“S- THE PONTIAC PRESME OVER PAGES TED PRESS ONTTED INTERNATIONAL 117th- YEAR * 5 ard x * ‘a " * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 9, 1959—80 PAGES 2 Playing Children Burned Jet Falls Into Northville Yard cad | : One More Makes a Dozen et _™—_— .-- = = — = . LJ | Pilotless Plane Moore Proposes The Rain Clouds (Fun... Crash... . Agony'F! s , ~ f_” (Cometh to Area Misses Homes - ° Ld r 4 Adoption law Tonight, Sunday EE: | A few scattered showers aré pre- Nearb School ® dicted for tonight and possibly . | House Cleaning [sss os tts sx." Airmen ie Foxtel’ © pera’ normel high of 6468 and normal : Craft When Oakland Judge Calls’***™ . , gt Al porageadt Setup Antiquated and a anki Menley = a lS Unworkable find temperatures climbing again. CPAs gen DETROIT #—A pilotiess Today's winds sou to south Pie ire Cs jet plane plunged into a Oakland County Probate|*t_ clindharardbrad wed = Sy MOS ae Fp residential area of North- Judge Arthur E. Moore said x * * je Rote ville yesterday afternoon, today it is me Michigan/ Forty-five wes the lonest come nite Te ed ie splashing flaming fuel onto “cleaned. house of its antl- iar preceding owe he The mercury Bars She eae a sandpile where five chil- quated and unworkable rose to 65 at 1 p.m. Bee te % ; dren were playing. adoption law.” - 3 age ety pe dele ae Two of the youngsters Judge Mpore addressed 81 To Fy Picture Sashs ee cae | lwere burned seriously. group of officials from Pes { ir th tes os dha idelerwts B Ral Soon it | |Their three playma throughou es who a: Mea - | Jescaped harm. are, in one way or another, F ar etter = : ce = ay ; ae Sf | The RSF —— mines concerned with baby adop- 4 “ Re AEE i et j crashing into a school a tions. The meeting was held D ur Ing Ap I il gS | | block away. It landed — garden, at the Oakland County! yor sprRINGS, Va. wm — Gov- L. Moutier of Belle- Youth Home on Cooley Lake ernment officials today reported a Air Foree pilet, para- road. tet ommereed cote with tbe to eatety. after bie ofick “Undér the antiquated and un- total dropping well be- and his plane went inte jworkable present Michigan adop-ljow the four million mark. climb. ition law many of these adoptive he indicated Git ow is attached to the Michigan ss . ‘children find their way into poor — Guard squadron at MOM WITH HER ‘ARMY’—Mrs. Edward ; Pontiac Press Phote homes through the route of the employment may have declined tan Airport and . Brinker draws admiring glances from her 11 Pat, 20, and Douglas, 16. Seated are Joan, 8, — market and the procedure by as much as half a million to land after a rou- children. She'll be the feature of the Brinker family (Rosemary), Susie, 14, Gene, 8, and 'which allows direct adoptive place- in April while employment reg- house tomorrow, come Mother's Day. Her older Keren, 2, Paul 4, and Jim, 6, are in front. |ments,” Moore said. rs a = te children are (from left); Barbara, 12, Eddie, 18, *2, Paul, 4, and Jim, 6, front. | i ; o . ra wala oar aed ee at ae This advance word on the month- fuel. P | adoptoon bill which he has helped. |'Y J2 reart, due to be issued mother, Mrs. Eugene It is under study im the State | Monday by the Commerce of Northville’s police omer oO laren County to Pay | = wety fen oficas wane creaming t be ee as ° vatly ts) attending | | “Its primary purpose is to elim-|spring meeting of the Commerce . od . inate the black market in baby Department’s Business Advisory Elizabeth were rushed mazes With Vigor | sens, Sem pemennins Ss TE heeaes J OSpila ore will_be no direct placements,” the x * * as serious. . | judge said. + ee an oe yo he toe y REBA HEINTZELMAN Ponti | * * because figures are ontiac General to: Get was flying at When the family of Mrs. Rosemary Brinker noisily ,,. | to. Judge Moore's bill has been Ben’ ‘he lest control of , ’| Higher Rates Covering introduced in the Senate by Sen. photo-recotinalsssice craft. tramps into her bedroom tomorrow shouting Happy| A L. Harvey Lodge (R-Oakland Coun-|8°"€ as low as 3,800,000. This Mother’s Day,” it’s going to be crowded. | Patients on Welfare ty) and Sen, Haskell L. Nichols|Wowd be more than 1% million “The plthe suddenly began a : ( ‘below the total in April a year . cold. “ET Mrs. Brinker is the mother of 11 children. oe a : ago. down @ little. | Agree Ss n ached Just how this pretty mother raises her brood Of ween the Oakiand County Social tt —_— require on eo aaa The improvement was vastly mene ~———~*healthy children, directs Welfare Board and Pontiac Ger- yong da. sare hae ks oe encouraging to officials whe, de- 7 : fund drives, and looks so at-/ Sri) say bialew teied ton x ak enw eutact. scaubennt laos" aoe sonae tour down out of the loop I knew it lpartisan Mee tractive is a mystery to all tare patients. It also requires that the release | ness pone aly have worried whether I hit with tt ‘ \her friends. | The Board Thursday signed a/of the child from the mother be! about the failure of employment | Mrs. Brinker—five-foot-two with contract on new rates for welfare |filed with ve cone, to match gains tp national pro- | said as he came down in Set Next Week ox terns toe ty er macy eh Ser "tering ie dep mens fection a ee ha pce es et ra | neighbors for her vivaciousness, , pert advice and skilled service,”| Tee April pickup, it was indi- ond and warmth of spirit. Local hospitals had protested the judge said. cated, was considerably greater “God, don’t let it hurt House Leaders Agree To her children, her sunny dis- | ficials said, the sealaty weer However, he added, his pro- soa ge joblessness Gopes : : BI a to Seek Solution of position and understanding good- | paying for what it actually cost | posed bill provides alse that the (387,000 to a total of 4,362,000, B Oy Admits Setting aze wees yen ny py Foe a ' +e ness all spell M-0-T-H-E-R in the | to take care of welfare patients. | releasing parents or guardian x * &* ‘Gae State’s Cash Crisis | mighest GF tha wank The ctendard raw fon weatmert| may have exchasive cheice of re-| ‘Ta number of jobholders in at Baltimore Warehouse so yearcld veteran flier said, “but : . leasing children to (1) a chosen |Marth rose by 1,100,000 to a total : dived right into that yard, the LANSING W—Michigan lawmak-| , Rosemary and her husband, Ed-iof county patients at Pontiac Get! ‘woeugeg agency, (2) State -Wel- lot 68,189,000 only open space for blocks ers scattered to their homes to, | were. a been rearing theirjeral this year has been set at}: Department or to (3) the ena BALTIMORE (# — A 12-alarm fire early today! around.” day to let tempers cool and mull| joe, on the ‘dare of tnt ake quid Harold B. Euler, Pos) juvenile Court. turned a sprawling grocery warehouse irtto a mass Of| HOUSE DAMAGE MINOR chicane ane Pumtcela te near Commerce, where they've The figure was the average daily| There is an urgent need for a News | ash charred rubble, with damage estimated at from one to! The plane hit in a garden behind : : :.{lived for more than 22 years. lcost of treating all patients at the|new law, Judge Moore told today’s -half million dollars. the home of Miss Ada L. Roe, an gether on a solution to the state's! ; : “ one and a m 89-year-old Her house cash crisis | Every one of the children, from | hospital m 1957, as shown in an | gathering, because abuses of the 10- ld t th scen d spinster. For the first time in many weeks'5-Month-old Rosemary on up the,2udit by Michigan Hospital Service| present law are continuing day; wassmngTon w@ — Former ee vail Panes = suas 4 onan menegn Sans Sees of both parties assembled yester-| inherited the good looks and happy P re * “The mother is fearful of dis-) Davies, it with cancer at Walter youth admitted starting the a just 40 minutes after 500 yee} day at Gov. ‘Williams’ invitation|nature of their parents. 4 left aust focal ay —— — and) Reed Army Medical Center, has fire Sla | Sus { been released from the po to talk ir di nd try! oS oe ae * doctor bills, conce! a stricken ot. , to clear the way for negotiation | The other children are Karen, 2,/Euler said, the high figure waslwhether she is capable of twat @ mild case | About 55 pieces of equipment y ng pec Paul 4, Jim, 6, twins Joan and Caused by new construction and/for her child,” he said. a ae were called to the one-story ware- Ga P . D A 75-minute session in the gov- \Gene, 8, Barbara, 12, Susie, 14,|the closing of one wing, bringing) law lets! A statement by the State De- [house of the B. Green & Co . S Frices. vl ernor's office produced agree- | nougias 16, and Eddie 18. | +—«| about an unbalanced operation. — a ) the a en 10 rol } ment by House leaders to meet on . . |her reach out and select anyone) partment today said he has had | Hundreds of firemen fought as Major Firms early next-week and attempt to | Just under 40, Mrs. Brinker ap- | For the first four months of | under the sun she desires to take) satisfactory response to treat: | biase through-the early-morning k oa develop a “mutually acceptable | pears as youthfal as het mar- | 1959, the daily cost of treating (her baby, even though it is not a' ment but “is, however, some- hours before bringing it under Nash Returned as Hunt Lop 2 Cents Off answer” to the state’s long and | ried daughter Pat, a prospective | patients has been $37.38 per p&- igood placement,” . Judge Moore| what weaker.” His temperature control—but not until the walls . chert-onage tnanty needs, mother next month. tient. concluded. is now normal, It added. had collapsed and the twisted | Goes On for Fhird Man} Gasotine will be two cents « gal- The meeting stemmed from Wil-| When Ed Brinker “brings home| Puler said the hospital will still sundae eashons _— "| in Lassiter Murder lon less at many area service liams’ suggestion in a message to the bacon,” this means 10 pounds ¢xperience small losses on its wel-| i . Ps 9 ae stations today. a joint session of the House and/of it, along with three dozen eggs, | fare patients, If They Just Keep Talking sere : Several major gasoline firms an Senate yesterday, for the most|six Maves of bread and four gal-|. Last year the hespital wae paki ”" Peer eT en ae ene a ene yes | timed srice cuts seunetlip, * part critically received by Repub-'lons of milk, or each welfare pa’ ° O . } part ¢ plage eaerenet sia saan, Pace LANSING Cdtimer, Hopet ull preine“c ine ihyearat hy |eriay wi the, man whose Srl tale, Oe, prnde eae te “We come to you because we) cix bicycl said. about 4 a. ere t ' believe that any program Démo- extra cue ren concurs au) . - ; LANSING (AP)—Senate Secretary Fred I. Chase who jsive answers, they took ae aod ~~ pe nist — pre to rm ey tne fe was crats might want would have tolby side in the garage area, and|Adlai a ‘Bridesmaid’ has watched Michigan Legislatures come and go since the EE a he led . soon joined by the Standard Oil have your stamp of approval be-| most of the children have earned | early 1920s saw encouragement in thé cash crisis session |‘estioning there, they Ex-convict Charles Nash, 42, ad-) 0, fore they would: vote for it,’ Sen. their own transportation, Mrs.) . CHICAGO (UPD—Twicede-| i Goy, Williams’ office yesterday. gave this account: mitted he. took part in the killing Carlton H. Morris (R-Kalamaz00) !Rrinker says. ee “T've seen times before when the legislators had prob- ~ of Lassiter near Willow Run Air-| Gulf, Shel! and Speedway” felt told the governor. | lai E. Stevenson cut a cake hon- fe a He was looking for canned goods] port April 6. Nash, of Chattanooga, | into line afterward, with others ex- Morris réaffitméd the Seffate Re-| Whenever there is an extra | oring Harry S. Truman’s 75th | lems that,seemed impossible to solve,” he said. “But, they (in,¢ might have spilled on the|Tenn., waived extradition. pected to join. publican stand that ‘“‘we will not big job to be undertaken at St, birthday, mourning “always a talked and talked and things began te jell. So, if they just ground at the warehouse's loading Polles in. Tenmeesce and cur. Presser retail stations to lower touch the veterans trust fund with-| (Continued’on Page 2, Col. 6) | bridesmaid, never a bride.” keep on talking .. .” , (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) | sounding states continued their ag eae ee gallon, out the use (sales) tax.” — * — . ; manhunt for Roy C, Hicks, 36, pmapsruathe p Racy b pbararyees “We won't want to use the * . e : . » a business associate of Lassiter. 33.9 cents for premium, Tice sat | Ae d. C f; d t C. f N Hicks was reported seen in Ross-|: eee ae Ss our compromise : ville, a small Georgia town just) The cuts were caused “omen AWeaS Confident as Conterence Nears 32222225 > 2 tsminoe x se as your . re nooga. dealers, according to Cash Haw- ise.’