ee I chan: sovsess, ee SS lu en The Weather Partly Cloudy, Warm 118th YEAR THE PONTIAC PRESS “ kkk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1955 —32 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS | ONTTED PRESS INTERNATION4L NEWS SERVICE Fy House Set for Farm Supports Battle | Morgan Douglas Taken by Death; Was GMT Head Had Long Career With Chevrolet; Came to Local Division in ‘45 Morgan D. Douglas, for- mer general manager of GMC Truck & Coach Divi- sion and a former vice pres- ident of General Motors died this morning at William Beaumont Hospital, in Royal Oak, after a long ill- ness. He was 63. Dies Today ke, Lawmakers e ~— \of BothParties Discuss Aid Bill Sen. George Predicts Passage of $3.5 Billion Assistance Measure WASHINGTON (#!\—Presi- dent Eisenhower conferred for an hour and 40 minutes today with 25 congressional leaders of both parties on his 3'2-billion-dollar foreign aid bill. Sen. George. (D-Ga), chairman of the Senate For- eign Relations Committee, MORGAN D. DOUGLAS .He was with GM for 35+ years b@ore poor health demanded his retirement. Douglas was given a leave of absence from his post at GMC Truck and Coach Di- vision\in Marchi, 1950, and Roger Kyes was appointed to succeed him. He had taken the position in, 1945 upon the resignation of Irving Babcock. = During his career, he had served | WASHINGTON (®— Administra- | 30 years with the Chevrolet or- tion leaders reported to a pretty | ganization, including 16 years &$ wel) split group of the nation’s genera] parts and a -manager, & manager, and an assistant gen- eral sales manager. Born in Chicago, Mr. Douglas) ‘attended the Detroit University School, and the ———— “ Michigan. He was a me r the Recess Club, the Bloomfield Hills Country Club, the Bloom- field Open Hunt Club, the Indian Creek Country Clb, Miami, Fia., and thé Ft. Lauderdale Yacht Club. ods A Sind degree Mason, he lived }at 31805 Evergreen Rd., Southfield Township. Surviving are his widow, Marda, two sons, Morgan D. Jr. William E, Service will be Christ Church Cranbrook, at p. m. Thursday, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery by the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Social Security Plans Studied - Series of Bills Would Put All Public Workers Under Program LANSING (®—Michigan's Legis- lature is working on a series of bills designed to bring all public employe systems in Michigan un- der the federal social] security sys- tem and raise the combined pen- sions allowed under each. The bills, some in the House and ‘held at the \ told reporters later: “There is no question but that it lwill get through—in what form, I don’t know.” George, Senate Leader Lyndon Johnson of Texas, and House Governors Told lke’s Road Plans State Executives Administration Views 'ed the 11 Democrats at the White Get , House conference. The Republican ‘contingent included Vice President | tin of Massachusetts. The chairmen of the Foreign Relations, Appropriations and other committees involved also P | attended. governors today on what it plans, ; ‘to do about salvaging its big high- Secretary of State Dulles and | Foreign Operations Administrator “= hore ” __. Harold E, Stassen were among ad- The meeting was held behind _ministration officials joining in the closed doors. | conference. A briefing was seheduled after: Risdipels! ps oe po se e r s that : = | Dulles a the other officials gave =o la worldwide review of economic _and military conditions, Knowland said Dulles’ briefing ef the yerners’ conference, sald he and his supporters wili | cemered on “developments in among members of the Far Pacific area.” He gave the ‘ ne details. of Representatives to revive the administration’s con- |Speaker Rayburn of Texas head- | Nixon, Senate Leader Knowland of | on Highway Program. | California and House Leader Mar- | Martin said the administration and | treversial road financing pro- gram. That plan has been scrapped by the Senate Public Roads subcom- mittee, which instead adopted -a ‘‘pay-as-you-go” formula proposed by Sen. Gore (D-Tenn). Some of the governors, notably Averell Harriman of New York and George M. Leader of Penn- 3| sylvania, endorsed the Gore for- i mula. The subcommittee last Friday | sharing in the cost, Eisenhower | urged a 10-year program involving | % billion dollars more than would, be spent at the present rate. | Woman Wins $60,000 | From DSR for Injuries DETROIT ® — A 48-year-old | woman won a $60,000 out-of-court | settlement yesterday from the De- | troit Street Railway Commission. | She was paralyzed from the waist | down when a trolley-bus struck her. | Mrs. Helen Maksymiuk of Dear- born received the damages for in- juries suffered last December when the coach struck her after the driver started against a red) light. Pontiac Motor Spends $35 Million in County Pontiac Motor Division spent $33,- 058,911.59 with 190 independent sup- pliers in Oakland County during the calendar year of 194, R. M. Critchfield, General Manager re- vealed this week. “The amounts included in the total figure ranged from $25 to more than one million dollars,” Critchfield said. iter (R-Mich). approved a five-year, 22-billion-dol- White House meeting, said in ad- | lar new road program with the | vance of the session that he had federal and state governments aiready discussed the long-term officials gave a ‘‘thorough, care- | ful explanation” of their reasons for favoring a continuation of for- eign aid. The pending bill would earmark about two-thirds of the ' 343 billion dollars for Asiatic coun- | tries. : | There has been talk among some legislators of substituting posed direct economic aid. One of i those pushing this idea is Sen. Pot- Potter, who was invited to the | idea with presidential adviser Jo- Water-Study Board Named Supervisors’ Chairman Appoints Four Members to Committee | Four Oakland County supervis- ors have been named to work on _the recently authorized water-study committee under chairmanship of Mayor Howard K. Kelly of Royal Oak. The members were appointed by Supervisors Chairman Floyd Andrews. They are Roy F. Good- speed, of Ferndale; Norman R, Barnard, of Troy Township; Hi- land M. Thatcher, of West | Bloomfield Township; and Charles H, Harmon, of Pontiac. Two other supervisors will be Pontiac Mayor William W. Don- aldson, City Manager Walter K. Willman plus Andrews will be Morale Slumps as Atomic Test Is Delayed Again SURVIVAL CITY, Nev. (#—The problem of morale, both civilian and military, became a major fac- tor in the much-delayed atomic. test today, only tentatively for tomorrew, there was considerable grumbling and griping among civil] defense workers and GIs scheduled to par- ticipate. The latter group, of/ course, had to take it, but many of the civilians were leaving. — tor for the Federal Civil De- fense Administration, had a long “heart-te-heart” talk with field workers yesterday and appar- ently dissuaded the majority from palling out, just yet. But one faction from Ohio in- dicated it was fed up with sweat- ing out the test, originally sched- uled for last Tuesday. Another spokesman from Ohio, however, said he and another group from his state would stick it out to the end. Uncertain weather appeared to | be moving in from the west coast, making “the end” a dubious pros- pect. Best estimates placed the! number of field exercise workers | remaining at about 200, Originally | there were over 350. Need More Aid in Middle East — Williams Says Nations Require Additional Help From U.S.. | States aid to the Middle East qh over Northwestern Michigan, |inadequate, Michigan's Gov, G. Mennen Williams reported on re- | turning from a:two-week tour of the Levant. The governor visited Turkey, Greece, Syria, Lebanof, Isreal and Jordan. | Reporting on his trip yesterday, | the governor said all these coun- | tee are striving to lift their stan- | dards of living. At the same time, jhe said, they serve as a ,cold-war | burden. U. 8, economic and technical aid, plus private investment, should be increased to help the Levant countrie ssatisfy the “immense drive’ of their peo- ples for a better life, the gov- ernor told a news conference, has reduced U. S. dollar aid to the region, Williams said. He. con- With the big open shot slated) — Hareld L. Goodwin, test direc- |. WASHINGTON wh — United {cherry . blossoms: popping The Eisenhower administration! Republican party decided today OUSting of the playboy ex- | PS > Michiganders Meet in Athens Pontiac Press Phote GOVERNOR ON WORLD TOUR. — When Gov. G. | Mennen Williams arrived in Athens Friday from thé’ bassador Caventish Cannon (right). During his brief Middle East and Cyprus he was greeted at the Hel- | stay in Athens Gov. Williams talked with Greek lenicon Airport by Socrates V. Sekies (center above) | Premier Alex Papagos and was guest of King Paul Neither Party Sure of Victory ‘inShowdown =< But Dems Hope to Get 20 or More GOP Votes iS to Raise Props WASHINGTON (#) — Op- posing House forces squared off today in a new battle over the old issue of farm price supports. The decision, however it goes, is certain to echo nois- ily in next year’s political campaigning. Scheduled for two days of de- bate was a bill to junk the admin- istration’s fledging flexible support program and restore high rigid price props on basic commodities to the levels first fixed in World War II to spur production, Both sides conceded the vote could go either way when the showdown comes tomorrow. Democratic leaders, however predicted that if they capture 20 or more Republican votes they can of Pontiac, who is on a visit to Greece. Also on hand! and Queen Frederica at luncheon in the Royal to greet Michigan's chief executive was U. S. Am-j Palace. Triumphant Diem Troops Push Cleanup of Rebels Early Blossoms Force Change in Annual Rite TRAVERSE CITY ™ — With out hastily advanced the date-for the | annual blessing of tbe blossoms ceremony. / ae They set it for next Sunday af. | his advantage over absentee chief of state Bao Dai. | ternoon at Bowers Harbor near Old | the ceremony. Entire orchards turned snowy @nd provincial officlals—to pass judgment on the Na and. Monday—at least a week earl- than was anticipated. The | ‘ier blessing rites will be held in a ih Saigon tomorrow.- + oo | 2 \ { h of long- | shield against Russia but their natural amphitheater overlooking| In a nationwide broad-_ ’ . term loans for much of the Pro economies are not equal to the Grand Traverse Bay in the heart cast, Diem said the national e S f a @ | ‘of the cherry erchard GOP Will Not Ask Recount of Votes LANSING country. army also would have voice | lin the final decision on ea: (position Dies ‘committee's recommenda- Liberal Measure Seen ‘tions. Both the states gen-| eral and the army were, Sure of Senate Okay This Week ‘expected to approve the. (mB — The Michigan not to ask a recount of the April) Emperor, who has been liv- | # general election. ling on the French Riviera | tern) | SAIGON, South Viet Nam W— Premier Ngo Dinh Grand Traverse Ministerial Assn. | iem’s triumphant nationalist forces pushed their nop] |up of battered remnants of the rebel Binh Xuyen army | today. On the political front, Diem moved to consolidate | pass the high support bill. Repub- _licans were equally hopeful of hold- | ing city Democrats. Last year, in a Republican-con- | troied House, 45 Democrats /teamed up with the GOP majority ito pass the present flexible law supporting basic farm crops at levels between 8242 and 9% per cent of parity, Voting with the | Democrats were 23 Republicans, Rep. Harrison (R-Neb) said the GOP expects to lose only | about 18 votes this time, but might also lose some of last year’s Democratic suppert. | Regardless of what the House does, no early change in the law jis in prospect. | The Senate Agriculture Commit- Mission, the traditional place for | assembly of political party representatives and municipal WASHINGTON WW — Sen. Byrd! The Premier formally convoked a “‘states general”—an tee has indicated it will not even |consider a price support bill be- fore next year, And in the event | Congress should pass such legisla- white in a matter of hours Sunday tional Revolutionary Committee’s weekend recommenda- ‘tion, it would almost certainly be tion to depose Bao Dai. The assembly was called to.meet vetoed by President Eisenhower. | The new farm bill would restore | price supports at 90 per cent of parity for wheat, corn, cotton, rice ‘and peanuts. Under the present |admunistration program, these | crops can be supported at 82% to | 90 per cent of parity this year. |The support range will drop to 75 | to 90 per cent next year and there- ‘after. For dairy products, the measure | proposes price supports at 80 to 90 per cent of parity in place of 73> to 90 per cent under present law. Parity is a legal standard ‘in- tended it should have continued about at the level of three or four years ago. Williams also suggested the a recount. 'United States should work out a | Party officials, believe, he said, ‘comprehensive plan” for aid to! “that recounts would not change the entire Middle East. He said | the election results despite the fact this should be designed to help) that several of our candidates lost the entire region absorb such prob-| by very small margins.”’ lems as Arab refugees from Is-| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) — State Chairman John Feikens The Democrats previously de- | said that a canvass of party for the past 13 months. |leaders showed no sentiment for | . | position ; resort of Dalat. (D-Va) said today most of the Sen- ltended to assure farmers a fair ate opposition to the liberalized | Teturn for their products in rela- The demands for Bao Dai’s de- | tion to the cost of things they buy, followed his cabled or-! der last week for Gen. Nguyen Van- Vy, a supporter of his, to supplant Diem, The army refused to follow | Vy, who scurried back to the hill foreign trade bill appeared to have | disappeared. ; Byrd, floor manager for the bill, Reports of new Freach sup: ‘of an agreement to limit debate cided against a recount. starting. tomorrow and that the bill pert and renewed U. 8S. backing bolstered the premier. French officials in Paris said last night "OW Tight. | Majority Leader Lyndon B. John- (of floor debate there isa possibility | might pass without change tomor- | Snags Merger AFL and CIO Argue —_—_—— | Name Di said in advance of a second day | ame ispute : | : | 'named to the committee later, said | ' Andrews. Mercury Smashes Record | for Date Here—Hits 87 Temperatures in Pontiac today reached the highest mark for this date in 83 years, with the promise of more record-shattering hot days to come. Mercury readings will average about 15 degrees above normal for the next five days, according to the U. S. | Weather Bureau. The normal high is 65, normal low 41. | At 1 p.m, the tempera-*~— ‘ture in downtown Pontiac !ow mark In the 83 years | temperatures have been record- was 87 degrees, tWO degrees 24 here was 32, registered on this | United States are prepared to | / Nam" that their government and the son (D-Tex) said he was working| About Title of Combined - on a time limitation agreement. | io “sacrifice’’ Bao Dai if his re- lSuch an agreemen uir Jt r anizati n moval would promote stability. | animous paodloyete Pa aegeared 2 g ; ° In Washington, Henry Suydam, to be largely up to Sen. Malone | WASHINGTON W — AFL and chief State Department press offi-| (R-Nev), bitter foe of the recipro-| cio efforts to merge into a single cer, told newsmen the United cal trade program, =~ | Iepor anion grompe Dave moceet . ms me cs i at least temporarily in a dispute wat “ continues to rt ia ve * | Malone conceded in a sepa- 4.67 a name i ‘ee pape com- egal government of free Viet! pate interview he believes there | bined organization. headed by Diem, He re- | will be only a few votes against | Both sides declined to say t i the measure on passage. ‘what names they have in. mind | A rewriting job done on the but apparently the AFL wants the Calls Brass Greedy ltrade bill by the Finance Com- "¢W Organization to bear its own | mittee, which Byrd heads, ap- See lated | Pa 17 WASHINGTON w—Secretary of peared to have quieted much of |__ °° Teisted sory. Fase I. Defense Wilson says military men the opposition. |name while the CIO wants some- | fused to say whether Washington (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) in SOE members by virtue of their office. The committee, also to include |Plan Commission members, is ex- pected to begin meeting this month Now Fully Equipped ASHLAND, Ky. @—Ten pounds | five bunches of Carrots were stolen| County groups in an attempt to from the Charles Russell Elemen-| develop a long-range surface wa- tary School. The thief also took) ter supply for the tri-county area. a skillet. seph M. Dodge. of sugar, a pound of coffee and with similar Macomb and St. Clair. higher than the reading on May 3, 1949. And the ther- mometer was still climbing. | Weather forecasters late this morning revised earlier predic- tions of a high of 82 and said temperatures might even reach 88 i date in 1907, A year ago, this | day’s high was 60 degrees. just naturally ask for more forces’ ————— . than they need. In testimony be-| 100 Shi s Pass Soo fore a House Appropriations =| P committee, released yesterday, he said: “The history of the world hundred Forecast for tonight and tomor- row is partly cloudy and contin- ued watm, with chance of show- vessels passed 61 to 65, high tomorrow 78 to 2 Yesterday's high was 74, low 58, nation or else create a military | than has moved One-fifth of an inch of rain fell. dictatorship.” single day in the past two years. Start Saturday in Pentiac, County Areas by mid-afternoon. ' ‘Schedule First Polio Shots for 9,500 More Children Plans for giving Salk polio in-|had their fisrt vaccinations. They | eran, Central and St, Frederick's. Lambert. Hudson Covert, and St.| broke and Our Lady of Martyrs. transport them from other district oculations to all first and second | will get their second shots in about | Owen Sclow! — Te, Hee |e in Pisiea Bakce | Southfield Township and Fern. | buildings, SS nee. Langiellow School — Emerson,|Adams and Waterford Vilage. | ‘2 Pupils also get their first shots |» , have not already started the two- Ww , eter. | this Saturda ° In Toda s Press ig Pontiac children wil receive | Willis and Wilson. Waterford High School — Water- | this § y- AT y T series were announced today! their first shots Saturday, in six pol — 3 rroll, St. | ford Center, Williams Lake, Pon- Booster shots for children who | Birmingham ................0.-... 9 by Dr. John D. Monroe, health ea ae eee we Wider, | tiac Lake end Four Towns. | got the vaccine in last year’s field | Bezie,, Malo.-c sc cites! central clinics which open at | Michael's, Bailey and Wisner mtd director. ree 9 a.m. Parents will be responsi- Commanit Cent Lakesté Two clinics will be set up in tests will be given with. the sec- — .: Bed An 9,500 children. in| 4 ar ~. | Birmingham, also starting, at 9 ,0nd round of inoculations June 4/ Crane, Dr. Geerge.. Pontiac ble for bringing their young- {Housing Project—Bagley and Whit- if , ; Rattortals ¥ ywnship, Bir- sterp to the proper place. tier \ a.m. Saturday. Locations are: jin Pontiac, Waterford, Ferndale | Etitertele joc 0-0:-- mingham two south Oakland ; :- __._ | and Southfield. These will be given |. finter Baier. |... County areas will get their first| Clinic locations are: Wateslerd Township first ana/| _ Simingham High jones ‘at the same locations as Satur. | [eiresct, Davia... shots Saturday, May 7. Webster second graders’ will get shots at Baldwin, Bloomfietd Wal. 'day’s clinics, agers. res All other county first and second | from Whitfield,. Baptist, 7th Day | three elines, scheduled at the | ott oe ta poise Birmingham children will receive | fy Rasie Programe. 1 graders w hose P rents gave : Adventist * a same time at these pia Ces: i ft. / , $ Wednesda: y Earl. EP tog a sent for the shots have already McConnell School—Trinity uth | Donelson School ~- Stringham,’ Pierce~Adams, Beverly, Pem- | School. Sel Lea } A . J ‘ F ‘ . | ‘ f H ‘ \ ‘ q \ ww e ¥ \ OS ee ee eet ae Sar es me ee ae = | SAULT STE. MARIE w — One through ers temorrow, Low tonight will be is that if you listen to military the Soo locks from midnight Sat- people only they will bankrupt the | urday to midnight Sunday — more | throigh on a | thing new like “the American Con- | gress of Labor.” George Meany, AFL president, ‘sald the quarrel over a fame could cause “trouble,” but he | added: “We've had trouble be- fore and we've gotten over it.” 4 2 MERA ; z eo? ha ve — % a j Z : ies “a © % * : TW nt | faa & : : . ‘ aA ) > 1 955 %s i i I | | ’ 16 Polio Cases | NEW YORK — Novelist Wil- /liam Faulkner has been awarded * | the 1953 Pulitzer Prize for fiction First 1955 Tabulation for “A Fable.” an allegorical novel Shows None Afflicted of a World War I munity Who Got Vaccine | The year’s drama award went ito Tennessee Williams’ “Cat on a LANSING ® — In its first polio! jj, Tin Roof,’ a play dealing with report of the season, the State i the dissolution of a Mississippi De! Health Department said today 9g ta family. Williams’ "A Streetcar cases of infantile paralysis have. Named Desire’ won him his first been listed so far this year. | Pulitizer Prize in 1348. None of the cases so far re-' Both, Faulkner, 57, a ftrst-time ported was among children who | Winner, and Wilhams, 41, are Mis- : . | sissippi-bora. Faulkner won the have received the Salk polio vac- | P' : pole aces po | 1949 Nobel Prize for literature. Gian-Carlo Menotti, Italian-born However, tha department | composer and lyricist, received the warned that weg will de- | music award for “The Saint of velop among vaccitiated chil- | Bleecker Street,’ an opera based dren. on religion and Greenwich Village , First. the department said, some life, Meno was the winner : * 950 music prize or anotner children probably will be well Lee - mes P e ” e long in the incubation period °P°"“ be Loe on " th y receive their vaccine The awards, set up in the will en they rece Ee (vaccine: ; » late publisher Joseph Pulit- In these cases the inoculation of the late pu atin Joseph Pult will do no good. Secondly, the department re- American minded that the vaccine is only Camp. s se be 80 90 per ¢ . i supposed to be © 10 29 per cor Week Proclaimed develop among some children who by Gov. Williams | receive the shots in time. | | The department said that of the’ In an effgrt to better acquaint “6 cases reported this year, four parents with Michigan’s summer occurred last week. Three were in camps for children, Gov. G. Men- Wayne County and one was iD pep Williams has set aside this” Ingham County. ‘week as American Camp Week. The department will issue a weekly polio repcet each Friday for the remainder of the season. In Washington, an early start appeared assured today for House | hearings into the wisdom of fed-| eral controls over the distribution | of Salk polio vaccine. | The Eisenhower administration | has thus far recommended — send their children to one of Oak- | a speretary of ©’ | land County's numerous summer | are y said last night she will, camps can make arrangements by | eer ces athe han contacting one of the following per- | aoe : 5 sons: of our findings and discussions or) F4ward Leland, Oakland Coun- i] The proclamation urges par- | ents and others interested in| youth welfare to give serious thought to the ‘‘many benefits of camping experience for chil- dren,” and to take advantage of the opportunities which state camps afford. ; | | | | | Parents in this area wishing to, |Pulitzer Prizes Awarded‘ to American. Journalists zer, were announced yesterday by the Columbia University Board of Trustees. They were recommended by an advisory board of prominent members in the newspaper and publishing tields The Coluinbus Ga.) Ledger and Sunday Ledger-Enquirer won the 1955 award for “disinterested and meritorious public service.” The newspaper was cited for its | complete news coverage and “‘fear- | less editorial attack’ on the wide- spread corruption in nearby Phe- | nix City, Ala. Local reporting awards went, for the first time, to two small-town | newspaper reporters, both of them from Texas the Alice (Tex.) Daily Echo, and | the Alice, (Tex.) Daily Echo, and | Roland K. Towery. 31, managing | editor of the Cuero (Tex.) Daily: Record : Mrs of corruptior val County, uf and terrorism in Du- Tex.. Was adjudged Brown 1 S CA\POSE 4) years, | the best example of local reporting under the pressure of edition time. | ceremony. All women — including the bride — Ss i ceremony in accordance with Moslem custom. She also: covered for The Asso- | ciated Press, Towery was cited for local re- | porting where edition time was not | a factor. He is credited with es. | posing a Texas land scandal in- | volving a 100-million-dollar fund set | up by the state to help veterans | buy land. | Except in music and drama, the | | awards cover work done in 1954. | The prizes for literature and music are $300 each, prizes in the field. of individual newspaper work car- | iry awards of $1,000 each. The! ,..i16 poodlums outside a Bronx Columbus Ledger, where staff teamwork was involved, receives ving for the high sch 'a gold medal. | Other 1955 awards: | History — Paul Horgan of Ros-; well, N.M., for “Great River, the | tio Grande in Nerth American | History,”’ a book that took him 14) years to write. - Biography — William §. member of the Washington bureau ' White, | - a ; t . N 7 ake so dpm GM ae yacht Set. Foe _ a . c advanced by Ellen Wyngarden, executive direc- A Taft The Taft Story.” such legislation. | tor for Pontiac Campfire Girls “pict—Wallace Stevens, a H ‘| Council; Mrs. Anders Hustved!, |, oom allace Stevens, a Hart: | : | Le rel ee ‘at, | ord. ‘onn., insurance company Drillers Move —__ | executive direcior of North O8t" vice’ president, for his collected arm ounty : Sct rh, . . : cies vere no ae poems Ri WH) S Ivan / Sidney N. Geal, = a direct Natiional reporting — Anthony : /of Camp Man-Go-Tah-See and Lewis 28 staff member of. the - to Seek Water | President of the Michigan -phlbaiige iW ashmgton Daily News, for " a jof the American Camping Assn.; ‘series of articles that brought After hitting two dry holes, aul and David R. Ewalt, Frog Hollow | about reinstallation of Abraham lers have now moved their rig to Camp director and Pontiac Parks | Chasanow, dismissed from the! Ferndale Park in Sylvan Lake in: and Recreation Dept. director. | Navy Department as a_ security | hopes of bringing in another well | for the city's forthcoming munici- pal water system. “City Manager Ernest L. Ethier said yesterday the drilling. com- pany gave up when a depth of - 2996 feet was reached at a site in a camp operated by a Detroit newspaper. : Previously, a 350-foot dry shaft. had been sunk behind the city hall. Conservation Department, accord- Ol Boat License Ordinance Repealed A 16-year-old ordinance requir- ing all motorboats on Orchard feet northeast of the one well al-/ dent Fred J. Walls. | risk. International reporting—Harnson _E. Salisbury, 47, of the New York Lake to be licensed has been re- | pealed on request of the. State, Times. for his articles on Russia summing ‘up his six years as Mos: cow correspondent for the Times. Editorial writing — The Detroit Free Press, for an editorial by the newspaper's associate editor Royce Howes, who analyzed re- sponsibility of labor and manage- The third try.is being made 350) ing to Orchard Lake Village Presi- | ment in an unauthorized strike at : | the Chrysler Corp. * * * SHE DIDN'T ATTEND THEIR Jordan, in March, 1955. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, poses with his schoolteac Hamid. 