‘
THE PONTIAC PRESEN OVER PAS kKkkkk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959—52 PAGES iss
U
Wants Berlin Si House Dems
Pass Beefed-Up
Building Aid Bill: Lusty Victory Defies °
Ike’s Economy Plea , The Weather
0.6. Weather Baresa Forecast
Cloudy, cooler tonight.
Showers likely tomorrow.
‘ Page 2)
117th YEAR
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
ASSOCIATED PRESS »
‘
Wins Time to Appeal
+ 7
Cool Weekend
Due Along With
More Showers
Considerably cooler tempera-
‘tures and more rain is forecast
for’ the weekend in ‘the Pontiac
a. The low tonight will dip to
52 » eevee
A few showers are. likely Satur-
ay with the high near 65. Today's
and GOP Efforts |12-18 mile an hour northwest winds
will become north at 10-15 miles
WASHINGTON \?) — A tonight.
| walk-away victory by House, Yemperatures Sunday through
‘Democrats in their battle; Wednesday will average about five
for large-scale federal hous- fs deeleesnel palgrinng Peecther
‘ing aids enhanced _pros-, Precipitation will total one-half
pects today for other Demo- inch to one inch with showers Sun-
cratic programs. day -or thunderstorms an and
By a lusty 261-160 vote, Wednesday,
In downtown Pontiac the sank
‘Thursday, the House passed ‘recording preceding 8 a.m. was
a Democratic-backed $2,-\© S°#rees: The reading at 1 p.m. West Germany .
Pushes Issue
at Geneva Talks Would. Bind Russia to
Let Alliéd Troops ,
in City, Get Supplies
GENEVA (P—West Ger-
many pressed the Big Three
Western powers today to
get a permanent hands-off-
Berlin pledge from Russia
before agreeing to a sum-
mit conference.
Foreign Minister Henrich
_von Brentano told a news
conference he believes the
United States, Britain and
France must obtain Soviet
“confirmation of the exist-
ing rights of the West in
Berlin as a precondition for
a summit meeting.”
If that commitment could be
secured informally from Foreign.
|Minister Andrei A. Gromyko here,
jhe said, it could-be made the basis
‘AP Wirephote ; ; was 60.
LEASE ON LIFE — Scheduled to die this morning in the elec- | 100,000,000 housing bill aft- tric chair, convicted killer Charles Starkweather gained a two-
’ week lease on life when he received a stay of execution for a jer upsetting every Republi- f R . d t
ee, seer ages Ka aed yee ayes ee Mae oe cent trications size Ofmer ¢SI en | |can effort to whittle it down
and admitted by the killer. Drow
re at ot ones are DEOWNS A lake
- Killer of 11, Doomed Today, #222 sim sisng At Gj T W k p teed i = vend Goo i owe Mrs. Lawrence Declared ane
side wo-Week Reprieve Won't Stand Trial for Slaying COLN, Neb. (‘#—Charles Starkweather, 20, slayer
AP Wirephete
myko's villa at Geneva. After two weeks of for-
mal sessions, the conferance is now expected to
get down to hard bargaining. AFTER NUCLEAR TALK — U. S. Secretary
| of State Christian Herter, Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko and Britain's Foreign Secretary
Selwyn Lloyd (l-r) chat on the porch of Gro- j
udget.
more immediate result was
te " penal new steam behind
proposals for a billion dollars
ef federal aid for local public | Forty-nine-year-old Mrs. Marian)
works projects, and a qu@rter Pryomski, formerly of Waterford,
billion dollars of government Township, was drowned and her
loans and grants to assist de- Sister reported missing after a 22-
of 11, won’g two-week stay of execution today a little areas. {foot cabin cruiser sank’ last night| Mrs. Sue Lawrence today was|to stay in jail. You told me T could) dence Township, to death April Atter nearly two weeks of formal more than an hour before he was to go to the electric in Burt Lake. about 15 miles south. Judged criminally insane and un- stay there always, and now you! 18. y ini
House passage of the housing f Chebo jable to stand trial in the April ,won't let me.’ ‘sessions, the Big Four
| chair. bill now sends it to conference|"“t _— | Besides agreeing that Mrs. Law- 'are now moving into a new phase Cheboygan County sheriff's dep-| Slaying of the woman who married! $3 PSYCHIATRISTS AGREE
uties and conservation officers still/her former boy friend.
searching early this morning| x *
Mrs. Helen Cameron, of Alan-| jrence was insane at the time -of|in which they expect romain dhedy
their examination, Dr. Tauber and|down to hard-boiled bargaining in
Dr. Behan testified the. woman secret over the Berlin and summit
probably was insane at the time issues.
iof the killing, too; Chief U.S. Dist. Judge Richard Robinson of Omaha with the Senate to comprymise dif-
stayed the execution until June 4. He said that would ferences. The Senate earlier this!
session voted a $2, 690,000,000 pro- for *give Starkweather time to gram. A commission of three psychia-
trists unanimously agreed on Mrs.
Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams|| awrence’s mental condition.
‘ordered the distraught, 32-year-old | * |
| json. * * *
a t
ee ae nee aes nae Republicans were counting on a, Thomas MeDonaid, of Detroit, [Berkley woman committed to| They were Dr. Ivan LaCore | ~*~ * (he Herter, and British Foreign
oman Ki vm a ™ igen sory a . Pass prope wie, pow fat ghee. ro ms: a ae - ¢ " ' ‘ =p Tags xn panama de Murville af France and f wa- ; . . " ‘ auto a } to Pp t | N of Thurs- treit. The three had examined 28 months ago and came to the
for day's major votes gave the Demo-| ter came rushing in after 9 flush Sobbing and near collapse, rN giwveatarr was scheduled
housing.
| biveet-sgerwilpl for ‘ene of crats the two-thirds majority they, trap im the lavatery tailed te | | tse, Caseounee teaiteee-Oh Mrs. Lawrence in Oakland Coun- conclusion -then that her mental :
| 10 Death i in Ca the slayings during murder|would need to override 8 veto. clone. | out sf the- courtrens eh and Bae -whahs Or te being condition bit Wen ettected ty bead Wess He On the Ménu?
rampage months ago. The) husband and « matron from Oak- | war pee | NEW YORK @ — The New Presidential displeasure ap- | He ordered the women to cling to and a ination ha of shooting
~_ ee ee pears certain to be centered on (2 life jacket, police said, but Mrs.| land County Jail. | sees. Wyvonn Crenshaw, 23, at | Me testified to that affect when | York Dally News put this head: Seeriia Alert Others sun a e killings suthority fer continuing govera. Pryomski panicked and disap.) “1 won't go,” she eried, “I want) 0) Anon terse Lr... indepen: Mrs. Lawrenee later collected a | line téday on its Geneva com
in Detroit, but Try to Official witnesses and news: iment-subsidized low-rent public peared beneath the water. McDon- -_—_——— -| $17,000 ‘Cireult Court judgement | ference story: - £ , men were already gathering in | ,ald said she could not swim. | stemming frem the accident, | “Herter roasts Gromy, has
Save Life Fails
DETROIT (AP)—A 24-
yea ‘who was
stabbed to déath on a mid-
town street last night was
identified today as Mrs,
Patricia Cioffri, a record
company clerk.
DETROIT «— An unidentified
young woman was stabbed to
death, apparently in a car in a
midtown residential street last
night.
* * *
Police were summoned by neigh-' At the Women’s State Reforma-; Officer Knows the Law
bors who heard her screams as
she staggered 75 feet from a curb! Starkweather’s murder tour: com-/
panion, is serving a life sentence. |
Doctors at’ Receiving Hospital|Supt. Hattie Bowley said the girl] charged with overtime parking,
opened her chest and massagedjhad not been told of the stay of| told the court: before collapsing on a lawn.
her heart in a vain attempt to
keep her alive.
The woman, about 25 years old |
and dark-haired, was wearing
striped slacks and a turtle-neck
sweatshirt marked “made in Can-
ada.”’
* * *
A trail of blood led from a curb
in the Second boulevard and Tay-
lor district. Police said the woman
either was stabbed and thrown
from a car or stabbed as she lef
the car.
* * *
The fatal wound was a deep
gssh in her left chest.
Residents attracted by. her
screams said they saw a man
skulking between trees and later
a car drive away with its head-
lights out.
2 Top U.S. Delegates
Go to Bows for Herter
GENEVA (AP)—Two top’ mem-
bers of the U.S. delegation to the
foreign ministers conference
showed up today at a staff meet-
ing in bow ties.
* * *
* Secretary of State Christian A.
Herter, who ‘wears bows habitual-
ly, raised his eyebrows at Defense
Secretary Neil H: McElroy and
Livingston T Merchant, assistant) print
secretary of state for European
affairs.
*—~ 9%, Sak. 9
Thé pair-said they adopted Her-
ter’s favorite haberdashery to give
him moral support.
‘Water Drives to Drink
CRICKLADE, England «UPI
. FE Pike com- warden, John Greenholtz, noti- President Eisenhower in his Jan- toward the center of the lake, the
man said, apparently thinking she uary message Yo Congress asked Mrs. Cameron turned and swam
fied them the execution had t for an end to public housing. But ‘was beaded for shese.
| stayed.
Protestant Chaplain
Klein had relayed the word of a
possible stay to Starkweather
Half an hoor later Starkweather
learned the repfieve actually had
been ——
*
He was nadia
Greenholtz
to go.’ *
shaky.’ }
said |
Before the execution was called
off, Starkweather had spent a}
jnervous night drinking a good bit!
of coffee, the warden said. Robert |
“He was all prepared | the Senate voted to subsidize)
5.000 new units, the Housé 140,000
new units over four years
rate of 25,000 a year
. * * we
The House ignored cries of *
loping socialism,"’
land spending sprees in approving
the bill without major change.
A coalition of Republicans and!
Southern Democratic el
|was outnumbered by the disci-|
plined| Democratic majority on! }
every key vote. j
tory in York, where Caril Fugate. |
execution, and- probably won't |
jlearn of it from reformatory offi-|
icials.
* * *
What Caril has learned of the)
case in the past has come from}
her atforneys, Mrs. Bowley said.!
The lith hour effort to save
Starkweather from death: was
conducted by his father, Guy.
The elder Starkweather
phoned Judge Archibald K. Gard-
ner of the U.S. 8th Circuit Court
of Appeals in Huron, S.D.
Judge Gardner referred Stark-
_{Continued -on Page 2, Col. nv +
first | IPSWICH, England (UPI) —
Policeman Roy Rushmore,
“I knew that 20
minutes is the parking limit in
the area except with special per-
mission from a uniformed po-
liceman. I was in uniform, so I
gave myself permission.”
» He won.
» >
Inductee ‘Booted’ Out
PEMBERTON, England (UPI)
— Harry Pascall, 20, was in-
ducted into the army three weeks
ago. He was discharged yester-
day because, he said, “army
boots, or any kind of boots, hurt
my feet."
Mrs. Pryomski had been living,
h with her sister in Alanson for the
at the ast eight months while separated
from her husband, Walter Pryom-
‘\ski~owner of Walt's Boat Livery,|
gal- 8226 Highland Rd. They had been pie.
budget busting married 10 months before the sep-| ideas.
aration.
Pryomski said a divorce was)
|pending. They had no children.
News Flashes RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (PP
—Angry mobs, enraged by a
sudden ferry beat strike that |
| stranded thousands of commut. |
ers, rioted for more than three
hours today in the city of Niteroi
across the bay from Rio. Offi-
cials at the presidential palace
said Brazilian Marines fired
inte the crowd, killing one per-
son and wounding 30 to 50 more.
LANSING (UPI) — A rate in-
crease totaling $6,788,485 was
granted to the Consumers Pow-
er Co. today. It will affect about
828,000 electric customers.
WASHINGTON @®—The State
Department today granted W.
Averell Harriman permission to
visit Red China as a newsman—
if the Communist regime will Spring Brings
Strange Doings
by Animals, Too Seize Dope, Students
Near MSU Campus: ousy.
}
NEW YORK (AP)—Spring does|o+ Marijuana was seized in this|Tiage in January.
'things to animals as well as peo-
They get crazy mixed-up
* * *
Witness a few happenings this)
lweek:
In Detroit a mother rabbit built
ja nest for her five babies smack’
lon top of a target mound at the/
city police firing range. A ‘‘cease-
\fire’’ was called pending removal,
, tance.
| starlings set up quernca ap Aer in
| a mail box. The residents tried
| three times to evict the birds and
finally gave up. It’s now & case
of early birds and late mail.
At Hurman, Iowa, a hen took}
a look at four kittens and decided}
ito evict the mother cat and take}
over the maternal chores. It did
too. The rightful mama has been
getting no closer than peeking dis-|
tance. * * *
- At the .Bronx Zoo only mother-)
|hood calmed down an agitated,
jlady robin with a multiple-dwell-)
ing complex, The bird built nine,
nests before deciding -on which |
one to sit and hatch. At Cranston, R.1., a pair of | campus town this morning and two}
|Michigan State University students; in_a formal statement after the |
jwere charged with ittegat-_posses-! sheoting—that—_Crenshaw—and_his
‘sion of narcotics.
* * *
se cooperated in the investiga-
ition leading up to the early morn-
jing raid.
/ M. Harper, 20, of McHenry Iil,.
|Thomas H. | wife had been blackmailing her
with threats that might lead to
State, Lansing and East Lansing) B¢? less ef custedy of her son, Wayne Lawrence Jr., 9. A part-time beauty operator and/
the mother of one son, Mrs. Law-|—
irence was charged with commit-|Von Brentano decided today
jting the murder in a fit of jeal-/bargaining will have to go on
She had dated the victim's hus- and dinner tables.
EAST LANSING t®—Ten pounds band, Donald, 26, before his mar-|
| small secret gatherings over
split-level conference partly in
gee pt
jtions later today is slated to bring
She said the fatal shot was fired! ‘another spate of speeches on de-
|while, she and Mrs. Crensha w/tails of the ‘contradictory Western
Arrested were William C. | struggled over possesson of a .25/and Soviet proposals for Germany.
‘of the brood from pot-shot dis-| Reith, 23, of Chicage and John | ealiber pistol. Mrs, Lawrence was
| wounded in the leg, not seriously, |
| but was held in St. Joseph Mercy
State Police Detective Captain} Hospital in a state of nervous)
Grant said the pair|collapse, unable to speak to au-|
had been under observation for) | thorities for 48 i
some time. 4«
He ‘said they made one sale ot |
the rough marijuana to a source
|known to police.
Grant said the sale and the raid
took place off campus.
Goes In for Long Count
MANILA (UPI)—Movie actress
| Rosa Rosal, a participant in the
longest kiss ever passed by Phil-
ippine movie censors, was asked
what she thought about during
the 10-second buss. ‘‘Nothing,”
said Miss Rosal. “‘I kept count-
ing to eight as I had been told.”
Curriculum Accents Intellect, Skips Physical Education-
There will -be no. ROTC at
MSUO.
Students will be Gpouraced to
learn Russian.
be neither required nor offered.
Students will study the phenome-
non of the growing dominance of
the large corporation in America.
These were some of the
points announced today in a blue.
for a curriculum at the
Michigan State University Oak-
land. °
The curricula was: described 1s
the product of more than a year’s
study by some of America’s out-
standing educatiénal: ‘leaders, a
community citizens group, MSU
staff members and-a _group of
honor students.
First classes will open this fall/ness
on the 1,400-acre Meadow Brook
and jfarms estate near Pontiac do-
nated by Mr, and. Mrs, Alfred G.
is |Wilson. An enrollment of about
550 is expected .the first year.
The banning of reserve officer training and the dropping of|
TPhysical education courses were)
isharp breaks from present prac-|
itices at Michigan State.
Students at the mother univer-
‘compulsory ROTC.
* * *
Michigan State also has been
proud of its vast physical educ ca}
tion plant and big-time football)
teams,
A summary of the study de-
clared its purpose was to develop
a curriculam incorporating the
newest and most promising ideas
in American higher educetion.
“The purpose has not been one
of revolution, although there has
been a willingness to revolt if by
doing so there was a_ possibility
of “capturing a quality of fresh-
the report stated. :
ie intent was not fo be ex-
was a promise of Greater effec-
tiveness in the learning process,”
it VAD Wig e.* perimental, «but a ‘willingness to! ©
experiment if in the trial there)” Five major conclusions were!
|reaches
. Modern universities are en-
iurety too complex and specialized.
2. There is an excessive em-
Physical education courses will sity have been agitating against|phasis on vocational training 4s
\opposed to liberal education.
3. University faculties have ‘oo
often forgotten their purpose is not
necessarily to teach, but to help
— learn,
. This new university, if true
SAREE POR MO RRR OR, SR
In Today's Press
Pe ee rt ee ee |
Comme ek cc Nish ackctcsses 37
County N@Ws 20.5. 5.0050, 22
Editorials .........05,060.8 6
Farm & Garden ...,.... 24-36
High School. ............-- me
Markets ......... ate Hiviere “4
Oe ee ee a
fe OTE. 34 Agee csedecs +» 32-33
TV & Radio Programs ...:. 5
Wilson, Earl ...... egrsapraee Ob
Women’s Pages ...... covey SL te its commitment. of education
| for tomorrow's leadership, must |
concern itself with helping stu-
dents learn more about the world
community, with particular em-
phasis on non-Western cultures.
5. A careful and continuous re-
view of traditional course content!
and ‘arrangement is warranted. |
Specific points made for courses|
of study included:
* * *
Approximately 50 per cent of)
the curriculum will be devoted to
gardiess of the student’s profes-
sional interest.
LANGUAGE REQUIRED |
All students; except engineering
and science majors, will be re-
quired to develop. a thorough
knowledge and skill in at least
one. foreign language, with the
emphasis on Russian.
Emphasis will be on written
wrest for the development of clear
and effective writing.
Experimentation with such tech-
niques as closed-circuit. television ¥ liberal arts and liberal studies re- PI MSUO Cuts ROTC in: Blueprint of Courses tape recordings, film clips and)
gps ies will be encouraged.
Small discussion groups, pe
| consultation between student endl
teacher, and independent study will!
be advocated.
* All students will = required to
participate in a course on great
issues, dealing with such themes
as religion and man, peace and
war, and liberty and freedom.
A program jot on-the-job training
will begin as early as the sopho-
more year in the teacher training
am.
There will be a definite move
away from vocational ,training in
business administration.
The engineering training will be
geared for the space age.
yi ®t * *
Traditional fields of engineering
such as civil, automotive, chemical
and mechanical will be abandoned
fot.a fresh concept of engineering
science. /
one engineering degree, J
of engineering - science, 'Hunch Pays $7,980 - * *
On a sine test, Crenshaw
denied any blackmail plot and said
Mrs. Lawrence was making the
story up.
Estranged from her husband,
Mrs, Lawrence lived at 2652 Ox-
| ford Rd., Berkley. In answer te
her suit for diverce, Lawrence
charged his wife was keeping
company with other men and
demanded custedy of their son.
Today's sanity hearing was re-
quested by Mrs, Lawrence's legal
counsel. When arraigned on a
charge of murder April 23, Mrs.
Lawrence collapsed afd was um
able to leave a Sheriff's Depart-
ment patrol car and enter the the
courtroom of Independence Town-
ship — William . Stamp.
a: The a EPP sal place
while Mrs. Lawrence sat in the)
jcar, and later she had to be helped |
pack up the steps of Oakland!
Jail by two deputies,
+ Menjou Fumes at TV -
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) ~Actor
Adolph Menjou fumed at ‘the
complete stupidity of come
things in television” in a letter to
the Los Angeles Examiner’, Men-
jou said that when he appeared
on the George Gobel Show | he
was forced to remove the carna-
tion from his buttonhole, because
the program is sponsored sad Pet
Milk.
TORONTO (UPI) — Advertis-
ing: executive Cameron Allard |WANTS PACT SIGNED
The central point of the dead-
llock is that the Soviet Union wants
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 5)
Reward Offered
in Milk War Food Dealer Group Will
Pay $100 for Capture
of Window Smashers
\
A $100 reward for the arrest and
conviction of the person or persons
who, smashed windows in four Pon-
tiac and Waterford Township stores
yestendty was offered today by
Michigan Food Dealers Assn.
jw offices in Lansing.
| Four independent grocery stores ,
i bearing signs advertising milk for
3 to 37 cents a half-gallon, had’
full qua bottles of milk thrown
through
bach be .
~
’
«
ae a
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959
et ie LS . ‘
me : tS gt . ‘|. |The Day in Birmingham
acM. anus John Adams ee lees Cha i man 3 : : Back hairman: Reveals PI Two-Week Reprieve aint) Bey | Back in State Senate |‘ rman heveals Fians ° . . Ld
* eyatined From, Pegs One ° . uaxsinc «ven —a contrwer'fOr June Fine Arts Festival
so feng eg serves t NNTVENLS QALY (ire iver ay sn ita, Oi lated a . p fore the Senate : : . ‘
was routed from bed at 1:45 a.m. lodged @ month peg Mare Be La-| BIRMINGHAM — Lovers of the| The Birmingham Junior Cham-
Robinson called U.S. Dist. Judge c . “te ; fine arts ‘are looking: forward 10! ber of, on :
Robert Van Pelt in Lincoln. Van Committee. ‘The Birmingham. Arts 4 Commerce night named
Pelt was the judge who rejected) This month marks the 25th an-|John & Adams, Inc. ‘has contin Now rated 26th among the Amer}-) Once considered a predominantly} The bill, passed by the House June 8 4 ri Robert. Wilson president for the
the habeas corpus application. niversa of MacManus, John &|to grow in stature and service. At|/can advertising in dollat!automotive ‘agency, MacManus, 22, was amended and - wide througt tfevafie, tay year. Other officers are:
ez *« ft Adams, | Inc., national advertising|the present time the agency serves volume, MacManus, John & Adams! john & Adams has been successful out.of the Senate Labor Com- rh were A John Jim and
Judge Robinson observed that/#8ency. with headquarters in|58 clients through offices in New/|will bill in excess of $40,000,000 thejin diversifying its accounts to in- mittee by a 4-1' vote late yesterday, |the general chairman, Harvey. Bob Reason, all vice :
Starkweather had been without Bloomfield Hills. York, Toronto and Los Angeles in\current year. ; clude such items as food wraps, with Sen. Garland Lane (D-Flint) Kresge. - a 2 re Fred Dardin, treasurer; and John
help of an attorney in seeking the It was just over 25 years ago|addition to Bloomfield Hills. It stil) handles Pontiac and |gloves, shoes, adhesives, building objecting. The festival is beivg spunenssd Tuppenlatz, secretary. .
habeas corpus writ and that he that two executive members of a x & * Cadillac Motor Divisions of Gen. |products, beverages, publications,| The Senate amendments |}, The Bloomfield Art Assn. in co- Several members of the focal
contends his constitutional rights Prominent pe iegho agency de-| 4 gompletely staffed Internation-| eral. Motors in addition to Dow [Public utilities, packaging material) amounted to an outright substi: | opergtion with civic and cultural Jaycees have been nominated
are being violated. | ew to s' Fay = ve al Division in New York has been| Chemical Company, which has and numerous others. tution of a version that was organizations of Birmingham and for the Spoke Award which will
SIGNED ORDER | |_ They were W. A. P. andirecently working with affiliate| grown to include 27 diffetent di- | In addition, it handles many con-| killed eariier in the session. [Bloomfield ‘Township. be presented at the State Con-
ee James R. Adams. Both had o¢-lagencies in 24 different countries. | visions. sumer products. and : vention in Jackson this weekend.
At 4:22 a.m. Robinson signed|cupied highly responsible positions Both the Senate House ver A variety of activities, te be . ‘
the order staying the execution. | wi baat di sions cal] for extension of jobless The award is made to first-year
. |with one of America’s leading ad- presented in the Birmingham ~ ¥
Word was phoned to Greenholtz'yertising agencies. Both had pay to about 28,000 workers who) anq Bicomfield area, is being members who have
and a U.S. marshal arrived at the yorked on a wide variety of ac- j|have — their temporary) headined by,dames Melton, in- “outstanding” works in their local
gel ig the signed order al counts eS ee success in ied ne SN ternationally known concert wih tonite
: * |automotiv: vertising. : ist, The Detroit City Ballet, Wil- — .
In denying Starkwéather's writ," © — x &* ; bas Dellar, + aller l sone t Torry Elementagy School piay-
Judge Van Pelt noted the question, _ The two of them had an abun- But the Senate version has a se- yt
: Wee 2 5"! bers of The Windsor Light Opera |ground will be the scene the
of the youth's innocence was not of courage, strong convic- ries of provisions called ‘‘fish- Company annual spring from 11
raised in his application. , abiding faith in their hooks"’ by Democrats, including a : a.m. to 3 pm. ere.”
~ *« & | combined talents—and Uttle eles section f upset the eflect of a| Am gatatesifing’ art he ae paBbr ict tf
= sone.| They a - agency preme Court ruling that gave titled ‘ . New Landscape: in i e
yi neatht he should have re. (Jobm-Adams, Inc.), rented an jobless benefits to Michigan Ford|and ‘Science will be on Rhy te ons ae ae
ceived no more than a life sen-| flee, hired a secretary and wormers idled by a Ford strike injat The Bloomfield Art Assn noon, 1 and 2 p.m.
tence. went out after business. anton, Ohjo. __ |leries, 361 N, Woodward, Birming-| Pt, © 4 oP American Legi
A bespectacled, bowlegged youth) The two soon found, however, ham, June 6 thwough June 14, 2 4% et 8 train, ponies and planes
who stood 5 feet 5, Starkweather that they needed an organization p.m. to 9 p,m. dally. Admission is will be among the features for
vaulted into notoriety in January hack of them to obtain the ac- R d GI free. : { children.
of 1958. _ ‘counts they were after. e a to Cal * * * ‘ * * *
Accompanied by his 14-year-old, + -. -e-* Representative artists to be) a. George r, general
sweetheart Caril Ann Fugate, he Several large national agencies, of Russi St di found in the collection include such chairman, said 18 and refresh-
set out on a killing spree. Nine knowing of their ability and wide lan Jiuaies names as Jose de Rivera, Gyorgy) jient booths will be under the di-
victims in and around Lincoln acquaintance in automotive ad- Kepes, Jose Guerrero and Piet | rection of the Torry School Moth-
were counted in three days, vertising, made many interesting GENEVA (AP)—Soviet Foreign| Mondrian. - »lers Group.
among them Caril’s mother, step-|offers of mergers and buy-outs. Minister’ Andrei Gromyko learned - * ——_
father and baby sister. Each offer contained a flaw of some at an American dinner party that] Other attractions of the. festival) ‘The Bloomfield Hills High School
ADMITTED 11TH SLAYING ‘kind, but it began to look as though the sons of a couple of his hosts|@re satire of suburban living, pré-istudent Council will sponsor a
The trail ended with capture of inal would have to accept some- ere ——— . [sented py so hina _ the ppg roan pil A raise —
i Douglas, Wyo., Jan. “ng. . house dren exchange
decal at arting-abot killing of a| One drab spring day when the Secretary of Defense Neil H,|Cinema; a sidewalk cafe reminis-| dent next fall
Shoe salesman on a Wyoming|two were about to go to New York McElrey ‘told Gromyko that van iy of Montmartre and music in * *
quently admitted the previously to discuss the possibility of becom- son, Malcolm McElroy, is studying|the air piped from Grinnell's win-| Larry Erdman, president of the
highway. Starkweather subse-|!ng a branch of a large New York Russian. Livingston T. Merchant,|¢0w where Jocally-known artists|Council, is in charge of the proj-
unsolved slaying of a Lincoln fill-|agzency, Tom Wade, then manager assistant secretary of state for| Will be performing. ect.
ing station attendant, to bring his|of the Detroit office of the Curtis European affairs, said his son, + Area residents interested in
; 1 \Publishing Co., suggested that they. Livingston T. Jr., also has taken! A Birmingham woman, Mrs.
string to 11. | : | ; obtaining help for the day such
a * ltalk with Theodore R. .MacManus. up that language. Howard Estes of 492 Rivenoak St! a. raking and mowing lawns or
Starkweather was tried _specifi-|Strangely, the three men had never | x * was named president of the Nation- putting up screens as well as
cally in the Jan. 27 shooting of a met. although their names, par- Gromyko, who speaks English ®! Board of MOMS of America’ housecleaning should call the yesterday at the National Con-
vention in Washington, D.C.
The wife of the Inte Howard | Estes, former state representa-
tive, Mrs. Estes has been a |
agen ager aaa The group needs $650 to sponsor
7 lan exchange student through
A past president of the Birming-| American Field Service. Thus far,
ham MOMS unit, she also has it has earned $150 of the June
served on the State Board. goal.
Leffer on Taxes Angers
County School Officials A veteran member of the Beard asking it to support the
land County Tax Allocation Board|county’s problem?” Bricker asked
yestetday was sharply criticized/after he before the
for distributing a letter which one Board with James Pepper, super-
school official said ‘‘prejudiced'’ intendent of the Oak Park board.
the Board’ into believing only the’ yoore asked a question himself
county and not schools have 'of Brickner, “Who else would have money problems. |written it?”
Robert Y. Moore, Board member) “lt it had te be written it
and chairman of the Board of should have been done possibly Bennet, Neb., high school junior, |ticularly in automotive advertising
- Robert Jensen, whose body was circles, were almost legendary.
found in a storm cave with that MEET MacMANUS
of his girl ca grap arin ial Theodore F. MacManus, who had
pointed attorneys had entered ov-
er the youth’s objections, and rec-
ommended death.
Caril, now 15, was tried six,
months later, was convicted of|
murder on grounds,she aided and
abetted Starkweather in the Jen-
sen killing. She drew. a life sen-|
tence. Her appeal to the State Su-
preme Court is pending.
. One criminologist, Dr. James
Reinhardt of the University of
Nebraska, who studied the Stark- wi
ag ora ap rm a ogeece would be terminated. The com-|
of power it gave him. pany was to be known as Mac-|
Starkweather, bland and unemo- Manus, John & Adams, Inc. and|
tional as ever, told the State incorporation was completed
Board of Pardons he was sorry) ay 1934.
re kee killed. But he spent the It was on Sept. 22, 1934 that
b of his time complaining about! the new organization struck its
his attorneys. whom he earlier first ‘pay dirt.”” While they were |
bad dismissed. He insisted that’ waiting their turn to make a pre-
with better counsel, he would have, sentation for the Pontiac Motor |
gotten off with a life sentence. | Divisiop account, they received |
* * a call from Midland, from the |fluently, expressed pleasure at
this.
| Newsmen were filled in on the
/exchange by Andrew H. Berding, |
assistant secretary of state for
public affairs.
rig oaoale Club
in Pontiac Invites
‘Mackie to Dance
| Guest of honor at tomorrow
{night's ninth annual spring dance |/1910, had handled several different
iautomotive accounts, many of them|
at the same time, although they|
“were competitive. |
* *
PROTEGE AND FOUNDER
Jones (left) and W. A. P. John, the only surviv-
ing member of MacManus, John & Adams, Inc.,
reminisce over one of the firm's -first advertis-
The young hopefuls met with, ing layouts which appeared. in The Pontiac
him. The upshot was an agreement! press in 1934. The national agency is cele
that MacManus would furnish the | —____ a
capital, the national reputation and
acceptance, as well as the back-
ing of his small organization. The |
ambitious John and Adams agreed)
‘to produce $500,000 in new billings |
thin one year or the arrangement | — Ernest A. Pontiag Press Phote
its 25th anniversary. This year is particularly
significant for Jones, who now marks his 20th
year with the. organization. Jones is the fourth
presidént in the history of the agency, succeeding
MacManus, John. and Adams, in that order.
