4 . $ m ; Ka oe Dae ¥ i e / , 4 ‘ ’ a f = ‘ f . 7 ae ne ae | ; . 1 Sa) ae . ) . i . o . ; i ‘ ‘ « a a a ee ‘“S- THE PONTIAC PRESME OVER UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL 17th YEAR kkk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1959—26 PAGES — | esbelereo Putsa 4 are ov. Williams Backs GOP Money Bill (Funds Available — Dems Caught —+ e Wind Topples Garage in Orchard Lake School Board a Dozing as Chief * 8 Z Sounds Opinion | Quick Cash ~ | 0 jfor Quick Cas “Mokes Swit - ‘. a> 3 in on Band Issue if LANSING (UPI)—Here are the funds that could 4 q €S Wi ° ~ head aay 4 iu * is ; be tapped for quick cash under the Senate-approved ‘| State Could Meet Past Answer Due Tomor row | Smeekens bill up for passage in the House today, in =| pee ig Satadlienn! on Charges PCH Policy : millions of dollars, as of May 8: i Seon Passed Hinders Music Group ls fe i os * os . ame pro n fund ............ gctees . By MAX E. SIMON ‘© State aeronautics (state share) ............... o9 {| LANSING @—A move by The Board of Education , Veterans trust fund (benefit revolving fund).... 0.1 Gov. ce iae spring last night used a special * Waterways fund ...... 14... Wr... . 06 ecg aitete widens meeting with administra- ‘ Revolving funds (except cRinae Bridge)..... 52 4 «tl cca Wee ig ‘tors and interested com-:, Receipts clearing (game and fish share)....... 16 , State employes urs- | : : * day ran into Democratic re- ‘munity leaders as a sound- Mecheats fund (hal): 06.3 6c sien we wx exmee wees 1.2 That ; ° - bellion last night. ling board to answer Others .....cccccceccgeceeuceguccecusteseeecaee 02 ben ata I charges that its policies * —— : y were sabotaging the excel- . ROUBLE Bae ore oie cle civloialeie we cictelere eslscsisisieie six eisai aly sie 10.6 >. refused to take the cue lence of the Pontiac Central x *« * e|from their chief and vote High School Band Only half of the Escheats fund was calculated * quick passage of the so- ‘Tics: eer tnx srocnintd + because the other half is money against which claims called Smeekens bill which ply tomorrow to demands of the, &e anticipated in the near future. » would have signaled is- Band Parents and Alumni Come) 3 oo eee sa nae enemies ae = | Suance of the delayed mittee that the high school band | - checks. Pentiae Press Phete jbe allowed ‘two of six school IN STORM'S WAKE — Struck by yesterday morning's fierce waterspout. The squall continued eastward, causing damage in | periods daily for practice and that Convicts Grab Vote to Hold ing probably will get into line windstorm, this Cass Lake garage toppled over, landing on two Keego Harbor, West Bloomfield Township and Bloomfieeld Town- | junior high students be allowed automobiles and crushing a small sports car, hidden in the middle. ship, but abating shortly before it reached Pontiac. Storm victims {in the senior organization. . ° | Republican leaders saw in the The garage. was on a temporary foundation at the home of Mrs. thought the violent, whirling winds were tornado, but the Weather Both practices were discantinued en tennia | govertior’s turnaboyt a sign of eakness” in he * ’ . . Frank Burrell, 3649 Wards Point Dr.. Cass Lake, who saw the Bureau said no twisters were recorded during the tumultous wind- |in September of 1958. Pp the Id Rg op a out storm rushing eastward across the lake in the form of a vicious storms that hit the stat t I. a alr 0 Ual § H 7 196] long hes he _ shealeaiaae illaniniaes: Rania ‘ eihineininesien euie eee | ee ere 1 | stalemate over the cash emeft- . practice to one pe iy. Dr. | . ce | | gehcy and a tax program. Soviet Stall Delays Geneva Talks _ | Russell W. Curtis, coordinator of | Officers Mass Outside. Pontiac’s Centennial Advisory! Williams annsmsced late guar: secondary education, sald an | . ° , : | : | additional ‘period would inter. Prison in Tennessee as Committee last night voted unani-’ 4.) the checks would be distrib- mously in favor of staging a cen-' vied if the Smeekens bill passed, : e fere with other activities and 130 Revolt itennial here in 1961 and eyed for- “unfreezing”’ certain restricted e S eman ea S or a e l es = jmation of a corporate body to'funds in the state treasury and - “Since certain subjects are) FORT PILLOW, Tenn. (AP) —/|Suide planning in two weeks. ‘allowing their use for general pur- At its first meeting, the citizens' poses. Sor . . limited to a few sections per GENEVA (AP) — The ‘the Western ministers that the! In demanding seats for Poland adding Italy and perhaps one or day,’ Curtis said at the meeting group decided a centennial cele-, “It will be unfortunate if the Armed officers massed outside a) Big Four foreign mini- Communist side be enlarged but ® nd Czechoslovakia, Gromyko two other allies. ‘held in McCarroll School, ‘a two- barricaded prison farm dormitory | bration should be an areawide un- blic gets the false im t aaa thal {. \they “did not display a positive wants to @stablish the principle of, Western delegation members period band assignment will make here today ready to strike down dertaking and was told by an ex-|‘nat - bill solves the — s ers en appa meet- art gs cog roi between the West said that on = basis of the show. |j¢ impossible for students to take a convict revolt. ‘pert that a civic observance would sist,” the govertor said. “But. ime today at 5203 p.m. "Te askesman wid Gromho og meeps The Wes has Shite wave aay eee any sett | Te 13 come ean two um Me lasing Denes, |. ln we have to tke hat (11:03 a. m. EST.) therefore would submit his de- always rejected this. ing problems. . Curtis also said many = o” armed dormitory guards Monday! “Net only is a ce a jfor the sake of our em . = mand formally areake BIOCK . ficials feel that extensive drill night and threatened to kill them! milest that te be | te 1 oad ant GENEVA W — The Soviet Un- - *« . E BLOCK ; required by the instrumental i¢ other guards rushed the build-| celebrated for its own sake,” | fect the state’s “ability or in- jon today demanded that two of! Gromyko is the conference) The Western ministers were To Hear About jmusic department faculty tires i. They remanded a conference) sald Wallace D. Lafferty, a pro- | ability” to meet the next big her Communist satellites — Poland Chairman for the day. The session ready to block this maneuver, but | Students to the point that they with state officials on prison farm |. fessional centennial planner, “but pa due May 2 and Czechoslovakia—be invited to Originally had been scheduled to they were prepared to tell Gro- Grand Ra ids (Ro longer ‘‘operate efficiently dur- | conditions. euch en ob ta- | yroli, ] ° | join the Big Four foreign minis-\hear opening statements of policy myko that at a later stage of dis-|, Pp jing the school day." “|. vorable publicity for a commun- | The lawmakers were groping in ters’ conference from the four ministers. But it cussions on the German question, Dow tow Pl | Noting the decision to reduce} Ketth Hampton, state commis. ity. - - within its own boundaries, \°V°'Y direction for a compromise The Soviet demand had been ex-\appeared that once more the con- Poland and Czechoslovakia could n n GN band time came after long period) sioner of institutions, flew in_ ia tts trading ‘area and through. ° ‘4*es today, with linking a use ted and the Western foreign ference would be delayed by con-/be brought in along with other na-) |. of staff discussions, Curtis said: | from Nashville to confer with | oy i sisee (sales) tax increase and a cor- a t dv for another|troversy over procedure. — ee eo “It is becoming increasingly a tO ee | eerste peste levy Sie (oe wean iesdittie Sovciet Red ere a oe o«# *¢ |help redevelop downtown Grand qutioul to be propert wg | made no promises or conces- | “It fosters a pririt of goodwill /much informal favor as any plan. a py tat aia ; gn Uns: BEAT DOWN BID The West's argument is that the — gee ie to Pontiac rome sid ae | sons. | and enthusiasm for a city, the x* * ¢ — {| By united resistance Monday, Soviet “Union. the United States, The teeulaee Pontiac Mer-| and werk i having the full | He said the revolt was weaken same kind of spirti that sport fans | A half dozen income tax pro- U.S. Secretary’ of State Chris- the Western three beat down Gro- pit; F smarily , , , ‘feel for their hometown team.” = i eivent ti tian A. Herter, British Foreign myko's bid to give Communist salah bc Genie the prob. chants Assn. and other interested educational program of the a he ee wean on x* * * \ 00-molit , oe ea . , Secretary Selwyn Lioyd and East Germany full membership in jems of Germany, but other — ie ee ie ee oe aitat ear wiather ao in-| The meeting was called by May-|come tax patterned after Indiana's French Foreign Minister Maur- the parley instead of a limited ad- tries ‘may ocala ws he near @ talk on the Grand Rapids) spend one-third of his day in &u “ sn 3 ; -_ es may be inclu when the, band is handicapped by having |Volved would lose their “good or Philip E. Rwston, who an-|coupled with repeal of 478 millions z : . : movement at a luncheon sponsored . : ice Couve de Murville were re- ivisory role talks get to issues of direct inter-|\, sieyens Hall by The gomeerns enly four hours, instead of five, time’ — time off a sentence given nounced the names of six more)in existing taxes. None seemed to ported firmly agreed to reject However, the Soviet diplomat ¢st to them. = . available for his general educa. for g00d behavior. jmembers of the committee, includ-|be catching on. the Soviet demand. | won the right for the East and = In exchange for bringing in| Speaking will be Bert Martins, tion. * * * jing Mrs. Dexter Kennedy, Jackie} There were as many or more . . ; | To complaints that prisoners Rae Voorhees, Charlies H. Allen, tax packages, bringing almost ev- Devoting one-third of the school 44 t) work Jong hours in the| Thomas Horwitz, W. E. Huthwaitejery conceivable levy into one com- day to band does not seem reason-'p, 14, Hampton snorted: ‘“‘We're|and R. C. Cummings. bination or another. jable. This discouraged students ., running @ country club here.”| ‘Their appointments bring com: |HINT COMPROMISE A Soviet spokesman said Gro- West German delegations to Poland and Czechoslovakia. the one of the founders of the Down-| myko had suggested informally to address the conference directly. Western three would insist on|town Council of Grand Rapids, | ~ = —— ~ a a —j|formed last year to develop a jmultiple program aimed at re e ° e “e |Vitalizing downtown through co-} from instrumental music partici-| Guards J. S. Voss, 49, and Hu-| mittee strength ap to 36 mem-! The torrent of talk rang from operative efforts of business and|Pation, and this constitutes a de-) + Neyman, 57. were inside! pers and there'll ee mere ap- |conciliat moves ong Friday in- in ad U By nial of their opportunity to have _ : a a ee oe property owners. : a when the uprising flared. pointments soon, said Rewsten. |dicating Gov. Williams might back | Martins, presidential assistant in this educational experience. | | off from a graduated income tax The spokesman for the com- | The committee asked Rowston| wil , . ; a, \a large Grand Rapids department! ~ * * By JIM BACON Eddie will go before Judge get a California interlocutory de-! 