Under g 75-25 per crht match- ing ratio, the federal government would supply seven DBiilion 756 million dollars and the states would ie rest: An additional 11 billion dollars would be provided for the same period for primary, secondary and urban roads. This would be divid- ed equally between the states and federal government. Thus, the federal would spend an average of one and — billion dollars each year | for interstate roads. plus one bil- lion 100 million annually for the _ other categories, Current federal expenditures for all types of roads total less | than a billion dollars a year. The Gore bill provides for di- rect appropriation of the added sums for interstate highways. How- ever, it recommends that the fed- eral tax on motor fuels be in- | creased one cent a gallon: Such | action would have to originate in the House. The financing arrangement is a sharp departure from the admin- istration’s proposal to set up a special government corporation to float 30-year bonds to finance a 10-year, 27-billion dollar federal in- terstate highway program. Gore said that a one-cent in- crease in fuels tax—the levy is } now tWo cents—would bring in 600 to 70 million dollars a. year in added revenue. government She’s Been There 11 Years | Dinner Guest Moves In ST. LOUIS (®)—Mrs,. Fuller W. Fooshe invited Mrs. .Eleagor 'Ngo Dinh Diem’s Cabinet dis- | Elaine Lee Harris to dinner 11 years ago. Now she wishes Mrs, Harris would go home. Mrs. Fooshe wants to sell her house. Another important factor is that | solved, but called on him to form un dues are deducted by the! a new one. . | y from the workers’ pay; The Assembly, which had Cabi- net backing, met in Sajgon’s City Hall and tore down ¢.: Dai's photograph from the and trampled on it. wall This apparently was Diem’s an- swer to the ex-Emperor’s at- tempt to overthrow him. Bae Dai, now on. the French Riveria, has not been in Viet Nam for a year. Thursday he summoned Premier Diem to the Riviera for con- His Cabinet felt the trip would mean Diem would be dismissed as Premier. In Cannes, France, Viet Nam's chief of state, ex-Premier Bao Dai, sent the stafe’s defiant Pre- today to come to.Cannes for a con- ference. The message apparently was | dispatched before news reached Bao Dai from Saigon that a Revo- lutionary Assembly there had de- posed, him, % mier a “‘second and last’ ofder | | She didn’t appear in court, all a der b she 4 A 4 thought The female version of the famous play ‘‘The Man Who Came to Dinner” came to attention yesterday as Magistrate P.- Donald | Fisher issued an eviction order againgt Mrs. Harris. but told newsmen later it was Mrs. Fooshe planned to continue living here. She said she would move in with friends in suburban Clayton. But William W. Sleater III, Mrs | Fisher this version: | | Mrs. Fooshe asked Mrs. Harris, ' One night led to another, Fooshe didn’t like the guest been back. stayed. City Bank in New York. before his. death. j Hagris died in 1948; He and his wife were estranged . Fooshe's attorney, gave Magistrate Mrs. Harris went to the Fooshe home in August 1944 for dinzier, who had just arrived in town, to sultations but Diem refused to go. | spend the night rather than go to a hotel: Mrs. Harris accepted, teo well, seo he left. He hasn’t Last August Mrs. Fooshe moved to Milwaukee. Stil] Mrs. Harris Sleater said Mrs. Fooshe wanfS to sell the house, but Mrs. Harrig won't let real estate agents or prospective. buyers inside. Mrs. Harris the widow of Beverly D. Harris, former presidest of Monsanto Chemical Co. and once a vice president of National oe - t a + searching today for Jerome Shell, - 71, of 20785 Westfiew, Royal Oak ‘ee a see ee oo Se SP Ped After Stabbing 2 Injured in Scuffle Early Today; One in) Critical Condition | Royal Oak Township Police are | FE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1955 Pontiac Group Will Attend Capital Meet A dozen Pontiac people will be among the 3,500 oper epee to attend the 43rd meet- ing of the United States Chamber of Commerce in Washington next week. The group from here, headed by Pentiac Chamber of Com- merce President Ralph T. Nor- Condemn Land for Birmingham School Site Values Parcels at $60,049 An Oakland County Circuit Court jury yesterday found in The Day in Birmingham r+ BIRMINGHAM — Seniors from Birmingham High assume — at least in title — the jobs of city of- ficials Monday in the annual Civic Control Day. . The day is scheduled to start -with studen{s working in municipal offices to they were elected, Student ‘Office Holders’ Will Rule City Monday chief, and Palmer Bollinger, fire chief. * * os The assessed valuation of prop- erty in the Birmingham-Bloom- field Hills - Bloomfield Township area has increased by some ten million dollars over 1954. . | vell, will fly to Washington | favor of Birmingham School Dis-| with experienced officials stand-| Valuation tor this year totaled . Township, in tbe stabbing this | tomorrow morning. - trict’s condemning 30 acres in| ing by to help them gain better $36,344,460, which is $10,213,065 , morning of two men, one of whom : ana tka Wake Peas a ae ‘Pome Others in the group are Rekert | Southfield Township for a building | understanding of procedures, more thas @ year age. Se - | ON STATE PROGRAM — Six members of the | convention at the University of Michigan, Friday.) ) St. Clair. Floyd Baker, | il-| site and set a $60,049 price on as ee be | “A detailed rundown shows as- - Emest R. Smith, 25, of 640) staff of Tomahawk, Pontiac High School student | Shown above (left to right) are Karen