26, whom he marned in Amman, Jordan, 1n a simp + a} | ~ 7 Red Bloc Plans Military Union Russia, Satellites Set Meeting to Organize European Command x \ st VIENNA up—Warsaw 2 nounced today that Russia and her i seven East European satellites will meet in Polish Mas 11 to set up a unified military an 4 = | Li i H radia 1e capital ‘command. | Western observers in Vienna said the move apparently was being |taken to provide the legal basis tfor retaining Russian troops in |Hungary and Romania after the lexpected end of the four-power oc- cupation of Austria. suc The Day in Birmingham ‘Commission Hires Firm to Design Eton Park Rink BIRMINGHAM — The City Com mission last mght approved archi tects preparing plans and = super- visine’ construction of the $125,000 artificial ice skating, rink at Eton | Park “The firm of O Dell, Howlett and peackenbach will handle the pro- ject. Funds for the rink were ap- proved by voters in a bond is- election April 4 The rink, approximately 85 by 185: feet, would be located south MW il of Lincoln and east of Eton. Tar- | get date of completion is Novem- | ber 1. Aid Needed in East, . . nie was ot oo Says Gov. Williams ; . : Soviet Umon, Poland. Crechoslo ‘ WEDDING — King Hussein, 20. of i \ : et _— , vakia, Romania, Bulgaria. Feast | «Continued From Page One) her cousin, Princess Dina Abdul Germany, Hungary and Albania \ ana Si 4 net ' = x . rae eke Pye ee b) a | “TRASCC le Moslem would take part in the conference eee un = yO OT were barred from the This picture was taken with Communist China sending an observer The eight European nations met iin Moscow Jast November to warn at Funeral fo NEW YORK uf — The teen-age hatreds that killed 15 - year - old William Blankenship Jr. flared anew last night. There were angry voices -of ju- funeral chapel after religious ser at, honor student, killed Saturday by a bul- let of a -youth gang member, Police dispersed the crowd of some 100 persons outside the chap- el after a group of teen - agers ithreatened to attack news photo- graphers who tried to photograph them. = “ j Police assumed the teen-ager, including several girls, were par- | tisans of Frank (Tarzan) Santana, ‘17-year-old Bronx gang member, ‘charged with homicide in Blanken- ship's slaying. | The new flareup came. shortly after civic and religious leaders called on New Yorkers for effec- tive measures to fight juvenile | crime, . | Police Commissioner Francis W. | H. Adams said Sunday that the rate of juvenile crime is ‘alarm- ing.’ Young Blankenship, son of a civic leader and fighter against * Pontiac Deaths ——— Julia Sue Downer Piston St. died yesterday at Pon- tiac General Hospital after a two weeks illness. . Julia Sue Downer, 58, of 16 E.| ‘that the unified command would be set up if West Europe went ahead with ratification of the Pars treaties and with West German rearmament r Slain Boy juvenile delinquency, was shot be- cause the gang mistook him for a member of a rival group. The feud between the gangs Was over the use gf similar Jackets, police said, * Western observers in) Viggna said the announcement appeartd a positive indication that Russia eX pects to carry through Its promise to sign an Austrian independence ltreaty and end the occupation. Bronx Dist. Atty. Daniel V, Sul-| A Big Four ambassadors’ con- levan said he will seek a first de- 'ference to settle outstanding ques- Wiliams recommended that 4 bigger and cheaper supply of books and documents about the United States should be made available in the Middle East. The Commu- nists, he said, furnish plentiful propaganda about themselves plus ‘American books that we perhaps would not be so anxious to have | future leaders of the to have.” The governor made the trip at the invitation of the Israel Society. region Forging, Socket Club yree murder indictment against UOMs on the Austrian treaty now Santana is in progress in Vienna, A com. ects 0 amer ed . , rs , 1pee after 5 first At Santana's arraignment ves- mun iss a ‘ a : the par a . . terday, Magistrate Hyman orn session yesterday said notabie The American Forging and Sock- denied bail, A companion of Sane progress was made et Company Management Club : : a. wee * " be le » yfficers x An hl tana, Ralph (Rocky) Falcon, 16.) Under the terms of the World elected officers at _ the monthly ide ye terms © he Worl mine meeting { i g | charged with noting, was beld In way qf peace treaties with Hun di iner meeting Monday night. $50,000 bal a peace Wee 1 Hun blected were? Harley Bodamer — . « « gary and Romania, Russia should president, Theodore Ferency, vice ‘ eharaw 5 NODS rary hase ; , ; = As the mothers of both boys wept ‘ - se ig toon as. Me mm thes president, doha Tl. Mie Masler See P we @ _ : ew are > : in court Magistrate Korn said: | 72 10nS | 8S soon as they are nO retary, and Robert E. Wuelfing. “If you ask me who is to blame, jonger needed to protect the supPIY treasurer. I would say the people of the City pain to Soviet troops in Austria The company's president. and of New York.” |Creation of a unified command) general manager, Goodloe H. Rog ; , would give the Russians a legal op. spoke to the group concern “The press is awake, the police phasis to continue their forces in ing current business conditions and department is awake, “ublic of- the satellites—an estimated 300.- ae conics ihn ficials are awake. But the public is q99 men in Hungary, 200.000 in ,. ‘ see probte ms er ar r : - oe” ‘Involves he cessation of the asleep and until it wakes up this. p, — 08.900 olan ‘ | Romania and 40 in Poland. yorean war.” Rogers said, “and situation will continue.” 2 |The Soviets reportedly have only military observers in Czechoslo- vakia, Bulgaria and Albania, * * The grief-stricken. father of the slain boy, Wiliam Blankenship Sr., said tersely: “Teen-aged hoodiumism that can strike a blow like this right into Diem Troops Push amy home in spite of ewrth"s T Cleanup of Rebels ‘that kind of hoodlumism isn't the | disease itself, | “Tt's the (Continued From Page One) outward sign that! still regards Bao Daj as chief of everything here is rotten, . . It} State. | has finally got me licked..I'm get- | Spasmodic _ fighting continued, | ting out...” | meanwhile, between four national- | The Rev. R. Millard Farrell, a/ ist army battalions and the broken | Presbyterian minister conducting | Binh Xuyen forces outside the cap- | tt ital. Only an estimated two rebel | . sharp curtailment of the defense program, naturalty affected the ‘country’s economy. Many com- panes, that. had been manulac- turing armament materials, were | left with idle capacity and per- sonnel, which they were anxious to use, Extremely keen compet tion. naturily, has resulted. “This challenge,’ Regers told the group, “has to be met by our company through manufac- turing efficiencies, strict econo- mies, and constantly improved techniques, “A most important factor is the attitude of the individuals involved. American | ready established for the system. | State regulations require that the |- system have two wells, with one) ~ kept for emergency service. . Ethier reminded Sylvan Lake | residents they can save five per | cent interest charges on their The ordinance was passed May 11, 1989, requiring all boat own- ers, intending to use a motor to register the motor for 4 dol- lar. The tag had no time limit and Was good for as.tong as the person used the lake and abided special water assessment tax A by license regulations, they pay it by June 30. Many’ have already paid the assessment, | ) register their tors he said. come. in to register thei Mote are disgusted over the repeal.” said Village Clerk Lucille M Smith, “they felt the heensing made for better fishing and control over the lake.” Blough Seen Next Head of S Steel , | The repeal was asked, a con- . servation department spokesman NEW YORK (INS) — Roger M._. said, because “the ordinance Con- Blough, U, S. steel vice chairman flicted with. state law and set a “A majority of the people who ; Cartoons—Daniel R. Fitzpatrick, of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, for ia cartoon showing Uncle Sam hoild- ing a bayoneted rifle, pondering whether to descend into a black swamp labeled ‘French Mistakes lin Indochina.’ Fitzpatrick won his first Pulitzer Prize in 1926. News photography — John L. Gaunt Jr.. of the Los Angeles ‘Times, for a dramatic photograph of a young couple on a California beach, minutes after their 19 month-old son lost his life in the surf Jack W. Henderson, 25, of Kan- sas City, Mo., a student at the Art Students League of New York, was awarded a $1,900 traveling re service for young Blankenship |! said: “We certainly do not demand of our government officials a heaven- ly city in which to dwell. But is it asking too much that they give | She was born Nov. 13, 1896 in, , Williamstown, Pa., the daughter) iof Ellis I, and Dora Hess Kline. | | Coming here from Burnham, Pa. | battalions with supporting units re- mained of the 5.000-man private larmy which sought to topple Diem | from power. | The insurgents. led by Gen. Le |35 years ago, she had been em- , , | ployed "bs the Wilson Toceney us a city with streets in which Van Vien, were fighting a desper- Surviving are daughter “Mrs four boys and girls can walk ate but losing rearguard action . . * p, Safely?” | Vien’s headquarters were now re- Ray Aumiller of Selingsgrove. Pa. and ope grandson. A brother, S, E. Kline of Pontiac, also survives. Mrs. Downer will be at the Voor- hees-Siple Funeral Home until 7:30 p.m: Wednesday. She will then be taken to the Barr Funeral Home of Lewiston, Pa. for service and burial in ‘the Burch Hill Ceme- | tery Friday. Robert Lonchart and general counsel, is expected to be named today as successor to board Chairman Benjamin’ F fF airless, Presidept Clifford Hood is con- sidered most likely to step up to the post of chief executive officer also held by Fairless, who an precedent that worried boat own- ers throughout the state.” Thieves Find Breakin Unprofitable, Steal $1 It was a poor night’s work for thieves who broke into the office scholarship in art. Henderson sub- | Service was held this morning | ported to be between Can Gioc, 12 miles south of Saigon, and Go Cong, 30 miles fo the south. Southern Bell Strike Goes On “Reuther, Gov. Folsom Encourage Workers in Diem's pursuing army Was re- ported driving south along two parallel routes six miles apart, seking to envelop the rebels. Behind the advancing nationalist ‘troops. huge fires blazed in subur- ban Cho Lon, the site of the old Binh Xuyen headquarters. The | | | nounced his retirement effective of \Yontcalm Builder's Supply firm. on his 65th birthday today Richard Meade said ‘Directors of the nation’s largest the burglars only got a dollar in steelmaking firm are scheduled to) cash, a pair of gloyes and two pick the new officers at a meet- flashhghts. He said. entry was ing in New York this afternoon made by breaking out a 2n4-foot Fairless, son of an immigrant plate glass window in front of the Wetsh coal miner who worked his office at 156 Montcalm St. way up to the top of the $2,350, : Owner | mitted three oil paintings to the awards jury. Ferndale Man Wins Color TV Set Prize 2ussell Havlatka, 3050 Inman St., Ferndale, won a 19%inch color tele- vision set in Product Pictures, the | contest appearing in the Pontiac Press each Thursday. This set has a retail value of $895 and is one of the major prizes in the contest. 000,000 corporation, told big steel's | stockholders at their annual, meet- | itg in Hoboken, N. J. yesterday | that he was stepping down at the | compulsory retirement age. He added, however, that he would remain as a director and a member of the finance committee. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY Partly cloudy and continued warm tenight and temorrow. Low tenight 61-65, high te- morrow 78-82. South te southwest winds 10-15 miles tonight. Temerrow partiy cloudy and continued warm with chance ef showers, low near 66. Today in Pontiac a" temperature preceding # am.) At § am. Wind Direction: West Sun sets Tuesday at 734 pm Sun rises Wednesday et § 24 am. Moon sets Tuesday at 444 pm Moon rises Wednesday at 3.54 am. CLOSE ONE! PE EREON BECAME $. & velocity 10 mph Peowntown Temperatures 6 @ M.....,. +» 63 liam vee A TB. Mirccceess- 04 12m ie 84 8B. M.. cccevee 67 ip. ese 87 OO. Boy. ences 78 10 a. mM... a Menday im Pontiar . (As recorded downtown! Highest temperature... -.-:........6 74 La ture. . deine = One Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature..,.A....,.-- Lowest j SE temperature a eee 465 oe : ee ve TE WATE US... __ WELL CONCEALED! pager wee vee 2 as, BIONIC WORD Li by age deg eaoract — ‘at the St. Sebastian Cathol ic 5] -Day-Old Walkout |Church, in Bessemer at 9 a.m. | , tfor Robert Lonchart who died at) ATLANTA (INS)—Southern Bell |his home Friday. Burial was in| Telephone workers in nine states Hillcrest Cemetery. | were bolstered today in their 951- Mr. Lonchart, 79, was born: in ‘day-old strike by a $1,250,000 loan ; Europe and came to this country and strong words of encourage- ; many years ago. He had lived most | ‘of his life in Bessemer where he) had been employed by the city. Surviving besides his wife are eight children, Robert of Dallas, Tex., John of Detroit, Francis af Berkley, Peter, Joseph, Mrs, June | Kinney, Mrs. John Brewn and Mrs. Harry Killian, all of Pontiac. Dena Carol Powell Prayer service will Wednesday morning at 11 o'clock '{n the Huntoon Funeral Home for Dena Carol Powell, infant daugh- ter of William D. and Maggie Irene Powell, 425 S, Bellvue St., Lake be held ‘The Rev. David Mortensen of | Marimont Baptist Church will offi- /ciate with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. | Baby Dena died at birth this /morning at 1 a.m. and is survived ' by her parents. ; Thomas Sydney Rogers Thomas Sydney Rogers, 72, of 1055 Durant St. died. suddenly at | his home yesterday on his birth- day. He was born in 1883 in England, the son of Samuel and Eliza Tilley | Rogers and was married June 21, 1905 to. Ella Haynes in- Mary- land, Corhing to Pontiac from Pennsyl- vania 43 years ago, Mr. Rogers had been employed by the Grand Trunk Western Railroad, liam and Mrs, Irene Ashley, both of Pontiac, Mrs, Betty Boucard of Clarkston and grandchildren. Also surviving are a sister, Mrs. Gertrude Horton of Davisburg and Samuel Rogers, a / brother, with whom. he made his home, .. - Service will be held Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. from the Huntoon ‘Funeral Home with Dr. Tom Ma- lone of the’ Emmanuel Ba Church officiating, Burial will be ment from one Dixie governor. | army launched its cleanup drive | yesterday by assaulting the last ‘rebel strongholds there. | The army yesterday advised Bao _ Dai in a telegram sent by Diem ' that it would not recognize any fu- ‘ture government he might name. | Army chief of staff Gen. Le Vah Orion, former residents of Pontiac.’ Surviving are three children, Wil- | And CIO President Walter: Reu- Ty, in an order of the day prais- ‘ther, pledging support, painted the ing his troops today, pointedly left Communications Workers of Amer-| off the usual preface that it was | Ica as carrying on a fight for all jssue@ in the name of the chief of organized labor over the question staic. of who should have the final word. in disputes—nfanagement or labor. Other CIO unions made $1,250,000 |available to provide necessary re- lief and assistance to striking CW members and their families. Senate Passes Bill “for Deer Control | Gev :, Folsom . ee" | _ Gov, James E. Folsom of Ala- | 1 aNSING un — The Senate, on bama,” meanwhile, said he ex- : , 4 et its second try, has passed the bill pects te ask bs state iegisiatere to extend the Conservation Com- for authorit seize publi 5 . ; ; y to public util mission's discretionary power over ities hit by strikes. : the deer herd in the Lower Felsom said he viewed the strike Peninsula. as a company effort, under “right; The bill was waterd down from ‘to work"’ laws, to keep wages low|a_ three-year extension to a two- -in the south. The Alabama gover-| year extension in order to pick up nor called Southern Bell ‘that poor! enough votes to overcome the ini- | little $15-billion telephone company | tial defeat a week ago. | _ .. that all powerful monopolistic| The measure pasSed last night telephone company.”’ by a 21-6 vote, compared to the | A company spokesman argued | previous 13-9 vote — three short of | there is “‘no need for such drastic the necessary majority. Negative votes were cast by | | I | | -action’’ as proposed by Gov. Fol-| som. W. A. Thompson, Alabama Sens. Dehmel, Faulkner, Misne- general manager for Southern ma, Novak, Rahoi and Vander | | Bell, said effect of the strike on | Werp. Sens. Blondy, Graebner and | ithe economy of Alabama and the) Roy were present but did not vote. “South “has been greatly exagger- | ated.’ Thompson said telephone Cub Scout Pack Gives Aquarium to Hospital service jis normal and a high per- | | centage of employes are working ;and “more are returning every ; day.” Den No. 12 of Webster School ‘Cub Scout Pack 9 yesterday pre- “6 sented a 10fgallon aquarium to Dr. Clarkston Man Waives James M. McHugh of the Pontiac Exam, Faces Arraignment State Hospital: -.To be used in the Hospital's chil- Corrte Bloodworth, 27, of Clark- -dien's division, the aquarium is the ston, was bound over for arraign- result of a two-month money drive ment \in Oakland County Circuit | by six Cubs of the Den, They sold Court after he waived examina-/coathangers and scrap paper for = a Holly Township Justice | money to purchase the gift, ac- Howe Monday. _ }¢ording to-Mrs. Fred Coleman, the \He was returned to the county boys’ Den Mother. jall where he will be‘held without; ~ bond. Bloodworth ‘was arrested There will be moré than 15 April 2 by Holly Patrolman Wil mi persons over the age of 66 liam Wood after he allegedly took within the next five years in the i } Drayton Plains $125, tolevigion set fom a gar: | United States. f ! i * Enthusiasm on the part of each supervisor in meeting the chal- good team work, which spells prog- rUss Woman Is Sought fo Clear Title Because Mr. and Mrs. Glyde J Randall, of Herkimer, N Y., need a clear title to land where their new home is being built, they have appealed to Pontiac and Oakland County residents. In a letter to the Pontiac Police Dept., they explained that they must have the signature of a Mrs. | Phoebe Dutcher on their property title before the home can be com- | pleted, The last known city where | Mrs. Dut¢her lived was Pontiac. | Capt. Clark M. Wheaton, chief of detectives, said his men have | checked all usual sources without success, Anyone knowing of a Mrs Phoe- be Dutcliey is requested to contact Wheaton at the police station, Clarkston Man Injured Slightly in Collision William H. Clement, 78, of Clark- ston, injured slightly Mon- WaS day ‘afternoon in a 2-car collision, ou U. S. 10 near Wagerford -Hul, Oakland County Sheriff's depu- ties said. Clement, who was taken to his home with face Cuts, said he was making a left turn when his car collided with one being driven south by William G. Smith, 29, of Mt. Morris. Smith's car struck a car parked on the side of the highway after the crash. Admits Weapons Count Dunbar Gay Jr., 25, of 174 Lake St., yesterday pleaded guilty to carrying concealed weapons and | Oakland County Circuit Judge H. | Russel Holland set sentencing for | May 9. Police said they arrested Gay here April 1 and found two pistols in his car. ? City Manager Donald C. Egbert was also requested by the commus- sion to proceed with plans for paving Lincoln east of Eton, in preparation for the skating rink, The city ownes property in the area, and would finance the pay- ing by selling it. Trey Township notified the com- mission that a hearing would be held tonight on a request for zon- ‘ing property north of the site of the new junior high school to @ business classification. The commission will send a rep- -reentative to the hearing. The |property is between Adams Road land the Grand Trunk Western | Railroad, north of Derby. John S. O'Gorman Jr., 147 Abbev, Birmingham, will direct the com- mittee planning dedication cere- monies of two new fire stations ia city now under construction Mayor Charles Renfrew announced the ‘appointment O'Gorman, a former city com- missioner, headed an advisory committee which made a study of the need for additional stations in the city. The stations, at Chester and Maple and at Adams and ‘Bowers, are scheduled for com- pletion this summer. ‘ * * * Two Birmingham school PTA groups have elected new officers for the 1959-56 season. The Quarton PTA elected Mrs. Robert Wyatt, president, Mrs. V. | W. Greene, mother vice president and Lawrence Ball, father vice president. At Barnum Junior Hégh, Arthur Stuart unanimously elected presider Earl Maxwell was elected father vice president and Mrs. Joseph Cook II, mother vice president. the Was 1 WW coal es ? “The Medium,” a film version of the opera by Gian-Carlo Men- ott, will be shown to the public tonight in the science auditorium at Cranbrok Institute. The film, ei $$ — Birmingham news is now be- ing handled by correspondent Wayne Klein, who may be reached at Midwest 4.8153. awarded the grand prize for lyric file: drama at the film festival at Cannes, France, will begin at 7:5 p.m. The program is one of a series sponsered by the Foreign Film Club. B J Parents may obtain applica- tions for summer camp for their children at Holiday House, Pine Lake or Camp Chickami from the (St. James Episcopal Church office. | » * = | The Women Fellowship of the Congrezational C hurch of Birming- -ham will elect officers at its an- {nual meeting tonight at the church. The meeting begins at 8 p.m. Mrs. Donald Olson, president of the | Women's Fellowship of the Michi- gan Conference of Congregational Christian Churches, will conduct installation of new officers * * * Frank C. H. Jennings and burial for Frank C HH. Jennings will be held tomor- row in Springfield, Ohio. Jennings, R88 Henrietta, died at St. Joseph e Service Mercy Hospital. Pontiac, yester- dav. after a long Illness. He was 69. An auto dealer in Springfield for 22 years, he moved to Birmingham last year. Surviv- ing are his widow, Edith. three daughters, two brothers, and seven | grandchildren. : ‘Driver Pleads Guilty to Negligent Homicide David F. Bratton, 19, of 5435 Savoy, Waterford Township, plead- ed guilty to neghgent homticide yesterday before Oakland County Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland. He was charged in the death of George R. Horsley, 52, of 100 Mar- quette St. Horsley died shortly af- ‘ter Bratton’s auto hit his last Nov. 8 on Elizabeth Lake road a mile west of Pontiac. Bratton will be sentenced May 16, according to Assistant Prosecu- tor Homer -G. Gerue. BIRMINGHAM LOCKSMITH SERVICE KEYS sesicacs LOCK SAF Call Us—MI 4-7939 320 N. Woodward Ave. at Ockland JOHN JONES—Your Locksmith Keyed. Opened Repaired, Installed Combinations Changed. Ofened | I i Wednesday is Double Red Stamp Day at National F ood Stores Play “Bonanzagram” Weekly 7 , Win Large Cash Awards ¥ piers — ——— — Organized iBecond of Five Articles) By DON WHITEHEAD WASHINGTON Ww — Organized labor is planning today tp move into politics in the 1956 elections on a scale never before attempted in the history of the American trade union movement. This move will begin after the AFL and CIO merge their 140 un- ions into one 15-million-man_ or- ganization this fall—perhaps in De- cember AFL President who will head the said in “We're going as far down .that tpolitical) road as it is necessary George Meany, new federation, an interview to go to achieve our objective—' Novice Considers Politics Unrewarding STUDENTS TAKE TOUR — Schools from the counties which are served by Pont bring bus loads of students eact Open House program which began Sunday at the 3 Issues Face City Commission Tonight First reading of a new taxicab ordinance, consideration of e much-postponed rezoning request and a report on a Circuit Court decision regarding peddling on Pontiac streets are on tap for to- 2 ght's City Commission meeting. The taxi ordinance provides for increases in fares and placing of advertisements on the rear of cabs. For what some observers be- lieve will be the last time, the Commission will again take up a request te rezone most of Glenwood Estates Subdivision to residential classification. City Attorney William A. Ewart will report on the decisien against the city handed down by the Cir- Court this week. The ecourt ruled in favor of a defendant ar- rested for selling ice cream on city streets. FE:wart is also scheduled to re- port on a set-back agreement for cuit Joseph L. and Victoria Palace on Baldwin avenue City Manager Walter K. Will man is due to repert on an offer to the city to buy land on the east side for another sewage disposal plant, and the disposal of city- owned houses on Parke strect and the city hall annex en Hill street. The Commission is also set to consider Renewal application for club li- censes for Eagles Lodge and_the Mellow Lane Club Resolutions to accept deed for part of an alley and to approve an agreement for alley improve- ments off Auburn avenue, as well as action to vacate an ad- joining part of the same alley. Appointment of a member to the Police and Fire Trial Board. A communication from the city of Berkley supporting a senate bill concerning development of water supply sources. ; Engineer’s estimates are to be / i j THE PONTIAC PRESS Over 54,000 Circulation Largest in Our History Labor and that objective is the living standards ing man.” of the work- * * s This plunge into politics will be | an historic turning point for labor | far as the 10-million-member AFL is concerned. In the past, the AFL has remained pretty as much | on the political sidelines except to} endorse this or that candidate for | public office, although the CIO has i been active politically for years. Meany believes now labor must move onto the political front in force for self-protection, This is his reasoning: “We are being compelled by the 10 tac State Hospital n day during the ,presented for the following pro}- | ects: ‘ force of events to take defensive | PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 3, 1955 & the raising of| action to make sure that we are | laws which curb the use of union funds for political purposes. The Taft-Hartley law forbids the use of union funds for political pur- not hampered and restricted at the | | bargaining table. We are being} compelled to enter the political | field in order to change the politi- shop, in which only union mem- cal picture that is developing) bers may be hired. The law per- against labor. And the job must be | mits, under certain conditions, the done not only on the national level | union shop, im whtich a worker —but on the state level. |must become a union member nd Re | within a certain period after he is “The Taft-Hartley law and re-| hired. Now 18 states have the strictive State laws are putting all right-to-work laws, which for the the weapons in the hands of em-! most part ban the union shop. ployers, So there is no other way| Some states are moving, too, to poses and it also bans the closed | left open to us but to take political | curb union political activity. Planning Large-Scale Entry Into American Politics After AFL-CIO Merger labor from a new direction, There | the Taft-Hartley law in combina-; Labor's political strategy will be, The-answer would seem to be in is a new effort to block us on the; political front and to prevent our members from taking action on a political level. * * * “But I say we are going to be| new power and influence in the as a bloc for any one party or candidate? \ political to the extent that we are forced to be in the protection of table. What the hell is the use of tion with the growing state re- strictions merely are moves by la- movement, which has boomed to past 20 years. The states with right-to-work ; kansas, Florida, Georgia, | areas where there is a good chance : y ‘to elect candidates friendly to la- bor’s enemies to throttle the labor? po, : to concentrate the main effort in) those states where there is the |heaviest concentration of union |members. And these states are lee ar ; Can the labor vote be delivered |New York, Pennsylvania, Califor- hia, Michigan, Illinois, Ohio, New Jersey, Texas, Missouri, and Labor leaders believe that with| Massachusetts, But many other our own rights at the bargaining| laws are Alabama, Arizona, Ar-| intense political education, work- | states have important numbers of Iowa, | erg will better understand how to| labor votes. The question is wheth- going to the bargaining table if| Louisiana, Mississippi, Nebraska, | vote in their own interests—and in| er labor's leaders can hold them you are going to have your hands tied behind your back?” | Meany has had political experi-| kota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, and er political force. ence in helping push prolabor laws action.” Meany referred to the spread of } so-called “right to work” laws and | In referring to these laws, Mearfy said: ‘‘We are seeing right now a new move under way to strike at | through the New York Legislature. * * * As he and his colleagues see it} Nevada, North Carolina, North Da-| kota, South Carolina, South Da-)| Virginia. 