2 is i | viets, Leonard Thom 26, of eo (% ” and that Republicans might take store, will tell of progress of the| Dr. Dale C. Harris, instrumental | pson, jto have City Attorney William A. something’ other than a straight AP Motion Picture Writer | avid Zenoff at approximately 2 cree last February from Fisher. | council's program music department head and barid| Minneapolis, Minn., presented Ewart prepare articles of incor- peng LAS VEGAS. Nev. (AP) — Injp.m. PDT. He will charge his! at that time, Miss Reynolds | Martins is a former instructor|director, said that much of the| the list of complaints, which | poration for its next meeting, May|"%* set “shaking down” eb- three 10-minute takes today, sing-)wife, actress Debbie Reynolds.| saiq tersely, “my husband has [in business administration at|band practice time was taken up ranged from bad food to alleged 1. viously was in . er Eddie Fisher will get a divorce,|with mental cruelty — the tradi-| become interested in another |Northwestern University. He holds}by marching to the drill field) brutality. x * * A — i a marriage license and beautiful|tional Hollywood grounds for di-| woman,” a classic of understate- i* business degree from North-| more than a mile away from the/ Thompson, serving time for bur- The Greater Pontiac Centennial) As Michiaan's cash criels maved Elizabeth Taylor for his bride. fvorce. Debbie herself used it to ment in view of the headlines pene ign — degree from! school. iglary, said the revolt was not a agg eae was the name chases into a new phase after a four : ; that preceded the breakup of |L©yola University. te ‘sudden decision. . jfor the corporate body, which ths im the ssate The marching and playing Oo |would have legal and financial re- ; Bacco Dag what was once considered an | efficiency of the band will suffer | “We tried letters of protest tol. his tk tn coniomelal jof the broad ranging develop- idyllic marriage. Lockout Turns Ovt | if you persist in your plans,” |Hampton but he never got them,” a _o ennia’. | ments: Liz Taylor will not be present Harris warned the Board. he said. “We talked about if for) Rowston said that he expected) 1: Top House Republicans turned for the divorce hearing, which is to Be Really Lock In | 595 ee teen cand many thal” long time. This thing goes back Members ars pcan of the. po thumbs down on a plan by Rep. expected to take 10 minutes oF) DETROIT (AP)-Two men from that Bopp rete Meer is trying to|"™o, 0 wre Pigg le rdered soko TS celtic bul adlial ae 7 fatangre dl 7 > less, barring last-minute hitches... City Tre 's of he a law unto itself, That's abhi oe oeeney Patrol eretres) , ern . y asurer's office pad- a law ne eee S aD- about 80 men to the scene. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) if the divorce = granted, the locked the coin and stamp store surd. And we're not losing any, —— ~~ i aleganieall eh Pi t — of Joseph F. Drake yesterday, in- | interest whatsoever in our work.| . ; = 7 |tending to lock him out for non-| But when the quality of the band R UF H courthouse where they will take payment of a tax claim. | goes down, we want it understood | ecelve onors = 5 ae oe | But Drake, 49, wasn't locked out.| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) , : Px: A small army of reporters and He was locked in. : : photographers will record the | He told police, who responded | events for posterity. j\to a man-locked-in-building alarm, F 4 d P| t For the ceremony, Fisher will|that he must have been sleeping | all an easan ; when the tax men came. get into his blue suit and Liz into, __ for Next Few Days her new moss-green chiffon dress | which movie stylist Jean Louis Beat Phenomenal Odds whipped up specially for the wed Partly cloudy and not much , ding. j BIRMINGHAM, Ala. «UPh— | temperature change is the , fore- The wedding is tentatively) Miss Elsie Van Wie looked it up een for the Pontiac area tonight) scheduled for sometime after 3| in the World Almanac yesterday | and tomorrow. Tonight's low is ex: p.m. PDT at ‘Temple Beth Sho-| and discovered she had beaten | pected to be near 50, said the lom. Rabbi Max Nussbaum, .the| odds of one in 158,753,389,900 | weatherman. Los Angeles rabbi who recently}. when she drew a 13-club bridge Wednésday’s high will be near converted Miss ‘Taylor to Juda-| hand. the normal high of 70 degrees. To- ism, will perform the double-ring day's southwest to west winds at Pay Reform rites. 10-18 miles an hour will become He will be a&sisted by Rabbi FI h light variable tonight. Benard Cohen of Las Vegas. Ne- ews as eS The outlook for Thursday is gen- vada law requires that all wed- ‘erally fair and not much temper- ding rifes must be performed by qeectips ' ature change. a clergyman with a local congre-| WASHINGTON & — Unexpect- | Fifty-nine was the Jowest record-| #Bation. ed opposition to C.. Douglas Dil- ing in downtown Pontiac preceding) = o® lon’s nomination as No. 2 nian 8 a.m. The thermometer read 70 After the ceremony, which {8/ g¢ the State Department devel- at 1 p.m. expected to take 10 minutes, the oped today before the Senate | . an | dp he wheren Me will Foreign. Relations Committee. | NED and pose for pictures. They & La) | 4 go to Misa Taylor's: $500-¢-meek| ssid’ ne ened, ot cntet mm, (in Today's Press ranch for a small reception. lon’s promotion because of what See EERE | w. 2% Long. called the “foolhardy” ad- —_ ——— They take off for Los Angéles| ministration of the foreign ald | Combes ............eeeeeees 18 5 : “y y at 7 p.m, to catch a jet for New) program in which “‘thieves, rack. | County News ../......+..., 15 THANKS FOR JOB WELL DONE — Two of. - : Pontiac Preas Phete , York City — and then, after aj eteers and rafters”, benefit | Editorials ............. vse» © | ticinls of the Pontiac Area United Fund receive. chairman of the UF last year/ Monaghan was — \ - _ ABP Wirephote apn ae there, another Jet to! abread. Sig ne — commendations from Leonard T, Lewis (right), , cited by the UF Board of Trustees for his com SHEDDING AND WEDDING — A pair of famous handholders, The couple will honeymoon in} LONDON @ —“Prime Minister |. Sports . eee Yeiz | Who was re-elected president yesterday. At the © duct of 1958's. successful an aot eae Elizabeth Taylor and Eddie Fisher, pose on the stage of the Tropi- fupope until Miss Taylor starts| Harold Macmillan dald today | Theaters ....... yee ee. 3@ | ‘left is Philip J. Monaghan, General Motors Corp. man won thanks for the service be as UF cana hotel in Las Vegas, Fisher will divorce wife Debbie Reynolds 4 movie in London May 25. Fisher| Britain -is getting” ready to enter | TV & Radio Programs ..., 25 vice president and general manager of GMC president four years, 1954-1958. The honors were - ya: today, and then wed the raven-haired of showman Mike wijl make personal appearances| the artificial earth satellite | Wilson, Earl :.......... ... % | Truck & Coach Division, and in the center is bestowed at the annual meeting of the Boaré of ; is Todd: (Continued orPage 2, Col. 3) | field. Women’s Pages .......,.1213 | William B. Hartman, Pontiac attorney. General Trustees. ot oa = es ie i f' ‘ PO OLED Ss CLE Smee rt sien AG ye eee PP se. oa 4 ye 7 eke ND SB i Fe BR et ee ee ee = ‘Only Whrom County's ‘9 Tax Valuation 2 Wixom was the only Oakland Dad community protesting its, tax equalized valuation as the state recommended that the eounty’s overall price tag for tax! purposes be $1,822,915,000. * * * With the exception of rounding off the last three figures, the recommendation of the State Tax Commission coincides exactly with the value of §$1,822,915,328 ap- proved a week ago by the Board of Supervisors. With eight other supervisors ’| voting against the Equalization Committee’s recommended total May 4, the possibility of other communities then. However, day deadline for appeals had passed, Wixom was the only city + which had carried out its inten- tion of appealing. Wixom claims its valuation of; olines for 1959 over $18,982,952 is too high, ‘‘inequit- able,’’ and that appraisers failed to inspect the Ford Motor Co.'s Lincoln-Mercury plant in the city. * * * As the State Tax Commission Williams Backs Bill to Release Funds (Continued From Page One) - package keyed to a two per cent flat rate income tax. Speaker Don R. Pears (R-Buchanan) and Rep. Allison Green of Kingston, GOP "al leader, said they were against t Is Protesting prepared for a May 25 hearing on its recommendations, it was surveying one of the smallest val- uation increases for the state in| | recent years. The total state equalized val- uation for Michigan has been set at §22,438,384,000, or an increase of $284,758,000 over the final state equalized figure for 1068. Edward W. Kane, executive sec- retary of the Commission, said the small gain in Michigan's 83 counties was partly the result of jast year’s business recession. Oakland, too, experienced one of the smallest increases in six years, according to county officials. The climb to $1,822,915,328 represents a $14,245,728 increase over Oak- land’s 1958 valuation of $1,808,- 669,600. Eighteen counties — including populous Wayne — showed de- 1958 state equalized valuations, Kane said. The Commission’s recommen- dations will be submitted for certification by the State Board of Equalization. Before giving final approval, the Board will OLD TIMERS GET TOGETHER — State Sen. L. Harvey Lodge (R-Oakland County), on the left, congratulates Oakland County Sheriff Frank W. Irons while Mrs. Irons looks on. Lodge, with many years of vv conduct the hearing May 25 for counties wanting to protest the recommended figures. Kane said first the Commission will study the appeals from Wix- om and seven other Michigan cities Eddie Today Shifts Wives in Half Hour and townships which appealed to determine if they are factually correct. The Commission has the power to hold hearings and necessary to re-equalize county. o*x * * Airing their protest before the Board of Supervisors last week, (Continued From Page One) the| while she is busy in front of the| |cameras. Michael Todd Jr., son of Miss taylor’s third husband, will be best man for Fisher. He flew in 2, Rep. Joseph J. Kowalski of Detroit, Democratic floor lead. | er, worked with aides of the | governor in trying to develop a program reportedly something | like Conlin’s. 3. Three other House Democrats | led by Rep. Walter H. Nill of; Muskegon capped day-long confabs| by an hour's conference with the|opposed the county’s valuations, | tend the private rites. Both Ed- governor,and refused to be pinned! | crease of 14 million. Wixom Supervisor Ray W. Lahti and Mayor Joseph T. Stadnik claimed that Wixom was absorb- ing $4,000,000, or 28.6 per cent, of the county's total valuation in- from a movie location in Spain espécially for the chore. Mrs. Howard Taylor, wife of Liz’ brother, will stand up for the bride. Lahti said this was being done ~~ * * “without new construction.” | Only a handful of close friends Other areas whose supervisors |and business associates will at- be were die’s and Liz’ parents will but yet did not appeal, Irons was the center of attention last night as 600 friends gathered to celebrate his 35th anniversary as a law officer in ‘Oakland County. The occasion was a dinner honor- ing Irons at the Northwood Inn in Berkley, the city where he be- gan his police career. Gathered around the spacious head table with their wives were many Oakland County Circuit Court judges, past and present, 600 Attend Banquet to Fete Sheriff lrons jg/throughout the United Kingdom! 