The Weather U. S. Weather Bureau Forecast Partly cloudy, warmer (Details on Page 2) f + THE PONTIAC PRES a . VER P xkekx PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 16, 1950—32 PAGES PRESS INTERNATIONAL WAKE 0 fe 117th YEAR Family Near as Dulles’ Condition Ge Then on April 12 he returned to,hower’s hand in the resignation, Dulles now is WASHINGTON \ — John Foster; weakened by the caacer that has Dulles’ condition is worse. His spread through his body, con- family has gathered here in the tracted a mild case of pneumonia city to be close to him. last weekend, Friday State De- In addition to his wife and partment Press officer Lincoln brother, Allen, who heads the Cen-, White said: tral Intelligence Agency, they in-| clude his three children and three sisters, The former secretary of state, |general condition.” “Mr. Dulles’ pneumonia has not a hernia operation, Army doctors completely resolved. There has discovered that the cancer had been some further decline in his|spread. Dulles, 7r; entered Walter Reed Army Hospital last Feb. 12. | In 1956, an operation had re- ‘moved a cancerous growth in the ‘colon. ! This February, in the course of | They gave Dulles huge radiation treatments, both with a giant, X-ray machine and by injecting the hospital. had spread to his neck. radioactive gold salts into his! abdomen. In April Dulles left the hospital briefly for a stay in Florida, For a time it even appeared that his |hower, x *«& * small group of newsmen that jof the kind that make him é would be clear Herter to take! Dulles’ Worse less.” And he announced he was keeping Dulles on as a consultant on foreign policy. Eisenhower frequently has con- ferred with Dulles during the last few weeks. * At Walter From the Camera Angle UPI Telephoto TULIP TIME IN HOLLAND — It's tulip time festival week in Holland, Michg and dressed for,the occasion is Susan Northuis and Steven Hop, both 4. They are inspecting one of Holland's numerous tulip fields. The 30th annual festival, which started Thursday, ends tonight. AP Wirephote GODFREY COMES HOME — Arthur Godfrey flashes a smile as he walks with cane from auto on arriving at his New York City apartment Friday. The 55-year-old television and radio entertainer had been released a short time before from Harkness Pavilion of the Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital where he underwent a lung operation April 30. Godfrey will spend several weeks at the apart- ment, returning to the hospital regularly for x-ray treatments. é graduating class and get h at the school which nestles+ ; law. Eisenhower will greet th WASHINGTON (#—President Eisenhower flies to Colorado today for a 24-hour visit. He plans to tour the new Air Force Academy and call on his ailing mother-in- e Air Force Academy’s first is first on-the-ground look at the eastern edge of the) Rocky Mountains. Accompanying the President from Washington for tour are Air Force Secretary James H. Doug- las and Gen. James D. White, Air| Force chief of staff. Also going along are the Presi- cps son and daughter-in-law, Afmy Majer and Mrs. John El- senhower, and their four young- sters, The President’s grandchil- dren are David, 1, Barbara Anne, 9, Susan, 7, and Mary | i dean, 2. Eisenhower is expected to re-| main.at the academy for at least! to fly back te Washington Sun- | third visit to Denver since he | Nerve Disease 17 Years suffered a heart attack there in September 1965. As he did during that last visit, Eisenhower is expected to pass up golf, *® * * Denver is situated at mile-high altitude and since his heart attack the President's doctor, Maj. Gen. Howard M. Snyder, has been cau tious about Eisenhower's golfing at such altitudes. Famed Comie Joe Cook Dies e Ago Ended Stage Life of Zany Funnyman day. This will be the President's News Flashes MUIRFIELD, Scotiand (» —U. 8S. amateur golfers clinched the Walker Cup for the 16th time in 17 meetings with the British teday on singles victories by Wettlaufer, INDIANAPOLIS \—Tony Bet- tenhausen, twice national big car driving champion, suffered pain- ful but apparently not critical injuries today when his race car crashed into a retaining wall at the Indianapolis Motor Speed- way. Bettenhausen had a cut nose and was severely shaken up but had no apparent fractured bones. He was conscious. Harvie Ward and young Ward (ago He made his home in the near- by town of Clinton, coming here from Danbury, Conn., 10 years He is survived by his widow, Alice Boulden Cook, a former Stage performer and member of a noted theatrical family; and two sons and two daughters by a pre- vious wife, Mrs, Beatrice Helen Cook, from whom he was divorced in 1931, ' The song are Joseph L. Jr. of Las Vegas and Leo of Pompano, Fla.; the daughters, Mr. E. C. Lee of Carlina, Pa., and Mrs, Raymond Bernaby of Venice, Fla. YANKUSES DEPARTING — Rebel farmer Stanley Yankus, and family of Dowagiac are shown Mere trarisfering trains in Chi- cago yesterday oy their way to the’ West Coast where they will depart for a new life in Austy4lia. Yankus holds his daugliter, Karen, 3, as they alight from train, Below him are his sons, Den- nis, 11, and Russell, 13, Mrs. Yankus is at the right. F f Ff j ~ i ie J” Dey o c NAACP Branches. Sen. Hart Speaks Tonight at State NAACP Fete Here The Oakland County Branch of the National Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Colored People, located in Pontiac, is playing host this weekend to the 23rd an- “nual meeting -ofthe-Michigan~ State Conference of} ~ Franklin Elementary School, 661 Franklin Rd., was fell due yesterday. and well over 100 million’ ‘dollars in current obliga-| tions were piled up against = it and the nearly broke/§ state school aid fund as the | State Treasury closed its books for the weekend. : So a 3 i 8 gies Fast Revenue Handling § May Meet This Week’s § State Payroll on Time LANSING (?