ee ~ Poisoned’ Atoll Natives Recover From Radioactive Ash 4 a HE PONTIAC PRE t The Weather Details page two J 112th YEAR ~ * & % & %& PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 1954—44 PAGES TEES wa TEES 7e Bachelor Party Climax AP Wirephete WHO LOST THE KEY?—Patrolman Clement Marino (left) and John Paola cut a ball and chain from the leg of Bernard Falk, 27, at the Bronx Park police station in New York last night as his fiancee, Iris Tannenbaum, 22, looks on. They will wed Sunday. The chain was attached to Falk's leg in a ceremony at a bachelor party and when the party broke up the key to the lock was missing. Falk met Miss Tannenbaum and together they went to the police station. Molotov's Hostile Atfitude in Speech Jolfs the West GENEVA (AP) — Western diplomats said glumly today Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov had all but killed chances of peace in war-torn Indochina by his latest policy statement. Outlining his “peace terms” late yesterday to the nine- party Indochina conference, Molotov not only raised new issues but leveled charges which aroused Western resent- +ment. . e Western leaders prepared 1] Are Missin to voice their jon for- mally at another Indichina session today. AU. S. called the speech “purely destruc- in Navy Plane Last Word From Craft ph ge I gris Br Was Distress Signal “provocative terms.” Early Today TOKYO (UP) — A U. S. Navy! remarks in Molotov’s speech as PBY seaplane with 17 persons| by his actual propesals. aboard is missing over the East) je accused the United States of Qhina sea south of Japan, the | masterminding a plan to under- Navy said today. — Geneva Seatestice and ; - extend the Ma war. bo twin "engined aircraft, | "He criticized the policies of Pre- nd for Hong Kong, was last’ mier Joseph Laniel’s government, heard from at 6:55 a.m. Just} which is now facing a severe test Ls INTERNATIONAL NEWS M’Carthy Challenged House Group Rejects Flexible Price Supports Votes Overwhelmingly Against Ike's Proposal for Farmers WASHINGTON ( A P )— The House Agriculture Committee yesterday re- buffed President Eisenhow- er’s proposal for flexible farm price supports and voted overwhelmingly to continue the present sys- tem of rigid high-level sup- ports through 1955. The committee’s 21-8 vote was a blow to both Eisenhower and his secre- tary of agriculture, Ezra Taft Benson, who has cam- peaeee vigorously for a lexible system which would rmit the administration raise federal price props to farmers in time of short- e and lower them in times of abundance. Te , Tipit Hs 1 at 90 per cent of par- as it passed south of Nagasaki. in the French National Assembly. ity,” Ferguson told the Senate. | New Courthouse Given Boost by Dust Shower A shower of plaster dust gave several persons additional incen- tive yesterday to support the pro- posal to construct a new Oakland County Courthouse. During a hearing in Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty’s courtroom, a cloud of plaster dust from the cracked ceiling rained down on the jury box. Apparently accustomed to such showers, Judge Doty calmly con- tinued to discuss the case with two attorneys. Other persons in the room were less unruffled. They cast apprehensive glances upward for some time. Cabbies, Union ; Seek Settlement Pontiac Cab, Teamsters Trying for Agreement on Contempt Charges Attorneys for the Pontiac Cab Co. and Teamsters Local 614, AFL, were seeking a basis of agreement Z AT TESTI president of tiac Chamber of NIAL DINNER—Milo J. Cross (left), Commerce, pre- | after serving in sents the keys to a new Pontiac car to Frank J. | was presented the car and a scroll last Ist X-Ray Unit Arrives in City Mobile Van Is Visiting PHS Today, Thursday and Friday One of two chest X-ray vans touring Oakland County to find hidden cases of tuberculosis started a two-week stay in Pontiac today. The mobile unit will check only Pontiac High School students for TB today, Thursday and Friday. DuFrain, retiring school superintendent, while Mrs. | testimonial dinner sponsored by tite C. of Retires After 21 Years School Service - = + 2 a . the city school system since 1921, Supt. DuF rai scroll. He retires this year as He has been connected with by City of Pontiac Citizens Frank J. DuFrain was honored at a dinner sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce Tuesday night at Hotel Waldron. He was presented a new Pontiac car and a public schools, in which post he has served since 1945. n Is Honored , Agrees fo Quiz if Dem Senator Will Take Stand WASHINGTON (AP )— Sen. Symington offered to- superintendent of Pontiac’s the city’s schools since 1921. over the after gram Robert M. Glenn presided* -dinner pro- The second mobile X-ray van will Brief talks were made by Mayor However, a call on a distress fre- | French Foreign Minister Georges the agreement as soon as pos- move in Monday. The public is Roosevelt Wins quency was heard at 10:30 a.m. | Bidault hastened to Paris immedi- and it is believed to have come &tely after Molotov's speech to from the missing plane, the Navy ‘@ke part this afternoon in the as-| said. _ sembly debate on Indochina. included seven naval officers, two| te have an unfavorable impact Surface craft and Navy and Air lieved to have gone down, but | Di Se found no trace. The plane, if it! to irect away India Warns Climbers | {1 Of Defense 0 rence “This in itself is a convincing argument for more flexibility in our farm program, along the lines recommended by the President.” The House Committee's action dralt the administrqtion a defeat in the first congressional test of Eisenhower's call for sliding-scale inflexible system. The House could override the committee's recommendation when the omnibus farm bill reaches the floor in a few weeks. How- ever, Chairman Hoe (R-Kan) of the House Committee has said he believes the House will pass the committee's bill, Film Producer Fined . The plane's occupants were not, A U.S. spokesman declared identified, but officials said they, Moletev’s speech was designed marine offi¢ers and eight navy en-| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) listed seamen. } Force planes joined in searching lk Ch Wil n the area where the plane was be- | e O0SES | 50 landed unharmed, could still be . afloat, the Navy said. WASHINGTON w— President |Eisenhower today named Secre- |and supervise the St. Lawrence of Snow in Himalayas | Seaway Development Corp. NEW DELHI, India ®—The In- land climbers in the Mt. Makalu| area to gird themselves against to 5 below zero. A radio official said it was felt | - certain all attempts on Makalu’s A provision for creation of that| BANGKOK, Thailand #—R. D. | sible to allow the judges to resume hearing scheduled criminal cases. Court Bars Appeal by Lapeer Farmer LANSING #® — The State Su- preme Court today refused to hear an appeal from Floyd Schriber, Lapeer County farmer, convicted as the result of an eviction riot in 1952. Schriber was charged with re- sisting Sheriff Clark Gregory when law officers attempted to evict Mrs. Elizabeth Stevens from her farm home for non-payment of a shareholder's assessment in the invited to drop in for free chest X-rays starting next week. The mobile units’ visit is spon- sered by Oakland County Tuber- culosis Association and Medical Society, and by Michigan, Pon- tiac, Birmingham and Ferndale. Pleasant Ridge Health Depart- ments. Men and women stay fully clothed for the X-rays, which | ber of Commerce. take just a few minutes. The scroll] was presented by Grif- Hours for both X-ray units are oe or Mrs. mela noon until 8 p.m. Mondays through | an orchid and Cross presen , Thursdays and 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. | ‘he car on behalf of the city's Fridays. - | service clubs, the Pontiac Manu- One X-ray unit will operate at —— or members ot ane Oakland County Courthouse, Huron | sacl on ae _ 4 eilier Erlentia and Saginaw Sts., June 14 through = parame oe , B. Ireland of Birmingham, presi- dent of the Oakland County Asso- ciation of School Superintendents; |Glenn H. Griffin, president of the | Board of Education; T) E> Wierse- ma, head of the Principals Club; Mrs. Paul Gorman, representing the Pontiac PTA Council; and Milo | J. Cross, president of the Cham- William W, Donaldson, Dr. Dwight | Landslide Vote California Dems Hand Nomination to F.D.R.’s Son, Despite Charges By UNITED PRESS James Roosevelt has won a | landslide victory in his bid for a | California congressional nomination | and Lt, Gov, George Bell Timmer- man Jr. is South Carolina's choice |to fight for racial segregation as its governor. Roosevelt outdistanced eight pri- mary rivals in the heavily Demo- cratic 26th district Tuesday despite contri Carthy for his figh com- ; munism., / Carthy’s financial affairs in 1952 but said it could come to no con- clusions. in the absence of testi- mony by McCarthy. That subcommittee suggested to (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Radford Will Testify WASHINGTON w—Adm. Arthur W. Radford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was called before government corporation by Congress May 13. The law provides that the cor-| Tokyo, has been fined 1,000 baht heavy snowfalls and rising winds | poration be subject to direction and | ($442.50) because the movie was at temperatures expected to fall | supervision of the President, or the not censored here before being |head of any agency the President | sent to Japan. chose to designate. A White House statement said 22,500- foot peak should be ended | Wilson probably will assign to | by now and that both teams must juty Secretary of Defense Ander-| LONDON u—Arthur Greenwood, | laya's Communist guerrillas with | be on their way down toward Bi-| son the duties connected with the treasurer of the British Labor a naval cruiser's big guns for the ratnagar and Jogabani en route to| operation of the development cor-| party and long-time Socialist lead- | first time in her six-year campaign Calcutta. poration. was in- Pestonji, dia government radio last night, cluded in the bill authorizing con-;motion picture ‘‘Santi-Vina,”’ warned American and New Zea- struction of the seaway, approved which won three awards in last tangled affairs of the Lapeer Coun- ty Farmers Mutual Insurance Co. The court's refusal to hear the month's Asian Film Festival in! case