Eee HE PON TIAC PRE MAKE 0 V “(Details on , Page 2D air YEAR - kkkwe* | PONTIAC, N ‘ {ICHIGAN,. SATU URD. LY, MAY 23, 1959--30 PAGES . UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS Je It's Gri , . s Grim Business (8. = 2 ‘ a , : : a ij ag a ; ey et “ | ' ¢ * - ap ‘ ' ig Bh, < , ‘ : | | ‘ / ; iS ae Bg A : ts hua ie + _ cannes : : . + ry ——® ‘ 13 Are Seized 9 Mighty Cool 46 . Undergoes Two Tri Shin c a ‘ ! ; s . z: 5 . toSettleOver | 8 o Trials | UNS ast Or muggling Pontiac Tonight | | eS 3 . . ; iy cloudy and continued oo} : a low of 46 is forecast for} laballSia@ een | | LU ures. * * * Sunday will be par | U. : partly .¢loud , ‘lone te Stop Plane 2nd a little warmer, the high eas | — a | ° se Loaded With? A inde’ pees rman said. Today's pic history was made at Michigan State Uni-" | Arms for Castro Foes hur will scaly st 31) nes A) Nesieatd Oakland yesterday as the new institution of ; nay | “diemay amd. warmaez a ght. | i nc learning discarded tradition and adopted a cur- } } iD) : 5 em- | um e ; AT, Fla. Pi—A pretty: peratures in the high 50s is the | ith aipienes the needs of students who will live Me woman flier and 11 men nny for Sunday in upper e Space Age. ann orn ower Michig : were accused by the gov- Peninsula, eT | it Durward B, Varner, chancellor of the new waives er ae . J rnment today of plotting The thermometer sti sity, told the MSU Board of Trustees—governing body: to export war materials adv 30 degre« er awe at a of MSU and MSUO: illevally ¢< . . . ee grees from 11 p.m “ llegally after agents”. terday dhroush 10 this morning arena no traditions and no alumni. We have | pounced on ar . in downtown Pontiac * * 1 _ - At r plane arms laden the reading was 53 1 pm St t C we . ne . r Ww d om for a fresh vas 5 | ‘start. We are recruitin | The four-engine C74 a S Fists lvo ga eget 74 was ; young and creative faculty | und for the D ; 7 and will gi CHRISTIAN : 0- Cd | I give them a grea AN A. HERTER ors of Republic to arm | urls rive |deal of freedom.” abi oes O eae : N f Cuban Premier Fide] * for acult | “Our long range destiny ties in w_Ihreats by Keds ,«: In ford Ye ere ancio Batista - use nsure hoard . |Far East,’ Varner said. fis jee Neo 8 pond iM . Cas 7 annie te financial crisis con- In another al digartere . S in @X »s tc radic | ile at the Dominican envlial. € Senate OK Michigan St ‘ =— in the side of from ivery-tower traditions of } es Nn O U dad * » ° —_ s Measure | Offic oe : : University Oakland, established universities, MSUO mY. ‘ vials as they see it | wo f e Thirteen rs With Surprise $35 000 faculty ie ti Pa k to recruit} will sweep away the divisions of GENEVA (U ing the vm yer ee ee Price Su ort Cc il tution. rs for the new insti-| the engineering school, such as ut A (U BR Gnnratari tinican RK ic’ r i : | Herter today aie Secretary of State Christian A consul at Miami, were es PP wei = © - | ea — = ’ a ule ¢ ae . : — : 2 «2 i@ . “We hh: 5 j = / ers, appa led talks with other Western lead- Friday and placed in bend. @ WASHINGTON. (AP) ~ ie hase Metered many ae) 6 degree offe pparently as a-result of new, Communist Charged also with « wheat bill, capped by a mergrise peepective Cameniees, eo lew enol wil he. etheoeh } to the foreign ministers’ rist threats pribe a federal onspiring to 5 099 © apped by a surprise refused to come here because of —— students—a- bach- sters’ conference. il officer were Con- 2 ceiling on government the state's un ; jelor of steince in ineering. At the same ; . sul” Augusta Ferrand ] ~. price supports t ‘ certain financial sit- eng: n re time, the West German delegation an- T°" 7 ¥ear-ol 1M ‘Joseph Lie or farmer o any one farm juation,” D. B. Varner, ancial ‘t:| There will be three. years of gen- - 9 + I rT } « ; Foes » +, > : ounced that Soviet Foreign Minister At d n man: and Leonard T imi police- Bev lis i = ts » the House Mon- ‘ol MSWO, disclosed yesterday. eral study in engineering with will visit West Germ idrei Gromyko pbuilding = mat d Trenton, 35, a 7 ate there is uncertain. | “Prospec eeaxient egneee = mathqmnetics Brentino ot i an Foreign Minister Heinrich von XN, . i \" ials dealer from qT * * * a sae ive ey members }and physics. tano at the latter’s villa h : e - oneap tects _ ly enthusiastic about * * } s villa here this after ' gislation dealing lans,” V ot I Herter: ae : : afternoon ; ® * * with the nation’s big ‘ a a a i i r met U.S. Defense Secretary Neil McElroy The plane. 200.000 cartridges plus was ham S bIg “ heat sur : to come here fe teach ad aut One year “ot specialization in only +. 4 s ‘lroy and a quantity of rif idges, and saute ah ammered out Friday in they see wh t : . and when | two broad fields will be permitted. scheduled a conference to- “eapons were . am, en atic oor - € ‘ent hours of Senate LED FROM COURTROOM Pontiac Press Phete impressed at we're doing they're | One field will deal with electronics, re seize ) “Ls + } ebaté art oting a — ¢ cte . . . morrow with French For- oltiwers aa the plane ” custom artd voting sleuvhier Gi the a . : Convicted yesterday of man * | circuits, electromagnetics and sys 1c igander, « sien, Watnist i shin: at RUkAIGT Tet “es warming * * * kuwust. Rava ; aying of a Southfield nursery’ caretaker last * * tem studies, the other to includ ig I ste a imi International ae il "nless AUS USI way Mon / . : 5 : as ee 7 , Minister Maurice The.olficers arrested Vi Airport.” Unless the Senate and House from Oak! nd L.,Alyea of Detroit is shown here being taken | ‘But inevitably the talk turns to, work in properties of materials, Michi oe uve de Murville. The Bland, %. ar 1 Sat “ i © i senho on a bill and President Ei sentenci Md sah Grek denne in Abeta to sit \eoooe’ kee \Guciaed! yaindt com ppieecirslanye, 5 hand Samuel oole Senhower signs . sentencing. Ct ‘ y § o await ) ~ | , ganite: three men apparently were Jr., 34, the pilots. and 10 an nv the. “ | it before June 1.’ resulted i me ed with first degree murder, Alyea'‘s first tnal ae bave decided agaist . com-| Further specialization in engt- | Both poe in assessing tl the scene. Ferrando w as i ieee a re <— law probably must : in @ hung jury. , : ume t to MSUO because of the state’ dl neering branches will be held to | W g three six hours | — as persuaded Continue. The House has t , inancial situation.” post-graduate work, laboratories ron Red moves re ; murs later by telephone to working on its owr “e su elas ; ; ‘ ; g: past >4 ‘has ted in the bane hs refuge i tke: cakailais been. bet Oo i heat bill . : . ,ONLY 3 FULL TIME | — where the stu- , LANSING—" ; . 8: : surrenger on vefore the Senate Th ving iar ame fines a resid or oe t h weal —Soviet Premier Nikita Khrust Jose Paulino, assistant nsul tip dagonneey program for the yed scapes Life ler te = “Seven <—h v : I ide { Michigan as t ll ‘i a Khrush-. was bails ; an consul next t _ 7 er .wit j a oM chigande a aaele Wied. ie alen: eo Sevkeed as bailed as a material witness ia ei ae cae of Ag . ’ posrer class of 600, has 8 ahi said physical education e > Governme Sens r ; ; . : z ree rses ired | Difies vs Government Printing PC*Ce ¥ith Communist East Get — 5 haired Miss Bland. wear. ™4lly announced oe i . signed a +time faculty meinbers| vane not be requi or ol- - tyke manual} lists ‘Michi. Many unless the conferet < toreador pants, and Poole mends against —_ aia or the fall. hough students.-will be z saul” ad the proper deem ynference quick- told) newsmen. they had b eeecesent. an Varner and Dr. Thoma ie raged to participate in intra- - accepts a ov iet-model or ten . : * * _ q ? Soviet-model German hired by Deminic Bartene a Benson contended that 1t would [ ' Hamilton, MSU vice pec: in [eat edoceten and informa! phys- . Neither one is right. accdrd- a , owner, to fly te Puerto oA not reduce production and prob : | for academic affairs, discussed . _ _ ar ca Cer 3. Farle en * . * “It T had kn — - bh would add to the costs .of a Ex-convict . the preblem of hiri |\TO EMPHASIZE INTELLECT tive’ secretary f th . —The Tass new P known there were arms Program that has take } i Raymond L. Alyea esc taini f sce | “Ow ibili a etary of the lichigan — ¢p, ’ s agency report 42d ammunition on the plan 1% Fillion dolts iken several tence yesterday W scaped a life sen- ing faculty members with the r responsibiljty is to develop ist Council nat Russia will demand admis. never we ald Eaioe! neread plane I n dollars in recent yeurs yes ay when a Circuit Court jury found t MSU Board of Trustees vester- the intellect, not the body, ”* Varner uMtichigantan”” ie the proper sion of the sacicn enivinters of “Poole said agreed to fly it.’ SOLUTION TOUGH guilty of manslaughter. ’ nim) day on the MSUO campus. said. term. ed Poland and Czechoslovakia Trente. told n Most se Char V * * ‘* old newernen wilh a ii st senators apres os ged with . arner has si a ; “Da . to the conference as full partici- that the guns ven with & TIN thing must be - ae thnk wrte t first -deg ree murder during the t to oht s said he would have, The university will not offe Residents of Michigan prox pants “in the very next dave.” going eC} me ammunition were’ o¢ bu ‘a t be done about billions rials to determine his fate, + wo ber ry around 20 faculty mem- ROTC. “If students want ROTC. erly are referred Pr) : ‘ 4 eee : uang Kai-shek, Nat : nushels of surplus wheat ~ oe Se rate MSU othe universities : iganians, a co 7 ; : ‘ in —A warning published by the ist China chieftait mona’ up largely in governm sig ang wires ae ees only a pos- World War IT combat veteran had _— naan nich tier 8." ; Michigania, one of the 10 “ te< Berlin Communist organ Neues * * © But agreeing on a solution was sible 1 to 15 year term on told Judge Beer during the eee ve | mented or i Narmes ’ hea designated to the a itschland saying the Reds in sal a Embry of Tampa said he. SIRE RTES TOMEE the lesser charge of tral PP gmnersin me ee Tee ee _—" administration. Wastiwwst Yoerritoe: He fhe Jel sermany will oppose se ie id no idea what the plane's - The f Senate rar Circuit ss signations have bee adm . the fcuen Clin it ee s Jel ome at Cleve an 5 ey i : weer whet te: es hea i Ko vee’ nee . pe decision was oy _“ Judge William J. Beer Fie: the jury te decide ceived from MSW faculty saad major de a al . said UFIORE ‘rencenenialives were excl nei engineer. William Bre as Hight: |. ; o 538.000 ceiling eg “il! sentence the bushy-haired Ma er I'm guilty of first-degree |this year — 3 : TS. tien of specialized fields, such p ives were excluded : iliam Brookley. 30 crop supports fe tine Cor ' murder a 60 per cent in- as : ‘SOUNDS BETT . TOP AIDES PRESt University of Miami. « A : or any farmer. } rps veteran June 8 don't wont not guilty at all, J Crease over last year accounting and sales > ! TTER' ‘8 PRESENT stadeat sala he ea: ngineering UL was a big victory for § Alyea, 36 nt any half-way deci- : a. meat, replacing training Pr . ; : ° al we was an mocent ~ \ ctorv for Sen . ras of 12044 Lansdo sions."’ . . = “ : - win | ce «ieee: The Herter-McElroy talks were owfandée--""T-stextit-te i 0 nt John J. Williams (R-Del) who has Detroit, had been wine s Sing is no doubt that other | (Continued on P 2° OC is base ittende lave stayed: been ‘prote ; accused of factors are i age 2, Col. 8) dt oN lice: Contents 200 nded by top aides of the two 4 * hool today.” he said \ n ‘protesting for years that erop stabbing his friend, Anthony J But the jury wasn't present whe e involved, but the .- * x * wr t tink the word simpls prit ipals—Assistant Secretary of - ‘ 3 fans up to more than a million | sinski, to death with - eo (Continued | on Pace 2. Col. 4) " oti problem is one of the 4 sounds. better It hase:s Pee State: Ger Jd O Smith ane a Paulino sai dollars have gone to large scissor i i rr m { i reaeees fer ee tre "| : savor to it. while M i ll on policy planning, and "A ah about thi c 7 i, know nothing porate farm ner ot “about Stop a Ai tan = | oun ation Gets liam Sie . ssistan S case. It Came as wo ; eee . | squnds har sh and ugly - a Secretary John N. Irwin surprise aM AS Og * * * Jasinski, a 5l rmy Missile Cuts | “It sounds like a broken rec - “And ‘Michiganite’ sounds nt xe specialty is internal secu I * * * Under the farm support loans. “ atcehm ns at the ini night- when we talk of the plight of wae Uke something You di i James L. Guilmart : the producer turns th .. ‘ ery wh t the Southfield nurs universities, But é ‘ ' : dig fron tric won, ©. S Dis ns the crop over CTY Wiere Alve s . 00 : , at we are in dire ° the gfound,” ‘he added. om * * * $1 te ney,- said Ferrando g 7 to the gevernment unless he can onrdewur ‘we hei * page time 0 ur az irm straits I e : Later, the U.S. delegati o customs office 1) make a profit by p ne back Aug : es G “. gation an RB Lank fficers William y paying back the “*4F 1 { ING WRONG IMPRESSION ; nounce a 5 ieank tor ia pers iene ancien line WASHINGTON — “SSION . : The sixth annual Michigan ounced that He rter will confer ely not to, bier Walace D. Shan Sen Pa ae = the market ; * * * ’ said yeste - Fhe Army: “Thdése who wil » Buil i t t ri i rm 1 1 suff m r Week cor .an omerrew with Couve de Mur- 7 }- Molest the shipment ner FE. Capehart (R-Ind) Tried once before day a Michigan firm) youth er are the, 9g ogress at | mes to ‘a successful ville, who has th . They turned the cast etl, Mad emeed under ‘ came efor the case Would be one of many affe outh of Michigan, the citizens of MSU close today—for just about =a o fas the reputation Of superio: ash over to their , , . rin a move to ie to no conclusion beca affected by| Michigan, i — 0 Revealed t 2 : : ervbody | ju about ev being the West's toughest b: Iperiors . wipe out all farm = support jury was une ial Gar use the @ Proposed cutback in its Nike-)N : , onl the. industry of ; ° n | tis is ul Ms Michigan gainer at the talks g ar controls after this veat S ‘ane alga inable to reach a. ver. Hercules antiaircraft missile pro Mic higan.’ Annual Meeting . | Michigan beauty, Patience i. : B k He wante ‘ta era . Dr. 4 Pierce of Detroit. w Despite . p ac Wheat Pri imi , inted te freeze the 9 or 10 4 > i = | j q etro ill be in pile the Ped propags nd rice Limit bilhon dolls M The four-man, eigh * * * residen oe New York tomorrow t threats, Americ: pagunda dollars worth*of surpluses. J sight - woman A president, told the trustees that | Glowing reports , K lOMorn Oo wring , American officials said WASHINGT now in go re pluses, jury that sat through the se The Senate Armed Services C university po s on the progres a a bit of publicity-amd good Herter still beties es Soviet For- gan Lo TON (AP) = Michi- the President g . ; pe ies let, trial seule Rave acquitted yh mittee has pacisicel "sla rage of io cals oe poorer Siew ite rye nrary University Oak- will out of Michigan Week eign Minister Andrei Gromy} ‘moeratic Sens. Phil vifte et rid of them by. er. convict JAS : a slash of r the im. | '4" ighlighted the annual mee : . sromyko will Hart) and Parr lip gifts, overseas sale ed him of first or | ut three quarters in the ple pression that faculty i j = * « be ready to begi own-to-ear ; atrick McNamari: s ales or other out-|. second-d ‘ T number . - anned , culty mtubers ing-of the MSUO Foundation yes- The closing * ectbet neqotlati Lalit inicmrny voted yesterday jor a ae lets that would not upset future) the j neren: waxete. lees, ee oS eee Seen fet Ae haven't been paid in months, |'erday at Meadow Brook sing day of ‘the annual gotiations about the mid- ment to the * n amend- jmarket prices jury chose to coavict Aly muctesttipped hercules th ae | Michigan Week celebratidn will dieintmextweck ' o the wheat bill to Amit | of the least serious ch yea ig | Asked to bring the trustees up to e campus of the new university. be observed today as Nev Ted * “ ze ; pr € support loans to $25,000 for Sen. E * * * | manslaughter. arge — The Avene Pe * date on the Legislature's action inl « The Foundation is made up of tiers Day Tt was believed, however, that meature farm or farmer. The un: ‘bl y ann eee | Hearing the verdict, amazoo "cu er cae ee, SS: See said: as eal be mae . » secret ’ : vd oposed b ~ ey mn 2 se j | a ! ™ . the 7 et talks might be under-) J. Willis prop " { by Sen. John jto offer tt d anvone else willing!aced in disappo ct, Alvea grim- Corp. at Walamaaon org-Warner | . * * le Macomb counties. It will - taken under the guise of “informal, to 20 iams (R-Del) passed 57 | pr : 1¢ administration's wheat | his knuckl ppointment, rapping/firms which hold: is one of the! “There's very little to report be- erve in a permit, siveny 4 ‘ ‘ = ‘ ODPoOs: Lo 7 i U. S Spacemen See = demtaete” to aveld ened con o 20. . ‘ ale na id 20 himself and was'oner's table. sharply on the pris-|contracts and arena bigers “~ very little has see dete,” psy supporting role to the univer- - mt with what appears fo be tt —- : a vy standing vote. - i uM ; fected t a he MSUO board - eck i he the oe aintaining his inn ed by curtailment of the rd is the govern- A ’ acide Will Bui ~ _innowene’. the ‘gram (See Story on Pa e — ing. body of the “‘sister universi-| Harold A. Fitzgerald, publisher Or aunching A =~ * : suild nee Lighter Model Thi = OO icant tat scsi a | of The Pontiac Press and ead of < con see! SUSE pointed to 1S I all a a a a phon - | Pag fe CANAVERAL, Fla. (?— einai " mf saiaitiauaipeaiiss eee Fecditeh telihe Air Force shot its 44th T ~ erence as an indic: . hor {t a : intermediate ras a ion that Gtomyko event ! age ballistic mis. at entually will le also suggested naming fu alle ever the Atlentic Fri ahandon the unrelentin s build ‘and. Ma. _ Friday : = g stand uildings after Oa night, riday pe has deadlocked the con-- WILMINGTON mat ‘coun’ contin kland and Ma- | The fawnching was the first | erem . Motor Corp he Del. (®—General to the America ‘ r ace * . - ever seen by six of the nations - * * two members ieee the other industry.” an automotive stances.’’ Chrysler said it ll George Karras, director of phys- seven: apes. fiveee one of whats US. leaders have mat et s e auto industry's" ) call its ne : said will added that a hati ical ple 211 te vers, ters hi : var big three i . : * * new model the alf- million plant at MSUO will be the first American 1. t that they will agree . e it clear il ree n an invasion of the fp * a odel the Yalic nt. lcars probabl on foreign,;the Buick-Oldsmobile-Pontiae as- thom meembers: the ; told Founda. = he: i to a summit 8'Wing small car_ mark tumors, which officials here T DIFFERENT DESIGN y would be sold in the sembly pl ae. See sent Into space two years frem conderence eniy if the forelam min * p v4 et a icials here re- whe { WSIG! United States this year aa all plant. Prior to the meet-! building will be completed July 15 , . a ae . > . Ss 0 0 - . . . z , now, = isters meeting produces some re- GM announced vesterdi will have “um say the Corvair the -F, oat will compete with AT WILLOW RUN a huge ‘tent Se ae a The 65-foot Thor roared off to sults ’ to build a new, | ay 1 plans in . a rear air-cooled alum-, ame ‘uropean imports and the! ..The Corvair ts pee: SO O lawn] Teady by Sept. 15. a fine start of a 1,500 mile re- this -fall. F ¥s ighter Chevrolet im engine American produced Rambler andthe pre ecb. will be shorter than outside. Building schedules are being met, liability test. ” . “heveler ord Motor Co, and, Pricewis : Lark. But Donner insiste od het Chevrolet, with a smal.|__ Donner and CM Preside he said mi noua . ; Chrysler announced plans Thu so e, it will be the cheap be American in desi d it will/ler wheelbase but inside - will F. Gord esident John 2 sate ure beet < : ans rs-| est Chevrolet a! : esign and ‘‘di iv - nasenne side -will seat , on-—making the taree day taraittartention reri In Toda fe P day for smaller cars how much lecueee' Gin ak Ae mance i ects. We Rind akg a ne It -wjll be pro-| stockholder atheakaaee as ‘oa oan Pinay otha ateing president of | part of their rigorous training Y TESS sane OMe as of plans for the com. | Closed: A) GM. spokesman aia \guce abrosd. other firms pro-| Kansas city. Mo. and Os Run, roy fficers — both reported conti-| ond a mentor ot tha } program, ct GM auto, to be called the | Rone of th » abroac ee Meee ea ee Jaklana, dently on future busi porn wae nm ee A a e e 1960 mod j Calif. iness. Donner| said been ‘ | \ It ag the second Thor launch- pens was made at the Sist | Dee” priced for. the rsd nai | Donner said GM had~ been | sod be pnt ar based on results to MISUO scholarships, ef whieh on n . f nu . ore’ : ob ae . e, ‘ 3 conte "o bret the nineiie | Church News ae Grday i ree meeting yes- | The GM announcement about tl pemicen- a | diviciean pia” npley a Redy laenaral, Mors & good year for) © will be available for the first hursday, a nose | Comic abana 1 Oe ederic G, Donner, (Corvair TS ae re, to conform te Americ employ approxi: | | year. He said Foundation mem- cone was récovered after a 6,- Fratton a «board. chairman of the world’s had air only made official what) and = standards” can taste | mately 3,500 at Willow Red |. Gordon noted that the first ux bers seen ; increase their. 000-mile fright, , 2 als boos sanewae pa 4 | biggest private manufacturi had been reported reliably in the| World War Il be even before | hire an additional 1,000 at pal ad ter “was an excellent one.” and fields of sundae A Discoverer satellite vehicle oo sist « oiaisiejnie 15-29 | firm. i sans ban ole laek Po a pauntry for many months. Even can tm 1908. | City. The Willow Run plant, for- [that ofits were 58 per cent higher| i using “a Thor first stage, is ex. | § euvnians sista sree gy /| by GM's Canadian affiliate mES the Rene CHINE BE RO surprise. A year and: a half ago, we be-| merly a truck cénter,” has jee [than in 1958. 4. report aa The community rela- ae FR . rts . . ae ‘ ’ an ’ pected to be fired from Vanden. aed te beneeeeees 12-19 | Corvair det * * * igar to merchandise séveral models| Closed aimost a year, It wi Dorner succeeded Ha |ttons program was submitted to Th detail j of nN get rlow Curtic : A hike ails ‘were kept secret] 8 of our European int 4 urtice|the Foundation berg Alr Force Base, Calif., with, | TV & .. 1010 |—a competitive ad et} Both Ford and Chrysler an-|fry an cars in this coug-| ito. two-sbift production after 4s chief executive officer and Al- poate tbe. Cousino, in the next few days. They antes | Wi Radio Programs .7. 2% ‘companies seek bait ae all auto‘nounced plans Thursday for smal-! Kan with a view of ev aluating |. 74" 15. ibert Bradley as board chairma remy hg he tion's commit- will be aboard, |. Wilson, BAY cc csesvcectvar 1. \ner hinted th retaih—but Don-|ler cars. Ford said it would b al-/American interests in this type of|° The Cortv \Gordon took over the de n. we in that field: a ' Women’s Pages ...., o | lettin " . new car would have out a Falcon barring “chang ring etenapte cig Donner said: 'the large noche the big news at | from Curtice. preqicenty University officials spoke. briefly, ee ee eee ie Nee ages ete i eatures which are new!th yges in|‘‘Since then the de st gathering of stockhe Following the . e market of other ve deniapd for lighterlers in ud-! In\other action; the ng meeting. ; } | r circum- cars has grown substantially. ” He! 2 700 hove 8 history. More than | revelected GM's , + shareholders tion members were tab ae J. , ' - * oo. ! jammed the meeting room in tors, + 33 direc-/ed tours of the fitst ‘academic / ~ i #% building. / < be ! . . ) v $ a ap ‘ | ; » @ # , . ' , . ° “ , : ! = Pp Ee ee | or Sd . j ‘ -* ee oe D BRA ERNE SESS 2 / - -— Westhet—Seany To the east, winds toppled a 300- the Elyria-Lorain interchange yes-| KALAMAZOO (UPI) — Automo-| , a Fridey’s Temperature Chart es foot radio tower ne Cleveland; | terday. His car craghed into @!pbjje traffic was barred from ff en Poet Ppl eed Baitimore 8 "87 Miami Beack 43 7, Miss. Five inches /of rain sled jlight pole, two-block aréa in the central busi-|4, have told associates. however Seewnevs 4 HS Minmeapetise 4 3 doused Tampa, F) ness district today as a test Of <hat the Air Force has no designs —-,: «ogee 2» \Not Telling the Tooth? [proposed revolutionary shopping on taking over direct command of Cincinnati 8&7 45 Omaha s2 « Next Move p to Reds } . ‘ mall project. the Polari# missile submarines as Cleveland 2 8 hips 6 UM } | ‘KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) — | The closed area. displayed 100)part of a strategic retaliatory rott 18 @ Pittsburgh 4 62 GENEVA (UPI) — The United The liquor on his breath was (late model Americah and foreign) force. « Dule en oh oo Set co ca fj) States and Britain: placed. full | from soaking his aching tooth in jcars. For today’s experiment, only! Last week the Senate Armed | Or Rapics os 8 Ste Marie 59 38. responsibility on Russia today | whisky, Tom J. Ballard said. |pedestrians were alowed in the Services mittee recommended Secteoetite a y Wasktugien est, for the next mgve on an early | Fifty dollars and 30 days ‘in jail |two-block area, which later this| that $22,400,000 for niore Hercules * Figpees Cry 72. 