| v 
The Weather 
U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast 
Light frost tonight. 
Fair, warmer tomorrew. 
(Details Page 2) THE PONTIAC PRESQMAKE OVER!   
  
117th YEAR: kkk UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS ' * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1959—52 PAGES “- ladancng Je 
  
Rotary Honors Students 
$. i s abs hae hi hee 
LUNCHEON GUESTS — The 
Club yesterday honored high-average Pontiac 
high school seniors and an exchange student 
from France. Shown here at the club's noon 
luncheon’ are (from left) Jackie Baron, a Freggh 
student who has attended Pontiac Central this 
year; James Lyons, #11 First 
Beverly Donato, 2124 Ostrum     
Pontiac Rotary 
W. Lawrence St 
St., Northern; 
St., Waterford tour Europe this Township, -Northern; and Harrison ‘Munson, 57 
Chapman St. Other students honored were Rick 
Serwin, 189 Oneida Rd.; Nancy Denaldson, 153 
hawk Rd., all of Pontiac Central. The club aiso | 
presented a $100 check to Marilyn Vernon, 158 
W. Rundell St., a Pontiac Central singer who will It'll Be 2 Miles Long! — |   
Plan Giant A-Smashe 4   
  Death on the Highway -., 3County Men 
Die in Smashup 
Near Millington © 2 Cars Crash Head-On 
as ‘One Tries to Pass 
Semitrailer Truck 
_ A head-on, two-car crash 
\Claimed the lives of three 
Oakland County men on 
M15.in Tuscola County yes- 
terday. 
Dead are, Louis Millman, 
55, of 31700 Nottingham 
Rd., Franklin; Lio W. Swit-   | 
Pentiac Press Photo 
; and Vicki McLaughlin, 193 Mo- 
summer as a choir member. 
  
School Board Sticking 
to Firm Stand on Band 
By MAX E. SIMON 
With a denial that new policies two to one school period and a pro- action, but rather disappointed, and ducing band practice time from, \zer, 94, of 4922 Carroll Lake 
\Rd., Commerce Township; 
land Walter Dunn, 78, re- 
| portedly from Milford. 
According to Tuscola County 
Deputy Sheriff Frank Kroswek, 
the smashup occurred one and a 
half miles north of Millington 
when. Dunn attempted to pass a 
semi-trailer truck and collided with 
Millman’s oncoming car. Switzer 
“We are not surprised at your Was a passenger in the Dunn car. 
“From the looks of the dam- 
are highly indignant at the divert- age,” Kroswek said, “they both 
ing and delaying tactics used by were going at a high rate of 
the Board.” | speed.” Both cars were demeol- 
oe ls ished. ‘   = 
COLLIDED HEAD-ON — Three Pontiac area 
men-died yesterday in this two-car crash near AP, Wirephete 
a truck into the path of the second car: A Bridge- 
port state trooper is shown photographing the The Board's prepared statement | reek: 
icharged that statements by band 
rehearse two of six school periods program. ssc fe 
The Board wa kied by me 
bers of the Parents a — =f 
Alumni Commitfee after a pre«} Both policies were discontinued 
pared statement was read, reject- last September. 
img numerous demands made by} After the Board's decision was; 
the Committee. | announced last. night, Roy Mac- 
* x * jAfee, chairman of the committee, 
The Committee had protested re-'said:   
Nash Admits Firing Shot 
in Lassiter Murder Plot By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. 
Charlies Nash thought his ex-convict friend, Richard 
: Jones, was doing him “a big favor” when he paid $150 to 
| bail him oyt of a Chattanooga jail last month. 
But what Nash didn’t know at the time was that Jones 
had had his prison buddy eyed for about a month as the 
~*triggerman in a “gun-for- 
hore” plot to murder Royal 
Cape Canaveral Oak car dealer Parvin (Bill) 
Lassiter. 
| In a confession to Wayne County 
LJ i] 
Hit by Strike tal shot from a .45 caliber Army 
revolver * which killed Lassiter 
Carpenters Picket Gates Apri! 6. 
of Missile Center; Could , Nas™._ *% of Chattanooga.   
‘Prosecutor Samuel H. Olsen last 
jnight, Nash admitted firing the fa- 
Jones, 27, of Rossville, Ga., and 
Affect 5,000 Rey C. (Buck) Hicks, 36, the 
| man, named as the instigator of 
: | the plot, were te be arraigned on CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) 
—Union carpenters struck the liret-degres murder charges this 
missile test center here today in 
_—s ee ldetectives last night that he was 
* * bel being held in jail in Tennessee 
Pickets were set up at the charged with carrying a concealed 
north and south gates of both the weapon when Jones paid out $150 
center and nearby Patrick Air to release him. 
Force Base. Two men were &t * * * 
each post, carrying placards read-| “] knew he was a friend of mine 
ing: “Carpenters employes on but I didn’t know why he was 
strike for higher wages.” ispringing me,” Nash was quoted 
Picketing was orderly. las saying. 
: ; _| “I've got a job for you to do up 
cand Coty nis of them at north,” Nash said Jones told him 
the cape — are involved, The “hen he was released. Nash said strike could affect about 5,000 of Jones then told him he “wanted me the estimated 10,000 employes at ito take care of somebody. 
the Cape and an additions! 2.000 ACCEPTS OFFER 
at the air base and other con- | Nash told Olsen and State Police 
The Carpénters Union, Local With Jones April 3 “there would 
1685, decided to strike after an be money in it for you.’ 
8'-hour negotiating session with ~ However, there wasn't as much members of Associated General) money involved as Nash and the 
Contractors failed to produce & other two expected. Nash told 
new contract. | detectives he and Jones were in- It was learned the union is ask-| formed by Hicks that Lassiter 
ing an unannounced pay boost). always carried at least $5,000 on 
retroactive to April 1, when the) him, and was sure he would have 
old contract with the contractors) this much upon his return from 
¢.-®& ® (Continued on Page 43, Col. 1) 
The contractors have offered a 
Staggered 35-cent-an-hour wage 
package in a two-year pact. They 
insist the first Scent boost not In? Today's Press FER SE Re LE EES 
  nea be Tetroactive. bah eae ook Se Sa 
H ; Comics ....... cecbecpnecens QM 
Cat Rides the Rails County News ...,....0.0505 41 
BOGNOR REGIS, England | Editorials eeteten cual i 
(UPI)—This pussy cat went to 
London, but didn’t see the Queen. 
  Elfreda King said her Siamese | Markets ...... teseeseceeeees A 
kitten climbed on. the under | Obituaries ...:.......as0-019 
carriage of a train, made the | Sports .......:0.ss.se00-- S135 
120-mile round-trip to London | Theaters ........ pitede ss 36, 37 
and back, and ended up the? TV’and Radio Porgrams....51 
next day “black as soet and | Wilson, Earl ...... ob ds wens 
smelling of smoke,"’ Women’s Pages ..,.......28-25 
< \ 4. } 
will bring about the “inevitable de- hibition against junior high stu- 
terioration” of the Pontiac Central dents practicing with the senior 
High School Band, the Board of high instrumentalists, 
Education last night refused to, nous test aight turned o | backtrack on recent changes in the at that the band 
instrumental mysic department eet or 
{with junior high students 
Nash said he accepted the offer 
struction projects in the county. | and was told on the way to Detroit: supporters in the past left the im- 
Ments were made on the basis of 
“conclusions . ,. . drawn from a 
ifew malcontents” and that judg- 
ments and decisions were ‘formed 
by hearsay from individua 
Ihave had little or no working 
dures.”’ 
The Board added: 
tions, for they represent an attack 
on the integrity, metives and 
| | 
are not borne out by the facts.” 
“It is unfortunate that efforts by 
the administrative staff and Board two-lane highway, Switzer was di- M24 in Lapeer early this morning 
to study the instrumental music, Tecting him to his summer cottage when the ambulance veered off, 
‘program with the view of serving Which Dunn was considering pur-|the 
been chasing from him 
labeled as lack of interest and sup- 
port, and an effort to reduce the the accident. better have all people 
level of: musical excellence,’ 
Board statement said 
¥ * * 
| The Board called it “unfortunate 
that the leaders of the Band Par- 
ents and Alumni Committee have ,crash, Dunn died later in a Sagi-|— 
plication that administrative judg- "*“ hospital. 
| Switzer and Millman died in the 
; 
* * * 
Delbert Storms of Millington, the 
truck driver, told police he saw 
both cars coming and blinked his 
is who lights in an effort to get the Dunn « 
car to slow up “but they kept 
‘knowledge of departmental proce- | ©oing.”* 
Storms said he pulled his truck | 
almost entirely off the road but 
“These are serious implica- _ had to stop because of a tre. 
Millman was vice president and 
secrétary - treasurer of Millman) 
judgment of the Board of Eduea- (Brothers Inc. The -firm operates| 
tion and school administration. (he 25 Vanity Fair shops in Mi¢hi- 
| Furthermore, these implications (94n  Millman was en route to Bay 
City when the crash took place 
Dunn. was beading south on the 
  Both cars were. demolished in 
the . ; 
Light Frost Again, 
Weatherman Says The Weather Bureau forecasts refused to meet with administra-! 
tors to receive and discuss in- 
formation which is available 
| “In this refusal they have 
demonstrated an unwillingness to | 
| took objectively at all facets of (13), and warmer weather with the was unable to tell officers how 
the situation, and have assumed jhigh near 38. 
the privilege of making critical (northwest winds at 12 - 
judgments without the obligation ,jj) diminish to 5 - 10. miles tonight.|He also was taken to Lapeer Coun-) of examining all facts. 
| MacAfee insisted that his group for Sunday. 
had sought to learn both sides of 
ithe controversy, but that the Board Perature in downtown Pontiac pre-'crash. The ambulance was a total 
‘tried: to dictate impossible terms Ceding 8 a.m. The reading at 1 wreck, police said 
for any meeting. 
The oBard announced that the 
scheduling of band is senior highs 
for one period a day would be con- 
tinued. But, ‘the Board added, 
there was no. prohibition against 
| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) 
  
‘Crazy Mixed-Up Sign 
ABILENE, Tex. (UPI)<Sign 
in an Abilene restaurant; ‘Good 
hot chilly.” | | scattered light frost again tonight. | 
Skies will be partly cloudy and the 
temperature near 38 
Saturday's prediction calls for 
Today's north to 
18 miles 
Fair and warmer is the outlook 
Thirty - nine was the lowest tem- | 
p.m. was 45 
  
No More Free Candy 
LONDON (UPI)—British Euro- 
pean Airways announced yester- 
day it has stopped treating pas- | 
| sengers to free candy. A spokes- 
man said the sweets had been | 
given out to prevent ear popping, | 
but pressurized cabins stopped | 
popped ears. Besides, the candy | 
cost the airline $22,400 a year, | 
he said. | Millington. Police said one driver speeded around 
  
CrashKills2 ~Gromyko Backs Up 
in Ambulance ~Studying»West Plan aed i fo La 
Lapeer Mishap Claims GENEVA (®-THE Western Package proposal for Ger- 
Driver, Patient; Third many ran into a wall of Soviet opposition today. 
Man Near Death ~~ 
and a to 
ambulance en route from Westrmiey Nikita Khrushchev insists that West Berlin alone 
Branch to Detroit were killed on be turned into what he calls a free city. 
The completeness of the Herter plan for Germany and 
opposite side of the road andjtS major concessions to” 
struck a tree. ‘Russia appeared today to 
* * * s ’ . 
‘have stunned Soviet For-; | K 
Be ole une in ne eign Minister Andrei ror- Be gium 5 Ing back of the ambulance with the 
patient, was critically injured and myko into making a Care- 
is not expected to live, Lapeer po- ful study of the cocument [OUTING Detroit lice said. . 
“ee instead of a snap rejection.   
Dead on arrival at Lapeer The Communist newspaper Prav. 
County General Hospital were the | : s > oat | 
paticet, Fred. Stimp. B, ef \da and the Communist East Ger-| Monarch Wil! ry 
rural West Branch, and driver ™ans condemned the Western Through Past, Future}! 
|plan as muddled and tangled. This, ; ~ 
lreaction was expected. Gromyko Goes to Chicago Today 
also was expected to reject the! 
plan but only after studying the; .DETROIT # — A swift tour of 
4,500-word document. |Michigan’s past, present and fu- 
The Soviets betrayed their sur- [ture was planned today for Bel- 
prise when a Russian spokesman | giym's bachelor King Baudouin, criticized the “secrecy” sur- | x * * 
| 
} Allen J. King, 55, of Detroit. 
The driver's assistant was identi- 
fied only as Robert A. Martin. tHe 
the accident happened because of| 
the seriousness of his condition.! 
ty Hospital 
* * * 
There were no witnesses to the | rounding the plan. Some details | 7). 98 year-old monarch arrived 
had leaked out in advance at jin Detroit yesterday. He was 
the foreign ministers conference scheduled to leave the Motor City 
here and the Russians pounced |}, piane for Chicago at 2:45 p.m. The ambulance was taking om them as unrealistic if not | today. 
Slimp, a heart patient, to the U.S.) hopeless. ‘ me , , e es 
Public .Health Service hospital ore leaving, udou in Detroit. Gromyko asked to lead off the planned to visit .the fa 
debate in today's fifth session of} 
the Big Four - foreign ministers. | 
He met Selwyn Lloyd and Chris-} 
tian A. Herter, the British and) numerous exhibits of Americana | 
American foreign ministers, at a and is noted fer its museem 
dinner party. last night. Inform-| which contains aptomobiles and 
ants said Gromyko told the West-! airplanes built in the infancy of 
ern leaders: those industries. 
1, He intends advocating early | 4 trip to Ford Motor Co.'s giant 
| gp oe page ee |Rouge plant also was planned to 
ee ee ee igive the king a look at modern   Greenfield Village started by the 
. . late Henry Ford for a glimpse of 
Truth Was Not in Him 
MOSCOW (UPI) — Nasretdin 
Ablasov, a scientific worker at 
the Kirghizian Academy of Sci- 
ences, was hauled to a_ police 
Station on drunk charges while | 
gaily reciting in Latin; “The 
truth is to be found in wine.”   
    Convair Blast Demolishes B58 Bomber. 
PLANE EXPUODES—One man was killed and 13 were injured 
when this B58 jet bomber exploded and burned on the flight line . 
at Convair Corp.’s Fort Worth, Tex. plant yesterday. Here firemen 
3 ~~ |auto production techniques. 
Aglimpse of the future awaited 
  : reunification of Germany 
: security system. It would! 
The patient and driver of an start by uniting East and West Berlin. But Soviet Pre-| bs 
lke Discloses 
$100 Million 
Project of U.S. Tells 500 Scientists 
Monster Would Take 
6 Years to Build 
From Our News Wires 
NEW YORK — President 
Eisenhower last night an- 
nounced plans for a new 
$100,000,000 atom smasher 
—a machine two miles long 
and by far the largest of its 
kind ever built. : 
The President addressed 
about 500 scientists assem- 
bled at the Waldorf-As- 
toria hotel for a symposium 
on basic research sponsored 
by the National Academy of 
Sciences, the American 
Assn. for the Advancement 
of Science, and the Alfred 
P. Sloan Foundation. 
He told the gathering the pro 
posed new atom scasher would be 
“by far the largest of its kind 
ever built.” It would take, six. 
years to complete,     The Chief Executive said the 
scientific progress of this coun- 
try thus far was due targely te 
the American concept . of ; 
dom. — 
    
  Reds Work 
on Similar 
Atom Prober 
SAN FRANCISCO w — A 100. 
million dollar scientific monster to 
the past. The village contains “ke the greatest assault ever on 
the atom will be America’s next 
entry in the field 
search, 
* * * 
Tt will be by far the most power. 
ful thing of its kind, although 
Soviet scientists are working on 
ee fgr -an instrument something 
ike it. ; 
The American machine will be 
      'Baudouin at nearby Monroe where 
the Enrico Fermi atomic power| 
;plant is located. ‘| 
| x * * 
Some 200 of Baudouin's fellow 
| countrymen were at Detroit Metro- 
politan Airport to greet the King 
yesterday when he arrived after a 
three-day state visit at Washing- 
ton. Small children in the crowd 
waved black-and-gold Belgian flags 
as well as American flags. 
= * * * 
From the alrport, the King and 
his official party were taken to 
the General Motors Technical 
Center near Detroit where Bau- 
douins lunched with GM Presi- 
dent John F. Gordon. A tour of: 
the center followed. - 
In the evening, the visiting mon- 
arch went to a reception for De-| 
troit's Belgian community. The; 
city numbers some 10,000 of. its 
residents’ as Belgian-born and an- 
other 40,000 as being direct 
Belgian ties, 
’ Later he dined with Mr. and 
Mrs, Henry Ford Il at their home 
in suburban Grosse Pointe Farms, 
Simenize or Blue Corel, Touch Up 
aint to match, Pick-up and deliver. 14 
. Alley off W. Pike St. PE 58-7426. 
    
4 AP Wirephoto 
spray fomite on the fuselage of the’ burning plane. ‘The aircraft 
was undergoing a routine check when a series, of explosions ripped 
through it, and a-huge ball of fire enveloped the swept-winged jet,   
    * two miles long. One of its big- 
gest tasks will be to “see” a 
were set in motion in New York 
the 
now   of nuclear re- ~    
       
     
         
         
       
