The Weather Full LS. Weather Bureau Report Cooler (Detailg Page 2) 117th YEAR * kkk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, MAY 11, "190033 PAGES 4 Ready for Summer | Traffic Acide. Claim 2 Lives on Area Roads Pontiac Mother Killed,) 9 Injured in Head-On Crash on Adams Road | ie Crash Kills One, Sev arene “ty, + 2d ae: @ en Critical Teed 3 ~ ence was called into session ae Conf Starts 3" Hours Late East German Issue: Snags Ministers Talks GENEVA (#—The Big Four foreign ministers confer- tonight, 342 hours late, after running aground for a time on the question of how the East German government should participate. The first session of the conference was scheduled for ‘two traffic deaths this| ‘weekend, including one head-on crash which killed a Pontiac mother and in-, ijured nine other persons. | Oakland County recorded / the Palace of Nations at 2:30 p.m. Instead, Secretary of State Christian A. Herter and his Soviet, British and French counterparts got together informally at a Brit- ish villa. From this meeting Soviet Foreign. Minister Andrel A. Gromyko emerged with| s+ * the announcement the formal session was set for 6) Pentiac Press Phote FAREWELL TO TIE — Pontiac Patrolman Lon Peters smiles happily as he discards his tie for the summer. For the first time in its history, the police department is allowing uniformed officers to drop neckties and open their shirt collars during the hot weather. City Police Unshackled From Neckwear Order By MAX E. SIMON A knotty summer problem of the Pontiac Police Dept. has been solved. Uniformed policemen no longer will wear ties during the torrid summer weather. Officers once were fit to be tied when the heat came. Killer Twisters partments throughout Slash o States: Michigan loosened uniform \regulations, Pontiac’s did 21 Hurt — Rain | * not. An order . ties dangling from their 5 Lose Lives, as Winds, Hail, Pelt Mid-Continent another story this year signed ted | of the Uniform Patrol Bureau, By The Associated Press Rains swept wide areas of the Mid-Continent Monday on the heels) of tornadoes which slashed through! six states over the weekerl@, kill-| ing five persons, injuring at least 21 and causing heavy property| damage. Scores of homes were demol-| ished, huge semi-trailer trucks were tossed about like leaves and the four-building Iowa community) of Fansler was wiped out in tor- nadoes which lashed Texas, Iowa, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri and Wisconsin Sunday. Tornadoes whipped through | Oklahoma both Saturday and | Public Safety Director George Sunday with roars which sounded D. Eastman said specifications to a farm wife “like a thousand | for recently-acquired police unl- winds blowing in all directions | forms were planned so the uni- at the same time.” It was in the | forms would appear neat with- out neckwear. Oklahoma town of Frisco that a | ee sand In- The order dropped on uniformed officers With bombshell effect. jured nine. But once over the initial shock, an “emancipation proclamation.” It guarantees freedom from neck- ies. Starting today, not only will a ficers be able to discard their ties, ] their shirt cuffs * * “We're just trying mane,”’ said Lemeaux The decision to abandon ties was one agreed upon by command ‘officers after a series of staff | meetings. * Heavy hail storms followed the, nee th in a a, of commu-| they were happily dropping an- ities en came the rains. Hath the wise of besebalie fell infer Ue with the past. the vicinity of Corpus Christi,} Tex., and egg-size hail covered the ‘Smothered in Soot ground near Austin. A tornado cut through sections of} NEW YORK (UPI) — More Green Bay and the suburbs of| than a quarter million tons of Preble and Ashwattbenom, injur-} soot.and ash settled on New York ing three persons, demolishing six} City last year, the department homes and heavily damaging 50) of air pollution control announced othérs. Roofs were ripped from two} Jast night. That was 18,000 tons paper company warehouses, and) more dirt than 1957, the depart- four industrial buildings were de-| ment said, but still only half as molished. High voltage wires were) much as smudged the city’s resi- downed. | dents in 1945. ~Appropriate Gift ; ee. Starts New Event LOGANSPORT, Ind, (UPI) = Loganzport Ahigh school track coach Fred Kinder, 37, walked GLENDALE, Calif. (UPI — Mrs. Eileen Cross, 22, gave birth to her second daughter yester- Day, I'm going to be home tak+ ing care of my two daughters,” Mrs. Cross said firmly. 4 day, ‘om Mother’s Day, Mrs. | the 23 milés home from-Kokémo, Cross’ first. child was born last | Ifd., as he'd promised his squad Mother’s Day. “Next Mother’s | he would do if they won their sectional track title. | after noon Sunday | Unhappy patrolmen pounde di (their beats with shirt collarsr but-| Capt. | | Oliver H. Lemeaux, commander | has come to be viewed as sort of | but they'll also be allowed to open) their shirt collars and turn under| to be hu-| Dead are Mrs. Marilyn ‘Boone, 29, of 46 N. Francis St., and Clifford D. Mar-| quette, 31, of 3115 Shedlow- sky St, Independence Township. ! Mrs. Boone died at 4:20 p.m Sunday from injuries suffered when the car driven by her hus band, Raymond, 30, collided head- on with another car driven by Dr. Albert P. Ulbrich, 47, of 5670 Sus Sex Rd., Birmingham. “The collision occurred pein on Ada | road near Tutbury lane, on the | boundary line between Troy and ‘, : Bloomfield Township. | The woman's husband, and a |son James, 12, listed in fair condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- jpital today with fractured skulls * *« & Two other sons, Kenneth, 3, and Leonard, 2, were treated for in juries and released The doctor was hospitalized and is listed in poor condition today. His son, Carl, 10, is in fair condi- tion with head injuries Also injured in the doctor’s car were Joseph Sticher, 55, and his wife, Elsie, 60, of 8903 Myers Rd |Detroit, and Sam Leiberman, age unknown, of 18985 Bircherest St... Detroit. | |POOR CONDITION Stuicher is in poor condition with jskull, arm and leg fractures, and this wife is listed as fair today with leg and jaw fractures. Leiber- man is also in fait condition after undergoing extensive surgery Sun- day for leg and chest injuries, the hospital reported. Oakland County Sheriff's Dep- uties said neither driver has been able to make a statement and it is not known how the accident took place. There were no eye witnesses, deputies reperted. Both autos were demolished, said} officers, and a total of fout am- bulances werg rushed to the grim scene. are | ; * * * Marquette died at Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital at 11:34 p.m. Satur- \day night of injuries suffered when he was struck by a car while walk- ling across Auburn road near (Continued on Page 2 2 ». Col. 3) ! * CENTENN TAL DR bushy beards that 1961 is Wilson Copk, a Lansing | the Lansing motor caravan that complete: wi capital city’ 10th ‘ened by pneumonia in his fight |Washington Sunday night because| ja mild case of pneumonia, but his|holes in the home Beards Pontiac Photo — Giving Pontiag ap of the age during his ake ty) stay grown ashington. pa na URE © . ie a His \visit is the first official trip 7 mgt’ aationtn tothe United States since 1919) by rds and 19th century costumes in honor of the birthday observance this year. ‘ COUNTY'S WORST — Shown here are two cars after they collided headon Sunday killing one and injuring nine.others. It was the worst injury accident in Oakland County this year with several a injured critically. Sheriff's a ties, Troy Police, four ambulances, and the Troy Fire Department were called to the scene. Fire- men washed away gasoline which poured over Adams road from the autos’ broken gas tanks. Wild, S cnovien Winds Rip Into Area Homes | Wild winds one near-tornado strength tore into resi-| dential neighborhoods southwest of Pontiac shortly’ after 10 a.m. today ripping away parts of at least one! home and causing lesser damage to many others. The blasts descended suddenly out of the west, ac-'. companied by what was de- cried as “low flying dark Pneumonia Weakens Ailing Foster Dulles They wt ttn al ~ WASHINGTON “B—No_ change} 2 time that a ‘small tornado” was reported today in the condi-'hit the outskirts of Ann Arbor, tion of John Foster Dulles, weak- |where preliminary reports indicat- ‘ed one woman ha against cancer. d been electro- The former secretary of state’s| Cubed, two houses set fire and Eleanor Dulles, returned to\several others damaged. she felt * 7 should be nearer home wate ecm foFigry seta jat this time.” Miss Dulles had) wren street im Syivan Manor been in Berlin representing the subidvision, suffered the t State Department at the 10th an- damage niversary of the lifting of the Ber-! , lin blockade. | Neighbors reported that a rear The State Department said Sat-/addition and half the roof had urday that Dulles had developed|been ripped off, leaving gaping sister * * * temperature had returned to nor-| mal after treatment | A resident of the subdivision, ———_—____—- Andrew Rossetto, 2425 Walce, said several chimneys on other homes Mexico © Crash Kills 16 seve toppled, shingles scattered, on Mother’ s Day Outing television aerials snapped and awn- ings ripped loose. A small funnel-shaped black cloud swooped down on the near- MEXICO CITY ww — Sixteen, persons were killed and 29 injured | Sunday night in the collision of al train and a bus crowded with | " Sore We ui ae women and children returning} Ha i take Md. bed de from Mother's Day outings. . The smashup ° occurred oe Ba 226¢ E. Ham- miles north of Mexico City. { , Most of the victims were women. The cloud, which Mrs. Voss de- and children. The driver also was scribed to her husband as ‘‘just} killed. \like a tornado,"’ removed the Voss’ front porch and a section of the roof over their living room. PICKS UP PORCH The wind picked up the front porch and smashed it to bits, spraying its parts all over sal yard, Voss said. Mrs. Franklin Read, of 2291 a Hammond Lake Rd., said: saw this real heavy black cloud | and this funnel.shaped thing at- tached to it coming down from nowhere. At first I thought it was a terrific wind, like a hurricane."’ She said it snapped & large tree) in her front yard in half “‘like a matchstick." Mrs. Read also said she saw porch chairs and roof shingles flying through the air. * * * Substantial damage was done to the Youngblood home, according to Voss. He said the same wind took off their entire roof. Neither of the Youngbloods eould be reached for comment, Belgium's King | Begins 21-Day | Tour of U.S. WASHINGTON (®#—Belgium's bachelor King Baudouin arrived by plane today to begin a 21-day tour of the United States. President Eisenhower, flanked by Acting Secretary of State C. Doug- las Dillon, was on hand to greet the 28-year-old morfarch as he at- rived amid full military honors at national airporg at 11:58 a.m. EDT. ¢ | eight! cate = | | * * * Baudouin will be a guest of the dropped into Pontiac Saturday, |,~ Belgian monarch, when Ba- douin’s grandfather, King Albert, Elizabet visited with Queen h, i Se UD lias’ he ee La a 3:2 8 2 OP ee +r *cording to one witness, ac-) iat Geneva q.