5§ Seattle E 4 agreement to ban suclear weap- for drunk driving, the judge said |year will be opened as a park-like| bases in continental United States ett i Ons tests. yesterday. ‘ a _- SS =a ye ® Plastic Rane Could Kill 100 Children By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hermiess - looking transparent have become death traps ‘e of a penchant youngsters of pulling the bags over heads and courting death ‘focatiort. - e than two dozen tots have heir death in this manner ‘'y this year. The National Council fears the death ray rise to 100 before the is out. * * * The bags are the type used Jargely by dry cleaning establish- ments for returning cleaned ap- parel. The material also is used for ‘covering pillows and crib mattresses. an * * * Legislation has been pressed to have the bags perforated or clear- ly marked ‘‘dangerous.”’ The Kordite Corp. of Macedon, N_Y., claiming to be the nation’s leading manufacturer of plastic garment bags, announced Friday it is supplying labels to cleaning establishments to be slipped over the hangers of clothes being re- turned in the bags. The labels read: . x * * "Tried to Push ‘M’ at East Lansing “Caution. For safety reasons! - FATAL PLAYTHING — Two-year-old Mary Bodkin of Mer- rick, Long Island, N.Y., demonstrates how a youngster can be- come fatally entangled in a plastic bag. At left, Mary begins to pull the bag over her head. At right, her head is completely covered. It is in this situation that the child's breathing can draw AP Wirephotes the light ‘plastic into the mouth or nostrils eausing suffocation. Such accidents already claimed over two dozen tots this year. The National Safety Council fears the toll may rise to 100 before 1939 ends. ° THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1959°-—~- $6 Million Hike for Consumers Electric Rate Increase. Granted by State Will "Affect 828,000 . » LANSING (® — A rate increase totaling $6,788,485 was granted to| Consumers Power ‘Co. yesterday. It | wilt affect about 828,000 electric) customers. | Consumers ,serves electric cus- tomers in 61 counties outside De-| troit, none of them in the upper) peninsula. Among the larger communities in its area are Bay City, Mt. Pleas- ant, Flint, Grand Rapids, Cheboy- gan, Cadillac, Mackinaw City, Manistee and Saginaw. Public service commission chairman Otis Smith said it was impossible to define exactly what effect the increase would have on the average monthly bill of a residentia{ subscriber with the usual appliances. The incidence of the order on residential, commercial and indus trial customers will be refined when actual tariffs are drawn up next week. _In gross, the boost figures at) between 4 and 5 per cent of the utility’s present income from elec- tric service. in Cooler ren said. ‘Sale carries a 40-year imax.mum, possession a 10-year maximum. It’s pretty tough to |prove sale when you have an in- former working with you.”’ dren as you would matches or But some officials hold that re-) sponsibility rests with the parents; — —to keep the bags out of chil-| |. ISIN _s ees Tee Se cats from Chicago ius chilling off| pus town | and were held for Circuit Court victims have been infants less -“~ = n the cooler today after trying to A dozen officers trom Lansing, trial in June after failing to post 22" MSU Dope Pushers Held by selling marijuana in this cam- | The pair waived examination jam V. Reich, 25 of Chicago and’ ay estimated value of $30,000. for $160 in marked bills to a police} Police Capt. Thomas H. Grant than a year old. 7 er * : |push the M at Michigan State. | Fast Lansing and State Police raid- bail of $10,000 each, 7 . | That's police jargon. ed their pad (room) and picked up! Warren said that Reich, who al- | Area Red Cross John H. Harper, 20, of McHenry, | x *« * jinformer, could have been charged gave the $30,000 estimate of the illl., were cut off their kick. Ingham County P utor I-ck With possc-sion -nd sale. | It means that MSU students Wil-'19 poun@s of rough marijuana with legedly made a sale of marijuana WORTH $30,000 . x | The pair apparently was trying Warren issued warrants charging} ‘‘But I just wanted to get them suitcase: in the trunk of Harper’s 0 ee In | | to work their way through college both with possession of narcotics.'on a charge I could prove,”’ War- car. Alyea Found Guilty sis tot cets su" of Manslaughter Reich, a sophomore and two- Expect 100 “to ‘Attend. : ‘ | Annual Concave Here ROLY Nets $400,000 | | | | year Army veteran, is majoring | | i (Continued From Page One) | Harper, a junior, is majoring in Wednesday | . tor North Central ee hte AVON TOWNSHIP — Friends of his success to Christian college the end of the trial Wednesday,| A federal agent working on the jurors were given the usual lati- CaS¢ wasn't too impressed by the -45 p.m. Wednes- North Central Christian College. | training. : : echeduled for 6:45 p . : . |tude in deciding the case. pair although the narcotic seizure Principal speaker was Dr. Nor- | -— «& \was the biggest in central Michi- day at the Pontiac Federal Sav- located at 820 West Avon Rd., south| | * * The hung jury had been told at 54" in the last 10 years. ings & Loan Assn. | of Rochester, have guaranteed the vel Young of George Pepperdine | *»* * college will open Sept. 15 by con-| College, Los Angeles. Adolph F. Klein, chapter chair- tributing close to $400,000 in cash! - 7 'the conclusion of the first trial—| “They were a couple of crazy man, will preside over the meet- and pledges at last night's rally) Dr. Young stressed, “the moral/97 days long—that if Alyea was,Cats trying to be big beatniks,” ing. held at the State Fair Coliseum fibre of America rests in the be-' not acquitted, he would have to be Said the agent. “They had a big ar ke Seemed i a Detroit. jtiet in God at ike practice of convicted of first-degree murder, hi-fi set in the pad, modernistic Dinner he wera ies * * * Christian principa's. Conflicts of but not of apy lesser charge. | paintings and the beard on the one — from vol ittee, | College President Otis Gatewood the world must be settled from) This was because the prosecu- (Reich), but they didn't quite mer wy Cireuit Seles | : said a crowd of 7,000 attended,the battlefield of ideas, rather|tion had allowed no exception to make it.” re, and re m te " |the raily which marked the wind- than with guns and bombs.” | its claim that the killing took place| FEDS MOVE IN | , port from the nominating com- | p h ( |during the course of a robbery, | The federal agents were observ- . up of the college fund campaign. ' mittee by Richard . Poole, | Judge Beer ‘said. |ing and moved in when the pickup Jail’ -Reuther The majority of the money a | chairman. was needed, he said, toe cover | Since the prosecution did not |was made. One agent sported a Elections for officers and seats Backs but Fears ‘Straitidcket’ More than 100 members are ex- pected to attend the 42nd annual meeting of the Oakland County) Chapter American Red Cross ond trial that Alyea had robbed cant smile. Jasinski, jurors were given a i possi ; s, | the eee ase eae eneeree Lansing Police Detective Earl — | Eddie said the pair admitted Judge Beer took under advise-| they made trips between Lansing completion costs ef the new gam. | to the board of directors will be ti-purpose building on the school held immediately following the re-| a ee ports. in police administration, to assure the opening in Sep- a * * tember. Mrs. Mildred Bennett, executive Gatewood said that people who director of the organization, an- contributed to the support of the, nounced there will be no principal college live within a 200-mile ra- speaker for the evening. There dius of Detroit ley, Alyea’s attorney, to set aside supply. \the manslaughter verdict. for al will be, instead, a session for each * x * Labor Legislation lof evidence. Me they won't ee a ais person to recite his contribution to. Guest artist at the rally was | Testifying in his own behalf, Al- a <n = yea claimed police were making} popular singing star Pat Boone.| him a scapegoat in the case since | He appealed to teenagers to at- nist Init. | Entertainment will be provided tend Christian colleges to develop hy en ote Ce toe Orit ihe was an ex-convict, having | by the chorus of the Junior League the spiritual and moral side of favors legislation that would ut| Served time in Joliet State Prison | ef Birmingham, under the direc-'their lives” as well as the intel- the “giver oad taker - bribes. in| Illinois for armed robbery. tion of Mrs. Ruth Killeen. lectual. Boone added that he owed. ji) together.” | He admittd to discovering the a * body inadvertently at the Ilgen-| t sritz Nurseries Inc., 2291 North- | | western Hwy., the night of the | killing. | But he said that he fled the |place without calling police, fear- |ing he would be suspected because “I favor legislation that would lot his prison record. drive the crooks out of the labor | field,” Reuther said. Spanish-English : DES MOINES, Iowa ~w— Wal-} Eddie quoted Reich as sa he would sell marijuana to anvone who would buy it. Eddie added the chapter during the past year. , * * * dents. * * Reuther, who spoke before abou 3.200 persons in two Iowa appear- lances yesterday, made the state- |ment in a press conference last | night. * * * Rain Dominates Again Weather Sign Wears Out By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS {tivity also was on tap for the _The Weather Man hung out this Rockies and portions of southern reported they would meet their |corners, always at a different time | “Those big men operate smart,”’ he said. ‘I don’t think | these kids can finger them for | us.” | The arrest and seizure came as familiar spring-worn sign today: California gi « , “But mt of labor's leaders are) pegs H /a result of long and patient couper- more rain., onest, ecent and dedicated | jation between state, East Lansirg * * * The pattern closely matched) men,” he added. “I won't go ed D) ictionar Y as hand Lansing police.” “ees Widespread rain, sandwiched Friday's rain assault that drenched | Jegislation that would put labor in between warm and cold air Many sectors. la straitjacket,. masses, splashed vast areas Most significant rainfall was .72) «: want to treat crooks in labor The midcontinent caught the inch reported at Baton Rouge, La.,!and crooks in management with brunt of shower activity during during a 6-hour overnight’ period: the same set of standards.” the early hours with rain extend-| High winds, triggered by thun-| Reuther said ti ing along the southern tier of: dersterm activity, damaged some, uther said too often the |a- states. ‘buildings and downed numerous | Leal erygtho gery — ’ | epyi : : " . L And, the U.S. Weather Bureau! wires in southwest Miami County, | bribe om the side of a cate ie Campus? | Arthur F. (Frank) Brandstatter, Printing Terms head of the MSU police, said he | Over five vears dedication by Was convinced there was little of William M. Pepper Jr. has resulted the marijuana circulating mong lin .a ‘Spanish-English, English-| MSU students. e,”” he said. ‘‘I’m sure they | and printing terms more compre-| : hensive than anything published Selina pushing the stuff nere on The federal agent said the pair) lsupplier at various Chicago :treet | Spanish dictionary of newspaper | -““We would have got the im-| ‘SEE NO REASON | . Commissioner James H. Lee took |the position that no increase at all was warranted. So did the Mich- igan Utilities Ratepayers Assn. of Kalamazoo, an intervenor in the case. The Commission staff had rec- | ommended an increase of four million dollars a year. Company President Dan K. Karn said, ‘“‘We are very much disap- 'crease.”’ | Karn added, ‘‘This is the first. “If it was rolled into two-grain electric rate increase we have been church will conduct a tour and! and only the second general in- crease in electric rates in 37 years. “Wages, taxes and the cost of everything we buy has gone ‘up |and up. The rate increase author- nrestaurant management. |jzed by the Commission falls far of 2419 Hawkins St., ‘short of meeting these increased costs."’ Romeo Mom Denies Embezzling in Court | ROMEO — Mrs. Edward D Harms, 47, of 226 Croswell St. | pleaded innocent yesterday in U.S. 'District Court at Detroit to charges lof embezzling $2,300 from Romeo Savings Bank. The mother of two was placed }on $1,000 bond. | The FBI said Mrs. Harms, em- ployed as a bookkeeper, took the insist so strongly during the sec- red beret, leather jacket and va-|money in safety deposit receipts: He also was @ M&JOr over a three-year period. Authori-| lties say she has made complete restitution to the bank Cleanup Laws,’ ment a motion by William R. Beas-| and Chicago to pick up their But They Will Lead, Is Claim iby 33 area organizations, mostly |mother on her 87th birthday. The. Day in Birmingham ‘ Baldwin Library Display to Stress Merhorial Gifts BIRMINGHAM — A specia} dis- play of used books will open at Baldwin Library Monday stress- ing the growing trend of memorial books donated by persons and or- ganizations. * * Jeanne Lloyd, librarian, said the John W. Watling and Charles Madora Baad, 76, of 2804 W 13- . Mile Rd., Royal Oak, at 1 m- Monday at the Bell Chapel o! the William R. Hamilton Co. A former Birmingham resident, Mrs, Baad died yesterday after a long illness. A member of the First Church of Christ Scientist, she is sur. d J. Shain rooms and the $1,000 gift | honoring the late Mrs. Hugh Well-! man are a g the outstanding contributions. | Books, Mostly notification, cov- er religions, sports, career selec- tion and sever<! scientific sub- | jects. Contributions have been made woman's clubs. x * * Others have come from the Elks, Ferndale Rotary Club, Boy Scouts, school children and several de- partments within the library itself. The Eldridge M. Kruger home at 976 Bird St. will be the scene of an open house tomorrow when Mrs. Kruger and her sister, Mrs. Foster Toothacher, honor their * * * Mrs. Kate Bates, 87, today lives at the Kruger home. A year ago, just after becoming an American |citizen, she returned to her home jin Kent, England, to help a sis- ter celebrate her 60th wedding an- niversary. by a daughter, Mrs, Charle H. McIntyre of Lake Angelus and .vo grandchildren. MSUO Courses Set for Space Age (Continued From Page One) in fiscal administration, product and materials logistics, and in- ternational business. Varner pointed out that the new courses were designed to prepare the students for something ‘‘beyond his first job.” EXPECTS CRITICISM Expecting criticism of the busi- ness administration program, Var- ner said? “Opposition will develop from students. But our obligation at the university is to train bysiness leaders, Our students will be pre- pared for such roles. We must develop their ability to think, to cope with ideas.” . Talks with industria] execu- tives showed, Varner sald, that they are seeking broadly trained “Bishop's Day’ for women of jthe Episcopal Diocese of Michi- | \gan will be observed Monday at {Christ Church Cranbrook beginning jat 10 a.m, The Rt. Rev. Richard |S. Emrich will be guest speak- jvalue of the marijuana found in a pointed at the amount of the in-|er Following the noon luncheon, = woman's auxiliary of Christ reefers, selling at 50 cents to $1 allowed in more than nine years explain the special points of in- terest. oe i MRS. ROY WHITE | Service for Mrs. Roy White, 41, corporations are here to stay Royal Oak) will be held 11 a.m. Monday at the | field Township. “of * * Mrs. Hawkins died Friday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after a brief illness. business administration students. | “We have checked carefully to imake sure that they are not just |doing lip service to an ideal,”’ Var- ner said. ‘‘We have been told why such students have not been hired before—they simply weren't avail- able.”’ x * * The growing dominance of the corporation in the American eegn- omy will be paid special attention in the business courses. “Like autos and the Russians, Varner said. . = MSUO’'s teacher education |First Methodist Church. Burial will! courses will concentrate more on bs in Acadia Park emetery, South- subject matter and less on peda- gogy or how to teach. , x * * A heavy dose of ‘‘internship”’ or on-the-job training will be substi- ‘tuted for the latter, with students | | Her body is at Bell Chapel Of receiving practical teacher train- the William R. Hamilton Co. | She was a graduate of Bir- ing at schools in the university area. |mingham High School, a member) |Birmingham Chapter 220, OES. | She is survived by her husband; ‘Ray; a daughter, Cora Lynn of |Royal Oak; her parents, Mr. and \Mrs. Thomas A. Maxwell of San- ilac County, and two brothers, Ear! | A. Maxwell and Thomas A. Max-' well, Jr., of Birmingham. MRS. MADORA BAAD | Service will be held «for Mrs | pass this country in science by | a chance we can overtake them later. : In a statement through his office -here to clearif marks made at Marquette University Wednesday night, Teller | said Friday: | “What I said at Marquet what I have been saying and have been quoted accurate- ly as saying for many years. “In essence, my view is th | sclence education and that as US. Can Overtake Reds ying} LIVERMORE, Calif. (AP)—Dr. Edward Teller, who helped | that he was convinced there were’ develop the hydrogen bomb, says the Soviet Union will sur- no bjg sales among college stu- 1970. But he adds there is still y re- te University was essentially at we are not doing enokgh in. | a result of the present Situa- | tion the Russians will surpass,usé in science by 1970. | | | | “If we begin now to work very hard in science educa- | tion, we can regain the léad later on. | } “If we do not begin now—and in a big way—the Rus- | sian Communists will shape the world of the year 2000. ‘of the First Methodist Church and| On-the-job training will begin aay ss the chancellor said, so that stu- | dents will have a deeper appre- ciation fer the realism of the classroom situation. The MSUO curriculum will re- quire all students in their senior year to take a course called “Great Issues” dealing with such far- reaching and persistent ideas as religion and man, peace and war, and liberty and freedom. * * * Assisting in the formulation of the curriculum were some of the nation’s outstanding educators who met with the program development committee of the MSUO Founda- tion in a series of seminars at Meadow Brook Hall. Also consulted for ideas and guidance were MSU faculty mem- — bers and MSU honor students. James C. Zeder, Chrysler Corp. | viee president for engineering, served as chairman of the Fout- dation committee. Zeder said the new. program of- fered by the university is not an experiment but represents the best thinking of prominent educators and laymen. * * * “What is happening here,” he said, “is being watched not only in the United States but in other places."’ The curriculum makers agreed “T have the full confidence that once the American peO- | that modern university courses ple fully realize the dangers of the situation they will make | are entirely. too complex and teo | waste.” the sacrifices necessary to correct it, and I‘do have confi- dence that in the end democratic ideals will win out but it | | is later than most people think and there is no time to (will be limited with stress on in Chicago forecast spreading rain) Fla. . and thundershowers for the hamid | * * * goest free. “Dictionary of Newspaper and | The warm, humid air ‘belt that} Asked about Teamsters Union| Printing Terms” is a single-handed| Senate Would Chop Three-Quarters of Funds Atlantic Coast during the day.! More widely scattered showers ac- clung frem Texas northeastward President James Hoffa's reported |@ffort. A third generation newspa- | on -|to Maine Friday also dominated|threat of a nationwide |perman and co-publisher and editor | trike, : = a lof the Gainesville (Fla.) Daily Sun, * * * the region today. This warm air Reuther said: The Weather that Mr. Hoffa thinks with his) aWare of the need for this type of in the far northern precinct at Portland, Me. muscles.”’ | dictionary. . . Fail U.S. Weather Bureau Report . | SHING » PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Cleudy and Only the Great. Lakes showed * * * WASHINGTON (AP) cool with cceasiona!l rain teday, high 58 Cleady and centinved coe! tonight, lew, Much contrast today with a fresh) 44. Tomerrew partly cleudy and warmer. surge of cooler air, dropping the bigh 64. Winds easteriy 16-15 miles teday. - . Becoming nertherly 510 miles tonight. MeTcury some 10 to 15 degrees wana ts Pontinx below a corresponsing cycle. Lowest temperature preceding 8 am Chicago's drizzly 49 in the early 8 amr Wind velocity $-10 mph morning was no real improvement over a 30 reading reported at An- |chorage, Alaska. Reuther said that the AFL-CIO that it not only gives a Spanish- (publicly against a Senate commit- is opposed to the Kennedy labor speaking newsman specific ‘tee’. recommendation to chop off bill “because of the unworkable} meanings of English terms and | three quarters of the money to ex- and unsound amendments attached) vice versa, but also. offers eX- pnand ‘its Nike Hercules antiair- to it.” | plicit clarification of variations (craft missile system. from dialect to dialect, fe ~ * | After exhaustive research in} In addition, the Army is step- | technical literature and all refer- ping up its intramural war with State Motorist Injured at Direction: Southeast Gun sets Saturday at7 $4 pm Gun rises Sunday at 5 03 ar Aart inna” Temperatares eo Rice a cleaner 5 en git Critically on Ohio Pike ence material available at that|the Air Force—and specifically its : ; 5 ; . Ms as Ue S! rain in a 24+hour tally for Addison,, AMHERST, Ohio (UPI) — A 44-/ Hime. aie) whi tae ea ae ’ 50 ty eg ichi st we ia veal ; ; : 10 am 50 KY een kt Beery ae! ee '” tacts. Additional conferences with|its antiaircraft system, the Air a coma and in critical condition at Amherst hospital today follow- ing an auto crash on the Ohio turn- pike Frank C. Ryan, of Warren, suf- fered head injuries and a.fractured| Kalamazoo to Close In the Southwest, tornadoes ‘dipped down in Texas. But no in-, 72 juries were reported. There, the: §° community of Paducah shook off a drenching rain of 8.53 inches, ‘also in a 24-hour period. Hail up |Force reportedly made a formal proposal to the Joint Chiefs of staff that an all-service strategic jcommand be sfablisted to control all nuclear retaliatory weapons. This would include the Navy’s fu- | colleagues at Inter American Press Association meetings helped to ver- jify the accuracy of his findings. Friday in Pentiac fas recorded downtown) Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature eather—Cloudy, rain One Year Age ta Pontiac Highest temperature 6 to 1% inches in diametef hit the: leg when ae control of his car . ° t 5 ced : Lowest + . 5 a . é : M - Tes ure missile-firing submarines. cen siete 52 rural Wichita Falls areg. - on the rain‘stick pavement near all Area in Test j ° os a ats | * 2 ofa a ey Aa Lan cms nl igec reine Army Blasts Nike Hercules. Cuts Tex., and a surprising high of 89 another demonstration of the fact /@ntly and has for some time been ; The|five million, The Nike Hercules) will have an eventual range of 400 Its most outstanding quality is | Army has spoken up sharply and/weapon, said, the committee, is| miles and also will mount a nu- | ‘virtually obsolete.”’ ‘ARMY SMARTS For days the Army smarted in} silence over the fund cut and the| j ‘oheolets description. The Army-Navy-Air Force Jour- |nal. reported surprise and conster- {nation in Army circles over Army Secretary Wilbert M. Brucker’s apparent failure to defend the |Army’s case. * * * Then on Friday an official Army spokesman came up with answers to questions by newsmen. If Congress. goes ahead with the Senate committee’s proposed a ent to, a House-approved bill, said the spokesman, ‘‘serious gaps” in the nation’s aircraft. de- fenses would occur, The spokes- man added: . At stake are 50 Nike Hercules battery sites for protection of 25 Strategic Air~Command bases. in the United States and at eight lo- cations in Hawaii. HERCULES RANGE The Army's. Nike Hercules can carry an atomic warhead 80 to 100 miles. j|ment that the Hercules is virtual- ~|proved itself by interception pf a clear warhead. x * * The Air Force contends the Nike Hercules’ range is too short, that enemy bombers carrying mis- siles would be within reach of the target before the Hercules could touch it. Reacting both to this Air Force view and to the committee assess- ly obsolete, the Army said through its spokesman: * * * 1. The Hercules. has been in op- eration for a year and is actually installed in a number .ef bases. 