     
   TH -o* / 
  
  
Goes to House; | 
Due for Defeat State's General Fund 
Empty After Today's 
Payout to Schools 
  LANSING \P—True to their vow, 
Republicans rammed a second use 
(sajes) tax bill through the Sen- 
ate today and steered it toward the 
House where a similar measure 
went down to defeat two days ago 
The vote was 20-13. Sen. John P 
Smeekens (R-Coldwater), on rec 
ord as opposed to any new taxes 
sided with Democrats in voting 
against the measure. Sen. Perry, 
Greene (R-Grand Rapids) declined 
to vote. 
The House, evenly split be- | 
tween Republicans and Demo- | 
erats, likely will give the bill 
the same treatment it did the 
first. | 
Sen. Carlton H. Morris (R-Kala | 
mazoo), sparkplug of the Senatct 
use tax drive, urged Democrats to! 
“let the people have the type of | 
tax they prefer.’’ | 
“The people do not want an in | 
come tax,”’ he said. 
Sen. Harold M. Ryan (D-Detroit), 
Senate minority leadér, called i! 
“an absolutely unworkable bill, a) 
shabby piece of draftsmanship, a! 
hoax and a mess of unk deserving 
only to be junked.” 
| 
Despite the Senate action, com. | 
promise talks gained momentum | 
in both the House and Senate. | 
House Democrats, responding to, 
steady prodding by Republicans 
for a party tax program, yesterday 
endorsed a tax package incorporat 
ing a personal income tax and a 
corporate income levy. It ws 
laid beside the Republican sales| 
tax increase as a basis for compro | 
mise | 
  * * * 
Republican leaders in both the 
House and Senate said they would) 
spective caucuses next week. Ryan} 
and Sen. Frank D. Beadle (¢R-St.| 
Clair), GOP majority leader, said| 
“they would suggest appointment of | 
Senate commiftees to sit in with| 
House Republicans and Democrats | 
on the compromise talks. | 
The new Democratic plan, | 
drafted by a seven-man nego- 
tiating committee and endorsed 
by a Democratic caucus as a 
starting point for negotiations, | 
would produce about 144_million 
dollars in new revenue. 
It proposed a six per cent cor- 
poration profits tax, a seven per 
cent tax on income of banks and) 
other financial institutions and a 
graduated personal income tax, 
ranging {from two to six per cent 
Together, the three taxes would 
yield 220 million dollars 
As offsets, Democrats proposed 
repeal of 8 million dollars in cur 
rent taxes, including the corporate 
franchise tax. most of the intangi-/ } 
bles tax and the corporations’ 
share of the business activities 
tax, 
|   
Scouts to Mark 
Ist Anniversary 
of Pontiac Trail 
The first anniversary hike along 
the Chief Pontiac Trail of the Clin-|Presen 
ton Valley Council of the Boy Scou 
will be held on Sunday, June 14. 
The hike will start from Kent Understanding in the community. jtween the North and South are obligation to evaluate the effect- 
Lake and go to the Proud Lake | Harrison Munson, the son of Mr. |rapidly disappearing because of the |iveness of personnel in carrying 
Chief Pontiac campsite, at which'and Mrs. Smile Munson, 57 Chap-|movement of industry to the South | out these programs. 
time scouts will present a pro-!man_ St., was presented the,and a pouring of Southern labor | | 
gram for the general public 
invited on the anniversary trek, in-} 
cluding troops from the 
Clinton Valley Council outside 
The Chief Pontiac Trail is open 
from March 1 to Nov. 1 each year 
to any First Class or Explorer 
Scouts 
% 
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report 
PONTIAC AND VICINITY — onsider- 
able cloudiness and continued quite cool 
teday. High 5? Partly cloudy with scat- 
tered light frest tonight Low “6 Tomer- 
rew fair and becoming warmer High 58 jaward 
has       
HOSPITAL VOLUNTEERS — Four volunteers pose at Pontiac 
General Hospital, representing their respective service organiza- 
tions. From left are Ralph Forman, of the Oakland County Red 
Cross Chapter; Mrs. Harry Stowell, of the women’s auxiliary; Mrs.~ National Hospital Week, which ends tomorrow. wee ee a hee 7 te Meee    - » 
a 
ee ax 
Fal 
a SE Fide 
on 
Arlie Leake, a grey lady; and Rev _— 
Bi? a 
Pontiac Press Phote 
. Easton-H. Hazard, of the chap- 
lain service. Helping to make Pontiac General a pleasanter place 
for patients, the four organizations received recognition during E PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1959 
‘ 
Chief Engineer 
at Edison Dies Birmingham __ Resident 
Wylie Groves Suffers 
Fatal Heart Attack 
BIRMINGHAM — Chief planning 
engineer for Detroit Edison Co., 
Wylie E. Groves, 63, of 542 West- 
chester Way} suffered a fatal heart 
attack late yesterday afternoon at 
his office in Detroit. 
* * * 
A lifelong resident of the area 
and a native of Troy Township, Mr. 
Groves had been with Detroit Edi- 
son 40 years. 
He retired as president of 
Birmingham's Board of Educa- 
tion last June. A member of the 
Board 18 years be served as 
treasurer during most of that 
period. 
r. Groves was a member of 
First Methodist Church of- Birm- 
ingham, Birmingham Lodge 44 
F&AM and the High 12 Club. 
* * * 
He is survived by his wife Esther, 
three daughters, Mrs. Ralph Hoh- 
man of Forelame Park, N. J., Mrs. 
Bruce VanDusen of Birmingham 
and Mary Ellen, a_ student at 
Michigan State University. 
memorial fund at First Metho- 
dist Church, 
The body is at the Bell Chapel 
of William R. Hamilton Co.     
ACCEPTS URBAN LEAGUE AWARD — Harrison Munson 
(left), of 57 Chapman St., accepts the ninth annual Urban League   Press Phote Pentiac (Continued From Page One) , 
jextending ‘band practice time by, 
' scheduling rehearsals before and 
“after school. 
The Board also disclosed that 
the bands at Pontiac Northern 
‘and Central would be indepen- 
dent and seif-sustaining. ‘‘This is 
the practice in all other aspects 
As for its barring of junior high 
imusicians from the high school 
band, the Board said:: 
* * * 
“Programs, activities and the or- 
ganizations of each school are de- 
termined as appropriate to the age 
of pupils involved. They are and 
should be different... 
* * * 
‘Junior high pupils who partici- 
pate with the senior high <chool! 
lmarching band in the fall must| 
attend rehearsals which begin at}! 
7:30 a.m. This puts a drain on their | 
physical resources. 
“They arrive late at the junior 
high school They must attend 
some evening rehearsals. As 
measured against pupil welfare 
find at each school level a com- 
  award from board member Dr. Harry L. Riggs, 3499 Franklin Rd., 
Bloomfield Hills. The award, given to the person or organization 
contributing most to racial and religious understanding in the com- 
munity, went to Munson for his academic, athletic, and other extra- 
curriculum achievements at Pontiac-Central High School. 
Urban Lea 
A Pontiac Central High School 
ninth annual Urban League award | Regional Council, spoke to the | 
| group on “By-Products of Re- | 
at the League's 
High School cafteria 
In honoring Harrison with its 
annual award, the Urban League 
cited his academic, sports and 
other extra-eurriculum § achieve- 
ments. 
Harrison, who will graduate 
next month sharing the top rank- 
in a class of 345 members 
one ‘‘B’ on his three-year 
high school record» The rest of 
his grades are ‘‘A’’s. He received 
the ‘‘B’’ in physics ing 
Winds north to northwest. 12-18 miles to. WASHINGTON PRESIDENT 
day and 5-16 miles tonight 
Tedav in Pontiac 
Lowest temperature 5 
38 
At 8 am. Wind ‘elo 
Direction—Northwe 
Sun sets Friday af 7 4 
Sun ses Saturda, at a 
Moon sets Saturday at a 
Moon rises Friday at 1 03 pr 
Dewntown Temperatures 
6am ae lan 42 
7 O.M.cccesss Bhd 12 43 
Bam. . .cece- 3» lpr : 
OB M.. ...600-- 38 
10 a.m 40 
Thursday in Pontiac 
(As recorded downtown! 
Highest temperature 
Lowest temperature . 40 ing class. \vacancies, William L. Belaney, as- 
Mean temperature 4 3 a 
Weather Cloudy * « *« |sociate manager of the Pontiac 
Ope Year Ago in Pontiac He ‘was selected a membe _|Area Chamber of Commerce, At- e Year i seiecte a ro 
Highest temperature .. . 8 ne Ny ; : oo. ras itorney Leon H. Hubbard and the 
TnMGR SEMEOAUENE cexcooeetaress sa the 1 ‘tional Honor Society. Har-\pey J Allen Parker were elected 
aa. e* rison excelled in track, football |tgthe Board of Directors. an ind basketball, and was named | : 
This Highest an@ Lewest Temperatures 
Date in 86 Years 1 oy While attending Washington Jun-. 
ior High School, he was president 
of his 9A class, president of the 
udent Council, excelled in track 
football, and basketball], and along 
with other members of his class. 
received a complimentary trip ‘to 
Washington, D. C. as an award 
for his services to the school. 
While at Pontiac Central, Har- 
rison was elected president of 
the Student Council and presi. | 
dent of the June 1959 graduat- 
to the 1959 all-county and Sag- tec each year to the per- 
{son or organization contributing | sistance.” 
ithe most to racial and religious| gue Honor jers that the Board not hold faculty | entists last night, President Eisenhower told a joke and got 
a big laugh from his audience. 
* 
The joke concerned a man who named his hunting dog Goes to Munson vice president of the Southern 
Wright said the contrasts be- 
annual into the northern citiés, thus re-| 
All scouts regardess of rank are|ginnér meeting in Madison Junior moving sectional differences. 
SEGREGATION ‘GONE’ 
Segregation, which developed 
out of the plantation economy. } 
with its semi-feudal system of| 
share-croppers and tenants has 
gone forever, Wright said. 
This has no place and will not 
long survive in an industrial so- 
ciety, he said 
. Wright cautioned, however, 
that certain states are officially 
committed to preservation of 
their caste systems. 
On the board of the Urban 
Boyer the Rev. Richard H.. Dixon, 
Norman H. Kuala, Dr. Harry L. 
Riggs. Fred V. Haggard and John 
F. Perdue expired as of last! 
night's meeting. 
* x * 
In accordance with the Consti- 
tution, Directors Boyer and Kui- 
|jala, having served two terms, 
jwere not eligible for renomination. 
The group re-elected Haggard, 
| Perdue and Riggs. To fill the three 
  
Who Did It?—You! League, the terms of Robert R.| plete program within the school 
designed for their age group.” 
The Board also pointed out that 
lit has “legal and moral respon-| — 
sibility for the education program 
and welfare of the school system” 
jand the obligation to determine the 
|educational programs that shall be 
maintained. 
x* * 
To the demand of band support- 
|members accountable for results) 
and standards attained under new 
|policies, the Board spelled out its 
position in detail: 
* * * 
j}personnel to carry out educational 
|programs as they have been es- 
itablishd. The Board retains the 
“If the Board finds that per- 
sonnel are unable or unwilling 
to carry out educational pro- 
grams with effectiveness that 
have been established, then con- 
sideration must be given to per- of school life,’ the Board noted. | 
it is much better for pupils to | 
“The Board employs professional | sonnel changes which 
quired.” - 
Three members-of the instrumen- are re- ae School Board Firm on Band the opinions expressed on the 
band issue. 
| After the Board position was de: 
  tal music department have gone fined, MacAfee asked: 
on record as opposed to the new 
policies of the Board, including 
Dale C. Harris, director of the 
band and head of the instrumental 
music department. 
* * * 
The others are instructors Eldon, good faith? 
C. Rosegart and Frederick Wiest. 
| _ A court reporter sat near the 
| Board president as he read his 
| statement and took down all of 
  
Wanted to Be Sure 
| WHITEVILLE, N.C. (UPD— 
| Young Jackie Register of Cru- 
| soe Island, 1342 miles from here, 
made sure he got his applica- 
tion for a summer camp in on 
time by sending it to White- 
ville special delivery, registered 
| air mail, at a cost of 57 cents. 
  
Fine Out of Season 
Hagiwara and Mrs. Kameyo 
persons charged with illegal ice 
one of the hottest days of the 
| year, The offenses occurred last 
winter on thin ice at a lake. “Has the Board ever put that 
Statement on record?” 
| Board member Louis Schimmel 
‘shot back with another question: 
‘Are you afraid we'll welsh on our 
|statement, that it’s not made in 
& 
“I move this statement be adopt- 
ed as the policy governing the in- 
strumental music department.” 
In a roll-call yote, Board mem- 
| bers unanimously put themselves 
on record as subscribing to the 
statement. 
ident Glenn H. Griffin told the 75 
band supporters: 
* * * The Day in Birmingham   
BIRMINGHAM — One woman 
Mrs. Peter B. Loomis, 1648 Dor- 
for her second full term. 
Other candidates are Francis 
H. Allen, 1761 Villa Rd.; George 
W. Coombe Jr., 4412 Parklane 
  Cheltenham 
Rd.; Richard L, Halstead, 1238 
| Ceder Ave.; Granville C. Ryan, 
550 W. Lincoln Ave.; ‘and Theo- 
dore J. Szymke, 1116 Bucking- 
ham Rd. 
The second vacancy for the four 
year term was created when Amos 
| Gregory “last of the old guard” 
|said he would not seek re-election. 
Gregory had been a member of 
the Board for 15 years. 
Mrs. Dean Beier, 1509 Horchester 
Rd., is unopposed for a’ one year 
term to which she was appointed 
last January.     
| Birmingham Police, this morn- 
|ing reported, a theft of about $20 
| Ave, 
The cash register, seria] num- 
ber 5,086,487, is valued at $300, 
police said. Entry was made by 
breaking a window at the rear of 
the building. 
  Members of the Birmingham So- 
ciety of Women Painters are mak- 
ing the final arrangements today 
for their 15th annual exhibit. 
Mrs. William Lyman, exhibi- 
tion chairman, said the exhibit 
will open tomorrow at the Bloom- 
field Art Assn. Galleries on 
| North Woodward ave. 
| Open to the public, paintings 
mfy be seen from 2 p.m. to 5 
p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Saturdays 
and Sundays. The exhibit will run 
to the end of the month. 
| Mrs. Minnie M. Pratt 
Service will be at 3 p.m. Sat- 
jurday at the Bell Chapel of Wil- 
liam R. Hamilton Funeral] Co, for 
'Mrs. Pratt, 87, of 215 Harwood 
St., Royal Oak. Mrs. Pratt died   
in the Royal Oak Nursing Home 
| yesterday after a long illness. . : pared 
After heated debate. Board Pres:| A former Birmingham resident, 1, soit up their package   chester Rd. a member of the board, 
since 1948 is seeking re-election! 8 Seek Four-Year Terms 
on Local School Board 
she was the oldest member of the 
Philemon Club. 
Clare Smith, of Royal Oak. 
Gromyko Backs Up 
Studying West Plan 
(Continued From Page One) 
treaties with the Communist and 
West German regimes. 
2. He intends trying to break 
up the Western package in order 
to discuss separately those parts 
of it which may interest Moscow. 
The British would not be sur- 
prised if Gromyko urgés that the 
separate peace talks with the Ger- 
mans should begin at once here 
in. Geneva. They expect him to 
say that, since representatives of 
the two regimes are in the con- 
ference room, the big powers 
should take advantage of their 
presence, 
TO GET CAREFUL STUDY 
Communist spokesmen here said 
last night the Western package 
proposal would get careful study. 
* * *   
  The family suggests memorial |and a cash register from the Co-! But Khrushchev renewed his call 
tributes to the Wylie E. Groves |lonial Cleaners, 1184 E. Woodward for a German peace treaty “‘con- 
‘cluded jointly with the two ac- 
‘tually existing Gérman states.” 
‘and said again that the unifi- 
cation of East and West Germany 
is a question for those two gov- 
lernments to decide by themselves. 
| He also threatened again to 
sign a separate. peace treaty 
| with East Germany if the West 
does not go along. 
These views, at complete logger- 
heads with those of the West, were 
broadcast by Moscow radio hours 
jafter US. Secretary of State 
Christian A. Herter had un- 
|wrapped the Western package be- 
fore the conference here. 
UP TO GROMYKO 
The next move at Geneva was 
clearly up to Soviet Foreign Min- 
ister Andrei Gromyko. Khrush- 
\chev's words appeared to fore- 
shadow Soviet rejection of the 
whole Western proposal, possibly 
at today’s sessien of the confer- 
ence. 
* * ® 
The Western leaders were pre- 
— after a Soviet “‘nyet’’— 
and ne- 
|gotiate piecemeal for a stop-gap 
arrangement on Berlin, German 
reunification, European security 
  She is survived by one brother, . 
and disarmament. 
  “Just as sure as you think we 
wrong, we think we're right.” 
He said more time had been _ Teamsters Lose Bid 
fo Sign Attendants 
skating were fined yesterday on | than any other issue during his 
10 years on thé Board. 
Schimmel said that in his 20 
jyears on the Board he had not 
jseen an issue discussed to such 
lengths. devoted to the band controversy | 
| Pontiac employes of the Clark 
Oil & Refining Corp. have voted 
14-2 to stay with the Michigan Gas 
Attendants Union 
An election conducted by the Na- 
tional Labor Relations Board | But before they offer to do that, 
ithe Western ministers require 
some evidence that Gromyko is 
interested in serious give and 
| take on at Jeast one of these issues 
that appeared doubtful. 
| ‘The Western plan would make 
' Berlin a united city, guaranteed 
by the Big Four, after elections 
Obviously angry at the hos- Wednesday saw Pontiac Teamsters) U8der U.N. or Big Four super- 
‘tility of the audience, he added: Local 614 defeated in a bid to| Ytslen 
\‘I've. never been more disap- gain recognition of the employes. | 
pointed.”   
Dog Humor Scores Big   
| 
* Scientists Like Ike's Joke 
| | NEW YORK (AP)—Turning from his speech to top sci- | 
* 
| after members of a college faculty. When the faculty wives 
complained, the man named 
A man from Chicago 
next year was $5, the owner 
full professor. 
* 
The President said that, 
  * the dogs with academic ranks. 
rented a dog named “In- 
structor” for $2.50 a day. The fee for the same dog the 
explaining the dog had been 
promoted to assistant professor. 
The third year the fee was $10—the dog had become a Rockers Got ‘Em , 
_* 
in the fourth year, the man 
was unable to rent the dog at all because the canine had been 
made a college president and that all he did was “sit around 
and howl and bark and he ain’t worth shootin’.” Joseph Cory, president of the 
gas attendants union, announced 
jterms of a mew annual contract 
jsigned in the wake of the elec- 
jtion. It puts base wages at $1.65 
'an hour and contains provisions 
for liberal insurance and hospitali- 
zation plans, Cory said. 
Clark Oil has five stations in 
the Pontiac area. 
  
It Was a Double Take 
TOKYO (UPI)— Police thought 
they were seeing double when 
Hagiwara and Mrs. Kameyo 
Mitsui for shoplifting. The wom- 
en, both 44 and mother of four 
children, were twins. 
| Police today sought burglars with 
a rock ‘n’ roll beat. The burg- | 
| lars broke into a record shop 
and made off with two record 
players and up to 30 rockin’ 
records. 
  
ae ead a From that first phase, the pro- 
gram would proceed through three 
Other steps: (1) creation of a 
‘mixed committee of East and 
|West Germans to write an eilec- 
\toral law, (2) establishment of an 
'all-German government after free 
\elections, and (3) conclusion of a 
|peace treaty with that government. 
| The committee would include 25 
|West Germans and 10 East Ger- 
mans but a three-fourths majority 
| would be required, so that at least 
some East Germans would have 
to vote with populous West Ger- 
|many to approve an electoral law. 
| Step by step with German reun- 
\ification would come measures to- 
ward European security and dis- 
armament. The four powers would 
agree to renounce aggression and 
boycott an aggressor, to Hmit and 
eventually reduce .or withdraw 
Simms Special Savings 
on Candy — Fri. & Sat. 
MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS 
  ms j 
  
‘sibee Assorted 
Famous MELSTER 
Dutch Fudge : 
  
  ~~ 
    88 in 1932 33 in 1895 inaw Valley teams in basketball 
, ture Chart ‘in ant Teeretey's Tom rates, & art Harrison, who is'a member of| SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—City ‘eg. 69c 
Baltimore 65 43 Memphis 68 46 the Regional Committee of the 1960) . 1i 
Bismarck $4 25 Miami B85 72 White House conference for chil-| ~ William C. Blake, a Brownsville 84 67 Milwaukee 48 36 ‘ "| gered at the closing of a down- Buffalo 47 38 Minnespolis 45 35 dren and youth repesenting stu-| 
Charleston 85 58 New /Orieans 88 66 Go oe Bonti, bli } } town tunnel, demanded to know 
Chicago ‘8.39 New York 64 41 of Pontiac public schools,’ no authorized such action. The Cincinnat! 61 43 Omaha 57 32 plans to enroll at the University} aah . gy ly Cleveland 50 42 Péllaton 47 26 | State Highway Division wrote 4 <o oy Denver 64 48 Phoenix = 98 of Detroit on a full scholarship) jin yesterday that the tunnel on La a ia troit ttsburch 2 , nt see ‘ . o a 
Duluth 4 3 st ous to study engineering was closed as part af a free- eres ; y ancise A . ” iE —_ -A-! a j ' Port, wer 3 $5 8 Francisco #50, Marion A. Wright, retired | way project, begun after it was WHAT'S NEXT? One-and-a half-year-old Deborah Kossel sive, however. The children's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Artbur 
Houghton 3 » —— 2 | lawyer, a past president of the | endorsed in 1956 by the city’s thinks her triplet brothers are mighty brave as they line up for Kossell, of 182 Vreeland Dr., Avon Township. Over 2,700 attended 
esos Se aoonie 8s 44 University of South Chrolina, and | Board of Supervisors — includ- thelr polio shots at North Hill Elementary School, Rochester. The the clinic sponsored by the Rochester Junior Woman's Club yes- 
pons $2 a Tampa 38 72 oad Law Alumni Assn. of the | ing Blake. boys, David, Danny and Darreil, 3'4, are a little more apprehen- terday. 
1) : ‘ ; A 1 
   FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1959     
          o 9 . . . ° |suit, is countering with a divorce;month alimony and support for 8.3 Per Thousand in ’58 Michael Rennie Sues [ection agningt bis estranged wile.|the chOd. 
Actress for Divorce | Rennie charged desertion and| Rennie, 49, and Miss McGrath, 
Michigan Residents Dying) sacs sovics, cas, ashaite cua Wetenir ote, were marie Ie Landon 
[British Actor Michael Rennie, tar-| James. He called Miss McGrath! 
af a Record Low Rate |get of Actress Margaret Mc-|an “unfit mother.” | The Red Cross was granted a 
iIGrath’s separate maintenance} He was ordered to pay $500,” a| congressional charter in 1906, eee ee — 
o« ANNIVERSARY   
1) iN : 
20% ON THAT ADDITION. ‘ 
READ THIS AD....   
» 
    
        
      
     
        
         
    
   
              
