# i] - Hi w # "Eh THE PONTIAC PR Saow : Details page two 114th YEAR MSOOCIAT INTERNATIONAL NEWS BKRVICR 96, * *& & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1956—68 PAGES > Floods, New Cold Wave Hit Europe Prepare for Birmingham Service. Arizona Senator Speaks Tonight PS v Michigan Roads May Get Boost . Some 625 persons are ex Chill Paralyzes More Than 600 to Attend Annual Lincoln Banquet Much of World; pected to attend the Oak- in Federal Aid banquet tonight “at 6:30 p.m. in the Pontiac Elks’, Ziegler Says Pending Temple, according to Robert C. Miller, co-chairman of land County Lincoln Republican Club’s 66th «ont 568 Lose Lives & Inches of Rain Pour LEAD PRAYER PROGRAM — Among seven ministers’ wives leading the World Day of Prayer Service at 10 a. m. tomorrow at Birmingham's First Methodist Church are (left to right) Mrs. Glen Harris of First Presbyterian Church, Mrs. Reginald Becker of Em- Pontiae Press Photo bury Methodist Church and Mrs. Mac Taylor of the proposed new Northminster Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Charles Breitmeyer is shown pointing out each woman's part in the program. e . Churches Unite on Friday‘,,..: Testim | Open eS ony for World Day of Prayer Suicide Feared In Murder Trial |.» xz: wen sar sgn» soox naan et. fOr Detroit Pair Fenton Farmer’s Wife when they observe annual World Day of Prayer Friday.| Guards Keep Watch; Says Clifford Dye Shot. In communities across the land and in towns and Discover $2,000 Sewn .| plained, Bill May Up Total to. $225 Million Yearly — A federal aid bill now. under study could bring the total available for free- way construction in Michi-| year, State Highway Com-| missioner Charles M. Zieg-) ler told the Pontiac Lions Club yesterday. Michigan will have an annual construction budget of $150,000,000 for the next five years, said Ziegler. State gasoline and weight taxes, current federal aid funds and bond money raised under state statutes go to make up the total, he ex- “But federal aid boosts Con- gress is expected to make may increase the total to $225,000,000 a year,” he decihred, gan up to $225,000,000 a speaker. ticket sales. All invited guests will be M. Goldwater's wife, who wi him, said Robert A. Sutton, club president. Senator Goldwater (R- Ariz) will be principal The 47-year-old lawmaker is chairman of the GOP Senatorial Cam- paign Committee. ‘He is a member of Senate com- mittees on banking and currency, labor and public welfare and in- terior and insular affairs. A fighter pilot in World War II, Goldwater is a family man with four children. The senator will be introduced by Congressman George A. Don- dere, of Royal Oak, who is also expected to give a short talk, “Dendero returned to Oakland Down on New Orleans on hand except Sen. Barry in Seven Hours ll be unable to accompany By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Raging floods and a new cold wave struck much of Europe and parts of the Middle East today, piling misery on misery in a 17- day freeze-up which already has cost 568 lives. Torrential rains and melting snows brought Turkey new disasters of the worst winter on record, SENATOR GOLDWATER by a committee. It would have the |be the strongest potential contend- as a candidate this week. | The same bill is seen the - ad Also slated to attend are State Other honored guests will include . “ | erie tis, ratty Soesency ne eee ECUcation Board the Fallon bill, now being studied OWS80. Bentley now appears to federal government pay 90 per cent,¢? for the Republican nomination’ rf of construction costs on interstate¥or governor, after Detroit Mayor! ‘highways. |Albert E. Cobo dismissed himself at Her Husband A lawyer charged with attempted | ‘\villages of 134 countries around the globe, people of all ages will join in services. They will bow their heads and recite in their own Michigan Turnpike Authority as paying 90 per cent of construction costs of 511 miles of toll roads proposed for Michigan, The bill Into Hamilton’s Coat DETROIT (INS)—Jail attend: as: a nae cia toll reads Highway Conffnissioner Charles M, Ziegier, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Clair L. Taylor, former Auditor General John Mar- : i | HLE Hil iit Would Raise $3 Million to Finance Construction) yy cosiavia = murder was accused of “firing tongues the prayer of the late Sioux chief, chosen by the gun right at my husband” yes- these young Indian-Ameri-¢ terday by the wife of a Fenton| tenant farmer wounded by a gun-| shot last Aug. 26. | Mrs. Lois Clark, 27, testified in} the Oakland County Circuit Court) wial of former Fenton village at-| torney Clifford Dye charged in the! non-fatal shooting of her husband, | William, 27, She was the first witness called by Chief Assistant Prosecutor George F. Taylor to testify be- | fere an 1l-woman, 3-man jury | (two jurors will be dismissed at | trial’s end leaving 12, the legal | number, to reach a decision). The Clarks moyed onto a farm) owned by Dye’s sister, Viola, of| Louisville, Ky., on May 8, 1953,| the woman said. The couple and! Dye, who lived on an adjoining. farm, were to split profits from} the farm, primarily from milk sold. | cans at the Cook School for the observance that will girdle the Christian world. Sponsored by the United Church Women, World Day of Prayer will be observed in Pontiac in Bethany Baptist Church. Registrations will be taken at 10 a.m. with the morning pro- gram beginning at 10:30. Mrs. J. A. Rammes and Mrs. J. C. Covert, co-chairmen, will be assisted by Mrs. Walter Willson and Mrs. Homer Harbage. In charge of the prayer and meditation pour will be Mrs. L. R. Miner of Macedonia Baptist Church, Mrs. Cari Nelson of St. John's Lutheran Church, Mrs. Elwood Bigler of First Congréga- tional and Mrs. James Hampton of All Saints Episcopal Church. During the luncheon hour, start- Named saat OS | = | ae | ae |. = (eae | : | | | | | | i :|Hamilton, 20, charged with the - jevery 10 to 15 minutes. for 15 Months tin, and Republican county offi- Brose 2. A tt, of Pontiac, will wed near ruce J. Annett, wi 20. mil. rs ret night. approved floating a $3- mil lion bond issue to finance its bulld- ants today were warned to keep|eligible for aid. a close guard against possible sul-| 5 4+ year’s gas tax increase, cide attempts by Mrs. Victoria) plus the possible federal aid bill, Hermiz (Haisha) 25, and Maurice| premise Michigan a stepped-up road programa, said Ziegler. “Tt will take a couple of years SUDPOeNA the Mouse lmurder of Mra. Hermiz’ husband, months, Aziz. 35. exe we will see any great|, Waianae pec 2 Do gra poe Se change in Michigan’s highways,” Bee Wi check the ‘highly emotional pair Ne stated, “but then the eel | r aS itness? will retire the bonds, explained ment should be rapid.” It will take contractors 12 to 18) KITTANNING, Pa. (INS)—A Hamilton and Mrs. Hermiz months to prepare to handle a/Pink elephant ‘is a small matter) both pleaded innocent when ar- | greatly increased amount of work, ia ter New Year's Eve raigned on first degree murder | he stated. es, TAR & mouse warrants yesterday but other | “T never said I was against tol! nough to Earl Dwyer, of Edmon, dramatic developments marked | roads in Michigan, providing they ‘0 rate a law suit. the day in Detroit's crime of are soundly financed and don't in-| Dwyer sued in Armstrong Coun- Schimmel passion. lterfere with the freeway system,” ty Court yesterday for $5,000 dam- i : ‘ the highway commissioner as- ages because he said he found a| The Board's bond-payment rec-| Hamilton, the student son of 8! sorted. 'mouse in his bottle of beer on New ord has been excellent in the past | wealthy Baghdad merchant, and) «4+ jeast 8 per cent of traffic|Year’s Eve. The suit was filed|and “we'll probably get the lowest Mrs. Hermiz, mother of two small can not be served by toll roads,”|against the Pittsburgh Brewing interest rate in the state,” Schim- children had admitted plotting un-|p. added. Co. and James Carnabuci, of|mel added. Netherlands night peratures France 124, Turkey 72, Italy 67, Yugoslavia 67, Britain 47, Den mark 31, Greece 30, Germany %, Austria 19, Holland 16, Portugal 15, Spain 15, Switzerland 12, Bel- gium 7, Sweden 6, Bertin and East Germany 5, Poland 4, Nor- way 3 and Libya 2. Successfully to hire a paid killer! «The turnpike authority consult-Avanmore. — - Part of the money can probably to murder Hermiz, a grocer who ed with New York bankers and got| Dwyer claimed that Carnabuci be reinvested at enough profit to| emigrated to Detroit from Iraq. |a negative shake of the head, in-|sold him a case of beer which cover interest on the bonds, he Scores villages still] snowbound across the Continent, And nine men were ‘sales committee meeting Tuesday when Albert Gall, Her husband also agreed to feed . : ae cattle on Dye’s farm for a share !"& at noon, the film “White Earth in the herd, she stated. Roils Onward into Light’’ will be shown. At first, the monthly milk Under the direction of Mrs. Neil when the hiring attempt failed. checks were endorsed by both Gray, the Yomar Group of the Yesterday, Hamilton told police ste - ae _ ete but First Presbyterian Church will pre-/ Pontiac City Manager Walter Kee He ber ese : knife Pn aid “he Was ‘sent a playlet showing where the Will ; arate Fir Mio! VOU) Nols having trouble with his wife” | lieing a sent o | : ream) Woday | was) Samed om |pleaded she was unable to finish and “we sent the checks to his . ; align manager for the Pontiac) . The afternoon will close with a! = : the act after using the knife twice sister to endorse in his place.” | ine of lay) Communion: Area United Fund drive next fall, | on her husband as he lay asleep . ; | according to William B. Hartman, ce ae chet sil |UF president. Willman will head| ore name to a check, but I Reason for Bragging EACH ACCUSED OTHER committed the actual WALTER K. WILLMAN = gern nde ‘an organization covering Pontiac,, The pair was transferred to the fused, tes : _ Waterford and Pontiac Townships, Wayne County Jail from Detroit In May, 1954, the accused re-| LEXINGTON, Ky. W— Traffic, a police headquarters after the fused to sign checks or have his court missed its regular weekly r4a,r c . arraignment and _ attendants, sister endorse them and the Clarks session yesterday for the first) It S Great to live making a routine search of Ham- had no money for farm expenses, time in its 4-year history. The) iiton, found $2,000 sewn into the (Continued on Page 53, Col. 5) reason: no offenders. in Michi an!’ Ch | shoulder pads of his jacket. | g ‘ osen Mrs. Hermiz screamed “You < ee : thief! Liar, liar, liar!’’ when she at Ss a * ‘ ’ es a : EOS SING iP "lt's great) as toll of the discovery, but (to live in Michigan!” ‘Hamilton insisted the money was Seek Expulsion of Three MMPA ‘R b I] 7 ¢ EL d That is the slogan for the third his ow d not th the pai e e 10N €a ers annual Michigan Week observance had vaised ‘ounce tie Seer 4G Slice ani Fe A recommendation that three officials of the Fair M*y 20°. ec ieca ee Howie Share Bargaining Assn. be expelled from the Michigan, Te Slean was adopted yester- Uf ft eet oe sources Milk Producers Assn. has been made by the MMPA’s ae a nied oa aon said the crime had been hatched eek.executive board at Michigan P Mrs. i Detroit Sales Committee. All are also members of the s Ledig hepa aagigearhegr agent latter group. | Gov, Williams was named hon- However, each claimed the other | murder | dicating its plan is not sound,” he contained the bottle which allegedly ‘continued. contained the mouse. * Ike Proclaims Month Roosevelt for Stevenson THOMASVILLE, Ga. (INS) —| LOS ANGELES (INS) — Rep. President Eisenhower today pro-' James Roosevelt (D-Calif) indicat-| claimed March as National Red,ed today he will support the cane | Cross Month and urged Americans|didacy of Adlai Stevenson for the ito contribute generously to the Rea|Democratic presidential nomina-| Cross fund drive. tion. = Many Lakes Now Unsafe Sheriff Warns of Thin Ice | Deaths by drowning of three Detroit area chil- | dren caused Oakland County Sheriff Frank W. | Irons to warn parents of the dangers of thin ice. “To venture out on the lakes is to invite tragedy,” Irons stated today. _ “Ice is‘now only one-inch thick on many of | the county’s 400 lakes,” he said. “and warm | weather ahead is bound to melt it further.” He advised parents to restrict children's ice | skating to community skating rinks until the dangerous thaw is over. ate University. - \came to the U.S. to join her hus- | band. The three include Arthur J. Heslip, Oakland County orary chairman of the Michigan | representative; Leo Kuhlman, Macomb representative; explained jaboard the 359-ton Norwegian ship ; , | Sagvaag, missing since Sunday off The board has definite plans Norway's icebound,.soath coast, for new buildings and equipment | * * « chon Relief organizations rushed food Projects the bonds will finance|and clothing to more than 250 per- include eight multi-purpose rooms/sons left -homeless by floods in with gym and cafeteria facilities; |Turkish Thrace. The raging waters an elementary school with eight sept away bridges and railroad classrooms, two kindergartens and lines. Thousands of acres of rich a multi-purpose room; additions to farmlands were inundated, existing schools including 12 class- rrALY SHIVERS rooms, a library and office area, h and eight play areas, plus addi- eaigher or a cao ry tional cafeteria equipment weibeedd pg hetisadone msires aca . shivered in temperatures down to '5 below zero. Fuel shortages and Tonight, Tomorrow — sv, vot acces were reverted Cloudy, Then Snow "elt Some _German cities reported jtheir coldest night of the freeze- According to the U.S. Weather up. Bonn had 8 below zero and Bureau, it will be cloudy tonight Nuernberg 13 below. Floods from and tomorrow followed by snow. the Whisper River isolated the There will be little change in the town of Lorch temperature, | Communist The low tonight will be near 25 ‘ported The high tomorrow will range from transport and industry. Some 28 to 32 degrees. . ‘plants went on to night work to The lowest temperature preced- case the daytime burden on powe ing 8 a.m. was 16 degrees. -The er resources. Fog covered Berlin, thermometer registered 29 at 1 p.m. with a temperature just over zero, East Germany re- snowballing troubles in Week celebration and Lt. Gov. Lenten Guideposts—Message of Faith and William J. Wilson, Ingham County representative. Heslip is treasurer of the rebelling group. The feud between the MMPA and the newly-or- ganized Fair Share group flared during the monthly Philip A. Hart and Speaker of | the House Wade Van Valken- burg (R-Kalamazoo) were named honorary co-chairmen. The day-by-day schedule for Michigan Week activities was an- nounced by General Chairman) ‘Russell A. Swaney of Detroit as | follows: | By “BABE” DIDRIKSON ZAHARIAS World Famous Golfer Washtenaw County rep-+ resentative, accused the trio tion to cancelling the member. of formally affiliating with ship contracts” of the three, the opposing faction and Heslip said yesterday: ‘Gall ac- Sunday, Spiritual undermining the interests cuses us of trying to serve two Day; of the association by half-' masters (MMPA and FSBC).) We Day: Tuesday, Hospitality Day; Texas truths, twisted facts” and have only one master, the dairy Wednesday, Our Livelihood Day; distortions in speeches be- farmer we're trying to represent.” Thursday, Education Day: Friday, | fore meetings of. MMPA_ The Oakland representative also Our Heritage Day; Saturday, New members. charged that other members of the Frontiers Day. had never been ill a day in my life. The Fair Share organization, committee objected that he, Kuhl- —_— I had just won aN George kept saying: “Cancer? That's impossible.”’ 7 ©¢ * made up largely of MMPA mem. 72" and Wilson were “leaking” Outlaws Modern Look | the 1953 Babe Za- . fe bers, recently announced an alli- information contained in committee ‘harias Open in ance with the Teamsters Union en inf ; ; ; | NANTUCKET, Mass. WF — Tir [Beaumont and was (AFL-CIO) to by-pass the associa-| e information, we believe,island of Nantucket, 30 miles out) packed for an : ; ae belongs to all MMPA members,”’|in the Atlantic, wants no shiny; sta or Bae gedit pol mane ig pre Heslip added that, contrary, chrome or glass store fronts| Phos nix ie = through negotiations with. cream- o charges, the | trio had not at-among its weathered buildings. | ox tournament. eries jtempted to undermine the|The townspeople have appointed Thad been feel: . MMPA. jtwo five-man commissions to po- : In adopting the resolution by 8 | He stated that association by- lice building and renovations with)! n g unusually 27-7 vote, the sales committee laws provide for a hearing be. an eye toward preserving Nan-|tired and decided ' recommended that the board ef fore the board of directors prior tucket’s early 19th century|on the medical directors “give serious considerg- {to action on expulsion. ‘charms. examination. Now ra A little dazed, my husband and} Foundation | left the doctor's office and walked! Monday, Mayor Exchange through the streets of Beaumont, | It seemed impossible to me. I ‘other, could effectively, jgin in a aie she SE IOROGCON GAL “ it s t 7 : of aA hod CL GEO nOO 6 OO GO SckG a lone modus ea fox the waXe | Food News........ 31 thru 42 1 5 : Sports ... 47, 48, 49, 50, 51 |ERAYERS ARE MESCTES Theaters .. 43 | Suddenly I looked upon prayers; TV Z Rav . ss) I found myself headed, not for a be those who pray for each other. golf tournament, but to the hospital. There was strength in this sharing,| and I realized I had to give to) | others as well as accept. After the operation, the doctor | came to me. “All right, Babe,”’ he said, “I want to see you up Soon newspapers everywhere announced I had cancer. Thous- |; ands of cancer patients and thousands of others who were afraid of the disease wrote, wir- ed and telephoned in the few days before my operation, Everybody promised prayers. before the season's over I want to read on the sports pages that | you've won another tournament,”” The doctor had performed aj This was something new for me All my life, I had. looked upon prayer as something very personal ——_ |between God and me but it never loccurred to me that thousands ot 1 TOday’s Press |people, separated- far’ from each as muscles, and I realized that faa Wilson, Fy. \ ' strongest people in the world must! “Women’s Pages + | fied—until I remembered that | and owt of here reall soon, and jhadn't gone into this thing alone | physical “Suddenly I Realized Prayers Are Muscles’ colostomy—surgery that meant, our vital changes in my entire way life. prayers are always with of, you.” . People I had known with! Sudednly 1 realized golf was colostomies were virtual invalids. more than a sport. Because what For a fleeting moment, I was terri- it would sy mbolize to thousands of I cancer patients—a victory through ‘spiritual strength—my game would lbecome, in a way, a symbol of lfaith. Knowing God answered prayers, I wanted to return to goif monstrate this—and also to too, could . CANCER KILLS SPIRIT Letters came from.people with cancer, people who seemed more to de concerned about my recovery than, Show others that they. their own. One man wrote: | their normal lives. jresume iSCORED A FIRST | Four months after my operation, Tt entered Chicago's Tam O'Shanter Tournament. Arnong the best ‘players of golf, 1 was aware of icompetition. Tenseness tired me quickly. I began missing easy ‘shots. We were on the fifth green ‘when an important putt stopped | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) “You must return to your game, Babe. Knowing you're back at golf will be a victory for us, too. ‘Cancer kills more than a hamiin body; it kills the hu- man spirit because we feel we who have it are incurable. Your recovery; Babe,’ will ‘Ye a spiritual steadiness for rest of us. That's why F} - 6 ptu Fugitives Yield Without Fight Three Surrender Near “Barton City Area After Fleeing Mio Cell STANDISH uA — Fanning out through the dense woods of the Huron national forest, State Police: and sheriff's deputies last night captured three armed convicts who had escaped eight hours eariier) from the Oscoda County Jail at) ‘ Mio, | Pentiae Press Photo eo 8 @ | TO AID FLOOD VICTIMS — United Fund president William B. State Police said the fugitives Hartman (left) presents a check for $8,200 from the UF to the Rev. gave up without a fight in an iso- Mr, William C. Hamm, county Red Cross chajrman. The money is lated area near Barton City, about for use in aiding flood-stricken victims in western states. 30 miles east of Mio in a sparsely populated area of northeast lower Michigan, They had abandoned a stolen car and fled on foot into the woods, Held at Arnac County Jail here were Clayton Yost, 23 of | Bay City; Andrew Petrowski, 21 ef Auburn and William Rogers, has granted an $8,200 emergency 20, of Flint They broke out of the |appropriation to the Oakland: tiny two-cell jail in Mio by over. County American Red Cross Chap powering a deputy and arming ter for aid to flood-stricken West themselves with the sheriff's |¢m states. . . . Suna, The Red Cross issued an appeal The men had been brought to, : : the jail to stand trial for burglar oo $8,000,000 to rehabilitate the | : jes committed after they ecaped what The Pontiac Area United Fund! The local grant meets the Pon- tiae quota, ruling out need for a special campaign here, said Wil- liam B. Hartman, UF president “This is a graphic example ‘of ithe excellent cooperation which ex- ists between the UF and its mem- ber agencies,’ sald the Rev. Wil liam C, Hamm, county Red Cross (chairman, |1905, he wa the son of Charies married Myrtle White in Florida UF Gives Emergency Aid (wis mess) to Western Flood Victims Fuiss tus sanived’ the river, City Bar Holdup Case |s Solved Second Bandit Admits Role as Red-Hooded Stickup Artist With a second man's confession, the robbery of a city bar Jan. 19 by two armed, red-hooded bandits is solved, Pontiac detective Ray E. Meggitt said today. After five days of questioning, he said, John D. Fortson, 23, of Auburn Heights, last night con- ‘fessed taking part in the $890 stick- up of Tom's Bar, 928 Mt. Clemens St. Jan. 19. Fortson was charged with armed robbery and is expected to be ar- raigned today, Oakland County Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem, > oy | | JOHN D. FORTSON & said Davis, 28, of Rochester, who Both men confessed a similar holdup earlier Jan. 18 of a tavern near Port Huron for $121, Meggitt, said. | Red eloth hoods were recovered, ‘near both robberies. | Suspicion centered on Fortson after questioning two weeks ago, iwhen he was arrested for parole ‘violation. | Meggitt said Fortson had been | isent to Jackson State Prison after ‘conviction in Port Huron of reek During Fortson's weekend in’ }and Maude E. Moore Schaar, He ing and entering. Arrest 2 Men in Troy Holdup Hunting Violation Leads: to Capture, Confession by Royal Oak Pair Two Royal Oak men were ar- | red in Michigan Forest Women Favor Parking Project 9 Organizations Back City’s $600,000 Plan on March 5 Ballot Nine women’s organizations with- in Pontiac this week signed reso- lutions supporting the need for in- creased municipal parking in the| ' |eity which will be decided by the voters at the March 5 primary. Resolutions were received by the “Committee For Five Cént Park- ing” from: Junior Pontiac Wom- en's Club, signed by Grace Hinck- ley, first vice president; Pontiac Business and Professional Women, Mrs. C. William Salton, president; Pontioak Chapter of National Sec- retary Assn., Edyth Perry, vice president; Sonta International, Lois E. Ellis, secretary. Others were Soroptimist Interna- tional of Pontiac, Elsie Wright, Women ¢f Pontiac, Wava L. Davis, secretary; Ladies Auxiliary No. 1230 FOE, Luella Robbins, presi- denty Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce Auxiliary, Mrs. Don S. American Business Mrs. Dorothy Chapter of Women's Assn., Brooks, president. With the submission of the reso- rested yesterday in a Troy armed robbery because one of them had a police record for shooting lutions, the groups join forces with the following organizations that ‘have previously voiced agreement on the city’s $600,000 municipal corresponding secretary; Insurance| Anderson, president; and Tipacon! chickens. Mrs. George Marsh, wife of the in 1948. |jail, Davis staged a one - man ‘|parking program to provide 624 ad- Drive to Star BIRMINGHAM — Readying for | the annual drive for Community| House funds, this year with a goal of $50,000 are some 850 volunteers, | including 150 leaders who met yes- terday noon for luncheon, and 15 businessmen, who met last night. Home and business solicitation will begin Monday and last through | March 4. * Of the luncheon crowd, Mrs, | Harry N. Gruber, head of home _ solicitation, called the number of volunteers record-breaking. The 105 captains will each have a number of women aiding them —one woman reported yesterday she has lined up 26 workers for her extensive area, Mrs. George A. Weinbold, dtive director, talked, as did Harold Ha- gan, lone male at the noon lunch- eon, Hagan is president of the governing board of the Community House, center of social and civic activities in Birmingham. Hagan presented scrolls in- scribed by the sisters of Holy {Name School to winners of the (poster contest conducted through local schools. Hagan talked also to the busi- nessmen, who met last night for) |briefing on why other local busi-| 'nessmen should support the “House.” 'GIVE EXPENDITURES He enumerated such expendi- itures from last year's budget as cost of the kitchen’s complete re- modeling and a new ceiling, and |spoke of future projects. Complete covering in insurance has been achieved for the first time during) the past two months, he explained.| The businessmen are miar- shalled by William Torrence and ws eS oy oy é “5 a " : ; :< ; # - f 7, ia a | pf hy, { ri a ( | } , } i, . if : ; , I a u ; , fj F, / THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1956. . | The Day in Birmingham | > Community House Fun t Monday | the south of the Kingsley Inn on Woodward avenue-in Bloom- field Hills, ng to Nick Takis, owner of the Inn’s food and drink business, He says he will incorporate a restaurant, offices and stores in the building on this eight-and-a- half acre parcel of land, Laurence L. Kortkamp Laurence L. Kortkamp, 46, 7106 Old Mill Rd. died yesterday at William Beaumont Hospital, fol- lowing a short illness. A resident here for two years, he had been with Cadillac Motors for 29 years, be at Manley Bailey Home until 11 a.m, Seturday, Survivors are hts wife, Madeline, a son, Allen Lee of Manhattan Beach, Calif.; a daughter, Laur- ene Alda, at Kame; a sister, Brandon Brown of West V and a brother, Trull Tyler kamp of Canton, O. Mrs. Dorothy Fisher . Service for Mrs. Dorothy Fislier,. 