ee oe The Weather US. Weather Burean Forecast Fair, warmer tonight. Partly cloudy tomorrow. (Detatis Page 2) THE PONTIAC PRE MMe OVER PAGES / 117th YEAR kikkkk PONTIAC, UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1959 cant PAGES 7c First Lucky Shopper ag a {)j Pentiae Press Phete MYSTERY SHOPPER PAYS OFF — Cloudy skies and a threat of rain didn't keep Mrs. Lyman Cowley, of 802 Blaine St, daughter Sharon, 5, from taking and her advantage of Downtown Pontiac Spring Value Days Thursday. Their shopping spree really paid off as Sharmon became the first Winner of a gift certificate. She is shown here the Oakland County Courthouse. receiving it from the’‘Mystery Shopper’ in front of Thursday was the first of three gala value days downtown and there are still 599 more gifts to be awarded lucky shoppers today | and Saturday. New Inquiry May Lead to City Water-Showdown ¢: Pontiac wants some answers that may lead to a show- made in the state. down between offers by Ne + Senate Passes 7 1-Cent Hike in State Sales Tax But Even House OK | Would Mean 90-Day Wait if Dems Choose From Our News Wirés | LANSING (UPI)—A bill) which would amount to a one-cent hike in the sales tax was passed by a 21-13, vote in the Senate today) and sent to the House, | ‘where passage was unlikely. All Senate Republicans) except Sen. John P. Smeek- ‘ens (R-Coldwater) voted for ithe bill. Democrats were ‘solid in opposition. , | The bill did not get immediate ‘effect and even if passed, would not become effective until 90 days ‘after the session unless Democ rats {gave it support Before passing the bill, the Senate rejected an amendment that would have increased the use tax to five cents, instead of four cents, and exempted food and medicines. The . defeated amendment, of- fered by Sen. Philip Rahoe ‘D- Iron Mountain). a lT lost out on \° 17 tie vote . * * * “This Senate Republican group has finally taken a _ stand that they're gonna stick with,” said Sen. Carlton Morris (R-Kalama-' The bill would raise the three- use tax on certain goods t elsewhere and taken into | Michigan to four cents_and broad- en the law to include purchases the Southeastern Michigan y*purther broadening of the law Water Authority and the city of Detroit to provide a new, would make it. in effect, a hike ‘Supply of fresh water here. City Manager Walter K. Willman was told last night GO TOGETHER to query the Southeastern Michigan Water_Authority on the practicality of its plans* to pipe Lake Huron water here City commissioners asked . Will- man to find out how successful the water authority has been r lining up enough customers to sel 100 million gallons of Water pinay Specifically, they want to know 1. How many commitments has the water authority won to date and how much water is involy ed? 2. Will the water authority * be able to sell to the populous south- eastern Odkland County commun- ities that are now under contract with Detroit for water? - 3. Or will Detroit:come into the authority as a customer, using the Lake Huren water to supply ity- suburban customers? * * * Success of the water authority hinges on whether it can sell enough water to .make financing of its proposed pipeline profitable, said Willman. KEY CUSTOMER Water authority engineers esti- mated the authority would have to sell 100 million ‘gallons a day. Pontiac might be capable of using up to 25 milliofT gallons daily, making it a potential key customer in the water plan. Howard K. Kelley,- chairman ot the water authority, has said Pontiac could have water at a top price of $1.33 a thousand gal- lons and that this price would go down as the number of customers elsewhere goes up. But the $1.33 maximum is based on total sales of at least 100 mil- lion gallons a day throughout the Oakland and Macomb county area, Kelley admits. - Meanwhile, Pontiac is still being; offered water by Detroit, said Will-| man, at a price of $1.44 a thou-| sand gallons under contractural Herter Will Report fo Nation on Paris WASHINGTON \w—A radio-tele- vision report to the nation on. the Western foreign ministers confer- ence in Paris will be given next Thursday by Secretary of State Christian A. Herter. — Herter will also review the forth- coming East-West foreign minis- ters conference to be held in CGe- neva May 11. _ The United States, with the apparent solid agreement of Britain and France, wil] make a determined try to -keep the strings around a package Ger- man settlement. Former President Harry S. man today praised State Christian A good job" at Paris. Secretary of Herter for ‘‘a Won't Go to — True in the three-cent sales tax. Amendments to it and a bill au- thorizing use of the veterans trust fund prevent either from taking effect without the other Democrats are opposed to coupling the trust fund and use | | tax bills. They want immediate | action on the trust fund and are solid in support of an income tax over a Use tax. Gov. G. Mennen Willjpams claimed the Senate GOP nee ed the state's cash crisis as a “black jack” to get the use tax. “This is another (GOP) attempt to put a tax piggy-back) on a bill to use the veteran’s trust fund in stopping payless paydays.” said Senate Minority Leader Har- old M. Ryan (D-Detroit) during debate on the bill yesterday “Any payless pavday we have, had so far is a phony,"’. said Mor- ris. | ‘The governor and Walter Reu- | ther are the boys who are going to make the decision when pay- | less paydays stop,’’ he said. Morris said Republicans ean (Continued on Page 2, Cal. en ‘| | } sales + | personal profit Mrs. Luce Quits Job | in Spite of | WASHINGTON (?—Claire Boothe Luce quit today as' ambassador to Brazil because of her publie row with Sem Wayne Morse (D-Ore). President Eisenhower regretfully announced her de- cision after an hour's talk with her at the White House. In a letter to the President, Mrs. Luce said: longer possible for me to* p accomplish the mission you have entrusted to me.” Presidential press serine James C. Hagerty told a news con- “It is no of a Senate subcommittee which | | handles Latin-Amerifan affairs. j A few hours after the Senate con- firmed her appointment Tuesday, arrangements similar to the ones ference that Eisenhower sought to|Henry Luce, her husband, publiclv| in effect in the southern! part of) ‘urged her to quit on the grounds | ;committee and on the floor, Rob- lerts copied his bill from the one!Churchill, | day’s deadline for bills to bé in- |-which their union was negotiat- | Ing money to such firms. |send unionists convicted of certain} ar mre vers =” LOY Have That Broke ‘F eeling Ike’s Pleas Detroit city limits, ~ these charges” is also chairman ” - |persuade Mrs, Luce to reconsider “ane > 2 on & the county.: lher decision to quit. that her Democratic political foes (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) “Detroit's price is higher, but the; : would make it inpossible for her’ offer is more definite,” Willman But her letter gives the rea- ji. carry out her Page —— : said. < ‘ OO es , | is > “ee > - Dandry was equally concerned le oe howe Sail fiseaae he i Som aioer will pe an hour . |governor to designate three suc: aoe ee eee r $17.95 99 $19.95 99 - ° g i : i as- i r r With street corner distribution of pop-obacene materials if they ere . ae oS Senate Passes Hike 'cessors, in order of preference, to} How long the approved appeal ” Values ~ Value obscene materials cext saavicied Dusting sint sure continuity in department op- |take over his post if he and mem-|might delay construction pfans — * % i.e. * ; : erations, Eastman said. ’ |bers of his Administrative Board architects hoped to break ground = Your, choice of either famous 3 a ee oe te. wa . . ; ; r . ; : ; s rv ° 7 . vhite These are sometimes sold to - himmilieiinialaiiaali ae — . * * * in State Sales Tax should be killed or disabled in.an|within a month or two — now was «@ Instent switch for steam or dry © and chotee of colors, Spotter than children yicbu next fo our echoolx bility Eastman also announced that |attack. Other state and local of-jin doubt. |" troning. $2 holds z shown. §2 holds City a'ficials are now armed the morning and night shifts will Cnatneaed From Paxe One’ ficials would do the same, some| “We're in a very vague position, > 2ismemeempamcesrqrasincaemeehom aes aR ee with a new state law passed last now utilize one-man patrol cars, - ‘designating five emergency suc-until we know exactly what they're GENERAL ELECTRIC bell A : year, undér which civil action can with the city diviied into nine the sales tax increase to be per-!cessors. They would serve only |going to do,” Davis said 5 = ; eee stributors re . , and “We'v otwal aN ok | 5 ‘Roll-Easy’ Model pril Passes On “ taken niet distributors of different districts. — a Weve got the votes! until elections could be held. | Annett. sneaking for the rest . . obscene materials woo . O pass it.” jof the directors, said they were ; TAKE VOTE Liomalh ke * jo directors, sa y acuum ner but Leaves Officials can now ask for Cir- I the past. the department’ Meanwhile ue men who run Another bill introduced before| Still dissatisfied with what the . : ' i n e past, the department's Michigan's state-supported colleges : \Supreme Court had said about # With All Attachments Dam Mement cuit Court orders confiscating three platoons rotated shifts month- and universities sav their schools the May 1 deadline would allow! ne i , | . p O | smutty litgrature and halting ly, but a vote by the department's are in deep trouble because of the County boards of supervisors to|county being able to use miscel-| $69.95 88 their sale, he said. 4 aes ~~ cent i catelal cvigie int t .|laneous funds. A precedent was “ By The Associated Pre | patrolmen showed 64 per .cent in state financial crisis appoint a county assessor to re-|" the ki t h id fia Val : : — — The attorney pointed out that favor of permanent shifts, East- sre erm place city, village and township |" ma ng, on Me sal etl aka Some showers left over from if Pontiac battles smut, it will be Man said e MORALE SINKING assessing officers. Oakland is allowed to proceed in Brand lectri e saree — : < rs Ss s : >, . : ° . his m n ing . | ran new - eiectric vacuum , AI a glass ee a me faced with a problem that has * * * Si hese fenadl cave pe bec ause ; - — = l@ cleaner with all the attach- * metry, merry mont May BY, mca 4 slenuchins ec yless paydays. lop P jilmot said: “It is their | ments. La wh reasy * ote proved ticklish elsewhere Extra cars will cruise through ; ~ ris ts. Large wheels for easy ; ross Many sections of the coun “In borderline cases, how d€) the Bike niet soutn eilone PP teachers. are being lured away by Truman Gets New Title opinion that this question is far | © rolling as shown. Easy to # ' oe , , you decide what is obscene an!” the city a cover. the f mote Balvent Bchooks. “ASHINGTON (UP >). | More important for future county |= pull te poke ‘ But fairly mild and pleasant eens e city, and cover the area o' ; WASHINGTON (UPI) — For financial planni th: “h ee ee re eee en ae —_ ’ seather -npealied-iy qde-arein oe ee, have alway regularly assigned vehicles If one | : Some institutions Rave fallem | mer President Harry S. Trumar, | 05 gees es ar ne . ae 4 — Sa! 4 4 contimiation of ‘Thursday's warm had trouble with this question.” | is called on a case, Eastman | pride igre retin bills and | who has lectured at a number | pout —— | GENERAL ELECTRIC | + temperatures and sunny skies. a said. | = ene | of universities in recent years, ; ; 11-Inch Family Size ; Biggest wet belts were in the Britain Plans to Send Night shift officers will work a! Administrators of all nine schools said he'd been given a new aca- on get who said taking the ap-| E . P West. Light sho Pare ‘ > ‘od on a ae told their woes yesterday in com-| demic title during his three-lec- |peal was the “‘only means left to)” lec $ let ari | a bi mets fel i ida Satetite Into Space SUCAY WEEN WHN EDIRNE POY DE ications to Gov, Williams and ture course at ‘Columbi Uni- jus,” said the League feels thell tric kil adjacent sections of Montana, Or cause of €@ manpower shortage. his Simin t ‘ , aS “ia a t > al bo ‘ C L- lcourts neve hav - " \% 88 nh and Nevada and along and) LONDON (‘AP)—Britain is pl “We haven't hired since » of istrative ard. ne, versity, ‘‘The ys up at Col- | ; rer ye properly an- % g 0! N ( rite s plan- E uired since July o _ ; : . spe SA ; | ; , ‘ g - newr coastal se Hons | of W asking, ing to send a British-American 1997 and the manpower situation rely ad era NR cnt one call mahi Professor Tru bee ie nae ieee ial! seid i ton, Oregon and ¢ enone Falls earth satellite into space, London is rin’? Bauman Saul. “Our to ns bale ut ¥ : established rey 4 me et the Electoral-College of wsultl, = re + F Value & ¢ wére light is most places newspapers reported today officers realize the situation and Tie cial’ ae al te a em” . a a a That is. does th i , é Completely i bl (Light showers also sprinkled; The decision to proceed with the volunteered to work without the § genera ema _ niga hivordien, s e — of the d omprelely immersive - Te ‘ sections of the middle Mississippi’ space program wag taken at a ov-time.” _ | Michigan Constitution, which limits Complete with vented cover. « * Valiey and the Ohio Valley e&st- meeting of Prime Minister Harold * *« * |public building financing to the ¥ movable thermostat control. & , ward to the coast and northeast- | y¢- Nan + ‘ : > depart . : ( jone-tenth annual limit, also re- Alu killet. $3 hold 7» : . : Macmillan and his top ministers, The department is planning to b I d R d oe minum skillet. olds. ward [ito Maine. Only other wet the reports said. train 17 recruits, Eastman said, u an nva ers €a y jstrict the amount that can be — , Wil: Bia SS: C2 ARO 2g spots were in parts of the upper x * * but it will be late August before . nr accumulated from sources other | % — . ‘ Mississippi Valley The Daily 7 antag sae dh. | ithan direct taxation. ie Genuine SUNBEAM + aily Telegraph said indi- they can tackle regular police du- | : ; : : | - cations were that the satellite ties. | O urren er In i anama | Davis said, as did the high | Electric Grill ou The Weather would be propelled by Britain's - = : PANAMA \#-— The leader of the to de ditional “no” A the monies tn gueniog ret . Blue Streak missile, that the sat-| They will receive « minimum of ANAMA U e ne Rr Sirs rT uncon¢ itionally and ‘‘no” as the monies in question are |: and Waffle Baker t Full US. Weather Bureaw Report ellité itself would be American,\eight | weeks training, Eastman;Cuban invaders of Panama said Submit to Panamanian court. _ not raised by direct taxation. & unre AND VICINITY—Fair and | i : ts inside British,'said , today he and his men are ready Cesar Vega, a former Havana, wy warmer today. Migh 61. Wind Ught and and its instruments inside British. 'saia. today he e y night club owner who led the ex-| When the suit was heard in $36.50 88 - wa er to aw ———y A ae | - é Pd tonight - he eget partly cloudy and — — |peditionary force of less than 100 Oakiand County Circuit Court ia ° E-f warmer, 72. Wind ligh nd vat . a er i 1 4 r ‘4 . saci’ beccing saetaweslerty le-t ashore six days ago, said he would) 1957 visiting Judge Herman C. Value a miles tomorrow, | |return to the invaders’ base on the} Dehoke ruled the county had Automatic waffle baker and i Teday in Pontiac | Caribbean coast and et formal acted illegally in accumulating i i i ee F Lowes mperatur preceding 8 ar PP! 1 f hi is ° these funds and that they should oid gunb baer acid § 36 - lapproval from his men. ° ’ tids. Sunbeam guarantee. » ate gis Wind Welocity 16 a | be restored to the general fund. ie Direction South. ‘ But he said he had already | The appeal resulted. : a : Sub- sets Friday et 7:31 p.m. | j taken an opinion poll and the | “ Moon sets Friday at 147 pm discouraged adventurers favored Judge Dehnke, however, when|§ Moo + Saturday at 257 a . quick settlement. |he signed the final decree Tues-|# Dewntewn Temperatures . oe ‘ \day, said the county could use| % 6 am +36 iba 54 “We are optimistic about reach-'¢1 192,427 left from these funds for | § aca... .. tee 4 ling a settlement within a feW the new courthouse. i Bem days,”" said a spokesman for the} «] understand he has to agree j _ inter-American team of diplomats hy jaw with the findings of the an rentine trying to end the threat to Pan-' Supreme Court in his decree,”|# Highest tempe: ature 60 ; amanian President Ernesto de 14 Annett said. ‘This doesn’t make |? pee Oe, rere) ee Guardia’s government. ‘sense to me.” Weather—Partly clouds | a Vega said he was responding, to) : One Year Age in Pentiae a eek 3 * direct surrender appeals from Cu-| . . — ond pee ee 3 \ ban Prime Minister Fidel Castro, Come On, Little Rabbit Mean temperature SUE bas “cee his brother Raul, commander of, Weather—Sunny ; ithe Cuban armed forces, and the | ‘ SAN FERNANDO, Calif. (UPI) mous DO - = + Mighest and Lowest Temperatarcs This a Organization of American States. on L. Seybert, 21, told po- t a leon. Electr to 9 CUP é ate in 86 Years a 4 * * x lice last night Ke’d had no idea lectric ron: lec i P rk ; 67 in 1942 28 in 1903 * \ ¢ e - | <7 Vega and three others of his those plants in his carefully cul- . ri¢ @ es a Tharsday's Temporture Chart | | i3 ‘ : party were flown to the U.S.