       
               
     
   
                   
          
   
           
        | GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) — Statejincreased since 1950, but not in 
Health Commissioner Dr. Albert! | pace with population growth, Heus- 
|E. Heustis said yesterday Michi-| tis said. 
gan people aren't dying as fast as| 200,009 BABIES 
| they nam ve << | Birth a has comer ~~ 
Heustis told public’ health work-|?)U00, oiies ow pout eight mil /ers attending qa three-day confer} jinn a anid 
ence the death rate last year was! 
8.3 per thousand population — a|  Leeal health programs, indus- 
record Jow for the state. trial health and laboratory serv- lees have contributed to the de- 
He said 65,469 people died last | jing in death rate. 
year compared with 66,435 in “However, in other ways we're 
1967. like a mah trying to launch a 
_The total number of deaths has} rocket with a slingshot — we're 
——-—-——*/i falling short,’ Heustis said. 
* * ° 
2 | di f li k He said 13 counties don't have a 
Zin ict or Lin full-time health department, 50 per| 
. . cent of resorts and motels are not | 
fo Poisoned Fish health department approved, vac- 
cination programs need improve-’ 
ment and nursing home services 
PHILADELPHIA, Pion ae are drastically limited. 
Daniel Diorio, president of ¢ 2 “ ” 
Universal Seafood Co., and Noel Plan ee is » said aaa 
Lo Castro, a foreman for the s z ’ ar _| the state’s bill for mental pa- firm, have been indicted by a fed , dnc syphilis is oty | 
,eral grand j on felony and mis- 
aerecaien eaten in he distrib-| twe million dollars yearly. 
ution of poisoned fish. “**While we have much good news; 
| x * * in health in Michigan, generally 
| The grand jury, which began 2 an|we need a stronger health pro- 
‘investigation last Thursday, re-|@Tam," Heustis said. 
turned the indictments Wednes_| 
5. adictments stem trom an CUTD On Price Cards investigation started March 25) 
when ‘flounder  allesealy treated at Gas Stations Fails ithree-year-old Dale Kleinschmidt | 
of Haddon Heights, N.J. Hundreds} LANSING  — A bill to regulate | 
of people in the greater Philadel- |price advertising by filling stations | 
phia area complained of illness. | was rejected by the Senate yester-| 
* * * |day 15 to 13. 
U.S. Atty.-Harold K. Wood said | In its original form, its backers) 
|the indictments charge two felo-|said it would end fraud’ in retail 
nies in that. the use of sodium jgaaotine sales by limiting on-prem-_| 
initrate was an intentional act as | lees advertising to- small placards) 
‘distinguished from mere negli-| placed on gas pumps. | Library Volumes 
\gence or carelessness. Opponents said the measure | $ 00 
) would put “independent” stations ! —s Price... 105” ~~ ~ . = 
ey ae ike, McDonald to Meet out of business. 
7 - | After several dmendments, the ; 95 
4 - | NEW YORK (#—President Eise”-| yin was reduced to what Sen. Ed-| - ~ #@ hower arranged to meet today with'yarq Hutchinson (R-Fennville) by 
“ : David J. McDonald, president of said was gibberish. 
However, White House press secre- ‘land), one of 13 senators to vote| NOW only i 
   
  PLIBLISHER’S REMARKABLE 
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    oy . y 2 ithe United Steelworkers Union.| Se Ha 
‘Construction Co. \Y™: | Sen. L. Harvey Lodge (R-Oak- 
   jtary James C. Rig pi said the/ ,cainst the measure, said he would, 
meeting would be “just a social ike to help small’ business and call. | couldn’t go along with the bill in’ 
its final form. i 
    92 W. HURON—PONTIAC 
      
     
           
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Dolores del Rio Faints 
During Television Show 
HAVANA (UPI) — Dolores del 
Rio, one of the most beautiful stars 
of pre-war Hollywood, fainted dur- > : a Study Guide 
rin Saal ceo performance here cost! It's the deluxe edition, the same : 
A doctor was summoned to the encyclopedia owned by more than 300,000 families, ° me oot studies of CMQ-TV to attend the x — 4 ; : 
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  UPI Phete 
WINNING TEAM—Although he’s blind, John D. Clark, 26, has 
misfortune on the run as he races with his fiance, Sidney Myers, 
22, across the University of Washington campus in Seattle, Wash. 
Clark lost his sight as a result of injuries he received while serv- 
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rehabilitation of the handicapped. 
  
    
  
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. 
  = THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1959 
elephants.” 
  
  ' | ilar products ‘‘strong enough for 4 arly American room measuring, . day his 27-year-old agency founded. . Out to Please Elephants | '*" ' \If You'll Bother at All, ne ie ae =| Dealer Switches by his late father would switch 
(UPI) — A local circus wants | A porcupine does not roll a GLEN GARDNER, N. J. @—/ture, he blackened the wall of Blaushild ane of Ohio's leading! agency's Shaker Heights show- to make sure all its animals are |into a ball when danger threatens! 
  
  \Here’s how thorough T. Herbert) the stone fireplace for realism. |Chrysier-Plymouth dealers and ait acon built eight years ago, are   
    conifortable. It asked a firm that |but simply arches its back and 4 
makes plastic foam mattresses [hides its nose between its fore- fore-|Hand is: | Thirty-five per cent of Canada’s|°riginator of last spring’s.“Youjamong the city's newest and 
for cars if it can produce sim- | paws, waiting for troyble. When he made a model of on'total area is forested. Auto Buy Now” campaign, a to largest. 
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                      THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1959   
  
    
wallet Newbury lost in the snow) 
more than four months earlier 
and returned it to the owner, The 
overjoyed Newbury found the con- 
tents of $150 still intact, tion and dexterity leads to mishaps 
among older folk. Melting Snow Means 
  tremely weak” when it canie to 
handling asir-launched bacteria. Poor Thinking in Youth - 
Jeter maintained that one of the Called Accident Key John Whitfield, a visiting pro- Extra Cheer for Him 
best methods of defense would be | fessor from England, says a study} WO _ N. ¥. (UPI)—Sun- 
to educate the American people | ITHACA, N. ¥. (UPI)—A psy- of accident-proneness among ajshine pling the winter snow- 
inow to the danger of germ war-|Chologist says poor thinking tends|croup of miners found a “‘distinct/banks around Wolcott brought an 
\fare so they won't panic if it ever ito cause accidents among young/difference’ between younger andjextra lift to George Newbury. Available, port time 
CONTROLLER All Accounting Services 
_ Per Diem Basis 
Write Box 26 
Pontiac Press, 46 W. Huron | 
/ | 
    
Area of the East Indies is three 
            
happens. |people while a lack of coordina- lolder workers. Chester Capron hepesced on the|times that. of Texas. 
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1 Do what thousands of smart shoppers have already done — 
| take advantage of the fabulous bargains offered in this sale. 
| Because of the consolidation of our Lansing stores, we're top- 
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Graduation, Father’s Day, June Brides, Anniversary or any 
other gift event: * . 
HURRY IN and SAVE! 
                  
UPI Paec.e 
SPACE TO PLAY — It's all out for Mars at a modernistic 
playground in Hannover, West Germany, where these kids have 
some outer-space fun. They whiz down a sliding chute which has | ae 
been updated by the addition of a rocket ship at the grounds of | hese eat reductions ae Ps pel 
) the German Flower Show, ; | wedding bands, men’s rings, pendants 
and fancy rings of every description 
included     
  Feels People Should Know | 
Uraes Germ War Facts Ladies’ fancy DIAMOND. COCKTAIL A la 
Smart for the graduate. Was $59.5 
a Beautiful ', Ct. DIAMOND 
Kt. gold mounting a Filagree design 
NOW $12.48 
ae in sm Now ot bap   
' Ladies as! te Sel Mtge Relbel DIAMOND, with beautifully F . ‘ 
| matc and a F meSou SCOUT COTE _NOW — antastic Savings — Buy Now 
z 1 _ ; Ladies’ full 1 Ct SOLITAIRE. Finest col d cut. Tiffan IOWA CITY, Iowa (UPI)—A, The germs, Jeter said, could also mounting. Compare at $405.00 olor Od ay TENSE small capsule is dropped into the produce three different effects. Men’s Cluster DIAMOND RING, 3 Ct. spread, in beautiful BP 4.SPEED PHONOGRAPH style mounting. Reg. $500.00 
ventilating system of a large audi- One type could cause quick death 
     
    
     
       
    Ladies’ DIAMOND HEART NECKLACE, with twentyth i . 
torium during a meeting of Amer- be f —" set in 14 Kt. gold. Reg. $35.00 reg glamends Regular $29.95 $ 98 
ica’s top rocket scientists. Sud- to large numbers of people. = Ladies’ DIAMOND PENDANT NECKLACE, 14 diamonds set in 8 awe 7 iL 1.000 of them fall ill— other type might bring about a: solid gold cluster. She would love this. Reg. $150.00 NOW $69.48 Plays all speed records. Smart, 
denly, a . o m fa . : Men's DIAMOND in handsome masculine “ Kt — mountin luggage style cate 
or perhaps die. prolonged illness with a low fa- A different gift for the graduate. Reg. $119.00 ...NOW set hs 
ali i j Men's DIAMOND, t hit id c . * x * tality rate. A third might produce “atatncee™ vine a len Florentine finish Now kanse 
The scientists could be the temporary illness. Mens DIAMOND ONYX RING in smart custom made pg mounting. REG. $5.95 STAINLESS 
STEEL TABLEWARE 
$3.99 victims of germ or biological war- 
fare. The deadly capsule could 
have been planted by a, saboteur. 
Science fiction? No, ‘PARTICULARLY SUITED’ 
He explained that the first 
would .probably be used only in 
case of an all-out war, while the Ladies’ 14 Kt. solid goid MOUNTINGS. To beautify cad modernize 
your old style. Selected choice. Reg. $25.09 NOW $12.88 2 
4-pi rvice for si PAY AS LITTLE AS 50c A. WEEK! Se ate nodehine according Never needs polishing. 
    
4. o researchers at the University others ‘‘are icularly suited to 
Tr oe Cae cy BULOVA, HAMILTON, In fact, ‘they said, mass exter- ; SENSATIONAL SAVINGS ON HOLLOWARE SILVERWARE 
The scientists said the U.S 
must carry on extensive re- 
search in order to be able to 
retaliate against germ warfare 
as well as to construct a defense minatoin or incapacitation could 
be carried out anywhere in the 
world to any group of people, 
animals or plants. 
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crowds, Themostat controlled, Reg, $24.95 Now 
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guarantee silverplate Reg. $89.75 ....... 14* ow 39” 
        
     
   
       
    
     
     
         
                   
      
     
       
      
    
                ‘ ; . against it. Men's “ALL PROOF” by ELGIN. This was the . substance of a %8 ; a I second hand, lagna band prinous Coronet Automatic Pop-Up Toaster, Choice $88 Silver plated 3 pc. Tea Service with engraved $ 88 
secret report which the research-’ The problem of defense is a big Reg. $29.50 OW $11.88 in Chrome, and pastel shade Reg. $19.95 Now serving tray Reg. $24.95 ...... ow 14 
de to a group of top- one, he said, because of the dif-} "Wat tor ‘ine epecial cant “tine dress , ‘deni — nth Utes accacrs ; x ; = Ps sca foul be stole for the special customer. 900.56 Dormeyer Steam and Dry Iron with stand-up 512" Crystal Cake Tray, with sterling base. aie ‘3” 
ec eo ai dn hits ae cae Gaane Men's BAMILTON ELECTRIC WATCH. 14 Ki. handle, right or left hand cord Reg. $17.95 Now wedding gift. Reg. $15.00 .... Now 
recently. spread a solid fold case Newest trend in watches, Chrome Corn- lei *6* 3 pe. Carving set, Genuine Horn sania, Sheffield 7 
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Hand-cut genuine crystal salt and pepper ents 
3 styles. Reg. $1.95 pe ete carrier agents are odorless, tone 
less and invisible. 
* * Reg. $9.95 . 
Magic-made caniianioa Waffle | Iron and 
Sandwich Grill Reg; $19.95 The report was delivered i 
Dr. Wayburn 8. Jeter, associate Ladies DIAMOND BENRUS. 
case, Smartly detailed 
for the discriminating ross 
59 OW $39.50 
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professor in the school's depart: The best defense, he said, would cr ais Cae Nd’ Hosting diamond a oc, , 80. £0) s y 
ment of bacteriology, who said require the quickest possible contrasted | with Diack. suede band | mi Presto Coffee Makers, in gleamin, stainless 5419” Heavy silver plated erevy | boat, beauty engraved 4512" 
, r t ic, i ex 149.88 9 ‘ccc ceeens . 
———— an - ara Si knowledge that a biological attack Ladies’ custom made WATCH with 22 ia steel, fully automatic. Reg. $24, ow Reg, $25.00 .... e 
but was merely® explaining had been launched so the germ diemends, | set in platinum’ case Gallery-edged serving tray. 53" 
real potentialities of are) could be identified Ree ae eer Dn. 1a NOW St Se 1 ORG E?) Reg. $8.95 .... vs ... New 
wartaré. ~d. Men's one EN. for that ‘special’ gr edu- 7 Fr ej ¢) L D R | N ej 5 Four-way Lazy Susan servers in “care-tree” chrome, $ 444 
Another defense might be wide- oe nee aieene how $5.88 in a Tt er ee ere . Now & 
  inted out that germs of Jeter pointec at & isolation and Nurses’ WATCHES. Waterproof, shoci- All other domestic and imported giftware 15* * 50° varying intensities could be spread Spread use of { 5 ratte ie iscou 
in an infinite number of ways. They qarantine measures to cut down | second hand. luminous dial. ex xp: is SAVE 50% ON items alse om dl co died 
ie ae sion ban eg. $2 Oo aa 
could be hidden in a ventilating the spread of the disease. Men's. BULOVA  “WRIST-ALARM” oO 
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  water supply. \clude germ-proof masks, protective Men's exclusive design BULOVA. Solid 
  ~~ & * ‘clothing and safety shelters — ee Se 88": cow ae0.08 One Group Selected RINGS, Birthstones, Onyx, $ 95 NY fx Beautifuy your watch with a 
Victims could also be attacked none of .which havg yet been AS LITTLE AS | + yrer rah COILDNEN, ya sna Sl neg 14° >> GB new Speidel expansion band 
through the food they eat, espe- tested under actual germ-warfare $1 A WEEK = Wadoes te. 90.96 ..o.. ecieccssceczes. i 3 LASS Lp ey - a Pre-1959 
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disease-bearing organisms. er- sets. Fanc and carv a utifully des ™ 6 
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introduced into the soil or air. lem F a against germs — emanate mpage al _ Now ‘19 A WO bey Reg 12.95 ...... Now 5.98 - 
Infected insects, Jeter said, SPread throug ar N MON FE ) f DO WN Entire Stock at Huge Reductions SS ‘a Reg. 14.95 °.....; Now 6.98 
could be cast into the air in an Normal sanitary measures can > ; 
    almost invisible cloud by a plane control the transmission of | 
or submarine and cause wide- | water and food-borne germs, he | o) 
spread sickness or death. said, but these would be “ex: } 7 
. nme memes Ah 7 
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hat LADIES’ sc oe newest Ballerina style t Men's CUFF LINK and TIE BAR SETS, in choice of Sterling or gold 
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GIRLS! Gift for y ing case that can be used for “traveling jewel box. ee sw Rogues 7.590. cte ede cen’ Sabon OSDtaOC Now 4.88 
ee 0 ORS 
BOYS AND a Man or $1 A Week $ 95 MEN'S. SCHICK, “AUTO-HOME” RAZOR, Perfect tor vacation Regular 12.50 0.00... e eee eee eee eee. Now 7.88 
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nter your dog in our big Woman MEN'S BONSDN “08° for fast smooth shaves. 
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The smallest radio ever built with a built-in MEN's NORELCO SHAVERS with twin rotary blades onary Sterling and gold filled, set with semi-precious stones and pearis 
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CAMERA SAVINGS! 
       Keystone §mm Magazine 3 ON FAMOUS Load, Reg. $109.00. . New 99 > 
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    Miracle Mile Shopping Center CLOCKS SHEAFFER scrofa +498 
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? Decorator Designed, Reg. $24.95 ........ Now ‘14 Pen and Pencil Sets Kit, Reg, ee Se 
  
Arges Af, 35mm Bigck Dial Ultra Modern Wall Clock $24 Camera, Reg. $49.50 Now 50 
with gold numeralsand hands Reg, $49.50 Now 529 at huge savings. Entire stock’ 
"MICHIGAN'S LARGEST JEWELERS’          
  
    
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SATURDAY, MAY 16th ! . 2 4 N S AGI N AW Zodiac Wall Clock, in hand-tinted dial, raised gold fig. 13.40 ox wie w Sie 8.10 mid "Beer Poteher™™ oo 
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 ooEeEeEeEeEOEOeeeEeEeeeeeerrn eee ee 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1959 MAKE OVER PAGES.   
YMCA Leaders Meet 
DETROIT w—The National 
Council of Young Men’s Christian 
Assns. opens its 33rd annual meet- 
ing in Detroit today. The YMCA’s 
chief policy making group, the 
council will meet through Sunday. 
an. tie fourth largest’ 
the world, covers 227,- 
a al miles and is larger 
than the 12 states from’ Maine ‘to 
Virginia. 
  CONRAD LISEK 
Conrad Lisek of 101 Mechanic 
St. died yesterday at St. Joseph 
‘Mercy Hospital, His body is at the 
Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. — 
MRS. PERCY STUTTARD 
Service for Mrs. Percy (Bertha) 
Stuttard, 74, of 5575 Crescent St.,       Waterford Township, will beheld 
at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the Donel-|brothers, Jesse Pearsall of Pontiac 
son-Johns Funeral Home. . 
Surviving are her husband;. 4 } 
daughter, Mrs. Veva Mere of Pon-|Mrs. Luthena Blakeslee of Pon- 
tiac; two. sons, Arlie’ Edmonds of 
  
  
  
    
  Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas: prem Ss ‘grandchild; and - “two, 
jand Sheldon’ of Keego Harbor. 
Also-surviving are three sisters, 
ita, Kan. 
HARRY G. KIGER 
OXFORD — Service for Harry 
G. Kiger, 73, of 1940 Lakeville St., 
was held at 2:30 p.m. today at! 
the Bossardet and Reid Funeral | 
‘Home. ‘A second service will be 
held: at. 2:30 pm, Sunday at the) 
Watson Funefil] Home, Cayuga. 
Thomas Cemeé' 
Mr. Kiger, died Thursday in AL 
mont. The graduate of Valparaiso 
University. was a member of the 
First Presbyterian Church in De- 
troit, the Masonic lodge in Wells- 
ville, Mo. and .a past patron of 
the OES in Cayuga, Ind. He was 
representative. 
Surviving are his wife, Ethel; 
three brothers and four sisters. 
MRS, CHARLES SPARKS 
OXFORD — Service for . Mrs. 
| Charles (Lena A.) Sparks, 69, of)   at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Bossardet 
| and Reid Funeral Home, Burial 
j will follow in Oxford Cemetery. 
Mrs. Sparks died Thursday at 
She was a member of OES 266 | 
\in Oxford and the White Shrine 22 
the Oxford MOMS Club, and the | 
Oxford Baptist Church. 
Surviving are her husband 
Charles; a son, Charles E. of Ox- 
ford; a daughter, Mrs. John Hir- 
linger of Pontiac; four brothers, 
one sister and one grandson. 
LIO W. SWITZER 
|Lake Rd., was killed -instantly yes-| 
terday in an auto -accident 1%) 
miles north of Millington. 
made by the Pursley Funeral 
Home, Pontiac. 
carpenter and had been an or- 
dained minister of the Christian 
Spiritualist Church. 
Surviving are his wife, 
phine; his mother, Mrs. Jacob 
L. of Commerce; two sisters, Mrs. 
Ida Chapin and Mrs. Alice Wil- 
ér, William J. Crossman of 
Orion. 
quired that conductors on railway 
  to take their trips on Sundays. y S. Washington St., will be held | 
‘her home following a short illness. | 
*|which damaged a section of Ann 
Funeral arrangements are being} 
Mr. Switzer was a self-employed 
Jose- 
Switzer of Otter Lake: a son, Leo 
An old law in Vermont once re-} 
trains must read passages of the 
Bible to.those travelers who chose!   
Cash Crisis 
| Data Sparks 
Spat in Senate 
LANSING brief spat oc- 
ford A. Brawh, a Democrat, sup- 
hadn't asked for, 
As formally requested by sena- 
tors, Brown yesterday made a) 
daily report on the balance of all 
  lrants (checks) for nearly half that 
amount were outstanding. 
be| Sen. John P. Smeekens (R-Cold-| 
water) objected that Brown's un- 
| Soligited information served to! 
“further confuse’ the state of) 
|weasury affairs and he was! 
“usurping’..the auditor general's) 
function. 
Smeekens demanded that the 
outstanding warrant data be 
omitted when the gross treasury 
balance was ‘printed in the Jour- 
nal, official record of Senate pro- 
ceedings. 
Sen, Harold M. Ryan of Detroit, 
Democratic floor leader, said 
Smeekens. was assuming a ‘‘don’t 
|confuse me. My mind’s made up” 
attitude. 
Smeekens retorted the treasury 
|picture would be out .of balance 
|without an accounting of tax rev- 
jenues en route to the treasury. 
The _unasked for_figure _was_not   
  
