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higher dev oAd bd gape ee ath AS py ed GE Ne IE RS ET i On / i oO oto;
a . 2° » OE , i . -/ hi iy
The Weather U WU bed & pitino
Partly Cloudy and Colder i ; A
Details page two
114th YEAR * *& & & *& PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1956—44 PAGES «47 TRE a TUTE MuoTos ve
t
lke's }
Restored Health Cheers GOP
Lenten Guideposts
Temptations of the Desert
Are Ever-Present Today — Plans By IGOR SIKORSKY
Renowned Plane Designer
Not too long ago I had the good fortune to visit
that gloomy wilderness overlooking the Jordan Valley
where Jesus was led up of the spirit to be tempted. It"
was a fitting place to forget the frenzy of modern life | Local Audience Is Told store and growled, “This is a
and contemplate the world, the flesh, and,
the devil.
tempter asked
SIKORSKY human power.
Above were the heaveris which covered | “T was so mad they could have
all the kingdoms of the earth which were offered to gine ing a spce nee
Christ by the devil.
My thoughts wandered from the stones to the
heavens. What is this visible heaven? It is not the On the ground were thousands of flat, |
smooth stones,
Even now they seemed remarkably like
cakes of bread. The desert monoliths and)
precipices suggested thoughts of the tur-
rets of Jerusalem, from whose ancient Plan for financing 51
temple top Satan challenged Christ to of state toll roads were re-| 1 into it and couldn't get away
jump without harm as a sign of his super- vealed yesterday by MTA until Mrs. Linneman had swung a | Doctor Report Turnpike Strategy Revealed .vviisne
} Lady's Punches
Send 2 Robbers
Depend on Help Running for Door
From U.S. Gran Son of Slain Missionary Born Here Cs
Republicans Confident
President Will Consent
to Run Again
‘heimina Linneman is a lady who)
doesn't stand for any holdup bust-
ness. She proved it last night. Two
youths entered her small WASHINGTON — Joyful
Republicans predict that
yesterday's reassuring med-
ical report will convince
President Eisenhower he
should run again,
Democrats voiced gratifi-
cation at the extent of Ei-
senhower’s recovery. A few
lof them maintained he will holdup."
Mrs. Linneman reacted siwftly.
“{ hit the nearest one right In
' the eye with a right swing,” she
told police, Program Would Lower
Cost to Michigan
the same stones that the’
Jesus to turn into bread. By BURDETT C. STODDARD
P _| When her first swing brought a Full details of the Michi ‘bow! of pain fram one youth, the
gan Turnpike Authority’s other polted out the door, she said.
1 miles| The one who caught the “punch
idazedly started for the door but oe OI i. Bbc
Chairman George N. Hig-|few more times.
shot me and I wouldn't have felt
‘Kiwanis Club here and a iit,” said the small woman. “But I)
‘later interview with The ‘didn’t notice whether they had a|
‘Pontiac Press. . = So 6 |
“To think that two young punks. ©
foolish invention of the astronomer. What is the The plan, evolved after Fj definitely and specifically includ
vast, invisible heaven? The universe itself? jweeks of study, could see Ke ‘tat Tou’ te ding then | ac ate. oh eed
Five centuries ago man saw the stars shining and $600 million worth of pay- homework.” | ‘ questions en whether Eissuhewer
beautifying only the earth. Now, he knows they shine highways bujit at a cost of ' Drees presario po are en
and beautify the entire universe, the invisible as well $60 million to Michigan, = ; : was one of the points the Presi:
as the visible heavens. plus nominal bond interest. | 0 Ing ac ines F dent will discuss himself when he
While sitting there I felt the heavens were indeed, In hinges on Congressional ap" ' announces his decision to the
one of the realities-of God’s creation and reflect all )proval of a Federal aid bill in- ; ® bs a nation.
His wisdom, power and glory. ‘troduced by Rep. George H. r«: Ordered b (j sks Republicans are confident that And I became suddenly aware of the relation be- jo, (p-ma) | a television campaign can be tal-
tween resurrected man and the mysterious immensity | — ; . a lored to fit any limitations placed
of the universe. I was a part, if only a minute part, of 4. ale a ee | 80 Units to Be Ready el barserperifle remem + | asi Sta! 0 news con- this tremendous creation. The thought awed me. cies daa ae a s300 PY July 1 on 1-Year » ‘ Cpt my hte
From time to time I have had such an inner feel- | mition bond issue (half the need- | Rental Trial | i eee A any “barnstorming,” regardless of
ing. That sixth, indefinable sense that goes beyond | ea amount) on the November | = : ane y g 5 » Poa We oat Ne tks > jhis heart attack,
mere mechanical intellect, intuition, or even inspir- | ballot for a public vote, ne Eee: Pgh Se ae z es me Indications are that Eisenhower
ation. It is one of the faculties of the spiritual com- | The MTA strategy would rule out ee aires nescacen CY. 3 : ‘ wil cunemce Ms soul tom
ponent of human personality. It is sound proof there | the threat to the proposed north-|for the one-year rental of 8) voting | poser ate = el ge Rava
is something. beyond brain, eyes, nerves, tissues. south (Ohio line to Straits of Mack-) machines at $150 a machine, was [ Pontiac Gress Phete/the nation during the last week in
It was not until I was 25 that I began my search inac) turnpike posed by High | accepted last night by the City) PROUD HERITAGE — It will be several years missionaries killed last month by savage Ecua- February.
alone, and became more and more interested in the 701. ee ee | Connie. betore Matthew day McCdly shows with bis doreen Sadians they wore Uying to convert 10 |wee my GmoRGEA
oughts benin n. My present convictions are not competing stretches of freew eon : He plans to remain in Georgia the result of a sudden awakening or conversion. It ng § ay. | the .city has the option of pur- | able to understand why and bow his father died. Harold F. Hobolth of 779 May Ct. Weighing 8 neat \ :
was an inner process, carried out mostly in complete “OUP CUT REVENUES | chasing the devices at a bid But when he does, he'll have good reason to be pounds and 1 ounce, Matthew was born Saturday imaes cee Feb. ‘22. t Vee
solitude; often in the woods, or climbing mountains. teen appro inating mre ms sis pour pa pray re ie : Sas eee ee The President has an okay from
It is not. necessarily the onlv road, but it was 8 FOMd [ccc tau cecicacsh cecil pues tus paccacs pric’ Pri in 4 Districts : be doctors to hunt quail myer (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) } ; ; mule-drawn hunting wagon 2 iohaind ~ gugres ~ higher Motion of Commissioner Philip mary in 1s used on past visits to Treasury
e ~ Rowston that the machines be in- Secretary Humphrey's plantation.
Returns From Basce
Wilson No
in Guided Missile Work
WASHINGTON (?'—Secretary of Defense Wilson says
the military's program for
Ssiles is “getting better organized all the time.”
The defense chief returned to the capital last night
after visits to the Army’s
Center near Huntsville, Ala, and Patrick Air Force
Base, Fla., headquarters for the proving range from
———_ * which guided missiles and
City Bank Gains
in U.S. Rating Growth in 1955 Moves
Pontiac State Up 27
Places in List
Pontiac State Bank moved up 27
places in the list of U.S, Com-
mercial banks by size in the United
States during 1955, achieving a cov-
eted “five star’ rating from_the
banking newspaper.
* The bank now ranks 899 from
the top among some 9,000 com-
mercial banks of the nation. De-
posits of the Pontiac bank totaled
$23,848,000 at the end of 1955, in-
creasing from $22,238,000 at the
close of 1994,
The nation’s largest bank, ac-
cording to the Banker, is the Bank
of America in San Francisco with
deposits totaling $8,802,506 000.
Chase Manhattan Bank of New
York ranks second in size with
deposits near $7 billion.
Drop in Temperature
Forecast for Tonight
The United States Weather Bu-
reau predicts partly cloudy and
colder for the Pontiac ange. The
thermometer will dip to a low to
night of 14-18 degrees.
The forecast for tomorrow is a
high of 25-29 degrees. Winds are
from the north at 10 miles per
hour.
The lowest temperature preced-
ing 8 a.m. \in dowtitown Pontiac
was 22 degrees. The mercury rose |
to 23 at 1 p.m.
* % 7 z é wns cen 22 File for Commission : | date Adiai E. Stevenson, “T am
te S P I OgI ess rn ee ¢ smoet- | Roy L. Gustaveon, corporation | Twenty-two petitions have been, Under the City Charter, prim- | DISTRIST 1—Dr. Roy V. Cooley, of course delighted at the favor. é taneously, getting the Federal representative, said delivery of the fijed by candidates fhopeful for, artes will be mecessary in Dis. | John B. Woodward, Andrew A.| able report on the condition of
government to bear the major machines could be made on or be- seats on the 1956-57 Pontiac City
expense burden and obtaining fore July 1 in time for the August Commission.
low interest rates. primary. | Yesterday was the deadline for
“That's why we want the $300 fe sald an educational team ‘filing petitions and final tabulat-
million bond issue voted on in wilt come to Pontiac about three (tions showed five filed from Dis-|
November thus placing full faith weeks prior to the primary te trict 1, three from District 2, two)
and credit of the state behind half; begin a series of instruction pe- '" Districts 3, 5,.and 6, and four
the total needed amount,” Higgins rieds for voters ang city officials each from Districts 4 and 7.
explained. | who conduct the elections, triets 1, 2, 4, and 7 to select McCaskill, Samuel J. Whiters, Day- the President’s health.”
the two candidates to be placed = id Simmons.
on the April 2 general election |
ballet. Candidates from Districts ston Frank O'Brien, William G.|in a statement dictated from his 3, 5, and 6 will automatically Spence. ‘home in Texas:
petites ase veritig | ates # | DISTRICT 3—Wiltiam W. Don-| “As @ fellow human being whe — aoe aldson, Earl J. Smith. |has gone through the same thing, All incumbents from the present DISTRICT 4 — Floyd P. Miles,|1 am very pleased that the medi- wane en ee ; City ——s filed petitions Basil W. Toles, Norman R. Bol-|cal report _ so a I know
Sayuri ee a) bhacie| “With tonight's a al, Pontiac | | C f except District Commissioner|ton, Louis H. Biles. every American happy. oa eels Se eee, sy) — the Larcoat city in ami ton on esses Harry W. Lutz who decided he! DISTRICT 5 — John A. Dugan, ._* *
expected toll revenues, and allow Oakland County to use these ma- ye ae » eperaniear ina Pearce rcs oy a lower interest rate, he stated. |Chines,”” he added. He estimated {() ni ing iS iva i hand as Wyobnegees pr ae pee i ad Natt ‘that 2,000,000 Michigan voters will | rush of six petitions into City J. H. Patrick Glynn. | ,
vote in the November elections by | wey — Thy . Clerk Ada R. Evans’ office. DISTRICT 7 — Victor L. Smoth-|
(votinalmmachines! | DETROIT (INS) — Twenty-year | “py districts, the following can-lers, Benjamin M. Gates, Robert
There are 4,000 automatic voting °!4 Maurice Hamilton today admit- didates filed for nomination: "Landry, and Gilbert W. Long.
machines in more than 200 Michi- ted that he plunged a knife into®———————--———— ame —— Sa eat s ota
gan communities, Gustavson con- the body of Aziz Hermiz (Haisha) Final Approval Given Plans development of guided mis-
Redstone Ballistic Missile
ballistic rockets are tested
over the Atlantic.
Having in mind the con-
tinuing criticism of the
American missile program (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Whether the complete plan will
be werkable depends largely on
passage of the Fallon road-ald
bill by Congress, The measure
is now in a House committee,
but is expected to be reported
5tol0Years
by Sens. Symington (D-
Mo) and Jackson (D-Wash)
and others, newsmen asked
Wilson about the general
program.
“IT don’t think the people’ of the
country, generally appreciate the
work that has been done and the
investment that has been made—
that we have such big projects
going as we have.” Wilson re
plied. “‘We are getting better or-
ganized all the time.”
American Banker, New York daily IC “ald me sGB Basa’t found anyone to direct the coordinated
missilé program of the Defense
Department and the three armed
forces—a job which he announced |
recently he is setting up. |
At present, Wilson said, he has)
in mind for the job about five per-)
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) \ out for debate within two weeks,
said Higgins.
The measure would have Fed-
eral funds pay for 90 per cent
of toll roads which meet specifi-
cations and ‘‘our roads would meet
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 2)
113 Valentine Divorces?
DETROIT (INS) — The Wayne
County clerk's office in Detroit. had
only 89 applications for marriage
licenses on Valentine's Day. How-
ever, lawyers filed 113 applica-
tions for divorces.
The bid from the New York firm wife, Victoria, 25, had pleaded: |
| ‘Copters Save 20 Sailors exc City Asks Bids on Hospital!" Europe Cola From Ice-Heavy Baltic;
Still No Relief in Sight
LONDON W — Europe's relent-
less cold wave had claimed at
least 489 dead today after 2%
weeks. Relief still was not in was the only one considered last, “] can't finish it... 1 can’t fin-
night. i tee from another firm was jsh it... you help me!”’ a
received after the 2 p.m. deadline, |
City Clerk Ada R. Evans reported, Paine ginko wreowen/ . | ‘to the commission. | Sy poy for |, 2ne City Commission last night approved final plans: aes ' for the Pontiac General Hospital $3,000,000 addition |
Stocks Shoot Upward reine cig easy 9 ee and authorized the advertisement for bids. !
ji | Upon the recommendation of Architect Leo J.| NEW YORK @® — The stock Hermiz was already dead because 5, h ted si idder Mire! plate y higher ia of the wounds inflicted by the eenan, who sugges six weeks for the bidders to
eit ath ere Eleenhow. young woman before he stabbed Complete bids, the bids will be received April 19. The
ee eed Neale pon Prices of the Detroit grocer. ‘City Commission is expected to get the results at their
key Issues were up from one to | The new statement by Hamilton, April 24 meeting. . c sight.
four dollars a share in the open- 0n of a wealthy Baghdad mer-- Heenan told the commissioners that the expansion Cubtreezing temperatures spread
ing minutes, chant, was made shortly before the wil] provide for 346 beds and 90 bassinets. The hospital across the Continent. St. Tropez on
Do You Wan
Read Lawrence, Page 4 couple was taken before Record- . : : : j presently has 148 beds. the French Riviera playground
iret degree murder Cee “er “| As to the actual construction date of the addition had a 16-inch snowfall, heaviest in
| jl Hermiz City Manager Walter K. Willman said last month that memory. Previously, both Mrs.
land Hamilton had accused each ,‘a8 Soon as we know what the bids are we would begin _Icepacks slowly forced the 1,
| 900-ton Swedish cargo ship Ma«
t Ike to Run?
DETROIT — With Mayor AIT-
bert E. Cobo out of the picture, Lansing said he would make a de- Yor and a vote getter in a Demo-
Republican Congressman Alvin M.
Bentley of Owosso- appeared today will.depend, he said, on the course hope of unseating Demoeratic Gov.
the strongest potential contender
for the Republican nomination for
governor
The Bentley Looms as Likely GOP Gubernatorial Bet “Young Turks” in the House at
cision ‘in the near future.’ It
of the Republican race.
“I would become a candidate if
I thought the other cofitenders
37-year-old _ representative would not carry through an Eisen-, put Cobo bowed out in a state- jother of the actual murder, ‘to advertise the sale of the bonds.” | =oaSS tilda on te Sweden's recky Bak
| tie coast. Helicopters stood by
to rescue the crew of 20.
The ice also treatened the last
‘open sea lane between eastern and
ee . aa >
Last night in a speech to the’ Rep. Gerald R, Ford Jr 8 fourth ee in hundreds at isolated “op i \.
Fred L. Crawford for the Re- Wayne County Women’s Republi- term Republican congressman’
publican nomination in Michi- can Club here, Beniley said Re- from Grand Rapids, mentioned as Villages in Italy and on lonely Bake
gan’s eighth district in 1952, The publicans can wrest control of the a possible candidate, also bowed '¢ islands ran short of food and
district includes Clinton, Gratiot, state administration from Demo-,out, He said he plans to seek re-| fuel.
Ionia, Montcalm, Seginaw and Crats but he predicted it would be election to the House. iIDROP 70,000 POUNDS
Sitewasere) evemmttos, Be sey en uptillAetit Still a possible contender is for-| Sixty-five U. S. Air Foree Flying ng Lat Co Cott | He sald a Republican victory (mer state and Detroit police com- Boxcars wound up the biggest Eu His grandfather and father, Al-' next fal] hinges on a heavy vote missioner, Donald S. Leonard. | ropean airlift since the Berlin Cobo, Detroit's three-term ma-. Bentley defeated veteran Rep. |
cratic stronghold, was considered
by many party leaders their best
'G. Mennen Williams in the event
Williams decides to run this year
‘for a fifth term.
from Michigan's eighth district has hower program in Michigan,” ‘the ment that caught politicians by sur- bin M. Bentley land U. operated & in the “basically Republican | Leonard has made no public an blockade, completing d elivery
indicated a firm decision before
the end of the week. : |
Only Bentley and State Repre-
sentative. George W. Sallade of
Ann Arbor gave any public indl- |
cation of being available for the |
nomination after Cobo yesterday
dashed hopes of party leaders he —
would carry the GOP standard
in the state.
Sallade, leader of the so-called: 33-year-old legislator said.
In Today's Press
Coenty “News... SABAEE 7
Faéitorials ........... fee ttaws 4
Sports......+.. 30, 31, 32, 33, 34
Theelere) oe ee eas cans K
TY & Radio Programs...... 43
Wilson, Fart... ...........5.. 12
-~S¥omen’s Pages...,.13 thru 17
( prise. woodworking plant in Owosso.' area of upstate Michigan” and ‘nouncement that he will seek the from Germany of 70,000 pounds of
TO GIVE DECISION S00N They built a fortune in investments, capture of at least #0 per cent nomination. He was soundly de- relief supplies for the hard-hit
Bentley had said: ‘You'll re. 0 General Motors stock. | ot the vote in heavily Demo- feated by Williams in the ‘34 elec- jatians. .
French cities were short of fresh member I told you some months’ A University of Michigan grad- cratic Wayne County. - sae
_ago that if Mayor Cobo ran,. I uate, Bentley was a foreign service.) Dr. John Hannah, president of The 62-year-old Cobo, who suf- vegetables. Gardeners suffered
would not run, If he is definitely officer in the State Department be- vichigan State University, stated | fered a severe heart attack in 1952. damage running into the millions,
out of the race, 1 will make a de- fore entering politics. lyesterday he had ‘no political as- 5#id the question of his health did) Fresh snow piled up over south-
lcision by the end of the week.) He was one of five congressmen pirations at all.’ not influence his decision. | jeast England. Roads in 77 British -
| Bentley lunched with Cobo yes- wounded March 1, 1954 when fa-| “I am not a candidate for any joan were declared dangerous,
iterday but neither gave any hint natic Puerto Rican nationalists shot public office and I don't intend to)~ A northerly gale sent East Coast — .
of what was said. ¢ ~ _ |up the House of Representatives. be a candidate,’ he said. = shippink runping for shelter.
i} 1 ( ) {\
Income Tax Returns Prepared
Angus aly py al Consultant |
W, Huron st. , Bves. FE 32-3615
~ » ‘
Z
:
Plan for Parking
Gains Approval “City Community Club,|
Employes Local Favor
$600,000 Proposal
_Two more resolutions favoring
city’s $600,000 municipal park-
f program were aired at last
night’s City Commission meeting.’
One was from the Northside’
Gymmunity Club and the other from Local 100 of the Government
Cominittee, AFL-CIO.