2. Not even the first model of the Bomarc has been put into the air defense system, The earliest date. when a significant number will be instglied is at least two years a . By then, the primary need will be for defense against long range, ballistic missiles, not bombers. . | . : * * * 3. The Hercules already has 2,000. m.p.h, target at a height of 14 miles. and interception of a rocket-launched target more than } shopping mall. and tap be trimmed to about - / ee , les a 4g: Tampa. vi The Air Force's rival Bomarc = 100,000 feet—about 19 miles. bronze and weighs 25 ,tons. | specialized. ; The number of courses at MSO depth and -quality. A vigorous program in adult edu- cation Will be offered at MSUO.- - Courses will be on the university level. _. ww ~*~ * Graduate courses: will be offéred- at MSUO by the MSU faculty for credit on the East Lansing camp- us. " ‘ °The university will strive te develop the concept of the “alumni university,” said Dr. , Lowell Eklund, director of eon- tinuing education at MSUO. The primary objectives of this idea, he said, are to make clear to undergraduates that today’s complex world demands a con. tinuing of learning after gradua- tion, and to provide a systematic program of post-graduate learning for persons after graduation. The curriculum was presented to the MSU Board of Trustees in a morning session at Meadow- brook Hall on the MSUO campus, and to the MSUO Foundation later im the day. The castle-like home of°Mr. ‘and | Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson, who gave their 1,400-acre estate to MSU for the new university will eventu*tly become a fine arts center on the campus. ‘ , * -* * 7 oe The Wilsons also gave the uni- versity $2,000,000 to construct the first’ acaderhic building for . the university. c ¥ The Statue of Liberty is made af ‘ \ « 5 9 | .' * THREE OPEN AT 7 ALM. Be sure .. . have your clothes faultlessly Cleaned and Renewed at... CLEANERS FEderal “Qne of Pontiac’s Finest’ 5-8116 143 WEST HURON STREET a 9 —_ The vital factor in our memory of some- one is WHAT we remember ahout him: We were to have had breakfast with friends at - a Lakeside. We left home at midnight, trav- eling through a smal] town we saw a sign “Speed Limit 10 Miles an Hour.” We crawled ’ past ghe business section, not a human being was in sight as I picked ~ speed; past the last house I was stopped by an Officer for speeding 25 miles an hour. He roared, cursed —I remember him with aversion. I was twelve. It was baseball season. I was first baseman. My school work suffered, until my / sixth grade teacher said, “School is a game, too: win there or you'll never win —’ I re- member her with love and affection. Business succeeds when the man respon- sible for it creates an aura of confidence, in himself and the products he sells: a news- paper's influence is in direct ratio /to its arceptance by its readers. a delightful exam- ple of happy memories {s a man and woman who celebrates their golden wedding anniver- sary. J. L. VOORHEES “ €. SIPLE } | VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME ) Build pleasant memories every Gay of your ife 266 North Perry Street Phone FE 2-8387 “Reliable INSURANCE Protection” | Phone FE 4-4565 147 W. Lawrence St. EEE = TOPS IN DISTRICT — Hospitalman 1. C. Gerald Perry and Yeoman 1. C. James Scott proudly hold the ‘‘E’’ Flag awarded to the Pon- tiac Naval Reserve Training Center this week Castro says his family stands to form program chopping up estates. HAVANA, Cuba (AP) — Fidel ose by Cuba's new agrarian re- big > The Prime Minister told Division 9-104, Center, AN ADDRESS OF DISTINCTION @ Deluxe Dream Homes @ Adjacent to Both Public and Parochial Schools OR 3-941.1 “Westridge of Waterford” @ Suburbon Atmosphere—City Conveniences THIS BEAUTIFUL MODEL LOCATED AT 4213 LEDGESTONE DRIVE HELTMAN & TRIPP Builders and Developers of Westridge of Waterford 1; @ Futlty tandscoped tots fef Denver, Colo ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1 Pontiac's Naval Reserve Surface stationed newsmen his family owns 2.178 pontiac Naval Reserve Training acres of sugar land which will be reduced by the law to 1,000 hen East earned the title of ‘dark horse” av by taking top honors in the first flag for large surface divisions. phase of the Ninth Naval District recruiting campaign The campaign, which began Feb. midwestern states, with Colorado is run on a quarterly basis. being the western limit and Mich- Pontiac's unit. waged war in the past month, amassing points are awarded for each re- 65 points in a come-from-behind turning veteran ‘and one point for battle with Surface Division 9-235, new reservists. ~ The local unit edged its opposi- ; : Pentiac Press Phete The local unit, Surface Division 9-104, is cur- rently leading the large division class in the Ninth Naval District recruiting campaign. Com- heting are units from Michigan to Colorado. , Law to Hit Castro, Too City Naval Reserve Unit . | Wins Recruiting Honors tion, 110 to 168 points at the close of the first quarter in the “large division” classification. at the For its recruiting success, the center will receive the Navy ‘‘E” Blvd., has * * * The Ninth Naval District covers an all-out igan the eastern boundary. Four Largely responsible for the local unit's feat was Yeoman. 1C James Scott, a full-time sta- TRADE-IN PLAN Your equity in your present home may be accepted as part pay- ment. Liberol allow- ance. OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO 6 P.M For Your Inspection iH HH if ‘ OR 3-941] 51 W. Huron At Seems #r es MOTOROLA PORTABLE | $1.25 wom | Put in Layaway—90 Day Free Service The Good Housekeeping Shop 4 4 i, i tion keeper and one of the 10- man staff that runs the center. 4 . Scott, who lives at 82 Edison St., i is Coordinator of the center's re- cruiting program. er tat Me Take Care of Pretzels but Overlook Price Tab PROVIDENCE, R.I. bill giving liquor package stores the right to sell potato chips, pop- corn and similar items was passed Friday by the Rhode Island louse In the process the representa- tives eliminated a $500. liquor li- cense fee. After red-faced legislators dis- covered they had _ inadvertently dropped the fee, would fix the error next week in FE 4-1555 ‘the Senate. bit Buck ACCOUNTS Your Savings are insured to _ $10,000 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. You're Sitting In Clover Witha Savings Cl ccownt: : Make a Bee-Line To Open Yours now ! It’s a sweet, sure way to reach the goal you're working for. A happy, secure future and you'll have more than luck to take advantage of an opportunity. _ National | Bank Offices at W. Huron ... N. Perry . . . Keego Harbor « » » Walled Lake ... Milford. . . Union Lake +++ Lake Orion... Waterford and Bloomfield Hills * tac j (AP) — they said they | DAYS and EVENINGS OPEN EXTRA BARGAIN So Many - Shop $ S—We * ror taba e IMMS TONIGHT a for These ‘SUPERB BARGAINS!’ i Had PR EAFA om, Pe BR gs 4 - * TRE STORE HOURS * For our customers’ convenience and shopping leisure, Simms will be open every nite to 10 P. M. ‘til ‘ Decoration Day, May 29th. No need to pay higher prices on Sunday . . to really save MONEY. Specials good tonite and Monday; Rights reserved to limit quantities: $ . Shop Simms during the week >. S TONITE 6 P.M. to 10 P.M. M PLOSED ALL DAY SUNDAYS MONDAY 9 ALM. to 10 P.M... reinforced 2-FOOT WOOD Al! wood with metal rod per persor. Ladder 97° steps. Limit ] —tnd Figer 7'4-Foot Tall—ALL STEEL Clothesline Props SOKCSSOHSSSSSSSSHSSSSSSCSSESSSTSCSSESEEES Smooth —— pens, blue ink points. Limit 2 Retractable RETRACTABLE POINTS . —Main Fleer ~ Ball Point Pens: Regular 25¢ Value c “ ' Soft PLASTIC CLOTHES BASKETS tw h ei TELE ee TreT a? b $1.00 ¢€ Value Regular ¢ 52.00 34-inch tubing. Rubber line : “ clip, mubber ground cap. sLimit Soekek. Kies pa bemaee omen / Pd props tic. Limit 1. — —?nd Fleer —2nd Fleer Reg. $2.69 | Reg. 20c¢ | Reg. $1.50 Reg. 5c Reg. $2.39 | Reg. $3.00 - METAL . FILE CHEST RAYOVAC Flashlite Battery King James HOLY BIBLE CANDY BARS 10 for WORKERS’ LUNCH BOX 1.77 = 1.43 | I | 78« | 29¢ 2.48 | e . e . Holds 800 docu- Power Pak’ leak- § Self pronouncing § Clark bars. Luden J Complete with Coast Guard ap- ments, has key & oot batteries. J Bible. Gift boxed. bars in mint, co- f vacuum bottie.— proved. Assorted lock Al metal mit 6 Regular § Limit | Bible. eonut, almond,§ All metal box, s te chest size. etc. Limit 1¢. $4.98. A! —tnd Fleer —tnd Fleer —Main Fleer —Main Fleer —tnd Fleer Fleets Metal HOSE HANGER Genuine GILLETTE <=) Razor Blades e e e e -§ : 79¢ Value 5A : 3): Pack of 10 go. : er cet mee 3 ae we 24: from kinks. 4 Thin blades — . TAS SSE S “ —_t%nd Fleer e geen gs lag 4 =: Se . e Limit 2 packs. e i ? 35 FOOT Electric 3mm 5 tiem SO DRASTIC - EXTENTION CORDS 3 ehie Shor §=6-¢-:s Cutlery Trays - ss ¢: ~ALL-WHITE $ — $7.29 ¢: Saino ° SHOE POLISH ° Value 48 tay - : 29c c ° Unbreakable. individual stacking ee | en | ees —tnd Fleer . Limit 2 Bettles 4 = —tnd Fleer Reg. $4.25 | Reg. $1.06 | Reg. 55c Reg. 49c | Reg. $1.75 Reg. $7.95 - BASEBALL FIELDERS’ GLOVE 2.47 Listerine Toothpaste Twin-Pak 49« Pepsodent Antiseptic 2 Bottles 63° 73¢ INSTA- : e LITE . 3.88 | Y s > roe'hes fie | Ramey gists | Pewee totes] Tontame er mitace, mame | ore, Sema ace TE aa 1 "a Limit Limi pe. — shempoo for all RemovabieY —tnd Fleer —Main Fleer Fleer wae Fleer om per Fleer All agent FOLDING : $ . KODAK Kedachrome . ae P " e | | Reg. $3.98 ° ° $2.85 ROLL “ 9b. : : : ] Ea. bd bd 1.94 ‘ re Keep Kids Safe in Water : : All metal, upholster- . SAFE-T-SWIMMER 4 —— ed seat and back — @ r $3.00. Rigid plastic 69° Z Limit 4 per person. @ foam as shown, never sinks. @ $4.15 MAGAZINE 294 —tnd Fleer = ca ath t. —— - ° LOAD FILMS 100 Ft. Reg. 35 | Reg. $3.95 | Reg. $2.00 | Reg. $1.89 | Val. to 49c- PLASTIC SINK OUTDOOR | Ladies’’ | LADIES’ Ladies’ * CLOTHES LINE 88* PLUNGER 2\¢ DRINKING FOUNTAIN 1.27 Half & Full WALTZ GOWNS 1.00 and Girls’ SOCKS 7 Ps S$]. 4 —_ core, plastic 54-inch rubber J Attach to outside § Avisce sii . ps in lonized acetate, | Stight irregulars. Fong iso ne. oe pores gm, eae — _— kids | choice of half or J fitted waist. Solid | Assorted styles & person - Limit 1 per r- for gp = Pg on oe a ee am — omn¥ r Best 2nd Flegr | son. ' —2nd Fleer —tnd Fleer —Main Fleer —Main Fleer —Main Fleer s * f Tele hone o MEN'S & U ~ Children’s 1 to S;Denim Na P ¢ “sors Underwear 3 mber Index 3 > Boxer J ex > — 4 $ oxer Jeans ° & T-Shirts > : Reg. 98 & > . ~ *® Briefs D5 $! Value e . . ¢ 3 * Shorts r ‘ _$ ' #2: @ € e ° $: = ° = —— e For .@e > Easy to use . : e . or hone e uw bem c @ e LIMIT 2 indexed A to @ Your choice of the above underwear @ Z. Limit 1 @ at this low price. Mix or match ‘em. @ —Main Fleer : All sizes for men and boys. Limit 6 @ e e = Sturdy elastic boxer ized. Bac waist, matae — —Basement ~ em. Blue _Gaain Fleet Reg. $1.95 | Orig.$12.95] Reg. 69c | Reg. $4.95 Reg. $1.98 Reg. $1.29 CURITY CRIB SHEETS 88° Ladies’ All-Weather COATS 3.99 18 x 36" HAND TOWELS 3 r §) Bedspr'ds or Matched Drapes 2.29 38 x 30" “CAFE CURTAINS 97« ie Fitted for 6 year J With matchin Dundee terrycloth § Choice of spreads | Washable. color-— To mateh the euibs Lifetime ff hats Rainproof § in choice of pas-§ or drapes, Pol- | fast in plain or # cafe curtains. 12x elastic White and fabrics. A)) sizes, f tel colors. Ab- — ished cottons, Is. lection § $4-inches. al colors not every style sorbent a, ete, of colors. . ; (2 for $4.50) ne —Main Fleer —Main Fleer —Basement —Basement —Basement —Resemect, 18x36" Carpet Squares . ° So Topout TYEE 3 MEN'S DUNGAREES Throw Ruas : ‘INFANTS’ : , gs: : aa e » “ _— : SHIRTS Regular $2.00 * oe Foal $1.98 e° e Sera Re NN e ° Bre ec rN Value «. > Value Ce - baer eae a | ° to $1.29 ° b Wes Cut pat = 3 bo 3 NA. “Pe\ e or ° - 7 . SN, yi a Non- @ 3 for $1.10 Bo or rh ol RA sewne e tipper me akitt back. Vax @ Size birth to 32 Ibs. @ ~ swig st riety of col- @ Styles in white and .¢ 2 nae ors. ~ @ » colors. e y 37° —Basement « Main Fleer - . ‘ SIMMS. THERS BER ei abi id. ve 4 +, ae * ‘ Pe a en eee HAROLD A. PITGERALD President and Publisher THE PONTIAC PRESS - Owned and Published Locally Editorial Page SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1959 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — It Seems to Me a Oakland County has a.big stake in Michigan Legislative activities. There are two distinct issues. First, there’s the immediate question of agreement on a tax program to pro- vide the revenue. - Secondly, there's the greater ques- » tion of adequate pay. at State uni- versities to keep our best men here. “ * * * Stories from East Lansing and Ann Arbor indicate that both in- stitutions are losing valuable * professors to other colleges and universities. Industry is also claiming some of the faculty mem- bers who have had highly spe- cialized training in certain fields. Chancellor D. B. Varner de- clared from the outset that he was determined to staff MSUO with the finest men obtainable and his early choices bear this out. Our educational program is aimed at developing real students. We pro- pose to have high grade men teach high grade students. But the money must be appropriated to face the situation squarely. * * * Furthermore, don’t be under any misapprehensions over our current financia] predicament. . Michigan isn’t “bankrupt.” Perish the thought. x * * We're simply “out of cash” at the moment, just as an individual might be who reached into his pocket and discovered a flapping wallet or no wallet at all. His . resources could be tremendous — just a Mictigan’s are. ; * * * = The Legislature in Lansing simply = can’t agree upon a, method of raising > the money. Our celebrated “payless = - paydays” have probably uncon- = sciously~ or consciously had some * pearing on the decision of especially talented teachers to leave Michigan, . even though they knew that the ~ State was completely solvent. What- ever influence this did have was al- = ways against us. > Itisn’ta pleasant contemplation. . x *&* * - We face a double barreled prop- osition, ina way. First, our finan- cial woes have contributed to the uneasiness of everyone on State . payrolls. These _ circumstances = weigh against us with men who ~ have outside offers. ° This is inevitable. x * * - Even though they grant to them- = selves that Michigan isn’t bankrupt —or remotely approaching any such = unhappy condition — it’s human na- = ture to lean toward institutions that ~ have never faced Michigan's current - dilemma sh) ee . Also, it becomes more difficult to «= get the most capable faculty mem- = bers to leave other places and come ~ he. Chancellor VARNER’s work in ~ this connection is now (eadioes ey = harder. . * ss * = When the Legislature finally = reaches agreement and the cur- rent “crisis” is solved, the State of Michigan must face the hard fact that other educational insti- tutions are paying more money. We must step up to thal.” ~ THE PONTIAC PRESS Trade Mark Daily Except Sunday 4@ W Huron &t Pontiac. Michigan Published by Tue Powtiac Parss Company st ; 108 seen? Joun A. Rrity Assistant Advertising Maneger Rv@erit Batsrrt Executive Vice President and Advertising Director SCOR EE Hy Ecet M. Terapweie, Howaan H. Pirrcres.m 0, , Circulatién Manager Vice President and Business Manager G. Mansmart Joadan, Local Advertising Ménager : Jonun W Prrectaae Secretary and Editor amr J. saopagins Rattor Gronct C. Inman, ClasBified Manager The Associated Press is entitied exclusively to the use for republication of al) local news printed im this hewspeper as wel) as al) AP news dispatches. 7. TIAC Press js delivered by carrier for 40 cent, a. Week: where carrier service is not available. by mail in Oakland. Genesee. Livingston, Macomb. Washtenaw Countie: it is $1200 a year; elsewhete in ae and ell other pi’ $26.00 @ yesr, All mail subscriptions payable in edyance. “ie hes been paid at the 2nd class rate igan ; nam aimee at Pontiac _~- * / _and capable citizens: a BH Pha ee ~o First baby sitters Member of ABC ~, Py . Insufficient College Pay Means Loss of Valuable Men in State We must face competition head-, on. * * * Hence, as I said at the outset, this area has a big stake in the current Lansing situation. We have an in-. terest in getting the turmoil settled. And we have a bigger interest in see- ing that the appropriation for MSUO is adequate. The first two buildings out there have been tailored strictly to utili- tarian purposes. The underlying idea has been to get the maximum educa- tion for the dollar invested. That is the guiding principle of MSUO. But in the matter of faculty and students, we must look the whole world squarely in the eve. And concede nothing. And in Conclusion... . Jottings from the well thumbed notebook of your peripatetic re- porter. . I had to go all the way to Ireland to learn the common Irish first name, “Sean” wasn’t pronounced “see-an.” Probably everyone else knows that it’s “Shawn” and means “John.” Purely personal nomination for an ‘especially attractive young woman: Doris B. GRIFFIN Fausus is losing caste in Little Rock and his school may integrate in the fall This 1959 Pontiac automobile continues to draw kudos and lavish praise wherever I go. It’s the automotive star of the year. x~ * * I've been advised “those places” only have 27 flavors instead of 28 ee Oxford University has about decided to drop Latin as a compulsory entrance requirement. Russian and German will be sub- stituted..... _Those new, two passenger taxis have been on trial in New York. Results to date: Mileage is better but the pedestrians aren't thrown as far WoL eeee Ethel Merman’s new show, “Gypsy,” cost about $400,- 000 to open....... .The ordi- nary dentist drill runs 600 revolutions a minutes. A new one turns.more than a hundred times faster and does the work so much more rapidly, the patient is spared immeasurably. This isn’t a theory, either. Bruce Hubbard used one on me. oor e ree eee x * * The outstanding high school bas- ké@tball player in New York is BILLy BURWELL and he will enter Illinois. He's a 6-8 center ....,; Bos ELDRED was an ace-high selection as head of the next United Fund Drive. He’s unusually capable and com- petent and has fine foresight and ad- ministrative capacity..... One of Oakland County’s most loyal “Jack” Mc- “ee ee DoNALD “Wanna go to the movies tomorrow night?” Second baby sitter: “I don't dare. I’d have to leave the baby alone with its mother” .......... Some west coast publishers said to rémem- ber this name: ANoig Dickinson. She may be the top movie attraction about a year and a half away. —HArRoLp A. FITZGERALD Many a person who strives to climb high on the ladder to success mainly in order to look down upon others. “In THE final analysis, space is nothing.” — Kansas City Star. Yes, but it’s a most useful kind of noth- ing—the only kind that will contain material things. If there were no space, there wouldn’t be anywhere to put anything, and this would make for inconvenience. “On Jung 3 the world will disin- tegrate into nothingness,” says a seer. We hope he’s mistaken. We've been used to‘having the world around sd long that we’d doubtless miss it-if it were to disappear. | « roll, Ls os BS FAITH THAT AMERICANS LIVE BY The POWER of FAITH semestt_ | - The J. L. Ragsdales were non-denominational missionaries teaching the Bible in Ken, tucky when the realization came to them that neglected children have a tremendous need for love, security and a Christian home life » Thereupon, with a grown daughter and a friend, they founded the Open Door Children's Home at Hazard, 12 years ago To get beds and clothing, they sold their car. The home soon burned, but the children they had taken in stayed on for four years in two remaining rooms while the Ragsdales saved to buy some land. This property the youngsters promptly dubbed Sunshine Mountain The older boys in the ‘ foundation for the new home was laid workmen contributed checks arrived by heating cropped up on the mountainside young people aged three months to 22 years, bought cement, chargéd nothing, family skills, mail 20 have left to marry, take jobs or enter the armed services “From the beginning,’ say the Ragsdales, ’ cut timber, dug a well, helped build a road. When the there was only $100 in the bank. But a friend businessmén gave discounts on goods or Doctors offered their services, ‘and coal for The Home became a reality and now houses 47 including three who attend college. Another “it has been a work of faith.” Roll Back Government Secrecy (The daily job of reporting what goes on in the world finds Amer- jean newsmen engaged in a cam- paign against sé@crecy The fight is right within American borders. not in some far-off place. Called the “right to know" campsign. it basically concerns maintaining «& free and effective press.) By EDWARD NICKERSON Associated Press Staff Writer Packaged in lump sum figures, New York's legislative payrolls accounted for outgoing cash in such vague terms as_ secretaria! expenses and custodial services Lawmakers’ salaries were known —but the payroll records were secret. Then, last. year, statehouse reporters got busy. Albany's Knickerbocker News paved the way and the Svracuse Post-Stand- ard and the New York World. Telegram joined in. They found a senator who kept his personal barber on his pay- a lobbyist for a retail mer- chants’ group who conveniently had a job with a joint legisla- tive committee, and a number of other peculiarities. The Legislature now has rules which require publication of in- dividual payrolls. And there's’ a special committee that makes sure this is done. The kind of secrecy rolled. back at Albany is the tarcet of a ‘right to know’ campaign by U.S. news- papers and other news media * * * Seasoned newsmen consider tho tendency to withhold public records and to conduct public business behind closed doors as a threat to “a free-press;---And-they-arquo..that. such practices also reduce its effectiveness; had New York's lez- islative payroll figures been pub- lic, for example, the freeloaders never could have lasted 20 years In 1956 Sigma Delta Chi, the national journalism fraternity, launched a campaign for ereater freedom of. information, and made state legislatures its target. The fraternity formulated model onen records and open meetings laws to guide interested legislators Substdntial progress has been made since that day, but many of the laws introduced into the state assemblies met defeat. Significantly, they usually died In legislative committees—which often meet behind closed doors. Under the model laws, officials found guilty of violations would be liable to removal {rim office and small fines and iunprisonment Experiences have varied where sich laws are in force. One biz quest is whether officials cou'd use stalling tactics to evade the law while not violating it. W. Emerson Wilson, city -editor of the, Wilmington (Def) Morninz News, referring to the open meet- ings law passed two years ago by the Delaware Legislature, re. ports; w “We'carry topies of the statute with us and whenever an effort is made to deny the press access to such a meeting, the mere suggestion that the agency could be repotted to the State a ‘ "ee + a eee \ ee % | be “oe ad Attorney General's office has opened alj doors."’ The Delaware law, like those of many other states, permits certain bodies to hold executive sessions in secret, but says the press and public must have access to any Dr. session at which a vote or other final action is taken. * * * A recent test case of a Louisiana freedom of information law, how- ever, shows a situation just the opposite of aed one in Delaware. William Bradv’s Mailbag Home Remedies oe to Relieve Ivy Poisoning ‘For ivy poisoning, apply to the affected skin, as hot as can be borne, sweet ferg tea—the «water in which sweet fern has been steeped. Crumble the leaves and smal] twigs, cover with watér, let steep for a while, strain and apply hot Frequent fresh applications give remarkable elief in 24 hour’s."’ (A.J.B.) Answer—Thank you There are other good home remedies to pre- vent and relieve the skin inflam- , mation of poison OR. BRADY - ivy. Send stamped, self-addressed envelope for pamphlet Ivy Poison- ing * * * “This time of? year” my hands are red, rough, irritated... (Mrs C.J.) ~—~Angwer-Apply--afew_draps..of the fotlowing home made skin lotion two or three times a day, after washing and before the skin is quite dry: Put three rounded teaspoonfuls boric acid, a heaping teaspoonful glycerin in a pint of water and boil, stirring contantly, until you get a thin clear jelly. Label it Skin Lotion. . * * * “I have been taking fwo calciuni wafers daily for the past six months for a calcium deficiency acquired by following a starvation diet. My family doctor advised me to do so. But this science writer savs foo much calcium can cause hardening of the arteries ‘ (Mrs. W.L.R.) Answer—Two calcium wafers a day give you es much calciam as every- one shoujd get in a pint of ynilk. The “science writer” does not indicate how much calcium is “too much”—he or she simply copies what some other bright “science writer” ‘has told the child-minded public. You may learn something to your advantage by atadying “The Calcium Shortage,’’ for which send me 35 cents and stomped, ewe addressed enevelope. ? Smiles . It seems to depend on whetlier or not the home team wins whether or not the umpire .is-a bum, “~ Bigned letters not more than one page or 100 words long pertaining: to personal health and hygiene. not dis- ease: diagnosis, or treatment. will be answered by Dr William Brady if a stamped self-addressed envelope is sent to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan. (Copyright 1959) FO = EO ’ Voice of the People Praises All 0 f Sports Page With Only ¢ One Complaint I'd like to comahend the Sports “Editge for his venhiial core ot all kinds of sports. No matter which you are interested in, it's * x * Now I can't write a letter with only praise in it, because I'm only human and bo here goes my gripe. Please, oh please, print schedules and scores of Little League baseball. We want our friends and neighbors to know when and where games are being played wo they, too, can enjoy and relive the pleasures of youth in our children. * * * Yes, I’m the mother of two Little Leaguers and I want them to stay that way or some day I may bow my head in shame when they! face that stern old judge in a court of justice. Do your bit, Sports Editor, and we'll love you for it. Remember, stoops to help a Little Leaguer.” _ 1592 W. Rundell ‘Women Work to Keep Jobs’ I'm a working woman and have no intention .of giving up my job man, Lots of men are out of work, but sometimes it’s. their own fault. I know men _ with families that miss from one to three days a week and still expect companies to hold their jobs for them. Those men are probably the ones that are out of work and have wives griping about women work- ing. About 99 women out of every 100 that. work stay on the job every day. They must or they wouldn't have a job. I get sick of people writing about women work- ing. I think the ones who gripe and are out of work are the ones who are too lazy to get up every morn- ing and go to work or else they’re too lazy to get out and look for work. They want some woman to hand her job over to them. We women are still working becaus> we stay on the job and take care of it to a Working Woman P. L. ‘Then What Caused Cold Years Ago?’ ~ In answer to F. M. ©. about bombs, rockets and guided missiles, what causéd the cold winter 50 years ago”? There were no modern tests being conducted then. If God saw fit to give us mild winters for 50 years, we should be thankfu! I still believe He controls the wind and waters, the seasons and the temperature. _ Amy ‘It’s Time W e Did Something’ A British physician recently said in a public address that he had * given a patient a fatal dose of a drug to save his suffering. The patient was suffering from incur- able cancer. This country seems to be very backward about doing anything in this connection and it isn’t to our’ credit. Huntley Grosner ‘Don’t Insult Us by Such Usage’ Frequently now days I see th Democratic party called the Socialist Democrat party and The Press has done this in several editorials. Please do not insult . @ great party. The Socialists be- lieve in the equality of all mea and they don’t think that racketeers and hoodlums like Hoffa should contro! the nation. They do not favor millions and millions in labor union money going Case Recor ds of a Psychologist: “A man is never so tall as when he Mrs. Leonard Patch into political campaigns for this denies equality. People every- where should stop calling the Democrats the Socialist Democrats. . They don’t measure up and they never will. Socialist ‘Any Five Dems Can Beat , GOP’ There are at least five different Democrats that can lick the panis off anyone the Republicans put up. and I'd even let them have Ike. L. G, 8. Just a Little Token of His Affection Haw, haw, haw. I just read in a New York paper of a man who ; trying to find if that horse thet kicked Wayne Morse is stil) alive. He wants to send it carrots and apples : Souckle — -—aeenee ies Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFFE Friendship is a priceless th'nZ . . . As people live and die More yaluable than money and Al] goods that it can buy Friendship in the sunshine or The fiercest storm at night Friendship at a funeral With prayer and candlelight It if the dear companionship That helps us celebrate Or sympe- thizes when we meet A most — unfortunate fate Friendship 4 Forgiveness or More surley thon Our suffering Friendship true And eager- a passkey to reprieve materia] wealth could relieve is faith’ and trust ness to aid Our real umbrell. -when we might Feel lonely of afraid. (Copyright 1959) The Country Parson ] “Sofmetimes a preacher needs to give his members-a rough idea of what he thinks .. . very Funeral Flowers Aren’t a Waste The very clergymen who be- little florists and morticians at being wasteful eleménts of so- clety, are never loathe to ree “eive their $10 or $25 for a suneral sermon or a cash hand- ov? for their church. Chris? ap- proved df honoring the dead with perfume, either in bottles or in living flowers. so don’t #et so all fired economical that vou strip. idealism from our nraduation at death *° -By-DR.. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE B-442: Mike S., aged 37, is a fine mortician, ; x & & “Dr. Crane,” he began, as I addressed his State Funeral Di- rectors’ Conven- tion at the Uni- versity of Missis- sippi recently, ‘I wish you would give us some ad- vice. “For example, we _ occasionally encounter clergy: men who criticize the use of flowers at a funeral serv- ice and even want CRANE to abolish the funeral entirely in favor" of a little memorial service later in their church. . * * * “They'd Have us morticians dis- pose of the body, ejther by burial or cremation; just as cheaply as possible so they could divert the péople into their church for a me- morial service . . . at a fee, of course, . DR. * * * “They seem to feel morticians are making millions of dollars. “How can we correct their erro- nedus thinking?’ . FACTS FOR CLERGYMEN It might help td temind all you readers that the average funeral service nets the-mortician only $92 BEFORE taxes. And if you are a private busi- oil nessman you know what a terrific . slice Uncle Sam gets nowadays from all private business firms. For that $92, the mortician of. fers the bereaved a costly chapel on a valuable rea) estate site often in the very midst of the city. The body lies in state for two or ~ three days and nights. Even a pri- vate hotel room runs about $10 per night nowadays for one person, so the rental of that funeral chapel room is worth $100;-at-the least: * * * Moreover, the surgical act of.em- balming takes just as much time _ as the removal of an inflamed ap- pendix, and each body must “embalmed by a college tra expert. Moreover, the funeral director furnishes an ambulance to pick up the deceased and transport it to the mortuary, as well as back to the church and cemetery later on. Many other arrangements are made by the funeral director, including the selection of pall- bearers, so don’t think a mor- tleian charges you an exhorbi- tant sum just for a colorful casket, That casket charge actually cov- ers embalming, ambulance and cars, plus three days rent of the funeral chapel, etc. BRAIN TRUSTERS Clergymen have usually never operated a private business of their own; so they are very prone to attack m ment or “big business” and almost always side - with the simple wage earner. ~*~ * & Actually, after you have tried to operdte any. private business in these days of confiscatory taxes and excessive red tape forms, you will realize that management de- serves its: reward. ‘Most people, however, are sim- pty salaried workers, either in ' ® , banks or advertising agencies, or on newspapers or in factories and shops. They get a pay check each week and take the full check home ‘to use as they wish So they tend to think that a grocer or mortician or doctor also empties his till at night and ta'tes the entire proceeds home to spend just as he likes They have no-conception of “net profit,’ for they have never -had to buy, merchandise and se. ice their prodycts; compute “net profit.” No American youths get any | newsp cer such training except carriers and there are only 500 %0 of them among about 40,000,000 school kids . Dentists and lawyers and phy- sicians and other private prac- titioners, as well as farméfs, grocers, morticians, etc., run businesses which require the “net “profit” computation. So if you are a braintriister + clergyman, will you kindly . uit * picking on management unt!’ ww get wise to the small net ~ ‘it now obtained by those leaders +30 furnish -empIbyment to all the rest of you. wage earners? Always write to Dr. George W. Grane n care of The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, rn voll enclosing a long 4c stamred self-edd reared, cnowens end 20c to cover jrptas and p ing costs ll, 8 poh B Snares nad pam pniets ~(Copyright, 1958) then collect and — : : : a renee a Two ‘Alpha Delta Kappa International Sororuy for j teachers initidted two honorary members at a dinner at Devon Gables Friday evening. installed at the event were, new ollicers Vrs. Chester 4 MORE left to right, PTA’s Ofticers Installed in Alcott Season Closer New officers were installed ly Mrs. Kay Weaver at the Alcott School PTA finab meet ing of the season Thursday * * * Mrs. Thgodore Figa ident of the group. Others who is pres will serve next chool veat wide Mrs. Lewis K. Smartt vice president, Mr. Smartt father vice Harry McCreary and Mrs. Walter retary Mrs treasure! Schmitz, sec presiden! * * * A skit entitled “Random Target,” directed by Kay Whe- lock, was presented by parents of John Monteith Elementary The cast included Mrs Mrs Aldred Waldo School Joseph Orosey Ostrander John Waldo Bruce past and 3ruc t Mrs sented a Taylor president s pin was pre Many Attend National Dance Affair at Elks Over 100 members and guests: attended the annual Dance of All Nations held Friday evening at Elks Tem ple. The affair was sponsored jointly by Janice Antona’s citi zenship class and the New Citizen's League of Pontiac Committee heads pjanning the dance included Roman Gravilla and Clarence Cham berlain, tickets: Miss Antona orchestra and entertainment Maude Chambers and Mrs Herbert Langton door prize Mrs. Langton also served as chairman of the mittee in ments Guests of honor were Mayor and Mrs. Philip k. Rowston house com charge of refresh The opening luncheon of the Women Saitors of Orchard Lake Country Club was held Fiiday at the club. Mrs. Basil _E. Brows, left, was chairman for the > j Others participating in the program were Josephine Crock visiting teacher, who led a discussion, and Mrs Howard Booker, refreshments chairmar * * * TI® Alcott School ‘Band. di ted by Wilham Brown played several selections. Bon nie Watson and Linda Roehm presented a string duet, > ac- companied by Mrs. Walter Schmit. DWAYNE BUTLER . June 7, Dwayne Butler of street will be grant On Whittemore B.S. degree in ia management from Lawrence In stitute of Technology He is treasurer of Alpha Gamma Up- and a member for Advancement ed a industrial silon fraternity of the Society of Management. W alter annual event. A. Kleinert, center, _THE PONTIAC PRESS Honored by- Soror State Educators Pentiac Press Photes Dasher of Wayne, historian; Mrs. Laurence Patterson of Dearborn, vice president; and Mrs. N.G. Polk, cor- responding secretary. Urs. E. Cleo Wiley. standing, assumed the office of president. Wisner P'TA to Hear School Vocal Groups The first grade Girls Ensem- ble ang the Wisner Glee Club, directed by Mrs. Donald Weiss) vocal instructor, entertained members. of the Wisner PTA Thursday in the schoo] gym- nasitum Particrpating in the ensemble were Rebecca Hogg, Janice Bottom, Mona DeQuis, Peggy Teague, Veonne Ostrande! Deborah Hargraves, Judy Ap- pleton, and Joan Appleton Their announces. was Melanie Hiouck The Wisner Band entertained and a cornet and baritone trio, comprised of Arthur Gale, Keith Allen, and Robert Viau played. Carolyn Bain = and Susan Wade played a_ flute and clarinet duet * x * Mrs. William Mihalek. of the Pontiac PTA Counci] and i member of the schoo} board installed Wisner PTA officers fur the coming year Flora Owen and Eileen Reynolds were appointed to the auditing committee Grads to Two distinguished personali ties will address the 1959 grad- uates of Cranbrook and Kings- wood Schools June 13 at Christ Church Cranbrook * * * Lt. Gen, Arthur G. Trudeau, USA, will deliver Crafbrook School's commencement ad- dress at the 1] a.m. program, * * * Kingswood's services will be- gin at 3 p.m., with Millicent Carey McIntosh, president of Barnard College, Columbia University, as guest speaker Phots Also pictured are Mrs. cochairman who presented the sailing schedule for the season, and Mrs, George ab eas ‘Pontiac Press Convention reports ~ were given by Mrs. Robert LaMar and Mrs. Cameron Clark, dele- gates to the state PTA. con- vention held in Bay City April 77- 29. * * * Announcements were made of the PTA mass installation and school of instruction to be held June 2 af Central Method- ist Church and kindergarten registration on May 29. Mrs Cameron Clark is handling reservations for the June 2 installation. Mrs. William Anderson, president of the Pontiac PTA Council, was a guest at the meeting. * * Refreshments were served by Mrs. Martin Bacak, Mrs Paul Maddox, Mrs, Reuben Dextrom, Mrs.- Arthur Clark- ston: Mrs. Robert Anderson and Mrs. Robert Andrews. Hospitality committee mem- bers were Mrs. Wilbur Hinsperger and Mrs. Irving Cocking Trudeau's Army serv assignments dur foreign Gen ice includes ing World War II in Aluminum Utensils Never Lose Color Now that life has beceme more lightweight and colorful on every side, thefe are rain- bow-hued aluminum plates that prove both points at once. These are made of alumi- num with the colors—and what colors—locked in, so they never wash or wear off. This so called anodized or porcelanized aluminum ware is both prac- tica) fot -cooking and pretty for serving Secret to Beauty The real secret of keeping yourself ‘Well - groomed is .to consider soap-and-water beauty routines absolutely essential Women Sailors Hold Luncheon at Orchard Lake The women sailors of Or- chard Lake Country Club held their annual opening luncheon at the club yesterday. Mrs. Basil E. Brown was chairman of the affair, and was assisted by Mrs. Walter A Kleinert,‘ who presided at the lunch and, presented the sail- ing schedule for the season. * * . Some of the women sailors at the luncheon were Mrs. F. S Strong Jr., Mrs. Margaret Russelt, Mrs. W, L. Shaffner, Mrs. George H: Crane, agd- Mrs. Howard B. Green. Others were Mrs. John G. Slater,” Mrs. Clarence K. Pat- terson, Mrs. Thomas H Adams, Mrs. Carson .C. Bing- ham and Mrs. Graham J. Graham, - SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1959 Vrs. Edward H. Leland, left, was co- chairman for the Friday dinner. Ross P. Tenny, center, and Mrs. Joseph Fouts also helped with the special pro- Mrs. to include neat gram. At present Alpha Delta Kappa is Pick Huntington Woman Voters League President Emerson PTA Holds Installation Youth Leaders were “recog- nized and officers for the com- ing year installed when Her- rington Schoo] PTA held its fina] meeting of the year re- cently Mrs. Joseph Napier, neigh- borhood chairman for the Girl Scouts, introduced the Brown: Scouts, introduced the Brownies’ leaders and _ pre- sented them with their leaders pins 1 * * * Robert: Bach. youth chair man, presented the Cub Scout and “Boy Scout leaders’ with leaders’ pins Lester Davison, PTA vice president, presented flags to the Cub Scouts and the Boy Scouts . Brownies and Cub Scouts sang and the Boy Scouts gave a demonstration of emergency first aid * * * The Glee Club entertained, wearing new choir robes made by some of the PTA mothers After installation of the new PTA officers, refreshments were served in the multi-pur- pose room Oversoaping Dulls Don't oversoap when doing the family laundry. It is al- most impossible to rinse clothes properly when an overdose of washing compounds have been used. This poor rinsing causes a build up of gray or yellow residue on. garments. Hear Special Speakers fields and the United States. In 1945 he was directed to activate and command Buse Xin Ma- nila to support planned = as- saults on Japan During and following the Korean War, his service in- cluded posts in Japan and Ko- rea. In 1958 he. assumed his present position as chief of re- search and development Mrs. McIntosh, a graduate of Bryn Mawr College, re- ceived her Ph.D at Johns Hop- kins University. A former teacher of English, she was headmistress of the Brearley School, New York, before her appointment as head of Bar- nard in 1947 In 1956 she was selected “Woman of the Year’’ by the Women's National Institute. MOTHER OF FOUR Mrs. McIntosh is-married to Dr. Rustin McIntosh. They have four children 5 , of Berkley At the clasing session of the bienniel state convention of League of Women Voters of Michigan in Detroit Thursday Mrs. Howard Lichterman of Huntington Woods was elected president for 1959-60. * *. * A league member since 139) Mrs. Lichterman has served on the staté boatd the past - three years and is a member of Oak Park LWV She formerly served as direc- tor of Women's Division of Chicago Heart Association, on the board of Women’s Commit- tee for Brandeis University and board member of Detroit branch of National Council of Jewish women + * * Other officers are Mrs. Fran- cis M. Hilliard of Kalamazoo, first vice president: Mrs. Ed- ward Radke of Dearborn, sec- ond vice president; Mrs. David Nims Jr. of Grand Rapids, treasurer; Mrs. John F. Jones secretary. * * * Board of Directors members are Mrs. John Iglauer of Grand Rapids, Mrs. John T. McCall of East Lansing, Mrs, Leonard Rall of East Lansing, Mrs Miller G. Sherwood of Grand Haven, Mrs. Thomas Snelham of Birmingham and Mrs. Ar- thur | Yabroff of Detroit. * * * Delegates of League of Wom- en Voters of Pontiac who at- tended the three-day conven- tion were Mrs. Eldred Mathes, Mrs. Robert Matheson, Amy Krueger and Laura Belz JANE H. LOUD Mr. and Mrs. Charlies W Hardesty of Dover, Del., an- nounce the engagement of their daughter, Jane Hardesty Loud of Birmingham, to Carl E. Wid- ney “Jr. of Birmingham--He_ is the, son of the C. E, Widneys of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. A July wedding is planned. -aTs ial Himéward bound from Hawaii are, left to rth; Mr. and- Mrs: William Cooper. of Bloomfield Hills, T; Mel RMehart of Detroit, and Mr. and Mrs. fack P _ States and Canada. 4laska and Hawaii in the future. represented throughout the United The sorority hopes MRS, Bride May Wear White Second Time By EMILY POST ‘Dear Mrs. Post: I have a very lovely bone china tea set which was given to me many years ago, but as I en- tertain very seldom I do not have occasion to use it very often. The daughter of a friend of mine is going to be mar- ried soon and, as she has al- ways admired this tea set, I was wondering if it would be proper to give her this as a wedding present, or might she be insulted at receiving a second-hand present?” Answer: Under the candi- tions you describe, I am sure the bride will be delighted to . receive your IdVely tea sct and will not think of it as being “‘second-hand."’ “Dear Mrs. Post: My hus- band has a habit of holding his fork in the left hand and pushing food onto it with his knife. He does this constantly throughout the méal. I think this looks horrible and, in my opinion, is very bad manners He says that it is just as cor rect to -use the knife as a pusher as it is to use a piece of bread. I would like to hear from you on this matter.” There is no better pusher than a piece of dry crust. Lacking this, the knife is also correct.— if properly used. Held in the left hand in the same position as it is © when held in the right hand, with the tip of the blade help- ing to guide and hoid each mouthfut-for the fork to lift, it is a natural motion and in no way incorrect. Answer Rinehart of Birminghine They all. sailed ‘Jor ‘the > ty Islands the end of April for a vacation, a HOWARD LICHTERMAN Alpha Delta Kappa in Meet Here Mrs. Wiley, State Leader, of Pontiac Greets Members “May you cherish the friend- ships you make here tonight. May we ever press forward to new horizons and keep in sight the high ideals of our proud profession as teach- ers.” That was the greeting of Pontiac’s Mrs. E. Cles Wiley, state president of Al- pha Delta Kappa International Sorority, when the honorary teachers’ group feted two noted educators at Devon Ga- bles Friday evening, Initiated as honorary mem- bers in the sorority were Dr. Kathleen Hester, professor of education at Eastern Michigan University, and Dr. Elizabéth Drews, professor of education at Michian State University. Each state is alowed two hon- orary members. Dr. Hester, is nationally Drew, former director of psy- chological services with the Lansing Public School System, is recognized for her work with the gifted child, * * * Mrs., Ross Tenney * opened the: program with grace. Mrs. Edward H. Leland gave a welcoming address, using two poems ‘Friendship’ and “A Friendly Handclasp” from the book ‘‘Looking Back” by Mrs. Nora Pencer .Walls. (Mrs. Walls is a teacher in Pontiac and a member of Rho Chap- ter of Alpha Delta: Kappa.) State officers of the soror-‘ ity conducted an initiation of offieers. Besides. Mrs. Wiley, those elected to ‘office include Catherine Dettling of on first vice president; Mrs. rence Patterson of De second vice president; Mrs. N. G.? Polk, secretary; Mrs. Walter Maas of Rochester, recording secre- tary; Vera Hutchinson of Lan- sing, treasurer and Mrs. Ches- ter Dasher of Wayne, histor- ian. Chaplains installed were Mrs. Josephine Sculley of Grand Rapids and Mrs. Paul Bushong of Ypsilanti. Mrs. Er- bie Buten of Muskegon was installed as sergeant-at-arms. * x -® Some 200 teachers were pres- ent fory the ‘event including Mrs. Elaine Chesworth who is an exchange teacher from Aus- tralia, 17 Michigan chapters, cluded Mrs. Eugene Carey, Mrs, Alton Madden, Faye Dan- elson, Mrs. Sandage, Mrs, Ru- fus Campbell, Mrs. Gordon Rice, Wilma Webb, Mrs. Mor- rell Jones and- Mrs. Theodore Fauble, all from Pontiac chap- ters, Epsilon, Zeta, and Rho. Remove Eye-Lash Make-Up Carefully Be gentle when removing eyelash make-up so you will not damage the lashes. Apply a damp washcloth to the eyes. Then gently dab at the lash- es with cleansing tissue. Fol- low this by dabbing cold cream on the lashes. Remove final traces of “my with a ——- Came Marks Hem ~ For a home-made hem marker, force a knitting needle through a cork. The cork will slide easily for different hem widths. oe Fs * THE PONTIAC PRESS, AY 23, 1959 _ Dear Bride -to- be KC May we suggest this exquisitely roniantic pattern.. in precious INTERNATIONAL STERLING ooo oteliest, by. design for your © 3)- ~ Xo Fs 0 “hf? co Ja * 9 AM ‘> ee, o~ : ‘* C ‘ fie) fe . ¢ Come in and register in our Bridal Registry now as your very own and receive our personal gift of “White Satin” — the world's most talked about perfume. piece place setting, $30.00 incl. fed. tax Ask ebout our savings on Basic Sets JEWELERS 16 W. Huron St. FE 2- 0294 ‘But Flint Employment Drops SATURDAY, M FIVE | State Job Picture Brighter WASHINGTON « — The Labor Depariment’s latest state-by-state survey of job conditions shows im- proved employment conditions in '12 Michigan cities and an_ in- j crease in unemployment in one state automotive center. The department's Employment Security Bureau said yesterday| Guests Slated } by Presbyterians | Special Speakers to Fill Pulpit at Oakland Avenue Church 7 In the absence of the pastor, the tev. Theodore R. Allebach, who Is attending the 171st General Assem- bly of the United Presbyterian Church in Indianapolis, guest speakers will fill the pulpit of Oak- land Avenue United Presbyterian Church tomorrow. The Rev. Edmond I. Watkins of . Joslyn Avenue United Presbyte- rian Church will speak at 10 a.m assisted by Elder William Cad- ;man, | The Rev. Donald Andrews of the ‘Church of the Atonement, Drayton Plains, will be thé 7 p. m. speaker iwith Elder Charles Edie leading the song service Linda Koch will sing a solo and Mrs. Gerald Shafer and Mrs. , | Gerald Schultz will be heard in a | duet. “Killer Dope on Trial’ will be the theme of the Pioneer youth igroup at 5:45 p. m. and ‘“‘The Man Who Thinks for Himself’’ will be the topic of the Builders group. | The monthly skating party is scheduled for Monday from 6:30 ito 9 p. m. at the University Skat- ing Center. | Elder Tom Mackie will lead the Bible Study and Prayer Hour at i p. m. Wednesday. The last class on Child Study will follow at 8 p | Minister Accepts Call PI Mie tte ae The Brace-Smith Funeral Home Dfjers the jt the Ciintooville Church: of ‘tho cermiinin <1 Senge, Crist Nazarene to accept a call to the! ° Insured Funeral Arrangement Plan for Taking Care of . Mr. Earl J ae Smith of the i Brace - Smith Funeral Home has’ just an- nounced their offering of the (nsured Funeral Arrangement Plan, to be used for taking care of all funeral Earl J. Smith expense. This plan. says’ Mr. Earl J. Smith, utilizes the sirigle premium insurance policy with the one difference that it can be paid for either with cash or in small monthly payments over’as long as 36 months Many people throughout the entire country have been tak- ing advantage of the privilege of arranging for a funeral much as you arrange for a possible sickness or hospit alization; the only différence. of course, is the fact that death is an inevitable thing Funeral Expenses Mr. Ear! J. Smith points out that in most cases the [fiving have no guide to go by in mak- _ ing the many difficult decisions when death occurs. With the Insured Funeral Arrangement Plan, all details, as well as the financial ‘liability have been taken care of. easily and thoroughly. There have been many such plans, says Mr. Earl J. Smith But his investigation proves that the Insured Funeral, Ar- rangement Plan offers more for each dollar spent than with any other plan in use today Another; distinct advantage not available with 1er meth- ods of pré- arranging or pre- financing a funeral, Earl J. Smith, is the fact that -any person in normal health up to 70 can apply, NON-MED- ICALLY, for this Insured Py- neral Arrangement Plan PLEASE CALL FE 5-0738 or write us for further details at no obligation. 