means that Schriber must producer of the Thai June 22. It will stop at N. Perry | St. and Glenwood Ave. June 25 The chest X-ray van now at PHS will visit Pontiac Fire Hall at 3253 begin serving a 1'4 to 2-year prison sentence imposed last Sept. 11. British Bombard Reds KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya #— Britain has opened up on Ma- Laborite Dies at 74 er, died today. He was 74. against the Reds. By WILLIAM J. WAUGH KWAJALEIN, Marshall Islands, May 29 —They call themselves ‘the poisoned people.” | There are the 82 natives of Ron- gelap Atoll who were showered by radioactive ash from the March 1 explosion of a hydrogen bomb. One of them, John Anjin, said the ash rained down for 24 hours. “It looked like salt.” he said. “It came down like a light rain. You could feel it strike your skin. It burned when it touched.” Editor's Note—A shifting wind cast path after the March 1 testing of the hydrogen bomb injury to two score natives— and a petition to the United Nations which sums up the Marshall Islanders’ feelings toward the radioactive danger and the loss of their land. To get the William J. Waugh went from Honolulu to the Marshalls and spent 10 days interviewing injured persons and their leaders, and also personne! who This is the first of two stories reporting his pre- They were delayed by censorship in the Defense De- run the atomic tests Itminary findings. partment, the Atomic Energy Commission Only minor deletions were made in the original copy, however. * * * pines, ‘came under U.S. control in the war 10 years ago. In 1947 the United States became their trus- tee under U.N. authority. The islands are low coral atolls with a population of about 11,000. Of the 82 Rongelapers, about 45 suffered radiation burns. Many of these were slight. One man, 39- year-old Toma Naril, still has a bad burn on the back of his right | ear, three months after the explo- sion. He was fishing in a canoe when the ash began falling. scribed the March 1 explosion: “Some were frightened,” said a “First saw light, -_ smoke. Rongelap medical aide. “By night Smoke went up, up and right | Children were crying. Many adults radioactive ash along an uncharted The result was facts at the scene, AP correspondent and the State Department Joslyn Rd. Tuesday; Fisher Body Local 596, UAW-CIO Hall at 821 Baldwin Ave. June 16 and 17, and Pontiac Local 653, UAW-CIO Hall at 386 E. Kennett Rd. June 18 and 21 The unit will stop at Yellow Cab Local 594, UAW-CIO Hall at 90 tiac Naval Reserve Armory, 469 | S. East Blvd., June = 2425; | Emmanuel Baptist Church at Tele- | graph and Orchard Lake Rds. June | 2, and Lakeside Homes Housing | Project June 29. | Cable Cars to Stay in San Francisco | SAN FRANCISCO #—San Fran- cisco's colorful cable cars are as- | sured of a place in the city's future as well as in its past. San Francisco voted %4,092 to } Each of the speakers paid tri- bute to Supt. DuFrain, his tong peried of service, his character and qualities of leadership, and his skil] in handling school fi- nances, All voiced best wishes for his retirement years. The scroll bore a resolution of the Board of Education expressing its appreciation for his long and faithful service. In a brief response he voiced his Mt. Clemens St. June 22-23; Pon-| thanks, He expressed the satisfac- | tion he feels as he sees young men, graduates of the Pontiac schools, occupying positions. of leadership in the community, on he City Commission and on the Board of Education Jerry Libby presented piano se- lections during the evening Scattered Showers Forecast Tonight Warm and humid temperatures are expected to bring scattered |heavy handicaps — his wife's | a secret session of the Senate For- ‘charge that he was unfaithful wity | eign Relations Committee today to | a dozen women and the Democrat: | testify dn the 3%4-billion-dollar re- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) quest for foreign aid. Man Travels 421 M.P.H. on Rocket-Powered Sled | ALAMAGORDO, N. M. (AP)—A 43-year-old Air Force colonel reached a speed of 421 miles an hour on the ground—a record for a human—during recent tests at Holloman Air Force Base here. Lt. Col. John P. Stapp, a veteran of aviation medical / research, rode a rocket-propelled sled designed to find out the effect upon fliers of bailing out at very high altitudes and supersonic s : “Things happen too fast to think about them at the time,” he said after the 3,500-foot run, which takes just seven seconds. ’ The critical factor in the} wards Air Force Base in Califor. test is the effect of the nia, breaking on the passenger.| The test sled, designed by North- ‘ ].|rop Aircraft, Inc, Hawthorne, Officials estimate Col.|ie., ‘consists of two vehicles—the tion to keep the controversial little | tonight and Thursday to the Pon- permanent network. The Weather Bureau predicts a through the clouds. Later heard | Were sick.” and felt blast. Wind so strong some | .4 few days after exposure, people fell down. It banged doors.” | Of the residents began losi het | hair. Three days after the a some thetr | i ' Because the cars have been oper: | jow of 62 to 66 tonight and a high ated at a loss—fare, 15 cents—to of 84 to 88 degrees tomorrow the city for several years. MANY) ‘Tuesday, the mercury soared to ; . if ’s body underwent a 14.277 in yesterday's primary elec-| showers and thunderstorms late oetire a times the cars in a slightly curtailed but tise area. \force of gravity and his) body assumed the weight of 3,960 pounds. “It was a fine ride,” he said “I feel a great sense of achieve- propulsion sled and the test vehi- cle. The propulsion sled carries 12 rockets, each with a thrust of 4,500 pounds, six of which were used in the March test. Some of the “poisoned people’) Natives of Bikini and Eniwetok | ; destroyer arrived to evacuate the i had campaigned to Scrap | the highest reading of the year ment —— this TUN Bl 8 tween which is a water troagh lost their hair: Others were burned. | atolls were uprooted in 1946-47 to In Today s Press residents. All started taking show- | . — 88 degrees, The low yesterday | oad off my ¢ . five feet wide and 18 inches deep. Almost all of them are cured now | make way for atomic experiments. ers then. . was 63, and a trace of rain WaS| The only other human to top | Braking is achieved by control- —but they have been banished In the March 1 blast the 82 per-| Silty a eo sepecversseseess te The evacuation from Rongelap Gives Up Navy Yard recorded in the city. 406 m.p.h. on the ground was | lable metal scoops ander each from their homes for a year. They | sons on Rongelap and 134 on Utirik Sontien oe ...... 9 | and Utirik was completed in two| MANILA @®—The United states | runt Moe pgp calgon d John Cobb, who drove a race car | vehicle which scoop up water are among the Marshall Islanders »were exposed or ghegrd ew) Ee Em..;;--::-::° ™. %. 57 | days. The affected people received | today turned over its old Navy | qe town Pontiac the at 463.135 m.p-h. at Bonneville | from the trough. who have petitioned the United Na- | such an extent that they were re-| Dr. Geerge Crane................. ¢ | medical assistance here on the| yard at Cavite to the Philippine Se ae ac 7 mn FOnURC Salt Flats, Utah, Sept. 16, 1947. In future tests, it ts hoped to pag Pha end atomic ees ela ee their home atolls. The fiity Pest... 00.200200000000004\ | Kwajalein Atoll. A top medical | government. ee Stapp, chief of the Aero Medical | carry volunteers at speeds up to — at st to see) Utirik people have goné back, but Og ore ranes nen cxereesrex edt team was flown from the United Osman’s Town & Country, Tel-Huren | Field Laboratory at Holloman Air | 800 m.p.h. at this 4,092-foot alti- » that the States observes ‘the Rongelapers must wait a year! patterns ..00000.0000. .......%@ | States, arriving March 10. Complete Your Basement Home. Fi- Open every night "ty 9 o'clock Development Center, made the/tude. Due to variations in air den- closer precautions. i their atoll is considered | eee 1% F | sin April a survey party visited | ®*9 YS ting to kill, fired one shotgun blast * * * Donnelly was arrested in 8 “murder for profit” plot involving two wealthy widows and an elderly Pat Gordon said. . * * s The attorney and a contractor were arrested and another person sheriff added. night after Hoeft blanked the Yankees with two hits. Stolorow Seeks || McCarthy, of one of the wealthy widows re- portediy marked for death. The sheriff said he staged it to break Seek Dismissal larg Oakiand County, oe * . Mrs, Clarence Chapman will be | the speaker at a meeting of the | Sodality group of St. Columban Catholic Church, having its last | Mrs. Robert White and the Rev Reginald Becker of Embury Meth odist Church are aftending the an- nual conference the Methodist Church, meeting today through Sua day at Mount Olivet Church in Dearborn. Youth representative for the church is John Fall * ¢ *@ A husband and wile team, Bur- ton and Bette Wright, are taking these same roles in “The Four Poster,”’ a play with two cast mem- _| bers, to be presented at tonight's Parking Delay -|L. Stolorow of the Outdoor Park- = eo * * Arrested on charges of conspir- acy to murder for profit were Don- nelly, 61, and Willard Durden, 3, Orlando building contractor. s ° . They were accused of conspiring Army Feud Reviewed WASHINGTON @—Here is a brief rundown on the Senate Inves- of Damage Suit Asks City Commission Birmingham Schools tigations subcommittee’s inquiry . - . to Postpone Installation | into the dispute between Sen. Mc-| Fight Dentist’s Claim |to kill K. H. Gerlach, 81. of Lake Carthy (R-Wis) and top Army of- Wales, a calendar manufacturer; of Mill St. Meters perirad | for $200,000 Mrs. Byrd T. Roach, 51, of Lake The original | Wales, who inherited an estate of Pontiac City Commission fast night heard a request from Sam Attorneys for the Birmingham of the Army Stevens and Army conool District appeared before os _ = band five years ago; —— | Oaki: County Circuit Judge H. | Louise Clark Hawley of ando, crnag Me and two subcommittee | picsei Holland seeking to dismiss | who has Florida real estate hold- and bk . | a $200,000 damage suit brought by | ings and an interest in a Chicago P. Carr, of _— improper pret-| Royal Oak dentist Maurice Rich- | sun helmet firm. ored Army "| ards. Donnelly, who had handled