Minditaran Was Test 
ANN ARBOR ww — A windstorm 
Arbor this week gave the Univer- 
sity of Michigan Medical Center 
| what Dr. Roger B. Nelson termed carpet Ghee eal pelea Sarr] 
plied the *"Republi¢an Senate with) 
lle per tiac* Mrs. lla Horton of Glennie some cash crisis information it) 
Marysville and Ernest Edmonds of McKinney of Wich- 
Port Huron; six grandchildren; aad drs. a 
five great- grandchildren; one 
funds in the treasury — 116 mil-|mother and father and was caught 
lions. He further offered that war-| under a hail of bullets early today 
The victims were Mr. and Mrs. 
ihis son, Russel] Chace Jr., Mental Patient 
Slays Parents Police Nab . Escapee 
_ After 
Highway Chase 
| WARWICK, R.I. (AP)—An es-/35, 
caped mental patient killed his 
|while trying to flee police,   
Subway Train 
Speeds Over 
  
day, 
Me platform guard, Earl Jones, 
. signaled the motorman with a 
The train was unable to stop 
short of the woman,’ Olga Ham- 
mel, 56, a grandmother. The first 
  two cars and the front trucks of Deaths Elsewhere | MOSCOW (AP)—Konstantin M. 
|Bykov, 73, a leading biological 
Woman; Unhurrt | scientist at Leningrad’s Paviov In- 
stitute of Physiology, died Thurs- 
| CHICAGO (AP)—A slightly built day, a Tass dispatch from Lenin- 
woman slipped and fell from a/grad reported. He spoke at last 
Bullet - Riddled Loop subway veto into the|year’s meeting of the American 
‘path of an onrushing train Thurs | Psychiatrie” Assn. in San Fran, 
  
  ‘Russell Chace. He was 53, and|the third passed the spot where | 
she was 50. \she had — 
Before he died at Rhode Island) x * 
|Hospital today, the father named! 
24, as} 
the assaiant. 
z * * * 
Young Chace was captured in 
his father’s automobile after a 
bullet-punctuated chase. 
Chace had escaped from the 
Rhode Island Hospital for Mental! 
Diseases less than an hour before} 
the attack. 
Police Lt. Charles Riddle said 
ig Chace entered hom~ about 
11:45 Thursday night and struck 
his father behind the left ear with 
an ax or meat cleaver during an 
argument. 
Then, Riddle said, Chace ran| 
after his mother, struggled with 
her in the driveway of their home 
and killed her with a blunt in- 
strument. 
* * 
Mrs, Albert H. Davis, a neigh- 
bor, told police she saw Chace, a 
tall, good-looking blond, strike his 
mother on the head, Mrs. Davis 
had been awakened by screams. 
Chace had been confined to an 
open ward of the hospital, mean- 
  jan excellent test of its disaster 
|plan. Nelson, associate director of | 
COMMERCE TOWNSHI P—Lio | University Hospital, said 400 doc- jhome weekends. 
| Warren Switzer, 54, of 4922 Carrol] |tOFrs and nurses were ready within | jlast Sunday. He was first con- 
|30 minutes. As it turned out, they 
lweren’t needed. Only one person 
was killed and one injured. 
  ing he had fhe freedom of the! 
grounds and the privilege to go/| 
He was home 
\fined, police said, in January 1953. 
There are two other children in 
the family, a girl and a boy.   But fate a smiled. After she 
ifell, Mrs.. Hammel flattened her- 
lself im - -the drainage trough be- 
tween the rails. 
Power was shot off on the third 
rail. Police and firemen arrived. 
A erowd watched, 
lifted to the platform. 
’- & ¢ 
She brushed her clothing. A 
transit werine alh ye eer y maybe } } 
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      Luncheon, 
Style Show ~ Sylvan. Lake Unit 
Schedules Event 
for May 21 
Members of the Svlvan Lake 
Branch of the “Woman's Na- 
tional Farm and Garden As- 
sociation are Making arrange- 
ments for a luncheon and fash- 
ion show which will be held 
May 21 at Pontiac Federal 
Savings and’ Loan Building 
Activities will get under ways 
at 12:30 p.m 
Mrs. Richard Valuet is tick- 
et chairman. Luncheon chair- 
man is Mrs. Franklin Web- 
ster, assisted by Mrs. Thom- 
as Horwitz, Mrs. D. G. 
Strauss, Mrs. Raymond . E, 
Heyse, Mrs. Leon Zelinski, 
Mrs. Arthur MacFayden, Mrs. 
Rey Howard, Mrs. Wayne 
Smith, Mrs. Ed Williams and 
Mrs. Paul Antilla. Mrs. Har- 
rv J. Wood is fashion show 
chairman, assisted by Mrs. 
Sim J. Warwick . 
Children modeling will be 
linda and Ronald Smith, Dav- 
* dq Tripp. Sue Ann Augmacher, 
George Bull, Terry Heyse, and 
John and Deborah Roper. 
Fashions will be by the Mer- 
garet Ann Shop. 
In the adult group Mrs. Wil- 
lis Brewer, Mrs. Kenneth Ol- 
lis, Mrs. Eugene Johnson, Mrs. 
Orville Tripp. Mrs. J. A. Ram- 
mes, Mrs. F. A. Moon, and 
Mrs. John Roper will model 
fashions from the DeCor Shop. 
Tickets may be purchased 
from Mrs. Valuet who lives 
on Garland avenue 
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1959 ge ee a eee eS 
  
  Pontiac Press Photos 
Here are two of the models for the Sylvan Lake 
Branch of the WNFG fashion show next Thursday. 
Terry Heyse, left, and David Tripp look rather 
pleased by the prospect of showing the new styles. 
The show begins with a luncheon at the Pontiac Fed- 
eral Savings and Loan Building. 
  Trying on some new hats for their 
fashion show neat Thursday are. left 
to right: 
Tripp. Vrs. Eugene Johnson. Mrs. 
Harry J. Wood and Mrs. Orville S. 
Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Tripp will be models in the show, and Mrs. 
Wood is chairman of the affair, which 
will be given by the Sylvan Lake 
branch of the Woman's National Farm 
and Garden Association. 
Bride Elect Here Given Shower 
Marv Landon. bride-elect of 
Fred A. Vollrath was honored 
at a linen shower held Wednes 
day ning at the home of 
M iX Sh | of Roch 
( ( Tess ( Mi 
Ven Henke, Mrs. Douglas Wil 
son dnd Mrs. Carl Ganfield 
Parent of the couple, w ho 
will be marred June 6. are 
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence D. Lan- 
don of Voorheis road and the 
Fred W. Vollraths of East Bev 
erly avenue ; 
* * * 
Att lants announced at the 
Shower are Mrs. Archie Pat- 
oe ROR aN 
  Vrs. ton, Mrs. Daniel Curry, Clara- 
lee Vollrath. Virla Landon, 
Mary Jean Savu and Jennifer 
“Burrows, flower girl 
Guests were Mrs. Waldo 
Leipprandt, Mrs. Nicholas Dai- 
lv, Mrs. Dean Fiddler, Betty 
Green, Marilyn Stover, Mrs. 
Eleanor -Botan, Sherrill Lyons, 
Mrs. Leo Reddy, Marguerite 
Sarbelli, LaVonne Tatro, Judi 
Fiddler, Patricia Smith, Mary 
Jo Griggs, Karen Page, Susan - 
Grey and Jacquelin Barclay. 
* * * 
Others were Sally Katz, Nan- 
  
{rthur L. Horst. left. looks on 
is Ves. Robert G. Pack. oulgomng prest- 
lent of the Webster’ PTA. presents the 
- yptbol of her office to the new presi- dent. Mrs. George H. Wauers, 
florst was honored for a record sale 
of PTA magazines. cy Ketterman, Nancy Roll, 
Mrs. Raymond Merdian. Mrs 
Charles Pokorny, Mrs. Victor 
Landon, Mrs. Clinton Barclay, 
Laurene Patton, Virla Landon 
and Claralee Vollrath. 
Concluding the guest list wer 
Mery Hunt, Jill Lagon, Mrs. 
Ollie Blenman, Mrs. Basil 
Hughes, Dorrene Pokorny, Eva 
Mae Arnold, Mrs. Douglas Wil- 
son, Mrs. George Burrows, 
Joan Curry, Mary Jean Savu, 
Mrs. Clarence Landon, Mrs. 
Fred Vollrath and Mrs. Ruben 
Barclay. 
es ‘ee J é fo" Spang ¥ +t 4% 
Pontiac Press Phote 
Vrs. GM Girls 
to Hold 
May Dinner Pontiac Club Will 
Invite Executives 
to Affair 
General Motors Girls’ Club of 
Pontiac will hold its annual 
May dinner~ at 6:30 p.m. 
Wednesday at Devorf® Gables. 
Members will invite executives 
of their respective divisions 
who have cooperated during 
the year on the clubs proj- 
ects and charitable work. 
Hostesses for the affair are 
Mrs. Elsa Leece, Mrs. Virgin- 
ia Schons, Ellen Jenks, Alice 
Jackson, Julie O’Brien and 
Constance Hensel. 
Arlene M. Newcome is gen- 
eral chairman for the evening 
and will be assisted by Mrs. 
Margaret Francis, Mrs. George 
A. Wilmot, Mrs. Ottis L. Brook- 
shear, Mrs, Harry G. Dern- 
berger, Miss Hensel, Miss 
Jenks and Mrs. Melvin Bond. 
Officers for the coming year 
will be elected and program 
entitled ‘‘A Night in the Or- 
ient,”’ will be presented. 
  
    Youngest Girl 
of Hirohito 
to Wed Clerk 
TOKYO WA _ $50-a-month 
bank clerk became engaged to 
Emperor Hirohito’s youngest 
daughter today without seeing 
her and without a ring. 
Hisanaga Shimazu, 25, and 
20-year-old Princess Suga were 
officially betrothed at the mo- 
ment their families exchanged 
traditional gifts of fish, Japa- 
nese wine and bolts of silk. 
An imperial chamberlain 
presented the Emperor’s gifts 
to Shimazu and his widowed 
mother at their home at the 
same time as the young 
man’s uncle took the Shimazu 
gifts to the palace, 
Four ~ hours 
change, Shimazu, descendant 
of a feudal lord, and his moth- 
e® were, formally received by 
the Empéror and Empress. 
Shimazu ‘then had a brief 
meeting withthe girl he is 
expected to wed\late this yeal 
Officers . 
Instatled 
at Lincoln 
New officers of Lincoln Jun- 
ior High School PTA were in- 
stalled at the final meeting of 
the year Wednesday evening at 
the school. 
Mrs. George Gray, retiring 
president, was given a corsage 
and past president's pin. By- 
Jaws were presented by Mrs. 
Daniel Peterson, and adopted. 
* * * 
The Lincoln Band presented 
several selections, followed by 
readings from the _ speech 
classes of Mrs. Ray Allen, Mrs. 
Esther Mountain and Julius 
Middledorf. Parents toured the 
rooms and saw student ex- 
hibits. 
Refreshments were furnished 
and served by the cooking 
class students under the direc- 
tion of Mrs. Robert Comparoni 
and Mrs. Jack Talbot. Mrs, 
Robert Baldwin reported on the 
state convention at Bay City. 
Bailey School 
PTA Learns of 
Tornado Safety 
“What to do when a tornado 
strikes’’ was explained and 
shown to parents and teach- 
ers at Cora Bailey School PTA 
meeting held ‘Thursday eve- 
ning at the school, 
x «*« * 
Lt. Donny Ashley and Pa- 
trolman Donald Russ of the 
city manager’s office present- 
ed the film ‘‘ornado’’, Pa- 
trolman Russ explained Pon- 
tiac’s tornado early warning 
system. 
Incoming president Mrs. 
Dolph D. Wright presented a 
past president pin to Mrs. 
Bruce Allen, outgoing presi- 
dent. New officers were in- 
troduced. Mrs. Jack Taylor 
reported on the fair held last 
Saturday. . 
* * * 
Horton Southworth,  prin- 
cipal spoke on the favorable 
reaction of parents to the 
modified conference system 
of reporting, recently adopted 
at. Cora Bailey, 
City Artists Society 
to Show Paintings 
A pre-exhibition:, showing of 
pictures painted by the Pontiac 
Society of Artists will be held 
in. the lobby of Pontiac State 
_ and Community Nafional banks 
the week of May 18. 
Included im the showing will 
be the prize winning pictures 
from last year's exhibit. None 
of these pictures will be in- 
cluded in the annual exhibit to 
be held at Adah Shelly Branch 
Library the week of May 24. after the ex Mrs. Ray Meggitt, left, retiring 
chairman. of the Central Volunteer Bu- 
reau, was presented with a corsage by 
Mrs. Donald White, new chairman, at 
the bureau's annual meeting Thursday   ' EE 
* Pentiac Press Photes 
in the Community Services Building. 
Mrs. Meggitt was honored by board 
members for outstanding contribution 
to the’ organization. 
Womens Section bt,” Sl 
News of Personal Interest 
Mary Jo Pauli, daughter of 
Dr. and Mrs. Theodore Pauli 
has just been accepted into the 
Mother Carmelita Manning 
Chapter of the National Honor 
Society. Mary Jo‘is a senior 
at Lady of Mercy High School 
in Detroit. 
* * x 
Mary Louise Thorburn ol 
Green Lake returned from a 
tour of Europe two weeks ago 
and is now on a 10-day trip 
to the Hawaiian Islands as the 
guest of a national airlines. She 
is a travel consultant. 
* * * 
Attending the newly ac- 
credited Madonna College at 
Livonia are Pontiac residents 
Patricia ~Guibord and Mary 
Ann Neville Mrs. Herbert Watson has re- 
turned to her homie on Nelson 
street after spending over a 
month with her son, Clinton H 
Watson, and his family, of Sil- 
ver Spring, Md. 
* * * 
Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Addis 
of Judson court have returned 
from a_ three-week vacation 
visiting friends at Deerfield 
Beach, Pompani Beach, Ft. 
Lauderdale and St. Petersburg, 
Fla 
* * * 
Announcing the birth of a 
son, Jeffrey Todd, born May 
2 at Pontiac General Hospital. 
are Mr. and Mrs. Neil R. 
Fletcher of East Kennett road 
Grandparents are Mrs. Mary 
Popp of Judson street and Mr 
a 
Pontiac Women’s Chorus 
Presents Spring Concert 
The Pontiac Women's Chorus 
presented its annual spring 
concert Wednesday evening at 
Crofoot School. 
The chorus was dressed in 
pastel gowns and sang aga 1st 
a background of flowers. Their 
opening number was Shaw’s 
“With a Voice of Singing’. 
“On the Steppe’ by Gretch- 
aninoff followed, and then -the 
44-member groun sang Cui's 
“Radiant Stars, Above the 
Mountains Glowing’. 
Duets by George Scott and 
Elaine Keinert included ‘‘Love 
Is Where You Find It'’, Rom- 
berg’s ‘Will You Remember’ 
from ‘‘Maytime’’. and ‘Thine 
Alone” by Victor Herbert. 
‘KISMET’ SELECTIONS 
Mrs. Carl Leonard sang se- lections from ‘Kismet’ by 
Wright-Forrest. She was ac- 
companied by Charles A. Wil- 
son, minister of music at First 
Congregational Church. 
Other songs by the chorus 
included selections by Bach, 
Bedell and Fenner. 
The Mello-Tones, Olive Ab- 
sher, Dorothy Tallerday, Vel- 
va Wolfe and Elaine Keinert 
sang several numbers and Mrs. 
Leonard sang a Kentucky 
mountain ballad, “Careless 
Love”’. 
* * * 
Mrs. John Lupear and Mrs 
George Seedorf poured at cof- 
fee hour. 
The chorus was conducted by 
George Scott and accompanied 
by Mrs. Paul McKibben. 
Birmingham, Bloomfield Highlights   and Mrs. Nei] D. Fletcher of 
Detroit. 
* * x 
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Smiley 
of Anoka drive returned home 
Tuesday evening from Lima, 
Ohio, where they spent four 
days visiting Mr. and Mrs. 
John Rothe (nee Mary Ann 
Peterson.) 
* * *® 
William Hampton, son of the 
Verne Hamptons of Bloom- 
field Hills, will leave Friday 
for Iowa City to attend the 
Big 10 convention of collegiate 
student unions. He will repre- 
sent Michigan State University 
where he has been lected 
president of the Student Union 
* * * 
Returned to their Chippewa 
road home from Annapolis, Md., 
are retired Nav yCaptain and 
Mrs. Ericson Lewis. They at- 
tended Captain Lewis, class of 
1920 reunion at the U.S. Naval 
Academy 
* 
Among Pontiac area _ resi- 
dents taking part in Univer- 
sity of Michigan's Water Show 
this weekend are Marie Joynt. 
daughter of Gerald Joynts of 
Birmingham; Darlyne Gould, 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rich- 
ard Gould of South Lake An- 
ageles Shores; and Cecille Dum- 
brigue, daughter of the C. E. 
Dumbrigues of Loon Lake 
Shores. 
Others are Patsy Dernber- 
ger, president of Michigan, and 
daughter of Mrs. Helen Dern- 
berger of Oriole road, and 
Judy Lou Elwell, daughter of 
Mrs. Grace L. Elwell of Dick 
avenue. = 
Concluding the list are Bir- 
Abbott, Susan Boynton, Sally 
Hanson, Janet Miller. Kather- 
ine Patton and Katherine Ma- 
bly of Bloomfielé Hills. Mellel abit sta Volunteers Elect Officers Mrs. White New Head 
of Bureau 
Mrs. Donald White was elect- 
ed chairman of the Central Vol- 
unteer Bureau at the annual 
meeting held Thursday at the 
Community Services Building. 
Serving with Mrs. White are 
Mrs. M. D. Shelton, Mrs. Stan- 
ley Carter, Mrs. R. G. Bump, 
vice chairmen; and Mrs. Ar- 
thur Kinney, secretary. 
New members welcomed to 
the board were Mrs. Arnold 
Jerome, Mrs. James Briney, 
Mrs. Robert McCurry, Mrs. 
Sam L. Stolorow and Mrs. John 
Riley. 
* *x * 
The Central Volunteer Bu- 
reau was formed in 1954 to re- 
cruit volunteers for social wel- 
fare agencies and institutions 
and to provide a central clear- 
ing house where citizens may 
volunteer their time and skills. 
At present there are needs for 
Motor Aides, office workers, 
and Friendly visitors to spend 
time with elderly shut-ins. 
Representatives of the bureau 
Mrs. Rey Meggitt, Mrs. Kin- 
ney, Mrs. Bud Shelton and Mrs. 
~ James Cook attended the re- 
cent meeting of the Michigan 
Association of Volunteer Bu- 
_ reaus in Lansing. 
Representatives from the vol- 
unteer bureauls of Grand Rap- 
ids, Detroit, Battle Creek and 
Lansing also attended and dis- 
cussed use of student volun- 
teers. Mrs. Kinney acted as a 
panel member on the subject of 
“Board Construction.” 
  