6.1254 County Sheriff Frank W.| his wife, Elsie, cut the firet piece. The cake was made te ing public service in hind him, too, was present at Northwood Inn fete Irons on his 35th anniversary as a county law officer. : . ot serve over 600 guests. Irons, obviously touched by the teremony, thanked everyone we- sponsible, and credited his success through the years to the men who worked for him and especially the “help and inspiration’ given him by his wife who was seated at his side. . five newly-elected cfrcuit judges, Berkiey’s mayor and councilmen, former Oakland County Con- gressman George Dondero, and State Sen. L. Harvey Lodge (R- Committee Votes to Stage Centennial _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1959 Awaiting Trial in Girl's Assault Martin Stands Mute on hoot Oi heart A year-old ex-convict from Pontiac was returned to the Oak- girl. Judge Adams entered a plea of innocent for Harold KE. Martin of case down for trial, furnish a $10,000 bond, Martin was returned to jail to await his trial. Ohlef Assistant Prosecutor Bloomfield Township. He is awaiting a pre-trial exam- ination on the auto theft charge in Pontiac Municipal Court. This is set for June 10. Final Meet Set for Pontiac Lake PTA Thursday Pontiac Lake School will hold its final Parent Teachers Associa tion meeting of the year Thursday, ‘ski mailed 28 million dollars in «school aid ‘money to 2,350 local! *school districts, _ down on what theywere trying to| Southfield Township, White Lake there, along with Benjamin Thau, do. ~“ s field Township, Highland Town-| 4. Aud. Gen. Frank S. Szyman- | Ship, Berkley, Walled Lake and Pleasant Ridge. many of them’ hard pressed to meet May 15 pay-| rolls and debt obligations. Hesaid he hoped to distribute nearly 18) interestf und monies, one half the | amount due, within another week. | * * * 3. Williams, in a surprise move, | conditionally advocated prompt payment of $5,200,000 in state pay- rolls skipped April 30 and last! Thursday only to have House Dem- passage of a Senate-approved biti! ‘to “unfreeze” certain restricted| funds in the state treasury. | * * * | boss at MGM, Liz’ home studio. Eddie Cantor, who . discovered Fisher, also has been invited. x * * There has been much public re- action locally against the quick divorce and marriage plans, since was Edward Piggins, former De- it has focused internationa] atten-|troit police commissioner and now tion on Nevada's quickie divorce;a Wayne County Circuit Court law. [tudge. Fisher, who closed Monday night| He praised Irons as an outstand- at the Tropicana Hotel here, ful-|ing example of devotion to law en- filled his six-week legal residence forcement and public work. while singing at the. hotel. | Detroit television newscaster Scent ae \Paul Williams, who was master - Par ran 8M ot ceremonies, said Irons ‘‘has nev- editorial two days running, sug- Be : gesting it migh ood thing |°" been a politician, odd as it may : - JP sgh s od seem. He is interested only in get- for Nevada if the divorce were lei the job done, which these wnat days seems to have become an old Oakland County). Irons was hired as a patrolman with the Berkley Police Depart- ment on May 10, 1924. Featured speaker at the banquet 6. Sen. Charles O. McManniman| (D-Houghton) threw out the two per cent gross income tax on wages, salaries and retai] and wholesale businesses, without any exemptions, as a means of raising 223 million dollars a year more than carrently yielded by the sales, | intangibles, business activities, use, corporation franchise and liquor) excise taxes plus the fourth and| fifth cents of the state cigarette tax. 7. Rep. Arthur J. Law (D.- | Pontiac) got ready to submit a proposed state income tax bill | similar te one already in the Senate for a five per cent levy based on federal income tax li- ability. 8. Mysteriously, the governor called in Sen. Frank D. Beadle of St, Clair, Republican majority leader, to gound him out on re- building the veterans trust fund at the rate of 24% millions a month through June 30, 1961. * * * As part of their use tax increase plan, GOP senators want four mil- lions a month in receipts set aside -for this purpose, assuming trust ‘fund bonds soon are sold to fun- nel 43 million dollars into the state treasury. The Weather Fell U.S. Weather Bureau Report oe. AND VICINITY — Partly, temperature Winds sowthwest te west 10-18 mites te. day becoming light variable tonight. Te@ay im Pentise . a a temperature preceding 8 am 70 ar . 70 temperature .000 temperature ......+..... 66.5 POTOLUTO «owe eeevee cess 77.) temperature §.....-65- cee 43 ong TIT eee Cr — j Mighest Keven 8 tures This) 1 im ; 32 in 1934! Baltimore — g « —.. 85 od cal Society. Harris said the junior high stu- said the “autonomy” of the depart- ge 36 Muveuxes 72 $3 Surviving are his wife, Rebecea,|dents entered the band voluntarily |ment was necessary because the 7] i tiv Orieens $1 @¢ Who is a teacher at Kingswood|and that the activity had ‘no |Program _ city-wide and “elimi- . & Mew York = 7* § School; and a daughter, Carol, at/harmful effects” on the young. |"ated waste” by frequent meetings 4 Riteton 11 $1 home; a brother and a sister. sters. of the- music staff to avoid dupli- 4 Pittaburgh $3 {| The family requests donations be| ‘The reaction of parents to this Cation af effort and to distribute i i * Eraeisce 12 {2 made tothe Birmingham Unitarian |program was favorable and stu- ‘struments property. by ” BE erie “ ¢4|Church Memorial Fund. dents were honored to receive in-| At the meeting were Board of $5 73 Washington 7 67) The Usual Sunday services of vitations to join the band,” said) Education members, 12 school 4 — $2.47 the congregation will not be con-| Eldon C. Rosegart, instrumental! administrators and »25 outside 60 ducted * Mags 17, “music instructor. citizens. , i hy | § « | Rev. W. B. Pedersen, 53, from the Desert Inn Country Club as a wedding present for Miss| Taylor. He said a New York dec- orator wil] work on the house |while they are gone. i * * * The couple cannot legally eae : ‘cig REV. Ww. B. PEDERSEN until Miss Reynolds’ decree be-| Birmingham vero Minister Dies hotel heir Nicky Hilton, whom | she later divorced to marry Brit-| ish actor Michael Wilding. They| too were divorced and Miss Taylor married the late showman Mike Todd, killed a year ago last March| in an air crash. | * * * Fisher is 31. Miss Taylor and) Miss Reynolds are both 27. Was Unitarian Church Pastor Since 1958 Fisher bought a $68,000 home fashioned principle.” fen, Lodge commended the sheriff for ‘‘building a respect for law enforcement in Oakland County.” “Since the people of Berkley make ‘loaned’ Frank to the “peels lifornia their permanent home partment. he has built teamwork. oe ‘All Michigan is watching him and following his current lead in water safety,’ Lodge said. Then he presented a gold plaque to Irons, honoring him on his ‘35th anniversary of faithful and consci- enforcement service.” A long-time friend, Nick Elnicky, entious law was chairman of the ceremony with Undersheriff Donald Pranels ities, stressing that communitywide acting as his assistant. A gigantic cake with a replica of the Oakland County Jail atop it was wheeled in and Irons and (Continued From Page One) an ia A Tewsship db that the advisory group would con-jrector of recreation, will be the tinue to have an important func-| featured speaker. tion after incorporation. * * Lafferty urged incorporation The Waterford Township Boys as one of the important initial |Chorus, under the direction of steps in centennial planning. |_ A field representative for the meeting newly-elected PTA offi- John B. Producing Co., | Fostoria, Ohio, Lafferty gave his cers will be installed. advice freely last night but prom- jised to appear before the commit- jtee early next month in a bid for a ‘contract to aid in centennial plan- ning. The Rogers company is behind) Bonneson, tea¢her vice presi- many of the nation’s civic observ-| dent; Mrs. Donald Birch, secre- ances, producing 147 commemora-| tary; Mrs, James Bishop, treas- tive programs this year, including; urer, and Mrs. John Sheiden, the Lansing Centennial. Incorporation, Lafferty said, would relieve individuals and pri- : vate groups of liability and permit x « # the waiver of 10 per cent federal} PTA members have been asked amusement tax on the admission|to bring to the meeting either a price to centennial events. dish towel or dish cloth to re- Just as important, he added, aipienish the kitchen supply in a corporation could begin centennial) pra -‘towel shower.” planning with single-mindedness of purpose and a fresh start. “An organization without a past has no enemies,” he told the Refreshments will be served by the kindergarten room mothers. ‘ * *‘Boss’”’ W. M. Tweed, Tammany political leader in New York City, was convicted of fraud and sen- 17- naping and raping a year-old eS one sioners last night moved to re- The Day in Birmingham Will Reactivate Old Plans for Widening of Eton Road Thursday for members of the Franklin Cemetery Assn. The meeting will be at the home of Mrs. William J. Brandenburg, 15739 Murray Hill-St:-ia a cl Hicks Holds Key fo Lassiter Case Jones, Nosh Each Say the Other Pulled Trigger in Murder BIRMINGHAM -= City Commis- plans to widen Bton road Yosemite avenue. A necessity ig set for City Manager L. R. Gare said plans prepared three years ago are still suitable for the project. was low bidder for the W. Mapie avenue widening 000 Sy porns E i fe rs! # E e z E along with those specified for the light oi] and oi] mat-seal coat treatment were approved. The roll of wil] be confirmed next Monday. ei | = : FE at Springdale Park. The original clubhouse was de- stroyed by fire several years ago- Mrs. Ray Render of 22405 13-/500 yards south of the Willow Run Mile Rd., is taking reservations/ Expressway i for the annual Mother and Daugh-|dumped there shortly after his re- ter Banquet of Birmingham Chap-jturn from a business-pleasure trip thwest. ter 220 OES. to the Sou ba * * Jones Olsen last t that The banquet will be held May 20 ae cane an taco iat at 6:30 p.m. in the.Masonic Tem- charge of the dinner and decora- | tions. The Women’s Fellowship of the) However, the robbery of Lassiter Francis J. Mansfield, will open the |Congregational Church of Birming- |; Lassi arrying meeting. Following the business|ham will hold a spring rummage! ny $320 x nal ga other sale at the church on Thursday. | The deors will open at 1:4 a.m. | PMY Was ie check form. Jones accused Nash as the two A musica] program and pot-luck; men met face-to face at Olsen's luncheon will be held at 1 p.m.) @ffice. —~ - BRIGHT & BEAUTIFUL === SW TA Uk T MITE PHOT CAMERA 0, INC. Ke aca YO it STORES & SHOPS SERVICLD By committee. “Everyone will ap- |tenced to 12 