488 Harmon, will be Friday at 2 p.m. at Manley Bailey Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Cemetery. Turnpike Vote Block Charged by Higgins last August from the Cassidy Lake . , P “isea, i tsty camp, nee Gee Pontiac Deaths: Oscoda County sheriff, . said the . trio, confined in a single cell, es- James Clarence Boyer caped after persuading Deputy| James Clarence Boyer, 68, of 32 Sheriff Alfred May to open the Rosetta Rd. who was killed in an cell door so they could phone an automobile accident yesterday in attorney. Chatsworth, Ga. will be brought to | ty ditional stalls in the city: lee | Mr. Schaar owned and operated armed robbery of an Orion Town-; Apprehended at a Royal Oak, Oakland County CIO Council:| Edward Kurth, 7 Attendent with the drive’s open- “Al's Auto Parts in Pontiac. He. was Ship bar. He. was caught last week tool shop, the pair readily ©0n- pontiac Motors Local 653, UAW-| | digg? a member of the F. & A.M. and Ki. by Oakland County detectives Don tegsed the $287 holdup Saturday of CIO; GMC Truck and Coach Local ng Monday are the “Captain's 7oO"8, THEBINS of the Michigan wanis Clubs in Florida. Francis and Jack Davis and after’). ala's Grocery Store, 35-E. Big 594 UAW-CIO; Fisher Local 596 Coffees” in indivdual homes, where Richards Detroit Ex nae co Surviving besides his wife and confession was charged with the 544. Ra. Oakland County de-/UAW-CIO; Local 100 Government Mrs. Anthony J. Daley of the) sinator. is eee to sa the father are three brothers and two crime. tective Roy Hartwick said. jand Civie Employes Organizing House Board, Mrs. G. Howard Wil- ANN ARBOR (® — Chairman OVERPOWER JAILER Pontiae late Saturday. sisters; Nelson Schaar, Floyd state’s proposed turnpike program | Fortson also confessed he and All three leaped on May and) one struck him on the head and! 1887 and married the former Es-| tella Herrington, | A member of Central Christian \Church, he had been -a residen Pontiac since 1917. took his revolver, she said, Sheriff) Marsh, recovering from an opera-| tion, was resting in his living quar- ters upstairs. Mrs. Marsh said one of the men) He was born in Missouri Nov. 25, Mr. Boyer operated a service “made a grab for me” when she |St@tion at the corner of Osmun fan into the cell room to learn/4nd Jessie what was happening. She said she Y€®"s. Before retiring Feb. 1. @atched up her grandchildren, “** caretaker of the Nurses Home|Joseph Mercy Hospital after an he ; Ohm, 1 and his 3-year-old)@t St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. er, Laurie, and dashed up. Besides his wife, he is survived ’ stairs, | by four children, Dan of California, AU®. 3, 1905, he t of ing. streets for a number of AMbrose J. Sparks, 51, of 21 E. __ \Committee, AFL-CIO; Chamber of Facing arraignment today on | : na a a bbery |Commerce and Junior Chamber of Commerce; Wever - Owen - Haw- Ernest J. Johnson, 316 E. Hud- ith aid Northside Communities! son, and Richard Carr, 213 Mid- | Gn¢- and Kiwanis, Rotary, Lions, | land, both 74. . |Exchange, and Optimist service |change lean vending machines in| partwick said Johnson was clubs. | Ambrose J. Spark ja restaurant. -}traced by information that he had SS P . 4 Meggitt said during the tWO rn ticketed by Troy Township Formosans Ovation ily carried a, pistol Cac bare A customer in another township| from a .22 caliber rifle, V!S' store which the pair® visited Sat- | oint, Mo. on ing to Fortson. Both guns were | ee Ca CES EG TAIPEI, Formosa ® — Billy, Schaar, Mrs. Eustace Thibodeau|Davis broke into two businesses and Mrs. Norman Parker, al] of at Updyke and Pontiac Rds, last |Pontiac, - ‘month, Meggitt Said. | Funeral arrangments are pend- He said the pair gained food from a meat market and loose Ypsilanti St., died yesterday at St. |Ulness of one mont | Born in Mineral armed robberies Fortson admited- police last hunting season. ‘carried a .20 gauge shotgun belong-| aay told Hartwick that vd set Greets Billy Graham lett Jr., Mrs. Donovan Gray, are helping in-| struct workers in asking for gifts) to Community House. | Last year’s drive came within; a few hundred dollars of its $50,000 goal. Letters preliminary to per-| sonal contacts have been sent into) 14,005 homes in the Bloomfield, city commissioner, and) | ton. * * * | When he returns from Halti, | to a vote, Higgins yesterday accused Rich- ards of trying to tell ‘the rest of Michigan how to build its roads" and termed his attitude ‘‘not only impudent but alarming.” He add- ed: “I wonder if Richards prefers ‘North Adams, Franklin, Beverly the type of tol] Michigan has now land the lakes areas, with a pam- On bloody Telegraph Road (U.S 24) iphlet authored by Norman Stan- or a toll gate and a safe “North- South graph. ‘Apparently he believes that mo- turnpike parallel to Tele- was. the 86n Of receovered in Davis’ home, Megg “Clarence, James L., Mrs. Gerald-|William and Ella Poflete Sparks. |gitt said. Graham arrived in Forntosa today, details will be furthered for torists gladly. pay a toll in 12 other _ After raiding the sheriff's arm- wry and taking a 30-30 rifle and |ine Williams and three grandchil- idren, He. married Kathryn McCabe in 1931 Hartwick sald the pair may have visited the store to rob it, | on his 30,000-mile Asian speaking! Kingsley Center, to he built to ‘states... but won't in Michigan.’ ee ——— er “in Ai i tin tn hi ti i Ain i i An An in i An i An A A Mia Nn Ni Ai A A Mi i i hn a A ‘tour and received an ovation from, ? | me capes cal Arrangements will be announced) Mr. Sparks was a resident of Prayer ls Muscle but decided not to because the several hundred hymn-sing-| 0 eee 2. - ry car belonging to the ater by Sparks - Griffin Funeral, th city for 20 years and was em. | . store was crowded. The man. jing Americans and Chinese. $ SIMMS LOWEST PRICE YET on Genuine > a he il Nee tae ee Home, ployed as a repairman at Gen- § dd | Realized ager noticed the two men be- | The American evangelist was to 3 ‘CONTOUR’ $ —- - PERE frigid | eral Motors Truck & Coach. ut eniy cause they acted “suspicious,” |dine tonight with Generalissimo $ REMINGTON ELECTRIC Shaver > evitheut coats. °§ | Vicki Lynn Cooke Besides his wife, he is survived) (Continued From Page One) Hartwick said. Chiang Kai-shek and his wife, who ¢ 3 ¢ Vicki L by one son, Wiliam E. Sparks, at . ape both Methodiets. 3 $23.50 Val 3 An Oscoda County deputy spotted often orpenre ted Ge home ’ -_ 7 just short of the cup. Shattered, I) Both athe ae needed ne Graham told newsmen he was @ Regular $23.50 Value 4 the car six hours after near Barton @ of Lloyd M. and Charlotte | ; buried my face in my arms and y Decause they were out 0! delighted to visit once again this $ 2 | City and gave chase. He summoned \ Poke of 4851 Payton St., died , Puneral ey ie a tre cried. The tournament had taken|Work, Hartwick said. He said they ‘great country.” He previously 2 —SIMMS PRICE— 2 help when the men abandoned the |" on se in St. Joseph Mercy Hos-| Se ary it eee ees on special meaning, and there were|Spent the loot during a spree in stopped off here in December, |} | > : car and ran into the woods. All eer She had been ill for WO ope Comeieny at. thousands of others, I felt, who/Alpena, where Carr has relatives. | 1952. ig | $ : $ : three were rounded up within tWo|"Ro tm Pontiac Nov. 28, 1965,|_ There will be a recitation of the|Woud be on the losing side with) # 12 gauge stotgun carried by| Graham will preach Friday night| 9 3 hours without a shot being fired. Rig m Pontiac Nov. 28, 1955, Riese a Kore Pedant the Me: Carr in the robbery was confis-/at the stadium in Taipei which ¢ Be 4 _ ee ie na De Lelio fae neds Funeral, Home Standing there, so terribly alone, cated, Hartwick said. iholds 8,000 persons. Iz ‘ a 2 ‘ cl was erving a nine month Mark ce apa ae . brother. | heard George approach me, and - —————— —__—_—_— > 3 $ lo 15-year sentence for burglary in| : irae: * . Betty Dodd, my playing compan-, Thi } > > are é : J | 1 ) J } 4 WITH 4 Charlevoix County in 1954. Yost) _, Also surviving are (pel agit Pontiac Man Killed jon. I felt their comforting hands| s LOW PRICE for FRIDAY and SATURDAY 3 TRADE-IN .... $11.95 $ none sentenced from Bay ke last of Pontiac and Mr. and Mra. T. M on my shoulder—and, in a etl 100 _ 200 _ 300 POWER $ Powerful motor, 3- diamond 4 Y 2 to 18 months to two years! Guoke of London, Tenn ° * . derful way, the hands of the many 2 honed twin shaving heads % for forgery. Petrowski originally, Praver service will be of 10 om in €orgia Accident jothers. I whispered. ® 54 give smooth, fast. contour q was sentenced from Midland Coun lriday | ee pe at aio _ i . 4 $: shaves. Carries 1 year factory $ ty in December, 1954 to six months jn oy ie ursiey Funeral) A Pontiac man died yesterday | tage EG) © go fake urre icrosco 3 Biny Gn saad cay. 3 to five years for entering without Home with the Rev. Walter Teu-/when his car turned over on a helped me this far. Give me the | q Friday and Saturday only. @ breaking wissen Jr. of the United Presby- Georgia highway and three other | strength to go on . . . please | 3 Save more by trading in your > He drew an additional 1% to 4% wn - ees es city residents with him were in-, please.” | $ old razor $ omficiating. Ural Ww ye on aK- | j " * 7” . | : , lad year sentence for the escape trom jand Hills Memorial Cemetery je a Hee mile ; | I came in third in this tourna] $8.95 3 $ : the Cassidy Lake. Camp. | mortal y: . cm be yames C. Boyer, 68, of nt. better tha anyone expected. Val 2 3 4 their first escape, Petrow-| — nes i dtcetth | Ut ay, 1 scored aiue ; ‘ \ ski and Rogers were rclzed last Mrs. John A. Graves Mrs. Boyer, who is being treat./1 tutte a difterert “wey: . e $ . 3 Sept. 6 near Grand Rapids and Y eee ed for injuries at Murray County) t 7 $a —M 3 i wns captated act ise hee Mrs. John A. (Nannie F.)'\emorial Hospital’ (ssid Baver In the months that enowee. not _ z 98 N. Saginaw ain Floor $ of , ater In'Graves, 78, of 1192 Atkinson St! gumped over in his seat before “On the Secvin | Inyjcalicee! oo Br aS Ree ees With Bn naa A RRA ARAAAAAAAAAA RAR RRA RE , Whiting, Ind. All three were armed |died yesterday, his pan left the road near Chats. Sarasota Open, and the United] scope for students, hobbyists, ete. woop ae nc nh nc A et i pen eA Stn a 1 . _Born in Portland, Indiana on worth. He may have suffered a, 5'4'es Womenis Cyst eee ee ee coe DAV Head Pp |Nov. 12, 1877, she was the daughter heart attack police said. => 2) 200 power lenses to assure perfect = & raises e Ezra = Lda Bore Poling. Released after treatment for mi-| Last year my cancer returned, | getinition and eliminate distortion. stipes : She married John A, Graver. nor injune ere Mrs j jand another operation was neces-| Growth of Chapter She was a resident of the city Laing Dey Mes, Magee Tika aay: Spiritually, I was much S R i aoe coming here from 4 neighbor on Rosetta Rd. said better equipped to face such a set-| POPULAR BRAND EGULAR SIZE Midland. ; a — Pontiac Ch i wanes the grotip may have been travel-| back. Per Chapter 101, Disabled Mrs, Graves is survived by two ing on a Florida vacation, For I continue to feel the pres- Carton : N. Saginaw ain Floor American Veterans. was commend- br g M ed today by the DAV national com-| mander for increased membership last year. . Maj. Gen. Melvin J; Maas (Rd. ‘others and two sisters: Charlie 7 Poling and Mrs. Ida Votaw, of . : Portland, Ind., Bryan Cox of Cin- Bloomfield Hills Okays cinnati, Okio and Mrs. Myrtle Hoad of Keego, Harbor, ence of God and the strength that) * comes from the prayers of thous-|—— land of friends. With all this, ‘f Trowbridge Subdivision (‘have no fear of anything in the Sa Choose your favorite brand and save at our everyday low price. Lucky Strikes, Cam- 1.89 / : fn chin : 2 3LOOMETE: _ , future. a . who also is chairman of the Presi-. Funeral will be ata pp mSatur BLOOMFIELD HILLS A Lael | Famous First els, Chesterfields, dent’s committee on employment day from the C. J. Godhardt Fu- subdivision with 20 lots has been) Brand Guelty Phillip, Morris, Old of the physically handicapped. cited nera) Home in Keegl Hartec Bun approved here by the Bloomfield! Tomorrow—Eva Philbrick tells | Gold, etc. This price the chapter's fine work in bring- ial will follow in Oak Hill Ceme Hills City commission, the story of how she learned the, PLAY CLOTHES * plus 6c tax. ing together disabled veterans. As tery, | The subdivision plan, submit. ‘truth about her husband, Herb of Feb. 1, the chapter had a total’ = | ted by Judson Bradway, owner |Philbrick, the ‘‘man)who led three Styled Exactly as Pictured Safe Non-Spill Base ot 10) members. Hardie D. Harriso | of Trowbridge Farms, will be lives.” i ° wo | - Harrison | known as Trowbridge Farms No. (From Guideposts, Copyright, 1956) | BEAN BAG ‘ ik Hardie D, Harrison, 71, of 761 1 and will be adjacent to the | —— he Weather |Palmer Dr., died yesterday morn- Trowbridge Farms and subdivi- Dies in Fenton Crash ASH TRAY ae be Nae TT ee ing after several years illness. sion on Canterbury. Lots are an _ 51.00 Value cloudiness tonight and tomerrow fol, Born in Clinton, Ind, June 3. acre and a half or larger. | FENTON w—John Reis, 41, of] c paraaece 7a tentene seat is oe. 1884, he was the son of Joseph A The commission confirmed an this Genesee County community, tomorrow 2-32. Nerth to northeast and Suphrona Harrison. On Oct. assessment roll to finance the Was killed last night in a two-car © Creepalis Large size. annonised ; ewe cere bh. beroming east te 2 1907, he was married to Beulah $7.946 cleaning and repairing of collision at the Fenton intersection | C Overalls fall glothiucee oak { wc Porter in Indiana. the ‘South Cranbrook subdivision of U.S.23 and Thompson road, i ee sorted colors ' Lowest temperet re oreceaing San Mr Harrison, a retired employe storm sewer system, which was ; Saat aa bd tated i 6 eu wine Wiens cas Wf Fisher Body Division, had lived taken over by the city several) With about 61,000,000 cars and mph | DisienNatinesst 2 n Pontiac 19 years, coming here months ago, It is tn the Christ trucks in operation, safety-glass ‘ Pte ee et aus nua from Indiana. ; Church Cranbrook area and had replacement in 1956 is estimated . Moon sets Thursday a! 1128 ; Surviving¢are his wife and five previously been privately owned. at 38.000,000 square feet. Moon rises Prid se 348 ‘ehildren, Mrs. Blyie Walter of Clin- Dewntown Temperatures ton, Ind. Mrs. Della Nicker son.’ f a =e : nia ae ae ; Mrs. Dorothy Foisy, and Wayne! j us = Weems ie lpm 29 HALEY. all of Pontiac: seven oo. coves ose sea DUE TO THE DEATH OF Wednesday in Pontiac jsrandchildre u j - or (As recorded downtow: Other survivors include a sister, bad Reaulas tghest temperat . . ; Sey E : ' — egula lavest tamperstute, 4. | ES. Daisy Dewey of Detroit. three ERNEST LAUCKNER Se 10¢ Yolus ares ae ire. 2G is 255 brothers, Willis of Marshalltown | eather—Cool 5 _ lowa; Pen of Brazil, Ind, and Long- mae EASA Pettey Pat of Tere Hale, id THE PONTIAC POTTERY hah tees | OST are 5 rt x S . é Lowest sacinerecire omanaae 28 The body will be at the Sparks- Big selection of | Me : BOX © BOX Mean temperature... 31 Griffin Funeral Home until 9 p.m ood lookin er : s Weather—Snow. oe : : a -g g, per g | ; Thursday when it will be sent to WILL BE CLOSED fect fitting, long . | ars of 50 | ars of 25 F . * = as a | eet oe ae This Clinton for service and burial. The . wearing “PLA- Regular $5 value. a Rexel i 60 tm 1921 -9 in 1904 funeral will be at 1 30 p.m. Satur- PET’ clothes for Full box gf 50 fam- ’ fun bee Se cigars tn % Sas : day in the Frist Funeral Ho ' linea al ba hed is Wendesday's Temperature Chart - i I ome : ‘ : a Baltimore 69 36 Memphis 64 48 with burial in Riverside Cemetery. ALL D Y both boys and ous pariel Longfel value for this week- e Bismarck 7-3 Milwaukee 26 24 : aa ” girls. Sizes 1 to 3 low cigars. end special price. Chicago $1.38. New Orieana 76 64 : and 3'to 8 6% ew Orleans 7 4 . 7 ° ‘ Cleveland 3 5 Omaha 3) 3 Albert C. Schaar FRIDAY. FEB 17 k ver 3 oenix 1 ' | : Duluth 13-3 St. Lous 38 32 Albert C. Schaar, 50, of 75 N: ‘ ° JIMM) «Ce re % ene : tt TOBACCO ¥ a ~ : . ‘- ‘te oom Da" mipite 50 HE etiie "3x 3 Faith St. died in W. Palm Beach, aa oy < 7 IMM. Floor Jackson vi am 6 : »sterday i t pone ’ Mamsas City 39 32 Traverse City 25 1 5 2 5 CHILDREN'S WEAR Main Floor J BROTHERS gD Angeles 6) 48 Washington 63 34 orn in Sebewaing on Aug. 21 iE . ‘ : = > = » A s a op a { fe _? : ; % i ‘ x d : : . ' a a 7870 HAO DV THREE-OUNCE DOG—Muggins, eight-week-old survivor of litter of four Chihuahuas of George Lydiatt, Akron, O., fits in drinking glass as it gets milk from an See, Japanese Brides Hint Margaret ee Eyes Catholicism 4mericanized of American servicemen in Tokyo Duke of Norfolk Says, . mee uery (alts clesarcom ‘Sheer Nonsense’ Rumors on Princess to to learn how to be homemakers | “American style.” The school, the “Tokyo Bride's | . iSchool,”’ is sponsored by the Amer-. LONDON «®—A new rumor 1s)ican Red Cross in cooperation with' going around about Princess Mar.(the U, S. Army. garei—that she may soon be con-| fm a bumper crop just gradu- verted to Roman Catholcism. ! ated from the unique school, 150 | * * * | | Ortental wives learned the in- Neither Buckingham Palace nor, Tieacies of making beds, cooking other official sources had any com- ment so far on the reports) published in some continental and) ‘all the American wife. London newspapers that such a) During the five week course the religious change is contemplated brides studied geography, as well) by the 25-year-old princess whose|—the nature of the country that sister Queen Elizabeth II is the| will soon be “home” for them. | “defender of the faith’ of the| Teachers in the bride’s school’ Protestant Church of England are American wives of servicemen But the Duke of Norfolk, Brit-'serving in the » Tokyo area. ain’s leading Roman Catholic ay. man, denounced as “‘sheer non- sense’ rumors that his audience [> last week with Pope Pius XII was to discuss the conversion of a, 7 ‘noted English personality’’ to the church Vatican circles said they newt nothing about any plans for Prin- cess Margaret to become a Cath-' *» olic. They also said there was no SK. basis for reports that the duke had's KY discussed the question with the aK GLASSES. Pope. 1953 that Princess Margarel oe” embarked on a new and fuller religious life after the death of her father King George VI. One report that she was considering entering a religious order—presum- ably an Anglican group—was de- nied by Buckingham Palace Margaret's religious outlook was generally considered to have played an important role in her decision last fall not to marry RAF) (;roup"Capt. Peter Townsend. who divorced his wife The Church of England opposes the remarriage of divorced per sons, even the ‘Innocent’ party, if the former mate is still living. | The New York Daily News. in a copynght story from London to- day, reported that the princess may soon announce she is enter- ing the Catholic Church. It said the Duke of Norfolk discussed Margarets “‘spiritual problem” personally with the Pope and re- portedly contacted the princess as soon as he returned from Rome. The news said Margaret's ‘‘de eision is the culmination of soul searching consideration over the past Several years It is not a re sult of the unhappy ending of her romance with Group Capt Peter Townsend. In fact, there are indi eations the princess is purposely delaying any announcement . so the move will not be connected in the public mind with the Town send incident.” Police Refuse Offer LANSING (®—The Lansing Police partment has turned down ar T) offer by the secretary of state's jepartment to take over ifs lieensing bureau. The city depart ment sud the bureau has broken ven or made money during the past few years makes a good contact with the public and is a good place fo assign imjured or fisahled officers To Talk Landscapes EAST LANSING (h—The Mechi-. gan Assn. of Soll Conservation Districts will discuss landscaping for the farm home at a meeting Feh. 24 and 25 at Michigan State University. Sheriff Hires 2 Gals MASON w—The Ingham County Shenff{s inent has hired Iwo women as license examiners » relieve two officers for nore active duty, Shenff Willard P Jarmes announces Depart ( Advertisement) ) LOSES WEIGHT ST. JOHNS. MICH. Renne! (Con- centrate is the imost satisfactory rem- edy to get weight back to norma! and pat my weight loss pleases me. Ren- nel pe bioating, takes excess ftuid from the body end keeps the bowels —— like a reducing aid should eel younger since a cooing the i te] way I Ask druggist for 4 ounces of i Nquid ENNEL Concentrate You'll never know a mange y moment while reducing with RENN 4 3 belt. A. Paisley Print: boasts handsome boteau neckline, 34 sleeves, self tee ond turquoise. Colors: sand, cof. B. Polka Dot Print: with white trimmed V- neckline, self” belt coffee and white For a Convenience of Our Customers Waite’s is open ‘til 9 P. M. 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Free Installation’ Hurry in Today for Your Free Gift and Your New Easy Automatic! ‘e Call FE 4-2511 for Free Home arial Waite's Easy Neiematle Chater—Dowsstairs Store ia! _ was ‘EIGHT Urge Ban on TV of Drinking Ads Witnesses Ask Senate Group to Prohibit All, Glamorized Matter | WASHINGTON (INS)—Some 35 witnesses. urged Congress today to ban radio and television com- mercials which they said glam-! orize the drinking of beer and wine They appeared before the Senate Committee in support of legislation to ban liquor ad- vertising on the air and in pub- lications which cross state lines. J. Renwick Patterson, executive; secretary of the National Reform, Assn. with offices at Pittsburgh, said the spot commercials are giving children the wrong slant * * * Mrs. Glenn G. Hays. president ef the National Women’s Christian “Temperance Union, said the situa. tion is one parents cannot control) because ‘“‘sandwiched in” between good TV programs are beer com-, mercial which children enjoy. ville, Leslie B. Logan, of Denver, executive director of the inter church temperance movement of IN IKE'S VACATIONLAND — Here s one of the cottages on Sec retary of the Treasury George Hurphrey s plantation near Thomas Dutch Freeze Cream, Same Vision Ga., where President Eisenhower is enjoying a week's vaca- difficulties are ‘aused by detachment of the retina dition HE PONTIAC PRESS. a ¥ is he ae Aes vid AP Wirephote | tion. The President is expected to reach a-more definite stand on whether he will be a candidate for re-election during his week in te the south. the Better rest of the eye, a con- promptly says Vision should be treated Institute from the which = Colorado, protested that a beer * firm sponsored a TV show on which Mrs. Catherine Marshall, Then Make lf Butter widow, of & senate chaplain, 8P AMSTERDAM — Finding that ° ; lsome of their customers in other Logan termed this a ‘sneak at-'countries objected to eating cold tack" because, he said, Mrs.'storage butter, some Dutch butter Marshall did not know in advance|makers tried’ freezing cream and. that a beer firm would be a spon- making butter from at instead, sor of the a | abate ALWAYS FIRST The 12 dairies that have made |the experiment say that it's a Hebrew Scholar jnew answer to an old problem shared by all da@iry-surplus coun Deciphering Old jtries—the problem of butter stor- lage, Ugaritic Tongue | oo | They say butter churned from SEATTLE, Wash. (—A Seattle! jfrozen cream not only tasts like diamond merchant spe nds his! fresh butter, but has a hig her vita- spare time trying to reassemble min-A content than fresh butter}; ~ ° yf i; 6° an ancient language which he says! ‘and is easier to spr ead might be called the ‘‘grand- _—___ mother of Hebrew.” Arthur Lagawier already knows 17 Mayor to Hear Gripes languages. He holds a Moet COLOMA —Mayor L. H. Beach in philosophy and a rabbinical plans open house in his office at . nee 7 pm. every Wednesday from now on ‘to “listen to anyone's ne jae epee wes aiaiernhe gripes and try to iron out what- ire re maeeed to tive his pce I can.’ He explained it has ane so ‘that I can't walk down cts of 61 eke a tet ta ng a lane ee io 2 pees two or three times with complaints versit) =: ,.or questions from citizens.” and spending much of his time in| _ scholarly study. One of his hob- bies is delving into the mysteries Experts estimate a man gets 83 jper cent of his knowledge ‘hough of Ugaritic, a language he a5 his eyes DON'T BUY A SUIT OR TOP- COAT until you see my was in use probably 2.000 years) before Christ. “It is the language from which developed Phoenician, fore- runner of Hebrew,” he says. Tablets bearing the strange writings of the ancient kingdom of Ugarit, in northern Syria, were unearthed in 1928. Lagawier re- ceived photostats of them three years ago. From the inscriptions, he is trying to develop a Ugaritic grammar. advertisement in tomor- row's Pontiac Press! SAM BENSON The retail price of salt today is about 7 cents a pound, the same as consumers paid in 1812. BRENTWOOD COTTON HIT PARADE EVERGLAZE Polished Cotton @ Blue © Grey @ Pink @ Yellow ©@ Chartreuse @ 12 to 20 @ 1412 to 2412 OIL RESISTANT NEOPRENE Soles G Heels WORK OXFORD full grain elk finished Sanitized 19 Brown uppers 9 \AbOnArOnY TESTED for grueling weer! 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Here’s a worst- ae a 4 egerege EEagE . iP * ;S $11.65 _ | d ‘ted | | ave ‘11.65. 1andsome, imported | d $59.50 val Py _ twee tope oats—a 0 Value.....