" The Weather 
Eseansen nanos eae 
  
  
              | . | 
Rescue Missioh Foils as possible.” - * % y 
WS. Weather Bureau Forecast 
Cloudy and cool 
(Détatis on Page 2) 
    
117th YEAR   
  aaa 
J Won't Fall for ‘Bait’ 
UPI Photo 
C'MON, GET MAD — This isn't happening where you think 
it might be, but the circumstances are similar. The stiff young 
man on the left was hired by a Cleveland department store to 
promote a British exhibit. The flexible younger man on the right 
did his best to unstarch the hired hand. He failed. So did the 
photographer, who couldn't even get the ‘‘guard's’’ name. 
  
Key Centennial Job 
Taken by Whittield Stuart E. Whitfield, vice president of Pontiac State 
Bank, has agreed to appointment to the key position in 
Pontiac’s upcoming centennial celebration. 
Whitfield, one of Pontiac’s busiest civic leaders, has 
indicated he will take on the rie task of general 
chairman of the celebra- 
tion, it was announced yes- 
terday to the Greater Pon- 
tiac Centennial op sen 
Commission. 
It will be up to the centenmial’s 
forthcoming seven-member Board 
of Directors to confirm Whitfield’s 
appointment, said John W. Hir- 
linger, manager of the Pontiac 
Area Chamber of Commerce. 
Hirlinger, a beard member, 
led yesterday’s meeting of the 
Centennial Commission in the 
absence of Mayor Philip E. 
Rowston, another board member. 
With Whitfield secured in the top 
position, the Centennial Commis- 
sion has virtually completed its 
task of laying the groundwork for 
Pontiae’s 100th birthday observ- 
ance jin 1961. 
* * * 
The commission agreed to meet 
onee more, on July 10, at hear the, 
John B. Rogers Producing Co. of 
Fostoria, Ohio, make- a proposal! 
to produce an outdoor spectacular 
here to climax the centennial ob- 
servance, 
By. that time, it is expected 
that the Board of Directors will 
have incorporated a nonprofit 
centennial corporation and be 
ready to consider a contract with 
the Rogers Co. 
The commission approved a set 
of bylaws for the corporation yes- 
terday and sent them to the Board 
of Directors with a recommenda- 
tion that they be adopted ‘‘as soon 
TWO-FOLD PROVISION : 
The bylaws specify that any 
profits from the centennial will go 
towards construction of a civie 
auditorium. The purpose of this 
provision is two-fold: 
1. It allows funds to be accu- 
miilated for a public purpose. 
2. It lets the city avoid federal | 
amusement taxes on\_ admission 
prices to centennial events. 
* * E 
The services of Whitfield and 
members of the proposed Board of 
Directors were secured by a spe- 
cial committee headed by Edward 
L, Karkau, Pontiae district man- 
ager of Consumers Power Co. 
“This committee has done an 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) 
Trio Gets Lost in Test,     
    
     
            STUART E. WHITFIELD   
Flood Swallows 
Entire Village 80 Bodies Recovered 
as Colombia Mops Up 
After Catastrophe 
IBAGUE, Colombia. (UPI) —A 
village of Junta early yesterday| ade 
while its inhabitants slept, and 
killed every person and. animal 
there. 
Only today was the completeness 
of the disaster becoming known. 
Authorities said 80 bodies had 
been recovered and that helicopters 
weré trying to find other traces of 
the 150 persons .who lived in the 
capital of ge got ne 
* 
- The full casualty toll may riever 
be known. The flood caused by 
heavy rains struck at 2:30 a.m. 
with devastating swiftness and 
swept entire families and their 
livestock down the Combeima Riv- 
er; 
Almost no trace of Junta re- 
mained, ° ‘ 
Although the village is only eight 
.)miles from this city of 130,000, 
the bodies of men, women, chil- 
dren, dogs, cats and catfle lay in 
eerie silence for nearly 10 hours 
before the first 
Tis the rea,” 
villagers had eile: caught 
in their thatched-roof huts, 
Si way tr Gace ‘torrent. ' 
Nhe the waters began to re-) 
     
Pontiac Zooms 
to Third Place 
in 39 Car Sales. 
Ahead; Olds, Plymouth 
Drop Behind 
Pontiac is letting Olds- 
mobile and Plymouth watch 
its exhaust for the first 
time in many years in the 
automobile industry new 
car sales race. 
Official registration fig- 
ures show that Pontiac is 
outselling every other auto- 
mobile except first place 
"|Chevrolet and Ford. 
Confirmed figures of the first 
four months plus partial returns 
for May, the standings are Pontiac, 
130,512; Oldsmobile, 130,347; Plym- 
outh, 119,601; and Rambler, 110.258. 
According to q Ward's Auto- 
motive Report, Pontiac was out- 
Selling its competitors for the 
third place position during the 
period of June 11 to 20. 
“Pontiac Motor Division is ex- 
periencing one of the best sales 
years in the history of the com- 
pany,”’ said §, E. Knudsen, GM 
lyice president and Pontiac Divi- 
sion general manager. 
* * * 
“Pontiac's increasing popularity 
has lifted it from No. 6 position 
in the industry to No, 1 nationally 
‘in the medium price field. 
“Public acceptance of the 1959 
model has placed Pontiac in its 
strongest competitive position, 
with total sales running over 50 
| per cent above last year,” Knud- 
sen said, 
A mid-June period also showed 
that of 176,600 new cars sold, Gen- 
eral Motors accounted for 48.5 per 
cent; Ford Motor Co., 30.5 per 
cent; Chrysler Corp., 11.3 per cent; 
and American Motors, 7.4 per cent. 
4 MILLIONTH COMING 
The four millionth car of the 
calendar year will be built during 
the month of August, 
By the end of the month GM 
will have produced 1,975,000; 
Ford, 1,226,000; Chrysler, 512,000; 
American Motors, 264,000; and 
Studebaker-Packard, 104,000. 
The month of June will have 
realized a 550,000 unit sales total. 
It wil] be the thiird-straight month 
this year of over a half million 
sales, 
* * * 
Sales for the automotive indus- 
try as a whole have improved 
25 per cent over this same period last_year. 
Free Lemonade 
to Flow One Day 
Late in Virginia 
BLUEFIELD, W. Va, (AP) — Free lemonade will be on tap to- day in this mountaintop city, thanks to an overheated ther- 
mometer, 
Bluefield. often called “Nature’s 
Air-Conditioned City,’ likes to 
boast that a temperatiire of 90 is 
seldom reached, The Chamber of 
Commerce has a standing offer 
of free lemonade to all comers 
when that occurs. 
The chamber was caught unpre- 
pared by Tuesday's 90-degree 
reading but promised free Jemon- 
today   
The last time the chamber went 
into the lemonade business was 
in mid-July 1957. D. Taylor, RETIRES WITH HONORS — Gen. Maxwell 
retiring Army chief:of staff receives 
some post-award admiration from his 15-month- 
old granddaughter, held here by her father, John Taylor. Gen 
Lyman L. Lemn Taylor had just been presented 
with the Distinguished Service Medal by Presi- 
dent Eisenhower. * * 
He will be succeeded by Gen. 
itzer who will be sworn in today. 
  
$26,000 Grant Expected Soon   
While the financing of next 
year’s federal aid to Michigan 
airport construction is being! 
studied in Lansing, city commis- 
sioners last night took steps to 
insure a full federal grant for this 
year’s program at Pontiac Mu- 
nicipal Airport. 
Beck Ignores. 
Date in Court ‘He Won't Play Footsie 
With Me,’ Says Judge 
Who Orders Arrest 
- NEW YORK @& — Former Team- 
ster boss Dave Beck failed to show 
up today for pleading fo charges 
that he accepted $200,000 from two 
truck fitm executives while he was 
union chief. 
*¥ * * 
A federal judge immediately is- 
sued a warrant for his arrest. 
When Beck’s case was called 
in the court of Judge Gregory 
F. Noonan, fteither the defen- 
dant nor hig lawyer replied. _ | 
Asst. U.S. Atty. Donald Shaw 
then told the court that the case 
had been delayed from last week 
until today at the request of. Beck's 
Seattle lawyer. 
x « -* 
Shaw suggested that no action 
be taken at the time, but that 
Beck and the lawyer be given an- 
other chance to show up later in 
the day. If they did not appear 
then, he said, a warrant could be 
issued, 
However, Judge Noonan’s face 
flushed and he snapped: 
“Oh, no. I think a warrant 
should be issued right now, He 
is not going to play footsie with 
*   
“T think if he does not have the 
sense to come in when notified he 
should be brought in here by an 
jarmy if necessary.”     Acts to Get Airport Funds Due to a searend technicality, | 
commissioners had to apply for a 
separate grant of $26,000 to help! 
finance the entrance road, service 
drive and parking lot for the new 
termina] building and tower, slated 
for construtcion this summer. 
Homer Hoskins, airport man- 
ager, said the grant is almost 
certain to be approved. 
The application had to be ap- 
proved before midnight last night,   said. 
The $26,000 was covered in the 
original federal] grant for the ter- 
minal building, which is expected 
to be completely processed by the 
Federal Aviation Agency in a few 
weeks, Hoskins said. 
x *« * 
But under a new law, the federal 
agency during this fiscal year 
can approve funds for airport 
roads and parking lots only when 
applied for specifically, not tied 
into package deals, explained Hos- 
kins, 
The $26,000 fs to be matched 
by $13,000 in already-approved 
state funds and $13,000 locally.: 
In Lansing, James D. Ramsey, 
state aeronautics director, said 26 
Michigan airports need $1,153,500 
in state money to get $3 million 
in already-approved federal funds 
for construction programs next 
year. 
Up to 50 per cent of the cost 
of airport improvements can come 
from federal funds, if the state is 
willing to pay a quarter of the 
cost and local muncipalities a 
quarter, Ramsey said. 
wo wk Ot 
Pontiac is asking the state for 
$89,000, to be matched locally by 
$89,000 and federally by $178,000, 
to finance a, $356,000 construction 
program next year, 
A Senate bill, introduced in 
January, is now in the hands of 
the Senate Appropriations Com- 
mittee and must be passed out 
favorably if the airports are to 
realize their full share of the the end of the fiscal year, Hoskins| The bill would provide $200,000 
each for Detroit Metro, Grand 
Rapids and Kalamazoo airports, 
and scale down to about $5,000 
for Sturgis and Niles airports. 
Other cities provided for in the 
state bill as it now stands include: 
Adrian, $18,000; Ann Arbor, 
$34,000; Big Rapids, $18,750; Clare, 
$24,000; Detroit (Willow Run), 
$75,000; Escanaba, $55,000; Flint, 
$47,000; Frankfort, $13,750; Hills- 
dale, $19,500;, Iron Mountain, 
$30,000; Ironwood. $22,000; Lansing 
(Capital City), $45,000; Manistee, 
$24,000; Sotnae, $1400 and 
Sebewairtg, $12,500 
Weather Rut Likely 
for Next Five Days 
Only srhall day-to-day changes 
in temperatures are predicted in 
the Pontiac area for the next five 
days. 
The weatherman said the aver-| 
age daily high reading would -be   
The forecast for Thursday is 
a high of 74 with winds north- 
westerly at 10-18 miles an hour. 
Precipitation for the period will 
include showers early tonight and 
again around Saturday or Sunday,| 
with rainfall totaling one-quarter | 
to three-quarters inches. 
Fifty-seven was the lowest tem-/ 
perature in downtown Pontiac pre- 
ceding 8 a.m. The mercury rose 
to 82 at 1 p.m. 
DSR Riders Begin 
  Isatety Council 
‘Sees 350 Dying 
in 4th Traffic 
| during the weekend Independence 
lsaid the fact that bills weren't 
in the upper 70s and the low near! 
_| 57-60, CHICAGO ®—Traffic accidents | 
Day holiday, the National Safety 
Ceancil estimates, will kill 350 | 
persons. , i 
The council, in a pre-holiday 
Statement Tuesday, also esti- 
mated 15,000 persons will suffer 
disabling injuzies in highway 
accidents, It said 45 million 
automobiles will be on the high- | 
ways during the 54-hour holiday 
period from 6 p.m. tocal time 
#riday to midnight Sunday. 
The council's figures compare | 
with an estimated non-holiday 
weekend toll of 267 deaths and 
10,000 injuries,   
  
