Turnpike Act Facing First Court Te + < The Weather _ Mostly Cloudy, Some Rain Details page two - THE PONTIAC PR *. ca Ad ie a P * & & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955—72 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE .. 118th YEAR ( & Steel Workers in Talks With — ) More Firms Union Seeking Increase | in Wages From Six Biggest Producers one € * | | PITTSBURGH (?) — Two more of the “Bix Six” basic | steel producers lined up| their top bargainers today | to find out how much of a wage increase the CIO} United Steelworkers want. | USW President David J.. McDonald continued to head the union negotiators as they took their demands to Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. and Jones and Laughlin Steel Corp. MeDonald has personally direct ed all negotiating sessions since they began Tuesday in sessions WORST DUSTER ROLLS IN — what aged residents called the worst ber. This picture was taken yesterd Dustiest Day in Town's History Hits San Angelo Winds in San Angelo, Tex. brought dust storm that they could remem- ay afternoon as the storm rolled in a thick silt. with U.S. Steel Corp., the nation’s largest producer. The union has announced it is seeking a sizeable wage increase but has given no indication of what it considers sizeable. The 600,000 USW members in | Hopes High for Quick End to British Rai 8 Americans Iway Strike © + é | ciplinary action for idleness begin- Dust, Hail Lash ning today. : | Monday for a three-year contract teed wage plan. | Another bargaining session was | scheduled for early afternoon | Ford and the union signed the ;new contract yesterday. Meanwhile, scattered walkouts ef both GM and Forg workers across the nation were subsiding, although about 25,000 GM work. ers and 5,000 Ford workers were reported still idle, LJ and Ford workers to get back te | their jobs. Reuther sent telegrams | to all GM locals saying work stop- | pages were ‘‘sabotaging national of AP Wirepbote bringing a half-hour of midnight blackness. Winds up to 70 miles an negotiations.” hour smashed windows and roofs and dust covered the whole town with Last night the union notified Ford strikers they would have no | protectton against company dis- CONTINUING STRIKES The continuing GM strikes were Texas; Damage Is Widespread tn lee Kae SAN ANGELO, Tex. u*—Whip- Sas City and Parma, Ohio The UAW has warned both GM | the basic steel industry now earn | an average of $2.33 an hour under a two-year contract signed LONDON (#—Union and government negotiators met | Win In France | for two hours today in their first full talks to end Brit-| The Ford walkouts were centered lashing thunderstorms, some load- at aircraft and auto assembly ed with dust and hail and charged | They kept mum on the trend of the talks, under a strict secrecy ; agreement. But they went back and forth from negotiating sessions in high fumor like men without too many worries. It was quite a contrast from the grim air that hung over the Ford Motor Co. bargaining last weekend before an agreement was reached including a supplementary guaran- Approve Survey by School Board | Panel Reverses Former | Stand on Merchandising Check in Area Pontiac Board of Education re- scinded its May 12 stand Wednes- day night at its regular board meeting when it granted permis- Jion for the distribution of a mer- chandising survey through the lo- cal schools, | Grades one through nine will handle nearly 13,006 question- naires which are to be taken home Friday, filled out by the parents and returned via the | children by next Tuesday. The board had previously gone S GM, UAW Negotiators Judge Denies Seem Sure of Reaching ‘Settlement Before Sunday DETROIT ® — Negotiators for General Motors Corp. and the CIO | United Auto Workers appeared confident today they will reach a con-| | tract settlement before a Sunday midnight strike deadline. i | Dearborn Bid fo Give Up Suit Case to Supply Answer on Constitutionality of Toll Road Bill ANN ARBOR (? — The first court test of Michi- gan’s long disputed and | controversial Turnpike Act | began in earnest today after months of adjournment and | delay. Washtenaw County Cir- cult Judge James R. Breakey | Jr. decided yesterday the 'matter would be argued in court despite the complain- _ing parties’ desire to quit the case. The City of Dearborn, represented by James Brod- erick, notified the court that \it wished to discontinue its suit to obtain an injunction 'against the Michigan Turne pike Authority, prohibiting |them from constructing @ /portion of the proposed north-south turnpike e | through Dearborn. | Judge Breakey decided it was on record sz z the stribution | withi 5 acm workers had returned to Ford's big other than that which pertained deny a discontinuance “since the Rouge plant at Dearborn. to the educational program, was) contrary to its established policy. | | This survey, they stated last night, was the ‘exceptional’ | _case. The information noting the last June. Under the contract™Qin's crippling 12-day-old rail strike and then adjourned Conrad, Campbell Are present negotiations ave limited | until tomorrow. | leading U.S. Golfers io waete eo). rae Ge wage efoumied sources said the two sides traded views and | in French Amateur [Texas yesterday and last night. talks unexpectedly collapse, the adjournment does not mean any breakdown. | { Damage was widespread but not | - -_——* Hopes stayed high for a PARIS » — Joe Conrad of San) believed heavy at any particular | | quick end to the strike, Antonio, Tex., the British amateur | point. Injuries were few, One man with hghtning, swept a path of | destruction across sections of It was generally believed that GM was working out a package contract offer for the UAW con- taining income insurance for Route Maps Available The Pontiac Press has received aerial photos.of the proposed toll Union and company spokesmen say there will be no discussions of the guaranteed annual wage this year. The union presented its demands yesterday to Bethlehem Steel Corp. and to Republic Steel, To- morrow the last of the Big Six, Inland Steel Corp., will meet with union negotiators. The Big Six em- | ploy 400,000 USW members. The first of other, smaller steel concerns, Allegheny-Ludium Steel Corp., entered the wage bargain- ing arena today. Allegheny - Ludlum announced yesterday that it had agreed to extend pension benefits to widows or other dependents of its pen- sioners under a plan similar to one worked out with Bethlehem Steel a few months ago. Observers saw a possibility that other firms may make similar arrangements during the current wage talke. The plan allows workers to sign up for lower pensions which will be continued to the survivors. Pre- viously the pension stopped with the worker’s death. Nab Circus Man on Local Charge Florida Police Arrest Advance Agent; Pontiac to Ask Extradition An advance man for the Cole and King Brothers Circus, which played here last weekend, was charged with larceny by conversion yester- | day in a warrant ordered by As- sistant Oakland County Prosecutor | William E. Lang. a Bud Fisher, 28, was arrested by police in Miami, Fla., an hour tion’s industrial boom. Some London newspapers said it imight come within 48 hours. Lev Is Recalled LJ { | Despite these hopes, however, in ena @ ce) _Jim Baty, leader of the striking | Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen, told news- ship at Chantilly. Hatmaker Will Testify. “men after the meeting Again on Alleged Graft; = “Nothing of a material kind has | The peace talks began at the | | elope ate ’? | Wool Charged by U.S. “ ae | Ministry of Labor minutes after Queen Elizabeth Il warned in a speech opening Parliament “the grave situation created by the interruption of the railway servicts.”” WASHINGTON — The Senate | | Investigations subcommittee called | | Chicago hatmaker Harry Lev. for | further testimony the | 'wake of punitive action against | two procurement officials linked! Meanwhile, efforts to spread a With) his (activities | wildcat ¢eamian’s strike to the “he a VE 1 “ll D . Ano | Queen Elizabeth failed today and Chairman McClellan (D - Ark) | the pride of the Cunard line sailed said Lev still has ‘‘a lot to explain” for New York as scheduled. after two days of testimony about; The vessel will call at Cher- today in his dealings with the government. | bourg, France, where she is due4 The Air Force announced last | '° pick up a group of passengers : _,; including Soviet Foreign Minister night it has filed court - martial! y yq Molotov. Capt. Raymond] About 800 British seamen, most- Wool, who formerly headed mili-|ly stewards and catering person- tary clothing procurement activ- nel, have struck in Liverpool and ities in New York, Wool is now in| Southampton, tying up six trans- New York, where his wife gave | atlantic liners and stranding birth to a baby Monday, but is American tourists and emigrant assigned to Dayton, Ohio, pending | families. The strikers want better action on the charges, He could | working conditions. not be reached for comment. Only about 30 of the Queen * * & | Elizabeth's crewmen walked off The Air Force said he was and Cunard officials said “we can charges against of | | which has slowed the na- goif champion, and Bill Campbell , died when struck by lightning. | of Huntington, W. Va., American Walker Cup team. captain, led |the way today as eight Americans | went into the fourth round of the French Amateur golf champion- | Conrad scored q smashing 6 and 4 victory over F. Alvarez of | France in the third rewnd. Camp- bell eliminated L. E, Evans of _ Great Britain, 6 and 5. Bruce est member of the U. S, Walk- | er Cup squad, won from R. | Carter of France, 5 and 3. ' Other Americans to reach the fourth round were Don Bispling- hoff of Orlando, Fla., Bruce Coffin of Salem, Mass., Joe Bullins of Winston-Salem, N. C., Col. Robert Conrad of Collidge, Ariz., and Lt. Jim Gray of Jacksonville, Fla. Missing Girl Found Hiding Out in Attic. DETROIT * A 12-year-old Detroit girl, the object of a police 'search for more. than 24 hours, was found hiding in the attic of ‘her home yesterday, apparently | because of an argument she hac with her parents. | Dorothy Jean Kaufman was found by police after they heard “| workers while unemployed, plus boosts in wages. pensions, insur- ance and holiday and vacation benefits. Tornado reports flew thick and | fast for a time, but there was no) word of the funnels touching the | ground. Six of the ominous clouds | were sighted, j * * | Thick dust swirled with the | , Squall_line_and San Angelo report- |hour to the workers. was ed its worst duster in the memory | | of old settlers. Thick dust at Sweet-_ | water caused 10 autémobiles and, a truck to collide, injuring four | * * * 'Fort Worth area normally daylight | |hours became black as night. | deadline, $1 Million Blaze. a year. TALKING TO UEW TOO GM is carrying out separate talks with the CIO International Union of Electrical Workers, also | with a Sunday midnight strike Hits Resort City Jerseys Coast Town be} GM has the same choice as did * Suffers Huge Loss in | of guaranteed wage — company- Ve . | financed “payments. for laid-off 2'2-Hour Fire | workers, supplementing state un- | employment benefits — or face a SEASIDE HEIGHTS, N, J. —| certain strike. Fire driven by a stiff northeast Ford preferred to grant a modi- wind reduced a four-block area of fied guaranteed wage rather than ‘beachfront concessions to ashes to- | be idled by a strike while GM day, Damage was estimated at a| CoWld continue producing for the | present lush car sales market. llion dollars Fine : f 15 tle | Few expect GM to buck the ire companies trom a 19-mil€’ union and take a strike that would How close or how different any, GM settlement would be to the | Ford pact, which the UAW claimed | was worth more than 20 cents an! the question intriguing the auto indus- | Under the union's value estimate | persons. At a score of points from of the Ford contract, a similar | Cudd cf Portland, Ore., young- | central West Texas to the Dallas- | deal for GM’s 325.000 auto workers | and 35,000 electrical workers would | cost GM about 150 million dollars charged with permitting doctor's " bills to be paid for him by an Air Force contractor; with falsi- fication of travel vouchers, and , with accepting gifts and gratuities | ‘for services rendered.” The Army announced the sum- | mary suspension of Ferdinand Tar- | | taglia, former research and devel- /opment chief of the Quartermas- | 'ter Corps’ clothing purchase divi- | | sion at Philadelphia, after Lev had | ‘named him as his partner in a carry. this loss comfortably. noises in the attic during a search of the Kaufmayp home. Her school teacher told officers Arizona’s Heat | ter scho , tthe girl did not come to school Just Too Much : | Tuesday and that she asked anoth- ler girl to go on a walking trip to Even for Snakes |Pontiac with her_to win a Gitl Scout ‘‘walking badge." PHOENIX, Ariz, U—Arizona's weather was too hot even for some * of its native reptiles yesterday. Monkeys Shine Dr. Herbert L. Stahnke, director | the Poisonous Animals Re- | of patrolman reported the monkey area converged on this oceanfront resort as the flames threatened for -a time to vault a narrow street into a congested hotel and room- ing house section. At least 84 amusement and food stands were leveled by the blaze that raged for about two and a -half hours before 150 firefighters | could bring it under control at about 8:30 a.m, * * * SALISBURY, Md! (»— When &\ Leveled buildings included three bars and the famed Carousel, a ‘leave the market clear for Ford. Charles E. Sorensen, Ford Motor ‘Co, executive vice president and general manager until 1944, in an interview with the Miami Herald yesterday hailed the partial guar- |anteed wage aS a step toward '‘‘greater national prosperity." { Simple Question Has ‘International Flavor _ EDMONTON, Alta. »—Scene in buying habits of the population is | being sought by the Retail Com- | mittee of the Oakland County Plan ; Commission and they said that it | would have no value without the | inclusion of “The Ponfiac area. The survey will be tabulated and evaluated by the University ef Michigan Bureau of Business Research. It was initially pre- sented to the Oakland County Scheol Superintendent's Asso- clation and 54,000 question- naires are now being circulated throughout the county, \ The school’s role is to distribute _ and collect the forms. Other costs |are being borne by the county. Public Invited to Tour City’s New City Hall ' Pontiac residents will get a their new debt-free City Hall dur- ing the next three days when open house is held at the $1,200,000 struc- ture. | The observance, which begins | tomorrow and continues through | Sunday, will be capped by cere- | monies Sunday afternoon at which | fiev. G. Mennen Williams will | deliver the dedication address. Placards will steer visitors _ through the hallways and rooms of ;the new building, and city staff members will be on hand to an- swer questions. Tomorrow's open house hours are 8 am. to 5 p.m. and Saturday’s are 10 a.m. to 4 pm. On Sunday, , the doors will open following the | dedication ceremonies, set for 2 to j200 p.m. in front of the building. Pick Prison Psychiatrist JACKSON oh — Dr. Henry L. read route through Oakland Coun- ty from the Michigan Turnpike Authority, They are available for public inspection at the editorial | offices on the second floor of the Press Building at 48 W. Huron 7. \ —— : ~~. (defendant (the authority) had been | forced to go to great-time ahd |expense to prepare its case.” Broderick then the | court for. additional time to pre- | pare an appeal to the Supreme | Court on the court’s decision to | deny the discontinuance. | Judge Breakey said that this |could be taken to the Supreme | Court with the rest of the case, should Dearborn lost its fight for jan injunction. He added: “The court insists that the wholé |matter be presented to the court |now ... the court is assuming ithat the Supreme Court will have the case. I think it is important Ford: Either agree to some form chance to take a close look at that the Supreme Court-get thé [cae eee | “It is a matter of grave im. portance to the entire state. Your clients are entitled to a de." cision; the state is entitled to ® decision.” Extensive briefs have been file@ by both sides, the Turnpike Aw lthority, the City of Dearborn and [the Michigan Free Highways Proe 'tective Assn., which has | Dearborn as a plaintiff. As an intervenor, the associae ition is bringing up constitutional | questions which it considers neces | Sary to have answered before turn pike bonds are sold and construc ‘tion begins. : | George Kely, attorney for the association, said, ‘Our interest ig in good roads.” He added that the association was siding with thé Turnpike Authority in insisting that the case be continued, ES f: feather business search Laboratory at nearby Ari-| house at City Park~ Zoo was landmark for motorists a busy E ; _ Burks, 28, of Ann Arbor, has} Judge Breakey indicated es ; : } ; as le é Lb y Edmonton hospital yester a : | . after Pontiac Police requested | At the time of suspension Tar-| zona State College at Tempe, put blacked out at night, investigators’ Four firemen suffered smnoke|/ Gave been named to replace Dr. Robert | an answer on the constitutional: his apprehension yesterday after- tagiia was supervisory military | four healthy Arizona coral snakes Shapiro as psychiatrist at South- He is charged with converting to his own use $210 in advance tieket-sale money which should have been turned over to the Pon- tiac Junior Chamber of Commerce, which sponsored the performance. Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem said Fisher will be asked to waive extradition. If he refuses, formal extradition proceedings will be started, the prosecutor added. The warrant was signed by John A. Benson of the Jaycees. Occasional Rain Seen for Pontiac Area | clothing specialist at Natick, Mass. | jn glass cages and started out for | Wool has denied vigorously hear-|his weekly television show in 'say testimony before the subcom- | Phoenix, where the temperature | mittee that he “‘got $50,000" to reached 112. ; | swing a big uniform cap contract; When Stahnke checked the | in 1953‘to Lev’s Mid-City Uniform | cages just before going on the air, | Cap Co. of Chicago. jhe found the four reptiles dead— victims of heat prostration. The show went on, with two @urable rattlesnakes acting as standins. , | The subcommittee is studying | evidence of possible graft in the | buying of benlorty clothing items | ‘for the armed forces. found the occupants had been un- screwing electric bulbs from their sockets and munching on them. No Murder Trials There are no murder trials pend- ing in Circuit Court for the first time in the nine years that Prose- cutor Frederick C. Ziem has been handling criminal cases for Oak- ‘land County, he said today. poisonifig, but none was in serious’ A credit manager (A) spoke only condition. ‘English, the outgoing patient (B) {| The fire—fanned by winds with only Italian, A painter (C) working nearby, ' | gusts up to 50 miles. per hour — | ‘swept south along the boardwalk spoke Italian and French, but not with amazing speed, engulfing the English. freshly painted, frame structures) The cashier (D) spoke English in its ‘way, and French, but no Italian. Police Chief Joseph McDevitt B told C who told D who told said the blaze started in a faulty A, who got the information he electric sign connection near the wanted: how much to be paid on Pier restaurant at Dumont avenue. the bill, =: ern Michigan Prison. Dr, Shapiro resigned effective July 1. Out of the Frying Pan... DAVENPORT, Iowa (UP) — woman rushed into the Davenport Police Station to pay a_ traffic fine amd an officer asked, *What's your hurry? I'm double parked , outside,”’ she replied. Atomic Fires to Burn for Peace at UM’s | ANN ARBOR (®—The fires of the | universe, banked in the atom, have ‘burned mostly for war. Today sci- Ralph A. Sawyer, dean of the, The one and a half million dollar| Here a huge cave was built of | water. In the bottom will be, university’s school of graduate laboratory, whieh was dedicated | high density cohcrete, three feet (Placed the 41 rods of radioactive | ence dedicates a new laboratory |to turn these fires to peace. studies, is director of the Phoenix | today, adjoiris the reactor. The hot- | project with Dr. Henry J. Gomberg test (most highly radiated) work | thick. Three windows of special |} cobalt 60 which arrive next morith cerium glass allow technicians - from Canadd@’s Chalk River Labor- atories. as his assistant. \takes place in the part of the and scientists to look inside. Me- Phoenix Motors, have contributed seven | and a half million dollars to Phoenix. | They did it to make the Phoenix) j questions in the case would be- expedited, 4 The City of Dearborn has objects ed to the turnpike on the |that it would deny the city re sonable control of its streets | public places. ' More specifically, the city that the turnpike would inte ‘with fire routes and a flood control program. | the authority, insisted that the stitutional questions. He said he stitutionality of the Turnpike Act, Fred B. Besimer, attorney tor Mostly cloudy with occasional) The laboratory is the Univer- HUGE POTENTIAL | myth come true. Dean Sawyer | rain is the forecast for tonight sity of Michigan's temorial to the arid tomorrow, with showers end- | dead of World War Il~—The Phoe- It will be the. largest reactor {lab which is next to the reactor. ‘owned and operated by a non-gov- | _ chanical arms dnd fingers do all the work, manipulated by Dean Sawyer says the 3000 Cu- of ‘nix Memorial Laboratory, dedicat- ack ol Grvtivall, ta be beiried as a , in the ground under a shield | ernmental ffstitution. Paid for by the Ford. Motor Co., its cost is one millién dollars. NO WINDOWS It will be a gas-tight, windowless building, housing _ a “water-filled “swimming pool.’ Under: this will be the nium -fuel and its ulti- mate of 10 million degrees. ers on the outside, \ : \ most twice the power of the world's Another cave, identical to \the entire supply of purified radium. In Today's Press County News.......0.-s000.-8 naipniale secsseesssseceucae @ | first, adjoins the high gamma ra-| The sheer complexity of the con- : | Struction and equipment in each of Food News..........37 thru 47, | diation area. Behind both of them the ption. What Feeatery 7 B&G _|is the disposal and decontamination |jt, ail means is an easier story. | [V. & Radio Programs......71 [70M > \| @ome 25,009 individuals, Inciad- | me Mee. (60. esr ., 63 | Tp the high gamma’ sadiation| ing everyone from Doe to { omen’s Pages ease 4 thre 53..\ room is a 16-foot well, filled with |\ the Ford Motor Co. and General } . : i 4 Seer ay { ; ¢ : i awh « , ! bi | - } h,, is ; ae beet os - ries of radiation in the cobalt ts al- to explains it this way. The name} | Phoenix was chosen with reference ‘sumed, to be later reborn, wii renewed youth f eo case be heard to settle-these cons . would have no objection if the con- - Legal Snarl Holds Up Walkout of Michigan’s Tug, Dredge Workers ¢ DETROIT (INS) —~The sound of tugboat engines vanished from most of the Great Lakes today as a strike of 600 tugmen and @redging boat men hit. However, Michigan has been spared, at least temporarily, due to a technicality. * * * Representatives of three AFL ions involved did not learn until y@Merday that they were required | ile a 30-day notice with the | Mighigan Labor Mediation Board to a walkout. mion members in Detroit e agreed to hold up strike entil attorneys examine law to determine if they can legally strike or not, The walkout took effect at ‘a.@B. today at all other ports along | from - Chicago | Lawrence River | th@ Great Lakes, in the west to St. Ms in the East. MAY AFFECT 3,000 strike is expected to affect a ae 3,000 dock workers. . * * ” The walkout called over was union demands for a pay increase | and fringe benefits. The union re- jeeted a ‘‘package"’ offer hy the Great Lakes Dredgemen’s Associa- tion of 12-42 cents an hour. A long strike could halt con- | struction on the Mackinac Straits Bridge. Salaries Committee Considers Requests The Salaries Committee of the | Oakland County Board of Super: visors agreed yesterday that the | County Juvenile Department needs mdére employes. ‘‘but the problem is to. find funds to pay them, said Chaifman Willis M. Brewer. The committee met in con- fanction with the Juvenile Af- fairs Committee to consider a request from Probate Judge Arthur E. Moore for mere work ers to handle the increasing mumber of youngsters up for adoption, on probation, or classed as neglect and dependency cases, “We will try to get together with the Ways and Means Committee before the Supervisors’ June 27 meeting and see if the way can be cleared for three more em ployes.”’ said Brewe: A request from Sheriff Frank W, Irons for eight additional men also will penis ussed with the ways and means group, Brewer stated. City Treasurer, Stricken, Condition Is ‘Critical’ Stricken by a heart attack at his heme last night, Murray M, Ash- baugh, city treasurer, was on the “eritical’’ list at Pontiac General Hospital today. A hospital spokesman said his condition was improving, however City treasurer for the past two years, Ashbaugh is slated to retire when he reaches his 70th birth- day next month, He has been with the city since 1949 With 75,000 mi ‘iles of trunk lines, the Pentagon's private branch telephone exchange is the largest oF its x nd in the world 6 | TIMES. .HAVE CHANGED — W: Auto Workers Union, who sig Motor Co, this week, Had a rough union organizer Richard Frankenste | ed this disheveled appearance in 193 guys for their attempts to organize in ae business, Ponta Deaths bes Charles F R. Kitts | Mrs. Charles R. (Marte | Kitts, 64, of 512 S. Jessie | yesterday at Pontiac General Hos M) St. died iliness Dev daughter of pital after a four months’ | Born Gladwin County 1890, Leon and Elizabeth La Fountain in 22, she was the | LaFayve and was married August 1935 in Toledo, Ohio. Mrs. Kitts had years, coming to | Lake City. Besides her husband, she is sur vived by a daughter, Mrs. Walter Michalek of Auburn Heights: a son, Fdward M. O'Bery of Wake field, Mass., four grandchildren and five great-grandchildren Two sisters, Mrs. Clyde Honey- well of Auburn Heights and Mrs. Tillie DeLodge of Detroit, also sur- vive. Service will be Saturday pm. in the Voorhees Siple with the Rev. A. E. Pott Auburn Heights officiating will follow in White Chapel morial Ce SMA Mrs. Edward H. Roberts The be [8 p.m. tonight the Funeral Home Mrs. H. (Hattie) 63, Euclid St. The funeral will be Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church on Commerce Rd. at 10 a.m, Friday with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery Mrs Roberts died Tuesday in Chicago, Il Mrs. Emery F. Sadler Mrs. Emery F. (Zoe T9. of 102 Henderson St denly last night at her She was hom Oct. 5 the daughter of Hunter 30 from lived here Pontiac at 1 3 Chapel uury of Burial Me recited at Huntoon Edward of 52 will in for toberts, Rosary held from night A.) Sadler died sud home 1875 Lev m Coral, and Clara Pontiac Sateen District: Will Borrow Pontiae School raw $350,000 at an interest rate of one per cent on the sale of tax anticipation notes to mature jn September of 1958, Low bidder at this rate was the Pontias State Bank which entered its bid Wednesday night along with the bid of First of Michigan Corp at a two per cent rate, Vernon L. Schiller, of the Pontiac school said that this amount, The Weather PONTIAC AND cheudy . tenight ecegsional rain. fooler tomerrew. Low temight 52-54. high tomerrow, 64-68 East te northeast winds diminishing tentght. Partly cloudy temorrew night showers ending. Cooler with a low ef 43-2 treasurer district, together VICINITY and temerrew Today in Pontiac P Lowest temperature preceding 8&8 am | 43 A am Wind velocity 4 mph Direction: Northeast San sets today at 407 pm @un rises Friday at 4:55 am Moon rises today at 16 58 pm Moon sets Friday at 9 24 am Downtown Tempersteres OP. Mo scrcce ; lla m . 70 1 & ™..00 ar Wm oo .esee 5 BR. Me. ccccnes lpm 72 | 9s. m.. ae. 4 30 B. Mn. . 40... 67 Wednesday in Pontiac ‘As Tecorded downtown) Highest temperature. ‘ : 68 Lowest temperature... Pes eniiieeeseeie: 87 Mean tempersture.......>....+.. : 625 Weather—Rain, 12 inch. One Year “Age in Pontise temperature... ...--+-eeecess Se ny temperature.... Mesh temprrature..... Weather—Fair. sacsesvecenes 18 Highest and Lowest oot. Temperatarce This Date in M4 Years , 41 fm 1913 district will bor-! Mostly | with | $350,000 | with the $400,000 borrowed from the state on anticipated state ald, will fide the district ever un- til the July tax collections are in. ' sy The board also announced last night that it would open bids fer the new junior high schoo} on June 14 with the contracts to be awarded at 5 p.m. on. June 16 ; According to De, Otto P. Huf Ziger, administration assistant in, charge of building, the bid forms will be written in three parts with the stipulation that the academ- “ section . the leted by buinlding be com- January 16 of 1956 The vocal room is to be com. pleted as soon after as possible and the gymnasium and cafe teria area is to be finished not | bater than March 29, 1956, Re- | habilitation job contracts for three elementary schoois will be | let at this same time. | | This, said, Dr. Dana P. Whit | mer, superintendent of schools, jwill allow the district to move ithe junior high school students in by the second term of the 1955-56 school year. } Wilham Wright was named to ' the principalship of the new Linda | Vista school by the board of edu- | cation. It was decided that inas- | much as Wright heads up the spe- | | cial education program and facil- | ties for this type of teaching -will | be located at the new school, it | would be desirable to place him in this post. Mary Killian Was also ‘named | ned an | married in Bay fat 9 a.m. | Chu THE PONTL AC PRES Ss, AP Wirephete ClO Ford and fellow Ing, t, head of the with the alter Reuther, lef historic contract tmp to the top. Reuthe: en, who held torn clot present = T after a beating Ford workers. Frankensteen now 1s by company touh Port Maine in Jul: 1892 approved when the Supervisors Mrs. Sadley came here from O meet this month.” away 46 yers ago The committee was set up to Surviving are a daughter, Mrs launch and carry through a pro . ral to suppivy Oakiand with an James FE. (Dorothy) Lavender, of sdequate and lasting water supply White Lake two grandci ren probabl from the Great Lakes and four great-grandchildren It is working in conjunction with Three sisters. Mrs. Vica l.umb Simul inty groups in St. Clair Mrs. Stephen Blain and Margaret &nd M b. The three comn Hunter, all of Waterford. alse sur- '°* ae expected to meet jointly Vie within three weeks paid Kelley, Servic 1 be held Saturdays at 2 pm. in the DeWitt C. Davis Ad R { dd. Funeral Home with the Rev. Ken enauer epor eC neth Hutchu ’ { the First Cur of the Naar otto REAM fo See Reds ing. Burial will follow in Oak Hill < Remel ery BONN, Germany (® — Chancel : Jor Konrad Adenauer is preparea John Teoli to meet Rusman leaders, a Wes John Teol!, .67, of 720 FE. Pike. German Government spokesman St. died at 2 a.m. this nonin ESE TE i at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. He But he added that the meeting had been ill three weeks will not necessarily take place in Born in Italy Dec. 27, 1888, he Moscow was the son of Padire and Gio The spokesman said Adenauer vunnina Teolt and was married has insisted there should be an Sept. 15, 1916 in Providence. R. J. exchange of optmons between Hie had been employed at the West German and Russian experts General Motors Truck & Coach before the place and time of the Div. Coming here from Providence meeting is fixed 33 years ago, Mr. Teoli was a mem This exchange of views already ber of the St... Michaels Catholic Yas begun in Paris, he said Church and the Sons of Italy. In prankhirt Russia's invitatic Surviving besides his wife, Fran-, to Chancellor Konrad Adenauer to ces, are foer children, NathamMel visit the Soviet capital brought Teoh and Evetyn DeLellis, both of this wry jest today from a Frank ’rovidence, Perry WWoli and Le- fort streetcar conductor * ona Herresa, both of Detroit. “Maybe Konrad will succeed in The following brothers and sis- what Adolf failed to do — enter ‘ ters living in Rhode Island sur- Moscow.” HL vive: Mary Palmeri, Angie, Al : bert, Mildred Delucca, Celia Lupo, ong Minnie Teoli and Theresa Cale i. Courthouse Building Recitation of the Rosary will be at 8 pm. Friday im the Brace- Smith Funeral Home The funeral will be held Saturday in St. Michael's Catholic with burial in Mt. Olivet Detroit, Herman LeRoy Thompson He LeRoy rch Cemetery, ‘rman Thompson, 68, Malcom and was & v6 Ruth St. died yesterday after several weeks illness Born Jan. 21, 1887 in Fayette lle Ark he was the son of David and Margaret M. Holeman Thompson A cabinet maker, Mr. Thomp- son came here four years ago from Niles. Surviving besides his wife, the former Menetah Winter, are three daughters, Mrs. Alma Foltz, Mrs Betty Lasswell, Mrs “Alta Hogg ‘all of Pontiac, a son, Charles and three eight grandchidren Service Set Friday. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP—Fuw- | neral service for Mark. G. Ver- Wiebe, four-year old Bloomfiela Township boy who died yesterday in an auto crash near Grana Blanc, will be held at &350 a m Saturday at St. Hugo of the Hulls Churct The i the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerhardt VerWiebe of 4641 McEwen Dr.. died after the car which his father was driving col- lided with a gravel truck on U.S ] The parents were not seriously ed the dent He is survived by three sisters Mars Lou and Kathryn at home and Mrs. Irene Rogers of Flint Rosary will be recited at 8 p. m/ Friday at Huntoon Funeral Home, Pontiat Burtal Aill be in Holy Sepuichre Ce tery in thfhield County Water Study Group. Seeks Workers The Oaklanc hy Committee Ww) appropriation is and Means Comr urd of Supervisors to employ two full time staff workers, dccording t Howa Kelley, chaifman I ! vA {i } I t { $7>.000 pre y set le for t ter 1 work Db ul SUPCTY 1SOr } € ne 4 “The men are needed to get the technical aspects of the sur- vey under way,” Kelley stated. “We hope the financing will be Committee Meets Today The special courthouse build committee of the Board of Supervisors is holding its first meeting today in the Oakland County Office Building, at 1 Lafay ette Chairman Willis M. Brewer said the group plans to select a secre- and get started toward launching a program | for securing Oakland “an adequate courthouse."* new ing st tary discussions new great-grandchildren of Pontiac. ’ Also surviving are:two brothers. Earl and Jessie Thompson, living in Missourt | Mr. Thompson is at the Pursley Funeral Home where service will be held Saturday at 11 a.m. Burial T a RSD. AY, JU ‘The Day in bieninenern BIRMINGHAM — Support for a “Yes vote next Monday on a $5,500 000 school bond issue snow- balled today #s two organizations went on record in favor of the proposal In addition, the Independent Citizens Committee — the group which surveyed the need for more school facilities in the Birming- ham district said it was distri buting 10¢ 100 printed f Iders on the necessity for immediate classroom expansion, to schools, service clubs and homes The study plus recommendations were pre sented to the Board of Education last month. The board, with few exceptions, went along with the recommendations Which included committee's the bond issue. Orga ition support for the pro- posal ca from the Burmingham area branches of the League of Women Voters and the American Association of University Women. Marvin Brokaw, 1165 S. Bates, CNalrma of the cititens commit- ee, Said support of the two groups supported the findings of the com- ittee “It shows,’ he said, ‘‘the find- ings of our committee that the need for additional classrooms, “for Accident Victim Two Groups Add Support 4 to School Bond Proposal | Only at SIMMS—Such a Low Price DRESSES 8.95 Value’ be held at the Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel, in Detroit June 11-15. The state convention, according to Birmingham High Twelve president Thomas Campbell, is scheduled for Saturday and Sun- day with the international con- vention slated fer the following Monday, Tuesday and Wednes- day. rham's High Twelwe club) yan, Camp- Birming largest in Michig | is the FRIDAY and SATURDAY! a8 * Lustrous Rayon Acetate jersey % Two Tones—Choice of Colors % Quality Made-—Fine Tailored t ell Said Harriet E. Service will held at 8 p.m.! Friday for Mrs. Harmet E. Steg: litz, 56, of 811 Westchester Way at | Manley Bailey Funeral Home. She | died suddenly at Henry Ford Hos- | pital yesterday. | Stieglitz, a native of Ish- peming, Mich., moved to Birming- | ham in 1928. She is survived by her husband | Van, three sisters, Mrs. Ernest | Hewitt of Birmingham, Mrs. H. | Bechtold of Bell Aire, Mrs. Donald | McClelland of Detroit; and a broth- er, Howard Smith of Elk Rapids. Stieglitz be Mrs. Masculine 3 stud top ... zipper front from A graveside service will be held waist. . . Cuffed snort sleeves . .. set-in Saturday at 2 pm at the Elk yoke ... gored skirt... 2 concealed Rapids Cemetery, Elk Rapids. pockets ... red, green, blue, purple, black with white Louis W. Anderson Service will be-held at 3 p. m. Sizes 9 to 15—12 to 20, and 1414 to 2414. modernizing of existing facilities | tormorrow for Louis W. Anderson, and completion of two swimming 1509 Yorkshire Rd., at the Bell oes {{@ pools for community use is based Chapel of the William R. Hamilton nar ca fact ss al ate —Ladies BROTHERS en facts and sound reasoning. Co. Anderson, a resident here for | The proposal, 1f approved, the past four years, died today at | would authorize the school board his home following a prolonged s to spend the $5.500.000 over the | illness, > next“three years for five new ele. He is survived by his wife, Ber- Special Purchase of Folding Aluminum ‘ mentary schools, five additions to; tha M., two sons, Louis of Kala- A 3 existing elementary schools, mod-| mazoo and Charles of Fostoria, Rockin -Loun e 4 ernizing older schools and com- Ohio; a brother, Harrison of De- ; pleting swimming pools at Bir-| troit; and two. sisters, Mrs. ff é mingham High and the new Derby’ Charles Cleveland of Minneapolis, ‘ Junior High One of the pools Mrs. Hazel Christiansen of Sibley, A $ Svuld be the indoor outdoor type. Towa. Burial will be at Acacia ‘ : . , Park Cemeter) > Re ng Birmingham fire chief . ‘ __ 5 Vern Griffith will be honored to iT Lt ! a moro ila «innen at 7 pi at Names Refugee Chief ; Devon Gat Grltitt ficialls ASHING TI PB —Secretary of ‘ retires A “7 aft 2 irs with State Dulles today named Pierce > the « nt J. Gerety, general counsel of the i 7 * « Civil Service Commission, to take | 4 The state and international con- charge of the bogged down refugee j ‘ ventions of High Twelve clubs will, relief program, | ‘ ; a et > > FRIDAY and SATURDAY Only SPECIAL , 7 : > D 7 Polished tubular alumt- % ° } ’ nem frame with sterdy > y £ canvas seating. Use for > reetfa! eelining of > peaceful récking Felds 5 compactly fer easy ster- > age. > —— === > Ss a a > > > > » > > > > “both will be in White Chapel Memorial | Cemetery. The Rev. Edmond _ L. Watkins of the Joslyn Ave. United Presbyterian Church will officiate. Why other pure sales tax). shee oe errs’ rac: CIGARETTES stock et your favorite brand Per more? Always fresh Carton No hase necessary (fe Tobacco Dept. REGULAR BRANDS ow Prices — —Main Floor Sizes’ 41% ‘0 9 98, North _ Saxinay Compare Style, Choice of WHITES and PASTELS .’. . huge selection of shoes for all surmmer events. SIMMS Selection and Price LADIES-MISSES-GIRLS Flats—Ballerinas -Playshoes Crepe Soles 97 Values to $3 00 {o DE teRe 12'3S Basement " kal pevrrrereretreretrrry é One Piece Wall Cabinet j ® Regular $18.95 Value ® Electroized, Rustproof * 52" Long, 24” High, 11° Deep * White Baked Enamel Finish * Chrome Trim Door Pulls ® Spacious Scares Shelves 98 North ° Saginaw Street SPECIAL PURCHASE! Over 3000 Yards Big Selection—Sensationally Underpriced We don't have a yard- goods department but this was too good a bar- gain to pass up, Sale starts THURS 9 a m price ‘til Sat 10 p.m. effective @ Fine BROADCLOTHS Printed PERCALES @ Sheer BATISTE Ne-Iren — COTTONS Butcher RAYONS Luxury RAYONS —and others FAST COLOR All guaranteed *perfect.’ little of others, FABRICS Regular 59c to 89c per Yard Per YARD PQUALITY, every inch is Plenty of some, ladies’ dresses, children's play togs, aprons, girls’ dresses, Curtains, sport For $ 00 $ 44 shirts. All Yuaranteed — WASHABLE and COLOR Now—YOU Can -PAINT-UP and FIX-UP and SAVE on FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY Specials 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS ANOTHER SHIPMENT—Same Low Price! ‘Dutch Brand’ Outside WHITE House PAINT Regular 3395 O™ BAG Per Gallon NOT Our ‘Best’—but Plenty Good Enough for FENCES, GARAGES, BOAT DOCKS, etc. A LOW PRICE paint with tested formula for any outside use. White only. We've sold hundreds of gal- lons—just ask our customers! ; ap Vv éZ IMa ( BY OROP CLOTH 2 | tease ef Big 9xi2 Cc ‘loth Drop C 88: \ Genuine Lamb's Wool Paint Roller Set $1.59 Value $1.29 Value Heavy duty crepe cloth, treated Metal paint pen C with wax and plastic for extra complete with lambs durability. Easy to handle, but wool roller. Both tough enough for any jeb you for this price. Limit have to do. one. ue. Sve. Thin Paint — Clean Brushes Paint Thinner Quart Bottle All Nylon Bristles 4-INCH Paint Brush te 4 $3.00 Value 4 99 3e Cc ® ; be Value * xe 4 All nylon Excellent for thinning .? regan are _ paint, cleaning brush- nm * > fongee peed es, remove stains, i. a4 tee floor wax, etc. first. All-Metal — Drop-in Cartridge Caulking Guns ‘$2.10 Value No Mess, Throw-Away Case CAULKING CARTRIDGE. Our é4c Value Ideal for Pits any standard caulk. ‘ing gun. All metal case, Plastic nossie, Perma- nently elastic, ' : ~ wer feed. Takes {{@ BROTHERS ‘ / 5 ; P ; . Fle \ : > % ‘ ls }! ‘4 a * } ‘ — § : at ae i \ hee’ | a bec | 7 \ & j La Le \ es MO ee THE PONTIAC PRESS. FHURSDAY., JUNE 9, 195 COOL...COOL PowAire Knit Girdles (Picture B) > A. Pantie Girdle ....... 7.95 C. Figure-Firming Girdle. 5.95 Waite's Corsets—Second Floor So very airy it couldn't stop a breeze! PowAire Knit give you smooth, smooth control, with cool, cool blissful comfort! Fashioned to trim your curves . . beauti- fully! Flexes with your every move- ment, keeps you wonderfully in line! Sizes S, M, L. Hurry in tomorrow . be wonderfully fitted! SAVE TO 3.99! REPEAT OF A DOUBLE SELLOUT! REGULARLY 5.98 TO 7.98! - Sensational..Sale of a Repeated Sellout! 600 More! Cool Cotton Summer Skirts! i, © Exciting Exclusive Prints! Famous @ Four Styles: Box Pleats and Unpressed Fuller Fabrics! Pleats! 12 Gores and Full Circles! YOUR CHOICE @ All Are Crease Resistant! Perfect for .° Sizes 10 through 18! Each Skirt Complete Summer Wear! With Its Own Belt! 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SANFORIZED SAIL-MATES! MIX ‘N MATCH! Popular Summer Sailcloth Coordinates signia . . 6 to 10. Charcoal! Denim Play Shorts . . . boxer Poplin Cap... embroidered in- x] White with Charcoal Trim.”... 1.98 Denim Washable Slacks . . . San- » forized top-sail, zipper fly, full cut. 6-12. Charcoal & faded blue 2.98 Unlined Poplin jackets .. . — _- forized, knit neckband and lets. Gripper closing. 6-12. Cha coal with white trim......... -98 Super sturdy: gail-cloth separates for active sailor son in your family. All designed. to mix 'n match with a top fashion result no matter what you ‘combine. All full cut, long wearing and so easy to wash! Now is the time to scoop up several ensembles for every youngster!. Hurry in today! Waite's Boyswear—Second Floor your new summer ensemble & ARMLOADS OF STUNNING NEW STYLES FOR EVERY OCCASION ,.. ALL WANTED COLORS! 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' Waite's Better Ligeia Waite’s Hondbags—Street Floor “SS | if vs te Pte ————= Hq 0-7) > . , , | : j 7 ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE. 9, 1955 ; ee - fs | A . Ae | Hi . | a isement> two boys to handle and also print . ope s Mrs. Katherine Furgerson, paid a | ° t ail 1 (Advert . ence Homework Ends Paper hie Gee setheee (la eae Police Families Aided 5258’ mortgage on her car and sent | Ets His Way to J = 1 Wi ! ‘gy Newtre! Sele AKRON, Ohio uh — The Mine) oi ot debt to lease | DETROIT uw — A group of bus-/ her a check for $1,000. Sgt. Cashel] ANN ARBOR —Robert David- us nas: ives! : , | s , 0 s : . . ‘ . © | SE Sought by USSR ola Times, published by Joel fae a _,\inessmen calling themselves the|Furgerson was killed on traffic) son made certain of free meals for EGS Soviet Blog Procceran 1s) fast: Bobby Hesi, e De’ Slmeogragbed Hundred Club | i to duty. 110 days. Broke, he borrowed a Get Pep, Vim; Feel Younger 1, is out of business. In an ad-| paper had been published about ‘UNGred Club have organizer __ s. : ; i i | ; ‘ ic ail | Thousands of les are weak, worn-out, ex- vertisement published in the | once a month for four years. help families of policemen killed} The Alaskan moose carry the | dime to call police and get a jail | house pach re bade Lacks bene Pat anc Akron Beacon Journal, the former | —_—__— | in the line of duty. In its most re- | largest antlers in the deer fam-| sentence after ordering and ea!- | xonaees ee “. ee ee editors explained that “Their is, Four-fifths of the people of China| cent case the club paid off alily, sometimes spreading to a ing eight cheeseburgers and {ail- | doses vitamins By and Bz. Costs ae “Get- | scquainted” size only 50¢. At all druggists just too much homework for us are farmers 1 $3,400 mortgage on the home of | width of 70 inches. ing to pay for them << a viel a:iild @\ Tokae} PS ; ee Block // : 4 YUGOSLAVIA Sen \ * “aN 4 Y SPAIN/Z cousica(’) Ge . | V/A ff, TAN 4 / xx ‘ 09* = a * )TURKEY 3 - ck 2 Mediterranean Sea , | —— Ae Se we 86 ALGERIA : | oes (ania?) SOVIET GOAL — Goal of current Soviet diplomacy is a belt of eutral nations from the Baltic Sea to the Adnatic that would separate European members of NATO from the Soviet Lnion and its sateilites At present only Austria and Switzerland are neutral in Central Europe Playing en all Germans’ deep desire for unificanon, Moscow hoids out wutrality as bait for West Germany. So far, West German Chan elior | Kunrad Adenauer has rejected the bait. Southern link in the neutral belt would be Yugoslavia. Soviet top brass went hat-in-hand to Presi- dent Tito, hoping to sell him on the idea. So far, Tito maintains his firm independence.” Early this year Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko went to Stockholm with the reported message IN ALLOWANCE Allstate Cushions 6.70x15 Plus Tax AND OLD TIRE @ They're ALLSTATE Triple-Guaranteed for 18 Months @ Extra Tough for More Mileage with Blowout Protection — @ “Cut-Skid" Tread, Greater Traction for Starts, Stops @ All First-Quality ... Installed at No Extra Cost 21.75 REGULAR NO-TRADE- IN PRICE that the Seviets would not object to a Scandinavian union (Sweden Finijand, Norway, Denmark) if the union would pledge strct neutrality . Rifle Is His Enemy - | while years ago. At that time he sold BUFFALO Wyo UP Denis Harrmet, 15, was wounded in the back by a bullet from the same 2 caliber rifle that had acciden- | « tally discharged a slug into his leg \cheted and hit Denis for HIS FATHER’S DAY he was hunting with it three the rifle to a neighbor. 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PO} r a ; ; é . ve Those are the reasons this is Sears best selling gym. {t's o safe — it's - ; ; 5 ane: al file Plays include two swings with non-tilt seats, 2 chinning PT SOME 1 — r oe a 3 ;, ea it’s ideal for bars, 2-seater glide-ride, firm trapeze, pair gym rings: See —save on this terrific buy now! h ome use In gray, green and Air-Cooled Cushions - Car Side Mirrors 1.79 e Adjusts eaaily to f : r blind ; 8 ps you H s tt gh --traffie. f lvl Chrome-plated i * 1.49 Throw ' New Car , Covers \ Pillows aa a | | Famous “Rex'’ Wagon — 6” 97¢ | One Wheel Trailer Oak Carrier Bars Stee! Ball Bearing Wheels | a Carries $00°Pounds Smoothly — $4-Inch: Support Any Load Here's exciting news from playland...a steel. wagon “New wrap $9D 8 lip on o = own Allstate i - sue Prigst round design A 4.95 ° designed to give a smoother, faster ride and at Sears es fe. Made of smooth Easy to back, easy to’ park! Sturdy barsheld fast to car top = ‘ A FWA P ainst RASS, 4 : - - = } GS eo fimyeml and paced € pen beacken G. by 8 lrge eucton caper Ad low price! Tractor-type semi-pneumatic tires; 1%-in. thick. Made oi vinv! 4 Sturdy __ plastic tach to bumper. 360 swivel fork justable web straps secure lug- Wagon is 34-in. sl atic Se Ae Easy to carry Coil spring. Steel body. gage. Buy now! . sti _ handle , ; : Toy Department—Sears Basement . : 2 d ; ¥ : re ! ' y : 02 pour money back S , 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 " - rs sii rf d i Bola, P . : . a Vii 4 j ye ox Zz F ' ; ; j i a ke r / < ; : , | 34 ’ 4 \ 3 . | s \ : | ( \ : Ses ¢ ® ME Meuse I - al eon’ . \ Shady Adoption ‘Rings Flourish U.S. Delves Into Problem of Black-M arketed Babies WASHINGTON (NEA) — The young girl leaving the clinic ob- viously was pregnant. It was ob vious, too, that she wasn't married, for she wasn't wearing a wedding band and her eyes were reddened and troubled. As the girl boarded a bus, an older woman followed behind and started a conversation. The woman was kindly and most under- standing, Soom a friendship had bies- somed and the girl was sharing her troubles, She would soon be an unwed mother, she said, and had come te the city so ne one would knew, The older woman consoled her, then offered to help. She said she knew a good doctor, and thought she could find a couple who'd agree to adopt the young girl's child. And she gaid she'd take care of the medica] bills. A few weeks later, the young girl had borne her baby—and an- other innocent child had been claimed by a shady adoption ring which would peddle him off to the highest " In 1953 alone, according to latest and as yet unpublished figures from the Children’s Bureau of the Health, Education and Welfare De- traffic of babies who passed from frightened, un- wed mothers to craving, childless often this results {fn say. Because of these and other re- ports, the Children’s Bureau has hired a special consultant on com- munity planning for the prevention of the black market in babies. She’s Margaret Thornhill, one “I want to accumulate all the latest information on the situation of unprotected babies so the Chil- dren's, Bureay will -have some hard-hitting and useful facts to present to socia] workers, citizens, lawyers, doctors and legislators. states laws need {m- and we might want to recommend federal legislation as result of the study.” “Most of the babies involved in the black market are born to young | are unmarried women." she says. ‘The black market operators take ad- T Ferris Plans Course for Doctors’ Aides BIG RAPIDS. —A new, two- year curriculum for training phy- sicians’ office assistants at Ferris Institute was disclosed at a meet- ing of the Tri-County Medical Assn. R. E. Pattulo, dean of instruc tion at Ferris, presented the course THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955 Grandmother Will Take William’s Son to Europe LANSING #—The executive of- plans for members of the associa-| fice has disclosed that Gov. Wil- tion which includes physicians | liams’ 14-year-old son, Gary, will from Mecosta, Isabella and Lake | tour Europe this summer with his counties. grandmother, Mrs. Henry P. Wil- liams of Grosse Pointe. Gary will leave July 1 on a cruise to the British Isles, the Scandina- vian countries, France and Ger- many. The average person has 125,000 hairs on his head. ham on the hoof hasn't appeared yet but A. H. Jensen of the Uni- versity of Illinois reports that tests show pigs. definitely prefer the taste of a ration containing 20 per cent sugar. \ MARGARET THORNHILL vantage of these girls at a time of | deep emotional! stress.” : “One of the most important fac- tors,” Misg Thornhill points out, “is the tremendous growing de- mand for adopted children. There. are simply not enough babies to meet this need no matter what channels parents choose through. to go adoption petitions were filed in courts across the country, This is 60 per cent greater than the | estimate made in 194. “In 1953 an estimated 90,000 | “The sale of infants for a profit | to would-be adoptive parents is due | in & large part to lack of adequate protections in many. states, This is a critical situation’ but it most critical for the individual child who becomes an innocent perty.” The actual case outlined above, which happened in New York City, illustrates how an adoption ring | works, It is one of many Miss a hil! encountered in her recent trip While this case involyed money, the hundreds of others which don't have equally sad results. The older woman who hag of- fered to help did not meet the | girl by accident. She makes it her business te spot a giri in trouble, and she has a seemingly easy answer toe al] worries and uncertainty, In return, the pregnant woman agrees to give up her baby after birth out of desperation and fear. | But when it's all over and she no longer has her baby, she has a ter-' rible feeling of remofse, and it is unlikely she will make a CS tory adjustment. The baby’s future is just as dark. Tt ig taken by a couple who are unable to have a child. This has) been an emotional upset for the. wife whose desire for a child has become an unnatural obsession. As | a result, none of the recognized social agencies will grant her per- mission to adopt. _ But her husband can afford to buy a baby through the black | market. And so thig child inno- cently le used as a cure for a woman’s unbalanced feelings, Miss Thornhill stresses that oth. the same er cases vary aro theme. Sometimes the pregnant mother is falsely led to believe = child will be returned. Later she finds that papers ea signed made it legally possible for | the baby to be kept. Often babies | just hurriedly given away un-| der pressure of well-meaning | friends or relatives. | | Open and a little feet Nl protection. TENNIS OXFORDS Blue—Red Sizes 5 to 3 ad ie 98 Sizes 5t03 Open Monday-Frida Nights | ih o’Clock entiec State’ Bank Aes | 1s | Lawn Sprinkler Efficient Oscillating Type $11 Provides even coverage Size of area to be watered can be ad- justed. Cast aluminum bedy, chrome plated arms Reg. 13.95 SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO. Hose Sprinkler Tough Vinyl Plastic Hose 2.50 Reg. 2.75 It's flexible! Bends aroind trees, up hilis, through. ditches! Sprays from one to 15 teet wide In 25S-ft. lengths. We As AM \ iat Ye Craftsman Mower De-Luxe 18-inch Model $27 Reg. 30.95 $3 DOWN Light for faster cutting . strong for longer wear! Rub- ber rollers; rubber tires; sealed ball bearings in reel Electric Rotary 16-inch Dunlap Power Mower yar 39.95 % DOWN Just flip switch to start! 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Size S THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955 DR, JACOB MARCUS RABBI SAPERSTEIN Hebrew Union College Man Speaks at Banquet | Dr. Jacob Marcus, professor of; Julian Levine and Dr. Samuel | history at Hebrew Union College | Chafers will officiate at the open- and Director of American Jewish | ing ofthe arc. activities in Cincinnati, Ohio, will; Participating rabbis in Friday deliver the address at the banquet | night's service will be Rabbi Mil- of dedication for the new Temple ton Rosenbaum, Beth El Congre- Beth. Jacob Saturday evening. | gation, Ft Worth, Texas: Rabbi | Dr. Marcus, past president of the | Harold” Gelfman, Temple Beth | Central Cotiference of American | Israel, Jackson: Rabbi. Richard | Rabbis, received his B.A. degree | Hertz, Temple Beth El, Detroit. at the University of Cincinnati and | A a be the coed bel ut Un Coll hae at the Hebrew | follow Friday night’s service. He maw aervice overseas in | Saturday evening's banquet wil! World War I and studied at Lane | include an invocation by Rabbi Theological Seminary and the Uni-| Henry Hoschander, congregation versity of Chicago and attended | | B’nai Israel, Pontiac; welcome by | ‘ 2 t 'Harold Goldberg, president of | ate es in Euiroy eee Temple Beth Jacob; greetings from Mayor William Donaldson: He received his Ph.D. degree | remarks by Rabbi Rosenbaum and from the University of Berlin | Rabbi Leon Fram of Temple Israel, and continued bis graduate work | Detroit; greetings on behalf of the in Paris and Jerusalem. | Ministerial Association by Rev Dr. Marcus is the author of an Nelson, president, pastor of series of béoks important to | John’s Lutheran Church, Pon Jewish life and letters, his latest | tac. work being Memoirs of American) A Community open house will be Jews, 1776-1865, He is well known | held Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. as a lecturer and a distingu | Musical Flag Pledge historian of the Jews. oe weer | Slated for Telecast WASHINGTON @ — A musical | ning’s service of dedication will be Rabbi Eric Friedland of Temple Beth Am, Chicago, former rabbi} score for the revised pledge of al- of the Pontiac conggegation, who | legiance to the flag will be pre- will deliver the dedication sermon. | sented for the first time on a Flag Rabbi Sanford Saperstein, the | Day program June 14 over a De- present rabbi, will lead the dedi- | ‘Toit television station, it was an- cation yer at the service Fri- "tring by Rep. Rabaut (D-Mich). day and officiate at the Irving Caesar, composer of such dedication of the religious school | hits as ‘“‘Swanee’’ and ‘Tea for for children Saturday morning. | Two" wrote the score. . ee . Rabaut was author of the law One of the highlights of Friday | enacted last year inserting the evening's service will be the pro-| words ‘under God” in the pledge cession of the scrolls. In the eis Ito the flag cession are the officers and mem: | bers of the board of directors and past presidents and members of 32 on Ferry Drown the building committee. Flower | NEW DELHI, India uw — A bearers will be past presidents of Ganges River ferry capsized 10 the sisterhood. Bearers of the miles above Allahabad today, scrolls will be Jacob Kovinsky, | | drowning 31 women passengers | Jacob,Meyer, Irving Steinman and | and a boy. Twenty other women Arthur Rosenthal. | aboard the ferry swam ashore, SAVE ‘13° portable ! + Available in Two-Tone Colors es you no longer have to “open * the back of your portable to plug it in. SAVE COMPLETE FOR ONLY. LIMITED TIME ONLY! ' AC, DC BATTERY RADIO—Hos all the great Zenith features including Super Speaker, 3-way Portable op- |) eration, your choice of beautiful two- tone combina- || tion, battery-sover switch. | BUY NOW ON OUR EASY TERMS No Extra Charge for Credit ; * AS Little as $1 00 per Week We Give SGH Green Stamps 3 With Every Purchase! eee sess pls.45 see 9S0-99 City, County Men second-ranking committee Demo- erat, said, ““Most members of the committee are for $1.” Chairman Barden (D-NC), on the Leave for Service otter hand, was backing the ad- ministration figure and declared he| Leaving this morning for Army | would accept no more than 95 processing at Fort Wayne, Detroit, cents. were 22 Pontiac and Oakland The Senate, with rare speed and County draftees. a minimum debate, called up the | wage bill yesterday and pushed it| The men will probably take their to passage without a record vote. | basic training at Fort Knox, Ky., The increase, effective Jan. 1,/ or Camp Chaffee, Ark., according would bring automatic wage in-| to local draft 4 1 officials. House Expected to 0K $1 Floor Minimum Wage Hike Passed by Senate in Speedy Action WASHINGTON — Two key House will follow the Senate’s lead| covered workers now making less | tin voting to increase the minimum than $1 hourly. | wage from 75 cents to $1 an hour. | President Eisenhower has asked ifor no more than 9%) cents, | reiterated that position yeste ae Rep. McConnell of Pennsylvania, | senior _ Republican on the Hou. its retailers sold 1,490 new cars in Labor Committee, told newsmen he expects the: committee to approve the final 10 days of May. Sales \a bill for $1 and said the House brought total retail deliveries for j ‘very definitely” will pass it. | the month to 3,523, the highest | Rep. Kelley of Pennsylvania, ‘monthly volume so far this year. Edward R. Silkowsky, 42 Au- gusta, was named leader of a Lincoln Sales Up 65, and Robert B. Lengmulr, 710 | DETROIT w — The Lincoln Di- vision of Ford Motor Co. reports 13-man contingent from County Board 67. Besides Silkowsky, inductees from the local board were: John C. Sheffield, 39 James; John L Deschaine, 37 Elisabeth Lake Rd, lan G. Lamont. 173 Nelson, John R. Huff- man, 3§ Rosshire Ct; James A. Cocking. 1826 Petrolia; Robert J. Nellis, 76 Chip- members predicted today the| creases for an estimated 2,100,000 | | | out Oakland County | by the State Conservation Dept. at | 9-man group from Pontiac Board | auction here July 11. Lake Angelus Rd., will head the | land sales for the department, said | Building. : Os : liwoed, d | Saini Tucker, Blomfla ‘Begin New Flights Other members of Board et DETROIT w — D & C Airlines | were: . ; Donald H. Westlake. Pafmington; | Wednesday opened a new sched- Hethz D. Sievertsen, Birmingham: Gil- luled 45-minute air service between bert N. Longo, 1451 Hendricks, Karl & Rhodes Jr.. Birmingham: Roge b | Detroit City Airport and Hopkins L. Jackson, Birmingham; — Warner, Farmington bees @ fo -! Riya, Airport in Cleveland. The service Auburn Heights; Richar eder Bloomfield Hills; Louis Reavis, Lake | includes four round trips daily. Orton; Gerald V. Walsh, Clarkston; John | FP. Morrison, Northville, and Arthur B. | Pairbanks, Birmingham. Flint Driver Killed i | FLINT u—Joseph Crespo, of stots will Offer Land | Flint, was killed Wednesday night Pontiac, | ‘in County at Auction ‘in a three-car crash on a country Scattered plots of land through- road north of Flint. Drivers of the will be sold, others cars escaped injury. Crespo | was en route home.from Flushing |where he was employed as a book- | keeper at the Compton Ford Sales D. J. McCarthy, Co. in charge of the property, all platted lots, was acquired through non-payment of taxes. The sale will be conducted in the Oakland County Office | A Year Round Exclusive Toy — Hobby — Crafts Shopping Center HINES HOBBY HOUSE 7 8. Saginaw Similar sales will be conducted | in 25 other counties the week of | _ July U McCarthy said. 