lait ead on ey   
  
  
  iting ih Lebanon ,% 
  
Goldfine Wants 
Court to Rule 
on Questions Probe Chief Is Cool 
to Plea. on Refusal to 
Give Answers 
WASHINGTON &® 
-—~Bernard Goldfine’s law- 
yers asked a House subcom- 
mittee today to halt hear- 
ings, and take to a judge) 
the fight over Goldfine’s re- 
fusal to answer some =, 
tions. Wants to Plead 
(Guilty to Escape 
County Jail Food 
The cuisine at the Oakland Coun- 
ty Jail prompted a 21-year-old Pon- 
tiac Township man yesterday to 
plead guilty to burglary so that 
he “could get up to Jackson Prison 
and get some good food.”  ~ 
Taylor Rd., will have to wait it 
out at the jail — food and all — 
until ‘next Monday. 
* * * 
Circuit Judge Clark J, Adams 
ordered him back there to recon- 
sider his request to change a plea 
of innocent to guilty for breaking 
into the Union Lake Lumber Co., 
7234 Cooley Lake Rd., last month. 
Smith, who stood mute July 
7, sald the only reason he wanted | 
to plead guilty was that he was 
“starving to death” at the Coun- 
Chairman Oren Harris) ° 
(D-Ark) tossed cold water =] pealias the toed ia mt com 
parable to that in our better on 
  he idea. 
The move marked the start of, 
Goldfine’s sixth day of testimony, 
on charges that he got favored 
treatment from federal regulatory 
agencies through his friendship | 
with presidential aide Sherman 
<incte cee Town Battles Te ee 
ened to cite Goldfine for 
oot Gc al are Gee 
tions about his financial affairs. 
Goldfine says the questions in- 
volve his private business and, 
have nothing to do with the House 
iriquiry into how regulatory agen-| 
cies carry out the law, 
Lawyer Samuel Sears restated 
Goldfine’s refusal to answer once 
again today, Then Sears made the 
surprise move 
The Boston millionaire, return- 
ing yesterday from a weekend at| 
home, said he wasn't mad at any- 
body despite the subcommittee’s, 
for refusing to answer 23 specific, 
questions last week. | 
Bat he dectined to say what [er flood damage as authorities 
ene el one a cow pee | 
oe Peter F. Mack (DI), 
member of the subcommittee head-| 
ed by Rep, Oren Harris (D-Ark), 
said he now thinks the group will 
finish with Goldfine by tomorrow. 
Goldfine, who on Saturday had 
accused _ the congressmen of 
‘smear, pry and spy.” said he was) 
not disappointed at the progress of | 
the hearings. 
Rep. John Bell Williams 
Miss) took note of the hearings’ 
main theme — that Goldfine got 
federal favors in return for expen-| 
sive hospitality to presidential aide 
Sherman Adams, Both Goldfine 
and Adams hotly dispute this. 
; * *« * 
Williams said it is “very signifi-| 
cant” that Goldfine so far has not} 
shown that he paid any hotel bills! 
for Adams before the former New| 
Hampshire governor came 
Washington with Eisenhower 
1953, whereas the investigators! 
have found more than $3,000 worth) 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) 
Bit Cooler Tonight 
With Low of 62 
The weatherman promises slight- 
ly cooler temperatures tonight and 
tomorrow. . Tonight's low will be) 
near 62 degrees. 
Partly cloudy and cooler is the 
forecast for Wednesday with the 
high reaching about 78 and the) 
low tomorrow night around 60. 
Thursday and Friday will be 
warm again, but ‘‘a little cooler’ 
is the prediction for weekend. Light 
showers are possible Thursday and 
Friday night. 
In downtown Pontiac the lowest 
temperature recorded preceding 8 
a.m, was 68 degrees, The reading 
was 82 at 1 p.m. | 
  
    ! 
(D-| The floods also were blamed for 
a sewer gas explosion and fire, 
to| 
in| fire disasters attracted thousands| taurants,”’ replied the judge, 
before I'll accept any ge - 
plea it must have no relationship) 
with the condition of the food at 
| the jail.” 
  
If Worst Flood ll., Stricken; | Irag Crisis at a Glance 
News From Mideast Tinderbox (AP)—The Soviet Union today | 
sought unsuccessfully to oust the representatives of the | Streator, 
Fire, Explosion Leave) 
4 Dead, 10 Injured 
STREATER, fll. (UPI) — This 
community of 17,000 battled its 
worst flood in history today in| 
the wake of fire and explosion | 
that destroyed a four-story hard-| 
persons and injuring 10. 
Residents braced for even great-| 
warned a crest was 
down 
a the city. 
| Torrential rains ranging up to — 
| six inches yesterday triggered | 
the floodwaters which threatened 
| to kmock out the city’s water 
and sewage disposai plants. 
About 500 persons were evacua- 
ted from their flooded homes | 
Nast night. 
* ® * 
yesterday that ripped apart the 
Williams Hardware Co. building in 
the business district. 
Firemen poured water on the 
smoldering building throughout 
the night and planned to enter | 
the burned-out shell today to re- 
cover at least three podies be 
pinned in the deb 
The double-barrelled flood and! 
of persons, first to watch the ee 
tacular blaze and then to 
and lend a hand to flood victims. 
About 2,500 volunteers sand-! 
bagged a levee around the sewage. 
disposal plant, barely keeping 
ahead of the fast-rising water. 
* * * 
The river climbed to about four} 
feet above the 49.4-foot flood stage 
early today and Mayor Ray Eutsey}| | 
predicted it would rise another|point in the east Cuban’ 
three or four feet before receding.| mountains to which the | hours at the delivery area but 
The stage was more than a foot 
over the high point of 1951, the 
worst previous flood here. 
  
Moose in Moscow 
MOSCOW (UPI) — Moscow 
was invaded today for the first 
time since Napoleon turned the | 
trick — by a herd of wild moose. 
They left their nearby forests, 
swam across the city’s northern | 
river and lay down to dry out in | 
a park as surprised Muscovites | 
looked on. But Norman K. Smith, of 1698) 
ee Bier ees 
‘kidnaped nearly 
‘weeks ago. ,   
Russia = Western neers ARAB CHIEFS OF STATE — Here are five Arab chiefs of 
state as they met in 1956 in connection with their relations with 
They are (left to right) Iraq's King Their Countries Involved in New Crisis’ 
  AP Wirephote 
Faisal II, Jardan’s King Hussein, Syria’s President Shukry Al- 
Kuwatlv, Saudi Arabia's King Saud and Lebanon's President 
Camille Chamoun. 
  
  
: 
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. 
overthrown Iraqi government 
CAIRO (UPI)—The United 
matic 
dad coup d’etat came shortly ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) Headquarters of the Baghdad 
threat to cite him for contempt|W@te building, killing at least four| | Pact will be changed from revolt-torn Baghdad to Tehran, 
| and the remaining members will try to keep the anti-Com- 
munist alliance alive,-informed sources reported today. 
  
today te the new Iraqi 
official announcement less than 24 hours after the Bagh- in the U.N. Security Council. 
Arab Republic granted diple- 
it. The       after President Gamel Abdel ‘ 
Nasser cabled his goad wishes to the Iraqi revolutionary | 
i 
leaders. 
LONDON (UPI)—Baghdad Radio today broadcast a com- | | 
j oo, 
| 
| munique by rebel leaders offering a reward of 10,000 dinars 
| ($28,000) for the capture of Premier Nuri Said. The com- 
munique said the premier “escaped and absconded from the | 
LONDON: (AP)—Pan American World Airways said today | 
rom its _reeren ofits that |- it aa rocsred a aoe xepetty 
| 
GUANTANAMO, Cuba (AP) 
29 U.S. sailors and Marines 
hope the scheduled start of 
‘only been delayed by rain. wrath of the people.” Yesterday insurgent broadcasts re- 
ported Said had been lynched but later denied this. 
  
= Cuban Rebels May Release 
“$. Servicemen Today — Cuban rebels still held 
today but there was some 
their release yesterday. had 
Helicopters were scheduled to take off from the U.S. 
\Navy base on Guantanamo Bay today for the assembly|   
rebéls were supposed to, 
bring the servicemen they; 
three 
U. S. Consul Park Wollam, who! 
|has been ‘negotiating with the reb-| 
iels for release of the men, sent} 
|word he was confident some would} timistic, Pilots of the helicopter! 
‘be freed today and possibly all) 
iwould be back at their base by | 
tomorrow, 
Fidel Castro’s men had prom- 
ised Wollam the men would start 
coming out yesterday afternoon. 
A Navy helicopter waited several | 
  
41 Tickets, 350 Warnings So Far   
Lake Patrols Keep Busy Oakland County's force of 25 spe- 
cial deputies for lake patrol have 
been busy for half the summer 
now, handing out violation tickets, 
warning. over-enthusiastic boaters 
and aiding Many persons in dis- 
tress oh area lakes, 
Thus far a total of 41 violation 
tickets have been issued to- care-| 9 
less boaters and at least 350 warn- 
ings have been handed out to 
wouldbe violators, 
Most tickets have been either for 
reckless operation of a motor boat 
or for not having the boat properly 
registered. 
* * * 
Of the 350 persons warned, at 
least half could have been ‘ticketed 
legally. 
Records show 16 reckless op- 
eration tickets, 15 tickets for hav: 
ing no registration number, and 
2 as   q one for using a false registration 
number. 
The remaining tickets are for 
violations such as illegal or dan. 
gerotis water skiing and excessive 
exhaust noise. 
Pontiac Lake has contributed the 
  In Today's Press 
EMRE, 
    SOC ere eee aces 18 
Obituaries ..... ROH CHUL OE 4 
Sporty... cecseesceoss 14-15 
MON y once cece ce scegere 16 
TV & Radio Programs .... 23 
Wiison, Earl .......:...-). 2% 
Women’s Pages .........10-11 OM lings - to | 
largest number of violators with 
eight. Cass Lake is next with six, 
Union Lake four, and the remain- 
ing tickets have been issued to 
violators’ on Pine, Middle Straits, 
Commerce, Lakeville, Maceday, 
Lotus, and Oxbow Lakes, 
Records also show many warn- 
swimmers who have 
strayed from protected swimming 
areas, 
This includes warnings to skin 
divers who have failed to prop- 
erly mark their presence on a | 
lake by the use of anchored flags 
or buoys, 
At least 15 incidents have been 
recorded where deputies came to 
the aid of accident victims. 
All these victims were in’ real 
trouble, most of them floundering 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 6)’   ¢ | evacuation. 
‘Sour Milk Shampoo — . none of the prisoners showed up. 
A Navy spokesman said bad 
weather apparently prevented the 
rebels from assembling the cap-) 
tives from the mountain camps in 
which they are scattered. 
Other Navy sources were less op- 
and Navy search planes which es- 
corted it said while there was| 
|heavy rain and mist in the moun- 
|tains, there was no evidence that) 
the Castro forces had made any | 
leffort to ready the captives for) 
The servicemen are the last held) 
iby the rebels, Previously 20 U. 
arl Canadian civilians and one! 
Navy airman abducted by the reb- 
-lels were released. 
All were sewed ina Castro bid 
to win recogiition from the U. s.| 
government as genuine belligerents'| 
instead of unorganized revolution-| 
‘aries, The bid has failed. 
A rebel radio broadcast beara 
on Puerto Rico apologized to the; 
families of the 50 kidnaped men 
and assured that all would be freed 
soon, 
    
LONDON (UPI) —. Moscow ra- 
dio’s home hour teday advised 
sufferers of dry hair to douse 
it liberally with jsour milk, let 
it stand,for 10 minutes and then 
wash it out. ° 
  
Imagine His Surprise 
JACKSON, Miss. (UPI)—-James 
Henry Young, charged with big- 
amy, told a court yesterday he 
took a second wife last Novem- 
ber because he was unaware of 
any law against it.   | Eniwetok 
| once to Washington. McElroy, who arrived in the test area 
| yesterday, had planned to stay until Friday. the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad was surrounded by Iraqi 
rebels and that no one was allowed to leave. 
  