legal ment for Pvt. G. David Schine, @| 1, Richards was injured when | and financial matters for all three, about $100,000 from her late hus- ing Co, that planned installation of parking meters at # Mill St. be postponed The parking lot operator asked commissioners to wait and see how | the 250-meter municipal lot on the or aaa aide who WAS i -achers collapsed during a Bir-| was released on bond late yester- *| northwest corner of Parke and E. McCarthy ond tile ietes im | mingham High School football | day. Pike Sts affects business of pri-| 1 accused ocens Gan Ad game Nov. 2, 1348. Durden, still in custody, was vate operators, of attempting to use Schine as a The basic question to be solved oo ” in the case is whether a school dis- hostage"’ in efforts to induce Mc- ‘ : trict loses its traditional immunity Carthy to halt or divert an investi-| , Sere ; : | from suit while performing a func- gation af alleged eiversives im | tion for which it charges a fee the Army, particularly at Ft.) , Monmouth, NJ. They also ac-; School district attorneys stated (25 [ake about five miles from cused Asst. Secretary of Defense| that there is no statute authoris- here. H. Struve Hensel of seeking to dis-| ing such a suit, and that the * ¢ « credit the subcommittee. | school district enjoys gevernmen- Details of the shooting were The subcommittee voted 43 on| tal tmmunity since a football | sketchy. May 26 to dismiss Carr and Hen-| game is part of the physical edu- | Thus ended the life of a man sel as principals. cation program required by the | who figured in one of Polk Coun- ~ State Legislature. lty’s most sensational slayings 22 They pointed out that a decision | years ago. He was charged then questioned more than two hours last night by Sheriff Gordon and County Solicitor Clifton M. Kelly. + . > Donnelly took his life at his un- acrons the street from one of pretentious frame home on Crook- his lots aad claimed the city lot would be in direct competition with him, If the city continues to expand in the public parking business, Stol- orow stated, it will monopolize the short-term parkers which many | private operators rely on to func- tion at a profit He said that 8.000 Pontiac citi- j zens had asked a vote to decide whether the city should enter the * Yesterday's highlights—Cohn said he does not regard Stevens as a/ coddier of Communists, but dor | ee a aruen either comeullivg ciate, Joe H. Beal, but a grand | eormg has ee a el districts to insure against such lia- | Jury refused to indict him and the foci Calemmiacke’” PrO"| bilities or curtailing the use of | hermes poaeing oul ! Cohn repeated under cath the | *hools for such functions, la , ae —=— Stolorow and other private lot | M —_— = he An appeal by the school district | HVe w ice ° | operators present said it is im- Stev a tri ’ - to dismiss the suit was turned down | | possible for them to provide park- | ""Cvens @ Adams tried to switch | i) starch 1953 by Oakland County calendar manufacturer, She pift, may be taken into custody, the vill be inves- | Detroit teammates Walt Dropo (left) and Harvey |The victory was his second over the world cham- Two more cases Ww Kuenn (center) congratulate pitcher Billy Hoeft im | pions this season and dropped the New Yorkers four ange a cali eadlasigaiad Yankee Stadium dressing room in New York last | and a half games out of first place in the American The bizarre case © here League race. (See details on page 2). e brok University of Michigan Alumni “M" Night. Host this year is the local alumni association, which bas chosen Will- O-Way Theater as the place and 8:40 as the time. Fred Lawton, composer of the famed U. of M. song, “The Var- sity,” will lead a group of Michi- gan songe, General chairman is Mrs, Guy Pitts. Proceeds will go inte the local group's schol- arship fund, which in the last 158 Lincoln, Pontiac,' year, has helped three Michigan going | Students from this area. jing at five cents an hour as the city plans to do and still realize la profit. Mayor William W. Donaldson sald his idea ig to install the market-site meters plug those under construction behing the market and then see to what extent they solve the parking problem and how private lots are affected. Commissioners said they will discuss the matter again at a spe- cial meeting Thursday night. south on Franklin, did not halt his * 6° ®@ car at the stop sign. Putnam's; ‘The Revolution in Asia’ will be car was hit broadside and rolled | the lecture of Mrs. Theodore D over, police said. | (Gladys) Walser when she speaks Witnesses stated that a county tar truck stopped at the corner blocking the view of both drivers jat 8 p.m. next Wednesday at the | Cranbrook Institute of Science au- | ditor ium, under the sponsorship of the Women's International League Police Arr est 6 Y ouths | for Peace and Freedom. in Theft of Hub Caps BIRMINGHAM — Police arrested the children of the aunt of the George E. Hankins, 18, of Royal | Emperor. She is now an accredit- Oak and five juveniles last night. | eq observor for the WILPF to the after the six admitted stealing four United Nations, and recently re. hub caps from the Harold Turner | turned from a four months’ trip Auto storage lot at Haynes and) around the world. hubcaps were discovered in| of a car the boys were | in, after they had been/| stopped for tion ‘and later returned there to tutor Two Sisters Escape ‘Injury From Lightning veniles will appear Saturday before | a minor traffic viola- | Two young Novi Township sis- : | térs muraculously escaped serious fore the Oakland County Court | indocy yesterday when a bolt of | lightning struck them as they No Record, | watched yesterday afternoon's rain The Weat he T | Storm from behind the screen door PONTIAC ANB VICINITY — Poruy|% the small family home. cloady, warm and bumid tonight and | Blye Barnstable, 7. suffered Thersday wiih scattered showers and) burns of both arms and minor thenderstorms tate tonight and Thers- aay. Low tonight 62 te 66. High Thers- | shock. Her sister, Margaret, 11 j also suffered minor shock, Both ro | 84 te S. Beutheriy winds 16 te 15 an heer. | | were treated and released by doc jtors in Ann Arbor | The youngsters are the childwn of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Barnstable of 49761 W, 10-Mile Rd Teday im Pontiac — temperature preceding 8 am At 8 eam: Wind direction’ Calm Gum sets Wednesday at 807 pm Sun rises Thursday at 455 am Moom sete Thursday at 1:15 am Moon rises Wednesday at 1 51 pm. Macc en nee ®t bevoecces- G5 OE eco ing cease ine 89 | 49680 W. 10-Mile Rd.. according to os see ereeses 3 Fred Stanton, Detroit Edison Co _ | dispatcher, Teesday to | = (As — downtown! «| zi Lowest temperature...¢............. © | Toastmasters Discuss Capital Punishment “Do You Believe in Capita) Pun- tj) ishment in Michigan’’ was Table | Topic Chairman Don Goff's speech Mighest and Lowest Tempersteres This| Tuesday night before Pontiac Y stkauc’” e 41 tm 1913 | Toastmasters Club. omens Other speakers included Donald _ ¢ se Angee se|Rofe, Arnold Whittaker, Robert Marquette $ $+ Pote and Sid Siege!. The table topic A oo 4 89 | ‘Oscar’ - was won by Edward ot Pas oe SS Preacices 6) 9 B Resninese oe Sl msabers ‘eho wil k off the ; (members who will speak off t City a Son ‘ 4 ¢uff, club officials said Molotov’s Attitude Jolts the West (Continued From Page One) on French public opinion, which threatens to overturn the shaky a McCarthy investigation from the | ‘ ' Army to the Air Force and the | Cacutt 2 F L. Doty, sad Navy. He balked at a suggestion | (he State Supreme Cour totus by Joseph N. Welch, special Army | ‘ counsel, that he was saying Stevens © “fra titre the ober eer-| Senator Challenged fo Bare Finances ices. Cohn said the two officials sought to ‘spread things around,"’ (Continued From Page One) McCarthy that he should testify, and have McCarthy leave them alone for a while. gl of but the Wisconsin senator never said: “To some extent yes—to| did so. The subcommittee made no later made public a transcript McCarthy had received $10,000 ° ° | Asked whether Stevens and Adams had given full cooperation some extent, no.” effort to require testimony from The subcommittee held q secret McCarthy. | which disclosed that Welch said _‘‘neither side is bound to have a) pamphlet on housing. Sctecthy and Seu, Syodegion! manufacturer of pre fabricated (D-Mo) renewed at the secret ses- in the Ft. Monmouth inquiry, Cohn session to discuss procedure and; The subcommittee reported that 100 per cent victory.” | . | A graduate of Smith College. | Mrs. Walser was born in Japan, | sion, and in the public hearing, their feud over McCarthy's demand Western hopes received their big- | that Symington testify, gest jolt when Molotov got down! McCarthy challenged Symington to the Communist terms for an! to take the stand and tell how he | Indochina peace |and ‘the political adviser to the | Some quarters had expected him! Democratic _party’’ — Washington to make important concessions. | attorney Clark Clifford, onetime but instead he toughened his stand | aide to former President Truman and raised new issues. | —‘‘were pulling the strings’ behind Laniel government. | the government's Reconstruction Finance Corp. s i] s Symington said he felt he would be performing a “‘public service of overwhelming” importance if he could get McCarthy to testify con- cerning the matters which were investigated by the elections sub- committee. Symington demanded that Mc- Carthy furnish documents and give |testimony “without resort to im- McCarthy said he would agree under oath and ‘‘subject to per- Se 2 the McCarthy-Army row. | He proposed that the conference When McCarthy called Syming- begin discussions immediately ON ton “sanctimonious Stu’’—the Mis- ie = !a political settlement in Indochina | .ourian’s first name is Stuart— —" aa oe : wt gape Pa Symington broke in: ‘‘T resent that | to testify before a special commit- wb he EDIE. ver delegates | reference ... you'd better to a) ' i thought they had gotten around psychiatrist.” 