wer ene ee 
The Weather 
Us. Weather Buréas Forecast 
Showers, tonight - tomorrow 
(Details Page 2) 
  : . “ , } 4 fr 
' {| 
} . 
THE PONTIAC -_PRES@ME OVER PE ¢ 
  
 & ee PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY-29, 1959—26 PAGES OEE sociTED Fused   17th YEAR 
Discuss UF Campaign 
ATTEND BUDGET ORIENTATION 
M. Glenn ‘eft), president of the Pontiac Com- 
S$. Nelson 
chairman of the United Fund's Budget Steering 
Committee, discuss plans for the 1959 UF cam- munity Chest, and Robert 
Straley Hearing Appointee to Serve 
Billings $7,719 MMSUO and Pontiac City Disputes Charges 
From Two Lawyers but 
Okays Tab for Records 
Pontiac has been asked to pay 
$7.719-to-cover the expense of the 
Herbert W. Straley hearing before 
the Civil Service Commission 
Bills for professional services 
during the hearing have been sub- 
mitted to City Manager Walter K 
_ Willman by James G. Hartnick, 
counsel for the Civil Service Com- 
mission: A. Floyd Blakeslee, as- 
sistant counsel. for the city; and 
the Oakland County Court Reports 
Co.. which recorded transcripts of 
the 18-day hearing ; 
Hartrick’s bill was $2,025, 
Blakeslee’s $2,610, and the court | 
reporters’ $3,084. 
Meeting, informally last night, 
city tommissioners ‘felt the court 
reporters should be paid in full 
but questioned the bills of the two 
Pontiac attorneys. 
TO NEGOTIATE 
City Manager Walter K Willman 
was asked to negotiate for a low- 
er price 
The court reporters prepared 
four sets of transcripts, containing 
about 2,00 pages each, as required 
by the Civil Service statute 
Blakeslee’s bill set a price of 
$20 an hour for 4% hours of con- 
ferences and planning and $25 
an hour for 66 hours spent at 
the hearings. 
Hartrick’s bill was based on a area and % in the north. High|MSUO, Jean Young. elementary | 
\temperatures will range from 86 rate of $25 an hour for- 81 hours’ 
work. 
x *« * 
Commissioners agreed to offer 
Straley reimbursement for 30 days 
ef vacation time he had accrued 
at the time of his suspension, Feb 
13. 
This will amount te about 
$1,040, said Maryin Alward, city 
Finance Director. 
At Tuesday night's Commission 
meeting, Straley had demanded 
payment for 65 accrued vacation 
days. saying he had taken virtually 
no .time off during his 8'2 years 
as \Pontiac police chief; 
\ * * 
It \was agreed last night that | 
the former official was entitled 
to reimbursement for at least 30; 
days, under city personne] rules, 
but whether he should get more 
money was a MNiatter of dispute. 
Commissioners agreed tq make 
their offer formally Tuesday night. 
Kathie Faces Decision 
in Chapter Hl of Serial 
Romance in Hawaii is featured 4 
in. .Virginia Nielsen's ‘Journey | 
to Love,” serial. Read of the 
decision Kathie Ebherts miust 
make: marriage or a life alone. 
The. second, installment of | 
“Journey to Love’ appears on 
Page 14 of today’s Pontiac Press.   
ak ae has Mie Ae SE RES PRE LOES 
      In Today’ s Pre: ess 7 : morial Day holiday coming up, and all that, why don’t of that bottle...” ae 
Lu ccommtmntimesiie |). YOU eprint that grisly little piece you did before the ‘will you 1 quit yapping = what time I got home 
- ery remem. |s last Labor Day holiday? Maybe it’ll help. Besides, Lt “ “tm gute tc see it this bucket re really can do a ae 
County News c.ccccccee 5 it saa gia shee ads a hundred and twenty . “It we ‘marty we ean get there ahead of the 
Editorials -......+-.+-++.0-+ ‘ 0 ee ? “How about another kiss, honey? .. .” — Farm & Garden ..... rot f eo et eva - + “Of emia he knows I'm passing him on the right. 
High School ..,.......+++- - 18 if Famous Words (of some very dead motor “So I've only driven 10 hours. Why sh Ves aren Sree & pi : lg - 0 hours. why should I be » stor Markets oowwcveveevecnee | me Last ‘ Skee y y ool siges guy thinks he's going ‘to cut me off, he’s 
ally Pere B¥icpiee = 14 aree the way she fe this turn at m. ; “Trouble with all those ‘ouesiie: eS killed ariv-: —*] could drive this ved blindfolded sale : 
gs . . “a | , y should I dim. my lights? He ain't. we ng, rd just don’t know how, naturally, Uke = “This baby can pass anything -on—«- hill, 
aecak. we ‘4 kone coc wunl % | “Wanna drag ...?” me...  +Wateh ...” ein. 2 
Women’s Pages ......-++- 67 iS “What's wtong with these tires? They've only gone “Thi ‘baby can steer itselt “Te ; . “Nothing ever comes out of these: sidb-roads . \ 
pains | lig forty thoysand . ae ” e nia ts Those = blinkers start working Requiescat encea : 
Open Tonight Unti 9 |a » . , . : : ‘ 
Thoms south Saginaw Bt. el ae tata   
  paign with Albe 
the Community 
munity leaders —Robert 
(right), 
bank last night. 4 
e Fires Cau 
  3 Sta } 
   A { se 
00,000 Damage   
Shovel Some This Way- —- ‘School Workers 
Seek $364,418 
in Pay Boosts Wage Increase Plan 
Submitted to Board 
by: Salary Committee    
   
              mm 
  
Phete Fentiae Press 
rt W. Holcomb, vice president of 
National Bank. Sixty-seven com- 
who will sit on budget hearing 
panels -attended an orientation session at the By HARVEY ZUCKERBERG 
Requests. totaling $364;- 
418 in wage increases for 
the 1959-60 school year   (See story om page 2.) 
  
     
  pine’: 
HOLLIE L. LEPLEY » ms   
Showers Likely 
to Put Damper 
on Holiday Fun 
Thundershowers are forecast for 
and Memorial Day for all 
by the tonight 
of the Lower Peninsula 
U.S. Weather Bureau. 
“It will be hot and humid, with 
- low of 60 degrees in the local) 
in Pontiac ‘to 74 in the north. | 
Cooler weather if expected late | 
Saturday night with a low of | 
45 to 50 the Bureau said. Sun- | 
day will be partly cloudy with 
a high of 75. 
Temperatures for the next five 
days. Will average near the nor- | 
mal high of 74 and normal low of! 
53. Precipitatién will -total about! 
three-fourths incl? as rather fre- 
quent periods of showers or thun 
dershowers. 
The lowest reading in downtown 
Pentiac preceding 8 a.m. was 66 
degrees, The mercury rose to & 
t 1 p.m. 
  
2 Killed Scaling Peak 
KATMANDU, Nepal @—An ef-. 
fort by an Austrian team to 
climb 26,795-foot Mt. Dhaulagiri, 
the highest peak in the world | 
still -unclimbed, has cost two 
lives, the Nepalese government 
annotificed today. 
SURE NRE tit beac cat 
N otice By BOB CONSIDINE 
NEW YORK —. “Dear Sir, if that’s your name,” 
writes an admirer who 
able name of Millie Considine. + - tem will contract with MSUO for) ‘Charles Murphy, 
‘fast night authorized Superintend- were presented last night to 
ithe Pontiac Board of Edu- 
cation by teachers, admin- 
istrators, secretaries, miain- 
itenance ‘and operation’ 
                    
    workers. 
| Board President Glenn Griffin) 
land. Supt. of “Schools Dr. Dana 
P.-Whitmer declined comment on) 
Appointment of Hollie L. Lepley, the proposals, saying only they 
swimming coach at the University) would be taken ‘under advise- 
of Nebraska, as director of physi-| ment. - 
cal education, recreation arid intra-| Some Board members indicat- 
mural athletics at Michigan State ed, however,’ that they felt the 
University Oakland, will be re-| raises seemed unrealistic in the 
' , WANT THIS JOB? — This isn't a picture 
commended to the MSU Board of| oe 6¢ Sand Masitafigps. =. saved from the winter. to tantalize the heat-. as crews work hard in a hurry-up effort to have 
Trail Ridge Road open for the annual: ribbon- 
  Trustees. A salary committee, jointly rep-| struck. The snowplow sending up a spray of the 
Lepley is expected to be official-| resenting 575 teachers of the Pon-} cool stuff is in Rocky Mountain National Park, cutting cerpmony Saturday. 
ly named to the post at the next |tiac Education Association and the —— ae 
Board meeting. The Board of Trus-|160-member American Federation 
tee§ is the governing body of both of Teachers, asked for installment 
MSU and MSUO. : lof a. “factor index” pay. structure} 
While serving as a full-time | |that would ‘‘assure a career teach-| 
member of the MSUO staff, Lep- | ler at least double his starting a 
ig SEES a Soave “= Pontiac Gears for Holida physical éducation, recreation / jcrements beyond that period. 4 
and athletics of the Pontiac | =*-* 
school system. 
—_ heen |r the coming year would amount |emonies, and heavily traveled|Sunday efternoon and evening car-| groups and majorettes. 
Parga as MS cee Wi Pon.|"°, $230,704. |highways will mark Menerid lcyee the big load of traffic as) Alse included are the Navy. 
sty Se aie ‘The minimum schedule we are Day activities in the Pontiac area|weekend vacationers Jbegin the gnq Biue Star Mothers ‘With Parade, Ceremonies, Traffic Rush   
_tiac school officials whereby for | submitting for 1959-1960 is -just &ltom 48 the nation pauses tor |long Apert «2 M a Clubs 
a two-year period the school sy® that start in direction,” said|the year’s first summer holiday. 
spokesman {0F| re holiday period will be short-| In Pontiac, observances will ie; a 
the committee. ler than last year’s for most peo-/fin at 10 a.m. with the annual | Recruiting gab and 
The ‘start’ is a $150 raise for |ple but police throughout the state|/Memorial Day parade up Sag-| a 24-man crack drill team from_ 
| thaining level 4 teachers, $175 in- warn that traffic may be er a eee res al the Grosse Ne Naval Air Station. 
| erease for level 5 teachers, $200 lconcentrated since the day also is Para wil assemble a a.m 
ent of Schools Dr. Dana P. Whit- | for loved @ and-O295 for fevel 7. [the treditidgel time for opening|@ Jackson street and on S “i Page phy > agg —— 
mer to conelude such an agrce-| 
These training levels represent, jot summer cottages. jbetween Whittemore and Cottage 8¢ who will deliver an address at ment 
Whitmer said Lepley’s time in respectively, teachers -who possess) With some city deilers ex- |" ye sees + in the ade will | the Perry-Mount Park Cemetery 
Pontiac would be used in the fur-\a bachelor degree, master ~de-| pected te get an early start to =" ng oa Pie par br | veterans plot at 11 a.m, 
ther development of the physical | gree, 30 hours credit past. the) summer hemes today, — teuad .© — —_ 4 teed)” oe. x’ * 
education program of local schools,| master’s degree and the doctorate. have switched to emergency road earcergen, hi Aiea Other officials prominent in the 
particularly at the junior and sen-; jerans’ groups,” marching day's activities will be. Floyd E. half of Lepley’s time. 
* * * 
The Pontiac Board of Education 
   * * | patrele. | trom “Pontiac Central and junior) ior high school levels. It accepted, the pay hikes would] Peak hours are e ed to ‘high “schools, the Rae-Vens” Dri Drill a ao marshall; Mayor 
HALF TIME ‘bring the base salaries in oS vinnie, casein F-series é ip Fn ~ song lr a 
As part of the arrangement be-| four categories to $4,300, $4,725, shey, president of the Pontiac 
system ~~ and| $4,950 and $5,175. 
Murphy said the pay struc- 
‘physical education instructor) ture would not be binding adres ee | 
would work half-time on the. uni- | Board in the terms of 4 
versity, campus’ with MSUO :con-| contract. tracting for her services with the| All of America today learned iv Pontiac's prong, 1959 safety 
jlacal school administratior | “Ot course. we hope it could record. ’ said Murphy, b’‘ut National Safety Council —_——a released today showed! |be adhered to,’ 
Her work at MSUO would be jt is really only q flexible prom-| pontiac tied with two other cities as safest in the 50, 
with the aia physical educa- |_ (Continued on Page 2, €ol. 7) | nopuiation division. 
News Flash ntiac had no traffic deaths during the first four. “One of our plans has been to 
develop close working relation; months of the year. (The perfect record for the year 
extends through today.) . 
JAKARTA, Indonesia —Un- 
¢onfirmed reports say 185 per- |Ships with MSUO so that We might | 
profit from the resources of this) Tying with Pontiac were Kalamazoo and Cedar Rapids, 
Iowa. 
' sons were killed and 200 seri- 
| eusty injured in a train crash | university and: they might profit . 
from our school system,’ Whitmer. 
told Board -members. 
in the mountainous Tasikmal- 
aja area of West Java, Health | 
Ministry officials announced to- tween the school Pastors Assn.; Larry Payne, pres- 
ident of the Pontiac Memorial Day 
Assn.; and Harry J, Pattison, $1- 
year-old Spanish-American War 
veteran. 
A parade honoring Waterford 
Township veterans will gét under 
|way~at-16:30-a:m, at the corner 
(000-100,000 ot Dixie Highway and Frembes 
street. 
‘The Iine of march wilt form ai 
10 a.m. at the Drayton business 
section parking fot. All traffic 
on Dixie Highway will be halted 
and directed by tnembers of the 
(Continued of Page 2, Col. 6)   
  * * * 
Detroit tied with Chicago as the safest big city in which to:Press Will Publish 
drive. Both cities reported 2.4 deaths per 10,000 registered 
Vehicles during the first four months of the year. One Edition Tomorrow 
Se that Pontiac Press Wyandotte took top spot in the 25,000-50,000 |   
* * * 
“We can envision a time: in the 
future that resource persons frém 
MSUO in science, mathematics, 
language arts -and many other 
| fields might work part-time in| day. classification with no traffic deaths reported this year. | employes may join the eb- 
aur school system for specific, Four coaches of a Bandung-. The national trend, however, showed traffic deaths jumped | servance of Memorial Day 
periods to upgrade certain in-) bound express reportedly plunged jin April for the fourth straight month. | to morrow, The Press will 
structional areas. 
“We can also see that programs. 
of ‘teacher training at*MSUO can) 
be enhanced by an extensive ond 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) int He} terday aft cougiing wrcke palormed er +, A total of 10,680 persons died on the nation’s highways | 
es said the accident was be- iduring the first four months, compared to 10,270 during the| 
lieved casused by sabotage by ‘same period in 1958. 
‘ rebe} Darul Islam elements. | ‘Last year in Pontiac 15 persons died in traffic accidents. publish but one edition, at 
noon, . 
Regular edition times 
will be resumed Monday. 
  oe ee EOE pee Sta a   - ee oe NR Rit Es eae MHS ye Bey Pai ad aia emg Ep * ~ ae Spt EE SE ARIE eke SES! POP WT EES i CEE eg 
the Way She Takes This Turn at 80. | oe ee ee | The faculty increase eet Parades,~solemn graveside cer-)night and early Saturday, with Team, end various Boy Scout't Olivet College 
Hall, Theater, 
Garage Burn School Building Loss 
$800,000; Other Blazes 
at Calumet, Hancock 
From Our, News Wires 
|Michigan damaged a hotel 
forcing 159 guests to flee, 
damaged a theater, de- 
'stroyed a municipal garage 
land a college administra- 
itive building. 
| * Total loss was estimated   
tration building at Olivet College 
early today. 
; A fire early today at Hancock, ] 
  
