‘e National Office, . ls not a candidate for na- intend to be a candidate for) “Republicans was screened out by 4 U.S. Weather Bureau Forecasi . A ; i ; Details ba twe - t 114th. YEAR * * * ~ * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, Av EDN TESDAY, MAY 9, 1956- —38 PAGES MOCIATINTERNATIONAL NEWS BERVICE : 2 Te Williams Candi > | Amoco pelea? ate Will Not Seek Governor Says Phil Hart in Running for His Second Term, He Announces Gov. G. Mennen Williams, who returned to Lansing today from @ “report to the people” of Gakland County, announced this morning he will seek an unprecedented) fifth term as Governor of Michigan. | Williams also repeated earlier statements that he GOV. G. MENNEN WILLIAMS tional office in 1956. “I categorically deny that, I have been a candidate for, any national office,” the Governor said. “I do not| national office. | “T am talking about 1956. I can't! say what my plans are after that.” Lt. Gov. Philip A. Hart also an-| nounced he will run again for lieu-| tenant governor. Winding up thetr tour of the | county last night, Williams and | five members of his State Ad- ministrative Board answered 31 | questions from the fleer in a 2‘s-hour town hall meeting in | Lincola Junior High School. Anticipated heckling by county) GOV. PHILIP J. HART — ‘into it. Boston. | farm bill. ‘that would invite a veto. Cards for written questions were ‘Executive Sees absent Republican board members reviewed what they felt were their of newspaper advertising “lies just breakfast, Williams said, “Like | Pinkham, executive vice But, he added, “The adjustment i"& Club. “EFFECT HARD TO PREDICT’ ‘4/id Pinkham, “and people in mean greatly expanded production. papers, an all-time high.” other industries. ful, ner ool ee in | advertising. a5" ment in the expanded recreation, fessions, providing adequate sup- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) President Eisenhower Kisenhower said today he will un- last month and asked for . farmers some 500 million planned another full scale-checkup yest moderator Monroe Osmun, who LT refused to allow oral questions. | ~~ distributed among the audience of, just over 100 area residents. Taking only occasional digs at Increasing Use of and the Legislature, the state of- ficials answered questions on cur- Newsp aper Ads - rent state and local problems and) BOSTON iB—The * golden age” major accomplishments in office. ahead.” Charles H. Pinkham, Bos: Expanding on his remarks on ton advertising executive said to- automation at yesterday's civic ‘day. any other labor-saving device, dent and = general automation will help us in the Chambers & Wiswell, Inc., jong run.” of our workers to the changeover “More money than ever before 1s the great challenge of auto-' is being spent in newspaper ad. mation. | vertising, despite television,” | New England spend more than a Long-range effects, he said, are hard to predict. In some indus- me boomed m a a tries he thdtght automation would ™C*C!S every week to buy news. In others, he added, it might Pinkham said- radio and tele- mean employment of less workers, vision ‘‘are no lortger the miracles, who would turn to other jobs in media, and have found their right-| Some, he said, would turn to — manufacturing automatic ma- chines, Others might find employ- industry which will accompany a shorter work week, He predicted a long-range expansion in the pro- plies of doctors and teachers. The Governor warned that lo- cal, state and national govern- lke Takes Physical Exam This Frida WASHINGTON «mh — President dergo a new head-to-toe physical NEW legislation limited to examination Friday, including a the proposed soil bank. He check on his heart condition. > asked for authority to pay Ld Eisenhower made the announce- dollars this year for taking ment at a news conference, He had been asked whether he land out of production next Py The House last Thursday passed in advance of the Republican Na- . Z tional Convention which opens in ay new (soa bank bil) beat without, San POSEN Aug. eh * ‘permission for the advance pay.) ments.. It included a provision for Calling it a peadiotor exami. Price supports on small grains nation, he said the: checkup was that the administration opposes not relate d specifically to the heart attack he suffered in Depe ver last Sept 4 s Senate GOP policy chairman | Ww — House Effects City Police, Firemen 10-Mile Residency Law Ready for Vote Should. Pontiac poliicemen and place the amendment on the firemen be required to live within a 10-mile radius of the Saginaw’ “and Huron streets intersection? | This question will. confront city voters in the oe November election. : The City Coma taeion last night) imposed the limitation and in-, structed City Attorney William A. Ewart to draw up the necessary) charter arpendment. |that the amendment would receive The Pottiac Police Officer's more favorable Consideration in Assn. requested the comuttesion \the August primary. sonnel to live within the city. According to Paul L. Merideth. attorney for the group, the as- sociation will request the com- ‘mission to place thé issue on the | Aug. 7 ballot. Appearing before the commission: last night, he said: ‘‘There ‘is. some feeling of the association ! } © a scheduled drop today. . dubious about the Friday schedule. | |bombardier on the drop plane see, the target.” _ | presi-| mahager of spoke before the Boston Adve rtis-+ | Approval Tae Senate Sene a on Veto-Proof Farm Bill “WASHINGTON (INS)—The Senate . Agriculture He expressed misgivings lest if Committee drives today for approval of a new veto-proof Prove too small Chairman Allen J. Ellender (D-La) told reporters: “I think there is a good chance we can approve a Dill. recalled Wilson for more ques- today—I hope so.” He said he will oppose amendments which Congress sent him’—-————- —— sacreage allotments. imuch of the oats. Ihave heen planted -Stytes Bridges (NH), said after grain provision will be revised or the conference that thrown out ballot to test a 1982 amendment ;commission could catl the special requiring police and fire per- election for an August decision. jwing” hoped today for im-, iproved weather to clear the; lway for America’s first air-| ‘uled for Friday about dawn jmight cause another postponement | | | | | i | ' “H-Bomb Drop Postponed Until: Weather Permit Friday at Dawn on Na. Island if Bomber Pilot’ Can See Target - | . By BOB CONSIDINE | ABOARD U.S.S. MOUNT! wore ain OFF ENIWE- (INS) — Scientists! Peres “Operations Red-' drop of a hydrogen bomb. | The drop of the H-bomb) over the mid-Pacific islet of, ‘Namu has been resched- ] NAMU ISLAND — Tiny Namu island at the north edge of Bikini | atoll is shown in this airview with the bullseye target, 100 yards in diameter, at which bombardier Maj. Dwight E. ,Durner will be —_ when he releases the Be bomb from a high flying B-32 jet (approximately 11 am. Thursday PDT). The third postponement | of the detonation was an- es nounced a few hours before Jackson Answers W ilson Weather experts were keeping close check on conditions which and some of them were frankls FROM OU R: ‘WIRE SERVICES any discrepancy between-the tes- s e WASHINGTON — Sen. Henry M.| itimony of Wilson and Gen. Curtis lenperte Aa ay "ene perigee Jackson (D-Wash) replied to an E. LeMay, head of the Strategic | Imen and Civil Defense officials’ administration charge of ‘‘fear- Air Command. present as observers on the com- Monger’ today by starting a new) LeMay testified that Russia will | munications ship Mount McKinley, @"ument with Defense Secretary’ ‘have superior long-range striking \Charles E. Wilson over this coun- power in two to four: years, - The story is astonishing in its! try’ 8 airpower. The vital role the weather plays. ‘many contradictions and in the) | le intricate forecasting which B0eS Wilson testified Monday that with aerial refueling, the nation's fleet One weather expert declared: ‘of 1.800 medium bombers — the. “Under absolutely ideal radio- p47, — have “true intercontinen-| active - fallout conditions, neither; 4) capabilities.” He said Russia| the crew of the B-52 drop plane has no air tanker of any kind! ‘nor observers spread all over the'to refuel its global bombers. ‘Bikini area -would be able to see} The secretary stressed the ‘tbe bomb because of cloud cover.’ Another speaker) added: . tanker point in his denial of [Day or May 23. os ear -on4/ Statements Russia is outstrippi It is very important that thé) the U. S. on sirpower. But Jackson told a_ reporter: _ Business, industry and The target is a 400-foot wide (Continued on mor’ on Fae 2 2. Col. 6) | BULLETIN | BENTON HARBOR (AP)—A freak tornado struck the Vern Enders | so visitors will , The secretary referred indirectly ie ay a. ne “ 'Monday to critics of his de fense thoroughly ‘understand the orem a te 2 MUS | program as “fear mongers” system, said John Hirlinger, northeast 6f Benton Har- manager of the Chamber of bor_in Van Buren County. Commerce. in operation. Even those sched- | “AWilson is to return be lore the a.m. in the Pontiac High! jSenate Military Appropriations ‘School auditorium with an eabe ommittee today to answer| questions. The unit expects to hear! orientation meeting. A pre- also from. Adm. “Arthur W. Rad- sentation-- of the public |ford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs' school lof Staff, ‘RIGHT TO ALL FACTS’ Jackson retorted: “The Ameri- No injuries were re- can people have a right to all A similar orientation will take’ ported. ithe facts. I cannot see how that place in the parochial sc hools, — _ can be labeled fear mongering. I'd linger said, call it fact mongering if anything = Sen. Robertson (D-Va) called to- for “frank and uninhibited” ‘testimony’ ty the -Joint Chiefs of ‘Staff on whether the administra- | ition’ s 36-billion-dollar defense bud- get is big enough. ' Between 10 a.m. and 12 noen, | elassroom observation will be | held as business and industrial personne] study classroom tech- | niques and methods of teaching. The visitors at each school will join principals and teachers for lunch and have a question and answer period about school opera- tion until 1:30 p.m., official break- ing-up time. Hiclinger said. Those who wish may return to the high school for further ae sie and answers after this 3% ending time. Robertson spoke out in an in, terview as the appropriations subcommittee on which he serves tioning about U. 8. defense needs, and the House prepared to start debate on the huge military Cohoo! board members, Superin- vetoed the big farm bill money bill. tendent of Schools, Dana P. Whit- The House bill would provide Mer, principals and staff member will be present at this last session answer the visitors’ questions Objective of the day's program. Hirlinger acquaint business and industry, with the schools svstem and the) needs af the school.” The event is yearly except that business and industry usually play. host. to school personnel, he added. $33.635,000,000 in new funds, This, © plus money available from prior to appropriations, would finance an actual spending budget of $36,200,- 000.000 in the bookeeping year a compromise on feed grains may he worked out. He said otherwise the new bill drops most of the provisions objection- ahle to the administration. starting July 1. Sen.. George D. Aiken (R-VU). Robertsan sald he thought Wil- said price supports on small grains son had ‘‘bristled untiecessarily’’ would not be helpful this vear when Robertson asked him wheth- anyway because under the House- er the military chiefs of — staff passed bill, they are dependent on,would be free to give “‘frank and He said acre- unbiased" opinions on whether the age quotas have not been set and budget will provide the strength it is too late to do so now since needed to meet any aggression. barley and rye Sen. Leverett M. Saltonstall ¢R- Mass}, a member of both the Sen- Aiken said he hopes the smalliate Airpower subcommittee ‘and City Council, for unnecessary Military Appropriations sub- of water during the current short- committee, was asked if he saw said is” ta Expensive cer Wash Bt "RERA. Il, w—A car wash now costs at least $50 in Eureka, That's the minimum fine set by the use age. Police Chief Herbert Wo Straley -Aaid he did not wish fo comment on a Ewart explained that only the pertedly against such a move as ai charter amendment | joining the city employe’s pen- mn whether he thought the Lee was sufficient | 5 ity But = Pometinerene pal ag | sion = to Social Security ee He tv also a power in taxation | The service said farmers in the time to place your ad. 15 _ Will be tp before voters at this She'll Find O 5 matters, George gave up the | Upper Peninswa and the northern] cash buyers answered this I Nn Today’ Ss P T oo | Sere: ' ~ chairmanship of the Senate Fi- (parts of the lower made consider-] one: If the amendment passed. at) JAMESTOWN, ’N Y. «® — Three, nance Committee to take over (able progress in planting oats] 2. mp EVINRUDE, County News. ......e0eeee- 8 either election. |Méredith said he times last Week fire trucks an- the foreign relations post, during the last week, with lighter lent cond. 9338. OA a-aie7, : 2 pirtesitssrcni le ‘ ‘knew of no Police officers vith swered false alarms from a busy; George's * decision apparently rains. t To » Place’ Your -Want Aa Aa ports — ...5..,..... 27, 28, 7 | would have to move to. conform interseetion, Detective. Earl Thies clears the w ay for the nomination! “The service said no fruit trees DIAL FE 2. 8181 Theaters : % with the distahce limitation tracked down the party regponsi- and expected election of former. have blossomed vet. The longer : autlad TV & Radio Programs a7 He said the association kas in ble—a kindérgarten girl who said Gov. Herman Tlmadge.to the seat blésseming is ‘delayed, the less Just ask for the iS Wilson, Eatt . 37 complete agreement on the 10 mile she wanted to see what would hap- being \ acated by the veteran of chance there is for damaging WANT AD DEPT. Women's Pages.... 71 thru 25 restriction, pen, Her mother said she would, 31 years of penate e service, . ‘ frosts, it added, : me 4 i f * te - . bf r . ( \ ae ‘ : : ‘ i 4 é j 4 * wae . / Fé Ey Target Area Awaits Airborne Hydrogen Bomb Fearmongering Is Denied With City Schools as Host." sctbet to plan another Business-Industrial- Educational Host for this year’s program will be the city. schools. |tifieq through police fingerprints as Members of business and industry will visit any of 25 “We don't have any jet tankers Schools participating in the. program. Sponsored by the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce, at Detroit House of Correction. beste for production are insuffi-, EBI Day will begin at 8: 45°— set-up will be made more better. George, of his family to withdraw, on foreign policy matters. ' Fifth Term Curtiss-Wright and Studebaker Merger Denied Heads of Both Firms Spike Rumors; Nance ‘Explores Situation’ Roy T. Hurley, . board ‘chairman and president of Curtiss-Wright Corp., said in New York today his com- jpany had “no plan” for merging with Studebaker- Packard Corp. . His statement. followed denials by James x Nance,. president of. ‘Studebaker- Packard, of published re- ports that a merger an- nouncement was expected in New York today. © “We have given careful consideration to the Stude- AP Wirepaste bomber over the half-mile square island in the Pacific. The target will be floodlighted during the hours of darkness. From an altitude of 50, nie = it won't look batt big. a Woman’ S Death Launches Probe Hurley said. “However, we have no plan for the ‘merger of the companies.” . Meapwhile, Nance as | ¥. visit to di i financing and that: 2 ; Saltonstal] said he did not | want to draw any conclusions i ‘Man meeting with anyone | regard untit the airpower subcomittee Police Hunt for n S pecans palo 2 | has completed its hearings. Who May Have Left!" White denying the tepexté. pubs But he said; “I thought Wil- Body in. Lane lished in Detroit that there were son's overall picture gave, us a current merger discussions with feel a nfide f f eeling of con nee, _ sadieen Heights, Detroit s nd res Wright, Nance conceded that the company “was = several situations.” Studebaker-Packard, * aca by consolidation of the two inde- a Arta Heights . lover's lane| pendent aute firms Oct. 1, 1954, after she died of overdoses of bar-| 489 been having serious finan- to-|biturates, alcohot’ and “nareotics.| CM! treable. ioe i Doak found yesterday at} The firm reported a net loss of 1 the shoulder of Campbell |More than 29 million dollars on [Road m near 12 Mile Road, was iden- - = " peqetons = State police today are searching bah the man they think left the ly of an attractive~redhead in Day Planne education have banded Informed sources say the auto firm plans: to consolidate 4ts De-. troit and South Bend, nd. tive plants. The move. phar ‘in the eventual peanechen of all © Packard cars at the South Bend © plant where only Studebakers are jnow being built. ’ Studebaker-Packard* reportedly has a working capital of 50 million dollars, assets of 120 million dol- no apparent marks of vistenee, lars and another 15 million dollars | he -said, of Available credit. Consolidation | The body was found beaiae ‘a might require additional financing, ‘unpaved road yesterday by John/but nothing like the 100 million Caldwell, 56, of Detroit, who was/ dollars the auto company sought to ‘walking along the road. seeking |Obtain through a loan. la job on building projects in the area, "Miss Caldwett was tying beside Prediction: for Area: the’ road, Madison Heights police: said, as though she had been’ Th d h ‘ carefully placed thére. The " body | un ers owers had no identifyin pers, and lshoes or ciel oe = = Severe thunderstorms are fore. | Police now theofize she was/€4st for the Pontiac area this eve- ‘taken to the lonely site after her |Ming and tonight with the thermom- death by someone who feared to/eter registering a low of 50 - 54 report her death. Tracks found at |degrees. ; ithe site indicate a car turned| - Thursday will be cloudy and. cool- eee in the road sometime yes-¢r with showers in the forenoon. ‘terday. |Tomorrow's high will range from | A couple parked in the dane re- 4 - 58. ‘portedly told police they saw a| The lowest temperature in down- car turn around near where the town Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was body was found about 10:30 p.m.'40 degrees. The mercury rose to ' Monday. a8 at i L p.m. Harriet Anderson, about 22, la known dope addict with a record ‘Dr. Richard Olson, St. duseph - \ | Mercy Hospital pathologist who To Retire | examined Miss Anderson's body, | said he estimated time of death at 2 a.m. yesterday, There were WALTER F. G EORGE SEN. Dean of ae to End Career George Reveals Choice After Consultation With Physician on Health Rains Delaying Planting — on State, County Farms Heavy rains during the past week have kept Michl- gan farmers out of their fields. WASHINGTON w — Sen, Walter F George (D-Ga), 78-year fold dean faite Senate has tdecided-not to Obliged. to sow their oats at intervals when the rains sevk: re-election His physician called the decision ti e ing. “a wise one” in view of a heart plan ng difficulty and diabetes>’ both de Since the forage crops grow good in cold and damp scribed as ‘mild.’ The doctor said weather, local pasturest a hand campaign might be detri- ‘have had a good start, and) wet coe ee Li “He simply needs to take Winter feeding was discon." pf in wly and ne 4 ace care-of himself,” Dr. Worth B. ‘tinued as early as in former being Tharvehcd Daniel said, ‘and if he does so \years, in spite of the late he a have a long and hap- spring. py life.’ | Winter wheat also has a good. Since the death last week of Sen. stand, is stooling out in good shape. Alben Barkley «D-Ky), who was and seems assured of being a good miy two months of ‘d er than crop with the heavy moisture stor- | the Georgia senator hartkage in the ground been strongly urged by members) The federal-state crop reporting {service in Lansing said the state's George heads the Senate For-| farmers. welcomed the rain. al- eign Relations Committee and though precipitation” was heavier serves as Democratic spokesman|than what was. needed in most areas: | Got Spring Fever? A lot of people have and they're anxiots to get out to the lakes for a little fun and, recreation, and it's just natural that they'll be need- ing all kinds of boats, out~ board motors, fishing equip- ment, etc. So if you have something falong this line you -want to sell, now's the baker - Packard situation,” ceased long enough for the soil to become dry for - e In the Pontiac area many farmers have been ) THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MAY 9, 1956 xy Fight for Signal Given Backing School Area Residents The Day in > ions 2 Kindergarten Cottages to Be Built Near Pierce _ - Mrs, Hattie Jarvis Wright. ‘BIRMINGHAM — Two cottage schools “which may later revert to|- Mrs, Hattie Jarvis Wright,. Bir- eee hh No Celation | 4 Ne ew Vehicular Weapons to Highlight Army Display) svpret John | Corry corns ere amin sha iting det of 5 year, ded Favor Traffic Light Tuesday at the home of her daugh- } : ing projects approved last night at 0 a y DETROIT uw — The Army willing to the weird in appearance. Pes pe otien ter, Mrs. Donald : “os unveil four of its newest vehicular, One is known as “the mule,”| Pour residents of the Longfel- Board Educ meeting whitcomb, Royal Oak, with Fal It’s Busine: Usual weapons of ground warfare in De-janother as “‘the thing.” sear’ @ckonl vem last eickt eave at Hill School, she had lived seven: years, . - : s_ Business as Usua trot during Armed Ferces Week, The two buildings will be erected; gne jeaves four daughters, ‘The ontos (Greek for “the thing’), looks something like a plumber’s nightmare. It is a deadly tank-destroying tracked vehicle bristling with six 106 mil- limeter recoiiless rifles, four 50- millimeter rifles and a 30-caliber Commissioner John E. Carry sup- port in his request for a traffic light at the Astor-Auburn inter- séction. But Carry told them “the City Commission cannot take action un- across from Pierce School in time for next fall's school term. Each building will hold a kindergarten class in morning and afternoon, with about 30 children per class. With No Candles as Anniversary Passes : Qne-year-old today and not a candle will be lighted to. celebrate May’ 14-20, They run from terrify- Recall Witness Pootiae’ Ci ial. rs ne TT: machine til all administrative means Of| proved, local builders will be | ton, Merie of Royal Oak; and a | Piet srike eugert from city offi- 1 | ; ae the city are exhausted.” ed. Authorizati¢n- lor seck-.|.sister-and two brothers, Mra. | ci eniployes as work goes in rl ry ld ‘The thing,” which also resem-| 144+ weex the commissioner | ing bids is expected at the next | Harry Winters and John and _ usual in the $1,200,000 struc- bles a tank carrying long stove-| began his fight for the signal , according to Dr. Dwight | Bennett Jarvis, all of Farming- pale ager in- the cit pipes, is thin skinned and depends) gocuite ‘notification from the | D, Ireland, superintendent ten. | Gee Gata pleas ve State Optometry Board jon mobility and’ terrible striking! {sty trattie engineer that the light | Se | Se anes cin edagll tee! Gears Official to Give Added power for protection, =~ would be disapproved by the | ane cottages will provide addi-|at Manley Bailey Funeral Home. swung open in the Pike street Testimony “The mule,” a four-cylinder | State Highway Department. ~ ‘tional classroom space for the! with burial in Roseland Park Cem- edifice, fulfilling the dreams city version of its bay-eating Mame- | The spectators last night were/coming. few years, but when en- etery. commissioners and other ° sake, is only 27 inches high a®d (1.14 the city manager would in-|rollment falls off again, can be shared for more than 27 years. MASON. uw — A key witness for) ean be driven from 9 sitting, vestigate the possibility of school |sold for residential use. They would the state — a state official fired| walking or crawting position by | pena voc lora aca aol Bartlet ager Is Honored cisaal eankant meres ox control from an airplane. It said a|on people.” ing of all the wooden seats. Court) Pontiac police, Oakland County y new high | speed tank.destroyer | ; ‘and Police It has been unofficially named : = _ {mounting a powerful 90-millimeter | WE Mold stadium seats six years ago| at the Pontiac all reported the “Shrine Room” because of a Or €alr Ss ] e the King Optical Co, to get pres gun also would be shown publicly) The American experts refused still in the Supre: pach i results i acl : : ption : are me no na a : ; DE a bel ee [to be stampeded on the question) About three-quarters of the re-| yesterday by Detroit police. tons of documents of| Bartlet Wager was honored by | ~ Ritholz heads the King firm,| A mock tank battle at the Army’s|of weather. lquired 125 new teachers have been old his wife of the Pon e country in the’room. The col-|some 80 employes and friends of which operates in Michigan and/petroit arsenal will climax the Col. Carlos D. Bonnet, chief |hired, reports Dr. Ireland, He-és+ Sagi Lar = oa anes is ho Nethengs Cob WT Pantie [Ponting State. Hospital last night § | “reer coutica Gat rimct pedi, ee ee weather officer of Joint Task [spending much ot his time in in-|'m “Detroit Police sald. But his gh afters arias Gees planted at a dinner held at Hi-Land Manpr. A $500 on March 28, 1955 in a Force Seven, said he doubted |terviewing, but most regular class secretary told them she knew of trees and shrubs over the grounds! Wager, who had been a hospital third floor men's room at the Har-| Williams, Officials | conattons wit! improve enough jteachers are already hired, | beino legal matter here in which surrounding the Land- comlare’ for the past 53 years, ry Sufferin clothing store in De-| to permit the Friday drop. says. Specialined jpesitions pamain.| Rhodes was interested. scape work has included laying sod|chatked up another honor last troit. ‘An er Questi ons “And if they do improve sud-| Ascension Lutheran Church will The re man regener uy Teper Saturday in Lansing when the. SW | denly they will be suspect,” a“ mark the festival of Ascension with os biter une bea ! sys-j ; 5 . : the trim young officer. “We n al service tomorrow at 8 tem has been installed to water|Michigan State Emplnyes Associa- Hint U § Backs (Continued From Page One) | absolutely stable conditions, not Sar “cvesuing Christ as King” is the many square feet of grass. tion awarded him a certificate owe ments must face the changeover |quirks of nature.” part of the celebration of His rising Another False Alarm Seen the fecal point of the Civie |20F, CusanGg | Service to. the Prien mag Seve, ars, " Bonnot and Dr. A.V. Shelton.|into Heaven on the 40th day. (Calls Fire Fighters Center will have a “sister” near- ° : ease adjustment for vi- |expert on jou! ictions, dis- * * @ . by in the $800,000 Public Safety Toastmistress for last night's )nd Dag Chore dual workers, played charts bearing relative) The First Presbyterian Church | A false alarm called Pontiac Fire Building. It will be lecated to | affair was Mrs. Orben Wilkins 4 : Speaking on public education, weather conditions. we rummage sale is tomorrow and |Department equipment to Clovese the north and completion is ex- | who had been emplayed in vAnothes | P Mission Williams said the issue is crucial) It was shown that the weather| Friday, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. at |and Branch Streets about 11 o'clock pected next year. _ | Wager’s office for 26 years prior nother Peace issiOon — Ae oe thesat. was just about perfect for an H-| the church hall, Tuesday morning. Residents of the Commnenti to his retirement last month. ons . ause of the Communist threat.|bomb test on May 5 when a tiny) - o* e 8 area report seve false alarms service to the ingienling ris Dr. Ivan A. LaCore, medical to Doubtful Middle East, “We must make our country atomic bomb was tested. The Congregational Church in recent weeks rou the same lo- the City Hall, City Manager W K superintendent ot Pontiac State Suggested by Dulles | strong, enough* to resist Communist The weather then changed for Men's Fellowship will hear a talk,|/cation and say they believe small Willman said: “It has been mest Hospital traced the history ‘of the 2 aggrssion ” Williams said, adding | ithe worse and if the H-bomb had|‘‘Tensions of Our Times,"' by Tom children playing in. the vicinity are pleasant year for all of us,” lhospital’ from. the time Wager WASHINGTON (®—The United that Russt education already 1s/P®e? %t off on its original sched-|Reid,- civic relations director of} responsible. a that only minor dift-|joined the staff in May, 1903 Staten was reported|resdy today]. an education already 15/16, radioactive dust would have|Ford Motor Company. at a dinner —_—____ “i d : blown over inhabit n thelat 6:45 p.m. tomorrow al wo! uct ”. @ulties “have been experienced in| At this tirke he was employed | : Saiack arscther idiadiel Bast pence (eet one eee tern bited islands in the at 6:45 t it. the} Free world production of nickel the operation of the 3-story hall.jas a clothing clerk, moving up to BARTLET WAGER mission by U. N. Secretary Gen- janeineers and technicians, | Marshall group. church. was 427,000,000 pounds in 1955. . It was built completely from tax! storekeeper in 1907. He was made, eral Dag Hammarskjold if he| CITES DROP-OUTS eS or ee eee ae ced (ae Sen proamts Israeli-| “The number of children who|Pontiac City Affairs Cook-Nelson Post No. 20, Legion} 1937 Auxiliary at the Legion home. “ She spoke on the forthcoming district. membership luncheon to be held at the home May 19 and the poppy sale to be conducted ‘May 24, 25, and 26. American’ flag which was pre- sented to the Brownie Troop of Our Lady of Refuge School re- cently. Final plans were com- ~pleted to hold a card party at the Legion home May 17. Real Dizzy Job CHICAGO u® — Thomas Martin, Chicago's elevator inspector, planned a busy, and probably! dizzy, day today. He will spend the day riding the roller coasters, the loop-the-loop and other thrill- ers at an amusement park. Mar- tin hag to determine that ali rides are safe before they are put in - operation for ay season, which’ WASHINGTON (INS)—Repub-] O'Neill 36,288, Lt. Gov. John W. | Taft, and his GOP opponent, Sen. a Treasurer Sanford’ A.'the National Bank of Detroit as, opens Mext) week: lican strategists pointed today to| Brown 14,283. | Gearge H. Bender, likewise had | 4+ the conclusion of the meet- paying agent for the $600,000 worth - ‘ President Eisenhower's solid per- Democratic for governor, 1,094 | no opposition. ing, Osmun said he believes what.’ jot neverwe bones ioe te ee 5 » a 5 i -stree The Weather formance in Tuesday’s Indiana pri- poling paces: Daten!) a= There was a slight element of ever party is in power, “this kind) |prowed off street parks Project “lchanges which had been made in Drivers, Beware! Anti-Radar Judge Changes Opinion Wager's appointment as steward came in 1923, a post he held to his retirement. Dr. LaCore recalled many drop out of school before. they have Secretary of” State Dulles said/decent educations is tremendously last night this country and its | alarming,” the Governor said, add- Western Allies now have greater ing that a recent survey showed confidence in United Nations -han-|only 45 of éach 1,000 fifth-grade 2 dling of the dangerous Middle East! students completed college. the hospital during these years, saying that Wager had been in- 'strumental in many. advances and that he had supervised the entire building program beginning in ’ DETROIT # — Traffic Judge) ‘John D, Watts, reversing an earli- er stand says it's okay now to bring speeding motorists arrested jon the basis of radar readings into! Other speakers were Ivan Estos, situation since Russia has indi-| ,, leated it is prepared “‘to support = bo prebiem fer most a solution” through the U.N seadeats le mraticte neeey ae he said, adding that a scholar- “The Soviet Union seems in- | ship program is needed to pro- creasingly aware of the danger- | vide college educations for Mich- ous = con s of reckless | igan students, Commissioner John Carry Asks Delay The City Commission will have to wait another two weeks to hear Commissioner John E. Carry (Dis- often discussed Michigan - Las) _A report was given on the/ a portable radio and Saum, jin be-/out, He had ruled May 1 that vio-. personnel director of the Depart-) Duncan McVean, storekeeper, and_| Lyle Saumr, president: of the em- ployes’ club. McVean presented Wager with half of the club, presented a check) fer $64. Postal Clerks Meet FLINT w® — The Michigan Fed- gates are expected. ment of Mental Health, Lansing. they're guilty. eration of Post Office Clerks will alleged offender. With new adjust- taining Israel's independence | hold its 38th annual convention menfs, he said, police can clock a against Arab pressures and also! here May 25-26. Some 200 dele- vehicle’s speed for a mimimim of seeking friendly relations with! idistance of 140 feet. his court, He'll convict them if} ” | action,” Dulles said in a speech ithe radar timing devices show) 102. before an international con- | vention of B'nai B'rith, a Jewish fraternal organization, His broadcast speech, consti- tuted a réport on his. meeting in ‘Paris last week with other foreign) ministers of the 15-nation North} Atlantic Treaty Organization. was largely devoted to the possi-| Ruling on a Panaine case, the bilities of expanding NATO's work. | judge said the fadar timer re-| As for the Middle East, Dulles, corded only the top speed of the reaffirmed U.S. policy of main- e Judge Watts said yesterday kinks, in the radar system which aroused his objections had been ironed, lations detected by radar would not hold up os mt | both sides. Indiana Farm Belt Backs Eisenhower in Presidential Preference Primaries | Sweeney 6,467, Frank X. Kryzan Lt. Gov. Philip A. Hart reminded streets drain case. the audience that a bill introduced | Carry requested the two week. by Williams in the last legislative postponement last night to gather session providing 500 scholarships further information on the three- of $1,000 each has died in com- mittee, * Asked whether lack of money is It|the only reason for delay in a state provements. road construction program, Wil- jliams said he thought Highway! Commissioner Charles Ziegler’s| “erroneous system” was. equally at fault, Ziegler, a Republican, had said he was too busy to accompany the touring officials, Other state officials who reported on progress which they claimed since taking office were Secretary of State James M, Hare, Attorney’ General Thomas M. Kavanagh, Auditor General Victor C. Targon- of meeting is a must.’’ He said he ‘year-old episode. It involves 19 |lot owners on the east side of the icity who claim they were improp- ‘erly assessed for drainage im- a Other business taken up on the 38-point agenda that faced the commissiqn, was the approv- al by the city that the state proceed with widening and pav- ing of a portion of the M24 trunkline in the city. The city will pay $2,000 for the project. Upon the request of City Man- ager W. ‘Police officer's request for uniform allowance was deferred pending a. meeting with a police committee.) The commission also appointed’ iy 1 i ad . pte pe 8. beet to stot ayn mary @s a strong indication that 3,446, Robert W. Reider 3.227, eae in Lausche’s failure to i sioners Carry and Dr. Roy V. fname windy and a little warmer with, the farm bill veto sparked no “'Te-| ggear L, Fleckner 3,126. Win favorite kon backing from all, is convinced Williams’ “reports to Cooley, the recently amended ordi- today soa tonight. tater iat volt”? in the nation’s agricultural ~ delegates to the presidential nom- [Ee peeciee Ste not ypartiean nance rtaining to bump shops Garakerms Uktty this cfterncen nad carly UECIt. FLORIDA ests pres : | Williams thanked the audience es e Pp evening. High today 60-64, low tonight $@-54. Temerrow mostly cloudy and! cooler with showers in the forenoon. hh 54-58. Seuth to southeast winds imereasing te 15-20 miles per hour teday and becoming south to southwest tonight. Teday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding & a.m. At ®@ am: Wind velocity 15 mph! Direction: South-southwest. Bun sets Wednesday at 1:40 p.m. Sun rises Thursday at 5.16 a.m Poon sets Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Moon rises Thursday at 6:08 a.m. Downtown Tem Lary geccoegios ie ee ip. m..... dems soseneee 44 Pry 45 ®. m. a. mm, BR. Missogerens s,m, or s. a Tuteday in Pontiac {As recorded Sermevn) Oo ure ereereoene: tabs artatie. oa Miighest and Lowest T By gregh pers jures This 96 th lhe ” in 1047-1958 ature Chart - ct @ geeseceseses 2 3 : 1 a} precincts; Li 4 % gi & 0 8 * * ¢ Particular interest centered on the outcome of the balloting in the traditionally Republican Hoosier State, which has a large rural ‘population and which is regarded! ‘also as a geographical gauge. of the political winds: But some significance veas at- | tached also to » \ to prepare the necessary ordi- nance to rezone to Commercial 1 as of bees ote Addition, India's first. Pharmacopoeia nc of standards) will be pub- lished ig July 186... * ship, will direct solicitation for the two men have agreed to serve on- United Fund in automotive and|my team. I think their work will other manufacturing plants in the insure a successful United Fupd . area. He ss ale (roan this fall,” . eatin 2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 9 | : | MANE U 19567 ct ? } « eh hoe ven raed de Ma Aibreped \ 4 v2 6 pe ~ FIVE - Tactics in Mau Mau Defeat Told) Kago, Whose brilliant tactics turned the Ft. Hall area of Kikuyujthe British agents had it pin- it came to a clear- arth Rage land into (virtually a Mav Mau|Dointed SWITCH FAILED ‘(Mau Maus suffered a crushing de-| |when aides reported the disap- oie] the valeting laos. But and security-forces swept down on 350 massed Mau Maus. Kago died in the battle and the Kago, his ‘suspicions arousedjfeat that broke their hold over the Ft. Hall ares. * * COOL CAT AND HER CRAZY BROOD — Meet a cat that doesn’t ‘‘have kittens” every time she ' sees little chicks. Tinker adopted three chicks brought home by Michael Karns, 10, of Dayton, Ohio, Whenever Karns separated the cat from the chicks, Tinker and the Tinker bring them back kitten-style to her box. Karns family finally gave up the separation idea, snuggled happily together. — That was in 1953, the first time! Kenya’s security forces had been. able to bring a majar Mau Mau: force into open battle. The reper- cussions of the feat swept through/ the entire Mau Mau movement The Mau Maus never could feel | secure again and life became a’ bdit-easier for the Burcpens colony. s a Even today the British won't tell the full story of the pseudo Mau Maus and their deeds. Some still are at work in their dangerous) jobs. Others, missions ac- jcomplished, have returned to such humdrum civilian pursuits as farming, business and game wardens. SECRECY UNVEILED But the Kenya War Council has! lifted a bit of the veil of secrecy, enough to disclose that European and African intelligence agents—| ‘joperating as pseudo Mau Maus at great risks— have played a major | role in the fight against the anti.) white bands. | . * Men like F rancis_Erskine and’ Peter Nicholas and Walter Gash have been decorated for their ex- ploits. Gash, a young Kenya regi- ment officer, did much of the pio- neering field work. Nicholas and| his pseudg Mau Maus killed 13 real Mau Maus in a Kiambu dis- trict skirmish near Nairobi. would play’ retriever, left, and The family, a cat and three. chicks, Red Cross Has Information on Aquatic Schools Men and women 18 or older, in With 56 Theme eras 3 Republican Senators aquatic schools scheduled this sum-| Say Record Jobs Give mt throughout the Midwest, may apply at Oakland County Chapter, “Party Vote Support Auericen Red Crom: 118 Freak lin Blvd. WASHINGTON w — Three Re-| The Red Cross will sponsor these publican senators said today that aquatic and small craft schools record April employment indicates|for the purpose of developing. new a solid foundation for the GOP’s|leaders for camp and community prosperity theme in the presiden-|recreation programs, the Oakland tial campaign. County chapter The Labor and Commerce de-| Sunaiegs Seoul Gump at Waite: partments reported yesterday that) hall is the Michigan lecation for employment reached 63,990,000/ the school. Mrs. Beulah Gund- last month while unemployment dropped 270,000 to 2,564,000. These figures were hailed by Senators Dirksen (R-Ill), H. Alex- ander Smith (R-NJ) and sgipioced ice oN aaa ml The cost of $50 includes board,| However, Sen, Douglas Di aval ee Training said the statistics represent on is available to representatives oi a seasonal upturn in employment, | Gewuuia tien orto individuals who and reflect a gain in population attend at theif own expense: Mrs, Mildred Bennett, county ae the (Sac fe eae ¢|Red Cross director, says that ae Committee. jdents will learn skills in water | safety and preparation for instruc- “The real test of employment ~ will come fin) the summer and tion for camps, recreation depart- fall,” Douglas said. “We'll know/™¢Mts and youth, groups. more then whether there is a sub-|- A specialty school in small craft stantial base for prosperity.” ileadership training will be held Bricker said the employment, ‘June 13-23 at Northwestern Mili- gain, if it continues, “will mean 'ary and Naval Academy, Lake, votes for us.’ \Geneva, Wis. Training will include) Smith said the figures add up to|Skilled used of boats, canoes and| “very good news for the Republi- small sailing craft, Mrs. Bennett | cans." said. Dirksen interpreted the employ: | It will also feature principles and, ment figures as indicating ‘‘con- methods of teaching and program: | fidence in the Eisenhower admin-| ming for camps, clubs and recrea- istration.” ltion departments. j Fer Their BIG DAY | give a GOP Sees Gain 5 swimming champion of the United States will teach the syachponized swim: ming elective at Whitehall June 13-23, 10K yellow gold-filled cose. Stainless steel back. With cord $49.50 $5500 y PAMELA 14K yellow or white gold case. $gqs0 With expogsion brecelet $95.00 CONVENIENT TERMS ARRANGED GRENADIER tt 10K yellow gold-filled cose. Stainless steel bock. Luminous 57950 dial. Waterproof’. With strep $72.50 Provided eriginel veal bs restored if opened ler servicing. “The Store Where Quality Counts” S COMPANY “Péntiac’s ‘Oldest Jewelry Store” 28 West Huron St. FE 2-7257 ‘veterans should not get special electric-power output has risen The Mau Maus caught on quick-’ ‘ily to the undercover operation and | tightened their security system to; combat it. They changed pass-if words frequently. They watched for betraying mannerisms and ac-| cents. An agent was likely to have a question shot suddenly at him, with his life hanging on bis ability to respond in pure Mau Mau dia-'| Disabled. Vets Criticize lect. Most agents avoid talking. | Two white agents have been Pension Plan Study xitied, the War Council disclosed. WASHINGTON The Amert\, S Cl , aes of President Eisenhower's anta quse Receives His Belated Thanks Legion Blasts: Benefit Report American Legion and Commission on Veterans’ benefits| as a “scare document” filed with pk commences, inaccuracies . Statistical monstrosities."’ The Legion's views were set forth by Donald R. Wilson, a past;may have put it off a little long, | national commander, in testimony|but she's finally dashed off a. prepared for the House Veterans thank-you note to ‘‘Santa Clause. "| Committee yesterday. The report| Maybe too she’s just a girl a was criticized by the Disabled |an eye. out ax te future. j American Veterans. | Wilson called on the committee to disregard the report and act! instead on the Legion's big\pension| bill. Her letter, opened. at’ the Salt | Lake City post office yesterday, | was addressed in bold, irregular, jletters to “Santa Clause, North The presidetdinl| comelaion|O on? 21g, er headed by retired Gen. Omar N.| “Dear — ~ raat Santa, we Bradley, called for a gradual re-jike both of you Thank ‘you for duction of non - service - connected/the nice toys. We like your elves. pensions as social security .and|We will try to come and see all other retirement benefits increase.|o{ you. We hope all of you have The commission took the gener-|fun up their (sic).” al approach that, aside from com-| It was cial ‘Kristine.” pensation any harm suffered because their military service,| In the past 10 years Venezuel's | government benefits indefinitely. ‘from 254,000 kilowatts to 1 165,000. is tops ms SALT LAKE CITY w—Kristine | 7 > D 6 wl z 5 other make her's a carefree summer with our newest... tor Drip-Dry, No-lron — Mother’s Day Gift Dresses by Adele ._ 599 Wash 'n' wear wonders in misses’ and half-sizes to please every Mother! Meticulously woven cotton creations to capture her heart on her special day and throughout _ the summer. Each style summer perfect and travel perfect. Coatdress in sleeveless style, wash- able and. Sanforized. Pink and blue. 12-20, 145 to 24\4, * Full skirt with keyhole neckline and pretty Parisian scene print. Black, pink, blue and green. 10-20. Waite’s Dresses—Third Floor of Fashion save 4.99 style! The style is Solid Stainless Steel 24-Pc. 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Waite's Domestics—Fourth Floor special buyer's purchase makes possible the lowest aice ever at Waite's ... and who pockets the fabulous 50% savings? nobody but you our customer! twin fitted, usually 6.95 3.49 double fitted usually 8.95 ........ . 3.99 matching cases, usually 2.50 1.59 . @ white @ pink @ blue @ maize . } @green i oe pee ee ee ee “ TRUE PINK — tempting as strawberry ice TRUE BLUE RED — torchiest of the blues : _ Waite's Cosmetics—Street Floor > —* | 2 a ae PSS es 5 PSS 5 ae Store your FURS Today in WAITE'S ar a S erage Vault! Call E FE 4-251 Teday for Silden tan Safe ¢ Protection! , aaa . a =THE PONTIAC PRES a ~ “pontiae 12, Michigan ; Say ras pore et ales cae poner . Brovzs, Howase H. Prrzoreacy Il, MEccative Vice President Vice. President and and Advertising Director Business Mufiager™ ~~ Ext M. TREADWELL, SSETT, : he eoser er and General Beitr pen Z Rice arr Promotion Manager uN WW, A Lo W. CHaates PERKINS, Secretary and Editor Retail Advertising Mgr Roser, B. t . Tara, Geoage C. Inman, Managt Tapditor Classified Manager | MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS a ———— Twe Powriac Pars is a week; where carrier service ts ichigan and 330.00's year All mail Phone Pontiac FE 2- MEMBER OF AUDIT, BUREAU oP CIRCULATIONS e >] Pontiac Symphony Ends Third Successful Year One organization to which the community owes a debt of gratitude is Pontiac's Symphony Orchestra. It is the outgrowth of a fine idea. The City needs the opportunity and facilities for people not only to play good symphony music, but hear it. This group and the association which sponsors it have grown in musical stature and public esteem. * * * Only a few evenings ago the symphony closed its third season with a fifth concert in this year's series which won high praise for excellent musical qual- ity. The performance was all the more remarkable because many of the musicians are non- professionals, | Credit for all this belongs not only to the musicians, but to the conduc- tor, Francesco D1Bxas!, and his asso- ciate, CeLia Merritt Turner. All have been enthusiastic and indefat- igable in their preparations for con- certs. Also sharing in the credit are members of the symphony associa- tion, including President CHARLES Uuician and the Auxiliary’s presi- dent, Mrs. MAXWELL L. SHADLEY. * * * We congratulate the orchestra, the symphony association and auxiliary for the splendid and greatly appreciated contribution they are making to Pontiac's cultural life. WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1956 GOP Gains Confidence in Farm Vote Outlook Recent developments in Washing- _ ton, including House passage of the * soil bank bill, have given Republicans greater confidence ovér the farm vote outlook. A few weeks ago party leaders saw only gloom in the situation. They feared that President _ EIseNHowER's Veto of the high rigid price support and soil bank bill would bring farmers’ wrath down on GOP heads. Since then no farm rebellion has material- ized and Republicans see things in a much brighter light. * * * For one thing the President. sof- tened his veto by announcing higher supports immediately for wheat, corn and dairy products. Second, and far more important, the soil bank bill as it passed the House, is a far more workable measure than the vetoed bill. As it went to the Senate the measure included authorization for payment to farmers of $1.25 billion _for participation in the acreage re- serve and conservative reserve pro- grams. None of the objectionable rigid support features in the vetoed farm bill were included. * * * The House didn't give. the President all he asked, however- It rejected his plea for authority to make soil bank payments this year in advance of next year's operations: But it did approve a “measure, which if accepted by the Senate, would give farmers some , - welcome relief. _ Another factor favorable to the GOP has entered the picture. Certain key prices, especially on hogs, nave ‘been climbing slowly since early winter. If this trend continues, Re- publicans should be able to face November with little fear that farm belt voters will desert their party. Ir you wish to be popular, don’t cause people excruciating pain by trying. to..uproot..their . prejudices. SEES SATE NAS EARS RAS ue = . ; 4 = | F . oe vi y "Adlai Ahead in Poll A poll just completed reveals that most Democrats in Congress favor ApLal Stevenson as- their party's - ’ presidential nominee, In all there are 280 Democrats in Congress, 49 in the Senate and 231 in the House. The questionnaires, sent out by Congressional Quarterly, were returned by 113 lawmakers, or 40 per cent. Of those answering 64, or 57 per cent favored the former Illi- nois Governor. Second in popu- larity was Missouri's Sen. SyM- INGTON. With 15 votes. Third place was shared by Texas’ Sen. Lyn- DON JOHNSON and Tennessee’s Sen. KEFAUVER with seven votes each. * * * Gov. Lauscue of Ohio finished fourth with five votes, one ballot ahead of New York’s Gov. HARRIMAN. Trailing them were Gov. WILLIAMS of Michigan and Oklahoma's Sen. Kerr with two votes each. Then came Minnesota's Sen. HUMPHREY, former President Truman, Sen. Rus- SELL of Georgia and Massachusetts’ Rep. McCormick with one vote each. * x * The poll, of course, is informative only. Nonetheless it is interesting to note that much of the 1952 Demo- cratic candidate’s endorsement came from the South. Of 45 Southern Senators and Representatives who voted, 23 favored Stevenson. Ir sEEMsS women are becoming even more tardy than usual. In re- cent months there has been an in- creasing number of news stories about women who failed to arrive on time at the maternity ward. ALTHOJGH the dollar (paper) is only six and one-eighths inches long, it is used as a measure of many things. | The Man About Town Fish on Fairways ~ Pontiac Men Feel That Lakes Are Overflowing Cook book: A safe place for a man to hide money from his wife. We've had a wet spring, but it didn't seem so wet that the fish would invade — the golf courses. But the other day Louls H. Cole, Angus Campbell and A. Floyd Bla«leslee found a 10-inch large-mouth bass on the tenth fairway at the Pine Lake course. While it was not alive, they assert it was fresh—which also applies to the story. We'd be tnclined to doubt it If it didn’t come from. three such unimpeachable sources. Pontiac had a famous guest Tuesday in the person of Dave Kaiser, who won the Rose Bowl game for Michi- gan State by that field goal kick in the closing seconds of play. After luncheon at the Pontiac City Club, while the films. of that game were being shown upstairs at the Kiwanis Club, he was spirited into that meeting in the dark. When his his- tory-making kick appeared the reel was stopped, the lights turned on and the young man who made it was introduced. He says he practised for it most of one day before the game. Dave says he might be interested in professional football. Warm weather has been so de- layed this spring that a number of ‘our readers have reported squirrels gathering dry grass and leaves to replenish their nests. My Lansing scout sends word that former Pontiac City Manager George E. Bean is one of the speakers at next week's in- stitute on police-public relations at Kel- logg Center. Since 1953 he has been city manager at Peoria, Ill. A pair of robins built a nest in the empty bird bath in the yard of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Galluskey in Auburn Heights, who say the other birds will have to go dirty until the new family ts raised. ‘ A sales slip from a grocery at Hudson- ville. near Grand Rapids, was found re- cently by Mrs. Alonzo Hamoden when raking her yard at Lake Orion. It was dated on the day of the cyclone at Hudsonville. ‘ . Verbal Orchids to— Christian Goedecke of Rochester; eighty-first birthday. The Romeo Press-Observer, entering its ninetieth year of pubfication Loren Huntley ' of Lum; eighty-ninth birthday. a * _THE PONTIAC PRE k . é How’s That Again? SS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1956 ¥ ul David Lawrence Says: Democratic Party Split Wide Open on Day’s Top Issue — Foreign Policy WASHINGTON—The Democratic party is split wide open on the main issue of the day—what— should be done in world policy by the United States. Sen. Humphrey of Minnesota, Democrat—high up in Steven- sen’s camp—complains that the Eisenhower administration is still pursuing ‘the same old ap- proach” of placing primary em- phasis on military ald abroad. “Sen. Symington of Missouri, Democrat—a_ potential candidate for the presidency on his own— complains that the Eisenhower ad- ministration isn't providing ade- quate armament, and he is en- deavoring to show that enough money isn't being spent on air power. One wing of the Demecratic that the Unlted States isn't. re- vamping its foreign-aid program ‘to meet the “Soviet economic threat.” Another group—which: by some will be called the militaristic group—wants more emphasis on military power as a ‘‘deterrent”’ and argues that the United States is being outstripped in the build- ing of long-range bombers that carry H-bombs. > : ADMIT RED CHINA TO U.N. Still a thikd point of view ap pears to be held by intimate ad- visers of Adalj Stevenson. This is the ‘appeasement’ group, which would acquiesce in the admission of Red China to the U.N. and also would abandon to their fate the oppressed peoples in the satellite countries behind the Iron Curtain. The principal architects of this policy apparently are relying on the advice of George Kennan, former ambassador to Soviet Russia, who was the head of the State Department's policy plan- ning beard under the Truman administration. On the subject of the Soviet satellites, Kennan is represented as saying that, while he condemns the “hideous injustices’ commit- ted by the Soviet Union in Eastern Europe, ‘‘there is a finality, for better or for worse, about what has occurred in Eastern Europe."’