'the interests of the labor mov ment—thus becoming a far strong: | Where could organized e-| in line at the polls. In any event, labor is getting jready for a political push, And labor | just how potent it will be may be While none of the bigger indus-| make its weight felt most heavily | reflected in the 1956 elections, trial states have such laws, labor | by a vigorous campaign in support | is fearful of their spread. |of its candidates? |Next: A third party? $$ $_______+_—___4 + cae ie | a | | | \ | an wee : ae, eee | Pentiac Press Phete | hospital Pictured is a group which lined up for a tour at 9 o'clock Monday morning. The Open House will continue through Wednesday. street from Oakland to Corwin Curb, gutter and drainage on Peggy avenue from Voorhels to Hazel Curb, gutter and drainage on Colo- | Curb, gutter and drainage on Fourth “rado street from Franklin road to Bag- avenue from Joslyn to Fuiler Curb, gutter and drainage on Gerdon Car Courtesy You're driving your car, minding | your own business Contest Opens - jspecial assessment rolls for the / following Curb. e er and drainage o Shef- field aven from Baldwin to Univer- ity Curb. e er and drainage on Beverly | enue from Baldw t University | Cu gutter and drainage on Cornel | aver fr Bald t University | Curb. gutter ar 2 ge on Ypei- nti avenue from Ba to Univer- | | ewer t aska avenue ewer ea of Motor to ener t Cc ado avenue : sewer east to Motor to| ) ; Water main in Featherstone avenue Suddenly, you're stopped by a Pontiac Policeman, who asks, “Let me see your operator's li- cense, please." He jots down your name, ad- dress and other statistics, but !there’s no cause for alarm — it's | not a traffic ticket the officer is about. to issue. | The officer had just nominated ‘you as his choice for the “Be a Courteous Driver’ contest which | started Sunday. } Each week winners of the con- test, sponsored by the Pontiac Police Offieers’ tea will be announced in’ the’ Press. Two tickets to a local theater, dinner for two, and other gifts will be presented to the week's courte- ous driver, Huch Stimsen, association president. “We hope that through this con- j test,” said Stimson, “‘we,can pro- 'mote more thoughtfulness among drivers. Pontiac was reported. in last place in a nation-wide traffic |survey recently; perhaps, the | city’s motorists can help us. get back up there again,” “Try to get the name of the |courteous motorist,”’ said Stimson. | ‘If you're unable to do that, write 4 said 'drainage &nd eight-inch ion Portland street from Montcalm | Said Dr, Noboru Tanaka, who con- | said statistics show many Japan- down the license number of the car | 4and state whether it was a man or , woman driving. Also mention the courteous act, when and where it happened.” | Letters should be addressed to the Pontiac Police Officers’ Assn. ‘at Box 777, Pontiac. | PONTIAC AUTO SHOW UNIT — This Pontiac traveljng exhibit, one of ‘four stich tnits now ‘in operation, is shown as it was being readied to start on its four of dealer showrooms and automdbile shows. | representative acts as driver, lecturer during the stiows and handles | broke up this morning at 2 a.m. The compact unit carries one of the Pontiac experimental cars, a dis- play engine, lights, props, planter racks fi * and. literature, A 4 Pontiac 7 ley * / Public hearings are slated on from Kenilworth to Belt Line Rallread Confirmation of special assess- | ment rolls is set for the following: | | Curb. gutter and drainage on Whit- | fleld street from Saginaw to Edison | Curb, gutter and drainage on Hamil- ton street and McNeil street from Bald- | win to Rundell | Curb, gutter and drainage on Drexel avenue from Paddock to South boule- vard | Also on the 29-point agenda is a | resolution to receive special as- | sessment rolls for curb, gutter, concrete | | and Kennett road from to University. to Owen Baldwin | | Hint Radiation Sickness as Hiroshima Boy Dies TOKYO tP—-A hich school stu- dent from Hiroshima died today and doctors hinted strongly it was caused by radiation sickness. | Makoto Chiba, 18, bedridden at | the Japan Red Cross Central Hos- | pital since October, died of a short- age of white and red blood cells, ducted the autopsy, Tanaka said the death may have been related to the 1945 atomic bombing, He ese in Hiroshima and Nagasaki) are affected with leukemia. Dr. Hisatoshi Miyata said Mak. | oto was exposed to radiation ef- fects for two months in 1945. Japanese ascribe three deaths in, Hiroshima this year to radiation, sickness. oo | Michigan State College. Editor Dale Stafford Tells of Campaign Experiences Editor's Note’ Editor Dale Stafford of the Greenville News made his first bid for public offtce In the April 4 election The official canvass showed he lost out by some 2.000 votes in his try for the State Board of Agri-: cultur Stafford has wtten @ series of two articles reviewing his experiences as a first-time campaigner By DALE STAFFORD Editor, The Greenville News GREENVILLE (PsSo-o-0, you are thinking about into politics Maybe you would like to hear about politics and the experience of a novice in the game. Out of our initia] experience have come three conclusions that stand out more than the others. They are: 1. The quality of people holding public office is remarkably high when you consider the sacrifice people have to make to get elected. | 2. A disturbing thing is the in which too large a | portion of the population holds “‘politicians.”’ 3. The Republican Party in Michigan is in about the same shape | as were the Democrats before G. Mennen Williams and his forces | took over. | getting contempt A career as a politician started for us on Feb. 19 at the state Republican convention in Detroit. We were nominated for one or two places on the State Beard of Agriculture. To our chagrin learned that nine out of 10 voters don’t know what this body does. we So that you may know, we repeat here that its sole job is to govern Michigan State University (darn near wrote it State College). The campaign for the April 4 election started March 6 way at Marquette in the Upper Peninsula. And it kept right on up to election day. If your presence at home is required by family ties or a business, | then don't go into politics at the state level. Here are some other don'ts: > like meeting people. Don't get in the game if you | can't do things that may be per- sonally distasteful to you. the school. Probably the other candidates had reasons just as logical. We mentioned being disturbed | at the contempt which some Don't seek office if you aren't Michigan § e AP Wirepheote THINGS TO COME — Artists’ conceptions of scien- , left, machine to take up and lay railroad track; top tific and industrial probabilities as presented to the | right, train of future; bottom left, flying saucer; and | his atomic hot rod, turns on the : -} air-conditioning, heads for a ball : : . | game in Yankee Stadium. That's Don't try politics if you don't) on various councils connected with 220 miles away. Couple of hours’ | drive. | Mom and Pop are spending the day in Paris. It’s a six-hour round trip, via 200-passenger jet. Mom didn’t bother to wash the break- fast dishes. Just flicked a sound- | willing to accept decisions which | peo show towa: office- a you may not ike | args! “e wave gadget. That washed ‘em , ; . _ dried ‘em, stacked ‘em Don't run if you aren't in top angers, ; c 3 This came to us from strang Visiswary* No. steictly jac: physical COREE O. , | friends of many years standing Don't run if you detest Swiss | aed even paper editors who| steak. This item has become the | ; ; standard piece de resistance at all. ought to be interested in good government, dinners preceding political rallies. “What in the. world are you And last, don't run if you get} bored by the sound of your own | getting messed up in politics voice. Likewise, if Nearing the| for?’ was a question we heard same speeches of associates over | numerous times. | We would try to answer. | and over disturbs your tranquility | The place we were the least! then stay out of politics. A footnote might include, don’t} convincing was the Elks Club in) Sault Ste. Marie. ‘‘Shine’’ Sund- | run as a Republican unless you are prepared to pay part of the | strom, managing editor of the, cost. No money sifted down from} Sault Evening News, introduced the Republican state organization to this candidate. us to a young man. | “What does this job pay that. Cartoonists used to picture | enema he = Republicans as the rty of j» Nothing, we repiied. 4 Sak If it is, then meet | A look of incredulity crossed his | evident to this candidate in the | face. Then he revived. recent spfing election. “What's the pitch then?” he Five of the eight offices up for ®sked. uThere’s - to nl - decision in the recent spring elec-, OF YoU womde't : Fé a n tion are non-salaried—regents of Winter trying to get: elected. | the University of Michigan, State Board of Agriculture and State | At the outset we remarked that | Board of Education. | the caliber of people holding public At various rallies people asked | office is remarkably high when | why we were seeking office. The| you consider the price they have | answer was two-pronged. | to pay to get elected. 7 First, we believe that the great |- Certainly in the long run politics American form of government | offers little reward. deserves some of the time of every o put the only reason we can, : | give for so many able people} true citizen. ; being in politics is that they have Second, the job we were seek-' been “bit by the bug.” | ing involved a_ trusteeship of} | He went away unconvinced. We suppose there is some satis- This iS faction in being called senator or an institution in which we have) commissioner and knowing that always held a mighty interest and) thousands of people voted for you. in years gone by we have served| We tried politics, but the “bug” Hasn't bit us. Drug Fim, Union Continue Meetings DETROIT (INS)—Parke, Davis | & Co. officials and representatives | of Local 176, CIO Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers, continued meetings in Detroit today in an effort to reach agreement on a} new contract. ; | A strike of 2,000 employes at | Parke-Davis, a major producer of | the Salk anti-polio vaccine, was | threatened last week but was averted by a day-to-day continua- tion of the 6id contract while negotiations are in pi N Last night's bargain ion _ inmates tual. At least, that’s what busi- hessmen were told at the annual meeting of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce. The peek into the future came at an exhibit entitled ‘People, Products and Processes, 1975." Fifty colored drawings, all based Blomes Beats Bill Affecting | included auto as it may be lived in the U. S. A. | 20_ years hence. Working drawings were sub- mitted by industry groups. They and aircraft firms, food chains, home builders, hotels, railroads, steel companies,” elec- tronics people, lumber men, pow- er interests. Chamber members were told that in 1995 trains, ships and autos will be atomic-powered. For city driving, cars will be tiny. They'll turn on a dime. But for .wse on the super-highways gdhey'll be air-conditioned cruis- ers, 20 feet long. Everything will be almost effort- Underground moving side- walks will handle city _ traffic Stores will have open fronts invisible curtains will shut out less Mental Patients’ Upkeep — LANSING \# — A bill to increase the state’s power to recover costs | of maintaining mental patients in state hospitals was soundly defeat- ed by the House last night. Turned down by a 66-23 vote. the measure would have made rela- tives responsible for the upkeep of long they were committed, provided the relatives could afford to do so Rep. Thomas J. Whinery (R- Grand Rapids), who sponsored the-bill, said the present law puts the burden of upkeep on rela- tives only if they can afford the costs at the time of*the inmate's commitment. as as | Whinery said in many cases a} relative cannot afford payments initially, but later in- herits money or through other cir- cumstances becomes able to pay. Rep. Gilbert Wales (D-Stam- baugh) led opposition to the bill He said it would create hardships in many cases, and could be mis- | interpreted. to make | Also defeated by the House was | a bill to re-define the practice of chiropractic, giving the science a broader interpretation in connec- tion with licensing by the state. Rep. Louis C. Cramton (R-La- peer) argued that the measure had not been given a hearing requested by the Michigan Med- ileal Society. Three bills increasing allowable disability and retirement benefits for firemen and policemen were passed by the House and sent to the Senate. A bill arising out of the Lapeer Farm Mutual Insurance Co. case was passed by the House and sen the Senate. Lapeer case drew national attention when shareholders of the | company were evicted for. failure to pay assessments, thus touching off the/ bitter “Fort Ziegenhart" setting up and dismantling of the exhibit at each location. The | George E. Bowles, chairman of the units,, ing out of Pontiac Motor Division, have appeared before | State Labor Mediation Board, said: 1,434,828 spectators