JERUSALEM, Israel (UPI)—Israel 
Nasser of the United Arab Republic. 
  
PARIS (UPI)—Premier Charles-de Gaulle summoned his 
top military and diplomatic aides into emergency session to- 
day to study a Lebanese request for French, British =e 
American troops. 
NAPLES, Italy (UPI) —The U S. aircraft carrier Wasp, 
two gruisers and a transport left Naples harbor suddenly 
today. Destination of the ships was not known but they 
presumably were reinforcing other units of the Sixth Fleet 
in the Eastern Mediterranean. a 
HONOLULU (AP)—Defense Secretary 
to observe U.S. nuclear tests, Neil McElroy, at 
is flying back at 
He cut short 
the visit because of the Middle East crisis. 
  
CAIRO, U.A.R. (UPI)—The pilot of an American airliner 
said today Iraqi revolutionary troops set up machineguns 
around the aircraft to prevent it from taking off yesterday 
from the Basra Airport. 
CAPE PORPOISE, Maine (UPI) — U.S. Ambassador to the 
| United Nations Henry Cabot Lodge interrupted a yachting 
vacation off the Maine coast today to return to his post and 
help deal with the crisis in Iraq. The Coast Guard appealed 
to radio stations in Boston and along the Maine coast to 
broadcast messages that Lodge was wanted for a top-level 
conference in Washington 
NEW YORK (AP: — Heavy selling again hit international appealed today for | 
“quick and firm action” by the United States to prevent the | 
rest of the Arab world from falling to President Gamal Abdel | lke Answers Appeal 
of Chamoun for Aid Action Follows on Heels 
of Pro-Nasser Coup in 
Strife-Torn Iraq 
BEIRUT, Lebanon (#—The U.S. Marines have landed 
in Lebanon. 
The vanguard of 5,000 U.S. Leathernecks ordered here 
by President Eisenhower landed today from the 6th 
Fleet, little more than 24 hours after a pro-Nasser re- 
volt had overthrown the government of Iraq. 
The action came as the United Nations Security Coun- 
cil gathered in New York to deal with threats to peace 
in this area. President Eisenhower said U.S. use of the 
itroops will end when the Security Council “has itself 
‘taken the measures necessary to maintain international 
‘peace and security.” 
President Eisenhower was understood to be anxious to. 
avoid any independent kk tk 
military action outside the . 
\United Nations framework. 
| But he was reported ready - Marines 
face up to a decision that such | 
From 2nd president Bee ation. | one 
resident Ei wer sa ia. 
Tehanese resent sat Battal lon | moun to guard American lives andl jaction might be necessary if the | 
|U. N. did not act effectively or if! 
| protect . Lebanon against indirect 
| aggression.   
|new coups threatened to otooe | 
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)—The 
\leathernecks who landed here to- 
The first Marines landed from |day are from the 2nd Battalion 
12 landing craft at Khalde Beach (4° the 2nd Marines. 
| just south of this revolt-torn capi- | 
‘ tal. They came ashore from sev- 
en small warships which ap- Workers at construction sites 
along the ‘beach road leading to. 
the landing area. droppéd their 
peared offshore. tools and rushed to get a closer 
The Marines marched off to|look. 
\Beirut’s airport, which had vse ke &  * 
|closed a few hours earlier, per-| An entire battalion was landed. 
iBy 3:15 p.m., Lebanon time, the 
. Handi was completed. Noncom- 
President's Text ; ciautenad <item connate that the 
on Marines Page 2 _‘airport had been occupied. The commander of the opera- 
— ition was Lt. Col, Harry Hadd of 
haps for the Janding of troop, car-'st Paul, Minn. 
ee Ambassador Robert Mc Asked where his unit had come 
Clintock urged the 2,500 Ameri-| | fesse he grinned and pointed to 
cans in Lebanon to leave the coun-| the ships in the harbor. 
try | “From out there," he said. 
Ten U. 8. Embassy families | He said he had no instructions 
left today, including the wife regarding liaison with the Leban- 
and son of the ambassador, jese army. 
| Pan American World Airways in. A Lebanese civil . a ocnses can 
London had a report that the U. S. raity RepeeseMmauive veoe ed Embassy in Baghdad was sur- across the sands to Hadd and ex- 
‘rounded by rebels, The British Ere Uo thet all traftic: had been stopped at the Beirut airport 
bassy there was sacked and marred He asked when the airlines iby the rebels yesterday.   
‘could resume operations. Hadd 
iim Baghind radi ‘report Sepia he maul pave sek c € . < a aa » : ° 
mier Nuri Said had been beaten; from pane spihority: 
to death by a mob. Earter the| 
radio had admitted its claims of 
his death yesterday were not true: 
and that he ‘had escaped. These 
‘broadcasts had offered a price for 
his capture Around 2 p.m., three carrier- 
‘based aircraft were seen flying to- 
‘ward the airfield. Two reconnais- 
'sance planes flew high overhead. 
After all these troops were 
a. ‘ashore and deployed in the direc- 
‘tion of the airport, landing craft 
‘continued to peng equipment 
ashore. 
The Lebanese on the beach min- * 
“The dog of imperialism was, 
ikilled by the people and his body 
\taken to the Palace of Justice in 
  
“Gy ROMANIA 
   BULGARIA 
    Black 
hee Wy Sea 
tease GY ies : 
a An ee MWY 
‘Caeece G TURK a 
+” 
    
  - BANON vray, : Nae ‘neg eacudan / 
IRAQ 
    Mecca 
LINEUP SHIFTING — Overthrow of pro-West monarchy in 
Iraq could lead to Iraq deserting the Baghdad pact nations (hori- 
zontal shading) that include Britain, Turkey, Iran and Pakistan.     
      
   
a 
ahah’ 
SAUDI oil shares on the New York stock market today, reflecting Bashdad.” the one broadcast Sel cied treciyiwith the Marines. 
_ the crisis in the Middle East. The Iraqi coup gave the stock . Baghdad said yesterday that One group. of Lebanese boys 
market its widest break of the year a decline of nearly Crown Prince Abdul Ilah had, picked up a towrope and helped 
6 pone ia ms gadustrial Rreree at yesterday s close. aS ontinued on Page 2, Col. 3) ‘Continued on Page’ 2, Col. 5) 
l Stalingrad 0 5006 s , | oes - a 
  
STATUTE MILES     
U.3.5.8. Saihh ent } 
es . CHINA 
iy, 
Lahore y // 
= 6° > | i 
Indian Ocean 
Ap ARABIA.   AP Wirephote Map 
Possibility was seen of Iraq aligning itself with the United Arab 
Republic (dotted area} which includes Egypt, Syria and Yemen 
latter not shown). Pap 
  
ripe 
    ee ee 
  
      
  By WILTON WYNN 
BEIRUT (AP)—Nuri Said, pro- 
Western strong man of Iraq, es- 
caped from rebel forces which 
overthrew Iraq's government and 
was hunted today with a price on 
his head. 
The rebel-controlied Baghdad 
radio announced Nuri’s escape. It 
was the first indication that the 
military leaders who wrenched 
Iraq from the Western camp into 
President Nasser’'s Soviet-ap 
proved neutral bloc yesterday 
might still have obstacles.in their 
path. 
* * * 
The West hoped fervently that 
Iraqi resistance to the rebels the end of Western influence in 
the Middie East, 
The rebel-held Baghdad. radio 
claimed that the situation in Iraq 
has finally been stabilized and the 
British-trained Iraqi army of 60,- 
000 had rallied to the new repub- 
lie headed by Brig. Gen, Abdel 
Karim Kassem as premier, 
* * * 
Hours later came the announce- 
ment of Nuri’s eseape, with no 
word on how he did it. But it ap- 
peared unlikely a man of his age 
could have gotten away without 
help, and this roused hope in Lon- 
don that resistance forces were 
gathering. The commander of the 
rebel forees offered a reward of 
10,000 dinars—$28,000—for his cap- 
would rally around the 70-year-old | typ. 
soldier-statesman, the dominant 
force in his country for years and 
one of the West's best friends in 
the Middle East. 
xk ® * 
In New York, the United States 
talled the U.N. Security Council 
into emergency session today to 
seek a check to the new turbu- 
Jence in the Middle East, Both 
the U.S, and British governments 
alerted forces for possible inter- 
‘vention in the area, but the Ei- 
senhower administration was hop- 
ing the U.N. could successfully 
olster the forces opposed to the 
spread of Nasse.ism. 
= * * * 
= However, the threat of the So- 
Wiet veto made any decisive U. N. 
‘action unlikely. Pro- Western 
Sources in Beirut said failure of 
the West to intervene to protect oe Some diplomats experienced in 
the Middle East cautioned that the 
escape announcement might be a 
ruse, They said the rebels might 
by laying the groundwork for an 
shot during the manhunt. 
x* * * 
sacked and burned the British 
‘| Embassy, symbol of Britain's long 
dominance of the country. 
King Hussein of Jordan, 
  Jordan and Lebanon would mean 
  
President Gives Reasons 
for Dispatching Marines WASHINGTON (?—The text of 
President Eisenhower's statement 
on sending U. S. Marines into Leb- 
anon follows: 
* * * 
= Yesterday morning, I received, 
‘rom President Chamoun of Leb- 
anon an urgent plea that some 
United States forces be stationed 
in Lebanon to help maintain se- 
curity and to evidence the concern 
of the United States for the in- 
tegrity and independence of Leb- 
anon. President Chamoun's appeal 
was Made with the concurrence of 
all of the members of the Leb- 
anese Cabinet. a United States response imperative 
if Lebanon's independence, already 
menaced from without, were to be 
preserved in the face of the grave 
developments which occurred yes- 
terday in Baghdad whereby the 
lawful government was violently 
overthrown and many of its mem- 
bers martyred. 
In response to this appeal from 
the government of Lebanon, the 
United States has dispatched a 
contingent of United States forces 
to Lebanon to protect American 
lives and by their presence there 
to encourage the Lebanese gov- 
ernment in defense of Lebanese 
  * * * 
President Chamoun made clear 
that he considered an immediate 
  