'to be put on by the Pontiac Demo-
West Germany Asks \cratic Club will be State Highway
Berlin Safety Pledge o's" John: C. Mackie. *
Shopper's Mall fo Boost
Downtown Kalamazoo The Kalamazoe Garette
‘Special to The Pontiac Press)
(This is the second of two ar-
ticles on how Kalamazoo is seeking
to revitalize its downtown shopping *x *
Allen Pilkinton, club pmegident,
said the dance will be hel@ at the
‘Roosevelt Hotel ballroom béginning
at 9 p.m. (Continued From Page One)
\to sign an immediate peace treaty
; with East and West Germany
,plan for the revitalization of dowa- while _the Western powers insist)
jtown Kalamazoo. Germany must be unified first.
In outlining this goal, its chair- The Big Four foreign minis-
area by creating a pedestrian mall! man cited concern among meI-) ters dined in style last night
By HAYDEN BRADFORD chants over recent vacancies in| samired Mont ~ si y i de . ‘ tespon: ge WAS Fac ‘ ; These are some of the themes of handouts
The nation's weather pattern of 19%. total billings combining the concrete block and grass mall fea-|immediate and favorable. Within by two delegates. arcomermnee newspaper, radio and magazine ad- Treasurer of the Oakland County aside. handling the advertising for a
new but small Dow Division with
a total billing of $18,000. They
were! | trend of economic decline’ which
has afflicted the downtown busi-
ness district of Kalamazoo and |
also thousands of other cities
Thus. Dow came in before lunch across the nation since the end
—and before dinner that evening of World War II.
the new organization also had won ?
the past several days showed only Old MacManus, Inc. accounts and turing reflector pools, tot lots, less than two months more than vertising the Michigan Tourist |5Ch0ol Board Members Assn., Ben Moores one page letter went on:
minor changes today [those newly acquired Dow. Pontiac, trees, shrubs, benches and a re-/$40,000 had been raised and the) The dinner conversation was Council hopes will bring more S. Jones of Troy, said Moore’s According to the Board of Audi-
It was more showers and thun-'and other accounts amounted to volving stage. ‘committee was able to announce “‘smajl talk,” according to @ tourist dollars tc the state this letter reminded him of the quip, '°"*. they cite the generous’ share
derstorms across the major part $481.000. we ~*~ *& * ithe hiring of Victor Gruen and, Western source. Then the min- ‘year. ‘Don't confuse me with facts, my of the millage which has been
given the schools in the past, and
they have full understanding of
‘ta ala wave bee very the schools’ needs in the 1959-60
fortunate in being able to get the |Sllocation. . lion's share of the 15 mills, while |g
the schools in other counties ‘have
had to get along on much less of the country with the possibility * It’s the first such program to be}Associates to draw up Kalamazoo’s| isters strolled into the garden,
of stormy weather jn some areas. | One year later, MacManus, John attempted in the heart of an ex-/ master plan. | admired the breath-taking view
x * & Adams, Inc. had chalked -a £rOSS isting central business district, ai-| In the next 11 months planning’ ‘of the Alps, returned Inside and
Some relief from the hot and Of $3,888,000 in billings. The new though other cities have tested the |consultants and architects from the) &¢ in front of an unlighted fire-
humid weather appeared in sight @&ency was on its way. ‘mall idea on a temporary basis|Gruen firm worked closely wit) place.
for most of the Great Lakes re-| In 1935, the three men, now sup-!and pefmanent malls have suc-\the committee and with city offi-| yj . |
gion and middle Mississippi Val- Ported by a talented and growing ceeded w outlying shopping cials in drawing up the | ener atid Gryyeres Sat on one } ppi Val- } ceec in new outlying shopping,cials in drawing up the long-range joveseat, Couve de Murville and mind is made up already.”
» The council announced it is In his letter Moore said:
| spending $64,665 on magazine ad-
| vertising, $18,718 on newspaper
advertising and $12,338 on radio
plugs during the spring-summer
season. ‘
ley in the next 24 hours, But the/Staff, solicited and won the Cadillac centers. | plan. Lloyd on a facing loveseat | Newspaper advertising within the | Millage.” |
muggy weather held a clammy Motor Division account How it will work out remains | Finally, int March 1958, the re-|.. ; |state, mostly in southern Michigan,| From what the many superin-
grip on wide areas from the a s a that impo 1 to be seen. Even some of the Sult of this eoncerted effort—| WAIT FOR i will be spread among 22 dailies and| tendents said yesterday, tt
southern Plains east and north-25 years of its existence, Mac- J. otutionary. plan's most en- |Kalamazoo’s Central Business| The Allies waited for Gromyko 175 weeklies and will amount to| appeared, however, that the |
eastward into the Eastern states.' Manus, John & Adams, Inc. has
‘had only four presidents—the first
The Weather District—1980""—was- ready for un-\to -hint he was ready to try to about $5,000.
veiling. Committee members and’ blast the logjam, in secret meet-| *
city officials got a special preview|ings and prepare the way for the thusiastic supporters admit that
it involves a considerable ele-
ment of chance. No one can guar- | Schools aren’t satisfied with this |&
| “Hon’s share.” -|
Detroit radio stations will be the! The first to quesiton Moore's } * *
three in that order and the present
president, Ernest A. Jones, A gntee that it will brin in the afternoon. and ‘a bli it f hi : } : g a perma. | : public summit conference for which So- only ones sharing in the radio ad-|letter was Abraham Brickner
Fr _ Weath Re t protege of W. A. P. John . 7 j ¢ : 5 : : : : i m 5ric » Sec.
> Rs Us oath er Berean B at * + ke nent upsurge in downtown busi presentation was’ made the same viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev is_vertising budget. ‘retary of the Oak Park Board of
cloudy cterning cooler this afternoon | we ae @ senificant year tb ness. evening. |So eager. ‘ .| The advertising is concentrated Education
compan. y a thundershower. - $ é en 3 or De i 1 idw “ +}. are
a wie A —— conciderably E. A. Jones, who is celebrating 20 The program, however, has been tailed articles on the plan | - phe dinner was billed as an |!" the Midwest market area. ““Isn’t.this prejudicing-the
cooler tonight A
shewers likely Saturday. Low tonight 52. y and temorrew were carried in the Kalamazoo
Gazette, and thousands of copies
ears with the organization launched without any~ significant! informal, stag get together. Her- |
High t 45. Winds southwest this . ) sit arising. Virtually rari ter, G 7 A
Se a eS ae GEoour en foo oe sition leita i ually every; of the spiral-bound, colortully- | a Gromyko and Couve 4e 7 . pao g others! Electric. Qo yer
neen at 12-18 miles but briefly higher downtown businessman and prop ilt | Murville did change into. dark | e color Zab, This low price plus
dering Thunderstorm — ° Jones attracted the attention of erty owner, in fact, has already, ee 80-page booklet de- | business. suits, but Lioyd showed O tax.
Teday in Pontiac John while manager of the Michi- contributed both moral and fi- clear oe ailieead ae | up in the same gray flannel suit O e
o Lowest temperature preceding 8 ®™ gan Band and Michigan Daily at nancial support he ca a Tribu: he had worn all day. . . “ : =
: t 8 am: Wind velocity 10 m ph the University of Michigan ‘ Originally. moreover, the effec- tion. TI di . f e . .
Ws a ae His work at the agency following tive impetus for the downtown mall This brought to’a close the pri- 1e.\ ainner _ = —— nt
y at 5 04 8 graduation convinced the founders idea sprang from this gréup's| Mary need. for the Downtown Kat q-jamiable than yesterday 8 nee are ni
Moon “fuee Friday = “ie Ge that he was potential material for leaders mazoo Planning Committee, Ine., bd ag an pelo secret
- aay) heading the agency, and he Waser tie PLAN although its corporate structure 54! Herter got up wit — a
6 Sowa nen 62 groomed for that position long be-| ee ‘continues in ‘force on a standby Gromyko's innuendoes and insin-|_ ensive care unit will be| veloping intensive care facilities
Teme. errs 67 PM ete. of roomed fon nat position. Tong Be There had been discussion by| basis. ‘uations and told him off. |incorporated in the remodeled east) because special nurses have be-
am el * cember 1953. ne President in De- city officials and others in July) Less thant a month affer fhe| Gromyko had been accusing wing of Pontiac General Hospital.! come se costly and hard to ob-
10 a.m 6s a ow & ae about doing someting to|plan’s unveiling, the City Com-| West Germany, of rearming to war dew t the hospital's expansion| tain,” Euler said.
sday 5 aApanciner 1elp the downtown area. That sup-| mission endorsed it ‘‘in principle,” |against Russia. Herter said: plan, the unit is designed to provide
, pe eceniounl . lditterect a oe oi three mer the Victor Gruen & Associates’ and the mayor appointed a eitizens » . ‘minute - by- minute nursing care it ae wr tied won on Rarer
peace gl cp oe $3 m ts same as nilielinniii Bulle: Ft. Worth Central Business Dis- advisory committee to work close-| “I hope that in the course of around the clock, said Harold B./the oid fifth floor sur roe J
Meani temperature ......... 73 Ing and needed even more space. trict plan had received widespread ly with city departments involved|the discussions, as they will pro-| Euler, hospital administrator. : : ng
i=" which could not be provided. The national publicity. in creating a feasible program for ceed in the future, this type of ac- the Tn Mun the first twe
Ose Year Age ta Pontise two surviving founders. John and ' so the first phase cusation’ and innuendo will cease rice: panes Se In the first two months since the
Highest temperature ...--.--s.. 62 ‘Adams, purchased seveneacres at) But ft wasn't until 1957 that | tae eee Ko - ‘| sivé care unit will have all the [remodeling program has been un-
Lowest temperature ........-..006 5 ‘the Ww ; wanna Olere talking about it ended and is committee's work in ihe and that it will not, repeated,| savan of special. nurses at |der way again, the .
Mean. temperature .......ceseeeee: 54 the corner of .Woodward avenue : 4 : tages u ay ‘ hospital
ge nica : action began. In February of that {following months revealed a num-|lead to a type of discussion which) ga, jess extra cost, said Euler $72,129 lace
eather—Rain. jand West Long Lake road and we: ’ lbef of minor flaws in thie masterican ‘ia e great irritant r extra » sal » |Spent. to replace worn
iighest sn@ Lowest Temperatures This began planning what was probably year a small group of local busi- pur Tera Decoy got '| déscribing the plan last night to | utilities, said Euler, including
; Date in 86 Years : ness leaders set up a non-profit plan, but none*which it did notj/and more‘ than that, might well) eo Board of 143 ing h ti
a0 in 106) 33 in isaz) the first building designed for. a corporation. . believe could be corrected: by|lead to very serious tensions.” Trustees, , 1 pec and heating;
Tiarciag’s Temperature Chart | AUT advertising agency. ‘ - .|minor adjustments. - ' Patients would be charged extra} |’ 9a; aap
A 78 49 Marquette 78 42/ After discussion with clients |__/"!S was the Downtown Kalama-| By March of this year it had), . Sa to offset the added expense to the general contracting,
pemapers +61 Oo Mamphie =. £0 7! ing cuppliers; the agency went [PO | aus Committes, Inc. Tsigevetpjed ‘a wiodified pedestrian Prize Pig Bites Hand hospital fully,staffing the intensive * *&
1h1 38 Mitwockee 95 56) Oheas vith the plane and te-De- (O° leadership consisted of one|majj« proposal for launching tHe care Unit with rurses at all times,| Euler expected local contractors
; ee we 33 7 New OF cane a cember 1963 i 4 int pos ‘ ‘member from each of four lead-|jong-tange downtown revitalization EXETER, : Erigland (UPI) — |Euler said have two second floor nurs-
Chicago 83 56 New York 81 69 So een, ed into Me at ing financial institutions, the presi- program, and thé City Commissjon At the Devén. County pig show Por a eries by the end of June
Cinctmnati 7) 6 Omaha _* tractive hitlside site It occupies (gents of one large and one small called a. public’ che to con-| yesterday: Two Bishops showed - and and fourth floor patient
Clevela: 67 t 7 are: r : ; s
Denver Scie) | OU le ‘downtown retail store, a utility| sider fit. up to hold.a special communion pore i on the ne would) areas finished by September.
Detroit « = Saya e 6$f Presently, with some 308 em. executive, and a Chamber 4f Com .. (Monday: Objections, doubts servicé for herdsmen. No herds- rg be “Ae bgrong as ot He reported that the demand for:
Port Worth G3 768. Prancisto 68 50 ployes at the Bloomfield Hills|merce executive. . 5 and problems fail to prevent’ | men came. The pig tpat won & ney ane veaid Dr C.G Fp aareny hospital beds has reached a
: +4 44 coh go 45 Olfices, fewer than a dozen still) Its stated gurpose was .to ralse| decision to go ahead this sum- | blue ribbon for . Diana eae er ad ead high, with average occupancy
_ & See aes ae reside in Detroit. ‘funds with which to hire an expert .mef with permanent downtown Suthrell bit her oft hand as stall, month at 96.8 per cent; or 7
2 Se S ée' Tempe 92 12|. Through the years: ‘MacManus, ito develop a long-range’. master! mall project.) * | she waited to collect ‘his prize. “Many hospitals are now de- 'cent above the budget ‘estimate,
(pe Pa - f %« P }/
‘ SS ae
p a »
a an
ter Dulles, By JAMES MARLOW
AP News Analyst
from the moment he)
belonged to history, What will his-jand simple:
tory say of him? ment”
|from gaining any more grou
It can never deny that this 71- imilitarily. economically or politi
year-old man gave to the service |~
and welfare of his country tre-
mendous and tireless dedication.
He quit only because of the ill- =< ar a policy of his ‘predecessor, cally.
| Dulles disagreed with it
loughly in
nd, tile and immoral."’
j. limited to reacting to Soviet. ac-
tions..In short, he said the United Se L——— <= <<. -—— -«- —_ ~~ - +
I
"THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959
2 Die in Buenos Aires Melee : ao
WASNGTON AP Fw Ate, ciel ry PCE DAC | perimeter and economic help to
resigned as secretary of state be-|friends and neutrals.
cause of his spreading cancer,| The purpose was direct, obvious Campaign before ie became sec:
to keep communism |tetary. He called i negative, fu- nése went ahead by leapsintheir —
nese went ahead by leaps in their
own
ticularly the 1952+ presidential |
‘States should create crises for the
be summed up in a single sen-jto death Thursday.
“Dead animals lay all over the,
Soviet Union instead of letting the
Psychopath Kills Pets ‘ |Soviet Union create crises for us.
But when he became secretary
He said it was * * *
Yet, the Soviets and Red Chi-
int erhal
the development, par-
Soviet Union in the
field of weapons which put added
pressure on
back. the West to stand
The cold war between East
His successors took a softer line tion or triumph of communism or Knittle, Judgment of Dulles’ Stewardship Now Up to History It was essentially a defen-'influence beyond i borders but office and Stalin died, the Acheson, 3.
pow Secretary of State Dean'sive policy, not an aggressive one. American mititary alliances and policy .was outmoded and Dulles jet loose before he became secre-
power remained firm and the So- should have Sought and pursued tary in 1953—ultimately favorable
viets didn't gain an extra foot of a different one of his own making. jor unfavorable to the West—were
thor- real estate with more aggressiveness and, less
idefensiveness, “or with more
frie >ndliness and less hostility
Father Brings His Son
to Police in Stab-Death
VENICE,
‘turned his son in to police Thurs- Calif. ‘AP)—A father
both 16. He said the boys
Arrest 300 in Strike Battle BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — -Some 300 strikers
were arrested Thursday night after thousands of rioters and
police had turned downtown Buenos Aires into a battlefield.
A visiting dignitary, President Sukarno of Indonesia, was
caught in the melee when Strikers shouting antigovernment
slogans pressed around the open car carrying him to Goy-
ernment House for a call on President Arturo Frondizi. Whether the forces already
already too powerful to be affect-
ed in-their direction or jdestina-
tion by him or any one te
4. Whether he was wisé in de-
pending so much on his own think-
ing or whether he should have
made far greater use of the minds
of the men around: him in the
State Department.
* * * Police finally detached the car from the mob, and
Sukarno reached Government House safely.
ness which incapacitated him, at Storybook Farms , h and West was just as intense when} .
”* & ot |he took hin the Acheson | Dulles went to the hospital as\4Y night in connection with the) In the years ahead he may Two persons were killed when a fourth-story balcony
But only unfolding ‘events—his-| PARSIPPANY, NJ. (AP) — eae TE new military siiances. jwhen he took office six years ago fatal stabbing of an engineer. beats ° = ee . nero a crammed with battle viewers crashed to the street. Another
tory itseli—can ever give a final|What police called the “hellish os « ‘VERDICT MUST WAIT _ Ba we nor figure. or pa nn ted Mot 25 persons were injured in the street fighting, in which
answer to the central question of!prank of a sadistic psycopath” Tk ‘ , Evington Scharling, 35, was — 8 " streetcars and buses were overturned and burned.
his stewardship: Was he a good! ‘has brought sadness to children at) Yet Dulles had hardly taken of- Is Is why many years ue slain with a hunting knife when one * ri ‘
secretary of state in the sense that Storybook Farms, a fairyland fice before -Soviet policy changed, Pass before history can give a fl- he scuffled ‘with two boys he ad- No one now—and certainly not
the policy he pursued was wise? amusement attraction. least outwardly, Forty-four nal verdict on the a icy and wis- monished for breaking bottles in Dulles, whose sense of history Violence erupted when bank clerks striking for higher»
His great task “was dealing ~ * * days after Dulles was sworn in; dom of Dulles, for it’ will take the alley behind his home. was too sharp for that—can claim) wages demonstrated one day before a government deadline
with communism. If his whole’ The owner, Joseph O'Bryan, the old dictator, Joseph Stalin, MMPY Syecrs and many events As xs ke * ~ to know positively the answers to ro, 9 return to work.
policy toward the world of the found five goats and two -rabbits died, and with him went the need- they unfold to show Later Ben Salerno appeare dat the questions jist raised. But no
Soviets and Red Chinese were to at the attraction shot and clubbed lessly savage Soviet foreign’ 1. Whether his policy led, or the Venice detective bureau with one can, challenge this about him The clerks presented Congress two petitions and
policy. helped lead, to the ultimate ruina-'his son Michae! and Raymond he did his best as he saw it. began marching toward Government House when heavily
reinforced police units attempted to head them off.
Id be it H id
oo uel ue ck cicon igs. a place,” — O'Bryan. jalthough their purpose, -and they to a peaceful understanding be- told him. Knittle stabbed Scharling! The tolls for the St. Lawrence Other workers joined the clerks in the battle. Police
inch.” * * ‘made no bones about it, was the tween East and West. ibecause he slapped him. |Seaway. are scaled to pay for the 6 .
x * * | A week ago two rabbits and two|same: Communist expansion. | x * * The youths were booked on sus-|project in 50 years, says the Na-| Made liberal use of tear gas, fire hoses and clubs. The strike
This was exactly the “‘contain-|goats had been shot ‘They managed to increase their” 2. Whether, by the time he took ' ‘picion of murder. Itional Geographic Society. has been in progress for six weeks.
)
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< 2 | a : |
3 Fourth Floor Draperies Furniture .. . Downstairs Bedding . . . Downsgairs 4 Second Floor Men's Shop ... Street Floor Street Floor Cosmetics Street Floor Neckwear Third Floor |
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Aerocor DRAPERIES | RECORD CABINETS | 25” LAWNSWEEPER | Knit Boys’ T-SHIRTS | Webfoot Swim Trunks} BAR BATH SOAP Bermudas, Capris SHEER DRESSES | j
50 b Reg. L 69e Reg. 4.95 Reg. R j
a” $7,991. ss $24.88] ss $18.99] a 2S] | mse $2.99 | % 1051] t% $1.99 *6.90 | ; . : 2 , Dark or light prints, flared skirts. i
50 bv 90 8.99 | Has magnetic door latch. For all | Keeks your lawn neat. Easy roll- | Cello wrapped. Reinforced neck- J Boxer style swim trunks in sizes Superbe’’ bath soap. in many J Sanforized fabric im stripes, | Drip-dry, - sizes 12'2 - 18% '
‘ Save 40°. —5 colors size records. ing wheels band. Sizes 6 to 16 28 to 40 fragrances. With lanolin plains, solids. Sizes 1'0 to 18. 14.18. ,
Fourth Floor Draperies ‘Wiesowasie . . . Downstairs Garden Shop... . Downstairs Second Floor Men's Shop... Street Floor _ Street Floor Cosmetics Street Floor Sportswear Third Floor
Colorfast... Misprint | Service for 8, Patterned | Heavy Gauge Plastic | Little Boys’, Girls’ 1-6x | Wash, Wear, 2 Sleeve Many Styles in Women’s Canvas Strip | Solid or Print Silk...
q TABLECLOTHS Plastic DINNERWARE AIR MATTRESS COTTON PLAYWEAR/| Men’s Dress SHIRTS | Summer HANDBAGS.| SUMMER SANDALS Afternoon DRESSES
54” by 54 Reg. Reg. : 1.98 Reg. Rex. Reg. Reg. 22.98 $ :
peat de 98. if $] .67 39.95 $24.44 244 $] .99 Values $] 299 $2.69 2.98 $] .99 2.99 $] .99 “and 24.98. 16
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Fourth Floor Linens Fifth Floor China Street Floor Notions Second Floor Men's Shop... . Street Floor Street Floor Handbags Women’s Shoes .. . Street Floor Third Floor ; . }
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Twi 29.95 Reg. 2.49 1.00 Reg. or Reg. 3.99
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Quilted, full bleached. by 41 by 13”. brown, green or ivory. sizes 7 to 14. - ¢ patterns. Sizes 30 to 42. lovely shades. Medium, 8'2-1] black. flowers. White and-many colors.
Fourth Floor Fifth Floor Housewares Street Floor Stationery Second Floor Men's Shop .. . Street Floor Street Floor Hosiery Foundations ... Secend Fleer Third Floor Millinery f
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2. 16.9 1.00 For $ Reg. 1.00 ¢ Reg. Reg. }
nei 99¢ Value $9, 49 Value 2 Decks 3] 7 L 59¢ 3 Pre. 99« 2.00 Values 2 Fer $] 5.95 $3.99 $98 $2.99
No. | sivas of striped color- | Adjust. toast brownness to suit [ Standard size bridge decks. Wipe eae Couns OP wane none Solids, argyles and fancies. Re-‘I Necklaces, bracelets, “earrings | Brief style or hi-top panty or | Nylon net, sheer marquisette or
fast sheet blankets. your taste. clean with damp cloth. more. intorced heel and toe. and pendants. Many styles. girdles. Sizes 5. M, L. cotton eyelet. Sizes S, M, L.
Fourth Floor Blankets Fifth Floor Housewares Street Floor Stationery Book Shop... Mezzanine Men's Shop . . . Street Floor Street Floor Jewelry Foundations .. . Second Floor Second Floor Lingerie PR
* DUST and WET 11-Position... Steel | Extra Hanging Space | Men‘’s Heat Sealed Famous Brand... 2 Styles in Women’s | Swiss Sheers, Prints Women’s Shadow —
MOP COMBINATION] IRONING BOARD Overdoor HANGERS |. LEATHER WALLETS MEN’S JEWELRY STRETCH GLOVES | WOMEN’S HANKIES | Panel BLEND SLIPS ; _ : :
Reg. ~ 5.00 ¢ 2.50.and Reg. Reg. 39% Reg.
; » Vales $3.90 6.98 $4, 99 2 - 99« $10 Values $2.59 "3°50 Values 719¢ 2.00 796 te 59 3 Fe $] 3.98 $2.99
’ 2 100% nylon mop heeds and Perforated all steel board. Folds, Fit all standard deark won't mar. Saddle leather, cowhide, beaver, _— tie biiler cuff links. All | Snow white stretch gloves, one | Cotton print and Swiss sheer Dacron-nylon-cotton” slips with
handle: Wet mop and dust. standard 54’ size: Arms fold flat. morocco, many more types, boxed. “Very famous brand. size fits all. hankies in. dainty and large sizes. | lace trim. White, sizes 32 to 40.
Fitth ——— Pitih Floor Housewares Street Floor Notions. Men's Shop . « Street Floor Men's *Shop’. . . Street Floor a’ Street Floor Gloves Street Fiver Hankies Second Floor Lingerie 4
‘FAMOUS ‘BRAND FLAT SHEET SECONDS COLOR-SEALED “ALLEGRO” SHANTUNG WEAVE SRarenies WOMEN’S FAMOUS MAKE COOL SUMMER SLEEPWEAR
: Percale . Muslin SW by 36”, Reg. 3.98...... 2.99... -SW by 90", Reg. 6.98..... 5.99 ee sale cet on hf $
| Twin, if perfect 2.79...... 1,87 Twin, if perfect 1.99... ova SW by 45”, Reg. 4.98.......3.99 DW by 90”, Reg. 14.98....13.99 | and shorty Tee yl patra, ne asa 3 “he 99.
Full, if perfect 3.09. 0.0... 2:17 ca ir . i sateen N37 | SW by 54”, Rog 498. 4.69... TW by 90”, Reg. 21.98... 20.99 | datiste. Sizes $M, LE) 32-400 ree
Ley 4 j oe ~ Ko Walte's « . Fourth Floor sd : : ie Watte's Drcperies . . » Fourth Floor : - Waite’s Lingerie . - «» Second leer * % - —s ; = ~— | | : a ¢ 7 | THE, PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959 MAKE OVER PAGES nn PTAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959 |
Era of Courage in Home Decor Predicted By PHYLLIS BATTELLE jbeen in years when it comes to! home or a building for the first “A foyer should be cheerful but. manently rich. MK should be as
NEW YORK—"I'm not a home-! Planning ee —_ es apart-| time. Actually, it IS like the |should never bow! one over. Peo-; uncluttered as possible.”
lmaker at all. But still I know ments ey're having the guts to) front porch of a house—remem- ple should’ feel immediately at,
‘ soem press well.” said Bery}|hire decorators, even, without be-| ber the front porch, before they home in it, rather than startled. | On the subjec ‘ of the rest of the
homies tatarioe pn “and |ine afraid the neighbors will think! put’ it in the rear and called it | “It should have -at least these house, Miss Austrian has this to
I tell you they want to conform. they haven't enough taste to dec-| a piazza? I dare say it is coming ithree pieces of furniture—a stiff toch hs — that the “elegant
“They want to conform, but be |Orate a héuse themselves. back, but in the meantime .. .”.\chair to sit down on for putting te Ning aged wat Liend oie,
|just an eeeensy bit better than the; She srhiled, “And I do believe ; : ; Meantime, American families 07 galoshes, a table on which to the metal chairs ‘woman they're conforming with. that we will gee some good, solid must make their first impression Put the mail, and a mirror for,
iThat’s why we've: gone through taste in home and apartments now upon guests with a foyer. And the Correcting last-minute errors be- “Which reminds me of a frieng
lall those Cape Cod saltboxes, and that women are beginning to speak same principles can be applied to fore going out or in. a pw a housewife - real —
| why all those picture windows look up with courage.” decorating a foyer as to ‘‘doing,’’; ‘It shoule never be too com- vin boi wih the crear Pages
jout on all that nothing.” x *® * : as Beryl does, a lobby. fortable, or goodbyes will be inter- Vo) Cony’ Paper napkins at ; ; : ; every meal. Her four-year-ol
Beryl paused, and thoughtfully Miss Austrian is the outspoken “First of all,” she says, “my Minable. There should not be daughter went to a atthe pier
| stroked her red fox boa as If it | founder and president of Intra- advice for women decorating a excess furniture to stumble over. party last week and was overcome
| were spaniel. “Then Frank jmural, Inc. Her specialty, these foyer is, don't go dreamy-weamy.| “Since it is the room that gets by something the hostess served
Lioyd Wright came along, and if |Past 20 years, has been decorating This is an expression which de-| the most wear and tear outside with the ice cream.-She told her
you had any money your bath. |the lobbies of New York's swanki- scribes things like pink bedrooms’ the kitchen, it should have resi- mommy — ‘we had the funniest
room had to puzzle into a hill, |€st apartment and office buildings. —the kind of place a guest walks jient floor coverings and clean- little pieces of rag with lace
“But I have great hopes today | “My forte, you might say, is |!nto and screams ‘Eeeeyow, what! able wallpapers or paints. “it ‘around them, instead of napkins!’
that American women are getting) creating a welcome impression |@ room!’ should never have wall-to-wall | “Ah, it’s an oversimplified
much more fearless than they've; upon people who. walk into a “This is not right for a foyer carpeting, umess you are per- world,’’ said Beryl.
| LOOK AT ALL YOU GET FOR ONLY SAB same ie i HOUSE x . ‘g 099
~~
8, f
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. 4 eas
LOOKING FOR ANSWERS — Whatever it AP Wirephote APPROX
was that sent 31 persons plunging to their deaths Civil Aeronauticss Bureau and Capital Airlines sd
in a Capital Airlines plane near Baltimore re- workers are shown laying out the wreckage like Includes Taxes, .
cently may lie in the rubble that covers 18,000 a huge jigsaw puzzle, to try to determine what A=
square feet of an old plane hangar in Baltimore caused the mid-air explosion Principal,
= —— ager Interest,
kids who want some foreign Insur.
Seaway Causes New Problem ie The problem, which threatened,
* to sprout into an international tnci-
Young Girls Swarm dent, began with the openjng cif
the St. Lawrence Seaway and the
Forei n Shi Ss in Ports introduction of foreign ocean-going
g p ships into the Great Lakes.
| ricar “rewme 0 Great;
DULUTH, Minn. (UPI)—Juvenile docked here and at Superior, Wis tea tenes an or uae
and port authorities are seeking to and are’ causing a brand neW|«gmmonplace and unromantic by
end international relations between Juvenile delinquency headache [0Fr| the cities’ bobby-soxers
foreign sailors and teenage girls authorities in the twin ports. hi the swashbuckling young
from this Lake Superior port As Tom O’Heir, head of the French and Greek sailors are some-
The girls have been swarming, Duluth Crime Prevention Bureau, thing else again, O'Heir said.
all over Greek and French ships| put it, ‘They're just romantic
Last week police chased a
— gang of teenagers, mostly girls,
* | from a Greek ship, he said, and
the incident was repeated on a
French ship this week.
e An 18-year-old Superior girl was
oled, nadia arrested for contributing to the de-
linquency of a minor following ; es .
jforay aboard a ship. q $
“These sailors can't even speak = =
English, but these girls seem to 20 = a
’ lfor it,’ said Superior Police Chief -
AC} J |A. E. Buchanan. . . .