§ } ‘Planned many months ago for this special event Osmun’s offer topcoats of imported tweeds, hand-loomed in Ireland Easy-draping raglan-shouldered ¢ nodel, expertly tailored to exact specifications with deep wing sleeves and full- sweep coat... yet hahdsomely rugged enough for season after season wear. Better stop tn today! : : : oe a? $ : . iy BUY TODAY | | pay 1/3 down—1/3 in March—1/3 in April Two Fine Stores to Serve You Better! = : Paes 51 N. Saginaw and Tel-Huron. Shopping Center QPEN OPEN | Monday-Friday ‘til 9 Thurs.FricSat, ‘tl 9 z, eect aeene eee ee ECTS (oS. See AB caesees ae poe eee ed — er s3 % TEN Careless is People Partly to Blame Forgers Fatten on Federal Checksia::2 22°22" By KENNETH 0, GILMORE (oe Se who received WASHINGTON (NEA)—Forgers formal notice from the govern- and counterfeiters of U. S. govern- ment that she would no longer ment checks have never had it 80! receive her allotment checks for good. to 10 in smat!, Both artists have exhibited in the narrow and medium. | Michigan artists’ shows of the past Come in today. three years “Donna” a “3 ‘ ‘i Youth is a period of high hearts gpo a family to raise. y family and pinching the pennies. penges and all, but she did it.” when I had a quick sandwich and day wedding of Gayle Ann Brown |, i, white sashs accenti R. S. Reynolds of LaSalle avenue. The : stephanotis. | — i akes Dream Come True jreally did go into a huddle. You ree. He could have worked until 65. “But with the children married which ws a good one, in a big | Pa chipped in, “Ma was really and on their own, we decided to. insu ‘pompany. That‘s the terrific at the budget department.jtake our chances and open the) building, over there,” she said as !t was all her doing, really, I used|shop. It meant risking some of she pointed across the avenue. 0 get discouraged and figure we'djour hard-earned capital, but it) I relsing the Dever be able to put enough away worked. Knock wood.” “I stayed home , . on salary, what, with our ex-) | king aig eeula rece that they didn’t have to knock wood. Busineés was terrific. In the next lull that came up, Pa came over and said, ‘Best part is, I'm right in the swing of things. | SWwang, it, what with the depression times, but we always did manage ‘to pyt a little away.” “Pa had te stay in his job, bd be ‘e decided to save as much as ; we could, so that some day the| RETIRED EARLY sandwhich shop would come to! “Then,” Ma went ont, “when Pa, life. It was touch and go many/had a chance to retire at 60, we * * | \. “I missed the office when I first retired, so we decided to open our, shop right here in the neighbor-' hood, so that I could still see the, lold gang. A good sandwich shop thas been needed here,.: too, al-| Married Saturday at St: Michael Church were . though it took a long time to find Gayle Ann just the right location.” | : ‘ : “And at the right rent, too,”) " r Brown end | “A ‘MR. ‘and MRS. MUN Gerald S. ee. | + Rev I could see that she still had Rey nolds. charge of the. budget department. | The bride is | Most of all, I saw that dreama con J come true, even if sometimes the daughter takes a little longer than we'd like! of Mr. and (Copyright 1956) Mrs. Deon. In a double-ring ceremony per-| formed Saturday evening in All Saints Episcopal Church by the Rev. C. George Widdifield, Beverly J. Waldbillig became the bride of Munro C. Lawton. * * @« The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Bunce of Navajo drive and he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clement H. Lawton of Caseville. As the bride approached the altar she was wearing a walts- length gown of wiilte Rose Pointe lace and nylon tulle over ice-biue Glamorous ‘56 Makeup | Easy to Get Hair, Skin Boosters “Seen _ Inexpensive, and Decorative Brown of Lenox avenue, son of Mrs. R. S. Reynolds of LaSalle avenue. and he is the d MR. anc oS é a =. “MRS.-GERALD REYNOLDS Gayle A. Brown Wears White Over Blue for Rite sx= 7 % m= srs Catherine Fisher and Mrs. Rich- | ard Deschaine were her bridal at-| Every woman can look pretty ‘tendants. They were ballerina-|in her own bailiwick, whether It ‘length gowns of blue crystallette|is the country club or church ng the|social that inspires her to look chic, The New Year ushers in the gay round of socia] events that all) women -enjoy, These days even ithe poor housewife gets a chance Bouquets of white carnations and snapdragons decorated the altar of St. Michael Church for the Satur- and Gerald S. Reynolds. idroppe@ Waistlines. . => s--> * * © . The bride is the daughter-of Mr.| Kathleen Brown, sister of the | and Mrs. Leo I. Brown of Lenox pride, and Tamara Fink, niece of| avenue, and he is the son of Mrs. the bridegroom, were flower girls. | She dogen’t need a large glamor budget. If she can't af- | & charm, Do-it-yourself attendants carried heart-! panhaigadle available Peli give A ballerina-length gown of shaped bouquets of shattered car-| expert advice on haircutting, white embroided tulle over ice oe and white roses. pincurling, styling. blye taffeta was chosen by the ATTEND BRIDEGROOM ; bride. Her fingertip vell was of | Best man was John Ohanesian. | iakseagor oO eco esune blue nylon tulle and she carried Mark L. Beltz, Richard D. Brown. |. nq skin care show her how to go a bouquet of blue gardenias and brother of the bride, and Harry | spout that important portion of 'W. and Harold G. Reynalds. twin').- jooks. DIEM’S Last Two Days Values to $14.95 @ an assortmen “Little Spanish Heel” Si, Si... Penaljo’s All-American . beauty with a Spanish accent. Small, narrow and medium in, sizes 5 to 9. Yellow, pink and opricot colors direct from Spain! Hurry in! e val ¢ Waite’'s Women's Shoes—Street Floor BROKEN SIZES CLEARANCE SHOES @ custom quality women’s arch shoes in many different leathers @ with price increases threatening, ide selection of styles for the narrow feet @ sizes for all, 4 to 10, AAA-D, but not in every style or color. —, brothers of ‘the bridegrdom, seated Gy amor the. guests. " i : A dress of charcoal green with mon is the giemer ‘picture St brown accessories was worn by Mrs. Brown when she greeted the guests at the reception held at St Michael Hall OPEN MON. | AND FRI. NITES Top hairdressers do not even agree on hair style, which gives the average woman great lee- | way. Long and short styles are Mrs. Reynolds wore a peri. | popular. winkle blue taffeta dress with | black accessories. They both wore corsages of cymbidium orchids. When the couple left on a motor tmp through Canada, the new Mrs. Reynolds was wearing a black and white linen dress with match-' ing accessories and the corsage of gardenias from her bridal bou- quet. The newlyweds will reside in Clarkston on their return. | Oriental styles are too new not, to be sensationa] in a small com-| \munity, but hairdressers predict) ‘that time will have hair styles going East, good news for the woman who still wears long hair or wants to wear it long. Enchanting styles may be ac-' complished by twisting the bun in Here is a 25inch beauty that is junusual fashion and fastening it , oriny of entry in the County Fair with Oriental combs. Competition; and what's more, it USE OHIGNON will tempt your skill with the knit- The woman bored with short ting needles. hair might use a chignon to get Pattern No. 5647 contains knitting the same effect. |directions; material requirements; Older women might remem- (stitch illustration; picture of doily. Send 25c in coins, your name, 5 t of styles ues are greater than ever No Exchanges No Retunds DIEM S “The Best Friend Yo SHOES ur Feet Ever Had™ To reside in Caseville are Mr. and Mrs. Munro C. y Lawton who were married Saturday evening in All Saints Episcopal Church. The bride, the former Beverly Waldbillig, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Bunce of Navajo drive. He is the son of the Clement ROC. LAWTON Lauwtons. Beverly Waldbillig Weds in Ceremony at All Saints satin, fashioned with a fitted bodice. A pert stand-up collar and long sleeves. The bouffant skirt was accented with sunburst effect of lace on tulle over layers of nylon net. Her fingertip veil was secured by a smart half-hat of iridescent sequins and pearis on lace. She carried a cascade arrangement of white roses and corvetions. gown was of sky blue crystallette in a waltz-length with which she tions and white chrysanthemums, OTHER ATTENDANTS of the bridegroom. When Mrs. Bunce received her guests she was wearing a navy blue silk shantung dress with white trim and white accessories. Her corsage was é wits orchid. Mrs. Lawton chose a dressmaker suit of navy blue faille with white accessories for her son's wedding. Her corsage was also a white orchid. - Following a honeymoon trip in ‘Florida the newlyweds will make their home in Caseville. Bridal Party Given for Shirley Sullivan Mrs. William Dorking and Mrs. Edward Poole were at a Saturday evening kitchen shower for bride-elect Shirley Sul- livan. The shower was held at the James Wellington home on Lowell street. : Invited guests included Mrs. Frank Sullivan and Mrs. William Sullivan of Dearborn, Mrs. Delos |Shank, Mrs. Gordon Wallace, Mrs, ‘Donald Trarop, Mrs. Darrell Jady, 87 NORTH SAGINAW ST. FE 2-2492 huiler brown America’s Feveorite Children's Shoes starting Gt... 550 Scientifically styled over Live- Foot-Lasts, Buster Bfowns give your children the firm foot sup- port they need. Bring your youngsters in for perfect-fitting Buster Browns! Reg. 129.00 NOW ONLY 79 IMAGINE’ an Ameri- can made White at a Full in price so low... size handsome console cab- inet. Your heaviest sewing is a snap with this sturdy, White sewing unit Ycite’s Children’s Shoe Centet—Second Floor you gel seuING lessons, Py es you save $5Q00 on this | >White CONSOLE SEWING MACHINE--~ Waites White Sewing Center—Fourth Floor * nounced Sept wedding * * Bulkless front detoil will concee! the tummy buf evoid the fiat- pulled - front fit. Serong droped front pene! is good, ber that no matter what hair style they choose, it should go ‘address and the pattern number up. As the face ages it sags, and to Anne Cabot, Pontiac Press, 372 all good beanticians prefer the W. Quincy St., Chicago 6, Ill. up-doe for older women. 7 a Eyeshadow will be more in the Marjie Courtney ‘limelight this year for those who ° “like it. Emphasis goes to the {O Become Bride “ \corner of the eyes with mascara * helping to slant the eyes upward. Mr. and Mrs. O. R. Courtney P| *_ * * of Harper street announced the ys, pelbert Reish and Karen Wel- | Mouths remain the way the Lord engagement of their daughter, jington. Mrs. Harold Renno, Mrs. / made’ them, except if one wants Marjie, to Richard R. McVicker winze] Renno and Janice Renno of ani Oriental lip style, and then the of Royal Oak at a party held in center of the upper lip is filled in|their home Sunday. The occasion with little dip, also marked the 36th wedding Skin Is supposed to be ‘‘por- anniversary of the Courtneys. celain” or “Dresden” with every * woman jooking cameo-beautifal, Vir McVicker is the son of Mr. : and Mrs. John R. Perfume is no longer only for Royal Oak. The couple*has an- the well-heeled. Expensive brands Al ani the datelof the now are available in dram size. One new perfume ‘atomizer de signed in France offers a special yy oce present included the Mc- perfume for purse carrying With \\ ers Mr and Mrs. Paul Mc- a leak-proof atomizer to guaran \i444 and Mr and Mrs W. O | tee that every drop may be used. mee ot, : A sheath with cide panels or soft Aah ne ae alee vas Me ly wrapped front panel section, Wherever you look women are ae i = k rte . d re — os both will conceal that tummy more charm conscious. It is good (976° © rand Mrs. st. Courtney of Drayton Plains and A Courtney of Vallejo, Calif “bulge. The thing you want to avoid to know that if one can't afford is a tight fit across that area. outside help, a little patience at This season so many panel devices the vanity table can achieve very flatter figures professional results, Herb Square Soup | Herb squares are a good ac- New Cream Deodorant Proved 3°°"3..)..°.222 | juices, Spread Squares | * stnall soda crackers with soft but- Use this Vanishing Cream Deodorant oo 7 ° - fi | with PERSTOP” Daily. Keeps Underarms Dry == and Odorless—Saves Clothes from Stains Now you can get-a new kind of protection == from perspiration and odor —ruabbed-in pro- i tection. Arrid now contains magic new | PERSTOP.” Rub it in—rub perspiration and odor out. Used daily it is actually 114 ames as effective as any other leading deodorant in = keeping underarms dry, soft and sweet. Safe for norma! skin and fabrics. Get soft, creamy [i] © Arrid with PERSTOP’ today. or toast ter or Margarine and cover lightly with bits of chopped chives or cel ery seed. Heat in a moderate oven for ; -330 degres F about five minut -> PS \| A { - ask about our Pie \ trade-in plan America’s Largest Selling 434.0. Deodorant tom Rub it in—rub perspiration evt!l No other deodorant gives you Arrid’s exclusive rubbed -in too! protection. So dint be half-safe Be completely sate—use Arrd with . Pejstop® to be sure. 101 N. Saginaw St. F * Carver Protucte wademerk fer eulfonated nydrocarbos s wurfactants. = McVicker of — Jacobsen’ Yale also attended. _ Madame la Parisiene will wear casual suits, slimming princess ‘dresses and youthful shirtwaist styles come spring. a gree Uniforms Cotton - Nylon - Dacron MATERNITY APPAREL. OXFORD SHOP 59 W. Huron FE 4-7312 £5 Aa AMET EE TEE I EE Alicia Bridal Salon FORMALS - BRIDALS 55 W. HURON FE 5-3675 ISS sisis Sweetheart ROSES =) s Flowers INE GIFTS FE 3-7165.9 Pontiac City f ¥ # b f A ¥ ‘ ‘ ; * lub Enjoys Ladies Night Gathering Pontise Press Photos ale rca Ba. aii Tom Whitfield (left), secretary-treasurer of the Pontiac City Club, and Mrs. Whitfield were caught by the photographer as they greeted (left to right) Mrs. Stuart Whitfield, Dr. Loren Sheffield, Mrs. Shef- field and Stuart Whitfield, chairman of the house committee, on their arrival at the City Club Wednesday evening. The third Wednesday of each month is observed as Ladies Night at the club, with cocktails preceding the buffet dinner. ———— 2 . | Business before pleasure for those who know Robert Oliver. Caught by the photographer catching a quick snack rather than waiting for the dinner planned for “Ladies’ Night” at the City Club, Mr. Oliver tells Mrs. Oliver of the school Every Day | Is Holiday | » in Florida board meeting he must attend. Also a member of the board of directors of the City Club, he helped plan the Ladies’ Night affairs, which are held the third W ednesday evening of each month. Miami Vacationers Enjoy Festivities of All Sorts By ETHEL TOMBRINK MIAMI—Every day is a holiday | here in sunny Florida, with some) THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1956 Womens Section PAGES 23-29- |kind of show, opening or sporting, jevent going on all the time. Dis-' . . |tinguished visitors trom near and For Annual Spring Meeting ‘far constantly stream into the Mi-| fami area to join in the fun. ¢ 6 «@ Huge benefit dinner dances marked the pre-Lenten days. Tues-| day the Jewel Ball was held at the) |Eden Roc Hotel to benefit the| |Heart Association, and on Monday |Club when the group gathered Wed- levening about 600 guests attended — . ee hl the St. Francis Hospital benefit) Pes@ay at Masonic Temple on East) Pore party at the Surf Club. | , meeting of Parliamentary Study Nominating include * eley. committee mem. | | French, chatrman; Thornton and Mrs. Homer Fen- Parliamentary Committees Named Mrs. George Watters announced!ard Saari, Mrs. Lester Oles and chairman; Mrs. I. J. Gouin and committees for the annual springiyrs Lewis Swartz. ;Mrs. R. Earl Springer. Mrs. Thornton sponsored the group which demonstrated taking minutes of a meeting under the ‘direction of a leader, division of |the question, duties of a nominating Mrs. Russell Mrs. Aden . ¢ The Miami's Junior League re- cently drew 650 members and | guests to the Fontainebleau Ho- , ~~ by a fashion show, In the meantime people are trav- leling here and there. The Benja- min Jeromes left their Fort Lau- derdale apartment the other day for a trip to Hawali. They’re not expected back until the last of March. to right) Donald King and Mrs. King, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold King. A strolling accordion player delighted members and guests at Pontiac City Club Wednesday evening. “Relaxing and enjoying music before dinner were (left * LJ The Russell Eames arrived Chairman of the annual luncheon jcommittee, and full and limited | tel for its annual “Gala in the | Sun,” a dinner-dance highlighted | jis Mrs. James Hampton assisted) Appointed to the program com- \by Mrs. Theron Taylor, Mrs. Leon- mittee were Mrs-..Russeli Auten.) Initiation Held Je by Trabajamas : on Wednesday | A candlelight ceremony with the jreading of the constitution was ‘held at the formal initiation of \pledges into Trabajamas at the debate, e * * Mrs. Forrest E. Brown served jas leader. Mrs. Harold R. Sching- eck and Mrs. Ernest Taylor were welcomed as guests, and Mrs. L. E. Lacy had charge of the guest book. ~ Mrs. Joseph Panter, parliamen- tarian emeritus, conducted the question box. Pictures Viewed Members and guests who attended the Ladies’ Night . activities at the City Club Wednesday evening found it an excellent opportunity to relax, enjoy the music of the strolling accordion player and just chat, before the buffet Hospital. Work Discussed dinner, Pictured (left to right) are D. B. Eames, Mrs. Robert Boynton, Mrs. Eames and Mr. Boynton. The Boyntons of Huntington Woods were guests of the Eames Mr. and Mrs. Robert Franz Kohr of |Wednesday from Michigan for an | home of Joan Richards on Le- lextended stay in Hollywood. Baron avenue Wednesday evening. * » Ld \ro TOUR iS = __| The initiation was the first occa- | Later on this month, the Edwin sion for presiding of the newly |Whipples will be touring Florida. | elected officers. They'll spend part of their time| 3 eanette Cockle ts president: ca ipa baal where) her: rmerther Joan Richards, vice president; : A | Margaret Selvala, secretary; Do- e GM Motorama drew big crowds ‘res Latskiw, treasurer, and right up to the very last day.' Linda Burt, corresponding sec- Among those inspecting the cars of retary. itomorrow were the Elmer Wall-| Helen Prizant will handle club \schlagers.and the Roy Maurers.|publicity, Maria Cosma is his- The Maurers drove down from |torian, Myra Goens, chaplain, | Vero Beach to spend a few jand Barbara Kenny and Muriel | days with the Wallschlagers in |Upton, sergeants-at-arms. Fort Lauderdale, and the four- | See some headed for Miami to take | The girls who recited the club im the Motorama, the Antique [pledge and were accepted into Show—and the opening, of the new Jordan Marsh store. } | | The new store is quite an at-' traction, even to blase Miamians—| it's probably the only department| store with a cocktail lounge and) ‘with its own boat docks. Instead, ‘of “let's hop in the car and | : shopping,’ boat owners can now say ‘‘let’s hop in the boat and 34 go shopping.” | i | Later this month, the Wallschla-| gers will travel northward to pick: up the Maurers and then head across the state to Englewood to ‘visit Marvin and Marge Sholar of Pontiac for a week. |membership were Mary Chasteen,'Gail Seidrick. A new hospital program was the Americanism contest sponsored by, topic of discussion Wednesday eve-| the Department of Michigan Am- ning when Bemis-Olsen Amvets vets Auxiliary. Birmingham announce the Sorority Hears Auxiliary met at the post home on| Oakland avenue. Attention was fo-| cused on the Saginaw Veterans’ Hospital. : * ® Mrs. Robert Adsit, president, an- nounced that students from Lincoln - Junior High School have been cho- sen as the post's participants in the Saybrook Group Meets ot Kutz Home | Saybrook Group of the First. tional Church met re-! cently at the home of Mrs. Karl, Kutz on Liberty street. Assisting her as hostesses were Mrs. Wayne, GeBeauclair and Mrs. Carl Web-' ber, Mrs. F, L. Smith, Mrs. Kutz’) mother, was a guest. | Prizes will be awarded winners | by the auxiliary, with first place Theme of the contest is ‘‘Con- sider the Blessings of Freedom.” winner taking part in statewide | competition. Members of the post joined the! auxiliary in a buffet supper follow- ing the meeting. * ¢ 6 Mrs. Mable Tedder and Mrs. Robert Jenkins were guests of the) group. Lynn Allen Talks to Amvets Auxiliary Lynn D. Allen, county clerk, was guest speaker at the Tuesday eve- ning meeting of Jimmy Dey Post their daughter, Jane Ann, to Lt. James Hanlen parents are Mr. and Mrs. James H. Kinzer of Demopolis, Ala. Jane graduated from the University of engagement of Talk on Jewels Kinzer Jr. His tion and answer period followed | A talk on diamonds was given) by Stanton Deyo to members of the Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma iPhi when they met at the Hotel Waldron Tuesday evening. A ques- \Mr. Deyo's | A report on the City Council meeting was given by Mrs. Park 'Buchner and Phi Chapter was se- ‘lected to prepare the program for |the Founders’ Day Banquet April The group planned a progres- sive dinner for Feb. 28. Members | preparing different courses for | the affair include Mrs. E. L, Sturdy, Mrs. H. G. Richardson, discussion. s s * Mrs. Howard McIntyre gave the Amvets Auxiliary held at the Michigan and he is a Mrs, Donald Rosie Jr. and Mrs. : devotions. The program was in| YWCA. Mr. Allen discussed county life in Pontiac in its voted to give & do- to the fund for purchasing dishes for the church dining There Are Seven Pages in| Women’s Section, ~~ t 4 of Mrs. Arthur Selden who | government and Americanism. | Announcement was made of the Amvets’ annu ing held at ner to be given in May and a telephone card party planned for Conducts Meeting | March were also discussed. Hostesses for the-evening were “ 7 'Mrs. Stewart Houghton and Mrs./Tecently at the home of Mrs. Mar- Program, A PEO Record Re- ‘Itin Wager of the Dixie highway. view.” Arthur Torrey. Midwinter Ball be- I ten Oaks Country) ‘Club on Feb. 25, The Charter Din-' Thomas Ogden, graduate of the Mrs. William Killian, Mrs. / "JANE ANN KOHR ot Roat, Mrs. Cecil Elshalz, Mrs. .- Academy. nee ied Carol Ball and Mrs. Buchner are others, |Atter the business meeting, Mrs.| wrs Roat and Mrs. Buchner Harry Chapman had charge of the were selected to represent Phi Chapter at the March 15 meeting ot dhe Greater Pontiac Advisory Council, * Chapter CL, PEO sisterhood, met. ss U, S. Military James Burlingame, Mrs. Mable! . 4 iad ‘Among the passengers aboard the SS_ road. They sailed from | Lurline en route to Hawaii are Mr. and Feb. 10. | Mrs. Benjamin Jerome. of Dow Ridge by Plymouth Group The Plymouth Group of the First Congregational Church met Wednesday evening in the home of Ethelynn Peterson on East Hu- ron street. Evelyn Russell assist- ed the hostess. Mrs. George Gaches presided at the meeting, following which Mrs. Janet Dow showed pictures of | Scotland. Guests present Included Mrs. Howard Hatfield, Mrs. Dan Kin- -|ney, Mrs. Louella Muirhead, Mrs. !Lawrence Rutledge and Phyllis |Virginia Flowers, Sherry Norman, Pope. {Joy Notch, Mary Lou Tibbetts, | Terr Fortino, Ann Hamilton, So-|( \phia Skinner, Ellen Wagner andj JEANETTE COCKLE oming Events Pontiac. Women's Club will Monday at 2 p.m. et the YWCA. meet San F. rancisco 4 : . a { pe =! | rd i (i Nixon Blasted by Touring Adlai suman Dem Candidate Raps) wew yoRK—I got a simple little letter the other day Administration Policies no news, no gossip, no Big Names—from Emil Paukoucek, a Perle Mesta Rumored | THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16. 1956. House Probers |} as Ambassador to Italy |(all3to Stand |Hollywood Headlines: Inquiry of Un-American) By BOB THOMAS Groups in Government) HOLLYWOOD w—Now it's Cin. N ew Star Shirley Jones Prefers East to Filmdom | LONDON — Tramp ships differ ings ifrom the vessels of regular steam- hip lines in that tramps may fol’) Records of explorers indicate |low any ocean route in their search that the ice cap on the antarctic Hor cargo, while steamship lines'continent is 900 feet lower than it seven-year contract, the first operate on an advertised routes, wasta comery ago. * lreader in Russelton, Pa., which made the Glamour Beat seem in Idaho Speech Maul + . _| *“A very touching sight greeted me the other morning,” he BOISE, Idaho w — Adlai E. viote “as I looked out my window and saw two small boys, suey presen tele Uten meaay| On about 6, the other about 8, tugging at the frozen body after a one-night Idaho stand in Of their pet mongrel dog which apparently had been killed which he blasted Vice President by a car. They would tug and drag a while, then stop and Nixon as an “all-purpose politil lift its lifeless head and pet it and speak to it. I had an cian” in the service of the Re uncontrollable lump in my throat as I hurriedly turned away.” publican Party. ls - * <* * * * * Stevenson, who seeks the Dem- A certain Hollywood producer, says Tony Pettito, told ocratic presidential nomination,) his secretary, “My trouble is, I don’t have time to do told a Boise audience that Re-| wale the things I do!” ... When Thunderbird owners loftily ask the Embers doorman, Chris, whether be can drive publicans have failed to grasp the muetioanes (of 8) ceaneing) wey, of their car, he says, “Oh, sure—I can drive a Ford.” life in the 20th century. The Eisenhower administration tion looks upon farmers, workers and consumers as ‘‘customers and) wards of a remote, benevolent authority — not participants,’ he said CHARGES FAILURES Saving his hardest punchés for Nixon, with whom he tangled: fre- quently in the 1952 campaign, Stevenson accused the Republi- can administration of failures in farm and fiscal policies ever the past three years and predicted they would lose in November. | Perle Mesta for Ambassador to Italy? ‘Twas whispered as a possibility at Earl Blackwell's black-tie party for Perle at Eden Roc. Howard Lindsay, co-aqpthor of “Call Me Madam,” which lampooned Perle, paid her a tribute. He said she graciously entertained him in Luxembourg, then asked what the script (already finished) was about. “I thought of Irving Berlin and Russel Crouse, my associates, and ™my bank bal- ance,” he added, “and didn’t tell her.” He added, “She is quite-a gal!” ; * * * * ; Tennessee Williams tells of visiting Tallulah Bankhead in Miami (before she brought “Streetcar” to N¥) and how she urged him not to leave. The phone rang—she took it in another room—he overheard her among the first six witnesses in the current phase of the hearings. to talk freely. amendment’s guarantees against star,” she explained. “I never gave possible self-incrjmination in refus- much thought to movies.” ing to answer questions about Com- munist affiliation while they were saying, “Tennéssee's here. The candidate was dined in the) I've been trying to get him to leave for/hours but he won't go!” Basque style at a $5-a-plate Len- : x * * * in government service. i e . iderella girl Shirley Jones who says | Continues in D. C, ishe has no yen to live in Cali- fornia. WASHINGTON # — The House) |Commyjttee on Un-American Activi-| If this trend keeps up, the Cham- ities called in three more witnesses Der of Commerce could end up today in its search for Communist’ “!th an inferiority complex, ‘infiltration of the government in BACK TO NEW YORK past years. ; Shirley, who looks as packed The committee listed those sub-|with vitamins as a glass of orange poenaed as Sylvia Oloff Steinberg, | juice (maybe that'll keep the C. New York City; Marcel Kistin, of C. happy), was here on a whirl- Weymouth, Mass., and Henry wind trip to pick up an award or | Rhine, New Albany, Ind. two. But Me planned to hustle In testimony before the com- ‘right back to New York. mittee earlier this week, James | . ©: E. Gorham, New York, had | | intercepted her in her hotel named among others he sald he ‘ite and asked her about this af- had known as members of Com. front to @e Sunshine State. The * * done bits in two R&H shows and starred in two movies costing a, total of 11 million dollars, “Okla-| homa!"’ and “Carousel.” used to,"’ she sighed in wonder-| ment, like to do a Broadway show, but | Mr. Rodgers and Mr. Hammer-| would like to do'one that isn’t a) musical, as a change of pace." | “It's still a little hard to get) * « Her future plans? “I don’t know,” she replied. ‘I'd! stein don't have anything for me) right now, So I suppose they will! lend me out for more pictures. | They blasted +, On a Crumbbng des From Nowhere! their way a _ me they had ever tied ‘up ai “oe talent, NOW TWO BIG s * * ’ Within two short years, she had THRU FEATURES munist cells in the government |e@uteous blonde batted her- eye- im the 1930s a Sylvia Soloft, a lashes and replied innocently, “Oh, Marcel Kistin and a Henry Rhine. 