eS ¥ f f paar ‘ phe Ay j t/ a ‘HE PONTIAC PRES U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast; ; 1 : Cloudy, Showers Tonight ° a Details Page 2 : nan YEAR kk KS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THU RSDAY, MAY 3, 1956 —64 PAGES ASSOCIATED. » Eton 0 ONT aati PHOT House * x * * Detroit Building Burns ¢--~ Flames Ravage _ 0-Story Sanders Downtown Store Three Firemen Injured in Million Dollar Blaze; 15,000 Watch DETROIT (AP)—A mil-. lion-dollar fire destroyed a six-story building in the! downtown business district! last night. Three firemen were in- jured fighting the four- hour blaze. Thirty - five) pieces of equipment fought, the flames. The 80-year-old building on Woodward Avenue housed the main store of the Fred Sanders Co., De- troit’s largest confection- ary chain, and a dress shop. | Adjacent buildings suffered smoke and water damage. About 100 persons were in a’ basement cafeteria! when the fire was discov-| ered. All were evacuated! safely and without panic. Fire Marshall Matthew H. Mc-| Nally estimated the loss. He said) the fire broke out about 6 p.m., apparently on the forth floor (Picture « on page ‘St. i where the Eaton ready-to-wear dress shop stores its packaging| material. The cause was not termined, — veloped the top fhree floors of the building and then spread rap- y x * * Ask N ew Census STUDY METROPOLITAN PLAN — A request to designate the Pontiac-Oakland County region as a standard metropolitan area is studied by Dr. Robert Burgess (left), director of the U. S. Cen- sus Bureau, and Congressman George A. Dondero pmsicd Cae during a ‘conference with Ae Governor, State ( Officials Chamber Seeks — Schedule Local ‘Report’ _. Governor Williams and his traveling group of State ‘administrative officials, who already have made “Re-: Asks for Metropolitan: Within minutes flames had en- ports to the People” of Kalamazoo, Kent and Macomb \Counties, are echeauied to arrive in Oakland County idly te the basement. ‘Tuesday. Firemen estimated nearly 15,000 area to witness five-alarm fire Firemen today praised 25 sales in his ‘administration to accompany the group. 7 —* Clair L. Taylor, Superin- Washington, D.C., yesterday when fighting. tendent of Public Instruc- 2 Pontiac Chamber of Commerce reportedly said girls who herded about 75 custo- mers to safety. The portions of the Sanders Building which still stand will have to be razed. Fire Commissioner * James L. Mahon said the destruc. | | tion of the building “is complete Fire Chief Edward J. Rohm! hattled the fire in formal dress. Alben W. The chief was set to attend a bat- man and master dinner | Paducah talion chief's retirement Bury Sen. Barkley _ Thrice heckled by Republicans, who suspect the persons remained in the dowmown tours are strictly partisian, the Governor said Wednes- ‘ognition of the the spectacular day in Macomb County he has invited two Republicans. County region as a standard met-| tion, be happy to go n Paducah Today Barkley, elder states- sioner Charles wit, arrives in today for funeral and when he was called on to direct-burial amid the picturesque set- Ment. the .complicated fire the aid of walkie-talkies. The chief said they had to force one floor manager to leave the store. He said she Was run- ning madly from one cash reg- ister to another removing money. | Firemen managed te drag her into the street as portions of the structure burst into flames. The Sanders blaze was the larg- this river city of 50,000 as citizens o * Pay The city's last five-alarm fire was tive son who rose from McCracken July 22, 1955 when the Simms Lum-' County attgrney to the vice presi- ‘dence Vv. est Detroit fire in some years. ber Co. was destroyed Citizens League io Honor... Ex-Police Officer Gilpin Former Pontiac Police Lieutenant David Y. Gilpin will receive the Oakland Citizens League's outstanding again in Pontiac’s Lincoln Junior service award May 15 for his part in breaking up num- ae pchodinion ya townuaballirmacct bers racket gambling in the county in 1944-49. ie award will be presentea to Gilpin at the tee emphasized that any voter may league's annual meeting at the Birminghem Commu- nity House. Gilpin, 56. served 27 years with the Pontiac Po- lice Dept, before his retire- ment on July 18 last year. He headed the Vice squad for eight years during which he received civic’ praise for his handling of| numbers racketeers.** | On March 5, 1947 he received a} citation front the league for his, part in ‘substantially aiding in de- | stroying the threats of gambling in’ Pontiac.’ Now associated with a real es- tate’ firm as a salesman.. Gilpin and his wife Kve at 30 Neome Dr. Durning his police career, he re- tions for outstanding work in the performance of his duty. In 1945, the lieutenant's entire six man squad, received citations for ‘‘out-| standing coordination and team-! work, ” < This meritorious service ventu- former board member of ally led to the trial and conviction league. ‘of & number. of Oakland County’ racketeers battle with'ting of his hometown, |were Broadway Methodist Church ‘seph A. Childs will be guest speak- The award to Gilpin wil, be madeier at the meeting. * * © The special 10-car train bearing publicans have been the late Kentucky Democrat sena- County Tuesday with the governor, ,for and former vice president was Lt. ‘due to afrive at 12:30 p.m. | Washington. Gov. from Of State Funeral services General James M. scheduled at 2 p.m » * * ski. Virtually all activity wall halt in ing officials will beg homage to the famed na- | appearance. Afte r the televised ° yu ope each ie ing assigned meetings and dinne uled, After dinner, tn Connty Democ attend the meeting Showers Ton The U, dicts occasronal ending tomorrow. fo a low of 42-46, The forecast continued for ‘am, was 42. The rose to 60 a 1 p.m. In Todays County News LIEUT. Davin Y. GILPIN Fditorials ........ ‘by Mayor William: Ww DonaJdson, Food News the Sports Theaters State Police Commissioner Jo! Wilson, Fart Group Boosts Defe hasn't yet received an in-, PADUCAH, Ky. —The body of Vitation. Highway Commis- chamber- -supported request to Dr was not available for com- The Oakland County Democratic committee said yesterday both Re- Philip A. Hart, Secretary growth” currently under way in | Hare, Thomas M. at the Treasurer Sanford A, Auditor 47eneral Victor C In Oakland County, fast in Pontiac’s Elks Temple, »sroceeding to a town hall meet- | ing in Oak Park High School and thence to Detroit for a WW4- TV the officials will separate, municipality in the county. the ~ questions he wishes from the floor: i gZ is se Rola ’ The meeting is set for 8 15 p.m Weatherman Says S. Weather Bureau pre- area, Tonight will be cloudiness The high will be 52-56. | The lowest thermometer reading in downtown Pontiac o 6 offered a simple 49, 50,°51, 52, 33 4\ & Radio Programs. Women's Pages ,... + 4+ * * se ——— SS ee ——- Informants Tell "of Arab Scheme to Murder Dag | Say Extremists Plotted to Blame Assassination - on Israelis | Will He Toss His Hat? Cobo Maintains Silence DETROIT (AP)—Detroit Mayor Albert E. Cobo was back at his desk today “after a four-week Ari- © zona vacation, still non-committal about whether he'll seek the Republican nomination for governor. x *«* *« * Returning by plane last night, Cobo declared: “If I can believe the people f Michigansincerely and honestly want me to be a candidate for governor, then fF will be a candidate.” - Cobo, three times mayor of Detroit, said he will | try to determine in the next few days whether the | “draft Cobo” movement is truly state-wide, rather than sectional. Leaders of the draft move have collected nomi- nating petitions bearing thousands of signatures. x * *& * Cobo said he will attend. the Republican con- vention in Detroit Saturday “If I reeeive an invitation. " i Rating for City | JERUSALEM (INS) —A plot by Arab “suicide” commandos to assassinate U. N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold and blame it on Isreal has been reported by yon-Israeli in- telligence sources. The sources, who refused to be - identified, say the plot was hatched by a group of Fedayeen, Arab ex- tremists who have formed ‘well-trained commando! units to. fight- Israel Discuss Possible Solution uniforms and arms and forged a} declaration in Hebrew that would have Hnked the ktiling tolextremiat The possibility of Pontiac, Port Huron and Flint Jews such as members of the banding together to solve water supply problems was |Stern Gang held responsible for| examined by = _Manager Walter K. Willman yester- ithe 1948 assassination of Swedish) ——— aay, at a Michigan Mu; |Count Folk Bernadotte, Palestine. pal League meeting in Peatioe Prose PRete) The plotters repertedly met in Passage Seen - | mediator as whighane Chamber of Commerce representatives yester- | yor4 we A dt! Willman was among, day. Standing, left to right: John Hirtinger, man- | pith ooents - stack Mam ‘seven city leaders exchang- ager; John A. Riley, head of the committee which | marskjold there. ing ideas, plans and accom- presented the request; and Dr. George N. Petroff, | on Oi an l plishments of their respec- cs i lke’s ‘Farm Measure Up Before House Vote, as “Parties Compromise | Jordan's Arab Legion was ‘| ‘to have discovered the plot and| jseized the fake uniforms, arms) jand forged documents although the? ‘plotters The amount recommended is | $1,741,832,374 more than Congress appropriated for the present year ending June 30, , The recommendations were con tained in a bill which the House ‘;will consider next week, The Sen- ate will act later, : The committee. said emphasis during the coming year will be ‘Council today he has obtained Eisenhower's farm soil bank) tiac’s extensive research - new unconditional cease-fire'headed toward expected House! ways of sarees “bey city’s well ‘agreements from Israel and her [passage today as party leaders| water the Designation During Trip four Arab neighbors — Egypt.'dickered over possible compro- possible three-way par 4 Lebanon, Syria and Jordan. |mise details. Of Pontiac's water will He told the Council in a “prog. | Republicans were making con-'man told’ the three counties’ “offi. ress report” the next step in the jie gestures, and Democrats) cialis “It's hard, with a high iron to Washington, D.C. A movement to win official rec- ontier Oekinnd) to re-establish full. compliance | Points at issue. |ter for industry or for our people.” | with other sections of the gen: |_ Chief proposal at issue was ped Bringing water from Port Huron eral armistice agreements of President's disputed request for h jand selling water along the line to 1949, which ended the Palestine @uthority to pay up to 500 mil-‘other communities would © cost lion dollars to farmers this year about $29 to $30 million, he said in advance of fulfillment of their! studies indicated, ropolitan area was launched in ,aidelegation met with Federal offi-|_ '"¢T? 8" indications he mayisoil bank commitments on next) pois: officials have already he'd; return in June to work for such : cials year’s crops. talked of working with Port Huron cals compliance and put the cease-fire Republican leaders busily on such a supply system, and in- |cluding Flint might make it pos- ‘sible financially, it was felt. along, but The committee, headed by John agreements im a more solid basis. sought an acceptable formula that: Riley, formally presented the ~ =~ would upset Democratic. opposi- epee thus completed tion, but Speaker Rayburn (D- fie or W the first part of the assignment Tex) declared last night that *n0| peat, ive We oe given to him by the Security agreement’” had rn owes eee sd Maes then been Council April 4. Hd filed his re- reached. jRegion Four of the Michigan Mn M. Ziegler Robert, Burgess, director of the U.S. Census Bureau, for study |nicipal League for the coming The meeting was also attended port to the Council president, Am = ; “ | by Congressman George A. Don- (bhassador Jozi Brile} of Yugo- ACC ES Pde bal ad Son: was dpukared for iri after- dere who asked Burgess to give slavia, from Jerusalem, where he Republicans hope to win approv-/h°0n'S panel on water and sewers. with al of what Rep. Halleck of Indiana, '. GOP floor leader, called an Pussy in the Motor “acceptable’’ compromise whic h| He will go next to Cairo for @ would place restrictions on pre-- BOSTON m®—Ernst Russo, 27, stepped on the starter of his car| brief conversation with Egyptian payment authority. officials and then fly to Rome. | |, early tentative form, these and heard what he described as, He is expected at the U.N. this restrictions would in effect estab-\the darndest sounds. He opened. (Continued on Pas? 2, Col. 1) ish standards of payment gearedithe hood and found a cat caught, to farm expenses for putting land in the fan. The animal ran off, ml ifo grass or trees, or otherwise! parently not seriously burt sault e rial lraxing surplus acreage out of ~ y. ‘advantage to the administration) Clifford Dye’s Attorney in a bid for the November farm production for soil bank reserves. In- all-day huddles. yesterday, vote Plans to Seek Appeal to Top State Court engaged in last-minute talks Israeli officials the request his “full considera- invited to the tion,” citing the “tremendous Attorney, the region. Kavanagh, | Brown and Targon- Riley disclosed that the meeting is 4 major step in a movement which gained momentum early this year with the appointment of the special committee, He explained that other future conferences to |present the Chamber's viewpoints are expected. In defining reasons for the quest, Riley -pointed out that the Pentiac’ and Oakland County are : is losing its identity as a wel populated and prosperous arca a cause of its proximity to Detroit. The two areas are currently classified as portions of the Met- ropolitan Detroit Region by the - US. Census Bureau, the travel- in with break- Democrats continued to balk at, ‘report to the to a different Tours, rs are sched- Naval Rocket ” Oakland County Circuit jude Fizzles i Mn Test Pointing to the fact that Pontiac Clark J. Adams today denied a is the fifth-largest city in Michi- moiton for a circuit. court retrial at White Sands y will meet | ; = gan, Riley said the Te ion a of Clifford B. Bye, former Fen-! ; ~ PROVING ‘Detroit's East Side. All ratic commit. prestige and other benefits which 4), village attorney convieted |” WHIFE SANDS JING h ere : ‘ 4 nomes, placed under her car go with a separate and prosperous yyireh 1 of assault with intent to GROUND, N.M. Disappointed | P community Dondero cited strides in) com- munity development, population growth, business ‘and industry in asking for a thorough study by the do great bodily harm. ' Navy scientists, despite a fizzle on In past years, Mrs. Prit-| But Dye, 54. probably will not wie initia] try, are Labs af chard has been a- foster begin serving his 210-10 year sen. Other attempt at a new rocket alti | tence in Jackson state prison until ‘tude record next week, parent to 17 other young- sters and reared 11 more,} and ask any 2 ' : : after the State Supreme Court has ; . Ig t, bureay, Data concerning various ruled on the case. The first production model of only one of them her own | aspects of the region were pre- the Aerobee- hi plunged to earth | ‘sented to Burgess at the _ Clarence B. Smith, Dye's at: /\) the southern New Mexico desert All call her mother. same, ( torne y, said today he will ask the high court for permission to ap- peal as soon as a statement of facta,in the case can be prepared yesterday after its main motors’ failed to fire The booster mechanism blasted time The . committee-members were part of a delegation which attended Her oldest “child” is an adopted, daughter, now 43. The youngest! lof her formalty adopted brood are. ‘ r ~ aa ses i showers tonight bs alles puoi, a oe front the 200-odd pages of official the research vehicle to only a pair of 14year-old twins. Her r ti pe » P Aa- « i ; F = r the Pontiac y.on'. capital transcript of the nine-day trial. 