? ‘ —_ GENEVA W#—Big Four foreignjwarning on the Soviet Union that) ‘The Communists appeared in ajter Lothar Bolz said he was “fully West German Foreign Minister], {1° mous pe is wanted and has ~) ee ee ee. so “ahae ar Suk Leta rapes ministers were headed here today|the United States wants “‘business-| confident mood, and Western dip-|of optimism.” Heinrich von Brentano is due Sun-|ticers said. , Before Friday, their were of your own so that we can accept a onary Seeibiath aman cate _ se nee aes _ & Propa-| iomatic sources ‘were rather pes-|50-MAN DELEGATION day. * * * fouf cents a gallon me es cost or reject ther.” opening Monday on Berlin, Ger- , simistic, Western sources Cau-| This is the first time the foreign] [Italian Foreign Minister Gtu- | potectives Charles ‘Leaf of the, maior dealers. faa Williams, backing a combination| many and European security. | TOS!TIVE SOLUTION tioned against raising high hopes|.inisters of the two German| Seppe Pella and the Polish and | pontiac Post and Calvin Lepien personal income and corporate pro- ‘. @cak Stepping from a gleaming white|for success of the conference. | states have attended a big East-| Czech foreign ministers are com- |o/ the Redford Post, to whom Nash, fits tax, had agreed to “reassess” turboprop plane at the head of a e ee lw 7 ing to Geneva, too, confessed Nash back ¢. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei est parley _—— In Tod Pe eee om Mn releate. the 43iGromyko was the firstvof the Big) ty cir norcrtine tac. the|,, They Pointed to prospects of con- arrived with a Soman del- | It is expected if the Soviets in-|to Detroit. “ - . ays ees at come dard oe ee _. Pag meer rng gy rae at the on such rou-| .,Uncn'in's sleek electric. atx. (sist on including such Communist Hicks and Richard Jones, 29, of a reach Geneva. ; ention outset curities to solve the cash’ emer-| U.S. Secretary of State Chris. |ference are a peace treaty with|ime Matters as agenda and Pro) coach train of the East German |states as Poland and Cuechoslo-/Rossvilie, were named as ace nee ’ t i him| ttam A. Herter flew into Bonn and liquidatidn of the|°Cre- railways. It had received special vakia that the West will counter! P slaying. Church News .....erniiase 88 von. / ’ : today, ¢m route to Geneva, tor {Allied occupation in Berlin. British Foreign Secretary Sel- | clearance to travel across West by demanding . for Italy at}. Nash and Jones worked ' for 2 oo ne ae soreecereeees SB j & meeting with Chancellor Kon: | - “11 is tor 9 positive solution of | "7" Loyd, the Inst of the Big | Germany. the conference : Lassiter a8 drivers of care de- | 5 yo ae: «<4 1960 Pontiac, power syferin & brakes.| T8d Adenauer. Herter said the | 1... tampertent questions that | Four, ts not.coming until Sunday | tH. precise role—if any—of the wwe mrad © ee Obituaries ........... redie ond hester,. sbie wall tores, 600| West is aa agreement ° | the Soviet delegation has arrived morning, Bast and West Germans at the) If the Soviets reject the West's, Jones is being held in the _ epee proposals te carry Geneya- * here,” he said. “Our intentions | The East German Communists| conference is one of the first things|package plan—as they are expect-|nooga City Jail . oP ) Said, Want The} French Foreign Minister Couve) are\serious, We shall make every | were set to get here before the|to be brought up, along with pos-|ed to—the Allies may run into dif-/of bond for of a Teutn?, We show: ponest ciscqunts ride: Murville was also due today,| effort for this conference to be |main participants. Leaving Ber-|sibly inviting other outsiders tojficulties on reaching undnimity on| degree murder. He said he , Bart... 1 8 Gtemew. » t Herter has’ served advance’ crowned with success, lin, East German Foreign Minis-|take part, a fall-back position. fight extradifion, : Women’s Pages "( AR a : 4 / ; | a . « lige 39 ’ | . ou 7 of . , | (ae ‘es , ‘ j yleae cr. - : a , Ss | iA , Tere Says ' | \__ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 9, 1959 ~ Sage: PLAN UNITED FUND DRIVE—Reviewing figures before the final session of the Michigan United Fund Admissions and Budget Committee are (from left) Fred V. Haggard, vice president of the Board of Trustees of the Po ntiac Area United Fund; Robert Ss. Nelson, chairman of the Budget Steering Committee; Mrs. Palmer G. Bundy of Davisburg, and Mrs. Donald White, 1958 Women's Division a Area United Fund. , | Sir Winston Visiting | To Sew Up Services - OldFriend Baruch ‘Air Buttonhole Plans NEW YORK (AP), — Financier | Bernard Baruch has a _ distin-) tinguished guest visiting him—Sir| Winston Churchill. : The 84year-old former British| prime minister arrived Friday| from Washington to spend a quiet| time with his old friend. Baruch} is 8&8, The two have known each other} for 41 years Baruch's Manhattan home is at! 4 East 66th St., just off Central} Park East Chilly, Fair; West Wet; Small Tornado Strikes iy. The Associated Press Showefs and’ thynderstorms “soaked wide areas of the West to- day while fair and generally cool weathér prevaued over much of the East A small tornado destroyed farm outbuildings near Arch, in east- “ern New Mexico, Friday night and the storm activity continued into -today, soaking portions of Okla- homa with more than 2 inches of rain Thunderstorms rumbled "Colorado and New Mexico east- ward into Missouri and Arkansas. Stcrmy weather was on tap from Minnesota and South Dakota into northern Texas High winds and hail accompa- nied heavy rains in parts of Okla- homa and Kansas. Oklahoma City was washed with a 2.49-inch rain during the night. Hobart, Okla., had 1.57 inches and Lawton 1.13. In Kansas, inch rain 2 County Men Salina measured a one-| Scattered snows fell over high-| WASHINGTON (UPI)—Defense planners are toying with a new scheme for unifying the buttonholes. This move was disclosed today in testimony made public | Armed Forces: standardized by a House appropriations subcommittee. The project isn’t sewed up yet. But officials of the agency which buys military uniforms told the subcommittee that buttonholes may be one of the ardize. next items they will stard- Presumably they feel the Armed Forces have too many shapes and sizes of buttonhol es, boosting uniform costs. Not missing any bets, the agency said it also was consider- ing whether to standardize mili tary buttons. Critically Hurt | | | | in Avon Twp.; Other One Struck by Auto Mision yesterday commended a Oakland County sheriff's deputy for Water Safety Earns Praise for Area Deputy at + State UF Wants $3,238,657 in ‘59 50 Die in Nile Sinking Boat Capsizes Most Victims Women and Children; Nassar Rushes to Scene CAIRO, Egypt (AP) — Divers and navy frogmen today recov- ered 40 more bodies from the sunken hulk of the riverboat Dan- dara, which capsized Friday with a holiday picnic crowd of about 300 persons aboard. These were in addition to 10 bodies found Friday night. Police said at least 95 persons still are unaccounted for, placing the prob- able toll at nearly 150. * x * The victims, mostly women and children, drowned when the heav- ily loaded craft sprang a leak and sank about six yards offshore. Most of the victims were trapped beneath decks amid wild confu- sion, The tragedy occurred as the 200-ton, double-decker craft, char- tered by the Agricultural Engi- neers’ Assn..-neared the Nile del- ta picnic grounds about eight miles north of Cairo. 100 SAVED Police estimated 100 were saved but the number lost may never be known for the outing tickets were sold in family blocks. Whole fami- lies drowned together. . A government communique gave no clue to the cause of the disaster. Agricultural Minister Sayed Marei described it as “a human and economic tragedy because those drowned include the best of our agricultural engineers.” *x * * One of the first to reach the scene was President Gamal Ab- | Goal Set After Hearing | Requests of 33 Agencies, in East Lansing * iset $3,238,657 as its tentative| |target during annual fund-raising | jcampaigns throughout the state this fall, it was announced today.| One of the rescued was Ahmed The goal was set after hearings \in East Lansing earlier this week, | \at which requests of 33 state and del Nasser of the United Arab Re- ‘public, who personally directed | the rescue of some passengers struggling in the water. HEADED FOR PICNIC The Dandara was headed for The Michigan United Fund ha8|Garden Park, a famed picnic. at the Nile Delta Bar- rage (dam) eight miles down- stream from Cairo. Talaat, secretary of the agricul- tural engineers syndicate which organized the excursion for the national health and community! Moslem Friday Sabbath. \services were aired. | Attending wére 250 leaders from 132 communities, |representing the | United Fund. They were Fred V, Haggard, vice president of the board of trustees: Robert S. Nelson, chair- Pon The Michigan Water Safety Com-'man of the budget steering com- n Mittee; Mrs. Donald White, 1958 women's division chairman; Owen O'Neill; Karl W. Bradley, execu- work which reduced water deaths tive directory and Robert Langer, in Car Crash Two Oakland County men were s. ion the critical list at Pontiac Gen-| aid. Deputy Donald Kratt, director of Various 14 per cent, Commission chairman assistant director. George E. Clay of Grand Rapids’ Last year, the Pontiac Area United Fund raised $52,985 for the agencies and services feral Hospital today as a result of the Sheriff's Department safety di- which the Michigan United Fund isheriff's deputies reported. | They are Clifford D. Marquette, 's 31, of 3115 Shedlowsky St., Inde- pendence Township, and Francis! (C. McCabe, 28, of 821 Gibson St., Oxford. Marquette suffered head in- | | juries and multiple cuts when | struck by an auto driven by Wil- | | iam D. Engstrom, 24, of 3381 | | Donley St., Aven Township, at 12:01 a.m, today. | | ion in a meetin gat Lansing. Kratt was appointed by Sheriff Frank W. Irons last summer to develop and direct the Oakland | water patrol program after Irons decided that a force of special deputies on area lakes was a necessity M drownings and beat- ing accidents were to be cut down. from|traffic accidents, Oakland County vision, outlined the local Water aids. |safety program for the Commis- Iraq to Make Hospital of Adventist’s Public BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — The Ministry of Health announced to- day that it will requisition the Seventh Day Adventists $500,000 Dar es Salaam Hospital in Bagh- dad and make it a public insti- |tution. The Commission yesterday; The hospital operated by Amer- Marquette was walking across|Praised Irons’ foresight and Kratt ican missionaries, is the most “er elevations of northern Colora- Auburn road about 75 feet east for the many hours of work he put modern in the country and pro- do. where Leadville had a 2-inch of Churchill road, Auburn Heights,/in to formulate an effective pro-jvides medical care for a large snow blanket |when he was hit. Showers also dampened the Pa-| He staggered on to the road and |boat owners on safety. cific Northwest but were general- ly on the light side Northern New England shivered in early morning temperatures in the 30s. Readings in the 40s chilled the Great Lakes and Middle At- lantic sections while the 50s were tommbdn in the Midwest x *«* * The Weather ‘ Full U. S$. Weather Bureau Repor + PONTIAC AND VICINITY — P cleudy and a little warmer teday. High today 7@ Winds seutheast te south 12-18 ~miles. Mostly cleudy with showers te- night and temerrow Lew tenight 62 High temorrew 8° Winds diminishing somewhat tenight t artly Dewntewn Temperatures 45 10 QTR .e- sane 0) 63 6 eo Today in Pentiac " Lowest temperature precéding 8 am 45 At 8 am. Wind velocity 10-15 mph Direction: Southeast Sun sets Saturday at 740 p m. Gun rises Sunday at §:16 am Moon sets Gaturday at 9 21 pm Moon rises Sunday at 7:24 am Friday in Pontiac e fas recorded downtown) ighest temperature .. west temperature Mean temperature Weather—Sunny One Year Age in Pontiac Highest temperature ae Lowest temperature ...... Mean temperature .. Weather—Sunny Highest and Léewest Temperatures Date in 87 Years 90 in 1896 31 in 1947 | Friday's Temperature Chart Alpena $1 43 Memphis 81 63 Beltimore 71 48 Miami Beach 80 173 ‘Bismarck 69 47 Milwaukee 58 40 Brownsville $85 72 Minneapolis 66 52 Chicago 65-46 New York 68 48 Cincinnati 70 60 Omaha 65 452 Cleveland 88 38 Pellston so 46 Denver 56. 