  Rainy Weather 
Persists in Wide 
Sections of East 
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 
Rainy weatber persisted in wide 
sections in the Eastern third of 
the country“today in the wake of 
violent storms and heavy rain in 
the past 24 hours. 
Tornadoes skipped across areas 
in Iowa end New Jersey yester- 
day: Tornado winds lashed sec- 
.tions of Wisconsin, Missouri and 
‘Illinois. No injuries were report- 
ed in the storm belt. 
* * * 
: The heaviest rain belt stretched 
from the southern Great Lakes 
region westward into southern}, 
Iowa and northern Missouri. The 
storms and showers erupted near 
the leading edge of a cool air 
mass moving southeastward from 
Canada. 
* * * 
A tornado struck rura] areas in 
southwest Iowa, causing extensive 
damage to at least 10 farms in 
Adams and Taylor counties. Nu- 
merous funnel clouds also were 
“reported in the area as well as 
in other sections of the state. 
Heaviest rain was an unofficial 
J inches in southeast Iowa. 
The Weather 
Full U.8. Weather Bureau Report 
NTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly 
som and humid with showers 
ene anes ending 
and turnin, 
gusty winds in selenhecsintins. Partly 
a@loudy an ier tomerrow. High tote 
around &2. Pe Bese 62. Hig 
morrow near 78. esterly winds 
15-25 miles, rs briety hi io in thunder- 
storms, shifting to northerly 10-16 miles 
Tomerrow night rtly 
cloudy, low near 60. - 
Today | in Pe Pontiac 
,, Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. 
At 8 a.m: Wind velocity § mph. 
Direction: Southwest 
Sun sets Tuesday at 8:07 p.m 
Sun rises Wednesday at 6:09 . m. 
Moon sets Tuesday at 7:02 p.m 
Moon rises Wednesday at 5: 12 a.m. 
Downtown Temperatures 
isa «eis 1 ene 
ea ee ed 
Menday in Pontiac 
as recorded sidiatentatiee 
Pichert (estetare civan 
Lowest temperature ...+..+. 
igean peerete . 
= Wea —Rein 
« 
One Vear Age Age in Peatios 
Highest temperatur: oe 
Lowest tombratere. rr 
Mean gare otf ree ettes sovereignty and integrity. 
These forces have not been sent 
as any act of war. They will dem- 
onstrate the concern of the United 
States for the independence and in- 
tegrity of Lebanon, which we deem 
vita] to, the national interest and 
world peace. Our concern will also 
be shown by economic assistance. 
We shall act in accordance with 
these legitimate concerns. 
* * * 
The United States, this morn- 
ing, will report its action to an 
emergeney meeting of the Unit- 
ed Nations Security Council. As 
the United Nations Charter rec- 
ognizes, there is an inherent right 
of collective self-defense. In con- 
formity with the spirit of the 
Charter, the United States is re 
perting the measures taken by it 
to the Security Council of the 
United Nations, making clear 
that these measures will be ter- 
minated ag soon as the Security 
Counci} has itself. taken the 
measures necessary te maintain 
’ international peace and- security. 
The United States believes that 
the United Nations can and should 
take measures which are adequate 
to preserve the independence and 
integrity of Lebanon. 
* * * 
It is apparent, however, that in 
the face of the tragic and shock- 
ing events that are occurring near- 
by, more will be required than the 
team of United Nations observers 
now in Lebanon. 
Therefore, the United States 
will support in the United Na- 
tions measures which seem to be 
adequate to meet the new situa- 
tion and which will enable the 
United States forces promptly to 
be withdrawn, 
Lebanon is a small peace-loving 
state with which the United States 
has traditionally had the most 
friendly relations. There. are: in 
Lebanon about 2500 Americans 
and we cannot, consistent with our 
historic relations and with the 
principles of the United Nations, 
stand idly by when Lebanon ap- 
jpeals~ itself for evidence of our 
oncern and when Lebanon may 
            not be able to preserve internal or- 
\der and to defend itself against in- 
direct aggression. 
Goldfine. Asks Court   
# Ruling on Questions 
(Continued From Page One} 
66 of hotel bills Goldfine picked up 
  be trying to absolve themselves| 
of any responsibility for his death 
announcement that Nuri had been) 
Nuri was first reported killed 
by mobs which hanged Crown 
Prince Abdul Ilah, the uncle and 
chief palace adviser of young 
King Faisal II and a leading Brit- 
ish ally. The Baghdad mob also 
There still was no word cn King 
Faisal’s fate. But his cousin in 
the Hashemite family, 23-year-old 
pro- 
claimed himself chief of state of   
the Iraqi-Jordan federation the 
two neighbors had organized in 
opposition to President Nasser’s 
United Arab. Republic. 
* * * 
mained the chief source of infor- 
mation’ on the situation in Iraq. 
nels were shut down, Airports 
were closed to traffic, and the 
frontiers closed to foreigners. Baghdad radio’s broadcasts re-|day 
Commercial communication chan-|Cairo Iraqi rebels, which had announced 
they would follow his ‘‘liberated 
Arab policy.” The U.A.R, chief cut 
The United States held off a de- 
  Nasser sent: his greetings to the 
= 
  KING HUSSEIN 
Revolt. which overturned the 
government of Iraq may have 
been planned also for Jordan, 
ruled by Faisal’s cousin King 
Hussein, but quick moves by 
Hussein in arresting suspects in 
his army recently is thought 
to have forestalled a similar 
coup there, A WORD WITH HIS GUEST—A pair of smiling 
presidents are Gamal Nasser (left) of the United 
Arab Republic and Tito of Yugoslavia during a 
lighter moment at latter’s residence in Pula, cision on direct military interven- 
gelos Averoff. U.AR. would ree the repub- 
lic of Jraq, J t crowds in 
and | hailed Nas- 
ser’s triumph. 
x *« * 
Yugoslavia, last Wednesday. 
of Tito along with Greek Foreign Minister Evan- The possibility of landing 
  hower 
  AP Wirephote 
Nasser was guest 
Ministers of three countries held 
three-day conference at Briconi. 
  GEN, FUED SHEHSB 
This is Gen. Fued Shehab, 
commander in chief of the 
Lebanese Army. He is a pos- 
sible compromise candidate 
to take over Lebanon's govern- 
ment, if called upon, Said to 
be reluctant to take over, he 
is believed to be willing to 
do so if necessary to save 
the country from destruction. KING FAISAL 0 
An army coup overthrew Iraq’s 
pro-Western King Faisa] II and 
established g republic dedicated 
to the policies of President 
Nasser of the United Arab Re- 
public. Fate of Iraq Premier 
Nuri said was clouded by ¢on- 
flieting reports, some of which 
claimed he has been killed.   
{Continued From Page One) 
been hanged on display in front 
of .the same palace. 
The offer of a reward for Nuri 
Said had raised speculation that 
he was among friendly tribesmen 
and was stirring up resistance. 
His friends in Beirut claimed 
fighting was still going on in 
Baghdad. 
* * * 
Strong British and American 
naval forces were moving into the 
eastern Mediterranean. 
Fifteen ships of the U.S. 6th 
Fleet, including the 33,100-ton car- 
rier Wasp, had left Naples on sud- 
den orders, and 11 others hauled 
in their sailors from shore leaves 
on the French Riviera and sailed. 
Other units had suddenly turned 
about from the Greek naval base 
at Phaleron Bay. 
British naval units were off 
Cyprts in the eastern Mediterran- 
ean and others steamed out of 
Malta. These included the carrier 
Eagle. 
* * * 
Britain had alerted 6,000 troops 
at their bases in Britain for pos- 
sible movement. : 
Big U.S. air transports were 
flown from the United States toa 
European nom. 
* 
pa Chamoun, who has 
been fighting off a pro-Nasser re- 
bellion here for 67 days, asked for 
Western intervention after the re- 
volt in Iraq tossed out the- pro- 
Western monarchy and premier, 
The new pro-Nasser regime of 
Premier Brig. Gen. Abeel Karim 
Kassem claimed all was cain. in 
Iraq, but some developments ih- 
    Weather—Rain | for Adams since then. dicated all was not smooth sail- 
Higbert sm Va Lowest, Temperatures * x * 4 - jing following the revolt. te kn 86 Vears - . 
94 in 1887 60 tn 1893' This raises the question, Wil- The eee m. - b 
Monday's Temperatare Chart li 1, t ad radio broadcast 
2 er er inlay tat mr, Ga oes, 1 rah oops i dordan Pismo” $5 bb Milenvace ps s3f pee lendship that Mr. “0ld-| to return home, But reports from Brownsville Hs 78° Minnespols 74 69 fine has made it out to be.” the Jordan capital, Amman, said Buffalo 83 72 New OF 5 § 7 ai 
Chariesten & bs] New Yor 2 n *~ * all Iraqi troops in Jordan had re- 
Cinclanall 86 70 Peliston 6°85, The current committee battle/mained loyal to Jordan King Hus- 
Penver 8 Phoepiz . 'H &'with Goldfine swirls around $777,-| sein. aa: & For Worth 7% ¥ moxie 5 = 2 4 000 worth of long-uncashed checks 
"Rapids «82 6 8S Marie 17 ‘which Goldfine insists have noth-| Hussein, Hashemite cousin of 
Houg ton ib ‘eyerse ©. 83 ing to do with the avowed com-|Traq’s King Paisal, assumed the Jacksonvi a) 34 /ing * apooy “Oy Ht ie ine Hi 58 mittee inquiry into how regulatory post of chief of state of the Fed- 
ia seo ° |agencies carry, out the law, eration of Jordan and Iraq efter 
  Faisal’s overthrow. Paisal’s fate 
was . unknown. . 
Jordan officials said only a few 
hired elements from the army 
backed by a ‘foreign Arab state’’ 
had carried out the coup and did 
not yet have the situation under 
full control. 
* * * 
Beirut itself was quiet as it has 
‘|been for days. There was no sign 
of gunfire or explosions from the 
Rebel-held area of the city but 
Lebanese Army patrols moved 
through the light noon-time traffic. 
The Lebanese radio played 
music, 
Cairo and Damascus radios had 
been broadcasting 24 hours a day 
to celebrate the coup in Iraq and 
a national holiday was 
today in the United Arab Repub- 
lie. «Marines Sent to Lebanon Marines Belong 
After Chamoun Appeal fo 2nd Battalion 
(Continued From Page One) 
pull a car out of the surf onto 
the beach. 
Later the Marines began clear- 
ing the beach of civilians. 
* * * 
The Americans were in drab 
battle dress, wearing green and 
yellow camouflaged helmets, 
* * x 
As a landing craft unloaded at 
the beaches, one Marine was 
heard to swear and grumble: “All 
my smokes got wet in that land- 
ing.”’ * * * 
Another Marine looked up at the 
beautiful Lebanon mountains be- 
yond the airport and remarked: 
‘This is a wonderful country, but 
they tell me they're trying to 
  wreck it.” © tion to protect shaky, ss waa 
Jordan and Lebanon from the 
rinig of similar coups. Washing- 
ton banked heavily on swift U.N, 
action but did not rule out acting 
ith Britain outside the world or- 
ganization. 
the 
$600 Marines. with the U.S. 6th 
Fleet. in the Mediterranean was 
under consideration, one senator 
reported after President 
met with Ejisen-   
available to fly U.S. 
Persian Gulf Sheikdom of Kuwait) 
both within striking distance of 
~*~ * * Huge Air Force transport planes 
at Charleston, S.C., took off for| 
Europe, where they would be! 
troops from Germany to the Middle East if 
Red Sea base of Aden and in the 
Britain has about 6,000 citizens     
  
