‘and at Martin City and Lees Sum-
' terson Air Force Base announced)-
200 Hospitalized the Weather ' U.S, Weather Bureau Forecast
Thunderstorms. |
\ (Detalls Page &) 4
sth YEAR
x &* *
34 Die in Kansas-Miss ,™ r x & 5 *
* " pepitel Bor dk lesue Decisively Vetoed at Polls. x *.f
®
ouri Tornado
Tornadoes, Floods
Batter at Oklahoma OKLAHOMA CITY «#—Tornadoes and ‘flash floods
brought more weather trouble to flood-plagued Okla-|
homa last night.
While no personal injuries were reported twisters Affer Onslaught
of Killer Storm 2,000 Rechc Seek
More Bodies in Towns
Hardest Hit A \
near Nowata.
Flash flooding was reported at Stillwater in north
central Oklahoma following rains which measured up
7.25 inches in about?
It was still KANSAS CITY (®) — The
season’s worst tornad&
smashed pcross the south
edge of Kansas City at
dusk last night, dealing"
death and destruction Suill
being evacuated
mre, vAagrelidigmoe
broke. souri la small vevew
‘Rescue workers counted er Creek was r atted ames 34 dead. 9 Residents File Suit
Roughten said pumps were be- gs Commission Readies At least 200 persons were| ing used im flooded basements at :
in hospitals, some seriously cella Ge ae canees sorte Emcdapprovet
injured. ( The line of (entries hich A group of nine Pontiac resi-
Twenty-two were killed moved into the state after two days dents yesterday began an eleventh-
at Silverton, Tex., on May % ‘lear weather also posed "4 nour battle against locating the! potential flash flood threat at)
15 in the worst previous Guthrie with heavy rains reported. Proposed | $100.009 Grand Trunk; , Western Railroad Co. switch yard twister this year. in the Cottonwood Creek basin’ cis tnmniee:
VEERS OFF COURSE north of the city. - brought suit in Circuit On May 25, 1955, a tornado wiped | = © ® /Court inst the railroad and the)
out little Udall, Kan., 175 miles! The Weather Bureau said pos-: icity of tiac, claiming the pro-|
southwest of Kaneas City killing SDM deevy rains would endanger’ ores would be in violation of
S. , Switch Yard
residents along Deep Fork Creek 2oni
lin the north part of Oklahoma
City.
The National Guard was sent to
Stillwater to assist in the evacua-
tien of flood victimes in the city
ef some 31,000 persons, including
more than 11,000 students.
State Police were called to assist
meter ranens © case on reads) sag Baldwin averme. where’. the
ay. ie ppl ee sun.|22" yard would be located, in or-
the Missouri National Guard forlwater was coune'e oe feng tor ©, mntenton cetghberteod poonewtate Ns City Commis-
sion has final accept-
ance of an n with the
vailread for tonight's
meeting. XY
The agreement calls
restrictions by the rail
;Vicinity of West Walton certain
in the
SET HEARING DATE .
Circuit Judge George B. Hart-
rick yesterday set May 27 as the
date of a hearing at which the
railroad and city must show cause * * *
The Cimarron River rose out of|
its banks at nearby Perkins, Okla.,
and water was reported six inches’
over. a bridge.
OTHER TOWNS HIT Thunderstorms and possible tor-| damaged property at Broken Arrow, near Prague and
regular
rd } Beck Doomed
as Union Boss, .
Reports Paper Tribune Quotes Official
as Saying Council Will)
Deal With Situation
CHICAGO (#—The Trib-
june today quoted a top
ranking Teamsters Union
official as saying that the
action of the AFL-CIO Ex-|
ecutive Council in remov-
ing Dave Beck as an AFL-
iCIO officer, also “seals his
(Beck's) doom as president
of the Teamsters Union.”
“As far as I am con-
cerned, Dave Beck is
‘through with the Team-
sters,” The Tribune quoted
‘William A. Lee, an inter-
‘national Teamsters vice
president and member of ne OEE
IN PHS AUDITORIUM — Teachers assembled
in Pontiac High School auditorium this morning
for a brief program before they split into smaller Teachers Assemble for B-I-E Day
groups to visit
the city, as part
and Education i. +
Pentiac Press Pheote
industries and business -places in
of the annual Business-Industrial
Day. Voters Reject
|6 Propositions
in Special Ballot Property Owners Rebel
Agdinst Higher Taxes
by 2-1 Margin
By PETE LOCHBILER
* By an overwhelming ma-
jority, Pontiac voters yes-
jterday refused a public
bond issue to complete and
equip the 200-bed addition
to Pontiac General Hos-
pital.
In an apparent rebellion
against higher taxes, vot-
_jers turned thumbs down
on all six propositions of
the special election ballot,
lincluding three general ob-
ligation bond issues total-
ling $4,550,000 and a $1
tax increase to finance
them.
the union’s executive —
council.
| og expect our counci] to meet
| shortly to deal with the Beck sit-
uation,”’ the paper quoted Lee,
who, it reported, left for a meet-
ing in Washington. ‘I believe that
Beck will submit his resignation
at that time.”
Lee, Gl-year-old president of
the Chicago Federation of Labor,
| was quoted by the Tribune as
saying he believed the Council
can remove Beck from office if to school. Beginning at 9
City Teachers Tour
Business, Industry Pontiac school children are enjoying a day off today
because it’s BIE Day, the day that Pontiac teachers go
a.m. this morning and until
about 3:30 the teachers will be at work, .while the|No ..
why a temporary injunction block-|Union
Most of the casualties were in
Ruskin Heights and Hickman
Mills, There also were dead at
Ottawa and Spring Hil] in Kansas
mit in Missouri. The Red Cross
estimated 975 families affected at
Ruskin Heights, with 11 dead.
+ © ©
The tornado’s path missed Har-
ry Truman's hometown, Independ-
ence, Mo., by about 15 miles, It
is east of downtown Kansas City.
Bus Tax Relief Bill
to Get Roll Call Vote LANSING #® — Legislation to
provide state tax relief for be-
leaguered local bus companies en-| ing the yard should not be issued.
The residents asked that the
city be refrained from issuing a
building permit,
Their representative, Pontiac at-
torney Robert Hodge, claimed
property values in the area had
dropped $1 million as the result of
the proposal to build the yard
there. ;
* * *
He said the yard represented a
nuisance to the neighborhood and
a danger to hundreds of school
children attending schools in the
area.
The final agreement has come
taxes about after many months of ne-
be abated othe exten tha ation Ben thet a ra fell below. 6% per |"°*4. Its full terms were to -be
veceivd. disclosed for the first time tonight.
a eR eg i a: on oe - jin 1957 public provement Sen. Donald E. Smith (R-Owos-| rogram. Public hearings.on five
road and sidewalk special asséss- shopping cer _The wind leveled the Ruskin
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 8)
Utica Firm Awarded
| firms. ment projects were scheduled.
$T Million Contract ° Smith complained that there was ; no “yardstick-on operating ex-/May Veto Parks Bill DAYTON, Ohio — The Air| penses — — this lets them write their
Materiel Command at Wright-Pat-| own ticket.” - LANSING # — Gove. Williams
Sen. Join P. Smeekens (R-
today it has awarded a eg Nene questioned the consti-
contract to Utica Bend Corp.,
will veto a bill to charge
mission to state parks unless the
Legislature comes up with some
more money for park develop-
ment and land acquisition.
Of the unofficial total of 7,261
How City
Voted
Proposition |
(Tax Increase)
er re
who cast ballots, 6,734 were prop-
erty owners, who soundly defeated
|the three bond issues by two-to-one
| majorities. ~ ;
| Besides the $1,500,000 hospital
question, a $355,000 bend issue
tor = hospitel parking lot and a of the sewage plant system also
went down in defeat, |
Although the city has 37,000 reg-
he fails to quit, children rest. Y ssacesevensees 2,390 istered voters, the voting was con-
“Beck bas imterpreted the inter-|..This is the day industry and education lock horns sidered hieavy for a special election tional's constitution to mean that! : —*and join hands, with 32) Proposition 2 and compared favorably with the ores be removed, but we shall A » of the city's businesses. (Regulating Bonds) April primary total,
abobt that,” Lee added. nxious Bear and industries acting as\No ............... 4,859\srun orriciats looker wh NT POST . hosts. Yes .......... 2,185) city and hospital officials were | Lee Yaid he did not want the) Dies of Stroke Approximately 803 teachers are 5g left stunned by the hospital vote.
nae A Se Tees oe Cubs Prow! expected to participate. In most| Proposition 3 —— r any circumstances,’ ose the . ind will com! (Regulating Bonds) remain an unused shell for at least
peop Bye ed aoperes of the} EW YORK w—Two squalling| am re No seuececeeees 4,343)two years, unless some other meth- AFL-CIO Exeeytive Council would = the S#8t of guided tours, but with the od of finnacing is found, _, |baby bears squee: rough . sani U1 2.545 not make him change his mind. bars of their cage at Brooklyn's smaller establishments more time #@8 .. - - - coerce ss By This wee because the fat te-
Lee has been mentioned by some) progect Park Zoo yesterday for|will be devoted to extensive exam- Proposition 3 crease was in the form of a City union leaders as a possible suc- ~Jook at the outside world. ‘ination of business procedures. - as maa Charter amendment, and defeat- comer Beck. ylicemen swiftly lassoed the) thi at “te — *) ed amendments can only be re- In Washington today, a tc Me ways” while mama bear| _ Following this period -INo ...... cosccacee 4,001 submitted to popular vote after a
er said Congress can help iQgure/watched nervously. enetten” Se Socters OM OY e, ..:..... ...... 2,203) two-year interval, democracy and curb corruption in| The excitement proved too; given their chance, They will be ™ inerdnne aud the
unions by ‘sanctioning an effective' much for the 300-pound mother.) emcouraged to ask questions and Proposition 5 mo —_— system for fining members failing She collapsed and died of a heart acon picsiity sltee catlicien (Hospital Parking) minor issues also were trounced
to attend union meetings, attack. ; ; : . |by the two-to-one majority. : The educators of Pontiac are|No seaseds veceeeee 4,671 * * * tee
e iven f seceee rty owners, who
Good Guess Can Win $100 ae ee eee 1914 se iat brant of any tax increese, nside of a wide variety of Pontiac, ae
Can You Predict Weather?iic cc. | sewage Pant) Only ronerty owner aries city. : lowed by law to ballot on the t * *. \No oeeeee eee euveneee 4,589 Ore ince,
- Attention all Pontiac Press readers who own crystal balls! How The vast Tield to be covered in-|Yes ......2seee000 26199 Only 527 registered voters not
chic type?
will win a $100 U. S. Savings bond.
