‘The Weather Pr Sa PEE I tp Ya REE AE me HE PO TI Cc P U.S., Weather Bureaa Forecast . ' Fair and Warmer . Detalls page two 7 . 114th YEAR - * *& & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 195¢6—40 PAGES *#0°CU4TED pause UNITED PREss PHOTOS — Stev a enson ockets California Vote « 5 and Canadian National Raiiroad inspecting railway facilities here i They, met with business and industrial leaders at luncheon. Shown above, left to right, are F. A. Gaffney, vice president and general Detroit's Water Pipeline Plan « Surprises City, Area Officials Detreit- Mayor Albert E. Cobo's for $150 per thousand cubic feet. tiac officials are interested’ # announcement yesterday that De- troit is “planning” a pipeline to Lake Huren to supply municipal water needs in Pontiac, and Oak- land and Macomb counties, has added to the complications of the water issue in the. area Comment from officials who have been directly concerned with the growing area water crisis would indicate Detroit officials have acted entirely on their own in forming the new proposal. Royal Oak Mayer Howard K. Kelley, chairman ef the newly- Grand Trunk Officials Inspec REVEAL EXPANSION PLAN President Sees Tragedy in Cut” ‘of Foreign Aid tke Plugs Hard for the Passage of $4.9 Billion Overseas Program Peg m aes t F acilities Here | WASHINGTON (#— President Eisenhower said today it would be tragic if Congress doesn’t support his foreign aid program. ' But he said he believes ithere should be a restudy of aid for Yugoslavia in the light of Marshal Tito’s new friendliness with Moscow. His statement came at a news conference in which) he: Pontiac Press Phete | ; - = * 1. Plugged hard nactment | manager, Grand Trunk Western; M. A. Metcalf, vice president, c the sciinistrati ial a = | Canadian National Railways; Donald Gordon, president, Canadian | ; ,900,000,- National-Grand Trunk Railroad System: and Walter K. Willman, % foreign aid program. The Pontiac city manager. House Foreign Affairs Committee has voted a $1,109,000,000 cut. Railroad Plans | 2. Drew away from taking | sides in primary contests be- | tween Republicans. E r | ° | sald be believes Ht is mot the | Expansion Here tasa‘iat Tita primaries. More Yard and Tracks Also on the politica] front, Eisen- — = = = . .., hower decl shed any light in to Provide Industry With oe chether he may. campaign FBI H Better Service | e 8% — Officials of the Grand Trunk systems were in Pontiac Tuesday n connection with expansion plans. 4 — on whether he may campaign more vigorously this fal] than he indicated in February. As for whether he may make “We are prepared to spend ap- more than the half dozen televi- proximately three quarters of @ sion speeches, which the Republi- million dollars in Pontiac, most of ¢gn National Committee has in- it to aid the shipping problems of The Pontiac Motor Division,” said| president said that he had not Donald Gordon, president of the|discussed the matter with anyone. 'Grand Trunk Western to a of Pontiac business men oon Eisenhower launched his con- | esterday luncheon yesterday. Gordon is also ference with a call for support in 7 y. president of the Canadian Nationa) Comstess for his foreign aid pro- | Railways. “This is a community problem,” | he said, “the answer was obvious.’ the proposal Schmid today termed Cobo's plan “‘We're interested in any Way “competitive.” and recommended we can get sufficient water to the ~ a ‘careful study” of i? by Kelley's city quicker than we can supply it Southeastern Michigan authority. ourselves." he said. He said he had not heard of a Rochester village manager ratte salad a baie ree Sebect . , need Wilkunn’s day's announcement. but would statement, saying: “We're inter- interested in analyzing any report Joa im such projects, bat we by Detroit's — board. want te know all the facts about “As an engineer, I wouldn't be gem. able to comment on the proposal eit a/all weeq) quiba al surgrioe ” until T see thei report,” ve " r Slone said of Cobo’s proposal. Cobo pom a had included Rochester in his list Pontiac City Manager Walter , | The President said that unless/ Adlai Surveys Victory BACKED BY CALIFORNIA DEMS — A happy Adlai Stevenson faces campaign workers at his Los Angeles headquarters last night iries, Stevenson has 2594 delegates following a victory over Sen. Estes Kefauver in the California pri- |and Kefauver 166. Other candi- mary. He is flanked by his California campaign manager, Pat Brown, 'dates have 226 total and 37014 are right, who is the state's attorney general. unts Banks Loot Three More Men Indicted ‘ (Continued on Page 2, Cal. 2) formed Southeastern Michigan \ Wittman sald yesterday De-— Water Authority, said yesterday trojt officials had not contacted the Detroit officiais had net con- | to have the cooperation and sup- gram on an earnest, sincere basis, ‘port of city officials, Pontiac Mo- then it will have to spend many said Gordon, “and we are anxious this country continues the pro-| AP Wirephote | ay v Kefauver Seen Out of Running as Dem Choice Adlai Now Has 259.5 Confirmed Delegates in August Convention SAN FRANCISCO # — Adlai E. Steyenson swept to a thunderous California victory today that all but knocked Sen. Estes Kefau- ver out of the running for the Democratic presidential nomination. Stevenson took Califor- nia’s 68 Democratic con- vention votes by what approached a landslide |margin and forged so far ahead of his rjvals that he looked like the man to beat for his party’s nomination. He was getting 62 per cent of the Democratic vote in California. Including yesterday's California, ‘ e The Suffolk County grand jury returned 22 indict- | ee ments, containing 66 counts, against Jordan Perry Jr. 31, of Boston; Edward “Wimpy” Bennett, 36, of East Weymouth, and John F. Buccelli, 41, of Brookline. They|vote Democrats gave St ‘were charged with being Montana and South Dakota prima- ‘uncommitted publicly. | While this left Stevenson sub- stantially short ef the €96', nom- inating figure, the impetus of his | California victory seemed likely | to win him support from pre- viously undecided delegates and | others still to be chosen. BOSTON (INS)—Three more men were indicted) Despite his California showing dicated are on the schedule, the\last night in the $1,219,000 Brink’s robbery and the/the former Illinois governor ap- \FBI raided several places in search for $25,000 of th loot, in addition to the estimated -$86,000 recovered! ;parently failed to match in his jown ballot total the count rolled up by an unopposed 70-vote delegate |slate backing President Eisenhow- ler for the GOP nomination. \MORE DEMS VOTE But in their bitteriy-fought pri- imary yesterday the com evenson= jand topped substantially (the ballots cast in the unexciting poe ete hetero Farm Index Rises tected hime or any amin (aa | bim announcing the pina... Se epee ag aceon aa ot Division and Fisher Body. We'more billions of dollars — com the authority before anmeuncing | Willman said Pontiac's study of LANSING @ — The index Of want to work this problem out to pared to the foreign aid total — their proposal te the public. 2 Pipeline indicated it would cost Prices received by Michigan farm- the best advantage of all con-'for what Eisenhower called e LI] | w= aX Rate in City Ces etary wen rnd race 3 ein ac Tener a fo en cr ciel the suggestion of the Inter-County Remains S table id, ‘accessories after the fact ‘in the Brink's robbery on crats outnumber Republicans by [an 17, 1950. 782,000 in the state, which Eisen- Bennett and Buccelli were held|hower won from Stevenson by |in $25,000 double surety each after/700,000 in 1952. \GOP contest. Registered Demo- negative, static general “6 ’ |program. Pontiac. federal-state crop reporting service Pontiac’s two big industries ~ w incl Oak- * or , in the north end are y han- COSTS LESS THAN WAR | . .| 5 Cmmmtiive nore pes or al Willman said, however, that Pon- said today. dicappedll new lane a the | With emphasis, Eisenhower sa ams ee Meccan at pon oe | With 15,366 of 24,160 precincts 7 hag legal power to issue bonds. . Grand Trunk by the current ar- that now, as long as we aren't! \ Court. | Comnted, the Democratic contest enter contracts amd build TTC Wisits Red A-Plants mimi "nse tm stooting, we. arent’ spending a $18.70 Per $1,000 Set Perry was held in Balimore,| Mand, Stevenson 58,8, Ket line to a distant pure-water source. . y «handling cars. ‘tenth as much money as if we ver 358,535. “We see no reason, in the light of Mayor Cobo's statement, to sus- pend the work of our authority,” Kelley said yesterday. Referring to Cobo’s claim that a cheaper for area cities than any other adequate water supply Kel- ley said: - “I don’t eee how the City of De- lasting pure-water source, and serve the area indicated, any cheaper than the Authority or anyone else could. “Right of way and materials will cost the same no matter who builds lower interest rate on bonds than anybody else.” When the Southeastern Michigan Water Authority was formed, Kel- ley said, Wayne County rejected membership in it. Studies of feasibility of a pipe- line to Lake Huron already have been made by Flint, Pontiac, and Water Authority, George Schmid, engineer man- ager of this group, said its study ‘Indicated water obtained through a would cost up to 88 per thousand cubic feet. When the eight communities found they could buy their 42 mil- Troy Adds One Area, Rejects 2nd Parcel : Voters in the new city of Troy and in Troy Township yesterday approved annexation of a 2%- square mile parcel of township land to the city, but a second annexation proposal was turned down by township voters. The first proposal passed by a ‘total city and township vote of 453 to 38. The second proposal, to annex 2% square miles of township land to the city, was approved by city voters, 409-31, but failed to pass when the township vote tied at two for and two against the pro- posal. Clement Gives Bibles \ NASHVILLE, Tenn. .— Frank Clement will present auto- graphed Bibles, purcha with « state funds, fo the 1,500 at lion gallons a day from Detroit! U.S. Eyes Yugoslavia Aid MOSCOW (INS) — President Tito of Yugoslavia ‘e™mendous growth of industry in, Soviet leaders. Detroit-sponsored pipeline would be resumed his role of distinguished sightseer in Moscow today following a round of reconciliation meetings with “They are subject to unfortunate delays which slow them down al- together too often, In view of the Pontiac in the past few years, what was sufficient once, is wholly in- adequate now, These plants have developed enormously and have it on the right track. gone far beyond anything that any Tito visited an experimental atomic power station of us expected. troit could build a pipeline to any near Moscow this morning, will address students at “We propose to spend abou ‘Moscow University this afternoon and leave this evening, Adlai, Truman Ticket Proposed by Californian it. I doubt Detroit can get a LOS ANGELES u® — California & ten-day tour of the Soviet Atty. Gen. Edmund G. Brown, ‘who now heads the state's delega- ! ‘the party next fall: President, Adlai Stéven®on; vice’ president, Harry Truman. * ¢ ®* | “Why not?” he said. ‘“Truman | Washington, and I think he might just go for the idea.” | He made his comment to a | group of reporters as Stevenson claimed victory in yesterday’s ‘California primary. : Be a Pal, Huh? TULSA, Okla. (INS) — A police car radioed to the dispatcher that it was “ip service” at Ith and Allegheny. After a pause, the dis- patcher asked: “‘Can’t you make that llth and Yale? I can't spell Allegheny.” *for a two-day visit .to Len-| | |ingrad. | * He will return to Moscow ‘Saturday before beginnin | | Union. The Yugoslav president spoke fa- two months this week, R. M. chief of staff. ; tion to the Democratic nominating vorably of Russian aid to unde-|Critchfield, Pontiac Motor Division) STALIN—Eisenhower expressed tions. | And he indicated that Russian- | Yagostay relations will be better | the Southeastern Oakland County has been wanting to get back to BOW that Stalin ts dead, because | of their mutual adherence to the | principles of Marx, Engies and | In Washington today the Penta-, gon indicated that U. S. military) jaid to Yugoslavia is proceeding about 75 million tollars in 1956 if, deliveries are uninterrupted. But officials said the shipments can, be shut off if Yugoslav dictator ‘Marshal Tito's current visit to Russia should lead to a determina- he is rejoining the Communist bloc.) at! | | | t .000 on this one phase of our (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) een ckss ne ae Pontiac Sales Show Upturn Past 10 Days Pontiac dealers turned in their | highest 10 day new car sales in this country. Twinthg is Air Force ‘convention, suggests this ticket for veloped countries and of the need general manager announced. for increased trade between na-| Sales for the last 10 days im of Stalin by Nikita Khrushchev, |May were up 23 per cent over the Russia's Communist party boss, previous 10-day period, Critchfield was primarily for home consump- said. | were. | We must continue to wage the peace, he said. We must support such pro | grams as the Mutual Security | | Act and we must have a continu. | | ing study of the program to keep | In the course of the conference, | ‘Eisenhower also dealt with these other matters: | TWINING—The President said Gen. Nathan F. Twining's accept- lance of an inwitation to visit the ‘Soviet Union air show in Moscow |June 24 means the United States ‘will reciprocate by inviting Twin- ,ing's Russiaf opposite number to ithe opinion that the denunciation ‘tion, 20-Mile Night Jaunt Missing Cow Goes Home A cow with the instincts of a homing pigeon led a jan accelerated pace and may total Pontiac Township farmer on a lengthy chase yesterday. Lynn W. Rowe, of 4180 Baldwin Rd., had to go 20 miles out to Brandon Township to recover a Holstein’ milker he noticed missing i led him té the D. J. Rush He bought the cow the Rowe, with the assistance of Oakland County Sheriff's Deputies and mailmen in the rural areas, was tion by the U.S. government that Searching the back roads when he found tracks which n the morning. farm on Dartmouth. Road. re Monday. for 1956 Year A tax rate of $13.70 per $1,000. of assessed value in Pontiac — the same as last year — was approved, by the City Commission last night. The rate will be levied on an) assessed valuation of $239,486,275, and is expected to net the city City Manager Walter K. Willman... caw $25,000 additional Brink’s| The city was able to maintain joot in a south shore. house last, the $13.70 rate, the same a8 Friday. This touched off a new| 1954 also, because of increased | assessed valuations, he said. The assessed Valuation for 1956. shows an increase of $22,395,795 over | The tax will be the major source | by City Commissioners Mo. : ” a federal parole violation Ww - It was Perry's arrest in Baltt- more Monday with $4,750 of the» Brink’s loot in his possession which led to the arrest of Ben- nett and Buccelli and: the re- covery of between $70,000 and $90,000 from a cache behind the walls of an office in Boston's south end sectida. treasury $3,280,961.97, according to perry allegedly told authorities| search for the “hot’’ money by the FBI. : The loot found in the office wall was in a green picnic ice box. The indictments against the three men linked each with the for the city’s revised budget of/nine Brink's case defendants now $5,136,276.56 which was approved. by the commission, A revenue of $1,555,314.59 will be derived from! sources other than taxes. The $5 million plus total operat- ing budget is an increase of $244,-! 448.48 over an estimated budget | approved in January. The major portion of the new funds, $200,000, will be applied to the cost of the Public Safety Building. Public works and city construction crews are slated to receive $23,204.34 In new -equip- | ment, . The voter-approved pay hike for the city commissioners and the mayor resulted in $5,000 extra, while $6,500 is earmarked for hir- ing of a city planning technician. Pontiac General Hospital wil] re- ceive $9,743.14 toward retirement of hospital bonds. | \ | French Peasants Mark 12th Anniversary D-Day Beachheads Still Assume U. S. Names OMAHA BEACH, France ) — Even to the French peasants who live nearby, this beach where the Allies landed 12 years ago today is known as Omaha. . Their pronunciation may be dif- ferent, but they have learned the name from serious-faced_ visitors who have come in search of graves and from old soldiers seek- ing spots burned into their mem- ory of D-Day. : + now direct visitors fo points of interest along the land- ing areas. The signs are in French but two invasion names have stuck—Oniaha and Utah— the Normandy beaches where the ‘might of the Allies struck to drive backsthe forces of Nazi Germany. 