  
Arrest Teamster 
n Juke Probe 
12 Others Indicted in 
Long Island 
ranking national leader of the 
| Teamsters Union and a dozen other 
}men were héld today on indict- 
iments by a gtand jury Which in- 
vestigated jukebox industry rackets: 
lon Long Island. 
The president of a New York 
|City local of the Teamsters Union 
and other teamsters officials were 
among 15 men indicted bec 
night. 
John J. 0’ Rourke, 59, an inter-   
  “Sure, Lm on the wrong side. 
traffic coming this way .. .’ 
“Thanks, but I'll light my own .. .” 
“Kinda chilly. Lemme have- another shot out There's never any when the train's five miles away . . 
“So, okay, okay, | it says ‘limit— 60.’ 1 They always al- 
low you 10 more... 
“Let's try this place. The shots are an, ounce and 
ahalf. . signs herself with the improb- 
“What with the Me- 
  
  
    Three separate fires in . 
|Shipherd Hall, venerable adminis 
MINEOLA, N.Y. @ — A top    “ie 
      
                
       
      
       
   
           
    
     
         iz be * ‘ EERE) <1) MER BE vp s 
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1959. reed ibe - 
  
  By GEORGE T. 
The Oakland County Tax Allocation Board today voted 5 to 1 
to retain a status quo on last 
schools and townships, while 
Lansing for monetary relief. 
The only dissenting vote, as expected, came from Robert Y. 
Moore, chairman of the Board of Auditors. The final rates will 
be set officially Monday. \ 
Voting for the freeze on 1958 rates were Board Chairman County 
~ County Appeal Looms 
~ on Hold-the- ee? 
Tax — 
Board Appro ves ‘59 Raft 7 j q 
e | 
i 
a. % — v 
Freeze   
Line Policy ~ 
year’s tax rates for the county, 
keeping an eye peeled toward). | 
% | 
  
_— 
Appointee to Serve 
MSUO and Pontiac 
(Continued From Page One) 
~—~fieal experience of trainees in our 
schoo] system." 
OTHER POST 
In addition to his duties as a) 
‘ physical education professor at the tax board along with Moore, has 
University of Nebraska, Lepley is in the past stuck with Moore in 
Nebraska State chairman of the opposing moves to deprive the 
Rresident’s Physical Fitnéss prog- county of its requested share of 
-|the 15 mills. ram. 
His impending appointment 
was announced by Roy Alexan- 
| der, MSUO director of student 
“We are extremely happy in| 
obtaining this man because he has; 
worked Jn both voluntary and man- the understanding that the coun- 
datory Physical fitness programs,” 
| Alexander said. 
*basis 
* * t 
Lepley's appointment becomes ménd to the proper authority that! 
effective July 20. 
During MSUO’'s 
ties as golf and bowling. 
Sports such as touch football. ceiving the 6.47 share of the 15 track and field, skating. and ski-'mills it asked in order to raise ing may aslo be offered, Alexan- $11,796,018 in taxes. * Physical fitness courses will not 
be required at the new university | 
which opens in September. Student | going to have to appeal or cut out 
participation will be on a voluntary|some departments.” 
infant stage, | 
Lepley will primarily be con-| He said the county can expect cerned with developing students |to slice $1,549,465 from its pro- 
recreational skills in such activi-| posed 1960 budget of $189997,018 
der said. 
OUTDOOR ‘ACTIVITIES *Philip E. Rowston, Pontiac mayor; 
William J. Emerson, county school 
superintendent; James L. Gardner 
of Commerce Township, Will J. 
\Oliver of Southfield and' Charles A. 
Sparks, county x 
Sparks’ vote favoring holding 
the line on taxes came as a 
surprise to county school offi. | 
cials and some supervisors gath- 
ered in the Supervisors’ Room 
| of the County Office Building. 
Sparks, veteran member of the)   
| Each year the 15 mills must be 
\divided up by the board between: 
the county, schools and townships. 
| Following today’s brief one- 
hour session, Sparks said he 
voted with the majority “with 
ty will be appealing its alloca- 
* * * 
Yet Moore said, ‘We're either 
Moore, however, was less difi- 
|nite as to whether he would recom- 
ithe 5.62 to be given the county 
should be appealed. 
|budget because it will not be re- 
4 
| As the tax board prepares for 
| a routine settling of rates Mon- 
+ 
The MSUO physical education day in its jast meeting, school 
‘ director will have the responsibility; and county officials are mapping 
of developing a program of quality! an urgent campaign te have all 
that students will want to take, | Michigan counties retain at least 
Alexander said. | 30 per cent of any new taxés 
The physical education program) the State Legislature might ap- 
MSUO will be devoted to out. prove, PROUD PARENTS — Dr: and Mrs. Henry F. 
Dawkins of Royal Oak get a happy sendoff from 
their two younger children, Susart and Mike, as   tas é i a ve 
Pontiac Press Phote 
they leave today to attend the graduation of their 
son, Cadet Capt. Peter M. Dawkins at U.S. Mili- 
tary Academy, West Point, N. Y. Pontiac Gets Ready 
for Memorial Day (Continued From Page One) 
Rev, Donald Andrews, pastor of 
the United Presbyterian Church of 
the Atonement, will give the in- 
vocation, 
President of the Drayton-Water- 
ford Rotary Club, Russell Hicks, 
will deliver the Memorial Day mes- 
sage. 
the Waterford High School march- 
ing band followed by Girl and Boy 
: = Scout Troops, members ‘of the Da- 
vid Belisle VFW Post 4102 and its), 
auxiliary. 
be Cub and Brownie Scouts along 
with Waterford Township Fire- 
At Sylvan Lake, services will 
begin at the city’s Veterans Park 
Pontiac drive and Garland str>et 
at 11:60 a.m. with the rededica- 
tion speech and prayer offered 
by the Rev. Richard Stuckmeyer 
pastor of Grace Lutheran Church. 
This will be followed by the 
presentation of wreaths by the Syl- 
van Lake Garden Club, Amvets, 
and Sylvanites Club, The. playing 
of taps, the National Anthem, and 
flag raising will close the cere- 
mony. 
A parade will then assemble and 
begin at 12:05 p.m., going north 
on Pontiac drive to Ferndale #reet     
  activities of necessity the) With this plan in mind, Emerson first year because no indoor facili: hast week proposed the freeze on| 
ties will be available. __ |tax rates, hoping the tax sharing] 
Lepley will also be charged (Proposal would provide the county, 
with developing a physical tite |APd Schools with the extra money 
Beas and recreational program (they will need to meet budgets 
for interested faculty members. year. are growing steadily each| year. The 46-year-old coach is a native ” . - oe | 
of Wisconsin and received a bache-' Only major changes noted trom| 
lor of | _y oe 1 Car. last year's rates will.be for Water-| — Wis.) College In | tord Township (from $1.32 to $1.31). 
«kt |Southfield Township (from $1 to 
: , 80 cents),. and for Brandon Town- He holds an M.S. degree in PhY-| ship (from $1 to $1.08* 
sical education from the University | 
of Wisconsin and is slated to re-| Preceding another attempt 
ceive his Ph.D. from Indiana Uni-| this morning by Moore to get 
versity next month. as close to the 6.47 mills as 
. possible, David Levinson, Bir- | IN NAVY V-5 * - mingham supervisor, reluctantly | 
Lepley served as a physical edu-| appeared before the aa eiee 2 
cation instructor at Beloit (Wis.)| gej1 of the ty’ . ya 1937-43. and | oe county’s money prob 
1943-46 was a lieutenant in the | , 
Nava] Reserve V-5 flight training, Biggest headache, he said, con 
and water survival. ‘ |County in paying for social wel-| 
jfare since the state has trimmed He has been with the Univer- 
  | 
: \its share of the costs from half 
sity of Nebraska since 1946. |to 30 per cent. . 
A member of the instructional} ~*~ *   
staff for the American Red Cross; Before the tax board then moved| 
national acquatics schools, Lepley|into a committee session to set} 
is a past president of the Nebraska what they call preliminary final! 
Assn. for Health, Physical Educa-|rates, Moore made a motion to. 
tion and Recreation, served as grant the county 6 mills instead 
editor of the association's publj-|of the “‘frozen’’ 5.62. 
cations, and has been a member of! ‘“‘This will still leave us $768,000 
the NCAA Swimming Rules Com-|short,"’ Moore said. 
mhittee. | 
He is married and the father of| 
two sons, 12 and 14. With no discussion, the vote on 
Moore's motion was 4 to 2 with | 
| Sparks siding with Moore this 
| time. 
Today’s vote on: what looms to The Weather | | be the 1959 ‘tax rates climaxed| 
(pontiac “ee Bonet ag po a running feud between Moore and 
Speer ckonere tedan high as, Wines the schools. Moore has argued that 
southerly 10-15 miles. Partly cloudy with Schools are asking for too much | 
weeteht and tomncrons Len tenteht ca |Millage each year, despite having 
temerrew 80. Winds southerly 18- approval from voters to fax be- 
1s eatles teserree rune te northerly ond the 15 mills to gather extra 
‘ —— s Teday in Pontiac dunds. 
Lowest temperature preceeding § a @m 
06   
  : * * *x 
By-doing this, Moore charges, 
the county is deprived of its “‘fair’’| 
share of the 15 mills. 
* *& * 
‘Yesterday he said it’s not the, At 8am: Wind Velocity 18 mph 
Direction: Bouthwest 
» Gun sets Friday at 7:59 pm 
» Bun rises Baturday at 4 59 am 
Mobn sets Friday at 12.39 pm 
rises Saturday at 1 30 a.m 
  Dew T 
6am abba ar ta 8: county which is ‘the big bad wolf” | 
iach a -- §3\behind the annual tug-of-war over! 
zon 3 the tax pie. 
“= an School officials believe it’s the Theurtdsy in Pontiae 
  (as recorded downtown) 
Highest tempereatu we 86 
Lowest temperature ..,............ $7 
temperature ~... 1.5 Three years ago, as the Board eather — Sunny of Supervisors hit upon a pay- | 
as-you-go plan to finance @ new 
courthouse, the supervisors and 
Moore’s Board of Auditors were 
—_—— \ | charged in a law suit that they Highes ; | 
ert buc ts Ter” | | had padded annual budget to 82 in 1929 | 36 in 1 a One Year Age in Pontiac 
Highest temperature ....... 
— temperature ..... ......./...\ 
jean temperature ........., SeaeuisenOt 
Weather — gunny. 
  
