The Weather Cloudy and Warmer Details page two 113th YEAR “ae Se a a AA THE PONTIAC PRE MAKE ( ee eo —e she ge ange. gic angie ie “ ey o h ® * * & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, ee A Wie e Rat ES z re Meson ra re ee ee FRIDAY, MAY 6, te! 1955 —44 Fr a gine) OR aio ean ye paeniian PAGES ONTERRATIONAL NEWe 2 ‘ Jim-Jim Arrives “<4 ic. at Zoo . if process Pontiac Press Phote FLOWN FROM EAST — Detroit Zoo Headkeeper George Bromley holds “Jim-Jim,"’ a 25-pound, two-year-old gorilla which arrived here from French Equatorial Africa last night after a stopover in New York The zoo's first gorilla will be the featured attraction in the new Holden Amphitheater slated for public opening May 19. Royal Oak Zoo Lavishes Care on First Gorilla By BURDETT C. STODDARD The Detroit Zoo in Royal Oak began lavishing care on its first gorilla today—a two-year- “‘Jim-Jim.” old, 25-pounder named The $5,000 youngster, who will be a featured attraction of the zoo this summer, is only a few weeks out of his ative home in French Equatorial Africa. - Floyd Diamond Trial Date Set Young Boy Will Face First Degree Murder Charge May 24 A May ‘@4 trial date has been set for Floyd Diamond, 16, accused of first degrée murder in the death last Feb. 17 af §-vear-old Kathleen McLaughlin, aceerding to Oakland | | will | erinarian i County Prosecutor Frederick °C. | Ziem Probate Judge \Arthur E. Moore waived jurisdiction over Diamond March 2. as an adult. He was later termed sane hy two Pontiac psychiatrists | at a hearing in Circuit Court. The youth, of 32545 Nottingham Knoll, Farmington Township, is charged with slaying Kathy at a pond near her home at 29430 Gil- Diamond's residence. allowing ‘him ‘to be tried + te has to be fed every four hours and the milk is tested ,¥ armth on a man’s wrist, just like a baby’s. Ss | baby foods and has to be kept out of drafts so he! *won't take cold. Jim-Jim | With two orangutans he Holden Amphitheater and ape house which opens to’ \the public May 19, said zoo ‘Director Frank McInnis. The new addition arrived at Wil- low Run Jast-night in a cargo plane from New York. McInnis and vet- Dr Appelhoff were right behind in a passenger William plane. “You can't be teo careful with these said MeInnis. “They're delicate and subject to attacks by viruses and germs.” gorillas,"’ The director hopes to train Jim- Jim to do tricks like Jo Mendi and He | also plans to seek French govern- | 'ment permission to buy two more gorillas within a vear or two and, raise a family in captivity—some- the zoo's other chimpanzees. | thing that has not been done suc- chrest and a short d&tance from Judge H. Russel Holland will pre- , side during the trial. Other trials slated this month include that of Erlene Wagenshultz, 19, of 7 W. High |New York. cessfully so far. McInnis and the gorilla became fast friends during four days in The director didn't _have the heart to put the animal ; in its Metamora, | charged with manslaughter. Police said she drove a car which crashed | head-on with another on M-24's “Slaughter Hill’’ last Dec. 5 re- sulting in five deaths. The case is scheduled May 16. _ Four men, charged with kidnap- ping and raping a Pontiac mother | March 6, are slated for trial May 10. _— Pontiac Sales for April Show 65 Per Cent Leap Pontiac sales totaled 51,705 new cars during, the month of April, a 65 per cent increase over sales during the same period last year, and the highest April sales in Pon- tiac’s history. R. M. Critchfield, General Manager announced today. Pontiac dealers sold 90,809 used cars during April, another all-time record for nates In Today's s Press Birmingham . Renanzagram ....,. Ae ie % Beogte. Mal. ... scr -cccncssseses-- 4 Comies neiseeesion coe. 8 County News... os Crane, Pr. George, os Crossword ses Editerials Garden High chee! Lavrence, News. ei ie oe ee MD eke eees Fee re vdeo Pages. a ii, cage here and asked an attendant to do the job. Jim-Jim broke down and wept | When the cage door _banged shut. © ee eet MUNICIPA ~~ One h city viteay stkcais te Cella MORE ek Gulag oem’ one ta | el Commission chamber at the new City Hall a trial warm-up yesterday i aa ices ac has eee ema | planned to enter the basement | inhabit the zoo'’s new | ‘of survival for Area Saturday’ / morrow. Heads Group ‘Nevada Ruins ., Show America an Age Horrors 2 Survival City Homes Withstand Pressure of Biggest U.S. Test Shot SURVIVAL CITY, Nev. (# —The frightening and so- bering reality of survival in the atomic age was driven home to Americans today as. ithe damage to this desert | | town community was to-| | taled up. The mighty shock wave, |of yesterday’s atomic explo- | Michigan Funeral Directors | sion buried the Darling Assn. has elected Glenn H. Grif- family — fortunately only | fin, Pontiac, president for the com- ing year. Dudley H, Modore, Au- /'mannequins—in their home burn Heights, was named direc- | GLENN H, GRIFFIN * / on Doomsday Drive, wiped | tor for the Oakland-Macomb dis- trict at the convention in Grand out their neighbors next | papids yesterdas door and the folks down the Other state officers are Ryan block. ; Demeester, Grand tapids and The 4,700-foot row, however, was | Harold Cederberg, Saginaw, vice not’a complete loss—two out of | presidents; Glenn Dunn, Mason, four homes withstood the gigantic | treasurer; and J. R. MacDonald, Howell, secretary, pressure of the biggest open test | shot ever held in the United States. | Its power was equal to 35,000 tons of TNT But the home at the 5,500-foot mark especially built and rein- ferced—did not stand up per- haps as well as expected. The reof was blown off, much of the front caved in and all windows Dulles Briefed Before Parley Ike’s Advisers Confer; | smashed, . The Darling family’s fate and Secretary Leaving for that of their neighbors—especially| Paris Talks Today the luckier ones—pointed up one | : object lesson: You can survive a| WASHINGTON WwW — President nuclear attack if you have the Eisenhower called in his top mili- right kind of home tary-diplomatic advisers for White Fifteen members of the Darling House talks today before Secre- | family ‘‘perished”’ in the collapse | tary of State Dulles’ departure for of their two-story brick and cinder Paris meetings «on Far Eastern | block hame, The walls blew out, the chimney fell in sections as though sliced by some ~ multiple scythe. The family never had a chance, But defense. Summoned to the session w {th the President were Dulles, Secre- tary of Defense Wilson, Undersec- (iv Deteane workers 'retary of State Herbert Hoover Jr. after unsafe timbers are re- $800 Bonanzagram | moved to see whether perhaps | Answer on Page 25 two persons in a corner shelter , may have survived. | and Adm. Arthur W. Radford ‘hairme f the Joint Chiefs of The single story frame rambler ane man we we oss next door was a total loss except for the specially constructed bath room shelter. This withstood the | blast so solidly that only one pane out of eight was blown out of the Dulles planned to take off for Paris late in the day to attend a meeting of the North Atlantic Treaty Council at which West | rear window Germany will become the 15th Harold L. Goodwin, test director |) Member. ‘of the Federal Civil Defense Ad He has arranged. also to ministration, believes that within tall with French Foreign Minister a mile and a quarter your chances "depend largely on what type of structure you're ‘in. Showers Forecast Antoine Pinay and British Foreign Secretary Harold Macmillan about ,Far Eastern matters, | He is expected to press, Pinay fo give strong support: to Premier i Ngo Dinh Diem of South Viet Nam, i whom the French a week or so. |ago Were saving was inadequate | for his job but whose regime aa have more recently. seemed willing The weatherman predicts in- to back creasing cloudiness and warmer [Diplomats said the ministers |temperatures tonight, followed by Will attempt to evaluate evidence that the Communists are trving to make some peaceful adjustments. 'This evidence includes Red Chi- Tomorrow's high is expected to nese talk about negotiations with showers and thunderstorms _ to- reach 75 degrees, tonight's low, the United States on easing Far 52-36. Yesterday's high was 68, Eastern tensions and Soviet moves .¢ to complete an Austrian independ- low 58. { ence treaty. At 8 a.m. today, the mercury The evaluation will have a direct |in downtown Pontiac stood at 49 bearing upon what the Big Three degrees. Early morning low was | Western ministers decide to do 43. At 1 p.m., the reading was 65| about proposing a Big Four ‘degrees, ‘conference. *&- irst Meeting Held in Pontiac's New City Hall problems and Western — ~ | quarters believe one Bs Ga ede oon ove tc i. ee eae first official use Tuesday night, Following the coeiens 6 Oty Sin, She ee Chiang Reveals Minefields Laid in Island Areas Action Expected to Curb Invasion Attempt, Also Lessen Shipping Chiang Kai-shek’s quarters announced that as fields have been laid in the islands. concern, the announcement said the action was taken in view of the declared‘ in- , tention of the Chinese Com-/; munists to Invade Formosa and their “repeated attacks on the offshore islands.” Communist arillery on Amoy yesterday poured 150 shells into Little Quemoy, only four miles away, and dropped 11 on Quemoy. The day before Nationalist planes | encountered four Red MIG15s |north of the Matsus, as. other | Planes attacked and damaged Red | gunboats in Amoy Bay. The announcement termed the | minelaying defensive, implying it was intended to obstruct pos- sible invasion from the nearby “mainiand. Nationalist sources indicated, however, there was more than one purpose One possible effect, they said, might be to choke off shipping to | the mainland port of Foochow near the Matsus, They have been con- cerned about this because they | believe the Reds have been ship-| ping jet fuel and other war sup- | | plies into Fukien province meu Foochow, They are not worrted 89 -much about Amoy. 150 miles to the south They say their retention of the | 'Quemoys has made Amoy a dead port for some time Both foreign and = Nationalist - result of the will be to boost jn- which mays | minelaying /surance rates, China Official quarters refused to in dicate whether mines also had been sown of the Red mainland TAIPEI, Formosa ()i— | head- | of today defensive mine-. territorial waters of Nation-| alist China’s offshore) Underscoring Nationalist | tend to| lessen shipping to that part of Red | in the territorial waters - Nine Die AP Wirepheote FIREMEN RESCUE TWO—Two unidentified residents of a Chicago skid row hotel, on W. Madison Street, are helped down a ladder from | an upper floor after a flash fire roared through the structure early | today killing nine persons. The fire, in a hotel called Comfort, is the third disastrous fire in the same neighborhood in nine oon dat Union Suggests Half Billion DETROIT (# — A half-billion dollars in “reserve funds” to finance a guaranteed annual wage at Ford and Gen- eral Motors is proposed by the CIO United Auto Workers. Each fund—an unofficially estimated 125 million dol- lars for Ford and 335 million for GM—would be created | by company contributions of 4 per cent of the base pay- roll over a period of five years. House Votes for Rigid Farm Sampo in Chicago Fire ‘Democrats Flex | the Party Muscles in Upset Victory | Defy Administration to Win 206-201; Senate to Delay Action WASHINGTON (# — The House voted yesterday to restore high rigid farm price supports in a second display of the Democratic ‘leader- Ship's ability to flex its | political muscles in defiance of the Eisenhower adminis- tration. As proved to be the case earlier when it voted to cut everybody’s taxes by $20, nothing seemed likely to come to this new move—at least this year. The vote was 206-201 to scrap the flexible system of price sup- ports which Congress approved MICHIGAN WASHINGTON *®—Reps. Ben- nett (R-Mich) and Hayworth (D- Mich) abandoned party lines in House approval of rigid farm price supports yesterday. Bennet voted for the bill and in Reserve to Pay for GAW: Hayworth voted in opposition. Ail other Michigan Republicans were against it and all Demo- crats voted in favor. The Michigan lineup: Democrats for (total 185) Diggs, Dingell, Griffiths, Lesin- ski, Machrowicz, Rabaut. Republicans for (total 21) — Bennett. Democrats against (total 29)— Hayworth. Republicans against (total 172) =o a CIO . President Walter | | Reuther’ s auto union made. Dispute Ended Pe proposal public for the first time yesterday. It was the union’s guaranteed an- ‘nual wage might cost. | Neither Ford nor GM | mented. The union, through a spokesman, | Said the proposal already has been | 'made to the two companies, Ford and GM are negotiating separately with the union over at Parke, Davis Union, Company Agree on Contract for 2,000. Drug Employes DETROIT Ww — Settlement of a| Foreign Minister George Yeh, in | Wage dispute that had threatened | new contracts te replace the replying to questions in the legis-|to halt manufacture of Salk polio, five-year agreements expiring lative Yuan, repeated the standard | vaccine at Parke, Davis & Co. | within the next four weeks. Nationalist opposition to a cease- Was announced - early today by | Ford's expires June 1, GM's fire state and federal mediators. | June 7. Workmen Duck | Job That Would Disturb Ducks CHICAGO « — Workmen on! Chicago's new 100 - million-dollar water filtration plant have changed their construction plans so they | won't disturb two mother ducks | who are sitting on a total of 11} eggs. The ducks are nested in a pile | of clay and stone, which is to be| used in the dike construction, |along Lake Michigan. Workmen put up red flags, warning workmen | and others to-stay away. Phillip Connell, president of the | contracting firm, said plans ealled | ‘for work at the eastern end of the dike. Yesterday he found the work | was proceeding from the western | end, A foreman told him the reason. for the change. Hention Freie Phees the company and the CIO Chem- | the firm's 2,000 employes. | four firemen Township will stage a car-washing | buy themselves uniforms. The drug firm is one of the ma- jor producers of the vaccine. Mediators said representatives of | cess until next week. In the interim the UAW’s national Ford and GM councils will be meeting to hear negotiations reports and presum- fably plan future strategy. The union proposed that the “re j serve fund” at each company equal to 20 per cent of the base Payroll. tributions should do this. Ford has 140,000 hourly paid workers and GM 325,000. The ical Workers Union agreed on terms covering wages, working conditions and a new pension plan. ‘The agreement was described as tentative since it was subject to ratification at a union mem- bership meeting tomorrow. The union's bargaining team said it will recommend acceptance by Terms of the settlement were not disclosed, At issue were wage demand, a guaranteed = annual wage and fringe benefits. The old contract expired Sunday tween $2.05 and $2.16. more than a present hourly pay averages be- ‘the first indication of what | com. | | —Bentley, Cederberg, Dondero, | Ford, Hoffman, Johansen, Knox, |: ‘Menter. Thompson, Wolcott. | | RN last. year at the urging of the administration. | Speaker Rayburn (D-Tex) and | other Democratic leaderg mus- | tered 185 Democrats find 21 Re- publicans for the bill; voting for | the administration were %9 Democrats and 172 Republicans. At the tense windup, several |members switched their votes to provide the winning margin, The farm bill will carry over ‘into next year's session of Com (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) List Kentucky Derby Facts and Figures The negotiations, covering nearly | half a million workers, are in re- figures on the 8lst running of the LOUISVILLE, Ky. ®—Facts and Kentucky Derby Saturday: Place—Churchill Downs. Distance—Mile and one-quarter, Post time—4:30 p.m, Eastern Standard Time. he | | It said five vears of con- | Purse—$125.000 added to nomi- ination and starting fees. Probable field — 10 3-year old colts Value—$152.500 if 10 start, with $108,400 to winner, | but the