  in Iraq, many of them engaged 
duced droMaings bad there not 
been a deputy on hand to rescue 
the parties in distress.” 
of a deputy.” 
Aside from this, 
They have also assisted in re- 
covering lost or stolen boats and 
properly set up buoys for swim- 
ming areas, 
* * * 
According to Deputy Donald 
Kratt, lake patrol coordinator, ‘So 
far the men have done a wonder- 
ful job, We've had a steadily de- 
creasing number of complaints by 
lake residents."” 
“In almost every case the new 
deputies are being treated with re- 
spect. Actually, they're interested 
only in seeing that people know the 
new laws and follow them. The 
men aren’t there just to hand out 
tickets,” he added. 
: * * * 
Local authorities are looking for 
a smaller number of drowning vic- 
tims this year and a much smaller 
number of boating mishaps with 
the newly-deputized lake force in 
Operation. He added that “there have been 
several other incidents of this na- 
ture in which drowning might have 
been the end result without the aid 
deputies have 
assisted over 30 boaters with mo- 
tor trouble, towing them safely to 
shore 
given residents advice on how to main and paving and the Com- 
merce street paving special assess- 
ment districts also were approved. 
erty, the Chiera property and the 
property owned by Dr. J. Glark 
Moloney. 
Liquor license transfers received 
no objections from commissioners. 
They included the transfer of the 
license of John and Viola Zig to 
Robert J. Niemeyer and Car) H. 
Pubanz and the transfer from 
Mark B. Bearss to Wabeek Phar- 
macy and Prescription Center, Inc. 
* * * 
Commissioners upheld the sug- 
gestion of City Manager L. R. Gare 
who advised them against the pur- 
chase of property in the River 
Rouge area from Raymond H. 
Smith, of 1091 N. Woodward Ave by the Birmingham City Commis- 
The Cole avenue sewer, water The Day in Biriteghen 
te Contracts for $95,275 
Approved by Commission 
paving, street surfacing, is that of Mr. and 
and police cars in the|Mrs. 0. F. Pearson, 951 Mohegan 
Lindent pf SS:290.97 were apnraved! Ave . 
: o.ihey Ica the Caliac Asphalt}has been turned into a bee hive. 
Lake Patrols Issue {iii Paty "teat tatac| Mrs Pare wi te had . i concerete surfacing and Edward the ho ygutthgh nigrecalt a. 
4{ Tickets So Far Miett COnchate having. His bid voas{ und that a multitude of bees 
(Continued From Page Oney  |P*#7-11 tie pending: sed i » Pee a ae Traffic signs will be purchased! around efter hele boats capsized|from Paul H. Callendar of Char-{, She said their mailman saw the | 
in deep water, lotte at a cost of $1,819.90, ‘The| yess tee side wall. 
faa te Deputy a gpa on me : pas <x te _ was mer gh them, he had not 
pert, “We know of four mishaps at a total eost of $2,278.26. , * ; 7 
which definitely would have pro- * * * Al Sundell, Birmingham & versa 
  
Bloomfield Hills city commis- 
sioners have approved eight mem- 
bers of the election board to serve 
at the Aug. 5 primary. 
The Young Adults of the Bir- 
mingham YMCA will meet at the 
“Y" offices, 400 E. Lincoln Ave., 
jat 12:30 p.m. Sunday to attend a 
group picnic at Metropolitan 
Beach. There will be swimming, 
golf, followed by dancing in the 
“‘jevening. . 
All single men and women be- 
tween 20 and 40 are invited to join 
the group. Additional information 
may be obtained by calle the “Y" office.     
Motorist Drowns at Soo   
  
Formosa in Path 
of Deadly Typhoon 
TAIPEI, Formosa ( — Ty- 
phoon Winnie bore down on For- 
mosa today with 172-mile-an-hour 
Chinese island tonight, lose some 
of its fury in the eastern moun- 
taing and then rake across the 
fertile western plain and Taipei 
betore crossing the Formosa 
Strait te Red China, 
Sputnik to Be Visible 
Over State Tomorrow 
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. im -- The 
Russian Satellite Sputnik ITI should 
be visible over Eastern Michigan 
tomorrow night, the Smithsonian 
Astrophysical Observatory said to- 
day,” 
The sphere is expected to pass} 
over eastern Lake Ontario after 
moving ‘through western New York, 
between 8:25 p.m. and 10:16 p.m.   
globe every 104 minutes, the ob- Sputnik HI now is circling the] - Car Dives Off Ferry Dock SAULT STE. MARIE (AP) — A motorist hurtled to his 
death when his car plummeted from a ferryboat dock ramp 
below the American Soo locks last night. 
The motorist, whose body was recovered from the 27 feet 
of water in the St. Marys River, was identified as Keith 
Carpenter, 59, of Libertyville, Il. 
x *« * 
The car raced 300 feet down the ramp, collided with a 
parzed panel truck, ramming it off the edge of the dock. 
The point is just: below the MacArthur Dock. 
Carpenter's body was recovered by crewmen of the U.S. 
Coast Guatd-cutter Tamarack. The car and truck also were recovered, 
Miss Eva McEvoy, ticket agent at the ferry booth, said 
Carpenter had driven_past the booth and had been called 
back to get his ticket. He backed up, bumping the front 
fender of a car behind him, she said. oy 
x * & 
Suddenly, Mrs. McEvoy said, Carpenter’s car “took off like 
a jet,” spinning its wheels, and raced down the slight incline 
of-the ramp toward the water. 
The car smashed into the truck and both toppled into the 
river. 
Ferryboat traffic was tied up for two hours during recov- 
ery of the body and vehicles. 
      servatory said. The river ferryboats take passengers and cars from” the 
American side to Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. 
  
* 
  president and general manager 
p past weekend was 8. Ik. Knudsen, (second from left) AT EDITORS’ CONVENTION — A guest at the convention of the National Editorial Association which concluded in Detroit the 
GM vice 
of Pontiac Motor Div. Shown 
A   "above are (left to right) Harold A. Fitzgerald, ; Dublsher, Ponting Press; Knudsen; Alfred J,. Ball, Woodhaven, N , board chair- 
man of NEA, and siiaede E. dessen, Livernare, Calit., retiring 
president of NEA. \Seeks Another Title 
Miss Water Follies of 1958, Ca- 
role Ann Ryden, of 114 Parkdale 
Ave., .has. agreed to enter the 
_|Romeo Peach Queen . Festival 
beauty contest ext. month, 
Commerce, which sponsored the 
three-day appearance of the Water 
Follies here over the weekend, will 
back the local girl in the compe- 
tition,   
it 
    
      
  “The. 
Ving 
Are 
  +The Pontiac Area Chamber -of - ‘      
  
  
  
    
          
    Re PONTIAC PRESS, ‘TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1958   
    
Large Army Base 
Returned to Japan 
TOKYO (AP)—The U. S. Army : imp Whi 
& *.= 
The camp 40 miles northwest of 
Tokyo is the former post of Spe- 
cialist: William §, Girard, Ottawa, 
Tl, GI whose killing of a Japa- 
nese brass scavenger on a firing 
range caused an international con- 
troversy. Girard got off with a 
suspended sentence, 
* * * 
Whittington was Japan's Kuma- 
gaya Air Force Academy from 
1935 to 1945. After the war it 
housed parts of the (rd Infantry 
Division, 82nd Field Artillery Bat- 
talion and 8th Cavalry Regiment. 
It was returned to Japan as 
part of a reduction of U, S. facili- 
ties in connection with the con- 
tinuing cuthack in American 
forces in Japan. 
Pontiac Lions 
Bringing Circus 
Here July 24 
The Clyde Beatty Circus will 
come to Pontiac for two shows) 
July 24 under the sponsorship of 
the Pontiac Lions Club. 
The site will be Telegraph and 
Pontiac Lake Roads in Waterford   
Lions Club members at %c for in 
tue cities kes 
school was blown to bits, 
: * * * 
Bombs have dealt sudden death 
“jbomb any time: He frequently 
keeps his shutter halfway down. 
A stroll along one block of a| rooftops 
neighborhood shopping street gave 
this picture: 
Dynamite bombs have blasted| 
the butcher shop. 
* * * 
proprietor comments, 
“Normally I take 40 to 50 Leba- 
nese pounds daily, Now, if ] make 
10 pounds ($3.20) I'm ‘the happi- 
est man in the street, 
* * * 
Thousands of customers have 
left the city. Movers seem to be ‘Death pa in Beirut 
Teaches “ai 
. |weightlifting champion. Terror ie 
tans ing mate 
the-Mediterrane- 
ag. ore epee Dee Oe 
The curfew has forced a shut- 
  Pontiac Man Pleads 
Guilty in Burglaries 
_| Johnny Rhodes Jr., who Pontiac |- 
Police say is responsible for eight 
burglaries in Pontiae and 
seiseveral in surrounding communi-| Prof. 
ties, pleaded guilty yesterday when 
arraigned before Oakland County 
‘Cireuit Judge Clark J. Adams. 
ts,) Rhodes, 29, of 66, Gillespie St., 
heard the judge set sentencing for 
July 28. Rhodes, a parolee, was 
remanded to the County Jail after 
he failed to make a bond ered 
By the judge from $5,000 to $3,000. 
The confessed burglar is the 
Michigan AAU light-heavyweight 
He was 
arrested June 30 after escaping 
from Bloomfield Township and 
  good 
— to wait for ‘them rather Keego Harbor Police. 
  
