The Weather } U. 8. Weather Bureaw Forecast Thundershowers (Details on Page 2) 117th YEAR xkxkKenk IGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1959 —68 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL 7 PONTIAC, MICH \ «< Everything Is Blossoming * 4 ‘ 6 a g % :. oe WYN ~ A ee | _ > OW a: ho A Tce - i, | - 4 f < ™ © 0 Sa< Pontiac Press Photo ground. Blending perfectly with the blossoms of a cherry tree in ber neighborhood is Margaret Murphy, 18, of 566 E. Madison St. ~ 27,000 State Workers A PEACH IN THE CHERAY TREE — Almost as if it octurred over night, leaves and blossoms have popped out on our trees and flowers have begun to show their pretty heads through the LANSING, Mich. ‘AP)—A pay-; check from his $22,500 annual (ers, got their paychecks on sched day without the pay came due salary Was held back. ule. They are paid from eag. today for nearly 27,000 Michigan) The others included ‘thousands state-employed workers. of workers at prisons, mental hos- Michigan's cash crisis was pitals, state teachers colleges, and blame. Istate offices. * * { ’*~ * Only a wholly unexpected solu-| Tact week a payless tion from the Legislature and Gov. : to ments * * *® payday, the first in the crisis, affected 325 ; G. Mennen Williams before the : } oa ' ” eal : close of the state's business day eT came at the tate gan’s cash emergency. ; could assure that a five-million-| 7, 4+ was a $100,000 payroll The emergency arose from de- dollar payroll would be met 7,100 GET PAID pletion of the state's general fund and a deadlock between Among those faced with the | Approximately 7,700 other state) *#8e was Williams (employes, including more than Williams, a Democrat, and the Republican - controlled Legisla- ture. Each group has blamed the other for the crisis. Steel Unionist: Win Demands a. & * ; -. Murray, a onetime official in marked funds of their own depart- Included was one smal! employe group of the 50-milliomdoilar vet- erans trust fund, itself involved in the fight for a solution to Michi- = ‘We'll Strike to Confident of Victory; Says Public, Industry Underestimate Effort | NEW YORK (AP) — | The Steelworkers Union today charged the steel | | industry with violating the = | antitrust laws and labor relation laws and asked the government to inves- tigate. NEW YORK (?—John F. |Murray, Pittsburgh Steel- |workers Union official, said today the union “is eventu- ally going to win its de- ‘mands even if we have to | Strike to do it.” | Murray, director of the ‘union's Dist. 16, and a icousin of the union’s late |President Philip Murray, ‘said the public and indus- try are underestimating the HERE'S DRAWING descriptions given by people whe News Flashes WASHINGTON W — Assign- ment of Lt. Gen. Emmett O'Don- nell to be commander in chief of the Pacific air forces was an- unions solidarity and de- nounced today by the White : : a . House. termination to gain a SiZ- President Eisenhower also able wage boost, and other nominated O*Bonnell — now Air 'concessions. Force deputy chief of staff for aa ; personnel—for promotion to the | Murray’s comments were made rank of full general. The nomina- to reporters as he headed a union tion is subject to Senate confir- bargaining team back into talks! mation. S&L t Steel Cor --- ; an Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp wimmtavoN We tae Re | The J&L talks had broken up than F. Twining, chairman of | Wednesday on their opening day the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is in ever a union demand that J&L Walter Reed Hospital for a series put all its plants and subsidiaries | of medical tesfs. under commen contract terms. = : Murray said there are too many Mother's Day Cards OK varying J&L contracts now. The} a ‘ J&L industrial relations vice presi- From Prisoners to Wives ident «Gegree sanid the cont. pany see separate .. : ieee * : is Pris ates hi a few contracts to fit loeal situations. |Sin& Prison —— | privileges for Mother's Day x * * | Warden .Wilfred L. Denno an- The J&L talks resumed this nounced yesterday that Prisonegss a cice ‘ Go Without Pay Today 2%: ur. morning with this problem their wives if they have children. In discussion later. cards only to their mothers. the United Mineworkers Union ' who helped organize the Steel- workers Union, emphasized that AND PHOTO — is the police sketch of a. slaying suspect from with Parvin (Bill) Lassiter, Royal Oak car > Sketch Leads to Arrest dealer, who was slain near the Willow Run Air- port April 6. At right is Charles W. Nash who was arrested in Chattanooga, Tenn. Tuesday night as one of three suspects in the slaying. At left » had seen him With 9 Emmy Awards FA 3rd Man Sought as Two Are Held - in Chattanooga Car Dealer’s Slaying Said for Money; Link fo Kierdorf Ruled Out By GEORGE T. TRUMSULL JR. Police in Chattanooga, Tenn., today were holding two ex-convicts and looking for a third man en route there from Detroit for the robbery - slaying of Royal Oak car dealer Parvin (Bill) Lassiter a month ago. Instrumental in bringing the month-long investiga- tion to a head was the ar- rival last Sunday in Chat- tanooga of Michigan State ‘Police Detectives Charles Pair Arrested for Murder of Lassiter iM. Leaf. of the Pontiac Fred Astaire Dances Off | Post and Calvin A. Lepien iof the Redford Post. Leaf and Lepien carried with ‘them a drawing of the man who . |mgt Lassiter April 6 at the Wil- By JAMES BACON |low Run Airport. Chattanoogy de- AP Movie-TV Writer tectives immediately identified the HOLLYWOOD — Fred Astaire and his first. big show] sketch as Charles W. Nash. #2, for television danced nimbly away Wednesday night two years ago after serving 10 with every Emmy within reach. . + |years for murder. “An Evening With Fred Astaire” had been nominated; Leaf, in Chattanooga, told The for nine Emmys—and won them all. | Peston Fosse ty fetyhene Gis OSSINING, SCY. (UPI) — Sing Fame, Playhouse 90 and the Alcoa-| un-|may send Mother's Day cards to previous years inmates could send year-old Astaire, who climbed to | Preview of Lansing Centennial | But television's oldtimers took their share of the 42] ines warty. te la awards—among them Jack* | ing q party to Lassiter’s mur- der and implicated friend and e » Lore -Young, cept the TV Academy's Emmys | fellow ex-convict, Richard Jones, iam = = ©) that for the last award—for the | 27, as the murderer. Dinah Shore, Perry COMO’ outstanding program of the year | * * * and Edward R. Murrow. | —there was no one om stage t© | jo.0. who Chatt , | | . anooga police | Julie Harris, originally from De-| ™#&e the presentation. ‘describe as a “notorious” safe troit, the gentle heroine of “Little| Actor Robert Young hurried Moon of Alban,’’ was selected for down the aisle of the Moulin Rouge cracker, was arrested last night \while attempting a burglary in ithe best single performance by @nj night club to give the Golden Stat-| Chattanooga, Leaf said. He refused actress juette to Astaire. * * * | “Ie Omnibus, the Hallmark Hall oft gaia to talk about the Lassiter killing: s a big night for dear old) ‘PLOTTER’ SOUGHT Astaire breathlessly toll @) "4 third man, R. C. Hicks, 36, was being sought between Detroit ' Goodyear theater were winners) among the big programs. Among | Picture on Page 2 TV's gunslinger adventures the) “ was Maverick. Review on Page 67 But the night's star was the 60- | __ ' the stage so many times to ac- 'NBC-TV. | * * ®* | the union is determined to win its demands even if it takes a strike to do it. Both the industry and union have been trying to play down the possibility of a strike in talking |with reporters during the prelim- inary steel bargaining involving a| dozen sets of union negotiations! Saturday. The capital city,, which with that many industry producers.’ this year, is sendjng a caravan of 25 new Oldsmobiles’ and 400 bearded ambassadors here. |NEGOTILATIONS TENSE As negotiations entered their o— llth Annual TV Emmy Awards Caravan Due Here Saturday sm xen = = single pro- best special musical or ‘Lansing will give Pontiac a taste of centennial fun) variety show, ene hour long: best | single performance by an actor; is observing its centennial) best direction of a single musical or variety program; best writing of a single musical or variety program; best live camera work; best art director; best musical to enter the city on Orghard | ataian cca bak That just about summed up the! April 8 } payless payday 3 t _ Herter Reports to US. Tonight x Will Ask Understanding and Support During ‘His Geneva Talks ; WASHINGTON (AP) — Secre- . tary of State Christian A. Herter : plans a major bid for public sup- port and understanding tonight on the eve of his trip to the East- West Geneva conference on Ger- many. Indications: are he will not spring any big surprises in 5 | American policy. Herter is expected to stress Secretary of State Christian ; Herter’s report to the nation to- night on the foreign minister's conference will be on the follow: | ing Detroit TV and radio sta- tions: DELAYED TELEVIS:ON 9 p.m.—WJIBK-TV (2), WWJ- TV (4). : 10 p.m.—WXYZ-TV (7). , RADIO 8 p.m.—WXYZ, WWJ, WKMH. serie what he regards as the reason- Rieger g 7 aed f ableness of U.S. plans for a peace-| \ ful solution to the German crisis. | \ He is prepared to say that the proposals to be presented to the Soviets at the foreign ministers parley starting Monday will pro- | vide a. sound framework—if the - Reds-sincerely want to negotiate. At the same time, he is ready to renew assurances that the Al- ong will not abandon West Berlin) Then they flew back to the White ‘o the Communists just because Moscow demands that the West- ern Powers get out. - i > The caravan is scheduled third day, they grew more tense— With its general fund cut by re-|Primarily because of disclosure Lake avenue at 11:40 — duced tax collections and heavy|the industry is already mapping travel to downtown Sagi-| public welfare costs, the state/Strategy to deal with a possible’ naw street, then head north} Ike, Winnie Zip Around Far _ Fay 1 inate walk n heac | TT OT faces» ne 3 ei ane 0S 1 nd wa gt Wiser Stadium via Oak: land avenue. Blue Golf Cart an David J. McDonald, steelwork- | ers Union president, and R. Con- Williams and the Democrats ad-| T@4 Cooper, chief negotiator for liquidation of securities in| U.S. Steel Corp. and the industry, a 15-minute stage show at noon’ p| agreed to quit airing differences fo Pontiac residents who want al | WASHINGTON W — Picture \Sir Winston Churchill zipping| vocate around President Eisenhower'sthe veterans trust fund’ to hel farm in a baby-blue electric golfout in the cash crisis. cart. * * * 7 There's a cigar’ clinched in the, Britisher's teeth and he’s wearing) a cowboy hat. = | ‘Look Sharp’ Time at Naval Center | a } ' Picture Eisenhower driving the* small cart — and it sagging a | bit to the right under’ the Chur- chillian bulk as they whip over | the gravel roads, | | That was the picture Wednesday} | afternoon as the 84-year-old former’, ‘prime minister of Britain and his} jhost toured the Eisenhower acres) at Gettysburg, Pa., under a blaz-| ling hot sun. | SWITCH TO COPTER | Later they switched to a Marine) Corps helicopter for an aerial in-| spection of the historic Gettysburg) battlefield where in 1863 -Union! ‘and Confederate forces engaged jin one of the classic conflicts of lall time. | | j * * *® Churchill clutched his gold-tipped cane as he eased into the golf buggy alongside his chauffeur, the ismiling President. | * ke * The first stop was a big cattle! jbarn. There Ejsenhower proudly {pointed out hig herd. : “They are Black Angus, all of them,” The President told his guest. “They're Scatch Cattle. We | also have some Nurse cows. | Thése. Black Angus don’t give enough milk,” ; Pontiac Press Phote * y as ' 4 ‘ CONDUCT ANNUAL INSPECTION -; It was . ‘Jook-Sharp” time at the Pontiac Naval Reserve * Training Center in Detroit, checks Training Center as the local. unit underwent ‘its le appear- [ ance of Seaman Robert A. Sweeley, top tocal _j annual: military inspection, Capt. R, M. Hayes - House where last evening Eisen- hower gave another stag dinner ‘that will take place here in 1961,| Pontiac’s centennial, year. There'll be square dancing in 19th century costume, presentation of centennial souve- At Wisner Stadium there will be) nirs te City Manager Walter K. jin a -quarter century of movie- The bearded ambassadors are PICKETS APPEAR | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) preview of the kind of activities 400 Lansing men known as the!” Part of the show originated from — -—-— —~ - -- —————-|Brothers of the Brush. They let/the Mayflower Hotel in Washing- their beards grow in honor of their, ton, and pickets city's centennial. * * * The caravan is the first of four) which Lansing plans throughout! Nixon: entered the hotel bef ithe state to call attention to its) |centennial. Saturday's trip will also} ltake in Walled Lake, Novi, Howell | jand Fenton. * * * Just beginning its centennial iplans.Pontiae—has been using the initial Lansing centennial model. as an Yankee Logic Wins MONTPELIER, Vt. (UPI) — Yankee logic has killed a legis- Jative move to boost the Ver- mont fishing license fees for out- the fees,’’ said State Rep. Phil- ip Chase (R-Rutmey) and the Legislature voted down ihe hike. In Today’s Press * ‘ * * Comics do peceteacee “ieee Gaygaly NGS, 2... vse ccevees: 19 MdWetiale ...ovcccaceesveaccs 6 Food Section.............. 35-44 Markets .. oo... eceevcces +. 61 QOPI oc ccccecedepeess _4 be eo... 53-57 Padaters |. ...5...005 i sahsees 39 TV & Ratio Programs:,..... 67 Wilson, Earl... ..c of-state anglers, ‘Fishing in Ver- | mont isn't good enough to raise | raphy. . | Astaire, a star on Broadway |when he first came to Hollywood jin 1933 for movies, thus accom- and a iplished in his first dancing TV} and Chattanooga where he was headed to sell two cars from Las- jsiter's Detroit Car Co, lot, 2614 N. Woodward Ave . Leal said Nash, in his confession lgiven at 1:05 a.m. today, named nation wide television audience) Hicks as the third man and plotter which saw the 90-minute show over} of the murder. * * * Lassiter’s body was discovered in a ditch outside the | fashionable estate of a Detroit con- |struction company owner off the {Willow Run Expressway. He had been shot in the head once. Bruises on the head indicated he was knocked unconscious first. A widespread search began im- mediately for a “dirty” man with beils on the back of his neck who paged Lassiter at the airport twice upen his arrival from Albuquerque, N. M., where he had gone from Phoenix to sell a 1959 Thunderbird. The sketch, based on descrip (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) | show what he had failed to ‘one Aged Invalid ; making. also appeared ‘there, as well as the Moulin Rouge i here. Vice President Richard M. Killed in Fire Unable to Walk, He Apparently Died When on the show as scheduled. “NBC executives handled techni- cal duties during the telecast. The) company charges that the 10-day- old walkout is a violation of its natified the union it is rescinding the contract. Weather to Be on the Cool Side | Next Few Days | For the next few days area resi- |dents may expect temperatures in ithe 60's, the weatherman said. |Tonight will be fair with a cool low of near 42 degrees. * x * Tomorrow will. be partly cloudy ‘and continued cool with the high jranging from 60-65. Today's north ‘winds at 1518 miles an hour will! ldimenish tonight * ‘ * * The lowest recording in down- |\town Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 50 degrees. At I p.m. the reading was 60. : { Inventory Réluction Sele. Want Thé | Truth? We show honest discounts on jeach car window. Bill Spence: Rambler. jail S. Saginaw. ‘€ontract with the union and has’ Cigarette Lit Couch : the pickets arrived. He appeared A 72-year-old invalid, Henry McGough, of 340 N. Paddock St was fatally burned yesterday after- negn in a fire in the living room of his home. A victim of Spastic paralysis, unable to walk, MtGough appar- ently dropped a cigarette which ignited the sofa, according to Pontiac Fire Marshal Charies E. Metz, - He was alone in the house at the time. ai Firemen recalled that Me- Gough had been rescued in a similar fire in October of 1957. His wife, Mary, 61, told firemen she had last seen her hiisband at noon when she came home from - the Pontiac Motor Division plant where she is employed. * * * Deputy Coroner Harty L. Riggs said McGough died of asphyxia- tion and burns. An alarm was turned in to the Fire Dept. by @ neighbor at. 1:20 p.m., but McGough was dead when radio and miles, 2606. Ref FE « veer enite wal Suess 600 $2823 / ; ~ $79Vd YAO JAVA i Two THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1959 > Pair Held in Chattanooga for Murder of Lassiter (Continued From Page One) tions provided police by two air- line clerks who saw the man, was widely circulated in the hope some- one might have seen him. and Lassiter’s business partner, Gordon Watson of Détroit, flew to Phoenix for a business and pleasure trip: It was Hicks, Leaf said, who ar- PICKED FROM LINEUP ranged to get the eos cars for ; “ Jones, known as a “car jockey” The two