Budget Bills Set 
for Williams OK State Hurries to Act 
as Fundless Agencies 
Start Fiscal Year |   LANSING (UPI) —_Most state 
agencies were without appropria-| 
tions at the start of the fiscal year| 
today but it was business as usual) 
although there is also a $110,000,000) 
deficit being carried over. 
The Legislature rammed through! 
budget bills in a flurry of activity) 
almost until midnight yesterday, | 
totaling about 360 million dollars, | 
but still left one appropriation! 
measure dangling in mid-air. 
It was impossible for nearly all 
the other appropriations bills to 
be signed by Gov. G. Mennen Wil- 
liams until tomorrow or possibly 
Friday, 
*¥ * * 
Some lawmakers thought agen- 
cies couldn't spend money if the 
bills appropriating for the fiscal 
year weren't approved, But others 
there “doesn’t mean a thing.” 
“Government will continue to op-   Sees Inflation. 
as Key Issue in 
1960 Campaign Won't Push Particular 
Candidate for GOP's 
Top Nomination 
WASHINGTON (AP) — 
President Eisenhower said 
today the matter of infla- 
tion -will be one of the main. 
‘issues of the 1960 presiden- 
tial campaign. 
The President also told a 
inews conference that he. 
not only looks for a bal- 
anced budget in the new 
fiscal year ‘starting today— 
he expects,a start on. pay- 
ing off the 286-billion-dol- 
lar national debt. 
And, he said, he believes ‘the 
‘Democratic - controlled Congress 
also expects the administration to 
istart paying off the debt during 
the next 12 months. 
He noted that Congress has 
just approved legislation—which 
he signed Tuesday—providing for 
anew permanent debt celling of 
285 billion dollars. 
The legislation also sets a tem- 
| porary limit of he billion. 
* 
‘Final figeris Sond not been re- 
jleased on the government’s defi- 
cit in the fiseal year which has 
|just closed. But it-is in the neigh- 
borhood of 18 billion dollars. 
The President said he intends 
to keep hands off the selection 
of the 1960 Republican presi- 
dential nominee. 
Eisenhower told his news con- 
ference that while it would be dif- 
ficult for any man to remain 
entirely neutral, he doesn’t intend 
to. indicate his choice either pri- 
vately or publicly, 
    erate,”’ said Williams, 
The money. bills bounced back 
and forth between the House and 
Senate yesterday and last. night 
as the. two chambers. sought to. 
reconcile differences. 
Lawmakers agreed not to give 
themselves a $2,000 pay hike 
to $7,000 in 1961, The House- 
recom pay boost had 
been rejected by the Senate, and 
the bill which had included the 
out the hike when finally ap- 
proved, : 
Only one measure, the 101-mil- 
lion-dollar higher education. pro- 
‘posal, was left unsettled and Jt 
‘wouldn't be ironed out ‘until this 
afternoon when the Legislature 
came back into session, 
Democrats were angry that the’ 
budget bills didn’t sfart flowing 
from committees until about a 
week ago. 
‘They require six months to 
iwrite the bills and give us only a 
week to consider and pass them,” 
complained House Democratic 
leader Joseph Kowalski; Detroit. 
2 
Green predictpd. supplemental 
appropriations might core early 
next year for. several of the state’s 
smaller colleges. He claimed the 
per student appropriations. this 
year were incorrectly computed so 
      Paying Higher Fares 
DETROIT (UPI) —DSR riders; 
began paying higher prices for | 
their bus rides today to enable the 
bus line to meet pay raises for 
its employes and still stay out of 
the red. 
New basic fare is 25 cents, ® 
5-cent increase. Express fares are’ 
30 csents, also up a nickel. Stu-!     available federal funds, Ramsey 
  said. | dent fares were raised from 10 to 
15 cents. 
  
Customer Helpless on Floor Since Thursday   
se life saved by an alert Pon- 
fiac Press newspaper carrier, 78- 
year-old August Cramer rested 
comfortably in a Pontiac General 
hospital bed this morning. 
x* * * 
The aged man was discovered 
lying in a pool of blood on his bed- 
room floor Monday afternoon by 
the paper boy, 14-year-old Gary 
Wesley, 77 N. Ardmore Ave. : * 
taeiuiens TO INVESTIGATE © He was disturbed, but believed 
        on the porch Monday, he decid- 
ed to investigate. Neighbors told 
him that as far as they knew, 
Cramer had not left his home at 
109 S. Ardmore Ave. 
+The youth tried the front door. 
It was locked. 
As he aeiall id on the side en- 
trance, he heard a weak voice 
  EI BT LR 
  In Today's s Press 
os my ec isas'g ccd cias 48 
County News ...... siete 
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Journey f@ Love =...... any 
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We cc: 43-46 
        Press Carrier Saves Man’s Life ireen inside, telling him to come 
into the house through the rear.| 
Entering, he discovered Cram- 
er on the floor, blood all about 
him, The bed had not been used. 
The weak man was unaware of 
the length of his ordeal. He thought! 
he'd been uncon$cious “gion an 
hour." 
Gary went next door to the home 
of Mrs. Earl J. Moore, % S. 
Ardmore, The pair.called police. 
* * * al 
A fire department inhalator 
Squad rushed to the home and 
took Cramer to Pontiac General. 
Neighbors said that Cramer 
had fallen in his backyard last 
  he fell could not get back on his! 
feet without help. 
Gary said another aged person 
had lived with Cramer in the home 
until recently but had prt ae: 
pitalized with cancer, 
Luckily for Cramer, he had | 
another friend — the unread cop- | 
jes of the Pontiac Press which 
served as an SOS to the quick- - 
thinking newsboy. 
Gary will enter Pontiac Central 
High School this fall. _. 
He has been delivering the Press       
Ambassadors Lose Out 
WASHINGTON @— A piro- 
  the smaller colleges got a “‘paltry 
sum.”" | 
The only money bills Williams’ 
had signed by the midnight dead- 
line were for about 7 million 
dollars for welfare and 17 mil- 
lion dollars fpr corrections, 
The House rejected moves to 
amend bills for more money to 
various coll and universities, 
and increased per-day state pay- 
ment for mental patients in Wayne 
County, 
The seven budget bills approved 
and ready for the governor,-exclud- 
ing the higher education. proposal, 
carried these totals: 
Public safety and defense $24,-| 
195,180; conservation and agricul-; 
ture $10,318,912; regulatory serv- 
ices $9.679.023:; general govern 
menf® $23,109,339: restricted funds | 
thighway, .conservation, eoronati| 
ties, waterways, veterans trust) 
fund) $219,463,947: public health’ 
$16,117,454; mental health $70,877,-) 
000.   1 
' 
  
Doggone Good Idea , 
CHRISTIANSBURG, Va. ®— 
One thief went to the dogs and 
the dogs enjoyed every minute of 
it. Somebody broke into a serv- 
ice station Tuesday night, stole 
eight pints of ice cream and fed 
it all to the dogs at the local 
pound. . 
  
  original provision was still with- |. NUMBER OF ABLE MEN 
The President went on to say 
‘the Republican party has a num- 
ber of able men of vigorous years 
who could be selected with honor 
to the party. 
A reporter noted that Eisen- 
hower’s selection of .Nixon for this 
some quarters as indicating a 
preference for the vice president 
in the 1960 contest. ; 
In the course of the news con- 
ference, the President touched on 
ithese other topics: 
SUMMIT—He still believes there 
‘is no point in his going to a sum- 
mit conference unless there is 
adequate preparation in advance     by what he called. the legitimate . 
diplomatic agencies of govern- 
ment 
That was an allusion te the Big 
Four foreign ministers who will 
resume talks in Geneva July 13, 
picking up at that point after six 
recent weeks of fruitless megotia- 
tions. 
KOZLOV—Speaking an hour in 
advance of a scheduled confer- 
ence with Seviet Deputy Premier 
Frol R. Kozlov, Eisenhower said 
he very much enjoyed the visit 
he had earlier this week with 
Kozlov in New York. 
That was when Eisenhower vis« 
(Continued on Page 2, Col, 1) 
Ike, Mamie Mark 
43rd Anniversary   
at Party Tonight , 
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President 
land Mrs. Eisenhower celebrate 
‘their 43rd. wedding anniversary to- 
day with an informal evening party 
_jfor members of the White House 
l executive staff and their wives. 
A more festive observance was 
ireserved for this weekend when 
ithe Eisenhowers planned: a- house 
iparty for old friends at Camp 
David, Md, F 
Barring bad weather or «un- 
expected pressures of business, 
the couple plan to leave Wash- 
ington sometime Thursday. They 
will return to Washington Sun- 
day, although the President must 
come back briefly Saturday 
  ‘posal to boost the expense ac- | Arm to the Rescue bl small ‘amily 
‘ counts of American ambassadors Y later 
| has failed. House members of a WASHINGTON (® — Schools | House” ip 2 ae 
conference committee refused to | needing space could | wee. idle | At the’ time, then « 
go along with the Senate provi- | military buildings rent-free under 25, was a et lieutenant in thé. 
sion, sponsored by Sen, J. Wil- | a bill .approved by ja House |Army earning $167 a months 
in i tea | Armed Services subcommittee. — oe od 
p é A F / se aes 
4 ar | 14 if / 
is Qh Wr. ile eee hig) ALE ee mission had been interpreted in 
a    
   
  
PRR TORR EC Lae ee eI MN su, mi eR RE Oe 
SF licen ip 
  
  * 
     
   > Jobless Pay Bill | - ~Periled in House Failure to Compromise 
May Be Death Kneil for} 
Benefits in Michigan    
            
     
     
    
      
    ' i ; L. y 
|The Day in Birmingham   * 
F : é 
  ° 7 
Police Probing Break-In, \Thett of Radios, TV Set | 
BIRMINGHAM — Birmingham| ‘The higher raté Was made possi- 
police today -are investigating aj ble by substantial growth and in- 
breaking and entering at the Bir-| creased earnings of the association 
ai nie Co., wg ha during the past two years. = 
oodward Ave., believed to have} Walter L. Moreland, president of - ' 
occurred shot miinignt last night. the association, pointed out “the 
rate increase is in keep with 
The store window was smashed, / the policy of the cannes to and an estimated $450 to $500 was pay the highest rate of earnings — 
taken, according to Det. Lieut. consistent with sound business - Merlin Holmquist of the Birming-| practice.” : 
ham ‘Police Department, Stolen)» 
were three transistor radios, a A : : cae The Senior Men's Club of Bir- 
a —— and & ports- mingham will meet this week on 
e aoa Thursday instead of Friday be- 
Birmingham police discovered | cause of the Fourth of* July week- 
the crime at 12:24 a.m. At 12:27 | end. 
a.m, two boys, whe disappeared | The 10 a.m. get-together at the 
before they could be identified, |Community House will be high- 
reported to Berkley police that (lighted by a talk by Frederick 
they had seen a man breaking | Hoar of the Burroughs Corp. pub- 
the television company windew. | lic relations staff. . 
Police are now trying to locate a 
the boys in the — that’ they Percy Lucas 
may have further information. as = : Service for Percy Lucas, of 
_ The Deeaketn wad tes Or SL hk Plasce Si. will te meld at 1 year at the Birmingharp Televi-| , m Friday at the Manley Bailey 
sion Co. ; Funeral Home here. . 
At a special meeting of the Mr. Lucas died suddenly Mon- 
Board of Directors of the Birming-| day evening at St. Joseph Mer- 
school boards. ham Federal Savings and Loan} ey Hospital in Pontiac, He was a 
The -Senate Education Commit-| Assn. yesterday an increase of retired farmer and a lifelong 
. dividend rate was unanimously) fesident of Southfield and Bir- tee attempted to amend the bill} a _ oF as - . . ee Ph wd Pe Mag 2 
en ne eR, Saleh es | Sot 8 Se ete | approved. mingham.   LANSING (UPI) — Failure of 
a fourth attempt at cémpromise 
today periled chances that unem- 
ployment compensation — benefits| 
will be extended for some 30,000 
Michigan jobless. 
e House yesterday rejected a’ 
report of a Senate-House confer- 
ence committee that split 4-2 along 
party lines on proposed changes 
in the jobless pay bill. i 
Democrats refused to go along! 
with new language to carry out’ 
the GOP objective of disqualifying 
benefits of employes idled by a 
labor dispute in another plant of 
the same employer. i     
    An attempt to turn a “right | 
to know” bill into a measure to | 
allow schoo) boards to act jn 
secret sessions has been delayed 
until July 8. : j 
Whe, Senate last night debated 
and then put aside temporarily aj - 
House-approved bill designed to, 
open records and meetings of |   
          to allow action af “executive” | 
board sessions when it is “in the; ; The rate increase from three Per} ie ig survived by three sons, 
public interest.” SPACE FOR 211 CARS — This view of the new Pontiac General Hospital park- Pontiac Press Phote on ba demectoae half Per! Floyd of Allen Park, Everett of 
“This is not a fair way to do | ing lot shows its ability to absorb 211 cars during busy visiting hours during the improvement funds, opened Monday. Three-hour parking at a metered rate of a P ; ‘ Largo, Fia., ~ Halsey of ~ 
it,” said Sen. John H. Stahlin | week and on weekends. This picture was taken during an off period. The metered nickel an hour is permitted every day from 8 a. m. to 9 p. m., including Saturday hoe Late een agence Ge wand f emp ve ndchil. , | 
(R-Belding), in leading the fight lot, financed by the city through $175,000 in revenue bonds and $50,000 in capital and Sunday. at the new rate wit be made (children and four great-grandchil- | a 
against the amendments. “You're | — : on Dec. 31 of this year, ao. ee brothers and a sister . 
  taking away freedom of informa- 
Mrs. Charles A, Pfeiffer tion.” | s ‘ : p 
The Legislature’s luckiest bitl—-| ; Accepts Key ost Private service for Mrs. Charles 
a measure providing for closed | e / ad r g eC U r e r r ed S ae Pf - A. (Margaret A.) a of 
primary -elections — may be up , | for City 5 Centennial 190 Berwon Ra was to be hed 
liam R. Hamilton Co. here.     for a final vote today in the Sen-| 
  A 
ae 
arms 
_ cpemmene 
        
