The Weather Scattered Showers Details page two - 113th YEAR ce GM believed PONTIAC, — MIC HIGAN, W iE DN ESD, AY, IU NE 8 , 1955 —44 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNI PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE THE PONTIAC PRESSE OVER TED 7 Preparing Fresh Offer Public Housing ‘ Measure Gets sateAppol Democrat Bill to Cost) Four Times What Ike Asked Originally WASHINGTON i? — A Democratic move toward construction of public hous- | ing at a rate almost four times as great as that Presi- | dent Eisenhower recom-| mended topped its first big hurdle yesterday. As part of an omnibus bill | to continue federal housing programs for another year, ' the Senate voted to author- ize 135,00C low-rent public , housing units in each of the] next four years. Eisenhower had asked authority for} 35,000 units for each of the| next two years. That is the, number authorized this! year ‘ The federal government does not { binld public housing projects It guarantees to meet the difference? between the lew renis charged How Michigan Voted WASHINGTON um—Sen. MeNa mara ‘D-Mich voted with the majority. on the housing bill. Sen Potter 'R-Mich.) was absent tenants and the cost of paying off morgages and upkeep Actual construction money is raised by bonds issued by local housing authorities The 540,000-unit program still hag an obstacle-studded path ahead. The GOP fight for the smaller adminstration figure will undoubtedy be resumed in the House. And the actual funds will be voted in a separate appro- priations bill. In the past, the appropriations committees have frequently recommended funds for far fewer units than are authorized. The Senate housing bill. passed 6025, provides also for four billion dollars in additional authority for the insurance of private home mortgages hy the Federal Housing Administration The present ceil- ing of $2.500 on home improve ment loans would be raised to $3.400 Other provisions include 1. Nearly 1'2 bilhon dollars in FHA insurance authority to launch a military housing program. the umts to be owned and operated by the armen services for lease to some 100.000 marned servicemen 2. A new public houstng pro- gram of 10.000 units a vear for elderly persons 3. A WOmillion-doliar direct-7 Inan fo ease a shortage of housing for college stidents. Colleges could borrow if private financing was unavailable. 4. A 2>milion-dollar loan insur ance program by the Farmers Home Administration and 190 mil- lion dollars: in new money for di- rect loans for farm housing 5. A %- million - dollar smoke ahatement program. Solunar Tables Start Today in Pontiac Press Today, 7" af the Pon- on page 33 tiae Press Sports Section. will be found a new, and = authoritative fishing and game guide. Prepared hy the creator of the tables, John Alden Knight. these tables will ap- pear each Wednesday in the Pon- tiac Press Sports Section Out- doors page. Knight, confirmed believer in the effect of the moon on plant growth, animal and fish behavior and the weather, has prepared these ta- bles especially for this area. Watch for the weekly Solunar Tables in the Pentiac Press Sports pages. Troy, Southfield Voters Approve Incorporation Residents in Troy and Southfield | townships approved incorporation of their areas yesterday. - Charter, commissi were elected in both CTE to pre- | pare charters for submission: at a later day. ‘Madison Heights, of Royal Oak : Township, voters turned down a' city charter, and Bingham’ Farms | ot Southfield Township, residepts | approved incorporating as a vil- ‘lage. For Ch ake details. * gee | | partial work stoppages reported at nearly al _an-hour increase, _orders and the pleas of Loca President Sports, New Spring Homburg FASHION NOTE — Wearing a blue straw hom- participating in burg with an off-white mbbon. President Fisenhower exercise He we leaves the U.S Military Academy yesterday after blue shirt Ford Production Reorcd by Unauthorized Walkouts DETROIT (|? — Wildcat strikes continued to push Ford production curves down today. with complete o1 1 of the huge company's operations Skilled workers, who had demanded a flat led the walkouts in defiance 1 600 President Carl! Stellato Stellato, who. shattered precedent by praising UAW- 30-cents- of union + Britain Pushing to End Walkout Nation Now in Crisis Due to Short Supply From Rail. Strike CIO President Walter Reu- ther, was booed by Ford workers at a.meeting in the Local 600 hall vesterdav | The union membersh p refused ta listen ta Stellato’s hack-to-wark arguments, and the local president walked ott after hecklers kept Interrupting him A complete shutdown of Ford's LONDON oh — Efforts end to ; operations was forecast unless Britain's paralyzing railway strike iheriatriking limeaticeiuracd! ie moved into high gear today as the nation’s booming industry ap- , their jobs soon, proached a ‘crisis weekend” of Most serious was. the walkout short supplies of tool and die workers main- Sir Brian Robertson, chairman tenance crews and. skilled crafts of the British Transport Commis- men in Ford's giant Rouge plant sion which runs the state-owned at nearby Dearborn, said to be the railways agreed to meet leaders single largest production facilits of the 67.000 striking locomotive in the world engineers and firemen for the first A prolonged strike at the Pouge time since the walkout began 11 plant could halt all Ford produc days ago . tion, since the sprawling. factors Other steps aimed at ending 'S 2 Mase supplier of parts to the costly strike on the basis of other plants a compromise peace plan The tool and die workers. defy- framed by the giant Trades ‘ing local umion leaders who sought Union Congress Executive, the '0 Persuade them to accept the top union authority, advanced Ford settlement terms, com- rapidly, plained the Ford contract pro- . vided.too little for them in wage Leaders of the TUC, with which jn¢oreases. nearly all British unions are af- _ ; filiated, called on Labor Minister They pooh-poohed wage hikes Sir Walter Monckton to urge gov- of & to 18 cents an hour, plus ernment acceptance of the peace ee annual “improve- icmula. which would get wage) Smt Tarnes Of © conta iam Rear, They said they wanted a 30-cent talks. going while the strike still is on. The government so far has raise. refused to negotiate “under Skilled workers have been get- duress."’ ting a base pay of around $2.50 Afterward, TUC Chairman an hour compared with the aver- Charles Geddes told reporters age hourly wage of $2.19 in the “there appears to be prospect of auto industry. Their craft are lit- some progress being made.”’ Sir tle affected hy layoffs and. they Walter then hurried off, to see felt the Ford package benefitted Prime Minister Eden. them least. About a thousand of the re-| belling tool workers voted unani- mously to strike and threw pick- SPARE CASH... job of finding buyers. This one brought over a dozen cash buvers the first day. What have you to sell, rent, trade or want to buy? Try a Want Ad, they get results FAST! work at the Rouge plant. Other Ford plants at Monroe, + Mich., St, Louis,-Kansas Gity and some due 4o local grievances. . Reds Rent Mansion SAN FRANCISCO ®—The Rus- sian delegation to the June 20 ‘United Nations conference here /has rented a secluded suburban | | mansion with a, screen of tall trees bot ‘insure sig? ‘For ‘a reported | MeNeil, a 28 FT. EXTENSION LADDER, Pulleys and rope. $18 Daven- ; port, chair, with slip covers, ee To Place Your Want Ad ' DIAL FE 2-8181. Just ask for the | | WANT A AD pert see eas masaats fer ive wesin! he oe leaker Ger hence veo a »sf ets around the Rouge plant, keep- is quickly gotten for unused ing out production workers. Neg articles when a Pontiac ly 50,000. or more than a third of Press Want Ad is given the Ford's. over-all 140.000 employes, | Buffalo also were hit by walkouts, | UAW Urges Men to Return to Work By ASSOCIATED PRESS Wildcat strikers picketed two more Genera}! Motors plants tn Cleveland today affecting ap | proximately 15.000 of the firm's 20,000 employes in this area * * * Officials of the CIO United Auto Workers said the walkouts were unauthorized and urged that mem bers return to their jobs Picketed last night were Fisher Body's Coit road plant and its sta tion wagon plant at nearby Fuchd Fisher Body is a division of GM 7,000 NOT WORKING The first strike was in Parma where some 7.000 did not work yesterday in the Chevrolet -Cleve | kand installation Harry Schwartz, vice president of the umon local at the Chevrolet Cleveland works declared the walkout there had “nothing to do with national negotiations’ being held in Detroit between the union and GM Neither the union or the com- pany would comment en the strike, at the two Fisher Body plants. Signs were shown hy station wagon emploves. however pro testing ‘working conditions de manding 10-minute rest breaks and contending there had been a speedup Pickets also halted production today at two of the six General Motors plants in New Jerseys ial AP Wirephote ing 4290 CUKGES) n what both Tune Week graduation and reumon company and CIO spokesmen ; called unauthorized strikes we a dark blue sit with a light IDLED FACTORIES The idled plants were the Mdsmobile and Pontiac Ruck assembh site in Linden and the Deleo hatter, factory in New Brunswick According to the strkers, the Linden walkout was a protest over the extension of the national Gen | n eral Motorg contract from last midnight to Sunday midnight However, the company spokes man said today the, dispute cen- tered around an agreement con- Wage Increase Demand Carried to Bethlehem, cerning rotating shifts. Republic Steel Makers Wildeat strikers at Fisher Bods Division in Cinemnati today were ~PITTSBI ROL oP The CTO 1 t ordered back to work of face dis ed Steelworkers Union carried its demands fer a siszeahle wage in C ti d Rain crease te Iwo more of the nation s on Inue largest be teel producers today | oe t Tod largest hasic steri producers today. FQrecast Today, limon President David Jo MeDon ald continued in personal charze of Th ursday Here 1 otpat < he LSM Wetight DE RENAL, ek HP AS a ib The rains came” to Pontiac ihe 4 : aa SAT Par f | : Its wage requests before officials \tonday and will continue through of Bethlehem Steel Corp. and the out the meht and Thursday in the Republic Steel Carp form of scattered showers. accord Bethlehem and Reput re the Ing to the latest report of the US Als . mh nation's second and third dargest Weather Bureat stecl makers respectively Though no fecords have been The demands being made of broken, the description of them are the same as those Me- city terrain has changed from Donald presented yesterday in parched to drenched following the opening of steel wage talks — the fall of .70 of an inch of rain with U.S. Steel Corp., the na- since the first of the week. tion's largest prodacer. Sessions — Forecasters Sat net omueh with others of the “big six.” whe 0 change jn temperature’ will ac- employe about two thirds of the eampanythe showers” Tomorrow's 600.000 basic steel-workers, are nected h wh is 7 decrees slated for tomorrow and Friday. Taday line mercir. dauntown McDonald hasnt announeed the seemed ghied toa the 62 degree USW demands but e@bservers sax mark which it hit at & am. and they amount to approximately 25 where it remained at 1 pom. Low cents an hour more than present before & o clock was 6 dégrees average earnings of $2.0 an hows The negotiations are jimited. unde: They Had a Ball a reopening clause in a two veai contract signed last June. to ware TORONTO, Ont t®—Twun genial rates only. That bars demands for hosts were sentenced to a vear a guaranteed annual wage. in jail vesterday. James R. Nebhbs, * * “ 22 and George Coates. 