union asked that it be ex-/0f 8 per cent of its base payroll. | It said that from its ‘ experience” an 8 or cent figure aod be rare, tended on a day-to-day basis rath- er than interrupt the flow of the vaccine by a walkout. The union had asked for a wage _ increase of 10 cents an hour for 'men and 15 cents for women. Men now average $1.95 and women | $1.68 Set Car-Washing Bee GRAND RAPIDS (UP)—Twenty- in nearhy Walker bee tomorrow to raise funds to} health director. Need Tenants? Every day. your rental unit remains vacant means loss of income to you. If you have a room, apartment or house to rent place a Want their first vaccinations. ‘about three weeks. Ship, Birmingham, South- ‘field Township and Fern- dale. All clinics will begin jat 9 a. m. calls: and rented the apart- merit the first day it ran. 3 ROOMS. MODERN. REDECOR- eel poceageteny pti cg ‘St; || Pontiac clinics will be at the aeety More then a good place =| following locations: appointment call OR 3-608, °F 1) Webster School—irictuditig” pupils from Whitfield, Baptist 7th Day To Place Your Want Ad_ | Adventist and Crotoot schools. ao McConnell School — including DIAL FE 2-8181 Trinity Lutheran, Central and St» Just ask for the hee sl oR eI Se awthorne, m Baron. WANT AD DEPT. I Longtelow School — including Em- erson: Willis and Wilson. ° onsinirrasiataasinasaninmniamnsnetts Pance Every Saterday Night Don Wijsan Trio Oskiand County Sportsman's Club Baldwin School — including Me- ‘employment | vi, Le St. Michael, al. Bailey sad |i Favorite—Nashua, 4 to 5. Last year’s winner—Determine, Record time—Two minutes one The union said at no time under and 2-5 seconds by Eneeny in the plan would management have 1941. “maximum liability’ | Crowd—About 100,000 expected. Weather—Fair- and hot. Radio and television—4: 15 to 4:43 pm. Eastern Satandard Time by ( BS. Oakland County Children Get Polio Shots Saturday An estimated 9,500 first and second grade youngsters in Oakland County tomorrow will receive the first in a series of two Salk polio vaccine shots, The youngsters are those who have not already started the series, according to Dr. John D. Monroe, county All other county first and second graders whose par- ents gave consent for the inoculations already have had Cf will get second shots in Ao asta cnanmcn ese ncnipent Tomorrow's shots will be | nity Building—Bagiey and Whittier Ad immediately ana fil | administered at clinics in Schools. that vacancy in a hurry. | Pontiac, Waterford Town-. This ad brought over 20 Waterford Township shots will be adminstered at: Donelson School — including Stringham, Lambert, Hudson Co. vert and St. Benedict pupils. ie ton Plains School—including Jane Adams and Waterford Village. . Waterford High School—Wated ford Center, Williams Lake, Pon tiac Lake and Four Towns. Toll Road Ban Has House Approval; Gives Veto Power Over Route to Towns William State Sen. §. Broom- field (R-Royal Oak) said today he | has an assurance from the chair- man of the Senate Highway Com- mittee that a bill restricting route- selecting powers of the Michigan Turnpike Authority (MTA) will be) | reported out for debate. The measure, introduced by Rep. Lucille MeCollough (D-Dearborn), | passed the House yesterday. It would give cities and villages veto. power over the route of the pro-| posed Flat Reck-Saginaw turnpike. The bill has been vigorously supported by groups and com- munities in Oakland County lo- cated along the toll-road line as now plotted, Once the bill is reported out, said Broomfield, ‘I will present arguments in favor of its passace on the Senate floor and am quite confident I can muster enough support to see it passed."* ‘Broomfield previously §& po n- sored a bill, which died in the Highway Committee, to abolish the MTA completely.) “The McCollough bill,’ he stat- ed. ‘will give local units neces sary control over the route and safeguard municipal home rule.’ Murder Trial Jury Still Deliberating An Oakland County Circuit Court jury resumed deliberations this morning aimed at returning a verdict in the second-degree-mur- der trial of Charley RB. Herron 37. of 357 Rockwell Ave. The jurors considered the case for two hours yesterday after- noon after opposing attorneys concluded their arguments and Judge H. Russel Helland = ex- plained questions ef law and fact involved. Herron 4s accused of of Lawrence 28. of 476 Ditmar Ave in back of a home the fatal Freeman last Sept. at 29 Iowa shooting ot An argument had Yeveloped be- tween the two over Freeman's ef- forts to persuade his estranged wife ‘to rejoin him. police said. Assistant Prosecutor Homer G Gerue vests rday read a transcript alleced confession Herron to the prosecutor's office after the shooting. of an rrfade shortly Shrine Gets otker LUDINGTON U—A marble marker. is. being seven-foot set om placerat shrine of Father Mar- | quette, ei Jesuit explorer and missionary, at. Buttersville near Ludington. Members of Mason County Allied Construction Council will donate labor Saturday to place the shrine in readiness fof the an- nual pilgrimage scheduled May 18 anniversary. of Marquette’s death 300 years ago. Western States Get Air Attack Warning Through False Alarm From Radar Unit SAN FRANCISCO up—Repercus- sidns'of the false yellow alert that threw 1] Western states into vary- ing stages of preparation for an enemy air raid yeterday are still being felt S Aa Olympia, Wash., the state as- sistant directory of ¢ iva defense Said sl alert apparently originat- ed at MeChord Air Force "Base ir Tacoma but didn't reach de fense officials in that state at all Adm, B. G. Lake, the official saul he assumed the warning was net Trelaved hecause the obser: at “McChord had “acted wisely in holding up the message for a recheck, The alert was relayed however. to California civilian ob- rvers and it produced some fa: reaching and confused results Hamulten Ai Force Base, north ef San Francisco. sent the war tOaklar immediate ry to the . lameda Counts ° sheriff's office, which broadcast The Weather Increasing clowdiness and warmer to night fellowed by shewers loreal thunderstorms tomerrow tonight 52 i North and Lew High temerrow near 15 westerly wind. Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature prececing 8 @ A am Wind velocity 14 mph ection Northwest Sun sets today at 7 g = ris®s Baturday o n rises today at 7 Moon sets Saturday . Downtown Temperatures il a m 6s mm... a 9 &. Bt. .seave. 12 m wees OF B®. Mcsessee. ip m 63 © 8. Mivcsonce» 32 18 @. Mawes ésen Tharsday in Pontiac {As recorded downt«on! Highest temperature... . 6a Lowest temperature. .....ceecs..s 38 Mean temperature eee eadEseeens 63 «+ Weather- a: One Year Age “Age is Pontiac Highest ompuestate ae ane 33 aa vemperature.. Keeeres — ire. . sanees new _fiarties, Pa snd bowen? Temperatures v8 s. Air Force B47s on a training Date in 3 ¥ en ne Thervtar's Tonperetor “ee | for ., dar station sounded an alarm that ~ 4% i 194 nications delay within the air de- : $4 units tailed to receive the notifica- fJ\some top grain cowhide on i 44 tion in time to avoid calling the |) 'esther case can be au 5 | Sat, aed Thal. Dee Com. fe * . ee 98 North EB ’ THE PONTIAC —— FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1955 somiaAtli teria @ % i | OFF TO WASHINGTON — Pontiac safety patrollers selected by the | Autamobile Club of Michigan to attend the 19th Safety Patrol Rally in | Washington, D. C., are Spencer Gray, 15, 499 Colorado (left) and David yoyon, f4, 2528 Elizabeth Lake Rd. The two boys, from Whittier and St. Frederick schools, respectively, traveled by car yesterday to De- troit where they will join 118 othér Michigan safety boys and board the train for the +day t ur Ss W ashington. Oakland Will Send 33 in June Draft LANSING wW — Michigan draft Rigid Farm Props Approved by House | wi boards have been ordered to in- (Continued From Page One) duct 538 men during June, one of . . the smallest calls in more than a gress. and the Senate may act on Cear it then seemec ikely o be.” A. ; ‘ en. It emed likely to Col. Arthur A. Holmes, state se- | pigeonholed for 1955 lective service director, said all Basic farm law sets up a = men inducted during June will be standard, called parity, for at least 20 years old except for measuring farm priees. Par- volunteers ity, which fluctuates with gen- Oakland County will send 8 from eral price levels, is designed to | board 65, 11 from board 66 and 14 give farmers a ftatr return for from board 67, Lapeer’s quota is their products in relation to their 3 men | and | Reese | Waterford | Gacy. costs. a The law also describes six crops Pontiac Police Officials as basic. They are wheat, corn. Attend Demonstration cotten, rice, tobacco and peanuts Under the ad istration program Pontiac Police Chief Herbert W. now in effect, the ermn t 1s Straley and two of his top offi- | required to support the prices of cials are attending a police dog | five basic crops at Irvels between demonstration staged by the Dear- | 8% and 90 per cent of parity born Police Dept today After this year, the rance will be Straley. who left: this morning 7 to 90 per cent. Under special with Capt. Vance Hanger and Lt. ‘legislation, tobacco supports are wil | held at 90 per cent. , | The House bil) would restore the | mandatory 90 per cent supports | | first. imposed during World War I | corn, cotton, wheat, -peanuts and rice. Nt ‘also would raise the support floor on milk and dairy products from the present 73 to 80 per cent of parity, Chief Lawrence J. Schaefer. The City solved its police man-shortage by adding the trained canines on pa- trol beats with policemen s a smile when asked whe- - Pontiac will add police 2 aiaiet patrolmen bere. iliam Crisp, said an invitation | had been received from Dearborn's | | of Dearborn recently Straley | dogs | lic Senate Passes Probate Judge Salary Raise A bill passed the state Senate yesterday and was forwarded to the House which would raise the | salary of Oakland County's pro- bate judge from $15,000 to $16,000. | The measure alse would hike the pay ef Cirenit Court stenog- raphers here from $5,400 to $6,000. The bill includes salary increases for all state probate judges and mest court stenogra- phers, Oakland's present probate jurist is Judge Arthur E. Moore, of Berkley. Only Wayne County probate, | judges receive a higher stipend. | They would be raised from $17,500 to $18,500 if the plan also receives House approval. Judges in counties with between 35,000 and 70,000 population, such as Lapeer, would get a $750 per year raise’ Lapeer court stenogra- phers would be increased from $4,000 to $4.800 Lincoln GOP Club Elects 36 Directors The Oakland County Lincoln Re- | | public an Club has elected 3% new directors for the ensuing year and | named two honorary presidents, | John B. Wilson, president, said | | today. The honorary posts ge te James W. Clapp, of Pontiac, and George Scott, of Royal Oak, “in recognition of their many years of service to their communities and the Republican Party,” Wil- son stated. According to Mrs. Robert A. | Fedcastle. club secretary, new directors from Pontiac are: | Robert Sutton, Robert C. Miller, May- ij mard Jehnson, Mrs Florence Brown Mrs W aA. Kennedy and Mrs. Sadie ams Others include: Pred Poole Jr. Waterford: Clare Puller Prank Stevens, Oxford, Mrs. Raiph Union Lake: Mrs. Lynn Alien. Mrs Chad Rit Troy chie, Bioomfield; Norman Barnard Ralph Becker, Milford Mfrs. Broots Marshall, Bloomfield, Mrs Frances Covert and Mre. Margaret Nor- ton. Rochester Also elected were: Frazer Staman. Novi: Wendell Brown | Farmington, Mra. Jo Nichols, Frank? Th; Mrs. Genevieve Schock and Don McPher- son Berkiey Mrs. Marry Henderson | Bouthfield Charies Stone, Howard Kei ley George Weitzel, Mrs. Helen Ran- dall. Mrs. Kathryn Hopkins, Mrs — ali of Royal Oek; Robert Po Gorden Haupt. Mrs. Charlotte Cook. Mrs Sadie Bowen. all of Perndale; Guy | Holloway and Mrs Dorothy Rowley, both | of Hazel Park Animal Rescue ton League Obtains Land Site Here Michigan Animal Rescue League i members recently purchased a land site from the city for construction ‘of a 100-animal shelter that is) expected end of this year, according to Mrs. Located at East Blvd. and | Featherstone Ave., the triangu- lar shaped lot has 175 feet frontage, measuring 300 feet on one side and 75 on the other. Funds for the shelter's construc- tion are being donated by the pub- | and many of the league's 700 members. The property is now | being cleared and construction es- timates will be ready within 3 days, Mrs. Davis said. The Animal Rescue League, af- filiated with SPCA, is sponsoring a contest to name the building. Pro- | posed names for the Animal Shel- ter may be sent to the Michigan | Attention all potnts and all sta- The alarm. which started at | Animal Rescue League, Box 411) tions. Set condition yellow. This is 10 am., lasted from 3 to 10! Pontiac, or to the present league not a test.” The message was re- minutes, | offices, 297 Oakland Ave. peated many times : —— SS Yellow alert .means an attack is eNXpected, a red alert means attack imminent A San Francisco operator of the city's alert system heard the broadcast but went through the routine procedure of checking the 1 toty of such a warning Rs the time he badewehecked it out, the all-clear had pers Gees al cities west of Oklahoma braadcast the ve alert But in ofher cities in ” Utah, Okla- 1, se gpa Misecetr. Kansas. Instructions: 1 ETETRS | and Louisiana onlv a winite i : \ uolitacy ocueeoes Each werd is 2 LAYLE i nilitary emergency) went related to my a) iy] umts work. Un- 3 XATER Many radin and. televisu a- . lar ts - nd te > = scramble at _& CUSRIE f HWS Wey ol \ air an some . faried “Cumicad” cos worms Gf few as possi- 5 SHAC | +8 ait rreit if P’ \F “ea f ewil defense broadcasts on ble Mi aes 6 SAG selected channels “yee 7 ABC | . swer appears under arrow, In Nevada, no alert was given reading 8 DEPES { T scause the entire staff of top offi- beau © the ef re uff of top offi downword. 9 TERIS cials in the state's civil defense program was at Las Vegas for © : sé 10 ITWA yesterday s atom bomb test. Colo- | What "s My Line Inc. W VEEANU | rado failed entirely to eet the 12 RETEM warning : = . A Several stations went off the air) Yesterday's 13 RAFE L in Los Angeles for about seven) Answer inuites, ¢ in Sacramento, Calif. 