  
    ate While Mrs. Long charged in a’ It was believed the governor was petticoat government in the capi- executive continued his mad ‘onti "s . als . - mae ( rom Page One) , 
The pa whic would a 5 . counter suit for separation yester- referring to $5,000 or $1,000 in his tal at Baton Rouge, | pace after midnight. | , ae | . pauline h ar giro ed Mousey at 
voter to indicate his party prel-\s% af nee aatenea reference to “‘going to give him J... nertiier . | mat F outstanding jo n $s er home after a proionged Liness. ; 
erence in order to receive a pvi- ay re the nee pueet ned tive, but she only gave him one.” SPECIAL SESSION A few minutes after state police ., much in such a short time,” Surviving are two daughters, \ 
mary ballot, survived death twice to kil! her @ month ago. Mrs. Long oe | Long said in a predawn news S¢t up an oxygen tank in his room, pirjinger said. Mrs, A. L. Moses and Miss Laura 
‘ : mika was unavailable for comment to-| The governor, speaking rapidly,’ ference today h le Gov. Long bellowed so loud during! ; ere | Desitfor ay o by 
because opponents were caught ay on har did not allow any interruptions in Comerence today be ‘planned to) & As expected, the commission de- Pfeiffer, both of Birmingham; five | 
napping. day on Long's charge. thee araiew: any oe jcall a special session of the Legis-|# telephone talk he could be heard cided to leave the choice of an’ grandchildren and two great- f i 
The governor said that Mrs. | ° Hature next month “so you can’t °Utside his room. ‘executive committee for the cen-) grandchildren. \ 
. . Long “kept culling this guy and | He also charged U.S. Sen. Rus- commit a man to a mental hos-| Long himself ordered the OXxy-\tennial up to Whitfield and the ——————— 
Debt Will Shrink telling him to bring both his shot. | sell Long (D-La), the governor’s pital without 10 neighbors signing gen. His doctor was out eating. Board of Directors. i " 
’ gun and pistol. She wanted to | nephew, “is buring up to be the papers.” feed geen has an asthmatic) The 35-member body, appointed 
’ hire him to kill me,” Long said. | governor.” Talking to newsmen while sit-.CO™@#ton that is helped by OxYSEN. by Mayor Rowston in April, re- 
“She tried to hire somebody to «4 0 is Blanche.’ he added, ting in his car in front of a hotel, | - * * versed last week’s decision that ~ | ‘And so is Blanche,” he added, t [F - a 
. kil] me 10 months ago,” he as- (referring to his wife Long added his bill would also re-| G a sapere gine pane | the conmmission itself should form’ § Jul pee ‘ : t . 4 aa . oe 7 ' ov. im into j i = = = 4 
(Continued From Page One) _ series | Mrs, Long took over some of the Tre that “they'll have to have ng s limou-' the executive committee. ° uly   
  +, % ee Long said his wile “was going perfunctory functions of the gov- five experts there explaining ail nigh ese Srve to ani 1m sure ee ae co teaites SPEC IALS to give him five,”’ holding up five ernor’s office in 1950 when Long what 5 what without all those big “Turn on the air.” he id his | have positions on the executive 
fingers, ‘but she only gave him suffered a heart attack chasing a words driver, who flipped a the a - | committee,” said Hirlinger. ‘In 
2 Fr COn-' tact, there will be room in the loneone,” the! governor indicated. hog up a hill. At that time, the Long returned from a four- |ditionin | ; g. ® 
Gov. Long apparently stil] joved| ee ee ee Badminton Sets ited the Soviet exposition in New| 
York. | MRS. EARL K. LONG 
On that occasion, Eisenhower) 
  From Our Newswires 
  
    
    
  
       
          
  
  
    
    said, he found pony tg agra COVINGTON. La. — Louisiana’ Long said the man was the hus- governor's wife held press confer-| hour drive and dinner about 4 
wn ays 8 ee Gov. Earl K. Long alleged today band of a “woman she thought I ences and supervised some of the a.m. with his doctor and several |with the idea of going either to! one in town who wants to work | ; 
have fun. ae his wife “tried to hire somebody was messing around with.” Long governor's staff. | state officials, Tucson or Phoenix, Ariz., for two! on it.” i 2 Racquets, net Bird 
Eisenhower went on to say that to kill me 10 months ago.” did not elaborate | There was talk at that tme of a, 7, governor wore his favorite Weeks. It seemed certain there It will be up to the general C $ 99 
while he enjoyed that visit it was/ wide-brimmed hat. His legs dan-|Would be no rest if he stays home. chairman to chose divisional and’ = 
personal and in no way political. ; _.gled out the air-conditioned car. |committee chairmen for various 
SECURITY — Eisenhower was ° ° : | He said he expects to call the Early Morning Hello j aspects of the .centennial and to. 
| at to Wet 8 lant av | ass es e rol |Session around Aug. 1. WAS : ‘lead the small army of committee 
: adel ya | « *« of ‘Gator Opens Eyes ;workers Which ultimately will be: 
formed,                       
  preme Court decision this week 
: that there is no present alr.. ~ ! . | 
es ta ates of givelel For several hours Tuesday Lou-' MOBILE, Ala, Wi — Mrs. W. =| “During the Lansing centennial, 
y ‘ | DETROIT W — Thousands stood; The cruiser, which has a 75-foot little trouble Monday night. She jsiana politicians hurried into the Harris stepped into her carport,!for instance. there were more than 
industrial plant employes on se- on both shores of the Detroit River beam and is 673 feet long—longer jripped off a propeller guard and piney woods town of Covington | yawned at the bright morning sun, §99 persons involved in committee | curity grounds, He replied that the lyesterday to watch the passage of than two football fields—had to use|broke two cables while passing; where Long—beset by divorce, in- | and leaped back into her kitchen. | work.” Hirlinger pointed out 
administration ordered a careful|the largest warship ever to sail the regwar downbound channel | through the’ Welland Canal locks, come tax- and health problems +'She was wide awake. A 21-foot It’ ; i ¥ 
study of tHat ruling as soon as it/the Great Lakes—the heavy cruiser because the one reserved for UP-  gne cruiser was the ninth of a i busy running for re-election. alligator had yawned back at her.|tenniad wl ay glee ~ — WANA 
    
  
    
                
     
       
           
          
         
  was ha down, and that he Macon. *  |bound passage wasn't deep enough.| 99 vessel U.S. Navy fleet to pass BUSY ROOM ‘ Mrs. Harris said she was sure! skeleton form TF e 2 1 U.S. ‘ . f : c : until early 1961 when) 
couldn't say anything further pend- ~ * * |BIT OF TROUBLE | Detroit en route to Chicago where | They moved in and out of his ‘t wasn’t anybody's pet ‘‘because| centennial activities get under way. FISHING ou IT 
ing competion of that study. | Hundreds of sailors stood at at-| Her size got the Macon into a| it will take part in the Inter- motel room like worker ants, some. eae * us — ba << “But the important step now was} @ Glass Rod Rev. $9.95 
INFORMATION — In connec- tention on the decks of the 17,000-) national Trade Fair next week. (on the business of running state| == we: e said the/to get the centennial organization > , 
tion with government opera- jton ship of war as it steamed by) The war fleet is the first to sai] government, some seeking a spot | ligator probably came from a started, and this the centennial e Reel 
there are all sorts of (on the way to Chicago. The Macon! * oe ~ » War of on the Long ticket, oth Jy |Dearby swamp. commission has done well,” said j $ 95 tions, oe ng ee oy} : tthe Great Lakes since the War of|® Long ticket, others merely mu well,” said] @ Line ; 
things which simply cannot received salutes from ore carriers, ricu ture inister 1812 and the Battle of Lake Erie, |€*Pressing friendship. Hirlinger. : 
" be made pablic for security rea- ‘small craft and the Detroit fire’ geet S gine Wile ‘ i Sens man see: 1 eaers TD © Plu 
sons, Eisenhower said. He made poat John Kendall The flagship, the frigate Willis) The parade of politicians|pet some good, healthy exercise g 
“that remark when asked for com- | New German Prexy A. Lee, passed Detroit yesterday formed a part of one of .the this summer—but I guessed wrong SOrry,. Wrong Castle 
ment on what a reporter referred The Macon, bristling with | morning. Later yesterday, the sub-|Strangest rest cures in history.!jast summer, too”... You can al-| LONDON (UPI)—Pub keeper | 
a a ween Con- | Mavy guns and a Regulus guided | marine Quillback, troop carriers|Gov. Long, 63 and ill, made scores} ays spot the important executive.| Alan Carl is having his usual | br rp 2 _ branch | missile on her stern, is on a | BERLIN (®—Heinrich Luebke, Cambria and Kleinsmith, the cargo!0f telephone calls as. visitors came tHe‘; the fellow who travels from) tourist-season troubles — a host | 
regarding freedom of information | goodwill tour of the lakes as part ;54-year-old agriculture minister, vessel Oglethorpe and the landing |4nd went. his air-conditioned office in an air-| of inquiring telephone calls. | 
about government business, of “Operation Inland Seas.” [was ate of West Ger-'ship San Marcos followed. | Although physicians say Gov. |conditioned car to his air condi-| Carl's pub is called, and listed | 
é many today. Another submarine, Torsk, and | Long has suffered a series of |tioned club—to take a steam bath.| in the telephone book as, Wind- | 
; * * * | the Donner, a landing ship, sailed | ™ld strokes, Louisiana’s chief |—Ear! Wilson. . sor Castle. 
It’s 100 in Baltimore, Washington Luebke was the candidate of | upriver today. 
. Chancellor Konrad Adenauer’s | x« * *       
          , . - . Christian Democratic Party. | : : : ~ The Navy said four destroyers | 
East, South Still Sizzlirrg |W stcated cere seria, me |,7* Savy, ld, fou, destrsers| Socialist candidate, and Max , '. ; | ecker ‘Whe wen tha chal , \troit for the climax of the Inter.) 
By The Associated Press [9s to above 100 degrees again a shou ve Dom = “ ‘national Freedom Festival and the | 
‘The season’s longest spell of Tuesday. The heat, plus high 5° ce Memocrane visit of Queen Elizabeth to Windsor , 
hot and humid weather in many, humidity, slowed the pace for the y Friday. However, the, ships were 
parts of the East and South cidn't|Millions in the hot belt. Record) Luebke won on the second bal-jreported tied up in a Welland, 
appear *to be losing much of its high readings for the date were lot with 526 votes in the 1,038- Canal traffic jam and may not.     — 
      
Good Luck - - - “Bud” SHAKESPEARE 
FLY RODS             
     
        
             
        
      
     
       
           
    
       
   
     
   
      
     
        
   
     
      
        
      
      
    
      
   
    
    
              
     
  steam today, reported in many cities. | member electoral college. This was arrive on time. i 
The cool Canadian air that, x« * * | six more votes than needed. up to 
brought relief to much of the’ The cool air was expected to, ~ & * | The first polio vaccine was de. | : st sections bring some relief from areag in) Hed 8197 & 5 ‘ fon at aie . z 
Ses waving ery fast into the eastern Oklahoma northeastward, De aren ee aly rveseed . ag i Pierre Baphee! We at Thomas Economy are going to 50% Off 
‘thr Migsourl and ceneal flan toi majority on the Lepine of the Pasteur Institute in| miss you. After all you can’t wipe out hot spots. ; through } "| first ballot, Schmid had 385 on the;Paris. It could not be used for: , thirty: -¥ cl \ d ol t 
Temperatures climbed into ee gis ane ary ood first aoae and Becker 104. humans, but was successful in a cvernite. clos€ and pitasan Reg. 29.95 oe 15.00 a ebke, a jaunty man, has been' ys. 5 i "as é : 
Th W th ing from New York and Pennsyl-| minister of cercttace six saan [monkey tt By 156 a Lepine eel Reg. 22.95 ee 11.50 
e weather vania eastward through the south but is litde known outside farming| humans, ard it is being used suc: Bud, we Rare come « bong wey to fi | 
aah. Weather Simca Senect \ern Great Lakes region and north- | dircjes ° ng | cubetiitiy il ee gether. Two.-World Wars, a major de- 
PONTIAC AND. VICINITY —Consider- ern ‘sections of the Ohio Valley) aia at és pression and ther passing of your friend 
Sot Seatanmerers, today. vending  te-Southwestward into Oklahoma, E and our founder William D, Thomas Sr., i 
Wen telar th lee tonignt 38, Wigh to- * *& * so you see it won’t be quite the same h today 77, low tonight 58. High te- | ‘ 
merrow 74. sapere oat gee oun Baltimore simmered through its; : Declare Your independence from High Prices! without you. 
teday,|third straight day of 100 degree La : rh oe 
Eo * wy ~~ 4 ce ee ghey At leas PRE-FOURTH-OF-JULY We appreciate the fact that when you VoIT 5 femight and. tomecsow ‘or higher heat Tuesday. At least; e th 
| ee nirie deaths were attributed to the’ became an executive many years ago and S | M FINS 
Lowest temperature’ preceding ¢ a.m, hot weather in Maryland’ this) S | { delegated your other accounts, you chose 
*, |week. | aie o Thomas Economy as the only account to .m.; Wind v -1 A , , 
‘in ite PB it also was 100 in W ashington. | serve personally. as 
     A 
Direction: Southwest $99 
$5.35 2 
        
           
     
      
         
       
      
       
   
    
     
     
            
  
       
          
   
         
     
      
   
             
                     
    
    
  
          