19. pleaded The same observers predict that guilty to stealing 1) bottles of the final settlement with the robust wine 4 cases of beer. pounds stecl industry will be for about 1212) of butrer, 133 e:rzars and 4 chick- cents More an her . ens from an inn, They said thes The union will be free to strike carted the goods off in’ a. truck June 30 1f an agreement is not and then-— invited friends for a reac hed hy then U. of M. __Patly. | [hale Meenapndlondeere) Seema * strike morning missal. Some of the night walked off the job last night Local officials of the ClO-United Auto Workers termed the walkout unauthorized. Company _ officials shut down the body and adjoining ‘ Chevrolet plant after the men walked out and milled around the streets crew IN ST. LOUIS, TOO In St Lous, employes of the Body Fisher and Chevrolet plants Wildcat Strikes Erupt in GM Plants Across Country, Affecting Thousands stayed away from their jobs today despite union orders to return to work Pickets remained at the two plants in northwest St. Louis and about 1,500 men, members of the day shift, stood outside, refusing to cross the lines. The strike was unauthorized and resulted from a misunderstanding among members strike dead! me over a Solons Tackling Problem of Government Pay Boost WASHINGTON ‘(?—A House committee takes up to- day the question of pay raises for rank-and-file govern- ment workers with some sig White House A compromise bill to hik workers an average of 8 per was sent to President Eisenhower yesterday, ns of new friction with the e the pay of 500.000 postal cent retroactive to March 1 ending a long tussle in which he vetoed a somewhat larger boost. + Longshoremen Postpone Strike Schedule Talks Today on New Contract for Three Unions AFL ‘again to reach with lakes Dredgemen's dispute that DETROIT uh longshoremen s Three try unions today a settlement (;reat nial up the lakes the . Assn contract could the almost all on re scheduled today But meeting the Mediation another The three unions we to strike at 6 am yesterday at a with Conciliation and they agreed meeting today and moved hackk t deadline until tomorrow rs OS Service to The unions involved are the Tughboat Firemen and Oilers, the Rock and Drillboat Employes and the Dreadgemen's Protective Assn. Together, they have 5060 to 600 members. Five Jongshoremen's on iginally were involved in negotia tions with the Great Lakes Dredge- Assn. which = represents some 60 companies. Two the Tugmen’s Protectwwe Assn. and the Crane and Dredge F:ngineers have accepted a package wage of- fer Imians mens The companies have offered a package valued at ll'2 cents an hour, including 9 cents in wages Umon demands have not been, specified A spokesman for the mediation service said members of the three inions now average “well over’ two dollars an hour Members of some of the unions are salaried Set Alcohol Funds LANSING \P—The State Board of Alcoholism has alloted $48.732 for re education and treat- ment TR in alcoholism. esearch, Visits Hatoyama . | TOKYO op—U Sen, Earl C, Clements (D a called on Prime _Mini ster Ichiro Hatoyarma today, shipping The House Post Office and Civil Service Committee goes behind chosed doors to- day to try to agree on the amount of the raise to be given the million-odd classi- fied civil service employes. The asked 5 per cent. But since his clash with Congress over postal pay hikes, he has been represented by some interested congressmen as willing to go as high as 7 per cent President originally for ‘Even before Senate and House completed action on the postal bill, some demands were sound- ed for no less an increase than that accorded the postmen — a flat & per cent. for Other members of Congress. how- "UAW Confident of Agreement Before Sunday Both General Motors and Ford Plagued by Wildcat Strikes DETROIT (# — General Motors Corp. today was be- lieved readying a fresh offer the CIO United Auto Workers aimed at reaching a contract settlement before new Sunday midnight Strike deadline. Nobody at GM would say so but UAW officials said they fully anticipated a new offer. The never day night last night to midmght Sun- day unless they felt GM was ready to do business along the lines of the recent Ford Motor Co. agree- ment including a guaranteed wage plan. GM requested the extension. With the-GM bargaining talks scheduled to resume at midday, both GM and Ford were plagued with a series of scattered wild- cat strikes in plants across the nation. There was hittle doubt in Detroit that GM faced the alternative on one hand of coming up with a guaranteed wage plan like that at Ford, or some other type of system to provide workers continued in- _come while unemployed, and on the other with a certain strike. RAISES EXPECTED Any GM settlement also was ex- pected to include wage increases, pension plan boosts, and holiday | and vacation improveménts similar to those agreed upon by Ford. The UAW also expected to insist upon a contract running not longer than three vears as at Ford. ~ union leaders said they would have granted a five- contract extension from mid-— ever, contend justice calls for a UAW officials were openly opfti- smaller boost for the civil serv- miu&tic that they would win a satis- ice workers. since the basic postal factory GM agreement before the increase \8 6 per cent. The other Sunday night strike deadline. portion of the average & per cent . . ae hike is accounted for by a major John W. Livingston, UAW vice an : . president in charge of the reclassification of pay schedules a" , union's GM Department, said: similar to requirements long in ef- fect for civil service workers. Area. Authorities Join in Search for Detroit Girl Oakland County Pontiac Police this morning joined Girl who is apparently lost some- authorities and in a search for ai “tiny” Scout, where between Detroit and Pontiac. According to Detroit Police, who requested Pontiac and Oak- land law officers to join in the search, the girl, Dorothy Jean Kaufman, was trying to earn her Girl Sceut merit badge by walking from Detroit te Pontiac. The little 12-vear-old scout was last seen late Tuesday by a broth- er and sister. The child's mother natified pol- ice early vesterday after her ‘daughter had failed ta come home last Kaufman said daughter s school, and officials there reported the seventh-grader had not attended classes all day Tuesday The girl is described as. ‘tiny for her age’ ahout 4-feet I@inches 80 pounds and has dark hair and eves When last seen, Dorothy was wearing a white blouse and blue par) night. Mrs she called her brown . Dedicates New Atomic Research Laboratory ¢ Phoenix ed Cb., to house a nuclear reactor, ie nmr oaarecon “There is every indication at this point in negotiations that, given suf- ficient time for further bargaining, ‘a peaceful settlement of. the con- tract with General Motors that is just and honorable can be achieved There was speculation that GM might come up with a plan pro- viding continued income for unem- ployed workers varying considera- bly from that negotiated with Ford, The ford ptan calls for a 55-mil- lion-dollar fund to pay idled work- ers 60 to 65 per cent of normal income, including state unemploy- ment compensation benefits. French to Talk With Molotov Soviet Foreign Minister Stopping in Paris for Luncheon Meeting PARIS uw—-The French will have talk with Soviet. M. Molotov tomorrow about the Russian in- vitation to Chancellor Konrad Adenauer te visit Moscow. Premier Edgar Faure and For- eign Minister Antoine Pinay are to be hosts at a luncheon to Molotov, who will stop here on his way to the United States to at- tend the United Nations com. | memorative session in San Fran- -cisea June 20-26, Diplomatic observers said they are sure both the invitation fo the 79-year-old West German leader and the projected top-level Big Four conference will come up for discussion. The United States, a chance to Foreign Minister V. Britain and Big Four parley be held in i Geneva July 18-21. | Ahd in London the ‘British For- leign Office made it clear today | Adenauer is barred by agreements with the Western powers from negotiating with Russia either to reunite Germany or to conclude a peace treaty. County News. ee csseeueege | we “a eee Ceneenen eee Cee a pha Theaters: France have proposed that the . In Today's Press” | ~ Halted by City Buena Vista Subdivision Contractor Told to, Improve Streets ne City Commission last night passed a resciution stopping is- | suance ef any more building per- mits fer home construction in Buena Vista Subdivision until the contractor brings streets to city- accepted standards Residents of the subdivision lis ing on Strathmore and Fairmont Avenues spoke in favor of the move saying the streets are impassable following rain and the contractor's agreement with them calls for im- provement to put them in year-round shape Commissioner Flovd P. (District 4) intreduded the Bb‘ cu Miles res olution stating the contractor had “procrastinated beyond rea san.” The resolution cited the “dane to hfe and preperty” caused | road condi ns sometimes makin “THUMBS DOWN" ON NEW t impossible for fire trucks. Pol ini poRD WORKERS — Ford we medical aid and = sanitary aoriices tn gain access to the area. |" Local 600 (UAW-CIO) headquar Commissioner John } Carr hall to capacit yesterday after District 6) called for es seer on the lox J row 1 wo . mrevent a recwience of the si PONTAC Deaths uation, { City Att ev Walham A. Ewart ud the move might being court; William Hatley action by the contractor but “the | . . : health and welfare of the public’ Service will by “held Friday al should put it on a sulid Jegal basis. ; 2 pm a Ute Voorhees Sipl Chapel for William Hatley. 56. of ; 1d Dinie Highway whe Va Four Persons Hurt ss eames mse accident vesterday two miles north ' oe ot Garrett, Ind in 2-Car Collision ue tom staione ot tie em manuel Baptist Church will off Four persons were injured In a ciate with burial in Ottawa Park ° car collision at Adams road and Cemetery South Boulevard last might, Oak He was born April 3. 1918 in; land County Sheriff's deputies | Newport Tein. the son of Alex sald and Lucy Fvans Hatley, and was Treated for a broken shoulder at| married to the former Delores Ol St. Joseph Mercy Hospital was) son July 20. 