Thursday Tea 
Fetes Retiring 
Norma Jenson 
Norma Jenson, who is retir- 
ing from teaching and moving 
to Tucson, Ariz., was honored 
at a tea held Thursday at the 
West Iroquois road home of 
Mrs. Everett Peterson. Lela 
Redmond and Mary Mitchell 
were cohostesses. 
Guests were Mrs. Irene Al- 
bright, Mrs. Bruce Barner, 
Mrs. Kent Webb, Mrs. A. J. 
Cadieux, Mrs. Robert Wales, 
Mrs. Edith McKee, Mrs. Eu- 
gene Carey, Virginia Luther, 
Margaret Luther, Mrs. Theo- 
dore Cohassey, Mrs. Kenneth 
Eaton and Mrs. Leon Leece. 
Others were Mildred Barnett, 
Helen Hayes, Gertrude Foley, 
Mrs. C. T. Forsman, Cora 
Baxter, Mrs. C. L. Harland. 
Helen Barnett, Mrs. H. H. 
Savage, Marietta Spring. Ade- 
line Hook, Dr. Pauline Spring. 
Helen Griggs. Mrs. Harry Ba- 
shore and Mrs. L. F. Hire 
Concluding the list were Mrs 
Harold Northon, Mrs: Norman 
Allen, Mrs. R. M. Williams, 
Mrs. Harold Brown, Mrs. Ger- 
trude Martin, Agnes Sturman 
and Florence Sturman. 
Hair Styles 
Demonstrated © 
A hairstyling demonstration 
was presented at the meeting 
of Gamm a Chapter of Beta 
Theta Phi Sorority held Tues- 
day evening at the Voorheis 
road home of Mrs. Robert 
Lohff. 
Modeling the hairdos were 
Mrs. Thomas Moffat, Mrs. 
Richard DeWitt, Mrs. Jerry 
Martin and Mrs. Ralph Behler. 
Guests were Mrs. Robert 
Hackett, Mrs. George Lamp- 
man, Mrs. Douglas Watson 
and Mrs. Raymond Eddy. 
Gay Weekend Ahead in North Carolina By RUTH SAUNDERS 
BIRMINGHAM AND 
BLOOMFIELD HILLS—A gay 
weekend in North Carolina is 
in store for a group of Birm- 
ingham friends who have been 
invited to Roaring Gap, N. C. 
The hosts will be Mr. and 
Mrs. Philip Hanes and Mr. and 
Mrs. Able Butler of Chapel 
Hill, N. C. 
Going south are Mr. and 
Mrs. Ralph C. Getsinger, Mr. 
-and Mrs. Garvin Bawden, Mr. 
and Frederick A. Erb Jr., 
Mr. and Mrs. Jack. Klarr from 
Birmingham; the Russell Nut- 
ters from Grosse Pointe and 
the Jack. Langs from Battle 
Creek. 
* * ‘* 
Comdr. and Mrs. Charles V. 
Gardiner and family are en 
route from their station in 
Hawaii to the commander's 
new assignment in Washing- 
ton, D. C. 
They will stop in Birming- 
ham to visjt their karents Mrs. 
Melvin Kates and Mr. and Mrs. 
C. E. Gardiner: ; 
* * *& 
Harry D. Hoey, headmas- 
ter of Cranbrook School Mrs. 
Hoey and their daughter De- 
borah, are_planning a supper 
, Party for May 24. 
The, affair’in the Hoey home will honor members of the 
graduating classes of both 
Cranbrook and Kingswood 
Schools. 
e * * * 
Of interest to Birmingham 
and Bloomfield Hills friends is 
the recent engagement of 
Katherine Kiersted S mith, 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy 
Chester Smith of Grosse Pointe 
to Robert Martin Stevenson Jr. 
He is the son .of Mrs. Doer- 
ing Partridge of Charlottes- 
ville, Va., and R. Martin 
Stevenson of Washington D. C. 
The Smith family lived in 
Bloomfield for many years. 
Kitty was graduated from 
Grosse Pointe Country ‘Day 
School and attended Briarcliff 
Junior College and the Uni- 
versity of Michigan. She is a 
Junior League member and 
-made her debut_at a dinner 
dance at The Country Club of 
Detroit. 
Her fiance was graduated 
from St. Albans School in 
* & & 
M¥. and Mrs. Carl G. Wonn~- 
berger of Cranbrook will sail 
, June 19 for a mohth of travel * 
in England, Scotland and Ire- 
land. 
+~ * * 
Another traveler will be Mrs. Russell Barnes who will fly to 
London June 7. 
Her son Lt. James Barnes 
is stationed at Stuttgart, Ger- 
many and looking forward to 
‘a visit with his mother.” 
* * * 
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sanders 
are entertaining Jane Runyon 
over the weekend. 
Miss Runyon is alumnae 
secretary for Bradford Junior 
College in Massachusetts. 
Alumnae in this area will 
honor her at a buffet supper 
Saturday evening in the San- 
ders home in Epping Lane. 
Assisting at the affair are 
Mrs, Kenneth Cunningham Jr., 
Mrs.- Wallace _R. Campbell, 
“Mrs. Richard H. .M. Korden- 
brock, Mrs. Carleton McLain 
and Mrs. Charles Chapman, 
* &; 
Mrs. Albert J. Scriven of 
Northlawn gave a_ surprise 
* * * 
Mary Elizabeth Redfield, 
very young daughter of Mr. 
and Mrs. Michael Redfield, 
will be ‘christened at. noon 
Sunday in Christ Church Cran- 
brook by the Rev. Walter 
Young. The Redfields have invited 
- friends and relatives for a 
five o'clock supper party to 
celebrate the event: and also 
Mrs. Redfield’s birthday. She 
is the former Lauise Thomp- 
son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Carl A. Thompson of Dunston 
road. 
Calory Counting 
Lesson Given 
Mrs. Howard Reynolds and 
Mrs, Levi Geasler gave a les- 
son on “Counting Calories” 
when Huron Gardens Extension 
Club met Tuesday at the home 
of Mrs. Geasler on Holbrook 
street. 
* * 
. Mrs. Leonard Barnes dis- 
cussed “Marketing” and ‘‘Shop« 
pers’ News'’ after a coopera- 
tive dinner was served. Mrs. 
Geasler was named communi- 
ty ee > 
The group decided to have a 
picnic June 17 at the home of 
Mrs. Norman Brown. on Eliza- 
beth Lake avenuc. 
Four pages today 
in Women’s Section 
La  
   TAT SOR am 
  ee en a 
  
i 
- 
~ 
seen 
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        § Si 
RA Re RE RS OMe fee me ee PEON A CN ER, ge me en GB | es 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1959 
    
    
    
   
    
       
       
     
         
        
         
    
      
     
     
    
  
    
        
    
        
      
  
Answer: You are quite right:   
  VEN OR | ; (eh SME an 8 PF aOne , fe 
Families Know Adolescents Too Well ts ‘a : : ' ey, venturous ‘~ i > ; > > ; 
and forces starts to it: ridicu-|their criticism in a quiet spirit. + | By MURIEL LAWRENCE adolescence hits, you. mocars 4 sib © aanett Vat cae edetencent tofunid axtiel Colonnade a , you to claim the dignity your eyes. — ae ing | Ome Sunday when I was 14 MY! volved «with your new condition. This is why are so |new dignity, uncertainty about) summer is in | 
| parents had @ guest, @ European| And your family, to whom the newcritical of thelr it makes our of his pestle: 
painter, male and unattached. {dignity is ridiculous, promptly And it's why. wé should ‘accept {condition such a threat that he|the offing for 
Because it was a hot summer} / perry He us as amiably 83) Cir] Scout day 2 wore onl up. ~ me be RR lO — “We can’t help remembering him Mariner guest was shown the garden and) | 4 | ne # ° as a child, and he can't stand . 
| Oe — vannpecnf Have/Y ou Tried This? - © | remembering himself as one. It's Cornelia 
ee a | '# problem that we must let time Riggs, 
where he'd ieft his bat and stick) Ginger Ale Adds.Zest |” denglacr of as | 
meet you,” when he suddenly d Ni Gi Mr. and Mrs. 
ane ey tae ea, Inve 2 to Angel Food Dessert ice Girls Lonnie Riggs passiona ’ . > / . 
“Ach, you are 20 enchanting. sO By JANET ODELL mi bottle ginger ale (not Don t Take ' of Augusta 
vound. 00 Dee . 4 Pontiac Press Home Editor 11 cups whipping cream or 1 pack : avenue who : a dessert e 
Struck dum, 1 was struggling |] At one of the bridge bene- Large angel feed cake 4 Such Trips will represent 
ith mingled delight and disbeliet}# {5 given this past winter @ nei marshmallows in fruit when giggles broke from behind|y flicious dessert was served. iuicg in double boiler. Let 5 By EMILY Post Pontiac at the * ‘We ve finally tra it EMIL! P ,the sola where my younger broth- down ana i & te yee. cool and add ginger ale. Chill | ; ' 1959 Senior 
cr and his perpetually grimy cof I's light enough to se at any ‘annie’ aby ane fed ino St | my aan POA Helen ot | Girt Scant panion luge. at . .| m ter’s our city 
ing into the open, my little broth-|§ coe. af ” ~ - mixture. "| about a year san. went to | Roundup in 
{itu in ecstatic mimlery” of my | tre racine She ees Ne i . eanall pletes. Put alayer et fi| distat in order that she be | July 3-12. ! : ; needs no in- : 
teughter ne ee ae se 4% troduction to Pontiac _resi- cake inte 9xi3 pan. — near her — > “ ' RI Boece , 
sete tne Sef See oe eoee mg Sem fl och Se (eum me CORNELIA RIGGS hin th ee rd = to do much else. Working with full. Let chill at least 24 ing at a boarding house. My ae oes 
th " the pain. This i a pity. We need| dowers fs her favorite hobby. Beur#i longer Is better. daughter wants to go and visit ne chg , ge 
See exciting clothes for summer-time living lto remember it t6 avoid hurt|# ANGEL DESSERT =e rovers ARE SEN EE a aon & if CO S$ : when our own adolescent boys and 4 By Mrs. Bartlet Wager nish hi cmp ped _ § * “She Id stay with her * Bai 2s 
in the new issue of Simplicity. Now on sale baied prae rage at betrayals Of § 1 pound mershmallows ig 16-20. | Il Qriend and be would find 0 P; k R f fj 
. abri Families are mixed blessings to) 7 ene : 4 rg Ae grain Ao saat [ Cc epr esen @ | l ve in our Fabric Department. adolescent people. Te ey cn the 7 | * morni H a P 
| A family has seen your face dis- (by car) they would be there 
SPACIOUS FREE PAVED PARKING LOT torted by the mumps. It has seen Get Colorful that night. Can they, in all By MARGARET BROWN 
Ke ass a a to = Umbrella propriety, do this? If ever a young lady fit the 
6s <7 99 |bat m to w your ears. —_— expression “ 
Owned and Operated by Local People ‘has seen you cry when you are Nothing to pick up the spirits , ~ 7 - but they ter, it's Cornelia Riggs Pon- 
jteased. It possesses the most| on a rainy spring day like an cannot make this trip as you | tiac Central High School jun- 
‘ample information on every weak-| umbrella that’s a flash of color. yourself say, “in all. propri- ior, who wil] 
Aubarn 5 and 10 fee ceri sey ’sm| “rey oe in taranise with mas tas Tumane athe 0 Ser jation with ich you've struggled } a © pri Girl Scout Roundup near Colo- 
640 Auburn Ave. | Block East of East Bivd. since you were born. in vivid shades on a white “Dear Mrs. Post:. What can rado Springs, Colo. 
- Then the physical maturity of! background. val ; The soft-spoken I do to ward off the attentions da ef Mr. and Mrs. 
= of someone whose personality ~ : 
E AT NO EXTRA COST I do not like? T met a young | Togaee' she ‘nwa MOR _ Sa a bs A man the other evening while | Frised and honored ik | 8% % bay og ee > - ice as bb tf ‘is at a friend’s house. I was not ppointment 
cab _ , IN BEAUTIFUL ee” discourteous to a tn ond international 
a neither did I encourage sponsored 
ow any way Ever since that meet- ean te ad 
T- don’t like to be rude, but Michigan’s Highland Recrea- 
short of that, is there anything | tion Area in 1956. Y I can do to discourage his Cornelia is the 
peel County scouts 
Answer: Whenever he invites cipate in activities at the cam 
you to do anything, always site, located opposite the new 
have another engagement, and a 
sooner or later he will realize . 
2 that his attentions are not Cornelia was appointed 
welcomed and probably give tend the roundup by local 
up his pursuit of you. leaders on the 
won work, ‘Dear Mrs. Post: An ac- 
i quaintance of mine recently | S*outing am oi 
—3 é told me that all white gloves Last Decem = are improper before five | of scouting, Cornelia became 
. T ; o'clock in the afternoon. I have Mariner. Activities 
Fe $e hae never heard of this and if it are pated quiaanay 
it ‘ec —— — 1253 Featherstone Rd. af is true there are a great many | safety and boating rules Bp : <n ane she is a ee At hogy irg -< -she is 
, Hrdlams this but just to convince my- page Me ef 
wh self I would like your opin- reation Aas. 
i ¥ Draw all 2 ghe ton that’s} ion on this.” She's also a 
“|the secret of fuller ALL- BRICK tery Methodist Youth 
3 LARGER BEDROOMS « FULL BASEMENT 
; ANO INCLUDING 
HOTPOINT BUILT-IN OVEN AND RANGE 
SNACK BAR @ RANGE HOOD-FAN @ ROUGHED-IN EXTRA BATH 
Suburben Living with City Water, Sewers and Paving 
FHA 840 DOWN eis cine cots MODE cA 
  
      
Other Houses at $13,325 — Gi Terms 
  Pontiac. Drive out Mt. 
      
» ke» BARES wa 
gaat atingteggsatasaem soe rosane nai vente 
eed ane PLT LE OLE OIE ELIOT EI IES EE ELT ELE EE EE 
«. Lussy Deodorants 
  figures. Princess sheath has a 
pretty, curved neckline — spot- 
lighted with gay embroidery. 
Printed Pattern 4527: 
Sizes 1444, 16%, 18%, 20%, 224, Half 
  
  in fact I can’t imagine where 
  
            | 
  Kea     
Cultured Pearl Pendants—Diamond Pendants 
—Watches—Pear] Beads—Charm Bracelets— 
Compacts — Jewel Cases—Pen Sets — Musical 
Powder Boxes—Brooches—Ear Rings—Neck- 
| laces — Bracelets by Krementz, B. David and 
/ Maladi. Sterling Silver in all’ Guild Patterns. 
“The Store 
  | >< Fred N. Pauli Co. Pontiac's Oldest Jewelry Store 
28 W. Huron 
  ‘ yards “Tear Mrs, Post: When one | began clerking 
vai an Ragen od receives an invitation and can- | department at 
; ; not accept it, is it proper to | ers Inc. department 
tern part. Easier. accurate. place? The situation is this: summer ahead. 
Send fifty cents in coins for this} | received an invitation to the | cost of train 
pattern — add 10 cents for each) wedding and reception of the | ing equipment pattern for 1st-class mailing. Send daughter of a friend of mine. nancial difficulties 
to Anne Adams, care of The Pon- “T will not be able to go, but families, Northern Oakland panned 2m semen. 
West 17th St., New York 11, N.Y.| in my place. The wedding is to | met the need of their sister peo $5.95 
Print plainly name, address with! be a large fashionable one and | scouts via a peanut sale re- iz Va 
zone, size and style number. she would lowe to go if it would | cently which netted sufficient || Jameice $3.95 
i be proper.” funds per in brat on tra- (Straighe shirt, Pedal 
Association Meets Answer: A daughter sub- | It has been estimated that ste ennlitth) 
stituting for her mother at a one out of eight Senior Scouts |} 
large welling would sot be a ag ara ge y e-n The ° 
of the season Wednesday improper, But I think it wou States me 
ewes at the home of | be best to telephone and ask | camp. Along with Scouts from Little SHOP 
Mrs. J. P. Charles of Bloom- for permission rather than just U.S. territories and approxi- 
field Hills. Ann Campbell was | send her. “ mately 20 other countries, they MATERNITIES 
guest of honor. Assisting the will compose the largest gath- | 
hostesses were Mrs. - Russel The new suits, as shown in| ering of teenage girls (some 4 E. St. 
Meyer, Mrs. Harley Melzian paris, Neten esly two Jace aageort as na ot naar Huron 
. out three : % _and Mrs. Don S. Connor buttons rt om FE 2-7691 
the roundup has been rigorous. 
For the Girl Graduate jm 
Where Quality . Counts” 
            
  
  
      
      
SE a ee eee eee ee 
     In gleaming tel glazes in gay, mix -or+ 
colors of yellow, pink, green and blue.: 
opaque dinnerware will add its charm to           
       ij meal. Graceful, flowing lines give them’, 
i) 6 air which belies their modest price. 
- 16-PIECE STARTER.SET, -   
  
DEXIE 
 a OR a a ER et cial ke Sy, > be ‘ 2 gies 4 
      
            
        
     
    
   
     THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1959 ‘   
  ison mn oer Oveles Extends Average to .487 in 8-7 Victory , Wall 4 Strokes 
Er Seems No Letup to Aaron theadotfied | 
| By United Preys International .| three-run uprising and preserv- ; lead the Giants to victory over | Gus Bell’s single with the bases . P 
3 | mae Ie ing Bob Rush’s third victory. | the EM. “MeCorisish, whe loaded in the ninth produced ‘all at of rings 
| word Pittsburgh defeated Los Angeles, scored totory, the runs in the Cincinnati-Chicago 
That's they watchword n0™ lr; San Francisco blanked Phil-| Be-bitter geing for 7-onethird im: game, Joe Nuxhall went the dis i | among battered, bewildered Na-| Gcsohia, 30, and Cincinnati beat| MBS* before pinch hitter Gram: |tance for the Reds, allowing only} Pennsylvania Pro Ties gone Fr 
   
   
    
      
        
    
           
   tional League pitchers who are\cpicago, 2-0. py Hamner doubled.  |three hits, and retiring the~ last ; . 
naar wondering if there’s « & tk Gene Freese and Chico Fernan-|16 batters in order. Dave Hillman arses pore With 63 
i Sac SER: Ee any end in sight. Dick Stuart’s. ninth-innin dez each singled in the ninth for|was the loser although Bell got) 7-Under Par 
er FREE! FREE! . recs — bat = Ara spared waa te ana pollegenel the other Phillies’ hits. Ray Sem-/his game-deciding blow off reliever 
-. } oo nes Pracigpi bt . pirates their victory over the|Proch was the loser. Don Elston. HOT SPRINGS, Ark.  — Art 
© RUBBER CAR RUG SB ietup. Dodgers. It — sag second| —- wall Jr., of Pocono Manor, Pa., 
ry . game-winning homer as many today carried a whopping four- 
With This Coupon §  xiteswuctott; The pitchers used to say that |nights and his sixth of the season. stroke lead into the second round H May 15 Baines 4 22 (P) . no one ever would tep Hugh x *& * 8 
f lof the $22,000 Hot Springs Open 
“Duffy’s record .438 set with the Bob Friend, trying for his first Ma Or lea ue * Boxes golf tournament... 
Boston Braves in 1894, but now |victory, was routed in the eighth) yall ti iti Wall tied the competitive course          
       