-con- tivated garden were marijuana, $9.95 48 $11.95 88 bs i arquett 40 3 “e i xs ° ; aouumata ~ Memonje aT eal fae trolled €anal Zone Thursday to ‘Tm a rabbit hunter,” he said. K ne > —, S Ms Miami Beh. 98 v3) $50 ats *|talk witlf the peace’ mission sent) “‘A guy gave me these seeds and Value , Value ' ‘ rownsyville i lwaukee 3 3 n F = ee . Buftaio” $6 36-Minneapolis 72 | {from Washington by the 21-nation told me they would attract all F Doth . id : * ; Charieston 149 66 New Orleans 8) 65) : OAS. : \.the rabbits I can shoot.” amous iriion electric dry Starts: automatically — ops 4 Chieago 85 41 New York 51 44/¢ & - { iron ‘with Adjusto-Cord — for automatically. Keeps colfee r Cipeinnati 7 4 Omahe ei) | os The U.S. minesweeper Falcon . right or left hand use. §1 at serving temperature. §1 > ‘eliston 6 H ¥ +4 = . at rom. ae 8 and two other naval ships also be-/Finally Turned It Off holds. |B holds * . Detroit so 36 Pituapargn 0 a1 gan orton nd the — on<-the}—--~ ? . Louis > . lookout for invasion craft. WEST HOLLYWOOD, ‘Calif. Ww 8. F ac Si “J a Sa oe . ~ 9 a ee es al Oe A Oe ee eee : Peatine Press Fhote | An OAS spokesman emphasized) (UPI)—Robert Fawcett retired ; Houghton 49 32 Trav. Cily $8 | folks were especially interested in the four-day Jamies ,Wilcox, 132 S. Johnson Ave., are shown that all foreign ships were being|. yesterday ‘after 30 yeats with the ¥ Jacksonville " = Whsbington 7% ‘i Home Improvement Show, which opened last dinnerWare displayed by the Pontiac Pottery “jysed’only for “peaceful observa-| Sparkletts Drinking Water -#s peepy Rad 19 41 Temps a3 64; Night at the Pontiac Armory. Here, Mr.cand Mts. __ store. , : tion.” Corp. Fe! 4 " 2 a fe > ; aa og nh : , a / ’ ° . a : 3 4 ¢ ‘ m 2 . > . é ° ° = ra » - = * 4 » ” Cae . cr 7 : ~~ r : i " . s mer and warm Pull 6-foot 3-inch hammock a 4 B- | canvas, Leavy pillows. Easy to store or take with you to beach, va- inches wide. Heavy tubular frame, head A 4 - j ata eneeaeEe Oe 5 neater _ \ a A Wi The Bradley sank last Nov. 18/sMarshal Lord Montgomery flew|tiicate in exchange for $1,801,000. — You Knew Simms Would “Come Through” With during a severe Lake Michigan 000 of 1% r cent certificates | - ; t e bed ‘back to London today after a two-| ‘2. i ° f V h r D Gif B ’ see penmanta is a eruiser oper-(t2¥ Visit t0 discuss East-West re.|™*U5NE TAY : Super-Savings for Mother's Day Gilt Buyers. ated By ert ? | lations Se ee ‘Reginald Arkell, Author New speed-bath LILT takes the mess tion wi ted t ill- fated Bradley, Line officials said; Montgomery gave no informa of ‘Old Herbaceous,’ Dies . alg pons. Sees ne “during the continuois search we tion about his two talks with So- ‘ cae have been making we have regis-|Viet Premier ‘Nikita Khrushchev See en a ieee » t he taking a per- | Regina eu, a al tered a sonak finding which may {Or°P* message from Khrushchev |dramatist best known abroad for Jewelers Compacts—Ea. 98° 5 een * ‘to British Prime Minister Macmil-|his novel “Old Herbaceous.” died| Bey. 05.00 bo 09 valum. _ Annerted detiges. Tour eke. Fe They said that if the finding is lan. The trip was Montgomery's today after a long ilness. He was 4 OO HH, Ayers Trio Set ¢4E Specially Purchased — Guaranteed Underpriced the Braddley they will consultwith OW idea and was severely criti- *. | 3 4 the Braddi th ill ; shh cized by some British papers. *® * * _ Famous nationally advertised bran cologne set | = ey Mey Se Cent * * * Arkell wrote or collaborated on Le Lentheric 5-Pc Set 22 e cinch gtr ee tae dra it ay wee epmnste a LO . 1 Sale of Fine FIRST QUALITY be oe bulk. 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Seginaw , ta Ss on aes ey ee OO AINLIO LAM ra i atthe Oe a, om o le ‘ THE — ewe geaiadlignd On. < Cand omy \ - =: 4 PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1959 > Hydrogen Bomb Testing Raises Question: LANSING (UPI) Hydrogen| emb testing by this country and|but some things have been learned. Russia has increased concern over radioactive fallout and emphasized he need for more information on i One of the primary questions! raised concerns its affect on crops| head ef farm crops at MSU, |treated in 1938. ind farm animals. Little is know about this problem Scientists at Michigan State | University know radioactivity | does bring about changes in plants. Prof. Kenyon T, Payne, said, but inj at“least one case, a) ,type of bean plant was changed ‘from vine to bush type being first been produced in plaptypy radia- jof potato tubers, even when stor- can trace flow of materials like} age temperatures cannot do so, tion exposure. * * * Some of the changes are bad, he ius ‘of the Pontiac Area Chamber of with Oakland County) in Washington MEET WITH CONGRESSMAN Congressman William S. Broomfield the annual meeting of the U. S. Chamber of Com- said mutations or changes have - merce. Pictured P. Whitmer, — Members Commerce met (R- while attending superintendent Utley, Broomfield, and Glenn H of Education president. f Exposures can halt germination i calcium which have been’ made Concern has mounted recently on|radioactive.” the subject, of fallout because of, State Health Commissioner Al; higher radidactivify counts, spec-|bert E. Heustis said there was M0), particu: a ially in the northern parts of the|cause for alarm about increased| Walter ma Chrysle gp ta e Bs niger L : US. fallout. It is higher than normal | through Troy which would best Prof. Sylvan Wittwer, Horticul-/20W. he said, bug must increase) suit some real estate interests they turist at MSU, said he hadn't made to 20 times normal before any real| own has been tossed out of court studies on fallout of strontium 90,;concern would develop. , Oakland County Circuit Judge H. but controlled experiments with the So little is’ kmown about the Russel Holland this morning dis- material show leaves and fruits) silver white matallic strontium (missed the suit by the Troy Mea- would absorb it. | 90 that the top policy-making dows Home Owners’ Assn. against Strontium 90 is a by-product of body of the Atemic Energy Com- |Commissioners Roy L. Duncan, H-bomb explosions and extremely; mission 4s meeting this week to |Louis Yanich and Clifford Suter- hazardous to health. review the entire subject. |meister Jr. | Wittwer said the above-ground Strontium 90, with no smell and| “The allegations contained in parts of plants take up the no taste, affects bone marrow and the bill of complaint do not dis- material and there is no obvious nf close the commissioners had has been found to be present in in-| change in the plant itself, ex-| . a, = a actual, direct, immediate or self cept that it does absorb ‘he stron- — SERNERS 1S aI Ge at! interests”. in where the road tium 90 and can pass it along to among other materials. | went, Judge Holland ruled. ca er uadiead: | Tukey said one of the main things} |known wag that when it got on} : Dr. Harold Tukey, head of the|aves it got into the plant. Witt-|tion which might mean at a later MSU horticulture department, said|wer said there was little “trans-|date that it will affect real estate : Holland Tosses ar Stnt™ Does Fallout Affect Crops, Animals?) 3 Troy Commissioners “They merely voted on a ques-| ! The property owners association filed suit in March seeking to pre- vent the State Highway Depart- ment from carrying through -with the route the three commissioners favored. , Judge Holland had issued a tem- porary restraining order unt ar- guments were heard April 14. At this time, Ernest 0. Zirka- los, representing the Highway De- suit, claiming the group had filed it prematurely and that the actual route had not been se- lected as yet. Judge Holland in his opinion | overruled the Troy City Charter whdn he said Commissioners Dun-| assistant attorney general | partment, asked dismissal of the | which expressway D two |should go through the city The association claimed that since the commissioners had per- |sahal interests they should have jabstained according to a provision jin the Charter. . | “There's po? basis for allowing A lawsuit charging three Troy|which they personally own,” the|the injunction relief to stand, and city commissioners with voting for|juége said. y ;|Moreover, the bill of complaint imust be dismissed,” Judge Hol- jland ruled. Painting of ‘Boy’ Found to Be Girl After 70 Years | INNSBRUCK, Austria @ —A painting hanging in the Innsbruck | Museum since 1389 has under- gpne a sex change. Called “Boy With a Hawk,” the | painting by Peter Drost was | taken down recently for refurb- ishing. The scantily dressed bey | turned out to be a girl, the hawk an outsized dove. When the painting goes back on the wall, it will be called “Girl radioactive isotopes have been|port’ of the material within the|g can, Yanich and Sutermeister were! With a Dove.” used in experiments for about! plant. eight years, but that his interest! The question of haw fallout af-| was in how various materials act fects farming is one that scientists! in various plants. |have only slight knowledge about, | “With us, it’s sort of like putting) Payne said: dye in a stream to,see how cur-| ‘We've just barely scratched the rents flow,” he said, “because we'surface,’’ he added. above (from left) are Dr. Dana of schools, Clare Griffin, Board Slated for No. 2 Job State Department's Dillon FAR HILLS, NJ man slated to be the new No. 2 man in the State Department is an amateur diplomat who made good C. Douglas Dillon, - 49-year-old investment banker nominated Thursday. by President Eisenhow- er, never held a full-time govern- ment post until he was named ambassador to France in 1953 * * * He did so well in the Paris job that he was brought to Washington in 1957 as deputy undersecretary of state for economic affairs The French liked Dillon’ For one thing. he speaks their langu- age. He was born in Switzerland while his family was on & Euro- pean sojourn in 1909 and he often returned to France for visits His father Clarence Dillon bought the Chateau Haut-Brion with its famed vineyards near Bordeaux in 1933 and the property has remained in the family since. } The younger Dillon thus acquired an appreciation for wine, and the French liked that too * * * Dillon's interests range over a wide field They include history, politics, art, sailing, farming, . fi- nance and, in recent years, diplo- macy. The Dillon homestead here is a PAYDAY LOANS $50 for 2. wks ... only 70¢! other loans to $500 with 24 mos. to. repay CASH YOU | REPAY IN | REPAY IN RECEIVE | 2 WEEKS | 4 WEEKO $25.00 $25.35 $25.70 50.00 50:70 51.40 Interest ot 3% per menth on belences Spr er ASSOCIATES LOAN COMPANY in DRAYTON PLAINS: 4494 Dixie Hwy. - CALL: OR 3-1207 in PONTIAC: ~ 125-127 N. Saginaw CALL: FE 2:0214 2255 S. Telegraph. Mich. Miracle Mile CALL: FE 8-9641 (AP) — The’ Amateur Who Made Goo 300-acre farm where he develops purebred Guernsey cattle and im- proves feed-producing methods After graduation from Harvard Dillon bought a seat on the New York Stock. Exchange and then entered Dillon, Read & Co. the investment banking firm his fath- er created in 1916. He was elected board chairman of the company in 1946, succeeding the late James A. Forrestal * * * It was Forrestal, then undersec- retary of the Navy, who gave Dik lon his first government assign- ment, a special study of Navy Department organization in 1940 Dillon served with the air arm of the 7th Fleet in the southwest Pacific during World War I, emerging as a lieutenant com- mander in 195. The postwar years brought Dil- lon into politics — and into asso- ciation with John Foster Dutles The two men served on a foreign policy advisory team during the 1948 presidential campaign of Thomas E. Dewey. ® «®t * . He helped launch the ‘Draft Eisenhower’’ movement in New Jersey in 1951 and served as_co- chairman of the New Jersey Citi- zens for Eisenhower. Dillon was elected an alternate ‘delegate-at-large to the conven- tion which nominated Eisenhower His appointment senhower was inaugurated. Dillon is married to the former Phgllis C. Ellsworth of Boston and Chicago. 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Cut Pile... © Machine washable, Ton-shid back $488 é ] | ° e 4 a ? é, ” \ rs . mi . inj ‘ ‘ . eee 2) Gee Oe Se ee ee eee . j BAL THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1959 | : Castro Scores Public Relations Victory in His U.S. Tour Soo Sees Island, Connecticut, Delaware ard} wounds, according to government wahovert | Berrelies of the | AF young Prime Minister from Cuba./the answers he gave to important) These are the impressions nized confusion” by one menepe-/fradems of speech, press, religion |half of New Jersey. records. e : . 2 coverage ‘of, Prime ‘Minisser Fidel | He convinced some skeptics, questions, He also left behind|Sained by newsmen, this writer/perman — underlined the lack|— @re contrary to communism, | Castro's North American tour. Here | = > . _ lamong them; who accompanied i anii-|Castre said. are some of his impressions.) jwon over critical audiences of|some doubts about ‘his ability t0| the Cuban leader on his - swing of administrative orga -s + « By ROBERT BERRELLEZ editors and college students and|cope with major problems con- | from Havana through Washing- zation around him, the Organiza-/ Neither did A ican and Ca- NEW YORK (AP)—Fidel Cas-/€merged with increased stature as|fronting his plans for the “‘new|ton, Princeton; N.J., New York, |tion Castro needs for the giant | nadian audiences seem fully sat- La i ed : tro’s whirlwind two-week tour of 4 hemispheric symbol of freedom.|Cyba” he hopes to bring out of|Boston and Montreal. task ahead of him. isfied with his explanation of the : the United States and Canada was} But ‘the bearded lawyer-revolu~ the chaos left by’ dictator Fulgen- * *e . x~ *& * continuation of war crimes exe-|. it oat ky unable to Pay, Zour, Payments. debts or bilis when due, see a public relations victory for the tionary left some wondering about cio Batista. -The trip itself — called ‘‘orga- Before leaving Havana on_his!cutions (more than 500 now) aft- ' pas . Zeeoy Ss mt ne EL ol end srreage. tor payments you con Te OO tour “to promote “Cuba,” theler- brief trials. The Prime Minis- - - ° Prime Minister had been expected ter said the trials and executions NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ° Rich Hermit Murdered to encounter his greatest difficul-| would continue as an example for ONE. PLACE TO PAY Tell Teamsters 4 = . 'ty explaining three things: his de-|the future that ‘‘it isn’t right to Member Ameri Association of Credit Counsellors 4 B lac k M 1Cce Ticketed | CAIRO, Egypt (AP)—A hermit Jay in holding general elections, |kill for political reasons.” This . | monk who got rich telling fortunes | coftinuing war crimes executions|was a reference to atrocities and Let 9 Years of Credii Counseling Expetience Assist You” | ] 1 | i i é ist influ- ital crimes blamed on Hours: Daily 9 to $. Wed. and Sat. 9 to 1. Evenings by App't. p C nN h é hesied his own mur-|@9d charges of Communist influ other cap é 10 Honor | kets for Space: Trip 1M Mo t ey a : sive ee 7 we _jence in his administration. Batista’s forces during the revolu- MICHIGAN CREDI ELL RS er Ras deen found Gead—mur-| “His remarks concerning the last \tion, He also said he was carry-| 16 Peatiar State saa T COUNSELLO idered. The seer, Abdel Messin el two seemed to leave many un-ling out a promise to a Bank FE 6046 NBC Strike Continues ,\\SDENBERG) AIR FORCE |trom his bars Coast missile base /Makrouky, was strangled and satisfied. He said, concerning |that these. war criminals would as Union Action May | mice te ace next month} eS te stabbed in the monastery where|Communist influence, that the on-jbe punished. The |promise was) : : ly party represented in his govern-|made, he added, to. prevent the . in an American attempt to prove! The little astronauts will bejhe lived near Asiut, in upper) arise - Halt Scenery Delivery JUST A c= REMINDER! Dr. A. Miles ae P iment was his own 26th of July|people from taking the law into that a“living creature can leave|chosen from 50 black mice now|Egypt. He had been robbed of|!movement. He also said he felt|their own hands and applauded the ’ jearth and return alive. , junder observation at Holloman Air|about 35,000 pounds ($100,000). he could win over the Commu-{Cuban leader. ‘ NEW YORK (AP)—The Team-| The mice will ride in a special-| Force Base, NM. - nists’ because his program was!