12TH ANNIVERSAY Today's 12th anniversary of In Today’s Press County N ove Editorials See eeeeeeeeseweeres t eee het enee Damon Ranyon...... woecseg Ae Sports ....... +++. 28, 29, 90, SI Thentere” oc. e ees, 27 TV & Radio Programs...... 39 Wilson, Earl..............:.. 10 ++» 81. thru 25 D-Day found residents and visi- tors again making the annual pil- grimage to the channel-washed strip of brown sand. The sad gentle sound of taps played by military buglers was only the faintest echo of the fury of that day, when the West mus- mada to launch the invasion of Normandy, . * *.% Today’s military observances were largely confined to the.ceme- teries—French, British and Cana- dian—scattered along the coast. The schedule called for the usual tered a mighty air and sea ar-|' speeches, rifle salutes and sound- ing of taps before the visitors moved quietly through the or- suriken ships poke through channel waters. That's: about ail. waiting trial charged with the actual holdup. Warmer Weather Predicted for Area Fair and warmer is the forecast for all of lower Michigan tonigh land Thursday. The U.S. Weather Bureau pre- dicts a low tonight of 50-54 degrees. Tomorrow's high will range from 80-84. Temperatures” will average 45 degrees above the normal high of 77 during the next five days. Monday will be cooler after oc- casional showers. Saturday and Sunday and possibly Friday night. The lowest temperature preced- ing 8 a.m. in donwtown Pontiac The Republican count from 13.- 637 precincts, fewer than tabu- lated in the Democratic contest— igave Eisenhower 585,986. On this ibasis Eisenhower wag certain to top Stevenson. Conceding defeat early today, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Stevenson Cops Harriman Votes Empire State Primary Indicates at Least Four Delegates to Back Adlai | ALBANY, N.Y, @—New York Democratic leaders’ hopes of pre- senting complete support for Gov. Averell Harriman at the party's presidential convention sailed out the window today as at least four Adlai Stevenson supporters forced their way into the state’s delega- tion. a . * * * . While Harriman will have the overwhelming majority of New York's 98 convention votes in his pocket, four pro-Stevenson men continued. was 51 degrees. The thermometer registered 70 at 1 p.m. Now’s the Time! Yes, now's the time to get set for a summer of fun at To Place Your Want Ad DIAL FE 2-8181 ‘it — Seminary . a for Bank Move - ‘Attorney Will Prepare $500,000 Expansion Steps were taken last night by sible approval of a ramp to connect the Community National Bank to a addition at 15 E. Law- rence St. * 8 e@ ; Upon the recommendation of City Manager W. K. Willman, the com- missioners instructed the city at- torney. prepare a proper lease for commission consideration to allow the bank to build over the city alley Separating the two buildings. " “This might involve a ques- tien of clearance,” Willman said. “It has been done before and I can't see why it couldn’t be done in this case.” =The new building, a proposed three or four-story construction, Would be on the site now occupied by the Backenstose Bookstore. A. C. Girard, president of the bank, said cramped quarters has necessitated the new addition, es- timated to cost approximately, $500,000, This total includes the| ramp which will connect to the bank’s mezzanine floor. Pontiac Deaths William J. Gamache William J, Gamache, 4, of 95 E. Huron St. died yesterday in Pontiac Genera! Hospital. He was born in Turtle Lake, Wis. July 30, 1901, the son of Louis and Eliza Penord Gamache. Mr. Gamache had been a resi- dent of Pontiac 30 years, coming here from Turtle Lake. A member of the Loyal Order of} Moose, he had retired from the/ Grand Trunk Railroad Co. after 27, years of service. Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Louis Kenling of Minneapolis, Minn.; two brothers, Jerry of Amery, Wis. and John of Pontiac. Arrangements will be announced later by the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. 54 Receive Diplomas at St. Fred's High High Schosi days are over for 54 St. Frederick students who re- ceived diplomas in commencement exercises last night at St. Vincent de Paul Church. ‘The Rev. Edmund A. Fornier, Prefect of Studies, Sacred Heart . Orchard Lake, in his say wordls of gratitude to to service. “Tonight there is fanfare,” the for a successful life,"’ the Fournier said, ‘‘a wish- hold high your aims and s; a backbone to maintain courage of your convictions and a funnybone to face life with a smile when the going gets tough."’ The Rev. Maurice Veryser, act- ing pastor at St. Vincent, gave diplomas to the graduates. Music was under the direction of Dominic Kline with the St. Vin- cent de Paul choir participating. Check Your Alibi, Boys; Where Were You at... Vandals left good indication of what time Monday night they broke into Hawthorne School, 1400 Telegraph Rd. All the school clocks were! stopped at 9:40 p.m. Police believe that. the master electric switch was thrown during the breakin. Only a small amount of ‘change was looted, police said. The Census Bureau estimates 26° million Americans over 64 in the year 2000 from it, He said it would mean no additional cost to Detroit tax- payers. |Miss Monroe our wonderful cook representing the national Pontiac Neubeck, Irvington, N. J.; R.°M. ATTENDING COUNCIL SESSION — Twelve Pontiac dealers, ager; Carl E. Fribley, Norwich,, N. Rapids, Iowa. Second row, left to right are: Bernard C. Johnson, - 2a = 4 7, JUNE 6, 1956 dealer group met today with top factory management at Pontiac Motor to discuss matters of mutual interest to dealers and factory. Attending the council meeting were, front row, left to right: Paul L. Harmon, American Fork, Utah; E. A. Critchfield, Pontiac general man- Y.; and Wm. C. Culver of Cedar THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDA ~ East Point, Georgia; Lansing W. Thoms, St. Louis, Missouri; Frank V. Bridge, Pontiac general sales Newton Centre, Mass.; and H. Blair Freeman of Detroit, Mich. In the third row are Fred B. Utter of Spokane, Washington; J. C./ Jamie- son, executive assistant to the general manager in charge of dealer |~ South Dakota; Clyde H. Harriss, |” Salisbury, N. C.; and John Hine of Dallas, Texas. relations; Don Liffengren, Pierre, HH © manager; Hugo L. Separini. of Detroit Water Plan Surprises Officials (Continued From Page One) of communities which might be included in the pipeline. * * * In Detroit, city councilman James H, Lincoln, a long-time po- litical foe of Cobo’s, today called the plan “‘strictly political.” Cobo retaliated in kind, attack- ing Lincoln’s remarks as ‘‘just an- other political statement.” Cobo said the program has been under study for months. Cobo added the pipeline would be financed by communities along its route which would buy water * * The Detroit pipeline would be te ished by 1956, Cobo said. Kelley's Southeastern Michigan group de- cided in their organizational meet- ing May 16 a line should be fin- ished in five years “to do any real * * « The Southeastern Michigan au- thority also decided to gather in- formation from previous studies, the National Sanitation Founda- tion, Detroit Edison Co. and the’ Regional Plan Commission for im-| mediate submission to interested engineering firms. Marilyn Rents English Haven —and Servants LONDON W—Patrick Cotes- Preedy, a lawyer, is renting his country house to Marilyn Monroe this summer. | ‘Miss Monroe must have pri-| vacy and all that,’ said Mrs.; Cotes-Preedy. ‘Police have looked) the house and the grounds over; and they say Miss Monroe will have the seclusion we understand’ she seeks." The film star plans to stay, about four months here while making a movie with Sir Laurence Olivier. The Cotes-Preedy estate at As-| cot has nine bedrooms, four bath-| rooms and magnificent reception) rooms. It is surrounded by 20 acres with trees and flowers. “We are also leaving behind for from the Channel Isles, a French parlor maid, our very English gardener. and so on,"’ said Mrs. Cotes-Preedy. Flee Red Prison TAIPEI, Formosa W—Two Chi- nese fishermen reached oné of the Matsu islands Monday after escaping from a Communist labor camp on the mainland, the official Central News Agency reported. The agency said they had been in confinement for three years for criticizing the Red rule. | She’s a ‘Brat’ No Longer Alters Girl's CHICAGO #—An operation has transformed a little girl from a “brat to a cheerful child. Doctors, in making the switch, removed half her brain. Surgeons at Wesley Memorial Hospital described the case at a news conference. They said the junnamed 6-year-old blonde young- ster had sleeping sickness at the| age of 1. Her left side was af- fected by partial paralysis. FAILED TO GROW She became .a “brat,” mis- Summerfield Opens ‘Operation Canine’ WASHINGTON (INS)—The Post- office Department today launched “Operation Canine’ — designed to make the dog the postman's best friend. * * * Sixteen experts on the problem of dogs biting mail carriers met behind closed doors and heard Postmaster Arthur Summerfidd call the problem a serious one. Said Summerfield: “There is little reom for levity or humor in dog bite injuries.” He said that in 1955 some 5,880 \dog bites were reported—one for every 20 letter carriers. Other bites, he added, may have gone unreported. To meet the problem of why man's best friend picks on the man who delivers the mail, the conference approved a nationwide program to ‘“‘educate’’ dog owners and letter carriers. * * ® The experts, including dog psychologist, agreed to submit writ-| ten recommendations for the cam- paign. A second meeting was ten- tatively set for June 20. Foreman Crushed Beneath Bulldozer A 34-year-old construction com- pany foreman died yesterday in Pontiac General Hospital of injur- ies suffered when crushed by his bulldozer Monday morning. | A spokesman for Bundy Con- struction Company said that the accident took place as Kenneth D. Powell was driving the bulldozer onto the rear of the truck at the Davisburg farm of Palmer G. Bun-| dy, who owns the company. Evidently the truck sank to one side in soft ground, the spokesman | said, tossing the bulldozer to the’ ground on top of the driver. Powell was married and livéd on Partial Removal of Brain Personality | treated others, shouted at her, mother and destroyed toys, She suffered 10 to 12 convulsions each | day. She Was taken out.of school because of her ugly behavior and! taken to Wesley Hospital. | Medical that half her brain was responsi- ble for her behavior. Tests showed the right half of the brain and skull had failed to grow. So, in a 4hour, 35-minute oper-| ation May 14, the right half of the brain was removed. Generally, the right half of the brain controls the left side of the body. Now, the doctors reported, the healthy side of the brain is taking over additional functions, and the child's senses are as acute as be- fore the operation. Partial paralysis still is appar- ent, they said, but improvement is expected with the passage of time. She has no more ‘ convul- sions, they added, but does have a new personality. The girl was described as pret- ty, cooperative and cheerful, and of normal imtelligence. Her parents plan to send her back to school this fall in their| home community somewhere in northern Indiana. Prominent Speakers Slated at 2 Schools Two nationally known personali- ties will deliver the commence- ment addresses Saturday at Kings- wood and Cranbrook Schoois. George W. Romney, president and chairman of the board of American Motors Corporation, will speak to the senior class of Cran- ‘brook School, and Dr. Helen W. Dodson, associate professor of as- ltronomy at the McMath-Hulbert Observatory of the University of Michigan, will address the Kings- wood School graduates. commencement exercises for both schools will be held at Christ Church Cranbrook. The Kingswood program will be in the afternoon following the Cranbrook \graduation in the morning. Thieves Go to Cleaner Oakland County Sheriff“Depart- ment detective Donald Francis was investigating two early morning breaking at Commerce Township business establishments today. A service station and cleaners were reportedly entered between 3 a.m. and 4 a.m. by breaking windows. Both are located on Cool- ey Lake Road. Forty-two pennies taken from a cash register were the only losses reported by the service station. Nothing was known to be missing from the cleaning store. The Weather Foll U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY —Farr. and. high 74-78. 5 ith 6-84 variable winds becoming east to south- east 5-16 miles an hour this afternoon and southeast te south tonight. | Teday in Pontiac { Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m | | At @ am: Wind velocity: Caim te-3) ay Direction: Southwest, in sets Wednesday at 8:05 pm. Sun rises Thursday at 4:56 a.m. Moon sets Wednesday at $:51 pm. Moon rises Thursday at 3:42 a.m. Downtown Temperatures ~~ @eam.......°52 lla m re. | a oc ae Pe .. | Sam... es Pete cto 16 6. m.. +. 68 (an iwenereen: Pt mee ’ t Highest temperature... snow Wee eis 4 i , Ftc tei ‘. » © perature... | ‘Weather—Sunny. = One Year Age in Péntine Highest temperature ...,............ 1 Lowest temperature. .........0..0--05 83 Mean 1 ey rer 7 Wea rain. Z Mighest ond Temperatures This Date in 4 Years 93 fm 1925 41 in 1804 Teteday’s Tempefatore Chart Chicage bs 8 New Greens oo ot ver 65 61 New York 7 4 Buin “ g — 4 ‘ . Lows = 63, , B'Mere oe 31 : oo 41 ; “o « 85 Bi Traverse City 69 48 Miami . 86 6 Washington 7 62 a t z Ws, ‘yooes ; é! AKRON MAN KILLED — Leon Clare Brewer, of Akron, was killed Tuesday in this crash. north- west of Canton, Brewer's car landed on top of one driven by Phillip R. DiJerome, of Cuyahoga the Bundy farm at 8625 Eatron Rd. i. AP Wireptiote Falls, Ohio, who was injured seriolisly. The cars are shown above as they came to rest beside Ohio Highway 687. De Committee fo Tour - investigators decided;S¢rves sout Red Run Drain Members of the Drain Commit- tee of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors tomorrow will con- tinue their tour of the county’s Detroit Murder Hearing Opens Mrs. Victoria Hermiz and Maurice Hamilton Face Ist Degree Count DETROIT @ — Mrs. Victoria Hermiz, 23, and Maurice Hamil- ton, 20, go on trial today for the fatal stabbing of Mrs. Hermiz’ gro- cer husband last Feb. 10. Both are charged with first degree murder. Mrs. Hermiz’ attorney, Edward A. Khoury, indicated yesterday his client will plead “meen: * Hamilton and Mrs, Hermiz, im- migrants from Iraq, have been ex- amined by a sanity commission and found mentally capable of standing trial. Judge for the case has yet to be named. _ In preliminary action, Record- er’s Court Judge Paul E. Krause denied four motions by Hamil- ton’s attorney, Michae] Kranson. He had asked for separate trials - how evidence was discovered. Hamilton and Mrs. Hermiz are accused of slaying her husband, Aziz, 35, as he slept in the Hermiz home where Hamilton was an over- night guest. Each at one time ac- cused the other of the actual stab- bing. = * s Recently Hamilton placed the blame on a third person, known to him, and repeated the accusation major drains, * * ®& Chairman John G. Semann, Drain Commissioner Ralph Main and committee members will hern Oakland County as a storm outlet, to its termination at the Clinton River spillway. The committee already has toured Twelve Towns, Evergreen’ defunct proposed Farmington In- terceptor. County Clerk of Committees Nor- man Barnard said t the group | as California Votes (Continued From Page One) A. under the influence of ‘‘truth se- ‘Admits Breakins The Day in Birmingham \ BIRMINGHAM — Dr. Clifford Erickson, dean of Michigan State University’s College of Education, will be speaker at commencement, climax to a week's ‘‘cap and gown”’ activities to begin Friday for Birmingham High School seniors. Swingout is the first opportunity for the 356 seniors to don gradu- ation attire—white for the girls and maroon for boys. Swingout includes a talent show after the processional following 8:10 a.m. homeroom sessions. Parents may attend. Commencement is set for June 14 at. 16 a.m. in the