_ r= . —_ il a a7 oe . ae aE +4 facinreees \ | 4 . : The Weather ; ‘=. THE PONTIAC PR PAGES. 117th YEAR © kkkkx PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY ar, 1959—68 PAGES UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Te Prepare to HONORARY PALLBEARERS — Four honor- ary pallbearers for John Foster Dulles stand Outside Washington National Cathedral. Left to right are Douglas Dillon, undersecretary of Dulles Laid to Rest With Solemn Rite WASHINGTON ww — John Fos-’ With them Dulles had worked Accompany state; Adm. Arthur Radford; Herbert Hoover Jr., former undersecretary of state, and Maj. Gen. Stanton Babcock, _ assistance advisory group in France. Coffin 2 County Sells $12,667,000 in Bonds wore: =: , . Sewer Project on Way | AP Wirepheote chief of the army's military » toSecret Talks Green and High Frequent periods of showers and thundershowers may be expec ted| on Courthouse | | be about 60 degrees. < ° Thursday will be somewhat cool-) But Any Final Action er with the high near 70 andi jhour will be briefly higher santa! } thundershowers. | By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR.'|; Temperatures for the weekend] ‘Oakland County supervisors| Sixty-six was the lowest recorded] ‘went behind elosed and/|temperature in downtown Pontiac; preceding 8 a.m. The thermometer! guarded doors yesterday, | When they ea 45 minutes later, this |reporter was told: ‘‘We have ° and we won't until next S Tuesday.” . Others Plead Guilty; . | It was fenened however, that su- Bribe Charge Dropped | Showers Ahead |tonight through the next five days, on Bids Delayed Until occasional showers. Today's south-} Courthouse - planning jwill average near the normal] high| ; a read 84 at 1 p.m. ‘hoping to iron out a ticklish taken no final aetion’’on. in Conspiracy The Senate adjourned for the pervisors were studying possibili- | | Supervisors Go | Will Keep Grass | the weatherman said. Tonight will Next Tuesday | westerly winds at 15-20 miles an| © of 69-75 and normal low of 48-54. | When, came oot 10 Sentence 3 lany of the courthouse bids, City Policeman, Two Just as their trial was to begin} ter Dulles, admired by his free t preserve the world’s peace day so its members could attend ties of awarding the general con- world frends and respected by his . : : — in Oakland County Circuit Court, | - Comn ae in th Ls wee until cancer ended his career and as a group. House leaders an- Struction contract to a Pontiac firm suspended Pontiac policeman Jess ommunis oes In © CO ai : . ¢ "C4 d death Sunday at the nee rece tt gpes to a final rest today after six ae a ath 4y a ao rite = recess at the time of instead of the - bidder from De- W. Quick and two other men yes-| turbulent years as secretary of : . +’ ¢ = AR ~ *« ' troit. terday pleaded guilty to conspiracy) : , } . to obstruct justice seare Ordinary citizens of his- own’ Top officials from many lands’ _ 4 spokesman = glares Upon the motion of Assistant | Solemn services in Washing. country also honored Dulles as, flocked to Washington to pay their) Bouse architects, O ee. ene Oakland County Prosecutor de-| ton’s huge National Cathedral. A horse-drawn caisson into Ar- lington National Cemetery, The . muffled drums, The burial serv. lees. The echo of taps across the monument-covered hills. Thus went the plans for the of- ficial} funeral which President Et senhower arranged to attend along with representatives from nations large and small they streamed by past his mahogany casket, in state in a chapel of the cathe- dral Through the night they came to, see, to pause, perhaps to pray ‘in the flower-banked chapel. The nation shares in’ the final rites to be telecast at 3:30 p.m. EDT from ithe cemetery by at least two of the networks. Gets UF Post {traley Battles Pontiac 2 Ways ° Says City Owes Him 65 Days of Pay; Wins Court Venue Change Herbert W. Straley was fighting on two fronts today. * * * The ousted Pontiac police chief fired the first shot in a new skir- mish at City Hall last night and, today was given permission to take} his battle for reinstatement out of the jurisdiction of Oakland County Circuit Court. | Portraying himself as finan.’ cially stricken, Straley last night demanded from the City Com- mission reimbursement for 65 vacation days he said were due - him at the time of his tem- porary suspension Feb. 10. The demand-touched off a sharp, clash which ended with the Com- ‘mission promising to talk the mat- ter over privately tomorrow night | and render a formal —— next | 4Tuesday. THOMAS F. WIETHORN To Guide UF Industry Drive * the Oakland County Cir- : ) am Today, : Pick Thomas Wiethorn, cuit bench granted Straley a change of venue in his appeat -to | Fisher Body Manager, reverse his April 4 ouster by the| for Fund Post, | Péntiae Civil Service Commission. | Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams, | = .. ...| presiding, said_the State Circuit | cones) Fisher Court commissioner had assigned | Body plant manager, has been .ctraley’s appeal to the court of in Wiethorn, | named chairman of thé Industrial Circuit Judge Morris K. Davis, Division campaign for the 1959 Ionia County. Pontiac Area United Fund Drive. -Straley had argued there was Wiethorn’s appointment was an-/too much publicity here, over his nounted today by Robert R Eldred! dismissal for him to get a fair general chairman of this year's! hearing locally drive. Straley angrily told city com. | missioners that Finance Director | Marvin Alward had turned down | his request for vacation-time re- | Wiethorn is chairman of Gen- | eral Motors’ local Plant-City Committee and a member of the UF Board of Trustees. ' imbursement, amoutiting to about He lives in Birmingham. ($1,508. | Last year the In dustrial Division, Alward said he. acted on the; raised $371,594.37 of the drive’s advice of City Attorney William | total amount of $584,370.61 A. Ewart. ws ke Ewart said there should be no | The Industrial Divisjor includes} payment until Straley’s status is 50 small plants in Pontiac and} determined by the appeal. Mayor Philip E. Rowston sup-) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) PECANS th |] Waterford Township, and firms ha.| longing to the Pontiac Manufac-| turers Assn, \These include American Forging| & Socket, Baldwin Rubber, Con-/7 Today s Press | ) sumers Power, Fisher Body, GMC! | SOLE RS RS ¢ Sy eR REE Truck & Coach, Pontiac Motor, ; Jig Bushing, Pontiac Varnish, and| ©? Universal Oil Seal. Comics eoenastweeseewy , 60 County News .....++++« on: f 4s ‘ Light, Governor? | Editorials ........- iinekeed oon R | Mark@te ....cceeeeeeevesees 61 BATON ROUGE, La. (UPID— | Obituaries ...............5. So | ~“Pm gonna swear off cussin’ f Beeeth oGiccceescee wee. 63-87 y like I did Smokin’ and drinkin’,”” | “Theatérs ...).:...-...++5- oo Oh Louisfana Gov. Earl K. Long | TV & Radio Programs’ .... 61 | told a legislative hearing yester- | Wilson, Earl” ............. 61 | day, as he smoked a cigarette./ | Women's Pages ...,,.... 1943, 4 ) - . . M4 yy /s the thousands final lying chancellor rived Tuesday night. & Luckenbach of Birmingham, said under the specifications Qak- "™€ K. Barry Jr., a first charge’ land County could, if it wished, of bribery against the trio was award the big contract to a firm ‘dropped following their pleas. | other than-the low bidder. Quick, 43, of 502 E. Beverly Herter, French Foreign Minister He said taking into account alter. AV¢.: Chartes B. Johnson, $7, of © Maurice Couve de Murville and /"ates, substitutions and the fact = W. Kennett Rd.; and Lealon Britain's Foreign Secretary Sel- ‘that the county has agreed to pay, S- Karnes, 63, of §22'2 Baldwin Lagat “4 | \extra for the general contractor to! Ave. will be sentenced by Circu‘t wyn Lioyd from the Big Four | ly Cierk J. Ad ot the | respects. West Germany's | Konrad Adenaur ar- A plane from Geneva carried | Secretary of State Christian ‘A. conference on Germany, ad- jassume supervision over the me journed two days for the occa- Chanical and electrical trades, the| conspiracy charge June 11. sion. , |difference comes-to about $2,085 Quick is accused of taking $122 E : ; ; _ {between the low bidder — A.,Z.|from Johnson, alleged operator of | The Soviet Union's Foreign Mit | schmina & Sons—and the second! a gambling game in Pontiac, saad Look Out, Humpty my y # cel . a _ +, _* go = Bec 3 ws ae ‘ee 8 a Ses ee xc AP Wirephote SOFT SAFETY MEASURE — Four-year-old Linda O’Steen of Atlanta, Ga. doesn't take any chances on a hard ‘sit-down if her feet happen to fly out from under her in roller skating. Part of her standard equiprnent is Humpty-Dumpty, her favorite rag doll, strapped behind her. Humpty seems all choked up by the honor {ssue Will Pay | for Farmington, : Evergreen Links Construction, to Stort | in 10 Days, Culminates 7 Years of Planning A Detroit and New York jbond buying syndicate headed by Halsey Stuart & Company Inc., yesterday purchased $12,667,000 in igeneral obligation bonds rom Oakland County to pm finance construction of “the Farmington and Evergreen-‘Sanitary sewer systerhs.: Sale of the bonds culminated seven years of planning for the much needed sewers. x * * Harold K, Schone, director of the County Department of Public Works which. will build the long- awaited sewers, said he was sat- ,isfied with the interest rates the lowest bidder submitted, ‘in the light jof today’s bond market.’ He said the average interest yield the $6,919,000 eight- community Evergreen sewer will be 4.39946 per cent, while for the four-community $5,743,- 000° Farmington sewer it wiil be 4.39018. Schone said the slight difference jis because of the difference in [costs of the two sewers. | The Halsey Stuart & Company and associates was the lowést of \two syndicated bids submitted, | Schone said. The second, approxi- ;mately one-tenth of one per cent ‘higher in interest rates, came from the First of Michigan Cor jporation of Detroit and 39 asso- ciates. ister Andrei Gromyko, an Opp0-|jow bider—J. A. Fredman Co. of | nent of Dulles over the confer- pontiac ~ ent of Dulles over the confer- ence table, flew in a commercial plane. * Confronted * with * many lega * © * An hour before the services, Duties™body was tobe moved/up another law suit. a source close from ‘the Bethlehem chapel to the to the Board of Supervisors dis- main chapel for the Presbyterian closed. funeral service conducted by the |heing ‘most cautious"’ Three committees of the Board Rev. Russell P. Barnes, secro- : tary of the World Council of settled on some preliminary | 7 oer , courthouse business yesterday _ afternoon, and then David Levin- Dulles was a lay leader and son, Birmingham supervisor in “senior elder in the Presbyterian Church. The cathedral is Episco- pal but services of various de- nominations are held there. Diplomats, the 23 honorary pall-| bearers cemposed of prominent/tive session,’ citizens and a special honoy guard — - of the Joint Chiefs of Staff were LE eae a to take their seats as the heur charge of the Special Courthouse | Building Committee, asked archi- tects, county officials and this | reporter to leave the room. he announced. | approached. : * * * x reject construction bids on the Then to enter in order were New building. which now has a the Dulles family, price tag of $3,000,000, Levinson Vice President Richard M. - Nixon! said and his party, President Fisen-| hower and his party, and lastly! Dulles’ widow. After a 25-minute serviee, the | ;members , of committees would meet before next Tuesday's special meeting of the, Board of Supervisors and funera] party arranged to travel decide on which general, mre- in a motorcade of some 200 cars | Chanical and electrical com- fContinued on Page 2 Col. 4 (Continued on | Page 2, Col. 1) fall to turn over to a Pontiac vice of being selected for such a dangerous mission, but maybe it's * * * jblocks to building the new couri- defendant when he refused to testi- |house in the past, supervisors are fy against Quick, a member of the not to stir ,Pontiac force for 14 years. . , lan advertisement ina police mag- “We are now going into execu- * The Board of Supervisors has however. until next Thursday to accept or) He added that the same three | squad officer as a bribe. just the belt. * * ® | There were 39 associates, com- Karnes was named later aS a co- At the time of the arrest, in- | vestigators probed the possibil- } ity ef a link between Quick and the torch death of Flint Team- sters business agent Frank Kier- dorf. Police said Quick visited | Leaun Harrelson, president of burned critically Aug. 3. Quick said he was there to sell Many to Get Holiday as City Honors Dead As Pontiac pauses to honor its war dead, industry and Pontiac Teamsters, at his home gOvernment will give workers a brief respite from their | the morning after Kierdorf was daily activities while the nation observes its first long holiday weekend of the yéar. City offices will be closed next Monday, giving work-| jazine. ers a * * The possible connection fizzled, | Quick, Johnson and Karnes days. could receive maximum prison | acy. Judge Adams continued $500 |County Personnel bonds on each. The Prosecutor’s Office was co ‘fronted for awhile with a legal|0" Monday will be those who nor- iproblem before the scheduled trial/™ fected by the holiday. while Quick's attorney de-| ‘The post office will be closed ally have to work on Saturday. lof the trio. The attorney for Karnes | Others, he said, will not be af- Pontiac jand Johnson had waived a jury | triat, ‘manded one. | Saturday with no windows open | But Employment ( Continges to Lag State Steadily Pulling Out of Recession LANSING (AP)—Michigan is steadily pulling out of the recession. There’s an increase in production and industrial ex- pansjon. Unemployment is on the wane and the direct relief case | | load is down. But employment is still lagging behind despite these gains. These were the findings of wakeusen for three key | state agencies, reporting to Gov. Williams yesterday on Mich- igan’s economic climate. Practically all indicators point to a substantial im. provement in the Michigan economy in 1959 compared with the corresponding months of 1958,” reported Max H. Horton, director of the State Employment Security Commission. flected in terms of employment. They seem to be doing it with less workers.” * * * ° Paul A. Herbert, résearch chief for the State Development Department, gave a similar picture. “The single exception,” he said, “is the lag in manufac- Feonomie | turing employment.” Herbert said there is a gradual increase in industrial expansion ih the state. He said recdrds “obviously incomplete” reported plans for 148 million dollars in industrial construction in Michigan so far this year against 109 millions in the entire 1958 year. Notable expansion he cited were 100 million dollars by |-Great Lakes Steel:Co. at Ecorse, 35 million dollars by the “Statistics on retail sales, personal income and produc- | tion all show substantial improvement,” he said. . x* *« * Horton estimated unemployment {n April-at 310,000; al- | dustries starting wp and moving into the state with less | centering in the automotive field. most a third below the 452,000 jobless figure a year ago and and down from the March figure of 340,000. New unemployment compensation claims, he said, were | , roles,” reported W. J. Maxey, director of the State Social down 72 per cent from April 1958. “But a large part of the estimated reduction appar — ently has been due to retirements from the labor force and a migration of unemployed workers to other states,” he added. Horto#t said there also still is a targe core of unemployed who have used up all their benefits. “There is good productivity,” he said, “but it isn’t re- s * Ford Co. at Willow Run and six million dollars by Chrysler Corp. in Detroit. Small car production by the automotive plants should help the Michigan economy, Herbert said. 7 * * * He also nated a greater diversification among new in- “I think we've seen the high point for our direct reliet Welfare Department. Maxey reported a gradual decline in’ direct relief cases this year from a high of 48,861 in February to 45,466 in April. Detroit has shown the-slowest decline, he said, dropping:only from 16,452 in February to 16,330 in April. The goverhor said he would use some of the figures in urging the Legislature to back his proposed 140 milion dollar bond issue for ngw state construction. a | been” lengthened from eight hours three-day holiday? weekend. City offices .are) ynq no mail delivered, said Rob- /normally closed on Satur-| ert C. Miller, acting postmaster. | Only special delivery service will County offices, however, will be! ye offered. terms of five years for conspir- |open for business Monday. Oakland | Director John| 'Witherup said the only employes| n-|to receive a compensatory day off) pick up mail on. Saturday. Box patrons with boxes in the main post office will be able to * * * Workers at the Fisher Body and! Motor plants will be off \Saturday and Sunday, while GMC Truck & Coach employes generally |will be off Friday through Sunday. Meanwhile, Michigan State Po- llice prepared for what they féar on the state’s highways. | will be a bloody ‘holiday weekend, { “Unless drivers are more alert, We are almost certain to have an increase in highway deaths,” warned Joseph A. Childs, state, police commissioner, | Better weather after a bitter win- ter and more cars on the highway swith an improvement in.the econo- imy have contributed to a sharp ‘upswing in the number of traffic |fatalities, Childs said | Pass days-of all state police of- ificers have been cancelled over ithe weekend. Patrol shifts have |to 10 from noon Friday: until mid- night Sunday. The National Guard has as- signed 129 men to work with State Police and 96 to aid sheriff's deputies throughout & state. Last year, when Memorial Day Memorial Day was 58 deaths. in 1941 and the low as four in 1950. * x * | Meanwhile, the National Safety Council Said today that state and local plans for the greatest. crack- down on traffic. violators in’ his- tory.may cut Memorial Day holi- day deaths below its estimates. The Council has estimated 260 persons could die in traffic during the holiday weekend between 6 p.m, Friday and midnight Sun- day. This. compares with an ¢sti- mated 225 traffic fatalities diring a nonweliday period of @ similar fefl on a Friday only 13 deaths} were recorded. The high "for al {mon practice for such large bond | sales, Schone said, combined in the winning bidding syndicate. Considering that each of the two isyndicates is split into many dif- ferent bonding houses. which showed an interest in the bonds, too, = the number of bidders. Because of many legal entangle- ‘ments going back several years, Oakland County officials feared (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Rescue Brother af Cuban Chief Raul, Castro Found Safe After Plane Crash in | South Central Cuba HAVANA (®—Raul Castro, com- mander in chief of Cuba's armed forces and Prime Minister Fidel Castro's * heir-designate, was res- |was found by three Cuban Navy launches. Raul Castro was found safe with the plane's three crewmen at the mouth of the River Hatiguanico im RAUL CASTRO__ the. Ensenada de la Broa area south of Cienaga Zapata, in South Central Cuba. ~ ‘ duration. Schone said he was satisfie@ here, .. jcued today after a plane crash. He - Ls . TWO Pontiac City Affairs Supervisors Holding | Talks on Courthouse | (Continued From Page One) panies weald be recommended to More protests over high assess- iments in arterial. road improve- we 2 ee ome ments were fired at the City Com. Although there is some debate mission last night, adding pres- oyer who the general’ contractor; sure for a revision in the city’s will be, it is expected that R. L.