1953, in Morristown Mrs. Virginia Fitch, 27, a passen- | Tenn ger in a car driven by her hus Coming here 10 year io from band Arthur, 30, of Birmingham. | Newport, he hati been employed Treated for cuts and bruises were | at Lotan’s Market their daughter, Tome, 8, and moth- | ‘Surviving besides his wile are er, Mrs. Hilda Fitch, 60 ‘his father, of Ne wport, three chil- Also treated for cuts was Mrs | dren, Linda J Jerry Lee and Wil Mary Koch, 52, of Rochester, driv- | ham Alex Hatley, all at home. er of the other car Four brothers, Fleet of Toledo Mrs. Koch told deputies her | Clifford of Cleveland. John and brakes failed as she approached | Walter Hatley. both of Newport; the intersection and her car col- | three sisters. Mrs) James Hill of lided with the Fitch auto Cleveland, Mrs. George Owshby anc ee Mrs. Jay Webb, both of Newport, Soviet Giving Paper “” Mrs. Guy Jackson {0 East Germany Mrs. Gury (Mamie) Jackson, 71 om 20 Flizabeth St. died, Friday BERLIN (F The Soviets say night. She had been ill one year their newspaper in East Germany,| Born in Jackson, Miss., in ig Taegliche Rundschau, will shut she was the daughter of Mr down July 1 but it looks as if the Mary Scott. Coming here from East German Communists actual-| Jackson 12 years ago. she made ly are taking LL OLer: hey home with her sister, Mrs. rhe East German government Mattie DeWalt, who survives her. | news agency ADN last night an Also surviving are seven nieces noanced the papers closing. It) and ‘one nephew aid the Soviet government would turn over the printing shops, build- lay at 2 pm. in the Macedonia Jet bat Gols a "0 com Baptist Church with the Rex thes LR is oe ent ches of East Ger ater, ber pastor, officiating. Bur ha Py ¥y T Poe re ge 1 } t 1 3 The Western Alles discontinued “l iad follow in Oak Hill Ceme- their Berlin newspapers several Fiienda macicuitatitne han Ams I Oe _ F Davis Funeral Home wiiee 3.30 rin. today 2 Pontiac Man Arrested - on Mt. Pleasant Request Agnetta M. Lambert Leonard Hell h, 93 Ri th Anetta AE Lambert 69 died eet “ rested by Pontiag ferday morning at the home of, Post State Police Iast mght on a. her ter. Mrs. Jobn J. Dauphin rrant from Mt Vieasant chat 1 Niagara An th When st embezzlement : lived. She had bee il} several eal authorities said-thes had vears 1 ordered to make the arrest Born Feb 1886. in Bas field he the Mt. Pleasant Post Wis. she was the daughter of John he warrant, which was drawn) and Cornelia Johnsen Lafihert an out-of-state seed company, A member of the Episcopal ms Schell failed to turn in all Church of Bavfield. View Lambert the mon he ceollected: from had owned and operated a retail ed sales to farmers throughout) ctore there hepa retiring. She nee n ae rine oats ; has lived in Pentiae seve years . ay MUSE ASS SUBST Surviving are a brother wee ted Schell from Oakland Counts ¢ Cy Teal tiltince isietens ul to Mit Pleasant yesterday P cc At, Suen of ones mORnang Minn.. Mrs. Homer Corner ¢ esa Wis. and Mrs patil in. ASiniks Larceny Gherae < Lambert will be taken from ce O Bal 2 of r S the Weak son - Jobos Fou nera Sagmaw St. wleaded gullty 4 Hiome to Baytield this evenin larceny from a person vesterday ast eleiahs vl is ne) dn ‘ and Oakland County Circuit Judge . ods SITAR Sou Te 1) CTS (.eorge B. Hartr set sentencing mid Cemeter for June 13. Miss Bates admitted stealing $30 from a cab st ver’ Mrs. Chester Miller ere last Dec. 10 ' Word has been received of the a ‘death of Mrs. Chester (Lillian) The Weather -Miller of 213 Norton Ave. She died suddenly early this morning seearrieceatt? einen eataty| Me Miller fad) gone to) Me showers tenight and Thursday Not | HOMINEe to attend the funeral of — popes Se cael vs Lew te- her brother. John Sawal) and was ! Teday in Pentiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 am 69 At 8 am’ Wind Direction’ Northea*t Sum sets today at 8 07 por ®unm fisese Thursday at 4 44 @ m Moon Vises teday at id Ph pm Moon sete Thursday at @31 am ¥elnoeity 4 mph Dew ntewn T Temperatures m [oe Sew 6S ¢2 eral brothers and sisters and two ae Mnvneress 8 1p. m 62 grandchildren also survive. eee The fulléval will be ThuFsday- in 3 the Larson ‘ Funeral Home in, Tuesday in P } Highest Teereag =e aren n , Menominee. peravure..,.. vbesearee pg 5 : Tature eeepen - 1 Weather-Rain, o1 Mrs. Edword H: Roberts One ¥ in Pontine ol hed began Ae 7; | Mrs. Edward R. (Hattie) / Rob- Sampefature 0 ci! Fas | Cts, 63 of 52 Euctid St. did last met ont ae ere This Date in # ¥ rs wen" ab in. 10409 The funeral will be held Thurs- taken il] yesterday | She was born in Menominee and was a member of the Eastern Star | and the First Presbyterian Church, | Surviving ie a daughter, Mrs 'Trovace (Florence) Doolin of 213 . Norton Ave. with whom she «had ; made her home for 10 years, Sev- night in Chicagé, Ill. of hegirt com- Furniture CONTRACT SAN WOTRCES thered Po e plant 1 ters and filled the with the new F 4 walkout at ‘t! truet. Rouge pla: ‘Commission TUF. , ¥ tc’ * AP Wirephe'te voiced dissatisfaction Cley 1 ted A Vorkers { ‘ doby the walkout Withdraws ~Weed-Con trol Proposal A pr rdinance OPose iy Vas City Commission wf opiht prov por ated ordinance | growth and trim The City Manager Wal of the reation Dept By a 6-1 vote, first on request the Commission of amendment to the city peddier's approved reading an for con- outlawing by street ordinance, trolling sale of vendors. providing rather than ite cream Objection was raised by Com. missioner Flovd P Miles (District “Wer things licensir t ey) who said them. to them to do ORDINANCE READ Also given first read PF owas an do we dont want ordinance establist ' a ecine P issagce oT te 4. and Ihe aw FY dary lines for te 3 4 Following measure, which approved by the puts in change voters in Firemen Overcome by Fumes at Blaze SARNIA, were Five firemen fumes from Ont overcome UP - by | burning plastics In fighting a $50.- OO fire at a furniture store in the heart of the downtown district ght blaze Co store in stock, In a two-hour battle firemen kept the bhyze from spreading to adjacen buildings. last ni The swept the Parson's destroying $30,000 The firemen were overcome after | being lowered through a chute inte the basement where the fire was helieved to have started Its cause was not determined The three-story where ‘Wa one - ef the building demaged in the tornado of two years ag Its re pairs had been completed onty recenth , Euchd St. with whom she made her home A brother, John Hallack and 12 grandehildren alse survive Arrangements will be announced later by the Hluntoon Funeral Home What Ww ill Happen U f{ {he areas af! ther Commis- ition proposed John F Carrv prepar then ordinance rezoning to actor issed a fe Mihissioner res portion of nm now ufacturing “This will conform with our policy of uniform zoning,” Carry explained. The ordinance will be presented to the plan beard for approval hange of Park lar ad- acent to the park owned by De- troit Edison Co. The Edison jend will hecome of the park { PREPARE MEASURES City Attorn Will A. Ewart was directed to prepare ordinanc vifts am- fication are 7, 133 and to 132 « 6 and 1 an rnhy InpAy section rey part ey 1am Ss to e¢ They to 156 of Asse to roning TIASS 9 to ssor s lot oO. F Subdivisi 8 Be per Received commission led reports and were plan approving ordinances rezoning to commercial | lots 1 and 7, assessor’s plat 147 lots 63 to 65, assessor's plat 103 ind lots 591 to 593, Ferry Farm Addition ESTIMATES PRESENTED Fingineer’s sented t estimates public Tuesday night for gutter and drainage work Blaine reet from Oakland to Montcalm. ind oon Jefferson avenue from Blaine to Summit were pre- and hearing set for curb, on st PONTIAC PRESS . WEDNESDAY, Quarry Mishap Electrocutes 2 Upper Killed by Short Circuit in Big Drill CEDARVILLE UW” Two men were electrocuted Jast night when a nt nt caused by crossed Wiles a ing «¢ i drill sent {Hii st reli ihe Dodie The victinis were Charies Wes- ton, 40. father of two, and Norman Kosier, about 35, father of four, both of Cedarville in the Upper | Peninsula. The two men were working in the Cedarville quarry of the Michigan Limestone Division of U.S. Steel Corp. when Weston had difficulty with his electric drill and Kosier, an electrician, rewired a motor when trom and power Wires crossed (Veston turned on the the dnil cab, Kosier, side, was electrocuted. Weston saw Kosier collapse and was killed himself by the when he stepped outside fo inveslgate were charge the cdb * * es A third worker, Sy Hurban of Cedarville, went to their aid but stopped when he “felt a tingling in the ground and escaped injury Church Is Against China Recognition BUCK HILL FALLS, Pa. # — The general synod of the Reformed Church in America has come out against United Nations recogm- tion of Red China = ~ e At the concluding session of the 149th. general synod yesterday. the group also called for continued support of the U.N. but urged that churches give serious study to re- vision of the U.N. charter Other resolutions commended the work of President Eisenhower in “doing ali within his power to avoid the outbreak of war" and opposed the proposed new “world’’ calendar on grounds that it is “‘materialistic.” The delegates also called f appointment of a special church commission to congeder the ordina- tion of women to the lay and min- isterial offices of the church will hold June 7. 1956. at Seminary, its 150th Western Holland, The ~eS8100 Theological Mix h synod Crash Victim's Will Provides Seeing Eye Dogs A Bloomfield T+ baled woman who died May 18. has left a $1,000 fund -to for her ‘dog, cats, birds and other household pets’ plus a trust fund to supply fi- care 'nancially needy blind persons with \ public hearing also was set for Tuesday for a special assess- ment roll fer curb, gutter and drainage on Carliste street from Walton to New York. Public hearings’ were held and confirmation deferred for curh gutter and drainage on Fourth avenue from Joslyn to Fuller and on Ypsilanti avenue from Carlisle to Stanley Special assessment rolls were confirmed for the following pro}- ects Water main in West Columbia ave- ie f 1 Baldwin to the west boundary assessors plat 107 Crrrk drainage on Going 3 ulevard to Prospect drainage on Willard Tainagée om Luther sty How lar ' ‘to Earlmog Ley: { drainage on Bever! arene Baldwin to Univer3iny de | nder Plan... leader dogs Mrs 3518 Franklin an auto crash Her will, filed in Oakland County Probate Court, lists real estate and personal assets total- ing $70,000, Skinner, 61, of died following a Genevieve Rd., The former representative insvrance company left small cash ms plus valuable household articles to two great nieces and several friends The trust fund for ptrehasing “dogs for blind persons needing. money’ is to run for 20 years at sul the end of which leftover cash will be distributed to charity. The trustees ara instructed to select persons to receive dogs through Interviews, JUNE & Peninsula Mer® standing oul- 1935 - age “LET'S SEE—THIS IS AN EASY ONE”’—‘‘Chris,” United Press Phote who is part beagle and part mathematician, studies accurate answers to complicated problems involving a difficult math problem at his home in East Green- square roots and what have The seven-year-old wich, R. I. And the pooch isn't kidding! His master, canine genius gives his answer by patting out the cagmist George Wood, claims the dog can give ES numbers with his paw et Ace Given Hills ‘School Keeping Up, Superintendent Reports Welcome Home Swea City, lowa, Opens Arms to Newly Freed AF Captain SWEA CITy Iowa —A dav of thanksgving for the deiivet ¢ of double et ao ( t. Harold Fischer J from a Red Chinese prison was being celebrated today by residents of this tiny nurth Iowa town Officials braced for a crowd en pected to swell the towns normal y (KM) wel- {han of 800 population for the come in the n to more official ceremony town park. A parade through the town and an address by Gov. Leo A, Hoegh precede formal introduc tion of Fischer to the populace. It's his first visit home since De- cember 1950, The townspeopte Were preparing a gift for the: captain who is home after two a Red Chinese prison. peared the gift) might not have all the glitter originally ptanned They'd hoped to give the captain a new airplane, which Fischer, in his letters from the Chinese prison surprise years But it Ap- hy had said many times he wanted to own, 2 * ee The American Legion post here sponsored a drive for funds. But it had only a few days to work after Fischer and three fellow prisoners—Lt, Col, Edwin Heller of Wynnewood, Pa., Lt. Ron Parks of Omaha and Lt. Lyle Cameron of Lincoln, Neb.