00 \ Baia fk “rete eS Ae stuDy, scRipt, plAy, draMa, stAge, acT, train, moe SCEAG, Me iMy ¥ Te . ' = 2 | Capitol Building basement. In San, pOise, wAlk, voiCe, sHow. _ Mateo, a San Francisco suburb of s jes aoe 55.000. schoolchildren went through an air raid drill—but the city’s sirens all failed. Here's what caused it all Handsome Camera Style The Continentat Air Defense Command in Colorado Springs and Air Foree headquarters in Wash- ington, D.C., said a Canadian ra- |some unidentified planes were ap- 5 Proaching over. the Pacific. : o *| Actually the aircraft were some $12.95 Values | flight. “but because of a commu- fense system, Western air-defense | Styled as pictured. Hand- | ff SPECIAL PURCHASE — SAVE Exactly $8 my Leather Case With Shoulder Strap Floyd Andrews, Clarks | to be finished by the) Martin Davis, League Secretary. Mrs. Jennie Barker Dies in California Word has been received of the | padded death of Mrs, Jennie Barker, a former Pontiac resident, | in Los Angeles, Calif, vesterday. | 6, 1887, Her parents were William | A. and Kitty Brewster, lifetime | residents of Pontiac, Her father | was active here in politics, having | iserved as alderman and sheriff. She had been an active member of the First Baptist Church and the Philathea Sunday Schoo! Class of her church. Surviving are two sons, Dr. Roy Barker of 3528 W. TSth Place, Inglewood, Calif., at whose home The Day in Birmingham 2,000 Youngsters to Get | tien | surprise enemy attack is the re- Polio Vaccine Tomorrow BIRMINGHAM—Some 2,000 first! and second graders from 12 schools iin the school district will receive Mrs, Barker was born here May | their first shot of the Salk gnti- | polio vaccine tomorrow. Mrs. Anyce Gillette, assistant to the health commissioner, said 1,151 | eligible students from public and | parochial schools in the area will inoculation at Bir- the other receive their mingham High School, 895 at Pierce School. Police have been assigned to direct traffic at the schools since, 'in most cases, parents will be driv-| She died, and Edward of Los An- | geles, Calif. sister, Mrs. Wilbur Rowston of Pon- tiac and four grandsons of Cali- | fornia. Service will be Saturday burial in the Inglewood Cemetery. Mrs. Eli Anttila Mrs. Eli (Rose) Anttila, 59, of | 29 Pingree St. died at Pontiac Gen- | eral Hospital this morning. She had been ill four years. Born Jan. 11, 1896 jin Buluth. Minn., she was the daughter of |Herb Sargent and was married in 1932 in Ohio. | Mrs, Anttila attended school in | Brainard, Minn. She came to Pon- | tiac from Crosby, |ago and was a member of Je- hovah's Witnesses. | Besides her husband, she is sur- vived by five children, Mrs. Valida Bailey of Clarkston, Mrs. Frances Goff, Frank Shields, Eli Jr. |Donald Anttila, all of Pontiac, A | brother, Russell Sargent of Spauld- ing and a sister, Mrs. Nora War- ;ren of Montana, also survive. | The funeral will be Monday. _rangements wil be announced lat- er by the Huntoon Funeral Home. Mrs. Service will be held Sunday at 2:30 p.m. from the Melvin Baptist | Church for Mrs. Peter Henry (De- | lilah) Beam. T7, who died this | i|morning at her home in Melvin. | |The Rev. |ficiate with burial in the Melvin | i Cemetery. She was born in Canada Aug 12, 1887 and married in Flynn Township Nov, 24, 1894. Surviving are six sons and five | daughters including these of Pon- | tiac, Mrs. Pearl Schneider, Mrs. | Mildre dSchell, Louis, alvin and | Lawrence Beam. Also surviving are 24 grandchildren and 15 great- | and | ,. . | First Also surviving are a with | | Minn. 19 years | ing their children to whichever school they were as- signed. The program is sched- uled to get under way at 9 a.m. o a9 Seven doctors and and from | regis- | tered nurses will handle the in. | Austria Treaty Talks oculation program at-the schools on a voluntary basis, she said. The Salk vaccine is provided free by the National Polio Foun- dation. Chlidren whose parents have consented to their receiving the shot will receive two more after tomorrow's initial injection. The second will be administered June 4 and a booster, the third, will be given at a later date, Mrs. Gillette said. * * * The eastern division conference , ; : ‘turn of prewar oil preperties to | | of the Junior Michigan Federation | of Music | Church, Peter Henry Beam | Paul McMillan will of-! 14 Mile Rd., Clubs will be held to- at Redeemer Lutheran | Starting at 9:45 a.m, Holy Name boys choir and the Methodist Church youth choir are associated with the fed- morrow / eration and will participate in the | day-long meeting. The Holy Name | Ac pehoir recently recorded * ‘The Bells | | of St. Mary’s,”’ and “O, Sanctis- ; sima.”’ The record is on sale lo- cally. * 8 « The Rev. Paul Shippert, pastor ot Church of the Ascension, will conduct vespers at 4 p.m. Sun- day at the dedication of the new church. The new building, at 1645 W. has a seating capacity of 300 and was built at an esti- | mated cost of $150,000. Cranbrook sculptor Glenn Chamberlain de- signed a contemporary crucifix of mahogany mounted on a 10-foot wide column of white marble that extends from the floor to the ceil- ing behind the altar. The chureh was designed by an Illinois archi- | tect. The Rev. Howard Allwardt of | Mrs. Beam will be at the Peters Our Shepherd Lutheran Church, | Funeral Home in Yale until time Birmingham, and the Rev. A.N.A. | Loeber, Messiah Lutheran Church, | Detroit, will assist in the dedica- | grandchildren. | for the service Sunday. ‘Manito Scout District ‘Holds May Roundtable Manito Scout District Thurs- day held its May Roundtable at Blanche Sims School, Lake Orion. Thirty-seven scouters from 12 units attended the program, con- ducted by Glen Robinson of An- dersonville. Up for discussion was the District Camporee, May 20-22 at the Detroit Sportsman's Con- gress in Oxford. The group also discussed tenta- tive plans for a summer Family Roundtable, a new program being | planned by the scouts. The June theme of outdoor cooking was also discussed at the meeting. | Refreshments were served by | the host troop from Clarkston. _Glee Clubbers Meet | ANN ARBOR up— Some 75 di- rectors and student officers of the | nation’s university and college glee clubs will meet at the University of Michigan May 19-20. The Intercol- | legiate Musical Counci} will dis- cuss problems such as finances, rehearsals, musical arrangements and alumni relations, Polaroid Camera Owners ‘LOOK! Now You Can Take INDOOR PICTURES Without FLASH! 19 Per Roll it 1s possible to take pic- tures without a flash . . . just ordinary light will do, without sacrificing of quality or simplicity. id ‘Pola P 400’ is four Now, See YOUR PICTURES 60 Seconds After Taken POLAROID LAND | tion. An open house will be held at the new church next Tuesday eve- ning beginning at 7:30 o'clock. The Birmingham High Shcool choir will present a program of music under the direction of Victor Ul- rich. = * Ed Miss Josefina Phedaia, an at- terney from Manila who recently * completed a world tour with the | International Presbyterian team, was guest speaker today at a breakfast by the Birmingham United Church Women at the First Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Fraser Pomeroy was general chairman for the affair. * * * Jack Stiff, president of the Sup- | per Club at the Birmingham Con- gregational Church, said a supper hour followed by square dancing will be held tonight at a church! starting at 6:45 o'clock. Nearing Completion VIENNA, Austria (The Big ' Four ambassadors faced up today. to the last two major obstacles to! agreement on an_ independence | ‘treaty for Austria, The envoys of the United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Un- | | ] ion were expected to settle one | issue—~the Western demands for re- American, ' interests, They likely will leave the other problem—a Big Four declaration guaranteeing Austrian neutrality— to be worked out finally by their foreign minister bosses, The envoys may conclude their work on the treaty draft British and Dutch oil, tomor- | row, In that case, the foreign min-| isters are expected to meet Vienna late next week to iron out ith neutrality declaration and sign the treaty. The treaty provides for with- | drawal of the 70,000 occupation troops within three months after | ratification of the pact. 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Ample Storage Space — “ Large Lots — Picture Windows — Closets — American 4 or Youngstown Kitchen Sinks and_Cabinets—Choice UY of Two Popular Floor Plans — Versatile Room Ar- tu rangement — Low Monthly Payments to Fit Any | Y Budget -On FHA Insured Mortgage — YOU MUST ° if) SEE fr TO BELIEVE IT! ) HOMES INC. | Phone FE 5-9221 BN “ " ) ’ } i" , SS geet f peel cee ff ppm ff ppm If ae pam saad boul fam sd * ef , a ad =) ——2, oH Fi if ¢ hi if —F 7 — 9 He 7 fF. ay py pone — a ; iy j } } } 4 = ff th. i porter Who eco abe & =] 5 | e f t¢ ; PRE-SUMMER Z Secretory mere, Tat Beason on ifs | stop-gap aid, and most producers) many places were wind-rippled like | men are growing fine beards in | this long drought with reason- | eit ran aaa he — iss "4 : soe recent teur o roug ridden pape “~ > | ae veg? . , | j : : plains area of the Southwest where have better equipment and other) 4. canara. Over vast acreages, preparation for a ‘‘pioneer days” | ably large reserves. the ‘part of bankore and everytody ; : a resources to Carry out emergency | py ey ee celebration later thisgspring. A great many of them now have | oic h ral feel is that : may be in the making.) control measures. 'only the hardiest weeds survived. | te Amacilio. ‘Tex! besiaecsmen| evhermnd Gee } ys else. The general feeling is tha “ By JOHN BOOTH Along raliread righte-cf-way there) *" “CTO SEX. Susineeamen | exhausm velr Savings and S80 they can live with this thing. 4 WASHINGTON (INS) Winds En _yomme mections, tals dreueht were great mounds of dust tem- and prosperous farmers from a must leas on credit—trom the gov- 4 ASHING Ns started in the summer of 1950. | Po ea acke Wide area flock to the smart Ama- ernment or elsewhere—or give up. Jobs looks for. you in the Pontiac 2 : that have ripped,through bare, pp, following year it spread inte porarily cleared from the tracks. | ” x . otey r : y ac ) : ~ared. farmlands gnd ranges in ae ; : rillo Club for the luncheon siesta.’ Ajthough many are now suffer. Press Help Wanted columns! ~ 7 an Hy Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska, Here and there a brave cover | Almost everywhere large stores : erro Help ‘em find by rt | M d the Great Plains have caused dam- jansas. Oklahoma, Texas and | ft badieoied : ing the fifth wheat crop failure: in| Help ‘em find you by turning to ens ee , | Of green in the fields indicated | and small shops display the latest row, there is little to show that eS ae ee 520 S. Saginaw Short Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS Reg. $1.98 and.$2.95 97: GOODMAN'S OPEN SUNDAY FE 2-2784 age that runs well into the billions of dollars Authorities disagree on whether present conditions in the Southwest fit the popular idea of a dust bow! They agree the damage has been great Latest official estimates are that as of April 20, about 13. millon acres of land had been damaged At that time in varying degree another 19 million acres without protective cover was potentially subject to the same fate. Since April 20, there have been more severe wiadstermss and the danger of further damage will continue into the summer. Up to dust been fully as frequent but, now storms have Severity of land damage per acre has been less but about four mil- lion more acres are damage now. Officials say soil blowing hasn't gotten completely out of hand be- cause farmers, ranchers and soil conservationists know more about how to combat wind erosion; they are better organized loc ally to the govern- in gen- | eral less severe than in the 1930s. ; subject to) New Mexice. More than 200 countles—some of them very large — have felt the! scourge this year. Four district areas within the overall drought belt have taken the heaviest pun- ishment One straddles the Wyoming- Nebraska border. Another. roughly trianguiar. has its base in Texas and its apex in Oklahoma. A third, shaped like a gnarled cucumber, parallels Texas’ western boundary and noses over into New Mexico. The fourth and largest virtually smothers southeastern Colorado and western Kansas In his tour last week Agricul- ture Secretary Ezra Taft Benson | flew te Denver and then motored about 800 miles east, south, and west again to see what was con- } where a wheat crop was. doing its best to hang on. On irrigated lands, the situation is somewhat better but supplies of irrigation water are short too un- less the farmer has his ofn wells. In the high plains of the Texas panhandle, farmers told the secre tary they were ‘forced into’ sink- ing irrigation wells. Moore County, for example, has more than 100 newly. installed irri- gation systems, mostly financed by federal loans. Such a system costs between $10,000 and $15,000 and the un- derground water supplies last about 50 years if used wisely. Benson's views were summed up | | when he told a farmer at Spring- | sidered a fair cross-section of the | whole drought beit. Less than 15 minutes out of Den- ver, Benson clambered down to ‘wade ankle-deep in the dust of a wind-riddled field Moving from Denver through southeast Colorado to the Kansas line, the secretary and his party saw the worst. field, Colo.: “We've got good people here. We | just need a little water.” . L In subsequent speeches, Benson | conceded wryly that hell needs'’—good people and a little water. Life goes on in the drought area | but it is not business-as-usual. | In the larger towns and cities | there is at least a veneer at gaiety. “That's all '-. | merchandise. There are generous sprinklings of Cadillacs, Lincolns and Buicks and the majority of lower-priced cars are late models There are few jalopies. But business as well as the farm- er and the rancher is feeling: the pinch Many storekeepers said their volume of business is from 20-to 40 per cent less than in 1950. The farmer and the rancher, however, are really taking it on the chin. Benson vinced that the only reason there have been so few sales of farms | and others are con- | anybody is ready to call it quits. Like farmer Glen Arnold of near Walsh, Colo., the most they'll con- cede is that ‘it’s an uphill task."’ Arnold's case emphasizes what | this whole region is up against Last vear he harvested only 60 to 70 bushels of wheat from about 1,200 acres. Usually he averages 20 bushels to the acre. Dairymen and livestock oper- ators are ne better off than the wheat farmers. Accustomed to oducing. much of their own feed, a great many of them are afraid to break land for feed * win 175000 the Want ads NOW! FREE Chemical ROOT DESTROYER Put in sewers after they are cleaned by electric machine. 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For the program, his films of last summer, were shown by Mar- shall Rice, The Rev. John Mul- der fave the devotional theme on a trip'on a Youth Bus caravan) “Finding God in the Summer,” and also showed pictures. It was announced that on May 20 the WSCS Detroit con- ference will be held at First Methodist Church in Midland. Meeting Headed by Mrs. C. B. Lane, the+ Fern Bank Unit served refresh- ments, Assisting were Mrs. Mabel Todd, Mrs, Edith Thomas, Mrs. Hazel Heiby and Mrs. Richard Dougherty. : coming year will include Mrs. Frank Gray, vice president; Mrs. Howard Sherwood,«recording sec- retary; Mrs. Charles Crawford, treasurer and Mrs. Ralph Robin- son promotion secretary. Chairman of the various com- mittees are Mrs. George Fisler and Mrs. P. G. Latimer, mis- sionary education; Mrs. C. D. Kdiser, Christian social rela- tions; Bessie Carpenter, local church activities; Mrs, Keith Johnston, student work and Eliz- abeth White, children’s work. In addition there are Mrs. Percy Jones, spiritual life; Mrs, Harold Srigley, literature and _publica- tions: Mrs, John Hartwick, supply work: Mrs., G, R. Jarvis, status of women; Mrs. Allen Palmer, membership.and Mrs. Robert Byrnes, publicity. Completing the list- are Mrs. Arthur Lake, Board of Education representative and Adeline Lever- ing, Wesleyan Seryice Guild co- ordinator. Unit chairmen Installed were Mrs. Harry Martin, Mrs. Pearl Kline, Mrs, Cecil Choate, Mrs. J. Harry Baker, Mrs. N. E. Maytag, Mrs. William Conrad, Mrs. Francis Mapley, Mrs. Irwin Brockie, Adeline Hook and Mrs. | Witten ? Moation or. Mrs. Alex Morris Heads Sorority Mrs. Alex C. Morris was elected president of Alpha Alpha Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority when members gathered Thursday | evening at the YMCA. Mrs. Benjamin Sweeney was) elected vice president; Mrs. An- By ANNE HEYWOOD What can you do when bad jluck strikes? You can either fold thony Grand, recording secretary; | your tents and silently give up, Mrs. Fred Baumgartner, corre-|or you can turn the unlucky sponding secretary; and Mrs. Rex) stroke into a real gold mine. Parker, treasurer. | One woman I know had to leave Final plans wee announced for, her job for six months because of a formal dinner to be held May) a back injury. 