| |special assessment ° policy, Spitzley of Detroit, low bidder in| * * "a the mechanical field, would re} ; ceive a contract, while Schultz Latest complaints came from Electric Co. of Pontiac, the low) residents of N. East boulevard, bidder, would receive the con-|- who are facing assessments of $4.50 a front foot for proposed wid- ening of their street from 22 feet * * | to 46 feet, between Mt.-. Clemens Levinson yesterday also refused! and Michigan. to release the detailed breakdown! of some $3 million he told other; supervisors. ‘is or will be avail- able’’ for the courthouse. Robert Y. Moore, chairman of “I think some adjustmenj in the assessment formula is _nec- essary to ease the load for these people,” said District 6 Com- missioner Wesley J, Wood, who | ’ Road Assessment Course Gets Rockier cost, $1,251; city cost,/Huron street extension through Richa assessed $1,729; cost for a 40*foot lot, $120. _* * * A sidewalk on the north side of Columbia avenue, Carlisle to Wal- ton Boulevard Park subdivision— assessed cost, $484; city cost, $475; cost for a 2Qfoot lot, $40. And four grading and graveling projects, including Kettering ave- nue, between Madison and Bal- - timore — assessed cost, $1,570; city cost, $20; cost for a 50-foot lot, $75; E. Hurofi street, Dougias to Paddock — assessed cost $84; chty cost, $4,467; cost for a 94-foot side lot, $84; Manhattan avenue, Emerson to Parkwood — assessed cost, $2,842; city cost, $1,644; cost for a 122-foot side | ia WILLIAM L. BELANEY Joins GMIC © “Credit Union $2 MILLION .NOW linal pavement was constructed 10 the Board of Auditors, yesterday represents the area involved. disclosed that “sufficient funds will be available to meet the obligation for the first unit of the new courthouse."’ Moore, too, refused to-give dut “The widening is designed to |help through traffic, not the resi- | | } "tract for the electrical. trades in! the building. j dents of the street. “I dan't want to stop progress, but these people were heavily as- sessed once already when the orig- a breakdown of these funds, | you're going to print it.”’ In the open portion of yesier- ‘day’s session, however, Levinson said $2,050,000 “is available right now to apply.on contracts.”’ He said the balance of the $3 million would come from the fol- William Belaney Will years ago.” Head Public Selation| It’s estimated that widening Department There ments and $101,838 in city funds. After six residents voiced ob- .| will cost $20,435 in special assess- | | lot, $110; and the alley north of | Auburn avenue, Sanford to Ard- more — assessed cost (com- | mercial), $608; assessed cost ‘HEAVILY ASSESSED’ BEFORE (residential), $113; city cost, $1,- | sion, was returned to the circu- | 672; cost for a 40-foot commer- cial lot, $90; cost for a 129-foot | side residential lot, $538. « These eight projects were all de-| ‘clared public necessities, as was: lconstruction of an alley north of; |Walton boulevard, Baldwin to Uni- jversity, for which the Engineering ‘Department was asked to prepare | plans. |Perry street and Walton boulevard Park may be curved, rather than straight, to add to the attractiveness of the drive. * * * At the suggestion of Commission- ers Floyd P. Miles and William W. Donaldson, the manager said he would study the possibility of de- signing the Cass avenue widening to provide for angle parking at Wisner Stadium. Referred to the Planning Co: mission was a petition calling for rezoning of the northwest corner of from residential to commercial. It was signed by 83 per cent of the affected residents. On motion of Commissioner. Miles, a petition protesting in- stallation of curbs and gutters on Tennyson avenue, Hollywood to Bonnie Briar Bush subdivi- | THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1959 e \B MRS, ANNE GALL Mother Insane, civenee™= "=" Judge Rules The Assessor's Department said) that only 29 per cent of those that! signed the petition were property! owners. . On recommendation of Willman, | Ridge Assaociates, Inc. was given! permission to sublease part of its The Day in Birmingham * . in Transient BIRMINGHAM — Few, if any, changes are contemplated in the city’s ordinance regulating the so- ealled transient merchants. Following a study, city attorneys have advised that the ordinance as, it now exists provides full con-| trol of the licensing of local busi- ness. , The only possible change would be an increase in the license ‘ee | which would be returnable on | personal property taxes after the | business was: established. The study was made primarily, to determine the number of per- sons who operated short-term com-) mercial enterprises locally. — The Birmingham Police Depart- ment and the Chamber of Com-! ‘|merce, however, are warning householders against the door-to- door salesman-type: enterprise. * * * Charles’ Mortensen, C. of C. sec- retary, said no payments should-be —_— Ey Mrs.-Gall Sent to lonia made nor contracts signed until for Allegedly Murdering Daughter by Whippings Householders land at Pontiac Municipal Airport! Mrs. Anne Gall yesterday was lowing sources: $375,000 from levying for two years one-tenth of a mill for public buildings; 75,000 from interest on invested building funds; and $500,000 from the sale of county-owned prop- erties, including the present downtown courthouse and site. “Not a single welfare home . Where there is a family living will be sold,’’ Levinson assured fellow supervisors. : His committee, in conjunction with the architects, is moving ahead although a spokesman for the protesting Oakland County Tax- payers League said he ‘‘under- stands” there is time left to appeal a decree in the law suit which had held up construction of the new courthouse since 1956. * This conflicts with what Nor. | man R. Barnard, county corpor» tion counsel, said yesterday, He William L. Belaney will resign |jections at last night’s hearing on| City Manager Walter K. Willman|to Fiesta Incorporates of Flint :or |aS assistant manager of the Pon-_| intention: to widen the street this said there is a possibility that the!a new hangar. itiac Area Chamber of Comfmerce|summer, commissioners voted to, ——— Monday to become director of pub-| adjourn the hearing one week. | ‘lic relations and education of -the| * * * | GMTC Employes Federal Credit! They plan to review the assess Dut Probably Not Alone Union. | : : } : Soe /ment policy on this street and on) voles ; |the proposed paving of Joslyn road/ e roomy O a u e | _Belaney's Spout to the tomorrow night at an informal dis- 4 V4 credit union post was announced | ayeeinn meeting , : today by Harry J. Woodman, treas-| "7, mane a ‘on w WASHINGTON (UPI)—President statesmen here for the funeral of urer and general manager. policy discussion Was Ficenhower will meet today with! John Foster Dulles. decd | Scheduled last’ week after Jos- West German Chancellor Konrad| The White House left open the “x emi y, who has held ee lyn avenue residents protested Adenauer and possibly with other question of whether Eisenhower amber of Commerce post 2! | assessment rates of $5.50 a front | = would confer with Soviet Foreign — B giikioged = — foot for paving their road from Minister Andrei Gromyko. But it s ‘s manager a © Sta- | Walton boulevard to Collier road was considered doubtful the Presi- tion WPON, dent would see Gromyko alorie. | at the northern eity limits. A graduate of Ohio State Univer- | Up to now, the city has had a If the two A ( get together during sity, the 32-year-old Obio native rigid assessment formula, with the Russian’s brief stay, sources joined the radig.industry in Bay rates for paving arterial streets said, it probably would be at a joint session of all the Big Four City in 1953. higher than rates for blacktopping | foreign ministers. | * * * neighborhood streets. It was assumed that Eisenhower Solemn Services Mark Dulles Burial (Continued From Page One) | on the quarter-hour drive to the | Memorial Gate at Arlington Na- diections| tional Cemetery. Belaney is on the board of di- . ECT UNOPPOS rectors of the Pontiac Lions Club, CASS PROJ UNOP =D is a member of the Urban League! There were no judged legally insane and unable to stand trial for first-degree murder jin the February death of her 12- year-old daughter. | Oakland County Circuit Judge ‘Clark J. Adams ordered the Com- merce Township worman commit- {ted to Ionia State Hospital ‘‘until restored to sanity.” | His ruling followed testimony yesterday by four _ psychia- trists who said Mrs. Gall, 35, is mentally ill and suffering from schizophrenia, or conflicting im- pulses. Three psychiatrists — Drs. Philtg N: Brown, medieal superintendent jof Northville State Hospital, Jean \F. Chambers of Birmingham and |Clinton J. Mumby of Pontiac — 'said Mrs. Gail was mentally ill the article has been received and examined by the purchaser. were warned | particularly against high - pres- sure salesmen by Police Chief Ralph Moxley. He reminded residents that door- 'to-door salesmen must be licensed by the city. In the event that such la person becomes obnoxious and over .persistent, demand to see the | jlicense or call the Police Depart- ment immediately, said Moxley. * * * ’ Both Moxley -and Mortensen pointed out that many -of these {firms are located far from Bir- | mingham. They are serviced by transient crews whose only inter- ‘est is in making a sale, they said, and the only way- to safeguard jpurchasers is by their own alert- ness at the time of the interview | Bloomfield Hills public schools were granted permission yesterday jby the State Municipal Finance ‘Commission to borrow $350,000 | The loans, backed by tax antici- and Adenauer would ‘discuss the Prior to, at the time of her daugh- | pation notes, will be used to meet Little Change Expected Firm Laws ington, D.C., following surgery for . the removal] of a brain tumor. He recently. had been returned to Fort Bragg, N.C., after serving 32 months in Germany with the 82nd Airborne Division. He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Kelley, two brothers, James and Richard, both at home, and his maternal grand- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Merle Col- lins of Walled Lake. 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Take 8 pictures per roll Pits large or small Polaroid Cam- eras on weather said the county believes the dead- -of Pontiac, and is chairman of the Taised last night on another hear- line for such an appeal ‘“‘is ’way past.” ‘ ) “The deadline was 20 days after the decree was signed (Auril 28),”’ he said. ‘‘We feel if they intended appealing, they would have served. the board of directors of the Pon. | raised at a hearing covering an (grave. | assessment roll drawn up as a | us notice by now.” STILL UNDER STUDY He has served as president of | tiac Co-op Federal Credit Union. Belaney lives at 93 Chippewa Rd. Bruce J. Annett, secretary of the With his wife and daughter. League, said attorneys were still John W_ Hirlinger, manager of Advisory Council of, the Marketing ing airing intention to proceed Information for Consurners Pro- Wuh another big widening project gram of the Oakland County Co-— Cass avenue, Oakland to Wis- operative Extension Service. ner Stadium, | Relatively few objections were | result of unpaid bills stemming | from last summer’s weed-cut- ting program. studying ‘the legal aspects” of an ‘he Chamber of Commerce, was, Two property owners protested appeal. He declined to say whether expected to name a successor to their assessments, far fewer than an appeal would be filed. “All. depends on what the attor- neys find,”’ he said. Other action taken up in the open session yesterday included approval by the three commit- tes that a project supervisor be hired to coordinate construc- tion of the courthouse on Tele. graph road in the County Service Center. Advisability of such a Person Was suggested by the ar- ! chitects. It was also agreed that- action Belaney shortly. (Continued From Page One) ‘ported Ewart but Commissiqners* Robert A. Landry and Milton R.\Telatively small amount of unpaid fenry objected. appeared last year or the year buried in the National Cemetery.+ before. One property owner com-) t Two-Pronged Battle #= cite te isthe cot tim If. oad Launched by Straley | Noting chat tees owners were generally undertaking to keep vacant lots trimmed of weeds arms, fire a full 19-gun salute and|.He originally sought and was | themselves and considering, the three volleys of rifle fire, and) gramted a chance to fly in Her- | bills There, amid flourishes and ruf- fles from a military band, Dulles’ | casket was to be moved from the hearse to a horse-drawn caisson, \for the slow procession through ‘the peaceful cemetery to the! The grave site for Dulles, an ;Army major in World War I, was ‘at the edge of a hill sloping down ‘toward the Potomac River. It and his simple marble tombstone were much the same as those accorded thousands of other military dead Final rights at graveside — a committal service and benediction! i— were to be watched by the lfamily, the President and vice president and their parties from chairs placed under a canopy. Then the military would present} sound taps. — $1,145, several comms-| Praises for Dulles continued to} however, when he was told there “By denying this pay, the Com- Sioners expressed belief that the flow to the capital as: they have would begin to arinex to the city the barrel,’’ Landry said. of Pontiac a certain section of Waterford Township, which the county needs to complete the plot| where the courthouse will be built reimbursement for more than 30 | In a Supreme Court opinion handed down in February, the | Alward and City Manager Wal.- ter K, Willman maintained it was city policy not to hand out days of accrued vacation time. “The city of Pontiac is no dif- only adverse decision against the ferent from any other employer" county was that the justices ruled Straley snapped back. “I was dis- the county had not in the past charged and the personnel rules legally annexed this parcel. s The ‘opinion came after the > ay that hould get discharged al] pay employes owed them League three years ago sued the U™Mediately on’ discharge. county, claiming the Board of Sup- ervisors and Board of Auditors had padded budgets in order to build up surpluses ‘to use for construc- tion of the new building The Supreme Court said other- Wise 7 ‘Pays Penny-a-Year * * * “T should have gotten this money. April ” “There is a question whether you were fully discharged or are still under a state of suspension,” observed Rowston. “N&Psense , I was discharged. etored Straley. LONDON (UPI) — William Tet : Blatchford was sentenced to ‘I don't see any reason whv three yearsrin prison for a’ three \Chief Straley shouldn't be paid and oné-half-cent theft. Tt was his third offense. The Weather - Full U.S, Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy, warm and humid with ecca- stenal shewers and thundershewers this afterneen and tonight. Temerrow partly cleudy and ceoler Southwesterly winds 15-20 miles teday briefly higher in thunderstorms. Becom- = unused vacation time,’” said Henry. occasional showers ‘Without months and am in urgent need of ight now—at least for 30 days of The former potice chief's ap- pearance in the missioners. He introduced him- self as ‘ta Pontiac citizen and taxpayer.” “IT have been unemployed -and income for almost four a success. There were no _ objections | raised at hearings on assessment | rolls covering four big recapping projects, involving Cass avenue, Pike to Orchard Lake; E. Huron street, Saginaw to Perry; Prall mission: is scraping the boottom of “eed-cutting program was proving ever since he entered Walter Reed ‘Army Hospital with the cancer {that was to take his life. } | Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush-! \chev told a meeting in Tirana, the capital of Communist ~ Albania, ithat Dulles was an ‘‘outstanding |politician” who in the last months | Berlin crisis, which has been the, chief cause for concern at the cur-| rent Big Four foreign ministers’ conference in Geneva. Eisenhower planned to nieet first, this morning with Australian Prime | Minister Robert G. Menzies, who| already was here for high-level talks. No time was announced for| Adenauer’s call at the White House. Whether the President confers with other foreign officials may) depend upon a conference he sched- | uled at 10 am. EDT with Sec-| retary of State Christian A. Her-| er. Flying here from Geneva with| Herter were Foreign Ministers Se]-| wyn Lloyd of Britain and Maurice Couve de Murville of France. Gromyko was to arrive jater | aboard a commercial airliner. | ter’s plane. He rejected the offer, was no room for his interpreter. | | County Sells Bonds — for 2-Sewer Project (Continued From Page. One) | Huron to Washington; lof his life displayed a ‘“‘more sober many companies would be reluct-| street, and Sanderson street, | to Cass. Oakland junderstanding of the international | | Situation.” Adenauer told airport welcom-|ahly would begin on both sewers Mrs. Gall made Judith Anne al- until 1961. ant to bid on the bonds. Schone said construction prob- Hearings were set June 2 on ers headed by Vice President | within 10 days. | intention to proceed with eight oth- er public improvements, including: \friend of the late secretary.’ He} bond Duyers are printed on the|If she didn't, Gall said, Judith Curbs and gutters on Harriett said,’ ‘‘There was between us &,/ bonds, Delos Hamlin, chairman of Anne was whipped by her mother | sessed cost $5,832; city cost, $1,172; lcost for 50-foot lot, $250; cost per lsewer stub, $72; and Arlene street, Madison to Second — assessed cost, $10,396; city cost, $7,484; cost for a 50-foot lot, $175. ‘All the newspaper headlines and SANITARY SEWER radio broadcasts testified to that,""| A sanitary sewer on Brooklyn was among the galaxy of foreign avenue, Stanley to Richmond —| Miriani Raps commissien | ' chambers tas a surprise to com- , Nixon that “I came this time as a/ street, Adelaide to Baldwin — as-| genuine friendship, far beyond althe Board of Supervisors, and Dan-| political one.”’ = 2 * * Other foreign chiefs to attend jincluded King Baudouin of Bel- 'gium and Australia’s Prime Min- lister Robert G. Menzies. Mme. |Chiang Kai-shek, wife of the Na- itionalist Chinese generalissimo, | dignitaries. | At home the Senate Foreign Re- Bloomfield Hills, Lathrup Village,|Mrs. Gall told them she didn't Spider Thief Not Smart lations and the House Foreign Af-|part of Troy, Southfield, the vil-| murder her daughter, that. she| |fairs committees adopted resolu- | |tions voicing appreciation for Dul- les’s servite to his country and to| ships will be served by the Ever-|myself and not have to talk to the free world.. After the interest rates and | iel T, Murphy Jr., county clerk-| register, will fly to New York to! sign the bonds. . The Farmington sewer will serve the city of Keego Harbor,) the major portion of West Bloom- field Township, all of Farmington Township, and a small section of the city of Southfield. } The cities of Birmingham, | lage of Beyevly Hills, all of Bloom-' field and part of Pontiac Town-| green sewer. ter's death Feb. 16, and is today. | construction and maintenance costs *_ *& throughout the school system Less positive was Pontiac psy. | . = . chiatrist Dr. Ivan A. LaCore. He; Residents of W. Lincoln avenue, $8°N. Saginaw testified under direct examination’ between Southfield and Cranbrook = by Mrs. Gall's attorney Raymondjroads, are being informed by city D. Munde, that he couldn't deter-| officials that little can be done to mine the duration of Mrs. Gall’s|remqve truck traffic from their illness. istreet this summer : “Her symptoms are similar to schizophrenia, but I prefer to say she is psychotic and“leave it at that,” Dr. LaCore answered | City Manager L. R. Gare report- Munde. ed, however, that a study will be During the long test-mony a very Made and every step taken to re- pale Mrs. Gall sat immobile be- lieve the situation tween a deputy sheriff and a matron from the county jail. She —Main Floor -LOWEST - EVER - PRICE! Not4...Not 5... but FULL 6 TRANSISTOR Construction on Maple avenue will rereute many vehicles. over Lincoln avenue, they said. A news release from Washington continuously stared watery-eyed D. C. states that Birmingham and : : at the floor. She held: a handker- Bloomfield area young men may Midget Size chief, with whIch occasionally she apply for entrance to the US. Air 2'2x4\ax) Force Academy for 1960 by writing: Inches \their congressman, William S Broomfield dabbed at her reddened eyes and mouth, : ¥ * * When Judge Adams ruled she is x * “insane as of this date,” she) Applicants to the academy at Col- showed no reaction. She covered orado Springs, Colo., must be U:S. her face as the matron and deputy Citizens, between 17 and 22 years of escorted her away from the court-'age and never married house and back Yo jail. Judith Anne Gall died Feb. 16 from what a doctor said was | Not $49.50—Not $59.50—but pneumonia brought on by “re- | Broomfield added that Oakland ONLY AT SIMMS peated” beatings. |County’s quota for the U.S. Naval At his wife's pre-trial examina-| Academy and the US. Military tion, John Gall, 37, testified that} Academy at West Point are filled y Pfc, John Kelley | Service for Pfc. John Kelley, 22, ways carry an 18-inch cherry of 659 Wallace St., will be at 9 bough ‘‘as a reminder to behave ja.m. Friday from Holy Name Cath- *\olic Church. Burial will be in Holy |Sepulchre Cemetery. x * * f 1. The Rosa y i “Dr. Chambers, who said she be- | e 7 om Serene -m. tomorrow in the Manle lieved Mrs. Gall dangérous to her-| § Fim (morrow in the Manley self and others, said. she told her, : ; during her examination, “I want} Private Kelley died Sunday at to be left alone because then I Walter Reed Army Hospital, Wash- would be somebody and real.” ‘iia — Drs. Brown and Chambers said! Preliminary examinations will be given July 13 with one to be chosen from this area. St In Zippered LEATHER Case The Galls, of 3080 Royal ' have three other children. Complete with— ®@ Plug-In EAR PHONE © 3'2-Foot CORD @ Back-of-Ear CLIP $3.50 Holds ‘til Father's Day Plays 150 Hours on . Single Low-Cost Battery Perfect operation anywhere— in auto,,home, at beach, in plane or on train. Powerful permanent magnet. speaker. FULLY GUARANTEED. BIvaveNe wasn't insane, and that she want-}. CHICAGO (UPI) — Authorities | ed to go to prison ‘‘so I can be by| of Lincoln Park Zoo advised a | | thief today that he'd be smart to return the exhibit he stole anyone.” : ‘Raiding Party: ‘Kenny President Issues Warning Has No Welcome for | Governor of Tennessee . °° ing merthwesterly 16-15 miles tomerre™ Tea ered pe = V t High tedsy 84. Loe tonight 66. high the mone \ Straley said on Degroit 1S! temerrew 70 * * * Sumas ie oeatins Agreeing to a week's delay on pETROIT (UPI) — Tennessee owe temperature preceding 8 am his request. Straley asked the Com- Gov. Buford Ellington left Michi- Dede ecu eind, Nelocity 15 m pb mission gan today but he left behind others } Ls 1—Boutn st ry “| . a - Sun sets Wednescay at Would you want to pay for one from the Volunteer State to court 758 pm. Sun rises Thursday at 5 ar @n sets Wednesday at 1033 am ] Moon rises Thursday at 12 26 am Dewntown Temperatures asceec OT 11 v 719 l2 7 cones 69 i . 1 pm 64 re peers BB | eouwe-1a Tuesday in Pontiac {Ag recorded downtour Highest temperature ae aC Lowest temeprature Mean temperature . _ 70 4 Weather—Sunny One Year Age in Pon Highest temperature ae "FS Lowest temperature ste o cere Sle atrta 17 Mean temperature . +00 Pes 6 Wather—Sunny I Highest and Lewest Temperatures This Date in 86 Years 91 in 1911 35 in, 1915 Tuesday in Pontiac ' Alpena 65 54 emphis 85 67 Baltimore 75-62 Miami B 82 #77 Bismarck 62 39 Milwaukee 62 €5 Brownsville 90 76 Minneapolis 80 47 Buffaio 7% 67 a Orteans 8&8 174 “ Charleston 77 70 New York 70 «+63 Chicago 83 @6 Omaha 16 «52 Cleveland 77 «G8 Pellston $1 64 Detroit » 7.68 Phoenix oo 663 Delyth — 63 .43 Pittebureh 716. 64 Port, Worth. &7 73 @t. Louis 87 «(68 G. Rapids 81 64 B. Francisco 58 50 Mougtton 71 56 8 8B arte 76 56 Kansas City bs 61 Traverse C. 78 67 Lansing 74 66 Washington,, 78 67 ‘Les Angeles @ @6 Seattle Vso 4a | Marquetia f% 63 Tamps 90 «701 week the interest on the money have had to borrow to live on?’| Straley s ouster was on charges brought by Public Safety Direc- tor George D. Eastman, includ- ing incompetency and insubor- dination. The Civil Service Commission's eo -upholding of the charges climaxed wo year’s of internal strife within the Police Department, a situation! e; Which led the city to pyt Eastman, day he did not welcome Elling: in the unfilled safety director's post) ton’s visit to Detroit to talk to fall ast Tot Won't Give Up DALLAS, Tex, (UPI)—Each of | Mrs. J. Leonard Brewer's four- year-old twin sons. Freddy and | Eddy, claimed the toy was his Mrs. Brewer suggested they kneel and ‘‘ask God to make you tell the truth.” They knelt. Be- fore she began the prayer, Eddy confessed the toy was Freddy's, pnd said ‘but let's ask Jésus’ to make nyse” discontented Michigan industries. Ellington's visit to Detroit brought a complaint from Detroit Mayor Louis C. Miriani that he was trying to steal Michigan in- dustry and an invitation from Michigan Gov. G. Mennen Wil- liams to visit the Michigart® capital] to ‘‘talk over matters of mutual interest.”’ ~ Miriani made it clear yester- | industries which might be in- * terested in locating in Tennes- see, But Ellington made it just as clear he would not be diverted from his business in Michigan. “This is a barefaced attempt to stea) industry from Michigan,” Miriani said of Ellington’s visit despite assurances that ‘“‘this is no‘. a raidjng party’’ from mem- \bers of his own staff. ; Ellington, meanwhile; told Wil- iliams he was too busy. te meet | with him/ Aid to Disabled Labeled a Must i “A social and economic crisis of| the first magnitude awaits the next | generation unless disabled persons | jare fitted again for service to so-| ciety.” , x * * | This warning was issued by How- ‘ard N. Maynard, last night re- ‘elected to the presidency of the Sister Elizabeth Kenny Foundation | at the organization's 12th annual’ |dinner-meeting at Kingsley Inn. | Maynard said the flow of pa- ) |.tients has been constant at the | Rehabilitation Center in Fern- daje. His progress report showed that the center has been averag- ing 485 treatments a month. “Just about every crippling dis- order is included in the outpatient Jist at Ferndale,’’ said Maynard. “Artiritis, amputees, congenital deformities, cerebral palsy, Park- insonism, hemoplegia, multiple sclerosis and polid are just some of the many. _* * ® “Most of the 30 million people i Suffering physical or mental im- pairmient in this country can be re- stored to some degree of self-help land productivity.” | He added ‘that the best heajth ‘ 4 { experts see the possibility of an- | other generation carrying the | burden of one chronically ill, | physically handicapped, non-pro- | ductive person for every able- | bodied American worker, unless | rehabilitation endeavors are ac- celerated. * x. * Other officers re-elected last) night were D. C. Fisher, chairman | of the board; J. P. Schaupner, Rob- | ert E. Forbes and Dr. Jdohn C.) Montgomery, vice presidents; E.| J. Rollings, executive vice presi- dent; Donald F. Carney, secretary; Jobn R. Wilt, treasurer and S. Francis Mahoney, assistant treas- urer. es we & Elected vice president was Rich- ard S. Daley, who has served as a trustee since 1952. 7 A new member elected to the board of trustees for a three-year | term was Robert J. Grow. Re-elected to the board of trus- tees were Mrs. Philip A. Hart, Herman L. Weckler, Mrs. Mar- jorie Karker, D, C. Fisher, Rob- ert E. Forbes and Arthur R. Hoffman. ; , ) Principal speaker at the meet- 98 N. Saginaw 4. 4 from q display case. It’s a live tarantula. t ESSE TONITE thru FRIDAY Sea ee ¥] “DECORATION DAY WEEK-END BARGAINS DRUG DEP’T. SPECIALS” 66 CAMERA DEPT. —Main Floor } ing was Dr. Ronald C. S. Young, | renowned lecturer, author and edu-| cation consultant. His topic was “Our Heritage.” Entertainment was provided by Lem Stroud, popular Detroit bari-| Famous “WILLIAMS” After-Shave 1° AQUA-VELVA. . a Bed ad Rhee al, oe it = ‘foo SAL-HEPATICA . 67°F; REMINGTON M Package of 18 TABLETS 2 6‘ : ROLLECTRIC le 37° EX-LAX Laxative . : i* Box of erie Size 1 8 a. bq FACIAL TISSUES ... 1 pe a Style—Femising 19 +} A'S TRAVEL syrince: 16 IG Bottle of 60—SAVE 230 * x ; by 79° BUFFERIN Tablets Ej - Always Check SIMMS Drug Prices Before You Buy % Ed DRUG {2 —iein R ERs he DEPT. { riest + SIMM). P : ; t Sy ci . by : . 4 a - = ¥ aoe ‘ J ae _. -% "> re eh 4 =_ ROTHERS we oy ym md —Main Floor Aa aa . ] : - ‘ ae . ’ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1959 Open Tonite Thursday & Friday ’til 1 SIMMS Can Afford to Give (a tun BIGGER BARGAINS . 9nd FLOOR SPECIALS Large Capacity—ALL STEEL Wheelbarrow $13.95 Value 599 Large 3-cubic foot tray, 10-inch wheel, rubber tire and rubber han- dle grips. Square front for eas7 storage. Enamel finish. Ready to assemble. Full S0-Feet PLASTIC Lawn - Garden Hose 4x40" FEET ALUMINUM Lawn - Garden Edgihg $1.95 Value—Now |= $2.95 Value—Now Fon ¢ inch 6 aging u inc eep ecg Pull 5 year guarantee Stops grass from spread- Standard coupling “ ing. Eliminates hard Outside faucets. Limit 1. trimming work Your Choice of LONG HANDLE | Bow Rake or Shovel © Regular $2.95 Value o. Your choice of either - — — por bit ooth SOCHOSHSSSSHSSSSSSSSSSSSHSHSSHSHSSHSSSHHSESHSSSEEEESE pe arms eee Attaches to Garden Hose 20-GALLON dar Sprayer Te a OT oRteg. $2.95 | at Spring Action Grass Shears <| Reg. $1.00 66° Quart jar makes ‘ Easy action shears pea torts with perfect cutting lier, etc “ f edges X a GRASS SEEDS ‘pound bog ....... 1.00 Creeping Red Fescue Full pound bag _. Perennial Rye Seeds, 5-Poung bag ... SOSCHOHHSOSSSHSHOSOOHOSESESOOEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEES Round All Metal—REVOLVING os tee Sprinklers . $1 Value 67° Whirling arms cover large area Not as = shown Round or Square Blade Floral Shovel 87° Short handle shovels fer flower ‘beds, situbs, etc 1.19 alue A” v O a Zz © o Oo © o wn , wo . > pe] o > [z % 100% DYNAFILL Miracle FIBERS *15.95 SLEEPING BAGS 36x72 Inch Cut Size 72-Inch Heavy Duty ZIPPER With Full $1 Holds In Layaway CANOPY TOP Pully tined. light- weight bag with rystproof zipper water repellent windproof cover, - moth and mildew proof Odortess and non-matting 2'9-Ibs. filled in- sulation, Tempered HOLLOW GLASS 62-FOOT Spin-Cast RODS Reg. $7.95 Value 3.88 2-PIECE ROD ‘ Tubular hollow glass rod with large eye-let guides, cork handle with reel seat to fit most any reel. Repeat Sale LOWEST PRICE SHAKESPEARE Spin-Cast Reels Regular $16.50 Value Push - button con- trol. ey no back lash. 1774 - model. oereecccccccsccccccacecacooteccocoocooosoese Simms Has Everythiftg for BADMINTON 4-Player Set 588 8 Complete with birds. net, poles, etc. For 4 players Storage box Deluxe 4-Player Everything needed for 4 players in plastic carrying case, Badminton Posts ...... 1.49 to 2.49 Badminton Nets:.......88¢ to1.39 Shuttlecocks ...... SGOGOS 3 for 48c FOLDING STYLE. Caddy Carts 685 | Holds any size golf bag. Large 10- inch wheels “for tise over any terrain. Single action told 3 fIng-style. Revher grip handle. pe Regular $10.95 Value STURDY LIGHTWEIGHT ALL METAL : ; 2 S&GINAW So Many EXTRA BARGAINS— We Added EXTRA STORE HOURS PA HAAR) SIMMS wc You'll Find Most Everything You Need Priced LESS Than You Expect at SIMMS! No need to shop from store-to-store for lowest prices . . . you'll see more items. underpriced at Simms than in a dozen Ordinary stores. Here's but a few of ‘em... shop our store for plenty more! BARGAIN BASEMENT Easy-to-Care’ Wash ’n’ Wear ro Men’s BEot Shirts. Repeat of LOW CUT PRICE JOHNSON CENTURY ’ s Spin-Cast Reels Regular $7.95 Value As shown—tits most any rod. No back-lash - possible with this famous reel. Regular $2.98 Value SHAKESPEARE Fly-Fishing OUTFIT Value to $17 11.88 @ Styles & Colors @ No Ironing Needed @ Sanforized Shirts “a, Short sleeve sport shirts in * wide variety of styles, pat- terns and colors. Wash 'n’ wears in solids, patterns, stripes, ‘ novelties, etc. All sizes, Small, Medium, Large. Famous brands SANFORIZED—FULLY WASHABLE Men's Ivy Slacks Value to $4.00 39 Fly rod set has glass rod, OK automatic reel and 25 yards of nylon line. 3-Piéce | CASTING 41 OUTFITS ; Regular 9S a $5.00 2 ' FIRST QUALITY slacks in ivy styling, J 4-¥. glass rod, level- polished cottons and twills in blacks, wind reel and 50 yards braided nylon line. Com- b plete kit for basting. stripes, ivy buckles, All sizes 27 to 40. tans, whites, blue, some flap pockets. In SLIMS, REGULARS, HUSKIES Boys’ Ivy Slacks 2.44 Sizes 6 to 18 years—ivy leagues in stripes, every wanted color. Flap pockets, zipper fly, etc. WASH ‘N WEAR Slacks—no ironing needed } $3.98 to $5.98 Values ARMOUR DENIM Car Seat Covers GOLF BALLS . DOZEN 88 Regular $5.95 anus Full dozen brand new balis a x $8 vulcanized cured covers | — 100 holes of play. (Single esis . . 5c. Front Seat 2 & 4 Door @ Washable @ Sanforizéd Protect your car seats from dirt and wear with soft, comfortable denim. Fits all cars front seats in 2 or 4-door styles. Assorted colors td choose from. No Seams—ALL RUBBER Volley Balls Official size and weight volley ball Lots of. fun and healthful exercise in your own back yard. ALTO TOUCH-UP Regular $2.49 Value Regular $1.69 19 LANCER ONE-PIECE FORM FITTED CAR MATS Touch up: scratch- es, marks ori body finish. Matches exact color of car. poort 2.95, Value to door protec- nang Heavy duty qual- ity szubber, Exactly as > his wd a deduadeauunnsavacueusbasentsesdeotuates - SIMONIZ TURTLE Wax Sheen AUTO tt POLISH FISHING NEEDS N Castin Auto Polish Line 50 7 59¢ and Cleaner $2.00 Value Snelied Hooks ll¢ $1.89 Pint _ 16-Ounce Pack of 6.......%. » 98 North Street Between Waite's & Sears. Opposite Federals Saving Money for Thrifty Shoppers Since 1934— AUTO DEPT. SPECIALS! Spray Paints ~ . . and Do! MEN’S and BOYS’ Fabric Uppers — Crepé Soles ‘Oxfords Usually Priced $3.95 239 BOYS’ 2% to 6 | MEN’S 6 to 12 { " Compere SIMMS Prices G& Quality on All Your SWIM NEEDS Blde or brown. Wash- able upper. As pic-% tured. New ‘TRED-LITE’ Soles Men’s Canvas Oxfords $5.95 a $1.69 Green Rubber Fits to Size 4 $2.39 Green Rubber 9 At Fits to Size 8...... $2. 69 Green Rubber | Fits to Size 10..... $1. 98 White Rubber 4 o+eeee Fits to Size 4...... Canvas uppers in sandalwood or navy colors. Ribbed soles, 3-eyelet style. Sizes $2.50 Wine Rubber 7 _6Y2 to 12. Not exactly as shown. $2.69 White Rubber 7 FQ 3 Fits to Size 19..... 