clerks, Eugene Reich- who operated between Detroit and emberger and Howard. Lichty, wet Chattanooga, on credit so he could flown to Chattanooga yesterday “from Detroit in a State Police peste Thera i PennesEeS: aa * * plane, Leaf said both identified * ap. Nash as the ‘‘dirty’ man in a Before his return trip to Detroit, police lineup. supposedly to split the profits from _. \the sale with Hicks, Jones picked | At the same time, Leaf said up Nash and both headed for De- ‘troit. Leaf said Nash and Jones had become friends after serving time together in the Brush Moun- tain Penitentiary in Petroes, near Nashville, Tenn. any connection between Lassi- ter’s murder and his purchase of Herman Kierdorf’s black Cad- illac last August had now been disproved. “It was a murder Leaf said Lassiter, 38, of 19690 Beverly Rd., Beverly Hills, purchased Kier- dorf’s union-owned car last August shortly after Kierdorf visited his nephew, Frank, of Flint, at a Pon- tiac hospital where he lay criti- cally burned This is the story Nash told in his statement to Leaf, Lepien and for money.” Nash is currently on parole for 20 yeats after the 1948 murder he served time for. Besides, Leaf said, he is out on a $3,500 bond awaiting trial for a knifing-shoot- ing which happened in Chatta- nooga in February. It was from this knifing that| Nash received cuts on the back of his neck which later became | The Day in Birmingham New High School Plan Wins National Award | BIRMINGHAM — The increas-,in the Children’s Department Mon- ing use of audio-visual educational |day morning. media and the demand for class-| A special coffee hour for mothers room flexibility has put the Bir-| 'who volunteer as librarians in the mingham Junior-Senior High public schools will be held at 9: 30 School, now under construction, in a.m: the limelight, according to Richard | \ Featherstone, administrative as- sistant of the Birmingham schoo |Outboard Motor Stolen A 25 horsepower outboard motor District. Plans prepared to meet the de-'was reported stolen from a boat mands have won the Walter Cock- owned by E. G. Rau of 5214 Cooley ing Award for the architectural|Lake Rd. sometime last night. It firm of Smith, .Tarapata and Mac-,was valued at $400. Mahon. The award, one of five in’ Rau told Waterford Township po- the nationwide competition, wasjlice the motor was lecked to his made by the School Executive | boat, anchored 50 feet from shore magazine. lin front of his home. * * * — —— Featherstone said the plans for| the Birmingham school are the ul-| timate in classroom flexibility. | Rooms are planned in such a way | that interior walls will be of con-| crete block and have no relation to the overall] structure, he said. “The walls can be placed to form four ordinary Class- AP Wirephote TOP WINNER — Dancing star Fred Astaire, right, gets a pat on the shoulder from Robert Young as he accepts the final Emmy award for his winning television show ‘‘An Evening With Fred Astaire,”’ last night at the Television Academy’s annual prize night. The show won nine awards. Re), | Chattanooga detectives infected, Leaf said, resulting in| Jones and Nash arrived in De- the boils the two clerks noticed. troit the day before the murder . x * and Jones had successfully sold! After their crise in Detroit, | two used cars from Lassiter’s lat Nash and Jones linked up with) in Chattanooga for $1,925. Hicks, who Leaf said has no crim- | Hicks, originally from Chatta. inal record although Chattanooga | nooga, had been left in charge of police said the trio was ‘‘very | the lot while Lassiter, his wife closely associated. —_—' The murder of Lassiter was | ; probably plotted after Hicks re-| Pontiac General Hospital is plan- ceived a call from Lassiter around Ning a full week of activities dur- Monday noon from Albuquerque. in ing National Hospital Week, which which it is believed that Lassiter begins Sunday. told Hicks he had successfully dis-! Climax will be Thursday and posed of the Thunderbird. Friday when the public will be| Leaf said it is believed that the an nego ne Keepiees three men probably thought Las- | ; siter would have upwards of §$5,- | 000 on him upon his arrival in Detroit. The tours, conducted by the | Purpose of the call to Hicks was to inform him that he would be Martin Faces Pontiac General Plans Open House |tions Department said. | low construction cost of $13.28 ]?2 Other highlights include the an- | Per foot, according to Feather- nual service award presentation, | Stone. | which this year will be held at | He concluded by pointing out arriving in Detroit at 10:08 on a Trans-World Airlines flight. “It was probably sometime after Hicks got this cali that the three alr 0 arges of them plotted the robbery,’’ Leaf said - . Po * *& & Ex-Convict to x j ‘ He said that Nash told how the H H rt % three of them took a 1955 Buick Trial for Kidnaping de from the Lassiter lot and drove out and Rape | i] to the airpoft } Jones and Hicks waited in the MRS. DONALD ADAMS & Nash_ related : in his confession, of kidnaping and rape. while Nash went to the TWA . $1.13 ito page “a Mr. Schroeder from day by Municipal Judge Maurice| A special accent will be place FASTEETH 0 erve gain whi " \F Finnegan at the conclusion of on fire prevention this year. Films) Baldwin Public Library will be- theorized that between |the defendant's pre- trial examina- will be shown to all personnel on gin its annual Spring Book Festival DENTURE re flew Nash left the car and {tion \Monday, followed by a fire: ex- —— ADHESIVE on History Unit | Donald Adams 1 Reappointed to State Commission \Court. Martin, of 739 F. Ave., is being held in the Oak- land County Jail. 000 on each of the charges. confused it with Schroeder. Waiting several minutes for sdDmeone to answer this page, Nash headed back to the car telling |Jones and Hicks no one answered) the page * * the evening of April 14, kidnaping Governor Williams yesterday an-; Ww hen Hicks Jearned that he had 47-year-old JoAnne Visure and rap- nounced the reappointment of Mrs. ‘paged the wrong person, Hicks ling her. Donald Adams of Waterford Towf-| scribbled Lassiter’s name on a| Police found the pair ship as a member of the Michigan piece of paper Historical Commission the return to the counter and page She was named for a term end-|Lassiter a second time. ing May 21, 1965. Senate confirma-| tion is required |hearing on the auto theft charge out to be erroneous a second |pal court. After receiving her AB degree | time. The word Lassiter was | ‘We Will Strike,’ - from Eastern Michigan College | Mistaken for “‘Sassitas,"” Leaf | and-a Master's degree from the | said, because Hicks had his right | University of Michigan, Mrs. | arm in @ cast and found it diffi- Adams served as a research | cult to write plainty. Say Steel Unionists assistant in Michigan history at jjicks received his broken arm the university for three years. in a car accident in March in| i 3 | (Continued From Page One) elected curator of Chattanooga. Nash was with him, Collections, Leaf said She was then Michigan Historical at joint meetings with reporters with 10 years or more service have Stand been invited to watch new 10-year employes win service pins from t Harold E. Martin, 20-year-old ex- Auxiliary will hold its annual Flor- car outside the airport, Leaf said convict will stand trial on charges ence Nightingale iployes during Martin was bound over the Oak- afternoon in the hospital dining counter and asked Reichemberger jand County Circuit Court yester-| room. approached the TWA counter he | He will be arraigned at 1:30 p.m. \tinguisher demonstration on Tues- —_ forgotten Lassiter's name \Monday on both counts in Circuit\day and a practice Madison 'E. Metz, Pontiac fire marshal. | Bond is $10,- | 13,296 Simcas Sold | He is accused of stealing a car jn Ist 4 Months of ‘59 next Simca cars for and told Nash to|morning in Bloornfield Township. ary-April Martin has demanded a pre-trial units. Instead of Lassiter this turned (It will be held June 10 in munici- pared with 1,417 in the like 1958 imonth. Chrysler owns a REO as director of the Oakland Lassiter, believing he had heard) after they'd mixed it up a bit at County Historical Foundation and his’ name paged, walked to the such a session Wednesday. was ce cretary-treasurer of the Pon- TWA counter and asked Reichem-! Cooper confirmed reports that tiac Historical Commission berger if he was -paging him. the industry is working on a plan. * * Reichemberger said he was paging tg counter any union divide-and- She also is a past presidert of “a Mr. Sassitas.” conquer strike move. the Michigan Historical Society. , Before Lassiter could walk away) He said that if the union should from the counter, Nash inter- strike only one or a few industry Mrs. Adams serves as se¢- pypted and asked him if he was producers, the others left operat- retary to her attorney husband “the dealer just arrived from ing might, under the plan, share who is a Waterford Township ajbuquerque.”’ Lassiter said he any excess profits with the strike: justice of the peace. was bound firms. Mrs. Adams is president of the kok Of . Waterfo rd Te ait Beard of Edu Lassiter followed Nash to the Cooper also hinted steelmakers . ae . are considering shutting down in cation. She lives with — husband Wait{ng car which was driven to a "| . ' ; a common front if any one or few | and son at 2711 Walton BI lonely driveway leading into the k. H id the industry extele of H. F. Campbell, about| 7° streck- ce om y | seven miles from the airport. Leaf “said Nash described how Hicks told Jones to hit Lassiter) head with a .45 caliber while hoping to reach a peace pact with McDonald ahead of present contract expirations June The Weather Full U. 8 Weather Bureau Report over the PONTIAC AND VICINITY Becoming revolver as they pulled the car id th i indust partly cloudy and much cooler today. , : he driveway about Cooper sal e steel industry high 63 Fair and cooler tonight. low ‘"’ a stop on the ariveway a . i tonight 42 Temerrew partis clouds and 600 yards off the expressway. thas been studying the strike profit. senrened Oe ais: tees, aut ; sharing plan put in effect by six * nor ’ s to ’ min PD ite " 2 : ishing tonight Ntter Lassiter was knocked out | major airlines last fall Ted _ from the blow, his body was He said there have been reports eday in ntiac . | Cewel ienrperslure Pirecdine HE ac dragged from the car and left that @ similar plan is being con- _ lying on the driveway. Here. |cidered by the railroad industry, , Leaf said, Nash said Jones fired facing new labor negotiations next, ot 8 one shot into Lassiter’s head. ‘fall boon sete Thurtdes at 7 iis body was dragged into a! McDonald has been talking of | Walinesd Pe gulley nearby where the men re- | a three-month holiday for steel- | vt eontiac peret *r 1d : moved a money clip irom Lassi-| workers after every five years of ye ibe pene *8 ter’s pocket. It contained just a service as a way to spread jobs. Mean temperature little more than $300—not the $5,-- He said the idea is more of a Weather—-un. rats 000 the three believed.they would “pre-tetirement training’? plan — ike CO ., be getting tooling up workers for eventual Poueat (eirpere tes, gasgasieeees = , Hoping to Snd the rest of the full pensioning—thdn an extended Mean temperature 2 money in Lassiter’s luggage, the vacation. The long holiday would Weather—Sunny three there ae searched it. Finding it not be with pay. Highest and Lowest Temperatures the luggage was dumped This Date in 87 Years 85 in 1936 _ 30 in 1874 in a vacant field. wash i OSSi Tra ed! _Famous Brand Bankers Choice ‘ Downtown Temperatures According to Leaf ash sai y pp e jgam.. 82 dam i... 85 Hicks then drove him and Jon | ¢ igars Reg, $3.00 @.M..c00--0058 Agric t18.. | pa 80 to the Toledo bus. station ater Bi ildi T b] oe ie they caught a bus for Chatta- as ul ing um es Box of 50 Plus - oes nooga = Pt Wednesday's Temperature Chart a . = _ 5 k Baltimore 63. 52 Marquette 70 Before’ this however, Hicks |. WESTBURY, N.Y. i — A big Free 5-Pac Bigmarck 48 31 Memphis 87 66 > N 1 bills f | industrial building under con- Brownsville 88 56 Miami Beach 80 74 gave ash five $100 rom dieartiae edie today with « | Buffalo 88 -56 Milwaukee 8 42 the $1,925 Hicks and Jones had | psed y vlog a Minncepons 56 66) made on the salg of the two cars. | thundérous roar anil ‘was believed st 0 Cc ew rieans Cincinnati 88 60 New York 83 61| te have trapped from 20 to 100 | Value —" . jf : oevel = Leaf said Johes was being held’ persons in the wreckage. At least | nox stenra wud) free ck- Detroit 4 be Zhoenis h oo 6 today on a fugitive warrant charg-| one man was killed. cil tor the low price -of 2.3. imit irks’ glace tsbur 7 pa .¥ yg - P~4 ny 6 ry poet 30) murder. but Nash was booked! Twisted © steel girders and 7 to 14. Gr Rapide 90 46 8 Francisco 69 3 only temfperarily on a vagrancy! mounds of planking being used Tachgon rte a a Trav city e 4 ‘ chi aa oe “ elk « mae ages = the roof rate the floor of ansas City ashington up Tuesday nig icks 1s stil; the structuré, forming a tomb- | : Lés H t 67 | ; 7 ina —M, . nts hensinnst” bas Tampe $ e2ibeing sought. | | like trap’ for the workmen. | vill ci ser pescsad ated y ‘ — ‘ - 4 : 4 4 ~ ». - z a considering all eventualities | groups can be arranged during the |week, |organization. rooms,” Featherstone explained, “Removal is simple since they | support no weight. A group of | four rooms can be made into two, three or one large audi- torium-type room by moving the wall around. “A four-inch-square steel post in ithe center of the room will permit jauditorium seating with no obstruc- ition of vision,’ Featherstone said. * x * To accommodate a movie screen, lone section of the room can be Prime interest will be the hos-|shaded to permit projection with- |pital’s nine-month-old addition now out darkening the entire room. | constituting the west wing. |Blackout curtains will be installed * * x |so complete darkness may be ar- Special tours for interested ranged when necessary. One of the most impressive features will be the remarkably LIVER PILLS Women’s Auxiliary, will begin 36° both days at 9 a.m., 10 a.m., 2 p-m., 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. Reg. $2.25 BARBASOL Brushless the hospital’s Public Rela-| Shave Cream a dinner Tuesday night at Devon Gables Inn. 100 hospital that this cost is low by any stand- ard, but becomes exceptional since it includes the eonstruction of a standard-size swimming pool. Nearly employes Reg. 65c D.O.C. DENTURE CLEANSER 4\* David. Thursdale, 12, son of Mr and Mrs. Robert Thursdale, 1956 Birmingham Blvd., is attending the annual meeting of patrol boys in Washington, D. C. David, a delivery bey in Bir- mingham for The Pontiac Press, is captain of the Safety Patrol Boys at Pierce Elementary School. he Hospital Board of Trustees. * *x * Also on Tuesday. the Women’s all em- and tea for the morning Bargain Basement Specials for FRIDAY and SATURDAY fire drill Wednesday, witnessed by Charles 87° Reg. 69c HEET LIQUID LINAMENT DETROIT WwW — Chrysler Corp reported today that retail sales of this year’s Janu- period totaled 13/296 April sales numbered 3,524| com- 25 per cent interest in the French Simca Reg. $3.00 REGIMEN REDUCING TABLETS Genuine HANES Brand MEN’S RIBBED tice orHits 19° y a , 2 Shirts for 1.50 Colored T-shirts with surrey rib- bing, one breast pocket. Finest combed cotton, slight irregulars BUY and SAVE at SIMMS LOW TOBACCO PRICES Specials—Fri. & Sat. Only Reg. $2.76 ABBOTTS VIDAYLIN VITAMINS Sizes small to extra-large. Freshest ‘cause’ We Sell More CIGARETTES ALL POPULAR BRANDS REGULAR y 4 SIZES I 8 CARTON Brands include Camels, Luckies, Chesterfields, Old Golds, Philip ide etc. This low price plus 7c Reg. 89c KING ond 28 100% PARA FILTER - MOTH CARTON CRYSTALS Choice of Salem, Winstons, Marlboro Hit Parade, Tarreyton, Parliament, ete. This low price plus Tc tax. 3-Ounce Tin FAIRWAY Lighter Fluid Brown or Green DENIM MEN'S SANFORIZED Hobby Jeans Reg. ¢€ Re ular 39 Reg. 29c Value $3.95 2 . GRIFFINS ALL-WHITE Pamous lighter at this 2 Jeans for 5.00 L- low price. Odorless and SHOE POLISH smokeless. Works in all Sturdy elastic waist ‘jeans for lighters. Limit 1 sports wear, yard work, picnics) etc. Brown or gfeen small, medium, large. in sizes) 17° Rapist Terrorizes 7 Persons in Home QUALITY BRANDS at LOWEST PRICES NYTHING in DRUGS You'll Find At SIMMS Rights Reserved to Limit Quantities—Friday and Satarda dered his captives to bind their feet with belts apd neckties. He ten tied up the childresd’s hands and ferced to .wife to tie her husband’s hands. Police said the man wore sun then tied up the children’s hands As he left, he warned his captives that a bomb would go eff if they made any commo- tion, The prisoners freed them- selves and called police. DETROIT —A masked man, armed with a pistol and a bomb threat, invaded a Hamtramck home yesterday, raped a mother, molested a woman visitor and held four children and an ail- ing father as prisoners. “I’ve got a bumb on me,” po- | - lice quoted the intruder as say. | Waterford House Fire ing. “if you try to yell or run, Causes $200 Damage I'll touch it off and blow all of you up with me.” “ A fire caused $200 damage yes- Police said the man wore sun |terday ‘at the home of Robert glasses and a cloth mask and (Davis, 311 Airport Rd., Waterford was carrying a pistol when he |Township. entered the house through the | Waterford Township firemen said rear door. the blaze was started about 12:30 x * * p.m. and was confined to the bed- He slapped the face of the hus- jroom of the frame house. It was band who suffers from multiple |caused by a short circuit in a sclerosis, police said, and or- light cord, firemen said. EST CUT PRICES! WEEKEND SPECIALS OF EVERYDAY NEEDS: FOUR egies SPECIAL ) BUFFERIN Tablets Regular $1.23 Value 81 ¢ FOUR Yeyeyisk SPECIAL Full bottle-of 100 tablets. PHILLIPS’ Magnesia No upset stomach. Limit |. Regular 52c Value Choice of liquid or tablets. Popular milk of magnesia. Regular 98c Value For retief of sinus conges- teon, hay fever and colds. Limit 1. 