Hoff, Mairlee | Wayne Gabert, at ira Novak: | the land. peyote = oy eens, (sessed values in Birmingham at Palmer, Detroit, is in critical con-| newspaper, presented a panel discussion before the | Minesinger, Patricia Zielke, David Tarr, Vicky Micu| ry _ . . dition with stab wounds of the lung | _ troit. _field Ct., Royal Oak Township, was | ‘released from the hopsital after | » hand. > uel J. Whitfield gave this account in Mt. Carmel Mercy Hospital, De- | Michigan Interscholastic Press Assn., at its spring | and Mary Sorros. James Smith, 21, of 21637 Glen- | treatment for stab wounds of his | Royal Oak Township Det. Sam- for May Day of the affray: Moscow Ready | | Some 60 Pontiac High School stu- PHS Students on Program for State Convention Marilee Minesigner, Tomahawk ed- dents from the publications staffs. | itor for next year, and Karen Hoff Thomas Whitfield, H. Y. Levinson, Richard L. Partlin, Dr. George Petroff and Smith Falconer. At the sessions, which will continue through Wednesday, ad- dresses will be made by President Eisenhower, Herbert Hoover, Dr. Norman Vincent Peale and L. L. Colbert, Chrysler Corp. president. The area, containing nine par- cels, is at Lahser and Fourteen Mile Rds. Only two parcels were in dis- pute, with previous price agree- ments reached on seven, according the district. One five-acre parcel in con- Students were selected for their various posts during the day by “elected’’ city commissioners Ed Jim Mosby and Jim Johnson, who earlier were selected by the stu- | dent senate. $53,249,460, up $4,442,200 over last year; Bloomfield Hills, $7,385,000 this year, up $1.338,600; Bloomfield Township $25,710,000, an increase of $4,432,265 over 1954. Golf enthusiasts swarmed at least two clubs in the area today as forecasts from the weather bu- to John E. Martz, attorney tor Peters, Tom Beck, Don Fraser. | peay indicated sunny, fair and cloudless skies were here to stay. | Prbs at the Birmingham Country Club and the Springdale course } ; s Position of Portraits | Secs _the state interscholnstic | and David Tarr, present coeditors; Ado S Polic tention was valued at $10,000 by | The commissioners chose Sut were preparing. meanwhile, for The two Smiths, who are not | Press association convention at the | of the paper. the district and $20,000 by the Spencer as city manager; Megan oven larger turnouts , related, were in a restaurant on | Shows Malenkov Low parte fm foe aoa eee Presiding at the convention ses- | owner. The jury allowed $12,300. | Butler as assessor; Jim Gillen as | tor tn the Eight Mile read, about 4 a.m. i. . Robert F. . Two smaller pieces, considered treasurer; Bob Miller as city en- Deadline entries Gib mecuuing when Shell cones ie | Man on Totem Pole \sirts from all areas of the state a pines ee a en of Land Reform werth $5,000 by the beard, ware |gineer; Noel Stookey as dog catch-/ men's league at Springdale is and reportedly pulled a knife. | MOSCOW (UP) — Moscow blos- | * one fed. a. mbers of the PHS Toma-| 1 of MIPA suri priced at $6,500 by the jurors. \er: Betty Quillian, assistant | Monday. And at the country Shell cut the younger Smith | S0med today with May Day dec-| hawk Staff presented a panel dis- . Att in mer arguing ™2>aeer; Bennett Wright, police | club women are preparing for a . : ; | orati ring the Soviet Union's | : the past year. Lawrence Nibb- | Indig’s Sind Provi uey SF one one MS | luncheon ~Thursday at which slightly. then all three went acress | to head showing ; ank, | CUSsion at both morning and aft- lett ti evinces at Coed FOVINCE | value, Harold Bludsoe of Detroit, | time they will draw for partners ‘Eight Mile to anothur restaurant | 'P aders in a new order of rank. . oon sessions of the convention, ee »P t= Detrelt, wes Cancels Feudal Grants, said he would appeal the decision for tournament play. Play in the _ in a scuffle. - find both Smiths on the sidewalk. ‘Farmer Granted ‘Final Request -at His Burial - Huron County four years ago and | menti Voroshilov. Foreign Minister where the older Smith was stabbed | An unidentified patron called po-| 7 aa ea lice, who arrived at 4:15 a.m. to} |. Premier Nikolaj Bulganin ranked | second to Khrushchev. It was the first public display of the nine leaders since Malenkov | stepped down as Premier in Feb- ruary and became minister of elec- | tric power plants, _ | Khrushchev, first secretary of A retired farmer who died in| the Seviet Communist Party, Hazel Park: April 20 was buried) ranked next to V. 1, Lenin and three days later at Bad Axe} Josef Stalin in the big portraits dressed in overalls, a jacket and) installed in preparation for to- with his beloved corn cob pipe| morrew’s world-wide Communist as he requested in a will filed in| holiday, Oakland (County Probate Court. After the party chief came Bul- Frederick Brown, 69, left his| ganin, Malenkov's successor as 120-acre farm near Bax Axe in| Premier, and then President Kili- | ‘moved to Hazel Park with his/ Vyacheslav Molotov was fourth. daughter. Mrs. George Thomann,| This was the lineup of portraits of 1426 E. Muir. ‘mounted on the Lenin Library | ‘ — | building here in the Russian right- te bis will in « * | to-left order of precedence | Communist Party Chief Nikita) jjjustrating staff and editing prob- |S. Khrushchev was first and ousted | jems as handled on the local school elected to succeed Beauchamp. _In addition to the general ses- ‘sions, students attended workshop meetings on various phases of high school publication work. Directors of the MIPA voted to reactiviate a journalism