; first read in part; “We
@ civic-minded group or 4
er ae a a a |
7 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1956 ee ne IE 2 A I
|
. The Day in Birmingham
Gotham Probing <2 * ne" 3 * ails
%
© me te t-—4 -* Bee errs
s te eee > es The current private parking
Operators have failed to meet the,
needs of the citizens, and that the,
mitnicipal lots now operating have’ to begin soon on Detroit Edison's Mohawk Substation to be located on
proven beyond a doubt to be self- Long Lake Road at Andover. The new station will serve an eight-
| square mile area in Bloomfield Township. The substation will in- Bloomfield, Franklin, Long Lake and Westchester substations. NEW EDISON SUBSTATION — Construction work is scheduled crease the electric power supply in the area by about 60 per cent. It
is scheduled for completion in early fall and will be a modern brick
and steel structure. This area now
“Other municipalities have —
proven by actual operation these . D
roca an aceon * OCINtIStS Seek needs of the citizens.” |
waz, ®rst . Oral Polio Cure , UM Researchers Say
Such a Drug Is Still in
Early Stages
Progress Note
in Missile Plans (Continued From Page One)
sons I doubt that of 944 by the National Foundation for
Gans wal take 1.” ~ Infantile Paralysis this month to
* © @ continue the program.
Dr. Francis said the drugs
would work as flueride in water jendiess heavens again, and Con- Himself down from the pinnacle .14 surrendered a variety of loot,
Oakland County Sheriff's detectives P0SeS the girl would carry a cer tain magazine with the name show- Temptations of the Desert {{ Youths Admit
Are Ever Present Today (Continued From Page One)
It would be difficult to explain them. :
in human. language, but it did The challenge to turn stone
bring me to the fundamental con- into bread finds its evil today |
clusion of my faith: Belief in God in the malevolent desire of the |
Almighty, the .Creator of the godless to control all food. —
earth, and al! the visible and in-| There is no more powerful argu-
visible heavens. | ment than bread. Feed them
While I was in the desert of first, and then it ts easy to com- |
temptation, I looked down at the Pel their obedience, |
flat, smooth stones and up to the ‘The devil dared Jesus to cast
sidered the temptations Jesus o¢ the temple. The objective of a
resisted so firmly. These tempta- miracle in such a place was to
tions exist today perhaps 88 control and capture the imagina-
~ |tion and obedience of the crowd
by sheer d strati fs -
Plan fo Re-Question mn" ater: *
Suspect in Robbery ‘day seeks to capture the minds
of men by exhibitions of over-
itempting to influence their souls
‘or opinions... The nihilist of our
| | tioaty u vim cnn weer AQ Breakins
jyouth, made a total of nine break- . ., ~Parking Heads Agenda
New-Vice Ring at Commission Meeting
Police to Investigation
of East Side
NEW YORK (INS) — New York
‘Police continued today to investi-
‘gate an elaborate network of
|‘‘floating madames” which offi-
‘cials said was operating from
|public phone - booths during the
‘cocktail hour.
| A high police source revealed
yesterday a vice ring which used
a dozen or more beautiful girls
‘on $100-plus dates was run by
‘madames who used the phone
‘booths around New York City’s
fashionable East Side area to
‘avoid detection and wiretapping.
The investigation was sparked
by two Park Avenue raids which
led to the arrest ef blonde, 21-
year old dane Stacey, and Mrs.
| dane Cook, 33-year-old brunette.
its electri er from | ' receives its electric power fro tls Stacey picked up at the
‘Sulgrave Hotel on Park Ave. and
\Miss Cook found at her home,
were questioned at the district at-
torney’s office while awaiting ar-
raignment in the court for vag-
rant women.
|
Poe Fodmmre
| i
The setup, which one official said
“makes (Mickey) Jelke look like PUBLIC PHONE BOOTH SETUP) acoustics, Bibles and camping
know-how took the Board of Edu-
cation's attention last night, while
city. commissioners wrestled with|
parking lot sites and priorities and
jlibrary fees,
| Parking Lot-No, 2 south of
‘Shain Park was relegated to the
_ time when West Maple is more de-
|veloped commercially, and com-|
missioners decided to have the city,
| manager restudy parking lot needs
land finances for possible re-
,vamping of their week-old priority
| schedule.
View of the Off-Street Parking
Committee of the Chamber of
Commerce that Lot HH, on Hunt.
er and Hamilton, should have
top priority along with Lot 3-A
north of Hamilton, was presented
by its chairman, Donald L.
Cummings.
Aiding with a financial study
will be Matthew Carey, Detroit fin-'
ancial consultant, hired last night |
to advise tehe commission on bond
sales. :
Of the $500,000 bond sale ap
proved by voters, $195,000 in bonds,
is outstanding, and $305,000 worth ,
of bonds are yet to be sold. |
For Parking Lot A, its necessity,
was voted, as well at the alley ‘at!
its edge, but paving and changes)
in Park and Oakland streets was’
held over for study of whether the
Gaffill, Bailey or Chenault prop-
erties should be used in straighten-|
ing Park. Hamilton crossover at;
Hunter boulevard was approved.|
. a piker,” was for one operator to Detroiters Confess 9 pone) another ea a phake | bool
White Lake Township) ses lining up a patron. | ie second ‘floating madame,”
Home Thefts | would then get in touch with the,
. {girl and send her to the selected
Seven Redford High School rendezvous. As a special service,
youths and four juvenile com- Suite reservations at 6ne of the
panions have confessed a series of best hotels woud £2 made,
WANE Tee Doetan) olanral Police said for identification pur-
said today,
The gang, led by a 16-yearcld ing or would purchase a certain
brand of cigaretts or soda, since
the girls reportedly never knew § Septembe Jetectives ; : ins since September, Detectives theiri dates’?
Harry Maur and Leo Hazen said.
| «Detectives said they confiscate
ag stolen property: The spokesman said although a
, number of operators were in-
| volved he could not disclose the | The ten dollar Hbrary fee for |
_ out-of-city readers, questioned
_ by Robert F.. Stansberry, presi- |
| dent of the Beverly . Golfhurst |
_ Assn., was answered by the fin-
ance director's statement ‘that |
_ taxpayers of this city pay on a—
family average $11.95 for the |
library’s support. |
| With the library taking $77,671.85,
during the current fiscal year, any|
owner of a home assessed at $6,-/
860 or over pays as over the non-|
‘resident’s ten dollar fee, he said.’ Arrest of Two Leads BIRMINGHA M—Lightning, \they already are from a previous placement by the Gideon Society,
and New Testaments will ge giv
en to students of fourth grades
or over if the students so request,
The Gideon offer was approved
last night by the board.
*
Frank Bensh, 1501 Humphrey,
was bound over te circuit court
today when he waived examina-
tien and an uttering and publish-
~~ es * #2
Mrs. Dorothy Fisher
Arrangements for services for
died this morning at St. Joseph's Hospital after a long illness, are
| being made by Manley Bailey Fu-
neral Home,
Mrs, Fisher, who came here aft-
er her marriage in 1924 in Detroit,
where she was born in 1900, leaves
her husband, Milo; a daughter,
Eleanor at home; and her father,
Harry E. Johnson, of California,
New Nickels Set
as Reminders of
Parking Plans
“Operation New Nickel” will put
shiny new nickles in the pockets
and purses of many Pontiac peo-
ple today as the ‘Committee for
Five Cent Parking” takes anoth-
er step to ask voters to vote for
the city’s $600,000 municipal park-
ing program at the polls March 5. -
The committee suggested to all
merchants that they replace dimes
with two new nickels available at
both city banks in an effort to
stress the need for increased mun
icipal parking for the city.
Pontiac Deaths
Teodor Gates ;
Teodore Gates, 69, died sudden-
ly at his residence, 190 Nebraska
St. Saturday,
does to prevent tooth decay.
It would be a chemical approach
said many chemi-
to exist which de-
stroy the virus. The probiem is to
find compounds safe for human
beings. His staff, he said, already
has demonstrated certain
monkeys. ;
An alleged red - hooded bandit wheiming power and frightening ie be requestioned today in the ipem into submission.
two-man, $890 armed robbery Jan. . rer;
'18 of Tom's Bar, 928 Mt. Clemens DARKEST HOURS St. .
The 23-year-old suspect from Seven outboard motors, a wire exaet number while the present Based on 1955 valuatio cost of : 1886 recorder-phonograph, a radio-pho- investigation continues, ithe library is $1,458 sir thetana Ih Born pigeon i ton M | leviai : ; | j "he w son of Mr. |Nograph, a television set, three) Officials ‘said the involved sys- he says. Tooke Gal He had li ee ‘gasoline engines including a 300-10. was unique in that no records| The school board accepted bids, et en The devil is surely worshipped pound four-cylinder motor, several of addresses were used since the for classroom lighting at Pierce t hen aon toasy by tose he i is Hare bows agers fee nae “floating madames’’ would mem- School for $6,830, from Schultz! Surviving i. eae inet, a Ro ; of lies murder to ju e , as er - head, 2 sleph bers - Electrical Service of Pontiac and jidren, Auburn Heights has denied since 614 of world conquest. calibre rifle and shells, a juke he Nae one numbers and elie acoaslical Ceiling for the same Tania, two grandchildren and two his arrest for investigation Satur- a+ the site of Christ's tempta- box, ‘numerous’ small radios and , » business School f Detroit A .., great-grandchildren.
iday that he took rt in teh cit o ; It was said most of the business eo! from roit Acoustical Rosary will be tonight at 8 |day that he pa Y tion I thought, this is surely one an airplane propeller. was done at cocktail or early din- Contracting Corp. for $4,250. ry &
jhold-up and in a similar robbery o¢ the darkest hours in human Cash taken was small, Maur ner time. Cha ugice tn the old echesks ‘o'clock in the Pursley Funeral
said. ~| ever seen before; yet in the fellow-students, Maur said. Some, indicated by last spring’s citi. Home until 11 a.m. Thursday when
Avon Township, who admitted the slanned, or preventable, hunger; leeuaile Ao 2 p.m. Burial will be in Oak Hill earlier Jan. 18 near Port Huron, jis ; : |Home. / | ory. We are endowed with said, probably not exceeding $20 ee . .
Det. Sgt. Raymond E. Meggitt more wealth than the earth has = Some of the loot was sold to Po Q Ini tiates lent Treen apace. one Mr. Gates will be at the Funeral
Police claim the man was the’ tase 4 years over 100,000,000 including the juke box, was des. D he will be taken to the St. George - wal } 000, J ay Was des : ittee report, bringimg Rumanian Church fo rice partner of Gerald K. Davis, 28, of jeople have been destroyed by troyed and split up among gang kj F I d zens comm po u r service at . : M the av re the members. . : by al ing ore @a e average up to above 30-
Cemetery.
stages
5,000-mile rockets upon which the
‘Air Force is working.
* Mi temperature |. ......00..-- ther
66 Im 1964 mi eed Higgins Tells Plan
croc: wisa'mies £0 Finance Turnpike
(Continued From Page One)
those specifications," the MTA
chairman asserted.
To Total cost of the two Michigan
tured the opinion that the Redstone) projects would be $600 million. If
rocket Fallon’s plan passes, Federal funds
Tocket would supply $540 million leaving.
or three the state to pay only $60 million, long-range. 'yjus bond interest
“And under our semi-full-faith
and-credit plan we would probably
get the bonds at 2 per cent in-
terest instead of 3.5 to 3.75 which
would be required otherwise," Hig-
gins asserted.
“We could also keep interest
down by splitting the issue up to
obtain monéy only as we needed
it,” he added.
“When we put our bill in asking
for a vote on part of the issue,
we weren't just praying for a
Ike’s Health Report
Cheered by GOP
Sen. Duff (R-Pa) said he feels pil would include toll roads.” _
confident “the President will be a) In order to get the aid grant.
candidate again in order that he the state would have to have its,
may continue the prégram he has share of the money to match the:
so magnificently begun.” lfederal funds. “The bond issue
GOP National Chairman Leon- would make sufficient funds read-
ard W. Hall, who has been mate ily available,” said Higgins. | taining Eisenhower will run, sa
in a statement that “the decision| VOULD STOP LOSSES . .. Is in his hands, and his per-| By building bothyprojects at the
sonal feelings and judgment will same time, and getting them into. be the determining factors.” ‘operation together, overall revenue |
* * »«# | would be enough to overcome loss |
House GOP Leader Martin of on some stretches which will be
Massachusetts, speaking in Hagers. less heavily traveled, he stated. |
town, Md., termed the medical ‘The section from Bay City
report a “green light” and added: north to the Straits will not pay
“I believe . . . the President will for itself for about five years’
not fail to respond to what is al- and if Ziegler builds competing
most a universal call of the peo ro'ads the Rockwood - Saginaw |
ple.” . istretch might not make much _prof-
- ‘it at first. But revenue from the
The Weather _Detroit-Chicago route would more
PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partiy| ;than overcome this.
a colder, tonight and tomor-,
row, High
t
“Under this plan, Ziegler can
teday 26-20, low tonight 14- Y | be ftemerrew 24-29. Nertheriy, go ahead and build any road
winds 10-18 miles per hear. he wants and we'll be a fot
Today in Pontise | closer to getting a network of
Lowest temperature preceding 8 am toll and free highways ade-
At 8 am: Wind velocity 10 mph | quate to meet our needs.” Direction: North, |
®un rises Thuriday at 7.24 am \
Gun sets Wednesday at 6:04 pm i
Moon sets Wednesday at 16 21 pm
Moon rises Thuredey at 9 20 am Higgins is in Lansing today to
explain the plan to the Legisia-
\ture and attempt to win approval
Dewntewn Temperatures of the proposed public vote in
¢am..... 4 «6oll a.m +» ++. 25 November,
TR. mM. beter BM UIT mM « 6 *, , 7
8a.m. ,... 2 ip. m......... 38 Another possible stumbling block
foe ck looms in an awaited State Su.
jpreme Court decision on _ the
+MTA’s power to over and under-
+ pass existing state roads. ‘But Tuesday in Pontiac
(As recorded downtown)
Highest temperature ...... ...
Mant temperetane soe lel ic. 38 there’s little doubt this will be de-
Weather—Sunny. ‘cided in our favor,”’ said Higgins.
One Year Ago in Pontiae = “If things go as is hoped, we.
Aeesccslrnahle eet might be able to start financing
24.8 proceedings for the 113-mile, Rock-
ped ete ‘wood-to-Saginaw section within 60
Highest ané Lowest Temperstares This days,” he added.
pa howe 19 in 1875.
— ee
Tuesday's Tentperature Chart Students Hear Kefauver re 37 Miam 8
: Cy i 70 -~.9o3 Mi lis 11 - 2] ESV ee — Ser! Bimpers, tg Morar Ht -1i|_ GAINESVILLE, Fla, uw — Sen. Chicago 40 25 New York 46 42)Estes Kefauver visited the Uni-|
Severs’ $5 Hh omine, 25 It versity of Florida campus today Detroit ° * =. paws % 33|to attempt to win the students - ancise ' F : | 3 # So Morte 33 pesca in his campaign Jor the)
tt. | if j . ry Leong Pt $¢ is Democratic” presidential nomina
Memphis = 7% «56 Washington 54 44| tion.
i |filing-making a total of 22 petitions
| Spence, 50, of 1034 Canterbury crimes Friday, Meggitt said. Davis by the Red revolution; by two | told Meggitt that he and his com- yong wars; and the ceaseless |
panion. wore red cloth hoods in pioodietting which followed. | both stick-ups. |
Davis previously had confessed, Before leaving the desert 1
being the lone, red-hooded armed looked at the vast, visible heav-
thug who held up an Orion Town- | ns, and felt the challenge of the
ship tavern Feb. 4. |vaster, invisible heavens. I knew
eee for the thousandth time they,
100 000 Not Ticklish would prevail because, in the final’
, The gang was*rounded up
through one juvenile, questioned
yesterday about a car theft in
Detroit. Detroit Det. Clarence
Wesley and Youth Officer Paul
Telisky said the boy implicated
his friends in the White Lake
—— tng which the priest marks each
Being held in Oakland County forehead with ashes and says in VATICAN CITY ®—Pope Pius
XII marked his own forehead with
ashes today as the 40-day Lenten
season of penance began rooms, where an eight to nine |
foot-candle average existed.
Furniture, bids ranging trom $20,-
for 673 to $28.482 were taken under!
Christians throughout the world. |study. of whether high or medium Hallett, 73, who has made her
Roman Catholics observe Ash quality pieces should be used in ™
Wednesday by attending Mass dur- Derby Junior High School, where died yesterday afternoon. She had
the board expects to have classes)
under way in the fall.
Mrs. Frank Hallett
Mrs. Frank (Anna Flizabeth)
home"ih the Pontiac area 58 years,
n ill several years.
Born Sept. 21, 1882 in Edinburgh,
plan of the creator, the power of jail waiting formal: charges are Latin: “Remember man that thou. Camping courses, for teachers Scotland, Mrs. Hallett had at-
LEXINGTON, Ky. (®—Two local'life, truth. and light’ is infinitely Russell Johnson, 18; Russell Dan- art ashes and unto ashes will re-|who will be leading such classes|tended schoo] in Brockville, Ont.
youths found nothing ticklish about greater than the sum of evil.
their two-month court imposed
task. They reported to Juvenile Tomorrow — “Babe Didrikson
Court yesterday they had com. Zaharias, world famous athlete,
pleted picking up the last of some! tells how pravers helped her in
her most desperate contest—
against cancer.
‘(From Guideposts, Copyright 1956) 100,000 feathers they admitted scat
tering when they broke into a nov
elty firm. jcey, 17; David Miller, 17; Thomas turn.”
‘Schwartz, 17; Gerald Luma, 17;, In St. Peter's Basilica many
and Eugene Herrick. 19 ‘as the Adams sixth graders who
took a week's camp trip last year, Canada.
She leaves a daughter, Mrs. Win-
Masses were celebrated to enable will be given in university ex- ford Hamlin of Lone Pine road: a
Another youth is held in Detroit, thousands of Romans and pilgrims tension here with the board's ap- Son. Ernest Hallett of Pontiac; two
waiting transportation to Oakland to receive ashes. Federico Cardi-
County, detectives said. The juv- nal Tedeschini, archpriest of the
eniles were released to the custody basilica, presided at the principal
of their parents. ;ceremony. proval last night.
Gideon Bibles will be placed in
school libraries and classrooms
for reference texts, except where
6 More Candidates File Petitions Yesterday's deadline for filing years and has been active as a’ been a resident of Pontiac since, He is a graduate of the Pon- \of the membership committee of|
nominating petitions for the 1956 member of the National Rivers and 1918 and is presently an electri. tia public school system and the Rema Club. He is also a mem-,
ST City Commission brought a last Harbors Congress of the United
Santa Claus. We knew the Fallon minute rush of six more candidates States, working on hydro-electric electrical company in the city. |
power and soil erosion.
filed | District 1 candidate Whiters has
Filing from District 4 were Nor-
man R. Bolton, 45, of 100 W. Hop-
kins St., and Louts H. Biles, 65, of
836 Sarasota Ave. From District
1, Samuel J. Whiters, 43, of 453
Harvey St., and David Simmons,
36, of 296 Fern St., both filed nom-
inating petitions.
Gilbert W. Long,
Prospect St., and
“
41, of 139
William G.
Dr., submitted, petition, from
District 7 and District 2 respec:
tively. oO .
Bolton has hved in Pontiac and
District 4 since 1929 and is pres-
ently employed in the maintenance
department of Fisher Body D1-
vision,” He is married and the fath-
er of two daughters.
The candidate was born in Mis-
enheimer, N.C. in 1910 and grad-
the Acme School of Technology.
