al The Weather Mostly Fair Details page two 113th YEAR TH xk x * \ PONTIA PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1955 —44 PAGES x CP E a Dulles, Ike See Growing Peace y Senate Highway / ; Bill Torn From ) Road Committee House Unit Is Forced to Free Legislation for Floor Action | LANSING (AP) — The, House had a Senate-ap-. proved highway bill before. it today after snatching it, from the hands of a com- mittee in a move that made legislative history. A coalition of young Re- publicans and Democrats discharged the House Roads | and Bridges Committee from consideration of the bill in a dramatic parlia- mentary maneuver. FIRST SINCE 1911 Not since 1911 has a committee been relieved of its jealously guarded right to act on legislation before it is sent to the floor. That happened in the Senate, the House as never discharged a committee. In a touch-and-go battle on the floor and in the cloakrooms, four “Young Turks” scraped together a bare majority — 56 votes — to carry off the rare maneuver. The feat greatly improved chances for legislative approval of a road program this session. STATE GETS 75% for a 1%4 cents per gallon gas tax increase. Three-quarters of the additional money would go to the state for construction Of arterial ae i miles farther north, The Senate-approved bill calls | Reds Fire Upon Chiang Aircratt on Patrol Flight TAIPEI, sist Chinese planes ran into Red Formosa (?—National- and from warships while on pa- ' antiaircraft fire from the mainland . Reserve Plan | §N ; trol over Loyuan Bay near the | Matsu Islands before dawn today, air force headquarters announced. An undisclosed number of planes used radar to bomb the Commu- nist craft in the darkness, the communique said. Results were not observed, Loyuan Bay is 15 miles north of the Matsu Islands which lie close to the Communist coast 120 miles northwest of Formosa. On Monday two Communist MIG fighter planes exchanged fire with two Nationalist propeller planes in the same area, On Sunday, 3 four MIGs fought a brief dogfight with four Nationalist Thunderjets over the Taishan Islands. Air force headquarters said there would be air raid drills on Formosa and the Pescadores soon involving mock air attacks, anti- aircraft target practice, simulated fires and first aid. f Says Death Car in WrongLane Witness Testifies Here in Manslaughter Trial of Metamora Woman A witness testified yesterday in | Circuit Court that the car driven by a 19-year-old girl charged with manslaughter was on the wrong | side of the road when it crashed ‘headon with another last Dec. 5, | resulting in the death of five Ox- ford residents. ‘ ‘gated for a total of five years’ House Expected to Approve Ike's Measure Due to Pass | | Intact Despite Efforts to | Soften or Kill It WASHINGTON (AP) — The administration’s pro- gram to build up the mili- ‘tary reserves was expected | to pass the House intact to-| day despite efforts to soften | or kill it. , | _ Rep. Brooks (D-La) pre-| dicted it would pass without 'major amendments, but ‘only after a fight. Brooks ‘leads House forces backing | the legislation, which al-) ready falls somewhat short of original Pentagon re- quests. President Eisenhower is behind the measure to give the military | | limited authority to enforce re-| | serve obligations and to provide a new plan for training up to one | million teenage volunteers in four ears. | te In one key provision, the meas- ure would authorize the Pentagon to recall for 45 days’ active duty reservists who fail to maintain a minimum of 8 weekly drills and 15 days’ summer training a year, or the equivalent. . Involved are draftees and volun- _teers who have completed active | | active and reserve service. | SOFTENS PROPOSAL ys Jets Chalk Up Speed Record U.S. Plones Fly From Defendant in Rape Trial Tokyo to Australia in 12 Hours Nonstop NEW CASTLE, Australia wy —' | S. Timnderjets landed Pontiac housewife March 6 testified yesterday that! peared ready today to change the Eastern Europe. Four U. 12 hours 2 minutes. The speedy single-engine fighters The House Armed Services Com- each capable of carrying an! mittee softened the Pentagon's | atomic bomb, refueled in the air , : Th. , | President and Dulles Envision New World Peace Russian Policy = f---™ —_|sSummed Up - _ @& _ in Video Report State Secretary Says Strength and Firmness Pay Off for West WASHINGTON (AP) — tration is preparing for a top-level Big Four confer- ence with Russia in a belief it may prove that a “new dawn” of peace is breaking over the world. President Eisenhower and Secretary of State’ Dulles | made that clear last night in assessing — before tele- vision cameras—the mean- r ling of recent shifts in So- AP Wirephot DISCUSS SOVIET POLICY SHIFT — President Eisenhower aad Secretary of State John Dulles are all smiles at discussion in Wash- ington before battery of cameras when they assessed the meaning of | recent shifts in Soviet policy. The Eisenhower administration is pre- paring for a top-level Big Four conference with Russia in a belief it | may prove the ‘new dawn’ of peace is breaking over the world. ° » Charges Police Threats One of four men accused of kidnaping and raping a duty since mid-1953 and are obli- here today, completing a record threats by Pontiac Police officers caused him to make fames of other Michigan colleges nonstop Tokyo-to-Australia flight in statements immediately following his arrest which differ after agreeing to rename Michi- with his assertions during the trial. Joe Williams Jr., 23, of 38 Lake St., was cross ex- amined yesterday afternoon by Oakland County Prose- ° lige Betaee or a doe 4 State Colleges Being Renamed trian independence treaty. Senate Votes to Delete By that pact Russia is pledged _to withdraw its troops from Aus- ‘Education’ From Title | tria. Communist satellite counfries like Czechoslovakia and Hungary will also want freedom, he said, adding that the joy of the Aus- trians over their freedom will be of 3 Schools “oemneroun:” ; Dulles predicted dramatic re- | LANSING —The Senate ap- sults from this pledge throughout | Dulles said that the acceptance | of West Germany into the North | Atlantic Treaty Organization has gan State College as Michigan | dealt the Soviet Union its ‘greatest | State University. | diplomatic defeat” since World | The chamber was ready to vote | War Il. The explanation of | Russia’ i | on a House bill changing the names eee © anges bebewter, he suid Signs The Eisenhower adminis- . = highways. The rest would go to hese we j j . | may lie in a Kremlin decision to * cities we counties. . Charged is Mrs. Erlene Wagen- iebcoarig rem im a, rs ‘ | three times during their 4840 - cutor diye C. a alae a oe ae Cir | of the teacher colleges. There was stop trying to block such develop- The measure also calls for a 10| shutz, of 75 W. High, Metamora. | other than honorable if they failed Mile hop — over Guam, Manus, cuit Judge nica 5 rer $ small courtroom. no opposition in debate yesterday. ments and. “conform to some of per cent increase in truck license, The accident occured on M24's'to keep up their training. But| Island and Townsville, Australia. | Zen point the a a : FOUR NEW NAMES _ the rules and practices ef a civi fees. “Slaughter Hill’ a mile north of | Brooks said he expected attempts The flight, part of a U. S. Air, statio a Che ' peer ’ oe ual dieses Central lized world community. { ai nt over | Oxford to reduce the enforcement provi-| Force good will mission to Aus- Sv@tion werk ; | POLICY PAYING OFF Until now, disagreement over ico forthe : Prosecutor George F. Tay- | Michigan College of Education, ‘ the distribution formula has Robert D. Wilson, of 1540 La- . ao ke tralia, extended the nonstop over- fend Willi : id | Western Michigan College of Edu-| But whatever the explanation | blocked approval of any road | Rd., Orion. Tw nae y section, the water record for single - engine lor, defendant Williams sa | Michigan | from Russia's side, he said, the . :Twp., said the " ide ; sy RE : cation and Northern Michigan | ' ’ . weet bee aks Cas pase | Measure would provide for up to jets by 355 miles. Col. David he had been drinking dur- College of Education to Central, important point is that a “policy polaepagnay sdicewting sone when 250,000 volunteers a year to be Shilling set the previous mark of ing the night in question | ala e ann | Michigan College, Western Michi-| Of strength and firmness and the Aas of ml poneerpiais feel ho ae Gas (ga ag oe ce special training, | 4,45 miles in 1953 on a flight and had never been arrested | | gan College and Northern Michi. | Standard of moral principle” is Senate == coeS | northbound auto driven by Har. | .°Wed by {is years’ active re-| from Turner Air Force Base, Ga.. or convicted previous to| es) vis te, | gan Collen. | beginning to pay off for the West. of their fair share of highway | Brabd serve duty. The volunteers, be- | to North Africa. March 6 City’s Military Units, | If the West sticks to that policy, , funds. These lawmakers support} old Mangum, 21, of 4 tween 17-19 years old, would save| The F84s set down at the Royal M&ICch 9. | Amother would change Michi. | : the present. disfribution formula, | which gives 44 per cent of highway Rd., who was killed. Four occupants of the girl's car | 18 months from the two years of Australian Air Force's huge Wil- active duty required of draftees. | liamstown Air Force Base here “Yet vou stated today that you | had not been drinking,’’ said Ziem. , Bands, Vets to Appear in Saturday Event gan State Normal College at Ypsilanti to Eastern Michigan | he said, “we can face the future with confidence.”’ He cautioned both against re- 7 yw ith. | 7 j i in | ‘ : ;... The prosecutor then read a list} | i Bae the aa 37 — gd ic | a ae. re — ora — | But aes put in this time in| at iia pm. Anecralieny Hime. Nee: of arrests againet Williams dating | - . College. |laxation of armed strength and coun per cent to 28, o . Burdick, Mrs. EF | rese : castle is miles north of Sydney, from 1952 and mainly for traffic Some 23 military units, bands} Also ready for a vote, with | against the great danger, as he Kuck, 31, -of 30 Pleasant St., | Rep. Barden (D-NC) said he in- on Australia's southwest coast. Charles Nelson, 25, of 32 Cottage | tends to offer a counterproposal; The flight had left Yokota air cities. violations, The record shows Wil- and veterans organizations are some oppositioin, was a bill to called it, of expecting too much liams also spent several days in scheduled to take part in the| remove the requirement of stu- | from the prospective Big Four jail, Ziem- declared, Armed Forces Day parade here gents at Michigan State Normal | talks between Eisenhower and the , Saturday. | agree to teach in Michigan schools | Prime Ministers of Russia, Britain Williams asserted that police officers had beaten the four de- fendants and they said things that were ‘‘not true” as result. of fear. ~ desperately to forestall the dis- | woman. three-man jury, Assistant 'by taking three months’ training | Southern Hemisphere’s May av- | charge movement. _— a caucus | Oakland County Prosecutor Homer | each summer for four years. tumn, rhich failed to discour t = . ‘ whi age |G. Gerue said he intended to prove M bo Old Hat N ‘publicity chairman for the pro-| and should be lifted. might result in_ disillusionment, Green (R-Kingston), Republican ger influence of intoxicating liquor am a ow jie yt sar al “ ie groups | DROPS DEATH RIDER (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) floor leader, moved to lay the mo-| and at an excessive rate of speed. have not been ls! ut those con- | . wae s tion over until Thursday. . Wilson’s wife, Opal, testified she V , P| ard, 23, of 38 Lake, and Winston | attempt to hang the death penalty accine an C , aie HAVANA, Cuba (P)—Now it’s the Cha Cha Cha. | Johnson, 25, of 312 Hughes Ave. | tee porete: o, heduled to = | for serie sex crimes against might be arranged, was ruled | Porth of the accident scene shortly | This is the latest from the home of the Rhumba and the Mambo. They are charged with dragging | Weer way at 10 a.m, will form before the crash occurred. The ; out of order. four bad 1 on the table. she From sunup to sunup the Cha Cha Cha throbs on the Cuban air. The Rep. Harry J. Phillips (R-Port oo ote andes _ and Lynn Best, 27, of 9 Stanton. | that would permit students to ful-' base, near Tokyo, in balmy spring . Republican Party leaders fought! Jy his opening talk to the nine- | fill their entire military obligation weather, but landed here in the SH. 1 Joseph Carry, of the as a condition of graduation. Spon- | 2nd France. _iocal Navy Recruiting office and sors said the law was impractical| Excessive hope now, he said, “Young Turks,” Rep. Allison; Mrs. Wagenshutz was driving un- | O T h h h | Also accused are Oscar Chavers, tacted have pledged their participa-| Sen. Lynn O. Francis (R-Mid- : rie, W O, a a a 26, of Gary, Ind., his brother, Rich- | tion. land) dropped without a fight his Green’s motion, a bid4or more | 52¥ the accused, Nelson, Mrs. u la time dur'ng which a compromise | Kuck and Best in a tavern on M24 | 5 ‘children on a bill requiring local | ® the 21-year-old mother of three oes awe ws eee ee ilaw enforcement officials to give | een assi . a | < ; | stated. Mambo, here at least, is as finished as last night’s daiquiri. from a mud-mired auto off South pe the State Police lists of all sex | ; ane ores Blvd. while her escort was away "fa at Saginaw and Oakland Hend Huron) then took the floor. As he : Word drifting down from the north indicates the Cha Cha Cha— sumimonina aid and criminally as-| AY® 0999000 === offenders. . stepped to the microphone, Demo- Wetecfors Towseltp: Faire | oth song and dance—alfeady has reached the United States. \- 1 ae piss 2 a ee | a ; | Francis, whose death penalty Congress Gets Bills ratic TS Leader Ed C {| man Steve Hubbell who handled 7 3 See saulting -her during an hour-long In conjunction with the display | pill was killed in committee : Sinan waarraceed: arey O°) the accident while employed as a If only they don’t try texgmericanize it,” is the fervent hope ride. | of military might on the ground, earlier, moved to attach the bil! | to Carry Out = tke’s “Mr. Phillips is about to rhove| SBeriff's deputy described the Gg Boe : DENIED BEATING EARLIER ioa2 Force and Navy jet fighters) but was ruled out of order. Salk Program position of the two death cars From the ch-ch-ch rattle of the maracas comes the Cha Cha | will swoop over the city at inter-| for adjournment. Before you be- It was brought out yesterday by, vals throughour“the day, Flying| come victims of any parliamen- tary trickery, I move for a call of the House.” MOTION PASSES ‘Carey's motion passed. It re- quired all House members. to re- main in the chamber and prevent- ed adjournment. New York Shows Way to Save on Mailing RENO, Nev. (®—The state of Ne- vada, which thinks it knows how to pinch pennies, got a lesson from wealthy New York yesterday. and three others which crashed inte them after the first smashup, e The trial was continuing today before visiting Circuit Judge Ar- chie D, McDonald of Hastings. Motorists’ Nightmare GRAND RAPIDS (UP) — Police and City Highway Department em- ployeg picked up several thousand smalf nails yesterday after they spilled from a truck. Police said the driver of the truck apparently didn’t know the keg had tipped nails for several blocks. Cha rhythm. It's a rapid 1-2, 1-2-3 beat. sing, Cha Cha Cha. For the 1-2-3 read, or The dance is something else. It requires the coordination of a main event boxer and the boundless energy of a 3-year-old. At first glance the Cha Cha Cha appears to be a sway and a dip on the 1-2 beat, and three fast shuffles on the 1-2-3. All accompanied by rhythmic wiggles and a twitch of either the left or right shoulder. Variations include a fast curley-cue step. “It's purely Cuban,” said pianist Jose Norman, who does orches- trations for Havana television station. Norman, while heading his own _ orchestra, introduced the Rhumba to Europe 23 years ago. - Luis Trapaga, one of Cuba's best known choreographers, says the | Cha Cha Cha “‘is technically more difficult than the Mambo. Although Ziem that Taylor had asked the quartet to point out any police officers who had mistreated them while they were still at the police (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Pontiac’s Commissioners Will Attend Conference Pontiac's seven city commission- ers were either en route or pre-| paring to leave for the annual con- ference of Mayors in New York l City today. The meeting of civic officials over and kept on driving, dripping | the music is completely Cuban, the dance corresponds to the American from all over the nation will con- as low as regulations permit, the _jets are scheduled to zoom over | -at 10:20, 11:35, 1:35 and 3:56, | | Carry said. Following the parade, Army and | Navy installations throughout the | | city will hold open house to display | ‘equipment. Both National Guard: | units and the Naval Reserve have scheduled programs, Inaugurated six years ago, | Armed Forces Day is designed to) ; pay tribute to the men and women. in both regular and reserve service | who devote their time to guarantee | security for the country. It also) } Starting: New Series. on Dr. Vincent Peale Starting today—the story of Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, one of the best known, busiest and most talked-about ministers in | ‘as bipartisan support was voiced _for the plan to put up 28 million | dollars to make sure lack of money America... how he got his start... how he works and writes ... What he thinks of his method of preaching . . . how he lives by his own creed... i WASHINGTON —Bills to carry eut the Eisenhower administra- | tion's polio vaccination “program for poor children have been dropped in the congressional hop- per—one by a Republican and the other by a Democrat, : Early approval seemed assured bars no child from getting the vaccine. Don’t miss this frank, lively | SCORES HOBBY closeup of the “Power of Posi- Government handling of the sit- tive Thinking’’ man by columnist | J ation continued to draw criticism, Phyllis Battelle starting on page | jowever. Sen, Morse (D-Ore) told ' Lindy with a Cuban flavor.” was designed to allow public oP | tinue through Saturday, praisal of armed forces might. 3 today. | the Senate’ yesterday he thinks Letters received by the Merete = B arose s Tax Commission from the New A —— retary of Welfare Hobby York Department of Taxation and Cloak-and-Dagger Intrigue Bared should be fired for ‘gross in- Finance were in en- competency.” eels ica nearly a quarter Sk, e e e Meces conde Mrs. Hobby’s a century agb. args Arrest Detroiter in Lebanese Dope Smuggling Plot 22222323 as governor, although he left office 2 wee showed “bad adminis. in 1928. . DETROIT #—A fantastic cloak-|the Middle East, announced the | before a federal judge today on a| A raid next day uncovered 50 street of Beirut, a Narcotics Bu- jend—who turned out to be El/ tration that comes close to im» and-dagger hunt in what the U.S. |two arrests yesterday. conspiracy charge, and his case is | small bottles of morphine con- reay informant heard whispers | Ghorayeb—would have the piece | moraltiy.” Don’t Need It? Bureau of Narcotics describes as | SPEAKS ENGLISH Main’ to cosve bekoes a UE. greed) contrate, beaten Ne Gs Fare inst 51 Ghorayeh wee chipping (. ) \ f } fi | “ e* } ‘ : \ i ey — y? 7 \ £ Ee ade! x * yras \ : — Pi RISE cay hats i an g pee. ni New Peace Signs (Continued From Page One) ‘Pontiac Taxi, pasa OP ‘ity Approves ‘Cab Fare Hike dismay and even a war psychology later on, Eisenhower, who interrupted Dulles’ report te the nation from time to time with comments of his own, broke in to say he thought “the American people are pretty well aware of what is going on” and that they show “greater maturity" about nego- tiating with Russia than was ex- pectable several years ago. Chairman George (D-Ga) of the Taxi fares in Pontiac will go up in 10 days. The new in a revised rates are included in taxicab ordinance passed by the City Commission last | night, } Senate Foreign Relations Commit- | tee later said he thought Dulles was ‘“overcautious’’ and showed signs of “timidity about the Big Four meeting.” * ” “We will stay strong and we will stay vigilant,”’ Eisenhower said, “but we are not to extin- guish the hope that a new dawn may be coming even if the sun ‘rises very, very slowly.’ Dulles himself sounded a simi- lar hopeful note at the outset of his half-hour broadcast with the President, saying: ‘I think now one can say that what happened (with respect to Germany and Austria) may really mark a turn- ing point in. the tide of history.” * * * While the broadcast was aimed primarily at the American people it was cartied to all parts of the world, in many translations, by the government’s Voice of America radio network. The broadcast was the first tele- vision program from the Presi- | dent's oval office. Eisenhower sat | behind his desk. Dulles sat on his right. On his left was a group of | high government officials. € * ? Aides said Dulles and the Presi- dent wore no makeup. The occasion was Dulles’ return from Paris and Vienna. In a his- toric 10-day period he had partici pated in bringing West Germany into the North Atlantic Alliance, in_s‘gning an Austrian treaty, in wot#ing out a better understanding with France on support of an in- dependent government in Viet Nam and in receiving from Soviet: Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov Russia's acceptance of a bid from the Western Powers for a_ top- level Big Four meeting. * * * One of the great moments of . the week, he said, came when he saw representatives of France and Germany sitting side by side as Allies at the NATO table in Paris. “You felt a new page had been opened on European history,"’ he told the President, ‘‘and the vision which so many people had for so many years of a unified Europe had actually started to come to pass.” In the same vein of acclaiming a triumph for the West, Dulles spoke of the Austrian Treaty sign- ing. They call for charges of 35 eenats for the first one-fifth mile or less and 5 cents for fach additional one-fifth mile or less. Ten cents will be charged for each three minutes waiting time. The ordinance also provides that cab drivers must wear visored caps with metal badges affixed to them Cabs may carry advertising sign- boards on the rear a traffic hazard. The regulation salso states “‘in no case shall the driver payment from a passenger out first throwing up the flag on the meter.” Defendant Claims Threats by Police (Continued From Page One) station following their arest Wil- liams admitted the four then denied being beaten, A doctor, who examined Wil- liams several hours after his ar- rest, previously testified the man had bruised lips. “Isn't it true you got bruised lips when kicked in the face by. (the woman)?” Ziem asked, “No,” Williams re- plied. . Williams and Winston Johnson who followed him tg the stand. both said the housewife Gas not dragged from the auto, but had appeared | on South Blvd. and called to them asking for a ride to town. They alleged she offered no resistance to their advances. | ‘DIDN'T SEE WOMAN’ They stated they did not see the woman in the mired car when they ‘ tin Weiberg attempted to help her escort, Mar- free it. Taylor asked Johnson if the dome fight in Wei- iberg’s car flashed on when Wei- berg opened the door to start his officiate with burial motor, Johnson said he didn't know, Weiherg, 24, of 102 S. Mer. rimac St., said last week on the stand he had ridden off a short distance with the’ four who said they would take him to a service station, The car stopped after hitting a mud hole, Weiberg stated, and Os- ear Chavers ran back across the field toward the car containing the woman, Weiberg then stopped a passing auto and went for aid, he testified, Lawmakers Seek to Block Commercial TV at MSC Several members of the state House Ways and Means Commit- tee said today they would attempt to block the plan of Michigan State’ College to set up a joint com- mercial-educational television sta tion Rep. Joseph A. Warner (R-Ypsi lanti), committee chairman, the committee would he asked to re-insert a ban against the stafion included in a senate-approved ap propriations bill but later defeated in a move led by Sen. William S Broomfield (R-Roya! Oak). MSC already has = applied to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for Channel 10, jointly with the Television Corp. of Michigan, During the course of the debate on the plan it was said that Edward. E. Wilson, Birmingham businessman and son of Defense Secretary Wilson, is an officer of Television Corp. of Michigan Wilson could not be reached for comment this morning. DEFEND TV PLAN MSC officials appearcd day at a Ways and Means Com mittee meeting to defend the teie vision plan. The station would operate on the last very high fre said Senate vester cor por ation, quency (VHF) channel available in | the state. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mosity fair tenight and tomerrow Warmer day time temperatrues Thursday with high 70-74. Lew tenight, 42-46. West erly winds at 16 te 15 mites Partly cloudy, warmer, Thursday night. Teday in Pentiac Lowest temperature preceding 43 6 am At 8 a.m, Wind velocity 17 Direetion: West. Sun sets today at 7:49 pm Sun rises Thursday at 5:07 a.m Moon sets today at 4:17 p.m. Moon rises Thursday at 3:14 a.m. Tereday in Pontiac {As recorded downtown) temperature. ....ceeeecices teMperature...cvecesers.-+- temperature. ....+« eeteeess Weether—Pair m.p 70 ou temperature ..c...0 00455 Scene eaneaeeen te eather—Mild. Cost of construction would be borne by ie state. Operation costs wou Id be split by the college and “MSC would broadcast 38 hours of educational programs per week and_ the hours commercially Broomfield said’ today the ban defeated by the Senate would have prohibited the from using » corporation 63 college state-appropriated money for get ting the VHF -channel. The lawmaker said the ban would possibly kill television at MSC. The college is now operat- ing an ultra high frequency (UNF) station at cost of $231,000 a year, he stated. “Tt requires a special adaptor to receive UHF and very few set owers can receive the college programs. If the college can't get | a VHF channel, which would reach its broadcasts might discarded standard sets as well be ‘GREAT LOSS TO PEOPLE’ This would be a great loss to the people of Michigan in that edu cational television is a coming thing and holds great value for in- dividual cit Other members of the House Ways and Means Committee in- dicated they would support War- ner in hig attempts to re-insert the ban against the station. zens.’’ Rep. James Gulette (R-Iron / Mountains said he could not ap- prove the deal unless he had more information on-it. He was joined ; n | Williams «D- committee member 1 | Committee by Rep. Louis Mezzano (D-Wake- field! Air “T think more members of the than half the Ways and Means would oppose the ars said Rep. Frank D Detroit!) another rangement.’ QUESTIONS RIGHT “I certainly question the right of the State Board of Agriculture to | identification | deck section, | providing they are approved by the | chief of police and that they do not | obstruct the driver's view or create | accept any | with- | Fa } | ‘THE PONTIAC times as fast as present methods. | ARITHMETIC’S FUN THIS WAY — That was the | The abacus is said to teach arithmetic three to five ‘decision of Trisha Bowden of 17310 Beechwood, Bir- | mingham, shown here trying out the new abacus | veloped by a Marquette University professor, to be used in teaching arithmetic at Beverly Elemen- | The idea, de- is to show children by sight and touch the fundamentals | tary School next fall. Demonstrating the gadget, as presently taught by memorization. First, second and well as one of the adding machines which used in math classes at Barnum teacher jai Pontiac Deaths Mrs. John | E. Baker Annabele sostiettas | of 1067 will be Junior High, is Lincoln Ct. | abacus next fall Iew Ordinance Sets Up third graders at Beverly School will begin using the | Pontiac Historical Group Service will be held Thursday at 2 p.m. Home for Mrs Baker, 65, of Ave. The Rev. Willard Stallcup of the Emmanuel Baptist Church will from the Pursley Funeral John E, (Dora) in Ottawa | Park Cemetery. | Mrs. Baker died Monday after a three years illness. She had lived here 37 years. John Chittick Jr. John Chittick Jr., 34. a former resident of Baldwin Ave. was killed in an automobile accident Sunday at Trenton, N. J. During World War II, he had served with the U. S. Marines Known to his friends as Buck, Mr Chittick had been employed for four years at the Baldwin Rubber Co. The funeral was held this morn- | ing at 10:30 from the Saul Funeral | Home in Trenton. He is survived by two daughters Lee Robert Collins Service will be held Thursday at 130 pm. from the Huntoon Fu- neral Home for Lee Robert Col- lins. 68, of 105 West Columbia Ave The Rev. David Mortensen of the Marimont Baptist Church will of- ficvate with burial in Davisburg Cemetery Mr Collins died early vest r- day morning at Pontiac General Hospital Virgil S. Moyer Service will be held Thursday at 10:30 am. at the Braee-Smith for Virgil & Mover, Monday at the Oak therculosis Hospital 12 years Funeral Home 1. who died land County Ty He had heen there The Rev. James Luther of Sil- vererest Baptist Church will offi ciate with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery Clarence L Geonburc Word has been received of the death of Clarence L. Spanburg %6, formerly of Pontiac and now of 320 W. Ottawa St. E. Lansing. He died at his home Friday after a three months illness, The 2-30 p.m, from the Palmer Bush Chapel with burial in Oak Lawn Cemetery. ' Mr. Spanburg was born Sept. 17. 1898, the son of John Henry and Emily Spanburg. Besides his wife, Spray, he is survived by six children, Mrs Joseph Reagan, Charles. Donald, James, John and Lawrence Span- | burg, all of E. Lansing A sister, Mrs. Albert (Charlotte) Shaughnessy of Chicago, and two | brothers. Lester of Pontiac, also survive. j enter into such a contract with a GM Official Dies { private firm without first letting . $2.8 bids,” i Williams said. Decigring he supported educa- tional television in principle, he sald: “The question is — do. we get a doflar’s worth of educa- tion for every dollar we spend n Lae Most of the members object to. ithe arrangement on the grounds | the government would be en- croaching on private enterprise. Williams said he would continue | to fight against the TV plan de- by Atty. Gen. DETROIT (UP) — Ray L. New- | ton, |Corp., died yesterday in his | suburban Highland Park home. | Newton, 63, was a native of | | Stoneham, Mass., and had been associated with Cadillac since | 1920. He is survived by his widow, | Maude, and two sons, | Recounts Ruled Out Possibility of a recount of any) races for state posts in the April | 4 election has been ruled out, Oak- County Clerk Lynn Allen said | 774 Orchard Lake | funeral was held Monday at! and Irving, both | veneral sales manager of the | Cadillac division of General Motors | for his courteous act which teok An ordinance establishing a Pon Commission last night was wirtten into law by the tiar Historical City Commission, . The five-member commission will collect and preserve histori- cal materials relating to the his- tory of the city, One member will serve one two years, year, one one three years, one four years and one five years. | Appointments are expected to be made after the ordinance takes effect in 10 days. NEW ORDINANCE READ | First reading was made of a new rubbish-fire ordinance which provides that such. fires be made in nothing but receptacles approved by the fire marshal and that such fires be at least 15 feet from combustible buildings. It provides that tree leaves may | be burned on private property only when supervised and in a safe | | | j cation | ASKS DUST SURVEY | City Attorney Wilham A. Ewart | asked a Health Dept. survey of | dust conditions around a cement plant in District 7, With the results of thé survey as evidence, he said } he believed a court) injunction could be obtained preventing the | firm's operation as a public nui- | Ssance, The Commission authorized | purchase of 60 acres of land in two parcels near Opdyke and Au- burn Rds. for $66,000, The 37-acre section will be used | for an auxiliary sewage treatment | plant, The 23-acre parcel will pro- | vide land for expansion of the ponds of the present treatment | plant and also for a sanitary fill. | Also authorized was disposal of the old City Hall building. The land on which it stands may be used | as a metered _parRing lot in the | immediate future and a park area in the distant futuré. | FIRM AWARDED CONTR ACT ' Oak Construction Co. of Royal Oak, was awarded a $145.000 con- stract for concrete paving jobs. A lease for seven plots of land for hangar construction at Pon- tiac Municipal Airport with Al- bert Wohlart, of Birmingham, Was approved. Public hearings were set for next Tuesday for a curb, gutter and| drainage project on Ypsilanti ave- | nue from Carlisle to Stanley, and | en spec ‘ial assessme nt ols for | Courteous Driver ! Cited by Police The Pontiac Police Officers’ | Asan. today announced the city’s first courteous driver in the cur- lrent ‘Be a Courteous Driver’ con- | test which started May 1. Keith Johnson, 31, was cited place May 6 on Huron Street in | front of the courthouse. Johnson, a foods salesman, was jrecommended as the first cour- teous driver by Patrolman Wil- liam LeMonde who said: “Johrison noticed an elderly lady's car stalled in heavy 5 p.m. traffic. Other motorists. drove by | her ignoring her predicament. | | Johnson stopped and tried to help | get her car started. When _ this failed, he pushed her car to a service station whete she was given further help.” © Johnson lives at 120 Marion, Waterford Township, with his wife similar work on Peggy avenue from Voorheis to Hazel and Gor- don from Oakland | to Corwin. PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1955 ‘The Day in itaineuer! pace Adding Machines| Enter Classrooms in Fall BIRMINGHAM — Some 500 stu- | de nts at two schools in the Bir- | mingham Scheol District will be th parochial in Milwaukee County in Jan., 1954. Tests of students who were also will play a duet for organ and piano with Mrs, Reginald Becker, * . * Mrs. Anne M. Connelly | Service .arrangements were be- | ing made for Mrs. Anne M. Con- | nelly, 1351 E. Maple, Birmingham, ' who died suddenly today at the William Beaumont Hospital at the | age of 60. | Mrs. Connelly was a Birming- poe in Michigan to start using | taught with Schott's method were | ham resident for the past 29 years, |“gadgets” in arithmetic classes | nt fall, The so-called gadgets are an abacus—a frame containing five rods with nine plastic discs on each jrod—and adding machines, They | were used by a Marquette Uuni- |yversity professor in developing a new method of teaching arithmetic. Subsquent tests of children who were taught by this method q showed they had covered in one four-month period what it ner- mally took 14 menths to learn. watching students use the abacus and am convinced we can do some real good with ithere,’’ said Mal- 'colm V. Ferguson, principal of | Beverly school. The 253 first, second and third garders enrolled for the fall sees- ter at Beverly will begin using the abacus in arithmetic clases. Fer- guson prdictd on of two thing “possibly'’ would com from = us of the abacus. ‘‘Either jt will trim learning time or it will add much | more understanding of arithmetic problems. I'm happy we can be one of the schools to use the method." Belief that use of the new method | would cut learning time was echoed iby Herbert Hengst, principal of ! Barnum Junior High. The %0 seventh and eighth graders at Barnum will use spe- ial “instructor” type ma- chines developed by the Bur- rought Cerp. in arithmetic classes next fall. Hengst said it was anticipated seventh and eighth graders would | get their lessons much faster. “We face the danger of running out of lessons for them,”’ he said, ‘‘but that's a pleasant danger to face.” | A total of 35 adding machines wil be used in the Barnum program. Developer of the new method was Dr. Andrew. F. Schott. It was put. into uSe in seven elmntary |}and high schools, both public and rop: In the experiment below, the slide on the left is‘coated with ordinary motor oil, while the one on the right is coated with Trop-Artic All-Weather Oil. When two steel blocks are dropped on the two slides at exactly the same time, the one on the right slips down nearly twice as fast as the one on the left. The reason is: less friction with TRop-ArtTIc oil. “IT spent two days in Milwaukee, | reviewed by Marquette University | ‘and the California Test Bureau. | gains normally Among other things, results showed | that seventh grade students made gains in four months that normally would require nineteen months: eighth and ninth graders showed in a single semester that would require mesters, Schott explained that use of the abacus and adding machine do not abolish standard _arith- metic teaching techniques. A student learns what must actual- ly happen with numbers in order to add, subtract, multiply and divide, he siad. “With an adding machine these short cuts on even a big arith- metic problem can be broken down into all its steps and each step | reasoned and worked. “The fundamentals in, the students learn to do by doing and what once had to be accepted on faith and learned by memorization comes alive meaningful form,”’ Schott added. Birmingham educators visited Milwaukee this spring to see his method in operation. This week the board of education approved start of the program at Beverly and really sink | Barnum this fall. Schott is scheduled to visit Bir- mingham in July to instruct teach ers at the two schools—eight teach- ers at Beverly and three at Barnum —on just ho wto use the abacus and adding machines. \ * * * A spring concert featuring the senior choir, a new male quartet and an organ-piano duet will be presented tomorrow evening at 8:15 at the Embury 9 Methodist church, The senior choir will pre- sent both sacred and secular num- bers. The ‘Gospe] Messengers,” the. new quartet, is directd by Mrs. Earl Fnnr. Th concrt wil b directed by Victo Ulich who four se- | in a) | moving to the city from Saginaw. She was the wife of the late | Walter L. Connelly, Birmingham | contractor, and a member of the Holy Name church, altar society, | Rotary Ann and Women's Literary ——- | Club. Surviving are six sisters and three brothers, Mary Louise, Helen | and Frances Keho of Saginaw; Miss Alice Keho of Birmingham, | Mrs. Joseph Lesperance, Ingle- wood, Calif., and Mrs. John J, Quinn, West Palm Beach, Fla. Surviving brothers are James and | William of Flint, and Charles of Saginaw. Police Group Pledges Money to Foundation | The Pontiac Foundation, a non- profit trust to gather funds for a civic center-auditorium, last night received the promise of a $100 con- tribution from the Pontiac Po lice Officers Assn. In a letter addressed to Mayor William W. Donaldson, which he read at the City Commission meeting, the association said it was ‘‘proud” to contribute. “Our city has gone for years With not one public building which it could be proud of, the letter stated. ‘‘While other cities spent millions in the construction of civie centers, museums and public buildings, Pontiac remained the +same outmoded and unattractive city. “We are finally pulling out of that ‘rut’ and doing something about solving the problem.” Donaldson also announced _re- ceipt of another Wisner Stadium bond for the fund. He said he be- lieved many bond-holders did not realize the bonds could be turned over to the foundation. —_ ee ess Friction with FRICTION SLOWS YOU DOWN WHEN YOU USE ORDINARY OIL PuHiturps PETROLEUM COMPANY New Phillips 66 Trop-ArtIc reduces friction far, more effectively than any ordinary oil. By reducing friction, it extends gasoline mileage. And it can reduce wear, even to the extent of doubling the life of an engine. It can cut oil consumption 15% to 45%. It keeps pistons cleaner. New TRop-ARTIC is the first all-weather type motor oil to meet the highest standard ever established for automobile motor oils, the Mil-0-2104 Supplement 1 Test. Get Trop-Artic from your Phillips 66 Dealer. In Service, too (73° PERFORMANCE THAT COUNTS / If it's performance you want, the man to see is your Phillips 66 Dealer . . . not only for the high-performance products he sells, but also for the mony extra services and courtesies he performs to make your motoring more enjoyable. Phillips 66 Declers are famous for “Hospitality on the Highway.” rtic Motor Oil! NEW TROP-ARTIC OIL KEEPS FRICTION LOW THE ALL WEATHER AOTOR O'L a PHILLIPS 66 PRODUCTS are distributed in PONTIAC and vicinity by ECONOMY OIL CO. 3389 Dixie Highway, Pontiac, Mich. aaa. Nang br cene7: LeClaire’s Cass-Eliz. Service “4171 Cass-Elizabeth Ra, Pontine, Mich, THE-PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. MAY 18. 1955 Gagwriting Probe Would Up U.S. Morale NEW YORK (INS) — Congress, considering a $32,860,000,000 de- fense budget, proper distribution of the Salk vaccine, relations with Russia, Peru and other sensitive matters, has been asked to drop all work and do something about giving more protection to gag- writers. * * * The National Association of Gag- writers, through the Gagwriters Protective Association, he asked } Sen. Harley Kilgore and Rep. Emanuel Celler, chairmen of their respective judiciary committees, to bring about legislation designed to throw the protective wing of the copyright law over creators of what passes for humor on TV, radio and in the nightclubs. (The whirring sound you hear is Joe Miller revolving in his grave.) “Can We Protect the Joke- Writer From Gag: “Thieves?” was HAVE LOTS OF IT! Add something to a profitable Savings Program at PONTIAC FEDERAL each week and you will have lots of money. That money won't be inaccessible either . . . you can withdraw, without advance notice, at any time. ‘ But until you do need those funds they'll be earning big dividends for you... 2% per annum. Program this week. ALL SAVINGS INSURED UP TO $10,000 2' Pontiac currently at the rate of Come in and start your Savings , CURRENT RATE Federal J Savings and LOAN ASSOCIATION 16 E. Lawrence St. “Kilgore and Celler have been requested to invite top comedians such as ‘confessed’ gag-thief Mil- ton Berle, Bob Hope, Jackie Glea- son, Groucho Marx and Jack Benny, and gagwriters such as Goodman Ace, Mac Benoff, Carroll Carroll et al (ed. note: Al Tra- han?) and other leading authori- ties on humor, to testify. “The National Association of Gagwriters feels that such.a joint hearing under these high auspices would do much for the morale of the country. The impact of tele- vision on the youth of the nation has created a situation in which the gag-thief runs rampant, and is glorified."’ . * 2 * Well, my morale could stand a little face-lifting, so let me state right here that I hope the probe comes off. If Rep, Celler’s great natural aversion to publicity can be over-| come, and TV camerag are in- stalled in the caucus room, and | The ninth annual Michigan Chris- | tian Youth Convention assembled Saturday at 2 p.m. in the Baldwin Avenue Evangelical United Breth- ren Church. | In charge of the convention was Party Line Hog Faces Prison Woman Found Guilty of Refusing to Let Fireman Make Call 's POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y, WA) | hot-tempered housewife has been | found guilty of refusing to yield a country telephone party line | when a volunteer fireman tried to | report a fire. | Mrs. Mary L. Kayes, 4, of | | Rhinebeck, N.Y., could get a max- ‘imum of a year in jail, a $500 fine \or both under a new state statute | covering use of party line tele-| ‘hones in an emergency, Mrs. Kayes, mother of four, sobbed when the verdict was an- nounced in Dutchess County Court ‘last night. | * * * ‘Let me alone, don't bother me,” she shouted at newsmen. | Judge John R. Schwartz set May '24 for sentencing and continued _Mrs. Kayes in $500 bail. According to testimony in the two-day trial, Mrs. Kayes said, “Let the damn thing burn and get off the line,’ when fire dispatcher Donald Townsend asked her to give up the line to report a brush fire last Jan. 71. Townsend and Mrs. Kayes share the line with five other =e. 100 Young People Meet for 9th Annual Convention | ' of Religious Education. Presiding of Reliigous Education. Presiding at the afternoon and evening ses- sions was state president Dennis | Sellers of Burt Lake. Over 100 young people joined in | the opening song service conducted | by Mrs. B. C. Meece of Cadillac. | Afternoon . devotions on — the theme, “Lift Up My Eyes,"’ were led by Dougald McColl assisted by Bob Dunn and Walter Brown, all of First Christian Church, Pontiac. A group discussion oh ‘‘This Is | Youth Fellowship” was directed | by George O. Taylor of Indian- apolis. The Cascade Christian Youth presented a panel an “‘Build- ing a Youth Fellowship.” At the business meeting the fol- lowing officers were elected for ' next year: president, Bob Dunn of Pontiac; vice president, Barbara Heaven of Cascade, and secretary, Jack Rogers of Traverse City. * Special music was presented by the proposed cast of characters shows up, the hearings will easily top the rating of the Army- McCar- thy show and provide more laugh’ than Sen, Ferguson’s inquiry, ‘‘In- side Johnny Meyer."’ Bugs Baer, who has provided a couple of generations of al- leged gagwriters with more fuel than is underfoot in Pennsyl- vania and Texas, once was asked by a high school journalist, “Where do you get your ma terial?” Bugs answered, “dust borrow it back.” Methinks that despite the hig ah! ' goals of the GPA, the crusade ts | doomed. The poker chip is not the, most homeless of ail créations The gag is. | There isn’t room on a quip for a byline, just as there isn't enough | humility or charity in the average | person’s soul to prompt him to| give. credit to the person from | whom. he appropriated the gag | And, really, there isn’t time on, most programs or skits. | ~ * * The man with the putty nose | about to be hit with the pie on, TV can't say, “Custard’s last stand—with apologies to Herman Q. Schmarz of the Nationa] Asso- ciation of Gagwriters.'’ He'd get hit before he gets to the credits. ... Which mightn't be a bad idea at that. THINK OF MOPPETS lt the morale of children TV ad-: dicts is at stake, as the GPA, gleomily warns, it should consider whether it is wise to strip our} moppets of their last vestige of il- jusion by informing them that | 99-44-100ths of everything they | laugh at on the Screén came not | from the comedian but trom guys’ named Carroll Carroll and his girls from the United Christian Church of Detroit and a trio from the Cascade Christian Church. worship service. The closing address of the day , was given by Gladys Harrison, | raligiows education director of Ja-. maica. Hit Dogtag Exchange CHATTANOOGA, Tenn, @—Civil defense officials here are seeking to curb a new practice of Chatta- | nooga youth in exchanging civil | defense ‘‘dogtags’’ as a method of sealing a romance or expressing devotion. | friends et al. i That might be a rea! crusher | and result in further juvenile de-| Dennis Sellers of Burt Lake and |linquency, After all, not many Leo Hallenbeck led the evening | present-day | Jack Benny on radio one night TV children heard when, shattered by a Fred Allen |crusher, he mourned, “I'd give $10,000 right now if my writers were here.” Godfrey fired more writers re- | cently than did the shutdown of | the Brooklyn Eagle. I see no | ganetuary for gagwriters, | Who do they think they are. whooping cranes? Still, it would be a nice congressional hearing to cover. And the Congressional Rec- ord certainly could use some) | fresh material, KRESGE 5-‘!1 STORES TE REFILLS JET BLACK in ee 1 ii ve Only genuine Paper-Mate Refills have the famous Silvered Tip. Fully guaranteed to give you the world's easiest writing. Can’t leak or clog. Ink won't smear, transfer or stain. Washes out of cloth; permanent on paper! And Paper-Mate refills are so quick and easy to install. They're precision engineered to fit your pen perfectly. Need no measuring, adjusting or breaking off. Insist on genuine Paper-Mate Refills with the exclusive Silvered Tip. Your ehoice of “fine” or “medium’ points—in red, green, blue or black inks, > | q | 41 @ | R NT D) . * » Townsend qestitied he had to | drive nearly a mile to another | | telephone to make the call. A fire official told the court the | | fire got out of control because . of | barn. things on a party line.” the delay and destroyed a nearby | Mrs. Kayes claimed she didn't believe there really was a fire, because “you hear the darndest | | | they .. fell | in | love... ons A University of Ilinois study indicates that children usually learn the grammar they will use for the rest of their lives between their first and third birthdays. colors. ch eae You Are Cordially Invited to PONTIAC GLASS COMPANY’S Spring COLOR fe stival) of PITTSBURGH PAINTS To Be Held at Our Store Thursday & Friday, May 19th and 20th * Fecturing Mr. Donald Cress, Pittsburgh’s Color Consultant, who will show you how to be burgh’s exciting, new MAESTRO COLOR system of 300 DEMONSTRATIONS See all the new Pittsburgh Paint products d including Cementhide Rubberized Masonry Paint and Wall- hide Rubberized Texture White. Cd FREE BALLOONS FOR THE KIDDIES FREE GIFTS FOR THE ADULTS PONTIAC GLASS CO. 23 W. 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When you compare price tags, Most economical of the low-price 3! full-time Power Steering, and all the other energy- | _-you'll find that, mode! for model, Plymouth sells for much, Plymouth’s fast-stepping new 6-cylinder Power- | *@¥ing_ power assists (at such low cost theyll | much less, and gives you more car for your money! Flow 117 is @ joy to drive, and own. Its exclu- hardly affect your monthly payments!) And = } give Chrome-Sealed Action locks in power to give you get many features that other low “price cars ‘ Sk) Lana Or Car” by & . : you peak performance for extra thousands of don't have. Hi = professional ortists, the Seciety ef IMvstreters : gniles — at rock-bottom cost. Come in and drive this big beauty today! te: : : | BEST BUY NEW; BETTER TRADE-IN, TOO . i FE 5.6441 § . GORDON E. REYNOLDS : . f ». ¥ ( t be aA P| | § * - t Fo . mi fi : ales LS ASS LS SS SS SN EE A SN ..with the sweetheart of the low-price 3 ] THE MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tee Powrue carrier « co OF a, a ashtenaw oe 12.00 @ oe rr: elsew! ip an tm the States $20.00 & year. S at are payable ad MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1955 Colleges Face Problem of Higher Enrollment One of the things that is worrying educators is the rapid growth in the ratio of college and university students to the rest of the population. With the beginning of the Fall terms in 1954 the number of such students had reached an all time high of 2,500,- 000. A survey indicates this total will reach 4,000,000 by 1962 and 7,000,000 by 1970. * x * This means that to keep abreast of this growth, teaching staffs. will have to be doubled in 15 years. Also, it will take billions to provide the necessary plant expansion and replace worn out and obsolete equipment. Although corporation gifts to institu- tions of higher learning now run about $100,000,000 a year, increases in tuition have been necessary. Fees in publicly supported schools now average $240 a year while the average for those pri- vately operated is $580. x *« * The possibility of further in- creases in tuition fees also is worrying educators. They fear either that many students will re- ceive a second class education or that many gifted young people will be denied higher education for lack of funds, This indeed is a grave problem. Al- ready it is attracting attention in Con-_ gress, There a bill has been introduced ‘to provide $800 a year for worthy stu- dents. So far the Administration has given no sign of interest in Federal scholarships. * * * However, President Eisenhower has said it might be necessary to offer more scholarships in scien- tifie fields to keep ahead of Russia’s rate of producing engi- neers and other technicians. This overall problem isn't going to solve itself. It deserves continued study by educators and lawmakers and any other groups which might point the way toward a possible solution. Weather Bureau’s Budget A look back at the havoc wrought by the 1954 hurricanes Carol, Edna and Hazel, strongly suggests the need for an expanded Weather Bureau budget. These three hurricanes caused prop- erty damage estimated at $800,000,000 and resulted in the loss of 200 lives, It is contended by experts that these losses would have been much smaller had the Weather Bureau been able by reason of a larger staff and better equipment to give more accurate advance storm warn- ings. x * * . The bureau’s budget for fiscal 1955-56 is $27,850,000 plus a special $5,000,000 for equipment to be spent over the next four years. Next year’s $3,000,000 in- crease over the current budget is ac- counted for entirely by observation work the bureau is taking over from the Air Force. -The.$5,000,000 asked for new equip- ment is needed for radar instruments ® needed to finance an emergency hurri- cane warning system. Center Lights for Safety This newspaper knows of no sound argument against a law proposed by State Sen. Porter of Blissfield to bring about uniform installation of traffic lights in Michigan. * * * His idea is that suspension of these lights over traffic lanes at intersections contributes much more to highway safe- ty than do those placed at curbs. It long has been the opinion of traffic engineers that the curb lights are less visible and hence less effective and tend to con- fuse drivers. This is especially true at intersections where neon signs of different colors make it more difficult to see the traffic lights. * * * Several Michigan cities, including Pontiac, have abandoned the curb lights. Lieut. J. Koren, head of Pontiac Police Department's traffic division, wholeheartedly endorses the Porter bill. He says that the three remaining curb installations in Pontiac soon will be re- placed with center lights for the very reasons which prompted Sen. PorTER to * introduce his bill. In the interest of uniformity and greater highway safety the Legislature should .enact this measure. ’ Asxep for his secret for longevity, a Denver man, 98, said, “Just keep breathing.” Yes, but there are many circumstances under which a person can’t just keep breathing—as, for exam- ple, when his heart stops beating. a A woman tells us that men are divid- ed into three classes: (1) The hand- some; (2) the intelligent, and (3) the great majority. Le ———————————_— The Man About Town Armed Services Day Observance Desired by Those Who Realize Its Significance Spring: A season that rushes sum- mer one day and crawls back inte the lap of winter the next. The observance next Saturday of the an- nual Armed Forces Day gets plenty of Pontiac support from those in a position to know what it means. These include such men as Edward C. Tanner and Charles Austin of the David L. Kimball Camp, who repre- sented us in the Philfppine insurrection in 1898, and those from the Red Arrow Division, “Pontiac's own,” with memories of James Cook and Elmer Nelson, whose combined last names make the title of a local American Legion Post. Then there are the thousands who participated in World War II, and getting down-to other tndivid- uals, there's Frank L. Doty, Oakland County Circuit Judge; Robert Alspaugh, Chief of Plant Protection at Pontiac Motors, Joseph B. Gable, Superintendent of Pontiac City Water De- partment; : Wallace Kinney, Superintendent of the Community National Bank Building, and Harold (Dip) Shaw of the Hotel Pontiac. The least you can do Saturday is to display the national colors. Getting a lot of comment is City Commissioner John E. Carry because his name was omitted from the cut lines under the picture of the commission in the Pontiac Press. John was in the picture and most everybody recognized him anyway. Conspicuous among the thanks received by this column on its suggestion that we com- bine an “Oakland County Week” with the current “State of Michigan Week,” was that from one of our county’s biggest boosters, Stephen J. Cloonan, who says, “No other area in the whole world has as much to brag about as Oakland Coun- ty. Let's do some bragging.” Exchanging the snow fences for roadside picnic tables, the Oakland County Road Commission keeps abreast of the seasons. The fences were taken down under the direction of their Superintendent. ; Oscar D. Looms, and the tables are being put out by Robert W. Osgood, © Forester for the Commission, They're ready to welcome you. Verbal Orchids to— Mrs. Julia Baumgartner I of 16 South Paddock St; eighty-sixth birth- - PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1955 Don’t k,Now, but— David Lawrence Says: Moscow May Force Tito to Play Ball Soviet Style BONN—Something of the alarm which has swept Europe since Moscow announced that there would be a conference ‘‘at the summit” in Belgrade between Bulganin and Khrushchev, on the one hand, and Marshal Tito, on the other, is expressed in @ car- toon on the front page of “Die Welt,” a leading newspaper here. It shows Marshal Tito in uniform with the stars and stripes as an insignia on one shoulder and the hammer and sickle of Soviet Russia on the other, with this this caption: “Will he wear them on both shoulders?” There can be no doubt that the whole western alliance has recetved a shock over something which they should long age have suspected. For in the last year and a half the steady campaign carried on by Moscow to win Tito back to the fold has been revealed in a series of moves which were minimized in the West but which finally bore fruit. WON'T BREAK TIES It is true that Tito has re- assured the western democracies that he has no intention of break- ing his ties with them, but what has not yet been disclosed is that he may not be able to control his own destiny and that the break with the West may develop now. » * LJ Here tn Bonn, where they know a good deal about Yugoslav affairs and where they tend to look on the situation in the Balkans with a certain detachment now that Austria has been neutralized, the reports are conflicting concerning the origin and purposes of the Bulganin mission to Belgrade, Yugoslavs here insist that there will be no discussion about a resumption of ideological ties but only about practical prob- lems in the diplomatic and economic relations of the two governments. . Others say that the meeting fs basically ideological because there has been a steady infiltration by Moscow Communists in Belgrade in recent months, and its is pointed out that Walter Ulbricht, leader of the Communist party in East Germany, soon is to make a trip to confer with leaders in Belgrade. SOVIET SCHEME What it all seems to add up to ls a definite effort on the part of Moscow to swing Tito away from the West, even though he may not allow himself to become a ’ puppet of Moscow. * s LJ So far as the Soviet Union fs concerned, it may well be content with the addition of Yugoslavia to the neutral belt which has been started with the successful detach- ment of Austria from the West. _ Once a block of buffer states from the Mediterranean to the Baltic has been established, the Soviet regime can well afford to offer to pull back her own troops and insist that American troops go home. Western Europe would then be at the mercy of a gigantic land army of Russians which could become supreme, es- pecially if Soviet propaganda succeeds in persuading the West to give up atomic weapons of mass destruction. So the Soviet aim now is to spend the next three or four years in what looks outwardly like a relaxation of tension but which actually means a determined effort to win by a “cold war” certain ago and a trade union delegation of Yugoslavs to Peiping. After the India visit, Tifo pro- claimed his belief in the neces- friend of the West have picked out un- necessary issues for a public statement, especially when it was known the viewpoint would be accepted widely as a criticisin of United States ,policy. TITO IN MIDDLE The true story of what is hap- pening inside Yugoslavia has yet to be told. There are evidences that Moscow has been conducting an intrigue among the hard-core Communists in Belgrade, faithful to the Soviet Union, who were recently released, and that, due to internal politics, Tito has found himself compelled to accept the friendly gestures of the Soviets, who are persuasively arguing that they are not asking him to become an ally and to line up against the West but merely to stay neutral, just as Austria is and as the Communists hope to persuade a reunited Germany to be. These are anxious times for the West in the “cold war,” and a counteroffensive boldly calling for the liberation of all the satellite states is certainly needed. ( 1955, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) Voice of the People Boy Scouts to Honor Military Services | in Armed Forces Day Parade May 21 | wi! be re | when feces sary because of space, Full fame, address and telephone ocurmmber of the write: accompany ietters but these will not ned & the writer 80 ents \etter is critical ip its nature. The Boy Scouts of America is definitely not a military organiza- tion. We have been invited to participate in the Armed Forces Day Parade on May 21. We were happy to accept this invitation and, therefore, our Cubs. Boy Scouts and Explorers will be in the parade in the role of a patriotic organization which em- phasizes citizenship training. and one which welcomes this oppor- tunity to pay honor to the Armed Forces of this country. Edward H. Leland Scout Executive ‘Holly Fan’ Says Tigers Won't Be First With Bucky © Well, there go the Tigers. They are just a flash in the pan, same as last year. They'll never get into the first division with Bucky Harris as their manager: Holly Fan Press Reader Praises New Pontiac City Hall This was a city of no mean ap- pearance even before the new building om the mount. That is the Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE There is no nicer present we... Can give to anyone . . . Than just appreciation for... A service that is done ... A little recognition for ... The hours, day by day... Of loving sacrifice to help . . . Some folks along their way .. . The gold or silver medal or . . . The hand- some parchment scroll .. . That testifies eternally . . . To that un- selfish role . .. It is befitting in this life . . . That we extend our thanks .. . To those who serve us privately ...Or in our public ranks ... A little recognition is ...A tonic to the soul... And it inspires others too... To reach a higher: goal. (Copyright 1955) Looking Back PONTIAC CITIZENSHIP Day to feature parade honoring 21-year- olds. BRITAIN TO SEEK Soviet good- will as press attacks soften. 20 Years Ago PONTIAC TEACHERS to get pay increase. SPECIAL LEGISLATURE looms for delinquent tax relief. City Hall with its large tree in~ front. ’ Although there may be those in our community, as well as those that labor in the factories, opposed to a strike, all of us Aere for nearly 30 years have commen sense. We do not want the national economy te be thrown for a loss. Those who have been here for less than ten years take every- thing for granted . . , vacation pay, overtime, holiday pay. Those who are now opposed to a guar- anteed annual wage, perhaps did exist here in the very early thirties of the depression. There would not be a union, as I see it, had it not been for Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Be Republican or Democrat, always remember that fact. Do you wish slavery and chains of mind and body? It is up to you, officials of corporations. William Reid GOP Urged to Campaign on the Basis By MERRYLE 8. RUKEYSER INS Economic Commentator Politics is only one of the over- tones affecting the trend for job- creating activities in business, but ever since New Dealers made an issue of modifying the enterprise system, politics has bulked larger than before. Recently pessimism has selzed Republicans in the fear that per- haps President Eisenhower might elect to retire after one term or, if he should accept a second nomi- nation, he would perhaps be a re- luctant candidate. As such, it Is argued, he would in a second term increasingly stress his non-partisan approach, and thus leave the party without sufficient patronage and buildup te continue in office after his retirement. It seems to me that superficial political wiseacres are overlooking some of the facts of life. Maybe the confusion occurred in 1952 when the Republicans ditched the late Sen. Robert A. Taft, Mr. Republican, in favor of a military hero, Eisenhower. As a result, with the Republicans there was doubt as to how much Eisen- hower's election depended on per- sonal popularity and how much on his views. * * : While undoubtedly the motives of voters were mixed, it was per- haps a fortuitous historic accident that a military hero possessed tremendous enthusiasm for the basic elements in the American economic system—our free-choice economic society. EMOTIONS DIFFERENT But more is involved in the change in public sentiment toward economic matters than the per- sonality of the individual in the White House. The basic alteration lies in the inescapable reality that the emotions of men are different in a high level of employment and of business activity than in an in- terlude of hard times, with soup kitchens and breadlines. Case Records of a Psychologist . Attractive Girl Has Good Position, Car but Longs for Job as Wife and Mother Theda ts very attractive but she scares men away. They see the gleam in her eye of the huntress. They vaguely feel the whir of the lariat and know she'll have them roped. So she needs to follow Seneca’s advice and adopt that “push-'em-away” strate- gy. Watch tomorrow’s follow- up case, By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case 0-333: Theda M., aged 23, poses a very common problem. “Dr. Crane, many times I have felt that life wasn't worth living,” she began. “For I have no boy friends. In high school mother said I'd have a biology teacher, an attorney, scientific farmer’, etc. But Theda's problem is partly due to her too narrow perspective. She thinks happiness is a case of 100 per cent or zero., That's not true You can seldom be 100 per cent happy in life, even when ideally married. And millions of married people are not as happy as certain single men and women. So if you can't