school gymnasium, and baccalaureate dune 10. The Rev. Theodore Wuggazer of Redeemer Lutheran Church will talk on “A Balanced View of Life,"’ at the baccalaureate service Ferndale Youth. | Confesses 41 Crimes, Waives Examination in Court The Monday night arrest by Ferndale police of 19-year-old Rob- ert Romaine, of 87 W. Bernard, Hazel Park, brought a confession| to 41 previously unsolved breakins' throughout Oakland County, it was, rum." * * * /previously cleared the man named follow the Red Run drain, which|by Hamilton. They also noted that. ‘testimony given under the serum’s influence is not admissible as jcourt evidence. tnd souls drain and ne nom: ALA] in Landslide | | Police, however, said they had announced today by county de- jtectives. He waived examination when ar- raigned before Justice Earl N. Nash of Ferndale yesterday on breaking and entering in the night time and will appear for sentence MSU Educati : to Address BHS Seniors in the high school gymnasium at 7:30 p.m. Sunday. The Rev. Robert Dewey of First Congregational Church will preside. Valedictorian of the class. is Ellen Coutlée, and salutatorian is Sharon Gray. If statistics of the previous two © years are a criterion, 68 per cent of the class can be expected to go on to either colleges, universities or junior colleges. The graduates will be in- troduced by Principal Ross A. Wagner. Diplomas will be given out by Dr. Dwight D. Ireland, superintendent of schools. * * «& High Twelve Club members will stage a golf party tonight at In- dianwood Golf Club north of Lake Orion, Wilbur Sears is chairman of dinner ———. * youngsters attending the Walnut Lake School Fair on Saturday. Events start at 1 p.m., and later a buffet supper is planned by room mothers. There will be two show- ings of “Treasure Island,” full- length Disney movie in the evening. Principal Albert Schumm has in- vited children and parents from adjoining school areas to attend. * * « A box social tonight at 7:30 the Young Girls will bring box lunches fer two, * Ld s June 11. He failed to furnish $2,000) bond and was lodged in the Oak-; Kathryn Mary LaLende Kathryn Mary LaLonde, 3-day- land County Jail. ‘old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eu- Romaine was nabbed Monday while attempting to loot a build- | ing. They said he admitted to hav- ling committed 41 breakins in the! service and burial, arranged by county and three in other states |since April 2. is “studying the whole ture in the county.” Music Festival Attracts 5,000 at Waterford land.”’ in pic- More than 5,000 spectators over- flowed Waterford Township High his supporters will do School stadium last night to view possible for the election of Demo- the elementary schools’ spectacu-\cratic candidates in the general lar music festival “Water Wonder-'@lection and to bring California Two thousand, students in grade: and executive officer of the Cana-| ‘future.’ campaigning for the Democratic nomination. He said he will not accept a vice presidential place on the ticket—an offer not likely to come to him if Stevenson wins the top spot. * 6 ® Kefauver said in a congratula- tory telegram to Stevenson he and “everything |back- into the Democratic fold in November.” The Tennessee sena- \tor told. reporters he had ‘“‘no ex cuses, No regrets and no alibis’ ‘for his defeat. - ‘ONLY FIRST STEP’ Stevenson obviously was s four through six of the township's 12 elementary schools depicted Michigan's history in song and dance, The program pointed up ‘“‘a review of the past, the glory of| re- Kefauver said he will continue | Churches, homes, and business ‘places had been the chief buildings ‘broken into, Romaine told police. He said about 30 of the breakins were in the Hazel Park area. Brown Seeks Post in State Legislature In | | Former Assistant Oakland Coun- | ty Prosecutor Donadid Brown, 31,! today announced he will seek the) Republican nomination for State’ ‘Representative from the 5th Dis- jlege of Law, left his position as. head of the Royal Oak branch of the present and a salute to the jieved that primary campaigning the Prosecutor's office two weeks. jended with California’s the final ‘ago to return to private practice.) Mrs: Lois Tiffany, elementary contested election before the Au-|He had held the position for 3% music supervisor, who wrote and gust party convention. He said he years. | directed the p narrated the story, which spanned the years from the time of the Indians to a decade in the future. Grand Trunk Plans to Expand Services (Continued From Page One) Pontiac operations to assist the plants, the city and ourselves in ‘step in a long campaign.” *. © * | California's Atty. Gen. Edmund |G. Brown, Stevenson's No. 1 back-|reapportioned to include Clawson, motor scooter Tuesday. er here, said the primary outcome “means California will elect Adijai Stevenson in November.” : * * * Democrats held their lines more firmly than usual, They denied cross-filing Republicans two-party nomination in a U. S. Senate seat and congressional races. One Democratic congressman won re- giving better and faster service. We are currently discussing this; matter with the corporation and) with city officials and are seeking, their aid and assistance in solving the problem. “The Grand Trunk is spe four million dollars on our big, main yards at Battle Creek and we are doing an operation in Flint substantially like what we hope to do in Pontiac.” Grand Trunk officials are cur- rently making a trip around the state to study conditions first hand. Gordon inspected the proposed Pontiac operation yesterday morn- ing. The railroad group'had din- ner with some civic leaders Mon- day night in Detroit and following the luncheon here at noon, had din- ner with a group of interested business men in Flint last night. Following that, the group swings around to other points in the state. Gordon is an international figure in Canada and is the president election without opposition and two captured GOP as well as their own party’s nominations. ‘ wang Delay Examination on Narcotics Charge Pre-trial examination of 14 per- sons charged with conspiracy to violate state narcotics laws was postponed today until June 13. * * .@ Pontiac Municipal Judge Mau- rice E. Finnegan granted the post- ponement at the request of defense attorney Milton R. Henry. * s * The 14, including three women, were arrested as a result of an eight-months investigation by the Pontiac Vice Squad. reduction, was a8- was ‘‘delighted by the results."’| An Army veteran of World War sised by 10 elementary music He added, in what seemed to be a II who spent 15 months in a Ger-| teachers. High school seniors Caro-|reference to the November elec- man prison camp, Brown was nom- line Campbell and Sheldon Smith tion that ‘This is only the first inated Republican candidate for suffered minor injuries when the State Representative in the 5th dis-| ‘trict in 1952, | Since then, the district has been’ ‘Royal Oak, Huntington Woods and Pleasant Ridge. | Brown opposes incumbent Vern-| ald Horn for the nomination. Cave-in Buries Man in Cellar of Home Rochester resident Melvin Blanchard, 44, spent an uncom- fortable few minutes buried in the! cellar of a home he was working on last night, Pontiac State Police said today, He was rescued quickly by neigh- bors. The man was working in the basement of a home being con- structed at 8741 Ondanega St., Walters Lake, when the surround- ing ground caved in on him, ac- cording to the troopers. They re- ported he was putting tar on the wall when he slipped, causing the dirt to give way. He .was trapped until help arrived. Blanchard suffered shock but no apparent injuries from his ex- perience but was planning to visit: his family doctor today. gene LaLonde, 11724 Memorial, ‘Southfield Township, died Monday William Beaumont Hospital. jat ‘Maniey Bailey Funeral Home, was iat White Chapel at 3 p.m. this afternoon. She leaves her parents; a sister, Cynthia; and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon LaLonde and Mr. and Mrs. William Wheatley. * - « George Mountford Service tor George Mountford, 49, 16928 Lauderdale, Beverly Hills, will be at St. James Epis- copal Church at 11 a.m. Thurs- day, with burial at Acacia Park. His body lies at Maniey Bailey Funeral Home, Surviving Mr. Mountford, who was an accountant with Ai Green ;|trigt In the August 7 primary elec-| Enterprises, Inc., Detroit, are his | tion, ywite. Brown, a graduate of Detroit Col-' John, Margaret; a son, Dennis at home; and a sister, Mrs. Frank Stephans, of St. Paul, Minn. Two Men Injured as Truck Crashes A truck driver and his passenger vehicle in which they were riding went off the road and turned over after swerving to avoid a halted William K. Hadskin, “8, of Royal Oak, the driver, and Troy Butler, 19, of Ferndale, were both treated by their family doctors following the crash. Hadskin had a bruised right arm and strained neck, while Butler received a_ strained back. : Investigating State Police re- ported the accident happened yes- terday on Sashabaw Rd., Water- ford Township. They said the truck was following two scooters oper- ated by young boys and had to swerve quickly to the right when the brakes on one of the scooters locked and the vehicle stopped right in front of the oncoming truck..- The scooter was attempting to turn right and the truck had slowed down following the boy's hand sig- nal when the incident occurred, according to the Pontiac troopers. Former GOP Solon Dies WASHINGTON u—Hiram Bing- ham, former Republican senator from Connecticut and a man of several other careers, died today after a long illness. He was 80, PONTIAC CITY AFFAIRS s at Pontiac City Affairs dian National which is the largest railroad in the world. He holds sev- eral honorary degrees and is one of Canada’s top ranking figures. Robert M. Critchfield, general manager of Pontiac Motor Divi- sion expressed satisfaction at Gor- don’s declaration. “‘We are handi- capped frequently by the lack of sufficient tracks in the right place,” said he. ‘I have reviewed the Grand Trunk plans and this! proposal will make a big difference in our operations in the future.” Domestic Hospitalized After Drinking lodine A 16-year-old Drayton Plains girl is in good condition in Pontiac General Hospital, authorities said, this morning. - 2 sy They said that Marjorie Barber, 2291 Newberry St. apparently took the poison about 10 a.m. while per- f housework in a home at iodine |tively brief 22-point agenda, in- Commission Approves Amendment on Residency of Police, Firemen A proposed charter aniendment!| concerning the city residency of Pontiac police and firemen was) approved by the City Commis- sion last night. - The form of the ballot, to be voted on in the November election, the Governor and Attorney Gen- eral’s office for formal approval. The proposed amendment will require police and firemen to live | within a 10 mile radius of the | Saginaw and Huron intersection. Other business included a rela- cluded the acceptance of a deed for lot 45 assessor's plat 112 on W. Lawrence St. to be used for mu- nicipal parking purposes. Public hearings will be con- ducted next Tuesday night on the 181 Lorberta Lane, Waterford Township, ; was instructed to be forwarded to|¥f city on which enginéer estimates were aired by the clerk: — Por south side of E. Pike street from Aster (Assessed cost $1,587.02). of Kenilworth avenue from Madison to Mt. Clemens (Assessed cost $11,672.48, elty cost $7,617.23). For both sides of Cameron avenue from adison to Mt. Clemens (Assessed cost $10,008.94, city cost $5,429.89), Cost for 50 foot lots for all three projects will be $100 as outlined in the estimates. A communication of damage arising from a Feb. 17 explosion of a private home in the city and a suit against the city in- Commissioner ‘ Floyd Miles of- fered a memorial resolution in M. Traver of Sylvan Lake who died April 24. The resolution was in recognition of his contributions to thé- community. It received unanimous approval of the com- mission. . Commissioners granted that per- mission be requested from the Michigan Department of Conserva- | tion for use of several parcels of « land be deeded to the city for right-of-ways needed for street widening. No action was taken on amend- ing a city ordinance to boost the pay of Municipal Court jurors to $4 per day. a . building zone law was deferred two weeks.. Commissioners approved a fire- following sidewalk projects in the “ remembrance of the late Dr. Rufus) works display for July 4th for the Pontiac State Hospital. - ermmees omeo Mi a = So —E— ia dae a Oe Sey ee a i a ra t ‘ : . . silts! an S Spe = = © ae t } es e+ bse Produc _ THR PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1956 __ Area Schools Take Part Soda Pop Set Food Habits Subject of Statewide Study Marketing Pla z iy | } « 7 ers to Hear New Fritz fo Speak Thursday Night Will Ask Local Support on Proposal to MMPA, vA [Your PTA Is Planning: Proper Group Honoring Eighth Grade Graduates Monteith School held tts first meeting here recently, setting the date of the second meeting Four Oakland County arealfood eaten during the week are Court Fight Issues here, at a banquet at 6:30 tonight} for Aug. 16, at the home of Sno oe net es ee une sates of the North Ox- 9 in the Community Cage! elena tact cowel n taking a nutri- in Oxford, Thomas _ 2 amentarian e tion study conducted by the Michi-|School near Oxford, Hickory Grove ing program will be presented tol wire tue ghtudents, from Proper read the newly written constitution, gan Health Department. School in Bloomfield Township, Michigan Milk Producers Assn.|School next fall and tonight are which will be presented to the Asked to keep a record of all/and the Troy junior high school. members at a meeting scheduledjto hear the class prophecy, will general membership at the The youngsters also are being for 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Romeo/and giftatory. april ineeting = i i : checked by physicians to deter- High School auditorium. Mike -LaM: wm te te | _- ° eniors : repare See oe Oe ee The proposed plan is based 0f| speaker and the Rev. William 5 , health and growth. views voiced by dairymen at meet-| 7, yates will give the invocation. [ | h | “Nutrition authorities fear that ings in the Thumb area during the) yirs) Max Burgess, PTA presi- yon Owns Ip (= ‘ many youngsters may be starving past month, according to Harold! gent, will present Safety Patrol Or fa Ud ion themsel by eating improper H. Fritz, president of the Romeo! poys and Service Squad awards. - wapbli ace feats Sane sions. Election Monda Dr. Albert E. Heustis, state health ‘| Designed to provide “higher | chairman for the event. Avondale, —_ Rochester | -ommissioner. prices to farmers, lower prices Leonard , High Schools Schedule! “The ever eoveree =e ——— the =e — A past president, Mrs, Clarence) VOters to Choose Two . = hundred i e “sound’’® hae ie 5 Final Programs dais Soa ae parm = actin fietars! Vite) aad tchow moo | beomasy repeat -— School Board Trustees, Michigan is faring at the table. It bers of the Romeo Local. They’ eae here. Mrs. Robert Zer| Ballot on Issues Commencement exercises con-|May set up a new guide for nutri- point our that MMPA is needed president, tinued to be the big news for sen- jors this week, as high schools in the Oakland County area pre- pared to hold final programs and award diplomas. Avon Township Avondale High School will grad- uate 100 seniors at 8 p.m. Thurs- day in ceremonies at the high school gymnasium. troduce the speaker. R. Grant Graham, president of the Avondale Board of Education, will award the diplomas to the graduates, who will be presented by Principal Rosco V. Crowell. Valedictories will be given by all “A” students Nancy Lowery and Bob Jaycox. Salutatory will be de-/t#ken as a matter of course by state officials at the Highland livered bygDale Raffler. Avondale High Schoo] Band will play for the processiona! and the recessional, while the senior ensemble will provide a vocal interlude The Rev. H. J. McCann of the | School, tion education programs.” Lincoln School, Cadillac; St. Thomas Aquinas, East Lansing; Sanford School, Midland County: All Saints School, Flint; Bay City; White Pine School, Ontonagon County; Lincoin Elementary School, Sault |Ste. Marie. | Tornado-Whipped ‘Woman Makes i Great Comeback : ‘most people. They study the rules, Kolb | and ‘LITTLE MONSTER’ WIRE National Girl Scout Encampment at the rate of one hundred feet in George Shoebridge lays electrical wire for the does it with a called a ‘wire PLANTER —— at Haven Hill 90 seconds. He “Little Monster By REBA HEINTZELMAN Milford Correspondent — MILFORD — Although the idea is not new, George Shoebridge ha: rigged up a contraption that can ‘it | Shoebridge was awarded the S contract to lay more than 20,000 _ feet of underground wiring at. lay electrical wiring in the ground) the International Girl Scout En- land cover it up at the rate of a! |hundred feet in a minute and a jhalf, Attaching another shoe—he lean reverse the process in the | same amount of time. | He calls his brain-child a ‘‘Wire Rec- -reation Area agreed that they have campment at Haven Hill. His two-man operating machine has saved the state both time and money, — _ In order to operate the wire LAPEER — A driver's license is Pjanter” and seeing it in action,|Planter, Shoebridge had to design and hand-build a small tractor to pull the invention. This he called the “Litthe Monster,”’ and although jtake the test, and that ends it — \if they pass. With Mrs. Basil Burgess, victim of Flint’s 1953 ternado, it is a thrill. ‘Mrs. Burgess lost her daughter, both legs, her home and her auto- School Building it looks new, the tractor is built /entirely from combinations of scrap iron. | The “Little Monster” is a minia- iture scale model of an Allison-| mers tractor and is made up for pa contraption of his own invention planter.’’ The planter is pulled by a specially-built tractor which he has dubbed Lr) ' Gets Contract for International Encampment Milford Man Molds Invention From Scrap {never come across anything like!reels, hooked them together and MMPA.” jcan now cut an 86-inch swath with his tractor. He also made a ‘cultivator and a bulldozer blade-* | * | Shoebridge said, “I need a set of plows for the Monster and if I ‘can find some more boiler plates and scrap iron, I'll make those too.” Post Lake Orion Recreation Plan _- Program Lists Baseball, Softball Games; Also to carry. it out, Fritz, plaintiff in a suit asking a declaratory judgment setting forth the rights of members, will ask members at tomorrow — night's meeting if they want to continue supporting him in his court battle. He said he wil] ask them if they ‘wish ‘‘to regain control of MMPA, to be able to vote on important issues, and to have tangible evi- dence of their financial interest in Rights of MMPA_ members | and clarification of association | bylaws are main issues in the | court case, scheduled to come up | in Wayne County Circuit Court | in Detroit, at 10 a.m. June 13. | The case, which has been hang-| ‘ing fire for over a year, was istarted by MMPA dairymen meeting in Romeo who wanted a greater voice in their own associa- tion. Named as defendants were MMPA directors and Howard Sim-| mons, secretary-manager of the as- sociation. . ’ s Ld | Members of the Romeo local also |will continue their appearances this week in southeastern Michigan ‘communities soliciting additional support for Fritz in his court fight. given a past president's pin. Waterford Township The PTA Board of the John Restriction Lifted on Royal Oak Homes ROYAL OAK—A two-year non- occupancy restriction on 15 new homes in the north end of the city has been ordered lifted by the City Owners of new homes in the area, barred from occupancy. be- cause of the critical water short- age, may move in by June 15, commissioners said. Pleasant Ridge OKs Tentative Budget PLEASANT RIDGE — A record high tentative budget of $319,657 SOUTH LYON — The annual school board election of the School District of Lyon Township for the election of two three-year trustees will be held in the community room of the South Lyon Elementary School on Monday, June 11. Polls will be open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Petitions have been approved for Donald Cross, 7660 Earhart Rd., and David G. Taylor, 360 Woodland Drive, South Lyon. William T. |Markham and Raymond Braun, in- cumbents, are seeking re-election. On the ballot will be a request for permission to sell the Wash- MeDonald and Worden School buildings and sites, and a i i | propesal to transfer approximate- ‘ly $1,700 from the debt retire- ment account for the bonds on the New Hudson School to the building and site fund, so that the money could be used for needed furnishings. _ The annual school meeting has been dispensed with. According to a new Michigan school code, mat- ters that heretofore have come be- fore the electors at the annual meeting held on the evening of election will now be decided_ by imembers of the Board of Educa- ‘tion. yd ee meee on eae “Contracts Let Church will give the invocation and She is now a Lapeer resident | ‘Two rubber tired ‘wheelbarrow rts or a Crosley, a Model-T, Swim Instructions They will conduct a meeting in — - Avoca Friday night and in LAKE ORION Plane for the Ae Saturday night Bath asso , : i 8:30 p.m. Lake Orion Township's children Fhe i P school age are almost completed. * * * land Harley-Davidson motorcycie.| for 1956-57 has been approved by OK $25,534 in Bids for City-Owned Lots The City Commissien last night approved bids totaling $25,534 for the sale of 22 city-owned lots in Robert Herndon’s Pontiac Apart- ment Subdivision. on the city’s southwest side. . Lost 1-3 and 5 were sold to Pon- tiac realtor Ward E. Partridge for $4,000. Lots 13-19 and 20-28 of the same subdivision were sold for $9,334 and $9,000 respectively. __ gh; Swimming Pool ‘ benediction. ts license | . the City Commission here. amen | te yen ons od te ra-aierpenes a | Southfield Board OKs wheels support the front end and a The tax rate will remain the Rochester eae cone the | $1 Million Bid on Junior door-bell button serves as the start- \same as last year, $25.86 for each Baccalaureate services at § p.m. oe os - oe ane me || AG) ‘er button. | '$1,000 of local assessed valuation, June 10, in the Rochester High. y. Three mon er the Hi — ° officials said. School disaster, she enrolied in a work | CRUISES AT 60 nniversary : budget ° va ee i aay the simplification course at Wayne | . __ | The tractor has a cruising speed Harold Carlin, high school coach, | : ua a pred blic| — < erenite — University, then took up her | SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP — of 60-miles an hour on a straight-, Will direct the baseball and soft- of Auto Wor ker s i a 2 , for 124 seniors of the school. The |Three contracts totaling $1,087,432 of way b ‘ hi ne 25. | , $8,000 over last year’s Rev. Walter C. Ge duties as a housewife. | aling $1,081,452 of-way, and can idle down to less ball games which begin June 3. . fi 7 er C. rken of st | a jhave been awarded by the South- than three miles per hour, accord- Registration will be at 9 a.m. at Is Recognized = John's Lutheran Church will give) Her courage carried her through! feiq school board for the building |; to Shoebridge : Atwater Park and boys from the A public hearing on the proposed the address on..‘°2000..A.. D.".. The weary, months in the hospital be-| of a I5-classroom and gym junior| = . age of 10 up will be eligible. A} The City Commission last night budget will be held next Tuesday High School Boys Choir will sing fore she Could get her artificial/nigh addition to the E. J. Lederle, OP¢ Of the biggest features of Oo of exchange games are be- passed a resolution in recognition/in the city offices. several selections. legs and rejoin her family. Now. School at Nine Mile and Evergreen ne vendllagag! = ot pane ing set up ‘of the 20th anniversary of. the installed in| aa a lawn as it plants > Work An Honors Conference will be oe it po bidd A. A. Smith the underground wire, and will Mrs. Lyle Bartlett, a former | Oe ercaed its Soreciatian! Water ft Or d Chur ch held at 8 p.m. Tuesday, June | , = . ‘work to within two feet of poles swimming imstructor at Lake : aS TaAw.| 12th. Sixteen candidates wil] be “O!¢ for her to drive again. building contractor; Davis Gibb to six local unions of the UAW inducted into the National Honors Seciety. A pageant, “Today's Task, Tomorrow's Promise,” will be a special feature. Valedictorian Pauline Gerken and Salutatorian Myrna Maass will give their addresses, and honorary awards will be presented to the various graduates by George Stringer of the high school faculty. Commencement is set for Thurs- day, June 14, at’$ p.m. when dip- lomas will be presented to the graduates. A. R. Musson, treasurer! of the Board of Education, will present the diplomas. USAF Captain, POW to Talk to Optimists Optimist, meeting here for thei Twureday aight will hear Sawin Blasyk, POW for nine months -in Germany, speak on the subject | There are three other children in ‘the Burgess family. They had ilived in Lapeer before moving to ‘Flint in ‘33 and are now back, living in-a specially built home jhere. | ' i i | “Why the Air Force Reserve.”’ Ld * s ~ Blasyk served five years in World War II and two years in the Korean War as a captain in the USAF Reserve where he was assigned for duty with the Stra- ' tegic Air Command Combat Intelli- Tax Hike Opponent to Talk at Walled Lake WALLED LAKE — A _ public meeting to discuss a proposed two- mill tax increase for Walled Lake School District operating expenses has been called for 8 p.m. Friday at Stone Crest Hall, on Barnston Street by Mrs. Norma Popek. Mrs, Popek, head of a group opposing the tax hike and a candi- date for election to the’ school board next June 11, will explain her opposition to the proposed tax increase, . Legion Women to Pick Officers at Lake Orion LAKE ORION — The American Legion Auxiliary will have its an- Teachers Club Picnic LAKE ORION — i. is ot Lions to Fete Boy Scouts = Inc., and the Colonial Electric Company. Two contracts for the building a swimming pool addition to school, amounting to were awarded At: ‘Co., and Kemp | Inc. at Monday night's — School Superintendent Glen Schoenhals said this morning that construction would begin within a week to 10 days. Nominating Petitions Due Friday at Orion LAKE ORION—Friday is the, deadline for filing nominating dates to be placed on the ballot of the July 11 school board election. registered voters are required be. | fore a candidate can run for one of the two school board positions which will be filled this year. Petition forms may be secured from Arlie Reed, superintendent of schools. METAMORA — The Metamora Lions Club will hold a dinner for Boy Scouts at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in the Lions clubrooms in down- town Metamora. N Ban Educator Will Study Michigan’s School Setup LANSING #®—Dr. John Dale Rus- sell, a former assistant U. S. Com- missioner of Education, will direct a two-year study of higher educa- tion in Michigan’ costing up to $161,000. lay members have been-designated told newsmen the study will have| Of the financing for the study the broadest $75,000 his been provided by legis- — ov, lative appropriation, The commit- of educational finance of the state of New Mexico. BEGIN IMMEDIATELY In the Michigan undertaking, he will spend only part time, receiv- ing a per diem rate of $125 a day and expenses. Active supervision of the project will fall to an as- | reverse of the planting operation. | Petitions signed by at least 50 due to inadequate wire covering. someone was “going down for the! [Married in Texas Rite or other obstructions. A Colter blade slices a three- inch swath in the sod, then a reel feeds the wire down to the desired depth. A roller immediately pushes \the sod back into position—all in ione operation. The next day, if there has been a rain or it has' been watered, the line is almost invisible. | The contract for the wiring jo» at the Highland Recreation Area specified that all of the underground wiring be removed after the encampment was con- cluded. This did not bother Shoebridge. He designed a shoe te fit his invention that simply re-winds the wire on the reel, in | Some years ago, the telephone companies used an invention simi- petitions for school board candi- lar to the wire planter, according, to Phil Reed, manager of the Mil-| Johnny Ambrose was at recess ford telephone system. The ma-' 4+ Woodworth School when he chine was abandoned as useless, Since that time, Reed said, new plastic coatings have made it pos-| sible to install wiring underground! which will last, for years. Finding the line where the wire has been laid has been one of by the Shoebridge family, so George took three old lawn mower Two Events Tomorrow at Jayno Adams School WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Two affairs have been scheduled for Thursday at the Jayno Adams School. The first will be held at noon wher the teachers will be the honored guests of the PTA at a luncheon. The annual kindergarten tea will take place in the afternoon. Next fall's kindergarten pupils may en~ roll at this time, meet the teaclfer, and tour the building. Albert Starr of Hadley . |Vought. he | Water Glass on Window ‘twindowsill in an upstairs bedroom. ‘pointed to the Royal Oak City commission. to fill a vacancy/’ oi Odessa, and vocal music teacher at Lake Orion High School, has been selected as swimming in- structor, Swimming lessens, for | which there bs.a fee of $5 are for all children of school age. The | children. will be grouped by age and ability in classes of about 15. Three two-week periods June 18- 29, July 2-13, and July 16-27 are scheduled. Dearborn Lad Saves Boy in Storm Sewer DEARBORN (®—A 15-year-old local youth leaped into a storm sewer through a two-foot*manhole |ti yesterday to rescue a 6-yearold| ‘boy who had fallen in. * @¢ * ‘heard some girls scream that third time.” : He ran to the storm. sewer,! jumped in and pulled out David The water .was over David's head, but he had clung to a pipe until rescue came. He escaped with a gash under one eye. me Sets Fire in Battle Creek BATTLE CREEK ® — A glass of water touched off a fire in the W.C. Carroll home yesterday. The sun was to blame. * « @ The glass had been placed on a} It caught the rays of the sun and, like a magnifying glass, focused them on the mattress of a bed un- til the heat started the fire. Eight-year-old Johnathan Adams was passing the house and spotted the fire. He ran home. and told his mother, who called firemen. Mrs. Carroll did not learn of. the; blaze until firemen burst into the house. Damage was confined to the! bedroom. Appoint Commissioner ROYAL OAK (INS)—Lioyd D. Crosby, 56, owner of the Royal Oak Printing Co., has been. ap- created by the resignation Ralph W. Fisher. Votes Against Merger _ METAMORA = Pilgrim Congre- [CIO “for a good record of public 'service.” * * The resolution was offered by Commissioner John A. Dugan (Dis- 15 Witnesses Called on Shooting in Niles NILES — Fifteen witnesses were scheduled to testify today at a coroner’s inquest into the mys- tery slaying of Mrs. Marion Dav- enjay of Chicago. : s * Ln Later today, Gene McClane, 40, a magazine salesman, and Miss Rita McGraw, 23, a member of his McClane is held without charge for investigation in the fatal shoot- Groups to Hold Elections, Potluck WATERFORD — The Ladies Auxiliary of Waterford Community Church will meet for a potluck _ |luncheon at 12:30 p.m. Thursday at the home of Mrs. Cari Millward, 2612 following locals: Local 653, Fish- |an election of . er local 596, GM Truck and Material suitable for cancer Coach Local 584, American Ferg) pads is to be brought to the ou Lecal Amal- SE There will be a special meeting \of the Sunday School Board of the church at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the church. Election of officers will be held. jects Controversial Strip on M181 to Be Paved LAPEER — The controversial 13 mile strip of M181, reaching from M24 to M53, will be blacktopped this year and turned over to the county when the job is completed. The cost will be aout $100,000, with the Lapeer County Road Commission contributing its 25 per cent of the cost from Federal Aid Funds, The State Highway de- partment agreed to pay the rest after a 1952 letter from State Highway Commissioner Charles Ziegler was found, promising the paving. Waterford Garden Club Changes Meeting Date WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The June meeting of the Waterford -|Township branch of the National Farm and Garden Association has been. postponed until Thursday, June 14. At that time the group will meet at 1 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Harley Stephens, 49 Avery St., for-a tour of her iris Gardens. This hobbyist has more than two hundred different varieties in her Family Supper Tonight at New Hudson Church gational Church voted against mergitig with the Reformed and Lost 11-12 were sold for $3,200 to James R. Leon and Robert Amori who appeaerd before the commission last night explaining |the need of the two lots for an ex- itension of their filling station. World Friendship Girls Net $63 at Benefit Tea MARLETTE — The World 4Friendship girls realized over $63 at their annual tea, held recently in Marlette Methodist Church. The money will be used for char- itable projects of the group. Garden Insects Topic at Royal Oak Session ROYAL OAK — Royal Oak Or- ganic Farm and Garden Club will meet Thursday at 7:45 p.m. in the Royal Oak High School. An illustrated topic “Insect Friends and Foes” will highlight SL << f if | a i frolic in Catalina’s | » admiration of the very parent you|the imperfectioris that make a] think is depending on you.” good counselor? ye . | edt ee Gar weer tke ability to say ‘Not to helping whom?” asked the young aed and Pas wc you?” mug: pind ackea|Sested the fashionably hatted wom-| earn nO SS seen on an bie beh. | yo “| “a -| Mer neighbor laughed. “That's ‘ In’ ceremony| °, tenpertootions Ws © ‘irten | 1662 S. Telegraph Rd. .o t performed | «wnat about the ability to ex-| : ; : . Saturday _ | press our own impertect feelings?” | Open Every Night ‘til 9 — Saturday 'til 6 r Sara asked the chairman. “Does the | ; . ; N. Mullins cuaiee and momsernpenels to al t became the | parent make us a more acceptable | , es bride of counselor than if we treated -the| very . || / Tae Roy ~— in her as strange | : 5 Lerchenfeld. wale ree | hcl a4 of Guests She isthe | 7 certainly woud a terey| yours... i daughter of \ot me. mI = : | 7 t Ruins Lamp Mr and Mrs.