Buchanan said he was “sur- | SEWERS—WATER—PAVING ALL PAID FOR BY BUILDER—SHOPPING Models Open —EE jo -
prised at the age of these sailors
tice dian tee ne: dete TRANSPORTATION — SCHOOLS — CHURCHES — ONLY 10 MINUTES FROM CITY HALL 12-9 P.M. Daily and Sunday
and you know what that leads to,”
in je ‘roub vane gon ‘over 3 BEDROOM REE CARPETING IN LIVING ROOM! ——___ L_ they're in trouble and gone over SI .
ithe pond.” x . . <
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ee companies th post no trespassing” © FORCED AIR HEAT © FORMICA KITCHEN COUNTER . and to keep "6. ‘. fee ee ale wen ® ALUMINUM SLIDING WINDOWS FE 5.9252
60266;
Pr ll eae,
“There have been no-_regulations
las far as visitors on these ships
semanas’ es | OPOTLITE BUILDING CO. — 263 w. coLumBiA-PONTIAC haven't been doing anything about
i. A = = a
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A. \ | THE. PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959 _2
: De 1 Favorite , | Union pay for publishing 10 = B ® Cj sion Beare: staged its version of
Arthur Conan Doyle : im ones of oe aber wis. Banticts Cif\e - /azanst shee oSeer.| Divorce Snags
Claim Ike: Authority on. Author Pe is Hope eS Te ee ica IE
By EDDY GILMOBE meats, comments and tess one never-khows,” he Fel heck—invite him to Moscow and _ It ranged from Cuba to Alaska,) MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) —
GENEVA ~The son of Sir Ar- ag = pubished 10% | pay him in rubles and caviar —| Southern Home Mission |2nd to churches and mission sta-/The South America-bound See thur C D said that Presi , The stagehand then said: Conan Doyle replied: ° tions across the ‘continent 48 it) scout Charlie Poliquin’s %3-ton
le ‘ Il, Prince Phil-| “i'll make a proposition.| «« , Board Dramatizes U.S. |rortrayed the efforts of Cffristians| ark was held fast on a legal snag
se es ee Ore ta halt] aoscow at. thelr expense and wat| in Report to 15,000 [and the challenges they face. Mis today atter slowly but succesfully five tons of caviar if necessary.” ‘ sionaries, hospital workers, teach- maneuvering sandbars, shallow
The privately printed book is By GEORGE W. CORNELL | of their work. the Mifnesota River in the first|2°? his four young children died :
| } , not for sale, , refused. See Se Associated Press Religion Writer) i004 15 sit “ais Gee th tds eecectadl oar: |
attack,” said Adrian Conan| aihough it contains many in-| “It was the greatest business No tlement . LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)—A bell them meaanget” Sama tote eredieh strayed thelr home. e| age. voice * * * * * things « ° tolled somberly, and a churches in 45 states, witnessed *
him . stagehand was Charile Chaplin, hall: . huge Fairgrounds Coliseum with! start dismantling it,” said the|er, and his youngest son
‘he could he said ‘please bring x « * There have been endless argu- sett p . gambling . ‘theatrical lighting and sound ef-|man who sold his.farm last year|2, died in the
me Sir NigeP. This was the | “My father once arrived in|/Ments over the real identity of/ CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) jale setice| fects: to finance the trip. “That divorce| Firemen pulled Tony, 7, . i y a Sherlock Holmes. —A strike of union carpenters at} “. . . materialism . . atheistic) t).y heard a re that South-| action knocks the bottom out/bara, 6, and Terry, 4, from the | first book he reed after his Ul: |paris” said his son, “and was y port just ; Je xk * * the missile test center has entered|and Communist philosophies . . - ern Baptists, who now number|of things.” burning building and attempted to |
ness . ; id i Seas te ad- “That's one of the easiest ques-|its second week with no settlement | obscene literature . . . ao tttntena, (nine miltion in 31,000 churches, a ian resuscitate them, but failed. =
Sir Nigel <3 Arthur Conan a a tions you can ask me,” said his|1™ sight. to spiritual values . . . disintegra-|..,ect to more than double the! Poliquin’s pregnant 22-yearold| Fire Chief Lloyd Hopkins said Doyle's historical novel of the 14th - SS yvomplimented the|Son. “There's no mystery about| x *« * ition of Amerjcan home life... jpumber — to 70,000 — by 1975. | wife, who filed the complaint, won|he believed a cigarette started
century. ; 4.|Frenchman on his powers of de-|it.“ Sherlock Holmes was my; Federal mediator John A. Ken- * * Dr, Courts Redford of Atlanta,|custody Thursday of their 2-year-|the fire in a living room couch
Adrian Conan Doyle is the ay-iduction and asked, “but how did|father. He dropped at least S0jney of Tampa scheduled separate| In such terms, Southern Bap-|Ga., executive secretary of the|old daughter and $20 per week|in the house the family had rented
ministrator of his famous s = you know who I was?” clues in his writings to prove it.”|meetings today with carpenters'tists traced the perils of the world/board, prayed: “Let our hearts! support money. since coming from Joplin, Mo.
estate and curator of his archives. HOLMES WAS DOYLE and contractors in an effort to|Thursday night, But their big con-|never be at rest until we have x * * last February.
7 * = . TRUNK TATTLES . But Doyle didn’t like the Holmes bring both sides together. Similar'yention also saw a bright side. |completely claimed our land for} “you put. this idea of a South; Burk was baby-sitting with the
SS ee ee “Your name,"’_ replied the Pe yle ae meetings Thursday produced no “This is truly a year of revival,” Christ.” The ‘organ rolled and the| American trip ahead of your mar-|children while his wife Joan, 28,
pr agtoragtromangye yg! Bg hie | Frenchman, “is on your trunk. of s stories, . significant results. the voice flooded over the massed/lights came on. riage,” Judge Theodore Knudson|was working as a waitress a
father’s birth, May 22, ©/ On the occasion of the premiere) “‘He had a grudge against Sher-| The 115 carpenters struck last| thousands, and chimes rang. “We told Poliquin, who appeared with-|coffee shép
will ask Secretary of State Chris-\of Doyle’s “The Speckled Band’’|lock,” he expalined. ‘‘My father! Friday in a wage dispute with con-|thank God for the victories .. .| The U. S. Fish and Wildlife|out an attorney) pregnant.
tian A. Herter to take a special/in London, a small stagehand/liked to work, but Holmes gaveitractors working on projects at|We thank God for the working of Service reports Michigan led the} “Can you imagine — he wanted
Doyle book back to the White) askde Sir Arthur if he thought|him no trouble. He just Wrote him-|the launching area and nearby|his spirit. | .” jnation in hunting and fishing|me and
House. : the play would survive. self.” Patrick Air Force Base. It was a broad-gauged presenta- license sales in the 1957-58 fiscal'that just didn’t make any sense,”
It's a beautifully beund col- x * * The son ‘said one of his present} Missile launchings have not been|tion, in stark and dramatic mood,/year with 2,264,285 licenses is-|said the is
lection of Sir Arthur’s decu- | ‘We think so—but in show busi-|projects is to’ maek the Sovietiaffected. as the denominations Home Mis-' sued. She left: her husband in March/carriages and bicycles.
ET NE PL ee ee eee IL [3 Ul S| i
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*
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MAY 22, 195 9
Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas MRS. DON 8. ANDERSON
Service for Mrs. Don S. (Mary
L.) Anderson 34, of Melvindale
a former Pontiac resident, will
be held at 3 p.m. Saturday at the
Voorhees-Siple Chapel. Burial will
follow in White Chapel Memorial
Cemetery.
Mrs. Anderson was dead on ar- rival yesterday morning at St.
Joseph Mercy Hospital. She had
been ill four months.
MRS. FRANK PIERSON
Mrs, Frank (Pearl) Pierson, 68, formerly of Pontiac, died Thursday morning at her home in Lansing
after a brief illness.
Surviving are four daughters,
Mrs. R. E. Hey of Lansing, Mrs.
Church Names
New Minister First Corigregational of |
Rochester Brings
Addison Pastor
REV. ROBERT JACOBSON
ROCHESTER — First Congrega-| —|be moved to the Troy High School. | $485,300,000 in the year starting tional Church of Rochester Olin Cooley, Mrs. C. I. Phillips
and Mrs. Evelyn Thomas, all of
Pontiac; a son, Frank of Balti-
lmore, Md.; eight grandchildren;
and eight great-grandchildren.
Service will be held at 11 a.m.
Saturday at the Estes-Leadley Fu-
neral Home, Lansing. Her body
will be brought to White Chapel
Memorial Cemetery for burial at
2 p.m. BABY GIRL FITZPATRICK
AVON NSHIP — Graveside
service for Baby Girl Fitzpatrick
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William
Fitzpatrick of 3177 Avalon Rd. was
held this afternoon at Eastlawn
Cemetery, Lake Orion. Moore birth yesterday in Pontiac General
Hospital.
Only other survivor, besides her
parents, is a brother, Bradley, at
home.
Deaths Elsewhere
WASHINGTON (AP)—Louis N.)
Ridenour Jr., 47; nuclear. physicist |
and aircraft company executive,
Chapel of Sparks-Griffin Funeral
Home, Auburn Heights, had charge
of arrangements.
The baby died shortly after
Stene Missile War
With Punched Cards
WASHINGTON \#—A simulated
aerial missile war is _ being
staged by the aircraft industry
with a stack of punched cards,
says Planes, official publication
of the Aircraft Industries Assn.
The magazine says the object Ike Pays Honor
to Composer of
National Anthem
WASHINGTON (AP)—President
Eisenhower travels to Annapolis,
Md., today for the dedication of
an auditorium honoring the com-
poser of ‘The Star-Spangled Ban-
ner.”’
* * * of the program is to provide much
of the flight data necessary for
engineering study.
* * *
ing all the operations in the air
defense missile’s ‘ground guid-
ance equipment as well as the
performance characteristics of ihe
missile and target aircraft, ire
fed into electronic data processing
machines, and duplicates the flight
of a missile to within 200 feet of an
actual flight path.
Blue Star Unit
at Troy Plans
Memorial Rite
TROY — Blue Star Mothers of
America, Chapter 37 here will con-
duct its annual Memorial Day
Service at 3 p.m. this Sunday on
the lawn of the City Hall.
Ceremonies are under the direc-
Mrs. James Dorsey Sr. The serv-
ice will center around the Memo-
lrial Stone {dr those who died while
In|in the Armed Forces.
| According to Mrs. Mullins, the | The new Francis Scott
| Auditorium is on the campus of
Ist. John’s College, which claims
The punched cards, represent-jto be the third oldest in the United Stagg Distilleries.
| States. Key was graduated from
the college in 1796, a century after
| the founding of the parent insti-
tution.
* * *
Eighteen years later he wrote
the national anthem .after watch-
ing the British bombardment of
Ft. McHenry near Baltimore, Md.
Immediately after the ceremon-
ies the President plans to fly on
to his Gettysburg, Pa. farm to
spend the weekend, returning. to
Washington Sunday evening.
U.S. Plans 47 Shots
fo Space in 2' Years
WASHINGTON (AP)—The gov- ernment’s space agency has ten-
tion of Mrs. Clinton Mullins and|tative plans for 47 space shots—
including 11 toward the moon and
,Planets—within the next 242 years.
| : * * *
Dr. T. Keith Glennan, National),
| Aeronautics and Space Adminis
ar to enable mothers to visit! gram Thursday to a Senate Space bn is held a week early each|tration head, outlined the pro
graves on Memorial Day.
In case of rain, ceremonies will
Michigan's oldest Congregational; The public is invited.
church — has called the Rev
Robert Jacobson of Addison to be
its new resident minister.
* * *
The Rev. Mr, Jacobson and his
}amily, wife Jane and three sons, | stage their annua show du
‘om, 10, Mark, 8 and Kirk, 2%, a a=
vill arrive here July 1 to occupy
he new parsonage at 1306 N. Pine
St.
Born and faised in Cleveland,
' Mr. Jacobson had 24 years of
during World
War Il, is a graduate of Hiram
Collége with a B. A/ degree and
School of
with -a Bachelor of military service
Oberlin Graduate
Theology
Divinity degree.
He also has done post-graduat
work in counseling at University ys jenti ;
of Michigan and in speech at MSU |v ee eee
* *
Jacobson *
Rev. is completin
four years as pastor of the Con-
gregational Christian Church at
Addison.
The Rev.
son arrives,
4-H Style Show Slated
‘at Leonard PTA Meet
LEONARD—Local 4-H girls
program will be songs by the
/ninth grade Boys’ Glee Club under
© the direction of Mrs. Dorothy Jean
‘| department
® Someone Cut In, Then © will
Cut Out With Mink Stole:
Ray Morton Hardy,’ PHOENIX. Ariz. @—Mrs. Alice’
who has been interim minister dur-|Chadwick told police she stepped |
ing the time that the Pastoral Com-|out on the dance floor of a Phoenix |
mittee has been searching for a\night club with her $1,500 mink |
resident minister, will continue to stole tossed around her shoulders. |
serve the church until Rev. Jacob-; When the dance was over the | | subcommittee. He testified in sup-
port of the agency’s request for
July 1.
* * *
For the remainder of 1959, plans
call for 11 shots, including ‘six sat-
space probe.
dates or other details.
-|Open-and-Shut Evidence
Another feature of the evening |door with them.
The bets were written on it.
Key |
ellites, one lunar probe and one|
Glennan gave no died Thursday. Ridenour, the Air
\Force’s first chief scientist, was
ja vice president of the Lockheed |
|Aircraft Corp. He was born in
Montclair, N.J.
JACKSON, Miss. (AP)—Kather- |
ine Johnson, 64, former’ dean of
women at Wesleyan College in.
Macon, Ga., and Hiroshima Col-!
lege for Women in Japan, died
Thursday after a long illness. She;
served as missionary in Japan
from 1924-41.
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Al-
bert Bacon . Blanton, 78, long
known as the dean of American
distillers, died Thursday of hard-|
‘vanced from Office boy to region-|
'al manager and ‘vice president of |
Schenley Industries, Inc. = re-
tired in 1952 after 55 years at the
| BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (UPI) —
|The Rev. Herbert S. Brown, listed |
‘as the oldest living graduate of
Yale University, died at his home ening of the arteries. Blanton ad-|] Chinese astronomers in 1054 re-|blazed for a few months, then'some supernov
corded the appearance of a star so|disappeared. What the Chinese saw/|Erupting with the brightness of. a|been expanding 70
bright. tint Kt shone by Gay.
‘here today. The Rev. Brown, who)
|would have been 100 years old/
| Aug, 2, was pastor emeritus of the |
Olivet Congregational Church here. |
He was survived by his wife Helen |
and a son, Dr. Theodore H. Brown, |
|a professor at the. Harvard busi-
- school,
Joke’s on Him,
So He’s Wearing
Skunk Toupee
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) — Sales-
man Paul Bishop’s new toupee
gives him that ‘‘distinguished’’
look, withthe white streaks in the
dark hair adding just the right,
touch. . | | + t
* * *
It all started when Bishop kidded
coworker Pearl Thompson about
her new fur jacket.
Bishop remarked that the jack-
et looked like skunk fur, and he
needed a toupee of the same ma-
terial to keep Bis bald head |
warm. -
Miss Thompson spoke to a fur-|
rier, who agreed to make the head- |
piece. Then she measured Bishop's |
head. He, of course, thought she
was_ joking.
* *
But when she brought the new | t
!
is best 7:2 ST = y at the school
will m clothes they have) H skunk-fur toupee to the office and) ‘ade in (heir sowing, slaets. Has Gamblers in a Jam ec an Buhop's beads the sabe
The Oxford Area Community) NEW HAVEN, Conn. w — De-|was on him.
|Board of Education also will con-|tectives have been faced with!
|duct part of their regular meeting | breaking down doors in gambling! Although Michigan
| there to show those present how|raids but in a recent raid here known as the automobile capital |
|the board operates. - Ht eeealde Gecemars ts take th:\of the world, 81 per cent of all,
j types of industrial goods are rep- 1
* |
resented in the state.
{mink stole was missing.
More than 10 years
highest quality ...
continuous dedication to of
Full Price
a Free Home
Nc sctration
fi a.jenjected a cloud
It} was nature’s rarest and most awe-|hundred million suns, the star|day ever
National | Bank oF PONTE A EC
Offices at West Huron at Tilden .. . North Perry at Glenwood 4
. . . Keego Harbor ... Walled Lake ... Union Lake...
Lake Orion... Milford... Waterford . ¢.», Bloomfield Hills
i]
AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS! :
. You Get Complete: You Get Complete: .
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UNTIL 9 P.M. Oe OEE
'
ei a, email cma, “iia alia, mati amma aia
THE PONTIAC PRESS, / FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959
Veterans Fight | As Reconciliation Calms One - | Asks Safeguards Oldster at 84 pan ja tor 8 dap af ctiee "| he oem
gnores Iron. she told the East German officer.|. WASHINGTON (AP)—The Sen:
| A
* * ate Thursda y confirmed President
: | ; - for Probe Witnesses © : ; Eisenhower's nomination of Paul
{ Preference Cuts! Another Rush-Around Romance Repo Va. osu sn ote PUSS Nate Se ata Se LONDON (AP) — One runaway, Dowsett got a high court order) Katherine opened the door and for N . he! BAD HERSFELD, Germany no fine. gy- Agency;
romance was {fading from British] prohibiting the marriage. It was|hugged her father. He slipped as Javits (RNY) hes urged ¢ * (AP) —"I'm too old to understand {- —_—__—_>-—_-—
Oppose State Proposa
headlines today with a peaceful|doubtful it could be enforced in|side quitkly. - senate to write strict rules Pro! his fuss about an Iron Curtain,’'| ”
to Reduce Civil Service reconciliation, but another one|Scotland, where teen-agers can Ye * * |tecting the rights of witnesses| i sivared Casiea = W Sell What We Advertise
Job T Allow. was on hand to take its place. |marry without parental consent.) Thirty-five minutes later Dow-|summoned before its investigating | y rc : e
° est owance | Shipbuilder Harry Dowsett fin-/But Langley would have been sub-| sett stomped out of his car, report | committees. Becker. And off she walked across,
jally caught up with his 20-year-|ject to arrest if he flouted the|ing “I agreed to compromise.” x *.~ * \the 10-yard “death strip,’ to have’ “FOR THE HOT WEATH ER
LANSING wW—A proposed cut in old’ cago Katherine and as ae and then returned to Eng-| Then Katherine and Langley| “In the past =enageys ae wie birthday coffee with her nephew |
the ference given veterans ap-|Playboy she eloped to Scotland land. ‘came out hand in hand. ‘‘We are|the Senate, ‘there have re-\in Communist East Germany. ” “ 7
plying for state jobs has run into with. The suitor, Edward Langley, HIRE} DETECTIVES going to the Dowsett home to talk) peated instances in which the rép-, x, * ; | r- thet SWIMMING POOLS a $ 50
j opposition from organized veterans 27, accepted Dowsett’s invitation The couple drove 220. miles things over,”’ he said. utations of individual witnesses) She lives in lcineauce, West | ns linia ened Atala dial x
groups. to come for the weekend and talk ‘ as Se aintacoh nae arrived ex. The new pair of romantic head-'and the progress of committee in- Germany, while Wilhelm Stein, 74, | $] 395
Leaders of the American Legion, things out ~* * lnateted ‘and. penile Fa Cam. | liners wo Yeu detirey vee Bave Dern Jeopardized jher nephew, is a resident of Gros- ALUM. CHAISE LOU NGES ......
Veterans of Foreign Wars, Dis- ae a ee - . anq|Hersch@son an ue-eyed Sylvia|because of insufficient safeguards! sensee, just 200 yards across the
abled American Celecamt Marine) Meanwhile, from London a rich bridg®. A See ts eae 1 Polentarutti, 20, from Zurich. | of fair procedures.” | border athe Germany in two. || REVERSIBLE WINDOW FANS $] 295
Corps League, Spanish - American silversmith’s wife dashed off to Private Mciectves Mth’ bY DOM\They disappeared from Jeffrey’s| * * Because there is no authorized] 900 C.F.M. . Scns erfilien to “3
War Veterans, Amvets and Mili-|Gretna Green in pursuit of her — eee Pi a home 11 days ago and were found| He said these have covered a|border crossing in the vicinity, $895
‘ary Order of the Purple Heart 49-year-old son and the family’s in Gretna Green, England’s tradi-|range from the Senate Internal|she was told she'd have to travel TABLE FANS De ke tee ee ee
were among those offering objec-/ pretty Swiss maid. | The father arrived and ham- tional haven for elopers. Security's subcommittee’s Red- roundabout 100 miles to reach her|
tions at a meeting with’ civil serv-, Dowsett ran_ his daughter and mered on the orange-painted| x *« * hunting hearings down to criticism | nephew. CAST IRON GRATE | $465
ice heads yesterday. Langley to earth at a friend's tiny door, shouting, “Katherine, let! Jeffrey said his father had of-jof the committee now investigat-| x * * | tor outdoor barbecues ...............:..--
All veterans receive 10 points apartment over a stable in Cam-,me in. It’s your father.” _ |fered him 20 pounds ($56) a week | ing wrongdoing in the labor-man-| ‘This sounds like utter ~non-
extra on their civil service tests, | bridge. “Are you going to. be nice, | pocket money and a car if he’d|agement field. He said the rackets’ sense,’’ Grandma Becker said. 1 Mile-£ast of Auburn Heights
and-disabled veterans get 15 points. Because the family forbade the Daddy?” Katherine cried tearful- give up Sylvia and come home.|group has done “a distinguished | She took her walking stick and E SALES
A commission staff study rec- underage girl to marry, she ran ly from the other side of the) «put I love her too much,” he|job,” however, | reached her nephew's home in a! FURNITUR
ommended a cutback to-5 points [off to’ Scotland with Langley andj locked door. | asserted quarter of an hour. 3345 Auburn Rd. (M-59)
and 10 points. The study group refused to come home with her! - x * * | “Love? snapped Israel Her-| Old Ft. Bliss, bu,ilt near El| After an hour's chat, she started You Always Buy for Less at L & §
also proposed limiting the pref. father when he followed them. | “Of course, my dear,"’ Dowsett scheson back in London. ‘My Paso, Tex. in 1849 to protect gold back. She walked smack into a §-6 MON. thre SAT.—FRL ‘til 9—FE 5-9241 3
erence to three years after dis- a replied softly. ‘‘Let me in and let’s|boy’s been in love five times be-|seekers, is now an Army guided |Communist patrol.
charge. |sort this thing out.’ \fore already.” missiles center. | “At my age, you can't expect a
Spokesmen for the ~ organized British Diplomat - — —— = = Eon
Veterans said they were especially
concerned with protecting disabled Wants to Ban
veterans.
They ,also disagreed with the 7 ;
time limitation on veterans prefer- Cocktail Parties
ence. SAKE aTiiG Arthur G. Rasch, state civil LONDON (UPI) — Sir Gladwyn
service director, said commission Jebb, British ambassador to
members would continue meeting France, said recently that cock-
with veterans’ spokesmen to try tai] parties are ‘‘torture for the Bs ly acree.
ol oo a mutually agree modern diplomat” and should be
banned by international agree-
Traffic Signs Moralized = ™ert: : eet John Rolls, columnist for the
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) 8 traffic London Daily Mirror, asked some officers erected a new Sign at a
busy street intersection on the other diplomats in London what
North Carolina State College .cam- they thought and got these onrt » answers: pus this week. said: “Yield.” 4 ;
It bears a at message now. | Dr. Lues Thomen, Dominican
on Republic: ‘They're _ invaluable. eon : N semsecne sppemied: ot ‘0 Real diplomacy is done at these temptation.’ ay: . :
parties.
aS ADVERTISED Oa ‘shorten the life of a diplomat.”
um Vincens de Steensen-Leth, Den- ON THE FA ous NE
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* ’ / ¢ “ , is ves . ‘ . < F j 5 “ é f ;a eee ee ee ee
ttl dn a ek ee a ee ee ~eeeese “ree Insurance Women of Pontiac held
Nite Wednes- the fifth annual Bosses
day evening at Sylvan
Greeting Maynard Johnson who gave
Mrs. Russell Lehigh, who was in
charge of decorations, welcomes her
Mrs. Allen Schmidt, president and
dined with her boss, toastmistréss, THE PONTIAC _PRESS, ,_ FRIDAY, MAY! 122, 1959 |
left, Mrs.
Inn. Glen
tion.
boss.
The Bloomfield: Angle
By RUTH SAUNDERS
BLOOMFIELD HILLS—June
6 will be a red letter day
at -the Lyle Bones residence
on North Adams road. A coun-
try auction will be held from
10 a.m. until late afternoon
under the direction of L. E.
and Mildred Smart of Roches-
ter, sponsored by St. James
Episcopal Church of Birming/
ham. The Men’s Club, Ushers
Guild and Episcopal Church-
women are joint supervisors.
Among St. James members
heading
George F.
eral chairman, Schnell, gen-
Mrs. J. S.
- Moon, coordinating chairman,
Mrs. George Weinhold, . Mrs.
John Roehm and Mrs. Philip
Detweiler, publicity.*. John
Johnson has a committee to
handle properties, mainly set-
ting up a large tent.
Mrs. L. A. Smith heads a
group for collectirig -éalable
items.
Besides antique silver ‘and
china, small electrical appli-
ances and occasional furniture,
there will be toys and ‘sports
equipment.
t+ * *
Mr. and Mrs, John D. Rich- committees are > ardson Jr. were. hosts at &
cocktail and supper party last
Friday evening at their home
on Glengary road
Guests included. Mayor and
Mrs. Louis Miriani’of Detroit,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hart,
Mr. and Mrs. L. L., Colbert,
Mr. and Mrs. William C.. New-
berg, Mrs. Richard Connell,
Mr. and Mrs. William E.
Slaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Fred-
erick Cody, Mr. and Mrs. Nor-
man FE. Fredericks, Mr. and
Mrs, William V. Greene, Mr.
and Mrs, J. P. Judd and Wil-
liam Packer Jr.
* *
Mr, and Mrs. Philip Max-
well of Pine Lake (nee Har-
riett Williams) announce the
birth of a son, Steven, May
16.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank E.
Voorheis of Rudgate road were
hosts at an open house Satur-
day. This is the first of a
series the Voorheis’ will give
during the early summer.
* * .
Mr. and Mrs, Irving A.
Duffy had—-as.their house
guest ove this’ past weekend
Dr, 'P. A. Lawrence of Char-
lotte, N. C.
Pentiac Press Phote
the response to the toast to bosses are,
Vac Herrington and Mrs.
Beatrice Dodge, who gave the invoca-
v eat
Roy Wilton, and presents him
with a carnation.
Carleton C. Patterson, of Birmingham.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest R
Breech left Wednesday for a_
short European trip
* * *
Dining at the Detroit Club
together this evening before
attending the opera will be
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McKenney,
Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Ler-
chen, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
B. Wallace, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard W. Reilly und Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Craig.
* * *
Mrs. Everell E. ¥isher re-
turned home Tuesday from
Dixiana Farms near Lexing-
ton, Ky.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. William C
Newberg are in Europe -for
about a fortnight.
* * *
Mrs. James Goudie was hos-
tess at luncheon Tuesday for
members of the St. Elizabeth
Auxiliary, Plans were made
for a tea to be given June
10 to benefit Daughters of Di-
vine Charity, Briarbank.
* *
Mrs. Henry €. Johnson has
just” returned. from a month-
long trip to Europe with her Bosses Are
Honored
by Women Insurance Group
Gathers for Fifth
Annual Nite
The fifth annual Bosses Nite
was held by Insurance Women
of Pontiac Wednesday evening
at Sylvan Glen Inn.
* * *
Mrs. Allan Schmid, presi-
dent, was toastmistress for the
evening. Mrs. Beatrice Dodge
gave the invocation and May-
nard Johnson gave the re-
sponse to the toast to bosses
given by Mrs. Schmidt
Galbraith Pritchard gave a
talk and showed slides of Alas
ka and its yadar system
Olficers 6f the group in ad-
dition to Mrs. Schmidt are
Mrs. Mac Harrington, vice
president; Mrs. George O'-
Brien, recording secretary;
Lois Amy, corresponding sec-
retary; and Mrs. Carroll Craw-
ford, treasurer. © ,
* x “*
Committees for the dinner
were Mrs. Harrington, invita-
tions; Mrs. Crawford, reserva-
tions; Mrs. O’Brien, program;
and Mrs. Russell Lehigh, dec-
orations.
Miscellaneous
Shower Fetes
Future Bride
Sally Reid, bride-elect of
Fred Zittel Jr. was honored re-
cently at a _ miscellaneous
shower at the home of Mrs.
‘Frank Morton of Brookdale
avenue.
* * *
Sally, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John Reid of Detroit, and
Fred. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Zittel of Navajo drive,
will exchange vows July 18.
Guests included Mrs. Reid,
Mrs. Zittel, Mrs. David Zittel,
Mrs. Lee Kremer, and Mrs. J.
G. Aldrich.
Others were Mrs. Vernon
Ayling, Mrs. Carl Randolph,
Mrs. Edwin Kerr and Mrs.
William Kovin.
* * x
Other guests were Mrs. Ed-
win Kerr, Mrs. Fred Cohassey,
Mrs. Robert Evans and Mrs.
Theodore Cohassey
>. Moose Auxiliary
Nominates Officers
Nominations for new officers
were read when Women of the
Moose met .at Moose Hall
Wednesday. The election will
be held at the next meeting
June 1
Reports were read by the
publicity, ‘ritual, hospital, and
library chairmen. All will be
sent to the Mooseheart national
office. .
A luncheon will be held
Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Edward Taylor on Irwin-
dale. drive honoring Pontiac
Senior Regent Mrs. Harold
Finn. All co-workers have been
invited to attend.
Silver Lake
League Fetes
Mrs. McDonald
Preparing for Country “Auction
.
friend Coufitess Dobrzensky. *
She. visited friends in Ireland.
a” Mrs. Grant McDonald, past
president and founder of Wom-
en's Silver Lake Golf League,
was honored Wednesday at a
luncheon at Kingsley Inn. Mrs
McDonald is moving from her
Clintonville road home _ te
Louisville, Ky.
* * *x
Forty-five members attended
the luncheon. Mrs. McDonald
was given an orchid and an
inscribed plaque honoring her
as founder. She organized the
club in 1954.
Mrs. Edward Dalton was
chairman and Mrs. Earl
Weher, president, celso took
part. Former City Girl aire Tonight
LUCIVE AMAR
Opening Night for Met
One to Long Remember
By LYDIA ROTHMAN
The Metropolitan Opera
opened in Detroit Thursday
evening for its first appear-
ance in the city in 49 years.
* x x
It was a night to be long
remembered for those who
were fortunate enough to at-
tend and for those who -mere-
ly stood on the sidelines to
watch Detroit.at its most glam-
ourous and stately best.
The Masonic Temple over-
flowed with glamor and for-
mality last night as many of
the opera goers donned top
hats and tails ang long even-
ing gowns.
* *® x
Perhaps the evening clothes
were a little foreign to their
wearers and perhaps there
was dn impatient driver in
the Jong line of traffic, but
generally, opera enthusiasts.
didn't seem to mind a bit and
really enjoyed the polite
crush of some 4,600 ticket
holders.
Amid flash bulbs and press
photographers, Detroit's so-
ciety leaders and those who
weren't joined in: the stately
parade up the red-carpeted
steps fo take their seats in
the capacity-filled- auditorium.