scholar- ship, which -is in recognition of the years of service given by Prof. John Brumm, for years as chair- man of the department at the uni- versity. Pontiac Deaths | As early as noon yesterday | Garland D Cosey favorite hot spots like the Mio in be held 1 ; th Prayer service w or dam area were filling up wi | Garland D. Cosey, ten-week-old son paper. On the panel were Patricia Zielke, Vicky Micu, Mary Sorros,-+ Pontiac Man Stays Home for His Catch (Continued From Page One) ers” as they're also known may wake up one fine day to find they’ve missed spme of the year’s opportunities. ‘trailers and cars loaded with | (+ Henry and Opal Cosey of 7025 sportsmen eager to be in a proper | Redmond St. Monday at 10:30 a.m. spot when midnight rolled around. | from the Sparks-Griffin Chapel. |The Rev. James Parker of Sunny- There is more sentiment than | yale Chapel will officiate with bur- science in this type of fishing (ial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Plans Redistribution KARACHI of Sind, a century behind western land reforms, recently announced cancellation of certain feudal land grants and reallotment to peasant cultivators. Sind government officials said no compensation would be paid to the present 124 land holders (called Jagirdars) because their rights did not involve title to the lands but merely authority to collect land revenue from the grants made to them which otherwise would have been paid to the gov- ernment. Nor will the present land-own- ers be entitled to file claims fer title to the land after deposses- sion unless they can prove right- ful title existed for ownership as well as for collection of revenues. Provision hag been made, how- (UP)—The province’ days to do so. If the appeal is not taken in that time span, said Martz, the board will complete the purchase. Both elementary and junior high schools are planned on the site. Judge George B. Hartrick pre- sided Gl Training in Sight for Most Young Men of Defense Wilson said today some military service will be required from practically all young Ameri- can men as long as the conflict with communism exists. In an address prepared for the Alumni Society of Randolph-Macon College, Wilson. said world condi- tions make this military service The nation must “always be May Luncheon Slated Friday Pontiac, Birmingham Women Hear Speaker From Philippines The May Fellowship Luncheon of he United Church Women of Pon- it tiac and Birmingham will be held ASHLAND, Va, @ — Secretary at the Central Methodist Church at | 12 noon Friday. | Josefina Phodaca of Manila, Philippine Islands who has just recently returned from a trip | around the world as a member of an International Fellowship Team sponsored by United | Church Women will speak on “Families of Nations.” . An: attorney in Manila) Miss | Phodaca is a past president of the | women’s tourney is scheduled to | start at the country cluh a peek | from next Thursday. | Bob Fauteck, Springdale pro, | Said a women’s league of 20 teams —two players to each team—and a men’s league with as many players began league competition at tlle municipa] course May 10. | A fee of 75 cents from the men |; and 50 cents from the women will be collected at the opening of each match. The money will go toward weekly prizes to the medalist and low team scores. The Springdale course already has been the scene of a “‘hole-in- one,"’ Fauteck said. Warren Sum- |ner III aced the 12-yard sixth | hole recently using a 7 iron. War- ren, 14-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs, Warren S. Sumner, 990 Fair- fax, won the junior championship at Springdale last year. He is a ninth grade student at Cathedral Central high school in Detroit. s * | ] It read: “The last request is oo. ; —_ “i tiuher- | Besides hi rents, baby Gar-|©VeT. to compensate land-holders lay 4 Groundwork for a monthly Cub { teat 1 be beried in an overall | Khrushchev, Bulganin, Voroshi-; and many, many peor” fisher ‘ent ia servieni gees ‘An.| and their families who prove they alert in defending the principles |} United Church Women of the Scout program will be laid Tues- ov lov, Molotov, First Deputy Prem-| men than fish, But maybe the s L | have no other means of livelihood. | which it was founded,” he | Philippines, chairman of the Board , and jacBe¢ and « corn cob pipe.” | jery Lazar Kaganovich, Anastas| “Dad always loved the outdoors Mikoyan, M. G. Pervukhin, M. S. | and hated dress-up clothes,”” Mrs. | Saburov, and finally, Malenkov. Thomann explained. lt was announced meanwhile | “His father always said that that the Seviet defense minister, when the resurrection came if dad, Marshal Georgi Zhukev, will re- ' | 'gela and two brothers, Gary and |Rodney, all at home. The baby died suddenly at home yesterday morning, really important part of the whole business is being within casting distance of real trout water when the whistle blows and plague take the refinements. Mrs. Harvey Hoffman Sind officials, who described the action ‘as ‘“‘historical,”’ said that peal one million acres of land | (about one-tenth of the total cul- tivable land in the province) would | be repossessed, with a correspond- said, “lest they be supplanted by foreign ideologies that may seem attractive at first but on careful examination will be found to be old tyrannies dressed up in new clothes.” lof Trustees, United Church of |Christ of the Islands and has | served as first and only majority | floor leader of the City of Manila | Municipal Board. She has been active in the ex- day night. Mrs. Ruth Silbar and two dens of Cub Pack B-8 will pre- sent ideas for such a program at a round-table gathering at Bir- mingham high school that night. . LJ s Ye a good hese ; tension Sunday School work at | -The West Bloomfield League of were lying in peace in his working | view massed troops in the tradi- scngie do have a 7 ee ie cut; Mrs. Harvey (Margaret) Hoff-| Ng increase of government land | Wilson said the attainments of Mandalayerts y with underprivi.