1.000 feet before it turned its own son Dale is 38. cloudy with Mambere Gr ake (Chamice cont: a ' nose down and hit the ground Almost from the time of her ttee include Riley. Howard O Dye was) copy ced 1) ue wall just a mile from the launching Marriage to machinist Benjamin BAIS es ee fatal shooting last Aug. 26 of Wik! tower. |Pritchard 48 years ago, her home| tomorrow is Powers, Barney nan ell, Edward liam C. Clark, 27, following dis- ; ; ines reverberated with the shouts! and cooler, Novak and Ralph Eastridge The putes between the two over man-) John W. Townsend, Naval Re- and laughter of children. Some! 55 delegation was made up of Presi- agement.of a Fenton farm leased search Laboratory scientists in stayed until they, were married| dent George.N Petroff John Hirlinger, Irving Stineman, | Clyvle Haskell, G. Wayne Gabert, HY. Levinson and Carl Bradley. Thumb: Suckers Tip BOSTON (® — Prof, Clifford L. Whitman of Columbia University solution for child leged tendencies to vidlence. thumb suckers in A talk. to the Dye's stay of execution under may have been a failure in the the year. American Assn, of Orthodontists. bond of $10,000 will be continued. fuel system, He said more re-| * ¢ ® . 4 iHe said if a child is taught. to for 20 days, Smith said today, Te search and better design obviously! “I’m moved to.tears,” 63 ‘whistle it would Jake the’ thumb said a new stay of execution will be are needed, lwith a soft smile, 15 from his moutHtand thus allow his granted pending the high court's’ Cost of the abortive shot was quickly, 17 thru 22 ‘teeth tp develop normally, decision, estimated at $100,000, one ta see my] tears.’ manager by Clark from Dye’s sister 7 nage o the TAC HInE, sald pen and hetd their wedding® in her! Smith based the petition for re- ing analysis of yesterday's failure, home. Others even took her namic trial on alteged faulty instruction.the Navy still plans- te fire an to the jury by Judge Adams, al- identical rocket here next Tuesday. BUSY AS USUAL | leged prejudicial remarks by Just what caused the failure willl Busy gs always, Mrs. Pritchard Chief Assistant Prosecutor George not be known until after a close was sorting laundry when word F. Taylor. and the fact that Dye inspection of the rocket. Townsend came yesterday that a jury of the net to testify to said the main rocket motor never) ‘American Mothers Committee, preceding & thermometer Press %, 32, 16 was permitted 33 thru 44 she said! | uneasy Middle Fust situation is bead had given ground on some|content. It’s not a satisfactory wa-| Funds Are Approved for-Pontiac Project WASHINGTON ® — The House Appropriations Committee today ‘approved a 40 million dollar con- struction program for Army Re- serve training facilities and na- tional guard armories. Reserve training buildings ap- proved, on whith the federal gov« ernment will pay the entire cost, included $263,000- for Pontiac, (City officials announced yester+ day plans to lease to the governs ment a site on Orchard Lake averiie, near the ‘ar Park area, on airpower and new weapons _ “being phased in at an increag- ing rate.” The new money, plus funds carried ever, would give the De- | fense Department 46'4 billion during the new fiscal year. contemplates military strength of 2,865,200 in mid-1957, compared with 2,820,100 next dune 30. Here's how the new dollars (Continued on n Page 2, Cal: 2) eed Motor City Widow Picked a ee ot te et American Mother of ‘56 DETROIT (AP)—A Detroit widow whose busy: ‘hands Have brought loye and a happy home to 45 chil- ‘dren is the American Mother of 1956. _ She is Jane Maxwell Pritchard, who at 67 still spends nearly all her waking hours making a home for /17 lively girls who live in her rambling brick house on are children from broken e by the Juvenile Court. MRS, JANE M. PRITCHARD ' “I've had an abundant life,” she chearsay evidence of Clark's al-\did start and preliminary exami-! meeting in New York, had chosen said, “I need no reward,‘When I ‘nation of debris indicated there her as the outstanding mother of:see my married girls and thei \families come home, I know. t all the work has been worthwhile.” Mrs: Pritchard will fly to New then added’ York next Monday to be guest. of “But [ never want any- honor at the annual Mothers Con- ference, x * ae Bae We i : ‘ 4 : ———— ' a ee ee eset Sek eee 4 ky = ae wo wage ¥ ry + ~., ] ie \ Union Claims. , UAW Local President, Meets With Officials - on Pay Grievances | F i { ‘ Some 1,500 employes of Pontiac! ' Motor Division stand to lose guar-, anteed annual wage benefits due to lay-offs at the plants which’ have idled 3,000 workers, local) union officials claimed today, | Charles Curry, president of Pon- tiag Motor Local 653, UAW, met last night with other officials of the union to draft a letter to UAW) President Walter Reuther request-, ing ‘a meeting between General| Motors ‘and the union te invest- gate pay grievances. Curry said at present laid off from 1930 to his retirement las workers are drawing, only Michi-/SU™mer, was gan unemployment_ insurance, 9 peg son weaken ets te His service to education was cited. 1 and Dec. 16, 1955 has eventually 4/80 honored-was Miles Ww. Marx. | “If the company had not con- . ‘na weibs . Over 33 Billion Fund on Dec. 19 to lay off temporary ver aL ul off would have qualified for vaca-| ‘ ‘ _ ‘retiring principal of Royal; Oak resulted in laying off high senior- retiring principa ity workers. High School. tinued hiring into December 1955 or if they had heeded our warning and low seniority workers, our P| d d f )) f higher seniority employes now laid| e ge OF e ense tion pay and the GAW," Curry said. JOHN THORS JR. HONORED — John Thors Jr. (Continued From Page One) jwould be shared among the serv- principal of Pontiac High School! honored at a lunch-, eon today of the Oakland County ¢ Secondary School Principals Assn. l Albert Gibson, Official of State Icebox Firm Succumbs: to Attack ROME ® — A honeymoon trip in Italy ended yesterday with .the death of Albert Gibson, 31, execu-| - tive vice president of the Gibson, iRefrigerator Co. of Greenville, | Mich. | Gibson. suffered a heart attack \Monday -night a few hours after he and his bride, the former ‘Nancy Moriarity of. Grand Rapids, {Mich., arrived in Rome. He died, yesterdayy afternoon at Rome's, Salvatore Mundi Hospital. NEIL G. BRACKSTONE * * * . ;| With him were his wife and his! Former Pontiac Airport man- +/father, Charles Gibson, also of ager Neil G. Brackstone has ' i] been given the 1956 President's Award by the American Assn. of Airport Executives, for meri- torious services, He is currently manager of Lansing’s airport. He ‘took the Lansing post in 1941, aft- er managing the local airport for 13 years, Greenville, who came here from) |Paris yesterday. | The elder Gibson said: the son and his bride came here after spending _a month’s honeymoon at Davos, Switzerland, where they skied, and in Istanbul, Athens and Vienna. ’ * @ The father had been in Paris sev-| e eral months on a vacation. He a ar mers said he and his daughter-in-law would accompany the body back to Greenville by plane for funeral . service there, as soon as local, fi {0 e Sse formalities are arranged. | LJ * * _ TNF nant ane PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 31956. 2 Pontiac Deaths : The Day in Birmingham \ ~~ NATO Changes Mrs. William Donaldsan | | ° | Mrs, William J. (Lettie) Poel Seem Imminent | son, 85, of 152 Washington died Monday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Mt. Clemens after a brief illness. She was born in Tuscola County July 20, 1870 and came to Pontiac in 1935 from Richmond. PARIS (®—Secretary of State Mrs.~ Donaldson_is survived by Dulles and other Western foreign Dulles Proposes ‘More Than a Military Pact’ to Member Nations Recreation Board May . Plan, \ fet cteteemenes = Okay Driving Area BIRMINGHAM—The Recreation, development of special education Board will approve a plan for| facilities, he says. titilizing a driving area across/" Aj} physically or mentally from Birmingham High School to-|pandicapped children up to 20 night, according to Board. Chair- emul age should be reported. man Mrs. William Jackson. The 24 census takers will have. one son, Gordon Adams of Rich- ministers dug into a wide-ranging! | mond; two step-daughters, Mrs. conference schedule today in prep-| jJosie Hensen of San Jose, Calif. aration for the opening of a coun- and Mrs. Margaret Vinton of cj} meeting of the North Atlantic, jRochester, N. Y.; four grand- Treaty Organization. children, two step-grandchildren, * * jand two great-grandchildren. | Western diplomats say the two- | Service was held at 2 o'clock day NATO session tomorrow may ithis afternoon from the Hensch be a momentous meeting for the \Funeral Home, Richmond. Burial 15-member - ministerial — council. | followed in the Richmond Ceme- Dulles. has ‘said one of the chief * jtery. « jobjectives is to plan the reshaping of NATO “into something more than a military alliance.” Shortly after he got here yes- ‘Hugh C. Howes | Hugh C. Howes, 48, of Dear- The board will hear reports by/an organizational meeting at 10:30 Assistant City Manager Dana! sm. next Tuesday in the board of Whitman and Recreation Director) ; ftices Frank Whitney on a study they @ducation o , . TS ™ hy ar made, working with. City Planne New officers of Birmingham Herbert Herzberg. Post No. 2645, Veterans of For- The board was asked for a | eign Wars, are headed by Harry plan fer recreational use of the | Kotelman, who takes the com- 66-acre field across from ae mander’s post from Orrin Clark. school, Whitman and Whitney have formulated such a plan, | Others are John G. Denlevy, sen- and the board will hear it and |!or vice commander Arthur Rein- act upon it tonight, Mrs. Jack- |bold. Hinlor vice coe D. son predicted. ; |G. Morgan, quartermaster, and William J. Watson Jr., adjutant. . A new state law requiring driver) ‘The post's auxiliary officers, are training ‘tor those under 18 faced yrs. Edith Wilkinson, elected for J Bo be C h that there are too oe detailed | instructio: si ef Bomber Crashes jmrsion,“sprarenty prepared . Were recovered. * Workers had to be employed May ices: 1 in order to draw GAW pay, he added, 1 jmore than this year, Farrell E. Roberts | TJ . ing] _of._ $871,774.44 over this year. OSSES Hat in Ring | Air Force — $15,479,125,000, a Former Assistant Oakland Coun- Pudget cut of $187,375.00 but an “ty Prosecutor Farrell E. Roberts increase of $739,361,830 over this) 5 fi ld So i oeday announced he will seek the Year. | umme lei ry = oe ~ | The rest of the money in the eee een for Sta pill was allotted to the office of o tg third. district. ine secretary - rigged and to a juate of the U.S. Naval /@terservice activities, none of Academy at Annapolis and the ic was cut deeply. University of Michigan Law School,, The committee called for a Roberts is a World War II and “compreherisive and integrated” Korean veteran. Following his) plan of scientific research to service as assistant prosecutor, he prevent Russia from overcoming returned to private law practice.| “our present marginal superior- _ Roberts, 34, is married and has! ity” in development of advanced one son. He is a member of Kiwan-| weapons and equipment. pling Sioa ct Nat It called also for better use of Saad the staff in the office of the sec-| \ riations. bar ‘assoc: . retary of defense, - commenting . jan example it cited a detailed in Nebraska: 4 Dead der on ent tects sstdards pall mowing grass. LINCOLN, Neb. (—A Lincoln|COMPLAINS OF LEAKS Air Force Base B47 Stratojet) con a : plained about “continued bomber crashed last night. A statelieaks and premature disclosures safety patrolman said four bodies of our military secrets” and said “drastic administrative action of * Ld Army — $7,497,582,000, a budget ‘ -leut of $263,843,000 but $167,629,000 Navy —_$9,999,534,000, a budget/and secretary of the firm's de- jcut of $48,066,000 but an increase, fense products division, succeeding The ‘younger Gibson, who mar- tied Miss Moriarity April 2, en- tered the refrigerator — business with his father in 1950. He later became executive vice president his uncle, Frank S. Gibson Jr. who became board chairman, for Speech Slip-Up WASHINGTON W—A _red-faced| Postmaster General Summerfield was reported busy apologizing to- Detroit Police Ordered | to Continue Practice as Court Favors Motorists } DETROIT u — Despite a court, ruling declaring radar timers il-| legal, Detroit police will continue to issue tickets on the basis af radar clockings, * * Ld Traffic Director James A. Hoye} yesterday ordered police radar op- erations to go on as before. The order followed a confer- ence with Pelice Commissioner Edward 8S. Piggins, corporation counsel Nathaniel H. Goldstick day for a speech in which he asked) Ja group of doctors for Republican’ jcampaign funds. * eo 8 The oceasion was a breakfast. get-together yesterday of medical society officers and members of the state congressional délegation. In his remarks; Summerfield thanked the doctors for ‘‘contribu- ting $75,000" to President Eisen- hower’s 1952 campaign. The “ On- Tuesday Traffic Judge John sonal hearing. * and representatives of the Traf- fic Safety Assn, charge based on a radar timing. | Yesterday he instructed five court referees to refer all questionable | radar speed cases to him for per- D. Watts dismissed a speeding * 8 Piggins said police will continue | money, Summerfield added, was |t0 Use radar for tracking of speed- | used te help fight socialized medi- cine. Then he told the doctors he was; depending on their continued sup- port to elect a Republican Cong- ress in 1956. * Sitting In front of Summerfield Ste#d said, “I believe radar is ers unless forced by law to stop. Officials in Kalamazoo, one of the first cities in the state to | use radar, voiced strong criti- cism of Judge Watts’ decision. Municipal Judge Clark M. Olm- nephews, Stuart A. Austin of Chero- kee Rd, Harry B. Austin :of E. of Lake Orion. born, died suddenly at his home Friday, April 27, Mr. Howes mar- jried Norma Cunningham of Pon- |tiac about 26 years ago. Besides his wife, he is survived ‘by -two daughters, Nancy of San \Diego, Calif. and Mrs. Mary For- isythe of Evanston, Hi. - u ss ‘Thomas P. Mason | Thomas P. Mason, 79, former local representative of Standard 'Oi1 Co., and lifetime resident of Pontiac died this morning in Pon- |tiac General Hospital, He had been ‘in ill health several weeks. He was born in Pontiaic June 29, 1876, the son of John and Violet ‘Mason and was married to the former Jean Wallace. Mr. Masen, a member of First | Presbyterian Church and a charter member of Pontiac Ki- wanis Club, was in the cartage business for years. He later be- came the local representative of Standard Oil Co, from which he retired July 1, 1939. The Masons made their home at 22 Oneida He leaves two nieces, Eva and Ella Austin of Mark St. and three | terday, he was given a French plan calling for a new interna- tional agency to distribute eco. nomic aid to the world’s needy. He conferred two hours with French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau on the French proposal,| which, informants said, urges U.S. cooperation in forming an aid agency outside NATO. ~ Pineau reportedly told Dulles the organization should be set up “within the framework of the ‘United Nations or some similar world organization,” and slould not be incorporated in NATO in order to keep it free of charges of cold war links. , American spokesmen declined to give Dulles’ reaction to the French plan. Hart Says ‘Liberals’ Can Break Race Bars IRONWOOD « — Lt. Gov. Philip) A. Hart said Wednesday night that, “politically, the straightest road) to the end of segregation lies with the northern liberals like Gov. Williams.” Hart, a Democrat like Williams, | s@id these liberals “have the cour- age and energy to-carry this great Iroquois Rd. and John C, Austin} Service will be at 2 p.m. Satur- day from the Sparks-Griffin Chap- hurt only themselves if they per- el with Dr. William H. Marbach,'mit themselves to be misled by his pastor, officiating. Burial