|—Michigan’s! general fund balance today! was down to its lowest level| in modern history. But help) is on the way. Two major )5 The fund was almost flat; i ead au i “2f Judge Jail Industrials for Nonsupport of Children land County Jail today as Oakland County Circuit Judge William J. Beer continued to crack the whip on fathers who refuse to pay for the support of their children. .|Farmington Township, strolled into the friend of the court’s office. yesterday afternoon and surrendered himself. He was dressed*— ready for jail and carried a kit of toilet articles. Donald A. Tews, enforcement at- In British Dictionary ‘ Hepcat Makes Grade LONDON (#—The cat that bent her roll-on getting hep in the espresso has at last gained of- ficial recognition in Britain. Cat, hep, roll-on a two-way stretch; and espresso are all included in the latest supplement ut out by the authoritative Chambers British | ictionary. os & Ten years ago these words would have meant 5 little to people who rely on the dictionary for their English. Had they described the cat’s dilemma with words then at their commtnd, they likely would have said: 2 “A young lady with an addiction for jazz music suffered a disarrangement of her clothing while performing a vigorous dance in a coffee . house used by the younger set.” This is a measure of what is happening to the English language, but as a spokesman for Cham- | bers said, “We must keep up with the times.” x *« * Chambers—despite its international distribu- § tion—is printed and published only in Britain. For 58 years, its tomes have been hauled down from bookshelves over the world to throw light wherever English is spoken. Not until now, however, has the reader been able to get the definitive view on words like stereo- le bebop, jive, cha cha, square and sweater A Detroit industrialist was behind bars at the Oak- Harvey S. Freeman, 37, of 29553 Lochmoor Aveé., ne Industrial Production us West Plan ‘Discussable’—Nikita lke Flies to Colorado General Fund for Visit of 24 Hoursat Modern Low | but Aid on Way | (But ‘Package Not Acceptable ito Soviet Union Khrushchev Accuses Allies of Propaganda Attempt at Geneva * MOSCOW (UPI)—Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev said today Russia will not reject the Western Geneva plan out of hand because it 4 sf PF i i (3:58 a.m. EDT). Sets Record in April torney for the office, then escort- ton Blvd., over to the courtroom jof Judge Beer. * * * Judge Beer immediately found : “Where I find a man the 23 member chapters in’ Michigan began registering. a busy place yesterday as+ Civil Defense Chief Urges Cooperation at 5 p.m. The school will act as headquarters for the con- ference, Highlighting the affair will be an address by Sen. Philip A. Hart of Michigan at a semi-formal ban- quet tonight. The $3-a-plate dinner will start- at 7:30 at the Pontiac Local 653 Hall, UAW-CIO, 386 Kemmett Rd., ‘| with Dr. Harry L. Riggs acting as. master of ceremanies. A dance will follow the’ banquet. More than 200 delegates from throughout the state were expec- ‘|ted at the conference. Workshops on. , legislation, and employment were being con- ducted. at the school this after- noon. Directing the conference activ- ities is Charles M. Trucker Jr., president of the Oakland County NAACP Branch. Charles J. Har- Jrison of 370 Bagley St is in charge Copies of Michigan’s new $250,- 000 civil defense disaster plan were distributed in Pontiac yesterday, with Ralph.H. Sheehan, state direc- tor of civil defense, encouraging ing, provides counties with a uniform civil de- fense preparation guide to follow for the first time in the state’s his- of reservations for the banquet. ’ City Receives State Disast In Today's Press Plan r ‘Church NOWS o.ccscesecees 88 Comics seeeeeeeeee sree eeeee 2s. Pee RHP R TRH Tee eee tener the TV & Radie Programs .... 32 Wilson, Eart Sreeteereeeeee 10 chy He Ty “hi iH Snowilakes Stun City’s Early Risers af g i | Women’s Pages - Shoplifter Repents Highest temperature .. = — Sas Ol ee” Z aie ye TEENS TO TEST DRIVING SKILLS — Bill Stephens (left) of 117 N. Ardmore St. was one of the first youths to apply to enter the annual Pontiac Driving Teenage Road-E-O. It wil Area Junior Chamber of Commerce Safe 1 be held at 9:30 a. m. tomorrow in the parking lot of the Tel-Huron Shopping Center. Francis W. Staley (center), principal of Pontiac Central High School, looks on KENOSHA, Wis. (UPI)—A life- time of steady shoplifting was hinted at. in identical notes re- ceived by the managers of three five-and-dime stores here. ‘I owe your store $75,”’ read the | note was $75, Sunny Skies Chase Cold From Nation By The Associated Press Sunny skies, blessed with a wel- come rise in the mercury, hugged most of the nation today. Remnants of a midweek cold curtain that draped over- ~ast! areas of the country were still pro- nounced along the northern tier. | Widely scattered showers also interrupted the warming trend. An invasion of warm southerly association today denied charges! Alyea stabbed Jasinski to death, | winds cut off the flow of cool Ca- nadian air in the Rockies and Plains Early morning Auto Price Fix Final Arguments Wednesday v {> Pontiac Press Phote as George Stewart, driver education teacher, gives Bill an appli- cation. All teenagers who will not reach their 19th birthday before Aug. 13 and have a driver's license or driver's training permit and‘no traffic violations on their recgrd are eligible to enter the contest and test their driving ability. Mother Aids A was completed yesterday with Al- we 7 ee Dealers Deny Detroit Area Food Firms Charged With Setting Minimum Profit Figure DETROIT ww — Twenty-two De- troit area Ford dealers.and their of fixing new car prices. |missing the jurors after they were c _ {burned his clothes in an incinerator Arthur M. Stringari, legal couh- | in his mother’s home and then dis- {sel for Metropglitan Detroit Ford posed of the