| Audiences generally cheered sters Union is instructing its mem-|!¥ designed ‘life package’ cap-| Scientists will measure their re-\Blame the Mailman better than theirs. This reply was|his evident sincerity of purpose, . : sule in the nose cone of Discov-|actions to blastoff, weightlessness : . sie hers | sensé of h nd personal mag- . . *k Ss . viewed as evasive by some. Others |sensé of humor and pe ag = ° ~ me _ . hn’s ‘ever aTL.. The sateune is expected | and the stresses of re-entry. The} DENVER (AP) — Youngsters thought it reflected surprising|netigm seemed to impress most. Is Now Located at = of National Broadcasting 0. .€M-\tg be launched into polar orbit / main object, though, is to get|/playing baseball at Manual High |naivete. But the disorder that accompa- 103 N SAGINAW ST gineers and technicians who are = ;something alive into orbit and|Schoo] watched in admiration as! But newsmen who have covered (nied his appointments and itinera- lees le ° on strike here. ; pack in earth hee ae sie ty POt™an Warren A. Adams re-|Castro over the last four months|ry seemed to stre-~then the be-| — : JACOBSEN'’S Flowers) The Teamsters Union Joint W | All: is. nas never n done with trieved a loose ball and threw it|could not recall when he had so/tief at least amor vsmen, that te9 Council counted on the instruc-| IVES gnore ’ any animal. — . in their direction. The ball soared| clearly spelled out his position re-| the 32-year-old 1 , Minister’s| PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER tions to halt delivéry of scenery} ' One unofficial source said there| over the diamond and smashed e@|garging communism. The ss greatest enemy now is a lack = pam _ z FE 2.0291 and other staging equipment Continue Blockade was about one chance in 100 of|4 x 6 foot window in a drugstore.!of the revolutionary movement—|maturity. : wsdion ’ NBC television studios. success. — aan. a — eran one tno T STE scene Sere NE Oust * * * a ° se * ; A spokesman for the Teamsters) OKMULGEE, Okla. (AP) — A] The Air Force had no com-| Council said its president, John J.|S™all but defiant band of house-| ment. ini | ; ‘O'Rourke, would tell its members| W!V€S — i8noring court orders, | HoW long the four black mice 64 99 by telegram today not to cross the|their husbands and union leaders | will stay aloft was not disclosed. | .. picket lines of the National Assn.|— Continued today to blockade) The Discoverer III capsule,’ of Broadcast Employes and Tech- | 2¢Cess roads to a struck Phillips painted a yellowish green, will be! nicians Petroleum Co. oil refinery, even) almost.a yard wide and two feet : , An NBC spokesman said: “We !f it means ail. | high. If all goes well, it will drift) expect the Teamsters Union to * * * earthward after eection over the continue working just as the other| The wives ignored a District, Pacific beneath a bright orange unions ere, and we have no knowl-|COuUrt temporary — injunction,| parachute. ‘ . thin " f 7 | | edge that they intend to do pther-,Which named 12 of the women, | x * * wise> jand then refused to disband when Hawaii-based planes will try to x * * contempt of court citations were snatch it with nets as it descends. ~ “In any event, we fully intend issued against five of them. If they miss, the buoyant cone’s e to continue normal operations.” The five were cited for violating radio beacon is designed to send Supervisory personnel have kept Provisions of the injunction “‘by!out signals for at least 10 hours . Wi Gg : NBC television and radio pro- bodily stopping the entrance of a/to pinpoint its location for search grams on the air since about two ‘Tansport truck” ‘into the Okmul-’ vessels. & -hours after the strike of about 1,-/8ee refinery, They were com- 500 television technicians started Manded to appear in court at 10 | Monday. a.m. Saturday. They are stretched South Korea Government e se: * jout across the roads, hand .to hut 4 | 2 - FaC NBC and the union are in dis-, hand. s uts 2nd Largest Paper pute over the extent to which un- » * * SEOUL, Korea (AP)—President ion members are to participate in| The women, whose husbands are the making of TV videotapes in Members of the Oil, Chemical and foreign countries for broadcast in Atomic Workers striking the re- Syngman Rhee's_ government |closed South Korea's second larg- jest newspaper Thursday night, ? .) , y by J j | 4s the United States eon nae er a 8 painted they | accusing it of erroneous reports ’ — — tract’ talks Droxe oll, Say (eY! and seditious comments. . . will go to jail if necessary.’’ The a - n j f H on has said it does not favor * Anita Ekberg s Marriage rei actions " The 13-year-old newspaper, Ky- - Still Same: Undecided The dispute was over dismissal U®8hyang Shinmoon, was backed lof several employes whom the un-|by @ Catholic foundation and sup- LOS ANGELES (AP)—The on- ion had claimed had seniority, |POrted Rhee’s political foe, Vice again off-again marriage of Anita 7 ee |President Chang Myun. It had Ekberg and Anthony Steel isn't on _ {been highly critical of government axain, but it isn't exactly off Actress, New Husband domestic policies again ether H . L d * * * ; ~~ * * oneymoon in London It was the first paper shut down “These people haye had battles eae , by the government since the re- ‘ ( a) ahif. —Ac- ‘ . before,"’ a spokesman for the cou- BOLL i : pat _(AP) Ac public was formed in 1948 The i z tress Constance Towers and her * . ' ple said, ‘‘and Steel wants to stay cow fushesd. Parancnian boxl- action was taken under a US. mil- together but Anita has some prob- nensiiat Eugene McGrath. are itary government ordinance of ON LY PONTIAC HAS WIDE-TRACK WH EELS lems to work out 1946, when South Korea was under -~ ££ & heading for London on a combined| | upation rule. WHEELS ARE FIVE INCHES-FARTHER APART. DOTTED LINES honeymoon and business trip Pet na hasnt * ‘ecided Miss Towers disclosed Thursday ; ; SHOW CONVENTIONAL WHEEL POSITIONS. ee ern she and McGrath, former husband Stogie-Puffing Crews , British actor. Miss Ekberg is 27 of actress Terry Moore, were mar-, a ried April 2 in Bloomington, Calif. Blasted by L.A. Mayor Detroit Area Painters McGrath got his final divorce de-| [og ANGELES. Calif. (AP) — ; cree the preceding day. Mayor Norris Poulson says there © Delay Strike Plans She is 25, McGrath is 36. This is are too many loafers and cigar her first marriage - . “Tae i 2a DETROIT uw — A threatened 0 BE smokers in [os Angeles street strike by some 4.000 Detroit area = -"s * painters has been postponed Church Strikes Oil “The city ; State and federal mediators said e city charter says we have ~ ~ Painters District Council 22 agreed| FARMINGTON, N.M. (AP)—A ‘© Pay these people equal pay to extend its contract until Wednes-|crew drilling for «water on the "ates of industry,”’ he said, ‘‘but it day at a meeting yesterday with Mormon church grounds struck doesn't tell us how to get an equal the Greater Dtroit Chapter of tho natural gas and high-grade oil at;#™ount of work out of them.” Painting and Decorating Contrac- 162 feet. C. P. Hilton, president) |. = * = tors of America of the Mormon Stake, said,fire| Noting many complaints about The mediators said the two sides danger may prevent its develop- Street Workers standing around would meet again Wednesday, ‘ment as a producer. smoking cigars, Poulson added: eee nnd See — | Everyone knows a cigar, and the time to smoke a cigar, and the ~ amount of loafing this suggests is Now at L| EW) S simply shocking.” | R y Se 2 Toledo Newspapers | SACINAW AT ORCHARD LAKE AVE. ito Merge on Saturdays |; TOLEDO uw — Beginning May RCA | | O 9, the Saturday edition of the — = | | Toledo Blade and the Toledo Times , will be combined into the Toledo CW THIN PORTABLES soe mad a che we BEFORE YOU BUY ANY a newspaper. Beginning next Monday, the |price of the Times will be 10 cents ° idaily or 50 cents a week for home —_— delivery, Monday through Friday, jan increase of eight cents a week. The price of the Blade will re- wee main unchanged at seven cents Mi Mi . ; |daily and 20 cents Sunday. - om | . PICTURE IN | ‘ ¢ 5 Sticks Head in Sewer amelie —and It Stays There PITTSBURGH, Pa. (AP)—John werrtin Nf ee RITTSBURGH, Pa. cAP)—Johr Prove to Yourself, You Should Drive a 1959 Pontiac from the coneunrs “esas |between his legs during a sandlot . game. The ball rolled into a curb : ’ sewer. “~ Undismayed, John went in head- eunanen an JZ first. He got the ball but couldn't 6 SOUND = - — : | get his head out. Neighbors tried applying oil ~nd y ;cooking grease to his head. He re- The Stylist Sportable. New Veri- mained stuck. Then police and thin portable! 156 sq in. pittwre. 3 . firemen teamed with a Pittsb gh A handsome finishes. 170-P-04 Railways Co. road crew to jack Sleek, slim and easy to carry! up the sewer from the curb and ; ; 17-inch (tubeoveralldiagonal,156 free the boy. 8q.in. picture) TV that can garand Gay : fit anywhere—even on a book- Seaway Rush Subsides a | ’ ae shelf. Veri-thin styling—the most " | CORNWALL, Ont. (AP)—Ocean "4 a RE ; freighters whose big swells were; = . attractive-looking portable you've ever seen. So powerful . you get outstanding performance ig | j (fren tinge area LEANNA ALE |damasing oatousce, and docks | , | af or UE UNEVW tmer eotenct,oxtre. gest PICTURE IN A PORTABLED |i, bh ete: - baie! , ; . W's twice as mych fon * Hi-level contrast control, transtormer- gf ents Ov | ‘ p< 3 e m e n Ss ; ° equolizer ond Signal Guide Tuner pro. | Were racing to be the first) into, . : x Pia ¥ Come in today! . vide portable TV's shorpest picture. the port of Toronto- after the St. | . , ae ~ Lawrence Seaway opened last Sat- ‘ P aN s ; Ly jurday. The race is over and the j ‘ , . \ . . big swells ended. we | , ; » ? = . ’ bs ~ fn : . * a ° i - ’ \{ 6 . - e 4 ™ f ; + pee 3 \ ‘lla hd dm WANE WER FAGES ELEVEN FBI Boss Says Don’t Follow the Crowd » Ignore ‘Chicken’ Taunt, Hoover Urges Youth NEW YORK. (UPI)—FBI Chief;done, it becomes easier — and the J. Edgar Hoover called on the doing of it while one is young young people of America today to Spells the difference between a defy thetaunt of ‘‘chicken" and do Strong man and a weakling as an what they think is right no matter adult.”’ what the ‘‘crowd” does. Hoover, writing in the May “It is never easy to go against issue of Young Americans Mag- the crowd even when the crowd azine, said that the personal is wrong,’’ Hoover said. ‘It is standards of an tndividua) were not easy to stand up to the taunt, vital to the setting of group of ‘chicken.’ But each time it is standards. A Racial Melting Pot Hawaii Has Imported Everything, Even People WASHINGTON — The fledgling | melting pot, Many bloodstreams, State of Hawaii, which Mark Twain| imeluding Polynesian, Japanese, called the “‘loveliest fleet of islands ce Ge aee ee that lie anchored in any ocean,"’| opeste the Hawailan-Ameri was unknown to the world at large 9n all counts a desirable citizen. yntil the arrival of Captain James Cook in 1778 After Cook came merchant sea- The synthetic nature of modern Hawaii is revealed in the history |g ing a “1 li farers, stripping the islands of} of things i oa anes beleve their fragrant sandalwood. Next ar- are typically Hawaiian, The grass caroused on the beautiful islands skirt is a 19th-century import from while their ships were fitted out for Samoa and is now made in New Pacific and Arctic voyages, Jersey. The ukelele, which is man- Meanwhile, King Kamehameha ufactured chiefly in Pennsylvania, I, the “Napoleon of the Pacific,” came with the Portuguese from the conquered all rival Hawaiian 4 country. Even the lilting Ha- chiefs toXform a kingdomthat “Jan music is full of Dixieland. chiefs to form a kingdom that * * * Was soon to welcome another Pineapples eame from Jamaica, group of immigrants in 1820— sugar cane from many places. In New England missionaries. fact, Hawaii originally imported just about everything except the Many of the strait-laced virtues land. tit climate. and the sea. taught and practiced by these God- Nothing so good as these could fearing men and women persist in have originated in any place but _ the islands even today, the Nation- Haw: f ali, the islanders say. al Geographic Society says The last Hwaiian monarch was The State of Hawaii is a whole Queen Liliuokalani, who wrote the string of islands, all of volcanic haunting song, ‘‘Aloha Oe.” Her origin, stretching across 1,540 regime was overthrown in 1893 miles of sparkling ocean. and a republic was formed the Fight, lying some 2,300 miles following year. Just before the turn west of San Francisco at their most of the century, the United States easterly point, are considered ma- Congress acceded to the request of jor ones. On the five largest—Ha- the Hawaiians and voted to annex wajj Maui Molokai, Oahu, and the islands. Hawail became a ter-' Kauai—live most of the 570,000 is- ritory. landers. * * . Hawaii has probably been inhab- Blessed” with abundant rain and|ited since the 5th century. Early) an equable 73>-degree temperature, 'Hawaiians were Polynesians who Hawali can po ee See and |migrated, on the wings of the trade pineapples as they grow nowhere! winds, in twin-hulled sailing canoes else. However, it imports much of/from faraway Tahiti, or perhaps its food and nearly all its manufac- even the Asian mainland. tured needs Tourists, coming to swim at Hon- olulu's famed Waikiki Beach or to Jail Cell for Sale se eee ie - poh nga WOODSTOCK, Ohio w» — The rece Fe Metals USE § Lt rd Village Council here is looking for lions of dollars each year. Addi- someone whe is a jail cell. The tional funds come from the ae community has a 6by-8-foot steel orate American military installa: tattice cell which hasn't been used tions, including Pearl Harbor for a quarter of a century, and Racially, Hawaii is an efficient Counilmen _would like to sell it. Cae = 1 tT ee * erg Aig eae © PADS Deere jue para va time to shop rs jie ‘ ts ft Fs S $8015 Thi ‘i ave on is P e e os R | {Deluxe Frigidaire Range ig he ct = Wonderful buy! This ie oven door with two a > enamel. % oven units come out pan, tod. New lift-up, stay-up, hinged surface’ units. “Gos. “ to-Sink” chrome trim ' Minder, “Speedsheat Units. New feminine La¢ework Styling “gossip or cheapen oneself through | helps lift one’s sights. lin the words of the Tenn must be done if or great inher- ee ‘oyal . the’ royal in thy. itance of American freedom is to |self'?’’ ‘of arrests reported by the nation’s juvenile delinquency. police departments remained the \the individual—who fixes the pat- CLAYTON'S Reg. $309.95, $ Now Only... . rede Heat Oven, High Speed Radian-tube Broiler, a pull-down enough to bake 10 loaves of bread at once. 4 ft- -up, hinged ee _ surface units with quick-clean drip bowls and'chrome rings. 