Mail your postcard to:
‘On the reverse. side write your
Press building by noon Thursday,
will be split.
eligible, ao.
next weatherman!
Twister Wrecks School and Homes
about doing a little star gazing? Or are you by any chance the psy-
In any case here is a contest that is just what the doctor ordered.
Start saving your old tea leaves to predict what will be the warmest
date, hour, and minute in June. If you have the closest answer you
Weather Man
Pontiac Press
P. 0. Box 40
Pontiac, Michigan
Only one entry per person, please! All post cards must be in The
Anyone except Press employes and their immediate teunilion is choice and your name and address.
May 30. ——_—— =
You may turn out to be Pontiac's iments may- profit. The suggestiens| cludes the automotive industry,
banks, the city’s utilities, the City
Hall, local insurance firms, The
Pontiac Press, retail sales outlets,
and area hospitals,
* * *
On the other hand, occasionally
the educators may come up with
questions that pave the way for
suggestions, It is this give and
take from which many establish-
often lead to improvements in busi-
ness procedure.
Therefore, BIE Day is not just a
“getting acquainted" day, but one
which is designed to further the
knowledge of and progress of the
Don’t Plan Picnic
—Rain's on Way
Pienic-frustrated Pontiac resi-
dents can prepare for another blast
from the weather man. Showers
and écattered thunderstorms are
expected * late this- afternoon and
continuing tonight, low 52 to 56.
Tomorrow will be slightly warm-
er, high 60 to 64, and mostly cloudy
with. scattered showers,
The lowest temperature recorded
Pontiac, cury stood at 54, in. downtown Pontiac peeceding 8} ¢
|many businesses and industries of|a. The results ‘were heard at City Hall last night in an atmosphere
of gloom,
;_| TURNOUT DISAPPOINTS
A gathering of City Commission-
ers, officials and employes were
been on. matters they con-
sidered vital to the city,
(Continued ‘on Page 2, Col, 2)
Addresses Nation Tonight on ‘Vital’ Program
| |Eisenhower asked Congress today
_ |for a $3,865,000,000 foreign aid ap-
_ |propriation and warned that it
would be “supreme folly” to halt
or cripple the program.
| eleasetn attends 01 250 ps.
M fortance othe program to the
| American people. FROM OUR WIRE SERVICES
WASHINGTON — President
‘Eisenhower ‘sent his foreign
ald message to Capitol Hill in
advance of a nationwide tele-
(Pontiac time) to explain the Im
Sen. Mansfield of Montana, the foreign aid down to a salable ba-
sis,"’ Mansfield said in an inter-
view, “As it stands about 85 per
cent of the program has been for
military assistance and =—
“If this. were made clear ahd
the program's relationship to our
own security were emphasized, 1)!
think the American people would
der the burden.”
* * *
legislators that “it would
understand it and. willingly shoul-.
Taking note of the economy
drive in Congress to slash foreign),
aid spending, the President told the) i or to cripple them through an
overwhelming zeal. to scrimp at
their expense.”
ALREADY CUT
ipreme folly to stop these Eisenhower warned that, while
everyone -wants taxes
there should be no tax cuts at the
expense of the foreign aid .pro-
He noted that his request for |8™@™
oqent.” new funds for the 1958 fiscal year| He said: “Economic: aid*actually is in |has been cut 535: million dollars} “There is only one sound way
terms of several hundreds of*mil- | below his January budget estimate.) for us to achieve a
lions of dollars instead of the sev- |His original request was for $4,-| reduction, “That way is to sec-
eral billions usually referred to 400,000,000. coed In waging p thereby
when we talk of foreign aid,” he clay eh eee
said, adding: sccm ota ceca:
for the address from President Asks $3.8 Billion for Foreign Aid economic aid should be made in
tax tration
(Pontiac time}, and
at 10:15 p.m, (Pontiac ba
| $2,700,000 issue for enlargement -
the form of loans instead of out- _
radio: both: will earry the speedy’)
j
WASHINGTON (INS)
House Appropriations Committee
today eut two billion, 586 million
dollars from President Eisenhow-
er’s 1958 military programs, vot-
ing 33% billion to meet what it
called a “somewhat abated” Rus-
sian threat.
The committee slapped at many
phases of the administration's mil-/
itary policie# but warned that de-
fense costs must stay at a high
level ‘‘so long as present world
conditions prevail.”
Antieipating pessible criticiam
ot the size of the cut, Rep.
George Mahon (D-Tex), chair-
man of the subcommittee that
the money bill, told
ysmen: “‘We’ve dealt in a
most temperate way with the |
military budget.” |
Mahon also pointed out that the
appropriations cut does not neces-
sarily mean military spending will
be reduced in the coming fiscal
year. :
He noted that the Pentagon has
several billions of previously-ap-
propriated funds still unspent.
Much of. the maney in the bill will
be spent in future fiscal years.
INCLUDES A-CARRIER
The measure provides funds to
buy 2,735 new airplanes, includ-
ing 10] long-range B-53 jet, bomb-
ers, and 23 new ships, including a}
300 million dollar nuclear-propelled
high-speed aircraft carrier capable;
of launching supersonic Jet
fighters.
The committee cut 354 millions
from the Air Force buying plans,
but told it not to reduce the B-
62 or the ballistics missile pro-
grams,
At the same time, the lawmakers
said that some non-ballistics mis-
siles—specifically the ‘Rascal’ —
seem “of doubtful value.’ The
Rascal is a jet-propelled missile]
carried by a bomber and released
to travel some 50 to 100 miles to
a target.
* * *
The congressmen expressed con-
cern over “the apparent lack of
timely, effective and decisive ac-
tion” by Defense Secretary Charles
E. Wilson in coordinating the guid-
ed missile program and said there
is evidence some programs have
been continued even after scientific
advances made them obsolete.
REDS ‘CLOSING GAP”
The House group, whffe agreeing
that the nature and extent of a
military threat against the U. S.
and its allies appears to have
abated somewhat, warned
that the Soviets are st y “‘clos-
ing the gap" in military capability.
The committee said America is
ahead in a “nip and tuck” race
4 sTHE
a
By E. H, Sims
Why is jt that one seldom hears
insects on the lawn, such as crick-
ets, in most states, in the winter?
Where are they?
Warm weather brings various in-
forty degrees, Fahrenheit, all in-
- Many weather experts believe
that, by counting the chirps of the
black field cricket, one can actu-
ally determine the exact tempera-
ture: Try it yourself, and if you
live in as warmer Climate, perhaps
pend on the cricket. He's suppos-
edly silent above that temperature.
The Weather
§. Weather Berean Report
fF
beer §ytey, Docoming southe: an hour tonight,
___Teday in Pontise
a
ween
———
Lowest temperature preceding 8 &.m.
At 8 a&m.: Meco velocity 18 m.p.h.
y at 17:52 p.m. Direction—Goutheas'
‘Bm te feel Weertede
Menaay y at 6:04 am.
et 12:14 p.m.
y at 1-17 a.m.
The
q
fi ; ht 1a f Pe Meg Meade neg a
i 7
}
“qieote§
un fighter inventory is “probably”
committee \. ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, ,TUESDA
Billion \
2. veals a somewhat lesser immediate
capability or desire of the U.S.S.R.
to start what may well turn out to
SIGNS DRAIN BILL, -— Gov. Williams signs resentative Lloyd Anderson, both of Oakland
drain bill which will assist with drainage prob- County, Senator Garland Lane, of Genesee, and
lems in this area. Watching are, from left to Rep. A. G. Jeffries, of Detroit.
right, State Senator L. Harvey Lodge and Rep-
Hospital Bond Issue
night, several substitute methods
of making the weeded facilities
available were disconsolately men-
tioned.
* * *
All had been previously rejected
before the election as costing tax-
payers too much money.
There was gloom, too, for the
defeated sewage plant bond is-
sue.
In the face of an order by the
Michigan Water Resources Com-
mission to curb pollution of the
Clinton River, the city had pinned
its hopes on the bond issue to fi-
nance most of a proposed $3,091,000
expansion program,
DEFRAY COST
The money would have gone to
defray the cost of a new plant at
Opdyke and Auburn roads and to
improve the present plant. The
balance of the total cost would
have been made up in revenue
bonds on which voters do not have
to pass. ,
Whether ‘the -hospital vote and
father defeated proposals would
become the major questions
discussion at tonight’s City Com-
mission meeting was not immedi-
ately known..
Of the six defeated proposals,
number 3 was given the most favor
by voters.
Allowing the city to save money
through more flexible scheduling
of interest payments on the bond
issues, if they had passed, the
third proposal was defeated by an
unofficial 2,545 to 4,343 votes.
The biggest shellacking was
given to: the: lot: issue. It
was defeated a . ,
the hospital and parking lot, and
65 cents for the sewage system
enlargement.
City officials had It Never Rains —
but It Pours— __
Waterford Knows There is an $1,800 leak in the
Waterford Hall and un-
less it is stopped, officials will not
have a roof over their heads.
The all-time low dip in the treas-
ury department on the main floor
is nothing compared to the slow
drip oozing out of the ceiling on
the top floor.
Supervisor, Elmer Johnson first
spotted the leak, and ¢alled in
an expert to check the cost,
Investigation proved that que
to loose flashing, the whole tewn
hall roof will have to be
replaced. It Was fixed tempor-
arily last fall, ;
“When I took office,’’ Johnson
said, “I knew things would be a
little rough at first but I thought
at least I would have a roof over
my head.”
..Bids for the reroofing job will
be askéd in the near future —
especially if it continues to rain,
Johnson said.
Tug-of-War:
Which Tugboat
Is the Champ? WINDSOR, Ont. — A battle ‘ment of Cohen for criminal libel Chief Counters
Attack by Cohen Police Boss Parker of
LA Fights Accusations
Made on TV This is what the committee voted
to give the three services, and. the
amount of a redyction it repre-
sents in the President's request:
Army $7,239,425,000, a cut of $1,-
225,575,000; Navy $9,801,355,000,
a cut of $685,645,000; Air Force
In addition, the Defense Secre-
tary was voted $16,350,000 to oper-
ate the Defense Department super-
structure and $682,375,000 was
granted for interservice activities,
such as retirement pay.
* The euts for the Army and
Navy are net as deep a8 appear,
as the committee took $590,000,-
000 of previously, - appropriated
but unspent funds eariayKed for
housekeeping purchases and
gave them to the two services.