will! jbe in Oak Hill Cemetery. cause to victory.” In a talk to a Democratic gath- ering, he asserted that Negroes, and other minority groups ‘‘will false prophets who substitute slo- gans for action.” | f/ rowacco-pepr. Friday & Saturday SPECIALS Regular Size — Popular Brand CIGARETTES he the school board with the prob- per lem of training public, private and parochial children of Birmingham, Mrs. Jackson points out. : Robert Girarden,!who will take the recreation director's post on May 14, is spending today work- ing with Whitney, screening p- plicants for the summer recrea- tion program. Girarden will attend tonight's meeting. * * * Parents are being urged to re- port handicapped children when the school census is taken May 10; through 30. Dr. Paul D. Carter, assistant superintendent of schools, point- ed out ‘yesterday that a special effort is being made to obtain information on all handicapped children. Such information would aid the Board of Education in LOW- LUSTRE CAL Ideal Choice well FRIDAY and SATURDAY ‘SUPER-SPECIALS’ PAINTS DEP’T. SPECIALS Odorless Wall Paint PER Waterproofs block siding, of white and colors second term, Mrs. Agatha Rathka, senior vice president, Mrs. Charles Mintling-junior vice presi- dent. Mrs. Floyd Crouse, treasurer | and Mrs. John Brown, secretary. . * The Michigan Federation of Young Republicans have nomi- nated Mrs. Betty Ellis for the vice chairman's office. Election will be at. the state convention in Lansing May 11 and 12. Vice chairman of the 18th Con- gressional district (Oakland Coun- ty) Young Republican Club, Mrs. Ellis is a Royal Oak school teach- er living at 2301 W. Lincoln, Birm- ingham. * *@ High School band members are in readiness for their concert to- night at 8:15 p.m. in the school auditorium. Regular $4.59 Value 3.88 LON for walls, ceilings, woodwork, ete, - Washable LATEX of colors. pairit, odorless style, Dries to touch in 20 minutes, KEEPS WATER OUT! Famous ROX Masonry Paint 10-Ib. CAN brick, cinder concrete, asbestos etc Beautifies as as it protects. Choice 2” Names were withheld. A BAT normally carries three or, four crewmen, | The crash occurred 10 miles) northwest of Lincoln and less than! some sort is in order.” Funds allowed the Army would provide for 1,045,300 men organ- ized into 19 divisions, 10 regimen- tal combat teams, and 140 anti- struction in ‘other states. The ve! Highest temperature . al dean! ealiea| Gcastal Garen where wecraft battalions. The Army, the | four Lincoln base fliers were killed! in another B47 crash April 6 |... ee wil Eyewitness said the plane last ar eMart ot ite poo age. | night exploded after hitting the Large Army allotments, in ad. ground and Panet ; jdition to the big items for pay, | are wuneesed el Re ee and operations, in- : cluded 306 millions for the Nation- | 6 crash said they thought the plane’ a) Guard and 410 millions for re-| exploded in air. : \Search and development.‘ * « « Recover Cannon Balls Funds voted for the Navy call j\for an active fleet of 1,005 ships From Hillsdale College in mia-1957, with 32 new. ships ADRIAN wW — Twelve missmg being added to the fleet during cannon balls are back in their cem- the year. The 1957 shipbuilding etery resting plate in Adrian after PTOfram provid ps for 23 new police lire edt iinie Hills. | Ships. including 6 Forrestal type: dale College fraternity house. ycarriers, 13 smaller guided mis- Four husky {fraternity pledges ad- sile - vessels, a nuclear-powered mitted they took the cannog Balls, SUided missile cruiser and 6 nu- which were imbedded in concrete “lear powered submarines. and wei 1 Ss, as a haz-| re ine = 1.100 pounds, as a haz | The Navy would have 12,600 ac- The youths chipped the halls free uive aircraft during the vear, with 2,000 year ending \June 30, 1958. Navy military per- the end of the year would be 672,000, plus 205.735 Ma- of the concrete after getting them Provision for an additional to the fraternity house. Thev of. ar ee deliveries a fered to pay damages and cost of (2POUsh » fiscal year replacing the can alls p acing the) comin balla: sonnel > at Cement Shortage Told _[rines. BENTON HARBOR we — City MORE FOR B328S managers of Benton Harbor and), allotments Air Force a cement shortage will slow down'p-» a number of municipal paving) Air Force to 137 wings. projects this summer. Suppliers| said there is a shortage of ce-'), ment because of toll road con-| jequal the United States in offen- =| * - tive airpewer capability within a few vears unless domestic plane} production is stepped up. * «* * Weather — Fall T.8. Weather Bureau Report ; PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy teday, high 60-44. Mostly clewtly tonight and temerrew with oceasiona! | showers tenicht ending tomerrew. Low tire tonight 42-46. Coeeler tomerrew, high 2-66. Westerly winds 16-18 miles ner The committee approved ‘the en- $6.48.500,000 requested for. : aircraft and related procurement, hour teday becoming variable 4-8 miles including $1.142,694,000 for guid- “an heuer temight and northwest te north ~ oF PF i 15-90 miles a hour tomerrew. ed missiles and $87,256,000 for, missile components. 1 Today in P i A Lewest temperature preceding @ ar | * * * a5 @ am: Wind As an indication of why the Air Direction: Northwest iForre eds + , ‘jen ph a CRE ru Force . needs so much money to Sun rises Priday at 5 24 am jkeep in operation, the committee ‘said it may cost “as much as Moon sets Thursday at 12.31 pm. Moon rises Priday at 2.02 am. ee i. ‘ $5,000" to get a fully loaded B47) bomber: off the ground. f velocity 20 mph Wednesday tn Pontiac (As Recorded Downtown) Highest temperature ..........0 0.0000 ———— eee ke a — ached pacrscesserrens : 2 Weather—Rain. “Forest Rangers Face Here's What Downtown Temperateres = Miles of Wiry Woes You Get: BREVARD, N.C, ®—Rangers at ‘the Pisgah National Forest have ‘a right lengthy problem. | aa * * @ 59 60 One Year Age in Pontiac : Lowest temperature ... Siteicensdeee. $3 They have 300 to 400 miles of: M Cempersture ......0--0:5+-se0s 43 ‘ . ‘Weather Warm — No. 9 telephone wire they want Highest ané Lowest Temperatares This '© get rid of. And it’s free for the | os te 008 Date in #4 Years src taking. There's just one restric- — tion—you can't sell it. \ Wednesday's Temperstare Chart > * «© | Tt és. Mine! #1 76 : 89 42 Minneapolis |50 40 The wire is a casualty of prog-| jenver, fe ie New Yorn $3a3.ress. It became useless when ra- | ° ¢ apanne bf Pa dion communicatior was installed, || Bort Worth 8 La eco 2 8 0™: time ago, but the * wire, ! — is eae wo SS jy Stayed up because the Forest! rast * 8 pwc ahaa 4 i Service had no funds earmarked = €§ 60 Seattle 7 «6. for the job of rémoving it. » ; es ‘ t * = committee said, is confident of compulséry health insurance legis-| 1, its “ability to cope with any mil- lation, fee include St. Joseph have been advised that funds to speed up construction of 2 bombers and expansion of the Russia's air threat, the commit- *e commented, is growing steadi- ily and the Soviet probably will were Democratic Reps. Rabaut, |!e&al and accurate and 1 believe Dingell and Hayworth, who is the|!' is far better than clocking a postmaster general's own con-| Speeder. Spate Police and police in , C 2 Poeks 89 jthree-fourths of our larger cities’ gressman. : > use radar to apprehend speeders,”’| Rep. Dingell, whose late father. x Pp 2 pe | Rep. John D. Dingell Sr. sponsored | Kalamazoo Police Chief Sherwin described Summerfield's eywood said “I've always con- ee a f .,. sidered it (radar) the most accu- speech as in “poor taste and © rate method of establishing the suit ye 1 ‘s ulting |speed of a vehicle.” Donald 0. Menzies Report Arati Plot Seeking Nomination {o Slay U.N. Chief Former Oakland County Under- — i Ses (OS sheriff Donald 0. Menzies said to- geal Ca LEE) SEO Ge day he will seek the Democratic weekend to write his final report, | iff's department -in 1926 on his graduation from Clawson High School. He served as uniform dep- background and a report of his ef-| forts to stop the fighting and bor-| der incidents. He made no rec- tectiv 4 ine! uty gerd fete ne being | ommendations. He is expected to named undersherif! in 1947. jinclude some in his next report. Married and the father of three | Hammarskjold recalled that he ns: ue oe _ a a Shrins hid reported earlier assurances of pose the a arang a ae He! ESyPt and Israel not to engage in ae oppose George flicks Ath jhostilities except in self-defense. ; wees ; . He then said he had concluded liam Dahlerup foc he nomination. “with positive result” the nego- ~~ tiations with the parties to the Henry Fonda Divorced other three armistice agreements, Syria, Lebanon and Jordan, | on Charge of Cruelty 3 RENO w«P— Actor Henry Fonda Bonn Scorns Red Bid and his wife Susan were divorced yesterday on her charge of ex-| BONN (B® — The West German treme cruelty. Fonda denied the government today rejected a Rus- charge: |stan offer of a trade treaty- Such Mrs. Fonda was granted custo-/a treaty could not be concluded dy of their daughter Amy, 2. juntil Germany was They were married Dec. 28,| government spokesman told a news iconference. 1950. lon Price — and sere Only! A HAIR-RAISING VALUE! Everything needed to Cut Hair at Home and Sove! 8-Pc. ELECTRIC Barber Sets $14.35 Value LUT Exactly as Pictured @ Wah! Electric Clippers @ Crew-Cut Craide <7 @ Barber Comb @ Barber Shears @ Neck Cape . © Instructions @ Clipper ou @ Rubber Guard Give perfect trim the first time ype ry. pro- féssional haircuts with a little prac. thee Complete in- atruction booklet. Dee ie i ae a __« an — nomination for county Sheriff in| to be given the Council next no matter what condition to acquaint Sms 2 week, a | you with the famous pre-smoked Dr. ES is new ie eae ee x | Grabow adjustomatic pipe—needs no MeNZes , , Urst joined e Sher- j . . - . thy breaking in Pamous Ebonite Bit, ] | His report contained mostly, ehaicell StMeaty ean Oalpimaribol awit reunited, a! Limit 10 Packs Choose your favorite brand and save. Lucky Strike, Camels, Old Gold, Phillip Morris, Chesterfield, etc This price plus sales taa. Limit 10 packs per customer Any Old Pipe (corn cob. clay. briar. etc.) Regardless of Condition is Worth $1.00 Toward a a PRE-SMOKED—DR. GRABOW $2.50 Regal Pipe trade-in 8 North \ : Saginaw —Main Floor SIMMS)... “) Simms—‘Where Spending Is Saving’ Friday G Saturday Basement Specials MEN'S WEAR Men's FAMOUS ‘HANES’ Ribbed ‘T’ Shirts | i ‘ | Irrs. of $1 Value 50-Pound Can .... $12.95 The WASHABLE LATEX Paine PER GALLON Qoes on easily, dries in an hour. Apply with brush or roller. Goes over wallpaper plaster, wallboard, etc In } cholce of colors. Deep Colors, per gal. $6.19 Rustproof Tin Pan and 7-Inch Paint Roller Paint Roller Set $1.29 Value 90: BOTH FOR Both the patnt pan and T-inch roller at this low price Limit 1 to a cus- tomer HN tL Electric SHAVER Sale Vocmiaa Nationally Advertised—Famous Makes i ‘xa ES i> _ DEEP-CUT PRIC i C*\-amy One—Big Lot @ Sanforized Cottons Bensationally underpriced cluding extra large. 98 North Saginaw | i yal —YOUR CHOICE— 1.33 * @ Linette & Splash Weaves -@ Fast Non-Fade Colors sport shirts full cut for comfort and action. Hanes surrey sibbed a C 5 f. shirts with nylon rein- _ k oth tl == § i ee toe Pecan in == ! holce f , ‘Mae, : —- : bie oF Peicu: Baas ss Sizes 8-M-L-XL iz if = | 7‘ : $1 501° : se: = i OUS ‘KING-KOLE’ First Quality = Wy “ a Great New = . . « latest models . . . full factory guarantee. -- = All Complete with Cases Regu SELECTION 9 NOW WITH PERANE ONLY TRADE Two-way collars, short sleeves, Gay colors and designs. All sizes in- Meo’ Bargain Basement $28.50 RONSON All Sales Final....... REMINGTON CONTOUR | Regular $23.50 Value..... SCHICK ‘TWENTY-FIVE’ - Regular $29.50 Value... ... 5 1 3.77. .12.77 pacar rey we : 14.33 ee 13.33 a 10.95... 9.95 12.77.1177 ST Meee... 15.95. .14.95 Renin goa so ake... 16.66. .15.66 ie tSos van... 17.95..16.95 Regulor $2950 Value .--...., 16.99..15.95 & nonnce somrmuw 17,95..16.95 Regular $29.95 Value... c..0.- This is NOT a ‘come-on’ . . . no switching to ‘just-as-good' cunknown brands . . . we sell what we advertise. WHY PAY MORE? . 98 North | ( i —Main ai) HAL BSA 44h) NT Ti * Floor nc i Saginaw ‘ ‘Super Kem-Tone’ | _—— 98 North Saginaw ; Street Lar * RACE IN A DOWNPOUR: — ‘Fd Mather has just taken baton ' from St. Joseph College teammate Bob i igarty. during Marine Corps Relays at Quantico, Va., in a = y ral ee Korean Women Gradually Gain Equality With Men SEOUL (INS)—Korea, that suddenly hit the headlines with the Communist invastion of ' 1950, has been known as “The He sueh great differences in the mit Nation” in the orient and its S@erican social life. ‘ women were strictly segregated ® Peogrdloess of the a from men. But today Korean the women are gradually adopting the culture Western idea of equality of the infiuenc: sexes, diers who are stationed in Korea set back the populace as they | were deft in bewilderment due to a country eactions 10 sudden influx of the different Ho Jelt same irrevocal ple Slowly the | ple hey an to dress more and more in western é sty ic ? -Rorea literally Centuries ago, the jumped on the western dress te an was forced to wear which the covering her entire face except for yeu'r: her eyes. Women who refused or Jpuring the war the people did not wear the headgear lol flee frome ihe conrushing. Com: considered of the inferior class of I rdes and “had to earn’ society. ‘living regardless of sex This Even up to 30 xears ago, an wht them that : ancient motte calling for the .COUNE on fu ‘ounterpart for “co : segregation was in existence, CVEPENON as a partner although According te the motto, Korean nt of p man and woman should be kept apart from the age of seven. bd be . n WoT nN horean-wom- a headgear denied for had were men can mu 4 rine! women took full the situation. .The's nd more and more not Oth. +4 through the introduc tion,of western culttire and Chris tianity, Korean women. skowly bs gan removing themselves fr centuries-old segre CHANGED NORMS ‘ ryimes for But. the — the rapid progress toward 4 1 es cay ization of Korean for the J pI) SES TIE TheiiSelves held down the ides « . . woman's equality with m fi Maori Viords listed | father entertain the | However WIE mien on affairs but also- m the , ration shackle Japanese rule .arre ideq that the Me Pe cen | ' 7 women folks should be a “means 0A Movut te bonglohohetionary de | of fostering warrior-citizens ‘ Hed: BPimiariy for use in the | j r printed at | Then came the liberation from the Japanese rule in 1915. The 0% ones sudden influx of western civiliza. Peference work on the Mio tion through the American sel cu. ' Thoustnds every day SOLVE SKIN PROBLEMS “with Ten-Q-Six Lotion als os if Clee Ht Hee [Ses - ~ « ‘ en SAM VOSS t ch has 4 Prk> a | vyasfies Me yt ft. Sain BIOL, 4 wee an: em £e ti ff] ae oe wom e 7.8: ‘Redan! Ba ~~ = il Lhe an . “| es _ Loe ; : : So ope | : ; Z 3 | Soe es eae I AI , ss f + Urea al fi 8 _ ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 3,.1956 _ . 7a : . : _ . i Janet Anderson Tops 46 Contestants ‘= ‘to Claim Title of City’s Miss Amvet ~| | : _ ALWAYS SAVE.AT,,_ _ Janet Anderson was crowned Milk glass "Davy Crochet” . . of ‘Pontiac for 1956 er (yar — beauty contest spon- a iy .. : CEREAL BOWL — by Post 16. She was chosen ar. .. a aia “Shag ’ . eae meee at Hotel ball i ‘ a" =| ILK | at velt Hotel ba a ‘ ay i ahi RAs 2 DRU iq “a MILK MUG Anderson will represent ~~ 3 — ty ge a” eae ee $ eS in competition for state a = &§ Regular 15« ic the Michigan Amvet con- — y * a * See Now each only held at-Grand Rap- © Lb. P . 48 . fLbed coaaale “n ee we MN 3 o. ' Finest glass clean QQ | INNS \ \ , Ss ' a al gown | ‘ t, LO SS 9 Sturdy that palaces pe F es oy _— Cae GLO-GLO - . J BASEBALL Durable 59: . 2 x 4) \ ee | Di oe ? 