40 Phoenix 90 «663 Detroit 60 41 «Pittsbureh 62 41 Duluth 4 47 «Bb, Louis oe Gr. Rapids 63 38 8. Francisco 58 51 ton 62 41 & Ste. Marie 60 37 Jacksonville 96 73 Tray. City “+ Kaneas City 68 55 Washington 73 52 *Lansing 63 3 Seattle 58 46 Los Angeles 76 57 Tampa 86 670 Marquette 4 “6 } gram, train the men and educate|percentage of the foreign commu- ‘nity, in addition to Iraqis. including five! Another a deca Moneim Mekky, saved his 6-year- | tac Area oi4 daughter Magda but his wife | * Dr. * * survivor, Abdel land three other children drowned. | Dr. Mekky, tm describing the confusion as the small boat be- gan sinking, said he saved @ woman who he mistakenly was his wife. Swansons fo Handle Tickets for Dems Southfield Mayor Donald L. iSwanson and Mrs. Swanson have |been appointed district ticket co- ichairmen for the Democratic |Party’s May 23 Jetferson-Jackson |Day Dinner to be held in Detroit. | * * * Massachusetts Sen. John F. Ken- Inedy will be featured speaker at ithe Saturday dinner to be held at the Light Guard Armory. * * a Coordinating ticket sales for the affair in this area along with the Swansons will be Willis M. Brew- er, David Utley, Otis Lawrence and Leslie H. Hudson. Tickets will be $25 for a single I couldn't avoid hitting kim,” Eng-| jstrom told deputies. The driver) was not held. | McCabe suffered head, face, a} jhand injuries yesterday when his | auto went out of control on Pontiac street north of Drahner road, Ox- | |ford Township. | Ais car travelled 111 feet after | jleaving the road, sheared a utility | |pole in half and smashed into.a jtree, deputies said. Bickering Continues to Stall Jobless Pay | LANSING (UPI)—Another week | 5 of bickering has failed to produce | action on a jobless pay bill and| distribution of 160,000 unemploy- |ment compensation checks totaling |moré than $600,000 will be held up iat least until next week. Sen. John P. Smeekens (R-Cold- | water) said his Senate Labor Com- | mittee had a ‘“‘a most disappoint- ling meeting’ yesterday with ad- ministration officials. * «\* Smeekens claimed Gov. G. Men-| nen Williams’ office had promised | 7 to supply some proposed amend- ments to the jobless bill that has | | been bottled up in committee since’ tit passed the House. Smeekens said Alfred B. Fitt, | Williams’ legal aide, came to the meeting ‘“‘without any concrete or constructive suggestions whatso-| ever.”’ Files Filings Bill | LANSING Sen. Glyde Geer-| lings (R-Molland) has filed a bill). requiring county boards of equals zation to give detailed accounts of their filings | ¢ VISIT- SENATOR HART—Four Pontiac area safety patrol leaders met U. S. Senator Philip A. Hart at_his office in Washington, D. C., yes- terday and made-him an honorary Michigan From left, next to Hart, are Pavid Flanigan, 158 Northwood St., Rochester, of North Hill) Elementary School; DavidgHerald, 175 Wall St., Pontiac, of McConnell School; Terry safety .patrolier, Miller, répresénting Waterford %. SCHOOL School in Troy. morrow from a D rally. Township's Wil- liams Lake School, and Joel Burkland, Union guests of the Automobile Club of Michigan at the 23rd AAA National Safety Patrol Rally. One. hundred from Michigan were among the 35,000 patrollers from United States and Canada at -the person and $35 a couple. Pe The boys will return home to- four-day trip to Washington as 6 Yards Offshore’ Mom of 11 Children Amazes With Vigor of miles away for food and enter- tainment after graduatidn exercises June 15. ’ They decided to bring in Fred Netting’s name band. and vocalist Janie Palmer for a dance at 11 p.m, Then, at 3 a.m. in the morn- ing, when appetities are ravishing, the women will serve a huge break- had plenty of experience serving bre for many — early — so she jumped to her feet and volunteered to head the affair. The project is underway. In her spare time; Mrs, Brink- er, who Is a graduate beautician, gives permanents, sets and cuts not only her six giris’ hair, but has at least 10 steady relative- friend-customers, She gives expert brush cuts to three of her boys. The two oldes — and husband Ed — have grad- uated to the barber shops, how- ever, she says. : TWO CELEBRATIONS Today, yard furniture,the out- Some 40 people are attend the open house, |her husband taking charge of all, cooking outside, it looks as if Rose- | mary will enjoy a well earned ‘‘Mother’s Day.” fi Micky Left Too Soon SOUTHBOURNE, England (UPI)}—The Royal Society for Animals announced that a black cat named Micky escaped from a dog and cat hospital a few hours before the will of his late owner, Mrs. Susan Thompson, was read. The will left Micky 4 The Day in Birmingham \ Not Causing BIRMINGHAM — “Don’t blame yt A a spray for all the in April was $470 to buildings only. No contents were damaged. x * The department answered 54 , 37 of which were fires. Newly elected officers for the He was owner and president of Reed Plating Co., Detroit, and a member of the American Legion, Zion Lodge 1 F&AM, the Shrine, the Detroit Consistory and the Moslem Patrol. * * * $1,400. } Surviving ere his wife, Grace; Forester Says Tree S pray Bird Deaths dead hine; .a. stepson, Robert ; .& "« <-¢ . three brothers and two grandchil- City forester Charles Gale ex-| dren. ’ plained thip sintemens ween. be +said that the ann ® ing the spray used fo combet Duren BOY ACmits Arson = ee ee Balti Fj cane tha clty Foretry asa {HM Daltimore Fire Parks Department has done a . great deal of checking to find’an | {Continued From Page One) effective and safe spray. Audu- (platform. And he was playing with bon Society reports have been | matches. ee ae a Te ee ee “least dangerous to 4 some paper on a ; Sprays used on lawns sad and spread to a nearby stack of to kill naples peda ds mene Aaa used for handling deadly to birds but seldom blamed, according to Gale. He tried to put out the fire by * * * ee ee ee eee Insects carrying the sprays on rages oy ag end their bodies and worms eaten par- ery! ony agar ticularly by robins can kill the] netesed arrival birds. Natural seeds and other bird engines. foods also can be fatal, he ex-| Then he came down and hung plained. ee Gale concluded by saying the |". "boy ‘lives. about two miles SS SS an from the warehouse. He is a ward hand in Dutch of the Welfare Department. battle. His 80-year-old foster father, Compared to many communities, |with whom he stays, reported him missing at 3 a.m ‘8 of Our H-Bombs Would Finish You’ e ¢ Nikita Hurls War Threat at Germany | LONDON (AP) — Moscow Ra-! jdio said today that Soviet Pre- | mier Khrushchev told visiting West German editors eight hydro- gen bombs would be enough to put West Germany out of action. The broadcast quoted Khrush- ichev as saying “obviously not lmore’’ would be needed to take ‘care of the rest of western Eu- rope. Moscow reported the talks be- tween the Soviet Premier and the| German delegation took place on| Tuesday. . * * ly wiped off the face He said NATO’s bomber force was out of date and the United States also was lagging behind the Soviet Union in rocket technology. State to Share in Surplus Foods Dept. of Agriculture to Release Stockpiled Farm Products Under fire by Congressmen Wil- liam S. Broomfield (R-Oakland County) and other lawmakers in Washington for its stockpiling of tion?" The radio reported this ex- change took place with the edi- tors: Khrushchev: ‘‘You probably realize how many nuclear bombs with a capacity of three to five million tons would have to be ex- ploded on the territory of West Germany to put her out of ac- * * * Editor G. Braune, one of the |would end quickly in a Soviet vic- group: “Eight hydrogen bombs?” |tory. in Hillsdale Cites Drunk Driving ' Deaths LANSING @—The death of four ~ 2 J 3 iy file H ie THE PONTIAC /PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 9, 1959 Installs New Officers DAR Meets for Program “Music in Spring’ was the | Walking,” by Margaret Apple ; Reports of the DAR Conti- fp £6 Glew ag al ea boree ington, D. C. ane gan ie eae panied by Mrs. Joseph Ben | Mrs. Echtinaw, Mrs. Harry i Mr | aet e | taps ene Peterson of West Iroquois road. oe a ae H. H. ee eS es * * © Shuart of Rochester was wel- | ing and chaplain, Mrs. Eldon New officers installed were comed as a new member. Gardner installed new officers. Mrs, Lisle Echtinaw, regent; om od Clark, ugh, oN: his, oat Alen worane | T FaVerse City Mother of 4 . rs. le ) a . v7] Benjamin, carresponding see: | Te “Mrs, Michigan — 1959 oes Dr. rive jibes DETROIT ™ — “Mrs. Mrs. Stokes’ children are Shelly, rseaicg Mrs. Max Michigan — 1959” is a brown- Patricia, 11; Thomas, 9; and well Doerr, librarian: Mrs. eyed, brunette mother of four | Nancy, 5. E. C. Huthwaite and Ora Hal- | children whose favorite house- | ~ ek * hold task is cleaning and cook- | ing. — Mrs. Elizabeth H. Stokes is, the 37-year-old, 5-foot-5 wife of Traverse City surgeon, Dr. G, Edward Stokes. baum, Mrs. Homer Osmun, ’~ & *& E. B. Wallace, Mra Bradley | , MF8 Stokes, a college grad. L. Scott and Miss Clark preetd uate, was picked from 13 final- man of the committee. Mrs. | ists yesterday for the “Mrs. W. H. O’Laughlin presided at Michigan# crown and the right the tea table. to represent the state in the , “Mrs. America’’ contest June .. * 11-23 at Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Mrs, Roland Gegoux was in « * * Sica atmo nes | Fe tone ee it her on the basis of good groom- ing, baking, cooking, table setting, character, poise per- sonality, and outside activities. In addition to the crown, Mrs. Stokes won $2,000 in prizes and) an all-expense-trip for twe to the national contest. Auxiliary to Meet The Auxiliary of St. Joseph Hospital will meet at 11 a.m. Monday in the audi- Epsilon Unit Holds Installation Officers were installed when Epsilon Chapter of Alpha Delta! Kappa Sorority met at the home of | Mrs. H. A. Mitchell on Lansdowne | secretary, and , corresponding Mrs. Mildred! Smith, treasurer. | signed with the natural —_ ae | and feminine look so im- Plans were made to attend she saga this spring. Black Alpha Delta Kappa state dinner, S@tin with a large, button |May 22 at Devon Gables. _~ jin the pleats at either side of the| is ‘chiffon, It's magic, presented as only, Length Harvey Berin knows how! At its) Nape of | . | Sizes Bust. Waist Hips Neck to |best in sheers over an opaque} . ” 2 Inches Waist lining, it is handled ‘with the ut | M4 ss So 38 16.4 ae ~ J 6 most simplicity, the main detail) 14 36%) 26% 37tg TS 8 28 39 17h 40 1749] \skirt that are almost on the bias.) Size 12 requires 6 yards of 42) |This treatment gives beautiful inch material for dress and 2%| |motior to the skirt, as well as an Yards of 39 inch material for lin- expensive look. |ing. . ; Make it in organdy, silk or rayon| To order*Pattern No. 1376, state bemberg sheer, voile, | Size, send $1.00. For HARVEY ofganza over a lining of china silk/BERIN label, send 2c. For % ‘or rayon taffeta and scatter some Page Pattern Book No. 15, send |flowers or embroidery medallions. | $1.00. (If what you're in the market for is) Address SPADEA, Box 55, ja simple black dress, this is it —|G.P.0., Dept. P4, New York 1, lin silk or rayon crepe, silk or rayon N.Y. If paid by check, bank re-| |Jersey. quires 4c handling charge. _ From this chart select the one; (Next week look for an American) lsize best for you. Designer Pattern by BRIGANCE). Mrs. Madden Entertains Alpha Delta Kappa Group Mrs. Alton Madden entertained| parliamentarian; Mrs. Extiine, | members of Zeta Chapter of Al-| printing; Mrs. Marjorie Cotter- pha Delta Kappa Sorority at her| man, social, assisted by Shiricy home on Square Lake road Thurs-| Friendly and Mrs. Gilbert Glea- day evening. Mrs. Elmer Thorpe| sen; Mrs. Borsvold, bylaws, as- assisted the hostess. sisted by Miss Donelson and Mrs. Mrs. Eugene Carey, president,| Frances Sauers. announced the following commit-| Mrs. Carey was named delegate | tees: Mrs. Donald MeLean, pub- to the International Convention to a -_ ee ‘Mrs jbe held Aug. 912 in Miami, Fla.,| ed by Helen Voss, Mrs. Royal 4 Hotel Deauville. Alternates are! |Exline, Mrs. George TurnBull III Betty Halsey and Mrs. Borsvold. | |and Dorothy Hensel. * *«* * | ~ *& ® | Following the business meeting, | | Mrs. Sam Hale is chairman of x9 and Mrs. Madden showed films| ithe altruistic committee, assisted | New Styles Dependent on Details. fd PARIS (NEA)—Now that the fanfare of the Paris collec- tions is ended, it’s time to take a closer look at the de- tails of the new fashions. For these details do much to make up the whole picture. There is much discussion about