¢ VC Ap a & A Ah A Re-Flect Head of UF Trustees Leonard T. Lewis Is | Retained; Haggard and Girard Also Remain | Leonard T. Lewis today was re- lelected to a second term as presi- ident of the. Board of Trustees of | | the Pontiac Area United Fund. * * * Fred V. Maggard wes re-elected | vice president and A. C. Girard |was re-elected secretary-treasurer. | The 1959-1960 positions were filled at the annual meeting of the board of directors at the Waldren Hotel, ture Corp., is a former lot the Pontiac Community Chest }Andrew H. Berding and has served on the board of|gram of the seati directors of the Michigan United/for reporters to see. Asked if the West had made concession fo the Russians, Haggard is president of the Oak-|Berding said: Fund. * * * land County AFL --CIO Council, munity National Bank, Haggard was also named to a new three-year term on the 19- member board of trustees, as were Merle Bennett, Harold A. Fitzgerald, 8. E. Kuudseh and Philip J. Monaghan. Newly eppointed to the board 'was Robert Nelson, replacing How- jard V. Heldenbrandt, who an- nounced his resignation today aft- jer nine years on the board. x’ * * Besides Lewis and Girard, oth- ers serving on the board include |Mrs. Geraldine Blanzy, Milo J. iCross, Mrs. William Harrison, Wil- jliam B. Hartman, Abe Lapides, Harry M. Pryale, Glenn H. Grif- fin, Peter Hammelif, Robert Par- enti, Goodloe Rogers and Thomas F. Wiethorn, Resolutions were passed honor- ing Monaghan and Hartman. Mon- aghan was campaign chairman last year. Hartman was president lof the, board 1954-1958. ' Commies Outdo West in Comfort Lewis, president of Lewis Furni-j- president while Girard is president of Com- p.m. (12 noon EST). agreement on all procedural and administrative matters,"’ he said, tion of German participation. pariey first .He was followed by. Herter, French Foreign Minister | Maurice Couve de Murville and | British Foreign Secretary Sel- | wyn Lioyd. Lloyd, designated to preside at) led the wire to resolve the despute in- whole issue of the tonight's opening session, olving the \seatus of the Red East German regime. * * * The formula decided upon for thé) | formal opening session was as’ fol- |lows: The East and West Germans | sit as separate tables. The Big Four foreign ministers sits at a round table but all on one side, leaving one side vacant. ‘ The West German table is closer to the seat, occupied by Herter, ithe East Germans closer to Gro- myko. The two German delega- ‘ “There has been a complete) adding that this included the ques-! Gromyke left the informal | Well, Would You Prefer to ‘Stand, Men? By EDDY GILMORE GENEVA (AP) — Table trouble continued to plague the foreign ministers’ conference today. It had started with the " ninkeka insisting that the ministers meet at a round table. A square table, to the Soviets, meant only four nations present, one to a side, and the Soviets want to expand the conference te include the East and West. Germans and Poland and Czechoslovakia. The Americans, British and French want to confine the con- ference to the Big Four, with the other nations called in as ad visers only when their are at stake. The Western min- isters at first stood three square for a square table. The United Nations—which is furnishing the facilities—said the only big con- ference table it had in Gene was square. Finally U.S. Secretary of State to hamstring it tions are separated by a thirdlant table trouble small table for the conference sec- retariat. ‘HAVEN'T GIVEN way" id up a dia any “We haven't given way on anything.” meeting at West had feared that if only a! round table were used the Rus- sians would try ‘to squeeze in first | the East Germans and later the! Poles and Czechoslovaks as full participants. * Under the and a formula | the Germahs are advisers and not full prticipants as demanded by} the Russians. if either the East or West Ger- man representative desires te speak, the conference chairman will ask if any of the Big Four foreign ministers has any objec- tiens. Hf there are none, the floor will be given to the Germans, A British delegation spokesman said the informal meeting was ar- ranged during a brief discussion between Lloyd and Gromyko. ‘FUNDAMENTAL ISSUE The spokesman insisted that de- spite the postponement of the for- mal opening session, the confer- ence actually has started, GENEVA .(UPI). — Communist | delegates to the foreign mi ters | conference are not. lacking in comfort. In fact, some of their accommodations outstrip the West- ern capitalists. . The East Germans set the ornate “We are in the middle of one of the fundamentaj issues which we expected the Geneva confer- ence would have te face,"’ said one high official. Assistant U.S. Secretary of State arrangement Western spokesmen said the sep- arate tables idea met the original Westen vbjections to having the a round table. The jthe conference before it even got underway, So U.N. workers began feverishly hamemring together a round. table With the issue apparently settled jon one front, table trouble broke out in another sector. Should he seat his guests at a round table and run the risk ‘ot giving someone the that the neutral Swiss sided with the Soviets? “Our table will be empire—em- pire oblong,” said a Swiss spokes- = 0 Vie for Posts on School Board Pontiac Nominees File for Two Vacancies _in June 8 Election | i Six persons including two incum- bents have filed nominati titions for the June 8 Board of Education election. Running for re-election will be members Monroe M. Osmun, 100 Ogemaw Road, and the Rev. J, Allen Parker, 149 Franklin Blvd. Also filing petitions were Thom- as Horwitz, 49 James K. Bivg.; Roy B. MacAfee, 18 Niagara Ave.; Dr, Leonard F. Klausmeyer, 111 Oneida Rd.; and Jennie R. Jones, 127 Thorpe St. At stake im the election will be two four-year terms eon the Board, Western officials said the Soviet maneuver to seat East Germany was aimed at compelling a degree of Western recognition of the Ger- pace when they rolled into Geneva in a special train of gleaming blue and white cars with a red and black locomotive whose every rivet gleamed like a mirror. West Germany's observers ar- rived on a regular train from the north and moved into a second’ | | iclass hotel. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and his short, plump wife arrived aboard a_ special Russian plane décorated ‘with vases of flowers sitting on cro- cheted doiles. Gromyko and his top aides moved into a lakeside villa, The Chestnut Trees. The villa has 13 bedrooms, six bathrooms, three |, television sets and many radios. Wreck Rhino Romance MOSCOW: (UPI) — The deputy director of Moscow's zoo com- plained today that Russian red brought to the Soviet union four years ago; the female was sent to the Moscow zoo, the male to Leningrad. : man Red regime. Tomorrow, Herter will hold a an-to-man session with Gromyko. | The U.S. delegation announced | Herter will be Gromyko's guest at} lunch in the Soviet permanent |headquarters on the Rue de la : Paix. Joins Effort for Elvis TUPELO, Miss. (UPI) — This | city's drive for funds to com- plete the birthplace memorial to rock 'n’ roll singer Elvis Presley announced today a Hawaii fan club has joined the effort. In Today’ Ss Press Qe F avictinticnivecenes b | County News ....... Saveds. Ae Sports: ...... ee Renee ee teers 19-21 RONG 4, ce cn cvetererians 23 TV & Radio Programs ... 31 Wilson, Earl ee eee ee eee we Women’s Pages ...,....;. School District officials this morning were checking signatures on nominating petitions. The City Clerk's office at City Hall will be open until 8 p.m. ttoday to accept voter registrations. Today is the deadline for reg- istering for the school district election in the City of Pontiac. District voters outside the city have until May 29 to register. Storms, Showers fo Diminish Tonight > i i i a we hel ey a a eo oul S Se ee a te oe SHVd HAD =* #, =a SS _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 11, 1959 oe es ee ee eee Se SSS eee fe ee | in $a Plan to Charge 3 in Lassiter Slaying | State Police Returning Suspects What was first believed to be a lmoney belt taken from the slain iman, turned out later to be just used car and Volkswagon tycoon was $320. Detectives believe the robbery was plotted after Las- Four Michigan State Police de- tectives were headed for Detroit today from Chattanooga, Tenn siter called Hicks at the lot on ” plain pelt which the men ap- with two ‘men accused in the) the day of the murder telling | parently mistook for a money robbery-slaying of Parvin (Bill); him he had received some $5,000 |pelt, Davids said. This, too, is Lassiter, Royal Oak car dealer, as| for the sale of a 1959 Thunder. still missing. plans were being made here to} bird. . * ok * charge the two and one other per-| However, only partial payment| Laboratory technicians were ex- son with first-degree murder. iwas made for the car and this,|amining several fingerprints found Capt. Fred E. Davids, district\was in check form, which the al-|in a 1955 Buick which Nash pointed commander of the State Police,|leged murder trio burned alongiout as the car used to pick up said he would confer today with|with other papers they took from|Lassiter at the Willow Run Air- Wayne County Prosecutor Samuel |Lassiter’s wallet. lport before he was murdered. Foes atest ‘Chars, W. Nash, lo, , 2 Die in Traffic on Area Roads 42, of Chattanooga, Richard Jones, °7, of Rossville, Ga., and Roy C. | (Continued From Page One) Hicks, 36, formerly from Chatta- nooga but late of Royal Oak. Churchill road, in Auburn Heights, just after midnight Friday. | x * * | Deputies said he walked directly |into the path of a car dyiven by |William D. Engstrom, 24, of 3381 | |Donley St., Avon Township. | Marquette suffered severe head | injuries an multiple cuts. He had | Jones and Hicks were expected to be in Detroit around 6 p.m. in the custody of Dets. Charles M. Leaf, Calvin A. Lepien, Tom McPhajl, and Lt. Patrick Detz- ler. Nash, released two years ago) from a Tennessee prison for mur-} der, is being held for investigation} of murder in the Livonia City Jail, \ \ The Day in Birmingham Hoover Urges Stern Measures Road Oiling | Youth Crime Must Be’ pipmincHAM—The first of two Curbed, Says Chief of hearings on the city's 1959 road . foiling program, involving 69 FBI to Subcommittee istreets, will come before the Bir- |mingham City Commission tonight. WASHINGTON (UPI)—FBI Di-| The proposed project includes lrector J. Edgar Hoover has called|jight oil treatment for about one ‘upon the courts and local commu-| mile of street surface, oil mat and inities to use “‘sterner measures’’ | seal coat for 3,400 feet and seal| lin dealing with juvenile delinquents! coating for approximately 10 miles. lcontributing to the rapidly rising | The discuaiion of the pre crime rate. + | widening and ropaving pees He asked a House appropriations | road from Yosemite street south subcommittee for money to hire; t@ pincoin avenue will be re- 150 new agents ‘‘for the purpose of opened. strengthening our investigative ef- . forts in the security and criminal| The project has been under con- | ees > a es ee phe Davids said. Leaf and Lepien had no sooner returned Nash to Detroit after his confession last week cracked the ibeen in critical condition since ad-| |mitted to .the hospital. Engstrom | was not held. month-long investigation of the : i ili OTHER MISHAPS Apri Las killing, yh aad oeotiena Saturday cl 1 In other accidents, Melville Pratt | 133, of 385 W. Glass Rd., Ortonville, was taken to St. Joseph Mercy Honea early today when his pick- Tennesee authorities. * * * Lassiter, owner of the Detroit Car Co., 2614 N. Woodward Ave. up truck was demolished. was found in a ditch near the Wil- | Pontiac State Police said Pratt | low Run Expressway two days | PAUL RICHMOND jlost control on a curve on M19) after he arrived home from a . north of Oak Hill road, Brandon the Detroit Broker business-pleasure trip to 'Township, and smashed into three Southwest. | HICKS HIDES ‘Slated Tomorr OW | Hospital authorities said the ~ } > ’ Hicks, manager of the Lassiter} 7 S . serinousness of Pratt's condition nN aycee er1es | has not yet been determined. He suffered rib injuries, a broken | A Detroit broker will be the) car lot while he was gone, went into hiding for two days after he calla viene. tend iktiples cotsisial | fourth speaker in the Pontiac Area! bruises, apparently heard that Nash had) implicated him and Jones in the |Junior Chamber of Commerce lec- murder. ; . ture series on investments and ; . Davids said Hicks and Jones, | securities. vitor O54 a tite another ex-convict would be | Paul Richmond, a partner in the 7° _ os asked to give formal statements [firm of Watling, Lerchen & Co Township, were treated for injuries | to Olsen upon their arrival in will have as his subject the analy Detroit. sis of securities. Jones, the actual killer of Las- Richmond's talk will begin at siter, according to Nash, finally; 8 p.m. tomorrow in the little relented to extradition to Mich-| theater at Pontiac Northern High iran shortly after Hicks gave him-| School. self up arid said hed waive ex- tradition. Nash did also. has been in the brokerage business lights of an oncoming car, accord- x * * since 1946, both in Detroit and ing to sheriff's deputies. Soon after Leaf and Lepien went New York. Bernard Whipple, 21, of 9560 Had- with Nash Saturday afternoon to| A graduate of the U.S. Naval ley Rd., Clarkston, is in satisfac- |. retrace the route of the murder,| Academy, Richmond served in the tory condition at Goodrich Hospita’ they left again for Chattanooga to'Navy during World War II and with head injuries suffered in a/| pick up Jones and Hicks \left service with the rank of lieu-|Collision between his car and an- Hicks, according to Tennesse¢!tenant commander. lother Sunday night police, admits being. with Jones) He is a member of the Security "| Sunday. | * Their car, * * driven by Weber, A native Detroiter, Richmon bat denies seeing the shooting.