during the first three months of 1955. | “We explored the issues further, jand reduced them substantially.” j { | “yy \ ae | : | \y ya i . \ f { | é -_ & | . ¥ | ie 4 i Le | a the in mutual Under measure, share- holders companies could not be assessed for liabili- ties if the company had unen- cumbered assets of one-third of one per cent of the insurance in force. Also passed by the House and sent to the Senate was a bill to Increase the amount of insur- ance required of motorists who have been ‘found to be not finan- cially responsible at the time of an | accident from $5,000 per individual and $10,000 per accident to $10,000 and $20,000. ——— | Chamber of Commerce of the United States are: Top} bottom right, man-carrying rocket. Marvels of Future Include Wall-Size TV, » Atomic Hot Rod for Junior's Road Racing | WASHINGTON (INS)—The date, on actual research, depicted life’ cold air in winter, hot air in sum- |is May 3, 1975. Junior leaps into | mer. Televisior’ screens—or so say the savants of commerce—will be wall size. All programs in full color, of course. A portable TV tape re- corder will pick up programs so they can be selected and run off at will In housing, the big changes will be inside. Most walls are to be eliminated. Outer wally will be of glass. Kitchens are to con- sist of pre-fabricated units. Foel- proof cookers will operate by push-button. i The business groups figure the U. S. population should increase from the present 165 million to at least 207 million by 1975. Lots of mouths to feed. But it won't be hard. Irrigation and reclamation will turn wasteland into productive farms. In the forests, lumberjacks will shoot hormones into growing trees to. season the wood. In sawmills, an invisible ray will slice logs. On the railroads, a machine. will rip up old track, lay new rails, put down a new roadbed, all in new | one operation. Flying saucers will be com- monplace. The U. S. will have a string of satetlites in outer space. Rocket ships will zip back and forth. Getting back to earth: Do you detest those long waits in the supermarket while your purchases are being checked? It won’t hap- pen in ‘75. An automatic com- puter and electronic eye will do. the work in a flash. cf WHAT'S MY LINE? Instructions: under arrow, 10 CEAK What's My Line, Inc. reading 7 TRYSAP downward. 8 DEARB © 1955 3 | i 9 DUHOG | j 11 oKiceo «CLI CLE Each word is reiated to my 1 SNYS work. Un- 2 SANHIO | scramble as 3 BRAKE few as possi- 4 SIPE ble A guess 5 SLORL } my line. An- swer appears 6 SAvEr Yevterdoy's Answer: a | benCh, recOrd, jUdge, juRy, odmiT, ’ bOok, tRiel, write, lawyEr, Ry. | y ee, ee ee co ee ie | i. —- . ren THE pont, AC PRES in Ceremony at Rochester paving Visor a Hansen Saturday in a double ring | The bride is the daughter of Mr. | Two Plats OKed mond Hansen of Washington are | |terford Township must be black- | tilly lace over layers of nylon ROCHESTER — Mary Eleanor | ceremony at St. Andrew Catholic) Township to Share and Mrs. Martin Stemmer, of 139 | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — All | the parents of the bridegroom. | topped by the subdivider, the town- net, Her three-tiered lace veil Mary E. Stemmer Is Wed Approval Given. Stemmer became Mrs. Darwin Ce as +.| in Road Oiling Costs; Rochdale Dr. Mr. and Mrs. Ray- | | roads included in new plats in Wa- “\$The bride’s gown was of chan- |ship board decided by resolution | MRS. DARWIN HANSEN Lynch, another cousin, and Thom- was held by a_ half-crown llast night. pearis and rhinestones, and she | The board also voted to share carried stephanotis and carna- | c . ‘ena, contersd sith a white | one-third of the cost of road oil or party | chloride for township roads. at. f Trustee Willard Johnson jis to replace Supervisor Lloyd Ander- son on the township recreation beard, and trustee Oscar Loomis was re-appointed to the board. Anderson will represent the town- | ship board on the County Central Planning Council. Clerk Louis Bar- ry was re-appointed to the tqwn- Barbara Stemmer was maid of | honor for her sister. Bridesmaids | were Rosemarie Stemmer, Bever- ly York, cousins of the bride, and Bernadine Morock. Arnold Pawlowski, the bride's cousin, was best man, and Paul as Bankowski served as ushers. County Deaths Mrs. Emma Mae McCracken ROMEO — Service for Mrs. Emma Mae McCracken, 69, of 271 E. Lafayette, will be held at 2 p.m, Wednesday at the Roth's Home for Funerals, with burial in Romeo Cemetery. A resident ot Romeo for 50 years she died here Sunday. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs, Maude Hall of Detroit and Mrs. Lena Pekkerinen of Duluth, Minn. A son, Thomag of Rochester and a sister, Mrs. Maude LeQue of Detroit. Mrs. Minna 8. Chatfield DRAYTON PLAINS—Service for Mrs. Minna S. Chatfield, 91, of 4424 Lamson Dr., will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday from the Wil- liam Sullivan Funeral Home, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. She died Sunday. Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. Sumner DeLano of Detroit, Mrs. Georgea McKinivan of Chats- worth, Calif., Mrs. June Osborne of Dayton Plains, Mrs. Ivan Atkin- | son of Detroit, 10 grandchildren and 20 great-grandchildren. 40 Fire Volunteers Complete Training AVON ‘TOWNSHIP Forty volunteer firemen have completed instructions and passed tests in) The township's firefighters were | taught by Pontiac Firemen David H. Warrilow and Lawson T. Evans. I Siege ucaigeeen of eek: gab | Bade, | Pontiac Lake MOMS | first aid and inhalator treatment. | ship zoning board of appeals. Under discussion was the devel- opment of the Harrington recrea/, tion area, being sponsored by t Four Towns residents and the t ship recreation department, The board reaffirmed its willing- ness to provide the necessary Following a wedding reception in the evening at the K of C Hall in Utica, the couple left for a week's honeymoon through - the southern | funds to develop the planned park states. os area, as previously Upon t i potas tay wil aaa Action was taken on two plats. | their home at 141 Ferndale St. | ane Watkins Hills subdivision ad- ° joining Drayton Woods subdivi- sion te the north and Lakewood sub to the south was given final approval. Temproary approval was given Berkshire Villa, at Maceday Lake | and Airport roads, subject to ac- quiring an access right of way on Harpar avenue. night when scores of local citizens| Several licenses were approved. | rushed to witness a fire which which |A hawkers and peddlers license for the Blue Island Sales, on Dixie partially destroyed a barn behind| Highway, applied for by Anthony | a residence at 306 Chandler. Matakas, a soft drink license for Flames shot high into the air,| White Swan, Frederick Render, a causing spectators to remain at | transfer of the Eagles Lodge liquor. some distance. Volunteer firemen | license to 4761 Highland road, sub- summoned by neighbors, were| ject to final approval as to code | able to control the blaze in 30/| regulations, all. were granted. minutes, | Plans for a water system for Owner of the building is Louis Holidays farms subdivisions three who reported the barn con-' and four were accepted by the tained empty crates and benches. | board. Cause of the fire is undetermined, | =n to fire chief Walter ‘South Lyon Lyon Pupils ‘Receive Polio Shots Switch Meeting Place | SOUTH LYON — Twenty-one WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — A} children who were jill recently and change in the place tor the/ unable to receive the Salk polio Wednesday meeting of the Pontiac | vaccine were transported to the Lake MOMS Unit 60 has been ah- | Oakland County health department nounced. |for the shots yesterday. The group will get together at| The 260 pupils of the first and | | Downtown Romeo Fire Draws Crowd ROMEO — Traffic was snarled | sages jie Weapons to units of the ‘from London said Any emergency requiring inhala- | 1 p.m. at the home of Mrs. T. M.' second grades of the Novi, New tor calls can now be handled by | Nelsey, 8120 Gale road, instead of | Hudson and South Lyon area had the township's department, which at the home of Mrs. Lorena Ogg. | been given the vaccine earlier. recently acquired the new life-sav: | ing apparatus. Mearl VanGilder is the tawnshi chief, | In 1854, the expectation of life (less than 40 years. Dr. inoculation, Sanford Stone gave the assisted by nurses p's volunteer fire at birth in England and Wales was | Mrs. James Wallace and Mrs. Do- | lores Allen. Velerans Organizations, Church Clubs of County Area Electing New Officers Clubs, church groups, veterans and civie organiztions of commu- nities in the Oakland Conty area have announced the election or in- | vice president, Mrs. Elmer Cor. | j nell; junior vice president, Mrs. | Douglas Bollar; treasurer, Mrs. Others named were Mrs. Burton | Brosius, Mrs. Yula Hallberg, Mrs. | Kathryn Tower, Mrs. John Ish, Mrs. Edward Pumphrey, Mrs. Ve- stallation of new officers for the Maurice Chriscinske. Also named | +4 Roman, Mrs. Earl Jacob. Mis. fiscal year. Among them are: Keego Harbor The new VFW home in Keego Harbor was the scene recently of joint installation ceremonies of the VFW Post 2706 and ifs auxiliary. Auxiliary officers installed are Margaret Terrault, president) Milweda Currie, senior vice pres- ident; Josephine Nichols, vice president; Lola Cullins, treasurer; Emma Wilson, secre- | tary; Pearl Cooley, conductress; Vivian Harbruger, chaplain, Others are Grace Oerfitz, Max-. ‘ine Dingle, Lillian Parker, Merie Lattimer, Luella Dale, Fannie Chakroff, Florence Schingeck, and Lillian Parker, Hilda Viswat, Lu- elle Dale. Margaret Ballard of Pontiac VFW Auxiliary 1370 was the in- stalling officer, assisted by Martha | LaMond of Hi-White Auxiliary 9914, Oxbow Lake. Metamora Recently elected officers of the Metamora unit of the Lapeer Coun ise Lasher, secretary-treasurer; Mrs. Harry Wittaker, representa- tive on the county's hospital board. Mrs, Ronald Walker was placed in charge of membership, and re a Alfen is publicity chair- junior — were Mrs. Delbert Smith: Mrs. | Martin Hillman, Mrs. Archie Grey | land Mrs, Charles Cornell. - Tenth District delegates are Mrs, Arther Stover ang Mrs. Charles Cornell, and alternates are Mrs, Chriscinske and Mrs. Smith, Mrs, Elmer Cornel] is de- | partment delegate, and Mrs, Chri- | Scinske is alternate, Public installation wall be at 8&8 p.nv, Tuesday | munity Room held in the Cém Avon Township Mrs. David Hackett will: be in ‘stalled as president of Stile School PTA at a meeting scheduled for 8 p.m. Thursday at the school. Others to be placed in office are ' Orville Sharp, father vice presi- | dent; Mrs. Bonnie Norman, teach- |er vice president; Mrs, Robert Greer, secretary and Mrs, Vernon | Shurtz, treasurer. Installing officer wil be Mrs. Leslie Walters, past president of the PTA. There will be a pro- gram of band music. Ortonville The WSCS of the Ortonville Meth- odist Church elected Mrs. William Narrin as its president at a re- cent meeting, Mrs. Carol Bilger is the new recording secretary. Porter Martin, Mrs. Alfred Cooper. Chairman of the MaryNarrin Circle ts Mrs. Paul Bindig. and Mrs | Keith Baird is chairman ot the | Esther Circle. Marlette Mrs, Charles Joslin was named to head the new Evening Fellow- ship Circle of the Marlette Meth- odist Charch WSCS, and Mes, Rex Taylor is the secretary and treasurer, The group set the fourth Monday | night of each month as its regular meeting date. Dryden Mrs. Althea Duckert is the new president of the WSCS of the Dryden Methodist Church. Vice president is Mrs, Lois Braidwood, while Mrs. Hazel Harbor fills the secretary post. — Other officers are Mrs. L. Har- mer, treasurer; Mrs, Blanche Chappo, Mrs. Florence Harmer, Mrs.. Marguerite Peck, Mrs. Mayme Elisworth, Mrs. Lillie Ulrich and Mrs. Pauline Went- worth. Watertord Township The first meeting of the Tull Acres Civic Assn. was held re- cently, and officers were elected. Merle Lowe is president; Kenneth Smith vice president, Mrs. Carl Robinson, secretary-treasurer, WEDNESDAY IS DOUBLE RED MS ame. DAY TU ESDAY, MAY 3, 1953 oard Orders Blacktopping of New Roads ‘Mary E. Shove Becomes Bride of Aaron Fournier Film Program _MRS. AARON W. FOU RNIER- S. Plans fo Train RAF on Atom Bombs | NEW YORK (®—The New York | Times said today the United States j has agreed to train selected Brit- ish bomber crews to use Ameri- can atomic weapons. “This agreement clearly envi- the delivery — in a war} emergency—of United States atom- | Royal Air Times dispatch Force,”’ the * J The report added that the actual weapons would only be turned over to the British from U.S. stocks in | Europe on the order of the Ameri- can President, as required by U.S. law, * * * In amending the McMahon act last year, Congress authorized the | President to release to allies lim- ited atomic information—none of it top secret—for use in defense planning and training. The act also authorizes the President to deliver atomic weapons to the U.S. De- fense Department for “‘such use as he deems necessary in the in- | terest of national defense.” ROYAL OAK — ‘Nuptial Vows | were spoken by Mary Elizabeth | Shove and Aaron William Four- niet Saturday in a ‘morning service | at the: Shrine of the Little Flower. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William G. Shove, of | Royal Oak. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene | W. Fournier of Milford are the ‘ parents of the bridegroom. The bride wore a gown with a white silk taffeta bodice with | cap sleeves, and appliques of Chantilly lace outlining the ba- teau neckline. Her bouffant skirt of nylon tulle extended into a cathedral train. Sister of the bride Mrs. Charles Reyes was the matron of honor, and Lucille Shove, sister of the bride, and Mrs. George Imhoff, sister of the bridegroom, were the bridesmaids. Brother of the bridegroom gene J. Fournier was the man, ard H. Charles Reyes, Fak ilecturer Dennis Glen Cooper will Carver Board Sets Date Planned for TA Ordered Recall Vote Dennis Glen Cooper | ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP — The to Appear Thursday George Washington Carver board for Stringham Group | of education lost a court bout yes- | |terday, and set the date for a WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Na- | recall election ordered by the Oak- tionally known explorer and travel | tion of the strife-torn school dis- trict which has been the scene of a turbulent history since its for- mation in 1945. Mitchell Raps Dems land County Circuit Court. | Judge Frank L. Doty denied a | petition to set aside the court or- ' speak and show his own color mo- | dered recall election for members tion Betures at the 8 p.m. Thurs- | Chester Carter and Mrs, ; Loretta day meeting of the Stringham , | PTA. The meeting will be held at the | . . | that the election will be held Isaac Crary Junior High School. The film represents a score of | expeditions by boat, plane and ear, cover the coasts of Lakes Huron, Michigan and Superior. Eu | Included are many orincipal | | parks and favorite tourist places. | | Among the highlights are scenes | | Baker, Following the hearing yester- day, the beard posted a notice May 12%. Polls will, be open from 7 a:m. to 8 p.m. at the school. | The notice was signed by board | member Mrs.: Lucille Taylor, act- ing for board secretary Mrs. Ba- | ker. Petitions seeking the recall were —¢Doll, George Imhoff, Nick Sesock |!" and around Detroit, a canoe | circulated by a Citizens Improve- j}and Louis Hardenburg. After a reception, the couple | left for a two-week tour of Florida. | ‘To Discuss Carnival FOUR TOWNS — The execu “ board of the Four Towns will meet at the home of ee C. E. Patterson, 1530 Lochaven at 8 p.m. Wednesday to discuss plans | for the forthcoming school | carnival County Calendar Auburn Heights Mary Martha Missionary Group of Au burn aeetents Presbyterian Church will day at the home of Mrs. Walter Peel, 3183 Henry 8t Awburn Heights Rochester Several guilds of the First Congre- gational Church will hold Wednesday meetings. The Bethany Guild wtll meet at 8 pm. at the home of Mrs. Alice Bitss. and the Plymouth QOuild will meet | 7 p.m. et the home of Mrs. Harry Markie The Town and Country Guild will meet at &@ pm. at the home of Mrs. Merrill Niles and the Olivet Quild will meet at 2 pm. at the church Waterferd Tewnshbip Mrs. T M. Nelsey of Geile road will entertain the Pontiac Lake MOMS Unit ata l pm es Wednesday. Thom Oakwood Lodge Peam 100 will hold &@ special meeting for conferring of de- eae on Waiter Hart! at Sat- rday at the OES hall oe with Py ehicken dinner The Rose Francis Past" Matrons Club will meet at 1 pm. Wedhesday at the OES hal] for a cooperative dinner end meeting trip to the AuSable river, water falls of the north country, and | Mackinac Island. Baltimore’s Voters Pick Mayor Today BALTIMORE (P—After a color- | ful campaign featurfhg a parody | /of the Davy Crockett ballad, refer- | ;ences to baseball and charges of | ment Committee, and filed by board member James E. Harrison. Harrison leads a reform minor- ity on the five member boards, | | seeking changes in the edministra- | brea Rapids Angler sets Boat, Drowns eeaND HAVEN iw — James | will be barred by a 70 per cent of Grand Rapids | Vote of the delegates. iW izorik, 54, drowned while fishing with a com- bossism, Baltimoreans choose their | anion in a bayou just off the mayor today. About half of the 400,000 eligible | /were expected to vote on whether | Democrat Thomas D’Alesandro | should get a third straight four- |year term or be replaced by Re- publican Samuel Hopkins. * * * | In the last 28 years, D’Alesandro has been elected to the State Leg-| islature, City Council and Con- gress. He has never lost election. Hopkins, a 41-year-old widower and bank official, had the backing of the Baltimore Sun papers. Four years ago he was the only Repub- lican among 42 state legislators from Baltimore, where Democrats hold a 4-1 edge in registration. He lost a later rn run s for Congre SS. | boat to put on a jacket. ‘field swam to safety. an- Grand River last night. James Grakefield, 36, also: of Grand Rapids, told police both were thrown into the river when Wizorik stood up in their small | Grake- | Berlin Workers Razing Russian Tank Memorial BERLIN wW—German workmen) today began dismantling the Soviet tank memorial, symbol of the first Russian war machines to crash the Nazi defenses of Berlin. The Russians agreed last July to remove the memorial, which irate _Germans had delaced. for Supporting Ike | BIRMINGHAM, Ala. u—Stephen | A. Mitchell last night sounded a |warning to Southern Democratic ,leaders who vote Republican and |then expect to help choose their party’s candidate for president. “My strongest wish is that our opposition in the Democratic party would resign when they can't support a party Democrat,” said the chairman of the powerft} Rutes Committee of the 1956 national convention. He is a former nation- al Democratic chairman. * * * Mitchell said in a University of Alabama lecture that if former Gov. Jimmy Byrnes f South Car- olina and Governors Allan Shiv- |ers of Texas and Robert F. Ken- non of Louisiana seek seats at the ee convention, he believes they | He called the three Southern | party leaders ‘‘political apos- tates." They supported Eisenhower for president in 1952. Legislator Replaces Sleeping Leader Dog LANSING (UP) — A leader dog jwho used to sleep through Mich- igan's legislative sessions has been replaced by a dog who stays | awake. | Rep. Robert Mahoney (D-De- troit) said he has decided to leave “Happy,” a 12-year-old boxer, at home during the sessions. A 2-month-old shaggy-haired German shepherd named ‘‘Sandy”’ will accompany Mahoney from " now on Mahoney said his new leader dog is ‘‘a a little-r more alert.’ Now -watch your gas needle move more, slowly— Brand NEW! A gasoline at regular price iS that gives you more miles per gallon! ‘ NEW Mobil More miles per gallon . . . with better perform- ance than ever! That’s the story of new Mobil-' gas with higher octane, plus Mobil Power Com- pound—three important, gas-saving additives. Here’s how these additives save you money: ADDITIVE #1—Saves gasoline by control- ling pre-ignition and spark plug mis-firing. ADDITIVE 72—Savye gavetine hy redon -MoBI LGAS | aS with Mobil Power Compound | ing the stalling due to carburetor icing. ADDITIVE #3—Saves gasoline by com- bating engine-formed gum and by helpingto keep carburetor and fuel system clear. If your car uses “regular,” you'll be thrilled — with how much better your engine performs indy wapannend oe le lag acmarah - eave ies Rr sean i we, Lieu Sasiinn tabcigicsiving Pay Qhnimctines _ patos Soy Brenee » We maintai > principal > quotati ee ee ee ee ee ee et di ti i de de te td ect line toa member of all 4 changes with up-to-the-minute 4 service available at all times. ll, Ale, ls, nn, l,l, ll, ln, tl, l,l, i,t, tl, ti, tls, tlt, t,t, ll, ili, C. J. Nephler Co. 414 Community National Bank Bldg. FE 2-9119 to fit your special Financing plans 5 NN 4 that make sense | and save dollars! The soundest way to home ownership is via one of our low-cost mortgage loans, tailored needs! | monthly payments often amount to less than rent! Come in today, and talk it over with us! Capitol Savings & Loan Co. 75 West Huron St. — FE 4-0561 All - inclusive Complete Investment Facilities ...» at Your Finger Tips Just pick up your phone and call us for experienced service on your investments. come—by phone, by letter or in’ person. WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. Member New York Stock Exchange end other leading ——- PONTIAC OFFICES , an Pontiee State Bonk Building Your muerte are wel- Grains Record - Slight Changes CHICAGO w — Grains. recorded only very small price changes in another session of slow dealings on the Board of Trade today. At the outset most contracts were fractionally lower, Even soy- beans, which had been indepently firm yesterday, joined the decline. But the market made a slight re- covery aS the session wore or. Wheat-near the end of the first hour was % lower to % higher, May $2.10%; corn % lower to % higher, May $1.43%; oats % to 2 higher, May 7154; rye unchanged to % higher, May 97'2; soybeans unchanged to % higher, May 2.51%; and lard 3 to 7 cents a hundred pounds higher, May $12.32. i * . Grain Prices a -“May 3 (AP)—Opening ain Wheat July. 5 99 (May 02 21044 Bept 1.01% | July seoee 194s Dee 1.05% | Sept eos 1954 Soybeans TOOC a keceus 1.98 fay .. 2.$0' | Cor Jay sewass: 2.42% | May cesses 143) Sept ....... 2.38 | July ae 45% Nov 231% Bept .,....- 143% Jan eouce 2-11 | Dec. vow 1-3T% Lar | Oats May -eecs 123.32 May won TUM JU wocee ens 12.72 | July .. -« 66% g : 3.10 Sept owes 6614 oybean Oil | Dee ..2. 6842 “caaen £036 Ry . May ..... 97 Teamsters OK Pact With Lumber Firms DETROIT & — AFL Teamsters ent of a wage dispute. s of the settlement were t disclosed. | James R, Hoffa, president of the Teamsters Joint Council, said he | | will recommend acceptance of the | agreement at a membership meet- | ing of Local 458 Friday night. He | said he is confident it will be, ‘accepted. The settlement put off threat of | a strike of 2,000 drivers, helpers and warehousemen of lumber deal- ers im the Detroit area. The Detroit Lumbermen's Assn. sets the pattern for 225 dealers in Wayne,: Oakland, Monroe and Washtenaw counties, Detroit Edison Shares Earn $2.18 Last Year -. NEW YORK wW — Detroit Edi- | ‘son's 1955 earnings will be about | the $2.18 a share registered in the | 12 months ended March ‘31, Wal- | ker L, Cisler, president, told the | annual meeting Monday, | | creased dividend, ‘That is a mat- | ter we would want to consider very | carefully in the light of conditions as they develop,” he said. | Stockholders voted the company | authority to sell up to 60 million ‘dollars of convertible debentures, if they were first offered to stock- holders, However, the company said that this year’s 85 million dol- lar construction program will be | financed by the sale of mortgage bonds and from internal. sources. Birmingham Man Gets Tool Engineers’ Award | Recently receiving the past Na- | MARKETS Produce DETROIT PRODUCE . OTT, May 2 (UP) — Wholesale blic farmers’ markets re- Bureau of Markets: uits; Apples, Delicious, fancy, 5.00 bu; Not, 4 ay oed hg on rma Jonathon, fancy, 4.00 bu; N 25 be; apples, McIntosh, wel ie, bu; ue 1. 4 od 3.95 bu; apples, Northern Spy. 3.30-3.50 bu; fancy, ‘foo bu; apples, weaesie's Red, = - 3.75-4.00 bu. tables. Asparagus, No Beets, topped No Gervete ei we 1, Rory Lis des 3.00-4. behs i yesa 1% 00-1 80 bu. 60-75 dos ; onions, sets, No 1. 2.25- 2.75 33-lb bag. Parsnips, ed ‘ 1.50-2.00 bu. Potatoes, No 1, 2.7 Ib 3.00 50 bag: potatoes, No 1, 536-8 90. ‘100 Tb bag. Rhubarb, hothouse, No 1, 60-70 § Ib Heres rhubarb, outdoor, No 1, 15-80 doz be Rutabagas, No 1, 1.28-i.50 bu. team bg ecto Ne 1, 1.80-2.00 bu Greens: Sorrel, No a = bu. Spinach, No 1. 1.28-180 b CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO, May 2.—(USDA): Arrivals 262 old stock, 31 new stock: on track old stock 436. new stock 47; total U. 8. shipments Priday 734, Saturday $03 and Sunday 2. Old stock supplies Mberal, de- mand good and market slightly stronger; earlot track sale, old stock; Idaho Russets $6.35-6.90: Montana Russet Bakers $7.15; Minnesota North Dakota Pontiacs washed and waxed, wide range appearance and condition $4.3%-5.50. New stock supplies ‘tional Directors award of The, American Society of Tool Engin- | eers, Pontiac chapter 69, was Charles F. Staples, 1366 Yosemite, Birmingham. | Charles King, Chapter chairman, |. presented the award to Staples at the tool engineer’s April meeting. | ' D. C. Inman reported on the /23rd Annual Convention of Tool Engineers, held receritly in Los "Angeles. George F. Bryan was ‘named chairman of the National | Standards Committee. | A tour of Rochester's Detroit | |Broach Company was scheduled | _by the engineers for May 16. ‘Pontiac Man Jailed | Hugh McGinnis, 59, of S| ‘Paddock St., yesterday was sen- | tenced to a year ‘Tounty Jail by Circuit Judge H. ‘Russel Holland. McGinnis admitted April 26 to a _drunk and disorderly third offense committed here April -2. (ine ee oH) oe in Oakland |- ambs 23.00; cull to choice shorn ewes 4 50-6.00. Films of Holy Land 'to Receive Showing ROMEO — -& shepherd trom | ‘Galilee, Stephen A. Haboush will ciety of (Die Casting Engineers ‘Holding Meeting Tonight The monthly meeting of the So- Die Casting Engineers, _appear at the Romeo High School | Inc. will be held tonight at the | auditorium at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow Pontiac Hotel. ETS =i to speak and show his Holy Land i | travelogue. | Sponsored by St. John Lutheran Schmitt ‘ | Church, Haboush recently returned and Company. Dinner at 7:00 p.m. will be fol- lowed by an address by C.R. of E. F. Houghton Schmitt, nationally ‘from his native land of Palestine, known lubrication engineer, will where he took the films. Rummage Sale Set |The Lakewood Farms Women's | Auxiliary will sponsor a rummage | ‘wale to be held at 7:3 p.m... | chase playground equipment, WATERFORD TOWNSHIP —| present an illustrated lecture on |water base fire resistant hydrau- lie fluids. ‘Rooster Is Well-Equipped VINTON, Va. (UP)—Mr. and /Mrs. R, S. Caldwell own a big ednesday at the home of Mrs. black Australorp rooster that has bert Fulkerson, 759 Globe St. Proceeds will be used to pur- | The rooster also has a tiny set of 12 toes instead of the usual six. extra wings. a ee elt 2.00 | .| Cisler said he would make no: seid at 17.25; small lot sorted choice | Celanese | forecast about prospects for an in- | Valuables. and personal possessions! Proper cover your property 24 hours a day. H. W. Huttenlocher Agency PROTECT YOUR insurance protection will, Call the Aircrafts Look ‘to Downside NEW YORK i®—The stock mar- ket went moderately lower in‘early dealings today. f) The aircrafts were down and there was some selling in the rail- road and automobile groups. In the rest of the list, narrowly mixed prices were the general rule. The aircraft shares, which had one of the sharpest rises in the bull market, have been working lower in recent weeks. Lower first quarter earnings were re- perted by some of the companies. Aircrafts down a point or more included Boeing, United and Gen- eral Dynamics, Stromberg-Carison, which will be merged with General Dynamics, was off a point. National Biscuit, usually a quiet issue, was active and down 1. Ana- conda Copper advanced 142/on a sharp increase in profits, High Low Noon i7 a1) Baldwin Rubber* ...... Gerity-Michigan® ...,,. Kingston Products* .., Masco Screw® ........ 