19 at Kingsley Inn. An installa- | Instead of lying in bed be- | tion of officers and jewel pin cere-| meaning her fate, she used the : mony of pledges will take place| time to read im her field. As a at the affair. Mrs. Calvin Rhodes| result, when she got back to work is serving as chairman of the! s dinner te a top job. Amendments to the national by- | Another woman, laws were discussed in preparation | | Serious eye operation, for a state convention which began | | convalescence to learn in Lansing today and will continue | the piano through Sunday. Now, with» her vision perfect Lt) Following a brunch held at Forest Lake | 5 i Pentiac Press Photes Mrs. Harold Jacober (center) of Hill Circle | Country Club Wednesday,. women Lae Mrs. Matthew Clevers of Interlaken | took to the fields for a round of golf. Mrs. | | drive found the weather just right for the Herbert R. Lilley (left) of La of Lancaster street, | activity. again, she hag a wonderful hobby | instead of bleak memories of weeks | of darkness, Behind many successful people ;and many successful organiza-| tions is a similar case of turning bad luck into good. Take the Calvert School, in Baltimore, for example. The Cal- vert School is a huge and suc- cessful enterprise, which provides | instruction to children all over the world, she was promoted within a year | who had a used her | to play) The children of traveiing par- | education through ninth grade — by means | The idea) came into being as a result of lents. children located in remote localities, and children who are | shut-in can all their school work, thanks to the | | instruction kits which Calvert pro- | vides. Bad Luck Disguises Good Fortune There are 8,000 children through- out the world who are getting their from kindergarten of this unique school. a tragedy. In 1905, the Calvert School Was a thriving day school in Bal- timore. Along came a terrible whooping cough epidemic, and the school had to “lose. Not daunted at all by this We" ay GRAS ROAD MAME De DI SFIS Gs | otherwise hopeless situation, the | headmaster devised a program | keep up with | for the children to study at home. | It included all necessary equip- | ment and instructions for parents. ‘It worked out fine. a NEW contemporary pattern Silver Blossoms’ REED & & ARTON This exquisite new service in life- time guaranteed silverplate consists . 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Bilun- don, public relations representa- tive and field director of Leader Dogs for the Blind for the state of Michigan. He talked on the Rochester divi- sion, saying that. it is one of the three recognized by the United States Government. Mr. Blundon further stated that in the middle west to serve the blind was conceived by a group of business men in the Lions Clubs of The organization was incorpor- ated in 1939 as a non-profit na- tional social agency. Job’s Daughters to Elect Officers Women of . Job's Daughters, Bethel 5, have circled their calen- dars as a reminder that election of officers will take place May 16. Taken into membership at a friendship night were Elizabeth Williams, Patricia Huntwork, Sharon Gable and Gail Gibson. They were welcomed by Honored Queen Mary Moore. Bethel 40, Pontiac, Rochester, Walled Lake, Clarkston and Com- merce were represented by those taking part in the initiatory work, | with other friends and relatives present at the recent meeting. Mrs. Hazel Bath, supreme dep- uty to Ontario was a special guest. Making up the serving commit- tee were Nancy Werth, Mary Jo Parker, Virginia Sheehan, Janet | Kneale, Martha Sanft and Pat, | eee A QOH Cad RRS NM + a7 Ne t. o New dresses just velveray, cottons, DRESSES Beautiful—Better Quality— and Styling Purchased Special for Mother’s Day Mother’s Day gift-giving. Beau- , tiful array of new styles in nylon linens, sheers. Sizes 9 to b—to 20—1414 to 241%, ‘at Waldron Students at the school live under constant supervision of competent instructors during a minimum of four weeks’ instruction — period. Training, the speaker said, is con- ceived as a ‘re-education emotion- ally and physically to a new way | of effective living. After a period of getting ac-| quainted with his leader dog, the student is taken to Rochester | where actual pedestrian training is begun. In progressive stages adjust- | ment to more hazardous traffic conditions is accomplished through training on busy streets in Pontiac. n At the end of four weeks training with a leader dog, the hesitant blind student is changed to an erect, confident person who has | challenged and conquered one of life's severest handicaps, Mr. Blundon concluded. ee aes Hee Features This Custom Built =, Lounge Chair 3 E-Z Textures Terms Tweeds Call Today _EM 3-4122 — Phone — EM 3-4122 4270 Haggerty Road, Walled Lake > * Foam Rubber Construction _, * Over 3® Fabrics te Cheese \ eA = Nylons me, , anak es I MAb BM AALAA AA A Add We 77 A Our Own Grow 101 N. Saginaw St. 3 Buttons WHERE SMART WOMEN SHOP! < | PLANTS — CORSAGES From — FE 3-7165 Jacobsen's Flowers @& rreenhouses at Lake Orion WOT IITIIOIIIIIIIIIOIOI OOOO D, x. PL eee ew. in time for Values to $10.95 S pecial 2 tor “11 WHILE THEY LAST | | , | | | RAMEE NAA EY Ne} PAREN Rea TTR RIOR A OR ces ge 2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1955 -_ + ; : 2 Spring Meéeting Planned Hostesses for the May 13 meet- | ing in Oxford will be members of the Thomas chapter. Reservations may be made by calling the sec- retary of Areme chapter. Mrs. Sidney Fellows, worthy ma- tron of Areme Chapter 503, OES, announced a Spring meeting at the recent meeting held at Roosevelt Temple. Mrs. Victor Bodamer will be a guest at Oxford on May 19; Mrs. Robert Davis will be a guest of Austin Chapter at Davisburg; | and Mrs. William Pfahiert. will $| be a guest at Clawsen on May = ’| The chapter was presented with a secretary's desk by Mrs. Fel- | lows and Chris Hornbeck, worthy | one of our enchanting gowns. Budal Salon | FE 5-36735 Priday and Monday ‘til ® tee and was assisted by Mrs. Roy- | $ Bvenings by Appointment $' al Clark and Mrs. Earl Foster. ARAL LL PPL La | | Mother Is a] gee, Real Good | » ° SPORT | Brown | & W hite ; ' 5 W. Buren | man of the refreshment commit | | i Lazy-Bones Seniors | | “Golf-Abouts” *Q” Pauli’s Shoe Store 35 N. Saginaw St. BAD VW" ‘Groups Gather Mrs. Charles Wheeler was chair- | 4 | lar and bouffant skirt, She car- | Three-year-old Phyllis Clark reaches for|Group Thursday at First Congregational* to Observe National | Pentiac Press Photes the large bunny which decorates the display Church. With her is her mother, Mrs. Harry of the Ortonville Home Demonstration|M. Clark of Detroit. Robert Cauley Takes Bride Robert E. Cauley, son of Mr.| The bride’s brother, John R. | land Mrs. Patrick E. Cauley of , Lasty sang the bridal recital. A | | Henry Clay avenue, claimed Vio | Lusty as his bride in a ceremony | | | performed at St. John Vianney | When the couple left for their society holding its first meeting | Church of Flint. | u | The bride is the daughter of Mr.| day rites the bride was wearing | Street residence of Beth McEvoy. and Mrs. Charles F. Lusty of Flint.| 9 blue dress with red accessories. | la | Teception was held at Knights of Columbus Hall, | wedding trip following the Satur- | A ballering length gown of | Following the eastern trip they will | white lace and tulle over satin | reside in Funt. was worn by the bride, The town so senccisine nena was fashioned with stand-up col- iGolf Club Begins ried an arrangement of white |'Summer Season ‘President of | | j Joan Bowhall | New Society | A brand new organization has come to town, with Phi Epsilon Nu Tuesday evening at the Euclid By-laws were set up and plans | are already under way for a money-making affair to be held in the near future. The new society will have as its | officers, Joan Bowhall, president; | Miss McEvoy, secretary and! Home Demonstration Week Modeling for the style show which had a! Achievement Day program was held at First Hawaiian theme Thursday were (left to | Congregational Church in observance of Na- right) Mrs. R. W. Church of Milford,| tional Home Demonstration Week. Ninety- Mrs. Goebel Kelley of Lake Orion and|one groups from Oakland County partici- Mrs. Henry Heffelbower of Milford. The| pated in the all-day affair. Achievement Day Program Is Held In observance of National Home | In the afternoon other Home} cluded Mrs. Henry Ellis, Mrs. Ted Demonstration Week members of| Demonstration members modeled} Geeham and Mrs. George Perry the ninety-one groups in Oakland | a ‘‘Lei of Tropical Fashions.’’ Mrs,| on registration. Mrs. Frederick county gathered Thursday for; Cecil Dunn and Mrs. Stanley Cole-| Weiss, Mrs, C. P. Issacson, Mrs. their annual Home Demonstration | man assisted in the fashion show. | Harold Pennell and Mrs. Walter Achievement Day program. Mrs. Frieda Bennett, Home| Brown were the hostess commit- Meeting in the First Congrega-| Demonstration Agent, gave recog. tee. tional Church of Pontiac, 400 wom- | nition to leaders and officers of Tables were in en looked at exhibits showing what | the local groups and announced | Arthur Bezdecny, charge of Mrs. while Mrs, Bur- Mrs. Harold Wiggins, treasurer. | had been accomplished in the past the Window Exhibit prize winners. | ye] Shaffor took care of favors. tion teph: carnations ang pink stephanotis, A breakfast at: Pontiac Country Mrs. Lawrence P. Jean attended | Ciub marked the teeing off of the Committee chairmen and thelr | year, heard their chairman, Mrs. | Pentiac winners were the In- |The style show | sisted of Mrs. Donovan Tubbs, committee con- duties include Mrs. Donald Har. | Walter Brown, give highlights on) teriakes group for their exhibit rison, charity; Mrs. Gerald | the national meeting she recently! o, hats and the Modern Home. | Mrs. Arthur O’Hara and Mrs. Roy Swanson, Mrs. Robert Over. | attended in Washington, and were makers for their United Nations | Chappel. | nylon. She wore matching picture | chairman of the breakfast which| S**™*" § d Jeyco Heflin, social. | stimulated by speakers on aber window. ; : jhat and carried carnations and | was served to 21 members. Mrs.| Added to these are, Mrs. Wig- and fashion. : | The invocation was given by the | Avoid Long Nails | rosebuds. | Ben Bowman was chairman of the | gins, historian; Rose Marie John-| Using members of the audi- Rev. Lawrence D. Graves, aSSo- | | Charles Cauley served as his golf committee. | ston, gratuity; Mrs. Clare Blades,| ence to illustrate the points she | ciate pastor of the Congregational} What possesses women to grow | brother's best man and seating | Bridge was also enjoyed by the | publicity; Mrs. A. R. Bartlebaugh made, Mary Louise Goodson, Church. Mrs. Lyle Abel, County | their fingernails to unreasonable the guests were the bridegroom’s| members and a business meeting | and Mrs. Keith Trever, telephone,| graduate of the John Robert | Agricultural. Agent welcomed the | lengths? It certainly isn’t beautiful. her sister as matron of honor | goit season for members of Niblick | wearing a plae pink ballerina! Cjyb on Tuesday. length gown of organdy over white | Mrs. John Meddaugh served as _ Serving Pontiac Over 75 Years! twin brothers, Patrick and Ken-|was conducted by Mrs. Harold. and Alice Riemenschneider and | Powers school, discussed ‘‘Se- | It makes them look as if they did group. neth Cauley, Slankster, president of the club. Joan Hilton, pledges. | erets of Charm,” Committees for the day in- no work, 2 ay a= Lack Cash? Use’ Federal’s Purchase Coupons! Shop today! EDERAL 9 Open Monday, Friday and Saturday nights to Hugwaist girdle with trim inner waistband 595 Elasticized front and back panels, elastic mesh sides, that whittle away inches. Won- derful for the young figure. At Federal’s in white. Sizes small, medium, large. pF Ry, Let our trained corsetieres fit you! ' ® seveeeee® BEHOLD ...the youngest you SUL MLANS ALE MLE TEM ever in a wonder-working Warde Bae Be fitted quickly, ee Bs \ 2 coe expertly and perfectly! — Favorite young figure girdle ugwaist by YOUTHCRAFT! A *- Sexy mene Patented Diagonal Slash for exciting figure beauty ... The wonder-working bra with the famous, pat- Panty g irdle 72. Now in ented diagonal slash . . . the famous petal- burst stitching! Wonder-bra does MORE for a. raw hy lon power net! MORE figures than any other...including § _fWsoeii-t=) po... yours! AND Federal’s corsetieres will fit you 7 595 perfectly, too! White cotton. Sizes A, 32-36; (5 2” eM SSS “buy, B, 32-38; C, 32-40. Try one on now!. Save! ~~, Inner band to whittle the waistline. Nylon power net sides to slim too-full hips. White. Small, medium, large. Try it on soon! Matching Girdle ................5.95 2 AMR as Rl. ili SD 28S 8 ENR RN III 2 # SAGINAW AT WARREN PONTIAC OPEN MON. FRI. SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 f omc "___THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. MAY 6.1955 | ‘Every Mom Needs Hymn for Comfort Family's Favorite Spiritual S6ng Will Restore Strength @ MODERN — But By MURIEL LAWRENCE speaker when the Parent Guid- ae aa a. Soon after the Greys had dis- |. ance Club met Wednesday evening still reflecting the. covered that Maggie was going to have a sister, they put a down payment on a suburban house— and moved. The day after they were in- Stalled, the little girl next door shoved Maggie away from her doll carriage. Overwhelmed by her own problems, her mother resisted the realization that Maggie might have one. But en the fourth day when the little girl next door, ac- companied by a friepd on a tri- cycle, ordered Maggie off her own front sidewalk, Mrs. Grey became really concerned for her child’s social future. She felt an intense desire to solve | Maggie’s problem for her by going out and slapping the little girl next door. Fortunately, she controlled this impulse. What she did was to drop her work and take Maggie on her lap. Then she began to sing their favorite hymn to her. By the time she'd finished, the | angry impulse to solve Maggie's problem for her had passed. The oppressive fear that Maggie couldn't solve it for herself had passed. To the stilled child in her arms, she was able to say smiling- ly: “My, how sad we've been about nothing! You don’t like unkindness in the little girl next door, All you have to do about that. It was the beginning of friend- | ship with the litle girl next door. Story Tellers Honor Mothers Earrings were given the honor- ees as favors. Mrs. Robert Boggs | bride is wedding photography. The consul- tants ope ned the store at 12 2 f W est Huron’ meeting held at the hall, of seven candidates was initiated in honor of Mrs. One of the many services made available | street today. Shown holding the large pre- to the bride by Lynneas, consultants to the bridal portrau is Viola Fine, and displaying one of several bouquets used in pre-bridal portraits is Je an Smith. Film on (nee Shown 'ship in pointed up by Supt. | with Mrs. Rex Lawrence of Chad- | ner meeting During the hospital chapter night a class Lloyd LaBarge Officers and escorts visited | coln Park last evening, when de- grees were conferred: sg be Sra tig ‘i {VE Dr. Whitmer ls Speaker at Meeting The closer teacher-pupil relation- today’s classrooms was of Schools Dana P. Whitmer, who was guest | wick drive. Dr. Whitmer explained that the | teacher of today is an adult advis- or working in the group rather than a dominant force set apart from the children. He also said that while the ‘‘thee R's" remain the basic principal in education, material ig presented in a more interesting manner. Present teaching methods are proving successful, he said. Group discussion followed Dr. | Whitmer’s talk. ‘ | In addition, the club elected a} | new slate of officers, placing Mrs. Walter Mann in the president's | chair and making Mrs, E. H. Vie- | riech vice president; Mrs. Sam Joan, recording secretary; Mrs. | James Fortier, corresponding sec- retary and Mrs. John Seilman, | treasurer Guests attending were Mrs. Har old Wert, Mrs. Robert Dorman and Ms. Enar West. Mrs. Ralph Dawe and Mrs. Joan were hostesses and devotions were given by Mrs Melvin Rentfrow. : Members will gather for a din- June 1 at Highland Manor, when installation will take place. Mrs. Charles Uligian is in charge of arrangements. Stars. in the flag of the United | States ‘are arranged in six hori- gontal rows of eight stars each. ' WHITNEY --- CONTEMPORARY MAI OPEN STOCK charm and feeling the Colonial era— as satin, For DINING ROOM—BED ROOM. or LIVING ROOM 3 @ FINISH — Smooth with that warm “Tempo” color, ROOM _ARRANGE- of designs and styles, WE ARE ENTHUSED OVER THIS GROUP YOU WILL BE TOO © PRICED TO FIT YOUR BUDGET | You Will Enjoy Shopping at DRAYTON PLAINS 4479 DIXIE HWY. FREE PARKING OR 3-2300 “The Friendly Store” Open Fri. & Mon. ’til 9:00 MENTS are easily made with the many ' Drayton Home Furnishings Mom. : ome yf the Moose, Chapter she was introduced by Mrs. Jessie it Is tell it so. All we have