| Women Voters has re-elected Mrs. clothes with his pipe by his side. | ditional May Day parade start. |, quarry. ‘while Joceed |. 77, of 92 Center St. died yes-| revenue of approximately $900,000 the United States cannot be ex- _ orphaned and delinquent Jack Couzens president. Also re- ' the Lerd would recognize him,” | ig at 10 a.m, Sunday (3 a.m. | arm and arm with their vilatiioirs lterday afternoon at St. Joseph, Per year. i | plained on the grounds of greater -nildren in the government institu. elected was Mrs. R. E. Driver as she added. EST.) *-| Mercy Hospital after a brief ill-; According to these officials, ' natural resources nor upon any ra- An Elder in the United vice-president. : . : = There was no indication the an- | Ticket in Pontiac; And every now and then catch a fish. they about one million peasants live on She was born Nov. 27, 1877 in| aNd Cultivate these lands for the | cial superiority. | tions, Church, she was one of the orga- ‘ lebrat would depart ; : The answer to the nation’s nizers of the ‘Moral Crusade.” ° . ows imal andamiet beak eo oo ea page Ba Chicago, Il. the daughter of | Jagindars, with less rights than schdevontanta, hi-tld, “es ‘us the The trip around the world was JOXONY LEGIS ators | Crashes at Cadillac | and parties, the opening motions on an alder-| Henry and Luey Rice Linzbach | | simple fact that by accepting the | made in’ the interests of Christian : CADILLAC (UP) — A Detroit iutiend troul sireant. le: married in Earl Park, Ind. The 124 Jagirdars’ holdings challenge of individual competition Fellowship and to hold consulta- jn woman who apparently traveled | Strike Poralyzes Traffic 170 miles in about two and one-| jn Harbor at Singapore half hours was critically injured SINGAPORE, Saturday us—Some | when she crashed into a street | 1 300 clerks. and overseers em- | light and tree here today. | ployed by the Singapore Harbor Cadillac police said Mrs. Char. | Board went on strike at midnight | ; a _| paralyzing maritime traffic in this | lotte Tierney, about 25, apparently great Eastern port. | | shoved aside the hungry brookies Coming to Pontiac from Lima, | Ohio, in 1928, Mrs. Hoffman was a member of St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church, Daughters of | Isabella, League of Catholic Wom- jen, Altar Society of her church While some df the niceties of fly fishing must be temporarily are responsive as always and it is really a very satisfactory way to put in one's time. One regret in this respect Is that we did not complete the | ca. | Surviving are two sons, Harold | and the Royal Neighbors of — vary im size from 500 acres to more than 200,000 acres, but large or small, the Jagirdars | Pay mo land revenue or income | tax on the lands over which they | have virtual feudalistic control. In some areas, it is claimed. | medieval conditions prevail, and the Jagirdars are the law of the we have done a better job of apply- ing our human energy and indi- vidual initiative to the improve- ment of the welfare of all. That makes the difference between our country and most others.” New Boat Will Make _ tion with groups of Christian wom- en in various parts of the world. The Team met with women in ‘Hawaii, the Fiji Islands, Austra- | lia, Indonesia, India, Pakistan, Af ca was called te the presidential Support Adenauer | HANNOVER, Germany *—Con- trol of Lower Saxony’s government _ passed to the hands of a coalition | supporting Chancellor Konrad Ad- enauer’s _national __ government night. The state has had a Social- ist government since the end of the x construction of a three-foot fly | of South Bend, Ind., and Everett Niagor il | War. ; the Soutien t pe ng phages The strike came as 22 ships | rod for this very purpose. It will |o{ Pontiac. Also surviving are a) Unde : ; digihad Fa Runs ago and rained appoimes | In last Sunday's election, the . rE me odes ty ‘jammed the wharves without nor-} be ready soon, though, and a | brother, Mathew Linzbach of Kent- r Sind government, plans | NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. w—One! »Y President Magsaysay as Socialist candidates polled the mal facilities for loading or un- | A speeding ticket issued at Pon- joading. | tac at 2 a.m. was found on her at; Employes are demanding over. | the hospital, police said. It's 170 time, fixed working hours, pension | miles from here to Pontiac. ‘and bonus benefits. full report should be forthcom- ing .-shortly. Tomorrow, if conditions stay the |Steinbaugh of West Lafayette, Ind., Mrs. Adam Hardebeck and Mrs. Harmon Wurz, both of Niles. same we plan to go over for some | : real dry a sak on the Au! The Recitation of the Rosary land, Ind.; three sisters, Mrs. Dora | - 300,000 landless peasants will be | the two Maid of the Mist steam! Mrs. George Garver, boats damaged by fire last week.' chairman, will be assisted by the 161 seats. for re-allotment of the lands, 2,- provided homesteads. 