7 = tee if that would get Symington this difficulty when the Commu- ~ 5 paaabane : — a a — weeks avo to mre, hearings started April 22.1 sury in the current Army-McCar- nists agree nee KS 40 ° Today's scheduled hearing is the! thy hearings give priority to the cease-fire dis- 30th daily session : = cussions. Molotov, however, said : , i the time had now come to begin parallel talks on both military and | political questions,. perhaps rotat- ing from one phase to the other on alternate days. French Planes Blast 2 Communist Bases HANOI, Indochina (UP)—French A Frnch High Command spokes- man said infantrymen and tanks followed up on the attacks on the villages of Tu The and Pra Lan geven mile east of Hanoi The spokesman said the raids, similar to those in which two Red supply bases were destroyed Tues- jday, were part of a determined drive to clear the Hanoi area of all Communist bideouts within a 20-mile radius. |To Serve as President O'Brien. Toastmaster was Bernard| Directors of Sister Eljzabeth Ken- ‘ery bottle factory, witness Santos Parrot, At, next week/s meeting, | ny Foundation have elected Steven Bundawe offered to re-enact the impromptu topics will be given’ J Jay, Grossé Pointe, as president accident for police. of the Foundation, Michigan Chap- ; _ter, a Torch agency. “A McCarthy said Symington wasn’t | too dumb to know that the charges about his financial affairs Edward Keehn Wins 3rd in National Contest | current inquiry. } : ; The records and reports of the Edward Keehn, 15, of 183 Pin-| elections subcommittee were sent | gree Ave. will be presented Thurs- | to the Justice Department early in | day with a $5 third prize award/| 1953. Atty. Gen. Brownell has an- which he won in the 10th annual | nounced the Department found no AAA National Safety Poster Con- basis in them for any action test. Edward won the prize by | against James Roosevelt Wins in Landslide (Continued From Page One) ic Nationa] Committee's refusal to support him. But Southern California Demo- crats rallied behing the late President's eldest son, giving him 2,736 votes to hig nearest rival's 476 witte 115 out of 901 precincts counted, : The 44-year-old Roosevelt, his | today as a return to “party unity | from the Lustron Corp. for writing | Lustron, now defunct, was a | "s- balding head shining with per- spiration, hailed his victory early 'in California.” Despite Roosevelt's strong show- it appeared unlikely that he | would score a double victory by housing and a large bo oe f | capturing the Republican nomina- tion, too. This had been rated a possibility under California's cross - filing law, j but Theodore R. Owings, making j his first bid for a major public | office, was polling far ahead in the GOP race. Roosevelt was fighting for his political life in the congression- al campaign, His estranged wife, Remelie, hag made sensational charges of infidelity in her sep- arate maintenance suit, and the court fight prompted national Democratic headquarters to with- hold financial aid. Another prominent congressional | candidate, Rep, Robert L. Condon, | got the same treatment from Dem- had | nothing whatever to do with the | ‘ocratic headquarters after he was | barred from watching atomic tests as a ‘‘security risk.” Despite the charges, Condon ap- peared to be on his way *o a vic- | tory in the sixth district Democrat- \ie race. Attorney John F. Baldwin was the apparent winner in the Republican column. In one-party South Carolina, Timmerman’s Democratic pri- McCarthy, but that the! mary victory was equivalent to | drawing a safety poster entitled | Internal Revenue Service was con-| election to the post now held by | former Secretary of State James “Wear White After Dark.’’ | ducting a further inquiry. Just last weekend, Commissioner The award will be presented by | The same storm knocked out a panes today nines and ows Principle Philip Wargelin at an | T. Coleman Andrews of the Reve- | transformer on 10-Mile Road. cut- | bases used by Communist re assembly at 8:30 am. at Lincoln nue Service said in Denver that his | agency's inquiry should be com- | Lincoln ninth grade student. Others pleted within 60 days. The Reve- | commended for their posters were | nue Service would have concern Alyce Stephens, 14, of 195 Oneida | only with questions of whether tax Rd.; Richard Moody, 15, of 942! laws had been complied with. Stanley Ave., both ninth graders | - 2° *® at Lincoln Junior High: and Jerry| In the exchange with Symington, | Almas, 12. of 28 S. Midland Dr.,| McCarthy said Symington was a sixth grader at Longfellow} reading a letter to him which he School (McCarthy) had never seen. McCarthy added he assumed the letter was written by Clark Clif- ford, onetime counsel’ to former President Truman, or the Demo- cratic National Committee. It was the third successive day in which there have been flareups between McCarthy and Symington. Before today’s session began, McCarthy told reporters he might | have a statement later in the day on an Army plan to bring the hear- ings to an early close. Witness Is Electrocuted Re-enacting Accident MANILA #® — Thirty minutes af- ter Gonzalo Razon was electrocuted yesterday at the San Migue! brew- He touched the uninsulated han /dle of a generator and was killed: ‘ * F. Byrnes, Timmerman and his lone oppon- ent, insurance executive Lester L. Bates, both pledged themselves to continue Byrne's fight against the Supreme Court ban of racial segre- gation in schools. Timmerman, however, was the | | only candidate to campaign with a definite plan for side-stepping the Supreme Court ruling. He also ac- cused Bates of having the secret endorsement of the National Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Colored People — a charge denied by Bates and the NAACP, Auditor Goes to Parley Pontiac City Auditor Marvin M. Alward will attend this year’s High Twelve Club convention in Denver. Colo., June 13 through 16. Alward is international representative of the Pontiac group. . 4 Deaths | . Pontiac Miss Sarah Burke After an illness of two months, | Miss Sarah Burke, 80, of 31 Whit- | temore St. died at ber residence ‘at 3:30-p. m. Tuesday. Born at Davisburg July 15, 1873. she was the daughter of John and Elie Buckley Burke. She attend- ‘ed Pontiac schools and was a ‘member of St. Vincent de Paul | Catholic Church and Altar Society. | years. Many years. ago Miss Burke was a. m. from Monday with the fake abduction | Surviving are three sons, cis, Edmund and Joseph of Pon- tiac, Leonard of Lake Orion; two daughters, Mrs. Wilfred Taylor of Elizabeth Lake and Mother Mary Benedicta of Park Hill, Ont. Funeral! will be Friday at 9 a.m. from the St. John the Baptist Catholic Church of which she was a member. The body is at the Tonellis Funeral Home in Mar- quette. Byron Moyer Funeral for Byron Moyer, 69, 1246 Grove Pointe Rd., White Lake Township, will be Friday at 10 a.m. from the Sparks-Griffin Chapel. Burial will be in the Commerce Cemetery. Mr. Moyer died Tuesday at his home. Detroit Still Working jon Lower Gas Rate | DETROIT (INS) — Assistant cor- poration counsel James H. Lee said |today he will appeal the Federal | Power Commission's denial of De- | troit’s request for a rehearing of | its decision establishing a contro- versial new rate-making method. | Lee’s appeal will be filed with would | With assassinating his law asso-|the federal Circuit Court of Ap- | | peals in the District of Columbia as the newest step in the city's | attempts to get lower gas rates | for consumers. Natives Recovering ‘From Atom Poison ae (Continued From Page One) sisted of representatives of Joint | Task Force 7; commander in chief | Pacific Fleet: high commissioner, Trust territory of Pacific Islands; the Atomit Energy Commission's |Narver) and the native magis- cused of conspiring to Mill three She had resided im Pontiac 75 trates of Rongelap and Utirik. | * +. >. | It was decided the Usirik people | could return home, with adequate wives of naval persongel clothing drive for the women and children. Al] the evacuated per- sons I talked with have been em- phatic that their treatment has tain amount of sadness among the people of Rongelap. **My people don't feel good about not going home,” Anjin observed. “We fear we may have the fate of Bikini.” * . s ‘ The 200 Bikinians, moved island to island, are now on iso- lated Kili, inaccessible many months of the year because of heavy surf. * . . Physically, Rongelapers today | bear few signs of their exposure. | Those who lost hair are getting it i back. Thirteen of the men made a brief | visit to their home atoll to recover some of the possessions left be- | hind. All the residents have been | compensated for the lost copra | Did these people have any mess- | age for the American people? | Paul Irujimman, 38, spoke up in Marshallese: “Please tell them not to do the | same thing again—throw the bomb, | We didn't do anything wrong.” | (More Tomorrow) ON HIS DAY a man should have his favorite Taresour word for it, Father Shi on Father's hour’ of wonderful come. both proudly and confidently. will love to receive a pair of Evans Ba . They mean and quality, ‘f workmanship and style that he'll be proud to wear. That's why you can give Evans Slippers Todd's Shoe Store Huron St. i ‘ “ engineer contractors (Holmes and. been the best. But there is a cer- - THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNF. 9, 1954 5 ange __ THREE . j . the Kremlin . - i y ww M > By al Red Menace to Americas Calls tor Fast U.S. Action|S°% A. 4 (Pion note: Congressman Pat | Guatemala is a police state. An-| which could be felt threughest | behind them in thetr resistence to | “® Mave the courage 10 ASS 4 . SERVICE po EH a BH -- “tinmias a vues oo ae hig n@rveus system, Later his | the Kremlin. ence "| ta the situation, . are creating ‘police state in tne | Own in jail. The protection of | head was repeatedly dumked im | s qcucy Ps, "a ='P Afford We'll Plan Your Tour Free! Central American nation. a eee ae bee bee water and removed only when iempitanivah dalake sak: denen Phone Mi 4-5711 mittee studying Communist methoas | abandoned. he was om the verge of drown. cur friends in Latin America . . in taking over free made ing. on Save $10.97 at Simms More and Better Gifts Tickets, Reservations the Gentral American trip with Btate ee A to strengthen, their defenses pemianggat be aapeine- and the people sti al- | The next morning he was taken : to daywhere By REP. PATRICK J. HILLINGS | lowed to attend church services |in a truck to the Mexican border | 5 “ive them assistance in im ‘BS Twat Dad Wants and Needs 379 Hamilton, Birmingham peAMENGTON CE) — T have im Catholic and Protestant and dumped over the line. | ,. | 89. appallingty low ; returned a visit behind) churches, However, there There is evidence a . , Grace Plummer Reilly [the tron Curtain in the Western| only best 100 petests tor a pope: | tempts to nationalize industry. Here | {the majority of Latin Ameri ‘> When You Shop and Save at Simms lation of nearty and the [is the pattern: The government sacdin eitiew aha Pat | At Simms you can choose Dad's gift from one of the largest selection gevernment has the num- | provokes a strike in an important fuel nape yon yg rt pi of crane wants end sae. » » Gite Sut Ne crn ian ve Se ber of who , On the of the strike : gifts that you can a to ior Father's ra ao “ta the government issves a decres | erament would be in sertous ditt | : The government has started | king over wide-scale arrests itical grounds that it is in the public 5. Students, businessmen, edu vane andl has stationed palice mat.