67° MURINE EYE DROPS BROMO SELTZER = 42° || = 67° | Large 20-Ounce Bottle—Popular Lavoris Mouth Wash > tie 61‘ MILES NERVINE % 67° pea = 43e Fact a a Ge BRYLCREME Hair Groom ca A eet tia EZO Dental Cushions — oe 44° MENNEN’S Lotion 75e Aa SHASTA SHAMPOO 39° PETROLEUM JELLY 44 Mead's OLAC or LACTUM BABY FORMULAS Regular 27c Size Can 12“ nee 89c Pound Coccm White a9 ft Fruit-of-the-Loom Quality BOYS’ and GIRLS’ Poplin Jackets | Reg. $1.69 D‘CON REDI-MIX FOR RATS AND MICE Bayers Aspirin Flavored Ar JIM For Children Glyc. Suppositories WN Fletchers Castoria Child's Laxative Reg. 43c al ham ask et Gr ani aos a abo ou a sn to a co —— ABDEG Drops , DAVIS me we ee le ee ee ee ee oo oe oe ee oe oe MJ: ROTHERS > 4 oe : vs. z ale C0 8 6 * CEO REE é #7 f ft * ae 220i tre eTVd My f} WH 9H powrrac PRESS. IURSDAY, MAY T1959 ’ Ls ; pee s aves eneath a Worker’s Dignity 410 From Suicide Take a Tip, Moscovites, | poston wen — at ew no gratuities Frowned Upon would-be suicides are alive today thanks to Rescue, Inc. My This was the repert from the MOSCOW \ — The tourist sea-; So too many people buying “Rev. Kenneth B. Murphy, theson has brought a new blast at programs have to fork over a Roman Catholic priest who founded tipping as practiced in Moscow. | whole le, and the camy | : ; |! women sellers pocket an extra the unique organization to discour-- THhere jis su yposed to be no . ; ; s suf | 60 or 70 kopeks a throw. age self-destruction. He described)|,. : <— . j Itipping in the Soviet Union. The} ~ . ae the activities of Rescue, Inc, at > ; atay- But the real moneymakers, the 10th annual Conference « 1 Al itheory is that everybody gets paid) j a eo ‘for his work and it’s beneath q/Soviet Culture says, are the em- coholism. * + * worker's. dignity to accept a ployes who run the coat-and-hat MOTHER’S DAY GLE T'S gratuity checking concessions, especially in hotels |. Enter a Moscow hotel and un Founded last January as a pri- vate, non-sectarian service, Res But too many people are cue, Inc. has. headquarters at Jetting dignity suffer for a few oy ep i Baston City Hospital. Anyone con-; extra kopeks or a ruble or two, leas a ee sticking in the seradl templating suicide can call the says Soviet Culture, a mews- cancer on a al a pe organization's well-publicized tele-| paper. It singled out program | posed —_ la : jhat. There's no carryi Our | phone number. At the end of the) sellers af Moscow —— ns stuff into the raataarace = pe line he will find a sympathetic) Ajthough programs sell for 30 and that goes for women as well ear and a reassuring voice. And or 49 kopeks — 3 or 4 cents at the ag men soon afterward a representative of tourist rate — the program sellers tescue, Inc., will visit him * * * _ handed a one-rube (10 cents) note Soviet Culture got a confession often profess not to have charge. \t,om one cloakroom attendant that NEW ‘59 WAGONS’ ~ *& * on an erdinary night his tipping Kopeks are eoins. Except for take runs to 60 or 70 rubles — but RADIO $] 99 500 15-kopek pieces for use in pay that on a rush night he can count WEATER telephones and 20-kopek pieces to on more than 200 rubles. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER pay bus fares, a Muscovite doesn't} There didn’t sé¢em io be any| MI 6-3900 like to carry. a pocket full of shame in the man’s avowal. He coins. ¢ just isn't turning down tips. . 2 8 8 8 et ee eh en wee nw a wie 8. *.4 © © OOOO oo wo 0 wo oe a gg 8 HH He Oe { Q ie S § NO MONEY DOWN SS De ee q e ° 50c WEEKLY { Give Mom this smartly led f ake VIII SSS IST eee | sean wit Reoettal we 50 PIECE STAINLESS STEEL TABLEWARE pension bracelet. Mother will be thrilled with this quality flatware you've seen selling for so much more. Heavy gauge stainless steel will not corrode, rust or tarnish— ocptere’ highly polished till it gleams like silver. Set includes 8 each, dinner knives, dinner forks, salad forks, soup spoons; 16 teaspoons: sugar shell and butter | RIES ee SRR OE Ot Oe ee at ar re Ot eee e ' knife. . eee Re Se Oe ee ee oa veretecatelereetereretetetets’ . wee eet ee oe? j *-* eee a ae) ee ee ee Pe ae ee orotate Pi ee ! Neeuae 49.50 BuLova sctieeecen $33 9°° 2 Diemonds 22 Jewels | bet =| 5950 G50 1.00 uals 1} Weekly $1.25 W’ki er cas it's 2 gifts in 1. $1 Weekly $1. y summ Dainty 7 lawl ‘ tch with bvilt-i 97 becict. YOUR =f: CHOICE ~yshion in- . fords with cus Febre eit eoles. Brown. blue ! sale er 6-12 Washable. Hurry > ot ack. aed j 7 jwood or sandals, Ln ales: blir ather Duo-life — ~avel ; blac 6 ee Hurry an _ Sues Bai | “ ss : : : { . Ooo s 54 : | Piece UNBREAKABLE MELMAC : O06 nla .* . : Child’s dc) | Service for 8 DINNERWARE i Sandals , “Barefoot” — E e Beautiful dinnerware to grace Mother's table Guaranteed not to break ALL FOR a dals jn red or ; — crack or chip; Easy and safe to wash by hand or in automatic dishwasher a | brown leather 75 { ; r) Not harmed by ‘boiling water. High /ustre glaze won't fade. You get 8 $ 95 | Duo-life Sole ” Ladies 17-JEWEL Watches each dinner plates, 8 soup or cereal bowls, 8 bread and butters, 8 cups IM sizes 5 to 3. 8 saucers, 8 dessert dishes, sugar bow! and cover, vegetable bow!, serving ; xx Regular $49.50 watches, white or yellow B33 platter, creamer and 8 Tumbler 50c WEEKLY 3 R bb gold with matching bracelet dress $ u er thon S watches or Nurses watch with chrome = 4 Red. bi g | top, stainless steel back é = ’ ue, vel. ‘ lo . : ~. | me thers. Cae 7: No Money Down—50c a Week! ”? . , ”., Women « i ] 7 2 men's 6 to 12 "s ions * , sa ee”, , : eas yey : A, * fs” eS or) pret | EPPS smn a ne nn ne ein te hn = 7.08 } 4 ee : 2 Washable s Ses | : eae * 2 ‘ one's" t ear +". af | ‘ **,9 Ss w as 'e = ie for spor Stites | Large 12” Big 15-Cup Auto. . YOUR 88 § Automatic Fry Pan _ Coffee Maker : - oxtords in white, T 13, 4 to 10. #4 ason’s ne white rubber soles. : it bracelets, pins and clips a8 We te CHOICE a Includes cover and all controls. Has Westghouse Thermo- - \ 3 es . Be Regular 19.95 stat. Large deluxe size. i ‘ . ; . : . ° } om . = . *e ond children’s pated No Money ar é No Money er fi ‘ a rene Women $ red, blue with were | Paes * —— west style successes ye from the Choces rrings, ° e slack wash- ootetee ecklaces, eo : Boys’ se — a rubber “it we matching sets m oa ae 21,6. Save more now - Scie °, ae ri d Condit Automatic Electric : ot . — - or Conditioner . mI Automatic Steam oe Mixer | = . —_ rN Pop-Up Toaster ‘ F sie or Dry Iron veSeniauwaa | fabedouh buffs and clean rugs, Has tamaus Westinghouse a ‘ RIDAY ONLY! , Has famous Westinghouse mixer with powerful 3-speed @ 88 thermostat. Regyler 19.95. 'C - ; bow | Thermostat. Regular 15.95. operation. Reg. 15.95 Bat ps 4 Sc 9a77 shy’, worrect Step’ arches eS aste vou $4777, so SERED SS : weekly | ee Foam cushion in- re | Account Weekly 7 x : wee] S0le, arch. Black, 6 & retete * ; *etetf = red, bone or white eagets | Pes = . ‘ o’e’s leather.4-to 10 ZA re : , . . BD? Ae” Cae ]|OPEN FRIDAY NO DOWN|| | , _ - : Ss | ‘ oy & FEderal =f ying | Ties | sitheieeteniiteiccineeserseeses oe ete aeine pperppcnge vs] From 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. 3.7114 PAYMENT oo RAL DEF LY.y: | | FREE PARKING Behind Store 108 NORTH SAGINAW 50c Weekly! 40, fAiden D. Pantana, Z SEE * , fiat, Mi. fn iin mite, dry -% te Bees THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1959 | MAKE OVER PAGES. Jupiter Launching Highly Successful —The Army blasted its Jupiter Army’s missile-space boss, an- nounced recently that the monkey launching would take place within the next two months, The first a pt to shoot a monkey in a Jupiter came Dec. 13 but the tiny CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla., (AP)|rider never was found. trip as a test weapon. On two| other occasions the missile was| used as a booster for Pioneer space probes III and IV. An average modern watch con- : tains upwards of 150 separate s er| The Jupiter was making its 16th /|parts. intermediate range ballistic mis-| — To Discuss Fitness, Sedentary Worker Dr. Thomas K. Cureton, direc- |tor of the physical fitness research laboratory at the University of Illinois, will speak on ‘Physical Fitness and the Sedentary Work- er’ at the Pontiac Club tomorrow noon at the Wal- dron Hotel. He will be introduced by one of his former students, Jesse Mac- Leay, football and baseball coach 100,000 Words but Start |bioeraphy. the noted Arctic eX- at Pontiac Central High School, . . Dr. Cureton is in the city to|for Admiral Doing Book conduct a physical fitness clinic for the Pontiac YMCA. plorer replied: “Fine. I've already written 100- BOSTON (UPI) — When a re- porter asked 84-year-old Rear Ad-| Rossini’s comic opera, “The The United States owns about|Miral Donald B, MacMillan how Barbara of Seville,’ was first per- 20,000 long tons of gold. | | | | 000 words and {i'm not born yet.” | | he was getting along with his auto-\formed in Rome im 1816. sile 1,500 miles over the Atlantic Wednesday night on what sources said was a highly successful reli- ability flight test.. The 60-foot rocket, which may | carry a monkey passenger in the near future, was equipped with a beacon light apparently for use in tracking the 10,000 m.p.h. journey | through the fringes of space. * * * } Maj. Gen. John B. Medaris, the} ‘ NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT. Sanitary sewer on Court Drive. To: Richard D. Venos, Lavina A. Tay- ler, F. L. Clancy and to ell persons interested, take notice: That the roll of the Special Asséssnfent heretofore made by the City Assessor for the pur- pose of defraying that part of the cost which the Commission decided should) be paid and borne by special assessment) for the construction of sanitary sewer) en Court Drive from Mt. Clemens Street) to existing sewer 325 ft. north of Mt.| Clemens Street is now on file in my| office for public inspection | Notice is also hereby given that the) Commission and the Assessor of the City of Pontiac, will meet in the Com- mission Chamber in said City, on the y2th day of May A.D. 1958 at 8:00 o'clock pm. to review said assessment, at which time and place opportunity will be given to all persons interested to be heard Dated May 6, 1958 W.o. 7411 ADA R. EVANS, City Clerk May 7, 1959 a | NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT Curb, gutter, grade, gravel, drainage, | and related work on jiwood Avenue To: Carmel Howell, Leslie Houston, James H. Campbell, Michigan Mtg. Corp. Bernard Brown, Crawford Cowart, Mr Mullen, Belaitre Home Bidrs., William H.) Nelson, Veterans Adm. Michigan Mtg.) Corp Mr Bailey. Gina Stangeland. Arnold Nelson, Philip J. Waldie, and to s interested, take notice: That f the Special Assessment here- tofore made by the City Assessar for the purpose of defraying that part of the cost which the Commission decided should be paid and borne by special gessessment for the construction of curb, utter. grade. gravel, drainage and re- ted work on Dellwood Avenue from Earlmoor Boulevard to Howland Avenue is now on file in my office for public inspection | Notice is also hereby given that the Commission and the Assessor of the City of Pontiac, will meet in the Com- mission Chamber in said City, on the 12th day of Mav A.D. 1959 at 8:00 o'clock p.m. to review said assessment, at which time and place opportunity will be given al) persons interested to be heard Dated May 6, 1958 WO. 7408 ADA R. EVANS City Clerk May 7,'59 NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT Curb, gutter, grade. gravel. drainage and related work on Court Drive. To: Richard D. Venos, Henry Neid- rick, Charles Ellender, Fred W. Mayers Frank Shook, David Grubb, Lavina A Taylor, Peter G. Venos. J D Shoemaker. | Jack Hancock, Ross M. Bishop, Central Credit Co. First Free Methodist Church FP. L. Clancy, Earl Hudnell, A J. Cou- ture, Jack F Kernott, Loren Thompson Charlies R. Ridick, Edw. Evans & Her- bert Libby. Gage Bidg Co. and to ail persons interested. take notice: That the roll of the Special Assessment hereto- fore made by the City Assessor for the purpose of defraying that part of the eost which the Commission § decided should be paid and borne by special assessment for the construction of curb gutter grade and gravel, drainage and related work on Court Drive from Mt Clemens Street to Grandview Boulevard is now on file in my office for public inapection Notice is also hereby given that the Commission and the Assessor of the City of Pontiac. will meet in the Com-} mission Chamber in said City. on the 12th @ay of May AD. 1959 at 8 00 o'clock Pm. to review said assessment. at which time and place opportunity will be given all persons interested to be heard Dated May 6th, 1959 W.O. 7405 ADA R Evéns, City Clerk May 7, ‘59 NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Notice is hereby given by the under- Signed that on Friday, May 8 1958, at 10 o'clock am. at 147 8 Saginaw, Pon- tiac, Oakland County, Michigan, public sale of a 1951. Mercury Cl. bearing serial No. 51ME69172M, will be held, for cash to the highest bidder Inspection thereof may be made at above address UNIVERSAL C1T. CREDIT CORP., 28 N. Saginaw St Pontiac, Michigan By A. McBride, Agent 317-T7837 May 6, 7. ‘58 NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT Two-inch asphaltic concrete pavement on Kinney Road Ta, H. & L Schram & Dr. Netzel Eleanor Morris. Frances W. Kemper Christopher & Olive Gibbons, Sudie M Murphy, Eari Horton, Billi Cunningham Olive M. Mark. Emmett F. Murphy, Jr Louls H Schimmel. T (Carter, 8. Cabon Rosodo, Albert Haynes. Earl P_ Huston, Talbott Lum- ber Company, Gillette D Warden. Roy Halbritier, M Levin Jacob O6cesch Colonia) Federal Saving & Loan Assn James T Barnes. Mr. Johnson, Mr Moore, Mr. Manning Mr. Plumb, Wil- helmia W. Zietek, Mr. Price, Dixie Home Bidrs., Samuel Rotundo, City of Pontiac. Jos. J. Ruva, Carl D. & Jodean Tharp. Michigan Mtg Corp, Unknown— Lot 127 exe SW 100 ft. A.P. No. 101 and to all persons interested. take no- tice: That the roll of the Special As- sessment heretofore made by the City Assessor for the purpose of defraying that part of the cost which the Com- mission decided should be paid and borne by special assessment for the con- struction of two-inch asphaltic concrete pavement on Kinney Road from Oak- land Avenue to Stanley Avenue, ts now on file in my office for public tnspec tion Notice is also hereby given that ‘the Comméssion apd the Assessor of the City of Pontiac, will meet in the Commission Chamber in said City. on the 12th day of May AD 1959 at 800 o'clock p.m. to review said assessment. at which time and place opportunity will be given all persons interested to be heard Dated May 6 1959 Wo 7368 ADA R_ EVANS, Cc Vacation Ahead? Don't forget your Kindy prescription sun glasses.~ Dr. Spencer Oates Optometrist CREDIT ROEBUCK AND CO. All corner ends and gate posts have new, patented “shiny” caps. 2 inch mesh. Wire is 114 gauge full gal- vanized after weav- ing. All posts are set deeply and securely in concrete. Firmly braced. os EN BS a Se FREE. BRADLEY PO SMR T S> IEE a, ee eal ate. be ESTIMATE ON SS, & FREES sraceriats e, ESTIMATE ON INSTALLATION és CALL FE 5-417) 7 OLD FASHIONED LOW PRI a "6 & 73% my UJ s “eS a ‘ i—¢ ah CM ® 'o%e%. 0.0 @-@ nO qerrmnae ee eT C ar —__D “Install it yourself. oY Borrow tools and know-how from Sears” % «al I rs Pan vw Vv bd 0.070%", OLY VOC CED VALUES IN EVE 5 CHAIN LINK FENCING OLY Ory WO OS OPV Line Posts, Top Rail, and Fittings » v¥ Protect Children & Pets as Well as Your Home je Your children and pets deserve the best of protection. Sears ** David Bradley chain link fencing is just that... and it en- hances the looks of your home and property, too. Heavy gauge steel galvanized for extra long life. 48-inch heights. ~e Nina, a wr Let Sears arrange for installation. ET ent 3-ft. by 48-in. Chain Link Gate, Reg. 10.95....... 