be 100 per cent happy. then shoot for 95 per cent or even be grateful to rate 80 per cent or maybe 70 per cent. Any girl who threatens suicide * or says life isn’t worth living because she hasn't a weddin ring, is obviously so narrow int her social perspective that she ean’t see the showers of blessings that Ged Almighty has poured on even the most luckless Ameri- ean citizen. Besides, such a narrow outlook actually drives men away. For a ike Fé it males, for they will feel free and easy in her company. Soon she can use Seneca’s “push- ‘em-away” technique. It works miracles on men. For whenever a male finds a woman who admits she doesn't want to get married that piques his vanity. So he sets out to change her mind and make her see the wisdom of marriage. He gets hooked in the process. Girls, it’s surefire! tp Meare. of The | Pont rege Pontiac, seit addressed cave Hd a «aime to cov : when your_send fer one This osychological Copyright 1955 f Hy of Prosperity’ In spite of feelers put out to the effect that Eisenhower might like to be a ane-term President, there are strong factors at home and abroad which are likely to induce him to consider running again. And there is little dispute over the polls that indicates he would prob- ably be the strongest candidate of his party. But Americans generally and Republicans in particular should give heed to Eisenhower's view that there is “no indispensable man.” A nation and a party are in a poor way when the reser- voir of potential effective leader- ship is limited to one personality. Furthermore; if the Republicans take the defeatist view that they can eke out a few more years in office only if a popular hero plays ball, they are indeed taking a dim view. : Irrespective of personalities, the party ought to start right now to make intellectual inventory. DEMS WIDELY SPLIT The schism in the Democratic Party between the Jeffersonian Democrats. particularly of the south, and the Americans for Dem- ocratic Action group of the north, with CIO and other union allies, creates both a challenge and an opportunity. * ¢ @ The Republicans would gain inner strength if they recognized that the intellectual issues of the depressed 1930s are more or less obsolete in the dynamic, expanding and pros- perous mid-50s. The Republicans, instead of looking backward, should under- take to restyle themselves as the party of foresight, which mer- chandises realistic optimism about the long-term future prom- ise of American life. The Republicans have an op- portunity to win friends and in- fluence people through espousing the enterprise system as _ con- trasted with the economic slavery of government-dominated police state systems. TRADE ON SUCCESS If the Republicans in 1956 are favored with a healthy national economy and improving interna- tional relations, they should recall the time-honored American maxim that nothing succeeds like success, * * ®# : They should stress the {mpor- tance of competency in govern- ment, and should take credit for curtailing federal expenditures, and for returning to the states, the lo- éalities and to private investment some of those activities which they are able and willing to assume, thus reversing overcentralization at Washington. Stressing, research and the for- ward look, those who believe in the American way should empha- size that nothing in life is per- manent except change. and thus free themselves from the poison of reactionary label. Some Doctors Still Treat Animal Wounds With Acid By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Believe it or not, some doctors and some hospitals still cauterize fresh wounds inflicted by animals or birds, or did indulge in such malpractice as recently as 1951 because, forsooth, of an under- standable misapprehension that public health authorities pre- scribed it. Some years ago any animadver- sions upon mad dog scares in- nf tFEti tal ae E “ uel ite ‘ [ LETTE af ae a zé (3) Cut away dead tissue (4) If the wound gapes, stitch it up (5) Paint the surrounding skin with mild tincture or solution of fodine (2%) _ (6) Apply a dressing of sterile (ironed) gauze (washed cheese- cloth) spread with just sufficient sterile (boiled) petrolatum or other sterile neutral salve or ointment to prevent the gauze sticking to the wound. That’s all. But I'd go one step further, or at least I'd want the doctor to go one step further if I were the patient, and that ts: (7) Administer tetanus antitoxin —one dose immediately, a second THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1955 ACTION PLUS—James Cagney, a “guy” who swore he'd never use a gun again, gets backed into a corner and comes out shooting. The first-run here, “Run for Cover,”’ stars James Cagney and Viveca Lindors at the Pontiac Drive-in. ‘“‘Run for Cover’’ also brings vista-vision for the first time to a drive-in theater. Man Prepares Own Funeral Buys Casket, Makes All Arrangements and Then Takes Life OYSTER BAY COVE, N. Y. ® —On Monday, Ernest Woolard, well-to-do interior decorator, visit- ed a funeral parlor, He said he wanted to arrange for a funeral for a member of the family who/|.. was near death He wrote down the precise cost of each item. He chose a simple pine casket, and listed the prayers to be said. He ordered the burial in a Washington, D. C., cemetery. Then he went home and wrote a note to an old friend, Police Lt. C. Russell Haff. It said, “You will find my body in the jeep in the garage in the event doesn't find me first." LJ * * Woolard’s wife found the body yesterday. The jeep was covered with a canvas, and a hose was rigged to the exhaust. Police ruled the death a suicide from car- bon monoxide. Police said Woolard, 54, was de- spondent over his 18-year-old mar- ried son John, who is in jail on a rape charge. The youth was arrested last month on complaint of Maryanne Joyce, a pretty 20-year-old red- head from nearby Glen Cove. She said young Woolard raped her in hig car after their second date, * = Young Woolard was released on $5,000 bail posted by his father. But two weeks ago, police said, the youth grabbed his mother by the hair and ordered her to cook his breakfast. The elder Woolard hit him on | the head with a coffee pot. Then 3 he went to Nassau County Court j in Mineola and revoked the bail. The youth was rearrested and jailed. Student Obeys; Discards Teeth Stuck in Candy OKLAHOMA CITY @® — Mrs. Loretto Bonner, a teacher at Taft Junior High School, noticed one of her students struggling with a piece of candy he was chewing. “Either swallow the candy or toss it in the wastepaper basket,” she advised the youth, “Can't,” said the lad, ‘The candy is stuck between my teeth.” Jokingly,. Mrs. Bonner told the youngster: ‘Well, toss your teeth in the basket with the candy.” The boy took out his teeth and threw them into the basket. He had a complete upper plate. Ad Agent to Retire MUSKEGON (P)—Carl N. Knopf, Muskegon County agricul- tural agent for 32 years, announced Monday he will retire June 30. Knopf operated a farm in his native Lenawee County after grad- uating from Michigan State in 1911. He became the first agri- cultural agent in Cheboygan Coun- ty in 1915. He held a similar post in Manistee County before coming to Muskegon. Steal From Police “GRAND RAPIDS (2) —Elzte Williams, 26, of Lowell, was in municipal court Mon- day with taRing part in the theft of $4 from a cash drawer at the Lowell Police Station. Police Chief Frank Stemphs said Wil- liams acted as lookout while two 16-year-old boys took the money. The juveniles also are in custody. FAST RELIEF FROM MUSCULAR PAIN my wife’! FREE GIFTS Come Share in Our Giant Birthday Cake! Everyone likes surprises! Come in for a piece of our delicious Birthday Cake — in which is hidden twenty-three gift capsules! You may win a Clock Radio, Scotch Cooler, Electric Bean Pot, Clock Table, and 29) 2°37 25 39° 31° 24° Timer, Outdoor Aluminum Folding numerous valuable food gifts! Pineapple JUICE 46-05. Dole Pure Hawaiian . Applesauce Mott's Low Priced! Purple Plums = «2 Sutton’s Bay. Everyday Low mae EMBASSY SALAD Dressing Apricots Me 2 Avondale unpeeled halves in syrup . Fruit Cocktail ~.2~ Del Monte. Everyday Low Price . Pear Halves = «2 Worldwide brand in syrup .. 30° Del Monte runs ».. 23 23° Deluxe pack. Everyday Low Price " , Spry woe Bo 77 Fluffo 38 77 new golden shortening EVERYDAY LOW PRICE! vit @) @ Loaf Bread Kroger Corn Whole kernel yellow . Catsup Standard Quality .. Sweet Peas Top quality Freshlike 3=43: 2 = 33° 235° Green Giant Sweet and tender. Large Peas. Wax Beans 9-2 43s 2 = 37° Stokley NEW EVERYDAY LOW PRICE! Catsup, Low Price . . Seq S| No. Sag Coffee fp 17 178 North Saginaw St. - Specials HYGRADE LEAN, CRY-O-VAC WRAPPED Smoked Ham “ AQ" Ham Centers Cut thick for baking. Butt portion. Ham Portions Hygrade Cry-O-Vac Wrap Ham. ° ° Super Special this week at Your Kroger store! Top quality lean and flavorful smoked hams cut in bud- TE U. $. GOV'T a KROGER tenoeray swiss on Ground Beef Kroger, the finest you can buy. 3 Lbs. 1. 15 Ground Round Choice lean beef. Fresh ground “ 39° ” 69 ir Freeze Kidney Beans 2 Avondale Brand. Priced Low . 10° 10° oe . « Sauerkraut 3 Kroger brand. Buy and save . . . Northern Beans 2 10° Avondale, Everyday Low Price ,.. . Creamed Corn." Standard quality. Low priced . e « - 10° 10° 10° Green Beans Standard quality. Tops in flavor... Cut Beets em Avondale, Everyday Low Price ... Ne. 303 Cen WEEK Top Quality Kroger Brand BANANAS 2 Ibs. 2,55 Calavos Wonderful for salads «6 Fresh Lemons Thin-skinned. 300 size. Extra juicy... Oranges Sunkist Navels, 200-220 Size .... rt 4 Round Steak KROGER VEIN-X Shrimp e®ee0e* N WW Stock Yu LONG SUPER SPECIAL! No. 303 plesauce 8 WEEK LONG SUPER SPECIAL! Top Round Lean Choice boneless cuts . . 2. « « « Lamb Liver Presh! Budget Priced. * 19 39° Tuna Fish Breast O’ Chicken chunk style . 3°89 Peaches | mwrm Qu 279° Flour x0 Hoo 25 122 Value Priced at Kroger ;. Dog Foo DOGGIE id 10 = 79° Week-Long Super Special Cone Cake Mixourcan meg a 89: 239° White, yellow, marble, choc Pickles 9 rer Shedd’s cucumber slices . Cans Larsen Veg-All Everyday Low Price . ., 2239 Sugar Peas.» 19° Dog Meal 5s 59° pa Big 23-oz jar won 3 ~ 69° Milk Bone Virdel, Low Priced ..-. D 16-Oz. 493° Cans Ken-L-Ration 22-0x. 39° Bon Dog Biscuits. Priced Low . « « 2 ee: We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities. Prices Ettective Thre Saturday. ey 21, 1965 -- Hours 9 A. M.-9 P.M. Monday thru: Soture getwise 4 to 6 pound shank portions. SHANK PORTION ° This week's Best Beef Buy! Ten- der and flavorful Kroger Ten- deray Beef trimmed of all excess bone and waste to save You even more money. Choice center cuts. Liver Sausage HYGRADE PLAIN OR GARLIC RING 1°°} Bologna... .. 35; Full Butt or Heart O’'Ham w:.: Defatted, Shankless, Boneless . . « . 59 Lb. Hygrade fresh or sage Any size piece Cube Steaks us Kroger Tenderay Beef. Lean and Tender Kroger Gelatin Your. choice! 8 delicious levers 4 oe 25° Facial Tissue 2237: Vanity Fair banded pack , Swift’s PREM *22- a foe f Week-long super special . . tL t ® Biscuit Mix =~ = Kroger Everyday Low Price . . . Cutrite 23 Black Pepper x 59° Kroger Brand. Low Priced . . NEW EVERYDAY LOW PRICE! 98: Shortening 3-Lb. Can Cheese Spread 49° 2. Ib. box Ice Cream Miller or Glecier Club 5 ° Vp Gal. WEEK LONG SUPER SPECIAL! Potatoes » 5.39: Tomatoes .. 29: r re oh age eeeT ROTI Pi hdd. get WERT ° eprre’ edd he Gs wee ee a a RL Ar WEDNESDAY. MAY 18, 1955 — - 7 7 PONT AC, MICHIGAN —_ - ) "THIRTEEN Pontiac Educators Watch Industry’s — Tarn Pontiac teachers teday have the answer for the student who wants to know about the inner-workings of local business and industry as a result of the fourth annual B-1-E day (business, industry and education) yesterday. Six hundred and eighty Pontiac educators pe ered behind the cogs and*wheels of big and little businesses as guests of the Chamber. of Commerce. Sixty representative business firms served ag hosts for the groups. The teachers were day-long inspectors of the automobile and truck production plants, banks and financing firms, public utility business, dairy production, the insurance business, lumber supply, stores and radio stations. The Pontiac Press hosted %5 of the Pontiac faculty members, showing every phase of newspaper production from .news gathering and advertising to getting the paper ready for delivery. Others visited downtown business, viewing the operation of a *‘five-and-ten’’ store and a big department store Groups of teachers spent the day as guests of the retail automobile firms, furniture merchandisers and a large wholesal food supply company watching the arrival of shipments and the process of distribution. Michigan has been observing B-I-E Day for nearly nine years with 693 communities reported to be carrying on this project as an annual affair. B-I-E day is a nationally-conducted program which was initiated several years ago to better acquaint business with the problems of education and education with the needs and operation of business, tobert J. St. Clair, director of the Chamber, said that this year’s B-I-E day was undoubtedly the most successful of the local programs. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, superintendent of Pontiac schools, said that from the reaction of his staff it was evident that a much better acquaintance of the facts of business now existed among the teachers. In previous years, Pontiac has carried on B-1-E day programs with education inviting business back to school for the day. Recently the students who will one day work’ in these local Tool engineer Russ Dahil, at right, explains a blueprinting ma- — wate Ge gee 4 : chine’s operation to Theodore Carison (Pontiac High) and Lillian H. St. Clair pointed out that B-I-E day also served to make teachers Claire Kleinschmit (Pontiac High), Mrs. Hazel Gordon (Wever),| left to right, watch Russell Roush operate a matrix molding machine Davidson (Malkim) at American Forging and Socket Co. more aware of the different resources which do exist.in this commumity. Sister B. Doreen (St. Michael) and Lucy K. Hayden (Pontiac High), | at the Pontiac Press. T, E. Wilson (left), general manufacturing man-| model of the new “‘Blue Chip” truck to Mrs. Doris ager for GMC Truck & Coach Division, shows a Mann (Washington) and Henry Elling (Eastern). 9 RE PALE. Se aati Saari ——_— = doe Preece (left), assistant personnel director at Baldwin Rubber Co., R. L. Bacon H. Johnson (Longfellow) watch stamp press operator Anna Seay at work. (Pentiac High); Mildred Williams (Bagley), E. L. Sturdy (Eastern), and Mrs. Melvin | , / fearm, Roebuck & Co, advertising manager Ted | Dennis (Washington) discuss am advertising layout. Kelffer, Ada McDonnall (Pentiac High) and Ruth | Pontiac Motor Division offers apples to teachers, | (Wilson), Theonilla Alger (Wilson, Sarah Peck left to right, Mrs. Kathleen Wright (Wilson), Donald (Lincoln) and Mrs. Robert Voltmann (Washington). G. McCracken (Pontiac High), Mrs. Russell Duncan | é i ie uae ee . A. Law (lett Consumers, Pouce , Hibbs » Mm » (Wever) doce tihditeen Bell's *‘voices with a Ji sie Boca Goinkinl gre een aaron thom ee Sapa etese sped ee with (left to right) Mrs, Ray L Alles (Weyer), Mary ( * < THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1955 ITS THE COST OF THE wnolE MEAL THAT COUNTS || TOM’S Storewide Values Help You Serve Delicious .. . Nutritious Meals With Famous Quality Fine Foods ... At Really Big Savings! SMUCKER’S PURE PRESERVES 12 OZ. ‘ STRAWBERRY 345 29) CHASE & SANBORN—15¢ OFF lor c INSTANT COFFEE ° 95 HI-C WHOLESOME REFRESHING § GIANT c @ | ORANGE DRINK _ “25° Me ALWAYS THE BEST FOR " at TOMS MORTHWOOD MARKETS: MORTHWOOD MARKETS: = ORCHARD LAKE ROAD | sair B | . 1 BLOCK EAST OF TELEGRAPH =| From “ip 9 AM. ‘TH 9 PM. my i “Chyie uM DAILY aa =| Cr eam Style CORN b L eee We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities U.S. Graded CHOICE Quality BEEF Standing RIB ROAST A favorite with millions for flavor and tenderness CORN CANS | AJAX & 1 0): Ain) CLEANSER Se MACARONI & CHEESE MooaM KRAFT DINNER 2 nc: 25. Kool-Aid as32. § xs 25e Krispy Grackers xs: 25¢ Nu-Soft ccs: | ; Rinse............ Pint Bottle Cc N All P M-O-Lene ssc 59% Makes 8 Gallons 3 GROUND BEEF = vuszs: 3 us 99e SLICED BEEF LIVER viauns 39}, HUNT'S FANCY CALIFORNIA IN HEAVY 2 CHOICE QUALITY Genuine Spring ri 23: LEG of LAMB ——— PRUNEPLUMS 2; per Value: —— SUTTON’S BAY Dark Sweet Pitted — GIANT | CHERRIES . Tender we PEAS | 25° italian Style Prepared SPAGHETTI ce 10: SAVINGS ON FROZEN FOODS! | Tender = A9; : . BREAST of LAMB sexe. 153. MEATY SHOULDER CUT MEATY SHOULDER CUT fF camp crops 595, Lams ROAST Jd}, =< FINE QUALITY — GRADE 1 —— FRANKS ~;% 1 LB. 1 ©CELLO PKG. 39: Swift's Promion an ae } SLICED | Sees | BACON [ane ouaury— crane 1 | ox Brookfield | Large BOLOGNA . | SAUSAGES |. ce. » 39 STAR-KIST TUNA PIE 'Y/2 Sate Fresh Creamery BUTTER é. 23 LIVER SAUSAGE 4%, 1 LB. 9 Print 5 C WILSON’S OR BORDEN’S CONCENTRATED , 1 Lb. FOR TASTY SALADS AND SANDWICHES | CQTTAGE CHEESE cm 99° LEMONADE __ CHEESE SALE ORANGES 03% VAN AM PS f YOUR CHOICE | ANC aii) 20'| oir cress | = 39 || Seald-Sweet ORANGE | (ee ; ‘@ LONGHORN ; L = "4 | poz : SnowCiap MOUNTAIN GROWN FRESH FROZEN CN Hamer Mae Rn Pas ne aoe io a ig i RS yc me Re WN Peatiae fF .: e Mrs, William A. Kennedy (second from le{t) who is president of the | With her is (left) Mrs. Kenneth B. Nichols of Franklin, Mrs. Peter Gibson ounty Re & publi can Wome a S ‘ Republican Women’s Federation of Oakland County, pauses to chat with of Monroe (second from right) and Mrs. Bert Norton of Rochester. Mrs. fellow members at the annual breakfast sponsored by the group Monday. we Bee % : . pera Mrs. Arthur E. Moore of Berkley (second from left) | (right) waits her turn to sign the register at the breakfast signs the guest book for Mrs. J. L. Slaybaugh (seated) of held at Northwood Inn, Glenwood avenue. Mrs. Samuel J. Lang of Pleasant Ridge Humor Can Salve a Sorry Situation By MURIEL LAWRENCE One Friday, Mike's grandpar-, ents came to supper. Later, in the | living room, Mike was happily ab- | sorbed in his favorite TV cow- exasperation. Mike surrendered his second chair, As he sprawied on the floor, Grandma said fretfully, “Oh, dear, can’t you turn te some- father angrily sent him to bed. The next morning, with intense resentment, Mike began to criti- cize his grandparents, Suddenly, his mother inter- boy program when Grandpa joined | him, Without speaking, he waved) : Mike out of his chair to sit down! auteand the exmbays. in it himself, Mike had found an-| So Mike drew his cowboy gun. other chair when Grandma made! In a state of high excitement, he her entrance, “Up, sir,” ordered | rushed about, poking it so insistent- Grandpa again — and in growing! ly Into everyone's face that his Society Names Delegates Alpha Beta Chapter of Delta thing besides all this noisy shoot- ing, Arthuc?’’ Mike’s father dis- Sherwood, Toni Horseman and Yoyce Graham conducted the members on a tour of the build- i * s * The spacious cafcteria seating approximately 300 students, the equipped classrooms, and the fine laboratories were some of the highlights of the tour. tr ? fa j rupted, “‘Let me show you how we all jooked to me yesterday!” she said. And pulling her face inte grim disapproval, she im- itated Grandpa's pompous ges- ture, crying ‘‘Up, sir,” in a deep voice, Then, making a growling noise, | she laughed. ‘‘That was you, Mike, getting mad — and here's me!" | Wringing her hands in burlesque |of herself, she whined, “Oh, how |unfair everyone is to my child! | What shall I do? Though I un- | derstand how he wants to shoot us /all @p, it's not polite to say so. | Oh dear what shall I do?” A small grin bad appeared on | Mike’s face, The next moment, at | his mother’s imitation of his fath- 'er’s confusion between duty to his | parents and duty to his child, Mike | burst into liberating laughter. | His mother’s humor had made weakness look so absurd that he could no longer respect it enough to resent it. ; Have I given the impression that I’m endorsing disrespect for grand- There’s a kind that’s bad for them — the kind that makes them feel little and helpless, not big and strong. We all know it, It's the fun-poking that seeks to hu- miliate us. That’s not the humor that’s grand for children; the brand Mike's mother displayed is. Miscellaneous Shower Honors Miss Anderson A miscellaneous shower honor- ing Eleanor Anderson, bride-elect of Wilbur Whayne of Voorheis road, was given Monday -evening. Eleanor is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Anderson of Walled Lake, and he is the son of Mrs. Elizabeth Whayne of Sacra- mento, Ky. The couple will speak their nuptial vows June 4. The shower was held at the home of Mrs. W. Earl DeMond on Barkman road. Mrs. Charles W. Griggs assisted the hostess, Guests were Mrs. Henry J, Green, Mrs. Frances McCue, Mrs. Walter Babb, Mrs. Aletha Vorhes, Mrs. Es A. Reitmeyer and Mrg. Lester Stanley. Others were Mrs. Jack Thomp- son, Mrs. Alton Owens, Mrs. Gor-| .. dan Shelton, Mrs. William Hart man and Mrs. Bill Wiseheart, Gibson was speaker for the day. The breakfast was held at Northwood Inn. PTAs Plan Installation, Meetings Safety Programs Agenda Several school PTA groups are holding a flurry of meetings be- fore the semester comes to a close: Malkim Both mothers and fathers have been invited to attend the annual May cooperative luncheon, sched- New officers will be installed during a business meeting, with Mrs, Carson Cascadden heading the group as president. She will be assisted by Mrs. Charies Hein- isch, vice president; Harold Mc- Connell, father vice president; Mrs. Carl Vedane and Mrs. dack Dougherty, secretary. Completing the slate will be Mrs. Hurles Pace, historian; Mrs. Ed- sington and Mrs. Nolan Keefer, council delegates. Committee members for the luncheon include Mrs. Rudolph . y ta 3 wiry ¢ Mrs. George L. Brown of Voorheis road, | photographed n Hold Annual Breaktast ei j g! ii as they awaited their tables. Mrs. Ralph Cook of Fernglale and Mrs. W.