1™ growing to like California He said he had lost track of ove each time I visit here. But I them. wouldn't want to live here. I like New York much better." Gorham has been the only one To add to the blow, she re- . marked that movies were never ‘her prime ambition. . The others have invoked the fifth | “T always wanted to be a stage ‘MOVIES FIRST | | Paradoxically, she became a Two witnesses yesterday—Morris ‘movie star first. When she left. her Y BUTTERFIELD THEATRES DEN JUB ttedivel fs a GOL — a - ODA sa heeds adenine nsdin cine dinciactiectinttindtiacie inti tiaetinatinatiatinatiadtinatiy Sitindindins f f ILE NEW movies! | BIG screen! | MOTHING SETTER ( TO ensovi ; ; ‘Features att STARTING TO D A Yy 1:05-3:55 6:45-9:38 ten dinner served by Basques-' : originally sheep herders who Perry Como wanted to go to confession. To save time, came to this country from Spain) he asked his music publisher Mickey Glass (who wor- in the last century and have ships in synagogues) to hold a place in line for him. formed a large colony in Boise. Later he had a private meeting with Idaho's Democratic leaders and party members. Stevenson told some 700 in Boise's South Junior High School gym that Nixon is an ‘‘all-pur- . pose politician’’ who uses ‘‘social- ism” as an “all-purpose word to villify New Deal Democratic pro- grams and applaud the same * things when they have a Repub- Ava Gardner’s adopted Spain's late dining habits: even Glass did but demanded, “What’'m I gonna do if the father gets to me and you're not here yet?” © x * * * Diana Barrymore's leaving the sanatorium this week. \Claims she's licked alcoholism already ... Russ Brown, the \“manager” in “Damn Yankees,” has whipped pneumonia .. . (Conrad Hilton'll turn over the Wash’n Mayflower and NY Roosevelt to Bostonian A. M. Sonnabend.. * x * ; Y ‘a,, HOMe town of Smithton, Pa., to tee Deteolt anid they ana e rich assault the big city, she auditioned for Rodgers and Hammerstein.‘ Communists, but both declined to ; say whether they had been a day Poa Naa ich tet bpd earlier or any time in the past. |Y0U"& Goll that they signed her t ‘ A third witness, Bertha Blair, 59, New York City, refused to say, : whether she now is a Communist LAKE Uoaeld or’ ever has been, She said i TO |worked for the gdvernment from |1929 to 1949 but refused to name! HISTORY'S ithe agencies. | “It's the same answer, Mr. Chairman, I decline to answer on the grounds of possible self-incrim-. ination,”’ Miss Blair kept repeating. | = Lt ; Se 5 ae ee “LET'S DANCE” FROM THE MAKERS’ OF Jkt Miller Story Lae" “ONE O'CLOCK JUMP” «SING, SING, SING" ‘ lican label.” sleeps most of the day. Actress Ramsey Ames (of “Alexander “What a wonderful all-purpose the Great”) tells of phoning Ava one evening to invite her word this ‘socialize’ is in the to @ flamenco party at 11. “I'll get up and have my coffee,” hands of this all-purpose politician) .aiq ava “and come over.” who can proclaim an old Demo- : * * * x cratic program as good when it Li wears a new Republican label and) Comedians Henny Youngman and Buddy Hackett reuned denotince it as socialism at the at the Copa (where Hackett’s in the bright new show with name time,” he said. told Hackett he'd been hit by a Volkswagen. “I had to go ic |to a doctor and have it removed.” - ‘THE MIDNIGHT EARL... Herb Shriner hopes his hour variety show next season’ll be on Friday just ahead of Ed Murrow. “Good spot te get a rating,” he figures ... Due to a mixup about Rhonda Fleming's singing on the Perry Come show, she’s to be brought back again with a big hurrah. When a friend said he hadn’t heard her sing Saturday night, Bhonda BARN DANCE Pontiac Armory Water and Mill Sts. SAT. NIGHT FEB. 18, 8 to | ba Stage Shew & te 16 Reseed & Square Dancing 10 te 1 = STARRING BUDDY SANDERS me HIS DRIFTWOOD BOYS | | “gn ” ey. ON STAGE said, “Good! The robber hesitated, then put i LLA U-ALL-COME | Ike's former Army cook, Marty Snyder—just back from the gun in his pocket and hurried = Sete etc iains that if the medics give the President a from the bank. EE == — — '50-50 chance of complete recovery he’ll RSE: 27 iJ NX y 7 run again... George Raft’s readying a i he — | HURON NOW! cafe act with six girls ...A famed 4 i ; actress who's taking a drunk cure gives S cocktail parties at the sanatorium , A spe cial a aaaiiemae Pied Cleo Moore’s getting sedate. no more WuiMe Li my busty publicity photos... Joan Craw- » se i HOLDEN JONES i ford's niece, Joan Crawford Lowe, , - invitation to teamed with Joe Howard Jr. son of |. e a jthe songwriter, in a night club act. fj} Lena Horne and Lennie Hayden will buy a home on the French Riviera: a ° |N-Y. town house is too expensive . . . Fe ‘Donald O'Connor met his fiancee, =” ‘Gloria Nobel, when she came to baby- ...’ ‘sit for the O'Connors . . . Elsa Maxwell may be the next celebrity to sue a scan- dal mag " Doris Lilly may fly to Las Vegas to « visit Frank Parker, an old pal... Pat ~ Marshall's stage door Johnny at “Mr. @# Wonderful” is gag writer Larry Gelbart ©; ae ... Morty Gunty tells of the lush who JOAN was bedridden recovering from a bad case of Scotch. _ EARL’S PEARLS ... “The first lesson in the art of self- ; defense is to keep your glasses on. | WISH I'D SAID THAT: “At some parties, once the ice 1s broken, the dishes and furniture are the next to go.”—Mort Lawrence. . TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Music arranger Morty Stevens | told a pest, “Why don't you phone me some time—so I can hang up on you!” Bob Olfm met a guy who definitely believes in reincarna- tion. In fact, in his Hfe insurance pollcy he names himself LOVE IS A MANY- ‘es — lod Oe OL Ol) 4 a 8) THING Cinruascopl BY REQUEST! ibe Wanstorpul dife « Thomac MITE FRI. & SAT. “MOON FLEET” and “GENTLEMEN MARRY BRUNETTES” Girl Clerk Outbluffs Growling Robber ‘haired bank teller outbfuffed a ___|Wic Damone). Hackett, married to a mambo teacher, said, would-be bank robber in a mid-| \“I went to take a lesson © and I’m: getting it.” Youngman town branch of the Bank of Amer- where Marilyn Dinubilo was work-’ ing and demanded: “I want fives, |tens and twenties.”” ihe laid on the counter wasn't real., | She | shut, jumped away from the coun. | ter and exclaimed: ULYSSES J de SAN FRANCISCO &—A_red- Malek an oliekir-te| their way a yesterday. The robber walked up to the cage/ Taio Maltirela 2 Miss Dinubilo decided the pistol’ slammed her cash drawer| “I'm sorry. I haven't any mon-| Teen-age Men You Can REDUCE Your Active Duty Military Service to 6 Months In- stead of 2 Years. The Reserve Forces Act of 1955 makes it posible for you to do just as stated above To fully acquaint you with the de- tails you are invited to a special information clinic, Friday Evening, Feb. 17, at 8PM. The US. Army Reserve Training Center at 37 W. Lawrence Street is the place All 17 to 18'2 year olds are invited to come and bring their parents. Bring Your Friends Bring Your Parents Tour of Training Center Friday Evening, 8 p.m. 37 W. LAWRENCE 8ST. Relreshments Will Be Served = This Ad Sponsored by ~ Blue Sky Drive-In Pontiac Drive-In ias beneficiary. That's earl, brother. 43rd ANNUAL | (Copyright 1956, the dos a FN\ticemmm Fish Bringing Top Buys for Ist Lenten Weekend By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Outstanding buys im produce are Fish gets top billing this week rather scarce. Many of the more SHOW Nl AM —TI PM in food stores and supermarkets popular fruit and vegetable items rose the pal jare not in season. There are still mae SE ae a few excellent bargains, however SUNDAY, FEB. 26 * Onions, white potatoes and salad 4 . Seafood for Lenten menus is as 2'@@ns are listed as outstanding ~*~ *k * plentiful as ever, there are plenty buys this week by the Department 3 big stage shows daity = °f_-varieties to choose from and Of Agriculture, while turnips, pas- STARRING ‘prices are moderate to low. In Ca! celery, sweet potatoes and cab- general, halibut is the top favorite Dage are rated in the “good buy” in West Coast stores while Floun- Category. 4g * z . ahr and cod head the Good buys in fruits are con- | popularity parade in eastern mar- fined pretty much to apples, or- te . kets. That's the wav consumer anges, tangerines and grape- preferences run, according to mar- {fruits ket specialists GORDON MacRAE WIERE BROTHERS KATHY BARR COLES AND ATKINS with LEU CAMACHO | Coffee pmces are still headin ADMISSION Beefeaters will find bargains higher. The more popular ee Weekday Bergoin Matinees... on this week-end, Sirloin Steaks are of vacuum-packed coffee have Evenings ond Set. and Sua. Mat. $1.25 down 4 to 6 cents a pound in climbed as much as 5 cents a Chiddren (Under 12) all times... $.50 _ Some cities. One chain is featur- pound since thé start of February AMPLE PARKING!ID iif honeiess leg orice nleen eek and several major supermarket ae re since last chains are hiking prices of their, MICHIGAN STATE September. | [private label coffees 2 to 4 cents a: PINT MeL LolelN ose |. 0d analysts say beef prices are Pound this week. | FEB. 18 thru 26 Off a shade at wholesale this week There's still an awtul lot of cofe| (about 4 to % of:a cent a pound) fee in Brazil. but shortages have but not enough to affect the retail devaloped“in some of the fancier price. ‘ itypes ; Theater * Theater XN la TODAY Poh 50c Nites-Sun. SAT. 20¢ Children w & perts Scury HE COMES FROM BEYOND THE PLACE: Chiku Shan, China! THe T me: Almost too late! RtaruPF WITH The Atom i, oF fot pe i ll a ely Ds} Kole) ome ALLEY eRe amr ee e-e eee en eae ee re SHOCK FULL OF THRILLS! =e eee Lesital a) cnolidisthaealcialmenilensManaaalontiinsiod HEY, KIDS! SATURDAY MATINEE 5—CARTOONS—5 2—BIC FEATURES—2 ' ome” "e “MEMORIES OF YOU" > “SHIN og Se eee ge Ae a ers UA Pr, aah eerie ee “AND THE ANGELS SING * ae | ee a yee. ‘ ae 4 # Ti. “DONT BE THAT war" - ” Cremer eee Re ee Vane Ab ee I GREATS. \ and T) cane mura woNe wanton Pe, HARRY JAMES MARTHA TILTON /77 BER POKLACK - TEDDY WILSON - EDWARD “HID! ange ! Day my fi <= See ape em ; ” PEO cmires see © ADDED e “Invasion of the ‘ Body Snatchers” 4 Also “SHACK OUT ON 101” 4 ywweweewte?efw.www|w wy" wrwrvwrvvrvrVTeeeel eh eh > STEVE ALLEN P Says ~ « « “My Style Choice is Eagle Suits. See the Su- perior Style and Tailoring of » Eayle Suits at Pontiac's > HUB CLOTHIERS” ° 4 4 4 Dl i i i i i i i * iwTwryTvuvwvvvyvvww*". IT’S THE COMEDY WITH THE MOSTEST! Hear “Shake, Rattle and Roll!” At—11: 15 = 3:40. 6:10-8:40 P.M. @ CO-FEATURE eo The Most Notorious Woman in History OLIVIA de HAVILLAND as “THAT LADY” At—12:50 - 4:20 - 7:50 P.M. > ¢ BARGAIN MAT., 40¢ DOORS OPEN 10:45 EVENINGS G SUNDAY, 50c CHILDREN ALWAYS, 20¢ ——l—TopayY thru SATURDAY —_— RICHARD SPENCER ROBERT WIDMARK TWO TRACY RYAN TOP Tha “BAD DAY AT CINEMASCOPE “HELL AND 5 HIGH WATER” | nits | BLACK, ROCK - IN COLOR JUST THE WAY IT HAPPENED! EXTRA! You'll Never Forget that COLOR CARTOON DRAMA BENEATH THE SEA! Featerg At—12:21 - 8:31 - 6:48 - 16:05 Day! S ud = Feature At—11:00 - 2:10 - 5:27 - Orta County Area THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1956 f esidents to Pause for Prayer on World came 7 ay Your PTA Is Planning: Annual Family Roundup at Waterford WATERFORD CENTER — The| PTA here will hold its annual family roundup from 4:30 to 9 p.m. | at the school on March 3. | Mrs. Homer Peterson is chair-| man of the event with Mrs. Ed- ward Sundwell and Mrs. Harry youngsters. Miller, co-chairmen. | Each home room will sponsor a} booth and dinner will be served! eafeteria-style, beginning at 4:30. Brandon Township Schools will be ‘held at 8 p.m. Monday im the gymnasium. Listed as some of the attrac- tions are a talent show, dog act, | Brandon Voters to Decide Issue Set March 6 Date for’ $650,000 Bond Election Michigan. will speak at the PTA for Schools day, Feb. 23. The talk was pre-! ‘ppp Group Starts 41st Year in Modernized Club House By JULIE V. HUTCHINS — was organized but the club con-| club house was paid and the |president; Mrs. Wright Madill, re- KEEGO HARBOR-—The fortieth | tinued to house a branch of the, mortgage burned with appro- {cording secretary; anniversary of the Keego-Cassinew library until 1947 when it priate ceremonies. Wilson, corresponding secretary; Women’s Club is being celebrated! moveq to a more convenient jo-| Mrs. Harold Stickley, treasurer; this month with meetings in an! cation, The officers for the present year|Mrs. Julius Kindel, auditor and enlarged, completely renovated, are as follows: Mrs. Walter, presi-|Mrs. Frederick Laffrey, .parlia- and modernized club house. In 1941 the debt on the first dent: Mrs. Lucien Allison, vice!mentarian. » * » The remodeled club house has a large assembly room, powder room, modern kitchen and utility room and a new heating system. | The Walls of the assembly room| are paneled and a tile floor has. been laid throughout the building. The job was done under the supervision of the building com- mittee, appointed by Mrs. J. W. Walter, president. The commit- tee consisted of Mrs. Royal Pazik, Mrs. Frederick Laffrey, Mrs. Louise Cline and Mrs. du- March 3 tumbling act, movies, a toy shop, game rooms, a country store, white elephant, fancy work, pony rides and snack bar. _ A nursery will be provided for —e Brandon Township The regular PTA meeting for, | Specific questions on the pro- posed bond issue and new school buildings wili be brought before the group. Join W. Thomas, | school attorney, and Bruce Smith, architect, will be present VELD E. BLUE to discuss the bonds, taxes and lius Kindel. The work was done building plans. | at up 10 ef by a local contracter. Wixom | In February, 1916, a group of ltwelve ladies of the Keego Harbor, | \Cass Lake area organized a club. | iwhich they called the Ladies Aid ™ ‘Society. Their chief purpose was. — Philip A. Hart, Lt. Governor of meeting here at 8 p.m. next Thurs- Post Office Mrs. Randal) le ‘ : or to do welfare work in the com- ‘viously announced erroneously as Name Veld E. Blue as “Ortonville, George Gray of Perry- ORTONVILLE—March 6 is the date set for a special election when voters in Brandon Township will decide a $650,000 bond issue nec- essary to build a 2l-room high school on the 53-acre site of Brandon ,School and a four-room| elementary building 1's miles south of here. Supt. E. J. Hungerford has stated | ‘slated for tonight. | Lt. Gov. Hart's speech will deal) Acting Postmaster; to i the hospitalization program for mentally retarded children in ithe state Township road condi- tions will also be discussed, with) LATHRUP—After months of in- BUY CASS LAKE SITE |E. E. Schaffer, chairman of the vestigation, Look for Quarters the Federal govern-| munity. | Their first president was Mrs. | [rates Lillycrop and at the pres- ent time the club lists twenty-three | Past Presidents. ' At the time of their organiza- Commerce Township Road Com-/ ment has decided to locate a postition and for many years after, mittee, present. office at the city of Lathrup Vil-| jlage in Oakland County, Repre- needlecraft the chief club. activity. The women held two ba-_ was that cost to the tax payers will be ? R di 0 sentative George A. Dondero de) ,args every year and the proceeds $8 per $1,000 of property Ss a 10 perafors clared today. -lwere used for’ welfare work. Bake} ee sales, card parties and dances' tion, accord to state equalization valuation. The present bond voted in’ property total cost of $14 per $1,000 of property valuation. School costs for operating and building would cost $25 per $1,000: able bonds amounting to $350,000 Sicuinghass, which to now serv: | Be on the money available would Plans call tor three 226-foot- | ing Lathrup Village. It is 4 | te daapet ow Federation of | lessen the amount of interest. high towers with is foot lequmme || ca thak pared Gerviae @ Lameae Women’s Clubs. - a Voters have until Feb. 24 to | bases, these to be in a straight | Village will begin as soon as in the meantime, the personnel, ——— ay register to vote in this special line and will provide 10 te quarters can be obtained. of the club had CLUBHOUSE NOW READY — The Keego Bechill. club member! land Mrs. LW. wale election. Te vote one must have registered within the past four years, have lived in Brandon Township 30 days, in the state six months, be a property owner, and at least 21 years of age. Registrations will be taken by Mrs, Helen Tucker Jencks of ville Road and Mrs. Elsie Pearson of Hadley. Polls will be open from 7 a. m., to 8 p. m. in the band room of the high school. Ask Zoning Change SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP—Ben Faberman and John Lione, who |will be owners and full time oper- ators of the proposed loca] radio station, appeared before the Town- ship Board to ask permission to _jchange .zoning of all but a one acre strip along Lahser Road. square miles of reception with the best reception within a seven mile radius. The station is aimed at supplying local need and availability of open local news. Approval of a site by ties. , the FCC is granted on a basis of} Herman F. Luhrs of 27315 Rain-/LONG SERVICE He also stated that Veld E. Blue, a resident of Lathrup Village for! a number of years, will be named, been the director of personnel for} the Chrysler Corporation for 10) years. The new post office at Lathrup will provide improved mail serv- | ice and give’ some relief to the | overburdened post office in | No rapid development in South- field Township and other nearby districts may necessitate the es- |tablishment of more postal facili- were also held and by 1926 they | had enough money to purchase, a piece of property on Cass Lake) |as acting postmaster. Blue has pq In 1927 they became affiliated with the Oakland County Feder- ation of Women’s Clubs. In 1928, the name of the organization was changed to Keego Cass Women's | that they became affiliated with | lchanged. Of the twelve charter members, only one, Mrs. Allie M. Webb remained. Mrs. Webb was an active member until the time) of her death in 1953. completely | | | bow Circle, Lathrup Village, is Other active members who have! Club and it was at this time PF) Cass Women's enlarged and modernized club- house on Cass Lake Rd. is being examined by president. The Dutch doors lead to a modern yellow kitchen with flowered curtains, Churches Slate ‘riday Services Events Include Special Meditations, Programs and Music COMMERCE — In recognition of World Day of Prayer, a service of prayer will be held at 2 p.m., Fri- day, in the Commerce Methodist Church. The public has been invited to attend the service which marks the first Friday of the Lenten season. Sponsored by the WSCS, the ‘| event wil) have as its theme, “One Fleck, One Shepherd,” in accord with that of the entire world, Mrs. Perry Thomas is in charge of the arrangements, Attending members will hear the call to prayer, followed by med- tations of praise, penitence, inter- cession and affirmation. Shirley Wooden will be the or- ganist. 4 Rochester The Rochester Church of the ‘Nazarene will be host to the World ‘Day of Prayer services from 1:30 F-ito 3 p.m. Friday. The Rev. E. W._ ‘Martin of the First Church of the Nazarene, Detroit, will be speaker. \ Imlay City The Methodist Church here will have services at 2 p.m. as part of the World Day of Prayer. Everyone is invited te attend, The committee on Pastoral Re- lations will meet at the Capac \Methodist Church Sunday, at 4 p.m. Bishop Marshall R. Reed will jspeak, Sunday evening at 7:30 a jmass meeting is scheduled at Ca: pac High School. Bishop Reed will {speak on his recent trip to Europe and Palestine, \ North Branch Mrs. Delbert Myers is Spiritual Life Chairman of the Woman's So- ciety of Christian Service for World |Day of Prayer, to be observed in '-\the Methodist Church here Friday afternoon. Mrs. Glen Spencer will “|contribute a vocal solo. Oxford The Oxford Methodist Church | will observe the World Day of Prayer on Friday with a family night cooperative dinner at 6:30. A program will follow, conducted by Mrs. Robert Bartlett, spiritual life secretary of the W.S.C.S. Romeo St. Paul Church. Commerce Staff | span in the airwaves. The request/chairman of a civie committee|seen l0hg service with the club) was transferred to the Planning|which promoted the application are: Mrs. William McCracken 37 | There will be two services for World Day of Prayer in Romeo, one at 1:30 p.m. in the First Metho- dist Church, Mrs. Peter Bell, wife . . ‘of the pastor of the Washington Decide Unanimously Yethodist Church and a minister erself, will be guest speaker with crnce Acton. Notes for Site Price and his assistant Clarence Members to Cover 5 kKutticuhn have been instructing Points of Discussion in members of the Commerce Town-; Commission. ~~ ifor the new post office. lyears, Mrs. Frederick Laffrey, 24 : ; |years, Mrs. Royal Pazik, 28 years, | DeCid eeting , Mrs. Lena Watkins, 26 years, and -190 to Attend Banquet Mrs. John Bechill, 25 years. | | During this time, the custom | LLL LLL LLL of sending flowers and baskets for Property on Romeo 5 7" _ship fire department on what to do} P ithe world topic “One Flock, One Union School for Fa thers, Da ugh ters of truit — the sean os | Southfield jand what to expect in the event of Street |Shepherd.”’ ‘ | s ys . ‘fire at the Guided Missile range. ' Another service for children from of Religion | ROCHESTER—One hundred and giving and Christmas they gave | baskets to needy families. For many years the slogan . 't st r ) ROCHESTER—Nearly 130 mer Ge Loe the sixth grade bers of St. Paul’s Methodist Church Church at 2:30 An installation of the United | States Army, the range bs located on Wise Road between Carrol! SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP — A of Pecial open meeting of the Town ship Board has been scheduled foi Glenn Brookbank will be the toastmaster for the program which follows the dinner. Bonnie the Methodist Fifth and Sixth in {ninety dads and daughters are expected to attend the banquet at Opens Feb. 23 | ai “ \ “d 128 5 r : : : the club had been “Build a Club voted 128 to 15 for the purchase of grade Girl Scouts will sing. St. Paul's Me 2 . : : t. Paul's Methodist Church this’ Brookbank will give a toast to Thursday, Feb. 23, at 8 pm. at the. Lake and Union Lake Roads in ‘House’ and in 1931 construction. jan eight acre site known as the General World Day of Prayer ROCHESTER—The first meeting | evening at 6:20. of the Union School of Religion here will be on Feb. 23 at 7:30 p.m. in the Parish Hall of the First Congregationa) Church. Members from the Episcopal. ; Methodist, and Congregational Churches will meet first for an in- formal refreshment period. At 8 the film on the life of Paul “Years of Apprenticeship” will be shown | Following the film the Rev. F. John Yuells will lead the Bible A patriotic theme to celebrate George Washington's birthday has give the toast te the daughters, Road property w been tables, arranged for the banquet Registered Pig Lost in Blaze * the fathers, and Ford Thompson, the afther of six daughters, will A novelty program has been ar- ranged by Mrs. Johnson Newell and |taking part in it will be groups of |fathers and daughters. Several ispecialty numbers in song ldance will be featured. | * * * The circles of the Women's So- iciety of Christian Service of the of a club house on the Cass Lake ras accomplished « * In 1934 the club undertook a project to make their club of serv- ice to the community and thus became the sponsors of a public) library in their building. Thé h-| lbrary was opened in June 1934 with several hundred books on its shelves. It met with an immediate response from the residents and Township Hall. The agenda of the evening will include the following points of discussion: * * * 1. Pian covering Section 24 be- tween 10 and 11 Mile Roads, be- tween Greenfield and Southfield Roads. 