9.00 . PS lina fe ee, ea a s + £ ; Garden Shop Specials He aaa it I —_ Rose of the Week! 4 , . —— im i Bavie i | Patented fy ft @RADtEY &. iis colic enacv Reg. 2.25 and 2.75 ROSES 2 Now is the time to buy and plant you've wanted around your home. Patented Roses and up to 75c sav- ings. Hurry in today dur- ing this sale ... Hurryl those roses “Perennial “gf Regularly 45¢ each a Now is your chance to buy perennial plants that you want from varieties to choose today, during this sale Hurry in Plants ne @ for 1 Quick Acting Plant Food for 2500 Sq. Ft. Reg. 2.79 2 for $5 Ideal for lawns, shrubs, trees, gardens. Balanced piant food, Sy easily .dissolved by lant i iuices: ,Buy it today. -Ib. | . clifacli ¢ é as . Merion Blue-Kin of All Grasses p |-Pound $2 ® Reg. 2.34 Unsurpassed for sheer beauty, sich green loveliness. So dense it tends to choke out Needs less mowing. weeds Galvanized, Weld Non-Climbable Fence Reg $25 $22 100-Ft., 48-In. Made with 2x4 welded fence, round terminal and line posts. Galvanizing approved by UL Testing Co r ging Gives Neat Looking Lawns $3 Rugged aluminum edging is corrugated for extra strength . ideal around drives, walks, flower beds 4-In. by 40-Ft. Cross Country | Sheep Manure 50 Pounds $2 eg. 2.29 zi Organic fertilizer adds humus to soil. Will not burn plants or foliage. Apply early fall, spring for best results Double Picket Woven Lawn Fence 100-Ft. Reg. $37 $33 Medium- ll-gauge copper bearing steel galvanized. Top pickets 3 inches apart. Bot- tom 11/-in. Stronger. Rake Value “14 curved teeth, by 23g in. long. 13% in. wide. Sturdy 4 Cultivates | Light Soil 1.00 @Strong steel @ head is 5 inches Vs Sa ae ve 39c on Stove Bolt, Nut Assortment 1.00 ‘ i Regular Price 1.39. Packed in plastic box. Contains round head 100 stove bolts and ruts. Come in today . , . Save!. Now Only a a pe 100 End and Corner Posts Extra — Woven Border Wire for Garden - Lawn $3 More beauty and protection for your flowers and lawn Fully galvanized steel tor longer life. 16 inches high. 25-Ft. Roll Seni nb 3 EE ROI ed aie ‘Elgin Screen and Storm Door Closer $] “Hold open” feature. Extra closing power. 14% inch diam- eter. 10'/-in. barrel. Save 79c. Reg. 1.79 * pos Sate ceo 25-Ft. Plastic Hose -.Fult 2" Diameter Crefteman $2 Lightweigh@ ends Hit ing.—Harry in today during this gigantic Dollar Sale ..» Save! See it at : RY DEPARTMENT! => AQ dq Seven Discs Garden Hoe Only 2.00 1.00 Padlock Solid Braid 1%-In. 190-Ft. 1.00 1.00 6x4” steel blade Plaring tool has ‘-foot hardwood Extruded Brass *7 clothesline of swivel cone yoke, Dandie. case. Two keys. cotton fiber aes a * ‘ «eS i Regular 7.50 Dunlap lightweight wheelbarrow, made of top grade ma- Perfectly Balanced— Designed for Homeowners terials, is rugged, long-lasting. Has 3-cu. ft. pressed steel tray with rolled edge. 10-in.x!.75 tired wheel rolls easily. 4 ~ Look How Little You Pay for a 20-inch Rotary Mower 34” 3.50 Down Powered by a 2-HP, 2-cycle Power Products three cutting height adjustments from 1%% to 25% inches. Has front and side trim, leaf mulcher plate, 6.50x1.50 tires, red finish. . @ 2-H. P. @ 1 Leaf Mulcher @ Regularly 39.95 sngine. Has Craftsman Rotary Mower Now with Easy Self-Starter 94° $5 Down Turn handle, push down — your mower’s in operation! | And operates safer, easier with foot pedal clutch. 4-posi- tion fingertip controls on handle. 7 position quick wheel adjustments. 2¥s HP 4 cycle engine. @ Regularly 104.95 @ Foot Pedal Clutch @ 20-inch Cut —— . © t 27 youn money back” SENRK 1H Saginaw St. Phone FE S417 ; ie —_—_- —_ — —— a aie: “ys gio ay THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1959 Marketing Setup Lags in Russia Agriculture Department Cites Inferior System for Farm, Food Goods WASHINGTON (AP)—The Agri- culture Department said today the Soviet Union lags far behind the United States in its marketing sys- tem for farm and food products. This was said to handicap the| Soviet people in achieving the) good diets and standard of living) they so badly want. . + eo | Information on the Soviet mar-| keting setup was obtained by a) team of department economists who visited the Soviet Union last year under an exchange arrange- ment. More progress has been made by the Soviets in stepping up farm production than in marketing, the team reported, “Their marketing facilities and methods are inefficient and. old; fashioned by our standards, and their market pricing system is in-| ferior to ours,"’ the report said. | A wide variety of breads and} rolls is used, the economists said, | to keep the Soviet cereal diet from becoming monotonous. * * * In describing retail stores, the report said there are refrigerated cases, but the meat never looks fresh. * * * Butter and cheeses are good, and together with bread and ice cream, these are among the best! foods in the Soviet Union. Both canned goods and fresh produce: are of limited variety. * *x The team. said, however, that while the Soviet diet was plain and not properly balanced, they saw no signs of hynger or of ob- vious malnutrition. .- E lementary Club Fair Tomorrow.; ROMEO — A carnival ‘atmos- phere will prevail at South4S8chool here from 3 to 9 p.m. tomorrow when the Elementary Schools Club stages its annual Spring Fair in the building and on the grounds: * * * In addition to the customary fair} events and booths, fire engine! rides, a novelty shop and a gold- diggers’ treasure cove will be new attractions this year . * * * Mrs. William McNeil Jr. is gen eral chairman and Mrs. C. K Auvil her assistant. Proceeds will go toward purchasing needed items “apn “ey ‘< ve ‘ev ety © © .@ | the *w®*® ¥ ee poe. “d - 2 sv eer yr tres THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN SHOVE OFF, PAL, PM ABOARD—Gabby, a four-day-old duckling, is quick to adapt and when plunked into the world of Little Miss Miffit, a four-year-old toy bulldog, no time was lost in getting transportation. quizzical, perhaps he’s asking the time-honored | question of cabbies, ‘Where to, bud?” | | i iploye at the new Southfield Bowl! oozy,’’ Mrs. Mitchell added, point-| Strange Well’s Owner Preplexed Oil, Gas Bubble in Southfield By DICK HANSON (bowling alley at 23059 Eight-Mile|ing to the bowling alley parking! “I have enough trouble getting Suburban News Editor |Rd., was angry when she reported | lot. | bowling alleys instalied,”” he SOUTHFIELD — They've struck| work one morning last week. Nor THEIR GAS a a oe fearon oil and natura] gas in Southfield,, ‘Look at my shoes, they’re | MacQueen went out to look at eee aa im the tlle ” but the owner is perplexed. | ruined,” she exclaimed to her (the lot too. ‘Must be a gas leak,” - tow The discovery was quite acci-| boss, Finlay MeQueen, owner of he said. He called the Consumers “But, we'll contact a driller, dental — the result of a natural the new bowling alley. He looked. | Power Co. We'll find some way to get it phenomena — at least in part. | —— were a real mess all The firm denied the gas was done,” he’ added. »~ * — theirs. ‘“‘We haven't got a main s *« * : Mrs. Elizabeth Mitchell, an em-| “It’s icky, it anywhere around there,” a The ground has dried a little spokesman said. The company |5ince the discovery, but a strange | sent a couple of men out any- /dor still pervades the air — a aan ‘rather tantalizing oder for Mac- . _ | Queen. Drill or cap? That is the “What you have there looks like; question. |an oil and natural gas well,”’ they : * * * agreed. When Southfield Fire Chief » Oxtor d Couple ‘fred W. Kruck arrived on the Port on Rolls of |scene, he found workmen calmly Bossardet Heads Group lo Study Oxford Needs Teal area ine crwde ai Beta Kappa OXFORD — Edward J. Bossar- ces and fire station plus approxi- for that purpose rather than let) oxrORD — Mr. and Mrs. John bubbles and is AP Wirephote The dog looks a bit | Scouts Plan | People of Milford Public Sale at Milford — Re-Fill or Fill In? ‘um ae um ww Divided:on Ponds stuff—and some not so good,"’ will be auctioned off at Boy Scout Troop 33's first sale beginning at 1 p.m. Saturday in the Legion Hall laccording to Scoutmaster George ‘Crawford in Romeo Stagés | * * * Purpose of the sale is to raise enough funds to bny pup tents for $ so they Gan earn impor- tant merit badges during the spring, summer and fall camp- oufs. “We need Scouting equip- ment,” Crawford said, “and the boys have been collecting items from neighborhood donors for | more than four months in antici- pation of this sale.” Already assembled on the Legion Hall grounds are electric ranges, | washing machines, gas and oil wa- ter heaters, furniture, clothing, an tiques, toys, musical instruments and even a 1948 Pontiac ‘Silver Streak.” Someone donated a cat and three new kittens, and Scouts have been By REBA HEINTZELMAN empty mill ponds in the -heart of| Milford for beauty’s sake or let} realestate developers plug the gapping ..muc holes with land-fill for a shopping center has become one of the biggest issves in this 127-yea@told town. Ownef of the ponds, James Rob-| bins, claims that he opened the) ifloodgates on dams, draining thou-| ” sands of tons of water from four! because insurance cor-| panies insisted on an immediate} \James Ely, likes the town as it that it provide building space of| MILFORD—Whether to re-fill the|Was before the ponds were emp- 3,600 square feet for village offi- tied, and thinks that there are plenty of ade- _quate shopping unity. “I moved out here to get away and bustle of the city—with its ta MRS. ELY inspection before issuing liability|dustry and gach.” she said. “I'd policies whch had expired. He also stated that it is not good business for him to main- tain the ponds at a yearly cost of $10,000, with no profit to his manufacturing company now operating in the old Ford plant on the. site. Prospective buyers for part of for both the North and South promised two live rabbits—just to Robbins’ property have been wait- Schools, Mrs McNeil said. keep things hopping. ing more than eight months for the icouncil to decide on whether to Rochester Will Select #2 oS Fourth of July Queen have become alarmed as to just! what is going to happen. reporter in an effort to spot-check} opinions on the water-versus-land.| ROCHESTER—The “Miss Amer-| selected, said contest chairman \fill question. The survey turfed} ica Pageant’ will provide the for- mat for the June 3 contest to select the girl who will reign over the Kiwanis “Family 4th-O-Rama”’ celebration here * * * Entrants will be judged on poise, personality, grace and charm as/| Mrs. Oscar J. Sorenson dr; Winner of the competition will reign as ‘Miss pendence Day Queen" during the Rochester Inde- ‘village's Fourth of July celebra- tion. She also will receive a complete well as on talent which they will| wardrobe and be considered to exhibit in the show production of represent Rochester in other areal competition. To be a contestant, a girl must | Second and third place whh- | ners wil] serve as the queen's | be between 17 and 21 years of age and a resident of the Rochester Community School District. Candidates for the crown w compete in. three classifications. These are bathing suit, talent show! and formal dress. VARIETY IN EACH contests. court. Girls interested-in*entering the 1] Contest may contact Mrs. Sorenson, | of 404 W. Third St. © ‘Old McDonald’ Gets In the bathing suit division, the Mixed With Hymn . girls will be judged on trimness of figure, color of suit, proper fit, style, carriage, self-confidence and charm. show, the girls may sing, dance, give a reading or play a musical instrument. Judging in the formal division Ricky sang ‘‘Old MacDonald Had} ment and pro- will be based on grooming, acces-}a Farm.'’ Two-year-old Gina sang] iqe - additional sories, style and color of costume, |*‘Jesus Loves Me."’ She made it!tay revenue for s {through the first verse all right. ; carriage and poise. * * * - . : , The contest will be held in the'she used her own version: “‘YeS,|the town should student\Jesus love me ,. . Rochester High School lounge and cafeteria at 8 p.m. Five judges, two locdl and three from out of town, are being 2nd Victim of Crash Near Lapeer Dies LAPEER — Injuries suffered in an auto accident near here Mon- day proved fatal yesterday to a Flint girl. ° Barnes, morning in Lapeer County General Hospital, She. , the. second death victim of the “night-time” crash south of La , Driver of the cary Barnes, 16, also of Flint butHig’relation to the girl, died L of injur- ies sustainéd when fils Vehicle left the highway and overturned. jtape-recorded greeting from his family to relatives here. * * * Davis and his 5year-old son \But when it came to the chorus, yes, Jesus loves me... yes, Jesus loves "" Swim Series Opens for Rochester Women ROCHESTER—The first of four swim sessions for women mem- bers of the Rochester YMCA was held this morning at the Pontiac YMCA, 131 Mt. Clemens St.,. Pon- tiac, The other three sessions will be on May 14, 21 and 28. Other women members~of- the hester Y who wish to -attend are‘asked to call to Pontiac ” to register. aa “"There’s a new cash’ register that adds up purchases, deducts. re- funds,“ lists different categories, computes taxes and makes MAQUOKETA, Iowa # — George| = and tive iDavis of Maquoketa, serving with PU around the cdrger from the When they return for the talent ithe Navy at Norfolk, Va., sent a ‘of the three remaining. s¢es-|ly out to be almost a 50-50 proposi- tion. * * * General Motors Proving Grounds employe Herbert Zachow would “just as soon see the water re- returned to the ponds,””’ built by| Henry Ford) some 25 years) ago. “Those ponds used to be recre-| ation as well as} beauty spots of the town,” he said. ‘‘We took our Boy Scouts there for skating in the winter- 4 ZACHOW time, and for picnics in the sum- mer. All this will be gone if the ponds are not — with water.” x ** i A Redford High Sdhool_ teacher who owns some 200 agres and li jponds, Mrs. |Thomas Manley i believes that the ‘holes should be filled for real estate develop- - oe —~ fot Milford. -“I don’t think © > like to see Many} }were contacted by a Pontiac Press| ponds restored like they weré, However, I can see where Robbins ; concerned.”’ ° Part-owner of a cleaning estab- Worn by Britain's most elite regi-| lishment, Mrs. Frank Eason owns'ments—the Grenadier, Coldstream, | and rents property directly across Scots, Irish, and Welsh Guards, the | from the contro- versial ponds at 320 and 340 Sum- mit St. She is all for filling the ponds with sd lishing a com- petitive shopping center.” “Since those ponds have been drained, tenants MRS. EASON in both of our houses have served ‘notice that they are moving out, me : . -. |@s ts i tain. because of the terrific odor emit- sa ting from the mud holes been getting $100 a month rent We have from each house. Now we'll be lucky to get anything,’ she added * * * Owner of the Milford Cement Redi-mix plant, William Knapp, gets a kick out of the fact that sai sO many: people have become in- dignant over the situation He pointed out, “‘This has aroused Milford to the fact that we must make a decision one way or another about the growth of ‘the town. It's good to get 4 +j KNAPP sibilities’ of taxation, beauty and development ‘héete.” Hi school teacher William Parker thinks that Milford does not hawe the population to support the proposed sho p- (igre : ping center if @ the land is filled in, and wants the water back in the ponds. ‘+ “Milford is: a take over the I i ioperation attd« MRS.“MANLEY, maintenance of those ponts,’’ she lsaid. “If they have monéy—or get lit through taxation, I believe we |should have something more con- structive like a youth center: for our teenagers."’ A Milford’ area housewife, Mrs. 4 Fire Chief Purchases 100-Year-Old Jail Cell WOODSTOCK, Ohio (UPI) Fire chief Charles I. Clark recent- purchased a century-old collec tor’s item for just $5 — the town jail. It's a siX-by-eigh{-foot portable celt whith ‘has been, only used oc- casionally during tle past 25 years small congmu- nity, and. n@t’a ; big shopping area,” he spid. *We certainly do not watt. thése _ unhealthy’ mud PARKER holes in the center of town—neither of kaving scenic ponds by land- filling for the shopping center.” Some of the ahswers to Why the water's g one — how, ‘when and if the ponds will be re-filled, and just what will be the out- Gerrard, yillage président, Rebbins said that by” that tite insuranee inspections on all but the main Huron River dam will have been complefed and he will for overnight guests. .Woodstock’'s prisoners are now sent to jails in nggpby towns. try to find out- what the council wants to do, . : ithe Oxford Citizens Study Group 'which recently was appointed to | Council. from the hustle} shopping cen, ters, heavy in-} point as much to rub fur the wrong way. far as the business angle is| Take bearskin caps. people thinking about, the respon-| do we want te ruin the possibility’ night Saturday ‘Has Winning Record & det has been elected president of Mately 1,200 square feet for a civic = hse |A. Krsul Jr., both seniors at Albion center. _ —| The chief decided it might ex- College were elected for member- plode. He wanted to evacuate jship to Phi Beta Kappa, the na- _ Another prerequisite is that the bowling alley 59 feet away. (tion's oldest scholastic honorary there be parking space for at ; | society, least 30 cars and that the lo. | But MacQueen dissuaded him on) kt * * cation be on a street with @i- ‘he condition that a concrete block; rect routes and protection for |wall be built around the well- |site immediately. It investigate village problems and to} report its findings to the Village j They were among 12 seniors jelected from the college. Stewart Langley was elected) : | fire trucks, was, And, | vice president and secretary of the) Chief Kruck posted a sign read-| Mrs, Krsul is the former Jus- six-man committee. The group has} The feasibility of including the ing: | tine Oliver, daughter of Mrs, decided to hold meetings twice a, township in the overall building) * «* * Mont C. Oliver of 390 Mechanic month. |program or other public facilities! «Notice: Natural Gas & Oil Seep-| St. and the late Dr, Oliver. Krsul Upon the recommendation of |should also be considered, the age. Please don't light the gas. ‘ts the som of Mr. and Mrs. Joha the council, the study committee | council has advised. ‘NO COOKING!!!! Order of fire! 4. Krsul of Detroit. will start with the project of | ~ * * chief.” | He has received a+ Fulbright looking for a guitable site for a | Village Attorney Robert V. Par-| And, “‘DANGER,\NO $MOK- Scholarship for the academic year fire station, ‘village offices and enti and Village Manager Ralph ING.” 1959 and will study at the Rhenish police department. ' |Precious were present at the! gray UNDECIDED Frederick William University of ‘ih ose The council has listed certain|t@4y group's organizational meet-| 1. ion instructed MacQueen|"omm, West Germany, specializing requirements which the group is), Gin. membrers of the com. t® Call in drilling experts to end st The Krsuls will sail aboard the M:S. Berlin fram New York Sept. 7 and arrive in Bremen Sept. 17 for his Grientation, SUPERMARKET asked to take into consideration) tte. -oettes Boat wh the explosion menace either by! | Langley, are Clifford Vennard, Dr.