\| They attended the annual Republican ——— At Dinner for Adoptive Parents The annua! dinner which is given under the society's care will be by the board of directors of the held May 25 at Hote! Waldron. Michigan Children's Aid Society MYRTLE REUL TO SPEAK = oe a fcr Myrtle Reul of Lansing will be | speaker. A former member of the ‘| bution of $100 to the Civic Audi- | Alaskan Movies on torium Fund uled for Thursday morning at 11:45,/ tial). A breakfast honoring this which will be followed by the chil- | ‘| drens’ presentation of a program |; year's new members will be held ‘ ; | June 5 at Rotunda Inn. Officers | in celebration of Michigan Week.| » 1; be installed at this time. | Department of Social Work of Michigan State College, Mrs. Reul @ has worked with the Michigan Chil- dren's Aid Society, and she has ‘Opens Her Hom | been active in the public school to Zonta Club system as a classroom teacher, Mrs. L. R. Sampson opened her assistant principal and visiting home on Watkins Lake to 40 mem- teacher. bers and guests of the Zonta Club _ recently for a May dinner and | business meeting. The club voted to make a contri- Mrs. Sampson Mrs. Adrian Ish, president, re- | ported that there are now 1,368 | members in District Five a | Zonta. She also reported on the success | of the recent project of the City | Federation of Women’s Club, done | i in cooperation with local mer. | ae chants. The next meeting will luncheon Thursday at be a Stevens Birthday Luncheon Held by Group | Twenty-eight members of the) , April-May, Group of First Presby-| BETTY LOUE GEORGE terian Church met for an annual | Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd George of birthday luncheon _ recently at Oxbow Lake are announcing the win Solomon, parliamentarian and members were Mrs. John Living- Mrs. Roy Trador, Mrs. Glenn Hor- | ston, Mrs. Quentin Sweet and Mrs. Rotunda Inn. engagement of their daughter, Mrs. James White was in chargé Betty Loue. to Dale Stanley ‘of the program. Other committee Helgemo. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Helgemo of South Josephine street. No date has | Floyd Mortenson. | been set for the wedding nny p | assisted with arrangements J. Randall of Royal Oak (lejt to right) were Women’s breakfast held at Northwood Inn. Children’s Aid Society to Gather She has received twe graduate degrees from Michigan Staie | College, has done graduate work | at the University of Michigan, and now is working on final re quirement for doctoral degree. The committee in charge of ar- | rangements includes Mrs. Syver Thingstad. chairman, assisted by L. Harvey Lodge, Dr. Richard Galpin and Mrs. Barney: Habel Junior League of Birmingham Arranges Party | The Junior League of Birmine- |ham has made plans for a party to be held Saturday at the Bir- 'mingham home of Mr. and Mrs. | John Richardson, The party will | honor transfers and their hus- _— Mrs. Frank Rhodes Jr, chair- man of the transfer group, is being by There are six pages in today’s Women’s Section Mrs. Bartow Duncan, Mrs. Harry Swan, Mrs, Hugh Mack and Mrs. | James Chapman, Old and new boargd members of the Juntor League will be en- | tertained June 7 by Mrs. George Squibb of Birmingham. Mrs. Squibb and Mrs. Rudolph Eberstadt Jr. recently returned from Sun Valley where they rep- resented the Junior League at a 33rd annual conference of Associa- tion of Junior Leagues of Ameri- ca, Inc. ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS Pfeiffer, chairman; Mrs. Darold | Houle, Mrs, Arthur Allen, Mrs. | Edwin Solomon, Dorothy Weaver, | Mrs, Cascadden and Naomi Den- nis, Donelson Movies of their recent Alaskan trip will be shown by Mr. and Mrs, W. J. Baumgartner at the monthly PTA. meeting to be held at 8 p.m, Thursday in the gym- nasium, Several selections will be sung by three Waterford Township music. teachers and kindergar-. ten mothers will serve refresh- ments, Wilson PTA members climaxed the sea- son with a program on safety. Speaker at the final meeting was Theodore Vanderstempel, Pontiac traffic engineer, Short talks on summer safety for children were given by Nancy Schmansky, serv- ice patrol captain and Robert Far- Crowe, Mrs. Leroy Eastham, Mrs. Pus- Women's Section “WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1955 SIXTEEN Emmanuel Baptist Church was the setting for the marriage of Sharon E. Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Smith of Al berta drive, to Mark B. Thatcher. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs, Frances Raynard of Addie street and Enoch Thatcher. The Rev. Tom Malone per- formed the 7:30 p.m. ceremony Saturday before 200 guests. Palms and baskets of giadioli, carnations and stock decorated the church, The bride wore a floor length _| tiered gown of nylon net trimmed with rosepoint lace and fashioned with sweetheart neckline. Her bride as maid of honor wearing a nile green gown and picture hat. An aqua dress with pink accesso- ries and pink roses was wern by the bridegroom's mother, For a wedding trip to northern Sharon Smith Weds Mark Thatcher Michigan the bride wore a purpie paper faille dress with white ac cessories and a purple orchid cor- sage, MR. and MRS. MARK B. THATCHER Honeymooning in northern Michigan are Mr. and Mrs, Mark B. Thatcher. The bride is the former Sharon E. Smith, daughter of the Robert C, Smiths of Alberta drive. Mark is the son of Mrs. Frances Raynard of Addie street and Enoch Thatcher. ee = pommel THE PONTIAC PRESS, \ WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1955 TWENTY-ONE Sisterhood of Temple Beth Jacob Elects New Officers a thing Mrs. Howard Powers of Cherokee road | church. (right) was at the door of Grace L utheran | Church Tuesday to greet members of the Junior Child Study Club who gathered for ‘a luncheon in the Fellowship Hall of the| ei ie Pictured Mrs. Lyle Passmore of Middle Straits Lake l( left) and Mrs. Frank Bonner of Delaware drive (center), ® % with Mrs. Powers are Male Who Didn't Give Gift Students Hold Will Get One in Return So Few Special Days Can Be Shared, Steady Advised to By ELIZABETH WOODWARD | “Dear Miss Woodward: My boy | friend's birthday is coming very | soon and I'd like very much to | give him a small gift. He didn’t do anything about my birthday, but then we weren't| going steady at that time. Would it be all right for me to give him something? And if so, what?” His birthday will be the ‘first ib of the very special private days | that you will share, so celebrat- i. It in style seems to me to be in order. Perhaps his family will plan something extra for his birthday | in which you will be included. | Perhaps you can add to his fes- tivities by having him over to, the house for dinner the night before. In any case a little remembrance would add to his pleasure. Maybe some initialled handker- chiefs, or a sport shirt, a snazzy necktie or argyle socks. If he has a hobby that you know about, keep it in mind. Records for his collection, perhaps, or stamps or coins, or books or flash bulbs. It needn't be an extravagant gesture—just something to let him know you are mighty glad he was born, “Dear Miss Woodward: I've been going with this senior for about three months now. and his graduation is close at hand. Is it required or considered proper for me to get him a grad- uation present? If so, what kind of gift would best suit the occa- sion? ' curing. Select Remembrance You're going steady with him, so you'll undoubtedly be included in his graduation festivities. Perhaps his family will enter- tain in his honor at a party of some sort and everybody will bring him presents. You wil! probably be invited to his commencement exercises. As the very special girl in his life at thls big moment you'll be pretty much expected to give him a present. | And graduation presents are sup- | posed to be rather permanent in| nature. So I'd suggest one of the | followi ideas: mae eee | da Sue Vaughn, Ruth Ann Vaughn, A billfold, a pen and pencil set, traveling kit for his toilet articles, a pair of military brushes with his monogram on thé back, a generous supply of address printed on It, one, of those gay new traveling suit bags. : | Anderson, Nancy Greenhalgh, d ; ette McReynolds, stationery with his name and | (jo | eturgy, Piano Recital Bethany Baptist was the setting Sunday afternoon for a plano re- cital. Participating in the program were Nadine Williams, Jill Prestel, Marilla Corwin, Rosemary Hoen- stine, Ralph Koprince, Jimmy Ex- line, Natalie Daniels, and Carol Norvell. Others were Marvel Wolfe, Hel- ene Schultz, Jon Barnhart, David Hunt, Bill Graves, Barbara Payne, Chery! Williams, Jane Bigler, Su- san Putnam, Connie Greisbach and Diane Woolcock. Also taking part were ape Mitzi | Schroeder, Judith Wallace, Bar- bara Atwell, Jill Miller, Mary Frances Hodges and Ann Hodges. Still others were Mary Shadley, Barbara Smith, Carol Riley, Wan- Marilyn Barnhart, Carol Stacy, Judith Brooks and Sharon Wallace. Completing the list were Doris I. Brooks, Jean Hoenstine, Paul- | Elaine Elkins, John Markley, Brian Woolcock, Jerry Exline, Karen Bowman, Gay Ann Cornell, Frieda Griesbach, Sharon Wolfe Or you might try a big leather picture frame for his bureau, or a small folding frame for lots of snapshots to carry with him. An, album of his favorite music might | also do the trick, or an old map. frame] to hang on his wall. Know your boy—his tastes, his likes and his needs. Then spoil him just a little bit. This is the) one. and only time he'll be grad- uating from ice school. . | Roquefort cheese owes its marbled appearance to a mold called penicillium roqueforti, which is added to the cheese curd before and Shirley Bryan. Helen Lapisch Assists at Parley Helen Lapisch of Dellwood ‘ave- nue has returned from Pittsburgh, Pa. where she participated in the | Northeast, Regional International Toastmistress’ convention. Representing the Pontiac Toast- | 4 mistress Club and Council Four, of- which she is chairman, Miss | Lapisch ‘spoke on “Evaluation on the Council Level.” Following the | workshop the participants were ‘taken on a tour of the city. Poplin Separates Greet the ‘Separate’ sea- son with our guaranteed washable Penny - Pocket Poplins. Choice of Tan- gerine, Capri Blue, Moss Green or Toast. Sizes 8 to 18. Shorts Blouse ...........- Bermuda Shorts .... Skirts. * e*eeenet ee # e@ © H eo@evsestetee*e Alvins. '» TELEGRAPH at HURON Mon, Tues., Wed. 10 to 6—fhurs, Fry Sot, 10 to Sp=Sun ‘2'to E Park Free Rear of Store | president of the Sisterhood of | Temple Beth Jacob when members | vice president; ‘4 ; 'man, second vice president and 28 W. Huron St. Mrs. Irving Gordon was elected gathered Tuesday in the temple for luncheon. Mrs. Joseph Nosanchuk is first Mrs. George Wy- Mrs. Harry Arnkoff is secretary. Other officers are Mrs. Thomas Horwitz, treasurer, Mrs. Rudy | LoPatin, corresponding secre- tary, Mrs. Harry Ackerman, financial secretary and Mrs. Julian Levine, parliamentarian. - Mrs. Harold Chapman introduced Mrs. Sanford Saperstein and Mrs. | Jerome Lapides who took over the | afternoon’s program. They re-| ported on a | Sisterhood convention 55 Are Present at Association’s May Breakfast Devon Gables was the setting Saturday morning for an annual May breakfast enjoyed by 55 mem- bers and guests of the Pontiac Association for Childhood Educa- tion. A sextet from McConnell school furnished music. Those . compris- ing the sextet were Mrs, Royal Exline, Mrs. Francis Schell, Mrs. Walter Wittkopf, Doris Martin, An- na Metzger and Josephine Stilwell. Josephine Stilwell has been re- elected president of ACE, Mrs, Florence Pappert was introduced as vice president and Nancy Pre- vette as recording secretary. Mrs. Alton Madden is treasurer; Mrs. Melvin Johnson, adviser, and Geraldine Gibbs, corresponding secretary, Mrs. Ruth Wright had charge of breakfast reservations and Mrs. Royal Exline made arrangements for the music. = Ld * Decorations were taken care of by Mrs. Arthur Pinkall, Mrs. Eus- tace Thibodeau, Nina Sackett, Dor- is Martin, Anna Metzger and Mrs. Francis Schell Western Whirlers Mrs. Irving Gordon Is President Have Guest Caller Frank Kapalski from the Sierra Squares of California was guest caller at a recent dance held by the Western Whirlers at | Bloomfield Township Half. ,Lergen also called dances. | Decorations were taken care of iby Mr. and Mrs. Maleolm Hamp and refreshments were served by Mr. and Mrs. Lester Mehlberg and Pete May 28. | West | | Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Rock. The4astsLeo dance of the season will be held line Waldron and held recently in Muskegon. The report was done in the form of a skit. The invocation for the luncheon | The Frank Hutchinsons of Clyde, Ohio, announce the engagement of their daughter, Muriel Joy of Chippewa road, to F. Chris Strebe, son of the Frank Strebes of Petrolia street. She graduated from Bouling Green College, and he attended Michigan State College. June 25 is the wedding date. was given by Mrs. Isadore Good. Committee reports for 1954-55 were given during the afternoon. Mrs. Sam Stolorow gave the benediction. MU RIEL JOY HAL TCHINSON Mrs. Irl Williams ISigmo Beta Members Named President. ‘at District Session — of WSCS Several local members of Sigma Beta sorority traveled to Gary, Mrs. James Deeg installed those | Ind. Sunday for a meeting of prov- wis) will conduct activities of the | ince one. eg Aeaearrsed r ark Methodist | Mrs. Charles Fournier, national Williams became president. corresponding i The business meeting was com- Wallace Williams, national charity bined with a cooperative dinner at | finance chairman; Mrs. Eddie the church, attended by 50 mem- | O’Brien, president of Psi Chapter; bers and guests and served by the Mrs. DeVere Games and Mrs. Wil- Rebecca Circle. . . liam Spalding attended from Psi- Officers assisting Mrs. Wil- Chapter liams during the coming year ; will be Mrs, Edward Tutty, vice Members of Beta Alpha Chapter president; Mrs. Courtney Clara, | Who attended the meeting were recording secretary and Mrs. Al- | Patricia Sturgis, who was named | bert Barker, treasurer, secretary-treasurer of province | Committee chairmen are Mrs. Vf: and Grace Campbell. Emersce Brown. Mis. Gites Behn Mrs. Spalding was elected prov- | ke, Mrs. Bert Weddle and Mrs. |/"C¢ governor. | secretary; S SHOSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSHOSSSSHSSEHSSHSHESHLOSCHSHLESSEHHESEEE Although many a= now come from the tropic climates, the larg- northern, cold climates, | Ma edldth lid tad ddl dd cd nt tli i ini el dh iid errr custom-made. PERMARENTS 5 individual Hatr Styles ¢ Created Just for You by Tony and Cart New Hair-Drying Comfort! Relax and enjoy new air-dry ing comfort with our “Beautaire” air- pondilioned hair-dryer .. . like ay the sun and breeze on a summer oH 5 Riker Bidg.—Rear of Lobby FE 3-7186 mrITTTTI Titi tll ‘*How to Make Your Wedding Go Smoothly ”’ Come in, write or phone for this booklet. There is no charge. Pearce Floral Company 559 Orchard Lake Ave. Phone FE 2-0127 bd RUTH HAIGH . CUSTOM LAMP SHADES PICTURE FRAMING OLD 165 Pierce St., Birmingham D PRINTS MI 4-2002 You Can Have a te Manage Curls that last with a Shaped Hair Style Permanents - . From #5.00 CALLIE'S BEAUTY SHOP 116 N. Perry St. Phone FE 2-6361. Opposite Hotel Rooseviet ext umbers si come fram tht ———— James Wellington. Still more are Mrs. John Wenthy, Mrs. William Childers, Mrs. John Lamont, Mrs, Claude Kline, Mrs. Sydney Barber; Mrs. Basil Meid- lein, and Mrs. Kenneth Skelton. | Circle chairmen are Mrs. Row- | ley Chase, Mrs. John Fuller, Mrs. Mineweaser, Mrs, Caro-— Mrs. Aldred Ostrander, | | { PREEURRURUG GEE SEERN GEG S © 54 Try a ppaneeee?) and relaxed bride. incl. Fed. tax.* *Silver = *Burgundy, *Chassie Sculpture, $33.50 Rose, $31 $32.50 Fé TT tLe om | Hints for the May Bride | Last-Minute Details: You can leave for Church calm and happy if you attend to the details of wedding preparations ahead of time. Press your gown, pack your clothes, and have your hair done the day before the wedding. It's the one way to be a radia.t Yet what bride wouldn't be radiant at the thought of all her wedding gifts? Especially sterling by Reed these popular patterns. Prices are for 6-pc. place settings and “Pontiac's Oldest Jewelry “The Store Where Quality Counts” Resa RROE Bik CE RRS SEREAREREERERR BAKED BOT * ee meee esee TL gaet® ae . ci <9 * os pe i bik RIE 8:8 RPI Sgt, Rega Oo le ee a ee é ’ # i Hl s 495° _ Ne Money-Down . . . THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MAY 18, 1955 Linen Weave Slacks Cool linen slacks — tailored to perfection. A buy no one @& 9 = 43 can afford to miss —- and in @] oD Py ye Ps "ee f -# . L ~ jf 2 the most wonted colors of: grey, ton, brown, gold, char- coal, navy and green. EXTRA SAVINGS OSMUN’S — 32% TOWN and COUNTRY 19. Tel-Huron Shopping Center sect agate y ‘ > DENIM FOR PLAYTIME | AT ANY AGE by the yard from our fabric shop Simtex Custom Cotten Denim 26” SANFORIZED - Wrinkle-Resistant Wesh-fast denim for sun ’n ; C ptay clothes for the whole family. Stripes, Plaids, Plain r colors. y ] ai. Wo” gy FABRIC New ‘n Save see Tel-Huron Shopping Center Ph. FE 5-4457 . "hk ee eet dldeamaanataa aa : 5 Your Choice of Ladies’ BULOVA MYER’S @ 4 <«¢ A Special Group priced at a low 69" and for your old am ip Se ; | waren you, get Your Choice of LONGINE-WITTNAUER $20.00 | _ paw You pay only 2 $1 @ Week a Parking Is FREE and PLENTIFUL Sho wher ‘: * Extra Shopping Hours Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. | *MOST STORES OPEN to 9 P.M. Come ‘as you are’ to shop at Tel-Huron. No need to fuss or dress up... you are perfectly welcome in your house dress, slacks, shorts or ‘work clothes.’ Every merchant ot Tel-Huron will do everything to accommodate your every need and stores are always well stock with the newest fashions and merchandise. TEL-THIU TRON center W. Huron Street at Telegraph Road, Pontiac fr Wonderland for Sub-Teen Kresge’s UY ° Has Your qi a an eee ney is Garden : ae : | Needs Everything from Tools to eo In her moment. of + at Ga 6 : . oo ‘a } ? a4 . ‘| BAL cs = glory . . .cshe dl want FY \ a ( 4 ” | | f "9 of {=| / : * ‘ i Dillow \ frock ol i Tt } Gori \ dia ah pastel uvlon ... OF THEE 2 ° hod p zn et. dre ‘ «i bs, rays cortan, ln x » \ r \ TWO _KRESGE SPECIALS! ie) Beet LATION DRESS. GALVANIZED SCREEN WIRE 24'— 26" —32"'—36" ” 60c Value ANY WIDTH 36° te Crea fian of BABY LEAF IVY PLANTS f ~~ T Chubby. Girt ee. 6a!) Single Strand oF DRESSES 10° Each — 10 for 97<|| |. Lan Siren Led : B44) Bw) °a." ae a ee Dt oven rade ond Sorter AO PRI QGE'S |p oN AQ ti 9 PLM. “Best for Children fee FEderal 35-9955 rEL-HLRON CENTER CONVENIENT, PACKABLE SPECIAL! + ah . ursday, friday, saturda IMPORTED STRAW LIS SA SS. SLIPPERS 19: fs, | Ideal for : Rf . magic Home, Hospital . \ . or Beach Wear ; Pair \ ‘= , fabric BUY AN EXTRA PAIR FOR GUEST ROOM OR COTTAGE Ir fr d ‘aa ae i © Saeaseu een eer Zee 2 ee wee ewwree Ze 2 2 2 2 we © eo @ =, : fn oN 4s resses : USE THIS VALUABLE COUPON... AND SAVE! : A 4 \§ | v4 ; ‘| : regularly ICE CREAM [/6 00s wc } YOUR CHOICE: oha | ! PINT © OPE | ' * Chocolate - | S$ ; * Strawberry yf | : * Vanilla With This Coupon ! Leena tanen wenn an caaes wan---- = a 1 vf a0 ha at CUNNIANGHANTS Self-Serve Pic-'n'-Pay TEL-HYRON SHOPPING CENTER At WRIGLEY’S yet, Everyone. reaches for... Your Choice of any 7-flavors of the famous gelatine desserts. Fill Your Pantry = c at This Low Price! : 2 ty Us Pkg. oO é : ee > \ WRIGLEY’S ele AY Sel wi sabhon | 3 BE uSSUPER MKTS.} | =. +. SHOPPING CENTER - OPEN [To 9 P.M. THURS., FRI., SAT. f be : i Open Mon., Tues., Wed. 9 to 6—Open Thurs, Fri., Sat. 9 to 9 / i ay es ’ oe ¥ ee ¥ ' i ; ‘if 2 fects OI ee Mige: Pe ego Ee ee : é t \ é \\ iJ h ast, B a niipatejeceactte Seah mn THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1955 Clawson Woman Hurt in Accident Mrs. Pearl B. Williams, 45, of Clawson, was reported in fair’ con- dition at Pontiac General Hospital in which she was riding. struck a utility pole last night on Crooks road near Hamlin road in Avon Township, when the car, Emma Sue Craig, 30, of Hazel Park, left the road on a curve SAVE TIME on PEN REPAIRS! ' @ A email adjustment may put 7 our ic in perfect condition! for expert service. i e Our are factory-trained in \ repair) fier, Ever- sharg and small afjustment may put your pen in perfect condition. Our pen i man ts factory trained on all makes of pens GENERAL PRINTING & OFFICE SUPPLY 17 W. Lawrence. Pontiac, Mich. a / \ / durable accurate J lou pr ice J flexible THIS instrument fills a definite need in the engineering field for a small drafting machine Its accuracy meets the demands of the professional draftsman for detail work. Its rugged construc - tion makes it especailly suitable ' for the engineering student Its low price brings tf within the budget of institutions for engi- neering education $5450 | GENERAL PRINTING | & OFFICE SUPPLY 17 W.. Lawrence \\\ / > JHE ~~ GRADUATION i Yi, GIFT ~w for a Lifetime! this Smith-Corona Portable Typewriter in its smart, new slim- ‘line “Holiday Case” It’s a beauty, both in looks | and performance. Your grad- uate will love it, and use it | for a lifetime. Smith-Corona is the portable with office typewriter features. Come in, see and try it. It's the perfect graduation gift ~ that keeps on giving—a Smith-Corona — the world’s first and fastest portable type- writer. So easy to buy, too... Smith--Coronas $94.50 Up PPL LLL LL LLL We Also Stock Royals Underwoods Remingtons and German Olympia Portables WE HAVE TWO SERV- ICE MEN TO BACK FACTORY GUARANTEE. GENERAL PRINTING & OFFICE SUPPLY ‘17 W. Lawrence FE 2-0135. | and smashed down several guard rail posts before ramming the pole. Mrs. Craig was treated for minor bruises. She was unable to tell Oakland County Sheriff's deputies how the accident happened. with injuries suffered when the car Midnight Snack FARNBOROUGH, England (UP) Detroit Zoo Cuts Red Tape to Get 2 More Gorillas DETROIT ®—Two more baby gorillas are coming to the Detroit Zoo after some fast red tape cutting. The zoo wants them to keep a gorilla it has just received from Coho. Cobo went to Sen. Potter | (R-Mich), Potter went to Secretary of State Dulles, Dulles went to the U. S, ambassador in Paris. The ambassador went to the French government. Up came the permits. To Air Dispute JACKSON (#)—Representatives | of Consumers Power Co. and C10 | with the honorees representing five | weight boxing champion Joe Louis 6 Former Stars Named to State ‘Hall of Fame’ DETROIT (UP) — Six all-time | of Michigan. sports greats were named today to the Michigan ‘Hall of Fame’’ different sports. — British Army Bugler Jack Fury got 112 days in the guardhouse for She sustained a broken rib, a/ stealing 24 eggs and a half-pound possible concussion and head cuts; of bacon from the mess hall be-| Africa. driven by Mrs./| cause | “I was hungry that night. getting lonely, But zoo officials were balked in getting export per- mits from French Equatorial dispute, Utility Workers of America meet} today to discuss recommendations of a fact-finding panel in a wage State labor mediators) were to sit in on the session. Tyrus Raymond Cobb, tormer player and manager of the De- ttoit Tigers, led the balloting of state newspaper sports editors and radio and television sports directors. Football was the only sport with two representatives—the late Field- ing H. Yost and Willie Heston, both Others were general manager and former coach Jack Adams of the Red Wings, former heavy- and golf great Walter Hagen. ~It-is estimated that Americans spend three billion dollars a year on research. Will Po Fallout BATTLE CREEK (#—Officiails From these. of the U.S. Weather Bureau and, nuclear blasts the Federal Civil Defense Admin- istration have completed final daily during operation alert, plans for coordinating their efforts | "@tionwide civi defense test set in plotting the fall-out pattern of nuclear explosions. Fourteen top weather men com-| most gasoline is sold to U.S. motor. pleted a 2-day conference with civil! ists between 4 and 7 p.m. The zoo went to Mayor Albert E. OUR NEWLY ENLARGED DISPLAY AREA OFFERS PONTIAC’S LARGEST SELECTION OF Carpet and Draperies Our Newly Enlarged Drapery Department Has All the Latest Fabrics Including GLOSHEEN and FIBERGLAS All Work Guaranteed! Phone for estimates with no obligation! Gal wr B age ooo Se. \ These beautiful RY, Special... ready made drapes in 4 beau- tiful colors. Ready to hang. ONLY... 41°’x90” We Feature Carpet From the Leading Mills LEES HOLMES: GULISTAN DOWNS FIRTH SMITH ALDON MASLAND MAGEE BEMPORAD MOHAWK Come in and let our experts show you the real difference in carpet. Don’t be fooled by many fantastic claims. We will show you how to buy a quality carpet. — Seunuda Bliuds. — (INTERIOR WINDOW SHUTTERS) BRING NEW BEAUTY THAT IS BOTH FUNCTIONAL AND DECORATIVE These %” have solid panels if you wish All Bermuda Blinds are CUSTOM MADE to your measurements Bermuda Blinds may also REMEMBER at McCandless’ You. Need No Money Down | Want Samples in Your Home? Phone FE 4-2531 and We Will Send a Man . With Samples to Your Home — Choose Your | This Top Quality Wilton shown at the right can be yours for only a few dollars per month and you need No Money Down Seven Colors You can buy this all wool Wilton carpet at the right, this week only for the amazing low price of only ‘7? 