    
          Wha Tut Inétallation!*        
      
  -& 
]-Hour Service 
      
    lg i think Aaron | when the Dodgers scored four runs | ‘record and posted the low com- 
While You Wait seieisiinaa [to tie the score. Roy Face Came caycaco aby hdi BOSTON abr h bi MILWAUKEE ST. LOUIS petitive total of his own career 
The 25-year-old Milwaukee maul- ‘on and picked up his sixth straight | Aparicio 8s $ = 3 : Keough zal . : - _——— — Stanense a" a yesterday with a blistering 63 over 
ler enjoyed one of his typical nights |victory. Roman Mejias also hom-| Tenais ef 3122 Williams If 3 0 0 obPafko ef 3 1 1 1 Cisnelt et 381 ! the 7,01l-yard Arlington Country 
‘Thursday when he collected three- ered. [Hants $334 Mauone ao gt it Aaron ct.) 3033 Rover aw) 393g Club layout |for-five in an 8-7'yictory over the | ~*~ * * Callison If 1000 Jensen rf 40 1 0 Covin'ton 562 ssegian ; | [eee 23 Ge lb_5 110 Torre lb 2110 Kelner p 0000 The nine-under-par tally gave 
Mela PAR St. Louis Cardinals that stretched Young Mike McCormick hurled pot a Stat whine OP IeS dAdcock 1b 301 ¢ dMenus 190° nim = healthy margin over Geno 
Rel the Braves’ lead to 142 games. | » three-hitter and Willie Mays | Spllips > S270 Buddin ss 6422 3irogan ss 5230 W.Smith p 0000) Littler of Singing Hillis, Calif.; Wynn p 5110 Hoeft p 0000 0%ren to 5100 iNoren 1000 a 5 » Cane; FOR x~ & * clouted a three-run homer to |Lown p 0000 Mnb'q'ttep!010pirsro p 2000 Tate ss 6000; dim Ferree of Winston-Salem 
PLYMOUTH aN Aaron’s third hit, his second Doniiield pie o 0( ae eS 1geel N. C.; Buddy gullivan of Ybs 
b> Suess si 1 0 j : 
ee ee ee cs Mark | vane oun Mir» ERE KSEG TEAC 1/18 Gn, out tot wee tr > wed e Lay bd - . : ota. Burdette p ©0000 Gram'as ss 2061 1! ress, « dey Wi were 
i 20.08 Ml j ; 5 : Cards. It came with the bases Prep ISCUS al -Singled for Monbouquette in ua; b- Lado > AR bunched in the second place 
0 i" ILE 0! | i full and capped a five-run rally. Struck out for Bowsfield in 8h rowe 1010 at 67 
—_ 2) UNCONDITiG | FULL tan ‘ v7 Eddie Mathews added his 14th Kean teen te Pa aes Chicage: ss..4 2 sss0e: 301 222 " an—sal SicDaniel 4H W i" ; M 
5 ALS Md POX IUN 1 ve tio, Hope S$ O-f00l-|Boston ............065- 000 001 140— 6 cDaniel p a reigning asters cham- 
“A be ; NAL GUARAN TEE! f i F paneled in the ecg ao cea all-state basketball star, bet-| g.wnite, Buddin. PO-A-Chicago 27-6, Totals 448167 "Tus 977197 pion and leading money winner on 
oie ore er nie i en the |tered the National Interscholastic esion, ae i pooled Bernert a—Doubled for McDaniel in 4th; p— the 1959 PGA circuit, used only 25 . 
OPEN DAILY 8 9 os ; Fae | we : ‘ier record here Thursday with) | cago 11. Boston 9 Grounded out for Bruton in Sth: c- ‘pied putts on his torrid round which 
= ae | bullpen to throttle a ninth-inning | 34 inches. Th 2B-Smith, Jensen, Loliar 2. Malzone, out for Torre in Sth: d—Fouled out for h f hed 
: , a toss of 161 feet, 5%4 inches. The! Kellner in 5th; e—Singled for Rush in he finish with four straight j Louis rall Buddin. 3B-Runnels, HR-Torgeson, Ennis, & 
SATURDAY 8-6 Pr ; as. _ ~ |recognized national record of 158/Landis. Buddin. SB-Landis. Torgeson. 8- Sth: f—Grounded out for Ww Silt MO birdies for a—tetal—of—nine._He 
       
     Call FE 3-7855 h: g—Grounded out for Grammas in 
"Burdette ended the game by |feet, one inch is held by Mike | Landis SP-Pox, Lollar, Malsone, Torge-;70: §—frounded 1 en an, 1 missed a. five-foot putt from an- 
  
  
  
  
    Ran for H. Smith in %h; j—Singied for 
getting Stan Musial to hit into Lewis of Lincoln High School a w. $2 2 2 SE ER BBS Brosnan in Mb; kK—Ran for Crowe in #n other bid on No. 6. 
a double play, thus halting © a _1San Francisco. j|Lown -11-31 001 } Milwaukee 010 105 Seealsn wae wt 32-31-63 
— = ——— | Heeft L, -.... ane ee 010 200 @13—7 Gene Littler 32-3567 
Bowsfield .....+s. 3 735510 E—Blasingame, O'Brien. PO-A—Milwau- Buddy Sullivan 33.3307 
Pornieles 1 2 1 1 1 O gee 27-11, St. Louis 27-12. DP—Green and, Dick Mayer 34-3367 -By Hoeft. Pox. U-Summers, Mc- 4° smith: O'Brien Logan and Adcock;| Wes Ellis Jr . 31-36—67 Kinley, Boar, Chylak. T-3 08. A-3,554. an and Torre. LOB—Milwaukee 10, St. Joe Kirkwood Jr 37-31—48 
j tenis 14 Bob — . W468 
KANSAS CITY BALTIMORE 2B—Logan. Aaron 2. Torre. Blasingame George Bayer “$3368 
- ab rh bi ab rb bi Cunningham, Cimoli. HR—Mathews. 8P— Doig preg oe Tuttle ef 4010 Tasby cf 4121) Musial a eek oo Terw'ger 2 5000 Boyd 3000 IP BR ERB SO pe" Furgol 333400 e@ ib 4030 Nieman if 4010 x-Pizarro 3 6 3 + the je 3435-09 Hadley Ib 9009 Woodling rf 4008 Rush iW. 34) 2 1 6 e i 2 Don Jam a | aus 3b 20 1 ©, Trowbridge 21:3 2 ¢ 2 . | Cerv if 3010 aFinigan 3b 100 0! y-McMahon Lit: ee =: ie A Smith 3b 3000 Ginsberg c 20 0 0 Burdette $38 6 68 1 (Ones Ce > me 
House ¢ 4010 biriandos ¢ 1000) McDaniel 4.7 2 2 0 Ao ns | 35.3578 Dem'stri ss 3010 Gardner 2 3000 Kellner Woof 0 8 0 Oe bt 37-3370 Garver p 2000 Miranda ss 20090 Nunn (L, 2-2) 134 5 5 1 OB meming © 35-3570 Daley p 1110 cCar'sq ss 1000 Ww smi ees et OO ee tant 33.3770 O'Dell p 2006 Brosnan 2 + 1106 1 Ter Fue : a 
ss | Gavia 100 6; Darvel eS a 
‘ C | John Dp ©0080 , Faced 3 batters in 4 Si hat : ; amt Re | ‘Tetals 332101 ° Totals” 30141; Ted _ Krell : 
9 : 1 | y—Faced 3 batiers in Sh Charlies Rorar 35-35—78 
a—Reached first on fielder’s choice for} WP—McDaniel, Pizzaro —Deimore. Teauny Bolt ; 37-33—70 
ot < iis. | Klaus in 7th: b—Plied out for Ginsber, Pot * 36-34—70 
e o . Bx! : *e '7th: e—Grounded out for Miranda in ba: Barlick, Jackowsk!, Crawford T—3 11 A Dea airfield : 35-35—70 
x | d—Grounded out for O’Dell in 8h | —7.356 X—Amateur 
Kansas City) ............ 010 000 100-2) — $$ Baltimore wo. 000 100 000—1 
| E—Ginsberg. Triandos. PO-A—Kansas 
i 27-12, tmore 27-10. DP—Gardner 
Miranda and Boyd. LOB—Kansas City 9. | 
| Baltimore 3. = 
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ww Sus Remove all 4 wheels; install SAFTI-GRIP gill 4 Wheels complete, 
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Pri ay — re | U ir ay — un ay * |] beck trout” whect bearings: 'adjest " pedal | | clearance; check brake fluid; ebeck all grease 
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  PITTSBURGH LOS ANGELES | habe bah $ , a © Chev. 
Heck 30 8 '3'2's Gitttem we “3128 Gites! cheek aheck sbearbers: free 500" mile 1 © Plymouth Clemente rf § 122 Neal 2b 4001 spection; rotate tires tf desired. =< © Ford - Mejias cf 5123 Moon if $012 . 
7 Stuart Ib - 5.122 Demeter ef 50777 
May 1 > — 1 6 — 1 Gennes 7] Seis Fairly a a; 4 ; Other Cars $16.95 Except Nash. Studebaker. Hudson 
M'zer'ski 2 4010 3 rss 3000 
mms ithe ll WEAIRKET TIRE CO Poiles ¢ 4010 eLillis so™ 0100 
Rese HRS. ° a f . ‘ pear, 888) 77 W.H FE 8-0424 ontiac’s Family | Bes |HLEL 77 W. Harn | Fowler p 000 - — — 
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RUSS’ SUPPLIES FE 5-3144        
       e Dp Vai | Totals 397127 Totals 37 612 6 
a—Singled for Klippstein a Tth; b— 
Doubled for Zimmer in &h; c—Ran for 
Snider in &th; oe ti for *Fouler in 
‘is th &h; e—Strike out for 
Pittsburgh ; , . po 0 00)—7 
Les Angeles 100 0 140—<4 
   E—Gilliam, Groat. PO-A —Pittsburgh 
27-17. Los Angeles 27-14. DP—Groat, Mas 
H eroski and Stuart. LOB—Pittsburgh &, 
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Demeter, Pignatano. Hoak. Snider 
as Mejias, Stuart. SB—Hoak. sF— 
        
            
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During our Opening Bl KE ’ | Bouchee 4000 Mas et 3328 CARPET CLEANERS, FLOOR POLISHERS 
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  \ \ 
FORTY h-PAGES. TILE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1959 Hea: . ' | l . | . _ By rge Sixta 
OUT, en on Planets in Few Decades British astronomer and cosmolo- Ma 66 Go, aan at cireoenis WILMINGTON, Mass. m= Men will come new mastery over 
gist, Thomas Gold, now a profes- (yesterday. will be on other planets within the’ nature. ‘ 
    
  aoe on Seer a These were among predictions)\ser at Harvard University; Dr. \7 FADING CONTRACTOR 
They'll find- out whether lite mai%,03 10P selentiats, Three -| Harold C. Weber, chiet sclentifie | Aveo is the nation’s leading re- . 
forms exist on the other planets. But ‘ dog 07 | adviser to the U.S. Army and «search contractor on the problem r . . — : 
' all depended upon a big “if.” They, ‘A TAKING HIM . 
But it may be many centuries (said it will be up to mankind to Prelessor of chemistry at Massa: of missile reentry OUTSIDE, GRAMPS, ii 
before they get beyond the solar decide whether gcientific and tech- chusetts Institute of Technology; Dr. Arthur , Kantrowitz, di- y 
‘BEFORE HE 
      
    
   
    
               
    
  system. nological advancement in the space pr. Clifford C. chancel- -ootor of the Avco-Everett GOE RAZ J 
They'll discover many of the| a5" en arate bese ree lor of the University of Bufisio porch Laboratory, has an- sc Ly! l tates ; apa ite 9 recsote past when!) oe civithation’ pa Seer -eodetaat ant-y od nounced that Avco had achieved By Edgar Martin 
. * * * velopment; Dr. Hans Bethe, shock waves of a million-miles 
FOUR NEW Rays - The scientists met at the dedica- nuclear physicist and » key an-hour velocity in their Everett | 
And they'll find a whole new tion of one sof the largest facilities| figure in developing the atomic ; laboratory similar to shock variety ‘of happenings going on min the world for solutjon of space| bem, and various other : waves sent out by storms on the 
the universe because they will have problems — the six-building Ayco} leaders. . sun. ; 
ee a nin of rays to see, (Research Center to be staffed by 4 ThorAble test vehicle recov-| ‘The shock wave research was with as soon as they get outside, scien technicians { | 
the curtain of the aks wm, kists and ~ ered after arching 5,000 -miles carried on as part of the testing! 
sphere. . | Speakers included the famous |through space was shown publicly’ program for nose cone re-entry. J 
to mes. belies snsenseameg | : BUARDING HOUSE   vr 
        
       
  | dnd wih grater undowiandhes WELL, DON'T FRET ~~ I SOLD 
= "SAD TIDINGS, PET/IT WILL TAKE BCORNIAL MAGELT, WITH” f SENERAL DAYS OF ADDITIONAL. : ; 
    | QUESTIONS ASKED, SUST fe 
$80 ON THE BARRELHEAD! /% 
UNDER House RULES /% 
WE'LL SPLIT (TLIKE A HOT KNIFE. ON COLD /Y7 
BUTTER HERE'S WY YOUR B4O/ 
             
        
               
   / | rac: \Ali RESEARCH AT THE LIBRARY TODO Bitter lies Wing B SUSTICE 10 THE EMINENT PLACE OF | sp b ENGLISH BULLS LIKE CORNWALLIS 
Vay Over Globe » IN BRITISH SOCIETY /«— HAK-KAFF/~ 
Migrate Thousands of 
            
   
      
       
          eS 
       
      
  CONFOUND THE DELAY I'M SO 4 amg ANXIOUS TO DISPLAY THE Ba CHAMPION TO MY maa BBY FELLOW SPORTS- 
SST SSS 
     
    . Miles in the Autumn; ME ‘ alent 
Return in Spring Wi es YW, 7; \} ire | ' 
| WASHINGTON — Many  butter- 
| flics and moths are notorious tour- 
i ists Yet little is known about 
! their travels. 
In autumn billions of the frail 
‘in ts take off in rainbow hordes 
1 *\c'aces that are hurdreds. even   {| | 
    ; Oy) 
POOKY AW ) 
        t) sands of miles distant, the | 
Na ‘ona Society says. | 
In spri , as food plants |. 
  th us! from warming earth, ~ 
they gradually rise on faded, 
travel-worn wings to\start home. 
It is not known definitely 
whether any of them Ifve_ long 
enough to complete the round 
trip: 
The search for food causes sea 
s° >! migration in a few cases. 
But none of the 250-odd migrant 
s'«les of Lepidoptera show the 
same patterns of behavior. In 
general the impulse to migrate 
" mv come from deen-roo‘ed in- 
; stinct or external factors such as 
overcrowding. . 
Another suggestion is that the 
fnsects are fleeing from predators 
in the Instinctive hone of multi 
rlying elsewhere in peace. 
* * ® 
The Painted Lady (Pyrameis 
cardui) of Europe spans the Medi- 
terranean. In springtime, swarms | 
originate somewhere in Africa, | 
descend on the coastal] areas in| 
April. and fly to Europe. Some 
carry on to Iceland. 
Other migrants include the 
('ondless Sulphur (Phoebis sennae 
or eubule), the Great Southern 
White (Ascia monuste), the Snout 
Butterfly (Libythea bachmani). 
the California Tortoise Shell 
(Agiais californica), and the very 
unwelcome Cotton Leafworm 
Moth (Alabama argillacea). 
Snoring lures these moths from | 
their unknown tropical American 
home, and they breed several] gen- 
erations jin cotton fields. Then, 
inexplicably, they get wanderlust. 
Millions appear in the Northeast- 
ern States and Canada, areas 
where it would seem impossible 
that a single one could survive.                   
          
    
  
  
    
        
  
  
  
      
  
  
            
                
              
  
              The Department \of the - Interior , . Cals SEG Sd Ty tee Ss , > =f ae y 
we the seventh divisfon of the/ ‘ : [a , 
ex ~ttive denartment of the United | 
ab’ chmtten by tac- of congrtess in | THE FUNNY GUY 
a“ senna ZRMRLINNS 6-17 , : | , ’ . 1] | > we ih 4 eal 
4 | } J me wifi 1849. | 
DONALD PUCK : By Walt Disney NANCY By Ernie Rnahmiller 
| __ EIRONP) (THAT'LL — —_— I——     
        
    
    
      
  
  
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You'll Find 
PROFITABLE 
| OPPORTUNITIES sh Every Day in the Pontiac 
Press Want Ad Section 
ai rt aste lake advantage of this easy way 
TY to sulve afl your buying and 
our selling problems a 
                
    
    
                  yell To Place Your fi | wo j | . ith the ' WANT AD ; , * , ie ! f j “e Al | Al. ) {909 by WHA Gorvive, tne. TR. Reg, UB. Pus OF, . . 
/. Gaver ) DIAL FE 2-818) é‘ We ap a hee GRANDMA ee ges By Charles Kuh » ‘ = GOLLY, I MUST O'GOT «IN THAT LATEST BATCH : 
: TOO MUCH ZOOM...n-7 F-—| JOP ANTI-SPRING FEVER 4 — 
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Nash Admits Shot, 
Police Officer Says 
Nash, released from prison in 
1957 after serving time for murder, 
his earlier story 
being the actual killer: 
: * © °-¥... 
Nash also poked holes in the 
sory given by Hicks, who was 
managing Lassiter’s Detroit Car 
Co. lot, 2614 N. Woodward Ave., 
while he was away. 
Hicks ‘had said he was “too 
drunk’? to remember what hap- 
pened on the night of the shoot- 
ing. 
‘HICKS SENT HIM’ 
Nash said it. was Hicks who sent 
him into the Willow Run Airport to 
page Lassiter. When he got into 
their waiting car, Nash said he re- 
calls Lassiter reprimanding Hicks 
for drinking while he was supposed 
to be in charge of the lot. 
i a, ae 
Confronted with Nash's new 
stery and confession, Hicks 
added to his earlier story and 
said he remembered “very clear- 
ly” seeing Nash shift the re- 
volver from his hip to a spot in 
his back when he went into the 
terminal to page Lassiter. 
not he who feigned sickness to 
haye Jones stop the car on a side 
road off the Willow Run Express- 
* * * 
“I remember hearing a splat,” 
Davids quoted Hicks as saying. way. 
? 
: 
i 
i 
i i   
of Steel Union 
Not Discussed, Both Say 
After Half-Hour Session 
-NEW YORK (AP) — President _ [produce «(ke Meats Head | MARKETS Strauss Gains changed 
«night. He had accused Jones as ‘ 
svting anion i tata grown 
brought to the Farmer's 
Market by growers and sold 
them in wholesale package 
Quotations are furnished by 
  
declared the steel industry situa- 
tion was not discussed. 
* * * 
There was no public comment 
by steel industry leaders about the 
session, which came in the midst 
of contract negotiations aimed at 
averting a strike by 500,000 work- 
ers when contracts expire in the 
basit steel industry June 30. 
McDonald said at a news con- 
ference that he went to Eisenhow- 
:: |er’s hotel suite to pay his respects) 
-\to the President, who was in the 
city for a round of activities. 
      the 
Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of 
Wi y. 
Detroit Produce 
FRUITS . Delictous, Du ....seeeee.-e- $4.00 
elmtosh, bu. ..... 2... ee seeveeeeees 2.50 
CB GG, WE. .cccceces-secvecen 2.50. 
We MON, BE gs. c cca: -ccssoceres 3.50 
VEGETABLES Pee 
ST Se Leeks, . 1, dos. .. .. 2.08 
Onions, greens, doz. ....-+.+.. o 
Pardiey, Tek, GOB. ...000c0--cvccvere 1.60 
Pasenipa, Mm bu. . , 1.25 Potatoes, 50 Ib. bag + 150 
, FER, GOB. csaccccccvccecges 1.25 
Radishes, white, doz. .............. 1.25} Rhubarb, hothouse, doz. behs....... 1.10 
DETROIT POULTRY 
DETROIT; a 4 1¢- +AP)}—Prices_ paid 
per 4, f.o.b. Detroit, for No. 1 
|quality live poultry: 
9-11; 
Tbs., 
  * * * 
“T had a very friendly visit 
with an- old friend,” McDonald 
said. He said he and the Presi- 
dent have been friends since 1944. 
“We did not discuss the steel 
clared. 
McDonald said he and Eisen- 
hower talked over “the state of 
the country and the state of the 
world.” 
Both McDonald and Hagerty de- 
had nothing to do with the steel 
  dumped |both the industry and union to|chassed 
|show economic statesmanship in| steers 
jtheir negotiations and avoid 
lany new wage-price inflationary)! 
‘spiral. 
| Before meeting with Eisenhow- 
ithe 12 largest steel companies. 
j   
‘Dow Plans Expansion 
  
Establish New Post 
in Special 
t established the position of}the provision for a director can cents higher: 
of special education, to 
become effective the next school Education| 
be made without expense to school 
| district. 
needs,” Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, 
superintendent of schools, told 
the Beard. 
a pro- 
t principals and teachers 
from two elementary schools, yet 
unselected, a half-day tak- 
ing instruction on precedures in- fy 
<|volved in civil defense work in 
case of emergency. Principals from 
  to attend as observers. clared the timing of the meeting, 
all other schools will be asked! ry: 
Heavy type hens 16-18; light ty, 
heavy type breilers and {fryers 
whites 19-20; Barred Rocks 24-26; capon- 
ettes under 5 Ibs. 21-2142; over ® Ibs. 
| 25-26; ducklings 27. 
DETROIT EGGS 
| OETROIT, May 14 (AP)— 
|Detroit, in case lots, Pederal -State 
is : | Whites—Grade A jumbo %-35, 
34%; extra lar s, fod. 
132: large 29; medium 24; small 19; 1915, Commercietiy graded: 
Whites—Grade A jumbo 28%; extra 
large 28; large 27-274: medium 22; 
rade B large 23 
26a; medium 21; Grade B 
Livestock 
DETROIT LIVESTOCK 
DETROIT, May 14 (AP)—Cattle 
salable 150 2 ager or 2 afiair, prices   0; few 
27.50-29.25; few utility and stan- 
mixed offerings 2100-2600; utility 
coms 19.00-20 50; 
s 1200 ibs. 
1310 tT. steers steer 
{28 50-3000; load choice 
; geod to low choice =e 130.00; 
“28.75; good to low choice heifers 25.50- 
77.00; standard te lew good heifers 
23.00-25.50; utility heifers 21.00-23.00; 
utility cows 1900-2050: canners and 
utility bulls 22.00-   
| Vealers—salable 25. Nominally steady. 
jnot enough done to test quotstions; 
jcompared to last week steady to strong 
most choice and vealers 36.00- 
40.00; few up to 41.00; during the high 
time standard and good 29 00-36.00; cull 
last week good to 
lambs active 1.00; 
lambs steady to 
| utility 
Hogs—salable. Butchers openi 25 
: sows mostly 25 cents 
|higher: 200 Ibs. and heavier steady; most 
|mixed lots U.B. No. 2 end 3 180-240 Ibs 16.25-17.00; stags and boars 11.00-13.80: compared last week barrows and gilts 
evenly 25-50 cents lower; a 
    
| Car Hits Abutment, 
‘Oxford Woman Injured 
Eloise H. Smith, 47, of 961 Burl- 
ingham St.. Oxford, was treated 
‘\for injuries at St. Joseph Mercy 
‘Hospital today and releaséd after 
her auto struck an abutment on 
Clarkston road, in Independence 
Township. 
Oakland County Sheriff's Depu- 
ties reported the woman lost con- 
itrol of her car on a curve and 
iran off the road shortly after 4 
lam., about a mile east of M15. 
  