He is a member of the Urban
He is married and the father of League Board of Directors, Oak-
nine children, land County NAACP, and chairman cal contractor and owner of an
-
|ber of the Masonic Gilbralta Lodge
119, the Knights of Pythias, the,
‘Whittier School PTA, and the Oak- |
land County Etectrical Contrac-|
tors Assn. |
Competing against Whiters and
three other District 1 candidates in
the March 5 primary, will be
David Simmons, a native of Pon-
tiac. Simmons is married and the
father of five children and is, em-
ployed by the Pontiac Board of
Education. \
He is president of the ' H-
tan Club, Southside Community |
Ciab, North Oakland County |
Young Democratic Club, and a_
delegate to the state Central
Democratic Committee of Mich-
igan.
Simmons is father vice presi-
dent of Whittier School PTA and
coordinator of civilian defense at
the school,
He is past president of the
Southwest Civic Assn., a member
of NAACP, and a charter mem- grandchildren, three great-grand-
children; a sister, Mrs, Donald
MacMillan and a brother, William
Hallett, both of Brockville.
Service will be at 2:30 pm. Fri-
day trom the Farmer-Snover Fw
neral Home with burial in the
North Farmington Cemetery,
Ernest W. Lauckner
Ernest W. Lauckner, 73, died
suddenly last night at his home,
2085 S. Telegraph Rd.
He was born in Saginaw Jan. 27,
1883, the son of Curt and Caroline
Lauckner and married there to
Edith Sager, Oct. 26, 1904.
Mr. Lauckner had been a rest-
dent of Pontiac six years, com-
ing here from Detroit. He had
retired from Ford Motor Co.
where he was a tool maker.
Surviving are his wife and three
children, Walter of, Birmingham,
Curt of Detroit. Edward of Pontiac,
10 grandchildren and one great-
grandchild.
Other survivors include two
brothers, Edward and Otto of Sag-
inaw.
Service will be at 2 p.m. Friday
from the Sparks-Griffin Chapel
with burial in Grand Lawn Ceme-
tery.
Pete Manni
Pete Manmi, 22, switchman for
the Grank Trunk Railroad, was
uated from Mitchell High School
i'there. He has been a member of
‘the Methodist Church since 1925 Whittier School. Hospital Monday. A train caught
The candidate is recreational di- his clothing as he was walking be-
rector of VFW Post 3701 and a'side the track near Johnson ave ber of Boy Scout Troop 14 of dead on arrival at Pontiac General
| i WILLIAM G. SPENCE NORMAN R. BOLTON
Bolton organized the Demo ‘x
cratic Club of Pontiac and served
two years as president of this
organization, He is a Master Ma-
son in Brotherhood Lodge 541, a
member of St. John's Methodist
Men's Club.
Long, the fifth candidate to
file yesterday, is married and
the father of two children. He
was born in Pontiac and is nue crossing.
Bom Feb. 21, 1933 in Bardo, Ky.,
he was the son of Joseph and Mary
Calchera Manni. He was married
here to Patricia D. Saylor June 8,
1954. member of Huron Garden Eagles
2887, and has been.a member of
Fisher Local 596, UAW-CI0O for
19 years.
He is a delegate to the State
\Democratic Convention represent-
ing precinct 42 of District 4.
Biles was born in 1891 in Allen-
port, Pa. and came to Pontiac in
‘1941. He is married and the father
of four sons and one daughter.
The candidate, a salesman for
‘the Wyman Furniture Co., was de-
ifeated in 1948 and 1950 for the
‘city constable post.
He attended the California
Teachers’ College for two years,
| and Is a former steward of Local”
| 658 of the old Wilson Foundry.
| A veteran of World War I, Biles
{was a justice of the peake for 18
a member of the Beulah Holi- Mr. Manni who made his home |
ness Church. at 45 Lincoln Ave. came to Pon- ) : eae : fiac from Coxton, Ky. six years Educated at Pontiac High School, , ago. He had fo rly worked as }
Long was employed for 15 years
by Fisher Body and the Yellow ae helper at Fisher Body Di-
Truck and Coach Co. and has sold ; . |
real estate and insurance in the Besides his wife, he is survived , city. : jby his mother and a son, Joseph
District 2 hopeful Spence, is Kenneth, at home.
the owner of a used car business Also surviving are two sisters,
in the city and is a member of Mrs. Agnes Short and Mrs. Lucy
the Gingellville Baptist’ Church, Francisco, both of Rochester; four
the Gideon Assn... and the Pon- brothers, Bennie D. Manni of Dray-
tiac Chamber of Commerce. ton Plains, Jack of Rochester,
He is married with one daugh- John and Primo. both of Pontiac,
ter, and came to Pontiac 28 years The body is at the Pursley Fu-
ago from Duncan County, Mis- neral Home where the Rosary will
souri where he was born and edu-'be. said at 8 p.m. Thursday. Sery.
cated. ice will be at 10 a.m. Friday from
He also studied at the General St. Michael's Catholic Church with
Motors Institute at Flint. jburial in Mt. Hope Cemetery, GILBERT W. LONG my&
F}
a yv
New Plant Under Wa
NEW YORK w — Kroehler
start immediately on a $3,000,000\tion is expected by June 1957, pe se My , : ‘ / ‘ ’ } / , ‘ f A wm ie’ 4 Win a7 , , : ‘
« stie sales’ res sue [WAKE Gude pe | THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1956 = FWRP LEQ OP y
| liam, Migs. Kroehler, a large fur- gn
Co. announced construction will niture manufacturer, said comple-
x | .
nae i mnctnnectsimensene—perenmes |
‘ance man, has been rena’ | SANDUSKY LAR Fr : Onn i. ilead the annual April crusade ot as auc nan s eng DEARBORN (INS)—A Ford Mo- and immortalized by Henry Wads-
jthe Michigan division of the Amer. | “ey. tor Co, spokesman said the matter’ worth Longfellow in his “Tales
fean Cancer Society.’ ;
President Waldo Stoddard said County to accept a similar post in.
ee ‘umber processing plant in Merid-| TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR: Pick Cancer Drive Head Detroit area exceeded more ‘olf Or d Co Consi derin *!and other members: of the Ford
$500,000. The 1956 goal: is $587, 5 GRAND RAPIDS — Edward! g family have received many letters
M Mus, Grand Rapids tno Resigns School Post Rebuilding Nofed Int renuis te un The inn, constructed about 1686
Division |tmdent of schools in Sanilac of reconstructing Wayside Inn’ at Of @ Wayside Inn,” was destroyed |
by fire last Dec, 22.
SIGHT Miller was 1955 campaign chair-/Shigwassee. County effective July; Sudbury, Mass. is under consid- “Wa vside Inn was purchased’ and’ | eee man when contributions from the,1. He has been Sanilac County ¢ration by the Ford family. restored by the late Henry Ford ;
First submitted by: Bucky . 8. 29th St., Birmingham, Ala.
: SHORTENING A LONG DOG — 3 !
No doubt you've heard people say: ‘‘Let's make a long story
ishort.”’ |
Well, here's Rudy, a long dog that can be made into a short one. |
First paste this picture down on stiff paper and then color with!
‘paints or crayons. Make Rudy a bright brown, his blanket blue with
‘a yellow border and the strap yellow.
Cut out both parts carefully. Fold back on the dotted line A. Then,
fold back on dotted line B. Make point A meet point B and fold the:
extra part away at the back
If you want to keep the dog short just paste it in place. If, however,
you want Rudy long, fasten with a pin :
Fold the flap under the front feet forward and fold the other flaps
back. Now, long or short, the dog will stand up
To help keep Rudy warm on wintry nights don't forget the blanket
with his initia) on it. Fold the blanket in half and lay it over his back
|You can keep it pinned with a wire clip.
| Junior Editors pays $10 for any reader's idea that is used Write
your suggestion to ‘‘Junior Editors’ in care of this newspaper, jt can-
trom Your EXACT | not be acknowledged or returned and in case of duplication of ideas,
PRESCRIPTION the first submission shal] be accepted
Tomerrow: Tina and Her Concertina
NU-VISION OPTICAL CO. orcas ees a New Electronic eee ere tna tatleg Reom 2-3, Phone ° ° aboard a plane. Radar principles
15 W. Lawrence FE 2-2895 ; Bombing Device are employed
. ¥ Information such as air speed,
Revealed by Firm altitude, desired target—all the
5 Offices Serving N’West Detroit and West Oakland County
NEW YORK (®—The Internation. factors bearing on reaching and ? bombing a target—are fed into the NEED HEL . . | al Business Machines Corp., today machine by the plane’s crew. It
made public some details of what|then guides the plane to the target
2 experienced real esiate salesmen wanted to work it described as’ a new electronic and carries the craft through its
from our office at 8081 Commerce Rd. (nr. Union Lake J aipiane bombing and navigational bombing run.
Rd.) Commission rates to 65 per cent. plus bonus group -
system of “unprecedented relia- | hospitalization plan, liberc! advertising, and 2 of the 7 A ; : : bility L
largest projects in Oakland County. Phone Mr. * 2 @ . Heads Tile Institute
“Hankey, Sales manager for app't. Because’ of security considera. NEW YORK ® — Seymour Mil-,
tions, few details could be given. stein was elected president of the
Cc. SCHUETT However, these were some of the Asphalt Tile Institute at the annual facts disclosed about the new de- wine meeting. He is president of the
It somewhat resembles the giant Mastic Tile Corporation of Amer
computers now in use in industry ica) New York, NY. EM 3-4197
we BeBeaaun 12 aaanan
Pick the performer that fits your family at
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~’56
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has highest resale in its class’ See the smart,
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“ae” Tune in “DISNEYLAND” —ABC-TY Network y
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big. new Hornet on sight! And from its mighty, new ;
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Zero to sixty in just one-fifth of a minute. Drive the
most powerful Hudson ever built—the most beau-
uful performer of them all.
ee om = ype — ae 4 fe mn se |
See them at your nearby HUDSON and RAMBLER dealer’s! |
Jacobson’s Motor Sales 58 W. Pike Street Pontiac, Michigan
division's 80 counties outside the superintendent since 1938. Henry Ford Il. Ford president, in 1925.
Slim lines and color make news in
Smart Spring Coats
Gorgeous first-of-the-season ar-
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lightweight, textured wools —
tweeds, boucles, flannels, hop- :
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It’s new! “Shantua” in favorite
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Fabulous collection of all-wool
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dept. ~ SAGINAW AT WARREN. PONTIAC
stores © OPEN MON FRI. SAT. NICHTS TO 9
79 Oe No Cor Injuries|
- PETOSKEY o- = — |
PHYLLIS BATTELLE are 600 new rooms there are 600
‘are two almost certain ways to dark winterlands to take them)
world. | s * be
Is There a SURE
IN your
INSURANCE?
Thatcher,
Patterson
& Wernet
The first pn ( traditions, | You'cen < miss," said 's in| red shirt namied Harry [but limited to bare handfuls of tyuteon. In the past 15 years
| Persons) is to marry Babs Hutton 1.6 never heard of anyone build-
\or Tommy Manville. ling a hotel here without making’
The second (relatively new but money. It's the thing to do. Pro-
sure-fire) ts to build a Miami Monn Sone like money, naturally.”
Beach hotel. | HE LIKES IT >
Every year, new pink and blue |
| Mufson, “born with zero in the
‘and. multi-hued tourist palaces family bank’ on New York's lower’
open up in the seven-mile-long East Side, is real fond of money |
|creampuff of an island, and al- himself. So after yaars of co-owner-|
legedly shrewd businessmen up ship of the Beache'’s San Souci!
overdone it.” But as fast as there of the year — the Eden Roc. | |
from $38 to fanstastique,
| happily expects to get it all back)
fast. _ ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, F VEBRUARY 15, 1956
Three distinct impressions |
strike almost simultaneously the
tourist who comes to the Beach |
for the first time: 1) Isn’t the |
sun glorious? 2) You don’t mean
it. That's a hotel? 3) We can’t
afford this Mama, Let's go home.
Mufson concedes this, but points
out that fortunately there are
many, ‘many les@yexpensive hotels’
than his flossy abode; and virtually
every bolly stays on.
Harry has a gentle smile, isplashing fountains,
1 you sink into up to your shoe- not a home. When people travel”
}
"North predict—"Well, now they've Hotel, he recently: built the hotel he put it on as he said, “When I LUXURY ARCHITECT
first came here I had the uncom-| f i ‘ , ; i pec J h / tv
3 i
|to indulge her dream beyond the
“= Opulent Miami Beach Just Grows Richer= It costs 10-million dollars bit, fortable tmpreesion that every-, |Tesponsible for most of it.
| Meg BEACH (INS) — There new families swooping in from the|thanks to its 401 rooms. ranging ‘body on Miami Beach was a mil-, others, he designed the Hearean) Harry liomaire. Then I figured it out.'bleu (last year’s hotel), the Eden
“A tan in the winter makes Roe (this year’s hotel)
everybody look wealthy.”
It’s difficult to ‘describe the. ‘ready heavily booked).
motley opulence of the Miami
iin the last few years. Most have hmong Blast Proves Fatal
MONROE w—Ira Evans, 21, of Many, Monroe died Tuesday of injuries: cxi
= as home Monday. ( Americana (next year5s hotel al ‘oa of his body when| When
line he was using to clean
“A lot of people laugh at the, on brushes was ignited b es mo fundedeA: ” y a)
‘Beach hotels that have sprung up Beach hotels,” he admits ami- stove pilot light. ad bes feet. ‘ably. “Frank Lloyd Wright called) —__ itchy 1 Pimplcs *
Kill Romance
shattered romances may be
directly to scratching of
skin blemishes. Why -tolerate itch-
and the Suffered in a gasoline explosion at ihg of pimples, eczema, angry red
Evans was blotches and other
tired cracked £ irritations
you can get fast relief with
' soothing Peterson's Ointment? 50
ts. One application de-
neon-lighted, the Fountainebleu an ant hill.
palm trees, gilt and satin, carpets) “an 9 can say is a hotel is |
strings. | they want to see things complete-
Mad and fnagnificent, designed’ ty foreign. to them. If it were
as showcases for bare-shouldered practical, 'd put a waterfall in
| blondes, their lobbies attract more every bedroom.
Balding. = = “Miami Beach is a Technicolor,
|Cinerama dream of delight in the
‘mind of Tillie the Toiler!"’
4 «+» Too bad Tillie can't afford Morris Lapidus is the architect)
-
Since 1911 oe witr ¢
| |
EB eee t, m ay Pi paivis
ee ee RCs ne
STAR CHIEF 4-DOOR CATALINA OO,
The car says GO and the price won’t stop you!
SE
EE
Rtn
erinnnnerrat!
.
HKasy Does It-Zhis Ones Loaded /
Try the mighty 227-H. P.
Strato-Streak V-8 teamed
with Strato-Flight
Hydra-Matic!
Here’s all the go you'll ever want for normal
driving . . . with lots more where that came from
whenever you need it!
The slightest encouragement from your toe
is all it takes to touch off the most exciting
surge of power you've ever experienced. So take
it easy! In seconds you'll be sailing serenely
along at the legal limit or leaving the steepest
grade behind unnoticed . . . and always with
that big “something: extra” for safety!
There’s nothing else like it on the road today
You can actually buy a big, glamorous Pontiac 860 for less
than you would pay for 44 models of the low-priced three! * engine, 205 h.p., ... and for a very simple reason, there’s nothing
else like that mighty Strato-Streak engine.
It’s America’s most modern V-8! ... the
biggest, highest-compression, highest-torque
power plant in Pontiac history! You can take
your choice of three versions of this great
227 h.p. or clear on up to a
blistering hot 285: horsepower!
And its teammate, the new Strato- Flight
Hydra-Matic* is just as advanced! This revolu-
tionary automatic transmission gives you gears: *
for crisp, positive action—sparkling response at
any speed. And with those gears therés an
amazing new liquid-link coupling to make that
flow of power oil smooth!
It’s loaded all right, with more glamour and
go than you ever dreamed possible at a price
so low. In fact, if you can afford any new car, you
can easily afford a Pontiac.
Come on in and get the details. Whether
you're talking performance or price, easy does it
with this fabulous ’56 Pontiac! *An extra-cost option:
“PONTIAC
GEE “PLAYWRIGHTS S6" AND “WIDE, WIDE WORLD” —NBC-TV
PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE
KEEGO S General Motors Corporation
65 Mt. Clemens St.. Pontiac 15, Michigan .
JACK W. HAUPT PONTIAC SALES
North Main Street, Clarksten, Michigan RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES
51 N. Broadway. Lake Orion, Michigan COMMUNITY MOTOR SALES, Inc. ALES & SERVICE, Ine. 3080 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Harbor, Michigan 223 Main Str&t, Rochester, Michigan
HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, Inc. 160 8S. Washington St., Oxford, Michigan \
yar
“ty
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1956_
ps
+.
i.
rs
ran it mE Aad i
at
44
eitttttttt is, (PRREDBR
ED
ar
pages,
——
always in style.
Pattern No.
14%, 16%, 18
Size 14%, 4 yards of 35-inch;
yard contrast.
coins, your name, address,
desired, and the pattern number| Chapter 228, OES, on Feb. 21 at
to Sue Burnett, Pontiac Press,
W. Quincy Street, Chicago 6,
Areme OES Holds
Card Party Tonight 8281 12%-24%
Carefully tailored and so smart
thee neat shirtwaist dress that is
1 is in sizes 12%,
, 20%, 22%, 24%. By ANNE HEYWOOD
|| Recently, in Portland, Maine, I\tiful they all were,
wag addressing a group of nurses| «It sounded so false, that I
relations. As is often the case, I —.. “Say 7 Something Nice, but Don’t Lie landish remarks about how beay-)never had to, although I've been!
on the general subject of human’ cided never to do it. And i, “If 9 new baby has lovely eyes, Workshop's. } 2n d Session :
Scheduled Three Educators $ you comment on that to his
mother, She beams and yoo
beam and you both know it’s
“a well-shaped head or dimples, | nest. lin the field 15 years!
learned more from my audience
than I taught them. |
They Were a wonderful group
of women. I remember one in par-
ticular who has worked in obstet-
rics most of her life, _
You could fee she loved her
work and thought that babies
and new mothers were the most
wonderful patients a nurse could
lave.
“T liked what you said about
telling the truth,” she told me
later, “And that it doesn't pay to
be pleasant if you're being hypo-
critical, and that, if you try, you
ean find nice things to say with-
out telling lies, . «
“T’'ve always felt that way, I
can’t stand lies. Besides, saying a
phony nice thing always sounds
phony and gets you nowhere in
the long run.
SOUNDED FALSE
“During my first assignment in
the obstetrical ward, one nurse I
werked with would exclaim over
the new babies and make out-
Party Planned
by Pontiac OES
Mrs. Davy Gilpin is serving %
size| to be held by members of Pontiac
372| Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan
" Il.| Building. - . * @¢ ®@
group met Monday evening in ty Bethany Baptist Church. MR. and MRS. ROBERT PETERSON
Joyce A. Wilton Married)
For this pattern, send 35c in| general chairman of the card party 17) Rite at Bethany Baptist Couple Plans
Joyce Ann Wilton became the A reception was held tn the
bride of Robert James Peterson in! VFW Hall on Walton boulevard
a ceremony performed by the Rev. | ! immediatety following the cere-
Plans were completed wtien the Fred R. Tiffany Saturday evening ——|_ “If he's very, very funny-look- 7 some of them are—you' In @ ceremony ook to see if his ears are flat. to Speak Tonight at ¢
Ps
perlermel® \Teun fonitan eV. 'T00 never coon) VV @USCET SCHOO! : Saturday such nice, flat ears.’ That's hon- le
dotakag tite est and everybody feels good. “The E. R. Webster PTA will § i be hold the second session of its? Bethany -“Tft he's vealty ugly, you non idwi a ale raqEyt that he won't be dae 3 mi nter workshop this evening '$
pt times the funniest-looking baby|®! 7:30. The theme, “Rearing /$
Church, “Joyce turns out to be Mr. America—but|Children of Goodwill” will be dis- s Ann Wilton |you still don’t lie, You say, ‘My,|Cussed by three educators.