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Saginaw St Phone FE S417. ae: ae raf nae ® a) ‘ is (i7a3 | a Nos aC dite tai ight a alee acid | ea NG iN f \ : my : i iK\ : ers j \ | ‘ i JN So \ atte = ‘ ae oe \ KAN 4% rae Mi Mi ig cd ae \ ae \ : ) Hy ( ey ek Massey Gets a Divorce From Honest Abe: By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK (INS)—Raymond Massey of Broadway,and Holly- wood is eternally grateful to| Abraham Lincoln of Illinois and | Washington, D. C.. for giving him a comfy living in the theater these last 17 years But he cannot honestly play the role of Honest Abe again * * * Massey feels he has outgrown the White House and in effect passed Mr. Lincoln by “What [I mean is,” he said, casting about desperately for @ | the /NO AD LIBBING place to deposit his legs, ‘I am tee old and too fat to play Lin- | coin any mere. I am therefore | switching, as any acter with & touch of brain does at some time er other, to Shakespeare.” Such an announcement as this eoming from a distinguished actor | born in Canada and graduated trom Oxford in the Merrie Olde | Rard’s country, does not come as @ particular surprise Except =| actor himself | “Some people have the impres- | | ston, ue he e says, “that I am an old | warded “‘by five good, THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSD AY, JUNE 9, oF hand at Shakespeare, but actually I've collided with the bard only | once in my life—25 years ago! when I did ‘Hamlet’ on Broadway. “Seared me to death ‘You have to be good. You have to | have a memory like a—well—a | Shakespearean actor When he played ‘‘Hamfet’”’ in 1930, Massey found it the hard. est work he had done before, and possibly since, and was re- two in- different and twe bad reviews from the critics.” then, | | scares me to death now. You don’t Lad lib Shakespeare, you know. “There was also an ambien | | mention, " he remembers with a| | laugh (a Massey laugh is rather | | like - that of a vocally coached j hyena, and is infectious within a 100-yard radius). “It was written | by a man named Robert Benchley. ‘Benchley wrote, and I quote, | seaymont Massey plays Hamlet | (as a verv decent young man who! doesn’t like actors,’ ean assignment will take place at | the launching next month of Amer- ica first all-Shakespeare theater in more about the theater Stratford, Conn., project which the is long overdue. * * big actor a “Ito is lke the study and Greek to a scholar “Every actor, do | sake of my stomach, I took it as 4 | pret.” good notice” FIRST IN AMERICA Massey's upcoming Shakespear- And as ter the people te Stratford, Conmn., to see the “American | annual prospective of Latin to be good, Shakespeare—because - yOu C@N| make every other form of acting take that many ways but, for the | easier to comprehend and inter- Shakespeare Festival’ opening duly 12 and continuing for eight weeks in its first season—Massey foresees their loving the ex- perience. “The beard knew a darn sight cultural believes | wrong. If he were alive now, he'd still be the biggest money-making playwright in the business.”’ he says. . s * should what's more, Massey it will playgoers will be happy normal characters again. speare knew _so well,” he hays. “So many of the so-called fine playwrights to- iday know only the neurotics . believes to see who go than al-| most anyone alive today and for | entertainment he just couldn’t go | “Shake- | the norma! people t o ,£ 4 a) A guage yj jaar be beautiful erts man drop a cigarette in | his coffee cup? That sort of ges- | ture has all sorts of deep mean- ing in the modern theater—but | it's overdone.” * At the beautiful new Shakespear- ean theater, located less than two hours drive from New York City, Massey will alternate between two Brutus in ‘Julius Caesar,” and Prospere in ne Tempest.” “Gelly, the lines are wonder- ful,” he says, ‘“‘and there is one that sums up what we talked about earlier—why I can a0 longer play Abraham Lincoln, much as I loved the roles. roles wove stent ilabion "Be not daturb'd with tay ity.’ future, I am not.” ‘Michigan Wages High Compared to Average | KALAMAZOO, — A report by ‘Dr. Paul V. Sangren, president of |Western Michigan College, in- | dicates that the average Michigan | family has $1,000 more to spend jeach year than the nationwide, | average in 1929 ie] a:iilg @\, jel@e) Ny these Cook 7h AUTOMATIC DRYER LOOK! SEARS LOW PRICE 59" JUST *5 DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Kenmore Gas Compare the E Price. 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Save! » Hi-Fi Phonograph - Automatic 3-Speed Changer Reg. #o.95 79. 88 ; % DOWN Realistic reproduction . ., two 6-inch Silvertone speakers. Two sapphire point ne Mahogany veneer! For, with Shakespeare in = He said for each dollar received, the average Michigat ‘family now gets about $2.70. The? “It'll be refreshing, won't it, to ne ‘I am now 39 years old, and 190! average for the nation | is $2.50. ~ — ing on Vacation?—tet the ; Press Follow — Call FE 2-818] THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955 5 MAKE QVER.PAGE New Serial Starts Monday, June 13 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN TWENTY-ONE - Ford Opens Ford Motor Co. formerly opened | the new research and engineering center at its Tractor and Imple- | ment Division in Birmingham yes- | terday. . The.new facility is located in a/| separate building connected with the divigion’s general offices at | 25300 E. Maple Rd, Seme 308 business, civic and professional \leaders of the area and press representatives in- spected the center yesterday and were guests at a reception and dinner at Oakland Hills Country Club. Dr. -Harlar’ Hatcher, president of the University of Michigan. an- nounced at thé reception. that Ford has given a grant of $100,000 to the University for a research on the relationships between plant roots ar 4 the Principat speaker at the dinner was Rep. Harold D. Coaley 'D- N.C.), chairman of the House Committee on Agriculture. Rep. soil Cooley praised the TEST MACHINERY STRENGTH gauges so sensitive they can measure the stresses in left, a heavy steel railroad rail produced by a light touch ficiency and productivity oO America’s farmers. He said: | ence of agriculture are (in Russia. Yet, land, they want Russia, agriculture requires labor of fully one-half the tota | population. One family on a farn ijhardly can feed itself and | other family in town “In America, for food. each farm worker f **Machines and the sci- available in that unhappy In the i, 1 one feeds 18 persons—16.4 in our coun- jtry and another 1.5 abroad. | while half of Russia's total pepu Thus lation works on farms, and still |cannot meet the Communist’s | needs for food and fiber, in Amer ica the efficiency of our far with the tools from our indu releases over 86 per population for other work .. .”' The congressman went on te point out that industry has a responsibility to join farmers in bringing economic equality te | agriculture. of the finger are used to determine the strength of nard Trescott, farm machinery search and Engineering Center, sensitive eleetronic In Ford's new farm machinery Re Birmingham, fingers are being used to check similar strength analysis. the ticular test. All mers— « stry a cent of our “Without our farm program ag- — Electronic | stresses in a tractor chassis. Engineer Ed Binek, checks the control panel as a ton of weight is applied to the chassis of a tricycle-type tractor right, which the front wheels will be dropped during a par- ild be and culture, this very day we in the de pths of a depression a great number of men in . implement plants would be looking | for other employment,’ he added OPEN HOUSE PLANNED A public open house is planned at the center Sunday afternoon, | with all residents of the area in- vited. (Cauded tours are planned} ind special displays will demon- | Strate for-visttors sdrrie of the in-|« teresting technique employed in the design and engineerng of modern farm machinery. The new ‘center employs ap proximately 1,100 persons in its 112.000 square feet under roof Many of the workers are trained researchers, technicians and en- gineers engaged in the develop- | ment and design of tractors and farm machinery. | Tests of various kinds, includ- ing dynamometer shakedowns, are catried tut in the center on tractor engines, transmissions and axles. Transmissions and | | production ithe equivalent of years of normal lannual Key | Detroit axles are driyen hour after hour to determine durability and ef- ficiency. Facilities are available for vir- tually every phase of tractor and ‘farm implement development, de- sign and testing. TORTURE COURSES Currently under construction behind the new center are a test track and four specially designed torture courses.” Irving A. Duffy, general manager of the Tractor Division, said these facili- ‘ties will enable Ford engineers to test farm toughest machinery under the conditions modern en- methods can devise. In e said, pre- can be given gineering a matter of weeks, modets usage Duffy noted today that in less than two years the Ford-tractor Division has moved from the role of a manufacturer of one 4-wheel tractor model te five 4-wheel tractor models, three tricyele tractof medels, plus more than 100 major farm ma- chinery Items. Modernization of the company’s tractor plant was a multi-million dollar project. The plant has more than four miles of conveyor ‘lines to handle multiple model pro- | du ction. 1,500 rend Key Club ‘Convention in Detroit Approximately 1,500 young men from 1,300 U.S. and Canadian com- attend the twelfth Club convention in July 34, some 200 adults, Kiwanis sors, faculty advisers and parents Key Club is a service association of high school boys. The only munities will spon- | together with | | im XN. | -INSPECT FACILITIES — Shown above during a tour of the new Oakland County Key Club thus far | | formed is in Southfield. |research and engineering center at the Ford Motor Co. Tractor and | Implement Division in Birmingham are, Jeft to right: Benson Ford, Molotov Having Lunch vice president and group executive, Mercury and Special Products New Center for Research in Birmingham Pontiac Press Phote the board; Irving A. Duffy, vice president and general manager of the tractor and implement division; and Henry Ford Il, Ford president, They are inspecting a consolidated recording oscillograph and ampli- fier, used to record transient or impact loads on tricycle tractors dur- ing drop tests. | Division; Ernest R. Breech, executive vice president and Chairman of With French Leaders PARIS u—Soviet Foreign Min- lister V. M. Molotov arrived in Paris by plane today for luncheon visit with Premier Edgar Faure and Foreign Minister An- toine Pinay. He is en route to the United States to attend the United Na- tions anniversary session in San Francisco June 20-26, Ber- measures the distance from Ford farm machinery undergoes a. Macken Church Is Sold JACKSON w® — The First Pres- byterian Church of Jackson, found- ed in 1887, was sold Wednesday to the Camp Realty for $125,000 The church was rebuilt in 1927. Its congregation plans to start construction on a new church in August, ~ Car Auctions No Picnic for Deputies: Want to buy a car—cheap? Every at 3month inter- the Oakland County Sheriff's year Vais Dept. puts literally hundreds of | abandoned autos on the auction block. Some of them sell as low as $8 . Although it may be a picnic for buyers, Ferris Holcomb and Ed whose chore it is to complete) ca Hooper it's no picnic for deputies | mountains of paper wack and cor- re spnde nce necessary to have the a small part of the overall task. cars declared abandoned. Only yesterday, Holcomb and Hooper completed a 3-day sale | of 109 cars, some tn fair condi- tion, some clunkers and others wrecked, Bat the auction re conducted in garages throughout the county '15 days, a report of th where the cars are stored, is only; The owner is given 45 days to | | claim Here's how they éxplain the sys- | tem, which is controlled by state law, works: After a car has been abandones | its | | its sale. Before the car can be | auctioned, the sale must be adver- | tised twice in consecutive weeks motor and_license number aes | ‘in a newspaper that circulates in to the Secretary of State's office at | ithe county. Notice of the auction | Lansing to obtain the last owner’s | must be posted at the place of) name and address. Vente for a 10-day period. CD Learns Mass Feeding Scenes like the ones below may be taking place throughout the na-| below were taken during a recent mass feeding test conducted by civil . tion when the 57-city H-bomb test gets under way, June 15, Photos| defense volunteer workers in Cincinnati, Ohio. Gathering in eolineipend, CD workers practice mass imoang 6 tech- | grasping the seriousness of the problem, enjoyed themselves. But de- niqtes. Cooking. is done with makeshift equipment. Youngsters, not | fense workers learned some valuable lessons. aS f | } Coe ft + ‘The site was switched last Dec. 2 to the Cadillac area of Wexford ter ied toe 10° toe thoes Beye. | Outdoor biscult baking is demonstrated by Mrs. Raymond Sullivan, tae Gost Cite suman’ teevens ne ee eee aw ane Sars Saale ee wee for housing and other construction Lf amasaeniaipuanien ie “ | began in Cadillac last February. f the car after which a sheriff is authorized to advertise | 2, The two deputies must conduct the auction and, if no bidders are available, the car is sold to the | . garage owner for $8 to cover ||. es \R° ul advertising costs. NY < joo In their spare tinre the two depu- | [™~ ” . 1, —t_ tles check all boat liveries in the J ts county to pass on safety and sea- || ~ worthiness of rented craft, make || 1 A a —= = - carne out forms for all predatory animals | fog = killed in the county and process | it~ land check disposition of all traffic pe tickets by the depart- ment. | The state gives $5 for each pred- | atory animal killed. More than 600 foxes were slain in the county last year, the deputies reported. A long form, certifying the kill, thust be made out for each. Each spring, Holcomb and Hooper check more than 2,000 boats in some 200 liveries in the area. But their biggest job is handling the total of more than obo stolen and abandoned car reports that pass their desks each month. Jet Base Start Due Next Year Air Force Reportedly to Begin Construction About February GRAND RAPIDS w — Construc- tion on the controversy-locked northern Michigan jet air =| probably will be delayed untij ne year, the Grand Rapids Press 1 re- ported today. / It said Air Force officials indi- cated yesterday that work on the | multi-million dollar installation will begin about six months after a decision on the site is an- nounced. The Press reported construction | will net‘start until next February, | accord to Air Force estimates, if a decision is reached within 30 days | low. Practice Water Swimming is fun — but it can end sadly for the recreation. The person who doesn't memorize and practice a few simple safety rules, such as the ones illustrated be- If you can’t swim, you should learn, because you are missing some of the best of summertime ; ter, 118 Franklin Safety Red Cross offers free courses in swimming, lifesaving and handling small craft. If | you want to learn to swim or improve your present ability, consult the Oakland County Red Cross chap- Bivd. Don’t swim right after eating a Before diving, make sure the when overheated or overtired.| water is deep enough and has no Also, swimming in the dark isn’t hidden objects that might cut you | such a bright idea. or break bones, | Never swim alone. Make sure someone is nearby who can help in case you get cramps or run inte | some other trouble. Distance over water is misiead- If you do go in for distance ing — don’t overestimate your en-| swimming in open water, have durance or try to make like a | someone in a boat follow along for Channel swimmer. safety's sake. Swim at a safe place, preferably one where there are life guards, If you tire in swimming, float for a change. Today he acted like a man who not only finds it fascinating but also extremely enjoyable. His weekly news conference lasted 30 lively minutes, porters who got together later to check their impressions came to thig conclusion: ‘Rarely has the President been in better form. Maybe one reason for the Presi- dent's liveliness was the fact that he had just returned from a re- union of My old .classmates at West Point. WASHINGTON i — Last week Dwight Eisenhower sized up the world’s toughest job, that of being U. S. President, this way: “It's a fascinating business.” Federal Court Upholds Pegler Libel Verdict NEW YORK (—The U. S, Cir- cuit Court of Appeals «has, upheld the $175,000 fibel verdict in favor of | he by Pegler Nov. 29, 1949. The ver- ’ dict assessed damages of $100,000) He was asked what he thought against Pegler, $50,000 against | about the House’s failure to pass against Hearst Consolidated Pub-| Eisenhower promptly started to lications, Inc. The jury also award-| talk; paused, grinned, and. said ed Reynolds a token $1 as com-|he supposed it was only natural pensatory damages. that he should speak with feeling a Nf A ._ ; . | Ve bak: \ \ ‘ Vi : ; t . « \ . Ref 4 Se, ae A eo) i and re-: lke Finds Job Fascinating, Enjoyable Too on this, And so he did speak with feeling, -for four minutes, : He said the need for trained Men was great since every ham- let and city in atomic warfare is in the front line. After mustering up ail his reasons why he felt the reserves are necessary, he wound up with a simple but firm state. ment. We must have it, he said, That got the conference off the ground, as it were, and it flew right along * Nixon Inv vites Indian for Visit Yo States . NEW DELHI, India in—The Hin- } ba THE PONTIAC PRESS, ates JUNE 9, 1955 surgeon can no more guarantee! Toke Kitchen Sink to cure a sick tree than a. doctor | can guarantee to cure a sick! CORBIN, Ky. ® — Thieves at rat the J. N. Moore home were thorough. They took the kitchen Sewing through sandpaper will | stove, refrigerator, a set of dishes, sharpen a dull owing machine a cedar chest — and the kitchen needle. sink. KRESGE'S.. Get ready for SUN- time) Girls’ & Women's SHORT é Smartly styled sunweor. Twills, chombroy denims, no-iron cotton ruffie cloths; front pockets, solid colors; some with contrasting trom and piping. Sonforized. Other flattering shorts 8 18 for both git adwemee | = Bewore Tree Quacks FINDLAY, Ohio w—The Cham- ber of Commerce warns home- owners to beware of quacks posing | as tree surgeons. Be particularly wary of guarantees, said the cham- ber, since “A reputable tree Women’s sizes 12-20 Girls’ sizes 7-14 wen = < GIRLS’ MIDRIFFS y Peasant style; eyeletruMe: c broadcloth. 8-14 5 9 WOMEN’S MIDRIFFS ‘| Sonforized denim, poplin. Elastic shwred back. Girls’ Reversible SWITCHETTES Z Zinl "= 79": “Seginew et Huron or Tel-Huron Really. . Cool, reversible halter, broadcloth, no-iron. Sonfor sed. Kresge’s Disieys True Life Adventures | LONI HEINE? THE LUMINOUS FLOATING GLOBES SOMETIMES OBSERVED DURING THUNDERSTORMS ARE CONSIDERED TO BE A TRUE FORM OF : LIGHTNING. ee THEY ARE BELIEVED TO BE MASSES OF : IONS AND positive Leergerteat Meet SALT \ awe Gome FIREBALLS LAST JUST A BRIEF TIME BEFORE FADING Z .