years in prison in 1874. prove it, at least initially.” Lafferty advised Pontiac to plan} ‘\various types of centennial activ- participation was the goal, He suggested that the er be celebrated throughout the year, | with a peak perid of activity dur- || BIRMINGHAM—Memorial serv- ¥ ice for Rev. Walter B. Pedersen, minister of the Birmingham Uni- tarian Church, will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday at the Church of Our Father (Unitarian Universalist), Detroit. The Rev. Mr. Pedersen died in his sleep at his home Sunday night | (Continued From Page One) | of a heart attack. Funeral arrange- | . ee ments are being made by ¢ |that we are not responsible,”’ Har- | Spliier Funeral Home in Royal] si. on ie mi m y Why junior high students are no} Board Sounds Opinion on School Band Issue Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, super- intendent of schools, noted that instrumental music enrollments decline sharply as classes ad- vance through the school sys- :|the actual date of Pontiac's 100th ing warm weather when outdoor | events are possibie. j | For this reason, Lafferty be- | lieved that not too much emphasis | should be placed on March 15, 1961, anniversary as a city. FOR LESS! 20%" iF YOU ACT NOW! |East from 1933 to 1945, he jfield director of the American |Cross in Japan for 18 months, | 1951. A private service was held at 2 p.m. today at White Chapel Cem- by crematiort. Rev. Pedersen, 53, lived at 26 Elm Park in Pleasant Ridge. few shower iia ee tint “morrow, 4) He had served the Birmingham tonight 50 High tomerrew 19. congregation since September | 1968, He received a bachelor of arts, \degree from New York University) pand rehearsal.”’ x After serving as a minister of several Unitarian churches in the Beek then was employed by the government as an educational cer there to teach the princi of democracy to Japanese tatorg and leaders from 1946 i From 1952-43, he was the Westchéster Ethical Society in New York and from 1954-58 longer in the band was explained) by Kenneth Nagley, principal of! tem. This is the type of show that} the Rogers company usually pro- etery in Troy which was followed) “Why the music program meets with such resistance is a serious question,” Whitmer said. “We should have 10 per cent of Central students in the band were miss-.| tion's students or 200 in the pro- ing out on clubs, homeroom and |--2m but there are only 69.” assembly activities. Our attend- + *« * ance procedures were compli- | Instrumental music instructors cated by not knowing whether (.,iq band students were content our students actually were at |with the present setup and it was assumed that only a small num- ber of students would continue in- strumental music studies. The need for an expanded music program was advanced by Philip J. Wargelin, principal of Pontiac ‘|Northern, who said opportunities should be available for the ‘‘not- so-talented student.” The meeting ended with a dis- cussion of the instrumental ma- sic department’s role in the school system. Francis W. Staley, principal at Pontiac Central, said instrumental teachers had little contact with “It’s not fair to let youngsters (other faculty members and school inte one high school activity and (activities. not another, Why make an ex- *~ *& ‘“* Washington Junior High School. | “It makes too long of a day,” he contended, “and junior high The principal said junior -high musicians missed out on activities at their own schools and created a serious transportation problem especially in winter. * * * Nagley apo argued it was un- desirable mix junior high and high school students because of their different outlooks. “By letting a few junior high students into the band, you're giv- ing the impression that. they're a privileged few,"’ Nagley said, “This can't be denied. duces during commemorative pro- grams, Lafferty said, with the size | of the cast sometimes. running as} high as 1,000 to 1,500. Lafferty proposed a complex ors} ganization of private citizens work-} ing “under the centennial commis- sion, with as many as S00 volun teers working on various phases of the centennial. “A centennial is too big of a job for any one man, it is a com- munity effort,"’ he stated. Lafferty saw many civic advan-| tagés to a centennial celebration. | “A centennial brings out la- | | | } “It has a high educational and) cultu al value, and property planned should cause | areas to look to the accom ments of your city,” | Also speaking was John W, Hir-| linger,~manager of the Pontiac] Area Chamber of Commerce, who} spoke of the chamber’s interest in| the centennial. _ ~ eee * * * “But the centennial should not] be a Chamber of Commerce! event,” Hirlinger believed. “It is a program for the entire com-| munity that should be carried out by the citizens themselves,” Hirlinger urged that a porfes- sional firm be hired to help plan} the centennial ‘‘to avoid costly mis-| : f “4 OPERATORS on DUTY 24 HRS. A DAY | NO MONEY DOWN . FHA. 60 Months to Pey & Kitchens | * Aluminum Siding * Gorag 4 £ Attics Finished _& Recreation Rooms * * Bathe . Breezew ¥ ays Ls * SHELL HOMES - COMPLETED. . ist PAYMENT IN JULY é | THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1959 Bob Considine Says: Sen. Kennedy Coy About California Primary LOS ANGELES—Sen. Jack Ken-|him on the matter came away with; “Any man who says he would Pat’s ready for the big time. single lights, 1,200 switches, nedy didn’t say yes and he didn't'the impression Kennedy will not not accept such a draft would be a!A fellow who is close by Harry| 1,100 relays, 250 fuses, 6,000 say no, on the question of choose to run against a «man horse's (deleted).” Truman called me up and said,| resistors, hydraulic jacks to whether he’ll enter the California|whose support and whopping «| * * * \‘Here’s a tip: keep an eye on| simulate turbulence and rough presidential next year. ldelegates he may sorely need| The men around Brown are, if Frank Pace.” | runways and the bump of land- .But the members of the Los later on—Gov. Pat Brown janything, keener to see him run, x *« * nly Favorite Son candidate in| Faded wis. and beef up his ,, , . - ; | strength for the convention, than ,, Don't ask questions,” he said. | : “Just keep an eye on Pace. making our first landing. In fact, H s! Wi “ie any American and, in Pat’s heabon s case, a justifiable right. He Brown is. | a ives! teat BI Keowiend by © mlten, | They are, among others, Fred- cin: ap nge lip elounch, panoononess it wad cur lest eel ; erick Dutton, an intellectual at- course, is the former secretary | landing Asked by Los Angeles Examiner | ’ weak, worn-out, | of _ the Army ander Truman, . crhousted beconms body jocks nea Fer mew | Political Editor Cari Greenberg it| ome whe wat & SHORE Steve | and more recently president of Slaughter Yards sites, Contele om for aoe vin; plus ‘he would accept a draft for either | pher,-a bright young attorney General Dynamics. president or vice president at| for the ultra-conservative LA The inference I gathered from Of Nero Believed Saag’ “ont wey Ld 3 a, Be Oe of oe the 1960 convention here, Brown) law firm of O’Melveny and the cryptic message is that Tru-| . P “ ” —— replied: ' Myers. man believes the 1960 Democratic! Found 1n Rome convention here in Los Angeles will develop into a hopeless snarl! ROME W—Ruins of Nero's gar- forth—and a compromise pleasing been unearthed in Rome. A to all might take first prize. i - * x« * * TRY IT AND SEE FOR YOURSELF > Carefree—perfect description of The Lark! Fun to drive—shorter outside, yet seats six; parks, turns, handles easier; stunningly styled. Priced right: starts severa] hundred dollars under the so-called “low-priced” field.
Lowest insurance and maintenance bills. Economy proved in the Mobilgas Run: The Lark V-8, with automatic shift, outscored all V-8's, with 22.28 miles per gallon average. The “6” did even better. See The Lark, fun-drive it, today! nedy, Symington, Johnson, Hum- human torches to illuminate scenes experience, knows the problems to the first century after Christ. of management and labor, and has not had to stand up and be counted on all the controversial measures of the day. Could be. . . But as Joe E. Lewis was say- ing in Las Vegas the other Prof. Pietro de Angeli of Rome's night, “I can’t pose as a prophet. Lancisiana Academy said_ the I picked Germany in the past marble plaque, dating to the 12th two world wars.” Century and inscribed, was one of Joe was too modest to mention ‘he Mest important finds. that he also picked Custer over * * * the Indians. “Oni the plaque,” he said, “we found reference to Nero's palace and gardens. It was a memorial.”’ The diggins are close to the border of Vatican City. Emperor Nero’s palace and gardens gave credence to. the Christians. We gained at least an inkling of the tasks and duties of the cockpit crew of a giant Boeing jetliner before flying out here. Avaliable a3 8 2-door and 4-door Discover what you'll save at YOUR STUDEBAKER DEALER'S—TODAY! MAZUREK MOTOR SALES 245 S. Blvd. East Pontiac, Michigan “a Census Will Probe We went for a “ride’’ and ensus I 10 a . |American’s 707 flight simulator, P B H b Ipased in the airline's hangar area aper uying q Its It is an instrumented, gadget- wide survey of the newspaper crammed replica of the control buying habits of the American Everything is built exactly to the U. S. Census Bureau. scale. , * * * delivery and newsstand Niadieg ett takeo rs en and will be made by interviewers ring- : ; holds in 330 areas. They also will — trailer. a be making the bureau's monthly eae ia’ ead ployment. poe eee ase age. i People will be asked if they |handled some of the, controls in at Idlewild. WASHINGTON (UPI)—A nation- compartment of the big jet. public will be made next week by : : Inquiries about home newspaper There is an eerie resemblance purchases lall. But everything is done inside 1" the doorbells of 35,000 house- The simulator, built by Curtiss- Check on employment and unem- will produce 125 full jet crews by h@ve the daily or Sunday news- : \bought at newsstand or other re- SEE THE S TRUCKS...THEY COST LESS, TOO! The simulator’s 2,000 switching taj] outlet. — circuits, 700 amplifiers, 500 *~ *« * — —~—_ The Census Bureau is including ® ‘ the newspaper questions in next) ters Assn. } To Speak at Dedication KALAMAZOO (UPI)—Postmas- ter General Arthur E. Summer- field will be principal speaker at the ‘dedication of Kalamazoo’s| $1,500,000 -post- office June 13, it was announced Monday. = Like to pay for home and auto insurance BY THE MONTH Now you can— with our “Buyer's a Choice’ Plan! TAKE UP. TO 10 MONTHS Factory Representative Here WEDNESDAY—2 to 3:30 P.M. 3 REMINGTON Shaver Electric RECONDITIONED —While You Wait Service— _—_ _— *T 50 (a, Estre —/ ue ~ su ou ew ad aeere eee rer sg 3 or 4 installments. Some others AND you can divide your in- ask for payment as long an three BUT now big dependable Michi- surance costs into as as ten years in advance for fire and wind- gan Mu Liability lets you monthly installments $10.00 N storm insurance on your home! choose your own payment plan ... or more each, . We emerged sweating, after involving the adherents of Ken-\dens, where Christians served as, phrey, Brown, Stevenson and 80 of slaughter, are believed to 7 : Italian archeologists, working E Especially a corhpromise can- of the Tiber, said the ruins date |E didate who has had government © fthe Tiber, said the ruins date = A marble plaque referring to | , belief that this was the scene | of the slaughter of many early | ‘week's survey at the request of| « |the American Newspaper Publish- | Ellis Island Suggested for National Shrine WASHINGTON (AP)—Rep. Mi- establishing Ellis Island as a na- equivalent of Plymouth Rock for millions, ‘ ‘ * * * Under his proposal, the shrine . | would contain exhibits of early im- migrant life and microfilm rec- ‘ords of immigrants. } * * * land in New York's harbor was a port of entry for immigrants about a tenth of the American population. | | ' | Heavyweight PLASTIC Child’s Toilet Seat (Fits on Regular Toilet Seat) 79 ' Value For all youngsters 2 years and older. As shown, eliminates Strain and induces complete relaxation. eet Petey pdi DIAPER PAILS Easy to clean plastic diaper pails. Won't absorb odors and stains. As shown, with bale handle. | } Smooth Sanded Hardwood Potty Chairs Blond finish and GET full facts, rates on your car. Phone today! 