| terest to do so to prevent a| caters, and others should be ” side of foreign embassies to arrest | ¥tdown. emt tw the United States and Why Pay “Full”. Price? } Guatemalan who might] “There is constant travel be- ee ee ee eee ti 1* y, take refuge and request political | tween Guatemala and points be- gag people = ey | PRICES SLASHED |? a o y asylum in such places. hind the Iren Curtain by govern- = ie 7 GIFTS FOR F In Mexico City, I talked with a| ment officials, labor leaders and 6. THR Committee on Communist Brand New—Latest Model ei : i Ab ATHER’S DAY Guatemalan labor leader who had! ether delegations, aggression should hold public hear- | 7 JUNE 20th been arrested one evening in his The commercial attache for the | @&* to alert the American public | i We're All for DAD . . . and DAD is office. He was taken to the police | s.viet embassy in Mexicd City re-|% the important and significant . for All of Us! x station. There he was beaten on appeared in Guatemala, al events which have taken place in Water-Action | e ye ° the soles of his feet by cops with | Cemly for | O8r, back yard. Revolving Christian Literature Sales |=" conn and Sener | nett man Food After the beatings he was | There is a bright side of the pic- ble ter -mgecennen) HT 39 Oakland FE 4-9591 forced to walk through salt wat ture. An anti - Communist under | aii nod li er which severely burned and ground does exist in Guatemala. : . ; | Washer eel ~ We must be prepared to stand | ( TRADE IN N ): + | 4 ZAl| Evidence of this cam be seen |up against any further efforts of | $12.95 $498 No -IN_ Necessary ‘a by unvsly éetving threngh — Vv *) 4 All BRAND NEW Latest Models | SAVE Plenty HERE! SAVE Plenty HERE! eee nn pmmtang — y fry SIMMS for Your 4} ) sina Price ] % All GUARANTEED by the Maker ) t sket with berries : : ’ Organdy Bonnets .... $1.44 Broadcloth Shirts... Q6c ee| Su mambers ot tuttdings. seo |p BEST Possible PICTURES 4) {gu fu resse. sumn trcr, tt: | | REMINGTON 2 Pe SUN SUS | Se eed =~ $44" prohibit, the existenbe of politi- a pe . ah een | COAT SETS Pe. § : Suis ae ik > ’ Y2 OFF! Pavesi 44 Bs Soe AEVSS Bivat2 i *§ Satin Failles, Boucles, Wools, Cordu- sunsuits. movement was ineffective until the A roys. Values to 17.98. Values to recent shipment of arms to Guate- ' $26.50 Value 2.98. mala because of the disunity and Save $9.65 factionalism existing among oppo- COTTON SUN SUITS Reg. 52.49 97 ¢c BATHING SUITS Votece t> $198 98< age { i; : i i ee ee te i te ee he i Le he de ee ) SINUS | NORELCO Twin S$ $24.95 Value Save $5.00 tions to unite. | REMINGTON $ 95 SHORTS PEDAL PUSHERS fh, ™ 2o"w<-=~.~ | bao ad | pears to be the next target of — $i — pt : $29.50 Veles Reg. 2.19 $ Beoutiful SS taken internally offer fis: B Seve $9.85 | : Seme workers employed by f lief f hi tA Cotton, Crepe ] 84/8 scotch plaid | 84 Be iste re esate cae miseries of sian bicck (IB (ete All Popular Models at Reg. 2.79, only — oon tor ae ak eoste ee < >98 | ede. Simms Popular Cut Prices! Broadcloth Topper Suit SMOKY BEAR HATS The Reds hope to capitalize on ae. = $9.24 $100 sition to organization labor er | Toblers | 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS | $2.99 Value jons in Honduras by the govern- : ; ment and business interests. 5 Interchangeable Blades Better Homes and Garden Straw Hats ...... Y, Price Sunsuit itis $2.29 Honduras fs closer to the Pana- te Ah de De he bi Mi i Mi Mi Mi Mi Mi Mi di Mi ti A i i i i Me i tl ili il, ill Ml il, i tl 08 NM. Seginew —Mein Floor | B Nest of SAWS ee eee — — $ 37 od iS Oe Susie, oo PRICES SLASHED on Luggage 1 : Teathent the tolocing approach || 40% Graduates or Father's Day Gifts es which might help to meet the r ee os As Pic- : ———— in the West- Genuine VOGUE tured ; 1, ——s supply a Plywood Frame. Plastic Covered ees aes , terials to anti - Communist e over a thousand - : 22 E. PIKE -- One Block East of Saginaw Street BB) is Latin America requesting such LUGG AGE teastae wy of 6 mawcneaguae (aitial memes aha |e aid to show the people of Central | & oes a a prening, | every imaginable job sround the : America that we intend to stand WTTTTTTTi tt , $ | Now You Can Afford the Gift | That Dad Has Always Wanted Here is a practical gift Dad is sure to find many uses for. Small deposit holds in layaway. 99 ~ 5 pore $633 Size ..... ; CONSIDER THE “EARNING POWER” of YOUR — SAVINGS - NOW! EARNINGS START THE Ist On every dollar of your savings . . . when you deposit by the 10th! Earnings are credited to your account on June 30th and December 31st of each six-month period. Buy the set of buy the sepe- rate pleces ‘ ¢ Strong plywood HI-POWER frame with i i tle coverin Strong han- i -] h les colors | erey ) Bema 4 nc tan end brown alligator all with IC contrasting trim on ends Federal ELECTR only 10%. Compare Anywhere in Town! | Power Drill . Re ™ — Bag $1.00 Holds $ 88 $1.79 ]>> in Layaway Complete With 6 Foot Cord Seller Ideal for all fight traveling. for the beach ete. Waterproof rubberized inside. Choice | Famous “HI-POWER” ' inch electric , drill is UL approved. Operates on AC or DC current. {{@ ts PRR sevemen: J 21-Pc., Vs-Inch Drill Set............ $14.95 . 'P 38-Pc., Ys-Inch Drill Set... ss... $16.95 It Your ‘Pop’ Smokes a_ > [IVYNINE Mele) mS 7<@ 76s Pipe oe Her e Is His Gift! Hundreds and Hundreds of Deluxe Leather Billfolds plate. EVERY DOLLAR OF YOUR SAVINGS———— inet wia inacine’ hes earning power of 2% current rete. 0 $3.00 $5.00 Val ; j Je lo $0. aiues _ Every Account Is Insured Up to $10,000 | 3 $ 98 Use the convenience of our SAVE BY MAIL plan. Postage TE Pl charges are payed by us.. Ask for this mailing information 10% Tas teday. m @ Many Leothers @ Secret Comport- ments @ Removable Pass Cease @ Change Purse Gift Boxed! Choose from calf, mo- rocco, steer, etc., leatn- ers. Styles for men. INITIALED in GOLD at no extra cost, SIMMS.{2, PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION LIG é Sy S$ : M M S a 98 N. Seginew aati Pergiin Sire ee ’ - ® of ate ee “ cu Mo agi ag Matching Wedding Bands, j) handsomely, tailored bands |) im 14% yellow gold. lewelry Department | GEORGE'S Uf Biaiaa ied |. > ‘ ‘ } % % | =. ; ae - | RESCUED—PFC. George Argus, | Brooklyn, N, Y., was found “alive and well” high on Mt. McKinley | in Alaska. He was injured on May i6—receiving a broken hip in a| tumble over a 1,000-foot precipice. | One member of the party was; killed in the fall. Two others sur- vived and returned to civilization for aid Backyard Tour JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UP) — James L. Haugh of Findlay, Ohio, | joined the Navy 22 years ago to see | the world. Now Haugh has been, discharged after serving in Europe. | - Asia and South America and » | plans to find out what his own) country is like by traveling around ithe United States in a trailer. | NO MONEY DOWN Westinghouse “FROST-FREE™ Reg. 369.95... now only s.4-. Refrigerator 286 Even less with your trade-in! Get the big Federal Finest pen for daily use ever offered. Give it every test. Notice its smooth | dit. the sure, even ink flow . its beauty. And it holds up to 40%. more ink! For a limited time we'll give you a dollar We Also Carry a Complete Stock of , Parker, Shaeffer and Easterbrook We heve « factory trained men to see thet your pen works properly! a superb new Ventura Author Says Fox Will Never Catch |Peter Rabbit SAINT JOHN, N. B. (#—Thorn- ton W. Burgess let the world in on a literary secret today—Reddy Fox isn't ever going to catch up with Peter Rabbit. The 80-year-old author-naturalist whose fictional animals have de- lighted children for 42 years, said in an interview he plans to keep Peter always one jump ahead of his hungry, crafty pursuet “There never will be a Uagedy in the Burgess bedtime stories the author added firmy. “It comes into a child's life soon enough.” Burgess, a resident of Spring- field, Mass., is vacationing in New Brunswick. He said he doesn't | plan to retire for another 20 years —not until he’s 100, THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, J Ex-Red Official Sent to Prison One-Time East Berlin Foreign Minister Cited in Espionage Charge BERLIN radio announced last night that Georg Dertinger, former foreign minister of the Soviet Zone govern- ment, has been sentenced to 15 W—The East German ' years in prison for plotting to over- throw the Red regime The broadcast said five other alleged conspirators, including two of Dertinger’'s women secretaries, were given terms ranging from 3 to 13 years Dertinger, 51, was arrested Jan.' 1s 1953. on a charge of espionage | for the West. His wife was arrested at the same time but the broad- |cast last night made no mention of | her . ‘ * * * | . Dertinger was a leading mem- ber of the East zone Christian Democrats, who collaborate with the “ruling Communist party, He was foreign minister from October 1949. when the East German gov- ernment was set up, until his ar- rest The broadcast said he was ac- cused of espionage for U.S. in- telligence agencies, of collecting data en Soviet troops and Eastern economic secrets, and of drafting | a plan with former West German | State Secretary Otto Lenz for overthrow of the Soviet. zone reg- | ime. Wheat once was the basic cur- rency in the Oregon Territory. UNE 9, 1954 State Gls Must Get Their Own Ballots | LANSING d®— The Department | of Stat4 today reported that the published by the Office of Armed Forces