- COULD LOSE VOTES Such an attitude would be re- garded as manifest abandonment of the moral support hitherto given by the United States,sto the peoples of the Iron Curtain countries which aspire to regain -their indepen- dence. Politically speaking, the Demo- y cratic party, if it accepts any such advice from Kennan, can be prepared to lose the votes of Poles, Crechs, Hungarians, Lithuanians, Estonians, Latvians and Bulgarians in some of the thickly populated wards of New York, Chicago, Cleveland and other cities where there is a strong bond of sympathy with the people who have been en- slaved by the Communist dicta- torship. Kennan hints at an appeasement policy also for West Germany. He says: “It seems to me that American policy should be aimed at the re- unification of Germany and the earliest possible re-establishment of that:country as a neutral factor that can blunt the sharp edge of military bipolarity in Europe and HARVEY THREW SAND IN My A HAIR! help, eventually, to mitigate the intensity of the conflict between East and West.” the price they ask for consent- ing to unification. The West German leaders, hoewever,_say they want to remain in aa al- Hance with the Western demec- ment of all of Germany from the he doesn't think admission of Red China into the U.N. should be sup- ported by the United States itself lukewarmness hint of ! by America toward Nationalist China west. . Copyright, 1956, As for Red China, Kennan says New Yerk Herald Tribune Inc.) Fathers Should Also Study Important Childbirth Facts By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. For years I have been annoy- ing hospital managers, doctors, and nurses by urging expectant father to study along with their wives everthing pertaining to child- birth and infant care and remain with their wives to share in the great miracle. This makes the hospital managers, doctors, and nurses hate me — well, they hate me anyway. telling people the truth, that home is the best place to have a baby, the hospital people just hate me more than ever. going to be pneumonia. But I have no such concern, be- _ cause I know doctors: and nurses. Even though they detest Brady the newspaper quack, the health teacher, I know that when or if Brady the patient needs their professional care, he'll get jt just as though they loved him. In the past when my pleas that prospective fathers behave like men and not boobs when the baby is due, seemed to interest too many prospective parents, some hospital superintendent or other spokesman would publish an open letter to inform the pub- lic that the husband might bring infection into the delivery room, and anyway the nurses and doc- ters are far too busy to take care of fainting husbands. -“Both “of these objections are laughable, if you know what goes on in the delivery room and you are not awed by the “Men in White'’ show the hospital stages for the benefit of the customers. In the past ten years there has been a notable improvement. in the behavior of expectant fathers. Not that my preachments lad much to do with it, although I hope some expectant fathers have studied with their wives at least the primer: Preparing for Materni- ty. for which send 35 cents and stamped, self-addressed envelope... Two modern developments are chiefly responsible for the more manly behavior of expectant fathers, I believe. These are: First, reoming-in—the husband is encouraged to be with his wife as much as he can (except when she goes to the delivery room), and the baby is kept in hassinet at mother’s bedside, not out of per sight and hearing in the plate glass show .window newbern nursery infants; and second, na- tural childbirth, as deecribed in Dr. Grantly Dick Reéd’s Child- birth Without Fear, published by Harper and Brothers, §2.75 at book dealers. , , _'Rooming-in” does not) neces- sarily include freedom for the htisband to remain with his wife in the delivery room, but it does 4 ~ offer hiny every inducement to live in—to spend with his wife, before and after delivery, as much time as possible learning what she learns about childbirth and the care and feeding of the baby. Voice of the People ‘Police Do -All They Can; ° * , Drivers Must salsitre wil be condensed when pese name, address and telephone number of the writer must letters but accompany these will not be published if the writer 80 apace unless the letter -is—cfitical nature, "When are certain drivers going to learn to obey the law? Every Cut Speed’ It’s as crooked as a crawling _ The Black Panther Ld Dulles Predicts. .Upsurge of Freedom Inside Soviet By JOHN H. MARTIN INS Feregia Director » Whither is Russia headed? . * Ld * Nobody knews of course, per- haps not even the new Soviet “collective” leaders. But U. S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles told the NATO Council in Paris that pressure by people in- side Russia for greater freedom may, lead eventually to a transfor- mation of the Soviet Union. He added that the Western nations, in partnership with the forces of -liberalism inside and outside of Russia, could, in a sense, work for the transformation of the U. S. S. R. into a country acceptable to: the society of nations. . s * s The ferment of ideas in Russia and the revolt against the rigidity of the Stalinist era were apparent to the outside world long before last February's Communist Party Congress in which spokesmen be- gan attacking the dead dictator. DARING DISPUTE In the first year after Stalin died the Russian intelligentsia plunged into a controversy which never would have been possible. under Stalin. . * ¢ @ Debates among Soviet scientists, writers and artists disclosed pro- tests, some daring and some timid, against the sterility and mediocri- ty to which they had been eon- demned during the Stalin rule. One Soviet literary critic, V. Pomerantsev, published an essay which implicitly denounced the Werary output of the Stalin era as a product of hypocrisy. | As he put it, readers of the Soviet novel “have been deafened by triumphant roar of tractors” and in that roar were drowned the cries, groans, sighs, and rejoicings of the human being. On the political side, Soviet Sremier Nikolai Bulganin and Communist Party Secretary Nikita Khrushchev appear to be trying to liquidate the cold war at the lowest price they can get. ~Their great wish seems to be a desire to settle down for the time being with the map of Europe as it is. That is, with the East European subjugated states still under Red rule, and with the pro- spect of winning over other un- committed states in Asia and Africa. Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE The man who says he never has . . . A moment's time for play . . . Is not exactly truthful as... He calculates his day .. . Or else he is mistaken, or . . . The time he tries to save . . . Is run- ning out the clock that ticks... The seconds to his grave .. . There always is some leisure time . For one who wants to take it . . .. And if-be thinks it is not there . . He merely has to make it . . . The choice is his, but wise is he .. . If he decides to rest . . . Because no man who never stops... Can really do his best .. . A night of sleep is not enough . . . To keep him wide awake . . . Somewhere along his work routine . . . He has to take a break. (Copyright 1956) Looking Back 15 Years Ago FISHER PADLOCK petition ex- pected soon. 22 GERMAN night raiders bagged by R.A.F. 20 Years Ago G-MEN HUNT crooks in politics. SOCIAL PROGRESS laid to in- dustry. law, THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Of which salvation the proph-. ets have enquired and searchéd diligently, who prophesied of the grace that should come unto you.—1 Peter 1:10. * *¢ We Christians do not believe that Jesus Christ was the only one that ever rose from the dead. We be- lieve that every deathbed is a resurrection; that from every grave the stone is rolled aWay.— Spurgeon. ; ee Case Records of a Psychologist: Dr. Crane Cites Movie Theaters, Bus Company as Bad Business Example I invite your attention to the disregard of Hoosier taxpayers’ best interests by the bus com- pany named below. Such pub- fc conveyors are licensed in the interest of the people, as well as the stockholders, so I am pointing out a grave cause of public ill will and incon- venience. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case R-351: Recently I had a free evening at home so I sug- gested to Mrs. Crane that we see a movie. ; When we looked at the movie ads in the newspaper, we found that all the movie houses In our area were scheduling the very same picture, and we had al- ready seen it. Suppose all the restaurants in a given area offered patrons only roast beef. Wouldn't many poten- tial prospects stay home and con- coct a different menu, if they were not roast beef fans? 2 Well, our movie houses in Chi- cage haven't realized that they are driving themselves into bankruptcy by the limited entertainment “menu” they offer us patrons, eo « e@ Mrs. Crane and I could stand at least one good movie per week, but we rarely see one per month for we have little choice of pic- tures. . We don’t like to drive 10 miles through city traffic, so unless a movie house within three miles offers our type of picture, we stay home. MOVIE MYOPIA The movies in our area thus lose six cash sales per month from Mrs. Crane and myself. Multiply that by the hundreds of other potential patrons and you can see the fallacy in this movie myopia (shortsighted- ness). a t It is such failure to capitalize on the buying public's practical de- sires, which prompts Business Psy- chologists to urge frequent con- sumer surveys. : Movies are complaining about the competition of TV, yet they refuse to accept good money from us rooters for movies just because . they. try to force us to accept a dictated movie menu ef the table d’ hote sort. And railroads are equally vul- nerable. Thousands of older motor- ists like myself would prefer fo avoid driving automobiles on long trips. But the passenger trains are dy- ing out, like the dinosaurs, for lack of aggressive sales promotion, so the schedules are very limited. RAILROAD DEATH KNELL Last fall I visited Wabash, In- disna, for some speeches during the National Plowing Contest. * ¢ @ I debated driving my car, but driving tires me before a heavy day of speeches, so I decided to let railroad engineers or air pilots handle that task of watching the road. . However, no airplane service was available, nor did any train go to Wabash from Chicago. But I got a fast Pennsytvania pas- senger train to Logansport, about 45 miles west of Wabash. It was really a luxurious pas- * senger train, too, but half the seats were empty. When I disembarked the ticket agent steered me to the bus station that was only about 300 feet away. As I and some other debarking passengers approached, an empty bus pulled out and I thought to myself, “I suppose that is our Eastbound bus!"’ * * & Sure enough, the bus ticket agent informed me there was no other bus for almost two hours. “That was your bus that just pulled out. You missed it by about 10 seconds,"' he added. “Since this is an important juncture point, why don’t your buses walt an extra 60 seconds to take advantage of the railroad passengers that get off this main Pennsytvanta line?” I askéd. “Hundreds of people ask me that same question,’’ replied the ticket agent angrily. “But we have nothing to do with the railroads! We don't even know their time tablés!"’ * @ @ Meanwhile, several men called — their families or friends at the next town of Peru, and had them-drive over to pick them up, but the rest. of us had to stall around for al- most two hours. So the bus lines lost cash patron- age; generated ill will of Hoosier taxpayers and further educated po- tential passengers not to depend on buses but to drive their own cars. That's very shortsighted bus}- ness practice. ao write to Dr, George W. Crane in dar@ of The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan, enctosing a reg 3c stamped, oo eearecons envelope and 20¢ to cover typihg and printing costs when you send ice ld psychological charts and pam- phiets. , (Copyright 1956) [= { LEW1S—Fine Furniture TEN e THE PON 4 It’s Talent - - - Not Lust for Money What Makes Steve Allen Run So Swiftly? ‘By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK (INS) — Steve Al- _ len, the nerveless wonder with the horm-rimmed charm, is about as relaxing to behold as a hammock!’ in the backyard. , e ° s . ‘ He plays, he sings, he writes, he composes, he acts, he jokes and— somewhere at the tag end of the day — he sleeps. “So why are you taking on something else?” we asked, when it was announced that he will compose a monthly columa for Cosmopolitan magazine on top of his nightly TV “What's My Line?” Steve smiled groggily. “I start- ed out as a writer and it’s what I always intended to be — got inta comedy by accident. Actually, I wanted to do more than this monthly column. I wanted to write a daily syndicated thing, and I prepared a batch of them in ad- vance, : e . ° “The syndicate seemed to like them but they asked fop a few more in a hurry. Then I got busy and couldn’t get out the few more, so I realized I'd taken on too much.” ~ WRITERS’ PACE _ Allen went dead-pan, “Can't seem to keep up the pace you writ- ers do." * td] * It is, actually, exhausting to think of the schedule Steven Allen Look at the Sky Sunday Night! It'll Blaze With Color According to U. of M. ‘Astronomer ANN ARBOR &® — The western sky will blaze with color about Sunday evening—that's the astral forecast from University of Michi-| gan astronomer Hazel Losh. * * »& The waxing moon will pick up) “earth-shine’’ about that time. It| will be tinged with a pinkish hue! on the dark section, away from the sun. “The faint light” says Profes- has maintained since he was born) to keep working. Steve had to and bred on the vaudeville circuit] learn ingenuity fast. 34 years ago. His parents were) tHe attended 17 different schools, Montrose and Allen, dancers. ~ | contracted asthma and enrolled in His father di¢d when he was 18 | Arizona State Teachers College— months eld and his mother had 'because both the climate and tui- TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR: JUNIOR EDITORS The Ant The ant is famous. Wise men have long admired it because it works hard and is smart. | While other insects sing ‘and flutter through the summer days, the ant stores food in its underground tusinels for the winter. Some kinds feed on grain, some on leaves and some on other animal life. Some keep very tiny insects, called aphids; from which they get sweet liquid, |just as a farmer’gets milk from,cows. Others make slayes out of weaker ants. There are 200 kinds of ants in the United States alone. Look at an ant through a magnifying glass and he will appear as the one does in the picture. For/your collection, color the background leaves green, and paste the picture on cardboard. Cut out the parts carefully and make a slot along the dotted line. Now insert the tab on the ant into the slot and move him up and down the branch, just as real ants may do in your garden. (This suggestion comes’ from Noreen Rocky, Cleveland, O. You may win $10 too if you send a good idea for Junior Editors to this paper. Violet Moore Higgins; AP Newsfeatures.) Tomoftrow: The Praying Mantis cause it is in this general direction Writer's Session Set that our sun, dragging the planets| along with it, is believed to be| ANN ARBOR un.