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Choice of 3 colors with roller." . ° MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS Keep Cool While Waiting with DRESS SET—Cotton broadcloth with matching top and skirt. Styles and colors to choose from. But- ton fronts or slip-overs, pockets, various trims. Sizes 10 to 18. SHORT S ing shorts with top. Cotton broadcloths, sleeveless, scoop neck, pockets, Ed solid white top with trim match- ing shorts, in black or red. Sizes 9 to 16. Maternity Tops and ‘ Maternity Capris rm 88 i 4 Choice of tops in white, ae oF ¢.. black in slip-over sleeveless style or capri pants with stretch fabric cover- - 5 — Sept dee: Sizes BARGAIN BASEMENT READY-to-HANG — Complete with Rings CAFE CURTAI j t . . NS ere 38x36 Inch — Scallop Top mt Ti Choice of solid colors and . curtains, textured finish acetate in : easy to launder, fast to dry curtains. ” / Mix-or-Match VALANCES Regular Value to $1.50 59° Use with drapes. or Pull 13- ones deep. S4-inches wide. Choice Ready-to-Hang Ready-lo-Hang BARKCLOTH Pinch Pleat $1.98 Value Now PER PAIR Inexpensive Way to Dress Up Windows READY-TO-HANG Dacron Ninon 54” Long, 82” - $4 57 Wide........ 2 Wide..,. Spe $4.98 Value — PAIR $5.29 Value — 72” Long, 8” $497 81” eee See SPY: clara Bae? Sw wash ~" quick rying =" And oll ta - S s 6.4.4.2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 12. 1959 Lawyers Warned: WASHINGTON (UPD—A special squad of lawyers assigned by the Justice Department to step up the campaign against crime syndicates is on notice from members of a congressional subcommittee to produce some convictions or face oblivion. * * * “Members of a House appropria- tions subcommittee considering finds for the so-called ‘special group” indicated in testimony thade public yesterday they were not satisfied with its progress * * * .Chairman John J. Rooney (D-NY) and Rep. Frank Bow (R-Ohio), the subcommittee’s top GOP member, put M. R. Wesse, special assistant to the attorney general and head of the special group, through a grueling cross- examination at a hearing on funds for the year-old unit * * * Rooney said the special group appe ared to him to be a ° super- #mposition over all the old line and Capable divisions of the Depart- ment of Justice and over every Body else.’ F ~ a — S iy Fuente Ricans eluzenship Was in 4917 granted ‘ PRESCRIPTIONS RESCRIPTIONS | Pies PERRY DRUGS East Bivd., Cor. Perry 2-0259 LUGCACE 2-Pc. MATCHED. $ é 95 Other Luggage Including ENGLISH IMPORTS TRUNKS & FOOT es PRICED RIGH ECWARD’S OUTLET 18 S. Saginaw BY PHYLLIS BATTELLE | offering a friendly little bribe to | NEW YORK —She was only a, keep the lady happy. small stockholder (four shares) in| | So it was that Mrs. Wildrick, a Hotel Corporation ef America, but’ retired assistant school principal, she had the instincts of a woman. By that, we mean s ‘of mind, frugal of purse and im- patient for action. So Mrs Englewood, N.J heard a word from them lately. “How,” inquired, hotels shaping up?” she The managers were only hosses | but they had the instincts of men. By that, we meam they were wary of the power of women, leery of offend- ing shareholders, and not above | Mrs. Nixon Opens Cerebral Palsy Drive. WASHINGTON w—Mrs. Richard M Nixon yesterday ~ formally opened *the United Cerebral Palsy’s 11 million dollar fund drive by receiving two cerebral palsied children at her home The youngsters, Paula Suter, 4, of Baltimore, Md., and Marvin Fields Jr., 5, of Miami, Fla., told the vice president's wife of their continued progress in their fight against cerebral palsy. The two will lead thousands of volunteers in a nation-wide cam- paign which starts today and ends May 31. The campaign is de- scribed as the ‘53 minute march on cerebral patsy’’ to dramatize of the outfit, the fact that cerebral palsy strikes every 53 minutes. United Cerebral Palsy Assns. estimate there are 600,000 cerebral palsied ehildren jn this eountry. The organization provides treat- ment, education, job training, J counselling — and ‘Fesearch. — * Improve Your Home We Do the Work or Land Contracts * Low Interest Rate 12 to 15 Year Terms Paewwowww. 92 West Huron ORTGAGES For Home Improvements and CONSOLIDATION of DEBTS * Consolidate All Payments Save All That Interest Money * Pay Off Existing Mortgages FREE APPRAISALS ° ASK FOR MORTCACE DEPARTMENT BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION CO. PERATORS ON DUTY 24 HOURS A DAY Charles D. Wildrick of packed her spectacles. and fine- e was CUrIOUS 15th comb and took a free vaca- tion to inspect e | holdings in the luxury hotels. Invited to visit the Edgewater wrote a letter t0 Beach Hotel in Chicago, Roosevelt the managers of HCA. She hadn't in New York, Mayflower in Wash- ington, she was put up on-the-cuff “are MY jn the best luxury accommodations. * * * ‘My!’ she remarked, as she checked into the presidential suite at the Edgewater Beach. ‘Mrs. Wildrick and Eisenhower slept |here.”’ | | To make certain the hotels she ‘Money-Saving Nuclear Device Picks Road Bed LANSING \W—A nuclear device, is being used to test the earth busy gazing at its tinsel, shying | harking | and stone foundation for new seg- ments of the Detroit-to-Chicago | expressway, the Highway Depart- ment said yesterday. * * * It saves labor and _ therefore construction dollars. Density of the roadbed, where 9 per cent compression is re-) quired, is now being determined on a project near Marshall through use of a combination nv- | clear density-moisture gage. A Yadium - beryllium sealed capsule about the size of a pencil eraser emits gamma rays and neutrons from the 18-pound | gage. The emissions activate a meter that allows the operator to calculate compaction and mois- ture content. * * * Using the gage, a two-man crew with one vehicle can perform work that would take five men and five vehicles using conventional methods, the department said. Formerly, caréfully measured soil samples had to be weighed, dried out and reweighed. [ * * * The gage was developed by the department's scientific laboratory at Michigan State University. It cost about $580. Aquinas Half Way to:Go GRAND RAPIDS uP — Aquinas College reported $730,140 on hand Saturday at the halfway mark in its drive for $1,200,000 for ex- pansion. Drive chairman Peter M. Wege expects the campaign to surpass its goal before the June 26 deadline. Contributors include Roman Catholic parishes in De- troit, Lansing and Saginaw. Funds also are sought in Santa Fe, N. M. All are Pontiac locations of Dominican teaching nuns whose order oper- ates Aquinas. Shareholder . Gets Grand Tour of. Hotels Get Convictions or. . supports were efficiently run, the, gray-haired housewife visited the laundries, the chambermaids’ quar- ters and, of course, the restaurants jand cocktail lounges. SAMPLES FACILITIES She also bounced on beds, fingered windowsills in the pursuit of dust, and obtained the ‘propor- tions from bartenders for » their wuxtra-driest martinis. At the end of the week,‘ Mrs. Wildrick went home and filed her report-to stockholders. We have not seen a copy of the. report, but if it was not favorable we will lose our faith in free-loading. Mrs. Wildrick had a $1,000 vaca- tion on a $32 investment. * * * I am always happy to report, to the outer world beyond the Hud- son River, a new evidence that New York City is neither cold nor heartless nor selfish. 7$10 Bill Is Elusive |e Bank of Dishes tek pty’ 6 |box of the cashier's cigars and BLAINE, Ky. (AP) — Weekend) some cigarettes. They overlooked burglars, frustrated after what \a $10 bil] which an absent-minded customer had left and It is not a job for “the cold and for people with both hearts and. | obviously had been considerable) which tetas bose had heartless and selfish."’ It’s a job; guts. Like New Yorkers, leftoxt to break open the vault in| failed to put in the valut. e ~~’ e e WHY IS THE ROCKET > so easy on your pocket ? It's just as warm and hearty) and kind as Grass Roots, U.S.A.; {but Grass Roots people are too back from its stature, back to its shady reputation, to! notice. x * * Today a unique New York insti- tution is 12 years old. It is called | “Windham Children’s Service’ and| \its mission is to take care of thou- sands of youngsters who need im- mediate, skilled care and quick | ‘understanding love when sudden} disaster deprives them—tem-}| |Porarily—of their own homes and | |families. ‘HAVE HEART | | “Cold, selfish’ New Yorkers ‘open their homes regularly to take | jin children as ‘emergency {foster | |parents.”’ | Their houses become, literally, | jhospitals and nurseries open 24) ‘hours a day to shocked babies | | whose lives have suddenly, tempo- jrarily been shaken—sometimes by the loss of one parent, or the \breakup of their family by illness or accident. | } ‘ It is the most wrenching sort of emotional volunteer work, be- ing an “‘emergency parent.” It calls for picking up the pieces of a child's crumbling emotions, | making him happy, learning to love | him—and then saying goodbye and | (watching him go back home. DYNAMIC 6 CELEBRITY SEDAN ST Ctcause the Rocket Engine Oldsmobile for "59 costs less to maintain! Jt's built right . . . right from the start! Oldsmobile engineers insist on the tightest in- spection in the industry —all along the line. This proven quality pays off for you in lower maintenance costs. Stcause your Rocket Engine Olds is engi- neered, designed, and built to last! Even the most casual glance at older cars on the road will tell you the story —look how Oldsmobiles keep their good looks. Olds is a car you'll be proud to own now... and for years to come! Zecause nothing compares with the improved efficiency and economy of the "59 Rocket Engine. It's the quietest, smoothest Rocket ever—engineered through- out to give you power when you need it . . . economy when you want it. Road-Test the Rocket today! S88 YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED OLDSMOBILE — ZT QUALITY DEALER JEROME MOTOR SALES CO., 280 S. Saginaw St., Pontiac, Mich. Ctcause, a ‘59 Oldsmobile costs less than many people guess! Yet it gives the ride . . . the responsive handling . . . the expensive feeling of cars costing much, much more. And an Olds is worth more at trade-in time. Your investment holds when you go ever to Olds! MAY IS SAFETY MONTH ¢ CHECK YOUR CAR... CHECK ACCIDENTS! b oe PRICES: EVER! FOR FAST-RECOVERY GLASS-LINED GAS WATER HEATERS BY HANDLEY-BROWN THERE’S A SIZE TO FIT THE FAMILY WITH ORDINARY NEEDS 30-GALLON MODEL HOLDS 30 GALLONS OF HOT WATER, REPLACES 25.2 GALLONS PER HOUR *89" = MODEL MES - 30 OVER’ WARRANTY AND A SIZE TO FIT THE FAMILY : WITH MORE-THAN-USUAL NEEDS : SUA FEATURES | 2 S° TRUE! In its lighter, milder 86 proof, Old Taylor , ; , 86 is so rich and deep in flavor that you sip it It’s quality built! Glass lining HOLDS 40 GALLONS OF HOT WATER, 4 right down to the bourbon dew on the ice! won't rust, corrode, or crack REPLACES 33.6 GALLONS PER HOUR . It is the same in quality as our famous 100 proof under any worer conditions. t bottled in bond Kentucky bourbon—which makes it Sturdy outer jacket, fiberglas , , the lightest full-flarored bourbon you can buy. insulation, uniflame . burner $4 795 ww \ + Try Old Taylor 86, see how good a light bourbon can be! heet-holder baffle and auto- poctcig grey . } matic controls assure pure hot _ WARRANTY water at all times. GAS HEATS MORE age Old Taylor 86. i “The Noblest Bourbon of Them All” ee ee ee ee Qc Straight from Kentucky — ) ) a truly American whiskey ayaa Py 5G RAIGHT BOURBON WHISKIES 100 PROOF, BOTTLED IN BOND 66 PROOF . THE OLD TAYLOR fen FRANKFORT & LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY » DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS 'y REWIUCKY DISTILLERY P ~~ “SP ¢ e THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1959 Don’t Be Careless Learn Proper Lip Make-up Josephine Lowman in care of The Femeeseor Fins with 2 ‘Beest 1662 S. Telegraph Tooth’ Have Worst Time Dieting,” e ” By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN ' If you would like to have my facial exercises, send a stamps The expression of the mouth nee makes such & difference way self-addressed envelope with e in the request for leaflet No. 9. Address yu should learn to use 2 lip- = Friday at the home of Mrs. Semon affair, poses with her mother, Mrs, | bruh. Thin my wm emewart | QDOKEN at Christ Church Knudsen on Bingham road. Here Jody Laren Keenan, and Mrs. Knudsen. ‘ Half i tense lips tell of inner stress or Married irritation, arrie women often such i . sceedune beseute of the way thay Pee OPEN EVERY WIGHT ‘TIL 9 P.M.—SAT. TIL 6 P.M. ge Pager bag stay Christ Church women . * te ure that Sle was ont teas Cranbrook - Light d am § were Frances l ° © e an | Because the mouth is a - an! Pree . mel pressi t rt cs to dovets today's pore to Norman . ° a aw 2 ae Woodruff Jr. |b Delicate For applied carelessly, it makes a cari- Their parents cat —— = and spoils its are Mr. and S charm pstick is smeared. e ‘meakes ly Mrs. Russell a. ee groomed, 0 ee ee B. Dawson and ummer FOLLOW apr tage roa oe Mr. and Mrs. Since the shape mou Robert N, individual, it is best to eine Ga cereal Mie of your lies Woodruff. ; ee ee MRS. R. N. WOODRUFF JR. Ps oa ds ; i First be sure that your lips . are clean (rid of old lipstick) W d tt D iiaie jor a tee Pontiac Pres Photos oodrult-Dawson Vows play and Fashion Show was held + +Keenan, the youngest customer at the you os a i at i hew Frances Ann Dawson and taffeta with square necklines, any other way. it may help you | Robert Norman Woodruff Jr., | short sleeves and Empire to brace your little finger on your | were married Saturday after- | bodices of Swiss embroidered ; chin in order to keep the brush | oon at Christ Church Cran organdy. The waltz-length Sizes steady. _| brook, Bloomfield Hills. The | skirts were topped with moss ; Some experts advise you to begin} Rey. Robert DeWitt officiated green grosgrain : and ZL at the outer corners of the mouth; at the ceremony. The flower girl, Catherine “s and draw the line in toward the| _ the bride is the daughter of | Anne Theis wore a white eyelet ee center. However, the majority) wr and Mrs. Russell B. Daw- .| organdy dress and carried de- Regulars : think it best to begin at the center son of Birmingham and the mure roses and violets. , and draw toward the corners.} bridegroom is the son of Mr. William B. Saunders was his After you have outlined your lips,) 554 Mrs. Robert Norman | brother's best. man. Ushers : fill in with lipstick. Smooth with’ Woodruff of Birmingham. - were George D. Miller Jr., of 141) to “ your finger and blot with tissue. Birmingham, Albert’ Theis III Zz, If your mouth isn’t all you would - *« *® : of Webster Groves, Ala.. Bruce and # like it to be, just a little change} The new Mrs. Woodruff H. Smith, Donald E. Runkel, %Bt042 4 can work magic but this must be| wore a gown of white silk Russell B. Dawson, the bride’ ' done subtly and not extravagantly.| taffeta, fashioned with a brother, all of Birmingham: ‘ If mouth is too wide, do rounded neckline and long ; ‘. your ’ Ralph E. Major and Dick not take the color all the way to | Siceves. Garlands of hand- | yiooling both of Cleeviand. the corners, Stop just a fraction | Comded Alencon lace Were ap- CLUB RECEPTION before that. If it is too short, pliqued on the fitted bedice and take color all the way to the Sooriength skirt | _ The reception was held at went a bit past the corners. If | She wore a mantilla of heir- | ieaving for a honeymoon to mm one lip is fuller than the other, loom Brussels lace car- Bermuda, the bride changed to elther pull the line in on the | Tied a bouquet of white butter- a beige Italian silk costume falter lip or fill out the thinner | fly roses and ivy. suit. The couple will live in lip, whichever is more becoming. | ATTEND BRIDE Tes tutes to & @adats of Today the consistency of lipstick/ Virginia _Lee Dawson was | Northwestern University where is so superior to what it was in| her. sister's maid of honor. the Gen & ber af G , [the past. Do not settle for one] Bridesmaids were Dorothy Phi Beta Sorority. The bride- which cakes or is too oily or t00) 1 ynn Dawson, another of the groom is a graduate of Uni for every woman. It depends some-| Seott, Marcia Anne Kelley, affiliated with Sigma Chi fra- what on her skin. Shelia McGinnis, all of Bir- | ternity $ 95 mingham; Mrs. John B. Dixon — 22 Per ee City OES Meets Martin of Detroit and Drs. Ai Yorns © Lessons a : ' ;, : Pontiac Chapter No. 228, bert Theis II of Webster | Uembers of the Village Women's en's National Farm and Garden As- OES, gel gy Temple — Mo., the bridegroom's THE Lovely Schiffli embroidered Arnel and cotton check. Club helped with selling the items, and sociation. Another hostess, Mrs. John meter Pra. vanes "worthy aera All the attendants ‘were KNITTING NEEDLE Weshes and dries without ironing. Just the thing floral arrangements were provided by Gordon, pours for, left, Mrs, James A. announced Villa Day will be | dressed in gowns of imported [452 W. Huron ~- FE S-1330 you wont for town or travel! In block and beige, Bloomfield Hills, Cranbrook, Birming- Beresford and Ruth Cumming. held May 24 at Adrian. white organdy over white young looking women’s style. ham and Foscroft branches of Wom: MOLLS MAY CARPET i FIESTA / wr _ : anny (OU MET = eae LP buen Featurin g six of Cabin Crafts Needletuft | popular carpets at honest reduced prices! These Sale Prices Are From $6.95 to $10.95 per sq, yd. | Never Before Have They Been Offered at These Prices! - $695 to $ | ()95 | For Example: A 70% wool and 30% nylon, giving more than double the wéar of comparable all watt eaipeti, is now Econ at only 6.00 5 sees are 100% Dupont carpet nylon twist is now only $7.95 sq. yd, This is a heat set twist, has a Permapad double bation = is treated for soil resistance. It is really a wonderful uy. @ ALL ARE IN CABIN CRAFTS RUNNING LINE @ ALL ARE PERFECT QUALITY For The “ove Of Your Summer... rhe etter emt: seme, Tt mT ee I th RII Caen Hand-sewn linens, children’s cloth- the show. Among those pouring were ing and layette items made by . the Mrs. L. L. Colbert. Here she ‘serves people in the league were featured at § Mrs. George Walker a cup of tea, what a wonderful way to say... Happy. F ather’s Day! t Y s\\Vz j— €: j AAS yeare of 0} @ FULL.COLOR RANGE fi \* speciti aut Sek @ BOTH 12 AND 15 FOOT WIDTHS lim or not- @ HONEST SALE VALUES $598 l . rai lott's | oan THESE CARPETS ARE BEING REDUCED IN PRICE FOR TWO. WEEKS \ \) oa —< th covering and # IL R PRICES ON MAY 28th } 4 q ro bat, im spies i oie fe / | OPEN -s 4 ae harp sae | ie A | FRIDAY | ah | : Chi, | _fand pete wien finish on easy-care, o% ' Lai ; a) cloth. i “a S | of Waterford MONDAY . straps, cought by big gold buttone, } 5390 Bigie Highway ORlando 3-1225 NIGHTS - 2 pure ok oreenes See. ae i M /____ Custom. Furnityte >. Quality Carpeting ( s : ‘ pe y Fe oe Pa —— Se ( THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 1 —" } / i 1959 News in Brief Ronald R. Griffin, 25, of $4 Park Island Dr., Lake Orion, pleaded guilty to a charge of drunk driving Monday before Avon Township Justice Luther C. Green and was sentenced to-pay a fine of $75 plus $15 costs or serve 30 days in the Pontiac Singer Pleads Guilty Eleanor Wilson, Friend, Avert Murder Trial by, Changing Plea murder trial in Rochester, N.Y.,' first-degree nvanslaughter. The plea was made as 21-year-| @d Eleanor JoAnn Wilson, and! Joseph J. Sobb, 20, described by | police as her boy friend, were, about to go on trial on the murder | charge. They are accused of fatally | beating a North Syracuse sales- | man, George Fisher, 46, in a suburban Rechester motel last | Dec. 23. was arrested a few days) at the home of her| Mr, and Mrs. Randal! B.. Dr. County Judge Clarence accepted Miss Wilson's to the reduced charge on) recommendation of District Attor- { } Oakland County Jail. ‘Troy Man Injured Vernon Owen, of 21 Mill St., and Township, reported to Oakland County sheriff's deputies Monday | that four lawn chairs had been stolen from their front lawns. Rummage Sale at Stevens Hall, Thursday, May ‘14th, at 10 o'clock. Enchange St. entrance. Adv. | The Women's Fellowship of the Birmingham Congregational Church will hold a rummage sale, Thursday, May 14th, 8 a. m. to 3 p. m. Church basement, Woodward and Euclid. Adv. AAA Driver Training S¢hool. ‘59 Cars. Insured. PE 5-5201. Adv. as Car Runs Amuck TROY — A Troy man suffered| Stel Pact Talks | MARKETS [Key Stocks Up Continue Toda Expect Union to Push The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce brought to the Farmer's Market by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. tions are furnished’ by the for 38-Hour Week, but|Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of McDonald Not Saying |™ NEW YORK (AP) — Contract talks aimed at preventing a N8-|appies, Delicious. tionwide steel strike continue to- day, with the Steelworkers Union expected to press a demand for a 38-hour week. © David J, McDonald, Steelwork- ers president, has said only that ae shorter hours, higher wages and contract improvements will