* *
Although many were late,
the lights dimmed and the cur-
tain rose * promptly at 8:30
p.m. to the first thrilling
notes of “Carmen.”
Some students of the opera
ay the Metropolitan is only
presenting “popular”. opera
‘during dts three-day appear-
ance. in Detroit.
x
But the most critical opera
goers and music lovers were
completely enthralled last
Parents
-Entertain
Teachers
Buffet Luncheon
Marks Final PTA
Meet at Malkim
Parents entertained teachers
at a buffet luncheon Thursday
afternoon for the final meet-
ing of Malkim School PTA.
Mrs. William Ander gon,
president of Pontiac Council of
PTA, installed new officers for
the coming year.
® _-® *
They ate Mrs. Howafd Mc> —
F
| 2 ; :
"
JEANNINE R. STICKEL
Mr, and Mrs. Charles Stick-
el of Haddrill court announce
the engagement of their daugh-
ter, Jeannine Ruth, to Roy
Etton Roeser, son of Mr. and
Mrs.. Elmer Roeser. of Wayne.’
Miss . Stickel. -attended- Harper ,
Hospital School of Nursing and
her fiancé: attended Michigan
State University. An Alig. 22
wedding is planned.
Ce ~~ ~“Connell, president; Mra,
Hartung, vice president; Mrs.
Mary Hodges, teacher vice
president; Sylvan Lemanski,
father vice president; Mrs.
Charles Adler, secretary; Mrs.
Glen Hoisington, treasurer;
Mrs. Charles Mann, historian;
and Mrs. Virginia Maeyens,
parliamentarian.
Council delegates are Mrs.
Stanley Boyd, Mrs. Leslie
Hotchkiss and Mrs. Lemanski. |
Alternate delegates are Mrs.
Hartung and Mrs. Herbert
Domke
* * * .
Mrs. Madge Healy gave the
invocation and the Malkim
Band played several selections.
Hostesses were Mrs. Woad-
row Walker, Mra, Joseph Wal-
ters. Mrs. Ernest Mann, Mrs.
Paul Weir, Mrs, Donald John-
son and Mrs. Floyd Brooks.
Foursquare Meets
The Foursquare Club, Order
of- the Amaranth met at the
home of Mrs.- Bert Weddle
on Oxley a be Officers will
be elected at the meet-
ing at the hme of fading “a
ing at the home of Mrs. “Ak
bert Kugler on Roselawn
drive.
x LILA
OPTI
on
PO Ba lOO ie BOE REET EM night by magnificent Rise
Stevens as Carmen and the
tender, beautiful voice of Heidi
Krall who sang the role of
Micaela.
When the opera was over,
the audience remaineg speil-
bound in its seats and ap-
plauded like a Detroit audi-
ence has probably never done
before.
x *x *r
As the audience left the Ma-
sonic Temple, it did so quietly
and without the usual frantic
rush, cornpletely touched by
the magnificent performance
just witnessed.
ak ‘evening's By LYDIA noriiean
A former Pontiac~ girl is
singing the lead role in this
production of the
Métropolitan Opera of New
York appearing in Detroit
Lucy Armaganian, known
professionally as Lucine Am-
ara, is singing the role of Ned-
da in “Pagliacci.” The opera
is the second in the Metropol-
itan'’s series of four perform-
ances jn Detroit this week.
’ STUDIED VIOLIN
Miss Amara began her mu-
sical career as a violinist to
please her father. Bertha Ma-
rie Roth of Pontiac was her
first music teacher.
* x
In 1937, Miss Amara moved
to San Francisco with her fam-
ily, where she continued her
music lessons and played with
a civic orchestra.
It was Mrs. Stella Eisner-
Eyn of San Francisco, who,
as one admirer put it, ‘“‘dis-
covered a something in Miss
Amara’s throat that was bet-
ter than her violin playing.”
Mrs. Eisner-Eyn encouraged
Miss Amara and gave her
singing lessons, insisting that
she work hard at them. Miss
Amara took part time jobs to
finance her studies.
* * *
In 1950, she made her debut
with the New York Metro-
politan Opera, singing an off-
stage role in “Don Carlo.” It
is said that she might be con-
sidered Rudolf Bing’s first
Ameriean “discovery,” as
“Don Carlo’’ opened his first
Metropolitan season.
Since that time, Miss Amara
cult operas, and is now heard -
only in Jeading roles. She has
made guest appearafices in
Berlin, Stockholm and Rome.
GLAD TO BE BACK
to have her, and she plans to
see her many relatives in the
Pontiac area whom she has
not seen for many years.
When she heard that Pontiac now has its own symphony én
chestra, she said, “‘Fabulous—
more power to'them.” She does
hope that the orchestra will
give young local artists a
chance to perform.
* * *
Recalling her own struggle to
become established, she re-
marked, “It’s -so hard for
young artists to get started
on a caréer and if the smaller
organizations won't help them,
_ they haven't a chance.”
She. is “mad about small
cars and sports cars.”
“Every time I see a Mer-
cedes or Jaguar, I have to
stop and look at them,” she
said.
Area PTA
Meets With.
Students
Will Rogers School PTA held
its final meeting of the season
in conjunction with the Student
Council Thursday evening.
Brenda Kéll, student council
president, presided at the
meeting- and Ricky Adomitis,
vice president, reported on the
council’s activities.
Each council delegate report-
ed from their room and it was
announced that the Youth Club
will continue through the sum-
mer, sponsored by the PTA.
x * *
Following the meeting, group
discussions on reporting were
held. .
New officers for 1959-1960 are
Mrs. Ernest Rhodes, president;
Council delegates will be
Mrs, Glenn Weiler and Mrs.
Roget Pomeroy.
be LF Be @ ad .
a ee
Sister Mary William, administrator
of St. Joseph Mercy Wlospital, will be
guest speaker at the annual May break-
fast of the League of Catholic Women -
Discussing arrangements for
the event which will be held at the Sunday.
x man, League Home on Parke street are, left,
Mrs. Joseph Spadafore, chairman of
the reception committee, and right,
Mrs. Marshall Sprague, publicity chair-
SEAS Po SG TION EEE GME EE itt RE ERB E ES
- Shrunken Heads, Children Found Lucine Amara Is Met Star
Strangest Things Forgot | Another woman left a gold inlaid vb MARY PRIME
NEW YORK (UPI) — Women travelers
the absent-minded professor to
———-shame.They forget everything from chil-___that_the
dren to shrunken heads, says a motel put
executive.
“You name it and it’s probably been
left. We find an average of
said a year in our motels,”
of Washington,
motels,
central purchasing, 50,000 items
ohn Lacock,
Pa., president of a non-
profit motel association, Quality Courts
United, Inc. The organization sets stand-
ards for its 500 independently-owned
handles reservations, At another motel, a mother was so
busy herding six of her children into b
station wagon that she overlooked the
seventh child, a two-year-old, She was
on the road before she realized she was
short one child.
- But women aren't the only ones to
leave possessions behin
Men are. prone to forge pajamas, hair-
brushes, and razors. and does
“Women generally forget’ lingerie,
which we find rolled up in sheets. tn
Cosmetics and slippers run & close
second,” Lacock said during a trip te
New York.
If an article has some value, the motel
manager drops the guest a
Travelers have left behind false teeth,
automobile hub caps, a cotton quilt, toys,
tricycles and typewriters. One person left~
25 bars of soap, another a trunk in a
driveway. card, he said.
* * *
The shrunken head was found in La-
cock’s . Motel last year. A woman had
broughr-the head as a souvenir from
South America. A day after checking
out, she frantically called Lacock,
the head was mailed to her. | ~_ route to
the suit.
and * * *
“One man,” he added, “took off with-
out Kis suitcase containing an important
speech. He called several hours later, and
I read the speech over the phone, while
he copied it down in longhand.”
Another man stopped at the motel en
Mexico and left his dinner
clothes in the closet. He called the own-
er, who took the tuxedo to the local air-
port and gave it to a pilot heading
‘ across the border. The pilot eeiveret.
FRNA MA, CEA hanger in a southern hotel. In tears,
she called the manager, explained
rf
, Lacock said.
I em
oe ae
ee Me 3 :
©
Then there was the motel maid who . &
opened a suitcase, found a skeleton, and.
collapsed. But no foul play was involved,,
A.tag on the skeleton’s. wrist showed it
belonged to a medical student,
__ f THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959 f
Dear Abby .
Wite of the Nice Young Man
Knows Darn Well What to Do — By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN
DEAR ABBY:. My husband
and I recently bought a home
and furnished it in Early
American. For a housegift his
sister gave us a Chinese Mod-
ern lamp,, It stands three feet
. high, has a
bright red
base with a
black lac-
quered shade
and has gold
dragons all
over it. It
looks terrible
nd I don't
— want to put it
"mum where it can
ABBY “be seen.
1 know his sister from way
back and she did it just to
be mean. You'd never see
such a cheap piece of junk in
her house. My husband says
I should use it anyway so her
feelings won't be hurt. I don’t
want to ruin the looks of my
house. How ean we settle
this peacefully?
PUZZLED
DEAR PUZZLED: Ask
your ‘sister-in-law if she has
any objections to your ex-
changing ‘the lamp for some.
thing that would fit into your
decorating scheme 4 little
better. She. could hardly ‘re-
fuse; if she does, put the lamp
away. At least, you'll have
thrown a little light on the
subject.
“A ¥ * *
DEAR ABBY: In a recent
column, a young girt tells of a
quick wedding at the city hall
over her lunch because she
couldn't afford a,‘‘fancy church
wedding’. This woman and
countless others have the
wrong conception of a church
wedding. Anyone who wants
a church wedding can have
one. It need not be expensive
or fancy
Any clergyman will unite a
couple in holy matrimony tn
front of the altar with only
attendants and parents. It is
still a- Service, and has the
blessing of God ] have nothing s
against city! hall weddings, but but “I -pronounce-you-man.
and-wi .00-please'’' type of
ceremony is not nearly s0
memorable. Sincerely, ey
REV. L. A. MEYER
x * *
DEAR ABBY: In pur office
there is a nice young man. He
is very sweet and we wouldn't
hurt him for the world, but he
comes to work with holes in
his socks. He is married. This
makes a bad impression on all
who see him and some folks ~
#nicker behind his back. Should
we tell him it looks bad, or
should we write his wife an
anonymous note telling her to
do something about it?
GFFICE GANG
DEAR GANG: If the man
consistently comes to work
with holes in his socks, he
knows they are there and
doesn't care. Leave his wife screaming and putting up a big
fight. The child becomes ner-
vous and throws up the food
afterwards. I was told to, mind
my own business when I sug-
gested they take her to a doc-
tor. I work here so I hesitate
to make any more suggestions.
Maybe you can help.
[ DAY HELP
DEAR HELP: Food forced
down a child does more harm
than good. J hope they consult
a doctor about the child’s poor
, appetite before they are forced
to see one about a much more
serious problem later.
* *x* “*
To get ABBY’s booklet,
“What Every Teenager Wants
| To Know,” send 25 cents and
| a. large, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to ABBY in
care of this newspaper. To be granted a B.S. in civil
engineering from Lawrence In-
stitute of Technology June 7 is
Glenn E. Noble of Nelson: street.
He is-treasurer of Civil Club and
a member of Alpha Gamma
Upsilon and American Concrete
Institute. AA |
| GLENN E. NOBLE
advice for a _ helpless little
child of four. She has a very
| ‘poor appetite. Her mother tries
to force food down her by hold-
ing her nose until she swallows
the food. I hate to see this child Alice
wedding is planned.
Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Vernier
_ of Midway
Ri street
‘announce the
engagement -of
their daughter,
Alice Marie of
Manchester,
Tenn., to
Benjamin
Hartz Hunter,
son of
Mr. and Mrs.
J. Keith
Hunter af
Rock Island;
Il.
MERLE NORMAN
NEW WHITE
“COLOR TONER”
LIPSTICK
Call for
‘ HOME
DEMONSTRATION
Appointment for
your club or group.
FE 2.4010
MERLE NORMAN
COSMETIC STUDIO
12 W. Huron
FE 2-4010
ALICE M. VERNIER alone. She darn well knows | —_—_————
what to do. Ae Engagement Told
DEAR ABBY: I am asking Mrs. Alice White of West Chi-
cago avenue announces the en-
gagement of her daughter, Mary,
Pennington to William G.
‘Bell, son of Mr. and Mrs. William)
‘H. Bell of Rochester. A june 13, '
WCTU Group
Hears Talk !
by Mrs. Irons
Mrs. Frank Irons was guest
speaker at the meeting of
Anna Gordon WCTU, held
Thursday at First Baptist
Church.
Mrs. Edna Mathaney, Mrs.
William Bradley and Mrs.
Orlo Mason and Mrs. William
L. Carls presented duets. Oth-
ers taking part. were Mrs. Sa-
die Patten and Mrs. Nellie
Monroe.
A cooperative picnic dinner
wil] be held June 18 at Oak-
land Park.
Women of Unity :
Dine in County _
Women of Unity Church of
Oakland County met at the
“Elizabeth Lake road home of
Mrs. Kenneth Wright for a
Cooperative dinner.
Guests wefe Mrs. H. Erwin
Gottschalk, Alice Kimball,
Jane Norgren, Matthew New-
man, Herbert Sampson of Miul-
ford and Mr. Wright.
This month's project was a
white elephant sale with Mr.
Wright as auctioneer.
Skin Stretched
Exercise Firms
By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN
(The Friday Question Box)
Q. “I have been about 50 pounds.
overweight for years. I finally) things
dition?”
A. That is one of the bad
about remaining over-
lost 25 pounds in the last six! skin does become stretched and
months. I am 38 years old and dees not always shrink enough
have lost this weight slowly. How-| to match the new proportions.
ever, my chinline is saggy where, However, I. think you can do
the double chin used to be. Is! much te diminish the defect by
POL LL LALA A dh hd ddd}
EYE GLASSES . (4444444 PHONE FE 4-3241 DR. CLARENCE I. PHILLIPS
Optometrist
LIMITED PARKING AT REAR OF BUILDING
Pe eieiLiitdiidaddadiar doing some exercises and lubri-
cating your skin carefully.
CONTACT LENSES \ Uriless there is some individual
|reason for not doing so, I believe
A the use of one of the hormone
creams would be an aid. Here is
jan exercise. Lie on your bed on
|yeur back with your head -and
205 Capitel Savings and |shoulders hanging off the bed
Lean Bidg. \ Slowly raise your-head ang touch
75 West Huron Street \ your chin to your chest, or come
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN }aS near as you can. Lower head
\) back again and continue. When
Vie into the skin gently.
* * *
“Would .you please tell me
COLOR 547 North Perry Street, Corner Glenwood
(Formerly Tewnsend) what causes hair to grow on the
\face? Do you inherit it from your
mother? Also do irregular men-
,strual periods have anything to do
‘with it? Please answer in your
column.”
A. This is really a medical CORNER \there a good exercise for this con-
jand
+
you apply cream to your neck, pat setup changes and when hairs
often appear on the face fer the
first time. I think you should talk
with your family physician.
starteq counting calories and have! weight for many years. The ' Q. “Small lines are beginning to
radiate outward from my lips.
Lipstick sometimes gets into these
this looks unattractive. Is
there any special cream or exer-
cise for them? I have used a facial
depilatory for several years.
Could this be breaking down the
skin around the lips and cause
these lines. I whistle a lot. Could
this cause them?”
A. You should give up whis-
tling and take up whittling in-
stead! I hate to ask you to do
this since you sound like a gay
soul, but I do think that whis-
tling would cause lines just as
do any facial expressions, such
as squinting or brow lifting. Use
any good lubricating cream. ~
Q. ‘‘What is a safe and easy way
to bleach the skin if one has too
much suntan?”
A. The easiest and safest way
is just to let it fade with time. |
Actually, I do not think there is
any very effective method or
product.
You can buy commercial bleach- The annual dinner of Alpha
Alpha Chapter of Epsilon
Sigma Alpha Sorority was held
Thursday evening at Kingsley
Inn. ‘ ‘
* * *
A. candlelight installation of .
new officers highlighted the
program. Serving next year
will be* Betty Lou DeGroot,
president; Mrs. Marshall Rose,
vice president; Mrs. Harry
Rhodes, recording secretary;
Mrs. Winton Hopp, correspon-
ding secretary; and Mrs. Jack
Andress, treasurer.
President Mrs. Elmer O.
for Aid to Emotionally Dis-
turbed Children, American
Johnson gave a review of the
year’s philanthropic donations.
U.of M. |
Club Meets
for Supper University of Michigan Club
met for a cooperative supper
Wednesday evening at Adah
Shelly Branch Library.
Iama C. Hook, program
chairman, was in charge
of the arrangements. Cochair-
men were Mrs. Harry J. Rich-
ards and Janet Heitsch, as-
sisted by Mrs. William Gordon,
Patricia Graeside and Kate
Sawyer.
Doris Haynes, president, an-
nounced committee appoint-
ments for the coming season.
They are Miss Hook. pro-
gram; Mrs. Gordon, s~holar-
ship: Mrs. Gertrude Martin,
social; Gertrude Overton, tele-
phone; Mrs. Raymond Rapa-
port, publicity; Mrs. Ralph
W. Behler, nominating; Mrs.
Clarence Carlson, finance;
Mrs. Robert B.. Tarr, constitu-
tion; Mrs. Richard, courtesy;
and Mrs. Charles Harmon, his-
torian.
= i
|| URNS
l DEVOE PAINT America’s No. 1 Interior Paint
CUSTOM COLOR MIXING
New Owner: JIM GEORGE, FE: 3-7270
FREE PARKING IN THE REAR question which I am not quali- |ing creams which help you some fied -to answer. In general, I |Or you can use lemon juice. If this
can say that the distribution of lis too strong, even when diluted.
hair is affected by the glands. jadd it to buttermilk which is also
When you say that you have ir- supposed to be a mild bleacher.
regutar menstrual pei‘ods and * * *
have hairs on your face, 1 guess | Tomorrow: “Don’t Give Up!
that you ale middie aged. This [Look Till You Find Best Cos-
is the time when the glandular | metic.”
SAPs, 47% N ° Fee aes
“OR 3-2300.
— 4479
‘DRAYTON PLAINS
Open Friday Nights "TH 9 P.M, Comfort-crafted summer furni-
ture of aluminum tubing with
highest quality webbing in Green
and White. Completely weath-
er-proof construction.
Chair
2 for $10.95
CM ry
“DRAYTON
HOME FURNISHINGS
IXIE HIGHWAY
te
oe =
-
‘Sorority Installs Officers’
During Annual Dinner Funds were given to the Mich-
igan Heart Assn., Foundation
Cancer Society and United
Fund. {|
Other donations included
Christmas gifts for Pontiac
State Hospital children,
Thanksgiving baskets and sew-
ing of cancer’ pads.
* * *®
Mrs. Harry Rhodes read the
qualifications of the member
chosen to run for the Michigan
Epsilon Sigma Alpha woman
of the year award. Chosen to
participate from Alpha Alpha
Chapter was Mrs. Edgar
Plympton.
Outstanding ways and means
awards for the year were pre-
sented by Mrs. Hopp. This
year awards went to Stephanie
Linabury, Miss DeGroot and
Mrs. Donald Stone.
Special honors were accorded
Mrs. Frank Jalosky Jr. and
Mrs. Edmund Smith who re-
ceived 15-year service pins.
Mrs. Carl Rose was presented
a 10-year service pin.
* *® *
Assisting with the dinner
were Miss DeGroot, invoca-
tion, and Mrs. Fred Baumgart-
ner, dinner chairman.
Introduced were the club’s
two sponsors, Mrs. Melvin
Brim and Mrs. Bertha Lamp-
kin. Also welcomed were two
former members, Mrs.° Frank
Oosterhof and Mrs. Reginald
Rippberger.
Rubber Spatula
Scrapes Mixer
When you use an electric
mixer, it’s handy to rely on a
rubber spatula to scrape batter
from the sides of fhe bowl. You
won't run the risk of bending
the beater blades as with a
wooden spoon.
Of course, it's easy to wash
the rubber spatula in hot soap
or detergent suds along with
- the bowl and beaters. a
> Since 1890 - - Always the Best in Flowers
| CHOICE PLANTS Ch; l; | , ; os in me! Memoria! FOR
Day Hi Saturday, May 30
CEMETERY
PORCH BOXES
Combination Boxes Filled With Choice Plants Suitable for Cemetery and Porch Boxes
Select Your Own Plants :
Save time sprinkling clothes by
sprayjng water on with a windex
sprey bottle as you iron.
you douse them. in
|
JWO.MEEK FREE! CALL FE 4-9582 YOU. MUST BRING second after boiling.
THIS AD.
Only House of Venus
Offers Two
Try Before eeks Free!
You Buy!
3 inches Off Improve Pesture
Hips end Waist ond Reproportics
Take One inch Bedy Measeremests
Off Ankles
# Membership Goed Coast te Coast
#& For Women Exclusively
#@ No Extra Charge for Sun Room and
~~. i A 5 we
ce or Steam Cabinets
10 to 10 Monday
Through Fridey 10 to 6 Seturdey
For Your FREE TRIAL Call FE 4-9582-3
FE 4-9582
House of Venus Figure Salons
Miracle Mile Shopping Center
S. Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. FE 4-9583
|
PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11 Ye S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg.. Pontiac, Mich.
Enrollments Available in Day or Evening Classes
Write. phone or call in person for Free Pamphiet
PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352
From
Priced. $
.&
3.50
- FREE SOIL -
Cemetery Vases Filled With
Flowers — Geraniums Springeri Fuchsias
- Ageratum Begonias ' Petunias
Coleus Vinca Vines Marigolds
Tuberous Begonias oe
Spike Type
res 350
Flowers Telegraphed Any Place in the World!
Pearce Floral/Co. , . a
Phone FE 2-0127
2~Deliveries Daily to Detroit,
Bloomfield Hills, Birmingham
and Intermediate Points.
«2a
were GIAU JAVA x THIRTY ;
Mrs. Benson Hosts Church Unit
31 ‘Meet for Luncheon ‘Thirty-one members of January- Church met Tuesday at the Or-
March Group of First Presbyterian chard drive home of Mrs. M. A.
Benson Jr., for luncheon. Mrs
a | Charles Tompkins, Mrs. Harry
Harry McGrath Boorn and Mrs. ’
spoorlswsoay assisted the hostess.
s * * *
Mrs. L. V. McCann's topic, on
the theme of social education in
A action, was “Political ’ Cjrcles.”
Mrs. H. EY McCulloch explained
the ‘‘Charter for Christian Action.”
Mrs. Smith Falconer also took
part. inatoons
& "~~
-
* * *
Guests were Mrs. Jessie Sanders
of Exeter, Ontario; Mrs. V. A.
Bilderback, Chippewa Falls, Wis.;
Mrs. William S. Field of Saginaw,
Mrs. Max Strausser of Birming-
ham and Mrs. M. A. Benson Sr
Mrs. John Peterson was “Wel-
comed as a new. member.
The next meeting will be held
at the home of Mrs. W. J. Baum-
gartner.
——
Women Feted
at Banquet
A Mother and Daughter Ban
quet was held at Christ Luth-
eran Church
Wednesday
Waterford
Mrs.
was mis EVERYBODY LOVES
A SHIRT! evenin<.-
Lawrence Benscoter
tress of ceremonies
Toasts to mothers and daugh
ters were given by Mrs. Leon wit leeves a patc
; a an action back ard -Heming and daughte:
Wn: ite, Bon Bon Pink or Blue Cindy
Sizes 8-18 - ;
Aa Honor roll choir, under the
Skirt. Pedal Pusher direction of Mrs. John Wiley ut. : and Shorts Available sang. A-movie entitied “Ou
North American Neighbors
The
Little SHOP
MATERNITIES Slate Play at U. of M.
“Waiting for Godot’ one of the
most controversial plays of the
20th Century, will be presented at
24 £. Huron St. Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, Uni-
| > \] versity of Michigan, in Ann Arbor
FE 2-7691 Monday Broadway stars Paul
Hartman and Earle Hyman will
ippear in the play
IDEAL FOR
_ Graduation
Weddings fixe Ss <
Anniversaries AS x i
ONLY 12
14-PIECE STARTER SET
IN YOUR FAVORITE
TOWLE STERLING PATTERN
AS LITTLE AS $84
, 4 KNIVES
4 FORKS
4 TEASPOONS
1 BUTTER KNIFE
1 SUGAR SPOON
PLUS FREE CHEST
Pay Only
10° Down and
10° @ Month or
Use Our Convenient
Layaway
a a ee Bittan te . . > ; ~ 4 by ; +
7 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959
, Ai aw My
Newlyweds | es ay » This young D 't N d im: ee af ed ; % %
pe gs ; ty dig “0 3"
local artist, on ee Es : sags aa. 2
who lives to Entertain E % a
, t * 4 pn * 4 *.
in West | ¥ es , We
By EMILY POST oO ue . 4
Bloomfield | “Dear Mrs. Post: A nephew || , *
i hi | of mine was married several | ‘ t
olwns up, | months ago. Our family all | “2S ea
he | went to showers for his bride
will play “ | and to the wedding and gave | oY:
harpsic hord | lovely presents. After they re- | ? F ah
| turned from their wedding trip, a & . si S Pics tei fi a :
at the annual the family expected to be invit- ities? Hi Ae edt
7 vl ; | ed to their house but so far } bs. Bde 5 te Rae Bs bis ,
Pontiac USI | not one of us has been asked. oe Pare a
Caild diner We know that their house is Lagas i
PEEEEAL SEEIETY completely furnished and that ;
Tuesday. they are settled. ‘ '
. “A close family friend, who . : ‘Be %~
, Vy We: lives near them, has told us Z ¢
SHIRLEY MATHEWS that they have entertained sev- a cy
eral of their friends. We all ie ‘ ‘ ae
fee] quite hurt over this. Don't “sy
Music Gui Id Plans Dj | nner you think this is a slight to his ; “4 pt
family and that we are justi- oi Se
‘With Harpsichord Recital “"se ; : ae 4 * :
p 7 SP gt 4 * : Se el
Answer: A young bride and . Epes } Dna Soe
; ‘ : - . Tn their néw house are — = ele ae “ ibe . the SI ‘_~
The alinual ainner~ of fhe they may Le made through the a ares atlen Ge expected Mn din ee xn OE, SA Panes (Br Showce
Pontiac Music Guild will be church office. in citeeiain wane hans oa :
eld at 6:30 n. Tuesday at Highlight of the ning will 7a sande an , ,
- “ F ' st , ‘Congieestonal I : b — chard - ital by s td 3 tt . ' f vate 1 be . grace/ut touch e the Orient oe be Breese ye a Narpsic ecité bi you should not feel slignted be- . : ; - ve
Church. The dinner and the -| shirley Mathews, local mus- | Cause you have not been invit- prevails in the Roy J. Alexander home delicate collection of almond-eyed
program are open to the pub- ician. Mrs. Mathews was born
hie in Texas, but has spent most
of her life in the Detroit area.
Here early study of the piano
was with €lark . Eastham. of
Royal Oak, and later with Ben-
ning Dexter at the University
of Michigan Amy Hogan of Seneca street
iy in charge of reservations, or
under John Challis, maker of
harpsichords and clavichords.
* * *
Mrs. Mathews has
as soloist both in recitals and
with, orchestra. She has_ per-
formed in the Cranbrook Sum-
mer Gardens Concert Series
a. a member c‘ the -Detroit
Friends of Music Chamber
Orchestra, as well as in cham-
recitals at the De-
» of Arts
won criti-
cal acclaim for her perform-
ance of a Nichelmann harpsi-
chord concerto with string or-
rs of appeared
ber music
trot institut
She most recently
chestra of leading membe
the Detroit Symphony
direction of Julius Chajes
* * * JAY WETZEL HALL The program will include
numbers by Handel Bach
Z Scariatti, Couperin. and
Pontiac Youth Vivald
to Graduate
roan Ganiswae Seno Gms About Flowers Jay Wetzel Hall. son of Ni nd
Mrs. Horace Hall of Navajo road Tl Better Home and Ga
‘ raqduate ircn Cranbr i aen ¢ b held a brenl st at
Set Jur J ittended Cr i. ec Lutheran Ch h Thur
brook three vears on ai sch i! gay 1 rning. “Irs. Oliver Du
ship where his acaden average in spoke on flower jarrange-
has been on an honors level. He ment
plans to enter the Unversity of * * *
Michigan School of Engineering in Mrs. Louis Livingston sooke
the fall He has won several scho on bird houses and martins
lasiic writing awards at Cran The club voted $100 toward
brook, among them a gold k furnishing a room at Pontiac
Jav belongs to the acolytes’ guild Goneral Hospital
of All Saints Episcopal Church and A a *
president of the Tau Alpha \ tin ( Chairmen for the day were outh Group Mr Elbert.Wilmot, Mrs. Clara
~~ ] gston. Mys. Emery Kaid
Hosts Local Group —#nd Mrs Daniel Goron
Mis. Maude Sci ‘ Belling skirts. ballerina skirts
hostegs Wednesda at a coor and many-tiered skirt shown
eratis in f t P for evening in the French col
t siste! wt hei Iectiongs call for lavers of stiff
Rosewood ve Mrs. Rosella ened petticoats. This brings the
Pecleski was a guest petticoat back into sharp fash
ion focus She studied the harpsichord *
unde r the
CEMETERY
URNS
59.90 &
Porch Pots $1.95 and Up
See our large seléctions
BIRD BATHS | -
ed. You can telephone your
nephew and show your interest
in their house by asking when
you can come to see it.
‘Dear Mrs. Post: My invita-
tion to my niece’s wedding in-
cluded a card reading In
front of .the ribbons.” M: fi-
ance’s invitation: did not inciude
this card. I asked. my sister
about it and she said that only
the nearest family was seated
in these front seats. Show int
he have been asked to sit there
with me?”
Answer: Si-ce your fjance is
the very nearest thing to being
in the family, correctly he
should have been asked to sit
with you
e “Dear Mrs. Post When a
man and woman are dining in
a restaurant, is the woman to
give her order first to the wait
er or should the man order for
both?
Answer: She tells her host
what she would like, and he
gives the order for both
“Déar Mrs. Post: Our two
children, five and seven ‘years
old. have their dinners with
the family in the dining room
Ordinarily their plates are
served first because they are
slow in eating. Should this
same practice be followed
guests, or
consid-
children
guests?” even when we have
could that possibly be
ered rude to put the
of the family before
I think that if you
ison, no
enough to be at table
with -chilaren as young as
feel slighted when
them first Answer:
explain the re guest
informal
yours will
you serve
Sylvan Club Runs
Cancer Pad Project
Syivan Shores Women's Club
met Wednesday evening at the
home of Mrs. Earl McHugh of
Woodbine drive to sew cancer
pads
Assisting
man Mack
Austin
Rohert Moore
Officers elected for the eom-
ing year are Mrs. William
Herrmann, _ president Mrs
Donald Bradford, vice presi-
dent: Mrs Linn, secre
tary: and Mrs. Duane Lemaux
treasurer > her were Mrs. Nor
Mrs. Fred Hayes,
Esler and Mrs XI “irs
Roy on Schoolhouse drive.