1.79 $5.95 ElDorado Fins Medium or Large Sued 95 PyTT III iit TRIANGLE CHILDREN’S U.S.A. Made Barefoot Sandals. All Sizes 82 to 1312 and I to 3 SWIM $2.49 Quality 69 , 5 White, red, MASKS brown or black . - leather uppers. s "e, reits ate Guatey made plastic lens SOCHOSSSSSSSSSHSSSSSESSSHSSSSHSSEECHOHHOHSEEEEEES 79¢ Vatue Medium Size. . 59¢ $1 Value Large Size... 69¢ Extra thick rubber in choice ef colors. All : sizes. (Large Size 12% te 3..,.,,.... $1.83) . , SOCHHOHSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSOSSSSSOSSSSOSCOEES LADIES’ — MISSES’ — GIRLS’ ‘Summer FOOTWEAR Regular to $3 Values 97 Sizes 4% te 9 @ Fiets @ Bellerinas @ Ducks @ Wedgies Whites, colors and multie colors. Ideal tor all sume mer occasions. geceseeseusconcesess Underwater Swimming SNORKEL TUBES Regular $1.29 19° Full 39 irr. length. White rubber. Lets you breathe under water. ~ ws Genuine ‘HELIN’ FLAT FISH BAIT $1.29 to C $1.50 “< Why Pay More Than Simms Low Price? s | | es s Ladies’ Swim Suits Pleat Skirt—Bloomer Pants a a P Your choice of these famous $7.50 baits., Nationally advertised. Value Save now. Choice of sizes, ‘ colors, etc. Sizes 32 to 36 a= Red Plaid—Ruffle Trim in White Broadcloth cotton swim suit, detachable straps, elasticized back, plastic sta's in top. One style only in this group. F Many Colors and Styles in Stock Girls’ Swim Suits Compare 89 9 ™ in the Shell to $4 3 , ¢ Sellers ic loome ypes elast: fabri Value 2 9 Scyiee metodo, Bhat ag bows, te rutfie 4 POUND ee. ne nee ee, ee ee Fancy roasted Limit 2 Fresh shipment. peanuts in the shell. pounds. Assorted Summer Candies Boxer or Brief Styles LITTLE BOYS’ LITTLE GIRLS’ @ PINEAPPLE SLICES F s © ORANGE SLICES Swim Rater t e @ ASSORTED JELLIES Suits run , Size 4 to 6X choice of . Limit Just a Few Steps From =, 3 Municipal 5e Parking * Lots! —— ae ee ee & wo Vd HAD TVW Relman Morin Writes for Hal Boyle ; Stammering Editor Gifted Dinner Speaker NEW YORK (AP) — “For struggling’ on the telephone onejhis throat. In panic, he followed)I’m going to do? And what I think years,” said the man from Texas,/day and passed the word around|Rogers to the hotel and called|about things? And a few quotes?” “I ordered chicken salad sand-|the office, ‘‘Don’t let Jake talk/him on the telephone, Rogers an-|said Rogers. J. Q. nodded. wiches, which I hate, because it long - distance - ever, He's unbal- swered it himself. J. Q couldn't} * * * was the only item on the menu Ij ancing my budget.” , jeven say ‘“‘hello."" He hung up.!| The cowboy talked and talked. i talk, without stam-| J. Q. despairing- completely shattered now J. Q. got his story,-a great story. salad) A m@ment later, Rogers came |“ len he was finished, Rogers said he'downstairs and went to-the ‘“You-knew. old country boy, you) could pronounce mering.” John Quincy Mahaffey. edit Day after day ly settled for the chicken wr of bar (ome sandwich, “Once or. twict the Texarkana Gazctte, is a gifted said, “[ made a stab at ordering!ber shop. J. Q. followed him-and/{don't’haVe to be afraid. Because | practitioner of the art. of after- the pimiento-and-egg. But I:neverisat there, struggled to speak, Sid-|anybody who amounts to anything | -dinner speaking, much in demand. made it.” |denly, the barber looke d, at J. Q |will know before you open your «He stands there, mesmerizing an’ Then the turning-point came. It and said ‘Next — you, you’re|mouth that you stutter. And the “audience, weaving his ancient ¢ame in a_ hotel barber shop'next.” J. Q only shook his head.jothers aren't worth talking to, «witchcraft. Nobody moves except*through a face full of lather. AR |anyway.”’ *when he makes them laugh, which WILT, ROGERS HELPS | At that point, Rogers sat up in This is not quite the end of the eis often _ | the chair and beckoned to J. Q.|Story. J. Q. did not emerge over- : PY * * > Will Rogers, the cowbe y harmor- | “Old country bov.” he said night as the William Jennings ° ae rward, few remember that ist arrived in Texarkana on a ° ‘|Bryan of Texarkana. But what he fund-raising ‘tour. J. Q. was as-| ‘you've been following me _ all|”': ) te J. d , J. Q. has a speech impediment. C ' : lmorning so you must want some- \did do, and to his own immense * Or rather | he uses it to enhance |Signed to meet him and get thing. Now you sit over here and | astonishme nt, was to accept a what he wants’to say. Stammer- Story, a funny story, of course. |ioy i. what it is you want.” [Speaking engagement not long «ing no longer terrorizes him All the way to the airport, he |afterward' * Years ago, however, it throttled kept repeating, ““My name is Ma-|SITS ON STOOL | x * * shim to such a point he thought he haffey and I'm a reporter My, J. Q. sat on a high stool beside} emight have to give up being ajname is Mahaffey and I’m a re-|the barber chair. He managed to)my life,’ he said. “newspaper. reporter. He couldn't; porter.’’ It came smooth eask questions. He would ‘‘freeze,’’-| silk. ~comple tely unable to talk. * * * But when he saw Rogers, he note book. jenough, when he comes to it, * % » ° His manag ging editor he ard him froze again, The words stuck in! ‘‘And you want to .know what does throw him.’ ¢ _ = = out ‘‘My name is Mahaffey and —"’ tbody asked me to make a speech,”’ he said. ‘back’ just a little further.’ Do You Want to Live in Pi Hi or Plumstead? lence of towns. Actually these are| “That was the worst week ofjonly two of a number of unusual T. Hayes, 45, entered the Vermont “You see, ainames by which communities in| Mother of the Year contest be- |cause as a widower he “has been mother as well as father’ to a seven-year-old son and a daugh- ter; 13. Hays lost the titel to a as fight his way through nite words, |stammerer can look down a whole|the state are called. long sentence and see the word) Others include. Pi Hi, Silently, he pulled out a reporter's that’s going to throw him. Sure| Allamuchy, it Oneg’s Hat, Love Ladies and Hi- Nella Borough. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1959 Worker Doesn't Like Wave of Milkmen - ie PHOENIX, Ariz. How ‘did he overcome it? Omer Zale, “By accepting every time some- | type. Every afternoon as he passed) la certain Phoenix intersection he “Every time you make a| it throws that old trouble la man working on a street proj- ject. '%* . we * | Qne afternoon the workman After nearly 30 years, and thovt-|jumped into a truck and followed sands~-ef public appearances, J. Q., \Zale. no longer has to order the chicken|vehicle and stepped out to say a salad sandwich. The |friendly word. “‘What’s the | shouting at me? "* asked the work- |workman let loose with a round- a re jhouse right. It took seven stitches] — DOUBLE TROUBLE, N: J. &—j\to close the wound on the milk- When a New Jerseyite says he'd) man’s head. rather be in Double Trouble than; |Mount Misery, he’s not just hand-| ing out some double talk. ‘He Enters as Mother . He's simply stating a_prefer-| NEWPORT, Vt. Plumsted, | Manaka_ Chunk, | ‘woman. UP—Milkman} 24, was the friendly) waved and shouted a greeting to milkman stopped his idea of always man. Before Zale could reply, the (UPI) — Lloyd Doctor Offers His Solution to Weight Problem NEW YORK (AP)—Overweight can be prevented by eating one. \per cent less every year after the age of 25, a symposium omobesity was told mot . * * Mer deyelops, said Dr. Herbert Pollack, ‘‘not because people eat more, but because they continue to eat the same amount of food from year to year as they grow older.”’ * * * “Yet, after the age of 25, we require one per cent less food each year,” he said. Pollack, associate professor of clinical medicine at New York University, is chairman of the American Heart Assn, nutrition cornmittee. Bootleggers Are Taking to Hard Sell — fo Sheriff CENTREVILLE, Ala. — Bibb County Sheriff Harold Dailey says it looks like bootleggers are going in for the ‘‘hard sell’’ these days. He was driving on a county road when a man flagged him down and offered to sell him some whisky. 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Value Armour 75's MAINLINER Pro Star TURF KING Golf Balls Value 4-Player - Badminton Set Racquets, Net & Shuttlecock $9.95 $ 4ss Value With Polls NADCO 55, Reg. $19.95 Folding ud GOLF CART ‘10” w a ers # } Berlin Deadline Arrves, but No Trouble Is Likely « * L . 1 BERLIN (AP)—The day the Soviets once set for the Western Allies to get out of West Berlin dawned today with no trouble likely. * * * Premier Nikita Khrushchev has postponed the deadline indefinitely. The Soviet Embassy in East Berlin assured the West that the Kremlin wouldn't renege. The U.S. Army said it planned no special alert for American troops in West Berlin. But all the talk of May 27 appwrently acted as a magnet for tourists. West Berlin was thronged with a record num- ? CRESSY B. LARSON Boys’ Club Head | Now Attending | National Meeting | Cressy B. Larson, executive di-| rector of the Boys’ Club of Pon- tiac, is attending the 53rd annua}| gonvention of the Boys’ Clubs of} America: at the Hotel Sherman in| Chicago The four-day conclave ends to- morrow More than 1,000 lay and pro- fessional youth leaders, repre: | senting more than 530 Boys’ Clubs and nearly 600,006. boy members, are participating in a wide variety of fotums, work- shops, clinics and training ses- sions planned to increase the ef- fectiveness of BCA's youth guid- alice program. The convention is placing spe- cial emphasis on the role of lay- men and volunteers in BCA's grow- ing contribution “‘to the develop- - ment of Juvenile Decency among) the nation’s’ youth,” according to John F. Gleason, national direc-| tor of the youth organization. Nationally known youth leaders, educators, sociologists and indus-| trialists will participate in some’ 50 sessions especially designed to interest and inform volunteer work- Denis Urging Spending Cuts West Berlin. ber of foreign visitors. NO BRAVERY MEDALS “I must disappoint those who expect to get braver medals,” said Mayor Willy Brandt smilingly. “May 27 will be like any other day.” Six months ago. today—on Nov. 27—the Soviet pre- mier called for an end to the World War II occupation of Berlin and withdrawal of the Allied military garrisons from West Berlin. He said that in six months the Soviet would give East Germany’s Communist regime control over Allied military traffic between West Germany and the Communist-sur- rounded Western half of the city.” : * * * ; The East Germans have controlled civilian traffic to and from Berlin since 1955. The Western Allies, who refuse to recognize or deal with the East German government, rejected Khrushchev's demand. There was talk of an armed convoy or a new " airlift-to challenge any transfer of traffie- control to the East Germans. Fear of war was widespread. The fears subsided when the West and the Soviets agreed to negotiate. Khrushchev said he wouldn't try to, alter Ber- lin’s status while negotiations were in progress. SETTLEMENT DELAYED The foreign ministers of the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain and France. began talks on Rerlin and Ger- many in Geneva last week. Any permanent settlement ap- parently must wait for the summit conference expected in August. Despite Soviet assurances that May 27 was no long- er D-Day, some suspicion lingered that the Communists might try something today just to remind t they still want an end to the Western Allies’ ion of the 2,200,000 West Berliners. But post-midnight inspections showed the Soviets still © manning the checkpoints on the rail and road routes. to “All's quiet on the Eastern front,” said one of the Ameri- can soldiers on duty at Helmstedt, western end of the 110- mile highway between West Germany and the divided city. Godfrey Urges Speedup leaders Want to trim] in U.S. Cancer Research Housing, Airport Bills to Avoid Veto | : i : “ WASHINGTON (AP) — Arthur/L S. Ravdin, a professor of sur-| Gee Charles De Gaulle an Godfrey, who recerity underwent| gery at the University of Penn- surgery for bung cancer, asked to-jsylvania; and Dr. Sidney Farber _THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. | DOUBLE SIGHT — Undulating reflection of building under construction on shore of Lake Merritt at Oakland, Calif., was caused by high humidity over area. - Vienna Expected Choice as Summit Meeting Site ..GENEVA (UPI)—The Western! and communications facilities, also allies have abandoned San Fran-|has been considered seriqusly as icisco as the site for a summit) a site. But many diplomats felt conference in favor of Vienna, it|it would not provide an atmosphere 'was- reported today. |conducive to successful negotia- | The Western powers have . just tions. They cited the Swiss city’s MAY 27, 1959 , a Soda Pop Lures - \Gromyko Lauds Violet the Bear to Boating Tragedy Late Foe Dulles Back to Owners ir cris is oe T ROCK —A bottle of soda ner’s report says the five young pop was Violet thebear’s undoing. | People who lost their lives in Lake Violet, a nine-month-old baby/St. Clair Monday were wictims of ‘who tips the scales at 75 pounds, ¢xhaustion and drowning. ‘escaped from the Huron Totnship| “I think panic -played a large farm of her owners, Mr. and Mrs. | Part in the tragedy,” said Dr. Ray- Jehn Newton, last Wednesday.. . {mond G. Markel, Macomb County , , mot ae | coroner. WASHINGTON (AP) — Soviet! The Newtons, who planned to Thee yoote and’ tee neral of the former secretary of g state, Mr. Dulles. “ \$ “I knew Mr. Dulles for a long|$ time, I think for about 15 years. ¢ “I attended with him many in-) 4 ternational conferences. i$ x & & 4 “Of course we had differences|> on many international problems,'¢ including important ones. 2 “But I cannot but recognize that > |he was an outstanding statesman, |S Then the Soviet visitor went! > quickly to a waiting limousine and |$ hurried away with Ambassador | 2 |Mikhail Menshikov to the Soviet |$ ; > a > > > > > > > > > > > > > d > > > > d > a > a a WHY? SAM BENSON’S Because I Have the Largest Selection of Uniforms at Budget Prices and . . . another NEW SHIPMENT WASH and WEAR Dad f 7 jf Ae be he be he hb * ie | Embassy. \Panic Contributed < a ie le ie tn hi in in hi hi i i hii i tnd By JACK BELL "WASHINGTON (AP)— Congres- . sional Democratic leaders report-| ‘Surely, a crash program of col-|cancer research is as important ediy are urging reluctant day for a stepped-up national pro-|of the Harvard medical school. gram of cancer’ research. I =" 4 about made up their minds to|!ong record of diplomatic failures, * * * P , holding a heads-of-state parley in| Meluding the 1955 summit con-| 11 had been met in behalf of § / yienns., Probably in the first 10/""pritish Prime Minister Macmil.|te State Department by Foy D. § $ 91 ) 4 days of September, reliable con- . . ~acmt Kohler, assistant secretary of 4 . ference sources said. Russia is|!4 had ‘suggested half jokingly, i : ‘ ‘ P : that summit talks take |state. for European affairs. The ¢ : 4 expected to go along with the St sum place at first he asked after he '4 ‘ : once NO sh led rr oC scopo ac pane ene wc: $ SOT To $4 401 : | A final decision will not be |Gieneagies has a golf course. | D¢ had beaten the other three for- $ ; made until the end of the present | Lack of communica jeign ministers of the Big Four to 4 ‘ 4 Hons 8P-| Washington. '$ For W in White Geneva foreign ministers’ con- peared to rule that out. |? for Women a es : mercial airliner, flying here from | : 4 The San Francisco-for-the-sum- ,,. « ss > tering frostys! Miracle i mit boom réached its ‘peak about Missile Pick Not Urgent |New York on the.last leg. 3 a a De. \three weeks ago. Nikita Khrusb-| . , - | * *, * > 4 the United States. New Yorks was'D° need for an immediate choice|wyn LJoyd and French Foreign § ' > ‘ruled out on grounds of security |Petween the Army‘s . Nike-Her-| Minister Maurice Couve de Mur- 4 JUST ARRIVED! 4 ‘difficulties. The Soviets had indi- “Wes and the Air Force's Bomarc| ville were flying ina few minutes > DOUBLE PANEL P cated they did not object to San|™issiles, Presidem Eisenhower|behind him in a Military Air 2 3 Francises. jhas told top Republican congres-| Transport plane with Secretary of $ UNIFORM SLIPS > 2s < —_ — merits al'=s Christian A. Herter. 3 $ - : \the two missiles have been “You be ; » § ‘ But the French and Western Ger- : 5 : ‘ou beat him. here after all,"’\4 ) mies guleed at objections cen- pee openty by ree leaders | Kohler said as Gromyko grinned. $ $2.91 to $3.91 $ tering mainly on the difficulty of” FCCe congressional earings.) rie nis brief stop in New $ sith anil Weis eke $ summit press coverage faced by York Gromyko had declined to 2 ” one 4 European newspapers in San Fran- Can ‘Spot-Weld’ Retinas sive newsmen any opinion of Dul- $ out ee 2 cisco. : \les as a statesman. 54 ’ onf@aawete § WASHINGTON (AP) — Medical x + & 2 SAM BENSON 3 nounced ‘flatly that, it 2 top levet |Srientisis ave developed & Way] “I don't think this is the timesg ATrvks 3 | meeting were held on the Amer- as x sentont {| to’ go into any political question,"|g - 37 N. Saginaw St. = ‘ lean West Coast, it would be at. (D&S: & key organ sight. 'Gromyko said. , tended by Ptemier Michel Debre |DF. Alson E. Bradley of the State < ¥ - ' rather than himself. That killed the idea. leagues to pare down housing~and|today to America as similar vant Model Agency Loses airport spending bills. They want ects now being pursued by nuclear|| ; * Tiff to avoid presidential nace fission, nitesiios and ‘ent “=r License in Fee | Wrapped up in these two meas- entists,"’ the television and radio! ures is the core of the political) entertainer said. NEW YORK up—Harry Conover's controversy hetween the majority) * * * modeling - agency of Democrats and President Ei-| Godfrey. in a request prepared | best known in its field — has lost senhower—budget balancing jfor Congress, made it clear that its license. — one of the | parently committee | with its ample hotel!creased funds for research. * * * “I ask this in the interests of mil-| Commissioner of Licenses Ber- The two bills now are before, lions of our fellow Americans, not nard J. O'Connell said the license Senatc-House conference commit-' for myself.” was canceled because of nonpay- tees. Democrats from the big cities particularly want Congress to en- act large-scale- housing and air- port programs to which they can point in their 1960 re-election races, If Eisenhower vetoes these bills and his action is sustained, these Democrats think Republican candidates will suffer. * * * On the other hand, Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn (D-Tex) and Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas were reported arguing that the Repub- licans thus far have developed budget balancing as the only ma-| jor issué for -1960.