The Army got $400,000,000 and
the Navy $190,000,000.
Another $516,000,000 of the reduc-
tion comes gut of Army procure-
‘ment fund requests and has al-
ready been proposed by the Pres-
ident himself, Mahon agreed this
‘Twas a “paper cut’’ since the money.
probably will have to be voted in
later years, :
REBUKES AF
The committee rebuked the Air
Force for allowing what it called!
‘“‘junketing’”’ by officers in obsolete
aircraft in the name of ‘“‘profi-
ing program.
The group also charged that
service rivalry is increasing and
“is becoming so serious as to
jeopardize and delay the rate of
buildup of our military power.”
The report said it has resulted in
“added expense and waste” and
is getting completely out of con-
trél.
“A sincere and self-sacrificing
effort,"’ the committee said, ‘‘must
be made by all concerned to sub-
stitute real unification for the pres-
ent loose federation.”
A-Attack Carrier LOS ANGELES (INS) — Police |
Chief William Parker of Los An-|
geles. wheeled out three big legal)
guns today to counter the verbal
Mickey Cohen on a nationally tele-
vised show.
* * *
Parker assigned two members|
of the Intelligence Squad to go
before the Los Angeles grand:
jury today with a tape recording
of the show to seek an indict-
because of the abuse heaped on
the chief in the TV program.
He also instructed Capt. James
Hamilton, head of the intelll-
gence unit, to file a complaint
with the Federal Communica- Approved for Navy
. | WASHINGTON — The Navy attack of him by former gambler wa. given the go-ahead today by)
the House Appropriations Commit-|
tee to start building a 300-million-
dollar atomic attack carrier.
* * *
clear that it was not approving
gram to build five additional nu-
clear carriers.
* * *
should be held up until the Navy
and the shipbuilding industry dem-|
tions Commission in Washington, |
D, C., against the “Mike Wal-
lace Interviews” show which
aired Cohen’s vituperation,
And Parker pressed for action by
developed today over — of all
things — who is the real interna-
sociation, said Saturday’s race on
the Detroit River, won by the
Diesel tug Aburg of Amberstburg,,
Ont., owned by McQueen Marine,
was sponsored by the Detroit Pro-
pelior Club,
nothing to do with the competition
its own May 28 at Amherstburg.
However, officials of the De-
troit, Propellor Club claim their
race is the real international one ©
and that the Aburg is the 1957
champion,
Zeleznik said he turned over
the England trophy, symbolic of
victory, becayse of -“threatened He said his organization had/
and, in fact, will hold a race of) the district attorney’s office, in
New York City on a complaint
filed with it by Hamilton seeking
‘lindictment of Cohen on charges of
criminal libel.
* * *.
Hamilton is in the East on what
‘Parker has described as a ‘‘va-
cation.” The chief denied he sent
gram, in which Cohen described
Parker in terms which cannot be
printed, will be played back for
the criminal complaints of the Lox
would then be up to the commit- tee to decide whether the full jury should hear it,
Realtors Not Worried
DETROIT — Leading indus- trial realtors think U.S. business
the race, Detroit has} will remain at its present level
sponsored the last two. ~* next year. The realtors, polled at
Zelemik said the plates will be| ‘a meeting of the Society of In-
affixed to a new trophy to be; dustrial Realtors here, also pre-
presented to the May 28 winner. | dicted a continuation of the
“He can’t Claim the plates,” he} movement from cities to suburbs
seid. “We put thern on.” next year. ee
'
-But hospital officials:
« |warned that the interior of the
Celebrities, Bowery Types Mingle
wu|Mixed Crowd Hears Billy :
alt Hi i i i
lopment of Sylvank rate their ability ‘‘to produce |
acceptable ship in an efficient
economical manner."
Police Hold Two Men
in Handling Stolen Goods
Pontiac police are holding two
men for investigation of receiving
stolen lawnmowers from two em-
ployes of a local department store.
Warrants will be sought today
against Charles E. Freeman, 59,
of 276 Chandler St., and Louis M.
Graham, 45, of 329 W. Wilson Ave.
Detectives - Robert Wachal and
men who were employed at Waite’s
department store. Y, MAY’ 21, 1057 |
$15,801,720,000, a cut of $669,280,-|
000,
ciency flying.” It ordered a cut of |
500,000 hours in the projected fly-)
the Navy’s more ambitious pro-|
| Deny New Trial |
in Little Slaying Convicted Killer of Lake
Orion Tot, 3, to Petition
State Supreme Court
Howard Wayne Moore, convicted
lof the slaying last summer of
three - year - old Martha Little,
daughter of his Lake Orion neigh-
bor, yesterday was denied a new
Circuit Court trial.
* * *
Moore's new attorney, Milton
Henry of Pontiac, indicated he will
petition ‘the State Supreme Court
for permission to appeal the case.
Moore, 25, was found guilty
of beating the girl to death last
duly 27. A jury convicted him of
first-degree murder and Moore
was sentenced to a life term at
State Prison of Southern Michi-
gan,
Circuit Judge George B. Hart-
rick yesterday ruled that introduc-
tion of lie detector test results as
evidence were not prejudicial to
his trial. Henry claimed it was.
Judge Hartrick pointed out the
test was introdticed in Moore's de-
fense to bolster an insanity plea,
and not by the prosecution to prove
his guilt,
* * *
that Moore himself requested the
jtest, and then failed five key ques-
tions in which he denied involve-
ment in the crime,
Scandinavia Gets
an Extra Dose
of Royal Visitors
COPENHAGEN .w— Scandina-
via got a double dose of royal visi-
tors today,
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince
Philip arrived in
aboard their royal yacht Britan-
nia for a three-day state visit to!
Denmark and a few days of vaca-
tion after.
A Dutch naval squadron brought
Queen Juliana and Prince Bern-
hard into Stockholm, also for a
three-day visit.
* * *
| In both ports guns boomed
salutes, jets screamed overhead
\ and thousands packed the water-
side and the streets te cheer. The Copenhagen,
|
But in including that sum in the bright blue sky above Juliana and.
1958 Defense Department appro- Stockholm was considerably more)
priation bill, the committee made cheery than the biting wind and
‘dull gray overhead that awaited
\the British monarch.
* ® *,
It was the third official visit of
ithe year for Elizabeth. Earlier
The larger program, it said, she hati captivated Lisbon and) ‘Paris.
Despite an attack of lumbago
which left him wan and tired, King
Frederik IX and Queen Ingrid +
boarded their royal barge to bring
the visiting British couple ashore
and then drove with them in a
horse - drawn carriage through
crowds
‘Amali Castle.
McNamara, Potter Split
Mineral Subsidy Vote
senators split yesterday in the 65-17
vote by which the Senate amended
a supplemental money bill to pro-
vide for a 30 million dollar min-
erals subsidy program.
Sen. McNamara (D) voted in
favor of the amendment while
Sen. Potter (R) voted against the
measure, During the trial, it was testified |
to Frederik’s.
WASHINGTON W — Michigan's ". j
% 1
BIRMINGHAM — Birmingham
City Commissioners are fairly sure
of a rather heavy program on
June 10,
At last night's meeting, public
hearings on the street oiling pro-
gram assessment rolls were sched-
uled for that date. A special item
arising from this is the reclassi-
fication of Shepherdbush , Lane,
iseal. It has been changéed to light
‘oil treatment necessitating the
establishment of an independent
assessment roll and district.
Also. scheduled at last night's
meeting for a June 10 hearing
is the necessity of an access
drive on Woodward: avenue te
accommedate tenants of a store
to be erected there. The request
was made by Charles Van Horn
| Inc.
| No action was taken on the pro-
posed closing of Buckingham road
j between the railroad tracks and
'Eton road. It was referred back
‘for the city manager for his study
land report. Also referred to the ‘city manager was the request of}.
Clarence W. Blenman to permit a
triangular section of Eton Park to
‘be ‘used by him for driveway
| purposes.
* * *
Damages totaled $800 in a chain
collision on W. Maple avenue yes-
terday. While officer LaMar Gil-
christ was writing a ticket in the
police car, the vehicle was struck
from the rear by one driven by
Catherine Zabriskie of 1760 Pine
Rd.
Miss Zabriskie told police she
was having trouble with her wind-
shield wiper and saw neither the
vehicle nor its flashing red signal.
When she applied her brakes, the
car slid forward on the wet pave-
ment. Officer Gilchrist suffered a
‘severely strained neck. Damages
|were $450, $250 to the Zabriskie car
and $30 to the stopped motorist.
* * *
The Altrusa Club will meet for
a dessert-coffee at the home of
i\Marion Goodale, Cranbrook,
‘Bloomfield Hills, on Monday at 7
p.m.
Mrs. Opal Cunningham, former |
governor of Fifth District, Altrusa
'International, Inc., will come from
Detroit to conduct workshops for
committee members and officers-/
jelect.
i q
* * *
Regular meeting will be H@ld at
8 p.m. today in the Community!
House of Pythian Sisters, Temple
‘4. Among those Birmingham
jmembers of Sigma Gamma Assn.
jwho will help demonstrate a
imusele testing machine developed’
by the Detroftt Orthopaedic Clinic’
Weather fo Decide
f A-Tests Go Off
ATOMIC TEST SITE, Nev, @—
Observers awaited another weath-
er report today to determine
|whether the much postponed first
shot of the summer atomic test
series will finally be set off to
morrow.
The blast was called off for the
sixth straight day yesterday be-
cause of 150-mile-an-hour jet
stream winds in the upper atmos-
phere, Officials of the Nevada
Test Organization said the winds
would cause “a questionable situ-
ation with regard to blast effects
in the afea embracing Indian
Springs Air Force Base, Las Ve-
gas and Boulder City.” i
The Day in Birmingham | |
Heavy Program Awaited. —
by Board for June 10th . - 4
:
will be Blenda Isbey, Mrs, Robert *
Brandon, Mrs, Maxwell E. Fead
Mrs. George Russell Il, F
Clement Penrose Jr., Mrs. Don A.
Cargill, Mrs. Malcolm Lovell and
Mys. Richard Kern. The demon- .
stration will be one of the features
in the clinie booth at the southern
Oakland County Health Fair. at”
Northland Center beginning Thurs- *
* *
originally scheduled for oil mat and} day
Kansas-Missouri
Tornado Kills 34
(Continued From Page One)
Heights shopping center as if it had been bulldozed,
* * *
J, M. Kaesner, one’of the first to reach it, said:
“The place was filled with peo- ple who were moaning and cry- ing. Tt was just as bad as if a bomb had hit out there.’
destroyed or heavily damaged at
Rantoul, just east of Ottawa.