. ’ s :
eral years’ residence in Mrs.
decided to make her niemento of set dolls. 4lexander
Okinawa a The array of figures on the
table includes dolls from Japan, China,
India, Siam and Indochina.
Roy Alexanders’ Home Filled
With Mementos of the Orient
By MARGARET BROWN
You've read about Roy J.
Alexander often on our pages
in connection with the new
Michigan State University Oak-
land. The school’s recently
named director of student ser-
vices has a very colorful back-
ground, having spent several
vears in Okinawa where he
headed the MSU mission at the
University of Ryukyus
He also has a petite wife who
is the epitome of ‘‘charm” and
two fine youngsters...
* * *®
The family’s cheery brick
home- on Schoolhouse drive is
filled with lovely and authentic
Simplicity Key
to Top Fashion
The glue to looking well-
dressed lies in one word: sim-
plicity. If you like color, wear
it. But wear it subtly
Don't mix colors unless
you've a rea] flair. Wear black
if you like but highlight it with
accessories that have a gleam.
And never wear too many orna-
ments at once.
Sit down to work in the kitchen
when vou can. It's a good way to
save enerey which
fets you sit with good posture and
allows you to place both feet flat
i the floor Use a chair Oriental furnishings - accumu- Naha where some 100,000 peo-
lated during their stay in the ple dwell.
Far East. Outstanding are sev- “‘“Okinawans are a shy. sensi-
eral intricately carved. teak- tive people.’ she comments
wood tables finished in blonde Although their disciplinary
tones for more modern tastes
Perhaps the biggest attrae measures are very mild, the
children are remarkably well-
tion, however is Mrs. - Alexan- behaved.
der's intriguing collection of American ladies, by the way,
dolls. The fragile array of don’t work very hard in Oki-
both tiny and large handmade
figures was carefully arranged
and the story behind each doll
was very graciously explained
during our interview
Some of the dolls have bodies
pure
silk and strikingly life-like com-
plexions. Each were a lustrous made of natural tinted
wig of fine black silk
* * *
Others. molded of
clay, look as if they might sud-
with their ad
their denly converse
mirers, So realistic are
hand-painted features
The
sentative dolls often are
torical events, or char
the drama
lieve such delicate
ly fashioned **toys"’
by children evervday, but Mrs
Alexander says that Oriental Newly-elected president is Es
youngsters generally are very elle Stevens and Mrs. Fern Stur-
- gentle and “‘pliable man is new secretary-treasuret
* * * The winning team of Miss Stev-
The Alexanders. who re @ns and Mrs. Lucille Younce was
turned from Okinawa in May
1958 with their children. John, Arndt of the board of educatica
13. and Karen, 9. lived near Wa&S guest
the island's city of capital
Country Day Schools
to Hold Graduation Ball
The first commencement ball!
will be héld by Detroit County
Day Schoo] and Bloomfield Country
Day School from 9 to ‘12 p.m
June 6 in the gymnasium of Detroit
Country Day School, West Thirteen
Mile road at Lahser road
* * * ie
Faculty, board of trustees, pat
ents and students will dance to
the music of Dick Saunder's Or
It’s Time to
STORE YOUR |
FURS WAITE’S
Gives You
Complete
Scientific
COLD
Fur
Storage
* Your furs are protected against heat, moths,
cust and theft.
* Waite’s offers you expert fur repair, remodeling,
and cleaning service.
& Modest rates.
*F urs tatty insured. CALL
FE 4.2511 to have our bonded
messenger call for
your precious furs.
ceramic
repre
of special days, his
acters of
It's difficult to be-
laborious-
are used They are expected to
domestics. “It helps
the economy,’ she explaiums
The family sailed to Japan
‘ while in Okinawa and visited
such exciting cities as Hong
Kxong, Bangkok, Singapore .and
Saigon
Banquet Is Held
by Shuffleboard nawa
employ
Daughters of Isabella
day evening at the
The league was organized
president
secretary and treasurer.
awarded trophies
League Thursday
shuffle-
board league held a banquet Thurse
Green Parrot.
last
October by Mrs. John Stevenson,
Mrs. Susan Carry was
Mrs. Pan! S.
GRAND
OPENING Week
May-25th - 29th
of
. Newly Remodeled chestra, and Detroit Country Day : .
Glee Chub will provide interm:s- EMMA >
sion entertainment under the
rection of James Doe “1 Waldron Beauty
Combined: social committees of Shop
the two schools are in charge of ; . ;
arrangements. Charles Christian @ Special Prices
and Lindy Lamberson are co @ Contour Chairs
chairmen. Assisting them = are @ Air Cool Dryers
Rodney Fisk, Clifford Higgins @ Favors for All
a — John spelt) EMMA HICKS. owner Marilyn Johnson, Nancy Cowen MARJORIE SALISBURY, Operator
and Sandra Movold.
Mrs. Jean Foss and Mrs. Doc | 38¥2 E. Pike FE 2-3044
are faculty advisors. In Waldron Hotel Bidg.
SPECIAL
ROLL-UP SLEEVES
NEW ITALIAN CONVERTA COLLAR
2 For $4100
$2.49 Each
Reg. 3.98 Each
SIZES 32-38
Solid White
Maize °
Mint, Powder
Beige and PURCHASE DRIP DRY DACRON & PIMA COTTON
Ladies’ Blouses
Nex
rd)
SMART LADIES
| DIXIE POTTERY arvant ron woxtn APPAREL «
. JEWELERS Open Daily 10 A. M: to. 8 P. M:—Sunday 12 to & P. M. 75 N. Saginaw Open Mon., Fri. til 9 P.M ©
16 W. Huron FE 2-0294 5281 Dixie Hwy. (Near Waterford) OR 3-1894 : *C. harge It.”
Y ; ; aa
* * @ = . 7 : ;
2 ' . > A é ° a i” ; . . | “i. ;
> a : a - : eal i. ; oe y ;
| )
| iar
Mrs.
|
COST i$ AS LOW AS RENTAL
APPLIES TO
. * $2.25 Tf puncnase IF YOU BUY
... the musical
» instrument
of your choice!
Try before you buy—find out
which CONN instrument is best
for you. We will heip with a
simple, proven selection method
developed by the largest band
instrument manufacturer in
the worid.
PER WEEK
Open Mon. & Fri. Nights
CALBI
MUSIC CO.
Park Free Rear of Store
119 N. Saginaw FE 5-8222 |
THINKING OF A
SWIMMING POOL?
*D yeur Esther Williams Poe!
ie tribater — exclusive for
this area.
INLAND LAKES SALES. 312] W. Heren FE 4-312)
4 wry PAAAAPPAPRAAS A >
> 4
$ NEW LAUN-DRY-MAT $ > > SILVER BELL ‘AT. JOSLYN 4
3 JUDAH LAKE >
> die Washers $:
2 Self Service b
3 Open 24 Hrs. Day, 7 Days a Week $
Ee ge eee ee Kenneth PDartdson has a
chance to look at the first prize project
Beth Jacob
Sisterhood
Votes Slate
Mrs. Gersten
New President of
Temple Group
Mrs. Charles .Gersten was
elected president of Sister-
hood of Temple Beth Jacob at
its luncheon meeting held
Tuesday at the temple.
Serving with her are Mrs
Harold Chapman, first vice
president: Mrs. Thomas Horo-
witz, second vice president;
Mrs. Saitiel Stolorow, third
vice president; -Mrs. Harry
Aekerman, fourth vice presi-
dent; Mrs. Harry Arnkoff,
recording secretary; Mrs. Mal-
colm Kahn, treasurer, Mrs
Sherman Birnkrant, correspon-
ding secretary; Mrs. Robert
Moore, financial secretary; and
Mrs. Joseph Nosanchuk, par-
liamentarian.
* * *
Mrs. Hubert Curson was
chairman of the luncheon as-
sisted by Mrs. Sidney Shertzer,
Mrs. Harold) Chapman and
Mrs. Julian Levine. Com-
munity singing was led b;’ Mrs
Nathan Hershfield
-® * ®
Delegates who reported on
the state convention held in
Flint were Mrs. Stolorow, Mrs
Samuel Chaffets, Mrs. Gersten
and Mrs. Chapman
Also taking part in the pro-
gram were Mrs. Sidney Siegel
and Mrs. Alfred Simmons
Pillar Club Sees
Pictures of Italy
Thirty members of Pillar
Club met Tuesday evening at
thé home of Mrs. Robert Has-
kins of Walnut Lake. Mrs. Ha-
rold Haskins was cohostess
Assisting were Mrs. L. F
Hire, Mrs. D. H. Craig, Mrs.
Paul Heinsohn and Mrs. John
Kiltie.
Following a cooperative din-
ner, Mrs Robert Haskins
showed pictures of her recent
trip to Italy. Mrs. A, C. Kirby
will be hostess for the June
meeting.
—_———_ 4 —__ _—___
Nurses to Meet
The annual May meeting of'
the Michigan Association of
Nurse Anesthetists will be held
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Veterans Memorial Building in
Detroit.
"Continuing lis Traditional Supremacy
Kingsley Inn Woodward South of Long Lake Road-
. Dining at Its Very Best in an
"Atmosphere of Elegance and Gharm
© paling THE
KINGSLEY INN >
GYPSIES
in the EMPIRE ROOM
to the Music of the KINGSLEY INN COACHMEN
FRIDAY and SATUKDAY at 16 — COTILLION ROOM
STEREOPHONIC. BROADCASTS — > STATION WJBK,
12 NOON MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
OPEN EVERY SUNDAY 12. NOON TO 2 A.M. “Burmese Tea House,”
pool and pollywogs.
complete with
Gy ss
pe 6-14
o«*
ww —
e \ \s \ si
ba bbrne Halos Its asnappy-wrap — se¢
the
and quickest to iron—it opens flat
Choose denim, pique, or seersucker dmgram! Coolest under sun
for 1, 2 or 3 gay versions of this
smart sun style. Tomorrow's pat
tern: Teen dress
Printed Pattern 4573 Girls’
Sizes 6, 8, 10, 12, 14. Size 10 takes
1'2 yards 39-inch fabric
Printed ditections on each pat-
tern part. Easier, accurate
Send 35 cents in coins for this
pattern—add 10 cents for each pat
tern. for l1st-class -mading. Send
to Anne Admas. care of The Pon-
tiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243
West 17th St., New York 11, N.Y.
Address with
Number Print plainly Name,
Zone, Size and Style re +. :
Spring council meeting of Northern
Oakland County Girl Scouts ivas held
CAl Building,
Oakland Girl Scout Council
Holds Meeting in Waterford Tuesday at the
Northern Oakland County
Girl Scout. Council held
spring meeting Tuesday at the
CAI Building, Waterford
The ceremony was pre
sented by Senior Roundup girls
who will attend the’ Nationu!
Roundup in Colorado Springs
July 3-12. They the invo-
cation and sang official
roundup song its
a flag
gave
the
Binoculars were awarded to
one troop in each of the five
districts for sgiling the great-
est amount during the recent
cookie sale. Mrs. Carlyle Bra-
gen, cookie chairman, present-
ed the prizes to Troop 54 of
Harrison - Central - Meadow
brook neighborhood, Troop 578
of Wisner-Alcott-Lincoln neigh
borhood, Troop 55] of Union
Lake neighborhood, Troop 120
of Waterford Center-Beaumont
neighborhood and Troop 165 of
Oxford neighborhood
Mrs. William Johnson, Avon
District chairman, received the
council meeting attendance
award
GRADUATES CITED
Recognition was given to
Senior Scout graduates by Mrs
Earl Schultz, Senior Scout ad-
visor
Receiving certificates were
Shelby, Jean Lockamy. Dianne
Copenhaver, Betsy Cook, Mari-
lyn Bell, Carot.Murphy, Vicky
McLaughlin, Jacqueline Grif-
fin, Barbara Lloyd, Joanne Fol-
som, Susan Hallenbach, Mar-
jorie Swobuda, Mary Way,
Gretchen Everhart, Barbara
Baldwin, Mary Stuart, Dee
Tanner, Lynn Whipple and
Lynn Tolhurst
tag AE Rmcnanrh t* ah ag
ey
ford.
W ater- projects.
Judges of the “Doll House"
project, which originated with-
in the council, were Pat Lally
Fred Poole and Mrs. Stanley
Conn. They awarded the first
prize to Intermediate Troop 309
of Rochester for its Burmese
Tea House
Second
79 of Avon
by Troop 413 lace went to Troop
and third place was
won of Water-
ford
‘ * * *
For the Brownie group, first
place went to Troop 12, North
Second place, Troop S332, of
Avon and third place, Troop 72,
North
Receiving honorable mention
Rochester Troop 320 for
study. use of color and design:
Waterford Troop 397 for good
taste and neatness: Waterford
Troop 54. for unique use and
cleverness of idea; and Pontiac
Troop 500 for cleverness
ideas, taste and colo:
These doll houses will be dis-
tributed by the were
of
troops to hos
‘pitals and other charitics
TO EXHIBIT ART
‘Picture Your Home Fron-
tier has been an inspiration
for Roundup girls, as well as
troops throughout the country
All have taken part in the art
exhibit fo be judged at 1959
Senior Roundup in Colorado
A painting by Gay Schmidt, 8-
year-old daughter of the Nelson
Schmidts of Oxford and a mem-
ber of Brownie Troop 565, has
been selected for the exhibit
Representing the intermedi-
ate division with a pencil draw-
ing is Linda Teasdle of Auburn
Heights. The two pictures will
*® Vrs.
one of the completed Miscellanecus
| Shower Fetes
_ a Bride-Elect
Mary Landon, bride-elect of
Fred A. Vollrath, was honored
at a miscellaneous shower
Monday evening at the home
of Mrs. William Clark of Kee-
go Harbor. Norma Greene was
cohostess.
Guests were Mar.e McGill,
Mrs. Paul Harworth, Nancy
Wright, Mrs. William Deuman,
| Mrs. Leonard Biallas, Mrs.
Andrew Andrews, Mrs, Daniel
| Curry, Mary Jean Savu, Mrs.
| Melvin Marley, Mrs. Archie rs
!
'
|
Patton, -Mrs. Nadine Riley and
Clara Lee Vollrath.
Others were the _ bride-
groom's mother, Mrs. Fred W.
Vollrath, the bride's mother,
Mrs. Clarence Landon; Virla
Lee Landon, Mrs. Dalton Metz,
students Permanents
AT A LOW,
LOW PRICE!
All work done by senior f
under super:
vision of instructor.
Phone FE 4-1854
Closed All Day
Wednesday :
| Call Miss Wilson Today ;
tor Information .
PONTIAC 1. BEAUTY COLLEGE
=
’
eeusoeevunve
Peatiae Press Photes
Fred Bisballe poses with
“doll. house”
be sent to Colorado.
* * *
Roundup girls will hold open
house from 10M5 a.m. to 11:45
a.m. Saturday. The public is
invited to attend and see the
demonstrations and equipment
to be used and taken to the
encampment by representa-
tives from Northern Oakland
County. The open house will
be held at the camp on Mace-
day Lake road at Orr road.
Sorority Notes
Founders Day
Founders Day dinner and in-
Stallation of officers was held Over 20 Beautiful
Resenthal pat-
terns im stock.
With Decorated Cup. .
guarantee. 45-piece 49.4.3
by Xi Pi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority Tuesday 4ur 22 years in business
evening at Hunter's Whip in ee ranges ..
Franklin, .
New officers installed were
Mrs. Alphonse Fowler, presi- e
dent: Mrs. Andrew Vitt, vice
-prgsident; Mrs. John Black,
secretary; and Virginia Lu- n
ther, treasure:
Jean Warnock, outgoing pres-
ident, installed the officers
She was assisted by Elizabeth
Halsey and Miss Luther
Before working in flower or
vegetable garden, be sure to slip
on a pair of gloves. The chemicals
in the soil that are so helpful to
flowers are harmful to your skin. d-Piece Setting
++ tee ee ewes
North Edge of Miracle Mile
en Telegraph Read Mrs. Sylvia Alex, Mrs. Ken- :
neth Burr, Mrs. Lucile San- _ 16% East Huree 4
| dow, Mrs. patearet Rosamond Behind Kresge's. 2nd Floor *
and Mrs, J .C _Saeckel. +:
Rosenthal... . : | MJ i . . :
FINE CHINA AT IT’S BEST! .,
| | , ait ‘
Open Steck Available wth Taupe Cup, $19.7@
Taylorton Casual China
Choice of 7 sengge =e l-year replacement
We are now showing the finest collection of dinnerware in
covering dinnerware in all price
. Many of exceptional values.
WE REGISTER
Michigan’s
Largest
Dinnerware
Specialty Store
o-« — eo
oy
_— eee eee eee eee eee ee
$395
—— © BU Pas i TO
eu QuaLit’
iodies’ F
YU ON
¥
I q Pr hioned ull ma 0 SE
.
WATCH FOR OUR
GRAND
OPENING
~~ SOON
THE MOST PRACTICAL, COMFORTABLE
DAY-NITER
“STURDY AND COMFORTABLE, TOO, COVERED IN SADDLE TAN, PERSIMMON OR ANTIQUE
WHITE PLASTIC \ ae ~
Charge It
¢ 30 - 60 - 90 Days or Budget Terms
{ Up to 24 Months
2 SECONDS FLAT! ANOTHER SHIPMENT
FOR YOUR FAMILY ‘ROOM OR CABIN
i a ee
MAKES
-A BED IN.
‘g 9*
OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY
AND FRIDAY
THLE 9 PM,
Parking Directly in front of our store
|HI-WAY FURNITURE MART I —
cork 72 WOODWARD AVE, B/RMINGHAM | ‘
i ? . t . i aes “ie
Ee NW PROEKS MOF 14 MEAD... ooo 4/40 i TONITE ra 0661
oT) ey , e NiPeticn Township High School.|Waterford, Public Schools; .and|\™ °
f and the Hi-Fi’s 4 Patricia Looman, of the speéch| Madeleine Half director of Oak- . cunuaanes
' e
e department, is the director, land County Child Guidance Clinic. |
“The play has been instrument- | Also on the meeting’s agenda is ig
al in teaching teenagers some- |report from Elmer Hartwig, legis- |g
thing about emotional disturb. |!ation committee chairman, on the|™ .
ance and its effect upon a whole |Study and work toward emergency |@
tamily,” says Mrs. Jerome Fink, |¢@re for the mentally ill in Oakland 2
president of the society, ine oes oe ae state
n regarding adm’ pro- The teenage cast includes Marcia |
Cameron, 301 N. Hospital Rd; |e, ind’, Bominations | ter Tom Goff, 130 S. Tilden St.; Sara’ Pontes terms for the board of
Barningham, 2856 W. Huron St St:
HELD OVER! Jobless Areas
| stil Troubling anv Aral an PULITZER PRIZE may
NOW ON THE SCREEN! SIRLOIN STEAK STRIPS $ 50: \
Potatoes, Vegetables,
Chef’s Salad, Hot Roll & Butter...
SSCHOSOHOOSHOSSSSSHSSHSSHSHHSHSESS FESOSOSSESEES
Parties, ou _ room seat- VISIT OUR \
. Banquets open ta seve our TOUNGE N
\ \ PIZZA" Take Out Call FE 3- 9377.
Open Daily 9 a.m. to 2 a.m—Sunday 2 p.m. to 2 a.m.
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
= $44 1650 N. Perry at Pontiac Rd. FE 3-9732
es ee ; Mehakdcdehdededehdedidede ded. des
ae
Welco he
THIS WEEK — EVERY WEEK | ‘oie
| Secretary of Labor James P. |
FOR YOUR RECREATION, ENJOY OUR Mitchell urged Congress to enact)
SHUFFLEBOARD POOL TABLE fl \ 4769 Dixie Hwy | | Cloud on Otherwise
“MAYOR OF THE HILLBILLIES’ . Just South of Williams awe Road ea tii Brightening Picture of
AND NOBLE LEE | nat -|p| Employment in U.S. Featuring the top music in | DANCING EVERY NIGHT “The Mailing Game |
Western and Hillbilly Style Music. Music by the ‘3 Little Words’ FRED ma Tate | WASHINGTON (AP). — The |@ d ‘ ‘
i) SPADAFORE BAR Yi] with Jee at the Organ BEHOCOLOR « cmemscor: ere Department said today that Ph — oh ” CROOKED TRAIL
ho e ecor s j .
| | FINE ‘LIQUORS, BEER and WINE NEW SECOND FEATURE~ evi. occu: recovers, there still are = Cinsnatcovt
fi Shows Friday, Saturday 9 P.M. to 2 A.M. | . Pleasant Service in Modern Surroundings ; APPOINTMENT bad areas of unemployment re-| \ im 7 v COLOR
() i | LADIES’ NIGHT EVERY WEDNESDAY quiring federal and state attention. | ,
wg’ SHADON Monday-Saturday 10 m2 a= Phone OR 4-0022 an assistance program to encour- ay
‘hard-hit areas. He called on gov- \Snsaseuanes Preity we
SPECIAL KIDDIE MATINEE ernors to have legislatures follow | : -_— | pss age new industries to locate in
6 N. CASS, CORNER OF WEST HURON = =o SSS
2 EE... Ve. Gee. 2 Presents SATURDAY 12:30 President Eisenhower's advice in|
EXTRA CARTOONS [| ™proving state unemployment
ee oie ea eae Oe haat ie et tant sO se BILLY FRAYE — FREE PASSES— " ———* laws. * DRIVE-IN - MA 4.3] 35 .
Beautiful New | | “The economy in general is THEATRE LAST COMPLETE
° Syl Comedy M.C. ae pa ‘making a seal Ne ht can SHOW STARTS : recovery,"’ Mitchell id, ‘‘but veep or r
(7 y van Glen Inn DANCING there stil are puonis iad slscas ED Lae AT 10:00
MUSIC and DANCING Fcunen Compania Cole seri are not sharing that pros- ;
- To P = ; 9 Fag arr TT se He said the localized character
George Corsi and His Gee Cee Trio be
EVELYN
TERRY Lovely Dancer Lee Keines of Drayton, Caller | °f unemployment, even though
there: was springtime improve-
=se= —______—-—_i__—_ —__-___—_ ment in more than 90 per cent of
WANTED the 149 major labor market areas,
“demonstrates the need for a fed-
1,000 COMIC BOOKS eral areas assistance program.’
$00 True Love Stary Bags. * * *
We Handle Bienen Jokes. an Mitchell's study of the unemploy- Soft. Romantic Music for
Dining and Dancing
THURS., FRI. AND SAT. NITES
Fine Food and Cocktails, Exquisite Cuisine
SYLVAN GLEN INN 5725 Rochester Rd., ‘Troy TR 9-0660
WITH TWO
A 5 - ment problem — with 65 million’
(Between 18 and 19 Mile Roads) FABULOU JACK | [Pg cleo caeeaaiaalg cue workers at jobs and 3,627,000 still | . - ab dl FLOOR SHOWS Se eenegenenennnen ~ idle in April—showed the greatest > _ d
| EVERY RIPLEY Seocar] amber, of unemployed concen:| GAP” Oa NcING THURSDAY, FRIDAY MODERN and SQUARE DANCING FRIDAY and Impressionist digjcoiay Penneylvania, Californie, Michi- ' 9 P.M. ‘TIL 2 A.M.
SATURDAY NIGHT URDAY & All Next Week = a ae At SATURDAY 8 P.M. ‘TIL 2 A.M ; showed loyment par- : ° Ra a" —Mutic By— SAT YEAST RAISED J ticularly high among the youngest SUN. 8 P.M. ‘TIL 1 A.M. iY) —s BILL LAWSON = GLAZED SPUDNUTS | members of the work fore.
JAM SESSION AND HIS BAND EVERY TUESDAY and THURSDAY
among the unskilled laboring men. ; i
scan kes be, [oe ee te OLD DUTCH MILL { CLENN EASTMAN Calling
* Reg. s8e b ith Frank Perry and His Swingmasters THE t * * * Auburn et Churchill Ra. Auburn Heights
-_* w« & * * Corner of Elizabeth 2 An upward trend in employer
a Del I's Inn Lake sad Coss Lohe hiring plans reportedly will con- J L I 0 U 0 R
Roads tinue at least to midsummer. A
Now Available— 1 Short Block West CS bis we Spring hiring dropped 14 major THE COUNTRY GENTLEMEN 7
BALLROOM Reservations fe 2-298) a -_ ~ labor market areas from the list , sma the TIPTON BROTHERS .
wl ile ‘of those classed as having sub- B WILSON on Drums —
= oe — EE) _—E—=E—L_—=_EEE ——_._ | Stantia] labor surplus, or idleness; =. wake YOUNG on Piano
ee DANCES and PARTIES SQUARE and ROUND of 6 per cent or more. Sixty cities, on
ae . Call EM 3-9124 remain on that list, compared with | Af . NO ay ER BCHANCS | Th L f Cl b | | | DANCING” ee = ago and only 2] two)
9451 Elizabeth Lake Rd. HARD TIME DANCE | DANCING
intend Sead Veteran's Hall—3325 Orchard Lake Rd. SA BALLRGOM. Traffic Right- of- Way | — —__—__—— — - - — KEEGO HARBOR 2957 Woodward, Detroit ~ Bill Goes to House | WATLED LAKE PARI DARKE
| — j Dancing Ev . SKELLY S CLUB 59 acters): May 23rd—Door Prizes BB rcraey eae Sank) I She Picsic Woncderband
Music by TODD ELWELL LANSING wn — A Si to cary as . : iability of motorists approac
Fo ot TS al ey UN ag oh a interacts from aide area con: 0 p F N p A LY 8 Miles West of Pontiac on M-59—Next to Pontiac Speedway Bie trolled by ‘‘stop’’ signs has been ;
= approved by the Senate and sent to ‘ ~”
me ~ -—ALSO— ’ . : ; + 4
CAMPUS BALLROOM a cporreried pe pleniye | Also Friday, Saturday & Sunday Nights
s - | * ;
DET idirections was unobstructed would Thrill Rides — Fun Galore “
Mod. and Square Dancing
Every TUES. FRI, SAT. | °C Cxcerted.
— FINEST ORCHESTRAS
— — —
— SSG I DINEOUT “KENNY DAVIS” “We THISWEEK » 2) ; et the “— ce Dance to the Music of
JERRY GREEN BOB LAWSON TRIO
on Drums "e Friday and Saturday Evenings : | 2. | @ Noonday Luncheons are our Specialty for Your Listening Enjoyment | e s Famous Style Dinners Nights and Sundays
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THIS WEEKEND
T
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4195 Dixie Highway . OR 38-7161
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FE 3-9446 INSIDE—OUTSIDE & CARRY-OUT SERVICE Music by The Cass-Mill red\. CHICKEN—SEA FOODS—SPAGHETTI ih re | ee ee Open 9 A.M. ‘til 1 A.M. Orchestra were uP 0 rivin an e
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i . 7 | Dine Out Today to the Famous ; \
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laying for your listenin os H ‘ pad ’ P; . $25
Fiare nigh a week | DINNERS: fe MARV JACKSON FRED STEINBAUGH | Mey 22s Onan an owe
Our. Kitchen is Open For 80 to 10:88 PM, +o 5 A On the Piano end His Music Maker Trie ~ Lennn=n™ iniature Train
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SMORGASBORDLUNCHEONS-| SMORGASBORD DINNERS
Chicken or Ham or Pork 1 25 Beef or Turkey dr Ham or $ 95
TOWN & COUNTRY INN Cocktail Lounge and Restoaur CARL’SFUN SPOT Steak. Coffee or Tea.. Pork Chops; Coffee or Tea
.. : 00 5:30 to 10:00 p. m.
raph Kd vo ae. vecitid Verne Widen 1 BOs: Oped Sundays. Selasgidhend 195. 2 te 9 P.M. Corner Dixie and. Telegraph FE 5-895.
, mK” ’
Pe “ree * = —=—s
F
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959 hela at | Ld ee —————
State Meets Start; PCH After 5th
a me ae rn na my
°
Chiefs Facing ©
Hot Challenges
in Test at MSU: Indians, Vikings, Ann
Arbor, Farmington in
List of Top Threats
An underdog Pontiac Central
High track squad of 14 young
hopeful athletes tomorrow -heads . °
into the annual Michigan school-
boy Class A championships at
Ralph Young Field, at Michigan
State University .
*® x *
The Chiefs are defending cham-
pions, They have won the big hon-
ors four times in a row, face a
difficult challenge in their try for
a fifth title.
Observers rate a_ half-dozen
other squads as leading threats
for the big one, but there was
hope among the 14 PCH quali-
fiers making up the defending
titlists’’ attack foree, that there
would be enough balance to once
more emerge at the top.
cot tae Fe MOM
a
ee Pe
Pontiac Central has strength (in
several directions, particularly in
the shotput, the medley relay, high
jump, and perhaps in the dashes}
and hurdles. However, there was
indication that this would be the — AFTER 5TW TITLE—Shooting for their fifth straight Michigan
High School Assn. track and field championship, Pontiac Central
High's squad (above) invades Ralph Young Field at MSU, Satur-
day. The Chiefs posed with their two 1959 big meet trophies, the
U. of D. Relays and the Thurston Regional award. The squad in-
cludes — top from left — Van Lacore, Dick Reynolds (Tomahawk),
+= Nine Area Golf
Teams Compete
at Port Huron County Prep Linkers
Expected to Make Bid
~ for» Titles ee
Nine Oakland County area high)
schools representing three classes, |
headed by defending Class A
champion Birmingham, go to Port)
Huron tomorrow to compete ‘in the’
annual Michigan prep golf tourna-
ment. e “
The area delegation will be)
joined by 33 other schoolboy teams _ ae
for the 1$-hole medal play tourney) Now WITH BOSOX a obby
with the winner in each class de-| Avil ore ede
cided by the combined stroke to-; AV#@ was purchased yesterday tal of four players. j by the Boston. Red Sox from the
= Baltimore Orioles. The 32-year-
Competition is scheduled in | old infielder spent 10-years with
three divisions—Class A, Class | Cleveland in the Majors.» The
B and Class C-D. The “A” and | purchase price was not
“C-D” golfers will de their fir- nounced.
ing at Black River Country Club |
while the “B"” squads play at |
Port Huron Golf Club. Starting ©
_ time on_both layouts is 8:30
| a.m. ' -
Pontiae Press Phote
Bob Richards, Leonard Gracey (manager), Jim Pritchett, Bill
Pritchett, Allan Howze, Charles Kimbrell, Leon Prentis, Charles
Brown, Ivery McDaniels (manager), Jesse Watkins and assistant
coach Tom Metzdorf. Kneeling — assistant coach Ray Lowry, Bill
Ratcliff, Joe Anderson, John Jefferson, Fred Brooks, Maurice
Johnson, Coach Dean Wilson. Joining Birmingham from. this
sector are Pontiac Central, Farm-
ington and Southfield in the “A”!
ranks; West Bloomfield, Brigh-|
ton and Shrine in Class B, and|
toughest competition the Chiefs
have faced.
Rated highly were the two Flint
squads, with Central probably the
biggest threat. There was an Ann
from the eastern part of the state. |
Kalamazoo Central was another |
possible threat.
-|St. ‘Frederick and Royal Oak St.|
Mary in the “C-D’’ division. j
®. *
Birmingham, _ last state AMERICAN LEAGUE a . a a .