Individual Hair -
Styling and Cutting
by Tony and Carl
0000 000000000000000000000 0000000000000 0000008
| gtteqeceeesecccecesoecoescoescescseeseceees
custom-made
PERMANENTS You'll be amazed when you see the
hidden beauty in your hatr brought
to light with one of our very own
custom ~~
SEY Riker Bldg —Rear of Lobby
FE 3-7186 5
Secccccccccces seeseseececeaeeee?
'won’t you and your husband just we
became the | |love having him around!’ And of Dr. Hulda Fine, principal of |
bride ‘of leourse, they will. ‘Hampton School in Detroit, will)
Robert James Makes LIVE EASIER | speak. She is chairman of the edu-
leational conmimittee of the Round Peterson. She “Telling the truth makes life so. ‘Table of Christians and Jews in|
the daughter ™uch eaiser. 1 love the mothers |
us dang and they love me, because we're, ‘Detroit and author of the first
es r = honest with eerie in Detro's ‘mu “ochools “she|
Wilton of | ,TVe thought of her miny thmes| el sree gyn Do We Expect
Maplecrest Her henson telations are per- Dr. Fine will discuss the four
Ge the son of saan thew eles |e he way ty cant the Lawrence | ple. aly : ae ‘ * |
%
Vr. and Mrs.
_ George W.
Euerle of
Oradell, N. J.,
announce the
their daughter,
engagement of
Barbara Ann,
and Ronald
Parsons, son
of Mr. and
Mrs. Pere
Parsons of
Illinois
aienue. She
attended
Taylor
University and
St. Paul
Lutheran Church
J0SLYN at POURTH
Lenten Service
Wed. Evening 7:30 P.M
GEO MAHDER Pastor FR 50404 Vissionar y
Training
Institute,
N yack, Se
p C
The TODDLER BOY DRESSES UP
The Very
G ores
Weave Suit witt 7
‘ tone shirt ana
4 $3.9
ed Look 1 I
j trim. $3.98
co Sla KS « j
3 up, with smart plaid Shu
ess Suits... trom $4.98 to $8.98.
sats of distinction . .% raglan
eaves
$8.98 to $14.98. for
EASTER! Young Gentleman
for Easter Co-ordinates
chestertield collar and tweeds
Ys of the
Patricia Ann
‘Render. and
John Allan .
* Shaw: were
married
Birmingham
and he is the
son of
Wr. and Mrs.
James M.
Shaw of
LEN SH Wo Walled Lake.
nder Speaks
Southfield
and chiffon for her duties as maid of
mother white stock decorated the altar of honor She carried a colonia! bou-
quet of pink carnations
OTHER ATTENDANTS
Jill Shaw of Walled Lake and
Shirley Mitchell. of Birrningham
were bridesmaids. Junier brides-
maids were Penny and Pamela
Pavlik of Detroit.
* * °
Shaw of Walled There dresses were of rose mylon
chiffon and they carried colonial
bouquets of carnations. Their head-
pieces were bands of net braid with
matching flowers
Paula Pavlik of Detroit wore a
frock of white nylen chiffon and
a white bonnet with cotillion blue
flowers for her duties as flower
girl. She carried a nosegay of
pink and blue daisies.
Ronald Randall of Walled Lake
was best man. Seating the guests
were Robert Welke of Walled Lake, |
‘Gordon Crawford of Byron and |
Lloyd Shipman of Walled Lake.
Jim Render, brother of the ee
| was ringbeerer.
| * °
For the reception held in the
church parlors, the mother of the
bride wore a light blue taffeta
‘dress with matching accessories.
Mrs. Shaw was gowned in navy
blue silk with navy accessories.
They both wore corsages of red
roses |
* * *
The new Mrs. Shaw changed to a
brown suit with brown and tan ac-
cessories for her traveling outfit.
‘Following a Florida honeymoon,
the newlyweds will reside in Walled
Lake
Denmark Pictures
Viewed by WSCS
| Mary Chase showed pictures she
jhad taken of Denmark. when she!
toured the country as a member
of = Lisle Fellowship Group, to
members of the Women’s Society
of Christian Service of the Oakland
'|Park Methodist Church recently.
The fellowship spent six weeks
‘Misiting and working in several
European countries. She
‘shared many of the fine Christian
“experiences she had on this trip
with her audience
Mrs. Albert Barker led devo-
tions. using as her theme. “Wom-
an and the Workers.’ Mrs. John)
Lamont was program leader and,
special music was furnished by!
Mrs Leo Mineweaser and Mrs. |
Joe Wagiey. | “Why Be / Shy?” which’
to be|I’m sending to you.” It will help
PTA Activities
| Linde Viste PTA Will meet Thursday at € p.m. in Emerson School, to
of reporting | to a J nee <
‘THE GIFT |
for the
Linen Lined . . . Plywood Frame
. « with Brass Locks
14:
LADIES’
“WARDROBES Suitable for
Dresses
14° MATCHING CASE . $7.85
FREE!
MONOGRAMMING
KIMMIN’S LEATHER GOODS Hanging 4 to
Plus
Tox
14 W. Huron FE 2-2620
Short Curl
Permanents
From (
$=50 le
We
IMPERIAL
Beauty Salon
29 E. Pike St. FE 4-2878
—
° i) io |
Religious Goods
Rosaries, Missals, Medals,
Bibles, Statues, Sick Call
Sets, Gifts.
Come to
The Madonna Shop
795 Woodward Ave.
Free Parking FE 5-9275
In the Sagamore Motel
adds lustre to your
Hand-Rubbed Calf
Choose from oer lorge setection of :
Fr Foshioned Styler trom BOS to 1 QOS
tolored wardrobe
L W W a revo! o L600 rings ae Pauli’s Shoe Store OT Sttiere, fit , : f ini €
: Ou enn a 35.N ’. Saginaw
Orrect}ys Open Fri_Eve 'til 9 P. M.
The MARGARET ANN Serving Pontiac Over 50 Years! = a h ; Phe preter ba ne semen sheer’ wih Re Ameren Med tnd res
SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC . Rike Bida. SHOP — W. Huron -
¢ , : en : , * : i. |
® a a D ’ i
é 4 1
. ‘ \ ’ Fa q we . ; mo : : a , i Nay 3
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1956 /
| Pyrex Glassware
SALE BIG SAVINGS—COMPLETE STOCK |
| @6-cup perculator © Measuring
| pitchers
| @ 6-cup teapot © Casseroles
© Custard cups
@ Cake dishes @ Sauce pans
' (all sizes)
| gO JUST RECEIVED"
New Spring Shipment
Miracle Fab Spray NY
con add NEW COLOR. NS oy A
ld bie a aan in choice of
use, Won
colors.
Winter Close-Out
| SPACE SAVER
DOOR s wa. Clethes Hamper Reg. $7.95 All meta!, wicker-type front. Fits
*2* |. any standard door. Self-ventilat-
ing, self-emptying. Choice of
4 colors.
CUNNINGHAM’S Self-Serve — Pick ‘n’ Pay
TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER
eet
aa
ee *
>
as
Final Clearance GIRLS’
DRESSES Colorful cotton dresses in sizes | to
6x.
Not seconds, but first
quality dresses in
many colors and ¢om-
_ binations.
See
5
ec
ls
ana
OO
ag
WRIGLEY’S
ars re = S SAVE MONEY!
; ; SAVE TIME!
STOKELY’S Yellow Cling Finest Cut
PEACHES Green Beans
Your No. 303 §
Choice Cans 190 !
SUPER
MARKETS
MYER’S Jewelry Shop in Tel-Huron Center
Save! General GE Electric
Telechron Electric Clocks
“Originality”
Reg. $8.95
Soo
ae Ps
$ 5”
Glamorous kit-
chen beauty.
Unusual see-
through design.
Crystal clear
ring joins case
and numeral
band. In red,
white or yel-
low.
“Telecrat” |
Reg. $6.98 |
*5*
mw Outstanding
m design in a low |
m priced alarm
mM clock... Top
mM and sides are
m gold color met-
m ual. Smart tex-
tured dial adds
beauty. “Decor” .
M) Reg. $6.95
r| $ 4”
| Unusual alarm
| clock value
Decorator's de-
light with mod-
ern look, Gold
color hands.
Beige case.
ff O/ | onal
M = eed
/) Lyfe, "
f f
TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER
OPEN EVERY
THURS, - FRI-SAT. to 9 P.M
*] Down mM o gam
NS
UY Ket $7 a Week
BUY NOW!
[Me Ts
:
ee Cae’
a Jubilee of Values . .
at Tel-Huron offer values every day. New spring
fashions and merchandise makes Te!-Huron shops
cand stores fresh as a new spring hat. And prices
are surprisingly low for these nationally advertised
brands. Give yourself a new lift shopping at Tel-
Huron this week. We invite your browsing.
a ts eg Be Se 2 |
OT | BEAUTIFUL RAYON and 7 ow
ACETATE PRINTS
i, Encomble. a5 colors ee peer oD 19 . 3
~~ Stores nsemble. 45-Inches wide. A ding |
= ga 7 to $1.59 |} con aes Toot f Yd. i See ads on this page
Samples |
V/0rr Regular Price
One of a Kind
From the NEW SPRING Collection of
Famous Jack Borgenicht Girls Better
Dresses. We offer these advance season
savings. One of @ style in new nylons,
sheer cottons, and dressy fabrics.
Reg. 3.99. <....... SALE 2.66
eb Lek) gooonsec SALE 3.39
p Reg. 9.99 ~:.... .» SALE 3.99
Reg. 7.99 .....% .. SALE 5.39
Reg. 8.99 ........ SALE 5.99
i We Give
Bl iGold Bell
a: Gift BEST POR CHILDREN
<3; Stamps FE 5-9955
TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER
Better Quality
Wool Flannel |
SHIRTS VALUES to $13.95
@ McGregor
@ Donegol
@ Chippewa
@ Botany
A big selection of colorful
plaids, checks, solid colors.
Sizes small, medium, large,
extra-large. An extremely
fine shirt. . . at an excep-
tionally tow price. Choose
yours today!
WHILE THEY LAST!
OSMUN'S Town & Country
TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER
Visit Osmun’s Shoe Dept.
et Our Tel-Huron Store Open an Osmun’s
Charge Account
| ‘ } “ / ts
an perm ep owmem = — . _ . /
AP ie
Vay er
. yes, yes, yes’ The Merchants—
SALE! T Salesman S |
Size 1-4-10 Only if
FOND NY |
See aan
Finny f j e
an aY
TPENIZIDIREE
‘ “ve foe
, “@ “Butterick
es *; vo erie ed 4 Reo attera
; eR, one 11 to 18, 50¢
r ta re Tubeble Too!
“SEW'n $ VE "sue | _ SHOP TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Ph. FE 5-4457
Open Thurs.-Fri.-Sat, to 9 P. M.
special!
thursday,
friday,
saturday
37
separates
full fashioned sweaters
' Rare price for a full fashioned sweater! Classic
slipons in washable nylon. Long, short sleeve
styles. 34-40 ;
usually $5.95 and $6.95
only, $3.99 } F
wool skirts
A value-full collection of slender skirts in :
wool flannels and tweeds Several favored colors. |
Sizes 10 to 16. -
usually $5.95 and $7.95
only, $3.99 ;
|
;
TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER
SHOP MON., THURS., FRI, SAT. TO9 P.M. fy . 4 ] i
: ad serving a 12 year sentence for of America will fs - ‘stage for over two years and will Watkins Hill No. 1 by the railroac 4 mental Church A approved a reselution to sponsor a munity Gnd’ be den the gin | lo contisue the plan = th
“ments to children whose parents
due tothe rapid expansion of the ssc a group of library enthusiasts’ gaiy publie library in mens f P licies _ community, applications should be jheaded by Mrs. O. L Seeman the Township. Many who did know THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 15, 1956 | | |
osal Plant, Rezonin
Fear Proposed Changes xcee Auziiery Pass Dublin
May Decrease Va uation .Nex Meets Bond Issue Allen Copley, of Pontiac will show
the colored ‘Slides of his*trip to Paris Approve $150,000 Sum
WATERF ORD TOWNSHIP—Ob- pr eed sewage plant remained to Finance. Addition to
fection to a proposed sewage the same and through western Europe when
the Jayeees Auxiliary meets next
Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Ber School
treatment plant adjacent to the The board moved to table the :
Clinton River. about 600 feet south matter until members had further
of Pontiac Lake Road to serve the investigated the possibility “of an nard Heaney
The auxiliary will be having WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP —/
new Highland Estates Subdivision other site.
was made by a delegation of citi- * 8 8 ~ ere a a Cua and Build- Voters in White Lake Township
. ee at he Chl orien! jk |Distriet No. 7 in an election yes-|
ue ee Viste ries Township — Another group of township resi - : terday approved a $150,000 bond, Board last might dents from the Westridge sub- Mrs. Jack Perry is chairman
Wate: ford division protested action of the for the booth and will discuss de-
issue to finance an addition of five}
A second group of ‘Classrooms and facilities to Dublin! citizens questioned a change im Waterford Township Zoning Board details at the Tuesday meeting.
zoning recommended by the zoning and the County Zoning Board a Mrs. Thomas Belton and Mrs. Dick’! School
board hanging from residential | 1o Dean will be co-hostesses The issue passed by a vote of|
_ * light manufacturing 1 10*2 acres on 195 to 33
Pontiac Press Phote
and Rabbi-Sanford Saperstein of Temple Beth Jacob. Not shown but
also participating is the Rev. Joseph Emmell of St. Vincent de Paul
| . fades itie Church. The topic of the group will be “Understanding Is the Road |Hurtubis: nd be r The protesting group [lurtubise on an indecent liberities jon June 11, one month earlier) pating (left to right) are the Rev. Fred R. Tiffany of the Bethany to Brotherhood.” An open forum will follow. There will be open _ PANEL MEMBERS — A representative group from the Round
Table of Christians and Jews will highlight the meeting of the Hud-
son-Covert PTA in Waterford Township at 8 p. m. Thursday. Partici-
change for further research.
The sewage plant May >°IV© the east side of Airport Road and
two other areas. the Saginaw Trail immediately north of the Grand fficial 5 aim | In a resolution to rescind. a near Watkins Lake and the sub- Trunk Railroad along the tracks , “x mili levy established in 1954
division at the corner of Tubbs The zoning change was up before | and replace it with the bond ts-
and Crescent Lake Roads. the Township Beard last night for i | sue which would require no more
Spokesman for the group et a decision. rison A apee ‘ise five mills, the vete was 122
area residents, Homer Heskins, Residents present protested the : yes and 137 no.
5676 Clinton River Dr., said that light manufacturing zone because Al b Authorits ' Representative voters said that
these present felt their property ‘the township could net contro! abama UEMOFIFES ine extra taxation would aid in
in the area of the proposed what went into the strip.’ They Arrive to Pick Up Man better operating and equipping
plant would depreciate. ‘believed that the manufacturers Arretied Gal K Dublin School
They feared an overloading of who mrad there Hines. erty rested in Keego William H. Vanderven, school | +
the plant as Waterford Township Posse —_ ae nei ae, Y | superintendent, said “I am very |
population continued to increase ¥! with undue noise, odor, or traffic KEEGO HARBOR — Alabama | happy about this.” It seems it's
and they feared pollution of the Anderson pointed out that light State Prison authorities will ar- | something never done, This will
Clinton River. ‘manufacturing 1 prohibits odor, rive today to pick up- Buford provide us with a better edu-| &
Lloyd Anderson, township super- and certain plants which’ would Saint, 30, of 319 N. Saginaw St.,| cational program for Dublin t ie
visor, replied that the Water Re- “mit same or cause noise a School students.”
sources Commission and the State Andersen said that “down Geces | Palen a an . bY) in a meeting of the school board
Board’ of Health would permit! through history the first area to one ‘ Soe spate aa ina night, members passed a
neither of these two things to! blight was near the railroad | ai atroiman Mchard esolution to hold the annual elec-
mene bane charge in a local place of business.
dormers his hare pyrsiginsd abe — —— aa Aird oi than usual. Due to the change, | Baptist Church, Everett Spurlock, extcutive secretary of the Urban house at 7:30 p. m. and refreshments following the eae A-nurs-
whether sense SS 2 | eee _ y: . jetype was received frem in the school code, there will be League, the Rev. J. Allen Parker of the African Methodist Church ery will be provided for children three years of age « or over
essary at the point proposed, sug- The board tabled the coun the Alabama State authorities 0 annual meeting but an annual == Ee
gesting a site farther down-river, with a description fitting Saint ejection.
just south of Elizabeth Lake Road. a . rq| 2nd 4 statement that he aod ! Youth val Attend Waterford High (Chu rch Groups He said. “There are no houses i In other business, the s | be an escapee of the prt F Il hi
that area,” and showed an oorial ‘authorized the supervisor to sign/ Youth C@LIOWS. ed Set Joi t Meetin
view of the township to bear out an agreement with the Lenox Con-| He Was “turned over to Sherif! Nn g
‘nan struction Co. to put up seven model|Frank W. Irons for interrogation at Waterford nt for Th d
‘homes to be used only as modelsand waived extradition before) Or urs ay
ENDORSES INTERCEPTOR until the plat could be recorded | Judge H. Russell Hollayid on Feb. tc¢ Meet Thursday | DRAYTON PLAINS — A joint
Hoskins went on to endorse the and the water system approved 9 WATERFORD TOWNSHIP —jdemocracy as it is lived in the, program next year. He feels that meeting of the Anderson and Kel-
Farmington Interceptor Sewer, and- they gave tentative approval’ Saint, who has a wife and three | WATERFORD — The Youth a4 The Student Council of Waterford United States. once Waterford has felt the re-lersberger Girls’ Missionary
which has been in a planning to a proposed sewage plant in children in northern Alabama. was jowship of the Independent Fund. Township High School this week The aFS depends on the com-|wards of the project, it will want|Groups of the Community United Presbyterian Church is scheduled
eventually serve Waterford Town- in the Sees Trail area. six-2nd degree burglary cases and meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the ‘foreign student im the high school ‘for Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the
lchurch parlors,
Junior: and Senior High boys Watertord Community «Church.
The King's Disciples of the | dents but the final choice is made) usual regulations,
* « « iby the New York headquarters. | The fee covers all travel from
The council will work through PARENTS RESPONSIBLE abroad to Waterford, insurance grand larceny there
| He has also served time, in
ltermittently. since 1943 for vag ship. — next year.
Anderson, who has worked with West Bloomfield the authority in. charge of ined . “8° Waterford church will be host to | 4 invited te thialmsecting anale rancy, burglary and grand lar- ithe America eld Service = liv h the $12 a month spending money, and, @re neeting a
planning terceptor . the Southeastern Rally” of. the the Amencan a ‘ r wher ehing lar a ass - u ntl) Mrs,
, ae years rem Soy ieee depragee iat of the ers who suffered financially from cots an mm Aen pee youngster is placed in the grade ing and caring for a teenage visitor’ Mamie Seibert for a business meet-
_ Gethsemane Lutheran at ncaa steed ae “The Community United Presbyterian natural disasters in 1955 will wel- |, foreign eet All candidates Closest to his age group. from abroad. ing and a sicial he hour.