  
  Thursda Tomgere@are Coat *4 fands. re 
a - Lansing *« 67) 5 
Sekipore 70 Marquette 71 47; Levinson today, as other county 
jm a Misc Beach s 44 Officials and some supervisors have 
Buff @1 Milwauk 78 688 said j \. = - oo — A 4 said in the past, deny such a prac 
(1 Met Orleans 97.74 tice bene S | New Ri 87? 72 * * * 
veiand . a 76 67 
penver 77 81 Pefirton Ki] $9. But one thing the county, schools ‘oe - 4 
Duluth 4 41 Pittsburgh 80 61 87d townships will agree on is that Fort, Worth ” 4 t. Louis e8 «6. each year it becomes (more dif- 
inte arith s $5, ficult for the tax board ‘to divide 35 Traverse C. 8 85 up the 15 mills three ways and / City i €2 tle 63 47) , 
Eos angeles 89 1 Tamps «8.431 Still please everybody. | = t 
jj > > gf 
hy 6 
f da ne 
f t 4 
  _ “Mr, Wells is well kftown to a 
county which each year asks for|/@rge number of Pontiac business 
more than what is really needs./People, and His expérience well     LLOYD C. WELLS | | 
; 
Pick Area Man 
| 
Lloyd Wells Was Once 
Manager of Creamery 
in Pontiac | 
\ } 
A former ‘Pontiac businessman 
has been named assistant manager! 
of the Pontiac Area Chamber of! 
Commerce. 
The appointment ‘of Lloyd C. 
Wells, former manager of the! 
Pontiac Branch of the Detroit 
Creamery Co., was announced to- 
day by John W. Hirlinger, chamber 
manager. | 
Wells, 56, of 6477 Sunningdale | 
Dr., Bloomfield Township, will 
ke over the post Monday, when | 
illiam L. Belaney leaves to 
become public relations director 
for GMCT Employes Federal | 
Credit Union. : 
Wells had been employed in the was not known whether the two body, according to police. He was 
Detroit office of the creamery con- 
cern since 1947. He was sales 
manager six years and in 1953 was 
named vice president in charge of! 
milk operations. 
* * 
Wells became general manager} 
    ‘for the: milk company in Pontiac} peter 
in. 1934, living for 13 years in 
Sylvan Lake 
He joined the Detroit Creamery; 
as a route salesman in 1925 and 
two years later was named branch) 
manager in Dearborfi.” > 
A native of Williamsburg, Ont., 
Wells attended Oshawa Seminary 
in Oshawa, Ont. 
qualifies him for his new position,” 
said Hirlinger. 
  
Biggest Foreign Ship 
Makes Visit to Detroit 
DETROIT # — The largest 
ocean-going ship to enter the Great 
Lake-the 20,000-ton French tank- 
er-gray carrier Saint Remi — 
visited Detroit today. | narrow Budget Group of UF 
Preparing tor Action Community leaders who will play; marily an orientation, session for }and then-east on Ferndale to the 
|Sylvanite. Haven Park. 
Morse fo Filibuster 
Strauss Confirmation? WASHINGTON (AP) —~ Sen.   Leading the procession will be |: 
Also included in the parade will] The Day in Birmiigham   
High School 
dred and ninety-two members of 
Heading the class are M 
Weinrich, son . and- Mrs. 
A. J. Weinrich, Vorn Lane, 
valedictorian; and Barbara Sayle, 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert 
A. Sayle, of 1527 Cheltenham Dr., 
salutatorian, 
uated with cum laude : 
Dr. Charles Anspach, president 
of Central Michigan College, will 
be the commencement speaker. 
Pay Boos! Sought ‘4 
by School Workers 
| (Continued From Page One) 
lise. For example, in a lean year 
\when building costs are high the 
|Board wouldn't necessarily be 
| bound to comply with the raises     Class of ‘59 
Honored at Annual Dinner 
His topic will be “Pauper or Mil- lionatire.’’ 
Members. of the United Church 
Women will meet at 10 a.m, June 
5 in the chapel of the First Pres- 
byterian Church for their final 
meeting of the season. 
Mra, Louise Carpenter, direc- 
tor of Adventures in World Un- 
Tickets for the luncheon may be 
purchased from UCW members 
prior to June 2, . 
Directors of the Birmingham 
Community House will hold their 
annual dinner and meeting at 
7 p.m, Monday at the House. 
Mrs. Effie Schaffer said annual 
reports will be given and a brief 
discussion of ‘future plans dis- 
cussed. 
  
Baldwin Public Library has ar- 
ranged a display of books written 
by 22 area authors as a part of 
the Birmingham Arts Festival be- 
| The books will include fiction 
jand non-fiction, ranging from mys- 
|teries to science and psycho-analy- 
sis.   as prescribed in the pay struc- | A number of the books are slant- 
iture.”” 
| John-Keinert;-eo-chairman of the 
|AFT salary comittee, said Pontiac 
teachers haven't gotten a raise 
‘in salary since an ‘‘across the 
" hike two yearg ago. * * 
“We are grateful for across the 
  ‘ed for children including the works 
of a Franklin author who has writ- 
|ten a number of books on natural 
| history. 
3 State Fires Cause   
ened that he may try to talk the | sre coming. * 
board increases,” said Keinert,' Wayne Morse: (D-Ore) has threat-|.. when the $ 300 000 D but you ‘never know y| , i amage 
nomination of Lewis L. Strauss to| { ; ® 
a vital role in the 1959 Pontiae| budget panel members. Addressing death 
Me Area United Fund Drive were|the members were Leonard T. 
J. | guests at a dinner last night in the| Lewis, United Fund president, and 
Community National Bank. 
The affair was given by Alfred 
C. Girard, president of the-bank.|clude persons appointed by profes- 
Attending the meeting were 
some 67 of 30 persons who will 
review budget requests of all 
participating ageucies .of the 
United Fund. 
  Nelson. 
The budget panel members in- 
  sional and civic organizations, and 
outstanding members of: the local 
| community. 
Each panel will hear budget re-| 
quests of two local agencies, of; 
which there are 16. Requests for| 
Fifty-one agencies receive funds} needs of state and national organ- 
from -the United Fund campaign.| izations servicing the Pontiac ‘area 
Eighty civic leaders will be di-j will be heard by the Budget Steer- 
vided into eight budget panels. |ing Committee, Strauss, nominated as ‘secretary 
of commerce, ran into this latest 
obstacle Thursday rfight after Sen- 
ate Democrats initiated a new 
round of criticism aimed at pre- 
venting his confirmation, 
Morse said he would do every- 
thing within rules of the Senate 
‘to prevent this enemy of the 
American people from ever being 
confirmed.” 
Under Senate rules, it is diffi- 
cult to prevent a senator from 
talking any length of -fime. 
Morse’s statemént, made to the 
Senate, was interpreted as a Each panel wil] hear the requests} These hearings will be held| i oat of filibuster. 
of various agencies and meet with) through the month of June. 
agency representatives. | 
They will then forward recom- 
mendations to the Bhidget Steeri 
|Committee, a year-around organ-| 
forC. of C. Post =" "=" Kills Area Man Based on the recommenda. | 
tions made by the budget pan- 
els and the review of the Budg- 
et Steering Committee, the Unit- 
ed Fund Board of Trustees sets 
drive. 
Last night's meeting was pri- 
  
Rescuers Claw Rock 
Seeking Two Miners 
KIRKLAND LAKE, Ont. (AP) 
—A four-man rescue crew clawed 
away at fallen rock 2,700 feet un- 
derground today in an attempt to 
reach two trapped miners. 
Only four men could work in the 
space where the rock 
broke loose Thursday at the 
Wright-Hargreaves gold mine. It 
miners were alive, 
A third miner, Frank Uramow- 
ski, 35, was brought up two hours 
after the rock fall with severe 
head lacerations. He was creport- 
ed in satisfactory condition. 
The two still in the tunnel were 
Moras, 54, and Gilles 
Huard, 19. the goal for the yearly fund | Construction Crew | 3   
Backing Truck 
_ Crushed While Seeking. 
Job on Birmingham 
  | A White Lake Township man, 
jJohn E. Teem, 31, of 1875 Mead 
Lane, was killed instantly in Bir- 
minghanf yesterday when he was 
struck by a backing truck. 
Birmingham Police said Teem 
was standing in a barricaded area 
on Woodward avenue looking for 
a Oak Contruction Co. foreman to 
try and get a job. 
He apparently did not see the 
approaching truck driven by 
James G. Barg, 32, of 539 E. 
Oakridge Ave., Ferndale, police 
| sald. 
It apparently struck Teem in the 
|head, knocking him to the pave- 
jment, and then rolled ever his   
pronounced dead on arrival at Wil- 
liam Beaumont Hospital, Royal 
‘Oak. a 
| The truck driver told police he 
felt the bump but thought it was 
dirt which had fallen from gnother 
jtruck until he héard . someone 
‘scream. He was released after 
making a statemer®, — 
  ass   
The missing wife of a Ford 
Motor Co: executive was found 
dead yesterday in a closet of their 
‘home at 695 Vaughan Rd., Bloom-|P*°*? 
field Hills. . 
The body of Mrs. Alan L. Gor- 
nick, 42, was discovered by her 
’ |husband at 3:30 p.m. when he went 
upstairs to open some windows, | 
he told Bloomfield: Hills Police. 
The large closet has a window 
in it and when Cornick leaned 
ever to open it, he uncovered 
The vessel is on ber way thoeol_ Soins by ciate tongiag @ 
t Duluth, Minn., with grain for 
International Milling Co. mills in 
Venezuela. ; 
The Saint Remi carries grain in 
center tanks and oil in separate 
side tanks. Launched last Novem- 
ber, the ship is 575 Teet long and 74 feet wide.   a 
zs -voncealed by clothés hanging on 
a rack, He called the police. 
Cause of death has not. yet been 
determined. ‘An autopsy was being 
performed today, *The body was 
taken to William Beaumont Hos: 
pital, Royal Oak Mrs. Gornick, 
> 
who had been uf- Find. Missing. Woman 
‘Dead in Clothes’ Closet 
|Wilcockson of New York City.   
der the care of a physican for the 
past thrée months, was reported 
missing by her husband 24 hours 
iously, 
| She had left the house at 3 
| P.m. Wednesday, telling the 
maid, ‘Tm going out. I'll see 
you later,’’ 
Surviving besides Mrs. Gornick's 
husband are two sons, Alan Jr., 
17, attending Fountain Valley Prep 
School at Colorado. Springs, Colo.; 
Keith, 5, and a daughter, Diana, 
14. « = 
Also surviving is Mrs. -Gor- 
nick’s mother; Mrs. George ‘H. 
Funeral arrangements are being 
made by the Bell Chapel of the 
William R. Hamilton Co., Rirming- 
ham. 
Gornick is a tax counselor at A verbal attack by Morse had 
a major bearing on another Ei- 
senhower nomination. 
When Clare Boothe Luce re- | “In the present situation a teach- 
jer doesn't know 
poe 
table to afford a house or a 
| The 
teachers to plan ahead.” 
| While the teachers 
| hope for positive results of 
Board's study, they agreed the 
that 
Pontiae 
| bly with the national average. 
Whitmer advised Board mem- 
‘bers that the proposed pay struc- 
ture is geared to national aver- 
jages. The cost of. living index 
|Shows an increase in the Pontiac 
jarea of 2.1 per cent, a figure lower 
jthan the national computation, 
|Whitmer told them. salaries compare favora- | (Continued From Page One) 
water pressure jn the area. The 
fire reportedly was brought un- 
der control by about 4:30 am. 
  use of the blaze has not been 
|determined. Firemen from Olivet 
jand the nearby communities of 
| Charlotte and Bridgeport fought the 
fire. 
2 
| ® *® * 
| Witnesses said the fire ap- 
peared to have started at the top 
\of the building and worked down 
‘toward the basement. 
| State Police said the fire was 
|reported by a passing truck driver 
|who noticed flames stiooting from 
‘the: top. } 
signed as ambassador to Brazil, | Administrators last night asked, OFFICIALS MEET 
she said Morse’s hours-long attackfor. wage increases totaling $48,-, The college administration, 
on the floor of ‘the Senate “had /383; secretaries, $7,930; mainten-| headed by President Gorton Rieth- 
made it impossible for her to 
serve, = $23,757; and custodiang-$53,- miller, met in emergency session 
to discuss effects of the fire. 
  