5 va NO MONEY DOWN! Big 9x12 ONLY $5995 ‘ Carpet on Your Own Floor a study in tweed and the unique neathery charm of ‘Randen le wool wilton by HOLMES The Famous Mohawk Carpet at the left has been the best selling pattern for years. It's patented weave means more wear for your money, Buy it today with NO MONEY DOWN This super thick Nylon — Tufton Carpet will make you think you are walking on a cloud. In 14 gorgeous colors you'll never guess its low price of only... , *8>> Yd. , | Largest Selection of Braids Miele Pontiae’s ‘Oldest Exclusive Floor Covering Firm! { 11 N. Perry St. FE 4-2531 SHOP arr. or FR DAY = : ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WwW EDNESD: AY, MAY 18, 1955 a? Board OKs Changes in Bui Iding Code Church Guild Party Aids Building Fund WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP Members of the Immaculate Heart 7 PTA Groups Plan Meetings Speakers, Open Houses, Card Party, Convention Reports Slated A variety of programs are planned for the 7 PTA meetings in the Oakland County area tonight, Thursday and Friday evenings. Here are the planned programs for the different groups: Thomas The Thomas PTA will have a “Pay to Play” card party at the Community Hall this evening. Non-members are welcome, of- ficials said. Southfield Township The annual spring open house will be. held at the Angling Read school at 7:30 p.m. Thurs- , day. Parents have been invited to | meet teachers and inspect the achievements of their children. New officers will be installed. Auburn Heights Mrs. Elmer Dancy and Mrs. Lester Oles will give reports on the recent state convention at the 7:30 p.m, Thursday meeting of the Auburn Heights PTA. The meeting will be held at the school. Students who have attend- ed dancing classes during the. year under the direction of Mrs. Betty Smith will furnish entertainment. a result of recent elections in the NEW SKIPPER EDITORS — The annual “Water- | tions. Others are (l-r) Jean Limatta, —— semes- log” and the school paper “The Anchor’ of Water- | ter editor of the Anchor; Ruth Willis, first semester ford High have new editors for the coming year, as editor of the Anchor, and Carole Fortin, editor of Journalism class. | the Waterlog. Kari Liewart will be sports editor of both publica- | Sales on Street Get Regulations Fireproof Construction Required in Business, Manufacturing Areas WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The | | |township board has adopted serv- eral changes in the building cade, | tightening the law in the face of | ‘the further development of the | rapidly growing township. Included in the code now is a, change requiring all persons dis- | pensing wares from a tent, trailer, | _ | automobile or truck to locate at least 25 feet from the highway or road right of way. Adequate parking for at least six vehicles, im addition to exits ang entrances, must be provided, under provisions of this safety measure. In another change, all buildings erected altered or repaired on land zoned for commercia] or manu- facturing development must be of masonry or other fireproof con- struction. The exception is for buildings used as a single family detached dwelling. Several recommendations | made by the township soning — beard were approved by the — board of trustees, subject to the approval of the county coordinat- ing toning board. The board was advised to change | from agricultural to residential | |zoning the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 12. Waterford Township The Waterford Center PTA will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday af the school for a quiz program of games. This will replace the usual speaker. Mrs. E. L. Windeler will install the new officers. The an- nual report will be given by the historian, Mrs. Harry Carlisle. The Hudson Covert PTA will have the last meeting of the se- mester at the school Thursday evening. New officers will be in- stalled, and a program will be presented by the Boy Scout troop. Walled Lake gohn Allison, Ang Arbor high school teacher, will discuss mili- tary service at the 8 p.m. meet- ing of the Walled Lake Junior- Senior high school PTA, Thursday in the high school cafeteria. An election and installation of officers will be held during the business meeting. Mrs. Edward Johnson, president of the Oak- land County Council PTA will be Members of three area high school senior classes are returning late this week from their annual senior trips, and another group left today for their excursion. The 180 seniors of Waterford Township High School left at noon today for a trip to Niagara Falls. A lake steamer will take them on the 3-day outing. One-third of the necessary funds was earned by group pro}j- ects, another third by a special magazine and candy sale, with the final third coming from the individual students. Accompanying the seniors: are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Larmee, Mr. the installing officer. and Mrs. Byron Merrit, Mr. and At this meeting also, consider- | Mrs. Donald Arsen, and Mr. and ation will be given to the question Mrs. William Long. Also attend- of splitting this PTA into two ~— ups, ch for the high | pate sal eacar high. . Kingsbury Set ‘to Remain Open, Goodison A family night program called ‘A Family Evening in Japan’ is Parents Learn METAMORA — Parents of chil- dren attending the Kingsbury being sponsored by the Baldwin- Goodison PTA at their next meet- School have learned that the school will continue next year along the ing in the Baldwin School in Goodi- same lines as it has followed since son at 8 p.m. Friday. it was started two years ago. Township fo Share This private school was founded Seniors of Area Holding Annual Trips; «<5: Tour New York, Washington, Niagara = s<"--c-% Ripley. New Oxford Pastor ing are Mrs. Gordon Bryce, Laura | City senior class have been tour- | Mahan, Arthur Lake and Paul’ ing New York city and will return Fifty-three members of~ Imlay * . ‘ {Southfield Residents me: m2",27:,Pes, mass September: THE REV, ROBERT HARRISON | Also the southwest corner of Scott | Lake Road and Pontiac Lake Rds., | trom residential to commerical. hes -— for the Lake Angelus tion of a water system and black- | | topped roads. The subdivision is Mohawk Lakes, | Friday morning. companied by class sponsors Rich- ard Wheeler, principal, and Kath- erine Robbins. Also-returning Friday after a 10-day trip including Washington, _D.C., Niagara Falls, New York City, are the 27 seniors of the Brandon Township School in Or- | tenville. ‘Memorial Clinic They were 8c: Officers Return for New Terms WALLED LAKE—All directors of the Dr. O. R. MacKenzie Me- morial Clinic have been | at the second annual meeting, Returned to office were Cartes Riffenburg, Charles Rogers, | Bertha Williams. Marion Murray | Accompanying them were Mr.| “4S elected to fill the term of, and Mrs. Charles Sayre, Gerald | Jackie Murray who resigned. | Irish, D f | Re-elected by the directors were cm uane Johnson and Shirley | Elmer Conrad, president; J. L. | Jacobsen. | : j Taylor, vice president: Waldo nocomny a trip Proctor, secretary; and Margaret to New York is the senior class : Dennis, treasurer. of the Mariette Community School. Although the clinic is expected to be completed early in the sum- ‘Circus Parade to Be Featured Seeking New Drain Application was filed yesterday | for a new drain in Southfield town- ship, according to Ralph A. Main, | Oak! i - one comy fae cme ot Pack Meeting About three and a half miles of} WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — A pipe, 10 feet in diameter, is pro-| grand circus parade will highlight posed for construction along Eight |the 7 p.m. Thursday meeting of Mile Rd. westward to the stream | the Lambert Cub Scout Pack 30. Chloriding Costs WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- SHIP — The township will parti- cipate im chloriding streets at a cost of $14.07 per 1,000 feet cost to the property-owner. if oil is preferred in certain sec- tions, it wil] be done on thé same basis, the township board has de- cided. A building report for the month of April showing 66 permits valued at $667,925 was accepted by = board, Installation Planned WALLED LAKE—Installation of by the late Carlton M. Hogbie and Mrs. Higbie. Higbie’s death last spring caused people to wonder if the school would continue, Mrs. Higbie has stated that it will. Gifts of the Higbie family have paid for about half the cost of running the school. Tuition from 29 students has paid the balance. ~ County ( Calendar Takes Over Sunday OXFORD—The Rev. Robert Har- rison from Ludrow, Vt., will as- sume his duties as pastor of the Oxford Immanuel ee | Church Sunday. A graduate of Whittier College’ Calif., and Union Theological Semi- ary, New York, he is married Rev. Ludrow has served and the father of five children. churches in Massachusetts, Rhode The Clifford Wecs sot the —_ Church will meet at 2 pm. Thureda the church to drive to the home of Charles McIntyre im Mariette for *; meeting. Marlet an Mother and Deaubher banquet of e WSCS of the Methodist Church will te’ held Thureday evening at the church. Metamera The Metamora Parm Bureau _ Officers will be held at the 12:30} p.m. Thursday meeting of the | WSCS of the Walled Lake Meth- odist Church at the church, — Pinochle Hot Shots will meet with mr Group will meet at the home of Mr, and Mrs | Harry Best at 8 pm. tod “e Trey Tewnship s. Lawrence Longcore, 3073 Talbot, a Island and Vermont, Mrs. Hurd Is Speaker WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Mrs. west of Lahser Rd., Main said. Bessie Hurd, state WCTU presi- dent, will be the guest speaker at | jing at 11 a.m. i 8 p.m. Thursday, |ton Plains. | the Waterford WCTU chapter met- | Library. Thursday at the | 4 | United Presbyterian Church, Dray- Included in the circus at the After a petition is circulated and | school will be a dog act, strong signed by two thirds of Southfield | man, clowns, a tumbling show, and property owners traversed by the | q freak show, containing a bearded drain, a board of determination | jady, a snake charmer, a tattooed will ascertain if the drain is neces- | man and a rubber man. Awards and advancement in Lois K. Welberry Named to Year's Study in Japan MILFORD — The Presbyterian Church of the United States has appointed Lois K. Welberry to spend her junior year of college at the International -Christian Uni- versity at Mitaka, near Tokyo, Japan. She is the daughter of Mr. and | Mrs. Walter Welberry, of 2000 Hill St., and a student at Alma College. The purpose of the year’s study abroad is to show the possibili- ties of a world community by realizing on a campus an inter- national community that will be a laboratory in international cul- ture and understanding, officials sald. Majoring in sociology and educa- tion, Miss Welberry was chairman of the Religion in Life Committee on her campus, and won recogni- tion in the recent honors assembly there for outstanding work in the field of Christian education. She will finance her transporta-4— of Mary Guild of St. Patrick's parish held a dessert card parly today at the parish hall. Mrs. | August G. Hebel was gener al « *hair- man for the party. Proceeds from the affair will go into the building fund for the new addition to the parish house now under construction. DANCE WITH ME TONIGHT Gene Nelson Trio MANNY’S W. Huron at Eliz. Lk. Rd. LOIS K. WELBERRY | tion, tuition and fees. Credit for the work she does while at the University will be given her upon her return to Alma College for completion of her senior Moat WE PAY CASH for: TRUE STORY, SECRETS, TRUE ROMANCE MAGAZINES. ETC. Piper's Magazine Outlet 34 Avbers Ave. FE 4-866 COCKTAIL LOUNGE 1122 W. Huron Huren Bowl Bidg. HELD -- ya" 2nd Big Week | Pontiac's Own Nationally Renowned Singing Quartet Al Lamano of the Song Fieldi * Ted Stanley Comedy M.C. * Pete Flore’s “Mel-Airs” playing fer Dancing Every ection for the drain was begun by Southfield citizens and busi- Garden Club Group to Hold Bridge Party ROCHESTER — The Civic Im- provement Committee of the Rochester branch of the National Farm .and Garden Assn. has planned-a bridge party for 1 p.m. Thursday at the Wood Memorial ranks will also be made. 0] RM Mrs. Charles, Talley heads the committee. Proceeds will buy new gardening books for the library. IT HAPPENED Tables Turned on Cheer-Ups Letter From Mamie Rewards Club By WILMA GREENWAY ORCHARD LAKE ~—~ Ten warm- hearted girls who have spent the SHOES ;;. FAMILY “Orthopedic Ghee Specialict TURPIN-HALL FAMILY SHOE STORES . 464 Diste, Drayten Pleins ute Union Lake RA, Union Lake past six months working to bring cheer to handicapped children and shut-ins had real cause for elation today—they are celebrating the ar- rival of their own “‘letter of cheer,” sent to them by no less a person than the First Lady of the land. The group, called the Cheer-Ups, has been meeting weekly under the leadership of Mrs. Hector Van de Vyver, 3639 Commerce Rd., to ( af make scrapbooks and gifts for shut- ins at Pontiac General Hospital. Two weeks ago, Mrs. Van de Vyver’s daughter, Joanne, 13, a member of the club, read that Mrs. Eisenhower was ill. Joanne sent her a scrapbook and _ pot- holder the group had made. Monday a letter, White Hotise stationery and signed “Mamie Dowd Eisenhower,” ar- rived, commending the girls or their work and thanking them for the gifts. “You certainly are thoughtful girls to spread such cheer among those who are ill,” the letter read. . It is friends such as you who have made me feel much, much better...” The news of Mrs. Eisenhower's written on) eS TTITITIITT. AS WILD AS THE understand that you get out of life what you put into it.” Two of Mrs. Van de Vyver's six children are not club members— Ronald and Gerard, 7. But Pa- tricia, 13, and Margaret, 11, are ardent Cheer-Ups, as well as. Joanne and Joyce, 10. The other six members are Shan- | non Donelly, 11, of 2410 Fordham; Rita Hahnefeld, 12, of 2163 Erie Dr.; Jacqueline Logie, 11, and Janice Logie, 12, of 3187 Orchard Lake Rd.; Shirley Proulx, 12, of 7581 Honeysuckle; and. Nancy Rabaut, 12, of 2274 Honeysuckle. All the girls are students at Our Lady of Refuge Catholic School. The group meets every Tuesday after school to make its “Cheer-. Up” gifts. Last Christmas the girls made 14 books for hospital- ized children and at Easter they made special baskets. They plan thie scale this summer. MANY Be te eR RH HH HTK KKK HHH KKK HHH sates copies of the First Lady’s letter, so. that each girl a might have her own. i SKK KKK KKK VE-IN: LEWC reses 2435 DIXIE HWY., NEAR TELEGRAPH RD. TO CROSS Night TIAC * Veils a IN KENTUCKY... WHERE GIRLS GET THEIR MEN! RIVERS “300° Club Find | OVER! SIRS RSI IR RI KIRK IRR IKI IKI RIA I } SETTING ———-— OF ITS DRAMATIC STORY!-—-~ m COLOR ano TRULY! A GREAT PROGRAM Dining Guide GOOD FOOD — FRIENDLY SERVICE Catering to Banquets and Private Parties PU RE FOOD - RESTAURANT ond BAR ® Breakfasts — Luncheons — Dinners 3 Geuth Saginaw — Across From Jerome Motor Sales Open 5:30 4. M.te 8 A. Mo — Closed Sanday BEER — WINE — LIQUOR EAT IN A sandwich & coke A malt & hot dog YOUR CAR A full meal is good at EL=MAR DRIVE-IN Restalrant . . . Dixie Mwy. at Silver Lake Road at Dick & Jim Scribss tevite feo te — & DANCE DRIVE-IN 130 S. Telegraph + SAT. . SUN. FOR BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCHEONS US-10 . Decker S sminnem FAMILY DINNERS At Reasonable Prices PIZZA PIE A Treat for the Whole Family 15 VARIETIES TO SELECT FROM Fine, tasty Italian feeds prepared fer you te take out. Joe’s Famous Spaghetti House 1688 West Heres St. FE 3-7306 Open 6 P.M.-3 4.M.—Gun. 3-12 P.M.—Clesed Mea. jack ) #@ ~=« DRIVE-IN CLARK S RESTAURANT at earccim GIANT MALTS DINNERS SANDWICHES Drive-In Service SODAS “Take Home” Orders Open 7 Days A Week Sundays 6 P. M- 12:30 A. M. Counter Lunches STARTING x TODAY x ON OUR GIANT SCREEN! THE SYNDICATE! The nation’s terrifying empire of vice and crime ripped 1 and exposed in the year's most torrid, - ture! e picture \ | ee a _check on the proxy votes. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1955 Grains Easing in Quiet Trade | MARKETS Produce DETROIT PRODUCE May 18 (UP) — Wholesale rade on DETROIT, prices of No 1 @ the Public Farm- ers' — as reported by the Bureau CHICAGO #® — Most grains| of Market -eased a little in quiet dealings | , Pruits: w thine 3.38-3.78 on the Board of Trade today, een tad Smite: eeerry Ase te beans Then ecto date "iow 150" scopes. Bie oe Sects pe. ward. Feed grains held up fairly | {Ge'tas ‘o-to baa: ie, oon well. although they weren't able | doz onions, se “2.75 32-Ib to make any forward progrsess. 440-490 ; roceede é pace | 100-Ib : , 1B Dealings Pp ded at a slow fete “bags aie * red sad wg in all pits. Riuber®: hothouse, oie -1.00 .- webs. a) rr ou ie - Wheat near the end of the first 138-180 bu. remates 0s, hothouse, He oe 3 00 14-Ib bskt. Turnip, topped, 1. $0- hour was unchanged to % lower, May $2.1942: corn % lower to ; CGyestn, Collard 1.75- 2.00 be! Sorrel, higher, May $1.44; oats unchanged | nip. 100-138 bu. gamete Magy oly to “% lower, May 7334; rye un- 20:36 vu leaf, 2.00-225 bu. Cabbage, changed to % lower, May $1.0142; | “ Egg: ive. 14.00-18.00 30-doz octet soybeans ly to'1% lower, May mediom, 12. 60-13.50; small, 6.00-9. 2.52%; to 2 higher, and lard 10 cents lower cents a hundred pounds May $12.15. CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO, May 11 (AP) — Potatoes: Arrivals old stock 56, new stock 17; on track 170 old stock, 118 new stock; total . U8. shipments 607. Old stock supplies Cemcsce css™ light, demand moderate and market CHICAGO, May 17 ‘AP)—Open to- | about steady; carlot track sales, old jay stock: Minnesota-North Dakota Pontiacs Wheat Bep ...... 10744 $410 washed and waxed, $3.25 washed May ...... 219 Dec . 10944 only. New stock supplies moderate, de- DIF vseiccene 190%, Soybeans | mand fair and mastet unsettled; carlot | track sales, new stock; California long «| whites $650 washed th 100-Ib. Triumphs $3 od / ew. sacks. Old Contracts 23 sacks, : a DETROIT EGGS DETROIT, May 12 (AP)—E fob. | Detroit, cases included, large 36: grade C larg Checks—28-31, wed ave 28%. Commercially gra Whites—Grade A extra large 39-41 larce 39-40. medium 35-36. Browns—Grade A extra large 38, medium 33-14: erade B large Proxies to Decide Fate of Reo Holding | se — CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS (Pp— CHICAGO. May 18 (AP)—Butter steady: LANSING Proxy counters | recetpts 1.634.020, wholesale buying prices paid 1 will report Friday morning on the | unchaliged ah score AA 56.75, 92 A 56.75 ee steady; receipts 40.702, wholesale Motors, Inc., of Lansing. | 38, 60-699 ver cent A's 38. mixed 35; to liquidate assets by Dec. 15, DETROIT POULTRY Pia t it corporation for the purpose of | “lity lve poultry up to 19 fight to gain control of Reo Hold-| 99 3)" % © 28° cars 0 B ormed to liqui e ing Corp. form q idate R 0) ying prices ‘unchanged to | lower: US paid whites 70 per cent and over A's The struggle is between direc- | mediums 325: US. standards 328 dir- tors of Reo Holding, who promised | “!es 31; checks 28, current receipts 32. ; sed | < and Telautograph, Inc., of New) pgrrorr, May 11 (AP)—Prices York, which seeks to continue the | per. pound f 0b. Detroit tee Ol | “weary bens $1.00 “Mght bons 16-00: carrying on nuclear research. |heavy broilers or fryers (3-3 Ibs): . | Whites 31; Gray Crosses 30-31: ca- Telautograph claimed at A) ponettes (4%4-5'9 Ibs.) 39-41; G4 bb) 33%: ducklings 30-32 meeting of stockholders Tuesday | Breeder hen turkeys 30-33, breeder to have control of 323,000 of the toms 38 sea a ee arket steady on hens esifabdle me- 547,000 shares of Reo Holding | | dium sizes and good quality receipts of stock. | hens today light and short tn some in- menees Pidd-pae seeey tai once CHALLENGE CLAIM ks fs ne Lette pms Scab aasltel . good demand by dressing out- jlets im nearby country areas. Fancy ca- Reo Holding officials challenged | ponettes tn good demand but races the claim and the proxy count offering difficult to clear Good quality was agreed upon. Percy Willette | De® turkeys aol Lan | demand: of New York City, representing | CHICAGO POULTRY Telautograph, and Donald R.