Davis and killed Davis, his wife
f sf z § 2
3 * . 33 F 4 Y 4 Gc
H az F3
STER CENTER
‘The Red Cross set up disaster
i 7 q
Ai:
SEE
A
- wan at with her ine
||matched her ars. gs e
Fs
g z
SPaTaF fi Br
-—
=
ra i EE 2 9
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3
THE PONTIAC. PRESS TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1957
} in
eesesessecssecssoococccsoccuccoseossoeeesesessleichermon Is Beaten
2. ( Established in 1898 :
: Farmer-Snover’ 2itman ‘ered tc,be the fr : ~ FUNERAL HOME = 8/opening after the long winter’ He : 160 W. Huron FE 2:9171 31s ond ten fond a
3a PARKING ON PREMISES — 3ciction campaign worker already YT erPTTTPPTTTTTTTTTITTTTT TTT ter on a tree,
|
The Airline that’s
going places... FASTER!
73 VISCOUNT W orld’s First Jet-Prop Airliner
NEW YORI “THE MICHIGAN SPECIAL”
Lv. Flint 9:15 am (EST) Ar. New York 12:17 pm (EDT)
La apical AIRLINES
semper _ Milford Banker
Dies Suddenly Norman W. Ball,
Recently Elected Head
of Banking Group
MILFORD — A member of one
of Milford's oldest families died
here suddenly early Sunday morn-
ing.
Funeral — serv- -
ice for Norman
W. Ball, 57, of 325
» Union St. will be
q Funeral Home in|
Recéntly’ elect-
+ ed president of!
“TRF the Oakland
BALL County Bankers!
Assn., Mr. Ball was affiliated with|
the Milford Branch of the Com-|
|for the last 15 years.
He was born and raised in Mil-|
ford as were his parents Mr. and)
Mrs. Norman Ball Sr.
* * *
He was active in many com-
munity affairs and at the time of)
his death was treasurer of the|
Teen Canteen and a member of
the Ernest Oldenburg Post No. 216.
He is survived by his wife Flor-
ence; a daughter, Mrs. Donald
Melzer of Milford; two grandchil-
dren and a sister, Mrs. Gladys
Brenholtz of Flint. Burial will be
at Oakgrove Cemetery with Rev.
Robert Worgess, pastor of the
Methodist Church officiating. Deaths in Pontiac Area MRS. MILDRED HENDERSON
NORTH BRANCH — Service for
Mrs. Mildred Henderson, 63, of
7 \North Branch who died Sunday,| will be held from the Blackburn
Funeral Home at 2 p.m, Wednes-
day with burial] in Kinston Ceme-
tery.
Mrs. Henderson is survived by
three daughters, Mrs. Dorland
‘Stonburgh, Mrs. Oscar Goss and
|Mrs. Harry Baker, all of North
| Brantch: two sisters, Mrs. Lawr-
ence Buckner of Clifford and Mrs.
Florence Chappel of Marlette.
GLENN H. HOYT
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
Service for Glenn H. Hoyt, 75, of
'2486 Cass Lake Rd., will be at
2 p.m. Wednesday from the Pursley
Funeral Home, Pontiac,’ with the
Rev. Paul T. Hart of the First
Methodist Church officiating. Buri-
al will be in Oak Hill Cemetery.
Mr. Hoyt died Saturday at Pontiac
Genera] Hospital] Annex.
DOROTHY V. JOHNS
MARLETTE — Service for Mrs.
pang National Bank of Pontiac Dorothy V. Johns, 42, of Detroit,
who died Saturday following an
automobile accident here, will be
held fron Marsh Funeral Home at
2 p.m. Wednesday with burial in
Evergreen Cemetery, Brown City.
Mrs. Johns is survived by her
mother, Mrs. Charles L. Rogers
of Clifford, three sons, Donald,
Robert and James, all of Detroit,
and one brother Charles Jones,
also of Detroit.
CHARLES A. KOTT
SOUTHFIELD — Service for
Charles A. Kott, 72,- 21150 Duns
Scotus Rd., will be at 10 a.m. Wed-
nesday from St. Michael Catholic
Church here, with burial in Holy
Sepulchre Cemetery. Mr. Kott, a
retired building contractor, had
CHOOSE FROM PRESENT STOCK ... GET IMMEDIATE DELIVERY... SAVE MONEY
We have an excellent selection of Mercurys in i idoch 0. wide vortuly &f dy Wows tied scleral! cay
get immediate delivery on many models. And when you choose your Big MI from the models we have
on display_or in stock_we are ready to pass big savings on fo you. And this is just the first way
you save! Mercury's record-breaking sales enable us to give you a generous
Fen i Yow Ge hotier chars. yee See 2 OS Oe Mery Yen
_MERCUR Batata hen 2 Soh
CENTRAL Li AO Wat Pike Stet allowance for your present
eet ee | Sister, at SIMMS ~ Here ive a Few
BONUS—One-Day—SP! CIALS
TOMORROW —9 A. M. to 6 P.M.
| WEDNESDAY
ONLY & SUPER SPECIALS lived in Southfield the ae 10
years.
He is survived by his wife, Rose;
four daughters, Mrs, Leonard Dett-
loff, Mrs. Frank Karber, Mrs,
Karl Standley and Mrs. John
Green; three brothers, and one
SCOTT J. McKINNEY iz
LAPEER — Service for Scott'E
J. McKinney, 90, of 207 N. Mon-
roe St., who died this morning at!
his home, will be held at 3:30)
p.m. Thursday from the Baird)
Funeral Home with burial in Mt.
Hope Cemetery.
Mr. McKinney is survived by his
wife Clara,
MRS. CHARLES L. ROCKWELL
Service for Mrs, Charles L.
{Atiia May) Rockwell, 88, of 65 BARGAIN BASEMENT
Genuine ‘CANNON’ FIRST QUALIT
at Below Maker's Wholesale Price!
Franklin Blvd. will Be at 1 p.m. - ge Rie - pm. Full 20x40 Inch
Siple Chapel. The Rev. Paul T. CANNON PLAID Hart, her pastor, will officiate,
with ‘burial following in Perry Mt. |
Park Cemetery. =
Mrs. Rockwell was born here on BATH TOWELS
May 22, 1868 to John and Anna
Yerkes Harrison and married in|E 59¢ Cc 1893 to the late Charles L. Rock-| Val .
well, mayor of Pontiac about 25 aiue
oe oes ber of the First ‘ was a mem
MATCHING re
Methodist Church and the DAR. WASH CLOTHS ........... 10 She jeaves a daughter, Mrs. Don-
ald C. Peruchi First quality Cannon plaid towels in
blue, green or sun gold colors. Super
absorbent quality, big 20 x 40 inch size.
Gannon Dish Towels
day morning after an illness of)
several years. =
MRS, LYDIA ANNE STARKEY
Saginaw St.,
night at her home, will be held
at 3 p.m. Friday from the Beulah
Nazarene Church with burial in!
Stiles Cemetery. Baird Funeral)
Home made the arrangements.
four daughters and one son, Mrs. |
Burt McClellan of Flint, Mrs. Herb |
Watz, Mrs, Arnold Smith and Mrs. |
Theron Smith and Vernon all of | a stripe designs. :
eeeee Poeeccccccccccccecoecesooesoooocccooces
Gay, Colorful TERRY CLOTH
| Pot Holders
eo — J
Lapeer. Fifteen grandchildren, 3 10¢ €
great grandchildren and eight | Value
great-great-grandchildren. | EACH
Y= Durable terry cloth in gay stripes.
hands against painful burns.
2nd FLOOR SPECIALS
WASHABLE FIBRE—Complete With Roller
| Window Shades WHITE—IVORY—TAN
Regular $1.00 Value
Ta ALBERT J. WHITSTOCK |
LAPEER — Service for Albert |
J. Whitstock, 63, who died at a &
Lapper Hospital on Monday, | ; Protects
burial in Stiles Cemetery.
Mr. Whitstock is survived by,
three brothers and two sistes, Fred |
of Lapeer, Herman of Oxford, Har- |
ley of Imlay City, Mrs. Ralph |
Fitch of Lapeer, and Mrs. Carl |
Banier of Birch Run.
Deaths Elsewhere LOS ANGELES w — The com- ,
poser of “Do You Ever Think of | it
Me?” Harry D. Kerr, 76, died |B |
yesterday at his home after a/|
|
i B
‘Raymond V. Solwold and Elmo F.
Burgess
Bloomfield police may seek an
additional charge against Swartz- |E long illness.
As a New York City attorney
35 years ago, he prepared incor-
aaa a = =
custody of
Rolice in front of the Oakland
County Jail.
Jack Carroll Swartzbaugh, 23, of
5240 Pine Knob Rd., Clarkston,
was en route to the county jail
with the township police to be held
for investigation of breaking and
entering about 2:50 a.m.
Fifty-five minutes after he es-
caped from ,Bloomfield Township
Officers R. Farrow and O. Grieve,
he was captured in a vacant area
between Bagley and Brush streets
near the railroad tracks by local
police,
The a officers were
Hal B, Mercer, John D. Pleasant,
vo baugh today, accusing him of es-
WEDNESDAY ict tes Pie,
REMINGTON Shaver —
Cut any width ~ te a while
} wait. Strong, protected egntans j dampness wit posse ; tee ‘base.
i Please br: im your correct meastrements; COSCO OSSEOCOOSSESOOSCOCCCSOOOSSESEOOE OC OOECCS
Ist Quality HARDWOOD
a oe so care : ‘ |member. Born in 1 S$
Calif. he was active in music Toilet eat
* | since the age of 15. He leaves his ith with CHROME FITTINGS
—- 5.95 ERIE, Pa. —Dr, Otto F.| > i - 3 66 Behrend, 84, of three broth- atue bd
ers who in 1898 founded the Ham- Complete with rustproof fittings. Easy to install yourself. Limit 1.
urer of pndsgein > os a seeeceesecesesseoeoeeoeoseeeseeooeseoeseseeses
member of the board ot directors =) Genuine “RUBBERMAID” 1955, died Monday. He was'
born in Coeslin, Germany. 28x28 INCHES
Shower Stall
RUBBER MAT $2.98 a7
Value
Prevents slipping accidents in the shower,
Rib design for non-slip footing. Ideal
‘3 for homes, clutis, motels, hotels, hospitals
pon White, green or pink discontinued
colors.