|" "What ‘a a "therapy station?” | arents of the Boy ANOTHER SILENCE } Should Have Made Melties ot ‘There was another silence. | Replacement Offer firyra ged “What kinds of problems can we| | Ae of he se Nell WONT" be eat : BY EMILY POST son 0 “Ones we can identify 3 : A letter tells me: “The other oe the Frang |S#id Fashionable Hat. e evening we invited some fri oe Lerchenfelds | “Aren't they apt to be problems | (tela ‘emi with | VR. and MRS. L, R. LERCHENFELD®! O"@@vile.| Sanes"as “ats crea : : After dinner while we were sitting ° pge ane | with?” he asked. And glancing | Se 7 around chatting, he went into the ° t his watch added “We’ 2 Regret ety Sara N. Mullins Wears =" " ~"™ ' ] “I'm sure it was an accident, . G wee Dae % ; but just the same I felt that his Taffeta and Lace for Rite oo avin ot ael Ge 3 parents should ive ol o re- i ween ” asked = : Place it, which they didn't do.) Honeymooning in. the Smoky,and accessores were of a match- Sen box you,” I said. “It is| i tl — opinion? Moun tucky are . [ng - carried a very to us parents to) t * Mm een iinet ia re eee | sei . ky sible for them to replace it, they wae oul) Pe Seemeity vee Richard Weber performed the |YOUT answers just as we do.” __ | . : d site should have done so. ing. Bishop Ralph johnson ,per-| duties of best man, and Ronald _ 2 : = _ ,|formed the 7 o'clock ceremony at| Elam seated the guests. _ SPECIAL featherweight cotton e monogramme jdaen — arly are ust|the Church of Jesus Christ of| Following the reception held im- DIETETIC FOODS F | blouse in no-iron from the engravers. | They read: (7c T Nauis ns "ine Presence tye ehurch parlors, the bride| Masural Health Foods |] ' tweed sheath dress 3 : Mr. rs. John Jones request * 8 @ changed to a brown sheath dress|j 58 Wayne. Pontiac. FE 4-4601 F - dacron and cotton tne Picasure of your company &t! ‘The bride is the former'Sara N.|with a matching-duster for the|] er#ss from the Riker Garage Tailored to wear anywhere, \ Ge marrige of . . .” ote: Mullin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. |honeymoon trip. a eaabunh 5 y , broidered ! theA® Ramt ot mine, upon seeing /Orvitte Mullins of Saline drive. washable, in black and our own 3-letter embroidered monogram ~ they ‘were incor-it ee Roy is the son of Mr. and Mrs. : rectly worded and that ‘they should| franz Lerchenfeld of Ontonville white in any color you choose on any color | | ‘request the honour of ; e . , oe “ cory This has rather sams A floor-length gown of taffeta For Brides to Be , _ blouse, and it’s washable. rng aay ke to know if pnt tiny et agen Sereda ; Sizes 10 to 20 10.95 4 F 4 95 she is right.” - chapel-length Gentes Q Sizes 30 to 48 séciont: Tee Day to oxy cn il OE DOU ae eee Call for your free copy of the eSNG RAMACRC Ne ARR RONEN : | ° : aon 7 arrangement of red and white ° ¢ ide’ , s. thadeewete ect aan “eoceaa| Donen Spring issue, the ‘Modern Bride - the pleasure of‘ your company”! Cleo Mullins served her sister | . O C . li S e. S ° f y | would be right, bu for the honor wearing | oo. . A * church polit 7 then wh chs gown shy ae Complete Wedding Service Since 1899 : ur ata ind WI m uits re or ou e ; However, tchng picture hat. She caried an | . One crm wens See ee : | | cegrod that you send tem t/ st | 6Pearce Floral Company | ‘am sure that very few will notice att ist bi os ; : i that there is,Ray error fesenpeiget bed, the brde's| 559 Orchard Lake Ave. Phone FE 2-0127 is going to be Loggia gon at a . . morning wedding. intended 2 =S ‘ Regtme arse ae! OFF TO CAMP IN... Ms — | ie to late afternoon and se | Plan for o summer full of tell me if she is right about this?” Answer: Ordinarily, a lace dress A whole coordinated outfit for is not worn in the morning, but | . summer .,. by WINGS. Every- at a wedding and on the mother of | , thing washes .. . little the bride, it is entirely proper. or no ironing) wrin- kles hang out, never need starching. Avon- dale Perma - Pressed Cotton. “oo | 6 RECKSHAW-MATES fabulous suits from the land o’ cotton. Choose the Imperial Princess in India print, 12.95 i! i i Rickshaw - Zip Jacket. Strip- ed. Grey/biue, grey/tan. 6 to 12 $2.98 Rickshaw Ivy Slacks. 6-12.. $3.98 Half Boxer Rick- MARY JANET DOHERTY } shaw Slacks. 4-12., WI Ee stances Mary Janet Doherty was grad- $2.98 uated from Marygrove College this afternoon with a Bachelor of Arts i Y < . fe degree cum laude, Mary, the . ; daughter of Albert Doherty of Wal-| The | Shop OPEN FRIDAY AND, eo a oe | MONDAY ‘TIL 9. : be ) : Jersdah Club and the Maryzrove| - Riker Bldg. — W. Huron St. / ; “A Dramatic First From Our Beauty Salon! - DRESSET “Ginghom Girl,” in Dan River check, has widened straps ~ for prettier shoulders, 10.95 makes oe set last twice as long Little-girl ‘7 00 $1 ()" " $1 ioe ae | - | and short e A. - \\ Complete Cutting and Styling shorts, a. Ao - _ “Where’Service and Quality Are Supreme” fully lined, [> | Expert Operators Await to Serve You! each, 4.98 e ° OPEN FRIDAY TILL 9 P. M. Catalina Swim Suits-Play Togs — Cs ff Play-Abouts_— : ? for sun! oe by en _ — oe | aa aan a for water! Bea ? Cf “ rie a ‘in or aqua, : : ) os oe = Ae. m- ei I Sizes 10 to 16. : ~for fun 7 ol ; SA ei ga ~jrent and crashed into a ditch. THE PONTIAC 1 PRESS, ‘WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 560 | Selling Enters [MARKETS Wheat Market nm CHICAGO — Selling entered one scale Maicears, mernees ta gree: the wheat market on the Board of 4 Trade today, influenced by clear weather in the Southwest which brought a resumption of harvest- ing. * * * * Wheat at the start moved slight- ly higher than yesterday's close, but later sold off in the face of some profit-taking. Traders said they expect an increase in hedging based on renewed harvest opera- tioris. Soybeans were sharply higher, with July futures leading the ad- { lee No. 1 and fa Pruite—Appies Norther 6.00 bu; i, 3.18-4 cy Red ‘fancy, 6.00 Vegetables, misc.—Asperagus, No, 1 1.28- 78° dog. behs, Beets, top; No. 1, 1.50-2.00 bu. Carrota, ee No. 1 i bu. Chives, oad H ‘adish, rn Spy, faney, 4.26 bu; apples, bu; No, green. No. 1, 80- onions, sets, No. 1, 1.60-1.75 $a Ib. Potatoes, No. 1, 2.25-2.40 50-Ib. bag ishes, —_ fancy, 1.00 doz. behs; No. 1, 1500 doz. behs: radishes, white, No. 1, 1.00-1.25 doz. behs. Rhubarb, hothouse, eer 0c §-ib. box; No. 1, 65-7 rusbarb, hothouse, No. 1, 1.00-1.50 oa ‘behs; rhubarb, outdoor, No. 1, 75-90 doz behs. oe hothouse, No. 1, 8. greens—Lettuce, vance, Corn’ was unchanged to a shade higher. - | i » Wheat at ‘the end of the first. hour was ‘s to ‘4 lower, July 2.06%; corn 4% to %4 higher, July $1.5248; oats unchanged to 4s high- er, July 64%%; rye unchanged to % higher, July $1.21%5; soybeans| %% to 2% higher, July $3.08; lard 16 to 15 higher, July $11.92. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN 275-300 bu; lettuce, Ro- maine, No. 1, 2.75-3.00 bu. Greens— Mustard, No. 1 |Sorrel. No. 1. 1.80-2.00 bu. Spinech) Ne No. A block of 10,600 shares of Amer- . 1.50-2.00 bu. Turnip, No. 1, 1.50-2.00 u. CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGG: CHICAGO, June 6 (AP) -— matter steady; wholesale buyi Sod, prices ei chahged; receipts 1,655 83 score A $8.75; 92 A 58.75; 90 B tC sa, cars 90 B 56.75; 89 e hie Eggs steady. ieee ra geying. prices! unchanged; teceipts 18,700 per cent A 37; mixed 37; mediums 36; U.S standards 34.75; dirties 33; checks "31.75: | eurrent receipts 33.73. Livestock Shela June 6 (AP) — Opening rain Wheat Oats July ...ceee. 2060's July pes 64%— Sep .ccoes- 2086's Bep ccaess -O6's ae 1 caieiis -—* Dee wees .69'5 el eenooc ye Mar seces 2 12% rol see te Ca. id J July ...ceos. 181%. Dec (2 c.. 135 re e+ sence Fil cee coce- 1.28% eC sesene-- kt Mar (7°21.. ‘baa guy 1195 "12.30 Carrier's Red Probe Shocks Mailmen Unit noon, They were Eugene J. Umerlik, 33, and Alfred D. Lint Jr., 33, both ot Detroit. Umerlik told Geputies of the Oak-. land County Sheriff's weighs: he had to drive his ‘truck into t ditch to avoid a head-on picts James M. Showers, 28, of Macon, | rites high’. with the oncoming tractor-trailer, and’ was struck on the side. Lint said his tractor skidded across the, highway when his airline broke and the brakes locked. Earnings NEW YORK—(INS) Ne: New York Central) Raliroad reported today net income for the five months ended may 31 of $17.- 682.895. equal te $2.72 a-common share. This compared with $2).120,708, or $3.27, a common share, In Yhe samep ertod last vear. Gross revenues increased to! $330.330,258 from $302,804.380 in the 1955 period. May net income declined) to $4,008,530 trom $4,784,142 a year ago. | | NEW YORK (INSi—First National’ Stores, Inc, has announced net income fe: the fiseal year ended March 31 of $8,071,226, equal to $493 a commo' on | share, This compared with $7,968,619, cr, $486 a common shafe, in the Bspoag f year, Gales increased to 849 from $470.628.572 the rear previous. | Adtian O'Keeffe, resident, said the company operated 331 supermarkets at. the year end. \- NEW YORK (INSi—Hat Corp. of) America reports net income for the six montis ended April 30 of $201,463, equal to 24 cents a common share. This com-) pared with a net ‘loss of $119,695 in the) same period last year. Sales increased to $8,320,249 from $7,502,889 in the in- itial half of 1065. Killed in Car Crash CARO ®—Riding alone, Richard Clark Auslander, 21, of Decker, was injured fatally early today when he lost control of his car on the Deckerville Road in Tuscola County. The car left the pave- ‘Spitzbarth, 37, of 11 Maynard Ct. DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT, June 6 (AP!—Hogs—Salable. Martst not establishes Asking 600. Pully 80 per cent receipts slaughter aes general |Market active, fully steady all classes and grades few small iots high choice, to prime fed steers 22.25-22 50: garde choice fed steers under 1200 19:00-20 50: ten head choice and prime /848 Ib fed heifers 21.25: scattered sales jutility and standard steers and eres [18 0-17.50; most utility cows 12 50-1 [peteemns two loads heavy Holstein pine canners and cutters mostly itt 00. bry ery | and commercial bulls mostly 14 00 4.00 Calves Qaiabie 125. Scattered early at the store. The jack was Valued at $20. “ Hold Georgia Man | on Larceny Charges — Ga., is being held in Oakland County Jail awaiting trial in Oak-| land. ‘County Circuit Court on a) larceny from a building charge.| ‘He waived examination when ar raigned before Justice Fletcher’ Renton of Royal Oak yesterday. Market Rises, - quite small, and trading was at a 2 slow pace after the usual opening: ‘|rush bulk | _-»: Then Delines. ¢ NEW YORK ®—The stock mar- ket opened a shade higher today early dealings. * * Movements either way were Prices were off fractionally, -| while gains amounted to 1 to near 2 points at the outside, * * * Steels were lower as were the airlines, motion pictures and most rails and’ oils. Nonferrous metals were higher together with utilities. 4 /Other divisions were mixed. - ‘ican Telephone traded at 179% up \\g. The blocks traded without the ‘dividend and had a value of nearly $1, 800,000. | s * «* | Among higher stocks were Good- r year, Boeing, American Telephone, ‘Kennecatt Copper, Westinghouse \Electrie, Baltimore & Ohio and iTXL Oil. Lower were Bethlehem Steel, ‘General Motors, Goedrich, Doug- las Aircraft, Dow Chemical, Santa Fe Railroad and Royal Dutch Pe- troleum, and ‘then turned slightly lower in| “bee ‘ eet mee ot — itis ete pee a BONG . _ NODLUI (ut Disneys tree Life Adventures NEST OFFERS — ANOTHER BIRD WILL HATCH IT. > - THE YELLOW © 1956 4 hi, > {? 7 * 8 « Yesterday's stock market was steady at the finish after a late i 00-22.00: mostly good fed steers bit of selling cut back earlier gains. | The Associated Press average of, 60 stocks was unchanged at 179.50. | | New York Stocks (Late Morning Quotations) Associated Press j 30 18 AS 6 = Rails Ui | Stocks Net change — 2 —.§ Noon, today 252.4 139 H 727 #178 Prev day a+. 9832 1404 29 179 § Week ago 230.9 141.0 721 1785 Month ago ..,. 2670 1581 732 1906 Year ago .... 229 32 °1372 «#732. 169.0 ose ob ecae. 278.2 185.1 732 191.5 cori 3440 1290 715 1716) eos. 2878 1424 TST 1815 1955 low ....,.. 203.1 H49 672 lags ‘Hayworth Urges House | Action onCivil Rights WASHINGTON: W — Rep. Hay- worth (D-Mich) said today the. i Ane ric SL-STORyY NEST. * AN UNGUARVED THE COWBIRD A CHANCE TO LAY HER EGG WHERE MOST BIRDS ARE VICTIMIZED, BUT. NOT OVER THE STRANGE EGG ANU MOVES HER CLUTCH TO. THE _ SECOND FLOOR. We, Montana Votes Go fo Kefauver | WARBLER / SHE PROMPTLY BUILDS Walt Disney Productions World Rights Reserved With a capacity of 44,000 volts, | the. four cables will tap the elec- trie energy. system of the Con- sumers Power (Co. in Lower Michigan and provide power for the expanding economy of the | ‘An office,” she said. eastern half of the Upper | insula, ~ Consumers will wholesale the power to the Edison Sault * * * “We'll have power into the Up Showers. is being held under United States cannot keep its free Pe? Peninsula by July 1." Dan E. $2,000 bond and will be tried June world leadership umless Congress | K@™. president of Consumers, ‘ll for an alleged theft of $110 be-. longing to a roommate. He is ‘said to have taken the money from their room in Royal Oak. The man was | arrested by Royal Oak police yes-| terday. City Couple Pay Fines | for Simple Larceny | A Pontiac man and his wife each paid fine and costs totaling, ‘$50 after pleading guilty to simple larceny in Justice Court yesterday.’ Leland Spitzbarth, 49, and Anna were arraigned before Farmington |, ‘Township Justice Allen C, Ingle. |' The pair were arrested yoseréay| by Redford State Police. Troopers! reported the eouple took miscel-|: laneous articles valued at $30 from a Farmington store. lron Curtain. Falls -VIENNA (®—Police said today | ing Czechoslovakia has started tear- ing down its barbed wire barriers on the Austrian border, following Hungary's example, = in Two Area Breakins !555 feet high. acts “‘to correct the - injustices, under which American Negroes | have suffered for 90 years.’ Urging speedy house passage of! civil rights legislation, he said “We cannot forget—or if we do, |forget, it shall be at great peril to’ the future of our country—that the | great bulk of mankind is non-| white. “Everyone of us who has trav- eled abroag,"’ he added, “knows ‘full well the international reper. Ranize the nation’s millions of un-'stresseq U.S. cussions of the racial and religious | jintolerances and injustices that un- \fortunately still persist throughout | America—in the North as well as e South.” Thieves Get 42 Pennies Nothing was reported missing in the breakin of a cleaning establish- ment at 339 W, Huron St. Monday hight, Pontiac police said. Accord- “t “them, entry was gained trough a broken rear window. The Washington Momument is \ Sai Labor Union Drive Begins in Textiles WASHINGTON (INS)\—The AFL- GIO singled out the textile indus-| ‘his address to the graduating: try today as its first major target Williams said he would consider, Which -reminded. him that last Hare's request for possible sub-) December he asked Mrs. R.. that mission to the Legislature. long suffering mother of six and| He added that he may also ask wife of one, = she wanted for the Legislature to boost safety |Christmas. jcommission appropriations from '$24,000 to $79,000. ® . * AEC Chieftain Reiterates U. §. Lead in Nuclear World PITTSBURGH (INS) — Atomic icy am Commission Chairman) |Lewis L. Strauss declared yester- lday “there is no foundation -in: known fact”’ for any fear the U. S.' jlags behind Russia in nuclear pow-: "in ler development. Strauss made the statement in in development of the power of the atom for every-day purposes ‘in these words: * ® «* “We are not interested in build- g@ Merely the most reactors to | produce the largest number of kilo- watts regardless of how much) class of the Cartiegie Institute of peteey Shey lose eeranlly ih cpet in the long-heralded drive to or- Technology. The AEC chief! ation, We know we can do that. strides in the “We are in the business of de- | ganized workers. . peaceful uses ef atomic energy. | veloping economically competi- \ The merged labor federation’s | 29-man executive council voted! unanimously to undertake an or- gahizing campargn- aimed .at the 700,000 non-union members in the far-flung textile industry. Only about 300,000 workers in the in- » dustry are Lesa oo The effort “will conceatrate par- ticularly on the South, where 575,- 000 textile workers are said to be unorganized. This is in spite of the fact that organizing efforts are encow difficulty in that section because a the fight over the school segregation issue. tive nuclear power, both at home and abroad. We are not engaged in making kilowatts for propa- | ganda, He told the graduates that atom- ‘ic power will “ease mankind's bur- dens, combat the plague disease, the scourge of starvation, and raise the standards of living: generally.” Gordon Stouffer Dies CLEVELAND (®—Gordon_ Stouf- fer, board chairman of the~Stouf- fer Corp., a restaurant chain, died at 52. He suffered a heart attack. He said: “The United States leads the world today in the state of its development of the | peaceful uses of atomic energy, | including the development of atomic power.” The government official predict- ied the nation’s first full-scale atom- ic power plant for peaceful uses, being built at Shippingport, - Pa., will be furnishing up to 100,000) kilowatts of a to homes and industries in the Pitsburgh area a year hence. ‘WE CAN DO THAT’ Strauss explained the U. S. pol- ‘primary defeat ‘could take some solace today in right. ‘being assured votes at the Democratic National |Convention, . isemhower claimed ion the Democratic iscattering of write-in votes also! * * of “ialists in diseases of the circula-) 'He’s Satisfied! | A Newer Auto . Cancels Charges CASEY, fl. @—Fred Collins, 45, ° of West Plains, Mo., told police Stevenson Given Few he was perking along U. S. 40 Write-in Ballots; Ike just west of Casey yesterday at Unopposed in Primary (about 35 miles an hour. when two ‘cars came barreling down on him HELENA, Mont. (®—Tennessee from behind at about 70 Sen. Estes Kefauver, jolted by his ~ _ ¢ +6 in California,’ The first sideswiped him on the The second scraped him on 16 the left The of Montana's drivers identified them- selves as George C. Lee, 27, of [Stllseates, “Okla. and- Mon H Lo, 24, of West Lafayette, ind. ‘The two Chinese, who had never met before, took Collins around to ,a used car lot and bought him a ‘1941 model. Collins said it is a better car but a than his old one * * At the same time President Ei- dq the state’s 14 Republican convention votes in yesterday's presidential primary, the first in Montana since 1924. Kefauver's was the only name ballot, |went te former Illinois Gov. Adlai| The police were satisfied, too Stevenson, New York Gov. Averell They didn't file any charges. Harriman, Sen. Lyndon Johnson a rs and Ohio Gov. Frank J: Reject School Annex usche. a WOLVERINE op Voters in On the Republican side, Eisen- this Cheboygan County community hower gained his delegates in 4 have rejected a proposed $180,000 lopsided victory by Secretary of bond issue for construction of a State S. C. Arnold, a favorite son five-room addition to Wolverine stand-in for the President, over High School Lar Daly of Chicago, entered as the America’ First Republican party candidate. Arnold has * * * Detroit Armory Begins pledged his convention votes to. DETROIT W — Construction 4s Eisenhower under way on a $2,242,500 armory 72s for the Michigan National Guard's | In 334 of 1.081 precincts the 425th Infantry Regiment. The build- -Democratic totals were Kefauver ing at Sunset and Eight Mile Road 21.648, Stevenson 227, Harriman East on Farwell Fiel Id is to be 34, Johnson 2 and Lausche 2. completed in a year and a half 347 precincts the Republican —_ he Viuereat Stockholders are urged to complete, date. sign and return the accompanying of Roches- Proxy meeting or any adjournment Pleading guilty to reckless driv- ing, James Manley, 32, ter, was committed to Oakland ,Da°t¢? Pontiac, Michigan, June 1. ‘0 ' i ays By order ot the Board of Directors. County Jail for 10 days yesterday.’ ate BRON = He failed to pay fineeand costs) ‘when arraigned before Justice’ Robert C. Baldwin of Hazel Park. A car driven by Milford Caudell, of Columbiaville, struck and killed ‘a deer at M24 and Metamora Rd., ‘Oxford Township Monday, the Oak- land County Sheriff's Department said today, ~ Rummage sale, Fri. June 8th. 1 to 9 p.m. 4494 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains. PEO Chapter C.L. Adv. If your friend's in jail and needs bail. Ph. FE §-9424 or MA 5-4031. —Adv Do You Have a Carpet Problem? Call Tuson Carpet Serv. FE 5-8103. —Adv, resident. June 1, 6, mi 20, 1956 COMPLETE “AUTO: To Explain Blood Clot | DETROIT . — Dr. Walter H. ‘Seegers of the Wayne University college of medicine will report on jthe mechanism of blood clotting at) ithe meéting of the American Col- lege of Angiology in Chicago June | '10. The group is composed of spe-. tory system, . f Gets Two-Year Probation Jesse L. Taylor, 28, of Ferndale, | who pleaded guilty April 16 to pos-' session of a marihuana cigarette, was sentenced Monday to two years’ probation and payment of $100 court costs by Oakland County Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty. | | i a sles about steady but not enough done Admiral 181 Int T & T 318 ds | In Pi WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP make. m tr Reduction 46 s rl Oe. ' “ ore 0 s Daly iISTE ON N “’gheep—Salable 100. Scattered early Allied Chem 1134 Johns Man .. 404! NAS | O-O| totals were Arnold 9.418, Daly Pray eat al eal A é sit lu 29 Se , “ite « r may do DETROIT «—The president of le sicy eas colton aaa mt call Allis Chalmers $33 Kennecott, 12031 Se 1,532 and Eisenhower 162 wnite- the 17838 Highland. Re ‘* : ng quality and condition; small lot cu . | live { 7 pm_ to § nm each Thursday tn : ‘ Kimb Cik 50.1 x ins. P ms : _ the Detroit Mailmen's Association |'¢ food 105 ib shorn lambs No. ore tea Eeeres, be Fl P Ths CHECK ay COUNTER CHECK MANEUVER MAY n oo ae e 2 & June 28 the of- says he is “shocked” at the govern- tew‘cuil and utility spring lambs 20.00 Am Airline. 21 Sree: oe ee Peomnue UNTIL THE ORIGINAL NEST IS 6 STORIES HIGH. 2apn ieee ment’s re-opening of a security yan... @6 i oe c $32 Picdusd 67 Key Foun Gein. Count Deaths BERT Sees case against a letter comer ff D Am Gas & a Lice & My 675) . ° y June 6 7, 1956 cleared six years ago of being a FIONM@ enies ing iS oe eg owe at 7 Sonce oF GUnlic Kana loyalty risk. m Rad “ - 207 per oa Chem 4 Kenneth D. Powell a scheduled ae | T M Baeeite he Mee 47 DAVISBURG — Service for 22! the Pontia $14 . é < ao i the Township Target of the new probe is James ncome ax oney © Aa Tel & Tel “ies Martin, x &@ | Give Me My Office!’ q e y rogram Kenneth D. Powell, 34, of 8625 Hail 2060 ‘Op ad. on Wednesda: Orsag, 42, a mailman since 1939.) | Am Viscose’... 337 Meee 2 |Eaton Rd., will B® held at 130; hea Gtk James H. Rademacher, president R. lofts te aca ¢ capris Anae pad c ne pales a od a ip.m. Friday at the Holly Baptist 2° _ of the Detroit branch of the Na- offa today denied he owes the 2? “e °° 533 Mone Ward 428 e€g1s ator a es l1me Church. He will be resting at the ‘ ‘s er tional Assn. of Letter Carriers said government $6,059.08 in back in- Armour &Co 22 Motor P4 333 ‘ : t i o er come! taxea for. 1957. tchison 156 Motor Whi 263 . Eevee! Funeral Home. Holly, un- weeaicieg ir "19" E “no one can be found who would Come taxes for 195 All Cet Line... 564 Net Bise 382 t H ] Th t H time for service. Mr. Powell, 45 Be % Atl Refin , #2 Nat Cash R.. 476 ; aceon in aeor label him (Orsag) disloyal: | The former Oakland County #t! Retin ..... @2 Nat Dairy 383 O ce p Ings a ome a vanes nwith Bundy Construction ~ "aoe in in labor leader has appealed the case Balt & Ohio. 492 Nat Lead . 986 E Road Problems Face Cc P aclidied Tuesday of ins (Pan cf hwo. Orsag said the charges against , be United S ndiz Av... $04 Nat Thea 76 o., Pontiac, died luesda) Noes ih S Sa et! ae ws be ' nm a peitition to t nite tateS Renquet . 17 NY Central’. 38 Ww ASHINGTON u—Congressmen' He found eggs but no bread for S H | J S i juries received in an accident with $715: pe th N 8T W alo m were based principally on The Beth Steel 1452 Nis MP 22 pecia une e$Sion juries re 715 W 9 h N 34°8T W along his associations with his wife Tax Court. case reportedly Be' Boeing Air .... @22 te fe Weal s 322 grind out such splendid pronounce-’ toast, pancake flour but no syrup. . a bulldozer Center of Doris Road to East line of brother a parents, whom the grew from his partnership in a — = : m4 No Am AY a ments for solving the woes of the " cuapping fare! 5! of State’ Legisature Sle leaves His eile. Bet. two see Bey ih x! iS siee oped ae : Detroit finance firm. Borg Warner.. 44 OT Fac world that it’s easy to forget that ent g. Barely escaped | “oe i =) 00° E to North line of Section, th vernment, 0: sald, accused il Aline ane Nwst Airline iss eS = : aughters, man and Janet, at Nor x 41 {1 to beg containing > being Conse , Under wiogieeimtlia: eattints Ooo Brun Baike a 36 owen on a, 3 they're only human, with the same & zealous policeman who wasn’t LANSING ? Highway safety oa ‘his acai Mr. and Mrs 20 ae Bes z a less pine pert of NE : = : s 2 — a € 2 wy i iis t t Bp, : . © ( . - ae as - al . 000 loss in the firm can be taken Budd Co 8 personal problems the rest of us taking any holiday from passing be added to the growing list. Edgar Powell: three brothers. sisactrn th x snus; eb eases noth Orsag said his father has been as a partnership loss. or a short- a + ae ae face | may be added to the growing list Edgar ( : Da 2s 2 ‘. tt oe 4 a) - “ ace dead 13 years and his mother eight term capital loss deductible over Camp Soup ws vs 812 «+ w « , out tickets for parking viola. of problems slated for considera- Melvin of Manton, Edgar a we iosiee) ft to bey iconteininig 2 (crea years. He denied they were Com- three years. Gan a4 33 ' B04 Only more so, in the case of Rep. tions. What with one thing and Man iby (the Eegisiatuvesatits Sue iat . Cou te Persons inte teres! ed are requested to be munists. : ame Airl 27 . & another didn’t get to ae until 13 special session. sisters. Marilyn Powell of Manton: presen A cony of the Zoning Map to ari CP... 88 241 Walter E. Rogers (D-Tex). He has 10:30. Mrs. Ronald Miller of Bay City, ce:her with a list of the proposed His wife, Charlotte, 41, also de- Se f | Ai dé: Papas oo vee Ha 412 SIX children Following a meeting of the Mx taby Blair of Lake City. ohanass steion file in the office of ths ; . ssiee | | , ‘ . .- £ ; - MIPS. AUD) al e ¥. Township Clerk and may examine nied she ever was a Communist. na e ncreases | pled £ fae. p44 : = On Memorial Day Rogers de- Decided to begin by painting State Safety Commission, Gov. Mrs.” Maryin Bennett and Mrs. »Y Gitedal tucereated “ Orsag said he had never been a tee Bi 642 - 4 | cided, as did many ther hus. Screen. Found new spray can Williams said he may ask the 17) Schuiling both of Grand! SEIS CE ah Communist or associated with per- for Health Research Sa Foe OO ee 3. band and father, to spend the didn't work as easily as he had Legislature to appropriate more Rapids. GRETA V. BLOCK, sons known to be Communists. Cluett Pea 43 Pit Plate GO ; es hoped. Was giving it careful in- money for the commission and | June 6 1t54 Coig Palm .... 87 Proct & G _day at home, doing “a few : driver i ve t sec- Oliver Brow He said he was questioned about WASHINGTON « The Senate Co! Bd A 22 246 Pullman |, cS chores that Mrs. Rogers has spection when suddenly it worked for the ver improvemen uw nee ~~ . a ad ‘ * } ‘ 4 z *, bd ce a T ~ ry possible Communist ties by the . = vliwn deltas, oeeier: SL. anes ue pore Od gc. 8) lling to my attention for perfectly, all over him. tion of the Department of State. AVON TOWNSHIP—Service for Notice of Bpertal Mee ing Cele FBI in 1944 or 1945 and believed aay to the 126% millions Presi-\Gon pies”: 2 RePub Sth.. GS! the pest several months.” TOUGH SITUATION An increase. in anemployment Otlver Brown, 68, of S15 Devon ccockttee tr auiane Cones he was given a clean bill of health 4) Eisenhower had asked for Cott BOk-. 332 Res Mer’ apd 4 ; benefits. correction of a highway dale St.. will be held at 2 Pm.company C er er a ag se! = Ca See - Rey Tod B , 63 | He tells about it today in a dole- ore son to Hie get turpentine Bondiie dau land mors! money) for Friday nf Pursley Funeral Home, . Please cake potice that special meet. co march on cancer, Cont Mot ..... Rock Spg me u ver y oY sly : ng ne Stockholders ° ine . Walled Lake Youngster heart disease, mental ills, arthri- ood oa ; od Rafeway ®t. 837 = eerert Soe Coeepss Beck an ie te 6 ratbcal Pecan! on the agenda for the session. ri a with burial in nite relied che Co eeoee) ol Seas oe ‘J € . > call t “Corporation™: itl l Struck Down by Auto tis and other diseases. Coe Wes pl nceen a that another son had dropped the. on the’agenda’ for: the sessiown. eo , = ne ills re Ged Tuesday st te.Q0 em. on June 28. 1986. a” Roos = 344 i fe 3 m ° Ee ‘d > : Trans- Straits Cable | | | Law officers were instructed to Miller Rd., will be held-at 11 a.m. co"“ana “Willard Convoy Company wa Pontiac State Police reported the “tonal — instllutes Pord M- $24 Stevens JP a2 Learned doctor had been about ae Friday at Allen's Funeral Home. 494 into Industrial Enterprises, Inc : and There are other differences be- Freepot Sul .. 03 “Stud Pack fill out the forms for drivers who approval of, and the authorization of a boy was struck by a car driven Preuh Tre |. 32@ &un Oil to depart for call to country with burial-in East Lawn Ceme- the officers of Willard Convoy Company- "7 t= by Daniel J. Ruese. 16, of 654 tween the two versions which also gen’ max) Seite Conte! or gins OGY «Thought it. might be helpful. and 2P€ ment ally or physically unfit for. He died of a heart attack a®4 each of them to execute and we must Be Tesolved. “Gen Dynam 602 Sriv Bl Pa Was. a Certifieate of Consolidation of M1'- Wolverine Dr.. Walled Lake, when “e Gen Elec 875 Texas Co restful. to take him’ Ran out of the highway ‘Tuesday at his place of employ- waukee Crane & Service Co and ghee he darted out into the road to pick | Gen Severs 2. ai Thomp Pa. a MACKINAW CITY —Tne Con- £85 on way out of town. | Drivers cited on the forms are ment, Jay's Collision Shop in Ox- Poets Memories 1 up a stone. They said the acci- Goodrich Man Guilty Ges ae) a4 Transamer | 40) sumers Power Co. today began lay- ¢ AUGHT IN RAIN ec shad tees sore ford. A Masonic graveside service ieee Ee od oat c0e dent happened on McCoy Road east ; (Gen Tite 22.341 Un Carbide 11¢8 ing in the Straits of Mackinac the ; ay oe Se . will be conducted by Orion Lodge goiiar is100) per share, and 100,000 pre- in Larceny of Ja Terrific d ba k é of Bernstein Road y saan : at Un Pac 173.4 ¢ first électric power link between errine downpour on way back. suspend their licenses. No.’ 46, F&AM. ferred shares of the par — ifty : . . . Good ye cen ST Unit Alr Li ‘ y dollars ($50.00: per share. which pre- "mit t - ae Ae ~ ¢ py > ts re de ations riv- swerved to avoid the VanSickle Ceny charge, Donald A. Masters. G\.jneund ast Un Ons Cp se insulas. tans See drain haa _ delayed necwuse the: 21 examiners. Margaret; six sons and daughters, 124, P8v0, ‘estenations. Dreseren et Pine child but hit him with the right 35, of Goodrich, paid $15 in costs Oui | a 1132 Us Lines 7 * @¢ om 4. a is topped. can't handle the flood of forms. Gloria Bromley at home. Mrs. Bur- Board of Directors) and otherwise to a “8 stir y } - , execute an ie su certi . - side of the car. in Justice Court yesterday. Holland F | 126 us beer © 384 Clear, calm and warming wea-, CEPed. =P Since May 14 he said, the ton. Bowerman of Lake Orion: ecute such documents and do such acts = | He admitted to stealing a ee ns se a = , mi ther prevailed for the operation ‘There wasn't much left of the state has revoked 650 licenses, Georgia, Judy and George F. 5 ™s) Nhe ceticcs ating bleed orients oo ; hydraulic jack = in Springfield 1 Cent... $44 warn B Pic ; 23 Which will require at least one, holiday for resting purposes,” | with re-examinations proceeding Brown; four sistérs, Mrs, Edna or executing the documents) to effec- Giant Truck Collide; Township and selling it to a Dixie [40st Rey -- 4) weer on net ae day to comple oR d, * : C t De Mrs. M Swift [ste the Plan of Reorganization, the . 