West Point's Greatest Cadet 
a Determined, Likeable Guy 
By LYDIA ROTHMAN 
Among the parents on hand 
Ww for graduation exer- 
cises at the U.S. Military Acad- 
emy, West Point, N. Y. will be an 
unpretentious but particularly 
proud couple from Royal Oak. 
* * * 
Dr. and Mrs. Henry E. Dawkins 
are leaving today-to attend the 
graduation and commissioning of 
their son, Peter M. Dawkins, West 
Point's outstariding cadet. 
Pete, who is 21 years, holds 
more academy honors than any 
cadet before him, including Gen. 
MacArthur and President Eisen- 
hower. 
In the 157-year history of the 
academy, he is the only dadet ever 
to have held the four d jons 
of first captain of cadets, class 
president, star student and football 
team captain. 
Besides this, he sang ih the cadet 
choir, plays four musical instru- 
ments and is always the charming 
life of the party. 
How does it feel to be the mother 
Perhaps he is just a hard work- 
ing, lucky kid, but it seems he is 
the possessor of that indefinable 
something that may some day put 
him in*the ranks of the “great 
men.” 
 & = @& 
    Ford Motor Co, in Dearborn, When Pete entered Cranbrook   PETER M. DAWKINS 
School in Bloomfield Hills, he was 
a slight youngster with a notice- 
able curve in his spine from a mild 
case of polio. 
His mother points out, though, i a 
j a 
iy 
  successes, Mrs. Dawkins said, ‘‘We 
were always ready and willing to 
listen to him, and his teachers and d 
operative. 
a normal, likeable young 
x * * 
Fred Campbell, Cranbrook's 
coach and a personal friend of Col. man.” 
him to take Pete into the academy. 
Col Blaik..was not enthusiastic . 
apout it, claiming that Pete ‘was 
too young, too light and wouldn't 
be able to take the rigors of. the 
_ academy. 
Pete’s first year as a plebe was 
America football team. 
   
  
  | 
    * Lawrence A ~_—_—<——_— s 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, _ FRIDAY, MAY: 29, 1959     
County to Honor 
Its War 
Communities throughout the Oak-, 
land County area will commemo-| 
rate their war dead tomorrow, Me-| 
morial Day, when the nation) 
pauses to reflect on her sons who) 
perished in battle. | 
Typical of observances by Amer-| 
icans jn towns across the nation, 
the day at Walled Lake will begin) 
with Flag raising ceremonies, 
scheduled for 6:45 am. at the 
Sims VFW Post. 
This will be followed by grave- 
side visits at al! cemeteries in the 
community. 
A } 
parade down main street 
i +at. noon, Dead 
‘in’ Solemn Rites will commence ffom Wrigley’s 
parking lot at 11 a.m. Included 
wil be the Veterans of Foreign 
Wars, the VFW Auxiliary, Dads | 
Post, Civil Air-Patrol cadets, Culy 
Scouts and Browntes, the Stan- 
cate Accordion School Band, and 
the Walled Lake High School 
Band. 
x * * 
The column will pause at 
‘intersection of Barnston street and 
Walled Lake drive while a wreath 
is dropped from a CAP aircraft 
overhead. 
* * * 
The parade is scheduled to 
rive at the Veterans’ ar- 
will be held. 
\FLAG CEREMONY 
The high school band will play 
the National Anthem. The Flag will 
be raised and lowered to half-mast 
by the VFW Honor Guard. 
Then, an invocation wil] be de- 
livered by the Rév. Carl Grapen- 
give an address. 
  
  - MAXENE MARIE DAVIS 
Mr. and Mrs. Earl J. Smith 
of 1121 E. Commerce Rd., Mil- 
ford, announce the engagement 
of her daughter, Maxine Marie 
Davis, to Ronald W. Averill. He 
is the son of Mrs. Wallace E 
Averill of 535 Elizabeth St., Mil- 
ford. and the late Mr iver 
A June 2% wedding is being 
planned C 
Conducts Study of Proper Diet Agriculture Dept. Says 
Cost Per Person Falls 
Short of 1c a Year 
WASHINGTON uF — The Agri- 
culture Department boasts that one 
of its most important task —that 
of studying food from the stand 
point of the consumer — costs 
less than a penny a person a 
year 
This work, which was started 
many years ago, is carried on by 
the department's institute of home 
economics 
Much of the work of scien 
tists engaged in this field—and 
many of them are women—has 
been trying to map out what 
humans should eat to maintain 
life and health. 
It is this work that helps make 
the department more than an 
agency for farmers alone 
* * 
The institute and its predecessor 
agencies in the department have 
led nutritionists in finding the nu- 
tritive values and other qualities 
of many different foods and what 
happens to them when they are 
cooked. ; 
It has conducted surveys te 
learn what various population | 
groups eat and why. As a. con- 
sequence of these findings, farm, | 
ers and marketers get a better 
idea of what consumers need | 
and. want.’ The department's re- 
search in this field forms much 
of the backbone of teaching 
in the nutrition and homemaking | 
fields. 
The experts say that there still 
is much to learn. For example, | tjury to return a verdict of Following the speech, a volley 
will be fired by members of the 
Post. Buglers will “sound taps to 
complete the ceremony 
* *® * 
Members of the VFW Post, their 
\families and guests will gather at 
ithe clubhouse after the parade 
A fireworks display after dusk at 
\Walled Lake Park will close Me- 
morial Day 
Oak - Park | Mulls 
Bids on $8 Million 
in. Insurance 
OAK PARK—Bids are now being 
tabulated on more than $8,000,000 
worth of insurance for the Oak 
Park School District 
* ® * 
City Business Manager ,William 
| Schroeder said he expects. to “sub- 
mit his tabulations to the school 
board at its next meeting on June 
* * * 
Nine insurance cempanies sub- 
mitted bids on the policies. Includ- 
ed is $7,853,000 fire and extended, 
coverage for the district's nine 
buildings and $320,000 for their con- 
tents. These will be five-year pol- 
icies : 
* * * 
School bus and workmen's com- 
pensation policies are also being 
sought. Thes¢ will be for a one-year 
period. Race 
  Track Wins Court Go-Ahe ad.   
  me 
Memorial 
where a special service’. ROLD W. HEIDEMAN j   Imlay Manager ° 
Starts Monday tine of the First Baptist Church | 
and Mayor Waldo Proctor will Has Similar Experience 
From West Branch and 
Manistique Jobs 
IMLAY CITY — A new manager 
of Imlay City will report on the 
job Monday He is Harold W 
Heideman, 49, of 114 W. Hollister 
St., Romeo > 
x * * 
‘Heideman is no stranger to the 
jobe of village or city manager, 
having served in that capacity at 
West Branch from 1946-49, and at 
Manistique from 1950-4. 
Since that time he has been 
| with the Misaukee County Road 
“Commission and self-employed 
as a civil engineer. 
The new village manager is a 
registered professional engineer 
having received his degree in en- 
gineering from Notre Dame Uni- 
versity in 1922. 
* * * 
He did graduate work at thé 
University of Toledo in the fields 
of public water supply. sewage 
disposal and public administra- 
tion 
Heideman is a member of the 
American Society of Engineers 
and the International City Mana-~— 
gers Assn. . 
A resident of Romeo since 1954, 
Heideman expects. to move his 
family to Imlay City in the near 
future. He married and the 
father of three grown children. is 
  
Favors School Board: 
in $50,000 Lawsuit 
ROMEO — For the second time! 
in less than three years, Macomb | 
County Circuit Judge Alton H. Noe 
thas ruled im favor of the Board 
of Education of the Romeo Com-| 
munity Schools 
Yesterday Judge Noe directed a 
“no 
cause for action’ in the $50,000 
damage suit which a _ Detroit 
architect filed almost three years 
ago against the Board. 
The directed verdict was or- 
dered after Leslie Jones, attor- 
ney for architect Robert West, 
admitted in his opening remarks 
that bids for a new high school | 
came in approximately $250,000 
over his client's estimate, 
William H. Nunneley, attorney 
‘for the school district, moved for 
the directed verdict after Jones 
completed his opening statement. 
West had been fired by the Ro- 
|meo Board after the bids came 
in too high. The local school dis-| 
trict subsequently entered into a 
contract with Eberle M. Smith! readmit their son who had been 
suspended from school until he got 
la “proper”” haircut. Judge Noe 
ruled in the Boards favor, and _ 
parents lost their case. 
t's Getting So Safety 
Just Isn’t Safe Anymore 
| JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) 
—The police set up a special safe- 
lty lane to check automobiles for 
imechanical defects and the first   
“lone into the chute was the depart- 
ment’s safety patrol cruiser. * 
* * * 
It flunked. One light didn't work 
Mrs. R.' D. Cureton drove in 
Her car passed but the Tane- 
flunked. 
* * * 
A large safety sign fell from ‘its 
j}mooring over the check lane, 
identing and scratching the Cure- 
tton car. Mrs, Cyreton asked the 
jsanety people to pay for repairs. 
  
the human body must get some associates, Inc., Detroit architects John Drew Barrymore - 
50 chemical] substances from foods. | 
* * A * 
Knowledge has been developed! 
on how only a small number 6 
these ‘may be obtained, and how) 
much of the various substance s| 
are required at different stages 
of growth. 
The iristitute also carries on re-} 
search in the fields of clothing, 
‘textiles, hosing and equipment, | 
family economics and home man- 
agement. | 
| who directed planning and .con- 
istruction of the new high “school 
which opened here last September. | 
In November, 1956, Judge Noe | 
upheld the Romeo Board's edict 
governing gfooming and dress 
— namely haircuts — when it 
was challenged by a 
youth “with an “Elvis Presley” 
hairdo. 
Parents of the boy brought suit 
seeking to compel the Board to 
  
We Sell What We Advertise   
END TABLES (Blond or Walnut) .. zl 
TABLE LAMPS (Fiberglass Shades) 
(Variety of Colors) 
3-PC.. SECTIONAL. 
  PLATFORM SWIVEL ROCKERS 
9x12 TWEED RUGS 
All Foam Rubber.{¥atiety of Colors) -..... .: $250 
"$395 
$2750 
$3,995. 
$194°° ewe 6 24 
  
       
       1 Mile East of Auburn Heights 
FURNITURE SALES. 
3345 Auburn Rd. 
“You Alwers. Buy jor Less at L & 5S” — (M259) 
T.—FRI, be Fens. Tote: 
  16-year-old ‘Faces Drunk Sentence 
SANTA MONICA, Calif. 
| Actor John- Drew Barrymore Jr, | 
will be sentenced June 24 on mis 
and run charges. 
Barrymore, 26, 
| Thursday. The ghee bach from 
la traffic accident in Béver'ty Hills 
last March 6, 
  