- As reported by some of their collengues, their argument is that if the Democrats trim the -bills to minimum amounts they may be able to blunt this issue by getting presidential aporeval for the ex- penditures .involved. If this means less housing and. airport development than some of the Democrats think is negessary, the leaders were said’ to have Pointed _to--what they regard as the likelihood that their party..will elect a president next. year who would be willing to support an ex- pansion of the progrems in 1961. ts & & For practical purposes, the com- * mittees trying to reach a compro- mise must stay within the frame- work of the different versions passed by the two houses. As an instance, in passing the hdusing bill, the Senate approved an urban renewal program author- izing commitments of 350 million dollars a year for six years, That totals $2,100.000,000 in eventual ex- penditures.. The House voted for a three-year program geared at 500 million dollars annually. If the compromise ¢ommittee listens to Democratic Jpadership suggestions, it could agree on. & three-year - program authorizing 350 million in annual commit- ments. This would bring the long- range total down to $1,050;000,000, compared to the $1,350,000,000, Eisenhower asked for a six-yea program, Bee OKs Farm Aid Limit WASHINGTON (AP)—A Senate Appropriations subcommittee . has approved a $59,000 Aimit on the total price supports that can go to ahy one {farm or farmer, The House has passed: a ‘similar pro- Vision, ‘ Godfrey made his plea in a Iet-, ment of fees to models. ter to Sen. Lister Hill (D-Ala), | Conover and his wife, Candy chairman of a Senate Apprdpria- Jencs — a former model whe tions subcommittee. The letter c _ ‘ Z | marri, her boss es dated for reading at monys dered te appear in. court today caring. to answer a back pay claim “Personally,” Godfrey wrote, ‘'I against Coney am qow dedicated to the dissem-| the siaal hoe: ination of information so that the The claim, for $2,200, was general public will understand; brought by Lorna Gillam, a 17- that semiannual examination is year-old blonde model for the agen- the only guarantee of early dis- CY- covery and diagnosis now avail-| Meanwhile, the district attorney's able, All the intricate and mirac-|offiee disclosed it had subpoenaed julous surgery that man-.can-devise|the books and records of the Con- is utterly useless when discovery over Agency. and the Conover Ca- ‘and diagnosis aré made too late."’| reer Girl School. s * * * Two widely known doctors asked he acted after receiving many com- today in prepared testimony for a|plaints from the parents of child '$110.203,000 appropriation for the | models who said they had not re- Cancer Institute.~They were Dr.ceived fees due them. ° GLASSES —ALUMINUM) | The Latest in Frames! ~ @ Lightweight @ Sturdy @ Attractive We just received these new framest We invite your inspection of the new- est, latest development in attractive frames ALUMINUM Always the Very * Highest in Quality at the Lowest in Prices! * SATISFACTION GUARANTEED @ Prescriptions Filled @ Safety Glasses @ RX Sun Glasses @ Repair Service — were or- | i Dist. 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Re SS ‘ EXTRA CHARGE . ——————— - oo ae eee where he held a similar position . — , : with the company. SPECIALS been in ill health; Says you will. He has ordered the x« *« * nearly a year. _ {chair pemgued from the witness; CHICAGO (AP)—Joe Kelly, ” Week Ending May 38 E ORLON DYN EL Mr, Warner, | stand. the quizzer on the old Quiz Kids Children’s 79° i COATS Cleaned ond 58, of 388 Hill-| ¢ ig THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1959 aE Spall ce ype lags Convict Frank jHackett, 27, | prisoner, told officers, “I. just Word has been réceived of the Brasington, 85, is survived by her|Mrs. Robert Dwyer/of Auburn and) Clayton A. Warner, owner and) |Glove Corp. ‘plant in Ironwood, died I Brasington in Thomasville, \C. Ernest R. Teachout: of Livonia; |ard T. Klinert/ both of Pontiac. |yesterday afternoon of a heart ail-| J. Frank McLaughlin's court you'factory since it was established in| She died May 21 vives. Detroit. He had| You stand because McLaughlin for service and burial last Satur-| MARLE TTE — Serviee for Mar- ‘ * , ‘ ' Gan Tired A Prison | hours after he escaped from San ‘Local Businessman {All Witnesses Deaths Elsewhere eae Hi ieet ae i ‘ mbs in Detroit Must Stand Up. AN QUENTIN, Cali. (UPD) | yously. considered a mode ; uccu Judge Orders | IRONWOOD ®— William S. | | was returned behind bars 10 got tired ot the Joint.” MRS. MELVIN P. BRASINGTON | A former Pontiac resident, Mrs./Theron J. Brooks Sr/ two sisters, |Hatch, 57, manager of the Hansen} —-_»__ . de ncn) husband; a daughter, Mrs. W. F.|Mrs. James Mason’ of Pontiac; and loperator of Warner Car & Trailer) HONOLULU (UPI) — When YOU! unexpectedly Tuesday of a heart) Geath of Mrs. Melvin (Hortense) Perkins of Thomasville; a son,|two brothers, Wilfiam J. and Leon. Sales at 3098 W. Huron St., died|take the stand in Federal Judge attack. He had managed the glove | —_ - nine grandchildren; and 20 great-|His grandmother, Mrs. Laura| ment - sited {2° just that, 1947, coming from Milwaukee} grandchildren. Feets of Hapbor Beach, also sur-| Ford Hospita Her body was brought to the} jf ; Thurston Funeral Home in Clare| MARCUS A. BATES ‘ tes, 78 dent of this} : : A Pea a “ ane 1920. ik to be} McLaughlin ruled witnesses "to. Progr” ee as Clothes . Finished by Approved Fur cliff Dr., was a} sion figure in Chicago for 26 years, MRS. CHARLES E. SNIDER |held’ at 2 p.m. today at the Marsh! member « {| must stand up because the fnore died Tuesday of a heart disease Frost Method Vive 3% of Service for. Mrs. marie E. (Al-|Fyheral Home with burial in the} Grace Lutheran orc oie (alee whether ke i. |For many years he was master 39° $ Minimum 60¢ verette) Snider, 83, of 32 Will rd Marlette Cemetery sealed Church. 1 . ° | of ceremonies on radio's National . will be held at 2:30 " m. Thurs-// Mr. Bates died Sunday in Mar-) ii w3 4 Surviving are! telling the truth, he said. | arn ~“Dance—program.—tle—was TIES 3 for * FUR Cc OATS. day at the Farmer-Snover Funera{|lette Community Hospital after a @ his wife, Ida: al And the bannister around the wit-| born in Crawfordsville, Ind. || CLEANED & Home. Burial will follow in Oakjlong ilness. | WARNER son, Calvin C. of|ness stand under the old system! * * * Cc j peace $ Hill Cemetery. / | Surviving are his wife, Bertha: Pontiac; five daughters, Mrs. Rich-|hid everything but the witness 's| HAMILTON, Va. (AP)—Chester C ta A sched Mr&, Snider died of a hearf ail-|a daughter, Mrs. Gerald Moors of\ard E, Shaul, Mrs. Gerard J.|face. Besides, the use of the word) L, Fordney, 66, a retired Marine| urtalns : oes ment Monday at the home $f her|Pontiac; two grandchildren, two \Weber, Mrs, Robert White and|‘‘stand”’ Snakes it clear what was| Corps colonel who at one time| 2 daughter, Mrs. Frank H. /Dohner great-grandchildren, and_a sister,’ ‘Mrs. William Sparks, all of Pon-|originally intended, the judge said.|shared world altitude record, died woo LEN GARMENTS} of 887 N. Perry St 4 pies. William Yule of Romeo. tiac, and Mrs. Allan Crawford of} McLaughlin said witnesses would!Tuesday of a cerebral ‘hemor- a ” — DeR ‘SHA | ‘JOEL A. CRUMBAUGH Pontiac; 13 grandchildren; and a| stand as long as he remained on|rhage. He was the scientific ob-| 1 aniline ee : Some sound ALFRED D. ~ | on Se | gee al he “brother, Floyd of Rochester. the bench in Honolulu. e | server on a balloon piloted by Lt. } RENUVENATE PROCESS i eae $119 ; Alfred D. DeRousha, 66, of 1155) WALLED LAKE — Service for, conice will be held at 2 p.m. ‘Cmdr. T.GW. Settle that spent Deoutiul ae rr advice LaSalle St., died yesterday after-|Joel_ A. Crumbaugh, 16-year-old Friday at Grace Lutheran Church: two hours at the record height of | | piu, 2% of Valv- $ 29 A peckaged. in plasic noon in Pontiac General Hospital| yofth who lost his life in a boating with burial. in Ottawa Park cane ‘Blué Shield Prexy 12st feet on Nov. 20, 1933. He! J ation, Minimum TSHoE aay raxcien Epeoel Have you installed a hi-fi or after a long illnéss. |mishap Monday, will be held at, ‘tery. His body is at the Don lwas born in Saginaw, Mich | 60. REPAIR Shee Repair Service stereophonic unit lately? Or He was a member of Oakland)! P.m, cOmnErOw at the Richart | Johns Funeral Home. x & ® bought a TV set? Furniture? Avenue A Hag Presbyterian | Son- Bird Funerdl Home. Burial Dies in e rol a SAN RAFAEL, Calif: (AP)—Dr Son DRY CLEAN YOUR WALL-TO-WALL CARPETING Church and“dn employe of General| iwill follow in the Walled Lake Frederick D. Seated 84 retired Appliances? If you have, ; - Motors Truck & Coach Division.|Cemetery. : : ‘rnald State health director of Oregon,’ chances are your old insurance Sarviving are his wife,.Elva; a A tenth grader at Walled Lake ig a S ' ' i u—Dr \ - me mal died Tuesday of a heart attack. doesn't cover the present value daughter, Mrs. Arthur Mastick of High School, he lived- with his Foster, president of Michigan Med- ) ar al) Qaranae S Gis .d to. He was born in Detroit, of your possessions. You'll lose. ft pony} ag: three sons, Ivan of Winter| Mother, Mrs, Donald Thompson, Baseball Great Dies unl Service ‘Blue ety i. d a f 1 . F € : out if fire strikes. Call us fora park /Fla.. Merald A. and Destin and his stepfather at 1729 Ashtan ’ ay es ates Eee See NEW YORK (AP) — Elizabeth checkup . . . today. A.. Hoth of Pontiae; 11 grandchil-'St | qa Bayes fhe eo wera), Cobb Rogers, 56, an author and/ drén: three brothers, Lawrence of; Other survivors are two sisters,, POMPANO BEACH, Fla. (AP) mE: sheng aie a . aevernt ARBEHUEY OE the late’ humorist Ir- Qrlando, Fla., Edward and Charles |Jeannine of Ann Arbor and Judy _pig Ed Walsh, one of paseball’s eats Wccieny Sivin Mead both of Pontiac, and four sisters, |¢ home; and tWo brothers, James wih this STAR-HOST = courmens YOU SAVE 50% BY DOING IT YOURSELF You can clean 300 sq. ft. of carpeting for only $12. 95, even more by shoring rentol cost with » your neighbor. Your carpets are ready for vse i ly efter g. We deliver the unique electric brush ond special cleaning com pound to your home, show you how to ose it. We pick vp the brush 2 deys loter. Se retary of the Michigan State Med- “!? S. Cobb, died Monday. greatest pitchers in the first de- jeg) Society and . Mrs. Agnes Dobson of Iron River, Crumbaugh Jr. of California and cade of the -20th century, is dead jeader of Yhe eeaas pirkece i | EXCLUSIVE Thatcher, . aed Econ Sve Me Desyton nl Crumbaugh of South Caro- of cancer. . ee ap pM _ on N-Sub Will Honor Lee . CLEAN ERS LUSTER rex Pp = gains, Q * a De: anson ia > The end came “Tuesday, less _ Le NEWPORT NEWS. Va. &@ — A were > oe CLEANING atterson Mrs. Virginia Ruffato, both of Pon- JOHN RICHELSON than two weeks after his 78th Red Rocks Fheater 16 miles nuclear-pewered submarine of the OPEN FRI., SAT. TIL PROCES = ae SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP — birthday southwest of Denver, Colo., is a type to launch the Polaris missile, a Wernet Service will be held at 1:30 P.M. conice for John Richelson, 89, of x *& * 9,000-seat amphitheater cut veut! now under construction here, will Friday at the Voorhees-Siple Chap- 9331 Dixie Hwy., h “I got a few innings of. living of the mountain. It is said to have be named the Robert E. Lee in 71 Community National } ¢! with burial in White Chapel Me-'., will be held at p.m. tomorrow at the Sharpe-| eft.” the bedridden-Hall of Fame the best acoustics of any outdoor honor of the Confederate com- 4. Bank Building ey Seen? Goyette Funeral Home, Clarkston. Pitcher told a caller then. theater in the! world. mander. / THE : = rial w , ore * * +. == — - - ——__________—— $$$ $$ _$_____—__—_— —— Pontiac's Oldest Iwsurance Agency THERON J. BROOKS dR. Burtal will follow in the Anderson , . — PRONDALE—Semiies iar There ville Cemetery. Walsh took to his bed a year _ . - J. Brooks Jr. 20. of 4G ae Mr. Richelson died yesterday in after arriving here in 1956 fromi ¢” = . i aaa ea Rar ma 7 OP ee aire Rd will be held at = =i a Pontiac Hospital. He left no Meriden, rion where he worked . P z | row ° ‘| survivors, in the twilight years as a water i be 7 . - Now Many Wear ,{fomorrow at the Zion Luthe-an : department superintendent | | FALSE TEET in Roseland Park Cemetecy. He will be buried Friday at For- AES in Roseland Park Ce ry. ° y<é : : ° H The —e vid pecig ts life Child Ties Last 68 Years est Lawn Memorial Gardens here a ee | With Little Worry in a boating accident Monday His| EDMOND. OkI w—For 68 after a Requiem Mass at St. Cole- : yee Tee tae coon Salk. jaugh or sneeze without body is at Wessels Funeral Home ais - _ man’s Catholic Church. y. ae j ar Of insecure false teeth dropping, > years Mrs. W: S. Rumsey of Ed- iy as ppine of wobbling FASTEETH here until 2 p.m. tomorrow when it ~ | : (iriatly The pleat ae kolo it will be taken to tbe church to'™ond has kept up correspondence | rach hour of the day and night, | ‘ a a oN _— sei pausea Its alkaline he : in state until time of service. with her childhood friend, Mrs. U.S. railroads perform the equiv- ‘ ; ; i B (non-acid). Checks cuntk eaee Survivors include his mother,'Sydney Osborne, Golden City, Mo. alent of moving 69.6 million tons : - : 4 “ oe oe hb) Get FASTRETH at Mrs. Lillian -M. Klinert; his They were girls together in Amity, of freight and 3.6 million passen- oe n . ‘ adopted parents, Mr. and Mrs.|Mo. ' gers one mile | { ‘ i - ; : : sf q « : . ~ } : ° ¥ a ¥ Oe } WHY HAS ee |! EDDIE STEELE-FORD valout! “a | : SOLD OVER - | : (in time for Memorial Day) 2,422 CARS and TRUCKS _ Ask Your Neighbor About the é y . 4 4 4 . , of : 4 : q e ‘ + * ’ aa e } . Low overhead plus high volume does mean savings to you Large selection ‘ of new and used cars and trucks in the big new Eddie Steele Ford outdoor Oo showroom where only the sky 4s overhead. i: e 7 a eae ; é | gee | SA 4 ' ¥ [rs . : . ¢ 7 * « ~ ‘5 R : Top-notch well-trained -service men with all the latest modern equipment | and expanded facilities now undef construction give you the smartest service } = in the woftld. * . . « s e of : 2 a t 4 — . ; i = } | i | * : . Everybody at Eddie Steele Ford ts sincerely ith ag seeing that you | } p i h od k ~ are made lo feel right at home and that you are really happy with your car. ¢ So ly You will enjoy rea) satisfaction at Eddie Steele Ford. i sensationa we can ha eep - } SA } ISFAC } ION | them on our racks! Yes . . . complete = i . b4 | ensemble of Arnel-and-cotton at this ~s i | Bee. ae * . - ¢ is ' fantastic low price! Dramatic black and white . DON’T TAKE ONE WITHOUT THE OTHER | checks ... the season’s newest color combination, in Gn all-around pleated skirt and a You will never know your best deal until you smart sleeveless blouse. So hurry .. . get yours, AN . : have been to Eddie Steele Ford. . ‘cause they're sellout priced! Misses’ sizes 10-18. . “ ; 7 = il - FREE SOUVENIR FLAGS and SPACE SHIP RIDES FOR THE KIDDIES ALL WEEK | | Use our convenient lay-away plan... no extra eabess We Will-B2 Closed Memorial Day a ae : .» EDDIE $§ FELE FORD, Inc. _ : ie. ea 2705 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD KEEGO HARBOR BIG NEW OUTDOOR SHOWROOM = 0UT_ OF THE HICH ‘OVERHEAD AREA = FE 5.9204 PONTIAC’S DIRECT FACTORY, DEALER 4s . "200 N. SAGINAW ST.