Brooklands Announces Scarlet Cord”, Frank G, Slaugh- Church Monday evening. some the internal revenue serv). hand-picked by the Minister of The iminimumedstto the spon-
ter; “Ten North Frederick’, John The meeting will be preceded ice peep ee hag pebial Education of each country soring group for binging these
Enrollment Open | - Sen ar ts $630 each. | O'Hara; “Jonathan Eagle”, Alex: | py 9 6:30 p.m. dinner, prepared | Emphasis is placed on qualities student ambassadors is each. | - 2
ander Laing, and “The First | 5, nega Peder Nisan Tee cee Picods; and oy character, leadership, scholar- Cari Hanna, Michigan represent-| on ork lothing
BROOKLANDS — Gethsemane, Train to Babylon”, by Max Ehr- nien are to bring their own ta- _— _«@.« <« ship, a fluent knowledge of Eng- ative of the AFS. however has
lish, Ge a genuine desire to know waived the sponsor's 's fee for the,
available at your _ aoe — Lutheran Church at Brooklands is’ liek,
announcing that its parish school Tninon figtion
tacitities will be doubled with the the Atlantic’: “A Night to Remem- den, FE 46370. F
1 | language. all the requ rements for Your PT A ‘Is Planning:
beginning of the 1956-57 school ,,,, * Walter Lord Armibeneador | Partiipating on the panel will computing losses from natural dis y 4 ants
year, Extraordinars CC Ce Cr . Alden Hatch: “To pe kiden Johnse lohn Boug asters. If shows you how to figure rs e * ry CHOY aE Hi, dee AIG TE asters " 8 g
Hell and Back Audie Murphy; Keith Jobnsor ind Wilham Baw. vour allowable deductions and late Bon SSUE a S Hr rts iy An undergraduate teacher will Mind On : . : ‘ 1 Seee oan d one 5 inding Our Own Business hy den The Bey MO J a numbe: of eas, -to-under
be. employed to teach the lower ¢ pac On , Dungarees $2.95 oe © @ &® *..* *
Led
Chambray Shirts .$1.79 : Charlotte grades with Norman Heim con- -
“L ; ble service. Reservations can be... pooklet
“Night Raider of Made by calling William Baw. local tax office explaina in simple
Teeuwissen gives
Samoun Ade Jr will he The moderato stand examples
Fanny Stevenson: The . ‘irs. Carrie Hubbell prin WATERFORI? TOW NSHIP lain brnefly the hond issue to be
venture at ra Feb. 2 y roe ipal of presented to the voters Feb. 21. tinuing as ae teacher “ Story of the Trapp Family Sing Williams Lake School, wil) be the OO e the upper classes e pastor Will .< Maria Augusta Trapp
teach the religion courses in the “Flying Saucers Unc ey wa « Mark 10th An n ] versa ry: guest speaker when the Jayno| The Waterford Center PTA
sixth, seventh and eighth grades Harold T. Wilkins Adams PTA meets Thursday at! will hold Open House at 7:30
30 p.m. Mrs. Hubbell’s topic will p.m. Thursday at the Waterford
tm this expansion Gethsemane of Library at Waterford (Rant renin RS hopes to be able to accommodate F . V William Bawden business ad-) Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts will
= qarireste and ee a armington to ote The month of March marks the made shelves and stacks and dec- ministrator for the W aterford have handicraft on display
i chil - ‘ |
Send bets 2 re : tenth anniversary of the Water. orated the room set aside for the OS Se = District fall ex- Mrs. Harry Carlisle. school his-|
c 92 Milli libri n\n FSP ee h ary in the new CAI building
It. has been necessary for the on lon $sue ford Community | Ebiary jin) the Many “‘work-bees”’ followed. get- Fees oul [ental a program in
; el "i. Community Activities Building on - ting the books accessioned and’ on once) of Founder's Day ss Fea aa Pees = : . | CCESS 1
FARMINGTON TON se The Withams: Lake Road the shelves ucd Ors kay past several years to limf enroll-
Thad Carr, ncipal of Wate?
Board of Education here last night . . Lelontints
But “business” selian cieciion Gael a) March os | ford Township High School, will e erection dat OF arch f
zed, ae “ Scarier nt Ae ‘ oe spea school bond
Ryelonetes however. that fo. a vote on a $2,000,000 bond Begun without much fanfare PY pany people knew about [iewe AU ee, period wil New Shipment of LEVIS
Sizes 27" thru 38”
$395 Pr. PwevveVveTTeCCCT $3.49
$2.98 Ladies’ and Girls’ Ruffies ..
Boys’ Tuffies
We Give Holden Red Stamps
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING IN REAR OF STORE
GREEN'S“; WEAR
4516 Dixie Highwoy OR 3-1807
DRAYTON PLAINS ~ are members of the church was slow. Not
thought that membership in | Mrs. Alfred Keith will be chair- §
township and 40 additional el (for Village School as a public ee Gs aa ines wae | WALLED LAKE — The Walled ™&P foe, the eves
—— service. They gathered books, rais- ybrary, This misunderstanding ‘4Xe Board of Education hares : é _ : he 13 pages concerned |
Final registration date for voungjed money, bought supplies, and » never b completely appre R h ast er Chur h
with the help of their husbands em, or ae een pletely with personnel policies and teach-, 0c es er urc
; er tenure plans which had been
The library has been able to submitted by the professional prob- ~ Announces Events
maintain a working catalogue of jem's committee of the Walled
over four thousand volumes. in ad- Lake MEA distmct working with
‘dition to seVeral sets of reference:the board
lhooks. This has been due largely
The issue would provide for a iproject was taken over for a time m as soon as possible since facili-
new junior high school in the Iby the Mothers’ Club of the Water- ties are still limited
* » * :
Parents are asked to call cither
the school or the parsonage office
in the election is March 16 as soon as possible.
ROCHESTER—The First Congre-- Dt pn a ie sp Dane
‘gational Church of Rochester has
PRESENTS CHARTER — A. W. Gault (left)
" peceives the charter for Stringham PTA spon- charter is Scout
“sored Scout Bass, of, At @ recent parents night ill. Troop Scoutmaster is Martin Readler.
, -
‘and cowt of honor at the school. Presenting the ‘to continued donations of many fine
books, and to the financial con
| sroup
The available books in the }i-
brary include about twelve hun.
dred non-tiction works, over fif-
teen hundred adult fiction (cur
rent and classical, though not
mately eight hundred books for
There are even a few foreign
language readers and grammars,
* Tuesday—7 to 9 p.m., Wednesday—
“9:30 a.m. to-3:30 p.m.,
7 to § pm. and Saturday—10 to
12 am
Newlyweds Reside.
in Alexandria, Virginia
ALMONT — Dorothy Krynicki.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Thomas
Ellis of Toledo, O
Stanlake. son of Mr.
led their marriage vows before the
'Rev. Daniel Boxwell, pastor of the,
‘mont on Jan. 1
Commissioner‘ Leslie C. Church ‘Alexandma. Va ltribation of the local Book Review 4), hiring and firing of teachers. participate in
a tenure policy ‘at a school elec- |
tion held last June 12.
discuss time schedules and rates Boy
children and junior readers. P®
. * and J retroactive to Dev 1.
at which time
‘tars went of an
~ At present. the jibrary hours are: starting time
Thursday— tract of Mrs. Clio Dean to take
First Congregational Church of Al-\jow was hostess to the Mothers’ Mrs
Child Study Chub Wednesday eve- the lesson.
The newlyweds are living inning. Mrs Garry Green had the agents Mrs. Freida Bennett and
where Arthur is le
stationed with the armed forces dren : Each teacher is to receive a iplanned several events for the
copy which will explain fully all coming week
On Friday church members will
World Day of
Voters in the district approved pe at the Nazarene Church.
The Sunday morning worship
service will be at 10:45 a. m.
Flovd Vickery was present to and Youth Fellowship at 7 p. m. the policies fo be observed in
Scouts wil] meet at the
always the latest editions), a sec. Of Pad for bus drivers. After COM ov nch at 7 p. m. Monday
tion of some five hundred adult “CCretion [he bosm! es wd * The Women’s Bible and Prayer
mystéry novels, and approvi “0 Tune warm Tp patios None Fellowship will meet at 9:30 a. m.
‘drivers and voted to increase the y ednesday. Girl Scouts will meet AN f drivers on | < § 9 MD. * ‘ ay ot) diver jon buses at 3 the same day and the Chance!
Chow will rehearse at 7:30 in the (lengary —- . , , evening.
eight o'clock * *
_ On Thursday. Feb.. 23. there will
be a School of Religion for adults elemen-
Approval was given to the con-
BIG BEAVER—The Big Beaver
Extension Club meets with Mrs
Thursday, The lesson
‘Hobby Munting.~”
_ Special” guests will bing thet:
_ hobbies and use them as illustra-
Donald Mux-tions. Mrs _Frances Jenkins and
Harold Petterson wall give
Home demonstration _——— eae —
MARLETTE—Mrs
sson on "The High Cost of Chil- Mary Hickson have been invited
to altend °
and at 8 the Friendly Guild will
the place of C. G. Scott, senior meet with Mrs. Robert Rogers.
English teacher, Scott was ap- - =
pointed principal of Union Lake ‘ ‘
and Tale Beach schools, replac- Big Beaver Extension
ing Joseph Wetmore who took a Sets Thursday Event
' Jeave of absence to work on his
doctor's degree,
‘In final business bills were aP- kK. T. Thomas. 490 Big Beaver Rd
and Arthur proved for payment on both the 4: g pm
and Mrs. operating and building and site vi1] he on
Frank Stanlake of Almont repeat- funds,
“Oh eome come Mr Rosberoagh! All roe nerd in a larger lean
from Bocaper ss”! s
Buckner Finance 4512 Dixie Hwy. Our Door!
Drayton Plains You Can -Parh at
OR 3-1221
: Pontiac—Walled Lake—Utica \
a
Other Offic
CLEVELAND w — A one-time
-usher at the Cleveland Indians old)
League Park made arrangements
under a gentleman's agreement
yesterday to purchase the Tribe
for nearly four million dollars
William R. Daley, 63. who will
be chairman of the néw corpora-
tion, had a chance to buy the club
-6': years ago for 1', million dol-
lars less.
* * *
Daley, an industrialist. and Gen-
eval Manager Hank Greenberg,
also a partner in the pending trans:
action, said they've been waiting
for a long time to buy into the
American League baseball club,
Greenberg has been waiting ever
since he came here nearly nine, worked out: for the’ stockholders’\ficers to remain. Some
approval. The directors, who own/shares still will be held by the
a large majority of shares, infor-|current officers and directors. ~
mally approved the price yester-/
day
‘rate, the club's total worth is near- sociates had the franchise
ly four million, counting the pres-|admitted then that “we and our
ent 2.556 shares
tion, but has asked the present of-\off, The Veeck regime finally sold i
_ _ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1956
‘ to Sell Tribe for $4,000,000 the. out late in 1949 for about $2,200,000, |
compared with the $1,200,000 the’
club cost in 196. The 1949 buyers:
were substantially the present ewn-
ers, except that Ellis Ryan depart-
ed as president after a squabble
in 1952, der the new owners. Daley and a thought he was to get a financial
fellow director of the Nickel Plate’ interest when he was appointed to}
Ratlroad, Oilman Ignatius A. his present job by Veeck in 197.) O'Shaughnessy of St. Paul, and > se 1 Greenberg are expected to hold) In fact Veeck announced that
more than half the shares. ‘Greenberg “‘is’’ the second largest
Hank, recently voted into stockholder in the Indians. but la-
* Baseball's Hall of Fame for his ter the general manager said that Greenberg is scheduled to be-| slugging talents with the Detroit he never was able te buy any
come a “principal” stockholder un-: Tigers. and Pittsburgh Pirates,' shares. It was reported a minor, of
Daley tried to buy the club back
It is $1,550 a share. At thatiin the days Bill Veeck and his as-
Daley
*- * actively pursuing
but it never came ‘assoviates are
Daley will head a new corpora- such a deal,” “would sell some shares to Green-
berg, but backed out |
Daley said that the other time
‘he was interested in buying. Veeck
was asking 2% million,
: * * *6
“I thought it was a wise invest.
ment then, just as I think it is:
now,” he continued. “I have the ris tT.
oo
if 1]
ome 9 AtLreme .
chances of meeting DeMarco are pretty good. Look
for him to challenge Basillio first however.
x & *® *
Have you noted Louie Fontinato is playing better
position hockey (on orders from Watson) and not
crashing enemies blindly into the boards? . . . Let’s
get the ball rolling for Andy Hebenton for Most Valu-
able Rookie! .. . Live-wire sheriff Bill Glanagan, 36,
stockholder had promised Veeck he'is Chairman of the Biddy Basketball championships to
be held March 22 at Jersey City.
: Heavyweight Sid Peaks doubles as a welder me-
chanic in the Navy Yard at Brooklyn.
- All sports car fans should get a copy of Joe Wheery's
excellent “Manual of Road Tests,” just out.
: * x * *
George Jacobus wangled free hotel rooms, fruit juice
years ago to get a financial inter- |
est in the club, which he thought |
he was to get in the beginning.
Both should get their wishes in
about three weeks, the time esti-
mated for the legal details to be,
greatest faith in the future of base- 42nd suntan lotion for all active and inactive ball players
ball and particularly in Gleveland, Who competed for the Baseball Players golf cham- which is a great baseball town”. pionship at Miami Springs. J. G. Taylor Spink’s trophy Daley was a sandiotter as a boy is one of the finest I have ever seen in 30 years of
fn Mahala, Gigs when he tam campaigning along the golf trals | fob as an usher in the Ipdians’ for- SEES IT GROW AND DECLINE * .
e
From.
The
PRESS BOX |
Motion pictures of the 1956 Rose
Bow! football game will be shown!
tonight in the new Walled Lake
High School gymnasium at 8:15
p.m. Burt Smith, MSU line coach,
wil comment on the colored films es
ae
PRYSTAI SHOT GOOD FOR
-will also be on hand. The event
is sponsored by the Walled Lake — and a few of the Spartan gridders’ scores in first period of last night's game with the New York
Rangers. Ranger goalie Lorne Wersley sprawls in front of net in
» @ AP Wirephote
attempt to stop puck, while two -of his teammates, Bill Gadsby
(left), and Jack Evans (5), try to stop Prystai’s shot. Wings’ player
partly hidden, right background, unidentified. GOAL — Metre Prystai (center),
Optimist Club and is free of
charge.
* * *
dim Meyers, a 245-pound fleet-
footed tackle on Madison High's
undefeated Oakland B champion-
ship football team last year, will”
enroll at Michigan State in April. gil aecukbes’ of Mth VAM Ockand ond place in the National Hockey
League race last night, defeating , Red Wings Ice Rangers, 5-3 DETROIT w — The Detroit Redimer Bruin, Gordie Howe and Alexa Ranger marker by Howell. It%wo goals midway through the big pro loops. The Wings Ughtened the dash for sec-|Delvecchio added singles. Harry was Harry's first goal of the sea- windup period. Howe got his 3ist/0f U.S. college players, who for
Howell, Wally Hergesheimer and son.
Dean Prentice scored for the Rang-
| of the season at 9:53 and Del- * * * mer home, Leagiie Park. Until’
now, that was his only official con-
nection with baseball.
Pro Leagues
Tak Turkey Canadians Meet With
NFL Heads Hoping to.
Settle Disputes |
i
PHILADELPHIA ® — Two ends
get together today to talk about
the middle in an effort to settle
a U.S.-Canadian hassle ‘over pro
football players. | o
‘Bell of the National Football
| League and Ralph Cooper,
senting our northern neighbor ‘5 two!
The middle consists
some time have been in the en-
vecchio scored his 20th at 11:02. Viaje position of being able to/ SAN ANTONIO, Tex, w-E. J.
Frank Revoir helped establish the franchise at Syra-
cuse, built the ball park, and then watched it decline
to the point where it was moved to Miami.
_. Frank is in Florida admiring the work of Bill Veeck
... “Bill is a great showman,” Frank said, “If he can’t
make baseball pay in .a sub-tropical city, no one else (can .
__ “Bill is gambling Miami will be the center of a popu- lation area of more than 2,000,000 in five years. Big
leagues will then be interested.
x * *
“As for Syracuse, it never had a chance once the owners wished to avoid that $65,000 yearly transporta- tion bite Havana had to pay. Miami now breaks up the hop to Cuba.
“This was in the cards all along despite glowing promises made to booster drive chairmen.”
Harrison Hits Tuneup 61: -
Bone Qualifies With 69 his finest round in 25 years, a 10-
it with a single swipe at his watery Dan Ferris, secretary-treasurer’ of ; : ore? aunt of snow Califor
brow. “Sure is a hot one," he said the AAU and director of the 6%- Sed Ute aie " ee a . ii his h bi “a ! nia S Mya. VaHey impressec a
: a year-old. mert a bea
Guess Bill was termine to both year-old, * * member of the International Ol. m
the game and the stuffy atmos nies CAnnistion «hich awarded
phere in the jammed little band I is heve eight world ne the 1960 Wynter Olximpic Games to and four meet marks could be box at Highland Park the Sierra ski resort
: * o *
Jorge Va of the Phil
stopped at the mountain region 200
of San Francisco Was ppines
It now appears that Pontac’s
Larry Lamphere didn't have a cut ii] ' Whies PAST Knicks Drop Hawks ves
Union “Don't miss the bal] game
July
Grove declared that a hat was
passed after the game and the
plavers split the take to become
professionals ge
To support him. a statement
front Will Marsan a life-long
ident of Onid. stated 4°"
res
over the eye in his finals bout ine i ~
against Dude Green. at the state | t NBA Cellar fi OSerrre Tip if Senn ca Gaitas b ip
4,olden Gloves finale at Grand n 0 - snow. he remarked of the 10-inch Cu a on Op
Rapids. Thats Larry s manager s pack. “I am glad the IOC voted ; :
report, and Boris Bisogni, one-, By Steruattonel News Service couaw Valley as the 1960 site, 1 12] Caribbean time Pennsylvania champion, him-. The New York Knickerhockers was agreeably impressed.” Di . d A .
self, says Green paid the Pontiac dropped the St. Louis Hawks inte l1amon ction 2 7 bf Fe n .
middleweight a nice compliment the ceUar of the National Basket ;
Green said ‘‘he had been around ball Association's western division Pre Results PAN AMA (B—Cuha held undis-
. pute: OSSeSsion rst lace quite a bit, and that with a lit- last night. : p A a p ~ ov of uy place in
: > Canh aseball charnpi tle more-experience Larry would) The Knicks beat the Hawks 10% the Caribbean baseball champion
ia) + ak a ea 82 Res ur 45 ships today on the strencth of a make good. to 99 at St. Louis. It was the nes paven 71, Romeo 62. i ——— ‘fifth straight loss for the Hawk? Atinda’e @€ Lake O-ion 78 fine pitching performance by
Tie ae r . es 4; Rave Washington's Camilio Pascual ane In winning the 19°90 National The Minneapolis Lakers vacated BARC 1 4s . : 4
| ) 1 | bescsf : Piece uF x 6 anama “ un ! conquest of league pennant. the Brooklyn Dod- last place by pasting the Roches ; ie 58 _ r 2 ‘ prisin ju
gers’ longest losing streak wasjter Rovals, 110 te 79 fn the : { ‘ ‘ ! ; rte - . ; : ; 3 Tere j age hay ' pr fed '
three games other NBA game scheduled Trev & ‘ tna . a yea )
——— Se ees —— : = 1 © Parel f 4 ir h ia nigh ‘: i rackes
is a «0 bee . up a 7-0 victor the first game . . . Ben § : fa doublcheadiy T runpl
OmisKkey F1gQures INS | weer ee se Whe Saners’ (OHA Geant . . ; c eh a i 8 { . = fast Boh B the Patti j . & i Fy ye 1 4f ;
fill Take AL's ‘56 Crown #286" 80. fe Gate ae At g t lass Hani (1 ( ie
| pier eae | Jar = Sneat fe
CHICAGO «—Chuck Comiskey.’ “We feel the 1996 White Sox tear - tn Seti WM = gle brichise
dion of one of baseballs pioneer will be the str est cli we ae MAM MiGs we i ue it Lewis Cards
families. is talking pennant in hus fielded in many wear.” continuer ie ao * ;
rookie vear at the Chicago White Comiskey. whe A “The mic se .