Kenaf is a tall, towering plant 
‘grown “iry Cuba which supplies 
jvaluable commercial fibers. It is 
akin to jute in its uses. , 
  
Monday thru Saturday 
FRANKLIN Road Route 
Weekdays: 9:15 A. M. (40 minute 
intervals) to 5:40 P. M. 
Setarday< 0:05 A. M. (60 minete - 
- intervals Ve 5:30. P. M, 4-4 ‘Big-Time Auto Speedway d   as + Pe 
: ‘ENJOY THE HOLIDAY 
DRIVE CAREFULLY in Shelby Township OK'd SHELBY TOWNSHIP — Big-timie automobile racing 
here ‘is virtually assured, with the suit brought by op; 
ponents of the proposed track dismissed in Macomb 
County Circuit Court yesterday. 
Judge Howard R. Carroll refused to enjoin Shelby:   
  } township Board from issuing permits needed by Curtiss- 
‘Packard Proving Grounds. 
‘believe the price climb will con- erty, 
(AP) — 
demeanor drunk driving and hit 
pleaded guilty, 
    
      
    
            When You Return Take Advantage of 
Our 23rd ) Wright Corp.| to establish the track on its property lo- 
cated on Van'Dyke, between 22- and 23-Mile roads. 
Plaintiffs in the case were five, residents of the town- 
ship and the organization listed as the Shelby Home- 
owners Assn. They charged* - 
that the township acted il+ track could be open for the : _ racing season. 
legally last December in re When Judgé barroll ruled on, 
zoning the Curtiss- Wright the case, he told Curtiss-Wright 
|property to permit cOn- and township attorneys that if the 
lstruction and operation of ,'T@ck should become a nuisance, the court reserved the right to, 
ithe track on the former step ‘in and halt operations 
Curtiss-Wright acquired the prop- 
which covers about 675 acres 
gand cost an estimated $1,000,000, 
rom -Studebaker-Packard Corp 
about two years ago 
The site has an existing 242- ne 
track. ‘And, the company plans 
to build permanent bleachers. to, 
seat 20.000 spectators, temporary 
bleachers for 20, more; comfort 
stations and a smaller track in- 
side the larger oval for sports and 
stock car racing 1960 ANNIVERSARY PRICES ff y 
Whatever you may need for any room in your home you 
will, no doubt, find it here for tess. 
Before you buy any furniture anywhere—check our prices. 
The group .further complained 
that the proposed track would con- 
stitute a‘ nuisance because of noise, 
litter and traffic. It would also 
cause increase in taxation and de- 
preciate property values, they ¢on- 
tended. 
Whether the plaintiffs will file 
an appeal was not known today. 
But they began discussing the 
ing the dismissal. Parking Directly in Front of Our Store 
    The suit was jnitiated against 
the township back in January and 
Curtiss-Wright subsequently Oxford Attorney Called 
n- to Speak at Leonard   
tered the case as a ‘“‘party de. a ~ | 
fendant.” : . LEONARD — The Country Cor- 
* * * ners State Extension Group will ° e 
Forced to halt plans for the present ‘Donald Tripp, attorney 
track by a series of delays and fiom Oxford, as a_public speaker 
postponments in court action, com- %:30 p.m: Monday in Leonard 
pany officials have- been twiddling. a ach ‘ry School. 
their thumbs, awaiting the outcome; pe will tafk on “The Impor- 
of the case tance of Making a Will” and “The 
Descent and Distribution of Prop- 
erty.” 
Adult residents of the area have 
been urged to attend. 
Want 
Latex Paint? 
SEE PAGE 6 Now Curtiss-Wright expects to 
proceed with construction plans 
announced [ast December, a 
month after an advisery vote 
passed favoring the establish- 
ment of a track which would 
rival the Indianapolis Speedway. 
The advisory vofe paved the 
way for the rezoning action.   
- 
A corporation official said today 
there will be no races this year, 
barring further litigation, the     but,   
         
       
     
       We Wish All Our Friends 
a Happy and Healthy 
Decoration Day WE WILL BE CLOSED SATURDAY can be built into floor— ——- 
or ceiling, walls or baseboards! 
  
  
    
      
       
      
      
       
               
              
                   
      
                  
    
          
     
              
    t 
: : 4 
CORRECTION 
In Federal Department Stores 
Wednesday, May 20 advertisement 
store hours should have read: s 
FEDERAL’S OPEN | ee 
EVERY NIGHT: TO 9 “ 
CLOSED ALL DAY = | , 
MEMORIAL ,DAY! ii “p 
t 
FEDDERS Buying, building: or remodeling, sed lt sean: to learn more shout built-in 
| , . electric heat; It's so comfortable, ‘so fast and so clean it makes other heating 
AlR CON DITIONER ° methods downright old fashioned. Electric heat makes ihpractical—for the first 
io ; time—to control the temperature in each room sere; Comfort? Here's ) 
SALE S$ ) 9 5 -such comfort it’s a brand-new experience. ' 2 
Oeee 4 Electric Keat completely eliminates the need for a furnace, for boiler or © 
. radiators, for chimney or fuel facilities. It gives you this space as a bonus! @ fF 
Poe ene  isteat THe. ONLY Like more information? Pick-up your frag copy of anew booklet on electric heat ae be 
7 at the nearest Edison office, or = your requést. : ° Se 
’ 'S _ Ay ° : : 
° as 
cu FRAYER'S: GO-ELECTRIC | 6:00 P.M. 589 ORCHARD LAKE AVE, . t 
e xh ae ‘asi ee 
' a “ea 
t ® E isd \ > é ; ye Se 
a See 6 PS a Sh ices Wee Lele 08 WG.) AE 9 gs a sg Sp gd GER Ss ee Hirer oe  
     / 
  
  
, Duals their place in the sun. The 
All Annual Flowers iminimum allotment is direct sun- 
light for half the day. , 
1 Require Much Sun panel ete rete. 
There's no escaping the fact! . 
eat lt nharat and most perennial|CUt Pest-Ridden Stems 
Now is the time to cut dead, flowers need sunshine to grow and 
bloom properly. It's a sad sight|pestridden stems, and’ the oldest 
to watch plants grow tall and canes from crowded shrubs, Wait 
: planted in a shady spot. : shrubs, sean pene Ceenahd brads 
Save the shade for ivy or otherjor spray special tree paint on cuts 
shade-loving plants, but give an-lover two inches     
7 a 
  F 
  
C* Ufarp-man | 
POWER MOWERS | 
DELUXE 24" | 
RIDING 
MOWER 
         
H. P. 
ENGINE 
5 SPEEDS FORWARD—2 REVERSE Here's the mower that starts with @ flick of the switch and lets 
the family enjoy new mowing pleasures. 12-vott electric system, 
unitized stee! housing, side discharge, hand adjustable cutting 
height. Variable speed planetary transmission, automotive type 
differential with exclusive safety clutch. AUSTEMPERED steél, 
_ $379.50 WE WILL HELP 
YOU FINANCE! 
IPMENT 
OF SIMPLICITY AND WONDER-BOY 
18” to 21" 
SELF- 
PROPELLED 
ROTARY 
MOWER   
P Neaierd handle with fingertip 
ottie control. Mulcher 
te included, easy cutting 
ight adjustment. 
3 SPEEDS 
SAFETY CLUTCH 
These Are Michigan Made Mowers 
We have one ef the largest selections of mowers in the state! 
WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL! 
We service and have all parts for any mower we sell. You do mot 
have to go to the factory or elsewhere for guaranteed service on 
your mower, Qualified mechanics to help you at all times. 
Pontiac's Oldest Lawn and Garden 
Supply Dealer in Pontiac! 
LEE" 921 Mt. Clemens St. 
  SALES and SERVICE 
FE 3-9830 
  4% | 
| fel} mother nature and call the   
perhaps reduce the leaf surface. 
| ower the vigor of the plant. 
Foil Mother Nature With a Pinch] So you like roses 
so most: of them bloom - around sien wie wanded: tea cree sacl 
‘the second week In June and thenlods leave an objectionable st ub. 
\come along about seven weeks|— 
‘later with a few more: sc attered: 
blossoms before giving up for the 
season. s 
Here’s good news. You can | 
| shots so you end up with roses | 
| just about the time you would | 
| ke them. | 
| The technique, developed athe 
Michigan Agricultural Experiment 
Station, involves removing flower | 
buds on some of the healthy 
stems on the outdoor bushes. 
When developing flower buds: 
are removed, side shoots will pro- 
duce blooms.a predictable number 
of days from the orighhal * ‘pinch- 
ing’’ or: bud removal date, ac- 
cording to floricultural scientist 
Richard® Stinson. » 
‘TWO TYPES 
Two genera) types of pinches 
wil} do the delaying job, the sci- 
entist says. A soft pinch is made 
at the time the flower bud can 
be clearly seen in its .whorl of 
surrounding foliage. The Stem tip 
is removed to the second five- 
leaflet leaf. 
The second or hard pinch is made 
when the bud has emerged from 
the surrounding leaves and is 
about the size of a pea. The stem 
tip is removed just above the’ 
second five-leaflet leaf. 
| When an open flower is removed 
from a rose plant so that two 
five-leaflet leaves remain on the 
stem, the axillary buds start to 
grow, Stinson says. The shoots that 
|develop from this cut take as 
‘much time to develop blooms as) 
ithose from a pinch, the research | 
shows. A cut, therefore, is! 
‘equivalent to a pinch for = 
\Purposes. 
| * * i 
Although it takes the same length 
    of time for a flower to develop 
  
  
STOP! LOOK! LISTEN! to the new soft sound in power mowing! the first and only sound-conditioned, vibration-free mower 
  
      
       
      
        1 to 3 inches 
e Pius m 
features 
it whispers while it works because .. - 
LAWN-BOY 
QUIETFLITE € Non-dendable crankshaft 
© Exclusive LAWN-BOY Balanced Power Engine 
@ Dashboard styling—all controls within handy reach 
@ Side-trim slet—makes back-up trimming easy 
© Blade guide eliminates everiap mowing 
© Instant individual wheel-height adjustment—from 
e i Activated Pilot Wheel levels bumps, 
any other exclusive LAWN-BOY 
@ FREE |-yeer foctory wer- 
ranty~becked by lergest 
: national service organization 
RUBBER ENGINE 
MOUNTS isolate vibra- 
tien from housing 
FIBERGLASS SHROUD 
and sound trap block 
engine noise 
LARGEST MUFFLER on 
eny mower cuts ex- 
havusf noise 
  
The first power mower you can use any time, any- souné-con- 
where, without disturbing anybody. There's ro iy ieee beauty 
never been. mower to match its features — its Come in today! 
performance — its soft sound. Come in; see it 
* yourself. 
  wees $194 | | ®” QUIETFPLITE 
    Call for a Free Demonstration 
¥ 
  2391 Pontice R4. at Opdyke Rd. 
  EASY TIME PAYMENTS 
KING BROS. PE 4-0734—FE4-1112 
la   SOFT PINCH — While the developing bud is still nestled oe 
side the whorl, snap off the stem just presi the second five-leaflet 
leaf. If one pinches lower, you'll end up with a shorter stem and 
A reduced leaf su 
from a_ soft 
      
   
    
      THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1959. ° 
  e might 
flower. 
pinch, a hand; 
Flower 
Removal 
Week of ....005. 
—— Coccee 
- F as ss e soft pinch if extra long 
        
                     
    HARD PINCH —~Wheti the flower bud is about the size of a 
pea, break off the stem tip just above the second five-leaflet leaf. 
If one pinches higher than this, one will en up with an abnormal 
Rose Flowering Time Table. 
| But you don’t like the way pinch or a cut, the soft pinch — Of oe My 
mother nature has fixed them up lpr almost undetectable tab. June June let! ara 1st 3rd Sth ist 4th | 
ee week | week week week week week} 
| guly | . July Aug. Aug. Sept. Oct. 
a Sra Sth 3n, 4th 4th 4th 
week week|. week week week week week | 
     
  y) 
              
   
      
        } 
July July July Aug Aug. 
     