63 Aboard Plane Unhurt } | new beat-will be ht to replace | The Mist Steamboat Co, said if jhoped to have a modern, steel | personal envoy of good will. following committee’ chairmen: Luncheon, Mrs. George Dietrich; |highest vote, but the party won only 59 of the State Parliament's * * The minor parties—the right- |wing German party, the Free | Sable’s North Branch whose hard- | will be at 8:30 p.m. Sunday at the, | vessel on the Niagara River some- | hospitality, Mrs. P. J. Latimer; as Nose Wheel Buckles | : Sinatra-Sullivan' Squabble Brings Bitter Backblasts NEW YORK (INS) — A three-| weeks-old feud between Frank Si-| natra and TV master of cere-| monies Eq Sullivan rolled not so | merry along today with both sides getting in their licks and no one giving any ground. van wants people, including him, to’'appear for free on his ‘“Toast of | the Town’ TV variety show, Not so, insisted Sullivan. pays and pays handsomely « The -two have been conducting their fetid through paid ads in the trade press . | He | “As to Sinatra's charges that ‘don’t pay performers.’ all 1 | The Weather _ PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Fair and Pleasant teday. tenight and temerrow - 30 te 54. Lew tonight 45-49 high Sunday. [4-7% Northerty winds diminishing te light and variable to- night. Teday im Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding @ am 47 At @ am: Wind! Velocity -17 Direction: North Northwest Sun sets today at 730 pm Bun rises Gunday at $°31 « r Moon sets Gunday at 240 am Moon rises today at 132 po mph ‘ Dewntown Temperatares ti iY) .s se.’ “* 1lem j2.m lpr eewsea erere B5538 Friday tn Pentiac ‘As Recorded Downtow: Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather—Sunnr “See Year ‘Age ta Pontiac Highest tempereture Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather—Fair Friday's Temperatere Chart can say is I have paid up te $15,000 for talent doing a single shot on Toast of the Town, and never approached Sinatra asking him 4o-appear free,” said bd. Sinatra has wanted him Sullivan “‘cuffo,”’ charged to appear : | (for free). The crooner placed an Crooner Frankie chargéd Sulli-| ad in two Hollywood trade papers | dent) Eisenhower could not escape |ing over reading “Dear Ed You are sick. (Signed) Frankie P.S. Sick! Sick' Sick!"' Walter Pidgeon, president of the Screen Actor's Guild, publicly spanked Sinatra for ‘‘sounding off” | in a letter to Sullivan yesterday. The Sinatra-Sullivan rhubarb started three _weeks ago when. Frankie refused to go on_ the Toast of the Town's’ scheduled production of the movie he's now making, “Guys and Dolls,"’ unless he was paid. Marion Brando, Jean Simmons and other members of the movie | cast were “set”? to appear ac- cording to CBS on producer Sam Goldwyn's contention that “Toast” came ‘under the head- of a publicity appearance the type stars are obligated to do under terms of their con- tracts,” Variety then quoted Sinatra as adding I told Goldwyn I'd work on the show if Sullivan paid the money ta charity or his sponsors paid some thing like $100,000 to an actors fund. . + Whereupon Sullivan took a full | page ad in Variety last Wednes- day to “answer” Frankie, whom he has admittedly ‘“‘nat spoken to for a number of years.” “I resent Sinatra's reckless - ¢ludes two paintings by Sir Winston afin ; Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home. Babed i> inch limit waters peovile Immediately following at 9 o'clock, for separating the men from the | the Daughters of Isabella will say | bovs | the Rosary. 1e , The funeral will be held from (See 2 2 ) . Page 12 for other trout St. Vincent de Paul Catholic | fishing reports.) Dem Says Blunders ‘to Catch Up With Ike "emocsting Quarters | SALISBURY, Md. (®—‘‘Blunders | dise Mart, the world's largest com- in recent ‘weeks for which (Presi- | mercial building, has started mak- the Merchant | responsibility” will lead to his de- | Manufhcturers Club in the bdild- |feat if he runs again, Sen. Spark- | ing.- Renovations will cost $200,000, | man (D-Ala) said last night. and the enlarged facilities are | The Democratic vice presidential | scheduled to be ready for the next candidate in 1952 gave as examples International Home Furnishings Chorch at 10 a.m. Monday with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, ‘Remodeling Quarters 4 the Edward Corsi case and the | Market in June, and NEW YORK «®—Sixty-three per- }sons escaped injury yesterday when .the nose wheel of an Amer- ican Airlines plane buckled after the ship landed at La Guardia Air- port. , | The DC6, ca g 58 passengers ,and a crew of 5gskidded some 50 |feet before coming to a halt in front of a hangar. The plane re- mained upright. ; Airport officials estimated dam- age to the plane at $200,000. Spring in Cheboygan CHEBOYGAN (UP) Park- ing meters were reinstalled on 'city streets here today. They had |been removed for the winter months. manner in which the Yalta papers | ere made public ' Sparkman said the Eisenhower)! | administration one’ of “broken | eos promises,-phoney claims and-phon- | <= ey performances’ in a speech be- . fore 500 Eastern Shore Democrats at-a Je{ferson-Jackson Day dinner. | ; The Republicans, he said, have spent more money than in any single period former President Truman was in office. . ‘Two Churchill Paintings _in Royal Academy Show | LONDON «®—The stately Royal Academy of Arts has opened its 187th summer exhibition and _ in- Churchill. | One is called ‘‘Sunsettat Roe- | hampton, 1919,."" and the other is aj ; picture of whiskey, brandy and | wine bottles, three cigar boxes and | seven glasses The former Prime Minister, no | doubt with a twinkle in his eye, ‘shipped the latter painting to the “Academy under the title, ‘‘Bottle- scape." And that's the name under | which it's hung. Y a FS ter meee ot or cuarer that_we donot gay per Named on Port Board | srssu'St ip Siinecgei 54 formers,’’ Sullivan said in Variety, . Brownsville 85 15 New Orleans #9 ¢1 | in the form of a letter to Pidgeon.