| Engineering Society of Detroit. Jones denies even being in Mich | x ‘* * \land Township, and then ran off | igan then. Tickets for tomorrow’s lecture Perryville road near Brandt street. | SLUG NOT FOUND can be obtained through Clyle R es other driver was uninjured, ; . askill, Jayce side Mt. deputies reported. ih Nek shower where Las. | Haskill Jaycee president, 1 Mt I ported siter was lying when Jones Bh Pane iste series will continue legedly pumped a .45 caliber bul- Asks End to Penalty Under Social Security let into his head. detectives Sat- — Tuesday and May 2. men . ithe final speaker will be David L. urday employed for a second time|, | _ : ; . : , Babson, director and vice presi- a mine detector in hopes of find- > . : ae dent of Babson Reports Inc. ing the slug. It wasn't found “We ran into quite a lot of difficulty in the search,” Davids Money for Blood said, ‘‘because of plenty of metal 5 in the slag covering the road Used to Finance where Lassiter was shot." Weather permitting, Davids saia Murder Appeal a hand-sifting search would be} ; - DETROIT (UPI) — A man who Who continue to work after 65 resumed téday . : sold his blood to finance his case|Pile up credits to be added to How detectives had pieced to- ; ; gether the crime earlier agreed | Will ask for new trial on a murder) their Social Security benefits when |they retire. The program would pretty much with the route Nash Conviction today oa ie ioe th v led detectives through Saturday " paid for by a % of one per i] d nancial] penalty’? imposed by the ! Social Security law on retired per-'° * * April Jobless Report to Show 700,000 Dip ed to report today that unemployment fell by more than rees. 700,000 in April to the lowest level since December 1957. have increased by nearly 1,200,000 to exceed 65 million land set an April record. ‘were to be announced at a¢ Richard W. Weber, 28, of 90 N.'news conference by the Labor Department. ‘at the same hospital and released less workers would be the greatest monthly decline since before the recession. It was especially wel-| went out of control and struck a/©O™ bee tree on Charms road near Wixom|Wh0 have been concerned about troit’s 3 2 , > fer finances have received at ‘road, in Milford Township. Weber |the failure of employment to keep ove! f W t rf d B d q_ said he was blinded by a head- | Pace with the general business up-|least a spur toward action. 0 a e Or Oal - turn. | ) ing steady for nearly four months, day without picking up a cargo of the Waterford Township offices tY discounting seasonal] factors mer resorts and farming along Whipple's auto collided head-on with a pickup in the manufac- | and Nash the night of the murder. | Analysts Society of Detroit and the With one driven by John E. Crady| turing industries hardest hit by | 18, of 3900 Perryville Rd., Grove-| the recession contributed to the | ilast june NEW '59 LOW WASHINGTON (UPI)—Sen. Jo- Port on unemployment insurance. | ‘seph S. Clark (D-Pa.) today pro- The Labor Department said the, presumably for Toronto, it was Tank Co., Marvin Skelton, was posed legislation to end the “‘fi- [Umber of workers drawing job-| with criticism of the dock facili. Presented at last week's meeting ess benefits fell to a new 1959 low f 1,724,600 in the week ended April | ‘sons who work after they are 65.|2> This was nearly half the num- Clark proposed letting employes ber on benefit rolls a year ago at the bottom of the recession. every state. Even long-depressed . . Michigan had workers called (Little Ambushers Fire back to their jobs in the auto, | At the s ] oe \bank robberies—one of the crimes| Residents in the assessment dis- #, » |under FBI jurisdiction. pixaet have objected during past | He said there were 631 bank} HONOR NEW MOTHER — New mothers at St. Joseph Mercy ‘robberies, burglaries and larcenies ; Hospital paid tribute on Mother's Day to Mrs. Harold Tellefsen, |in the year ending June 30, 1958. iHe said that ‘‘not since the gang ld C: newly-born Harold Jr., first baby born at St. Joseph yesterday. lessee than G00: viclatiora of the As a Mother’s Day tribute, Mrs. Tellefsen was crowned with @ | Bank Robbery Act in a 12-month . ’ . wreath of flowers and wheeled about the maternity ward in a period. | S in 0 e flower-decked wheel chair. The couple lives at 26795 Palmer St., | Hoover's closed-door testimony Madison Heights. 'was made public Sunday, the 35th/ anniversary of his appointment as) Three Other Michigan | He told the subcommittee that| preliminary estimates indicate that Turnpike Crash the number of serious crimes in ' {1958 were 11 per cent higher than} the previous record of 2,796,400 set} By The Associated Press in 1957. He said youths under 18; Eight persons, including a little total arrests. their lives in Michigan traffic over! ‘‘As tragic as the spiraling crime the Mother’s Day weekend. wave is,’ Hoover said, ‘‘more seri- mother of four also was among WASHINGTON (UPI)—The government was expect- ous is the terrifying pace of youth-!the victims, 1 lawlessness accompanying it.” * + A 7 ; He called for an end of the’ 1p addition, three Michigan resi- e time, total employment was reported to names and otherwise xiving spe hurt serinady when thelr var was {ee ecaie ee €s accused -ammed by a truck Sunday on the of serious c s. : Z t “The present youth problem does Ohio ‘Turnpixe near Lorain. : The sharp improvements in the nation’s job picture not involve child pranksters and The Associated Press count be- . mischiefmakers,” he said. “We can &ins at 6 pm. Friday and runs make plunder into a trifling pgank, In the two smashups where | reduce mayhem to a mischievous; gmail children died, the mothers act and pass off murder as a boy- were driving. jish misdemeanor or the act of an a ‘emotionally disturbed youth.” Victims were: Deborah Sulier, 3, Temperance, | 7 . p 6 and her 10-month-old brother Ran-) Seaway Ship Leaves Detroit Without Cargo DEPFROIT (®—The Port of De- expansion plans, stymied The drop in the number of job- fields.” He noted an upsurge in| Sideration since 1955. 21, the newest mother of all. She is shown with her husband and Sra of the 93x” have there been Se | Residents Die in Ohio) accounted for almost half of the girl and her baby brother, 208t) practice of keeping secret the gants were killed and a fourth no longer afford to let “tender age’ to midnight Sunday. > dotph, killed Sunday when a car} ed by administration officials driven by their mother Dorothy.| 26, skidded in a rainstorm south! of Temperance and collided with, another car. than 130 Mrs. Raymound Boone, 29, Pon- recent: Uac mother of four, killed in a * * * * * * Snubbing the crowded dock fa-| Petitions Unemployment dropped by 387.-'cilities, the Grace Line freighter signatures | with more presenting a 000 in March to 4,362,000 after hold- Santa Regina steamed off yester- zoning change have been filed at 'v0-car collision in Oakland Coun- Sunday j Five-week-old Janice Bdrton of Berkley, killed Sunday when a car driven by her mother Mrs. Glenda Barton, 21, collided with another in Detroit. | Clitford D. Marquette, 31 Clarks- automobiles. The Santa Regina, first Ameri- can flag freighter to reach De- troit via the St. Lawrence Sea. way, went away complaining. She refused to wait any longer and will be the main topic of dis- cussion at tonight’s township board meeting, according to Clerk James Seeterlin. ~ * * * Last week the Board rezoned a lot Walton boulevard More jobs in construction, saiu- | pro -eme . corner on Ape beqrey = for space. scin Fanelli road from resi-.t0%. who died Saturday night of Joblessness—reported at 3,374,000 | Left on the dock were the crated dential to commercial by a 4-3 Juries suffered when a car struck! |500,000 the next month and has sentative said another Grace ship will be present to discuss their burn Heights } jnever fallen below 3,805,000 since would pick up the cargo today protests ° * * * jthen. It hit a peak of 5,437, * * * * * * Gilbert Morgan, 38, Onaway. who Upon first arriving Wednesday.; Another lot on Elizabeth Lake died Sunday of injuries suffered the Santa Regina couldn't find road at Ascot street is expected Saturday_night when the car sin One sign of the trend was evi- SPace to load and went on to To- to be rezoned from residential to which he was riding rammed: a ent in the latest government re- !edo and Cleveland. commercial. A request from the parked truck in Cheboygan County, When she left yesterday again, Owner of the Silver Lake Septic Gait Johnson, 10, Alto, killed Saturday in a car-truck collision on M21 two miles south of Lo- well. Gail's mother, Mrs. Char- lotte Johnson, 36, was driving | the car. Donald Frank Maki, 44 Stam-! haugh, who died Friday night when, his car went out of control on a railroad crossing, * * identified ties by a Grace Line official. and board members _ postponed action until tonight’s meeting. Detroit voters have refused to spend money for new dock facili- ties. Private operators say they Oakland Bar Plans to Honor Three Deceased | lack the cash Declines were reported from * Officers those killed City Commission to Hear Proposals hearings, saying they felt Eton road is used mostly by commer- cial vehicles and persons patroniz- ing the Grand Trunk Railroad. : * * * Area _ property owners. have voiced strong opposition to assum- ing the customary 8 per cent of the total cost. Also up for discussion will be contract bids for the widening of W. Maple avenue, from West- chester way to Cranbrook road, and the eastern extremity of Hol- land avenue. Further business will include Bir- mingham Country Club’s request for an extension of fire protection service from the city. The present contract expires June 30. Eustace Rucinski, 46, of 2306 Buckingham Rd., Birmingham, re- ceived throat injuries and a bruised forehead when his car crashed into the rear end of a truck at 8 a.m. this morning on Woodward avenue, just south of Long Lake road. Bloomfield Hills Police said William A. Smith, 50, of Lake Orion had brought his truck to a stop midway down the hill, wait- ing for the light at the intersec- tion ahead to change. There were no vehicles in front of him, police said. Rucinski was taken to St. Joseph Mercy ith ws ti for treat- ment. Smith whs uninjured. No tickets were issued. April building totals of $741,427 are nearly double that for the previous three months in Birming- ham, according to Andrew F. Butt, city building inspector. Butt said 64 permits were issued last month, inéluding one 32-unit multiple residence. A final Hickory Grove Elemen- tary School PTA-PTO meeting in Bloomfield Hills will be held at 8 p.m. Thursday in the school. Newly elected officers will be installed. The slate includes Dr. Charlies Bowers, president; Gene Johnson, father vice president: Mrs. Gerald Francis,, mother viee president; and Mrs. Geor- gialee Levse, teacher vice pres- ident. The music department of the school will present a special pro- gram Mrs. Catherine L. Gunn Service for Mrs. Catherine L Gunn, 63, of 7251 Holiday Dr., will be at 11 a.m. tomorrow from the Bell Chapel! of the William R. Ham- ilton Co. Cremation will folléw at White Chapel Cemetery Mrs. Gunn died yesterday at the Alexander Nursing Home in Royal Oak after a long illness. She is survived by a son, James jin December 1957—jumped to 4.-'cars. But a Grace Lines repre- vote and residents in that -area Dim shortly after midnight in Au-|W. of Birmingham: a granddaugh- ter; one brother and a sister. Asks Part for U.S. in ‘American’ Bank — WASHINGTON (AP)—Presidént Eisenhower asked Congress today to approve U.S. participation in establishment jcan development bank. of an inter-Ameri- * * * For the United States to join. Eisenhower said ‘‘will be a most jsignificant step in the history of our economic relations with our |Latin-American neighbors.” beginning with the hotel Jones and he stayed before the murder, ending with a trip to Toledo where the two ex-convicts caught a bus for Chattanooga the next day | * * * Closer search of the route was planned, Davids said, in hopes that Lassiter’s wallet and belt would! be found But Davids said little hope is James Lynch, 52, was one of and three men sentenced in 1943 to life On employers and employes. in prison for the robbery-killing of a Hamtramck tavern owner. Lynch has maintained he was innocent and had no part in the death of Peter Kubert in May 1942. He was named as a bandit by Henry Hill, another suspect who :'clause contributes | / ‘ ms at ‘Tanks’ With Toys | . Establishment of the billion-dol- . —— | The Oakland County Bar Assn.:in the Ohio crash as Christopher jar bank was recommended by | LOCKPORT, N. Y. — An-'has apponited thre: committees of Perryman, 49, driver of the car; ‘representatives: of the 21 Ameri- Lal * * _ | Swering a motorist s report of attorneys to map plans for a June|Sennie Mitchell, 60; and Caroline san republics after a three-month Pennsylvania, another hard-hit someone shooting at passing cars,'} memorial exercise to be held in| Fortson, about 50. conference here starting last Jan state, reported more jobs in coal|Deputy Sheriff Clyde Doty spotted honor of three members who have! They were pronounced dead at\g The participating nations would jmining, electrical machinery and two armed figures on telephone qieq within the last year. the scene. ‘provide the capital cent additional Social Security tax boeat-building and chemical indus- tries. The present law requires per- sons between 65 and 72 who earn! more than $1,200 a year to for- feit Social Security benefits. The |vestriction goes off at age 72. As a result, Clark said in a metal siaair ania pone near the red, ‘ To gel hg —_ “+c + statement, many useful workers) : “nae set {George B. Hartrick, Harry J. Mer-| * | The United States would invest ace iat to tee Ybor dooce. He! The boom in steel production,! At closer examination, Doty! ritt for many years the county's Make Better Wives, {50 million dollars. The Latin- partly cuased by buyers’ hedging found them to be two youngsters| corporation eounsel, and former the forged retirement acainst a possible midsummer |who had merely taken strategic |Cireuit Judge Glenn C. Gillespie. also said Learn How to Shoot ‘American republics would put up to ‘‘demorali- and physical and mental among many aging citi-, turned state's evidence given to finding the murder weapon * * * zation as Nash said Jones disassembled it} Lynch has spent years saving, illness’ on the way to Toledo tossing the the money for the appeal—putting zens. parts out the car window. aside some of his prison pay of the 38-year-old |17'2 cents a day and selling his p Stolen from tors would allow it. \tions above 1,000 feet. strike, also contributed to the im-| positions to fire at passing ‘‘tanks’ Hardly more than a tenth of the) York City occurred Dec. 26-27 in an average American child devel- | blood for $5 a pint whenever doc-| world’s population lives at eleva-|1947 when there was 25.8 inches ofjops about one decayed tooth each \the wet stuff in 24 hours. The ceremony will be held at! 1:30 at the Courthouse. Friends and relatives of the deceased, as well as all others, are invited to be present, according to A. Floyd! KEARNY, N. J. (P— Mrs, Em- ma Vilardi is teaching brides of ithe future something she thinks roved job picture. with their toy guns. The greatest snowfall in New| Between the ages of six and 18 ; > | lives—how to shoot straight. ; Blakeslee, chairman of the associa-| |. “ak ee tion’s Memorial Committee. | Every week she gives rifle in- ~ Committees named consist of; | Struction to a group of teenagers, year. The Weather PAGE TWO U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Scattered showers and thunderstorms teday. Lecal- ly heavy thunderstorms this afternoon Partly cloudy and cooler tonight and to- merrow. Predicted high fer today, 86 Lew tenight 5%. High temerrow. 