    —@— GRADING Oe 
veniion HARCOURT , wrcxer oi Jordan Rd. 
"YOU CAN GROW A LAWN ANY TIME THIS SUMMER Success will depend on the proper 
choice 
quantity of water available. 
If you're late in getting started. but 
want a lawn this 
Samall easiple of your sell. We'l tall 
you what you need and what you 
must do to grow a lawn in hot 
weather, Our advice will cost you 
nothing, the proper seed and fertilizer 
can be inexpensive. 
28 JACKSON ST.             
      La. Cc 
ri onete ta 
    cane   
of fertilizer used, and the 
ALL LAWNS, NEW AND OLD 
REQUIRE A jor IN JUNE 
REGAL FEED and LAWN SUPPLY CO. 
@ 4266 DIXIE HIGHWAY 
  
  
GERANIUMS 
In-Bud and Bloom. Bushy Plants 
in 4-Inch Pots. 
60°: 
  
HYBRID PETUNIAS 
‘2 Doz. Box $1.00 Most free flowering of all petunias. 
20 Varieties in Bloom 
    
DOUBLE PETUNIAS 2 Doz. Box $1.25 
Full centered flower - like Carna- 
tions. Pink, white and ,complete 
mixture. 
    
    
       
  DELPHINIUM - 
1 Dox. Box “sq > 454 
Pink Mixture, Blué Mixture.and White. 
  
   
     TUBEROUS BEGONIAS (for shade) ‘ 
$1.00: 5 Plents for 
     
        IMPATIENS and COLEUS 
FOR SHADE © $1.00 
1 Doz. Box 
. VINES and SPIKES (for boxes and urns) 
35¢—50¢—75c     
  CONTAINER GROWN 
Plant ‘Any. Time amen     
FLOWERING SHRUBS 20 Varieties 
“1.50 
    
      
    HARDY AZALEAS 
*1.95 
  
   
   VIBURNUM THEIFERUM In flower now—covered with clusters 
of Red Berries in Fall. 3-4 ft. 
°2.95 ~\      
     
_Alyssum, White and Purple 
Bachelor Buttons, Mixed 
Calendula, Mixed 
Carnations, Mixed 
Cosmos, Mixed 
Marigolds (French (Dwf.) 
6 varieties in bloom 
Portulaca, Mixed 
Petunias, Single, Mixed 
Also Pink—Blue—White 
Snapdragons, Mixed and 
Red-White-Pink-Yellow - 
Zinnia, Giant Mixed 
Lilliput Mixed 
EVERGREENS * Blue Spreading Juniper, 
18-24” 
Pfitzer Juniper (Most pop- 
ular spreader), 15-18” 
Andorra (Dwarf. spreader), 
10-15" 
irish Juniper (Upright); 24” 
Young Upright Yews, 15” 
midal 
argo" $950 Pots, 2 feet tall 
Alse 5,000 iarger eve ns, balled or 
growing in pots — ll priced right. - - .and 
NURSERY STOCK eae ecm 
BUY YOUR PLANTS FROM the GROWER! Get Fresh, Well Cared for Stock at the Lowest Prices-- 
See Over One Million Plants on Display! =. 
  
         POTTED COLEUS All Colors. BLUE AGERATUM 
20 10+ Pot     
  
PANSY CLEARANCE Swiss Giants, Mixed 
sinsx DOr 
6 Boxes $1.00 -_     
    
READY NOW 
Burpee’s Big Boy 
HYBRID 
TOMATO. PLANTS Big, solid slicing tomatoes. Individ- 
ual Peat Pots... or boxes of one 
Dozen . Plants. a~   
{     
       
   
         
      
VEGETABLES Tray of 1 Dox. 35° 
Plante 
Stokesdale Ruters, Early Detroit, 
Cherry and Yellow Tomatoes. Early 
late Cabbage, Cauliflower, 
Broccoli, Brussel Sprouts Eggplant. 
Sweet, Medium Hot and Hot Pep- 
pers.   
    % 
  
SHADE TREES In Striking Colors. 
Sunburst LOCUST. 6-7 ft. 
6-7 Ft. $5.95 
CRIMSON KING MAPLE 
5-6 ft 
Many Others @ Birch © Maple —. 
Pink 
    
    
      2,000 
Potted Rosés 
All Popular Varieties. > 
Prices Start at 
$1.50:   BORDINE GREENHOUSES and NURSERY | 1835 S. Rochester Rd. 
One Mile North of Auburn Rd. are Rochester, Michigan ————— ~—<— 
        
      Ce 
El 
   eee seeeiee 
am 
“ 
  
  
  
    
  ‘ 
THE CO ww» a> cube cl ee Seed bad “a eat, 
    
    
Futures Market | 
Demand Is Off © 
CHICAGO w—The grain futures 
market was generally weak dur- 
ing the first severa] minutes to- MARKETS | The following are top prices, 
produce brought to the Farmer’s| 
Market by growers and sold by 
ithem in wholesale package lots. 
Quotations are furnished by the 
| Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of 
Thursday. |   
  day on the Board of Trade with | | 
rye losing as much as a eent a 
bushel and wheat and soybeans 
off major ‘fractions. The feed 
  
  | FRUITS 
  Detroit Produce 
   
  
  
    
With Mamie as Hostess 
WASHINGTON (AP)—The First 
Lady had a smile, a handshake, a 
gay word for each of her special 
guests—even a kiss for some. All 
of them were at least 65, some 
over 90. 
Mamie Eisenhower had _ invited 
514 men and women from local 
homes for the aged and the blind 
-for a White House. garden party— 
the first of its kind. ‘ 
~*~ & & « 
Some were in wheelchairs. 
Some walked with crutches or 
canes, Some were blind. But all 
waited with an expectant smile as 
they lined up to meet. their 
hostess. 
Mrs. Eisenhower didn’t disap- 
pointed them. 
Under a tree near the Presi- 
dent’s-golfing green, she stood on 
a square of pale green carpet in 
hr pink silk dress and told them 
“T am awfully happy you came.’’|' 
Mrs. Eisenhower complimented 
the women on’ what they were 
wearing, worried that wheelchairs 
were sticking in-ruts in the grass 
and that the 90-degree heat might 
be too much for the elderly guests. 
served at two bright red and 
white striped awning stands. They 
sat 6n chairs and listened to the 
Marine Corps band in scarlet and 
white uniforms playing on a knoll 
across: the -lawn, ; 
A chipper lady of 93 even passed 
herself off as 80; : 
™ was wonderfil for you to 
‘ | 
igive us this day," said blind Mrs. 
| Alice Mott, formerly of Riverside, 
| Calif. é —* . 
Floyd Jones, lying paralyzed on 
ja wheelchair, held up a mirror so 
ihe could seé Mrs. Eisenhower as| 
!she greeted him. - | 
| With an embrace and a kiss, | 
|Mrs. Eisenhower greeted 89-year-| 
jold Rebecca Clark, mother of} 
|famed Gen, Mark Clark. 
Mrs, Clark smilingly revealed} 
(she. had known Mrs. Eisenhower} 
“since she was a girl.’   
  * * * 
A few had brought gifts for Mrs. 
Eisenhower. Among them was 
Mrs, Eleanor V. Gerodette,, whose 
father once headed the US. 
Bureau of Printing and Engrav- 
ing. She gave the first lady a 
photograph of the Gettysburg bat- 
tlefield, made from an: engraving. 
She said it had been in the 
family 50 years and she'd long 
wanted to get it>to President 
Eisenhower “but I didn’t know 
how.” 
A Elzey, Livingston, 
Tex. Jhite House aide, intro- 
duced each of the guests by name 
to Mrs, Eisenhower. 
* * * 
After the last of 514 guests had 
met Mrs, Eisenhower, the First 
Lady left the party, waving good- 
bye. When some of the elderly 
guests tried to thank her for the 
special treat, Mrs. Eisenhower 
said with a smile, “the pleasure’s ours."’ 
/ wt 
fi v r * 
    sine tapes coring sae of weal ern AC TAG EASES Market Steady 
NEW YORK w®—The stock mar- 
ket was irregular in moderate 
trading early today. 
Gains and losses of key stocks 
were from fractions to about a 
point. & PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 29. 1959 
s 
  
    sociated Press): 
* 30 5 15 60 
; Indust. Rails Util. Stocks 
Net change .... +.1 —.3 
Noon today .,. 343.5 142.5 97.8 229.9 
Prev. ‘day ...:343.4 142.7 978 229.9 
Week ago ......341.2 1449 og 4 230.2 
Month ago ....3347 1416 09 227 
Year ago .. - 80.1 179.1 
1959 high . : 102.6 230.2 
195@- low ...4...306 96.0 211. 
1958 high ...... 95.7 2143 
1958 low 2 729 156.6 
          
      
  
  
  
leave the clubs, watched as the 
men and women were put into 
buses. - . 
* * * 
Paul Newey, chief investigator, 
said..the. raiders confiscated 75 
| cartons of gambling - equipment, 
several pistols, sawed-off baseball 
bats and ax handles, and .alleged- 
  DETROIT STOCKS 
(C. J. Nephier Co.) 
Pigures after decimal points are eighth) 
High Lew Noon! 
Allen Elec & Equip Co’.. 2.! 2 
Baldwin Rubber Co* ! 
Ross Gear .Co° 3 
Gt Lks Ofl & Chem Co* 
Howell Elec Mtr Co* 
Pen Metal Prod Co* .. 
The Prophet Co* 
Rudy Manuf Co®* ...... 
Toledo Edison Co 17 
"No sale; bid and asked 
News in Brief 14 
18 | 
124 
St., Independence Township, told 
Oakland County Sheriff's Deputies 
yesterday that vandals broke eight 
windows and two glass doors of 
her cottage besides stealing two 
porch swings, valued at $22, plus 
severa] pillows valued at $10. 
Two Holstein calyes, valued at 
an estimated $60 each, were re- 
ported stolen from the farm of 
Lonzie Johnson, 2130 Houser Rd., 
Holly Township, yesterday, ac- 
_ {cording to Oakland County sher- iff’s deputies. ; ; 
Prevent diséases caused by air- 
borne bacteria, used ultra - violet 
light units, used in hospitals and 
schools. $39.50 value, $9.95. .Michi- 
gan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard 
Lake Ave. —Adv. 
eas Driver Training School, '59 ars. Insured. FE §-5201, —Adv,   3°) “to wipe. out 
12.4] 
Isadore Cohen of 4671 Lakeview) ly lewd photographs and films. 
Newey said the raids had ‘been| 
planned for a year. and were taken! 
the gambling and 
364 prostitution in Calumet: City.” 
16 
* * * 
“As of the moment, the nuisance 
of Calumet City is swept clean— 
17 |the honky-tonk strip for gnce is 
complétely closed,” Newey said. 
City police did not take part in 
the raids but set up, a watch to 
ptevent looting in the closed and 
darkened clubs. 
  
| 
Carpenters Vote on Pact 
to End 3-Week Strike 
KALAMAZOO (» — Striking car- 
penters in eight southwest Michi- 
gan cities .voted today oh a 
contract proposal for ending’ their 
three-week-old strike. 
The Southwest Michigan Corttrac- 
tors Assn. has offered a 25-cent 
hourly pay boost in a threé-year 
receive 10 cents-now, another, 10 
cents next> year and 5 cents the 
following November. 
The walkout has ye up car- 
pentry work. on eemmercial and 
industrial building in. Grand Rap- 
ids, Muskegon, Holland, South 
Haven, Benton Harbor, Kalama- 
zoo, Battle Créék and Coldwater.   contract. The 2,500 workers would)’ LOS -ANGELES (AP) —- Actor   sparkled wjth, motherly pride as 
she went into the nursery and 
picked up their 7-month-old boy, 
Jean Francios. 
“This is the same bed I slept 
in when J was a baby,” said An- 
nette. “I remember when peopte;~ A- sharp break in stock. prices 
used to come and watch us when might lure “some ofthese stocks 
we- were about three years old. into the market. 
. * * * . * * * 
After the quintuplets came to) But most observers feel that 
\live in Montreal,.they - withdrew only a change in the tax laws— 
into a life -éf comparative seclu-| either to make ‘borrowing less at 
| sion, especially following the death lactive to corporations or to make 
lof Emily in 1954 after an epilep-{stock selling less of a tax burden 
itic seizure. ito shareholders-—is likely to swell them and pay the capital gains 
tax. 
This is true even if some suspect 
prices are near their peak. Own- 
ers preler to wait and see rather 
than sell and pay taxes. 
  