5 says Mr The Rev. O. L Mann Rd Lewis of 3017 has resigned as pastor Church of the Nazerene at Vassar He will deliver his farewell ser- mon on ‘‘You May Add to This” at the 11 a.m. service tomorrow. He has served the Clintonville} congregation for two years. Color Film at Southside The religious color- film, **Mid- east Profile.” will be shown at 7 p.m. Sunday at the Southside Church of God, Motor at Nebraska streets. Simon P. Long, director of the church visual aid department, said the publie is invited Choirs to Give Pageant. The choirs of Providence Mis- sionary Baptist Church will present a pageant entitled ‘Heaven Bound” at 7:30 p. m. Sunday in St. James Missionary Baptist Church, 345 Bagley St. Mrs. Wal- ter Richardson will be narrator. Sunday Sermons Listed “Rejoice_in the Blood” will be the sermon topic at the 11 a.m Sunday service at Central Christian Church. At the 7 p.m. worship hour, the pastor will speak on “Re- meenber Lot's Wife.” CONSUMERS CENTER 178 NORTH SAGINAW WATCH FOR OUR GRAND - OPENING SOON COMPLETELY SELF SERVICE DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT ‘STORE faith. | Flint was the only one ‘of 34 major labor market dreas across the na- {tion reporting an in¢rease in un- employment because of additional auto layoffs. Flint was placed in ie |the category of over 12 per cent junemployed. It had been in the 6-9 per cent group. City areas placed in an idle grouping of less than 6 per cent, cpnsidered the margin between moderate and substantial unem- ployment, included Battle Creek, Saginaw and. Lansing. Major areas dropped from the 9-12 per cent idle grouping included Grand Rapids. Areas removed from the smaller substantial labor surplus areas included Ann Arbor, Ypsi lanti, Benton Harbor Holland Grand Haven, Ionia, Belding and Greenville Rev. Dick Reilly Holding Services at Stringham The Rev. Dick Reilly, evan- gelist and missionary, is speaking at special serviees at the String- ham United -Missionary Churca, 4016 Elizabeth Lake Rd Worship services are held at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Sunday as well as every evening except Sat urday list of Former director of Youth for Christ for Elkhart County in In. diana, the evangelist served as a missionary in India and as a director of the Baghuntathpur Bible Institute there, His travels also took him to the Himalayan Mountains where he preached to the Naga head-hunting° tribes of Assam Presently he ‘is foreign secretary of the United Missionary Society which has more than 110 mission- aries serving in 11 countries Communion Observed Weekly at Ist Christian The Rev. D. D. McColl, pastor said the ordinance of Holy Com- munion is observed each week at First Christian Church to giv everyone an opportunity to quietly and reverently remember the “The Shield of Faith pastor’s sermon topic Sunday mornipg His message will con- cern the Apostle Paul and his great wil] be the to Serve You More Convenientl y Now Four Offices Pontiac Federal Savings Current Rate on - Savings PEN SUNDA 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. OPEN TONITE UNTIL 9 P.M. 51 S. SAGINAW ST. (Next to Wrigleys) Formerly the Lion's 5 Ft. LONG PICNIC TABLE and 2 BENCHES Set includes big table—seats 8 people easily and 2-5 foot long benches. A Yankee Doodle Dandy Buy dt this low, low price. Imported Rattan BASKET CHAIR Sturdy solid steel legs add the mod- urn: fouch excep- tional durabrlity, stability to this lightweight _* imported rattan wonder, 3° CHILDREN’S CANVAS SHOES Blue canvas in sizes 5 to-3 with built-in arch feature UTILITY PAINT For indoor and outdoor use. NOW ONLY ... WHITE UTILITY PAINT Fer indeors and eutdoers. Buy Yankee lew, low 1 Gal. Can new at this price 1 17 + Rose Bushes 2-ALIKE All husky ‘stalks—your choice «> of hybrids including Climbers t » Full Size i Folding VELOUR COVERED COTS s7ee 6 1” tubular frame const camping trips— @ Bright .ptaid weven Veion cover @ Tested for over 600 Ibs. support Carry easily te cottage, folds for easy storage . FAMOUS LONGLIFE PAINTS wcrc hes MONEY BACK .GUARANTEE Long Life White House Paint $4997 in 1 gal. Sold on a Money-Back Guar- Cans antee. Now at Yankee’s low price Of 71... 34 ROO EcoDI PORCH & DECK PAINT or Braches, base- ments, steps, indoor and outdoor u®. $397 Paint of quality with the Vinyl Plastic base for af 4 intérior wall surfaces— including ‘basements. 397 ca ~ ‘ . Y/ Big 24” \ BAR-B-Q GRILLS hreme plated revelving grill rank type grill adjustment Cc € Big 6" rubber tire wheels | HARDWOOD CHARCOAL BRIQUETTES, 5 Lb. Bag 39c 4 Faryisr® EXTERIOR INTERIOR PAINTS ft ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1959 Smile and Say ‘No’ — Abby Refuse to Answer. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR “ABBY: I have a desires above his own. He is nice Jooking but he is only five — DEAR MARY JO: Quantity can never take the place of Prying Friend up in the morning and fix her Session of OES Held County Group Springtime .. | mae wih be aang, bee bag of Worcester, Mass. who Judy Coniff is giving a luncheon Mrs. Elliott Moving to New York Local’ Roosevelt Kin to Wed in East By RUTH SAUNDERS Mrs.’ Carl T. Guething of Kenne-| when their daughter Helen and BIRMINGHAM — Mrs. Eleanor! saw avenue is planning a luncheon| Karen Malachowski will be hos- It Elliott of Pleasant ave-| arly in June for Mrs. Charles| tesses. husband's breakfast? My hus- . \state in June with her four children. . & friend who visits me. con- feet six (I am five foot five, | -quality. Take the little one | band gets up at 5:30 every Gathers in Berkley She will be married June 27 to will arrive June 1 for a visit. jfor the Class of 1959 this Saturday stantly and calls me on the | flat-footed) and I am debating | .. . you see eye to eye. morning and it’s awfully hard Masonic Temple \George W. Roach of Rhinebeck, | Driving out with Mrs. Lummis'at the Detroit Boat Club, and a? between the two of them. Can ~ * IN. ¥. ‘ |will be Mrs. Helen Robertson, also|dinner dance will bé ‘given early my telephone bills and. grocery bills are every month. I am fed up to the teeth with these questions. How can I put a stop to this without hurting her feelings? FED-UP DEAR FED: What feelings? you help me? DEAR ABBY: Do you think for me to get up that early as I who must care for three chil- dren (under 4) needs all the ~Mrs. Frank Voll Jr., Mrs. Maurice McGleish and Mrs. - The wedding will take place at (of Worcester, who will be the house|in June at the home of Mr. and ition of the Convent of the Sacred|minghain-- after spending. several} Meanwhile parties will be given Heart, Kensington*road, Bloomfield|years in Reddington Beach, Fla. for her before she leaves Birming-|jsi))5. They will occupy the Muir Lind rest she can get. Set the table | Cari Smith took part in the |ham. -Mr. and Mrs. Clifford B.| home on Mohegan drive in June. and do as much toward the | morning session. West will entertain at dinner| The actual graduation day is) 47. 4.4 Mrs. Lind are at. their breakfast as possible the night -~.- May 29, Mrs. Eldon J. Bemis and| dune 10. A party will be gives omer home in Leland. before and sleep in the morn- ing. And don’t feel guilty. * * * CONFIDENTIAL TO MARGE: Talk is not cheap. When words are spoken in anger, talk can be very ex- pensive. To get Abby’s booklet, *‘What Every Teenager Wants to Know,” send 25 cents and a large, self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, in care of Oakland County officers es- corted in by Ma-Con Club were Mrs. Harry Long,’ presi- dent; Wilma Bendle, first vice president; Eldon Sweazy, sec- ond vice president; firs. Thomas Glascock, secretary- treasurer; Mrs. Eugene Perkio, marshal; Mrs. Robert Adair, chaplain and Mrs. Oliver Godsey, organist. * * * Pages were Mrs. Les Kel- 1 Mrs. Willys Wagner will be. hos-| for the graduates June 12 by the tesses at a luncheon June 5 at the| Sacred Heart Alumnae prior to latter’s home in Franklin and Mrs.| e eighth annual Candlelight | Dorothy K. Roosevelt will entertain Ball at the Latin Quarter in at dinner just before she leaves. , Detroit. Mrs. Norman Fredericks of, Bloomfield Hills and Mrs. Law-' rence Kroha of Detroit are chair-| imen of arrangements. | A breakfast will be given for ithe graduates “‘after the ball'’ by |Maureen Shea and her parents, | |Mr. and Mrs. John D. Shea of Bathroom Good Place to Snap Tots’ Pictures ; The ‘next time the camera bug bites, soothe the bite by taking advantage of the ideal lighting conditions in the bath- room and the ideal subject MARY JO |! it is every wife’s duty to get | have ‘three children and the | Oakland County Assn., Order T : sist ils Sey sa, | eee! is four. My husband |-of the Eastern Star, held its | the Myde Park-home of her aunt least’ ef” Mr. and Mra, Godtrey(Itrs. Lawrines Mirchq_ and thele es nd if spring meeting Thursday at | Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt. eivaliaaniaie, daughter Carolyn. 8 My OY Ree ee Gy Berkley Masonic Temple with | rg Eniott's mother, Mrs. John Oe et * *& a PUZZLED Seotebes. of Beridey chapter a8 iCuttet of Kittery Point, Maine will] Many lovely parties are being! It is nice to know the A. G. “ petereatna bridal party -| back to Bir- DEAR PUZZLED: A mother x *- * - oe Sclane: \planned around the first gradua- Gehrkes, are moving c! The next or — question she this newspaper. logg, Mrs. Sweazy, Mrs. Stan- Palmer Woods. matter of children having a- Give ber a great bi beautiful WILLIAM 3. GILLO - s * ey ae ee ae Final gaiety will be a house | sPlashing good time. aia ana show all those teeth =< - ABBY a dive af this Canoe "Taeiees an cate Lene End 2x6. party over the 15-18 of June at Just invite your children— | a are fed up to) and tell her Candidate for a B. A. degree & self-addressed, stamped envelope George Takes. the Canadian summer home of and maybe some _ borrowed | eeatty “It's none of your busi- | {rom Alma College is William LEONARD M. PICKERING | | Honored guests were Mrs. | Dr. and Mrs..Harry D. Seitz | from the- neighbors —to hop ) ness, Dearie?” aL oo Mr. and Mrs. To graduate from Wayne aro Ox | Seer weit rey irae ae a i — | ~ * * ve rated t | State University Medical C C : _ ow , . . | DEAR ABBY: [havea great | tio tajor he minted freee | School June 11 is Leonard . ‘ eis wenas al aa ae Stiffen Skirt Band | walls will multiply ‘your light | agg gh pf pment pli nomics and general science. Myles Pickering. He received Bride-to-Be Chapter of Michigan. A stiffener made of adhesive- The fun of all being in the ever, my parents do not know | He is @. member of Tau Kappa {| his B.S. from Wayne in 1954. / »- *& * backed cotton tape, 143 inches | tub together —added to the it. My dad smokes, and when jdiatae dues sata nPon | The son of the Floyd Picker- Has Shower argh ogg — _ Paul ear ey gg peste dl keep — ag wae < a te it te bed for me and incl University or a aS ee | Mrs. Benton Camburn, Mrs. A hot iron quickly presses this oninealls poses by your sub- aca neage allow it. I have | Year's study of mortuary sci- _ and his wife live in Birming- | Carol Cox, bride-elect of | Kenton Hunt and Mrs. Ellis _non-shrinking, washable tape | jects, and without their even tried to quit, but I cant. To ence. ham. He is president of his Naval officer candidate Robert | Green. to the inside of any skirt band. trying. | be honest, I enjoy smoking. 1 fraternity Phi Beta Pi. Bender, was feted at a bridal Vocal selections were given — —_ : woiike we sine met | School Uni | seer Tai (Tali | y Rat Par ' ; | wa e Oriole ree - iat shee moe ston Sood to Ccnoo! Unit home'of Mrs. Allan J. Denham | ‘semana ©? Mrs. Sally Wallace, City Student The Season’s Most Important | . ° . nd Karen Denham. * * &* : YOUNG SMOKER A | a DEAR YOUNG: I am no | (1 ANNUA Miss Cox, daughter of Mr. | | The fall Oakland | County Awarded Grant ! ! 2 smoking man (am not even a . . and Mrs. Joseph Cox of Mo- Assn. meeting will be held ermanen ay é le smoking wofnan) but I can tell Dinner hawk ‘oad, and Mr. Bender. | Oct. 29 with Entre Nou chap- | ll Cranbrook | ° you that it is expensive, and it son of the Russel] Benders of | ter as hostess. The Oakland can't do your health any good. Can a ‘‘smoking man” give this boy any better reasons? * * * DEAR ABBY: I am going with two fellows and I am hav- ing a hard time making up my mind which one I want. “A” is six feet two and very nice, but he is very conceited and acts like he is doing me a | Presented by the school dra- Carmichael, and Jean Ann If packaged water softener is | Masters of Fine Arts degree in favor when he takes me out. matic aed directed by Mar- Kumley. used in laundering, it should be metalsmithing under Richard But he does make a wonder garet Harths. Also invited were Sonja put into the wash water before | Thomas, department head and appearance and all the giris even me when I'm with him. Mrs. Walter Hubner, out- going president of LeBaron PTA, was toastmistress at the association's annual dinner Thursday evening. Featured on_ the program was the LeBfton Schoo! String Ensemble, directed by George Eckroth. A skit was New PTA president, Mrs. Robert Trachet, reported on Middleville, will exchange vows May 30. Guests incjuded Mrs. Cox, Sue Cox, Mrs. Lewis Sites of* Oxford, Mrs: Howard Wilhelm of Detroit, Mrs. Harlan Boyce, Mrs. Oman Lewis, Barbara Fair, Patricia Clark, Carol Simpson, Vivian Smith, Janet Wilson, Neome Cheney, Carol Ryan, Kay Rouse, Mrs. Hardy Fair, Mary Felice, and Mrs. County breakfast will be Aug. 2 at Avon Park, Rochester with Mr. Sweazy chairman, assisted by worthy patrons of Oakland County chapters. Serving will be from To Soften Water adding soap. And softener in the first rinse water prevents Among three students at Cranbrook Academy of Art to be awarded a tuition grant by his fellow students is Fred Fen- ster of Whittemore street. The fund was acquired last month from the sale of student work. Mr. Fenster received his B.S. degree in industrial arts edu- cation at City College of New York..He is working for his 195 Tat : = — —_ the tg Ser Pod ge Frank Schwartz. : soap curds from forming. ver and pewter. , ith all is interested in my wants and | Bay City, Cit N Dimitie Tah a oe quires Keep Looking ity se or the affair, assisted by | MABOLDR.WAED | ‘ : . Flect Hood -Szacns Joos: Find Your Best Cosmetics . . and : enginee| rom Lawrence ect Head Programs were made by chil | Institute of Tec logy June 7 is | ° ) a ee Toe at Mrs. | Harold Russell Ward of Park- ; | er ae Fees | wear dite: He ie a maehee of | By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN inet most flattering to my own|Many women make the mistake of and Mrs. Paula Kennerly, the Rho Delta Phi fraternity. There is such great variety in|coloring and which also matched|buying one without enough width. Choose 3,’ Others as Officers for Local Group : |cosmetics that we often are most of the colors I wear. In other words, the woman whose ! Sg I IN ASSN nl PR nines wg tempted to select quickly anything) 5 4.04 this lipstick for about |°US* i8 Widely. spaced requires a The coast to coast cele- Mrs. Stifart E. Whitfield has a © which seems at all right for us. | _ pow - a oan bra p Bye hago Aap rt this Phone brated cold wave at an f . . i A ‘ e | : } years, pplemented eas . P a) >jAs a matter of fact, that is what type sty, has cups exciting special e. Don't been elected president of the |i Have You Tried This? || most of us do. It is a rare woman) “Crs on occasions when the | separated is wonderful. FEderal' delay. bce not Ponti Visiting Nurse As | ; . 4 Who continues looking for the lip-| Cole of say costume demanded i kt 8-1343 always needed. her officers include Mrs. Canned Cherry Pie Mix Shee tor her me ni ot} replenish my supply of my Many women ‘ave trouble get- Geyiston Poole, first vice presi- | M ee "'§ |time and expense and also because| i yt - co. = poe cage oni sailiae meen d ? if . e . # 2 a Z - > fent _ Lac: —. I akes Delicious Dessert By Procrastiontion We just do not! oo — Sig hin medium bust but a fairly large, | ea, Moderate second ; president; . E Me round ° . ; | t because bony structure. Often in order e1éher &b = to eer ce F By JANET ODELL CHERRY DESSERT —f|_, Yet the color of a lipetick or the| mere red ni. I bnew my | fo uta ft im the cup the band COLD: WAVE treasurer. | — By Mra. Iwah Baker nergy - pi siesarnay auth a readers have had similar ex- | at the back is too tight. The | Committees appointed when ||) Sometimes, when we have =!" on go , 8 These ron ole on auras oaiics perience because they write to | answer to way hotigg add some Beauty Salon - With $ 00 Cees OuP met Thursday at the |) asked readers for a recipe we 17;"F2ef0%"" rate coconst _-—=«g|TOM_@ woman's appearance and) ™e SPewt I. siestic at ihe | 2nd Floor Cot Community Services Building (3 forget it temporarily. Then . !'2 cans eherry ple mix * literally can bring out her eyes or| It also is imperative that we| Never buy a brassiere at the 42 N inew St were Mrs. Harold Howlett iz when it arrives in the. mail * Cut margarine into dry in- Sia them. It makes a truly im-|take time in the selection of our;counter. Always have it - Seg ° Mrs. Lapides and Mrs. Arthur | we are pl : * gredients as for pie crust, but | |portant difference in her looks. It| foundation garments, We must do Young, finahce; Mrs. Charies easantly surprised. do not roll. Add coconut. ~- = would be well worth while to give|this for the good of appearance Coppersmith, Mrs. Poole, and | * * #* Line 9x9 pan with half of the =| more time to the selection of cos-|as well as our health. The style Mrs. c Bryan Kinney, nom- Mrs. Ivah Baker sent us the flour mixture. Pour 1°4 cans §/|metics. and fit of a brassiere is essential See Mrs. Leslie Tripp and (© recipe for the cherry dessert cherry pie mix--on this and —| The manufacturers discourage us|to a bustline and to preserv- rs iDiam Emerson, pub- a 80 Many women enjoyed at put remaining flour mixture —|S0mewhat, also becuse they are/ing the natural contour of the bust. | i. : Wee \@ the Symphony benefits. We on top. Bake 30 minutes at || @lways discontinuing some item or * * rs. DV. . retiring i know that Mrs. Baker is also 400 degrees (or 375 degrees if 4 |changing it. After much experi-| A brassiere must not flatten AND) president, poh honor- i active in a child study group. glass pan is used.) —— I found a lipstick of ajit should not, pinch or squeeze. ey Za a yee otc Thank you, Mrs. B for the To serve: Top with scoop of § devoted to werk with the ap MH recipe. vanilla ice cream. Serves 12. § \y i" hy ; | “a aa ; ag and Mrs. | sane ee Pet. eae e 5 a ES BE Wade egos Look your BEST for \\ > 7 } : George Crane were welcomed $+ LL important occasions, in \ a ' i. as new members of the board | , , clothes freshly cleaned “2 i Mrs, Lee Dunlap also werner | Here’s What You've by “GRESHAM’S.” ' ent. * * * * i The Visiting Nurses Associa- | tion gives bedside nursing care | to patients ill at their homes. Been Waiting for! | WALL-TO-WALL - CARPETING | DRY CLEANED | by Wonderful New STAR-HOST Process Or we will clean your carpets | with Bigelow Kerpet Kare Here's STORAGE that's . easy . . . THRIFTY tool CTORE | WINTER GARMENTS FOR you SEND EVERYTHING: CONSUMERS CENTER 178 NORTH SAGINAW WATCH FOR OUR ' PER ‘Funny’ in the Sun ™ _ Scions mammals cea aoe oe . Other W : Fun in the sun extends to |- DO-IT-YOURSELF, SAVE 50% | vi odes aa GRAND shimnsical me summer. tn ne wih conver. | ssi"madtc” aaron tty sonpowt to Sto" spn 5 SHIRTS | | so squane PER By sation-piece beach bags, hats (16218 Ft.) FREE DELIVERY AND‘ PICKUP. : Ex rtly Loundered , sind towels are blouses with ap- ve YARD pliques of calico dolls, bright 1-DAY MONDAY THRU FRIDAY $1295 $] 13 Coe - ial | | fiah, oboe, sailor boys and POST RENTAL | ; e Corry : DS ; Pcoaee shirts. have -batteau necks, For. Loose Rugs. There Is No Substitute for Cleaning Re Goo , ' SOON - ‘i metal beer and roll-up , in Our Modern, Btlicient Plant | . nT ! re TS wel 6’ NEW WAY ea ne C COMPLETELY-SELF SERVICE 14 | eee: RUG end CARPET CLEANERS ane susnt casupty ) Yai] DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT | , eo $ = “605 OAKLAND AVE. _—_— FE 4-2579° ALITY : = tes ie Bee ; open $4 tre. Day, 7 De : 7s » Weer 3 Rug and Carpet Cleaning EECLORYEEY oo Mad _— Open Monday thru Seturd 7 AM. te 9 P.M. | ee wvrvvuvvwV VY a oe ee ee ee rrr Yy - _ - i ’ } . : I - | . . ' wee ‘ a / : d ’ | a a oy és a : / oy f 4 ed, e erie { é Fa ee ee ey eee eo a ol eee Oe a ah oe ae ee eee ee. ee. ee Oe es } "7 POLLO OF ORO Yes a ie Fs ole CHURCHES MISSOURI SYNOD St. Paul ‘Pastor Renamed | The Rev. ‘\pastor of the Baldwin Evangelical United Brethren Church, has been Myron R. Everett, returned to the congregation here > for the fifth year by the annual Joslyn at Third Worth Side) George Mahder, Pastor - conference held recently at Elkton. — Servi 8:00AM The Rev. H. E. Ryan, a former Semin "Sewice 1.10.45 Am. |Pastor of the local church, was £ Sunday School. /..9:30 A.M, »|@PPointed chaplain at the Haven Hubbard Old People’s Home at «|New Carlisle, Ind. | Chosen new conference superin- tendent of the East District was tithe Rev. N. C. Leiesner, pastor # of Trinity Evangelical » Brethren Church, Detroit. Bloomfield TOWNSHIP Square Lake & Telegraph =» Wm. C. Grate, Pastor United :; Chureh Service .. 10:00 A.M. | ® Sunday School .- 11:00 A.M. 33} -| Church of oe ey E. “Pik St. Mark iadacen” 7979 Commerce Road one F a (West Bloomfield Township) Moms Worshtp, Wm. C. Grate, Pastor Evening Worship, Sundav en SE 945A M 1:30 P. Sund school J4I AT Youth Night, Wed Church Service 11:15 AM 7:30 P.M. r Welcome “Forward in Paith” | Cedar Crest ce Farnsworth off Union Lk. Rd. (Next to Dublin School) Howard E. Claycombe, Pasior # Services at 8:30 A.M. and 11 A.M. Sunday School 9:45 A.M, Grace Corner Genesee and Glendale (West made COMMUNITY UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH — Ex- cavation is already under way for the new $180,000 addition to the T I came that they may have life, and may have it abundantly, First Social _ Brethren Church New Pastor Comes {to First Open Bible Coming to the First Open Bible Church this week as the new pastor, is the Rev. Arthur W.