| DETROIT (#)—Henry J. Sulli- 4 o a New _— — bed | “To date we have paid “over Van, assistant to the executive vice | Clevelan@ 72 46 Pittsburgh 71 52 $5,000,008 in salaries and my nego-| president of the Detroit Edison) pope 3 by 2 es be 1 | tiations with Mr. Goldwyn called| Co., was elected to the Port of THE HARD WAY—Mrs. Mary Por Worth 90 59 8 8. Marie 59 37 for me to pay $32.000 covering! Detroit Commission Friday by the | has taught herself to type: Rouen 8 a — m oe technical costs for @ 30-minute pre-| Wayne County Board of Super-|in the conventional way. ina ;" view of “Guys and Dolls. | visors. | im her teeth. ‘ . j % ra ’,. A 1 - Ann Hamilton of Thornton, Colo., time in June, to run tourists to the | program, Mrs. Carl Nelson, deco- base of Niagara Fatis. If the tour- | rations,-Guild-3 ef AH Saints Epis- ists like it, the company will buy copal Church with -Mrs. Bruce another, it said. . ‘ |Hubbard in charge: registration, A plan to rebuild the old boats Mrs. T. Warren Fowler and ush- was scrapped. They were in dry ers, Mrs. Ted Koella Jr. dock when fire broke out on one! Tickets may be obtained from and spread to the other. |Mrs. Aden Thornton FE 2-3998. Mapped at Area Meeting — Four hundred education-interested citizens from Oak- land and Macomb counties prepared a message for Wash- ington, D. C., Friday at the first regional meeting for this area of the Michigan White House Conference on Educa- tion. Held in the Royal Oak High School, these two counties are participants in a state-wide program to draft specific recommendations on the educational needs of boys and girls in Michigan. These will be taken to Washington this falite be presented at President Eisenhower's nation- wide White House Conference. Among. their recom-?— mendations the local regien asks for “federal aid to help and wea pet rr of School S uggestions for Ike | Democrats and the Refugee party |— joined Adenauer's Christian | Democrats in a coalition’ control- ling 93 seats. - move assurés Adenauer of a two-third majority inthe Federal Bundesrat (upper house) which he ‘needs for passage of rearmament legislation opposed by Socialists. The Lower. Saxony State Parlia- ment elects five senators to the Bundesrat. Report Rudolt Hess on Hunger Strike. BERLIN # — Rudolf Hess, for- mer dGeputy fuehrer of the Nazi Reich who reportedly tried to com- mit suicide recently was said to- day ‘to be on a hunger strike in Spandau war crimes prison. Lt. Col. H. W. Earle, American © not deny the story. The unofficial reports said that Convict Uncle in Murder | of His 11-Year-Old Niéce — Cabinet Work | =e tT: = 3-1931 y Free Estimaes Free Installations Sample on Display @ General @ Corner Millwork Cabinets ’ @ Glass Repair @ Picture Custom-Made @ Gun Cases Windows Screens Our Rates Are Reasonable OPEN 8 A.M. TO 8 P.-M. | Sawins Cabinet Shop 4700 Walton Bivd., East of Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains Custom Work Call ORlando | 1_Lgeccsrmt © CABINET A Step in Beauty ORNAMENTAL IRON Flat Columns Corner Columns * Check These Features: @ Non-Skid to Prevent Slipping @ Rich Vibra-Packed Waterproof Concrete @ Steel Reinforced u 4 Deliver Anyuhere 5380 Dixie Highway Concrete Steps @ No Sections to be Forced Apart by Frost or Settling UP TO 42 SQ. FT. OF PORCH SPACE ‘CONCRETE STEP CO. OR 3-7715 AIR | HOW 3765 ~DIXIF ND HIGHWAY Compressors Cement Mixers Arc Welders Clay: Spades A om Tampers RAILER RENTAL OR 38-1456 You Saw It at the BUILDING SHOW | ) : | oes Aare ; j } : - + , ' t ay ie ro ea x) Easy te Apply a The ready mixed oil plastic paint Creates that beautiful smooth texture decoration it's an easy painting process Done in a simple manner—with a paint brush Come ta for a finished sample and Color Card {\ Mfg. Co. (17-19 S. Petry St. ’ PONTIAC PAINT FE 5-6184 mm MES FOR AMERICANS ~~ AP Newsfeatures MODERY VENTILATION—Interior kitchen is practicable in this exterior treatments. This can be a contemporary house with butterfly roof, or a more conventional ranch style. Three bedrooms and two bathrooms are completely segregated from living quarters, which include an informal activity room. This is Plan 216 by Paul T. Haagen, 360 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago 1, Ill. unusual plan suitable for different Today's Kitchen |Dainfj Relies on Tile Painting Saves for Color, Pattern Friendly colors and decorative design enhance the efficiency of Coordinate Colors for Overalt Looks of House kitchens in new homes today. Producers of quality materials for the -kitchen are now bringing out their products in @ wide variety of work-inspiring colors and designs. There are some 200 Windows need the warmth of good color as much as any other different colors to choose” from part of the house. Windows are in tile, for instance, and a great’ eves to a home, and the paint se- range of shapes, patterns and jected should harmonize with the textures roof, siding, and trim colors. If Practical not only for floors the windows are wood they can and walls because of its dura- | be readily redecorated to, suit a bility, decorative tile is alse ,Cchange. in the overall color being used in finer homes for scheme splashbacks behind the range Painting windows is simple, but and sink. , keep these pointers in mind Work counters, too, are surfaced! Paint