Information and Education, incorrectly says relatives of serv- icemen may apply for their absen- tee ballots in Michigan This was permitted under Mich- igan law between 1944 and 1952, the department said Because of the error, munici- pal clerks have been receiving applications from relatives but have been forced to refuse them. Servicemen must now make the | applications themselves, by mail | if necessary’ They must also be er to vote before the bal- lots can be sent. This, too, can | be done by mail, the department said > FAST, ao eee Loens made without endorsers asy-to-meet requirements. “Right-eway” loans for any good reasos. DEPENDABLE SERVICE SINCE 18678 More men and women borrow from HFC than any other company in its field. Loans am wags on Sou. car or furnitere with- or stop im teday. HOUSE HOLD FINANCe —— Corporation of Ponitiae—— 3% Sevth Saginew St. VAL-U-WAY COFFEE E> On _ = [— ms 10% ox. A HURRY! ue! evr. ; Campbell’s 3 CANS , TOMATO » SOllP a, a) == Peanut Butter " Fresh-Ripe Watermelons * TALL CAN 2 CANS 29 Ground Beef a a Pard Dog Food 2 ~ 29° Cello Pack eet 2 Shedd’s ‘LARGE FAMILY Size HEAD LETTUCE | 2 29° We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities! NEW! BIRDS EYE CHICKEN PARTS 10 oz. Birds Eye Frozen Birds Eye Frozen Chicken Thighs - Breasts - Drumsticks Your Choice Birds Eye Frozen FRENCH FRIES tre “The Whole Family Loves ‘em” JUST SPREAD ON RINSE OFF! — . WEST JOHNSON’S ANK TENUTA'S THE COMMUNITY ALWARD’'S DAVEY'S FRANK'S FULKERSON General Printing & Office Supply |} ACRES manxer nizzUT0's SUPER = TRADING = SUPER, © MARKET = MARKET = MARKET = GROCERY 17 W. Lewrence St. 7321 Commerce eal ical MARKET SE19 Gaddicw 5605 Dent DE: Ji Adewi OOO 1012 Main $. "take Road ae Road Road Rochester $56 Oakland Drayton Plains White Lake Auburn Heights Rochester Rochester Pontiac Pontiac Lake $ , $ { ve . \ r he . f | 3 2 _ .___THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDN ESDAY, JUNE 9, 1954 , 5 ) . , | Young Republican's Club, president . ’ meeting, the board approved eight . of Oakland County Animal Welfare fireworks displays. ’ Incorpor ation | Election Set Monday Setey“tad ha tence “_— 5 a a | | «gs | to mpo Soon (Lakewood Farms Group | OK'd by Voters | School Board Positions ‘Webford Club tunicheon | WATERFORD TOWN sip —|Plans for Family Picnic uate * ; : ; + Set for 1 P.M. Thu | Living quarters for firemen at} WATERFORD’ CENTER—Plans | g99 pee _ Citidens of Commerce, Sought by 3in Waterford ah FOGGY’ | Fre Station No.1 wil be improved tr family aa -aen caesgriomleedct aon Tile le the second year this Walled Lake Radlarsa WATERFORD TOWN SHIP —| Rochester in 1946 and-his law de-| Harold Richardson of 1810 Williams | Louis Barry. residents on June 25 were made at Day by the Bible school of the Bung Decne ofthe a of te : ‘Three persons, including incum-| gree from University of Michigan | ‘#*¢ R4. will be hostess to the! Barry said the Township Board |the recent meeting of the Lake- |Community United Presbyterian | school,” said John Hazlett, Home Rule Proposal 4.1: Exmer Johnson, have announe-|in 19. Married ad the father ef | em Club at a cooperative | has authorized him to advertise | wood Farms Women's Auxiliary. | Church at the CAI Building. | superintendent of the Bible school? | WALLED LAKE — Resident of 4 their candidacy for the Water- | three children, he served 33 months Maaioty 0h baig SU hon | enon poemneibes ae: timate de The meeting was held at the| ncgram wil feature presentations When seeds of the American With a total of 374 residents | ‘4 Township Board of Education | in the Navy dishes and silver. They have also bids for blacktopping the alley in|"ome of Mrs. Hans Reckmann, | by the various departments, group | holly sprout, only about one tenth casting ballots, 267 voted “yes” at next Monday's election. Bell has also served as chairman! been requested to bring items for tae Dregtae Bias tain ee 741 Gertrude St., with Mrs, Hugh | singing under the direction of John| produce female trees, and only said i were: tains ‘Seumpetation: will be cepbing na win Johmsca'e | ite _Nerthora Oakland County's Sood batint for a nopdy family. ' In other As cohostess. the female trees produce berries, ? wi draft a charter for the new hr ae Ske a a seams ‘ule ‘otly, Donald E. Adams and John W. Elected were Larry Gilliam, 288; Bell. voted; Charles H. Fisher, 269; A. Boyle, 245; Ralph Bufimyer, 242; |, Joanson, 49, an Cameron Rose, 232; Hiram Sims, | ‘ess Ware Co. at Walled ‘ 224; Clifford Smart, 217; George | lives at 3320 Seebaldt, Drayton FF L. Gram, 183; and Fred Free- Plains. He served on the school bury, 172 votes. Other candidates for the charter commission were Harry W. Thom- as, 164 votes; Marshall E. TAy- lor, 163; Lewis D. Rourke, 150; John G, Murphy, 81; and Ben Z. board for one term before con- solidation and was named by the board to fill a vacancy created by the resignation of Jayno Adams in 1950. He was elected to serve a full term on the board - Most Treasured Schneider, 42 votes. | school teacher committee, the in- square miles of Commerce | Resident here for 18 years he is Township bounded by Commerce, | a member of the Township Rec- Decker and 14 Mile Rds, and a | reation Board and Clarkston Ma- lime slightly beyond Ladd road | sonic Temple. He has two children, Recipes Appear i; Every Thursdayin | The Pontiac Press | The latest census for the area | i" college. showed 2,569 residents. The area| Mrs. Adams (Elizabeth 58.), is somewhat smaller than the area/ lives at 2711 W. Walton Rd. with which was sought for incorporation! her husband and a sen, She is more than two years ago. a secretary in her husband's law te the west, one in high school here and one 42, Commencement | A graduate of Pontiac High School, Mrs. Adams obtained her Set for Seniors A. B. degree in education at Ypet at Avondale High — degree in history at Uni- AUBURN HEIGHTS — Com-|tion she served as curator of the mencement exercises for 85 sen-| University of Michigan historical iors of Avondale High School will | collection, In 191 she was ap- be held Thursday in the auditorium | pointed to the Michigan Historical of the high school, Commission. It wil] be the largest graduating| A past president of the History j class in the history of the school. | Society of Michigan and of Pontiac sal oh comallaelwecsel mtlicteegd (2 oD prolly | _ | Oakland County Historical Foun- | wat earareet intel | Siten She alco was a jute a ington, Ind., will deliver the com. | the peace during World War I. | mencement address. Bell, 29, lives at 2941 Silverhill | Awarding the diplomas to the| Rd. He has law offices in Pon- | graduating seniors will be Grant| tiac and serves as consulting at- | Graham, president of the board of| torney for Waterford and Inde- | education. pendence Townships. Music for the program will be; A graduate of Holland High furnished by the Avondale High | School in 1942, he obtained his | School Band. B. A. degree from University 5 _-_—-__—_—_ 4+ -__ $$ Crescent Lake Assn. _ | ~_ Renames President SCREP IRON | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—At a and | vis hom. Bendey 5 oy aaiey METAL | i ry Leh irley was elected to a second term a | Ld president. Others elected were James Dun- Selling: kel, vice president; Mrs. Ray Structural Steel Fields, treasurer, and Maxwell C. Haddix, recording secretary. — I-Beams -- Channels | In other business, the member- ship voted to go ahead with an Angles -- Etc. extensive beach improvement pro- et Old Favorites... Tempting New Dishes... Comiy Coleader fs Scee” Your Neighbors’ No. 1 Recipes... i ‘Siw SURPLUS A Top Feature of the Pontiac Press. . .. NEXT TO THE STATE THEATER S. Allen & Son, Inc. | | TARFAULINS = Everyone takes pride in being a good cook... i o1 7 acs 1215 too | ioe wt wen. Dt everyone has a favorite dish for preparifig taste WR ai 2220 1205020 15. 30100 Fae te oe. lt tempting meals... for preparing meals within Hettrick ARCTIC BAY TENTS Sean an oo a budget ve for clever use of left overs. Your _as Seen on Television! | ee Shh neighbors’ favorite recipes appear every Thurs- COTTAGEAIRE iar “enc day in the Pontiac Press ... another feature fast hee eee | Ct ay becoming extremel ular with good cooks @ Adjustable cross ventile- j saucenine Chocety "te ay g ; y Pop g tion with storm protec- Stirring | td pia !¢ ang tion | ad a, ei fice onet.wate , —- EWerywhere. @ Bobbinette xipper door ga el yA sawn @ Bobbinette windows Maer ang ing con” alga @ Sew-in-canves floor fP hoe gatthed a bleng YY Adel ’ @ Telescopic steel poles pi el aah at sont — tones" © coig * e re Yj, Ea ~~ =ae.s Share Your Favorite Recipe With Others » Pup Tents ...... $ 5.95 aie OH, tot . TTA te EE ee oe _ eee up a © ore 1 oS reece | eo CALL JANET ODELL Pee eed | en |‘ PONTIAC PRESS FOOD EDITOR | a ee | nik ee Izomer geese torte . ~ “335s... Look for This Feature in the Food Section Every Thursday! Se | =!s: PONTIAC PRESS > Pa a a : C 3 \ ; Sen : THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 1954 i _ -¢ THIRTY-ONE. : . , 4 iN . ay ' Chisox Take Al Lead as Senators Dump Indians :====2seeAnee on | at St. John’s University. The Chris-| able baseball performer, ’ we fo cap a.five-run with an %1 record; Virgil Trucks, rosea > > ving ; . 'chances, he said, “are exactly | night's game PHILADELPHIA @ — The Chi-| The Chicagoans dislodged the were surveying the Junior Cirtuit | ¢ t zZ : fingertip-hold pennant race from the top of the}what I thought befgre—they're | seventh inning for the Chisox. It | last night's winning pitcher, has an rched atop |Cleveland Indians ‘ yah ing - oem adn rad bi first place by defeating the standings since May 1, good.” was Kell, too, who poked a single 83 record, and Sandy Consuegra | ’ j if day but Manager Paul Richards Philadelphia Athletics last night. | . © ©. He cites a couple of .good rea-| in the first inning to start a two-jhas won six of seven decisions. | TELEVISION | | ? was unperturbed by it all. 19.3, while the Indians were losing! There's nothing unusual, either, | sons: run rally. Third reason is outfielder Orestes | | 4 * 8 @ ~ |to the Washington Senators, 5-2.