| 316 Baldwin, FE 2-0384 Maglott. i Sat. Eve. Service ....7:30 P.M. Born in Lexington, Ohio in.1925, Sunday ‘Schoo! ....10:00 A.M. he is a graduate of the Dayton | Sunday Marning Bible — where he also served PP ey wl aide Pet yey as a teacher. Prior to coming to Sunday im e220: . Pontiac, the Rev. Mr. Maglott was Wanki & = 9 308M the minister of the Open Bible] Tues Young People ..7:30 PM. Church in Ithaca, Ohio for nine} thurs. Prayer 7:30 P.M, years. r Besides his pastorates, he has| been a camp meeting speaker in p= South Dakota and Iowa. With his wife, Mary, and chil- dren, Linda, John and Mary, he lives in the parsonage at 2597 Genes Dr, ‘ . REV. TOMMY GUEST, Pastor PILGRIM HOLINESS. CHURCH Baldwin at Fairmont First Congregational Church Mill, E. Huron & Mt. Clemens Pastor 0. D. Emery SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 AM. simi sc iii siaiaiias WORSHIP HOUR STANDARD” oe SERMON BY PASTOR EMERY YOUTH HOUR and Friedman. Gerald Shell is general contractor; and Temple & Sons, mechanical contractors. Roy Lindahl is chairman of the building committee and the Rev. Walter Teeuwissen Jr., The Rev. Mr. Burton, preaching Community United Presbyterian Church on Sashabaw road, Dray- ton Plains. Plans also call for the remodeling of the present unit which was built in 1928. Architects for the new building are Eroh pastor, and Elden Shell are ex officio members of the committee. Church Sersice | oe O00 AM Sunday School .....9:00 A.M ¢ . *. Church Service ....11:00 A.M Sunday School -11:00 A.M. e any OIrs St. Stephen The Christian and ° VF.W. Hall—Walton Blvd ae ; 10 ive oncert otha Missionary Alliance Guy B. Smith, Pastor Church — Sei Ss 7 30AM, M-59 at Cass Lake Rd. Baptist Church Event y 206 24 Rev. G. I. Bersche, Pastor Scheduled for Sunday St. Trinity Sunday School ...... 9:45AM by Four Groups — 3 Sunday Worship ....11:00 A.M. mare peed FAITH and OBEDIENCE Under “the leadership of Miss Ralph C. Claus, Pastor Elda L. Sutter, minister of music, gaieh © ee ay | > as ree 6:00PM. | choirs of Bethany Baptist Church ey Oo! ....7: Evangelistic Service.. 7:00P.M. Iwill giv : 7:30 p. Airst Service ......8:30A.M. Peeercsion ares . On e€ a concert at 7: p.m. Second Servi ...11-00 A.M. CONFESSION and ES unday, = ited OAM RELIGIONS” Numbers to be preesnted by Se ‘ the Senior Choir will include | “With a Voice of Singing,” ‘‘Ma- ijestic Is Thy Name,"’ “My Faith FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH | (Baim ‘in ‘Giead,” “The” Holy : ‘Balm in Gilead,” ‘The Holy HURON AT WAYNE City,” and “The Heavens Are Telling.” | MDS. GERTRUDE E. VELGUTH | Poster REV. WILLIAM H. MARBACH, D.D. Associate Pastor . REV. GALEN E. HERSHEY, B.D. WORSHIP SERVICES . . . 9:30-11:00 CHURCH SCHOOL .... . 9:30-11:00 | | The Ladies’ Chorus, Men's Chor-} ‘us, Primary Choir and Bethany Junior Choristers will also parti- | cipate ‘Christian Science A Evangel Temple 1380 Mt. Clemens Interdenominational Open House for Public - The Dorcus Society of the Pon-'by Adventist societies all over the tiac Riverside Seventh-day Adven-) world. tist Church will hold open house | lfrom 2 to 6 p.m. Monday at the Inewly acquired Health & Welfare The group works with the Pon- tiac schools and cooperates with The > Episcopal ( Church of the Advent Middlebelt Rd.. North af W. Long Lake Rd. THE REV. JOHN W. WIGLE, Vicar 6:15 P.M. EVENING SERVICE 7 P.M. Health & Welfare Center, | 82 22n sss ASTOR EME P, wee vening Worship. 1:69 Ve PASTOR EMERY GEOFFREY DAY. B.A.B.Th., Pastor We invite you to join us in joyous worship and warm Christian fellowship. Our program is for your entire family VISIT US THIS WEEK ‘jwork copperating with Civil De- fense and Red Cross officials. Mayor Phillip E. Rowston will cut the ribbon and speak at the official opening of the building. Other distinguished guests will be Morten B. Juberg, public rela- tions director of the Michigan Con-| ference of Seventh-day Adventists and Howard D. Burbank of the; Home Missionary Department from | j|Lansing, Paul C. Allison of the | Pontiac Public School - System, | and several] city officials. 3 The expanded facilities provide | ore space for storing clothing Public. a ; Organ Recital Last in Series Gerdon Wilson of Ann at All Saints Church | | Arbor to Give Program =~ FIRST BAPTIS Oakland and Saginaw Pontiac, Michigan Ret Rev. W. E. Hakes, Ass't Pastor . H. H. Savage, Pastor T CHURCH 9:45 AM.-SUNDAY SCHOOL Classes for All Ages “WORKS VS. 10:45 A.M.-MORNING WORSHIP FAITH” rr Tourgh I. Chapman, pas- re will conduct the annual service of remembrance for all / OAKLAND PARK METHODIST CHURCH REV. J. W. DEEG, Pastor-—MONTCALM and GLENWOOD 10:00 A.M. Service—“Moke Your Calling and Election Sure” Sunday School 11:15 A.M. Youth Fellowship 6:30 P. M. Prayer. Fellowship, 7:30 P.M i i? to Be Lecture Theme | m and disaster equipment as first | aid and survival kits, which will | be on display. \. The last program in the eurrent series of monthly organ recitals, at All Saints Episcopal Church |” “PROPHETIC 7:00 P.M.-EVENING SERVICES MESSAGE” of Life Everlasting.”’ Ronald Boyce will assist at the 8:45 morning service and at 11;" jam. Diana Irish will be youta| assistant. subject will be “‘Christiam Science Soul's Restorative Power vealed.” Mrs. Velguth is on an extensive tour as a member of the Christia FIRST GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Paul Johnson — FE 4-7172—FE 5-9822 Science Board of Lectureship. And He spoke a parable untc; Finst FREE | METHODIST CHURCH CHURCH of SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP Malta Hall—82 Perkins St. (Off Auburn) 501 MT. CLEMENS STREET Lyal H. Howiton, Pastor ing. Re- {ter graduating from the Con \as chairman of the arts department |. of Northern High School in Flint) ito devote full time to the public | |practice of Christian Science heal- lof Catherine Crozier at Rollins Center at 168 Mt. Clemens St ithe Catholic and Salvation Army | Servcie 10:00 AM. ' te BPOUPS. = _ ee See The local welfare center is &|" Members of the Dorcus Society - aoe eae nn mp eera ’ Be” ‘- ies 24 36% i yRtig Seay ys ie Aes oe ‘G74 part of a state-wide disaster net- in uniform, will be hosts to the! ig =n a SS is a P et who died during the t year | Mrs. Gertrude E. Velguth of Flint z : Hush F i wececeks at both service at the 11 a.m. ecrvice Sunday. jwill Jecture at 8 p.m. Tuesday at) This type of work is carried on a by ~ o mie "Evance Neal —— & His message will be “Sins of jthe First Church of Christ, Sci-| . ig hiss ha 2 ie rary te ees ngiibine mj Our Spiritual Health — Our Hope entist, 164 W. Lawrence St. Her’ Mr. Wilson is a former student ‘hic. omc Rae) el Rota at ? (Ret RET College, and is presently working ‘toward the degree of Doctor of Musical] Arts at the University ol ona - Memorial Day ‘Service Slated The following program has | been chosen: ‘Kyrie, Thou Spirit BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH West Huron ot Mark Street Dr. Joseph Irvine Chapman. Pastor a ] servatory of Music at Eastern | | Devine,” “Christ, Our Lord to Percy M. Walley. Ir. Minister of Educatsion } 4 249 Baldwin Avenue them fo ne end that they ought \Michigan College, she studied at) Girl and Boy Scouts | Jordan Came,” and “Prelude and ‘ine Wanshie-taaviabe=e5nl. KWL wad v0 a - =e ~ Sunday School 9:45 Mornin Se- 11:00 ay spirale | Michigan State University and the Fugue in G Major” by Bach; Sermon: oe OP OUR SPIRITUAL HEALTI” X ’ Sund ay School 94 Morni 3 Service [FTint Institute of Arts. | to Decorate Graves at, Our Hope of Life Everlasting" , joree. Paik srsce SD Exe: Service 7:00 In 1945 she resigned her position Other. selections will_be "My 9:46 A. M-—Chareh’ Scheel Ciasses for All “> } Wednesday Prayer Sen rvic e 7:30 Avis & = Sashabaw Cemetery lHeart Is Filled With Longing” by | 7:00 P M—4 B.Y.P. Greups " \ |Brahms, “‘Piece Hereique’”’ by" 1 30 P. M.—Annual Concert of-the Choirs | A Memorial Day service is being Franck, “The Rhythmic Trumpet”’ Wednesday, 7:30 P. M.—Mid-week Service of Prayer and Bible s. < ‘planned for 11 a.m. Saturday at by Bingham, hg in “An American Baptist Convention Church” |the Sashabaw Presbyterian Church |Pace’’ by Sowerby, and Prelude; ———— oa in connection with the Sashabaw 4nd Fugue on B-A-C-H” by Liszt. i= i eerine Carrie 20 PN | “It was suggested Las Vegas ~ M Evens sie le a TT Cie Sunday School 10:00 A.M. igsta!l divor ce machines—like Thurs 7 30 Fil — Silver Tea Worship Services ent airline insurance! Rev. Austin Wallace of Chesterfield June 7 11:00 A.M. and 7:30 P.M. HE AR WHY On Free Methodist Youth 6:45 P.M. CKLW SUN., 7:30 A.M. Prayer Meeting Wed. FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchard Lake Avenue Rev. Harold Marshall, May 23, Strawberry Party 8:00 P.M. Rally Sunday Services Pastor 2:30 Fayette Balcom. 7:30 Rev. Marshall Circles 4 Dinner 5 P.M. tarry Nichols, President 10:00 A.M. and 7:30 P.M. REV. A.J. “BAUGHEY Speaker _ BRING THE FAMILY ¥ —_— Cemetery. The public is invited to attend Following a brief message by the |the recital and reception immedi- cemetery. Home Nursing Class At noon, coffee and cake will |to Be Graduated Sunday, CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST — Laree Parking Lot — Nurse pastor, the Rev. Clifford H. Has-jately following. Crescent £ Lake Ross, Near. Eg inwed J Road . . ! MIN s r kins, a group of Girl and Boy) 10.00 AM Worship Anthem by Adults Chotr Scouts wil] decorate graves of the 11:00 A. M sunday School Classeo-—Nursery thru Adult ry During All Services “An American Baptist Convention Church” | be served in the church: base- BETHEL TABERNACLE First Pentecost Church of Pontiac S.S...10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m Evangelistic Service 7:30 p.m. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN Tues. and Thurs. 7:30 p.m. “SEARCHING THE In an article last week we presented arguments which proved conclusively that this modern idea of denomina- tionalism {ts not taught in the Bible, mor is it endorsed by the Bible DE- NOMINATIONALISM Ig AS FAR FROM THE BIBLE AS THE NORTH POLE 18 FROM THE SOUTH POLE. How intelligent, honest, sincere, conscien- tious minded Bible reading individuals can associate and affiliate with such a system of mockery as is ¢isplayed by denominationalism is incomprehen- sible. This can be seen by noticing the following points 1. Jesus prayed for unity of all believers Question: If all believers are not unified of our Lord? 2 ae constantly wrote condemning t 10. Phil. 2:1, 2 Pt Denominationalis sm encour ages civisi of Paul's statement? 3. The Bible teaches us to waik by faith and faith cometh by Word of God Ro 10:17. Il Cor. 5.7 Question. Is one wal king by faitt baie 1 wee lks In vie o is rea) 5 THEM Sate BE Te or John 17°21 do they not disrespect the prayer pis sion aod encouraging unity. I on, is this not a mockery hearing the when the Bible does not endorse the ith Paul I] Cor NATIONS ‘EXIST TODAY particularly tn view i c. YE OUT FROM AMONG YE SEPARATF WHY DO De: YOM! orough consideratior This ques the fact tion ts WaEE ¢ our of discu ion has shown dene mine tong lix m to be contrac ory to the Bible Any pide sdent of integrity will readily Semit that ‘in the days of the apos NO DIFFERING DENOMINATIONS EXISTED * «The Standard Mar ee for Baptist Churches, E. T Hiscox, DD.) Since they did not then, why not answer, DENOMINATIONS EXIST TODAY FOR AT LEAST ONE OR ALL OF THE FOLLOWING REASONS 1. The teach: something more than the aposties taught ‘and the apostles were guided into all truth.) or 2. The teach something less than the aposties taught tand the apostits were guided inte ail truth.) or 3. They teach something different from. the apostles’ teaching (and the aposties-were guided into all truth) or They teach a modificdétion of that which the aposties taught (and the aposties were guided into ei] truth.) th view of this, yar cannot one do? “COME YE OUT FROM AMONG THEM.” II Cor. 6:17. I marvel with Paul tn Getatieaa 1:6 7 when said,."l marvel that’ ye are so soon removed from his that called you into the grace of Christ unto another gospels Which is not another, but there be some that trouble you, and Would pervert the gaspe) of Christ.” ‘“BELIEVETH THOU THIS?’ ENROLL IN FREE BIBLE CORRESPONDENCE COURSE {if -you have not enroiled in our free ‘Bible correspondence course, shy net do so TODAY? i Further [ntormation Write to P. wane 210 Hughes St, Pontiac or Cali FE 5-1] WELCOME TO THE CHURCH ‘OP, CHRIST 210 Hughes Street = \ ao sibly be right, what should 4 Rev. and Mrs. E. Crouch CHURCH ment. Chairman of the Memorial Day program is Mrs. Ida Stewart jof the American’ Red Cross wiii of Pontiac. |be graduated at 3:30 p.m. Sunday | The charter from the National|at Providence Missionary Baptist Council] of Presbyterian Men will be! iChurch with thé Male Chorus of| .| presented to the recently organized the church providing a musical Men’s Council at the 7:30 meeting | program. | 68 W. Walton FE 2-7239 Sunday School 10 A. M. Morning Worship 11 A “Angel's Food” an Group 6:36 P.M. Evening Worship 7:30 P. M. “Mysteries of Kingdom of Heaven” Pastor Somers Preaching at Both Services eae ae A Growing Church with a Friendly Welcome!_ “Holding Forth the Word of Life” M | A First Aid Home Nursing Classi A i ee FRIENDLY GEN ROBERT GARNE ERAL BAPTIST CHURCH 131 MT. CLEMENS ST.—Y.M.C.A. BLDG. Sunday — a A toe —Mornin ng Worship 11 A.M. Eve. Praye »” . Frening Maes is 00 R CLENTIS HAZELETT 11:15-CHURCH SCHOOL 1348 Baldwin Ave FE 56-8256 Tuesday evening. A guest speaker | Graduates include Irene Paul, | — Pastor 8.8. Supt. od G. W. Gibson, Minister — will be present from Detroit Pres-)Mrs. Mary Teasley, Mrs. Mary]. MPR ee eee names SCRIPTURES FE 4-0239 347 N. Saginaw ; bytery Council. |Paul, Mrs. Pearl Anthony, Mrs. — S aaiianas meme —_ th } - ‘ ; wi Bile Schoo! 545 Aah CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC | As part of the program, the color [ouise Richerson, Mrs. Gladys TE | RST ‘METHOD | ST™: ' Roosevelt Wells, Minister || tocning Worship ....11.00AM myopsoms paseo AR ee ee eee ere George Senne) ae 4 CHURCH CALENDAR Youth Servis ° -.. 6:00 P.M SCIENCE CHURCH tion," will be shown. Reirestments|Syivia Trayler and Mrs, Mary South Saginaw at Judsort............. Paul T. Hart, Pastor (} into uenesi mame oe Peeniigy Sevice SoCos a “se phitemors street wil] be served at the close of thé}Newcomb. Mrs. a Flem- Harry J. Lord, Assistant Pastor : ible Sunday ..... 9:45AM. [i] Eveninc e M ullus COOK, opea session. lings was the instructor. ’ ' Ere; Wersnty sermon ---.ceepé. || Praver Meeting ond Bible | Sunday Service 7.30 P.M ae 10:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP / i y Tuesday . } Study eid Silver Te Vednesday -— ia < . -_ = . _ . cee ee WHY DO Riches _ 4 , ALDARSGATE — THE BIRTHPLACE OF | * METHODISM” 4 DENOMINATIONS Marimont Baptist Church Dr. G. M. Lenox to Preach Rev, Peal Hive Prmeching , troit Council of Churches, will be! town, Ohio and _Minneapolis, Minh. guest preacher at the Orchard; Prior to coming tc the Detroit Lake Community Church, Presby-|Council in 1947, he was associate terian at both the 9 and 11 a.m.jdirector ofthe Ministers’ and Mis-| Get Acquainted REVIVAL First Open Bible Church 517 JOSLYN “AVE. ; Starting May 24, 11:00 A.M. REV. ARTHUR MAGLOTT Preaching Nightly 7:45 P.M. (except Saturday) ~ Come, Lets Get Acquainted! REV. ARTHUR MAGLOTT, pastor * § & ee ey ; services. His subject will be| sionaries’ Board of the American 60 STATE STREET “Arise, Be Doing.” \Baptist Convention. | ; : | A graduate of Bucknell] U Iniver-f Worship siete cot iy yee DM. ‘sity and Colgate — Rochester | rong Wome oo ar cae pick Mi 6.30 P.M . rs orman Smith, will sing | i ‘ LM, — ——— | “The Children’s Prayer” at the | Youth Service ! 4 } |} Worship hour tomorrow. Jack A. VanCoevering, who re- Council dinner at 6:30 p.m. Tues- CHURCH i: NAZARENE Evangelistic Service 7:30 P.M. MINISTER SPEAKING cently returned from a safari.in] Bible School ...... 9:45 A.M. East Africa, will show pictures! . and tell of -his trip at the Men's | inti > nema . oe ay at Orchard Lake Church | 4 al IrChal ake urCc | Youth Fellowship. . .6:15 P. M. ' Wet. 1: 30 P. M. Bible Study and Frayer Fellowship 2 Dr. G. Merrill Lenox, executive |Divinity School, Dr. Lenox served) 2» oe RE RE MELEE RM DIOM eat tidediidioniaanaat ‘director of the Michigan and De- as a Baptist minister in Youngs- FIRST day. * * * Sarm Burnley will be in. charge jof the dinner and Howard Hobart, 70 ae Cor. Edison. Cc in dig oem Pray” Sunday #30 AM. « an and Sunday Se S@nday School. 11a Apostolic Church of Christ will preside at the election of 458 CENTRAL jotficers. Young People Saturday .... 7:30 P.M. The public is invited to see the . pictures at 8 p.m. Sunday School & Worship ..10:00 A.M. a. Sunday Evening Service .... 7:30 P.M. UNI I Y Services Tues. & Thurs. .... 7:30 P.M. Church Phone FE 5-83 UL 2-5142 Bishop L. A. Parent 61 ‘ ~ f > | if , THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1959 = The love of God hath been shed | sabi: —_ . United ile ger gale pena New inister Waterford Community Church 4 ¢ ‘Holy Spirit which ‘was given unto) pe al ‘ jus. Andersonville e V4 = } = + Presbyterian ba cae Naa caomenscal Q Be Installed Worship Services ....8:30, 11 A. M. I. 4 l¥ D ‘ . % ° TE on't Fail to Hear | . . Sunday School ...... ...9:45 A.M. Churches Le Evangelist + Detroit Pastor to Give . “4 g . ; { Evening Service .......,...7 P. M. |i »| Sermon at Ceremony p a: s . ae. . wer ..... b . . OAKLAND AVENUE in Trinity Baptist Hour of Powe : Cailand at Cedillan The Rev. Joseph W. Moore, new Rev Robert wine Welcome to a Friendly Church! SGneie Then Youth Direct pastor of Trinity Baptist Church, ;iwill be installed at 3:30 p. m. Sun- Wea ti) Gogoecocoens 10:00 A.M. day with the Rev. Ezekial Wright, Bible School .:...... 11:20 A.M. master of: ceremonies. ’ Youth Fellowship ....545 P.M. « * * ‘ UNITED GOSPEL ‘ ; canoe 7:00 P.M. : Devotions will be given y wueis sales fe Deacons Robert Carson and Clif- SINGING CONVENTION | Prayer Meeting ....7:00P.M. @ ’ ford Coit. | Sunday, April 26—2:30 to 4:30 P.M. | . >| Participating in the service will i | AUBURN HEIGHTS IF] be Mrs. Deloris Graves, James | FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH | Threlkeld, the Rev. C. L. Dix- 3456 Primary Street Oo cris. 316 Baldwin Ave. F. Wm. Palmer, Pastor a th _ = i o— "s . t Sunday School ..... 10:00AM. Ii! oeicd Pine! ear ee Featuring QUARTETS, TRIOS, DUETS and SOLOS Worship ........... J EISAM.§} HAZEN MacDONALD «|and vice president of the Wolverine Plus CONGREGATIONAL SINGING “Joining Up... With God” f° Former Baptist Pastor and H State Baptist Convention, will bring . | Youth Fellowship ... 6.00PM. J}, Public Relation Representa” @'the installation . sermon. - If you have talent, come and use it— Children’s Choir 2 of Theology. of Boston. One ty The Rev. Claude Goodwin of/the It you know someone with talent, invite them! Festival ...........730PM 9% of America’s Great Soul ™ Providence Missionary Bapfist |, Winners Speaking in both ; ‘Church will offer prayer. / EULAS HOUSTON, Pres. . COMMUNITY UNITED ti services Sunday. a | x * * ELSIE GASKIN, Sec’y. | b Tuesday, 4 The charge to the new pastor Drayton Plains, Michigan | Bible Study, 7:45 _will be given by the Rev. Amos W. J. Teeuwissen Jr.. Pastor (3 ~~ Thursday, 745. #| Johnson of New Bethel _Baptist go 4 —_ 4 a oe 4 Bible School .........945AM. }> Young People "Church; the charge to the church Cx eM Morning Worship ....1100AM. I}; m iby the Rev. L. R. Miner of Mace- ; ‘ ; “— Youth Groups ........630AM ~ donia Baptist Church; and Dr.,| BISHOP’S DAY AT CHRIST CHURCH CRAN- Fentiac Press Phe Evening Worshi 7:30PM Z Joseph I. Chapmén of Bethany) BROOK — Discussing plans for Bishop's Day at Mrs. William S. James of Birmingham, in charge Wed. Praver ond — a #|Baptst Church “will extend the) Christ Church Cranbrook Monday in honor of — of the book table; Mrs. C. Theron VanDusen and Study Hour ...730PM. ff ihand of fellowship. | the Rt. Rev. Richard S. Emrich, bishop of the Mrs. Henry L. Woglfenden of Bloomfield Hills, 14 e| Arthur J. Law, state repre- | Episcopal Diocese of Michigan, are from left, two hostesses of Christ Church. — LAKELAND lf “Visit the Church of the 4 sentative, and Harvey L. Lodge, | j + | Maceday Lk. & Wms. Lk. Rd Old Fashioned Gospel me senator, will give brief | is O ‘6 a ervices | ag oe a Fah Wee oy _ hag «Ye 210 N. PERRY AT ' b | Bish D Ss : ter mor Famer, pane R210 PERRY Jaobed site seater wil | s Y | FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH Sunday School .... 930AM [f ower OS Mrs. Rosa Kemp, president of the M d Ch ( ‘h h 149 N. Bast Bivd. Pontiac, Mich. Morning Worship ....10 45 AM. fav. Warey 2 Wibley. Ladies' Auxiliary of the Wolverine | P | on ay at rist urc J S32 Benson — mechdonee 4 Seeae 2nd Sunday School: 10:45AM. | stgsuesmmaprssammansssseue" Baptist Convention. | | - — | Pastor Moore will preach Sun-| | Nearly 500 Episcopal Church-|chai Mrs. Charles H. Welch SASHABAW First Christi Chur h day morning on ‘‘The Pastor Looks w aes of the Dances ate sapicted Jr. and. Mrs. Paul ‘Wilson with This Is YOUR Invitation to Worship | 5331 Maybee Road 11S ris eee urc at the Few.” | at Christ Church Cranbrook for|their committee of 18 members of| EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE Disciples of Christ co ‘Bishop's Day Monday. They will/the parish will conduct tours of| 2800 Watkins Lk. Rd. % Mile NW of Oakland Co. Mkt. Serving Independence Township ‘Sunday School ..10 A. M. il aw ah Lew . School 10 a.m. Preach’g 11 a.m. & 7:30 p.m. Clttora Beskine. Paster . . | participate in worship and in trib-|Christ Church. Mrs. ris Keenan a i ai Church Service ..11 A. M. Choir Festival ute to the leadership of the Rt./and Mrs. William James will be at Marvin Morse, Supt. Classes for Everyone unday schoo tee : 858 W. Huron WRev. Richard S. Emrich, bishop of|the book table. Worship Hour ...... 11:00 AM. Rev. D. D. McColl! . . | ‘Michigan. Rag pig er oe Lag aye <—s = SS SS — ——— . | Traditionally Bishop’s Day is Show ‘Java Harvest’ r. VOmes ee . W. T. Stone un a yenin | held at’ St. Paul's Cathedral in A. J. Baughey, - All ° t E - l Ch h Detroit but because of work being at Evangelistic Center ‘Dp ee Like, wales con an ped Gad ae a oe cee Saints Episcopa urc done there, the meeting Was), | p P Youth Group to Discuss. changed to Christ Church. Pe “wa he soon et tonight at Williams St. at W. Pike Program ‘of Auburn Rigor gn ou Pontiac Evangelistic Center, 204 The Rev C. Georse wigaifield. Rector Jp sat Heights Church Rpiscopal Churchwomen; Mra/f Pike St. The Rev. Albert $11 1 EARN HOW 8.00 AM —Holy Communion le tees oo and MYrs.| ives include Sunday School at 10 ; The Primary and Junior Choirs! ‘a. m., worship at 11 a. m. and, Hi lth dH 9:30AM meres Mare ee of the Auburn Heights United Pres-| ; The Gay will ad sari 7:45 p. m. ed an armony Church School rite | byterian Church will present the) pey goRD B. REED United Thank Offering will be! An evening gettogether is held) } ; ‘Children’s Choir Festival’ at 7: ad . . m every Tuesday at 7:30. Prayer AN BE Y R 11-00 AM. —Morning Prayer and Ut p.m. Sunday. ipresented at the service of Holy meeting is held at 7:30 p. m. each| aren 5 Ar Rector } ‘f Assisting Mrs. Mary Patrick, ip cnergase! a 10:30 with Bishop Thursday. “ MY 4 Wdirector, will be Mrs. Evelyn Lid- astor to e ebrate \Emrich, celebrant. oe a ahs : . gard and Mrs, Dorothy Beatty| Following’ the business session attend this with Joyce Munrow and Opal ‘4{ Y p |» 11:30, Bishop Emrich will ° : ST. GEORGE'S + ‘Leonard, accompanists. St ear in ontiac |: “speak at the noon box luncheon National Lutheran : ST. ANDREW'S x * * * | speak on “The Holy Spirit,” at ° ( | | EPISCOPAL -CHURCH EPISCOPAL CHURCH The congregation will join oe Pas Rev. Ford B. Reed will cele. | the noon box luncheon. ,Council Churches E RE E LE RE 8.00 A.M —Holy Communion choirs in singing the processional, te his. 4ist year as a Pontiac | , rrow : a a on 8:00 A.M _—Holy Communion “Now With Joyful Exultation’’ and'pastor at services Sunday in New! Parte a hele Bigs ee en ASCENSION Entitled ‘ 11 00 A M —Morning Prayer and 9.30 A.M. and 11:15 AM. “On Our Way Rejoicing,” the re-/Hope Baptist Church. hol to the bishop for installation | WATERFORD noise Rev B b gi Viear Sdontica) Services of cessional. | The Rev. Joseph Parker of the the following newly elected mem-| Meeting at Leggett School / e . e ABC CLUB— White Lake male ah ep | A discussion of the youth pro- [Shilob Baptist Church at Clark- bers of the executive council, Mrs.