The Weather U.S. Weather, Bureaa Forecast Thundershowers. (Details Page 2) ’ \ 117th YEAR | regres PONT IAC, aa ae ee es “MICHIGAN, ee TU ESD. AY, ch i i, i eee ‘ ' MAY?’ 5, 1959 —28 PAGES HE PONTIAC PRE ggg Oveh PAs ASSOCIATED PRESS ONITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Summit Talks Auto Passes Safety Check ee INSPECT] LANE AHEAD b SAFETY 0 BRAKES LIGHTS MUFFLER HORN WIMNCHIFI N WID RECEIVES HIS STICKER—Orrin P. (seated in the auto) was Jr. of 124 Osceola Dr. one of the first to have his car yestetday at the start of the five-day annual May Pontiac. Eastman, public vehicle on are safety director; inspection program in (from left) George D Harold Marshall, FRS Huntoon safety-checked with the Pontiac Looking 3 p.m. and 5:30 Clifford Metty Postmaster Objects to ‘Girdle’ and Robert Flynn Area Chamber of Commerce Traffic Committee which co-sponsors the on re Mea ‘ e ¥ Pentiac Press Phote all members of the Pontiac and Safety check Automobile Dealers Assn. The safety safety check lanes will be open from 9 a. m. to p. m. to 8 p. m. until Friday in five areas throughout the city Downtown Mail Space Too Small Is the government planning a federal building here that will be crowded and incapabie of expan- sion? Present plans for remodeling the old main post office into a federal building indicate this may be the case The two-story building at FE. Huron and Parke street is now under control of the (General Services Administration (GSA), which is currently in the process of dividing up the first floor for future use of three agencies— the Post Office, Internal Revenue Service and Social Security. It’s the 10.000 square feet of floor space on the first floor that is causing the most concern. * * * Present GSA specifications call for 4,985 square feet to pe used for postal purposes and 4,221 by the two Treasury Department agencies, with the rest devoted to corridors The specifications are in the hands of the architectural firm of Heenan & Pullar Inc., which is de- signing the remodeling PM PROTESTS The space is being divided on the. basis of present needs. Robert C. Miller, acting Pon- tiac postmaster, said present pos- tal operations downtown could “barely” fit into the space al- loted. “It would be like squeezing a new girdle onto an old bulge,” said. * * * Miller extra room for handling extra- heavy mail at Christmas time Nor would there be room for handling any additional carrier routes, he said. * * * . The downtown office handles the bulk of Pontiac mail—everything east of Johnson avenue. Although the new post office en W. Huron street does more busi- ness, most of its activity is for the benefit of the areas outside of Pontiac that are served here. Crowded facilities downtown could mean later mail service for the downtown section and some homes, Miller warned. Sorting service for new Pontiac routes would have to take place! & In Today s Press RoR as County News........6..e0e! Editorials ...........0000e+5: a Markéta .......5..- Salad siete Obituaries .....- OSA AAOCHOSEE a MpeTES cs sesvaccasecceds 18-19 Winenhere | os seen exes cede ne 17 TV& Radig Programs wales 27 Wilson, Harl........5.0...q.-27 Women’s Pages..........- 13-16 | ?’ rs horses, from the delivery points he ex- at the westside office, farther away plained. * * Miller doubted whether the post office could maintain a 24-hour self- service station in the federal build- ing under present plans Under the GSA plan, the Office of Internal Revenue is scheduled to leave the office it is renting at 65 Oakland Ave This spot, which the Internal Revenue Rervice has been using | Take Umbrella Along Tonight and Wednesday Better take your umbrella and raincoat along tonight and tomor- row. The weatherman has forecast showers and thunderstorms. Tonight's low will be a warm 58 and tomorrow's high 75, but temperatures Will turn cooler in the afternoon. Today's southeaster- | ly winds at 10-18 miles an hour wifl become south to southwest Wednesday. Fifty-four was the lowest record- ing in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 am. The mercury rose to J7 at 1 p.m Shah Out Courting «e Women and West | LONDON w — The Shah of to Britain reportedly with two un- official problems on his mind—a future wife and closer ties with the West. * * The moment the _ dark-eyed, twice-divorced potentate stepped off his train, some of the very; people who could make those dreams—if they are his dreams—' come true, appeared before him Standing in spring sunshine in the center of a quarter acre of red carpeting at flag-draped Vic- toria Station were: Pretty Princess Margaret, Queen Elizabeth Il, Prince | Philip, Prime Minister Harold | Macmillan, and two of his Cabi- net members, Nobody in London is a "/@ romance Between the 39-year-old | Mohammedan Shah and the Church | of England princess. | But with royalty, like through- nothing is safe at 100-1. a Detroit Building Spurts DETROIT ##—March contracts. for future construction in .|Michi- | gant totaled ‘$112,767,000, an in- | Wells, fer about a year, is generally considered the most attractive Internal Revenue office in the state. The office serves populous sout eastern Oakland County, as wel as Pontiac east to Rochester, Walled Lake 'D. Beadle and surrounding areas and west to Williams Fails to Settle Crisis i With Beadle Dash Hopes of Avoiding Another Payless Day for State Employes LANSING (UPI)—Hopes ‘for avoiding another pay- less payday were dashed to-*- day when Gov. G. Mennen | Williams and Sen. Frank (R-St. Clair) failed to reconcile conflict- ing views on Michigan's cash crisis. “It was more or less a sparring match” the Senate GOP leader said after a 15- minute meeting this morn- ing with the governor. Beadle insisted the state istrative yesterday it could delay a payment longer than expected iwas not justified’ in ordering a payless payday for 28,000 workers Thursday board, which disclosed to schools In another development early today, Senate Republicans were | looking again into the possibility of using money in the liquor fund to tide the state over until new tax rsevenues come in. The meeting followed these de- velopments last night * * ® —Williams paid a rare per- ‘sonal visit to: the Senate to apolo- gize to Beadle for keeping the Senator waiting most of the day and for a telegram that was print- ed in newspapers before it reached Beadle —Confusion among Williams’ cabinet on the deadline for pay- iment of a $35,500,000 bill prompted |Republic ans to renew claims that ithe cash crisis is a hoax. * * * —The Senate passed and sent to the House a bill to ‘‘unshackle 1 of cash among funds —Senate Republicans Williams’ offer to draft a biparti- san taX program in The space provided by the GSA Senate action to cash in the vet- in our present location is satisfac- ©T@"S trust fund tory and allows sufficient room for —A bill to tap the federal expansion,’ said Lyle D (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Voters fo Pick 2 for School Board May 11 Is Deadline for Nominating Petitions; Election Is June 8 Two seats on the Pontiac Board of Education will be at stake in the annual Pontiac School District election June 8 * * Vt Nominating petitions for candi- dates are available at the Board fof Education offices, 40 Patterson St Deadline for returning the pe- titions to the Board offices is 4 p.m. Saturday. the signatures of 50 registered voters. Expiring are the terms of Board said there would be no Iran today began an official visit members Monroe M. Osmun, own-} er of Osmun's Men's Wear stores, and the Rev. J. Allen Parker, tor of the Newman AMF. Church. Both plan to seek re-election Board members are elected to} four-year terms. * * * * The deadline for registering for) the election in the City of Pontiac is May 11. Registration may be| made in the city clerk’s office att City Hall. * * * In outlying areas of the Pontiac} registration| School District, the deadline is May 29 ‘News Flash By The Associated Press A tornado dipped down near Minn. this forenoon and funnel clouds were sighted ip Texas and Kansas, Tornadoes and funnel clouds spun into five states. They struck mostly in open country. A few and farm build- _ings were damaged but no in- juries were reported. | crease of 19 per cent compared | with the previous “March, the | | F. W. Dodge Corp. reports. — Inventory Reduction Sale Want: The Trutt™ We |discounts on each car windd Bill Spence Rambier, es 4 Russell, “ed payrolls primarily They must bear | pas- oo honest 211 Ss. Gaginaw| government for 50 million dollars to pay next year's bills