-FREE PARKING in.the REAR 7 . | t as a THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1959 | De-Emphasizes Military Help ET TE, House Committee Stresses Economic Foreign Aid | | ‘ WASHINGTON fAP) — The nation’s foreign aid program had a strong nudge today in the direc-| tion of economic rather than mili-| tary -assistance. The House Foreign Affairs Com- mittee “provided the change of| emphasis as it approved late Tuesday a foreign aid authoriza- | | tion bill cut $266,800,000 below | President Eisenhower's request for $3,930,000,000. * * * | The measure, subject to. both House and Senate action and to a change of figures in a later ap-| propriation bill, would authorize new spending of $3,642,000,000 plus about 21 milliom dollars of left-| over funds. The cut was only slightly below) last year’s authorization of $3,656,-; The over-all reduction, however, does. not tell the full story the committee plainly intended to con- vey (6 the administration. * * r-—- It raised by 100 million dollars Fisenhower’s proposed _ 700- million-dollar allocation for loans to help develop backward coun- tries CUTS MILITARY AID And—counter to the trend of for- eign aid votes in the House in! recent years — it made mayor cuts in- military items It was understood the commit- tee also agreed to emphasize in its report that the military reduc- tions are to be made primarily in arms.aid to Latin American and other countries: not considered to be the potential firing line — as are the NATO countries, South Korea and Ndtionalist China * * * Eisenhower's general military iid item was cut by 160 million dollars from $1,600,000,000 to $1.440,000.000 The related defense item. for cash aid to countries straining their budgets through their military efforts, was slashed from 835 million to 750 million dollars FUND SLASHED The President s contingency fund, to be used on his authority in emergencies, was cut from 200 to 100 million. support One economic aid item, provid-| ing for grants,-not loans, was trimmed. This is the special as- sistance fund, cut $21,800,000 from Eisenhower’s recommendation, to an even 250 million. * * * But the committee voted the full 17942 million dollars Eisenhower had recommended for technical assistance—the ‘‘know-how’’ pro-| gram to help’ underdeveloped countries get started on econom- ic improvements. Actual funds for foreign aid are provided in separate appropria- tions legislation. These cannot ex- ceed, but may well cut below, the} figures in the authorization bill Congress finally passes. | y x * * Chairman Thomas E. Morgan} (D-Pa), who has favo a strong | foreign aid program, ¢alled the committee-approved bill a sound) one and gaid he would try to ar-| range a House vote the second week in June. Wants Payments Cut: Earning Too Much! | HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Andrew) McLaglen says hes paying too much for child support because he’s earning more. * * * Under a 1957 divorce order, the son of actor Victor McLaglen was directed to pay his ex-wife, 38- year-old actress Veda Ann Borg $390 monthly alimony. McLaglen, 38, a television producer-director, also wag told to pay $100 monthly and an extra 15 per cent of his gross income over $1,400 monthly for. support. of the couple’s child Victor II, 42 McLaglen's attorney asked for a change in the order to provide a maximum of $5,000 a year child support and that the percentage | be computed on take-home pay rather than gross income Dr. Evon:Z. Vogt, Harvard Uni- versity authority on American *In- dians, was a U.S. naval air combat intelligence officer during World — Hundreds of War II » UPI Phete — Jacob the drake BETTER DUCK, DRAKE a gone goose as Prinz the German shepherd puts the bite on him at a farm near Frankfurt, West Germany. The quacker is in the the best ~ of friends and nobody gets hurt when they play together like this. looks like no danger—he and dog are ~ Aussie Girls Mob Tab MELBOURNE today, They dragged him from his irms Australia AP) car and covered his light-colored. tear his clothes off. Hunter even mobbed U.S. film star Tab Hunter'girls kissed him, tugged at his after the mob stopped all traffic pulled his hair and tried to teenage girls coat with lipstick. The screeching ‘tually escaped into a radio station Soviet Aide's Wite, Daughter, 5, Vanish LONDON (AP)—The wife and 5- year-old daughter of a Soviet na- | | | val attache were reported missing in.London today, The woman was named. as Nina Dmitriev, 35, She vanished with her daughter Lena on Saturday, informed sources said. * * * Mrs. Dmitriev is the wife of |Capt Aleksandr Dmitriey, a new assistant attache | at ae Soviet | Embassy | Scotland Yard and the Foreign Office refusad immediate com- ment : |- The Soviet Embassy, a_ buff mansion on London's ‘‘Million- jaire’s Row,”’ refused all calls. x «© & | Sources said Capt. Dmitriev, 38, jleft his apartment near the em- bassy Saturday with two other em- bassy officials. Neighbors believed they were going to Hawkhurst, the | Soviet weekend mapsion in Kent. Soon after, Mrs. Dmitriev and the child left the apartment say- ling they also were going to Hawk- hurst. Neither arrived there. Balsa wood weighs only one- half as much as cork. MARK DAVIS AMERA Phy f > "HURRY! WHILE THEY-LAST! Big 60 Oz. Size G poi! : ¥ ae? ee f f-~\ Pitcher be Regular c / $1.00 Kalue! 4 . - j Twe color polyethylene with special pouring spout. Choice of color combinations. PAINT & Gohasion WALLPAPER co. | FE 2-700] ohnsTon Paints + ROSENBERGER 34S. SAGINAW WE SELL SPECIALS for M fi} 'a fi the WEEKEND ee | Screen Alone Is a $21.95 Value | and SCREEN Once in a Lifetime SAVINGS SPECIAL FOR THURSDAY—FRIDAY MONDAY—TUESDAY Open Friday - Monday Eve. to 9 P.M. Qraseaey a Yo be be ve re ve ei SS PORTE OT es RR ated —. Guy Now aud Save! TRUCKLOAD PURCHASE... TERRIFIC VALUES! Per Week Only Not Exacily as Pictured GADGET BAGS ide pose OE Direct Factory Import . WELTAFLEX © Built-In Full Synchronization ° Self-Timer from 1 Second to 1/250 © Precision §3.5 Coated Lenses *® Double Exposure Prevention Our Lowest Price KODAK CINE SCOPEMETER. ve TURRET AU f 1.9 Lens @ Regular Lens $6775 e@ Telephoto Lers @ Wide Angle Lens @ Reg. $99.50 (N&t Ranetly 08 Pietered) — Regular $49.95 ha CASE FREE ace A.—36"'x21"x66"! Full width shelf; walnut finish. Lock and key; convenient mirror; dou- ble refrigerator-type doors. YOU SAVE $15.00. Regularly $44.95 ; g% YOUR CREDIT __. INSTANTLY APPROVED See Our Complete Line of Utility and Kitchen Wall Cabimets Regularly $34.95 g% No Bank or Loan Company. Pay Where You Buy. No Carrying Charges on 5 Wyman’s Budget Plan. B.—36"x19"x63"! Walnut finish; “hat shelf. Holds 20 garments. YOU SAVE $15.00. Park Free Next to Either Store | 17 E.Huron St. (18 W. Pike St. o- Be. Sure to Ask for Wyman’s Blue Trading Stamps. Goed for. Valuable ~ Premiums. Free Delivery. Free Parking or Bus Tokens. BINOCULARS Center Focus Reg. i 18" CASE FREE SENSATIONAL SLIDE PROJECTOR VALUE! LA BELLE Al Guarantee on all photo- _graphic equip. “$3 Q95 utomatic CASE PRO NECTOR 3 9 | FREE. SAVE ON YOUR FILM Eastman-Kodak ‘Sum COLOR Kodacolor Film MOVIE FILM 620,120, 127 Sie *] 95 Fresh Dated Reg. $1.35 8mm MAGAZINE . COLOR = K135 KODACHROME ! 20 Exposures ......... *]* MARK DAVIS Gamer ‘83 NORTH SAGINAW. STRE ] | . | THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1959 } . ® ‘SUMMER SLACKS... We have one of the largest selections of cool, light- weight blend summer slacks at popular prices. Be comiortable ... keep cool... look fresh this week- end_ holiday! RANDOLPH HBarwood CUSTOM TAILORS & CLOTHIERS $08 W. Huron FE 2-2300 Complete Tailoring Service —Tuxedo Rentals PROM DATE? 2 Only the newest, 5 sharpest Tux's! ; Pive (5) styles 2 Special student prices! ~~ at all. 3 thopal al s ® FREE! FREE! & RUBBER CAR °$ RUG ry s @ with every brake May ttn very 1-HOUR SERVICE || if (pisses. While You Wait || | Op, i : . All Other U.¢ Care ) / 20.000 MILE oy | FY ) B) UNCONDITIONAL Guapen en GUARANTEE! Open Daily 8-9 Saturday 8-6 FEderal 3-7855 | Highly Favored American Falls fo ‘Unknown’ Captain of U. S. Walker Cup Team Beaten, 1-Up by Murray Lawrence SANDWICH, England (UPI) — Murray Lawrence of England pro 'duced the greatest upset of the 1959 {British Amateur Golf Champion- iship today when he eliminated iCharlie Coe of Oklahoma City, |Okla., 1-up, in the third round. Coe, captain of the victorious U.S. Walker Cup team and the American amateur -king, was the tournament favorite. Lawrence, almost unknown in British golf circles, surprised Coe hy winning the first two holes and hit the turn with a 4-up lead. ry | Coe got three of those back. The \lanky American then took a double- bogey 6 on the 13th that dropped | him two behind. He won the 15th Shadrick, winner of the sportswear Coe Upset in British Amateur MIGHT FIT ME! — Carl Lemle (left) coach of the Birmingham High golf team which won its 6th Press tournament Monday gives Fred ty “fan meet,” A hint that the outfit might fit him. Shadrick, Royal Oak Dondero coach, shot Pentlac Press Phete an actual 38 to win the sportswear, courtesy of Richman Brothers. Lemle and other coaches in picture Jim Beadle (back left) of Oak Park, Dick Ayling (with cap) of Pontiac Central, and in the facul- PITTSBURGH A + sto HOUSE PAINT Featured on the Garry Moore Show Save 20% —Reg. List *7.35 oo ao Tom Raeside of Clawson each shot net 39s. but then bowed out by halving the| last three holes. ' “I missed a lot of opportunities but Lawrence played some reat POQATSON Goes golf, especially on the front nine, No Money Down 24 Months to Pay AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION MOTOR TUNE-UP Fast Service—Quality Work MOTOR 401 S. Saginaw FE 3-7432 |\Coe admitted at the conclusion. ;‘He was unscared and deserved ito win.”’ son, American League Rookie of BALTIMQRE (AP)—Albie Pear-} Both handed 2 Fish, Frog Combination The mudskipper has a head and to Orioles jforelegs remarkably like a frog's 4” Brush Special—$3.98 Reg. $5.68—Tynex Nylon players threw and hit left-;and the rest of the body that of I \fish. Before Coe’s upset, two of his the Year in 1958 for Washington}, | Walker Cup ‘teammates, Jack | Nicklaus of Columbus, Ohio, and | Bill Hyndman of Abington, Pa., gained berths in this afternoon's fourth round. Nicklaus posted a | 1-up victory over England’« Tony | Clark and Hyndman trounced T. and a favorite of the capital fans, will be on the opposite side of the field when the Senators play here tonight. | Pearson was obtained by the ‘Orioles in exchange for Lenny Green, another outfielder. Le _ deal .was announced after last | Dilks Page of England, 6 and 5. night’s 65 victory by’ Baltimore Lieut, Bob Magee of Newton!over Washington. Highlands, Mass., turned back Eng- * * * land's Fred Binns, 1-up, but Lieut.|_ Last year Pearson hit .275, led Bill Gibson of Louisville, Ky., lost!the Washington club in singles ito Michael Bonnalack, a member|(113), doubles (25) and_ stolen of Britain’s Walker Cup team, on|bases (7) to edge Yankee pitcher \the 19th hole. Ryne Duren for rookie honors. Other U. S. losers yesterday were; A_ groin injury and a touch of MacDONALD TIRE CO.’S GREAT MONEY-SAVING SALE OF ARMSTRONG MIRACLE TIRES ENDS FRIDAY MAY 29th DON’T MISS OUT ON THESE TERRIFIC WHITEWALL BUYS +S wy \) \\ \\) X\ \ ARMSTRONG MIRACLE TIRES WHITEWALL—TYREX—TUBELESS First Line Road Hazard Guarantee # “+ 45.00 | —“* 730/14) “49 35 | 19.95 800/14) “39.45 | 21.95 850/14) —*=" | 23.95 670/15| 42:90 | i950. TVOIN15| 21.50 760/15| © | 23.50 | BLACKWALLS 800820151 47.00 | asso EVEN LESS! Above Prices Plus Tax and Recappable Trade TRUCKERS ATTENTION: SAVE REAL DOUGH DURING OUR BIG INTRODUCTORY SALE OF FIRST LINE TRIPLE SHOCK PAD, RHINO-FLEX CONSTRUCTION ARMSTRONG TRUCK TIRES MIRACLE-TRACTION RIB 750/20 10 Ply $52.50 F t Tex 825/20 10 Ply $56.502°7.. - 900/20 10 Ply $62.50 -2°s.. Similar Sevings Light Truck Sizes HURRY—SALE ENDS MAY 29 MacDONALD TIRE CO. 370 S. SAGINAW ST. FE 5-6136 PONTIAC Col. C. C. Kenwérthy of Luverne, |influenza set Pearson back this} Ala., Peter Grant of Phoenix, Ariz.,/spring and he lost the centerfield} Ken Foster of San Francisco, Dr.|job to power-hitting rookie Bob} UP TO 50% DISCOUNT | | 7-Inch Roller and Tray—98¢ Mohair Cover—$1.50 Value : nol ON NEW & USED AUTO PARTS. We Pay Top $$$$ for Wrecked Exhoust Pipes | Genert = oo and Junk Cars and Trucks a Ps yomes, ters,. PONTIAC GLASS CO. Ernie Vandeweghe of Rockville|Allison. Pearson has played in} \Centre, N.Y., Sgt. Fred Stratman|only 24 games and is_hitting .190. of Leon Grove, Calif., W. S. Brown! Green likewise has been a part- of Salem, Mass., Jack Penrose of|time performer for the Orioles Miami, Fla., Lieut. R. L. Swan-|He is hitting .292 for -24 at bats. siger of Youngstown, Ohio, and|Twice before he has had tryouts Lieut. Tom Sutter of New Orleans.|with the Orioles but finished last ePoneitoe | season with Rochester. Decoration Day SPORT SAVINGS CROQUET SET 6 Mallets, rubber tipped 6 Plastic Balls Blue enamel stand with rubber tired wheels. 11.99 HORSESHOE SET 4 Shoes — 2 Stak 6 e Reg. $8.60 ZEBCO REEL Was $19.50 Now . $1] V7 | Downtown Only | BADMINTON SETS 4 Rackets Metal Posts Net. Birds’ » °7.95 Other Sets From $2.99 GOLF CLUBS lrons..... Were $6.60.... Now $3.95 Woods.... Were $8.50.... Now $5.95 | Men’s and Ladies’ — Carried in Open Stock WADERS ‘4 7.05 ALL RUBBER, BOOT FEET Downtown Only CANOE PADDLES $1.50 » Free pair of suspenders with each Downtown ‘Only Others From $4.69 e pair of waders. ee a “ - : Holiday Shop 24 E. Lawrence St. 696 W. Huron St. i > with the whiskey that’s light, gentle, RR t i whiskey by Hiram Walker... for people with an educated taste and a sense of value ot ~ $381 = $940 ‘ ; . 4/5 Qt. Pint ‘ = ‘ Code Neo. 408 < Knowledgeable people © Duy Tiperial ae enn always in good taste La . . BLENDED WHISKEY « 86 PROOF « 30% STRAIGHT WHISKEYS, 6 YEARS OR MORE OLD + 70% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS » HIRAM WALKER & SONSING., PEORIA, ILUNOIS Open Sunday 10 A. M. to 2 P. M.- | 23 West Lawrence Street FE 5-6441 | BAGLEY AUTO PARTS | Gy «| nem 170 Bagley St. FE 5-9210-19 7] Deliver | FREE BUS TOKENS UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT f Le Another Tough Loser SAN DIEGO, Calif, &—Dick ‘Stigman, San Diego southpaw, pitched 1034 innings of hitless ball but wasn’t dround at the fin- ish as the Padres had to go 15 in- nings to edge:Salt Lake City 1-0 in a Pacific Coast League game last night... ~*~ * * Bill Moraii’s. perfect squeeze bunt with one out in the 15th brought in the game’s only | run, TUESDAY'S FIGHTS FRESNO. Calif—Hank Casey, THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, }959 San Francisco. outpoin tro, 157%, Arcadia, Calif. 12. MOBILE, Ala.—Guy Sumlin, 145, Prich ard, Ala., outpointed Tony Dupas, 149. New Orleans, 10. HAR RD, Conn.—Junamy Monts, Hartford ked out Joe White, 162, New York, 2 HO’ Tex —Cleveland wintame| USTON, 215, Houston knocked out Ernie Cab, 219, |New York, 6. PITTSBURGH—Art 68widen, bu ——— Oliie Wilson, fo Conn., 10. 195. Pitts- 188, Hart Maurice Richard, Canadiens’ ace,, has been in pro hockey 17 . lyears. , By The Associated Press A winning blend of hitting and pitching has kept Cleveland on top in the American League pen- nant race, and when the hitters miss, the pitchers can do that job too. Left-hander Don Ferrarese took care of the pitching and the punch for the Indians last night, com- bining with reliever Jim Perry for a four-hit shutout while driv- ing two runs and scoring one with three consecutive doubles in a 3-0 victory over the Chicago White’ Sox. That pushed Cleveland two games ahead of the second place White Sox and put Ferrarese in aw. |Ferrarese Stars at Plate as Tribe Boosts AL Lead -Indian Pitchers Also Hit edge, but Reno-Bertoia and Bob Allison followed with RBI singles before Harmon Killebrew hit into a game-ending force out, Russ Kemmerer (44), who gave up a solo home run by Tasby in the fiftn, lost his third in a row for the Senators, who took a 3-1 lead in the sixth on Faye Throneber- ry’s two-run homer. Right-hander Tom Brewer get up two runs in the first inning on three hits, then blanked the Yan- kees on four singles the rest of the way for his third victory has lost three in. a row for th first time since 1955, walked eigh but gave up only five hits in bh 6 2-3 innings, He had allowed three hits, but trailed 32, before! giving way in a five-run seventh. SLAYBAUGH’S WILL BE OPEN the record book as the fifth pitch- er -to hit three two-baggers in a nine-inning game—the first to do) it in 36 years. The White Sox second white- THURS., FRI. NIGHTS UNTIL 9 P.M. LOW Everything for Your Camping Pleasure PUP TENTS . : “TIMBERLINE” FEATURING "H ET T R iC K " T E NT 5) S'5" Including Ropes washing in thre games left them OVERHEAD LOCATIONS ee a ee Alem, i Fiaer ying, Screens, The Quality Cost You No More 4 BEAND mt} i re _ oe ee ast B IG , GLOSED SATURDAY, MAY 30th ok oe ante Remon ee ma es FOR) NOU Fc gg a tory over Kansds City, and Boston IN LAKE ORION—2 LOCATIONS SHOP FOR YOUR HOLIDAY NEEDS : Rooms as 134" stopped its skid by pounding the ee ae a a eee THURSDAY & FRIDAY NIGHTS! New York Yankees . deeper | into the cellar 12-2, - \ Ferrarese, a mont shy of his 30th. birthday, had the only hit off Chicago right - hander Dick Donovan for four innings. Then he cracked the shutout duel in the fifth with his second double, scoring Woody Held, who had sin- gled, and scoring himself when SEE MOST OF THESE TENTS SET UP ON OUR DISPLAY FLOOR WE RENT TENTS Umbrelia—Wall—Cottage Type Russ Johnson Motors Broadway Corner of Shadbolt — M-24 Corner of Shadbolt MY 2-2871 SLAYBAUGH’S ! 630 OAKLAND FE 8-0453 $3.98 $13.50 7x7’ UMB Water RKepelient, A Fair Weather Favortte 584.50 S!a9 FAMILY LODGE $ » to s 16° — 2 Reoms 138 Cross VENTILATION TENT “Peles, Stakes 33 weet ONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER “ ~ Cc eiss i a eae? ears PY Siege Ncaliare Ale” ggg.gQ __USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN FOR ALL YOUF CWin'siukes, Fees” [Jim Perisall followed with a dou-|) —~ ee aise Wee" “test Pes Rea: seme "", CAMPING NEEDS — $1.00 HOLDS YOUR CHOICE $4.98 ple Another single - oe on le ; ination iy e. a rrarese a 4 ; . BOAT COVERS | {sleman Lontern ......$11.88| FISHING TACKLE [7700s up against Donovan) e e Shaped Canvas—Draw Rope : ‘Ferrarese (42) gave up only @ : 12-Ft. 8" 14-Ft.°10” Pe Salers | jug eee pe Giese Costing Reds... .88€ Up Hihree hits and struck out four be-| 3 : C ice Chest $10.88 Glass Spinning Rods. .$1,88 Up [fore calling it quits after issuing|*. es vshions oer ae . Casting Reels ...... $1.79 Up }jhis sixth walk with one out in the} ©: ey C. G. Appr : $ 2.98 Spinning Reels ..... $3.85 Up seventh. Hee ay on the 2 me ® . — Landing Nets ........ 88e Up Fo iki out three and walking a Sent Cover with Windshiels ; sa ia C 6. per. tat S118 ves Ke fourth “ace: ‘ = an or Cover Attac lidren’s ......... Minnow Buckets ...... $1.88 A three-run homer by Gene} 12-Ft. $18.88 14-Ft. $21.88 Adults ; $3.98 Woodli uled the Orioles from . 16-Ft. $24.88 18-Ft.$29.88 | Commercial = $7.88 | Beat Anchors ..... eee a aan erin ciath inni BADMINTON SETS —— Ja C90BU0GCR006 25¢ [but a double by Willie Tasby and | 4 2 Play = eee bs Cattidh Line «oo sce ccs es 15¢ Bob Hale’s- pinch single scored | 7 4 Play w F the clincher in the eighth. Hector gO 6 shes nn x five e Sell Fishing Licenses Brown (2-1), first of four pitchers, |) 5 was the winner as Billy Loes|). " barely managed to put away his|*. NAVY PARKING The Senators had two men on)" — In The Rear = vith none out i the ninth when | , es eee ly eae Begin the summer fun season with most relaxing clothes we have | — — — ; ever shown. Comfort is the watchword for the season, and Dickin- son’s couple it with the smartest styling and color combinations. Choose from our -fine selections and enjoy the’ outdoor season ahead. cu GUAR Onis MONTH! LIFETIME GUARANTEE against all defects in material and workmanship STETSON STRAWS Style and cool comfort are woven in lightweight Baku fibers with a smart puggree band. The Baka- tan, shown. Vg ag Rea os f?. SPORT COATS RESORTWEAVE® e rorated on tread wea: from 5 95 P . a A new featherweight: wool and Orion 7-ounce SATISFACTION GUARANTEED blend that is tops for summer comfort, yet feels or your money back. All adjustments are based on like cashmere. Cool color ¢ e yoo , . ° re. tones from ancient India. current price ... without trade-in at time of return. cieieieeiaiemaieaiestiaiisiaasaiiliasssiaaaas Wear it with comfort-cut Palm Beach slecks ia ; dozens of new shades. TIME SERVICE GUARANTEE against all types of road hazards prorated on the months used. KNIT SHIRTS Open weave knit shirts ore fast becoming the summer favorite for cool comfort and _ relaxed styling. ~ 5.95 Coats from ~ 35.00 Slecks. from 6.50 = from $ 9.50u04 Te tC Tubeless © “P| onty vat | |’ SPORT SHIRTS us 5 4 P . . ese in a wide variety of © : btl AND YOUR OLD TIRE ond colors REGARDLESS. OF ITS-CONDITION ! 