Sox helm of the 1944 «lint with us Miaiske 4 Bosox Sign Stephens,
The personable. young vice pres- and the White Sox have beer Pee "4 ‘CoB Part a ¢ Ted Williams’ Fill-In
ident, who took charge after Frank strenethened by the addition of on: A Pieter he
j es Wavre ; 48 \ iP ening of Gene Lane quit the Sox to become gen- standing players from other n A jet Ras Civ J ¢ Rapids J ¢ BOSTON W—The signing of Gen
r of } ; (ie . : Tephen ‘ Miising Venine mut eral manager of the St. Louis Car- Jeague’ clubs and from our farm °° oes Stephens, a promising young out : farm a n ms Notte Dame 83 (over- ¢; - 7 " 4) dinals, enthusiastically cries: system peers ience ss e Dame 83 (over- Fielder who filled in for Ted Wil
“Ninety-six in '36.” | * | 2 1 183 Brown 63 liams in left field most of last sea ! y-si) : : See KN: 9&8 Manhattan 9 . * = s Actually the Sox have acmiire > Ca : ke 281 som, Was announced today bv the
That's the number of victoriés only one outstanding play: Q Bee : 6 Boston Red Sox, .
Comiskey believes are needed to he’s outfielder Larry Dobv. whe C 4 | The 23-year-old. speedster from
win the American League pennant many observers last year felt coe ne we Arkansas hit 293 in 157 offiej
this year and hes sure the Sox would have brouvht the Sex-their “iar: f We a4 times at bat while appearing in 10
: Paul #4 ne § 7% -
an_ reach the mark . first pennant in %6 veltrs had he ae . mames last veir In mans of |
“Tm convinced ” said Comiskey been patrolling centaur field for the — eon pearances. he < i |
iat the White Sox “Get-Away” Comitkevs {ay a ee hitter th Furnes - ¥h i
encheon vesterda, “the team that * * i fa elief fl field lat, r
ns the Amercian Lracty pennant Th « the ( P * | a
an da A With Mh 4 t } ' ty iOMTHAWRE T 1% ia &
That's fhe same ng Vor winginis th aa Ppa ikea
eps Won it with las un whil “ALT ha i ; che © nnatys Hod +t
he Sox finished thir tf i pele }f Ue Ms a flee Whrete
mphs ta jest J7 games tone he \gathe v0
? . cee
& -
- ”
. ® y _ Christian University specifically to!
7 Olympic Bait
Hurdler Back in Running FORT WORTH. Tex u® — Bill/Meet, Kansas Relays and Drake
Curtis, who returned to Texas Relays... —
He had to drop out of school
make the Oly mpic teary is running last year to recoup financially and
the high hurdles in championship’ worked in the oil fields at Color-
form. ado City. He returned last fall and
Curtis was at TCU in 1954 andjhas been working in the hurdles
not only won the Southwest Con-\ever since. He has done 14.2 twice
ference 120-yard high hurdles but!in practice without pressing and
won in all the other meets he en- Elmer Brown,“ who is coaching
tered—the Border Olympies, Texas him, thinks he'll go under 14 sec-
Relays, Southwestern Reéreation onds. ;
ea eee nee the New York Rangers, 5-3, before ers. Hergesheimer scored on Ron |Prentice narrowed the gap to 4-3 at Play off ends against each = Harrison, the old cam-|under-par 61, in a pro-amateur wa rom Madison two 12.906 fans. e «¢ @ Murphy's pass early in the second 16:32 but Prystai found the empty’ for the highest salary. _ |Paigner; had the eye of the gallery! It was at the Oak Hills Country
ore ee The Wings, beaten 2-1 in New but Ferguson rapped home Red net at 19:39 when the Rangers Both leagues accuse each other|today as golf's winter tour went Club course, a 6,135yard layout Meyers holds the Michigan The win moved the Wings, de- York Sunday, had to come from Kelly's rebound to tie it up again. pulled Worsley in favor o: th of persuading-players to break con-| through final tuneup rounds for the'that isn’t as as the Fort rd for the | concn gs, ) Pp ag Pp : avor of a sixth prep recere mec Ge wegen tow th (ding Stanley Cup Champions, to behind in each of the first two pe- The Wings took command with attacker. fracts and options held by the oth-| $20,000 Texas Open. Sam Houston course, where the down run. a 105-yard gallop wi " within one point of the second-spot riods and were fighting off a strong : er’ Several of the disputes have| | The old Arkansas traveler, who Open is to be played. But ft showed © pasa interception oe a Rangers. Both clubs are far ahead Ranger surge for the tying goal wound up in the courts and many plays out of St. Louis, caused them that the man who won the Texas tn 1954. The giant tackle is 18 oe cect of the pack. Fighting it when Prystai’s second __ tally Claims Ist Pro Game 4 have been marked by hot words. to buzz yesterday when he shot Open twice in the past—in 1939 years old and as a college stu out for the fourth and last berth clinched the game in the last min- : |, ~ Bell suggested the meeting, to — <== <= and 1951—was to be reckoned with dont will have! a) wile, : =H for the Stanley Cup playoffs are ute of play. A , be te noon in a. down- : in this year's tournament, and a S-monthsold daughter, y. 6 ponte Maple Leafs. th = ; pe D th H t : Eff t t - ||town hotel with newspapermen on. Harrison 2-22 with : Felicia, to support. ton Laois ape fe peo ee Playing their customary hit- e a 1 S Or Ss O jhand to record the proceedings. ausse j avor jes on the rank nine Sh me 2 ee and-run game, the Rangers « Cooper agreed willingly to talk last Hawks ccsved en Gree of Gace 15 chots Pp ° * aie < the last. He missed only two putts Bayd Willams. manager of the ay yetroite cored three : peakaae Gs Trove Vi it e O 1 [Cilngs: over.) under 10 feet and had two 30-foot- Williams Gun Sight Company at - Oe rote sce . on Detrelt netmiader, Glens Wall a Bel] says he's ready to talk about ers. He won $400 as the low pro- na » oxped. &oals in the third period, to take while Lorne Worsley was kicking — OVID, Mich. —-Ovid rob; “T live . _4 anything which “does not restrain Davison, is on a hunting expedi- i. Jictoey, their 23rd of the sea- | cut as Detzelt achves . Mich. id now prob- ive right where I did July 4, ®! che > fessional, finishing five strokes hon in Tanganyika, East Africa, 90 Taos have 60 cinta : . . , ably never will be recognized as 1895, the day we played a game the rights of players . ahead of Billy Maxwell of Odessa. Wilkhams will. make a new sound behind “ “ . ' A . aa Prystai, whom the Wings sent to the site of the first professional of football .. . at which game a So th Ame: : = Left Tex.; Jack Burke of Kiamesha
movie about Afmean hunting and the a ea and 18 off i, Hawks last season and took football game collection was taken and the money Writers Honor bd rican * Lake, N.Y., and Dow Finsterwald
will stay through the month of L B back earlier this season in a trade Leo J. Grove, a man with a paid to the local team. and the If d bb Hooker Rated 2-1 for es A ale, whe cond March. Metro Prystai led the Wings with for Ed Sandford. scored his first cause, died last week, at Delray @ount was three dollars.” : ‘won $180 for tying second with . two goals. Lome Ferguson, a for- goal in the opening period to offset Beach. Fla, at the age of 79. __ c ae Sc et Ro y Tonight's TV Bout 66s, ‘o wie
Chuck Davey, the pride of Mich a —_ | FoR 8 C an e1ser . Me a.
igan State University who became . Grove spent the last few years uITY fan 5 ute j. Pp 4 - | CHICAGO w—Eduardo Lausse, At Fort Sam Houston 177 ‘ the
a TV wonder boy before reunng J] US ky x- ets 1g ts of his life digging through old rec- | CHICAGO @ — Julius Helfand, powerful left-hook specialist from lesser lights ot the tour anf easy from the boxing profession, was jords attempting to prove that the on Murde Ch chairman of the New York Athle- | South America, is q 2-1 favorite to|not on the tour shot for qualifying a guest at a father-and-son ban- O ; / ° M first professional foofbali game if arge ‘tle Commission who succeeded in defeat rangy Bobby Boyd, former places in the open with Henry Wil-
quet Sunday morning at St pa-ON W ens umpiIng ar was played July 4, 1895 at this ; fer prea t the boxing managers’ feepy: roaggrdl tn ne ee . ay rick’s in White Lake Township. He} a VARK i toclvn Rance. beatenor equals ee Central Lower Michigan town. Accused of first-degree murder guild in New York, last night re- in b to a m \ :
gave an informal address. | wee ene sin Tange - a had Sauaret | ee e in the fatal beating Jan. 18 of a|ceived the Chicago writers’ | weight title shot. Phillips of Winchester, Va., lead-
‘ *_ * = takes the spotlight in the National the broad jump is one of them All the record books recognize aes a ee mn . wes hotel ~—<— yal —— the mpst to Lausse, 28-year-old mechanic's fd pelle cele 68s Kenny Lane of Muskegon. 4A indoor track and fie ne . the first pro game as a meeting” “ y yesterday sic oxINg . : son, will an undefeated string Pe course, Gene eee ath Satin} in cae ee o ee ‘ - nd ee Ty yy Banke came out Tol pombe gir between latrar and lean pe at Mute and Oakland County Circuit es Nees Geukt an te ieee ts aha carters Bone of Detroit and Don Clarkson : Pronsups saturday as a. threat 0 the Pan-Ameniean Gantre at Mex. 7 8 ee ae ie Judge Clark J Adams entered an Other. awards went to middle-..n,, ; of St. Louis were next in line with lightweight ranks, and Yama jhe °}-\earold broad jumping ec rey foie fara Tie Gace itpobe Pa oon Au NY miecit pa far him : - : Si Ray Rob ally televised 10 rounder at Chica- 69s. A 74
Bahama, promising welterweight, opj. of the pieat desse Owen: . ° plaved fmitooi lar Albier - M ae a a 7 Wy, . ai weight enampion s ueet i Vos : go stadium (10 p.m. EST, ABC). . was necessary to quality
are headliners iy a boxing show The brawny ex-eoldier now co: ee a at i ie Lica Slew 4. . | ee a oe ah h ree nee ene light-heavyweight’ Chuc acrap mayl antes Ge ae) =
Feb. 2% at Lansing’s new civie 00 . wher top midwestern tean rac es ‘ oN ae : tance, for each has impressive ‘ peting unattached out of Los An - - | : : nl in ex-bookkeeper He wil avwart Robinson was cited for making J id ell auditorium. poeuepe ican mani gelex has his immediate sights on Ol 2 M b le goin Use After graduation, be trian! in Oakland County Jail . the “Comeback of the Year.” and knockout records. Lausse, world’s ee S ma eur
ees am eee a * =* the indoer heaad pimp pecord of ympic em er nest a coral ue om Brewin oe Twe men have told porlic e they Speiser received the “Most Im- third-ranked wee pound contender, ° no n selected. % feet A inches set bs Ow , URLS _Bushe So at Ms heard Curry threaten to hall, Be proved” boxer award. has scored @9 kayoes. A victory fatus en in A d b Ss aw © town of Shepardsvill : , over Boyd would him at the But Babe of Braniicnar wheat we y oqu | oer on meparasy ive neal heydt. while one says he witnessed Helfand, steering clear of his re- he ; 7 | NEW Yo
worked the Pontiac-Highland Park Vall S fall |’, Curry beating the yictim whose cent battle against the guild, said| head of the line fora crack at the ORK w—The fate of star basketball game last night pulled “f think Range i< coon a Cy now a On June 27. 1895. the following death resulted from uptured ab- vigilance will restore boxing to its winner of the Bobo Olson-Sugar| miler Wes Santee, who faces per.
pleut Sand. chance to break the mark,’ Said : 2 : notice appeared in Ovid Register- dominal artery roper level. Ray Robinson return bout. manent suspension as an amateur out his handkerchief and saturated SACRAMENTO Calif uf» — The : : Af “ios His over-all record is 61-6-3 and| athlete, likely will be decided Sun-
his victories include decisions over day
Tiger Jones, Kid Gavilan and Gene | ¢
|Fullmer and knockouts of Purk Ed-
iwards, Georgia Small and Johnny
Sullivan. Lausse, making his 13th
\start in this country; was held to
‘a draw by Milo Savage in his last
\fight, Jan. 6. Savage floored the
Argentine. Santee, a Marine Heutenant
whose 4:00.5 mile was the fastest
The investigating committee
comprised of AAU and Olympic of
Kemmerer a Seal ficiais will look into what Pincus | Sober, chairman of the seven-man | SAN FRANCISCO w—The San group, called “new information not | Francisco Seals of the Pacific previously revealed.”
Coast League today obtained Paul Santee was suspended by the ‘Kemmerer, young right-handed Missouri Valley AAU last Oct. 11 \Pitcher, on option from its parent on charges that he accepted “‘ex- lclub, the Boston Red Sox. cessive expenses” for three track
*
Seeakes “mek iemeenaceet at oe ante
$2,961 600 for t APPROVE SALE OF INDIANS a “Ma ren
‘ilean, ¢ pr sident of the Gleveland Indians Dal \. president of Yis & Co. an investment McCoy has a dH-point total for 16
3 flanked by Hank Greenber, left, general ma firm, Molson is expected ta stay as president with . ca ‘ ed Ie wom
f the elib, and Pion Hlarnbeck eluh THE PONTIAC’PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1956
By Keats Petree [
i
os Boe Ay
ALLEY OOP
>
esc/ BOARDING HOUSE
HOW!'S TLL GO FOR IT
- ; , NCLE IF (T'S NOT THE IZA KAFF /é How WouLD You ¥ U , Z) TONSERS LIKE TO BE OLYMPIC HANY GAL DY MARATHON |Z
“\ STARS ¢ ~ UNCLE HANNIBAL ve) mucH NOWL (& HAS OFFERED TO TRAIN YOU! 5) eae (/65 oh aS 2
FOR A FUTURE CAREER OF ENoveL ON MY Hom
F YOU MIGHT MAKE | / —T ano :
i 7 GET SIM THORPE)! ni ey
S oan OLYMPICS, :
vy) \
~ , ; \ .
L\\\ J \ 7X a re, am
fo y o
€ )
Pe S\\ 3 / ha (A A hy ay, } nN; y g
RY Ne o_o Py ‘a
ETTING
THE STAGE FOR HIS
ag a ee OWN GRADUATION = 2-1F E- Cen 2 Z 2-6
~ ie ale a a
. r—@) e en :
a js @. mn ea 215
— {@a Bu <0_? ax © 1066 by MEA Sandon inc. Tih Mag. 8, Pen, Ht.
by Ernie Bushmiller
| NANCY
OH, BOY--- THERE'S A
BOWLING BALL
HEE
ef
De Pee. Pe. _ f. aa ? ay
: of SCRE nee nl
CAPTAIN EASY
OUT OUR WAY
NT
Mic
WIPLOLRY DOLLY <
YOU'LL GET
AFTER TH’
SUMAN @ouk4 Se
“| YOUR CLOTHES
JUDGE SEES = ‘ You!
BORN THIRTY YEARS TOO SOON @ tees eed ences oa = “=~ a '\'
| BOOTS AND HER BUD WHY WOULD OH, I SEE
“| ANYBODY
THROW AWAY
NOW
EL “AUERAGE Man” WAS A
“| DISCUSSION OW THE
AVERAGE
meek
THE STATLE WiLL CELEBRATE
MAN'S MEDIOCRITY--
RIGHT ?
ee SE
@ 1956 by NEA Servine, tne. T.M, Rag. U.S. Pat. OF.
GRANDMA
2-6
DIXIE DUGAN
Y HE'S SO FULL OF TRICKS. 1’ WON RING Ie THIS FLIGHT ISN'T JUST HER ONE
HE’S RIGHT, OIXIE-THIS 1S A SECRET MISSION — HE HAS HIS ORDE
NO-NO-NO — I'LL GO— Jig 7% WANTED TO ¢ rf . j re ly
YEAH, | KNOW.” AN’ IF 1 CAN
GET THOSE KIDS THAT FAR AWAY...
aA LB regen Y Nave’ TH' LAS FEW TIMES //
By John M
STEVE, MY K4IR ORYER
HAS BLOWN TWO FUSES!
WOULD YOu TAKE [T
and Tension
"Enjoy chewing healthful. refreshing, delicious
Wrigley’s Spearmint Gum You'll. Find
PROFITABLE
OPPORTUNITIES Every Day in the Pontiac
Press Wont Ad Section
Take advantage of this easy way
to sdive afl your buving and sel!-
ing problems.
To Place Your
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DIAL FE 2-8181
< é
Ss t ‘
Luter beet 3 \ — . | He, / ER ati) yt CH tata
f tals ii « ? las Pa : : *
ee fp FO ve ce ; k ? f ” i
/ 3 yy : \ ; ; ly d
1 r é° \ H % = nist
1 \ ii = /} : {
, THE P po
j = Ss y
st , WEDNESDAY,
S i MOC M , Ne ss FEBRU
: i , e iN
roduce Morning Quotatio oa us) —
rains Lower on Paes | a mer sO ar | :
DETROIT } air” eduction i 3 Shoe .... 6 Op Ss. ‘hi y .
tn ee
| Dermott. Feb. 8 ‘AP: isa sie = int secant ++. 043 In ‘hevrolet if Ja 7 H
- quicaco [FRCS poten ei apse (d tisde “hl cae Goat gil gging A a sea elie
CO : cat oho A uto ckson
wm — Moderate selling rie Aor hasan 4% bu; jconmthan, Yap Line) A irfine a3 Johns Man- He ar | Given, David
grains } sr ort < 2.50- 3.00 bu. yan, fancy, = oe Kelsey Hayes as By DAVID J | S im
the Board of Trade jower On |ern Spr a ee abo Ste pe men:| NEW YORK &® eae 1924 - WILKIE It iL ’ urvey David Eastham,
ran from fracti today. Losses > Vgg » fancy. 400 bu: No 1 2%. Market leaped a The stock Am sade ae. boots Cin. ae Associated Press Automotiv isn't much of a secret 21, of 3 Putnam
| then a ions to a little more |/}.50-3 pAhreaaer core, sgapmr hy in heavy early trading to’ 6 points |e N'Gas 7s = we ae Editor ° with ufacturers have-had proble ee cin rer pacers asia ue yesterday was sentenced to
A om. a red. Mo 1. 178-225. bu.” v0 today. {ka x Mowe aun & PF .... 18 | DETRO th hardtop eel k & Co. fi months to 15
* e topped, fancy, 3.75 ees Carrots | Am News LOF G =) Se IT W—Going over. st production. it first gures place | : years in Jackson
: ; r, strong- manufacture: Most it first in the auto ind State Prison
Deali bu. Celery Root, No 0 1, 225.278| Leading issues ‘Am Be Lib MeNaL "ise ly i TS © industry in 1985) 7.