made its appearance in the Senate. Both Beadle and Williams spent most of their time yesterday in separate discussions on whether Michigan actually has a_ dollar shortage = * * * “The money is there,’ said Beadle. “‘There is no excuse for payless paydays. It’s a lot of hokum.” There was considerable confu- sion yesterday when state treas- urer Sanford A. Brown admitted up until last Wednesday he thought! $35,500,000 in primary school in- terest money was due May 15. * * * Lawmakers were led last week to believe the administration halt- ly because it needed to save up in order_to meet the Ma) 15 se hool obligation. admin- , rejected jarville, Miss., the receding waters of the Pearl return for ~ River near Bogalusa Monday. nounced ‘bleached body. FBI agent and a Mississippi high- that kidnaped Parker from his jail} cell in Poplarville on April 25, two! days before his trial was sched-| uled to start. p=nion spolted the head. one arm _ and a shoulder abo.e the water ait on Geneva—lke Lansing, Take Note! Oakland Whips Deficit By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. An open letter to the money-troubled Michigan legislators: You think the state has a deficit. So did Oakland County yesterday — until its supervisors did something about it. And it was only a matter of minutes be- fore the deficit was erased and a new balance blossomed. Supervisors’ jaws dropped when Mis~Genevieve-C.- Scheck-of- Berkley —___._. {ng $162 had-been-dropped —the flower of the Board of Super- visors — reported that the Board's flower committee spent more than it jook in last year. Does this ring a hell wtih any of you legislators in Lansing? * * x However, no cries of “we'll mortgage the/courthouse fund” ryng out in the Supervisors’ Room Monday. In- stead, the age-old custom of passing the hat was invoked Although Mrs. Schock modestly asked for unspecified “voluntary contributions,” fellow Berkley Supervisor John G. Se- mann moved that supervisors kick in two dollars apiece. ‘ROW’ STARTS “You're out of order,” Frid of Northville “Are you declaring a moratorium for state employes?” inquired Donald L Swanson, chaifman of the Michigan State Fair in addition to his duties as have to shouted Sydney supervisor _— mayor of Southfield. @ But Swanson dug deep and pro- duced two greenbacks for passers-of- the-bags (with all the men on the board not one volunteered a hat) Faye H. McCartney and Elizabeth W. Mitchell, members of Mrs. Schock's “Sock ‘em Committee.” When the money was counted, Chair- man Schock beamed a wide smile, report- trr-the-bags: (Some county officials helped bulge the kitty as there were but 75 supervisors on the floor. * x * So things once again looked rosy for Oakland County’s once-wilted flower fund “We'll be as eegnomical as we possibly can,’ promised Mrs. Schock. Such econ- omy of course; will depend on how many county officials are taken ill or pass to the great beyond. . EXAMPLE SET You see, legislators, something can be done about a deficit. By the way, Schock’s committee spent $138.49 while taking in only $134.19, for a “whopping” deficit of $4.30. “And the funds were audited,” Mrs. Schock was quick to add. So stick with it legislators, if Oakland County can get rid of a $4.30 deficit you should be able to handle one of .. . say, what has it come to now? Lynch Victim Winnie Comes to See en Found in River His Wartime Friends Conference Sure if Ministers Make Proaress Eisenhower Says Only Man :Who Can Deal for Russia ls Khrushchev - | | WASHINGTON@® ff ‘President Eisenhower said | | today a summit conference fi \will bea foregone con- | : clusion if the foreign min- ~~7~ isters conference opens the | | way to easing East-West i tensions. : The President also tolda =| news conference once again i that Soviet Premier Nikita | Khrushchev isthe onlyman | | who can deal authoritative- | ly for that country. i Eisenhower was asked how much progress there would have to be at the Geneva foreign minis- \ters conference beginning Monday e to justify a later meeting at the “| summit. -| ‘The President said that he a wasn't in a pesition to give a + specific reply, but does hope for | Some progress at Geneva. Any development there which . |, gives enlarged hope for decreas- ‘|ing’ East-West tensions ‘would mean, Eisenhower said, that a ;| later ‘summit session was a fore- *| gone conclusion. | x * * The conference brought these comments 4 from Eisenhower on * | United Sta can’t stand idly ‘ by and do hing about any | néw wage-price spiral which might stem from the industry's | negotiations with its workers. Negro, Kidnaped From WASHINGTON (? — A sentimental journey has fjsonhower said anew that he Poplarville Jail by Mob, brought Sir Winston Churchill to Washington once (se the idea of any govern- «a ment intervention or move to con- Identified by FBI again to see some of my comrades of wartime days.” pel Wars and peices on Coutrety P -+ Sir Winston, now 84, stepped slowly and carefully | to the American system. BOGALUSA, La. (AP) — Two! from President Eisenhower's personal plane Monday as ~*~ * * The FBI in Washington an- identification of too * * * The gruesome discovery by an The FBI agent and his con® Eisenhower body's left foot in the fork of a field marshal, criticized American}- tree. A log had rolled over . leadership in a televisjon program} v just be fore a recent trip to Moscow’ Col. (Continued on | Page 2 2, | | | | THE NEW LOOK 2 Four g Court judges were measur Monroe “1. Osmun, Pontia William .J. Beer. Being who will aScend the be * \ Oakland County’s newest Circuit d/tor their black .robes -yesterday by haberdasher, easured first is Theodore F. for a six-months term July 1. From left’. in the office of Judge Judgé Beer, Hughes, “I always love coming to | America, but I shall not say— as most people who are travel- | Pages 6, 12 seem to do—everything I think,” he remarked. grinned, _ crowd laughed, at this apparent! nthe treasury by allowing transfer Peace officers dragged the body Eisenhower and a crowd of¢— of Mack Charles Parker, the Pop- about 500 persons lynch victim, from .omed him at Washington Mier Nikita Khrushchev. National Airport. But his voice was clear and vig- the orous. The Churchill wit was there Eisenhower. The visit is criked as purely personal. House for three nights, |his visit. * * * | and the! line in a drift. three miles | reference to another wartime fig as A ow south of the Popiarville-togalusa | ure | mother was American, said “Wee's salaried personnel. bricge across the Pearl River. * + ‘claim at least the maternal side} | ‘of him.” Swirling currents lodged the, Lord Montgomery, retired British Churchill agreed that (Continued on Page 2, Oakland's New Judges Fitted for Robes . wel-| for conferences with Soviet Pre- He will be a guest at the White spend an- |Sir Winston's remarks at the air- }port are the only public state- fucti ' |ments he plans to make during ection workers at 'P > De- _Eisenhower greeted Churchill as som 5 . my dear friend of wartime days’’} e 350 employes at the com and, recalling that Sir Winston's include 270 production workers and nited States is “my mother’s Col. 4) —_—_—-_____—_| the mediators. - Pontiac Press Phote are Stanton G. Dondero, Osmun, Hughes, Frederick C. Ziem and who is already on the bénch but getting robes of his éwn for the first time since he was appointed last August. Dondero and Ziem will begin regular *!x-year terms Jan. 1, 1960. TRUMAN — Asked whether he feels former President Harry S. (Continued on vinileani 2, Col. 3) Delay Walkout at Rochester Churchill's last visit to this | country was in June 1954, when as prime minister he came for a series of official conferegces rm way patrolman pinned down the, , davs about the world . fate of the 23-year-old Negro. mE nownenye ® - other night at the British cm- Threatened Strike of charged with the rape of a preg-,— — —_—_ — bassy, and go to New York for . nant white woman Read Lawrence and | several days before returning to 350 at Parke, Davis * * * | | | England. + Gets Reprieve | It didn’t Tead officers any closer} Marlow on Churchill, | * x —apparently—to the hooded mob | British Embassy officials said Mediators today effected a de- lay in a threatened strike of 1,650 vis and Co., one of the nation’s largest drug manufacturing firms The walkout would have affected ' pahy’s plant near Rochester. These Local 11-146 of the Oi) Chemi- / cal and Atomic Werkers Union i. the | agreed to set back, fer several | hours at least, a 10 a.m, strike | deadline for further talks with The union had set = strike | deadline at the company’s plants ‘in Detroit and the Rochester area after a breakdown of negotiations. Seven weeks of bargaining failed |to produce an agreement to re- |place a contract that expired Ap- iril 30. Talks were broken off yes- | terday. } * * i The company also was dead- j locked in contract négotiations with local 1288 of the International Assn, 3 of Machinists. The local repre; sents 325 machinists. and power | plant employes. ‘TALKS BREAK UP fia | State and, federal mediators re- . ported ho progress in talks that j|broke up last night and were re- ® lsumed thig morning. The IAM’s . contract also expired April 30. The union demanded automatic $33 recognition at the company's 1 | new medical research labora- | tories in Ann Arbor when they 7 are opened tater this year. 4 The company said it was willing ; ito transfer any employe affected 4. by the move of operations, bat it & would require a National Labor Relations Board election to de termine, what union, if any, would represent ry workers. % 8 % Both enon demanded an - per cent wage increase. The ¢ pany offéred 2% per cent, plus the: unipn representation at i Fhe company said. the average hourly pay of mania ee members $2:8644,~ ° MIE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1959 Talks Begin Court Orders Blood for Baby Strike July! ifNo Accord. | -jesiaaaamen Union Head Optimistic About Getting Pay Hike but Firms Resisting NEW YORK (AP)—Steel indus- try labor negotiations started for- mally today with only two months to go before a scheduled July 1 strike deadline. Negotiating teams from U.S. Steel Corp. and the United Steel- workers Union sat down together in the Roosevelt Hotel. Talks also were due to start there today with Bethlehem, Republic and Kaiser steel companies. Eight other sets of talks begin Wednesday and Thursday with other top industry firms. Present contracts expire June 30. x * * .|national AFL-CIO march on Wash- Overrules Parents as Detroit Doctors Fight to Save Life Senators Open ’ DETROIT w — A newly-born baby was given blood transfusions yesterday after a, court order Door to Jobless x State Committee Will founded on a religious belief. Hear Complaints About| x Failure of TUC t Probate Judge Nathan J. Kauf- |man, acting on a doctor’s urgent | recommendation, issued an order LANSING (AF) — The Senate Making the child — known only as Labor Committee today. opened | ‘Baby Boy Collins” — a ward of its doors to jobless workers want- the court, and thereby allowing ing to air their gripes on legislat-|the transfusions. The baby was ive delay in extending temporary Oly 21 hours ae at = time. unemployment compensation. | * * * * - ‘Baby -Boy Collins'’’ was bern Hundreds of Michigan's more Sunday with a defect in his blood than 300,000 jobless are expected system. * to converge on the capital city t0| At 1:30 p.m. he was brought urge legislative support of an en-| to Children’s Mespital. We was larged jobless, aid program. The’ dying, doctors said. A trans- Michigan AFL-CIO set up the all) fusion was ordered. But the day conference, a follow-up to the) father objected. The Day in Birmingham Schools Win Top Award tor Conservation Program BIRMINGHAM — Although Biy-/Ferndale St. tomorrow. The sale mingham schools are no longer|will begin at 9 a.m. participants in the program at} s. Clark Proud Lake Recreation Area, they a anager rf Clark yesterday received the top award Service gr! Mrs. i bes held for their efforts in the 1957-58 state. 7 he 62 oan prow gg ai ree eee a p.m. wide aaa ieee SS Presbyterian Church. Burial will |_ Presented by Alfred Masini, head ane Grandlawn Cemetery, Red- ord. iranger at Proud Lake, the cita- a ; ition is for the schools’ efforts to-| Mrs. Clark died Thursday at Tuc- son,. Ariz., after a long illness. 'ward the conservation of natural : resources, A resident of Birniingham for 4 years, she was a member Birmingham schools took part ; in the program on an experi- | of the Birmingham Woman's Club. mental basis. Whole classes were taken to the lake for a week of | surviving are her husband, three | regular school work with special | .ons,/ Robert, Norman and David, emphasis on natural science. all of Birmingham; two daughters, | The week-away-from-home angle |Mrs. Clare Wismer of Port Huron, caused local teachers who had par- Mrs. Jack E. Briggs of Santa Mon- ticipated to withdraw from the ica, Calif. and 19 grandchildren. | project The body is at the Manley Bail- At yesterday's award program ey Funeral Home. Valleywood Elementary School, | jat Dr. Julian Smith of the University ‘of Michigan spoke on the value » Body of Negro Victim teaching conservation ington. * * * nN: : : Dr: Wolf Zuelzer, chief of the; Donald Richards of the State Discovered in River Neither R. Conrad Cooper, chief U.S. Steel negotiator; nor Presi- dent David J. McDonald of the union, had any comment. The industry is standing firm against any new concessions to the union, warning they would be inflationary. On the other hand, the union is demanding a bigger share of industry profits, includ- ing a wage boost, shorter hours, pension and other improvements. The U.S, Steel part of the nego- tiations found — 100 union negotiators pitted a a long many U.S. Steel representatives. * * * m Both sides have expressed hope | bargaining table with nearly as| | | the strike can be avoided, and wnat oases Circuit Court Begins McDonald was optimistic over the chances for union gains, even before the talks began, He has pledged that the 500,000 workers in basic steel, already among the best paid in the nation averaging $3.02 per hour, will emerge with their best contract in murderer Raymond L. Alyea and/13 auto accident WARM WELCOME — President Eisenhower appears pleased as he shakes hands with Sir Winston Churchill at National Airport yesterday. House during the Summer Jury Term | The second trial of accused|decency, growing out of a Dec.! involving four| history. McDonald says steel prof-|the case of Arthur C. Mooney,|students, one of whom was killed. | its warrant worker gains without requiring any steel price increase. The industry, on the other hand, is resisting any contract changes,| arguing that increased labor costs would cause steel price increases dismissed Waterford High School | x * * teacher accused of gross indecen-; Qne of the students told Oak- cies, opened the summer jury term Jand County sheriff's deputies that of the Oakland County Circuit yfooney had bought beer for the Court this morning. four on the night of the accident, George F. Taylor, chief assis- and then revealed the alleged acts) |hospital’s laboratories and child Conservation Department, Educa-| Chairman John P. Smeekens (yesearch center, took steps to get tion Division, and Harold Gillam} guest of the President, and will stay at the White (R - Coldwater) said his labor | (ourt authority. committee, if necessary, would | * * * eat their meals in the commit- | “We had a dying baby on our tee room and stay in session to- hands,’’ Dr. Zuelzer said, ‘“‘and night to discuss the proposed something had to be done in a! TUC program with conference | hurry.” delegates. Judge Kaufman was called from The committee also expected to 4 meeting outside his court.. He meet with Gov. Williams on a Teturned to his bench immediately Demoeratic - Republican impasse and at 2 p.m. signed the order. AP Wirephoto Churchill is in the United States as a personal that has blocked legislative ap- * * * proval of a bill to extend temp-| The judge said he acted without jorary benefits up to 13 weéks. knowing the names of the parents. | | ak | They later were identified as Mr. | | Heart of the disagreement was u 4nd Mrs. Charles Collins of subur- which ban Taylor Township, members of three-day visit. | charge of $10 whenever of the department’s Parks and Yecreation Division also spoke. Birmingham City Commission- ers last night set a minimum it is necessary for them to enter pri - vate property to mow weeds for the owners. ‘Property owners will be notified early in the spring that their va- (Continued From Page One) ileft leg and that hampered rescue jefforts. * * * The night raiders who dragged Parker from the Poplarville jail by his heels stripped Parker of all his clothes except an under- shirt and a pair of shorts. BODY. BLEACHED The coroner at Bogalusa’s Char- ity Hospital did not say how Park- cant lots must be kept mowed ino, died. except to report a bad accordance with the city’s weed ordinance. They will have ample time to make arrangements with for considerably less * * * Commissioners set next Monday night for a hearing of necessity on the 1959 road oiling program Ford and others claimed it én-|they could not yet say whether . 