7) AND YOUR OLD TIRE © REGARDLESS OF ITS CONDITION Foe or th 4 Blackwall ral Each, New lightweight fabrics make . these Bermudas more. popular than ever. Nylon cord for more safety driving comfort © Special tread design assures safer stops © High mileage “emulsamix” blended rubber © Feel better by driving on an ALLSTATE EE ge Se tate eat SEs teens Ee Bile ols Be i 7 ES, pe Se Sits nl oon ee Casual outdoor water repellent sport jockets in-all the new styles. | 14-In. Tubeless Whitewall Wheels Balanced SAFETY CUSHIONS | Toilored.for comfort in ion 14.95 , Including smart new colors and pat- for é Weights , terns. 7. PS we sal Waitewall Each, "26 AND YOUR OLD TIRE Regardless of Ite Condition from ——— 3.95. =. Shop Sears ) See Our Windows _ ura Monday & Friday _. Nites ‘til 9 “1a w Saginaw se f° Phone FE 5-4171“ Auto Accesbories Dept., Perry St. Basement ne ae pala anna Ame SEARS © 18- Month atime Conrentes _ Open Friday Night ‘til 9 " DIRMINGHAM—272 Bt een ae THE neXt CORNER — PONTIAC aids SAR ak FY THK PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1959 RENDEZVOUS — Here's a suggested holiday affair for boating families. Hold some spot on a lake, at the bend of a river, or fun holiday. a rendezvous at other gathering spot. Several groups car join in and singing, Teachers May File Bids for ‘Outdoors School . LANSING — Applications are now being accepted by organiza-| tions sponsoring teachers who wish| to attend the annual conservation| scholarship school this summer. | §$cholarships are provided by | | the Federated Garden Clubs, the Women’s National. Farm and Garden Association, Michigan | United Conservation Clubs, | Daughters of the American Rev- | olution and other conservation. | minded groups. Local egleee | of these organizations select teachers to attend this school. | ence ceitintne eG iaiasm As in the past, each week-long} jsession will be held at the Conser- vation Department's Higgins Lake) training school. Inclusive -dates for each school are July 12-18,| (July 26-August 1, August 9-15 and! boating. | August 16-22. adding zest to a By JOHN BOHANNAN Syndicated Boating Writer Memorial Day, coming up this week-end, marks the beginning of! the racing season for many yacht clubs, and everywhere boating be- comes a colorful sport with flags flying and a spirit of companion- ship prevailing Some new boatmen may feel “left out,’ especially if they have not yet joined a-club, and for those here's an answer — look up several friends who have boats and organize a rendezvous ‘This can merely be a simple arrangement to meet at a cer- tain time and place — at a bend in the river, in the lee of an island, or to make it extra easy, at the dock of one of those wa- terfront restaurants. Or the rendezvous: can be made more elaborate, with a contest to try out the navigating ability o! the skippers and their mates. This willy appeal particularly to thost who have taken the excellent p: loting course offered by the’ units of the United States Power Squad rons. — Just before leaving his home skipper receives a succession dock, each sealed orders of courses to follow on the chart, all ending at the same destination Each captain is asked to set the speed he wants to use for the en- tire trip, then give as exact an estimate as he can of his time of rival giving For every minute early or Tate at the destination, he is penalized one point from his perfect score of 1000 The finish of the predicated log race can be made more ex- citing if the person charged with laying out the course problems for the various skippers allows them to select their own start- ing times to arrive at the des- tination exactly at noon. This makes for a photo finish if all are evenly matched, Alternate plans ean be an nounced if'the weather turns bad and in either case if the after noon is to be a family picnic, keep the food simple and easy to serve On small lakes and rivers with point-to-point problems over known courses, the equipment can be re fuced to bare essentials . Youre the Skipper Kalamazoo Holds Ist Outdoor Show The 12th annual Kalamazoo Ken-! net club’s all-breed dog show and obedience trial, June 6, will be the first outdoor dog show of the sea- son for Michigan. That's what If the rendezvous proves a suc- James Bobb, president, reported cess, more skippers will want to when he announced the show ex- join your group for the next eyent- pected entries from 30 states, Mex- It could even become a real club. j¢9 and Canada Questions and Answers * * * What are the correct flags to fly on a small runabout? Fly your club burgee from the E. W. Averill of Birmingham is one of the judges, for the affair, set for County Center Building bow staff and the yachting ensign Recreation park, Kalamazoo. En- frém the stern staff. If you are @ tries close May 26, with Marion member, ~,the be substituted Power Squadron USPS ensign may it the stern. What is the Coast Guard Auxil- Raise New Family and *how Webb, Auburn, Ind lary inspection, can J get one for my boat? A devoted pair ef Canadian * * * geese, back for the summer near the Otter Jake home of Mr. an This inspectiog # voluntary on our part and if your boat has all Mrs. Howard Lewis, have a new proper safety and tion family—two bright yellow goslings t os . ‘ “ equipment, you will be given a Mrs. have been returning to Otter lake each navig Lewis says the geese decal for the windshield. Inquire 3 at your. boat club or yacht club Spring for years Their last family for the name and address of the Was a o-gosling array, two years inspection officer- of the nearest 4&0 USCGA flotilla The geese, come to the Lewis Is there amy place where I can lawn for bread and other food get help in forming an outboard Mrs. Lewis reports. ‘‘The gander beat club? never eats while the goose is eat- Write to the Outbocrd Boating ing. I think he's keeping watch to Club of America, 207 N. Michigan see that no enemy appears,’’ Mrs Ave., Chicago I, Illinois Lewis observed 5 2504 FAMOUS MAKE Nui MUM Lightweight alt THRIFTY GRANTS SAVES YOU i fo to 33 » BUY NOW! XTENSION LADDERS 95 20° size 1.25 week* 5 iminum with | 1 — or Doublelok | Corrugated 1*4° | { i safety rungs | bag) Lee Everblooming built-in safety warranteed to meet and surpass the indus try's specificamo: COMPARE FEATURE FOR FEATURE weanis! | GRANTS ~ SITE |COMPETITPON| PRICE | SAVINGS 20°] 41.95 | 2895 | 30.9% 24°} 49-85 | 36.95 | 26.0% _ re] 58.95) | 4395 | 25.4% _ “37% ] 77.98 || 51.95 | 33.3%. 36'| 87.95 | 5é 95 | 32.9% _40° 96.95 | 68.95 | 289% 4 ~ NO MONEY DOWN Is [on AN | standard equipment Selected 2 Yeer Field Grown For a | 00 Rubber safety shoes are Spring-loaded automatic satety rung lock Rosebushes Everblooming Shopping Center Arcadia Superooted Select Reg. 1.49 | English Ivy & Begonia Plants 11c ea. RIDE THE BUS TO GRANTS MIRACLE MILE Rosebushes ’ WANT MORE FOR YOUR MONEY KEEP YOUR =< | MOWERS HAVE FORWARD —J st ON GRANTS ———__ WIG 24-INCH ROTARY | CUTS MOWING TIME 25% . ni > | ER 4938 \ Reg. 54.88 \ NO MONEY DOWN a XY $1.25 Per Week \ Powerful 3 HP 4 cycle Briggs & Stratton engine, wide 24° cut, features recoil starter, \ Choke-a-Matic handle control. Leaf mulcher. @ 3'4 HP 4-cycle Clinton engine @ Safety clutch 24" RIDING ROTARY | AND REVERSE SPEEDS Tops in performance with plenty of go-power. Fast wheel adjust- ment changes cutting heights. 10” rear... 8” front semi-pneu- matic tires for smooth riding. $] 39” ONE’ YEAR WARRANTY on Clinton engine. Guaranteed " against defects in materials and workmanship under normal use and care. a % > - * x > FT ';pic-type courses have been desig- of a lake Along the Outdoor Trail With H. GUY MOATS e ; | | Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Press ° Game Experts Seek to Aid Preserves Women P lay Key Roles = sin U.S. Outdoors Life perts will ask the conservation lcommission next month for au- thority to give Michigan's 35, |struggling shooting preserves a peter break. sale . By The Press Outdoors Editor po! regulations woul r- : in There’s a lot of truth in a recent item from a national vate, to open at least three weeks arms maker’s public relations bureau regarding the part say the et = srently, | Women play in the outdoors life of the country. The ‘preserves can't open for business Old Romans, it is pointed out, knew what they were do- Kemp-used & kite to take t the pnee ha start r the ear but ing when they named a patroness for the hunt. They air at the Mediterranean resort. |ont, have to shut down before selected Diana as goddess, The Greeks had a name for - Game men also are likely to re- her, too. They had earlier called her Artemis. Yachts Take Part ‘commend a boost in the percent-| It's a matter of history that the feminists have always sage of released birds that can be played a vital part in the wresting of new lands from the In Pan-Am Games ifree on adjoining lands, dependin HICAC ae _on the total released. «These! lost. CHICAGO (NEA)—Yachting will thereby become targets for’ other! play a major role for the first punter | UPI Photo WAVES—Ameri- can water skier Sonny Kemp |mit all preserves, public and pri- OVER THE rises to the occasion at Cannes, France, during an . exhibition. Not content with merely speed- ing over the waves on skis, ers sy ent wigioprg’ require wilderness in the nation’s early days. When frontiers had dis- : per cent of the birds 8° appeared, much of the contact with the hunt, for women. also But today! There’s a renaissance in outdoor sports time when the. Pan-American . - | that’s been going on for some years and is now at a high Games are held in Chicago, Aug. p- | level. Women have recently been among the finest shots 2 - Sept. 7. Pike Is Cannibal at trap and skeet (remember Carol Mandel’s feats in na- The increase in yachting com-, The walleve vike is a: conliened tional skeet circles here several years ago?) sis e peing made posse bY carnivor and its fobd con sts THAT HUNTER MAY BE A GAL! states yacntsmen who are ie ; : roviding boats for contestants uelY of Smaller fish, including = ‘The girls are also taking to hunting in a big way. They P g s { other walleyes. Carp are bottom , from other nations. Three Olym- feeders. They root up the bottom shoot alongside the males in quail, pheasant, grouse fields, or pond when they feed &Ven participate in rugged duck and goose shooting, and do all nated on Lake Michigan and keep the water roily so that Tight.at it, too. Many have a natural talent for hunting, shoot- All five of the International plants can't gruw. Brook trout ing—and fishing. : Olympic classes-Stars, Dragons, 5.5 feed mainly on insects, insect * * * Sa eaimeanapld i. pel alae mt areal tite And she is beginning to influence hunting equipment in addition to Lightnings and Snipe makers to provide special gear, like the new firearms, that classes offer models designed expressly for her smaller size. One such, gun is the Winchester mode! 37 beginners’ shot- gun. There are also rifles and other shotguns in feather- archery champion, is authority for) Weight versions, all influenced by the feminine shooter's the belief that the bow and arrow! desires. ~ were. first used by the extinct PRAIRIE DROUGHTS PERHL DUCK PRODUCTION van ce race about 5,000 Current. conditions affecting waterfowl! breeding in the ° ae western Canadian prairie areas have been reported as “not very promising.” An extreme drought has hit those areas, and Rattler Gets Hooked many birds have been driven from customary breeding grounds. MCALSTER, Okla. uw — Mickey Reports from Manitoba and Saskatchewan show some 75 to 90 Davenport and a young companion, per cent of the normally producing potholes have dried up, or while walking in a game refuge will be dry before nestings ate completed. Only hopes for a with a rod and reel, saw some- change in outlook is for rains within a few days, and that thing move in the grass. Mickey mnie & cat aah a i leas birds can find satisfagnoy sa spots further norte. r Archery Ancient Art | NEW YORK (UPI)—Dr. Robert P. Elmer, one-time United States Fishing Tackle Show CHICAGO Up — The second an- nua] national fishing tackle show will be- held in Chicago Aug. 2 through. Aug. 7. The show drew 945 jobbers in 1958 #foot rattlesnake. + a ps A-late carp spawning season has forced a change’ in sewed re — ee are The cave-salamander, confined dates for the annual Michigan Bow Hunters Assn. Carp F 1145 538 — 6:00 to Sardinia and the mountains Contest, this corner is advised by Vic Beresford. Contest is attracting attention from Ohio and Indiana bowmen, as well as the Michigan contingent, as entries may. be made from outside the state. MBH memberships may be obtained by sending $2 to |MBH headquarters P.O. box 127, Flint. Many cash prizes land trophies are offered for men, women, boys and gizls. |MICHIGAN ANGLERS WIN IN FLORIDA Recent conclusion of the annual Metropolitan Miam} (Fla.) fishing tournament found three Michigan angling enthusiasts among the winners. H. A. Mitzelfeld of Roches- ter, boated a 90-pound, 8-otnce sail to lead that class. Irene G. Kolowich, Detroit, took a 35-pound African pompano, and Craig Heath of Milan landed a winning 26-pound snook. State Senate Approves U.P. Special Deer Bill LANSING (UPI)—A special deer|tain), sponsor ef the measure, sald bill for the Upper Peninsula, de-| the conservation commission would |feated Monday night by a single |not set ‘‘any deer’’ seasons in the vote, was revived and passed in|Upper Peninsula’ if the bill is the Senate yesterday. signed into law. ¢ would | The bill was sent to the Senate. cone in the co hoa jvoted 31-1 for passage. It fell one Tuan uae died ad 4 ana vote short of passage on a 17-11 vote the day before. sex even though they are not) der present law, a camp deer is permitted but the. hunters must be in a>group. | Sen. John P. Smeekens (R-Cold- Sen. Philip Rakoi (D-Iron Moun-'water) was the lone ffoldout. than a bluebird, is as mean a killer as-its much larger kin. KINGS IN HAND! — A Poi&tiac angler has a good ‘‘hand” of kings (kingfish), as she displays her recent catch at Miami, Fla. She is Mrs. Kay Nurenberg, 3312 Lexington Dr., and her fish weighed 13 and 14 pounds, respectively. Mrs. Nurenberg, Mary Novak and Florence Marsh of Pontiac, and Ann Novak of New _ York are vacationing at Miami Beach. . ~ INSTR Boats @ Buit @ Salvage ION © EQUIPMENT: © TANKS FILLED 599 Orchard Lake FE 5-5375° a sportswear far sportsmen action swimmers prefer knit and woven trunks by Jantzen When you take your swimming seriously < like the pros—— you want knit and woven trurtks, Bob Cousy, America’s Mr. Basketball, likes Jantzen’s famous “Spéarhead” trunks, Short gabe snug fit, and action style make the “Spearhead” tops- for skin diving, surfing, _ hard swimming. All to give you- the pro look, 4.95. Use our “Shop & Park” Free rogram from 106'N. Seginew Streat—Open Friday Nights. "Ti | . , * ' . “ McNally’s 9 P 4 > —_ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. MAY 27, 1950 | MARKETS The | following” are’ top prices! {| ” covering sales of focally grown produce brought to the Farmer’s| Market by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Tuesday. Detroit Produce PRuitTs Speies. Delicious, DU. ...e09.-se00+ Mcintosh, bu Northern Spy, pu Greele Bod. pir -,....-.--- vere vee VEGETABLES. ' Asparagus, doz behs. ........+...- $1.16 Chives. No 1. oe 16 ks; No 1 00 Onions, = = 85 Parsley 50 apr Cs Ms by. 26 Potatoes. bag.. See 50 Radishes 06 Radishes. hit 25 Rhubarb. dutdoor, doz behs. ....-., 90 Tomatoes, hothouse. § Ibs reas A) GREENS ! Cabbage No. 1, bu. .......s5- $2 06 Collard, No. 1, bu ....sesees +. 2.00 Mustard, No. 1, bu. .4..+0+- . 1.50 Gorrel, bY. . ..,. +606 oe . 150 Spinach. pu ..e.-.- ore erceveere “150 Turmige BU. ...cinssccarssercvee 1.50 Poultry ond Eggs PETROIT EGOS ~ DETROIT. May 26 Detroit im case kts federal state grades Whites — Grade A Jumbo 33: extra large 31-32, wtd. avg. 314s; large 30; medium 24: Grade B large 26-27. wtd avg. 2643, Browns Grade A large 32 large 28: medjum 24; ciecks 18 com- mercially graded Whites: Grade A Large 27-29: medium (AP'—Eggs FOS | t { } | ] 21-22; Browns—Grade A Large 27-27% | medium 21-23 DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, Mey 26 (AP) — Prices paid per pound F.O.B. Detroit for No. 1 quali- ve poultr ty Heavy type om 16-16; light type hens 9-10; heavy type broilers and fryers lbs. Whites 19-20: caponettes un 5 Iba, 20-21: over 5 Ibs. 24-2544 breeder turkeys heavy type hens 22-23. Livestock Stop in Today See Our Large Selection of General Tires with BIG SAVINGS! ED WILLIAMS Tire Company me a 451 S. Saginaw St. "FE 2-8303 | Little Change SHOPPERS LINE UP AT GRAND OPENING —More than 400 persons were af the doors of the Consumers Center at 178 N. Saginaw St., disc -ount deparime nt store's grand opening at ' } | for the items. Pontiac Press Phete ‘9 a.m. today. The self-service store, open from 9-a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, will feature soft aia hardware and household Grain Prices (Late Morning Quotations) Pigures after decimal point are re turned from school and é@xclaimed: | ja corner of the official railroad “Mama! found out today? Do you know what weicar he used We're brothers!"’