—were released Ford Still Opposed _ to Fu DETE (yy ST gt guaranteed LOIT (® ——. Two Ford Motor spokesmen claim Ford is still gly opposed to a 100 per cent annual wage because it would Impose far too creat Fi financial responsibility upon the | company.” Carleton W, Pierce, manager of ithe Industrial Relations ment of Ford, and: Richard John- son of Ford's finanejal staff, were | assigned by the company to ‘an- swer a series of questions by a panel of editors. | Pierce and Johnson said the | contract upon which Fore | reached agreement with the C10 United Auto Workers was not a guaranteed annual wage, but a | private supplementing of public | unemployment compensation, They. said a true annual guaran. teed wage would call for 100 per| | Cent: wages for each week of the | year, whether worked or M6t. The pact agreed upon by Ford and the) UAW calls for 65 per cent of the base take-horne pay for four weeks | and 60 per cént up to a maximum | of 26 weeks. "| z\t ay * * & Some of the questions and an- | swers asked of the Ford panel) | iy Depart- | farm out that type of work where there is a high seasonal fluctua. tion In employment. \—The likeli of instability and other hood exporting risks and dangers are inherent tn any true annual which the Ford plan is not CENT INCREASE Under the Ford plan, the tinan- cial obligation to the company is no more and no less than a five- cent-an-hour wage increase. * e guaranteed Wage plan, * Benefit payments tied to the bis To nee te cusetion: eee | trust funds and have no direct eaaraiaae. chien = eee ieaata | | financial impact upo t | pany pect Ebony tie icon. | we say this is not the guaranteed , ‘annual (or even semi - annual) Q—It 1 were a Ford worker, | wage. I would Hke to know what ts going to happen to me under this plan, From the history of past layoffs, and barring a great change in economic cpnditions, can I look forward te % weeks of benefits? A~You can't determine any great degree of reliability “from | the history of past layoffs, The ; only way you can tell is when it | goes into ectual _(oeration. |. Im the fits ne. it win! not | pay 26 weeks during its ourly ‘years' off flhd building. have fairly stable employment as ‘we have had in the last few years the emplove eat “expect pretty good benefits out of this over the long pull But there js no absolute guar- antee about it. 3 If there were a recession or de- pression, the trust fund, because of heavy layoffs, would not be in * * as good a position to pay long | , duration benefits. Once the fund is | | built up, it might well ride through any recession or depression, Q—Could you briefly summar- ize the differences between the Ford plan, as it will appear in the contract, and the guaranteed annual wage — by the LAW? differences, Piisooiaiy years of study is a plan to hcl rc with private com- pahy unemployment benefits, the Leva Mla aapdeocer Ah toners Pt pensation bénefits, which — by the ie Meo eas ult sali ey conhpany. have developed over FORD PAYS ue A~There are many fundamental Plans now are to give the captain what has been collected) 'so that he can apply it on the purchase of a plane. Minnesota has 30.000 miles of fishimg streams in-addition to its 11.007 lakes. . BIRMINGHAM—The Bloomfield Hills superintendent of schools said today education progress in Hills’ schools “has kept pace with physical ¢ att . Eugene L Johnson said t he Rloomfield Hills sehool distmet in two years had grown from an en roliment oof os ny tu a Pointing up the educational progress growth idea, reading tests were given students in grades one through SIX. ‘Results in the fast thr erades shawed seores above stale and ma tional score Tohnse iG In grade two the averave vain in reading ability as shown on the test was a 12 months gam in 5 months of school he said, Test results) from the other three grades has not yet been com pleted In his monthl school bulletin Johnsen aleo listed proiurs in Bloomfield Hills high sehool Included were: an expanded fren h program which includes expermmental teaching of French to the fourth grades in elemen- tary school: addition of sh irthand and advanced business typing in the business educati de part- ment; and Khomemat speech, dramatics and journalism cours¢s to be offered A club program designed to fit hobby and leisure time interests of stiide i its will be started under faculty supervision, and the Stu dent : ‘ouneil will be given) more responsibility in governing the stu- dent body Johnson also reminded parents of the Board of Education elec- tion June 18 at Vaughn School. There are two board vacancies to be filled. ‘ P e : Manager eres Mortensen of the Birmingham Chamber of Com-9 merce said he WAS so I Pay Guarantee load. The cost is borne completely by the employer. Q—Then the Ford plan is pre- dicated on integration with the varions state unemployment compensation systems? A—Yes. Completely. It is inte- grated both as to duration and eligibility of the laid-off worker. Q—When does the plan start operating? When can a Ford worker start drawing his bene- fits after a layoff? A—The plan won't start operating in any case during the first year | ‘off the new contract. This is to | allow time’ for building up the | reserve fund. USTATE RULINGS i And further, before the plan be- comes effective, rulings must be obtained from state officials that efits will not reduce or eliminate rstate unémployment - benefits in states where the company has two- thirds of its employes. many states would have to be integrated before the plan could start operating? Sag abot fonts We ey fhe al ! eens “ee et simultaneous payment of fund ben- | | 65 PERCENT .LIMIT and any two of the states lilinois, Missouri, New York, California and New Jersey — also could bring this about. Q—Is there a deadline for ob— | | taining these favorable rulings? A—Yes, are not obtained from states of two-thirds of the em- | ployes before June 1, 1957. | plan will terminate as of that date. | We shall work toward obtaining | | these appropriate rulings. Q—There has been a lot of- talk by some management spokesmen on the social, moral and economic dangers of the guaranteed annual wage. What are these dangers and how do you feel that you have been avoiding them? A—The guaranteed annual wage | originally demanded by the union | called for 52 weeks’ pay ‘at 100 per cent, It is a great, danger 'to a man’s incentive to keep work- | ing, or when he’s laid off, to: find | another job. if appropriate rulings the home | So it seemed to us that a funda- meutal question was ho whigh ben- efits could be and for how long duration without rimming into this problenii, | Rochester following | the | ‘ s I r of me t s MM ed p i vester { s | iKfis eel Nig it the ( munity House, Some 50 mem- bers Were | and] as the chi ber launched ts) membership drive Mortensen said the goal is to re t a) add tal members There curves are 225 members n the Birmingham *chamber, he said * Dr Emil Kontz, pastor of the Birmingham Baptist church, has been awarded an honorary doc- tor of literature degree. The de- Was gree conferred Sunday at the 103rd commencement exer- cises of Hillsdale college. . The regular meeting of the Franklin Cemetery Auxiliary will be held tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Harry Rainey, 424 W. Mapl: A pot-luck luncheon is scheduled tor l pm . e * = Owen Pinkerman, director of thes Wiliam Beaumont hospital and a member of the Roval Oak Rota club. addressed Birmingham Ro- tarians at a recent meeting Speaking on the progress at the new hospital which opened in Feb- ruary, Pinkerman said all patient rooms have been opened for serv- ice and that the staff now cons.sts of 140 d Rochester Man Held on Larceny Charge Pontiac Police last ested Gerald Holst, a 22-year-old man on a charge of by conversion.” According to the warrant, sworn to by Community Moters Co, Rochester. Holst had obtained an automobile May 17 under the pre- tense of wanting to buy. Justice Luther C, Green, Avon | Township. said Holst, without com- pleting the purchase, was allowed to drive the automobile home ‘“‘for the night.’ Pontiac police found the car and Holst at Hazel Park ilast night Holst waived a preliminary hear- ing. and ts being held in jail in lieu of $2,000 bond to await ar- raignment in Circuit Court. actors night ar- “larceny Parolee Questioned in Jeannie Murder KALAMAZOO im — A 25-year-old /parolee was held for questioning today in the slaying of 8-year-old Jeannie Singleton May 23. Police said they arrested the |}man yesterday after two teenage i girls reported a man was trying | to lure little girls into a car near a | Kalamazoo schoo| eatlier in the | day, The older girls identified the | man as the one they had seen. The school is about eight blocks | away from the one Jeannie at- ‘tended, Her body was found last | week in a‘ lonely wooded area in Allegan County. about 15 miles north of her home. June’s Circuit Court Term Lists 81 Cases T NE PONTIAC PRESS, Personal News of Inter est in Pontiac Wellemeser of Tolland Ind Myron David Orr of Menomi nee road is a MA degree in Education on for a June candidate 13 at New York University's 23rd) annual conimmencement. 4 University student Ja ae fier of Baldwin avenue was ‘ ‘cently oimtiated inte Omicron Delta Kappa, national honotary leadership society. for met He was also initiated inte Psi ¢ honorary psychology fratermit { oo . aa a and Wilnmia bridesmaids wear- Marga ret Gillespre Piahlert were ing power blae and vellow en- sembles, respectively, Tike the maid oof henor’s. carried Thes CHILDRENS SHOES. FOR ACTIVE VACATION esr » wan aim = THURSDAY — FRIDAY — SATURDAY ~ Values to SO95 ‘Values to 4 Other specials, too, in chi and teen’ers’ playtime footwear. +. STAPP Sensational Savings! AQ and $5 40 Children’s-Misses’ Playshoes T c A ‘eenage tr Ww : Cand ¢ for summer wear Good chaice of sizes . Idren's kiddies’, misses’ ® JUVENILE BOOTERY 28.E. Lawrence Street Phi FE 243208 ' Teirents Yin and Mrs. WL. WEDNESDAY. zp tha be ie Yr DETERGENT-PROOF loves o dishwasher colors will not fade mar 4 «4 A t i: @ i i Litt} or wash off with years of use 54 R for 25 yea gaornst ¢ © ee hee , 9281 Dixie Hw, (Near Watertord) OR 34-1894 GUARANTEED ears aga crating o crockling : Wendertully chip-resiutont For Your Convenience Open Batly and Sunday UZ VK-348 10 a.m. to 8 p. m. Versatile “Triple Play” styles in Lady Nasbene BRAS New. Long Line Bra Nylon taffeta bra with ufderwired: cup ‘ Drawstring? adjusts perfectly. White. Sizes 32-38. Trv one on! Smart Bra-s-lette For any style necklifie! In nylon taffeta with embroidery trim. White. 