2. School outlined by Geer Associates, 3. Plat revision and subdivision planning and design as recom- Commerce Township. Both Price and Kuttkuhn toured |S" the range recently noting carefully the best procedure case, of a fire. sie roqurements ax TH Unfinished Task’ Slated at Brooklands to follow in |James Keith property on Romeo chairman reet for a new church * *# & The land has been under option at a price of $30,000 since the first jweek in February. Li It was presented to the Official Board of the church by cochair- men of the Building Committee, Jacob C. Judson and H. B, Littel. The district superintende is Mrs, Frederick T Farr. VFW Post to Sponsor | Jamboree for Amateurs IMLAY CITY — The VFW Post No. 2492 will sponsor the third an- nual amateur Jamboree on Friday, April 13. Contestants may enter nt. bY writing to Dwane Bassett, Im- ay City Study on ue ees of ibe cueh will have charge of the contined in operation until 1939 mended by the Planing Commis-| BROOKLANDS—Scheduled for Arthur Smith, presided at the Tues- ee haar he ae = | penqet |when the demand for new books Sion. ‘showing Sunday at Gethsemane day meeting k di ° ble . = Gn are avail- | LEONARD — Fire of unknown lcoold no longer be supplied. | g Acceptance of the zoning |Lutheran Church in Brooklands is] 5 . ns Ask New Radio Station ote ae origin destroyed a barn on the Noon Luncheon Held ISTART LIBRARY | map, which at this time is ithe new feature-length movie, “The! Pastor ee Ses ee WASHINGTON —The Metro free jestate of Cmdr. Melvin S. Lanphar, | ncthing more than the eld map |Mfinished Task.” latest film pro, ** : sta tat © C oolitan Bruadcasting Corp. of The Bible Study Book is James T. Carlyon's “Getting Acquainted East Leonard Road, last night. Lost in the barn housing regis-| WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — |The Pontiac Camp of Gideon Auxil- A library committee circulated, petinons throughout West Bloom-) with new street names and sub- | duction of The Lutheran Church. uilding commuttee was authorized po.a) Oak has applied for a new Missouri Synod to go ahead with building plans in- iary praver luncheon was held atifield Township asking for a vote divisions brought up-to-date. cluding an architect The movie is part of the Synod’s with the New Testament.” tered Canadian Yorkshire pigs, . ames | | | were 11 registered sows, approx) noon yesterday at the home of Mrs. to establish a township library When the Planning Commission “Venture of Faith” “{fort . re Hot L h Pp imately 120 baby pigs, five tons of Henry Mehiberg, 5938 Anderson-,The vote was favorable and the is ready to plan the new zoning erin na a he ‘ che Gan Dryd P le’ : k ot Lunc rogram y | ‘West Bloomfield Township Library’ map showing new zoning it will me mass wet ie instian Uryaen Feopie s Ticket | Church's primary purpose to evan Started in Leonard LEONARD — The hot lunch pro- gram opened at Leonard School here this week with Mrs. Mary Benson, recently of Bloomfield Hills High School, in charge, and Mrs. Anne Schlusler of Leonard assisting. : The Board of Education has in- stalled much new equipment anc made numerous changes in kitch- en facilities to insure proper sani- tation and handling of food. Nan Bernstein of the State Health De- partment has helped to form the program and Rose Boyd, Oakland County Supervisor of Nurses, and Gabrielle McDermott, school nurse, have also cooperated on the proj- ect. Lovett Dance School Opens Studio in Utica UTICA — The Lovett School of Dance has opened a studio at 52232 Van Dyke in Utica. Lessons aré conducted by Samuel B. Lovett for both children and adults. Class and private lessons can be taken in tap, toe, ballet, ballroom and character dancing. Lovett said. i Slate Zoning Hearing TROY—An application of Law- rence Land Corp. to rezone acres at the southeast corner of Maple and Livernois to commer- cial use for a $5 million shopping 30 | ‘hay and a quantity of feed | | The blaze began about 10 last | | night. The Leonard Fire Depart- ment fought flames all night. The Oxford Fire Department was . | called to aid in the fight. | The damage has not yet been estimated. ‘Thomas WSCS Planning ‘Father-Daughter Banquet THOMAS — The WSCS here will hold a ‘Father and Daughter” ‘banquet at Thomas Community Hall on Saturday evening | Tickets may be obtained by caill- ing OA 8-3579 or OA 8-2148. ———$—$——$ = Former Red Wing Star to Speak at Southfield SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP—The Optimist Club members will meet at Fruitridge Inn tonight. (Guest speaker will be Syd Abel. former Red Wink hockey star and cap- tain nd To Hear Global News LAPEER—Members of the Home Circie will be entertained by Mrs Gary Cooley on Tuesday. Mrs. Er- inest Clark will be the leader and ‘her subject will be “News About the Globe ” | | / . ‘ i Imlay Cite center will be formally. considered | Sacred Heart Church en hold Lenten WM pm, Fridey, | at a public hearing Tuesday, Feb. services at 7 Ortomvilie ville Rd. | ' County Calendar | ~ | call meetings of each section of the Names 7 for Office ltewnship at which time those in- terested may discuss the proposed changes prior to actual action on the changes taking place. 5. Consideration of a report on conditions for loaning services of the planning cosultant igelize the world a= Gethsemane's pastor, the Rev. two showings Sanday morning at | !@&° caucus here were: the church, beginning at 8:30 and | 10:45 during the regular wor- | ship hours. Bible Class for the | day will be cancelled. | ri ; _ (ee u Petition fo Annex ~ [,.,i enc’, tat reparate| ear Fall DRYDEN — Nominated on the Norman Kuck, says there will be People’s ticket at Tuesday's vil- radio station for Royal Oak for 1/1220 kelocycles. The application was received yesterday by the communications commission. Troy Auxiliary to Meet TROY—The Troy Dad's lary meets at 7:30 p.m. Auxil- served. tonight. President, Harold Leever. clerk, at the high school. Women will re- ‘Dale Wilcox: treasurer, Hazel Mc-|veal their secret pals and draw |Cauley; assessor, Bob Weingartz: for new ones. /councilman for three years, Robert, A “Traveling Basket’ will be McCauley, Oliver Braidwood and started and refreshments will be date Sunday |showings are open to the public. Area to Royal Oak een see Spoon Shacket Homeowner's Assn.., ihas filed petition to annex a two- IMLAY CITY — The Imlay City mile-equare area of Madison Fire department has been given |Heights to Royal Oak a used ambulance by Muir Broth- | MADISON HEIGHTS — Lipton Donate Rescue eat City SP EC I A L wn AST FOR THIS WEEK! THEY: The area. which is from 12 Mile ers Funeral Home. It will be con- to 14 Mile west from Stevenson verted into a rescue car and ta Campbell, has an estimated equipped with the resuscitator and valuation of $1,200,000 oxygen tanks which the depart- ment now has. Other rescue equip- ment will be added DARK cause the rest of the city would Planning Flower Sale ASPHALT probably outvote the 400 voters | DRAYTON PLAINS — St. Cath- | im the two square mile Section. (erine's Guild made plans for its TILE | | Mayor Lloyd H. Ferguson said | this morning there is little chance for the annexation be- * ae Lod et apo gt get i see ee: over ‘signatures of Royal Oak and Madi- Meeting, at the home of Mrs IR ison Heights residents, has been: Stevenson, Watkins Lake. The new ‘gent to the Board of Supervisors! budget was read and voted on. Cc Only each ‘Boundaries Committee to deter- | The petition, bearing 7090 coming flower sale at the February imine legality. 7 | . ; = We Carry the Open Daily 9 to 6 Friday till 9 P.M. FOR... _ FURNITURE at Its FINEST ee ‘4 pee e tees preceese eel SP lee me 1p ae we e oan | New Hudson Coach Firm | Marks 25th Anniversary . cf ie : ; Festi Frm Phaeton Manulacturing Co. here re AND IT CAME FROM A PULLET — An egg that dwarfs its | cently celsirated Opes ee as FIRTH FLOOR CARPETING. WE SPECIALIZE IN FORMICA. SEE US FIRST. KAREN’S FLOOR COVERING Complete Line of ee 2B. B don Oran, No #7 Wl t . m ar . F r 7 |g Branden Orange, No 073, wil meet at normal-size sister 1s compared by Mrs. Bernal Pacer of Clarkston |. anutacturer of mobile-homes.| P | XLEY , ; ling. A potluck supper will be served be- and the chicken that ‘‘did the damage.’’ The look of ‘‘Did I do that?” ; : : - < : Drayton WCTU to Meet re eo dusiness: meeting | h hen’ ai |, The occasion was climaxed with Next to Karen's Toyland . Ne | A meetin tctamere aial eccmts| = the young hen's face testifies that the monster weighs six ounces, ‘the unveiling of Vagabond’s latest Home Furnishings . } | DRAYTON PLAINS — The local wii be held at Piigrim Congregations! | which is mighty hefty for any egg. Mrs. Pacer says she's raised *+ first,” a ‘Traveler Trailer,” self- os. lac | 4524 Dixie Hwy. Phones OR 3-4109 ¢ chapter of the WCTU will meet at; Church st 2 p a (eter | chickens for 26 years and the seven-inch-round egg is the largest contained traveling tnit with built- Rochester. Niche Dr Plai . OR 3-1279 1:3) p.m. today at the Drayton MOMs Unit 14 will hold its reguiar she’s ever seen. Clucks the proud creator, “In our chicken language. in septic tank, water storage, gas. OL 2-212) OL 1.9642 rayton ains >” Plains Presbyterian Church. 5 | eens SS eee a Pm © | ite the mostest.” o , lights, and easy-hauling device. Sia a * . ee Se _ r, e -¥ } 2. : | oy i \ * ih a : , : * ‘ 4 . ; , ry & 4 i , ’ \ . . , “ cf 4 ‘ fh =) \ ‘ Nl — , \ . = 7 | S A 4 sa 7 i % & : : Johnny Holman, re victor over Bob Satterfield, Aaa boxing professionally in 1947. spring meeting on April 1s. run through May 5. NEW LOW PRICE! UNDERCOATING Expertly done, with new ‘56 equip- +] 4*” ment... all labor and materials * Motor Cleaning ‘GUARANTEED! PONTIAC UNDERCOATING * Steam Cleaning 1 Chase Street FE 4-5453 AUTO PAINTING Expert Body and Fender Repair on All Makes of Cars . Werk Fer Companies Ultra Modern Building {or Collision and Painting ROCHESTER FORD DEALER — OL 1.9711 LARRY JEROME =~ iy as ] THE PONTfAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1956 Enter Race? No One Knows ARCADIA, Calif. @ — The on- again, off-again return to racing of Swaps tomorrow -remained in) the speculative stage today. Trainer Meshach Tenney was ex- pected to drop Swaps’ name in the| entry box this morning for the $15,- 000 feature at Santa Anita tomor- | row, a mile and one-sixteenth over- night styled the Los Angeles Coun- ty Handicap. Presumably it will be Swaps’ last chance for a formal race be- fore the $100,000 Santa Anita Hand- icap Feb, 25. Fourteen other horses, among them such outstanding handicap threats as Bobby Brocato and Traf- fic Judge, are also expected to be in tomorrow's field. Eastern States Prep Tournament Suspended GLENS FALLS, N.Y. — The Eastern States High School Bas- ketball Tournament has been sus- pended because of opposition from the State Education Department. Francis McGinley, chairman of the sponsoring committee, said yesterday the department was op- posed ¢o participation of New York teams in such tournaments. Nor- mally about half of the eight teams SVC Place Battle Tightens WHAT GOES UP never seems to come down when Bill Russell of San Francisco bounces around. At left, Russell starts wheeling for a pivot shot as California defender goes up with him. Center, Russell still is climbing as his opponent starts to come down. And at right, he's all alone, head’ and shoulders over the rest, as he follows through. entered in the tournament, usually held in late March, have been New #York schools. | ' Don Newcombe of the Dodgers walked only 38 batters in the 1955, ' season, OPEN FRIDAY—MONDAY ‘til 9 "P. M. \nis tour. Pancho Keeps Winning ‘Signs Contract CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. ® — Pancho Gonzales scored his 29th victory over Tony Trabert here | jlast night 6-2, 6-4 as the two aces) ‘continued their showdown on Jack| Kramer's world championship ten-| se A TAN HAA TROPHIES Bullpen Okay for Gromek DETROIT w—Steve Gromek, 36- Tigers and says he’s willing to be ‘year-old righthander, has signed|@ relief pitcher. Inis 1966 contract with the Detroit Gromek posted a 13-10 record —|last year but wilted in the sum- Hi Hl mh Hic | mer months. Near the end of the season he turned in two brilliant lreliet performances and Manager Bucky Harris says he may send Must’ for PHS fm day gets down to the critical stage ~ |Friday night when all contenders {Central and Northern Victor Friday Over Bay City Central, Northern Fives Collide in Spotlighted Engagement Saginaw Valley's hottest basket- ball title race in many years Fri- will be in action. Chief attention, outside the local interest, is focused upon the Flint encounter on the big IMA court in Flint. This will be the second. big meeting of the two top clubs, Central having edged the Vik- ings, 59-58, dn Jan, 6. Indians are again favored to retain their Big 10 Cagers Hold ‘55 Rate for Personals Study Shows Average Per Game About 38.6 Fouls CHICAGO (®—Big 10 basketball officials still have as much breath to toot their whistles this season as they did last year. A study of personal fouls by the conference shows that so far this year the average number called is 38.64 per game. In 1955 the aver- age was 38.65. The study also shows there is little distinction in tooting against visiting teams and home clubs. The number of fouls on home teams is 763 compared to 744 for the vis- itors. Home teams have won 22 games and visitors 17. Furman Cager in NCAA Point Lead By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS When Illinois shut off Ohio State’s Robin Freeman with only 12 points ‘last weekend, it was the first time in six years any national individu- ‘al scoring leader had been shown such disdain in major college as- ketball. What's more, the unfrocking was lead, which they now share with their home-town rivals. The other | perpetrated before a national tele- Valley tilt Friday is Arthur Hill vision audience as Paul Judson at Saginaw. and Bill Ridley of the IMlini collabo- Cts will be at Bay City Cen- heer, a tr ay'’s tilt is rated a . “must” for Coach Art Van Ryzin’s Bees Peggable = bet outfit. Pontiac must win over the . kine 6 € from the West- Wolfpack (PHS dumped the up-|o© cutterence. But his 359 points starters 76-50 in the 1st game), if aA game average was shaved to it is to retain any chance of stay- 32.2 in today’s listing by the NCAA ing, in the race. Wolves beat Sag-'service Bureau while Furman's inaw Tutsday night, 83-78, and|parrell Floyd moved back to the off this effort promise to give top at 33.8, DIXIE DAN MUST MOVE Men’s and Boys’ WINTER JACKETS @ Quilted Linings @ Nylon Gab Surcoats @ 10% Weel Suburbans Boys’ Sizes S$ Sold for as High as $9.95 99 FROM @ Wool Varsities @ Biouse Style Your Last Chance to Buy $25.00 Government Sheep Lined FLIGHT PANTS | Men's Uniform WORK SHIRTS Tan, Grey, Green, Blue Men’s Famous AUTOGRAPH DRESS OXFORDS Nationally adver- tised at 8.95. Men's Uniform Work Pants ® Assorted Colors Men's Sizes S$ 99 Sold for as High as $12.95 $h99 ye US. ar Navy typ OXFORDS Genuine leath- $388 f er with bonus wear soles. , ® Sanforized ® Zipper Front Genuine U. S. Army FIELD SHOES 9.95 val. Genuine Goodyear welts Goodyear welts, cork or zebra soles $999 Men’s Neophreme Sole WORK SHOES 9. a3 vO 56” > (4 = ' ‘. - > j - an ee ee ee 0 ee © en ee ee eee ee e é OS SD CR ES Immediate Delivery Engraving Done In Our Own 28 Seath ot: Street the veteran to the bullpen early Chiefs a red hot scrap. SPORTING — FUR BREEDERS Order Your Bowling Trophies Now Plaques — Medals Made to Order Pontiac econ this season. - Gromek, relieve." Shop an early season licking, i am fest “Anything's okay by me," said “it doesn't take me long|but has never been bothered very | to get ready, either to start or ‘Broncos Beaten, 68-62 CHICAGO # — Loyola avenged leading form start to finish, to whip West- enr Michigan 68-62 last night in t non-conference basketball con- LAST 2 WEEKS} IN PONTIAC PRICES SLASHED T0 THE Bone! | | EVERYTHING MUST BE SOLD! Including Store Fixtures COME IN — Look around... money saving sale.. we have. See for yourself. . take advantage of this tremendous . 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Wolf starters will be Cart| fellows; Don Kanicki Wayne | Van Ryzin wasn’t certain of one. lars”, Willie Dewalt, Rod Treats, | | . Going Siding | Ice Fishing? GENUINE DEER SKIN For Warmth and Wear iB Sheep Lined. . $6.95 Wool Lined. . $5.95 AL HILDE 1920 $. T Daily 8-6. FE 4-7673 Sun. °10-2, Fri, 8-8 Make Your League Reservations OW tor Sosy Gite nee eneten. cen Goncentings ; Pret ass Recreation 18 &. Perry Bt. FE 6-e0ss @5.9 Herse- power @4500 RPM @ Weighs a2 We. @ Remote tank @ Water-cooled The fish will hardly know the kids will love it! Put ‘MARK 25’ Motor ‘MARK 30’ Motor ‘MARK 55’ Motor 1) at iL Saginaw at Warren, Pontiac A hurricane harnessed for your ° pleasure! The 5.9 hp. ‘Mark 6’ MERCURY Motor *230 = you're in the neighborhood when you troll this super-silent Six! Lively 42-lb. lightweight features dual-purpose drive for weedless operation and synchronized spark and throttle. Even yours in lay-away today! ita e Stores ani” | =; fi TDS ee ra f - } - 7 s } ra N a | f - / x eo . } fine ~ fe / eco Fla } fy \ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16,1956 FORTY-SEVEN | xe azemen Pro Grid ‘Brass’ Seeks to End Raidssaso Its M oms, D ads PHILADELPHIA ® — Ralph|the press yesterday that some ad-jplayers and the NFL charges the March 1. He said that at that/thinking and a numbér of his sug- Cooper, chairgnan of the Canadian justments’ would have to be made Canadians with holding 45. time he hoped to get the permis-| gestions follow our own ideas. I 8 Who Take Bows Football Council, went home lastjon players each league claims the| Cooper said he would present the'sion of his group to finalize the think and hope we can reach a@ le amp PRESS BOX night to ask his colleagues for ab-\other obtained by raiding. The Ca-|plan at a meeting of Canadian foot- program formulated here. | sound and Workable agreen mi jtional Football League. ‘ ong When it comes to building an athletic program for in on actual tiscussions—with Bert) _ solute authority to negotiate ajnadidns say the NFL has 13 such|ball league executives in Toronto| “We are in accord with Bell’s|he said. — working agreement with the Na-|~~-—--— —— : a 2 aaa, By BRUNO L. KEARNS Couper mast hare saaterdayliala . Sports Editor, Pontiac Press ‘novel open rane sl sat! gsters, the Moms and Dads of Birmingham, some Bell, commissiiner of the NFL. The? ome itwo agreed in principle on a pro- Former . Prospects Get Early Attention From Bucky Harris strong can take their bows. a The well co-ordinated Little League Baseball pro- ‘rim to end the years of bickering id ga — er gram and rapidly growing Little Football League, made |)" gues. ee : the secbastgs Tigers’ ame possible strictly through the efforts of the citizens them- 4.4) Jia he had absolute au- gchocl’ ee selves, have taken a mammoth task off the shoulders j),,i1y to negotiate a pact for the of Birmingham's recreation department as well as the nr and advised Cooper to go school board. jhome and get ane — Sigel ; otc ition. “If you do,"’ sai ell, ‘‘we This task, according to . eg of age groupe in ‘ean settle our problems in five! the school district, is providing seasonal recreation jours." for a majority of the 2,000 boys in the pre-junior | ‘The two executives agreed that high school age levels 9 through 12. ithe No. 1 problem was to stop * * * * 'the raiding of each other's playing Baseball for the Little Leaguers started in Michigan ode Laue aa Seonantae| with one of its first leagues in Birmingham five years .a-h other's contracts and options. | ago. Since then it has developed in that city from one pu and Cooper worked out a. oe three, the ene National and Federal. pian whereby the NFL and the Ca- The latter organized last year. inadian leagues would hold similar PEAK REACHED IN 1955 WITH 700 BOYS iplayer drafts, use standard con-| ; tracts, and begin the signing of The peak of its short existence was reached last new draftees at the same time. ue oF | year when more than 700 boys participated in 12 An impartial arbitrator would set-| “major league” teams, 18 “minor league” and six T-boy tle any disputes the league heads leagues. jwere unable to reconcile. x * * * | * ’ * | ‘All at a cost to the city of a mere $800 for keeping, The one thing neither can do, up the diamonds. ; {nor admittedly desires to do, is to) Including managers, coaches, umpires, score throwing with a little pepper * * *® : Among top prospects whe hope to gain a berth with Detroit are J. W. Porter, a catcher and out- fielder; infielders Steve Demeter and Reno Bertola and outfielders Tom Sarna and Hollis Powell. * * * Porter was outstanding in spring training last year but , failed to: live up to ase * Bertola is a bonus baby who showed promise last season. De- : diy), phy * 2 ; i Oe a ite * |meter hit .285 at Buffalo last year peg Suialies o ae ee ‘ ok ve : Z ‘and is a fine fielder. | = eae | Se a, : | = or Sata == | Sarna is a power hitter who had a .305 average with Augusta in 1955. Powell is a big question mark. He made a good start last spring, then hurt his back at Au- gusta. . AP Wirephote CAUGHT IN A SQUEEZE — Rookie Steve Deneter slides into Detroit Tigers instruetional school. On the bag is Larry Orsborne, bag after being tagged by Reno Bertoia, right, as they ran through whose father was once a pitcher for the Chicago Cubs. The Tigers a rundown play for benefit of photographers at opening session of welcomed more than 50 rookie hopefuls at Lakeland yesterday. | Spring Drills By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | ; : | Michigan player left the penalty Rookie goalie Ed Chadwick, an | BOSTON] up danssarhoestin rex: box. Total expenses showed $4,626.03, leaving another/Toronto Maple Leafs lock up fourth M@ Commissioner Henry Lamar $4,000 available to expand the 1956 program. |place in the National Hockey SYS the televising of fights is “an Mel Lindquist, president, and Dick Sauerbrun, gen- Leasve. wrk pall ad ar Nd ah eral manager, of the Little Football League, give the ae Soiansas ils Chadwick, filling in for the In-/have been the managers’ guild ong reason for the success, “community co-opera- jured Harry Lumley, has given up 94 TV promotion,” Lamar told a jonly three goals in the five games State legislative committee on tax- | ODDS AND ENDS FROM THE PRESS BOX ‘he's played since the Leafs recalled ation yesterday, “Of Hy TV < hi from Winnipeg of the Western Promotion is the worst. Speaking of the Little Football League, Southfield League. He has produced two shut-. The commissioner appeared be- is planning an entry next season with the co-operation outs. : \fore the committee to urge a 5 per of the Optimist Club which also carries sponsorship Last night, Chadwick hand. cent tax on television receipts for of a baseball team . . . Why all the disgust at the Red cuffed the Boston Bruins as Tor- bouts in Massachusetts and on [restrain open competition for play- lers who are free agents—players keepers and others who just wanted to help out, this net under contract or option to, 9 either league. Any agreement in — enormous program existed because of 250 parents. eis) Ciel (wrod eur) atocll te) the! } | ~_. Last year a similar program was undertaken 1!n United States of the Sherman anti. e e : football, entirely separate of the baseball organization|(rut ww. «| | Win 9-7 with another 100 citizens giving time and effort. | : a O CC IS ] O n ‘ It, wh tual ° : ° More than 247 boys turned out for the Little Foot-| As 8 result, while many mutual --_ “problems, including the all-import-| ; 1 nN g S a ball League which had two teams, a varsity and junior ant no raiding pact, would be| : “3 | varsity competing in the Jack Lowther Football League |ironed out amicably, the war of/ CHICAGO (®—In a brawl that Eduardo’s eyes in the third round. Bobby, eighth-ranked contender, B ti U M Sk t . of Michigan. dollars would continue almost un-|had the aspects of just about every-| ‘An 8-ounce glove couldn't have earned his ninth straight triumph €a 1ng - al ers — : * * * * : abated. The highest bidder still thing—wrestling, football and bull —— a cut in a place like ner |and now has a 38-6-2 record in a, Only 84 uniforms, completely outfitted - were avall-/would be ieee to get the star Sphihce Paes oad Parents rer, nui lave tone ae cleinn for a shot at the middle-| ANN ARBOR — The Detroit oy sd thea seen — the sticks able, leaving 160 boys just hoping till next year. Well, “U°®® PTs |, pes rugged Eduardo Lausse last;"It was a butt. And the jarring ee oh mus 1d ets Red Wings almost had the reddest! oo, — Lindsay that year has arrived and an additional 80 boys will) there seems to be one stumbling|night. effect from it held my boy back! oa ; a _ ; faces in professional hockey last! ; get the opportunity to play for one of three Little Foot- block in the way of a final agree-/ Boyd, staggered several times by enough for two rounds to affect uae Pa ered aati a night. Despite the nine that got by, i ball League teams. - jment. Both Bell and Cooper told'the Argentine’s vicious left hooks, the outcome.” eae eatin alee ga | ,fccos ing Pe oe the wines er = ae eer shikiows : = piled up his edge with a harpoon-. Lausse, third-ranking middle- . re should have beaten the University o help up 's THE MOMS KNOW HOW TO GET THE MONEY ing left jab and head work. weight who had been undefeated Bray vd for Boyd 94-91. Referee ¢ Michigan’s defending NCAA smaller size, smaller club and in- ' : Frank Sikora favored Lausse 94-93 How was the money raised to get equipment and In fact, Charlie Johnston, man- in 32 starts and scored 49 knock- FT@™ Kes oat a ay hed caring 10-3 in a howling exhibi- experience, the Red Wings used uniforms for a total of nearly 1,000 boys? 4 00 ie 0d le ager of the 28-year-old Lausse, in- outs in 61 victories, was a bleeding, The Associa ec EN) a \tion of horse-play hockey like they two 17-year-olds, a 16-year-old and xk k& k&& * ferred after the natignal televised harassed fighter thereafter. But he ae on ee ae 4. Lausse con- U@ last year. |a 35-year-old trainer, Lefty Wilson, Both scrap in Chicago Stadium that got Boyd in trouble at times only 4” the a) | Bo oO Wilson goal-tended the final pe- The Sacume oT oe can easily show a breakdown. tJ.% Boyd used his head so well he to have the 22-year-old Chicago Ne- nected with a good right. It looked | But too much horse play and a riod. of Little League Baseball youngsters g0 out e DS Or on 0 butted open an angry gash between gro swarm back in savage rallies. 