3 “ce »g (he would live. country, as I always figure it abl d unions ‘cE haisas snag ‘ ” to finance strikes against them-! and feel it. | ; . selves through théir contributions A White House limousine car- to the unemployment compensation (Continued From Page One) Phone Company dinners tonight and Wednesday fits expired April 1 it ; - Tha : hace : . ae = »| Telephone Co. has revealed plans event of a dry summer. Gare dsked night. The British Embassy will} The bill also carries a $1 or $2 for a 171 million dolar expansion for another week for further study spot on the right side of the head. x ® * No one attempted to estimate by the fingerprints of the right hand. A ganz of eight or 10 men wearing masks and white gloves broke into the Poplarville jail, ried the President and his guest fund. apenas 10 miles of strects abeat 26 miles trem hore, shert- |to the White House for a quiet x * * . are involve 2 Pe ; . . ly after midnight April 25, visit which started with a family Democrats | want a simple ex- Plans Expansion oun foes ae a savagely beat Parker dragged dinner, |tension of TUC to July 1, affecting) men and) H ’ . might disturb the price situation.|Women, Jurors were being select- umm qa 5 al sae ower oe = Eiasnkowes Sak he could aot sit ed this morning to hear the new | | moved by Churchill's enfeebled idly by. if negotiations started |tTial of Alyea, whose original first- on Geneva Sa 5 lke condition and heartened by the pointing to price boosts. But he degree murder hearing ended in a) ’ y still-sharp wit of aod ot the great has never spelled out what he hung jury in February. masters of the English-speaking might do in that event Alyea, 36-year-old gardener. is (Continued From Page One) people. The contract talks are starting Charged with the fatal stabbing Truman has been evading his in- At the airport yesterday where two weeks early at McDonald’s|/@st Aug. 1 of Anthony Jasinski, | yitations to the White House, Ei- the President went to welcome his suggestion. a Southfield nursery caretaker. - | senhower replied he wanted to guest personally, and again as x *& * * & make one thing clear. Whenever they entered the White House to- McDonald's hand in the negotia- Taylor said present plans call/he invites anyone on a personal gether, the President grasped Sir tions was strengthened Monday for the Alyea case to be heard basis—as distinguished from a Winston's arm in strong physical with announcement that an oppos-|#84!n by Judge W ulfam J. Beer, |forma] invitation—he always em- support. ing faction in the union was sup- who dismissed the first jury of|phasizes he will understand if the + « porting him in the drive for a new seven women and four men Feb. ' man invited is unable to attend| This was no back-slapping ges- contract. 4 after it was unable to reach| POLITICS—The President said | ture of friendship, but something Donald C. Rarick, president of ‘vee following a week of de-| he hopes the 1960 Republican |More In the manner of a dutiful Pittsburgh Local 27 and a sur-| ration. presidential nominee will win | son helping an infirmed elder prisingly strong opponent to Mc-| Judge Frank L. Doty, who | even more votes in the South {Churchitt showed the sad erosion’ Donald for the union presidency) Taylor said will handle all crim- | than he did in 1952 and 1956. |of age and a life of crises in his two years ago, said his rival| inal matters until the end of the : ; ' slow step, his pronounced stoop group stands 100 per cent behind! jury term, will today hear the caches Erte to al But there was nothing slow or McDonald's leadership in the con- | case of Mooney, 50. Niih: or New York's Cau Melacn'| stooped about the deft rapier he tract fight. He was charged with gross in- A. Hotketelles could do as well | used rhetorically against another as Eisenhower did in the South. | orld War II figure who has deen The President touched off a a critically of Eisenhower lately State Sees No Twisters Downtown Space sin for Mail Too Little iway before the pubhe service com- * engineer, said plans call for $78,- : . }852 000 in new construction this (Continued From Page One) | year and $91,735,999 in 1960. Next administrative superintendent the Pontiac office. St., was apprehended yesterday ; as he took a pair of trousers : : a | from the Jacobson’s Youth Ap- Dayton O. Slater, assistant chic fl parel Shop on Woodward avenue, Birmingham Police reported to- day. officials said filed River County, Miss., new charges . had against the men * been * * The rape Parker was of occurred Feb. 25 near Lumber- ton, Miss The victim and her 5- of year’s outlay is the biggest since, Det Lt. Merlin Holmquist said year-old daughter were sitting in jthe record program of 105 million/the store manager, Robert Culk'a stalled car waiting for her hus- jdollars in 1957 ver, stopped the youth on the band to return with help But the Internal Revenue Serv- ~ ~ * street with the stolen Zoods im- PICKED P*‘RKER re i concerned oan whether | slater warned. however, that mediately after he left the store | . if ra nc nh scan ae continued low earnings and a cut and called the police She said a Negro in a black te moved to the ral d- lin demand for service could jeo- re * rm agate drove uP P ping : ipardize the expansion program 4 , ‘ing hel > Joe eS Oe ee = ee pa expansk prog Russell is being held in the Bir the child to get into his car and Its concern is so great that * * * the GSA has given it permission to negotiate with the architects for more space, He reported the company expects ito gain 260,000 telephones in the two-year period ending Dec. 31 mingham jail on a larceny from a building charge. The case is expected to come up in Municipal Court tomorrow. drove them into a wooded area where he raped her with the child watching desig . é far as she three acenctée sckee utility is confident of a continuance) The Women’s Auxiliary of the ne Si anion le pani later fom sare space 8 . “lof the general economic upturn. Charles Edwards Post, American oe arker from a 25man line- aa . |Only 6 p s re é € rit r ; ° One revision gave the post office nly 66,000 telephones were added Legion, will hold its spring rum Officer: had believed from the a little more space, said George in 1958 | eenan an associate in the firm * * * mage sale at the Post Home, 267 * first that Parker's body probably would be found in the Pearl River or one of the streams in the area. He said plans have come to a Attempt Foiled by Grocer halt while waiting for the Detroit Miller had some other com-| ] s | plaints | Two men and two women plead- He said there is no provision led guilty and a fifth person stood office of the Internal Revenue Serv-| . ice to come up with its new space estimate. | Short later led detectives to the other four. Stroud admitted going ¥ a Special FBI agent Ralph Bach- man and Bill Hood, chief of the Mississippi Highway Patrol, di- rected the search. Then Why the Censor? . ® jRepublican amendment : . - , lwould countermand a state sup-| Jehovah's Witnesses. Lagbteabes os to do — ee: how long the body had been in | We said City Manager L. R. Gare | jreme decision awarding unemploy- . * : Gare also pointed out that from the water. The body had been Hi Vi if With lk {ment pay to Michigan Ford Motor! ‘‘Baby Boy Collins’’ was still a study made by his office pri-|Dleached until it wets impossible } iS 1S! | e Co. workers idled by a 1953 Ford alive today. His ‘condition was sate contractors can do the job to tell if it was Negro or white. | strike in Canton, Ohio critical, however. Doctors said The FBI made its identification | accused ~ lround of laughter by asking th : sel | Sir Winston will spend a week-| im present plans for a Civil Serv- mute—when arraigned yesterday into the store with Short while ; _ soviet Un- ‘ |reporter whether he had any can-| F has : MOSCOW — The Soviet Un ‘ Tornado Scare Fizzles aoe ron meen ee aes ating arte mrt tara bs |Conaed ratey fe Fu. seme ice aie two wemet at Day esa maps | ; - Rockefeller. There are other | longtime friend, financier Bernard! ‘ - jcommit armed robbery of the Fa- scene. Folice Sa e two women Press Day today. All news Ts $ : ‘lsible GOP candidates, Flnenow.