38. Buy at Federals! FEDERAL 7>°° 10 dept. Stores Mrs. Barrett Harrison of Lexing- Sigma Theta Vau, honorary Sellers are announcing tbe birth of a { » 5 Loilfre Seopet f . ia : reaver ton drive and Mrs. Wilfred Sei -| nursing fraternity at Wayne Uni of Miami, Fl Todd Wailaint, om June | feant and = Mrs William G Pie a Mideinal yvrandmother Tadleson both of Osh " Ont Virals ies ets 1b a a he eee ee : wet ' t aR : shawa, m ; ee . ; completed his freshnwin year at a ‘ Canada, have returned from Guif-| Members Sara Bridson of Oliver : : t indpa eral ' pe : the University of Peansvivania, . wi port, Miss., where they attended) sleet. will join his family on Thursday ! Puceboo.wn ot Hi . oF - : sire | ou ett ; é the graduation of Sue Flizabe th) "g oy - ae fun a mnths never. Ronald will receive his BA ce CUSTER. ES Free tre ‘entral V g 4 gree from Central Michigan € oi “a pate. . Short Curl lege, Mount Pleasant, on Sun- > t € ¥ rn day. Wilson Avenus Miacthedist I ermanents Higetes) fLE iy ‘ ee Church was the setting for the 7 CHOOSES PINES om « arte 1 ' - \ . C ‘ ane hich a a clock cercanonsy preformed sat bow 1 Will gr ible { : ' < = aay or two : Ip urday by the Rev. baston Hazard x 20 \ . € ting et = 2 in the preseuce of (00) guests — ' ) rival at the home of | parer aati Gia wires Mr and Mrs. Stanleys Kev \ fac vq Iocourt ‘ ( ‘ Hadrill cou ' A} No Appointment Necessary » * P ij cle ‘i ! ( Mr. and Mrs. Pt oS : Lead Jie pe es St he rt tee Haare i IM PE Ri Al 4 mever inee Wart F titted ft 1 ‘ ; wiht avenue Grr oa 2 Nc \ . WEARS GIET PEARS Beauty Salon ne barth ’ : Todd ; ; 20 F. Pike St FE 46-2878 Grandpare | : a Everett L. Reese of Watkins Lake “ . road and Mro and Mis 0D F Se on summer-cool luxury Dollar Days savings “Run, Rush, Hurry! Big Bargains for ALL during Money Saving LINGERIE @ Can-Can petticoats Ships and petticoats with dainty trims, 320, S MeL. Cotten. nvlon mesh or talfeta can-cans, S-M-L. Shorty, waltz or slipper length gowns, tail ored pj's. wanted fabrics, 32 to 40. Baby Doll bloomer sets, sizes SM or 5 i . jj @lacy slips, petticoats @ Gowns, pj's. Baby Dolls f oa 3 Summer savings now on smart CGAY PLAYTOGS Keep summer-cool with ft. Cid double panel Loomcraft SLIPS , . ? 50 Shadow-proof protection in summerweight cotton , They're cheaper by the pair, be- pana auiet Seu) a a cause you save so much! You get wees, 36-T): Warandlers and Broneas, 10-20. an absolute shadow blackout in Woater-renellent preipor in Nehets. watistan hiip fens thr, | these votton slipes by Loonicrait. 19.20. Propeartioned: Township, Bingham karms, voted ine example ot * reaching mians MARILYN DF PEAS LOR in Incorporate as a village, This ae { ; sas approved, Lil to 10. f ; t ) bert i Voters in lad fs \ I i rf ' { aral Sit I ew t for: Raval i widl be di- 1 Paslor Ss of Reomes Hler downship turned wn the pro led ipfo two pe- france is Daie Eo Cunningham Jt posed cit’ charter, by Ss tes “4 ‘ sen of Mr and Mrs. Dale Fo Cun The ballot tallev showed 1.0>S : 4 eeks ningham of Portage \ Ju oy votes against the chat ter and only 4 i beaccy ' bre t 676 for { \tcs Virginia M a satel € at thie Cor i ' ( } j Solberg secretary oof the chat \ ; \ ; commission, said today thar the held at variou hurler commission would FeCdn: ' “é the to. rola LJ * CUMarte ¢ } \ i 1 lah , ; 4 the es up Cli Or an | e vene unless petitions aeainst such mer an pdicted mck ane = a move “were circulated Ainers Red Cro standards : hi willy Cia iranged for begin as Truck Hits Tree In Commerce Township, the ac- ny’ t i { and | nevation of Oakland Park to Wol \ bread tiles \ verine Lake Village Was soundly : ‘ ee : : : LIFEFORI Tat b wa CLIFFORD : V Vin ' defeated, > died yesterday when | mnilk trucsn ; ina t 1 tor will smashed into a tree near Capac SAAR OS 4 : , t b t t ' 4 were tty | ' | rede “ aye prey bs plamnes i ( 1 t 7 : t ila st 1 | : i t with t $1 ' th ot be ted t I | not ; : ; se \ f » and t vdled i { al aevtest { ut : 1 ' ; \ t is a t ywnship i ° I recon , . is recorded rt afi fey ( f larlett ae 11 x Ae tty ; ; Rea ) ' t ‘ od f mont! Prov were Pred W. iilde cl vill t 1 j red 1 Cliftor I cael Dakland Lake Krivet eh Reveal Engagement we Georme Wo Ford 10M. B Wedne i 12 4 }-4 pm MAPLETTI Hie von I. Druin x rman Fo Be } ' \\ Lake : ae : nave S Frank Ceostel A tia bik ‘ ila ra ; I 6 ‘ ee 4 t is aif) { bis Lab ( area, 9-12 a a , \ ( i 1 Wee M La 1-inm Wednesda iN at ang Nit | at . bE] 1 - : . is bee Tai bet } kit Lake Watkins Lake Assn i Feces a + Cu 1 candida ‘ et \ , beach 1 | Tuesday, 9-12 am Aap : | vA ballad BD Ts fieht ‘Towt Friday Flizabeth Lake family ( ser Nos . . bea } m Tuesday and Ly » ¢ ka Ad _ f fi lidat t Th 1a ( scent Lake Cre { candida | inte mist SS} i cent Lake Highlands Ci, Assr Asnake Al [yee hat \ s e polle a ye : t township t t beach, 1-4 p Monday and Th reugh surface ca ' ‘ da : : ea Pavue ~M ‘ : prOyTess of ; ne much Allerton J Tala Ered Leonhard Tad: Emmanuel Chris . eye renset 1% Donald Swans eaths in Nearby Communities ov. .cv8 Clarence Durbin, 1,260 Oakland County Circuit Judge DR we a oe Privat IMLAY we tenn . H. Russet Holland denied an in be rn is hth ‘ a junction to halt the Trov vote service for lauise Jean Coster. H, Fenner, 63, will be,\hetd Monday, brought by the Vickers daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard pom. Friday from Mu Brother Corp. C. Coster of 2079 Briggs st.. will : be held at the Brace-Smith Fu. Funeral Home. with burial in 1) Attorneys far the firn : neral Home in Pontiac The mfant Imlay Township Cemetery. He died ding a $2 000.00 as was dead at birth vesterday in Tuesday “ township said the area incorpora Wilham Beaumont Hospital. Royal surviving are his wido i anes “ slate’ l Hire trent of ts t Oak dred, a son, Joseph of Flint. a anes nly HEV ing, bevers ine par sau hte Mrs. Joa Harris of rige Holland denied the inc aM a brother a ind a SISter, pyr nd teur brothers, John, but allowed Vickers’ bill of Celine, both at h Dian Walter of Imlay Cit MET aint to stand. This apparent Peter Jd. Frisch nd Earl and Hat h leaves the way open for further 1ILFORD—Service for Peter J. trait, A osister Mh gal action by the firm Frisch, 71. of 121 Bobelink. will be af Imlay Cit t held at 2 pm. Thursday at the Pauline Allen Hadley; Richardson-Bird Funeral Chapel, grandchildren ~ Mother, Son Unhurt Walled Lake, with burial in Oak Moyrtle Hanmmond View Cemetery in Royal Oak. He DMILAY CITY Sery Fj Hits sol died Monday NMivrtle Hamm nd will be . aS ire Surviving are Rus widow, Isa- pom. Thursday in Springport. POMEO — Mrs farola Here: bella; a son. Mark Wo Cook of She died Monday. Surviving are ee a ie Detroit: a sister, Mrs. John Kop- two sisters-and two brothers i 1 cde Seed nin ma Vs st plen of Arizona, two brothers Mrs. Nettie Dodge dat when fire a loved 4 Chris Frisch of Saginaw and Wal- (GAGS CHIN ee Serciem foot: — Gh the back ut tie oH fer Pxten of Detnont Nettie Dodge, 86, will be held 2) Romeo Plank Rd hom Mrs. William L. Young p.m. Thursday in the Little Funeral Volunteers of the Romeo Fit AUBURN HEIGHTS — Service | ome and byrial will be in Elk- Depaytment had the blaze con for Mrs William L. (Doris Mae ;lan Cemetery. She died Monday. trolled in 20 minutes The rest Cooper) Young. 35. ef 3782 S. Bouke She is survived by two daughters, of the four room;frame house suff vard, and her infant son, will be Mrs. Harold Evans, and Mrs. Ed-, fered smoke and water damage, but held at 1 pm. Friday at the Ward Noonan of Birmingham. | no estimated of the damage cost Manley Bailey Funeral Home, | Mich nine grandchildren and. of the destroyed utility room was with burial in White Chapel Cem. eight great-grandchildren made etery. They died Tuesday oe Herefert was at work at the Surviving besides her hushand : time. and three other children, Bill, are her mother, Mrs Bert Cooper, Reds Blow Up Train Sharon and Carol were in school of Tillsonburg, Ont.. four children, KUALA LUMPUR. Malaya uh— Cause of the fire is undetermined Barbara Ann, Donna Jean, Linda Communist guerrillas blew up an -——_-—-- Louise and Dennis Allan, three sis- armored train in south Malava's An average of Ses persons die ters, and five brothers. all of Can- Johore state last night, injuring each year in the United States five from freezing and frostbite. ada. pohcemen aboard, ee REHEARSAL BREAK — Clowning in a a7 hoy } Pontiac Press Phote of “One Foot in Heaven’’ is Stanley Vandersall | day. The appreciative audience is (-r) Beverly ee The three act dramatization of Hartzell Green, —_ a nd, ‘Mary Beach, and Helen "Ge toh Pohl as # z i | which may void the election, 'to give the proposal a large measure of approval 111 for the incorporation, with 254 opposing + }member charter commissions weathe: and court ltagation Troy residents turned out The : Oakdale Project "Has Dedication Down Payment Made by Residents Yesterday in Royal Oak Township ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP The Oakdale (iardens housing project was officcs dedicated to its resi dent-ommers at 2opon esterday With thy ning of the papers, a check for S100.120 9° as down pay- ment oon the $1 HS 985) purchase price Was turned over to the gov- ernment The government returned to the township 875.655 held to be used iminediately for repairs, and to put the project in good shape I ‘y Tee hic that ‘ ha the politic com Ne ffl int ert Washington Carver sehool board Pr t { Ss Sit t Acre niv a s all ntiumibe f propert Aners in the school distmet. Onl b | t Arie? ! eng t 1 off the board How f TVial ! cq yr t tat et owners Ww th the pur ise th Jeet th f a of potential bites will be thtown op Fund Being Raised . fo Eliminate Weeds LAKE ORION — The Lake Iin provement Assn has raised So »ob fer se in ridding a portion of the lake from weeds president Fran Dexter has revealed A tnochemist rs coming from a $20) O00 milar protect oin eM York to supervise the spraying of he lake proximately one-third of the iKe will he d Dexter said ed on the contribution of home manners there Tx Xter idded = that residents “ishing fo contmbute and insure a wider spraying of the lake should mtact him at once as the weed killing chemicals are being of MII Bell sé ae LES tists shaw ow neo} . nit EF OT! fl TOWNSHIP ; Bu pert f May were Blueprints} . ler t ear’s high re Ribbons © twall be the ‘ doin April Ma total was ers opie tomer at $1 TT compared : 7 West athe {for April at $1,743.605.25 Ms ‘ vA ‘ wd Nine oc ial permits in- e diy si ; cluded a store on Dixie Highway Dr. T. Lather Purdom of the valued at $19.000: lumber shed at Laiversity of Michigan wil) be 64 10K retail office at $9000: bar- the speaker «xs 68 seniors at OV ber + pon \irpor t Road at $6.40; ford are graduated, frant. market 1 M9 at $6,000: T as Wa n. $1 000: store Tmibuing nisr heal ‘ ibaw Raad $5.00 store The hich sho a i) bunlding on West Huron, $12,000 Str several selections B i of and warehouse at $650 bringing Education president Carl Buechler tele] commercial permit valuation Aill present the diplomiis to Sod Ut Topping the list were 131 home permits valued at $1,389,390 Co f ( Others were as follows: 30 re- unly Lalendal : : y modeling and addition to homes, Br $51,757: 31 garages, $2 6 ga- tlam - . : ° more ; rages and breezeway at $8,500; 2 Mrta a F AM a! Peursday remodeling ta commercial, $3,600: “ Leonard 1 church cottage at $1,000 and I is a! “ . Ghure? eC tool shed at $750 M G i‘ Ciack ake a e Drayton Plains ae ounty F irths mee'ing t a ¥ Jo? e r H eae if f ar a mir City ak a A r Dee has been born 4 to Mr Louls hrivia New fladsen Mr and will roka are \ . r 4 the perentsa of a new Debra s > . Ka) 5 " Mr F c MM 7 Alment “ ‘ \ and Mrs Febo Zenero are an- ‘ © if f son. Stephen, Waterferd Township 4 Ww ar has been born to Mr, ( re e ani M Mart marmat a a! Capac t A r M ar M Nick Viilaltande are + - are s of a newt 1 sor ES Nica, 3 A Treat tor the Whole Family 15 WARIETIES TO SELECT FROM fine tasty Itattan Stoeds prepared for you te - take out § : Joe's Famous Spaghetti House 103% Wet Herren ®t. FR %-7306 Open 6 P M.