88 if Boyd caught it off balance. | hazing collége spirit narrowed the| One of the youngsters, Carl Wet- and raise $3,500 each year. When the third league) Se = - a = ee patted Fo nn eS Red Wing margin to 9-7. zel, 17, handled the Red Wing net started | jsta cou i ee ract $3000 But the Mone pat ar tnettl walitine G b Ath § f It A t | ‘ | bounced to his feet. It went as al en peel Dunnj- ae Hall adiirsee Decors be ‘shoes and the su | amar Asserts see" ~— knockdown, although Boyd later in- £4" turned at trick. Goalie 3 ee the sum now shows $3,040. [ | D0 . ~ wa sisted it weal lip! (Lorne Howes, spectacular at Sout eae 1 saves with “It’s amazing the help you get from all of the . TV Worst E vil ms The bleeding Lausse was stag- “mes, _stopped the hardest shots atin nd ; : —————| Lindsa Howe each ... parents,” said Boyd Simmons, president of the Bir- | Off-Season Policeman EAcinGiRorin Te \ om gered in the seventh from a steam: ae =e al Hr - , mingham League. Stingy With Goals as g ng | il o Py ine rene at Cot ec Gerry Carpinka got two for Mich- - . ss i : awe ion, ew & football started through private contributions of Lumley’s Fill-In Boston Official Also B= ninth Lausse again was rocked and Cg] Two From igan. Two of the Red Wing goals $3,800. Total receipts after the first year showed | Hits Managers’ Guild; like making a tackle in football, ' et ina, papy- aad rane a , $8,631.92. Parents donated $1,116, business -gave $2,048, | Would Tax Telecasts clung to Boyd's midsection and Pontiac Area ‘one just as a tag day produced $442, advertising netted $400 and |pushed him across the ring. It sale of game programs accounted for $39.71. ‘off-season policeman, is helping the’ looked as if both would fly out of Two youngsters from the Pon-| the ropes. tiac area will be on their way to| Other scorers for the Wings in- | Aside from these antics, Boyd the southland, Feb, 27, to take part Cluded Bob Goldham, Red Kelly, \proved himself a classy, seasoned in professional baseball spring Murray Costello, Alex Delvecchio ‘campaigner and one of the best training. They're making the trip and Lorne Ferguson. | middleweights around. together. ou pee sae ry ‘ | OT They are Waterford’s Steve sine | jemmmnants) hea = - Kebler, former Skipper hurier | Cranbrook Easily | Sit glormes stinres marr wa . more Orioles, and Dick Golds- | 0 if Beats Patterson | werty. sx ris plarer, who re | turns to the Phoenix team of the Cranbrook won its 3rd straight Srizona-Mexico Class C loop. , SS ee ee Ln ee ee Wings? After all seven straight NHL titles may be a lifetime goal for any team to beat, including the Cana- diens . . . Note for Wing boss Jack Adams who said, “Real Chevrefils isn’t Detroit's type hockey player” .. . He sure is Boston's type! U-M Out to Dominate onto made off with a 10 victory closed-circuit fights telecast into’ on Tod Sloan’s third-period goal. the state, | The victory increased Toronto’s| Lamar said the managers’ guild) hold on fourth place—the last Stan-|“has been put in its proper place} ley Cup playoff position—to 4 points and is no longer a threat to the! over Boston, sport.’ He added enforcement of In the only other game, the New @ 5 per cent tax on closed circuit York Rangers dealt Chicago's showings of fights would help put; jhopes of landing a playoff spot a/TV promotion in its proper place." crushing blow by trouncing the TWO-TIMER — Indoor per- | ———— | game, by more than 20 points each time, in whipping Patterson Colle- giate of Windsor yesterday, 76-30. After taking a wide 23-4 lead In the Ist quarter the Cranes scored at will with reserves play- ing a large portion of the game. John Kirk led the scoring with 19 points, followed by Jerry Deb- Dick hit .317 for 290 at bats in 1955, t ' Kebler is a right hander, 6-3 and 200 pounds. He signed last Sep-! tember, and has been assigned to! the Thomasville, Ga. training |camp. He will go to Paris, Texas, in the Sooner State Loop. IV Grid Plan Expect Announcement From Committee Today _ on ‘56 Policy KANSAS CITY (INS) — The Na- ° tional Collegiate Athletic Associa- tion's football television plan for |Black Hawks 61. The Rangers, breaking fast on first period coals by Pete Conacher, Wally Herge- sheimer and Dean Prentice. thus Big 10 Distance Mar ks ee oe es eae ne jover idle Detroit to 3 points, ANN ARBOR # — A sweat-! Since entering the training plan, stained secret from Finland has he's run in the Michigan AAU put new power into University of meet at Ann Arbor and the MSI"! Michigan distance runners. They relays at East Lansing already dominate the best relay places he turned in performances in the Big Ten. ‘times in relay running that mark Before the year is out, they may him-as a possible threat in the dominate conference distance rec- shorter distances, ords too. | Canham titinks that Wallingford The secret is a “speed and 54s brilliant possibilities. pace program” which Michigan | : Coach Don Canham says is a | * * way to increase “strength and , about it, Finnish National coach Armas’ Valste passed the training plan on to er: Everyone got a look at what can do at last week. end'’s Michigan State relays. Michigan's spring medley re- fay team and the mile relay team steamed to new meet and field- house records that will also be listed as the best performances of the Big Ten athletes as under. graduates, Since Michigan men have al- ready turned in the best perform- ances in the distance mediey re- lay, the two-mile relay and the 880- | t ; | Billy Peacock Favored LOS ANGELES ww — Bantam At. both weight Billy Peacock, who wints, half-mile to fight Robert Cohen of France| for the Frenchman’s version of the world championship. is heavily, favored to whip Joey Benson of Los Angeles tonight in a 10-round bout at the Olympic auditorium. | formances strengthen the hope son and Owen Fett with 13 each | that Arnie Sowell of the Univer- Cranbrook now stands 6-5 for the sity of Pittsburgh will win the | season. Olympic 800 and 1,500 meters in | | Melbourne. llinois Will Aim for MicCoy ~ , ., Wes Santee Determined ig Ten Leader Which - . Cooled Freeman Hopes tO Prove Clean Status ~’ | to Stop Spartan Star | | NEW YORK «® — Kansas miler|tary treasurer of the AAU, Charles | EAST LANSING, Mich, (®—Illi- Wes Santee apparently means busi-/P, Grimes, representing Santee, | nois will have another chance to ness in his efforts to clean up his demanded ‘that the AAU revoke, | Show how to cool off a hot shooter amateur status and compete in this | any existing suspension of Santee) in a televised Big 10 basketball year’s Olympic Games in Mel- and make public announcement to |game with Michigan State here bourne. jthat effect,” | Saturday. Santee’s attorney yesterday ts-| Santee, a lieutenant in the Ma- The Illini, undefeated in eight sued a warning that he would file rine Corps, was suspended by the conferences games, pulled a stun- a suit for damages “‘if any libelous, Missouri Valley AAU last Oct. 11 ner just last Saturday before the statement of any nature whatever’ on charges that he took “exces-| jtelevision eye, is made at a hearing of a Natfonal sive expenses’ for three California! Ohio State was humiliated 111- AAU Investigating Committee Sun-/track meets in May. The suspen- 64 and Robin Freeman, the top day, jsion was lifted Nov. 20 on grounds |conference scorer, was held te just. In a letter to Dan Ferris, secre-jof insufficient evidence. 12 points—lowest in his college ca-: ———~———— eee a |reer. [Cranbrook ..eecesce-- 33 18 23 12—76 [Patterson ..... e005... # 12 T T—30 The AAU, however, set up an Michigan State forward Julius Midsummer Date Set investigating committee to again look into the case, and Santee McCoy with 236 points is second for Publinx Tourney anes Hon nn eh |in Big 10 scoring behind Freeman's 280. McCoy has averaged 29.5 For the Ist time in the history|in the East. ‘points a game to 31.1 for Freeman. of the Michigan Public Links Golf| The special committee makes its MSU Coach Forddy Anderson Association, the annual state tour- report Sunday morning to the AAU has declared McCoy is a more ver- ney will not be held on the Labor Executive Committee, which will isftile player with a greater va- Day weekend. ‘rule on Santee’s future status. iriety of shots than Freeman. Publinx prexy, Pontiac’s Roy) Grimes said Santee probably will | Illinois guards Paul Judson and Iceberg, announced Wednesday the|be in the city but he is not ex-| Bill Ridley are expected to be as- event will take place June 8-93-10 pected to appear before the AAU, signed to McCoy—the only potent over the Rolling Green course body. . it’s Hot Stove 9 leugee) Time eee 1956 will be announced at Kansas 1 ,City Today. | The plan was drawn up yester- TU) WL the ay in Chicago at the conclusion jot a three-day. meeting of the Mana r 'NCAA’s television committee. ge It is believed that the plan & will follow last fall’s program of (Ninth of a Series) eight national telecasts and five... Bob Turley of the New York eae dates over a 13-week Yankees was the wild man among 2 American League pitchers last Walter Byers, NCAA executive season and Detroit's Al Kaline was Secretary, said: the 445 NCAA the circuit's leading batter. , members will vote on the plan and Here's a situation in which they Teturn their decision by March 2, were the key men. Yankee man- A_ two-third approval by NCAA ager Casey Stengel called it right. members must be gained before batter or pitcher and (L) for a lefthanded batter or pitcher. The Yankees and Tigers are . Fight at Lansin is pitching and he retires the first’ g | LANSING «®—Kenny Lane, light- 'weigtit from Muskegon, and Yama ers in a double-main event fight show here Feb. 25. Lane will go 10 rounds against Golden Gloves and International Golden Gloves titles in his weight in 1952, Vaughan has won 16 of Would you have? ; \it becomes operatives. (R) stands for a righthanded| ———_— e Lane, Yama Bahama tied 2-2 in the top of the 10th inning at New York. Turley (R) Bahama, colorful welterweight from Bimini, will be the headlin- Isac Vaughan of Cincinnati, whe won the national AUU, national 18 pro starts, Bahama, who has been rising na- BOB TURLEY yard relay, they now have every \Spartan scoring threat this season. at Saginaw. First two rounds of —_—_—_—— | : regular best performance in relays PMSU. with pee conference rec-| play will be over 18-hole routes. NFL SFANDINGS ‘two batters on grounders. How- sae a 19 bch con that the conference lists. The only lord, now has dropped to fifth place|with the Sunday finale going for _W L T Pts. GF GAvever, Bill Tuttle doubles to right.| “2 vO Weber oe ns et : exception is the seldom run four- farel (Carl only ogee hein a colce 36) (cies ‘Montreal 34 12 10 78 162 98 Kaline (R) is the next batter with seme of Chicago. mes was the : mile relay. 'In an earlier mecting with Illinois, Defending champion is Jim Selt- New York 27 19 9 63 166 144 Earl Torgeson (L) on deck. | port mee : phe ; a i De | Individually, three Michigan’ ‘State atone time had a 16-point zer, coach of Flint Northern's high DETROIT 23 18 14 60 144 112; wontd you: pare . BY el moe : men are prime examples of the jlead but blew it to lose 73-65, jschool golf squad ‘Toronto 19 28 10 48 123 145) We A en en Neat ond a) esa Finnish training plan. The most _ _ oe Boston 16 28 12 44 111 156 & Lt Turley pitch to Kaline COLLEGE BASKETBALL | Chicago 16 30 11 8 17 North Carolina 77. Wake-Forest T3 (Johnny Saxton are to sign formal TODAY'S GAME b. Walk Kaline and let Turley aerenn achat : Wea ral asvly ood ili = “ 1 : | | ford, a stubby Canadian two-miler. Baie te pocnsyenis\ a) Basilio-Saxton to Meet WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS ~| Pitch to Torgeson? Philadelphia. .......... ae eS a é : Loe eee oer on CHICAGO (® — Welterweight) Toronto 1, Boston 0. e. Walk Kaline and bring in a Passage OO cecoeads | | Army ¢9. Hartwick @3* champion Carmen Basilio and New York 6, Chicago 1. lefthander te pitch to Torgeson? | syracuse 3 & NEW 3 J A - A N y 73, Get by: + Fort Wayne bs] ‘ Hunter, fully fatto Agape oe % Louisetile ne ‘Renrteayy Wesleyan ™ |contracts today for their T5-eund.. Toronto at Montreal. cs aN ster... | recovered .from St ous 7 radiley i © . 1 + 7 a aioe j isa 16 ke \61 |title bout in Chicago Stadium FRIDAY’S GAME “Bny) 7 ‘MOT Jo ysey ay) ut “Lous oe § wis 76, D e = basta { injury, became the 2th New York OUT OF MONEY INTO MUD—Jockeys running OG of the money | Chicage Losele 6h. Wert. Michigan 62;March 14. Boston at Chica ih - ant ae a i WEDNESDAYS RESU Yankee today to sign his when it rains in Florida get just as mudd they do elsewhe Butler 77. DePauw | - HOM SHUBK MLL "AU PLOJUT WE UO vmneapolis 113, New York 28 - ball contract. Terms 1956 base- R. J. Martin\ Mikton Dal; > nd Tr 2 * i bed lean! Ud € etalk) 2 be abaah, Ga Praamings The fight originally was sched- SATURDAY'S GAMES woseRIO] pames puwy sures ayy uy jadelphia’ Sie sche - | eg closed, — ve at ee. ‘well covered: or - a my Maeda, ‘left to right, were ati aan Ten » Wrerria ”. juled for last night but was post-/ DETROIT at,Toronto. », pPeuTeUlar AIINL., passed A|TeuON syrkeuse vs. New York at Philadelphis ; 1 “ = < a race at Hialeah Park. So. Methodist 26, Texas Cheistian 22 ‘poned when Basilio became ill.| New York at Montreal. Uayuy] Sem, oUTTEY — g -jftsay [Recep a — | : 4 a : ae ; ® ° y \ bs e i - 7 4 wt ie , ‘ , ; . # , y 2 e s ‘| » eG . ' é ss : _ b. ; e . (ee | | ; . s ee) Me ' age. - & : ; Ue ey : “ ® Kavanagh Issues Opinion on Meters LANSING ®—Atty. Gen. Thom- MARKETS Produce DETROIT PRODUCE a. Dupo 8 (AP) —Latest prices tg os Jonathan, hs , 25 1100 bu: Macintos : . 2.80-3.00 bu; No n° dee bu; Mo 1, bu; 3.50 fanc A’ second attempt this year for such a constitutional amendment was also defeated in the House. Since then, Hathaway has intro-|t total 45; duced a bill which would accom-|Gemand. moderate and” market aueed | s Carlot track sales, old stock: “6.15-4.40, utilities cod Minnesota-North Dakota Pontiacs washed -1§-3.80. New stock arrivals : 28; supplies moderate, de- mone slow and alt dull with no cerlot track sales reported. Kavanagh said the Legislature could impose such a requirement by passing a law and that a con- Ale Co. were to return to work , today after a one-day walkout. Officials of local 297, retail,| VAs? and department) steers and hetfers uneven mostly aaas to 25 higher, spots up 60, early trade fairly active but how rather slow; other classes about steady, but instances rime trying to transfer loaders’ assist- anal rime steers 18 00 21 $0 e obs. They said the mixed good and choice 900-1050 Ib steers ant to other j a! 900-1935. & few loads prime 1300-1475 dispute would be submitted to ipusteers 21.00-23 00, a load of good 3 ; 10 Ib steers 16 25 ‘a ose commercial arbitration. | pes Ib weights 1800. about two jonds prime 1000-1050 Ib haiters 20 00-21 st good to high choice heifers 15 30: 19 00; utility and commercial cows 10 75- 1300; canners and cutters 9 00-11 50: juclitty and commercial bulis 14 00-1600. ers largely 28060 down odd head enaice and prime veaiers 2900: a ibaa ef good and choice 700 ib yearling feed- ing steers 17.00 jiable sheep 2,000 Lodge Calendar Special communication. Pontiac Lodge No. 21 F&AM. To confer the Fellowcraft degree. Fri. Feb. slaughter lembs 17. 7:30 pm. Samuel E. Smith. slow. mostiy steady to weak, with bulk WM. Ady. shorn lambs unsold: slaughter sheep steady: good to prime wooled lambs 110 lb down 1900-2075. a short deck chioce prime 95 Ib averages 21.00 pnd eer smaller lots good to prime 120-1 piesa lambs 1600-1800; cull in (files od 1200-1850 a deck mossy choice News in Brief Charged with driving under the ‘° choice slaughter ewes § 00- influence of liquor, Fester Robin- son, 48, of 611 Nevada Ave., was No Future i fined $100 or 20 days in jail by Municipal Judge Cecil McCallum Set for Second yesterday. Physical on Ike Bargain Box, 465 8. Woodward, BOSTON w—Dr. Paul Dudley Birmingham has lots of good clean men’s suits. Priced reasonably. MI 4-4528. —Adv White, the Boston heart specialist ; who has been attending President can Chanene Thinesees aoe Eisenhower, says no future date Friday nights, 7 p.m. to 9 pm has been set for another examina- Ady. tion of the President's heart Dr. White, back home after Tuesday's physical examination of _the President, appeared last night “on a closed-circuit television pro- Rummage sale. Youth Center, cram beamed to audiences of doc- Lake Orion, Fri, and Sat. —AGV. tors only in 56 American cities. eo. | He told a news conference prior Dividends |to the telecast that the six doctors lattendi ng the President have NEW YORK (®—Johns-Manville agreed not to elaborate on their Corp. has declared a quarterly div- Tuesday report which said Fisen- ident of $1 a common share, up ower “should be able to earry 25 cents from. the rate paid in on an active life” previous quarters. The dividend is, “for another 5 or 10 years.” payable March 9 to holders of rec-| But, without mentioning any ord Feb. 27. /hames, Dr. White said some heart patients ‘‘not only can but should NEW YORK —American Tele- work. Many are unhappy if they ptione & Telegraph Co. yesterday are not working. Work is good declared its 140th consecutive divi-|treatment for some cardiac dend—a quarterly payment of $2.25 tients.”’ . on the common stock or the same ee that had been aid in prior quar Ground has been broken for con- ters. The divi payable April struction of a $43,000.900 dam and 10 to stockholders at’ fecord March hydroelectric power plant at Ke- ' jmer’in Westem Turkey. If Hd! friend's in jail and needs bail. . FE 5-9424 or MA oe | { 1 : f as president ¢, pa-- “ny THE 1] PONTIAC PRESS, _THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1956 |. MAKE 0 |000. In 193 a te halttg’ 8 \Market Moves Trial Jury Hears (Final Landmark Hupp” prtucion. Te HE § Official: 1955 |company tater had a comeback but “Testimony of Wife of Huppmobiles (S22i"production of nutomoblles Was Best U. S. Year irr the e "40s. Slightly Lower fo Re Scrapped a esis ia=aae y (Continued From Page One) D IT (The former home d fAd A WASHINGTON — The Com- s \she went on. Clark took a job! or the once popular Huppmobile| ea 0 gency merce Department has put its offi- NEW YORK W—The trend was) | as a welder four days before the|win “be tom down and, ironically, cial stamp on a statement’ that S- slightly lower in early trading in, iy shooting to meet family expenses. | enough the site will become x to Present Awards comes as no surprise: The United es On the day of the the ‘the stock a toma. day oe parking lot for the cars turned out! ‘States was more prosperous in | s a, aaeeee ar by we by Hupp's competitors and succes- | James R. Adams, board chair-'1955 than ever before. After a moderately active open- rab Sally, 2 soar " ore sors, man of MacManus, John & Adams,| Final figures released by the ing. — owed I the Sebald stl as The one-million square foot, four-\inc. (Bloomfield Hills), has been department dewed Gat tonl Fractional losses prevailed ; ; story plant is an industrial tand-ichosen to present the Zith annua ee ‘among many leading issues but She described the night's events |mark on Detroit's East Si at|Goua Medal Award, regarded as 1 duction of goods and services hit |there were some gainers here and! as follows: Milwaukee and Mt. eae the advertising profession's most 3308 billion dollars last year— there. ce. Dye hed Clack end The decision to raze the plant distinguished honor. 26% billions, or 74 per cent, more Aircrafts | criticizing his handling of the herd|Wes, made by the Midland Steel) Adams will give the award Mon-|"2&" in 1954. were the only group to | Products Corp., which acquired the|day in Chicago to Fairfax Cone,| Production thus topped the pre- 'show a bu : ea | plied he had never lost a cow and| Property in 1950. The company is chairman of Foote, Cone & Beld-|Vious peak, set in 1953, by 22% sere ons ¢ me ee oe aan ltold Dye to talk to his (Ci ic’) | Puliding @ new plant in O - ling Inc., and Leo Burnett, presi-|billions, or 6 per cent, Ye to gel carte har jattorney. (A lawsuit was in proc-| About 300 of the 500 workers dent of Leo Burnett Co. following} National income also hit a record. a Gee Ris and ess over the division of farm equip-| Rew engaged in brake manufac. |a dinner in the Sheraton-Blackstone| high, the report said, with all seg- ig penta her galing over @ . ment and revenue.) turing operations at the plant will | Hotel. ments of the economy except agri- ar- Long ried irwants Seal A, LINCOLN MOORE Dye told Clark, “Don't get amart! be affected by the move to | Adams headed a fury of adver-| culture sharing the gains. point on oa ith "International, with me,” and pulled out a 25-| Owosse, a tising executives which sélected the 7 merger ta wi mal : : caliber, automatic pistol. two men on the basis of their con- | surance Firm Ok Paper, - . a Demolition of the plant will be |i inuy th in in in 1 ays | ee 8 He “‘monkeyed with the gun” lone of the largest industrial wreck. |" utons '© the field in 1966. 100 Per Cent Dividend cpning ca moe Ge ) sn ed te Ga gfe ct ae Motors off % at 44 on 5,000 shares, Eg 'U, S. Steel off % at 53% on 1,000 Succumbs at 88 stitutional amendment is not nec- i jand Westinghouse off % at 57 on The attorney “pointed the gun at essary. Poultry _ 2,000. | my — and sig ‘more At the same time, the attorney; ngrrorr, Peb. i5 (AP)—Price oid Boeing, Douglas and United Air-| A. Lincoln Moore Lived: shots. - reached ye and general held that ¢ities have the ound fat. “upto id ed bated 8) ity craft went ahead. Chrysler, Re-| ‘the two ‘“‘tussled” falling to the) right to install parking meters un- " 29-30: light type 20-22: public Steel, Anaconda, American jn Pontiac for 56 Years etound. Dye dropped the pistol der their police powers. Ts rollers or fryers (3-4 $20. 0258” Cyanamid and Santa Fe slipped and Mrs. Clark picked it up. She 34-25 ee apn: Before Death Most cities which have parking ettes (44% Ia) 26-29; (8-6 Ibs) 30-31; behind. saw blood coming from her hus-| meters have installed themy by ac- comment “ Market barely steady. Sig : . . A. Lincoln Moore, an employe of band’s mouth. ® ‘ * were u was, * ’ tion of their city councils without/ $l trade sow. | Receipes eere oo ail| Standard Oil (vew ots ‘the Pontiac Post Office nearly 35, The Clarks ran to their truck, holding referenda on the issue. | offerings. | pilaierra igor was quoted of tlyears, and a resident of Pontiac| got their screaming children in H H CHICAGO, Pee is CAP) Live ultry 61% bid 62% asked in moderately 156 years died at the age of 88; the vieed be) —Liv Grain Prices steady; receipts tn coops 260 (yesterday tactive trading over the counter, early this morning in Riverbank; saw Mr. Dye come running cat 499 coops, 16.859 Ib); fob = Pr ee red with 62 bid late yester- Convalescent Home, Livonia. ef the barn with some sort of cmcaao. Fev te Apropos today tees. reratarit pene eS 23°94: ( “a an Mr. Moore was born on a farm) stick. He apparently got inte CRT | Rorout Reali t fl Pam oe under 4% Gay in Farmington Township March 12,| bis car and tried to back tt in eur ——— |1867 and remained there until he path.” i ROIT EGGS New York Stocks |was 25 years of age. He then went The IT, Feb. 15 (AP)—Bges. fo. (Late Morning Quotations) work fer the late former Gov- got through the gate, } 121¥s'metroit, cases. included, federal-state to lor the late \drove to their farm. Mrs. Clark | grades e Aamiral —.. . 198 Isl Cre Coal 388 ormor F, M. Warner as a cheese-| ? mnor | SiWhites—Crade cabmeny Lao weight Aled ‘Chea iba baron RE J years. got their car and drove average - avg 45%; em johns : husband and daughters to the medium 41-42, wid avg 42; grade B.hY Str: 62.5 Jones & L 1 her hus' 43. Kennecut 120.6 : - a may A poy parr Kimb Cin”. 43.8 In 1896, he came to Pontiac Festan|patice cian ake coatiied.| sre 48: large 42-48. wid ave 44; medium |aicon 8 Peeee BY and was employed in the shipping {where she gave the weapon to an pte Magth ppie, | aed rede B laree Am airtime." 1 [ip Mea -.. 166, department of the Pontiac Buggy |officer, she said. She later gave Pp ti p f 2 Commercially ‘raced: ore 0 an cyan, os bide & My... & | Co. for a year. He was an active | statement to Taylor at the Flint on lac romo es large 42-46, medium 39-43; grade B Am Cas & BI 088 Leow's --roo $8 | emember ef the Fir Baptist State Police Post. . nrows—Grade A extra large 42; large am este ia bd Mas eee a Church, Dr one a of Flint, yore fo to Ins ection Posts Comment: Market steady. de jumAm Smelt. 486 McGraw H .. 16 In 1897, he was appointed State cared for Clark's wound, said | fair, but not aggressive. Supplies of a 2 debe i. MéreK | <.00--. a dairy and food inspector. Late in, bullet entered the farmer's mid- rchnp Ger breg ehy prmime mtiup- i Vices a8 re . lsection and penetrated about ten| Two rectnt promotions in the bs roi ted demand. Under, redes | Mi ch .. 43.5 the year, Mr. Mdore entered the! foal Depesae gens fo hight" supply and readily clear, Reasicey poh Mont werd es si 2| postal carvion! | inches cravel slightly 4 -| spec Ow | announced by Wiliam “H. veal | cy GMICAGO 2 BOTTER aw E06 Armour @ Co 3§ Mowreia |... 44/ Mr, Moore was a “mounted car-| | ward. hief i Pontiac M CHICAGO. IS (AP) Butte T Atchison 145 erres a ge iv.0,rier” before being transferred to fenton Police Chief Orie Clark c nspector at jac Motor steady; sais ese. s4 wholesale buy-| 4+) Refin 372 Paha he! Soy Division. ing pee ve sea, 83 score AA 87: Aveo Mig... 71 Ket “aspe <7 che business route. He once stated’ saiq Mre. Clark gave the pistol | Orin J. Brown to B seis coat: cert Bait & Gato. 3 as “!! jaa he had walked more than three 9 him. She and the children ° ’ teady. to firm: receipts 9.908: “+ “2 Nat Thea ... & \times around the world in his 35, ’ who has been | who nas buying | prices ‘unchanged to '% a eee “er ny Contras - as edi sacview’ were “very hysterical” he | ral foreman gr ME ICE Se Ter Boeing Air eee wes ansl- stated. r cen ; miv m™: ums es iinapertica tia ae 258, artes 205; checks Borden”. toa No Am Av .. $13] Mr. Moore made his home at | state Police Det. Walter Barkell, a |Borg W OS ee : i85| 25 Park Place until death of the Motor Plant® Bras malas" we Sn corto 2 oe =e wis, eas dane conome mer ‘of the Flint post, said he went to! i : li Gi 3 eee oe ee Livestock Calumet @ W138 PEaA W Alc le | bek, tm 1952, Since then, he bad tee checting “When! T aieed bien! Promoted to su DETROIT LIVESTOCK Comp Soup Panh-Epl ... 70.2 a with his daughter, Mrs. perintendent of IT, Ped. 16 (AP)—Hogs salable CO™PD WY 37 parce Da 22. 43 Sates to take me to the scene, he said! i tion over 200. No early sales: undertone stead rae aes tei Ps : ah a Ruth Wiisen of Plymouth. he was ‘too tired’,” said Barkell. axle, foundry, cout tmaniet sendy: Neompared inst oie? T Ohio” A Pisser ane : iad 3 Service will be at 1:30 p.m. Sat-| Dye has never related his bier * 1 ight. motor plant and active. fair clearance. slaughter steers ChFYsier 726 Puive 2 +: 32] urday from the Farmer-Snover Fu-'sion of the night's events, Barkell/ heat treat. His See eter avenge aby teats 1 OE Care Beate | 508) ee Met oe neral Home with his pastor of the|stated. ‘He just said Mrs. Clark! former duties BROWN __ steers. cows and. bulls: firm ttockers Climax Mo. $5 Pitpite 1, 1e¢ Baptist Church in Plymouth ae and the kids were not = = right . an feeders very scarce, unchange 16 Proct & G .. 