| 3621 Pontiac Lake Rd. nA Mea Rev W. A. Hunt, Vicar | | gram during the past mine ston will preach at 11 a.m. and the|iiouis fafladay, Mrs. Herbert] | Wm. LoFountain, Paster ristlan oCcClence ——e months will be moderated by |Rev. V. L. Lewis with the chorus)... ® a Miss Munrow, president of the (of St. James Baptist Missionary | Hungerford, Mrs. George Wors- | SUNDAY SCHOOL ...10 A.M. § / bd , —— = oe | group. ‘Church of Pontiac will be in charge wick, and Mrs. Bruce Hubbard. | SERVICES ..... 9 and 11 AM. ff Soul S Restorative At the close of the program, A The Youth Fellowship group will|of the service at 3:30 p.m. —_— i THE S VATION join area United Presbyterian| Preaching the anniversary ser- i CHRIST p R | d‘ AL Churches jn a roller skating party mon at 7:30 p. m. will be the Rev.’ WATERFORD TWP. ower evea e at 6:15 p.m. Monday at the Uni-/L. W. Pryor of Antioch Baptist l | M § 29 W. LAWRENCE STREET QP [versity rink. \Ghurch, Fuunt. egal Merger Matus | “toe ot Winme Labe Ba, Pp by GERTRUDE E. VELGUTH, C.S. ; ‘ , | * * * The Rev. and Mrs. Reed have = nderson, Pas Sunday Schl. 9:45 a.m. Young People's Legion 6 p.m. | the Rev. F. William Palmer, [moved back into a mips = Pastor s Report Topic: SUNDAY SCHOOL ..9:30 A.M. | lice lee eet Morning Worship ll a.m. Evangelistic Mtg. 7:30 p.m. | will preach on “Joining Up With '398 Bloomfield Ave. CHURCH SERVICE 11:00 A.M. ff Member of the Board of Lectureship of The : , ; God’" at the 11:15 a.m. worshipjand furniture were badly burned in in| Mother Chu The First Church of Christ Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 p.m. hour Sunday. ja fire Jan. 21. ie MEN. are * Burton, ST JOHN'S ! Scienti a Bos Massach ti CAPTAIN AND MRS J WILLIAM HEAVER ee (pastor of First Congregat . | tentist, in ton, usetts. Mattenk Sad tient: Q Church, will report on ‘‘The Legal| PONTIAC 1 : Kennedy . Status of the Merger’’ at the 4 p. m. 87 Hil) St. at Cherry St. Tuesda } Ma 26 1959 ‘ Good Music — Singing — True to the World Preaching Pr b t I Nn t Hold |meeting of the Michigan Council , y; y ‘ * ' oJ God Meets With Us _ Yo T A In ited es y e la S O |for the Advancement. of Congregs-f Car! W. Nelson, Pastor 8 00 p M ° u 100, Are invi - ° ‘tionalism at North Congregational | SUNDAY SCHOOL ..9:45 A.M. | : .™M, : ———— ——'Memorial Service SUuNCay crircr'soutstielt, tomorrow. | CHURCH SERVICE 11:00 AM. * * * . . a ut | The Rev. Neil Swanson Jr., exec-|| SHEPHERD of the LAKES Columbia Avenue Memorial Sunday will be =| a has calleaq for an jutive secretary of the National, WALLED LAKE . . . ° : served at First Presbyterian] emergency cancer pad sewing |Assn. of Congregational Christian H F Irst Church of Christ Scientist Church at both the 9:30 and 11] session Thursda Churches, will address the group] ‘“/*ctiss 0* Walled Lake Blom. School , : b : ola | y: renee, | ee, )«6W. Maple Near Ladd Rd. 164 WEST LAWRENCE ST. PONTIAC, MICH. a.m. services with Dr. William} . lon “Creative Congregatiohalism. | - Rabbi Nathan Hershfield of f cae ’ < 5 x *« * M. Frederick Foutz, Pastor - . H. Marbach, pastor; preaching on Temple Beth Jacob will speak and ll W ’ » “We Will Remember Them.” — | ginect the discussion on “What Is| Registration is scheduled fr 3:30/] CHURCH SERVICE 11:00 A.M. All Are elcome! 64 West Columbia Ave. John Wilkinson and Charles) Judaism” at the Out, of High|P.™ Following the afternoon ses-'f SUNDAY SCHOOL. ..9:30 A.M. ‘ FE 5-9960 Frankenfield who died during)schoo} Group at 7 p.m. Sunday. jsions, coffee will be served by the . - - - —— Sunday School .....4.......... pe ce eecesies 9:45 A. M. | World War IT will be honored as} Participating in the panel pro-|women of North Church Morning Worship ..........cccececceeceees 11 A. M. | welt as the following who diedigram on ‘“‘Segregation” at the BLT. UL cece ccc cceccccuceecuecs 6:30 P. M..|Within the past year: Mrs. A. B.|Senior High young people's meet-| Know ye not that ye are a tem- - Evening Worship ........2....... weave eles erets 7:30 P.M. | Amsden. ae E. Chai i ing at 5:45 p,t. will be Gary|ple of God, and that the Spirit, of, Cl | | a n U e} a IS U rc ! W: Mary Col rs. aries S|Miller, Robert Riley and Jill Miller. |God dwelleth i in yout. ednesday Prayer Meeting wen cnn ei wa 7:30 P. M. [puttolph sLynn Allen, Mrs. E. Vf a et — 7 ' Rev. M. F. Boyd Jr., Pasto? Allison-and Mrs. Robert Farms. | ; S. Cooperating’ with Southem Baptist Convention | Others will be Mrs. D. F. First Church of the Brethren 645 5. Telegraph Road — 9,000,000 Members — Kerschner, Mrs. W. S. Downes, . 46 NORTH ROSELAWN : E II: I Y ; Cla Pitchett, Mrs. Henry | “ ) ra i er =a pa dee Dr. James D. Comp: | . Po aay 10 ‘Mu slits y palais aM > 'specia y nvites ou to - | ton, Mrs. Charles R. Shoemaker, | y Guest Speaker. Evening Service by Rev. James DeVault Ccitianan Temple 30) Ruburn Ave. | Miss Florence Day, Miss Pansy Prayer Meeting and Bible Study at the Church Wed. 7 :30 P.M, WORSH | % AT THRE E G R EAT SERV | CES i... Rev. J Luther Sheffield, Assistant Dollery, Allen Booth, Paul D. | —______- ——_—___— =| A Special Welcome Awaits You ad see Me ey = ~ 10:00 A M. | | ‘00 A M McLintock. : — Ute fy Munda shea ‘Ciseset AAsts | Mrs. John C. Mitchell will be WESLEYAN METHODIST | : ° ° ' , ° ° —Yo 4 3 148 PM—Evanselistic Servipe remembered as will Mrs. Thomas 67 NORTH LYNN STREET . — ——— iR. McCulloch, Claude A. Coons, Sunday School 10 A.M. Worship 11 A.M. 7:30 p M | ’ Mrs. John W. Ball, Mrs. John A. Evening Service 7:30 P.M. W.Y.P.S. 6:4 aia . e e | - SYLVAN LAKE [Rene and Mrs. Howard S. York. | Wednesday Prayer and Bible Service 7:30 P | (Baptismal) CHUAth OS wee . CHURCH { CHRIST | The choir will sing ‘A Prayer | REV. H. L. JOHNSON, Pastor ey ae ' \t Orchard tab & Middlebelt Roads, oes! ea — — = ———_—— “BEGI NNERS’ DAY” 4 . . arvin W. tings, Ministe : : , a $ ie re organist, Lyndon Salathiel. | DONELSON BAPTIST CHURCH j } rye ge my John Beers, a glassblower at Elizabeth Lake Ro. at Tilden ne Per f HONORING ALL 4 AND > = CROSS OF CHRIST” ,Greenfield Village, ae | Sunday School ymor and sn paeea ks : YEAR OLD CHILDREN . ~Ood's Power To Bare the Sou! on the program of the Couple's} youth Service ..... oeceweeagescssick cece dace cO300) PM. . Dally: “Dial-a-Devotional Service” — FE 8-048 Club at the Wednesday dinner. | Evening Chureh Service .......... 7:30 P.M. ; CKLW-TV—Saturday, 8:00 P. M. “Herald of T th” ! Hosts will include Mr. and Mrs.|} Midweek Service ........-. tereees ..1:00 P.M. Wednesday Music WXYZ—Sunday, 5:30 P.M eraid of iru Orrin Huntoori Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Pastor—REV. LEW (4LONE “s. 8. Supt. —ARTHUR EWALD i ne Mr. and Mrs, | == ee SSS Under .the Direction of try McDowe / ~ PONTIAC CHURCH At the urging of the American C JIMMIE MEENA OF CHRIST [eee se! Central Methodist ‘ : oy ; % MILTO NK, D.D., Ministe Sunday School Attendance 1,392 « - Welcomes All Visitors Williams Lake REV. Gus 4c MALAAGE, BO. Aissehan inate y | ' \Jeugee «Bible Study ..,.......... wee - Church of REV. JOHN H. HALL, D.D.; Assov. Minister wv : |, the Nazarene |} MORNING SERVICES, 8:30 and 10:45 A. M. RADIO REVIVAL WPON \ Listen to Herald of Truth - , & Corner Airport & “CIVE AS UNTO HIM” 10:15 EACH SUNDAY WHYS Detect 8:90 8 Satardayy, #00. Pa. -}--P“Snguter” Hatchery Road ¢ : n é : . sney® TT 10 AM. SUNDAY SCHOOL Dr. Milton H. Bank, Preaching Modern Supervised Nursery Everybody Is Invited! Amp! Pa ki 1180 North Perry St. Y an wemat Dott (BROADCAST Over WPON, 11:00 A. M.) mple Parking - 32% 5 Ae aR is Mae ag ae : fo Rae - ' , a . P ~ : - ic 8 . <i Py : Murs a 4 * a r 2 e « . ; ; A y : 4 ~ } 4S . ; P ‘ van : \ : "e iF | _. due ; say f % , : he ev : 77 + ro } . : f aE st Y i ving Chg a , , ~ ° c — : | oi hs Ly . yoy ™“ A: ‘ oa a7 ir y . ca) ‘ ee . f NY . = > a) ¥ , S . = = . g / } os ‘. : te 1 ak fe TR - é - w¥ «/ Par ie ° . f ” ? oir ad a Min “x x3 a EY Rae ee ne ee hee eve ee i a ae ee ES ee OF: Wee ee Age ahs ah tid & 2 Kk ghia 3 L 1 LE SE Se eee ve ere THE PONTIAC MAY 23, 1959 Vaiver onB lker Chase Muddles Bowl * ok * -— S an ‘M’ and Illini May Go to Wire for Big Ten Title PRESS, SATURDAY, Situatio re x k/ ~*~ *« * 1 ; | j 4 | | of Post-Season ‘lay Preduced Big Ten Proponents of Two-Way Track Battle ANN ARBOR (AP) — Defending the 100 and 220 dashes including champion Ulinois and indoor tilist’ Bahamas - bred Tom Robinson; Michigan may battle right down two in the 8380-run and 220 low to the closing mile rejay event for hurdles; and one each in the 440- the team crown in,the S&h Big yard dash and 120 high hurdles. Trip to Pasadena May Compete Individually } ANN ARBOR (® — The Big Ten € Ten outdoor track pheet today. after yesterday's two finals held in The Wolverines also should score well in the pole vault, led by Nels Lendstrom from Finland. *x * * Ohio State captwred the scoring ead momentarily with 9'2 points today was in a quandry over a the discus and the broad jump m°-stor it has created in a weird . However, Michigan's bid for two-bended Rose Bowl fooibail However, host Michigan, which hurdling points may be repulsed nh picked up 9 points, and Hlinois, . Willie May, Indiana's defending —. next with &, were expected te . From two 94 standoff votes Y@s- team ahead with a private scrap tenday game’ Mis: sirange’ setup for team honors in this after- Firs'!. the policy-making facultY pooy’s 12 finals. representatives refused to renew , : the Rose Bow! contract which ex- The forecast was for cloudy, 60- pires with the 1960 game after a degree weather after morning | 14-vear span - ,Tains. i . * * * Then, proponents of the bowl In yesterday's rain - sprinkled dug eut a joker from near the bottom of the conference I¢gal deck and opened the way for free-for-all] participation in the Rose Bowl by member. schools on an individual basis. The in the joker a clause inserted confere handbook in 1946 1 waived the Jeague’s ban on Was ne “ all a etic postseason competition for participation,in the Rose Bow! * * * The anti-bowl group of Ohio State. Tingis, Wisconsin, North- \ rm and Minnesota succeeded i n? the provosal to renew the bor] contract because a 35 deodigck spikes any new legisla- tion, But, in rebuttal, the pro-Rose Bow! group. of Michigan, Iowa, , Indiana, Purdue and Michigan | ‘State voted against eliminating the Rose Bowl proviso from the rule book. The way things stand now, after the 1960 Rose Bow] game the newly orzvanized big four west coast group of California, Washington, Southern | California and UCLA can _ invite any Big Ten school to the Pasa- dena classic. However, if a team like Ohio~State or Illinois won the conference championship and was the logica] team to be invited such a schoo] would be put in an em- barrassing position because of its expressed stand against the Rose Bow! Of cow hich is C c } se. the west coast group an offshoot of the Pacific vf destined to per ish July also could invite any eastern Tivi] outside the Big es ome: Ten As a matter of fact, Greg En- glehart, California athletic direc- tor, said ‘‘this may be a healthy thing. Ht doesn't close the door for Big Ten schools, and it opens the door to other schools that have outstanding teams." The invited Big Ten school would need only approval of its own ad- ministation and Could take all of the visiting team’s .bow] share, some $330,000 including TV money This contrasts with the approxi- mate $60,000 that a Rose Bowl con- tender now brings back after split- ting with Big Ten members. Furthermore, the same school could .appear indefinitely, as op- powed to the present restriction of one appearance every two years Big Ten athletic directors and football coaches, almost to a man, favor Rose Fowl! play. The 5-5 standoff on the bowl issue de- veloped at the faculty level as each school’s academic council voted individualty on the subject in recent months. Said one unidentified athletic di- rector Let's see how the egg- heads handle this Indiana 2nd,,-MSU trials in six events, Michigan quali-; fied 10 men compared with 8 for} oth Illinois. Wisconsin, Indiana and Minnesota were next with 5 quali-| fiers each, followed by Iowa with 4. Purdue with 3, and Michigan State, Northwéstern and Ohio State with 2 each. Well-balanced Illini moved no fewer than four runners into the eight-man finals cf the 220 dash and had both heat winners in the 880, long-striding «George Kerr | and Ted Beastal. Besides, the Ilini were expected to score heavily in the high jump, led by defending champion Ernie Haisley and Ron Mitchell, and in the shot put with a couple of 54- ae foot tossers, Larry Stewart and Bill Brown. . | * * * AP Wirephote Illinois’ mile relay team also SIDELINED — Kansas City’s posted the spring’s Best clocking iding hitter Roger Mans will 311.4. and this event produces be cut “— wt for a while after eight points fur the winner com nderzoing an emergency ap pared to five’ in each individual pendectomy sesterday. He is event. hatuung average of .328 with Michigan qualified two men in 10 homers and 26 RBI's Lead 1 Second ts in 13 Milwaukee Increases Dodgers Gai Beating Giar By The Associated Press Aaron going 4-for-5, had walloped It’ ‘t long time coming, Philadelphia 10-: Pittsburgh, t's been a Jong tume co 1g ce" ; 3 brought Cincinnati back to 00 hy but Don Drysdale finally has nailed beating the fifth-place Reds 4-3 his fourth victory and the Los An- gnq the St. Louis Cardinals put the geles Dodgers at last are geW¥iN€ Chicago Cubs fourth with a 3-1 de- even with” the San Francisco ¢icjon in |4 innings Giants Drvsdale and southpaw Johnny The Dodgers grabbed second Antonelli were in a double 2-hit place in the National League from quel for eight innings. The Dodgers San Francisco as Drysdale, win- had a 10 lead -oring without a less for almost a month, defeated pj: in the sixth on a walk, sacrifice the Giants 2-1 in 13 innings.last and error, until Willie Kirkland’s pight. It was the sixth victory over Qingte and Orlando Ceped mt the Giants this season for the ¢p)1), fter, Wille Mays had Dodgers—matchinz the total they fanned—tied it in ine ninth managed in last year’s 22-game Al Worthinet 13 Wer it alter wilt reheving Antonelli, who gave up It also was Drysdale’s fifth in) four hits, in the 12th. A hit batter a row over the Giants since last ind a walk set up» Hodges’ win- Aug. 8, but it looked like just oning blow. Drysdale gave up six another fruitless night for the hits, three by Cepeda, and stuck 10 Axuron smacked a bome run, a double and a pair of singles, scored four runs, drove in three and upped his league-leading av- erage 12 points to .468. out lean right-hander antil Gil Hodges’ 2-out single put it away. Drysdale 4-4 hadn't been a win- ner since April 27, but in that span he had gone 11 innings for no decision against Milwaukee and nine innings to no decision against San Francisco. Ditk Schofield. inserted M Golfers Lead Meet Mich. uP Host} led today lf il ANN ARBOR Mechigen nd into secon: day pias 40th annual ment ov dampened , the way in the tourna rain i f er the U of Ms course Soggy Weather Changes Outlook for State Meet fending nions , state have weather in which sd ral Alt nd cold tT! meets Today defend their 1ight time at al It's another wet and soggy day! And the Chiefs can’t be writien off. despite the rafting ac- cerded Flint Central, ® Flint. Noclitern. Ann Arbor or Kala- mazoo Central. Under the condi- lions P€UH should be on equal ferms with the tae rated favorites. Many clined to bad weather Dean W th@@r last sth observers are in- a good omeh_in the conditions. ~Coaeh. Chiefs have won two. outings in this kind the Cniver sity Detroit: rela ind ,iaSt Satur- w.fin ng the’ TI mn A in Revion al by a cor vyrcing total d local oer leon '«< ne Ls yf d . stop only Thursday in a Pirate The runner-up switch upped Mil- shake-up, beat the Reds with a waukee's first-place edge to aes ninth inning homer, his first. It osc ftar aie) fF. i . : games after the Bravés, with Hank camé off reliever Hal Jeffcoat 0-1 _ Vern Law 4-1 got out of a. bases- loaded jam in ‘the ninth to win with an Shitter? Jerry Lynch hit a 2-run homer for the Reds, who jost their protest that a fan had touched Schofield’s homer SAN PRANCISCO LOS ANGELES abrhb bi abrh - Rodgers ss #060 Gillam UW 4120 Kirkilar rf 40190 Neal 2b 5000 ‘ Al¢ 21900 Demeter cf 5110 _ ; Mays cf 5060-R®pulski rf 3010 Michigan posted a 716 score Cepeca tb 5031 Fairly rf 1000 ee Pee :. ay te¢ on- Wagner if 5000 dZimmer 1060 yesterday for first day team hon- cyeccer 2b 4010 Drake ff 090.0 ors. and Iowa's Frank James and Landri c 4000 eSnider 0000 nas res ib 3010 Hodges 1b 4011 Bob Davis fired 151's for first day prnode 0000 Gray 3b 5000 nmadoli tn OC 2e z cDav'pt 3b 1000 Pigtanoc’ 4000 medalist honors in 36 holes of play. gD’. P' 2 ooo Life ss =e 6 Wort 1 p 1000 Drysdale p 5000 Indiana was second to the = Totais 44 11> Totals Po , . A-Ran for Kirkiar n * b-Walked Wolverines with a 779 fellowed for Bressoud in 1th. c-Ran for Rhodes in by Purdue, 782; Ohio State, 785; in: 4 Pooped a tor Fa ly in It "Ox. e-Walked for rake in 13th Michigan State 790; Towa 795: san Francisco 08 009 01 000 OI ° ‘4 pate Los Angeles 000 061 000 000 1—2 Wisconsin, 800; Northwestern, Aa cet ce PO-A -San Francisco 3 lllinois, 827, and Minnesota, (17 Los Angeles 39-12, (Two out when ° won red) DP-R« er Sper cer peda LOB-San Francisco 7 l r fie * * * 1B-Cepeda. $-Neal. Landrith iP oH R ER BRSO Purdue, favored to win, found gysonen i +10 5 > 2} ' 7rpe uct ty om 1 1-2) 12-3 1 1 1 1 1 the rain and greens a: TAME D ale «W 4913 6 1 } 10 cope with. John Konsek. meda RP —By Worthington (Demet: I . a ' 4 Yelmoa Rar k Ja owski last year at Columbus. had’ a 77. S'83.Y°, Denes ARON 7—152 to lead the Boilergiake . Dick Youngberg, a sophomore Narrow Win at Drayfon from Northbrook, IIL. was low ; scorer for. Michigan with a 75-77—» Dubski's Bar piled up a 5-1 lead 152 ind fo ught “Olfa_ 7th-inning rally for a 5-4 victory over Lotus Lake After 36 holes, Jack Reynolds of Waterford was at 157 and Tim Baldwin of Birmingham at 139 Both play for Michigan State. The meet ends today. so{thall game at Drayton Plains It wAs a rescheduled contest from Wednesdays rainout. The top 15 players: after 36 holes In yesterday's other scheduled 6-75-4151 . . Davis, lows we 72131;8ame, Hubert Walls Service was Konsek, Purdue M 13) wnable to.field a team and had to . 46~T6— Senaantee,’ Kacmene 1S 37-182 forfeit to the Waterford Merchants Tad Schmidt, Michigan State 75-78 “ts Wall's manager “Dick Stafford is Jon Bommer, Indiana 76-78 154 ; . Chuck. Steeno, Wisconsin 77-17-{54;now on the lookout for players aft- Mike Podolski, Ohio Siate 75-7 al 1SM/er recently losing a few membe rs Larry Markmafh, Michigan 17- Daxe Daniels. Ohio State 75-80- 135/04 his squad R Ray Lovell Michigan TT= 78-1554 . Don Quam. Wisconsin 78-77 —155 7 CA Smith MiocKigan State 81°73 —-18#) 2 MONDAY’S PREP SCHEDULE t y Waliden;: Wisconsi: 78-78 —156 Golf Jot Lieches lowa 78-78 156 Parntiac P s Piveney, Pontiac Country yi hed Indiana 81-75 6 Od a” Bri Michigai 78-70--156) 'H at Nerihville Cath Mitehel) Purdue 80-76-1356 Bentiey'a! Southhiel@ « \ a v Ps 4 2 {hich hurdle’ champion. 'May won Schmidt, Dlinois; Norm Ehlers, Illinois us rd ee 1 ‘tie for Sth); BIN Fields, Ohio State, and his heats over both the low and Chuck Colby, Minnesota. ~ Distance 159’ hig icks. e r{fe ing 3 ai gh sticks, edging defendin B Qualifiers and best, times in other champion Pete Stanger of Michi- events: 100-YARD DASH—Wiimer Fowler, North- at short- last night in a Waterford League | _y | Seen gan in the low hurdles. = } h _western: Tom Robinson and John Gregg, ; |Michigan; Del Coleman and Ward Miller, _The one other returning indi- [jyinois. Berry Williams, Indiana, Tom vidual champidn is Minneseta’s Hyde. Iowa: Bob Rechord sesame” A s Best time—:10.0, by Robinson. two-mile king, Len Edelen. 120-YARD HIGH HURDLES— Willie May | and Ray Spivey. Indiana; Dave Odegard PRESS BOX } Mary Ann Saghy of Pontiac i) |participate in the 3ist’ ai cal | Michigan Stat® Fencing Cham 9n- |ships Monday night at Derby Jun- lior High Schoo} in Brimingham. iShe is an MSU student. * * * The annual singles doubles | horseshoe league of the City Recreation Department will start | June 4 at Oakland Park. The | league runs through August. x * * | Dave Althouse, a Detroit junior George time— 487 Talented Golfers in Press The two new champions crowned and Russ Pederson, Minnesota. Pete h } , h ta Michi b iscon- | ‘her, has been ni s vesterday were discus thrower fin. Dick StiJwagon Mpurdue: Mike Klein. Lanse ages named anos Larry Schmalenberger of Ohio ; , Od ene al AEN. Ee meets. jvalyable player on the Albion base- ss py Odegar ‘ » H » ‘ove i State and Michigan broadjumper ae = ball team. Charles Coye of Battle ; See CARD ERUN Leon me Sau aly pene Creek will captain the team next Lou Williams. Ges orge Kerr, linols, Tony Seth and Earl . : ardor{f, Michigan; Dan McKinney, spring 4 . Schmalenberger whirled the plat- Wis sconsin: Bob Hughes. Michigan State * ~ * 4 H i st t arry 4 ter 154!z, while Buckeye teammate Dick Strayer, Obio State | Haves een _ ‘ ; George Mirka was second with , ?%0-YARD DASH—Ward Miller Georg ge ‘ s ee, ng Navy football ae = : Nitscet Del Coler Joh tfi- av i ¥ « ission |153-2. Williams also bested a Wol ! eral ciinots: oii mincineos and Tain dt ao a " \verine teammate, favored Les Greex Michigan, Tom Burrows. 10. » ; ‘de De ap The group a . iimer owiler orthwestern es ime . 7 ricz Det \Bird, by one-half an inch—24-6', — 222 by Lattimore AP Wireohete ‘ “ a a Chon of rem. to 24-5%. . 2>©-YARD LOW HURDLES Dick a . ; ¢ oo 1958 captain Dick Dagampat, iWsummaries of the 68th sonual Bic = ne Or —_ a, St 7 nig a THE RIGHT TRACK?