3 Full-width oven finished in easy-to-see gtay, porcelain Automatic Cook-Master lets you bake complete oven meals automatically. Two fast-heating Radiantube “We need only set standards a small percentage of youngsters. little higher and make real efforts became juvenile delinquents. But to meet those standards to bring he added that all of the nation’s about a definite change in the|youngsters must bear the respon- moral climate today,’’ he said. “A sibility of the wrongdoers. simple refusal to indulge in petty | Unfair though It is, you who are mature in the acceptance of the use of foul or vulgar language your responsibilities also carry ; ' more than your share of the rar | load,” he said. “You are, in a | sense, on trial... you have to “Isn't it well to remember that! work harder to ‘prove’ yourselves every day, in everything you do. in the eyes of adults and gain you are developing the sense of their confidence. values by which you will be guided | 7 , thréughout adulthood? Are you,| °%0U will do the tasks which |be preserved,’’ he said. “._-t ¢ “Simply on the basis of observa- Hoover said that 6.5 per cent. tion, I am convinced that your more persons under 18 years of individual spiritual and moral age were arrested in 1958 over code is a very real weapon in the 1957, although the over-all number; war on both juvenile ¢rime and It is you— same. i\tern of what is or is not accept- _ The FBI chief said that only a lable in your age group.” MIDNIGHT MIRACLE SALE ‘TONIGHT 9 to 12 P.M. at Singer Sewing Center MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER SLANT NEEDLE Portable or Cabinet Model 139°° USED PORTABLE ....... . *12.59 USED CABINET MODEL 519.59 FEATHERWEIGHT PORTABLE ‘119°° There’s a SINGER for every pocket—every purpose SINGER SEWING CENTER amaze $8 SEWING. Daciine co} COMPANY MIRACLE MILE STORE ONLY Located in J]. C. Penney Fabric & Notions Dept. © FE 8-9352 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1959 TONIGHT MIDNIGHT “MIRACLE SALE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. Telegraph at Square Lake Road FREE PARKING for 5,000 CARS cae Ea ; 12.2 Cu. ft. 2-DOOR ~ FRIGIDAIRE SPECIAL GOLD CROWN VALUE 30” Custom Model DA-11 59 ro ad oo, 5 aot ae F M peat Ss Are er; . : super-size oven ‘model has big Even- non-tipping, slideout shelves. , Big for easy cleaning.: Removable drip- tings and porcelain drip bowls. Heat- Kee CONVENIENT TERMS! CLAYTON'S of KEEGO HARBOR 3065 Orchard Lake Road. OPEN MONDAY and oe EVENINGS ‘til 9 BREE PARKING'in Front;of Our Store .. . Come in for Meter Pennies Reingerator SPR 4 es ‘Pre-Summer Surioge on o Ch WEL? Uae ey ee ae tet ee BALE ee Ee tort, ahs SA te -s. 5 at a! nn 90 Days Same as Cash. Up to 24 Months to sa Ms Twin Slide-Out Hydraters oose From .. . Starting at $171 ict ese tear +++ The Store for General Motors Employes! wh teh ore. ~ GOLD CROWN HOME LAUNDRY FEATURES... © Hage 86 Ib. Freezer © Cycla-matic Defrest la © Special Butter & Cheese Sections t" SPECIALS! ... with patented 3-ring “pump” agitator FEATURES: bathes deep dirt out ° Big 61 Ib. F without bedting! © © 16.2 Sq. Ft. of ) ° Shelf Space WITH TRADE ~~ © 5 Door-Storage , Shelves © New Lacework Styling 10-8 refrig. | gg* WITH TRADE . 3 a = ae 3 ; a oe y ee . > FURNITURE CARPETS APPLIANCES Telephone FE 5-9474 - Keoge Harbor LPR © ee ew ee ww om, —_ — California Uncommit | Dems fo Tell Kenned Filling Your Freezer Every Piece Guaranteed Tender CUT, WRAPPED, SHARP- FROZEN & DELIVERED FREE ive $ 5 Country B BACON SQUARES Week Per 1 Doz. Large Eggs 1 Ib. Country Boy SHORT RIBS HIND QUARTERS of BEEF......... lb. FRONT QUARTERS of BEEF. . SIDE of BEEF eau 719¢ 29c 65c 53c 57¢ The Old Fashioned Market With the Modern Touch The Country Meat Market 7617 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) And Williams Lake Koad OPEN 9 TO 9 INCLUDING SUNDAYS SLAB BACON ocsvoswneeveevee eve 8 @ © der in Nogales were erent SACRAMENT®, Calif. John F. Ke nnedy (D-Mass) today, ard they're The state is wide open for the 1960 Democratic presidential nom- ination race “IT know of no one ofyparty stat- | ure in California committed to any} William A. | state chair-| one,”’ Assemblyman Munnel!, Democratic man, told a reporter * * Gov candi- ill potential Democratic diites to visit California before the| ation .to the 1960 na-| state's deleg tional convention is formed Brown himself has been men-| tioned in the early talk about the} Democratic ticket, but he has de- clined to go beyond saying he might seek to head the state dele- gation, * * * After a Democratic Juncheon in his honor, Kennedy planned to fly to Los Angeles by chartered plane to address the Los Angeles Press Club tonight. Stolen Item Should Be Easy to Spot on Road NOGALES, ficers at the Ariz, (P—Federal of Arizona-Mexico bor- an eye open for an object stolen in El Paso, Tex If the object comes along, of ficers should be able to spot it Missing is a 28-foot long | (AP) — California Democrats greet Sen.! primed to tell him: | Edmund Brown has invited | asked te keep _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY A MAN AND HIS DOG — Larry Wilson, 20, of Owasso, Okla., gently lifts his hound Little Riehard into an ambulance was dislodged Tasmania, an after the coon dog from a limestone crevice where it island off, Aus- more potential waterpower than trailer. tralia's south coast, is said to have all the rest of Australia combined. Hart Asks Senate Banned Pupil’s Dad | Shoots Bus Driver | McHENRY. ‘il, (AP)—A father, angry because his 7-year-old son | was banned from a school bus for | unruly behavior, shalted the ‘us| PAINT AP Wirepheote was trapped six days. At left in a stocking cap is Don Dillard, a small high school~ youthr who was first to reach! the imprisoned dog and hand- feed him a few hours be sich the rescue. With Your 16-Year-Old or Les Popular-Make Refrigerator in On @rating Condition e « || « ma 18 rw Je The Biggest, Most Exciting Opportunity Ever! a | i ab! Buys This ‘el FRIGIDAIRE BIG FAMILY SIZE REFRIGERATOR Giant Full-Width Freezer 12.1 Sq. Ft. Useable Shelf Area 4 Roomy Door Shelves in Super Storage Door Sheer Look Styled with Stunning Frosty-Turquoise- Accented Interior and Sheer Look Lines Outside KT PRICE EVER / oP Day IS ALL YOU PAN & ROLLER 19° for Approval of Antilynching Bill WASHINGTON UW — Sen. Philip \. Hart (D-Mich) asked the Senate today to approve an antilynching bill Hart said recent mob action in Poplarville. Miss. had prompted his action, but added $1.45 “I want to make i clear that it is not greatly different from some of the incidents involving mob action when Negro families have moved into new neighbor- hoods in Michigan. “The same violation of constitu- tional guarantees providing for the equal protection of the laws may be involved. Basic motivations, I am sure, are the same.” * * * He said we believed an antilynch bill would ‘‘provide an additional way to strengthen cooperation be- tween the federal law enforcement and those of our indi- vidual states ODORLESS LATEX PAINT agencies “Gov. (James P.) Coleman and the local law emMercement of ficials of Mississippi have taken an important step toward build- ing that cooperation. iWilliam) Rogers me that his depart ing and giving every ’ Hart said “Attv. Gen has assured ment is recels assistance,’ $ GAL. . White Colors Slightly Higher Quick Drying Waghable—Gua ranteed California grows nez arly half the nation’s pears, but its crop’ this year is 27 per cent smaller than in 1957 —~ 4 ; i> and shot the driver Thursday as > 25 children looked on. 3 CENERAL hbbdubddid Co, . 4 ; - > The driver, Victor A. Hopp, 26,'$ and Joseph DiMaggio, 49, ex- 3 OUTDOOR changed blows after DiMaggio > \curbed the bus and ‘argued with 4 | Hopp for not allowing his son Dom- > , linie to ride the bus. $ LAMP | Sheriff Melvin Gre bel said Di- 3 |Maggio pulled a .25-caliber pistol $ ‘from his pocket. His sen tried to 2 BOTH separate the two men, shouting, ¢ . toni ONLY ; > shoot him.” DiMaggio fired one!$ shot at Hopp, the sheriff said. 2 $ 95 | Chief Deputy Edward Dowd said > 'the shot, which struck Hopp in the $ Hleft shoulder above- the heart, 2 Sells ter failed to knock the bus driver to 3. $20 a {the ground and he continued to ex- q Most Places | change blows with Di Maggio. $ \uines Sy ee 007.00 \However, Dowd said, two older 2 a ee ~~ o% $ ‘boys who hed gotten off the bus | finally arene up the‘ fight. * ae rn a salesman, was held fin. jail under $5,000 bond on a icharge of assault with intent to | murder. Hopp was in fair Condition. 14-2 ROMEX'4-2 MOM METALLIC SHEATHED CAB ' 100 ft. $2.95 “TOILET SEATS Im Black White and Choice ef Celers *3*° OUTDOOR wis : ANTEN NA $6.89 Inc ude a dwere else GRASS SEED Kentucky Blue .89 Lb. Perennial Ryegrass 5 Lbs. $1.10 5 Lb. Seed Mixture $1.49 FERTILIZER GALVANIZED GUTTER 10-6-4, 50 Lbs. $2.19 Length OWER LICHT WEICHT, BAMBOO RAKE. . 69° MOWERS ROUND NOSE, SHOVEL *1.98 DIRT > H. P: 4 Cyc. Engine $89.95 List Price SAA95 ?. S 44 ° CU. FT. WELL BUILT $12.95 Value PAY GET ONE BIG ENOUGH ALL STEEL FEATURES Zi Up to 2 Full Years to Pay >. Choose the refriger- 2 We will deliver your ator you waht at new refrigerator and WKC, 108 N. Sagi- install the METER naw No DOWN BANK out of sight, PAYMENT free. = fic Phone FEderal 37114 108 NORTH SAGINAW Deposit as little as 4 25¢c a money you save with new refrigerator ef- day of the 1wency ee ee ee en iecue 7 es eh en oe eek sn Oe ee UG GG * OUR LOW, LOW PRICES INCLUDE DELIVERY, 1-YEAR SERVICE & 5-YEAR WARRANTY a a patent -aehr Sasi tiemanaaninaenieysanenyee "ULG IN OUR No bills to pay or collectors to annoy you. Bring in your savings and get a receipt for them. | FREE PARKING BEHIND STORE GALORE Clinton 3 HP, 4 Cyc. Motor Automatic Recoil Starter Reversible handle * Leaf Mulcher Trims Both sides * Safety Clutch 1 Year Factory Warranty SEEDS OR FERTILIZERS $ 8? $14.95 Value 50 LB. SPREADER MACHINIST CASE By KENNEDY ¢O0\88 CAR TOP CARRIER $4.88 Others to $25 Powerful 10 Amp. Moter POWER SAW $96" blade Big 7° enables /it to dress-, CENERAL Warehouse Co, 2258 Dixie Highway. °° Tool Specialists + Hardware + Paint + liph i A hh LOT ay Gee ee oR ra . - Pontiac, Mich t Fixtures + Elec. Supplies wabs SANDER ‘3” 2 4 d Reg. $24.95 — we _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1959 __ : ‘ ' Delawa re ‘Blazing Auto Shoved —[Tucson. The city fire department| Missile, Aircraft Industry jthe National Science Foundation. Plymbing List Helpful) f an ‘Into H d f Fi }couldn’t help because the auto was E M Planes, official publication of the| ‘Into Hand of Fireman i. of the city mits. mploy Most Scientists [aircraft Industries Assn:, reported) MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) — The SUIT-COATS $10.00 W 7 le SPQRTCOAT ‘Be M ay hip | TUCSON, Ariz. —Ronald Chap,| Chappel and some friends solved) WASHINGTON (—The nation’s/89,000 scientists and engineers regio gringo ie gepantPoga wener Span oc acing PO New Aid Slant pel of Ramey Air Force Base, |\the prpblem by pushing the blazing missile and aircraft industry em- jwork in the aircraft and missile|tures by make and model jumber E.Z Payment—Leyoway Plan All Robbers | Puerto Rico, had unexpected trou-l\vehicle across the cify limit line./ploys more scientists and engi- lindustry, of which 52,000 are di-|to save time for the plumbing EDWARD ; ‘ble when his car caught fire in a\The fire department quickly ex-|neers in research and develop-|rectly connected with research andjcontractor when repairs have to -alalaiocania! 18 5. Saginaw Says It’s Necessary | DOVER” Del, (AP)—Delaware’ s\° | parking lot on the outskirts of tinguished the flames. iment than any other industry, says |development. _ \be made ina hurry. i to Lift Underdeveloped L«sisiature, concerned by an in-| =a crease in the crime rate, has | Notions Economically jrvanory or yemte once] FREE PARKING ORCHARD FURNITURE'S WASHINGTON (AP) — Former|>bery. President Harry S. Truman says! The bill says: 20 to 40 lashes Pt ae a new international approach is for the first offense and not less fe ‘ager needed to prop up underdeveloped than 30 for each subsequent con- countries with economic aid. viction. . He'd like to see the rest of th = = * Western industrialized nations join} The House passed the Senate the United States in putting such a version Wednesday 22-3. Gov. J. program into effect. \Caleb Boggs, however, declined Truman appealed for the inter- ‘comment when asked what he national teamwork Thursday night | |thought of the bill. at a dinner honoring him on the} He gsaid he would decide earty 10th anniversary of the Point Four |next week about signing it. program. The program of techni-| If he does sign, it will be the cal and economic aid for back- first time in the history of the ward nations took its name from | state that whipping has been man- a section of his 1949 inaugural ad- datory punishment for a crime. dress. x * * The need for such a program is : even greater now than it was 10) In the old days whipping was years ago, Truman said. He ac- used to punish wife beating, theft cused the Elsenhower administra-|2 8 variety of other crimes. eed. | but it was always imposed at the “We can’t purchase security and| ldiscretion of the judge. The pres- peace by pinching pennies at a lent sentence for robbery for ex- bargain counter,” he said. “We|2mple, is a fine of not less than 24 MONTHS TO PAY > : 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH should be planning how we can $500 and imprisonment for 3 to 25 use our strength and resources to | ¥€4TS, plus not more than 40 i\lashes if the judge wishes. the utmost rather than fearfully | trying to hoard what we have.’’| For seven years there have been Truman called on the scores of no official whippings in Delaware. congressional ‘members in the The most vocal opponent of the audience of 1,500 to increase the bill was Rep. Paul F. Livingston the only Negro U.S. authorization for the develop-| (D-Wilmington), ment loan fund and to make such member of the House. : Nanticoke Acres) argued that the ’ bill would serve as a deterrent In Quarrel Over to robberies. He cited a wave of ' them recently in the southern part Office Space jee secret | CHICAGO, Ill, (AP)—A_ doctor and a dentist at odds over ottice tate PTA Congress space were killed Thursday in a whining flurry of bullets behind . the locked doors of their joint re- Backs Federal Aid ception room. Police theorized the physician, | ‘ . , ap BAY CITY —Federal aid for Dr. a T. Hart, 61, killed the education, with certain qualifica- — gt egrielc ye spograd tions, has the endorsement of the Sasa g Michigan Congress of Parents and as Low as himself. ary $ 8 8 Three letters telling of despond- Teachers a * * . ? , vent, dust cop see! ond ency and ‘‘my last earthly act” . filter screen. For motorists, were found on Hart's body. The Congress endorsed aid only = FOAM RU B B ER fishermen, sportsmen, in ‘ * * * for school construction and teacher = _ eye-catching red with The hail of bullets alarmed more | P4Y with these restrictions f ALL 3 SECTIONS . . ~ bright yellow printing than a score of persons being; (1) Where aid is requested by or Large Choice of Colors = Reversible Cushions WAGs quantities fast treated in the doctors’ office build-| the recipients; (2) When local | Cash & Carry ing, the Medical Center Building) and et eek are shown to - on North State Street, on the near) be inadequate and (3) Where North Side | there is no federal restriction on Police, who had surrounded the| any school district im. selection CLEARANCE OF BEDROOMS! building and brought tear gas aft-| of teachers, administrators or er receiving the alarm, found Win-| textbooks. tea rd nce re) ograd dead from wounds in the| Mrs. Gaude Moore of Detroit chest and head. Hart died shortly | , after he was removed to a hospi-|¥2s elected Region F vice presi- tal for treatment of a bullet in dent“ She is retiring president of the right temple, A .38-caliber re- the Detroit Council of Parent- sae volver with at least five Shots fired Te@cher Assns. was found near him. d ~ *& * Police said Winograd had asked} Named vice presidents in uncon- that Hart be evicted from the joint) tested elections were Mrs. Lynn E. offices. They theorized the men|Ford of Grand Rapids, Region C, had quarreled over office effects|and Mrs. E. Daniel Irwin of Fern- just before the shooting. dale, Region ‘OD. 10- Pc. Bedroom Outfit 10-Pe. Living Room Outfit LIGHTWEIGHT SOFA or a BED and Double Dresser Clearance on MATCHING CHAIR Mirror $ | 88 © tenet PLUS ess @ Broyhi atchin Bed @ Hooker There may be other blends as pa $4 88 * np Tobie 6 C tnnerapring ] 3 8 @ Paes ere may 3 02 Table Lamp sages Only 813 Bown 2 THREE FEATHERS costs you omy 3s 2 2 Threw 2 ood Lp nly own $i nte @ Smoker Some Femews . e Save up to 50% or More on Bedroom and Bedding 2 CLEARANCE OF DINETTES a ie} | 2 Pc. Set an © FORMICA TOP © EXTENSION TABLE LEAF © 4 MATCHING CHAIRS All il Dining Room & Dinettes Save up to 50% or More Only $4 Down SAVE UP TO 50% or MORE GRASS SHEARS Hard Steel Blades ¢ Case Hardened Tension Spring CASH and CARRY. Reg. $1.29 Value’ | 2 .“ 7 __ .B BR EvVERBLOOMING BEAUTY IMAGINE! ONLY > — FOR YOUR HOME $ , | todas” 8 any 4/5 hibrid Quan TEA ROSE BUSHES CASH and CARRY SILICONE PS IRONING BOARD PAD&COUER SE Furniture Pictured Typifies Similar Selections! Phone FE 58114-5 Aluminum STANDARD SIZE LA ¢ R ¢ u A R FURNITURE COMPANY $239 CODE 729 LONG LASTING! 