- BUT OTHERS BY PLOUE5: Distributed by King Features Syndicate., For Bond Payments ‘Lockheed Gets Order School Bill Among Forty for Turboprop Ships Signed by Gov. Williams LOS ANGELES — Lockheed Aircraft Corp. has won a 65-mil- LANSING (UP)—Gov. G. Men- | ion-dollar contract with its design nen Williams yesterday signed in- | for the first commercial turboprop to law 40 legislative acts including | | transport to be built in the United) one providing for loans by the | States state to school districts for paying American Airlines srmounced | bonds. ' yesterday it has placed an order for 35 of the high-speed, medium- | weight planes with cruising speeds | of more than 400 m.p.h, and a range of 2,000 miles. | Delivery is to start the latter part of 1958, Awarding of the contract gives Walt Disney Producnons World Rights Reserved Repeal of a law creating the public schools of Highland Park and allowing the Highland Park district te operate under the school code provisions applicable | | to districts within its population classifications. The law prescribes conditions under which school districts may become eligible for loans from the state. ‘Other bills now law include: Increasing the daily allowance for hospitals and convalescant homes from $18 to $19 a day for acute care and from $11 to $12 a day for convalescent care to crip-| pled and afflicted children. Providing that sherifts and chief | the first challenge executive officers of police de- Gene the commercial jet-with- partments report on persons propeller field, The turboprop pow- Allowing county road commis- sioners to spend up to $2,500 for the building or repairing of roads or bridges without advertising for sealed proposals. | | | to British lead- | LOWEST! PHOTOGRAPHIC PRICES PRAKTIFLEX-FX F2.8 Tessar Deluxe Case with 1.9 Primoplan—Only $99.50 Telephoto for Praktiflex 100mm F4.5 Focusing CERMAN TELEPHOTO ree $3Q™ now 10” SENSATIONAL PROJECTOR BUY! VIEWLEX Brighter, cooler. Compare Viewlex with any other pro- - factor and see. pass NOW $ $59.95 SHURFLASH CAMERA OUTLET ONLY *489 COMPLETE REG. $9.95 VALUE 8mm Editor, Complete named in_ sexually motivated | Liquor licenses to be renewed | crimes and the disposition of cases | without the approval of local coun- | to the commissioner of state ice. cils or boards unless an objection | pol! | is filed with the Liquor Control | Commission. SECURITY FOR Gis Joan, Tony Dress Best | Giving members of the armed | the entertainment world’s best- forces, regular and reserve, secur- | dressed man and women last night | ity in employment and a status jer plant utilizes q turbine but in- stead of releasing its power in| pure forward thrust as a jet en- S$ 95 does, it uses it to turn pro-| The new four-engine ee. LOS ANGELES w—Tony Curtis Electra seat 64, four more than and Joan Caulfield were cited as are provided for on the DC7 flown | gine | pelle rs. ,by American. by the California Fashion Creators,| The Sahara, in northern Africa, 400’ REWINDS © VIEWER & SPLICER $39.95 VALUE Not as Pictured which can’t be jeopardized by be- representing 375 apparel manufac-| is the largest continuous desert in ing in service. turers, ithe world. WITH or WITHOUT A TRADE-IN YOU WILL BE MORE THAN HAPPY IF YOU CHECK ~ OUR ‘HIGH QUALITY ~~ LOW, LOW PRICES _7” MERCHANDISE Drive Out and OUR | Frayer's is noted for TAKE YOUR TIME To pay when you buy at the Mark Davis Camera Mart. Low down payment_and . small weekly or monthly payments. Charge it. } EXPOSURE METERS Lowest Prices . . . Compare METER REG. PRICE OUR PRICE NORVEX 23.95 16.95 MASCOT 15.95 11.95 1 DW 68 24.50 19.95 PRI 32.50 24.95 Weston Il 29.95 24.95 SECONIC 8.95 6.95 | its friendly courteous service: and for the continued service it gives its customers after sales. 30’ OFF GADGET BAGS LEATHER — PLASTIC — ALL MAKES TAKE YOUR PICK FROM THE LARGEST SELECTION IN TOWN! ————— This GE Freezer Can Be NEW G-E PORTABLE YOURS INDOOR, TAKE IT OUTDOOR ANYWHERE ° for as little os ‘ : . $13.40 Only | 9900 | AMONTH = SMALL ° | Reslorantl . MARK DAVIS AMERA | ART | 83 N. Saginaw St. j Spee FE 4.4343 Catheras Are Our ere Sidelinel IMMEDIATE Watch for “THE BIGX . | PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED DELIVERY Call FE 4-4792 RO Raa Pee ame ee i ee ne rE eS ee ee oon - a ana we mene MIAN IN iA DWN Adds Grandeur of Swordfish fo Broiled Dish over, is one of the most piue Cheese Broiled Tomatoes is ptized of al) fish—both to the, recipe that has an epicure’s sports fisherman, whg considers it’ jh added to an old a rich trophy, and to the commer- eerie cial fisherman who can sell his a catch for a handsome price. Broiling is the best way of pre- paring it, to be served either with lemon wedges or with a creamy sauce like the one below which calls for-diced celery. Broiled Swordfish Steaks Celery Sauce Accents Flavor of Swordfish favorite, broiled tomatoes. quick and easy to prepare, will become busy and their families. a favorite with homemakers American blue cheese adds not only taste appeal to a variety of dishes, but it contains all the important nutrients of cheese— With Celery Sauce protein, calcium and phospho- If steaks are frozen, let thaw Tous. before cooking. Pre-heat broiler The creamy white, blue-veined and broiler pan. Place steaks on cheese, rich with its pleasingly pan about 3 inches from source Of; piquant flavor, is an outstanding heat. Brush with butter. Broil six prodiict of the Americah cheese to eight minutes on each side.' industry. Use it often during Serve with Celery Sauce. Celery 5s Blue Cheese Broiled Tomatoes 4-3 cup diced ceiery 2 2 tablespoons butter ar) p erumbled American biue Big tablespoons flour yut 4 eunees) ft cup milk t eens fine dry bread crumbs % ‘teaspoon matoes, cut in half % teaspoon Dairy Month. cheese salt n-sized to pepper! Saute celery in butter until, 2 snzall onions, thinly sliced celery is tender. Remove celery Combine cheese and crumbs Stir flour into butter. Remove from mix well. Sprinkle tomatoes with heat and add milk. Replace on) salt heat and stir unti] sauce is smooth and thickened. Season and add celery, Pour over hot fish steaks, or serve in and pepper. Top with onions and sprinkle with cheese mixture Broil 3-4 inches from source of heat about five minutes, or until! lightly browned and _ to- cheese is bowl. Makes enough for four serv-, matoes thoroughly heated. Serve ings of swordfish, | four — “S ’ ° cf now ’ear this... only onamge Juice | s ie «-look for it on the shelf or in the freezer Me, all POT ROASTS All Cuts id Well-Trimmed hal ae CHAP BALL LLL Lf (ELE tL LL de hd (SEL 04 EE Ld s] Farm Fresh Large \ EGGS * 45: Beet Siew "09° WHOLE Cut to Your Order Wrapped for Freezer Ib. » Beef Stew Picnics." 25° ' While They Lest ff BI: aii THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955 plicity with a touch of grandeur is the keynote of this fore broiling them. broiled dinner. Turn into a buttered I-quart cas-| derloin, small mushrooms and serole. Bake in a preheated mod- squares of green pepper an 1 | erate oven (375 degrees) 30 to 40. bacon on skewers. Dip in melted | | minufes or until lightly browned, butter or margarine and broil. Mi akes eight servings Serve with rice and tomato sauce. SPECIAL? FRONT QUARTER SALE - U. S. Choice FRONTS Free Parking — a ea a a a a a a a Peps Up Tomatoes Boon fo Hostess heat-strained nerves. to enjoy the long, warm evenings. The power of pearoetien defi- nitely ig involved, Serve pic- nic foods te Vaan "family and friends on the porch, terrace or in your dining reom and the of a picnic. and this is to consider party, factor This recipe | prepare: Hot Barbecued Beef Buns eup chili sauce . cup beef boullion + '@aspoon salt espoon Worcestershire boulll mustard and Tabasco on, salt, | ‘sauce Add garlic Bring to boil, top tomatoes with it be- n-wrapped hamburgers ue cheese, Add bac a raw veget tables for a relish plate. —_——— , — — Z Savory Pola to Recipes Glaze Your Cookies BLUE CHEESE BROILED TOMATOES — Sim- in the form of bl — is Dairy Mon th. If you — milk ring occasionally, If the water. Remove garlic. Want *to gite.your cookies a To serve: Slice iC P S th, W t shiny glaze? Mix an egg white More like shredded meat. Butter | ome rom Ou es or an egy yolk with a tablespoon o : a Ug = veral ve el Your family wi enjoy these two Carrot-Potate Se allop of oe ifer and brush over ‘the a . “ _ eat on yottom half of | ew potato dake s. One comes tabs ns flour cookies before baking. Or brush — 2 teas Sat the cookies with cream, if you Pour the hot barbecue sauce rom the South, the other frum 2 ial ostedee bared and os have any in the house. over meat. Top with remaining ilifornia, 2 a . ped . ——<—<— half of bun. Serve immediately. Mashed Potato and’ Chive eee ery, clued chopped aunt Fruit Salad These may alSo be served cold, j Casserole - s milk. scalded y ising cold meat and sauce. Makes j 2% pounds (1 n) potate mp tauss —_ . eee : { For a jaunty fruit salad, tm eight servings { \-inch boiling wa in pan Combine flour, salt and pepper. er ; ; = a Sp beet eee ye Arrange a layer of half the pota- serving a pear half with dra see? : cameos at ene pe toes, then a layer of half the car-| Pineapple chunks or tdbits in the Add diced green pepper or celery |e eoeers pe] edie rots in greased casserole (1% hollow center. Toss a few straw-, to cannied baked beans before heat- | euies oa chive juarts berries or cherries on top. ing. Makes good texture contrast. | ; Sprinkle each layer with celery . . * = Pare potatoes cook in the oil and onions and flour mixture. Re- ing water and salt until tender peat Pour on milk, dot with but- jin covered saucepan. Drain off ter or Margarine | water and measure three-quarters) Bake in moderate oven (375 de- | | cup grees) about 49 minutes, Makes SIX servings Mash potatoes. Gradually add ee potato cooking water, Stir in re- maining ingredients. Beat until Serve Beef (eae fulfty. Alternate squares of beef SKINLESS, GRADE 1 HOT DOGS 3 lbs. for G9: FRESH KILLED FRYERS Tender, A9: Plump REMUS BUTTER 59. DEFIANCE DOG FOOD 12:2"99' ISBEST FREESTONE PEACHES \aAddAddddd dea (44s Country Fresh FOR FATHER’S DAY! Men's and Boys’ Any Size BELTS... * 89: CANS for KEKO OLEO 2D ibs. 45¢ Hershey's Chocolate Syrup 16 on. ie For 3% SUPER MKT. ‘Phone FE 2-0119 senfecenniedshanenameeibagr= 1-Pound Box { - Open WII IIIIIs. a Barbecued Beef Hot ‘summer weather should go hand-in-hand with relaxtion for our A new kind| of summer entertainment—an at- ze home picnic—stops the clock and} 4 | allows hostess and guests alike There is a very good recipe for this kind of entertainment, a rec- ,ipe so simple that hostess can 'almost be a guest at her own indeed a happy offers a new way to teaspoon prep&red mustard ropa Tabasco cloves garlic, split lean roast beef, | tler or margarine 8 hamburger buns, split To make barbecue sauce In| a saucepan, combine chili sauce, Worcestershire then cook over | lew heat 2% to 3% minutes, stir- | sauce — becomes too thick, add a little meat very thin, | Mon., Twes., Wed. Thurs. ~—9 to 9 Friday and trom 9 Recipe Repeated Yule Cookies Still Fresh After Over Five Months joyed them, Now she’s convinced that the recipe is superior. This is the tale of a cookie, of two cookies, in fact. Little did we realize when we published Mrs. George Tallerday’s recipe for Christmas Fruit Cookies that they would keep so well, * * * A few days ago Mrs. Robie! Clack of Drayton Plains called in | to tell us that she had discovered two stray cookies in the bottom of | a covered tureen she opened while | housecleaning. meal takes on all the festivity | Mrs. Clack had made some of the fruit cookies several weeks before Christmas and thought her family had eaten them all, To her surprise the two remaining cookies were still moist and fresh, Mrs. Clack knew when she first made them that the cookies were’ Bake at | delicious and that her familys en- | minutes Let us give you Flakorn Corn Muffin Mix Once you discover that famous FLAKORN CORN MUFFIN MIX -- and ONLY Flakorn <= gives you 12 full ounces in every package...makes 12 to 18 crisp golden miffins, up to 50% more than any other corn mix, you'll never settle So we'll buy you TWO packages FREE. for less. Just fill in coupon. ' 1 t 1 trom \ i ] NAME 1 ne : This o ' ' i 1 ' We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities HILLS BROS. COFFEE Choice of Grinds SOUTHERN STAR BONITA FLAKES "HEKMAN CRACKERS 27° Corner of Baldwin Ave. and Walton Bivd. |. TELEPHONE FE 2.5192 re Bagh ay We're repeating Mrs. Tallerday’s . These cookies would taste good with cool summer drinks, And , you might be able to save some for your Christmas FRUIT COOKIES By Mrs. George Tallerday 'y cups brown sugar 3 cups chepped nut meats Sift spices and soda with flour. greased baking sae ee ewe ewe ee ew ewe we ee FLAKO PRODUCTS CORPORATION Dept. PPA, New Brunswick, New Jersey GENTLEMEN t pac MUFFIN MIX. price to: ADDRESS family. Good only for FLAKORN CORN " MUPPIN MIX Offer goed onty United States, Aigtts and Offer sedject te ape? ebée siete gad focal /eguietiens Offer may be ecthcrews st any lime without eotice . ———— oo ae ee oe ee ee ee ee oe ee “BIRDS EYE FROZEN LEMONADE 2 cm 33° sf ee ‘ingyen mmo > By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editer Children aren’t going to like this article. It’s on spinach! * * * The other night we had fresh buttered spinach. It was picked from the garden only minutes be- fore it was cooked. I washed it carefully and thoroughly three times in lukewarm water. The tiniest speck of sand can ruin a dish of spinach. Warm water seems to loosen this sand quicker than cold. I cook my spinach in a deep saucepan, using only the water that clings to the leaves, and cooking just a few minutes. In this way the spinach retains all its greeness—also its vitamins and minerals. We like butter, salt and pepper and a hint of freshly ground nut-| | meg on spinach at our house. The vinegar cruet goes to the table tor those who wish to add it. Per- THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUN QAG0F nurem o. .. NE 9, 1955 % OD SOE eS eae ia — “ unusual and contains fewer caloriés than a nocdie or rice ring. Spinach Ring 2 cups chopped cooked spinach 3 tablespoons melted butter or mar- garine 23 eggs, slightly beaten peons vinegar or lemen juice Combine all ingredients and mix thoroughly. Turn into a well- ourmet Dishes Can Be Prepared from Children’s Bugaboo -- Spinach! of hot water and bake in a 350 degree oven about 30 minutes, or until a knife inserted in the cen- ter comes out clean. Unmold at once and fill with creamed fish or chicken. The lewly spinach can‘be & gourmet’s delight. If you like herbs, add finely chopped chives and a bit of dried tarragon to buttered spinach. One of my colleagues con- tributes her pet way of preparing spinach so that it’s a real treat. Jeanne’s Spinach : —— ready-to-kook spinach ken cream sauce’ oashe er garlic salt Balt and pepper Cracker crumbs Butter of margarine Cook and drain spinach. Mix with the cream sauce, garlic as desired, and Brown the crumbs in butter and sprinkle over the top of the dish just before serving. greased ring mold. Set in a pan sonally I like lemon juice just as Oc: well. * ¢ 6 Earlier this spring we had spin- ach salad. When the leaves are about the size of a fifty-cent piece, I serve them with french dressing. They are a welcome| a? change from lettuce or cabbage. Sometimes I add sliced radishes or wedges of tomato for garnish. If you are -entertaining at. luncheon and wish to serve creamed chicken er creamed seafood in a ring of some kind, try a spinach ring. It is delicious, for labels from EWA 096 0G F000 ICE CREAM TROPICALE — li » | there are no lumps. you think this picture shows straw- berries served in fresh coconut shells, you're all wrong. The hollowed- out shells are filled with coconut or vanilla ice cream. Then the strawberries are added. Isn’t it a beautiful dessert? * s * Tropicale Fills Coconut Shells Ice Cream Tropicale can be the hit of the party. Fresh coconut ice | cream and ripe fruit is an area combination ,which becomes even | more gala when served in coco nut shells. Spoon the coconut ice cream into | the shells, pressing it smoothly, | leaving a hollow in the center for the fruit. If the fresh cocenut ice cream ts not available, q rich vaailia ice cream may be substituted ‘with shreddeq coconut sprinkled over the surface. If a freerer is available, the ice) cream-filled coconut shells may be prepared in advance and kept degree oven about one hour or till | in the freezer until almost ready | done Makes eight servings. If de-| sired, serve with one of the sauces. | to serve. * * * At serving time, fill the hollow in the ice cream with ripe straw- berries which have been sliced in tempting big rosy slices. Raspberries or crushed peaches or a combination of strawberries, raspberries, oF peaches with crusheg pineapple make a colorful and refreshing dessert topping also, Grated kumquats are an exotic combination with the coconut ice cream for this tropical dessert. Meal-in-One for Baby A meal-in-one for baby is the new strained macaroni, tomatoes, beef and bacon. It’s a‘‘‘casserole- | type” dish, a lightly seasoned com- | bination of meat, macaroni and vegetable. Although it is pureed so as to be easily digestible, it has a wealth of flavor that is bound to be popular with baby. Our milk supply is provided by 25,000,000 dairy cows on some 3,000,000 farms throughout the United States. + Soup Sauces Add Sparkle to Meat Loaf Good cooks, always looking for | | Over Gingerbread gingerbread. “ e@ according v vigorously, over moderately low | something special in a meat loaf, | will sing praises for this one. The, “fancy” part is using a can of, vegetable soup in the basic meat- egg-bread mixture. Clever way to spark up the color, bring out Ge) flavor. Fancy Meat Loaf 2 pounds ground beef lean (1% cups) condensed vegetable Bou 1 egg, slightly beaten 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce mustard ‘eq teaspoon black pepper Mix all ingredients together well. | Shape into loaf and place in shal-| | low baking pan, or pack into light- | ly greased loaf pan. Bake in 350 Celery Pimento Sauce Mix one can (1% cups) con- | densed cream of celery soup with | one-third cup milk (or drippings | | from loaf) and about one-third iad chopped pimiento. Heat. Mushroom Sauce Mix one can (1% cups) con- densed cream of mushroom soup) with one-third cup milk (or drip- | pings from loaf) and about 2 table- spoons chopped parsley. Heat. Tomato Mustard Sauce Mix one can (1% cups) con- densed tomato soup with one-third | cup drippings from loaf (or but- ter) and 1 tablespoon prepared mustard. Heat. ‘For Teatime Treat Teatime treat: OAKLAND 77 S. Saginaw Small BAR-B-Q SPARE RIBS 49: Hickory Smoked "Sliced Bacon gx ue PACKING HOUSE MKT. Open Fridays ‘til 9 P. M. RING OR LARGE BOLOGNA H. C. FRANKS SMOKED STEWING CHICKENS devil's food mix in a 9-inch square 10 Ox. Size in pan. Cool the cake, then cut in Devy Crockett half crosswise. Now cut both layers Tumbler of the cake into diamond shapes. Frost the cake diamonds with a fudge icing, then quarter marsh- 4° mallows and tuck a piece of marsh- | mallow in the center of each. | Plenty o Beef Pot ROAST SMOKED ' PICNICS | Bake packaged , Pour Fruit Sauce Here’s a brand-new sauce for Pineapple-Grapefruit Sauce 2 tablespoons cornstarch Balt Ye cup sugar l%e cups canned pineapple juice 1 cup frozen grapefruit juice (diluted to directions en can) -2 tablespoons butter or margarine Stir cornstarch, dash of salt and sugar together thoroughly in a saucepan, Gradually‘ stir in pine- apple and grapefruit juices until ‘ Cook, stirring constantly and heat until thickened and bubbly; cook a few more minutes. Remove from heat and stir in butter until melted. Makes about State Housewives Get Milk Bargain For every dollar spent for fluid milk, the consumer receives nearly two dollars’ worth of food val- ue, The average Michigan house- wife spends 15 per cent of her food budget for milk and prod- ucts made from milk, but she is actually buying 30 per cent of her family’s nutritional needs. is the principal dairy item pur- chased daily, accounting for Tl per cent of the milk shipped to Detroit, The rest goes into cheese, butter, ice cream, cottage cheese and other dairy products. That’s pnly part of the story ef milk in the Detroit market, according to statistics of the Michigan Milk Preducers’ Asso- clation, whose members are 11,- 000 dairy farmers in 33 counties of Michigan, 13,000 of whom send over 2.2 million quarts of production and skills of Michigan's dairy farmers. For Flavorful Chops Braising pork chops? Top them with green pepper and onion rings for delicious flavor. Canned cream of mushroom sauce, with a little soy sauce added, makes an ex- Fluid milk, fresh from the farm, ee eee =— braising ae “IF IT’S ALIVE IT'S FRESH” TURKEYS 12-17 Avg. 2 ROCK FRYERS ROASTING HENS 4-8 ¢ Avg. Oven Ready SMALL FRYERS — ib For Ber-B-Que 97. Let’s Go Fishin’ at People’s — Fresh From the Lake! Fresh Perch and SILVER BASS Fresh Fresh Channel Live 243 cups. Serve hot over warm ginger-| 3 bread squares, Bake gingerbread from a standard recipe or a mix | : in a S%inch square pan. WALLEYES CATFISH “49% | °49° Lb. @ ¢ 39 SHRIMP —SCALLOPS— FROG LEGS oiterdy FISH & POULTRY MARKET = South a Street —Wholesale and Retail— FE 4-1521 MAINE LOBSTERS Old wana 9 to 9 VELVET BRAND PEANUT BUTTER fz PARKING PRICES ~ GOOD 7 DAYS! ie eer MICHIGAN PURE GRANULATED APPLE — CHERRY — PEACH 4* 89 OPEN SUN. SLICED BACON CRECENRIGER Grade A Medium ad SUGAR Adler’s Low Price C. P.C. FRESH, LEAN | SPARE RIBS 39 SMALL BAR-B-Q RIBS .. Lb. 39¢ COLDEN POPPY PEARS JOAN-OF-ARC NORTHERN BEANS In Heavy Syrup BIG 2’. CAN 1200 Baldwin \ THE, PONTI, AC PRESS. THURSDAY, NE 9, 1955 7 9.1955 AW c PVA Re pry AUTRE \.