| Baruch, before flying back to Eng-' ™8* —_—— for all of Oak- | ther & Son Market in Pontiac April;admitted providing the weapons printed aearinis and ieee . ; . er said. : ‘land land County are conducted here, | 24. used in the holdup attempt. — | Soviet authorities hold that only ‘ BY United Press International {forecast for a section of the west-| EoRgIGN AID—The President SS he pointed out. * * * The three men were retuzned to the press of the Communist Michigan sweated out its meat =n part of the state. | plugged anew for the adminis. “The number of applicants for| Scheduled to be sentenced May the county jail yesterday, unable sphere is free. The Communist tornado forecast of the season yes-| No twisters were sighted, how- | tration’s $3,930,000,000 foreign aid Mud-dled Through ‘jobs is terrific nowadays,”’ Miller 18 are James D. Stroud Jr., 28, of to post continued $5,000 bonds, party’s Pravda expressed ‘‘sym- terday. | ever, and the weatherman lifted | said. “In the past eight weeks, /736 W. Huron St., Jerry E. Smith, while Mrs. McColl and Mrs. Mor- pathy for exploited colleagues in The Weather Bureau issued the : | Program. He brought up that STONE CITY, Colo. (UPI)— ‘e. we have given more|24. of 36 Sanders Fs ya ee Aloe : . ” ee eee S| the warning after six hours at | subject himself, and noted that 6 x. Revesld ' Pucbio-.and his for instance, we have given more|24, of San erson Ave , Mrs. gan were allowe to remain free capitalist countries.” (The fore- about 7:15 p.m. | hearings on the program are f : 7 teynolds of Pueblo and his than 1,000 post office examina-| Muriel McColl, 22, of 657 Riverside on $300 bonds each pending sen- going dispatch passed through ‘ ; _ | two teenage sons saw a COW itions.”’ Dr., and Mrs. Marilyn J. Morgan, tence. | Soviet censorship. ‘ Th W th Some northern Michigan com-' getting under =ey before con: | mired in mud while they were * * * lo of the Riverside address ——- ——_—— aid — ¥ e eatner ‘munities were. hit by cloudbursts| STesstonal committees. out fishing. After enlisting the | Present space distribution on ~ _ T Fell U. &. Weather Rareae Report a8 the storm front moved across! A newsman said there is some aid of four other fishermen, they |the first floor calls for closing ise] Saree» = eames on PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Partly the state. belief that too much of the for-| succeeded in pulling the cow | entrance to the| tered for him by Cakiand Coanty cloudy today and tonight. Chance of . Pp g \Perry. street side t € showers and a few thunéersterms te. Many Cheboygan streets werejeign aid money is being ear-| free. The cow immediately lay | building, Miller said. ciao triad =) anerned: Adams tua cae Gnmanean A —— under water when a cloudburst marked for military assistance. | down and gave birth to a calf. | The acting postmaster believed after he stood mute was Billy J. warmer teday and tonight. Turning cold- caused Smith Creek to rise five! Eisenhower replied that each —- = —_ Pontiac residents would be served Short, 31, of Harlan, Ky. lg ire Nagas Bigh today [8- feet and overflow its banks. Base-|time he has recommended ari aid . ‘better if the door were used as His case was ordered set down). s! ago wings 10-18 miles becom. ment flooding was also reported./program it has been cut down by Parents! Parents: the main entrance to the postal|for trial by Judge Adams. waist co hue x * * beta ej | SALAS. 7 oP “ section. Short was the first of the quin-| ‘ . More than a score of tornadoes e also said a large portion of| f S, Tex. (UPI) — Mrs. tet captured, Pontiac police said,| Lo | a : | ‘ , . police said, were sere _— J = pep: i midwestern states last ay aid goes to help hold) Quincy Adams repeated several Pig oh camper ng eae after he was outsmarted by An-} a.m. Wind velocity 10-12 m ph. yy _|such places as Korea and For-| times to her son, Wade, 6, that spletllanit rear ro Direction—South night, sending thousands of per P n or , Wade, 6, tha tonio QOraparotta, owner of the Sun sets Tuesday at 736 pm lsons diving for cover. mosa. he was to be home by 11 a.m. building, — market Jocated at 856 Oakland Ave. | Pallet pacers vig ae ig gs | Despite the frequency of the Eisenhower also noted that a) As she helped hini on with his would have to walk down a long Craparotta, 65, told. officers he! Moon rises Wednesday at 4.54 am \twisters, no injuries were reported study committee he appointed had cpat, she asked: ‘‘Now, what | hallway alt the way to the reer grabbed Short’s sawed-off shotgun Downtown Tempemteres ‘and property damage was rela-"ecommended that more money! time did I tell you to be home?” soininas » \ sie totter er Pay from him after he and Shroud at- Sem am “4 tively light. Most of. the torna-\De set aside for military aid | “Eleven o'clock,” Wade replied. | * Stamp,” he . tempted to rob the store. 2 Sem. “8 1pm _... 11 does struck in sparsely populated|®>P0ad. “Gosh, have you forgotten al- | With a separate door, the post)————————~~——————— Q.m....... : ‘ i . . . 10 a.m 68 rural areas. loffice could maintain 24-hour serv- ___ li he said. send Seniiox Drenching rains and hail were ° me OK Syl lak M (As piroeni Ay Gwasex 1 in many areas in Kan- ‘Stay, Yankus, and Fight | * ™ * y van a eC an migneet fempernie so 1S | Sane Nebreaka, Mlasour, Hows, | : According to GSA plans, the sec: been eee ees " . . > | ‘ ° ; d floor of the federal building eee See 5 Minnesota and Wisconsin. Omaha D t ¢€ U S BI k E on ty t maar en . was soaked by nearly three on lve ° ° ac ye Pecetitan i ee of oun 0d 0 one Aas tai Kealike inches of rain in six hourt. : . Lote temparabete sccosscrssness: 3 | | ‘would house such agencies as the} The Oakland County Board of Mean temperature ......... “s In other parts of the country, WASHINGTON (AP)—Stanley Yankus’ decision to se!] Federal Bureau of Investigation|Supervisors yesterday approved Weather—Sunny j _ : : 4 thundershowers were reported in his farm and move to Australia is giving the United States and the Armed Forces recruiting /the appointment of Irwin P. Nich- Highest on ot ee Pere and Virginia and | a propaganda black eye, says Rep. George E. Shipley (D-Il.) services. ols, 33, of 2385 Garland Ave., Syl- 00 5 4006, weljerstare Cant 1001 | eho a Shiuetea axa Shipley said yesterday Communists will use the Yankus | ‘ van Lake, as the new. secretary. $8. 48 Marquette 90 64 . incident to “contort, misrepresent, and blow his picture up Interchange Rejected pale = tne Board of County Road u ie Mia! a m Wet weather was ** outlook for in other countries as a man who was abused’ so térribly by LANSING #—The State High- ‘Nichole. for « eight years associat- ‘ “ “ Minneapelis a wide un during herding wage our government that ‘ has _ = this country.” way Department has rejected a |ed with the National Twist Drill &| Orleans more storms indica parts 70 89. New York _74 49 . request for an interchange at the /Tool Co, of Rochester as a sales 8 8. Omaha 81 0 Iowa, Nebraska, Missouri and Shipley appealed to Yankus “not to tuck his tail and | intersection of U.S: 27 and Lever- jengineer, replaces William Car- 3» Phoedix 2 8 Kansas. * a’ | run” and to stay and fight against the U.S, agricultural | ing road south of Mackinaw City. |rigan who retired Feb. 15 after é ae eo regulations Yankus said he could not endure. The Straits-to-the-Straits Assn. |26 years as secretary clerk. : ageastes te at st steal te se|_ Dry weather was forecast in the "The Dowagiac, Mich., farmer recently conceded defeat ¢n | #8ked for a study of a possible | The new secretary-clerk is a _NAMED AMERICAN MOTHER OF THE YEAR—Judgé Jennie 5 8) Traverse C. $3 ye Southeast and Southwest. the | tong pattie against wheat plahting restrictions, sold his | ‘erchange. Highway Comimis- {graduate of Michigan State Uni-| Loitmdn Barron of the Massachusetts Superior Court has been 92 65 Washington +} $ middle and north Atlantic coastal ‘art, and annmenced ba sould y 7 A t ny : = sioner John C. Mackie termed |versity. - | named American Mother of 1959 by the American Mothers Com- = bs eee — 3 states and parts of the central , e would move to Australia where he | the project unfeasible froth .a | His $7,500 yearly salary will be| mittee, Inc. Boston-born Judge Barron now’ lives in Brookline; ‘ 58 . |Plains. said he believed freedom had a greater future. traffic standpoint. paid from county road funds. Mass. (See story page 13.) , * t we * * A f » , e oy ie be a s - a ’ : ; J ? . ‘ j biaj \, | 7 i= ’ : e = ““% + < . . - e : ’ ‘ Aer am es | i “ - mM le I, J et gp te a a caw on eee” Ee ee Le ee ‘ee Pr Ss Se ee’ er ee or + «© . , fw wry dl ee a ORM eh a ie see Se ae ee a Oe oe oe | he sel #25 8 Seo bl = = e THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1959 A Michigan. sculptor Marshall Fred- be. erected