65 Teday in Pentiac Lowest temperature Preceding & am ee re eee ay At 8 am: Wind velocity 25 mph Direction—South west Sun sete Monday at 752 pm Sun rises Tuesday at 5 14 at Moon sets Monday at 1057 por Moon rises Tuesday at 902 an Dewntewn Temperatures iba ys-otei Oe 11 am sa «7 12 noon 1 p.m 71 t eeeecere Saturday in Pentiac fas recorded downtown! ; Highest temperature ; Mean temperature : Lowest temperature ........... Weather—Fair | Sunday in Pontiac Highest temperature .. Lowest temperature . Mean temperature Weather—Showers One Year Age in Pentiac Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature .....-se.ss- Weather—Sunny | Highest and Lewest Temperatures Thts Date in 87 Years 86 in 1896 30 in 1907 Senday'’s Temperatere Chart Alpenea 61 54 Marquette 75 86 Baltimore 72 61 Memphis 5 68 Bismarck 56 $1-Miami Beach 8 76 Brownsville 84 75 Milwaukee 82 53 Buffale 75 89 Minneapolis 80 ry Charieston = be Now he 5 - lew. Yor! Cincmenats” 81 €8 Omaha 69 46 Cleve 70 @ Peliston 80 57 Denver 66 44 Phoenix 94 65 rote Tl. 4 Pittsburgh 73 «62 PeWworth 0 8 Prancisco 13 Se / - ancisco 56) . . _ Ord. Rapids 82 e 88. Marie 61 AY SUDDEN SHIFT — One of the damaged buildings in the tor- Seta Ti Waatnginn $9 $8: nado which hit Green Bay, Wis. and its suburbs last night was this Lansing 4 $3 —— by bs year-old home moved nearly off its foundation in Ashwaubenon. ' \ , 5 4 For Judge Hartrick, Probate Judge; *t ane Police Athletic League rifle| man, association ivan tert “The girls feel that by learning David C. Pence; For Merritt, Sen.|t9 Shoot now they will be able to L. Harvey lodge, Charles A.| Share a common interest with their Davis, assistant corporation coun-|husbands,”’ said Mrs. Vilardi. sel, and Maurice A, Merritt; For Judge Gillespie, George A. Don- dero, Clarence K. Patterson, and) William 4. Ewart. | rosion. | Nickel plating is used principal- ly to protect other metals from cor-! | the rest. He’s Sure Congressmen will be valuable in their married Outtalk Congresswomen WASHINGTON (®—Can con- gressmen outtalk congresswom- en? Rep. Leo W. O’Brien (D- NY) has decided they can and do. O’Brien measured every speech that the 420 congressmen and 16 congresswomen have de- livered in the House this session. The results: the average con- gressman talked twice as long as the average congresswoman. Chicago-Rotterdam Run for Ship Travel Starts CHICAGO (UPI)—The Dutch ship Prins Willem Van Oranje was to arrive here today, marking the start of the first passenger service, between Chicago and Rotterdam, Holland, via the St. Lawrence Sea- way, | Officials of Great Lakes Over-’ seas, Inc., said the 462-foot long) vessel of the Fjell-Oranje Line was, the fastest ship scheduled for serv- ice on the seaway this year with a speed of 19 knots. | The first Israeli ship to reach} here via the seaway, the MS Tam-; ar, arrived yesterday with auto gas tanks from Israel twine from Portugal and wine from Italy in-) cluded in its general cargo. The nation’s can makers expect) 1958 production to total 4344 billion | cans — about 250 for every pefson in the country, That. would be 4 per cent above 1957 production. i BEST VALUES Y . AP Wirephote Five members of the Julius Alberts family, inside when the twister struck, were unhurt. The Alberts’ garage completely disappeared, | 1946 the/ nation produced 24 bil- and his ear, which was inside, was dropped in a nearby field. jlion cans, or-170 per capita, J S. Saginaw St.-at Orchord-Loke Ave. IN 35 YEARS! | _/ | \. | JY yo , a oe, , THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 11, 1959 She Saw Russia— Good and Bad—From Inside “I wanted to stay and see what lish, and I tried to learn Russian, he 40 impossible language. A whole lot of them were disgruntled with \‘Frisco Repeats Invitation for Summit Conference SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—This lat’ has repeated its invitation to the Big Four to hold the project- ed summit conference here. The latest invitation was sent) OPEN TONITE | UNTIL IT’S TRUE SIMMS Has More QUALITY By PHYLLIS BATTELLE She has seen much, been around tival in Moscow, among ered NEW YORK — Sally Belfrage Plenty, for a wisp of 22 years, and youngsters from all over k , she is candid ‘about it all. The lat- world. “It was a crazy, soreaming ne Russia mee teeny like, after t many things stank. You can’t generalize about the Russian people any more than they can say all Americans have swim- ming pools and private airplanes . . « which, incidentally, is ex- | actly what most Russians think.” QUALITY and SAVINGS on These SPECIALS Mon. & Tues. Russia Said Making» Big Medical Strides | | | Stoy. They pay fairly well in Rus-| work, so I was able to stay op, to ttive just barely, for five more 1 j | months. “Most of the time, I was aw- | WASHINGTON (UPI)—A team of} ful cold, physically. It gets 30 'sia for intellectual or cultural Actor, Composer Home Paul ‘a hospital. Muni, 62, was hospi- et 2 bl f : hole . Pee ic young londe — est sojourn was to Russia. Her mess,” she recalls. “Because of three-week festival was over. So their way of life, and a w lot ' eyes are dewy only when neces- . mation of six months’ working language barriers, I found myself I went to a publishing house there were happy. But all of them were Friday to the foreign p-sanaaiagh ITEMS sary, like on moist mornings after and playing with Muscovites: all the time with the Americans. | and they offered me an editing job both , friendly and curious about t/Mayor ‘George Christopher. "| at LOWEST camping out all night. “Many things were great. And \~ j— on English translations of Tol- ™- | P. M. PRICES One-third of the budget of an! average American household is Shop Tonite ‘til 10 P.M. and Tomor- spent for food, beverages and to-|fow—Tuesday 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. for — Actor | pacco. Liver Super-Specials. Save More at and composer . Ira|—————— SIMMS ‘"AYDS HELPS YOU £ lose HOLLYWOOD (AP) Muni | Galvanized Steel Sally laughed, briefly. “I spent’ y's. health officials says Russia | degrees below zero in Moscow \talized for a week by a respiratory a lot of my time disabusing theni is striving with "great vigor” to| | in winter. But I was a novelty |infection. Gershwin, brother of the ROTARY OUTDOOR of this crazy idea that we Ameri- : 0 the people, being a real live late George Grshwin, underwent . : © 30 Plastic cans are all filthy rich. I wanted improve its disease prevention and| aaiecista girl, so I was treated the students in Moscow speak Eng- Clothes Dr er Lines them to know that we are very medical care. but still trails the! tke a movie-star. People would |—— — ; I y ere much like them in many ways — | United States. follow me around in the streets, with GROUND SOCKET warm and friendly. Thé officials, who toured the So-| asking questions. 510.95 Valeo Bow . tee Feet “Bees “fh Ts op he Viet Union in 1957, said in a Pub-| _,, Galvantood shail Gan. ee Because that's the way t I'd go to call on people, maybe * leas ieee r) of Space Ania ATS an lic Health Service report that Rus- « cappe people are over there, really very four or five families a day — I'm aidan Gameat oon much like us. Only their warmth |§!@ Was fighting disease and med- full and I'd ha — with ground . ical problems on an “almost ex-@Wfully curious — ve socket and plastic ey is almost a childlike thing. It’s ‘to have dinner in each place. you 182 4 al by Car r Be their nature to explode with laugh- |Plosive sail |Gained 20 pounds. I tried ba tell ‘de 1 re Ge , , meas, io or break down and cry with} But the report, issued last night, | tmall spaces. ter, unhappiness. They are not as so- | phisticated as Americans. They | haven't learned to repress their | emotions as much.” ATTENDED FESTIVAL Sally went to’ Russia as one of Si. 7 Ys Se ai T Infan car torage or pis Y 999 Pa \~ |Many are kids from well-to-do par- directed. It curbs ite \ 160 Americans attending the Mos-|added, however, that Soviet medi-| ° bs my appetite. cow Youth Festival. But she was cal establishments were “antiquat-/€nts. “The only value to them is) With Apds, ( tek ani whei I $3.95 PER GALLON in contrast to Something foreign — an imported | want, but I find I want less. ‘For exterior or interior sur- not like the rest. Not as easygoing, them it’s fashionable to be thin in| ‘said the quality of Soviet doctor-|* ing falls short of that in this coun- .jAmerica, but they thought I was | try. sick and tubercular and abso-/ lutely insisted I eat.’’ The officials said the problem} Sally spent most of her time | lof medical care had been “tackled | With the * ‘stilyagi" — — Soviet — with great vigor” in Russia. They alent of “the beat generation.” * * * ed or jerry-built” those in the United States. |cigarette lighter, a jazz record, an | “Weight is no hardship for me with the Ayds Plan,” says lovely Debra Paget.” “I just take one or two Ayds before meals as EZ-FLO Ready Mixed WHITE Outside Paint 7 oe Many of my friends in Holly- faces... fences, barns, gar- perhaps; certainly not as depend- ri ent on home. and family. The U.S. doctors found that the American girl. I was very popu- | wood take Ayds.” Doctors. proved ages etc. Limit 4 gallons. ’~ *« &* Soviet government in its health Jar, needless to say. | ve —_ — = safest, at ; Wren A programs concentrated on quantity | x *& * | a New Engia inic. Prove it ; i Parr he wu - haprsem ot r and widespread coverage of per-| ‘We'd sit around, not drinking yourself. Lose pounds with first Famous BUNGALOW OUTSIDE rewe . . 7 Sixlon 4 a fa sonnel at the expense of quality. coffee like San Francisco ‘beats,’ box, $3.25, or money back! White H House Paint | an wet ia "tevin . oe They said pestilence and diseases but drinking wine or tea, and eat-| eran alee | for publishing a left-wing *\ caused by filth had been brought ing fruit. Sixty or 70 per cent of A Y D s MINERAL CANDY $5.98 PER GALLON paper. Sally was personally ostra- A under control substantially. surgery April 29. cized in Hollywood, her home Ready mixed white house paint will ultimately help in finding ajof a minor we condition or its has been cure, but as yet none found. |lated diseases .. . matism, neuritis, | gives a durable finish outside. y ha paint. Fully washable. Limited ob A aye Srcad town, and socially confused. Advertisemen ertisement Famous Roc 7e are She decided that ‘nothing po- | ? 98 N. Saginew —Main Floor hall N. Saginew —Main Floor Easy to brush on. is Buggy litical was worth it’’ — and that ———————ae she would travel the world ‘Selo-Kote’ ODORLESS OIL-BASE arching for the truth aboat . TY ter ns ane evil exe ew AOre is a message you will want to read; Se yin pices ot cnea a Flat Wall Paint $1 5 are IE and LOWER PRICES—(Tonight and Tuesday) ain : 7 eee! ood ae gg ey en ee PER GALL | 4 She wrote a,book (‘A Room in Medicel research specialists are now en-ler “safer or has been proven mere effec- $5.95 ON , : Niyscow ) Jo earn the money to —_ in several projects which, it isitive than Pruvo for temporary ee Odorless oil-base one coat ed to Israel and the Arab coun- tries (I want to find out how they ,. really feel’), and left la&St week- end for this new destination. . * * arrived, at the Youth Fes- POVRT TUT TT YT Infant Dept. —Main Floor Sally — This Week Only! SIMMS SPECIALS SALE of IMPORTED CAMERAS & ACCESSORIES cameras and accessories . . . euery tem 4s r made . highest quality Ger -.J NN cal ae EI le Mclaren : ose? SNe a tie Seton eel Sins ee net a CHILDREN’S BOXER STYLE a) Round and Square Styles Easy 10 apply to blocks, bricks, ene ""¢ ' asbes a In ite r, >; S L ean Famous CAMERAS Values to $2.98 — be and colors. VEVTEUEUECCTVOVESTIOTTIVNCTONTOSTO TNT $29. 