    
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Sun sets Wednesday at 8:12 p.m. Boston got some relief after a} \ ' 459 i ks id € € | ) ’ - 
Moon este Wednesday at 4:17 p.m. ‘high of 94, with the mercury drop-| Vie LADI ES Summer Thomas Economy, has been serving 
ae 1HGE Tearetey BCE: 6m _ping into the 60s during the night.) mn ! the people of Oakland County, for forty- 
—_ Bewators Tempersterss  « ; Thermometers bubbled past 100| ° five years, that was just one year prior 
F BM... cen. 000. $5 19 WM, occas... 60° degrees in the South Atlantic} eB to your start at the Pontiac Press. 
ee ees 82 states and Gulf region, including. ' ; 
39 ao.m......4....%6 1103 at Columbia. S.C_, 102 at Dan- = Values to $3.00 Thanks again for all you have done 
A Seales ia Wenites ___jville, Va., and 101 at Albany, Gai, | for us Bud and lots of good luck from all , 
weet eget cB [and Monizomery. Ala of us. t Mega temperature pace pescee nce, = 08 B) x * * ' rs 
a The dividing line between the, ‘ t 
Highest temperture e*® —g hot _and cool air’ extended from . if 
ne tee eeeeenenveeeses 69 southern Nevada eastward across i Sizes y 
Weather Pair eT eens * northern New Mexico and.—into ‘ 4% to9 | 4 
and Lowest Temperatares | 0Uthwest Oklahoma, thence , ) i ; 
| This Date in 87 Years jnortheastward into northern TIli-, Flats Ballerinas 2 d : 
vadcsaras Me . “#@ Jn 1902 ‘nois and‘ eastward through north- | 7 @ - H] ‘ 
Thesdeay's Temperatare[Ohart ern Pennsylvania and into the At-| @ Ducks @ Wedgies i Lf 
i 00 70 Memphis 95 74 fantic. : : 
-& $2 Mand Dench oe 81 et * oe Over 800 pairs go on i 
ig $0 Minneapolis 56 30 | Temperatures were in the 70s: = bic one oo is s O47 os i‘ 5 a - = i 
so $4.new York 100 g0\ 40d BOs during the night in areab| fer ts and dress nyes | ; 
fe Ft rlltom 8 @2\south of the, line. To the north, a i : He 4 Phoenix 36 fa feadings were in the 60s ahd 50s, | | 
egy gulerd jwith the 40s-reported from the’ . : 4 43 Bt. Loui 97. ‘76! i | te o © Francisco 6341 far northern Great, Lakes region ii 24 E. Lawrence St: ‘ 43 5, Bte Marie 6¢ 50... stWars | b H j ¥ SHOP : 
“ iE ~ fale 4 Thad rd through [northern Min-' ‘SHOE DEPT. —Basement = i OLIDA i 
to Trenesy. ss gr /ncnom _ the, Dyfcotas and Wy-| ' eu ! 696 W. Huron | ' 
si i Wastiingyon 109 72: OMing, . \ , - os \ 
. é i 4 a ‘ 1 \ ‘ , : 
) 7 ‘= i" \ 5 ey \ ' 
fee 7 4 / : ‘ / 4 ; ye ‘ : 
¥ ‘ i he e 4 j * : = : s 
\ 5 te os \ -     THE PONTIAC PRESS, APNRRDAK 
Plants Just Too Ancient 
1-Year Plan Cén't Meet 
= Soviet Industrial Needs $ ‘MOSCOW ih The Communist/work and low produetivity'* 
Party's céntral committee has | existing in many fields. 
been told the task of -installing| 
modern equipment in Soviet indus-'Russian Republic, largest in the; 
i try is too big to be managed in Soviet Uinon, he said only three 
ithe current seven-year plan. | were modern, The rest dated from 
Accordingly, the central com- the 19th dd even 18th centuries. 
mittee has ordered some shortcuts! Some of these antique mills, he 
| and will concentrate in fields where said, are “20 to 30 times less pro- 
|quick results may be expected in ductive than modern’’ ones. 
ithe rac4 with the United States) 4 
'for world: industrial jeadership. Por t lan d Cc heers | 
The committee has just con- | 
| Sp toviet intutty at witch Pre. EXPFESSWAY 
Bypassing City , 
PORTLAND w—This_ central) 
|Michigan community will be by- 
S | passed by the opening of a new 
veuta, ‘Stretch of the Detroit- Muskegon 
Averki B. <Aristov, the party! expressway. . 
I presidium’ $ expert on industrial ef-, But the people of Portland are fm ficiency, frankly told the commit-'cejebrating rather than deploring 
im tee of some-of the deficiencies of this byproduct of the stepped-up. 
| Soviet industry. He said retooling: State Highway Department road , 
‘was, too gigantic a task for ac-' construction program. -complishment under the seven year |   
    
   
       
     
      
          
    
       wad ap : ot eth wrpte the majority opinion in 
saihterndie (D-Mich), the case.’ 
+ McNamara‘told the Senate that |The’ court held that Michigan em- ‘J ployes of Fdrd Motor Co. were en- 
_*™ WASHINGTON  — The Detroit}Time gave a distorted account ot ticted to unemployment comipensa- a apn ‘State Supreme Court rul- ‘Free Press and Time Magazine | tion when laid off because of a 
were accused yesterday of taking |ing “comes ¢lose ‘to libeling! strike in a Ford plant’ in another 
part in a national ° ‘smear, Micht jodeenth Justice George Edwards! state, Raps Aad Aire 
~ for Michigan ‘Smedir’   
        
    
the main speaker. The results 
filed more than three pages 
Tuesday tin tle two leading So- 
‘viet newspapers, Pravda and Iz- 
Yourself 
First ~. |plan which ends in 1965, This is in direct contrast with 
; He said-he “blushed at the out- | many communities that feet | 
dated equipment, heavy manua] Progress will pass them by if they are bypassed by an express- 
way.   
The Way Thousands of Pontiac | 
Area Folks Do, and 
MAKE FASTER PROGRESS 
Current > We Rate ; 
| 
j JULY 1, 1959 
Of 80 steel rolling mills in the,       
, Bata gs 
len a 
      
  1 Agelintideis : When hate 1 
est —      
she b 
in the 
  6 years old ri 
904 proof 
{|    
   
    
  $5.90° ‘5 Qt. 
$3.70 Pint 
Code No. house”   Min 
nmeyMelier 
      lnported in bottle from Canada 
IMPORTED IN BOTTLE FROM CAMADA BY WiRAM WALKER IMPORTERS. INC, DETROIT, MICH. BLENDED CAMADIAN WHISAY 
      
           
                 
  ON ALL SAVINGS 
Make it worth your while to save... take advantage 
of our high rate of dividend paid semiannually! Budget Plan 
  
Pontiac    
        
      
    
  SPECIALS FOR THURS., FRI.     
  & MON. — OPEN FRI. & MON. EVES. TILL 9:00 P.M. 
REPEAT OF A SELL-OUT 
ST i TRADE-IN on YOUR OLD MATTRESS or SPRING REGARDLESS of AGE or CONDITION!   
    
        
    
     
      
     
       
       
   
   
     
       
       Federal Savings 
HOME OFFICE: 761 W. Huron St. 
ROCHESTER: 407 Main St. PONTIAC: 16 E. Lawrence St. 
DRAYTON: 4416 Dixie Highway A H | Offi | Portland is whooping up the| 
red ospita Cla formal opening of slightly m« ore | 
jthan four ‘miles of expressway | 
Named-to Committee that will divert traffic from city 
| streets and take jt south of the 
city. 
| Marcia T. Keith, supervisor of! The stretch of expressway, built 
Physical therapy at William Beau-!at a cost of $2,878,932, wills be! 
/mont Hospital in Royal Oak, was!opened to traffic following dedi-| 
lone of five top health leaders in |cation ceremonies Friday mor ning. | Michigan to be narhed members of | Portland is planning a parade, 
a professional scholarship award- /a motor cavalcade over the ce 
ing committee route and a civic luncheon. eee 
The group .will select the state’s'coffee will be served to all motor- 20 winners of the National Founda- |jsts stopping at Portland Frid: 1y | 
tion’s 1959 health scholarships | ang Saturday. 
sometime this summer. Supported | 
by the March of Dimes, the schol- 
arships pay $500 a year, or $2,000 | 
for four years to the Michigan | 
j student winners 
Miss Keith said selection wil] be 
‘based on scholastic achievement, | 
financial need and personal apti-| 
tude. 
2 State Officials to Take | 
Oath of Office Today 
LANSING \ — Two state offi-, 
cials elected in April were sched-| 
uled to take oaths of office in in- | 
augural ceremonies at the state! 
capitol this morning. | 
Dr, Lynn M, Bartlett, of East, 
Lansing will start his second two} 
year term as state superintendent| 
of public instruction. Mrs. Cornelia | 
/A. Robinson of Kalamazoo, a new- 
comer to state office, will start a} 
six-year term on the State Board/ 
: ‘of Education. Both are Democrats. '     
  
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Be sure to ask [ies 
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Pontiac's Progressive 
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Voice of the People | | 
sts Clean Fun — | ; 
  AMIN AVES UC   Ts l= BL \y ie | 
fw 
    
        SBGHF PONTIAC PRESS _ 48 West Huron Street» | | : | 
WEDNESDAY, is Pontiac, Michigan 
JULY 1, 1959" 7 . 
Owned and Published Locally by The Pontiac Press Company 
Harotp A FRreceraiD . 
President and Publisher a. *y 
Joun A. Ritzer. Teen’ Requests Cle That's Inexpensive, Near |   
I, too, have fourid there's no organized entertainment specifically. 
for teenagers. The one dance. that’s approved’ by .both teenagers and ; ; 
x ' Howarp H. Pireckkarn u, JonN W_ Freseerata, 1 t ra ge 
Vice President: and Secretary and Editor Treasurer and is 20 . They ’ * Business Manager \ Advertising Director - sabre . miles away ” ba ai eoant the adn ae price - 
Harxy Jo Rerp Eant M_ ‘TREADWELL, G. Marswatt Jorran, G c. Mans - King a * * ¥ "4 
Managing Editor Circulation Manager Local Advertising PORGE Ineaw, 
Classified Manager Manager, é 
  
to the big and small canals leading nival, although around Pontiac or Waterford is there a tair or car- 
these are greatly enjoyed and appreciated by teens 
and their families. If you go to a shew once a week, you've seen | ’ ) about the only movie in town, because many are shown at the same Youth Shouldn't Deter °° ‘ie evataa seater eter , Qualified Candidates 
For the few diehards that seem to 
criticize youth in positions of im- 
portance, their memories appear 
rather short. In a lot of the early 
political chatter, much is being made 
of the youth bf Senator JoHN F. 
KENNEDY. 
What's wrong with youth? 
x * * 
A little checking reveals that with 
a couple of exceptions, the whole list 
of 1960 prospects in both parties falls 
in the youthful category. 
By convention time Kennedy 
will be 43 and-the present leading 
Republican candidate, Vice Presi- 
dent Nixon -will be 47. Other 
Democrats in the running are 
Herbert Humphrey, 49, and Sena- 
tor Lyndon Johnson, 51. 
NIXON’s Opponent will be NELSON 
ROCKEFELLER, 52. The only so-called 
“old men” in the race will be ADLAr 
STEVENSON, who will have turned 60, 
and Senator STUART SYMINGTON, 59. 
* Kw '-* 
So, by and large, it will be a young 
group we will be choosing from..This 
youth movement is nothing new. It 
must be remembered that FRANKLIN 
D. RoosEVELT was nominated and 
elected at 50, in 1932. His adversary, 
HERBERT HOover,-“was 54 when he was * x 
Fed by Himalayan snows and 
monsoon rains it made fertile 
21 million acres in Pakistan and 
five million in India. More land is 
irrigated by the Indus waters 
than by any other system in the 
world, and 22 million acres more 
could be brought into production. 
At the time of partition with its 
terrible bloodshed, a line was drawn 
through the Indus Valley. The argu- 
ment started then has continued for 
1] years to the detriment of both 
countries while 80 per cent of the 
river water flowed unused to the sea. 
India has at last agreed with 
the Bank on the amount of money 
she will contribute to works which 
will make Pakistan dependent 
only on the western rivers of the 
Punjab. Pakistan has set up an 
organization for developing the 
Indus Basin supplies. The World 
Bank must raise its own share of 
the money from its member 
nations. 
The benefits derived by both coun- 
tries from a sane use of this water 
will be huge and much needed for 
their vast and growing populations. 
  
The Man About Town 
Making Highways David Lawrence Says   Boom Go Boom? 
  