ashes temperatures; Dealérs Inc. amd the individual} + were up at least 10 degrees from dealers, said they will battle the | cleaned the incinerator herself, sev-| ‘Woman Dem Pokes Fun at yed Defense cop Hopetuls case presidential ct a Pushes ‘Musts’ | THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, MAY 16, 1959 ongress A City Gets State Plan for Civil Defense (Continued From Page One) each Oakland city of 10,000 or more population, Both Oakland County, Pontiac, and many other larger Oakland cities already have workable civil defense outlines, for which little revision is expected to be neces- in Message Dems Return Fire as President Lists Critical Legislation WASHINGTON (UPI)—President sary to fit the state proposal. With obvious reference to Ohio Sen. Stephen M. Young’s sugges- ‘tion that federal funds for civil defense be abolished, Sheehan told yesterday's gathering in the Super- visors’ Room: “T have little time for these |Eisenhower challenged the Demo- people who say in this nuclear |cratic Congress this week to quit/age that we should roll over and |$talling and get on with his ‘‘must”’ legislative program. Otherwise, he whether either side had gained a point. But the political mills ground more furiously, Eisenhower demanded in an extraordinary message that Con- gress deal promptly with higher gasoline and other highway user taxes for urgent pay-as-we-go federal highway aid; with mort- gage insurance financing to keep home construction from collaps- ' ing; and with measures to ease the costly tax burden imposed by the surplus wheat program and the farm price support pro- “Lack of action is making the’ problems critical,’’ he declared. Then, in a fist-pounding press lconference, he asserted that for | the good of the nation he not only wants his fiscal 1960 budget bal- anced but also enough reserve rev- enue to start reducing the stag-| gering public debt. * * * This would rule out all Demo-| ‘cratic spending programs: | As of May 8 the debt stood at . . DENVER (AP)—A Democratic |“" Testimony in the first-degree yea’s mother taking the stand to party women’s leader said today | unsigned notes. Attached to each | .u;der trial of Raymond L. Alyea hit at a part of the prosecution’s the Democrats have so many) astronomical $284,824,191,180. It was tapping the taxpayers for more than 8 billion dollars a year. nomination eligibles BILL STALLED said, the country will suffer. { After fuming Democrats fired| nado-like winds which caused con- their return barrage it was a £UeSS| ‘ F jy { é , 7 . / - |coalition comprised of the commit- jtee’s four Republicans and two of His first trial ended in a,aire and a well-known cocker Rules committee by a conservative | designate an area civil defense co- | ordinator who would join with state officials to map preparations dur- its eight Democrats. jing the pre-attack, attack, and post- | Speaker Sam Rayburn (D-Tex- jana phases. as) commented tartly that he had | been saying for some time “that | if we could get one Republican | vote on the committee, the House | would be able to consider the bill.’ Rep. Leo Allen (Ill.), senior Re- ipublican on the committee, said he \“would not drop his opposition’ 'to a Democratic provision to ex- * * * | Chairman Wilbur D. Mills (D- \Ark.) of the tax-writing House “Checkers,” a gift to the Nixon Ways and Means Committee, re- is still a, newed his opposition to the gasoline \tax hike and noted pointedly that) Eisenhower had been unable to find a single House Republican willing to introduce the highway financing ' bill. Mills said some other method of financing—displeasing or not to Eisenhower — would be found. Assistant Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield (Mont. )| The meetings which have been { ‘bristled over the President's bud-|held so far have been nominally 9 Seek 2 Seats |get remarks, “I would state,”’ he | said, “that the President has pre- lsented six annual budgets pre- \ceding this one, and each Con- igress did its share, and a little | more, | quests.” * * Mansfield said that as for the | wheat problem, Ike’s Department lof Agriculture has refused to co- operate with Congress in submit- \ting a genera] farm bi The House Agriculture Commit- tee poured fuel on the flames by |approving a two-year, stop-gap but without substantially reducing} ithe farmers’ income. Ike doesn't \like it. To Do Autopsy on Road Victim : . . ‘ : | in reducing his higit re | The Western Big Three are plan-\dents, including one incumbent, /ning on a summit conference, prob-|have filed nominating petitions for leat to cut back wheat production) Reds Ask Treaty; U.S. ‘Disappointed’ (Continued From Page One) and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei the entire weekend in Geneva. SEE SOM HOPE. “ The conference's first week re- sitions on the key issues under dis- }cussion, but diplomatic observers hope of compromise. Attendance at the secret meet- excluded. closed, but press spokesmen for jall parties concerned have rushed \to tell newsmen what happened as) 1 n on adjourned. |soon as each sessi * * * jably in mid-July and possibly ‘th |\San Francisco, despite the present|election to fill two seats. deadlock in the foreign ministers’ | Those who will seek three-year talks here, it was reported today./terms in the June 8 election are | | * * * |W | | | | which the West has set as the pre- requisite for a summit conference. factories in the U. S. which pro- of sugar per year in 16 state centers. | Tom Tucker has the rele of The Day in Birmingham ‘Streetcar Named Desire’ Ends Play Season Tonight BIRMINGHAM — The Village Players will close their 36th sea-| son tonight with the final per- formance of the Tennessee Wil- liams hit play “A Streetcar Named Desire.” The show is open to the public with curtaintime at 9 p.m. * * * The difficult role of Blanche DuBois is played by Gertrude Thomsen. She