SSHSHOSHSSHSSSSSHOSSHSHSHOSTHSSSESESESESESSEOSESE
Extra Heavy ALUMINUM
2-0t. Sauce Pan $3.98 Value
122 gs 2. -quart all aluminum sauce pan with
safe grip handle, large knobbed cover—
ag cool to the touch. Sealed beaded
es.
MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS
NYLON Heels and Toes
‘Ladies’ ANKLETS.
a Pairs 700
English ribbed ankiets of mercerized
cotton. Irregulars of 49c ankiets,
F White only in sizes 9 to 10%.
Papp leeceeeecososcococcecesesesesessse “ee eee
FS LACE TRIMS 4-Gore Style
LADIES’
199 Full-Slips
e $1.59 Values Sizes 34 to 44
TEE Sere “TO
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1957
\ )- 4
NEED A NEW BED? Mattresses at Miller’s are always. best
values by leading manufacturers. We al-
ways have some close-outs at Extra Spe-
cial Savings consistant with quality. Our
location ‘and lower overhead saves you
money on dependable home furnishings.
You Can Save Safely Here!
Our 21st Year of Greater Value Giving
Open Friday and Monday Until 9 P.M.
Closed Wednesday Afterrioons
Miller Furniture | “144 Oakland Avenue
jase PARKS FREE DELIVERY
1 don’t know a better way of being
a friend to so many as to give them
so much for so little.
That's why my J. W. Dant has
so many friends!
WORRIED OVER DEBTS?
w Ww St. ot Be ee en see
mncHios CREDIT ft and arrange fer payments you can
regardless of how much or how many vou owe.
NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED
ONE PLACE TO PAY
Member American Association of Credit Counsellors
“Let 9 Years of Credit Counselling Experience Assist You”
Hours: Daily 9 to 5. Wed. and Sat. 9 to 1. Evenings by App't.
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS
WU. S. Risks Prestige in Middle Basttm nae
|
i
| PARIS (INS)—The United States! tige and influence im the Arab
.is taking a calculated risk in back-| werld ride with young King Hus-
‘ing the governments of Iraq, Saudi] sein of Jordan.
Arabia and Jordan in the Middle) «44 orican prestige in the whole
East.
| The governments of the three| Area.” a a .
kingdoms have not won the hearts hd loses control or even if he is
of the peoples. President Gamal), -cassinated like his grandfather,
Abdel Nasser of Egypt has. | Andutlah, U. S. prestige will go | Some diplomatic experts go so ‘with him.
| far as to claim that U.S, pres- ‘Now that the U. S. has en-
JUNIOR EDITORS
(ANIMAL QUIZ
___|
Abeve Oakland ig Teeter
QUESTION: How long does a turtle live?
than any other animal with a backbone.
Their family tree can be traced back 175 million years. During)
that time, dinosaurs, mastodons and other enormous beasts have come}
and gone.
For a fellow without teeth, slow afoot and eT, in danger of
ending up as a bow! of soup, turtles show amazing ability to live to a
ripe old age. Some varieties, especially the mammoth-sized sea rovers,
cousins and reach a length of seven to eight feet and a weight of 1,500
.. | pounds.
Turtles, even the snapping kind, usually mind their own business
and attack with beak-like jaws only when provoked. Maybe this is why
|they live so long. They are too slow to be used as beasts of burden
‘but on tropical islands in the Indian Ocean, children sometimes climb
‘aboard for the ride. They coax the lumbering animal forward by
\dangling a banana just out of reach of his mouth.
x * *
your animal collection.
| (Today’s $10 Junior Editors award goes to M. Kato, Honolulu. Send
|in your idea in care of this newspaper. Violet Moore Higgins, AP News-
jfeatures.)
TOMORROW: Does an elephant ever forget? 41% 8S. Saginaw
—— wa csee es
* Le
Pontiac State Bank
GIVES YOU ALL _—— _______ i CAS eee A I
no extra cost.
1. LOW RATE
+2. LIBERAL TERMS
3. FREE LIFE INSURANCE
WHY TAKE LESS.... When you finance your car
home improvements ; personal loans
FREE LIFE INSURANCE PROTECTION is included in 8
the Pontiac State Bank Plan when you finance a.
new or used car. It is Paid-in-Full protection that
‘covers any balance remaining if the borrower
happens to pass on-during the period of the loan.
This protection is included in all installment loans at
| PONTIAC STATE BANK COMPLETE BANKING SERVICE © |{
_ MAD OFFICE ie Pa at oe La
by Supporting Three Arab Kingdoms
‘INTERESTS DIVIDED iteach-
tered the fray, the people it backs
must succeed." icrossroads beteen Europe take teaching jobs in the other
Arab states, Among other things,
they teach the children’ the great
Nasser vision of an Arab empire,
the Nasser hatred of the old colon-
ial powers and the Nasser dream
of power through control ¢
Asia, RCA COLOR TV
Sale n
SWEET , RADIO TV
422 WoW
U. S. officials admit the danger
But one said: 4
“Progress had been made. It's
not over yet, by a longshot. The
danger remains, but things are
not as bad as they were.”
The thinking is that a number of
factors have gone into the im-
provement process.
* * *
First was the Baghdad Pact
which linked Irag, a member of
the Arab League, to the West and
against the Russians. With Egypt
and Syria, leaders of the drive for
pan-Arab nationalism, moving ever
closer to the Soviet orbit with the
Iraqi adhesion to the regional de
fense pact was healthy from the
western viewpoint.
Israelis claim their blitz vic-
tory over Egypt in the Sinai last
fall was the most important ele-
ment in reversing the trend
among the Arabs, They claim
that without their victory Saudi
Arabia and Jordan: would not
dared to have balked at RevEms
leadership.
Americans put the Eisenhower
doctrine and the mission of its
salesman, James Richards, high
on the list. They say this gives
the Arab states a place to turn
and eventually may prove attrac-
tive to Arab peoples, too,
Then there is a natural division
of interests between the oil-pro-
ducing countries, like Saudi Arabia
and Iraq, and the non-producers,
like Egypt. Nasser has written that
the oil of Arabia should be used as
a weapon against the western “‘im-
perialists."’ Iraq wants its oil rev- TURQUOISE Dinnerware Set...
it’s yours FREE with the 1957 FRIGIDAIRE Appliance
of your choice—this week only! We're celebrating,
“Frigidaire Week" with one of the biggest gift offers
in years. Here's a strikingly styled, heatproof dinner-
ware set in beautiful Turquoise Blue that you'll be .
proud to use for any table setting. It serves eight
with ease. You get: 8 cups and saucers, 8 each of
dinner, dessert, soup ond salad plates. Plus one
serving platter, vegetable bowl, sugar and creamer.
And as a special bonus: a 16-piece matching set of
juice and iced-tea glasses. A real big-family set!
ANSWER: Turtles have been waddling around on this earth longer’
live for hundreds of years. A gteat tortoise on the island of St. Helena} @ question for the future.
is said to have been romping around when Napoleon was a Prisoner]
there. Water turtles are more active than their smaller, clumsier land
|
| FOR YOU TO DO: Mount this picture on cardboard, color it with | your crayons, cut out carefully and put together as directed. Save for enugs to build up its country and
improve living standards, King
Saud wants his oil revenues to run
his government and keep up with
the enormous expense of financing
j|his huge family. °
Whether the new offensive to | Telephone FE 5-9474 CLAYTON'S Furniture &
Appliances
break Naseer’s influence in the
three Arab states will succeed is
Nasser is well dug-in. Educated 3065 Orchard Lake Road Free Parking Keego Harbor
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1 | i
Corp., which controls a national
clothing, cosmetic, and jewelry
line, has announced it will award
a $1,200 gift certificate to an honor
student at Pontiac High School,
p.m., Eastern
“annual
‘MARKETS (Drive Falters
last.day on which un-|
jairline may render service. All
“jeall the trucking company which
. |Tangements \ y
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1957.
eral huge stones into his front
Then, the more he thought
about it, the more he realized
a
RUBBLE IN “ASHES” — It looks like Charlie
Ash will have to find another ax to grind, after
six teenagers side-swiped his living room and *
crashed into his teol shed. Charl
je has started a road. one-man ‘ax-grinding’ campaign with the Oak-
land County road commission to protect residents
on the three 90-degree angle’ curves on Wixom ‘Drop Rim’ Inventor Fights Speed De mo nr
that “someone might get hurt, jhaving trouble pulling flat tires off|tra rim on tires, This contribution, =. “+e he hauleg them all awajrims after they had been removed |to the world has made Ash “a paft«
from the wheel, Charlie designed|of every car on the today."*.
Years ago, when people were|the solid wheel—eliminating the ex-| pa _
f
Horowitz Named
witz, president of the General Bank
of New Haven, Conn., has been
eins
| aor
e
€
2
Ow
Pentiac Press Phete
Under the plan, a shipper re-
ceives only one bill, even though
two trucking companies and the
the local merchant has to do is
in turn completes all other ar-
Pay for Maintenance, NEW YORK — How do you “Div.” for dividends. The entry is read the stock market pages of ‘‘1'sG."" Here again, the digit and
Let's follow U. S. Steel on a
Officials of the Ideal Country sample day, April 30, 1957. The “G" is a footnote reference to an
On the extreme lefthand col-
| date, U. S. Steel’s highest price ,
was 73', ($73.50 a share) and its
Under the columns “Open,”
\“High” and ‘‘Low’’ one reads that |
ithe opening price—the first of the
been done in the subdivision.|day—was $64 a share; the highest| shareholder. The $1.50 in divi-
They were told the township |Price that day was $64.37'2 a share dends for U. S. Steel was paid 75 . and the lowest price was $63.62% a} ay
share
This information is given by the!
Under “Sales in 106s’ one
finds out that 15,600 shares of
U, 8S. Steel changed hands on the
market that day. The figure is
156 which, multiplied by 100, lowest price was 57'4 (857.25 a |
* that the stock closed for .,. ioc the
y at the price of 63% ($63.75| Vuh Is better than your money
that the ‘net change” from the
previous day's closing price was
“*.54"—which in fractions of a dcl-
‘lar means the stock went dowh
More information about U. S.