ericks examines the head of Christ of Right: ‘Fredericks, on the left, -stands © assembled at the base of the statue with represen- his Crucifixion statue being in an Oslo, Norway, workshop. The tatives of 55-foot statue will be part of a.group to foundry. AP Wirephote at Indian River, Mich. the workshop and art s 50 Turn Out for Meeting of OES Areme Chapter Fifty members were present ss a meeting of Areme Chapter, OES, | Monday evening at Roosevelt Ma-) sonic Temple. Passed on proficiency tests by Eugene Perkio, worthy patron, were: Mrs. Marion B. Holmes,} Mrs. Ralph Hale, Mrs. Alfred Vaughn, Mrs. Olga Wilkinson, Mrs. Agnes Newel! and Plezzy Newing- ham. Name Officers - New officers of Cross Trailers Square Dance Club are Bruce Al- len, president: Chris Holmes, viee| president;- Mrs. James Barwick, P secretary; and Mrs. David Slater, treasurer The club held its final dance of, the season with a_cooperative din- ner Friday evening at Willis School Guests were Mr. and Mrs. An- drew Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. | Benjamin Stephenson, all of Bir-| mingham Cross Trailers will continue danc- ing at Summer Squares, the club} from which Cross Trailers was! formed last year. Meetings will! _ be held at American Legion Hall | on Oakland Lake beginning May} 20 The Oakland County Ass0cia- tion meeting will be held at the Berkiey Masonic Temple May 21, with Areme Chapter assisting in the presentation of the flags. CL Chapter Hosts Area PEO Meet Oakland County Cooperative of PEO Sisterhood, composed of two E jdelegates from each of the Oakland | Members and guests will attend|County PEO chapters, met Mon-| ™ ithe Eastern Star Villa Day at the \day morning at Birmingham Com. | \Eastern Star Villa May 24. Those | munity House. jplanning to go will te eet at the; Chapter CL of Pontiac was host- Ss Roosevelt Masonic Temple by 9 ess chapter. Members of the chap-| Pe a.m. lter attending were Charlotte Baird, | | = Z| Mrs. Harry Lunsford has been Mrs. A. A. Dodd, Mrs. M. K. Fell, | invited to be a guest at Friends Cross Trailers Night of the Royal Oak Chapter. Elda Sutter Hosts Senior Musicale Senior League of Tuesday Musicale met Sunday at the West Iroquois road home of Elda Sutter Taking part in the program were Barbara Atwell, flutist; accompanied by Mary Alice Kissick and Lynn Thompson, pianist Reports of the state conven- tion were given by Deanna Rel- Mrs. J. W. Keasey, Mrs. Charles | Matson, Mrs. Clark Morgan and) = Mrs. H. W. Chapman. g Officers for the coming year are | ~ Mrs. D. H. Lamb, chairman of |" : Chapter CG, Birmingham; Mrs. |\7~ R. T. Hatch, vice chairman of 7% Chapter CG, Birmingham; Mrs: | Keasey, secretary of Chapter CL, Pontiac; and Mrs. H. P. Cardon, Bs treasurer of Chapter AD, Royal!” Oak. eh Hairdo Experiment — A hairdo that flatters a friend ‘ may be unbecoming to you. However, it is always fun to yea, Marcia Cameron and Gary experiment in the privacy of | >» Relyea, your own home. If you are tall Plans for the June picnic and slim, avoid hairdoes that were discussed, and a gift to add to your height. Smal] girls Interlochen Junior Cabin fund look top-heavy with hair piled was made. up in waves and curls. | ee See Re ee oh FIBERGLAS DRAPERIES of NO-IRON You’ve never seen their ))> equal — they wash and | hang dry in minutes as & beautiful as ever without # even a touch of an iron. They never shrink, never © - stretch, and absolutely pS % Will not fade. What is %\o a more, they NEVER SUN- | : ROT, NEVER MILDEW. Try them in your most ©) difficult windows, you'll ™ |< just love them. Length | 1 Width _1% Width | & Widths | 3 Widths —90” | $9.50 | $15.00 | $20.00 | $32.00 — —sa" | ~+9:.00 +| + ~=©+215.00~”—~=<‘“<«CSSC(<«é‘«‘ COCiéd‘C:C‘S ~~ 81” $50 | 44.50 | 1950 | 31.00 : 72" | 8.00~—| ~—«13.50, | 18.50 | 29.00 | | ~~ 63” | 8.00 | 13.00 | 18.00 | 28.00 — i 54” | ~ ~7050~=~|~C~*<“‘«‘zS|Sté« ENJOY THE NO-IRON TEE-TAB SHIRT - 4 = Fae ; i { & Perfect blend of 65% Dacron-35% fine cotton . ! = P ~ ‘ q Beautifully tailored with two-way collar and pocket tabbed for ‘ S AV E ¢ golfers’ tees. It drip-drys quickly, won't pill, fuzz or shrink. i ‘ 5 Bright stripes woven on white. Size 30 to 38. She knows the , ; quality of Ship’n Shore! ,n 5 by Van kaalte awe ML EOS he TD re = More Opulént Than You Ever Dreamed a Nylon Tricot Could Be! Because she leven nice things . . - she’ Il love 4; gown or Slip by Van_Raalte, Powder-puff lightness, caressing silk softness and petal smoothness she likes so well! If it’s Van Raalte and if it’s from Bloomfield Fashion Shop, she'll know the difference! 0S Sl = ‘Slips .......0.4....495 to 8.95 * asleep while smoking in the Holly- Pe ae ee ea ee ee ¥ i ee ai —rlUCUCTTOUO THE P ONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1959 \ Patty McCormack Nice and Normal at 13 By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK — The luscious blonde star from Hollywood swept into our office, sat, smiled, and {ilched a box of paper clips, * * * “Mmmm,” she remarked, and] began hooking them together. Fin ally, they made a long ‘chain. There,’ said golder girl. “Jt’ll make a good belt. If you don’t need a belt, use it to tie up your pel mouse.” Neuretic? Nothing of the kind. This ig Patty Mc€ormack, cer- tainly the only actress and pos- sibly the only blonde in town whe does not lie about her age. It is 13. Miss McCormack begins tonight to fill the time slot vacated by Arthur Godfrey on CBS-TV. She was accompanied, for this inter- view, by her mother and her tutor. Her mission: To talk about the new show. “It’s called, ‘Peck’s Bad Girl,’ only she isn't bad, you know. Well, it's like-yph—oh, I get all mixed up when I try to tell the story, but you know, it goes something like this, . .” ‘ * * * For about 10 mintites she tried to tell the story of the first se- quence, getting all mixed up like she said, but it's something about how she is a student who-has: a crush on her art teacher who is engaged but she doesn't know it so she tries td pose for him until her father tells the artist to make her pose as Cinderella so she'll have to scrub floors, and then oh, never mind. 6 YEARS AN ACTRESS Patty has had six years of money-making as an actress and Bandleader Bumed Badly in Apartment LOS ANGELES (AP) — Band- jeader Hal McIntyre remained in extremely critical condition today. Ite was severely burned in an apartment fire Sunday. Firemen said he apparently fell wood apartmefit of singer Jeanne McManus. The entire lower part of his body was burned. Miss McManus said she left Mc- Intyre working on his music Sat- urday night and found the door locked when she returned early Sunday She slept in a friend's apart- ment across the hall, she said, but was awakened by the smell of smoke McIntyre, a saxophone and clar- inet player, once played with. the Glenn Miller orchestra. He later organized a swing band and gained considerable prominence in the 40s. Miss McManus, MclIn- tyre’s vocalist, said his band has been inactive recently Dies on Relief With Hoard of $30,000 in Home CINCINNATI (AP)—Miss Matil- da Krohne, 77. had been on relief since 1940 when she died last week Welfare workers rummaging in her home discovered cash and stock worth nearly $30,000. * * *® A hoard of $7,500 in five, ten, twenty and hundred dollar bills was found in an old chamber pot, hidden in a cardboard box. Shares worth $22,000 in a real estate development firm were dis- covered. * * * J. J. Flynn, manager of the Aid For The Aged office, said he would file suit in Probate Court to recover funds equal to the aid given Miss Krohne through the vears * * * Miss Krohne left no will, Flynn said. Her only known relative is a cousin who once lived here. + model on Broadway, radio and TV, she giggles, she_talks in spurts and has come out of it as normal! and at length about the things as the girl next door, except a) that don’t mean much to her, little nicer and considerably pret-| and clams up with young shy- tier. ness on. those subjects that mean | By normal, for a 13-ycar-old, everything. | Take baseball. Her pretty! |mother, Mrs. Betty Russo, was! We mean that she likes boys (“but only for about two days’’), Supreme Court Drops Contempt isemi-pro in a softball league, and; And Patty has a bosom friend in \Patty loves to play. Is she any|California. She can't really talk good at it? about her, that’s bosomy stuff, but “I'm okay, 1 guess.” She looks/she says this much: Clear Virginia Printer lat her fap. “Put her name in, will you? | for Silence Before -a Legislative Committee I'll. spell it for you. It's Janet, J-a-n-e-t, Zawadski, Z-a-w-a-d-s-k-i.”’ Acting is Patty’s profession. What position do you play? “Any of ‘em. I bat okay, but | don’t like to run.” cf — SHINER—A fqu] ball in a neighborhood soft- ball game gave 10-year-old Kathy Roth of Salem, Ore., a dandy shiner when she failed to duck. But she came r mouse Hollywood Headlines Two Young Film Makers Finally Are Recognized ° By BOB THOMAS ling older and more content to sit AP Moevie-TV Writer jback on their capital gains HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Film in-| Two young fellows ‘txemplify dustry moguls are always talking | this neglect of new creative tal- about the need for flew talent, butjent. They are the brother team they seldom do laa about it.jof Denis and Terry Sanders, who J ~~ * lare now hitting the big time. But hasn't ——— her batting average. She has no egotism about it, and no modesty; it is just there, in -her life, like baseball and paper clips. . “T don't get nervous,”’ she said, WASHINGTON (#—The Supreme Coaurt yesterday struck down the contempt convic-| tion of a Virginia Quaker who re-/ : — 2 unanimously , fused to testify before a state leg-| islative committee about his con- nection with inter-racial groups. x / * . David H. Scull, a printer at An- nandale, Va. declined to answer questions asked by what was known as the Thomson Investigat- when asked. “I get kind of ‘all excited and happy like, but not nervous.” Advised that all the great actresses get nervous at openfhg nights, and that Helen Hayes had once said the- moment you stopped getting nervous you'd probably give a bad performance, Patty|ing Committee set up by the Vir-| looked questioningly at her mother.|ginia Assembly. He later was held, * * * in contempt, sentenced to 1) days “Well,"" she said, ‘“‘she knows ajin jail and fined $50. lot more about it than I do. But I'd think if you're nervous you'd) ypanimous opinion setting aside | flub your- lines. Wouldn't you.! the conviction. ma?" “ 23 * * * Mrs. Russo smiled. Black said that the purposes of We leaned over to ask Patty’s|the inquiry as announced by dele- mother, in an undertone, how she, be gate James M. Thomson of Alex- kept her daughter from a swelled|andria, the committee chairman, j dustice Black wrote the court's head. Mrs. ‘Russo knocked on the}«-were so: unclear, in fact con- desk, whispered back, ‘A ,good flicting, that Scull did not have! strong backhand.” . an opportunity of understanding, Patty grinned. ‘It only — the basis for the questions or any, for a little while,” ee said. the part of the seeking the infor-| mation he refused to give.’ } Dems Bolt ack adie” * | to MeKeldin contempt under these circum-, stances would be to send him to’ jail for a crime he could not with, But Gray Still Heavy Favorite to Capture Baltimore Mayoralty justification on committee for 0 reasonable certainty know he was committing. This court has often held that fundamental fairness re- quires that such reasanable cor @ AP Wirepheote tainty exist.”’ ight back, ready for more. The held in an earlier case that , “areas of individual liberty can. | not be invaded unless a com- pelling state interest is clearly BALTIMORE (AP)—A rush. of late support from dissident Demo- crats shortened the odds against Family of Six Republican Theodore R. McKel-' shown.’ { ® din, opposing J. Harold Gray in| | Drown on Outing today’s election for mayor of Bal- - =” However, the court did not reach, timore. Literature supporting McKeldin turned up in several sections of the city consideréd strongholds of Mayor Thomas D’Alesandro, de-|_ feated by Gray in the Democratic primary two months ago. The mayor placed himself solid- ly in the Grady camp affer his de- feat, but some of his allies openly that issue in Scull’s case, Black said, because of the vagueness of the inquiry as stated by the chair- man, | DAIRY QUEEN The orginal and the best! thing's delicious at your neigh- HEYWORTH, li. w—An after scheol beat outing on a flooded gravel pit turned to tragedy Mon- day when the craft capsized and a Heyworth couple and four of their children drowned. * * * A ‘fisherman who _ heard screams for help rescued a fifth With a dozen top stars demand-|it wasn't easy. ing fabulous salaries. new box! Terry is tall, slim and 27. Denis office draws are a must. Just 48|js shorter. chunky and 29. They urgent is the need for new talent}pboth like to write and cut their in the creative field. The greatiown films, though they share the directors and producers af® grow- duties with others. Principally Terry is producer, Denis the di- jrector wasn't easy to convince a e * =» , new . Klansman Admits ner. amine probation for five years and fined) They did it by whipping up their|— $250. He was given a 6 to 12-month|own project. They passed up the sentence when he was convicted in]}monsters to choose a classic by March 1958, but he appealed and/nostoevski. But instead of playing was = oy - it in 19th century. Russia, they switched it to present-day Santa James (Catfish) Cole, former|Monica. a Los Angeles suburb grand. wizard of the KKK, was/tThe result: “Crime and Punish- convicted of the same charge and|ment—US.A.” is serving an 18 to 24-mopth prison * + * term. His appeal for a new trial). We shot it on location and in was turned down. a rented studio in 12 days."’ they reported. ‘‘The cost was $100,000, Harriman Will Seek which was put up by. Allied . - Artists, ourselves and some pri- Talk With Khrushchev Sie, ER a et : ...._| The picture is an excellent NEw eg (AP) — pormes piece of film-making, well-paced, a avers Herriman, we Un {exciting and moving. There are U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Un-|oments when the skimpy pro- ion during part of World War II, — ) — Cattle the Oakland County Board of An end to a farm = su me Ee (Ge Mot A Hn Tim R_ Bear 563)able 2200 Gaatty of fed steers and heif- expense paid vacation in Miami Middle Belt Rd., West Bloomfield Supervisors yesterday when a ery gram. “which nobody but Congress Ge tine” "WE Tranamer “"", 309 teers Gnd Metter go0e to Noe, Chekes| Donets en the hover whan rameq| Township, according to Oakland “of McCarthyism” was heard for Wants,” was urged today*by Con are 52 Twent Cen ... 396 grades predominating: high choice of- Daniels won the honor when nam County sheriff's deputies. the first time rressman Wilham S. Broomficld Gutette— — ae ferings in ee ont ad? cows|Michigan winner and one of the . ‘ F U . S comprise around fer cent of run, 7 Southfield Supervisor Donald © AR Oekinnd County) : de M26 UN 23.1 this about & per cent over last Monday, | ‘OP five sellers nationally in «im fan ween bee aes Swanson was critical of a form Broomfield told his colleagues in G ah rae <4 Uni 62 li eeriy cu; a oie and gr gg ch recent sales contest of the society. Complete line of garden supplies, }# s it ) 8 iv ’ 8 letter sent out to all supervisors the House of Representatives that G eyhound (223 a Sh slow. steady to S0c lower than Wednes- everblooming roses, flowering recently by the county Civil Det. the present price support program @21,0%,,. 134 Upyonm of Kal a7 ee oes ace ani ees| Coe = Maen, Ch -U.,|shrupbery, shade trees, flowerin ense Office inviting them to a May iS “‘‘robbing ‘the consumer) of Holland F 14 US Lines ... 33.5 except canners and cutters fully steady:;manager of the Pontiac District trees, climbing vines, all makes o g : Home “Stk 401 US Rub - 577 good to low choice steers 26.00-28.00:|(¢¢; f Prudential Insurance Co., jfertilizer. Evergreens galore. Open 14 meeting in Birmingham to hear Many dollars a year in extra f00d Hooker Ca ae Oe ree! 91.2 nad mixed good and choicé steers 28.50-|~ e O . \7 days a week. PE 83911. it Clardy, ex-congressman who and clothing bills.’ Aah 4 US Tob ...06. 2900; bulk choice steers 29.00-30.50; recently observed his thirtieth an- j - f ha cgleitigs ae 103 Walereen _. 545 load high choice steers 31.50 early, these versa with the firm. He has! Fish dinner, Fresh Lake Superior served on the House Un-American In addition, the high cost of the I: : 1ST cee ne care feed low mates of 32.50 steers last Mon-|niversary Herring by Pontiac Chapter 228} rities Comn = , ; Ir 436 West A Bk dav: standard to low good steers 23.50-|been with the local office since Activities Committe federal farm program is causing ;, 255 Weete El we 2600. few loads stahdard ta low #004! 