Aine St. Joheph River   
Using Former Lifeboat 
for Pleasure Cruises 
ST. JOSEPH #® — A doctored- 
up former lifeboat now is a home 
away from home for a St. Joseph 
physician’s family. 
Dr. Kenneth Cowdery, his wife 
and their two young sons—Dan, 9, 
and Harley, T—board “S"Neither”’ 
several times a season for pleasure | 
jaunts along the St. Joseph River. | 
Their beating adventures start- 
  A piece of canvas was the first! 
passenger protection they tried. It 
later was replaced by a truck body | 
which had been given the Cow: 
dery boys for use as a hut in their’ 
backyard. 
  children and $1.25 for adults. 
All general admission tickets at 
the door will cost $1.50. Proceeds! 
will go to the various Lions Club, 
projects for Oakland County Chil- 
dren. 
Many blocks of tickets already! 
paid for by various local concerns! 
are being distributed by the club. 
to such organizations as the Oak-) 
land County Children's Home, 
Oakland County Society for Crip-| 
pled Children, and the Pontiac 
State Hospital Children's Ward. | 
  
Building Contracts Drop 
DETROIT —Contracts for fu-| 
ture construction in Michigan 
dropped 12 per cent in May from 
the same month a year ago, Dorige 
Reports says. The construction 
agency said May contracts totaled 
$126,942,000. Non-residential. build- 
ing wag down 12 per cent and 
residential dropped 18 per cent. 
Contracts for the first five months 
this -year are down 21 per cent 
from the like 1957 period, ~~   The truck body has been re-' 
worked to form the unique house- 
boat’s cabin. 
Rubber mats that once stopped | 
ee ee ee jdone at leisure. Aaron,.the family airdale dog, 
also is a regular passenger.     Governor Told 
Dip Is Lifting Economic Advisers See 
Rapid Upturn Likely 
Before End of Year 
cautiously optimistic, 
They met in Williams’ office yes- 
terday along with about a score of 
key state officials whose. duties 
touch in one way or another on 
fluctuations in the economy. 
qualified their 
of ‘Michigan State University and 
J. Philip Wernette of the 
University of Michigan saw a com- 
mony rapidly brightening pic- 
Oe cad cautioned that a 
steel strike would throw off his 
projections, and expressed some 
misgivings over the extent to 
which June’s favorable showing 
reflected inventory buying of 
steel in anticipation of price in- 
creases, 
But making allowances for these, 
Hoagland said, ‘‘the pickup could 
be more rapid than some people 
suppose."’ 
Wernette stressed three optimis- 
tic indicators — steady strength 
for several months now in con- 
struction contract awards, an up- 
turn in new orders by manufac- 
turers and ‘undisclosed’ second 
quarter gains, 
The latter, he explained, are dis- 
cernible in some economic indices 
even though complete statistical Adlai Stevenson 
Sightseeing in 
Moscow Today 
MOSCOW (AP) — Adlai E. Ste- jids man, Earl H, Picard, is new)r 
commander of the Michigan. Vet- =" 
Heads Veterans pane 
KALAMAZOO ®—A Grand Rap- 
mander; 
erang of World War I. The organi-|Carpenter, 
zation chose Bay City for its con-     venson came back to Moscow to- 
day after 32 years. He noticed 
that this time there are no home- 
less children a the streets, he 
said. 
Sse decides Gilkanceatic’ welt 
detitial candidate arrived by train 
from He was met at 
the station by Deputy Foreign 
Minister Vassily V. Kuznetsov and 
a small group of government offi- 
cials and newsmen, 
x *««© * 
Stevenson planned a day of 
sightseeing before a reception to- 
night at the U.S, Embassy in his 
honor, He leaves Thursday for 
Tashkent, the first stop on a 
three-week tour of Soviet Central 
Asia, Siberia and the Urals. 
x & &- 
Stevenson is seeking to arrange 
Soviet payment for American 
copyrighted material published 
here, 
His main purpose on the trip, 
Stevenson. said, is to learn about 
  ulation is 1,500,000.   
  returns are not in yet on the first 
half of the year.   
  
While some water enthusiasts 
live for the thrill of racing | 
along in speedboats, owners of, i 
“S'Neither” mosey along at about 
six miles an hour stopping on/ 
whim for swimming, fishing, a] 
jpicnic or anything which can be} 
    
1955 Chev. 
Conv. Beautiful White with a White 
tep, Ref and White Vynile In- 
™ Really « Sharpy, with « 
Engine with power lide,      
1.59 
Value * 
    Resto and Heater. Burry On 
One. 
$1195 
EDDIE STEELE, Inc. 2708 Orchard Lake Rd. 
EKeego Harbor 
  
been converted inte deck ecover- (* 
ing for the craft. Windows from | 
an old house trailer and army | 
surplus goods round out the 
beat’s fittings. 
Deciding it was neither yacht! 
nor canoe, the Cowderys’ named | 
itheir craft ‘“S'Neither.”” It is pre | 
ipelled ‘by a 30-horsepower -| 
‘board motor and draws but eight | 
‘inches of water. 
* * * 
A small gas stove, ice coolers| 
and a toilet provide comforts of! 
home. 
Outings range from one to | 
three days. Other youngsters 
are invited along to share enjoy- 
ment with the Cowdery boys. 
“We always take kids,” says | 
Dr. Cowdery. “They get such a | 
bang out of it.” 
  | muscular aches 
| ease torment of nagging backache, 
| aches, muscular aches and pains. by 
| soothing effect on bladder irritation. 8. by’   (ad vertisement) 
Rip Van Winkle | 
‘Couldn't Sleep with 
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EVERY #LOOR AIR-CONDI 
* Cosmetics 
* Notions 
* Stationery TIONED 
SALE Mail and Phone Orders Accepted on 
Orders of 3 or More, Phone FE 4-2511 
  
  Liberia’s current estimated: pop- 
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PILLOWS 
60 only at this sale price! 
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Loosens tired muscles, firms flabby 
spots. Ideal for rheumatic or 
arthritic-like pains, Gives gentle 
deep massage. Washable corduroy 
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Save now! Formerly 
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  ight. Black oxidized per- 
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  HOLDS 50 GARMENTS! 
STEEL CLOTHES RACKS 
299 
Heavy duty 1” tubular steel garment racks. Easy Reg. 
4.98 
to assemble. Complete with hat bar and shoe | 
rail. Like adding an extra closet! 
  
Triple-Thick Plastic 
See-Thru Seat Covers 
2.99 Triple thick vinyl plastic car 
seat covers that are actually 
tougher than leather, Reg. 
3.99 
    
  Full 54” Jumbo 
Plastic Garment Bag 
Reg. 
8 6885 Strong 3 steel hook and 
steel frame full 54°’ long 
_ zippered garment bags. 
Holds to 16 garments. sper ‘Soft Strong 
Imperial Toilet Tissue 
Reg. 
15¢ ea. ] @] Rolls $] 
Facial quality toilet tis- 
sue, soft and absorbent. 
Large 850 sheet rolls. 
White and pastels.     
  
   
            
   
          
  
  Want to discover the going price for excite- 
ment? Just step up to Chrysler. Ease 
behind that wheel and power away proud 
and smooth! 
At your toe—bristling Chrysler V-8 
power. And big Total-Gontact Brakes for 
trigger-quick stops. Beneath you—incom- 
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Now! Take that Chrysler gleam out of your eye—put it in your 
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drive, you save! For Chrysler trounced 
‘em all (even the lightweights) during the 
1958 Mobilgas Economy Run, averaged a 
penny- -pinching 21.02 miles per gallon! 
yours with ease... for Yet, this taut, trim heavyweight can be 
only pennies-per- 
day more than lesser cars. Your Chrysler 
dealer can tell you all about the price. And 
discuss terms to please your purse! 
Have a chat with him today! 
  
  ~ MIGHTY CHRYSLER... eee styled to excite :.. engineered to adie . . priced to please. See it at 
R&R MOTORS, INC. 724 Oakland Ave. Box 280 Pontiac, Mich.   
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719° , Distinotive designs 
by famous artists in religious and novelty REDUCE SAFELY, EASILY! SWEDISH MILK DIET 
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HARD MILLED 
FACIAL BAR SOAP SOFT ALTEST Softens Hard Water 
FACIAL TISSUE BUBBLE BATH 
  
REUSABLE JAR Reg. 
1.50 8 8 ¢ 
Soothing bu o ble bath in 
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blossom, pine. 6 base lenses, extra strong plas-   Reg. 2 2 ] Reg. Reg. 10 Bars $ Se 5 Boxes $] 1.60 2 Pkgs. $] 
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‘3 88° 1.39 
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ends prevent snagging. Holds SUN GLASSES 
1.44 Reg. 
2.98 
    
LARGE—9 PAIR SHOE RACKS 
% 1.99 2.98 ° 
"Loop tree’’ shoe holders, 
chrome -finish. For the whole 
family. 3 jumbo blankets bags with 1} 
Ib. moth crystals. 
holds 3 or 4 blankets.   tic frames. From Italy, France. blouses neatly, 
SET OF 3 ALL OCCASION 
BLANKET BAGS GREETING CARDS 
298 9D | 2 ais, 3 tae S$] Each box contains from 12 to 
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    ALL’OCCASION Famous Artist Picture BOXED NOTES 
GIFT WRAP Reproductions STATIONERY _ oe: Reg. 
Cellophane pkg. of 3 jumbo Beautiful prints originally : ea 
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CHARGE THEM AL                                     L AT WAITE’S . . . STREET FLOOR —     
im” De . ‘ a *     
      
   
   
           
      
      
       
     
        
     
        
   
    
   \ i Li 
  En " ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 1s, 1058 BE re ss < — : eee - .,  . es ‘ bees a , nl Jf 
Claims Men Have No Dining Imagination , 
‘By PHYLLIS BATTELLE overlooking the Hudson River, an|of this and that (including the Unit-|who must plan daily meals for)chefs under her direction, which <i / | : 
NEW YORK — Picture this,|oven poised o'er lovely Centraljed, States) on Thursday. = \, anes ae itees game eh es 
mother . ,. . a. sparkling white|Park, and your luncheon guest? , 1. Don’t be fancy. , geen ee Pee ee ee pe oe . ! 
kitchen, ‘blak eon ee smog|Cary Grant today, the Duke of| *% crazy, maybe. 2. Be simple. . “mama.” i leads to nd New Space: Objects ] 
of New York City, a dishwasher |Windsor tomorrow, the president ip od Soe 3. I your man falls in the [mon in the au oo oe Made of Thin Plastic! # 
mrs. Hilda “Howard, 6 ermy| category of “most men,” stick to. | “bogs.” tt gives the chef a sense of| Unveiled in Films . She” lamb ‘and beef stews, chickem || confidence, and confidence js the| i DT 
     
  
i 
Preise: the job. Except for one as-| 4. Don’t repeat the same dish/chintzy and businesslike. Only one|" c.;. 3 
a oe within four weeks. ,, *|Pheture hangs on: the wal. It 15 2|sq° giamneter ter. Smaller ones 7% 5. Kaeo a reconh af sienna, to bei peettat of Jimmy Durante, fect across. And a saucer-shaped u 
   