to Women of t q | do is just tell her that we don’t A preview of Mother’s Day was | 360, have started arrangements for | Carie hospital committee chair like it—and thep walk away held by Zeta Eta Chapter of Beta| a mother and daughter banquet man from it...” | Sigma Phi. The recent annual, Which will be held the evening of | This was followed by a question io hs “ 4 at| May 19 at Moose Hall on Mount: and answer period conducted by on nee Soon, a Gay or = aes + Dey benqert = = | Clemens street. Dr. Kenneth Vandenburg Remem ber later, Maggie was able to do just | the Old Mill Taverh in Waterford. > ' | the Pontiac Story Tellers, pre- ee ‘ Personally, I think that n | of 2 =a The new embers are a). mother can ever afford - be sented a program for the 21 wom- Th — a. meee a uy ee C d P ty Profit j without a favorite hymn ~}en attending. Grace was said by we sepnald wre Harold Mien ar arty Frovts wis = ~ ™ | ‘ " ; » , e Mrs. Aarne y acKsnear., wirs . For children bring us their pains | Mariya) Main and Mrs: William James Sa ze, Mrs. Oleta Adams to Beautify City | and hurts seeking strength that | Doyon gave a welcome to the i = : g 2 ‘ a : and »! : g é . Sheltc ~ rs. Addie Brained and Rose Ann Proceeds from Wednesd aft- is firmer than theirs. We do not | mothers. Mrs. C. M. Shelton intro. ill ceeds fror ee duced the speaker. d ernoon's benefit dessert c aa party always have it ready to give to : , mila : Yellow candles and three baskets In recognition of the Academy 8d bazaar held by the Better ~ ue favorite hymn restores of spring flowers formed the cen- of Friendship Degree conferred ‘ome acme es aul be Thet is why children want «| TPE on Mrs. Ferman Huston and Mrs. oe satin. a A * uM ma a to have one. _ : A ritual of the jewels ceremony Myrtle Huddy in Saginaw Mon- oeneral chairman aes Mrs. P iul It becomes assdciated with our | and installation of officers will day, the two were presented with | B hirian Mrs 1] Kendell sire conquesia of leer Sx then. acl co aie the next meeting on May friendship rings by Mrs. C. J. - E Pou: - Nn Raipn. Pare: they learn to trust and love it. 2 ee eee ieee and Bre. Mickart Bis and Mrs 1 M. Beauchamp, Mrs. Though they do not grasp the | J. L. Slaybaugh and Mrs, Leota | meaning of its words, they sense ‘Mother, Daughter | sn educational film on cancer Thomas were in charge of the that we do. was shown by Barbara Amundson. | bazaar. | ‘Party Is Planned secretary of the Oakland Counts Haven Hill will be the. setting And in our arms they grow | Cancer Society _ seake ; or . A quiet, knowing that we are re- Corinne Sisterhood 1M, Dames Cancer Society. Ax guest speaker, for the ci i es , covering from our excited, angry | of Malta met Wednesday evening ; \ impluses to attack what has burt | '° make plans for a mother and | then ' daughter banquet to be held May | } | 16 at 6:30 p.m. As our peace comes back to us, Reservations may be made by ° ( M: uggie recovers hers. She will | ¢ calling Mrs. Jamies S hram of ' . THT = ah }, kno fo the stant when we have Sout Manbait siete tts | SINGER VACUUM CLEANERS t sec aed our hold on "the ‘rock Richard Lange - Dover road. i that is higher’ than ours—and | - = = : . jump off our lap to go and play. ONLY Sm m2: pl Regula? ' I don't know how I'd ever have é Cignner $104.75 H managed without our favorite hymn. e Gets under furniture easily — housing TS unit only 5 inches high—has headlight for easy seeing Carmel Jensen } so foctinestn) arabatire awe | @ No foot-pedal acrobatics. adjust han- dle to any position with trigger on Feted at Shower eae Carmel Jensen, bride-elect of @®No winding of cord —cord reels MODERNIZED School of Beauty in and out of handle automatic- De osep acke ras Or Daniel Joseph Hackett Jr, was ally—no tripping over cord honored Monday evening at a mis- | cellaneous shower held at the East ® Dual a — two fans mean Iroquois road home of Mrs. Ralph greater dirt-getting action , Wilson, Co-hostesses were Mrs. Call today for detailed © 2-speed switch for heavy or : Robert H. Kimmins and Mrs. Har | information. No age light cleaning. Con trols THIS MOTHER'S DAY old Hackett Jr. limit! within fingerttp reach on : r handle The bride-elect resides in Ed-| wardsville, Ill., and is the daugh- | ter of William A. Jensen of Bowen, | Queensland, Australia. The pros- | pective bridegroom is the son of | Dr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Hackett of | Owego drive. Guests were Mrs. Robert McMan- | us, Mrs. Walter Rapp, Mrs. D. J. | Hackett, Mrs. Stanton Deyo, Mrs. | Robert L. Hackett, Mrs, Ralph 0. | Handemp en cleaner ables For Future Security Midway with rou to carry Phone FE 4-1854 —_ | - Call Miss Wilson Today tor Information PONTIAC BEAUTY COLLEGE 16% & Huron, Behind Say it with Flowers-By-Wire On Mother's Day, as always, F.T.D. Florists guarantee delivery. Even last4minute remembrances get there telegraph-fast! Simply stop in or phone Ceme Int or Call ra Home Demon- stration! | Payments as low as $5.00 per month after minimum down payment SINGER SEWING MACHINE Allen, Mrs, Harold J. Hackett, Mrs, | Keesge’s ” PONTIAC, Fe ie a ce W. Maple \ your F.T.D. Florist—the shop with SPEEDY Harry W. Kimmins, Mrs. Robert | 2nd Floor 7 ae aa and the famous MERCURY EMBLEM. Hasse and Mrs, Frank C. Hasse. | Costs So Little! You pay only for the flowers you select, plus telegraph charges. Phone or Visit Your FT. D. Florist cet eee Were ers. Detroit, Michigan VALUABLE | : Z = eee SEND FLOWERS-BY-WIRE JACOBSEN'S FLOWERS Greenhouses and Retail Store at Lake Orion 101 North Saginaw YOUR COATS oe ee ee MS Ph. FE 3-7165 PHONE PEARCE’S, FE 2-0127 i f Flowers for Every Occasion! ss 982-8101 PEARCE FLORAL co. ‘ é ; Flowers for Every Occasion Delivered Anywhere, baat ; ( , , 559 Orchard Lake Ave. ad ae Delightful i DINING Downtown Location = fl WALDRON [| COFFEE SHOP Mee Mrs. Forsythe Entertains Group in cent meeting. Ple nt The group discussed sending a Atmosphere =| child to summer camp as one of for Your Convenience len spoke on “Thought.” the chapter, teld the members ie about her visit to Kansas City, Me,, where she toured the inter- nationa] office of Beta Sigma Phi, HOTEL 36 E. Pike St. ia Members of the chapter enter- VENGilt SI tained their mothers Sunday after- WEEE at Hotel Waldron. Mrs. Edward Forsythe of St. Jo- seph street was hostess to mem- bers of Zeta Lambda Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi sorority at a re- their projects, Mrs. Forsythe gave a talk on “Speech” as her part of the program and Mrs. Richard Al- Mrs. Robert Terry, adviser of noon at a Mothers Day tea held Mother's favorite warm weather dress with air-conditioning .. . Gail Byron Eyelet 8 Si @ Perfect for Town or Country Weor @ Shuns Wrinkles . . Needs Little tron- ing “yan Hex © * rye YS * ee OC ty . vr mh” Priced So Tiny crush it. . init no Af Came ws Crease it... pack it cee $ = “ rat es eal * fe cS . 4 A e - % A] ‘ ce fits smug every minute. . with or without a belt. pink, aqua or white. 1414-2414, ome New 1955 Jersey... @ So Practical . .. & it Stays Meat as a@ pin through every blister- , ing surmmer day! Dainty eyelets let air in, supple jersey is comfortable as | your skin, elastic waistband | «| You alone look and feel pretty whether i® vacationing or im your own * backyard. Washable in navy, | 12-20, ~ lustrous as a pearl for every occasion throughout summer days! ersatile Milan traw by 'e Roose 90 - a perfect shoe . . . designed fi atter—so comfortable, t; amd so adaptable for lous or tailored occasions. f utiful leathers in white, ; se, Caramel ombre. § to 10, to B. Hurry in today or ite! = Waite's Women's Shoes—Stree! Floor DAPHNE D. LANGFORD BETTY JANE PALLAS Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Langford of ; Fred Pallas North Paddock Parkhill, Ont.. announce _ the ‘ 7 ase a — street 18 announcing the engage- ieagagement of their daughter, ‘ a . = ment of’*his daughter, Betty Jane, of Stout street, to Arthur Martin Decker. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Decker of Cass City A summer wedding is planned. |Daphne Doreen, to Rudolph A. | Giglio. He is the son of Mr. and | Mrs. Charles Gigho of Elizabeth | Lake road. An early summer wed- ' ding is planned Alas, Those Poor Suburban Tykes | By MARY MARGARET McBRIDE. brought up in Westchester County, “If it will help, you may have N, Y., offered in answer to my ; my childhood;” a friend who was, plaint that I am running out of For MOTHER — ON MOTHER’S DAY 3) 50 Pay Only $125 Per Week | Reconditioned and Parts by Necchi and Elna Center CALL FE 2-9143 FOR FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION NECCHINELNA, | , 745 NORTH PERRY STREET - euinG (cates | # 25 Roll Ends of Carpet smart dress-up shoes for every command performance . . . Party Pretties For Juniors by De Roose 5° Even on dress-up occasions growing feet require carefully constructed shoes, correct fit. . . fine ma- terials ‘for long wear, Imagine all this quality plus the tiny price! 812 to 3! Black Patent, Blue & White! PRICE alge, Bakes: ij Get the New Dripless & Alkyd Base Paint “BREEZE” AT _ ~ SPENCER'S — FLOOR COVERINGS : 3511 Elizabeth Lake Rd. —*FE 4-958!" Open Friday and Monday Nights Going Out at TIE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1953 Engagements Highlight Social News in Pontiac ’ RUTH MARIE LUNDGREN A fall wedding is being planned by. Ruth Marie Lundgren, whose | betrothal has been announced by | Orchard Lake announce the en- | her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clar- | gagement of their daughter, Caro- lee, to Robert D. Chrisman, son ence Lundgren of Myrtle street. Her fiance is Robert E. Thayer, | who is the son of Mrs. Russell | Bunker of La Salle street, and the Of Auburn avenue. | wedding is planned. late Lt. Charles M. Thayer. childhood reminiscences and could | use eight more lives, like a cat. | Just as I was about to leap at the generous offer, my friend went ' on to minimize its value. “The trouble is,” she confessed morosely, “I can't seem to evoke the kind of romantic sounds, smelis and tastes that make such fascinating reading. ‘About the nearest I ever came to a cow all my childhood was the bottles delivered each morning by our milkman and even you would be put to it to make ftitivating memories of the loud clink of bot- tles on the paving stone backdoor step “The more I think about un- fortunates me, born and brought up in comfortable, middie- class suburbs, the more I'm: con- vinced that we were discriminated against. How could you ever ex-| pect to be a great writer, politician or even business executive when you've never gone barefoot in your | life, never churned yellow-gold but- ter, never day-dreamed in your private cherry tree? “Whoever heard of a President born in the second house from the corner on Linden avenue, complete with sewers, regular trash collec- tions and P. S| 37 blocks awas? like two “How could you be a Horatio Alger type cornering the titanium market without a background of grinding poverty or—at the very | least — a mortgage on the old | home place? “The suburb, for your informa- tion, is that tepid place in between | | /not rich enough for the glamorous _— the paid police force scooped | | them up. We didn't have very good | fires—the paid firemen were very | efficient. I never even knew there CAROLEE OMEY Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Omey of of Mr. and Mrs. Carl R. Chrisman A July 3 —too prosperous to provide an ex- citing saga of up-by-the-bootstraps; governess-and-pony-cart idyl. “We didn't have town characters | type of were volunteer fire departments until I started reading other peo- | ple's warm, colorful memories. “And, just as you might expect. | and syrupy. Beat egg whites stiff none of us has turned out very /and gradually add rest of sugar. interestingly, either, I don't know of a single tycoon, statesman or Fold gently even bank robber who was grad-/ture. Turn into cooled pie shell and chill in refrigerator. Serve | with whipped cream. . uated from my public school. “A few of my classmates made Alcoholics Anonymous and I do | hear now and then of q divorce, bat most ef the boys grew up to be average businessmen and most of the girls got married , and raised families—in suburbs — much like my birthplace.” Well, I'm still in the market for childhoods of any style, And I think the Westchester sound rather pleasant. Homeowner and Painter | Can Share By HUBBARD COBB There's no question that you can | save a good deal of money when | . it comes to painting your house if you do the job yourself. On the other hand, if you live | | in a large two-story house you may | |& suburbs | | |cold water. Add rest of water, '2 | Largest of all living rodents is the South American capybara. Salad Oil 4 : | Three feet in length, it loves wa- Pie Crust ‘ter and can remain submerged . = eight to ten minutes, ls Different Mrs. Luther Diaz Likes Mom’s Way of Preparing Pastry By JANET ODELL Pentiac Press Food Editor Pie like mother used to make | . . When Mrs. Luther Diaz wants | that kind of pie, she uses. her | mother's recipe for vegetable oil crust. Then she puts her favorite lemon chiffon filling in it. Two years ago the Diaz family | came to Michigan from Colorado when the Navy transferred her husband. Since that time they have been busy finishing the inside of their house. Mrs. Diaz belongs to | the Sacred Heart Guild of her | church. LEMON CHIFFON PIE with VEGETABLE OIL CRUST By Mrs. Lather Diaz . For crust: l cup sifted, all-purpose flour ‘4 teaspoon salt vegetable oll 2% tablespoons ice water Sift together flour and salt. Com- bine oil and water. Beat with fork | until well mixed. Pour over flour | mixture and stir with fork. Roll | out and fit into pie pan. Flute edges and prick bottom. Bake at 425 degrees for 20 minutes. For filling: 1%, teaspoons gelatine 1-3 cup cold water l cup sugar 3 tablespoons lemon = fuice Grated rind of 1 lemon sh of salt 4 eggs, separated Soften gelatine in 2 FIRST HOLLY COMMUNION Remembered Forever... in precious PORTRAITS Special Offer at... .$7.95 6 Lustretones—Mounted 1 8x10 Oi! Tinted (Regular $18.00 Value) Open Communion Sundays for Your Convenience 10 A. M. to 3 P. M. VARDEN STUDIO 23 E. Lawrence Pontiac, Mich. tablespoons | cup of the sugar, salt, lemon juice | and rind to well beaten egg yolks. Cook and stir until thickened, about 5 minutes. Stir in gelatine | until dissolved. Cool, until thick | thick and into cold egg mix- | beating until smooth. | —, The opossum belongs to one | b th of the oldest living families of eee ee advertisement with you. mammals. EES fj Wek wt REVIEW STUDENT Training Will Bring Results The demand for stengraphers, secretaries, typists, accountants, and other trained office help is far greater than the supply. Begin- ning salaries are excellent. There are many good opportunities for advancement. You can prepare for one of these desirable positions by attending either Day, Half-Day, or Evening School. Classes Throughout the Year BEGIN ER or: SONNY ae eT lincluding your summer vacation. 