High Court OKs Teaching Adultery WASHINGTON — The same 
Supreme Court of the United States 
which recently ruled that it’s all 
right to teach or advocate the 
overthrow of our 
government—be- 
cause this is Just 
an “‘idea’’—now 
says, in effect, 
that it is lawful 
to teach adultery 
  Justice Black objected to that 
ro.e, declaring that then “every 
member of the court must exercise 
his own judgment as to how bad a 
picture is, a judgment which is 
ultimately based at least in large 
part on his own standard of what 
is immoral. . . . Such an _ indi- 
vidualized determination cannot be 
suided by reasonably fixed and 
certain standards." the Union regulate morals as 
they see fit, 
The new doctrine seems to be 
that it is necessary to prove that 
each, picture may “‘incite’ its 
observers to subsequent acts of 
immorality. 
In other words, sin can be 
taught, and the states must silently 
accept such teachings as within 
the protection of the Constitution. 
  My friends and I aren't trying to be smart alecks and we don’t want 
to complain, but can’t anyone help us find some activities for teenagers 
that are approved by, parents, reasonably inexpensive and somewhat 
close to home? We're not asking for a lavish dance hall or a free party 
— just some clean, wholesome fun. Any suggestions wil] be more than ‘ 
appreciated. 
‘Maine Experiment 
Has Backfired’ 
I'm a lifetime Republican, but I 
even heard Democrats raising their 
political eyebrows at this Margaret 
Chase Smith, Mame’s turncoat Sen- 
ator who beat Eisenhower’s ap- 
pointment, She and Wayne Morse 
could have a dandy time together. 
After this, I wish Maine would 
keep her women in the home and 
let the, men go to Washington. This 
is a ‘‘noble €xperiment” that back- 
fired and proved the Maine voters 
have inflicted unnecessary punish- 
ment on the U, S. 
7 G.'0. FP: 
‘Dems Couldn’t Be Any Worse’ 
Washington says we face the big- 
gest peace time budget in history 
and this is from Dwight D. Eisen- 
hower who promised the taxpayers 
he'would cut expenses and reduce 
taxes. 
The Republicans said Roosevelt 
and Truman were the biggest wast- 
ers in al] history and now their 
own man spends more, Eight years 
of a Republican president is 
enough and the Democrats can't 
do any worse and maybe they 
won't be as bad on us taxpayers 
as they used to be and as bad as 
the Republicans are now, Also Bored to Tears 
Dem Urges 
Sales Tax 
LANSING (AB)—Lt. Gov. John 
B. Swainson last night urged leg- 
islative approval of the Republican 
use tax bill, bringing into the open 
a marked strategy split with his 
chief, Gov. Williams. 
Only the day before, the gover- 
nor took a strong new ‘stand . for 
income taxes on individuals and 
business. He tongue-lashed Repub- 
lican Senators, stirring up a storm 
in the Legislature. 
Swainson, during an interview, 
said “I am convinced—the GOP 
use bill for a one-cent increase 
in the use (sales) tax is uncon- 
stitutional and that this was the 
pivot of his thinking. 
In Lansing today, Swainson said: 
“IT agree with the governor on 
his aims. The only difference is on 
the means of achieving them.”’ 
He said: 
“I am very familiar with the 
governor's program. It is equitable 
and adequate. A personal and cor- 
porate income tax would be a per- 
manent solution of the state's 
problems. 
“But I do not think we will get 
either. So I would pass. the use tax P iy’ = ; j 5 and the break- ,, since t Fither the Supreme Court fad 
chosen President four years earlier. Much Dirt Is Being Moved ing of the mar- NOT DETUSSED on the paar gon will hace L. G. Selswerthy 1 in in the ‘House, I am convinced : in the Vicinity of Oxford riage vows. _ But the impression left by the to te’ chaneed a <i. aiieeea a it is unconstitutional. The 1940 GOP nominee, Wen- The court says Justices is that the Supreme Court eae g g ‘Neutral’ Gordon “il then aboaid be taken to the 
dell Willkie, was then 48. One of Economy: Ordering 30 candles this also is just fhe United States today is not ( et 1980) ; 4 d Supreme Court immediately. If 
is chi  S Rob. on your birthday cake when , an “idea” which isturbed by the teaching of the ibe’ Irritates Reader the court held it unconstitutional, his chief opponents, Senator Rob- you're 40. LAWRENCE the majority of ~dea’” of sexual immorality or vz : Gordon ‘he Legislature should be called . 7 50. w : vi ais adultery. * WXYZ's newscaster 70rdon ; . : : ert A. Taft, was 50. The man who the people of America may not Smiles should get the air. but quick. He back and the income tax bills of 
led the early ballots, Thomas E. 
Dewey, was 38. When he won 
nomination in 1944 he was 42 and 
he took it again at 46. 
Lest we forget, another pretty able 
President was THEODORE ROOSEVELT, 
42, who took over from the vice   
One of the biggest highway fills in 
Oakland County is just beirig completed 
on the Pontiac-Lapeer Road (24) just 
north of Oxford. The big dip near Stony 
Lake, where an accident that took sev- 
eral lives took place, has been entirely 
filled. 
This makes it a level stretch and raises 
the grade around 30 feet above the lake like, but that it all comes under 
the head of ‘“‘free speech’’ and is 
protected by the First and Four- 
teenth Amendments to the Consti- 
tution, 
This latest decision will come 
as a shock to church-going folks 
everywhere who do not believe 
that it is lawful to advocate sin, 
‘any more than it is right ‘to This is proclaimed now as pro- 
tected by “free speech,” - and 
evidently the scope of the First 
Amendment cannot be limited in 
that respect to let the states of It usually pays off when par- 
ents say kind words to their 
youngsters rather than the other 
kind, 
  
Dr. William Brady Says:   
Try Whitfield’s Remedy was supposed to be neutral in a 
debate Monday night and he 
charged the Republican Senators 
with blackmail himself without 
even having the Democrat lieu- 
tenant governoy do it. 
He was prejudiced and it 
showed so plain I'm disgusted 
with WXYZ for letting a bigot 
take the middle spot and pretend fered again. _ 
“Thig is befter than no solution 
at all.’ 
  
Portraits 
By JAMES J. METCALFE 
Some people like to be alone 
. . . Or so they do declare . 
Their solitide is wonderful . . . presidency after the assassination of level, encroaching on the east shore of advocate crime of any kind, he was neutral If Gordon isn't = her TRAN ee President McKINLey. the lake. The new pavement is located especially in motion pictures that oo a Democrat I'm a zebra and TV need. companionship , a any ust west of the old, f , reach the young as well as f F F t I f t stations should not pretend to be : wee . 
pip iw eaiam seamen EO le J LOK BUNGUS FOOL LTTCCLLOM wernt" deat and tu Severn» To be nyt y 
2 = 0 «8 = ; A mile or so north of there the new The Supreme Court's own words favor one side. asics. . And poaaly thay are member the important positions held work crosses the old, taking out the big are startling. The opinion of the From readers’ queries I infer the foot for 30 seconds only, in a ~ WXYZ is fighting an uphilt bat- sincere . . . Not meaning to be by youthful men and women during hill and bend near Thomas. This also eurt, delivered by Justice Stewart, that toe and foot itch, ringworm, shallow basin of gasoline, on three tle, anyway, and things like this _rude . . . But what if everyone on our own formative years. Age should 
‘not be a deterrent when a man is eliminates what was a hazardous sec- 
tion of highway. reversed a decision of the highest 
court of the State of New York, 
which upheld the law of that state dermatophytosis, athlete’s foot, 
trichophytosis, tinea, fungus infec- 
tion is not successive days. Of course, it is 
necessary to do this either out of 
doors or in a draft between open will put them even farther behind. 
L. G. D. 
  earth . . . Assumed that attitude? 
. » » What would become of friend- 
ship and. . . Our marriage institu- In order to keep things in ba t iddi ‘hit = indows aul HTS qualified for the position. gravel eperations. ae less tape i Perbaiting the extubithn of ction widespiwed. an i von aim Sway from, matches, ee Gn” To meee wees how pictures ‘‘which are immoral in was 2 or 230 lighters or flame. - So faith by itself, if it has no could we . . . Make. any contri- 
    getting so deep that they will create an-_ 
other lake there. 
  that they portray ‘acts of sexual 
immorality . . . as desirable, ac- years ago — or, * * * 
Signed letters, not more than one works, is dead.—James 2:17. 
* * * bution? . . . Each soul is by the 
grace of God . . . And He did not V tio Bi )] S h ] if my deduction is page or 100 words long pertaining to aca n ] e Cc 00 S ceptable, or proper patterns of wrofig, then rem. Bersonal health and hygiene, not dis- Man does not live by bread intend .. . That we should go our bchavior. se, diagnosis, or treatment, will be - oth . Wi Fin S A «es Pontiac area people are summer vaca- ; a, ot edies are more Mampeds self-ctdreeuiam brady if a alone, but by faith, by admiration, way alone . . . With never any e Summer ctivity tioning more than ‘ever Bie New SR coe, ed ater a adatle od ay to The Pontiac Press Pontise Michicas, bY Sympathy.—Raiph Waldo Emer. _ friend. 
What better way could our young 
people start summer vacation than 
by attending one of our many area 
Vacation Bible Schools that have 
been going on since the close of 
school? before this year 
Word from : 
Virgil Keener 
at the local AAA office is to that effect. Like statements come from 
Pete Wadelich, 
Manager here for Greyhound lines, and 
William Gracey, preted that language of the statute 
to require denial of a license to a 
motion picture where “‘its subject 
_ matter is adultery presented as 
being right and desirable for cer- 
tain people under certain circum- 
stances.”’ 
LAW UNCONSTITUTIONAL 
The Supreme Court’s opinion and dence people 
with this trouble 
prefer to try rem- 
edies suggested 
by Tom, Dick and pg, BRADY 
Harry. 
Through the years, the remedies 
that have given the greatest satis- 
faction, readers report, have been 
    son. : (Copyright 1959) 
  
Case Records of a Psychologist:   
Tall Gals, Femininity’s Important Pontiac ti tae, OL spree es : * * * Railwa * cket agent for the Grand Trunk accepted the contention that the Whitfield’s ointment and Whit- Tall girls, note well: Don't tall folks, One in California has star, height is not a crucial mat- Many times we all take religion y aaa oan iene: @ field's solution. slouch in your posture or grow 8 10” as its minimum require- ter. : ane: ~ * * stoop shouldered as you try to - ment for girls and the boys must Nowadays it is mental horsepow- for granted. It is work such as this 
that will serve as a reminder to 
many of our young folks. 
The many churches and the 
thousand or more volunteer work- 
ers are to be commended for 
organizing and conducting these 
courses. They provide the young- 
sters With the proper spirit to 
commence a vacation period. 
x * * 
These Bible courses help create 
tite right devotional atmosphere 
which is so necessary in all. our lives 
today. In the long run, the few hours 
spent in this extracurricular activi- 
ty will mean added pleasure to all 
those who attended. 
  
Indus Water Agreement . * ° 
Will Benefit Populations ae ( | many pees acne have report- 7 a sate ial 2 not develop stooped a being 2 or 3 inches shorter 3 7 . th fa : .* le of my recollection, none has com- Ss . an your male escort is only one ahaa Will take place in or waterford: agra birthday. A plained that it was too irritating. | ae cienly ee et dig LUCKY TALL GIRLS minor means of making ru fet, | naon in “gust between the repre- Mrs. Harriet Rumley By the way, the formula I give | ‘am worried about embarrassing In some foreign countries, tall important | sentatives of India, Pakistan and the of walled Lake; 84th birthday. in the pathphlet is just HALF them because of my greater girls are doubly admired, For ex- Always: write to Dr. Gesrge W — : the strength of the Whitfield’s ample, in France they are the ‘0 care of The Pontiac Press, Pontiac 
  That annual get together of the health- 
jest bunch of people you ever saw takes 
place on July 19 at the Oakland County 
Tuberculosis Sanatorium. It is the home- 
coming of the 
Patients Benefit Association 
comprising those who regained their 
health at the San. All former patients 
are urged to attend. 
  
An optimist to the nth degree Is 
: Elmer Frostman 
of Keego Harbor, who says he never has 
seen a season when vegetables and other 
growing things got a late start that 
didn’t turn out in fine shape. 
  
Your boy may not be able to get a res- 
ervation for the week he desires. but 
Edward H. Leland, 
Executive Secretary, tells me that there 
are still some vacancies at the local Boy . 
Scouts Camp Agawam. 
  
Verbal Orchids to- on to hold that New York State 
has no right to pass such a law, 
because it is unconstitutional on 
its face. Justice Stewart says: 
“What New York has done, 
therefore, is to prevent the ex- 
hibition of a motion picture be- 
cause that picture advocates an 
idea—that adultery under certain 
circumstances may be proper 
behavior. Yet the First Amend. 
ment’s basic guarantee is of 
freedom to advocate ideas. The 
state, quite simply, has thus 
struck at the very heart of con- 
stitutionally protected liberty.” 
All.in all, six justices voted to 
take away the right of the states 
to decide’ for themselves what 
motion pictures involving ‘‘sexua 
immorality’ are objectionable, 
while three others said they would 
rather see the Supreme Court, 
. acting presumably as a ‘‘supreme 
board of censors,” decide each 
case on jts merits. 
The   
? 
Country Parson * 
       The solution is for use in day- 
time, the ointment for night. 
In the pamphlet on Foot Itch 
(available free, if you previde a 
stamped, self-addressed enve- 
lope) I give the recipes or for- 
mulas for Whitfield’s ointment 
and Whitfield’s liquid. 
A pharmacist-chemist who had 
foot itch informed me that his 
dermatologist warned him that the 
formula I give in the pamphlet is 
too strong, and showed him a per- 
* sonal letter from Dr. Whitfield of 
London in which the formula is 
about half as strong as I have it in 
the pamphlet. 
The dermatologist warned that 
Whitfield’s ointment, as strong as 
I suggest was quite likely to irri- 
tate the skin. He thought it would 
be better to make up ointment. or 
liquid at about half the strength 
suggested in the pamphlet, | 
* * * 
But I must say it is remarkable 
that in all the years I have been 
advising the use of Whitfield’s 
ointment and liquid for foot itch, merge with the women of av- 
erage height. For men admire 
tall girls who are feminine. This 
newspaper column can offer 
you plenty of psychological 
strategy’ by which you can win 
boy friends. And don’t think 
you must pick a taller mate. A 
lot of short men marry taller 
girls. 
By DR, GEORGE W.. CRANE 
CASE B — 475: Lola R., aged 
19, has a problem that is growing 
more common in America. 
* * * 
“Dr. Crane,"’ she began, “I am 
embarrassed because I am so tall. 
My height is 5 
feet 11 inches. 
“If I wear mod- 
erate heels,. that 
means I am at 
least 6 feet 1 inch 
so I am likely to 
be taller than 
most of the men 
at a college 
dance. 
    height.” be 6’ 1’ or upward, 
A lot of tall girls feel unduly 
shy about their height. and thus 
subconsciously develop stooped 
shoulders as they try to get down 
to the average height of their sex. 
ke & ; 
Girls, if you are tall, take full 
advafitage of that fact by standing 
with erect posture. Don’t slouch. 
It is perfectly OK to employ 
low heels so you don't overly exag- 
      gerate your extra height, but er, plus the ability to earn a 
good pay check, that are much 
more desirable male characteris- 
tics than a tall physique or a 
hairy chest. 
BE FEMININE 
It isn’t primarily a girl's height 
that attracts made admirers,. but 
her femininity. 
A short, petite dame who 
smokes or spouts slang and vul- 
gar stories, or who swilis down 
hard liquor and otherwise af- 
fects masculine habits, will drive 
“A tall girl who is a member 
of the “Compliment Club’ and 
who flashes a cheery smile, as 
she dresses in proper feminine 
styles, will attract men of all 
heights. 
For men want girls to be fem- 
inine, They prefer women who can 
deftly start conversations, but then 
become good listeners while they 
let the males dominate the con- 
versation, \ 
_ They fall in love with girls who make men feel important, And 
International Bank f ruc- ies adil Dawei Sante ; pie 7 P ason Ardmore ointment described in stahdard ary, GIRL PROBLEMS subject of great envy. self-addressed enve Arpanet : ; , ee : , yping and prin Pp a view to 80 Harbor; 84th birthday. textbooks of dermatology. It you think we haven't been One Paris beauty salon boasts ior is ee re Ne Moe a seen settling the In waters dispute. 
_ The problem fp that six rivers of 
the Indus Valley have their uppet 
_ waters in India yet flow through 
Pakistan to empty into the Arabian 
Sea. For 5,000 years until partition 
‘the river and canal networks were . developed as a singte unit. The Brit- ish had added’ hydraulic engineering 
    Fred Miller 
4 Lincoln, 82nd birthday. 
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Miller 
04 Lincoln: 52nd wedding anniversary. 
Mrs. Mary Oyer 
of Birmingham: 85th birthday 
W. H. King, 
9712 S. Midland. 84th birthday 
_ Mrs. Frieda Langletz — 0 
~ 0 
. of Haily, 82nd birthday. 
t it 
V 
  “People arf .better than they 
sound — their tongues so often 
fail to reveal what isy-in their 
hearts.” Probably patrons of swimming 
pools, gymnasiums, beaches and 
other places where people go bare- 
foot have become itch-conscious, 
because many such places now 
provide for or require the use of 
foot bath, paper slippers etc., to 
prevent spread of the infection. 
Many persons with foot itch 
jhave, found gasoline an effective 
Remedy, both for the itching and 
for the disease itself. Using only. 
common gasoliné, not ethyl. Soak growing taller, as a general rule, 
just consider that in 1900 the aver- 
age woman in America was 5 feet 
tall. 
_e + * 
Now she is 5’ 5”. And there are 
an average of 8 girls out of every 
me who stand 5 8” or taller in 
their stocking feet, Add 2 or 3 
more inches when they are wear- 
int hich heels, * 
In some cities, as on the West 
Coast, there are special clubs for that it will,““Make Girls Taller.” 
It lists taliness as a mark of 
superior Americans, -As regards 
dating problems of tall girls, may 
I remind you that thousands of 
such women are happily married 
to shorter men, 
Indeed, ‘a man’s high center of 
gravity is not as important as his 
high L.Q. ! . “x * &@ 
"In this modern age. unless/ you 
wish to be a college Lagicwall ‘ 
  . (Copyright 1959) 
  