— The fourth flying through space/about 12 miles annual Michigan Writers’ Confer- — rae aoe i vera was\°Se will be held at the University ut 14, years ago Ve i : : the pole star oS another |! Michigan May 24-25 in the ob- sor Losh, “is caused by sunlight reflected from the earth, which appears on the crescent moon as a great bright object about two degrees in diameter.” | Added to this, she says the bright planet, Venus, will be nearby. There will be other bright planets in the southeast. Mars, she tells us, will travel through the constel-| lation Capricornus and enter Aquir- ius by the end of May. In the Constellation Lyra, Pro- fessor Losh says, is a bright bluish star called Vega. “This group with Vega is of spe- cial concern to us,”” she says, “‘be- 12,000 years it will be in that po- sition again. It is six times brighter than the present pole star on the ‘handle of the little dipper. UM-Industry Symposium ANN ARBOR up — Some 125 in- dustry representatives will discuss “sources of radiation for industry” Friday at the University of Mich- igan. They are expected to attend the first Ann Arbor industry- education symposium, designed to provide a freer exchange of infor- mation between the university and industry. This program concerns a" servance of Michigan Week. The public sessions are open to editors, agents and authors. (Advertisement) That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many — rs of false teeth have it rea) embar be their plate dropped, slip or wob- bled at just Dore oo t ~ = not live in fear min you. Just sprinkle a little PisTeern, the alkaline (non-acid) powder, on your plates, Hold false teeth more firmly, so they feel more comfortable, Does | not sour. Checks “plate odor” (den- ture breath). Get FASTEETH et any | drug counter. Se JUST IN .. FOR MOTHER'S DAY TIME... Cash & Carry Special Select From Lewis Extensive Variety of Outdoor -] and Porch Furniture @ PEEL bee bw Pee TOR arene mere te “pa @ ALUMINUM } -. @ STEEL @ REDWOOD Mother is certain to appreciate this ideal porch chair. Use it outdoors this summer, then bring it in the sunroom this fall. Tub- style for extra comfort. FALSE TEETH | tion were favorable to hjs rundown condition. While there, he had an gnnounc- er’s job on radio in the afternoons, played piane in a nightclub at night, wrote a dramatic series: for radio, kept up his school work and, sons. (He was later divorced and since has married Jayne Meadows, TV. beauty.) THEN ‘DISCOVERED’ Steve was ‘discovered’ about six years ago in Hollywood where he was an ad lib disk jockey and brought to New Werk to enlarge his already incredible schedule in- work. ° s e Besides the “Tonight” show which keeps him on screen for about 1 hour and 45 minutes night- ly in New York, he has published a book of highly acclaimed short stories, will release his newest novel this month, has acted in TV plays he wrote, composed such tunes as ‘‘Let's Go to Church Next Sunday Morning” and “An Old Piano Plays the Blues,” and even “The Pink t.”" Despite critical praise for him, the play folded quickly. In con- trast, Steve Allen shows no signs of folding; in fact, it has just been annoanced he will take on a new television show every Sunday evening. What makes Allen run is a mul- titude of talent, not financial sat- istaction. He knows his tax bracket business. As he pointed out to a friend not long ago: “You can't get rich on a straight salary. By the time I get around in good order, had a wife and three, to a monumental masterpiece of took on Broadway in a play called; Elephan get rich that way either.” TIAC_ARESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY: 9, 1956 Apply for DSR Passes 2,600 “senior citizens” plan. j , Detroit Senior Citizens _- The program provides a 10-cent men and wo! ifaxe, during gertain hours for per- the reduced fares. Se ee _ sons 65 and over. who are not gain- ully employed: The plan will be- gin a four-month trial:on May 15. DETROIT (INS) — An estimated! Transit system secretary. Wil- applied liam B. Fitzgerald said he exy Monday for passes to take part in pected 50,000 ‘‘senior citizens” to Detroit's new reduced bus. fare enroll:in the plan within the- next |two weeks. An estimated 250,000 Flint Raises Salaries FLINT & — The City Conmis- ‘ sion Monday approved § salary increases of $2,000 for top admin- istrative officials. The new salary. of the city manager | will be $16,000. The director of finance men are eligible for/will get $13,500 and the city lattorney $14,000. + _ HALLMARK OF A GRACIOUS HOST | Lord Calvert AMERICAN WHISKEY FOR MEN OF DISTINCTION( {___ Pontiac Flooring Executive chooses Lord Calvert In all the world, no other whiskey so fittingly symbolizes true hospitality as does Lord Calvert... for the rare flavor and pleasing smoothness of this fine American whiskey make it the choice-of men ' who insist on perfection. 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A Kraft salesman will reimburse you for each coupon, in the amount of the regular retail price plus two cents for handling, provided you customer have complied with the terms of this offer. The customer must pay any sales tax on the Parkay received. Cash redemption valve of coupon 1/20¢. Kraft Foods Company, Chicago, Illinois. LWAIT—ONE TO A FAMILY AFIT TN? VENA VI INT NINA LINZ YET LIL NEL LL VE VITA VIA VI? ST Vl ae aeaweweweaeaeeaa wee ee ee eee ew oe ow ow oe e@ oe the ae Qweeweanw an ae eae ae ae ee oe 2 ee ee oe =e ‘ ca ne : - 'BIGHTEEN So he [ o~ : THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1956» “ = _ Schedule Improvements for Holly Recreation Area ES Peach Festival Officers Named Meeting at Romeo Elects Jewel West President, Restricts Contest ROMEO—Jewel West, local at- torney, was elected president of the Romeo Peach Festival Assn. at an organizational meeting last night. Other officers are Ralph Garri- gon, vice president; Ray Gamelin, treasurer; and Mrs. Charles Meeker Jr., secretary and resj- dent agent. F Named to the board of di- rectors for three-year terms were Gamelin, Andrew Downey, Ar- | ther Farrell and Mrs. James H. | Milford Slates Costume Dinner Foreign Dress, Food to Spark Church Event Tomorrow Night MILFORD—One of the most. elaborate dinners of the year will be held at the Milford Presbyterian Church tomorrow night, beginning at 6:15, = a * Ld * In order to emphasize the spirit, of National Family Week, parents| are asked to bring their children, to Family Night Internationale in lany costume of a foreign country Those in costumes will march | in a parade in the: church so | that families will see their color. | GENE CALHOUN Gene Calhoun, an associate with v To ‘Address C. of ¢. Thursday a Walled Lake. Housewife to Oppose Tax Hike Plan Lake district, June 11. The talk, to be given at the | Leon Lake Memorial Home of Post 3952, VFW, will touch on similar proposals and issues in this and other areas in the state. Mrs. Popek has organized a group of citizens in accord with her views in the Walled Lake School district and they are can- vassing from..door to door, she says, in an effort to let people know about the new tax proposal and to urge them to vote. * es» @ Text’ of her ‘Nuursday talk is as follows: “Citizens and taxpayers in the ‘Walled Lake Consolidated School WALLED LAKE—Mrs. Peter be voted on Popek, Walled «Lake housewife and PTA member, will talk before the Chamber of Commerce here Thursday night at 7:30. * * oe Her speech will be on the pro- posed two-mill increase for school operating expenses in the Walled Monteith School to Be Dedicated Thursday Open House to ful representation of other lands. the Donaldson Lumber Co. of, Pontiac for the past 15 years, has Winberna. Preliminary preparations for the. 1956 Peach Festival, a three-day ! event staged annually over Labor | +f | An unusual program under the “aL S ‘just opened a new paint, . wall-| icentering around ‘“‘living in foreign = Pe oe lands.” Plains. |FOREIGN STUDENTS i The Cart Hanna family will bring Was instrumental in getting mate ‘four foreign students who will dem- land for archery purposes at the) onstrate their dances, costumes corner of Teggerdine and Gale| Carole A. Thompson Wed tet in Awe. w w in Candlelight Ceremony cedure was a decision to invite... . Queen's Contest entrants only | KEEGO HARBOR — Carole A.|parents are/ Mr. and Mrs. Erwin from neighboring communities Thompson of Keego Harbor and A. Wagner of 26505 Coolidge, Oak similar in ce Romee. This Jerrold E. Wagner of Oak Park Park. would rule out contestants from were marned in on evening cane | The bride wore a gown of larger cities such as Pontiac, light ceremony Saturday at et white nylon tulle and Chantilly . Flint and Mt. Clemens. (Baptist Church Pontiac. a lace, with sweetheart neckline This change eon.| Carole is the daughter of Mr.| and tapered siceves. Her skirt t tend, would tenes tran, and Mrs. Condrad D. Thomspon swept into a cathedral trail, and sportation difficulties and conflicts °! 2411 Pine Lake Ave. Jerrold’s) her fingertip veil was of silk with Labor Day celebrations in | iilusien, She carried a cascade rr raaemctaion ot the soap ROCHeSter Students | sas wate crema and a white crchid. Box Derby was favored unani-|_.— ee ously by the board, because Show Art Tonight petition, condition of the road used | Day weekend, were made by the board. Julius Clevio was appointed chairman of the concessions com- mittee. Philip C. Davidson, Gerald McLean, Mrs. ‘Antonio Ferrara and Charles Meeker were elected to handle the Miss Romeo contest, next month and the Queen's Con- ‘MR. AND MRS. JERROLD WAGNER land. * * Elaborate table decorations are ters.. Grand opening for his new being made by the Senior-Hi Fel-- store will be this Friday and Sat- \jowship to put the guests in a urday | “far-away mood.” The dinner menu will include specialities from “gay Paree,” Hawaii, India, Poland and other lands, There will be India chicken curry, Polish cabbage Deadline to File sar crac keonwse exe {OF School Posts triguing dishes, | eae ie , ' Walled Lake Petitions A big sombrero will be passed to cover expenses. The bride's attendants were her) Mrs. James Phelan, in charge of sister, Nancy Thompson, and sis- the affair, says that reservations, by 4 P.M. Saturday | \ter-in-law, Mrs. John Thompson, have almost reached the capacity | . err Rn an Fle. While Dawn Wagner, a niece of the for the derby and comparative) epee Nome fan eee bridegrgem, served as junior! disinterest on the part of visitors Mentary * sues ©. bridesmaid. of the church accommodations, | —-— \for election to the Walled Lake at previous festivals. itheir first Art Exhibit and Open, Ficst man was John Meister , Walled Lake : House tonight from 7 te 9 p. m. Waterford Class of ’51 jjob, cost of the training. oppor- ales, need for additional personnel ‘tunities for employment after and the fact that there has been a training, and the location of the reduction in the school's portion of Madison Heights Father Planned; to Organize Parents, Teachers WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Calhoun, a member of the The new John Monteith School on|sons for it have been presented to board of directors and past presi- Crescent Lake road will have an/|the various Parent Teacher Assn. This: is one of four elementary schools started last fall and the creases and bond issues for our '"% Each cost $100,000. Thursday's program will begin with the open house at 7:30 p.m., followed by the dedication serv- ices at 8:30 p.m. Rev. Theodore Allenbach, of the Oakland Ave- nue United Presbyterian Church | will be guest speaker, Mrs, Lois Tiffany, supervisor of elementary music, and her staff will provide music and lead community sing- ing. idistrict will be interested in the inew proposal of a two-mill tax in- crease for school operating ex- penses. This proposal and the rea- dent of the Pontiac Archery Club, | open house and dedication program |Soups in our district by oyr super- ibeginning at 7:30 p.m, Thursday. |intendent of schools, | “We have voted for millage in- and give talks about their home- Rds. A member of Central Meth- | only one completed in time for use school district in the past but in odist Church, Pontiac, Calhoun is this year, All four used the same|this instance many of us feel that married and father of four daugh-| floor plan, modified for its location. 'to vote another millage increase residence. for any reason would be a serious mistake. “The 1955 tax manual is a new Standardized method of reclas- sifying and re-evaluating homes and property and has been ap- proved by the Michigan State | Supreme Court, and will affect every home and property owner in our state. “It is on this new assessment you will be paying this propoged| Mile Long Road Will Be Bult Is Largest in County, 16 Miles From Pontiac The Michigan Department of Conservation today announced 1956 improvements to be made in econ- ‘largest recreational area. Pa * * Murray W. Titsworth, manager jot the Holly Recreational Area, states that a-new Wildwood Lake jentrance road and parking lot will ibe built, the contract already hav- ing been awarded to: Lyman Girst of Waterford, During this construction work the public is requested to use other sites around this lake and at other lakes in the area, The Rew road is to be nearly a mile long, and will jeave the Dixie Highway about one mile north of the M87 intersection and 16 miles ‘northwest of Pontiac, | Future plans include more park- lots, picnic and camping grounds, boat launching sites, new shop. garage, office and manager's | +. * # The Holly Recreational Area is ‘located on both-sides of the-Dixie: ‘Highway, mostly in the townships ‘of Holly and Groveland. It covers 6.015 acres, and the 16 lakes within ‘its borders are state owned. Its Crotched Lake is stocked with rainbow trout, and it's Wildwood and Valley Lakes were recently planted with “muskies.”” It has thousands of acres of roll- Special guests will be Supt. Wm. two mill increase, and equalized, |ing terrain, including some of the members. A short organizational parent- teacher meeting will be held with WALLED LAKE — Candidates Donald Smith as temporary chair-| man. Refreshments will be served. Legal Questions Snarl Meeting Farmington Race Track Issue Tabled Pending Study by Attorney lon every thousand of your new | valuation, | “One taxpayer in this area was Shocked to find that his valuation had increased from $6,200 to $10,000 Jon the 1955 tax rolls. That was an {80 per cent increase in one year. With the new tax manual being used this assessment has been increased to $14,000. That is an- other 40 per cent increase this year. The full shock of this in- \credible change came when the itaxpayer realized that actually he is receiving a 120 per cent boost in two years. “Are there any among you who ‘have received an increase in your incomes of 120 per cent. Of this | for Nominees Due In a. shunck and Board of Education that will actually amount to $4.00Nighest hills in the county, and a great abundance of wildlife cqver. Deer are quite numerous within its confines, and there are plenty of the smaller animals and a great variety of birds. Ld * * Titsworth has been manager for the past seven years, during which time most of the development work has been done. He has a ranger force under him, and other crews are assisting in the work, Orchard Lake Baton Twirler Crowned Queen FARMINGTON—The Farmington amount 75 per cent goes to the ORCHARD LAKE — Sharon track in the community. * * * |1955 tax manual. | | “We urge you to go to your School board officials claim the Township Board of trustees be-/ Walled Lake Consolidated School preyer 15, of 3717 Wards Point ,tax is needed to meet increased came clogged with legal techni-|District. This is not an isolated |p, falihel new queen of the De- This included the amount of edu- operating costs due to growth of calities last night over fhe con-|case. Every taxpayer is being or|+oit Letter Carriers Baton Content cation needed for each specific the district, higher salary sched- troversial proposal to build a race Will be assessed on the basis of his) The contest held ai the ae ‘Patton’ Memorial Building, was open to all twirlers in the United The trustees agreed to approve’ township halls and ask your clerk States and Canada. nection with Oakland County's jobs geographically. € 15-mill levy now in effect. Some rezoning of the necessary 2744 acres to * & residents, however, are protesting! and put the entire matter to a Other aspects which were in- ‘he proposed millage on the -, : ane eee ; a referendum of township voters. : he virls ook first ‘cluded in their classroom study grounds that it will make taxes too | 196: Alsoicheck your new value: jvision, The girls also: tod . or in interviews with people in high for the average homemaker. | _ TM. opposition group chal. | tions. place in team work. allow you to see the 1955 man. | Sharon's sister, Arlene. 11, was a * . ual, especially pages 72 through runner up, taking first in her di- of Four Killed by Car |3oard of Education must have Long Beach, Calif.. while the Students Hold Planning June Reunion ng and hostesses. trict in order to have names in- Was held in the church parlors Uit of study on various carecrs “The terms of Julius Nelson and| : hest school following the ceremony, | uled for June 24 at Kensington sultant of the Rochester nual “Career Dav" Tuesday. years. families. ikindergarten; Margyerite Galler, live at 2031 Cekdale: Fontiac. | for information about arrange-| 145s. fourth; Florence Mortimer were considering as a result of WATERFORD — A nominating) == — Sunday School election June 7 will Methodist WAC will meet at 8) in Arizona a nominating petitions filed at ithe office of the board not later Every child in the school .will pridegroom’s brother, Thomas..and fear penal iy ceca licne (ant have his work exhibited, Students pan Kaufeld of Waterford served Career Day PAT ed PU et CS Lot Sh Te 8 | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP eA Be WALLED LAKE — Climaxing a | A reunion for the WTHS gradu- : open to- them, Walled Lake Junior Joseph Long expire on June 30. Park. The event is being readied |2Y3te™ has arranged the exhibit.