—Casey Stengel! sits in his railroad car tackle great Bob Reifsnyder, a4 & {USS e in , = » Ten outdoor track championship sota. Willie May and Ray Spivey. Indi. Coach waiting for the Yanks to leave for Baltimore, The Yankees, George Fritzinger, Paul O’Con- BROAD JUMP—Lou Willjams. Michi- ana. Bot®Geurts, Wisconsin: Dick 8till be 5 Hees “ g track <x sone setords , sunt tes Gitd Michigan. Paul Puréman, epens. Perdue. Hest. cas—30A, ix May however, have been on the wrong track all season and yesterday nor and John Livengood. Illinois, Stan Morrow, Minnesota: George 440-YARD DASH Jess Nixon. Wiscon- it stul wasn't the track Casey wanted because the Orioles shutout * * Ward Michigan State Distance—24 sin. Ivar Kau! Minnesota: Ted Storer ; . ' 2 . ~ a ae ole: utou * Bis Ohio State. Ron Etherton. Purdue. John the Bombers, 5-0. Angry Stengel is wondering when the Yanks are Jack Foust and Elmer Swanson DISCUS—Larry Schmalénberger hio Brown Marsh Dickerson, Michi l, ¢ . P . ’ State Mirka, Ohio Staie Ord can BeGE dl by Stherton ° suing to get on the night track of Michigan, Bob Calihan of U. of D., Wayne's Herb Smith and Fred Trosko of Eastern Michigan will be among the guests when South- field High honors its athletes Tues- day night. W. W. ‘Eddie’ Edgar, Detroit bowling official and for- mer sports writer, will be the guest speaker with TV announcer Budd Lynch master of ceremonies é Tourney Many Individual | Stars to Grace & 2>qGPHRE S| Suuthfield’s outstanding senior and juniwr athletes will be honored ® ® *® The hitting of John Kendall and pitching of Dick Lamphere pace 4 Pantiac Northern to a 4-2 basehall triumph over Cranbrook Friday. Monday .) Event Detroit Only ‘Long-Shot’ 16 Schools Challenge Birmingham's Pursuit of 6th Title at PCC MUNICH W—American Olympic Thanks largely te an elegant Team balance and depth will be Officials said today Detroit's brochure and good public rela- the key factors in Monday's 8th’ chances of getting the 1954 Olym- tions work, Squaw Valley was @ annus! al Pontiac Press Prep Invita- pic Games were dar':ened by Eu-' one-vote winner for the site over tional ¢ If tournament at Pontiac ropean distress over “the Squaw) Innsbruck, Austria. uate Club. V illey alfa Afterwards, de legates said. it But that. shouldn't hide the fact Squaw Valley is the tiny spot) turned out that Squaw Valley had ‘ that there will be a host of indi- in California) where the 1960 lot more building to do than it vidygl standouts on the firing line) Winter Games will be held. indicated and a Jot more money n Quest of medal honors. to obtain than it had announced x * * Every one of the 17 schools\en * ® * tered in the Press event has at Fi S Some European sportsmen mut ‘ igure oviets tered complaints that the Squaw least one outstanding golfer ca- pable of shooting himself into the medalist limelight for the 18- hole distance. Valley Olympic multi-million promoters were using the committee to build up a dollar resort area as Detroit Ally for’64Games ~ Among the many individual stars The comptaints turned to near-re- ready for Monday's early morning MUNICH, Germany wh - De- = “ “en ll : vie tone tee-off are Gary Mouw of Birming-, troit may have an unexpected | Siegel acres ai ‘this outa’ ham, Mike Samardzija of Pontiac’ ally in Soviet Russia in its bid\o Ta Glen a Central, Chuck Canterbury of Wa- become the site for the : 1964 = terford, Larry Beaupre of Roches- Olympic games, Now Detroit has launched a ter, Dick DeLano of Pontiac North- Russia controls 16 to 12 votes \. major bid to become host to the ern, Mike Wiegand of St. Michael, in the International Olympic 1964 Games, The Michigan city's and Jon Shaw of West Bloomfield Gomnitiaogltahion opened its chances were regarded here as x~ © *® meetings here today, and in only a long shot, with Tokyo like- A few others worthy of mention formed sources say Russia has ly to be the successful bidder. are Charles Deschaine and Pat Se- decided to throw its, support ‘to Some. Americans said they coy of St. Frederick, Bob Thomp-. Detroit. thought Detroit would have had a son of Bloomfield Hills, Bob Mckee Russia reportedly would like to bettcr-than-fair chance af it had of Clawson, John Howting of display its athletes in the United not been for the Squaw Valley alf- Shrine, Bob Young of Walled Lake, States for propaganda reasons. [111 : Ron Metcalf of Dondero and Doug By unofficial tabulations, Rus- ; * ~ * Forier of Kimball. sia defeated the United States at But Detroit has by no means The lowest individual score the last games in Melbourne in given up. Its délegates here art ever posted was a one-under-par 1956, busy buttonholing. officials and 68 by Pontiac Central's John The British Empire bloc of trying to line up support Rogers at Pontiac Municipal | Olympic members is reported te = So were officials from Tokyo, course in 1952 when the 1st Press be divided between Detroit and Vienna and Brussels which also are seeking the 1964 Games. Brus- ——— tourney was held. Monday's field | Tokyo. will be trying to eclipse that rec- oo SE ord figure over Pontiac Country , White Sox and Boston Win Club's par 37-37—74 layout. Birmingham, which will be gun- ning for its 6th Press title, holds the es for the best winning team . The Maples had a five- man total of 378 in 1957 * * * St. Fred has yet to win the Press crown. but the southsiders hold one td score By The Associated Press over the Yankees, creat distinction in this event. Dick National League clubs brushed Orioles stayed within 2‘, games Kast shot a hole-in-one for the off Hoyt Wilhelm because _ they of the first-place Cleveland In- Ramis at the City, course two years could tell when he was going to dians, who managed just two hits ago. the only ace in the history throw his money pitch, the knuck-' but beat Detroit 1-0 behind the of the tournament ler, Now he holds the ball in his The seven previous Press tour- ‘glove and American. sig a hit- ney, titles have been shared by ters in the palm of his hand three schools with 8irmingham Once a bullpen wonder = ‘the owning the lion’s share—five. Pon- Giants in the National League, tiac Central and Waterford have Wilhelm drifted to the Cardinals claimed one apiece and then ines ‘fhe American! - League with Cleveland before’ Veteran Chuck Kocsis was a . coming to roost with Baltimore. It model of consistency "Friday in G h Title Clincher was Oriole Manager Paul Rich- tye 5th annual Michican Medal op el irds who suggestéd he hide the Piay Golf Championship at. Red ball in his glove. ic * * As a result of his steadiness, the ‘I should have thought of it My- 47 - year-old Kocsis held a two-| elf.” Wilhelm admits. “Coaches stroke lead at the end of yester-| in the National League were tip-|day's 36-hole grind which saw the Spoiled by Spartans LANSING \#—Minnesota lost chance to clinch the Big Ten base a ball title yesterday as. Michigan ping the batters whence : was starting field cut from 46 players! State's mound ace Dick Radaiz ee “ine? erg . ad to 24 for the remaining 36 holes ; Now the 35-year-old righthand. pitched and batted his team to e. cr has become such a mystery to Compiling a total of 11 birdies, | 6-4 victory. hitters that he’s unbeaten? and) Kocsis fired 70-70—140 against The conference-leading Gophers pyen- had switch hitter Mic key! “Red Run's par gof 72-72—144. exchanged thret-run innings With jantle resorting to a rate tactic Chuck's nine-hole breakdown the Spartans before another thiee-/imst night, The Mick didn't switch} W8* 35- 35-35-35, one under par run MSU raily in the sixth inning|_and he didn’t hit, either. | on each nine. salted. the game away. | Fact is, Wilhelm came within} A pair of former Michigan Ama- Radatz struck out 12 and chipped|six outs. of becoming the fifst)teur champs, veterans Ben Smith in two hits in posting his fifth; pitcher ever to no-hit the New/of Detroit Golf Club and Tom straight Big Ten win. York Yankees twice, then settled|D raper. of Birmingham, were oe nes Pe Lp Par : 1\tor a one-hitter while packing iChuck’s hottest, pursuers. ~ Smith Mathe and Junker: -—Radatz and Monc-|away his sixth victory as Balti-|scored 70-72—142, while Draper jzka . | more belted the champs deeper|carded 70-73—143. BIG TEN BASEBALL STANDINGS _into the cellar 5-0. “| Kocsis, six- -time State Amateur Minnesota 10 F Indiana ‘ t x, & & jchamp, canned three long~birdie Iilinots 9 4 Michigan f u Wilhelm, a long-time relief ace, tputts and topped “his “‘bird’’ spree [piscotiin Hi + had lost nine straight before nail-/by exploding a 70-foot shot from Northwestern 6 6 Iowa 3 3 ing the first shutow of his 7-year | the sand trap into the cup on the "FRIDAYS FIGHTS career with his ‘no-hitter against 381-yard par four 10th hole. NEW YORK—Alex Miteff, 204% Argen-|the Yankees last Sept. 20. He State Publinx champion Mike ns ‘ot jot Wayne Beihes. 28's Thasn't Jost since, winning seven Andonian of Poritiac was still: in SAN DIEGO, ‘Calif Monroe RgilWf.j7n a row—three over New York. /the running * with: 7475-149. An rf Sao Diego sopped: Wille Cuber: | By winning ,their fifth. straight|donian had severat birdie opportu- los. | Angele 2 a al | 4 opportu ~ « > +. Olympic Hope Dark) .sels appeared out of the running. | And Detroit: was mo better than) third choice among the de legates; Wilhelm One-H its Yanks, 5-O the third place; -Tom Demrick was thé loser. who will‘ make their decision next Wednesday Delegates from the contending Bebind Cleveland 22 1 “| — cities were spending a lot of time Chicago 3 #9 «6 ', Baltimore 21 1b 563 2' talking to the; Russians, who are Kansas City Sil sala ceen sin expected to call the shots for the, Washington 7 2h | TOTS : - ton Bb 19 441 7a entire East European delegation. Detrou 3 21 32H Spel “hn lox New os x re) 375 * Innsbruck, which lost- last time YESTERDAY'S RESULTS s by one vote, was regarded as a PSachtnerag Hy mac ge . night ° ansas Cit t certain winner for the 1964 Winter Batumore’ 5 New York ‘ ian nt Games over Calgary, Canada and Bostoa 4 Wemingion (2 ot Lahti, Finland Detrow at Cleveland. | pm —Bunning (43) vs MecLish (5-0) Cuicago at Kansaa City. 9 pm —Wyna 62) vs Daley (1-3) * . New York at Baltimore: 106 pm —Lare sen (3-0) vs Pappas (¢+1) Elementary ry Schools ae ro ioe at Bostop, | p mgRames vs. Sulliv (1-3) TOMORROW'S GAMES [ | Detrott at Cleveland 2. 12:38 pm rig at Kansas City. 23 pm. ork at t 2,16 pm. | tell at Boston. 1 pm NATIONAL LEAGUE Wen -Lost Pct. Behind d La The National Rifle Association has just announced the chartering yy we uxee of a new jumor rifle club for the Les Angeles Pontiac elementary Ch mises . Heading the club is Paul Elkins ae as president. Jean H. Young, 170 st North Opdyke rd., has been select- — ed the adult le ader. The new group, like thousands of others similarly chartered by the NRA is designed to instruct youngsters in the fundamentals of good marks- manship and safety in handling firearms. It is restricted to. per- sons under 19 years of age. Other officers include: : Vice president, Jimmy Saiz: ex- °o Var schools sburgh Louis phia YESTERDAY ‘s Rest its Milwaukee 10.. Philadelphia 5. night Los Angeles 2. San Francisce |} nning. night Puaburgh 4. Cinewmnati 3. night St. Louis 3. Chicago 1. 14 innings TODAY'S GAMES MUwaukee st Philadelphia, 1:65 p.m ng (5-4) ve Owens (1-3) o at Los Angeles SY vs Williams p.m vs Cincinnati at Pittsburgh. 12 » pm —Pens (2-1) vs. Daniels (1-2) TOMORROW'S GAMES “Mawautee at fladelphia 2. 12:05 pm Francisco at Los Angeles, 4 pm . as is 10 pm— ee —Jackson ecutive officer, Vi Kloka: secre- x Louis at Chicago, 1 pm tary-treasurer, Billy Comstock. a cinaat at Pattburg at" noon , ~ 4hut pitching of* Gary Bell. Phe! Wilhelm walked six and struck second-place Chicago White Sox, a out two, losing his no-hitter ‘on halfigame back, defeated Kansas Jerry Lumpe’s leadoftf single—oif City 2-1. Boston beat Washington a knuckler—in the eighth. at R q R (3-5) with four runs in the first on Triandos. five consecutive hits and a bases- loaded walk to Wilhelm—all with nities during hisa2nd round, but he jcouldn’t sink his putts, Pontiac's 4-5 _ * * * | The Orioles chased Bob Turley two out, The big blow off Turley Was -a 2-run homer by Gus Wally Smith shot himself out. of contention with 75-82—157., * * * Mantle? He grounded out twice and walked twice while batting right-handed against a right-hand- UALIFIERS er Chuck Kocsis, Red Run r0-70—140 °F for the first time since 1957. Ben Smith, Dei G.c 70-72-£142 * * * |Tom Draper, Red Run 70-74—143 Tal smith, Fremont i 74—145, Luis Aparicio led off with a sin- |Larry Bianco, Dearborn 1-74—145 | |Bob Whiting, Red Run qta—148 | Sl, Stole second and scored on ud Stevens, Western 73-73—146 Nellie Fox’s single in the first in- i ve ist dig for the White Sox. the dou- 13-78 148) bled and scored the clincher on an \ , in the third against Bob 74-75-4149 | CTTor 71-73—149'Grim (4-4). The A’s had just four 6-74—150 Pred Wilt, Gowanie |Nick Weslock, Essex {Harold Brink, Blythefield Bob Reynolds, Washtenaw Mike Andonian, Pontiac Cliff Taylor, Spring Lake Glenn Johnson, Grosse Ue Randall Ahern, Rea Run B- ‘noi hits off Bob Shaw (4-0). who gave ohn 4 epointe .. 76-75—151 , — ——. Rekepee e re UP @ run in the sixth on Ray Jim Punsten, Plum Refew 75:76—181 Boone’s 2-out . single and, Bob o e = wee - J dou Don Mead, Pitim Hollow... 75-17—1$3|CeTV’S double. Shaw gave way in Perry Byer, 3 6 Bigs 16-4 — 18 the ninth, needing Turk Lown's orge Linklater, Red Run ....78-76-154) relief and center fielder Jim Lan- ck Whiting Bi phen ALIPikis spe 54) dis’ diving eatch of Dick Willianis’ john Deivee. Detroit .. 7- 11-3086 liner for the final out with the ne ard 78-77—155 bases ded. ~ Hermte Miller Jr. Bistbetied 80-75—155 loa ac . ‘ -85—}. Bud : Run . 7. 71-T9—1 id = “ Frank Coanéliy, Oo Gowante— “Tho 156 Ted Williarns brought in the Tom Skovér: Meadowbrook". fa-Te=tee}@ing tun for Boston with a sacri- Ya aie McDonaid, Beitr’ -_ i a fice fly in the fifth, then doubled Bill “Josdain, Meadowbrook “71-80—157,and. scored the winning run on” in — pomp mo en prin wari 187/Frank Malzone’s double in the Waty i. creatine . g ~js1 | seventh. Dick Geérnert’s homer & ar n - Ker eter Saginaw “tense scored ythe other two Red Sox ac er. hmoor 32° ‘uns second Ralfph fistrom Dearborn 82-76 — ; ! . in the against Camilo Reread si” CAM vod’ We aenpiie- Wal, bores ty John . n 160 Jack Aldred. Ferndale 89-81-1681 von # despite Nat homers by Dr..D. J. Jaffar, Det. GC. - %3-83—166 6no Bertioa.and-Jim Lemon * MAY 23, 1959 SATURDAY, DIVIDER WALE — To let more light into the sma ning yom the ¢ opened the upper p ! ie teresting shelves Sut of A planter box adds color. There is a een. dn ee : Ace Ad om me of fieldstor 4 jaior WLS niture jons on th tsie window is painted d e white he wall a Kite h- THE s ‘ ” at the left. Walls are cor irk green wih avo he chars. al is the PONTIAC PRESS PON'TIAC, Your ! Neighbor’s House MICHIGAN an 5 eee iS Colliers Raise Roof of Log House at Lake ODELL Editor shore of JANET Press Home By Pontiac Out on the north Cooley there area number of log houses. Most of these were cottages that deled into vear- Lake originally summer have been rem round homes. On of them be longs to the David Colliers When the Colliers bought thou house had three rooms,.a !ath and.a porch. From the outside it looked hike thousands of other cottage Now, five vears later, all that is changed First of all, the Colliers added more floor space py building an nd a second house. Mrs. what. she back floor over- the entir: Collier told Mr. Cottier wanted and he did it in his spare time. At the beginning, he knew nothing whatever about home addition at the building. The log structure is painted red. The upper story.is whife with blue. and white shutters. windows between. the ins in this mm are zreen. Most nt color Pontiac Press Photes by Eddie Vanderworp en Jhat sparkles. There is a sheer yellow ruffle above the winddéws on the on to the ériginal house. inside. Outside is a woodén awning. This room was added living _ feet. Outside liers have added a flagstone , the front door the Col- patio, Seven | fe@t was added-to the ing rdom to make it 17 by 21 a Ve ~# ~ f , The mdst of . The old fieldstone direplace a ane ee { j —- - «Sag rt i a te eee ‘ ae: Pad vd 7 was replaced by one of red brick. Even the hearth is brick. Jalousie windows were in- stalled between this room and the porch. These can be ‘com- pletely covered by deep coral draperies under bamboo cor- nices. The walls and carpeting are green. All the furniture is light. Much of it is bamboo ut some custom-made pieces are birch. A divider wali is used between the living room and dining room and on the stair wall. In- to the front of a closet door, a LOG EXTERIOR — The original lines of the. David Collier home on the north shore of Cooley Lake can be seen in this picture. Cothers added the second story and a wing lots in this neighborhood, the There’s Something on the back. Like theirs is long and narrow . . under the stairs the Colliers built a bookcase. On the porch the walls deep sandalwood, Carpeting is brown and beige. Furniture has wrought iron frames. The sofa is avocado and the chairs cush- ioned in gold CORAL AND GREEN In the dining room the are walls are coral while the living room rug is extended into this area. Under the divider shelves there is a planter, Beige, black and coral draperies. frame a jalousie window. All the furniture is The house has a ckground for LIVIN painted deep green Cushions on the chairs are avocado. . The kitchen is a-dream room that any homemaker-—would, Ps, love. At the back there are three good-sized windows. Only a sheer yellow ruffle orna- ments them. There are almost three walls of counter space as well as a peninsula break-" fast bar which ean alse be utilized tor werk space. Cabinets are white with metal trim. All counter tops are yellow. Accent color is red. This appears (Continued On Page 16, Col. | 3) d is ; gay ‘look with the logs painted red and the clap- board a sparkling white. In the rear there are blue and white shut- ters. It took Mr. ‘Collier five years to complete his work on this ~~ heuse. Mrs. Collier says she was the adviser. NEW at Judah Lake Estates “The FAIRWOOD" WITH ATTACHED GARAGE See All the Features‘ of This Planned Subdivision LAKE PRIVILEGES @ PAVED STREETS 80’x125' LOTS @ COMMUNITY WATER PAVED APPROACHES @ SERVICE WALKS SCHOOLS NEARBY @ SHOPPING CENTER Ve MILE @ WOODED AREA 3 MILES NORTH OF PONTIAC ON JOSLYN ROAD FROM PONTIAC: Drive North on Perry to Joslyn Turn Left 5 miles . OR North on Saginaw to Montcalm Turn Right to Joslyn. Turn Left 5 Miles. FROM. ROCHESTER: Weston Walton to joslyn Turd Right 342 Miles. | t 4 ae | ” -_ f 5) co f i s« tf WA | 2h ted lok 2h ok Ce o oh 2 ae ee me! eh Ue eS US Se ee Rete aA aby Judah Lake Estates. NATIONAL NOMeES DLORAH. BUILDING co 82: OKV.A. TOTAL MOVE-IN COST! $72 PER MONTH (Not a Penny More) “Incl: PRINCIPAL, INTEREST, INSURANCE, TAXES F.H.A. TERMS AVAILABLE RPA: ee. 2} f 33 pete NE he “tgs .. Rigi striae Sie ce ctl ai pons Mi ital: cnceacalilapapaill ‘| 5 ‘ ME Dot e sa j a . 4 E F b/ Ree * ; 4 + 13 , 4 a g Ma ae aes. 4 «2 eis + FY S&S | ion) ate 14 Oe i. a et ‘The Features of This 48°x24‘ * @ Attached Garage— 5 Storage Space @ 3 Full Bedrooms— Double Closets , @ 12x14 Master Bedroom ome ver ot teh ? i « oa DS OE el nth tel Key Rieti t | FE 2-9122 * SS SO, Se — wee ll UL ELS SS, nine te to 8 A.B Bn & BD ape \ A i he f THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1959 eer OoresT=s vg aft? orf Ae . j i E. J. DUNLAP | Custem Bulbders 1370 Sq° Ft! Brick Ranch Home with full 1} Block Basement and a Large Two-Car Plastered Garage. Plastered Walls s ) wa gy perete dining reom Birch kitchen with eating space G.E. even and range 2 baths with ceramic tile & fan 2 natural fireplaces; raised hearth Storms and sereens Entrance is 60 sq. ft. of slate Studie a _ living reom with © acoustic nen A epee neled living teem Select eak floors Septic tank, copper plumbing — ALL THis FOR $19,950 ON YOUR LOT — Mode! Shown by Appointment | is one of five im the Decorator JNLAP_ _ FE 8-1198 | project Packet’ 50 for $1. These | MAKE A SCREEN to suit your needs and Larmonize with your room. Pattern 462, which shows every step in making frames of any size and finishing with hard- board, wallpaper, fabric or plas- i tic, is 25 cents. This pattern also’ Let us build you a substantially, well designed custom home to fit you needs, your budget, and your lot—and still cost no more. FRERICKS Bros.-Bildors 7520 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Se Sa patterns can help you to have'a | better home. Orders under $1 add 10 cents service charge. The | Pontiac Press Pattern Dept. Bed- | ford Hills, New York. Aluminum Nails Will Never Stain construction: is f |heating and cooling on a year-| y jround basis, many old-type homes|en into ‘account, there’s a better’ are installing these central units|chance in 1959 than ever before g to the American Ga@S/that most families can afford the Aenocistien, Homeowners find that |juxury of whole-house, year-round = conn. . While the trend iri new home definitely toward the cost more than pays for itself in added comfort and the increased value of their property x*i* * In homes where forced warm air heating systems already exist, air conditioning can be added at a furnace, blowers, ductwork and registers are used for both heat ing and cooling. FHA APPROVES * * * “No otherwise acceptable cred- over $15,000 should be pated cost of air conditioning. ig that the savings on heat, on The builders’ maxim that no home is better than its nails ex-| plains the phenomenal growth in| the use of aluminum nails in less | than a decade. Nichols strong aluminum alloy | nails, as used by many leading 1—Quote you a price on your plan, or a plan designed” for you. / 2—Help you with, the financing: 3—Build you a complete. home with good workmanship and worry free dealings. LET US: ‘damage or be weskened by rust | caused by rain, snow or moisture | condensation, yet are clean, easy "to apply inexpensive. Alumi- jnum alloy nails end the need for | nail rust stains. * \that expense, resulting from air con- ditioning, added cost of operating the unit during the cooling season. * * relatively low cost, since the same, | In December 1957, the FHA sent | the following directive to all of its | jreecest offices: more than offset the | “Within a few years any house is not air conditioned will builders can never cause rust stain probably be obsolescent so FHA' should start encouraging the in- clusion of air conditioning.” * * * These are just a few of the nu- i f merous advantages offered by cen-| ,costly repainting jobs caused by|tral air conditioning. Experts have lestimated that within the next few A special etching process in- years, year- -round climate control creases the holding power of alu-|Will be just as important to homes ~\iminum alloy nails and makes) | them sterilely clean. Since they | cannot rust, the FHA approves’ them for use without @ounteéf-/ isinking or. puttying. They hold/| paint better than the building ma- | terials which they fasten. Where aluminum, redwood or | red cedar are to be applied, | aluminum alloy, nails are a must. Ordinary nails are at- tacked by these materials or do damage to the materials, them- selves. Both tke Réd Cedar | Shingle Bureau and the Cali- fornia Redwood Association recommend the use of aluminum nails with their products. | The most impressive recent suc- cess of aluminum nails is their adoption by almost all of the prin- jcipal manufacturers of asbestos siding; who now supply aluminum nails with their products, instead J of the traditional steel or copper- alloy nails. Exhaustive testing by the asbestos manufacturers proyed that aluminum alloy nails pos- sessed excellent driving qualities, ! great holding power and matched the long life of far more expen- sive fasteners , In roofing, wall ccnstruction, uty to your home and grounds. It'sa for flower- ing shrubs and vines. Nationall known Anchor Fence never ae annua! painting. Yor Cat er 6 fon ent FE 5-747] + Ne Down Payment - 36 Months to Pay + Fiest Peyment in july ence Factory Installed nchor V siding, fences, dry- in fact wherever nails may be ex- posed ¢o moisture, aluminum nails are now the accepted standard. They are widely available at lum- ber yards and hardware stores. — ——— Use Sponge on Stick Narrow spaces behind stoves or between cabinets can be reached with a little ingenuity. Use a thin. long strip of wood, perhaps a descarded vardstock> to reach into awkward areas. Glue sponges on the stick and use a brush for tight spots When building prices seem TOO TALL... \¢ VEIDRICK ¥,7% CALL! One to FE 4-6909 74 HOURS EVERY DAY © GARAGES Lumber Forever @ BREEZEWAYS © DRIVEWAYS @ REMODELING © ROOM ADDITIONS © ATTICS FINISHED ® REC. ROOMS Some progressive lumber com panies are now using helicopters to seed cutover lands and help guarantee America a perpetual supply of timber. Forest tree plantings on private land were up 30 per cent last year, compared with 1956. © : © REPAIRING FREE ESTIMATES No Money Down 60 Months to Pay NEIDRICK BUILDING SERVICE 65 Court Drive Pontiac, Mich. —— New home construction for 1959, previously-estimated at 1.3 million units, may exceed 1.5 million units if the current rate is main- tained. New home _ construction -for the first quarter of 1959 topped the same period in 1958 by over 30 per cent.. ~ SLHTSPOSICOCHEAECHHTE CHOPSCSCSOPSPSOSSOSTCCECR ALT EHOOSSC EO LESAN. e PPO SSSS ESS HHO SS HET OST OSS SESE SE EE EEE MOS AVAILABLE for HOME OWNERS \ MORTEAGE MONEY Conventional Bank Mortgages or Refinancing of Land C ontracts desiring: Applications can be made at our Main Office or any of our four branches. PONTIAC STATE, BANK MAIN OFFICE Saginaw at Lawrence Street : 3 In Downtewn Pontiac's Tallest Building Auburn Heights Dalwin Ave. at Yale Drayton, Plains Miracle. Mile Center ; \ Member of FDIC lawn furniture, | The Heatilator is a hollow steel! form built into the fireplace. It saves and circulates heat wasted up ordinary chimneys. Eliminates common causes of smoking. Heats cabins in chilly weather. Saves labor and materials. Proyed every- where, SIBLEY COAL & SUPPLY CO. 140 N. CASS AVE. FE 5-8163 “inl SCATILA TOR awe. » W. Walton- EEE Mode! W. Montcalm Central Air Conditioning, Goes Into Old Houses as automatic transmission is to | automobiles, When all considerations are tak- BUY A GIANT HOME 8 LARGE ROOMS 1200 Sq. Ft. of Living Area @ 3 Bedrooms @ 1% Baths @ Face Brick @ Low Taxes @ Big Kitchen @ Family Room commeTe. $12,990 $540 Down, $88 per Month Take M-50 east to Van Dyke. Turn right onto Clinton River Rd., to 19 | it application for a house costing | -—— turned | down just because of the antici- | The best opinion of the industry | cleaning, laundry, and medical | W. Longfellow Mile Rd. Turn left, follow signs to Giant Model. MODEL PHONE RE 2-1622 = NOW for Far Less . Free Estimates — We Deliver Anywhere! CONCRETE STEP COMPANY 5 6497 Highland Rd. (M-59) IP PPMECEIPTITtrreerti Eee EEE EEL r ee eery Cc Zz =f 7) = mm ~ For @ Step in Beauty CHECK THESE FEATURES: | = © One-Piece Construction = © Permanent Beavty—Rugged Dependability Satety Tread Reduces Slipping UP TO 42 SQ. FT. OF PORCH SPACE aencene een eeeeeeenepeeeeeneeeeenee " OR 3-7715 wg TTA ——_—— + ROOM—_—. ee - CL yz e ° SIDING —— GARAGES— C6 e Se SHED NESS SASS SSS AS LOW N, ADDITIONS $995" |. AS ALUMINUM SIDING AS LOW AS “495” \\ a 1) GARAGES AS LOW AS 695” Including Cement NO PAYMENT ‘TIL AUGUST YOU IN! % NO Other Costs! FHA — 60 MONTHS TO PAY NO MONEY DOWN Operators on Duty aig BEAD MOVES . CONSTRUCTION CO 92 W. HURON—PONTIAC Che Carpet Queen EVERY ROOM FULLY — CARPETED SEE THE 240 Sq. Ft. DREAM KITCHEN a * .3 BIG BEDROOMS c a , SALES BY JIM WILLIAMS FE 4-0547_ a