H as LA 
The Pontiac Press is delivered by ents a week: where 
ice Ys not ay . br 
and : 
      
      
        
  ST 
ee 
an 
ee 
eee 
ee 
Oe 
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mre, aR Te ' Silious smile and snooty tilt to his on opening night, it was booed, is a fool.” 
  f 
  
  
} 
  Osborne’s Words Cut Dap ieciga! a. 
Playwright Lashes England 
LONDON ® — In this kingdom by the deadheads who: write poli-;one of the most destructive habits 
of convention, cold toast, pagean-'tical maniféstos,-make films and|his characters can acquire. But 
try and polite manners, playwright| produce plays.” he’s making it so fast that he has 
John Osborne stands out like a x* * * five com : 
young rogue camel running amok’ When Osborne's latest and most| | a. & . 
in a peaceful oasis. ambitious play, ‘‘The World of Of course IT enjoy money,” he 
With his long upper lip, super-)Paul Slickey,” dropped its curtain |S4yS. “Anyone who says he doesn't     
handsome , head, Osborne . epen hissed—and applauded. Osborne says he's tired of being 
looks like a dromedary. ~ «  < called an angry young man. 
Not surprisingly, he drives the he | “They're just sitting around 
natives~ nuts with his literary AS the elegantly dressed Osborne/waiting for me to become cor-         crea left the theater by a side door he| ed. The ; ticisé me for thrashings. 8 5 rupted. y even criticisé me for 
= s+ * ‘* was greeted by a blast of boos.|wearing better clothes than when 
Listen to the 29-year-old Osborne; ‘I must be the first English play-|I was penniless.” 
on several subjects: wright to have been booed in the! 
The Church~-‘During the. past streets,’ he observed. _ | 
60 years the Church has repeated-| John Osborne is a highly sen-| e . 
repeated-| John iv se Monrovia Skipper ly ducked every moral issue that|sitive youngeman of considerable | | 
has been thrown at its head —jtalent with a knack for stinging) Bl R If 
poverty, unemployment, fascism, |dissent. | ames Oya on war, South Africa, the H-bomb andj _ His father was a commercial ar- 
so on. It has lived in an atmo- | ae who died when John ‘was quite} | DETROIT t — The Greek cap- 
sphere of calh, casual funk.” jyoung. The boy and his mother |tain of the Liberian freighter Mon- 
On the Royal Family—‘‘Nobody|were very poor. Atone time they! rovia blames the Canadian grain 
can seriously pretend that theexisted on less than $3 a week. carrier Royalton for the loss of 
royal round of gracious boredom—| When a schoolmaster slapped); i, ship on fog-shrouded Lake the ancient fatuity—is politically! young Osborne for what he thought !t11on last Thursday’. 
    moral or morally stimulating.”’ hepa lad slapped him) Capt. Stefanos Svokos, 49, af: 
* *& ak Was RICKEG ON OF SCHOO". Athens, told a Coast Guard marine, 
The British Broadcasting Corp. | * * * board of investigation yesterday | 
—‘Staffed by highly trained pal-' Three years ago he was a wife- the Royalton was going at “exces-| 
ace lackeys with graveyard voices less, out-of-work actor, the author sive speed’ and also failed to| and ponderous language, as nour-|0f severaP plays which few had | answer signals before the two' ishing and useful as wax fruit un-|liked and none had accepted. 'vessels collided. der a glass case.”’ Then he hit with a bundle of . 
SS bitterness called ‘‘Look Back in| The Monrovia, smashed in on | 
Prime Minister Harold MaeMil-| Anger.” _ | her left side just below the lan’s Conservative party — A class * * * bridge, sank within 11 hours with. | 
of inept deceivers full of a It made a big noise in London. her $350,000 cargo of steel parts. 
rogance, whose testing of the H- In New York the play also enjoyed| All her 28 men were rescued. 
bob was the most debased criminal success. | Capt. Svokos, while blaming the . | 
swindle in British history.” Osborne followed this up within) sion for the collision, admitted 
jhe violated Great Lakes navigation   
On the Labor party—‘‘Socialism ae Eniertaine® a Lorene 
is about people living together, and [Olivier actually asked to play the| ae a 
the sooner: h iondcia at the Labjrole of Archie Rice in the play. oe up ae ‘the Ro rations party stop ing about sugar and| This was followed by “Epitaph |, Jes aring y 
cement and wake up to the fact for George Dillon” and finally, | oe ee ey , the better" “The World of Paul Slickey.” = e nen a SE amen since 
On Britain, his homeland — ‘‘We| In the three years since “Look |1925, was making his first voyage 
live in an island of sanctimony, |Back” Osborne became a welative- 0" the Great Lakes with the open- 
without any? vital culture of our ly rich man with a beautiful ac- 1n& ot the St) Lawrence Seaway. own — this we are forced to bor-|tress wife, Mary Ure. He lives in) His ship was bound from Antwerp, row from America —,without any luxurious rooms and drives a long, Belgium. for Chicago. 
moral dynamic of our own, and Sleek sportscar. ge 
still responding to the same tired. | x «© * | Detroit was the first to install | 
grubby symbols handed out to us' In his plays, moneymaking is radio sets in police cars. 
_ a   
* 
   
      
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  : . { ij cA I. = i, 4 
f a: | fis | THE PONTIAC PRESS,’ WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 1959 
  
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  | ’ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 
  1959   
15 Children Stricken 
at Belleville Lake Park | 
DETROIT w i F. children 
were treated and | released «at, 
suburban Detroit hospitals -today 
alter becoming il] at a private park 
grounds. and coeagins ome: 
The youngsters, ranging from 2 i re 
to.8 yedks of age, were stricken. 
at Belleville-Lake. They were at 
a camp operated for employes of 
the Detroit Edison Co. 
* ial * Ad 
i The Wayne County sheriff's road! 
ipatrol said the children may have| 
been victims of impure well’ water. | 
(They were attacked by fits of, 
‘vomiting. No adults were stricken. :     eee eee a 
  
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Linings Sanitized ® 
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Downtown store open Mon. and Friday. * 
THERE'S 
NOTHING a 
                + California’ s Population 
| ‘Soars to 15,280, 000 
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - estimated 18,280,000 today—an ins Minister Convicted ic crease of 528,000 during the past 
| yer. 
“The annual pie in exce 
jot f one-half million persons is ex-:degree murder Tuesday in the Jan. 
\California’s booming population, | noctéd to continue,” the State Fi-/14 slaying of his wife, Clara, 48.; 
lits climb slowed only slightly by! nance Department said in issuing’ ‘Mts. Kaigler was shot fatally: 
ilast year's recession, reached an' ‘its official July 1 estimate. | 4 
$s Kaigler, 66, was convicted of first. for first degree murder is manda-, f 
\toty life. 
during a an Ticaindvavorinn   beet gh 
: VICTOR PAINTS Most species of deer shed their 168 N. Saginaw     | Evenings "1 97. 
  
  
  Recorder's ‘horns every year. ys 
  
  BY GUM — Linda Rose Jobe, 
J, 5'z, is just bubbling over as she | 
| puffs out a whopper before sail-./ 
    .ing to Mannheim, Germany, | 
from New York aboard the liner | 
United States. The Torrence, 
Calif. girl was boundj for a 
_three-month vacation with rela- | 
_ tives. 
Ink Strike Menaces 
British Newspapers   
    
LIKE 
SLAX 
APPEAL 
d we're the local experts) 
fabrics outstanding — 
for hygienic freshness. 
g& 100. $85 Pr. 
‘til 9 
on., Wed., Thurs., Fri. ‘til 9 LONDON (AP)—Britain today | 
‘faced the threat of the biggest, 
shutdown of newspapers, since the 
;general strike 33 years ago. 
| A strike of printing ink workers | 
supplying Fleet St. — London’s, 
inewspaper row—cut off supplies, 
to the big national newspapers! 
which circulate 20 milli6n copies 
a day throughout the nation. 
’~ * * 
A spokesman for the Newspaper | 
Proprietors’ Assn. said the papers 
fhad stocks only for four days and 
would be forced to suspend publi- 
cation with Sunday’s editions. 
Members of the NPA have an 
jagreement that when one news- 
paper is halted, all stop. 
| Eleventh-hour peace attempts 
Tuesday night by Labor Minister 
‘Iain MacLeod failed to avert a; 
‘walkout by 2,500 members of the | 
National Society of Operative) 
,Printers and Assistants who work 
‘for firms supplying ink. 
* * * 
About 1,000 magazines and 
‘newspapers published outside of 
London have been shut down for 
two weeks by a strike involving 
100,000 printers. 
| Both the ink men and the print-_ 
ers are demanding a 10 per cent 
|pay raise and a shortening of the, 
work-week from 44 to 40 hours. 
|Weekly wages now range from 
$23.60 to $42. 
  
Assumes Top Position 
for U.N., U.S. in Korea 
SEOUL, Korea (AP)—Gen. Car-) 
'ter B. MacGruder today succeed- | 
jed Gen. George H. Decker ‘as 
commander of U.N, and US.; 
iforces in Korea and of the US. 
8th Army.. 
| Decker left by plane for Japan 
‘and the United States. He is due 
‘in Washington July 10 to become 
  U.S. Army vice chief of staff.   
  