= + - } year s i .
ichamp, and PCH, Farmington, W. /ctevelana nm i oo os interested in playing Summer base-
‘arm-| é |Bloomfield and St. Fred look tike Soitfee 007 3 i 26 4 |baFl im” Independence. Township. Arbor powerhouse, strong Farm- ithe county area’s strongest repre-|Kansas City .... 15 . 1 M7? 66 8 to 15 may report to the ington, Grosse Pte. and_ Monroe{ sentatives. plane ae 3 |Clarkston High School or Pine | 8 ston >, : . " in. | Detroit e Bb.» 3% Farmington was a surprise win- 3s"... 2° 19 (387
The Pontiac area will be well |
represented, with Birmingham,
Waterford, Pontiac Nerthern
High, and the two Reyail Oak |
schools among Class A eniries.
Cranbréok, Bloomfield Hills, & a» ner in last week’s regional action YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
at Farmington CC, beating Bir- Bovon 5. Kansas City 0
mingham by three strokes for the YS GAMES
Class A crown. The Keego
won the * (38) vs.-Grim +43).-
course and was three shots better New York at
,than Farmington. Tetley ®ve 8th Annual Golf
Wash ee at Boston,
The Chiefs placed 3rd in their °°’ tomonnow's ‘SCHEDULE West Bloomfield, Clawson, Troy
all have strong squads and could |.
make this division a very warm
fight. Defending champion is FE.
Grand Rapids.
Not since the days of Chiets'
fabulous Hayes Jones (current
Olympic prospect at EMU), has
the state seen a triple winner.
There was the possibility, Satur-
day, that this situation might be
changed with Farmington's sensa-
tional Warren Cawley running the
hurdles and trying the broad
jump, all events in which Jones
set records while at) PCH
Cawley has hit 13.9 to equal the
national prep mark for the highs
He. turned 186 this year for the
lows, and jumped better than 22
feet. He could win all three, Satur-
day, giving his team a hefty boost
The record assault will include
probably the hottest mile battle
of years between defending ti-
tiist Rem Purdy of the Pointe
and Jerry Bashaw of» Lincoln
Park who have been pretty close
this spring to the state mark |
mark of 4:21.8 set last year by |
Purdy." Bill Milum of Flint Cen.
tral is not far behind.
Maples’ Bill Alcorn is regarded
as a sure bet to boost the pole a ie %. ‘. Fgh od . m, ;
: oe
GPa E & Invitational at nw
Pairings for 8th Annual PCC on Monday see EES: Press Golf Invitational | All of the Oakland area teams sor *ptee...g °° 3 343% 10 Class A Challengers going to Port Huron except@uepn mf a 2
With 7 in B-C Teams Farmington, Southfield, So athe Emam ee es Su ‘%
AIRINGS-STARTING TIMES BACK NINE : jand_St. Mary will cross paths|s: ‘Louls 1° 14 400 8%
~ . “ — 8:24am. — Jon Shaw, West Complete Field |again Monday when they play in|/Fuleéelcempars gESUiTS FRONT NINE Bloomfield: Pat Secoy, St |The Pontiac Press Prep Invita- Pittspurgh 7. st. Louis 2. night
8:24am. — Mike Samardzija s tlade Frederick; Gary Mouw, Bir- Entries have been locked up and tional at Pontiac Country Club. (San = Seneaued® ames
TODAY? GAMES an-. |
Detroit at Cleveland. 7 Dk -Deptaan f team (b5) ¥s 2)
75 pm! (3-0)
7:15 p.m.—Pascual,
Champions of their respective
iconferences, Connecticut (5-0),
Clemson. (20-6), Bradley (19-3),
iTexas A&M 418-7) and George
(Washington (143) have quatified
for the NCAA baseball tournament.
x * *
C. W. Smith's Hillsdale goes
for his second straight stakes
victory in $100,C0@ Californian at
Hollywood Park tomorrow.
* * *
The American League has ap-
proved the purchase of Chicago
White Sox stock by Bill Veek. |
* * *
. dim Tyler of Franklia Hills
will captain the MSU rewing
squad against Wayne State in
the school’s first rowing regatta
| om Grand River in East Lansing
' today, x * *
Word from Chicago is that the
pro grid Cardinals are going to
trade Lamar McHan to.the Green
Bay Packers.
x *
i}; Northside All-Stars will play Our
Lady. of the Lakes in a Little
j\League game. Saturday at 2:00
p-m. an the Our Lady field on
Dixie Highway.
| x *
| Tomorrow is tryout day for boys
Knob School diamonds for tryouts
at-9 a.m. The program will have
leagues divided into three age
groups. Several sponsorsn have al-
ipeady been secured by the Town-
B’ title on’ the same Chicago at Kansas City, % p m.—808¥ shin Recreaton Board.
‘Spencer, Sno-Bol
Nines Post Wins
nemonay LAT, wana\ctt Waterford
Spencer's came from behind and
Sno-ol got shutout pitching from
Bob Badder to win . Waterford
;American League softball games
llast nigfit.
An inside-the-pakr homer by
\Wheatley broke a 33 tie and m—|Spencer's won 53 over Nonne‘s
p m—|Jack Nelson hurled the route with
‘John Studt getting 3 of 7 hits.
'~ Sno-Bol was outhit 43 by Dray-
»™— Bersche brothers, Jim and Joe, got
the three winners’ bingies. Joe
'scored the ony, run_needed in the
i 1st. Pontiac Central; Richard mingham: ‘Tom Deaton, |the field is complete for Monday's x *®& ” mm
DeLano, Pontiae Northern; Pontiac Central. 8th annua! running of The Pontiac! Ann Arbor, Dearborn and Valley) “Burdette (62) ver Raberte cot
Chuck Canterbury, Water- 8:31 am—Chuck Deschaine. St Press Prep Invitational golf tour-!}champion Flint Central are the Bel A icean (rth ns Demi Tae
ford; Mike Wiegand, St ' F » : ~inament at Pontiac Country Club.|Vorites in Class A tomorrow while/St. Louts at Chicago. 2 p.m— rederick: Barry Johnson, | "~~ : lve. | €21) ws Hobbie (3-3) Michael. West Bloomfield: Donald Seventeen Oakland County area/ Jackson St. John gets the nod in Cincinnati at | Putsburgh. 7:13
8.31 am. — Bob Thompson, Davis; Pontiac Northern; high school teams, the largest en-|the “B” ranks. Another Jackson TOMORROW'S CERDULE
Bloomfield © Hills: Larry Bruce Ennis, Rochester try list since 1952 when the sarhe| Parochial school, St. Mary, will be) Mawaukee ai Phuagelphia. JA a
Beaupre, Rochester; Buzz ¢. 4 Bruce Brown., St. Number registered for the Ist Press shooting for its 6th consecutive st routs at Chicago. 1 pm
Lewis. Birmingham: John ~~ ar 1: are vac Ah event, are in the fold and ready state championship in Class GD. |Cineinnati at Pittsburgh, 12:30 p.m.
Hoyvting. Shrine oe erry Noes ‘ty start gunning for ‘the title and) Saturday's tournament field: - Shrine: Dick Evans, RO h . } at one AT BLACK RIVER CC
8:38am. — _ Brucee Billings, Kimball; Richard Banfield, ‘ Aeny Perpetual trophy that Bes CLASS A Aim Arbor. Dearborn, Flint | w Bloomfield His: Bob Mc- Waterford i it. Central, Midland, Pontiac Central, Jack-
Kee, Clawson;
8:45 a.m.—Doug Forier, RO Kim- Fred Coxen, Walled Lake; morning it appeared that there Central.
8 8 8 ° P ra * ~ sen. Parmington. Plymouth, Kalamazoo;
Orin Pear- 8: 45 Te Bricks. Claw Central, Niles, Birmingham, Bay City
on, Birmingham; Larry Mc- """” $0. ‘Beier ‘Saputo, Shrines| Ertries Closed | Wednesday at fends. , University of Detratt | Wig ; : ¢* : : : ‘ uw a
Carty, Waterford. son; Peter Saputo. Shrine; midnight and until late yesterday/Grand Rapids Union, Muskegon Catholic |
: aS . : AT PORT HURON CC ball; Tom Balkwell, Walled g.59 PCK Austreng. St. Michael. woul be 18 schools in the compe-| crass 'eyackson st Soha, ast! ® Lake: Kei “aw. 2s am. — Jack Miller, South tition, which would have set a new|Grand Rapids, East Lansing, | Alma, ake; Keith Haglund, Claw-| I - Steve Dil Bl |Brighton, West Bloomfield, Lansing St. son; Bill M Rochest | oe attz, 2100M- record. |Mary, Hillsdale, Whitehall, Three Rivers. ~— on. Pal Meson, socnester. | field Hills; Ken Bucci, Oak But Thursday telephone cal] Manistee, St. Johns, Kalamazoo Un!- 8.52 a.m.—Bob Duckwall., Lapeer; Park; Frank Palopoli, St. . eR: - versity High, Kalamazoo St. Augustine. ‘ Ronald Metcalf,RODondero:| sick , from Southfield reduced the figure|Royal Oak Shrine, St. Claire
to 17. The Jays were forced to] o, SF MACE Mivee co Robert Young, Walled Lake;| 9:00 am—Fred Wendt. Lapeer;’ withdraw their entry after failing |st. CLEVELAND ® — It's well for
Mike Jackson, Birmingham. | Mary, Owosso)
THURSDAY'S FIGHTS
By The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES—Mauro hima
° Paul, Edwardsburg, Royal Oak 8t.| s their for- ; 2 John Taylor, Pontiac. Cen-! : : ae Mary. Ann Arbor University High, Pon. the Detroit Tigers that
ed ial ae ne foot 9:00 am.—Chris Howard, South tral;. Jim “Hollister, West Ne. Ssadny eas (cl ane tine (St. Frederick, Holt, Stanton, Mon-itunes seem to have turned, for
oarrent champion ae Ay ete Lyon; Dennis Patterson, St.’ Bloomfield; Russ Baker, RO up Mies Sites jnow a really rough deal is on the
Saturday's preliminaries start at Michael; Jim Miller, Pon- — ‘Bruins Trip R a4 ; ’ facia fe maue es tiac Northern; Ron Read, 9:07 a.m. —Gary Krause, RO Class A — Birmingham, Pon- |OUins trip Kangers Tonight's opener of a four-game Doatiend Coat uh . i ; ll a Oak Park Kimball: Gordon West, tiae Central, Waterford, Pontiac [in Berlin Exhibition series here with the league leading F ral's quilifiers are 9:07 a.m.—Don Beyer, Lapeer: Bloomfield Hills; Bill Davis,| Northern; Rechester, Walled Cleveland Indians finds manager ania _ietidies sRatentt tdashes Vic Olah. Oak Park: Jack Pontiac Central; Don Cole,! Lake, Royal Oak Dondero, Oak | BERLIN (AP) — The Boston|Jimmy Dykes: team setting out oO e thurdles: ohnson Je rson ° s wo a = i
ina, ie Brooks, Kamael hgh : Frees, Magee: Ol s.i¢am—Joe Pullin’ Bloons| Eagion:'™ "ns IRangiiee Ba Wekeealig ait mimnenes of pent ee ump}, ! ritchett Rus ~ . | wv: a.m.—J0e é | 78 : ° .
pinot uaCore, Brooks, sim renee “ 9:14 Pcie Man oe ae ficld Hills; Bob Stachurski,| Class B-C — Weet Becmnfield, |the final match of thelr “three The’ situation also is likely te soo. Ratcliff, Pritchett (880-relay\, Joe “ oe eae era Clawson; Roger Morenc,.’ Bloomfield Hills, Clawsen, Rey- |game hockey exhibition series in Anderson (mile) mingham; Gary McDowell, - Ay . : z serve as a test of Dykes’ ability aes a : Pontiac Northern: Bill Beck. Oak Park; Joe Keller, St. al Oak Shrine, South Lyon, Pon- |West Berlin. to handle pitching assignments. 1440). Reilly (880). Cocks +880) Alcorn UP FOR GRABS—This huge cee 3 : : D, gg ae Frederick tiae St. Frederick and Pontiac In the 20 games of their Euro- ante tvasit), Jacobeon ‘broad’ jump). perpetual trophy, standing 3- + RO K me ave f stie, 9:21 a.m — Ron Sugg, Pontiac st. Michael. ipean tour to date the Rangers! Detroit, fighting to avoid a re-
Pontiac Northern — Ed Montgomery feet, is up for grabs in the 8th A . ; : . Central; Tom Roach, La-| It goe3 without ri that Bir- lead, 11-8, with one game ending'turn to the Americati League cel-
(880) | annual Pontiac Press Invitational 9:21 a.m.¢Jim Armistedt, West peer; Ron Pulleyblank. Wat-|_/f 80¢8 without saying that in a tie. Jar, is playing 11 games in nine juparmington — Cawley shurdies, broad) Golf Tournament Monday at . : Bloomfield; Dick Perkins, | erford; Bill Dingel, Walled ny orgy a te = hee 00 Seo Merion as. "Pontiac Country Club, Birming-° Rochester; Jack Moores.| Lake Thole Fun at 8:24 in the morning, | S2S2°oRstenanas Sere Waterford — Bili Kaines (mile), Mike ham has held it five times, with Shrine; James Sprague,| 9:28 a.m.—Russ Marshall, Pon-|°” ° =< * . * i aie ¥ = 2
gen u — OL st. Mary. pin Kron, POMtiAC Central and Waterford South. Lyon. tiac Northern; Mike Reed.) The Maples have won fi ot|* s ; (880, relay), relay team, Krull, an} as the other winners ~ 9:28 a.m.—Dave Boening, Claw- St. Frederick; Douglas Grif-| he seven” : tna |
Sickest — Bl Fenner *| cr son; Steve Carpman, Oak ame, RO aie lwith only Waterford and Pontiac | © OC in : Our Cranbrook-Class B — Medie relay! — ita aig Don-| i orale y earenggs Meas | £ : ‘ team (Seyfarth, Prey, ‘Cameton, Can-| field), Hubbard (vault), Crouse (dashes) 880-relay (Crouse, Hoffman, Dewitt, Mexico City, Seyfarth), But ' y 135. Compten, Calif., 16. 4 |
a a amg DeWitt "BROWNSVILLE, ‘Tex.—Onterio Molina, (broad jump, 440), Callogly +880)
MHSAA Records
forClassA-B 120. Corpus Christi, epeee. Pajarito Gon-
tales, 1 Reynosa, feo, 4
TOKYO—Hachiro Tatsuimt, 154. Japan,
outpeinted Fumio Kaizu. 151, Japan. 10
Here are the current
Pm ny | a (1925), Hester, | . etroit; Tolan, Cass Tech (1927): Sebert J —_ : - Dant (1958s Alpena rane sabert, COLUMBUS — Baseball's ma
(1945), E Grand Rapids jor leagues have opened the gate
220-yard dash: (A}—21.7 (1925). Hes- for io j ter; (1953), Alonzo Harris, Pontiac 1B) for the formation of a third loop
—21.8 (1948), Swain. with major league status.
440-yard: (A) — 49.7 (1945), Cambell, j Ja- Dearborn-Fordson. (By) — 50.6 41938), _ Operating heads of the 16 Na
Housler, Boyne City tional and American League clubs
880-yard: (A) — 1:589 (1956). lake reed imo * Kelamazoo (Bi—1:576 11938) rels- ag here unani usly yester
ford, Birmingham. day “to
Mile: (A)—4:21.8 (1958) Purdy, G. Pte i ions
(B)—4:28.2 (1940), Brackrog, Mt. Morris appl cation favorably consider”
for major league - lub é The immed .|though Bud Badger is gone, and|\ ¢a a % High hurdles: (A)—14.4. (1956), Hayes Status by “an acceptable group cau) organizations ee eee SO i cteriard weak at times this sea- | acs _— and derky M noos Jones, Pontiac. (B)—14.9 (1949), Hill, of eight clubs which could qualify.”| ‘The approach is to a third ment from George Trautman, oon ‘bas not hel by swing. &) silarti. | Baseball commissioner - Ford jeague,” he said head of the minor leagues, on pless. - Fe In the left hand, the P| Low hurdles: (A)—19.0 (1958), Cawley, | : : ’ : ; _| Each school will send five play-| { Farmington. (B)—20.0 (1956). Palmer, |Frick says his personal belief is| the statement from the - club he —t happen “ a third ma-| ers into the battle and tee offs ||, main pressure should “ uis ° i a 68 vel . ‘4 j k be : . # ? s a +4 Shotput: YA)—BT feet 19584)" Boyden, |*At such a league is parson owners loosed a’ flood of specula- JF 8sue 's organiz hich ‘have| Wil begin tromt both nines simul-| be applied with the | poe mtg Miskegon. (B)—84 feet 8% inches (1953).!and that it certainly will come tion, Among the cities which h Ve taneously. Pairings and starting) | last three fingers — again avoiding too hard of a os tial be 4 . r : within fi sted alte b Libe : Pole vault: (A)—12 feet 11% "inches | Within five years. timistic report On, .Was — how, about ball = af aa sine tae agent times are-announced today. grip. with the index finger. The main idea here is First Rapt. =. 2 orgs grant Sag sg Og 1 Miva even "etitiens oat Nel players? ee Yo +. Boftale “New Cnicana ; = jase —- eee . 40 have the club firmly in control with the left hand == $8). Amy. } af . aida ’ trophy w 0 overall win-; Fi Gar.
“Shien Jump: iAy—# feet 4 inches |York's major’s committee on A third major league would Dallas-Ff. Worth, Minneapolis-St. nor Mae: as a with’ tro-lA sa caps i pola gs ° . a
(1950). Mead, Bay Gis, 8 Yet 3 bell He said: nerd 200 players under. the Paul, Montreal, ‘Seattle, Mexico phies for the class A champ and| pl Rsgpte 2 the bi tee, et Ft road jump: (A)— % rere : ; ; oe . hand at the top of the swing. Doing will have you ieee ayes dongs,” Pustige. Bia “We ought to be ready in tour ? at player Meat rute City and’ Toronto. the B-C champ. P ‘ nthe ; 2 4
Ren ee or five weeks to do something. in * ols ‘ It at all costs, 880-relay: 7A) — 1:30.0 (1927), Det, hird majo should ers will develop if you have the fications members of a new league ists in’ both classes and medals): fau v NE. (B)—1:31.0" 64986), palmer, « ing Tapas : et that fer then ‘would havé to.meet “in order to for members of the ca pe itn ts Sh ih ee a eRe et a iw "go major.” team. Beart tn-For » 4 231: \¢time.”” ; 7 Another wae was — ‘go major, ; : ; ee
. é x . a ° ag “ae ; - bi
et i Se seen | a th y - : tad , ; - w . ; . a f ¥ ‘ A ; ’ .
r . : ; . dero; Lyle: Kish, South ,Lyon.
FACULTY TOURNAMENT
NINE HOLES, FRONT SIDE
10:00, 10:10, 10:20.
Tee-off times—9:40 am., 9:50,! : ; ble to make a deht in|— erford; Jim Agne, Walled Central sa le Lake: Roger Buchannan, Ro their domination. PCH won the)’.
Kimball. \inaugura] event. and the Skippers | © By DR. CARY MIDDLECOEF
9:40 a.m. James Landry, Shrine; |>roke through in 1956. \e rarest? ar ; erins me oP Kurt Letzring, South Lyon; | There are indications, however. | ment. , writg fa Paul Harding, St. Michael. DIAGNOSIS: Pressure in the =
earursuret: Gate Opens for 3rd Major League +> $$$ ______ days — five of which are at night
'— and from now until June
ert tec ans
8
Ff
| The June 22 date is the first day
off. in a playing span starting with
tonight's battle with the Indians.
The team will be playing 1 day off uniess
the weather. interferes with the
: 2 ‘
White Sox has.
for May 2,
Dykes’ first string
not been too re-
weakness of his
q i
:
Ab
that Birmingham's path to another |*' be 5
|Press crown will be infested with TREATMENT: As any golf professional will tell you, ©
‘thorns, Half a dozen other squads) —
'look thoroughly capable of giving) ~
the Maples a-close race for the! ©
championship. | &
Pontiac Central, which
snapped Birmingham’s 36-dual- doomed to failure from ‘
the start. ‘ j =}
understand about the grip
is that the main pressure
in the right hand should
be applied with the middle
two, fingers. Gripping too
hard with the index finger
will set up tension in one
of the major muscles in
the forearm, which will 3 victory string Wednesday | Frick's statement came at the about the cost and the effect on meet Mar a by ome rom é
windup of a hastily called meeting the minors?
of the major league club bosses.
Frick’s d. “there is no
existing plan te expand the pres-
ent major leagues.”” By that he
meant expansion of the National
and American loops‘ to 10 or 12 ardzija, is a worthy challenger.
One of the qualifications set | So i West Bloomfield with pint- up in the meeting yesterday was , *i?¢d Jon Shaw leading the way. that the new league would be | Other strong titlé Contenders are| | responsible for all territorial St ~Fred, which has shown ex-|- provisions and financial obliga- (cellent team balance: Bloomfield)
tions necessary to set it up. | Hills, still to be respected even|* we
? on |
4
To that, Frick said: “The play:|. ‘The club olvners set up 10 quali- “There are also awatds for medal- spraying your shots all over the course. Avoid this grip
getting your grip set right is Step A toward acquiring i|
a goed swing. If the grip is wrong, you are prétty much it
One thing you should iri game in eight
t time, Foytack
the bull pen.
has indicated
that’s to be the fate of the right-
hander once counted on as a
Cleveland is expected to. use
pitcher Gary Bell (3-2), sophomore
righthander who spent his first
year in the Big Leagues in 1958 after being impressive in the
Only three unbeaten teams re-
main after two weeks of play in.
the Pontiac Church Softball
Track Title |
7
Ls
——_
orca »
od +
NEW -YORK (AP)—Boxing re-
turns to Madison Square Garden
for a long run tonight with
heavyweight match between Alex
Miteff of Argentina and substitute * Step at 5157
West Huron At.
Heurs’? te 6
Sunday 9 te 2
FE 5-8318 a
Wayne Bethea of New York.
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Deoler's Address license No. of Cor THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959
ro
Ann Ar
bor Hosts Big 10 Meets
TRI-COUNTY CHAMPS — This quintet paced
Rochester to the Tri-County championship in the
2nd annual meet held yesterday at Romeo. In-
cluded are top row, left to right, Denny Hohf and
Rociesier Tri-Coun Romeo had the standout
dividual on the field but Rochester
used balance to ‘take the
County League track champion-
ship at Romeo yesterday.
Orchard Lake St. Mary: clinched
the Suburban Catholi¢ crown by
‘eating St. Fred 3-1 and Clarkston’s
Dick Caverly hurled a no-hitter at
Holly highlighting a busy baseball
slate. .
Bill Benson won the high jump
and placed 4th in the broad jump
to pace Rochester with 7 points.
The Falcons also took the shot
put and 440 and tied in the pole
vault in compiling 58! points.
Romeo also had four winners but
was far baek otherwise in totaling
49. Lapeer had 39, new loop entry Tri-| - Joe McDaniels.
in the 880 relay.
The latter event was a record
for two meets held thus far.
| Others were set in the shot, 880,
broad jump and mile.
Ted Baraczewski won the OLSM
baseball clincher with relief help.
Ken Kowalski stole home for one
Eaglet run and homered for an-
other. Ten walks greatly. aided the
victors.
* * *
Caverly lost a shutout in the 7th
in downing , Molly 9-2. Clarkston
broke up a scorless duel ih the 5th
with 7 runs featuring a grand slam
by John Parks
Milford wrapped up the Wayne-
Oakland Championship, West Bill Lovelace, Reggie Dixon and Bill Benson.
Dixon is holding the title trophy. Benson was
high man of the group with 7 points.
ty Track Chamos in- in the broad jump and taking part after blooing an 8-0 lead. Down = Indiana Golfers
| Are Figured as
> Purdue Threats Track Marks May Fall
in Distance Events of
Conference Meet
ANN ARBOR (UPI)—Indiana,
, Which never has’ won a Big Ten
igolf tournament, has its best
‘chance yet to dethrone arch-rival
|Purdue when medal play started
gan course.
The Hoosiers had a dual meet
record of 14-1-1. Altogether, Pur-
due and Indiana met four tires
during the season in all types of
jmeets with Purdue handing In-
idiana defeats by seven and eight
jpoint margins while the Hoosiers
iclipped Purdue on the Boilermak-
--rer-eourse for a. two-point victory
plus the tie.
Indiana doesn't have any par
busters like Purdue's defend-
ing champion John Konsek but
only 3.1 strokes separate the
Hoosiers’ top and bottom men
led by Jén Sommer’s 75.6 up to
Dave Pelz’ 78.7.
Purdue has won the conference
crown five of the last nine years
all-veteran team
expected to w.n Pontiac Press Phote
Bojtom row, left to right, are
and with a near
returning, was
again.
The dark horses are Michigan,
9-8, Terry Hoy- tied it for the Red- 29d Michigan State.
skins with a homer and Larry; Two Big Ten track records ap-
Chaple cleared the fence in the 8th.’ peared in danger ‘today with
Jims Paddock and Earl Clark had half-miler George Kerr of Ili-
Brighton home runs. Terry Ander- nois and miler Bob Lake of
son won in relief.
* * *
West Bloomfield had only two
earned runs but led all the way as, Kerr, a Jamaica star on the
the Barons made eight errors. .A Illini team, already has been
homer by Otto Jancik brought clocked at 1:49.4 for the 880, best
Avon from behind as Darryl time ever by a Big Ten athlete,
Thorpe earned another triumph. and he could be pressed all the
Cranbrook was held to four safe- way or even beaten, by Michigan's
ties Tony Seth, another Caribbean
runner who has a best time of
1:50.7 this year
The record for the event is 1:50.3
by Dave Lean of Michigan State | Michigan State rated top chal-
lengers in the 59th annua] cop-
ference meet.
OL St. Mary and Clarkston also
won in other sports. The Eaglet
tracksmen edged Bloomfield Hills
56 2/5 to 55 3/5 while Clarenceville
had |today on the University of Michi-,
|
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’ Roseville 23 and L'Anse Creuse Bloomfield outscored Blomfield a Frank Prelewicz turned ae JERE, raed > ai TO GO
Boclars Ughenre 144g. Hills 11-9, Avondale downed Oak- ‘€ tide by winning the pole vault.| Me. Dealer: Ask your wholesaler how this coupen mey be redeemed. +. * * | land B champion Madison 11-8, Clarkston whipped St. Fred 170- Lake has a time of 4:04.9, far d
Bulldog Charley Peterson scored and Hamtramck walloped Cran- a in golf sparked by Jim Cun. better than peal eee i Se . ; ie - Rome brook 11-0 in other baseball. ter’s 38. Mike Reed fired a 40 for by Don McEwen of Michigan 14’, poonts for Romeo by winning fhelitacnn eight years ago, and was rated CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES |
. 100 and low hurdles, gaining a 3rd Milford nipped Brighton 10-9 capable of whipping the record if
he gets any competition.
Foreign stars were expected to
Stand out. Michigan's Tom Mobin-
son, from Nassau, Bahamas, was
favored in both the 100 and 220
yard dashes; Les Bird of Michi-
gan, from Antigua, was the choice
in the broad jump and Finland's
Eeles Larfdstrom, also competing
for the Wolverines, was classed
as most likely to win the pole 63 E. Walton Bivd.
vault,
Michigan, which won the indoor
track championship in March. wa; T
a heavy favorite to add the out- For Your Home In a track triangular for sopho-
mores and juniors not in the state
jfinals, Pontiac Central scored 79
points, Birmingham 31 and Water-
ford 29. The Chiefs missed only
one Ist with three double victors.
TRICOUNTY WINNERS
Roch), 48
Benson, 5 feet
le vault—Bil] Copp ‘Lapeer
(Roch tled at 1
Bob Stevens ‘Lapeer:
29 feet. 336 { High hurdles—Ron
Leh! ‘+L'Anse), Merley relay—!
Romeo ‘Herb Bliss, Howard Grimes. Tom
Craig and Don Powler), 2458: 100
Peterson 10.5 880 — Frank Coleman
}(Romeo}, 2°09.2: 440 — Bill Lovelace
(Roch), 548: Low hurdles Peterson
21.7; 220 — Wayne Smith (Lapeer), 24
Mile — Ed Fellers (Lapeer), 4.57.9: 880
relay Romeo (Peterson. Ted Thiel,
Dave Wills and Fowler), 37.8
Wir
8h
7 inches
Broad jump — Nogel (Ct'vile)
1 ‘nches
hurdles — rere aN ree eran o-e=neenrgrs
FE 8-4402
‘—Oary Meissner
nch; High Jump
8 inches. P
o coo
er
3
-
door title for the 23rd time on the
basis of its superior strength as
well as individual stars plus in
juries which could hamper de
fending champion Illino‘s ners at Bloomfield Hills
t - Wisckstrom .(B) 46 feet
@ Outdoor
Furniture 18 feet
Tigh Rusewicz (QUSM)
Jeanne Stunyo, who finished
second in diving to the now re-
tired Pat McCormack in the 1956
Olympics swimming competition,
is a senior at the University of
Detroit.
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Low hurdles Krull (OLSM
} 220-yard — Schumann (PH)
Mile — Barry (BH). 4461
880-relay — (Bloomfield Hills!, 1 390
High jump — Votruba (OLSM), & feet
inches
Pole vault
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State finals at 2 Port Huron
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‘lege ‘Conference of Illinois titles
Lk)
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959
x &* * x *k *
tournament at Michigan State Uni-'_ Don Middlebrook, Iowa, defeat . Brown, Wisconsin, 3-6, 6-4, 6-4
Denny Nabors, Ohio State,
The Wolverines went undefeat- H ary Granette, Indiana, 6-4
. ‘ : Olson, Minnesota, defeated Shi
ed in their first 10 matches (Northwestern, 6-0, 6-2
ste , ams — 9 | Jack Archer, Ohio Btate yesterday and amassed 24 points | 08°" pon ‘Indiana’ 9.7. 6-4 ve rsity
i i ; ‘ Fy Ruedisilli, Wisconsin, 6-4. 6-1
wh third with 12 points; Iowa Jack ‘Schlosser *Obio State ” to 18 for the Illini. Minnesota Dan Mesh. Illinois, defeated Lon! Holtman and Beb Breckenridge. 1i1-| v ~$~4 7 PRrRIcEeE x *
isEpecedto MI’ Netters in Lead <% Northwestern, 6-0
. 'Steve Hibben, Northwestern, 6-2. 6-4 |
od Tony Epkins. Illinois. defeated Roger Plagen-|
hoe!f, Michigan State, 7-5, 9-7.
defeated; Jerry Rotter, Wisconsin, defeated! 6-4 John Stoy. lowa, 6-4, 2-6, 6-2
n Torri DOUBLES (FIRST ROUND) Healey and Tierney, Minnesota, de-
defeated feated Anderson and Rotter,
sin. 6-4, 6-2
nois, defeated Dixon and Field,
defeated 6-3, 6-4
had 10; Ohio State 6; Michigan |Uan Rothmuller, Indiana, 7-5, 2-6 6-0 Voxman and Lary Halpin, Iowa, de- Qu
z | Hank Utley, lowa, defeated Art feated Bard and Hibben, Northwestern y .% » f oe State 5, Wisconsin 4; and North- 4-6, 6-4, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3. i iT |Ginannakopoylos, Ohio State
western 1. Purdue failed to | °°
score a point in yesterday's play. |Voxman, Wisconsin, 6-1,
Michigan scored 22 points in
(Singles play and captured two
closely-contested doubles matches. |
John Wiley and Frank Fulton
defeated Purdue's Dick and Bob
3erg, 6-2, 7-5 and Wayne Peacock
teamed with Lary Zaitzeff to de-
feat Ray Raddsevich and Dan OI-
son of Minnesota, 6-4, 7-5
Jerry Dubie, Jon Erickson and
Fulton supplied the power in
Michigan's singles sweep
fay
sulr
sI Big Ten tennis tourna-
marie
NGLES (FIRST ROUND)
ickson. Michigan, defeated Larry
JNO bSiate 6-1! 6-1
4 7
Michigan. defeated bill
e. 6-0 -2
Michigan. defeated Fos-
e. 6-4. 6-0
i ~
Northwestern defeated
nreaux. Pu 6-4. 4-6 6-2 hil Cc rdue
Dan Olson. Minnesota. defeated Steve
Kalabany. Purdue, 6-3. 6-4
I ‘ ] defeated John
.1-5
son. Minnesoia defeated
rthwestern, 6-1. 6-3
Beb Cansford Illinois, defeated Dick
i; g P ie, 6-2. 6-4
SINGLES (SECOND ROUND)
r P M
Wa Peacock Michigan defeated
Jen Lortz, Wisconsin, 6-2 -
La Zattze{{. Michigan. defeated Bob
Da Wisconsin, 6-0, 6-1
n Stoy wa eated On State's
Chuck Ca 5 3 6-4
R f ail M gan State. defeatec
Net] Gould. Minnesota. 6-4 6-3 .