       “Ten years ago, men were | ortain you don't repeat the same which is scrawled, “To Mrs. he , i of foods. “ affair 30 feet in diameter is on) for as 
Nowe they're calorie gonselous, {ast within four weeks, so mene — the world's gréatestline drawing boards, Some of var-| s0hs¥ 
They want everything bolled and |, Make the salads interesting, cup.| U8. shapes as large as 100 fect! Sanu broiled, For dessert, the 6-to-1 |27! and unusual dressings. Talk ie potens te Ween in diameter have been proposed,| Willies . 
favorite ln teed fruit. Ir'e— |en, lke salads better than you! Kary Seyi et ee vee woul Theme ot Setiinn Se vert ae as 4 
aatinash 7, Watch the calories. being of Mr. Durante: an exquis-|peer sueetctat inter-|_ Will Heve You Heard the Big News?” 
WEDNESDAY 
DOUBLE After 17 years of keeping the| Of course, Mrs, Howard has 57'itely-simmered bowl of farina. 
most famous male stomachs hap- 
py, Mrs. Howard has come to real- 
ize what the majc ity of house \Coup d’Etat Hardly Noticeable wives around America know; That 
mae gente une (Ue. Airliner Leaves Iraq|sms   
  
  
            
                   
  
  
          magi rea nd - CAIRO )}—An American ; they’re un inative and nar- air-| * , i 
row-minded, which means they|}ing Ses ene was grounded for ih airport was very — : 
want steak. 15 hours in Iraq during the revolt Me * he R , x * * there said “everything was very|* COUP d'etat| in the country, ra 
Desiree reread eee, Smee a ete eimemares Mc lcrent oi Secon DAY a » Average is | “Capt. John . Hulburd of jgovernment demonstrations in are fea ts. The} Donal 
mer has to plan a daily menu for|piack Eddy, Pa., landed his|Basra but so far as I know the|12tooter we nine pounds.| penalé 
1,000 men, members of the Rocke-)Trang World Airline Constellation |demonstrators were ‘cheering the|The 2Y-foot sphere weighs. 11| Res 
feller Center Luncheon Club. Herlin Cairo early today after revo-jnew regime.” | ' ounces. if a. Every, tem checked by our mer: 
guests have included Ike, Truman|iytionary forces which seized the} Before the plane was given| When they are shot into space jena ds, 31 ae sf eash jeff. >. And, you ea 
: , and Hoover, more than 100 COn-|Rasra airport allowed him to con-| permission to leave, the two Iraqis|by rockets they will be folded into verry ©. ang tg aaa 
FRIARS Club Special ALE gressmen and diplomats, the Shah/ tinue. The plane was carrying 25|were ordered off and returned|packs no larger than a woman’s| jie. .43’: ‘ese Oren ae of Iran, a great many movie/ passengers and a crew of 10 from|home, “I understand. no Iraqi is/handbag or a smell suitcase lado, Prine 
is smooth, mild, mellow. And. stars, and a few ex-kings including! Manila to New York. allowed to leave the country for! Once at the desired altitude OE Aha Bs aie DOUBLE STAMPSE 
you get this superior, extra- Peter. of Yugoslavia. x *« * the time being," the pilot said.|they will be inflated by a small Oscar 1 Pervell. 486 ¥ Py . 
aged ale at a popular price! With all this experience, she! truthurd landed at Basra, Iraq's} =~  * * * cartridge containing nitrogen. Robert Law, 1.99 Ladies’ Bermudas 
FRIARS Club S: suggests a few rules to housewives) po rsian Gulf ofl port 280 miles| One of the passengers was Mor-| As space vehicles these crea- "  Loigt é 
i Mag a om southeast of Baghdad, picked up|tiq Rush of Santa Maria, Calit,|tions will carry instruments for| Bily B: Liodbey cial ALE tonigh: Me ¢€ tonight. Comes in NEW DEALER PRICE = itwo Iraq citizens and wad about/an oil worker for the Arabian the tic and grav 
12-ounce bottles and handy |to take off when told to wait, [American Oil Co, who boarded itational fields of the earth, giving 
ss aen cackena 1958 FORDS | “About 40 Iraqi soldiers took|the plane at Dhahran, Squdi Are-|scientists new information on the _- 
! vised = Tribard aes “They She oe eens im Basra er og on aay new — Pi 
Big ‘300° 6-Pass., 2-Dr. |i paced three machine guns around sate weather informa Some of   
DOUBLE STAMPS 
FRIARS 
          our aircraft.” them may act as reflectors of ra 
$ List * ¢ »# “t Cut th vord!’ {dar and television waves, greatly 1578 Price Bat the bers tok at tt] yin gate (emensine the range of thee fa $6 Ladies’ Swim Suits 
44 covers Heense, all taxes Imets and began ASHINGTON (UPI) — State 
cone ALE Deltvered ‘complete, $44.40" month. the passengers, who went swim-| adjutants general were conwerg- x« *« © $ 66 
| ming and generally enjoyed the| ing on Washington today to or- | Others, the NACA said, will be) | 
PREMIUM QUALITY ALE AT A POPULAR PRICE EDDIE STEELE, Inc. wait, the pilot said. ‘Phere was| ganize a protest designed as collectors of solar én- 
2705 Orchard Lake Rd. nothing to fear and nobody got} Army's latest plan for reducing jergy, constituting experimental 
©1957, Drewrys Lid. U.S.A. Inc., South Bend, Indiane Keego Harbor FE 5.9204 || Panicky or worried,” Hulburd re-| the National Guard from 400,000 |power plants in the sky to run 1.00 Ladies’ Bras .... 4% 
ported. to 360,000 men their own instrumen ;     
  
  
3.99 Ladies’ Sunbacks 
GET SATISFYING FLAVOR... $y3s 
4 | @ | : , rere Foe x Fppomecula 
‘So friendly to your taste! } =m one a, DR ats oy, No flat’ filtered-out’ flavor! . | 
No dry “‘smoked-out” taste! CEST 
_ | S977 1.29 Fitted Crib Sheets 77 
: r MATT 
PALL TAM ARET   
  
  
            
  
» DOUBLE STAMPS 
2.99 Girls’ Swim Suits 
$ys4 
F AMOU 5 CIG 2.99 Boys’ Khakis...1.88 
  
DOUBLE STAMPS 
1.99 Men’s 
Sport Shirts 
37° 59¢ Men's Tee Shirts , 39¢     
DOUBLE STAMPS! 
5.99 Men's 
oan’ Pan 
JIN HOC SIGNY Urs ig ae Gr . 
Ss — | | Spas 
1.99 Men’s Swim Trks. 99¢   
  
DOUBLE STAMPS 
39c Bates Fabrics. 
NDS 5) 
1.99 Loop Rugs uve. 99e | light either 
end! -      
         
© A. T. Co.   
    
Tpouste STAMPS) 69c Bath Towels 
Outstanding | - H Oe 29¢ Wash Cloths .... 
. — _ «and they are . ? smoke and makes it pct Rhee faa OUBLE STAMPSE 
mild —but does not . aca Mitel} | or filte + that FOR FLAVOR AND MILDNSSS, FINS TOBACCO FILTERS BEST ; | - wa 1 ar Ou a | You get greater length of the Ff sh aac hort Oi we ate: nee € 
satisfying flavor! | finest foboooos money con buy da.filtere the emoke naturally... () through Poll Malls fine tobocooe! BABS . ” : | : \ Me Feather Pillow ( Prod tof Ihe i, ine Sobarer Company — Sober is our midile name | aise ne 99e 
: : — on anti ~4  @  George’s-Newport's ~ See how Pall Malls 
greater length of fine 
tobaccos filters the   
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i ‘ s Ee A , 
       
      
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THE 
MOST 
ADVANCED        MICROMETER 
IN THE WORLD! 
Brown & Sharpe 
CONVERTIBLE THIMBLE 
MICROMETER NO. 1011 Range 0 to 1” 
PATENTED AND PATENT PENDING 
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e cone Thimble —Changed at will from “friction” te 
© Oblique Oradvetions — Show berre! reading regerdices of thimble position. ; 
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_ PLENTY of FREE PARKING See this now Ne. 1011 
which we reg 
      
        
      
   
                  
     
            
     
       
   
      
            
    
  
        
    
      “$2,500 Stolen 
  
  
    
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
    
  
  trailer, Misini said. The tree were} DETROIT (AP) — The United 
dead because their roots had been’ auto Workers’ big local at Ford's 
|chopped away to allow their re-| River Rouge plant begins voting 
moval, he said. today on whether it is willing to “We in conservation consider 
this senseless killing of living, 
beautiful trees as a kind of wanton 
jmurder,” Masini said angrily at 
today’s arraignment. 
* * * 
“These trees yesterday graced 
one of the prettiest hills in the sary in the union’s labor contract 
talks. : 
UAW leaders as bargaining talks 
were resumed with the Big Three 
car makers after a 12-day recess. 
UAW Vice President Leonard : | 
recreation area. Now there are Woodcock, who heads the union) 
only ugly scars left.” bargaining team at GM, said ho 
progress has been made in nego- 
tiations that started late in March. 
“Obviously we are not going to 
_'drift along without a deadline for-   
One out of six retail, wholesale 
or service firms in the U. S. is 
automotive.   
  lever,”” Woodcock said. He aval 
| however, the union had no definite 
date in mind. | 
Ken Bannon, the union's chief 
lunion was getting ready for a 
strike if necessary when the com- 
Hints of strike action came from|panies start production of neW|they saw no prospect of an early 
j|models in August or September. 
“We're taking a real look at 
Inon said. 
Bannon reported that 
workers so far have voted 97 per 
strike poll among Ford workers.   
  the 1959 model changeover,” Ban-/era} industrial relations manager, 
Ford |change in the bargaining picture. 
cent in favor of authorizing strike|nis said, ‘‘They’re still up in a 
action. The balloting at the Rouge|mountain and show ne disposition 
Plant virtually will complete “the|to come down.” The UAW reported that the 
strike vote so far among General 
Motors workers has been 92 per 
cent in favor and among Chrysler 
authorize strike action if neces-'negotiator with Ford, hinted the| Workers 95 per cent. 4 
* 
Company negotiators reported * * 
settlement of new contracts. 
Malcolm L. Denis, Ford's gen- 
said yesterday's talks brought no 
Referring to UAW demands, De- 
The UAW scheduled bargaining   
  
  Why Sell Your House 
to G fire cheaper than you would to a buyer? Doesn't make sense, does it. ” 
You might well do that very thing in case your Property Is not insured up ‘to valve, Better check your policy, better check with us.    
    