We bought all they had—only 
91 cartons at this price.\Per- 
fect quality. 
PLASTIC WALL 
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25-Ib. mals 1.42 
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Glider Webbed 
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          Special 12” 
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Lacquered 2-piece ash 
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Our Best Kenmore Eliminates Sprinkling Before Ironing 
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  i : THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 1959) | ’ - 
ah es ro! Cuban AF Head ‘Ghosts Man Patrol. Care ( 
Russia’ s “New York Exhibit Blow to U. S. Ezo Quits, Blames Reds Motorists Beware! HAVANA # — Major Luis Diaz]: )   
id     
  ‘Lanz resigned Tuesday as com- _ r will never know w ere a car 
NEW YORK—The Russians! nese-cone of Lunic (or Mechta), ‘sobering effect ‘on a toirist who bit more room to live in, a bit country.” Or the -dreamy-looking) ‘mander of Cuba’s air force, telling Plsaarglilhe gat st piles . ex know whe if it is 
make it a little hard on the skeptics man's first planetoid, circling | might come upon it muttering, to’ less discomfort. Next year, who’ ‘painting of a writer, saying, °‘I ‘President Manuel Urrutia he was: warning to drivers on the New | manned. Some of the most, desert- — : the sun since early this year. himself, ‘‘This is all phony; these, mows? write from the heart.” He's likely | Quitting because of Communist ac- York, State Thruway this July 4 ed looking patrol cars have sud- who will descend on the New York hac een | £ ; Lunic is expected to last as people can’t make a one-ton ; ‘tivity in the armed forces. | hi , Ano | ; ! ” weeken : denly come to life, snaring an Coliseum between now and Aug. long as the polar system. truck. a even a personal car. Or to be ea = ay eden This was the first resignation by nd. ~% a overconfident th ar 
— ow : firs gna' peed 
36. In the same exhibit are minia- They've made somewhat more. - - A * ingenuity ie working modeisig government official blaming The ‘ghosts’? are cars parked, “The driver never knows for 
‘than the paeans of praise to the|Communist -activity in Premier whether the next car will be. vege . 2 : 3 : (along the highway in an effort to) Sure The arrangers of the exhibition working stiffs. Fidel Castro's regime. Castro has) cut traffic fatalities. Authorities| lempty,”’ Hynes SAYS, “so he 
often denied his government is feel the mere sight of a police car) [doesn’t take Thances.”” They've put together an im- Lots of it is on exhibit 
pressive exhibition, better de- , P “ Some of it has pasacanetangio 
signed and not so gooey on the mock-ups of fine Russian jets, anc a few of the Russian people, All | lead off their batting order with par WE REALIZED ¢ ture space rockets, and 
  
    
  
  —__ _ as weir — the ty ha ee " wn ~~ of hey sprog to all of those [their clean-up hitter—Spacecraft—| He is addressed on, all sides in| jcommunist influenced. ; will cause a speeding motorist to! ~ « * 
Wortd's ‘ule lest ‘year. orbited the earth for a wee re people, in time, by Khrushchev. (and follow that up with their next flawless English. All the exhibits, | slow down. ; | Troopers say the cars add an- 
Vou wks cand easenere a MS succumbing hundreds of miles out’ They are a people who have lived best. Hapaserh spectaculars, etc., ed habe sal or Meets’ Soviets ‘i ie re rin] poli pie Te oa of a 
onitents 2 in space. on pr ses » fo “ati J ; ,, |to speak. A lot of very good anima- 2 » Says - Maran! police car by jhe roadside May 
aa a sina et ig pall) We Pee A mie Pr a vane, and aitionat eresinee Reps \tectr, stemlo-pewered | ‘tion and descriptive quality has; MOSCOW (AP)—Emperor Haile Hynes of the State Police. isnap drowsy drivers out of an 
industry, agriculture, science, President Eisenhower said, off the aa ue promises ice-breaker, Lenin, and an as- -©¢" built into this exhibit. A lot Selassie of Ethiopia met Premier) The troopets began the experi- occasional. “highway hypnosis.” 
technology, radio, electronics, Cuff. to the First Vice Chairman pate ‘COMIN along as one > Y€ar | tonishing model of jet planes of pre-fixed smiles of amused con- | Nikita Khrushchev and President|ment two years ago. They pr peaceiull user of aicesic <oeec, ef the Council of Ministers, Frol F. o 7-year plan is followed by an- ders < i el Gas, sia tempt and suspicion will freeze at;Kliment Y. Voroshilov in the) jes oe had Ses to ” ight Big Fluorspar Producer 
optics, Seep ition, public edu- Kozlov, as the saga of Laika was or | taking off and landing under the the Coliseum this summer, and not| Kremlin Tuesday on the second;the t inst 9 ’s excellent sa ety; 
cation, public health, sports, con- €xPlained to the chief executive.’ ney tend * measure things bY models of their utility atomic |P°Caus of the juiced-up air: Con- | [day of his state visit to the So- — ye | SPRINGFIELD, ill. (Illinois 
struction ane art and public Everybody laughed ener op ygernlonelliple sede power plants and a host of other ‘ditioning. . a : | e cars are “spares '— reg produces about 54 per cent of the weitere. 4 \ cians more vivid memory of previous, dines that conned keke bat & x «* « jlarly marked and mechanically fluorspar mined *in the United 
a DRAMATIC REMINDE hardship, lack of prestige, but now eee ene atl ut im- "The Reds have done us a favor Moroccans Take Over |perfect, but not in use because|<:ates. The’ mineral is a raw ma- 
They have arranged things so “So, right at the start, the the hammer and sickle circles the a e gadget-minde Ameri: by putting their best foot forward. their drivers are off duty. Crews j..i4) for hydrofluoric acid, used 
that the visitor—and millions of Russians dramatically remind the sun. They can Step into a 600- “s They are saying, in effect, that, RABAT, Morocco (AP)—Moroc-. move the ghostly squadron in a) jto make frosted glass. 
Americans will pass through the visitor that they beat us into space mile-an-hour- jet and fly to Peiping| He might not even see the tower- there’s another great power in the can troops will replace French |constantly. changing pattern. 
exhibit—first is hit with soaring and have done some things ‘way or Prague and, if they're excep- ing mural of Lenin, captioned “‘All'world. It is better to know this soldiers guarding U.S, bases in| x« *® * | Christmas ‘observances were 
replicas of Sputniks I, 1, and HI out there that we haven't ap- tionally trusted, even further. power in the Soviet Union belongs than be duped into ignoring the Morocco beginning today under a} Positions are shifted so that banned in Massachusetts from 1659 
ant a replica of the 3,250 pound proac he d yet. It tends to have ay _They eat a little better, have a to the wor orking people of town and fact. irecent agreement with the French. veven the Teguiar thruway, -custom- ito 1681. 
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   £ “ I | 
    LHE PON'MAG PRhs, 
Mowry of Charleston; W. Va., a 
NEA cks former president of the NEA. 
The resolution urged support of 
. the Murray-Metgalf bill, now pend- 
ing in Congress,| which would give 
outright federal, grants to the 
states., The grants — based on $25 
for each school age child — could Federal Aid 
Urge Telegram Flood and/or teacher salaries, 
“Supporting Help for! — - 
' Nation’s Schools Aly Khan Fights Rita 
in Nevada High Court 
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP)—The! 
Nevada legal battle between ace| 
telegrams urging support for PS dala Rita Hayworth and Prince | 
massive program of federal aid|“!Y lent over yet. | wd educaitnn The Moslem prince asked the| 
State Supreme Court Tuesday to 
Only a small cluster of “No” overturn a Reno court’s decision: 
votes was heard when the motion that his status as Pakistan’s am- 
came up for decision at the asso- | bassador to the United Nations; 
ciation’s annual convention here. doesn’t protect him from his for- 
mer wife’s legal action. | 
Harold Bell, a delegate from | pjstrict Court Judge A.J. Mae-; 
Virginia, put the case for the |tretti rejected Aly’s claim to| 
opponents of federal aid when | diplomatic immunity and ordered | he said, “to me it seems in- |pim to pay Rita $25,000 in attor- 
congrous to send $1 to Washing: . 
ton just to get $60 cents back.” jney fees incurred in arranging for | 
the couple’s daughter to visit the | 
A resolution pledging a grass- 
roots campaign at home and a’ prince in France four years ago. 
i 
barrage of messages to Washing-| Marconi sent a wireless mes-| 
ton was Presented by Miss Corma sage across the Atlantic in 1901.   
  ST. LOUIS #—The Nation@] Ed- 
ueation Assn, voted overwhelming- 
ly Tuesday to flood Congress with   
        
surf fishing at Nantucket Island. 
FA KK AIK KK AK FOI IK ATK A TORII I RAAT TIO HK TICK KI DKA IK IAAI IID A AIAAIASASIACA I hI RIA RI ATOR KT IA KITA HE 
SPECIAL PURCHASE } Tel-Huron Merchants Are Seetepreting : 
the Weekend with a BIG . 
  
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EAT EERE RT EAM TER 
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  Makes Your 4th of July Weekend 
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action swimmers 
prefer knit and woven 
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When you take your swimming seriously ~ 
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      STRIPER STAR — Abe Glasser is a happy and proud fisher- 
man after bringing in five striped bass totaling 127 pounds while 
    
       
     
      
      
        
        
        
        
       
           
    WEDNESDA ¥, JULY I 1959 
  Owners Vote for Change 
Negroes Can. Dance, Dine 
in Bermuda's Top Hotels 
HAMILTON, Bermuda (P—Ne- ; Group” wrecently and pos Ber-' 
groe$ may now dance and dine in' muda's | Bermuda's leading ‘fidtels formerly’ lth - weet _ pon i ed 
ipatronized only by whites. But! — yeott and picket lines | 
| Negroes still are barred from tak-, ‘Theater owners said they closed, 
ing rooms, | their establishment “to “prevent 
Up to now, Negroes were not any incidents.” f 
|permitted in the main hotels ex-, +e 
|cept_ as help. There are other; [+ appeared the hotel men felt! ‘hotels which cater exclusively tO they would be the group's. next’ 
‘the Negro trade ‘target   
  The lush tourist spot in the AC | wp gro employes of hotels al. | 
| lantic has ne law specifically pro- 
| viding for racial segregation. 
However, Bermuda's Innkeep- decide whether to quit en mass | 
during the height of the tourist | 
| er’s Act enabled hotel men to ..ason 
; pick and choose their customers. | 
| . C. Pearman-Wilson, 
| This long has angered Negro dent of the hotel group said the 
|Bermudians, many of them busi- yey policy also applies to foreign, 
ness and professional men | Negroes. 
| The desegregation decision was gel 
made by the Bermuda Hote] Men's policy are the 
Assn, Sunday night. |Castle Harbor, 
The hotel] men acted after a/Club, Inverurie, Princess,  St.| 
| group of young Negroes formed Georges Hotel and the new Ber- 
what they call the ‘‘Progressive mudiana. 
     
    
      
   
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ready had called a meeting to | 
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The seven hotels to observe the| 
Belmont Manor,' 
Elbew Beach Surf| 
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1) . es : o . L “ / | 
| LTWENTY-Two THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY‘1, 1959 (eit a 
a Selassie issie, Khrushchev Va | ra oe situs, [serve as a consultant on such eIce Cream Vendor Fined Epo wnp meena {To Make Home ‘in AlaskalArea Representative |sesinst “uses ss, diane ‘n.0 Con EON Le 7 Tin, neat instruction and profes ae ee, 
fg MOD — Bory ae After Lake Orion Wedding at Education Confab "= ==" === Panton TORN — ys | opie @ ay | 7 An ice eream & se og ge pall pegreetgeen LAKE ORION — To reside in ROMEO — Donald Giese, field : . fine and $10 costs to Justice! a praised the Soviet Union Fairbanks, Alaska, after October : >, |Appropriate licants (55 & thanked it for support in Ethio- are newlyweds Mr, and Mrs, Doug- representative for the-Michigan Ed-|- PPTOP — Court yesterday for possession and P pia’s battle with Fascist Italy in las J. Teasdale. The’ couple is ucation Assn, is attending the 38th OKLAHO CITY per! sale of fireworks, a misdemeanor. 
1935. . now honeymooning in Western and Jannual convention of the National| $ns tp the state wildilfe| The vendor, James D. Shoat, of 
ide nit Doicke ao om oe ee ee Education Assn, in St, Louis, Mo.| SPOON were William Fish and| Detroit, was arrested Sunday by 
ample to all African countries of White “flowers and palms dec- surpass oe bh at  |Sam Bass,  « : Redford State Trooper John pene 
how to win independence, orated the altar of Lake Orion Giese and nine other members About 12,000 the Suez pe he atypia to his getter 
: Methodist Church for ‘the cere- of the MEA executive staff led a epithe stp “ oom ' Tt has been estimated that about mony performed, by the Rev. Al- delegation of 200 Michigan educa- Canal in an average year. customers, 
7 per cent of the fresh meat con- bert B. Johns. }tors into $t/ Louis June 27. Head- : 
  sumed in North Carolina is pork.   
  
  in business ...in professions 
            | Mr. and Mrs. William D. Wilcox, now of 3351 Lake St., Orion 
Township, celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary yesterday. 
They have one daughter, Mrs. Robert (Laena) Sanford, who with 
| her husband and son, Aaron, entertained 150 guests Sunday at their 
3355 Lake St. home in honor of the occasion. | FETE GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY — Former Pontiac residents, 
iJ quarters for the Wolverine delega-| The former Janice Morin, the 
. tion is Keil Auditorium. bride is the daughter of Mr. 
and Mrs. V. J. Morin of 31 
Hemingway Kd. Douglas is the 
son of Mrs. Frances Teasdale 
of 1057 Henrietta Lane, Troy, 
and the late Mr. Teasdale. 
The bride chose a short-sleeved 
gown of white tulle over satin. 
The tulle bodice and skirt were 
accented with an appliqued design 
encrusted with seed pearls, and 
her fingertip veil of silk illusion 
was secured by a headpiece of 
seed pearls and pear] flowerettes. 
* * * 
She carried a bouquet of white 
Amazon lilies and stephanotis. _ Just in Time for the 4th 
A TERRIFIC 
‘SPECIAL 
PURCHASE THAT SAVES YOU $11.25 
     
        
     
    
    country will participate in the 
week-long convention, Activities | 
conclude Friday, 
Giese, who lives at 236 Morton 
St. here, serves Michigan educa- 
tors in Oakland, Lapeer, Port Hu- 
ron and Livingston counties. 
During the convention Giese will   
    MRS. DOUGLAS J. TEASDALE 
  
  
    
         
  * * * 
The bride's parents are Mr. and 
iMrs, Cletus P, Ledford, of 301 
\Drace St., Rochester. 
igroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. 
\Edward J. Zackar St. of Gary, GENERAL PRINTING 
& OFFICE SUPPLY 
    
  
ballerina-length veil of white il- 
lusion., 
Matron of honor was Mrs. 
Joseph Beier of Gary, Ind., sis- 
ter of the bridegroom. Her hus- 
band served as best man. 
Following the ceremony the bri- 
dal party and the families had 
dinner at Inman’s Restaurant in 
Galesburg.   * * * 
After their honeymoon in North-   
  | 
  
Federal Job Roster 
Shrinks 2,178 in May 
  Call Offtee Machines 
Dept., FE 2-0135, General 
Printing & Office Supply 
      
  
  