Steel is -given under the column, ifraction is just shorthand for dol-
lars and cents—it mean $1.50. The
jexplanation at the bottom of. the
|page reading “Declare or paid this
\year.”" In a nutshell, you have
been told that U. S. Steel paid, or)
declared it would pay, $150 a
share on its stock up to that date
this year.
| YOUR PIECE
A dividend is your piece of a
company's profits paid to you as a
cents at atime in the first two
“quarters’’—three month periods—
of the year, If business remains
good and the company continues
\its present dividend rate, it would
lpay $3 per share for the year,
iclose to a 5 per cent return—
draws in a savings bank. Roads Goo Potls Market Page a Riddle?
Here Are Clues to Solving It
and dividend payments stack up?
Has the price of the stock fluctu-
ated widely or has it remained
fairly steady? Has the price shown
a gradual growth over the years?
Have dividend payments bern reg-
ular? Have any been omitted re-
cently?
(Continued Tomorrow) | VALUABLE
FACTS ON
“Dividends Over the
Years”
a basic guide for
common stock
investment
Clip and Mail This
Coupon é for your FREE copy of
pars ee Perr
Own your own share of
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WATLING,
LERCHEN & CO.
716 Pontiac State Bank Bidg.
FE 4-2895
Se oe
Exchange other leading
exchanges
News in Brief
Gerald Cox, 23, of 605 Hendrie
St., Royal Oak, charged with con-
minor, yesterday demanded an
Justice Fletcher L. Renton, who/|
|set examination date at May 24,
jand returned Cox to the Oakland
‘County Jail with bond set at $500. ' j j
Robert A. Bailey, of GMC Truck
'& Coach in Pontiac, is one of the
special General Motors personnel
who is undergoing an intensive
10-week training program in indus-
trial uses of ‘radioactive isotopes.
mentals was started last Monday
at the GM _ Institute in Flint. The
trainees will attend a. course of
lectures and experiments at GM's
Technical Center in Warren, fol-
The course is planned to give
the men a wellrounded background
in radio isotope uses so their di-
visions can evaluate proposed ap-
plication of radioactive materials
to manufacturing and processing
problems, Five other divisional
engineers join Bailey.in the course. R l C
LP . e e _
Grains to Ease roo in Mixed Deals . DETROIT PRODUCE By REBA HEINTZELMAN =
\ The f rises, reported by the The man instrumental in design-|yard for protection. CHICAGO uf — Rain again had|Boresu. of” Markets covers sales of} NEW YORK ® — The stocking the ‘“drop-rim” bed, is locally grown produée of No. 1 and fancy| F ing rop-rim” type wheel, a dominant influence on grain fu- grades only, brought to the Parmer’s|Market’s upward drive faltered @5/having a hard time keeping them
tures at the Chicago board of trade Markets by growers and sold by them prices were mixed in early trading out of his living room.
men tracts opened cl tolapeien a* EBS: Fruits | Tt sing issues showed a hodge ap ample be “f n con 0} close P ‘spiea, ateei ; “\figure in the automotive industry,
Monday’s closes, but prices eased|No. 1, 430-800 bu.” Swesle Bed. /podge of small plus and minus!) .. with his wife, Claire, on a _back despite reports of heavy over-| VEGETABLES MISC. Asparagus, No. /S/ZNS. Many pivotal stocks were 90-degree angle curve on the two-
night rains in the winter wheat-|t' 1-200 ‘bu. Carrota, topped. No» {| unchanged. year old blacktopped Wixom road, growing areas. There was also|!35-1,75 bu. Celery Root. No, 1 200) The opeaing was fairly active | near Milford rain in the corn and soybean|fiorse Radish, No. i, 1.00-1.26 pk. basket.| Dut once the initial blacks were °
regions where planting has been poser doce yrs = Guten. disposed of the trading pace Six different times, speeding
atoet BBS, Ne Sete ores tt] Ste wan stret analysts said| tre, beviad scream Go “hab o. 1, me t ysts rm, ac :
aa ——. patched a i 15-05 To oe fare mm pion gg ge the market's strong advance has! croft” lawn, into barns, sign
Cceracts aA tai imreee [ES Rep masa Wie et |towm technical signe of “tpping| pests, tenons aad. tress, Some 0 dos. behs. Radishes, “No. 1/out’’ recen er a| have lucky, ve
at epee be wtews and seyeeeen. ao ne ne thoes string of new 1957 highs over the been hurt.
Near the end of the first hour box. Rhubarb, hotho ney, 1.40 -dos.| past week and a half. It was time old style wheat was % lower to %|0chs: Ne. 1’ 100-1 38" doe, bens.” Rhw- for tha soectet te ver look and|, O” ® foggy night this week, =~ barb, outdoor, Ne. 1, 85-96 doz. behs. ’ teenagers driving approximately 65 higher, May $2.18; new style wheat Tomatoes, hothouse, No. 1, 3.75 6-Ib.|listen,"’ remarked another. miles an hour, missed the sharp
was unchanged to % lower, July a A rise in the U. S. Treasury's :
$2.09%; corn was % to % higher,|monerd Won 1” 356-360 ‘ba, Sorrel, Short-term borrowing costs, stop-/“UrYS: jumped off the road, plowed
$1.31%: 2.00-2.60 bu. Turnip, No. 1, 2.86-3.00 bu.|ping the do { the up 73 feet of lawn, tore open the May $1.31%; oats were % higher ping wntrend 0: past 4 No. 1, 1.50-2 . Spinach, No, 1,| k Ash living room and smashed to % lower, May 69%; rye was %| LETTUCE AND SALAD GREENS: Let.|four weeks, was one background shed.
tos lower, May $118: soybeans|ie ist fetes tk, {oogge|tem. There was litle in the way| were hurt, and one of the were unchanged to % higher, May'}.00 bu. 4 + Bo. 3, 2°) of major news to change investor we art,
$2.39%, and lard was unchanged) BOOS: Large, 11.$0-12.00 20-dos, case; outlook. young peomie genplan to 5 cents a hundred pounds lower, et a long time frac
May $12.52. eacnuis meas New York Stocks tures of the right leg. Forecasts ere seniors DE: May 20. ‘APi ~ Ett (Late M Quotations) Ash, a highway construction
growing areas continued un-|7,0.3°, Detroit: “ engineer, claims that there are
certainty as to the effects of the" fe: Orage &, jambe 31-39, 40mm, Tikees is” int ne ae three very dangerous 90-degree
heavy rains of the past month Or large 33-36. "td «20a; enue, lanes 8: Allied ae He it Tela T 7 Soa curves on the Wixom read. Peo- | , ; ~ Strs .. U7 Int Tei & Te :
130. wtd avg 30; 27, s. . = vere cme eine factors im Grace 8 are 30.32 wid Ar at “ Allis Chal ... 39-4 isi cre Coal .. 0) ,| ple unfamiliar with the smooth
. ne: . 5 2
Cone see lerceeetc bites [an ee ee eee eee ee oe oe ee A . Checks 24-71, wid avg 24%. Am Cyan... 63.7. Kennecott. ...113.6| on the gas,” and when Grain Prices Whites: Grade A jumbo 36: extra|Am Gas&Ei 39.1 Kimb Cik .... 443 they come to the turns, are un- cascsee @ large 29-32; large 21%4-31; medium 2.4m M & Fay 38-4 Kresge, 88°... 26.8 p | Seewen: a A. jumbo 34: extra.dm Motors .. 65 Lehn & P ... 245| able to keep their speeding cars CHICAGO, May 21 (AP) — Opening ; : | erm: . |tasee, 31-31%; large 21-31; medium oa bom BH Gas ... 88 Glass... 73) under control. o
wn Se See tS! ieeebet ennet Mich Dustrteutive domeng|am Bed) ...:. 383 Kee My 2. O48 a4 re er ] eee Lockh Aire ... 45.17) BP cE an. ga Sg ate OA Mama BEE Ae OY Creme ronda and Wine 'p seevenehe y ” . 7 Ai ry oe 23 w al ‘
Ones > eee) Rye — BUTTER Am Toe... 3) Pane aa i17jom and Burns roads, agree with
July. 200% May... 119%! CHICAOG May 1 AP? Butter Am Viscose .. 302 Loy & Nash . 774 Ash that there have been many Sept. |... 2.12% July 119 | steady. receipts 648,000; wholesale buying|anec Wt Gi. se. MACK TIE ----30-1) Anse W & C.. 16 idents at these lo- Dec 216% Bept. 9... 1.31% | Prices un to % higher: $3 seers larmes” ot. ang MOg.D Sus --. 2e2/Unnecessary acc a Gene Moreh 2.1% Des. 2010 |BA 60; 08 a 90 B 66%: 89 C 85; carsiarmour & Co 141 ever gpl * Jp.3 cations, due to inadequate warn-
May AM July vee. 28.08) Equs ‘about ‘steady: receipts 25,000: | Atchis a “ 3 ee a Pa 344 ing signs. .
A enseoss 13% Capt... 4 poongpee ag eB ee ee sas cee jan Cat. Line 444 Mpls Hon oe The first few times after the
eee Es ‘SC mediums 34% standards 21%: dirties/avco Mig .., 69 uae. M&M... 74 Ashes’ had unwelcome visitors
en | 38%: current receipts 26%. | Balt & : 48.1 Mont Ward .|_ 371 Miss the curve, Charlie hauled sev-
CHICAGO POTATOE |Bemeuse “0. GS Met Pe + 2
SHOP HERE | ,CHICAGO, May 20 ‘AP) a potatoes! Beth Steel”. «1:1 Murrey Cp... 397 c eld: arrivals t. treck 61; total US. Bes ait, ++ $04 Net Bise |... 384
Sunday 15: rhame Hy They
mancnnnnwnnmmnn BL suality five pouitry up to 10 om cre,M M3. 284 Parte De... 326, Near Williams Lake jot daily newspaper?
Jodent Tooth Brushes freer) brotsrs or teyers atr3ss teen ORME Be Pee. } Regular $1.00 4 tb 21-27% tes 14 Ibs) 34: (3%- | Cities Sve 3 pr ce . j ’ ba S | Clar poe zer 85.2)
2 for 69* qutartst quiet: Receipts Night end ade-\Cumaz ise .:. 147 Eres > “4S Club Association do not think their figures show: ce) carryovers’ noted en tthers “ema! Gtuett Pee «... 408 phitip Mor... 433). sa eee eee ee ee oe breoder turkeys. Colg Pein “Ge Hoge Des A 48.3 subdividion is 90 ideal after ee
‘Col Brad A...) 35.6 ml . ing with the Waterford Township umn—that, during the year to
ORA DENTURE CLEANER cmicaco roviray Gol Ges 0". HS Kitimen °° $2 board last night ° CHICAGO. May 21 (AP) — Live poultry Gon Bonn’ 227 Pure Ot ..... 43 :
rn pean mean DE [ives eerste key ee So Rone 4 Revs sci =. Halon the wen side of Wiliams Lake, . vy a pu tl... ; ih
BATH DISH FREE ff EUG went hens 13-3: old =| Goncum Fe: a4 -. folie side of Williams Lake, | ls
ee een eee aeaeeaenee over €% fos 20 %-28. when ie Pe Pt (4%) 96.3 Rey Too B i a3 ve = SS ome ne . ! = \Gont Se: 2 ee ‘<1 39g the upkeep of their privately owned!