| about the Sox's current six-game| The first is George Kell, whom | s 8 ¢ (Minnie) Minoso, the league's No. | Start Training Now in Your Spare Time! | { “We expected to get there,” | Cleveland had held first place by winning streak, Richards said. | Chicago recently obtained from the; Second reason is left handed | 3 hitter with a 332 average. Minoso | . e | z Richards said. He added: ‘‘And eight percentage points. “They're just playing the way they Boston Red Sox, The veteran pitcher Bill Pierce who rejoined|has hit safely in 21 of his last | The Demand for Our Television Graduates Is “ we expect to stay there.” | It was the first time the Sox can play.” The «team’s pennant | punched a two-run homer in last | the = last Lay Lia pone two 33 games. He had a single in four For Greater Than the Supply. .? — — = _ - — aan — ~ - - ~ re e wt al me » ler __ . - : pacing ta abel Maal rgan | MODERN LABORATORY and Classroom Instruction | “ ad vere (derwent diathermy treatments for | + * * ' \@ sore arm. He said his arm now! The Cuban also drove in one run feels better than at any other time |to hold his league tead in that | , this season. ’ department with 52. He also leads | | Even without Pierce, who had in triples (7). runs scored (47) and | an 1812 mark last year when the| is tied with teammate Jim Rivera | Just 4 Hours - - - ONE EVENING A WEEK Phone. Call in Person. o: Mail Coupon for Full Details NAME og ccawsannsdedsas gee cet omends bees cee IDORESS 6 cue won nacdseesswa toll leas enwawes ' Orioles Boost - AL Attendance Over 53 Figure ? New Club Helps Swell : Crowd to 2,413,498) for 191 Games ° Sox finished third the Chicago for most stolen bases—7. j pitching staff has the best major; Richards said he has no specific | |league record of the young season. | plans for the important New York | ELECTRON ics INSTITUTE Bob Keegan leads the league | Yankee series this weekend 2457 Woodward (Donoven Bidg.) ‘ WO 2-566! Three Blocks North of Fex Theater sd Angus Campbell, 87-17 — 70: F. ‘SO Teams Playing [sewer toes 2 9. "bem eester (Detroit) 106-35 — 71: Gene in Best Ball Event = |siai: toeoin net m0. P | CASH . Schwartz (Royal Oak) 70; R. E. | Approximately 30 two-man golf | priver 86-16 — 70 and professional teams are busy with competition | Henry Ransom (Pine Lake) a fine in the summer's four-ball-best-ball | 68. Ransom fired six birdies tournament at Pine Lake Country | against two bogies for his card. Cub. On the recent National Golf Day, ¢- . Pine Lake had some 78 entries First Televised Game paced by Tom Cross of Pontiac,| The first college football game | who had 8-17 — 69 for low -net.|to appear on television in the | Other low cards were turned in by | state of Michigan was Sept. 19, | W. Park, Jr., Royal Oak, 88-17—71; 1947 between the University of De- | A. Floyd Blakeslee, 8-16 — 70; | troit and Centra) Michigan College. | | HOT WATER | you want—when you want it! Orioles. Earl Hilligan, league service | bureau director, today reported | attendance in the Junior Circuit | through 191 games was 2,413,498, | - TIRE SALE Complete Tire and Tread One Week Special! 670-15..... $6.95 710-16..... $7.95 760-16.,.... $8.95 Fees yen x bee .“ ‘ deacons i, wher et ome. | JONES, GIARDELLO EXAMINED—Bobby Jones. | AP Wisephote The National League Monday | = | of Oakland, Calif. and ag oe ie ae Garden Last week Clarem Yen a cae al F announced an increase of 07,577 | Philadelphia are — ee tae seas kal me vee tt offered Jones a for the first 188 games this year Vincent Nardictio of the State Athletic Commission. $50,000 bail on a hehe i ; a Por over 1953 attendance for 179 games The middieweights meet Friday at Madison auene bribe of sateen ) to throw the hgh - — played through a comparable per- eet imi wane ian, |Giel Expected to Sign [hee Game listed bate ce of a0 comered win NY Giant Contract Today 2. moc mis ms) BHDeeT eas WATER BEATER 800-156..... 99.96 Recapped coe by the a Bac —, beret By JIM KLOBUCHAR !through every one of his starting | baseball play in Oakland County's | MINNEAPOLIS ww — ~sote ances this year agree the 18th District League. Sta i da j year. For the same period, Balt). Minnesota appearance lis year agree the Biwiarhan'a Reds. eo to: We by RICAN- more stands 272,449 ahead of St.| All-America Paul Giel, whose|5-11, 18>pounder has a major | ° terford for a game on the Water- Here's a fast-working : Louis. football exploits almost obscured a league fastball ford High School d d hil ° « Gcomoms- As Low As a igh School diamond, while | eal water beater. Attractive white Di F Ri brilliant college pitching career, is o>? the Blues are at home to Claw-| emamel jacket with bleck trim. $ 75 ntled ans Riot " : act, [lis control is adequate and he son at Pierce Field. Berkley plays Gelbvantned steel tank -.. oe 80 sgru expected to sign a bonus contract} for ait | Seo it : Huron Valley Boys Club, also / T » New Y¢ asebal| | b&s @ good curve ball After Soccer Contest today with the New York Baseball * ¢« * backed by the Birmingham post, IRE Co. Giants ! ' rs INNSBRUCK. Austria, June 9 > | But it was in football that Giel at Huron Valley . ~ ronal anc anadian Leagues o ; and phecrennr aig! pany ered sugary inducements for the an arm co 0d “a 7 The entrie { the = ; i id last two weeks FAMOUS MAKE NECKWEAR. A ; PAJAMAS by Weldon. a . ye dagen she . \ m t " oO abardine—yo hy . . ‘ : “ blir id . yon or £ e—your choice bound to please him. It’s Tae wah ceuaverniheajiu to iba # fre distinctive colors Before you spend another doller (67 ai))6 neiran: pe: $8.95 something we're experts patterns by Interwoven... compare Allstate's low rates and other advantages You II 2 Pair tor $13.00 at doing every day of the se 4 4 $1.00 see why the number of Allstate policy bolders has m than doubled in less than three years. Today over two and year! - le dee they are as smart as he one half million car owners are getting the really bepte value vou'd expect from the company founded by Z" Get the facts about Allstate's fast, fair claim ao ‘ - Proposed City / eee eee ese THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 1954 Ordinance Bans Grains Nervous but Stay Quiet CHICAGO W — Grains had a trade today but they didn't move | - far from previous closing levels. | In early dealings soybeans, par- ticularly the July future, showed Ca the most strength. Wheat started | out firm but lost its gains when Kohlrani a little selling pressure developed | Si7;,, after the opening. Feed grains hardly budged. Wheat. near the end of the first | hour was % lower to % higher, | July $1.94%4, corn \% lower to | higher, July $1.5542, oats 4% lower to %@ higher, July 70%, rye % to 4 | higher, July $1.04, soybeans 44, lower to 2% higher, July $3.63 and ,, cents | July lard 25 cents lower to 2 a hundred pounds higher, $16.82. CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO ane grain Wheat 1.13% July “% Soy Sep . 197% July .. 3.63 Dee ..rccee: 201% Sep . ¢ 2.72 Mar ........ 2.03% Nov . 251 Cora Co eee 254% July 1.55% Lard Bep nave: 1.50% July 16.15 Dee 141', Sep 1440 Mar ...ece-s 144% Oct 13.35 Oats MOY iccues 12.25 CORY « eeccsec 7, Dee 245 Sep 68% Boybean O1) Dee 70% July 390 eo 72% Sep 12.38 Ry Oct 1.25 July ..ceee 104% Mar ....... 10.78 Sep .....- 17 —_— | | Special communication Cedar | Lodge No. 60 F. & A. M., Clarks- | at Davisburg Park, Sun., June 13, 11 a. m. Elgan R. Wood, W.M. | —Adv Special communication of Roose- , velt Lodge No. 510, F. & A. M., 22 State St. Thursday, June 10, at | 7:30 p. m. E. A. degree. Raymond Kneisel, W. M. —Adv. News in Brief Avorene Gordin of 301 Howard | McNeill St. told Pontiac Police to- | day that someone took his son's bicycle while it was parked in the yard last night. The bike was valued at $10. Osmun’s Town & Country, Tel- Huron Shopping Center, Pontiac's finest store for gentlemen who prefer the finer things. Open every night ‘ti] 9 p m. Plenty of free parking. ff your friend's tn jail and needs bail, Ph. PE 5-5201 C. A. Mitchell. or Ph MA 5-4031. Guy Carter Diamond Rings, 20% off.) } | Georges-Newports, Jewelry Dept. —Adv Rummage Sale; Thursday, June 10, 9:00 a. m. Temple Beth Jacob; corner Orchard Lake and Ex- change. —Adv St. Paul's Methodist Church rummage sale in Rochester at Plassey’s Garage. corner of Fifth and Walnut, Friday and Saturday, June 11 and 12. 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. At Sam Benson's 20 S. Perry St. | you'll find a selection of over | 4000 pair of pants at savings om $3 to $6. Sam Benson, 20 S. Perry | open every night till 9, free park- | ing at the Hubbard Garage next | to my store. | —_ Vv. / ROTICE OF ANNUAL ELECTION SCHOOL DISTRICT OF THE CITY OF PONTIAC To the qualified electors of the Schoo! District of the City of Pontiac, Oakland | County, Michigan Notice is hereby given. that the an- | nual election will be held in the School District of the City of Pontiac. in the County of Oakiand and State of Michi- | gan. on Monday, the 14th day of dune, | 1954. from 17:00 o'clock am. to 8: o'clock pm., Eastern Standard Time. for the purpose of electing the following: Two members of the Board of Bduca- tion for a term of 4 years each. and to vote upon the following proposition: | “Shall the lItmitation on the total | amount of taxes which may be assessed | each year against property in the Schoo! | District of the City of Pontiac, County of | Oakland, State of Michigan, for all | purposes except taxes for the | of interest and principal on obli ‘ations | incurred prior to December 8, 1932, be increased as provided in Section 21 of Article X of the Constitution of Michi- gan. for a period of three (3) years from 1955 = to 1957, both inclusive, 625/1000ths of 1% (86.25 per $1,000) of | the assessed valuation as equalized and | for a tiod of seven (7) years from 1958 to 1964, both inclusive, 875 /1000ths | of 1% ($8.78 per $1,000) of the aenessed | valuation as equalized"? | Also to be voted upon is the question: | “Shall the County School District of | Oskiand County, State of Michigan come under the provisions of the special education § act, statute is de- | signed to encourage the education of the handicapped children; Provided. that any amnual property tax levied for the administration of this act shall be limit. to one half of one mfil"? Notice ts further given, that the fol- lowing persons have been nominated for the offices of members of the Board of Education: Edward P. Barrett Matiyn L. Brown Waiter L. Godsell Lola B ry Leonard P. Kiausmeyer Paul J. Simmons Everett C. Spurlock Notice is further given, that the voting laces for said election will be as fol- we: A—Bagiey School, 320 ner Street B—Webster School, 640 West Huron C—Crofoot School, 280 West Huron P—Owen School, 43 East Columbia G—LeBaron School, 595 E. Beverly H-—Emerson School, 850 Emerson 6t I—Baldwin School. 