7 m Strong, durable aad . : The winner will go on to 3 4 oden Junior Sized Leather compete with girls from through- Ly c ‘ E A N E R . . ” Delightfully diferent See a; A SOFT BALL! GLOVE — = ie ey 25 K HUMPTY Z BAT AND BALL The judges selected Miss Ander- a son from a trio of outstanding ~~ > . Ei ; Zo ‘ Ss ! cena | TY | paepeaea: Y caf“ 98° | = og: edge Barbara Looney and — 4 ' Vie é . , * eee tore a y an : 1 ep , a 4 , | BISODOL S , ‘Takes plenty of hard usege. iat 8 ni ql 9 § a5 z EI 3 Let the “little one” lay ball! Over 100 people attended the contest. The — was in both conventional cm ee BE & F462 included Sheriff Frank Irons, : - \ I Skeedo W birlwind oe Jem) EMPIRIN, | ee BOMB Got COMPOUND | 7 et onl, OS Mayor William seeroRad who was , Great, ‘WS big, doll!!! ~ hdei tis GOP | A oS EAA a SCS ~“on Racial Issue | S#C Men 4 Gece te SN ait Siti BE BEAUTY- wise (—_=>-. - Touring Dem Candidate | . | MYSTIC Goes’ on Handshaking: FOAM Drive in San Francisco For rugs | Cc upholstery 89 Eesy to use et heme! suits. The list of judges for the contest - Sprinkler ih 39° Finest sprintler, MISS AMVET. NAMED — Janet Anderson, center, was named SAN FRANCISCO (®—Adlai Ste-| Miss Amvet of Pontiac at a recent beauty contest conducted by Post vengon mixed sharp criticiam of} 16. She will represent this area in state competition at Grand Rapids Se ea ie On} in June. Also shown above are the other contest finalists, left to other issues) yj Barbara Loone and Genevieve Dovre. wih cheertel bantsbaking in al!” A aes amie a _ ffornia’s presidential primary. | ; $11 5 Billion Available ,Byrd issued a statement as chair- S * «# ¢@ jman of the Senate-House we charged during 12 appear-|it- Foreign Aid Spending |aog committee on federal spend- ances here yesterday that the) WASHINGTON u — Sen: Byrds: | President has not used the pres-|(D-Va)-said today 117% tittion-dol Se aaa tige of his office to help carry bare will be avaliable for, foreign Bridge Painting Bids Out spending in the new financia striking down separate public! year if Congress approves the full LANSING W#—The State High-| ’ schools for white and Negro stu-|$4 900,000,000 asked by President! way Department will take bids hildren $s 25¢, 29¢ dents. Eisenhower jLansing May 8 for the’ spring| He told longshoremen on the wa-| Byrd said there will be $6,600,- ‘cleaning and painting of 12 bridges. | tertront — won't see better pro-| 990,000 of unexpended foreign aid | Eameus FOSTER GRANT glare releving? MEN'S... 3200 LADIES’ 59 $1: Stick or Cream CREAM paoegalo Deodorant er 5$O°|i" 36 Finest Tussy doesn't dry | Apply Etiquet and out of evaporate. Stock assure yourself no Aluminum WRAP sm SI Preserve foods better! BRUSHES 2 21° Excellent brushe 2 z t, 8 “? tas summer ate ev 1. dor problems Clip-On $1.50 labor; better housing) palances on hand at the start of| London's Lord Mayor holds of- | -~ rears to Washington ‘tune new bookkeeping year July 1.|fice for one year | LSS . . \ . , wwnN N aN COTS FRI., SAT. & MON. ONLY Bae FUNERAL whirl FO FOR, 1 HE E SM ART SS wind tour a San Francisco, the former Illinois governor left. by ; * SS eee _ Jewel Tone S Tea Towels “Be PKG. Cc ‘ OF 4 “T. 2-quart capacity gay metal * “collegiate” PENNANT Large 5 Cell Men's cool Standing FLASH | SPORT | 2-SIDED LIGHT CAPS | MIRROR Quick relief with STANBACK TABLETS time. to Negro districts, as if to| OO AND . Special $ 49 Buy on € Special P overcome previous criticism here) 7 ; Value et alow Value that he was too soft on civil rights. 2 [ 0 Pl L c s POWDERS Long distence, wide cael emetee. of Sturdy micror for WASTE-BASKET third 8 NORTH 50 Teb 50 Pd beam. Keep in cer! inest quality caps! beauty needs. Seve! = ol : $. irs. pore os ides ‘or 8 Quality Clothes > Easy Credit SAGINAW ST. 63: 83: = men’s tromsers weet with ee were drilled in Texas. , taco ch = ) Specially Pri od. 7m é > SET HANGERS VK 4 ae eas eee \ uy today! A< , | \e z. ) 7: @) | , Save on regular price Taste this mouthwatering Fountain Special a) on i GALLON ICE CREAM 4 delicious Cc flavors Stock up! Full fashioned NYLON | HOSIERY 79 New spring shades , BARBEQUE >FRANKFURTER : eaten aS DICED FRUIT SALAD SUNDAE a are filled with the newest aveil- eble drugs. Highest standerds are toltowed by the highest shill. ed pharmacists. Yet prescrip- tions are filled at the lowest cost possible, NN wt) INS Qyyacu DESIG Shaves Closer CEM | é [ier asin a & BAKERS mer wit 3 RAZOR’ Banc, Extvbrstnelh err Olieaa 19: Relieve aches, pains. with k up on your needs! Regular 23¢, now | C cempiae sf 00 SI For Mother . .. lovely -ORGANDY APRONS Reg. i | Values Surprise, delight mom with one or more of these pretty organdy half aprons! Brightened with contrasting trims of chintz, pique and percale prints! At a special low price for Mother's Day! UB EPsow Sats TABLETS Out fit I we ‘ egular 25¢, now HYDROGEN P Beg 9 - ser of GEM bledes S r NIP Purest peroxide for antise ERO XIDE now eee | loo Tabs. 77° rr. NL: TINCTURE OF IODINE Be prepared for minor cuts, abrasions! | ounce bottle... Seve on quiet ecting Anecin for miner aches end discomtorts! EWN | Abi pe ss ore J-- Tas, fone) 9116 2428140 4enGle), \ Zt tu rl Kher, niines’ S Day CARD AT CUNNINGHAM § 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS | No. 1—29 N. SAGINAW (Downtown Store) No. 2—TEL- HURON SHOPPING CENTER 5 Tel-Muron Shopping Center Saginaw at* Huron [ 7 | 7) - : - : ee ee Ee | = TEL-HURON STORE DOWNTOWN STORE MOIS PR tee eee Set Sunday Rally at Brooklands eee na "hy ik ? Pe eae 2 A. ‘THIRTY-TWO bel di; Plan Special Service in Liev of the Regular Gethsemane Program BROOKLANDS — Members and friends of Gethsemane Lutheran Church in Brooklands will gather Sunday in one service at 9:30 a.m. in the multi-purpose room of the Brooklands Public school instead of at the church. This will be a special rally serv- ice arranged by the New-Church Planning committee headed by Vin- cent Braun assisted by William : Bishop and Robert Smailey. | The sermon will be delivered | by the Reverend Ihno Janssen, | executive secretary of the English District of the Lutheran ‘Church — Missouri Synod. The Reverend Norman Kuck, Geth- semanes pastor, will conduct the liturgical portion of the service. | The Detroit Lutheran High School | chorus wil] assist with three se- lections. The committee will also at this time bring the congregation up to date on the. progress, needs and plans to connection with the build- ing and expansion program. Nursery facilities will be provid- ed for the smaller children during) the service. Holy Communion, Sunday School; and Bibte-€lass-will be cancelled, for the- day. The regular Sunday schedule will be resumed at the church near Dequindre May 13 with Holy Communion in both the 8:30 and 10:45 a. m. services. Fire Department Siren Installed at Union Lake UNION LAKE — The Union Lake| Fire Department has installed al new five-horsepower siren on top| of the Union Lake Superm: arket. | Also plans are in progress for a} system to give tornado warnings. Church Rally Scheduled HUNTERS CREEK — There will | be a special rally at 8 p.m. Satur- | day at Hunters Creek Church. Mr. and Mrs. Howard a will present a special musical pro-| gram and will show a film entitled, “Amazon Dee adline. , Sunday at St. Pa — PONTIAC PRESS. THURSD. (Y, M: AY 3, 1956 ‘Slate Moth (Communion WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — The annual Mother: and Beughter! Communion Breakfast of St. Pat- rick parish will be held Sunday following the 8:30 o'clock Mass. Mrs.'‘Clarence Chapman of Berk- ley, past president“of--the| North- western Deanery Council of Cath- clic Women, will be guest speaker. A May crowning will be a fea- Orion Principal - Resigns Post | at High School LAKE ORION — Fred Wiegman, | rincipal of the Lake Orion High School, has presented his ayaa tion to the Superintendent ‘Schools here, cancelling the 1956 1957 contract which he signed! |three weeks earlier. Wiegman prepared for wie | | work at Michigan State Normal, | University of Michigan and Michigan State University. He Deadline May 12 -Da hter “Broakfas toFile Petitions Breakfast ture of this year’s program. | Nominations Musf ~ Francine DeSoermier will. crown a statue of the Blessed Mother | iN for June 11 aay as Queen of the May. Her at.) at Avondale tendants will be Carolyn Pifer and Janice Thibodeau, Three- year-old Marianne Hancock will be flower gri. Various prizes will be awarded. The Men's Club, under the direc- tion of ifs president, William J. Best, will cook and serve the break- fast. All mothers and daughters of the parish are invited to attend the ibreakfast, which is sponsored by the Women's Guild. Reservations should be made immediately with Mrs. Gerald F. DeSormer, EM- pire SS ‘Brownell Electors Ask Annexation to Lapeer METAMORA — A Special meet- |ing of the- Brownell. school district AVONDALE — Saturday May . is the deadline for filing nominat-| ing petitions in the coming Avon- | dale cording to Raymond N. Baker, superintendent. Voters will place two members on the board for three-year terms jin the June 11 balloting. Total ‘school board membership at Ae |dale is five. ‘To have their names cameed on the ballot, candidates must pre- sent petitions with the signatures | of 50 or more qualified school electors to the secretary of the board, Petition forms are available at Avondale High School. to Be Held at MSU School Board elections, ac-| the Board of Education office at. Cattle Confab for 1957, | spent several years in the air electors was held here relative to foree as an serial gunner. Mr. and Mrs. Wiegman have} both been active in Lake Orion) groups and with their datghters' ‘Gloria Gaye and Lynn Anne have made many triends in the area,/| although they have been here just a year. Loyalty Sunday May 6 at Commerce Methodist COMMERCE TOWNSHIP—Mar- shall Wheeler, chairman of the Commerce Methodist Church Fi- nance Commission, has designated May 6 as Loyalty Sunday at the church. On that day, the budget for the, coming year will be presented to! the congregation. Members and/ constituents will Le given an oppor~ ‘tunity to renew or make new) | pledges To Visit Selfridge Field FOUR TOWNS—The local Ex- |plorer Scouts are going to Selfridge | month, it bogs Field as guests of the U.S. Air 'Force for the weekend. G. V. Myers will he accompanying. the | ' boys. | annexing to the Lapeer School Dis- trict or joining with Dryden, Meta- mora and other rural districts to American Aberdeen-Angus -Assn., representing 32,000 breeders of | Aberdeen-Angus cattle, will hold. build a new junior and senior high school in the area. The consensus of those present | was that the district should an- nex to Lapeer, and a Ea of | those present so voted, The I peer district is to be asked re, permission to annex, ~ There are 29 families in the dis- trict. Brownell school has been closed for some time and children are being sent elsewhere for their) education. Set T hree Nights for Registering at White Lake WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP—The White Lake Township clerk will ibe at the township hall to register electors on three evenings this announced today. i * The dates = accepting evening, registrations are tonight, May 424 land May 31, from 7 to 9 p.m. | AUBURN HEIGHTS — The Com-; ts 1957 conference at Michigan State University. The group voted, on its next meeting site yesterday jat the close of a two-day gather- |ing at the U niversity of Tennessee. Heights ee Sale munity Club will have a rummage sale, Saturday, from -9 a.m. until! 1 p.m., at the Community House, | 220 South seme ee Open ‘Daily 9 to 6 | Friday tii 9 P. M. FOR... FURNITURE. at Its FINEST Pixley + Home Furnishings 332 Main St. Rochester, Mich. KNOXVILLE, Tenn. uy — The BE WISE. ; “és | GUARANTEED 10 BLOOM THIS YEAR MONTHLY BLOOMING + FAVORITE VARIETIES ___ Reds-Pinks-Yellows -Whites - Two Tones ° OL 2-2121 OL 1-9642 Reg. 4.95 Value WROUGHT IRON HASSOCK Firestone. Large 14 ‘inch size. Ld TAKE VOUR BUSINESS TO KINSEL Sh whisned with Foamex by Choice . of new decorator colors. ——_—__— OPEN STOCK P erns wiessly ur Ww C * tt tla ‘| 5 ture wath aya fin sh . B, 1 i seul e. mal oO rh id with p yre Ss! wer at pots ot reatest wear. prec es Ove a @ oO c wt e e ¥ e gift M thre: \ treasul for ears! ual Gift |Save *50” pen stock price * from © for8 55-Piece ~ Service QD Chest Extra Eternal Love most she's sure lo be pleased ifyou give Fine Gifts From ENGGASS .. . on Watch Bracelet -ttovely -"'Peti-Point’ expan- sion bracelet to glamorize Mother's watch' inaslh ing of Give Mother a per- sonal gift. . birthstone set ia an exquisitely fashioned gold mounting. for Mother! ! ina Leaf Tray ine Silverplate ernational Silver Co ideal for serving bread, ves, salads . of asa mnterpiece ied with w for cone! s Day! Open iday and /Monday Evenings Ys THE STORE WHERE GRANDPA » OB AND GRANOMA BOUGHT JEWELRY CO. 7 fiery diamonds set standing value' Birthstone Ring her $ SUNDAY, MAY 13th a BULOVA|| LA PETITE - 23 jewels, 2 diamonds, — six precision | ts, unbreakable mainspritg. Lovely 1-Diamond Wedding Band m, trim mount- 14K gold. Out- 519” 95 % Free Parking in Lot Opposite A&P 25 NORTH SAGINAW STREET } 4-Foot Norton , ‘ Soar REG. $12.95 oe =e KING {UTTER ELECTRIC HP REGULAR 53c VALUE | fae a jOHNSONS. | 5 6. W. Casal, : REGULAR 85c Socraice vine e SYRINGE vice : REGULAR 96¢ VALUE JOHNSONS o. on REGULAR 1.00 VALUE | ad MENNENS 1. macic Wy S4 REGULAR 96c VALUE , REG. $18.60 Q-TIPS 79.) srownie Buiiseve We ECKO STAINLESS STEEL F LAS i Ou TF IT MHA KITCHEN AG : TOOL SET, one With Nardweod “eo $ ; 98 pELENE - 2 5 Rubenstein’s vue $SHAMPOO | Gees THE FRIENDLIEST DRUG STORES _Negtowns G7 NORTH SAGINAW - PONTIAC WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES ( TAKE VOUR PRESCRIPTIONS... TO RINSEL’S fm oo Po LJ | | & impe : ; oe “NITE PONTIAC PRESS, . THURSDAY, MAY’, 1956 é 4 ai f ; a : u 1 $ 1 - om wn | COMPLETELY NEW! COMPLETELY DIFFERENT! 1 “ Imperial’s got the flavor that’s been missing in margarine! ’ f j f = LIKE THE HIGH-PRICED SPREAD! a You're going to be seeing a brand new product at your grocer’s today ...a product so superior that it carries a guarantee never before made — in all of margarine history. Imperial is the first margarine guaranteed to.bring you the tantalizing flavor formerly found only in the expensive spread for bread. : IMPERIAL’S GOT THAT FLAVOR Flavor is what’s been missing in margarine. And flavor is what Lever Brothers _ , devoted seven years to achieve. It wasn’t hard to make Imperial spread smoother and easier than any other margarine. And it wasn’t hard to make Imperial as nutritious as even the most expensive spread you can buy. The trick was flavor. And Imperial is the first margarine to capture and hold that unmistakable flavor everybody loves. vou AGREE—OR LEVER BROTHERS RETURNS YOUR MONEY . We know you may find it hard to believe that a margarine could live up to all we claim # “for Imperial. So to make it;possible for you to try Imperial without any risk, . _ Lever Brothers unconditionally guarantees that if Imperial doesn’t taste like the . | 5 high-priced spread to you — they’ll return every penny you spent to try it. p.s. Like the high-priced spread, Imperial is delicate and perishable. So to protect its perfect flavor, always keep Imperial in your refrigerator. % : : , (WPEHRIAL- THE EXCITING NEW NON-DAIRY SPREAD FOR BREAD —. R00. &. 6. PAT. ovr, t : i : \ ‘ . : ; | fall is tHe rinst MARGARINE. UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED TO TASTE t tn ili ella Ap hot oven (400). for 20 minutes. Re-| THE PONTIAC PRESS. “THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1956 Q. What is the name of this cut of meat? A. Pork arm steak Q. Where does it come from and how is it identified? A. It is cut from the picnic) shoylder. The. picnic shoulder = cludes the arm and shank section of the shoulder. The pork arm steak contains a small round (arm) bone, is oval at one end, and is squared off at the other. , Q. Hew is it prepared? A. It is cooked slowly by brais- ing, a moist method of meat) cookery or by panfrying, a dry. method of meat cookery. Steaks. cut three-quarters of an inch thick! require about 45 minutes for cook- ing. | To braise, brown the meat on all sides in its own or a small amount of lard or drippings. Sea- son with salt and pepper, add a small amount of liquid, if neces-, sary. Cover tightly. Cook at a low temperature until done. To panfry, brown the meat on both sides in its own or a small amount of lard or drippings. Sea- son with salt and pepper; do not cover. Cook at a moderate temperature until done, turning occasionally.’ Remove the meat cut from the pan and serve at once. strawberries package sliced strawberries (12 os.) vod |) Juice Strawberry Sauterene Suffle Salad. 1% cups borane! sweetened sliced fresh frozen a or | Tomato - ee 1 package lomen-favored pela’ ' i hot water xin % one, strewberry juice %e cup Santerne or Rhine wine (drained | ' Ms = real mayonnaise Py up cup ruined, pineanole yee, ¢ a % cup chopped pec ad.|Leftover Meat Dish. A small amount of turkey, chick- skillet. Season with soy — Whip bananas into vanilla fruit, as dessert with brownies. — : 29° en, duck, roast pork or ham left over from Sunday dinner can make Monday's lunch or supper. Team the diced cooked meat with cooked rice, salad oil, finely diced onion, strips of green pepper or pimiento and heat in a_ large ioe put into freezing tray of refrigerator and serve when firm tor tray. (without changing control) 15 te 20 minutes, or until firm about 1 inch from edge, but soft in center. Turn mixture inte bowl and whip with rotary beater un- til fluffy. : ~ [freezing unit) Ki) to | orale juice from berries, reserve | - % cup. Dissolve gelatin in hot wa- ter. Add strawberry juice, wine, mayonnaise and salt. Blend with rotary beater. Pour into refrigera- Quick chill in freesing unit | Fold in drained strawberries, cream, add chopped nuts or fresh pineapple and nuts. Pour into 1 ‘a uart mold or individual molds. ae until firm in vig “spur (not 60 minutes. meas Cogan | > Spring S duterne Salads Ideal for Fancy Desserts 7 There must be an “S" in the 4 to 6 servings. Steam, Your Fruits Steam prunes, apricots, ment on a. skewer. grees). a meat accompaniment. Dress Up Loaf Cake loaf cake. few minutes, watching carefully! Serve at once, — Kraft’s Velveeta Cheese Food Plain or Pimento 19 2 Ibs. ls Slt Ways | | Have you bought any 2 recently? The U.S. Department of Agri- culture has been trying to find out where your money goes when you buy potatoes. One of the things it has learned is that there’s a considerable dif- No. 2 Libby’ Pineapple 9 SLICED . For Cc Can : CRUSHED For 5 Re ference in the amount of money. the farmer gets, some difference in''the amounts other people get | at different seasons of the year, and also some differences depend- ing on where the potatoes are grown. } But forgetting about the ditter. | ences for a moment, let's use | Libby’s BARTLETT PEARS 303 Cen 2% REDEEM YOUR COUPONS HERE FOR PINT CAN OF WISK.. ABSOLUTELY FREE! NEW LIQUID MIRACLE FOR , ALL THE | FAMILY WASH Idaho Russet Burbank potatoes | as an example. Those are the long white potatoes that many | people call “Idaho bakers.” Usu- | ally they command the top price at the store, because they —) _so well. Let's say you paid 68 cents for a 10-pound bag of those Idaho bak- ing potatoes. The retailer kept 29 cents, to cover his costs, any po- tatoes that spoiled or had to be thrown out for any reason, the ib *s 21 Can cost of the paper bag and some, L bby Va For Pine tailer bought th tat sce "Chi e retailer bought the potatoes from a wholesaler, who received Ha ves ing them a carload at a time, and hauled them from the railroad car or his storage house to the retail store, The wholesaler kept about Peaches ] 00 #3, PEACHES Birds Eye Frozen four cents for handling that 10- pound bag of potatoes. It’s a long way trom Idaho to | the place where you live, and the | railroad company charged almost | 13 cents for hauling 10 pounds of | potatoes. The potato grower out in Idaho got 22 cents to pay for his costs of Libby’s 303 Can. Garden Sweet PEAS 4 Fer Be, Be : growing the 10 pounds of potatoes, digging them, cleaning them, put- ting them in 100-pound burlap bags, storing them in a special ware- house for a few weeks or several months, and loading them into the railroad cars, Win Applause Libby's 303 Can 2 For Cut Green BEANS 39° With Nutritious Wheat Sticks Since quick - breads require no special skill. they are one of the easiest ways to display your baking talents—and one of the best ways to perk up meals and coax appe- tites. - Libby’ Cream Style or Whole Kernel CORN s 403 Can 4 For «6S Everyone likes bread so you'll please the whole family from Dad 4. r] to Junior when you ‘spark your Libby $s Ot For meals with made-at-home breads. Serve these Wheat Sticks hot Deep Brown with plenty of butter. They'll win compliments and you'll have the satisfaction of knowing that you are giving your family better nu- | trition. BEANS 29° Super Value | BREAD With Wheat Sticks atte, Libby's 2 tor 2-3 cup milk 303 Can 'S cup melted butter or margarine 1 1-3 cups flour 3 teaspoons baking powder 34 teaspoon salt %4 cup wheat germ Beat eggs until very light; add sugar, milk, melted butter or mar- FRUIT COCKTAIL ~Coupon ¢ ib garine. Sift together flour, baking powder, salt; stir in wheat germ. Add the liquids to the dry ingredi- ents all at ofice. Mix- together but do not beat. Have cornstick pans well greased and heated in hot oven (400). Fill pans two-thirds full and bake in) move wheat sticks from pans and. serve hot. Makes 18. Fresh asparagus, chilled and cut into 1-inch lengths, is a wonderful addition to tossed green Salad. > : 9° CHILI With Beans 35’ Libby's Pineapple Imperial Ma rgarine Unmold “and garnish with whole strawberries and chicory: Makes and whole figs. Alternate their place- Brush with meted butter and rehéat . them in a moderately hot oven (400 de- Serve skewered fruit as Here's a way to fix up bought Heat it in the oven until warmed through, then spread the top with strawberry preserves and place under the broiler for a Try Mint Sauce on Lamb Chops it ou have a “meat and po-|. tato” family and you're bored to death cooking the-same thing every night, try serving your lamb chops with this wonderful cherry mint sauce. Your family will love it, for the. gay ;red maraschino cher- will brighten up the lamb chops and move them out of the ordi- nary. Cherry, Lamb Chops 1 tables poet butter or margarine pods shoulder lamb chops, H cup water 2 teasboons — salt . Round or Swiss ries and the cool green mint jelly make an exciting combination that) about % inch; |spice. Delicious with slices of ‘baked ham, 1 12-ounce jar mint felly 'g cup maraschino cherries, cut in halves (about 20 cherries % cup white vinegar Melt butter or margarine; add chops and cook until browned on both sides. Add water and salt and cook, covered, over low heat until lchops are tender, 45 minutes, Add ljelly and cherries. Cook 15 minutes. Asparagus Buying crooked stalks, and those with spreading tips. They indicate that the asparagus was cut long ago and not properly refrigerated dur- ing shipment; -consequently the asparagus may be tough. Straight, indications of the best quality. Heat applesauce and sprinkle with just a smidgin of ground all- When you buy asparagus, avoid). plump stalks and tight tips are) ‘Everyone Needs Milk | Regardless of the Age Everyone takes for granted the fact that babies must have milk. They’ need it to develop strong bones and teeth... in fact, babies can't even sit up until they are about six months old — not until they absorb enough calcium from _ milk to make their skeleton strong. All growing youngsters need milk . . about a quart a day. Parents of teenagers know that even more than a quart is often well used by boys and girls who are shooting up inches a year. How about grownups? They need milk too. Regardless of age. all must have the calcium, high quality protein, and important vi- jtamins that milk supplies. Adults need almost as much milk as do chiJdren . . . to maintain the body in health and vigor. When you're young, milk helps you grow . STEAK swctti Choice Cuts—Beef ‘Standing Rib Roast “i."42" 4 5: Swift's Premium Hot Dogs - Swift’s Premium i BACON V obb. Trapak Swift's Premium Cut-Up—Pan-Ready 37: Defiance Dog Food 12 Cans LLS BROS. COFFEE 83. Defiance Fresh Kosher Dill Pickles 19:- ] Vs Lb. Loaf AW Without Coupon ¢ tb Red-Ripe U. S. No. Hot House Tomatoes Cc lb. pean, =i Crisp, Tender Florida PASCAL CELERY 19°... SPRY Pure Homogenized Vegetable Short’ning Large 3-4b. Gan e 19° Friendly Market 884 WEST HURON STREET _” FORTY-TWO es +5" THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDA AY, MAY’3, 1956 ¢ growing season nearer when pro- duce counters will be filled with home grown fruits and vegetables. This is evidenced by increased shipment of many vegetables from other states and the end of the ? season for several fruits, says Mrs. Josephine Lawyer, Consumer Marketing Information Agent of the Cooperative Extension Service. Already shoppers-can find Michi- gan hothouse leaf lettuce and the small dark green heads of tender Bibb lettuce. The head lettuce supply is heavier than last week: the quality is ggod. Tomatoes will hurt the budget less on today’s market list as both the 14-ounce packages and the het-house ripened ones are increasing. For some time the State Demands Ne {peak of the smelt season, though By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Home Editor les U pitiey will be available all. during Pure Flavors May. The characteristic smelt| ifavor is the result of an essential Maybe springtime does things to| warmer weather also! 's fancy, but men in at least | | loil present in the flesh. | This oil evaporates rapidly and is not found in stale fish, Wise shoppers will insist on strictly fresh smelt for delicate sweet flavor, Prices on Grade~ A large eggs five é jhave dropped a few pennies 1M crbam is made fancied the some préiluce buyers is better than it has been in several years. Within the next four weeks, strawberries . will . arrive from other states—then it will be tine to look for Michigan berries, . , a man Michigan places where ic drink. The company that puts Even though the end of the grape- sod stores. Fryers jie the have imitation ice cream “uit season is in sight, there is)budget price group even though’ aes F aa a "plentiful Saat of fine! prices will probably be a few cents around and get by = it. quality fruit. For the most juice higher this weekend than last. | ‘select those that are sey thin! PAN-FRIED SMELT and smooth skinned, and that are| ; 7 heavy for their size. Winesap) a gan yes Pann ll fish ment of Agriculture dropped aenice are in the spotlight at about With salt and pepper. Roll fs mye ue oe Hh 3 % cents a pound depending |!" cornmeal, dip in egg dituted une xpectedly — anc ounc Je Se with milk or water, roll in corn-/imitation products, which are 1-) ing it. ee are fresh pineap le| meal again. Heat two tablespoons legal in this state. In some states! How WY aa , ps “ 5 +0 Peta in a heavy skillet. Using a low they are permitted. In all five! he i aed Hares Daten “ if 80 ‘flame, brown the fish on one side, instances the artificial flavors were 4, esitating y this Lroots iseize Leite: irs. Lawyer at 1260 West) then the other. Shak fash ave |Boulevard, Pontiac, and ask for| Variations? 1. nee vs el Under Michigan ice cream law lthe chart showing an easy way| lemon. juice for 10-15 minutes | mo imitation flavor may be used Pine-} flavors, drink powder has added a new jt their line. They fancied they could, that @ Fruit Punch. is, until inspectors of the Dairy) Fruit Punch cap be serv iN) fruit juices and beverages. Cranberry Fruit Punch 1 package Imitation Fruit Punch ink powder % cup sugar Combine all ingredients. tt w Fruit Punch Bows " Springtime seeras to call forth a°'59's,” since a carton holds half variety of. new ‘food products.88 many as boxes did. Would that-it called forth some At least one Pontiac store is No doubt there will be dayscome out of test kitchens—instant when we'll welcome, a long coolapple chip cake. y could little packets of fruit-flavored softof apple. When baked, these chips In additiof to~ eight familiar flavors there is NOW apple chip cake is quick and ‘ed a layer cake, a large loaf cake Season Division of the Michigan Depart-| alene or combined with other We these| suggest you try this way of serv- chain food 2 cups (i-pint bottle! cranberry juice . Water and ice cubes to make 6 cups may be keeping your food on the | Beat until perfectly smooth. Add ‘fore frying to bring out the deli- except imitation vanilla, Fruit until soft drink powder and sugartight containers. ‘The food will stiff, Bake as ordinary waffles. | In;Old Orange Crates Go Out nated by the number in a ¢ ducted to determine the whole- er), The former “100’s” are now| someness of such foods. So far, | - 1, cup mayonnaise ; tests dtae shown that fresh taste, * of — vitamin and calorie values are unchanged in most foods. There's a plentiful supply of idates on the market. We think you may like a couple of recipes showing how you can use this de- licious fifuit. Dates are probably man’s oldest cultivated fruit. In ‘the United States most of them are grown in a 5000-acre garden in the Coachella Valley in California. Date Waffles 2 cups sifted flour ly teaspoon salt 2 tedspoons baking powder ‘, cup: butter or margarine 2 cups milk Maraschino cherries Lettuce, watercress Arrange pineapple slices on -bed of lettuce and watercress! Leave space for orange cup with mayon- naise in center. * featuring the newest cake mix to It is lightly outspiced and contains generous bits * * Cover pineapple with thick swirls of cream cheese, run through a pastry tube, Press 3 whole pitted dates on top of pine- apple. Fit apricot halves in cen- ter of pineapple slices. Garnish mayonnaise with sliced cherries. (To make orange cup, own brand of instant coffee. This cut large orange in half. Remove is in addition to their line of cus-| a ee chopped dates Pulp. Notch with sharp knife.) sonttom-ground and vacuum-packed! if; together flour, salt and bak-| —_-—-—_—— coffees. ~ “ling powder. Add egg yolks, butter Within the next ten years you|o, margarine and milk gradually. oneare slightly chewy. the Catting for two fresh eggs, this simple to beat up. A box makes or 20 medium cupcakes. the country’s largest, stores has put out its. One of Save Plastic Bags - Save the plastic see-through 4 Stirshelf in the kitchen in plastic air-| og whites be unti) ags from carrots or other foods. dates and egg whites beaten un lThey'te fine for storing English cabbage on Michigan counters ito cut and serve pineapple. has been arriving from Florida, (apple is selling at near wholesale are dissolved. Makes 16 servings. cate flavor. jee creams must contain fruit, 2. Other suggestions for crum | and gut ice cream must contain this week it will cost. : “ei . cracker og aE with cabbage | ; , }ng—ffour, bread cums eres Ker) sate. dust a mere suggestion of | ft supplement This chowld | Following the usually seasonal crumbs, crushed cornflakes. these, like a whiff of violets on | Have you seen any sausage pack- from the Carolinas. This show | pattern, wholesale prices on ee | a spring breeze, won't do, jaged in transparent plastic pack- ; BA ‘ ‘ages, ready to be simmered~ or Michigan's ice cream law, baked right in its wrappings? . Di- cup thick cream ‘garded as one that provides the rections for either method of cook- cup gorseradish consumer a product that is SU ing are printed on the -Cryovac Mix well and serve either hot perior to that permitted in Many wrapper, Watch for this conven- 12 to 1s. states, requires that fruit t¢e/jent meat at your favorite store. t add up to especially favorable | ioe pork and beef are Up prices, so plan more way to use. | slightly, However, shoppers will | eabbage in menus. notice only very small changes Rains in Texas have affected the, in retail prices. All cuts ef pork anion market so that in some) will be featured with economy stores there may be as much as, buys in picnics, Boston Butts, ‘or cold. Serves SAUCES FOR SMELT Horseradish With Cream < t) ce Ncreast ee) ri oi an age. | : : cream