     
      
           
Be Sure You Are Well Insured! | 
Kenneth G, 
HEMPSTEAD 
___ INSURANCE 
102 E. Huron St. = FE 48284 
  |   
       You, 
Too, 
CAN MAKE WISE 
INVESTMENTS! 
When you invest in one of 
the leading Mutual Funds, 
you buy a share in 80 to 
100 or more selected secu- 
rities. If you'll write, phone, 
or drop in we'll be glad to 
help you select a Fund 
which will offer you a wise 
investment. Or, if you wish, 
we'll send you full infor- 
mation by mail. 
  WATLING, 
LERCHEN 
sa Od OB 
Member New York Stock Exchange 
716 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 
FE 4-2895 
         
      
       
          
      
      
           
   
   
   
     
    talks again today with GM, Ford 
and Chrysler. 
The companies gave no indica- 
tion when they would make new 
offers, They originally proposed 
extension for two years of the 
wage formula of the 1955 con- 
tracts which expired Memorial 
Day weekend, 
General Motor’ said yesterday 
that Local 87 of the United Rubber 
Workers Union has agreed to a 
two-year extension of the 1955 con- 
tract. The local represents 3,000 
hourly rated workers at GM’s In- 
land Manufacturing Division in 
Dayton, Ohio. 
* * *     
Would you > 
like to 
own an 
interest 
in over 100 leading 
corporations? 
| You can — for as 
little as $100—or 
as muth more as 
you wish. 
. Phone or Write Today for 
Full Information 
C. J. Nephier Co. 818 Community Nat’! 
- Bank Bidg. 
FE 2-9119. 
Hours 8:30 to 4:30 
Pontiac, Mich, |    The rubber workers will get an 
increase of 16 cents an hour 
spread over two years. The UAW 
rejected this as inadequate. 
GM said the sgreement with 
the rubber workers provides for 
an income security plan instead 
of the supplemental unemploy- 
ment plan, GM will contribute 5 
cents an hour to the income se- 
curity fund for each hour worked 
by Inland employes, The contri- 
butions will be credited to each 
employe’s personal account from 
which money may be drawn dur- 
ing layoffs, 
General Motors proposed the in- 
come security plan as an alterna- 
tive tothe layoff pay plan which 
first was negotiated by the UAW 
in 1955 and later adopted by some 
other unions, 
* *  * 
The union's layoff pay plan has 
been inoperative in\Ohio and sev- 
eral other states where state regu- 
lations prevent integration of state 
jobless, benefits with company-fi- 
nanced layoff pay, 
GM described its income se- 
curity plan ag the only one of 
its kind now in effect in the auto 
GM reported it has reached 
agreement with 12 other bargain- 
ing units affiliated with seven dif- 
ferent unions on two-year exten-   
me : 
Thomas Phillips officiating. Inter- 
ment in Commerce Cemetery. Mr. 
Tuckwell will lie in state at the 
Richardson-Bitd Puneral Home, 
Walled Lake. _ 
WRIGHT, JULY 14, 1958, DELLA L., 35 N. Tasmania 8t.; e 57; be- 
loved- wife of Howard Wright; 
dear mother of Warren C. Wright; 
dear sister of Albert BE. Weaver 
and Edwin K. Weaver. Punera: 
arrangements will be announce 
later by Pursley Funeral Home. 
Card of Thanks 1 
WE WISH TO EXPRESS OUR 
deepest thanks and appreciation 
for the acts of kindness and the 
messages of sympathy and the 
besutifu' flore] offerings received 
from our friends, ne’ ors and 
relatives, during the recent be- 
reavement 
Baza. A special thanks . 
Frank Beomineeey for his com- 
orting words, e pallbearers, 
organist and Bery} Patch for sing- 
ing. Mrs Don Baza, Brothers and   
  
  
  
  
8 Sisters. 
WE WISH TO EXPRESS OUR SIN- 
cere thanks to our friends and 
pélgnbors, o id 
Centra! Methodist Church friends, 
to Dr. L. A. Farnha: nd     
  elson - Johns eral Home for 
their kindness during our recent 
bereavement "Family of Robert 
Flannigan 
In Memoriam 2   
IN LOVING MEMORY OF LILLIE 
Gaskins, who perce ety! 3 
y 1, 
Sadly missed bv_her husband, Carl 
Gaskins ‘and Family. 
Funeral Directors 
“4 HOMELIKE ATMOSPHERE” 
COATS - 
FUNERAL HOME 
Drayton Plains. OR 31767 
Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME 
br ed for Tals" 
Thoughtful Se Ls AN 1 
Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME 
Ambul er mbulance Plane or Motor 
BOX REPLIES ' 
10 a.m, today there 
replies at the Press >. 
in the. following   
  
  
  