Dut Michigan, defeated Gay Mes-
i Northwestern 6-2, 6-1
Ericksor fichigan Cefeated. Vandy
i Northwestern, 6-1, 6-1
Fulton, Michigan. defeated Bob Sas-
i
Anderson. Wisconsin. 1-5
Champions’ Tourney
Tomorrow, Sunday #} COME IN—
Fifteen of this area’s outstanding COOL OFF | 1
bowling teams swing into action as
tomorrow right at four alleys in
the 2nd annual ‘Tournament of Keep Kool While
Champions’"’ sponsored by the the Hottest Deal You've Ever
Waterford Junior Chamber of Seen.
Commerce
* * * .
The event, open only to Town-
ship league winners or 2nd place
finishers, will be held Saturday
night and Sunday afternoon. COFFEE FOR
Defending champion Drayton
Inn has drawn a bye into tomor-
row's 2nd round which starts at |
9:30 p. m. All others will start
rolling at 7 at either Lakewood
Lanes, Dixie Recreation, Land-
0-Lakes or Howe's Lanes.
* * *
The four top opening night per-
formers will advance to the semi-
finals Saturday at 2 p. m. Finalists As]
will vie at 5 p. m.
Prizes will be awarded immedi-
ately after the championship is 1958 R
decided FO D The first place team will
i ™ ! WAGON
Mikkelson. Minnesota, defeated Bill
6-3
ICE CREAM, COOKIES, Plagenhoef and MPscaill,
western, 7-5, 6-2 &
State, defeated Hitler and Torri, North-| \ ;
J lay MA?) Tho PRICE is RIGHT y
a cay) TReQUALITY ia Pontect +
Sis | “EAST LANSING w — Favore Mike Field, Indiana, defeated Don Lansford, llinois, defeated Steve Bard? - ~ ' :
Mict : . ‘ ni Fa red Schmidt, Purdue, 6-1, 6-2 4-6, 6-2 a ga
whigan Came through in form Bob Breckeridge Ilinols defeated Mescall, Michigan State, defeated Dick; 1 toe a ~ ,
in early round play and held a Doug Smith, Michigan. State, 3-6, 6-0,'Trachsel, Wisconsin, 5-7, 6-2, 6-3 { — 9 . 6-2 3 j a six point lead over runner- s Sassone, Michigan, defeated George
I ead over runner up ili Jack Fitzpatrick, Indiana, defeated Gilmore, LUllinois, 6-4, 6-0 |
nois today in the big ten tennis Jim Himmelwright, Purdue, 9-7, 6-2 Ray Raddéevitch, Minnesota, defeated!
Wiscon-|
ndiana,
Michigan !
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147 S. SAGINAW ST. _—‘*FE '5-4101
Call Collect from Toll Areas for New or Used Car Information, ;
~e
ne eee
Vies
a
THE ‘MAVERICK SPECIAL’ — This is the
new two-wheel drive Willys station wagon now
= offered by the Oliver Motor Sales, 210 Or-
chard Lake Ave. The new vehicle is designed
for standard six-passenger family service and e =
County Dealer Acquires
Willys’ Oakland Franchise
County franchise for Willys. as a versatile carry-all with 100 cubic feet of
cargo space with the rear seats fotded forward.
Oliver Motor Sales has just acquired the Oakland
»
Hoffa Denies
Strike Threat
Sonee K. Johnson, 2 25, of 98 Cam-|
ley St., recently,
was granted a
fire and casualty’
insurance license’
tion.
sponsored by the
Republic Fire In-|
surance Co. of
Detroit. Johnson)
for two years has a
been associated
rth 8 “yas areareneseseaness JOHNSON with his rather's|arena Shy Se 2B firm, August Johnson Realty, 1104) : VEGETABLES
S. Telegraph. |Asparagus, doz. bchs, 00 * * * |Chives, No. 1, dos, .... cane 2:18
; ; j\Leeks, Mo. {, des. ..c.eoc- 2.00
Livingstone P. Hicks, 10624 Co" Pires green, doz. ... 85)
dar Island Rd., White Lake Town-|persniga, ts p00 seseeees to
____|ship, has been named to supervise, Potatone o> 1.50,
he accounf of Accumulated Capi-| [Radishes white 308, eee eo ubarbd, ot uu eens See
al, Inc., Phoenix, Ariz., recently |romatoes, rer peeing 8 ibs. casuscen 8
icquired by Howelb & Young Ad-|
vertising, Inc., of Royal Oak.
Hicks, executive director. of
‘orporation is introducing a new)
Business Noles | MARKETS |Rail Irading following are top prices
\covering sales of locally grown
produce brought tu the Farmer's!
|Mustard. No. 1, bu. .
Sorrel,
Spinach, bu.
lowell & Y®ung, says the Arizona Paraipe.
rading stamp plan which compen-! arket by growers and sold by
after passing a ‘them in wholesale package lots. |
Lansing examina. |Quotations are furnished by the
He w a s Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of
Thursday.
Detroit Produce
. FRUITS
les, Delicious, bu
eIntosh, bu.
GREENS
bu.
bu. .
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959
Tops Market | :
NEW YORK \*% The stock |,
market advanced in active deal-|
jings early today with rails heavily |
traded.
| Gains of leading stocks went,
from fractions to about a point.
| The carriers followeg through on}
0 their rally of yesterday when they,
lifted the market to an overall,
gain. Gains of the carriers were
mainly fractional. .
* * *
Pennsylvania Railroad wag up
14 at 18: on a block of 17,500
shares and improved its rise in |
Similar gains were made by
Northern Pacific, Union Pacific,
New York Central, Santa Fe, Balti-
more & Ohio and Alleghany Corp.,
ithe holding company for New York
~
!Central.
Olicer Motor Sales, 210 Orchard head engine, which provides a ates the customer in cash rather Poultry and Eggs age erserica are
Lake Ave., a Buick and Ope! high level of fuel economy, the new h chads ye pers, oils, airlines
ienlership, has just acquired the model maintains the miaximum . . St TIRCCHAMNe: Peete. DETROIT POULTRY equipments also moved ahead
dealership, BAS J 1 ; _— "Says His Union Would] The director announced agency) DETROIT, May 21 (AP)—Prices paid moderately.
Oakland County franchise for cegree of maneuverability charac- N L ans call’ for the opening of a per pound t. a b. Detroit for No. 1 qua mn ~ *
my ie P ‘Gaen"’ vehicle ; . y_ live poultry:
Willys terisitic of all ‘‘jeep’’ vehicles Keep Any Cw LOWS) sioenix service office. Heavy type hens: 17-18; light type hens| Among the few wider gainers
The immediate introductory re-- A_ selection of eight two-tone d b C t 9-10; meee 4 type broilers and fryers, 3-4) . |
car! < ce ts Imposed by Congress |pounds, whites 19-20: Bard Rock 24-25: were Litton Industries which,
cponse to the rugged “jeep” sta--paint combinations with harmoni- The Board of Directors of Sher- eaponettes § pounds 2-021; over § pounds: jin 5eq more than 3 and Du Pont,’
tion wagon, “maverick,"” has been zing interiors of breathable vinyl 5 nan Products, Inc., has elected 77° Pove’™ ‘about 3 3 ahead. Raytheon, General
“terrific,” according to Bob Oli- coated fabrics and Pompano car- MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP)~ | yp Froehlich to the post of. vice DETROIT EGGS iTire nad Chrysler rose about a
ver. “The idea of a small wagon peting are standard Although he said he favors systen | .resident-manufacturing. The an-|_ DETROIT, May 21 (AP)—Eggs fo b i h
i ‘apt! the imaginz I - oe : / = . |Detroit in case lots federal-state grades point each.
has captured: the imagination ind indusiry bargaining, Team | ‘ouncement was made by Presi-' whites—Grade A jump 33-35. std) The ticker ta late brief
, oar : a pe a dus tt A an . . i 7 er was late - |
people intrigued by the small car 15-Second Quake Hits sters Union President James R | lent W. A. Romain, following the S)% oi eda a i ta ad ou ix te the opening es. ed
craze Hoffa says his union never woul nt ual meeting of stockholders at sman 18-19, mie. re. areas 8 trading slowed , . 77 : : 6tS" } - }
The “Maverick’’ employs two New Zealand Town call an: asin walkout toyal Owk. ott ae i: large “id, medians 73:| Boeing was actively traded, |
wheel drive, accommodates six ; ; . He « 41 making the threat o Froehlich for the past year has,check 19. ‘
WELLINGTON, New Zealand uP - | ie sup manager. responsible! Commercially graded: White grace Opening on a block of 11,000 shares
passengers and can carry a hali i nial ced such trike in a talk at Prowns | een group manag po ss jumbo 30; extra large Kh to at: quickly followed by two blocks of
_ - *or ar i o “OC KE : n - “o 2) < ¥ | . :
ton load within 100 cubic feet = a second on quake zoe : - ile, Tex. and reiterated an ear | OF the manufacturing, engineer: a ftree a8 t ie) een vc uta = 5 1,300 shares apiece and one of
of ‘cargo space with the rear ‘Yelington tonite it, causing ol licr claim: that he had been mis | ng and purchasing-production de-jlarge 22's 19.000 with the price showing no)
. lamage and plunging a third of ,, i tments
seats folded forward. TU 4 ° cae quoted saruments. Boei dded a fraction |
, . __,, Ue city into darkness But. Hoffa added. he does not| He Nives at 19191 Glenwood St., Li ' k later ng a
a il chamber captive a Windows were hroken, chimneys fee] to have been “victimized” by | Lathrup Village. | kj * * *
white wall tires are standard ¢.]) an hes Cras (F f : i f and articles were throvn off te: pres near: “Tc _ . 5 ee
equipment and eliminate the need - : as ue Ol! the 7 ss because “I can handle | pana Brak) USDA Moderate gains included U.S
shelves mysel = = ay (AP) ’ . > ,;
for carrying a spare. says Oliver. pepartment store shoppers * * * | | 1V1In ( ost | Cattle gotten 300. steady on ter Steel, Ford, Goodyear, American
A one-piece windshield and low mara ae a led & : classes tn Cleanup affair: nat ering Telephone, Eastman Kodak, Tex-,
t screamed as the flours tremblec Hoffa. here to talk with Minne- standard and grade mixed offer- daus.G
er, ribbed roof panel are amone Tora . ea lichtc , - : | ings 24.00- ey utility 21.00-24.00; utility Aco an ypsum.
, - walls cracked and the lights went apolis and St, Paul Teamsters, t t cows 1950-2100: canners and cutters! |
new design features ut = said his union would abide by any e urns O . 00-19 50 ee a last week slaughter[ |
But. the biggest attraction is Ty ai sintered! abc Eee ; ne eers under 1100 Ibs along with heifers -
} i . ey . The quake centered about 0 restrictions: Congress imposes in fully steady; steers over 110Q Ibe. steady! New York Stocks
the economy feature explains miles from Wellington new laws. ‘But,’ he added, ‘‘we Record High« bulle steady: around 3 joocs aversge ¢ f (Late Morning Quotations) |
waler : | a
the dealer Damage was also reported in reserve the right to have the ad- high choice 1035-1250 Ib. steers 30.00;|wigures after decima) point are eighths
‘Maverick’ is several hundred Picton ard Blenheim vantages as well as the disadvan-| VASHINGTON (AP) Living 5, Imost choice Sot 1100 Wb. stecrs, 39 00. Admiral 246 Ford Mot .... 706
la i , tages anv new legislation.” (AP)— 8: weights over 1100 Ibs 80529 75; | Air ee 86.2 Preepot Sul .. 313
d : ade station / _ 1000-11 b steers 29.00; good to in .
wagon.” Doesn't Care What It Is, : aay, See: to the “record high reached iN iow choice steers 26.00- 28 30 standard tela Is Chal 3 4 Gen Elec - 5
a ‘ ‘ ‘ Told that Sen. John F. Kennedy July and November of last year. |low g00d steers 24.00-26 00: load standard | A}c™ on td ai Gen #as 832
Aside from its four-cylinder F- He’ll Vote ‘Yes Anyway (D-Mass) had made a speech the government index went up heen oa arena y eas hi haga ree ig 33 Gen Motors ‘Sh
a Thursday night in, which he a¢- iyotenths of one per cent from 88:80 Ib. heifers | 29 35 most. chotcelam Cyan Sea Gen Time .... 902
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — State cused Hoffa of a ‘‘public-be- 750-900 Ib. heifers 2775-2850: small lot|Am Ma Fay 804 Gen Tire 116
Half Shin £ * + a - : March to 123.9 per cent of the'nigh choice 961 Ib heifers 29.00; ood|Am Motors 382 Gillette «- 52
ine xpensive Rep. Charles -F Hoffman of Cin- damned” attitude, he said Kenne- 1947-49 base. This matched the t° low choice heifers 25 50-2750: two am On. ih! a hd ADC Bs
n got fost iz angle of dy ) ( ( > Lat loads high good with an end choice aag-| m Telate Fic C
RICHMOND, V P Eugen cinnath got | in a tangle of dy would lo well to examine )..k recorded in two months last #99 Ib Lutscal edisaceatenearaies ioei Aa 08 6 Goodyear 139 |
R \ - EENC amendments and questions about his own remarks to see whether vont good heifers 23 ‘s0- 2550: utility steers | Armee. bt! e3 hag ga ae
Hi. Loving had had one shoe shined a measure being voted on in the he is talking in the best interests ” * * * Sort atta ecer” 1. 19 30;| tatiiaes ©e 3% ot 0 wns re 3°
: “s [han fp car CNiC ris] ~ Wher led on o king man.” tility bulls 22 4 eyho * ‘ hen the shin boy asked to sex Ohio Legislature. When polled on of the working man Announcing the figure today, the bun up t-25 av peared gee gy Ny (Bait Ro pil — Gull 164
his wrist watch. The boy took the a roll call, he responded ‘Labor Department said that rising convnere salable 25. Nominally steady Boeing Air 375 para 4 : a
$25 < at tht “Voge, tant » ar ate F | i N Pal ay compared last week: prime vVealers oe 4 om t eee
$25 watch to the better light out Yes m whatever we are vot-| The apple blossom is Michigan's cra: and local taxes helped shove|1.00 lower: lower grades steady: most Beta —_ 33.6 Hooker Ch ... 424
side and failed to return ing on.” state flower up the living-cost level. Cost? of| ‘choice and prime vealers 36 00-39.00; feW | Borden 794 1) Cont 52
; OO 7 ie “ edical | peed’ Ok Oecin ue” anh aus Somes! Borg Warn 435 [rene Coy faa transportation, m al care, rec-'@ - cull and utility 18.00-' Briggs MI a5 ‘P 7
- a = . 28.00 Brist My 10g IDterlek I 30
; ' jreation and personal care iteMS ~ gheep and lambs salable $0 Nominally |B; ik Int Harv 442
Broke Safety Rule on Lake Jaunt all were up also | steady today compared last week good to Budd Baine . . —~ Pa R det
{prime shorn lamba steady to strong; Burroughs ....377 Peps! Cola 283
* * * jlower aces steady to weak; slaughter Cal Pack .....64 or D .... 46
5 ey ~ ewes lower; most good and choice Cal & H ...245 Philco + 32
R 13 N Food, however, pgpanerie oo a shorn lambe Ko Ito fall shorn pelts 108 Can Dry ... 205 | Soca hips ria
tenth of one per cent continuing a !>s. down 2) $0.24 several loads choice Cdn Pac .. 30 ee : Pure Ol) .. . 464
ESC ued | ace INEeW | laza r d Tine rkedia drop lnrrigled Gay he ag” ee ereetaheia eee emia aay ot wel So a in January. ~ to 25.20: small lot good epring lambs Case, JI .... 22.7 Repub Stl «.. 733
a 24.50; utility to good lambs 18.00-21.00;|Cater Trac ...1064 Rex Drug ... 421
DETROIT (P®— Coast Guard He said each of: the 13 persons The Hobo, powered by a small The new living cost rise Was aC- cull lambs 1400-18 00 gull to choses| Con Ill Lt ..042 Reyn Mot... 87.
; i f . ed b Labor Depart-,*#ushter ewes closed 3.00-8 |Ches & Ohio ..73 Rey Tob .:... 527
action for violation of marine safe- aboard could be fined $50 for the auxiliary engine, was without Compan y a Labor WVepé |Chrysler 114 Royal Dut ... 442
ty rules was indicated*today fol- violation. sails or a radio. ment report showing the purc has- Gere . Se a = ate { Tas har fa) ee en a
The group's 26-foot sailboat, the - . Ooemeai t th . ooo and on the 10th try the Times| averaged $80.68 per week for the “* i) West A Bk 34
Hobo, had run aground in two “ es Fie Ghee ( 2 -d _ 1 wn boat pulled her free of the sand- worker with three dependents and Pull down lights, over 60 styles fe weit 7 se,
feet of water off Strawberry Is- “ cs - oe oe dene w of bar and began the tow for home. | |$73.14 for the single worker. This on display. Factorv prices. Michi- | Woolwort a is
Jad late Wednesday. It was found 3 ew a on y 0 The boys aboard the Hobo. were reflected both increased wages’ ‘gan: Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake) 8 Yale & Tow 33 |
early yesterday the participants to regard the in- j,2. than fully «killed and experi-/and premium overtime rates fer Ave. et Goer EOP. ate
_ cident as a lark = enced extra work hours. Bl Auto 1 a7 4 Zenith Rea. anne
Coast Guard Warrant Officer Chief Bosun Ad drew Pretry Ke WwW * * * ’ Rum mmage Sale at Stone Crest, Fl & Mn< 73 intB * bh ed
Everett Mo Marshall. command 6f the Coast Gand walle Spendadle earnings of factory 234 Barnston, Walled Lake. Satur-'& gmer, Rad m4 int Bus Mc sr
ae wt ee it ated oc — tea eo ; In their excitement. the bovs workers are now up about 10 per day, May 23. 10 a.m. to5 p.m hig ten ot aig Pfiver am
i. ron, Hetee ere mere SN d ‘ “IO” forsat to} anygne man the cent over the Jevel last year. —Ady. Food - Mach Fy WOM Ci
no Hfejackets aboard the beat. lated by the absence ol Lifejackets nticy <1; ; s id nd th ms - * . r __ \
nile ! said ’ he ummage Sale—Saturday, May f
. ue Wil ; i all over the lake Most of J's million workers aah an Orcas afehoss Note Passed in Class |
until we yelled for someone f0 whose pay rates are geared for a pyterian Church, oiil Commer H :
steel * * * . ~ quarterly living cost adjustment —Adv. Brings Firemen on Run . |
fice Sinan (orm spaeil fei vein oo Goran ic pay ie Priaay,§:00-0.00 Dm. Bat, 9:00. | GANADARKO, Okla. uw — Fire) . will receive no change in pay “1:00 p. m., Waterford C.A1.|Chief Roy Taylor has been called’
time overnight singing school cause the change for the three- e Ay : | a : é Bldg. —Adv.|to a lot of fifes in a lot of ways,—|
songs ind listening to a portable, month period was too small. This, ’
(Pontiac Press Photo
. SELLS MAYOR A POPPY — It isn't every day that Pontiac
Mayor Philip E. Rowston has the opportunity of buying flowers
trom pretty+tittle giris, but yesterday was different. The cute smile
of three-vear-old Kathy George completely® charmed His Honor . :
intd buying one ef the poppies being sold tp aid disabled veterans
She is the daughter of Kart E. George, past commander of VFW
Post 1370 in Pontiac. chairman of the drive which beg@h at noon
sursday ‘and ends at noon tomorrow. All proceeds® will Be
tributed: to ,the filsabled veterans ‘and\their AE °
- ; f . ‘ ais+
¥
-? 27 011
this week.
‘This week's car output will miss lowed a usual pattern for Don D. | last week and
corresponding 1958
Record-breaking operations by
| Rambjer and continued. heavy
overtime scheduling by Ford Di-
| vision, the trade publication said,
*wilks offset decline in
| Motors and Chfysler production 17
week radio's reports of the search for jncludes nearly a million workers
fruits and vegetables’ 905 in the
rate since April, 1946 due
abundant supplies.
General
to New District Judge
DENVER ~~. The-ritual fol-
last week’s 133.856 by only 235 Bowman when he was sworn imas
units ‘and “compares with 86,589 a district court judge. The oath|
units in the similar 1958 week jwas given iby. District. Judge Rob-!
Canadian car_and truck produc- ‘ert W. Steele.
tion thi s week Was chopped to. It was the same Judge Steele! Rummage Sale—14_ E. Ptke St.,|
The truck output compares with [00d price decline. Costs of fresh Products, Inc., appointed J. Jack-
were UP. son Riggs as vice president
Eggs in April sold at their lowest charge of marketing. He had been
to district manager {n Detroit “for
(begat ee Appliance Sales Co.
Oath Giver Well Known ginal Polio Clinte Set
‘in West Bloomfield
| }
8.162 units by observance of the who gave Bowman the oath’ of of-,
mn ictoria Day holiday Monday. Ca- fice -in 1927 as a jpvenile court
nadian plants built 9,506 cars and probation officer,
319 in the district’ court
yyar ago.” jrucks last ;week, anc
corresponding week
rf 8, clerk and in 1933)
as a deputy digtrict attorney.
. in 193t ‘as al WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN.
SHIP — The West Bloomfietd
Township Health Program will
conduct its final polfo clinic of
the présent school year from
6:45 to 8:30 p.m. Monday and
Tuesday in the gymnasiom of
Roosevelt Elementary School.
The clinic is open to
wishing the first, second, third
or booster shet, Inoculations will
| cost one dpiiar. ; '
.
f
rae A in even by note.
men . . ‘te in. Sat., May 23, 9 to 1. Baldwin E. U. x ke
| The Hobo, owned.by W. C. Fla- sey oe ee |B. Church. —Adv.| Taylor and other firefighters!
herty, a Chrysler Corp. executive. x * * Rugeage Sale. Pike & Saginaw, ere attending class in the latest!
was “aken fren its winter dock But about 160.000 workers: will Fri. May 22, 7 p. m. Sat.. May 23, methods when someone slipped, by Flaherty’s son. Paul, 19 get a raise based on the new| 30 am. —Adv. him a carefully written message. |
_ When Me landed, young Fla- jiving cost figures. This includes Rummage Sale—Friday, 7. P.M. It was dated. and gave the exact,
herty doulge d reporters with the one cent for 120,000 workers in Stevens Hall, Guild No. 10. Adv location. Firemen rushed from,
comment “T don't want. ta, talk Westinghouse FElectrie Co.: and AAA Driver Training School. * gp “ass and put out the blaze.
about it one cent for employes of the cars. Insured. FE 5-5201. hay |
ee Caterpillar actor Cc thies eas rpill ar. - Tractor : Co. Chic KO | Rummace Sale—First Presbyter- Cafe’ s Sign of Times
U. S. Truck Output Transit emploves will get/a_ half ian Church. Sat. 23.9a.m. —A@v.
1 cent an hour pay increase. PHOENIX. Ariz. (UPI) . © as ro é ne a A
The one-cent raise for the West- I oeage4f oO he _< = sign in a Phoenix cafe says:
iting New High inghouse workers restores a one- , ae “Eat, drink and be merry, for
cent cut they took in their last Rummage. Furniture. Sat. 9-12.) tomorrow you may diet.”
| DETROIT WU Str ; ‘quarterly adjustment 21 Charlotte. —Adv. RTATE a ae rcs |
will hit n 1959 hich orem tes * * * Ar S Vee A Ol t d dareniie Di ‘ah Str Oamiana. . . cid F visio
automobile production will total Sharp. reductions in egg prices gu p PP inte on the matter of the petition —
1373619 this’ week Automotive and poultry and seasonally lower| ANN ARBOR (p—Argus Cameras 7 Oe Patricia Ashcroft, minor. Cause)
News reported prices for milk brought about the pivision of Sylvania Electric! enna. Margaret Ashcroft a
Petition having been filed in this)
‘ourt alleging that the present where-
abouts of the mother of said minor!
ehild is ufknown and said child is de-
pendent upon the public for support.’
and that said child should be aced
under the jurisdiction of this Court.
In the name of the people of a
Btate of Michigan. you are hereby
fied that the ‘heafing on said pe
will be held at
roi Center.
B West Bivd.. Mosi|
the Oskiand County}
Court - House Annex,
in the City of Pon-|
the afternoon, and you are Lavine ‘eom-|
Manded to appéar personally at lish
heering. ,
being impractical to make per-|
hefrot. this summons
and notic? shall bé served by publicatiog
e a copy one ‘week previous
@aring in Tire’ Pontiac Press,
= printed’ and ¢irculated
onty service
Witness. fhe Honorable Arthur £&
Moore Judge of said Court. in the City
of Pontiac in said County. this 20th dary of May, AD
(Beal) A THOR E MOORE, }
A true copy) Judge of Probate;
"ELSIE J. VASCASSENNO, || Probate Register.
uvenile Division
A J, May ‘60. Death Notices
a MAY 21, 1008, AUGUST
Henry, 286 Oakmont, Auburn
Heights; age 71; beloved tether of
Maylon Graham and Mrs. Gordon
dear brother, of Lewis
Haynes;
v ees- Puner'
Rev. Alger Lewis itictating. -
— in Oa ill Cemetery.
Mamerow will lie Ben state at
rh ve MAY aia ra] Home.
FITZPATRICK, MAY 21, 1959, BABY . a Avalon, Avon gee be-
oved infant daughter a iiliam
and Leila Pitz rpebon dear oa
ter of Bradley trick, Grave-
side servicey Hahn eld this after-
noon at the Eastlawn Cemetery,
Lake Orion, with Rev. George
Kibbe officiating. ar-
rangements by the Moore Chapel
‘of Sparts-Oriffin Puneral Home,
_ Auburn Heights
BOX RUPLIES
At 10 a.m. Today there
were replies ..t The Press
office in the following
boxes:
4, 5, 7, 8, 20, 12, 13, 14,
16, 24, 25, 28, 31, 3%, 56, 62,
64, 65, 66, 71, 72, 75, 77, 96,
100, 162, 103, 1.7.
, a
The Pontiac Press
FOR WANT ADS
DIAL FE 2-818!
From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
All errors should be
ried «ummediately
ress assumes
sipility for
than to cance)
for chat portion
insertion of the advertise
ment which has been rea
cered valueless Ld
error When Pepin me
tre mace be sure to get
your ‘kil) number” No
adjustments will be given
without it
Closiag ume ror advertise
ments containing type sizes
larger than regular agate
type i 12 o’clock noon the
day previous to publication
ADVERTISERS
The deadline for cancelle-
tion of transient thee _
is now 9:15 a.m the age Fe iret ublication after
sertion.
CASH W4NT 4D RATES
(ines i-Dey 4-Days 6Days
s $) 50 $204 $313
3 1.50 29) (430
4 2.0 3a 6.16
§ ‘Bed 48 670
Ld 306 540 620
? 30 630 966
Li. 400 13 11.06
® 450 B10 24
° $00 900 13 0
Card of Thanks 1
WE WISH TO EXPRESs OUR
sincere gratitude to the many
friends. relatives & neighbors for
ther cards, floral offerings and
acts of kindness extended to us
during our recent bereavement in
the loss of our son, David Paul
Whitlock. A very special thanks
to Sheriff Frank Irons. the mem-
bers of his department, Rev G
J SBersche & the Pursiey Fu-
neral Home
_The Jesse Whitlock Family
In Memoriam 2
IN LOVING MEMORY OF MY
dear husbend Henry Partio
who passed away 2 years ago
May 22. 1967
There is an open gate at the end
of the road through which eaco
mut go sione
And there is a light we cannot see,
our Father claime His own
Beyond the gete my loved one [inds
happiness and rest
And there is comfort in the thought
that a loving God knows best
Sadivy missed by his wife Nila
_Par tin
Funeral Directors 4
COATS FUNERAL HOMF
Drayton Piains _OR_ 31151
FUNERAL HOME
“Designed tor Purerais”
—FPARKS-ORI¥ FIN CHAPEL Thoughtful Service TE 2-564
Voorhees-Sivle
FUNERAL HOME
Ambalance Ser ice P'ane or Motor
re tare
Cemetery Lots 5
4 CEMETERY LOT AT WHITE
__Chapel, _phone OR _ 3-6837
4 CHOICE LOTS. (6 GRAVES TO lot) in section 5 Perry-Mt. Park.
chotee lot at Oakland Hills
emetery near Walled Lake and
Novi. ene OR 3-2253.
? CHOICE GRAVES. PERRY MT
GEAUTIFIM ¢ORAVE OT ER.
vide _Reas “hm 4 a
WHITE. CHAPEL. DOURLE LOT
Help Wanted Male _6 ee Pree one aoe =
2 FULL OR PART TIME SALES-
Good commission. We train
23337 Ask for Jean’
for Fuller Brush Route work
Must be reliable with good car
Call FE 2-2318 for appointment.