new windows before I- with the stainproof and waterproof stallation, net after, especially in material. Indeed, one of the latest | P¢Wly built houses. Modern wood trends in kitchen design is the window units are precisely manu- all-tile work “island” conveniently | factured millwork and must be located in the center of the room. | protected from moisture and . plaster spatter during building | operations if they are to give best service. Factory-built units of _ponderosa pine are already pro- To Buy or Sell Real Estate Call the _____ “All-Weman Realty” - THELMA M. ELWOOD Realtor 5143 Cass-Elicabdeth R4. FE 4-3844 or FE 5-1284 servative treatment against warp- ing, swelling. shrinking, and rot- ting. A prime and one additional coat of paint or ether finish, both inside and out, will prevent putty failure and afford protection dur- ing construction. The prime coat should be relatively thin paint, for ready absorption by the wood, and fast drying. : “When painting the outside the = - = “ Mf | it; t |! "i paint or varnish onto glass slightly and-eoever the putty thor oughly. On the inside, paint or varnish up to the glass. Keep fhe paint off weatherstrip- ping. If paint gets on the weather- strip, wipe it off immediately. Use solvent and steel wool if necessary. Otherwise the windows will stick. Time will be saved in the long rén if operating handles are re- moved during painting, Protect Basement Windows with PC GLASS BLOCKS remodeling idea . install PC Glass Here’s a practical for cellar windows Blocks. Glass Blocks will keep out | other hardware with some kind water. let in Sgn insure privacy they're the mark of a modern home of -overing. Giass Blocks are easy to clean,.too, and don't need replacement. of repair. Call or phone today If the window is a casement or jawning type, don't-close the sash |until the paint is dry. This will prevent fouling. the weatherstrip with paint, and will keep the sash from sticking in the frame. If it is a double-hung window, paint and dry the sash _ before placing them in the frame. Room Divider for Plants Decorative tile suffacing for your room “ivider combines practical- ity with appearance. ‘ine ceramic material is really durable and re- tains its colorful, decorative ap- pearance forever. If you have potted plants “tr flowers. in the room divider, the waterproof, stainproof tile is eminently prac- | SIBLEY COAL & SUPPLY CO. 140 N. Cass Ave. FE 5-8163 Specialists in Re-Modeling! ELLIS CONST. CO. ee 2690 S. Woodward The éullinan diamond weighed | i 1.3 pounds when it was found in = . South Africa in 1905, ~ Build Your Home _ With Quality-Tested Tru-Bilt Blocks — ; Let—us—shok—-you~how—a—-home—built-of — blocks iggf life-time home . .. with low- i annual Mkeep cost. Warmer in winter— cooler in surmmer, TRU-BILT K. Co. Home of Better FE 4-9531 KS > > > > > > > a > > > > > > > > > > > 4 4 4 4 ‘ 4 4 : 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 . 4 4 4 4 4 a BUSINESS FRONTAGE SMALL MODERN HOMES in > > and > ‘ Booming Union Lake Village > . > > See Ad in Classified Basiness Property.” » » + bb ttt NELSON G WESTERDALE ‘ CONST. CO EM 3 ‘ pe ee ~wwvwvvcecvvre* rwvuvuvuweVvVvVveVveVveVeT?* i i i i hi hi hi hi i i hh hh hi i } bare windows during the summer | : KE (}\ be taken down, If you do not like Recipe ; Clem Yes, daily problems, are! Just call FE 28181. } ads! PAG quickly solved thro it is a wise idea to use only ‘ . 7 . the thinnest of nylon curtains YET STs I ITTI E which will not obstruct the breeze ; * IT ADDS $0 MUCH “es co sO * and require po iroriing alter bd BEAUTIFUL — NATURAL : laundering, } ' In a home where the are chil BU LDING STONE fren, s covers should be rdy ind should not be too light in cot NATURAL STONE | | MARBLE and SLATE S ' that © Cosi * T Marble) (un pelished) raigmar (Tenn. Marble ] t ind ire ¢ y ® Briar Hill ; popes Id be put aw * Tenn. Ledge Rock ® Indiana Limestone We © VESTIOULES stock, or 7 ; ld ' ' *® Blue or Buff Tayco pre-cut it to fit your needs. eacn Chil imiiy ms ven certain daily chores the chil conc | PONTIAC CUT STONE { tra r in h wmaking and . ; : a ner will be muct M-59 (12 Mi. West of Airport) Phone OR 3-1594 ie Want Ads CARLYLE ‘30 162 FAIRMONT LO allt amma Cs STRATHMORE BALDWIN VETERANS --No Money Down MONTHLY PAYMENT Includes principal G interest OCCUPANCY in 30 DAYS Open Daily and Sunday 1 P. M. to 6 P. M. MODEL HOME 162 Fairmont Phone FE 5-4731 DAN ROSE REALTY 20030 JAMES COUZENS PHONE BRoadway 3-100] e Two Bedrooms @® Full Basement From @ Luxaire Oil Heat @ Steel Casement V indows WITH IDENTICAL SHADES OF EACH IN 3 any FINISHES GLOSS UOWE: HGH GLOSS FINISH | FLAT WALL FINISH ONE COAT COVERS OLD ?.SINT or WALLPAPER SOF VORE ~~ Washable- Oil Base DVO GLOSS FINISH cEM! WALLS ond WOODWORK Brush or Roller @4 Styles to Choose Automat FEATURES: @ Large Lots @ Paved Streets " @ Full Closets with Sliding Doors @ Plastic Tile Bath @ Double Ribbon Drive © Completely Insulated @Low Taxes BURKE LUMBER CO. “Where the Drayton Plains - on - the - Dixie Home Begins OR 3-121] i rox. WALLS ond | woooworK«k _Wen't Crock ov Chip _j o x he at ALLL eae KENNEDY REALTOR Exclusive Sales Agent Office 3097 W. Huron Zz ours \ I ] rs @ E t 19x IT 1 @ Lara 14 tom cabinets with « Yue COP} drawers in bathr espe r jned overhang around house FE 4-3569 g* > 4 an ~~ “ * ~ SOR a the Meadowlark ae : 3-BEDROOM RANCH ‘11,950 to 12,200 $600 Down to Qualified Veterans Plus Mortgage Costs Model Open Daily a Model Completely Furnished Features of the Meadowlark: n be x later quare ft. @! 