|mier. when he was pre- Futures Mart : ‘Land Sale Would Help Meet Cost Robert Y. Moore, nies of the Oakland County Board of Audi- tors, yesterday released an an- nouncement that a plan hai been approved ‘‘whereby sufficient funds will be available to meet the obli- gation for - first unit of the new courthouse.” Mogre said the announcement, ‘}eame from the Ways and Means, Committee of thé Board of Super- mittee had ordered him to keep) some details secret. He said the committee was | meeting - this afternoon to con- sider sale of the downtown Pon- tiac courthouse site and other land holdings in Pontiac and | throughout the county. Profits.from these-sales are to be used to help finance the first sec-| tidn of the pay-as-you-go $2,875,000- | plus construction program, Moore - said. « * * But the county official said he | had been instructed not to’ make public how much profit the county expects to make, The county is contemplating sale | of approximately 92 acres in Pon-' tiac, said Moore, including feet of frontage on the south side of Oakland avenue from West south of the city dump. | ”® * * them ‘in Pontiac. . “Only one of these lots has a 1,600! .the Ways and Means Committee boulevard to east of the Grand) ‘money would come from building Trunk Railroad and about 5,000 funds built ap through earmarking | feet on Kennett road, egst and In addition, the couMy has 26 separate lots it is thinking of sell. ing, said Moore, about half of for construction of new building denied reports was about to sell homes in which indigent families are housed by the Department of Social ¥e- fare. | |sale of homes owned by the county) lin which unfortunate people are visors, but added that the com- \housed, unless the properties are Pause, of last day meee released by the Welfare Commit: |nouncement said. ts *& *& | | Moore said that other funds that |would go into the courthouse build-| ling. were those included in the| 4 |building. fund and “other miscel-| OK Courthouse Financing house on it, and that house is (Committee Suncomenl sae is- not occupied. Moore said. He |used after a meeting Tuesday that the county |morning at which bids for construc- tion of the courthouse: were; te- viewed. The county estimated the cost of construction at $2,875,000, but bids ‘The committee has not now,/submitted last month put’the cost nor has it ever, contemplated_ the higher. OOL. Cees Se tee ete te ac, Oukland Coun residents of the School City of Pontiac living outside Pontise jtee as no longef needed,” the an-/Ciy limits. hereas, the Annual! Election is to be held im said school district on - day, the 6th da Therefore, no is Pridey, May 29, 1950 , Eastern Standard day ‘on which unregistered, —— liy- hool trict of the City the Sc of Pontiac but outside the City of Pon-) eligible tiac may — in order to be |to vote at said «nnual ‘laneous non-tax funds now On made tet nit ration should The building funds, which the, !State Supreme Court recently ruled’ ‘could be used for the courthouse | amount to$1,800,000. 1 . * * * | But Moore refused to release the, ‘amount of non-tax revenues the \Ways and Means is considering putting into the courthouse. | “] can’t tell you that because | won’t let me.’ Moore said that the rest of the one-tenth of a mill annually out of | itax gollections for einai purposes. | State law allows the county to| earmark the one-tenth of .a mill and maintenance of old ones. Moore said the Ways and Means | « Admiral ...... 24.4 Johns Man 55.4 Air Reduc tr Jones & 132 DETROIT LIVESTOCK | ues Allied Ch .....117.4 panel 1B | DETROIT, May 26 (AP) - (U8D) — Allied Strs .... 60.5 Kime ‘Clk. ave “ ge Livestock Allis Chal... 322 ime ce $4 a 600. Bulk early supply Alcoa "897 _ 33 tandard en ood grade steers and heif- Tow a tor . = seg pled eS ated showing hele year- NEW YORK —A hesitant stock _ ame ; as ibby McN&L 123, CHICAGO w&- ‘Moderate selling ling steers end heifers; cows comprise. Market moved ‘unevenly in fairly.amcyan .. $0 fiSS, "MY - B9| weakened the grain futures market) Sean oe eee ceiserr iow moni active early trading today Am Mardy :. 18 Loew's“ ... 344] slightly all along the line today in| sales — pg car gp ‘ur - Pivotal issues showed narrow am NGas as Lorritard 37 early transactions on the Board of! the n u thepe steady but morket Mily steeds. Changes mostly. The range to the/A™ Tere Tel’ ‘seas Mack tm .. 443, Trade. bulls stesdy; two small lots choice 19€3-| plus and minus side was generally Am Tob - 966 eee ‘gaa| Rye and soybeans again led the 070 Ib. 28.00; teert A C) 666 Martin Co ... 844 ak daelen seers 26 00-28. 00: oe ous within a point jAnsconde $63 er © . 63) setbacks with losses running to ma- hoice heifers 28.00-28.25 t high good Armco Stl 42 . heifers 3708: ‘utility cows 1950-2160 Exceptions were few. Zenith Armour Co 232 Merr'chas |” {95| Jor fractions of a cent within a few te 21.50; canners and cutters Do aded th int Atchison 28.6 Mols Hon 126 \few minutes. Brokers said how- 15.00-19.80: utility: bulls up to 25 00 a another 3 polts or so. Ba & Ohio 442 Minn M&M | 1374] ever, there were no particular new Hogs — salable $00. Butchers and sows, International Business Machines Beth Steel 52.3 -Monsan Ch 50.1! stssdy, matt mines tots G8 Wo 3 804| added about dle its infest run Socsten! "05 Het pret 7 77] num factors and that the pres- 3 180-240 Ib. Butchers 1650-16 15: mixed i" Borden... 79.2 Mot Wheel ipe sure appeared to be mainly short we. tena 3 Se up. Du Pont was up about 2. ao Warn. 431 ola 191 5\ selling, a hint that some traders No. 1 Ibs. 17 mall jot _ M uel! B No. 1 rH a7 ies 1773: No. 3 and 3 240- Chemicals were well ahead with | ade tll pp Murrey cp 8 3.3 were expecting prices to rally from reer tearten ty mined gree ote. gains of fraction& to about a point Bete Co... Net Cass Rete present levels. 400 is. 33 ge-14 25: 400-600 'bs No. 2 and| but the trend wasNblurred in other cai Pack €3 ha poll 32. Wheat wes % to 3s cent a bushel |groups. A.number of leading issyes Csiut_ = H .. ae Mal Gren cholee and Uptime veslers 30 00-39.00,/ showed no change Can Pac i og Norf& West 927\t0 % lower, July 63%; rye un- ue i jonas 28 00-3600; cull and) = Among those that did little or Carrier CP ... 443 No Am Av .. 455) changed to % lower, July 1.20$5s; Sheep and lambs — salable 400 Lim:t.,othing were General Motors, ote, 77... aga * Nor Sta Pw 241 soybeans % higher to ‘a lower, Ju-| e4 supply staughter lambs and eres'Ford, Woolworth, Jones & Laugh- ches & Onte.. 71.7 Obie Ot. + Ly $2.27%. steady: one toad mixed good and coesgilin, American Telephone and In- EPICS °°. 883 Owens lm Ol ae hot ri he 26 25; evatteving ephone. ‘ic 8 572 Pac OE! 63.4 ; ; a anion aaa Cocs, Cola ...145.1 Pan A W Air. 295) Grain Prices ee eee ny Fee couce| Despite some sharp increase in Co OM "7 BS Param Pict” S841 CHICAGO! May i (AP! — Opening) slaughter ewes 2.00-8.00 rail earnings there was slight ac- Con N Gas : 42.7 Parke De... 40 3{erain prices: ; ton among the carriers, Balti S37 fan se ey aR STS guy enn tgs Bate aes Cyprus, in the Mediterranean, ™ore & Ohie was a ftrac- [Cen Pe pf 4.16 os rene 1 Cola .. F~] | Pen. icone 15% fad ; . : Con Mm. ¢ a 61 - . 5 Cinctionc had been administered by the tom. Santa Fe eased. (Cont Cop & 8: 13.5 Pralos D1. 64 iMag. Ooo 198% Deco sae. e . pas British 81 years before it was The business and economic news Cent Oi ee oa ly Lccteee 298M Duly. eeee granted independence this year. was good. Retail, auto sales were Copper Ras... 3, Prat &@ ... 4 See neananee ie oe Tan oe up and a rising trend of construc-|Curtis Pub 116 Rca eas Mar oo bie we série C i - ages ty reported. ee Se Repub St! .... 78.4 yyy - ia a s4ins of arou a point were ine C Seag “ Reyn Mot .. #76 | ” on erence Doug Are .. $21 : i;made by American Tobacco, | cwl Cheat 8712 Rey Tob .! R 1 Du A ae Eastman Kodak ahd Allied Chem- —— : e Safeway Bt 24.3) ‘Stanley Yankus ROOM ical East Kod a3 ae al coville ee Slightly higher were Chrysler, Eston Mtg --- jae Sears Roed |. “34 mendment’ Is : Goodrich, Raytheon, Anaconda, Air Ei & Mus .... 71 ee . eas Reduction, American Cyanamid, EB? Med --- 22 ginciair ....- & Likely to Pass . An Added Facility General Electric and Pfizer Ea-Cell-0 Be catag motes at) > Down a bit were Texaco, Repub- Fora Mach ss Sperry RA ‘ wee WASHINGTON um — Sen. Philip! > at the lic Steel, Douglas Aircraft, Ameri-| Ford f°s.., 36 ga en Bash > can: Smelting, Bullard and Pan Proch Tra 7 etd ou Ind .. $7| Stanley Yankus amendment” will > American World Airways Gen Bek 13-4 std Ol Oh... 0.3/ become law if Congress passes any > SAVOY i Gen Elec an4 Stevens JP ... 305 wheat legislation this year. ; = 1) Stud Pack 1 , Pontiac Starts Gen Si af Bun OW $)3|. The amendment would remove Ge oor . ‘ : ‘ et , Gen wit t ‘ . boy Tex GO 8ul . oy a 30-acre. restriction on wheat ‘Gen _ . . MO | I: | Bonus Drive \Gen Tire 3 stan *- Sas, Which can be grown for use on 4 D Conence m6 Trans W Air 3}$| the same farm. It was tacked on j = ‘illette Tansamer > Ad Campaign Gores) 33 AMG 7°. 384) a Senate wheat bill by Mart last » RESERVE ITTODAY. [Goodvear.., 84 Gn carnice 1483] Week: > FOR YOUR SALES Pontiac Motor Division is con-\ct a & ge 8 - 35! ‘Troubles with such apetl No R . 581 nit Ai Lin .. mn z rest 4 0 0 ducting a large advertising cam- Doe“ né vat fire. ste recently resulted in Stanley Yank- S MEETING * 4ipaign inviting motorists to — pt OA, ---- ES on Gene. ae us, a Dowagiac, Mich., chicken > Ph drive a wide track Pontiac,” it] ome Stk -.... 434 Ujena. of Kal. $2 .|farmer, selling his farm and mov- one FE 5-9224 ; Soker Ch |... 434 US. Lines .... 32.8 , | was announced by Frank V. Brid mc $13 US Rub ...... 62.7 ustrali Jare . ‘ “general sales se dee of Pontiac ‘Thaust” Ray ey us Bicol veees stone ra alg == ails > a Motor Division. jalend SS) Waleress 524/ Hart also told his weekly news " w { .. 89 > ROOM RATES | Centered around Pontiac’s now- jratorrel ir, a bana deta: 33 ¢| conference yesterday he will sup- > - ‘famous wide track wheels the ad-|tmt Harv wonke . . oa] port a Senate proposal to increase » Single ...... .$ 7.00 | vertising is designed to. impress [2t pick, 33 White Mot .. 44.6: Internal Revenue personnel by 700) buvers with the importafice of Int shoe 282 Wilson & Co 373) Kereons Others, he smilingly re-| 5 Double ........ $ 3.00 { th sdcis mt STR ei be Pee e ite’. 383] oarked, would “help President El- driving one oO ne new models Int Te Te ba mar wou elp 8 | : f T1218 » Twin ....... .. 811.00 | themselves to fully realize its mamy:"! CTE Com! 88 Yeast Bide 'senhower balance the budget.” | ; GES > og: 9 advantages . STOCK AVERA Several billion dollars in taxes > Kitchenettes .$12.00 The advertising program is i ed by — Press) | are lost annually, he said, because > ~ scheduled for May 21 through |) 700 Indust Rails Owl, | Stocks| Americans don’t report about 25 HO July 31 > Noon Wed. .....3 1429 98.4 - 2299) billion in income: » FREE TV Boe day cde Gt By BE ee i Ae Be naan They’ re Also Brothers _ Ree ago kao ste ise ¢ Overturns on X-Way _ ba . 1959 low ....... 306.1 1336 96.0 2115 | MILWAUKEE (UPI) — Five - 1959 nigh. .2. 3120 136.5 96.7 2143) DETROIT W—A loaded tractor Before You fyear-old-Patriek and “Demmis- Mc- 1958 low ...... 2447 809 729 1668 trailer driven by Donald B. Isbell, Bride have known ever since they 35,-of Muskegon, skidded and over- could talk that they were twihs.| The late Polish pianist and/|turned Tuesday on the Willow Run) ‘ After all, everybody called them statesman, Ignace Paderewski,; Expressway in Allen Park. Ishell| ° “The Twins.”’ loved to play bridge so much that|said another car forced him off ay One day, though, the boys re- jhe had a bridgé table installed in/the road. He was not injured but his load of 25,000 pounds of auto mufflers and tailpipes was scat- tered over the highway. . ' Ford Case Barb Still Sharp State Tries Again to Free Temporary Jobless Checks LANSING (®—The bell rang to- day for another round in the eight |week legislative scrap over bring- sation program. ; | Meanwhile, 200,000 TUC checks! \dollars in jobless pay benefits 93 lower after about an hour, oats \* averaging $37 each for 27,000 po-| ee beneficiaries were stacked! up awaiting a solution. yesterday to Democratic cman: | ments advanced to counter ae Smeekens — the decision leffects of the key point in the bill ‘as far as Republicans are | cerned. 4%) 25| With Sen, John P. Smeekens ing Michigan under the federal temporary unemployment compen-| publicans are seeking to pre- vent any future application of State Supreme Court doctrine laid down jn the so-called Ferd- Canton case last January. The court awarded one million to 11,000 Detroit Area Ford Motor Co, employes idled as the resuit a labor strike at Ford's forge | opens the way for labor- unions to subsidize strikes out of unemploy- ment compensation funds. Sen. Garland B. Lane (D-Flint) said the Smeekens language goes | ae (R-Coldwater) spearheading, Re- |1,. far, and offered proposed word- = Solons Back Ford ‘in Army Contract Bid. '20-member congressional delega- ition is getting behind a Ford Mo-| tor Co. drive for a maltimillion idoliar Army contract to build 4,-| 050 military trucks. Hart (D-Mich) predicts Le The contract, if landed by Ford,! The first provision, Lane said, 'would provide about 1,300 new jobs| in 16 Michigan localities, mem- bers of the delegation report. Ford representatives told a meeting of the group yesterday that “a large’ majority of the manufacturing and all of the as- sembly would take place in. Michigan” if Ford gets the con- tract, They said Ford is the only Mich- igan-based bidder. on-the contract to provide 4,050 M151 quarter-ton vehicles, Cities directly affected by the contract award would include Ann Arbor, Bay City, Berkley, De- troit, East Detroit, Tonia, Jackson, \Livonia, Marshall, Marysville, |Monroe, Muskegon, Oak Park, Van |Dyke, Wyandotte and Ypsilanti. Names of other bidders seeking} jthe contract were not immediately | javailable. by Eager Little Girl. ‘Santa Claus Disabled LINCOLN, Neb. ence Fiske was awarded as a department store Sa last December. Fiske tqid the court he was totally disabled from Dec. 25 to April 4 as the result of injuries received when a girl jumped into his lap. ¥ r * : .) ~ ‘ an ™, ae ee _ awe ell ¥ ~. OPEN-FOR ‘BUSINESS ~ ‘The new ultra-modern home ofthe Matthews-Hargrpaves Chevrblet dealérship: is -The new / building is’ located at @he. corner of Cass and Oakland ? ye, open for. business. : Cc avenues. The $350,000 property houses modern showroom facilities, an engine and repair depa pair, wash and eretige depo + | WASHINGTON «® — Michigan’ 1 i. No. (AP). — Clar-} $1,849) for injuries suffered while on duty} nta cml * Thieves jacked up a new-ear at jing to limit its effect in these two ways: ; Benefits would be allowed | to workers idled by. a strike at | another plant of thelr employer pela. caps ares involved violation by aa dangucy atte sdienal: health or safety laws. 2. Benefits still could be paid if the employer was shown to have |caused a lockout in a_ supplier | plant. was intended to exempt, purely lo- cal controversies wholly unrelated to regional or national labor union policy or purposes, grievances over washroom facilities and the like. Almost automatically, the Re- publican majority turned down }Lane's proposal yesterday, Later, 'Sen. Lewis G. Christman (R-Anna} Arbor) called for printing of the jamendments and their reconsid- eration today. Heretofore, Democrats have flat- without pressing for modification such as suggested by Lane, taking the position the bill should be lim- ly opposed the Smeekens language} . city clerk of the cownene or city = which the resides. ap ane alnety oe on the reg- — books o' J. the township or city “@ ae ALTER L. GODSELL. retary Bosrd of Education the School District of the City of Pontiac, y 27, 28, “Se. Death Notice from 2 p.m. time of service. a in Roseland Park Cem- cagunavar f. May 25, 38, 1058. 0. ICKL ; 1739 Ashstand, Wettes Crumbeugh and - Wauneral will be held Thursday, y 23. at 1 p.m. from the Richa -Bird with Re+. Keith R . In terment in slied Lake Ceme- thar Mi Merald A.,.Destin brother of Agnes Dodson, ll, ; Virginia Ruffato Edward. Lawrence and Charles ; survived by 11 Punera) gor Ppa ited to extending benefits. A first TUC bill died in a Housé- Senate deadlock. The present bill is a second’ covering the same ground : z { | | lodge Calendar Special comniunitation Cedar 60, F. & A. M., Clarks- ton. Thurs., May 28, 7 p. m, Work in FC degree. Gordon. Stayt, ha News in Brief & R & C Motor Sales, 8145 Com- {merce Rd., Commerce Township, Tuesday and.took.its four wheels, valued at $55, and tires, valued at $139, according to Oakland County Sheriff's Deputies. Walters Lake Grocery Store, 4694 Clarkston-Orion Rd., Inde- flendence Township, was broken fhto and $10 worth of knives, $14 |worth of cigarettes, and about $1 in change was stolen, Oakland) County: Deputies reported yester-| = ~ Cocktail tables, end tables, blend, mar proof top. While they last. $5.95. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake Ave. ~ —Adv. Work bench fluorescent a slightly scratched, factory p le & phenol in _ Park Cem jtery. Mr. rner is at | Donelsqn - Johns. Punera!l Home aS BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. Today there Xess: 1, 4, 5, 7‘ 106, 14, 16, 9, 20, 25, 27, 28, 29, 31, /32, 33, 36, 98, 59, 61, 63, 4, 71, 75, 77, 83, 84, 88, p= 98, 100, 101, 108, 119. The Pontiac Press | FOR WANT ADS \ DIAL FE 2-8181 Fronk 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. \ All errors should ré- pres immediately: The ess- assumes no respon- sibility for errors other { an to cancel the charges for that portion of the first nsertion of the advertise- ment which hes been ren- dered valueless thro When cancellations get ” No adjustments will be given ¥ t it, time for advertise- ments t a oo type sizes larger regular agate type is 32 o'clock noon the day previous to publication. 2 MEN WAN the will be i i il rsh i i ; E Excellent house and transporta- fu: tion y= Re $ ® eS eee eee a PLACE A“LOST” AD, Call FE 2-8181 for an'ad to recover’ Wes.. Dial FE 28181 for an ad writer. sta ¥ $3.45. Michigan Pinoresodate se NOTICE TO Orchard Lake. Ave. —Adv. moe ee eae : a transient W ‘Ads |e Cong. B Israel, new arid old os oe thee - rummage E. Pike. ‘Monday 9 | pabiation fer hhest to 9. andy, he ; AAA Dri Scheel, "50 CASH WANT AD RATES [ Cars. Insured. FE 5-5201. —Ady. ie Ti *Due pare ; AAA Driver Trainin : i he,“ . Cars. Insured. FE 5- = Sapenr' Hy +f ye} be Pontiac Press Photo Cong. B'nai Israel, rummage. 14) 7 Hi $30 He} E. Pike. 9 10-8. —Adv. 8 48 18 Hes , wheel alignment, electrical re- gare theu.-Fri. 10 “oe 9.00 ibe ‘used car display grounds. * , pte 5. ee ir —Adv. ws at os d : : ° of: a? . be x > fe ‘a A * t i / . 4 4 e.* so % ar EE ES SLE OEE Oe SO SD aS Ve, ES OE ey MERE le ame Peay I mR ee ss Say “charge it.”). + oie . pak 8, & See veinkat r ~ i . | a Te