« New Bridal Hats Difter From Traditiona eile ” Mr. and Mrs. - & 1 L. F. Hylla | PARIS (INS) — Some of the, they end in two wide bands of {original head ornament 5 ajshape of a white lace kerchief | LINGERIE - ‘latest bridal head-covers in Paris | white organdy knotted to a large | bride with a chignon. It is a long | worn peasant manner. Simply | Panties. Sli of Florence are a far cry from the tradit ional | bow with the ends floating down | White muslin searf which he winds! knotted under the chin, it: looks| cae Belt 18 . to the waist. ee AR “hi arenue veils and orange blossoms. twice around the chignon. | charming on a very young bride | Girdles We will be Closed . > m A hat. showy “ath Iso has = announce the Lilies od 1e- yma are the ms ost | i iN at Fa als« nes) From the back the two ends in a country setting. popular bridal flowers since Paris- a bridal touch. A small white are brought forward, crossed in | engagement of ‘ans believe they bring good Tice straw crown has a large brim’ front of the threat and draped Wood members can be fastened | Wednesday during Ja tot as designec swee “ic . their daughter he ae ie jel pnales made entirely of liies-of-the-valley | back again over the shoulders. |together with machine screws or lune. July and August & ’ — n a : anc) mounted on wire for a halo ef-; With some lilles-of-the-valley | bolts through the use of a small — Dolores Joan, ~~ jfect. For the spring bride, Fath — to the chignon, it looks (threaded anchor that can be set| OXFORD SHOP Will: oO Three wreaths of lilies are also has a crescent shaped head- ressy, new and youthful. into the wood. Fine for any article | 58 W. Huron FE 4-7212 fo Huan “worn in the hair, ballerina fash- gear made of jasmin blossoms. One Paris designer suggests the |that needs to be taken apart for Thomas hire ion. At the ae oe fhe neck } Hubert de Givenchy sows an simplest bride s head- -cover in ihe | one reason or another. ‘Chaperone Necessary in This Case Man Should Stay Not at Widow's, but at a Hotel By EMILY POST A reader asks the following question: “Will you please clarify | a point of etiquette for a friend | and me? “] say that it is highly improper | son of Mr. for a young widow, living alone | and Mrs. with a nine-year-old child, to have . 1 , an out-of-town man friend stay. a Pilham O. | | overnight in her house. 3 ee Thomas of ‘ : “{ maintain that unless she | a sep fe ean be chaperoned by an older : = Center Eine member of her family, he should . “ “ae The couple is eS : stay at thé hotel. My friend says | >a Ena tall 7 that such stuffy conventions went | _— © peenning aoe. : out of date with high button | pik ; uedding. | Ss : shoes. ? | “] would like very much to my _ DOL ORES JOAN WY LLA | & : sl i He is the pees; it ty gh ¥ ; ‘ * your opinion on this matter. oo oe es — en Aer noes installation Rites Held | | | , Just In Time for the Hot Summer days Ahead Answer: “Black Tie” means that | the men are expected to wear | tuxedos and the women not too elaborate evening dresses. A bal- lerina-length would be acceptable. | able chaperone and to have a man e stay overnight in the house under! Rabbi Sanford Saperstein con-| Irving Gordon, newly e lected a these conditions would not escape ducted an installation of new offi- | president Fi criticism. cers for the Sisterhood of Temple, ay, procedure was followed by If the daughter were grown that , Beth Jacob when members gath-| yi Joseph Nosanchuck, first would be another story. ered Tuesday. vice president; Mrs. George —_ | The first taper in the candie- Wyman, second vice president; * . “Dear Mrs. Post: When writing light ceremony was lighted by Mrs. vars. Harry Arnkoff, secretary to my friends I find it more con-| Herman Dickstein, outgoing pres~ ang Mrs. Rudy LoPatin, corres: venient to typewrite my letters ident, which she passed on to Mrs, | ponding secretary. rather than write them by hand.) —————— - | Mrs. Tom Horwitz is treasurer; > “The other day while typewrit- Graduation Events |Mrs. Harry Ackerman, financial ing a lefter to a friend, one of | secretary, and Mrs. Julian Levine “% _ the girls in my office brought Set by Cranbrook lis parliamentarian. | me to task for this and said it | The commencement week pro- | Mrs. Irving Steinman gave the | was improper te typewrite per- gram for students at Cranbrook | i"vocation following the annual ds a sonal letters. School is a busy one luncheon. The musical part of the “Will you please tell me if she| Thursday evening a June formal | PrOsram was presented by the Sen-| ~ ° is right about this so that I will dance wil] be enjoyed by seniors, | '©T Girls Ensemble from Pontiac know whether or not to continue , post-graduates| members of the High School this practice?" | third, fourth and fifth forms and; Mrs, Harold Chapman, program | © .* the faculty chairman, introduced Rabbi Saper- Answer: To typewrite informal Friday evening a supper for the stein who paid tribute to Mrs S letters to friends is today not only faculty. resident students and par- | Dickstein and the Sisterhood. He, ©, ? correct but preferable if the letter ents and guests from out-of-town | closed the affair with a prayer | i is long or one’s handwriting is at Will be held at the school — * - ‘ all hard to read. | Commencement will take place wil! often cause the pipes in the ( } Saturday morning at Christ Church. | house plumbing system to give off : “Dear Mrs. Post: My husband A commencement luncheon will be With some loud noises. This can and I received an invitation to a | held during the afternoon honoring | be eliminated if special expansion | | ie large dinner party. The inv itatiun | members of the graduating class fittings are installed in the line or! ~ : specifies ‘Black Tie.’ and thelr families an off-set is made in ) the line. “Am I right in assuming this a Sa ————— ‘\ : means evening dress for both me 4 and my husband? Would a bailer- | F ina-length dress be acceptable?” b; § E * Each one an outstanding value * Every wanted style * Cool summer fabrics * Juniors 9 to 15 * Misses’ 10 to 20 f : * Half sizes 14/2 to 2212 Here is the shoe you have- seen walking all over town all the comfort of waik- ing on air with the softness i of give leather an : unbeatable combination lon Fay $798 for Housework é Just fome in and tr¢z, them on! Natural im sizes 4% ‘'o 10 AAA ‘ to C widths | #8 Simple bodice of biack chiffon with slim sleeves and Mared skirt | 0 of taffeta plays down the large é | he bosom. Black sheer sheath with | e covered chest of pleated black net | : re] is a fine chest expander. Black OPEN | ix being worn for late day events MONDAY | ae me AND SHOE STORE ||) London’s subways always re- see, 4 4 pes main at a nearly constant temper- FRIDAY 26 W. Huron. FE 2-7440 Pe ature regardiess of the weather NIGHT ’TIL 9 Ehcee for Young Folks S| outside. 4 nen i eS pe ae " aa - | pe a 8 ae Bie wet bap OS Sa Ie Ea es gt +a put sunshine ‘2 ° be | ie in your steps with SANDIER ar ine ce) Bln CHOOSE from A SELECTION of 600 sondol . . . chock-full, of sunshine and fun. . to be lived in and loved. — So soft... . so light. . ..you hardly know it’s there. gg «|. BEAUTIFUL HIGHER PRICED DRESSES DE G ./® Open a Convenient Charge Account G ) % , 30-Day Accounts, Budget Accounts oe Payments Conveniently Arranged @ GOLD @ WILD RICE poe tt iam. il is nn ee ' + Winners of the leagues two di- _ Visions, Four Towns of the Na- ‘Halted Once More THE Charles Back in Contention Among Heavies Ezzard Avenges Loss, With Unanimous Victory Over Holman CINCINNATI W—Ezzard Charles still says he’s ready to fight any- one—and of course that goes for heavyweight cham pion Rocky Marciano. Ezz, the Cincinnatian who has failed three times to regain the heavyweight title, bounced back. a bit last night when he won a unan- imous 10-round decision from long- armed Johnny Holman of Chicago. It was Holman who scored a surprising ninth round technical knockout over Charles in Miami last April. s = But last night Ezz had the an- | swers, He kept his left shoulder | up and his head buried in‘the taller | and heavier Holman’s chest and | mver gave the Chicagoan a chance to unloose those powerful rights which wrecked Charles in their last fight. It was a smart fight as far as Charlies was. concerned even though it wasn't a spectacular performance for the 2,522 paying customers and the television au- dience. Holman, summed it up after the fignt when he said: “IT just couldn't get a solid punch.” 7 * = Charles said he thought his best punch of the night was a right hand wallop in the third round. “My legs felt a dittle tired after the eighth round,’’ Charles said. “but at the end the legs were just as fresh as earlier in the fight.” Jake Mintz, Charles’ voltfble co- manager, declared, “If he would | days and Thursdays), day camp-| ~~ ay 7 pe | ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. W—A British physician today swung a medical Haymaker at the sport of boxing—whether championship or amateur—declaring: Boxers can get damaging ‘‘cauli- flower eyes"’ as well as cauliflow- er ears. Knowing how to box is not a defense “against blackguards and slubberdegullions’’ who probably will use brass knuckles or knives. The brain is a delicate complex of nerves and sense organs and “the very thought of setting out to smash all this artistry with fists is a sacrilege, not a sport, and it behooves us to speak out against such barbarism.” * * * Nearly half regular profession- al boxers show brain defects soon- er or later, by findings of one re- searcher. Medical exam’ before a_ fight can single out “‘the cripples and morons,” but cannot predict whether a fighter may be killed | in the first round. ‘Barbarism Is Sacrilege? , British Doctor Cries | Out Against Boxing — “One expert has said that prob- ably no head blow is taken with impunity, and each knockout causes definite and irreparable damage.” For every boxing fan really in- terested in the technique of the sport, ‘‘there must be many who consciously or unconsciously uti- lize boxing to foster their sadistic impulses.” ee * Boxing is not harmless and “will soon, we hope, be as obsolete as galley slaves or the chain gang.” The criticisms came from Dr. James Hamilton Doggart, of Moorsfield Eye Hospital, London, in a speech to the American Medi- cal Assn. Cauliflower eyes are destructive hemorrhages in blood vessels of the eye nourishing the retina and lens, and account for many of the vision defects in boxers, he said. Doggart said boxing blows can cause many kinds of damage to eyes, and to various parts of the brain. Recreation Plans for Avondale ‘Are Announced. The Avondale summer recrea- | tion program plans have been laid | with the starting date June 15. |The program, which includes a variety of activities, will close Aug. 12. Sponsored by the Avondale Board of Education and interest- | ed people in the school district, | the program is directed by Law- ' rence Scharer, with Frank Crowell in charge of activities. is swimming at Cass Lake ( U.S. Netters Gain in Two British Tests Trabert in 3rd Round of Kent Grass Courts Championships BECKENHAM, England @® — i American tennis players tuning up | their strokes for the June 27 start | Among the scheduled activities | of the All-England championships at Wimbledon are making strong fight all the time like he “fought ing and trips. Avondale teams will | bids for titles in two warm-up tonight he could lick anyone,”’ “He’s an awful smart fighter,” said Holman, ‘‘and he wouldn't let me get set all night.” Little Stories From Majors CLEVELAND, ®—Boston's Jim Piersall is showing signs of shak- ing the batting slump that has plagued him almost from the start of the basebaR season. The fleet outfielder has hit safely fn his last six games, collecting T1 hits in 26 at bats and has raised his average from .211 to .245. Piersall had four hits in five trips as the Red Sox nosed out the Indians 5-4 in 12 innings last night. NEW YORK «—You could hard- ly ask for any closer games than the ones they played in the major leagues yesterday. Five of the seven games were decided ‘by one run and the other two wound up with only two runs separating the winning and losing clubs, The results: Giants 5. Braves 4; Pirates 2, Cubs 1: Orioles 3, White Sox 2; Red Sox 5, Indians 4; A’s 3, Senators 2: Tigers 3, Yankees 1 and Dodgers 3, Redlegs 1. PITTSBURGH — Dale Long who wasn’t expected to gain a regular. berth with Pittsburgh, ap- pears to be in for a long stay as the Pirates’ first baseman. Long’s fourth homer gave the Bucs a 21 ninth-inning victory over the Chicago Cubs last night. He also had a double in four trips and boasts a batting average of 333 with 41 safeties in 123 at bats. Solunar Tables By JOHN ALDEN KNIGHT According to the solunar tables calculated for this area, best times for hunting and fishing for Friday and Saturday are as fol- slows: be entered in Midget, Class F }and Class E baseball leagues in Pontiac, and Avondale. Little from the Stiles, Stone, Elmwood, Auburn Heights, and Opdyke Sub- division areas. Birmingham 9 in Legion Win In Waterford Bows, 3-2; Boys Clubbers Victors on Forfeit The 18th District American Le- son got under way Wednesday one game played, another rained out, and a 3rd resulting in a forfeit. Huron Valley Boys Club won by forfeit from Berkley and the Clawson-Reochester contest was rained out. In the lone game decided on the field, Birming- ham nipped Waterford, 3-2, on the Waterford High diamond. Herb Kelly’s defending district champions jumped off to a 2-0 lead in the 4th inning, then pushed over what proyed to be the winning run lin the 6th. Jim Traa singled and Tom Beck poled out a long double, scoring the swift Traa from Ist. Waterford rallied in its half of the 6th, loading the bases with |none out as Dave Latta singled, Tom Bryce doubled and Ron Kind walked. However, Latta was forced at the plate and the uprising died after Leroy Nicholas had singled home 2 runs. Larry Hower of Birmingham bested Waterford southpaw Chuck Gillis on a hitter. League play resumes Sunday with Rechester -at Birmingham, Waterford at Berkley and Boys Club at Clawson. Birmingham ,,....... 000 201 0—3 4 : gion Junior Baseball _League—sea- Friday Waterford ......... 002 0—2 A PM Hower and Deer; Gillis and Kind. apr! gran! — aad rh iF 9:3 ; ; , Saturday: The Baltimore Orioles used 19 Minor ee aeior Minor m Major ifferent starting lineups in their 0:10 3:55 10.30 4-20 ' 1st 19 games this spring. | Trabert. playing | tournaments this week. * * * Tony Trabert, U.S, Davis Cup Leagues will be made up of teams ace, has reached the third round of the Kent Grass Courts cham- pionship here along with Herb Flam of Beverly Hills, Calif., Gil Shea of Los Angeles and Hugh Sweeney of New York, and Louise Brough of Beverly Hills in the women’s division. = * * At Bristol, where the West of England championships are being played, Hugh Stewart of Los An- geles, Malcolm Fox of Baltimore, Mrs. Dorothy Head Knode of Ala- meda, Calif., and Lois Felix of Meridan, Conn., are in the third round. * * * court made slippery by rain’ had the closest call yesterday. He de- feated young Mel Anderson of Australia 11-9, 86 but had to fight off a set point in the first set and rally from a 2-5 deficit in the second. ~ * * “Gee, there,’ the Cincinnati star said. “It would have been the easiest | thing in the world to slip and sprain an ankle. I had no intention of taking such a risk.” Savoldi and Gosper Wins Track Honors - EAST LANSING (UP)—Joe Sa- voldi Jr., son of the former Notre Dame football great, today was named captain of the 1956 Michi- gan State College track team.” Savoldi, a crack hurdler, broad jumper, high jumper and _shot- putter, is rated as a top decathlon candidate for the 1956 Olympics. Teammate Kevan Gosper, New- castle, New South Wales, Austra-. lia, was named to receive. the M. M. Knappen Merit Award. Triple Play Record Most. triple plays in one league during a season is seven. This was registered by American Loree teams in 1922 and 1936. National League executed seven in 1910 and 1929... 2 _The annual Junior Chamber of Commerce golf tournament has been scheduled for June 20 at Pon- tiac Country Club. Bill Whitlock is chairman of the activity for the Pontiac Jaycee chapter. All male amateur golfers, who wilt ‘not hive attained their 18th birthday by Aug. 15 this year are Waterford Village, 4 Towns in Title Game © The 12 elementary school recrea- fion department sponsored softball leagues ih Waterford Township will end play this Friday. play for top honors Friday at 4 p.m.--at the Waterford Township en Pat All Jeague games have n fields, following _ 5 Sports Pages in Today’s\Pontiac Press - *e 7 . ys JC Golf Test eligible. However, players will be disqualified if they enter any other Jaycee junior golf event. The low 5 scorers in the 18- hole medal play tournament will qualify for competition in the state JCC tourney July 18-19 at Walnut Hills Country Club in Lansing. Cooperating in the acquiring of entries for the tourney are caddy superintendents Wes Powell and Patrick Brazzil of Tam O’Shanter and Orchard Lake Cquntry Club’s respectively. ; The 5 players who qualified for Slated the state tourney from Ponfiat last O year are Bob Shaver of Walled | pe Lake, Jack Morriss of Pontiac, pt Dick Murphy of Keego Harbor, Kan on a it was dangerous out) p PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE. 9, 1955 troit Tigers to a tense 3-1 victory over the New York Yankees last night before 43,139 fans in Briggs Stadium. gles. Bob Turley started Yankees but gave up 10 walks in six innings. Tigers turned three ii Hitt ar of them into runs, and handed é 3 : I ge HE bea g sig ni & g Reed righ man, 17-year-old high school golf ‘BABY’ IN STAR-STUDDED FIELD — Deane Be- the baby in a star, smiles last | gan, Sam field Snead, Cary Middlecoff, etc. The Bethesda, night from between the driver and putter which won| Md., youngster shot a 75-69—144 in the qualifying him a berth in the star-studded field for the National | rounds and got his chance when Charles Bassler of Open Golf championships at San Francisco. He'll be | Baltimore withdrew because of the illness of his wife. ° i ll ——, - AP Wirephote of golfing names such as Ben Ho- PARIS @ — Bill Campbell of | Huntington, W, Va., led a strong contingent of Americans today into the 4th round of the French Amateur Golf championship. The tall U.S. Walker Cup cap- tain, playing brilliantly, eliminated L. E. Evans of Great Britain, 6 and 5, in one of the most orie- sided matches on the Chatilly course, Other U.S. players to advance included Don Bisplinghoff of Or- lande, Fla.; Bruce Coffin of Salem, Mass., and Joe Bullins of Winston-Salem, N.C. Bisplinghoff defeated P., .Cha- veau of France, 4 and 3 Coffin won over J, R, Levy, e Frenchman, 3 and 2. Bullins turned back P. Maeght of France, 5 and 4. An American |} “was Jack Brown of. White Plains, N. Y., an army man stationed in Frankfurt, Germany, who dropped a 19 hole match fo Michel Carihian of F “Lieut, Joe Conrad, newly crowned British amateur cham- Pion from San, Antonio, Tex., and WM other Americans were among the 23 players who-went out for Major Leagues AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lest Pet. Behind % #17 «67 4% 4% Pete Green of Franklin and War- senate steneris ren Sumner of Birmingham. All| Ney York at —— 2 p.m—Lopat (3-4) are probable entries again this Baltimore Bt Chicago (2). 1:30 p.m —Paltes year. - and Keogan (63) or Fornieles (4-2) Entries are available at Pon- | Weehington st Kanses City. 3 p tiac, Waterford and Birmingham ton at Cleveland, 12:30 p.m.—Delock High School, and at the following; “ Weuntypays RESULTS” golf courses: Pontiac Municipal, Pontiac Country Club, Pine Lake, Orchard Lake, Tam O'Shanter, Knollwood, North Hills, Oakland Hills, Birmingham CC, Bloomfield Hills and Forest Lake. Softball Schedule ball games Wednestlay night were postponed because of wet grounds. All scheduled’ city league soft- | p. 4 veining ‘ > +s opine as end, two Friday and four Sunday, Tonight's games: At dette—Prankiin Products vs Louie's ern, 7 p.m; Drive-in Clean- ers ve Ni 6:30 pm.; at Northside—Giles vs Gingellyille, 7 p.m. (Girls); Biemar vs Giskiuse Tan, 8:30 m. ‘ Priday’s ows KC, 8:30 p.m. ‘s , 8: x Nundey's games: f Ned pine ‘ ees 2H Beng nk thalde-Riks ve Ashland, T pant} {sqm bene 3, sear! York Boston 5, Cleveland © ia innings) Kansas City 3, FRIDA hicago, Baltimore at Kansas City d New York at Cleveland, 7 p.m. Ch 8 GOR > New fork cl 8 ee Raoule .....c20c... 20 # SS a Shackenet eee || 2 ‘429 «17% Piece "PS BS OR Chicago at . 