3 in @ Custom ind jern living © Dot ls and s! T'S. l] 1992 Pontice Drive } 3 % 4 ‘ t { Lyf! : Ne THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY) APRIL 30, 1955 “Giddyup! " Rochester Students Plan to Present Folk Operetta ROCHESTER—‘‘Trouble in the Valley,”’ an original operetta a School at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Rochester High School auditorium. In the course of the operetta, there is a feud between the two Avondale High Plans Musicale Choir, Glee Clubs Set to Stage Spring Concert at 8 P. M. Thursday — AUBURN HEIGHTS—The annual “Spring Musicale” of Avondale High School is going to be pre- Romberg will climax the program. 3 f ; 88g i ERE bet z Conditions ‘Worse’ in Dust Bowl Area CINCINNATI (INS)—Agriculture tinue vigorously the (drough lief) programs now in operation.” Says Orientals : Prefer to Study the Inner Man ern’ world is more interested in’ exploring outer space while the | ern Division of the American Philo- sophical Society at Michigan State College. g Fen i tte Bill to Be Debated WASHINGTON (INS) — An old e in seeking to understand | philosophy,” 4! Ht s REV. A. K, JONES Plan 10-Day Revival at Highland Church HIGHLAND — Revival For R i i f ; tt By nee agFrz2 HF 433 opesy, cram. 20, 1958, D., Bt mronend Be. brother of ¢ of fe An- Bete Sheep Sor Parker Ottawa Park x Gerland may be one Puneral Home. geret. 83 Center, Pontiac, ; ’ mother of man and Harold sister of Matthew Mardebeck rm 4 Wurs. Funeral held Monday, Me from St. Vincent Interment at White mortal Cemetery. the Rosary will May 1, at 8:30 > Melvin A. Schutt an ue ec es eee better himself. A career in p.m. Sunday from the fu-| insurance selling may be the an- neral home. Mrs. may gues. Uwe infermation a po re ~~ — 7. Shes. aqeeuiete a te - : Rome FE +4. INDEX ZUTO 8A : ARngypcecants used, commission, deme Suesecescceceece 1 f z 4 i "Memoram eovecceccccoccccs 3) 3 rr One ere jae ry bole Fernwood Chev wed } —— — meaty tots oo | 9238 ' ind OYMENT coin 1-1866, Help BEAN —sccccccceccecs 6| ASSISTANT ele Fomote .........+- 7| vector. Salary range $4300 to 94800 vevseseébeaceeceue ° per yeas To aid m —: 4 ork Bi cccsscosescce¥® =. a Work Wanted Female .........-. 11| ence i. SS oa — SERVICES, OP FERED istration or work ‘volving plan- Butiding . 33) Gime and community 1 service acti desirable. Pub- Business lie speaking ability and ho ; alien t ette Bt. Pontiac. , ‘RRIED < ames ve car | 5 Growth ot Pontiac ay eave » Join a busy ~~ EA, cnet Seberang: Tealter’s office staff and earn | cA ~~. A een is) with on vnlimited future. J.B Whee. ee ; Lost & Pound | .........0.000e- \Rate clerk ..............002..8273 Hobbies & Supplies ...........- A FREE DEPT. Notices & Personals ............36|Photographers, no exp. ....... $500 m - |Saleamen, Pia seccceces $325 Booed eteecees> Bon Em oO ment md susaecevases Bes W. Huron. od PE 4-4409 Wentes te kent ccc | | BILLING CLERK Ghare Living Quarters ......... Night work. employ m: Wtd. Transportation § ........... Gooa ; appointment wid. PIRGB. cc cccces: 3 Call FE Warted Real Estate .......... 324|CARPENTERS PF OR CUSTOM RENTALS OFFERED a Rent Apt«. ws Rent Y Comsstery Lots 5| Help Wanted Male Help Wanted Female 7 HOUSEHOLD FINANCE CORPORATION i i f : : s 5 Le nit . it : ‘Tbe Hi FINANCE CORPORATION 3% 8. Saginaw St. Pontise PE +«0 NEEDED Journeymen for Foundry Maintenance PARES ORIFPFIN CHAPE! Se . Thoughtful Service __F= 2-800 Millwrights Voorheés Siple Electricians Ambulance Serv: or Mote: | . ahd Funeral ors 4 Donelson-Johns Machine Repairmen Ls” APPLY nnn emmagS SA , BUY DIRECT AND ve ? a er Company PONTIAC : MOTOR The Pontiac Press " - | FOR WANT ADS DIVISION a Employment Office rrom 8 a.m. te 5 p.m, |} au errore eneuie ve re | (CLENWOOD | meron im mediately. . : a A Te ar eg ee J Serinemest zoe the oeee |G gy oe tn Ser Stee, “ter cae | | eras es — crt ect acatent? | Earres meee a Sera yee LK, Fa 3088 FOR MEN SES SRS || ete the first insertion. 7: om ak Y Sra ca ant * 20 °3 ‘THERE'S A FORD rouk 3 ie bb 6.40. 5 000 =r ee meee es cogineering MEAT DEPT. MANAGER BODY ” i 3 23 4 fi ibd E i pial fet g 5 ot one . i H "g : oe SAT- "BAIS ees BLOOMFIELD FASHION SHOP cooking. Liv Other help em- SWITCHMAN, d Ft i i jul i: i Paleedt ss | i re! af is : ‘ es 3 H : binds i transcript. *xtbu RIN Wid. _AMBirious MAN TO SS Se ee _Sales,_ @ W._ Pike. reliable. ee and — HOTEL x EE i c UTTER & coUn.| GENERAL YARDMAS-|_#04 ¢ MI_ 4-354. Reterences | TER G.T.R.R., JOHN- 0, Comrie SON AVE. YARD OF. FICE. peme. 2 on om children. A 3200, wat aks. Eres, Mi 62217. er a ag Berven cal. Market tire Go, 11 be between and ©. y or —se_ home nights. PE 27733, SALES . i i i i i > z : APPLY IN PERSON 9 A.M, to 3 P.M. | itn etme ihiss or FE RUSH! * EAST SIDE? sround the Be s3¢ men BEAUTY OPERATOR Experience’, FE _99931,_ BEAUTY OPERATOR, 5 CAREER GIRLS RUSH! GAL WHO Farrel tratp- commission. FE ‘Aubern. \ Supervisor ne inent for ok. leave. oe 5 ment pk Fare res office limite 25 to ne ‘and To Box 16, .. of Collections Salary Range "EL-MAR DRIVE IN Dixie Hwy. at Silver for "home Monday, May 2, 1935,’ at 9 a.m. RUSH! Ss — a ae j3 FULL_TIME REAL ESTATE SALES PEO-|5 PLE. . VERY GOQOD),* WORKING CONDI-| Sau TIONS, MOSTLY NEW HOMES. OVER 60 GI AND FHA HOUSE T NOW UNDER CON 4 CUSTOM end finish. CARPENTERS EM 3-060) A-1 CEMENT WORK LLOYD MONROE > FE 4-6866 STONE REALTY CO. Josiya + ss 2 by 4's, per Lineal ft. -34e, all lengths. only. INC. 3145 Wo 8 Mile Rd. . chard Li unt, Daly : Or- Vd = STORM SASH Combinations 5 ys rr) a” CEE WEEDON” T rE I ae ad : rn Accurstel¥” | PE 32-7600. GAWe RECTSIC ~