|“@PP'"& oF by drilling for oil. ; Donald C. Davidson, Harry Hall) and Gérald C. Olrich. in the selection of an appropriate location, * * * These include that the property, \be within reasonable walking dis-| ‘tance to the downtown area and = A 40,000 SQ. FT. FURNITURE MacQueen was. still undecided | today whether to drill or cap. 2 by Bearskin High Hats Hard to Get, Difficult to Maintain, Cause Uproar Bihan. |. } j i] | H i | WASHINGTON — It doesn’t take Towering, glossy bearskins al - OPEN TONIGHT ‘TIL 9:00 — SPECIAL PURCHASE! National Geographic Society says. | | The Grenadier and Coldstream | Guards were organized in 1660, | and all regiments have distin-| \guished themselves in battle.| |Together they comprise Her |Majesty’s Brigade of Guards. | London has no more , elegant | spectacle for visitors than these | ramrod-straight foot soldiers in | their king-size hats and scarlet Seen against the gray | and Windsor Castle, they prob- | | ably are the most photographed | Recently, however, a Londoner | complained to The Times: ‘Some | (caps) have no fringes at all and) look curiously bald, while others) have a slightly tattered, almost) mangy look about them.” * * * | The letter stirred up a mild tempest in the teapot of British ‘national pride. The Brigade of Guards pointed out that bearskin| caps are not the easiest items in| the world to come by; some are) 50 years old. The manufacturer of frames for the caps stated in print, with wryly mixed metaphor, ‘that the condition of the fur is \‘not our pigeon.” | And townspeople of Timmins, | Ontario, offered to trap enough Canadian bears to previde new headgear for the sentries. | The furor concerns a 20-inch- tall cap weighing about 1% ‘pounds. It is kept from sliding idown over a man’s head like a lbucket by a weblike skullcap isimilar to a GI helmet liner. Noncommissioned guardsmens jeaps are made from the fur of) lmale Canadian bears; those of; — from the softer, brighter fur of females. ae “a . f B Sleep-or-Lounge awteet avy acnon... ! Boy Scout Auxiliary to Hold Square Dance AUBURN HEIGHTS—The Moth- ers’ Auxiliary of Boy Scout Troop 23 here is sponsoring a benefit } square Yance at 8:30 untit mid- in the Avondale High School gym. Callers will be Bill Toll and Ray- GIVES YOU A See this new full size sleeper lounge in Lawson style just as pictured. It hos an extra long innerspring mattress FULL SIZE DOUBLE BED? that makes a usable, comfortable, full size bed. Fine quolity, 100% nylon frieze covers in your choice of colors make this a buy you can’t afford to miss. 1 : ‘ paLiveny 90 Days Same As Cash —Bank Terms Available of 12 te 24 Months Pay- mond McCarty. . Refreshments will be available. TERMS: ments. Open Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday Ni — Closed All Day Tickets can be purchased from m Wednesday. 20 Franklin Rd., just Off S. Saginaw. FEderal 5-9279. James Weaver, sales chairman, or at the door. | All will.go into the Boy) to-buy. equipment. 1 PARK RIGHT AT THE. FRONT DOOR : Ss. G; , aneuons Ta) CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI)—Paul | Brown of the Cleveland ‘Srewne has won 267 games, lost 55 and) tied 11 during 28 years of coaching prep, high school, college, service | and professional. football, . + Len a A NLT ION IEE RECOM | i} 2 of ae ee ee ae ee age ee a a wine ere nt eee ; © j i a en See eee } 4 * ee ly te as e Nome sUhtiaOs THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1959 desirable,” be said. “I'd ike to but Not Poll Results Bob Condsidine Says: E 7 |" ngineer Raps isee us put some of the billions) ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo. Feel Sorry for Yourself? Visit a Hospital space program 238 oor. se reg | Johnson lost in Sweetwater .County standard of living in underdevel- | oy action races for the Wyoming NEW YORK — The next time ing hands and fingers of the blind , irl all done up in blue, stood alone| across the hall. He sat straight ; It was a double ring ceremony. joped countries. state legislature you feel sorry for yourself, visit! gardeners. iby a great window of Rusk's of-| ®% 89 @Frow in his roll-chair, his |David Beatty looked up at her with) U. of M. Department | * * * | James J. Johnson, a Republi- a hospital | Dr. Howard A. Rusk, the great/fice, overlooking the river. She head pela po = ‘ 2 y ” | as over. Linda uNams = . ————————————— visit to the Ins ) through her purse and found a | CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI)—‘‘The land. A pretty assistant reminded| Beatty leaned over her husband, | Medicine and Rehabilitation, New} ~ ' treasured kerchief to give her. It]! There was a nurse or two, a best 4 |him The wedding’s about to| arte : ; eaver. rate space ~ York University-Bellevue Medical 2.04» oe invited yi to come Provided the “something old," and|man from down Virginia way, and 2nd his eager, Yrateful lips found space program (of the ‘nited : ; Center. | along | the girl was touchingly grateful. {the Rev. Kenneth C. Fordyce of 8 eo epene leaves me cold,”’ the head ] ] | z : , rt ss | > | > is “c jew C - }< -ng in a iwersit’ I saw a little Bolivian bey | Linda Williams, a pretty Virginia! David Beatty waited in a room |the Methodist Church ot Nee er well now ihe: mecioun part t sriiiwan cai at the University of 4 UU ° e roudly watering his flowers, ma- | ——— - iberland, W. Va ve . SP 2 aes BA p ' ' | * t * over, let's get on with the fun, Ernest Boyce, who also is a ; ‘ S’ In MEN’S and BOY nipulating the spray with tiny | i Dr Rusk sz ay ; ; : . . _ Rusk said. He gallantly kissed sultz F mands that ocem te grew out of ’ | Linda William, engaged to Da- Serie awl g ie _ rs consultant for the World Health . | the bride, and soon the cokes and organization in the South Pacific, | his body without the intervening ivid before the terrible accident, | ookies were flowing like wine was one of man a . i. extension of arms, And I attend- |came in on the arm of her father.) yy, by the - jee many engineers at the ) | : e went by the flower house annual spring conference of the ed the wedding of a fine-looking |Her husband-to-be could not turn) aoain. Juanito Yepez, a trunk with'American Society of Fnzinecrs young man who is paralyzed be- ‘his head to see her. The best man)}inds and feet but. "avin ; nani icc , : s neither arm y ci Craft Cloth Jockey Underwear on as jhere who claimed the space pro- s S heee sharts, Seartenekt © imarveves ‘Socks @ Michaels-Stern Clothes @ Hickek Belts MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Charge Accounts Invited. Open Every Nite ‘til 9 accident. around to position, and there fol- crop. A_ great-éyed little boy : . | l\lowed the tender recitation of the a eee : * * * Enid Annenberg Haupt, publish-| thumped in on his braces, spotted er of Seventeen, has made a won-| j|marriage pact, the half-whispered) , caged parrot, cried, ‘‘Polly, want drous contribution to the institute, | pledges, promises la cracker?” and hugged his own a ee a ree | aimed at expanding the horizons of | yee said. “The space pro- its kids. The gift is a playground low the neck he broke in a car jand the minister wheeled him por jegs. was cheerfully tending his gram was not worth the muney. | “I couldn't care less about “For better or for worse, in | sides in delight sickness and in health,” fluttered | Mrs. Haupt, God bless her, went through the room and took com- back to work. “We need to put our money and gram leaves me cold.” whose gear will be fitted to the| physical limitations of the users, an outdoor grill on which they can, cook their picnic fare, and a su-! perb hot house where spring will) always be in breathless bloom. * * * | It is unique, but surely one day will be found at the side of many, hospitals. The therapeutic proper-| ties hardly need delineation: the| rebirth of plants and flowers, the} emergence of rare beauty from} homely soil, the patient progress of nature The passageways of the place al-| low for the dimensions and intrica-| ries of wheelchairs; the flower pots are built low. where they can be reached pelling meaning. The best lady put her handkerchief briefly to | her nose and mouth. Judge’s Laundry Aired at Meeti \ WISCONSIN RAPIDS, Wis. (?— A murmur ran through the Wood : County Board chambefs as the committee chairman, réading a list came to this item ~~ Eee of bills submitted for approval “Jail laundry — Judge's Laun- dry, $8.10."’ ; “Since when,’ demanded one of the newly-elected rural super- | yisors,. ‘‘are we paying for the judge's laundry?” * * * This good woman, whose love of children and flowers has here found perfect communior, is proud er of an herb patch than anything she has touched, She showed it to us. a shallow table-like garden It was all smoothed over when a city supervisor explained , that Judge's Laundry is a local clean- “sprouting rosemary, lavender, hie , ne fone, sage, dill, mint and the like.| AP Wirephete |! establishment and the bill was STARTS 39TH YEAR BEHIND BARS — Antonio (Tony) De |f0r laundry work for the county It is a garden for blind chil- _ ; ; . a Jal dren, Here, fragrance and the Tardo, 84, prepares to light his pipe as he sits in a rocking chair feel of texture will substitute for at the barred window in his ane in San Quentin, Calif prison A modern internal gas combus- the delights of color, Nearby, a + te recently began serving his 39th year in prison. De Tardo, dean tion engine burns about 13 pounds cactus corner — confined to need. of the prison both in age and continuous time served, came to San of air to every pound of fuel less species because of the quest- Quentin after pleading guilty to shooting his wife Madeline consumed oo: FORD Inc. EDDIE STEEL NEW CARS NEW TRUCKS USED CARS USED TRUCKS PARTS and SERVICE I ee 7 . 96 GET ROYAL CROWN J COLA 16-OUNCE ! 6-PACK AT HALF PRICE. You'll Never Know You've Got ROYAL CROWN 16-OUNCE WHEN YOU BUY | VERNORS -8 OUNCE 6-PACK AT ate Until You've Been to Eddie Steele Sales - Service - Satisfaction DON’T TAKE ONE WITHOUT THE OTHER! EDDIE STEELE *™ 2705 ORCHARD LAKE RD., KEEGO HARBOR | BIG NEW OUTDOOR SHOWROOM Oo he Hi Overhead Area FE 5-9204 « 4 , ; f 4 all ain en 2 _ VERNORS 8-OUNCE . . . Right now you can buy a 6-pack of 8-ounce deliciously different Vernors at regular price and get a 6-pack of 16-ounce R-C Cola at half price! R-C Cola— — the fresher refresher with a sprightly-light taste all its own. Vernors and R-C Cola .. . whata tasty pair. What atime to buy! Go ahead — step out your door, go down to your store and stock-up now! ) ROYAL CROWN COLA Is Bottled and Distributed by | VERNORS GINGER ALE, INC. ; | OFFER AVAILABLE ONLY IN DETROIT, ANN ARBOR AND PONTIAC! ad c=", REGULAR PRICE f Se THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1959 ” Young Criminal ‘Anything Cause—MSU Researchers. ly ; o r} that wane could be produced lave same ty of 1 required by an ee. . 4 'U.S. plants in fivé days or less. laverage a of 15,000 Popul tion. Thinks of Schooling Cells Decide on Cancer’ 2% pants in tive days or less laverase «ity TOLEDO, Ohio #.—~ Fifteen-year- EAST LANSING (AP)—Researchers at Michigan State old Kenneth Harrington of Garden University hold that cancer: City, Mich., convicted of auto theft, 1. Starts when too many of the body’s repair cells de- | f was offered a choice in US. dis- cide to reproduce. r trict court of serving three years in * * * the National Training School for 30ys in Washington, D. C., or being 2. May be caused by anything—from viruses to tobacco turned over to juvenile authorities tar—which influences the cells to ‘reproduce. in Michigan. 3. Should be attacked with the aim of controlling the He picked the federal sentence. | number of reproductive cells. a ipmesr ting A cee gar al The cells which repair tissues are the same as those be cae cacatiorss ‘raise program which generate cancerous tissue, say Drs. G. Bernard than is available in Michigan. Mpeg a H. Morrison of MSU’s Botany and Plant athology partment. Pulitzer Prize winning play- x * ae wright Elmer Rice was a practic- ns : : ing lawyer before he became an| STREAMLINED THEORY known cell-specialist. author of many stage and screen . +. 2 a hits He says the theory that cancer starts With continuous meee en ne as ea growth of repair cells is “a streamlined version of the theory Sealed propeses etl tt Ts tt | held by most biologists.” } the office of the ty jerk ily a ee ee ce aeay an | Wilson and Morrison maintain the most promjsing ee oe oe Be the oie approach to a cancer cure is to concentrate on a study of aud the retes of vids for the ditterent the reproductive cycle of cells. items noted or the construction o ves he ee ee eae The cycle has four stages in which the cells (1) divide, Mother's Base ; Section B. 2° Bituminous Conerete| (2) grow, (3) rest and (4) prepare to divide again. | Day ’ Sion, Nevious ‘streets in ‘the City oi kok * | Sunday, — oe nis work The MSU researchers believe it is during the third, or | May 10 ASSORTED CHOCOLATES j consist principally of the following: resting, stage that the cell decides either to help carry out ’ ion 2?" Asphaltic Concrete 8t = i tace ‘Course and Related Wor nerete, Our: the functions of the organ of which it is a part or to repro- | 1lb. box $1.36 2 Ib. box $2.70 : Bis e Preparation, 40,357 are Yards) duce. 4 ar gi or ieaCon a ae aes Coa, * * * 4 : qu . ards » 8 'B zB Bituminous Concrete Re- Under their theory, cancer starts if too many of the cells | Replacement aa Related Work . decide to reproduce. ae. Cee ee Cotter Repeneee Ue tiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce, pre- | r 194 Lin. Pt Bid ¢ re ae {Gutter Replacement (24) big smile on Karen Schreiner’s face indicates sénts the trophy as Marion Zollman, Karen's | Epecial Curb Replacement, 1688 Lin Pt.