Princeton college was known as 
Colorado is called the Centennial 
State because it was admitted to| 
the Union in 1876, 100 years after 
the Declaration of Independence.     
  
  Poultry and Eggs, 
wt. 32-33 _wtd. avg. | 
large 37 Browns—Grade A extra args 
| 
\Sumbo 31; estre terse 30%: lerge, SF um : extra-large s; large 
| large Bn. 
30; cannmers and cutters 
through a trained social worker. Another Backer by 
lots.| Confirmation Vote Due 
Next Week in Senate on 
Commerce Secretary 
WASHINGTON (AP)—Sen. John 
O. Pastore (D-RI) said today he 
will vote to confirm Lewis L. 
tary of commerce. 
Pastore was the second Demo- 
crat on the Senate Commerce 
Committee to state publicly that 
hearings on the nomination. 
x« * * 
The committee will vote next 
Tuesday. 
late next week. 
If all six Republicans on the 17- 
member — committee 
Democratic vote to be assured of 
jthe backing of a committee 
jority. - 
Several Democrats on the“com- 
mittee have declined to say how 
they will vote. But one of them, 
Sen. George A. Smathers (D-Fla),   ja very close vote.” 
* * * 
Sen, Clair Engle (D-Calif), also 
of now Strauss appears to have 
ing confirmed by the Senate. 
The Assistant Senate Republican   un-jleader, Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel 
8S oe nine | of California, said he also is con- 
| fident that Strauss will be con- 
firmed. He said he anticipates 
nomination. 
The Commerce Committee's 
hearings came to an end after 
Sen. Clinton P. Anderson (D-NM) 
testified for a second time and 
;;accused Strauss of following a 
“pattern of deviousness and de- 
ceit.”” 
* * * 
But Pastore told newsmen that 
ealves|“‘over a period of years I have 
tein found him to be honorable, and I 
see no reason to question his com- 
a statement that Strauss had a 
  under Presidents Wilson, 
Roosevelt, and Ejsenhow- 
er and if he had erred at all, it 
‘end|had been “on the side of. secur- 
Bsas\ity for our nation.” 
* Board Favors   
Youth Aid Plan Pledges ts Support 
by Judge Moore 
The Board of Education last 
night went on record as pledging 
its support to a youth assistance 
|program for the city of Pontiac 
which will give social guidance 
to emotionally-upset children and 
parents. 
The program, proposed by Oak- 
land County Probate Judge Arthur 
E. Moore, has received the en- 
dorsement of the City Commission. 
It is also designed to assist 
in the prevention of delinquency 
and neglect. 
Under the plan, as. envisioned 
by Judge Moore, an executive and 
a citizens’ general committee are 
to be appointed jointly by the 
Commission and the Board. 
* * * 
Citizens would call the needs of 
an individual child, or family to 
the attention of these committees, 
which would investigate facts   The...child...and his parents_| 
might be requested to appear at 
a private hearing to discuss their 
_problems, 
According to the plan, the so- 
cial worker or committee mem- 
bers could request the parents of a 
child to do anything necessary for 
its welfare, request the child and 
his parents to have any medical 
or hospital care or needs attended 
to, and outline a course of rea- 
sonable parental supervision. 
* * * 
Any failure to comply with the 
program on the part of the family action by the Senate may come 
recommend 
confirmation as expected, Strauss 
needs to pick up only one more 
committee and in the Senate “‘by 
a committee member, said that as 
better than a 50-50 chance of be 
solid Republican support of the 
Thurmond told the committee in 
in Program Proposed SURVEY IN UNISON — Waking flamingos Whipsnade Zoo’ near Dunstable, Eng. The grace- 
uncoil their necks as they wade into pool at -ful birds are a great attraction. 
  
Magnan (DWash) said. fire; Lnefficiency Could Help Other Alert State Cities   
EAST LANSING (AP)—Detroit’s lack of 
preparedness for handling St. Lawrence 
Seaway shipping is embarrassing but might 
lead to a desirable dispersal of Michigan's 
economic growth, a seaway consultant said 
Thursday. 
~ Dr. John Hazarg, a marketing consultant 
fore the St. Lawrnece Seaway Corp. since 
1954, referred to the jam of sea-going ves- 
sels waiting for dock space in Detroit. 
* * * 
Hazard said the Motor City was the least 
prepared major port on the Great Lakes 
and added: 
“Detroit has chosen sides against it- 
self, but in one way it might help Michi- 
gan diversify its econemy because 
smaller ports such as Muskegon, Bay 
City and Port Huron have made tre- 
mendous efforts te improve their facili- 
ties and are way ahead of Detroit. 
“It will be hard for Detroit to recover 
from its late start. I count it out of the pic- 
ture now.” far advanced 
He foresaw 
seaway will 
Coast. 
ed 
“If the full 
BACKLOG WORRIES 
Hazard said he was still encouraged over 
the potential of the seaway but worried by 
the backlog of ships in Detroit. 
“A tremendous economical potential is 
still there,” he added, “but ships can 
only back up so long and the cost of 
shipping increases with the wait.” are going to 
sources. the ships and other 
handling huge bulks must be found.” Says Detroit Ruined as Seaway Port The marketing specialist said Toledo is 
in seaway development and 
will draw heavily on shipments abroad 
from Southern Michigan. 
x * * 
some trouble for Michigan’s 
agriculture and milling industry in that 
one day the state might find it cheaper to 
import wheat. 
Eventually, Hazard continued, the 
make it cheaper—on a per 
unit cost basis—to ship from Detroit te 
Europe than from Detroit to the East 
Hazard expressed‘ fear that labor-man- 
agement trouble ovér handling of cargo 
might delay seaway development and add- 
“We should be using up-to-date tech- 
nology in cargo handling, but stevedoring 
is still a menial, dirty and dangerous job. 
NEW METHODS NECESSARY 
potential of the seaway is to 
be realized, freight cars and trailer trucks 
have to be driven right into 
new methods of- 
x & & 
HagZard spoke to farm and industry lead- 
ers at a Michigan State University program 
on development of the state’s water re- 
  
    leervice tinder Presidents Wilson, U.S. Reveals X15’s Speed   
Plane to: Hit 4,000 M.P-H. | WASHINGTON (AP)—The government officially dis- 
| closed today the expected speed of the X15 rocket research 
airplane—4,000 miles an hour. 
x * * 
Ira H.Abbott, of the National Aeronautics and Space 
Administration, told the Aviation Writers Assn. in a pre- 
| pared breakfast talk that the X15 will “leap out of the atmos- 
phere into space much as a fish Jumps out of water.” 
Abbott, deputy directér of NASA's Office of Aero-. 
nautical and Space Research, said that beyond the X15, 
the rocket-boosted Dyna-Soar' glider will explore the 
speed range between 4,000 miles an hour and satellite 
velocities of about 18,000 miles an hour.. 
The X15 currently is undergoing exhaustive captive 
flighs tests under the wing of a B52 jet bomber. 
* x * 
Its first free-gliding flights have been somewhat de- 
layed. “‘We are having the expected teething troubles with 
its complicated systems,” Abbott said. 
  
  Chance of Passage Slim 
House Committee OKs   
WASHINGTON (AP)—A $4,400,- 
000,000 federal school aid bill had 
committee approval today, but 
even its Democratic backers shied 
away from predicting its passage. 
Republicans..said it _hasn’t__a 
chance. 
The bill, approved 18-10 yester- 
day by the House Education Com- 
mittee, Would) make outright 
grants to the states of $1,100,000,- 
    
bill’s author, commented cautious- ly thet “I think it has as good aiFinal Settlement Decree 
on Andrea Doria Signed i E & FF 
i ‘* * 
The ship went down off Nan- 
tucket. after a collision July 25, 
1956,. with the liner .Stockholm. 
Fifty lives were lost. 
“There were 3,322 damage claims 
‘for injuries or deaths, aggregat- 
~ ‘ling 116 million dollars. They even- ; 
i 
3 t : s zZ 
8 
gif > 
_ 
e       i 
F I 3 tually were settled for about six 
million dollars,   | Huge U.S. School Aid Bill Lodge Calendar 
Fis 
ia 
Rummage Sale — Saturday, May 16th,, 9 to 1 aor S. Parke. | Adv. 
Rummage . 14 E, Pike, 9 to 2, mene Ady,   
Reason to Complain 
LONDON (UPI) — Farmer 
Ralph oting drove to the Na- 
tional Farmer's Union office to 
can lid, a scooter frame and & 
large opened can of putty. 
Regular radio broadcasting was 
born when station KDKA in Pitts- 
burgh carried the 1920 presidential   and battery by 
Court Judge referred the 
’s case to the 
clinic and the 
He set sen- 
placed on $1,- bend was re- 
was taken to 
Wayne. County Jail when she 
caused a disturbance in the 
Mrs. Adelle Dalton, 45, told the 
court Mrs. Hill scratched her 2 
f g rT a 
2 ime A i ed li Tl SAE A tg : é | 
t 
z 
    Z ‘ roar   
Ha 
  
fo Post Slight Rise 
DETROIT (UPD — Aubmotive 
‘|News says this week’s car output 
will climb to an estimated 135,300 
units, a slight rise over last week i iT +ag 
Fy ti f5 
E i   
: ie g 
3 
  election returns. 
  
  
  EARN 5% 
Bonus—6 Months Free Interest Until May 20! 
$500, $1000 denominations. $50, $100, $2 - gble June 1 and Dec. 1. 
ee ee sre gia . E INTEREST 
    
    
¥ 4 
—   ~ li H       
   
      
  
ty i gs AON el NRT ING A BC orm es eee ——— 
A ance reer  ieeeeecaos 
teil 
     
  
Death Notices [Set et eet te te Female 7) Employment Agencles 8A) __ Building Service 12 
FIRST COOK == |_gveLyn EDWARDS |_, et $595 
‘es ch ee Ss vos ,   
the Deo heme. ‘OP Cook’s ‘HELPER Deo Tei f h 
y = B 
ei a Tere pels te Magne "eon, Ric peer Foe lected ‘will. rvcatve morph ont pore fer, home than wages, care Work Wanted Male 10 
ardet training, ; c-| gon.         
  
    
     
  
  ry Puneral panes ow away wn years ago tite piv’ 6 FT. HUSKY W 
ulars Bum. 
Sp be cae am | REL oli man | Eee | Se Ma ros PS Be AL te et Cayuse, - . ¥ ho lose can tell, Ad , service on tundiy 2 5s pe. Phe’ grist we bear in’ silen Pr experimental RILL COO 
revs s|- For & one we loved so we parte. Tout ave” experienes 1 ies bao um eendiiote 
Cayuga, s Me Sadly missed by his Dad, Mother | [iose rance | work, Raa Ber 
ome, Oxford and Bier. sore, vacations. Gteedy work.| rust be is years of age, some 
CisEK, WAY 14, 196, CONRAD, 10i | IN LOVING MEMORY OF ARYTD Let EcEe Orion | S&Perienee necessary. chan Pune : . w person p.m. 
Mecbanlt, BE grooaneed ‘wlae Oy | mth 1, cece sono RT may | the Sparks-Oriffin Puneral Home, | The from qur-honsenpid "=| ‘cq cciecban ill qecer y-| Woodward at Square Lk. Rd 
OTTARS: MAY 14,1060 BEnTHA att place vacant in our! {cQ’mgr. Bade Btee WANTED FOR. 
STARS: HAS Ie ENT | Tee var cane ted, __| _gifintd tate Rena evee Mar | Shea age ahinn wire Waterford sve. age 14; beloved Treasured memories no one ~ can SuTeTANBING 79. ae Oe —: | ad 
Nother of Mrs Veva Mere, Ariie, | Death ls heartache no one can seal; | nity! W mecern es two neg msommanre, 70, UE Ak 
and Ernest Etimonds; dear sister shock sudden, the pain severe, nancial concern has = Gore for ent & } er 
of Mrs. Thena Blakeslee, Mrs. Ta Bite” we Knew that death was so — ee erate on ot abt ace on —< Deve } #2031 or MA 
mig ge ang ; also | His ip thoughts for others so many 50. Ca ional on business-profess saat, DOG! oe knew, accounts, Pontiac area. Car es i ok Po 
rreatgrandeniacen. and.» ‘one The wave of bis hand, and gentle — ee oo a4 dren. . RORSEL 46062 
ibe il 7) neg a a ie wie — ieotne Press, Box 18, giving Nurses, Also lab —— <4 ‘SLASHED 
      i) be held Saturday, y missed by reine. May 16" from Donelson-Johns ter. ST ORECT BELL: | oT $13,700 Funeral Home, at 1:30-p.m., with | if Oo MEMOR FART TIME Ee ‘oto HELP & ORILL Gin. 2: Dri _ interment in Waterford Cemetery.| Blanche Maud VanDecar, who| ing. D0, canvassing Abel te ioresn. Wreaktlep eles, Bargain Price ~ 
SWITZER, MAY i¢, 1969, RAV. Lio | peseed oway 1 year ego today, —. Ta 3118 W. Huron EASY TERMS Warren. 4922 Carroll Lake Rd. y ae a 
Commerce Twp., age 84; beloved “oe to sleep deems, sts PART TIME tive CHILD “Gomes 
Cea ceo of Mis. a of bale ue a eaves: If are free 7-10 p.m., are 
Betty Bwitser; dear father of | gediy missed o there: vusband,| Best eppearing, and have @ car, 
Leo L. Switser; Grandchildren. Trade in Your House 
    
  
  
  
    
    
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
    
  
  
          I 
NArmCmmsy 
eaters 
    
   
     
    
  
    
  
      
  
        
  