must eontain 5 per cen a ten cent i ase - a three-| rib-end loin roast, and sausage. | Spanish ‘Sauce fruit by actual weight. Nut ice| Whee we we ficu aeatricd, io : New pot: . ae : oe \ ; i 2 w w oy ed pound bag of onions 3 The steady wholesale price. of } tablespoons fat creams. must contain 2 per Cent we had bookcases made from ', teaspoon mustard Few grains cavenne 1 teaspoon lemon orange crates. Even if today’s toes are higher than expected SINCE net chuck keeps it one-ef the best newlyweds wanted similar “fur- new supplies are not as plentiful Custard. ice! nuts by actual weight, juice és Giret anticipated. However. at oe tchtiy more than week ago | Deer ee a ake ee ei eae niture,”” they would be doomed tt %0 Seat own rates are For more elegant eating. beef rib] -Heat fat until melted, add_re- ~~ * © « | to disappointment. The wooden &.miust-in every day's diet. roast carries a’ reasonable price| maining ingredients, simmer for In the five. seizures agricultural, OT@nse bex is no more. Carrots are a low cost favorite./;.5 Both pork and beef are good 10 minutes. Serve hot. Serves department inspectors found quite’ Orange growers are now packing or select beets for real home values for this time since they are 6 to 8. : ia collection of illegal artificial oranges in corrugated paper car- grown flavor. seHing at considerably lower prices! —— = flavors. Some were banana flavor- tons which keep the fruit in top Berries are the big news on (than last spring. When you entertain: cream may,ing, which also contains coumarin. condition. These new containers | . fruit counters. The quality at This is a good time to enjoy|be whipped and refrigerated for illegal in this state in the manu- necessitate a change in the sizing this time of year, according to |Michigan smelt, this being the'an hour before it is to be served. |facture of ice cream. j(you know orange size is desig- — 4 ~ _ —— - —— ee — —— —— — ~~ _ ‘ : = ~ + Ahash good enough for Sunday Dinner! T Mary Kitchen prepares this hash the way you yourself would fix a special dish for Sunday dinner... from choice fresh beef. (GGG This fine beef is oven-roasted to a crusty brown. Complete with the sa- vory pan juices, it’s blended with firm white potatoes, subtle seasonings. SERVE MARY KITCHEN ROAST BEEF HASH oven-browned in a casserole or pan- ’ browned in o skillet. Or, be fancy... bake it in tomato or pepper cases. Don't hesitate to serve Mary Kitchen Roast Beef Hash in an elegant manner... it’s an elegant hash. @ Tear out and take to your‘grocer TODAY! ROTATE TT EERE R CROCHET CPCI. aE SOO OWORIC WORSEN TOW CMY THIS COUPON WORTH 10¢ ra toward the purchase of a 151/2 oz. can of oad And here's how you can SAVE 10° ON YOUR FIRST CAN MARY KITCHEN _ .ROAST BEEF HASH TO THE DEALER: Geo. A Hormel & Co will redeem this coupon for 10€ plus two cents for hondling. Customers must poy ony soles tax The redeemable valve of this coupon is 1/20 of | cent cosh. This coupon is void if toxed, prohibited, or restricted by law. lye This offer expires Aug. 1, 1956 ! 2GEO. A HORMEL & CO., AUSTIN, MINN. ir ’ hi & active atonis. BEEF HASH quarts orkeep because it will have been corve with butter and honey. | Muffins, leftover baking powder irradiated with X-rays from radio- serves 6. biscuits -that are to be toasted, Experiments are being con. | salad greens or celery in your re- Date Fruit Salad Supreme 2 \frigerator. 6 thick slices pineapple Your favorite bleach This favorite bleach of millions now has a big, easy-grip handle to make 1t easier to carry — handier for kitchen and bathroom clean- ing and disinfecting. 4 SIZES: GALLON 3/4 GAL. V2 GAL. QUART You save work and get extta benefits when you use | Roman Cleanser Bleach. It’s a bleach and stain remover—plus a cleanser —plus a disinfectant... whitens, cleans, sanitizes. “ Sf . Big sso sists a , 7 7 ° ” = ee - SEACH ‘wew NEW “ONLY ovarr.s;, wt pI ee ea, "wih Ha SS ” hd » es ee eee —- a = ee ee ” ileal CS . =o | i kot wat FoRTY- FOUR 0 21VW + THR. PONTI AC ‘PRESS. | Brea bers of the Greek Orthodox church| eaten eggs, butter. or fish — all have nothing milk, cheese, By JAN ET ODELL Pontiac Press Home Editor - have peat, fasted.. They containing ‘food from anything living. After midnight Resurrection But in the Nicolas Samouris family}- on South Edith street-only- coffee and Greek Easter bread will be served. The head of the house cuts the loaf which symbolizes the end of fasting. cackeaas yeast in warm water and add to first mixture. oe d Baked for Greek Easter double. . Sift flour, add sugar and place in bowl. Make a well in the dry in- and eggs. Beat well. Do not put in all ghe flour at gredients and add milk mixture). you—want.—‘Rott—out two long strips of dough, round them and twist together inte a wreath. | in large round pan. Make braids out of tpe in a greased bow! and. allow to rise Place on greased cookie sheet or | hard boiled egg fir mly down into| the center of the cross, Let rise. eos on Chicken Good | with the chicken... “THURSD. AY, M AY 38,1956 . es . | i flayor barbecue sauce during the broil Quick sauce ing. be heated and brought to the table|with a little milk or cream. jan with a big Glace canned pineapple rings ‘bow! of hot steamed rice and a! ‘in a mixture of butter and brown — Broiled chicken takes on 200d) sreen salad. when it is brushed with! (Sugar to which a little soy, sauce for dried beef: con- land grated fresh or ground ginger soup, diluted; thas been added. Serve with om = |fried pork chops. Bon cme eres Extra barbecue squce may \densed mushroom : Sunday’ is the Greek Easter.|Mass on Saturday many, families) 1% cups sugar Divide tite 2 or 3 portions, | Just before baking brush bread) - Since “laSt Sunday, devout mem-|go home to eat a regular dinner. —— new depending on the size of es {with a mixture of Tt ‘egg yolk, a) little milk and a few drops of vanilla. Sprinkle with sesame seed and brush again with egg. Bake 10 minutes in a 400-degree oven. Reduce heat to 325 degrees SERVING ALL DAY | FRIDAY & SATURDAY ROAST remain-|and bake 30-40 minutes longer, or until bread sounds hollow. Do not get it too brown. first. Add what is necessary at ing dough‘and form a @ross in the center of the wreath, Place a We had hoped-that Mrs. Sam- ouris would be able to have her picture in today’s paper, with some of her Easter bread. But pressure of a part-time job and choir preparations fer Sunday's services were just too much. Mrs. Samouris is the choir diree- - tor. 'this point to make a dough you Knead smooth, Place can handle. A lengthy telephone conversation iprovided us with the recipe and full directions. On Tuesday, our day at home, we baked three 11 a.m. to 7:45: p.m. | TURKEY and dressing with cranberry sauce | ‘loaves of this wonderful bread. ,Greek Easter bread—or Holiday bread—is served twice a year. At New Year’s time it is baked in braided loaves and contains a coin. Whoever finds the coin in his slice _ will have good fortune for the _ entire year. It used to take hours to meke : fruit punch... now you can buy it At Easter time the loaves are | formed into wreaths with a cross ready made | in the middle and centered with ; a hard boiled egg colored red. at your grocers. Small wreaths with an egg in the center are made for the chil- Q dren. Mecording to our olen rence book (Can the Greeks Cook!), Greek Bakery Department SPECIALS Lemon Jelly Roll = 49¢ Banana Bread. . ~ 35¢ TRY IT— HAWAIIAN PUNCH. Easter eggs are dyed only blood red; signifying the blood of Christ. It is customary to dye the eggs only on Holy Thursday. and Satur- day. : However, the bread itself shoyld be made on Good Friday and Holy Saturday. Some housewives make thick, round lofives with a-‘number BRING THE FAMILY! FOOD SHOP 144-146 N. SAGINAW STREET ar, jof eggs stuck on the top. ri Our leftover ege dye failed to produce a blood red egg. In fact. ours looks rather anemic and caused the photographer to ask if the hen had been drinking red Oia measure ONLYAFLAKO PIE CRUST MIX sre ink? es you giv sy . | But the bread itself came out |just right. It really is easy to |make and delicious to eat. We got one large, one medium and .one f /small loaf! from the recipe. ; | GREEK EASTER BREAD By Mrs, Nicolas Samouris 1% cups milk . ‘g pound pweet butter 1% tablespoons vegetable shortening ty teaspoon salt : _He at to uke warm. with hard boiled eggs dyed bright red. The loaf above was made from a recipe given us by Mrs. Nicolas Samouris of South Edith Street. Do try it! GREEK EASTER BREAD — It's Easter in the Greek Orthodox church this Sunday In the many Greek homes in Pontigc foaves of a delicious | bread will be se — te loaves are EE Watch Your Buying of Kitchen Gadgets DOUGH TO SPARE! Exclusive 10 oz. package costs no more to buy! Dissolve _ 2 “ip A ee a i Ws che a ae # * ALL PARTIES AGREE... TREESWEET IS THE FRESHEST-TASTING ORANGE JUICE IN CANS | EAST LANSING (INS) — You pensable for you. Have you ever|you can unscrew. a lid from yourself tried to lift a roast out of the ketchup bottle or a wide-mout roaster with a fork and a spoon or pickle jar. itwo forks and have a piece of meat 4d break off before you get it trans-| Gadgets are useful until you get! ferred ta the platter? No more of too many of them, detlares Mrs.| this with a roast lifter: it looks ae sure’ to choose only| en something like a pancake turner|those you'll use. | see rare men iaeee except the part used for clipping) | —— {under the meat is much larger and Kitchen Economy. | But, says Mrs. Sands, the smart slightly curved. __ | leche eccucuny, The | $s will limit her number | i , pa \Gohgets fo .a minimum en oe nie slo ow aren heart and gizzard of a small broil-| | She goes on to-“say Nedheatid Whaat = WK ane © ‘ing chicken may be brushed with) “IT have found a few gadgets that oer a a "4 ou ak jmelted butter or margarine and T couldn't live Sithouth and which aighe Canaan : atorld = ir broiled with the rest of the = ay tent to use, it also saves burned (chicken during the last 15 or 20 supplement my basic pieces OF CUT" fingers and makes it convenient T te nea lery very nicely to baste more often. urn the hea Her favorite is a wire whip or and gizzard as necessary. beater which is used in a teacup to whip a small amount of cream or an egg white or an egg york. This is especially useful when cooking for only two people. Mrs. Sands has more gadg- et ideas which might prove indis- are not alone if you find becoming a little gadget-happy Ruth Sands of the Institution | Administration Department at | Michigan State University says gadgets have a definite purpose se (soecresersseasTeeTIeEEe minutes of cooking. For those who make doughnuts, jan automatic doughnut cutter ts a big time-saver and fun to use It cuts the doughnuts and drops them right inte the het grease * : A jar opener is a lifesaver, adds Mrs. Sands. They are adjustable 80) TreeSweet's exclusive INST ‘OVAC FANCY GRADE A 1FRYING CHICKEN PARTS uartere LEGS and THIGHS FREE FREE FREE DRIVE-IN THEATER TICKETS WITH EVERY PURCHASE OF $3.00 OR MORE YOU WILL RECEIVE A TICKET GOOD FOR ONE ADMISSION TO THE WATERFORD DRIVE-IN THEATER WHEN ACCOMPANIED BY ONE PAID ADULT TICKET. | STRICTLY FRESH # LARGE GRADE A’ EGGS@G 9. SHINNER'S MARKET | We Reserve the Right : SORRY! NONE SOLD .- to Limit Quantities! TO DEALERS! © in 6 pevenseangs: Black Cherry, Root Beer, Lemon, Ginger Ale, Cota. Flevor-sealed in a flet-top "“Mira-Can” Copyright 19564, Pabst Brewing Co, id, chek dude eu uMeududeads LL | Soft drinks go modern! | Piss, “lf It's Alive—It's Fresh”—Taste the Difference CAPONETTES a 9. ¢ ib i Finest Chicken Money Can Buy TURKEYS—DUCKS—ROASTERS—RABBITS—COON or Roasting — Stewing or Pong. Farm Fresh Jumbo p,, rge 0’ "59° | shrimp.” 7 ee 4-8 Lb. Average. EGGS .- eee FRESH and SALT WATER FISH of ALL KINDS RESH LAKE PERCH, 39; BUFFALO ib. F BASS or WALLEYES | un 45¢ Fresh Channel CATFISH b.\49c — SMELT PEOPLE'S FISH & POULTRY NRKET (Wholesale and Retail) 82 S. Saginaw Street seo © © ee oe ee \fe 4-1521 crcrevoreresscerressese® 2 wr Tastier! More Convenient! une cd i‘ New light, bright Pabst sparkles with natural flavor! Kiss goodbye to old type soft drinks! Pabst brings a modern taste and convenience to sparkling beverages! Children love the natural flavor ... no artificial - flavor, no preservatives! And mothers love Pabst too —Flat-top Mira-Cans are easier to carry home, easier to serve——no deposits, no returns! They stack easier, chill faster! And Pabst’s own modern treatment makes the natural flavor sparkle, bubble, and last and last! Enjoy Pabst sparkling beverages today! BLACK \CHERRY, » eee yas a + “MIRACLE OF CONVENIENCE. Mire-Con ‘the new trade’ draGan) esignes, he Anacan, Gat Somme, seen : er, beverage can. © mm re a six grandchildren and three great grandchildren. : : Mrs. ira EF. Kenaga * Services were held today a or Famous BIG-SCREEN .TV ap fe * . « { Mid land for Mrs. Ira FE. Kenaga. 87 who died Monday at a Saginaw hospital. She spent most of her tife in Oakland County. :} For many years Mr, and Mrs. ‘Kenaga conducted yeneral stores .at Clyde, White Lake, and lived ‘at Royal Oak 40 years, moving “to Midland two years ago. They celebrated their 67th wedding an ‘miversary last August. Besides her ‘husband, she les: ' 7 sons, Ivan of Midland, Rus | sell of Portland, Oregon, and How- grd of Ardmore, Okla.; one daugh eal ter, Mrs. W. Wollman of Midland << a brother and sister; 13) grand. , CHOICE children and 20 great grandchil- yee iY dren. | sit v ge ” REFRIC Ralph Alger Lyke Eh eula NOVI TOWNSHIP — Service fo WeltoEept | Ralph Alger Lyke. 64. of Phocnis a Ariz., a former resident of Novi eas Township; was held last week in Phoenix, with burial in Greenwood Memorial Park there. Mr. Lyke, a former Arizona legislator and head of the Arizona state gasoline ta tefund division, died April 20 ath a long illness He leaves his with, Floren son, John of California: thre bret ers, Dewey of South Lyons. Alex and thres sont Ninny M Ih and Burr of Northvill: sisters, Mrs. Ford Brix Mrs. Harley Cole and Angel, both of Northvi: Spaghetti Supper Friday LAKE ORION TW! Wet } re We PY ber School on Clarkston Orion Fi Pace-making extra value outtit is sponsoring a ae ont ( phe re oe your living with supper from 5.30 to 730 pm. Fr 7 The anal ne Guin CURE ee T ; RS: ons 4 > PX ord at the ee Famiii i - Ae pertly styled. and constructed sofa welcome, and free movies will and lounge chair suite, modern | provided for the children, Tickets ACH ROOM CAN BE Wrought iron chair, 3 modern tables, | ‘ ; 9 will be available at the door, PURCHASED SEPARATELY! <¢ y 4 FAMOUS 2 lamps, and throw rug 7 j | ———e = / j MAKES Exceptional at This Price $229 : : Ail, Season's Last Dance ¢ An Ultra Streamlined 26-pc. ~ Ay {| Krochter NEW HUDSON — The Satu: Meee Ensemble md Douglas @ Bedroom in the Modern Manner Night Square Dance Cluby «1p wvongs on this group offer? es PRA Bassett -A thrilling amount of fashion, comfort, and sent the last dance «af thr eriey |r me dinette with double les 7s Tappan quality for.vour dollar!” Stunning routed line ast dance cL in ~ ; i. f i ching ¢liait. plus smart ate and recessed detailing. smart modern finish on the school gymnasium here fe 4 General the doubdle dresser with mirror and bookcase urday night. Electric bed" Innerspring mattress, box spring, pair of © | . Unusual outfit value at $89 CBS. etc. pillows, lamp included! | (Advertisement: Restokraft 8 Pi 5 $ ' ale and €r re of EN of Ketrtigerator Only with t{-Room Onatfit even teces at aaa Mi 219 Nagging Backache Sleepless Nights Nagring backache, he adae aches ant, pains may eome 1 tia, emotional tipsets of da stfain, And folks who eat a sometimes suffer mild blasted: ov With that restless, uncomfortable feel Fouare mine rably and worn «> @ these discomforts, Doan's P ithe often h ip y their pain relieving nctinn. hy thei: h- |i effect to eds: bladder irritatic their mild diwretit action through the | tending to increase the output of @f kidney tubes. PB! nagging backache minkes you feel Geeeged-out, misern ble, with restigns, sleep. - feo inv rel try Diéan’s Pills, get the y relief millions have ehje wed for years. Ask for new, ta: eronomy pall nd tove moe) Get Down's Pilis codag } Ss ue ELIN & Co. 25 SOUTH SAGINAW PONTIAC’S MOST BEAUTIFUL FURNITURE STORE INCLUDED! NOT the cheapest BUT the best top value decorator-co-ordinated | complete home ensemble | your dollar can buy! | Our Budget Plan Pay Ad © 9-pc. Living Room Ensemble j {5d 7 e | C4 : “ i ¢ : 24 oa : 2 } j) : \ oa ceed ~~. | iy! A hs | cf e ies) ik pos 5 ' a CA are te | “ ' cee -4 i TITE PONTIAC PRESS / = ; & “i he BAY ad - CHECK’ OUR PRICES 2 cn aan aa a Ak OR/O : H t B id ‘Were PT. A Is Pla nin Sof Wee 0 in 0 ul 1 ran in auths late “Open Daily 9 to 6 . : D q | E § ate Friday 9 to 9 4 Je | xplorer to “Show Film Friday Music Festival Sanday 90 2 | all of 1957. I | : more . at Saac Talky Tonight | FRANKLIN —. Student Council] Trimedge* “Ss Savings Stamps St ‘ Ww Id H members here under the direction; Hao KemTone 2. -/O ructure. ou ave WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Den- pears under the auspices of String- ef teacher Mary Kopus and M. E. iesioam and Tile | 17 Teaching Stations, nis G. Cooper, nationally known ham School PT A which is sponsor- ‘Cc randell, principal, have organized | ; Cost About $650,000 | explorer, photographer and travel ing the program. 