be sought. It was understood, however, that the union favors a plan of three five-day weeks followed by a gle four-day week—all at eight hours a day—which averages 38 ney Harry L. Rosenthal. The max-| severe internal injuries this morn-|hours a week. imum ‘penalty for first degree manslaughter in New York is 10 to’ 20 years. Miss Wilson, a divorcee andj John L. Worthington, 23, of 1054) of two small children, is} expecting a third child. Police quote Miss Wilson as nt several hours the night of Dec. 23 with Fisher in the motel, and that later she revisited Fisher’s quarters with Sobb, a bartender. She denied any part in the beating, police said, but told them she saw Sobb take a diamond ring from Fisher's finger. A motel attendant found Fisher unconscious in his bed the next morning. He died Jan. 13 without regaining consciousness. The ring, Fisher's billfold and a piece of pipe, allegedly used by Sobb in the beating, have not been | he was traveling about 50 m.p.h. ing when he lost control of his car while driving south on Crooks road Woodslee Dr., told Troy Police when the accident occurred at 12:57 a.m. He said he swerved to avoid what appearéd to be an object lying in the road. * * * The car rolled 204 feet and land- ling 12 com |gave no sign of wavering In their ed on its wheels heading north, just south of Square Lake road. tory’’ this morning During the past 10 years there has been a steady increase in the size of India’s merchant marine. At present it totals about 700,000 tons. Approximately 5 or 6 per cent of India’s imports and exports found. are being carried in Indian ships. represent- Industry spokesmen, companies, major steel insistence that a one-year freeze on wages and fringe benefits is the best way to check both infla- tion and unemployment. Contracts covering a half mil- lion Steelworkers in plants produc- ing 90 per cent of the nation’s steel expire June 30, The present average wage is $3.03 an hour, and the price of steel is $150 a ton. The cost of the 38-hour week Officials at St. Joseph Mercy |has been estimated at 15 cents an) years. Three years ago Steelworkers struck for five weeks, gaining a 6214-cent hourly wage increase. Steel prices went up $24.50 a ton in the same priod. sin- joel aes f.0.b. onday. Detroit Produce OU. ...cccccccece -O4.00 VEGETABLES topped, DU. .,...-se-secceee 1.75 Leeks. tbehs.) Gow ....- ..«+++ noo ted Parsiey Roots ‘behs.) dos. 1.60 Parsnips. % bu... papOench ee Potatoes (bag) 50 Ibs. .... ceveen 100 hes, red (behs.) dos. ......-..-- 1.28 ubarb, hothouse (bcehs.) doz.,.... 1.10 Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, May 1! (AP)—Prices pa troit for No. 1 quélity y type hens 17-19; light type hens 10-11; caponettes under § Ibs~ 21-22; over & Ibs. 25-26 — DETROIT EGGS DETROIT, May 11 (AP)—Eges f.0.d. Detroit in case lots federal state grades: Whites — Grade A jumbo 35; extra { WILL THIS BE HIS HIGHWAY OF TOMOR- ROW? — Five-year-old George Roberts looks into the future as he watches model buses operate ora completely automatic model highway which could be a full-sized reality on turnpikes by the time he is old enough to have a ‘tiMay in Washington, D. C., the Auto-Control System was developed at the GM Research Laboratories. Explaining the 20x30 foot scale model to George is research engineer Har- old M. Morrison. Each bus contains a package Automatic Highway car. Introduced General Motors highways. of electronics no larger than a transistorized radio which receives electrical control signals: from wires in the highway. These signals accel- erate the bus, steer it at speeds equivalent to 60 m.p.h. on a full-sized highway and stop it whenever a vehicle ahead stops or any metallic object is placed in its patch. GM scientists say the Auto-Control System could be built full sized and offers a pessible method of automatically controlling traffic on inter-city and limited access System Shown by GM WASHINGTON — An automatic highway of the future — offering virtually fulltirhe electronic chauf- feur service—was unveiled in scale model today by General Motors Research Laboratories. Adapted to Chicago-to-New York toll roads, for example, a driver would scarcely have to touch the steering wheel, accelerator or brake until he reached the Lincoln Tunnel cutoff into Manhattan, ex- cept for fuel and rest stops. Shown to about 350 newsmen | and highway experts, GM's Auto- Control System takes over steer- ing, speed control and obstacle detection. “Automatic vehicle contro] is progressing from the dream stage,” said Dr. Lawrence R. Hafstad, vice president in charge of GM _ Research Laboratories. “The techniques and knowledge are presently available.” * * * Auto-Control is the latest in GM's quest for even safer, more enjoyable and more economical motoring, developed in coopera- tion with AR&T Electronics, Inc. Also exhibited were GM's space- age inspired Firebird III, a highly styled gas turbine car, and GM's recently announced Hy-Com (high- way communicator) which auto- matically radies vocal information| jmatic steering, which could be — to an Auto-Control high- way, plus Unicontrol, a single “‘stick’’ for manually steering, ac- |Celerating or braking the car when jit travels over present day roads. |° Thus, Auto-Control represents | further refinement — in minia- ture — of electronics, In addition to automatic steering, a sensing | device speeds up or slows down | traffie or obstacles ahead. | Also provided are warning llights for manually guided cars | whose drivers might use the auto- |matic lgne for passing. The lights |would warn that an Auto-Control car is nearby in the automatic | lane. | ‘*Auto-Control was built to stimu- late both highway and automotive lresearch interest in an automatic highway concept,”’ Dr. Hafstad de- clared. ‘It represents one work- able approach to a very complex problem.” * * Auto-Control vehicles are steered by an electro-magnetic system similar in pfificiple to that on Firebird III. The Firebird can fol- low a ‘“‘magnetic’ path created by low frequency electrical current from a Cable embedded in the road, An electronic computer takes the signals from the cable and which alse provides a means of measuring car speed. Another cable in the pavement provides a speed control signal, while still other circuits regulate the speed of all automatic vehicles for safe spacing. Obstacle detection is accom- jplished by dividing the highway {into control sections or blocks _ 200 feet long on a {full-size high- _ | cars automatically, depending on way; 5 feet Jong on the Auto-Con- | trol model, When a car is in a lmines automatically the speed of vehicles in two blocks or sections behind it, automatic lane, the following car is stopped in the first block to the rear and this chain reaction lother vehicles come within control range of preceding cars. * * * “‘Auto-Control, or some other con- cept of automatic vehicle control, would have its principal .applica- tions on turnpikes or other types of limited access highways outside urban or metropolitan areas,” Dr. Hafstad stated, He pointed out that motor trav- e] in the past.10 years has -vir- tually doubled and greater traffic volume can be expected as popu- lation increases. Therefore, he or trouble-ahead warnings from 0 SY 4 actuates a servo system to steer! iq efficiency of road systems roadside to driver, either through the car radio or a separate re ceiver. HAS UNICONTROL the car. i In the Auto-Control system the | / guidance cable in the pave: | ment ts a crisscross wire in the Firebird HI already has auto-| center of the automatic lane, ~ may have to be increased, This; may require new. guidance and control concepts, such as Auto- Control, built into tomorrow's high- ways, Can You Have . for Outer Space? CHICAGO (AP) — Can a man particular block, its speed deter- buy a life insurance policy cover-|Week ago .. ing his anticipated trips into outer | space? The answer sought at a conven- If a vehicle is stopped in fhe'tion of life insurance underwriters, |1958 low ........ jseems to be: not yet. ax * * | But, Frank H. David of New- lbacks up along the highway as ark, N.J., assistant actuary of} 'Prudential Insurance Co. of Amer- \ica, said today, ‘‘Twenty or 30 jyears from now underwriters may think no more of granting full cov- |erage to those who fly around in louter space than we do now of granting it to those for Whom the plain old sky is the limit.” * x * David, addressing 300 members of the Home Office Life Un- derwriters Assn., said the coming of future astronauts raised a ques- tion whether those holding regylar life insurance policies issued with- lout aviation restrictions might be protected while they were in outer ispace, 4 He said he felt it is premature now to”consider restrictions and premium rates for space travel. A in Active Mart NEW YORK (#—The stock mar- ket moved generally higher in active early trading today. Key stocks advanced from frac- tions to about a point. Losers spotted the list. * * * | The opening was brisk as @ | string of rather large blocks was ‘traded in a number of the recent among some of the electronics and rocket fuel shares. The trend was higher among motors, steels, mail order-retails, non- ferrous metals and utilities. Chemicals, rubbers, airlines and aircrafts were mixed. Drugs were off. Thiokol dropped about 3 points. General Instrument was a 1-point loser. Martin Co. fell more than 2. | HANDS OVER $50,000 CHECK — Harry J. Woodman (right), general manager of the GMTC Employes Federal Credit Union, hands a check for $50,000 to Charles Dowling, general manager of the Pontiac State Hospital Credit Union. The money is to be used to help state hospital em- ployes through the period of payless paydays. 5 Psychiatrists Carpenters Want Raises |Isl Crk Coal STOCK AVERAGES (Compiled by Te Associated Press) 0 bt. 60 indust Rails Util Stocks Net change ..... +6 +1 +4 +4 Noon Monday ..334.2 137.9 99.5 225.9 |Prev. deg ...... 333.6 1378 99.1 225.5 «336.0 141.3 98.6 227.2 |Month ago .+...324.3 130.0 100.4 222.7 |Year ago ....0.. 249.3 93:3 1.8 169.1 1959 high ....-..336.8 144.2 102.6 228.7 1969 low ......- 306.1 133.8 96.0 2115 1958 high ....... 312.0 136.5 96.7 214.3 234.7 80.9 72.9 156.6 DETROIT STOCKS F f = cron ed ety are eights |Figures after decimal poin | ” High Low Noon Allen Elec. & Equip. Co.* 24 4 Baldwin Rubber Co.* 174 18 |Ross Gear Co.* 4 636 1Q@. L. Oil & Chem. Co.* 14° «16 |Howell Elec. Motor Co. 12.6 32.6 12.6 Peninsular M. Prod. Co. 14.2 14.2 14.2 —. a . 