9.6 ating. Burial -will be in, te and Clark was going to him." riven boen)_sssemed \by Free © i 00 ‘ew Jets ae i tori ‘pounds Come 4 ao rye eu, SO} Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Dye's bloodstained shirt and/ 9 80: commercia. an RCA ‘ oo woos as admitted to evi- Starting to work for Pontiac in tee good steers 17.00 18.60;) balk |COS N Oee TB, Mapes all... undershirt were the Accounting Department in 1929, {s'iR7, ond commercial steers and heifers Cont Ou te wea Drug ay Two Appointed Directors dence. Other exhibits proposed | Brown joined Inspection in 1934. lens Mie'g0 to 1860" bulk utility cows 11 00 Curtiss | wr i mar Te Satis 3 or admission by Taylor are the ' Promoted to $1 tctin Seti Shh TMA pgmana? Deere sss: Se Meek ape --. ane Of Auto Manufacturers platl allegedly used and bullet re-| s . owe . ] superintendent of Calves saints heer ee redays market Dis C Seag 37.8 Bt Reg Pap. 3 DETROIT w—Chariles L. Jacob-| ‘moved from Clark's body. ‘nominally weak, compared iast Thurs- | Dour auc pie Seoriies Mie 21) leon Chrysler Corp. vice president, Mrs. Clark is expected to be cross | inspection ove T gay quiet ore marron, Sceaers MOMiy Bev Pent aay Seel® Bech eae Charge of salen’ and William H. examined today by defense at-| latin car as ower a. i 4 an Ls ance ate East Kod_ 16 i aay) and shect prime late 36.06 to'3200-“iate tope 3200, E: Auto tite 37.3 Secony Mob | 6g3 GFaves, vice president and direc-orney, Clarence L. Smith, as the] most utility and commercial grades 15.00 ss = wan “33 4 Sperry Rand . ry itor of engineering for Studebaker- trial continues before Judge Clark | metal WAS to 2000; cull and low utility 1000 to aA H Charles L. Ste- 15.00 pairp Mor = 3° Sid Ou nave) Packard, are new directors of the J. Adams. aries . ee - , one 7) vens, who has geminal: Caciparea inet a Tearseey (trea, oesol lee ais aa Ss Bae «bol 2 Automobile Manufacturers Assn. been with the de- ifad7"™*Sth “Geode: Mine’ Toned Gea ream BE Sida‘Pace” “3 Jacobson succeeds the late! (aunty Deaths partment ance siaushier lamba. under stig pounds 18 $0 ois Laat ea wilt & ce & George W. Troost of Chrysler se 0 | ° am Nemcice: and lorie 160) 8 Gea Motors 49600 32, Graves replaces Harold S. Vance, noah to eas ade legpen prine a9 to “tes penne atees pis wae pos ex ‘O° bul on who resigned from Studebaker-! eel i or the COMpany lambs mainly No 1 peits 1950 to 2020 Gen Time jos shomp Pa 53 Packard t the Atomic En | OXFORD — Service for Andrew | STEVENS in 1934. chisel wosteatskesp les content «(Genes 432 Tren War. a Pac tool ad Oe ETEY yoseph Holstine, 60, 2281 Ray Rd.,| Pri to his otion he was | rich 77.4 Twent Cen ae Comm On. i acura fareraam ot inspection over | CHICAGO LIVESTOCK ‘Gran’ Paice 3 ‘ Uncer wood re Th 14 million bade Bes as Sopot Plants 2 and 8. Stevens has been CHICAGO. Reb. 18 (AP)—Saiable hogs Ot West $B Go ur Lin: ‘33 Wort aes Mullion hogs in. Oxtord Cemetery. Rosary will, , . Vv w succeeded by Mahlon S$ Kath. 38:60 ‘iower on’ buteners. through mid. Quif Oi © a7 Yat Aire. ge oe be said at 8:15 p.m. Friday at ° ose m 4 ety |tizable share ps fecetpts, so- iniowart Romestk ' wi! us Ge <4 B . Flumerfelt Funeral Home. Mr. Hol-| | a0 wea ren * er i by 300 Vernor Employes UB Nol, 2 and 30 180-200 Ib butchers O- Cent” 616 US Stee 63.1 usiness Notes Stine died suddenly at his home| lkout |isaas several lots No 1 and 3 jeune Bay ue, tale 19.4 (per. End One-Day Walkou Tribee ie Gr Let toeet te cena talend (ae mt wore ee He is survived by his wife, | DETROIT — Some 300 em- 350 330 Ib 11 00-75: larger lots 380-600 int eusn) Mach we Wilson alice rhs DETROIT (INS)—American Mo- Helen; two daughters, Mrs. Alice) ployes of the James Vernor Ginger He iitoe ot Gem) HEnter weigntey Ty ick “ovlmora 48 tors Corp. President George Rom-:Harmond of Imlay City and Mrs.| ot able cattle 13000: salable calves Int Tel & Tel 106 _ney today announced the election) May Kafron of Oxford; three sons, | of Richard T. Purdy as vice presi-|Otto of California and Andrew and| ‘dent in charge of automotive @x-\Edward at home; and two broth-| ers, Ernest of Pontiac and Law- PETROIT STOCKS (C. J. Nephier Co.) Pigures after decimal points Aa) eighths Hig h Low Noon rt. Baldwin Rubber er Geri. Satentean® gicteee 443?) Purdy will direct distribution rence of Detroit. Maco Bresette es 27 22 and marketing of all Hudson, Nash. | Raymond Peabody : Midwerieibrarives 0°") @) 86 Rambler and Metropolitan auto) HOLLY — Service for Raymond] Warne Bcrew* |... 12 a mobiles in all overseas markets. (Peabody, 57, 202 John St., will be, “Wo sale bid'and asread «=~ 3 He is also president and direc- held at 2 p.m. Friday from the STOCK AVERAGES |tor of American Motors of Canada Dryer Funera) Home, with burial NEW YORK. Feb. 16 Compiied by The 'Ltd., an AMC subsidiary in Toron- in Oak Hill Cemetery, Holly Town- | PIES Gu ‘ship. Mr. Peabody died suddenly 30 yesterday morning of a heart at-' mes Indust Rai 8 unl Stocks| retary) As isl a an Nene TORE im) = Dicecinrs, of tack : Month ago 2478 1298 (118 173.4 American Telephone & Telegraph Survivors include hie wife, Char-| 1958.86 high 2878 ae ae mig Co. have elected Clifton W. Phalen lotte; one daughter, Mrs. Elaine 1955-56 low 202.1 1149 672 re executive vice president, effective|Anderson of Fenton; one sister, | 1954 high 2119 1230 683 1852 y 1954 low 1439 778 854 108¢ March 1. Phalen is president of Mrs. Rose Disbrow and one broth- [ne Michigan Bell Telephone Co. er, Thomas. Clark Studies 2-1 Split [#unOudeGeenesusnesesnessascanacaen, BUCHANAN wW — Clark Equip @ | ment Co, shareholders will vote # : | = /April 27 on a proposed two-for-one bad + gplit of common stock. If approved, g a the split Id tak 1 May | plit wou ake place May @ ba 15. Par value per share would be & a lowered from $20 to $15 and the @ 24 Hour Emergency a Inumber of authorized shares in @ . La creased from 1% million to 5 mil. @ Pp a ti S M a The company manufactures ma- . terials—handling industrial trucks, : 37-39 s. Saginaw at Water St. — construction and _ earthmoving @ i | equipment and farm tractors, DAYS—CALL FE 5-4521 tl —__-_— AFTER 11 P. M—FE 5-4485 tl There were 1.532.000 marriages a in the United States in 1955. ‘Famings — NEW YORK ‘INS'—Net income of Gen eral Mi ‘ors Acceptance Corp reached a record $35.276.581 ih 1955, compared with $33 833 TTL the previous year. President Charles G Stradelia said re‘afl reteiv- ables purchased totaled $3 €99 571.000. an increase of 42: per cent over the $2744 - 244.000 a year ago. Wholesale volume $6.158 544.000 was up 47- per cent ure of 84,179,183,000. ASHLAND Kr (INS)}—-A 68 per ot tnerease in net profit of Ashiand Oil Refining Co tn the quarter ending ee 31 was reported today. The net totaled $3 $20 616. equal to $8 cents per share ompared with $2 094.537, or 31 cents per share. in the same period of 1954 Seles increased to $72.2 12,144 from #60 807 426 Emergency Delivery on Request Detroit Edison Co. At indicated dividend of $1.80 this stock yields better than 5% at present market price. from 1954's fig COMPLETE INVESTMENT SERVICE NEW YORK (INS!—The Rutberoid Co 1 y toda ported het tmeome tn 1968 of | By | . “4 Wasi or: $2058 per share. compared §* C J N } ] Co 28.746. equal to 6319 per share e ® e 1 er ° the previous year Sales last year were sf t a fecord $82,122.684 compared with $7¢.° it se Ma 1954 Bord Chairman Her. $18 Community National Bank Bldg. FE 2-9119 tTeeieg to compensate J evento pr We inc ead exper nae hn) ‘Grocers Have Top Year | uppmobiles were built in the | WASHINGTON plant between 1908 and 1935. FORT WAYNE, Ind. ®—Stock- National was among the 10 leaders in the| stores increased 6.9 per cent in automotive field, employing more|1955 to a record of $39,415,000.000. than 5,000. apecanenidy elf pie pro Mueller said super mar- ord sales of $52,500,000 in 1929.|kets handled 59.7 per cent of the Then the depression hit. By 1933'total, about six per cent more than Hupp sales had shrunk to $6,118-\their share the previous year. i SELLING OUT The Remainder of the Stock of Plumbing Supplies Which We Purchased at Close-Out Prices From the MARLIN LUMBER CO. We made a terrific buy on these supplies . . . but we had to eoiramad their entire stock to do it. Now we are passing those savings on to you... while they last! But hurry, because items are going fast! Big 21x32-Inch 2-Compartment SINKS — buys! Hurry eee LAUNDRY TRAYS lik PO Real today! tions. wearion: Cabinet Sinks 42” Size CABINET SINK Complete with faucet and a Slashed for Clear- is 95 $56°0 54° Size CABINET SINK With feeces & alner eat fer ear 295 a 50 Big 66" Double Compartment CABINET SINK More's value - piel | Modern Lower races! “ Crate ronte ST §* aporesy and Complete strainer, wee | lew me, 11695 HOT WATER THESE ARE ALL inst UALITY SINKS Compere b my Valme . «4 » ‘ Pere and Youll Be Convinced! aeeeaebaaaaaaadd ' > 4 $ 40% 3 eae? $ DISCOUNT 38 STALL SHOWERS 4 4 > 4 ; Youngstown 2 With off = § 12 a 4 4 ours on bower $ CABINET z certain $ swe gig7 ¢] WASH BASINS >» Upte " 4 id é With tripte ted $ P i tt REPAIR RAO | chrome (eueele a 95 wonderful vaiae! Choice of cast Iron or steel tubs. 17 x 19-inch china basin, and $ 3-Pc. BATH SETS closet (less seat) . complete with trim. HURRY FOR THESE 106 . « » THEY WON'T LAST LONG AT THIS LOW PRICE! COLORED BATH SETS Now as Low as $109.95 Up White Enamel LAUNDRY TRAYS AS Ua $7] 95 +18%.. 4-Inch SOIL PIPE in 5-ff. lengths .............. only $3.69 3 Ways “The Store That Values Built’ =|SAVE) 1, Cash ~PLUMBING SUPPLY. CO. a. Layaway Fall Stock of Soil Pipe Fittings—Everything in Plumbing Supplies Compare this Value and you'll be convinced! a) Complete with Stand and Faucets. 3. FHA— Ne Money Down. (As Low as $1.25 Weekly) . Phones: FE 4-1516 and FE 5-2100 — | FREE PARKING 172 S. SAGINAW) r Stivenr 4 rz re ____ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 16, 1956 , Notjce is also her ven that the Commission “yee ee the @iet 4 - ial eeseesment for the construction Deputy Gets Plastered | Comuiaaen and the auanee of the City| February 1986 « 6 o’sleck basi to of 2” Blacktop Pavement on Street ‘ef Pontiac, will meet in the Commission me motions soley “obisctions, at may be from South rd to Prospect Street ‘RICHMOND, Ky. —Deputy [Chamber im the City Hall in sald City, Y parties tn is now en file in my office for publie “Willi th t len the Ust bx? of pebreary nd = Sates” February i “ipse Ravana ti armor \ laeeescmeat (a which’ time and. 3 : gies hereby given that the d place City Cierk Commission the Assessor he was being attacked by a pris- |opportunicy wil be piven all persons Ped. 16. '86/ of Pontisc, will meet in the Gemmiaany over, but actually he was just jinterested to be heard —_—— - .Chamber in the City Hall in said City, tung “plastered.” He received ri | Dated: February 16," 1986. Notice of Special Assessment: (°° }¢, 21s of Yvebruary. A'D. 1986 - hard blow the head while : “—S ADAP EVANS. 2” Blacktop Pavement on Fourth! assessment, a t which time and pines a weet City Clerk. opportunity | vin “be gitep all persons Chemical May Replace conducting a group of prisoners Feb. 16th, 1956 Avenue. oe, y P ‘the courthouse, enroute \ [ents Dale ad oan Mr. wapognaes | Dated February 18, 1966, | r ne, wo. Oung, Mr. : 0. . Insulin for Controlling the jail. He was hit by falling 4 | Netice of Special Assessment: Richard Mariette. LaVern 0 Cox, Jouste ADA mavens. : ams, Mr. Block. r. Reeve, Clerk’ Disease of Blood |Plaster but escaped injury. (2 Blacktop Pavement on Blaine shay. Bimford J. Floyd. A. fnchony | ren. ten toes | Avenue. Renne, Melvin Dorries Jr, Mr. Fleet- + _Dublin has raised bus fares. |_ To: Baward G Teener, (Ji Clouter: | orgs parti err >, ment al Duse, band ol Notice of “Special Assessment: : ‘wi Geo i - She DETROIT @)—The Upjon Co. ot oe ae \Young, C aud @ Clay, Nathan Partney. | Plymouth = Townes, Hula McCallum. 2” Blacktop Pavement on Gerdea * Kalamazoo we control of reagan Election Notice Monday, pe Ro Lees | | mats ‘crone y, ‘Lawrence rogrs Poshettetd Martin a, Jackson. Bibert ei Wegther- anert See * taki ills composed of a new Te i electors of the City © e. Grimaldi. J. A. Tilson. Riehar. aly, ur um, vi aum, To: Pa ytarian, Clarence Bun- aca retaad of daily injections | {5 h cis [Soha Neaves, Bernard Yarbrough | Robert Lgalio'L. Motchkten Aisere Lines. Berke, ac anny ueUzenee eaieg epee Notice is hereby given that e@ y |Maudy Bateman, Sam C Sturgeon, Jud-| Miller, Lesite L. Hotchkiss, Albert tae Bently, Geo. Neikirk, Harry and Fannie of insulin may be almost within Primary Election and Special City Blec- {son radway Company, Emily Rauffus,|™@an, Ethel & James R. ee yde| Mortis, Tony myoe. Gabriel Balasky, the reach of the medical profes-| {#00 5ii' be held i ike Oly ot Mtondey John D. Rook, Roy Stantleton, Donna Welch, Walter G. Leegentecas bomes | wey . Herman Ulman, Walter ua sion. jae $th day of March 195¢ a! the re- A : Oi i herelnafier desig- This was disclosed last night by tatea | DE Date Bere Hulsapple, Donald Caswell, Ervin ¥. Johnson, Maurice Whisnant, Carl & s Buckner Christie, Jultus Braeckwelt, Harold | Largent, Mr. Bragan, J. Hereeg me Sherman Wood! and Glade M. Wall, Homer|Gerald Rose, Ernest 8 Mann, M. Boh Axford, Prank Polley, Prank an, Duncan. Mr. Johnson, Clarence Bdwards./That the roll of the Special Assésament the pharmaceutical firm to a group Precinct Robert Puller, Darwin Cathin, Pius BH. C Stevens, W. M. Johnson, Lucille heretofore made by the City Assessor for Pp No. |Martell, J. C. Allshouse, Irene Allison, Harvey, Geo. Argee, B. Moore and to all/the purpose of defraying that part of 7] : That Cramalogton “eo at doctors who met in Detroit to| 1 nines Bees : (Marshal ect D. see: Browee bid, prpetegnaes seg yemmocpedl — rol op pet prone ee eumiasion decided 3 ire Btation No ey pn now s ec and me La _ a closed circuit TV program. | 3 Bagley Schools j cod mee it 63 ond 8. te ‘elore made by a he City, Assessor for the tsseasment for the eunmramicg tee 4 Emanve r = ure lasted tae enlee That the roll of the| bavement on Gerdon Street . E, Gifford Upjoha, oe | 8 Wemingron Schoo! |Special Assessment heretofore made by Keel Pe - A ido ——— seeitet from Oakland Avenue to Corwin Avenue tha’ nLOT £ a the City Assessor for the purpose of de- | | 48 now on fle my office ie posi ‘of the firm, reported i | Bg fraying that part of the cost which the SSsessment for the construction ef 2° D. * the search for an orally active & Wetater School % Commission decided should be paid and blacktop pavement on mbes Avenue) Notice is also hereby given that the method (a drug taken in the | % Senior High Schoo! borne by special assessment forthe con- from Joslyn Avenue to Puller Street] Commission and the Assessor of the a le Crofoot Beheol : struction of 2° blacktop pavement on !s now on file in my office for public) of Lens will meet in the mouth) for controlling diabetes, 1; 9 Oaxiand County Office Biég. | Blaine Street from Oakland Avenue to| Inspection. .|Chamber fin the City Hall in said ay. “recent developments now sug. 2 Wisner Bchoo! | Montcaim Street is now on file in my! Notice is also hereby given that the on oe st dey of February A.D., 1 | 12 Lineoim School : ‘office for public inspection |Commission and the Assessor Qf the City| at 8:00 eicied we Teview oaid gest a ses may have | i¢ Lincoln School | sie is a ereby given that the) Of Pontiac, will meet in the ich time and place [16 Ow hoo! le Com ion and the himoecer of the City | Chamber in the City Hall a said Ctty,| opportunity a be all ' 16 LeBaron School lof Pontiac, will meet in the Commission 0n the Jist day of February A.D. 1986! interested to 1? Emerson School A opens called Orinase! Te- jg .#ire Statton No 4 Chamber in the City Hall in said City, at 8 00 o'clock m., to review said) Dated: 7 15, 1956. on the 21st da WoO. 6044 H 4 of Pebrnary AD. 1956, 4ssessmen! at which lee oe place , i foe beagle rchpipemaats hal 8 00 loc m., to revie iq, Opportunity w ¢ given all persons i lated to sulfa drugs, originally 20 «YMCA So oem te, review piald! opportuni aaa ase ADAR EVANS. made in Germany, has been ex- 21 Contant pebee a opportunity will be we all persons Dated “reerases 15, 1986 : Peb. 16th, 1956 ; ty « . t perimented with intensively Dy 2; gauern Jr High Bohoo! r 2» : "Dated! Pobeuary 18 13, 1956. ADA R_ EVANS. : i} Aeon American scientists, Dr. Upjohn 24 Longfellow gchoo: } s”. : Dated: Ws ie ei oan es said. He said it has been shown) 3% ff‘Gonnell schoo! ; = . be = ee AOA Ry Clerk. be 19882” Blacktop Pavement on Fam Met 1 Cetenee lowers) thse Os ss wise ashes: ee Met materi Maal ac. 4 a __ Feb. 1ekh. 1956 Notice of Special Assessment; Street. sugar of animals which are able be) Wilson Schoo! | To: Verne C. Hampton, John My ax “ ; ; m “RN — Workme : : AP Wirephot sane 2” BL vem: Ham to produce insulin in their bodies’ 10 Congrega’n Bona! fsreal Temple SNOW IN SOUTHERN ITALY Workmen dig p te eos of (Special A. t: | Black re ent on iiton | our pier LS, meee aur me 31 Webster School | at a pile of snow in a street in the city of Bart on heavy snow has accompamed severe cold weather 2” Blacktop Pavement on . Beverly | Street icNeil Street. Ae dolph wGusestewrmin macar bebo but not those which cannot eee 32°09 «Wever School _ se | . : w Burt, Donaldson Lumber! Decker, Wm. Parnes, Herman Schur- insulin 33° («U. & Navel Tr ‘Center. | the Adriatic Sea in southern Italy, Unusually Une rt Europe dee a four weeks. Avenue, lconipany. Philp C Miller, Louts Goule:,| man, Henry C. Phillips, Harrison Joba. “Preliminary observations show 3$ Foptiec Housing Bide a SS Ss a Sil y ober bare ipyeirg ibe erp | die Braden, Peter Krueger. tg DU | tony Red Star Trenat Co. Inc. Wilham ere oushe. $, ipant, Martha Gruner, Gerald Melick. ircher, Josep! . MeDowell, Virg!i Cc is also orally | 36 Jefferson Jr. High Schoo} an the City Primary Election Ballots be submitted to the electors of the City! ; | ; Ho Patterson. Bernard Pulkerson. Lee Geo. McNally, C C. Decker, Charles E. | Allison, G.T.RR. and to ali-persons in- at pad geftersomn Jr. High School ‘as candidates for nomination for City of Pontiac, Michigan at a Special Ci Netice of Special | Asersenscet: A Stallard. C McReynolds. George P Peters II], Pred Therrien, Bernice Mar-/|ierested, take notice: That the roll of xs ane » a Pontiac, eth i t clas J = effective in reducing hyperglyce fog peer. Ce basi \Commn:ssioner at the Primary Election wlection t9 ne hed if conjunction witn 2” Blacktop Pavement on Burt Griffith. Joe B. Hopper, Jeanne Linsley |tin, Ray Ritter, Rober. Bitaing, Linga|the Special Assessment heretofore made mia (blood sugar) and glycosuria 40 © Washington Gcheol to be held Monday, March §, 1984. and the City Primary Blection on March 5, Avenue and Hillside Drive Walter Win Egge, Peter Geiger, Leda Meler. Alma Rodgers, Mrs Sanh by the City Asseaser for the purpose of ) tients with, 4: w rainy Behoo! I do hereby certify that the said pe- igsg a» proposa! to amend Section @. — . . Mart Bernice Sipie Cratus Riley, Che@s | Parrott, Mrs. Caroline Hogert, W. J. | detraying that part of the cost which (sugar in urine) in pa | a pedbes, ‘choo! fitions were signed by at least twenty- Chacter Il! of the City Charte: Tie To Pontiac Union Schoo! Emma and E. Rawitms, Car! Shelton Liovd Ore \Coleman, Frank VanHorn, Gertrude Wall, the Commission decided should be paid diabetes milli- 27. iftve qualified electors evidenced by af oo ee o: a cChatie rerndment Dewey Cookley Anne Bressier, Buiah'staff Henry Meng, A. Kiinestiver W.'E Wideman, Werd 1. O'Brien. Raiph\and borne by special assessment for the the adult form 4 Malkim Sehool a e sac arier Amendmen ea fidavits ettached in accordance with | ndinert No. | Cubhingham, Russell Anderson Robert Lanpher, Roy-Plummer, Alfons Weishoer. Dean, Larry Ruthenberg, B C MacMil- construction ef 2'' blacktep pavement en al id Less con- « Baldwin Schoo! desigtated as Chafier Amerdime o | tus.” Dr. Upjohn said. The said Clty Primery ciection ts to the provisions of the ciara of (ht is to increase the compensation of ‘he Tanuiniil, Clarence Biust Velma and Leon Cretal, L Barber, and te all per-|ian, Geo. Larson, Est. of EF. Switsenverg,({Elm Street {rom Jessie Atree, to Ban. be held. for the purpose of nominating City of Pontiac Michiga Sn PeanAEClisnComminiones Jessie Adler and to ell persona inter-\sons interested, take notice: That the! Mrs Olive Burgess. E P. Fiippo, Sr,.jford Street is now om file in my office ; : a Daatsietal td) acca 3 of ane Cite | erry COMMIRGIONER ke y ested take potice That the rol! of the roll of the ial Assessment hereto-| Alfred Lewis. John Swanson and to ali for public inspection. * liwo) candidates (fer the office) of Cily| District Nol 1 Roy ¥ Cooley Jr an The proposed Bection 8 Chapter Til Special Asseasment heretofore made by fore made by the City Assessor for the persons interested. take notice. That the! Notice ls also hereby given that the hy fa Hon n | Commissioner drew A MecCaski!! David Mimmons Shall read as follows : he City Assessor for the purpose of 4. [purpose of defraying that part of theiroll of ihe Special Assessment hereto. Commission and the Assessor of the City woe “said jeg city election is to Bamuel J Whiters and Join B Wood-; ach Commissioner ex-ept the Mayor ‘saying that part of the cost which jcost which the Commission decided fore made by the City Assessor for tne Pontiac, will meet in the Commission held atc the purpose of voting upon ward shail be paid by the City the sum of C°@imission decided should be paid and should be peld and borne by special! purpose of defraying thst part of the|Chamber in the City Hall in said City triet , es borne by special assessment for the con- Assessment for the construction of 2'’jcos: whicti the Commission decided!on the 2lst day of Eeereery AD. 1988 | tne following proposition: Distriet No 3 Prank O'Brien Philip $2500 for each and every official meet - t : : struction of 2° blacktop pavement on | blacktop pavement on Beverly Avenué/should be paid and borne by special at 8:00 o'clock ew said 1 Shall Bection @ of Chapter 3 ef the EF Rowston and Wm G Spence ing of the Commission attended by such id e oe | Charter of the City of Pontiac be{ Dtstrict No 4 outs M Biles Norman jeer per ided however. that no Burt Avenue from Montcalm Btreet to from Baldwm Avenue to University | assessment for the construction of 2" assessment, at which. time and place amended ta provide that: R Bolton Plovd P Miles and Basil ‘eric; of the Commission shell Hillside Drive gnd on Biliside Drive|Avenue ts now on file in my office for [dlackiop pavement on Hamilton Street, opportunity weil be Siren all persons ratid ig-' Each Commissioner, except the Mayor Tole» memue; of the Commission shall te- (rom Burt. Avenue to Summit Street is| public Mspection and McNeil Street from Baldwin Avenue interested to be hear Teachers stil! have time io regis-| . - es ‘4 Oe Ee Gates (“ive mote than $1.30000 tm any one cow on file in my office for public in-! Notice ts also hereby given that the. 5 Rundell Street is now on file in my Dated pel! 15, 1956. shal! be paid the sum of $25 00 for’ District 6 Re n ™M a fi F } ter for two corrective reading every vinidal mecting vf ind Commi” Robert Landry “Giiber W Leng end 22 gra hel the Mayor Shall "be Specxion \eeTPontac” wit meet ig’ the Commission Ret" one ner ing Ow solalerane " iVietor t b 1 $26 tp on : Vi i " tne 1% at otic 5S also hereby given a ie courses offered here through the men Apr nay eee ton shell re reel oer dey of Pebruary (928! mont? he instalments at ihe rate enone ena he Wiese at the aa Chamber in the City Mal! in said City |Commission and the Assessor of the City) ‘ City Clerk. tension service of Michigan State ceive more than $1300.00 in any one|A. D. 1058 of ce pstaliment for gach calendar of Pontiac, will meet in the Commission °@ the ist day of Pebruary AD . 1966 of Pontiac will meet in the Commission Feb. itn, 1956 = |year except the Mayor who shall be paid ADA R Fvans. moth Except for the purpose of in- chachber in the City Hal! in said City, ®t €00 o'clock pm. to review seidichamber in the City Hall in said City, Normal College. '82,000 00 only per annum in twelve City Clerk quity the Commission and each of ita on the 2ist day of Pebruary AD. 1966 secrtemen = a ae pie at ee the 21st aay of Pebruary AD. 1966. Notice of Special : . 7 m shall 4 , : : tae opportun. ll person t 4 Assessment: Second (senciens foe Bath cout ees yee) sence verses: iiss] ee ee at 8 epee a tes ine Soe eets Se cost pa ca revew (ae, opera, SO ee |Slsetament. st which_ time "tra! piece @” Blacktop Pavemest ea Drexel will be held Saturday at the read- leaoath® BOARD OF REVIEW NOTICE sofely ‘hreugh the Manager except in opportunity willl be given all persons | Coe veSrusiry Hy Na! s tatcrectea’ 4 ile Sete Aon all persons Av e SESBRTTA the Devartment of Pinar nd Law t nle o be j oes ing clinic of the Oakland County! 2 Shall the city of pontine. “Michigan. | Rey (On PONTIAC, MICHIGAN TD ia Geuhe, ce Gourision Gat Gn) BLS peat ase ADA R EVANS, | Dated vebruary 18. 1966 ‘eroey red an PHONED. Donald, Latner Board of Education, 1025 N. Tele-|:"" Revenue Bonds" im the amount of 1° 07 Bont siichices ' member thereof hall give any order or, WO 6938 Feo i len ise, 2 0053 aoa Ravana) |e terra! J B. Rounding, Prank Rd ith Dr. Harry T.