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE + PONTIAC ES / _ 3 BLOCKS WEST of SOUTH SAGINAW GLENDED WHISKEY, 86 PROOF, 70% GRAIN- NEUTRAL SPIRITS, THREE FEATHERS DIST. CO., LAWRENCEBURG, IND. ° 7 2 Avon Votes Monday on School Funds / ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAYs:MAY 1, 1959 Transfer aaa Circus Coming | to Farmington lions Club Sponsors 2 Wednesday Shows Under the Big Top FARMINGTON — Mill's Broth- ers three-ririg circus will raise its big top on the lot north of Far mington Plaza Shopping Center to give two performances on We dnes- day * * * The circus i$ sponsored by the Farmington Lions Club. It will bring artists from 18 nations as well as lions, tigers, the famous ‘precision liberty horses’ and the GOP mascot elephant ‘Miss Burma.” tional national Aerial acts, clowns and high wire artists wil] complete the show. It is the first time a big- time circus has ever appeared in’ Farmington. * * * Performances will begin at 3:30 and 8:30 p.m Part of the proceeds from the shows will be used by the Lions Club for its sight conservation pro- gram which includes the supply of white canes for the blind. * * * We always have had to put on two or three drives a year to solicit funds for the club,” said « MAUREEN ANNA FISHER June 20th wedding plans are | being made by Maureen Anna | Fisher and Roger J. Johnson. | Their engagement is announced |. by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John J. Fisher of Dearborn. The fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard J. Johnson of 6510 Church St., Clarkston. | Davisburg's Jaycees Sponsoring Cleanup DAVISBURG—The Junior Cham- ber of Commerce is sponsoring a Some 95 sixth-grade pupils from Commeree and Wixom elementary schools will enjoy a four-day camp- ing excursion at the Proud Lake Recreation area near Milford, Wil- liam Doggett. program director. announced today. He is principal of Twin Beach Elementary School at Walled Lake, which forms part of the same school district. The pupils will leave Monday and stay until Friday. They will be accompanied by three teach- ers, assisted by parents in the school partment of Conservation person- nel, State troopers also will be on hand, Doggett said. Activities for: the youngsters will include nature hikes, a visit to the Hatch Farm on Coolev Lake road transplanting trees and instructions in the corecf use of fitearms. The children will be given the opportunity to shoot air rifles under close supervision as part of the instruction * They will also help in preparing their own meals and with other camping chores. Waterford Driver Hurt Ray Cranston, club president. “We Village Cleanup Week” here start- as Car Smashes Pole hope this one big project will bring in enough money to make public solicitation unnecessary this year.”’ * * * Cranston urged that tickets for the circus be bought in advance pointing out that the club will receive a greater profit from these than from: tickets sold at the box office. be purchased at Tickets may ing today, lasting until the fol-, lowing Friday * * * Prizes will be given in June to Glen Gibson, 38, of 1288 Shoman St. Waterford .Township, was _ in- jured yesterday afternoon when his auto smashed intea utility pole district and State De- | House Backs Up Ike Camping Trip Planned for Area Sixth Grader Oakland County Science Con- , Sultant Dr. William Forbes is | bringing several microscopes to | the campout so pupils can ob- | serve organisms found in swamp and pond waters. | Assisting pupils with arts and crafts study will be Mrs. Roy ‘Dewey, art consultant for the \Walled Lake Elementary Schools isystem. Other teachers directing camp activities will be »Mrs. Maude Sharpe of Wixom School and Mary | \Selway and Burt Howe, both of {Commerce School. re S . Pupils will gather around the campfire in the evenings to hear | representatives of the Walled Lake Story Tellers League, and Dr. \Henry Raskin, ‘Veterinarian, who \will talk about pets and wild iife. | Archery instruction will be | given the youngsters by mem- | | bers of the Multi-Lakes Conser- | | vation Club, In addition, campers will enjoy a scavenger hunt and talent shows lwhich they will stage themselves. | | Two cooks from the school cafe- ,teria staff will accompany the \group. +— | * * | ito befriend a 13-year-old and a | on their birthuays, a spokesman < Group Decides to ‘Adopt’ 2 Boys at County Home K Will Put District Back ‘County Home [ON Pay-as-You-Go Basis Branch of the Trans-Atlantic Brides) AVON TOWNSHIP — Voters in the Avondale School and Parents Assn. have decided| District will go to the polls Monday to decide whether to \to take two boys at the County aythorize the transfer of six mills being dropped from Children’s Home under their col- i ; , : h sanaien: ite. the building fund to the operating fund for the next five years. The Board of Education‘and the Citizens Committee have gone on record as endorsing the transfer as the solution to the school dis-*— ay | trict’s present monetary dard of education in the district, problems. | school officials said, but would also If the proposal is accepted, the | seopardize the district’s accredi- district could ——s 2s “S"| dation with the North Central Assn. Every two weeks, at least, tw0|you-go system of financing after) Only seven of the 13 mills now members will visit the enw! several years of deficit spending,|being levied are needed to retire A ne toot ete carl| School officials said. |the two bond issues now owing. women. The group's Pras aso cal.| ‘They, emphasize that a “yes’’|This leaves six mills available in for collecting a sma pocket al-' ote will not raise the present tax the building fund to transfer to lowance me ie ove nt millage. \the operating fund without necessi- jtating a millage increase, the edu- * Mostly mothers, the women want 10-year-old youngster. The boys will be especially remembered by. the branch at such times as Christmas and for the group said. on Rural Electric Veto WASHINGTON — Jolted by! The House refused by vote of i? Royal Oak. their inability to upset an Eisen- hower veto, congressional Demo- crats took a new look today at their plans to push through some big-spending legislation. They may have to mark down sharply the price tags on some | pending bills or risk vetoes which |they now have little hope of over- | riding. ; x * * | “They will have to be a little winners in a contest to spruce up ae . P on Elizabeth Lake road ‘ust west more reasonable after what hap- » ythe village 5 * * * The Jaycees also are busy fixing up the Garrison Building here * * * They plan to use it as a retail of Crescent Lake road in Wnater- ford Township, Pontiac State Troopers said Gibson was reported in satisfac- torv condition at Pontiac General Hospital today with head and face several downtown stores and also outlet for used furniture. Proceeds injuries. He told troopers he failed at the Bel Air and Farmington will go toward civic improvements to make a curve. ran off the road Plaza shopping centers and other worthy projects Brothers, Sisters Meet Again in Waterford and struck the pole. pened yesterday in the House, commented House Republican Leader Charles A. Halleck of In- diana. What happened was a double reverse for the Democrats and a dual victory for President Eisen- | hower. < 2 Couples Reunited After 42 Years By REBA HEINTZELMAN Two brothers who married two hour week over a six-day period. it is impractical to own a large-|to Australia by way of France, That is, they only work a little size automobile, Joe said. Spain and Switzerland. 280-146 to override Eisenhower's| |veto of a bill which would have taken from Secretary of Agricul-| jture Ezra Taft Benson his power to refuse loans to rural telephone| and electric cooperatives. | 4 VOTES SHORT The 274 Democrats and 6 Re-| publicans who voted to override tell four votes short of the re- quired two-thirds. Four Democrats joined .142 Republicans in voting’ to support Eisenhower's position. The Senate had voted 64-29 to | | upset the veto. | It was the 138th bill vetoed by; the President. He has never had! a veto overridden. ‘| Democrats had hoped to slap) down Benson and at the same time display their ability to work, their own will on legislation de-| spite the President's objections. | Facing probable vetoes if they ever reach the White House in their present form are bills call- ing for heavy federal outlays for airport development, hausing, community facilities and aid for | depressed areas. r | | high school auditorium on Wash- Then, in August, the boys would) What will happen to the school \easnre aid attend the annual picnic of the’ district’s financial and education- | . - ra * branch as well as the yearly al program should the millage te . ; P Christmas party for children, ac-| proposal be defeated has been ion ar Tein aimee cording to the spokesman. explained in a specially-prepared ould help the Board meet the The’ TBPA will hold its next. brochure distributed to all voters | proposed budget for next year meeting May 19 at the Canadian by the Citizens Committee. 6 ‘In addition, some would be Legion Hall, 1005 E. 11-Mile Rd.,| A “no” vote would cause CUI-| u.eq to start paying off short- tailment of operations and services term loans, Board members |by approximately $77,000, the com- wae |mittee said, because the district's, . |short-term credit is nearly ex- [hausted. burn Heights School. The rest —. — in Auburn Hgights School. res bese — o as ; lwho reside in the area east of Since the debt retirement millage Adams road will vote at Elmwood is scheduled to be reduced six School. mills. the present overall millage would be reduced from 24.03 mills - to 18.03 mills. ‘This would cause Student Council Post loss of revenue which the district Kept in Warner Family jnow receives under the state dis-) tressed school aid program. Payment of these funds is ap- plicable only of the millage ex- ceeds 20 mills. Oxford School Area Will Vote Monday OXFORD — Polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. in the Oxford Aréa School District for voters to cast their bailots in Monday’s special election. * * * Persons living in Brandon and Oxford Townships, Metamora and | Hadley will vote in the junior Those persons living west of Adams road will cast. their ballots ALFRED, N.Y. (UPI)—A War- ner has been elected president of the Alfred Tech student council | for the third straight year ington street, Oxferd. Kenneth G. Warner of Yorkshire, Those who reside in Addison and Dryden Townships will cast their ballots in the Addison Town- ship Hall in Leonard. _ * * * The Board of Education is ask- ing the voters to approve an in- crease of five mills for school operation. The necessitated curtailment of N.Y.. was named to succeed his jschool operations and services brother Russell) who had served | would not’ only lower the stan-\ two terms in the post. AUCTION COING OUT OF BUSINESS, DUE TO ILL HEALTH ALL NEW MERCHANDISE . Saturday, May 2nd, 1959— 7:00 P.M. LOCATED 2616 DIXIE HICHWAY (US-10) 1 Mile North of City Limits of Pontiac : FURNITURE Shelbys Police Start SI Round-Clock Duty sisters in England more than 40 More than six hours each day, and “They sure are more laxerious Finally. they'll dock at their| “We may have to cut these bills 2 and 3-Pe. Living Room Suites—2 and 3-Pc. Sectionals a " e been’ re “d play the rest of the time, explained “ys ome , > ‘oast/ Gown if we want anything at all , 'N 4-Pc. Bedroom Suites—Box Springs and Mattresses years ago hav een reunited in 4 p though,” he admitted, (his broth- home wn, Perth on the coast ; ; | SHELBY TOWNSHIP — Today ahr : Swi Platt Waterford Township, climaxing Joe er Harold has a new Pontiac). of the Indian Ocean. [other than cAieeiee les. iis ae day the township Police rane cs vel and rm Rockers years of anticipation and world Most of the automobilés in Aus-- Next week, the two happy cou-, If things work out, Harold and|'P House Democrat commented |) partment goes on round-the- MISCELLANEOUS travel for the occasion, tralia are of the smaller type be- ples will head for Canada to visit Edith plan on taking a good with Pevately- ‘ ‘clock duty. , 3-Pc. Luggage Sete—17 Jewel Watches—Appliagces When Joseph Saunders of Bir-, Cause gasoline is more expensive. the brothers’ mother, who is ill. trip to Australia next year—just| * * * Vacuum Cleaners—Clocks of all Kinds—Electric Skillets mingham. England married pretty, “Very. few people have larger cars Electrie- Toasters—Dishes of all Kinds TOOLS From there, Joe and Florence to get even with relatives who . . “ Granted civil service status in Florence Trowbridge of Wales in and with highways and parking will say goodbye and continue on came here singing praises of the the April 6 election, members of Grain Production 1917, his brother Harold took one! lots geared for the smaller Vehicle, to their native England, then home| ‘‘wonderful land down under."’ look at Florence's sister Edith and _ Up, but It's Same the five-man department now will \be working a six-day week at no Electric Drills—7-Inch Power Saws decided to make it even more of a family affair he Edith After the So weddings, Joe and Florence went to Australia to pi- | oncer some 8,000 acres of home- stead land. The: other couple, Harold and Edith, went to Detroit, then to Wa- terford Township, and he went to work for Fisher Body Corp. for the next 34 years. HIT BY DEPKESSION Today. Joe and Florence are here from Australia, visiting Ha- rold and Edith at 3618 Airport Rd After vears of good living in the warm sunny climate of West- | ern Australia, the Joe Saunders were hit by the first depression and lost all they had worked so | hard for. Their wheat and sheep farm gone, Joe took a position as a gold mine supervisor and. started all OV 4 * * * f nstant flow of con versation as the brothers and _ sis- ters t 1 other of their many expenence e they parted near- ly a cent 10 Both men are retired and have children and gr indchildren And both have a terrific urge to travel However., this is just about the | only thing they agree on, Joe | he | Saunders said Fach thinks lives in a better country than the other. Austra 000.000 sa is in the Saunders They do not hive their home. as ere for such utilities. F has a “stifled” fee furnace gor home HE'LL TRY PROOF Harold intends 1 e his point about the virtues of America its mighty aufomot by showing h br the Pontiac Fisher Body pl but some of the For industries General Motors plant “If he isn't - flabbergastéd some of our fast duction lines here said Harold © says she when the Ss and product not onls ' ant d and by pro- 11] eat my hat automobile “I could show him a few things | about our tremendous Australian ® sheep-shearing production lines _ that would knock, that hat off,” retorted Jge, and to prove his* id that last year there the Australians take things married unr 7% HAPPY REUNION — After’ years of separation, Joseph tralia (left) shakes hands with h é wh itsmen thn 3 Dlan Baby Sitting © ene anr—sam Joo Service at School “ on Solith Saginaw street * * * Chairmen are Mrs. Clarence Vidlund, Americanism; Mrs. Kenneth Parson, cancer; Mrs Leo Wittkoph, hospital; Mrs. Hector McClellan, metnbership and youth activity; Mrs. Rich- ard Robison, legislative and home fund: Mrs. Richard Lange, vrehabilitation; Mrs William Vandecar, buddy pop- py: and Mrs. Evans, publicity. New members welcomed are Mrs. Lloyd Rowden, Harlean Vandecar, Mrs. Duane Jones, Mrs. Edward Filarski, Mrs. Chauncy Birdsall, and Mrs Josephine Seiser. ca Battle Creek Woman Named Mother of Year DETROIT vw — Mrs. Howard Bayley of Battle Creek, mother of four, was named Michigan ‘ Mother of the Year at a special Mother's Day luncheon, Thurs- day, attended by state and city officials * * Mrs. Bayley was cited for her charitable ‘work, her role as an outstanding parent, civic, school and church leader. * * * Her children are Dr. Don Bayley, vice president of the M. Ten Bosche Laboratory, New York; Dr. New Bayley, head of dairy husbandry re- search, U.S. Department .of Agriculture, Beltsville, Md.; Dr. Howard Bayley, head of radiology departments of four hospitals in the Beaver Dam, Wisc., area; and Roberta Bay- ley, Parke Davis and Co. dietitian. PE RE i NR TE Be AR eat ly Shows Off White House ment, the renovation during President Truman's term, they decided. senhower told some former ten- * ants of the White House. The First Lady led an unusual tour Thursday for sons and daugh- ters of former presidents here for luncheon. * Harry S. Truman’s famous se- ond-floor balcony got mixed com- Rep. James Roosevelt, a son of F.D.R., “thought it was a good place from which to take jt was a poor copy of the original. PORTRAITS GOT SCOWL * Most of the ex-presidents’ chil- dren seemed to dislike the White House portraits of their parents. However, descendants of President D-Calif., trait, Tyler were delighted at his por- pointed out by Mrs. Eisen- hower in the private family din- the bottoni of the executive man- . ing “room. hot S. sion, The ‘tour included her own gee cere “it jugt ruined” * * * bedroom, blooming with bouquets the White House opinioned Gate Altogether, it was quite a nos- } of pink rosebuds, and the First spoken Mrs Alice Roosevelt Long- ~ falgic day, Earlier, nine presiden- ' ; Family’s private dining room, worth, daughter of President Theo- tial children, including John Eisen- af i re es dore Roosevelt hower, had given a Women’s Na- : j a ag . . tional Press Club luncheon their The eight children of presidents x * * views of life with father. in the ; poset Pgs pet a gatas President Eisenhower took time White Heuse. : . from his official duties t a looked over with a, critical. eye guia lai ze ft ¢ back. RIGHTER, AIRIER - ,Z what once had been home for some of them: Many had not been ‘Mueh brighter and airier, since nae “e ee the -guests, “ yr capee bits ° ye anne ity panama stoi . He directed Mrs. Marion Cleve- ~ ~ land Amen. of New York City to ~ a portrait of her mother, Mrs. Grover Cleveland, in the Gold Room. Mrs, Amen said she thought : ‘The press club; celebrating its” 40th anniversary, Sparked the idea ° of getting the famous children to“ ~ . gether. They had invited all 20 children of the presidents, but ofily nine could come. ama NR a a —_ - ’ Pontiac City Panhellenic members met recently to discuss final plans for their annual tea, honoring Pontiac area high school seniors planning to attend college this fall. The affair will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday at Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Final plans for the annual tea honoring Pontiac aréa high school seniors who will attend college this fall have been com- pleted by members of Pontiac City Panhellenic. Mrs. John Collison and Rosa- mond Haeberle are cochairmen for the tea. which will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday at Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Building “SENIORS INVITED All senior high girls who plan to enroll in a college or uni- versity in the fall have bedn invited. Invitations have beén mailed by Mrs. Anthony Pizza, Dorothy Cummings and Mrs R. Bronoel to students at Pontiac Central, Pontiac North- ern. Waterford, Avondale, Clarkston, West Bloomfield, Walled Lake and area paro- chial high schools *® * * Program chairman Mrs. James Huttenlocher has an- nounced that the program will feature a panel consisting of sorority members from Uni- versity of Michigan, Michigan State University. and Albion College. They will discuss rush- ing, expenses of sororities and campus activities. * * * Mrs. Howard Owen and Paula Kennerly are in charge of displays that will explain vital statistics of the varigus- sororities and list their national philanthropic projects. Refreshments are being lined up by Mrs. Stanley Hutchin- son, assisted by Mrs. E. W. McGovern and Mrs. Robert Buck. Decorations will be made by Mrs. Russell Jacobson, Mrs. Robert Passineau, and Mrs. Lewis L. Irwin. The reception committee is composed of Mrs. Riehard Kuhn and Mrs. William Freyer- muth. Mrs. W. H. Ragsdale heads the clean-up committee. Insurance Unit Names Officers’ Officers were elected when 23 members of the Insurance Women's Association -of Pon- tiac met for a luncheon at Hotel Waldron Wednesday. Mrs. Russell Lehigh will serve as president, assisted by Mrs. Harry- Hall, vice presi- dent; Mrs. Earl Arthur, re- cording secretary, Ernestine Neubauer, treasurer; and Mrs. Vern Hartman, corresponding secretary. Invitations tp the. annual bosses™ night program, to be held May 20 at Sylvan Glen Inn, will be sent next week. This event will replace the regular May meeting. Garden Association Elects2Officers . Mrs. Kenneth Downing was elected vice president and Mrs. Donald Lloyd secretary. at the annual. meeting of Lorraine “Manor Branch of the Woman's National Farm and Garden As- sociation. Members met at the home of Mrs. Joseph Carpen- ter on Fernbarry drive. Anhual reports were@given and a garden quiz completed the program. Mrs. J, R. Paris served ai cphostess. Cochairmen for the Panhellenic tea are Mrs. John Collison, left, and A special fea- Rosamond Haeberle. Bu ilding. » Pentiae Press Photos Mrs, Anthony Pizza, left, who has been mailing invitations this week, pauses for refreshments with Mrs. Stanley Hutchinson, center, refreshments committee chairman, and Mrs. Richard Kuhn, who is serving on the reception committee. Panhellenic Teato Honor High School Senior Girls ture of the program will be the presen- Bloomfield Hills Highlights tation of a panel comprised of sorority members representing several colleges and universities throughout the state. Hunt Club to Mark Derby Day By RUTH SAUNDERS BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Prep- arations are under way at Bloomfield Open Hunt Club for the annual Derby Day cele- bration to be held Saturday. Members who do not go to Louisville to watch the classic race at Churchill Downs will have excellent TV and arm- chair service right at home. Mrs. Irving A. Duffy is chairman of the day at BOH Mrs, Everell E. Fisher ‘is MR. and MRS. flying to*Lexington today and Mr. Fisher will travel by the Fisher's famous bus. Flying to Lexington Thurs- day were Mr. and Mrs. Wash- burne Wright * * * Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Mc- Kenney wil] entertain a group of friends at dinner Sunday. Included in their guest list will be Mr. and Mrs. John Bloom- quist, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Craig, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. FLOYD BEARDSLEE oJ & . ~ . . . * Celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary this week are Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Beardslee of East Square Lake road where they have lived for the past 47 years, : Their daughters, Mrs. Donald S. Brownlee and Mrs. John S. Malcolm, extend an invitation to relatives and friends to an open house at the Beardslee home, from 5 to 7 p.m. Sunday. s Bachman, Mr. and Mrs. A. FE, Purman and Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Martin. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Albert Theis Ili and their small daughter, Catherine Anne, will arrive Monday at the Robert N. Wood- ruff home. Mrs. Theis will be a bridesmaid next Saturday at the wedding* of her brother Robert N. Woodruff Jr. and Frances Dawson. Catherine will be flower girl. *. * * Mrs. C. T, Maloney will go to Roanoke, Va., late in May to attend a class reunion at Hollins College. She will go to Florida for a visit with friends there before returning home. ’ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Duffy (Paula Jones) of Ann Arbor announce the birth of a daugh- ter, Lisa, April 16. * * * Mr. and Mrs, Ralf A. Crook- ston were hosts at supper Sat- urday for Mrs. Ward Cruick- shank of Marblehead, Mass. Mrs. Cruickshank formerly lived in Birmingham. Thurs- day, she was guest of honor at a luncheon given by Mrs. J. J. Roura Jr. * * * Bride-elect Fr s Dawson was honored Thursday at a luncheon and shower at Or- chard Lake Country Club. Hos- tesses were Mrs, Oliver K. Kelley and Marcia Kelley. Mr. and Mrs, Robert N. Woodruff, parents. of . Robert N. Woodruff Jr., the prospec- tive. bridegroom, will give the rehearsal dinner next Friday at Orchard Lake Club, The day of the wedding (May 9), Mrs. Vene G. Perry will entertain a for mem- bers of the party and out-of-town guests, ee i ae ee = | } ' t ' their great new PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1959 e Nearly 300 species of scallops are known to exist. —Free Press Promotion— | PUZZLE NO. 4 identify This Place In Michigan, Win $15,000 Cash! Your knowledge of Michigan history can lead you to the richest rewards you ever heard of! The Detroit Free Press is offering $30,000 in 1089 cash prizes to readers who play Tangle Towns game. It’s a loca! puzzle game that’s just starting and that will pay $15,000 to the first prize win- ner, $5,000 to the second prize winner, $2,000 to the third prize winner and $1,000 to the fourth prize winner, plus thousands of dollars in additional cash *prizes. Michigan Tangle Towns is fun, it’s educational, and there's nothing to buy or sell. All you do is solve a different puzzie like this one each day for 45 | days. But start now! Get the Free Press! Cal) your loca) dis tributor and order home de- livery immediately— FEderal 5-9272 ‘| said admitted attempting ta_mo- Michigan | OLD BRUSHES? Clean and soften hardest brushes with K wikeeze. Good for all bristles. At paint and hardware x. (Advertisement) . Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH Do false teeth drop. slip or wobble when you talk, eat, laugh or sneeze? Don't be annoyed and embarrassed 7 such handicaps PASTEETH, an aikaline (non-acid) powder to sprin- kle on your plates, keeps false teeth more firmly set. Gives confident fee!- ing of security and added comfort. No gummy. gooey, pasty taste or feel- ing. Get FASTEETH today at drug Counters everywhere —— 1. SOLID Police Hold Detroiter in Molesting, Stabbin | DETROIT —A man who police — a 17-year-old girl and to stab- | bing her father was held today for |investigation of assault .with intent yr to rape~ Held was Ulrich F. Fenior, 25, a factory worker. | Police said Marle Taylor was |returning home from a corner store | yesterday when a car driven by 'Fenior pulled up near her. | “E tried te run away, but I fell down and he caught me and | dragged me into the front seat | of the car,” the girl said, | The girl said Fenior decided to ,;g0 to her home when she told him j|there was no one there although fboth her father and mother were ‘in. As they walked to the house,’ jher father, John Taylor, 37, came} |to the door. } * * * The girl broke free and ran into} the house to call police while Tay-| jlor grappled with the man. The} j|man stabbed Taylor in the thigh} jand fled. Taylor is reported in seri-| | ous condition. Police found Fenior near ‘the iscene and arrested him. eerste American Export Lines to Get Federal Subsidy | WASHINGTON # — The Mari- time Board has agreed to subsidize THE ae, THE CONTINENTAL entertainer Maurice Chevalier MANNER — kisses the hand AP Wirephote gressional Wives Club affair honoring Mrs. Ei- senhower. One might say it’s Gaullic charm to French service by American Export Lines, Inc., between the Great Lakes ns Local Group the Mediterranean via the new St. to Attend Confab hao Services at Age 93 Lawrence Seaway. The New York shipping firm will make between 10 and 15 sailings each year over the route. The. federal subsidy is designed to off- set the difference between oper-| ating costs of an American flag-| ship and the lower costs of foreign! competitors. | ifourth annual convention of of Watchmakers A contingent of jmakers will be among those at the jay at the Hotel Tuller in Detroit Leading ‘the delegation from the The maritime board previously | Pontiac area will be Dan Scott. Lakes and the Caribbean. Injured in Classroom BAY CITY — Robert Miller, 20, of Saginaw, suffered a badly} mangled left hand yesterday in! agreed to subsidize service by|second vice president of the state) Grace Line Inc., between the Great |organization and Dwight E. Cas- } jtract demands. * Steelworkers After Big Gains | Sizable Wage Hikes, Major Benefits Goal) of Union eam | NEW YORK (AP)—The United) Steelworkers of America seek) “substantial wage increases”’ and | lother major benefits in a drive for | jtheir best contract in the basic| lsteel industry since the union was'| ‘founded 23 years ago. | The union's 17-member Wage} Policy Committee is meeting here! ‘to map its program for negotia-| jtions with, the major steel com-j panies which start here next! | Tuesday. j * * * i The union has not announced! jwhat gains it will seek for the/ |half-million of its members in the! basic steel industry. | Present wages dverage $3.03 an’ Is. Approved for VETERANS TRAINING Take advantage of P.L. 550\to improve your education and prepare for a better position. Veterans eligible for GA. Training have three years from the date of their discharge or sepa- ration to enter training. Do not allow your eligi- bility to elapse. Courses are offered in Business Administration, Professional Accounting, Higher Accounting and Junior Accounting. Other subjects are available. Day, Half-Day and Evening Classes Call or Phone Today for Information ' The Business Institute |hour, AFL-CIO President George| 7 W. Lawrence Street Phone FE 2-3551 \Meany told the Wage Policy Com-| mittee that the federation will sup-| jport the Steelworkers in their con-} | + 6 | | Union President David J. Mc-! {Donald drew cheers when he tolc |the committee that the négotia- jtions will result in an ‘‘even great- The One Steam or Dry Iron Designed to Use TAP WATER HOOVER Has stainless steel sole plate, Scratch, stain, rust and snag |Michigan Watchmakers Guild Sun-| ; F. , fesistant. of Mamie Eisenhower as he arrived at a Con- nibble the arm. jer agreement” than the current, = y resistor - es | one that the union won after a five was = $ 97 | . |week strike three years ago. He! f ee j nant ‘church organ and act as choir di-\described the current contract. | id i ‘Church Organist Busy rector.» iwhich expires June 30, as_ the $1.00 Weekly In addition to playing for two,‘‘greatest labor agreement ever) regular masses each day she is on|made in the history of our cvun-| THE | TORRINGTON, Conn. \P—Every hand for evening services, wed- try.” { pi Sh lday, despite the weather, Miss Jul-|dings, funerals and frequent choir|— Good Housekee ng op of Pontiac ia Carroll arrives at St. Francis rehearsals. ' | The University of Notre Dame} 51 W. Huron St. ‘PE 4-1555 local watch- Church before 7 a.m. to play the; Miss Carroll will be 93 in May..was founded in 1842. ; the} eseccesece ‘ goooeecee® eT ITE ee? "86, | e® ee e* e e° e ® jler of Ferndale, director of the \Pontiac region of the guild. The Guild has been pushing for a law te license watchmakers in the state. Other items such as employe “epresentation and the combatting an explosion during a chemistry jof price-cutting will be reviewed class “experiment at Bay City | Junior College. Flying glass struck | at the convention. All watchmakers, allied crafts- ‘Tf other students but none were|men and their families are invited hospitalized BUY IN SOLID M ‘to attend the convention. Arle! double dresser, chest and bed $71950 Only $20.00 Down it’s a solid buy in solid maple. If you like Early American, you'll love Winston Chapel because-the designs are authentic complete to the antiqued brass hardware. Finish is “Butter- nut”, a golden amber. glow flecked with rich beige and brown graining. You get a lot of maple for your money in this group :.. come in and.see for yourself and you'll agree Night stand $22.50 SPRING CLEARANCE VIBRATOR CHAIRS Several nationally advertised Vibrator Loungérs in assorted fabrics—* reduced to create a Mother’s Day bargain. $ 89.50 eee ee ee eB eeve CHAIRS... .. $59.50 $ 99.50 CHAIRS................$69.50 $109.50 AND OVER.............$79.50 Charge It 30-60-90 Days, Budget Up to 24 Months to Pay Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. ‘til 9 P.M. \" HHI >? WOODWARD AVE... B/RMINGHAM. MICH Easy to Park — Just Drive Up WAY FURNITURE MART Dr Pepper . 4 robe ©OR PEPPER COMPANY 1959 e e > “s REGULAR ° OR KING-SIZE rYYTTTTTTTTTT TTT TTT ON EVERY CARTON OF Dr Pepper a | frostu, man, frosty Enjoy America's Most Distinctive Soft Drink...NOW! Dr. Pepper, the flavor favorite of millions, is now at your favorite store! And, for a limited time only, you can enjoy this delicious, distinctively different soft drink at @ saving of 10¢ on every carton of Dr Pepper you buy! You'll love the flavor of Dr Pepper... . it never tires the taste! eS It’s the friendly “Pepper-Upper” that never lets ‘you down! Pick a pack of Dr Pepper... today! * tee en “ * "3 ‘ . * . 