'find that to do the job properly | | |will take you most of the summer | |& VETERAN APPROVED _| Double-diagonals are so flatter- |ing to the half-size figure; they | make you look taller, smarter, slimmer! Outlined in bright con- trast on this simple sundress — ‘they're twice as pretty! Add the bolero to make a lovely ensemble. Pattern 4702: Half sizes 14%, 1 | 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%, 24%. Size 16% dress, belero take 4% yards 35-inch fabric; %4 yard contrast. This pattern easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- plete illustrated instructions. Send 35 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern “for ist-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West I7th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and style number, | surface preparation to be done | | such as removing loose paint, etc.. | jize that the average homeowner can paint the lower portion of his You can, of course, get a | painter in te do the job for you | | but this might cost mere than you can easily afford at this al. | time. the best things we can suggest is | to sort of split the job—you do | |some of the work and let a pro- || | fessional painter do the rest. For example, if there is a lot of | | why not do,this part of the job yourself and then call in a paint- er for actual application of the | paint. | It takes a good deal of time to | properly prepare a surface for | paint and if you do this work, you | make quite a saving. | Many professional painters real- | house without much trouble but | will run into difficulties when it / comes to doing the upper half be- | cause of lack of adequate scaffold- ing. oe 7 West Lawrence Street CRGusinsbpsiiluls Phone FE 2-3551 PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11%q $. Sagiaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. Enrollments Available in Day or Evening Classes. Write, phone or call in person for Free pamphlet. PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 A aT Wr a ee mn ke ee ~f ~ Phone or Return This Ad for Bulletin al ial Name Address es A PERMANENT WAVE NOW ... so many more hair styling possibilities are yours — when your hair is beautifully permanently waved. Let our experts groom your hair for summer. RANDALL’S HARPER METHOD SHOP 88 Wayne Street Phone FE 2-1424 Many of these men will make | a deal with you whereby you do all.of the work that you can reach from your stepladder and they'll move in when you have finished and do the upper part and the hard-to-get-at places. This sort of a deal works out very nicely for all concerned and is especially nice for those ama- teur painters who aren't too fond of standing on the top of a tall ladder while they wield a paint brush. Charis Club Plans May Square Dance A “Covered Wagon Square Lewis will be the caller. Funds raised through the club's projects will benefit the Oakland County Children’s Home. Dixie Pottery CHINAWARE GLASSWARE STARTER SETS PLANTERS MILKGLASS CUP,SAUCERSETS COPPER ITEMS And Many Other Ideal Gifts “Mom” Will Love LAMPS URNS VASES DIXIE POTTERY 5281 Dixie Hwy. (Near Waterford) OR 3-1894 _ For Your Convenience Open Daily 10 A. M. to 8 P. M, " ‘and Sunday Noon to8 P.M.” ON " arta _ campaign for the May 26 general ‘elections. In a farewell speech she British Parliament | Dissolves for Voting LONDON WwW — Queen Elizabeth Il sent Parliament home today to said Britain hopes to ‘‘enter into) fruitful negotiations’ with the So- viet Union now that West Ger- many is once again a free and sovereign nation. _ Britain now. will be without — a | either legislature unti] June 7, when the new House of Commons will sit for the first time, Prime Minister Eden and his eabinet will continue to run their various departments, They do not resign until after the election — cabinet if the Conservatives win, or for the Laborites to take over the government if they are vic- torious. GET GOOD HELP through Help Ads. service phone FE 26181. for Eden to form a new} For experienced ad-writing | : Worker's Death: Stalls Rail Talk Union Blames L & N for Shooting of Striker in Tennessee jon a Tennessee highway last night, | near. The shooting came only a few hours after the mayor of Knoxville, Tenn., phone Co. walkout, ae * * entered their 54th day today. Charles E. Wright, a 32-year-olc | striking railroad carman, “NASHVILLE, Tenn, ®—A rail | road employe was shot to death, in a move aimed at halting vi-| olence in one of the many trouble spots in the Southern Bell Tele-| - Both strikes—each economically 'costly and each marked by out- bursts of violence and. disorder— | Was | ; THE. PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1955 for another session this morning n the urgent and complicated negotiations.: . * * George Leighty, chairman of the union negotiating committee, | blamed the agra for the strik- ing railroader’s death | A dispute over health and wel- | fare benefits resulted in the strike against the L&N and its subsidi- aries in 14 states. = India Gets Salk Formula NEW DELHI @-India is the stalling crucial negotiations*in the | first country to receive the Salk Louisville and Nashville Railroad’ poti9 vaccine formula from the strike as a settlement seemed, | United States. The formula was | presented by U.S. Ambassador | John Sherman Cooper yesterday. | India was selected because rhesus issued a shoot-to-kill order; monkeys from this country were used in U.S. polio research lead- Hindu Women Win 5,000-Y ear Divorce Battle NEW DELHI, India @—A new marriage law now approved by Parliament gives Hindu women the right to demand divorces for the first time in 5,000 years of history. When Conservative Hindu mem- bers objected that marriage among Hindus is sacramental and unchangeable, Prime Minister Nehru burst out: “What is sacramental? Is it sacramental to be tied to each other for life, all the time hating each other, biting each other, beating each other, making life hell for each other?" The law also restricts men to one wife. ‘Although few Hindus | have more than one, polygamy has | been permitted in some sects, Child marriage has been fought in India for generations, but per- sists in some The new law _ men must be 21 and. girls A Personal Invitation \, To talk over your Insurance Needs for Complete . Protection. Prayers for Bargainers DETROIT (®—The Episcopal di- ocese of Michigan today offered spiritual assistance to company and union negotiators now bargain- ing on new contracts in the auto industry. It was in the form of a@ prayer sent to the 152 parishes and missions in the diocese. Bish- ops Richard Emerich and Archie H. Crowley said the “most. im- portant thing all of us can do is to pray for those who are so close- ly involved.” Ralph Norvel AUSTIN-NORVELL Agency, Ine 710 West Lawrence Corner of Cass Ralph Austin 298! ing to the vaccine. OP 4 TERRIFIC ARRIVED! wrecked car near Mount Pleasant, a small town in central Tennes- ij | found dead about 20 feet from his | / New Ansco Hi-Speed Color Film 620, 120, 35mm Color transparency MARK DAVIS CAMERA Cameras sizes. A.S.A. 32 with your box camera. Mart FE 4-4343 Are Our Business—Not a_ Sideline! nearby. tiations at Washington. sored mediation session after midnight. came from both union and rai officials. So \se B.F.Goodrich gift-time tr Westinghou GRILL ™AND ) WAFFLE IRON Automotic heat control, with signal light. @ General Electric DOWN TOASTER General Electric COFFEE MAKER WEEKLY HIGH Makes 2 to uiFT 9 cups. Fully automatic ws low'as General Electric KITCHEN CLOCK Low price &: Four colors. DOWN WEEKLY As low as TRADE NOW! cost No More Than a Tire and Tube Get biggest trade-in allowance of the yeor—when trading for B.F. Goodrich TUBELESS TIRE SAFETYLINER © yoo ond your recappable tire see, A bullet had gone through his 7 | head from back to front. An L&N truck also was wrecked | Four nonstriking railroad workers who identified themselves Even so, Chairman Francis A. | O'Neill Jr. of the Nationa! Media- tion Board summoned both sides as occupants were arrested on charges of carrying concealed) weapons, Word of the shooting threw a! monkey wrench into the negotia- | Angry union representatives | stalked from a government-spon-| — : shortly | Bitter statements | L in 40 colors and effects @ Cool Grey @ Mist Green @ Honey Beige | é , @ Cocotone | @ Suburban Green @ Ice Blue @ Corinthian Rose @ White @ Avocado Green | @ Mexican Green | @ Mist Blue ... Plus the Newest Tweed Tone Effects Including @ Grey, Beige and Brown @ Chartreuse, Grey and Brown @ Grey. 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PERRYST. _ OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS ‘TIL 9 : FE 2-0121 Phone Midwest 4-4433 | — & 999 Hunter Blvd., Birmingham Ws ‘Monday, Thursday and Friday | THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1955 —oomm 7 - + oe ee ae ] ; Knee-Deep in Gray Hair | ‘Brain’ to Replace ope item it wl ores a warn- Germd ns Now until us West —- ay ane | Lagi large-tooth Pelee in | tall ‘and is located near Sumner, commen ad over their own defense with the 12° the United States starids 69 feet | Mich, ¥ , In Army tradition, when data * Host to Troo Ss divisions they are allowed by - F pus esi ericy ers 350 Army Clerks | fed into the brain it types out its ? p treaty, Estimates on that time $ : | answers in triplicate of Occu ation range from three years upward. 2 Foca Bite for Oldsters [oem #2 sith Ship Freed pans The American ground forces are. ‘stalling a mammoth electronic British Ship Freed | WASHINGTON «—Restoration Of8anized in the Seventh Army 4 = brain in Detroit to replace 350 a of West German sovereignty does which includes five combat divi- ¢ “DETROIT (UP) — The Rev. | purchased the 750-room feed De- clerks who keep an inventory of | TAIPEI Formosa —The 3.500- nop mean that American occupa- Sins and supporting units, includ- > s “one- | troiter to be operated on a similar S rents cane sachin , ton British freighter Incharran, tion forces are »—they ing six battalions equipped with 2 bus F, Suedkamp and hi 1 basi rt i 1. Appl the replacement parts needed te nd i: ai : Ss are coming home—they = 1 i ; 2 x i? ~aSis, Starting June 1. pplica- ,eep all US litar shicles Seized Wednesday by guerrillas off simply become guest defend, the 2 mm. cannon which can > - man staff of social workers’’ were eep a . S. military vehicles A E ¢ guest defe rs un- 4 — - : ae air in tions for the new home have been rolling the Matsu Islands, was released der treaties with the Corentne. fire atomic shells, 4 a iy ) eerh dav : eports The . ; . . knee-deep gray ir te y ; arriving by the hundreds each day. The brain cost five milhon dol today. official re ports said. The lo- The same is true of British and Air Force strength in West Ger- > living for old folk in community “We're up to our knees in gray lars, but Brig. Gen. Paul M. Seleen al British consul. Alexander Her- French occupation troops many is primarily assigned to tac- $ MADE TO YOUR . ee hair,"” Father Suedkamp quipped. commander of the Detroit tank- Mann will protest the seizure ‘to American strength. which wil] tical duties and includes at least 2 ' Father Suedkamp and his young ‘The hotel will go a long way automative center, estimates the the Formosa provincial govern- | remain unchanged for the eceachl, two squadrons of Matador medium $ DR. H. BUSSEY EXACT PRESCRIPTION volunteer assistant, James Ls toward Detroit's problem of how electronic device will pay for it. Ment tomorrow, includes about 200,000 Army offi- range pilotiess bombers, $ Optometrist McCuish, described their project to care for the aged. But even self in six years. He said clerks ee cers and men and 70.000 Air Force ee 2 : Eyes Examined 4 of “campus residency” as the ouly the hotel can't replace such neigh- take a month to de what the All patents are dated as of people. West Virginia was created when |@ ee ; DR HAROLD BUSSEY ane of its kind in the world de- borhood projects as Kundig Center. machine will do in minutes Tuesday of the week in) which -_ * * its residents refused to secede $ Mow tovatee 1 eS eee . ‘ signed to keep eltierly persons who) “Our campus residency program: The brain will keep track of they are issued. regardless of Barring sharp changes in the in- from the Union and severed 3 = ese Teele OPTOMETRIST live alone on modest social secur- may be the answer for many everything the Arms buys. When whether Tuesday of that week 18 ternational situation, such a force themselves from Virginia during > FE 4-521) . ily checks & gally saree to Skid communities all over the country." it sees stocks falling on any of a holiday or not. is hikely. to » be maintained at least the Civil War €ca Pd Row, or to old-fashioned ‘*‘poor |; ——_—_—_____— ——______-— $$ es = ee Sg a I _ Ss DeSales farm.” “Old age has become as much | of a community problem = as youth,” Father Suedkamp stated = in an interview. q “Sometimes I think we 5s end | econ PRIETO TPR: MFPs cemecer & . MELE ~ et ss en : ene ae ee too much time developing recrea- tion and social programs for teen- agers while our old folk who can | no longer work just sit in their rocking chairs awaiting God's call to eternity.” For the last eight months, the Roman Catholic priest has super- vised an interdenominational pro- gram to make the “‘waiting years” as pleasant as possible. “Tt started last summer when an old. fellow named Johnny told me he couldn't sleep nights. be- cause of the hordes of bed bugs in the flophouse room where he was | staying,” Father Suedkamp said. | “I looked around in a pleasant old neighborhood to find a reom jor Johnny in a private home— | and then the idea hit me. i 1 “Jim McCuish and I had already | taken over an abandoned commun. | ity hall with the idea of setting | up a recreational program for old people—just the usual shuffleboard- and-checkers type of thing. We | called it Kundig Center, named in | hénor of Father Martin Kundig, a fine social worker of the past | century. “Why not, I thought, turn the | whole thing into a program of | community living?" j The campus residency program | was quick to catch on in Father Suedkamp's parish. Soon after it started, 25 men and women rang- ing from 62 to more than 80 years of age were living in rented rooms | in neighborhood homes and eating their meals at the center's com- | munity dining room. Food and rent are provided with $68 to §70 a month which the old folk turn ever to the center from their social security and other old age assistance checks, _The Detroit Diocese recently VALUES GALORE at PARK JEWELERS WATCHES : SMART NEW WRIST WATCHES For Him... Fer Mer CHOICE...NOW ONLY BULOVA BENRUS $ 95 GRUEN LONGINES e Ladies and Gentlemen— 24 We invite you to try anew Ze taste! for Him... for Her CHOICE OF BIRTHSTONE % ‘ ® Now wust ¢ : wry 14° Live taste! Mark that phrase well. It means what it says and it says a lot. te, ) Folks who know their beer will be interested in this “story behind the taste.” 41.95 \ L-i-v-e! The word implies something you like to think about capture the evanescent qualities of delicacy and aroma. Next he nent beer, A taste with vitality. A youthful taste that sets taste journeyed to the fertile slopes of the Yakima valley seeking an- ines buds tingling. improved strain of the famous Golding hop from Europe, Quelity This is the hop that contributes its buoyant character to the live taste of Goebel. In the gardens of California was brought to light a Pilsen-type hop, mild and cheerful as a morning in May, to complete the sprightly trio of hops that create the great, new live taste. Hops that bring flavor to life! Where does the Goebel live taste come from? From three sepa- rate sources located thousands of miles apart. The only places on the face of the earth that can produce the unique characteristics found in the three special strains of hops blended in Goebel. . After analyzing hops from all over the world, the Goebel Brew- master personally visited the Tettnang hop gardens of Bavaria. There is a difference in the beers today—and you'll find the differ- There he selected expensive, hand-tended, handpicked hops that ence in the /ive taste of Goebel. We invite you to try it today! Go for the new live taste - GO GOEBEL! | ree i iy { | |} and waxed in 50-!b sacks 4 00-4 §0: Beba- (earnings was $24,428,740 or $2.81 | Business Briefs DETROIT—Four promotions in the advertising and merchandising departments of Nash Motors were | ‘announced today by Fred W., 3621 Gregory Rd. Adams, director of advertising | FE 4-8594 and merchandising Appointed were R. loy, now sales promotion mana- | = = ger: Allen D. Gage, national ad- vertising supervisor, EF. B, Bro- BUILDING gan, local advertising supervisor, and John H. McGuckin, sales train- ing supervisor, ' . ‘ ‘ q 7 Fr ~~ y ¥ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY , MAY 6, 1955 a Lis la = | , Py e TODAY'S SESSMENT FOR: . ‘Ch ] S h - : J d Produce ’ [ . at Peak Level Psi in Robbery : | if if n DETROIT PRODUCE in ar y fd e NEW YORK . Two men were found Quilty < OW YORK w—Chrysler Co: ; i | ate ard - phy ces yore . ‘today reported record a5 ‘aaatien nage a espnererr peg | prices © 9. grade on e . ’ Pa, 3 e f. ‘ CHICAGO ® — A slightly farmers’ wnarket 0s reported by the) NEW YORK (® — The stock : i «| Sas. Station attendant trend “ed rai bureau of markets ; F earnings of $34,504,730 equal to $3.96 Dec. 3 py a Cireuit Court jury easier trend appeared in grains. pruits. Apples, Delicious, 4.00-4.