protrays the gradual mental collapse - Rs om = able to cope wi! ec es 0 time has rade as she sees Peg are Rice Rigee ei A — eed — ught t. cc plantation home lost through {estimated es of $10,850. The previous month, Moxley sat) conteatl paid -taw’ ales ‘bese completed. The 40 channels of the control panel may be used alone or in arrangements for unusual gute ctionts. The board is said to be equal to those of area professional theaters, according to Larry Martz, Li chairman for the season. panic The April report of Police Chief the curial Stanley Kowalski with Judy Tucker as his wife, | Sed reported 63 mishaps causing Stella, who is calm and under- damages amounting to $21,750. standing. Moxley said again greater cour- Representatives of area maga-|'€sy is needed since violation of zines and nwspapers were shown|the right of way accounted for through the renovated playhouse|more than one-third of the mis- on Chester street by members of haps. ~ the 1958-59 blicity commi == after last night's performance. Mrs. Robert Thom of 6160 W. * * * The stage and lobby of the play- house have been enlarged. A new State May Meet This Week's Payroll (Continued From Page One) receipts anticipated from car- marked sales and other special school aid taxes on whisky and cigarettes. B Newcomers’ re- cently-formed tennis club has an enrollment of 25. The group meets for instruction and play. Other newcomers to the area are invited to join the group. No major school payouts other Catherine V. Malone than the atcumulated arrearages} The Rosary will be recited 8 p.m fall due until the school aid in- stallment Aug. 15 in the next fis- cal year. Thus, the outlook on arrearage for school purposes at the 1958-59 fiscal year-end is for between 25 and 30 millions. If the state wriggles out of present acute money miseries over the next few weeks, 9p- other tight squeeze is on the way’ dune 15 when $23,500,000 in general fund obligations fall due, so ana & Industrials Jailed tallied into asury te, “acusse ot accelerated pro {OF Nonsupport of 3 May because of accelerated pro- cessing of tax receipts. © (Continued From Page One) from his company of $75,000 a Hills; a san, Jack of Chicago; and four grandchildren. Slowly but surely, a bi-partisan move toward compromise on a new tax program for Michigan ap- Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd Gromyko—were expected to spend| range revenue needs are popping vealed that East and West are| be briefed Tuesday on the new diametrically opposed in their po-| graduated income-corperate pro- said there still appears to be some! ings proposed by. the Americans |Republican and Democratic Houge would be limited to the four for- |members will try to wark out a eign ministers, plus two advisers mutually acceptable tax program. each. Even conference secre- | peared to be taking root in the Legislature. *® * * Signs of willingness to get to gether on a plan to meet long- jup in the house. In the te, they were fhore faintly di le. Republicans in both houses will fits tax package endorsed by |‘ifficulty making payments be- | House Democrats as a starting cause he had payrolls of six em- point in bargaining talks. ployes to meet. Then, if the House GOP caucus Tews, who emphasized this agrees, seven-man committees of| ¥®* ® Private petition for non- payment of support, and not initiated by the friend ef the court, said Freeman surrendered Similar committees from the Sen-| '@ him saying, “I don’t have the money and am ready.” taries and interpreters would be ate likely will be invited to join in. Authoritative ‘sources said the| Hatchery Rd., Eldon Rosegart, 3007 est believes Soviet Premier Nik-|Orangegrove Dr., Dean A. Salley, ita Khrushchev is so anxious for|6065 Wilson St., Norman Cheal, a chance to negotiate with Presi-/4200 Roseberry St., and M. Vir- dent Eisenhower that he is willing|ginia Ross, of 6101 Adamson Dr. to pay the price of. progress here| Also running are Donald R. Mur- | Phy of 7831 Cooley Lake Rd., Curt School Board Waterford Twp. Nine Waterford Township resi- on 1 \the township Board of Education incumbent Edmund Windeler, 5601 where Mrs. Freeman once was a substitute teacher. Allen said Freeman had made — 1535 Marylestone St., and| Judge Beer further explained his | There are about 17 sugar beet Dr. duce upwards of 1.8 million tons\other opening is for the seat of | Jerome Mulligan of 475 Lakeside by saying, ‘‘If they have a legiti- mate reason for not being able to make the payments, such as un- Marshall E. Smith, whose term,employment or sickness, I would runs out this year. inever send them to jail.” Windeler’s term is expiring. The Whose Car Hit Viaduct, May} | | | Berkley Man, | | Have Had Attack First | An autopsy was to be held this| | morning on a Berkley man to de-; | termine if he suffered a heart at- ‘tack before his auto crashed into! the center section of a railroad viaduct on 14-Mile road near Wood- | Dead is Herbert Edwin Rowley, | 53, of 4152 Kenmore Rd.,-a D-| troit school teacher, He was dead) on arrival at William Beaumont! Hospital, Royal Oak, at 3 p.m. | Roy Cline of Dearborn, who wit-| nessed the Accident, told Royal! ward avenue yesterday. Sherm Schramiin HOMER HIGHT MOTORS Quality Service © Chevrolet Sales © Pontiac Representative @ Buick at 9 a.m. Tuesday at Eaton Park . Oak Police Rowley was traveling} at a high rate of speed and ap- parently lost control of the auto. The victim had been a teacher in Detroit since’ 1939. After his recent transfer from Cooley High School, he taught ‘at the Trombly Trade School. The body is at the Sawyer Fu- neral Home, Berkley. } Two common types of calories are the kilogram calorie with heat to raise the temperature of 2.2 pounds of water one degree, and the gram calorie 1,000 times as, TIME TO TURN T0 SHERM! Residence Phone OA 8-3405 Business Phone OA 8-2528 RECONDITIONED USED CARS 3 great. Homer Hight Motors / 160 S. Washington (M-24), Oxford _ OA 8-2528 °°. S - is ee El te! MEYAL . ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 16, 1959 ‘St. Paul Church Installation Services Set Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas CONRAD J. LISEK JR.’ | Mr. French died Thursday et his;Mo., Robert King of Marion, IIl., The Rosary will be recited at 8 home following a heart attack. He| James King of Pontiac and Leroy Funeral Home for Conrad J. Lisek! OOF in Imlay City. Jr., 36, of 101 Mechanic St. Surviving are his wife, Lucy; a) one grandson. ‘The funeral service will be held|daughter, Mrs. Marion Tripp of . . . at 10 a.m. Monday at St. Vincent/Lapeer; two stepdaughters, Mrs. LIQ WARREN SWITZER — de Paul Church with.burial in Mt.|Berniee Cornell of Ann Arbor and) COMMERCE TOWNSHIP—Serv-|Sunday. Hope Cemetery. . Mr. Lisek was owner and oper-| ator of the Novi Coffee Shop in, grandchildren. Lodge of Pontiac, and the Amvets| Mrs. John (Margaret) Lierman,| Mr. Switzer was killed instantly During the 11 a.m. service, in Novi. of 365 W. Fourth St., will) Thursday when the car in which! Surviving are his wife, Paula;|be held at 3:30 p.m. Sunday at/he was @ passenger was involved his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Conrad| Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Bur-/|in an accident near Millington. Lisek: and a son, Conrad Lisek III| ial will follow in Imlay Township; He was an ordained minister of, Cemetery. jthe. Christian Spiritualist Church the pastor. broker in Drayton Plains, died ter, Mrs. Helen Banghart of Ro-|L. of Commerce; four sisters, Mrs.|the coming year. early yesterday morning in Glad-/ meo; a brother; seven grandchil-/ Ida Chapin and Mrs. Alice Wil- News in Brief win after a brief illness, idren; and one great-grandchild. | mot, both of Pontiac, Mrs. Bethel | Mr. Munn, 74, of Gladwin, was} jHudson of Flint and Geraldine | a member of Cedar Lodge 60 of} KLEBER L. MERRICK |Tesch of Grayling; three brothers. | Clarkston. | FENTON—Service for Kleber L.| Leo of Alpena, Benjamin of Pon- Surviving besides his Blanche, are two daughters, Mrs.|will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at|Orion; and five grandchildren. John Dill of Dalton and Mrs. John|the chapel of Craft Funeral Home. | cn « . Stackman of Lansing; eight grand-| Burial will follow in Oakwood Cem-! JAMES E. VOORHEIS children: dren; a sister and a brother. | Service will be at 2 p.m. Sunday : at the Miner Funeral Home, Glad-'result of injuries received in an//0Wing a short illness. win, with burial in the Highland|auto accident May 9. Service will be held at 2 p.m.) He was a laboratory technician Monday at the Dryer Funeral sheriff's deputies yesterday three great-grandchil-'etery. { ’ “ae a Mr. Merrick died this morning | 84. of 213 Washington St., died this) wheel, valued at $40, from his car way. The Rochester Glass Co., 560 S. | p.m. Sunday at the Sparks-Griffin}was a member of Post 116 of the;King of Campbgll, Mo.; a sister, lias Wateee hee os hg |Mrs. Ruth Green of Arkansee? and|(© “omens ety of the St. - a. |Paul Methodist Church here will | |be installed during the 9 a.m.} jworship service at the church on| Mrs. Prichett of Detroit: | ice for Lio W. Switzer, 54, of 4922; Mrs. A. B. Johns of Lake Orion, tour So erareiaeun: and nine great-| Carroll Lake Rd., will be held 1/a district officer of the society, | , | p.m, Monday at Christian Psychic will preside. The Rev. J. Douglas, Science Church, Buria! wil] follow! Parker, local minister, will preach! Novi. He w member of St. . Sineont de Paul Church Véorane MRS, JOHN LIERMAN |in Crestwood Memorial Cemetery.on the theme, “A Kingdom of Foreign Wars 1370, the. Moose! IMLAY CITY — Service for Grand Blanc. — officers of the Senior Youth | | Fellowship will be installed by | Officers of the group include of Bernie, Mo, ee : | Mr. Lisek died unexpectedly) Mrs. Lierman died Friday at a and a self-employed carpenter. He Gary Fiedrich, president; Judy | Thursday in St. Joseph Mercy Hos-|Lapeer rest home following an ex- Was a member of Eagles Lodge Eldred, vice president; Kathy) i pital. tended illness. | 1230. Ralph, secretary; and Allan Price, | Surviving are three sons, John| Surviving are his wife, Jose- treasurer. | CLYDE MUNN lof Almont and Andrew and Ken-'Phine; his mother, Mrs. Jacob! Mrs. George Fiedrich has been) Clyde Munn, a former real estate| neth, both of Imlay City; a daugh-| Tesch of Otter Lake; a son, Leo|named counselor of the group for wife, Merrick, 49, of 309 W. Ellen St. tiac and Will J. Crossman of Lake! Knight Webster, of 6250 Walnut Lake Rd., West Bloomfield Town- ‘ship, reported to Oakland County that | Holly — James Edgar Voorheis,)someone had stolen a tire and at Hurley Hospital, Flint, as a. morning at a Pontiac hospital fol- while it was parked in his drive- Oxtord Church Slates Speaker ‘From New York OXFORD — “Christian Science: 'Practica} Christianity for Modern | Times” will be the topic of an jaddress to be given by Robert |Van Atta of Rochester, N. Y., at i8 p. m. Monday at the First Church of Christ, Scientist, here. * * * Mr. Van Atta is a member of ithe Board of Lectureship of the ‘First Church of Christ, Scientist, ‘in Boston, Mass. _ *x * The lecture is open to the public, and care of children will be pro- | vided. | Lecture committee chairmen lare Mr. and Mrs. Julius H. Berg, lof 8130 Woodside Dr., Clarkston. | | | } ' | } Electric Firm Plans 14th Anniversary Fete | Crump Electric, Inc., 465 Au- ‘burn Ave., will hold an open house \May 22-23 to celebrate its 14th POWER LINEUP — Snark leads off Air” Congress of Flight at Las Vegas. In background | @”nivers ~ - * Force mumtace-to-surtace missile display at World are Thor Able, left, and Atlas. Demonstrations by Miss Jean . Hardy of Detroit Edison Co., Mrs, Helen Wright of Frigidaire Sales, Purse Stolen, a Held | Business Notes == = a Crash Injures 2 Women Jesse R, Langston has been se- torola will be féatured. General jlected by the Eastman Chemical: have. representatives present to A two-car collision on Auburn motorist nearby and booked him man Kodak Co. to head its new! * * * Electric and Sunbeam will also Products, Inc., subsidiary of East- demonstrate their products. road near Opdyke road early this at the Oakland County Jail on a chemicals division sales office in| Refreshments will be served and £ Cemetery. ‘ . : q . let ‘Buick Motor Co.. Flint. |Home. Burial will follow in White Rochester Rd., Avon Township, : : si | : i HAROLD J. POWELL Surviving are his wife, Alice: ae Cemetery. wen 7s « by erage’ —_ ee een he theft as ourse eyes oes cor eeaties oo x *« * fice aig oe = Harold J. Powell, 52, of 445 S.'daughter, Mrs. Leah Anderson of| avid are many nietes and end gic ochre the "hank pire dan and the arrest of a Drayton Plains Piercy W. McLaughlin, 24, of 4542) For the past six years Langston | . Paddock St., died this morning at Fenton; two sons, Garner and P€Pnews. . : man, according to Oakland County |Sashabaw Rd., Drayton Plains. De- re PUBLIC SALE z St. Joseph Mercy Hospital of a Lorin, both of Fenton: j according to Oakland County sher- = : : represented Eastman in the sale) 1955 Pontiac, Serial No. P75SH-3193, St. se } ‘ h ; parents, | {t's deputi sheriff's deputies tectives said they plan to question { it ndustriz , specialty 2;D0°r, Sale to be held at 10:30 a.m. heart ailment. He had been ill Mr. and Mrs. Guy Merrick of Fen-| uls deputies. * * ~ . - _, of its industrial and spec Y May 18, 1959, at 601 Pontiac State Bank \ { ) } |him today about the missing purse chemicals in the New York area. (Bide. 38 N. Saginaw 8t., Pontiac, Mich- three months. ton, and four grandchildren. | a S Sew ere Rummage Sale Benefit of Crip. Deputy Stephen Navarre arrived ‘ His oa _: ‘ll i *\tgan. He was a specialized clerk at) seit teat sp | Ipled children. 9 a.m. .5 p.m. daily at the scene to find one of the ation ansigamenst tee | May 15, 16, "50. G ‘ _| MRS. LES SPARKS , ay 22-23. Will-o-wa Theaie aa : § d W N Michigan and southwe 0. SEMENT FOR E General Motors Truck & Coach Di OXFORD — Service for Mrs,{_SAULTE STE. MARIE, Ont. |W. Long Lk RACE of Telegraph, vers: Donna N. Stansell, 26. of KOUNG WAVES NOW | strand Mrs. Langston and eae Tho ‘Becta at Baveniian et te School a _ ey ~, ., Capt. Thomas J. Attridge, com- Bloomfield Hills Rotary Club, Adv. 3277 Waukegan St., Pontiac Town- two children will make their home ‘Dist*ict, of the Citn of Pontiac, Michi- de Paul Church. |Charles (Lena Ann) Sparks, 69, of : ‘| ship, and -her passenger, Jerry } ; ir an will receive Bids for fire-proof stair- Survivors include his wife. Mil-'5% S. Washington St., will be held mander of the- Pittsburgh freiggter) aq priver Trainin School. |Ann’ Dick, 2 ac Racbarn § ean t e Ca pe S jin Pontiac. |Ways at Wilson, McConnéll and Baldwin a - Tansee eral aes Ss Thomas Lynch, died of a heart at-''59 Cars. Insured. FE 5-5201. Adv 1" Dick. 22, 435 Raeburn St.,| | R. D. Stephanian, 7743 Locklin|"’smeniey, Sebesls dred; his mother, Mrs. Laura Cum-'2 p.m. Sunday at Bossardet and . -\ suffering from cuts and bruises : P , Nn} . Sealed will be received pub- mins of Pontiac; a daughter, Ca--Reid Funeral Home. Burial will tack as his ship entered the. Michi- ; : - : - WESTBURY, N. Y. (UPID—U! St., Union Lake, has been selected |iely read, sled. of eS Pussereee too rol at home: a son. Harold J. Jr.| follow in Oxford Cemetery. |gan Soo lock yesterday. oo hte treated at oe Pubes edaavert ie enabling to rep din Oil Company's Fuel |tenties. seutipes st 2 P.M. on Thurs- : be : : 1 Sie Seat ; ‘ - | General Hospita released. | ja ubricants School in Asbury |“"3; ; ¢ tae eae an es ee ee oe was a member of/ SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Lloyd an Robbery | The driver told Navarre the driv- Seca Ps Ager oneetely Park, NJ. BW a BN ; of Pontiac and Mrs. Clifford Broad-|Oxford Baptist Church; OES 266, W. Dinkelspiel Sr., 59, national | er of the auto which had struck | ee ' pe ing = surgical in-| Stephanian has been employed |Materia! Bonds in the full amount of the ; way of Auburn Heights ‘Pontiac White Shrine 2 and the president of the Jewish Welfare her from -behind had left the § prmmncnt Pie an , by Shell since 1957 and is present-| | All Bids ae ae remain firm ‘ ; tags omi : scene of the wreck. 1 s rer. ly in the co ; i | ‘ ae Piaget wody = at the Don- moms —_ rere i od Pg a tone weno: Suspect Held ad ‘the new equipment supplements, = ras Deut anne leheck as eaneek a o% Oot the ae 7 aes | Surviving are her husband.|"Derporr (AP) — Clarence J.| She also reported her purse stol- 3¢@™ ‘Sterilizing and removes the) eos ot ihe ital Arg ha Bid must accompany each ETR d : She also reportec r purse stol- Seven members o staff of, tans and Spccitieaitens fer the ghove idanger of cross-infection from hu- the Pontiac Office of the Metro- may be obtained at the office of the a ee oy . : : = - ' $ BE. BID en 2 GUE EGET ESC MEESUIS Gh etek Eee RT Tee PP we ea aS ag MRS. NELLIE RAMIERZ Charles A.; a son, Charles E. of) 71 og 63. former Republican Ferndale Man Denies ° @t the ‘scene. Moments later, . : Oxford; a daughter, Mrs. John) . . . . ‘iman hands Mrs. Nellie Ramierz, 49, of 187 (vivian) Hirling ontiac: four/“2>eressman, died of cancer in a deputies apprehended the missing] ¢ —_ ; , Politan Life Insurance Company |Architect.. We. C._ Zimmermann As- ee ee eee hospital Friday. March Theft There but : und waves so high that they this week attended a business con- Michigan. and 7 an will be a file at t ference with officials of the com- \See rouse a Dullders’ and Tredere ROCKVILLE CENTRE. N Y.