4, music festival, to be presented! Ml IER PLASTIC TILE lecturer, will snow his color mo The new movie, a sequel to; the at the achat vat 39 Pm: Friday. | i ROMEO! Oe LAdminisiratorsrand hon picture, “New Adventures in color film, ‘Touring Glorious Proceeds of the festival will be Armstrong Dealer } hoard members of the Romee Com- Michigan.” at 8 pm. tonight at sMichigan’ which ‘Cooper has ered 2 landscape — the school si : : \ munity School District again stud-- I aac Crary Junior High School chew to nudicaces (rusncuasl (ar = ». an 7545 Ortonvilie Rd. , MIS, Clarkston, Mich. MAple 5-346] \ ied een pee i ne pro- Cooper, a native Detroiter, a[* coast, -is a pieture-story of the lees contributions will be, ( Pal vet ies ; a, Ks f es heauty of Michigun SED SEIS eo 2 (US ONT i cial meejing last mgnt Lstunates ; : i | : - : = Seas _ _ _ _ _ ss } cost of the structure is between Rochester Class It features both the’ upper and as penne $60 SF mgt A ] Di lower peninsulas, all coasts and Sand 42 ; ELSIE Ue oe nnud Inner, idepicts Michigan life in every sea- I ie DV re educators Wave - . , son incorporated in the latest oat oe ‘alterati at ion was the Dance Is Tonight Professionally, Cooprr is head enlargement of corridors contuin- ROCHESTER One hundred Uf the Leal Re a we of “re ing lockers from 10 to 12 feet in and nineteen members of rard Intermediate School, e | width. Size of the band and chardl [Rochester High School Senior Class trom, He is a recogmzed author- rooms was als revised, will hold their annual dinner dance ity in his feld and has lectured Tent oe A ae ft ‘lat’ Hillcrest Country Club at Mt widely on scientific and eed senchang’ (ucisens 1 lactating) 0 Clenwns tonight ab as ’ F , g ii- ‘ brary, physies, chemistry and A banquet will be served al: ek oceans it nomic ns wort : 6:30 p.m. followed t ~vening he New Hudson ETA: w heme econemmes Feonts. HURON VALLEY QUEEN — Sharon Knight, 12, winner of the | of ae oe ON OS eet at 8 pan, Thursday in the | The cafeteria is designed without, Huron Valley Boy's club beauty contest, js being congratulated by school gymnasium. This will be windows to facilitate its use for, Michael Morey, representing the club, The contest ran two months, | 4¢™#nistrative sponsors attend: the last meeting of the season. | ee Le ~ Soniiona:! " ; ; : ue » Mr. and Mrs ni ] 2 visual = oa a the college mith 9 little beauties entered, according to Director Gerald Bierkeley.-(" eva a ae ‘ ¥ mn “i Avon Township Size gymnasium will seat 1,200.) The six finalists who will make up the Queen's court are Shirle aig wiy) a AE aa SH "Architects from the firm,of Jen: Gjonka. 11: Mona Winstanley. 12 Y are Shirley ard Huizenga, Mr. and Mrs. Har-' The last executive board meet gen and Keough, Detroit, estimated’ | Hei '" , = | , _ “™ ¥ . TLL Shoemaker, 1] Sharon lan Johnsen and Mr. and Mrs ing of the Elmwood School PTA | t would take 12 to 13 months to i ee i da ark ue aud Ariene Tribble. 11) Final judges for Roger Seager. Class sponsors will was scheduled for 1°30 p.m. today L construct the new two-story build-)* CONES! wi Mrs. Giul Winterbettom, Mrs Jo Morey, Mrs. Mar- be Mr. and Mrs, Wayne Holman,!Members are discussing plans for [ ing and advised that test borings ton Lewis and Mrs. Vita *Mr- and Mrs, Wayne Chatterton a school picnic, to be held some- on the site in Mountain View Or and at and Mrs. Ray Lawson, |time in June, : aorts be taken immedi tiately - — . School officials hoped for comple al ] »bers- Boyl N pil iI tion of the building by the opening e u la Ss. o. °@ i of school in the fall of: 1957 Sp k t N th B h A L AN | . . : were roan crip MPOKEN al North Dranc nded m ries! yim Serta Tufted Innerspring Mattress | will clear latest plans with heads» NORTH BRANCH! — Marlene F Ellen Ani. Bayle ae ed as e o y wor ie e » ” | 5: epartments pri » ne Boyle and Robert Chambers spok “posssayn) (AS cp | = — aces eer te a their wedding vows at a 10 : mn baxcesmuud ton Des < and >“ ls silt Consolidation Service showed me how to clean Gives paras Support Whether vou Weigh 80 or 280 Pounds! , , reg cK on. ! ' . : ol James Boyle, brother of the th ide up bills and reduce monthly payments that were too high. And a” : nee Mass in SS. Peter and | 5 5 ubesileted| by Hs bo : resh Start! ua, too, can get a cash loan in just 1 visit to the | / : al — by R ay Dembow The bride is the daughter of Mr’ © Narles vw aughlin and Vernon office if you phone first. Or, if more convenient, write or come in. \ j { } ° as & 14 lacoh ttn le x , schaub of Nt ancl the board, at‘a cost of $6,197 each a M ; ; . I - vie of North > , hs ae ; | rh Branch | _. beans -$25 te $500 on Signature, Furniture, or Cor ; zi ranch, ine he brie OOM s par wedding uneheon far of pela “ , f The bid of 3, 810 from Ral; pr Gay ris are Mr and Nf Hare i taend a . J rison on a 7 to 10 passenger carry- Chambers a) pean f id and friends t place at the ; all also was approved. ies ASO OE SO ramen Clitinrd [OOK pall at 1230 pm s The board is again requesting Harlene was dressed in a bal. and a reception for 210 guests was o> ; from the state fire: marshal for) lerina length gown ef white taf held at the hall at 8 pm use of the previously condemned feta and satin, with shoulder Temporarily, the couple will Live it WEST LAWRENCE TaTREET: PONTIAC Maples School for the 1956-57 schoo] length veil. She carried.a bougert t with the bridegroany’s pare it 2nd Floor, Lawrence Bidg. + Phone: FEderal ceed iE year. — of carnations,. centered with a (6741 Jefferson St. The bridegroom OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT — PHONE FOR EVINING HOURS _ red rose, i emiloved (nibaxian Loans mode te revidents of all surrounding towns mployed in Wson } County Deaths New Spring H er ae. Soa | DISCONTINUED sh ace ew Spring Homemakers’ Sensation! F.B. MELIN’S | MODELS: “IMLAY CITY—Funeral service | for Henry J. Bagley, 78, of 780 .N_) WHILE THEY. - LAST Young Rd., Attica, will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday from the Lester : “00° Smith and Son Funeral Home, with se burial in the Imlay Township Le Cemetery. He died Wednesday me morning. ™ F aes * Surviving are his widow, Ruby, | a Jay he et : a son, Hamilton, Attica; a daugh oe ter, Mrs. Doris Nemeth of De a freit.a Brother John of Lake Orion: | RANGE and CHOICE of REFRIGERATOR $5.00 Down 4 4 ffie Beautiful Striped Ticking Formerly Used on : High-Priced Mottresses © Deep Layers of Fine Cotton Felt e 510 Resilient Steel Coil Unit Special purchase of discontinued ticking formerly used on expensive mottresses NOW available on special, firm 510 Coil unit brings you a rare oppo~ tunity to own @ top quality mattress ot a budget price! Chrome plated stee! turning hendles ond 8 air vents. 4 : j { < ad ] . Ha Wail. = 4 SMOOTH-TOP COMFORT ” HEALTHFUL SUPPORT . EASY TERMS MADE ONLY BY STOKRAFT —f hoy fe (oy Ulu... “Perfect Sleeper’ . SMOOTH.TOF pape GPSS ES AND BOX SPRINGS Own the Worlds ONLY smooth. top mottress with the amorng "Un emoatec wnt you sleep on not im ii’ $5.00 DOWN ~ ae. fom = fie se ithaca harge OgOur Budget Plo 25 SOUTH SAGINAW PONTIAC’S MOST BEAUTIFUL FURNITURE STOREved Lo Gla ff \ | _FIPTY-FOUR_ 2 ~ ee _THE PONTIAC ¥ PRESS. -THURSD: AY, MAY 3, 1956 _ Methodists Continue Plans | JM ESS ff . | | ‘ ” ] i 5 $ s “a | New Movie ‘Julie’ Keeps Pree, “ tim to Condemn Segregation _ || ENJOY Mulli-Million Dollar MAY time i 4 : ‘ t = 1g “grea t al br ther-| ID & D y th re a ] P o— Te ——— op “MINNEAPOLIS. (#—The worl d's; “os " greater interracial brothe ; oris Qa 2 on e ) ¢ : ve . S ECTACULARS in echnicolor ; is s largest Protestant de nomination hood . ws ee a | Wee) os ue . . he Methodist Church—today be- ; y MAS , claimed much money can be : . : . a Gece las ie racial le to winend the church ee HOLLYWOOD (®—You can find,saved thusly, but there is some on the Giant Theatre Screen 2 4 eee . was pees the way for all Ne- ‘Doris Day all over town, | these dispute about this. Though ‘studio : ime i pee * * “ |gro church units to move into the idays, —_ A rental and fe -building i elimi- re. bE . ae SU HUE Gin all cepa marennica Ori ll nated, there’ ‘are sfill ‘salaries: to , Delegates to the church's quad- falls crate eT be One day she was at an insurance be paid, plus the expetice of trans- rennial general ‘conference set tilled Dylaworthindsion henotine building in Los Angeles, the next porting ‘workers and equipment. forth a three-pronged program a legates in 132 conferences per- at the Hotel Statler.Skhehas been ‘ONLY ONE SONG festerday — CX z seg Noura chure oe at a market in Brentwood, an) ~~ a ee aeting “neat on oe sible ae . a oe Oe ee os : Bf beter building in Westwood.| Doris gets to sing but one song in the church structure and study- oes is ee ime root! Whe ‘n Ll eaught up with her, she in the picture, She had onl¥ two ing new ways of bringing Negro eereare administrative Units. “was playing gin rummy with her in her last one, “The Man Who and white members of the con . yoo _ tand-in in a modest room of a eg nee Much.’ ning she assured gregation more closely toy: ther Sih meten Cen be on a vot i class apartment in Holly- ‘musicals wasn't trying to eseapx : oN ONSTITUTION luntary basis and could be under- » * AMEND CONSTITUTION untary eee ee ““ MSI eerie The Battling Sergeant 2 TOP The eonference sped through ac- Xen Oy tw ; * | iid we jo do both,” she ex- ot Fichti ; tion opening the door to full inte. Tesiwnal groups involved. | The reason for all these wander.’ - plained, “I'm going to do ‘Pajama ° ose Fighting FEATURES! gration jn the church, urging abo an ings is her latest picture, “Julie.” Game’ neat, so~that will be an Wolthounds Meets iat lition of discrimination or seyre-| For slum betterment, Saigon, in |@ suspense drama that is being out-and-out musical, After all, Pve a Girl i. nm. a (4 gation and setting up a commuis- Viet Nam, will install 23 new Wa: filmed in ectual booale is ne non-singing pictures before, Ki = mall She Was sion to study ways of develop- ter fountains, j @ I didn't Sing at all in ‘Storm Warn-} Pink mona! Mle as ; a . : - / “We don't have one day's shoot ing,’ and IT had only one small -* ing inside the studio, unless we > song in ‘The Winning Team.’’ ? . BAIT ee) eee TODAY PRICES might need some process shots,” ee a y; ee A0c ‘til 5 P.M. Doris explained. | Mount Ararat, the traditional for a KILLER! a FRIDAY 50c Nités-Sua. With all this traveling and shoot-! pp sting pl: ae ct en i “ah is THREE STRIPES: cf ; S ~ SATURDAY Children 20 ing In odd places, I wondered if about 16.900 fect high and is in in the SUN ~E ; she didn’t ied the comforts of 4 eastern Turkey near the Russian ‘ studio. . j 5 iborder. Pe - a “Not at all/” she said cheerily. i I RAY Phi CAREY: Dik YORK » ¢ SLAP HAPPY —Ruty Jurado, ie He eer ke tee wait erture Shown at (8:30, ° o” above; tossed an ad Ib slap af ating to ine pe oO € fe wa ; 3:30, 6:30, 9:35 P. M : Py ~ “Anthony Quinn during the oe : ics a movie And se trem whrd a) ree ‘ ¢ : : as AAR f 7 fi e Pane wi PLUS_—THRILLING WESTERN! Soa ete i ling. they ‘set aside an office for 2° Frank Lovejoy | ree Pavdeduri . ae éI tly me ‘to relax in. At nes Hotel Stat-! ~ rd Mari Blaachard GEEZ WARNER BROS rocecen ey fer too ' cn . ae ee 4 fy ay ke ler, I had my own suite.” OPEN e Richard Denning wnes Ullt Ll TM ro a : vent o1 ; *LAINTS . t ‘lint ing and the show went on. NO COMPLAI 10:45 A.M. roo ‘Strange Lady inv Town ee eee SOS ee a ) _SIAanNe said, “The film we have been fel GREER | GARSON « ‘ DAN A ANDREWS ( 14 Bla 1S ling is wonderful—the real locales | ala eD Pray vive it a note of authenticity. — SN a So ae | DOORS “OPEN 10:45 | onecieo ov MERVYN LEROY CiNemaScoPe WARNERCOLOR ; “As a natn of aU mo nt All the Better Pictures Play. - ’ | Treat the family to a movie - = : on it ye any good i id complai “ me w Family n to. onight whe 0-21 anton CAMERON MITCHELL SS Sree ern @ Ld orit e ritis lI uted "to be able to go home and | Here at ile t Family Rl . 2 = i i you ricea Pi oT a see the be ire ‘complain about the producer of! ces ; TRS Pay 588 (ne best lrst. : | English Party Leaders '"” pictures. Now I go home to) HERE LS more BUYS Mat. 40c; Eve. 50c; Child 20c :, . ; . thee producer!” i j ; ; “4n Invitation to Excellent Food” Hit for Starting Spat He is Marty Melcher, who hap TWICE AS MUCH | TODAY thru SATURDAY SERVED FROM STEAKS . CHOPS, CHICKEN With Nikita on Tour jpens to be Her husband, ~ | | c n 45 1 A : r » ti] * 4 THE BROILER | This method of shooting in rea ; eegge JN Att THE Wort Never NOTHER Lixe MANNY’S FINE LIQUORS—FINE FOOD | Lonpon in—Pravda today ag- locales has been" done before, es- DARRELL S LG : West Huron at Elizabeth Lake Road cused leaders of the British Labor pecially during the o of the j atiy of picking a quarrel.with semi - doeumentarics following . — 4 Nikita ‘Khit hev ian attempt World War II, Although outdoor DRUG STORE to head off the formation of an locations were used, seldom were | 37.39 § Seginew FE $-4521 Box Ottice Opens 6:30 P. M. nternational Communist-So¢ialist films made entirely away from In Oakland Theater Bldg. ~ united front a Studio, as with ‘‘Julie."’ Doris , 2 Phone FE 4-4611 _* ee Khrushche’’, head of the Soviet Oo WIDESE Communist pr om! * into a rew f with Laborjte leaders last week ‘ | when he and Soviet Premier Nik , “i ( The Brawting ; ; wai Bulgar nw i artical FROM WARNER: Bros. IN CINEMASCOPE AND ’ chore oh pttel | ee A eater: eae | iT E STORY OF EXTRA: COLOR CARTOON! ~ | A ee mec 5 SUNDAY: “A MAN CALLED PETER” and “QUENTIN DURWARD” urta an Aske id 0 UNIS 2150 Opdyke Road leader to help free those impris- oned, ‘ } 7 NONSENSE SAYS NIKITA \ fn: ~ 2nd MAJOR HIT! i. STARTING : Features at 1:39 — 4:11 TON IGHT ~ Ti { U RSDAY Khrushchev angrily brushed oe o) M-G-M's MUSICAL ROMANCE OF RIO! 6:43 — 9:19 aside the suggestions as “‘non- . Come! j | sense.” He said there were nqJ” \ LANA TURNER _ u MEN rr f . : Sectal Democrats in the” Soviet RICARDO JOHN Lours : | FOUGHT FoR Se | eh, Mie tic: THE Union, and the fate of any else- MONTALBAN - LUND - CALHERN : : uLrs LIPS! "an ~ Et taat where were no coneern. of h’s, : *” w. EY aco Ge oS $e. : Count! “MAR TAL ! : vk \ ss ; eae a. : Seer ase G to | eS Glee ie, her ee Sie! iui “GIRL ON THE RED VELVET SWING” A town j t % tne . v M Mien & te ro papn fran Whanees with FRI enna. OF BILLY MITCHELL | "00 ee ; “also — “VIRGIN QUEEN” | orsaene Weetorn bourepe ——_ UEL on TH GARY _ 3 ...a stranger em a, Betrsh I port, tenmchors wh . “ ISSks pDwpyT CCOP ER Ytended the d rowMith Khirush ° Si = a a INEmaScoPeE : warnerCovor : hey ‘ , e demed thes o Be rately ° and the things wwe LEX BARKER - PATRI AA MEDINA A anrs BICKFORD: perry BELLAMY Pore cc cohen gia . wy TECHRICALC CH (V8) i Rh riv iil : ; 1 \ i ies x l he does to 1: i) oe "= ! fi . | - ” - t J ? e oa _—_ ° NOW! KEE ADULTS 50¢ a — Waedward to Maple Rd.