40 East Howard M—Eastern Jr. High, 25 South Sanford N—Central School, 101 East Pike School, 1406 N. Tele- Tee whittier School, 600 Motor Street Willis School, 1834 Spares Washington Jr. High, T10 Menom- } Whitfield School, 2000 Orchard Lake | The following statement s been re- the hool fac are 2.56 mills for inclusive.” ‘YD M. SIBLEY. sputy —. f Saniens County rer © LOLA B. KING Secretary of . 19%. Dated: May 16, 0. 10 Be j he failed to post a $1,000 bond, the Board of Education| was arrested Monday after a [MARKETS | Ry (UP) — Wholesale eee Ss | ¢ farmers’ markets reported i Sorees of Markets: Fruits: A Northern , fancy, steve, Met 3ee3%e ter Steele's Red, , 600 bu; No 1, 2.8- 3.00 bu. Strawberries, No }. 14.00-14.50 24-qt case. v bles: No i, 1.25.1. dos 1, 1.86-3.9¢ bu. Chives, No 1, 100-125 dos behs. Caali- flower, No 1 Leeks, No 1, 1.50 uce, head, No 1, ~dos; | lettuce, head, No 1. 1.75-2.25 bu; » | leaf, No 1, 1.35-1.5@ bu. Romaine, No |, | 1.75-3.00 bu. ' Greens: Spinach. No 1, abbage. No 1, 150-200 bu d, Neo 1, 150-175 bu. Musterd, Ne 1. 15- 1.00 bu. Sorrel, No 1, 100-125 bu. Twr- Bip. No 1, -1.00. - DETROIT EGGS (AP) —Eegegs, -st ed average 46; large 30‘ )-42, ‘| & Tube, Boeing, Homestake Min- Market Stages Operation Hold NEW YORK wW—The stock mar- ket staged a holding operation with the railroads out in front in the early afternoon today in the aftermath of yesterday's break. The railorads had only scat- tered support, but it was enough to modify the market's otherwise lower tendency. Gains , and losses spread out over a range of around a point in either direction with the losers more numerous. In addition to the railroads, plus signs appeared in the steels, rub- bers, distillers, golds, tobaccos, Lower stocks included New York Central, Standard Oil (NJ), Para- mount Pictures, American Tele- phone, U. S. Steel, Studebaker, General Electric. Higher were Youngstown . Sheet ‘Radios on List, Also Furniture Religion and Labor : a & srry FETT . “fF Fi i rt i saa A is United Press is the son of George Leader ow 43-45, wid av 44; large 37-40. wid av 39'; medium ing. American Tobacco, Union Pa- 32-36 sw va omell 2 ede 2 cific, Atlantic Coast Line, and rge ir 5 ; 5 ° so Northern Pacific. mi AGO Aen : bor CHIc f \—Butter unsett re- ceipts 2.001.910; wholesale buying prices | New York Stocks unchanged to \4 lower’ 93 score AA $65, | | 92 A S65: 90 B 8425: 88 C 52; cars | Adams Exp 334 Kimb Clk we 90 B S475. e8 C 525 Admire! . 5 Kresge 6 6 33 Exgs steady; receipts 29.518, ypomnsd fe 4 Reduc ... 265 Kroger ae buving prices umchanged to \ lower; | Alieg L St! ... 325 Lehn & P 7 U.S. large 60-€9.9 per cent As 34: mixed Allied Ch .. 862 LOFP Olas bl¢ M% US mediums 305; US. standards Allied Strs ... 44 Lid MeN AL... 982 305. current receipts 29, jes 28; | Allis Chel ... 88 & Mey... 7 cheeks 27 Alum Lid ... 566 h --- Ba —- alum Ce Am . * (ooo Ld Am eum . 8 . CHICAGO POTATOES Mack Trucks 13 CHICAGO (AP)—Potatoes: arrivals 127; — Pi map Marsh Pield .. #3 on track 277; total U8. shipments 902: | 0™ ~— i} 343 Martin Gi 24 supplies light; demand slow; market dull | 4™ ro is) May D Str 30.2 nites $5.00-90; Reuse Reds e018; Aint| Am M & Pay 331 & = tes 5 m ; Ale- t 7. bama tines $4.25-30; am 30 beg Coown oe (Triumph Type) $4.00-15. am -3 Mont Ward. 61.8 Am Geoting .. 382 sister We 118 DETROIT POULTRY Am Tel & Tei 1677 Mot Wheel 226 DETROIT (AP)—Prices paid per pound; am Tod ..... 61.2 Motorola ..... 37.7 feb Detrots for No. 1 quailty live poul-|4ns0 Cop ” + sine x a try up to a.m ; Heavy hens, 2-28: light type, 17-18 | tonite eae eee #1 Heavy roasters, over 4 Ibs, 38-30. Heavy | 11" Ch rine joge Nat Cash RK... 77 broilers or fryers, under 3-4 pounds, Atl Refin 333 Nat Dairy .... 70.7 ag SS ales (ones ee ee ponettes 31- : S06 Turkeys, heavy type toms, 36; turkeys, 2so9 Eyed tees as Nat Thea .... 66 hens 20-30, toms, 24-25. Beld Lima .. NY Air 19.5 ais a « = =: NY Central .. 22 = Av CHICAGO POULTRY ge af ‘AP)—Live poultry sbout Boeing Airp .. 422 No Am Av nT steady; receipts 1.228 coops: f.o.b. paying| ponn alum 20.3 Nor Pac 664 ee ee a ae ee tects | Sane es --- 193 ier On Fe .. 8 t hens 15.5-16.5: fryers or broilers| 5 4en - {: Northw Air} oe 85 “37; old roosters 14.5-18 Borg Warn ... 82.6 Ohio Oil 662 Briggs Mf a | ra 4 Li t Brist M ‘ re | ella So Pal Brun e . eve Budd Co . 12.5 Parke Dav.... 326 DETROIT LIVESTOCK sep _ ae Sa e).. 4 DETROIT ‘AP)— Hogs salable 300. Mar- | Coma Wy ... 22 Pepsi Cols.... 18 ket not established. undertone around 28 | ©. ° pry "433 Pheips D..... 37 cents or more lower Can Pac .. 26.6 Philco . ns Cattle salable 475. Pully 50 per cent | oo iy) " 34.6 Philip . 03 fresh receipts cows; slaughter steers afd | oe. Trac $26 Phill Pet 61 yearlings less active than Tuesday. sbout | — 1... 17.4 Pills Mills . 902 steady, other classes cattle generally | os onic. 41 Pit Plate Gi $2.4 steady; few sales good and choice steers Chi @ NW 111 Proct a2 and yearlings 20.00-24.00. high choice | ier |... 91 Pullman ...... 50.1 and prime absent: bulk utfiity end com- Cities ore tans Pare GB....-- 4 mercial cows 12.00-14.00; Holsteins mov- Ch Mo... 46.7 RKO Pic..... 61 freely but other breeds particularly can ves “** 33@ Radio Cp..... 26 fat offerings very dull; canners and cut- Pal "43 Reo Motors... 28.1 ters mostly 10.00-12 00: early sales utility | Cole Palm .-. 0) Repub gti..... 569 and commercial bulls up to 16.50; heavy | Cel Rae ane? 433 Reva Met... 12 fat bulls very slow Con on ‘So Rey Tob B... 383 Calves salable 200. Vealer market — 443 Bt. Jos Lead.. 3194 ing slow, weak: not fully established; |Consum Pw “so0.9 Scovill Mf... 15 early sales choice vealers up to 25.00; | ConPwPt becca °F | Bead Al RR... 64.4 some higher Cont Cam .... O85 Sears Reed... O44 Sheep salable 100. No early sales — -_ sane Shell Oll...... #4 soeee immons...... i Corn Pd ..... 73.6 sinciair Oil 41 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK . CHICAGO (AP)—Balable hogs 10,000: | Crve Sth ...-. 98 , —h 3 bulk butchers slow: unevenly 25-50 or! ne: sais 315 sou Ry....... 622 more lower than Tuesday: sows 25-80) nous aire rr Hand veeeees 614 lower with some heavier weights 15 | now | 384 97 Brand 33.1 or more #if: choice 180-230 Ib. butchers | nopont . 121 gta Oil Calif.. 62 25.25-26 240-270 Ib. 23 50-25.00; s0WS | ples pich ... 313 gt O11 4 choice 240-250 Ib 25.25-25.50; 280-318|po% air L |’. 23 Bid Oll NJ 83.7 Ib. 2.00-23.25: few 350-400 Ib. 18.75-21.25: Eastm Kod . 857.4 Btd Oil Ohic.. 38 choice 330-400 Ib. sows 18 00-2150; 425- Fi Aute L . 38.6 Studebaker... 164 600 Ib. 15.50-18.00 i Fmer Rad *5 guth Pa . Balable cattle 14.000; calves 400; steers End John . 2984 swift & Co 434 and hetfers mostly steady to 25 lower: | grie RR 165 Sylv El Pd.... 42 spots off 50 an high choice and prime gy-cel!-o €96 Texas Co.. 6e6 steers: sows active to 25 to mostly 530°) Firestone 704 Tex G 6ul.. 934 higher; bulls steady ‘to strong. vealers | Preept Sul .... 584 Thomp Pd. 60.2 steady to 1 00 higher: couple loads prime | Gen Elec 118 Timk R Bear 06 steers 7700 and 727.25 most prime | Gen Fis 662 Tran W Air... 143 steers 25 7$-26.50; choice to low prime! Gen Mot . 685 Transamer 32.2 23 00-25.50; good to low choice 20 50-| Gen Ry Sig 286 Twent C Fox... 19 22.75; few loads prime heifers 2450-25 50. | Gen Tel 34.7 Underwood ... 28 good to high choice heifers 19.50-24.00;| Gen T & Rub "21 Un Carbide... 170.7 utility and commercial cows 11 25-15.50 Gillette $72 Un Pac.......322 canners and cutters 950-1175: utility | Goebel Br 72 Unit Air Lin.. 21.6) and commercial! bulls 1490-1700: good | Goodrich .. 88 Unit Airc..... 61 to prime vealers 19.00-23.00; cull to com- | Goodyear .... 615 United - 46 mercial grades 10.00-19.00 Grah Paige 12 Unit Fruit.... @4 Salable sheep 1,000: spring iambs 50/| Gt No Ry 546 Un Gas Im... 42 to mostly 1.00 lower than Tuesday: old | Ot West 8 192 U 8S Linmes.... 15 crop lambs scarce; quotable 50 or more | Greyhound . 122 U B Rub . 323 lower; slaughter sheep about steady, Guif Ot! . $461 U 8 Smelt 0 most sales to prime spring lambs | Hersh Choe 39.)—C UUs 8s Steel..... “ 22.50-25.00: few choice and »rime 25.50- | Homestk . 416 U B Tov...... 172 26.00; cull to low good grades 18.00- | Ill Cent 442 Warn B Pic... 18.1 22.00; small lots mostly good No. 1 and Iniand St! $44 Weukesha M.. 15.5 2 skin yearlings 1675 and 17.00; cull to | a . - ‘ pla oe ee ——EEeee ee eee Int Harv ..... 312 Weste A : 383 Senn ann Int Nick ..... 416 Westg Ei...... 6 . Int Paper -. @ White Mot 33.2 ocking Horse =| Birra! a wootworth a ohns Man . ale ew... | Kelsey Hay .. 193 Yngst Sh & T 424 Soothes Young | Kennecott 786 Clark Equip.. 414 ° e STOCK AVERAGES Hospital Patients | xxx ,rorx—comsues 07 00 ne ciated Press A rocking horse named “Black Beauty’’ is now soothing the nerves | of children awaiting surgery at | Pontiac General Hospital. The wooden psychiatrist was do- nated by Dr. Leonard Blackwell, | according to Shirley Dovre, hospi- | tal administrative assistant. j ‘Before we got Black Beauty children waiting to be operated on had nothing to do but worry and | sometimes cry.'’ said Miss Dovre. ‘‘Now they can relax by playing cowboy or cowgirl.” Willys Exports in May Second Largest Month TOLEDO, 0. (UP)—Export sales | of Willys-Overiand utility and pas- | senger vehicles during May were announced today. Hickman Price Jr., president of ' sidiary, said shipments totaled | $f, Deutsche mark), 2368, unchanged: 53 duri marki fifth | Hol! h 26.44. han A 4.053 ing May. king the ely ire’ ie) ofe cent, unchanged: straight month export sales have | Portugal iennnse) 3.50, paeee ad; Swe- si @ ’ , une : 8 } shown an increase over the previ- | @*, ane) Gres aa enemeneel ous month. | Denmark ( e) 14.50, un | unchanged" Broch"tires 58 we | une an — ; ; chan Mexico 6.02, unchanged; Vene- Walled Lake Youth, 19, sore! pouvas se, anche as, on Sent to Circuit Court A 19-year-old Walled Lake youth ignment | ed to Oakland County Jail when breakin at a Walled Lake tavern. | 30 is 18 en Indust Rails Util Qtocks | 1064 «6888 Prev. @09) o.