| how thrilled she was yesterday to receive a tro- second grade teacher at St. Trinity Lutheran |Health Dept. Reports Bituminous & opcrete Resurface 2833 Ton te 155 25 172 Base Replacement, Square Yards Bituminous Square Yards 12 Stor rm Concrete Removal, Drain, C-75 R. C. P., St d Manhole . ace Std Inlet, 1 4 “Cone rete 81 a wetk Replacement, WINS SAFETY POSTER CONTEST — The phy for winning a safety cartoon Robert Morrison of 371 Elizabeth Lake Rd., sponsored by | the Pon- chairman of the contest, which consisted of was conducted School looks on. The contest, coloring eight safety cartoons, for St. Trinity's second graders. coloring contest. Bradley Owners End cane et ee ten Pink Firehouse Doors reported last week in the Oakland| \Ported to the city carlet Fever on Increase f the communicable diseases! lof the communicable diseases re- and county health 6920 Square Peet search. So far, the union's effort : Poe . NIWA first quality that spell special value in any man’s language! Don't be misled by the price—we have never offered a value like this before! Each in Sets of Four BRAND NEW 1959: Stronger ROAD HAZARD Guarantee | Dayten Tires—and only Dayton PERE ED LAGS EOE eRe b O44 wins 42% KOO ee. ee “+e Tires — can you this sensa- tional road guarantee — stronger than ever before — more realistic than ever before. All tires carry a manufacturer's guar- antee against factory defects in workmanship and material. But only one tire in a hundred fails because of a factory defect. The hdd Mdddddbddldddshdddidddéadééddddddddtdddaitdddddddtea Ask your dealer point blank: “Is this tire guaranteed against road hasards in writing by the manufacturer? Is this réad hasard en a monthly basis er on tread wear? Is this road hasard en it price or on = more accurate , Secounting price?” No Payments ‘til June 10 | Applications Processed Promptly BONDED BRAKES ; rest fail because of road hazards ; = cuts, spikes, curb breaks, " N rim bruises, ete.) But Dayton gives . N you a full road hazard guarantee ; N based on tread war, not on some ‘ NY arbitrary monthly —and on ~ y accounting prices, not on some ° N phony in list price. . N enna > SSS Se Y DICTA ARVANA Sn LaLa mth meg Easy Credit Sits “| WHEEL ALIGNMENT Complete front end adjustment om including : DIAMOND caster-camber | ° Labor and Material $ 95 |: "RINGS. and toe-in © Re-Pack Front Wheels GRANDMOTHERS , 5 ; : rom ° e Leper $95,000 A Gift Everlasting 5 95 Re-Adjust Brakes % ~ ° to Be Cherished Forever S © Inspect Wheel ; Most Chev., 3 Registered Jewelers Fords, Plym. Cylinders FORLYMOUTR : American Gem Society ‘ : DIAMOND : > . PENDANT paytonas ; NECKLACES rporo?! : rom $25.00 JEWELERS , ; | ; | 16 W. HURON / FE 2-0204 . ‘ BUY ON BUDGET PAYMENTS — 10% DOWN — 10% A MONTH > ~ . ™~ ss ” . baad “ ; ® : 7 SB fey. . . : A. f ' eras ys ff : ; “ . nies ee Fe Ea ae Ne Oe aes 64 fe hs ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1959 What Young People Think | By EUGENE GILBERT “‘Everybody works but father, he sits around all day .. .” Remember that old song? Most teenagers probably never heard of it, but the main idea in the lyrics is enough to start a pretty good argument among them. Does the fact that father is the breadwinner excuse him from working around the house? Should he help with the house- | “Why shouldn't he do the dishes. of Hoosick Falls, N.Y. “No one |He ate, didn’t he?” counters bel likes om a ee iginia Lee Brown, 15, of Coates-| a —— oo ville, Ind, ‘‘He's not the only pne| sa cae —— John es ; ; fo w o c y, Iowa, answers: ‘‘Ho! be has to work. The wife Works | ays mie ko aire Doles all day too. ‘dishes is part of a wife’s duties | “I'm sick of listening to how and ghe shouldn’t need help. The hard men work. They have to/post office doesn’t have mailmen’s wake most of them up at the of-|wives come down and help with fice to go home for supper.” ithe Christmas rush.” So far, the teenagers interviewed Larry Budde, a 16-year-old Should Dad Do Dishes? Question Stirs Storm! work in an agreeable manner or is he resentful? Surprisingly, 59 per cent of the youngsters said that their fathers managed to smile behind a broom, and only 22 per cent noted any particular resent- ment. more light than do dark colors. on walls and cupboards reflect specialists at Michigan State Uni- “He may snari a little when | asked to do ” sald | one boy, ‘‘but once he gets going, you usually find him whistling or singing.” The survey showed that one way | husbands can avoid housework is’ by bringing work home trom the| office. Of the youngsters inter-; viewed, 32 per cent said their fa- | FLOWERS... for Mother in new Floral Print DRESSES | thers brought home work from the | office and spent anywhere from at it. While boys were overwhelmingly opposed to their fathers doing) housework, 81 per cent saw no} objection to his doing office work | at home. And, as would be expected, ~twork?-Do-the-dishes-every-night?+-Breokivn—iad,-came—up—with «were speaking in purely hypotheti-. Or maybe just pitch in and help| revolutionary idea to solve this cal terms, giving their opinions on lafter a big meal — say at Christ-| age-old domestic problem; ‘Why jwnat should or shouldn't be done. ‘mas and Thanksgiving? | don’t the children do the dishes, | Witay HAPPENS? | * * * then Mom and Dad could sit Fos inekiice, does Dead do any of These are some of the questions} #nd watch television?” If Larry’s || oy ework? Yes. answered 56 , a idea ever caught on, it might . we threw at 600 teenagers across & ‘per cent the country in an effort to deter-| be bigger than paper plates. And ‘what does he do? mine father’s place in the home a 57 © 1297 aacemnaesecaicnninlel Sizes 8 to 20 and 142 to 24'2 JOYCE COFFEL Mr. and Mrs. Ross Harper of Drayton Plains announce Boys were inclined to bend a the engagement of their daugh- when there’s work to be done. little — but not much — on the| “7 ——— led = ine girls thought exactly the oppo- Cool cottons, dressy crepes and 4 ter, Joyce Coffel. to Lester he |duestion of whether Dad should| Test with ® 52 per cent vile. site, with 59 per cent opposed ¢ Stanley. son of Mr. and Mrs. As might be expected, the | The survey figures further te hie deing offieé work at heme, party chiffons. One and two 4 questions divided teenagers into jhelp with the dishes after a big posi jmeal like Christmas or Thanks- Plains. No wedding date has ae = mE camps. | giving. handy fellow around the house, Girls for the most part were all been_set. A magnanimous-minded 13 per| when forced te it. ee for putting anapron on father and | cent flashed him the green light) Twenty-two per cent of the teen- allowing him to work off office/to proceed to the kitchen; 59 per|agers said their fathers helped tension on the business end of @ cent stil] held out against scullery with the cooking, 13 per cent said broom or dishmop. ‘duty despite the festive nature of he did the floors and walls, 5 per Boys, for the most part¥ thought the meal, and 28 per cent didn’t|cent said he washed clothes, 3 Meets at Home sag ese eee anes: were ‘know what to think. \per cent said he swept the floors. POESEROMRE Sc Ue: SHAE 08 She HOUNe * + | The remainder of the answers of Mrs. Gurche {not at all in keeping with his | Girls had no second thoughts! were divided among such chores Zeta Xi Alumnae aiid of dignity, rank and need for relaX- shout this ene at all: 9T per centlas washing windows, painting. Delta Qmicron, national music fra- ation. lof them insisted that Dad's place|cleaning the garage, moving fur- ternity, met at the home of Mrs. 4g maMA MAID?’ \after Christmas or Thanksgiving piture (“Mom's the artistic type,” Alice Gurche of Birmingham Tues-| «Certainly hisbands, should help dinner was in the kitchen and not | explained one boy), taking out the day evening. iwith the household chores,” in-|Snoozing on the couch. ‘garbage, tidying up closets, even * |sisted 16-year-old Marcia Rives of| “}fusbands have an obligation |changing baby diapers. * * * Does Dad take to this type of AS a cS ae ae Rant eae Ee ee Leia eae & tt pe Be eg Sc 5 cae Ralph Stanley of Drayton showed that Dad is a pretty compared with the 83 per cent Who thought he should pitch in with the household tasks. 216-216 SEWING | MACHINES Brand New! In beautiful console. Selling out floor samples and || demonstrators. Full Lia $ 47 For Home Demonstration Cell CAPITAL APPLIANCES | FE 5-9407 piece styles. Our Famous Brand MR. JOHN HOSE DESIGNED IN PARIS 99¢ cous Caton s 36 N. Saginaw Delta Omicron Re ;. ] 3 19 Pair JOANN GARRETT Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Garrett of Newberry road an- nounce the engagement of their daughter, JoAnn, to | Douglas A. Keyes, son of Mr. | and Mrs. Elwell O. Keyes of Detroit. The wedding will be performed June 20. * * New officers for the coming year Detroit. “What do they think the) to help out after big meals,” | argued 15-year-old Virginia Coe - M g 9°" are Mrs. Howard Moore, president; sai maid . a Mrs. Harold James,. vice presi- “No,” argued 14-year-old Tom dent: Mrs. Ronald Grover, record- Mackay of Duluth, Minn., ‘‘Fa- ing secretary; Mrs. R. P. Jackson, ther works all day, he should be corresponding secretary; and Mrs. allowed to have his evenings and ‘rank H easurer. ,weekends free. Most women now = . erta, as don’t know what to do with their Catherifte Skelly, pianist, played b , spare time.”’ two dances by contemporary clas-) : And argument went, | sical composer Milhaud. Mrs. ee : with 83 per cent of the girls Jackson and Mrs, Gurche played calling on Dad to climb out of three piano duets by modern jazz that rocking chair and get to composers. work, and 55 per cent of the New members are Donna Bryce, YS Urging him to stay right Nan Webster, Mrs. Ronald Grover, Where he is and enjoy a well Miss Skelley and Carolyn Scott. = it Sbould husbands wash the dishes | | | ‘ Biss Sh ee 7 SORES BS i med | « SUIT BLOUSES make a wonderful gift every night? Special Absolutely not, answered 9§ per de f cent of the boys in an amazing ‘ “ show of unanimity. : Mf P Even the remaining 2 per cent ° ¢ : i were reluctant to join the enemy ranks. To a man, they answered) is sat ; eons , ‘don't know,’ leaving the yes . Purchase % AC ons Mi} : blank on our questionnaire sealed bai 5A aie MAY IS a single male vote . Fe: To Make st UNIFORM MONTH Despite their strong stand on! i Mother , at The Oxford Shop | Dad's helping with household ; Here’s a likely chores in general, girls were in-|; ap - ‘ “OR * neuen Street clined’ to leniency wie 1 carce Happy 5 little number that’s OR S$ Seren to sentencing him to a nightly ses-| ‘. og bound to please. It’s —— ott ae sion at the sink. fi ; f SATISFACTION | Only 24 per cent thought he | $! 5 ) ‘ only one of a should do the dishes every night; |; te collection in > 95 ae | 5.95 72 per cent figured this was asking * ¢ ¢ ¢ ee 4 . Shore wand ond Gieaves a big too much; and 4 per cent 2 é batiste, dacrén and nylon ae od — Be $0 hadn't quite made up their minds. \ = in drip-dry fabrics. Te] Garis 10 to 20 GROWLS From Bows . ; A spectacular Loce trimmed e whole question brought an j : w . Oxtord shop gry growls from the young males? “on parchose ; or tailored’ interviewed. of minks for : Sizes 30 to 38. @ MATERNITY UNIFORMS “No, definitely not.’’ grumbled Mother ot end- is 2 @ LAB COATS 15-year-old Marion Evers of Au- ae @ DOCTOR COATS gusta, Maine. ‘Dishwashing is not | of-season © DRUGCISTS! JACKETS a Te eam 5 prices. She's elwoys dreamed, of owning. » = RA mars, ep ANI a ttn nen\|f. mink—let this special price and credit plan > — ~ ee ; make it possible for this special occasion. y ° : In pastel, sapphire, silver blue + Blouses — Main Floor Slhury " or ranch mink. © ins He *Plus 10% federal tax a TRAVELING Pas Pur products labeled to show country of origin of imported furs. Be _— ™ os Be : ; a eT ee a > - COM ‘ ANION IN ALL WO 2 iL - i SEE ES aon - asain 4 , ks Fur Salon — Second Floor * * Par NN : -- WORSTED CREPE TWIST, SIZES ! / dey 2 SPECIAL Ee , (32 © 8 TO 16 IN WHITE, c ‘eS Suitable for 4 } 3 . - 4 » i . z < 4& Summer , Red, Maize ¢ : ¢| i ; ——— 0 . f DRESSES i oa € : : i Priced e. \ ' ef > > > ty A New . eee Ge ag ae e Washable C | ] | Ee ee ae Fashions ie «3 Remember Mame with a lasting gift of fashion. ‘ ¢ 6 6 9.98 BLACK and WHITE. f What more fitting way to I A FSS FS ; ‘if greet Mother on Her Day : . than with our air-weight suit of handsomely textured Cupioni. Back belted lO § to ( 9 8 c, with seam and dart detail. e rs *& PARTIES Navy, Capri blue, Beige, % RECITALS Green. Sizes 10 to 20 It’s a wonderful way to show her how *% GRADUATION much you care. It has a fine look of ° Suit Salon — Second Floor simplicity and one of the prettiest ways } to look cool and smart for summer. 5 98 to 10 98 Choose from one and two-piece ooo Se * styles. Jacketed styles, of course. \ Party pretty and feminine for little girls’ very 4 Ways ‘to Buy: Sizes for cabal misses ond = Em f special occasions. It’s.the way you'll want . | ee Yy y: women’s half sizes. GIFT y, her to look on Mother's Day. .. Cool, crisp ™ * 1. LAYAWAY ) i . “3 he sleeveless dresses in nylon, dacron/cotton Be 2. CHARGE / a Dress Selon — Second Floor CERTIFICATES, ‘ blends ond drip-dry cottons. Pastels. Sizes a 3. CONTRACT ; Issued in any amount et ) pe ig) te 1a, prepa » 4 BUDGET our main floor desk. ; ; : 4 . it Young Folks Shop — Lowey Level 1) sina ’ , b a THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY x > ng _e 7, 1959 ill | AWAKE UVEH.FAbES SQA Dn . | Movs ‘ We a , RICHARDS BOYS AND GIRLS WEAR While Shopping for Mother’s, Day Gifts See These Amazing Values for Children .. . 2 BIG FEATURES ; DRESS SALE COAT SALE 4 sop a? Coats, Git’ Spring Sts and Straw Fats : an a Real ” 4 Dresses to $8.98 from our Regular Stocks 1,0FF in all size ranges, they are sensationally reduced in two groups at $2 and $3. Timely Specials Big Showing : @ 3 to 6x Boys’ 00 q . Seersucker Shorts ....... $s] @ 6 to 12 Boys’ Zip 00 . Fly Shorts .............. $] | @ Girls’ 6 Mos. to 6 Years 98 Rhumba Suits ........... $s] Special New Shipment GIRLS’ CAR COATS Tan Poplin with Knitted Collar Popular iA 3 te 6x $4.98 ’ 7 te 14 $5.98 Pre Teen $7.98 $3.79 to $5.99 ‘| BE DRESSED FOR MOM’S . Do You Have a Charge Account With Us? DAY WITH HANDSOME RICHARDS e BUSTER SIE Boys’ and Girls’ Wear NORTH HILL PLAZA r) SIMPLEX FLEXIES ROCHESTER I4AZAAALALAAALAZALALALAAAL LLL ILA LLALLALLALALLLALALLLAL AL Lar CONFIDENTIALLY GETTING MOM... MARRIED? yeu ng ladies we offer this real vhanee te save a substantial amount eon wedding invitations. 20% "ee items that say: “As usual PLUS FREE GIFTS Invitations from $8.80 per the unusual from Welch's. $3” LY ach Printed Napkins from ae CASSEROLES, gs 4 $1.95 per 100 Blenko Decorative Glass from... , 4 Bm MOTHER Good thought we have when we Nobody makes peanut butter sandwiches like you do. | taste need not be expensive is the go to market. We hunt for those fa ~~ = o o 1a z rf i Dm. SOUT TTUOOOOTOOE LED, CARAFES *2.98 MANY OTHER ITEMS JUST FOR MOTHER Free Gift Wrapping—Special Attention Given to All Children OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY NITES “ CALL OL 1-1231 We will give you.complete de- talls er come in and tet us give On 1461 N. MAIN, ROCHESTER CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED : AMERICAN EXPRESS CREDIT ; CARDS PTT 7 AA LZAALZ LAA ALAA ALAA LA BELA LLL LLL Lh kk hekikdhddhadddddddrn _ OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS TILL 9 WOOO OITOVIOIIOOOTOOOET ES ( aa. WEeCLETI TTT ITT TT Ieee eeeee: I ’ OPEN THURSDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS ‘TIL 9 A?) Team © Geen fords weicets “SSKRESGE CO. {Hoh Shh YOUNSS Helms WRIGLEY Sg {7 ‘acd whe Th Ly Th Lafitaut eat jks a T | fore “ROCHESTER AT TIENKEN ROAD fed : FREE PARKING FOR 850 CARS “oF | + TROY ~ aimee a__\_\--L--<-1-i-hheb ethereal. Sheer Seamless NYLONS 98¢ Pair 2 | ‘Crystal-Clear” run-resistant mesh or regular hose. Stretchy welt-top. Mist or sun tones. Short, med, long. BOXED CHOCOLATES $125 $4950 JEWELRY BOXES Mie > ~~ ~~ CHAISE ‘ LOUNGE ‘9°? = I 495 o-ateerenn ce ee 6 “wre e GUARANTEED SINGING CANARIES $55 MOTHER © Westinghouse Motor 20° PORTABLE FAN JUMBO size fan drives out hoe stuffy air, draws in fresh air. Has a reliable Westinghouse motor with 1-yr. warranty and G.E. rotary switch. Grey enamel case has ~ snap-on protective grill in white enamel, ovuw'wr oe . SUN ‘CHIEF AUTOMATIC CUPS TOASTERS vm 39° OPEN THURSDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS ‘TIL 9 NORTH HILL PLAZA, ROCHESTER == Dh hah hha hh hh haha hha ® 3-Speed; Portable @ 1-Year Motor Guarantee 12° BREEZE BOX Deeply pitched 12” blades provide cool, silent air cir/ culation in home or office. Two-tone baked enamel finish has snap-on fingerproof grill guard. G.E. rotary switch, 1-year warranty on motor. re * eer se © & ow * *“*- Neeee PALOMA EASE LEAE IEEE IETIESSESESIIEEIS ESET ESS STOEEEEESESESIESSOLEESESSEOEEODEEOE SD wn vaio. . THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1959 Leonardo da Vinci, the Italian artist and scientist, first advanced) the theory that a lens placed in| direct contact with the eye could correct faulty vision—450 years ago. 25c ‘til 1:00 P. M. Ww C Site ConCult NOW! Thru FRI. FRANK SINATRA DEAN BiVIARTIN & “SOME CAME RUNNING’ A REGALSCOPE PICTURE A Regal Films, inc Producti WARTER BRENNAN ses'srszmoe Hurts Detroit First U.S. Ocean Ship| Finds No Space; One, Lack of Docks: | ocean ship has arrived here, yesterday the 46-foot Santa Regina found no dock space available for taking op cargo. The cargo liner, owned by Grace Line, had to pull intc a passenger ship pier to be officially welcomed as the first U.S. orean Calif to arrive-at Detrort: * * * Grace Line officials said Detroit harbor terminals was notified well in advance of the Santa Regina's arrival time. facilities were tied up and sevéral ships were anchored in the Detroit River awaiting dock space. A number of foreign skippers have deplored the dock situation in Detroit. Capt. Adolph Schulz of the German ship Clemens Sartori said, ‘‘This is terrible. Didn’t you people expect ships?” So the Santa Regina will Jeave for Toledo and Cleveland for wel- comes and then come back to Detroit to take on a cargo of autos and other goods for delivery to South America Lack of adequate dock facilities ‘Held Over! KEEGO THEATRE NOW Thru SATURDAY LEO McC CAREY Newman - Wooowaro COLLINS - CARSON CINEMAS --- TAKE OUT ORDERS ------: Call Ahead —FE 3-9821 e@ STEAK Your Order Will Be Ready When You Call MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT BOB'S COCKTAIL BAR of Many Made to Wait) DETROIT (UPI)—The first U. S. but} the But all cargo dock; GOING VISITING—Scemingly at the Miami Seaquarium, this sea turtle is only peering through the open window to see how the othef half lives. / UPI Phote to come up for air when workmen lowered the water level in the tank to remove the window for repair. At left is one of the Sea- quarium divers, wearing a face mask and a snorkel attachment. trying to escape from his tank He got his chance Parents to Iry Recall of Trio Litle Rock School Board Members Arouse Ire Through -Firings LITTLE. ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Three Segregationist members of the. Little Rock School Board to day faced the threat of recall in the wake of a purge of 44 teach- ers in the city’s integration-trou- bled school system About 400 patrons of the Forest Park Elementary school Wednes- day night shouted approval of a plan to seek. a_ recall election against Board President Ed I. Mc- Kinley and members Robert Las- ter and Ben Rowland x * * Mckinley, Laster and Rowland, acting after three other board members walked out of a meeting in protest, voted Tuesday not to renew the contracts of 44 teach- ers, -Including the Forest Park Frances §. Wood. Forest Park Par- the group first censuring the Principal, - Mrs Acting as the ent-Feacher Assn., adopted resolutions three segregationist board mem- bers for the purge and commend- ing Mrs. Wood. Then acting as school patrons they voted to cir- culate the recall petitions under a segregationist-backed 1958 law, de- signed to facilitate removal of board members suspected of inte- grationist tendencies. * * * The three board members who boycotted the purge session — Ted Lamb, Russell Maton and Ever- eft Tucker Jr.—received standing ovations when they appeared be- fore the Forest Park group McKinley and Laster declined comment on the recall move. Row- land could not be reached The three refused to give specific reasons for the purge, ex cept to say that some teachers fired for ‘remarks they about integration.” have were made Prisoners Won’‘t Have Music After Tuesday CENTRAL CITY, Ky. WA ra- dio station received a postal card from a jail inmate asking that a BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN THEATER 2150 Opdyke Rd OF TERRIFIC DAN OHERUIHY - RHO MERVYN LEROY (lene FE 4-4611 SHE NEEDS HER MAN... JEAN SIMMONS BECOMES THE DRAMATIC STAR OF STARS IN ¢ Home Before. Dark NDA FLEMIM IN( G: - EFREM CMBAUST R comin by POOLTON - GLEN and ROBER! BACON, - MERVYN Ls ROP wee | Py GLENN ps eu a STEIGER STARTS FRIDAY 4 HOURS ENTERTAINMENT SHE NEEDS HIM NOW! § been a year THE St RANGER | WHo Kwew Asout Her ucrv Dwectet W) ERNE xm, Bee oi) a J Com ay TECHNICOLOR aa (han/ “HIGH LAST. TIME TONIGHT (aids a ja “WARLOCK” AND FLIGHT” _ fore Tuesday." had the only radio. |Hollywood Headlines British Are Voting Burden of Loneliness Puts jp local Elections Ne Fears Rising Budget NEW YORK (UPI) —The New| ~ York Chamber of Commerce warned yesterday that the city's budget may reach three billion dol- lars by 1965 if current spending trends are not stopped. The chamber charged in a re- port sent to Mayor Robert F. Wag- ner that the rapid rise in spend- ing was due primarily to the city's fiscal policies. The city “‘has failed to . ¢ffectuate needed economies and efficiencies” that would re- F.0. E. #1230 289 W. MONTCALM FISH or CHICKEN Fri., 5:80 to 7:30 DANCE SAT. DOOR CHARGE MEMBERS AND ) GUESTS A very bewliching. comedy NOW! At 7:00 and 9:00 about a very enchanting subject-sex: Sun. ‘Auntie Mame’ Inger at Screaming Point LONDON (AP) —Britons voted eS \in 395 cities and towns today in| local elections that Conservative| When you have no oné| and Labor party politicians like that,*life can get very diffi-| watched for a possible clue to the | By BOB THOMAS your life. AP Movie-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP) — ‘“‘Some- times I could get so lonely I could scream.” This helps to explain the mys- tery of Inger Stevens. Seemingly a well-adjusted, independent per- son, the bright young actress un- derwent an emotional] crackup last January, Hollywood was shocked to learn that~-she had swallowed a poisonous cleaning fluid at her New York apartment * * x She is back here now and work- ing again. Tonight she stars on CBS’ Playhouse 90 in ‘‘Diary of a Nurse.'’’ She talks volubly about her life and career, though she avoids what specifically caused her turmoil But Inger did talk about the Jone- liness that.can afflict a single girl She is a divorcee “The thing I miss the having someone to share things with,”’ she said earnestly. ‘‘] come home in the evening bursting to unburden myself of the things that happened to me during the day's work. But there is no one to tell that Hollywood can be a lonely them to. town for single females, but add- “Yes, I have dates, but that isn’t ed: “It’s not just Hollywood. You | the same. You need someone to can be lonely anywhere in the, Share the day-to-day events of world.” cult. Sometimes I could get SO future fate nationally. lonely I could scream.’ * * * I suggested the solution to her| probler m would’ be to find a man. la man aio will love me and whom I can love,” she agreed. ‘‘But un- til that happens, I have to find other means of curing my loneli-| ness. I do that by keeping busy. * *x * “T want to keep my career ac- tive now, There is talk of a fpic- ture or two. My contract with Paramount allows me to do live ———E television and I enjoy excitement - ° of doing live shows. For two Cadillac Jail Declared whole years when I was getting to Be Beyond Repair started, I did a great number of TV dramas. I can also do a play, and I'd like to find one “But work isn't everything. want to tuke UCLA if I stay here. painting, and I model with clay. Also, I have been writing down; Macmillan's conservative towns and voting earlier .this week. to the right \supervisors have been told I do some adaptable for to meet state requirements. Meanwhile, the most 1s publication, but to find out what the jail and I'm thinking about.” She agreed with Suzy Parker cial levy next two years. indicated inspector of jails | Although fewer people vote in municipal elections—and local is- I hope some day to find gues sometimes upset party al- |legiances—they are often regard- ed as a good political barometers. | party picked up 22 council seats in 92 country districts in There was also a slight swing in Scotland, where anti-labor factions gained 10 seats. CADILLAC —Wexford County the I courity’s jai] isn’t worth extensive some courses atjrepairs since the building is not enough remodeling super visors my thoughts about things—not for|learned that scheduled repairs on county courthouse would take most of a $50.000 spe- to be collected in the A letter Monday from the state the county would be asked to close its jail for failure to meet standards. YUL BRYNNER DEBORAH KERR LAST TIMES TODAY “The JOURNEY” Oakland TOMORROW GIANT OUTDOOR MOTION PICTURE ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTED AS IT SHOULD BE SEEN ON OUR HUGE SCREEN IN SPECTACULAR MAGNIFICENT TECHNICOLOR! number of records be played ‘‘be- One of the prisoners was to be | released on that day — and he THE WATERFORD TOWNSHIP CIVIC MUSIC ASSOCIATION Presents The Columbus Boy Choir in Concert December 12, 1959 at 8:30 P. M. Featuring Menotti’s “Amal and the Night Visitors” There will be several concerts of equal caliber throughout the 1959-60 season, at the Pierce Jr. High School Auditorium, for members only. Adult memberships $7.50, Students $4.00. Address... 02.0.0... 000 cc eee Amount Enclosed $........ (Check or M.O.) Make all checks payable to CIVIC MUSIC ASSOCIATION. Send to Waterford Township Civic Music Assn., Box 67, Drayton Plains, Michigan. Membership cards will be mailed before the first concert of the season. Offer expires May 9, 1959. Tickets for individual concerts will not be sold. — || ss TODAY! ——FEATURE AT—— 25 - 9:35 Open 10:45, 25¢ to 1 P. M. | 11:00 - 1:05 - 3:10-5:95 -7 trand “ OVERWHELMING AS THE | ELEMENTS! As the massed SEE! The Ravaging Hordes of Rebdeition! Colossal Combat of Cossacks and Cavalry! Festival of Fire on the Froren Steppes! The Tyranny of Empire That Tamed a Centinent! ———__ rq a irresistible human storm thunders across the face of Earth...an Empire totters and a great love flames! SILVANA | HEFLIN | MANGANO | LINDFORS Roaring With Battle!..Rousing With Emotion!..Raging With Epic Greatness! PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A DINO DELAURENTIIS PRODUCTION TEMPEST % The producer of “War and Peace” presents a story so vast and violent it bursts the boundaries of the screen—as the world has known them until now. STORMING THE HEIGHTS OF MOTION PICTURE GREATNESS! might of an at & starring 08 osc HOUOLA we WELMUT ORNTINE «AGNES, MOORENME AD “CoM ING ROBERT ate, ataene ASSMAN SOON! + eee s “AL CAPONE” VIVECA _ he GEOFFREY). HORNE HOWARD) HAWKS Sty. r , +t? TECHNICOLOR® trom WARNER BROS. F WARD BOND ‘JOH yi ROSELL PEDRO GONZALE2.GONZALEZ - ESTELITA RODRIGUEZ - Screenplay by JULES FURTHMAN THE ADVENTURE OF JAPAN'S DOERN MERMAIDS! eee % ~ PLUS FEATURETTE WINNER! BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT SUBJECT! walt DISNEY AVIA _ fy] GIRLS Ks | Area Builders Get State Jobs Firms in Woterkoed. Bloomfield Hills Win Expressway Projects The contracts, topping vious one-day high of $18 million in December 1957, were let as ington for allocation of promised federa} interstate highway funds .|$1.42; soybeans’ unchanged to % No Price Shift CHICAGO \(# — Dealings in grain io for -May wheat, which moved up and down in major frac- tions during the first several min- all price shifts were negli- lower to % higher near the end of the first hour, May $1.90%; corn) | higher to % lower, lay 66%; rye % lower to % higher, May higher, May $2.29%. Grain Prices Heavy 1s to % higher, May $1.25; oats |19- 21; type a broilers and he al 3-4 ibs. whites | 19; 5 caponettes ander are over § lbs. 24-27; ———? ‘Grains Inactive: MARKETS Space Stocks The are top prices covering sales of locally grown —— aig acd rare geet Mig rd ai in wholesale package Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Produce eeerere Se . The United Kingdom teak Poultry and Eggs cent a bushel | DETROIT POULTRY yf to-| Detroit -Bureau of Markets, as of Stocks churned in heavy trading as $4.00 Spiral Upward* NEW YORK WW — Space age the overall stock market pursued, an uneven course early today. | Among key issues the gains and losses went from fractions to about! a point. Most changes were narrow. | The electronic - missle - rocket | on the upside in a follow through | | from their great advance of yes- terday. Gains went to 3 or 4 points, A few losses were taken. Thiokol, the rocket fuel stock, was delayed in opening under a flood of sell orders. The New York Stock Exchange ruled out all stop orders in Thiokol. fuel shares remained reeerally | unmoved by the guilty verdict. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1959 Convicted of Grou Indecency } | ° ij 2 Bound Over By Finds Mooney Guilty for Hearing on Assault-Robbery Two men accused of unarmed Arthur C. Mooney. dismissed | three surviving youths told of robbery will be arraigned Monday Waterford Township High School) having immoral relations with in Qakland County Circuit Court. mathematics teacher and a tormer | cipal, yesterday was convicted of gross indecency with a 16-year-old student. An Oakland County Circuit Court jury of eight women and four men deliberated one hour before bring- ing in the verdict. Jurors recom- mended psychiatric treatment for Mooney. Cireuit Judge Frank L. Doty-set| jsentencing for May 18 at 9: 30 in Japan after leaving his earlier) 1; Mooney, ‘vho is 50 and un-| position as principal of the Chi-! Byer erga sh pera estcnete | married, could be sent to prison|cago school. a.m. for a maximum term of five years jor pay a $2,000 fine. Mooney, of 1651 Grimshaw St., Commerce Township, appeared He was allowed to remain on a $500 bond. The charge against Mooney grew out of investigation of an actident last December in West Bloomfield Mooney. in his Pontiac Township | last year. Mooney ‘said he was too drunk, to recall the incidents, Ziem said.| Immediately afterwards, Mooney beating Alex Corbine, 56, of 471 and robbing was suspended from his teaching job by Superintendent of Schovis William Shunck. He had been with! the school system since Septem-| Finnegan bound both men over to ber, 1956, having just finished an Circuit Court yesterday after a educationa] project for the Army Mooney was acquitted of the| ert W. Hodge in March. Still pending are his appeals of | cvartotions of drunk driving and | driving with a revoked These charges were pressed after the earlier incident. Township in which one of Meoney’s students, John L. Fromm, 17, of Waterford Township, was killed. IT, May @ (AP)—Prices paid eet o_o Send sae Detroit for No. 1/These are orders to buy or sell at) Three other students in the car type bens—whites 17-18, colored ispecific prices above or below the said in a statement later to Pros- bt hens 10-11; heavy eoing market price. Stop orders ecutor Frederick C. Ziem that rr 20; ocks 24-26; 5 Ibs. DETROIT TT, May 6 (AP)—Eges EGGS rade A oT i 33; 31; medium 24; small 21; Grade B la 28; Browns— Grade hy extra this year OPENING GRAIN ee ee ee Telephone dropped , In Memoriam 2 __ Help Wanted Male — 6 a & | |CHICAGO, May 7 (AP) Opening grain:) ¢ ; labout 3 points. Losses of around Death otices cd i e warned that Michgan will) | Wheat poate New| ow A jumbo 294-30: gin |IN_ LOVING MEMORY OF OUR MECHANIC. IDEAL | WANTED sinozx MAN TO WORK. have to delay building an addi-|**” 190% diy G4\e large 27%4-28; large 26- ma point were taken by Anaconda, | | Husband and Pather HT. Allen Proikine. Neon. 7 T ta | on dairy farm. experienced. 42680 PS ee 1.86%. Sep 64>. 32- rowns—Grade A jumbo. a. oe and Air Red | Ne eel aT) sed awa May it | H tt "tom Bohr 9 Mile ‘orthville. Call tional 400 mil a : eT : Goodyear ir uction. pas y R os of planted ex-iy *77: 1g300 Rye eens Ee sinter: Sea: Sas op ssion of big block BAILEY, MAY 6, 1959, ORACE E£_ | You &re not forgotien Dear, 4 | _Ine.._ Predbroak $2478 pressways if the interstate highway war “". | 1965. Mav “1.42, | 27MM? B teres 23%-23 | A succession of big blocks was i Otter Lake read iformeriy of | NOF,cver, sl You We: ey test, “exrERANceD <——e “pants YOUNG MEN, 18 TO #4 YRS. FOR doesn't come through. Corn Sly eee 21% | ,traded in the glamour”’ stocks. Holly and Clarkston); age - We shall remember thee clerk for new and rebuilt | gutdoor service depertment, Must ’ May ...00-6 124% Bep 125+ ° 4 h, loved wife of Joseph Bailey; ‘dear | Ba. missed by wife Melva and Must be ee ve Hollerbeck have insured . & be ' | Up 4 points or better were suc diy missed by e 1 able to converse with | ty eae ht _. 1.2834 Livestock mother of Carleton Bailey; dear daughter Virginia & Family | Auto Parts. Phone FE 5-1051. 273 | ho the ‘tity . ° MM Lard (Drums) | jas Vick Chemical, Haveg and Mag-| sister of Prank, Ivan and Lloyd = : ' Baldwin Avenue. _— oe gna rnd A, > ; S. S. Kresge President as oe ee pod DETROIT LIVESTOCK inavox. Motorola and Hoffman, ee a are at al Di EXPERIENCED AUTO-PARTS| office. Mr. Sacconi, PE 37944 : woe 1020 | DETROIT, May 6 (AP) —Cattle: Bal-| py bout 3 each.| grandchildren end 12 erat, | Funeral Directors 4) “cirk, tor Saturcay & Sunday | Retires After 44 Years iy’ . Sis Nov 2... 10.288 /SBI@ 700. About s dosen choice {Electronics rose about 3 eac cree naid Priday, May & at 2 v | work: PE §-1081. |_Help Wanted Female 7 } Sep a steers in . a ce steer aod |Later Motorola erased its gain and. pm. from the sharee-Gepeite | COATS | EXPERIENCED PART TIME BAR- ~~ § DETROIT (().— Franklin P- ferings: Choice r steers active, Showed a 2-point loss. Up around unerel Nope, Giarksten FONERAL HOME | | “tender. Write Pontiac Press Box A WEEKLY PAY WHEN REPRE- : : : te terment in Seymour Lake Ceme- | Drayton Plains | 61, stating experience, and refer-| senting Edith Rehnborg Cosmietics | Williams, general ; og |e eraaeeSig eatty Teetees as |& point or better were Admiral| eee cee ae |_tte Start fat ance. Information. Fl 8 ies - manager of S. S. Kresge Co., which Says Inflation Guides anaes steady severa cows cd bulls land Maytag. eet ip Aly Puneral Home, | Donelson- Tohns|= Ex a \N |X MATURE WOMAN FOR HOUSE- he served for 44 years, has an- 1100 1b etezés 28°0020.50; two loads hign | Radio Corp. and Phiico were off) ee ici eire | * | PONERAL Home ae lees ase | Se an with illness. No nounced his retirement effective ae Mb Tete. Jp. steers 31,00; moderately on profit taking. Rosshire Ct beloved sister of |} Des! tor eee tenance. Phone: PLateau 2-2269. amen ag to Pontiae ; mostly prime 1340 Ib. steers 31.00: scat | fl Puneral will be |" SPARKS.GRIF® Colby Dale Parms, Romeo, Mich- | _ Press i ig t . | tering good to low choice steers 36.00. | The ticker tape was late briefly, ; ee eee aie 6 aks | Taoughifut_Serv PE 2-390) | _ igan. BEAUTY OPERATOR Williams has been president and | teers poy alin nan atunders jin early “aiees from the 8 irke-Oriitin Chapel | V h Sj | no . Laas nr azavics| 2; yp ge pmcenaeer ? wit r r . —_ ae of = dime store| LANSING Uf — A witness for Thon oo, ekancrs ana” cutters ise eificiafing Interment in Octane | Oor Ges. IDIG| Sete bere eapeclesen ees | bak ane” em meme feet © Park ‘emetery rs. w | < cecemyncn clos ATOR TO MANAGE "ae ‘o past a Michigan Bell Telephone Co. told 1 £0 etilty, valle 29.062800. ae. New York Stocks lie in state at the Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME: caly to person to Service Mao*i | BEAUTY OPERATOR TO MAN : —— : com- |the State Public Service Commis- tive ‘strong to mostly 25 cents higher, Funeral Home after noon Friday. | ambulance Sgr vee Plane or Motor | Woodward. Bir ; or rent sBop 714 W. Huron. _* pany's retirement policy|sion yesterday that current infla-| oly Ng age cg ge (Peal nerd peevisighhan: B MAY 6, 1959, BLANCHE, | Aye ——_ | ORB GIRLs NEAT SAEPEARINO. ees aa ale lots UB No. 2 and 3 180-240 B Figures after decimei point are eighths 63 S Tasmania; 16 dear | with cars. $18 per evening. Call _ar" A&W. 91 rs m employes |tion in the nation’s economy should’ Saar 16 75-17.25; few lots No. 2 240 ‘ 61 mother of Mrs. Lolita Williams. Cemetery Lots S| Su s-see berwoen . a ai 4 - retire at 65. be taken into consideration in fix-/245 Ib 1/00: mixed No 1 end. 2 in| ee ae oe et. eI Merritt and Vincent Butjer: also hes Seite a - | COOK MUST | ic. a LOT > recen: noes. ults. A successor will be elected byjing rates for public utilities. | Boa Ibe “10. Pech No. 1 17.13, | Aled Ch ..... 