12:30 p.m.—Minner (42) ys. Purkey (2-6) Obs. neverte 0 Vee : 12:3) p.m.—Com 30 p.m.—Minar- eos Pe a As Ne ay \\ * pe re oct a ead vt me Campbell Heads U.S. Links Contingent in French Test another} | made official at @ meeting today. Turley gave up five hits and struck out five. He now has 92 strikeouts, tying him with Cleve- land's Herb Score for the lead. In all, Tigers were given 14 walks—four from rookie Tem Stur- acon, 84 | worms we TY ee FS 333 Beet tl Bes ll Wilson, c 21 0 ¥ 4 tees. BF i , Lary, p 1 @ Skowren Tur P Brag Sturdivant, p@ 6 & Bauer J 736 uius ee nreS Grounded out te ee th. New YoOrk......ccceccecee- O01 OOO Batroit ......ceccccene «+000 201 be er and Robinson; : York | 8, iturdivent § Lary 6. HO—Turley § in 6, Sturdivant 1 —Berra. - W—Lary oo 4). U—Papereila, Rommel. —3:04. A—43, CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Mary Ann Downey, a rather stock- ily built brunette from Baltimore, threatened today to make a farce of the 50th annual Women's East- ern Golf Assn.'s amateur tourna- ment. - She carried an eight-stroke ad- vantage into the final round of play over the 6,197-yard par 73 Farmington Country Club layout. Miss Downey had rounds of 73 and 74 for a 36-hole total of 147, . * * Not only did the veteran ace from the Baltimore Country Club appear a shoo-in for the champi- onship but she had a golden op- portunity to establish a new rec- ord for the 54-hole event. A par performance by Miss Downey to- day would break the record of 221 set last year by Mrs. Mae Mur- ray Jones of Rutland, Vt. Trailing Miss Downey by eight strokes was Margie Burns, a scratch player from Greensboro, N. C, She shot one of yesterday's/ ) Irish Miler” Mary Downey Holds Eight Stroke Lead in Tourney performance of 157, the same total scored by Mrs. Kip Finch of New Canaan, Conn. Three more strokes back with 160s were Mary Pat Janssen, the host club's best bet to win the crown, and Mrs. Maurice Glick, a tourney veteran from Baltimore, Next on the list of leaders were Mrs, A. B. Bower of Richmond with a 162, Josephine Smith of Philadelphia with 164 and Mrs, and Mrs. Reinert Torgerson of Garden City, N. Y., with 165, Farley Wins - State Seniors Andianwood’s Lear Is / low Net in Class A Division Badly Injured two more rounds of competition | | today, And the experts say they'll still be at least five Americans among the eight left in the competition when the last ‘putt is dropped to- day. Fayored to win through to the quarterfinal round were Conra Bisplinghoff, 20 - year - old South champion from jando, Fla.; Campbell of Huntington, W. Va., captain of the U.S. Walker Cup team which downed the Brit- ish; Bruce Cudd, 21-year-old col- lege student from Portland, Ore. and Bulins of Winston - Salem, N.C. an Army private stationed in France. None of the American favorites were seriously challenged in yes- terday's competition over the 6,140- yard par 72 Chantilly course. Seven of the Anjierican survivors are members of the U.S. armed forces Stationed in Europe, Keith's One-Hiter Eases Lions fo Win Harlan. (Fat) Keith, whose wife presented him with a new daughter Tuesday, celebrated the event last night by pitching a 1-hit shutout as the Waterford Lions blanked Sylvan Center, 10-0, in a Waterford Recreation League softball game. Keith yielded a single to Sylvah’s Van Alstine in the ist inning, but Larkin-Is F iret Winner of Miceli Memorial —- Skipper 2-Sport Star Named as School’s Top | JACKSON, Wyo. (INS) — North- | er Ireland's champion miler hov- yéred near death today in a Jack- son hospital after falling 100 feet lover a cliff in the Grand Teton National Park. Star athlete Victor Milligan, 25, of Belfast, was reported in very critical condition at St. Senior Athlete Dave Larkifi, Waterford High School footbal] and baseball star, became the Ist recipient of the An- | drew Miceli Memorial Trophy in impressive and moving cere- mony at the school’s awards as- sembly Wednesday morning. The beautiful trophy, a gift to the school, was established in the memory of Andrew Miceli, 10th grade student at the Town- ship High School, who was a recent drowning victim. The award is given the boy se- lected by the school's coaching staff and athletic director ag the out- standing senior athlete of the year. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph. Miceli were present as principal Roy Larmee made the presentation to Larkin. Larkin was an_all-Inter-Lakes Conference selection in both fopt- ball (as a fullback) and baseball (as a 3rd baseman). He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo W. Larkin, 6412 Logan, Williams Lake. ‘Little Mo’ to Wed SAN DIEGO, Calif. (INS)—Mau- reen (Little Mo) Connolly, the ex- world’s tennis champion who re- tired from active competition last spring, will marry Norman Brink- er, 24, Saturday in San Diego. Joseph's Hospital in Jackson from two compound fractures of the skull and internal injuries. He has held the Northern Ire- land mile track ‘record for three years with the time of 4:06, and ,placed 4th in the “miracle mile race” a year ago in Vancouver. ‘He was climbing a cliff in the Grand Tetons with David Grunau of Valparaiso, Ind., a fellow-stu- dent at Purdue University, when he lost his balance and fell Mon- day, Plastic Helmet May Have Saved Life of Player HOLYWOQOD <™—Curt Roberts, Hollywood second baseman, suf- fered a brain concussion when struck by a pitch by Bubba Church of Los Angeles last night. Roberts, 25, was taken to Wash- ington Hospital where x-rays later today will determine whether his skull was fractured. He was ported resting well. ° Team physician, Dr. Murray Small said the plastic helmet Roberts wore under his cap prob- jably saved his life. The pitch | struck him high on the forehead. Roberts, the first Negro to play for Pittsburgh, is here on option from the Pirates, Competitors all were at least 50 years of age. Winners in competition for vari- ous age grq@ups: Class A for entrants 1% and over— low 3, Dr. W. 8. Mackentie, Lene- ‘ountry Club, 138; low net, W. EL Jr.. Indianwood Country Club, Pontiac, 152. Class B for entrants 70 to gross, F. Riggin 6r.. Port low net, G. A. Currie, Midiand, 153. Class C for entrants 65 to My ross, F. L. Riggins Sr., Port Huron, 61: low net, Roy Berry, Barton Ann Arbor, 138. Class D for entrants 60 to 64—low oss, C. J. Strobel, Port Huron, 161;- rd net, H. M. Long, Flint Golf Club, Port Huron, 1465 West Orange Flier Defends Ricks Award DETROIT — Lit. Charles J, Young, of West Orange, N. J., will defend his Air National Guard Auto Races Cancelled Weditesday night's old model stock car races at the Pontiac races start at 7 p. m. was untouchable thereafter as he struck out 11 and didn't walk a man. His batterymate, Art Ruelle, paced a 10-hit Lion batting attack with a 3run homer in the 6th inning. Sylvan Center Waterford Lions ..... 2 Thomas and Young; Keith and Ruelle. Norris Becomes Prexy NEW YORK (INS) — Jim. Nor-) ris, millionaire president of the International Boxing Club, t Square Garden: today in a reor- ganizational move resulting from the mass resignation of six mem- bers of the-board of directors. ‘The board was reduced from 15 top. man, following the walkouts yesterday. John Reed Kilpatrick, former (succeeds Ber- nard F. Gimbel ag chairman in the new structure \which will be eGR iy tba the outstanding amateur athletes to nine members, with Norris .as/ of the year by the Ca ‘Assn. m BROOKLYN (‘#—Don Newcombe doesn’t like cold weather and doesn't rate himself a hitter but ‘recent records belie him. It was cold and rainy at Ebbets 3 a ed f Field last night, but the big Brook- cree Se ony oe | Tyn righthander racked up his 10th victory without a defeat as the Tir York Giants back in 1888 and matched by Rube Marquard of same club in 1912. But he a different pitcher bist B22 Ag a EF F Big Newk Dislikes Cold, Says He’s No Hitter, but He Gets {0th Mound Win, Lifts Hit Mark fo .400 fete tt 64—low Huron, - Hite, - END TIRE SPECIAL ILOP TIRES of QUALITY = FULLY GUARANTEED Dunlop Ist Quality DELUXE CUSHION @ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1955 TIRE SIZE | REG. PRICE | SALE PRICE 6.00x16 18.60 12.95 6.40x15 19.85 13.95 6.70x15 20.80 14.95 7.10x15 23.00 15.95 ~"7.60x15 25.15 16.95 Plus Tax and Old Tire BUY ON EASY BUDGET TERMS SIMILAR SAVINGS ON DUNLOP GOLD CUP WHITES Be Sure—Be Safe—Be Satisfied! TIRE SIZE REG. PRICE SALE PRICE 6.70x15 38.20 21.95 Be —-7.10x15 42.25 23.95 ; 7.60x15 46.25 (25.95 CLYDE’S . FFAME and WHEEL SERVICE FE 5-6467 169 Orchard Lake Corner Bagley a | | SCHENLEY DISTILLERS CO., N.Y. CG | WASHINGTON W—Fiity golfers which goes to the country with the from 26 nations tee off today in| lowest combined score. for its two) the International Golf Champion- | ships over a Columbia Country | Club course soaked by rain and with more showers promised. * 8 8 The sponsoring International Golf. Assn. bills it as a $150,000. tournament, but that figure in- cludes expense money and a $500 payment to each man who partici- | |pates. Actual prize money is) $11,800. LJ * * : Chick Harbert, the U"S, PGA champion, said he thought a figure of 560 would win the Canada Cup, BS Mi tl jit —Schenlet avagts Try it today, only se Pt. | Code No. 673 Order it at your favorite bar. | BLENDED WHISKEY, 86 PROOF, 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS - team members for “holes = meda] play. Par for the 6,510-vard course in suburban Chevy Chase, Md., is T2. * * * Harbert, who attended a banquet for the entrants last night along with Vice President Nixon and ambassadors from a_ score of countries, said he thought 275 would be enough to win the $2,500 first prize which goes to the indi- | 72 | vidual who scores the lowest num- | should be enough to win,”’ ber of strokes in the individual tournament, It runs concurrently | with the international event. “If his partner gets 285, that Harbert | said. * = * Peter Thomson and Kel Nagle of Australia, defending champions in the third annual Canada Cup com- petition, were rated as favorites. Harbert and Ed Furgol, the Na- tional Open champion, were rated just behind. The theme of the International Harbert Sees 560 as Winning Tota Golf Assn. is “international good | will through golf,’ and that theme _was played for all it was’ worth ‘last night at a banquet for the participating golfers, * * * John Jay Hopkins, president of General Dynamics ‘Corp. and the moving force in the association, had this to say: * Ld s “All men are equal when faced with the nerve-shaking dilemma of a bal] buried deep in the confines of a sand trap and a seven-stroke score facing them on a par-3 hole.” ° * * * “Whether a man speaks Chero- kee, Japanese, Saudi Arabian, flawless Persian or English, his problem with that ball is the same as the other players who find themselves in the same bunker, and he and his fellow sufferers will understand each other a lot more identical devilish quandaries that a golf course poses for all men.’ Jabneh, Son ‘Dark Horse’ NEW YORK wW—Jabneh is the dark horse for the $100,000 Bel- mont Stakes Saturday, like Nashua at 1 to 5 in the 87th| running of the 3-year-old classic. | Laudy Lawrence, a retired mo- tion picture ‘executive who lives in Paris, owns this bay son of Bimelech out of Bellesoeur. Jabneh has the pedigree to make) the mile and one half Belmont, interesting for anybody. * * s Swaps—who will be absent Satur- | day—upset Nashua in the Ken- Special ! Thurs,--Fri.--Sat. $15.00 Golf Bag $10.75 $12.00 Golf Bag $8.95 $40.00 Golf Bag $24.00 $30.00 Golf Cart $23.50 $16.50 Golf Cart $12.45 $21.00 Woods . $9.00 $12.00 Irons’. . $6.45 50c Golf Balls ... 30c 70c Golf Balls ... 50 WELDEN SPORTING GOODS 51 Mt. Clemens. FE 4-6211 ow Cee ‘Lightweights for Father's Day JUNE 19th Arrow Lightweight Sport shades, . 106 N. Seginew St. . to keep him cool and comfortable all summer long! Arrow Lightweight Shirts in smart collar styles, airy “Sanforized’’® fabrics, Arafold collar, breezy .. . “Sanforized’"’®, Arrow Ties in light summery colors, ‘ Arrow Handkerchiefs in cool summer ror ARROW LIGHTWEGHTS $3.95 Shirts with $3.95 $1.50 55¢ _ OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY NIGHTS "til 9 and he’s | a pretty good story even if you) On the day the California colt tucky Derby, Jabneh captured an | troit and Power, ' Brooklyn and | Milwaukee, @; Mays, | _ HITS—Aar |New York, 68; | Brookiye. a | . “ty ork, STOLEN BAS! | aa; Giiltam, Brooklyn, i nail, 7; Moon, st ! Pai Milwaukee, 64 of Bimelech for Belmont jobscure $4,000 race named the Johnren Purse at Belmont Park. He’s been idle since. Unraced as a 2-year-old; Jabneh was the $1.45 |to $1 favorite, and beat War and 'Peace by 21, lengths. The colt started racing last winter at Hia- leah, * + * | Just imagine the story it would : Top Net Stars in Dixie Event be if Jabneh won the Belmont. | Hardly anyone, including his. own- | er, gives him more than an out- , Side chance * « “He doesn’t have much chance, | | but I hope he doesn’t disgrace us.” lis the way Lawrence put it at his | home in Chantilly near Paris. ' League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING (based F] line, Detroit, 372 Power, Kansas City, | ington, 313; Mantle, New York, at the net today after weeding out ‘| from the U.S. “| off in separate matches with two Blue - Gray Tourney Promises Hot Action in Today’s Matches MONTGOMERY, Ala. u»—Some of the top stars in the Blue-Gray tennis fight may be butting heads many lesser lights in opening play | yesterday. Johann Kupferburger, a sturdy South African Davis Cupper play- jing for the University of Miami, | comes up against Jerry Hunt of Atlanta. Cuba's Davis Cup star, Orlando Garrido, tangles with An- niston ace Les Longshore in an- other match. The likeliest upsets may come this afternoon when Davis Cuppers and Mexico square RUNS — Mantle, New York, 51; §mith. | | Cleveland, 46; Kaline, Detroit and —— | New York, 41; Goodman, . RUNS BATTED IN — Kaline, "Detrat Berra and Mantle, wen York, | Jensen, Boston, 38; —— Kansas cits | |and Vernon, Washington, leeds — Kaine, Detroit, ny Smith, Cleve- | | €; Kuenn. Detroit, ; Pox, orking co co m the glov y_of Thoma MAN —— 4 ds higher, July $12.32, | gece ysis It opened on a 12 ae in demand. eli the Lees’ pleas to sta re- can be assured with a 15 pe ntrol |compartment of his car whil ; Fl — ae eek ON FARM BY Grain Pr oernor enor Baa fo oe ee ee aes ie couse). The service oD aie Os el ee edeoe rab) patent We it) mn 3 | BE Na aerle, Wane"tane sa rain Prices Dee TROIT, June @ (AP | signe eed: ekheed, which | South Kore ; ond y manage ee | Division parking | Of D aaa a roit, cases inclu ee ees. fob. | gned a big plane contra ot an government gement. The Fords g lot. Reported tak 3484 UNSTAN'S PLOWE MAN WANTE ncluded, Wederal-state aie sontract with)| Soe ee can | ready o al- | en were a -| 20 8 Berea & © ba SST AMDLe [mcaco lan crease jederal-state | American Airline . ith} 7, nationals {ro wn about 10 per ; pair of sun glas ts FEC 3-8301 siness in W OA 16H CHICAGO, June 8 oman : | erase barge a" fares GC eadiam Ht. than a point ines, rose more | Communists. m the | Outstanding Ford a cent ot all ring and a wrist eaich: asses, a Funeral Directors 4 seruaiy of owriac a ioal Oo: i os pening | rowne Grade all . | Le i mainder, re ~. . re} If . : z start Writ. ence needed grade B large 37 large 42, medium 36, OTHERS LI “e, who fled Nort : . ported to amoun your friend’ AIP AMB SUTIN MCF-696-0, e Rawlei we Dept. rd veeeeee: 10TM Commer sally graded: Al STED _ the Communists et Korea when 3,089,908 non-voting — sh. t to! bail, Ph. FE 5- er jail and needs Pursiev 7 Panerai an GROUND Geena nie FOR noe Sead 1 10% ites—Grade A Ja so higher . otherwi over, think: owned b ay . ares, - is | 4 or MA 5-403 co. Hom, FE ¢121} __bor wo MAJOR AND 3 AND E, Serbeass 1 igig| 1 erede @ ree 2S rge 39-40, medium tex, Du P were Zenith, Celo- JES BA . s y the Ford Foundation.) | eeu cts PUNERAT. HOME NEE OS m ry beans ies rowns—Grade A _“ ont, Alli " AH ; | tock to p ‘ —Adv Dreyto acilities OR NEED \N PO es cata 71, medium 33: Cetue Bete 20. tare Standard Oil (NJ) “ aaa mical, he ous not like the United States.” | will be sold ww ne ered publicly Rummage sale: Clea DION Sane I sn Wetertord” Twp, Some of TORE MONEY? vale ocn00c * 3 ays, | erate Ret sreaey! fo Sirs Gepplies mod. | villelMcInare- Pox ohns- Man ~ *495- “In South Kore 2 | y the foundation. toys, househol n clothing,| = F!"*>*_ piesb eg SE VICES ; over $100 a eae aon Geen Nov 2 ne better te be | yre - Pore hav Korea, they! “ d goods, etc is Home Fr You'R * rt tim Mer ........ 10% til Geil imate national Harvester Passat Inter. DAVe a strong Underground . ; A decision te give v rae homes! Sat) dane 1108 from mePARKs « GRIFFIN are ee cesi Eeet nee ot i s : : 7 1 = ' eneré Ae hell : ar r oting . : 5 : : am @ i “orn Contracts ‘| CHICAGO BUTTER te United Aircraft oe Cc : ways of getting people.’ 7 a de em raen a Pike) m. 4 South eaginae) a — FE 3806} eels ve $3900. for ap. i Mar < | CHICAGO FR AND EGGS | * : 1g pare . rk would be di . ME cece 2h tends June ; . * * : i ? nts, he 58 ictated de- A CHAN ne 1232 sec prices an ha a ose oe tetsaele - Kaiser Aluminum, stro mained in North vee ae ‘ec wl to attain the largest caus Rummage sale: Roch Ady. Oor ees-Siple , Saar ‘ Wiser Narare bo ‘We OR ae a | 56 73 92 A 36 we paners pallacore re cent sessions. ] ' ng in re- heavy pressu f a, under! Pe ic distribution 3 odist Chu ester Meth FUN : ne « ed 1.01257) | ears 90 B85. 8. an ae os ee L s, lost a small frac ae ssure from the Reds be-| @ . That can be rch at Plasse i NERAL HON CHANIC AN = i sees = 13.35 [ ac 43 5 Yester : raction, cause Pa aa: reds be- lone bes! Pifth y's Garag Ambul ME hel D MECHA | pee: US ee aa alltime eat ibe Ppa Mit an the cant et sons service with the New ‘Sel te . listing on (to 6 oe Pri. only 9 a. a weinnes! Borvieg "aus ot Meter son. Keno seals) Auetw va, ber 7, ; unchanged tp sae? ; gn. e Assoc : ; qd States arn i Oe! Exch: —meed E.arber rvice, . arge whites 60-69) 9 1 higher averayve = ociated Press ny. | The big boa ange. —Adv ME Ro. ied 37) mediu per cent A's 2 ee of 60 stocks ¢ : ; & rd does not | Home , : D CHANICWL DRAFTSMAN. \ E U. M lo Award Ps Tdi Thea stat: 3.30000. shares voli Voting stock. istinew: lcoret srdiat enone onelson-Johns | fii ts area es c= jen shares as a onside “Surthermor Pontiac Lak. hurch. 2775 PUN work in prod ut and detailed : €, ; e Roa “ ERAL HOM experi uct design 8 | @nd institut pension funds d. Serving 5: DESIGNED .FO > E ence in tool d ome institutional | P- m., June 11 5:30 )._ FUNERALS” able Interestin esign desir- “fe | Poultry New Yo k . 5 will not b buyers generally | . —Adv. Mon ing organization. Oran in_expand- | ates DETRO f tocks “Ford uy a non-voting common | Rummage sale, Youth BS uments 4A eas Ich OA 62588. Mr Btur. IT POULTRY (Late Moral ord stock, ac - | Lake Ori outh Cen B 1 aaa oa Ic | DETROIT, June 8 ning Quotations) male cording to esti- | on. Pri. & Sa ter, | pone DIRE AM yan s t tiac Orant': D 8A - + Saale penitty Dare Gerona Ramis a a ee ice 404 ing an about jeer ene ee facts | , aay fecal elo MIDWEST Bruce Annett pitgavy hens 28-29 up to 10 am Air Reduce 1, 41 tut Nica 210) 93 about -$600 perations, was worth Driving lessons sOaknd= Arai are ae se with Posting weal oy Ponti ) 3 Other sures eae ft eos 30, heary Aled Cho 1118 nt Paper 0011241 Mo Shot 1600 8 share at yeurent | lend) MamatouPaaticn Teen —_ wih Footiar Best Firmen ae ay 1 whites dCh i : ver .,, 67 | ns 8. ! A G Real Estate ‘8 | caponetion 2542444 Ibe) Rocks Allied Bite... aa int Tel ‘cxtl Sah $2 ve May Bring New | wouldibe vein appeal, this , Training. FE 2- oa Drivers BOX REPLIES eneineer Ons FOR MEN en Get H ducklings 30 We ckas cote (163°) ce sees 196 Jacods eo) 386! 000,000 B at least 10 for 1. | —Adv. vollege Grad types , $15 000 { onors Maruet sca 2: | Alum A ... 1056 Johns Man .. as ‘ ’ vildin to “Ford earnin l Sat. June 11, A ‘ UMabaeetecrete oa $7 dy on [A m . ..1485 Jo an .. 90 | g gs last year on the W. Rumma t 10 am, toda slanecers. exp. «4... bee 4 under lel cla geod quatliy bens laa coe 8 Jones & L .. 383 Area $600 a shar Huron St. ce sale, 98 y i oe --. $10 000 to ew fair esas ight supplies short iAm Can a Kelsey Hay 2B e stock were abo Gold Star M there w 3 tenes $390 aac -@i nica 1 a sh ut $58 others. ere replies a pontine men will be among |eeretyyatenay ine Soegites funy sauphe reser i rae imp Cle. 304 woul abe . This year's earnings | —Adv. the Press office si OPEN S. \TU RDAY a ben ms chosen to receive ack oeataeuca Market tn general Am M & Piy . 