§0 bu: | Market in early dealings today pre- eatevda on the Board of Trade today Sj Jonathon, 300-3.25 bu: McIntosh, 3.25-| sented a mixed price picture. a common share, compared with) ¥ a rl Gens So see : : sur {3.78 bu; Northern Spy. 3.30-3.50 bu; ; j : : a ‘harles Oxendine, ee met oe a a _— Steele's Red, 3 60-4 00 ante ied Changes ran from fractions low- | $7,681,053 or $8 cents a share in Graytield, Detroit, and Chester rain W & Ps > egetables., sparagus 5- o#. . ny 1 . : a 4 . : - one behs, Beets, topped, 1.25-1.78 bu.- Car- er to between 1 and 3 points high- | | the first three months of 1954. Shaw, 18. of 22684 Tulane;- Far« = Most other grains took their cue Hore = keg hersieeaen 3 uk os aia ——— | pene ae ee os ming, “i sentences my wheat, as they have done all pk. Leeks, 1.50-2.00 doz. bchs. Onions, helps . . | | $ g = | 16 by Judge George B. Hartrick, bee ria * ae - Gry. 1.00-1.25 50-ib. bag. Onions, green, Steels mixed, motors mixed, rub- , 009,000 in the three months ended | . g . this week: Losses in rye and feed | 65-85 doz bchs. Onions itet,. 2.38 | ors lower, farm implements un-| ‘June 30. 1933 Another man also accused in grains were very small, however, | 2.7 32-0. bas. Parsley, cuniy, i in | hanged to lower nitecatte heh oa the crime, Edward Gobin Jr., 18, Soybeans continued to act in a | bag. Potatoes, 590-550 100-lb. bag |* & ” ' ne a | Directors declared a dividend of 8627 Robindale, Dearborn, pre- oe ; if Radishes, red, .95-100 doz behs'|er, distillers steady, radio-televi- | ; ; perverse fashion. After showing | 7S lnce white. 90-100 dos. behs.| .; : aS of 75 cents on the common stock, | | Viously pleaded guilty and will be independen€ easiness yesterday, | Rhubarb, hothouse. 80-100 doz. behs | SIONS higher, utilities steady, cop- the sate ameunt paid in the | | sentenced May 23. The three are : they were independently steady Rhubarb. uoctdoor 63-90 dos. pens. | pers mostly higher, chemicals mix- st th t ee ‘held in Qakland County Jail, ac- tav ’ “ hreerers 25-150 bu. Turnip, topped, ed, electric equipments mixed. pa ree quar ere. p to that ire F ‘cael: "Pp . 2 rook today. Ged cet Baerel /UGAcC ao) bac apinacko) codiade ee ; time, it had nvaintained a $1.50 , cording to Assistant Srosecu Wheat near the end of the first areens: Barre 2 Bu: sh railroads higher, oils steady, air- lw E to I 1 to 1! le wer, M ‘ Suse a 225 1 ba ete PO lines higher, and motion pictures quarterly rate since December, | iliam 2ang. hour Was 4 to 2 lower, May | Musta 22 : DA ' . 1951 | ere 2 16: - : . Ye th we steady. ~ _— Apa sig pr iieaee d te . ae CHICAGO POTATOES i tacks wer The dividend will be payable ALBERT K. MITCHELL | The creation of cardinals rests +f. May $1.447s; oats a {0 ‘ CHICAGO, May 5 iAP:—Potatoes: Ar- Among higher stocks were Beth- J | solely with the Pope lower, May 72%: rye 44 to % rivals old stock’ 47, ‘new stock 10: on | lehem, Boeing. RCA, Zenith Radio, Ferre H to stockholders of record A New Mexico stockman, Albert ’ lower, May 9934; soybeans —un- Ue. smipeents 631 *O1a etonk cuppiies | Anaconda Copper, Sante Fe, and fapetd 16. K. Mitchell, has been elected - changed to 1's higher, May $2.53%8 | moderate. demand oy be and ier ket a |Pan American: World Airways | hs eee peapeigd sors seagete. president of the Internationsy Stack Free Chick Day , pon dull lot k a st In- | | 2 &.: 2.13 are . g = and ms 2 ey hundred nesota North Dakota” Ponticas washed| Lower were General Motors, seaman rm ors 7 * share the ae al ast a ae he ' : wer, Alay 2.67, and waxed $4 60-5 00 lew stock sup- | (7, =a } nears “ee ¥Y € Pe ‘e-year,; owns a arge Ca ranch a pounds 1o . | plies moderate, demand moderate and CcagyeRr, American Cyanamid. of 1954. ; Albert N M. /May, Tth . . | market about steady cartot track sales. | Westinghouse Electric, Bullard and ~~ Ai » aN. MM, Grain Prices j new stock. Plorida Round Reds washed | 74. Co | | Previous first quarter high for 25 Chicks Free with purchase of 25 Ibs. of Feed Bill's Feed Store James Mol- $500 James C. Stewart, vice presi-_ PER SQUARE FOOT dent in charge of the central di- vision for Hitchcock Publishing COMMERCIAL ) Company, Wheaton, Tll, has been i or transferred to Detroit. INDUSTRIAL Stewart has purchased a new . home in the Birmingham section . but will maintain headquarters at Andrew s. LaChpelle . Re “« Couze , » 1. G 1 se » Jame s Couzens Highway, De secnag a MI 4-7566 5 ro. nd pe DON’T MISS “NEW YORK CONFIDENTIAL” STARTING SUNDAY BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN THEATER CHICAGO GRAIN gor im $0-1b sacks, washed only. 370 Yesterday the stock market was OUR SPRING FLOWER GARDEN laishare un ike Fust (hire aac CHICAGO. May 6 ‘AP:—Open today: 4590010 toon cackel fair appearance somewhat higher for the second | YOUR SPRING FLOWER GARDEN—5 ‘ € e montns | Wheat Rye Boe . The Hyacinth of 1953. Chrysler's record quarter Mev... May ......05 98's UT" istraight session. The Associated y was in the summe onths of 1950 | July... JULY ....ee., 2103's | Pre se of 60 stocks was ‘up | A Spanish legend says that when the world was finished, so many See oma Bep cas. Sep 1 06 DETROIT EGGS Fess Average © OCKS Was" UP | following the outbreak of the Ko- Mee .ieeee Dee 1.00 DETROIT. May 5 ‘AP)—Kggs, fob | 60 cents at $163.80. | angels gathered on a rainbow that it broke into many pieces and fell to, | ean War wh rofits totaled $65 Soybeans sie - ~ : Nen profits totalec b),- Lae we Mas. 9b abla cases included, federal-state | ; earth. From these bits of rainbow came many beautiful-colored plants | 703.872 : . ae ya, grades 04d Mey : ey baad * "Whites Grade A jumbo 45-47 weighted | New York Stocks ‘and blossoms. ee ul vores 2 oe) eS es average 46 large 40-44 wtd ave 41'2 \ Bep . .ess Nov . 2331 | medium 36.30 © 5 : , Maybe the legend makers were thinking of the hyacinth. It comes: 4 redium 36-39 wtd avg J7, grade B large | (Late Mernia uotations) ~ = Deen cee are BS 1-38 wtd avg 37 | -* in white, pink, blue or purple. Originally from Asia and Africa, the | Oats May 17.68 Brown —Grade A jumbo 42-45 wid avg | Adams Ex 424 Jones & I 375 May seeeee ; te oe "1305 44. large 38'3-42 wid ave 40. medium Admiral ..... 273 Kelsey Hay w4) flower yas brought to Furope in the early 1500's. It is easily grown and | July . aly ' “ 34-16 wid ave TS! gra arge 35 | Air Reduce 117 Bénnecott ,, 1104 Bep Ber wee ‘ —1i | Allee 1 stl 4373 Kimb Clk $16 very popular in Holland. . . grade C large 3 | Alleg t 7 ” E = ory a : | otha Checks 28-32 wid ave 28's j Allied Strs .. 55 Kresge 58 aa The hyacinth, e ort : es Ju : - > > which also is raised in this country and Canada, | Commerctallvy graded . Ailis Chal | T32) Kroger sees 422 r€ yacin : Grade A extra large 38-41. Alum Lid... 90 LOP Glass. 72 prows from bulbs. Its cluster of small blossoms are on the top of a. Cif Underwriters rer 38-4) medium 38-38 Am vairiin 221272 Tip MeNAL.... 213, & | poof &) DETROIT (INS) — General Mo | Browns—Grade A extra large 3738 Am Can jas ligg'& My .. 682° slender stalk. The plant may be from six inches to a foot. and a half tors F hive large 17 medium 33. small 27. grade Bl am Cyan 82 Lockh Aire ,, 446 . . rs, Ford and Chrysler today all N N Offi large i's Am Cackel ang leew e 211 tall. It is grown in open beds, in hothouses and in the home and heeds | reported big jumps in sales. for | Market unsettled Supplies adequate (am MA&Pdy _. 192 Lone 8 Cem ., 602) |. ame ew icers Trading slow ee 172 Lorttiard .. |) 232, rich, damp soil yO . | the first quarter of 1955 over the Receipts heavy but @ large volume am N Gas .. 812 Mack Tr Be Dick often works after school and on Saturdays in his father’s flor- | same period last year Fifty members of the Pontiac , moving directly tnto storage and afford- am Rad spe Maren Pei 3 , “ 1A ion af) underlying strength to the! am gmelt 48 eerie e an ist shop. He is carrying a hyacinth out to a customer's car. GM President Harlow Curtice F | a We aS “Le Mu r | ; - ay t 7 Spupel ot Nationa eee - : market As Oe i) seea ce Tt Color the flowers carefully and in different colors so you will be) said his company*s sales through ‘nderwriters, elected new of- Am TelATei 5 i : Life Underwt : CHICAGO RUTTER AND EGGS Am Tob m4 Mid Con Pet 1984 abie to recognize a hyacinth when you see it | April were 142.5 per cent of the ficers at a breakfast at the W al- A 99 Mid Stl Pa ‘74 ie CHICAGO May @ :AP) Butter steady | Am Zine 226 Monsan Ch | 112 Tomorrow. A flower for Mother's Day. total for the corresponding period dren Hotel yesterday. receipts 1 $67 027 wholesale buying sar OP 626 Mont Ward a5) oe = ee 1954. A sales . 22 na Seer: f State Farm Prices unchanged to 1, higher 93 score) ADsc WH C.. S8% Motor Pd... 21 — |} in 195 pril sales were 132.6 per Harvey Perry, of State ; AA S875 02 A S675 90 B S45. Be Cc ATmeo . ca ig? Motorola 835 | : cent of last year’s figure tual urance, was elected 53 cars 90 B 5S R98 C S35 rmow ° 1570 Mueller Br 334 : Mutual Insurance: a a ee ee ny we ao Gwe ee Pe Mercury Reports Sales | . , President. Other officers: first vice | aie buying prices unchanged US large Atchison a4s Nat Bis ay | . | Curtice said “this could weil president. Ben Shaw of Life In- | whites 70 per semana overs s 35 60 at ° ee 3 5 Net te a x = d : ! Set Record for April he the biggest passenger car year 69% per t As 38 mixed 35 mediums cee gir , anti i : surance Company of Virginia: sec- 325 Pe © n Tee ine Meoceny 31. Atlas Pa $94 Nat Grps 472 ae es kk Aarne DETROIT uF Fords Mec in the history of the automotive large checks 30. current receipts 32 Avco Mfg 7S Nat Lead ea) ge No. 21, , Friday, aS —rord $-1 cur induatry.”* ond vice president, Olin LaBarge. | ¢ . (Bald Lis 172 Nat Stee! 694 g | - sme ¥- ‘onfederé seh Life: thi as vice pres Ben & (On 45 § Net Thee 1; | April 6 Lodge opens at 7:30 p.m. Division reported téday sales of | Confederat * P It Beech Nut 116 NY Air Bre 253! Irwin W. Mills, W.M —Adv Mert — Ford reported its sales through ident, David H. Speer, ecu ou ry ; i 51. NY Cent 403 z ; new Mercury cars in April set an April of this year were 2 per a res —_ John | : | 14 Nia M Pw 4 ‘ oe ae “ National Life: treasurer ont DETROIT POULTRY 113 Nor! & West 58 ews in re all-time monthly record of 36.305) cent over the same period m 194 Stewart Life Insurance Company RAT ROH Mar $ tAP. eae paid we Ne sn AY id Montclair, Monterey and Custom and higher than in any vear since = per pound fob elroit for fa) quali! Mi od Nor x wy ~ A = i ei of Virginia fap Saaiee wo foe oc ara 66 Ner Sta Pe KS Thomas Mina, owner of a gro- models 1994 " “Ff fect nar F v F « 79-31 let wr 1 ° r Ware se ’ F fi 79 * eral ap SRR * pee e 7 %, . All officers we e elected nan att eoy hens 29-31 he! one 9 Biel ° &e wer se bee ES in aie ry store at S&8 Franklin Rd The “pres jus, high momh for Chrysler sales were expressed in mously > and will assume thelr 39°59 gray crosses 31/532, Barred Rocks | Brist) My 441 Olver Cp isa reported to Pontiac Police today M M — terms of net earnings equal to dol- : cente e ‘cording to; 372.73 Budd Co 24 © s ml Gl F "g F ns D i ‘ Mercury was Mare j ” duties in September secon " al aaa stead Overall trading mod- Burrougt 4 284 Pan A fs A r ue that’ vandals smashed his rear oe = ay arch of “this: year lars and cents per share of com- D. H. Pritt of Lineoln National gare ana ipplies In general ace ade- Calum & H 135 panh EPL .. a2 Store windows with a rock last|/ when 35.588 Mercurys were sold. mon stock. The company's first Life, chapter information chair uote | Bes) Jstcren) wae for) ened anal: compe? ie? Param = ee night. Joseph E. Bayne, general sales, quarter earnings were equal to frye over Y!y it thes offerings Cdn Pax »1 Sine eda s 2 an nee man ; ra over J’, Ibe with these o : ; Penney JC 914 - are . manager_ sa ales : . fret | 33-96 a share, contrasted with in “Everybody's Business” a film feadily cleared pieced 7 i = Pa RR 21 Eeores Police today re serine anager, Said sa es for he first come equal to cents « share for on free enterprise, was shown to CHICAGO POULTRY | Case JT 166 ere ie A the arrest of Ezra C. Bogart, 62, four months of 1955 were 25 per | January, February and March ; linge Cater Tra a6 balay »4 Of 3)8 Pridham, Keego Harbor, ,,, ‘ = mie . members by John Hirlinger, CHICAGO May 3 'AP)--Live poultry | Gai! ay Phikee 404 ee : cent higher than in the same pe- 195 eal f the (Chamber of Com: ; tieett on neos, barely siesdy No weak Coe PS og . Philip Mor 417 last night at S. Cass and Orchard ping re year : | Tesic 1 O17 | bl en ung stork receipts im coopa 108 = zi ss . ’ Phil Pet 73 , 2 : . ss _— ~ ; 01} Cert -te90d 63 ; Lake Ave. and charged him: with — ite d $H4>;00ps $1207 Ib! fob a tlishy Mulls 1354 . » $< erce yer eres eee Che or 76 2 m —_ | paving prices nehenged heavy hens hi & ole 1a] Pit Plate G 786 drunk driving. Troy PTA Da “ SI t d Pontiac Woman Winner = ? light hena 1 protlers cig ee Pulimar $8 nc ate 1 Chrevsie Ra 2 ; frvers 29-11 r ter 125 1 a a'r ‘ = z * rand Trunk s mee old roosters 12 capon Cittes Ba o Sl ou ‘ ie Julian P, McCoy, 39, of 136 N. TROY WN Mrs. Mark Cheney, 51 Dwight i : ae ‘ L ie _ op ——————— CHmas Me 19 Radio Cp 464 Johnson Ave, charged with utter- | No. 2 2 ee The Troy | St.. has been awarded a Westing- E lo es Plan | Li k Cele Cols se “os en as ing and publishing a $79 check 0, 2 School PTA is sponsoring a) house electric dryer in the recent | Cox Col eet Pe | epu St 4 , , 4s or) mp y ivestoc Cole Pala 2 RL ORevn Met 162 waived examination yesterday- be. | Suare dance, to be held Saturday contest sponsored for “all” deter- . al ax ev Te 56 | ev . - a = C dit Union | DETROIT LIVESTOCK pele na) 168 Rev ee See fore Municipal Judge Cecil Mc- | VEnné in the multi-purpose room| gent by Monsanto Chemical Co., DETROIT. Mav §& ‘AP:-- Hogs, Sa! “or << Safewas St 452 t o | re company announced foday. Tre ‘ROIT a is ' Gonicn Be aa] Rilewa 1 2 Callum and was bound over for of the Troy Union Sc hool. th pan toda pie = able 100 Not enough sold early to make’ Conpw Pr 45 108 St Jos Lead 461 < Grand Trunk Railroad employes & market, undertone lower ConPe pr 45 a. s ae pe aog day. He is being held under $2,000 | of Pontiac have rece ed approval Cattle Salable 200 Market opening | Cont Rak 420 Scovill ME 16 bond in the Oakland County Jail. é = _ rR 2 , Moatly steady todas Compared last | Cont Can TT Seah Al RR 34 ® from the Michigan State Ranking hursday fairly dependable demand ail Cont Mot ... 12 gs, Roeb .. R17 = Commission on their proposed in e good clearance good and cholere >) Cont Onl ; Tk 4 sg a ‘e &) ‘ Rummage sale, Sat. May 7th. ' tee fed steers and heifers steady ta weak. Copper Rng ee 42) League of Catholic Women's Home, charter for a credit umn, lower grades fully steady cowa active | Corn Pd 895 ginciair O 543 9 to 12 —Adv . strong bulls unevenivy weak to spots $0 Cruc &St 411 Sen Pac #17 g The new union will serve | cents tower stackers and feeders steady. | Curtiss W 294 go Rs 923 neal . dT k emploves living in bulk high good and choice fed steers, Dic C Seag 325 spnatk: W 46 Neighborhood rummage, 19 Le- IN BEAUTIFUL CLARKSTON VILLAS Gran run M pro’ 23.00-25 06 sbout three loads $0-1193 | Doug Atr 6 2 653 Grande, Fri, May 6,7 p.m. Adv Pontiac, according to Warry = jp 2525 and four head 1125 Io 50. Dow Chen S71 tg Brand 19 4 , , a , = , a minst good fed steers mainivy 19 00 Dp Pon! 190 2 4, : é 727 = Woodman, GM Truck and Coach a Pie a mirietcial ctecce 1460 pe i gy td O cal a Rummage sale, Sat. in garage, Federal Credit Union Manager, (1800. good and cn fed heifers 1800-/ East Air L a 8 A es iN 114g 23 Pine St —Adv ae y ane mmerc ia heifers |) Fast Kod e122 ae : S ; T° . ty and jew com Fil Au I 422 Std Oil Oh 47 . Garland Hales, Grand Trunk Pe 14.00. high commercial * Stevens IP 253 Rummage sale Mav 7, 9 a. m 5 ommercial, El & Mus In 4 : aps ' ” emplove will represent the com- cannmers and cutters) Emer Rad 144 Sone rer a A First Presbyterian Church. —Adv . t ; “ ; ld ? 