-2 4M. —Sun. 8-12 P.M.—Closed Mon Sundays 5 P. M- 12:30 AM. CLARK’ S nestavnant .2s!7! at Montcalm | | GIANT MALTS DINNERS - ; A SANDWICHES Drive-in Service SODAS Counter Lunches fe cid Open 7 Days A Week Take Home” Orders : GOOD FOOD — FRIENDLY SERVICE Catering to Banquets and Private Parties | PU RE FOOD RESTAURANT ond BAR i ® Breaktasts — Luncheons — Dinners TN South Saginaw — Across trom Jereme Motor Sates An Ideal Hobby | Oper 5 © A Mte * & “ — Closed Stnday BEER — WINE — LIQUOR IN A sandwich & coke EAT A malt & hot dog A EE a fall meal is good al EFi=-“AR DRIVE-IN Restalrant . . . Dixie Hwy. at Silver Lake Road re Scrib s QD ona’e' donc DRIVE-IN Dancing Bren ya 130 S. Telegraph tontay Nettane FOR BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCHEONS DB, ue Jack Decker's 5 en | tay DIANE 4 + ee Lo ndaieecntid ally eeisica ses e i About 100 pounds of separated Eggs were *, milk are pounds of non-fat dry milk solids needed to produce nine last year at a rate of per person. COCKTAIL SALE ren Bewil Bidg PETE FLORE’S “pel - Airs” for dancing and entertainment —nightly. furnishing = music Entertainment Every Night of the Week AL LAMANO » Have fun in Ponticc’s newes! « fertainment club. . Lounge. DANCING Every Night Ath VON VIEANC PItESs: Ry DORGTHY MANNERS TY. SUSAN TEAMED BICMAR INN ALL NEW SANDWICH BAR KOSHER "CORNED BEEF Biemar Inn 94 W. Huron Box Office Show Starts 7.45 P.M = ~ Theater . .- NOW SHOWING Did He See a Murder Committed? JAMES STEWART ALFRED HITCHCOCKS: REAR COLuH-BY TECHNICOLOR ~ os * 3 x DANCE WITH ME | TONIGHT} «©... Music by the KIM-TONES MANNY’S W. Huron at Eliz. Lk. Rd. PERC VIDS BEETE | | 2 Opens 630 P M Phone FE 4-461] 2150 Opdyke Road And Also AA MLIED ARTISTS PICTURE Boric: HELE hy MARSHALL THOMPSON - MARJORIE LORD TONIGHT—2 FIRST RUN : ~ CINEMASCOPE -— ALL COLOR , q WARNES macs VA 66 Strange 8) yay N A ANDREWS ees sear A New Lake Theater » ° 420 Pontiac Trail WALLED LAKE PONTGUHIT a a .~Y In Cinema Scope ~ a SICN OF THE PACAN with Jeff Chandler ATDsoO HELL'S our rest With Red Cameror Joan Leslie b | a a a a asain When You See the Big Clock tts ; Time to Stop fora a DRINK at the AUBURN BAR BEER—WINE—LIQUOR 378 Auburn Avenue Beer and Wine to Go BADIES® NIGHT JEVERY WEDNESDAY { at the New us Tahoe * LIQUOR | — 3412 Dixie Highway _ * BEER | Varsic sic Dy “the m3) Little W Zords” * WIN E __Every Wed, Thu s. Fri, Sat. and — NO MINIMUM of COVER CHARGE Phone OR 3-9754 WATERFORD DRIVE-IN THEATER ? THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN . Cor. Williams Lake-Airport Roads — Box Office Opens 7:15 P. M. WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY ¥ d OLENT THE FREE-SWINGING DEACON THE AND THE KNOCKOUT GIRL! WIND- SWEPT PRAIRIE! Shelley WINTERS Keenan Jennifer JONES ry PECK Joseph COTTEN yvrepgo WEIN! ’ Hollywood Headlines - via» Reds Deny Murder ~ of Two Koreans : as tite n daughter Mary SIDIOOATIIIPOOIOTI ISS OO (leo Moore iso back in) Bur bank Hespital and her friends are worried about her coutinued loss of weight oe thing 4 Navy Seeks 5,000 Big Stars for Their Films Reserve Officers Jane and Bob au NOG) Wash \GTON (® — The Navy ill ¢ pt up t l ai reserve Olflecer i tours of duty startfng Jul rniber double the quot { 4 v tied i I f rsonne| i toll Ww be Cn) ae i! in at th i( pte il «a lual qual tow { rer l Val Slow poke Cited .» as Road Hazard - Same as Speeder Family Will Spend 2 Days i in Shelter N. Tex, ®—A m ms wife and Ona children wi hiv three days in an unde reround a bomb shelter during a civil defense test starting late today Lou, 11, were among 200 famihes volunteering for the experiment. Chrstmas is a 36 ir-old machinist and World Wat U Nir Foree veteran ‘ ular shelter has 13 square leet of space, with a cetl- six to mine feet high contact with the out- ah intercommunica- stem for emergency use. Balks at Soft Chairs for Fire Inspectors OMAHA. U&—When Omaha Fire Commissioner Simon A. Simen got a bill yesterday for $59.50 each for two upholstered chairs for two of his inspectors, his reaction was to explode “One inspectir on his feet {fs worth two inspectors on their seat.”’ ; He refused to okay the bill. A few hours later he relented to the exfent of saying he'd buy two chairs but ‘at about $22 each.’ ing trom Their only side will be tron Sy LOI aa SG OAs, WHERE GOOD FRIENDS MEET © BEER @ WINE @ CHOICE _ LIQUORS ® DELICIOUS COCKTAILS tl LIBERTY COCKTAIL LOUNGE | _ 85 North Saginaw N NE a Nu No “ ee —— BOSTON u—The general man- ® ager of the Automobile Lecal Assn Predicts Dem Sos simmic e a * . Li ! Victory in S00. sfatten t txt Mok Governor of Tennessee . RINSE Sola ERG Sped much slower th t! Pledges Support for mat flow of traffic. and who for Party's Candidate x at at Da ns ou a ul r fo get bs t | e 1 the roads { t with a speeder. or reckless d He said he favors a minim ! speed in all states. ed 234 WE PAY CASH for: “ TRUE STORY. SECRETS, TRUE ! it | ROMANCE MACAZINES, ETC. | oO “°° 0! Gl Piper's Magazine Outlet a 34 Aubera Ave FE 4-s240 Coun ae 2 point oo" OWED. and THURS. Ho Der eemeeem § Gioadway s Hit Musical “ ri Hits The Screen! «. } verhen STAR-BRIGHT red t it he +} mr i xt ow AND SPLASHEO WITH chee Se ; a writ t oe) Me) >t a bmef address at t ! ed the accomplhish- nd untments of Chi- , n c mayor. Richard DE K J [a w “ elected in April. .". vo ( has t mentione by ad : | le rS as a [| ble .c-M! iS ential wdidat xt »M-G M! However. he mad ref- to. his avail for with KAY ARMEN 1 CARROL NAISH ‘oped CHARD ANDERSON. ects JANE. DARWELL AN M-G-M PICTURE SERRE ReE Nationally Advertised @ Fresh Sea Foods @ Prime Steaks @ Chicken & Turkey Dinners @ Delicious Specialties LUNCH—DINNERS Open Every Day! NOW SERVING OYSTER on- the ” % Tort tr - ‘NOW! alt ms an me Pe * bay ce et ENMY NINE i. K FOERAL *- 48 ¢ OAKLAND: JAK Aim CONDITIONED TODAY thru SATURDAY YANK PRISONER IN CHINA CHOOSES BAMBOO CURTAIN Did Sergeant Fall for Commie Cutie OF w Wes He Pushed? You'll Get rm Wonderful _ Feeling feaere Gl oho freely with re prem camp eapercuoes and autiful Tanya Clayton wt BAMBOO PRISON ROBERT ‘DIANNE BRIAN FRANCIS FOSTER KEITH When You Meet “A Man Called Peter CinemaScoPE Color by Ds Luxe BINNIE BARNES - ALBERT DEKKER BELEM PARRISA - PATSY MPLLY + EDGAR RGMMEDY CK PURCELL é hl ey 1”) i y : ip a) Rey wey!” ~EeK 2 R RICHARDS InN STARTS SUNDAY! 2—B C ACTION SHOTS—2 “BATTLE GROUND” “THE ASPHALT JUNGLE” AND COMFORTABLE -- STARTING TODAY -- On Our Giant Streen! ALSO: *°7.7...: ALWAYS COOL DOORS OPEN 10:45 A.M. ee eo x yaaa —_— e? et oe = = GARY as White Hat, the Magnificent Gambler INGRID ‘BE Seman) as his Clio of New Orleans ‘REER FLAP OF cAgtY eOpMEON - ow ee fome GaRee - ete oem ye STAR-TEAM jim x EXCITEMENT! / THE SCREEN SMASH ef THeEy were SS Eiht HUMPHREY OGART LAUREN oe HALF SHELL | _Zeeeecocoancccooscey | : Banquet Room > a| - eho Soccccgccccvccccces M | mmm STARTING SATURDAY —————— | Phone: | GLENN FORD IN “THE AMERICANO” —~——— ALSO—— Si < athekiieecdahe 309])\|, THE BOWERY BOYS IN “BOWERY” To gagoan” ee | pa ower ners quar iat my) Be ha es le \ ‘ol Cactus. Mo ee a ee Grains Steady. in Light Trade CHICAGO W — Most commodi- 'tles were about steady in a light} mete The United States has more than 7, million oil burners in use for central heating. FOR SALE- Surplus. Equipment including | Nearb y soybeans contracts | Rained substantial fractions as de- mand for crude bean oil pushed those prices as much as 18 cents a hundred pounds higher Corn and rve_ slipped slightly! but oats gained minor fractions Wheat was virtually unchanged Farm Equipment. Tractors; Office Equipment: Hospital Furniture and Equipment. OAKLAND COUNTY BOARD OF AUDI- TORS—For Information. call Mr. J. Talley, FEderal $-3411 , Near the end of the first hour - . wheat was unchanged to 78 cent! higher, July $1.98!2: corn was 's to *a lower, July $1.42'4; oats IDEAL GIFTS FOR were 's to '2 higher, July 664, | and rye was ‘4 to !2 lower, July| GRADUATION $1.06. Soybeans were unevenly 34 | cent higher to ‘4 lower, July $2.43 and lard was unchanged to 7 cents | ond No Extra Charge 250 Ibs etiecings mostly few high choice to prime vy 17S 200 Ibs up to 25 06 « and commercial races @ BAROMETERS 1400-1700 “scattering. ul Sheep salable '30 Market Le on meager supply ne t 2) re 18 00 "9 Ib shorn lambs No 1 @ FIELD GLASSES ity to good 76 Ib shorn lambs CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO June AP;—Salable hoes 1t 000 market slow very uneven gen- . ® i : enera rintin eraliy 28-50 lower on bu teh rs under 230 | ib averaging around 5 lower on eine wetghts ver 230 Ib soWs weak to . lower choice N 1 to Ye 196-220 Ir & Office Su | butchers 19 00-19 74% around .a double pp y deck mostiy choice No 1s 00 these very scarce most choice No and V5 236-250 ip 1800-1900 few und 230 17 W. Lawrence *Ib to 1975 most 260-280 | 00 fewg 200-310 Ib 16 73-172 wetehts searce sows 400 - 1425-1699 {few sround 27 16 50 most 400-500 Ib -——— Se Oe Se een se ee ee wetvhts up to 600 Ibo down to around 12 24 Balable cattie 9500 salable calves tO |; S'aughter steers slow, steady to 50 low- | jer heifers steady to 28 lower ¢ ws | fully steady. bulls and vealers active bulle stron g@ to 25 higher vealers strong to 100 higher two leads prime fed steers 2550 and 25 75, mixed chotce | chotce steers 22 00-23 25 good tq low | choice 1800-21 75 -a lead of choice and prime mixed steers and hetfers 23 50 ee ee ee ee ee ee eee most good to High choice heifers 18 50 . 23200) =outtHty ond commercial cows as . j 1178-1450 canners and cutters 950 {[ liked it {1278 utility and commercial bulls land 14 50-18 50 good and choice vealers tf @) | 20 00-25 00 Gg enough to Salable sheep 2.000 general trade a factive, slaughter lambs unevenly §0-75 . j higher than Monday. sglauchter sheep buy ito. largely steady, good to prime nattye spring lambs 2250-25 25 utility to low | good lambs 1700-2290: two loads good ee a oe ee ee ee dt choice 97 Ib shorn Jamba No 1 and | fall shorn pelts 1950. short load 71 Ih A A | Texas feeder yearlings No 1 pelts 1450 Now I'd feel short deck shorn lambs around 90 Ib 1830: load $6 Ib Texas spring feeder tiambs 1680: cull to chotce shorn slaugh- iter ewes 350-600 LOST without my... | Vanderbilt Niece Wins Divorce on 4th Try LAS VEGAS, Nev. (®—On the: {fourth try. Mrs. Gertrude Vander- bile Whitney Henry Gabaldoni New York heiress, has won a divorce from Peruvian diplomat- journalist Luis | Emelio Gabaldon: Dist. Judge” Frank McNamee awarded Mrs. Gabaldoni, 30. a decree yesterday after a jury up-_ held her contention that Gabaldoni deserted her abrees) years | AKO. Ye ¢LIQUID LEAD trade on the Board of Trade today. 