95 YASHICA 2'4x2'%@ 3.5 len $59.95 WALZ en" Wide Angie £2 } $59.95 visas 127 Super Slide $69.95 PETRI 35mm Fast lens 2487 2987 4787 4787 TEV OUEEEUTECTOSTOFESECUTTTOTETETETET ective relieving agent available called refunded by the maker. There are pon uvo used in hospitals and clinics, prescribed|You can get PRUVO st SIMMS BROS., pad doctors and have helped scores of|9¢ N. Saginaw Naturally, we all live in hope they willisciatica, lumbago ana bursitis. And it's} successful, but until that time we/wonderful for backache and ever day, anak be content to get the best relief/muscular aches and pains too. Try ssible today. You must be satisfied eo the ight now there fs a fast, safe andiresults or your purchase price Pruvo's ingredients have beenieconomy sizes also, for continued use.| {SIeTO ITO TE TET L TO SIMMS SALE Tonight and Tuesday \ Cy —tor LADIES 4” AR oO —for GIRLS Play Shorts Regular 59c Value — Now Only Boxer style shorts in assorted colors and patterns. All sizes 2 to 8. (3 pair for $1.00). Limit 3 pair per customer. we we ew ww oe wn oe ee eee eee eee ow oo eve Treriveereey * color selection. No limit. "' ~ Ready Mixed ENTERPRISE Flat Wall Paint i GALLON 4° Breather vinyl latex paint for stucco, concrete, brick, cinder Water Leaks i in ‘Paints aints blocks, shingles, etc. ROX Masonry . ¢ 2 - e Special Group NOVELTY RUGS Your Choice 1 5 50-POUND CANS . ° . . -. . $16.57 — Op A TriiTiti tic lip Cis (OH MASKING TAPE $1.19 Value — With Coupon ¢ a 59 a s- wv 34 inch widths by 60 yards long. aun sos 6887 Girls Play Shorts i Girls’ Tee-Toppers \ © A tet Qually ilar 599.50 AIRIES 35mm 6887 9 ” meet ee | @ Weshable, Skid- Yunaucceucuscuceqenceseuunusennet SSE Sem 6907 | 59° ! cy Seoct ere of vay si i ush cut pile, vat dyed, assorted ACCESSORIES : —- Po ‘Ao 27-inch or 34-inch sua prplmeeliaram eh 4 | 2 for $1.00 Combed yarn tee- = . . Siicccnemn 287 | ere | Sittie tay QE SPECIAL GROUP : | is ‘accom Coil Gud ) erie te wacmaley | A etnies a r a Faaeiny Senegal 287 7 colortast. All sizes 3 fast colors. Th row Rugs ‘Paint Roller DISPOSABLE ~~ VUTTUPUCECECECHUCSOSVETTVUOOTSSSTTONTIRVENTT $4.95 Self Timer Famous Accura make.... $7.95 Slide Viewers ‘Avigo’ with Batteries. . . $5.95 Movie Pan-O-Mat Fits top of tripods $2.95 Coil-O-Matic 5 ft. for strobe or flash. . $6.50 Carrying Case For Brownie turret $7.95 Carrying Case Scopesight G Scopemeter. $4.95 Accura Air Releases Full 20 feet cord se eeere a ee a 387 387 VEEUCCEPECUCCRTSLETEUT INE EM. - Ce Accura, with batteries... Mow aS 2% $9.95 Polaroid Fanflash Gears B-C, folding, batteries .., $14.95 Gadget Bags Deluxe leather $19.95 Telephoto or ey 9874 SL le necessary famera accessoties you'll . some imported, sore domestic but all quality find at Simms . made and low priced. ea aaa hd ikea rece Miiontwtcadyut Set has eek blouse with button front, in in boxer style.) COOL FIRST QUALITY SPORTSWEAR Ladies’ Shorts and Tee Toppers SHORTS—washable denims, linens, sheens, cottons etc. in all sizes 10 to 16. TEE TOPPERS—solid white or white with trim. Boat neck, V-neck styles. Sizes 8-M-L. BIG LOT—MANY STYLES—UNDERPRICED Ladies’ Sports Wear sportswear, Your piel by wad low price. Hurry! “Special group of the above rugs $3.50 C Neck Chai Dukee-qealy snetal 5. 287 | TWO-PIECE MATCHED SETS and Runners ‘ Rogater $1.00 $4.95 Accura Rapid Wind { eas” 2082 Por Aras C3 Comes 20) Girls’ Play Sets Values East pase windows ihe aetrg ater. Fis 69* 6.50 : Por BOM ard Browne... 207 @| . 98 vont 50-~< $9.95 View Finders Regular Telephoto or Wide Angle. 299 4 $49 89 $4.95 Range Finde hn Accura precision por ese 2994 Value 27x48" Hi-le Loops e x @ 27x48" Plush Cut Piles @ 27x48" Tweed Carpeting — @ 24x60” Rug Runners @ 24x70” Rug Runners in choice of many assorted colors, All fully washable rugs with non- skid backings. VISCOSE RUG RUNNERS Regular $4.98 Value | 9 For 5” Pich-Betten Control 2%-Qt.. WHISTLING Tea Kettle ALUMINUM Carry-All Cake Carrier Red or yellow washable viscose in 24 x With LOC-ON COVER ecard | : cS Say mond tsi ue 9 | may 3 $5.95 Walz Movie Meter 44 to C Lint 2. Value Val . T E Direct reading, case ..... 4 $2.95 S | f RGE R oe : $9.95 Shoe Clip Meter I A Cover holds moisture in ‘cakes, E gg Compact with case...... 627 | YOUR-CHOICE ale o UGS longer. silverciike’ finished’ sane AS SROwn — polished alumi - What’ a 7, saute polished fuminum ‘ s portion of the many ynusual and big greup . “ oa -F a tae te 1 : ?a several non-sk | ; ; KBE OS Suni reg as Sue (oe Nee wo JIN [ee DIMM vcs — SIMMS os Floor | Votan are HERS ri. Saginaw wD) TaaVaate. BROTHERS _teraeia a BR THES : : a rae s . , , ¥ : TA Oy mod +. ! , J gg I my or aoe a feo, f fr? 2s fA. * 3 oe fa p , ~- OF ee” Se ee a ee! a a THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 11, 1959 Firs of Roman emperors was|Octavianus) who ruled from 27 Augustus (Gaius Julius Caesar!B.C. to 14 AD. The “Different”? Look for you... PERMANENTS Complete Styled Hair Cutting from............... ANNALIESE BEAUTY SHOP (Over Tasty Bakery) 804% N. Saginaw St. FE 2-5600 > GTORACE for FURS s\|Protection against : FIRE, THEFT and s FUR DETERIORATION COMPLETE SHIRT SERVICE | 719 W. Huron FE 4-1536 Quality Cleaning Since 1929 , Fax "@ ORY CLEANERS Ry, be smart-look smart be smart-look smart Fellowship Class church. also took part. cause a number of Civil widows once lived in it. population is now 20. Meets at Church Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jones were hosts with Mrs. Clarence Winkler, cohostess, at the meeting of Fel- Evangelical United Brethren ; lowship Class of Baldwin Avenue} . . . Church held Saturday at ~ Omar Johnson showed pictures, | and Mr. Jones and George Hollis’ Named for Widows WIDOWVILLE, Ohio — His- torians say this Ashland Coun- ty community is so named be- 4 ~ « Le Ss the | 2 War The 205 Voorheis Rd. WILLIAMK. COWIE Custom Upholstery 25 Yrs. of Practical Experience FE 4-2857 Between Telegraph & Orchard Lake @ 20 Fashion Hue Colors. @ Completely Washable | ONE COAT COVERS! MEET for LUNCH | | AMERICAN MARIETTA @ Water Thinned @ No Painty Smell @ Easy to Apply with Brush or Roller CLEAN UP IS QUICK WITH SOAP AND WATER Pontiac Press Photos | Enjoying refreshments at the “French Cafe,” a feature of Cora Bailey School school, are, left to right, Mrs. David | Morin and Mrs. Bruce Allen. Harriett RIKER FOUNTAIN Sealtest Ice Cream Populer Prices Oakland Fuel & Paint 436 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-6150 Riker Building Lobby } Fortino is waitress. PTA Carnival held Saturday at the OSTING for cool, summer elegance starts at the toe of your smart White shoes. Here are two styles you\re certain to love for their cushion- sole comfort, their clinging fit. Also in navy smooth calf or gleaming black patent. Let us show'you our entire collection. As seen in VOGUE. ALL PERMANENTS ONE PRICE SPITS f COMPLETE WITH CUT and SET You Get All This: Carefree Haircut Permanent by an Experi- enced, Licensed Operator Styled Set Our Famous Guarantee: A Complete Wave for $3.75... None Higher HOLLYWOOD "caop SHOP 782 North Saginaw Street FE 8-3560 Over Bazley’s Air Conditioned hactivity—andinterest._The idea that study. 9 a Mrs. W. C. Sheffield, right, was among teachers assisting with the carni- val. Here she shows Charles Hall and Paula Taylor some of the many things that they can spend their pennies on. Keeps You Young No Age Limit to Learning, By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN There should be no age limit to'read this list: athletics and recre-|your beard of ‘education about es- learning, to trying new fields of ation, typing, sewing and pattern tablishing one Shakespeare, __leathercrait, | * * x we are through studying when we /oil painting, sight singing, Spanish,| Tomorrow: ‘‘Lip Make Up Has finish school is a deadening one. public speaking, wood work, radio Become An Art—An_ Important ;<« If life is to remain interesting and/repair, cooking, psychology, cur- One.” adventurous, we should keep learn-|rent events, bridge, motior picture joffered in- one progressive city, others g good turn by talking with ing all our lives, through study as|photography, swimming, modern acl “as steciveltion and ex- dance, dressmaking, bookkeeping, Plans Breakfast perience home catering auto maintenance, | The Altar Guild of St. Hugo of Adult education is doing wonder-/crocheting, knitting, child psychol- the Hills Church, Bloomfield Hills ful work in many parts of the ogy, journalism, music apprecia- Fees ,. will hold its annual mother, \ * , 7 ~. . THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 11, 1959 sah | Addison Mother of Two Shoots ai AS BE Struck 3 Times, Bids Decided pouple aria ale se apes by Clarenceville 7 OC2eS'S7 “ure fe? Condition Fair ‘Ghene = ae Woman Jailed After Board Lets Contracts Climaxing Week-Long SH) New clesentary, Feud With Rifle School Building \- FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP —| Bids for construction of a new} elementary schoolhave_ been| opened by the Clarencéville Board} of Education. : * * * Low bidder for general construc-* tion was Lockwood Mcfutcheon, Inc. with a bid of $232,553. In the mechanical trades, Romeo Expects. ROCHESTER — Before an .,. Heated Election banked ih white gladiolas and snap 7 Will Vie for 2 Posts dragons, Shirley Irene Kirchofer| = was married to Gerald L. Gary| on Board of Education at St. Paul Methodist Church. | in June Vote | The candlelight ceremony was! performed by the Rey. J. Douglas Parker. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Kirchofer : of 32% John R. Rd. The bride- | seven persons will be vying for the groom’s parents are Mr. and | two positions open on the Board of Mrs. Lawrence Gary of 580 Le- | Pducation this year. high St. | The seven, including one of the : ‘two incumbents, filed their nom- For her wedding the bride chose | ination petitions before the 4 p.m. a boufant, floor-length gown of deadline Saturday. white chantilly lace and nylon tulle They are Mrs. C. Harold Wil- featuring a bateau neckline and| pee — einige M. _ : a oe niet.| Cummiskey,: George Burns an fitted bodice with a basque veal Sansid A. dapck, a ff ; Ray Wilson of Washington and incumbent Clyde Hotchkiss Sr. of By LEE WINBORN ADDISON TOWNSHIP— A 33-year-old mower of tw@ small sons is in Oakland County Jail today charged with assault to commit murder in the shooting of her father Saturday after- noon. Mrs. Jean Madary, of 301 Rockwood St.,- has admit- ted she shot her father, John H. Phillips, 62, three times with a .22 caliber rifle because he scolded one ROMEO—In what promises to be} one of the most hotly - contested|, | elections in many years in the! | Romeo Community School District, arm tr J. D. Naylor and Sons bid $73,553 for the low C & L Electric Co. bid $24,833 | for the lowest on electrical work. | Great Lakes Hote} Supply Co. | submitted a $9,220 bid for the | low on kitchen equipment. a f: , MRS. GERALD L. GARY line Her *by a pearl crown and she carries} . . fingertip veil was secured | The school will be erected on the same plot of land as Clarence-| a. feerede heanue hiie- car-| Davis. oe Ee, 4 ts : ville Senior High School on Middle - iii Tail On ENE Ear ai lle Scurchewi. dil i % ac fo Of her sons. Belt road. It will be on the south- Mrs. Bennett Williams, xk *® * ‘Rush, is not a candidate for rea-| S@?". See ue ry _ . Mrs. Madary was arrested short- ly after the shooting by Romeo State Police Trooper Paul Uerling who was called to the Madary’s lakeside home by a_ neighbor, Roman Klosowski, of 129 Rocke ; wood St. Klosowski said Mrs. Madary came to his house and handed him the gun saying, “Please do something,” and that she had a shot her father. Phillips, who lived west corner of the tract. Wife of Attorney, Dies Mrs. Richard Wilcox of 604 Wil-|sons of health. Plans for the new 14-classroom cox St. served as matron of hon-| Four men have filed for the one school were pfepared by Smith, WASHINGTON (UPI)—Mrs. Dor- or -Barbara Kirchofer of Detroit; Vacancy onthe Rochester Board Tarapata, MacMahon, Inc., Bir- othy Williams, wife of famed law- was bridesmaid and Marilyn Price of Edueation. They are Fred mingham architectural firm. yer Edward Bennett Williams and 0f 355 Maywood St. was junior; Houghton, John Terry, Victor Zink Bids will be studied by the archi-|" bridesmaid. ;and Raymond Storm. tects and the Board of Education cake Geta feel action fe Peal All died yesterday. She was 34. The duties of best man were | Lewis B. Arseott, veteran of bids will remain firm for 30 days. | Mrs. Williams had been under Performed by James Kennedy | ae eee ve cee Reece . nn rae oe "| Of Hickory -Lawn Rd. Ushers | Board, is retiring this year. treatment at Georgetown Univer-| yore Kenneth Spry of Hickory | Lawn Rd., David Price of 355 | Maywood and Richard Wilcox of Pentiae Press Phete that her father was always picking on her two sons and telling her how to run the house. Mrs. Madary’s husband was already in jail after being arrested May 5 following a fight with his father- in-law. | SCENE OF SHOOTING — It was behind this house on the shore of the upper end of Lakeville Lake that John H. Phillips, 63; was found shot three times Saturday afternoon. His daughter, Mrs. Jean Madary, 32, has admitted the shoot- three small ing, according to Romeo State Police, saying mother of Defense May Ask Dismissal Shelby Car Track Plaintiffs Rest Case Britain to Furnish Iraq With Tanks and Planes In the Avondale School, District three men, including the two in- cumbents who are seeking re-@lec- sity Hospital for respiratory illness Her husband has with the represented such controversial figures as the Utica. Madarys, was found on the grassy a « . ition, have filed nomination peti-} ° $ : LONDON «®—Britain ; late Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-) 5 g ™ Ce 4 slope of Lakeville Lake with DON (| Britain announced Following the ceremony -a re-|tions. They are Board President mane in arms - . Wis > s $ Jame today it will furnish tanks and R 7 Teamster Fresiient James . BES ception was held in the church/Gordon S. Hamiltoh, member R.