"OM experience preferred. Holi-
day & vacation pay. Finest work-
am. t 6 p.m. Phone for evening
appt. Pontiac Retail) Store Gen-
ens St FE
63 - YEAR - OLD CONTRACTING
ager. Proven direct »
handling men and a Park FE ape after 5:30 pm.
ry Mt .Park Cemetery Wil) 4-onne
in Garden at Love FF 8-2645
mec wanted Leads furnished
7 PULL TIME. 2 PART TIME MFN
$100 to $150 per week to start
~ § MECHANICS
ing conditions. Will interview 8
eral Motors ait 65 Mt. Clem-
firm desires local saiesman-man-
basic requirements. $6 pag sa) lary
plus bonus. Write giving _ brief
_Tesume to Box _29, Pontiac Press
AT ONCE
6 MEN WILL P@& SELECTED POR
Catholic contact work. Pull or
part time. Large organization
Good income if you can qualify
For interview see Ken Smith
Rear office, Kennedy Real Estate
Bide 340t- W- Muron. 6:30 am
Thurs thru Sat.
NO CONNECTION WITH REAL
Estate, insurance or encyclo-
pedias
AUTO MECHANIC
GM experience only, High income
for fast man ydramatic ex-
wren ae helpful. Shelton Pontiac
On 4 a ain Street. Reshener
OVS. VETS-TRAVEL
3, 18-23 to travel eastern resort
Q@reas and California interview-
_ leer oe people. & month
ag ne work, See
Mr. ‘aM MoCormick, Roose-
pe tel. "prides and Saturday
on:
ouple - Caretaker
Cook - Housekee 12/TO &. FULL TIME FOR BOTH.
Live on premises, Accommodation
for poe ge on mr Belary $300
netied anant
1 ?m, Tem. dornisbeae : Tee.
| Pine —_—- bath; bad elec-
trie cateigarpher nk
unit ay shacks Television; Tele-
phone. Electricity. Laundry ‘sent
out. Gas for car Sobriety Good
permanent positions City {oe
ences, Calf owner. J
- SAVE ENERGY. USE
WANT ADS! To find a
job, place to five or a
ood used car, see Classi-
d NOW!
Help Wanted Male 6 aa ai
BER WANTED. 912 W. Huron.
Call OR OR 3-1460 evenings.
STEADY. NIGHT. GAB DRIVERS. or Ts Apply 438 Orchard
“COL LL "EGE STUDE ENT. summer ee will be offered to
cia qualified young men Paine
ae provide the finances
peal to meet next term's bevy 2
— Accepted men should
e 40 save $1000 by September.
After training and breaking-in,
here in Pontiac, it may pos-
sib'e to transfer to 1 of our 700
offices, including Ann Arbor,
Lansing, and Detroit, a part
time basis. Por information call
Mr. Goins, FE | 2-3613 _— _
D-TOURNAPULL OPERATORS. Also, operator for Northwest drag
line. W Pontiac Press
Box 72 _ .
DEPENDABLE MEN FOR go
ment work Part time. Must
able to trowel. FE 4-0618. can
_Sfter 5
Designers
FOR PRESS ROOM AUTOMATION
Atso Machine Hands
WTD. IMMEDIATELY
APPLY SAHLIN eee
COMPANY
150 W. Maple Rd. Troy, 3 miles
east of Woodward |} MID 4-7373
PLN OA ODL,
Good pay
bonus manager
incentive
Health & retirement plan
tact Mr. Berg. 42 N. Saginaw.
EXPERIENCED “CAR WASHERS
wanted Apply 1 lao W y. Huron.
EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE salesman cia" Smith Wideman
Realty. 412 uron on. FE 4-4526.
ELDERLY MAN. USED ED LUMBER
yard. 226 E Blvd NN.
XP. COOK WTD APPLY FIVE
Spot, 2585 Dixte— te
EXPERIENCED — — FOOD PLAN
salesman. We have excellent fi-
nancing Call for appointment,
Davey's Freezer Sales. OL 32-1511.
EXPERIENCED 8HOs SALESMAN,
with ability to manage shoe store.
Salary and bonus to right man
OR 3-941
FLOOR LAYER | FOR NEW
floors in remodeling job. MAy-
{air 6-6250 __
HEA
ENGINEERING
DIV OF HARLEY EARL’: ASSO.
ARCHITECTURAL ENGINEERS
Junior and Senior
6405 Livernois. Troy
HELPERS WANTED |
Call FE 26319 for_ appointment
[NSURANCE
FIRE UNDERWRITER
Exp. in industrial, commercial &
all other fire lines. Royal Osk
agency 5 days. Reply stating ell
quahfications and salary required.
All replies held in contidence.
Reply Pontiac Press _ Box 14
JOR FOR 2 MEN BTEADY WORK
Most of our men earn more than
$100 per week Must have car
OR 3-0908
LIFE INSURANCE DISTRICT
Manager Fine opportunity for a
successful and aggressive produc-
ing agent, interested in -—_=
his own agency, recruitin
training men. Write qualifications
to Box 89. Pontiac Press.
LABORATORY TISSUE ae nician Pontiac Osteo po
pital PE 8.4192. Ext,
Leads! Leats! Leads! . |
SELL BY APPT ONLY
GUARANTEE DRAW ©: DAY TRAINING
OR PART .TIME
I wil) interview by @ oaly.
MR CALL HL
ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITTANNICA
DIAMOND 1-5390
FULL OR. PART | TIME
Commerce & Walled LE area $60
fo $100 wk MU ¢1815, 8 to 13
daily m eee ee
OUT OF TOWN CONCERN WANTS
man for Portiac area. Quaiilica-
tions — Ability to mana own -
business and to assist im training
of others Earnings—$200 per
week Write, stating qualifications
Jerry-Kay Dustributors. 1580 Pug
Pd. St Clair, Michiges
POLICE PATROLMEN.
( ity of Pontiac '
pal $4 888 $5,200
APP’ IcaTiONS are now being ae
cepted for the position of Satico
atroimen. If you are an ambi-
s young man and have ersdu-
atea from « standard high schoo! - o: have the equivalent credits
and are interested in @ career in
police work, this is your oppor-
tunity
APPLICANTS — be the mini-
mum hetgh minimum
weight 147 Ibs, between 21-28
Trs..
tion and live a 0 mile
radius of Huron and Saginaw Sts
An official application may be ob-
tained from 35 8. “Parke St., Per- _Sonne! Office, 1. ficor, City Hall.
POSITION AVAILABLE -GARDEN-
er, experienced with small green-
house Residence and transporta-
tion furnished. Applicants supply
Bor dee Apply tiac =Preas,
ox
QUALIFIED. COMBINATION bump & paint man wanted, must
be able to estimate. work in
Lake Orion. MY 31487. after
6 om oe . _
Soft Water Salesman You've solo the rest Now -sell
the best. Real Deal fal! FE
2-716<
SINGLE MAN FOR farining Write Pontiae Pre a GENERAL
« Box
SALESMEN ANTED. EARNINGS
CALL OICK VA
OAKLAND AVE. FE
SH OE . DEPARTMENT MANAGER experience preferred. Apply in
persor, Consumers Discount Dep:
«Store, 178 N. Saginaw
SALESMEN
ATTENTION!
Wanted
3 Men TO TRAVEL EASTERN MICHIGAN
1. Men selected wil) be trained at
home office in Chicago. Expenses
aid
2. $400 a month guaranteed to start.
3. Must have car; neat appearing;
energetic; enthustastic
4 This ts @ Ufetime connection.
Right men will be selécted for
treining in key management posi-
tions
pre Clint Barkway 7 to 9 pm,
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thurs-
day event at Roosevelt Hotel.
Pontiac. §-8126.
SOUGH CARPENTERS. MUST BE
_union EM 3-4026, after 7:30 pm.
STEADY WORK FOR PART TMB automatic transmission mechanic,
22 Auburn Ave.
SALESMAN WANTED “or modernisation «a'es. Wil) tratn
aood Worker & M “ullding
rr 271004
Two” NEW ‘R SA \LESMEN, EX-
perienced ly Cadillac & Olds.
A real good job for the right
men FE 4-3566, ask for - sales
manager Ze - ee
TOP PAY FOR TOP CARPENTER. Write Foretman Construction Co,’
308" Tanforan erry Colorado.
Prone PYramic 4-030
_ Service
TRUCK pis TOBER = R-FOR CON-
te with’ ti ea. i aa r ac a
4 7 4 to 5.0m. sod.
OC. -_ re >
matic ae Setyice
_— er or ge Wil
N. :
_Woodward , Birmingha: °
WANTED MAN FOR YOGRES-
sive die set-up with trouble shoot-
ing and renatr experience MY
23-2761. ~
_WOOL PRES®ER, APPLY MAIN
Cleaners 4480 Elisabeth Lk, Rd.
atcrias enter eee man to sell sive automobiles,
Must be grees ive and willing te
ae hog - : ne good commis-
= sior @ Sg oO rig persom
~ Phone FE 8-4530. Ask s- Manager... ‘ -
.
THE PONTIAC PRESS,
FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959
-—
~Today's Television Programs ~
Channel 2-WJBE-TV
Channel 4—WW4J-TV Channel 7-WXYZ-TV =~ = Channel 9—CKLW-TV
——
TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS {9:30 (2) Playhouse. Drama: Rich- (4) (7) History of Transpor- IV Sh Originati
6:00 (2) Code Three. ard Carlson, John Dall star tation Parade. ows | riginating
(4) News, Weather. in story of two brothers who|'!#58 (9) Billboards. in New York Attract *
(7) Curtain Time. _ carry a personal feud with) SATURDAY AFTERNOON Springtime Visitors (9) Pope ye. 7 on dangerous mission! js: 99 (2) Sagebrush Shorty.
$:15 (4) Life of Riley. —And mERG TEC athy (4) True Story. By CHARLES MERCER
6:25 (2) Weather. seeapen (7) Uncle Al. NEW YORK (AP)—What sounds:
6:30 (2) News, Weather. (4) Cavaleade (cont.) 7 Country Calendar interesting to me on network, (4) Riley (cont.) (1) 7 Sunset Strip. Adven-|!?" 30 nh a Bowling. television in the coming week may)
(7) Curtain (cont.) s ne ; not in every instance interest “
(9) Wild Bill Hickok. hone . rates of oats) Aiea lial | So let's remember the show ows 6:45 (2) (4) (7) News, Sports. lee. ie: originating in New York which 9:00 (3) Medic. Brame: French- old man to expose leaders nal arg (2) Tiger Warmup. seemingly thousands of spring: |
Conatien: eiceae cocue “0 mystic cult. 11:00 (2) Baseball. time visitors to the city want to!
araeg (9) Charter Boat. (4) Welcome to Michigan. Michigan army surgeon for'g.45 (4) Jackpot Bowlin . see. 9: ig. 1:30 (2) Baseball. pear
ae % gunshot wounds. | 10:00 (2) Line Up. Police drama: (4) Patti Page. hewn in i cele we Amit abe - Woman: is robbed of jewels (7) Ramar. \
eo and killed with an pointe (9) Movie. = ga Clark Se ABC = ason and the Double of chloroform. 1:45 (4) Industry on Parade. guest Prackie Avalon will sing non ete (4) Thin Man. Drama: Nora/2:00 (4) Movie. Py ”
et ee en eel collects counterfeit hundred- (7) Movie. Venus. + *&« ¢
dollar bill while raising 3:30 (2) Scoreboard - r i
rid frag ad is robbed money for charity milk fund.|3:3@ (7) Dance Party. Bape Ag ngeitang alaangg oes
) Milice Deller Movia: pl ci Weather. |— (2) Wrestling. : ~ on NBC st Saturday night. Ap Drama: Woman scientist d=- ee oe — (©) Milky’y' Movie Party. 3 ‘ : MEE Heee pearing with Como are Gisele vises ‘ mathematical penal 220 (9) Little Theater. - 4:30 (9) Six Gun Judge. | SINKING SENSATION — Slowly being swal- to a new location, about a half-mile away, when MacKenzie, Dorothy Fields. Car.
i belle ee rales 4 ee Confidential. (7) Realm of the: Wild. lowed up in a man-made flood, the last house in their town was inundated by the new Sylyenstein | 6) Hughes and ventriloquist Bob
She Went to the Mocan/ MMe Oly he to murder], (2 Move the Bavarian vilage of Fal, West Germany, reservoir, Europe's largest for the eallecton of |ttinme (45). James Cra Ava! vhgicianyestiiy oP on stands in the middle of a lake that has changed _melted Alpine snow. At right, a new bridge spans Jack Benny offers ‘a special ig. brown parcel she was carry- (9) Movie . Spec Gardner. ing. Q) Movie. ‘the-entire landscape. The villagers were moved _a narrow part of the lake. hour of Comedy on CBS Saturday
7:30 (2) llega Pisano Age- (4) M Squad. Mystery: Man! 5:30 (2) Lone Rafiger. i a) en eg OO e night, aided and abetted by Phil
ng ran tues shure! peeks Baliga nd whe nt ne Coe he finds someone has been MAAS avi danger of dying of thirst. filling his diabetic sister's Hammarskjold Rainmakers to Try ews and Revie ws |McDonald, president of the Unjted
ee) est we insulin bottles with water Confers With ouse | Steelworkers, an _R, veer
sage. : ” (7) Cannon Ball.: Drama: E t § i| Wh D id P] h per, executive vice presen
ee wade desertion “oe Mounted Police ask C. and Ike at Breakfast xperimen on 01 y I ay jet pica on ee together
oe A. truckers to look out for H T W t vision for the firs e to cause they refused to fight, deadly stay-awake pills. | EAST LANSING ® — Artificial! ave to I y a es er n? discuss their positions in the steel
0 British ee Atel (9) Person to Person. Ed WASHINGTON (AP)—President rainmakers will set up shop in| ltons. wage-contract negotia-.
. ) Rin ie an hae ure: Murrow visits Mrs. Albert Eisenhower conferred at breakfast Michigan in July. tions, oa
ee Witten: ke Se aerin D. Lasker, wnown for her today with Dag Hammarskjold, FoR By WILLIAM EWALD ly staged and semérousingly | A —_ ai — re . Mas s s : “ ew ’ ew , , o caw public and community secretary general-of. the United ; NEW YORK (UPD— If there) suns. pace—Man’s Last
ay hve ‘cicaped Aoay = service activities, and Bill Nations. ee inate iether was one thing I didn’t need from] "4 was all quite obviously pre- jvisible on NBC Sunday, with lead-|
_—, Veeck, newly-elected presi- ‘ kid acne io ill ‘ Playhouse 90 this season, it was synched, but |"S Pioneers of the space age) (9) Movie (cont. = ( Hammarskjold declined ll east of Ann Arbor. recorded and lip-sy | partici ting
8:00 (2) Rawhide (cont.) — page gee ;newsmen what he and Eisenhow- . ' iss, Keilvaitered 90 minutes of cows ~ horses then, this seems to be the stan- - * . - “ Se pecan 10: ews, eather. , iscuss crew from e Agricultural and human sion in e sage-!
Mie ae beg +63, 11:00 (2) (4) News, Weather. ia eee ie are private talks, Research Station at Purdue Uni: brush. pas aia eo ee = TV. Jack Por retarea trom vaca- ariety: ovacs On iusi*. (7 O Vv t ‘ é ~ rest t ow was stan-| | tion “visible
Cast includes Eddie Adams. i gy. Sales. erteky whether at breakfast or at dinner, Paring wire —— —— 2 dard inspirational type muck, but!and audible again on NBC. - ° ‘ . P) il tor equipment to cooperate | However, last night the CBS-TV}
and Andre Previn, who con- (9) Theater. Drama: Zach- the U.N. official said with a smile. ' with a research project being (showshop went thataway like, lit struck me as relatively pain-| Du Pont Shaw of the Month
ducts the music. Guests are ary Scott, “Guilty Bystand-, A reporter asked. whether Ham-' -grrieg on by the Soil Science |everybody else this semester and ‘less, perhaps because the heat has| presents “‘Billy Budd” over CBS|
Louis Jordan and James er.” 30.) marskjold feels there is any ig, department at Michigan State | whi ped out a western, “Out of finally gotten to me and I'm too; Monday night’ as its closing show
Darren. 11:20 (2) (4) Sports. chance the U.N. will be injected| University. pees beat to complain. of the season. Don Murray and /|
(7) Walt Disney Presents. 14:25 (2) Nightwatch Theater. into the Berlin crisis in any way.| }{Jason Robards Jr, star in this Fantasyland: Two classic Drama:' One of the world’s He replied that situation “is very MSU researchers want to find | found it sluggish, strained, |. THE CHANNEL SWIM: NBC-'dramatization of Herman
childhood stores by British wealthiest men dies with Wait-and-seeish.”” out if their theory of minimum til-! ebvieus and except for a couple |TV's Dave King pulled a 15.1 Tren-|ville's story about a young sailor| aA in TA cromame the word “rosebud” on his) * * =. ‘ a i Ss “ “* Me mini of its performances, lusterless. (dex in his debut Wednesday night/on an 18th century British warship baa - , os lips in “Citizen Kane.” ('41) th Eisenhower a ammar- s an * * * ‘while CBS-TV's The Millionaire) who kills a seaman who js per-
in “Wind in the Willows.” | Orson Welles. Drama: Boris skjold at breakfast were Henry worked just enough to permit soll) 1 41.0. 9 very solid mum-|Facked up an 186 and ABC-TV's|secuting him and then. stands| _ Movie feont.) Karloff, Peter Lorre, “You'll Cabot Lodge, U.S. ambassador to ' germination. mer, held its creaky parts togeth-| ‘Donna Reed a 12.0. . . CBS-TV’s|trial for his life.
8:30 (2) Amateur Hour. Find Out.”’ the U.N.; and Undersecretary of s * * er with a hard and chunky piece Desilu Playhouse will offer two| Wednesday night on NBC is (4) Kovacs (cont.) 11:30 (4) Jack Paar. Johnny Des- State C. Douglas Dillon. This differs from conventional at playing. She received some able "ew plays this summer among its|new variety show a
‘9, Disney (cont.) | * mond, Hermione Gingold ; |tillage where the soi] is plowed, manuitat tony: Dick Week: reruns — “Perilous,” with Max|titled ‘The Kraft Music Hall Pre-/|
(9) Country Hoedown. Eva Gabor and Dr. William . ‘ |harrowdd and disked |SUPPO schol and ine on June| sents Dave King. King, the British 9:00 (2) Phil Silvers. Comedy * * * , Joan Forjtaine on June , age Pree, Stanley Sims, guests. 0 ice le | The Purdue equipment will sup-| 22 and ‘The Killer Instinct’? with| Comedian, is filling this spot for
_ ny seas songs (7) Shock Theater. Melo- |ply simulated rains of up to fiye) Fritz Weaver, one of the larger/Rory Cathoun and Janice Rule| the summer. casino anc runs — ard drama: Bela Lugosi. “Night ‘inches an hour on test plots to young talents in our theater, wes! on July 13.
a in “You'll Never Get of Terror.” ('33) ' : allow scientific comparison of wa-|thrown away in a role that was 80, 7) Have and Have Not” is Married or Not?
(4) Cavalcade of Sports. Box- SATURDAY MORNING* ISADPeals ——— oe it bordered on the lu among the properties being con-
ing: Wayne Bethea ve. Alex Le |e [sidered by an astomaker “(Buici)| Rigg Question Miteff in 10-round heavy- 8:30 io Your Child’s First Years Mi f C ADA Opposes Plan | ABC-TV's ‘Pat Boone took Pi ec lias four Ernest rg t
weight bout from Madison 8:35 (2) Meditations. - issing rom ounty as it'll present on CBS- for 105 Cou les ° : eles = - Sata keene . different tack last t and built | next Bob H ill Square Garden. 8:40 (2) On Farm Front. Seat Where Gan sland WASHINGTON (AP) — Spokes- his half taped season . lope w
(7) Tombstone Territory. 8:45 (2) Michigan Conservation. | g men for Americans for Democrat- : os § at the Navel Pik ‘do six one-hour shows for NBC-TV BELVIDERE. Il. (AP)—Are we
Western: Distant shot on *:55 (4) (color) News Parley Probe Goes On ic Action oppose extension of the nha a = : next season — among them, an .
desert rouses Hollister, helps 9:00 (2) Cartoon Party. government's security program to “™Y # Annapolis.” overseas Christmas. show if he|™arried or not? F
him to solve miner’s murder (4) (color] Bozo the Clown. OWEGO. NY. (AP Poli \civilian employes in nonsensitive ~*~ « ® feels well liinesico That’s the question many of 105 |
(9) Boots and Saddles (7) Crusade fur Christ. Chiet Howard B = oh a jobs. Edward Hollander, national, Some of the early musical food couples coule be asking them-|
"Answer to Previous Puctic = 93 (2) Capt. Kangaroo. : ‘4 their vcatn ee Ma director of ADA, told the House tions of the show—set in t selves today after it was disclosed |
(4) Cartoon Express. an : i 5 bee are ~~ Civil Service Committee Thursday basin with the poled ioe that the man who performed their |
> mA AINE (1) Betty Boov oe ce bry af the ioeat : the security program should be.Club joining Boone in sea chan- marriage cére was not, as| SS : =. . D ente or : ) e SURE * _ mony
eects at Aet ‘eree a hee eee tion of the notorious Apalachin Confined to sensitive positions. Ges — wie idayertig: BANOO: - they believed, a justice of the)
Tom] TR iAlel jae . a Ses gangland - conclave —
_ 4 SC r 2 salad in or aperearee | Branning, 39, has not been séen Divide “ia lies Horde aiangd JP Aye Freek, S/P'Al_ jz t . - MM > sae lect to. the April 2, TIAN! lee ny _,; | since Monday. His wife and son hi S T st e b Gists | UP eee on Conservation jo45 left their home by automo Op la, pouse to es Presbyterians Repo ' — er both positions since. |
a | bile Thursday. r e- attorney general handed |
AlV cate i 11:00 (2 Heckle & Jeckle. if ] Di L WwW P 7 down a ruling two weeks ago |
a Eis |. im Fury “I don't ‘know where the chief ta Y ‘s IVOICcCe a Ss Youth-Serving Agencies ing the jobs were incompatible|
TBE x (7) Western Manhunt. is," Mayor John Day said. “He Crowd Out Home Life and that Freek ceased being a| 11:30 (2) Robin Hood. corialeily 4a alae” | By EARL WILSON mabistrate when he took the coun!
~acnoss Oy ——— On Monday, two vailiioes from | PARIS — They met face to face in a Paris elevator: former INDIANAPOLIS. Ind sel post.
1 — ‘corn i 2 p qh } | 6 14 JO fu the state comptroller’s office be-| King Umberto of Italy and Sophia Loren’s husband Carlo . S, Ind. (AP) —| In Chicago, Ben Schwartz, first
8 —— au lait ; r " gan checking records of the Owego Ponti. ' — ty parents belonging to the/assistant attorney general, said he
eet tineohs . , Police Department. The auditors “Ah, we're both exiles!” exclaimed the camry |Coited Presbyterian Church injbelieved a court test om the man 3 With ed b I would tel] newsmen only that they ex- monarch, to the film producer. # 3 the U.S.A. feel that the demands ee validity — bring a rul-
ere Se t -red > vil- ; ng they were
16 Jail. inmates $ i] B Hose awe, see teexamie He referred to the fact that he can't : of church and community tend to “That's a common sense opin-
30 Frenchy FT i Th "Police said Branning and a pa-- 0 back, nor can Ponti (because of the separate family members toojion,” he said. anauty Li . trolman left here Monday morn. anti-divorce laws). However, Ponti and _}much,
22 Finishes v4 IY Yy 2. Uy 1 ing to drive a new police patrol) Sophia will test the law within the next This was brought out in a pre- State to Auction Land
” jaa 0 5 TAT _|ear to an Endicott garage for 8) few weeks when Sophia undertakes to liminary report on a survey con-|' ; 2¢ Bricker’ — Yy + checkup. The patrolman reported) film “Bay of Naples” with Clark Gable ducted by the Board of Christian] LANSING — The State High- fe ne hi Yi o that the chief left the garage and, right in Naples. Education of the church, issued| “2” Department auction 11 parcels
32 Men servants yiad said he would get another ride Pp lhe e church, iss of surplus land at the Redford of-
34 Wading bird = nl | j back to Owego. The distance is 13. Ponti attorneys have prophesied that be- Thursday “at the ITIst Generalitice June 8. Most of the land con- 34 Light brown “ar, miles. cause Sophia's international ‘stature as an Assembly of United Presbyter-|sists of leftovers from 37 Honey eater 40 tj Mf purchases
39 Colt's. mother / se * actress neither she nor Ponti will be arrested." WILSON lians for John C. Lodge expressway con- 825 W
belle tein ML 1M} MM 7M AT f° His wife told a reporter she had + «< | + * & struction. :
SS 6 % "i peta where ie vg Granite They're still hoping in Rome that Frank Sinatra can be Bat np acd ark ce anki
45 Sanctified - 5 7 her son and a woman whom they Persuaded to play a priest in “The Fair Bride” — in which lgations in cities of various sizes,
Hp Gol ol did. not know left the Branning Ava Gardner is also to be starred- One producer under-~ and rural areas, were interviewed. i
53 Cultivate 1 nm] |home about midmorning.. They stands that Frank will agree if Ava will personally phone Questionnaires were filled out by|gy
as meee took luggage with them, the neigh- him and ask him to do the {another 1,000 parents and a like |g
3 tampa ute 9 Prayer ending Edison 41 Use sais iia picture. But so far pe- — ae —
DOW 10 Defended 26 Cloys 42 Asterisk body’s had_the courage to /YSiS of the data included cqnsulta-\M@ we pought all factory 1 Go by place 27 Mediterranean “43 Demigod Hawaii has rehased 50 chukar y e id tions with theol jans, cholo. il = aed the
2 Mind 11 Gaelic coast dweller 44 Leave out pu aa | ask Ava to ask Frank! o€ - psy A had at this price! Makes the
3 Fruit 17 Trying 28 Roman road 46 Gundrun’s partridges from the New Mexico! gists and sociologists. finest floor you can have. Com-
HES weet ome 7 eee Do ine Department of Game and Fish as An enormous convention of! The report stressed that ‘further |B fort, beauty enay-to-clean.
6 Ascended 23 At no time 33 Citrus fruit 48 —— and seed stock for Hawaiian -game| ies is held held Mar-|research remains to be done, but , 7 Legal matters 24 Chair 38 Attack nut pudding Sypsies is he eld near at! eome f it relimina conclu 4 Sugar —— 25 Thomas —— 40 —— sirup 50 Rights (ab.) areas. ~ seilles The gypsies once fa- sedated p ry as ~ Enough Tie for a 9x10 ~ 120 80
“ seas rece eee — . , sions : Room fer Oniy ad
mous as horse-traders, now x* * * ig
trade Cadillacs and _ Rolls-| Famites in rural, urban and|@
Royces. ‘suburban areas alike complained |&™ - Today's Radio Programs --
WIR (760) CKLW (300) ww (950) WCAR (1130) WPRON (1460) Wxvz (1t7@) WIRK (1500)
|
TONIGHT 16:30—WJIBK,.Sound Off 9:00—WJR News, Pace WPON, Chuck Lewis
6:00—WJR, rews WWJ Network wwd 3 Pe Elizabeth 12:40—WJR Tyme tor Music WWJ. News 11:00—WJR, News wx WIBK. Tiger Salute
WWJ, Network Time
WJBK, Stereo
WPON News. Muate
WJBK, Jack. Bellboy
11:30—WJR, Music WJBK, News, McLeod
WCAR News, Page
WPON. News. Sports
46:80—WJR, Dinner Date
WWJ Maxwell WJBK, News,
10:00—WJR. News
WXYZ. J. Daly SATURDAY MORNING cet ge a 2 2. Yeo Orchestra
WPON Candlelight & Bilver CKLW. Back to Bibie 4 6:00 WIR, Agriculture WJBK News C Reid ws er 7:00—WJR, Baseball erie oe WPON Bob Lark
WXYZ & P Morgan CKLW. Sons of Saddle Paen WIM. Oren CKLW P Lewis Jr, Musie| WJBK News George 10:30 WJK Around House WWJ. News. Monitor WIBK, ‘Be = WCAR News, Sheridan WWJ, News. Melody wxyz red Wetss
, Baseball WPON Early Bird CKLW. Mary Morgan WCAR News. Bennett
WCAR Woodling
>» 6:80—WJIR, Music Hall
imi—WWws % Star Oxtre WJBK News ree 11:00-WJR, tou're the Jury| WJBK, McLeod 4.
WXYZ. Night Traip WW, News, Melody fl CKLW .B Davies 7;00—WJR, Dan ‘irby WXY2, News, Shorr 4:00 Wk Mu te :
ee CKLW, Good Mornin Wisk News, Reta WOAR "Mews “Benwett rn \ ews n
$:00—WJR, Tiger Baseball ; WXYZ. News’ Wolf . WPON Chuek Lewis . KLW, News . WWJ Monitor WJBK, News. George WXYZ Pred Weiss CKLW R Knowles woak Newr os th: e-em, Tune, pte pai. News McLeod
8:90-WCA Woodjing News, sey Al ews. oodling PON Carriage Trade
WPON. Nite Sounds 10 wie, Music Han . wean w Music Hall #:00_wws, Sutin George —— ‘Wear jews Bennett
W Bible 8:00 + WJR. News, Guest 5:00— WIR bay Muaje
< WEVY2 Night [rain Sate Me Wolf SATURDAY AFTERNOON Wwe, Mavs. .
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ews met CA ews, nett we Work, "Today : News, rk Wweez, P. winter” ber
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Reid 1:00— WJR, Dance Orch
WCAR. News Woodling
0:30—WJR Jack Harris
WCAR News Woodling WWJ Mews. Muste
WJBK, _ Basketba))
‘oan et Marine Band
— Baseball
WPON. Bob Lark
:30— WIR. Detense Stars
Lady Beatty, Frank Si-
natra’s great friend is again
being romanced by hand-
some Jerry Herzfeld, the
Miami and New York race-
track millionaire . . . Alec |
Guinness flew to London
from Havana to discuss
playing Christ in “Son of
Man,” which Samuel Bron- |
|
AVA
ston (producer of “John Paul Jones”) will film in Spain.
‘I handed him a blank-check and told him to write in Iris
Bronston said.
* * * .
From London, where “Soloman and Sheba” is being
edited, I hear that the Yul Brynner-Gina Lollobrigida
movie is in the greatest ReMille tradition. Director King
Vidor’s reportedly combined the best in mass audience
entertainment with master showmanship. It looks like the
boys at U.A. will have the biggest show jn town at Christ.
mastime.
EARL’S PEARLS: If you think children don’t know the
value of money nowadays, try giving one of ‘em a penny.
WISH I'D SAID THAT: Being a husband is just like any
other job—iteeasier if you like your boss.
‘A man-sighed, “Tell my wife her hair looks like.a mop
and she won’t mind a bit—she doesn’t know what a-mop is.”
. That's earl, brother. own salary,”
- (Copyright, 1959) jchoirs, school clubs, PTAs, scouts,
jergy,’’ the report stated,
Offers Variety
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Across from Tel-Huron
that comniunity and church activ-|
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imuch, Mentioned were baseball!
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+H clubs and other “‘youth-serv-
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* * * |
“Their resentment grows be-|
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find. that tensions mount, com-
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ily-freedom is crowded aside in a
seemingly relentless “schedule.”
It added that “awkward sched-
uling .., . makes Sunday for some
families the busiest and. tensest
day of al] the week,” and con-|
cluded that “the, church itself
needs to re-examine what it ex-
pects of families."
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