  
At 
were 
office 
boxes 
    ‘sions of the 1955 contracts, . 
‘ 
\ 
      
  ae   38. 
at Drug Store 
fc Perry Pharmacy Hit 
10. 4| Second Time Within 
5 =F _Hitures dealings in #5) Past Two Months ae eet j=) jalgrery Peg 
Protection — vrs ene on =" ERUUE oy 2 aout |were 
; Ses ‘ep 7 ibroad short-covering movement. Pontiac Police with 
You Rec Protection for Your Home, the . || Wheat bad the strongest support Oi 
. ee las much cents a bushel ‘ he past two months, opening transactions while some - oe H. W. HUTTENLOCHER Agency other grains went ahead around 3 } Me Bg clang grind gl: 
| cents.  S4ltola police that over $2,500 had|: H, W. Hutteplocher Max E,Kems | were scant at first but points. De- . Bs ee ee ee oe 
306-320 Riker Bidg. FE 4-1551 minutes ge point. ‘ht Murrey cp": 318] Police investigators reported $200 |may be made at 1350 N. Woodward, Bir- , liberal at higher - 407 Nat Bisc .... 49 |mingham, Osklana County, Michigan, eee ten prices leveled off bh. ; 4 Het Cash B .. G4.1/missing from a cash drawer, $232/the place of storage, 
: ——ee Within the first half trans yk} et Gype..., 49.5|270m two cash registers, and be- 4: J ELLOW MANUFACTURING December wheat was selling : %3 Rat Led |:; 91.5| tween $2,000 and $2,500 stolen from ACCEPTANCE 714 Co unity Nat’l big "339 No Am Av... 313| 5 gar Tron, mm ty at a gain of 2 cents, traded. After. | cities . 66.2 Nor Pac +. 203/8 - 1645 Guardian Building 
Bank Bldg. Trading was at a much slower * prices oor, Se . S. Sate On aise 30.1 The thief or thieves entered pg go oe 
! pace near the end of the first hour): the ticker |Coca Cola ...118 Owens Ong .. 454) through a ventilator in the roof, July 14, 16, ‘Ss. Phone FE 4-1568-9 | with wheat 1% to 2% cents a bush-|, temporari- Palm ... 832 pio'G # Ei .. 354| sald police. The drug store was e ol A arose Pan AW Air ° 
ae jel higher, July $1.90%. Corn was :  lotum Gas ::: 194 Fak BO Ar so | broken inte by the same method |_ 1956 GOR, Serial No. soyoT2078. 
as : poke’ ioe showed ean Naas’ 7, art aram Pict: 408) om May 24. st tol Pootise State ‘Bask’ Bldg.” Pon= , : f 1% to % , July 65; rye % to Consum Pw .. 83.1 Penney, JC .. 93.2 In the previous break-in detec. 88. 
‘ 11% higher, July $1.25%; soybeans Con PwPit% 1012 PaRR’....... 124 ‘ r duly 14, 16, , ; 4% yes-|Cont Bek .... 38 Pepsi Cols... 23.5|tives reported $2;994 cash plus $85 KK. 1% to 2% higher, July $2.31; lard Cont Can |... $0.1 Phelps D .... 485 : " 3. Its lossicent  COP&S 10.6 Philco ....... 162)in merchandise stolen. ® 
J ali h-4 ~~ Sa aarntmaeae oils. Cont Mot .... 9 Phill Pei... 43.1 x * * t ofices -4 
f ‘ pee , —— ° | a point ieeer Gog. 22.1 Pure Oil ...... 306 Another break-in reported Mon- 
Richard H. DeWitt Donald E. Hansen ' asian enue |were shown by Standard Oil (New|Corm P¢ .-.- 432 Ritu, gif :::. 477/day netted thieves $162.26 in mer- RL, JULY 13, 1968, IDA ¢ Res. FE 5-3792 FE Grain Prices Jersey), Texas Co., Royal Dutch,|Secre "™ .°: 36:1 Sx Drug .-.-: 15.1 chandise and $10 cash from Man-| 5818 Hanley Rd. 9; belov ‘ Res. 2-5513 in Endive. b Be. Seonecorennenre 2.50 eyn sere OI s of ‘Vir Escarcle,. bleschéd, bu. doa 2.50 Jersey), Texas Co., Roya] Dutch, “4 Sy ae Ley ry) os - fisidalari's Market, “el Central St. Vincent, “Olen y and Rens . 2 bi Geocves 5! Standard Oil of California and So- a pen | vs+e S64] Entry was gained prying op- , a Homeowners’ Policies . A GPBEAGO, uly ts CAPS. — Opening] MOMMOA WA oon renessereeeenees coup dheklt Dow chem at Rae Bap tigen a door. 4 o| eid si, p.m Wednesday from Li ent seeocree (0 DETROIT EGGS Gett at “agg "St! 9'8] Am attempted break-in was re- Mage Auiance Accident Insurance Fire Ingurance Selyrrnnnnns 1am Bee cect BB") eemoee onie mn cape ees, toh lst ee eed close 10 8 point, tates a": deere eee: 8 tthe Glenwocd Ber, 1 Bieta ae teaSy & Stetee : % oan fe. aes. li Transport & Trading a frac- mt ” fone” pra Ported a’ x ¢ P ' 
Automobile Insurance _— Life Insurance Dee. vevees-s iss oe = ons eassacaiaonel ! EI auto © ...3007 sinclair’ ..:::. $87 Glenwood St.°Entry was gained| will lie in ‘sate at ursiey ‘ur 
_ Liability Insurance Plate Glass Insurance it Dee. So “at lange ni iarwe, seas i we, ie: on * .* ee RA, ee : ou Fee's i cecatiedl bon ee day. st whl time. che ‘wil be ues = voeeneee + een neeee s > avg. : ow re blocks uded: Royal Erie~ RR Seca geen : i made 
_ Burglary Insurance _— Bonds : All Types Sep. 220: gt Hai gr age B lars a G. wid, ave: 42 meee | 1% at 41% on 15,000|E#-Cell-O ... 383. ghey ng Bt the liquor st room. Nothing| :Ststs wats a 
. Tenants’ Policies ee. -- Se “aw S.. ) jo; checks 29. = shares; Standard Oil (New . Jer- Mot ::.. 403 ind -- $9 else was disturbed. Denise.” is suniper™ Auber 
4 poet * HS aire, G bo 42; extra large|sey) of % at 52% on 8,000; Getty San 9 ~ st i118 : > 4 oes 32 || ” * of ‘ Norman E. Brock- 
Brothers quarrel like thieves inside a Mar. Les TERE." Shes 70s, mectum 35:36:| off 36 at 24% on 6,700; Shell Trans-|cen Bek |... 11 4 Su 7P'... 308, Another unsuccessful attempt to] man: dear sister of Penny Lee 
Rouse. bat cueite Rate gepepe logy ext ny large 0-40; large %-30%: erade B|port & Trading off % at 18% on|Ses Dyem - M1, dud ick .'.. $2 break into a local establishment| — fervice will be held Wednesday st in other's delense. 5,000; Gulf Oil off 1% at 112 oniGen Fas .... $31 guther Pap --. Sal met reported a —— tad pease Gettee terete Proverb Itry 5,000; and Steel off % otors .. 39.6 Syiv Bl Pd.... 5 Hicks Lumber Co., ton Blvd. with Rev. William Parker offici- 
—=—=_ rief ron ee ga er BE Rs Sat lg py de gegen Tsai avoir Oil and Ohio | Gen. ire oe Ree BY ‘ aruneral Home, Auburn ignis. 
— Lyle of 007: Katen| be ve peutiry: ree OT MO} eee nt nn: Somer Poe. 27 Pen Wear 2d New Car Inventories Habe inarctors, Wiltaes gin; cps 
epee |e" Toe | St., pleaded guilty to a|16: ‘heavy type brofeme anf inate ih Good dyea 824 Twenty Cen i : os 6 dear mother sf be-| Dounds. : 25: eaponettes 4 nd = G e ar Underw nee. p A J uis W. Loch; two brothers, coven 
DOWNTOWN fore Municipal Court Judge Ceca"? wee ome eee = Dow German Firm [sive eo) arseim : #2 UID AQAIN IN JUNE Erandchildren, alo Subvine™ Pu B. McCallum and was sentenced ’ So jar a1 ae day, July 18, Bs } pan. from the Pe . A G . eee _ . g 38. D. 
| MODERN OFFICE pa eT LEX eens Form Corporation (eesti. $2 BG. # toen declined again n June. | RenySe dee, Cues a , m Ce i ~<eeeee . 
2, BUILDING ‘is unpaid, DETROIT. duly 34 (AP) (USDA) — Indust Ray -. 3" 08 Top... 974| By continued production cuts} tery, ars" clark will le in state 7 Ba Hogs—Bala 208. butchers .15-1.00 low-| LUDWIGSHAFBN, Germany Inland Stl .. 904 ¥ Reel ..... 3$-$|and aided by a modest sales in- ot the Depelsan-ishne Funeral . ; *4| Chester A, Craig, 30, of 429 Riv-|¢T: sows steady; most mixed we Ke. 2 Inspir C 30.2 green ..... the ind cut the stock- —Home. _ 
al bs d and 3 100-260 lb. butchers 2260-23.00:|—Badische Anilin and Sodafabrik,|tnccrisk tr .. 188 West,U= Tel .. 20 | crease, ustry - COLLINS, JULY 14, 1968, 
ie 6500 SQUARE FEET 2 | = yo meee Be. Ee. "lint Bus Meh 356 Wonk f° -*: $22! pile on July 1 to 672,842 units. Burie, bid Cameron Ot; age $1; 
¥ sQ BA |injaries at Pontiac General Hos-$'S¢"ue"ica Re, Niel savthe "ifs |® Successor to the prewar I. G.list Rary-™.'3.1 Whe Moi: 8 rel deans he eet rs pital Monday after being struck at|most No.2 and 3 260-200 ibs. 21.15-22.25:|Farben Chemical combine, today|}*t Sick, --:-J}, Wits & co. 211) Reporting this Automotive | picnanan and Mrs. Russell Perks; - aad \few mixed grades 160-180 Ibs. 21.25-22.00;| . A pane o ed Woolworth .... $7.7| wows said: “Not since 1954 has dear brother of Euell Collins, Mrs, ee or "=> | Saginaw Pike streets by &|mixea grades sows 300-400 Ibs. 19 25-20.75:|joined the Dow (Chemical Co. of\!2! Sef ..; yee fore: Se Orville Mann and Mrs, Harold = ear driven by Charles Hooks, 58, of No, 2 and 3 400-600 ibs. 11.75-18.78; stags ck Gece et Te Soke 38% Fnest Sh ST . $2 a July inventory count been low- Martin seetviee be 
= 140 Wa Street direct! across 178 N, Saginaw St. Cattle—Salable 2800. Slaughter steers| , ug ng ba STOCK AVERAGES er. The midyear stockpile in that — Goat ce Wenrko-vttn Pu- 
yne , pd and heifers slow. mostly 25-50 cents low-|chemical corporation in the United year of selling reverses was 508,- neral Home where Mr. Collins will the street from a Municipal Park- Rummage sale Sponsored | bY moderately active, steady: other” clasces States. ee ee a a ae) Oni eis ewe oe. a Land O’ Lakes Ma . Sat.isi : ; a : 1 1 ELINE, JULY 14, 1968, EDWIN, 
4 ; Lot. F | ied b July 19; at 9 am. 128 W. Pike. 24-50-2850; few loads low ‘choice “Iioe.| The sa a oe est Rap ess! The July 1 inventory total com- will be anpouneed. tater ‘by the ing 2 ormerty occupi y 1150 Ib. steers 26.00-26.50: bulk choice cal. Corp.,” which will have head-'Noon Tuesday ..2551 996 81.8 174.3 Sparks-Griffin Puneral Home. . . ae 900-11.50 Ib. steers 26.50-28.00; around 5|— Prev. day ...... 2564 998 82.2 1749 Pares with 741,251 cars on June 1/ _Sparks-Oriltin Sune ae 
- Michigan Employment Security § loads mixed high choice and prime util. quarters in Texas, has a capital fre’. tee clase ped ome Hts 3! and with 745,211 on July 1 last year.| "OU JULY 13, 1968. LO 148 Auge . a 2 Get 30-Da S ity and standard steers 20.50-2458: most/stock of 60 million dollars. BASF Month ago'.....:250.6 987 $11 1784 ree ar’s highe : Jak = 566| _wite of William Polk, dear mother 
Commission. Fluorescent Lighting, Ee Y 27.00: few loads average io high choice |and Dow will each control 50 per)fjeg wife °"11..3e09 isis ae tt hati 7 =a. nae of Mrs Blanche Paulkner and 
eat : r+ f T ki Tr eee ee ee My and standart cent, BASY said. 11968 low ....... 2347 809 129 1566 Units on March 1. record high| Louis, Lengtine: | dear sister | of Base Radiation Hot Water Heat, 4 / or fo 4 ng rees oo canners and wttere “74.00-18.50: | The plant is to produce chemical 193? be. °°: as ea s2 foe was. 903,789 units on March 1, cor Pig hegre Lb mea a 
New Boiler just installed. Ideal SIF Area Parke |e, bese” good’ srs' choles ase tn. products on the basis of acetylene ——s 7 ‘m, trom the | Donelsoa-J 
for Doctor's Clinic — | : TOM £276 FOLK jeans oak, te Nate's (siplled by Dow. High-preamure| gy lette the precccts to: improved| | siaceting Mnkraast ts s & =—- insurance % ealers—Salable 250. Steady to weak,|processing methods have been de- iquor $ses man Chapel Cemetery. ’ 
3 Indignant Conservation Depart-|most weakness on standard lightweight Dire profits through the balance of the TONTOOMERY JOLY if, iss, 
Office — Furniture or Appliance “i|ment officials today obtained con-|SsFi ob sachets ant ER os aS | BASE Dignity for Wine Names | model year are dim. Be 8, beloved gon 'of er” gd store. _y.|victions against two men they cull and utility 13.00-24.09, al a . “Skimpy inventories can be as Mrs. Thomas Montgomery &r.; 
; 4\accused of uprooting and stealing a lambs-~Galable 600. Bulk | 2,800 Algerians Freed LANSING (#—The State Liquor | profitiess as bulging pantries, deal- geet beethenr of Gory E, Michael, 
é PeAlsix trees from the Proud Lake |hii,tgPPly seugnie sneee: oe crope: Control Commission has decided| ers agreed, if deal-closing is as|  ¢rY, Puneral service will be held ‘ 5 Md|Recreation Area last night. limited trade on slaughter lambs steagy,| ALGIERS (UPI) — French armythat dignity cannot be sacrificed] rough as it has been this year.”| from S¢ Michael Caihslic Church 
s "@4| Beginning’ 30-day jail terms in|choice “sering lamhe 34.50" few unsold headquarters announced last night|for catchiness in its new classifica- with interment in Mt. Hope Ceme- | 
4 Se \Oakland County Jail in lieu of /i8%),), choles, shorm old crops around that clemency had been granted to/tion of aperitif wines. The expression nowadays seems will be ‘at 0:30 Fas = lit | 
ht ag J C. MITCHELL Bi paying $100 fines were William ‘ul! to choice slaughter cfeep,8'00-10 0 ‘nearly 2,800 Moslem nationalists in| Such names as “Mother Gold-|to be: “Do you know on which Home, 711 Auburn Ave. | 
7) 123 N. Seginew St FE 2-483] (|W: Gray, 24, of 8144 Sanford St. \calves 190, hogs 400. sheep 300. ‘keeping with Gen. Charles de|Stein’s Flaming Jaguar,” “Hi Fi,” |side your bread is oleo’d?” . . .| ROCKWELL, JULY 14 1968 KAREN | ; ° . -. |Garden City and Roy E. England, Gaulle’s wishes for ‘French|and “Flaming Jet’ are out. Investigations prove men are age 6: beloved daughter of Mr. ; 
£9 peas £5 i ponediont so vee _\19, of 19313 Glastonbury Ave.,; Almost all of the motor vehicles | unity.” About 175 of the national-| A number of similar new names/|getting better at solving problems, Doel 9 apctellll an pbb ar 
= : E\ eth pleaded gully at srcalgn:|clevs art teeal wo bate boon iiltcicos: The Gthace errs urvier Wu-| lame foi vale sGrentage of Goomr-lefte: Ga oacnen Geete Gem | Gamer ss, Seeme re ” uit eleva Wet (Monniid Seal es Oa w Boab i Sonee al g sales Earl Wilson. : eral service will be held Wednes- ' good mechanical condition. rious forms of house arrest. ing : son. day July 16. at 415 p.m. from 
jtice Elmer C. Dieterle on, state the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home 
with Rev . = eee ee : th Bi Conia Karan ul he in na | Park rangers apprehended the UAW. Resumes Talks With Big Three tt Denelson-Johes Fupersl Home, 
| oles south oe soard ar iaeeg ° "pert 8. iad ‘Terry, Walled Take: | m pa i . , age §3: belov usb 0! 
(Pl igen pw ows ° pa eee 
Shee Lord Nouge Flant Votes on otrirRe | :een ee ! Tilt be held’ Thursday aly St leu nde ee Bird Pinerti mone “with eRe. 9 
ttt capo?