the widened shoulder line. Actually, this is a line achieved by expert cutting and seaming rather than padding. And it hasn’t thé remotest connection with the sharp Joan Crawford look of the 1930s. So don't start reaching for those foam rubber shoulder pads; you won't need them. The waistline. as we all know, is back to normal. But it isn’t a dull normal. Belts range from the very narrow to the ultra-wide obi or the shaped corselet belt. They're done in leather as well as self-fabric. — ‘ Blouses are worn every hour of the day and on to midnight. Many repeat the gay print of a suit jacket lining. Others are done Gibson Girl style but there are sleeveless blouses, too, in tucked chiffon or or- gandie. Mature women get a break with the flattering new neck- lines. There are soft, draped fichus, draped cowl collars and pleated berthas, all of them flattering and all stressing the wider shoulder lines. Hat and shoes in the same floral print are shown for wear with a simple solid color dress or suit..And necklaces of the bib variety, from three to 10 strands, are shown as fill-in for deep necklines. Some are fake pearls in pink, black or smoked shades and some are mixtures of pearls and crys- tals. Zeta Eta Dinner Held Tuesday Zeta Eta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority held its 12th annual mother-and-daugh- ter dinner Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. William Deb- niak on Longworth drive. Mrs. Clyle Haskill gave a welcoming speech. Program for the evening was Mrs. Charles Wheeler's demonstra- tion of decorating a Mother's Day cake. Past Noble Grands of Rebekah Meet The Past Noble Grands Club of Rebekah Lodge met this . morning at the home of Mrs. Don Bussard on Clinton River drive. Mrs. Zetta Timpson, treas- urer of the Rebekah Assembly of Michigan, was a guest when 35 members of Pontiac Re- bekah Lodge No. 450 enter- tained at a cooperative din- ner. The affair was held Friday at Malta Hall. by Mrs. Arthur O'Neil and Gayle of their recent Alaskan tour. | Hullinger. | Other committee heads and as- | sistants include: Mrs. Ruth | Wright, bends; Mrs. George Robbins, courtesy; Mrs. Gordon | Paul, telephone, assisted by Pa- Jones and Mrs. Walter | . Mrs. John Borsvold, | | Pontiac area students at Uni- | | accents the waistline. Try Cream By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN | may well promote the growth This Gan Make Lashes Lush versity of Michigan were among undergraduates hon- ored for outstanding scholastic achievement at the 36th an- nual Honors Convocation held this morning at the University. They are Thomas W. Cross, son of Mr. and Mrs. Milo J. Cross of North Hammond drive, junior honors in the col- lege of engineering; Frederick | , frame, your weight should be | | | ii. Area Students at U. of M. | Win Scholastic Honors Colgate street, freshmian hon- ors in the school of nursing. Others are Charles D. Mc- Laughlin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J: McLaughlin of Mo- hawk road, sophomore honors in libera] arts; Constantine J. Sousanis, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Sousanis ‘of Mohawk road, sophomore honors in liberal arts; Donald P, Tate, son of Otis P. Tate of Pontiac Lake 4 MAKE: (WER. Pages. oe SEVEN - Mate’s Viewpoint. ’ By RUTH MILLETT marriages— If more wives took pride in the |job of homemaking instead of con- |sidering their daily routine as pure If more husbands noticed and | commented on their wives’ tempts to make their homes a tine tractive, their cookjng imagina- | "UUM®- tive, their entertaining easy and} | pleasant. If wives understood that a man — |.can be just as tied to an office | as a woman can be to a house | and children. Just because a man j leaves home every morning | | doesn’t mean he is necessarily going out into a fascinating world | of adventure. If husbands realized that wives who are tied down al] day oc- sponsibility for at- | Pegarding If wives paid attention~to their | There would be more happy / husbands’ ideas on bringing up |the children, instead of thinking , they know it all because they've read a few books by ‘‘experts.”’ | If more husbands accepted re- ibility ki teci their children instead of t. | taking the easy, ‘'go ask Mother’’ Need Another GUEST ROOM SAVOY sai Seeatier = MOTEL need to have an occasional eve- ning out that is as carefree as a) date. If husbands tried to understand their wives instead of dismissing the feminine viewpoint with, “There's no understanding the way a womah's mind works.”’ If women sat down and fig- ured out the real needs of their | families instead of wanting everything their neighbors have. | If men treated their wives like business partners instead of treat-, ing them like financial lame brains. | Guest e Fully Carpeted FREE Returning Home Mrs. A. Scott Topp of La- fayette stneet is returning Sat- urday to her home after a | month's stay in William Beau- | mont Hospital, Royal surgery. Single... .$7 Twin. .$11 Oak, Tiled Bath — Shower Restful Double Beds ‘ Double Kitchenettes. .$12 where she underwent major |? 220 S. Telegraph Rd. To Accommodate Your Out-of-Town TV — HI - FI MUSIC Continental Breakfast Air-Conditioned Sound-Prooled FREE ICE @ | (15020 FL). FREE 1-DAY MONDAY THRU FRIDAY POST RENTAL For Loose Rugs. There Is No Substitute for Cleaning Here’s What You've Been Waiting for! WALL-TO-WALL CARPETING DRY CLEANED by Wonderful New STAR-HOST Process PICKUP. in Our Modern, Efficient Plant NEW WAY RUG and CARPET CLEANERS FE 2-7132 42 WISNER ST. Rug and Carpet Cleaning EXCLUSIVELY for 30 Years SAVE 50% Rental price tmeledes the easy-to-use, unique Star-Host electric truth and eneugh Star-Hest cleaning compound fer 306 sq. Mf. ef carpeting DELIVERY AND = $1295 Waich Channel 8 at 10:15 A. M. — Sunday, June 7 See ‘TODAY'S CHIROPRACTOR’ A presentation of leading metropolitan clinics to create wider public understanding of chiropractic. The Season’s Most Important Permanent Wave Value! (The Friday Question Box) of the lashes. The use of a little | about 125 pounds. Printed directions on each pat-) 9.1. there cream which| sh brush is helpful tor the | et . D. Gibson, son of Mr. and | road, freshman honors in the tern part. Easier, accurate. any w | Q. “I have a problem with fat will make the eyelashes grow?” same’ reason. Mrs. John F. Gibson of Osce- college of engineering, and Send fifty cents in coins for this Q. “I am 15 Id, 5 f \legs. My legs just have no shape; ola road, sophomore honors in Thomas H. Westerdale, son of pattern — add 10 cents for each| A. There are creams on the | *: m 15 years oid, eetlat all. Is there any exercise I the school of liberal arts; De- the John C. Westerdales of pattern for 1st-class mailing. Send| market which make this claim. (tall and weigh 125 pounds. MY|\uiq take? I am very self-con-| lores A. Gustavson, daughter | Union Lake road, sophomore ee ee ae I have not had personal experi- |measurements are bust 35, waist cho-t ¢ of the Carl Gustavsons of East honors in liberal arts. Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 ence with them. However, I do 26 and hips 36 inches. I think = ~ - West 17th St.. New York 11, N.Y.| thimk that the stimulation which | ' . A. If you have straight up Print plainly Name, Address with| your lids pet from the gentle || SPould lose at least 15 pounds) saq down legs this is usually a K Y H = need to-lose weight. Who do you, little to be done. However, if , \ 4 MONDAYS cae is right? My sister's weight | aed calves are pipers can | Modern With Clean \\ turspays BUDGET SPECIALS [ext meen: 2 the! Si Scmise "tle on tne teor | Drapes and Slipcovers , — on your back, legs straight, arms One’ way to a neat and “Newly Decorated ~) a c Oil | A. Are you sure that you are | Testing in the floor at your sides. J Look’’ is through Gresham. We can take dull at N Teme just & feet taf? if so, you | Lift the left leg up as far as and worn looking drapes and slipcovers and . |} should lose some weight. Even | Comfortable, knee stiff. Pull or clean them to hew brightness and life. ‘ | if you have a very heavy | point your left toe back toward S and Finger Wave | trame you should jose at tenst 19 | Your head. Lower leg. Do the Here’s STORAGE that’s | pounds. Do this slowly in a sen- | same thing with your right leg. easy . . . THRIFTY, too! $] 75 } sible way. Eat smaller portions | Continue, alternating id | amd cut out in-between snacks | Q “What is the best time of $ * | _ _ has oe much Jday to do exercises? I have heard| Ler U HAIRCUT ! os ree tountale iat they make the figure much} é : prettier if they are done. the first x $] 50 Styl F Q. ye ele = thing in the morning.” e le = ° “ A. The time of day has noth. U weigh 134 pounds. I am not large| ) “ ARMENTS FOR YO “4 mend i ing to do with it. Take your ex- WINTER G : | Super Permanent | ane de re Maa , SEND | A. If you have a ent for you. PER > EVERYTHING: you should weigh about | Tomorrow: ‘‘Wardrobe, Too, $495. snamroo | 138 pounds. If you have a small |Needs To Be Well-Groomed." 4 vena » Coats, Dresses, AND SET lereltiiiesanudene ier Thi inden | Jackets and . Inevrence protection vp to $280.00 Other Woe oolens 10.00 to $12.50 Creme Reg. as : PE ANENT eoeese $7.50 Incledes Cutting. Oil Creme Shampoo, end Style Wave Exclusive Sha and $2.50 “Where Service and Quality Are Supreme” No Appointment Needed! Service! 1 Immediate Open Mon. and Fri, ‘til 9 P.M, — Midre Beauty Salon | Studio Pose of the Bride Weddings are exciting! Be sute of having a serene pose. of yourself } as a bride. Call for an appointment when your gown is ready! a Pontiac Photographers Association ‘ % >. ROBINSON'S STUDIO re 4 * Ruren St. “244 605 OAKLAND. AVE. BRANCH—5—OAKHILL ne AND SHIRT LAUNDRY FE 4.2579 ‘ DIMITRI LaZAROFY SUTHERLAND STUDIO and Fleet, Peatioc State Bank Bldg. FE 9-9287 fj, ™ “™ oe x FOQUEVER STUDIO echoes Open Mendopsthen Seturday—7 A.M, te'9.PLM: 42 N. Saginaw St. * , Toe eee : 3 - ; ms = meee " 7 52 Neisners ‘Beauty Salon | 2nd Floor The coast to coast cele- brated cold wave at an exciti delay. Appointment not always needed, . °7.95 special price. Don’t F * 7 » - 4°) eo ‘¢ 1 wm »- aE 4 ‘ % : a 4 E : .% in lt a ee ee ee ee ee, ee ee ee ee ee) ee ee eS a ee a ae a) mE eee ee oe AE a ee ee EN 3 Million Polici to Be ‘Brain’s' Speed NEW YORK (UPI)—A new com- puter is being built that will go through more than three million health insurance contracts at least twice a day to find and handle! The computer, whiclf can at the rate of 40,000 pro P a minute, will go to work for me Cross in the metropolitan N York area. It is being built at the Minneapolis Honeywell's Data- matic plant in Boston. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 9, 1959 in Beach Slaying = Chicago Man Freed Hollywood Headlines Mouse Ears Droop Low S| CHICAGO (AP) ~ A jury which Death Knell Sounds * |deliberated nearly eight hours Fri |day acquitted 25-year-old Barry Cook of murdering a sunbathing spinster three years ago in a TONITE —LAST COMPLETE SHOW STARTS 10 P.M. North Side lakefront park. Judge Henry L, Burman |commented earlier in the day he} |would discharge the jury of five| |women-and-seven men if they had/ not decided a verdict by 3:30 p.m. (The verdict was reached at 3:15) and announced minutes later. Although the acquittal cleared Cook of the spyglass murder of Miss Margaret Gallagher, a 50- By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP) — So it's a time, at least? Walt Disney indicated this week | anyway. that the TV kid show will not re- jturn to the ABC network next fall. Mouse ears blossomed out on small fry all over the country when the afternoon show began four years ago. The MM club quickly became the daytime show year-old beauty operator, he is not/with the highest rating, and even 'a free man. He will be returned to} ithe tougher critics declared it was ‘prison Monday to serve the re-\a step forward in the quality of mainder of a 1] to 14-year sentence ifor admitted assaults and robber-| fies of women. TECHNIRAMA® 2 “* TECHNICOLOR® “AUNTIE MAME’ ogee h ANTE NAM cught 0 have —L-AWMERALD EXPRESS THEATRE SUNDAY 1 1 KE ECO : | | | 4 : | WannsrCo. oF , ROBIN HUGHES SUNDAY SHOWS START AT 1:05 3:50 - 6:30 - 9:05 LAST TIMES TONIGHT ‘Rally Round the Flag Boys’ ‘Old Man and the Sea’ s SAT. 3-UNIT SHOW DRIV THE WATERFORD E-IN THEATER FAMILY DRIVE-IN SAT. SHOW 9 a. = SUNDAY AVNTIE MAME’ NOMINATED | for 5 | ACADEMY AWARDS! “THE COMEDY OF THE YEAR! DELIGHTFUL, DAFFY AND DARING!” NY. JOURNALAMERKCAN jargued that there was a limited ‘younger crop. This year the show jwas cut to a half-hour, all re- | runs \parents who ask me why we don't ‘marked. ‘Nobody wants to put up idle” Castle. ‘Ron Randell. kid shows. * * * Then TV economics stepped in. Sponsors began dropping, It was) to the market in advertising “I've Kad complaints from make new shows,” Disney re- the money. I'd like to take them off the air and bring them back in three or four years, There would be anew audience then.’ * * * There is also a chance that “Zorro” will not be back for its third season. Sponsors are report- Pontiac Theaters jmake TV _ films, Oakland “Rio Bravo,’’ John Wayne, | Sat.: ed balking at the upper - for the series, “T’'d just as soon quit it,” had | goodbye Mickey Mouse Club, for | producer said. “I'd like to ho \Guy Williams in some “features, * * * ‘ “I think we could get along well with just the one series (‘Walt Disney presents’) on the air, You see, we were never in TV to make money.*We use it to advertise our other activities — theatrical - fea- (Says Senate | Too Chaotic Sen. Stennis Bemoans Noise, Confusion on Floor of Chamber WASHINGTON (AP)—Chaotic? The Senate of United States? So chaotic at times it’s almost unbearable, says Sen,- John Sten- nis (D-Miss). Noisy? Confused? Noise and confusion frequently grow so great it is impossible to tures and the Disneyland Park. Other studios like Warner Brothers have separate units to} the way they jused to make B pictures in the ‘old days. We're not geared that) \way.” Humphrey Asks U.S. 7-Year Plan WASHINGTON (® — Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn) proposed to- -|day that the United States imme- diately Jaunch a “grand design for peace — a seven-year plan of our own.” * * * One goal would be technical and economic aid to free peoples to|" cost at least 14 billion dollars, or 2 billions a year for 7 years. The need may~-last for decades,| -|Humphrey said. Other goals, he said, would be | winning a just and durable peace act in an atmosphere of intelli- gence, protested the quiet gentle- man from® Mississippi. * * * What can be done about it? Positive self-discipline, Stennis said Thursday. He took the floor | ito ask a halt to “the growing | trend toward more and more con- fusion and greater and greater disorder on the floor during Sen- ate sessions.” x * * For a more orderly atmosphere, Stennis suggested: Barring from the Senate cham- \ber employes who have no busi- iness there but who just hang around in —— . ere | | Hiring a full Seed presiding ofti- | jcer to maintain order when the| ny president is not there. Sten-| s assured the senators this pro-| |posal was not a reflection on Vice | ‘President Richard M. Nixon. Nix-| on’s services are needed in many | fields, he said. | Immediate backing came from | |several colleaues. | Sen. Prestott Bush (R-Conn)| Dean Martin, Ricky Nelson, color. | and realization of dignity, well- |.,iq the Stennis speech was long! \Coming Soon: Walt Disney. f Strand Sat.-Wed.: ‘‘Tempest,” Van Hef-| lin, Silvano Mangano, Viveca Lind- fors. Thurs.-Sat.: ‘‘Operation Dames,”’ Eve Meyer; ‘‘Tank Commandos,” ‘Wally Campo. Huron Theater Sat. May 9th ‘Bell Book & Can- James Stewart, Kim Novak. | Sun.-Fri.: ‘‘Auntie Mame’’, Rosi- land Russell. Eagle Theater “Invasion U.S.A.’ Pegzie “1,000 Years From Now” Sat.: Sun.-Tues.: ‘‘Sheriff of Fractured Jaw’’ Jane Mansfield. ‘‘Monster On the Campus” Arthur Franz. | Wed.-Fri.: ‘‘Rio Grande’? John Wayne, Maureen O'Hara, ‘Nice Little Bank That Should Be Robbed” Tom Ewell. Waterford Drivelin Theater Sat.: ‘Torpedo Run’”’ Glenn Ford “Party Girl” Robert Taylor ‘‘Ore- gon Passage’ John Ericson. Sun.-Thurs.: ‘‘Auntie Mame Rosiland Russell ‘‘Manhunt In The Jungle’’ Robin Hughes. ‘Shaggy Dog,”’ by| being, and equality of rights for | verdue. every American. Humphrey, in a keynote speech prepared for the 12th annual con- vention of the Americans for Dem-| ocratic Action, said the Soviets | had put this country on no-notice talism. * * * Humphrey said that Soviet Rus- sia is growing stronger - and there- |fore bolder. He said there is abundant evi- dence of what he “solid and substantia] perform- ance and plans of the Soviet ronan and the Soviet mili- ge spite of the President's sooth- ing words,"’ Humphrey added. “there are well-documented doubts about our military. strength, now ‘and in the future.” Ancient Egyptians loved orna- mental plants and flowers. Rames- */es the Great boasted that he had| furnished at least 19 million cere-| imonial bouquets to temples. TONITE---Last Complete Show Starts 10 P. M. “INVASION “1000 YEARS OF MAN-MONSTERI THE SHERIFF of F is a very funny CO-ED BEAUTY CAPTIVE ARTHUR FRANZ - JOANNA MOORE ..DSON PRATT. ——2ND BIG HIT!—— only for people who like to laugh! U.S.A.” Also FROM NOW” Starts SUNDAY termed the | | bomber which with the underside of one of | the other bombers. A row over the labor) bill during a recent night session, Bush sajd, made him ashamed of the Senate. * * * Senators often forget, said Sen. Thomas C. Hennings (D-Mo), that |with a seven-year plan in com- visitors in the galleries may “then | |munism's competition with capi-|just once in a difetime and then go back home and tell their | friends what the Senate is like. And Hennings agreed that too many Capito] employes wander in| and out in hopes of seeing ren J thing dramatic or a good sho “This is not a show—we hase! he added. One Dies, 5 Unhurt | as AF Jets Collide | | SHAW AIR FORCE BASE, S.C. | five others escaped injury near | | here Friday when two Air Force | Jet bombers collided. * * *® | One plane crashed in flames, | carrying its navigator, Capt. Ju- | Han T. Stewart, 32, of Miami, | Fla., to his death. The other | | limped back to base, its fuse- | lage severely damaged. Three RB66 twin-jet reconnais- | sance bombers were practicing formation routines at 11,500 feet. Eyewitnesses said a wing of the crashed collided | ) | Two crewmen ejected them- | selves as the plane caught fire and plunged toward the ground. | Capt. R. E. Weodworth of Fert | Bragg, Calif., the pilot, and Capt. d, F. Young of Lyon, Kan., the | Believe Release Near for Pilot Held by Reds FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) —Communist East Germany was believed today to be ready to re- lease an American civilian pilot it has detained for six weeks. e+ “t: ® Emory A: Vaughan, 32, of Ports- mouth, Va., was arrested by the East Germans when he strayed into their terri on a flight be- tween Mannhein and Neurnberg in West Germany on March 27, * * *x Today there were strong indica- tions Vaughan would be furnéed over to west probably within the next 24 hours. Australia leads the world in the production of wool. Day in Her Honor. Take awaits you in @ SECRET MEMO @ FOR DAD, SON AND DAUGHTER Surprise Mom Tomorrow, by Planning an Exciting Climax It With a Trip to a B ... Where Outstanding WIDE SCREEN Entertainment MAGNIFICENT TECHNICOLOR! Her Out to Dinner, and THEATRE “RIO BRAVO” IS THE BEST OUTDOOR PICTURE EVER MADE CANNOT BE COMPARED TO ANY WESTERN EVER SHOWN ON ANY SCREEN AT ANYTIME! y ors GIRLS Doc umentary co-pilot, parachuted to safety. * * * The third plane, with a crew Before the Burial |population. He downed his spade ja year ago when the parish coun- |cil trimmed his fee from 4 pounds and her last wish was to be buried jhere. said a member of the council. | Pounds and not a penny less.” of three unhurt, landed at the base but its landing gear and underside were badly damaged. Must Settle Strike OVERSTOWEY, England @ — Old Gerry Wyatt’s one-man strike looks like it will get results at last. Gerry, 69, is official gravedigger for this Somerset parish with ‘559 ($11.20) to 3 pounds 7 shillings 6 pence ($9.45) a grave. : * * * The result wag deadlock—be- cause nobody died. Now, however, a woman who used to live in the village is dead * * * The funeral is set for Monday.|> “It's put us in a bit of a fix,” Said Gerry: ‘I still want my 4 wvwvvvvvrvVv—7—7—7—7—7—70707V0V0707T7T7TVTVTV"VNVVY -Sunday! Doors Open 12:45 Feature at 1—305—5:20—7:30—9:35 OVERWHELMING AS THE ELEMENTS HEN SILVANA MANGANO-VIVECA LINDFORS - GEOFFREY HORNE ze Agdin the preducer of “War and Peace” creates a vast stery - ple living and leving— again a background eof an era's dying ... anether dawn- ing. rus» TECHNICOLOR wo TECHMRAMA® ; Starts Thurs.: “OPERATION DAMES”—“TANK COMMANDOS” ,wTuvueuvvvevevvuvuevevwyevwvevuvvuvuvevevevvvevvevvww*" rwwwvwvvvvvvvwvevwevwvuvwveeuvuvwvwrevwevwvwevevwuervwrvwvevwvwewweCeCT Ceo RACTURED JAW picture made DRIVE-IN THEATRE FA MA 43135 CARTOON FESTIVAL LAST COMPLETE SHOW STARTS . ACTUALLY PL MED AMONG THE MEAD-HUNTERS OF THE AMAZON! Seo This Amazing Softener Today at H. H. STANTON Heating & Plumbing Contractor 103 State FE 5-1683 HOUSE PAINT anercee: $-750 030s STAYS LONGER! ° @ gal. BROWN BROS. 704 W. Huren FE 8-9311 Ready Home for Big Drip Is your home ready for the ‘‘big drip?” ‘No, we're not ,talking about an extended visit from some boring relative or acquaintance. We mean the endless drips and drops that are coming with the massive ar- rival of wash-and-wear clothing, which last year accounted for estimated sales of $1.4 billion. According to one manufacturer of the material, 20 to 25 per cent of men's suits will soon be wash- and-wear. And, along with the suits, there will be more wash-and- wwear lingerie, shirts, skirts, blous- es, women’s suits, sweaters and sO on. Unless your laundry is prop- erly equipped, you may find that the convenience of not having to iron and press many articles of clothing is partly erased by not having a convenient place for wash-and-wear clothing to drip- dry. Use of a material such as ceramic tile on the floor of your drip-dry area would be an ideal and practical solution to this problem. i | | | } W. H. TOWNSEND CUSTOM BUILDER 65 HI-HILL DRIVE Pontiac “4 (M-24) ‘> Mile N. of Silver Bell FEderal 8-0803 | ALUMINUM AWNINGS 31” wipE $9.95 40” WIDE $14.95 Free Estimates—Any Size Alum. or Fibergias THINKING OF PAINTING? Get Our Prices First on ALUM. SIDING peal? wage A Can Afferd M New, = Lew As $12.60 Me. N Installed or in Steck fer De-It-Yeur- self. Free Estimates Elther Way. Alum. Storms—jJalousies Ornamental Iron in Stock J. L. VALLELY CO. “THE OLD RELIABLE PIONEERS” AUBURN & ROCHESTER ROADS Coll UL 2-4900 NOW Res. OL 1-6623 REVERSE CHARGES \visit indeed. WHITER: } State Named | building associations as a generat- ing force behind the movement of A ceramic tile floor with a drain to handle excessive dripping would ‘have a four-fold advantage: (1) Ceramic‘tile is impervious to water, and, therefore, cannot be damaged by this kind of use. (2) Ceramic tile is easily cleaned, so that your drip- dry area can be used for other purposes. (3) Ceramic tile needs no wax- ing or other protection. (4) Ceramic tile’ comes in | Practical Ranch Home many shapes and colors, so that it will fit right into any room. So, it looks as though the ‘‘big drip’ is coming to your house to) stay. If your floors are ready for) the reception, it can be a welcome} in Forecast of Building Boom. | Private and public building and) ‘remodeling—modernization will to-| ‘tal $73 billion in 1959, according to research studies by Building} | Supply News—leading building in- dustry dealer publication. Legis- lative action, population increases| tures, BSN’'s editors point out, ere , economic indicators that add up to) continued increases in the building, i industry. Gross _ estimate _ forecasts for! Forecasts show an over-all, - building market gain of 6 per) ‘cent, a residential market gain of to the family area. Or if you pre- - 5.5 per cent, non-residential gain of | 1.1 per cent, and a remodeling- | modernization gain of 10 per cent. the family area. J homes. ‘ADD to YOUR HOME... This HUGE ROOM with BATH Canale sserbied and finished. " Mahogany paneling, tile features in bath, fully wired, electric heat, full insulation. Storm windows and screens. “There Is No Substitute for Experience” OPEN DAILY 9:00 to 5:30 FINANCING UP TO 7 YEARS BOB’S BUILDING SERVICE INCORPORATED 207 W. MONTCALM At the flashing white light just east of Oakland A. Murray White i 4 FE 4.9544 te! te ah tee De it en a jthe house where it can be enjoyed jevery day. jmain foyer, hall, owner's bedroom mality is emphasized, with the din- 5 BEAUTIFUL BUT SQUND — house utilizes unique ideas for practical living along with some unusual features to put more This one-story ,.. . fun, leisure and color into your home. three bedrooms, 1! It has’ 2 baths. FLOOR PLAN — Upper foyer Most home buyers desire space for a garden — no matter how smal] — but here’s a switch on the idea: Bring the garden into t This. spacious, one-story plan calls for a roofed-over interior gar- den that can be viewed from the and dining room. There’s a walled- in exterior garden also. It’s one of several unusual fea- tures in a home designed for living in leisure. Designated X-57 im the House of the Week series of distinguished homes, it was produced by Architect Herman H. York. forgotten a practical floor | \plan that will provide comfortable, Study Plan Order Coupon }convient ne i ; {8 Send to The Pontiac Press, An upper foyer is the hub around § which all major rooms are lo-\8 _ Eniclosed is 35 cents in coin. ! cated. The house has three bed- 8 Please send me a copy of the rooms, one and a half baths, and ® pooogp Mh cag of ig ee of an unusual kitchen-family room aH == en & room arrangement. Infor-g No stamps accepted. Please |ing room opening in an open plan § ° ‘ fer, you could use a folding door 9 sea (please primi) ito separate the dining room from - (8 STREET ........... 