5 Hig , P ' = z 9 afield ing ae oes S Weste A Bk piete. | Rogers sai So we all went to | at the rate of 16,000 a year. arey ° troit, Mrs. : ary Swift pian and Agreement and Arties of iw 0 nday, Springfie : Weet : | bed.’ Mer the merger and consolidation: Drivers Escape Injury ee eS Mahgetnee ir. 6) So ® as © “ . > oy Shipey of Goodison, Mrs. Leslie and generally _ action and authorization Justice E J. Leib te Wilson & Co 186 He said the program should be ‘Township Justice Emmet i Bus Mch 4324 Wicieosth 437, Four miles of underwater cable One result of day at home: ’ 3 McBride of Florida; and three with respect to the merger and consoll- Two truck drivers escaped injury said today. int Harv - ge ye val Toon te 2 he } y a me: stepped up by adding 48 license randchildren. dation when their h hicles collided te Pace Be Yicnest arr one tre being unreeled between Mc- Rogers has decided to spend his examiners and $239,000 to the bud. ® . ("Such other business as may come n their heavy vehicles coil The man was arrested the same = Pa 136 6 be 7 Gulpin Point, west of Mackinaw a ——_——_— before the meeting or any adjournment at Orion and Rochester Roads in day when the original owner of mo 41° Zenith Rad 1128 City, across the Straits to Pols next holiday catching up on chores get of the driver improvement : 5 (thereof ° we Oo | -Stockholders of rec t a.m, Avon Township yesterday after ‘the jack recognized his lost article wew yon tos eeniied by the LaBarbe. west of St. Ignace. fo OEE. office News in Br ief lon June (i986 will be entitled to vote | eC ee a 2 4 = of Thanks pee e200 ee eee ee eee ee ee Prete see senesesceccess oP ? 4" a passed | une 8th, 1058. | 2 From world of pain and sorrow Te and of peace and rest { ‘God has taken you. Geer _— =~ | Where you have est Sadly missed by Dad | vel And, awnhs another I In our jonely hours of thinking. ts of him are always near. Days of sadnéss will come oer us, ifcoses may think the wound is) BS Wanted Fe Made ceescceree Tha Bacetio’ Re ieevienn es secs missed by his Wife and scecssesecousse®. 9 Children Work Wanted Male. ...... aa IN LOVING MEMORY OF JOHN Work Wanted emale SAAR SRS SS vd TN, Parkas. my dear husband who | passed away | year ago today. , June SERVICES OFFERED Service — ...-ceseevees Sst | se meme Services cenceoomean et ] & Taxes es 4 ee ft & Tailoring «......16) } abe WE ees cee mare Bar| Income Tax Service .... 17, Service 20) 21) A 22) -} Fi tr RENTALS OFFERED Share Living Quarters Wid. Transportation aeeee eee oe) 3 38 SBA s Peastlsncens Homes . a Rent OUI 40) Rent Office & waeareeeeot For Reat Miscellaneous vecwece@2 REAL ESTATE FOR SALE For Sale SERS S Sale Lake "Prope Md For Sale Resort Prope: rban RF owen eee rata Por Sale Lots ve se scsicses 8] For Sale Acreage ..... wisinvolwicissis a For Sale vars eweeweses pt Sale . $3 eee eeeernerenees . + MERCHANDISE Bale Househoid PY aoscsco- 57 Valentine 58) Grain 5 Lt S a Sale =. 3 74} Sele Farm ) _enoooesssoonl. | Sale Farm Equipment .........76, Auction Sy ecocce cececsoecseutt AUTOMOTIVE he | Drayton Plains — Waterford Twp Voorhees-Siple 3 Cemetery | Lots |WHITE CHAPEL. | | Closing time for advertise | ner r shay little know the sorrow ¥ an within the heart con- cea! lope 8 a face that fs always with ‘There's @ vVolce we would love to hear |There’'s a smile we shall always |_ remember, ene we loved so dea Seah missed. by his rite, Allie, | Mother Nietes, Nephew IN LOVING “MEMORY OF BER- | tha Ward, who passed away 3 |_ years ago today, June 6th. 1953. From this world ef pain and sorrow, To the land of peace and rest. God has taken you, dear Mother. Where vou have found eternal rest Sadiy missed by husband, chii- dren and grandchildren 3 ik LOVING MEMORY OF RUTH .) May Jeffrey, who oY June 4 1953 The depths of serrow we ‘cannot tell, Qt the joss ene we loved so well, And while she sleeps a peaceful slee H . shall Bedi v olsced by Mother, Brother and sisters, IN LOVING MEMORY “Or THEO- dore Eggert, who passed away dune 5. 1985 He had a kindly word for each, , and died beloved by all _Sadly missed by_his_V Wite Flowers 3 PPP LLP LLLP Ot” PLL DUNSTAN'S FLOWERS | aaaq W. Huron _FE_2-8301 ~ Funeral Directors 4 Pee EES I : AIR AMBULANCE GROUND. pasts Funeral Home FE 4-1211 Ss yOaTs ; FUNERAL HOME moplete facilities. OR 3-7757 ep pean we always Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME “DESIGNED FOR _FUNERALS” ‘SPARKS-GRIFFIN CHAPEL ;Thoughtfu; Service — 2-5841 DIGNIFIED seRvices B Home—FE 4-1862 Funeral FUNERAL HOME ‘Ambulance Sevice Plane or Motor FE 2-837" PRP ee ee $150 FOR PAIR Excellent loca- ef burial spaces, tion LI 2-2167 The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL. FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. |. All errors should be re rted immediately, The e558 @ssumes po respon eibiltivy§ for errors other than to cancel the charges § | for that portion of the first insertion of the advertise ment which tas been ren dered valueless through the error. When ———— your adjustments will t Without i. | Fe | ments = type sizes larger than agate trpe is 12 voan seen the day previous to cuuicasiea: Transient Want Ads may = cancelled up to 0:30 am. the ‘day of publication — the first insertion. CASH WANT aD RATES Linea 1-Dey 3 Days 6 Days Bigg service will id June 8, at 11 am from ‘Allen's. "pineral Home with t ¢C. Oliver officiating -- Interment in East tery. Graveside service under the wn (Ceme- auspices of the Orion Masonic No. 44 F&AM. Mr. Brom- ley will lie im state at the Allen 5 _Puneral Some: take orien ve —— ais erondale Prd wives dear father of Paectzke: de ior’ ting. Interment in White — Cemetery. Mr. Oliver will lie in state at the Pursiey Funeral Home GAMACHE. JUNE 5. 1956. WILLIAM) J . age $4 dear! Louie Kenling Jerry and John Gamache Fu- netal arrangements will be an- nounced later by the Voorhees- . Sipie Funeral Home LALONE, KATHERYN MARY i724 Memoria! Southfield Twp. daugh- Mrs Musene La- ay et 3 pm. at White _.Chapel Cemetery. , GEORGE, J. R., 16928 > yerminghoes, Saena inée Riley) father Earl } dear mother of Youlanda ‘Missionary Rev. George D. Mur- in imetery. Mrs in state at. the Pune Ho’ to the church for burial. Funera! ar- by the Sparks-Griffin he ic b Tihurs- Home OY nite, der, basa wed husband of Mabel 4|" and epportunity to develop a ca-- + DON'T 2 $150 gi86 $2% fF 3 150-2700 3.88 4 180 «63.4886 8 225 405 6.00 6 270 486 ©6720 7 315 S67 840 & 360 648 960 ® 405 7.29 © fo.80 oe BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. Today here were replies at the Press Poe esS. Qe Seer YF MY CAB DRIVERS. STEADY AnD emal! dies im person. Ham- lin Teel ‘sb achine So. 1671 E. ‘Hamlin Rd. Rechester, Mich ——- || EXPERIENCED OPERATORS. eee PE E3800 & otec sete tournapull. 1 $s. EXPERIENCED moe ae. ‘| Co-operative Real Estate Exchange E 2-026) 1075 W. Huron office in the following boxes: 1,2, 3, 4, 13, 16, 25, 27, | | 28, 31, 41, 44, 45, 46, 53, 7 | 4 59, 63, 66, 71, 78, 83, 85, 97 97, 111, 1b. Help Wanted Male 6 ATTENTION rE [ode at A call to the story you sellin 54622 will jobs in the nation. Full or part of one of the ANBITIOUS MARRIED MAN With good car to handle service calls and replacement business This is not @ canvass deal. Man must be nea. appea-.ng and able | to handle the public This position | offers protective service territory. , | Income from all seevice and re- | | placement sales paid weekly. Ap- kt in person only, 9 .o 12 a m,, Haggerty 19 Water St ae i AMBITIOUS HONEST. | Sincere, mature man between 25- 40. for a career selling life insur- . ance, continuous training program $300 per month Plus ¢ommis- sions to start. Call Mr. Pohl, the Life Insurance Co. of Virginie. 1669 W Huron 8t..FE_ 2-021 BUMP AND PAINT Sey noes pay and steady work, must be ex- eters and have tools. 22 Au- T NAGER FXPERI- enced to take charge of Credit Dept. tn large local store. Write. givity experience réferences, age WTD MAN seed “GIFT SHOP EX- and starling salary Permanent appointment at good salary for - . the right person ite 1 Pontiac | _Press oR 13 CAB Steady. part time, nights. __Huron we DRIVERS. STEADY DAYS. 1ol Ww |BARBER WANTED | FOR § pireaby ¥F _ work. 1469 Baidwin 4 DRIVER WANTED. - WITH _ OR without route. for ary cleaning Desitees. FE 8-2775. or FE £0106 after ‘Draftsman. : Map Maker Position as a maker and — general @rahmans A vith the Oak- | jand County planning commission | reer i» an interesting and ex- panding field Experience in mu- nicipal planning preferred, aiso- experience in nom - mechanical draftsman Map making. archi- tectural drawing or commercial art be considered. Starting salary up to $4,706 8 yr., depend- Merit in- yeration, sick leave and gther fringe -bene- fits. Apply personnel office. Oak- land Office "ag. 1 canarets St. Pontiac 15 FE 3-7151, ASS UP| -| MONEY! belongings. for cash through Classified Ads! | |FE 28181. BABYSITTER IN| TASMANIA t Sell unneeded = THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDN NESDAY, JUNE 6, 1956 ‘ Ip Wanted Male 6 aml pert time. 28 or older. Apply 438 chard Lake Ave. DIE LEADER DIE MAKER MACHINE HANDS a lpg eggy DIE MAKER FOR man to train for manager. Excel- ine rermaetoors for advancement. pay. Life insurance, hos- pitalization Retirement plan. See Kir’ Pierson, Shoe Dept.. Pederal Store GRINDERS, . SURFACE | GAUGES. Jigs ‘ana fixtures. Days 58 week Must have job shop expe: — Ae bead Ore hag fle Rd. Berk Taroee aa AND Sri FOR fabricating be able to print work, Sunbeam Manufacturing £2» $454 Dixie } Hwy, Drayton Pi. Pi. ~~ RAILROADS NEED MEN from this Area to Train ar STATION AGENTS CEMENT AS- SURED by written contract upon completing training qualifying you - for Agent, Operator, or money refunded. Interview hours: 10: 00 am to 1:00 d 10 00 pm. Con Waldron Hotel. If married, brin __Wife If under 21, bring parent ~ STATE-WIDE Real Estate Service of Pontiac NOW READY TO ADD ex enced full time salesman usi- ness real estate sales and listings from 26 offices through- out Michigan. Dont waste your time on = oe commission, Apply in De CHARLES, REALTOR i117 8 "reseraeh PE 4-0521 Job Setter Must be experienced in setting 7 precision work on Mest types machine, Apply in person only. No phone calls. Employ- ment office closed Saturdays DANIEL’S MFG. CORP. __ TT _~Orchard Lake- Ra LAYOUT MAN For fixture fabrication Apely tn person oda Industries 66 N_ Parke St Machine Repairman Por job shep, experienced on hy- ri | Immediate opening, _Melp Wanted Female 7 7 PAR at Albert "iatr Stylist, -BRoadway _ 32283. CLERK- TY PIST per mont . Pontiac ene MANAGER, EXPERI- take charge gf Credit store ite, COOKS, WAITRESSES AND DISH- washers: Jet —— ane Wood- ward. corner South Bl “EARN MONEY AT ae FULL, PART-TIME” BOX 6 PON- TIAC .PRESS. EXP BEAUTY OPERATOR. AD- vaneed training preferred, but not necessary, Avon Beauty Salor OLive 2-8111. EXPERIENCED | GIRL UNDER 45 ® e- pepe in tamiiy of 4 No ironing. stay nights, pleasant room and "Help Wanted 8) Seale Seve al Business Services. 13 Share Living Quarters 30 “ a mg away ‘iDING AND INSULA- - : . NG A NS - fn "person ‘180. N- Perry. | “ions Fg 63500 or PE. 48633. “Pe, comnatite i, anys res a EL yee mae Al PLOWING. DRAGGING 4 ty bs type PE 56-8734 or FE ALL KINDS OP CEMENT WORK. _PE 8-37 BIRCK, ree AND | work. Also chimneys. No job too ALL POWER LIFT Plowing discing, _joading. Cow manure GARDEN PLOWING & D- ‘AGGING. UIPMENT. veling end FE 4-3371. JR. MATHEMATICIAN _..... $400 OFFICE MGR. TRAINEE $300 ACCOUNTING CLER. ree. $300 SALES. MUST TRAVEL $500) Claims Examiner. .$518. | 2 years adjusting experience, CAREER CENTER | B-] RIKER BLDG. JUNE GRADS REGISTER WITH US NOW te LL ney YOUR JOB OPEN NTIL ADUATION, MID- WEST wee C STATE BANK BLDG. FE 5-9227. Instructions 9 LEARN TO DRIVE THE SANE- AT “ “WAY DRIVER Bus. FE 2-2253 Res FE 8-1645 LEARN WELDING FOR BIG PAY opportunities. easy to train, spare time. Compiete instruction tn arc and acetylene Welding, Get — facts Utilities inst... S02 2 Pon- tiac Press MEN, WOMEN AND COUPLES TO MOTEL Management NATIONAL MOTEL TRAINING, _INC. Box 1, Pontiac Press. Work Wanted Male 10 WANT WORK 103 2 BOYS. AGE __of any kind A-| CARPENTER WORK NEW 4 & repair. PE 44210 BATHROOMS REMODELED Free estimates. FE 2-0300 or FE: 18, FE 5-7 |BARTENDER OR MEAT COUN. | | ter man 1780 8 Milford Rd. MU n- | 4-8060 | BOY. kind. Outside ‘preferred FE 2-2638 | BRICK, ‘BLOCK AND _ CEMENT | work FE 46773 20. WANTS 3 WORK OF ANY repeir. Murdock, — FE. 23-7861 |COLLEGE GRADUATE DESIRES summer job before entering grad- uate school. OR 3-1985. CARPENTRY, CABINETS. FOR: mica and finish work, additions. _repeirs, OM 3477) CARPENTER EAVESTROUGH. | ing, cement work, remodeling, ad- dition and barn repair. By or by hour FE 8-3580 or 4-8833 CA —} CARPENTER AND CABINET work New and repair OR 3-4857 ‘@ARPENTER WORK ALL KINDS Reas John Featherstone, FE 4-1330 | CARPENTRY WORK WANTED NO job too small or too large. Free _est. PE 3-720, FE 8- CABINET MAKER AND “CARPEN- Kitchen & specialty. FE ter PULLY EXPERIENCED TRACTOR or truck mechanic and welder. GARDENING & LAWN SERV. FE 8-2028 or FE 5-8261, cay or night. HAND DIGGING, ANY KIND, large $8 Weeds and bush cut- ting. MY 2-3603, OR 3-9654 LAWN MOWING OR ODD JOBS _by pensioner. Phone REp_ 03921. MIDDLEAGED MAN NEEDS steady job. Caretaker, watchman _or janitor, FE_ 2-002 _ MAN DESIRES WORK OF ANY kind. Call between 8 ard 4 p.m. FE 4-0227 PAINTING DONE WALLPAPER tremoved FE 2-2116 — PAINTERS HELPER WANTS full or part time work Call FE Berta er PART TIME MECHANIC JOB with lots of work. after 3:30 pm Have no objections to Saturday or _ Sunday. OA 8-3644 PLUMBING WORK DONE REAS- onably OA 43868. PLUMBING WORK W.aNTED. R ble. FE 5-1016 WANTED. ROCK LATHING NO __job foo large, too small FE 5-0394 Youno MAN DESIRES WORK OF any kind. FE 8-3 | YOUNG MARRIED aa steady - work immediately _ 4-114 ee sate YOUNG _ MARRIED MAN DE. SIRES STEADY WORK WITH | GOOD PAY. PHONE FE 2-1321. DAY WORK Work < Wanted Female 11 LEP LLL PP women WANT WALL WASH, ine and cleaning FE _ 17-0223 WANTS abe) | work filling in for vacations. FE | g-274 £ ALL TRONINGS. $3 A BUSHEL, ick-up and deliver, 1 day serv- ce. EM 3-0050 ALL IRONING $3 BU. PICK UP and delivery 1% day service. FE 8-2316 BABYSITTING, 1 CHILD. IN CITY. _Hour or by week FE 4-2903. BABYSITTING, VICINITY OF LIN- _da Vista. FE 8-2510, eves BABYSITTING WASHINGS AND ircmes done $3 a bushel. FE DAY WORK. 3 OR 4 DAYS WEEK. Exp. with references. FE 5-1973. ENVELOPE STUFFING AND AD- dressing done. FE: 2-7057. WAY TRAINING L j PE _8-0416-, FLOOR ° i} | | | | “ELECTRICAL phd lel Ng FH Gee Electric. eE fen or FE 8-3677 Well ind pump OR 3-2396, Dressmaking, Tailoring. 1 16 FE sane DRESSES, COATS & AI- ee “ abet Z ae _ terations — wei Huron. FE 4 E. Pike a wr EROPESSIONAL _Typewriter | Service 22A 4 T0TT - ___Garden Plowing 168 eee sitpeiting’ soon: wert, Al ROTOTILLING | _ps'ts,_it'w"'Lawtence st Fase REASONABLE FE 2-001, Miteell's. gd ee | . Upholstering - EAKLE’s CUSTOM UPHOLSTER- ing 6174 Cooley Lake Rd. EM 39641. _Free_ estimates. THOMAS {UPHOLSTERING | 4_8 TELEGRAPH E,_§-8888 ISHES TO | Si tol uae os ar cL} _@ 6-024. - Wd. Transportation ; 31 at WOMEN WANTING RIDE > wor House remy Drayton. oR 33747 after 5 p Wtd. Contracts, / Migs. 32 DO YOU WANT TO buy a land contract? For quick results, call; _G. Trocke — - Realtor 1648 Union Lake Rd. CASH ” Por land contracts. New or old., Large or small. Buyers waiting. Prompt courteous service, EM_3-4671 ROTO TILLIN Lawns and gardens. wks Dutch- er OR 3-513" ROTO - TILLING L4WNS8S AND gardens. OR 3-9784 TRACTOR WITH POWEP LIFT SANDING. OLD FLOORS a specialty, Carl L. Bills, __2-5789. _ FLOOR LAYING. SANDING. FIN- ishing. 