  
    
  
  it ailable s : “The girls still have a Mass | he Ryan tae Sees 
: crease the fina] cost of interest for 
every month,” said Allard. business borrowers. A paring of 
Cecile, the first of the quints to capital gains taxes might induce 
Phillipe Langlois. They have an|shares to buyers. 
8-month-old boy, Claude, Marie is! 
married to Florian House, nm B b 5 ff d 
a nursing career but. has beeh qd y U ocate 
convalescing in recent months . 
‘rom Asian iu, she tives wth «DY Sleeping Uncle - 
; “ MOUNT CLEMENS (®—A ‘two- 
month-old baby was suffocated ac- 
‘Previous Wife’s Daughter ge uncle rolled over on him .as . “ithe two Were sleeping. 
The victim, Gerald Thomas Jr., 
(Aetress- Jayne Mansfield, must father’s 15-year-old brother, Ev- 
‘continue $300 monthly support for!erett Thomas, , while the parents 
|his 9-year-old daughter, “Tiha, by) were at work. ° 
| Attorneys for: the’ 31-year-old | home early today to find the baby 
‘actor and his ex-wife, Mrs. Mary|dead and Everett asleep beside 
|Hargitay, filed the approved jt. Coroner Raymond Marko ruled cokebested for Emily ctery | A corporate tax drop would in- 
become a mother, is married to|some holders to release existing 
Pajdisnsee still single, is following 
|nursing friend here, 
Jayne's Hubby to Support cidentally last night when his teen- 
Mickey Hargitay, husband of)had been left in the care of his 
\a previous marriage. | Mr. and Mrs. ‘Thomas* returned 
—— in court Thursday, *’ Jeath was accidental.     
8,000 New Doctors Get * U. S. Licenses in 1958 | 
\~ CHICAGO..(AP) — Almost 8,000 |new , physicians reeeived licenses 
\to practice medicine in the United    
  Gunmen Seize 
Peso Fortune i azit'e: Woman Wounded in: !t was the sixth consecutive : year” in which more than 7,000 . 
Theft of Cuban Money physicians obtained licenses. 
at Mexico City Those figures were reported to | 
day by the American Medica! As- 
. sociation's Council] on Medical | 
MEXICO CITY w — A fortune) Education and Hospitals. 
in Cuban pesos brought here from) ea ds 
the United States was stolen!’ qhe 1953 total of new licensees 
Thursday night by holdup men) was 7.809. During the samé period 
\who fled after wounding a U.S. deaths among physicians num- | 
woman. ,  |bered 3,700, So the net gain.in the | * * _ nation’s phySician population wag Details of the holdup and identi-| 4 199. i = 
ity of those involved were vague, | : 
but this was one police version: | ~ 
A total of “3;767,500 Cuban pesos . . . 
were brought’ to Mexico or cen- Detroit.Man Injured   
  
   
      
  
  
      
        
  
    
  
  
      
  
      
    
  
  