2 cars struck Marlow’s southbound auto. | The truck and auto struck Lane’s, car and one being driven bv Kern chal and Brewer were ference of Clubs of Michigan opens a two--day convention here Wednesday. _‘ than Eu delegates are _expected. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WE DNESD. AY, JUNE 8, 19 55 Se = EE MARKETS | Stock Market Produce DETROIT PRODUCE DETROIT, June 8 (UP) — Wholesale prices of No i grade on the public farmers’ markets as reported by the | bureau of markets Fruits) Apples vorthern Spy 3 35- 75 bu Steels red 3 50-400 bu berries 9 00-11.00 24-qts | 5.50-6 00 16-qt Vegetables) Asparagus. 125-175 doz behs Beets topped. 25-17$ bu Broc- coli 225-2175 4 ,-bu Cabbaye 1 75-2 25 bu s«- Cau! iflower 200-258 dos Kohirabi 175-200 doz bchs Leeks, 1 50-2 00 dog behs Onions, dry 100-125 S0-!b bag Onions green 65- 80 doz behs Parsley, curly, 75-100 doz behs Pota- toes 200-235 50-lb bag 400-450 100 ib bag Radishes red 96-110 doz behs Redishes white 60-100 doz behs Rhu- barb outdoor 78-80 doz behs Bquash EUSIRy er 200 pi Tomatoes, hothouse 25-250 8-ib bsat Turnips 1 00-1 50 i ao z behs Greens Cabbage, 125-175 bu Col- lard T$-125 bu sorre! 160-125 bu Turnip 78-100 bu Mustard 15-100 bu Spinach 175-160 bu Lettuce and salad greens bibb «980-125 pk basket Lett 350-400 3-doz. crate head 1 60 lettuce leaf 100-125 bu | 2 60-1580 bu | Exes Large 13 00-1490 30-doz crate, ; hundred pounds higher, July $12.17, , med#um, 11 00-1200 smal: 6 00-9 00 . . | CHICAGO POTATOES FATHER S$ DAY Grain Prices CHICAGO, une Villars ematen iarrivais 133° on track 22@ tutal US | __ CHICAGO oo shipments 893 Supplies moderate, de- CHICAGO, June 6 ; — Opening, mand good and market steady Car grain lot track sales California Long phites | Wheat Rye $450-475 Round Reds $450-485. Ala- | July 198%. July -oe - 106 bama Hound Reds $4 25 Sep . 190% Bep i Ov‘, pee ee Dec «- 2024. Dec Pepe ices Mar ...... 2016 Bovbeans DETROIT EGGS May oon toe Old Contracts DETROIT June 7 +AP)—Eees fob Corn July 242', Detroit, cases included federal-state July ge 14i"s Sep 2 284, grades r Sep - 14l*%— Nov 2 28%, Whites Gritte A Jumbo 43-49 weight- Dec 134*%e Jan 231'. ed average 4)'3 large 41-43 wtd ave Mar oe 237%, New Contracts 41. medium 35-37 wta avg 36', smal { Qats Nov 30‘, 20.) grade B large 35-37 wid avg 36'y July 66°. Mar 2 S4be Browns—Grade A jumbo 46 large 41 Sep ce... 635". Lard ; Medium 34-36 wid avg 36. grade B Dec «. 68", July . . WIS | large 36. grade C iarge 27 Mar one Bep 1250 | Checks 22'2-23 wid avg. 22', Oct 12.32 Commercially graded Whites—Grade A extra Jarge 30', Li t k large 37-38, medium 35 : | | Browns Grade A extra ‘arze 39 large é ives oc } 36',-37. medium 33 grade B large 30 DETROIT LIVESTOCK | — @ RING BOOK ZIPPER DETROIT June 8 (AP)—Hogs salable | CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS 400) Nu early sales | > . < un ‘AP tut CASES and BRIEF t Castle peels bic bee About 90) per cent | stace “oe Re - een ra wh ; A as resh receipts cows siaughter steere and | ,., rie ! pif we CASES in Tufhide and yearlings slow, steady cows active fully | cae Bia Sa 18 ey = $4 Os 89 ( oe steady bulls stromg at 2330 50 cents | cars 90 FR 545 Bo C 83 genuine leathers $3 advance, stockers and feeders momina!l Eggs steady t firr receipts 23 106 few sales good and low choice fed steers | wholesale buying prices unchanged U8 19 00-23 00 high n choice and prime ab- | 2 ees oe As up. sent ulllity and commercial steers 14 50- | tm letandarls ‘00 bulk tility and low commerct@l | 3: dirttes 275 chece sis Currect Large Stock to Choose from cows 13 00-1430, aizabie lot at 1400 and) eins 205 . : 1450 few high commercial cows a . 1850 canners and cutters most!y ay ay | =< 1306 most utility and commercial bulls @ Complete line of BUX- § 1450-1650 Poultry Calves salable 175 Market about TON BILLFOLDS for ff steacy purl puesta) em cics ood ur DETROIT POLL TRY mand f light weigh ae - men and women $1.00 over 210 Ibs very DETROIT June 7 1AP)—Prices paid ood and choice veale hotce srot und 225-250 Your Name in Gold ...at Eccinsaled ites CHICAGO POULTRY CRICAGO June 7 tAP Live poultry weak on caponettes ab ste , balance receipte in « ps 671 027 «coop 178695 it ft Two Are In jured ‘in Collision Here were injured when three Two motorists slightly Tuesday cars -! and a semi-truck collided on East Boulevard near Mt Clemens street, Pontiac Police Treated and released by Pontiac General Hospital attendants were said Harold Lane, 27. of 511 Granada Ct. andRobert D. Marlow, 20. of Detroit. Both suffered bruises Gilbert H. Paschal, 31. of 464 Auburn Ave., the truck driver, |said his northbound trailer: ap- parently jackknifed as he at tempted to stop for a line of cars on Fast Zoulevard and of Rochester. Pas- not injured Brewer, 18. Garden Clubber kee! 24th (,arden (P» — The Federated JACKSON con- More e That's the wsual story with this amaz- ing new writing ta- strument! People try it out for the chrill of writing with this NEW Parker inven- tron! Then they dis- cover that they can't get along without it, because it 1s such a joy to have around aad to write with. And here's why: f= @ Smith-Corona, Remington, and Ger- | man Olympia PORT- ABLE TYPEWRITERS guarantee backed Royal, © POINT CAN NEVER BREAK! e NEVER NEEDS by our own expert SHARPENING! | © ERASES Service Department. CLEANLY! ° WRITING @ Beautiful line of STA- CANT seuoOn | TIONARY, and NOTE | * StIM GOOD | LOOKS—A JOY | PAPER eee for men Te Own and women. @ DIARIES G TRAVEL Ory it out | Books. taday at We Stock a Complete Line of PARKER PENS and PENCILS. Also Sheafter, Esterbrook, @ SCRAP BOOKS and PHOTO ALBUMS. Eversharp and Waterman i Factory Trained Pen Man ‘in Charge General Printing & Office Sapply_ 17.W. Lawrence . Here’s Some Fine GIFT SUGGESTIONS For FATHER’S DAY | and GRADUATION OFFICE FURNITURE in wood or steel, everything from Ash Trays to the ; Finest Type of Leather Chairs. Genera Rtg ANO OFFICE SUPPLY 17 W. LAWRENCE STREET, PONT! @ DICTIONARIES... Webster and Random House from $1.00 up. @ Kem Plastic PLAYING CARDS. e@ DESK SETS ond letter opener. @ BOOK ENDS. @ ELECTRIC RAZORS @ AUTO COMPASS with light. @ BAROMETERS. @ BINOCULARS ond FIELD GLASSES. a » SCISSOrsS 15, MICHIGAN Straw. | Slimly Mixed NE WYORK uw — The market was narrowly mixed today | | following the strong advance of, | the past two days to new highs: | * stock Most changes either fractional, but a few ad vanced to around 2 points at the! outside. | Way were Issues Steels and aluminums were active and higher, as they were yesterday, Kaiser Aluminum was up between 2 and 3 points and Aluminum Ltd. gained between 1 and 2 peints. \ Katser Aluminum started on a, - es block of 12,000 shares up 2 at HARLEY BODAMERK S8'z and among other significant blocks on the tape early 1D the B d { H d session were General Motors ‘ 900 | 0 amer 0 €d shares up 44 at 9978, U-S. Steel 3.500 up 4a at 485s, vediachone Flectric 1,500 off “sat 68'4, Ameri-| Management Club ‘an N -s 2.100 f ‘4 9& : 3 can lotors MI of s at 96 The anntal installation of off! Deere 1,500 up °s at and In- _— . , ; 1. cers of the American Forging and ternational Harvester 5.800 up ‘sy Socket Company Club was held at a dinner Monday evening. Newly at 4 | Island Creek Coal after a boost in its dividend opened on a block meeting : are Hi .OdaI rest ‘of 2.000 shares up 2ly at 28. Plans a cs pee ae »t dlamer, pi den reodore rATTE avert for a merger of the company with ent. OOOTE ve : y, . | Pond Creek Pocohontas also were president one Hl Me hen r See: disclosed. Pond Creck opened up retary, and Robert b Wuelfing, 144 at 49%4 treasurer John Telep, of activiies charge for the chairman in Universal - Ccylops Steel on an and a awards eXtra dividend was up | at 47. Management | pact | elected of- | | | | | j National Association of Foremen, Universal - Cyclops Steel on an as well as‘president of the Man- extra dividend was up | at 47, lagement Club of The Budd Co., | Detroit, served as special installa New York Stocks ltion officer Telep was introduced (Late Morning Quotations) iby David Hicks, program chair- man fams Ex 441 Interlak Lr 214 sa miral 257 Int Harv 404 The business meeting was con- Reau - 420int Nick 697 ‘caste. . : rd : i | eLs i irs Paper 110 ducted by Ford bird, retiring hed ms Int Silve 673 president Ilted & eu 6 Int iA Tei 2a | Se 3 @ Ist Cre Coa 234 Ta Lra in acobs 87 T B . | A 14) Yee Sac Airiin ws Le et “s £umoOr benign, i Can 4 Ke ' = | Cvan & Kenne 1 ) L % < l ju Gen & EN SAT Keele oe Viewers earn hay JIS Kroge aut 97 Lor Ge 156 1 TV $16 Lin MON n: IN Surgery 247 lige & M 64 ioe fee ah PASHINGTON GO) Shortly (tee 4 62 n Sooo 0 clock last night tele 1p y oe RG . - Vision watchers learned with relief 2720 Marsh Fie.d 62 that the ugly Jump tn the young 644 Martin G ‘ 3) Mey D & , womans left) breast) was fot B: 1 Mrad ¢ 621 cancer o 192 Mog BY. EF mol . A 6 Monsan ¢ m4 They scooped the young woman chisor 4a t Ward ee ae : Atl Car t 422 ee Pa a5 herself by a matter of hou sand Atl Refir 4 Me r Whee V4 her anxious hushand by perhaps Atias Pedr St7 wet ( ' | Aves ate ee, | oo. 1) or 20 miniites Bald Lira 1748 Murr ( tw ' Balt aS NGn Riel” ane The occasion was history's ee ‘2 ) first televised surgical removal ‘at Da 11 Nat ing 495 | of a breast tumor, It also was - Re Lee (0) the first time in history that, 173 Nat Thea 1 even while the surgeon worked, Li NY Air B:k 28 . . ©? ONY Cer to7) & pathologist in a distant labora 14 NeaM Pu 22 tory examined the excised tissue : Norf & Wes 1 f A > ean Ae seg and reported his finding, by tele- 200 noe Pa 756 vision and intercom to the oper- ft ie © if 1310 Oiver Cp 171 ating room. iG tery Pac «9 ; Tet Owens i Gi 123) | Surgeon to pathologist more 4 ae A 23 : Capital airl wae) yen aes A = thtan one - third of a mile away: ; a , Be Me Beat 436* How does it look? r 4 ri Parke I) 46 Pes ater Tra So ae te. ge CROOKS RENIGN {" asi ce - 7 6 Pa RR 2a 4 Pathologist to surveon Loo en Ps , Pet reg 2 ES t-teed 281 op D og ber n mild rs Gt s be . es & Oh 7 r 14 6 ae ’ hi & NW my poM so), tS . : er 74 pr Pe aa > A ye > ' ee T . ' : S26 Pit Plate 6 102 Had the verdict been malig Eovtp 6O8 Prort & 97 3 Mo $70 oPimar ans nant the surceon s work would Pea 6a) Bie; 7 : oe — . , Petr ae fee we just have be gun He would have On 1444 pF Ra RAK had to remove the entire breast 498 Recn Ver asi sa 5 ne $ Rev Toe B 423 As it was, his work was quick- 1 9 Bn © . Rak Ww6 © ace, Iv over, And a few minutes later ile ay ee 491 the waiting hasband—who had t ’ Bt Reg an a eee Or R1 Reavil a¢7 met dared to turn on -his TV Rng 385 Reab at 866 set—was hearing the lovely word Pa AO Psser aa | oan : Bt] 424 Bhe! oO so? “henign. Wr 71 Sttrmear 444 161 Rinclatr O 55 The shew — and for all its real- Sea wR RK Pac 60 5 ry Aa 8 by eaz, ism It was a show—wsas Staced at Cle Ne 2 6 ' Walter Reed Army Hospital and mt 190 d Srand 7) 7 P oy Sd ON Ca a5 the Armed Forces Institute of Pa- ro. 3 R'd Ot Ind 46 tholog, tAFIP) in Washington . a Erd ¢ N 2 427 Sra It was sponsored and prodiic ed Nene ae Sa ra . : . eS ee es 7 by Smith Kine & French Labora hn wy os ck T14 tones of Philadelphia in coopera aR "Ih * er Pan an 4 warrpenin. “She 0 gree gvly ED Pd Ane tion with the American MEeocdieitt jFairh Mor .. 