7 Le : tie Pf ay YO . . « . * ,. o> te * o* a . Se Lamers rs nS Vd » tlt line = =e Find Buffalo Tot Beaten, Slain Body Hidden 2 Miles From ‘Home; Checking on Bloody Clothing MARKETS |Mart Rebounds Old Crop Gains BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — The following are top prices From Decline neue or tostepstera couse BOLSTER Grains covering sales of locally grown produce brought to the Farmer's i >» a 3year-old girl ae Market by growers and sold by whose bruised and lifeless body ‘as found t les away Thurs-- CHICAGO » — A moderate to\them tm wholesale package lots.) jew YORK u—The stock mar- —————e * heavy volume of short covering in|Quctations are furnished by the yet perked up a bit today after a oe * all old crop grain futures con- | Detroit Bureau of Markets, as Of | three straight days of decline. Ear- Wednesday. + ly trading was fairly active. Most leading issues rose frac- |tionally. Quite a few were either | unchanged or showed slight losses. | Chrysler advanced 2 points to = tracts strengthened the market The battered body of Sharon generally in early Board of Trade| Crossman was found beneath the transactions today. porch of a house after a two-day search. The exact cause of death was not immediately known. * * * The blood stains on the clothing were being analyzed to determine . Detroit Produce Corn, rye and soybeans were fir Gaaree to strong with rye bouncing ahead) scececece 6400 ) ‘by aoe than < cent . bushel) a ea “ |spark the Automotive section. Its ‘within a few minutes, May wheat, | VEGSTARLES inet income for the first quarter : | Beets, topped, DU... esse eee eeee BO) 80) sed interes cowever. ranged fromi = rikjot frajrarmis tapese, BA |cccsvecscciscs> SHO ee daz «stalks the type. tion lower to more than a cent | porstiradish, Reo) oh ces 13) Thiokol’s new shares based on The parents of the dead girl, higher in an active two-sided trade. | sects ‘a Gea ee. oe 20 the stock split were up about 3 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crossman, The small supply of rye in com- Parsies Roota Mchs: aos 160 points over the closing price on 1.25, the “when-issued”’ stock yester- 1.75) day. Parsnips % bu ‘ mercia] positions here was des- | Potatoes (bag) §0 Ibs Radishes hoth behs.) doz. cribed as bullish while additional |*S Barred Rocks 24-27; caponettes .over 5 Steel tors and oils were oats % to 3% higher, May 66%; lbs. 25-27. | eels, motors and oils were gen- rye 14 higher to % lower, May —— jerally higher. Coppers, drugs and 1 alk: - to 7% DEsROrr BOs laircrafts were mixed. ; $1.414%2; soybeans unchanged to 7% pgErTRoIT. April 30 (AP) Eags, f0.b igher 9 ORT Detroit, in case lots, Federal-State) higher, May $2.237s. pcan | than that.| The body, clothed in blue dun- garees and a white blouse, was found face down in the dirt under the porch, She was shoeless and one foot bore a deep bruise. Other Walworth was up a fraction marks of violence were evident on Whites—Grade A jumbo 35-36, wta. despite its report of a slight net ee av 3542; extra large 33-34, wt avg “her head, neck, legs and body. 334: large 31-33, wtd. avg. 3l'a2; medium loss for the first quarter, Wall | . , . _ Sharon recently had undergone Car Sales in April a pancreas operation and was re- ported still in a weakened condi- May Total 510 000 ' thon avg.. <5. Grade B large 28-29, 28. Browns—Grade A_ extra large 31; medium 24. Checks Street analysts forecast better things to come. | Slight gains were shown by An-| f*'rs aconda, U.S. Steel, General Mo-| | 24-26, wid jwtd. av jlarge 33; i2h‘4, Commercially graded: | Whites—Grade A jumbo 29-0; jlarge 28-29; large 28-284,; mediu : z x * * DETROIT New car sales for Browns Grade A jumbo 26's: large 28, |tors, Standard Oil (New Jersey),) Her mother Eleanor, 27, had , wp—New car sales lor medium 24, small 18, Grade B large 24. anjiag Chemical and Radio Corp. | told police the child disappeared April may total 510,000 units, says } aaa | A bit lower were General Dy-| for Funerals here with burial in . : a arly| Ward motive Reports. | = - | from her crib sometime early| s Automotive Re po . Livestock | namics, Sperry Rand, Kennecott, | Farmer's Creek Cemetery, Meta- Tuesday. She said she had put) The agency said April 11-20 sales} |\Chesapeake & Ohio and Pfizer. mora , Sharon in her second-floor bed-|averaged 19,875 units against 18,050 DETROIT. "April Se aes Cattle: Mrs. Kelley died unexpectedly of room for a nap and then had gone the preceding 10-day period. Salable 1500. rer early supply few lots} New York Stocks a aac attack Wednesday at Sher eee ee ae | - utility and standard mixe offerings, | to rest. Several hours later, she “Highlighting the rise in sales’ around 50 per cent of run cows, most ld police, she awoke and discov < : early .sales limited to slaughter cow ae e. tole NV odesa ee awoke and discov-| the the Rambler and Lark cars, Cheese Wtully steady; few. early sales Figures after decimal point are eighths Surviving are a sister, a niece ered the child was gone. Ward’s said. These makes ac- utility and standard mixed offerings Admiral’ 216 Jones & L . 684 and a nephew ° | counted for 9.8 per cent of the about steady at 21.00-25 50; ulllity coWs!air Reduc 85 Kelsey Hay ... 45.2 . : . April « th t toll i 19.50 gees few young ag in a Allied Ch 1124 Kennecott 113.3 mark u ar, ollowin up to 22 canners and cutters -' Alli Strs Fae | seconds fire aks ? Trucks Sideswi e | rs i . { March : 19.50; few strong weight cutters up to Allis’ Chal : 28.3 Kresge os - 336 Every 3 bre out | 9 per cent in a > March and 900 =Com ared last week slaughter Alum Ltd 73 Kroger . 20 | in the U.S. Every two minutes an | 8.4 per cent in February. steers and heifers, steady to mostly 50c/Alcoa Lehn & P... &3 Ameri bd _ lower; cows and bulls steady; most good|Am Alirlin 29-6 Cinpy McN&L 12.3 merican home catches fire. Every | * * * lto low choice steers 26.00-28.50; some)Am Can 43.1 ; My .. 95 i uman perishes on Narrow Bridge | Including imports, the agency steer me 50-99-30. | ee geld rm Maurey 3.4 Lockh Aire ark ce nem aon of — I rts, Steers 2850-2950; ‘late trade mainly) ” Loew's 31.6 < | Am Motors 37.8 oo — ‘continued, ‘‘the total short wheel-|28.00-29.00, bulk choice 950-1200 Ib-|,n N Gas ||. 69.6 Lone 8 Ges .. 433 See nae ta ee SHELBY TOWN§HIP —¥% Two base market in April will crowd ress 71300-1250 br steers 98 $0: twojAm News fee a Mek : a4 Aig an ue ate yp truck drivers approaching a nar-'g9 000 units hefty 1,080,000 an-!Joeds high choice 1140-1180 Ib. steers Am yo i044 Mack Trk .... 42 sumeke Divine. — = = ow bridge from opposite direc- va, a soe 32.25-32.50; standard to low good steers) Anaconda 66 Manning 27.6 In the matter of the petition con- = +Aual—rate- - . ___.,24.00-26 00: Joad high standard 1072 Jb Armco Stl _._. 69.2 Martin Co .. 50.4) cerning Ronald ter, minor Cause tions both thought the other ve Also reported in the survey is a Holstein steers 26.00; utility seeers 2150-lArmour & Co 243 May D SEtr 496 tee. zs : hicle would stop Neither did ” * vel! en amment ia rat i ae 23 . ae Lee = a BS oe paid Atchisoe, - = Mead CP .. ie To Felbert Kester, father of said child. 1c} . ‘ 1 shar Aproveme irysier § 25.5 J; loads at 2 carr a ! } an ving The trucks sideswiped and fell . ke “ . tr Ward's said)t2%,°! Shotce, bulk choice 850-925 Ib./ Bell Steel - Mergen Line .. 56 Court slleging thet the rene "where. = 3 . market penetration. ard’s SAld heifers 2850-2950: load high choice to|Boeing Air ... 387 yyerr Chas 20.1 | abouts of the father of sai@ minor child into the ditch on opposite sides Chrysler's April share of the mar- prime 920 Ib heifers 30.00, standard te|zene on de Mpls Hon 134.4 are unknown and said child has violated of the bridge. One rolled over. jket should Tange between 13 per|cTreA°% Chit sits ati, Weie'lbere Rare ast Mine MAM - 183 er PO ~*~ * * cent and 14 per cent. It dropped 21.00. canners and cutters 18-00-19 $0: Brun My ie 85° Monsen Ch: “a5 zu [ot te ee ee : : : cent ins = - ae hcl apeh ~; : iS |Budd C 271 Mont War -4 eta In the name of the People of the Lackily neither driver wa (1084 per cent in strike-handicapped' ot'23.00, toed, good, around 708 I Burvasene 4g Met Grek 4 lauate of aichigaa._ you are eroby ot . Horus , 5 . oe ‘ i killed, but the wife of one who *COPUSTY. 700 Ib steers 31.80: few small lots'Ca aM 24 aictarcla mee 936 poe t ‘= Pg . Sou was with him in the cab re- ee eae stock steer calves 425-450 — py = Mueller — 7 AaRrG : = . tine ae oan se Mig Ng Boy tg bruises arm He its oe 7 ae : last — a Peay 4) age . me Nat Cash R 69.7 OCEAN LINER PASSES MACKINAC started the westward voyage from Montreal with (may. AD 1980, at nine o'clock tn the steady, bu rime - off, due to/ GS a: { . 51 7 ea = - ~ . c - canean i wae x P b S the paa-Keshering holidsys; most choice|Cass, JT 23, Nat Davy: @y | BRIDGE—The American flag ship Santa Regina the opening of the new Seaway Saturday. It was io conn uercamane at oneal —— ut on couts and prime sold early in week 36.00-40.00,/Con Ill Lt. pf .8% Nati Lead 137) js pictured passing under the Mackinac Bridge the first American and the second ocean li It being impractical to make personal The accident occurred on 24 Mile late trade 35 00-38.00, few up to 3850,Ches & Ohio .726 wy Central 275 . ; N€T | service hereof. this summons and notice wis standard gnd good 37.00-35.00; cull and|Chrysler 66.4 Nort & West 984 as it sailed through the Straits of Mackinac to arrive at Chicago. shall be served by publication of a covy road, about a half-mile west of at Crofoot School utiligy 17.00-27.00. jCin Mil M 46 No Am Av 461 : ; wer one week previous to said hearing in The Van ‘oie Sheep—Salable 100. Nominally steady.|Cities Svc .....882 Nor Pac 595 bound for Chicago yesterday. The Santa Regina Pentinn Presa, a nawapnper grinwed and / a Ke . Compared last week slaughter lambs rig Equip .. 694 wor sta 24.7 + f A. |cireulated in said County Both drivers told Romeo State : ; steady to mostly 25¢ lower; slaughter! ee ace “i Ohio Ot! 40.2 Witness, the Honorable Arthur F Police they thought the other A farm theme dominated the os ewes steady. most good and olen shorn Cole Palen ; 4 Owens Cng 14 Moore. Judge of said Court, in the City = cent meeting of Cub Scout Pack slaughter lambs No 1 and 2 pelts 105 Colum Gas 222 Owens Ill Gl 884 . : 2 of Pontiac in County, this 28th would. stop before crossing the u Ibs down 20.00-22.50; few loads high ; Pac G&El 64.5 S S ] d a ’ eek Pe perors OssIng me 8 at Crofoot School as dens pre-|choice to prime shorn lambs 22.50-22 80; Con Bie -----002 Baan Epl 48 sult ettle Lodge Calendar {sean “PTY A aTHUR EB MOORE ridve rr) . ° rag sented several skits on farm life utility to good shorn lambs 18.00-20.00:/Gonsum Pw ...842 Param Pict .. 45 | (A true copy) Judge of Probate * * * sen ; cull to choice slaughter ewes 500-10 00 Parke Da .... 437 | = Rudolph J. Mueller G6 of 41343 Michael Nichols was accepted Hogs—Salabhe 150. Limited ga butch |%q iy of _ 9% Penner. JC ...112 - - ainst octor Lee nr eAM. ree Probate Register tude J. Mueller, 26, of 343 : ‘bo : a ‘ ers 25¢ lower weights over 250 Ibs cont C : Pa RR ....- + 176 | nag . , 24-Mile Rd.. was driving a nursery into the pack as a Bobcat and absent quoted 25c lower; sows quoted 25¢|Cont Gop & s $3 Pepsi Cola ... 29.5 | May Ist. 7:30 PM. Leslie t aia te. of k t i k oH i ‘ait awards were presented to the fol- mer errs Lon ‘ 3 ace ee, \cont Meter 12.7 tb a. ie | § nion Nag for 16,000 | Hotchkiss, W.M. adv. . stock truck e escaped unhur . quoted 16.50-16.75; No. 2 an -300'Cont Oil ... 62 helps ‘ : - The other driver aed Ruiz lowing: Michael Cooney, wolf} butchers quoted 1480-1600: mixed|Copper Rng. .25.4 Phileo 11. 354 | | ee 71 f “2151 %6- Mile Rd : New badge; Stephen Chapman, silver ft'00: ee a task Be Nets: cadicuta Pek 31 Prset So : 3 A $500,000 malpractice suit filed = n< Clarkston Community School District, ‘ 0 eel oo. C NCW , | oe . < arrow; Charles Morin, silver Ar- gitts unue, 240 Ibs. 25c lower weights|Deere- .........50.1 Pure Otl ..,... 446 Santa Regina Forced two years ago against a Pontiac | ews in rie Oeklane County. Michigan Haven. also was. unscathed, UE) cw: Charles Morin. silver ar- ovt? 240 Ibs. 25-S0c léwer instances 1.00'Det Edis "437 RCA ; 613 . . a Dr. V C. Abbo his 67 vear-old wife: was treate : J UA ‘off cows steady to 25¢ lower. oly — . ae sige 8 Stl .... rie to Wait Off Shore in Payee, 5) See tt. . . ; ; oc pm. ene Semen Billy Cooney also received a ion Its Du Pont Plan Best El Auto S86 St Reg Pap. 497) CiCAGO, Ill. (AP)—The flag- 2 0P€-4ay federal court trial be- Police last night that someone had standard Time, on the 11th day of May Jefferson Beach to Go badge with one gold and_ one | (EL & Mus ..... i$ Seats Roed ..- 422 ship Santa Regina, first American|{°re_U-S. District Judge Theodore |broke into his home and stole a !##?. st which time and passe they | | ~ = Rad e - ’ , | silver arrow point. — | CHICAGO its ys [eecceeb “+1128 gimomms ..... $32 vessel to use the rebuilt St. Law- oo ee tl a. coaread irevolver valued at $50, several] | The notes will be dated May 2. 1988. in a TT-page brief filed in U.S.| Sinclair ...... 63.4 Segway: €x dw war tobert L. Hall, 30, charged in bottles of liquor, $50 cash, and bashes hdd = ol DETROIT ?—Jefferson Beach One year perfect attendance : - : .” | Firestone 143.2 socony "452 rence Seaway, expected a warm : ee quor, ‘ interest at a rate or rates not exceed- yee é , - A owee : a ls § ) At ale amusement park, a land-mark awards went to Bruce Turpin and District Court says its pan ts Gi \Ford Mor. 64 Pt ig e¢? reception in Chicago Thursday, Se : 5 ee failed to use'made an unsuccessful attempt to je olllong will be. Pearl aC oom awe foun r oe . ; : ; > scree of sk -COSSALY ; in suburban St. Clair Shores, will | Jac Sarker ¢ arpin a vest, Du Pont of its 63 million|Preepot_ sur “103, SPa"Brand ... 61 but ran instead into a union dis- ceree SE Lee ee Diy open my sele: place as may be agreed upon with pur- iburban St. Clair Shores, will Jacobium Parker and one yeal . Frueh Tra 43.7 7ery , y er pen p i shares of General Motors stock is Std Oil Cal 55 - surgery’ when he left a_ broken} jchaser Denominations and form of notes be torn down June 1 to provide service stars to Bobby Gibson and 5 Stock ‘SiGardener Den $23 St4 Ol, Cty” §o.5 Pute over its pilot. h ; jto be at the option of the purchaser expanded facilities at the Jeffer- Stephen Chapman. the best but adds that it still isGen Bex" 133 St Ot Inf 83 The 460-foot Grace Lines ship|("reeduarter inch needle imbed-| A 12-foot’ Master Craft inboard Accrued interest to date of delivery of Si bae (eee open to suggestions. Gen Elec $36 Btevens, JP... 2 was forced to lie offshore for four|®@ i” Hall's facial tissue during an motorboat, trailer, motor, and a such notes must be paid by the pur- ‘wow Beach Marina. The expan- Boy Scouts from Treops-56 and: “The government-plen js for DylGen Fas 79. Stud Pack wae Our operation in Pontiac General Hos- 12 ; chaser of the time of Selivery sion will make the marina one of 150 were introduced as the new e 8 ‘ag Gen Mills 107 Sun Ot. .... 63. hours while negotiators for a new) FO. tiac General Hos- }2-gallon gas tank, valued at a Said note or notes shall be subject ee Pont to sell 20 million GM shares|Gen Motors .. 49.6 Suther Pap «.. 4444 fie |pital Nov. 10, 1957. total of $800 w ed: stolen |, redemption prior to maturity in in- largest nrivately owned | det chiefs gn the open market over a '10-\a% Time 84 Swift & Co... 356, merican pilots’ yunion huddled fet ‘ So ae en verse numerical order at par and secrued eae ; en re Tex G Sul ... 21.1) wij sentatives res yesterday from a interest on the first day of any month pleasure boat harbors in the Tr results of Scout-O-Rama year period and allocate the re-|Gerber Prod . 684 Tim R Bear 57.2 with, representatives of the ves Rot a F g ig ee to maturity thereat, upon fifteen cvintre. When finished the ma- ticket sales were also announced. mainder to Du Pont shareholders\Sesbef Br. °34 Hantamer’” 399 °Cry OUnes Chrysler of Canada Liecepsphhetecchedprent Mae peinag ail ml alle perdircen Em Agri rina will have 1000 boat wells a _ ——— » = = Goodrich AEP hoa od 397, The ship finally was allowed to |at 17465 Buckhorn Lake Rd., Hilly cceccer' ar’ canines aed = andl a KO-nnit motel. . . on a A ea & Asis. e (ene Fees 141.4 Un Carbide 14 iproceed to dock and an official to Close for 5 Days /Township, according to sheriff's the State of Michigan, which carries 4 Named Railroad Director The United States Supreme Court Gio Ry 59 Unit Air Lin. 384 welcomed from Mayor Richard| deputies. 2 SS has ordered the divestment after|Greyhound 22.4 Unit Airc ~ 60.4 _ TIN of the sale of municipal bonds. B Kill 4 . ff; ep : — s - filed ae lout oll = ites Unit Fruit 38.5, Daley- and other city officials only| WINDSOR, Ont. (P—All depart-} Ritt F wk : Por the purpose of awarding the notes ovKilled in Traffic DETROIT om — Fred L, Riggin ruling in a governmentfiled ami-trw’cnge "nt Ua'cae CP 414 after the union agreed to toss the ments in Chrysler of Canada's surgn. "Yes! “Spring. has spring.