000.0005 And here’s a factor Mom will : appreciate: She can supervise | JR: y Ore STATE....... the outdoor play area from either the kitchen or the family room. The large living room is traffic ample room for ing. And the raised located. toward one corner of the Soul, lsabian it geneible: Sie ec have variations in conversational groupings. The low entry features a flagstone floor and wrought iron} hub to all major rooms. Note that the interior to an outside dining terrace throug large sliding glass doors. Out here | you can have a barbecue grille! serves as the garden is visible kind of house will long remember, . , , . — “* Ad - oA » Tas — ‘ Fe ‘eet ost | Pe - 5 ca ‘a 2 | r : PLAY AREA : , tee es re Ee cs [ooo r? — or ; is ; 1 : oy ; — oon sLIo ORs. . 7 . on ce & ft WK FICH. FAMILY RM. BED RM. TT oe ’ on 4 ; Ues21° i4%* 17° = ve, = ow. me pt Sey a oe 43 i=" a é iy Serie oid | s1s vores uw —— LA < , ; z DINING RM. Nise 424... foe Fis Fe DINING qi°s45* tLe. Le . GARDEN vie os evreces = nh, o ? ’ bs 38 sanina —4 UPPER FOYER ; “ ers ‘~ 4 } > is 4 o ¥ ASSO MBARYM = ” -e . aanwe” , .* : ONE CAR LIVING RA. eee GARAGE itil “ 11%* 20° esnme—d FOY’ 11% 144 , f ae * 4 pas . - 4 . z . ~-s els le ry i: Xs? pret Ni Andee patna Fo" ag a aT te from foyer, hall, main bedroom and dining room. tance provides for a sweeping vista Built-in Garden Beautifies: visible from the living room only f It's an impressive visitors is de- ifty feet away. that your yet signed for practicality. The dining room opens directly | hj hat’s convenient to the kitchen. | It's the answer for outdoor fun at home — yet this and the other terraces enjoy complete privacy. A door is provided, inciden- The exterior bears this out. On one side of the main en- trance, for example, there is a ; large nine-light window surround- ed by brick. The same brick | appears in a planter which wraps itself around the the entrance steps. The other walis are finished in other side of | Nature Gives Cl to Color Schemes | A city-dweller with a flare for decorating” revealed recently her ‘formula for choosing the colors iwhich decorate her home's inte- ‘rior, ‘I just refer to the flowers | with “which Nature has provided lus, ’’ she told a questioner. She had | used a calla lily for the inspira | tion guiding her ‘bedroom decer. | “The white of the flower was used for the ceiling,’’ she said. The ;pale green of the stem for the j}paint on the walls and woodwork | Deep green of the leaves supplied the color for the carpeting. Pale | yellow of the upholstery and dra- iperies and dull gold accessories lwere suggested by the center of |the lily.” | White Venetian blinds at the windows and antiqued white furni- | ture completed what has proved a |most soothing and satisfactory -.Il- | or plan. Ice Replaces Jacks To lower a heavy vault or other iweighty object flush to a floor, jinsert blocks of ice before re- |moving jacks. As the ice melts, ispeeded by fans if necessary, the heavy object settles evenly into Stretching Lumber A New Orleans company, His- gins Industries, Inc., has devel oped @ machine for stretching }um- ber. The process in no way affects the strength or durability of wood, spokesmen for the firm report PEDY-BILT «, GARAGES CUSTOM BUILT--- TWENTY-ONE e Made by TRIMVIEW of California ® ALODINE FINISHED ALUMINUM © SCHLEGEL WOODPILE LEATHER STRIPPING @ SINGLE GLAZED OR INSULATED CLASS © EASY INSTALLATION BY YOU OR US Call Distributors FE 2-0252 West Detroit Glass + roNTiAc 715 Auburn Avenue DEALERSHIPS OPEN Means Guaranteed rkmanship and Materials SPECIAL PRICES NOW IN EFFECT lock @ Brick @ Frame ii Our business is building garages that fulfill the needs of COMPLETE MODERNIZATION PROGRAM ur be @ Recreation Beoms @ Breeseways @ Perches @ Reefing @ Siding tally, for easy access to the 7—“ batten boards. en from the dining terrace side you'll have an efficient “‘U”’ shaped kitchen for easier cook- ing chores. The master bedroom is arranged.the house, where they are readily} as a separate suite with a won- available. derful view of the interior garden. | The designer has, as in several previous House of the Week plans, | emphasizing beauty, York\again used a planted wall here do not use sticky tape on coins. wana da mananansaseand hundreds of to achieve an impression of space at the approach to the garden. | The other two bedrooms are com. | pletely private with a split bath room and dual lavatories. ;wood shingles and vertical wood | Phe roof features asphalt | shingles in a light color, but the architect suggests wood shingles would add to the appearance of The house | square feet of floor area in the 205 square feet for the base- A | ment recreation room. You must | add an additional 235 square iV feet for the garage. Overall dimensions are 68'8" length and 41'4"' in depth. in 7 Popular Tool Comes rin Pocket Size One of the most popular tools - Bin recent years has been a sur- @ faee-forming implement that can § be used on wood, metal and plas- tic. One type comes in the shape of a file, another in the shape of ga plane. The face of the tool has individual - fine - cut} teeth, with outlets so that the chips | clear themselves. The latest addition to this line is’ a “pocket’’ Version, only five and one-half inches long. Handy for | putting in the pocket of a work |apron or trousers, it can be used contains 1,710 | first floor, with an additional — meneeneecein oer SEE family while keeping price in mind. We have a list of specifica- tions for a good garage which we suggest you use in your dis- cussions when getting competitive bids. Send for it today. with no obligation, for it will quickly en- -able you to detect a good builder from a production builder. Free Estimates FHA TERMS Cement Work Pedy-Bilt Garage Co. BUILDERS OF FINE GARAGES 7722 Austere, Waterford OR 3-5619 If No Answer, Call OR 3-2360 i. ae STEP | custom RAILING ' For a Step in Beauty CHECK THESE FEATURES: Free Estimates — We Deliver Anywhere! UP TO 42S @ One-Piece Construction @ Permanent Beavty—Rugged © dependability @ FHA Specifications @ Strong Reinforced Casting © Aveid Messy Instelletion Me 4 Safety Tread Reduces Slipping Q. FT. OF PORCH SPACE ee hearth fireplace| BOTANICAL GARDEN The focal point of the main foy-| for trimming doors and windows, er is the beautiful, roofed over|sticky drawers, model making and interior garden which gives an at-|many other jobs around the house mosphere of a botanical garden.!and shop. A fish pond and lily pad pool) against a brick wall in the dis-|Conn. are the manufacturers. Stanley Tools of New Britain, | » CONCRETE STEP COMPANY 6497 Highland Rd. (M-59) OR 3-7715 FULL INCLUDES PRICE LOT Excellent FHA Mortgages available family room* farm kitchen*built-ins full basement * 2-car garage Open Daily and Sunday 1 to 8 P.M. "furnished by BETTER HOME INTERIORS The Houseman Spitzley Corporation has developed over 300 fine subdivisions since 1914. Pa a OR ee eS Oe a See es ee Oe FULL LAKE PRIVILEGES 1400 sq. ft. of living space $20,000 Belalcueip-s@ualal a Phone FE 8-133] _—*e-*e* “<-«*« ee eee hm + £4 6+ «eee eo © « & & 2 ee ee eee 8 f ' _ ere er ewe -yee Oe eee ee eee ee " | poe 2 re” 2 bee a a iment, tae op hey ee Ee ee ee ge Ty Boe Va a ee Soe PE ts ae Des a THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 9, 1088. | Southfield OES Death Notices |—“2~ Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas jit: Entertain sees mes | BREESE | Evelyn on ap 7s LL Rhodes, bath of Flint and wtrs(rand Officers Hd pacrel umaebeaert| Machine Operators ‘wail eal ein CE PRUD 4 JOSEPH FERRE , both o rs. é be anne u ih le ra-Ortttin Pu spain Save spines ofS see eu ee Ed ; qd / Service for Clarence Prude, 55.) AVON TOWNSHIP—Joseph Fer-|Nina Reed of Venice, Fla.; ‘two! coiyryFrELD—Southfield Chap- i Ho yu le cee ee ee “ TYE OP PaaS . war ' of 86 Houston St. wilf be held atirell, 59, of 3879 Auburn Rd. was| brothers; a sister, eight grand-|.. 519 Os, will entertain grand ust have ref. MA 5-7878. . Must be to Liberad . | dren and nine andc PACE, MAY 7, 1959, BERTHA MAB. hospitalisation & pension| YOl ‘ED OR 11 a.m. Monday at the William F./dead on arrival at St. Joseph children great-gr hil- officers at 8 p.m. tonight in a spe- 60 Chamberlain, age 82; ae ‘ply employment of. ps oot de ‘iat Panargey v Davis Funeral Home Mith burial | Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, early this | dren. cial program at Birmingham Ma- —— a Pleyd | (Gerteades fice service and m ance, Use of a type, in Oak Hill Cemetery, ‘morning following several weeks . a ' Sect 'nass) aad Charlee Pace;| “V0 Detroit, BMichigen. a See. Se whe tel oo on ‘Yee | & 8 sonic aia le. also survived by 7 ce ta mornings. ___ lic, Ty Mr. Prude has }een a_ self-|iliness. ) h FI h * + @ great-grandchildren, curate "Fa employed mechanic _/ | Funeral arrangements are being eat $ Sew ere Included : the program will be geank-eren’ arg aural Burr oughs . _Help Want: Wanted Fei Female 7 7 Must be single. /his w imade by the Moore Chapel of ; Richard Fisher, grand: soloist; Page ce tare be al Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Au-| MIDLAND \—Charles Penhali-|Mrs, Sally Wallace, grand organ- Cleveland, Qhio;/ five grandchil- burn Heights. igen, Dow Chemical Co. auditor|ist; Russel Monroe, grand worthy | dren, and four sisters. MRS. CHARLES FREESE | since 1941, died of a heart attack patron; and dancers Sue Rose- Mr. Prude died Tuesday at ‘Pon- fie * - lyesterday in the Dow Hospital at)berry, Betty Seibert and Laurel | Mr. } LAPEER — Service for Mrs. Freeport, Texas, the company said/ Stebbins, | 1, at 1 pm. from the Sparks- C H WHEN hares. RECHPTION i, with interment in orporation A WEEKLY PAY, WHE Cosmetics Mt Proportional 1s } Mariette Rg Mar — a Start at once. Information, FE © Ariug Gundinghat wit.grtene i : a a ness’ building. Mrs. Pace will lie in state at the ALL AROUND MACHINIST RE-|4 MATURE WOMAN FOR HOUSE- ful boss and a ~_Sperks-Griffin Funera] Home. | quired for ex ental work. De|* heepe r ond pe with illness. No fits. Aged 18-38) No short- _— is ~~ not apply wi less than 7 yrs fa: Replies to Pontiac -hand. $275. / exp. all phases of ng org? _Press ; / tiac General Hospita) after an ill-; Charles ie) Freese PRUDE, MAY 5, 1959, CLARENCE, 3 j * ty pail * ‘ aoe Charles (Jennie) Freese, 78, . 25) today, He was 58. * * x oe Houston ens cae Gk baicoee Whitams Research Corp ig oe BEAUTY OPERATOR far g thir A patic otzeist ss of three Mays. Wilder Rd., will be held at 2:30) Elizabeth Warwick, worthy ma- buchen of ig. nnie Prude; call roe near Walled Tole | Full time sume exp. necessary You will Be fo the publicity: } ear father o Comptometer rence Prude Jr.; — Sey Good salary. Csl) im person, dear brother of Missouri, Turner. |CANDID PHOTOORAPHER. PART. [oor "Beliiy Shop, main floor, SePartment/ Comptometer p.m. Sunday at Muir Brothers Fu-| SALISBURY, England (AP) .