ASPIRINS | * (fom oe” gh} Sateey me . $3, roads. The group claims it has
2 BOTTLES OF 100 Livestock Copper Rng.’ $24 St Jos Lead. 3¢/been four years since any work
Regular 98 | Corn Seve S23 & Pap .. 15.6 has
eg € i DETROIT LIVESTOCK Curtiss Wr.) 44 Mts... 3 |
BOTH FOR ‘Hogs—Salable $00. “Mareet cr el ale Geers ‘Roed .. 211 lished. estab-| Dis C Seng ... 336 Shell Oil .... 822! cannot legally spend any money ee ee eee ee eS eS eee Catt | Deo are ri s eeee “6
C Polish fed steers and Sue ene oupely | Doe’ Chem == 3 Sinclair... 64) om township road improvements,
mies Polish Remora [ace hg act toe ee RE Eres Se eae et te co lonve ox rcs around per cent receipts, somewhat East ‘gg Bou: Ry weeee 42 | of because are
Regular 49e 3 3 poe ncag from cd ers and: El Auto L .., 312 p< pat Ra . 23.1) not to z F ,
eeders ia “per cent of El & Mus |. 4 4 :2. 416) ROt Gp to present specifications. |r oures 64, 63%, 63% and 63%. ; earl Emer : Cal .. $3.4| ’ ,
aaa ada aaa aan eae moderately active. steady — prommesi t “38 Rad ee hee ma ou = ae Board members told representa- | On the extreme right,
ve, " ; bulla fully|Ex-Cello | .° ooo ; “
LaCrome Seer aa, fete ates (Pure mee Hy Bt Sal voala scrape thelr ronda, in prep the } j 3 : a! one oe, -Pa. 7 : - :
oot the) Go rer Sen sra, Saat deg Mee beet een BE ESSE. flaration for oll and tarvia which a share); and under “Net Chg." : 0: low choice fed steers. Sul. 107 t Pp .. ihas to be paid for by the property | /11.00-22.25; ' utility and standard Swift & Co |. 35.1)
sorw rox 43 eta t Sects Seenkatet Sab Gee bee. ta BRE Sg owners,” meme memmm mmm nnn Brier wiley (20d jandard 1686-1080; Gon Klee. O24 Tti,cq Ot -- 3g3/DEBATE CEMETERIES ng Paarl -|Gen Pads 4 < “ene i : :
NOXEMA Her Sle commersial vany sener-(Gen ins" $32 Teee>, Pd... 012] Other business included discus. gyi cents a share. ¢ Je up to 17.50: load choice 499 Ib |Qcn Motors. $3 tran Ww air 152 Sion regarding the landscaping and
$1.25 Size 79 [eaten genre ane er gest G0nd Od lGen Tul ..... 62.6 Joe Cen. 343/maintenance of the four township- |
ibs. 31. 75-34.00 Suse > Time : as Underwd ..... 29.2 owned cemeteries. A plan to set up,
Su ee en nee eee ea 'e ‘and sealers 38.00.30 00; good | ainette eo. 42 a + aa art contracts for residents to pay for |
Charles Ante! te Jow choles 21.00-28.00; standard grade | Cocgrien, ©... 7g Unit Air Lin 287/lots on an installment basis is be-|
SHAMPOO ‘ bray rd aoe “ Unit Pruit .. sealing studied
- 1 AGO LIVE vs 18 Un Gas Cp ... 36.7) equals 15,600.
Regular $1.57 ¢€ Pi cmcaco, May 20 caps — Sclabie Gt Heo b sis OS Live .. cae |e ee aera eee author- . ness 8. ve, steady |Greyhound ... 16.3 08 Steel .,... 68.7, Ized the Oakland Road
2 FOR eS Se Se BE OT os TST FL) Commission to agcept bids tor : on see 5 Van Real .. 2 sa eane aan eaaaae= le s : . .3 | Holt ee : SOSe
100-235 here iese-1¢ th: ‘several|Homestk -..... 314 West Un Tel. 182 oe ees oe Breck . lots 1-3 19.00; No. 1-2 lots these weights|Hooker El... 34 West A Bk .. 321| Lake Road for blacktopping. OG;
Shampoo & Crome Rinse [i27,. "sss sin dad 'ettstee tee tact’ nay HY Hats Hoe $84] Estimated costs to blacktop the| GMC Truck Official lots ‘mostly 3 00-17. nd... 83. es ; * one
porn ron $900 Ji ah, tiem eate f* Eevee: giemah ono a cele Gets Special Training i : r ace A \ =
| 350-550 Ibs sows 14.3816.25; with 400 Ib|Interiak Ir ... 29 Yount 8 & W 3a = ed
eodemmnncennnne Fe i ate tie REESE Senn, Gane | tne thew Gester "Baiable cattle 19,000; calves 900: steers|Int Nick ..... 111.2 . The township voted to pay for the
COMBINATION prea 10050 higher ante aendy on K AVERAGES aoe oat ein Oe : ; and banks. c Puff higher; other steady: Press
Hi Fi este 1” ply srt, coe es re Fae “rh ” e 15 a 60 i prime 24.50-26,00: few loads low to « rice 26.50- Indust Rail Util Stocks Regular $2.00 27.00; i tu ales” -2 -4 UNCH -3 : * two-week course in 0 Ge oe 68 oe on oe oe oe ee bm * choice fo Mg Betfers 34 0- Noon’ Tuesday ene iz as oo Merchants in City *
low choice 19.50-22.00; utility (gp Week Ago 7 3680 1249 (768 182.9 ; mercial cows 14.00-15.50: canners and|Month Ago, .“ 265.0 123.1 14.8 1802 ° . 5 leutters 11.50-14.00: ‘utility and com-|Year Ago ......2544 144.3 72.6 181.1 an ip y if
Senta atte et emails eg ES ee Saiable 1,000; trade slow, 9 LIT ig7e3 158.1. 76.9 191.5 ‘sales lambs fully 25 lower; noeeees, 1988 4 nooue ‘0 126.2 69.6-171.6| A new Surf-Air plan instituted the initial two weeks. bulk of receipts still to sell: si Slick Airways lowing
lambs 96 Bb No. 1 Ah Bg Se 15 elas motor Sean eiicmcs we . 5 (C, J, Nevhier Co.)
How ond oe sizes yyoame Ine minis area
larger than agate Rd. WE
Say previous te ARE NOW HIRING: oan BUTCHERS
be cancelled up to MEAT CUTTERS
the first ‘insertion. ie Shot ~|. PRODUCE MEN casm WANT 4D Rares DAY STOCK CLERKS
Lines 1-Day SDaye eDare Stamping Co Sania a Mec Be | Permanent full, time positions for
3 tt im See FORD DEALER tng conditions.” Many “employs
; is 4.05 tte or see a used cars, salary & = See
$F (See SS | Bea man, heuet be producer “Cal MICHIGAN s° 38 $8. 38 ied oa EMPLOYMENT
~ FIRE FIGHTERS _ SECURITY CITY OF PONTIAC COMMISSION
es
messages. cards and
offers of assistance helped to
“Also the co i OUR . We TO riends; = po bes Re *t parsley bors, iv.
employes "Yor mt acts of | r m :
kindness du: the ore
reavement of [A husband Albert
z. wife Marty & ta
ae
Serene Mrs" 0 Vielet. nee
Flowers 3
~ GERANIUMS
0 varieties .
s, Hy., =
Pater erat hee be vee. plants 2d hoes clea
m5 ey Ra.
° {2 miles w. ot Pontiac mite
- OPENING | : se
. Donelson-Johns cae
142 WAYNE PONTIAC
i
BEPENDABLE WOMAN TO CARE for phe + Write to Box i119
Pontiac Press. LADY FOR CARE
EXP. GIRL. OVER 3 FOR eral housework. Must have ref-
GEN- r PART TIME:
hand &
days &
Must
tod hour! rly
ite Pontiac Press, B IRL WITH SHORT-
typine exp. to work Satur-
unday in pvt. have own tr residence.
rate expected. Boz fair RELIABLE, WOMAN TO BRELP
ete ot ework &
poor nad all Sa Dull
Job?
& _@ See eee
Beautiful
Blond ©
Da Graebner's ALL KIND mae NOUSEWORKERS $1 & car fare. Exp. & Refer. FE
43841,
; BABYSITTING MIDDLEAGED ‘ Good ref- 1 NI N. CASS
rE Work Wanted Female ao Building Ser, Service 12
a ‘Aver. rE 3-64 TRONINGS # tn) UP & DE- oa CEMENT JO JOBS & A & ALL
| other tinds of cement work. FE
_6-3185 or FE 5-0256
$ei TIC TA) and WKS, “TELD TIL truckine OR 33157 & FE +0106
Save Thousands
woman. Experienced.