| After a week's trip through the | ; t * * € Members may contact Joyce first grade; Heneretta Ensign. they observed and they learned) Question of the controversial two- | : e ] . ments. \(principal), Sth grade< and ce: Vacation rip itheir previous study. Dennis, sixth. t committee to select candidates for County Calen dar meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at) the home of Mrs. Jean Walters, The Wag ae in the home of Mrs | han 4 p. m. Saturday. Petitions will assist their teachers as hosts as ushers. qualified electors of the school dis- A reception for some 200 guests sluded on the June 11 ballot. Mrs. hy Whipple, art con- ating class of 1951 has been sched- poke eit sit High ninth graders celebrated an- Those elected will serve for three! Her aides are Honora O'Conner, Eastern states, the couple will for the 127 graduates and their’ = From 9:30 until 1:30 they heard, On the ballot also will be the | | Hetherington, 466 Gateway Drive, second; Jean Walker, third; Irene ‘about some of the vocations they mill levy for school operation.. ittee - The North Hill PTA will serve : ’ Commi Will Meet oes during the hours. Ends In Death ; the Waterford Community Church, Leonard 4016 Maiden... ; iti alary, | lenged legalit f the action | In order to win, Sharon had to wA0son MEIGS — A ime Ge Church to Beain (Maem planned vacation trip to Arizona wes ; ment eng ur ; | ended in death for the Madison @ctual requirements of the job. | Cc to egin | Heights father of four Monday UD ro Ee ese Bond Campaign | . i S night. . hy John Williams, Mrs. Maybelle at Brooklands Your PTA Is Planning: | Drama, Last Meeting Installation Ceremony e Gar : Thomas A. Sharum, 35, of 430 Han Cig UG) OEE Kenneth, was fatally injured — W because the township's zoning board and planning commission already has voted against re- toning. Objectors said the board could ‘not legally. go over the heads of the trict is receiving as much as 75 per cent of the taxes collected in |some of the townships. It should ‘benefit handsomely by this new ‘assessment system. “Tt has been stated by our super- “Our Walled Lake School Dis-| ‘twirl with all of the first place winners of the day, thus winning the title of first twirler and the |queen’s crown. | County Deaths Dern con eile crossing) street Rochester Women ' BROOKLANDS—As a result of {Wo agencies and approve the intendent that we will realize a) : in Tucson, Ariz. [interest shown by the congregation rezoning, with or without a refer- great financial benefit to our school | Thomas H. Jones -DRAYTON PLAINS — A dram-|Wadena Langdon. secretary. Rob- \last Sunday in a rally at Brook- endum. district from the taxes that will be! atie production, “Random Har-jert Shepard, treasurer, Mrs. Mar-' Sharum, with his wife, Alene, \lands School, Gethsemane Luth- Hurt as Car Flips The board finally tabled its ac- paid by the Lincoln plant being “With all due consideration for ‘our school superintendent's pro- ‘posal, many of us feel that we have vest,” featuring local talent willjion Sharpe. a wiles abel ane nah tome Sis ee : _jern’s New Church Planning Com- tion and referred the matter to the built in this district. ) epee pba doeal onl a bat ee ee esa | ine wack trip to visit relatives | Two. Rochester women were in- milte’ will launch a financial township attorney for a legal me Fame re easel Del and Mrs “Valeita McClelland his. When his car ran out of gas. He jured last night when the car in Sete build ara charcon the cee ——— - In the cast are Mrs. ros Dal- eae Bib S.S was on his way to a gas station Which they were riding went off Present site, Auburn road near 7 tee, Willem Lot pend oe , when he was struck and killed. the road and rolled over in Rorch. | Dequindre. — Refreshments will be served by , | leater, | The effort is being spearheaded first grade mothers. wes body will be rune to the; Mrs. Mannie Milligan, a passen- by an initial bond issue in amounts Avon Township ‘Wiliam Sullivan Funeral Home, Mrs. Carl Methner will be nar- Satie past - iger, suffered fractures of the left {20M $100, to $5,000 over an option rator and Frieda Huggett, visit- ;- A ‘Royal Oak, Thursday. Funeral ar- - . > ‘period of from 5 to 13 years bear- ing teacher, will lead the discus- nae "Guidance ‘Clinic. will. speak ramements are pending. aot enibem Mee oan vance ling interest at 4 per cent. Mem- sion following the presentation. (4+ the Thursday night meeting fee see ee oD 8. the driver, suffered lacerations bers will be visited immediately The meeting is scheduled to be- Elmwood PTA, at 7:30. id, 7, Richard, 4, and Beth, 2, HelVer the right. eye. Roth SS eG Oe lanier coremitee: gin at 7:45 p.m. Mrs. Earl Spring- Newly-elected President of the also leaves his mother, four breathed at the Avon Center Hos- | Pt h ¢ planning commi ce. er will install officers for 1956- | Fast Oakland PTA Council, Mrs. ers and a sister. pial . ; “It is emphasized that Geth- 87 and Mrs. Leonard Eliiott will | A.) Gotorth, wil officiate at a Mrs. Yates told Onkland County) semane’s investment opportunity report on the recent state con- candlelight installation of the Sheriff's ae she struck loose ig available to non-members as ost ’ Fred, and Mrs. Joseph Wallace. * * * Avon Photographic Club vention held in Detroit. | following new officers: aravel, control of the car, well who want to put their funds | . ire « " ter | * Refreshments will be served by yrs Donald Ross, president: Plans Thursday Meeting ‘went into the ditch oelirolle d aver. be neet in a worthwhile cause, , kindergarten mothers i\Mrs., Leon Steward, mother vice) AVON TOWNSHIP — The Avon pally he Rex) Notman 5 Kuck, Leon Steward, father pastor ot) theschurch: “Mothers Night’ will be Thurs- vice president; Mrs. Suddath Wat- day at Four Towns PTA and Mrs. kins, secretary; Mrs. Eddie Bur- Donald Farmiloe will be in charge nell, treasurer; Mrs. Helen Boyer, : teacher vice president, and Mrs occasion which starts at §. of Bean ‘William Anderson, historian, president: Photographic club will meet in the Library at Rochester, Thursday,-at 7:30 p.m. Members and the public are in- vited to bmng prints and color, slides fur dascussion and analysis. Kindergarten mothers will serve, Four Towns— Hold Budget Hearing . Montes may- also be loaned in- : K H directly to Gethsemane through the! at eego arbor |Church Extension Fund of the ‘Michigan District with an interest KEEGO HARBOR — The City yield of 2'» per cent with 30-day This meeting includes instal- Council held a. public hearing on demand withdrawal privileges at lation of PTA officers and the ‘refreshments . jthe proposed budget for the com- any time. Interested persons may awarding of Safety Patrol Cer: Walcrinrd|(Tansckip County Births ing year in the municipal build- get in touch with cither the pastor fificates. s ing last might. A resolution was or committee chairman, Vincent Stringham School PTA has slated also passed to rent automatic vot- Braun. | Metamora Refreshments will be served by jationally-known Dennis G. Cooper,’ the Ladies Ald Societys rt MATILDA NIELSEN and Mrs. Peder Nielsen of Mr 3227 Van Campen St.. reached the limit of school tax in- creases. As the situation is right now many home and business tax- payers find it financially impos- sible to reside in this district.” Mrs, Popek talked recently on ithe subject to the Optiniists and the Walled Lake Chamber Execu- tive Board. Seven MSU Scholarships LAPEER — The Lapeer County, Bankers Assn. as in the past, is making seven Michigan State Uni-| versity Short Course Scholarships) available ‘to the Youth of Lapeer County, This scholarship. provides $100 to each recipient, towards an, 8 weeks short course in Agriculture or Home Economics at M.S.U. Application forms and more in-, formation can be obtained from| the various Vocational Agricultural and Home Economics teachers the Kindergarten mothers. Open A Sil Plactin Consent ore iat at aw machines, for a period of one) _— house will be from 7:30 to 8 eee photographer. and rave | Thursday ow cement et B d Meets Tonight ‘ment of their daughter, Matilda, to Office Building, Lapeer. + lecturer to show ‘‘New Adventures Ciitferd The Road C igsi a. wOaOr ees lonig | : when the mothers may meet their in \fichigan’’ Thursday Mr and Mrs Merton Hobson an-| a Se gee > UNE Wow) ites Ino 3 ue TTT Gaara. cadae sday. apunee Gihe) (iran roti at laccenien n- authorized to accept bids for a| COMMERCE TOWNSHIP—Regu- son of Mrs. Henry Gatewood of Thursday Lecture Slated | The meeting will be “held at 8) Mariette Hospital new pick-u i -up truck for city use. lar monthly meetin Som- p.m in Isaac Carry High School. | | r a : Cea eel Waterford Township The chloride application for the Four Towns Mr and Mrs. Charles Jehte of Loc! Gallup, N.M. David 1s currently Lambert PTA will install its new officers Thursday night at § Mrs Arthur D. Heiple will officiate dames Van Lueven, of Oakland County Juvenile Court, will speak, Orion Township Webber school tonight will hole the last PTA meeting of the year.! the Officers will be installed hy Past haven announce the birth of a bab | boy. Charles Edward , ROYAL OAK — Leroy Miller, lecturer-farmer from Doster, will jtalk to the Royal Oak Farm and, ‘Garden Club on the subject of “Changing to the Organic Way" at Lapeer Bankers Steriag! FAST | LAPEER—Service for Thomas \H. Jones, 67, of 3745 Davison Rd., ‘will be held at 1:30 p.m. Saturday from Baird Funeral) Home, with ‘burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Mr \Jones, a supervisor at the Lapeer ‘State Home and Training School died at his residence last night after suffering a heart attack | He leaves his wife, Amelia; one ‘sister, Mrs. Margaret Mack, and one brother, William, both of Donaldson, Pa. (Advertisement) LOST 40 Ibs RENNEL DOES THE WORK LANSING, MICH. ‘Using Rennel right in mv own home my weight went from 169 to 129. my dress from 20 to 12 and my Miss 5x3 to the dress | size I want to be I feel fine, eat any- thing I want and will call Rennel mv friend for all time. Words just cant Drayton throughout the county, also at the explain how well it works. You must {Plains, are announcing the engage- County Extension office in the Post }£¥-l'. Get Renney, Mt sees (oe weit: or writes Mrs. Wm. Schweit- | zer, 704 Maple Hill. | Ask your druggist for 4 ounces of liquid RENNEL Concentrate. You lt never know a hungry moment while reducing with RENNEL, ITCl ae ee (Advertisement) (Scabies! is highly contagious and will . continue for life it not stopped. Its sole cause is the itch-mite which is immune to ordi- nary treatment. EXSORA kills the included a bake sale and movies, realized a profit of $104.00 and the! group will decide on a school proj. fect tonight WO! VERINE LAKE—A heal Bleck sVERINE LAKE—Age has) . . West Bloomfield Township jtaken its toll on the dam that! tee co ure ner conor of The Green School PTA will hold holds back the occasfonally ambi-(M¢ 4am dues not come as news “Wolverine Lake is the head serve refreshments. its fifal meeting of the year Thurs- ious waters of Wolverine Lake. (to most of the Wolverine Lake vil- water of the H . aH fol ae ‘Pontiac Lake day evening with the annual family _ Modern day engineers would lage residents. Many of them, Par" |by pala et owe pes t ree Dinner will be served from 'ikely hesitate toguse the word ticularly those living near the lake,| 1, k Tee OWE SUT RIS The Pontiac Lake PTA will = will De ser spac : _ ° 1 jLake and Kent Lake with the 6:30 to 7 p.m. at the West Bloom. “dam” except v oosely, in re-|have been clamoring for a new ; : meet at 8 p.m, Thursday. Téach- |;;.14 High School. a ferring to the y-rotted wood,one for some time, according toldam’ Sioa ake vod it ee ere will be in their rooms at) the new officers for the coming Planks that-still manage to do’ the George Belprez, the new president] commerce and ieee? Seis ak 1:90 for consultation with Par | car will be installed at this meet, 10. “Jof the village common council. Slg nc aie ents in tiie last of the | ; would probably risé in a harry,” os . ing. The dam in question is not Consequently. the council is Ty /ne added. The children will be entertained much more than a stone's throw (IS to set te heels prose = The villa » in bas : ; é ge councel already has New officers to be. installed are: |with Leonardo and ‘‘Magic as You’ from the’ inteesection of Glen. Into motion. aid out about $1,000 for prelim- There will be an instrumental music presentation and Girl Scouts of Troop 275 of the -school will present a thank-you gift to the ‘school from all the troops, Fourth grade room mothers will mete ere DOM at Wolverine Lake Is Trouble § By STAN BOK perhaps the length of a city Commerce Correspondent | can hold out. “One of the two cement bulwarks which sapport the wood planks is being under- mined by water,” he explained. George » President; : Mrs. /Like It" during the business meet-| gary and South Commerce roads | Belpre expressed concern inary engineering work on a new Albert , vice president; Mrs. ing. , at the north end of the lake, | over how long the present dam |dam, .Belprez said. me i a if 4 # > yp aie = Further action on the project must come from the Oakland County Drain Commission. | The majority of persons who |own property surrounding the lake have signed petitions to express their willingness to accept a spe- cial assessment for a new dam or) for the rebuilding of the existing) dam. The engineering work for the| project is now in the hands of the) Oakland -County Drain Commis: ‘sion. The Commission is working’ 'with the Conservation Department to ascertajn the bes{ solution. to the m Royal Oak High School, at 7:45 iteh-mite almost instantly. Only 3 p.m., Thursday, The public is in- days EXSORA treatment is required. vited, | CUNNINGHAM DRUC STORES . eT WORRIED OVER DEBTS If yeu sre anadle te MICHIGAN CREDIT C after fade ra a0 Grea debts “ bile when due, sre i and arrange for me 4, regardiess ef hew much er how many you owe. “ad a yeu ean NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED | ONE PLACE TO PAY Ameri A hm th of Credit Counsetiors “Let 9 Years of Credit Counselling experience assist you” Hours: Daily 9 to $. Wed. & Sat.'9 to 1 Evenings by App't. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS - ‘problem: 41%) ® Saginaw st. FE 8.0456 Above Onkland Theater ; : x ono events ~ x nor ence tiation OS RE of | i a Ss S . THE PONTIAC, Yes: WEDN NES SDAY, MAY 56) Ol Soybeans + Break Sharply | | MARKETS Produ DETROIT UCE DETROIT, May by hee ed. Resnagtnn saleé of locally grown i {Stock Market __ Rises Quietly prices cover - Sen Holy Aeon & fades, only. y.| j Eraey W— Old crop soy-| | cous Brads loon Bot by ahem in wholecale NEW YORK wW — The stock! beans broke as much as 10 cents,| Package lots. "Prices Saturany were: market was quietly higher today the limit permitted in a single, bu; No. 1, Sat be: bu; apples, ylounitod, in early dealings with most areas! *’ “session, as heavy liquidation Swe apa, 480 bu; No. 1 3363-78 PU of the market passcipeting in the! over the bean pit on the Board t!3 03 be bu apples, Northern Spy, feney.| modest rise. | Trade toda: $.00 bu; No. 3.75-4.25 bu; apples. AA | es es « ery Red. Sines. toe bu; No., Rots Hird =n 4 vy ing & OSSES were. al- . 1 The break in these futures un- No. yin y pene ber sting as, opant most entirely fractional with a few. settled some other grains, Old 1 tb. 15-2.28 bu. Celery root. Ho. 1.1 °75/issues pushed up between 1 and crop aad was quite weak, New dos. eh “Morseradish,, No sta’ .36-$.28)2 points, . ¢ crop soybeans and corn also de- pk. bskt. a OS = -| Here is the way major divisions ; 15-1.25 50 Ib. bag: clined. Wheat: hel. we re epeecems en 18-85 doz. behs ; distant dainetea eis of onion sds No. I, 180-200 32-ib. bag. Pere ; & SMa. rsnips, No. 1, 100-125 % by Pota-| Rails higher, oils lower, - airlines gains, After tumbling the 10-cent daily. limit, old crop spybeans rallied a couple of cents, with trading con-, tinuing very’ active = nervous. Wheat near the “s of the first, hour was \% to 14s higher, May $2.254%; corn 1 to 2% lower, May ,, $1.49%; oats 4. lower to % higher, May 66; rye 4% lower to 1 cent’ higher, May $1.2644; soybeans 2 to, 8% lower, May $3.11, and lard 30 to 52 cents a hundred pounds lower, May $12.85. Grain Prices IcCAGO “Py hort 2.00 50-lb. bag; No. 1, 1 70- 90 50-!b. bag. Radishes, hothouse, No. | t oS. 1.50 doz. behs. Rhubarb, hot- pres fancy, .90 5-Ib. box; No. }. 78 5-lb. box; Rhubarb. hothouse, No 1, 1.00-1 30 doz. behs. Rutabagas, “ae 1 110 bu 80 bu., Turnip, topped, No. 4 Eges: Large, 1500-1600 30-doz case; fore atl 13.00-14.00; small, 9.00-11 00. DETROIT EGGS DETROIT, May 8 iAP) — Eags Detroit, cases included. federal- uete| grades: Whites — Grade A fumbo 417-4 _Welghted average 48: large 44-45 bry avg. 4445; medium 39-40 wtd. avg. 39'y, small 3 peat. bd, large @ A jumbo 45-46 ae ava. 45%: argch ry medium 38 Gra B large 40. Grade C large 34-36 wtd oe 36 Checks 35 Commercially graded Whites—Grade A large 40%, -42% dium Browns—Grade A large 40-404, }dium 35% Comment me- me- Market steady oats % ferings ample for « good. cal ais: GRAIN i ce usr 9 CE grain Whea' 67 May ........ 223% raf Boaconon: thed JULY ..cceeee 2 Dec ce. 12M Sep ....06. 205% Dec... sees, 200s May eure 138% Mar ..se..-. 2.1042 July ..... Ci Sep see 13s May ....0.-- 149% De seas. 1.56 JUly sevccees 154 tar Sep -eroe-» 1.86% July ..... 13 sooce-» Leltg Sep ....0.. 1400 Oa Nov 14.26 | May . 65% Chrysler Idles 6,200: in Detroit, Evansville °. DETROIT (INS)—Chrysler Corp. ; poy instances nearby receipts barely ad . Mediums barely ample to ample, for trade needs. Fairly \arge volume con- tinues to move into storage. oe CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO, May 9 :AP'—Chicago Mer- cantiie Exchange Butter nervous, re- cetpts 737.00; wholesale buying prices jeachenses bode ‘te lower; 93 score AA 59, 90 B 565, BBC so Cc 56 Begare steady to firm: receipts 24400 i wholesale buying prices ly etre tos Saree whites 70 per cent ene na 9 per cent A 40: meat teas 38; US wires 37. checks 36 celts 165 current re- CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO May 6 Pi — iU 8. De- . motors steady to higher, higher, airerafts higher and radio-, if unchanged to! standards cents at steady, utilities steady, nonferrous metals unchanged to higher, chemicals mixed, steels higher. rubbers ues mies * Sete Started on 3,000 lshares up ‘3 at 9's and then! , 'mproved a little more in the midst ‘of renewed unconfirmed reports ‘that it planned a merger of in- terests with Curtiss-Wright which lost 3, at 348 initially. | Among advancing \Santa Fe Railroad, Seaboard Rail- ‘road, U. S. Gypsum, Pacifie Tin, \St. Joseph Lead, Union Carbide, Rohm & Haas, Bethlehem Steel, | U. S. Rubber, Boeing, Douglas. Air craft and usc ; * * For the eel two days the mar-) ket has been declining. and to- day's improvement in early trad- ing ihdicated a stiffening of buying stocks were | $5.25. cars 90 ress at the lowered price lev- iecttty the Associated Press javerage of 60 stocks was off 50 $189.90. The previous day it was down 90 cents. | New York Stocks yesterday announced new layoffs per eens Ae Agriculture) —— rotator,” ‘Late Morning Quotations) and the 6,200 employes affected total U 8 ines 335. asoeuae light, pe es jonas peas aut Af {demand moderate arket stromger cas Allied em 22 les .. 