12 yrs exp. Guar. work. geod estimates. Leo & Bob, FE F R LAYING. SANDING AND finishing. 10 years experience. Modern honors guar. work. pean SANDING. LAYING, FIN. P. pocket 491 Central, FE GENERAL BUILDING REPAY rick, stone cement work. ‘Plas _teria g_and tile work. HOUSE WIRING DONE aka ably. Free estimates given. FE eae zoe MOVING. FULLY _ equipped. FE 48450. L. A. Young GUARANTEED ROOFS, ALL kinds, Est. 1918. — Marsh, _353_N. Cass. FE_2-3021. 2-8946 Jos. FLEMING. FLOOR Soe Sanding, finishing. 155 Edison. Ph FE = JOHN TAY LICENSED FLOOR ‘CONTR ACTOR aa pia ee 2410_ CRANE OR_3-1616 NO p10 oTRG FREE ESTM. Guaranteed. IDWEST. Water _ Proofing. L eee PAPERHANGING, PAINTING, FE |. t ailabie for garden, sank farms pe new field lawns. Vicinity of Baldwin &# ton. _FE 4 8543 WEST SIDE PLOWING & GRAD- ing. Also blac dirt & manure. FE 4-4228 Laundry Service LACE CURTAINS. PLAIN CR RUF- fled. Beautifully ee Pontiac Laundry. Phone FE 1-810 FOR FAMILY a ae SERV. orgs Pontiac Laundrv 2 WASHINGS-IRONINGS. DONE IN 18 | a _ Michigan Animal Rescue League ‘Hobbies « Supplies _ 24A NEW SCRABBLE 8ETS8. $3 PAINT. iframes sg FE 2-1414 Notices & Personals 25 tte ee eet AAA PRIVATE DETECTIVES Ease your mind of worry by knowing the fac about Domestic or bus. nao __Private consultation FE 5-5: ~ Aerotred Knapp Shoes” Fred Herman 2070 ‘Airport Rd. OR_3-1593 100 WEDDING INVITATIONS, §7.50 Sutherland Studio, 18 W Huren __ Printed _papkins — Past service AUDIVOX HEARING AID. RM my home. Bea J and deliver. _Call PE 5-1910 0 _18A Landscaping ALL _maintaining FE ee BULLDOZING ee FE 4-9978 CLARKS LANDSCAPING SERV- vice, Within 25 miles of rontiac _ Topsot) and | sod. FE 8-3691 COMPLETE _ LAWN Lawn building, fertilizing meewe. Free estimates. _3-5621, or OR 3-5015. DAN'S LANDSCAPING SERVICE. Complete lawn mainivenance and _building FE 2-8712 or FE 4-6510 LANDSCAPING & ee “WORK. and OR _plaster repairing, FE 71-0932 PAPERING. PAPER REMOVED. Plaster patching, inting, general _Tepairs, Wall washing. FE 5-9937_ | PLASTERING. NEW AND YD REPAIR | Vern petites FE 17-0251 RG. sanding and finishing. Phone 5-059: l= REMODELING _ AND | building mymintenance, Cement) work roofing. siding, ace breezeway and porch enclosure Free estimates, Ph. EM mr “PLASTERING | AND PATCHING. 3-4837 wEwiika— soReenaaa AND | cement work of all kirds OR | 3-9082 Before T am. or after _5 pm ~“TRENCHING AND _ BU LLDOZING R_D_ Tompson FE 4-6841 | bal al etal! ON FOUNDA- | jon & conc _tos ft. eeteegs te Uoor for existing | FE $-0777 Building Supplies 124 BRIKCRETE World's mort modern masonry. pe Siab Inter Lake Brikcrete. 128 sn eres: Walled Lake 13 PPLE LOL PP Business Services a eee id 1 A-1 EAVETROUGHING, FURNACE | Reas. rs cleaning and repairs. __2-5832_ 5932 BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS alls and windows. Reasonable. _Pree est, No __No obligation. _FE +1631. APPLIANCE SERVICE | We service all makes of automatic | washers, wringer washers, refrie- erators. Radios, cleaners and all types of smal! appliances ROY'B, 6 _Oaklana Ave FE_2-4021. ACE TREE SERVICE = REMOVAL | See Get our b FE) ~ BEACH CLEANING Beaches cleaned, installed, sand- ed. EM 3-208" CHIMNEY WOKk . Of all kinds @ specia'ty includin: cleaning. Also all kinds of bric work including ——— pairing walie a - registered co, FE 5-3701 DRYWALL TAPING TEXTURING our specialty. Free e.timates. OR 3-5000 : DRY WALL BY MACHINE FREE estimates No feb wo big or small. FE 5-4628. EXPERT TREE TRIMMING & Ph FE 5-6593 or removal, _ 3-2000_- repaired by factory trained men! at our store Carat Printing & Office ee ogre WwW. Law- | rence St. J ees 135. EAvESTROUGHING Ew AND | repair, flashings duct work, me planter boxes furnaces cieanra | and rope ired, frg: estimates 1 and Sheef fetal, FE _ Sen _sérvice. _Lester 1 ener ECTR OTOR SERVICE R a ce Pewinding. 2i8 EB. Pie. SEWER R'CLEANING Sinks —Sunday Service, FE .4-2021 HEATING SERVICE - of] burners and mer ™m | SPECIAL Pareaced ae puaces cleaned and | repaired. Outdoor grills built to | order, Chimneys cleaned, re- paired. Rebuilt. Built new. Gas chimneys a specialty. Walis and copings i Tot registered EXPERIENCED HIGH 8CHOO L| senior Would like job babysitting | and doing light housework, Chris- _ tian _home preferred FE 5-5611. EXP. LADY FOR DAY WORK. ___FE_ 4-1797 GENERAL CLEANING Lal THE day. Call between 6:00 a 7:00 i aa FE 4-5745 cad rc for A ply in person. 9 to 12 only. City Directory office, 1% N. Sag- _inaw. ; YOUNG LADY 25 TO 30, GEN- eral office work, typing and _abil- GIRL WANTS pHOUSEWORK OR babysitting. FE 3-77 HIGH SCHOOL aint WOULD like babysitting job. or mother's helper. 4-0822 ity to serve public Dp Shorthand heipful Inte and pleasant work. Apply in person, Auto Club of Mich. after 1:00, 63 N. Perry - m keeper, po other woman in * _ charge. 9-356 —— ; PRACTICAL NURSE AVAILABLE. Hetp Wanted 8 prefer Sor: FE_ 46113 ‘ AGENT WITH AUTO. PONTIAC area, Silverware, Aluminumware, Bibles, Rugs, rapes, g- et plan? he: commissions. No —— needed, We sup- ‘ply all A an- mi ager. 60 vaay roit No, 1. BIBLE SALESPEOPLE World - sales organization, ame te : Baa hace a! rite ( utors, reas, Press’ Box 14, reasonable ANTED: K OR cleaning, by day. OR 3-1032, i WASHINGS AND IRONINGS $3 A ‘ub HRONINGS. $3 A BUSHEL PICK- uP and afelivery. F FE :_2-5079. LADY DESIRES WORK AS HOUSE- TAKE CARE OF eoLDREN i BY hour, day or referably while mother con. ‘1873 Pontiac TYPING AG CLERICAL WORK WORK snd reference eeslcry Fe and references © ty. FE &-2687 after 3 A shel Rochester area. Pickup and delivery. OL 2-387, J LAWN MOWERS | HAND OR POW er, sharpened or repaired. Air cooled motors repaired. One day service, Free pickup and corey: Phone FE 3, 65 Line ; PLASTERING ALL aa H _Myers, OR 3-1345. SAMS GRINDING, CLIPPERS, lawnmowers. ity. FE 4-274 152 Jackson St. |, Saws, Hand Lawnmowers _ Machine meres Manley Leach 0 Bagley St. Saws—Lawnmowers PE 21 sf Shaperne’ 8 Chamberlain st ROVERS WAL WALL WASHING SERV- tees. Janitor window service. seat offices, factories. FE | TREE TRIMMING AND REMOV.- ook 8 hes acemetes Phone FE DON’T WISH FOR MONEY! Make it easily through Classified Ads. To sell, rent, buy, swap, hire, dial FE 28181. NYDER. FLOOR , LAYING. ' FE 5-313. :} PAINTING AND DECURATING, LOWER STRAITS LAWN CUTTING | Compiete lawn maintenance, serv- ing southeastern Mich. Free esti- _mates EM 32071 0, /ROTOTILLING GARDENS AND _jawns. OR 3-2860 and FE 5-1842 ROTO TILLING GARDEN | AND | YARD LEVELING FE 4-€229 TOP SOIL BLACK DIRT. FILL | _dirt and yd grading | FE 5-9089. TOP SOIL AND ort DIRT Tanpec ar i OR $430 ‘YARD 3 a ‘DRIVEWAY ~ GRADING _& back filling FE 5-3552 | YARD “LEVELING. seeding and sodding FE 5-0636 or PE 2-2165 Moving & Trucking - -19) et A-l MOVING-RAULINO EXCELLENT SERVICE : | rE | Reasonable Rates 5-3458 | AA-1 MOVING. TRUCKING GOOD | service 3-6253 or FE 53571 | anytime \A. B HAULING WHAT HAVE ves Basements, ete cleaned | - Trucks 1 to “Rent | TRUCKS. TRAC RS ; AND EQUIPMENT ‘9 ton pickups 1%, ton stake« |} Dump trucks Semi-trailers | Trailers and Tractors { Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. #25 8 WOODWA | Open Daily _FE 44061, PE ' ASHES AND. RUBBISH 1 HAULED. anytime FE 5-394 | GENERAL ae Ton and ‘y stake OR 3-157) or OL; _ 31-6528. eves I HAUL EVERYTHING» ate service 86 State FE 5-7972 INCINERATORS CLEANED | or rubbish cleanup FE 4-5134 LIGHT AND pth d ao of any kind FE - LIGHT AND mete ara UCRING Rubbish hauled Sand, fill dirt and gravel FE 23-0603 WILL HAUL BLACK DIRT GRAV- .) wb dirt and rubbish r cient HAULING A AND ) RUBBISH. | “Call Bil, FE §-503 LIGHT HAULING _ Any place FE 2-66 TRUCKING AND HAULING 1 RUB- _bish. Anytime Cheap. FE | ~ O'DELL CARTAGE Local and Long Distance Moving | Phone FE _5-6806 ~ REDUCED RAT ES Large van to serve you. Smith Morne: _FE_ 4-4864— \Palating & Teenie) 20 | ‘A INTERIOR DECORA- | plaid REASONABLE. REE ESTIMATES. OR = rE! 3.1626. | ; CT “custom IM DECORATING, 1 WALL pering. Steaming service. Com- | apey EM }- A-1 CUSTOM PAINTING. PAPER- hanging. Paper removed. Esti- _mates FE 4-6018_ A-l PAINTING, INTERIOR & EX- terior 10 per cent disc. for cash. _ Guaranteed, Free est. FE 4-9205. “A-l PAINTING, PAPERING _ PAINTING, PAPERING Mason_ Thom pao, FE 4-8364 UALITY WORKMAN- w prices for wall cleaning, interior & exterior paint- _iné. Free est FE 5-0834. ALWAYS DEPENDABLE. PAINT- Bho decorating. 26' vrs. exp. FE MAC'S WALL WASHING . salt ing, reasonable. FE | 5-2 1 PAINTING AND | naoaatie bath tile or floor tile, by the hour or job. Free estimates, A-1 work _kusranteed Cai! FE 2-1006. PAINTING AND DECORATING K. D.__Willhite. FE 5-9580. PAINTING. INSIDE AND OUT. ores estimates FE 56-1949 or FE au _free estimates. FE 3-7663 a f LAWN CARE Mow AND 2 3-154 | 1 | ~_ SERVICE | GRADING | ¢ RD Inc PE eit "ad | ANYTIME | IMMEDI | a aT WERE, 226685 | Wtd. Miscellaneous 28 10l\, N_ Saginaw. FE 4-0639 DURA-CLEAN YOUR RUGS. AND | PEROT ERY PREE EST oR, “SUPPLIES. DAINTY MAID Mrs Ee Mark Burns, FE 2-8814_ EXPERIENCED _ Sh setiere. Winnifred i 70 Cana Re Suess Mich. RB | _ public yai3t FOR _ BETTER ! CLEANING TO | keep colors gleaming. use . Fina Foam rug and uphoistery cleaner Odgers. Waites Notions et ON AND AFTER _ ‘THIS DATE, | = | June 5. 1956, I will not be re-| sponsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself, LJ n, 313 Woodward Ave. Roch- ON AND AFTER THIS June 6 1956 I wiil not be re- sponsibie fer any other debts con- tracted by any other than my- self Wilfred Rounding 824 Pre- mont Pontiac Mich ON AND AFTER THIS. June 6 1956. 1 will net sponsible for any debts con- tracted by anv ofher than mv- self David Stitee 2236 Rosemary Pontiac Mich IN DEBT? IF SO, Let US Give You 1 Place to Pay Fase Your Mind | Restore Credit WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS Above Oakland Theater — Travel Agencies PL NOW ANTE ie CALL Midwest 62170 ELARIN uN \ EL BURF Free eee : Advice ~ DATE, be re- 254 | Reservations anyetere' PLANNING A TRIP? VACATION 8UGGESTIONS AIR-RAIL-SHIP ng rm eco ESCORTED TO OREAT LAKES CRUISES PONTIAC TRAV EE SERVICE 6898 W HURON ST PE 8.3231 Wtd. Children to Board 26 CHILDREN CARED FOR Sashabaw Rd OR 31-5875 (CHILDREN LOVED AND CARED for, FE 2-1730 PRE-SCHOOL CHILDREN BY 1 DAY | $, wee te Licensed home FE Wed. Household ¢ Goods « 27 Re Ree _1 PAY CASH FOR SMALL RADIOS FE 56755, 0 FURNITURE NEEDED | Entire home or odd tote. Get the top dollar, Wil Aa | outright or ros Mt_for Paves on hr ee jon Gana DHPOLAL OF ALL your household goods, cal) MYr- tle 32-1521. |fer vs su _it for you Y OA ONE OF PONTIAC’s LARGEST | furniture buyers. Cash waiting. FE 4-788). nee | WANTED _of_ furniture. _Pnone _FE_2-5523 RAR ree Are WANTED TO ‘Boy : GOOD 3 FT ‘sickle bar mower. H. P. Sutton, MY 2-6432 ‘ WILL soF Ty AND misc, articles, MY 3-1121. WILL PAY UP TO $1000 FOR used house trail Call AR 5-365) _after 7 pm FR 2-7989 3 DATE. | {Tt OR AUCTION 8-2681 TO BUY ALL TYPES - i WANTED. CEMENT NT MIXER. © CALL ve o eeteet ean. ames ‘Geecge Callender. 664 Bay. PE | oi pcovERs. ee & BED.| -Bring in vour contract or call 4-0604. __ CAR DEW PLOWING DixciNna | "Diets Your moterial. PE So7e7.| Guy Hour OE Letthiough No ob- BLOCK Bi CEMENT WORK |. anc dragging. FE 5-6859. Lost & Found 24) ligation & fireplaces, FE _2-2468. GARDEN PLOWING AND DISC- oe | dL OC. HAYDEN, Realtor cK +My iatvice, OW aD tae 6am. Se. Vemks of spars Beles. eats ee TYPE PUPPY. |i6 E Walton Open Eves. Vicinity 4th St, FE 4-8687. TRACTS. CARPENTRY AND REPAIRS. CE- | GARDEN iow AND YARD 2 CASH FOR LAND CON “ment work. PE 6 Ofeveling. Top salt OR 535600. Lost’) LADY 's GOLD WAT H_ 4, Vanwelt, $440 Dine Hwy. CEMENT Peotone wr KINDS. GARDEN ROTOTILLING. 319 E | Lost ENGLISH POINTER 5 ath rives, etc. Jensen, FE | Wilson. 2-6920. Male. Vicinity of Williams Lake CONTRACTS WANTED GARDEN AND TRACTOR — Rd. PE 5-6805. ~ - : elite ~ ~ CEMENT & aoe _PE 48189, FE 40653 & PE 45080 LOST: ON GRIGGS ST, ROCH-| We ee yy What neve Work. FE ‘5-07 PLOWING 4 YARD | ace ester, violet opa.ine parakeet. ees Buyers waiting meee cusTOM B ILDING 1 ioe HA. Fi-| _FE 5-6418 FE 44878 *) * 46 Williams St. Phone FE 2-5841 -Jewell, cashier at a local mar-jment of $150 court costs by|g.Cox, who will spend the first 30|bation and payment of $100 court/Frank L. Doty also ordered Brown) Ball pleaded guilty May 21 be-| ee os ket, pleaded guilty May 14 to sell-\Oakland.. County Circuit Judge|days of his probatiun in Oakland/costs by Oakland County Circuit/to pay all his victim's medical|fore Oakland County Circuit aa epg: -Hour Ambulance Service 2 ing $400 worth of groceries, ring-|Frank L, Doty. County Jai, had appealed a jus-|Judge Frank L. Doty, and hospital bills, = Frank L. Doty. r= SEARS NATIONAL FURNITURE: “a 2 Pc. Bedroom Set “Cameo Oak” Double Dresser and Panel Bed Reg. $151 v & Drawer Chest ¢Y 44x30-In. Mirror $ ¢ Divider and Pin . _ Tray in Drawer of Chest . , Smart modern “Cameo $13 Down Oak" set styled with rounded indented drawer pulls, dust-proof and cen- ter-quided drawers, and y, SAVE $23 | iting) meron that will ad-- : ust to line of vision. - - L 10] 4:1te @.\, leeee) = SUMMER FURNITURE Reg. 29.95 Umbrella ..... 24.88 Reg. 11.95 34-in. Umbrella sg Table ................ 9.88 Reg. 5.95 White Outdoor Chairs .......... ee 499 Reg. 6.95 Folding Chairs ... 4.99 Reg. 22.95 Aluminum on 3 Folding Chaise ...... . 17.88 Reg. 49.95 Aluminum Glider: Spring Cushions ...... 39.88 Reg. 5139 Gray Oak 2-Pc. Suites Reg. 17.95 Folding, Chrome High Chair ........ -. .12.88 NFINISHED FURNITURE edges Three-Way Beds 850)" | , Reg. 39.95 Mattress = $ Harmony House Gray Oak panel Reg. $59 Chest.........$49 i bed and double dresser is made Reg. $59 Bookcase Bed. . $49 Reg. 4.95 Steel Chairs ...... 3.99 of selected hardwoods. Has fully Nite Seands ........... $19 : te ze é dust-proofed drawers, large fpiate : ‘glass mirror and simple straight JUVENILE FURNITURE $10 Down = tie esis Reg. 34.95 Baby Crib in Reg. $130 Triple .. $114 : ; gray or natural...... . 24.88 Lceccreeie ey Ath Harmony House Reg. 9.95 Crib Mattress .... 7.88 _ _ 7 Reg. 9.95 Folding Stroller .. .8.88 weil eq. . oller... Bh 0 * - Les. g 9 - or. Mattress = Esse" Reg. 21.95 Baby Carriage. 16.88 Racivle Gas ~~ e Reg. 5.95 Nursery Chairs... 4.88 . with all-new. felt 88 Sn S tufting, 180-colis, Harmony House \ and firm rolled o. Smart space-séving arrange- : or Box ri = beds in 39-inch widths, , Sp ing s = ht-i : Thick sissal and “ Reg. 12:95 Extension . Table. .8.88 road Guact ae peel — cotton “felt oad: 88 : : ‘x ladder, mattress. Use as bunk ae Reg. 16.95 Chests eeeeeteee 13.88 beds, twin or trundle beds. sgl “54 lovely ea. = t ~ | , ‘i tk nd e Reg. 12.88 Bookcase with © ne coruc eine $3 fews | Drawer .......... ..., 6.88 SAVE 10.07! FullerTwin Spats e. Reg. 32.95 Corner China . . .28.88 +2 Seas cee eat 9. $ Reg. 49.95 Mattress _ * * e ees e «+ @ oe * : Ld eg : \ YOUR CHOICE or Box Spring . “ Shape retaining Fabulous savings for every room in the 88 ie patie: = 88 home! Complete or add new comfort to en stripe ticking. = “your homes now at these terrific savings. Thick este po , I. ding. coils. $4 Down ; USE SEARS SAVE 3.12 SAVE 10.07! _—s Fuller Twin . : | Reg. 149.95 Foam 5 * EASY CREDIT | Latex..Bedding Take advantage of these tremendous sale ; - Medium firm den- : : h thick items with either an Easy Charge Account Map le Bunk Beds cee *pecutifully 88 or Convenient Payment Plan! Buy now. Sturdy Hardwood construction ——n = aa : — inch solid post stock. Ladder, — able and restful $10 Down ft Sears Furniture Dept—Second Floor guard rail, and mattress includ- sleep. | Full Size a\E | ae ed. Use as twin beds as well as 119.95 Twin Size Set ......89.88 po ee as - | ar ee : 5 ee, SAVE 50.07! eee ’ 2 , / s . : : 7B * : _ , Ob You monty 154 North Sa St. Phone FE 5-41 | 1S aliifaclion guaranteed ov your money back SEARS 154 North Saginaw St. FE S-4171 ] ‘ F ya } is : eo : Pee i Ses po : I, \. ( rs j . i 4 ‘ fy i, iy. { i | ; ce 4 i \ vy ” =e feo ss — on y i 7 % ‘ er Pe J EEL, a : tM, a fg é i/ i | [ey ce {\.| f a ia. rie Pele ie) J A ; fi da : } Li os ? ; oe, f fi Noe ai, H } i j : L.A 4 ¢ ee Coe My thas Pu AES