1997 ang manager since 1956 ,,O.E.S. Federal Savings & Loan} | Swanson objected to a section higher taxes and is depriving the int Harv “ite wi ron & Ce 34.7 3 30-23 Praag i eo a node helters pialoce who is past exhalted inmuano as SY Y Aa | e of the letter reading, “We hope fafmer of his freedom, Broom. i! Nick ee Toe ie {2 21 00-25 00; good to low choice hetfers lal? of the Pontiac Elks Lodge,| Int pe 1 i@ ¢ o - ” 7 = . é 4 £ 4 to alert responsible people to field added, Int Silver 434 Young S&W 36.2 ee esse i 7 cows To 50. i rj INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE| - : Int Tel & Tel 433 Ynast BhaT . 130.2 ses kates ae | sia qeatingts elmiets lives with his wife and their two Want The Truth? We show! See Us First About a Low-Cost «the fact nhs pracieay i leg Agriculture Department expendi- 181 Cre Coal 41 Zenith Rad... 318 Jana cutters hee-1980. ~ children at 26 Illinois St. oe discounts on ench car win- | islation witic protect our tures total some seven billion dol Hogs—salable 1,000 Butchers under dow. Bill Spence Rambier, 211 8S. Th ' I é T , . | government trom Communist },, ally he nd * Swans sn said one billion dollars a year x ; ath to 3 8 pte ie 5 and bears 11 00-13 50. |headed by William A> Kirkpatrick. —Bonded—FE 5-5201. adv. | this community, the prosperity and growth of every wari. and in a protest ter to Detos Hamlin 7 * * ; . s ae oe a. ee | family is our deep concern. chairman ar the board Broomfield urged that Congre s | Bofire the entike hoan’ Sonday.(puse ix bil. fe allos in Wixom Opposes Valuation to No Avail . . Swanson accused Clan. of being homesteaders t0 ret ° Ford Visits Mexico | Capitol Savings & Loan Assoc “the epitome of McCarthyism," plus food while they are Bs i ting z | 8 with reference to the late Wiscon- homes and clearing land . sin senator's anti-Red campaigns He said that such action would to tu y xpansion i Established 1890 ~ —— spur sett s to the stute at prac- { aval | © na lvine tua ~? . 7, n« ‘ he fords 4} . “ - — , > . ri =o rr . ~ - +4 un | i i i : 7% ri vicar Son ne my 7 Se re Henry: Wixom’s plea that the Oakland| Lahti, in a six-page p" “dj “direct a competent physical ap- 75 W. Huron St., Pontiac FE 4-0561 4aSnz n VSBoerlAa Geriver ter: ernment is We “woul have v0 Ford II arrived vesterday to study . = . srotest ‘handed out to sup s : l { tl Li ] 1 t” | wey pane erif?? : a erdore . . Line , : County Board of Supervisors dis- | praisal of the Lincoin plant” re * ™ oa Irom Ii whic h is the store the SUTPiUus wd for + num the possibility of further heavy 1939 ounty te A ualiza- before the meeting, objected iw an ceived but the nine supporting CUSTOMER PARKING IN BACK OF OFFICE Siz Vor for «nm yer WG sr of .eoarse nyu if oun resen = ‘ : > - Russian word { 1oking. Active ber of year nyway if our present investments in Mexico by Ford @Pprove 1939 cc ax eq 4-| equalized valuation of $18,982,952! votes. | voleanoes are reported on the is- agriculture policies are permitted Motor Co tion values, as a protest against its being put on Wixom. < — =a = = es eens 4 + ni a ° lands __ ee cine Ford told reporters he may have | ‘inequitable’? valuation, went un- = x * * some news for them Thursday heeded today as the report was ap- “I believe a certain inequity ifter inspecting the Ford assembly proved by a 66 to 9 vote. has been allowed to creep into UPI Phete REGAL BEARING — Queen Elizabeth» II and Prince- Philip face the camera at Buckingham Palace’ for .this, new official photo by Anthony -Armstrong-Jones. The queen wears her: long-trained Parliamentary robe and a tiara of diamonds Philip wears the uniform of an admiral of the couple will tour Canada in June and July the St. Lawrence seaway. and pearls. Prifice fleet. The royal with the queen to open / \ , ;, with M iteos Any considerable Ford expansion in Mexico probably would call for niant and Adolfo Lopez talking President * * * Voting against it were Hugh G. Al'erton Jr., Southfield Township; more of the auto- Edward Cheyz, White Lake Town- manufacturing The Ship; Delos Hamlin, Farmington mobile’s parts in Mexico tcovernment earlier this year con-/SUPervisor and chairman of the siderably lowered import duties board: Arno L. Hulet, Bloomfield yn small automobiles, mostly of Township; Ray W. Lahti, Wixom: European models, and parts for Louis F. Oldenburg, Highland their. assembly. The government Township, Theodore Ollar, Berk-|y nplained, that assembly plants ley; Marshall E. Taylor, Walled n Mexico had not increased their Lake: and Arthur G. Elliott Jr., use of Mexico-made parts as much Pleasant Ridge. s expected Hamlin surprised supervisors —— cine with his ‘tno’ vote. Later he : : said the Farmington City Com- 6 Ships Wait, 4 Unload missien had ‘instructed him to at Limited Port of Detroit oppose ‘he report. | “They might appeal,’ Hamlin DETROIT 4UPI'—Six ships of aig «And they're not too happy.” five nations were anchored in the Detroit River yesterday awaiting |MAY BE OTHERS | berths at the Port of Detroit. Four The other ‘‘no"’ votes against other shi ips fying ,three foreign the annual report, which is a pre- flags were being loaded and un- Jude to setting tax rates, might loaded aeesin tog the port facilities also indicdte other appeals. to the to the limit. — Michigan State Tax Commission. Steamships agents chafed at the ; delays and some predicted that a ere “ a ce much ‘Detroit shipping would be | . il “— y ca and tk ‘tie done through Cleveland and To- omc ae . er fait ledo. Costs of keeping ships at morning, ti was indefinite whether the young city would proceed whh an appeal it filed prematurely last week with the Tax Commission. It hes five | days from today. | é | Wixom was the only municipality for dock space are up to $2,000 a day anchor waiting said to range Brewery Reports Loss DETROIT (® — National Brew- +, come out in the open and oppose ing Co. of Michigan reported Mon- the 1959 report which puts Oak- day it had a net loss of S82 —o ” Jand's total worth for taxes this for the vear ending ‘Dec. 31, 1958 vear at $1,822,915,328, or $14,245,728 The firm said a 4o-day strike in higher than last year's valuation. | the spring of 1958 cut company | _ See sales> by 19.7 per cent or from "§6.180.677 to $4.968,183 Walled loke Class of ‘54 \Plans Summer Reunion | The-class of ’54 at Walled Lake Coca-Cola Co. today reported first | High School is pl ing a reunion be held sometime this summer. quarter -earnings of $5, 240,240, | '° A fuestine fas been‘ echeduled equal to $1.24 a common share. | Tgp ba _ ; r 8 p. m. Thursday to form This compared with net income in | lans. It. wit be held ut the hich the similar 1958 period of $4,699,- P __— » school. 923 or $1.11 a share. | / —_—— + 7 — ‘Ti largest potash deposits in Coal has beén, found in 90 per the U.S. -are found in western} cent of Montana's gounties, | Nebraska. Coca-Cola Earnings Up |. WILMINGTON, Del. W — The t the equalization process,” he said. He added that putting such a high valuation and equalizing | factor on Wixom wag “appar- ently desi to correct past errors of judgment.” Lahti said Wixom’s estimated valuation accounts for $4,000,000 or 28.6 per cent of the county's total valuation increase over the 1958 valuation of $1,808 669,600. | ‘And this is without new con- | struction,”” he said. | Appraisal of the Ford Motor Co.'s Lincoln-Mercury plant in fF Wixom—which accounts for 380 per cent of the city’s total as- | sessed valuation—caused the big- gest storm in the county’s newest eity. , * * a Lahti cherged the county's: Equalization Department with hik- ing the assessment of the plant} over the 1958 rate, without ‘coming | in to appraise the property or to; sample ‘any industrial property within the city.” William B. Grabendike, director of the department, said Wixom ‘s| trouble rests with the city assess- ing at 25 per cent of market value| while the county dssesses at 50 per cent. In addition, Grabendike ex- plained, assessment of the plant is was figured on cost figures sub- mitted by the company. Lahti said after the meeting, “This was no explanation at all. We assessed at one-quarter be- cause other areas do also.” COMPARISON POSSIBLE , W. Raymond Ransom past chairman of the Board's Egualiza- | tion Committee, said it is panes sible for Wixom to make a com- parison of this..year’s valuation since it’s the city’s first. “Trouble -is,” Ransom said, . “they are basing the comparison under ratios which existed when their Jand was part of Novi and Commerce Townships.” x FE 4.4523 MAYNARD JOHNSON Austin-Norvell Agéncy, Inc. — 70 West Lawrence Street . Pontiac, Michigan INSURANCE now associated with the We are now at... FE 2.9221 } Lahti’s plea for ‘supervisors to ; vote down the entire report and 2 ; | - ; _ ; 9 P ~e ’ a « « 2 ¢