49 Some the first auto workers jot track sales old stock | Washed 100 Allied Strs 496 Ralsey Hayes a elegibie or s$ ement . Ib sacks Idaho russets $5 75-600 Bak- aliis Chalm 65 ennecoo be fi uppl mental un ers $6.65; utilities $460-465. Red River Alum Ltad.. 1126 KimbCik .,. 554 _ employment benefits when the valiey Pontiacs washed and waxed $8 aA Aico 18 Kresge, 8s. as ff 600 New stock arrivals on trac Am Airline 234 oge _ 4 revolutionary plan starts operating) [supplies moderate. demand moderate. am Can as Lehn & Pw. 17 June 1. market stronger. cariot track sales new my LOP Glass 613 Am Cyan 24 Hy Ps Py Py stock: Washed 100 Ib. sacks Alabama an, Gas & El $7) Lib McN &L.. 18 Triumphs $6 28-650, California long'yn. we a Fay uN Liga & My Aes pes} The layoffs, attributed by a whites $615 UNE Ray ot) ee GS ee bein Chrysler spokesman to ‘“‘adjuts- me eh 408% Lone 8 chem 184 i 5c 23 te 191 mertts in production schedules, Poultry Am Seating - 32.4 Lou a Nash es 4| 4 a 5 jAm Smelt 56 k 36 bring to 38.200 the number of the DETROIT POULTRY NS] SEV Tic bpegh, Ue oe de firm's employes now idle. soeteos May 8 (‘AP)—Prices paid am Tod 8Ot say D str 422 pund fob. for No. 1 quality live Am Viscose 167 wterck 94 The employes, laid off at the poultry tres i ant >, eee 1° Anac Co . m6 Mpls Hon 74 ' eavy tfpe hens -30; Tight type - Anac WAC . 80 Whites 24-25, Gray Crosses te Armour & Co 224 wotor Pd 3 61 : ecaponettes $-6 Ib 30-32) ducklings 2 Arms Ck 333) Mot Wheel a1 Evansville, ne |oreeder turkeys heavy type hens 38 Atchison 694 eat arols . * * Comment Relte about ssredy a Atl Cs: Line 627 Mueller Br - < heavy. type hens, steady on balance of at] Refin 435 \urray Cp 404 The Cheytler. United Auto Work- jocay's moderate receipts Offerings of Avco Mig $2 Na bre... ers bles ay Dp . noes liberal and demand lacked aggtes- Balt & Ohio $15 Nat Cash . ‘4 | Jo less pay plan stipulates siveness as buyers,critical of site and Bendix Av . $7 Nat eotey a that to be eligible for benefits quaiity Fryers in” ample supply and Benquet 21 Nat Gyps ... 60 1 r ; equal to demand Caponeties found tair Beth Steel 1563 Nat Lead .., -103 the employe must have been laid f° Gaedimavemen Sacing Alc eet na he off on or after May 2, 1936 — Rohn Alum 287 NY Central Air “AGO POU Rorden 602 Nia M Pow 324) eee eee eter : Borg Wariier an} Nort & West 711 =e CHICAGO, May #@ 'AP) — U 8 De- pris sa 2 EN GULARINAT o26 partment of Agriculture: — Live poul- pron Balk 182 Nor c as 7 ry About steady, recetpte in caops Budd Co 901 Nwst Airline 164 (Oi (Monday 1829 ‘coupe, 90008) 1b.) wurroughs 495 Ohio Oil aa ° fob paying prices unchanged to Calumet & H 15 Owens Til Gl "16 on Sticky Ch | cents enere light hens 18 oF oid Gamplesap 40 «Pan AW Air 185 roosters <1 caponettes under gy Ib 2” : . ih 1 a2¢ p arges 25-26 over <'y Ih 28-29 ducklings 35 Can Dr) Sy fia pte (heavy Bees Ea hom delete 2 Capital Alrl . 38 Parke Da .. 4 Charged m the attempted toy- quoted) vere MB: Carrier Gp S76 Penner. Jc" 994 se. J ses - pistol stickup of a printing com- |Cater Trac... 76 Pepsi Cola. , on y Ches & O 651 ner vee 42 pany May 1 at Egith Mile road i CRrveiec 451 Phelps D ... 68 and Grand River, two brothers yes- Livestock Cities Bvi ., 69 Philco atl fer t t mali DETROIT LIVESTOCK Climax Mo . 7 Philtp Mor ,. 453 lay stood mute at arraignment’ pgtrorr. May @ ‘AP)—Hogs—Salavie Coca cole. 1214 2H Pe Use in Oakland eoumy, Circuit Court bee Market not established, undertone cole Fatt A) erat aaa eady “o rt 25! a < Me - attle—Salable 750 Supply includes Col Gas 18.45 Erne! is o ee Judge F “sik L. Doty entered in- several huncred slaughter steers and Comw Fa 407 Fu.lme es . Bs 5 t Co 7 Pur oil » wea nocent pleas for Mack Lee, 32, of eae icn. cask need ae aerees een Ries tae REA eur . a] by pearly sales mostly choice fe¢4 steers Consum Pow 48.6" Repul { a tenes ne a C. Lee, 38. 00-2100 some good steers 1800-1957 Cont Bak 0 7 aoe Ors ae Oo " f pre = 1 les 60- Cont Can... 492 Ch 6 - a en a Be fe ay G weit ioe gucdianarchisiee-ica, pee Cont hat Ss T Rey Tob B cu man to jail under bonds of 5; 50:19 50 East utility and commercials Cont Oil 123 4 Ree Lp 0 BN $2,000 each. heifers 1300-1670, utility cows slow = el, : aa eoliea tesa cere s * PS moat!y ireetisos canners and rutfers Liss i? y 8. . Ne Mle 19 ost eee 7,00 fi htwetght Deere vor ae : 7 The pair is charged with assault mur, cannets 04 dogn witty Sal Det Edis. 141 a bh At rel ae commercial bulls fe 00-1600. late idon-|Doug Airc as wenn 2 : with intent to robo While armed. day, small lot choice 465 Ib stock steer Dow Chem 677 Ey on oe ; ~ calves 21 60 Du Pont 2216 * a They were scared off when a wom- “80 3! Geiable 200 Vea'ers opening East Air L | 81 SE ane an clerk in the office screamed, about steady. market not fully de: Ea ret 4 pee ls eee ae veloped, early sales good and choice uto Lite 37 tld Ln ed : Redford Post State Police said. Be Tors) SE1RO [36 GON Lome Nianiechiosrenin: ART Atal | 4) Sou Pa is _— dividuals to 28 0. prime absent utility Em bayle “aDaic aos ae : Rand 261 " d - 2 1 rie oe. 222 Sperr van é County Custodion Hurt (ea i ee ene rd Be Beans OS ounty Custogian mur BncepBslsble | a0 Short deck most mod Mach Sol Se ee eat . ly choice 87 [b shorn lambs number 1 Fore o ios t ti In in Plunge From Ladder pens “tiny steady at 2550.17 head Se eine 887 Std OY NJ 40 mostly choice 90 ib native spring jambs G. nimak TM ae oe Sou ors ye A custodian for the county of- Dee later at 2800, sheep gcarce Gen Dyaene aa? alae Pack } fice building was hospitalized this, pen Elec 76 sun) [oti = . . Gen Fads Le. OF Suther Pap morning for injuries suffered when CHICAGO LIVESTOCK den Moe e @ seit, & J May 8 ‘AP) — 1U $ De- wy eae Sviv El Pd he fell from a ladder. 7 -pamncn Fert a Pry ees Gen Shoe = aus Texas Co X-rays at Pontiac Generat tios-” fairly active. steady fo 15 higher Gen Fire 211.0 59) pony Pu pital revealed that Ira Castle, 56 on y euteners. Instances 18-28 higher late. Gijjerre +. 48) Timk R Bear 5 = " sows steady to strong. bulk mixed grade" Qoebe] Br $5 Tran W Air of 63 N. Cass Ave. suffered no jots No 2 and 3 190270) Ib 18 00-35 | Goodrich ..... 844 Trancamer - teh j 7 dargely 1510-25 on 260 Ib. several Goodyear yh oo Taent Cen broken bones. He is in fair condi- ieGreq No 1 to 3 mostly No 2 190-220 (rch Paice a catenecne tion with severe back bruises, au- Ib 1535-50, and a few. selected lots Gt No Ry 446 Un Carbide : . around 150 Ibe mostly No 1 and 2 G+ West 8 212 Un Pac thorities state. pneee weights 1565, a few lots ee Greyhound y Unit Atr Lin ‘ne x , Ib 1450-1500, and small lots 320-359 Gulf oi) ... 1282 Unit Aire 702 Castle reportedly was changing ; bh 1380-1428. larger lot sows up to Hersh Choc... 446 Unit Fruit 14 a light bulb when the fall occured greuna $80 Ib. IL 75-1278 with 400 Ib Holland P 177 Un Gas Cv Qe weights averaging around 12 75 Homestk 197 US Lines Phan at 7:45 a.m. in a hall of the office “‘gaiabie cattle 7.000: salable calves 400. Hooker Ei 445 Us Rubber 5 i afayve C steers and heifers mostiv steady. steers 71] Cent 08 1S Sire Sf ; building, 1 aLafayette St Sere paitered teicivcectizes CUMiyl antligaui: marie a2 MaesI Tob 14 aN commercial cows steady to weak: canners Ing Rand ... 644 Walgreen 5 Ee Cit E | t R roa and cutters fully steady balls sreadls te ineals con : ave wen ie ae 2 weak. vealers and stockers anc eeders Interlak Ir.,,. ; . ‘ ny mptoyes Oo kaise steady, m load mostly prime 1200 Th Int Hary 43 we i ok Be * steers 2300, a few loads and Iots high Int Nick ce ott . Funds at Area Fish Fry choice Sand mixed choice and prime ‘Int Paper a4 ¥ steers 21 00-22 00 bulk choice steers Int Bhs 2 SAT w The general public is invited to 1975-2000 load fot, mixed good an! Int Silver sei Y T 8 JAS Lo ERE choice grades 1875-1950. .most, good Int Tel & Tel ~277 Yo 8 eat as much as possible at a fish- grade steers 1875-1850: a load commer- seit Coal 43 ov net mae 4 ' celal 1.108 lb Holstein steers 1800, load Jacobs '' TFenith Rad 120 6 fry from 5 p.m. to 8 PO colt iba ihclteinn cee edo 1 morrow at the Mlaita Temple, 82 ots high choice and prime heifers 20 75- STOCK AVERAGES Perkins St tks 3/2050. Sood and chol-e heifers NEW YORK —iCompiied by the | > ave mos The City Muncipal Employes Assn. is sponsoring the event to raise funds for the employes’ news- paper and city hall cafeteria, Tickets available at the city hall and police station cost $1.25 for adults and $.75 for children un- der 12 Earnings NEW YORK (AP'—Panhancie Fax tern Pipe Lime Co reported today i! t income for the first three Ito “o 1954 rose to $5 816.648 equal a common share from $4 921 561 oi 4) a a share tn the vear-ago quarter ‘small ints mixed eold crop | ale cows 1100-1350: canners and cut r -11 78° most utility and commer- cial bulls 140-16 good and chelce vealers 2209-2600 cull to commerc!al grades 1200-11 00: good and rholce 575- $50 Ib feeding steers and yearlings 17 00- 2000, load chotce 924 Ib feeding steers 19 00 Salable sheep lambs sheep AO Slaughter activ®. unevenly 50 to 150 higher steady load good to mos&tly Ib shorn lambs No 1 and-2 pelt« 2450 ambes, A rs pelts 18 | lings 120-130 ib. No and 2 80-85 Mb mostiv rhotce sprite lambs 2800-2830 a few mostly prime 87 Ib averages 3090 soon fe low good spring lambs 23 00-2 to choice shorn siaughter rile "s 00- hp on Convention _ Highlights > Reviewed by VanDusen —— Meeting last night in Birming The Megnavoxr Co reports a t 4. mi ve . . » Da profit of 8864323, or $101 a share ‘or ham, Oakland County Young Re- the three months ended March 3! This publicans heard Seate Rep. Rich- compares with earnings of $477.7 or ic Vv . ' i 4 73 cents a share for the like period Aare an Dusen review hich- of last lights of the State Republican Con year NEW YORK ‘IN6'—American Sméiting and Refining Co yesterday repor income for the quarter ended March 31 of $11,267,732, equal to $161 a common share This compared with $8, O57, or $1.97 a common share, tn (thtesame pertod last year Revenues ine redsed to $161,930.204 from $137 se ous in” The initial three months of 1955 LOG ANGELES. |IN8S:—Monterer O11 Co. announced net income for the quatter ended Feb. 29 of $278,973, equal to 24 cents a common share «This compared With $331,008, or 21 common share, year Revenues from” $4648 249 in months of 1955 cents & to $4,851,303 three increased the jinitial Corp repotts for tt quarter ended March 2] a net prot a $1 339.336, or $5 cent. a share compares with 1055 first-quarter earn- ings of $1,238.176, or $2 cents a, share! The - Admiral vention alst weekend in Detroit gates at political conventions. The meeting was held at the home of Mrs. Lincoln Ave. Cobo to Open Campaign DETROIT Wo— Mayor Albert in the same period last E. Cobo is expected to open his cried.” campaign for the Republican nomination as governor Saturday. He has accepted an invitation to address the state convention of The ‘otal Young Republicans in the Hotel awagsee County /Olds at Lansing. tility’ and commet-rsociated Press : choice $1 , Betty Ellis, 2301 W. fy dust neve tt] Stocks 4 Net change 10, Noor day 184 7 132 1903 Prev day 4 $153 732 Awa Week ago 1 1596 711 1900 Month ago A 1445 164 1a9 0 Year ,auo 6 1332 T21 1627 1956 high 2°1572) 782 1915 1956 low 0 1290 716 1718 1955 high B j424 TS 7 1814 1955 low v1 Me 672 1488 Father will Testify in Son's Fatal Beating * OWOSSO iP — dren Dewitt is able to testify in his own defense in the fatal of-his 4-month-ald’sen during what police said was a fit of temper four weeks ago Two doctors testified Doctors say Le- heating * at a sanity ‘ed net and discuss responsibilities of dele- hearing in Circuit Court yesterday. However, they could not say wheth- er the 42-year-old Durand raijroad worker was sane at the time of the killing. They said. Dewitt ap- parently could nef remember de- tails of the actual sliving. Dewitt told authont child with a wrench “because he The baby’s mother and brother returned home from a° shopping tmp to find him dead in his. cradle Dewitt was remanded-to the Shi- Jail without bond to await trial on May J). ; ies he hit the ’ Company «an, WHICH SNATCHES HIM ALOFTD ’\Price Tag Still Top. = ‘but Must ‘Sell’ Drivers Ry PAVID J. WILKIE ‘optional equipment) with hus new AP Automotive Editor ‘ear, But the equipment mainly is DETROJT w—The average new of the comfort ahd. convenience ‘car buyer is interested in the auto |lYPe- ‘industry's newest safety features-+~qxa even after the belts have ‘but he is° moré ‘interested in the! over-all price tag on the car and! the trade-in allowance on his used) car. ; | * * @ | This is indicated in numerous in? {formal surveys regarding the de-| imand for the auto industry's latest | idevices designed to eurb highway | reluctant on the part of the car owner and his passengers to use them. This, some of the safety experts say, Is one of the major problems in their efforts to pro- mete safe car operation, These. experts say they can cite| fatal I ‘innumerable cases where seat’ ne 7 ; | oe itie dhe mee, ma belts have prevented serious in- jbelts, sa ety S00 a er vee jury. to car drivers and their, padding are among the major a jvances in safety design developed | lby the automakers.. passengers, But they can also cite | almost as many instances where ibelts installed in cars were not in luse at the time of a crash. BOOMER JOHN C. But, while there is increasing | | demand for the belts there has been no wild rush to have them installed either in new or old ears. ° Whether ‘lap belts alone provide the maximum of safety still is argued among ipdustry _ authorities. fome say to be Poll Optimistic stattacar'ss About Economy The safety’ experts -advocating! Experts Foresee No Dip’ in Employment, Sales for Last Half Elect New President — of Management Club Newly elected president of the American Forging and Socket) Management Club ‘is! John C’ Boomer George Richards is vice presi-| dent: Robert Koskela, secretary; | and Robert EF. Wuelfing, treasurer. | Harley Bodamer was the retiring seat belts say they reduce injury) president. The Management Club by preventing the motorist gr car) ‘is affiliated with the National Assn. passenger | from being — thrown) of Roremere \violently from his.seat and that) ithe unyi¢lding door locks even! ‘prevent him from being tossed out | he ¢ar industry's interest in to 135, 514 for Week lseat belts brought belt makers into the, market. In some re- spects the mushrooming of belt) mane Motor vehicle produc tion in the makers resembled the rush of early’ U. S. totaled 135,574 for “the week day car makers to get into pro- ending May 5, according to figures duction. | jover-al] business boom in 1956, the same time, than ever. the association reported. These organizations point out that! Pontiac's production for the week. belts attached only to. the seat | milion almost a for the week previous. General Mo- jing of the car offer little security. | | olay adorn fell 270,000 from) tors Truck produced 1,982, against They have to be fastened to the! March to 2,564,000 in April, 2,034 the week before. \frame or other part of the car that, will withstand the impact of any kind of a collision. *, Butch Comes Out Beyond this, however, the be leat Genre {fered by all car me 2 eer : Second Best i In aieied by ailicar makers stiltiare Industrial and commercial build- ‘Tussle With Cow sere motorist buss a tot of its Bit new record for Apri \peona! equipment items. The! 4 — March sales of manufac. struction during the January-April | Things won't be the same today around the Country View Inn, ae ~ Three Plead. Guilty Were running well ahead of a tiac Township, as “Butch,” year previously, year-old dachshund pet of owner 5 — Another report showed that to Food Violations ‘Auto Firms Stress Satay been bought there is considerable | WASHINGTON (UP) — cover |ment and business groups issued a Sat. morning 8 to 12. V hi | { Di ne alcr: series of optimistic reports yester-) e IC € Ou put ps never in a crash: ; ie which. bolster prospects of an! American Bl. Hills, May 11, 9-2. facturers were revealed to |have made more money last year) These were the major develop- more than in jreached 5,720, compared with 6.299, back or to the sheet metal floor-| March and a new record for April. | will be held at 1:30 p.m. Thursday jat the Baird Funeral Home, with 3 — Another Commerce-Labor| report found spending for new con-Albrecht, a lifelong resident of Ca- and the Lapeer area, died Its Period matched the record pace of ‘ode Cale jpecial communication of Roose- velt Lodge No. 510, F. & A. M., 22 State St; Thursday, May 10 at 71:30 p. m. E: Thomas, W. M. Special communication, Cedar | Lodgé No. 60, F. & A. M., Clarks- ton, Thurs, May 10, 7:30 p. m. Work in E. A. degree. Raymond Ruggles, W. M. —Adv. News in Brief A Lake Orion man paid fine and costs totaling $75 yesterday after pleading guilty to driving while! junder the influence of liquor. ‘James R. Wern, 43, was arraigned before, Justice Hetmar G. Stana-| ‘back, Orion Township. | damie EF. Ullmer, 25, of Walled Lake, was fined $25 and $15 in| costs for reckless driving Wednes- | \day. He pleaded guilty when ar- —Adv. A__ degree — Past, __. Masters to exemplify work. Arthur) gic? Woman Attacks Hers Stalled Car. OKLAHOMA OMA CITY @® — Police arrested Fanny. Stepney, 34, last night and reported, she attacked her car, The car stalled. * Officers od by-standers as ‘saying the woman tinkered under the hood several minutes, then lost ‘her temper, She! kicked the car, ‘beat on it with her fists, threw rocks at it. One witness, the officers report- ‘ed, said she threw rocks at him when he ciated ele ¥ The car was eat damaged— ‘headlights smashed, battery cracked, hood battered. , The formal charge on the docket is drunkenness, ooo ‘raigned before Justice Herm [Roth of Walled Lake. ‘Students Sell Principal | A $%5 radio was reported stolen |yesterday from a home at 76% Hess St., Pontiac police said. The veport was made by Robert Gill, /of that address, who said a man’s suit also was missing, police added. Vandals reportedly broke 15 windows last night at Jefferson Junior High School, 600 Motor St., “Pontiac Police said. tional Church, Fri, 6 to 8 p. m. —Ady, Rummage sale. Kirk in the Hills, | (Lake Hourse), W. Long Lk. Rd., —Adv. bail. Ph. PE 5-9424 or MA 5-4031. —Adv Do you have a carpet problem? Rummage sale, First (Congrega- If your friend's in jail and needs ‘to the Highest Bidder NEW LOTHROP uw — At nine cents a pound, Alfred Bowyer, 210- pound principal at New Lothrop High School, is worth $18.90. That's the price he brought at a “slave sale,"’ strictly legal, that raised $131 for the annual spring trip of the senior class. Escorted by the high school band, Bowyer and prominent mem- bers of the senior class shackled and led through New Lothrop’s main street before they |were auctioned off to villagers. Each ‘slave’ then worked eight hours at various tasks for the per- /son who bought him, I. 1955 mK. PUBLIC ALS N be i ir Number Koy ped Sale to be held at 10:30 M., May 21, 1986 at 48 W. *y | ree Pontiac, Michigan LAPEER — Service for Mrs. /Paul H. (Diana L.) Albrecht, 82, bur rial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Mrs. | pac |Monday night. daughter, Mrs. Samuel Sly of La- peer; three sons, Howard and Wil- liam of Lapeer and Gus of Flint; a brother, William Simpson, and turers, wholesalers and retailers | q sister, Mrs. ‘Mae Perkins, both of 16 grandchildren and 29 | | Lapeer: | great-grandchildren. Mrs, Joel F. Close She leaves her husband; a released today by the Automobile) ments: May 9, 10, ‘36 Manufacturers Assn. An estimate of the number of 1 — AUR Cuaiuber of © Call Tuson Carpet Serv. FE 5-8103. | aan a General Motors ‘passenger éar} Safety belt makers now in buni- ~ nih ce saa —AdV.