| offa and gambler Frank Cos- lower back. He was taken to the parlors Grant Hamilton and newcomer | The newlyweds are on a honey-| Ear] Wilson moon trip to California and in-| George F. Roberts will be chal- sels for the group of tend to reside in Riverside, Calif. '\lenged for re-election to his post homeowners have completed their on the Board of Education in the examination of witnesses and Utica Community School: District rested their case in the automo- in answer to a request from the dog's ‘‘air conditioned’’ comfort, by two newcomers, Charles F. Ban-|bile race track trial which -is Kassem regime earlier this year. the Committee om - Galvanized /KALAMAZOO (UPI) — Dan M. now and Gerald Moll, All three'scheduled to resume in Macomb | Behind the response was a be- Steel Sheet. Research Suggests a Ryan, feature writer for the Kala- filed nomination petitions by the 4 County Circuit Court May 21. - lief in Britain that drastic moves dog house with both -ends open mazoo Gazette since 1946. has been p.m. deadline Saturday. Only the| The next move is up ta the at-| are necessary to stem the Com- and a galvanized steel roof to re-'appointed associate editor of the one position is open this year. ltorneys for the defense. A motion ‘recording had been made of the munist tide in Iraq. flect the’ sunlight. paper. . | All elections will be held June 8. for dismissal has been suggested |Zoning Board's public hearing last ——— --—— ———___-—___— — ou ———-—'as a possibility when the case May 23. An advisory vote on the gets under way again. amended ordinance subsequently | passed last November. | The homeowners’ bill of com- | plaint charges that the town- planes to the Iraqi government of tel!o Brig Abdel Karim Kassem John Profumo, minister of state B : for foreign affairs, told the House . Id Better Doghouse of Commons the British grant is NEW YORK (UPI) — For your SHELBY TOWNSHIP—The coun- homeowners claim that the pro- Gen ‘proper use of land. They add that the increase in congestion on public roads near the track would ‘‘aggravate -haz- ards to life and property.” * * * Promotes News Man — | ship acted “iegally” in rezon. | recording in evidence, Judge ing the Curtiss-Wright Corp. | Howard R. Carroll said he would listen to it over the weekend | property here for a track that would rival the Indianapolis to see if the speakers can be Kullmann reported that a tape! Before admitting the 31-hour | | identified and also if it is clear township |Posed track would constitute im-| enough to merit consideration. Clark presented measurements the had taken of several narrow bridges and roads near the pro- |posed -track. NO ENGINEERING TRAINING Under cross examination he ad-| mitted he had no training that |would make him an engineering | authority. j | Miss Dee Edwards, an atter- | ney for the plaintiff, rested her case. Then she asked what kind | of a motion the defense lawyers would make. | They contended that they might | jask for dismissal. . | Speedway. The corporation is a | “party” “defendant in the suit. ¢ | ' | On the stand Friday were Community Hospital near Almont where he was reported in fair condition. today. ? The shooting climaxed a family argument which started a week ago and ended in the jailing of Mrs. Madary’s husband, Donald. He was arrested May 5 for drink- jng and for allegedly beating up his father-in-law. +Madary was charged with violation of parole. When questioned by Romeo State Police Detective Paul Brabant and Assistant Oakland County Prosecutor Anthony Renne, Mrs. Madary said she shot her father because he was always picking on her children and trying to tell her how to run the house. |\‘HOLLERING . . . SHOUTING’ ‘Your PTA Is Planning ‘former Township Clerk George | ‘Kullmann, in office when the re- zoning action was ‘taken; Gene Pini, Township Zoning Board mem- ber: and Duane Clark, treasurer of the Shelby Homeowners Coun- cil, an organization also listed as a plaintiff in the case * * * Also on the stand briefly was the Poppleton Elementary School newly-elected township clerk Lorin PTA meets at 8 p.m., Thursday Evans in the all-purpose room of the WILL INCREASE REVENUE | school. } i ‘ , Student Activities Show Set at Poppleton School | TROY — A sample of student; tion of B. W. Zobelski, AAC activities will be presented when *@fety chairman in the area. | Then the Library Girls wil] ex- | plain their work. | The annual installation of PTA) officers will follow. Mrs. William| | Mrs. Madary said she was wash- ‘ing clothes when she heard ber father “‘hollering’’ at her seven- year-old son, Danny, “for throw- ing stones in the lake.’ A short \time later, she said, she heard her father shouting at the boy again for not taking eare of some fish poles. The young mother whe has an- other son, Donald Jr., 2, went out and told her father to leave - the children alone, she told She added that she police accused her father of picking on them because their father wasn’t - Pini said he didn’t know how the Musical selections will be offered) Artman is to be installed as presi-| proposed track would improve the by the 6th grade Glee Club under| dent. Other officers are Harry Win-! ; . ale ithe direction of Ruth Gasiord een father vice president and| ° safety, sanitation and morals of | i an seman |teacher. The school band, con-|Herbert Palmer, teacher vice! Telling her father he must pack {ducted by Victor Bordo, will play| president, jand leave by the first of June, she He did agree, however, that it |g medley of tunes. | PTA members also wil Istage a/ sent Danny to bed. | would bring increased revenue | This will be followed by a skit hobby display. » & * * | to commercial enterprises here. | yeing staged by the Safety ang | Refreshments will be served by| Mrs. Madary told police she went In their bill of complaint, the! Service Squads under the direc- |the second grade mothers. \back into the house to get the - !gun, came out and shot twice into | | ROCHESTER — The Brookland the woods. 'Won’t Tolerate Abuse, Says Robbins Avon Elementary School PTA will) "That's what I'm going to de SA Council Will Air Pond Issue rp—7s nt, i , ~ Eugene Rounds, Chairman of the , Rens : newly-formed Rochester Area ano She Der Sethe be Ser ciate | . yy . | ment made after the shooting. . : a Youth Guidance Committee will be! the guest speaker. | Then Mrs. Madary shot Phillips, ~~ . ' An election of officers wil] be and when he started to rise she held when the Baldwin Elemen-|shot him again. She walked to ‘tary School PTA meets at 8 p.m, |Kosowaki's howe and told him | Wednesday at the school. _ |wWhat had happened; then walked . -. |back to. her home and calmly ws en cite: Mew Nes. gan feeding her som, Donal len Po for president; Mrs. SUSPECTS LETTER Ruth Gullon. Mrs, Ann Ogilvie | When questioned at the hospital, and Mrs. Mary Ann Ayers for Pphiilips told police that after his mother vice president. ‘daughter shot him the first time, Others are, for father vice presi-/she told him the next one would dent, George Gullon, George Beat-|be in the heart. obbin: report on the condition of the 25.|'¥ 8nd Jack Wurges: for teacher | Phillipe said that he thought pea Resta ocag year-old dams. —? x Comilin Salyers) Bist. Madasy hed . ’ and Joan Rosegart. | letter from her husband that day | He also stated that it costs his | Also, a movie titled “‘Assign- that had turned her against him, ‘Ask Churches to B ‘Ask Uhurches fo Bust Board of Commerce rose 140,000 and non-automotive both employment totals and the | exceeds that of corresponding Milford company approximately |ment Children’ starring Danny’ The two youngs taken $10,000 annually for maintenance Kaye will be shown. to as. Gee paola Pim } | x . DETROIT—The automobile in-'manufacturing increased, 33.000,| prepertion of the total repre- | factories in any other area. Racial Job Barriers dustry, mass production and De- while the count of self-employed| sented by automobile manufac- | The Detroit area ranks second and aperation of the dams, and : there is no profit from this ex- , . Home w stay while both pareats Township Board ****". troit are synonymous in the minds rose 10,000 between 1949 and 1957 | turing. eee ; : i } ; < F: eh! WAS N , | _ "esi- of people throughout the world. | Offsetting this 183,000 increase, em-| - > fareer Kew foe tes ote Pais ee ssid penditure. | e to Acton Plans Macomb Jury Gets Mass production made it possible| ployment in Detroit's automobile Detroit's tremendous volume of tion of drugs and medicines and) government contracts called on A-development company wants) ito fill part of the Robbins pond| iproperty and construct a complete . < seenia conti of Zoning Unit ; . : " . ne 2c line , 35 ) “Ee - ©. R Sch | § t for automobile manufacturing, dur-/factories declined by 35,000, rips manufacturing other than automo-lalso in output from its non-ferrous|300 church leaders today to use ~ i | PONTIAC TOWNSHIP — At to-| omeo 00 ul ing the first half of the 20th cen-|ing the net gain down to 148, tive can be illustrated best. per-| a rm Ne “ sam aire? : Council members have stalled, : . : | i \tive can illustr , per-jrolling and drawing mills. It is|‘‘moral persuasion’ in their con- night's war Townsh Board tury’ to record the fastest rate of over that period. he b fnparison of non-|sec. : ‘ : ai wig) the past eight months on rezoning) = i — ply y, ne | i aps, by a cofmparison of ,non-\second only to Akron in produc-|gregations to break down racial , meeting, members are expected to) ROMEO—A $50,000 damage suit growth ever = Although part of Detroit's lag in automotive manufacturing jobs injtion of tires and tubes: Blast fur-|discrimination by employers. |the land from heavy industrial to inke action on several Zoning|Which Robert J. West, a Detroit major industry. This growth/automotive jobs in recent years this area with total manufacturing|naces and steel mills and metal! Speaking for the committee, New|COmMercial for the shopping cen-|) secemeneatat us a larchitect, has filed against the reached its zenith in 1955 when can be attributed to mergers which'employment in other large indus-|stamping and coating plants rank| York City investment banker John|te™ Project, because they claim} intments of ‘ ale o i Romeo Community Schools Board nine years of api up - ith closed some local plants and to the|trial centers. In 1957, there were'third and fourth, respectively,|A. Roosevelt told the clergymen at] industrial property is scarce and oor the coming wviaes > permane of Education goes to jury trial in mands c at ~ or C year. | “g i . postwar demands culmimatec iMacomb County Circuit Court to IN fact that a higher than normal 309,000 persons employed in De- among Detroit industries but their a day-long conference, “you can|they would rather see new industry an output of 9,169,000 cars and proportion of new plants have been troit factories other than thoselrank among like plants in other) focus public attentién in your com-)Move in . | The’ Zoning Board will recom-| trucks from U.S. plants. built ottside the area, probably/making niotor vehicles and equip- United Sfates areas is lower than| munities on the moral commitment! 1" general, old-timers would;mend rezoning of property on! Detroit's dependence on the auto-/most of the declining importance ment. This figure was practically!for the previously listed industries. /of each citizen to assure all Amer-{like to see the ponds located just Churchill road in Auburn Heights mobile industry reached its post-jof the industry in this area has/equal to the Cleveland area total] ‘+ #.* licans unrestricted enna 16 jobs inOff Main street restored, and new- from residential to commercial for var maximum in 1949-1950 when 53/been due to a nationw ide postwor!and within 9 per cent of the Pitts- Together with automobile manu-|keeping wih tists aptivades and comers want the shopping center./a dental clinic. ‘ ‘burgh eae Ral manufacturing. facturing, these diversified prod-|abilities."’ | per cent of all manufacturing em-)trend. log j area W in factories, } f 1 ployes in the area were, in fa | The end of World War II founc ucts have made Detroit one of the! making motor vehicles and equip-|the nation hungry for a wide va-| ~ bal abuse of himself from those present. He added that often public hear- lings develop .into unruly verbal Business tycoon James Robbins abusk of those involved and “i this |will be present to answer questions |@PPens I shall be obliged to Stave 4 ” as to why he drained three scenic| "Pe meeting. ponds in the heart of Milford, and|INSURANCE REPORTS what he intends to-do with them. Robbins maintains that the reas- In a letter to both Council |" for opening the floodgates on President Joseph Gerrard and four Ford-created mill ponds, was Village Manager Oliver Taylor, |S° that insurance inspectors could MILFORD — Scenic ponds wr sus taxable real estate is the jcontroversial issue to be discussed} at tonight's council meeting | * * * industrial giants, but it annually attracts thousands of visitors from all parts of the globe who come to Michigan to learn at first hand the story of mass production. ° COMPLEX OF PRODUCTION — Symbolic of the great in- dustria¥ might of Metropolitan Detroit is the huge River Rouge concentration of manufacturing facilities of the Ford Motor Com- pany pictured above. Not only is this one of the world’s leading Nation’s Fourth Largest Factory Center F.O.B. Detroit’ Is World By-Word aovcast cu ittaena’s skaauaeeal ed facturing employment in the De-| where motor vehicle and equip- | industry, or well over twice as. cultural achievements written by |troit area has increased 25 per, ment manufacturing accounts for | many as in the second-place Chi- Michigan newsmen as an introduc- jcent while manufacturing employ-; about one-half of all factory em- | cago area. Output from its iron tion to Michigan Week 17-23.) | : a : , . * jment, exclusive of automotive, has) ployment, these fluctuations in | and steel foundries, its cutlery, By JOHN RB. STEWART ‘risen 12 per cent. In numbers,| the number of automobile work- | tools and hardware factories and Research Director, Greater Detroit', 4). manufacturing employment’ ers have substantially effected | its inorganic chemicals plants (This is the 14th in a series of rrow, | West is the architect who worked with the Romeo Board on original plans for a new high school.almost three years ago. : | An additional recommendation | Business connections officials * * | Area Engineers to Meet will be that the rest of the west Despite recent declines, Detroit : yorld’s atest i i 3| sevelt, son of former Presi- ment. By 1957, the proportion of/riety of goods whose manufacture! stil} accounts for over one-third —* greatest industrial centers} Roosevelt, . ‘+ | side of Churchill road up to the | were bids for i manutctring eye eae restric or Probie the nation's auobe workers ee rent, latry beret Hanke D, Roose, ao in Birmingham Tuesday | cave te sed commer. ” | Groped mel smmented1 resented by automobile “making durigg the war. The key problemjand leads Cleveland. the next most nan” unewbeliad : engitecrs and|céuld ‘play ‘‘a mernerabie oni in-| The Oakland County Engineering) The Zoning Board will also rec- proximately $250,000 ever had-declined to 47 per cent. of most automobile manufacturers)jmportant area, by about 10 to 1. technicians. the best in metalwor'k- $piring role” by counseling negro/Society will hold its regular meet- ommend’ that the current practice! @fchiteet’s estimate. These changes resulted in fart |in’ early postwar years was how to|In addition to its pre-eminence iM ing research personnel and eftiand other minority-group youths to\ing at 8 p.m. tomorrow in: the of notifying persons living within] Subsequently, the Board entered from a decline: in automobile }f0 get‘out enough cars to meet the|the making of motor vehicles and) cient management. /*\train themselves adequately for/Birmingham Community House. 1,000 feet of propérty to be rezoned into a contract with Eberle M, manufacturing employment. but) demand. Cost problems were sec- parts, Detroit holds firm leader- Combined with hearness to par-|skilled jobs. ; | B. B. Bender, production engi-|be discontinued. Smith Associates, Inc., Detroit mostly from a large inerease in ondary; employment was. high in|sbip in many other important)... , plentiful raw materials and) He said the Church officials, rep-|neer for the Chrysler Missile Di- * * * architects, who directed the plan- Hon -manufacturing employmént [relation to output. With the return manufacturing industries.. low-cost water transportation, they| resenting 22 major denominations, Vision, will present a film of the; Among appointments to be made|ning and construction of the new and a substantial rise in nianu Yo a buyer's market and the spread) pig area's second most impor- |make this area the nation’s fourth|further should tell employers ‘that|firing of the first Explorer satel-)are one member each 1 the Pon-|high school which’ opened here las facturing employment other than of automation, this surplus employ-) jan group, metalworking ma. (largest manufacturing génter, and|many firms Are changing their lite missile. He also will discuss |tiac-Avon Township Regional Plan-|September. __, r that-in automobile plants. ment was eliminated. | chinery, employs 16 per cent of \“F.O.B. Detroit” is’ a by-word|previous discriminatory employ- the latest developments in guided ning Commission and to the Pon-| West filed his suit in the fall of | Qver the past decade, non-manu| In’ Detfoit and Wayne County, | all productionw orkers in this jAround the world. { : ment practices.” 7 jmissile production. jtiac Township Zoning Board. . |1957. se A 4 - * , t s | ¢ > rr . Ne : ° 4 ~ ’ ae a NR a tee Sk Oe * ei we ee 8 RS ee ae lg ; ae re 2 eS ee ee ae rae eae Ee =a = = FF we on aes Owesel Te lUc,lC} | . i raid the telephone o >e at ! , : : Over it wander small bands of | Old crop corn also moved well sigh iin fe) pure for Nee I Huron = peers her master, John A. Bobko, who is secking nom- tribesmen who still use Stone Age head near the end of the first Quaicy lve poultry _— ination in Parma, Ohio's primary for council h - : » wheg rng / te y ty h 17-19: light type * * methods to scratch out a meager our. “At that time wheat was’'s' Heavy type tens, | nif Ls _ _ a _ : = . 5 : roile a +t mae si - + te : ~ living to % ¢ent a bushel lower, May scoala lo ih crept IP gg emia re Storm said the project is sched- . . $1.894%; corn 1'& higher to 's lower, Barred Rocks 25-26.. Caponettes, over 5 Uled for completion in November : So inhospitable is the Australian May $1.2558: oats unchanged to J el | oe eartland’ that few travelers had jower, May 667%; rye unchanged to DETROIT EGGS N Y k k netrated it before the modern cent lower; May $1.25%s; soy-| DETROIT. May 8 (AP)—Eges. f 0 0 ew York Stocks ‘pons-testing range was laid beans % to 1 cent higher, May Deol: iB case lots, ceili (Late Morning Quotations) | 2.314% Whites—Grade fe jumbo, — exits Figures after decimal! point are eighths - = - - F : a - . large 32; 1 0: medium ; esma of the pioneering visitors Sa We wade B iarge 28. irowns — Grade get 205 Gent Can | 482 : : 9 on oO > > Australian anthropologist, . i carte. tar as aie 30; medium 24; Allied Ch 1140) icoet! Bete, 134 00 ansin In | | = Mountford. In 1945 he, | “Total weekly receipts of government- ied Strs ... 68.7 Cont Oi} : sa ~ Allis Chal 31 Copper Rpg 26.2 camel-train |graded eggs May 2-8 were 11,112 cases. jajum Ltd .... 276 Corn Pa 572 exp ratory ca Commefcially graded | Alcoa 47.1 Curtis Pub 117 3 ‘ \ 4 a ‘ . hrough the Ceatral Re- Whites —Grade A iamibe ~ rab a Am Airlin 297 Deere 96 wre : ” ; LIMMINS 27; medium rowns—Grade umbo/Am Can 434 Det Edis 433 ANSING (UPI flood ype P P “ -Doi werve and phbdtograph RICHARD H. KIMMIN _ fa leree 25-26%) medium 21-22: Grade Am Gran at Oe et ius : LA a {UI “ \ )0d of open today was a seven point nd culture of its sev- Richard (Harry) Kimmins, 65, B large 22'2 Ant MuFay oH D 1K eee e compromise tax plans hit the eapi-, package advanced by Rep. Rollo a . Am S 38 5 le q ‘ ee ee ; , ‘: = inhabitants. of 23 Florence St.. died, Sunday Am N Gas 696 DuPont 949 6 tal today as unpaid state employes, G. Conlin (R-Tipton). K would . : - . , ° Am Tel&Tel 247) East Air L 406 stepped up pressure for solution uise $139,500,000 i ily * * it Pontiac General Hospjtal afte: Livestock ain Tok 1002 East Kod 84.2 ‘i p pl e for a solution! raise 39,500, primarily ; Anacon 645 Ei Auto I 444 to Michigan's cash crisis t oug er ¢ x ¢ un casi live there a two-day illness DETROIT LIVESTOCK Armco St] €6.—sF1 & Mu 15 sey, a Mik € 5 Rim Spee: cemk CAS his supplies with Mr Kimmins! pgyrorr, May 7 (AP) (USDA) — Armour & Co 241 Emer Rad 26 There's a lot of talking going corporation income and a flat - chison 28 5 rit R l hiv | : . ‘ 2 afterward in the had served the Cattle Salable 150. Only around 75 head Bait & Ohio oe Fire a #1 On behind closed doors.” Gov. G. 2 per cent on personal income. ‘ sf ; ° Pontiac Fire De slaughter gs and — in enely Beth Steel 492 Ex-Ceil-O “4 Mennen Williams noted at hist 1 Phill R-P ic Magazine muac rive -'supply, about 25 head cows and load Roring Air 404 Food Ma : Zep. Harry J nillips «(R-Port i. ithou é artment for 27, bulls: steers and heifers in cleanup affair Bob Aluin 24 Ford Mot “7 2conferenct aa a pombinat ee WE t a P _ “"\with hardly enough offered to fully test Bond Strs 221 Freepot Sul \ \\ 7 , ; idvocated a combination “da with only years. He retired trade; cows closing slow with Wednes- Borg Warn 422 Frueh Tra 24 : ns \ sales tax boost and corporat. “i . ? "I = on Fs . 1954 day's late decline; no*early sales bulls Brieus Mf 9 Gardne: Den talk : 7 , ; : = their bare -. in August, D1. foad low choice 1135 Ib steers 29 50 Brist My 110.4 be Dynam tb. 4 fit levy, a plan discussed brief ws for untold \" Hci Was Deer 25°00. few peri pe “19 00.20.50, where Budd Co 267 Gen Fi One plan that camw out in the ist week by Williams and GOP >» age adequate ber of the Metro- about steady with Wednesday s 50 cents aut we a eos ee foe = awmaketr : ces ~_| ic Spir- lower trade. Compared last week slauch-.<., ‘ : , “ee a late sur | pa Club, It ter steers and heifers 50 cents lower Facipe ae 1 < i He os id bg * ’ aaa jt No. 6 cows and bulls steady: magt good to low Gy) pry ) Gerb Pr F } se Democratic leader Joseph _ He leaves his choice _ steers 26 00-2800, mixed loads Can Pac 296 Gillette i Seana ig! { Dets i °° \ every: | , all good ane choice sone-1 8 1S steers 28 50- Capita Ail 194 Goebel B Ur US J. Kowalski ol etroit) saic a ; ' wife, Allyne; two 2900. bulk choice 950-1175 ! Carrie r 4 Coo t , batch { compromise plans were igines ve : 29 00-30 50: around 3 loads hi woice Case JI 6 Go r 1promi \ ~ount | KIMMINS = daughters, M rs.!1}30-1178 ib steers 3075-3100, small lot Cater Tra 586 Giah Page discussed by lawmakers in Detroit Ji ‘s Bradley, of high.chotce to prime 1150 Ib steers 31 50; - C lt pf & Gt & P 44 2 he weekend 1 as vames 2 ‘oad mostly prime 12340 Ib steers at Ches & Ohio 70.3. Gt No Rv i over the weekenc ‘ ills Pontiac, and Mrs. Leo Munsil, of. 31 00: standard to low good aes Fy 50- eines i es H ae ie , ye Sen. Philip Raho (D-Iron Moun T nes |OFrtonville; two sons, Richard H. 2 8; uRitty ee ee as 80, a Cluett Pre p28, Hollans 1 faini) claimed’ Williams wasinesady oan |\Jr. and Robert D. Kimmins, both cholce | bee oe ais betters 3 = Colic _Pa'm 115 ea aid to embrace a flat rate income tax . . r e}! y s hig v- ba) 1a 2 c 49 ] jof Pontiac; 16 grandchildren, and prOuDG Hour oso: few head prime 900 Con Ful. Simin oP: + Williams said all pins will be » itwo great grandchildren. A brother !» heifers 30.90: individual prime out Con N Ga sb Inland Stl 134 4 “oiven careful study.” The ; te , ry this lot up to 33 00; standard to om fae Cor um Pw i Inspir Ceo 474 | ‘ . a : so survives. heifers 2300-25 00: utility heifers 2100- Con Pwpf:452) 056 Interlak I: 6 : - - ; known % % Service will be held at 1:30 p.m. |23.00. utility cows 19$0-21.00, canners Con Fanii¢ 16) tint fius Mch Sit ‘ Conlin said his plan was ' ho is St SA and cutters 15 00-1950. utility bulls 23 00- Cont Bak 487 Int Har 2 realistic approach that ~bould who 1S -. Inesday at the Voorhees-Siple 25 00, cutter bulls 2100-2300. several an WASHINGTON (UPD —Sen. Ken | be given careful analysis and not without to : ral Home with burial in Oak loads and lots good and choice 668-783 VANTIN \ en. Wen e iv careful analysis and no apparently ‘emeter . ee gpaheory i. np ee a dag i t a . neth B. Keating (R-NY) says Con-. subjected to quick emotional < rs J 2 rv. oads md §05-575 st s : - - x or eekual - emeter\ 34 00-3450: few lots medium 500-600 Ib | UOr mo e ress must quickly do something judgment. that babies co cant ualahia 28 M eoeitaa? steady ‘i drastic about the huge wheat sur * ~ * not enough to establish market. Com- plus+ because the public won't |] egislation to advance the com a.Nurses Liked hildren’s Ward shaped stones tiny spirit childré emerge from the about until they fim pared last week, vealers mostly steady to : ee Stand for it any longer I HMOND. Va. W—The Medi- Pood 28 00-36 00 1r we : > ; . lambs No. 1 and 2 pelts under 105 Ibs temperatures that drop well beloW training. They work in the chil- 2050-23 00; about 5 loads choice to prime rn lambs No 1 pelts 86-102 lb weig WASHINGTON (Pm — The ie els of surplus wheat — more than do- 1 different freezing. Sleeping between tWO dren's ward, feeding and reading 3339.23.40. 