| CHICAGO. May 17 (AP)—Live poultry ; _| Steady: recetpts in coops 468 ‘yesterday Flintermann of Detroit, represent- | 945 coops 99.624 Ib): f.0.b. paying prices ing Reo Holding, were named to | unchanged: heavy hens 23-28: light hens | 16 6 $-17: eal or 5 hace otal old | roosters 12-12 capon s ° Reo Holding was formed to dis- | tribute $16,500,000 paid by Bohn)! Hotel Evacuated Aluminum and Brass Corp. for | ; ; the truck firm. - One liquidation | SPOKANE, Wash, (#—Police hur- payment of $20 per share has been | riedly evacuated 1,300 persons | made and another was planned from the 470-room Davenport Hotel | 's largest, last night after | € The | guests were allowed to return to e before Dec. 15. Halley's Comet which put on aan anonymous bomb threat. spectacular show in 1910 is again | ees, federal-state Trades 12.57) . Whites—Orade A Jumbo 44-47, weight- 12 7$ | ed average 45: large 39-43, wtd avg 41's; 1260, medium 36-38, wtd avg 36; grade B 12 20 | large 37. 12.65 Browns—Orade a mbo 42-45, wtd avg 424; large se wtd avg 36%; medium 34-35, wtd ar 35; grade ,B to be visible from the earth in | the hotel about an hour later when the mid 1980s, . | no bomb was found, WORRIED OVER DEBTS? cs GeLeRban Omnneh Goan yments, debts or bills when due, MICHIGAN CREDIT UOUN LORS and errange for payments ae afford, regardiess of how mech or hew many sou owe. NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ONE PLACE TO PAY — BONDED AND INSURED 9 years of credit counselling experience assist you Hours: Daily 9 to $. Wed. & Sat. Appt. to 1. Evenings b MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 41% South Saginaw St. Above Oakland Theater Phone FE 8-0456 LET COMPLETE HOME INSURANCE COVERAGE BE YOUB WATCH DOG INSURE WITH CRAWFORD -DAWE - GROVE . INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS 716 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. Ph. FE 2-8357 Boost Your Opportunity to Win in Detrottaimes “LUCKY 4° Game in New Cash Prizes T Days a Week tg 0 3 WINNER ... Here's what you do. te win. ” offers you four different ways to win . Just Lucky Auto License Numbers, Lucky sod va cky Delere” Nembore ecards with TIMES habit; it’s a LUCKY habit . . . Check the NUMBERS IN THE TIMES EVERY DAY—You a big WINNER! If you'd like to boost your oppor- fill in and mail the blank below. Good Luck Detroit Times “LUCKY 4” Game. y be te YOU in PASTE ON POSTAL CARD, ADDRESS and MAIL TO: Times “Lucky 4" Editor, P.O. Box 118, Detroit 31, Mich. Te afford we a better opportunity te win in The Detroit Times “Lacky #” #” Game, bere are my numbers. Secial Security Numb Aute License Num ’ Driver’s License N My Name. 5. i Aircrafts Make Strong Showing up 1% at 56%. Higher with the aircrafts were and railroads, Other divisions were steady or mixed. Stocks advancing icluded Beth- lehem Steel, Goodrich, Northrop, Boeing, Douglas, United Aircraft, RCA, Allied Chemical, Du Pont, Ge eral Electric, Brown & Bigelow, New York Central, and Texas Co. _ Lower were Caterpillar Tractor, Zenith Radio, American Telephone, United Air Lines, Loew's, and Goodrich, New York Stocks (Late Merning Quetations) Adams Ex Ist Crk Coal .. 323 Admiral Jacobs 37, Air: Reduc 31.1) Johns Man Alleg L Sti 42 Jones & L lied Ch .,..108 Kelsey Hay ‘ies Allied Strs.... 53.6 Kennecott iis Chal .... 72.6 wimp Clk “5 Alum Ltd .... 872 wresgee 85 Alum Am ....111 6 Kroger Am Airlin . 26.6 LOF G: < oe 33° Li MeNaL oH. Am Cyan 56 rs rae Am Gas & El.. 43.7 pa Rael ee at Am M & Pay . 302 h Aire ... Am Motors.,.. 103 Loew's ....... Ab N Gas .... $13 Lone 8 €em .. 572 Red ...... 233 Loritlard ..... 226 Am Seating... 30.2 Mack Trk Ele ll eters ce Am 8tl artin : Am a? Tel => May D Str 36 m To! Mead Cp c i Am Zinc ..... 233 wird stl Pd | 45 passes , mah Monsan Ch .. 132 rm } . nt W 5 aruseraGe M4 ole en marcos —. Motor Wheel .. 30.1 Ail Ca Line... 616 Warcvc.” see Atl Retin ..... 46 at Bise 404 Atlas Pdr ... Nat Cash RR... 40.5 veo Mfg q Nat Dai 40 Bald Lima... 161 Net Deiry ‘ Balt & Oh.... 452 Nat Gyps ..... aes Beech Nut... 32. Nat Lead ..., 66 Bendix Av..., 49 Nat Steel G6 Benguet .. 13 Nat Thea ve ee Beth Steel ....1276 NY Air Brk .. 24.3 Boeing Air .,.. $65 NY Cent 394 Bond Strs ,, 16¢ Nia M Pw ...33., Borden _..... 64.4 Hort & West . . Borg Warn.... 43 No Am Av .... 48.7 Briggs Mf . 213 Nor Pac - 13.8 Brist My ..... 31.7 Nor Sta Pw 16.5 Brun Balke 24 «=Ohlo Of] ..... 682 Budd Co .. 31.1 Oliver Cp 15.4 Burroughs .. 281° Otts Elev . 625° = ha — y Owens I! Gl. 12 Can Dry ..... 15.7 ~~ 4 Cdn Pac .... 313 param Pict |. 426 Capital Alri.) 294 poet pa a6 Carrier Cp 58.6 Penney JC... 91 Case JI ...... 16.2 RR sae Celanese... 24 et Cola en Il PS.... 262 Pepsi Cole ....23.7 Cert-teed .. 25.6 Pheips D ..... 50.1 Ches & Oh..., $1.3 Philco 38.4 Chi & NW... 17.6 Philtp Mor ... 50.2 hrysier ...... 757 1 Pet » 22 Cities Sve..... 47.9 Pit Plate G ., 72.6 Clark ig hg. . 664 Pullman ...... ed Climax Mo.... 73.6 re Ot) ..... 3858 Cluett Pea.. 444 Radio Cp ..,.- 46.7 Coca Cola -1214 Rem Rand ... 39.7 Colg Palm : 522 Reo Holding .. 183 EG Fh ae Consum Pw... 47.2 Foe "$5 cee rey Sb 11L® Rev Tob B88 Cont Mot 163 Gey ace ol 46k Cont On 766 sateway St... 445 Copper Rug .. 36 St R > * we Corn Pd 86 Beovit Met . 356 Crue Sti 40 Sears Roeb 83.5 Curtis Wr 20.5 Bhell Ot 506 Det Edis 35.5 Simmons 3 a Dis C Seag 37 sinclair O.... $32 Doug Airc 656 Bou c 505 Dow Chem 524 gou Ry * 954 Du Pont . 1894 Sperry _.... % 62.1 Eagle P ... 30, gta Brand... 391 Fast Air L . 466 Std Ot] Cal - 165 East Kod 786 std Ot Ind... 43 El Auto L 412 sta Ol NJ...1121 El& MusiIn.. 36 gtd O11 Oh... 456 a ee . ne Stevens gt 251 0! . Stew War.... 246 aby eae anisiars 2 : Stude-Pack.. - a 2 & = . un ; 16 Drossae oe = paki My si ros rest see - ¥ toe . Freept Sul ,..744 Teses Co...._ 93 Pruen Tra ..42 Tex G 8ul... 402 Gen Bak .... 104 Thomp Pd... 48 Sa Fe ciSt Roe Ge St : n see Tran tr Gen Mills ... 686 ‘Transamer... | Gen Motors . 945 Twent C Fox 3 | Gen Ry Big .. 44 Underwd..... 34 gon Rae cc WE Oe Cpa ahs oreo n ( neeeee Gen Tire ,... 56.4 Unit Air Lin.. 425 oe aanieale ae van ate Sieve sf o e ee : nit fC..5 i] Goodyear --. 582 United Cp.... 65 Grah Paige *# 21 Unit Fruit.... 575 Gt No Ry ... 401 US Lines..., 22 Gt West 8 22.3 US Rub,...., 48 Greyhound .. 15.2 US Smelt..... 50.4 Gulf Ot) - 681 US Bteel..... 81 Hersh Choc 444 Van Raal..... 364 Holland F 15 Walgreen ... 30.4 Homestk ..... 392 Warn B Pic.. 186 Hooker El 35 W Va Pulp... 47 ™m Cent ..... 623 West Un Tel. 100.0 Indust Ray .. 552 Westg A Bk.. 26.2 Inland 8st! 70-3 Westg El.... 682 Inspir Cop .. 47.7 Wilson & Co 12.6 Interlak Ir ,. 23 Woolworth ... 466 Int Harv .... 365 Yale & Tow... 58. Ro Laden rd Moa Loomollh Ay int aper ... 97. Zenit a Int TelézTel 26 Int Bus Mach 410 STOCK AVERAGES NEW YORK, May 18 — Compiled by The Associated Press. 15 60 Indust Ralls Util Stocks Net change....+1.3 +6 .... %: Noon today.....2165 1300 715 160.9 Prev. day .,.... 215.2 1304 715 160.2 Week ago ...06. 2186 133.2 ma) 162. Month ago 2236 #1376 72 166.4 Year ago .,..e. 1688 91 60.0 124.2 1955 hig «6 2249 1376 728 166.8 1955 low eooee 20312 1149 672 1488 1984 high ,.. 2119 #1230 683 155.2 1984 low ....... 1439 T7178 55.4 106.0 DETROIT STOCKS (Hernblewer & Weeks) Pigures after decimal points are eighths High Low Noon Baldwin Rubber selene sercece 180 17:6 Gerity-Michigan® .....,.-.. 34 40 eats pectene cesecicses 2 38 oes 22 24 seoee 82 90 ~s 32 | coe 383 LL Ambulances on the Way Before 2 Trains Collide open sped toward the scene of a fore the accident happened. gis i af i & zs i + tee * Lyin em % ov t the steels, motors, chemicals | -| choice 7 | heifers 19.50-23.00; a ab 904 7} and commercial cows 11.25-14. CLEVELAND (®—The parents of 12-year-old John Francis Schivell have a problem. Psychologists told Aircrafts | them their son's level of intelli- | gence is so high it can't be meas- ured by standardized tests and most public schools-are inadequate Nap ner omagts strapping 150-pounder who stands 5 met'6, John is wrapped up in physics and mathematics and says he wants to become a toch clean He is a freckle-faced bespecta- cled eighth-grader at suburban Maple Heights High School, where he gets straight A’s. Two years ago, during routine Organist’s Music ‘Sends’ Woman —Right to Court CHICAGO wH — A 35-year-old woman told Circuit Judge Car- nelius Harrington yesterday that she traveled 20 miles to attend church because Robert Metzler’s organ music ‘‘sends me.”’ “I am not interested in Mr. Metzier,’’ Miss Harriet Davis said. “I'm interested in his music. It sends me. There's something about it different from the music in any other church.” * s s Metzler, 50, is organist in a church in suburban Glencoe. He formerly was organist at a North- west Side church but he said he left that fob to escape the atten- | tions of Miss Davis and her moth- , er, Belle, 55. | Last February after Metzler saw them at the Glencoe church, he obtained an injunction against ‘them. At that time he said the / two women had maneuvered their | car to block off his car as he was leaving the carck, | * They were x court yesterday to have the injunction set aside. Judge Harrington refused and said: “If you attend this Glencoe church, I will interpret it as an I will hold you in contempt of court.”’ 2 Schools Planning Kindergarten: Days Kindergarten registration and open house have been scheduled by the Waterford Village School and the North Branch School. Hours of 9 to 11:45 a.m. and from 1-3:45 p.m. have been set for Friday’s open house at the Water- ford Village. School. Birth certificates must be sented establishing that the child will be five years old on or before Dec. 1, 1955. In North Branch, children from the rural areas will be registered Thursday, and those from the vil- lage on Friday. Hours are 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. both days. Parents have been requested to bring a list of the immunizations and diseases each child has had. Livestock DETROIT Whereas DETROIT, Ma (AP) —Hogs—8al- able oe: No cathy ont sales asking unevenly highe Gattie—salable 600 Presh receipts mostly cows: market opening fully steady; no high good to choice fed steers offered: few utility and commer- ciall steers and yearlings 14.00-18.00: some low to average good steers up to 21.00; utilitly and commercial heifers 1350-1700; most utility and low com- mercial cows 12.00-13. 50. few high com- mereial cows to 15.00: canners and cut- ters mostly 10.00-12.00; stockers and feeders absent Calves—Salable 125 Market openin about steady but not full yestablish account scmall receipts; few early sales good and choice vealers 19 00-26 00; high choice and prime held higher: uellity and commercial grades 13.00-19, Bheep—Salable 200. No early sales slaughter lambs undertone steady; sheep uneven, steady to weak: late ‘uesday. deck chotce 91 Ib shorn lambs No. 1 pelts 19.00. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, May 17 (AP!—Salable hogs 7.800; active, 25-50 higher on butchers; mostly $0 higher on weights under 230 Ib: sows 25 to mostly $0 higher; most 190-220 ib 1800-1865; mainiy 18.50 and above on No. 1 and 2 grades, a few decks mostiy No. 1's at 18.78. bulk ‘230-250 Ib 17.25-18.00; 260-280 Ib 16.50-17.25: 200-350 Ib 15.25-16.50; ove under 450 Ib tn larger lots 13.75-15.2 few choice 300-325 Ib 15.50-15.75; pair 450-600 Ib 12.50-13.75. Balable cattle 8,000; salable calves 300: steers slow, opened steady to 50 lower; late trade 25 to agp 50 low- er; helfers about stead cows mostly steady; bulls strong to ) higher: other classes steady; a part load prime around 1,100 Ib steers 26.75: load lots high choice and mixed pe cosh up to 1.500 Ib et bulk hoice steers 22.00-23.50; good choles 19.$0-21.75; most and choice Ib heifers, high choice with a prime end 23.50; several loads heid above Leryn utility can- ners and cutters §.00-12.00; wtallty and commercial bulls 15.00-17.00; = good and choice vealers 20.00-24.00; few choice and eka rye —— jon -— os arg rs 11.00-19 @ part loa choice 678 Ib yearinig ok steers 23. ": two loads ae a Ib conn P soosbt lings 5; feeding weheeee roy two loads choice hetfers Salable B tclgaes cl . 00-22.00; ort yearling stock le sheep 2,000; active; lambs unevenly steady to 50 ; lambs over 110 ib slaughter her, Ib bs No, 3 and ~~ on —_ 15.25; ae deck choice ib lambs 20.06; cull to low toed eee 10.00-16.00; a double deck choice 82 ib California spring "jambs 22.00: cull to choles shorn ewes 4.00-6.50, Selfridge Plans Show attempt to annoy Mr. Metzler, and | pre-| to house the missiles. * * velopment memory, ability to com- pare and contrast ideas and con- cepts and recognition of words, according to Dr. Corinne F. Baker, assistant clinical professor there. * The boy spends his spare time reading technical publications, studying foreign languages, and is Army Displays Nike Defenses Seeking to Reassure Communities Nervous About Ack-Ack Sites WASHINGTON @—The Army, embarked on a billion-dollar pro- gram of building Nike sites, is seeking to reassure communities nervous over close-by installation of the deadly antiaircraft missiles. Partly for this purpose, the Army yesterday took newsmen to a new Nike site at Lorton, Va., part of the antiaircraft defenses of the capital, about 16 miles to the north. * 8 ®@ Maj. Gen. Gilman C, Mudgett, chief of Army information, told the newsmen the Nike ‘‘is being literal- ly installed in the back yards of householders all over the nation.” And Brig. Gen. R. R. Hendrix, commander of the Washington- Baltimore Nike defense area, said this ‘‘has touched off some knotty problems." s * J “As you may know,” he said, “Army engineers have met with some strong resistance during the | process of acquiring real estate for Nike sites. Some local com- munities have not been at all in sympathy with our program, par- ticularly in land matters or in the stationing of troops in residential areas.” Hendrix contended a Nike site | “is not dangerous, but as safe as/| a gas station; as important to) security and as much a part of the local community as the police and fire departments." * * ®@ Army spokesmen said land and construction for a Nike site costs, on an average, about one million dollars. The weapons themselves cost between $20,000 and $25,000 each. Army officials estimate the entire program will take several years to complete and will cost upwards of one billion dollars. The Lorton site is an under- ground installation which, when completed, will have 12 launchers and 24-foot-deep concrete caverns * In a “dry-run” demonstration, newsmen saw the white, pencil- shaped Nikes (each weighs a ton, is 20 feet long and one foot thick) whisked up from underground, shoved onto launching racks and pointed skyward, ready for firing. The general said the Nike ‘“‘is capable of outmaneuvering and de- stroying any type aircraft present- ly known and foreseeable for the immediate future." Asks Senate Probe of Red Air Power Lodge Calendar Special communication of Roosevelt Lodge No. 510, FP. & A. M., 22 State Street, Thursday, May 19, at 7:30 p. m. E. A. degree. J. Robert Parr, W. M. —Adv. Special communication Cedar Lodge No. 60, F. & A. M., Clarks- ton, May 19, 7:30 p. m. Work in . ©. degree. Richard Snover, W. M. —Ady. News in Brief Theft of a power lawn mower from her home was reported yes- terday by Mrs, Charles Metro, of 46151 Dequindre, Avon Township, Oakland County Sheriff's deputies said. She said the mower was val- ued at about $84. Carl Leach, 18, of Lake Orion, charged wth driving without a drivers license, paid a $25 fine 12-Year-Old Boy's Intelligence Too High ; Be Soe absorbed fn a Goi noe Dr, Baker said: “It is easily seen that John is out of place among boys of his own age. He has adult reading habits and is bored with school, because there is insufficient challenge.” Dr. Baker said John recorded the highest possible score of 190 in a series of IQ tests in which aver- age children register in a range from 85 to 114. * * * , John’s father, a layout inspector in a factory, applied for a scholar- ship for the boy at a private acad- emy, but says he cannot afford the $800 yearly cost for the boy’s room, board and books Dutch Cabinet Quits Over Rent Queen Juliana Hunts for Leader to Establish New Government THE HAGUE, Netherlands w— | The first Dutch government crisis and $25 costs Tuesday after he in nearly three years sent Queen pleaded guilty before Bloomfield Hills Justice Alva J. Richardson. After pleading guilty to driving under the influence of liquor Mon- day, George Boland, 50, of Milford, paid a $100 fine and $25 costs. He Chamber 50-48. The vote came on a appeared before West Bloomfield Township Elmer C. Dieterle. Rummage sale St. Vincent De Paul Hall, Sat. 8:00 to 12:00. Adv. If your friend’s in jail and needs bat, FS Fee ee —Adv. Rummage Sale. 88 W. Huron St. Fri. 2 p.m, bape Saint Mary's Episcopal Guild Rummage Sale Sides 8:00 a. mm. to 12:00 m. First Methodist Church. Spring Concert Set for Tonight at W. Bloomfield KEEGO HARBOR — The music department of the West Bloom- field high school will present its seventh annual spring concert at 8:15 p.m. today in the high school | gym, The combined glee club is com- posed of 120 members. Among the numbers to be presented by them is ‘Glory to God” by Bach and “Ride the Chariot.” Speciality numbers will be given | ™*> F. Byers. 504 by the Triple Trio—barber shop naan Teenanke ge dllee ae quartet, a piano duet by Kay Love- | mem: land and Pat Dunaway. Me County Deatl Deaths Milton Ray Major Ray Major, infant son of Mr. and | Mrs. Ray Major, 222 Clinton St.. will be held at 4:30 p.m. today at the Oakgrove Cemetery, with burial there by the Richardson- Bird Funeral Home. He died Mon- day. 4. Surviving besides his parents are Major of Milford and Frank Vettes WASHINGTON (® — Sen. Russell | (D-Ga) says he will ask an armed | services watchdog subcommittee to investigate reports that new Rus-| sian jet bombers and missiles | threaten U. S, air supremacy. Sen. Symington (D-Mo), former | secretary of the Air Force, de-| manded such an inquiry in the Senate yesterday, saying events | have shown Secretary of Defense | Wilson ‘‘was dead wrong” in ear- | lier estimates of Soviet air power | “and ability to produce modern | arms.’ 2 bd * Symiington said a Pentagon state- | | have flights of long-range jet! bombers, able to deliver nuclear attacks, may mean that this coun- | try and its allies ‘‘may have lost | control of the air.” Rusell, chairman of the Armed Services Committee, said last night the inquiry Symington urged was the type planned for a pre- paredness subcommittee headed by Sen, Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas, the majority leader. Hit New Low Price in Wholesale Food NEW YORK u—Wholesale food | prices as measured by the Dun & Bradstreet index this week touched a new low since April, 1953. The index stood at $6.37 com-| with $6.39 a week ago and the same week a year April 14, 1953, the figure All Work, No Play NEW YORK (UP)—Wall street ‘Otto of Walled Lake, of Detroit. C. Ray Letchfield SOUTH LYON — Service for C. Ray Letchfield, 68. of Northville, was held at 2 p.m. today at the Phillips-Bahnmiller Funeral Home, | Northville. A former resident, he died Monday. Surviving are his widow, Bea, two sons, Dr. Francis H., of Pin- conning and Herbert C., of Pitts- burgh, Pa, a granddaughter, | Joanne, a sister, Mrs. W. J. Emery of South Lyon and an aunt, Mrs. Frances Palmer of South Lyon. Mrs. William Sonnenberg grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur | The program is under the direc- | tion of Mrs. Charles Seavey, vocal Jessup. 424 Highland, MILFORD — Service for Milton i | negligence, Juliana searching today for a polit- ical leader to form a new cabinet. Premier Willem Drees submitted his coalition Cabinet's resignation last night after losing a vote of confidence in Parliament's lower government bill to raise rent ceil- ings 10 per cent on about one third of Holland's rented homes. * * * Because the rent issue is a ma- jor point of controversy between the country’s two major parties, the Catholics and Drees’ Laborites, political circles predicted a long crisis. Each party has 30 of the 100 seats in the second chamber. The Laborites deserted Drees to vote solidly against the rent bill. They said they would agree to it only if wages were raised simul- taneously, Until a new government is formed, Socialist Drees’ Cabinet will continue in office as care- takers, Driving Violations The Secretary of State's office this week reported the names of the following Oakland County motorists whose operator's license either was revoked or suspended recently. They are: Osborn 244000 Hathwey. Parmington, unsatisfied | semygeeses Nor- Parkdale, Rochester, 12615 judg- James P. Sao. 2906 «Churchill, habitual negligence; Arvo Horkonen, Margaret, Milford. drunk motor Jackson, 20872 ae Court, habitual negtt H, irunk go law: D gdon, 7863 Elizabeth Lake Rd., @runk motor law: Paul D. Maison, 418 N Center, Roya! Oak, habitual negligence; James R. Majors, 359 Hick- ory, drunk motor law; Charies H Mann. 135 Cadillac, drunk motor law Jessie Miller, 2405 Worden, Holly, drunk motor law, Arthur J. Payne, 91 Craw- ford unsatisfied judgment: David Pierce, 3325 Crooks Rd. Birmingham, habitual negligence: Seymour Posner, 18221 Kenwood. Oak Park habitual Gordon E. Randall, 822 habitual negligence. negi!- gent operation and unabie to pass test; James. F_ Rountree, 445 Vester. Fern- dale, habitual negligence; Elbert Snoot. 207 Hughes, unsatisfied judgment; Mam R. Snyder, Lake Orion, motor law; Riley C. Spears, 23815 Kate, Hazel Park, habitual negligence; Richard W. Thomas. 