50 bulk atility and | Frie RR 245 sud cx ae pany and work with Rea be ommercial pulls 1380-1600 most good | Fx-Cell-o Me eed at If your friend's in jail and needs organizing the union rc en Gebedies (cumin and) medium | Firrcone Ge Berne 931 bail, Ph. FE 5-9424 or MA 5-4031 . s 2060-23 0 immon ad dium trestone ; was Ce * known as the Railroad Employes }'59 a aA ae eee eee See wal aa a2 Tex G Sul ba — Adv. Credit Umion of Pontiac Calves- Salable 50 global ene rr a Bee de fea 554 Rummage sale, 98 W. Huron, SEE MODEL THIS WEEKEND . - . steady tod Compared iast \ursday yen ak von 297 . . The Union membe Sega MH! | Clete (alslp Bitive mosliy steaey. mioat| Gen Fiec syq Tran W Air ij, Saturday, 9 a. m. Sylvan Shores elect men to the board of directors sales bien choice and prime 2600-3000 Gen Motors . 875 Twen: C Fox 282 Women’s Club — Adv. 9 } wsevelt latter price sparingly, most good to Gen Fv Sig 434 Undered 322 Sunday, 2 pm, iA | he. Re choice 1900-2600. utinty and ecommer- | al Refrac 1210 tn Carbide 902 Rummage sale, May 7, Sat.. 9 a. Hotel ballroom. Following the | ciail 1200-1800; culls down to @¢ [eee te aps Un Pac 172 om to 1 pm. Chapman Hotel . * electic \ . vher Sheep—Salable 25 “Todays market) Of cire - 567 Unit Air Lin. 413 : _ / . directors’ election by the member- | hurmal Compated jest ‘Thursday re: | Gillens “oo wig Unit Aire 06 4S. Saginaw —Adv. ship, the board in turn will elect cetpts mainly shorn siaughter lambs de. | °° Bae nee: 5 = mand spotty and undependable at times toed rich aS 1 885 company officers, to serve One Wetket slow, steady to weak, sheep | Goodyear ‘ete te ’ vear. scarce. steady deck good and choice fall | Aono ee. pee Us ae ‘ re an | ates ‘The membership will name ‘Pom Tembs 22:00. soout two leeds io = Gt West B 26 US $12 n . mostly ¢hotce 86-105* lb shorn lambs sy ay samen : - . = - i € t 5 s &m f 61 credit and audit committees to the number t pits 2106, most sees, ered | Quito Get Ug aren! 83 ; A . and choire chorn lambs t t ‘ — . > - a : : Pe > Railroad Credit Union. 12 pelts 1800-2050. popular price 2900, Haves Mf. iS US Steel pt ..16 Or onor ocie y — } for number 1 pelted lots. utility to good | eo as Ue sea oe y ; shorn lambs 1400-1700. scattering cull! Hooker Fl 182 Wailer 5a : ROCHESTE : shat 2 ; 16 2 green 6 4 SSTER—Thirteen Roches- GMC Trucks to Boast to choice shorn ewes 27 50-8 50 Houd Her |... 127 Warn B Pic 191 ter High Sche iL rludents | ~ ; . s ecrork j 1 Cent 657 W Va Puip 442 a choot students have been . CHICAGO LIVESTOC ndust Ray.,, 544 West Un Tel 1912) named candidates for the National | Revolutionary Seats Soon iodiss 2B S44 WwW 1 O12 ng r the } CHICAGO May 6 ‘AP: —Salable hogs | Inland 811 26 Westg A Bk . 26 . . = 9000. market fairly active. steady to 23, Inspir Cop .. 476 Westg Fl _ 16 Honor Society GMC Truck & Coach Division jower. mostly steady to weak on all) Interlak Ir 236 White Mot_ 82. The group was selected on the ll be the first truck manufacturer hogs. mostly chotce 190-240 Th butchers | Int Hary 71 Wilson & Co it 2 xe ge wi e the fr ruc! 17 Oo-17 75, largely 1750 and above on | Iee — ree a eda Bir ys asis of scholarshi 1p. le adership, | 1 : my yr ON 5 7 w dot t Der q foolworth 47! to market a_ revolutionary new ao _— ee a = ie cones So alge ee ota pafarata ee aw pil character and citizenship. truck seat that uses torsional 4.1," 250-280 tb 1650-1700. 290- = Ib | . a Coal ae bie! * T a Selected were David Arscott ees rotec ‘ers | 15 75-1680, a few loads 330-360 Ib 15 00- q fenith Rad 12 : nn : aree Dally | ae ad jolts . Pe nonne o Isis a few lots up to 375 Ib down to| Johns Man. 86. Bonnie Axford, Ed Batchelor, Polly | “om road joits, it was announcec 1450. most sows 456 Ib and lighter 13 25 | oP ovnds ar : . from Z ee ‘ il law slog Goes ecouns , ba Naser STOCK LATER AGKA Bolinger, Lynda Larson, . George today by R. C. —— general enter to 1800 and 1825: larger lots) NEW. YORK. May mpiied by, Lindquist, Judy Lutz, Moria Male- truck sales manager of GMC. 480-400 8 1200-1350; good cirarance,, | The Atociated Press || 4, don, Joan Mason, Marlene Michel- The new GMC "Bostcor seat siaughter steers and heifers very scarce Indust. Rails Utti, Btocks son, Ellen Purdy, Gwen Rathke, x ree : r. nominally steady cows opened weak ta | Net chance 5 4 2 4 — in greatly reduces driver fatigue by 28 | lower: later trade and general market | Noon. todar.....2206 1348 724 1642 &Nd Linda Tenniswood, protecting the driver from 60 per -1§ off. with some being held for the Previous dag_...2201 1344° 722 1638 _ __ _ . - = seis Monday. bulls 28-50 lower, veal- | Week ago .....1113- 1389 723 1848 re | mr Ss n S$ ge) 4 cent of the predominant road) eri" Steady. a small jot high choice fed Month ago.....2101 1308 711 1818 Clarkston ‘Cadet Gets y * vibrations and shocks, Woodhouse vearling steers 2400, a few good fed | Year ago...,,..1677 912 897 1236 . steers 1900-2100: a package of low com- | 1955 high.......2249 1378 T28 1668 said. ‘| mercia! Holstein steers 16 30: a few peed | 1068 low ....-..9811 1168 67.2 1488 Promotion to Major ; F: Cr strib- | @nd_choice heifers and mixed y gs 1054 igh eo. 2119 1230 683 1552 Marketing plans call for distrib- | tq S100 utility and commercial cows | ips$ low. 1439 778 554 1089 CLARKSTON—Robert S. Rose of uting the seats as GMC dealer 1125-1450, canners and cutters el us ‘i : we ; oy BE Ns | | r . were , 12.00: utility and commercial bulls 13 50- | PETROIT STOCKS arkston has POT romoted to) accessories, Woodhouse said. They | 1395: 9 few good heavy fat bulls 1225 srbedald pi oe ce a te Hote Dues may he obtained for most of | bulk good and choice vealers 23 eat - Pigures after decimal points are eighths “@Get Major in e Hobar ol ene GMC's 1955 “Blue Chip" models. | 2200” bute of the stocker and feeder | paiawin R High Low Noon Air Force ROTC at Geneva. N. Y. is = = y a ubber i 7 172 ; oe et super macendee for the market early | Gerity-Michigan® ae ee “3 rea A kine at Hobart, aa oo | Kingston Producte* ,. 36 42 member of the Hobart Band, the ait . Gerity Corp. Turns U ee ee os cutter a eo | Mame Gere. a... $9 22 33,6 ee ; p. J ter Pepe atteres ie tess market, se | Midwest Abrasives... a gg Schola Cantorum, and Sigma Phi * * . sma cus © choice shorn ewes & Rudy s° . 323 4 : te i y 3 , s the : of Mr. First Profit in 19 Months | at 425-6 00 easily Leo 13g: «fraternity. He is the son of Mr *No/sale, bid and asked Arthur L. Rose, Rt. 1, Clarkston. ADRIAN (® — Gerity-Michigan | — — ee Corp. turned in a_ profit last) “A. month for the -first time in 19 months, it was reported by James Gerity Jr., president and board D chairman. er on Improvement in production effi- ciency and price increases on au- ’ S . tomotive parts led to the upturn, | ts pring and. a Full aids Only $]] wiele) sg ; ; | r Gerity said. He reported sales in| Y L d ; f i bathroom accessory lines, the new oung aaqy s ancy Gerity “attach - it - yourself’ dish- * ~ os ¢ . F ’ eae oe Oe cael turns to Cadillacs. I’m | ing machines also- were res i- awd a | ble for increased profits " checki ith Dick | Outstanding Features “Long term profits prospects are cnecking wi ic 3 - | encouraging.” he. added. ; Moore at Jerome @ Brick Front @ Cedar Shakes @ Aluminum Sliding Dividend Is Declared Windows @ Choice of 4 Front Designs @ Extra Large iviaend Is Motor Sales Lots (Smallest 100x150) @ Large Double Sliding Door NEW YORK w — Standard Oil Closets @ Knotty Pine Kitchen Cabinets @ Tile Bath Co. (New Jersey) today declared 1 Room @Birch Doors @ Oil Heat @ Bathroom Vanity a eash dividend of $1.25 a, share? payable June 11 to stockholders E of record, May 16, the same ae amount as in the previous dividend | _ ce. this year, ‘bringing the first haif rts total to $2.50 compared with $2.15 . for the first half of 1954. : Z NO MONEY DOWN «.<.. LOTS LEFT SUBDIVISION TO » ~ 3 Bedroom Home with 11/2 Baths MODEL OPEN DAILY 1 to 8 P. M. Saturday and Sunday 9 to 9 / M-15 CLARKSTON us [orion RD. MODEL * a SASHABAW = = = + r) Phone PONTIAC MA 55701 (MAPLE) ORION & For the Ultimate in Suburban Living Come Out to the Beautiful and Dignitied V DIRECTIONS: 1. Dixie Highway (US-10) to M-15—Turn Right Clarkston ‘ts ‘Oren net (Standard Setiento Torn : to Model. ‘ , 2 Out Oakland abet ie a Clarkston Rapd then turn left te : JOSEFINA PHODACA - Philippine Team Member Speaks. United Church Women Hear Josefina Phodaca on May Fellowship Day Speaking at the May Fellow- ship Luncheon at the Central Meth- odist Church tomorrow at 12:30, will be Josefina Phodaca of Man- ila, Philippine Islands, Miss Phoedaca, an attorney, has been on a trip around the wortd as a member of the In- ternational Geodwill Team, vis- iting Christian women in Ha- all, the Figi Islands, Australia, ‘Indonesia, India, Pakistan, Afri- ca, the Near East and Europe. The Team was sponsored by the United Church Women. In past years, church women have devoted May Fellowship Day to cooperative planning and action on such community concerns as race relations, slum clearante and economic problems but this year emphasis is placed on the Respon- | sible Christian Family. The group believes that com- munities and nations will be strengthened when Christian fam- ilies accept their moral and ethical responsibilities in their own homes and in all areas of live. Miss Phedaca will speak on “Families of Nations.” May Fellowship committee chair- men working with Mrs. George Garver, are: publicity, Mrs. Har- old Wright; tickets, Mrs. Aden Thornton; hospitality, Mrs. F. G.' Latimer; programs, Mrs. Car! Nel- | som; decorations, Mrs, Bruce Hub- | bard and registration, Mrs. T. War- ren Fowler Sr. Film Writer Narrows 6 Names Down to 2 LOS ANGELES ™® — Superior | Court has approved the petition | of a_scteen writer to reduce the | total of his names from six to two. | - Frank Stanley Gilman Borden Chase Fowler obtained permission | yesterday to narrow his name) down to Borden Chase. He ex-| plained: “IT was named after a flock of | rich relatives but it didn't take. I never inherited a thing. So I picked the name Borden Chase out of the lot for a pen name. I used the Borden on account of the milk and the Chase because of the bank."’ About 27 million cars and trucks in the U. S. are now equipped with radio receiving sets. with a Bell ¢ Howell MONTEREY Smm MOVIE PROJECTOR NEW Sine $20! LOW $7995 PRICE Wes $99.95 pear’ aoe lem of yor Me... are yours to relive again a again.,.in home sone. See+ them at their best—brilliant and sharp—with a Bell & Howell So easy to use, can put on his own even a , | fety Peyments~ Libero! Trode-tn LIFETIME GUARANTES ‘Elbe Veterans | American Veterans of | Meeting, got funds for round-trip _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, | tickets to Paris through an appeal ‘on a television program. The Rus- will take them Winging Way from Paris to Moscow and back to Meet Soviets oe sian government é The reunion is set for May 9 NEW YORK « — Nine Army although the actual anniversary of veterans were winging across the the river meeting was April 2 ‘Atlantic today on the first leg of 1345 . - 7 Before their plane took off last a flight to Moscow and a reunion night, one of the group, William with Russian soldiers they met at Weisel of Cincinnati, said We the Elbe River just before Ger- are hoping to plant a little seed of brotherhood. We know we won't stop the cold war overnight but we hope that this trip will contrib ute a little bit toward ending it.” many surrendered 10 years ago. The group, calling itself the the Elbe Sea Yields Remains of Two Jap Ships TOKYO @® - have vie Ided_ the Japanese diappeared a men The oil-covered bodies of nine crewmen of a missing Japanese re search ship were found adrift yves- terday. Life jackets identified them with the 15-ton fishery research ship Hatsushio Maru. It had been since it radined May 1 that Aleutian waters remains of two vessels which with 45 Missing week ago missing . MAY 6, 1955 it was running aground at Agattu. Island. Other Japanese fishing boats re- | ported finding debris from the fish- ing craft Hoko Maru with 21 aboard, last heard from April 30 when it radioed it was in trouble in Aleutian waters The Coast Guard said if was “‘presumed lost with all aboard’ Tours is: consid decisive battles it saved The Battle of ered one of the of the world bec Christian civilization in Furope from being overwhelmed by Moslems aAUS®e western Boy, 5, Hangs Self | Louise Tidwell saw her schel, 5 the back porch, was dead. He tangled in the hanged. Tito Talks With Turk Turkish Premier Adnan Menderes on a problems vesterday with President Matfshal LOUISVILLE, Ky. WF — Mrs. | son Her. playing With a rope on Moments later he apparently became rope, fell and was BELGRADE, Yugoslavia WW — state visit, discussed world Tito, WORRIED OVER DEBTS? i! you are anable te pay your payments, debts or bilis when dee, fh see MICHIGAN CREDIT OOUNSELLORS and arrange for payments you can afford, regardiess ef how much or how many you ewe, NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ONE PLACE TO PAY — BONDED AND INSURED “Let 9 years of credit counselling experience assist tal Hours: Daily 9 to 5. Wed. & Sat. 9 to 1. Evenings by App MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 4142 South Saginaw St Above Oakland Theater ‘Phone FE 8-0456 ROEBUCK AND CO. | @ because these fashions come in a gleaming blend of orlon* and cotton Festive dresses with o free-and-easy outlook Weor them without fear of wrinkling! Wash them as easily as you would a hankie! Choose from a trio of crinoline-billowed styles, with three-quorter sleeves, short sleeves or no sleeves at oll. Misses’, juniors’ ond half sizes. sale! _ summer hats ee ere reduced! 1 i ] One of our most flattering hats ...in pretty summer styles. Choice straws and loths in many colors... *&. some two-tones -— all sale fe, Priced at Sears now! t @ A. Scoop neck ond high-rise waist. Blue, groy or brown. 12 to 20 @ B. tong forse style with bock interest. Gray or black. 7 to 15 @ C. Wide collar with white chiffon frosting. Bive, groy or brown. 14° te 22". “*DuPont’s ecrylie Nber AN 7.3 = “@ ul ne for ‘Mother’ s Day” stoles von 398 o~ Other Stoles to .....0.55: 4 re “s & 4-4 x. PS summer gloves ay “> many styles in white nylon mesh for Mother. Others see te sm _decessories = pretty white stoles in assorted a? styles — a lovely accessory for her spring and summer wear! 4.98 | ae’ MOTH Ks DAY lie Kerrybrooke Handbags JM. FAX © : * & a we ovtae? $ na oot, for Mother TT TO | fi, en plostic eee 98 For Mom a sell, assorted colors, too! Styles she'd choose for her- i ~ rs plas Fed. tax Assorted styles and colors § Mother will love; priced low Other Handbags to..... 7.98 oo you monty bach” SEARS, 154 N. Miracle Blend L Baby Cord Dresses | won 398 Completely washable and crense-resis‘ant ... these fashion finds are styled in the expensive blend of cotton, rayon and chromespun acetate usually { d iresses that cost dollars more. Choice of 19 grey apdan in sizes ié- please mom with a beautiful | gift box of "COUNTRY INN gift chocolates 1”? Delightful assortment of more than 20 different exciting flavors. Extra thick with rich dark or sweet milk choc olate. It's a variety to please everyone. 2-Lb. Candy Dept.—Main Floor Box of Chocolates One Pound Assorted Package 98¢ delicious as- caramels, chewy _ For Mom Peggy Kelloga's sortment of creas nougats,. crisp and pieges. Milk, dark coating. SOLD Omar By , \ S#aeQS, ROFSUCK AND CO 2 vr redperes now—et Sears “CHARGE IT PLEASE” 3 REVOLVING bm ARGE accov esk eny sales- J eae: : L _ Eslimates given at no chergel. 4 > Get ee Dainty Miniatures Famous Country Inn Chocolates. Chiccleks Cherries Delicious Chocolate Coating Reg. 69¢ 2 Lbs. $] Reg. 1.75 1 A 0 t-Lb. You'll want to sing when you A variety of more than 20 faste these luscious whole flavors. Tiny pieces thickly ‘maraschino cherries floating in vanilla cream. Saginaw St. covered with pure rich dark an milk ‘chocolate. For Mom, Phone FE 5-4171. 4 3 oe . | i ae i = y x 7 ) : ? ’ eae 7 ‘ \ ‘ ‘ ' é f yf . ‘ { “ . ' \ M4 2 \. I ‘ Rae ane : ‘ : ie J ea : 5 \ ‘ ‘ | { fg 8 ges ‘ “a ; Z : 3 ; Vay j ae \ : , | ee = Jae ‘ ea wee Af ee a 4 ‘ gy s i 1 i \ 4 Pet See gee 4+ ij re | ea, “ * E ‘\ a Ao we \ é