179 head choice and prime Ment today abandoned its histor enough to take care of all small fires, they seeth comfortable tg the children and teaching them No. 1 pelts 102 tbs, 23 7%. load good and policy of collecting liquor and Mmeste needs for two years. i e j p -ans chotce mostly good 86 lb weights 217 : I l i without covering while Europeans games. utility to good lambs 1850-2050: load cigarette excise taxes through the Sen. Stuart Svmington (D-Mo } shiver between blankets. good and choice shorn fine wooled lambs ¢.1, of tax stamps : <= * * * 2000: few loads utility lambs 1900-2000; 5 4 tax Stamps. i member of the Senate Agricul . C cull to choice slaughter ewes § 00-10 00 * * * Ve (arene denounced the On the march in unusually cold Hits Bottom of Barrel | Hoge “salable 250° Butchers and 2088 cio rting June 24, the industries nm tt nou . ; i steady: most mixed Ss ? 2 and 3 190- —. mH <1, ' administration s farm program 1n ac . vines Leta . = 2 weather, however, the aborigine 240 Ibs. 16.75-17 25. one load No. 2 241 will pay the tax by filing returns a ‘ emselves by| SAN “GO... Calif. (—A 3-year- Ibs 17.35: mixed No. 1 and 2 190-23Q Ibs ; way. sometimes warm themsel y) SAN DIES = 17 40-1760: few loads mostly No 1 200- twice a month carrying burning sticks or bark. old neighbor of Bill Veck Jr. said '919 js 1775. small lot Nc 208 ibs at Symington said that farm 4 The technique is a sound one, the their trash collector was very re- 4 Oe atar see se Pe ones 60 pee. About four billion dollars now ci { Agriculture 3¢ ta I ’ « Geographic writer reported after ligious. He took off his hat after grade sows 300-600 Ibs 1175.14.25; stags is collected each year through T. Benson have forced four million : ; - § som p dlast . 5 trying it. But carrying a portable the bottom of ga trash barrel fell atl pape bei pie soseeared last sale of such stamps. persons off farms in the past yeat fire and keeping it alight are not out, the boy said, lifted eyes eyes er. full advance on weights over 240 | om and ‘“vou'd have many million . hes os ; “ 5 . sows mostly steady, instances 25 cents The industries have Jong lobbied , so simple as might be supposed. to the sky and asked God for help higher for scrapping of the stamp system more leave” if support program SSS ——$_$_______— thaundoned They complained that large woe — — Keatine ter 1 t the 3 amounts of working capital wer BERAG, BOE ue ie Agricul ( ‘ommiutt \ SUMMIT SETTING US. . 200,000 tied up because they had to buy “SShculture Comimllce s ‘ the stamps in advance of bottling to work out a workKabie wl Germany-_.115,000 \Y d . . , ram ee es \\ See ol think it has finally sunk in on UK. ..580,000 France... 10,000 | ~ x eeem nl avadioality { : those who have played politics Conede... 5,000 \\ Under the new system, distillers with the farm vote these years Belgium .... 2,000 and tobacco manufacturers will |) thes ont cannotien van bull file returns twice a month cover- . = NONSHNKS ng these surpluses—that the pub- IRELAND, 7 GREAT BRITAIN Germony 150,000 CNYUSSESSRAY im Sims in te pre (eenat Wand-tar tinny longer Xa rmeny.. 150,000 ing 15 days. Taxes will be paid |“ us ee he said. “We should have action when returns are filed. this year” Internal Revenue Service offi- 0.000 _ | cials said details of the pro . / P Benelux ..25 : J aw \\ | cedure haven't been worked out Edison Man Retires 2 ch... 200,000 \ i P. Vicharit vn“ Affer 45 Years the Tobacco Institute the action will save the gov ment money and hft part of the Willam G. MacDonald of 179 ¥idustry’s financial burden at. the Catalpa Dr., Birmingham, has re- eee same time tired ts general foreman for. De- overhead lines de- after more ro troit Edison's partment. in Royal Oak * * * “It is es { (al I) timated that the gov- ermment has been spending at than 45 years of service with the coe ’ ITALY least five million dollars per year, Compan) Se abs BULGARIA | : a — . : \ i er in printing. handling and distribu! MacDonald was born in Little . ‘ [ Bulgoria..160,000 ing the blue stamps so familiar’ Narrows, Novia Scotia, and re- re is] - A Ye v 4 to tobacco users.’ Richards said. ceived his high school education i 5 ine in a statement. “This will ro in Sydney, Novia Scotia. He (us ... 10,000 | . & longer be necessam worked for the Hydro Electric +) RE nar0 ED Mejor NATO Boses me Italy... 350,000 | GREECE Power Commission of 40ntario . = =! and Michigan Bell Telephone Ry Communist Bloc [EJ Mejor Communist Boses | Albonia 35.000 Record Haul Perfect Company before joining Edison sts * : : , Figures in boxes ore troop strengths a With Those Who Care as a lineman in 1914. _ Co MacDonald and his wife, Helen, | Western Strength 2,240,000 Troops Communist Strength 2,935,000 Troops | WELLESLEY, Mass, (UPD) = have a son, John of Detroit, and | The ee m was how . transicr two daughters. Mrs. James Johns- } 10,000 phonogr ph cords safely to [on and MM Richard Calverle The Divided City The Two Germanys Ithe Wellesley College Music De- poth of Reval Oal : BERLI |partmenf's new quarters —— N 1! Authoritiesmsolved it) neatly ! oe ee ee a ee | Populoton | 17,832,200 | es Berlin @ EAST | having 120) musie students each ' make six trips carrying a_ thre linch stack of records. Not a sin | disk was. broken To Im prove We now have trunk lines, our POLAND FRENCH | ee Married Attorney Asks lstrong. prime vealers 150-200 over last : week's close, due to the non-kosher holi-; Keating said vesterday that \day at end of last week; most choice and ” ; - : t ‘prime vealers 3600-4000; standard and this criminally-expensive wheat yould y eld a plan will be submilted Conlin said. The plan gain of $279.- romuse his week their choice Virgi h cull and vauee 1750-0800. oo sag ue glut is a symbol of wrong-headed 990 000 thes ‘ollege of Virginia has some : ee ; Sheep and lambs salable 190. Nominal- polics n farm matter , me > incr oul = = * = young nurses—and the chil-'lvy steady, not enough receipts to ¢ a Government to Collect . I se rporate me a tax a y i scientists re recently Vis- i lish market Compared last week slaugh- . 3 coe : eae yield 110 million dollars and the Scientists who have en ly Ss dfen love them. ter lambelactive De orily 75 cents higher Revenue Right From By the end of — the pres nt A ceuesa a oi Pe . ited the wild interior ere particu-| They are drawn from a group of instances 100 higher on ghtweight | d ' . Bi hI growing season, he said, the PCr™ | come tax would bring , -reste - * lambs. slaughter ewes mostly steacy ‘ “ : . 140 mill oljars he al larly interested to learn how the'35 students of Thomas Jefferson however demand on fat ewes rather naustries imont y federal government will be hold- ‘ Hl om q ars, we bs a naked savages withstand night! pieh School who nave had special B&‘FO*., most good and choice shorn ing more than one billion bush d as under a proposed gradu Extension of the now ifed i me tax ies tax to items exemrt and Id vield 18 million dollars the financial institutions tax would idlion dollars * * * Conlin voiced yield” 11 opposition to the plan fer a four-cent use (sales) tax backed by Senate Republicans Conlin said he was opposed to patchwork” solutions ~ CALLED COMPROMISE The GOP tax expert said his plan wa 1 compromise for those Who. OPpPese agi aduated income tax which does not coter most of aitzen if Is a compronise for those who oppose an increase n the use or sales tax because of its unfair impact; and it embodics many important objectives of the citizens’ advisory committee.” The plan is so similar to the advisory committee's original recommendation that it is ex- pected to meet with strong objec- tions in the Senate. Two rival employe organizations were geared for action in case compromise efforts fail The 12.500-member State Em- ploves Association and the 9.000- member AFL-CIO Michigan State Employes Union had separate plans for focusing attention on the plight of state workers who missed a payday last week But both promised their mem- ~ * * bers would not walk off the Association president Gordon P Larson said his. executive board would meet tonight to decide whether to start a Supreme Court suit to force the aaministration to release paychecks Robert C. Grosvenor, president of the AFL-CIO group, said there had been “some talk’’ about the possibility of a brief work-stop demonstration by union members but he emphasized ‘‘we’re not threatening anybody with anything right now. We have to check this further.”’ Our Service two additional new number is . the Wrong Question 7 FE 2-9117 | ALBUQUERCUE, N. M. (t—At-| torney Don Moses was asking pros- | pective jurors their occupation | , . A woman, was asked: “You're | ' —_— , . a housewife? You don’t work?” 1@° ¢ J N EPHLER CO When the laughter had died down Ae e a e Mosses said Hours 8:30 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. “Tr guess I better not go home 218 ~ Te oe . . AUSTRIA tonight if my wife -hears about that | 81: Community National Bank Building | question.” he ee ee oe: oe em ee eens a! is ] : * ‘ * e a ¥ ay . = president, is 10-year-old ‘‘Penny.'’ With 72 candi- | dates in the spirited race, almost everyone in- | day evening, May Ilth at 8 pm, . ” 1815 Ee. Lawrence Bt . Sec ip Single .......... $7.00 dith . Coons. retary Double ......... $9.00 N ’ . TWIN . 3422608: $11.00 — News In Brief Kitchenettes .. $12.00 Olive Hall, 346 N. Cass Ave., FREE TV ‘reported the theft of her purse job. x cae on a per diem basis. includes supervision of bookkeeper; statement. preparatian and analysis; tax returns; systems; cost; budgeting. YOU PAY ONLY FOR WHAT YOU NEED Write Box 26, . Pontiac Press, 48 W. Huro > VwTewvrewCrr eT ST. Conference ROOM | > > > > ; ‘ An Added Facility 4 at the > > > > > > SAVOY MOTEL RESERVE IT TODAY FOR YOUR SALES MEETING UPI Phete Lodge Calendar Phone FE 5-9224 120 S. Telegraph Rd. ROOM RATES Stated meeting, Pontiac Shrine No, 22, Wed,, May 13, 8:00 p.m.; Balloting on proposed life mem-| bership. Mary A. McCurdy, Scribe Regular Chaptér No. 228, O.ES. on Mon- 'wwuwevwvvwvvwvwvvwvwevwvvwvvwvvwvwvvuvwwwevwevwrevwvwrevwevwvevrovvwvreowvrvevvvevwvvwevww™ > > > > » > > > > > meeting of Pontiac p > » » > > > > » > Pa from the Cora Baijey School to Pontiac. Police over the weekend. | The purse contained $35 and mis- — cellaneous papers Robert Deaver of os Cottage se..| FAMILY ‘MAN? reported to Pontiac Police over the FAMILY PLAN! rwwwrwrevevvvuwwwe*. weekend that someone entered his home and stole $6.50. Julia Milton, 79 Orton St., re- ported the theft of $22 from a purse in the bedroom of her home), to Pontiac police over the weekend Conscience Wins. Out but It Took 17 Years SHAWNEE, Okla. wh — In 1942 Kenneth Barrett thought he had lost his automatic pencil in high lost his automatic pencil in a high school typing class Recently, the Shawnee News- Star receivell a letter containing the pencil. A note explained the} sender was repenting after taking! * the pencil You can cover yourself, your wife, your children... even future children ... with “economy;size” Life of Vir- ginia Family Protection. Just one, low-cost policy .. . one budget-size premium. Great for saving, too. While cash values are grpwing, every member of the family is pro- tected. Call me for facts and figures. Lottery Tickets Cost Court Witness $100 SAVANNAH, Ga. W—Jacob Lee's cost him $100 in Superior Court, While waiting to testify, Lee pulled out his handkerchief Five lottery tickets fluttered out of the pocket. A policeman saw the whole thing and Lee pleaded guilty to possessing lottery tickets. | He paid a $100 fine FOR COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE CALL DANIELS AGENCY 563 W. Huron FE 3-7111 nose _ Frank Dering Representative FE 2-0219 1080 W. Huron St. THE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY JOF VIRGINIA SINCE 187) + RICHMOND WIRGH Notice to City of Pontiac DOG OWNERS 1959 Dog Licenses now due and payable + ~=—s att City Clerk’s office, first floor, City Hall, 35 South Parke Street. *2 up to and including May 15 3 will be charged thereafter Ada R. Evans, \ ow AN \ it City Clerk \*"’ —FOR SALE— BUSINESS PROPERTY Sealed proposals will be received by the City Clerk, City Hall, 35 S. Parke Street, Pontiac, Michigan up to 4 o'clock p.m. EST. Monday, May 18, 1959 for.the sale of business property located at the Southeast corner of Perry Street and Glenwood Avenue extension, being Lots 8, 9, 10 of Replat of lots in Modern Hous- ing Corporation Addition and part of Lot 130 Modern Housing Corp. Addition. A deposit of ten (10) per cent of the bid price, as a guarantee of good faith on the part of the bidder will be required with each | bid. The City reserves the right to atcept any bid, to reject any | bid and to waive defects in any bid. | By order of the City Commidion. | Dated May 8, 1959. y Ada R. Evans ' City Clerk