30500 Burbank, Farmington, negligent homicide, Alfred Timm, 119 Helen. Roche: drunk motor law; Richard K 370 W Chesterfield, Ferndale, habitual negligence; Chester L Williams, 1125 Chopin, Royal Oak, unsatisfiled judgment. WCTU Convention Set MARLETTE—The Sanilac County Woman's Christian Temperance Union will hold its convention Thursday in the Watertown Meth- odist Church, beginning at 10 a.m. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS f law: Roy L. Ferndale, Pensacola or Storm Drainage and Sanitary Sewage Treatment Systems for BLOOMPIELD HILLS HIGH SCHOOL Bioomfield Township, Oakiand County, Michigan The Board of Education, School Dts- trict No 2 Fractional, Townships of Bioomfield, Troy, West Bloomfield, and ment that the Communists now | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — | the City of Bloomfield Hills, County of Oakland, Michigan, will receive sealed Service for Mrs. William (Theresa) | bids for the construction and instalis- Sonnenberg, 66, of 3976 Beech- | tion of a Storm Drainage system and a Sanitary Sewage Treatment System m 9 ‘in connection with the Bloomfield Hills grove St., will be held at em High School, now under construction Friday at the Sparks - Griffin: | on West Long Lake Road and snaevet j | Road. Bloomfteid Township. Oaklan e | Chapel, - with burial in Whit | County, Michigan, until 8:00 p.m. East- Chapel Memorial Cemetery. She, died Tuesday. - Surviving besides her husband are two sons, William of Wauke- gan, Ill., and Edwin of Pontiac, two daughters, Mrs. Al Van Vleck of Cleveland, Ohio, and Mrs. Gale Palmer of Pontiac, also three grandchildren. Victor FE. Johnson SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Victor E. Johnson, 70, of 29385 Leslie Rd., will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday from Spencer J. Heeney Funeral Home, 23720 N. Farmington, with burial in Oak- land Hills Memorial Gardens, Walled Lake. He died Monday. Surviving are his widow, Mable; four sons, Amon, Halmer and Elmer of Detroit; six daughters, Mrs. Edith Haight, Mrs. Anget Smith, Mrs. Thelma Kehr, Mrs. Vinnie Lam- bertini, Mrs. Beulah Eaton, all of Southfield Township, . Hilma Branchetti of Detroit; 29 grand- : | children and 11. great - grand- children. Marion Lange NORTH BRANCH — Service ‘ i” z 1 i li | i ren Standard- ‘Time, May 31, 1955, at the office of the School Board located on Vaughan Road, Bloomfield Hills. Michigan, which time and place al! bids wil! Portes opened and read. Plans an pecifications may be ob- tained on and after May 17, the office of the Architect, Associates, Inc, West Long Lake Road, Bloomfield Hills. Michigan Each bidder shall be Toratshea two (2) sets of plans and specifications, for which $25.00 must be submitted as @ deposit. same to be refunded when plans and specifications are returned in good condition. Proposals must be submitted on forms furnished by the Architect and accom- panied by a certified check or bid bond in the amount of five per cent (5%) of the cost of the work in accordance with the plans and specifications. All proposals shall remain firm for « period of thirty (30) days after offictal opening of bids Successful bidder will be requested te furnish satisfactory Performance Bond and r and Material Bond in the amount of ‘bne hundred = cent rt of the. Contract, cost of which shall included in the Pr 16. The Board of Education reserves the nt to reject any and all bids, in ole or im part, and to waive informal. ities therein OF EDUCATION, Bloomfield School District No. 2? Practional, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. MERRILL BATES, May 10050 tals HEREBY GIVEN OF A pubic Dries ‘to be held 1 the Water- te Town: Zoning Board at the Wecnentnn Cheesman; tee isl sz cart of Bart Hight; dear sister of , Mra. Cc. Cc. Bil and John Taylor. Funeral service will be held Thursday, May 19th, at 2 p. m. from the Dudley H. Moore Funeral Home, Heights, with . Le Carol and Rebert Steward: r brother of Mrs. B. L. Zevely. Pu- Cemetery. Mr. Moyer my be seen the Brace-Smith al William and Edwin Puneral service — day, May 20, poh 2p Sparks-Oriffin Cha: berg the Sparks-Griffin alent BOX REPLIES At 10 am. today 13, 19, 1, 23, 24, 28, 30, 68, 74, 77, 78, 82, - 83, 89, 96, 115, 116, 118. rene and Flowers 3 ae ‘AN’S Funeral Directors 4 DIGNIFIE. Cirkoy Panerai? Home ne PE 1889 ~~ SPARKS-GRIFFIN aaa Thoughtful Service FE_ 2-584] Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service. Plane or Motos FE 28773 Donelson-Johns B ECT AND SAVE Pontiac_ Gran Com: Robert J & Geo £ Sionnaker Are. rE BARBER WANTED TO MANAGE shop. 1 month, job if esa Good job. 2577 Dixie Hwy. Pontiac. ASSISTANT MANAGER WA con a7 acumen tom furnished. More info Ap iy Mr. Baker Singer Sewing achine Co 177 W. Bir- _mingham. a AMBITIOUS a man for © car. __merce_ Rd. poate and plus Apply 127 am. 2 to 4pm. B. F. _tich Co 111 N. Perry. i pee aa Ek Goo 2423. Telegraph, Part tim n Bob a Myrtle’ Cafe. e. 334 East Bivd. ba BULLDOZER OPERA- tor. Must be experi- enced. Report to Norman Kohlhepp, 99C Sunset Rd., Lake Orion. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1955 ieee ee eee Gg ae Ghee ea CARNIVAL $500 DOWN | OXBOW AREA : . om this 2 Balance $65 per mo. on, this, 2 Balance Livin Se ee teapoome, Kiteb- =a 3 pe. bath. Full basement. . CEDAR ISLAND vee masonry room. With large ving (oom. te cherehes and EMBREE & GREGG — EM 3-4383 WILL SACRIFICE ——* py cong oe 4 This is a [mg at eUis808. Term: terms, Pe cs roo “Masx30, ‘Wand m Parte keen bear. fror id red bere. | FB 1704 Two ‘acer we im ltving | 3 ROOM a aaa G1. RESALE. room. one in dining sum | 610,300 FE 6-441 room 7 ae ie ] i fee eek) Templeton fel Gen et bs. ' a . Pine tree + % A, bigh. Lilae mo rrenckie nedee forming GI Ss , sarge “i ~! screened front $500 DC WN Sar ft eine pany ey Pepe ies: Fischea 1 & ffi Eitchen. ta Two car Ha: =e floors rouchout, 1 e Of) bw vear old with hot we.cr heat Garden pot. $300 DOWN house Near Gol Coareg Lane petvinges | Rarfscct™ ncn" eek. Paks 800. For further ee floors Ot h cal) OR 3-1676 after 6 p. mm. $60 DOWN OLD LAKE FRONT HOME! ? bedrooms. Ext moss living —_——_ ‘and re Foom Hardwood floors. Piastered verge, Jet, beat, cgrement oli | ,walls. Tiled beth. heat $10,000. Write P.O. Box 9.| K. |. Templeton, Realtor ° Orchard Lake a® OXBOW LA 4 ROOMS bath . basement wooded ot. tor Priced for quick sale! Call MAr- ms ket + 4 p.m. Wee NOTHING DOWN M4 car “shane ce yours = cr DAVIS ie NOTHING ELSE Ly PAY! CIVILIANS 61,150 Two bedrm. brick duplex homes, full Basement, gas or of) heat, Approx. §75 month includes thing. Model open datly 10-7 p.m. every- On East Perry and Mt. Clemens,” Anchor Real Estate. _ vetween late Sable DR, EM 3-408 Seminole Hills An attractive 4 bedr plus sleeping porch. home new ultra dining “iy ornen ry ness or professional man. by ent : $1,000 Down 9 bedroom einder block bungalow. im 1064. off Auburn Ave., ‘ and bus. total New FHA Homes MODEL OPEN 3 bedroom with larae living room ane picture window large kitchen with — utility room uto hot water, oil $1,300 Call at our office to see @ SCHRAM FE $-5091 or FE 5-9471 §-2864 LIVE AND PLAY AT LAKEWOOD VILLAGE miles Brae West of “4 oon miles from Will build 3 house with proposed eckerae Hwy exten- esiee ants Grou percent may 00 Ke etde wecsel weir: A i build 3 bedroom « wil front home “as low as 92.490 om _mv lot. OR 3-3871. tetal price. per cent down payment. "s most desirable DYER lake development - es class rent tone wen ove | Seine Seat pag e. 4 eo: ‘yours See model homes and iet and utility. with 30 2 § screened | US use the = = gg chee porch A real bu 68600. Eas > acs Al * “COME AND SEE” DYER You'll are that you should live he best, oy Borie, Lane LAKEWOOD VILLAGE ree Do! eter on EMpire or This « piel This year around. | com- petra Since ot RBaweed 22000 mat ese) C. OChuett Genr babes beat & e C ue Shop. Retired couple, moving to SOON OH 1400 Wighland R4._(04-80) Florida Priced of s1asea wma!” “COUNTRY HOME New DYER Qurerd ith roe tan “5 * —— femme gle § og = basement. a w Lake, —§ room Terms. attic. One— REAL ESTA’ Faience ate: em See EL Tin TE iM, 6 rented to veer tennants comm oh | terrace in Rosshire bree 2 wtih, 2008 ou eo for) Ct. Carpeting in living room. din fess fer arcer dows seyment.| = recm sad steire Bie See these tang — anows bw ae | Si, Temes & Teertive OF meen home. Pul vesemnenh, DYER Lapwc tet foxzi0,_ $11.100. Walled room cottage. - 8S MODERN 3 un Gene cme awe terms.|” ee be ER EAST sUBUR DY 5 ag ogg el and ‘4. 3 ——— waterfront year reh, basement oi] convertion home at Case Leake Com . Including 9 boats, Reh, oriced eh only 07.668 with end of road ’ Sie w =e walls diy Vanden = 4 lot 3700. on very easy terms Manv others Dive we @ call- JOHN J. DYER 008s RCE 0AD 24TT ROOM, STRICTLY MODERN 3 bedroom home With stoker. Lot Plenty of shade. Next to ‘tiom ent, 8 “with eg eroane eq full price $8.000. OAkland 6-2413. Eve. Leonard. For Colored Families larg, gis ho CLARK. REAL sorave . $45 caver HORSE +3303 re sorte Starting This Week Bedroom Bungalow 3 New, 3 "BUD" Nicholie estate ——— ° cs eRe +1901 of FE 31372 ROCHESTER ROAD | rt basement, tert oniy 86, serege. RIDGEWAY 78 Baldwin PE ¢€203 Co-operative Real Estate Exchange AUBURN HEIGHTS. «4 ROOMS, modern basement. Half acre. ._ FE 3-0679. eae 3 vedroom aa Liv. en + Hot alr fur Automatic hot water. 1 car B t peer eS ateman wntown. Price 68,000 8, seautitul 9 pedroom wits uate | Sylvan Village ished second floor. Oak floors, Seldom is such ® purchas- Eeat'*tae faeation paved waréet | iSha°marehs mugine s s l- Near ine, Priced te sel) on 3 bed: brick terms. information call Mrs. home w' mal the extras for Spears. FE ¢ own er is anxious for # quick RUSSELL NOTT has ced the 170 W. Pike FE 43008 pee ed sccordin Die hd For Colored : Families : “This is the best value ever Ranch Style in @ newer all white 3 bed With Dreeseway end at bath down and tached garage. ig attrac- i bed room up. Kool tively heme is vent a ., storms and in new es ae screens, ies front ew m ful . TV set and _ Cooper r plumbing, Kenmore washer. Only Ls storma oh 1,400 down ovlus Mte. screens. gill a bow costs on Ph. M 215 with ba | jeges on Howard, PE 2-413. Loon Lak see it at dOHN NZLER, REALTOR oniy sil.ers. 470 W. HURON Cate and Cozy ke. oe AMILY Five Ps room bungalow alow built ta Four beautiful apartments with dao tae new ref rs, oak os heat, 2 floors, plastered Ss, separate e. fenced rear front and fear entrances. v ard alt @ real value basement red hot wa-| 8.680, vet, $23,500 gas te tai lot and sa ah o Tocation. Saved at by Dick Turner uf tm a had Gap. 1966 by NEA Services, ine, — of a tip!" “I certainly hope you're not expecting much in the way Owner of this day Lake with 190 For Sale Houses 43 Leaving State bedroom fine ranch style bungalow, is leavin must sell at ence ter frontage, fireplace. carpeted ving room, steam heat, and 1's ear garage. ‘ot is ite land. F, C. Wood Co. lf no answer ativ: Estate Ex LOOK Cottage Tizte Lake. A bar- gain ot Terms. HILTZ FE 5-6181 REALTOR OPEN 90 CARL W. BIRD, zh? ven os REAL xUy oi 208 FR. 43608 See ioe BT EE ty Lake Estates on Winding Drive Otter-Sylvan Lakes $ Gestrabie, high and éry . sites ‘er See ee’ peatooe . Kere's from Realtor RM, home. be Bes ‘ onions oon with electric dishwasher. two | al 3rd let ow and small 1% cat basement, off si iting ie and Fishing MORE SPACE ‘a. Tae a8 see Le aah a! 6. FOR LESS MONEY It's a well known fact thet houses 46 eee mn ee BEAUTIFUL PLORIDA Lors aT Haines City. MY 33733. BUILDING SITES 2 lots, Chetolan shores, jake” priv., on Elisabeth and Cass Lakes. high and dry, total feet 60108, SS _— Pacreg with $300 down, AUBURN HTS nice ~ “3 72x34 footing and 2 of agar _ also well es reed us at door, tists te priced wt, ite 100 with $634 down, ie nenee TWP. = South — 6 Jots, acre, $1,500 cash. oer, valing yoouis0. feet, goed najghdorbood, $1 Oe ¢ WATERFORD TWP. 2 lots 1002 133 f 9650 cash. CLARE REAL ESTATE 1363 W. Huron 8 Open Evenings oa RO. 147 BELMONT 8T. Bade 2 sidew ane 10 LOTS IN AUBURN HEIONTS = 2961 Churchill. Aw e : HILL 240 ft. on pavement. 600 ft. —. % mi. terms. P ‘REA $143 Cass-Elizabeth Lake Rd FE $194, FE . Open 9 to 7. 0 FEET ON b habla JUsT West of city Cash or . FE 2 ADJOINING 86 FT. LAKE front lots at beautiful Scott Lake. ach. F +1906. For Sale Farms © 4 (i ACRES, § ROOMS. 3 . ‘ rooms. Near M15. Suchy “Ke % ACRES ON DIXIE Hwy. < tion, resthorent, ¢ TOO! ttt room —~_ = tor 1 or Drive-In i & ke and farm Ww. _Dinnan & Soa 66 W. Huros 1 — ON DUCK LAKE RD. a E bgt — a — own ; on the ner of Sedinoree and Duck re Rd nday 1-6, TOwnsend 8-5010, | PARMA AND ACREAGE Call Rutledge. OR 3-1111, FE 40003. 132 ACRES ® room modern bome in — per acre, “RIDGEWAY 975 Bakiwir FE ¢6203 Co-operative Real Estate Exchange Oxford Area 167 acres of a2 main nighvay in oe developing’ area. Larse — and mise other bidgs. yoy eee gain. John K. Irwin ZALTOR 8 1925 wi% reet | Phone FE 5-0447 _ Eve. FE 2-1804 | ACRES HOME, 2 cael lakes. § acres of cherries Large barn. ae. Tractor tools ‘| aved road site for motel or cabins 4 ine 4 mi. sorth of Glen Arbor $5000 down PAUL M 832_W_ Huron JONES REAL pESTATE | 43505 @ ACRE i aN oan TH or 2 acres of land within 15 miles of . MAple $-4101, For Rent Farm Prop, 48A RENT OR — 7% ACRE muc! farm A great ootato pro- ducer Cash or on porte with or without farm tools O. E Boice. 5035 Cooley Lk Rd or ohone Sale Business Property 49 49 DRAYTON PLAINS O Diste H'way, Well. septic wenk anf? drv wells y ta. Also foundation . floor for 346260 drilding with ov. parking FOR SALE OR LEASE —- NEW store building with living quar- ters rear, On e. Third iz. off US 10 at 5830 Andersonville Rd. Waterford, Mich. OR }-7941. INFANTS’. CHILDRENS AND ladies’ ready to wear store. Vex Thumd area. APRANT. a a wom One. RESTA driv Rent-Lease Bus s Prop 49A SouEeCIAL, BUILDING 15.000 = eyes on auto sales Big om arene Parkin lot. Incutre 29% _Auburn Ave FE 40534 STORE CoR: AAD CASS L. ANY BUS : _oe BUILDING _ and ‘aree y ne —, Dgow of business. Me~ be divided inte tw- smaille, stores. ‘Near Tele- and Orchard Lake Acreage for Subdividing 235 acres om M-24 bet: Pon- and Lake Orton with over Some operated cs © Feat with 3 homes and many out butidings, at $700 an acre. : -|Roy Annett Inc. nee 33. Muron eral 3-7193 Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 0 ACRES ON ERCE RD.| fort Duck @ Road, large house. ave Be eects Gres bers. ‘other | bidgs. Nice — eee | Iter ee farmer Sivin “Sing cra. sary terns , ce consider trade es down pay- West Side ment, Owner Woodw: TO Brick store building - 3,400 85010 = ft. main on LOTS AVAILABLE. LOW DOWN unit ‘Basement Fd geese payments. v shed. oction FE soe), FE 63478 t month — 2 to 6 year Bu) @ LoTs preferred. 12 lots @. Sewer and water in. * « In Pontise. Terms. Phone Detroti| Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor WO 29700. 32 W.. Lawrence St. Evenings ND SUITABLE SUBD’ FE $6161 or vision. Lote gr al immediate butld- ing matte SYLVAN we sees soni A WR: TA ing 1 acre of ground. Pardy ful REAL Y of late model wrecked cars. Being Pease Baggot) day. Lagayroore rr este oe: ote terms e FE 6-1431. Open Baty ® w @ 0 Baldwin. BAT. _ § TOS BEAUTY hime pete aa —— eround Ful sqeipoed MA wish ee Ortonvill MA one FOR SALE ESTABLISHED 7¥ oe sore secneee Soe re servic: ee ORS oe be imately 3500 Pon «+ 2 homes and many ~- build: Te —— GROCERY _ STORE, aND 4 LAKEFRONT LOTS end 4 vagy Ug Ol tt. ESS ee ee. i for $6,500 and one REALTOR @ W. Huron Bt. L.LOTS s0x100, #180 EACH lots facing W Bivé, rE say. : 2 LOTS LOCATED IN ROCHES- ter. Call FF 93704 or OA 68-3763. RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL 402100 — Elis. LE. Ra. Ft on win Ave. i Ft. on A Ave. HILTZ FE 5-6181 OPEN 9 SYLVAN CITY Near City, five lots, to be group, Two cor- rodlig - Fi Good “Tocatton. 98.800 for ail. ; Edw. M. Stout, Realtor TT, Gaginew, ot, EX TE baie WARD E. PARTRIDGE FE 2-8316 one L, H. BROWN, Rene SUPERETTE Now grossing over $80,000 and serving no meat. Excellent beer WHILE THEY LAST. A. JOHNSON, Realtor 1704 S. fk Rd. YOUR LIFE’S MADE | EASIER through Classi- Business Opportunities 51 | Partridge 18 THE “BIRD" 8EE TODAY’S snes AAA Motel on one of Michigan's — highways. —— tur. $32,006 dn. Drive-inn restaurant located west of Pontiac im the expanding lake region. $6,400 full orice. Northern year ‘round fiquor bar in the Weet Branch erea Own- er’s ept. Real estate & al! $26,- $00 terms on Meat market & 3 @t just $11.000 dn plus stock. \ Busy restaurant — feign Lake Michigan north from Chicago. ouaars “apt 831.000 on terms. CALL N THESE on MANY P OInER CHOICE BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES THROUGHOUT MICHIGAN WARD E. PARTRIDGE. @ W. Huron Open Eve. FE 27-8316 GILES Grocery Store Can be bought @t 8 real bergain if sold at once, Owner erne ct riving business the city, call our Giles Realty Co. 22 W. Huron FE 54-6178 open @ till © LOOMIS CORNERS - DIXIE AT M-87 attractive gest remtal unit), heated work- 20230 with a in doors office and displ building on the corner. 4 is @ perfect setup, for bus ness, engineert og or pro- fess: service, $12, handle for further informa- tion call, PAUL A. KERN, Realice 31 Oakland Ave rE 24000 “Real Estate Since i919" FOR SALE FARM MILK ROUTE. ‘2. Ss HAVE A STORE BUILDING WANT ind of b partner. Any &: usiness. Good location Excellent Cabin Resort S| Fang Hunting, Skiing}. When you invest in a cabin re- sort, y = have « ~~ give you can do busine the around We have just vuch = Attractive ranch type nee? modern light house- each, . trout lake ——. Located tn skiin area near ylord. Where demast for rooms exceeds supply. O. T. STATE-WIDE Real Estate Service of Pontiac John A. Landmesser, Broker _FE ! E +i 5-0078 SECOND HAND STORE 1 10 YEAR se on doctors orders. gat ee Pi OMBING SUPPLIES. OW leaving city, Must sell business and stock, 402 Rochester Rd near is dile, WAXING ERVICE. REGULAR sar 3¢, gToss income, FE fo BUY. TO SELL — MEALTOR Partridge ts “THE BIRD” to see Sale Land Contracts z 52 6 PER CENT LA NTRACT. West oe home. Will discount. 12 veers, Will cent. EM 3-4148. Money to Loan 83 (State Licensed Lenders) LOANS $25 TO $500 BAXTER & 4 W. Lawrence St. FE ¢1538 CASH For You Today Up to $500 During {llsess, layoffs short work week, er oo ah Sevens on on consid NO PAYMENTS WHILE OUT OF WORK Sag Buckner FINANCE CO. ‘Three convenient joc PONTIAC: Huren at 7 DRAYTON PLAINS: 4613 Dixie : me WALLED : 20 Barnston (Next to Bank) MERCMAN CORNER TABLE, swap for 2 = tables or $25 cash, FE | HOUSEHOLD FINANCE te a MONEY WAITING - You May Borrow || DRUM SET TRADE FOR OLD) mR |e. Ww. OR $25 to $500) Seas Feee a Money to Lean 53 wn ~LSate Kieran Len Perel. SHOPPING FOR A LOAN? onl —_——— to — — tonwide: ‘oa Single visit loan, ‘st. Phone, write or come LOANS $25 TO $500 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 7 W. Lawrence FE 23-9249: Pontiac TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER, MICH. UTOS L ‘OCK HOU! LD Rochester OL 6-071) 1-9781 $28 to $500 ; 28 to 9600 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 3% E. LAWRENCE FE +1131 FRIENDLY SERVICE NEED $900 or. less WITH QUICK SERVICE? Auto Pig “cease. ogg Oot yg notin ry od gon your first visit so as 7 or = co S38 on = 'e sc oe and payment plan end dries courteous se peser you. Leslie Fleisher. ager. Berkeley Vogs. President. Ph. FE 5-8121 Home &«& Auto Loan Company wi Comm. Nat ~ Hours: @ to: &. a 5 1 GET CASH QUICKLY Up to $500 1946 to 1953 cars aig your -_ a deals =—— + minut also made on farnmare. | GARLAND LOAN CO. PE 2-9206 202 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG ~ WHEN YOU NEED ~ $25-$500 You can get ft quickly on your signature, car or furniture. 7s endorsers. Payments to suit ood We will be elad | to new your money prob: TE FINANCE CO. FE 4-1574 _103_ Pontiac State Bank Bidg._ Mortgage Loans 54 LOW INTEREST Untim ited — for owe fam dwellings; — Rerrewer H. G. PETERSON 1310 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. Phone FE 54-6406 or FE 2 Swaps car or anything of value. FE 5-4574 ~ | EXCELLENT 74 OR 16 HORSE | , outboard or Lae aie Surnshell ofe’s. feie- SELL OR TRADE 3 bedroom bungalow all interior studding, construction throughout. Lk. | “Ask for L. H. BROWN, Mr. Brown. Huren FE 2-4810 Member Co-op Real Estate Exch. SOR SALP OR TRADE ¢, CHEV. rolet 679 WESTING ble window . FE 5-2766. ios] 71 FOOT $495 of trade for furniture. _ §-3888 . MERCMAN CORNER swap for 2 end tables cash. FE_ 46352. T MEDIUM SIZE FURNACE lower stokrr all rAP OR SELL * E sé - ed lor and motor seaP OR GELL 20 FT more hardwood flooring. 12-30 eal oll drums. 1-6466. sw OR SELL 12 in Rese! gt Ce i Wecleund ant Mi. Pe set 2. Exe gies er HP. OUTBOARD Mo- small coment mizer. FE Realtor |F -| SELVINATOR REFRIGERA ABOUT ANYTHING YOU W. N POUND AT L @ 8. und bas ak oy door 4 oh white metal, $12.08; pod I oraiers, om up, “— Ls gee elec. MH of up: jon 68 Up: new ge Se mg ly CP ig bedroom suit suites Ce up: ving ing room — hen $19.50 ep “vse. OOR Sasy paywent ¢ Sade buy Cate ar cone 3 acres of APT. SIZE ELECTRIC STOVE. Like new. FE 41845 before 5. ALMOST NEW vic uP. _ right freezer. MY 3-5751. TIC WASHER. KEN- ie Saver Good condition. a ELECTRIC RE- * trigeretor. FE 27-0626 - a ‘ea G. E. AND BRAND NEW SCHWAB STOKER, complete, §75. eS ere eg Lapeer R * Out a oak ig f+) - land 8-380 3 Fe, VRS bya SUITE, FE BOTTLE GAS | New low — —— installa- tion onl ya” hl? By, Eres BEAUTIFUL “BLEACHED MA MAH Modes Seta €asH POR on OE, PORNITURE or tools. CLEARANCE: SALE cl cent discount. New en until 8 Weds., eae FURNITURE Free Parking FE 5-3433 1230 Baldwin Next to _Adier's Mkt is CU. FT KELVINATOR DEEP freeze 1'5 vr old. Just like Tord 9 W. Dranner Rd. Ox- ord, CABINET SINK AND BABY scale. Good condition. 179 Nel- son Jt CHAMBERS GAS | RANGE, REGU- lear or Philgas. Eacellent condi- one MA 66. ASH FOR ALL stg Sh OF USED ig or dishes. 56-3853 CHINA CABINET era ROUND glass. 700 N. Perry, Combination — Easy elec- tric clothes dryer & de- luxe Easy Spindrier washer. Dryer has never been used. FE 8-1215 be- fore 9 p.m. DEMONSTATOR DOR MEYER double basket French fryer, i TW R. B. Munro Electric. 1060 Huron. DAVENPORT. | $35; 2 CHAIRS 420; inte $25: drop leaf table : Poco and il ehairs, $20. 1-30n49 mirror, $12: 1 poker table $20; upright piano, DNING TABLE. 4 STURDY chairs. FE 17-0521, EASY 6F spin DRYER. A-1 CONDI- aT in DRYER WASHINO machin oestry sweeper and eiris bikes $10.00 each. USED Loe papi Ps with pig tail a Only