| tie Township. of Watertord, | County . . = ; " merce poll of 404 delegates at its ; . of Gatland, State of Michigan, output for the period was pegged), ness puts the total at around 100. annual. meeting here last week | N@¥Y Mothers’ rummage sale. | ORDA 55,986, compared with 66,024 for/ And tests made by various . . 98 W. Huron. — The tollowing smendment to the Wa- at 30,986, pared h 4 for; Adv. : | { showed at least two-thirds ex- ferford Township Building Code ‘the previous week, Other totals; agencies showed that more than t lhok ad enles fark ‘ : r Ordinance No 26. American Motors, 1.59%: Chrysler| half of the belts produced tailed { PCct Jobs and sales during ¢ Rummage sale. Youth Center,| Amend section oper obey erican Motors, 1,0 rysler| last haif_of 1956 to be as good as Lake Orion, Fri. and Sat. —Adv.| "rom, Before building permit te Corp., 18,355: Ford Motor Co., 4,-| 1@ seme respects to. meet the | OO che | ficat *|tasued” the ‘following “tees. shail be pald 316; and Studebaker - Packard) ™inimum strength or installation ca —— ee ee shal ae eneaitan " csieatan poses Corp., 2.183. | requiretnents recommended by | "lf. | Count Deaths of the “work as determined by the ‘in. All-were decreases in compari-| the auto driving safety organ. | 2 — The Commerce and Labor) y ~~ standard prices. sical son with the week ending April 28,| ations. ‘departments reported 63;990,000/ Mrs. Paul H, Albrecht De to a1. eee Cost oer ” - |persons were employed last month, $1,000 to $500, ' oe " i,600 lee plus per vaiue- tion or fraction is over $1,000. . . $500,000 to $1,500,000 ...........,. The above fees jus §=6§90.50 per $1,000. over }, 000. ° $5.00 per first 1,000 square of floor area or fraction thereof. pias, 90.50 po ieee each additional 500 square men Before a building emit fa eps following fees sha hall be id to Building Inspector. @uch fees shall be based on the estimated cost of the work as determined by the a shall be based on curren prices. ete Cost seeeeerteeess 00 Up $1,000 00.,...., si, 00 t to #100, G00 ton $1.50. per “pi,006 "value - ion or fraction thereof ever Charles Nuzi was kille oster- A es ee brn swan Milled yestes 8, manufacturing corporations) WATERFORD © TOWNSHIP. = Hoeie tees plus.‘ $1.00 we ade $15.1 billi sy, ; 1 . Butch” was butted by one of Owners of three city establish- ee baa hae ts an pe yer a ee shag es aia thereof [ire cows 6n the inn property while ments yesterday pleaded guilty to, One cautioning note came from! | ge. a re fh © J af eros Pl a plus $6.80 fae uzum .stood a short distance charges of violation of state food! W. Randolph Burgess, _under-|neral Home, Hambu 7. hae Her over 4 riod fraction thereof away. laws at arraignment before Pon-| The pet was known by all the tiac Municipal Judge Maurice E.| customers of the inn as a con-, Finnegan, stant companion of Nuzum and a! Louis Savas, charged with un watchdog of the building, sanitary conditions in his restau- ‘secretary of the Treasury. ‘disturbingly’ Broken-hearted Nuzum, a bach- rant at 554 N.»+Perry St.. was ‘lor, had funvral serviées, com- fined $100 and sentenced to 30 days, oigsshich hens tion s s capable: plete with casket, this afternoon in jail. Finnegan commuted the for “Butch.” |Jail sentence and ordered Savas to| Business h Notes. —- close his restaurant and. improve Congress Adjournment ithe conditions before feopening. Sam Cobitz paid a $25 fine. He 9 John L, ier: a has been ap- Expected on July 15 was charged with selling apples in pointed manager of WASHINGTON (INS) — Repub- unmarked crates at his grocery sales for Detrvit by lican congressional. leaders have at 254 E. Pike St._ of the told President Eisenhower they Robert FE. Mount pleaded guilty ways, think Congress can wind up its lo unsanitary conditions in es and adjourn by July 15 bakery at 432 Orchard Lake > Both parties are anxious for an Finnegan deferred sentence early adjournment because of the Monday ~ ‘election ¢: ampaign which officially The gets ander way nominating conventions. Smith Jr, of Green Bay, year Was hanored his ager J.P. Ave.” A native until Hartl last the Wis., charges were brought fc a peter in national competition. Wu? Disneys True Life Adventures DUEL THe VERVET MONKEY: IS FAIR GAME FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN i | CROWNED EAGLE IN THE ENSUING AIRBORNE “TUSSLE , THE MONKEY CAN ; INFLICT ‘A MORTAL BITE--, --BUT HE STILL LOSES. “4 oan Walt Disney Pre ts World Kights ee d a AY air CATROMA y 'y sales officials | a %an American World Air- according to District Man-, by” W ATERFORD Market) Research Council of Se by New York when a marteting sur- ‘of 4362 Lotus Dr., will be held at with the August-James McCollum, Michigan state vey he submitted won first place 10:30 a.m, Thursday at the Pursley with ayempudg sounjray fury bg panna NS. S \body will li@ in-state at the Melvin He said Americans are saving-a A Schutt Funeral Home, Pontiac, same proportion of tonight, ahd be taken to Arkansas {2,°° their incomes, net quite enough to tomorrow, | Mrs. Close leaves her husband; ja daughter, Mrs. E. J. Williams of |Pontiac; a son, Marvin Choate of|___ five sisters, | Jacksonville, N.C.; iMrs. W endelin Braunagel and Mrs. Sarah Milhgy of Pontiac, Mrs, R. F. Shaw, Mrs, O, E, Emory and Walker of Arkansas ;and four brothers, A. M. Shockley, Shockley, John and Jackson Dele | Shockley: all of Arkansas, (ialbraith L, Miller ‘rvice for Galbraith L. Miller, 60, Funeral Home, Pontiac, iburial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. -He died suddenly Monday at his home, Mr. Miller leaves his mother, Mrs. Mortimer Cooper, at home. Ernest E. Hayes COMMERCE—Service for Ernest KE. Hayes, 58, of 9644 Belleterre, Detroit, a former Commerce resi- dent, ail be held at 1 p.m. Friday | at the Richardson - Bird Chapel, Walled Lake, meree Cemetery, He died Tuesday | at his home after a long illness. | Mr, Hayes ‘leaves his wife, Le- nora; two sons, Ben and Aft Cis- zewski of Niagara Falls, N. Y.: ‘a sister, Mrs. Cressie Salviano of | St. Louis, Mo.; children, | Arthur Gartield Hammond | LAKE ORION — Service for Ar-| /y thur Garfield Hammond, 78, of 28 | E. Flint St. Saturday Home, Cemetery, He died suddenly Tues- | day. Ile leaves two daughters, Mrs. ; {Les F. Stone Sr. and Mrs. George HH. Kingston: 11 grande hildren and 21 great-grandchildgen, Rejected ‘Witness’ Knocks, but in Vain A “disfellowshipped”” member of “the Jehavah's Witnesses failed in his attempt to attend a meeting in , will be-held at 11 a.m. from Allen's Funeral ,;Drayton Plains’ Kingdom Hall ee nght Chester Waugh, of 53 Newbery, St., whose injunction against the church's leaders was dismissed Monday, said the door was locked 'when he tried to attend a book study meeting, although at least lone person peered at him from a | window, he said, . Waugh charged in a recent suit lenterinethe church. A temporary injunction restraining leaders from keeping Waugh out was lifted Mon-| |day, She died Wednesday finance the rapid economic growth after a six-week lillness, : TOWNSHIP —| and four grand- with burial in Evergreen’ of Lake Orion Kiteley of , ‘that the pastor and congregation: , |had conspired to prevent him from olition Fees s5.00 ied first 1.000 square feet of floor area or fraction thereof, plus per each additional 600 square The above stated amendment is here- by eee, es be effective immediately u publicat — Waterford Township Board LOUIS G. BARRY, Waterford Township Clerk May 8, ‘sé. ee, Rh BIDS ‘d of beep wo of the School us Pontiac, Michigan lor bs oobe pe | on the Educa- The B District a he cit will receive Bids following Schools and Board of tion Garage GARAG Reconstruct rear wall, new doors and window BALDWIN- “Rehabilitation of : Toilet Rooms and. adjacent areas and installae Hon of a Gas. fired Hot Water ee WISNER—J of 2 Toilet Rooms. LONGPELLOW—Removel of a present ‘partition and construction of a new partition, BAGLEY—Construction of an addie tional means of egress from the Gym- hasium : ” — Fioo OWEN—Construction of means of egress from the nd Board of Education, 49 Patterson Street, Pager) es at 3 p.m, on Tuesday, ay Bidders ‘will be oe to furnish satisfactory Performance Labor and Material Bonds in the full’ amount of ‘the Contract. All Bids submitted —_ remain firm for a period of 30 day An acceptable Bid Bona or ee check In the amount of 6% amount of the Bid must cacomeany: sean Bid submitted. Plans and Specifications for the above may be obtained on or after Thursday, May 10, 1956 at the office of the Archi- tect, Wm C Zimmermann Associates, with burial in Com.| os ‘W. Huren Street, Pontiac, Michigar nd also will be on file at the Detroit | Offices of F ge Co |Butiders’ and Traders’ Exchange. ; The Board of Education erves the right to reject any or ail bids, and ee ‘waive formalities theretn. BOARD OF EDUCATION of the School District of the City of Pontiac, Mich, LOLA B Ales retary, May 8, wi 10, 198 F COMPLETE | "AUTO INSURANCE | Crawford Dawe-Grove Insurance of All Kinds 710 Pontise St. Bk. Bldg. "Ph. FE 268357 were | Ne THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY_9, 1956 | | a } | ‘New Drug Relieves Bronchial Asthma © - o : NEW: YORK «—A new drug Iooks promising for relief of bron- chial asthma, and also for relief of the premenstrual tension affect- ing many women every month, a medical team reports. The drug, choline theophyllinate, js described in an exhibit at the annual meeting of the New York State Medical Society. It relieved bronchial asthma in 2? of 33 patients, and brought com plete to moderate relief of monthly tension in 31 out of 43: women, said Doctors Herbert S,. Kupper- man, Sidney Dann, Frederick R_ Rrown and Arthur C. Degraff, and Gagliani, Ph.D., of New York Uni- versity, Bellevue Medical Cente GOP Warning Sign Faces Speaker Adlai ALBANY. Calif. uw — A_ larg: sign on the roof of an auto, re pair shop looked down on Demo cratic presidential contender Ad- jaj Stevenson in a speech at the | a ca ie a i ; NEITHER RAIN NOR FLOOD SHALL STAY THEM — As far as Sally and Chfford Glen are concerned, th® mail will go through, Apparently they feel that if the post office department can deliver in the wake of a three-inch rainstorm that flooded Dallas residential the least these youngsters can do uw “break out the rubber ip 2 . aceas boa! and collect it.” Aiea Freedom Movement last . D February by Nancy Keefe of Bil- he s Widow Sues octors lerica, mother of a son, born after It read her husband's death July 3, 1955. “Careful what you say. Adlai for Incompetence John S Keefe, 27, who. served This side of the street is good both in the Navy and the Army Republican territory CAMBRIDGE, Mass. ue—A 22. on different hitches, died of ure- _—— year-old widow has filed a $250,000 "4 less than two months after a : : . ; ~ ~ tumor operation, ad Dies in Dallas ; it aeais tien u Quad Dies ewil suit against’ two dectors superior Court officials said the DALLAS —Melanie Kay Hun- charging they removed her hus- doctors’ names are not privileged for until judicial notice taken of the suit fer, one of the quadruplet daugh- bands mght kidney without know Use is ters born to Mr. and Mrs. George ing he had no left kidne) A. Hunter May 1, died last night * 8 Earlier today all four had been A_ Boston reported doing well in incubators. yesterday the suit firm disclosed) Pneumonia still kills about 45,000 was filed last Americans a yea law Youte never too far away to remember Mother Say it with Flowers -By-Wire That's the gift she really wants on Mother's Day. Flowers say all the things to her that she wants to hear. And when old frends at home dropin, she can unashamedly dis- play the affection with which she is held by her family. It’s so easy to do. Just phone or visit your F.T. D. Florist: He guarantees fast delivery anywhere in the world. This year... say it with Flowers-By-Wire. “hoetey c=) ‘ . Dae Phone or Visit ae F ornty tT. egraoh DB. tery Arsoctation Heodavetes. Detrot M chigan SE _ PHONE PEARCE’S, FE 2-0127 : Hlowers for Every Occasion PEARCE FLORAL CO. Flowers for Every Occasion Delivered Anywhere in the World 559 Orchard Lake Ave. anes TS SSE EE aw ae aan . | SEND FLOWERS-BY-WIRE | ea JACOBSEN’S FLOWERS Greenhouses and Retajl Store at Lake Orion 101 North Saginaw * Ph. FE 3-7165 _ problem” of manpower failure,” |Dr. Edward C, Holmblad of Chi- ‘cago said here last night. Industry Must Face Manpower Failure tor of’ the © Industrial OKLAHOMA CITY w — The “sn ‘old delegates at the Oxia: : ‘homa State Medical Assn. conven- tion that physicians are concen- eal failure and now faces ‘the trating more and moré on ‘pre- Medical world is past the age of mechani- Dr; Holmblad, managing direc-| y _ventive health, He said, “It is‘one connection with a 2-car accident: quam place where we are trying to work, The driver of one of the cars—| ‘ourselves out of a job.” | Manuel L. Souza, 187 Smith St.f . UNITED t ere eemerennme An injured party — Manuel L.| , It’s Day to Remember Souza, 187 Smith St. i SHIRT | Wi tioned — } ‘ for Manuel L. Souzes {ace i Beau St. , Manuel __- Distributors | FALL RIVER, Mass. Police} They are different parties, three |. Oewatews oid at Tel-Huren irecords today had this notation in' generations ofa family. dramatically modern Harmony House 3-piece bedroom if not specially purchased our price would have to be $219! SU Stnking drawer pulis and subtle titours ad ainusual imtorest to this’ « >I) ry bedr 1 "group ply hardwood ver we firushed in popular limed oak. coler. Tops, fronts and ends of all ;1°-es are handrubhed 19 a@ satiny luster for long lasing beauty. All drawers are d proofed and center-guided to cpel S during this salel 29.95 Mattress, Bed Spring 19* Harmony House Quality Now at spe matching 63 « comfort. Felted : > saving button tujting Twin Size ial purchase savings! 180 coil mattress and oil box spring built for years of sleeping ¥ } padding, firrn relled edge, cotton shape- ke Space-Saving Arrangements With Versatile Beds Three-Way Beds 88 $8 Down @ Regularly $99 @ With Mattresses @ Smart New Styling House 39-inch beds can be used as.bunk bed, twin beds oc trundie bed. fern black finished angle iron a ae clive headbéeards. Solid round guard rails, angle iron ladder and four casters. ‘ ~ Harmony ny 7 = ZMORE SAV — —— INGS=" SPECIALS “so” ™ — 7 MORE ite 188 Double Dresser, 4-Dr. Chest. Panel Bed. Use Sears Easy Payment Plan MATCHING PIECES bookcase bed $62 triple dresser $127 night stand $34 e Folding Carriage Durable Plastic Fabric 3-Pc. Modern Suite 133 « Hi Honeysuckle 29,95 Designed for Modern Homes —sg34, pown = at Modern black wrought iron coil spring sofa bed, arm oe . oS ae ee chair and shredded foam padded circle cocktail chair Padded he | chrome pla: With cotton tweed cover in your choice of colors. See ed handle Brake it now—save more! » oe Are Con Aoptn aie SOLO ONLY ay SEARS. ®OFBUCK AND CO. YOUR CHOICE of 5 Harmony House Colors Sale! 2-Piece Modern ‘Suites - oie Sa Come to Sears for furniture! Your choice af construction Slant-Arm Style Regularly Priced at. $169 mohair’ frieze fabric in Spice Beige, Dawn Gray, S155 plus | Cherry Red, Ming Blue or. Mint Green! Made to compli: Only $16; Down e ment your surroundings. Save now! Furniture Dept.—Second Floor 154 North Saginaw Street i Section guna on ous mony Gach SEARS Phone FE 5-4171 h , E) x