PE 54-47%
of Dollars
ON A NEW HOME
| FIXER? Order’C
ads to sell, rent, find a|~
x ook jh FE 96081 the NEED A FINANCE: Sat
. ater ’ Got down? We he inte woaee ety coder hos fever cnet — WRIGLEY S a acllag ‘pection epee tor 9 unary | DEPENDABLE WOMAN WANTS iE. C. ackson, Contractor
= Plains Store will agen goon Som gal whe can type 8 _ We restaurant wort of baby sitting. 1 teen pao 1
EXPERIENCED chon CaDER a me fusrentes you'll never be bored. _$ days. FE #1071, Puone ‘OLive 1-461 hochesier one of the growing chains BARBARA AT CAREER cap wiDDLE WIRE REPAIRS AND CONTRACT- MI 4-0090. im this area. TEN MIDDLEAGED CT:
EXPERIENCED —_ SALESCADIES , ma lady would Uke cea etating, ait- RENCHING AND — ae ae | WEARE NOW MEN 6 GIRLS ‘siretmsceseesenrce| auniposing. PEGGY’ HIRING: sires f lees one a _Positian. Write ZING
EXP. WAITRESSES CASHIERS ; inoninGa Dome Tt aE EaPra PaNINI-INbikeueees EXP. W. SSE! 3 CAS ERS . GIRLS | TRONINGS DONE IN MY HOME. | we ECALIZE IN B NTS ee ree eer Rl |©6UMEAT WRAPPERS | glo bundle washing. FE ¢i¢ set Also excarar : a “oC ~ o_~ ru ‘win.
| tte eanare ar.) PRODUCE CLERKS EDW ARDS RECEPTIONIST. ge S28 git tee as —woan race | 8 Star =
“ty oe Benes. Rene oe eee dealership reries 1 | Abe GL Daears SUMMER _B — aoe ol Rochester Rd. BAKERY CLERKS VOCATIONAL COUNSELING Vaniery OrFice, maa | clothes sewed, in ms home. FE uilding Supplies 12A Fe Permanent — . EXP. WA i —— . $200) Curb qualified "Excellent work- . . A MEDICAL ASST. experienced $250 MIMEOGRAPWING, TYPING, &EC- A Believe It or Not Deal
centeg Be Boy Drive-In, oan eee yo a We Want the World SECRETARY to adv. exec. .. g380| _fetarial service BM 3202 |’ You can now build yourself » Dixie Hwy,, corner of Silver Lake! Voncement. apply at To Know TVPMT. 8 WPM ............ aes re Lio? = aioe fyotect heme ome np maney on.
SERA ? - TYPIST. 40 WPM |......... $200 4278. mal : +37. ; tae rin person aaa MICHIGAN | pp Ey eee : $200 | WASHINGS “AND TRONINGS. On | CUSTOM DRY WALL Worx —
after aher 3 pa ie een, Woe EMPLOYMENT TIONS AVAILABLE, FOR Th GRCARTARy re -: Sars | fepemmes cane te my home. FE| guncentocd Pree cotimetes. FE
_feae “ SECURITY HERE just a FEW. NO, machine’ ép- woman Ww WOULD LIKE WORE IN ~ Business Services. 1 . . i‘ 1
EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. DAY COMMISSION SECRETARY, auto executive , $358 TE See Ol Jeol shift. Martin's Restaurant. 436 W. ATS oC AROUND THE WORLD $200 | BOOKKEEPER, Pull $325 a ACE TREE SERV Prete *. 142 WAYNE CT. Tyovel agency vente © peresne- E CLERK ” $300 PRacticat Ste [ aVAILABED | ~, nal es Gee ne, Oe
fall or) par time, “Apply” Cras PONTIAC ist. typing ‘Gester we ge! ® TRONINGS PICK | ar; wanes OF FOUNTAIN Fens Drug, MI 1-0394. ASST BOOKKEEPER OR 3-0688. capad Luasy FULL & PART TIME WAIT-| MOTHERS HELPER. Live IN. | CROUND $280 | dealer Ne 380 SANFED BY WDOLEAOED sgh iy sect oreo or resses, good hours & Wages. No| 5%» days wk. Ref. Christian home.| S'#f im with a new com SECRETARY, small office. $225 general housework or bebs| Office Supp! “aw . : Supply oo. a Ww.
| coool N. Saginaw ~| Ste. tees ene ss gion ig. Will SECRETARY, ME execu. ... $00 | sitting Preterabiy to << in rence St ve a Law-
Pd ee Eh “SW < train. , ME | Write Pontiac Press Bor ~~EPPLIANCE >
FULL TIME HOUSEKEEPER 34-50 SALESWOMEN . TRAINEE ss00 WOMAN WITH A SON 2 YRS OLD| we service sil mame ae motherless me. Must live; Let me prove to you that: you | ay timo x $275 | SALES TRAINEE ' g3s9| Would like ao baby: sitting job| and auto washers > eed jn. 2 children, 26 5. Modern) SVERY west working Sa bre, | Experienced and eccurate typist ACCOUNTANT "<...'| g4on| Says Apply at 29 Pingree, off |: Ponties .
erences Write Pontise Press Box| & 7A 1 you love sae work Loads of company benefits. MANAGER TRAINEE ....... 000 | SouaN wo pee eR nd PE 24024 : as call me for an interview ~ EXPERIENCED IN OEN- HEARING Alb. RM. UYERS $260 :
Taira bone maneape | ene ue eames | plese, eet, sh | (GTACDNEY'S | steer soce ree woe ys | OMPIED wet Cesena: consider expectant mother. Write | lock eth noon — raeoner s WOMEN WOULD LIKE WORK IN| Walls and windows ‘Reasonabie. Pontiac Press. a. 7 eS . SOMe expe Pree est . PE 32-1631,
GIRL FOR CARE 7. In July $90.90 with | ex THE ONE & ONLY $300 “MICHIGAN’S _sfter 6 p.m. PE 6-302. SqOREREPER Py cl on band ace i Creases thereafter to $05.20. Cur- anufacturers agent steno LARGEST” | WOULD YO" LIKE A LADY TO| time. Experienced FE 56-6771 mother works. Live im ON poeus, | Tent vacancies | local => whe can use electric typewriter! 51) poacinc State Bank Bide. | ff oe pte tee ywnlle Jou | EAVESTROUGHING FURNACE co! Mpg cme sUR- ew im soctal sciences = typing. Unusually cordia| atmos- PE $9277 — —— metal work,
exept Bat OR 30003 after 7-38 Boge zam-| phere. uilding Servic Employment Service office or by Instructions 9) —— pairing & fevlnding Sis Pine _Call PE 43148 Michigan “| GENTLEMEN W ~ AAAAAAAAAAAAA wu -
home in Birmingham. Boy 1 Las ry = , st ay vind. PINE poaLETY | ef sharpening Also mise. tools. years of Exp. and rene- | 900.00 to 91020. To fill future These Are For You DRIVING SCHOOL dim on au “4 Pe }-T323 ir Da ea the) See LM tent bao gl = + coves caaez on | ©4 one an tor your | —-¢: 30D BILLS. PE 62080 EATINO VICE.
pga ge! ~ WER A oh ype Maiehigan eo eer oe ata Sane. son "rh eS = an contencies. Gcbe Roth. pie Croaks "fa Roches . Fs oe = m Service office 9F| and likes figures. FINISH HIG NO CLASS- FE 5-9591 JACK's TREE SERVICE TRIE HOUSEKEEPER OLDER WOM —s Civil Serivce, n~ es. = pemge _ me. weetisas Sasements, cement ming & removal free estimates.
an. Plain cooking. 0 TRAVEL ENT arded. r work, : PE
Sort, Stay, nights. 2 days off.| Switchboard Operator |. tecel siperien ae Ider calaiog prayne Sehesl, oe ns Soom et oe CAWNMOWERS SHARPENED at ain
HOUSEKEEPER, LioHT HoUsE- Typist emiose- LEARN TO DRIVE THE SANE |Ai BR BLOCK WORK.| fenuine parts ‘sed? Pree ek up work. More for home than wages.| Interesting sur- open| Fay AT, SAZEZWAY™ DRIVER | Fireplaces, oasements and | and dettvery. are Pontiac srtine (Sort, Peart, “Gr; | PUBLIC RELATIONS TRAINING rE nme Lincoln _ Write Press Box_82. ee - for 0 youna man with 6 degree | mas VE 9-2353 Res. FE §-1646 [ ta LADY FOR LIGHT +s. : m or some v0 | SAO & VIOUN TERSOES REx | “Reuter trom. © PHA PLASTERING = a ave TELEPHONE —— ble, FE 4-001. " REA-| forme. Gordon Piattiey. BM|, D. 30 EM 39163 TADY, ie bo WoT of OBE . SALESWOMAN . SALES & SERVICE ts om SPARTON DRIVING TING SCHOOL 5 ING PLASTERING. NEW OR REPAIR elde: an earn substantial week- Manuf R E ( H .
ly lady country. for| ly income making ealle from your | portunity to young oe tae | ee yop aval A& wr NC Field tile G_ NEW AND RE- me ee than} desk in our office. je previous ex- oe wal io car fe bool "| pair, Vern Keller. 17-0251. wogee. 4. Fonte F 8 Lag ag eae e oo ——— ALL KINDS OF CEMENT WORK, spre = r MACHINE LADY CAB DRIVERS. SHIFT | 7 ' FOOD GALES TRAINEE _ #28/ Work Wanted Male i See Sen 8 ee rk on L. P. Bowling Tor PA afte fat — MEN DESIRE RT - = :
opportunity for person lik: | essary, exclusive De depes- interesting business. Car ond om |) tee Pa ce a1 ad Saws—Lawnmowers
ing to mee publie Kendale's, 14| ite, ne delivery. no collecting a a 18 Chamberiain FE 2-7680 w Phone Iris Chamberiain, MI OFFICE & CREDIT . instalation. PE 56-5210, — SAWS MACHINE FiLED TO LIVE IN & HELP WITH | ons MOR. TRAINEE $350 | A-t ag = Maney Leach 10 Bagley St,
fo 4, Pe esas ON fem * te person only. after 8. ym. | peckeround you'esn, locate nest TREES WA AN xpy.| bu Mul ts tel. S838 home in one of the offices of & new. after 6:00. Trimmed or removed. Tree sur-
eerie ee | ee ae anal Pn ee ee Scllange and Sirine Free esis Part time to start but full time if | Nights, At Bob & Myrtle, 34 E. | SALESMAN ove BB’ Murdock. Pa ates fasten, retmeailo eves, yeuiy te bo ie ee . college or equivalent will stert| SOY. 18, DESIRES WORK OF $260), Walled take. Bros, 8. Saginawe | sit or pet : ou on, the road to an interest King FE ¢-4200. FREE. TRINTWING AND -REWOV: HOUSEKEEPER ene, 0a oe part emo cbert, Ing cate =: hn ates. FE 2-6019. oe ae housewives, Mothers can qualify, . Also cabinet work. FE ton te eo
ANICURIST, “MERLIN SALON,| Mtct,cer Sppbons, cevemtial. ne 9425 VL W TREE SERVICE SPRAY. 18 Woodward. Lt ostie._ = PE +ise. : ter : Wn aracueer CGuuctar.” thos and Feats =
wouep van © on. 223 -Oatlend ave SARPENTRY, 30 VRE ERP" WEW|- Al up i ae eee heeded, te, Press, | a GiRig & tate Addons, “kiteh en setepotes, OF 2010s. : ; v ApPiy fe pers Porches. Recreation Dressmaking, Tailoring 16 MAID GENERAL bsg ie Repgatee has E'Fe HOU sEwOR STAY a z
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