13.6 Gelees Ee ase Funeral I mg be an- |! ing mul pra Cemeteryey ead oom Re" ian. sae a the firm's Board of Directors after ; ‘nd a few head No. 1 201 bs. up to 18.00; Allied Gir. -- 884 gine Cie... 62 | nounced later by the Huntoon | 41 4-6305. Por ea | CARHOPS. RIENCED Dr. Walter A. Morton, Univer- No. 2 and 3 240-260 Ibs. 15.75-16.80, smali Alfis Chal .... 284 yoo gs 336) Puneral Home. tine Press BOx 18, stating age, } the annual stockholders’ meeting igity of Wisconsin professor of eco- | ot 260 ibs included at 16.50; No. 4 and 3 pe tae a jh pager ". 3B Di “LEO €. 1a E_ RUPP. \4 aR Aon ls ME- | _ experience. & SF a wn ee. {0 eee |nomics, testified during the third tows n00-s00 tbs. 11-1214 sized srece* qm Airtin.:- 295 TOF Sisse “1166 Ret aem ing): tater of | SEAUTIPOL ¢ORAV® LOT PER | MEQRTED, CAR, SALMAN — | CRORED GIL To Live ae = Vesiers: Salable fully steady; Am sseeee 2 Lippy MeN&L 12 | ee ee ale Mt | Part Comet wu oc | _ Lake MA Ott. 28 to 40 for INANCE NO. 34 AN = day of presentation of the com- .oi'e and prime 36.00-40.00. standard Am Cyan ..... 34 Lig & My .- 966 te an Hocaberger, bre. ni le MAN TO 8 | and cook 16 thre 9 | a provide ~~ — on. | pany case. as £2i" ana vauiny queied bg = ld 7 a. a Aire - >» Diliaway. Staff c. Dut- GHOICE +0 CORAVE LOTS Sree | Rg one who went Bee 4-6114. * z of White Lake, in Michigan Bell has said it would | snes 200. cales Am eet oe Bt eet Gas: 33 and Richard. tein, Rowers morial Gardens. Novi, FE ¢3is¢ | sett Call PE 22318, Puller Brash) “Adpiy ot Bie Boy Drive-in. 2000 County : Fer ; Himied early. ot Am News... 444 Lou Nash .. 833 and Ric ne ° _Co. pa present evidence to gore fet its ‘ering ae : ra Am Tel & Tel (2422 Mack Trk 405 Saturday at 1 p.m. from t | Wars, CHAPEL. 6 LOTS CHOICE | FOR ART- M . 2 Maniey Bailey Home, 183 1 MEN (3) GLEAR owt ; Pg it is ge ge regen pen for an annual \"* be 3280." \Rnesenda’ : a Meh | O land. Birmingham Interment | hate. $1,280 vates, 0090, PE 208 ggg Ragen work 0 ee sas. Ambitions womaa, or pert and welfare to provide for strict con- Eo) - Armco §tl - Re Cc + 4s lf boreere an col = to Plexible “ poin public safet around 25 million mae | at ECKERT. MAY 5. 1950, WALTER s. | Outside Order Dept. SS ae . — ne re of grass) Utilities, whose incomes are fixed | \Acnison °°. aes Merek fs gta W. Hopkins st Gi. be: BOX RCPLIES 4 ex For ap fires and other fires; j Lodge Calendar | Ate + %5 Mergen Lino . 58.3] ti it A few opénings exist for young call PE 260. Now, therefore, the Township of White by regulatory procedures, are) jBalt & Ohio .. 423 wWerr 195 loved husband of Mrs quanite L | At 10 a.m. Today there men willing to work, Only those = : |Beth Stee] .... 49.7 (Main) Eckert; dear father of CHILD ¢ & HOUSE- ‘ aaa among those most hurt by inl. | al Con nication, Pontiae Boring air. 38 “ia it 34 Mrs Charles & Bondey and Mrs. | | were sage The Press} | yi. wi) be interviewed, Baiary Work. $18 wk. FE 2-2900. Prom and after the et|tion, Morton said. A fair rate Po o. AM, ; ++ 30-7" Mine wate pp FR, Ta ae following starte at $100 weekly rn | ism On EVENING a mae be = for utilities is iMay sth, ‘at 7 p.m. Work in BA. Bons Wie Bo Wart ice will be held Priday, May 6, at An (aL: tte. Preme-—8 ES 1~ ee ee “yee eny person or persons to set fire wilfully |Feturn one COnpAT” | Degree WM. Brose Mo... 1 Mot Breas) 7) “pm. from the Deasison-Jobas| § °° mt 3 yen or tp any woods, prairies or able with earnings in other | ; me ee ee es cg Mat Wheet 2. laal bunorai Meme ohh intermens in ~ $100 Week Salary You NEED MONEY? grounds on his ¥ OF property of pte sari 99 "| Ottawa Park Cemeter pia ib tart elle acetal toe Earp more with Sandra Parties, others, or sail wilfully t any such|ments of industry, he said | [Bren Balke ... 08 - Eovuer’ Bisse 2) _ Ottawe emotery. 1, 3, 5, 7 14, 18, 20, PLAYER Win free toy kite MI fire or fires to pass from his own woods, . | Badd Co 4 ssurrag'CP ... 3961 GRISCHOW, MAY 5, 1959, EMIL P ‘Lake Inn Ph Ie A ne MEE oy prairies or grounds so as to endanger! | NOTICE OF “SPECIAL TOWNSHIP) News in rie ‘Gator - 0e mat Bec eet Fredrick. 2600 Airport Ré ._Dray- mM, M8, 31, &, 66, 5B, Cl, | | seestrial mendes OOM. | ee ees Le ee po gi oy oro = destruction of property| meeting and and of registration mpd soup .. 5@ Nat Cash R .. 08.2 Nee Pane nee ee a eechee: | ¢ St @, TH, WH 90, MB, BB, pany ning for} in More. for than wages. (A) Ownership Whereas, at a meeting of the Town- Can Faded : a ot nel on 68 } beloved son 0: bars Margaret J. ry 87, 90, 91, 100, 103, 109. m bara salesman or bias re 4-9612. ss The word “Owner” shall include every|s@ip Board of the Township of Inde-| Burgiars stole $60.87 from a COD tee 30) N 12.5) See, ee ae * Thompson at Mi 6-3100 for per- WHITE poresn having © right or rights of pr . end County. Michigan. achine at Carrier Cp ... 425 NY Central | 264) er aan a sek ~sonat_tnter of 1 child & housework. erty of any kind im lend witht on the 2st dey of L 1958 «cash box in a vending m P $23 Norf @ West 002 Paul (Ruth) Gaister and E. Jack : Sedsh Lake. FE 8-3878 said Township of White Lake. franchise ance pied, en-|the Speedy Oil service station, 3470 E2te; ae 614 No Ain Av 48 6) phat Eco gh cage - Hon boetold "Part Time Salesmen Exp, waitress (>) Every owner of land or other per-|titied as Auburn Rd., Pontiac Township, bd Tl Lt Pf . 82.6 Nor Pac . 50.5) also survived by seven grandchil- | Por established hardware firm. 921 W. Huron for the wilful and negli-| Ap Ordinance, — to Consumers) hes & Ohio . 71 Nor Sta Pw 232 dren and three great-grand chil | iac P Write Pontiac hn Box 24 stat-| EXP. CURB GIRLS WTD. CA Say ene tas mae serene ta ost | aaigne ine Tight, aoe and sutnerny| ast night. The break-in was re-| Chrysler oe eee ge dren. Mr. Grischow will lie The Pontiac Press me ae ae and| UL 2-4075. or 4 en. F erty that may be coused by such fires to ayo yh 9 ps A sa Grah Paieg ... 2.6 Unit Fruit ... 381 the late Lewis Marion. Puneral expe salesm to ‘cover| week. Fo working : See ee Se eS be be oo seta date; be Rummage — Congregational Ot No Ry .... $83 Us Lines 33 May 8 atl a cneed, in food, drag. nobaces ot | Bets ova ‘ot Hinance, but the remainder of this|/tween the hours of 8 o'cléck a.m. ood ®!Church, Mill St. May 8th, 9 a.m. (Greyhound 2) Us Rub ...... 56.5 Snover Puneral Home with Rev. be ‘Gale wg, aarel | Settee Oe ee. Se “ene and A tae aie “Sosa P come a ieee ted by a Sat. 8 to rb clothing for all —Adv. Gull ns | US Steel ..... 90 | . J. Luther Sheffield ——— ; Beverage ine, vious on Oy writ- TEE WIVES S CIEL? ; the of White Lake,|Board is on file, with the undersigned Home Stk... 404 Ven Resi 2. 30 Interment 10 Brereugen Cometery./ Siaip Wanted Male 6 | _ ig % Tums Frees St HOU SEWIVES & sIRLS at a meeting held on the 29th day of/Township Clerk for the purpose -| Rummage Sale, Sat., 9 a. m cooker . West Un Tei in state at the Parmer-Ga ~ SALESMAN WANTED We need several young spection the qualified electors. ° - |tl Cent 49 est Un = er-Snover | $29 A MONTH RENT FOR ROOM, 2 complete our sales rma, Bek Seiary BERT A. McKEACHIE, By Oréet: of the Township Board. | First Presbyterian Church, W. [Indust Ray ... 231 Yrs! — _ Funeral Home. Wl eicct seam: respectable man to help | “of modernization «ales, Wy train tua’ bene, your heute. 4 Township Clerk} Dated April 21. Huron St Adv, (18 Rand 106.4 White cal McGOUGH, MAY 6, 1959. HENRY,| with chores around house. Write worker D & M 2 ours a day. On irement EDWARD N J. Leese . : se | cw Wilson co. 3H ad wotetMire Mary” McGough; 38 * Pontiag Press rvice FR 2.7006 or PE 2-845 must Reve ‘ velephene D Supervisor Township Cle - Me 6 ow h. ACCOUNT ADJUSTEI SALARY voice. Por appointmen Miss . ‘s9.| Rummage Sale—Saturday, Vet- |Inteya woalwort 54.1! dear brother of Mrs. Rose SALAR "way 3 Apel 30 Mey _*_* | erans’ Hall, 371 W. Pike, Rebeccas tet Bes Hes a 5 yale & Tew .. 38 Toner. Mrs. Catherine Mctaueh- EI a Plus 14 per cent commission. Our’ Chee Fine ORDER WAIT: ” | 450. Adv. Int ick. Bs Ynest Sh & T 119 Puneral service will be held Pri- | Company, ce ol aie eA ee of teed duelisens oa umn aottbinaies ote ae e Int oe ..... 36 Pore a Bi a . day, May 8, at 10 a.m. from 8t. high camael s Ti Good start- route fers real securi ye a oyal Oak Agency, 5 day ty Rummage Sale. Thurs. Fri. Sat.|Int Silver 34 Michaels Church with interment ing a com car. A liberal share of the Are} Reply, sta all qualifications { oO . Int Te] & Tel 44 Genesco -. 35.2 in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Recitation |- intral sian of company benefits | You wi to put in all your| salary requited, Ail j 9 to 3. 2938 Dearborn Dr. Avon-jtsi crk Coal . {0.7 Upjohn ...°. . 43.6 of the Rosary will be at Ag 30 Hy Appl 8. “Telegraph Road.| time and effort necessary to train pot Lo. Write Pontiac Press dale Hi Adv today at the Melvin A. uté | ~ PRY ‘ = for @ permanent position with 7. ' e High. . Puneral Home, 211 peat Ave,| AUTOMOBIL@ BODY FINISHER & Sales experience de- | STOCK AVERAGES : where Mr paGeusk will He in Auto —— A - tools. 206 8. Srebie’ but not necessary. Car KITCHEN HELP oo OiRt. AAA Driver Training, °59 cars, NEW YORK—(Compiled by the As- — state. _ Saginaw. Bell & Powe Garage. | ond all expenses. fersichod, if you | Apply OP yg 4 Top . ~ i , |soctated press): j ; E : z - ean pass a rigid ond and char- | insured. FE 5-5201. Adv. 15 en | er body ote ANNA: be. Nab fer son tor deel -EAN wen. Ap-| omtet investigation and like people ove De Ba & EVERY = The Pontiac City Commission has scheduled public Indust Rai's veil setork Parris; dear grandmother ‘of Mrs “AR. | enough to make a permanent | Sun. off. No weshing or . i Net ch ply we Huron 10 a.m. Fri eth ve will trai References. MA 108 for 12, 1959 at 8 EST Rummage Sale, Friday May 9 ieea Thurs 334.2 1392 991 2280 vil. be beta gaturdey, May 8. | x2: a. pay. Must’ be. married ‘ving in | MICHIGAN REGISTERED —_ : hearings Tuesday, May Pp. Mm. 10-12 a.m., Stevens Hall Adv. | Prev. day 335.6 1394 «996 3269, ae eee Parat Wea | Ai inoviin “MACHINIST RE-| the vicinity of Pontiac. Call LA| es “wfc otk In the Commission Chamber, City Hall on Intention Week ago | 3099 1607 988 226-7 with interment in Crescent Hills | @Uired for experimental work. Do| 17-7932 for appointment, or Apply| Must like Geriat i. Apply ia ’ . [Month ego ....323.4 137.7 1010 2272 not apply with less than 7 yrs.| 10-4 13333 E. Seven Mile Rd son, between 10 a.m. & : and A lated k Year ago 2500 942 801 169.8 po drag GE ge sone cy Miia Be exp. in all phases of machinery. Cook Coffee Bio Hospital, 2100 c a Construct bituminous recap Te work on $1.25 Basic Pay Urged inse high occas 14 1 iss state at the Huntoon Funeral Wiliams Research, Gorp. 4830 W. cNESUAL WiTY “yop | _werd 8 O 215 a om e abate OPFORTU _— the following streets — iy 1958 high oo... Mr0 1s MST tet ee ee pad location near Walled Lake. = | 4) Rage A og Bel Praaie OPPORTUNITY WASHINGTON (UPI) — AFL- (1958 low 2347 809 72.9 156.6 a ‘pe wiis, dear | BOYS WANTED. 16-18, 3 ARS. Btecle Ford. Lake, PORTUNITY ‘ ife of William F. Wilds; dear . Cass Avenue from Pike to Orchard CIO President George Meany ' mother of Mrs. Joh L. White, | dai. 8 _zasaitgns Apotp Bats | — oad, Keego Hargor. jhe emesiiin id Ni K, Hetee Sues hes Roguew Perr urged today to boost |Well, They Can Swim Sirti Sat Not: fite| Enpafadnt cite, bat’ | WESTERN AUTO | 3h tt aceeene at Wat ’ an iliam son an ndrew — = ; als fved b - | BARBER WA 912 W. Huron. and part time salesmen. Pre- Judson Street from Saginaw to Parke the federal minimum wage to eterno’ TUWU io Wate dee Inch: also survived by it grand~| BARBER, Wa ‘ty SOE | Hous"seiting experience helptui |. Congenial, fami Sanderson Avenue from Oakland to Cass $1.25 an hour and extend cov- the . children. Puneral service will be | CHAIN BAW OPERATORS. TWO -— site pre. . Own reem wah SV F Prall H to Waal . to an additional 7,500,000 opening of the St. Lawrence ad irom ines aie Ge ae pin ‘ stb osoee a direction are. Bit” S._ ‘Telegraph. ~ of ag: vs way, Chicago Police today ome w v m “ke te. know ih. . os : + One each week plus / Raeburn Street from Paddock to Sanford workers in order to relieve “‘mis- | sumed the responsibility of pa- ea Write Bor $0 Podting Press” | WANTED: 2 Di _ Sanpete ery” and “destitution.” trolling the city's waterfront for | it Comet sg-WILLTAMT WC | CARETARER HAVE OPENING | ished Good commission. / 4 Two week vacation For further fnformation see legal notices. ‘ three miles out. There was only 1138 Woodland Dr, Sylvan VLE: | or middieage to care _32ert. for_Jean, ¥ . se Poll , ® Gi; bahaved Sembene of five. for spt. eee en ust be able Wr it Y + Bxcellent wages Interested property owners are urged to appear. |}Olds Sales Up 25 Pct. = a hats alice Depurt Ina a Write: x Se, oi bay for extra work, PEF PROMI eee - Dated May 6, 1959. | a —e ; don Mt. See oe eral service Mist Press. Bos St. giving | $e » Oo pm. Mp. ‘ LANSING (@®—Oldsmobile retail- uation 7 witehe ‘. Wee. from Our ba Chay of menage ein meters wwe-ur8 Ada R. | pers deliy pr 35,450 new pane iN ticed—by Christians ahd. Moslems! . Bepuichre i White iat. the a _ racks to “Daw hawt bet na Tepe Sea ee } April, per cent ovet the like| during. the Crusades. Richard the eee ere ew ts | ernceas, mS e Paddock } 1958 , the company reported|Lion Hearted had 2,700 survivors - | Ponducted at 8 caylee ted poy smi ATE | Res 2m, ae. | today. . beheaded in Acre in 1191. at 9 o'clock tonight, Realty, 412 W. Huron, FE 44526 > é “4 " . va » ves j ‘ ‘ ; 54 : | {. iy ‘ : / { , se aan y ' fyy~ | ~ ff P 4 e . ‘ { ; . Yee GA. s ff | a rue ‘Ft ~~ oe: a ae? J i- J ty Pau CA Pa EIN ra rk Mat ee ae ; f DETROIT, FOB Detroit in case lots federal state grades: Whites—G: rand large Bs American * |vent undue fluctuations in a stock. | { This week Thiokol has been the |most active issue and gained 18% | ‘points up to emery s close. * * lot beer before the accidert from ia grocery near his home, using ir money. | At the same time, two of the Testimony for the prosecution and defense was wrapped up in one afternoon yesterday. His attorney, Carlton S. Roeser, p’aced Mooney on the stand in his| own dtfense. He denied the inci- ident. banned occassionally to pre-; Mooney bought them two six-packs| Four other defense witnesses, in- cluding a Greek Orthodox minister from Pontiac, testified as to) Mooney’s character. All said he| was a “‘very good’’ person. They are Nathan F. Coléman, Chicago elementary school prin-; motel apartment in February of |37 of 4709 Hillcrest Dr,, Water- |ford Township, and Everett Epley, )45, of 454% Wayne St. The two men are accused N. Kenilworth Ave., him of $6 on April 23. Municipal Judge Maurice pre-trial Kearing. | County Jail pending arraignment. ence fields. of Direct GM Stock NEW YORK To — Alfred P. Sloan Jr., honorary chairman of General Motors Corp., has sold or given away all of the GM stock he held directly but retains indjrect - interest in more than one million shares, the New York Stock Ex- change aid yesterday. * * * The changes in ownership were included in a periodic exchange report on transactions by officers, directors and large stockholders. * * * During April, the exchange said, Sloan sold 90,106. shares of GM common and gave away 22,000. common shares. Sloan’s holdings in \GM Shares Inc. and those of New of E. ‘ charge of furnishing beer to minors| One-half of the 2,500 museums in Castle Corp., in which he owns by Pontiac Township Justice Rebd-'the United Stafes are for history |half the stock, are equivalent to |and one-third are devoted to sci-| 1,185, 156 shares of General Motors |eommon, the report said. With Wad in Cheek? H ungarians to Make Gum BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — Hungarian Communists, after years of poking fun at gum-chewing Americans, are | going to start making their own chewing gum. A cookie facory in Gyoer will open a gum section to | American gift packages an | nist China and Israel. supBly some of the local demand that has been filled by d official imports from Commu- __Help Ws Wanted Male 6 — 4 . % Fe Me in