7 Midwest Abrasives cer Rudy Mtg En eaeee ' Wayne sees *No sale. bid and asked” td OD op ewone STOCK AVERAGES NEW YORK, May 3—Complied by The Associated Press 30 15 18 60 Indust. Ratis Util. Prone 13 Previous day....221.8 135.7 13 164.8 Week ago...... 2240 #1368 278 1668 Month ago.,....2182 1285 07 1656 Year ago.......1664 899 $0.3 122.4 1955 high..,....2249 1376 728 166.8 1955 low........2031 1140 672 1488 1954 high..,....2119 123.0 683 1552 1954 low.......1439 778 55.4 10806 Foreign Exchange NEW YORK, May 2? (AP)—Foreign ex- change rates follow (Great Britain in dollars, others in cents): +s « 1954: $1,444, about 5 per cent. 953: | ena taped $3,271, 000— down by not quite | per cent. 1953: ee 1984: 000—a drop of cbout 412 per cent. 1953: $4,806,000 .. . 1954: $3,553, enna bp dMowene’. GMC Truck & Coach, 13,202 Ford plant, had a production of 892,389 cars and trucks in the first four months of the year, compared with 735,137 in the peried of last year. Ford’s April production was 235,- 752 units divided as follows: Ford ears, 153,950: Ford trucks, 33,910; Mercury, 43.304, and Lincoln, 4,- 548. Chrysler Corp. plants produced | 149.284 cars and trucks in April, compared with 77,321 in the same month last year. The company’s volume in the first four months of this year totaled 581,583 units, compared with 284,010 in the same period last year. Chrysler's April Canadian dollar in New York open | | production by divisions: remium or of a cent. market 15/32 per. cent 101.16%% Ra cents, off 1/2 2 49 17/ | futures 2.79 5/32, ah day futures He 38/32, 3/16 of a cent. Belgium (franc) 1997/16, up 001/16 of a cent. Prance (franc) 28% of a cent, | mark) | (ira), 16% oe ‘4-2895 Pee, ‘ H.W. Huttenlocher Max E. Kerns ‘ 318 Riker Bldg -— FE 401551) . i { ‘ e ~ a f « ! i * » ' Z { ye / } pa \ : aD ae a * B = ‘ \ 4 ; pied \ 1 at : & \ by Ay ee | \ ay ee iN ’ i = i t eh A Ve - Se ee ae Fe ae i ee eee : 4 poe & e. = \ 3 unchanged. Germany (western, Deutsche 85, ee Rolland (guil- der) 26.32%, rg 01% of @ cent. Rls of a cent, unchan oe “Svitecriand \ nese) 19.34, Latin America. Argentina (free) 7.24, ‘unchanged. Brazi ih \tree) 130. unchanged. Mexico 8.02. (boti- var) 30.03, B, spobenges. Lino ong dollar 17.50, un- € Aim Was Really Off LITTLE COMPTON, R. I. (UP) gun at (i } | tats | 60 ‘day perial, Plymouth, 76,443; Dodge, 30,472; | DeSoto, 14,240; Chrysler and Im- 17,760, and Dodge trucks, County Deaths moderate, demand good and market ; 4 i i i aerate: seman coogi tree: | Lower issues included General CLEANER LIVING IN ’54 — Americans are drinking less, smoking sales, new stock: Florida Round Reds | Motors, Chrysler, Goodyear, Allied | less and gambling less, according to federal tax collections cited by the washed and waxed in 50-lb sacks $4.60; Pi z pe Cuba 100’s (Saturday) 5.75. Chemical, Southern Pacific and| Commerce Clearing House. Figures under sketches above give the | a Eastern Air Lines. Small upside | amount of tax collected during the last six months of 1953, compared | DETROIT EGGS J pernorr, May) CAP) = fees, tos. | Progress was made by U. 5. Stee 1, | to the similar period in = Detroit cases included, federal-atate | Zenith, Du Pont, American Tele- graces: . 1 Whites—Grade A jumbo 46, large 39-44, Phone and Standard Oil (NJ). . i. hn pa avers oo porate um 36-39 w rtd | av grade rge 8 wtd ay “4 ews in [ e a owns—Grade A jumbo 43, large Be New York Stocks - large 38: dee =e 38; grade B : Pann Gesiathens’ rge rade rge (Late orning Que as Checks So. Walter Schaldenbrand, 24, . of Commercially graded: revere a . pote Secehe « Tel 43 Detroit, id $100 fine ic nda. Whites—Grade A extra large 39-41, ne I a ae | rl, paid @ ine Sonday large 38%-40, medium 36. Ar ees 41g Joned & L_... 38 | after he pleaded guilty to ‘driving Browns—Grade A extra large 39, large Alles L Stl. « Kelsey Hay .. 312 38. medium 34-36, small 29; grade B/ Allied Ch 100 ey oe under the influence of liquor. He | 6 am Allied Stra ... $64 ennecor, *-'So1| appeared before Bloomfield Hills | Allis Chal ... 76.6 tee Kroger ...... j , _ CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS _, | Aum Ltd .... oS laa kk {3{ | Justice Alva J. Richardson. CHICAGO, May 3 (AP)—Butter steady, | Alum Am . 1 LOP Giass 12.6 receipts 2.328.863, wholesale buying | Am Alrlin . . 271 Yin wie N & Lal | After pleading guilty to reckless prices unchanged to ‘z lower: 93 score | AM Can 39 lige & My ., 69 ae 4 RA $6.75. 92 A 5678: 90 B 648, @ C|Am Cyan . 525 OE .® MY -- 88. / driving Monday, Felix Marshall, $25, cars 90 B 55. 89 C 82. Am Gas & El 465 Loew's . 20.4| 37, of Flint, paid a $75 fine imposed Eges tops easy, balance about steady: | Am M & Pdy 321 fone g Cem 60 ' » P : . HURNS receipts 62.567: wholesale buying prices | Am Motors 113° LoriNara 221|by Bloomfield Hills Justice Alva unchanged to 1 lower; U. 8. large whites| Am N Gas ... 522 Mack Trk ... 23.1 ; . . 70 per cent and over A's 35; 60-699) Am d . 231 Marsh Pielad || 35 J. Richardson. . | per cent A's 35. mixed ‘mediums Am Seating .. 315 Marfin Gi <2 18.4 eW ice- resi en S| 328 U. 8. standards 3258, dirties 31; | am Smelt 417 May D Str... West Bloomfield Township Jus- | checks BO eed current receipts Am 8tl Fd 31.8 Mid Con Pet 116 ice E C. Dieterle Mond —__—— Am Tel & Tel 1825 Mid BU Pa .. 47 |Uce Elmer ieterle Monday ~~ Poult Am Te» ee: ne Monsan Ch ..125.4| assessed a $74 fine and $25 = ame y ison DETROIT roe "LTRY Anae con Gy Motor Oe aS, wait oe foes Ss Foll De Ed Anac W & C 572 Motorola .... $ Wal wake, after “ete | ollowing tw troit Edison DETROIT. May 2 (APi—Prices paid | Armco 8tl 784 Mueller Br isn | . ilty » s ° I , per pound fo. Detroit tor No. 1 qual- | Armour # Co 18S Murray Cp .. 336, | pleaded guilty to driving under the meetings held in New York Mon- y Uve poultry up to 10 am Assd Dry G 25 Nat Bise > | ‘: errr hens $9-21, ee hens a | Aichisce. 3466 Nat Cash R ,, ae! | aptivence ot lave: day — the regular annual stock- rollers or fryers ( 4 Ibs) {tes t Nat | x F ! > sey creases 31-32 commons a | re ary a Nat popes . Sips se ® fully adequate to the light demand. — tg a. ae ao ra Aiig Te g ae aps . aut i nH § under the — Edison President Walker L. Cis- | Caponettes unsettled as price is con-| Bell A OP = Sto NY Cent deg | nruence of liquor, He appeared j.- announced the re-election of saored tos nigh and offerings smalier | aed ag 846 mie Pw 325) aaah ei ese Justice th éttive (man boa 5 ol dive Benguet 2 bl or est $81) fillis D. Lefurgy e ; -man— rt BC | | th Bt 344 No Am Av ... $14) ; CHICAGO POULTRY \ peccag, et : "ae Nor Pac “ag | , tors and the re-election or re-ap- | CHICAGO, May 2—(AP)—Live poul-| pons alum. 217 Nor Sta Pw .. 166. If your friend's in jail and needs | | try steady; receipts in coops 764 (Pri- gong Btra 1¢7 Nwt Alrlin 215 bail, Ph. FE 5-9424 or MA 5-4031. _pointment of all company officers | day 257 coops, 38. 185 Ibs; f.0.b. paying | worden 63 Ohie Ou 68.2 | —Adv. by the board of directors prices unchanged; ehavy hens 28-30.) porg warn 472 oie Cp : s| y the board of directors. light hens 165-11: brotlers or fryers 29- | ‘ ‘ tis Elev. | ler alen ¢ . 4 | Sr sia Foctiwea 1SckSb) cogeneties <2- | meese | ae on Owens 1! Gl oes Rummage sale, May 5th and Cisler also announced the elec- | 435 | Brun Balke . 26 Pan AW Air 185) 6th. American Legion Auxiliary. tion of two new vice. presidents— Budd Co 207 as -: 861 Birmingham Post. 266 S. Wood- | Thomas E. Hurns and Eldred H. . urroughs 7 = ; - Livestock | apa - H,.. DT olan ooo OE S 4 ward. 9-5. Adv Scott, both ie Birmingham the DETROIT LIVESTOCK |c Spe inl “ Pa RR on | Promotion of Anthony G. Maihofer, DETROIT, May 2 (AP)—Tim Detroit | Gan Pac “313 poet Osta” ote ie of Detroit, superintendent of taxes, | Livestock Market report: | Capital Atrl .. 30.7 price . |to assistant secretary; and the salable 1,100. Few early sales | Carrier Cp 6 Bhi M yet a ids mixed choice 190-220 {b bar- | Case Jt 167 p or . 43 | ag of Henry J. Sullivan, rows and gilts around steady with last Cater Trac .., 98 ets ted fe arin : Grosse Ile, to assistant to the 227 PR Plate Go. N 7 d 2 17.80; not established others. ° 4 president. Cattie salable 3,400 Market opening ae re ae erect &o.. : | oderately active, about 25 per cent | Chey & Oh so7 Suliman ..... receipts cows, good and choice sisughter Chrysler... 80.1 eh . secs 3s | . ® steers and yearlings opening wea: Cittes Bvc 482 . | (gl Fa ES ie ar | y . close; cows active. steady to strong win Soe we mir Repab st a3 First Quarter Output | semen t ursday, receipts include oe ' yn et... . \ stock calves, no early sales; most early | Coc® Cola ...122 Rey Tob B 453 Best E ver Re d d. | DETROIT — The National Brew- | : Colg Palm 583 corde sores eres ee nce cerns Ges {188 Boca eG ing Co. of Michigan held its annual - 3 .00- ; low. choice 8’ : afeway t- 44] s 2$25: few head $3 80. but quaiity and | Con Edis 50 Bt Jos Lead .. 45 by Auto Firms meeting of stockholders Monday at finish much plainer than last week; |Consunli Pw 483 gt Reg Pap .. 406 i _— fi | early. sales good steers 1950-2250; bulk |Con Pw pf 108 secovill Mf ..372/ pDETROT —— ne company’s offices in Detroit. mainly utility cows 1250-1400, few | Cont Can 766 Seah AL RR a12| JETROIT « — General wen | According to Jerold C: Hoffber- smooth young commercial cows up to Cont Mot 12. Sears Roeb HTC ‘ See . 1500: canners and cutters unevenly Cont Ot ... 79 ghe oit a4 orp. and Ford Motor Co ger, president and chairman of the | lee cave a eee Grue Pty : a 3 simmons : ported yesterday all-time ifooee | board, the stockholders re-elected | : oy se Sinclair O .. 43 : Calves salable 460 Market openin Curtiss Wr . 04 1s . 5 “ . ° | ascut steady with last week's chose: | Det Rais «sf | tion records for the first four | 4ll seven members of the board of bulk good and choice vealers 1800-2600; | Doug Aire ,. TI t ibe y +. 926) months of th j directors. high choice and prime veslers early | Dow Chem ,. 493 Sparks W ... 54) s ius year. a 26 00-28 00: some held higher, most util- | Du Pont 1st¢@ Sperry + 68 \ ity and ‘commercial 1100-1750, culls! Eagle P ... 334 Std Brand .. 39 | GM said its April production ey aoen to 8 n [art Air L ”, 46. Std Ol Cal.” 793 oe rtonville Clu : fcr salable 1800 Market not estab- Feet mot Rs = ou La a 3) a new record for any month in she I uto t Mi ONS 6 | i | El & Mus In.. 37 Std On on .. «66 the company’s history. Add U y ; | 12) | CHICAGO LIVESTOCK [End Jono 11,. 29) Stew War |. 387) Chrysler Corp. plants in April s co, | CHICAGO, May 2 (AP)—Salable hogs! Erie RR... 234 stude-Pack | 126. 7 | 1 12.000. fairly active, generally weak to | Ex-Cell-O 486 gun Ol! 1 almost doubled their production QrKsS Irt ay mostly 2% as os butchers. vows boots | Pairb Mor 25 eels — a ; ik | even, around 25 lower: most choice - | Pireston wee 826 pei no o e me mo ‘t ¥ , . T ; 230 Ib butchers 16 75-1725. a few choice Preept Sul eo. TH pl a ea a “ ee ORTON NILE |= the Ortonville No 1 and 2s 190-220 Ib 1735-1750. a 28- | Prueh Tra a1 Syiv El Pd 4420 and in the first four months of |Womans Club marked its th an-- head lot chotce No Is at 1763. bulk 240-! Gen Bak ,... ing Texas Co 951) | pipers 5 a: 370 Ib 16 25-16 73: 200-300 Ib 1$.75-16 28: | Ge Elec .,.. 521 late *“ “s 1955—n0re than doubled the vol- ) PuvetEary recently when they met, weights over 300 ib scarce, a few lots’ Gen Fd B45 omp 5. Cle - | to 400 Ib as low as 1425: sows under | Gen Mills 694 Timk R Bear 552 ume of the same period last ap be ones ee Ib 1325-1480: a few choice under | Gen Motors .. 978 Tran W Air 03 tell. ae 14 ay is 00: bulk 450-600 Ib 12 25- | Gen Ry Sig .. 421 ee ne m3 year. Mrs. John Waltz, gave the his- good clearance Gen Refra .n6 went ‘ox 3 MPS. ; $ Salable cattle 17,000: salable calves 400; i Tel... 537, Underwd aie ‘ tory of the club, and Mrs. Clif- steers slow, but steady to §0 higher com-| Gen Tire |... $86 Un Carbide @ $04 GM's April output in the United ford Mcinitvie _ hai pared last week's close; cows and heifers | Gillette ..... 676 Un Pac 18 States and Canada totaled 452,683 ee eee ully steady. bulls steady to 28 lower: | Goebel Br... 81 Unit Air Lin 434 — , - . ve’ man, paid tributes to the past vealers steady to strong. stockers and! Goodrich .. 655 Unit Aire t14 cars and trucks. This compared : : feeders steady. Bulk choice to low prime Goodyear .. 587 United Cp 66 with 248.307 in tl . ; presidents steers 2275-2650. a few loads mostly| Grah Paige .. 22 Unit Fruit 56 4 shia dee in the same period Corsages were resented t res. | prime 1078-1275 ib 2700-2750: good to| Gt No Rv ... 496° Un Gas Im . 376 last year. The new peak was 3,325 a F o fo pres low choice steers 19.50-22 50: commercial | Gt West 8 ... 224 Ug Line 232 ‘ident Mrs. Dale Dickison and past to low good grades 1650-1925: a load | Greyhound .,. 181 Us Rov tag Units above the previous monthly | president Mrs, William Narri mostly prime 1038 Ib fed heifers 2475: | Guif of! ..2, a4 US RY = OO record ect in Manhths wear OC = oan bad Sighes bulk good and! Haves M 14 us — a 2 s _ chotee heifers 19 50-2350: commercial to| Hersh Choe .. 444 = : : 7 ~ low good grades 1690-1900: utility and! Holland FP ... 157 US Stee. 87.4 GM had an output of 1.630,97 4 . commercial cows 12 00-15 00; eanners and| Hemestk 7. 43 us i 19 | units for the first four months of | : armings eutters a few shelly canners Hooker El ,,.. 375$ gr . x % aie na is most utility, and ceomsrest| nced Wer 0. 30 Warn B Pic 18 this year. compared with 1.225.863 i ue 0-16.00: odd head early Up to; Ill Cent 614 a Pulp the sx C § ng NEW Y¥ c ey: F aa See ee eee ee rene eee eee | iin kay