| Teller Identifies Him — |been found effective in removing | . E : | (AP)—Royal Toner, 65, reputed to New Textbooks even the tiniest bits of dirt from tn Chicago” Conrad Hilton Hotel) "athe Board of Eeecation Sere te jbe one of the world’s largest pro-| FERNDALE — A Ferndale man \the most tenacious surfaces, which Schlussel 3522 B | waive 7 i + Ale thesete. s lars “-RNDALE nie , 3522 Brookdale Lane, Jo- arial nasa tcl identified yesterday as the cne who for Space Age nig not only clean but sterile) seph R. McCoy, 930 Fernwood, the School District ja pital. loner opera ao, held up a bank here in March, is . ° | . |Royal Oak, John H. Thill, 10178 t ity o tiac, Michigan jacre oyster farm on Long Island's being he!d in the Wayne County Being Written | Lakeside Dr., Milford, and Thschin| — Secretary |Peconic Bay. Jail until a hearing May 28 A | B M |D. McKinstry, 1110 Myrtle St NOTICE TO ] 28. eat wept ut ; |D. : . BIDDERS NEW YORK (UPI)—The influ- nge 0 etter an, .| Others were Fred J. Ritchie, |, Sealed proposals wit be Jack A. Bentley, 35, of 1206 E.. | a by Romeo Confesses lare audible to the human ear have Rockwell St., died yesterday at the rbert Kine of St. Loui St.. Joseph Mercy Hospital after|O™ rs, He = St. is, a long illness. Her body is at the} Melvin A, Schutt .Funeral Home. | MRS. ADA WILLIAMS Service for Mrs. Ada Williams, 46, of 622 Sanford St., will be held at 1 p.m. Monday at the William F. Davis Funeral Home with bufial in Oak Hill Cemetery. - Surviving are a sister and three |, CLEMSON, S. C. (AP)—Arthur Chesterfield St., denied the rob- €nce of rockets and space travei |8396 Golfside Dr., Milford; Ralph ogg A be hy pe = |Buist Bryan, 83, former member ; : : _ is bringing a new approach to the T. BI b W. . Offices, 2420 Pontiac Lake Read, Pon- | * de: Clan College faculty bery when he was arraigned be : : fe anzy, 1115 West Huron St.; ion: Ube. sal ee eel Gon oO. son g Y: fore Federal Judge Ralph Free- teaching of science in American ‘and Alois S. Vinclear, 8550 Golf- Eastern Standard Time. May 28 1958, brothers Mrs. Williams died on May 7 at died Friday. ‘man yesterday. He was held on SChools, including new kinds of; |side Dr., Milford. and will be publicly opened and read ; : ©? ‘textbooks. | COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) —A_ «ee for 1900 cock, a.m. of the same me St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after an illness of eight hours, One 12,000 gallon tank. Information, bidding bianks and M . |epecifications may be obtained upon Metropoli-| request. Bids must be made upon Oak- tan’s staff of almost 29,000 field [Res County Bead Commtutes NEW YORK (AP)—Lewellyn B. $25,000 bond. White, 59, newspaperman, maga- Bentley was picked up by zine editor and author, died of a’ Ypsilanti State Police Tuesday heart attack Friday in a hospital.) quring a routine check after a One new series of textbooks,| janitor sweeping up after a gram- They w mon ‘called ‘‘Adventures in Science,"’;mar school science fair found al ing inl of = top-rank-| is aimed at junior high school|jcrumpled note which proves that | ? students. It is published by The/|the ancient art of writing class- WILLIAM G. BURNS AY Reteice toe Ware %- |White was employed by ‘the old traffic violation. When troopers American Book Co. and written|room notes is still alive. and Canada es we oe Burns, 35. of Portland, Ore.. will ‘Chicago Sun, New York Herald’ found a gun in the trupk of Bent- by Dr. Willard Jacobson of Col-| The note said, “To Paul. Paul anada. : pate, boar recerves the right te ros ley's auto, they charged him (mbia University Teachers Col- I'm ashamed of you. You had and to accept the propdsals that im the opinion of the Board. is in |Tribune, Newsweek and Reporter with carrying a concealed weap- jege and Robert N. King and a nice girl like Sue and then turn Fisherman Won't Mind ~ the oe | magazine. ' defects be held at 11 a.m. Monday at the| Dryer Funeral Home here. Burial! best Interest and to the a will foll in Crest M al “fe a ~ oS : Gatdeus, trunk Bien: a ® | MEDFORD, Mass. (AP) — Dr.) ; Louise E. Killie. around and took Beth. Don't ever} mtecleners “of the County of Oakland Mr. Burns died Wednesday in a » \Katherine M. Jeffers, 52, dean of! The accused told police he was ask anything of me. If the rest of SEATTLE — The Weather wichigan, and of the County of Oak- Portland hospital following a short \Jackson College and professor of an informant for the FBI but fol- Ww Who A a the class is wise they won't ask) Bureau Friday issued this ad- '0"¢. Michigan | ap COM- : oman ° ttempte anything of you. Be smart, go visory for the opening of trout MISSIONERS HE COUNTY or T back to Sue. Sue and” Nancy is, fishing in Washington's high OF ROBERTO FELT the best girls in this room.” lakes Sunday: “Wonderful fish- LEE O. BROOKS The answer: “I still like Sue. | ing but lousy weather.” Lom illness Surviving are his mother, Mrs. | Margaret Burns of Detroit; two} daughters, Margaret and Doreen,! both of Detroit: two sisters, Mrs.) Priscilla McKenney of Holly and) Mrs. Delores Keranen of Detroit,' and two brothers. ELMER J. FRENCH IMLAY CITY — Service for El-; mer J, French, 76, of 1645 Sum- mers Rd., will be held 2 p.m. Sunday at Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Atti- ca Cemetery, Attica. iN May 16, ‘38, WYLIE E. GROVES Service for Wylie E. Groves, chief planning engineer for De- troit Edison Co., will be held at 1:15 p.m. Monday at the First Methodist Church in Birming- ham. Burial will follow in Green- wood Cemetery. Mr. Groves, 63, | baugh. It’s a ‘‘fountain flower of 542 Westchester Way, Birming- | pot” which automatically waters ham, died Thursday afternoon | the flowers for two weeks at a in his Detroit office following a | stretch without a lazy home heart attack. gardener having to lift a finger. ST. ELMO, III. (UPI)—Another heavy burden was lifted from the shoulders of mankind today oy the latest invention of School Superintendent Harry H. Arke- biology at Tufts University, died|lowing a check, he was quizzed Friday night while visiting in on the holdup. to Plant Cliff Saved Cleveland. | The teller at the Ferndale | a Branch of the First Federal Sav-; HOLLYWOOD (AP)—Erna Tan- = ings and Loan Assn. identified ner wanted to plant some geran-|But Angelo took her from me. She ‘Invents Gardening Boon Bentley as the mar who held her iums on the 100-foot cliffside be- hates me. Angelo is a better man! - up and took $200 March 11. \hind her Hollywood Hills home. than I am." — pom | LAZELLE AGENCY, Inc. ~ \cliff. . . ‘ Highway Workers ake t Disagree With Proposal | wer | she tied a rope to the bumper for One Military Uniform a of her car and let herself over| | Continue Talks the cliff but the ground gave out) SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The|f All Forms from under her halfway down. {commander of the 6th Army dis - . 