} L poets! as provided in Ordinance No Bp 7 direction either publicly or privately. ADA R EVANS. seat! ee ie | ‘Diaz, Est of Lottie Hutchins, Trans- graph _ Wi 292, as amended by Ordinance No 1208 — Roulpere Danae notified MeO? Gs any of the subordinates of the Man-' erk — — City Clerk American P. Inc. and to all persons in- Hahn, reading clinic director, In-'of the city ordinances, for the purpose sonra ot mesiex ee Be Clay et ici ae ase | Notice of Intent to Construct. Ped. 16th, i9s¢ terested. take Gee t = sales 2 ‘ : : neet at the office of t ee nas een the Assessme eretofore made structing. Each course carries (wo |i Pere oP icccmentle porting cress City Assessor. City Hall, 3) 8 Parte Notice t# hereby given that the fol- | Water Main in Elm Street. | Notice of Special Assessment: >’ the Kier Ansaeae Shot tel perweee ot semester hours on graduate “ or’ in “Automobile Parting District Ke. 1 Ehice om Cuseday | Match 6/1906 (008 ‘ovis 1s the! present Sertior € (ChepterNetice! of Special Assessment:) You are hereby notified that a i Se detraying thet ecst whieh |e h bends will not @ gemers! obli- o'clock am. eastern standerd tim at ‘1 f the City Charter which is pro- 2” Blackt P t Co ul ular meeting of the Commission of the|2” Blacktop Pavement on Going the Commission prayed: sould re paia undergraduate credi bere of the City og Will be payable — ioe and peace = ee, Moor ee to be amended by the preceding 2 acatop Favement on Commen nity of Pontise Micniae held ba = Street ; construction of 3 vat Grovensmce & pole < os Class time for “* act re from the revenues of the city's shall submit to the Boarl of Reyice the section . re day of bruary by resolution | = Li ec " ie) pe nt en Cor = ive Reed | |asaceebiinl Parking smpetons) (te) (cold Gencrelleseessiacnt sexiccu al ane cig) ome iowa) (Racni coma etoner ike pel AUTEOS was declared to be the intention of To M & H Bquip Co. Gerald Brown, Drexel Avenue Ege jock Street to ing in the High School” is 8:30 to district? The Board of Review «hall coutinus in oid for his services the sum of 6500 To Elmer Good. Athanas Maxim thee City Commission to construct John Drigado, Ertin Polter, Pietro Felice, South Boulevard now on file im m) Notice relative to opening and Clos- session st least two dears muiccersively for each and every meeting of the Katherine Warner, Warner, Barney. eater main in Elm Btreei from Ander- Henry Thyle, 8uperior Stee! lud. Netty! office for public inspection - 10:30 a.m. each Saturday. ing of Polls. and as much longer as may be Aeressary Commission attended by such member’ Bertha Whitiow. 1 Virlin Reed. C E. son to Marshall Street at am estimated Terr:. Geneva Alto Mandalar!, Clarence! Wotice is also hereby given thet the “Problems of Adjusting the e polis tor the City Primary and to complete the review. aid at leas! 61x -rovided however that no member of Rowlins, Mss John Lyman, John cost of $1487.32 and that the plen, Smith. Baldwin Rubber Co, Frank Commission and the Assessor of the City Individual rene City Election shal! be opened at pours “11 each dey during the ‘wo the Commission shall be entitled to re- Robertoy Peter Tandsk! Archie Hob- | profite and estimate of said improve-|Boroff, Mrs. 8 E. McCormick, Wm \of Pontiac, will meet in the Commission Program to lock im the forencon, and shall consecutive dys they mre in session .e!ve more than 830000 In any one year, good, William Clitf, Chas. Adler, Wil- ment is on file for public inspection Morris. L. C Smith. John Dorris, Jose Chamber in the City Hall in satd City Needs” is given: 10:30 a.m. yes open until @ o'clock in the after. any person or persons desiring to do 114 pfo rate for any portion of year iam Foster Kenneth Jones. Mr. Mc-| 4t js further intended to construct said Garcia, Bennie & Dorothy Iverson, Ed-)on the 2ist mie of February A.D, 1966 tol pm. This a laboratory boon and no longer. Every qualified! so may examine his or her assessment Except for the purpose of inquiry, the Kinney, Mr Polson, Mr. Goplin. Mr |improvement elector present and in line at 8 o clock fm accordance with the| Ward Townsend, Newton Rush, Charies| et 8:00 pm, to review said feo such t#x roll and may show cause if Commission and each of tts membsrs Baker, Estella - McNamara, Brownle| pian profile and estimate and that the Cobb. Ella Lambert. Esperdian Munts, assessment, at which time and place course for elementary and second-|fhe hour prescribed for the closing of) caete why the valuation thereof shall dea! with the admintstrative.branch Moore, Ernest Stutesman, L. Pulkersom./cost thereof shall be defrayed by special Melvin Kell. Prank Reaume, Howard opportunity will Le i! all persons ; ithe tis shal! be allowed to vote ‘ me Bernard Rheault, Mr Mille Felix Qar- assessment according to frontage and | Eagle Ernest Latin, Herold Fransisco, | | interested to be ary teachers, with’ approximately mead Fetrunry! pisses pod be changed and tha sald” Beare et ibe cn ¥ aovernmen ihrroepetioos cla Roy O'Neil, Lucille Thrower. af4,thet al] of the lots and parcels of = |Sohag Milkonian, Steve Becora, Mrs F | ted Pebruots rh 1956 ' devoted to ADA R EVANS. Review shall decide ‘He same and the Manager. ¢ : her the '® Si persons interested. take notice: ‘fronting upon either side af Elm Street McComb. Charles Boyd, Emma Lalonde WO. 6980. half of the course time Cie clery their decision shall be final of Pinance and Law, and netther * That the roll of the Special Assessment from Anderson Birest to Marshe!l Bitest] Gerttuds Howard) W FP Reynolds,: ADA R EVANS demonstrations and supervised in- Pebruary 16 a6 Dated Pebruary 9, 1994 Commisaion nor any rer eee heretolgre made by the City Assessor shal! constitute the special assesement Dolphus rercer John Reznside, pernatée| City Clerks he' ADA R ae shail give any order of direction e Ne for the purpose of defraying that vert district to defray 998071 of the esti-/Oputin, Wm McVay Un- Feb. léth, 19s struction of young people in the “x oricy To mLECTORS OF THE y Clerk pubiicly or privately, to any ef the of the cost which the Commission -de-imeted cet and expanses thereat angiknown Lot 686 Percy Pare Adam Org) . - City of Pontiac, Michigan Feb “arn 198@ subordinantem of the Manager ride? should be paid and borne by. that 980661 of the estimated cost and to all persons interested take notice’| NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE ° | @ notice: Notice is hereby given | — = : Ry order of the Commission special assessment for the construction expenses thereot shell be paid from the/ Tha: the roll of the Special Assessment 1948 Pontiac 2 Door. Engine Wo that petitiens have been filed ied the| CMARIER AMENDMENT NOTICE Dated January 18, 1996 of 2° blacktop pavement on Cornell Ave-, Water Improvemen! and tN bs Fund. heretofore made by the City Assessor §PRS5003. Public sale to be held on There are about 325,000 prong-' ahr of the City Clerk, Pontiac Mieh-| Te the electors of the City of Pontiac, ADA PR ADAMS nue from Baldwin Avenue to University. NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVER for the purpose of defraying that pert! February 27, 1986. 1:30 pm. at 223 gan for the tohowing | named persons Michigan City Clerk Avenue is now om file im my office for ‘That the Comnneeen of ay City of of the cost which the Commission de-|South Main Street [ecbergld jperueee horn antelope in the United States. ecrstins thet their names be placed; Notice is hereby given that there shall Feb. 16th, 1986 public inspection Pontiac, Michigan will meet in the elded should be paid and borne by| Ped. 15, 16, 38 _ Death N Notices | Death Notices a ld dB da he cere od dl rol AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE £XPERIENCED WASHING MA-| MANAGER, PAINT STORE ROCH- SALESMAN OR MANAGER FOR | PP tnt ator, Able to set up own me- chine repairman. Must nares ox0e | ester Ruperiens sn Pid, Mi 4-00 ne | Bit ae ova biinarpame! cnaguant | ; ' n job set lene ito ry m ny ® tial rfiei ust ha perience be BACON, aR y oe MISS SCHAAR, FEB. 15. 1956. ALBERT ev enreticone. aon nh in poke aryere gteacy work. Pacation ose . : = & Se. able cir ornanisa tan | Georgia F. 32 Edison St. age 92;, C. 28 N. Raith St. age $0: Be-| ohiy ng phone calls Employ ey salarr afd commission OFFICE BOY MESSENOER CAR | = bah ke direct. Good offer to) _Pre wed aunt of Mrs Georgia! loved husband of Myrtle Schaar; ment office closed Saturday. Dan- | Must Mirnias references All infor-| necessary Plant loc on Woers|| rowressing individual & one wi!!- Weolfenden, Mrs. B. Woolford.| dear brother of Nelson, Flovd (els Man ‘facturing Corp, 2677 mation confidential Roys Re-, ester Phone OLive 10211 Per | rh? work for advancement. Call Mra. May Parker, Francis Bacon! and Lewis Scharr, Mra Eustace Orchard Lake Rd ~ | placement Parts and Service Co, | Somme! Dept — FE 2-3001 for appt. Ask for Mr. end Edwerd Hammer Funers! Thibodeau and Mrs Normen Par- ARTISTS APPRENTICE YOUNG 6 Opkiand oe service will be held Fridey, Feb. ker Panera! arrangement@ wil man for general work in an art EXPERIENCED TOOL AND DIF ; 1%, at 2 pm. from the Pursiey, be announced later by the Donel- tudo Pho: uetas maker Apply Thomas Die and STORE CLE RK ( atu “8 home Mr. Hodges. Mid poly, tho 2 : ~DPUIN Hi — Purera!l Home with Rev. Wm. son- Jghn: Funeral Home | west 61171 Stamping Co 2170 E Walton Blvd ; . HM. Marvech officiating Inter. $400 PER MONTH GUARANTEF — \eazneseelgeri ment reise ie ANTEFD e s lor een ue ta tate ae SPARKS. ruB ed aatmnosr to Married men between the age E erienced sober middle aged man to assist pa ee o 7 and 7 while tratrir for | : ; manager i Oo seling. counter Pursiey Funeral Home _ Deed: hurbind of Wathtyn B your own insurance putinesa with Xp = NEEDS Oe eoreruKCo Te POR displays some stotk and delivery Bpercs ceer father of William one of the nations largest. mul | itn QRUE A | work Must have drivers’ license BOYER, FEB. 15, 1956. JAMES EB. Spares Funeral service will be tiple .ime companies For personai | Salesman 2 ee | and ability to handle a drawer Clarence, 32 Rosetta Rd. ege 68: held Sav iriay, Feb 16 at 10am. interview and aptitude test cal | RAY O'NEIL. Realtor | GRAEBNE beloved husband of Fstella Borer, tron. gs Wichaels Catholic Mr Harper DKeze] 10110 1e 962 S Telegraph Rd Open 0-0) Geer father of Clarence, James Lo chigech 1 ferment in Mt Hope ro ___ssTO SELL NATIONALLY ADVER- Phone FF 3-7103 or FE 68-7202 Emplovment hoe Me and Dan Boyer. Funeral Srrange:| COMCUE! Mr Swarks sill ihe DRAFTSMEN ee DMN CON | Co-operative Real Estate Eachange 313 Pontiac Stale Bldg FE $0717 | ~ Jonna ci! ‘} - ST! = - ments be announced later this , to 'Cipe |PATTERN & MODFL MAKERS ym Ss : needed bad! et } ld wipperks-Oriffin Puneral lation of the Rosary JR. ae M NE t R Excellent Opportunity | rion MAL eb rereing alesmen ee Po held ot 8 )- rides 2 d 19 _ were, ERD 11 at the Doneinon-Jonus PRIMING 1 AM. Molt FH. A. Ebling & Sons | Misa. Atkin 15, a goa ‘TE. | _Funeral Home Men needed in Engineering He SEE MR. JANKA 1n neon, age oved | —— — partment for minor jayout and | €a Sia e of Mrs. Ida Votes, Mrs | Detail Drafting pn special ms. 13 6 PARKE 81 | Cnerite Poling, Bryan Cox and} Card of Thanks. 1 chines autor oh devices ej | Rave openings for alert young Mra. Mrytie oad. Puneral sexy- | aw - tro-mechanical controls. and hieh ara VPLRIEN ot Db men Experienced nm se,iin ice will be held Saturday, Feb THE FAMILY OF SAMUEL BEatE "eed wa he EU EXPERIENCE ca? aes: aavertistae 18, et 9 pm. from the C J. ish to express their gratitude | ce S aN ‘ | contacts Warnings unlimited. Godhardt Funeral Home. Keego for evety kindness and sympathy ELE CTUCATE CONTROL ALESMAN DIVISION Marbor. Interment in Oak Hill) extended to them during the re- UITRY to sell real estate. GOOD opportu. | To Buy—To Seli—lo Trade ay iota) | HYDRAULIC Cnc UIT DESION nity for GOOD man Plenty of r YOU BUY IT—WE'LL INSURE [T) Cemetery, Mr. Graves will lie cent loss of their Father and ry “ ¥ ; H Openings i in state at the C. J. Godhardt Qrandfather Sylvia M Tomlin. ggtt® ST DESIGN TECHNIQUES =| GOOD listings ample floor time as Opening | L s 1 t 4 Ny ut tare it 1° ee pons! ¥ for « "i Funeral Rome. Keego Harbor som Cheise A Beale Ardell Bo Geveiopment, decien and manu. | °7% nD. any ARI ro lor j —— ~ | Dope. Caro! a Bees Georgina G facture of the most advanced |} Lc . A Ui oo) HALLETT, FEB. ae 1986 ANNA! bbe Elaine Beale = type of equipment beine built for 1717 & Telegreph Ra | SENIOR Elisabeth Bra Burr tpn- WE WISH TO THANK OUR wee nied vetlen Andlusteies FE #0471 tle FY ‘%-8801 | valescen e, Bloomfield Hille,| friends and neighbors for their ew. modern plant. Top waves 48 : atian 7 ree age yg ees ioe Ne Ernest | Kindness and sympathy during the hour week Educational vrowram PT yiaks inl tines leanitricua can eS ] NER mperative Resi Extere otte Mallett, Mrs. Winford Mamlin:| (lines and death of my husband. and other benefits Minimum uy to 4 With car for sales and | | Co-operative Real Fatate rons | dear sister of Mrs. Donald Mac-| Pearl McDonald Mrs. M-Donald | YF euperience required Gelitery work 1000 estadiished “ . 1 FE 2 3 |__and children If you are eager for an opportunity | aT gaa wk ulus e746 S10 years bodr or sheet meta u and William Mallett. Pu-|_ and < re to ..0ress \our creative abilities | customer BA eta If vaalitied design experience ole W. Hu neral will held Fri- and work with a crack team of | Y loa Deer al Sssie tor. tcleriee NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH ’ Gay Ped. 17, at 2:30 pm. from: Flowers 3 specialists in a new and expand- ne FE 2-2 pale . | AYOUT M ANi— POST OFFT the Parmer-Snover Funeral Home AA A ERE tlt aap the field. you will want to con- HARDINGE LAPHE OPERATOR, es aa AGE aR = tact us eae Cal) on work E UST | canna Ser Malt cite he DUNSTAN'S FLOWERS CR. Rrmal. MI ¢ 400 1-AY AND co 34 vears experience es body OF be journeyman. Bkuttle Manufac- in state at the Farmer-Snover Closed for Vacation | CAROILEDETOTT 1 Veen DS & Commerre Re Walled Lk Biecupmetslgia7cuumnian | turing Co, Milford, Michigan. Panerai mons 3294 Cole ipmingliam Mi EMpire J 1001 SENIOR THREE A) WARNER - SWASEY La) b= Funeral Directors 4) PARBER ORO REDE iG 33) Vu OCs tR All BR eSERVICE AND WW Turret Lathe operators — aes | HARRISON, FEB. 15. 1956. HARDIE ~~~- : SUSernee Shr fue — parts man oraighiy experi- up own jobs Top wages, 58 | Oot sai Dr oar mee _ BE PORUGR : enced for steady jot Traver Ex- DETAILER : hour week ouersen ‘Machine , Sue ad = - AIR Fuastel Nowe one De vt ; . iN ae thane, 60 8S Telegraph, FE Products, Li 6-0610 lored J jah ar- ar ( yap! ET CHARS Hea = — rison; dear father of Mra. Deila fo Ae =a OF SUPER. MAPKEN ei < -— 24 years sheet metal, body or WANTED: SALESMAN “AT ONC Nickerson, Mrs. Dorothy Foisy, COATS FUNERAL HOME DE HORS Lie MEN mechanical detailing experience W_Dinnan, 66 W. Oe son and _ Compiste facilities. OR 3-7757 Must be experienced ty tair twits eave : WANTED” EXPERIENCED BAR. Wayne and Carr Harris Tuat p aces Accounting Bkq sare Mrs. Elvie Walker; dear brother Drayton Piatns — Waterford Twp full time responsib.e fut whi MeclLadica fea ally | Pull Brau work Herb's Bar- | of Mrs. Dalsy Dewey Willis Ren DIGNIFIED sERVICES cludes ent ourine Geo par Gead ani. “Promott< 2 ee | Ber Shor ae and Paul Harrison Funeral ser: - KIRKRY eee UG SSeS SIMeeerchealnce $300 \WHOLFSALE STREBE Tor fn ; OR nee ees . a = - Wants young married man. high tee will be held Saturday, Feb sae Bouin] Deon acu Bre Mataine Tedl traces ? : eh 18, st 1:38 p.m. from the Pirs: Funeral Home—FE ¢1262 | BODY MA REN ene 2 ete | school graduate anxious to learn Puneral Home, Clinton, Indiana 7) Loo. == ——'} ‘ ” =C Ah é i { \ IR For welding operations, business by ctarting as combina. | ed only Coliision shop Expericn | i ‘ ¢ 1 Rie: : tlon warehouse man and truck | Interment in Riverside Cemetery D h As . : B-1 Ri.e- 3 | = a ; Mr. Marrieon will be at the onel son- O ns Aton ee eee oe : , Us Leia | a core a a Press Bor @ we ke-Griffin Funeral Home un- FUNERAL ROME Saat eee Wik LINOTYPE OPFRAT: .T \ — eee Cc Evese Por st th @ pm Thursday evening -DESIGNED FOR FUNERA! s” | i SiN ENGINEER ' ee eee ENGINEER | i when he will be sent to Clinton —— @PARKA-GRIFFIN CHAPE! | required by growing company, ‘8! ° parding | Help Wanted Female 7.) fom service. Funeral arrange- yy, yughtful Service FE 2-584) manufarturing Alf Compressors > [eee | ments by the Sparks-Griffin Fu- — = Rydrauiue and PYeumatic Va‘. 1 - | A] TOR a5 aes neral Home. and equipment for aireraft t App AY \ - ORNEY Sy . { | SECRETAR MOLSTINE. FER 33. 1956 AN- . & ( MPFE, CO eminent) ciic Grow, eatetae 7a eee FUNERAL HOME Tsiiniacwooa lal | vere Gren SALARY 1 competent ee ton Oxford. age 60 beloved hustand Ambulance Service Plame or Motor ——- sf FE 7-83) | Voorhees- Sip] Le wie or phone MYrtle 22711 ; ‘ of Helen Hoistine, dear fa 73-8378 D] of Andrew and Bdward Hoistine. == | ee jon =o e ae eae Must be able ‘o handle people Tl votens nr PE “RSO EL See Nancy at ateer Center, B-1 a wo) I VN Riker Bidg FE 8-0418 y ouid ithe his office. , Otto WMolstine Alice HMarmond ~ | : Tmee Nee : \ and May Kafron: dear brothe- Xemetery Lots 3, DES] E C ant : (mean Secon eA TY COUNSELLOR (CAREER of Ernest and Lawrence Hejittse ~~" aera oe it ) MECHANIC EXP: + PRNe | \ fee a pane rlunity with nationa adver | Puneral service will be held Sat- 1 GRAVE IN PERRY MT PARK fi ac Pro Beg. Mec lai ae Pontiac. Michiean ae cprporaion aceon mt | 8 ¢ ov ity req ace - i en 7 im he Pg Mbt oH mente ges) —Cemetery_in Section 4 FE 20H DETAILE | commun and caary expected PINBOYS F\i-NINGS AND WEER- _time FE 2-2759 i ®t. Joseph Church with Rev. Fr = = Box | end:, Motor-Inn Recreation FE | ain = 4 George E Ging officiating Int & . | Ponting Presse Box 59 Fey + | BEAU - SALON terment in Oxford Comatexy Re- Is CHECK S I MECHANIC, EXPERIFNCED oN _56032 _ Beauty operator manicurist and | ettation of the Roserr wii] be ro Bi Fe EMC care for Roval es Fy ; | —Teceptionist wanted. _FE 2-0382 held st @15 pm. Priday, Feb ROX aETTIES os ees eee cer RFAL ESTATE — 17, with Milftery service follow. ' An. Manager Reval Pontiac sie | Se ee a ee | BIRMINGHAM che ely Waving il tela tae | 50 he Main St Roral Oak SAT ESMPEN | IMMEDIATE OPENINGS at the Plumerfelt Punera] Home 235 11 12 13 16 20 25 MAN FOR DELIVERING CAR RE Increcce vour earnings in a we:) General office, secretaries, book- gh rotten tall athend a Pa MEN \ ANE Ip nuited Must be seat aud lave lat office 1 a ri keepers and waitresses No do 28 37 38 o 63 66 67 7 poets Rs good felorence Cal] M Lom SG Gn office In good west mestic Birmingham Employment MEST Tat UTE, | 90 90:85 $9 100 Io 1p, SHORE TINT | BEATE OEE hae ele a a - Telegraph road, age ~s j oo Ix IU Thu 4s Hock Friday Z 2am 44254 73: beloved husband cf Mrs | ; ; th fyi de. Q Jf RE A ae "CLERICAL Edith Lauckner; dear father of | es TOP ia rs : MACHINE DhpluNPR ” REALTOR ' Girl for general office work Walter, Edward and Curt Leuck- = 4") TEAR PROG RAM eMal Fecate and Insurance | Pleasant working conditiong ip her: dear lege of eral service TAL ¥ ea a DETHOIT? NEW FET CURIA CO) itr w Huron PE 5-6181 | ar ecien Cail Mr Shaw. Leuckner, ose pire i LAFAYE ITE ENG CO - Mitronn MICH Se ets 1 ee will held Friday, Feb. | ENN : = : = TVATNiNG READY FD <9 - hd food, he erst tin r _ 2619 DIXIE HWY GR soar a REAL ESTATE CAS HIER ‘IN LADIEG READY TO Patera) om ie = OUR LIFE’S M ADE, R MEN c = | a soen Not ovér 35 years a nt us DRIVER wor, ORY c LEANING | SAIRESMEN appearing. pleasing pet- — | us e fat appeart ~en ag 1 expert. Deen a as meters St eel |EASIER through Classi-| Ker the city Steady employ. SALES - Se ‘ pecetieNs separ ee mare sien. soa ate © Frese, Box 6s a ee | 2nT ws fare eee “| PONTIA | 000 first’ eat | CLERK TYPist PON GENERAL : | ! k. ce tn “eer 38.1988, LINCOLN. fied Adé:~To solve every-| _EX-NAVY PETTY OFrficens Employment venice | R J. VALUET. Realt Birmingham $day wn Call ; Return to active @utv im rate. |18 W. Huron Bt, “WE 42541 eaitor Mr Pritchard, Miéwest 6-010. ir ved at a8 Part Place). | Details, PE 48 173 poche is ‘245 Oakland ave. FE 5-0693 | —— Fomine ne, O88, 90: “eer father of day problems quickly. dial | sxpeniewen D DELIVERY MAN. MIDW FST Co-Operative Rea) Estate as CLERK ie rine bed Seay FO PE Dea. EERE ares Pee | EME gag MURAL ENP RET| | STENOGRAPHER __ Snorer jo derek Wodes juleracnl ; FOOD PLAN EXCELI ENT cont Daenen ($800 | STEEE BROKERS Wa nTED a) hniaed) ane hatece —leahatind in White eo! M : Ve MISSIONS GOOD OPPORTUNI. Office Mer* Trainee $500 ly Trase American Freight Lines | chest aa) Chap . Mr gi at BS at jeset 3 vrs oifice caperiones: ore wit Ve in state at the B TY FO A ake uh CALL , Jun 18 Pics oun a “ “ $300 267 80. Bir i) La Pont: Starting salary $267 01 onth Ss — Mome. 1 4 Wl ntige State Rank Bidg teak MAN ON DAIRY A Pexcannel offi ‘ A ‘4 - . Li, oJ at. BRONTIAC : i PE 60227 i near Oxiord OAkiand #-2187, ‘ pel Motphal. ° can ‘Pomtia ; Ey =e . . e ie ae Pi © . ’ ‘. x0 : * - ey, , F cs : : ae = eZ 2 i “ t _ ; x ce _Help Wanted Female 7' Help Wanted Female 7/_ Help Wanted Female 7 Gl ERK-TYPIST | CrERATOR TO TRAIN FOR PART TYPISTS WANTED FOR OEN. aa : time radio dispatcher co mene eral office work. Apply 608 Com- Preferably with some experience | tor Write Pontiac. Press Box 90 munity National Bank Bidg in cost, work Apply Pontiec | Sant TIME MORNT INOS. ¢ CREDIT Press _Box mM. pevoecing by phone National con- Type 30 words per minute ~ Clerical ¢ irl Meas Tel-Huron. Write Manager WANTED Retailers, P.O. Box 230 Detro Must Ps sconces & have good 31. oF call WO 3418, __ hand writing ition is perma- oe Leia with better than average P E -RSON ALE _T RAINEE ung gir] between ages of 20 2 LBM. TYPISTS ARTHUR’ S tof frais "irs Bitersocal ay personality, Please call Miss BILLING MACH INE _ NS eginawe PLOYMEN: at ied I EM- COST DEPARIMES 1 \- _PLOYMENT FE. 5-0327 | Temporary Assignment Fine opportunity for person with PONTIAC Top Rate mathematical background Ex. | reece Sestrapie: ed ser aval “ | tad neces ago a saad ewes ie worker W e consider b f G ] St. ‘Det. Josirn pecatits ancinde fuily-pald ilfe Jo Ss ou Ve S } and ospitalization insurance PBX RECEPTIO $290 as re, Gee, CLT RECEPTIONIST, "imall office sa Russell Kelly Office Serv, AEE Tin PERSON, mor. | RECEPTIONIST for rea! estate | ' nswer phone and type 8200 ——— PONTIAC V ARNISH RE CEPTIONIST.CASHIER Ite yg WA TED. RESPONSIBLE LADIES typing ft leasant teleph les pro CO. ‘FILE CLERK ite typing $200 oF pistsen’ ‘evepnene sates, prc Py ew yo rts: FiGune CLERK tot ad _ fhotion work, Rrselient remunere = 28 | CREDIT HELP enc $2 $6168 after 4 p.m. Thursday, tli CASHIERS SECRETARY. no shorthand $300 3 o'clock Friday Experienced cashiers and eredit SECRETARY to executive $335 HY (AIT! | help. Full time posttions open . : $2) dia pet bad BCR CaP OFFICE TRAINER, ASQ 4180 TER $175 33 | _ ports 7 | N Sagi ___ | | JOB EXPERIENCED BEAUTY OPER- one GIRL OFFICZ no OPPORTUNTTY? be Had ts! ator for Birmingham &alon Mld- CRETARY, Light - * pel eee 4 and Lincoin ae hand - cn PONTIAC 2 Aer oe om FRIDAY. for executive $200. = - Soar EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES COMP. OPERATOR $280 | Employment Service Fountain girls. No phone catis | . 18 W. Huron FR 3551 Mery-Go-Round Restaurant, 107) (- [ONG pCa - | WOMAN FOR GENERAL HOUSE- _N Sa epee | “mn AEU)S Mae > i ue ac work. 3 children. Live in. Re!- EXPER eas GIRL FOR pees a « erences. FE_¢6050_ housework and care of children 2 -| WOMAN WANTS HOUSE WORK. By week een __ FE_2-7019 Fr Z| OMUUAC | BRea See EXPERIENCED _ T: i ; ane and two school age children LORESS. GRESHAM GIRLS while mother works me a Se os aa c in $2) per wee ear e CLEANERS, 605 OAK-! g and Woodward Phone MI 62936 LAND, |STENOORAPHER FOR MODERN | _sfler 6 p.m ORK WHR CO i c WOMAN TO WORK WIT CON- FULL OR PART Te SALES RECENT GRAD FOR NEW se! valescent patients. Ortonville eee $994 | ACCOUNTS PAYABLE AND ©”, 170R2 Pe - | GIRL poaitaEen Gee AND SHIP- RE ABLE . s40.0 “WOMAN TO CARE FOR Heath * 5 5 . ping dept a Rue v Fox Dry Clean-|crepir CLERK. siwiw((N(L gi000's«arem and home §& days ee in else ew aS LITE BOOKKEEPING |. 9240, Call efter! Tip: Mak HOUSEKEEPER — o TO 60 YRS.| GENERAL CLERICAL . - $225 WOMEN FOR TELEPHONE aur old General housework 2 adults. RAPID TYP]S $333 | vev work No expetience. App: —Piain cookin No laundry 830 FIGURE CLE $225 Kendales, 14 8. Saginaw. ¢ @ week Prt. apts with bath MIDWEST ; _5-0322. . __snd radio Pontiac Press Box 80. | - ra YOUNG LADY FOR GENERAL HOUSING AIT eee ee office work. Must type. Write post OUS TAL DE se office box 7 Bloomfield Hills. Pontiac lakeside homes project, salary $4,043 to 84.667. Position| PONTIAC GIRL TO ___ Help Wanted 8 invoivés accepting applications I Er ARN ee ee dus ~ and interview applicants for -Ef . ‘ : ° ° . COUPLE WANTED TO TAKE experience ims phase of vociai| NT ERVIEWING care of a 18 unt Apt Btate work is desired Bick leave. va- qualifications Reply Pontiac cation and pension plans: apply MICHIGAN'S LARGEST EM-|_ Press, Box 6300007 Personnel office, City Hall, PLOYMENT AGENCY has an’ MEN, WOMEN, YEAR ROUND OP- 8 Parke Hagens ene Fostse soiree | portunity on established Watkins ; foute. Ear 82 to @3 per hour HOME NEEDED FOR TWO BOYS train as a personne! interviewer, | Write 11 aa aon iit ebotiae beddh prefer @ girl ites saiee or | Say eer ore SE: OR ontlac. usinéss experience. but will train | oat ene nag | Someone WN teal dace trpe cer. |REAL ESTATE SALESMEN. OR JOIN THOUSANDS OF HOTrsE- sonality. who has no previous es- Relcswcm ra Full or part time. wives who are earning good ine perience Interviews by appoint- ow cost housing project lenty come representing Avon Cosme | ment. Call Mies Edwards at of floor time Earnings unlimited. ics er iach — their sal eer | apply. at ok lef ha +e oie ®asan a! o~ “Tr teed am, i] Beata > et call) GR \EBNER 5 *. see et +4508 : FE S-9277 Instructions 9 LADY FOR HOUSEWORK. STAY | ee oe dae a Re 2 Children school age. OR RHOISTERED NURSE OR RBOIS- DRIVING LESSONS. PONTIAC { ie tered me neice for 12 midnight to _ and. Sun nday FE ane Eves, a LIKE PEOPLE Finance Company needs a girl who likes to talk with perp ie ter, OL 1-83 | _Reading, A Arithmetic. FE 2-5055." 381 take payments, do typing - Us. CIvin~ “SERVICE TEsTs: school freduale nat over Ey SALES T SLADIES Training untt! appointed Men- single Coe vat least a Hee Women 18-55 Start high as si77 ro nighte a week or FRuaw ait Avon Center Hospital, Roch- 1 4 Corts ee Ze 98 ae =! om 34] | a Al ] EJ as a> 4 x ore. 3-7181 a 7 i oan T| LADIES coats | Siwy Mertagente Som MUSIC LADIES’ DRESSES requirements, show salaries, oe . e ; “eoe “Pore oo tests fear ‘ va gauge daa cat Wile CHILDREN’S WEAR. |_WRITE welieg_ Pree ree 8S, |} Must be experienced, steady pos!- _ Work "Wanted i Male le 10 tien, good salary, commission, 4 hour week, other benefits nN BOY, 19, w TEA Ope ing George’ s- New port’ s | __of any kind PE oan SH tat ___74_N Saginaw st. | CARPENTER AND <¢ CARINE? E ' SALESLADY FOR FLOWER SHOP. Tee ae one fepelr OR 3-485 7 xperienc Experience in selling. Write Pon: CARPENTER AND CABINET tiac Press Box work. New and repair, D. B r i ons | ome ck FED. | Secreta Unlimited See CARPERTERA re for Housewives repair, FE §-2704 teers On A ANG Shorthand and typing necessary Due to the great demand for our | CABINET MAKER AND Cal Must have interest ym retailing newly perferted product, we, tet. Kitchen @& specialty. 2 ke to work with ople and de must place several represerta- +3000. a Pontiac wréa resident _ Apely | fleas on ocd = vicinities.| CARPENTRY CABINETS Por. Personne! Dept. Sth foo or Loy Nate use of car mic® work k Attica —— Rec interview call FE | tier Repatrs at be Ceesary Warte's Dept: ‘Store 4 * vaeen : Lens