—East Fi Birmingham its people, 1 : Vidas CHILDREN 20e | Federal Reserve NOW SHOWING THRU SATURDAY! ; THE ZIP - A - DEE - boo-pAH! show - | Order Detied 7 especially Sai Tar - ; PFRANK, SINATRA ELEANOR. PARICER, KIM NowAK : rape ae — President ieee m ' ey“ s= ; oe ee we bs Shoes ALT LAKE: CITY op -A Uinh 1ts women: haere y aa Ue i . BLUM Caf Up ‘A ee 7 Pa " oe e eeeeeaa! bial . . , ab . re ; | ee ALSO — : 1s be aver it toy the fe cle tee] fy i te tat tae fh a r - APR ETE TOM & JERRY RED SUNDOWN 4 CARTOON er ae th 5 ee emp t ase a ‘ i | for I ’ ( ine hy Kk teed Tetist 1 vee ew ALSO IN C@LOR — FRANKIE LANE (Lon of tos tien capitak as “ade: | in “BRING YOUR SMILE ALONG” o . ‘ a * one } i th { tt ard \ ( t t t / 3 | } t 7 ! caine : por et ee imsameé sw a Cy is well a i ma } Corner Williams ie Airport | Roads——Box Ott ce e Opcns 7 1 . ; : jet nil ww fe eS . na & | LAST TIM ES T ON NTE | . ULITZER.PRIZE PLAY . NHTE | Ott conned SIN NOW ONT __ re ae 2 | ‘THE SCREEN! ! WANTED by the police in ail, | ———7gr > ara ra an Se ence | ¥ i the luxury-spots of Europe!... Ritgca les? Ps, oe . “8 A catch for any w woman! . f° Dixie Hwy. (U5-10) 1 Bik. North of Telegraph. Rd. FE %-4500 COLUMBIA el Onee. presents { 3 > LAST TIMES TONIGHT 4 WILLIAM HOLDEN | ; ALL COLOR PROGRAM ") —— ~ il Cour BROS emese~ FREDERICK BRIESON aie & f . "THE COURT-MARTIAL| 0s4uno ausseu \ i aX ; SS | 3 OF BILLY MITCHELL i Mas eas ; Ar: Mer . . panic ue new an actor worked intermit = soot * ie . : have been caused by cancer, a fact a Pontiac firemen estimated e | shipments 665, suppl o ats _fa2s. tently and s gibe : mt ae qe ‘ | : Admiral . .... 193 Isl Crk Coal . 46 4 pplies moderate May HS *e y.and supported him when sable se gecheve cal igo ear ai Eeaiaae | | aa Fa 193 ial Crk Co ae demand ee ced Lol dataer totalled r Se we be: usines with thi ore cnt ved , nl bosehe & ‘ fire broke trailer when me . ' = test r died in M out id aac A acaba, tg tenes oe rs sates old stock as out of work nl = sugyest that differ- a Le n March and! pareply at at 8:20 a.m., ap- , old atox ; en sor = a er sist iy » aye ce ’ Ait se Gvesieee fo wi iii. Ff {i ttathed sho russets $98, lod i *“ * * Election of two persons to the pres oe a of individuals are re-. halt th : “ underwent surgery, hat ies ter smoldering cigarette a Oa tye 3 ey ned ok ‘ fcr une e a end ar “Bur when heegot al $12wa- board of the US. Truck ented in. the accident and nen- é ne disease this year. s were thrown into a waste- 4.4 TKeanecets ss a ie 38 Aled stock” arrivals week spot in Las Vegas and 1 three others ta ii ‘ ae and accident LUN Oe ” they even Mrs. Spence describes her miss- ‘paper basket. . 2 oderate, market dy . eines di : . e Bn Be pegular communication ventiae se ea Veen a ccenriys nancurce Us —— Ae as being 5 feet 8, with lee trailer is owned by. Addie 89. Lodge No. 21,F. & A.M. Fri, May fused to give me $100 a weck and Chairman C. W. Behrens. ' Minor P| leads . = wii a sak aatels pine eae oeance sul 6 Poul yy ae p.m Samuel E. smith, 4snanimousls tossed me $20 a. Phe new directors include Robe ea S ul ly W 7. Se ahs loss of $300 to contents : M. . wee . ’ - . m ' ou try —Adv week TREE) Bis agent ir Jones and Henry ghee ee hooping Crane lage see lg craller itgelt. Dane : * ° ‘le S 2 2 > mer J. Klebba was elevated to to eer Possession Whoops It U ‘kitchen pa one side of the DETROIT ie LTRY A property settlement gives ‘senior vice president and Donald ‘Brewery Plant Razed 49 Ar seating ees | DETROIT, May 2 (AP)—Price I ' H Am Smelt Lorillard. ..... 19: +pdund f.o.b. Detroit for No. 1 seat les ews in Brief ‘ i rs wm Co en Gl . 3 Peecty Meee Seat. 1 L t Miss Mann, who was Miss Utah A. Ward to vice president. Donald 4 W : ms one nf y . Am. Viscose May D Str... 42 broilers or fryers Tinea ee wanes 1938, sole title to the couple's Baker was appointed vice a mince arrested fast might for ith Tw O E Am Viscos pense Aaa el 7 [aera se Gteaies Bede Barred| Noe Pleading guilty to t : home and 10 5 dent 4 ce presi- posse ssion of beer pleaded ggs “| Anac W & C Mead Cp 80 | 2642-27, Caponettes (4 Ibs) 28. 14! ote “ ty SS charges per eent of Baer’s ent in charge of operations today, but 2 net, |_ ALPEN poe 5 Mpls Hon.” (ed ed Ducklings 30-32. Brsedet|= yesterday, Frank Shanahan, 29, gross earnings or a minimum of —_—— ion pl 4 aoe) vest old orn TN eee un—Josephine ewery building will be razed to rout & Co Mpls Hon” 2 A ys, heavy type hens 36 of Clarkston was jailed 35 days $900 a year. Floyd G. Lawrence, former De- of oe caved innocent to a charge made big news in the Polonia al Brewery building will be razed to i a > * ~ . = Tus x » hi . Pl . pical yay re Sain ia ont Weed “ si cuicagg povurny when he failed to pay $40 in fines —ee troit editor of ‘Steel’ and more re- ponald 1. me hquor. world Saturday when she laid an a way for a metered parking fa Mig’ -» 62 eee Wheél . 29 «|Pieccy on 3 May 2 +AP)—Live poultry ttmposed -by Independence Town- Pai F cently manager of publicity for th he Ha rbor Te as long pot ecco cae. ee al oe Ckca Gen tm ck BRE t on ~ OT Wi d $2 : re i i ~ sie & . at Motorola ‘4 Brea: con jeune tock, avout steady on ship Justice William H. Stamp alr aces arges Packard-Clipper Dyvision_ of Stude- five di ws * fined $25 and jailed mex oO . eee out of business with the ad- “ry Sor £ Macc. Cp 404 om alr pr jsmeene? $28 ‘coops, Shanahan was charged with driv- « baker-Packard Corp., has been ap- Judge s by Pontiac Municipal Supt. George Douglass of Audu- sha Cal Uetletal tae Tal Pade eta Joeing Airs... Ot et Dairy... $4-3)1_ cent ewer” “hehe ONeas aeerenaed ie ing while ‘his operator's license in Robb pointed executive editor of W aris (penta a eesti ben Park strutted like a new papa ous small firms have used the eee $ pas Dew Bie fryers 34-265. old. roosters 15-16, | 2S revoked and with drunk i ery em t Reports Ine The fir 8 ontiae police arrested him in and tofd newsmen th &P@ building since then. jond Bers pa : ipa Se a we | farreee Saeene) 18. (No quotations on ‘disorderly conduct nk anc rd’s Aut e firm publishes his friend's cantilalter mang Donnie 4 th a e event dem-| —___.__ _ parene Nat Thea ,.. 6.1 caponettes.) mnduct : utomotive R eel r another onsite hat whooping ¢ : — — jorg Warner. . “a1 NY Central .. aa = Two bfothers, both f Ward teports. driver reported their “t [an sreriarier” Se RY et ma oth factory work. Ward's MulomotivelWearhonk : heir car had can breed in captivity 333 Pleadin eate r : cory ends lonced ff the ros . wad Conn... 348 Nort & West . 60.8) Livestock icharge eg ty yemerany ate ike ee d arraignment this morn-, Ward's Canadian Automotive Year-« Offi om if the moad- Josephine and Crip, her mate REAL ESTATE purouats 392 cP an : be “DETROIT LIVESTOCK { driving under the influ-["& alter charges were brought, book. . ){ficers claimed they found sev- are two of the 28 wt aie ESM . . ™e ~. Seles “ r IOs os ‘ > neem vial © 432 Nwst airine |. 16. 1) DETROIT, May 2 (AP)—Hogs—S lence of liquor, John Crimp, 27, of yesterday in an tempted stickup! = Ce eee ee Oe ee arid, Douglass aA an Cen cms Seena ti Gi. 13:8 pdingrinh ney t cecumabaate cman 1ete ‘Troy Township was jailed 18 days by which they allegedly hoped to! The election of H. Stanley k it was stopped at the corner of sal L ‘aa in fe nf eerie ns 73.6 steady: to strong. e TP ies, anley Krusen 8, Paddock ¢ s f said, and the first to p ey! Sk a i i ait : ai Met ‘tong: “amneness or ae alin t Pa Seino fine ea ene torcontiisese arinkig to (al place onl the board/ep the a x iddock and Elm streets, Cas- egg in captivity 0 produce an Recet nies nena tees predict rCp.... $82 . cows, supply steers and heifers »y Hazel Park Justice SPr°e- bie Manuf ton’s companion was remanded ‘ ve . SS PS ee pier oo $F Peon ep mostly cows; supply stecre and heifert!p obertt C. 1 Mac - nufacturing Co, was an- Oak! : 1anded to * of all new homes will be we eee BY Param Bret 133 Srertopn anys: out 200 carr irom rtt Baldwin. 2 ack Lee, 32, of Farmington and nounced yesterday by i akland County Jail when he failed — Jos ar : fabric. pre- Chiat res: Parke’ abe pI [caer tt leet ste ce ledwin'C. Lee! 31 of Gard ‘ity Higbie J ay by Cartton M. to post $150 bond set by M 1 sephine added egg No. 2 to} pro chet One of the most mies: aha arte oe [steady on all ‘classes; early: sales |§ Ten sets et keve wer : rarden City r., president of the Roch- jun ) eCal the nest yesterday while a phot gressive prefabricated home ee se ES Pe ik Ba sere rading average seit 20.00. Wieser thet baer e ft Lieds were charged wilh assault with in- ¢ster firm. A partner in the 1 Bene trial May 10 rapher was waiting around f og-,] manufacturers is taking appli e. ; some utility and commercial reakin of Linda tent to rob t » New ep . around for a | cations for sal A Climax Mo..... 717 Pfizer... 43.2 Steers and heifer cialle, 1» being armed by the York Stock Exc Picture : sr Only aaa tater: ea g Me... Th Eoeins > $2.3) mest sane some) ma, ieee tae School Tuesday night, Pon- Oakland County Prosecutor's « of- Shearson cae aee fi rm of _There are more automohiles in i € ef the first. ao area. Only men inter- Col Gas .... 33 Philip Mor aa somsare ty nse earlier in’ the wee c police said. A window was fice. after State Police at the R felaiac) al direc o., Krusen Califorma than there are mot Pat _ 7 — oo rin oe Dee Comw Ba |... 41.2 i Pet “1004 fo arb and eaters meatly 1050-12 50, found broken. ford post said At the Red |/= #180) 4) dinecton ol xeveral joiner Toiens eat peo rae. motor Russia is buying two outdoor TV per year considered. Send em- Con save 417 oe 72m ens . 46.7) 16 commercial bulls 14.00- } , aid the pair tried to national companies. ie i . 90-278 tb wutchers, 18 06 io. a Me Patter Dey Bante 5 me but mere traced through the Now M ' . Auto Lite 344 rooted me Sean etal a 900-250 ib 18 28 a peak mt St —Ad license plate on Mack's car a es ossible for A 5 * most , | — Drees OODLE GM pec dyke pe “Pee 7b around No 1 and 2 190220 in’ Rummage sale, sponsored by A : ny trie RR *.... 223 Sou Ry sorted for weight and rade E : ; fz-Cel-O 1 #18 — v 119.4 at 16.00, a limited volume No 2 aie psilon Sigma Alpha Sorority. ‘Ay fe) oot ew a W Fairn Mor e trv Rand 83 280-320 Ibs ae DO; most 350- tat be held r y t = e Actoparrt ti 4 by Ou caltt 112 to 14 00. vith. Bean ieee init Women “a ‘s ee mrs Pac u f er Oo n a Ig, eautifu [82 Std Ol Ind 61.6 1250-75 mostly around . May a oP : yeu Ford M : a.m. : Prag BY ELSE Gee UL ee sh cts eas -as Receives Charter | = FF s . e chotce id b r 5 Oe Pde : =? | ea cock a feel eo soe bids olf $0 Good buys in clean used cloth- : . : Qk Byonis ehs Seitim Go, M4 Geeks Rh imaay a peters ee erga Heads \Uasucelmenalel A new charter was presented at | Gen Milt sees ORG Texas Co 137 4) Stead pulls steady ices “ow. aay d Shop iA ae o Peonucs steseie 4 oon) Tow en een et : s 2, 6t «=o Tex © Bul 343 to 25 higher; vealer clive, steady * irmingham. 465 S. Wood- “°° Cub Seout pack & : Gen . ers steady to 1 a OG = i Pan Mrs 2 ie Gen ere . 23 rare dn 62.6 Rage mse tency to strong; stock jward. MI 4-4528 _ Adv Roland Stephison, president of the : Gen Tire .... 667 Tran Air 93 | load or so prime steers Capa cea | R school PTA made the pres yroneating cones O87 Tern Cen Su . ahs s prime 1178-1 ie th 1 meee sale at St. John's Cubs winn a wo JEAN, ween 08 d en n ce anc eee utheran ¢ 7 : ing awards were: Don Goodyear .... 112 Underw 307 prime necren Al 23.22 243. Deter end 9 te Salone 87 HIN St. from ald Marsh M i unis were: Don , Grah Paige .. 21 U" Carbide 197 4 steers, 1950-2100: good to choice Saturday. May 5th Me : h. Michael Measel, Jon e Gt No R Un Pac 700-19 2 . to low choice Adv. Stepieton, 2 ; Ot West ¥. wt “ vee’ via | eng) te oetl He iptetes and prime heifers Rum if on, Robert Woody, Kenneth urin ur Greyhound .. 16 Unit Airc 71.6, 16 78-18 78, Site ipesicemmeciencces Ertl mage sale, 197 8. Parke, Goll Jr. James Mitchell, Kenneth aul on 23-3 Unit Fruit Lt) §/ 1100-1400. canners ahd cutters coxa Fri. and Sat.. 8 a.m. to 2 p McCleHen. Wesley Williams Hersh Choe 40.1 nA ie cp |1200. utility and commerctal b at 14.0. Aa is } ey NeHiamisi sie Homestk .... 25. ines maa 1625. a few choice and prime ve —Ady, Ermest Humphreys SPRI N Hooker El 44s se punter 54 26 00. most gond Sancti (es ony 20 ow Rur A new Boh ut Ti Ger El pf 100 us Tob ‘s Ehuiee (adi tiser olor! vealers 12007 immage sale, Grace Lutheran cat, Gilbert Mephison | * stock steer i cae A me . teeane aay “—< He Walereen 32 3! Lance chat ie “raring alae 2150, ae S. Genesee St., Fri. 9 we is welromed to the pack = md ..., 632 * s down 17 25-20 00 Sat. 9 to 12. : zy _ inend Oo eta See : Inepir Cop |. 626 Weste A. "re 208 * Slate Dance Proceeds Interlak Ir. 314 ae a art If your fri tec mus! Maen Osh ice Ly 584 earl g r friend's in jail and needs for Worl i he as Wises aco 163 n id Firm | bail. Ph. FE §-9424 or MA 5-403! d Service BEE the looted fo stop her meat and F NAS PUSS An UUs BENG sue ne or Dollar you Can’ t 2 , vince ourself that Dollar — Peeve Prod Co.... 126 126 BF x Sy Rosmond Williams, of STL, p her baby from falling off re: a Ce ee r eat a Pontiac! . rephet Co. 118 11s lie) Perry St. tol We ront seat ete ee of $2 428 p00 Rud 118 y¥ St. told police a ‘ RA cents o common «bare T Toledo Edison C 3 @3 63 and two metal f a desk In as mtiac General H rompared sah $900 080 or 18 cents. SALES DEPT. OPEN 8: 30 to 9:00 P. w nm Co 1. 1444 144 «144 al file cabinets also al Hospital, Mrs cmon share dn th ae) M. Mon. Th Fri 5 Sane ceia cad caked 11 12 Were forced open, apparently with Violet Fre 2% of 760, EF First a. gos cer Hincreaceal ta ea 489 Onn - ru Fri., . Sat. Until 5:00 P. M. a screw driver, . Ave was treated fer moror brings. 7" Clee 2 eee here . _ es. as was the baby, Carolyn, 20 81 . tee SS ’ TN, OVS Mict Nee oN ’ i : . months. a son. Michae Cnenl Pay Dea Michigar ‘ ice Staff Strikes ip eeene Girl Hurt luniniured ‘ ena ly sas a $f ee ter} te aa ee Ot ae f x ead S86 oper cent gain h 5A : Ove W When Struck by Auto’ The accident oecurred at 3 1 Balen for the. same res ines sear . [ age ispute | Af p.m. en Wall Street, police said, npared Pines bes eis in the. firs: : ive-year-old girl darting across . quarter of 1985 . ine e PORT HURON W — UAW-CIO. Wall St. at noon yesterday ces = ; {fice caped serious i i M Dateless of the Ainsworth py a ; et) APRIL 30th anufacturing Co, went yassing car, on strike : today in a new Jane Marsh, 444 Osn : . contract dis 1un St., was : RVICE d Ganesan aw enn | treated a skinned knees ani leg le roit. “4 ison Co. oo an RTS HOU RS: Local 155, said t cuts and released fri : : q alks broke down Pi rom Penthc : : ahs General Hospital, a FF At indic ivi : Mon. thru Fri. 6 yesterday on an annual improve-| The dri pabeet uthorities said ated dividend of $1.80 this stock heli | A. M. to 6 P. M.; Sat. 7:30 A. M. to 1 P.M. All ment factor. Hardy-said.the com- burg, river, Robert P. Whitten. yields better than 5 at eft for service must be picked up by then. No cars rel d oon pany sought a decrease under the bung.) 1 ot Zits Andersons price ‘ present market hours. : s released after service amount yided in the old content Pontiac police the girl darted. , . ' tract which expired Dec. 31 nto the street from the front of C | , ; : : a parked car. complete Investment Servic : ‘ $24 said the cut would amount | & service ~: 3 to $24,000 over the So i proposed three- , C t Po | . year Hfe of a new contract. Dead Deer Count On ° ° Ne hler Co a Ainsworth employs 80 office) LANSING \i®—The C ° | ° workers in plants in surb’ ; e Conserwati . ur" € mn, i r if: ™ Marysville and in Detroit: Bo Bite tin eee ae deer comaunif man re pou : said picket lines were set up at ha Re is in progress again, but Hours 8:30 to 4:30 both sites. { ofall slowed in the U M per Pen % ~ : ‘ jinsula by Hale sea: f : 65 M Cl : _ Dp | | [ | von snows —_ t. Clemens, Across from th i a : iin = = ; ‘ o) e A : : j u ie “ . . ( , 5 : z ! . j yi 3 rf ( ‘ e e ; &. . | oe f i ’ e i fy ’ 3 . *