—\tron of the local chapter, reports! ; ILLIAMS neral Home, Burial wil] follow in| Richard Chipperfield, 84, ancient i toure, Duller Agusta Robinson| ‘ime. Speed graphic knowledge Riker Bidg helpful byt - , MRS. ADA WILLIAMS — 2 jas Pei \master of 4g otis’ who wes the meeting will be open to the and Saddie Fields; also suvived | Write A BOOKKEEPER PREFERABLY) Must be! atiractive. wind The body of Mrs. Ada Williams, | Stiles Cemetery. . public. Mrs. Margaret Larkins and by five Sag ergs = cg be CAB DIVERS 25 OR OLDER. insurance enperiante. Com- under 28/years of age. $250 | Mrs. Freese died Thursday at) known as old Mr. Chips, died Fri-| rs Harry Henderson are in ay os Menten. a : -plete knowledge rial keeping | y who died ‘Thursday at St. Joseph ll, at 13 Ai ree the Allies CARETAKER HAVE OPENING) procedure, _ through ee da) STENO /for purchasing de- » H ed i rin Mercy Hospital after a. brief j}i-| Lapeer County General Hospital, |day. e started in the circus & | charge of refreshments. R y. Davis Venerol Rome ae: for middieage’ couple to care and negtily _ Aston 7 Lee t of a large manu- bak 2 ness, is at the William F- Davis/follewing a short illness. at 5 and soon learned most of the ter-| for apt bldg Man must be able company. Aged ment in Hill Cemetery. Mr. 9-1870 f Fu 1 Hom Surviving are three sons, Hugh abilities of a circus performer. ; 5 Prude will Iie in state at the - 40" ordinay repairs. a hed aaee Lincoln 9-1870 for! Willi 46, of 622 S. San-| N daar: am a rs East lA resident Mrs. ee : \of Lapeer: three daughters, Mrs. | Chipperfield family has been in i 8 wpm Top William F. Davis Puneral Home’ of unfu Ref ul Writ after noon Sunday. Pontiac "hice Sen 87. giving Oprerie we, iY atta iad det a——e— ford ps oe ny cer a |Ruby Butcher and Mrs. Marcella, the circus more than three cen- Will | l| Offi : | cst tries. il Install Officers ADRIAN (—Adrian’s fire chief, | MRS. ARTHUR WOODARD | ; Service » for Mrs Arthur) News i in Brief | Jack Hawley, 60, a former vice _ORION TOWNSHIP — Mrs, Wil- (Beatrice) Woodard, 39, of 277 ‘president of the Michigan Fire/liam Porter, president of the East 7 Hughes ee | Harry Kiser, 48, of 84 W. Flint Chiefs Assn., died Friday of lung|Oakland Area Parent . Teacher q je in_2 day! WILLIA BEAUTY OPERATOR DRAYTON L JAMS MAY 1, PO geo legpen tens ORIVERS WANTED WITH LATE| Piains-Waterford ares. Call OR Da gaat ig, re Pais model Tandem trucks to baul| 43-5080 or OR 33381 after 7 p at young thing just out of Joe Wesby, Wesby, Char- ready-mix rete Apply aft | le Wesby and Ann Prieson. Mrs.| ¢rnoona i waka BD! BEAUTY OPERATOR TO MANAGE) fears experience. Must be Williams will be shipped to Ben-| —* 30 x. or rent shop. 714 W. Huron. /abarp and type 50 wpm: tonia, Miss. for funeral service} EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE | CURB GIRLS. NEAT APPEARIN / Shorthand 100 wpm. is and interment. Mrs. Williams wil]; salesman. — Lege le | Apply A&W, 991 halieta: aight / . ; ““first-rung-of-the-lad- tie s state ted pega F.| Realty 412 FE 4-4526 anit. / Ger’ job. $275. vis Puneral Home after noon! xp PORD~ MECHANIC. YDEAL ; / Sunday. fag OE ag BS I sace Gamkaet CASE WORKER _ BOOKKEEPER -SECRETARY = Grane ye y at Tom Bobr, For children's agency. Good sal — Must have heavy book - ‘ Hughes St., will be held at 2 p.m. ’ nated : : | : As P : v sn, Council, will install new of- Monday st the William F. Davis <1 Lake Orion. Paid a tine icciAdrien’ ire Department for 40|icers of the Proper Elementary WOODWARD, MAY 7. 1858, EA-|_Inc. 130-8 Main, Milford. | a1 New offices Retirement. 67)/ keeping, experiance Good Funeral Home with burial in Oak plus costs a P & hool PTA du iia accd ts OF aves, nan cdra: eer AUTO PARTS) desired. Write Pontiac Pry ss| gal or real estate back- ; guilty to a drunk driving charge | years, Se A ring group’s dear mother of Minnie Alice| Clerk for new and rebuilt parts.| Box 11¢ ground helpful. Must be sl aii b ‘Friday before Orion Township Jus-| 8 p.m, meeting Monday at the Reece poy norm B. Johnsen; dear rer (a none PR $1061. 313 COLORED GIRL Te TO. Live aN, ‘OE teen ‘eae bie ‘of polec. S a: > Lib- S . . " ar i is J d Mi 40 or Site was 8 PaCrAner — tice Helmar G. Stanaback. ADRIAN w—Earl J. Christmas, | | school, Weoby. ° Penerd pa aged Baldwin Avenue. _| and. cookine. ildren i6 ru 9 $450. erty Baptist Church. 67, who was an insurance man in * * * held Monday, May 11, at 2 p.m.|/ExXPERIENCED AUTO- PARTS | months. PE 4 {___| KEEPER 10 use a Surviving are her husband; two. Mrs, Agnes Burns, of 3337 Laco Lansing and Adrian for 45 years, Olficers to be installed include: i the Wiliam F.- eck = ay eure? & Sunday, CLEAR UP Tacee “BILLY NOW! Ley wee pu ae siecal i daughters, Mrs. Minnie A. Reece Dr., Waterford Township, reported died Friday of heart disease. | Mrs. William Morrow, president; Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs, Wood. | EXPERIENCED MARRIED MAN time, cap ‘earn regulgf "check company, is willing to start of Pontiac and Mrs. Addie B. to Oakland County sheriff's depu- 'Mrs. John Graves, vice president: want et dete sane ar the. fer Dairy farm werk. Must be| et elpagag lan Ry For ep out @ girl and promote Johnson of Yazoo City, Miss.; ties today that someone stole her | K Si val William FP. Davis Funeral Home. capable of some repair and main- _polntment call PE 2 rapidly. $300. ; aal a ak Local Nav Man Mrs. Keith Siegwart, recording sec- tenance. Phone: PLateau 2-2269, | —Pomtment Oat | three brothers; and a sister. 14-foot plywood boat from the rear y tary; M Bob ‘ Coley Dale Parms, Romeo, Mich.|COOK - HOUSEKEEPE PBX OPERATOR to ect as Mrs. Woodard, who died Thurs- of her home oemarys mee. Cooper, eect | | ee, ones ee wt pave own| Receptionist i na hospital : pond and — transportat on -323 e. __| ust tactfu] and sympa- day after an illness of two years, | Dons the "Gi ay ing secretary, Mrs. Jac | The Pontiac Press — - CLASS LIGHT SERVICE CE CHILD CARE GHT HOUSE | thetic with a pleasant man- was a sister of Mrs. Ada W illiams| Inventory Reduction Sale. Want) Lewandowski, treasurer. roo gpg A gp i work. $15 wk is aed ner Loads of young. hand- ? * * * DISH WASHER EVENING : _ who died the say day at St. Joseph The Truth? We show honest dis- in Musket Match FOR WANT ADS j) 22°72 person to Bervice coy wert “Stil Dixy Hey. Drayton, 1 Mercy Hospital. ‘counts on each car window. Bill| Others are Mrs. James Parsons, Woodward. Birmingham” — = HAIR STYLIST for « shop | —— ~ Spence Rambler, 211 S. Saginaw) 4 jocal Navy recruiter is whoop-|Mother vice president; Don Schu- DIAL FE 2-8181 GARDENER NEEDED. sie| that handles @ descriminat- (ADVERTISEMENT ot og chg@ol Aav.|; . his cond oof h the|macher, father vice president; _ for glo wages. Non-drink- | aon clientele 3, years ex- The Board of Education o e ac ing it up this weekend wit e r, ; From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. er. 1 uburn —. = a ee District of the City of Pontiac, Micifi- gan will receive yore! proot stair. Maynard Jot n Insurance is! motto, an d Co. now associated with Austin Norvell | | muskets, boys, the South Shall Rise “Save your Confederate|Mrs. Harold Young, teacher vice sreaithad, kad ire, Richard Schad: Hardware Salesmen } ' All errors should be re i | por established socal firm. Write WAITRESS in an exclusive . | in | nearby restaurant. Only the Elementary Schools ' ler, historian Pontiac Press Box 18, stating age, Sealed Bids will be received and Ptine(Insurance Agency located at 70 W, Again : —a . ‘s « «* fo Rigg gag MS : experience, address & i finest Fg: eee y a Good ‘ Board of Education. 40 Patterson Street, Lawrence at Cass Adv.|_In fact. Quartermaster Cli Gailbraith will also show than to cancel the charges | |1P YOU ARE WILLING TO WORK ee ee eee eee Pontiac, Michigan at 2 PM. on Thurs- 'Frank A. Limpert of the Pontiac; inton th will also Ww for that perticn of the first pate prosrac, ge gegen FE «fei? | NURSES AILe — Must be rtion vertise- ~ ee experience ave own Gav. May 21. 1959 Bell’s Farm Produce, Opdyke at N avyRecruiting Station is help-|slides on Michigan, following re- Bidders will be required to furnish satisfactory Performance, Labor and Featherstone Rd. Mother's Day ling the South to rise again as fresd nts served by the ex Material Bonds in the full amount of the plants and annual] flowers plants| |a “Confederate” in the Annual tive board. inse ment which has been ren to right a) Dn for appoint- EX “ei WAITRESS WTD transportation. $195. Gered valueless th the ment. FE OR/ 30328 When cancellations IMPORTED c = SALESMAN — a ge WHITE WOMAN. EVELYN EDWARDS error. ere made be sure to get Walled Lake area. MA ¢1331. | of -—yF as ——— VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE c and vegetable plants. —Adv. “Al Bids submitted shali remain firm g P | Qualifying Musket Match at Fort your “rill pcumber.” Ne IP YOU ARE LOOKING FOR udah Lake. PEs for a period of 30 oe ie 4 or Certified, Rummage Sale—Saturday, Vet- | iLee.. Va 'H Bad! Dam d ra om ai wil be given work, I have a nice clean busi- Exp. teat | —OUR a LOCATION — xs a mount ‘of 3’: of the erans’ Hall, 371 E. Pike, Rebeccas| : Frome y age ness for you. FE 5-0736 after 5 / 971 W. Huron Fae EAST HURON auensl af the Bid must accompany each 450. Adv. Limpert, who has been with the b R M . Clostag time for advertise _P.m. : /ExP aur < GIRLS WTD. CALL “SUITE « FE 4-0586 Bid submitted ‘local recruiting staff since lastiDy Romeo Mystery Fire ments containing type sizes § |MARRIED MAN FOR DAIRY, UL 2 —_ nei AS nee Geciticatienk for the above : ; larger Ahan regular agate farm work. Yearly employment tx © OTHERS WwW eee an ee nt tne office of the. AAA Driver Training School. ‘59 September, took his family along 0 i Woe ie 12 e’clock noon the House, electricity. hot wate. "need io 4 aggro — pans oat ork Wanted Male — Jo Arcnitect wm. C. Zimmermann As- Cars. Insured. FE 5-5201. Adv. the event ROMEO — Fire of undetermined e ‘ay previous to publication. milk furn. STillwell 1-0526 | after n. ae an Tavera. soctates, 831 W Huron Street. Pontiac , “ origin yesterday afternoon caused | NOTICE TO MAN TO WORK 65 HOURS PER __Waterfor 4-1 PAINTING AND WALL Pa- Michiean. and also will Lg = sad a He first joined the Confeder-| | day soi? pisbiace ene who won't —— _pering FE 26721 ;_iconsiderable damage the two- ADVERTISERS ‘| GENERAL HOUSEWORK RK LIVE he Detroit Offices of ” f ttend age to | 88 ranteed Pl ation and Builders’ uaa treache jacy” last August after atte ing | « ily home of M Sarah L. The deadline for cancells- | uart call FE r yant'? Fuller am IN. Love children. MA O4107._ _{8-1 PAINTER, INTERIOR aNd Exchanee. amefa rices u lone of the colorful matches at/@miy home ol Nirs. sara Yan of Gessiont Want Ade f | |GIRL_ WANTED TO LIVE IN,| exterior Hens PE C602 Tite Board of Education reserves the Greenfield Village sponsored by \Horner, 128 Benjamin St., Romeo ubliestion after the first | = more for home than wages Care|.) CARPENTER WORK. NEW right to reject any or gil bids, and to hae h-South ae Ay i | police reported today. ecrteen, | {EN XN NE E DE |B peel 2 children. Apply 1 Emer. and repair. PE ¢4210 | f lith th rein } ort ut rmis Assoc | - waive “Board of Education to Meet Imports he The Romeo Fire Dept. fought the Xv CASB WANT 4D RATES | FoR / ‘HOUSE EWIVES & GIRLS | ot paInTina INTERIOR & EX- ee ane a rent Michigan , ‘ blaze more than an hour before , oe os We need several young ladies to 43.3753 eh _— Rees. OR of WALTER GODSELL. Secretary | In full Confederate. uniform, | bringing it unde trol. a ee tee eee Tl WAYNE complete our sales staff saiery are ot OO ON : ecr oes : . under contro sieht ay aad , ‘ AVAILABLE NOW CARPENTER May 9. 16.1959 ANN ARBOR (®—The Argus) tin ‘ ¥ ng 3 $150 «662.06 «66312 9) plus benus. Choose your hours 2 ’ ‘igi ia Elec-| rt will be “‘shooting for The fire apparently started in 1.50 287 = 4.50 3 Gay Only requirement| 288 eguiost work. Hew and se Sa - Cameras Division of Sylvania Elec- i : apparenlly a 3 yy re OAKLAND ours a day req it. D. H. Murdock. FE 2-761. 15d Bute Fe Se aeeias sartzazas. tric Products today trimmed 35) the 15th Virginia Cavalry, Con- (downstairs front bedroom. No es- 250) 450 670 | vesce Por ‘appointment = “Miss Saoanaeen ALL TAXES Gale to be held May 12, 1959 at 1030 millimeter camera prices to fight| federate Military Team. He (timate of loss has been determined, ° 3 4 +4 MACOMB | Waters PE 3-7 EMpire 32416 Poot ag ea State Bank Bide, foreign competition. | hopes to attend several ‘‘skir- according to Fire Chief Walter a 200 720 «11.04 INSURANCE. FIRE ONDER WRIT: baa MAKER. FHA TERMS. tiac ch. : , a er perienc D 3650 . May Sand 9 1059 A rpus dropped the list price of mishes” scheduled this summer. (Werth. rt ry ese fl LIVIXGSTONE commercial & all other fire lines. | CARPENTER 8 CABINET WORK. 3514557-20 ie BALE a.C3 camera 29 per cent, from! From. the musket match this| . COUNTIES Reply. sent Steen & 38768 . At 9:00 am. on May 21. 