; the ur : were fairly active with pert, Locke, No. tie oye dot the favorable poleslgee — asian it 8 wae Sloe a otherwise seeing new car aed, expected opel tee Pond eae car sales by 67 ‘05 cars, | reuit Judge Mf erry a
rj the support on | Onions, dry, taney, 1.75 -1.78 dos bebe |Eisenhow e» ident|Am » .. 14 oA pea right now are the glass apd window w ran second Eastham Holland
decline. Brokers ‘thou 1.40-1.65 Se een. er’s physicians snapped APS icone at ‘Lone 8 Chem 742 industry’ auto | with installations and) The R : ito pleaded guilty Feb. 2
of the selling v ght some | 85-1.00 dos Bchs. Tey. curly, xo 1 1 the. market out of it “Armeo ae $$ Loritara ma s newest 4-door hardt hinging and latchi » R. L. Polk figures: usuall breaking into the Trans- z
was based on 1.00-1:25 dos behs Ld Vi day of its. past two Ar “ 48.44 Mack : 205 These ‘ops. |an entire! ng doors on are acepeted Yican Fre’ Ameri-
medica) report the lla ten bento: tend aoe ee ays of hesitancy, ares Co 41 M ie... 20 are the models iy different t - by the indust ight Lines warehouse
concerning Presi- | PA€ aera yr oe 150. 50-10 | igi Martin, Gi... 35.7| the in which | 4esign. ype of body official. The ry 88 \§. East 267
: $i - , No 1, 130-1 : ' §0-lb| Aircra Ad Call 4 Me. re are y y cover fs .
cent Eisenhower's physi letornaee re Wb bag’ Radishes, fts, motors, steels, coppe ea ce Lee ee yD Str.) 41.1) aboy, no side-center posts trations. new car regis-|and Boulevard, last Dec. 29
‘ . ton. cal condi- {2.88 dor bebs Rhubere. Hothouse taney ‘and oils were the leaders i tne Aveco Mte yer . 9)@ e the belt line. - These difficulties are bei a taking three charcoal stoves
\ ‘ly box: No 1, 70- ancy, rush of n yar & Ob) Midt | - 4) Twe' icked. th ing) Chevrole ssenge two calculating mach
. Pialiges near the! end’ of the Brat hothouse, fancy 1 800 git te Bld OX. t¢ vel oe whieh delayed the Benguet mar he Mou poole ais, ear cae of the industry's current | rently sortie car makers aie trations potato ee or regis typewriter. ines and &
r was ty to 1's lo SEH eles faeadl aerate de oahrmr No ! which reports t Boe! 2. Monsen Ch 441) are prod hardtops “oe :
reset “ NMfg Vas 1 eee ooseee eee lL fions, tt ransac- Boetme Air 13.3 Motor vy ucing them in 0 increase expect’ The : .
$2.15%: cor s jower, March 78-124 cu mh quash Deilicous No | _ three minute Bohn Ali 2 Pa 46 heir 1956 li the 194 ‘sal
e- orn 1, to 3s lowe : Tomatoca inbard we 1. "$12 > nutes at one time. Bond urn 273 «Motorola Ines. percentage of ie | ai es race ended
$130: oats 5 lowe r. March o<« ciate cand Ne 4 Se es Ws ey Gt 16 Muelier Br ah s output devoted to the: their dispute between Chevrol in a Three-Year P
iarch 5 4 lower to 4s higher sped 4 Oveniia block Sore Warne % Murrey Co |. a6 | wrveys indicate demand The hardtops, se models. Ford, the et and ., robation
» ae: fe to cent bee cuncauo poraton nae ig ble ks nidaded bu Pom BEaey, Ml ro 47 Nat Btve "at these models is holding up for | can bellowe na windows that leaders. -F' consistent production Given Ross Little
_ March $1.21%4; CHICA oe s 5 at 271'2 on 4.000 shares, US ay 0 aa 351 with well, yw red eave bol ord claimed. Ch
4; soybeans + 3 GO Feo 14 5 \ s shares, US. Bru Bal Nal Dair a sone t wholl th sides h: evrolet | =
- 2_10 A AP’ Potatols ICE! SB erp ae : us alke ? fo RU a7 retailers ope: ad regi e
lower, March $2.48, and (OO peg oe ee Te | up 3 at 3042 on 25,000, Gen- Budd Co a4 Nat Gype i) make immed unable to pave mere above the belt line. stered many, cars act Ross Little, 45 .
cents a hundred lard 2t05|\ Gs asmass weaerau and’ ecrat Motors up 1a at 44 oe Caluniel OL NY Cente 76> industr late deliveries, Many — ave more than ordina ne. still held by dealers. ually | yesterday peed apres
emand ~-moderaie and AUGET. 45 OG aoa dy on Calumet & H ; : Central 'yY experts ‘appeal. ry eve- . y was
March $11.50. pounds lower, slightly aecka: Old sock ca marke /).000, Bethlehem Ste ; Campi se 126 Nia M Pow a1 #@ say finthy the © . Ford made no year hati ed on three-
ates: Idane’ Ruasets carlot track 149% eel up Sty at Cap up 414 Nort @ w 33.1 oor hardtops som Tt ; ammouncement re- | probation and assessed
i 94.85, utillgies §3.20-3 $4 18-428, Bakers 4 on 6.000 and K ry 162 No est 632 “e e day wil ve hardtop styti garding the Polk fi re- court costs $200
: 328: Mon ennecott C Cdn Pac Am Av replace the : styling also ap figures costs by Oakland
sets $4.60;AMinnesote-Nor: tana rus-(per up 4% OP- Capt 324 Nor P aii conventional ty ‘to inere appears 5 County Cir-
* -North Dakota “4 at 122% on 2 “apital Air 39 ac... 741, Sedan. type of ase demand f cuit Judge H ’
+ y ar on = |tlacs §3.60-3.85 washed a ni Re: 500, [Gerriex C 6 Nwest Airline : dow or power win- : > H. Russel Holla
Ca + — Opening neswts Ooebiers $3.00 Mew seek: Florida iedapee vee advanced 5 Cater B.. kas) Pace Goh a By bie I ai a extra-cost op jen City Women Bruised _ Little admitted Feb. 2 sceating
‘ eee a gh-p ba 63. 49, ade a
fe “ose Mar essesee 81%) ——— SF pad Ol, Glew Joes) See Gd Pea AW aur 13 a, producers, available by all in Two-Car Colli foe ee
Be SES sy gon a" | Poul 2% at 153% on an opener xin So By Barge Ries o B ys P Laggin GM's Fisher /M BCU rar
meee tase | e lark . 4 e ory i | g Ss rs.
veers ® Mar”....... 12, | petnorh Fett caPh anaree 4.000 Ciena ae. 3 Pete Ae pe Walaa Gal snd ee ee Boe vier Boniag Graisance en on
Mar eres. 130, July °°) 120%. per pound fob pce tone Gains of 2 point Cluett, Pea D483 ar: in C . hardto t of the 4-door > on Ave., suffered minor Electors and and. Cittea
fuly 1. Hees Sep GEORG Hebert ive pealey up to 10 Hed No 1 quali'y made by Re ae e better were Cole ee Ue pel Oe 333 ig 5 ction csi the after successfully ae in a two-car collision last} ,, ae cpeemerd ot te
od CE OE ets i, Menvy hens 29-30. few 31: teel, Phillips 2! Philip Mor ..- the 2-door the t on W. W Mare “Sth, 1006 ven. that
: SP wees (a7 ae . is90: heat; broilers tight ‘ype Petroleun hry illips ¢ Gas 16 p Mor .. 445! we model of alton Blvd, o. Men.
: CGE 132%. Mf . 114s white ° SUE AEA ine & n, Chrysler Ye omw Ed ae Dn Pe #3, WASHIN . | ‘Stanley A’ near] Pi. ot 1:30
” Mas ; CA 3 qiny crouses 34.58 sheet & oT mingstown Con Ee: Pit Plat 3 GTON ww — Se ve., authoriti tern
Ful 2? Rocks 7) 4 caponecttes ($6 Bar: ‘ Tube United ots i 476 Pisce ‘G8 phrey n. Hum-| ‘tia Genera. es in Pon- Village Hall in the ets Sr cabs
OS 2 cl) auckiinge 30-33 POP Rate Baty, Cre ls Aircraft, con Pew 8 Pact & G .. 100.4 y (B-Minn) called on th | A major — 1 Hospital said. Lake at Orchard Lake See
~ + larke unsetiled. Price Anaconda Texas Co = ( a Ee: s45 Pp ee enhower ad e Ejis- the 4doo: em in developing’ A Lake Road, a publi ees
ij hea cents lower Races generatiy one Long Bell Lum} : and © Bf MA or Onl Fe oe Imunistration tod r unit w passenger with John J. jon the nm ¢ hearing will be held
ivestock- Seer Cat, Gee Receipts of eu. In : -umbed ec Ou ae bcs 413 “exercise its les lay tO quired as achieving re- 28, same in Bailey, | Village ew Zoning Ordinance for the
perro enol! LIVESTOCK vLonties and Sa Uae Geo Ca Ford Motor stock advanced 4 Corr Va. we Repu “ 2 than ie lunge esderip rather ter ee the shortenedicen alter Ailton she was released | pases es co coprs Koo Ordi-
2 S00 No ea: (AP Hine salable Dom Cuconstied f continued 16 move Mi ddd fb’ s asl @d_ tro Ce ee +4 Bey Me 94 ore sone IPOD Anne CONS tock a hal carries the d rs yon nrereaes = aid = Ord ant
i lower sales. Updertone weak to eceeuste le ny supplies are more than af 62 oe rom its close Det gels 2 U Re. Troe mi sd wal action on cM a tehes and oar Pontiae police rep r any regujations tal nance
watt nero « is) gisapapieting fle demand. Overall race ne " yesterday in the over Dis wen me Be aoe 3 legislation. ew rights ing proper ae ~~ maintain \f Stakes ae jap ias Thomas rosie be given BS Sopatuany tc
cody; «i 60 per mostly | ae — SAUL NS! ee” Boe Che vee ‘ : sof the car t oh Rochester, drove ,.0ht
; ows, cent fresh re . 3 Doe Ch i os thes 46 4 . * SUpporte Op his car across . arove s notice is publi
: nope ie es good and 2 ab cmeaaeae® eee _ ; DuPont em oe at Ree ao pe Humphrey, a sup ends d only at-front and reat hit fain cs the center line and paper a general eiretiation ele
a ore fie prtsic individusia/ steady 00 ee ey cralecencnace jee Ae Scoville Mie , E. Stevense pporter of Adlai ey ’s car head-on, ieee) of Oecbard Laks ne coon te
f . ers 12 00-18. cial grade | weaker on Se ee and young stock Kod .. 772. aD AL RR a8 son's bid for the De Many month aoa i United Stat also be given by registered
i iy core appre piiiccret and cutters paying ose coope, 1630! Ib 499) un y aa § iene Live na seen cratic presidential aterthatec:. | ° | final “nhac of tests preceded 1 lees Oe et cm cae public utility
| bulls 1300-1600. and commerct ying prices unchen, ib; fot lemer Re 4 Simmons a struck hack on, ion of the [ d operating any .publi road owning of
FR a ‘i Siurhad ‘oa ai hears” 7 bean 22-28 ages fait ees Vick? Lynn Cooke (Erie cee yy Sinclair © 514: Vice Pieddeni wre contention of partons They were nee foe 0 ge aiendar epi ee ja oaetscte| e1 mead
a yere 23- a -Cell-€ ony M . 5 Nix oF ; . E
y frm sales good ont oak 446-18 8 caponelion a eps 18183 AVON TOWNSHIP—Se ee 7 #64 Beeriy mi as York 8 om on in a New |. the most revolution. pects Said publisned | an.
() der 4 IP-—S a peech nary t com: 4 registe:
prime individuals heid up 00; Fle? mee fed Ch LT Ls 30. tom Nekere wayVicki Lynn Cook ervice for Poustene - ‘0 2 Std Brand at Dem Monday that the changes since introducti body | Lodge No. 60 munication Cedar + all be given not less than red notices
seers: ee any and commerciel ——-= vert 32 “daughter of M ©. two-month-old poet, “Ths” "aa ea Glee 303 sel omar paveliprovedil teins | cle cmeael Cosed oe cathe Thursday, Feb 16, Ee Clarkston, ore VILE AGE “hearing above sei
Fiaheey 8 r. and ee lt nae Big Gil Kas B14, es “helple 5 FC 30 “| ORCI ARD
: Socep teiacle ‘00 «No cariy sales M. Cooke. 4851 Payt Mrs. Lloyd oes pau #0 2 +} on ~ . 1836 held. pless and futile” in this | Another revolutiona we degree. Reymcna Be We | wee epee MICHIGAN
é arnings held at 10 am. Fr fai St will he) Gen eae meats a8) * °8 'is being carried out t a acetal a SS Feb pon Viulees cre
iday at P , 2 Stud Pac i s by GM's C ruary 1 ge Clerk
. iF ursie ic Mills 74a § ‘ t soque ‘rolet hev- 4. [ose
CMICAGO LIVESTOCK Paras) Davn a Ce 8 ‘uneral Home, with burial in O ye ee as eh ml re az “We might make so Division in its new sta: wee) Communicati RA A
Sule, Glamallicaarhan aceoreaey feet | Spezense of 13 per cent nes reper ct we aad Hills Memorial Coaset in Oak: Gen Shoe 2 Bre gird) et Gal progress jin tt eid substan) frame plant near Flint. Seas 22 5 velt Lodge, No. 510 F. w AM! + a8 ICE ——
| tive, lowe moderately ac- The t in net earnin r4 infant ‘metery The Gen Tir 4 Tex O Bu Ueaitl ss in the field of civil Here a tube ich tate St., Thursd. OF PUBLIC SA
‘ decline on cate eed — with. most | that arge pharmeceutical weal for 1955 died Monday. Gen Tir 574 Tr Bul 337 rights legislatio ivi ube mill and an at ay. Feb. 16, Pontiac 2 Doo: Le
ral net sales for la: m announced |> Bes Gdiietse T senw Aly 342 n in this Cc bendin ingenious 7:30 pm. F.C. D sPB3s009. spot r, Engine a
[ losing dull, 28 ee Ib. but 113.244. co! st year totaled §17 sides her 4:4 Transame if we ca ONgre ss | g machine Th ; egree. Arthur Pebrue gale to be held
a mostly 80 1 mpared wit ine parents, she joebe! Br .2 iT ro... 31 n get just 2 convert st omas, wM ur ry 27. 1966. -at
: te butchers; jower 1954. Net ea $109.938.424 for|Vived is sur- s 2 Twent Cen et a hittle help Steel int strip’ South M 1:30 p.m. at
a So tte. lower; sows scarce,| last yea rnings equaled $2 92 Esl by a sister K Goodrich an naareoea| coe 6 rom Repubi 7 aly o tubing and tt —— ain Street Rochester, M =
: * ; most U. B. No | yaer em red with $214 fel share brother M aren and a Goodyear sia Un palboy 364 said icans,’ Humphrey Soy inch 4en into ~ Feb ichigan
several butchers 12.00-12 50, & nepeaseho eh ag bpemoch basen rh, pe nes | Mark at home Grah Paige 3 Pegket LO aid in an interview. “If ; box girders that fr 18, 16, 86
1 and 38 190- $8.19, high in net profits tc Aspens . Gi No Ry 4) Unit rei i7s)~6 administ we do, the * nev body) frame si Fm S ! ‘NOTICE OF SPECIAL
on a ee a re oe ual competed " itn” pees! 25 ane Kenneth: M. Lord > Gupbomel 7) Ut Cap ae — are cise its soader ay have to exer- me Soe members. ew in rie iT rete cwnahip tek ualifeg elecory of Waterford
fots . 1ae-T2.99;/* seers one or 9328, MARI gag Cit Prict ership rathe —— < strict, Oakla
up to ETTE — Hersh Choc U ‘| r than it y. Mickigss: nd Cour-
round = 9.75-11.00.,; Sunbeam Corp ha Service for K ul -. §3 n Gas Cp = lungs. its Notice
* come fo # announced net in- neth M. en- = Nand FP .. 134 US Rube: Eon tl : @ 4 brief case is h
SS le ane a Si asap 5, AUS, Seal yee tee | at Ue eo ene a eT LA ie sane and slcre rater Shad ote out ee ea?
and ‘prime calves 400: s similar Period br re Marsh Fi uc Pit) treats at in might r m a cars: on T akland County, Mich
gtrong; other grades steers steady to of Paes or $1.59 ought net profits Home, uneral ent e2q Ven Raal remind the R . paved at Si ‘wesday, the 2 Cas ~
& shere with burial to f Indust R W -. %$2\that epublicans | anford and E. jary. 3 1988. t Ist day of Pebru
; heifers weak; ae aay Sl ee lette 0 follow in Mar- 1 ay «21 Ware Be = 213) during the & ‘oy iS Sts. =F Madison of Milford. re Age Serews et ds 14! {This was a 275 per cent ‘career: rte ntendent. He was poli Lake Orion, Fri. and Sat. Center, sea tor ae necessary te ba. bor.
* * rote aoe Ov ase tO e H : ME r the project for
: Card : No sale, bid an a, es the com amilton plant jbonds are to be which said
Death Notices Card of Thanks 1 FI ’ a asked the company saad 1955 month, mechanic in 147 ls ae master. eareain Bes Woodward, ELMER R
WE Wism To THA ouR M oboe 3. __Help We Wanted M le |plant superintendent ae mshi men's Saal ised of good clean Secretary of the |
ends end DUN iY
% 485 1. 19s Wick: “Tecent bereavement durine, our rd ewod rtd FLOWERS | ass e of __ Help Wanted Male cli —— e oI) Dated: of said. Scheel
bel 4 pa deny 8t, Avon, g, wens and lowe) Rev. fa for Vacation —__ ' eSEMBLT. CABINET. —r CELIA 6 __Help Wanted Mal —Ady.! Janusry 26th, 1956.
y Mr. and Mrs. ant perpen __ Spring Carl Wal Walker rend Pastis ___Faneral Directors 4 Apeiier work aapelerag, hr bee Pontiac ing RERERIERCED on RARE 6) Help Wanted Male 6 H Feb. 8, 13, tos6
Guar aus . Cooke; ty (PRA 804 liv Coach | af 7. | CNpors,
Cooke. ie and Mart In Memoriam 2 p>, AIR AMBULANCE BAR cuca. ae agnee fouls: |) Macbaees Bee paral OTE S| ends. o Brees ser wee enon | _Help Wanted Female 7| H
haid “Pricey a) service will b* ALBERT LOUIS m __.* Pursiey Funeral Home Cy "8 eG ee Main St Roval Pontiac #18 ; _ $6032. Se eien Pe | cea baleen Conatio PReat| Coen seeneeniaes _Help » Wanted Female 7
Pursie =| ASHBAUGH W ATS Fy | on MAN FOR GENERA PENSION § 2187 JUS =p i — ee
i Tit Rev, w. ee ee seed away two rears ago Fee precamplete fe re 7 BUTCHER | Bance fot apie mors suaters) ta tat Ghee oe ‘ply Trans Ameri WANTED: aP.| Fine EEE PERSONAL TRAINEE
“ - Hills Memoria ce Always! se tres, snecifish ‘sed Sees a —=_Weterford_Two. | OF TUPER MARKET MEAT ae eae yrs Ohare ‘prover Stee ns vamos FOOL AND Bivd. Prien ues perience. dea rackgrouna, “Ex-| and fo fo train ans 5 of 30
- = the Pore Pe Few if this wor'a =) Lae | pers Anon rast aaataccrauet cures uamon AND DIE MAKER. MUST a quail | int as a professional
et rsley Pu his equal you'll | KIR | Must be experie lease 4 et above requirements REAL be journeyman. Skutt. MUST | Benefits r will be considered erviewer, Must have sales t
é Home. . _r fault t need to take th jo not apply 4 T f EST, turing Co. uttle Manufac- include ful | rsonality. es type
3 OATES, FEB. t 7 anh hte nat came to an a none shea le | gluon ai ‘buying eg ab, whieh MACHINE DESIG NE a SAI seve E WERE AA WARNER OWE See alt ms el Rena Col a Sabwast, Eat
died | Beariee Tell y Good = Incr OLENA Turret cS swasry start ' able to | FE 5-0227 .