4. She clutched the rope for 45 agrees with Rear Adm. Hyman C. DETROIT (UPI) — Negotiations minutes until firemen rescued Rickover’s suggestion that the mil- of were scheduled to resume today : . : ; rae er. itary services all wear the same in an effort to avert a strike which * * m adler beheace = 5,000 poorer on re Mrs. Tanner, 50, was somewhat} ‘The services gain by friendly| : ‘ jhighway projects totaling 100 mil- shaken but unhurt. competition,” .Gen. Charles D./ lion dollars. ; a |Palmer told an Armed Forces Talks between representatives of a | Dav luncheon Friday. ‘That com-! | the Michigan Road Builders asso Ttudent Admits | petition is achieved by identifying | ciation and the Michigan Confer- the services in their own right.” jence of Teamsters continued until Rickover suggested in Washing- late yesterday affer a union offi- He Started late ton Thursday that identical uni-) cial said 1,500 teamsters would forms would curtail interservice| | strike if no progress was reported, BALTIMORE Nominee for ay" oon “yesterday: the frankest high school graduate D . Bi d | b t EE ri ome * of the year: Charles Bostian of; rives bir ncubator ‘ran tzsimmons, the Team- Baltimore City College High. ra (UPID— . sters’ chief neg@ator, said the = Named “most likely to succeed” Bhar eh iaal priate pegs union members would walk off py his classmate, his farewell) the only motorist in the country their jobs Monday if no progress (message to the school said: who drives an incubatgr. Seems was forthcoming. | “Content many times to take) a wise mother bird seeking a A spokesman for the association the easy way out, Iwas satisfied! nice warm spot to raise a family said the walkout would affect an'during my earlier years with) Jaid three eggs-under the hood of additional 3,500 men working on work that could have been done! Harry’s car. When the caf's highway projects under contract to much better. I managed to make} parked at home, the mother bird the group across the state. ifairly good grades but it was not} watches the eggs but she flies —_—— ‘until my senior year that I began} away whenever Harry goes for Church Will Begin ito work in earnest.” a drive. ’ . . ‘ Evangelistic Series Palace Guards Need New Shakos | pavisnunc — an evangeivic Qtario Bear Hunt Begins series titled ‘‘New Life Campaign," will begin at 7:45 p.m. this Sun- day at First Baptist Church (for-| TIMMINS, Ont. ( — Forty hunt-'The hunters went out today in merly Community Bible Church), | ers plunged into north Ontario bush, groups of: five and six, EMPLOYEES FEDERAL the Rev. Jack A. McCurry, pastor, | today looking for bears with which) ~*~ * * announced today. |to re-hat the guard at Buckingham! The hunt started despite protests ame nncenn SR, ~ & * | Palace. lof animal lovers in Canada, the! CREDIT UN ION Guest preacher will be the Rev.| The hunters, led by Mayor Leo United States and Britain. One man Rudy Schuerman, evangelist from /|Del Villano, carried wcapons that) wrote the mayor and accused him Keego Harbor. He will be assisted| included old army rifles and Ger-|of being a murderer who intended in his sermon delivery by his wife|man 8-MM specimens. a ruthless slaughter of bears. who will portray Bible themes; 1 was Del Villano who organ- | One bearskin will provide two with chalk and special . lighting) ized the hunt, after reading that | ceremonial hats for the guards. = effects. the bearskin shakos worn by the |-The bears must ‘be shot now, ‘ . . The series will continue nightly | guards at Buckingham looked | while the pelts are at their best ‘at..the same time, through the| ragged anc moth-eaten, not at gloss. : ‘following Sitnday. | all imperial. The War Office iw | 1. Timmins Rod and Gun Club =" = | Londen accepted the mayor's of- has been giving the hunters courses | | For Emploroue of GMC Truck and Coach Diyision and Their Families 156 W. Huron at Norton FE 5-6151 “It Pays to Do All Your Financing Here” Pontiac Press Phote - se | A youth rally is planned for) fer and said it would take, as in gun handling for the last two jtonight’s service. many bearskins as he could Sup. | weeles "7 | Ply. | | The committee already has two Berbers, in northwest Africa, | The hunters will go out every; bearskins—one from this area and are a mixture of European, Arab- | weekend until June 15, when On-/one from Carleton Place near Otta- jan: and Negro strains. tario bear hunting licenses expire.|wa. ‘ poe STYLED FOR SHOW — Garments made by re ! girls in the John Pierce Junior High School home- «Erwin and Gail Russell (right). A run-way con: - making department will be presented in a style structed out into the gymnasium will allow pupils | show during an open house at the school at to demonstrate activities learned during the past 8 p. m. Wednesday. Helping Anne’ DenHerder year. Each department in the school will partici- adjust a new dress istJudy Karl (left), Sandy pate in the program. ‘ t oO wo ) ® SC . 1 F a } . _ a ° ‘ af . f P F 7 a * r | « dt ) ~ cee ee ee = , ee ee re A