  
    frepho' you may be able to qualify for 
ap wv ~ Mrs. Ida Chapin. a 8 Pwo lech i po oe eneb: to 
FANCY DIVING? — Apparently taking a headlong plunge into Poswal evanpemaals Ain oe oe & repeler jee Ver, informe the University of Michigan's women’s swimming pool are these nounced ster by the Pursley The Pontiac Press =e gen to 
three members of Michifish, coed synchronized swim squad. But FOR WANT ADS Product Drrftsman 
they’re really a ‘‘heads-up” group, as you'll see if you turn the Preferrably experiesced in smal) 
j precision aircraft devices. ob | 
picture upside down and note that the picture was made under DIAL FE 2-8181 M. C. MEG. CO. : at 
vat FOR CASFP INA 118 tadianwoed Ra. Lake Orion | aidry “Glecessed. Mstchery. Re. ind. water. lair ; . From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Time S & Dixie Highway. Over 40 years 1% miles West of Ven HURRY, sel} things Part Time Salesmen of age. OR 40103. FE 8-0458 or MU 4-5083 
| ough Classified Ads All errors should be re Por established hardware firm. re 7] 
c through lassitie : rted immediately. ‘The Write Puatiac Press gox 24 stat-| "DOF ices FE B-1001. C. SCHUETT, Realtor 
hj ! Dial FE 48 assumes Do res ing age, experience, address end ts : 
Play the Bl | [Anything goes! Dial FE) ere basher TION TY, LA RE, | pened fics Ps | PRERCHR, EXCAVARIND_ FOR azzmen Flay the Diues | 2-818. esl cancel Sr atetes | | TLEaMAN, EXPERIENCED AND) Siutandag sane uci Grper-| Bie } 1 insertion of the advertise cellent building program ‘ie in| ff" qulultied. Work Wanted Female 11|" guidin 12A ment which has been rem progress). Ask for Sales Man-| Mf qualified. oe avail ‘< Supplies gered valueless th the ager, HUMPUR IES REALTY, FE rienced rales wom- 
er ecnets ea tre made be sure 24236 tn Write Box 101 Pontise Press, |! DAY IRONING REFERENCES, | guy CITY 30 HOB OR CRANE og sure SERVICE STATION ATTENDENT #3 bushel. PE 6167). doser, D4 Doser 
| ee Fate Sates arata| REGISTERED, NORSE | "+ sar syeveeas © 9°. "| haved rath at Pac PARIS (UPI)—From the French, walled on his clarinet until the | ~ CEASSIFICATIONS odjectmens Portetetern ma Binet Service, | CRALLENOINO SBCURE SOTAE p Fe ow pump mir and ce 
quarter of New onans to the sun came up, ’ } INDEX scant afm tig rel Real Poa Salesmen AREA, get Reagan lag in Reterentes. PE 8-003. : 5 
Ne iart nel down tooey |Back in New Orleans they looked oY Rn Se peteasee | [Pama Pasi ter) essa amare ty | we at bee ee played the blues until dawn today remembered Sidney’s fantastic pe previous to publication VANCEMENT SINCE FHA &| Tey. talisation & other ORN HOTS — EXC. GHILD a WINDOW & WALL WASHING. for Sidney Bechet. i 1 GI MORTGAGES, CAL! OR SEE/| ¢ . aon offered. Must have | 4U® Wk. Licensed. T ¢ clarinet and saxophone playing. ANNOUNCEMENTS am Dick VALUET 200 OAKLAND. | {rine benefits oftered: Must have care, Day of 7 * ." bz... 
Tee, ood cla, Tiled cnoky bis-| D& Edmond Souchor!, director faa iinet re 1) roe gitthnret tinea. || gre Se wrer rare eve | tia oetty Stier ass | cme Asph ove, young and old, filled smoky “a of the New Orleans Jazz Club, In M@MOriam ........csceseeeeeeee 3 tion of transient Want Ade tl = bong Be ex sheets agg Boag Ey ist ve bis OR mates. 917 or 00043. 
tros with a jazzed-up dirge for the ..i4 Bechet was merely “the great- Flowers... seuceeeseneeeereee: is now 9:15 a.m. the day o rienced. Norwalk Truck Lines, RELIABLE WOMAN AS a GoM | BABY SITTING, NITES, DA 4 ALL MAKES OF POUNTAIN PENS Funeral Directors ..........e00+- 4 lication after the first | 43507 a oral ‘OMAN AS COM- Weekends. In City. Bus i 
white-haired Negro jazzman who est that ever lived on the tenor SADR UDIENES 1 5sscseecss+-cseses 4A | egreneertong Re panion. Live in. References.| Deehesse, repatred a py tnctory man 
| Cemetery Lots ......seeeeeeeeeees 5 REAL ESTATE ety after 2 p.m. 261 State Bt. et our . Genera) died of cancer here yesterday. ‘ax. Nobody in the world ever Cemetery Lots ..... ; So WOMAN Office oupply Ce 17 W. Law. 
; cameonear Bind these i: oe SALESMEN WANTED (SECRETARY wort thru Friday. 68| rence St. Pasoe PR '}-0135 Merz Mezarow, Bechet's clos. jcame near him there. EMPLOYMENT Lives 1-Day JDays Days We have opening in our modern| Previous exp. in architectural or tare, Relerences. PE | - ry 
est friend in Paris, got together | Alphonse Picou, an 80-year-old | a. 81.50 62.06 63. office for good salesmen. Our in-| engineering i altees desirable. Ac- BiT WORK WANTED. 3 OR 4!” truck delivery. 3-220. 
: > ill bl t Help Wanted Male 6 290604 centive plan ee pay you more.| curate typfst, shorthand, knol-| days a week, own transporte nO with some of the boys at the clarinet player who st ows a Hy Wanted Female .. “4 3 Wh. ir Pina & have| edge of simple bookkeeping om, references. PE 23-1043, tooo culling ee 
left bank Metro Jazz Cave and ‘a little bar in the French quar- Help Wanted a : ’ 250 4450 0«=— 6.70 Sulative 7 you = make Aber ee ee te as.. is WANTS WORK OF ANY | 63669 
OO ter, wasn Little more reserved. pmplerment Ageasion woos: of ¢ i 40 $30 Y-} oo Birmingham. | Michigan, stating eT ORADUATE BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. 
: a6 Work Wanted Male ‘ “ age. tions, sa! ex- Live windows. 
. . “| showed him how to play,” | Work Wanted Female oO tse ate otaes ears agstrom _peciee. SER GOOK DAYS. ae #-9080. FE +1631. ; 
Dedication at Detroit he said. “He was my pupil a | 0 800 0 t38o HORT CaDES COOk — OOS HAVING“ BaBY? VACATION. CHIMNEYS , ti , e mm . We are 5 aw DETROIT _ | million. long long time ago. He was not SERVICES OFFERED _ atbsuscee asses Call for interview EM 3-0112. = —_ ol cus tor peur Lal pt Da ener - —— 
‘TR i, a] new million- so great as a musician, but he = Snildiidg: GETS creriecnnceme: n wr 2. OR 40088 ehildren oP home. EM fring, stop ‘ 
dollar Food and Drug Administra-) had good ideas about music. Building Supplies ........ 128 RENT IT FAST | gate pare D, RM. AND SALESLADY a TA NTED —PIRaT Baskets made to came. Aine a 
tion Building was dedicated Thurs-| Sidney believed in giving peo- seckeeet og a Taxes ‘ 7 i | through Rent Ads! Room, oe wages, oo milking! Thoroughly experienced | #°USERokios ar HOME S71. ‘ 
dey by Acti Deming US | lo what they westnd” Beate TE oo house, apartment, any-| CeCEeMTAN- WANTED | and well qualiGed to sell| | wget Bien og | CLEANING welfare. The buildi “will, serve| comes Lexi, Soe ey Mee Dresamaking & Telloring ----"ygq | thing — Want Ads give | “or sete De i sulin better dresses. babysitting. reterenees Te ear: fovsinecs, eetee bento tet 
as the administration's. Detroit SX. Years ago at a jazz concert \ ee Ee ies a ACTION. Dial FE} §2trie°@e. s1iosvor re Senet APPLY IN PERSON: hand, typing. fing & ste. Small) Heeistered company. PE ‘s-Ji01. as i str : said * neome SOE LA WANTED: HELP EVENINGS. . ; :. District headquarters. It is on East ‘" Los Angeles, said “he was on€é é Insurance Agencies .. +0 BTA 2-8181. ae salting.” BO cénvassing. Peggy's ae WOMAN DESIRES PER- 
Jefferson avenue. of the greatest men we ever had ia ces | FE S-3116 barcode secretaria) | with | dicts i as. —-— — ___ ________. . . @ great man, a great mu- Moving & ‘Struckin king wees a > = WOOL PRESSER . WOOL PRESSER phone, genera) a x n z 
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP SCHOOL sician."! Painting & Decorating Ft BOX REPLIES h pay. Paid vacation. Write| Migh pay. Prefer one who can do| enced & references. serviced. $1788, District. Oakland County. Michigan. | pp, th stment Euston B Avccsserios At 10 a.m. Today there mig? 2iy: cess bon tt some alterations. Write Pontiac, Box 107. _ Notice of last day of registration. at was the sentiment among Physio-Therapy . .... = oe +a el POR LP iN Press box 104 MOTHER WOULD tikes TO rE 
‘ Whereas. the annual election will be jazzmen in Paris who had listened Television Service .......+.--+- were replies ut The Press WiL TRAIN MEN fas Ghne. AN FOR ONT . Fenced yard. 
eld in said school district on the 8th . Typewriter es office in the tollowing surance sales. Part or fu work, live in, nice home, 820 w Ot! Elizabeth Lake rd. FE 45-4721. r} r\ % 
day of June 1959 enraptured to the jazzman from Upholstering ........+++seeeseees 23 New class to start soon. FE 4-395 | Fork. live Oe ee geet ‘bet. 0: Mt oO. nO ‘ arc hr, serv 44. 
Prigay: the eth dey et slat tase ay New Orleans’ Storyville for the sonnet See aE at RIMEY ARE GLAVE | 224 &. al pees to $00 ociock, pm Eastern Standard last 14 years NOTICES We eran bat 001 £0 weekly part WAITRESS me 1m t day 
registered to may Pca beg naar Lost & Found .........ss.seees 34 2, 5 1, a, » sy i, ey tn ine PE 3-3613, rey Mr. seer Sen gees eran to be eligible to vote at said annual AQiahe an Ne + We if Hobbies & * 2, Sl, 32, 56, 57, 4, 66, Brooks. Plains ; election icnigan ot eitare Notices & Persona. 25 66, 67. 74. 76, 9%, 96, 101, Grp YOUNO WAN OENERAL : 
_ Appl lication for registration should be F Travel Agencies .....--++++++- 235A * » fs 119 knchen werk, experiance fe oe rhe jar) Looe 
pean as files ‘the elector rections. State, Says Wil lams > heasediipedandises tod ~ age Bae mgr Wg a ret: == ‘on nh ot Persons already registered upon the . _— WANTED . _ crences to Ponta Pr Box 100. commission, ae we Ad 
Chek nerd “net mirecites owneme| DETROIT —Gov. Williams Wid. Children to Board ...... 26 Funeral Directors 4 founG Mak 17 TO 33 TO WORK tween 9:30 and § p.m. Dated May 11. 1959 said last night that Michigan is | Wtd Household Goods   
FREDERICK J POOLE Z 4 i 
Secretary of the Board of Education not a welfare state ‘‘in the sense = ove for tor ceiver” sock we work. “35 R OENERAL wa 
Wid. Miscellaneous ..... ba oman ; 
May 15, 26, 59 ;meant when that term is used as —_ Money Wanted .........+:+- — COATS . 
| orayton ising OR 3-178? ~ Help W Wanted Fe Female 7 WrD, WOOL PRESSER. APPLY   
  
  en 
Share Living Quarters aes   
      
    
  
  
    
  
  
      
      
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
      
  
  
      
  
    
        
     
       ee a fn beth Lx. US TREASURY DEPARTMENT— &? epithet Wtd. Transportation | ee Cleaners. 4489 Eliza 
INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE > ¢ F Wid. Contracts. Mtgs. ... 'D ] h 
NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION SALE He spoke . = men oe Wanted Real Estate Vonelson-jonns AN EASY JOB OMAR [AN POR BABYSITTING & ; VING May 14 1959 /New Detroit office of the federa oUNmnal BOER Girls for telephone sales. Salary | general housework. Live-in ¢ days. ASPHALT PAVING | axpys roro - rriino. aar- Pursuant to authority contained in Food and Drug Administration. Furerals” or bonus teed. cole ready 4-71 Let us estimate your driveway tos, loves flower beds. FE 
eetion 6331 of the Internal Revenue... d 4 of RENTAL OFFERED ae OS EN GAPE to work. 20% E. Lawrence. Room watreuanee EAD 7) Ginis or parking lot. Our jobs are our Code. the following described property We are, however, proud of the SPA Mig a? Good pay. All hours open. Lake's references. GustoM PLOWING AND DRAG. 
has been seized for nonpayment of ¢e- tremendous pro s Michigan has Rent Apts. Furnished .......... 33 | Thoughtful Service 2504) | —— eaiy PAY WHEN REPRE. | Hamburger. 332 8. felegraph Rd. ‘4 ” OR é 
linquent internal revenue taxes “due from tremendous progress / . Rent Apts Unturnished ......... = . A wins Baith Metamberg Cosmetics. No phone calls. 7 u UR owe Wilfred t emith! 7 in welfare programs of many Rent Houses Furnished ........ 35 V h S ] - 
Berkley ‘at « Ferg hiduesn The mune eifa P : “s 5, Rent Houses Unfurnished ..... 36 | oor ees 1p e Start at once. Information, FE WANTED: TYPIST ASPHALT PAVING @iscing, leveling & loading, re 
property will be sold in accordence with kinds, Williams said. In this Rent Lake Cottages 36A 3 ER _ Must be fast and accurate. Good Phone PE 5-8637 or UL 32-3420 ¢3371. 
the provisions of Section 6335 of the se of we this stat For Rent Rooms .. PP BABY for advance- | AN Lawn ovis sense of welfare, th e and For Rem Roome = FUNERAL HOME ale SITTER Fo 2 eng 0; Gas Rea Internal en Sode. d th la- |. : o<e * ane or Motor y Pr treat L) hospital- 
tlone “thereunder, at “public auction on its people can be proud of their Convalescent Homes - mete DOOKKEEPER. PART Ta giMe. ee 4 insure ae C e 26th day of May. 1968. at 1:00 pm. welfare programs.” | ~~ | QOXGl eres, eeeeescsoencs Must be experienc ‘oD- | anu acturin oO. t Riker r t n . - , Rent Stores Lots 5 g Michigan Garage, 99 Wayne St. Pontiac. ie said he was confident Mich- Rent Office Space s.se... al Cemetery ties _Preee ayt. 118 Indianwood Rd, Lake Orion 
D scription of property igan would meet its problems and _- ll aa 2 CEMETERY LOTS. OAKLAND rage nog tnan weees, Very | WAITRESS STEADY NITES, NO 1953 Pl h 24d Serial No < Rent Farm PAF .. .ncccess 41B den. OR more for food 1 in, must be: 36 5 
13462529 Only the the right. title, and Move into an era of unparalleled “or Rent Miscellaneous ........ a) Se oem Oe sii80, pt ool ots se a or older, nee. come at yon terest Wilfred & Dorothy G ; pty ae rience, t it self con- 
Brith, i and tov the property will be SrOwth REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 9 erie enten & Pasrrom. Park. SS a 7 in Oat deat. Prefer married “oye offered for sale ————$——— e portation. PE $-3672. Ite p.m. . xx The terms of payment will be pay- ’ choice lot at Oakland Hills PTeleereph. *x: _vE 2-1655, 7 to 8 }_ p.m. = a) Len Mantes (ctrihe Calleitdae Dinne (A-fine! | ©££% °° °©&(| fer Sale Mousses =..-...:..--.-. 4 e s Rostecrant. 
amet eae without regard. a the Selfridge Plans A- Blast’ ocome: Property, seers wa emetery near Walled Lake and patina entmet AF. WOMEN WHO WANT MONEY, 
amount of such bid Payment to be For Sale Lake Property sees at eee one 3-225). Ip tn person Prost-Top Drive- would you ike to oft oe ut on Peesy 
made fo eh Ceres check, Cainer) MOUNT CLEMENS -U—-A, sim: Suveroan Proper Pesseesess, 45A Mt nach Cemetery Tent or | fa 118° w.-Burce. Easy to learn and will show you 
ee yy JOHN H GEUKES lated atomic explosion, complete for Sele Lots a : vee Cons ge og Pg new to set gg Ee 
MY 15.5 with mushroom cloud, will high- Fae hale’ herasna oie Help Wanted Male 6| Bite Hey. canvassing. MG th mission. | “wore 
3479921-2 S y i Base's For Sale FarMs ..........:.00+:: 48 X~ us bonuses weekly. Just read-| eis) Also under 479921-23 [—— light Selfridge Air Force Sale Business Property ........ 49/9 FULL OR PART TIME SALES- CASE WORKER : Fog: nie ad will not pelp, call OR We ere well_teq : Call MY ak 
At 900 am. on Mav 21. 19589 a 1954 Armed Services Week celebration for Sale or Exchange .........60| men wanted. Leads furnished.| For children’s aeene Mead 3-2514 or FE 8-2922 for inter 31128 Joho W. Guaren- : 
Ford Convertible. Serial No U¢FC166872\ Saturday and Sunday. A air show Seas ommission, We train. FE) ary sncerty iW ee ecaeces WAITRESS teed wee _ Laundry Service 18 Wondeard Ave Perncae Mich. that also is on the Selfridge Lg gi FINANCIAL $188.§ 55 qoairea Pontiac Press ss rienced Apel bain full = Custom Cabinets Garages COMPLETE FAMELY SaURERT 
address ng where the vehicle is Latest fighting planes will on | . h ls 3821 Op- Op- | Zree - on Service - Shirt service ored d may be inspected * Business rtunities .....e008. $1 phone ca = 
“ angemey ‘ May 14. 15. ‘'59 display Sale seas ntracts 82 | $217.22 . CAPABLE WOMAN oye. a B L ood Floor had onde “Teieeran. FE 
: Lb lira aco Ml eabe seein ve $214.25 : “ness WID. SALESLADY. mceonanl Pea res ESF: TSA ie pee ortgage LOANS ..........00. sea ; qicurex seeeeet neal . Huron ‘ Landscapin , 1955 Pontiac Serial N P755H-1193 Money spent for building or pur- ay onal , sua art on py eg orb ae WANTED —- DEPENDABLE BEAU- sok Also nee e. OR 39402. oe lg 
May 18 1959. at 601 Pontiac State Rank Chasing homes constitutes one-fifth MERCHANDISE tite a elgg jag home. ply Sext. Wighlend : e. Ap DON 5-2863 ee oe ee F you pet 
_ Bide, 28 N. Saginaw St. Pontiac. Mich- of the total capital spending in the Al Harris, service mer. . Congenia! family A RV piggy eo iD. 
igan Mac ts te -sp US ag a : ae Steele Ford. 270§ Orchard H Ww 8 lee work popes, a thee PARAM ae cor. 
oe Scrap & Tron 4A | ae, Bere oe: r - Own room with TV. elp anted MA or OA 83272. free estimates. OR 3-6826. 
Sale Household Goods” ecveccese ALL A MECH WIT iRY 4YPE OF HOUse PLANS. ie: aVic“g aE 
Valentine Gifts .......seeeserees: 58; tools. OA 8-3849. - One day off each week plus) A BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN, UN- on SE 5 vice 49. = L 1-41 and trimming. Get out bid. Christmas oe ATTENTION SCHOOL BOYS alternate Sundays usua] opportunity with unlimited wa. 
Christmas Trees o. want to make money. If you earnings. For interview 
Fe fale Miscellaneous + 60 ay ator 2 hrs. after stchool, + Two week vacation. moet me att E. Tennyson at achinery . hi Gaturday, hay on . 18th. 
Do it Yourself . ie G1] Fouts he. efter Ap] —— ~ ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A $500 Cameras & Equipment ....... 5% 8. . Ph. MI 46-9264 @ month income? Male or Fe 
Sri ey ty et | _Btke oot Pa ote Laer Le seeeee . man. 
Sale Offi . 6° Structural steel, 8 minimum | CURB GIRLS. LEES DRIVE IN.| ine you INTERESTED LADIES? Sale Store layout and detailing exp. No} _ 2001 Pontise Rd. Free coffee makers, 6 r to 12 
Saie Sporting Goods ....... * others need apply. toad. resume DO you MONEY? for yourself, Hunting Accommodations sseoe GSA] gna starting rate desired to| garp ~ ae Parties. 
Beit, Minaews, Bi.” ;-s:r+rr--OE8 | — Ponting Press pes 71. Win free toy kite MI. 46308. Vanilla, 159 N, ak en   EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE | XP. CLUB Wait WATTRESSES OR | COUPLE had : : FOR 
nts, “Trees, Bry se at country WORE & near 
    
    
        
  
  
    
  
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                Plants. Trees. Shrubs sslesman. Apply Sm Smith-Wideman eee. Apply perpen 3-to & 
. Se sake ae a envier— ore: Kingsey inn, Biomfiee_ wis. — tee ~~ Bg me afternoons. Apply $77 Auburn, Ave. 
FARM MERCHANDISE Service, p's. “Adams. Birming- a. erent teen 
av Gra Feed ...-s000e coool > COMPANY BAS 
Celt ate cB | tae Riad Cece gt | ap nba Pam ‘i or e noes : ° us' ve 
sale Farm Broguce oocccc-- H8| Bpeedvear and goad health #8) EXPERIENCED Auction Sales ..... fevees on Fey oo ee ee oe ELECTRIC 
AUTOMOBILE £X?P. MAN TO OPERATE LOCK  « mower, also, hand tri : 
For Sale Housetratiers .........78| Ml, 6-4109. ml _ TYPEWRITER Cc. SCHUETT, Realtor Rent Trailer Space ...... Lil 1 | xp. TRoew MECHANTC FOR ATR Auto Accessories .....ssecesee-. 80 and vacuum. Give ref. Pontia OPERATORS 
For Sale Tires  ....vsceeee . BA _Press Box 59. Employment Agencies SA 
soe Motor Seogiers wi | ELECTRICAL Needed. for gay & evening shifts. | ~~ For Sale Meterayenee ® ENGINEER rg after 10 a.m., Monday, May 
Bouts &. Acrescories “8 ‘Ponting Area indusirial Pant) — Pontiac City Index IMMEDIATE 
Cette ie | Rmeesdes Enbattier Whur | 2 ORCHARD CARE | | d wines Used Gare 2) 88 Postiee Press Box_ 62 Food Checker, Young OPENINGS 
Wanted Used Trucks 8) GR WIrD. FOR NIGHT! por Country Club. A . Used Truck Parts coccees COA Big-Boy Dijrets W. 13 Mile Ré. or a Neapteir POR WOMEN For Sale Used Trecks. 90 = Amp Detween 2-& 6| 6.2600. * SECRETARIES 
pivot ports Oath occ. FONTAN We Gee aket | _RECEPTIONISTS ° $1 @ 6 . 
oe Pooling Press Bor tt ‘DRS ASSISTANTS days, stay BILLERS. ~- 
| fof man'tee'euas™ | | FOR MEN GET IT QUICK, ener / . through Classified Ads! . * c 7 rd r y AP Wirephete Yes, whatever it is = dial DON T W I Ss H FOR SA LES WANT ADSI he fers 
NONCHALANT PRINCESS — Britain's Princess Anne, daugh- FE, 28181 for an ad- = MONEY! Make it easily DRIVERS job, place to live or a 
ter of Queen Elizabeth Il, Jeans on wooden fence while attending writer and get it! write | through Classified Ads. To ENGINEERS used car, see Classi- 
a polo match in which her father, Prince Phillip, played. She was . sell, rent, ti swap, hire, MIDWEST Fed NOW! Y 
accompanied by her mother and grandmother, Queen Mother dial FE 2-8 ° EMPLOYMENT , . Mts 
Elizabeth. \ | Ponting Siete ro , j 
v v ) A eo ON | = 4 ' > P f , 1 
! Le i. = a - eee Pe’ Sane Eee ey eee ai of. v- 3% die: \ Ee ae ae - b