    grains were steady to slightly /Apples. Delicious, fancy, bu $4.00! Tee semexel adele aid version at a_rate of 36 cents per QS Truck Whacks Car ‘ ‘ y ently McIntosh, No. 1, bu.* * 7 tee 250! in a fairly active opening then 300. | . ee easier. Northern Spy, No. 1. bu. ..........-2.75| more gainers appeared to give peso, or for a total of $1,356,300. | : * & * Steele Red, Pancy, bu. .. ....., - 400 the list a tty even balance: be- Four US. citizens and three Mexi-| FERNDALE — A _ 79-year-old 
| VEGETABLES _ oe , j 7e been in--Detroit man is reported in “fair”. .~ 
f cans were said to have in-; = 
Brokers, said there appeared 10 | Asparagus, Oa: beh 5 ccdccecnce ae tween plus and minus signs. volved condition today in William Beau- 
j ives, N ° covercccncccocee 1.98) : . : be nothing pr than a —— ong glam dl soos 138! Some of the electronics and oth- They .were to contact~a buyer mont Hospital, Royal Oak, with commercial emand and that t Psormeng  cbeige alae ‘+ $8 er specially situated stocks: made Thursday night. {injuries received when his car: was ieee at lower prices found @ Parsoips vs bu, ees 123 progress but the market as a + $+ |hit from behind by a cement... 
slow reception. | Radishes, je ae ee whole was fiddled with gains and As the group left their rented Tuck yesterday ~ afternoon. 
Pak stan was understood to be | ihGbars” octduor. “dee. behss mei losses. / apartment in a prominent resi-| Charles Hill of 3100 Twelfth 
in the nvarket for about a half Tomatoes. hothouse. 8 lbs. ........2.75| The raising of the discount rate dential district, armed men drove |St., is suffering from internal in- 
million bushels of hardi wheat onthe GREENS to 342 per cent from 3 per cent up, seized the valise in which the Juries and shock, hospital authori- , 
and the Department of~Agel Collard. Not bu. 222000020711.*2'qy Miter ythe: market close yesterday money was being carried, fired tes said today. culture Accepted subsidy bids of “Mustard. No. 1, bu. ................. 2. sgjand e departure of some wall |.- twicé and fled. 
12 to 15 cents a bushel om J,- Spinach. bu. 222.0222 1102002. 1201 so, Streeters for a long Memorial Day The woman, identified as Mary- . a 481,009 bushes of corn for ex- |Turmips bul .222.00ITIIIN ,. 150 weekend were cited as mildly de- lin Beyeff of Miami, Fla., was PAYDAY port, : =o) |pressingly factors. | shot through the arm. With her 
ok Poultry ond Eggs | Smaller gains were scored = at the time was her husband, A. 
h } Sper- | c Wheat was % to 12 'cent a bushel DETROIT EGGS ae Toe Geen and | - ‘Phe gate Kar! Beyelf. LOANS 
lower after about an hour, July Secceie ke eae Ga pacrel pve tional Nickel Southers Pacific andl i é Police said they pong he 
$1.8434: corn % to '% lower, July €™s¢es \ : . rie . number of suspects, ig . j F : Ww = Li 4 _ reeeoerianmmssan ars 
$1.2414; oats unchanged to 3% high-|avg. 35. extra large Ban33, weds ena pene Sea. | > ea. ine Pe ; inne Se ban gunmen, former. secret ser- 
July $1.2143; soybeans %% to 1% Shik large 31; medium 24-25. wtd avg Ne Y a S k | = ™ . i ow : an sme . |vice agents and North American : 
er, July 625s: rye 14 to 7s lower, treads A nee eres an ee ve, ew ° tocks LUCKY WINNER — Don Brell, 12, of Keego _night’s annual Father and Son Banquet of the | gangsters. But the money, and ap- i 
lower, July $2.25% | Som aeveiilie crue (Late Morning Quotations) ~ Harbor beams happily when presented with:a Boys Club in Keego Harbor. About 200 persons |parently the driver of the get- * 
~ | Whites—Grade jumbo 32: extra Figures after decimal point are eighths prize fly rod by West Bloomfield Boys Club Vice — attended the affair, held in the VFW Hall, ac- |@Way car, were, still at large. a large 29-30: Jarge/ 21-28: medium 21-22:'A¢miral .... a : m ° The stolen pesos reportedly were 7 - 4 Browns -——no jumbo: extras large 285,./Alr Reduc ‘"* ¢¢4| President- Chester Briggs. The occasion was last cording to Carl Misfelt, club direcfor . : f ‘ 
Russ an Bo parce 27-29 medium 22-235, Allied Ch ...122\ Livy McN&L . 121 anther: nniaaannen meres ______|issued by the regime of Dicta- 
| \e mM DETROJP POULTRY Alum Lid ..""..28 "I * = - tor Fulgeneio Batista, The peso 
DETROIT, May 28 (AP)—Ftices paid Alcoa ...... 81 vies 301, ; normally is worth $1, but Prime} § ' 
gi ll iealaatlaamed /- (gee soe #2 Can’t Meet Investors’ Demands Minister Fi "s revolution- live poultry ana a 332 inister Fidel. Castro’s re 
Heavy type hens 17: light type hens|Am Cyan .... 58 ash .. 863 ary government took steps early $ 2- wks 10: hb : t Ma&Pdy .. 5| : : = r 
Author Shot * ine Sie 130", barreg Rocks 2 tn Moor! , 2 ie . e® &% ‘in April to render worthless the 5 0 fo : 
. a; Capra seder © Wee, sail. over Slim B Ges *. G1 a large sums taken out of Cuba by) . ,, only 7O¢! . cane heavy type bens 23 ‘Am Tel&Tel .246 $.| A Batista and his supporters. Ll sac 
Richard Willis, Who . Anaconda’. esa Meriden, Line: $88) 0 . ; All 500 and 1,000 peso bills were) = ther loans to $500 | 
Wrote Trotsky Myste Livestock lAithison s “°. 385 ies AWSON b he f ache sack cae’ an for Conversion into new with 24 mes. to. repay , -- . 138.4 By SAM DAWSO! mission reports that.in the first,and give would- ock owners a} igi ; : 
5 Y Y DETROIT LIVESTOCK [Beth Steel”. $23 3331 ap = , Niston: Aasivek poss Hone ron eee 5 = ates ee ee Se eer - « Victim of Gunman DETROIT, May 28 (AP) —Aivestock: Boeing mir "..-378 “33 | ee ee es oe ee was determined. The deadline for} “eygq you [REPAY I | REPAY In disseice Glues tues Gaeae scatter. (nene Alum ... 33:1 2 bend YORK—There aren't were about 510 million dollars in| The reasons corporations |CoMversion was April 30. RECEIVE | 2 WEEKS | 4 WEERO 
NEW YORK’ (AP)—The book's.jow “good ‘mized. offerings 3 s0-30.00, |Bors WAT -<- 432 Mevrola, \ 112, oe iike demants of Gna '0 new common stock issues offefed? haven't been turning to ava a * i fac $25.00 | $25.35 | $25.70 
dust jacket read “Jack Wilinski Ui stesys tod peters 21.90.2400, will /prun maine “coos ¢ Murray Ch Bi rouse elem le ee ic mained gig eorrenegener eter dv adiggiaal Pog tages Atipe ne goregeoe ane WN ALE : : . ° bersiBudd Co 2718 1958 the off mance growth or activities are {that no arrival could bring more “ came to Mexico to murder the 15 50-2000, compared last week average|Burroughs .... 367 \ 31-4| That's one of several reasons put 958 the offerings came to less > & than 50 into: Cuba latecest at 3% per month on belencns 
the-man who murdered Trotsky.” {ower somes salec 100 lower eth eel ae 136 NY C We forth to explain the current bull nai saaeniantian ache There were ‘es ort in Cuba that Shenton” i egy perpen tm The whodunit's author lay dead,fu!l Gecline on heavier weight steers:|Can Dry * 202 N mina ho 3 ° . > r ~~. ne . - ; t< | A ualned - _ ah ow - 
; beielacadValesra lana’ keWe rel tesa gis o 1 wot, West . 824% market on the exchanges. With SPLITS, DIVIDENDS | . Expansion spending itself is Batista men and American gam- on the doorstep outside his first-|er grades also steady: cows fully teclQerun mi oo oS aig d ; j 't needed i ~ ASSOCIATES 7 higher: bells steady’ tb serene. moniconin cr “laa Ber an $17more investment funds bidding, for| The supply of shares also has | 40Wn, so new funds aren't '.|blers fled with an estimated 50 to : c 2 € y €. Carrier CP .. 424 Nor Sta P : ; ‘ : ~ floor Brooklyn flat, himself the ?is™ ia } - 246 atte : ; : : ; Some think such spending and ili i j victzm of a mystery gunman. | Se 00-28 ws ike hole 0 450-1180 Tb, Cel ns : “102 cep $3 ai-mape supply, the price of} been increasing. through a steady 7 : eae = |(0 million pesos last winter just LOAN COMPANY . en on . * steers 28 50-29 St, choice steers 1150-1250 Con I le pf 874 her Aes Gi 88 ist ks hag risen. stream of stock splits and stock ingen he be increasing in com-| before the overthrow of the dic- |1bs. 28 00-2956. Ome lot high choice 1005/Ches & Ohio 1723 Pac 1 63 \ div 5 WwW ares MZ months. : ip. , : ae 
“Police have only the clue of ate ib. stegrs 30 30 lot montis prime Chrys a ae Path Ag rr eee Se ee aides ot few orleteal . pedi AN — — , in DRAYTON PLAINS: —— ’ - s 8! eee se 1 > . 
man in a blue sit seen running Cae ec attiltty steers Cities Bre $13 pares ‘Piet #1 | investors today that the issuing stock without chanetnc their sitet Then - corporations are more | . a , 4494 Dixie : 
Thursday from the scene where heifers 25 $071 QO: bulk choie 760-020 Ib |Cluctt Pepe... 53 peeney, IC - 124 a ee ne eee corporation's assets, the sup- quid today, have more cash. Straits Transit Expands CALL: OR 3-1207 “ : fi id fortune heifers 27 50-29 50: standard to low good|Coca Cola 1476 Pe - + 177) ing, if moderately. . 1) Ee ? : i j = Russian-born soldier-of-fortune peers By s025 s0- wtility. -betfers 21 80-lColem Ges .. 411 Urea! Com ... 393 position is that some of them wil] During the recession they were ; 
Richard Willis, 51, met death.}23 50: utility cows 2000-2180: canners|Con Edis... 628 “na, p77" 332| The Securities & Exchange Com-'find their way into the market More likely to be buyers of govern: CHEBOYGAN @® — The Straits! 5) PONTIAC: 
Powder burns on his clothing 399° "cutter bufls 2100-29 00: several |Consum Pw .. 397 Philea- ...° 32a , ment securities than sellers of their Transit Co. has. purchased the) yo saan) showed he had been shot once in loads mostly choice 694-704 Ibs. yearling|Cont Can |. 48 paved be own. Mackinac Island Ferry Co., which CALL: FE ere 
the ¢hest at extremely close ib weights 31.60" few lots good 608-288 |Cont fever’ . 13 sh Ou... _ : They were doing less spending yes fnree “ag be om ° 4 
. rage. , Th stock steers 29.00 {Cent Oi! - 81 Bub 4 R - - D - - ckinac Is- - 
Weatero-caai eVaeeel Rn 257 Repub su 753 oh growth, living off stock rather). : 
woe ft Ser ee ie ee Ie en i Bat ee So €maining Vionnes than seeking funds to build inven.{2%4. The Company; organized by 2255 S. T ; vealers steady to 100 higher: most Curtis Pub . 123 Reyn Mot - 86 ; . ; former state ferry crewman pre- Mich, Mirec Mile 
It was around dinnertime when choice and prime yealers 36 00-3900 |Deere .... 616 Rey Tob - 50 . . tories and doing cost cutting on a). . aiv buust 3B CALL: FE 8 964 
‘Willis’ landlady, Mrs.-Elsie Greg- sung "ts aote doot 02600: cull and Det Eee dal Safeway Bt le" Sc ebrate 25th Birthda a wae SraR ef Manckignd; aad ‘gana sista ¥ meh Fane mm atCB- utility . | Dis ag... e . Straits o ackinac . Rehe . $24 8 Pan... Y ; : ; “ “on aon a oe ; : Bow’ chem oh Bcovile Mi as . Also financing through bonds or |a Bois Blanc island ferry. All five 
ool f wip tadet [eth |De Pont 357 > Sears Roed ... 45.7/ bank loans has been nm attrac- |boats will be put on the run from _ a : : ; Fast Air L . 394 Shell Of)... ITRE ] : . . the man in the blue suit dashing Business Notes ot ool Old Seema 7 i Aelia (UPI) —-The four;ning to understand the world-wide tive beeguse of taxes. Interest on |Mackinaw City and St. Ignace to out the door. Willis staggered out Baten Mis... be Sinciai: 627 ralibie, Dionne quintuplets ex-| attention they have received since! such financing is deductible from | Mackinac Island. Emil Potvin, for- of his 1'2-room apartment and a tla Mu... 12 ie Si pa changed visits and gifts yesterday they were born in an unpainted! income tax returks: : imer state fe captain is presi 
collapsed on the outside stoop. He Max W. Dafoe. 92 W. Longfellow Emer Rad. 223 gou Ry 352.0n their 25th birthday. fern Scie s. | ent’ of the con. Pp . presi- 
was dead by the time an ambu- Ave.. has completed an engineer: pO" 11. 4a Sot Braud 265 Annette said in an interview that * For most companies this cuts) pany. lance arrived ing and product application semi- = a : 33 4 Sta O11 Cal. $5.2/She and her sisters — Cecilc.| “I realize now that the in- interest charges in half. But divi- 
~ * * nar congue by i F Goodrich Pord Mot... 717 a — -— * Pa Yvonne and Marie — were begin-| ne peorie have in “ is dends paid on new stock issues 
. _ ustrial Products Co., a division Freept Sul . . 295 sa Otl Oh .. 594) —_—_________| only human,” she said. vThey aren't deductible. And new stock 
as yr gion Mag aperipine of the B. F. Goodrich Co. § Ger Bat "2038 ee °! ara have followed the events of our means more shares on which RRIED OVER DEBTS ? C ig s a a - va = ne aa 
achat” “Morning in ae i lag Dafoe was sponsored by the F.B: — — . ey sguron ..... 6! G . t Vi R id lives all these years. Our neigh- ‘holders expéct dividends. J s 
on s eae aie found were two wright Co. of Dearborn where he|Gen Pax .|... 4 arog g ** ae lant ice dl bors in Montreal used to look | Fixed interest financing is still : : 
typewriters and a bank book siow.|h#s been employed for close o/Ge sletors < .'sie Tex, 0. Sul =’ Nets 96 Arrest nitesea: =: (ot 7 ByiOAR ERO cBU AEE Bap” re “arp weal Sou ca ing a balance of $10,000 (MO ere BR aac 3 rom Ripe; oes Ss TTests are used to us now. stock issues. Bond and note issues Rew much or how many fee swe = : mene d {Gillette ..... 49.5 Trans W Air , 21.5) ye: “ : very-|in the first quarter came to 1% The book jacket described Wil- Mr. and Mrs. George A Sold. | Goodrich “100 4 Transemer + BB In Calumet City pesca: ou ee thin aciteve % NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED 
lis, who became a naturalized citi-/ 4109 Walnut Hill, Birmingham, Ger Paige 2.05 $ Underead 1! 26 | Gade. Gat Caer cid Re aie i . ONE PLACE TO PAY 
zen in 1929, as a bobo, sailor, jour-|hayve returned from the 1959 In-|Gt A&P bat a1 Un Carbide 108.3) CHICAGO (AP) — Investigators pa = a eon 7 ee outle PER CENT : Member American Association of Credit Counsellors 
nalist and editor at various times ternational Conference and Busi-| Greynound 24 Unit “Air Lin . 382 from the Cook County state's at-| their rlvate lune : mmt anaaes Some 138 million dollars in pre- “Let 14 Y of Credit C - ” | 
in his active life. | ness Show in New Orieans. - |e cnce Ne Unit Pruit ... 348,tomey’s office staged a massive| P ~ ' {ferred stock financing was done in Heame Dolly § ts 5. ‘Wea wei Oud ue ti men yee x *& * | Sold, ‘staff assistant at the De-| Holland P ... 136 LT pad dae 382'raid on suburban Calumet City’s _* * * ithe first quarter.. This leaves the oon. Police said they found an empty  troit Edison Co., was among many — ob US Rub ...... 642 Notorious night club district Thurs-| Each of the quints had private common stocks at 22 per cent-of MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 
.38-caliber shell in Willis’ apart-jkey executives invited to attend) m Cont . $15 oe any ats Hoge day .night. Ninety-six men and birthday parties. with their hus-'the total securities offering. A 716 Pontiar State Bank Bidg. . : Fe<seue 
ment, which he rented only six|the conference sponsored by the[Jndust Rey .. 224 ya, “1. 3° | women’ employes were arrested. .jbands or friends. Then they alliyear ago-their share was 10 per| === 
weeks ago. Two years ago Willis|National Office Management a (aa a . F. daoy es rei: - Teh night clubs were raided.|met for a short time to exchange’ cent. ’ i 
lived in_Lauretton, Queens. ; | sociation. lent es a West A Bk .. 345 Three other clubs* the , investiga- greetings. Quite aside from the compara- - : ra e 
His whereabouts in the period; More than 130 manufacturers ex-|Int Nick 991 Shite Mot. 504 {OFS sought to enter were closed. s ie = tively few new common stork ; : : lInt Paper ....1186 W O46 5: Annette said -they received a. between his Queéns residence and|hibited new inventions ta reduce’ tmi shoe 36.3 Wilson & Co .-371!} * * * : issues. the available supply to in. = . saline gj at Int TelaTel | 404 Woolworth 534 birthday cards from -many parts |! : a supply in.) : his moving inte the Brooklyn flat labor and effort ‘a office work. TS) no nen’... s6e Yale ie Tow 383 The 53 men and 43 women were! of the world. They were dit: Yestors has been thin for tax rex] 
a . mr « or, . av O7 ea 7 ot rw 4} ail ; wk or | > : a . . + is another-.mystery. 25 through May @7 Jones & L vee i46 Sala = zl 93 taken in nonin the state's at-| played in the four-room apart. Sons Bloomfield Hills School District No. 2. ; 
ws Kennecott 111.7 Genesco”. .. 351i torney’s office for questioning. _. | rae . ; : \ . ; ‘ 
: Kellogg New. 356)" 9; £ _}| ment, where she lives with her | Large - quantities are locked Js : . ; , : Krewe 86°... 524 Upjohn of K | 411 ,; a of hoped dag 4 hecliand, Geemsle: Aland away ecuued ols haidens wie | County of Oakland, Michigan 
: ’ enders, stri : ar girls re- a a } 
Elder] Guests S arkle STOCK Seeicae sisted arrest. Some 1,000 persons, Wearing a brown and white cot-| have been enjoying he big rise | Old Pine Lake School : - , 
y p NEW YORK_iCompiled by the As-|Most of them customers forced to|ton dress, Annette’s brown. eyes| In steck prices don't want to sell ‘ Sealed: bids will be received by the Board of Education~ of Bloomfield Hills School District No. 2, County. of 
Oakland, Michigan, until 8:00 o'clock p.m. on Monday; the 15th day of June, 1959, at its offices in-the High School Building, 4200 Andover Road, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, for the sale of ‘the following property and | ~ building: : 
Part of the Southwest V4 of Section 3, Town 2 North, Range 10 East, beginning at the South “4 _. corner of Section 3, thence North 2 degrees 23 - minutes 10 seconds West 183 feet; thence South 
88 degrees 56 minutes 50 seconds West 108 feet 
thence South 2 degrees 23 minutes 10 seconds 
East 183 feet; thence North 88 degrees 56 min- utes 50 seconds East 108 feet to the point of be- ginning, being .45 acres, more or less. 
| Said property is located at West Long Lake Road neor | Middlebelt upon which the Old Pine Lake School, ¢ * | wood frame building is situated. . . All bids must provide for full payment of the purchase * Price as bid by cash or certified check. A bid deposit ~ of 3% of each bid by cash or certified check is re-~ quired, which deposit shall be forfeited as liquidated« damages if such bid is accepted and the bidder fails 2 to purchase said property. The seller agrees to. furnish * purchaser with a policy of tifle insurance. ; For further information call. Midwest 7-01§5 or write = : to Eugene L. Johnson, Superintendent of Schools, 4200: Andover Road, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. ee The Board of -Educetiorresemes the. right to reject+ ‘ any and all bids, All bids must be sealed and markedi} “Otd Pine Lake School Site Bid.” Bids will be‘ openéd* 3 af the Board of Education meeting to be held Mt Ba Monday. the 15th day of June, 1959, at the Hight]. — School. Building, at 8:00 o'clock pm. : , 
JEAN B.-MARTZ:] © Secretary, Board of Educetion | . Bloomfield Hills Schoo! District No. 2 
dS   
ij 3 
seewe 
tes SE 
eg 
eT 
I 
ER Rat 
| Re 
a 
Se 
eR 
ak ee 
ae, 
‘ 2.3 a 
s, - { | { 
  . “a   +