233 Texas C . $57 Association. as the last on the | Firestone Tex . 476 ilar ~ IEC, . lieeeent Sal Ar xa (Spring senes of SKE’s March of Frueh Tra . ir Medicine prograny Gen Fak ,., * x * en Flec | Gen Mills The stars were the 25 vear-old Chen de ; Gen (wife of an Army doctor: May Fid- Gen Bu ward S. Bres Jr. of Silver Spring Men Refrac 5 : Md... a Walter Peed surfeon; and Army Capt) Claude Wo Delia of | the AFIP whose new atom bomb- omen a proof building occupies a hill site | Goodrich more than 2.000 feet from the hos | teoodyear ; ler * einer aranl paler pifal where Jast might’s surgery Gt No Ry took place Gt Wee 8 Greyhound |Gulf Ot; . : Haves Mf? 7 { [ Helland PF 1, 682 Homestk seca 42 hi 95 Hooker El ... 37 Wilson & Co 11 . . Houd Her .., 141 Wise F] Pw 126 lil Centr ... 644 Woolworth 47 Ul ins | Indust Ray 5684 Yale & Tow 632 | Inland Stl . HT Young 8S & W 26" _ |Inspir Cop .. 514 Yngest 8h&T 892) HOUGHTON (® — A Calumet & STOCK AVERAGES Hecla, Inc., official savs the firm NEW YORK. June & Compiled by . PE nth 3 «Rte THe Asscciaiedl Press intends to proceed with its 2 30 15 1S #0 millon dollar damage suit against nett change .. g's Rajis Cul Btocks | the CIO United Steel Workers | Noon. today 244° 1970 170 1ARS A. S. Kromer, general manager | Prev day ...:.. 2277 12172 729 1682 ory te Fa. Week ago... 2218 1:57 {724 1848 of the company’s Calumet Division Month ago . ,, 2788 1332 ~721 1427) «; esterday the fi will press Vegi kee ee a) ee aid vesterday the firm | press 1955 high ,, 2277 12746 730 1682 for an early trial of the case 1 1985 low ...., 2021-3149 672 1488 aE = ve AA: sya 1A 71984 high 2119 1230 683 1552 Federal Judge W. Wallace Kent | 1954 low 1439 778 354 1080 Monday denied the company an injunction against a strike at its Calumet Division and an injunction \to regulate picketing at its five DETROIT STOCKS (Hornblower & Weeks) Figures after decimal points are eighths . . High Low Noon Baldwin Rubber Ceviteentenicane 167 167 184 copper mines and smelter, Masco Screw ae 32 32 33 ee Kingston Products* 3 4 | Midwest Abrasives or ae o4 One of nine civilian job-holders Rudy Mfa* + eevee 320 33 jn the U. S. works for a govern- Warne S-rew* 13 14 *No sale, bid and abked ment agency. SMASH-UPS MEAN PAY-UP! DON'T GET CAUGHT WITH YOUR. FINANCES DOWN! With..... - CRAWFORD - DAWE - GROVE |) } INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS) State Bonk Bldg, - Ph. FE 2435) a millron-dollar fund out of : ; which to give laid-off workers part | model automobiles Along with the 6 gp, customary pay, Ford 7s development will come still high Poy py In a position to Vo whe id horsepower output, |. le of its stock to the putt * * * These advances immediately | Actually, the stock to be sold SEES! quality fuel. That. |" thar eld by the Ford founda- tion he nmonveting shares are too is in prospect. However step- Tearmed on the foundation s hooks ping up the quality of automobile’ at $135 each But Wall Street fig fuel iS an expensive operation. ures that’ Ford's assets are just Sore sources have! ealdithat add under two bilhon dallars, and that therefore, the foundation's shares ing a single octane number near have an asset Value in excess of the present top involves a billie Ml $500 each. dollar investment in added faci . . ‘ fies by the petroleum industry Sree $500) alshare stock) vent So the men who make the in- popular with the general invest dustry's engines are trying to ine ing, public, the expectation is that crease what they call the Ford will split the stock at least “mechanical octane of the = 19 for 1. and perhaps more. be- power plant, Distinguished from fore making the public offering the chemical octane advances Ne . * contribated by the — petroleum Union leaders made it plain that refiners, this involves improve. "ey meyected Fords offer to let ments in the engine to facilitate employes buy stock at half price its operation ona fuels currently primarily because it was put for- available. (ward as a. substitute for unem- ploxment compensation, They say It is achieved chiefly througttythe union would be glad to eon- improved ignition control. valve | sider the stuck offer as a se parate timing, carburetion, engine-trans- proposition mission relationship and. combus- | SE tion chamber design In simple | words if ms designed fo get the | Lodge Calendar most out of every-day auto fueis Special communication Cedar FUEL WASTE Lodge No 60, F & A M. Clarks- The engineers say there still is 10m. Thurs. June 9, 730 p m tremendous waste in incomplete Work in EA degree. Richard fuel consumption. At the me oy elag vi oeh ~Acy time they sav combustion nd ; 4 fuel consumptien—is substantially News in Brief “better than it was in prewar dass " you want to argue that your Mrs. Amos Vanbuskirk. of 28 ar mileage per gallon as little, if. Fairmount Ave | reported the theft any, better than it was before the of her son's bievcle from Wever war the eNXperts have an answer Junior High School Tuesday, Pon for that. too tiac Police said Ea * * They sav that. in modem day After pleading guilty to reckless i traffic there is vastly more stop- | driving Tuesday before Waterford ind-go driving than ever before | Township Justice Donald Whith and that you get no mileage at all | Raymond Prusakrewicz, 21, paid a waiting for traffie hght changes. | $90 fine in’ heu of spending 20 days in Oakland County Jal Top compression ratios in this | vear's modely ig 9 to l in a {f vour friend’s in jail and needs | bail Ph. FE 5-9424 or MA 5-4031 | —Adv limited number of cars. There will be several more in the 1956 | models. Contpression ratio, | Rummagé sale’ Clean clothing, roughly, is the space in the (toys household goods. ete from cvlinder at the bottem of the fine homes Sat, June 11 9am piston stroke in relation to the to 9 p m= 4 South Saginaw 341 combustion chamber space at — Pike Ady the top of the stroke. Rummage sale: Rochester Meth- Some industry engineers have odist Church at Pla Garage predicted some of the more ex Fifth & Walnut. Fri. only 9 to 6 pom = pensive cars soon will ‘have 10 to TI compression ratios That un- Home made ice cream social at doubtedly 1s one of the goals of Covert Methodist Church 2705 j the engine designers, but it does Pontiac Lake Road Serving 5 40 not appear ta be in prospect for po om, June 11 — Adv the 1956 models. A few engines - with 95 to 1 are mere Lkely Rummage edad Youth Center, Lake Orion Fri & Sat. 9 to 4 12.5 TO t TRIED Adv The industry has tested engines | ORI RECTION with raties considerably higher ve TOF Te than the present top. Charles F f : eet 8 Kettering. famed engineer - ser uy oe entist. built a couple of engines a v . eo few years ago with 125 to 1 cam. fie te ibe ye pression ratios They required a e dime 4 yosp type of fuel that even today is ee ' tee commercially impracticable — to Povo ce ERE de | produce. Fer four year terms ending J } * * 2 oo 5 1859 However, Kettering believed he | proved the practicability of higher tej tynn OD Allen Jr compression car engines*and that a) Ithey vielded greater mileage pet ton Ms a gallon of fuel an) | A Par There is a limit, of course, to . how high compression ratios can f j Te mx be attempted in gasoline power 7 plants. Somewhere in the U5 er ans 4 ero " - _ ase : ‘ If to 1 ratio area the diesel type 00°00" ee Pr of combustion is reached. In this | 4 — haviey s: field the fuel is detonated by the | Eo 8 heat developed rather than by a | DP 2 timed electric spark. r Some sources say next. vear’s 4 ears will include several with 300} 5 Ra cmin § horsepower engines. Chrysler re- | K-Weson sch i éently announced one with that! t, MeConnel . power capacity’ and Packard cur- NE Gentrel (Re rently is building a sports model | ee " car called the Cambhean which de ee ale at Rea Balous 275 horsepower PoWachineton Tr TI Ntenas : § Daniel tof NO Oreha BOARD OF FNUCATION Toledo Plant Will Make Lots BRING: ne & @ a Rescue Boats for Navy WASHINGTON «m — The Navy j hag aw: arded Ray Greene Co... To- edo Ohio\ a $65,790 contract to build nine \19-foot plastic rescue t ate 4 fay of by an yetwer | boats \ NOT mAD Michigan Cor They are ta be flat bottom. blunt- | poration ryhrandt president i \ of the first part and W Chica said “Now we wairit to improve the arithmetic . Negotiations will open’ Thars- day in Moline with Deere & Co., farm equipment manufacturer, Greathouse said. The company, Whose contract will expire Aug. 1. has ome plants and 15.000 workers. i \ * t! | a, compact CNet ae} WIM ow t i We I ernational blarvest Cu plants I gia eed annua wave 4 ' 1 ‘ iy t nN All Cha { ifucturing Co Sp id Caterpillar Tract ( Rast Peorta Studebaker- Packard Corp South Bend. Ind ind) Bendix Products Division of Bendix Aviation Corp., South Bend Panhandle to Boost Winter Gas Capacity WASHINGTON - Panhandle Faster Pipe Line ¢ today not Federal P ro mned to | mmis- woxt its peak da eapacits : 0 cubic latural gas) This would 4) ADO O00 aTeiieen utifities and indus- Indiana, Ohio Missour The enm tres in Michigan pans < three main ¢{ Stretch from f ' rs feeds mio the at Tuscola. Hl (aulf Coast handle s\stem The Michigan affected the Ce ef Jackson. Citizens Fuel of Adnan, Michigan Vtilities of Coldwater and utheastern Michi- of ‘Port Huron Business Notes The appe John Bohmrich as the \ Fruehauf Trailer ¢ beer announcers? by W four ire companics nsumers Power (as Gas van (Gas ntment af J assistant to it president has 1? as 4 Biir the puast 1 wal Mr crated with £ £ rporation «af is General Grocer Pleads Guilty on Narcotics Charge DETROIT 1® — A Detroit gro eer accused of participation in an international narcotics ming plead ed guilty to a conspiracy charge today in federal ceotirt Phe wer Hussine Under, 41. Vas arrested Mas Zh an a five- pantandicrment chant conspir wy to wielate federal “narcatics was Hider was arrested on informa tion furnished hy James Aftie, a federal marc: fics agent who posed is a dope peddler Athe went to Lehanon in the Middle East where © bought 11 pounds of raw herein from oa Lebanese contact. Agents said af would bave brought two then dollars on the underworld rket Nth J he te tact with fu Idlers ia Lebanen through miific ation, pape s furnished t Llides q Death Notices RAP FARKAS oe 6 11955 JOHN. Ti2', W age 64. beloved d ot Ali ie L Farkas. dear r f Willia t m Farkas, y+ at 2 uw M rch with Rev OD la offieciatine Inter Chapel Memorial , Parkac will lie in as » Pursley Puneral t f n Thursday Hater TUNE 7 19055 WILLIAM . mix Hx ace WW heloved ard rou Delores O Hat E F , \ f «tex Hatley . T ty J Jerry 1 a Alar Atex Hatles > At ¢ eet Jorn Hatles Mr Ja Webh Hitt Funeral d Pridar June the Voorhees- le Rev Tom ta i Interment if ortawe Park c meter Mr Hat- 1 will lie ft atate at the Voarheape Rinie Puneral Home JACKSON TNF 2 1085. MAMTE 25 Flizabeth St aee Ti: dear ter af Mattte DeWalt 7 nieces and 1 nenhew also curvive Pu- metal