3 13 ed - Os. Toledo ison Co. 16.7 16.7 16.7 *No sale; bid and asked. ° School Census Begins in Waterford Township Waterford Township residents have been asked to cooperate with some 20 school census takers/ no"? making an annual survey. / ; The census began t6éday And don- 'tinues thréugh May 31/ Superin- |tendent of School Willfam Shunck said. { f South América ‘1s two-thirds as large as North America. McConnell said sales for ‘the | first quarter of 1958 were | $875,546,000 or 12.7 per cent more | ‘than the comparable period in | | 1958. * Sears expects to spend 5¢ million | dollars on expansion and improve- ; jments in 1959. The program in-| ‘cludes nine new retail stores in| cities where there have been. no; Sears stores, relocation of 18 stores in new and larger buildings, | ‘and the enlargement of two stores. | | In addition, 46 new catalogue sales offices are to be opened. | ‘Margaret Truman Plans Summer Theater Tour NEW YORK (AP)—A four-week summer theater tour has a in June. | The bookings include the Tap-' pan Zee Plahouse at Nyack, N.Y.; | Grist Mill Andover. nee 32-33, ving te 7; ree = x x x : 3 ema 20: Grade Wy etarge 30 me tian 3 apuare: Tiadie Core, fase S t ik Menaces Ca navera ] rade A extra ; ~ n 2 apiece. o Corp. Was a : : 202. | - : “Hct ae ay coe eon tne wot Test Mother 72*° é Grade Bie large 3638," medium, 22; /SPe ny gained fractons. CAPE CANAV | Fla. (AP) the Cape voted Saturday to call joake Be. extra. large 27%-38: tarse| American Telephone recovered Sanity H “a0 d ed missile test center geared |the strike. So far no progress has |Sves?: stedtum 33; Orede © lars?) more than a point. Frucheuf anity Hearing Ordered |.,4,, for a threatened midnight |been reported in efforts to renew ° . Trailer was off a fraction. for Mrs. Gall in Death ‘strike that could affect 5,000 work- negotiations between the union and Livestock Motors were unchanged to slight-| 6 Daughter, 12 ers and delay construction of aca © ea Ak Foe Baw Cor DETROIT LIVESTOCK ly higher. The major steels tilted g ' |rocket launching sites. | ractors Assn. DETROIT May i (AP) — (USDA) = to the upside. Fractional gains | With less than 24 hours to ped x * * Cattlo—Salable heifers, eood ” sverage| prevailed among coppers. Boeing) Five psychiatrists have been deadline, the Carpenters Union| A federal mediator was on hand cpuice, predominating: i oder, lower and Douglas ae "General inamed to examine Mrs. Anne D. jheld i in its _ to set Up but sources said no meetings were aredes in shorter PeTRit 8 per a Dynamics was off a bit. Gall, Commerce Township mother picket lines tonight. | planned. ider last Monday: cnty phous, 150 pest U. S. Gypsum fell more than a of three, to see if she is able to| * * * | * * * eece aaa heifers opening slow, | tgu|Point. _ - ; ‘stand trial for the first-degree, The 115 carpenters employed at! The carpenters, who staged a ake eneral. market Dow. Bg “he The eenined eee back-| murder of her 12-year-old daugh- jtwo day wildcat strike last week libs not fully established ‘on wuility and a ens. ter in February. . turned down the construction com- 5 |sfeagere e Thareaey of 0c lower Mrs. Gall’s attorney, Raymond —. pig of as rant ge ; (than "eeriy jest Wednesday, west focal © New York Stocks =D. Munde of Pontiac. yesterday ar | S C 00 ae nigh good 1190 Ib. steers 27.50; — (Late Morning Quotations) petitioned for the sanity hearing. ’ pact expired April 1- ood and choice 1.000-1,150 Ib. sects wigures after decimal point are eighths/ There was no official comment 8.00-28.75; bulk choice steers me ibs. 29.00-30.00: few loads high choice), 4. | @Oakland County Circuit Judge | ® . ian & we saad iia of Wwe deo ih steers 30.50: utility cows| Admiral ...... 26.3 Johns Man... 856) yy aang ine ut it was lea that most 19 00-2050: canpers and ‘cutters 14.50- Air Reduc .... 864 Jomes&L .... 664 dam granted | lV the union members at the Cape 19.00; small lot good 680 Ib. stock steers) Allied. Ch... 1808 poe Bay 113 $| order and set May 26 when the | would honor the carpenters pick- ro s—Salable 1.000. Butchers and sows) Allis Chal ... H.2 Kimb -Clk . 6 | psychiatrists will report back to rpe! mostly steady, most mixed lots U. 8./Alum Ltd..... 27.5 Kresge, 88 .... 33.7) - . et lines, Sa NB Var AE aE, a fro RR tg Ml Farmington Man Dies * * # its ipostly, No. i 1178; Ig No. 1, 28/am Can 0... 4 LOF Glas °. 118 | Appointed to examine the 35- in Monroe County os! About half the 10.000 persons 16-25; I Ne. *, > Js. 16-80: No. 2 Am MePdy 83) yey MRA :- 32, year-old mother at the county jail employed at the Cape itself are j “Wealers-Beladle 200. Steady 80 410006: Am N Gat... @24 Lorets we -'” 304 were Drs. Clinton J. Mumby, Ivan' Auto Leaves Road _|union-affiliated. Sadcigts bovine wt Wi wapeardagal AD Tslerai atts Lettube™* $244 pontiac: De. dean F, Chambers ee ee renee? tnd jambe-Saleble 2.000, Goed| Am Tob ....,1082 Mack Trk .... 433 of Birming ; ose Dr TS’ FARMINGTON -— A 21-year-old 28¢ $2.85 an hour, asked that their aan hore sleuabierice te pooujArmes Stl... 067 May D str .:-: 28 N 7 ie. Phillip Farmington man was killed in-| initial pay increase be retroactive steady to Soc higher: | slaughter pamed y (wrod co.. Ma Meek Bs Brown of Northville. stantly when his car crashed into|t® April 1. The Contractors Assn. jambs ‘21'30-26 00: abou 3 “loads, choice Balt & Ohio .. a3 Merr 8 8 83 Judith Anne Gall died Feb. 16 a one-room frame school house declined. ct Remand pri "shorn lambs 300: Being air. at) Minn M'& M1464 of pneumonjawhich Dr. Richard near Monroe at dawn today. | ; on ge ) ag slonghset owes 5.00-10.00. -— a ‘ ap ee ae. O02 E. Olson, pathologist at St. Joseph | x * * Blast Rips Building Borg Warn ... 42.5 rod .... 326 Mercy Hospital, said was brought) 4.) rter of 21876 Colgat Mot Wheel . 165 ; | Henry Carter o 6 Colgate ® Briggs Me sons Mowerole 3.12 om by “repeated” beatings which <; died of a fractured neck and at Henderson Plant . rass eer L an : j pete Co =n BS Hes Be ss ot er moire tted giving her. ‘crushed chest. His passenger, Nels) HENDERSON, N. C. A Cal Pack - 06.4 Ne Dairy 322, At the lower court pretrial T. Larson, 24, of Livonia suffered! gynamite biast shattered an un- == 33.3 mes Qyps ---- ©] examination of Mrs. Gall, her shock and minor injuries. occupied nursery building at the . Captial Aizi ti No ewest ; fae) hes » John, an unemplayed Monroe County Deputy Sher- Harriet-Henderson Cotton Mills Carrier Cp... 43.3 No Am av... $2 construction worker, testified how | i Vernon Van Buskirk said the | early today in another wave of Gates Tres 7 oes SS OBEY 25.4 his wife forced Judith Anne alway$ ¢g, jet a country road at a | Violence in a bitter six-month : .8 to ca an 18-inch che bough ; = - ° ose | Ghes a ‘Onle : 703 Owens ti D1 #8 \"as 2 reminder to bear wag, Curve 2S seat Wife in Fair Condition | “7! 7? Pee Gs El 47 | . of the school, 174 feet from the | Bullets and rocks greeted ft 2-C S h Gites Bre. 82 enh epi" * a96 she didn't, the child was whipped, poaq Half of the car went | Workers leaving the mills’ two After -Coar mashup Clark Equip ., 714 Param Pict |. 442 the husband said. through the front, knockin plants Monday night. No in- : Parke D 1 . g over ) - | in W BI fiel Goce Cola 2.138) Benner. JC 1i0%| Mrs. Gall, of 3080 Royal St. on | desks, Damage was estimated Series were reported. in ash Prconis Colg Palm -'..1142 Peo coi”... 29 | the north shore of Lower Straits | at $500. — Calm... Of 00 : j . | Con N Gas ... 51.6 Pfizer ....... 124 | Take, was bound over to Circuit two tric aces n the Pon |e, Be Eee ©. La) Eee tina al fr fit ele ras aero sues) TELEPHONE Hiac Area Monday sent four per-/¢ Pw Pf (416) 95.6 Phill Pet 3°) degree murder following the |; ye te a iy tthe prone sons to Pontiac General Hospital /€°@t €3P gg {3} Pure Ou .... 444) examination. pal st A splice = ANSWERING according to Oakland County sher-|Cont Meter ... 13.3 ao a [few remaining cuereces schects.) iff's deputies. er ee a : 433) A week later, Mrs. Gall tried to. Known as McGowan School, it, SERVICE A Walled Lake couple, Robert {Co Pa ----- 51.2 ig ee: aw Be take her own life in ber jail cell is located eight miles northwest , Curtis Pub ... 11.5 al Dut... 444|by slashing her wrists with pieces of Monroe in Exeter Township. ' C. Fellows, 37, of 1992 Pontiac|Deere ........ 504 Bt 385 You Leave— Trail, and his wife, Eleanor, 35,|9% cPSt,":: 4 Sf Bes Fap'.. oas[of & smashed light bulb. | - 5 = were injured when their car col-|Dows Aire ... 36.3 § Mf... 35.1] gunde had already given notice! It will be closed until repairs) lt Rings— lided may aie s OF coc |Bew Chem ... 87 on ou : $2” lof using insanity as his defense Can be made W A It! i with another at jac }Du Bo 006 ee . nswer wie and Haggerty road in West|But ait, cae. gimmant --- $32lplen before today’s petition for a! Carter was a recently discharged) ° . > East Kod ... 4 § “a3 | paratrooper. Bloomfield Township. Eston Mig ... 12 Sou Fe 7", Ge.0/ Sanity hearing was filed. CALL ° “ee Gow Ry_...e-- 56.6 Fellows, who was driving, was |Z! & Mus -.. 014 goerry Rd |). 27 P 254 treated and released. His wife |rrie RR... 115 ats Brand | B16 FE t Hik WRC to Hold Dinner FE 4-2541 suffered internal injuries. She [ProG Moc’) fag Std OM Ind 408 ears xpecis Ke OXFORD — The W 's Re was described in fair condition pore teu .. 32.6 Sia Ou On |! 28), +4 |liet Corps will meet at frolic PLYMOUTH tote. romp at Sena” 22in Ist Quarter Profits» in : Gardner Den . 62.3 Stud-Pack .-. 0i-$ row in the Oxford Veteran’s Build- DODGE—CHRYSLER The other driver, John R. Bell, 7 13-1 guther Pap , 45.6 ing for a cooperative dinner and | DEALER 25, of 2535 Union Lake. Rd., West|Gen ‘Bice... 1.3 Swift & Co -. 2%.) CyicaGoO um —Stockholders of demonstration. Proceeds will go! i r hi , Gen Fads 83.4 Tex G Sul eae : Bloomfield Township, was un-\Gen fan ---- 00} Textron. 231 Sears, Roebuck & Co., were told for purchase of flags which are JACK COLE Inc. injured, deputies said, Poon ne im tard Sag "90.3 yesterday that the company ex. given to Cub Scouts, Girl Scouts, | 5 | Leroy R. DeMasellis. 17, of 2312! aiuett- 53. Transamer -- 33 | pects a 20 per cent increase in its Churches, and other orysnization: 4: SO St. @:Eoemes Tee Crane Rd., Drayton Plains, and a) Geearich iia o3.4 Underwa ue 140 [Operating profits for the first quar- = cies eee eecaiicapeieiagiieareeeecipeloee passenger in his car, John V. | Goodyear . 1384 Un Pac me 38 | ter of this year. Meler, 16, of 5820 Dwight St., were| One ny... Py ott Aire... 835 Fowler B. McConnell, chairman treated for minor injuries and re-| Greyhound ... 222 nit Fruit, --- 3¢\of the board of the huge merchan- | leased. satel a etx 418 08 Rus. i ding firm, told shareholders at| Their auto ski on wet pave-| Hooker oe Steel ..... 89-1/the company’s annual meeting that- ment on a curve off Gale road west Indust Ray ..- a 4 West Un Tei. 33 Sears’ consolidated operating | of Williams Lake gre Ot Inland tl + ABT eae We ee i profits before taxes and profit | Township, and ran into a ditch, |e O°: 583 Wines @ Co..ss<[enering fund contributions are es-| deputies reported. Int Bes Mch AT Woltworth. os $4.4 timated at 60 million dollars for n oes : ‘a : : po . «| amt Nick 2200, 92.4 ‘w.. 36 |the period February through Aprii. | a fa 16.1 Ynest shat. 117 This compared with $49,773,000’ What Insurance rt gaver oe Zenith ws... 11.8 for the corresponding period of [Int Tel & Tel . 43.4 Genesco ...., 35.4/1958 .. 44 Upjohn ...... 5 ™ Key Uf to lots of living BUY A HOME Firer/ It’s your own! The home of your dreams! You have privacy, a place to entertain your friends properly, and a secure financial investment! Let us help you purchase and finance a home of your “ own — with one of our low-cost, budget- planned home loans. : Capitol Savings & Loan Assoc. . Established 1890 75 W. Huron St. FE 4-0561 CUSTOMER PARKING IN BACK OF OFFICE