|es,,comeeted Sy. determining. at The Sa (SEY Soren Geer, & . : Ria utive vice president of sige the viel ont ngs |Home otk “. Us Rub $7 1.whole problem into the hands of Pasenger car production plant |\Complete line of garden supplies, ag gpesitied therein, ine wal bgt San eer, lueller Brass Co., of Port Huron,|in GM re a tendency towa iw m2 Us wee He federal mediators. fand the eight-cylinder engine plant everhlooming roses, flowering!trom June. 1. 1059. to. their maturity was killed Thursday when he was has been named a director of the) monopoly Indust Ray 73.1 Van Raal . 36 j j ; will be closed for fiv rki shrubbery, shade trees, flowering|and deducting therefrom any mium strick by a car while on the wav Grand Trunk Western Railroad.) U. S. District Judge Walter J./ifor 102.4 West Un Tel. 36.2| The union, the Licensed Tug | See et eee soon trees. climbing vines, ail makes of |The notes will be awarded to the bidder ta school in Bay City. Poli ‘id The eels) USE inced| ended veils ine eacine | nepir Cop 44 West A BK . . 362 men’s and Pilots’ Protective Assn. days from the end of the regular|rertijizer. Evergreens galore. Open|Wose 01¢ on the above computation » sche in Bay City olice salir > 3 fas ¢€ |LaBuy - | e c SS), : : ishi 4 , - : aes : “ : west : the senostee dacted into the sath \ mt Se bctce ai hig i. div be sent ong 1 pat nt Bus Mch 883.4 White Mot 7S insisted that one of its pilots be Shifts on Friday, May 1, until the 7 days a week. FE 8.5911. teers Maly he gS Bang je aon sal l e€ pi shia ae y me re pit or] nll na aves ment proposa. “4 Mery 81 Vilesn 6 Co 43 employed to take the 15,000-ton |start of regular shifts on Monday, | = ; me prepesas Sor the ace toss if ; amand president o e railroad.|w ago. wal i | : : p in , u b —/than all o notes or at- a ce ; mi I of the 1 8 tat Paper. .116¢ Yale & Tow -233/Regina down the Calumet River |May 11. households — — eetnine less than their par value’ will be ‘con- Int ghoe “+++ 381 Zesith Red. Ji? |into Lake Calumet Harbor on the! This temporary shutdown is to/May 4th, 10 to 5. Tues owed: “Mine lean ts tm anticipation ef the Int ceaTel : 43 Anaconde $8.1) far South Side. 4 |allow for plant rearrangement, W.| Thurs., Fri. 10 to 4 Sisterhood| tose tax. l sGhastnanwenn ae Genesco 355! Tugboat men backed the new |H. Shotton, | passenger car plant Temple Beth Jacob, 14 E. Pike. ME cae Bh io ge Boe mg neni i union. (Ase said today. adv. "a certified or cashier's check in the Weal’s Car Prodec, | x * * Total number of employes af-| Maynard Johnson Insurance is|noves, drawn upon um theorporated bank | ar Froauction | The line maintained, however, fected by the shutdown will oe = Pipl gg oer gpd ge company and payable to the e } —— . 2.170. f = +f wive ngurance ency, loca order of the Treasurer of Clarkston to Hit 11-Week Low ithat it already had a pilot — the 2,170. Truck plant production willl)” yw, Lawrence py ASS long Community School District must ac« car production will total 120,454) News said today. priced makers, | Automotive News truck output this week at 26,610) units against 27,000 last week. lone which had guided the ship continue without interruption. DETROIT (® — This week's U. S.'through the Great Lakes. units, an 1l-week low, Automotive the guinea pig,” said Ted B. West The trade paper said the decline the lines, who made the 1,250-mile | from last week’s 133,987 cars will voyage down the seaway from| result fronr sharp dips by medium- | Montreal. Indicated output for this week'by President Patrick Cullnan, de-| places of honor when 100 school will compare with 78,441 cars built! cided to turn the issue over to me-| safety patrol members from Mich- | It said Canadian factories willgave him a’ flag of the city of) protecting three children at his GMC REACHES MILESTONE — The 1,000,000th 270 cubic inch gasoline engine manufactured at the GMC Truck and Coach Divi- sion is shown here getting a special inscription from John Falberg, engine plant superintendent. Others in the photo are (from left) Walter Selberg, engine line general foreman; Virgil Foltz, fore- man; James Hanrahan, foreman, and Carl Rogers, factory man- ager. The 270 cubic inch engine is’ a popular 6-cylinder unit used ° in GMC light trucks. During World War II several hundred thou- sand of them were used to power 6x6 Army trucks and Ducks. Death Notices MRS. M. NORRIS KELLEY | ROMEO — Service for Mrs. M. \Norris (Alma E.) Kelley, 62, of /153 W. Lafayette St., wil) be held |at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Roth’s Home ‘j}company each bid as & arantee of faith on the part the bidder. Checks of unsuccessful bidders will be promptly returned s shall be conditioned upon the Pee “ P oi | }1 P.M. St. John. Me urch. They were trying to make US| Areg Boy to Be Honored (Highland and Nebraska. adv “junqualified opinion of the purchaser's ‘fall, executive vice president o at Safety Patrol Rall Rummage Sale. Saturday May |tiorney, approving the legally of the ty y 2nd from 9:30 to 3, 228 N. ater poco be anernd oh (he peremnee & FERNDALE — Rickey Andrews, ig lg a a. '12, of Ferndale, and Erlene| AA Private Detectives. Licensed |Cisrkston Elementary School, 6506 Wal- —Bonded—FE 5-5201. adv. Rummage Sale — Saturday 9 to . 42 Pingree. adv. don Rd., Clarkston, a The *e> reject any and all 1959. Approved Apri! 21, ATE OP MICHIGAN After the union group, headed! Thomas, 13, of Jackson, will have in the week ended May 3 last year. diators, the Regina proceeded the/igan attend the 23rd national AAA) Rum e Sale — 128 W. Pike avunee ens WALTON T) ROBBING. estimates seven miles to the harbor. |safety patrol rally in Washington,|/St.. Sat., May 2, 8 AM. adv. Ceeretary | Daley greeted the ship's skipper.}May 7-10. Rum e Sale OO a olaRigg tinct Mer 2. 2 pea icapt, Hawley MacDermit, and| Rickey lost his right leg while|1052 Premont. : ” cay hee oaeece che Oeat © acne Notice is Lente A given that a meetin of the Pontiac Township Zon Boar will be held on Wednesday night, May ‘i con es ? a : TO GIVE AWAY NEW PONTIACS — Two " Pontine Press Phot representatives of the General Mills Co. were Store, is R. C. Gates. Looking on is J. W. Wid- ‘in Pontiac yesterday to receivé titles and keys ness, also of General Mills. The cars, will be to 48 1959 Pontiac. caré to be given to consumets given in a contest sponsored by the ‘cereal firm. and grocers. Accepting the keys from Henry, ‘Seventeen of the autds are being displayed at Gotham i sei manager of the Pontiac Retail supermarkets in the Pontiac area. Ka. . iN / \produce 10,280 cars and trucks this Chicago. Police and Fire Depart- ¥ 5 . ; ago. art-| post. Erlene pulled a classmate week against 10,.325 last week. ment bands and marching units.! from the path of a skidding car. Moves Up at Burroughs ee |chilled after the four-hour wait,| The 100 safety. patrol members,| DETROIT w—Richard O. Bailey, ‘Sees Dearborn Tax Hike |a!so hailed the Regina, largest) from 93 Michigan communities, Burroughs Corp. director of public | ship ever to enter lake Calumet./ wij] make the trip to Washington | relations, has been named assist- DEARBORN. Mayor Orville} The* smaller Dutch freighter 4. guests of the Automobile Club |ant to co i Hubbard ‘said Thursday Dearborn) Prins Jéhan Willem Friso, wiiich| of Michigan. ° : ee jresidents can expect higher taxes|had won with east the race from despite a lower city budget for| Montreal to Chicago and ———— — ithe 1959-60 fiscal year. Hubbard |ceived a tumu]tous greeting when | Seiberling Strike Ends te new position. > pproved a 13-million dollar budg-|it docked in midmorning for a cus- ON ‘MAY 8, 1960 AT 2:00 PM. THE a for the Detroit guburb Wednes.|toms inspection at Navy Pier, had| AKRON, Ohio U—Seiberling |cash one 1966 Rave, serlal xeGxteeie? |day, He said a tax increase of less|no trouble with its pilot. Rubber Co. is the second manu- |S} "7 Bast Wy Wy -y -< \than one dollar per $1,000 assessed} Cullnan said, “We'll get to the/facturer to reach a settlement with|spected at the said address. The under- ivaluation would be necessary to | foreign lines later, Right ‘now we|the Unite Rubber Workers Union eee OCTAT ES TROCOUNT CORP. offset a 33 million dollar loss injare iriterested ovly in Americanjon a new contract and supplemen- . BY L. SPARKS,» personal. ptoperty tgx valuationg.|dollars.” ’ |tal agreements. . . ae a i ~ > ° ’ 1. : f . 4 \Eppert. Bailey will continue as di notice rector of public relations in. | his} 42h day ot Ma 6th, 1959, at yo ~~ to of the L N 6u bot Road. Mer.- ing will be held at the Township 4a'’, 2080 Opdyke Road. ° LESTER AXFORD, Chairman GRETA V. BLOCK, Township Clerk April 21, May 1, '69. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE here! given that on the » s at 11 o'clock a m., ill _sell_af- sale. the Bidder for: one 955 th No. P155H 36.976, t 30 . Bt., Pon Mich, id ve is stored 1 8. Sie. footy, Pontie, “Mich. ed Pabe right to bid Mt the sale. COMMUNITY yInances co., Pontiac, i JOHN LEE, —a April 24, May ist, ‘59. ’ : THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1959 Pickefs Halted in Coal Dispute Violence Prompts 2nd Restraining Order in Kentuck Strik . ot eet. na 5] H p eeesne err iat this tiny Vancouver Island vil-| CUSTOM COLOR MIXING ntucky rike * * * wildly. He y lage Thursd | . age Thursday. | . Py aii: “ial ‘some of he weird denied any _inniety or discomfort. Battle Creek Area Youth | Only four cans of soup ima New Owner: JIM GEORGZE—FE 3-7270 WHITESBURG, Ky. (AP) — dreams men have as they lay jects ac led Bob Maddern, 40, and Bob PREE PARKING IN THE RE United Mine Workers pickets were wide awake confined in a coffin- — = ll aranghemer ga ee Auto Cr kup ‘Turner, 46, both of Aberdeen, EP AR ordered home Thursday a_ few hours after a federal coyrt issued a second temporary restraining order against the union. Coal operators hailed the action, but said they were not convinced it would end the violence which has torn eastern Kentucky's coal fields during the 54-day-old strike. * * * Judge H. Church Ford issued the order, good for five days, in| tS; on a petition filed by the National District Court at Lexington|- Labor Relations Board against UMW Districts 19 and 30. union was directed to stop vio-! The'|- Tests Probe Reasons for Hallucinations By JOHN BARBOUR AP Science Writer PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (AP)—A dancing spider, church bells and laughter, and even sunlight in the like tank in a darkened room, a researcher Said today. ’ *x * * ; Why does the mind; deprived of much of its sensations, make up fantastic sights, sounds and stor- jes so vivid they seem real? Perhaps because the mind is looking for some sort of meaning in the jumble around it, said John Marcell ‘Davis, a Yale University medical student. * * * This would explain why persons, shut completely off from sight and sound, have fewer hallucinations than persons who have some Imaginations Run Wild in Experiments ‘After 9 Days Adrift them and strange colored ‘shapes was also the sound of a motor. One screamed to be let out after! 38 minutes, tore off his bonds and his life over again, skin diving and even taking his girl on a! picnic. One saw himself pitching a bril- liant game of baseball while his girl watched and cheered. After felt stiff. Sometimes the volunteers real- ized they were seeing something | unreal, and sometimes they did not. * * * The researchers tried the exper- iment without the flashing light, but with two volunteers at a time, both male, strapgers to each oth- were projected on the wall. There|ist dancing on a tube. Another American fishermen’ who had been| this hallucination his pitching arm US. Fishermen Safe | One’ saw a spider that didn't ex- (AP) _— Two CLO-OOSE, B.C. lsaw vibrating lines on the wall. adrift in their disabled boat for Still «another heard church bellsnine days through turbulent Pa-| land laughter. \cific storms were hauled to safety | , ame COLOR CORNER ‘ 547 N. Perry St. (Formerly Townsend) Corner Glegweod and Perry DEVOE PAINT America’s No. 1 Interior Paint | BATTLE CREEK u® — Peter\Wash., from starvation when they |~ iWentworth, 16, of -Battle Creekireached shore. Township, suffered fatal injuries} Maddern and Turner, both in| \last night im the crash of his auto|good condition, left Aberdeen on) iat a Pennfield Township intersec-|April 21 on what was to have been) tion about four miles north of Bat-|a 13-hour run to Neah Bay in the, tle Creek. 34-foot troller Thordis. Pennfield Township officers aid) The boat’s engine broke down, | ae \For nine days, through some of} the youth, alone in the car, ap- jparently tried to brake for the in-| itersection. His auto skidded, ca- romed off the rear of another car and rolled twice. Wentworth was'| dead on arrival at Battle Creek! Community Hospital. i! | Joshua Edgar. the stormiest weather of the! spring. the Thordis drifted. Mad-| dern and Turner had no radio| transmitter. The Thordis drifted close to) shore near this fishing Village, 80) jmiles northwest of Victoria, and| \the boat was spotted by Postmaster | ae. A TT CSS aes a IOP TIIPZLALLALLL LL La EYE GLASSES DR. C. I. PHILLIPS~ Optometrist Announces The Removal of His Office 205 CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN BUILDING CONTACT LENSES To FISD IIT? I mass prio b AP Wirephete | meaningless sights and sounds in/er. ‘Crash Kills Postmaster caer goed Me wil —_ 15 WEST HURON ST. ‘ord's action follow three TEST RESCUE DEVICE — A \ the room “with them, Davis told They were told they could talk F Mr. h | : : dynamitings and an —, of one-ton “‘boilerplate” model ‘of ithe American Psychiatric Assn. lif they liked, although they could Pe ggesasctres at Mindisid’ wasl Ire cas heh, wee pvp td PONTIAC, MICHIGAN more than 200 shots in a %4-hour the Project Mercury capsule |annual meeting. not see each other. Nine of the) killed today when his car collided icy water, caught a rope thrown’ period, designed t65 carry a spaceman | into orbit around the earth is shot into the aig in a test of the escape mechanisms at Wallops Island, Va. The triple nose _ Davis and some Harvard Uni ten pairs were able to remain the| head-on with a truck trailer loaded|from the Thordis, and hauled the} LIMITED | PARKING IN REAR iversity psychiatrists are trying|full 10%, hours. Six subjects had|with steel on U.S.27, eight miles boat through the one small gap! several experiments. hallucinations. tsouth of here. lin’the reef that hems in bay. a Secs — They shut a person away in a| DOWNTOWN PONT FE 4-3241 VIP LA LL LeeLee TY: * * * Ford, who previously issued: a} 15 P. thousand persons contributed op ea rs on e i more than $600,000 for its con- struction. \ , Grant's body was placed in the 4 a well of the tomb April 17, 1897. 4 Mess ays The casket containing the body of ¥ Zila = his wife Julia is beside his. RS * * ‘*® > The tomb has been maintained by-the Grant Memorial Assn. Last Z ; 4 / August, Congress authorized the a eS secretary of the interior to accept ~ | the tomb from the association 14-KT WHITE YELLOW GOLD 1 Last November the city surrend- s or ' site with cermission of the Legiilature ©*Plus Federal Tax @All First Quality Wie, America’s inadequate highway e@ Watch and Jewelry Repair Department “Low-Cost Elgin 12-ft. Elgin Open $ system involves a loss of about $8 } 7'/2-HP Outboard Fiber Glass Boot billion annually to the public in SEARS 154 North Saginaw St., Phone FE 5-4171 Reg. $199 $169 10% ' lost time, mishaps and other fac- Wide, deep construction for plenty of fishing roorn. 3 $1? DOWN tors. Twin cylinder motor: forward, tank type seats. Chromed bow eye and ‘lifting handles. neutral gear shift, 360° pivot Green exterior finish; fleck interior. Takes up to 12-HP reverse. 4-gal. fuel tank. Auto- matic rewind starter. Outboard Motors. Fabulous “400” | TAPPAN GAS or ELECTRIC RANGE SPORTING SPECIALS 2-pc. Cane Pole 9-ft.... .12¢ | . and OVEN . Tpe. Cane Pole 14-ft.... .33¢ With tabe'Manths te Fat or Use Lines Regunr Charge nea Spe. Cone Pole 12-14-ft. 88 Built-In — 3 1 Tray Tackle Box......1.44 Power- Chain Stringer ..... .. 88 uae . 2.95 Fisherman's ate a ¢. Higgins Fast - > Ox ir Trout Landing Net ..... 88 Action Casting Rod 88 2b. Buss Bed-ing....... 98c Poi “piece fiberglas blade gives fast action — quick re- 2-pc. Cane Pole, Line, Bobber, sponse. Detachable handle, 2 metal guides and tip. reve eeees 88c 4V4-feet long. A handy second rod — perfect for young : anglers. At Sears. Low Price and ‘New Styling 19” ALLSTATE Plastic Covers INSTALLED Dress up your car interior at a modest price! Tough, woven saran plastic seat and backrest. Rich looking simulated leather trim. Comfortable, durable, easy to cledn. bid install. Woven. 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