316 xresae 83 |. 30 The Troy Tow substantially higher.” | Rummage sale 8S the f in 7 Till 2 P. XN tifieates in red cer- | Am Motors... 10 Re a Oe 3 mship zoning board : rage, aturday in ollowing boxes: i: sented Ju real estate, to be pre- ‘ (42 " Gas ka ipa - rus will hold a June 14 sees a . 23 Pine St. cn xes: Midwest Employm ‘ . ss : , Giass pons a “4 i — PONTIA ~ of Mic sigan pad the University | ACTUCAGO. June 8 IAPs Lt an Beating. mi tle McN&L | v8 ppg forme which ma easing Electric Power . ge sale Sat. J , 1, 2, 4, 10, 12, 14, 15, “ “ye seat See: on , »xtension service in, °" dy on hens and youn ive bosliny = acy ' $16 etre My .. 644 2,000,000 office ‘ p am. unt une 11 8 16, 19 eae oD. GRI : = saa bor. = on caponetiae receipe, work weak Am elira 13 Love Maire 2 4t* search benidin in nd re| , / Church. ut noun rare Christian ee oe 28, 78, 101, tly experienced’ | OPERATORS, : payt 5 929 Ib) c . si a uro: . “ o 3 nes moeerary certificate will be | 32 6.28 Ment hess 1s tf Resty hens |Am Zine at” Lortitard _- “ undisclosed firm has Tons | 6 Pct. Over ’ m. —Adv. , proof of sae Dont " 7, Must * ruce J. Annett, 2799 | ryers 30-32 oid fas -% broflera or Anac Cop .. 27 Mack Trk - 2 on 100 acres : R . > phone person an @ st Z ar | : -. 1 Mars noe SY s on the no egisP Mant calls, DB : = Shore. for his wick . a ponettes 34-38 ers 12-128. ca- | qgimegva co 1s Martin O..as Maple Road, across ease) NEW YORK (\#—The P is ae. Buys Out __ Help WwW Fas eas, aa woe val estate progra 3 Assd Dry G. May D sir .. 373 2iFport be TZ nation’s § OHOC G anted M RMANENT a aller _— sia) usa c (3 etween Crook output of e s orp. ale 6 man PosiTio ee teen Seine Livestock | AU'cet Line”. 4 Mont v Pe in ooke Toads sand Coo 1156 per Be en ew YOu p. Stock A LOCAL ROUTE Now OPEN. perience bot Jn saieawort. Bx. adm sine tl Ret a = we) eal : + . NE 2K ve ri a = inistration thro : ne | wetno AU Retin 2 344 Meat ware pss PI | Edison El d of a year ago. K (INSr—St. R Works ee ele tol pli ine eee chavassion. ; ugh its: exte IT LIVES dr .. Pa... ans call ectri P. egis yo week yY & c asain sion si n- _DETRO TOCK .. 836 Mot 216 for a 100,000 squ c Instit aper Ci inten en om miss: a. « of th on ice. Annett is president | | 128 Maries por 9 (AP)— Hogs salad) Baia lee MI 68) Motor eS, a | foot office buildi : are | today. srune! reexted i 0. announced today that sential. = ‘ance civea. No cold reas ae employee benefits. © Michigan Real E areane etsabiished. : me. ii) Mucuer wr. Xs ng and a 50,000 t has ired i part & sareces, att ip = al Estat | A steady undertone | BSlt & Oh ueller Br squa ly Output w acqul all man for Fri ime delive Maple, Bt =omy 17? We ciation. e Asso-| Cattle salable lmesch Wat 7 491 Murray C w | re foot research labo put was down fro common stock Brush, PE and Sat Call Puties PLANT rmin, st mastiy Goce: Market seen eda ce Bendix A a ee a | oe ratory, | vious week m the pre. Of the Pollock P. $ pm 23318 between 6 and hire ELECTRICIAN WILL. pared last rket steady tod elpte Mc $24 =N . 4231 g to Township 8 . however aper Cor, rT and ire journe N ot Thursd ay Com- at Cash R -¥ : ip Super- . as a : p. of AMBITI F Too. as Roars r onic men chosen to inc. crene ks Seisegiiar went cod O04 visor, Nerman &. Barnard. a be the Memorial Day holiday por as a result of an offer of vase cari iaiseen fants TO 4, wor Hadley "8 . 8 ay. 2 rertificates are ‘oa eka g to spots 28 ce an * $01 The 1: . roduction of E . ’. | exchange ry Entebushed higan ter- - olly, Mich. E. Partrid Cramer | stron michel oad ecsd eros Higher "195 and is present); , “lectricity in the | made by St. Regis $2 an hour sales progra: FI PRESS OPERATO! 4 ge, 43 W. H gto 80 cents Hi grades: cows resident y zoned for | Week ended J e On the |. - bonus. E and my A cram LINT TOOL a co Rudolph F.R * uron St; quality and sorts feher considerin ; Ae eh ntial dev elopment. The 9 537. une 4 amounted basis of th ffe nese aperience gel « xpense 407 Hadley St. . Kanke, 2348 N pinapeat dtp pecrtand (Acces) cated ach ©) pergiwera” } 232 pany w com. | 9-537.000,000 kil to | ho e offer, stock- qeesieary See. Mr but_not 7 St. Molly, Mich Center Dr , N. Pine | bulk ch and feeders ful! igh - lp g Warn..,. 465 NI 4 y wants it rezoned owatthours, Iders of Poll ron Hotel Wed. eeks, wer . and Ivan W bulk choice fed steer y ateady. | Driess Mf... 214 aM Pw .. 33 | Commerc to light Pared with 8.2 com: ock will recei There. 69 L a3 J . Schram, | omai! choles Gnd cians 23002400. few Brist My ve 3 Nort & West. $. ercial development. | the 46,000,000 kil | 369,999 co ve ASSIST pm AT udson. lots up to 28 me Individuals Brun Balke.... ; 4 No Am A - $8 | “Th ours, in the | owat- | : mmon shares ANT MA Ww ataine mist © 2300 bulk and Bua ee Nee be 881 is building woul | ike holiday ra the 42 of St. Regis perkin, NAGER FOR e need 3 clean-e Recipients h chetce steers 19 90-32 90 good to low | A aCelec. 308) woe Pac sca touthe d be similar Year ago and 9. week a e 42,000 outstanding . tg loake lots and garag men imiedia ut a cressive s have . complet a eae aal eeets moat atiney Burroushs .. 296 or Sta Pw .. 167 Ford Motor C 976,000,000 kil of commen @ salary $73 per week wi Start new eat telv o handle total of 16 h pleted a d and choice fed 1480-1800 moet uum & H Nwest Alrit and I 0. Tractor | hours in the owatt- | Pollock. opportunity f eek with good ean off: resale oroverti we C ours work i moat utility heifers 18 $0 32 co Jimp> W / 131 one Cc lin., 254 mplement Div week before. . 1830 OE. lor advancement. A and er vy top es. We phases of real in eight | !3 75- 17.50; S and commerctal Ca y .. 374 ou Pp... ies propaseéd ision and the| Sh " Pallock Pa quired. xcellent referenc = Sey et works oan a al estate. So tal co ulk utility and hetfers | Gan Dry ..... 16 s Elev. i Vickers C | , Sharpest output gains were per Corp., with sales Apply 50 W pa be EW MODER tions in studied for fo ’ Some have | cia! ws 13 06-1450: f low commer- Cdn Pac 44 Owens Til Gl tae 7 buildi orp office, th put £ In jin 194 of a ° tween ) and « ayne Bt be. TIONED O N AIR COND ur years taki t cows ss to 15 $9: ew high commer. | Capital Atri "36 Pan AWA 24 ing,” Barnard sa e central industri - | pproximately $33,000 are seeking pm ONLY tf look us ICE. Come sh course each semester. ng one | *T8 mostly 11 90-13 capnets and eat. (Carnes C 1 Penh EPL. ia If the said. clud al area, in- |: !s a leadi aed ment. permanent aa ise = semester. commercial b 00: bulk utile 1 Ca >... 62 Poram Pict, 427] zoning chan ing the steel . ng manufact ses: Si V _._ The Michigan Real Esta $000-35 6 cbetm) seekene bulk” good - rp eT Farem, Pict... 427 by the zoning bo tai ara and auto manu. | “2X¢d paper used in din hak os L AN ciation. the ‘State Office of Voce. | 0 ett Manet ue wean Shlaewe path 7 12 $2}, Ship board of ctration face lowe | wan! whee coer augtien utiee and other industries mekine AUTO SALESMAN — 28) ORCHARD tional Educ ‘oca seday li Cami _ Market 278 IR waa . 291 , struction might 5 ° mption . New and aT LAKE RD. ation, along w market pared last Thi slow, steady ice: -teed 30.3 bees! Cola * 3i under way this y get | tricity at A of elec- health, used Demo fu MIDDLEBELT real estais bn ’ g with local | 200 = erratic: good 4 ursday eatee Ches & Oh 2 283 Phelps D.. wee 7 Th yous year. 5 : tomic Energy C marr accident and itt rished. FE 5-418 ate boards. work with - eaviee ocight weand tee ce | CR aN. - $23 pniico ood Hh e building is sc mission in ‘om- : e@ availab'e H le insur. REAL EST oe | aie | : Nices 2 s schedule . installat sions, oni igheet w ATE university's extension service inal tne aoe cere eases HE chuieator By meee TES empoyes to have | sharply. Production, ta the crm: eath Notices enact oe paved ful or part te salmon roviding the pro wavy vealere 3 ower, som Clark eo Py tral in ¢ cen- Sng 7 alers Sam Cc grams. chote Oo off e choice Equip. 70 t Plate G industrial Hodge yrs Ask for M4 HAPIN-B B A luncheon f tendo all weirhts 1700 nul good and | climax Mo Proct & . area was w. Fernwood Ch. Jack TGELOW n for ce a pri 2200 fh Pan -- 186 Vac ne cent 23 per _ Wood ward errolet. 223 BR Seis wall &llow certificate win- | 2790 with: pean asset MeAivia ets scene: | chests =e 76 alt, Jee oal = oo of a year ago and MATLEY. JUNE 1, 1998, WALL BOY TO Boo as Ferndale, - . M11) Oothe: pela ERS eeveiony “oe the pre: sentation | Ao aee ce commercial! go Soniael Saye on at Medio op vos ms esman rs was up 23.6 Senate nee oe =. res resale onions PAINT- ma marker tk it group ais ei lear SUscartel wissti> 166844 14 00. See ean be! mad . rent. ley. dea res O. Hat- y's Golf and C ardening 131 or FE 5-834 oy epee Moa neta Me ween, te Folge aaa |Semtem eH} icra Hits Gas Legislatio All other sections showed gear lather ot inde 3 ac? 2308 Toaton Lake Rd ott Com: REAL ESTATE ection ob: officers. ana Baaressive (Gems ursday broad | con, BSE -- 23 Ro Pict...) ;: eg ti n over > gai Jam iam Alex Hatley; BAR TENDER POR . SA Other “ea ls nso unevent> As for slaughter | Cont Can. 7:24 Rock 8 oe 93 | . a year ago as f ns ‘ea and Mary Ethel H ey; Nigh et “OCAL CL LESMAN 7 area people receivin | nen seats Pere 300 higher ca |Cont Mot ore Sclcoay wh .. 272] ce England ollows: New a brother of Pleet, atiey; Pontiac Permanent job UB. mbitious and . tificates: cer) th Beer scare’ S000 higher tobe | CoPber Siete a ne) ecuesial Gaeviel tira antic 02. West Caneeal 79 ach egies sae, neat gb rte | Bierce" tetdndan eee 21.89 ot Mostly good #1 Wb spring ott | Corn Pd 69402 & Reg Pap. 803 esman contended *| Contrai 9 entral 7.2: South peel paola James, Mill Puncrel AND BRICK MEN HILTZ mPhase vant Scott. 3248 Cum a choice shorn hetee: 2200: bulk ennd | Crue Bt! +: ye each ie dg ‘477 that “any legisl today ss 96: Rocky ve 3 corre will be held Prid: eral Ss se union Steady work f: MUST REALTOR FE 5-618 Birmingham-—H A “| te $9, some No 2 alice Mold pelts 91905 (Cor ee agg Sead AL : nas benefit. g: slation designed to Pacific Northw untain 7.1; 81 +93 2 p.m. at the oo woteees: She after ° Pir ag 1 Vila Ha and farol’ § DeOrlew 1278 kee head chotce ayes kinds 20 80 21 59 Det Edts ... 361 Sears R an it gas producers cifi est 10.0; and Pa-{ Mal Chapel with Rev 5 2190 — = EH epee Ibert & Straith, 498 chotce No 2 pelted bulx eands anq| Dis © Seag : Ah Bhell ost = 80 2 also contain ... should , CHC Southwest 8.3 ' a- Touace officiating. nev Fem Comb. B Clawson (1 : uUMity and geed sho kinds 2059-21 84, | Doug Alre ‘ag Sinclat Moe Eh a provisions designed t ~~ le wa Park Cemetery. Mr fare Liberal Smper & Paint SALESMEN Gordon ci aries A Bowen Jr, 10S E tee te choice shorn Us lambe 15 00-18 89 Dow Chem | $57 Seu ma O.... 88 protect the public’ ie) = * Voorhees He in state aa Hat- w non-financial er EAL st Ferndale trex ; ASE laughter ewes 3 00- | Pas Pont. Seal es cass 6. | Rolla D s interest." i a ees-Siple Funera] Home. me ve ban Smith. ast penetee. Call Have oy Fale Ludger J. Charnentier 380. Wordsworth peae ge go By pberne *§ {| mony Sena ea said in testl- Earnin S Sale pas oy eal eenneed CARPENTER —— trot ining a teeing. ie K Matheson, 482 W ezocih a CHICAGO LIVESTOCK East Kod _ 3 ae thy. cree O84 _merce C or the Senate Com- wife of Charies oe bod beloved eérnishers po bbed ata AND ings unlimf contacts. Earn- - George W . Wood- | 5, soo) June & (AP)—Salabie z Auto 63 std On a 186). ‘the eee he relerred (to NEW ¥: ogo of Mrs. Gain tna pan Sa a 4-1160 wate union = tae wal ett eat e ete | Ei oa a8} Bg Ou ks nie Be Bae interven een) CORK (INS) — The Fw] Ti aM, Gheyraceramey et | Sey Bor Ge eget a take | You BOY HUweLi ty Pred J. Ruge, 228 A | eos choice No 1 er len ail Nese. eco John .... 312. Std NJ...116 : y.and fair co . announ - Wz We Delodge and Mrs. after 6 P. m SURE IT . t. | butchers 19 25-2 to Ve 190-2 Frie RR. 7 238 On On .. 472) ditic mpetitive con- | Cont ced today that will be b neral servic AR um she Oak Park —N Le Ib 2000; deck ch Ml gaia. we Stevens’ JP a ms for all fuel = racts awarded i . eld Saturday. J 1 CARPENTERS = Realy ane, Ann Gage 24746) 20.25 m0 t8_ and small hotce Mo Witte ee Stew War... 266) industries."’ ture ho n May for fu- ch | A at Voothees-8 i wanted. c 2 A-1l ROUGHER 27830 Ithaca. and Milton J. Ross, | 250 1b ne choice No 2 oe head | Sree: ts .... 642 Stude-Pack | Campbell |: me construction i Chapel wrth * Rex s- renets =e —Byeher 6 3 = = ot ee _ | 280 Tb 1828-1925. some and 38 230- | Prueh a eee eal" | the E 8 general counsel for states east of the n the 37 Aneeag een x a wnie’ “D. ¥ wroyal Oak —Edwerd L. Beckman, 613 No |! and as 230 Im as ht red choice! Gen Bak” | stand Creek Coal (© | $1,011,31 Rockies totaled sere ain een) a ae City T Robett H C sargerst Ro Cook and | 220 Ib bee th 17 28-18 25 gh as 1975: | Gen beh! ae ington, W. V al Co,, Hunt- 0,000. This wa ate at the Voorhees- je itn City y reasurer REALTY € ttl 332 y : 6 * . Va. | high Ss 23 per cen _feral Home ¥ s-BSiple Fu- of “Pontiac Cepee and Hazei M iterate 8 Washington, | lahter 1 3-17.25. most sows ¢ tew 300-| Gen Fda be. le appeared | higher than th t $5473. Dut Salar= $4849 ve Real” mone chell, 730 Symes one tee eee 400 Ih and | Gen Mills’. half of both bon! e same month MERRIMAN, JUN visin tes: Assist tn = F ey Exchange ia a 3 80-1675: b chotee 370-200 Mills 422 hard and sof ‘year, although last liam # E 8, 1958, WIL- @ the collects ¢ super- E 2-0263 ae Taso Matgerh t tlk 400-800 Ib Qen Motora 56 producers t coal | ,, gh below the Rae enry. 3055 Auburn Sssist in k ion of taxes and Open Eves. ° to 12.80 ots up to 600 Ib 13 s0- Gea Retice Ma . year gains of 34 year-to Soe Heights: age 61 S ea auirements: kooping accounts. Re- es. ‘til 9: Sun. we & h 07S 104 F ood Pri Salable cattle 18 000: own |Gen Tel... Slee The committ | and 48 per per cent in April nesvend of Mrs. Rais Eb eodaeay uate. § vears Hieh school erad- NEXT DOOR TO BI Nate yearlings and Lacree salable calves Gen tle or bill to exem a is considering a constructi cent in March. Total Clawan oO. Rot Jone Wand are pon a er reer ienes in ino re . Posto BRANCH TIVE, icky! hoavin ween hee’ | oe M 47 xempt natural - ion awards ' service i timan. Puneral Jun mination. 9 ALE. Seedy torah ince Mien ce ne ae "7, \ers from fed gas produc-| gories { ds in all cate- pare oe wel es eae cre i yAzelv Perso si bene MAN Meds iSeS hie heavy. ee high cholce and Geevel B 66 c ederal regulation in May showed a Peachy at 130 pm. at eee 5 v 3 8. nnel Office. Beara, cack NTED iS ee fellate fteety cose tere ane Goedrich 814 ‘ampbell protest . six per cent fro; drop of pestcon, Fueera)) Rome See ae HER OWE Monday, arke before ested tn ebuck and Co. is inter. naa@y io 98 uighec: Waodarktetn wetive: 1c oodyear .... 6! 366 ently, th otested that “‘appar- the fi from April. This wa Melba ll Perry Mt Park. Mr. Easanens ENGINEERS 3005 pie eqgiloa look several quali a : : S balla tal ve | Grah Palge 24) . the feelin irst decline : 8 rriman will le . Mr. Tool mak GINEERS hoelleg K NEW YORK vealere steady. a f ully steady. | Gt N -. 21 US Rud $4 feeling is that the i from the Huptoon_Pu: fest) Go Ma Sees and “Excellent. das 6 , In the same Huntoon Puneral Home EXPERIE oe selling career ‘with va potentiat cost at wholes: @ tlal 0 willty ibe boa core saiac. a ie T year. Sales inc period last| ROBINSON ome a NCED TOOL high level ith a potent 7 “ . ic sed , JUNE akers wtd incom jal erosion ia pee. (1800-2250. “short” Toad “around 1021p NEW YORK June 8 Ce hree-Car Crash Kills freed S77 4nd 3 Sy the nite hall Lehoy. 4808 Mohawk Blvd. Miz Go" 4on"Hadiey St. B “root eo who , Would be" wiling. 12 Highest th A oy Rene a) luce We 980: ¢ Leary ghora lamba No Ae ate The Associated Press 35) Compileds by Niles Man at Bi h eS i. _ — the initial! halt mye nee 18: Missa’ as Michi: aes So ¢ eae wo et ew th out ar est this week we shorn | ofce and prim : 301 U . rnest : ved not saboas areer they ig is th ade jellies, sugar ae Pick Ber Se mony c tnd 3” pelts 20 00: | Net change Indust wi. e!8, g:f%cg | BUCHANAN, Mich chanan Wau —_. tea ad oe ee o. “Robin. ful time. ime. Must pert Naeaeene information, bree le further seed oil, eggs, pr : ' on- I> shorn | Noon. toda 99 4 + > , ch. ww — Lewi GTO athryn E. Robin ord ve at least SERVICE se aa] ee prunes, steers, hogs eemuesy Yr Ber ni. aa top 2 | R- Fretz, 40, of Niles, died S| eral Reserve oh (INS)—The Fed- Souneed later by. will be ru ES at Bob Adams aneh calls, ERVICE STATION ATTENDANTS. corn,, 18. Lower were wheat, oun Month ago "2." 2178 133 928 1683 day of injuries suffered yester- | business loan rd announced that} george Home: by Voorhees-Siple | | and Maple Bird. Bir. 5 esee jepentabay ban nance -corn.. rye, oats, barley and lard. eains Year ago... ee 1683 car crash near here in a three- | decreased $5,000,000 ‘in the Rape, Fae EXPrRIENCED CED WOOL Parsee Easton = handling ‘records, , Wh vo. 93 ia! St Pp : , in endersoa 8 . A. 038 Bald PRESS not ne ; = Paul M. H 1988 low .. 229201376 732 | State Police sai ended the week mother t., age 79; dear Cleaners win Ave. ER. reference “cea . M. Hudgens 1084 SUT SSh tes e712 less : » said Fretz tried June 1, Princ thy? of Mrs. James E. “ie maw “aves Warten 77 "6. bay ree . UTICA—Se. high ...,.. 2118 672 148g PASS a car maki to| were ae ipal chan Levender: dear si (Doro- EXPER: 477 Fregressty: 7 , —Service for P. 1984 low . 1... 143 1230 683 1552 a aking a turn, brushed a decrease of ges Mis Vien Lanbr i: sister of Leite, J TRACTO 8. Bag e Qi ‘Hudgens, 54 aul -M. “ 9 778 85.4 1080 gainst the car ' the St. Louis ' $14,000,000 in Biain and Miss wa Mrs. Stephen er. Single m 1 R DRIv- TV SERVICE MAW ns, 54, of 43314 Mo DETR | acros. and veered é District and _ Puneral service will be held Lakeville on Yule Ras A 8 RA ; : und Rd., | OIT STOCKS 988 the road, hitti of $10,000,000 in tt a rise Saturd will be ule_Rd. 42 W ° | Haxung Township, will be held a Figures a | Sap eor any patefeards ; car approaching non Oe a_ third | District. "Outstand San Francisco mall De whan tene os igees = man to AND | UNIFORMED TRU __Huron n ) EM - an Friday at the Schwartzkott. | Gerity Michigan Bis re sapien | nection: Bes Sea ips ays Mutchineon anne = . Executive Salesman CK © iken = Fune | Gerity Michigan? ooo aso, ise 14 dollars, million ent in Oak Hill C BSE Prudential Insu n Wi ral gston gots ee 3 ; a gai on Sadler emetery. rance ER ° burial in Uti ees with | Marto Screws et) It 344 > MSC Prof. million dollars. or billion 37 DeWitt ©. Davis: Puners! at ‘the executive ‘salem: Sree tor’ on Itica Cemeter: Midwest Abrasives” wean 3 rotesso over thi ae ea Puneral Home. ey ocman, Serta a Tuesday ry. He died| Ruey Mteo nn ...002. ts 98 Bronx Z aoe year ago s time a mam they) tomes gem HER: 2 re Saat tor BH , xper ienc * Wayne ee ee-csle ce 2h ; nx fe) P . 9) LeRoy, 86 4 A for ed s eae o Posi Tne | Stee en Surviving besides hi Sp deni aac °|OU | LEA ition 2 ; Menetan, petoret _numend st EXPERIENCED AU Driveway, tow ba 3 Katie, are a Paul a widow. ra sr LANSING ®—Richard H Detroit Boys Hurt Betty Lasswell ‘Aime Pols, Mrs. chip. Racy a stadeaker dealer: saddle and i diy and : son, Paul J Manville é : an ell, Mts. . i and ler- indivi daughter, Mrs. Maxine nan a Helen Keller Returns zoology at oral professor of Burning School Pape Brother ot “Thompson re ir aes cangmake money. Bes tractor brokers for ovens both of Utica, a brother F ee From Tour of World Ss ee eae DETROIT W—Two boys = beheld Saturday sermtee it _Birmmgnam MY e340" the-road driving. Coal Detroit ran mammals curator of e- am. et the Pr it at workin : , three sisters, M NEW YORK Fox for the New ome with raiey Puneral g conditions. Se igeeel & Wie! Fenda Mollie | deat W—Helen Keller, | Cua! Societ York ing. Intermet EXP iority rights. W aa est Frankfort and blind autho '.| The >: White Chapel Me IENCE s. Welfare in Mrs. Ethel . QL, | who will be r and teacher position includes surance. Pensi . .. E Durham 75 years old bility f responsi-+ ension. An ville, 1, M of Gor-|ended a 40 June 27, or mammals at. TO nual vac: i * Me rs. Marie .000-mile tour. Zoo. Manv the Bronx BIL ation with Cartervill . Barnett, of | Wild Airport : at Idle- ille, who has Must pay. ie, ILL. and three f po today "very tired and/| the college since been with P apply at uard glad to be hore.” to tak 1947, will lea cur dosh 1 theta Miss Keller arrived with he @ the job i Repecaber, Robinson compani T | , to se FLEET ion, Miss Polly Thom Facto o Il new and used cars Funeral Angeles. She larided y orker’s rawing all , ‘ from Los »s, Sh =. E Ww 1 owance of RI ound in Grand River $125 per week against | ‘ commissions. Write to CORP 7 box 26. P . 586 § . : giving fboens Press a th Blvd. East “qualifications ih d - tiac, Mich, s reply. \ haps ENERGY, ' bye ANT ADS! To find a hoya live or & fea NOW Cassi eet A ae = Me : 4