56 Webraika: gps 1954, TEODOR - as te lived eve Do ia about yourse! face your e Lathe operato about March §
! in Rumen @: 1 si inne ol neison- oh eee ciel EW ELE establist arnings ine wet | Hour’ week” rs Must set| APPLY IN PERSO!
: = ere ig n c Prew AGNEW ELECTRIC iahed office to | ou Top wages Tx PERSON, MON. PONTI
j pm era eel py chiles by hie Sister Broth: | pesIGNED FOR PUN S| c comm ODY MAN it per RTG CO | "se location. food west | Products LI 60610 Mscnize| PONTI RC VARNIS
| - potgprtaltnge ‘ery in Section 4 FE 20317 ookkeeper ndustrial Special ) time Pte ‘a. of @ TYPIST $400
day Feb 17 ela Pri- Sadly missed e Thee | > wiht teeta Dd rial Specralis ase apply : t_avply FE 3-906; é
: Md Parton -auster Pane’ E irom Brothers and sitet ana) Deo: oa 50 Oitice Met Trainee sso | OEVERAC aC et won Hinpyee rica, wa ieaners. bar nce WAITRESSES: CASHIER Libel ALY LB ine
é Riemer! tn North “Adal no IN LOVING Nciaon 2 OF NED: BOX REPLIES ' MEX a me | ower iAecountant $300 BACKGROUND wit! Bi ele WANTED EXPERIENCED B Mary Ge. Ronnd bake pec cate : oun ORT ar fic: 175
im state at th allett will Me away ebranes Jr who passed 5 BI c State Bang Bidg Rina JOIN _A TEAM OF WET > rv. Pull time work Herb AR EXP ne lhe : Ne ECRETARY Tight
_Puneral Home e Parmer -Bnover w civ liing) wae ore io . DAY & NIGHT SHIFT CFE §-0227 ale NG SPECIALISTS HARD er Shop. weet. EXPERIENCED GIRL | FOR shorthand
et } 23571 . Sani 8 ee LINES IN OTH. WANT’ a Se housework RL FoR GIRL FRIDAY ¢ ao
a Are w pleasure to rec pimetant face. 57 12 14 16 . x Oe TESS = Fir ED YOUNG N : B and care of cht COMP or executive 82
P = _ He had | ; 2) 5 : 2 | L M Mm is owned b i the a MEN BETWEEN _By_ week. | Rete children OPERATOR 90
LATCENER YF ad a kindly ard fer re 30 % WW 39 57 | AN t _ profits go y members all | ges of 17 & 18'+ on M | : ferences, FE 2-7019 sao
: B 1¢ 1956 ERNF And died beloved ty eh 38 39 57 60 66 71 TO y vestment to members, N | Tuesaday and Wed! $ onday.| EXPERIE \ .
: S Tele ST Some day we ho ou 84 90 99 “ 1 ym RATES pcriment, reaiited |) Option o in| pm. $1.38t> nesday, Bto 10; 7 ‘RIENCED ~~ TAL GRALBNER’S
- bef Belovea gtaph road, age fom e hope to meet him, 99 100 101 111 119 4% YEAR PROX = icipate in ail ption to pare | f per hour » 10) TORES~ ; hop .
husband e day we know nx : WHY DRIV JRAM capita ; investment ‘orms furnished Unt- ORESS Ey) ae V3 Pont ontiac
Bdith Mu of Mra T a é not when ! IVE TO pital wain adv 8 with Interv! en | : RES i 2 tac Sta.
Bang suctna! Mur tutnen ch Restrnt beatae water _——— FXG CO dese eaters laren oeenes ty O maui CPEANERS. 88 OAK) PO] rece
F ner: dear brother 9: urt Lauck- S@dly missed by father and 219 DIXIE HWY ’ .| NEEDS SALES cae plet perience a | promotions a pporaalry tor | . IN. : AK-| > PO
| pind piaueknes Puners) Racavic OTe OvING MEMORY OF ENG NE! Help Wanted Male 6 oe SAL FSM eee APPOINTMENT roe rainy bulldihe has co socnted Wnovus Fentive rewrenee | paeae NTI AC
eld Friday FP mapas nny who passed aveav Feb enced only Appl EXPERI- . cretarial staff competent WHOLESALE DISTRIBUT OR PART
2 p.m. from th eb 17 at | 1954 eb 1) A BILLION DOLI | Walker Clear rply 6 to 0 a.m RAY ONE j; tal for invest 4nd ample capi- | Wants 5 /E DISTRIBITOR _*°T Call TIME SALES
j . WPunera! Hom he Sparks-Griftin 1 uF home she is fondi ence Co. is enien LIFE INSUR- | ~ EX-N ranere Lake Orton | O'NEIL, Realt t baeal broke a ment Profits lat seh oung married man.) after 5. FE 4-030 | Gl
4 , oe i vere! s ope [K-NAV - aes “4 a l prevh t ool graduate . igh GENERAL
| iosanel 1 e with inte ment be ndiy remem- tion im the aeteae its opera mat NAVY PETTY OFFICERS | 262 8 Telegraph Rd or | Good? 5 en ous records business Se ate anxious. to learn cook HOUSEWORK AND
' Tauckner il] He Boeste Sweet memories cling to hev ety. lusdaual isecarue tear Rare ea ctve ute in Phone FE 3-7103 | Seo anes Bester | en ey searing Se! come ing Girl 25 Sp) GRID Cylons) nk
{n state at These’ rape lov ec ner name availab) ; pportunines are ails FR 45173 rate Gcoepatall or FE 5- | may -Pont! Press| W 4 couse: man apd “t | perienced Must ha’ x- R MODERN
—Sperke-Griftin ‘Punera! vant he ait i‘ oved ber in ite win | he cipeneiiee a one OS “ne XPERIE} NCED DF1IVERY MAN aaa ness Fetes Exchange = couridence be fn ree Fou aid aeniet ater Pontiac’ Pre aes + help emploved rm ee ner | eee GRAD FOR NEW
= - love Rerin eaceihien lessionall career Ng Tanwe Ul time Applr : MODEL M | REA Ne 88 Box 67. e rmingham |
MANNT FEB ath fust the ered at . Teer Must be HS ket. Birm pels Peabody s Mar- neadeq badiy Fuce! AKERS L ESTATE BA ga eared WOULD YOU GIV = 16-1887 Area. ACCOUNTS P. $230
! Senaiel is sae 93° beloved bus, . Mabie acd Ded Carry Replies canaeieciee w aeiary Sen ee WASHIN( stot LO ilibn working paomay Oo Ws eet ana : Son ee ‘yoana men in| GIRT, TO ASSIST IN THE ne RENAE axe $240
of Patricia 1 toved bus- IN. LOVING MEN errs call FL ; rite or chine repa G MA- “7 =a s REALTOR 1 any kind bet H ck lady. Private hom JERK :
loved son of Mr D Mann! be Mother Con foRY oF OUR —Huron aBarge. 566 West Tien irman Must have e PONTIAC Teirerash ASE t | will be released , before he; tn $18 aw ome Live LITE KK woo $240
y y tt _ ae ce on auto tpe- | ( FF 3-710 r) lf v te return | .. week include ss wo... ‘
dear father of pail Manni maxed pliant el who ACTUAL “JOBS oO me FE 2-1453 | dryers pee ce washers and | we Mure MENT SER | Co-Operative: R a rE eee ‘ ia have a kind ven Dome board. Call between ripchare and dal ol CLERICAL |. Loh
; popes ome weether Beane rom this world of vain Sa ner: | So Am. E PEN IN THE US| oye Setore ana comer | Lee eiutoals eR PE 42351 R Rew! Estate Exchange ; _T% Pee Oo bie father os tat adiee) aa CURE CLERK 33
. datk. John of Bennte row nd sor | Write ante urope To $15,000 | Must furnish referenc commission | : : ~ st FAT Ee ~ Se | HOU CunAC fe | $225
a= Mrs. Agnes fae (aie FAS To the tend of ic ty Emplo;ment Info C mation erences All tnfor- TAL eS ATE —— SING AIDE MIDW *
Short. Mrs mnt. God | ef peace and rest: r Room 680, 47 elon ce ce confidential Rots Re- f : 5 - | Ponti : EST
Bele ‘ay ee ett oun, 2! Where’ you have t eae ee er pe 6 tre SStiars 5 8t Se akong aednearice PONTIAC snea oALESMEN | Help ' Wanted Female 7 7 eee ey fgets roject, | “et teed Bank Bhig
from be 17 at 19 rest und eternal YWATIC SCREW | | 1 4 ill time Sales xpert i involves & sition | PE $-0227
st M am 1 | operat A MACHINE ielpful. Right perience AMBITIO’ ccepting applications | Per
pAacal moreent in are ne reh sea Far fonline Sons and Daugb- | erin Gros pasen ith oa me- Ex | MOTOR ; 000 first \ear men ea ere 656) eo viapcieg’ (ceaatucin $85 Raiseing a Callege sopiicants tor | ee OMENS
; r Mi te ie Cn lies : p exD joo s | ing A ‘ “ul ster. | rainit | N
_atithe Pursiey Punera! tome ---- | men No phone ail to, person | per jenced R. J. VALUET, Realt Letut” peastifal "Nor car atisa,| work ie desired Bick meen 8 Maen SREP 4285!
eral Home . ; emt office closed Mmoploy- | Sc DIVISION 343 Oakta e or ‘az necessary FE nressing.| cation ck leave, va- -25$
i Maztaron FEB en arene The Pontiac Press | ‘ele Manitacturpg Corr, Dae alesman | Hl | Co-Operative Real Esta eras 23-6627. 32-6175 or FE. Pes easton ae wai PONTIAC GIRL TO
: reriy © he LD : i Take Re Se < 4 RETIRED ite Exchange - j rke “ dae
: Nh tie eee : ; Wit LISS BA BERG CREO as Openings PATTERN : ATTO a Ho! = 2 "
Oshman ee erin Leuise FOR WANT ADS mann ice a UCE YOUNG seo: t NATIONAILY ADVER ter 8 wanting part-time work pares SEC RN EY'S Sages D FON TWO BOYS. INT rane
: agree Medien, "Picea pe g DEAL TE? IS feed lowe Me toe. ae pntelubg EIGN AIR CON ~ SALFEMAN OR MANAGER FoR "o™TIECM SCRETARY | Witla! MO Maor HE Peele | age BIE
mneral ce ’ Al. yes 5 * od § ae mae % 2 i ‘ i ¢ Mt
i = het Revirdar re > 2-NISt pues a id= | : T SENIOR fomplce } me of bailding Sienice campetent eernel would tke JOIN THOUSANDS iN Fouties. eg a
! hia] ae " N iret % = t i = erieni + Mut fr his a
Foner! eae Richardson. Bird Fron § aimto spin oe Merrie oH GUARANTEED ceellent peer Canes | Be i able to pence a sell Mine ne able to! hai cle othe come osnaec ae in- jae AGENCY hes en
Hebel Fae Oshman wil hens All e ee | te : 137 while Gainthe fel \ - Wadia 7X : DESIGNER ue aressive indi me ee offer to Riker Ric napa ha ter, B-1 ie en in their eee eee | ter an cin gl Sasee, pirice
3 inher im : = 41 vee rane ae For | - ne te 5 °_— - 12 2 ‘ t wood Us easy fi -t tr
warts *nems Tuiters"Wom tr Be cor anand oe se |] ene tee eats Maat EE MR SANK by tak eae bec cork for agancenest Get TTR ACTIN BS iy Vee) ghee Se apeersieeer
¥ ning until - rom Frt- resS @Ssumes 7M | ie ite crim ian : - stoma: a len eR sheet meta! Kece : i “appt ee for M x VEE GIR § 64508 r information, cal! busine : t ¥ tales or
mae Hach | Mee Oe) Cy ah t us no TespuD Winteniee eon eon eres 38 PAR Rowe cit ee { ; | ih! I : : ; ineas experiedce, bat will tr
onre ersice i] trea ta 1a none! | Mr Ket ON aa gt es RES! OL AY( YUT M Ce ee ee ek Bon HOUSs work Ae pom cone] wii reel asics oe cee
i . rth charges 28 ‘ 10 A 1] Sey Pes A ee : ght: 2 Children schoo! ee rho has no e5
WRIGHT, “FEB 131036 WInt., for that pertion-of the ress to De EXPERIDNGHD (24 ree Noe ORD cr ak Coens nee gta aa¢ 0) seine ie aoeD, noni age OF Went Call ales Bed be appen
mother z =| é je advertise- i he S experience ax Small auto and paint supp! BEAU ; ; . LFAGED LADY =e 1 Miss Edwards at
Jéuste wrieht.. Willie Mt endl to mem, sulehn basy > DRAFTSME SAI : S sheet metal 1 he ody qe bes 8280 per moth a tan wil) Beauty- TY SALON » tn 3 ADY BABYS!
pe 4 i een ren RAFTSMEN MOAN | tal layout m pavys26 per imoethat te Se auty- opera @ and light housewr SIT- oe.
fey “McDowell. Cherie. Harry, Geredy vusnelees) terweee te 04 IR. } NCL ce te | i 201 reel estate Goon, oopor Se ae | sober middie aged tte start for | _Teceplngict eanteaur Ee ee lie eae | GRAEBNER’S
= and Ros : are m anc ations | NGS EER | ‘or iad ; rtu- | / IOR disp! o selling. counte — 25 a after 6 S
; pene i aac nota Tae _ be sure to get BR TO WORK IN ooo erpen ample fer of | \ Sell aarke stock and delivery BIRMINGHAM MUSIC. es FF §-90277
ree tarees Seanta|| Manca Sil te ewes || Ree ic | METBTCTARLES | DE | Sealy ag Bebe aah erator _DEMEDure Grbaisna | foubittigeag atnlZcP We *
Peb. 1@ at 2 wid ~Thureday without it ven en needed in 1ARLES | ILER GR rawer. eraluuttiog © encvetatia uture Must have ai ALESLADY FOR FLOWER
ak @unn hk, Mel- : Darien for mitt ee oo. 1717 8 T | 24 ve | RAEBNER Keteern and’ weltetses Waves. montiae Prefs, bo €. Write | Experience in R_BHOP
sage Panel Weeley wines Miles See ne for advertise. Hien Drafling on a ong, eer ees re 5-889 i mectaaieclieaticg: body or” Employment Agency Service oye Taployment | NEAT AND ATTRACTIVE | bee lett es ree hicieslaia
; ing. Interment in Pernt Mf Pack ; bapee contesting type sizes ' tromectacienl om device: i HARDINGE Wirie one 1 | EL € experience , 313 Pontiac State Bidg Sol y sam Ml) 44284 Maple. Birming- | 2 fetal in office. Must | 9 ect wa :
ere dacyha| ive ets (I nach cee yereaet were) ELECTRICAL | Sales Vn eee ase ts BGR) 6 EE ana ce-Oo | Eee a a
; Hom in Schutt | day previous tol pak fe ee ELE LEA 3375 8 -A-Y AND CO OR 3069 EEE rs sypeemest = b
> cation CTRICAL CONT $8 8 Commerce Rd ; ENG eC : ‘0607 OPERATOR TO ae U li * +
RO ‘ Walled if } TRA niin Ea
Menno Want Ade may RUDE AU l Noctneee “ fl gu F ED pLe SIL . INEER S © ( leri u tore write’ a for ree puipes
. : cance! 2 ATES i 3 Qus PTR I " has . ® Me 7 ,
FO R CASH IN the reaped apis) oe | Shar TEST. DE SIGN TECHRIOUES Darts RAN Ls oo re AND. For welding operations Real] Estat Must » ical Girl ac Press Box 99 ‘Due ta the eae
a> Bs N A the first insertion e | ccvelovment oeeeibulits Tar We nced for ateady job zeker | Ras Q ee ee & have aona| oO aevty lec for oer
HURRY ‘ Caan fecture rt the and manu 6S Telegraph FE! ave openings for alert Raper iine: (Postion “la perme Del Nn ae place several repres
2 sort) sell -things SH WANT AD RATES high of evuipment Ponty cs = ; Sreaty ta erienced om se Tae sat etter than average | fives on Powtine sPngoresena.
th ee gs Lines ee 3Days 6 Days ee oncuttge eters for JOBS K¢ 1 oMEN ENGINEER contarts” Earvines eavertizing ART u E | paceecary” For ‘iperview ~4 sa
a 7 + gee { « A ary? ” re a =. « j Je A }
rough Classified Ads [ 1 im me Hef) and othe: pfant) Teo] vanes! 43) (Seite Bcceusting) Be = Bu sume | HURS xperienced om pistons ih
A Leo” (34 Des Cee enetiia: Mia gram, | Mechanics € ..... ne : Toe. B —To Sell—te Tra ‘ OMAN GENERAL HO
~ Anythi 4 rire 48 404 tt you perience required mum 1. Sales Promotior canes... $230 Nols 1T—WE'LL INS § N Saginayv work. 3 childre AL HOUBE-
= goes! Dial FE Ti 76 ac ns you bre eaner for an portunity | Menecet meter be oy ORE 7 ChE RK Ty PISt ecret r sao PE 40080 Live in Ref
: “a 315 . and w yur ereative abil . Machine » 4 sence $300 Pp a y LAN, 28
ais. a 168 aa a speeialt=ts ve @ crack (ean ot | (C RICE ieee ei? SALA | gr coat” with some experience Shorthand housework. TPrcien Ties 1 iont
° ace ye 9 60 img field v new and expand | ERC EN TER | Press 8 k. Apply Pontiac Must and typing no Apoty aPaa ive-in Refer-
° as tact us in mediate! Chel con. | + B-l Riker Bide i o*. Uke patatebll asthe in ‘retailing ; mee Eee
tua immediately "Can | PER Sere wi , Bes
CARGI LDR ROM uM ote ee ! INNEL REALTY CO, aa CLERK pees area recceeoe ks wouay FO LIVE IN, #10 PE
4 SOCole tylateases CORP [AN AGER PAINT STORE “ROCH +40 Co-operative Rea! Shaper he STENOGRAPHE vee Devt. sth fh Avoly| wi. Meee for hom: seg te Ue fais
ngham. Mich aad esseatial Wart pre! feeredy bats Glenwood Av enue, | E? ay a oe Goering: as R Vaite’s Dept. Store WOMAN Was child FE 44550.
* veld, MI 4-00)0 i a typt : orthand HOUSE WORE.
1 Pontiac, Michiga nEx 1078 Wo Buren eieks! Sor hol Person qith PART TIME MORNIN 8 days a wk. be raphe WORK,
\ a: gan 4 T DOOR TO | Sta yre office expe: rome by GS. CREDIT | WOMAN
fet obsceeC| A tlug_ ssinty ene al oct aresan, Nationa! tor fos
, ; : FrICE | Apply Personnel eff per month rear iu eae aakecret| ee family Pies 3 ie EWOR
“ i, Ge noe mee | eteiers "O. Bors Manacer WOMA
— : Mor ¢ x 258 Detroit | X TO Ww
mae 7 - eal WO MIM, ron | " valescent Geneeey With COW:
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