1939 » 1955/ $59.95 to $39.95. |weekend, Limpert will tour sev- Married 27 Times, Dies | im confidence. Write Pos ee erena JABINET MAKER AND CARPen- Ford Thunderbird Seria] No 9f ori 183388) P ident Clinton H. Ha de- jeral famous Civil War battlefields, | . O . . | Local age Wane Mi oor oh Bos 45000 specialty. ward Ave. Perndals. Michigan, That ad-| srnad the meve as a “reli up a Appomattox, the scene) BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) FOR CASF INA each of the above omtion Peek ica a8 heer game pb | CARPENTER WORE OF Mane mate r ‘ le ed | _ . . . | ion entails contec wholesale Must lik Geriatric App! a wry after Sata & Wipe Se" Neel Cp aleeven™ amor to foreign [Of Lee's surrender: He plans to} “A Yugosiay marital record bold HURRY, stID things, Hipit Geet pcrmtulya'is| Hie hatte ate Wp bm PEESOR ts competition which he said was | sal . * g portant than exp Permanent posi- — sain ood LicexsED A tata | Limpert, who lives at 1737 En- Sredoje Goluskin, from northern through Classified Ads.| ton Complete training program LAWNS RAkED —vERTILIEED 1 3334874-19 a major problem to American PUBLIC SALE With $650 per month draw bon- aa | ™~ r \terprise St., Royal Oak, has spent|/Serbia, had been married 27 ic Wak “Gace cor a ce bon: | OPPORTUNITY wetied. ren eens an oe FE 28302 18. 198 oss, Manufacturers. . . “5 pee arise erat oe. OaPCIRSal| — most of his 13 years in the sub-\times, Belgrade newspapers. re- Anything goes! Dial FE) abie sr. Toler 2975 Mapi will be sold at public sale a: 22500 Wood-| The price of the Argus Match-| marine service. lported, | Wsminghem, 1% miles east of por capable woman, to do cooking RPIER ex? ; Coo! ODD JOBS WANTED LAWN ward Ave. Ferndale, Michigan. thsti Matic C3 kit was fixed at $64.95 -- 2-818). | 121 te 4 Monday only 0 * °\00d Nght housework in pleasent wry “clean up and light. hauling address 1ere e ehicl is i sai - * stored and may be inspected or 13 per cent below the $74.95 in- | _ PRODUCTS _ c ss aus wid LaexeTo~ SPRAY POR . 9 2 ; > . < © Ld . s miv q——__ 1 **_® troduction price a year ago. = Security for You DRAFTSMAN — reed “riling Guaranteed. agtie 3080030-30 “The C3 now will be fully com- 2 BOX RIPLIES PREPERRABLY EXPERIENCED IN mn ree awit sy = eno or wick At 10 a.m. Today there | | sense GPEC” One day off each week plus no mess FE 846429 Cost less. fae alternate Sundays WA w : mere, eplies Tne Press | 18 mnaianeood Ra." Late Orin (fous cleaned "Pree eat Fe Pais office lollowing Seger aaa x , _=* Part Time Salesmen sisi WINDOW WASHER aa ane * ’ | Por establishe@ hardware firm . Excellent wages inside. FE 8-43) | Write Pontiac Press Box 30 stat. i ae YOUNG ~ MAN” wairte SENAY mg age. experience, ress and ‘ 4 vouwe A & odd jobs. PE 5-0008 1, 5, 7, 24, 20, 25, 28, || phone number. YOUNG MAN WITR COLLEGE . At 900 am on Mae Ir 1959 2 1957, Petitive with similar foreign cam-| s s Ford Fairlane 2 Qr Serial Number\eras and lower in price than any| ; 1 t . CTFT130056 will be sold st public sale) American manufactured 35 milli-| a | QC f Q IS ef fgan, that address being where the*meter camera with built-in range | ! 8 stor be { ted . vehicle is stored and may be Ar enig e \finder,”” Harris said. | j | By RAY HENRY From Mrs. M.W. of Knoxville, Tenn.: “For the past year, [| I have been doing house work and baby sitting for a work- L AZELLE AGENCY Inc ing mother. She pays me $10 a week. I want to pay Social | ® ||) Security tax on this money so that I'll be entitled to draw }}, Payments when I get too old to work. Where can I get in- formation about how to pay the tax?” You can get the forms and instructions by writing to the nearest Internal Revenue Service office. Any post office can give you the address. gf loving heart had ceased to = in our new office, weekend In city near bus line FE 4-2903 From 0.M. of Jefferson, Ohio: “A friend of mine | ) Relore we knew you were gone| Pusinesa “ae cigeiat gts SALESLADY | use RED OTR DiaInEs cay 31, 32, 56, 61, 67, 80, 89, Real Estate Sales |REPINED, SINCERE WIDOW 38 TO, degree. experienced in varied motherless home. 1 child _ lines seeking better position 96, 100, 103. EXPANDING OFFICE goed pertioutses t6 Pemtion Prons| . rise Pontiac Press. Bor 6 NEEDS MAN WITH . : =e SALES BACK- a Work Wanted Female 11 n Memoriam 2} GROUND. WILL Sows bonturting Se tote nl DAY TRONTNG 1 REVERENCES, IN LOVING MEMORY oF oUR} TRAIN. R. J. (DICK) gee ere ee ee ay Ino nos ar be Hickvon, who passed: away May) VALUET. 345 OAK-; | flothes Geod par Good working ____FE_2.1488 you bid us not — _ LAND AVE, FE 5-0693. | Sees he "5 4 6. coaward, fare | ing an pee Ral Rg i Nor said goodby to ~REAL ESTATE SALESMAN = BABYSITTING. DAY. NIGHT OR All Forms of Insurance tells me that the survivors of war veterans may receive ell egg mae ee Thoroughly experienced) “work. Px 8 some money from the government toward a veteran's cal “wetepessh Peace be Ta Prospects. Also will consider part, and well qualif-ed to sell CONVALESCENT CARE AND LIGHT me salesmen. Apply in person | , | housework. 1 adult. Ref. live in. -|| burial expense. Is this right?” better dresses. Bo Badly missed by her Family | x 25. Pontiac Press Yes. The Veterans Administration will pay up to $250 Funeral Directors 4 HAGSTROM APPLY IN PERSON: ‘COLORED © WOMAN DESIRES 504 Pontiac State Bank aay: ° FE .. 8172 toward a war veteran’s burial expenses or cremation, pro- | | ~ . Pp oy’ s plus fare References FE Boiss . COATS | Real Estate Service “BB. * DAY WORK WANTED 3 OR 6 viding the veteran was discharged under other than dishon- | orable conditions from his military service. | fPUNERAL HOMF ee ee eee days a week, own transporta- °} “| pRBALTORs TELEPHONE SOLICITORS, ALSO tion’ references FE 2.1043 * * * From G.H.S. of Englewood, NJ.: “In a recent column,,. Orayton Plains R_3-775% 4900 land Ra iMSe) | girl with car for delivery. Salary +0358 E you said that a person could collect Social Security after reaching 72 no matter how much he earned from work. I was 72 in December, but didn’t apply for Social Security because I didn't know I was eligible. Can I now apply and get back payments? My earnings for this year will be around $5,000.” You should immediately apply for payments for Janu- * ary through April. The Social Sécurity law allows the. pay- ment of up to 12 months of back payments. . IR RES ~ ot geese eo 2 ee, creer sere es ape SS eT: Pontiac. fich Ph. OR and commission. Avply, at 20% — Donelson-Johns RESTAURANT MANAGER. GOOD) Lewrence, room je a.m. to 4 $46 hours. No Sundays. Good salary |_ p.m. 6 days per ' *vesk. GIRL peal Ae OR PUNERAL HOME plus commission. Insurance cover-| WTD.: i, GALESLapyY. TAT ONCE | ated Trans. necessary. Ref. re “Des! for funerals” age. Vacations & retirement plan. | 66 a Le A r CHAPEL | See Mr. Berg. Neisner's. 42 N. warraies WTD. RIGHTS ONLY | HOUSEWORK WANTED FiRst ry FE 2-584) Fhoughitwl_Service Mn ad uale's Restaurant. Lake Ori-| part of wk. 1 or 2 days FE Voorhees-Sivle| wAbESMAN 28 - 50 | ce eatsa~ wAxres—sUnNDara| eh easr vine Tate, Chast Momerte Aqsoste- ing? Capable, mature experienced i off, e ced. Central Bar, 12 FUNERAL HOME ell ope cong Me = Public] @ saginaw Bt. woman will care for your chil- ambulscce bersice Pane or Motor | Dot necessary You will AITRESS & KITCHEN HELP| fp Ena on: ee See ag She fully trained, Earnings with bo-| Ponting Leke Ina. + should average over $800 WANTED TELEPHONE CANVAS. RONINOS, Pics UP AND DE- Cemetery Lots $ Per month Subs‘antial drawing) sers 4 hours da Calling from iver ve tat | Acvoun (or tiret 2 months, while ethos. balary LADY DESIRES DAY WORK. i) downtown arene. Gor sgoccesey. 203 &. peed io rT) ‘—- 1 CHOICE 4 GRAVE LOT IN OAK. | _Lineoin. Royal Oak Sppeintment call Fe ¢eetl be. LA } DY wie 3%; WORK OR fees Hill Memorial Cemetery 'siRVICE STATION ATTERDENT tween 9:30 and 5 pm | baby sitting. References FE 4-6305. and mechanic Sunoco ex 8-2565 + | Wa NTED: WHITE WOMAN TO ¢ LOTS IN OAKLAND HILLS ME-| preferred 27700 y Telegraph, Ra. Rd. care for children. PE 2-2370 be- MOTHER WOULD LIKE TO KEFP morial Gardens, FE 2-7585. _Northwestern rie fore 10 a.m. or after 9 p.m. children in home. Fenced pt hy A hat Le ¢GRAVE .OT PER SCHEDULINO Rg a ST) WOMAN FOR LIGHT HOUSE-|_ Of! Elizabeth Lake rd. FE 5-472 Vy 7 poh Mim Be ; BIRTH RECORD From GM. of Jones, Okla.: “Please tell me how a per- | son who is 65 can prove to the Social Security Administra- tion that he is that age? No birth certificate was issued when | the person was born.” The Social Security people will accept such proof as a baptismal certificate, census bureau record, hospital birth records. I suggest you get together any proof you might have showing the date of birth and ask your local office if any other proof is necessary. From Mrs. G.G. of Cleveland, Ohio: “My husband died in September, 1955. All I’ve had to live on is some insur- ance he left me and a little I’ve been able to make working. I applied for Social Security at the time, but was told I wasn’t eligible because I didn’t have any children under 18. Is this still true? I'm 59.” Widows are not eligible to collect Social Security on the basis of their husband’s Social Security record until they reach 62, unless they have dependent children. Apparently, you were turned down because you had no dependent chil- dren and hadn't reached the age of eligibility. I can only suggest that you apply for Social Securty when you reach 62. * * * From Mrs. H. N. of San Bernardino, Calif.: “My husband | was a World War I veteran. He died about two months ago. Is there any chance that I’m eligible to receive a pension frorh the Veterans Administration because of his military re ee ee pang are faut OF pT oie real egg | tnd work. Hve in. nice home, § yr.) MIMEOORAPHING TYPING “pre: Cre Ee RA OTS. GARDEN precision machined parts. old boy. FE 4-0571. Bet. 9:30 & 5. etaria) service EM_ 3-2842. ~ Rent position in sma’ progress! WOMAN TO WATCH 2 GIRLS IN| NURSES AVAILABLE. OAKLAND =n pa Gardens. Novi. FE 4-3156 company. Please mail resu Fei my home, days. OR 3-3612 be-| County Nurses Registry Licensed itil crreoes. Berk, 5 £2000 ag ey requirements to to P.O. Box tween 7 & 8 p.m. _and_ bonded. FE 5-124 Jota. $1,300 value, 8600 FE 2.0061 o ee, w | pupa RSES AVarLAREE = , e rse Help Wanted Male 6). SALESMAN | — Help Wanted 8 bie eee beta Page mr imm for ic.| A BOSIN F YOUR OWN EXPERIENCED experienced salesman to cover, Selling na’ y advertised Wat |SILK FINISHING wey AND REAL ESTATE Pontiac area. Prefer man experi-| kins ucts No cash minor_repairs. FE_8-6252 enced in food, drug. tobacco or} necessary. 9 to 12 a.m ree WASHINGS & IRONINOS. vic, tray gee nag gd Pg cA AKER. UPLE _Drayton Plain s. ORiando ) _3-1476 Tf you have a proven recora| S*#'us . w acre estate near Davisburg. Pri-|/ WASHING AND {RONING PICK- of Jeoctes. You ona qualify for| 26 to Pontiar Press Box 40. vate furnished home. Tdeal for} _Up and deliver FE 6-1620. sales manager in @ 4 office SALESMAN WTD. retired or sembretired, Write Box) WOMAN DESIRES DAY WORK. Pontiac Has ref, FE 2-1247. : “ EMPLOYEES FEDERAL CREDIT UNION x For Employees of GMC Truck and cach Division ~ and Their Families _1$6 W. Huron at Norton FE 5-6151 “It Such to Do All Your Financing Here” ‘a must be a top earner. capable and EST peo} of traveling in atast expanding ee corn time. “Cail Wi ional, Jim kei, 5 Am i — & strietly cénfi- ake ft ae aw ___Building Service 12 an birt Lathes! ee i ONL bo ewer vaso Phone C. SAL. ESMAN WANTED: | “tine ts, PE 8-4085. UL 2-3782 se Mi N Or modernization sales, Will tratn Ay BRICK & CEMENT WORK. re one ee a Berrien Fm 27000 ‘or “Pe Sages faeyieand Agencies 8A| planter. boxes duimney repel. Reb molt aay rate Sh bet Plus 14 per cent comfilaston. Our Immediate Openings home tagTBAP OF, AOE. SONY oe reeset stanane tore : fers real security, a| Receptionists . d Enar et the profits, Are Ort Maas . f are ONTH RENT FOR ROOM, |: to put ri Sort Seicin wit | fee Soeatsnatveege Sauer manor om ME NEED A -FINANCE- and all Sun nok, becaeary, Osi Drivers . FIXER? Order Classified an bond and Engineers sete? investigation and like people Midwest mag py Ads to sell, rent, find a som we will trate with Contie’ Siete Bonk Sing 7B beer) + pay. Must’ be martied in| good job, FE.‘28181 is the vicinity of Pontiac. Call LA Instructions 9 All work enn — UL ol After GET IT QUICI through Classified Yes, whatever it is' | service?” 7-7932 for tment, or Apply ~~ ~~~ | the Want Ad , Yes. If you meet the necessary qualifications, you'll be FE 2-8181 for /an ad- Ons Gl Oa . {* FL Yy THIS SPRING. ant Ad number | j entitled to receive $50.40 a month as the widow of a World writer and gef/it! te work evenings. for Sees aa ‘ Sorts at, 2 'y / wart veers , 4 . 23337. Ask for Jean. Non-Profit OR 3-1881 ‘ Pa ' 1 : Re / 4 j } } - } \ } S