SAVE ON 
Pe ioe ZS meg 
      
- Now is the time to stock up on stationery at a real 
savings! High grade rag paper, choice of 4 colors — 
double quantity, (110 sheets, 50 envelopes). 
Regular value 2.50 ............ How °4.89 Plus one box of matching Monarch size 
Total Value 3.75 ........... Both for *2,49 
‘FREE PARKING and FREE BUS TOKENS 
FE 2-0135   i Rochester Bride Is Wed | ; for bridesmaid, respectively, “a 
at West Michig: were Beverly Aim,.the bride's |! COATS cteaned and (Wek Ending Iuly 11 a Ss er n Ic 1gan cousin of Escanaba, and Jeanne | Fer CHILDREN’ 
i reapects, customer, clients | E. Morin, the bride’s sister. || Fisished by Approved For _ 79° 
ay ERS! fects ties ‘heep ROCHESTER ~ me Stadent Kenneth Teasdale of Troy at-, a. os CLOTHES ee 
material Sparkling always. No Parish at Western Michigan Uni- tended his brother as best man) - 
pasting, just slip papers in! versity was the scene of the re- and ushers were Robert Bishop of! FUR C OATS \ ¢ 
Handsome leather-greined covers. [cent wedding of Cleta Barbara Ferndale and Fred Bernhardt of | CLEANED & BLOUSES \ 
ideal for gold-stamping firm, Ledford and Edward John Zackar gg yscocrion wacibeta ennai GLAZED BY = 
Jr, The Rev. Donn Taylor per- ly following the ceremony at the|| FURRIERS DRAPES a formed the nuptials in the pres- home of the bride's parents. . METHODS U to 48” 
‘ence of the immediate families. The bride, a graduate of Lake | pays 2% for Storage Incurance, P 
    A crown of seed pearls held herjg 
     
     
   
    
    
         
         
      
    
  
  ( INSURED COLD NS ncalintecctebon STORAGE 
ORLON DYNEL rec Mrs. R. W. Lee dr. of Lake 
Orion served as matron of honor. 
Attending as bridesmaid and jun- 
      
     
      
           
     
   
     
           
        
     
|   
Orion High School, also attended | 
the Business Institute of Pontiac. | 
A graduate of Troy High School, | 
      
  the bridegroom, who also attended) SHIRTS BY EXCLUSIVE LUSTER-TEX 
Highland Park Jr. College, is now | Beevtitulty sundered sad NEI VENEATS PROCESS 
serving with the U.S. Air Force, |  "ssped inéuessey $] 19 $ 29 
with which he will be stationed Phos 2% of Volo 
in Alaske. SHOE Ask for our Special { etien, Minimo 
  REPAR Shoe Repair Service 
German Visits in Area lo , : 
AUBURN HEIGHTS — The Earl Z é 
Wrights, of 790 Nichols Dr., had as p 
their houseguest recently, Gunnar 
Heindl of Hamburg, Germany. The 
Wrights son, Gary, was an Ameri- 
can Field Service exchange student 
in Germany last summer and lived 
in the Heindl home.   
      
  822 PERRY at EAST BLVD. 
                MRS. EDWARD J. ZACKAR Jr. 
  A 
  
READY FOR THE’ HOT WEATHER 
MALLORY 
STRAWS and comfortable, cool in a 
sailor, Panama or Milan—al) li 
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summer! 
ALL ONE PRICE 
$95 
In the Swim with the Best! 
CATALINA 
and JANTZEN    
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DACRON BLEND TROPICALS and CORDS * 
You Don’t Have to Pay $40 or $45 
TAKE YOUR RICK AT JUST 
75        “Dunbrook” 
    
        
      
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the swim! We have a complete selec- 
tion of all the newest styles. 
SLEWS and. SLEWS of 
FINER QUALITY 
WASH ‘n’ WEAR 
SLACKS Up to $12.50 Values Look! Famous Imperial 4 @ ; 
BAN-LON KNIT 
SHIRTS 
The aristocrat of all ON SALE AT 
-knit sport. shirts! 4 
oS “Imperial” Ban-Lon , 
Look! Famous “Conclo” colorful contrasting 
WASH ‘n’ WEAR 
SPORT 
SHIRTS 
a and = tains its original 
always. 
Solid colors, whites, checks 
and prints — dacrons, cottons 
— open weaves — all sizes. 
Our Store Is Air-Conditioned ...Shop in Cool Comfort! 
Open Friday and Monday Nights ‘til 9 P. M. 
Bar nett’s a a 
150 NORTH SAGINAW—Next to Sears | s : ’ Lge 
é | 1453 
: } vk ae 
° . et ; j < : 
, “ ‘ i yj ; { i : 5 psy ‘ \ \ sf 7 / ra 
\ a fe Sent Eee ws ‘ * ‘ ; « one eee i ie \ 
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® This Season’s Newest Styles! 
© All the Newest Colors! 
© All Sizes 34 to 46! 
® Regulars, Longs, Shorts! 
ya © Alterations Free! — 
2 Pair $15 Fam ‘a 
~ ANY SUIT PURCHASED 
THURSDAY or FRIDAY WILL BE ALTERED TO WEAR FOR THE 4th. 
You Don’t Need Cash! 
JUST SAY ‘CHARGE IT’ », eae 5 Sah LOOK! 
@ Dacron Blends 
@ Gabardines 
@ Rayons -- Orlons 
@ All Grand Colors 
@ Sizes 28 to 42 
@ Alterations Free   
You'll Want to Buy ‘Em All — They're So Grand! 
i They’re tops! 55% Dacron. Just wash ‘em, hang to dry, ready to 
wear in no time. Exceptionally fine quality in cool surnrner colors, 
Sizes 30 to 42, Stock up now!      
   
          
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FREE 
PARKING 
    
    
        
  
  
 ‘THE PON TIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1099 Pps "PP 
=i 3 \\/wiziea (= 3 \ gas . . c> Uae | 
SHOP and SAVE at ’ i» 
tT aa ee , CHARCOAL) # cuapco GOLF. OLF \/, 
Jie Lite tip ae ee CRiQUETS || uicurer 24 TEES )\ BALLS; ” \ SRFOR. HOTTER COALS ~~ our a 30; | 3: COVER [PS 
feycelil A SIF iIN3ET ) fi Dime mt cA | v3 Fill |         
        
      
     
           
       
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a TT ew clonious 1'ye|    
         
         
           
   
       
    
   
       
       
   
    
SUPER-SAVINGS FOR 
WEEK-END FUN — Flag - Free American F | PA: f 
The ae 40S ore /2 PVE TUSSY aS 
          
   
        
  
       
     
     
    
           SOLID ; Ny CONSTRUCTION? 5 Mie HOLDS 4 TO * $8. We. 6 CHILDREN 
- yAL da fountain ot PERMA-STICK complete se sores. REGULAR p T \e 
Cunningham’ a) 
Wie - 5 @ CHOICE-OF SUMMER SHADES “THAN " DISCOUNT Gr). Gives lips that lustrous inviting look soe wh <.% : ye Ps 2 Rs 
     
        
        
       
       
   
  
       
          
    
      
     
          
   
         
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      C4 YOU SAVE $1.50 ON THIS SPECIAL OFFER 
FREE! ROBERT CURLEY CREAM } ts Aa et ‘ 
PF vick Creamy Flavor 
89c Half Gallon 
ICE CREAM 
SAVE 69: 
is AT ALL CUNNINGHAM $- wie) $1.20 SKOL TANNING CREAM 
BS1.00 MENNEN'S SPRAY Desir. 69‘ 
BRYLCREEM .......... 59¢ Loses Le Long Perfume, 89¢ 
OLIN Cc 
ATI¢ MILK of MAGNESIA .- "a al Zs - ns r . 5 Siris COSMETIC KITS ...(9ej3le =o Toothpaste        
    
    
       
                   
    
                     
         
  
  
             
           
   
          
            
      
          
  ANGELIUS MARSHMALLOWS y ee aw ous Fa 10 OUNCE BAG   
   
   
   
     
      
    
   
     , “pag ACEP TON init 50c EMILY ROGERS WHITE LIPSTICK, 19¢ 
HEDGE Wt : “Sao Wes SCHRATZ SUN VALLEY BUBBLE BATH OIL,$!.00 
SHEARS |" ose ACs Be Lt i a a : Aer USE Lae : 
$1.59 RAID BUG HOnLER 14-02. AEROSOL . - - 25¢ ORANGE 'S LICES rae. 19 
: Circus Marshmallow Peanuts 9 OUNCE BAG 
MELVILLE MINT & WINTS 9 OUNCE BAG .        
     
   
    
       .. OF 100 
    iy A 
       
SUNGLASSES SALE DAYS THRU SUNDAY 
         
       
          
       
       
   
   
    
      
           
   
   
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ITS NEW! ro ace PIMg | ACAPULCO tie oat “A : Ve BROWNIE 7 LADIES Black or 98 
wf rinetng high STARFLEX BREEZE SSAC | GIARITY. White Frames °M temperature ters INTL Y. part. oh Tenia wal, tc) MEN'S ‘BLACK 69: 
OW WORRY FREE SMOKING WITH STENT nee spceos FAN CHAMPION OR DEMI J   
$499 , yy $88 ‘iN N acMEN'S BELMONT A TAR GARD | —< 00 DEM! \4 
| DISCOUNT PRICES ON EASTMAN FILM 
a pe yp te 50° BLACK & WHITE FILM #620 ROLL.... 39‘ k * : 
‘SPI ham's\ » 0 $1.35 COLOR FILM #620 ROLL............ $795 
: 9 IAL Ki $495 $2.05 K135 KODACHROME 20 EXPOSURES ‘1 
Mo murens 9 Zyl 32.85 COLOR MOVIE FILM—8MM—25 FT.. 5224)    
      
     
       
           
   
              
    
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Package of 6 so-c-secersreress® 
9-0Z. COLD CUPS _ 33 
         
           
        
    
                  
        
          
       
     
      
        
   
         
    
        
            
      
     
   
    
    -ALL-RUBBE | Children, Ladies 2 gi dg Ad * 49; 
88¢ BEACH TOWELS 2554598 
R - GE nST” «Sleds. cccedicscasbsec   
  
      
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9” PAPER PLATES White—Package of 40 ........c0cceees 
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Pay Bills The Easy Way ‘EB Enrich wih Soothing tone CoP ON 
AMERICAN SOFSKIN PERTONE    a | fasta MOISTURE | if SUNTAN LOTION 4 f 
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  - exchange students, * 
“THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 1959   
pont Fami lies W ih 
  Host. ? Firemen Hired 
31 Foreign Exchange Studentsiat Walled Lake AVON TOWNSHIP -— number |kotas while spending the past year 
: of families in the Avondale School! as seniors in A m er ic an high 
District will play host to 31 foreign) schools, 
representing 
The group is a of 1,170 15 countries, who will arrive by : par . 
bus Saunday for a fro dk stay, Students who came from Europe, 
the area. Central and South America and 
* the Near and Far East under 
x* * 
| auspices of the American Field 
All the students have lived with — 
an American family in cities lo- 
cated in Minnesota and the Da- _ The students’ stay i in 1 the Auburn 
oe         Heights-Avondale Community is Replacements Chosen part of a three-week bus tour which 
the AFS provides for them at 
ithe end of their school year. 
|TO TOUR TECH CENTER s 
While here ‘the group will tour, WALLED LAKE—Two new fire- 
the General Motors Technical Cen-/™en have been hired by the City ter in Warren, A potluck supper ‘of Walled Lake as replacements, , 
with an evening of dancing has City Manager George A. Shaw an- Action to Cut Force ae 
  After Residents Protest jis: } 
Lake. Orion Awaits Centennial   
LAKE ORION — Wearing lip- 
stick and bald faces will be out- 
Lake Orion celebrates its centen- 
Local businessmen and business- 
women will make their first. offi- 
cial appearance in their centennial   garb tomorrow at the monthly|o¢ the local corps of ‘Keystone i\Chamber of Commerce meeting to 
ibe held at noon at the Villa Inn, Taboo Lipstick, Bald Faces 
lawed here this weekend. when|!{ Women are found wearing cos- tat this the acepted dre toe Donates Excess Wages plus.to three Little Unegons 
'|Emerling, a Democrat, © 
HAMBURG, N.Y. (AP)—Super- te eos tet Gb wen 
visor Raymond J. 
makes $1,200 more than he thinks! only 
Generves no be gave the sur-'91,200, } Emerling |board should pay the! supervisor 
ae ee 
  
the approaching weekend, and that 
metics without a license or men 
have not applied for their shaving 
permits, they may be fined and 
  
tossed into the old Orion jail set 
intersection. | fF up. at the main 
Arresting officers will be members 
Cops.” 
  
      been planned for Monday at Avon-' 
— | dale Senior High School. 
  
| 
| mes mex 
THE GREATEST SHOE 
VALUE IN AMERICA! 
-      
           
     
   Go frrst to 
eisners 
    luncheons at 
embassies, 
‘out the country, a local represen- 
| will achieve a better understand- 
ing of people from other iia- 
| tions. 
‘of the committee making arrange- 
|stay in this area, All 34 buses making the tours 
| this year will meet in Washing. |~* a 
ton, D. C. on July 15 where the = Township. 
students will be received by Con- 
gressional and other national | 
leaders. They also will attend | 
their respective | 
Then the students will go to tn’ | 
New York City area for four days!| 
countries, 
* * * 
The AFS is sponsoring the bus] 
tours in the hope that foreign stu-| 
dents will gain a broader view of. 
the American way of life through- ‘prior to returning to their home| 
tative said. 
Another aim is that the 560,- 
000 Americans who meet these | 
teenagers along their bus route | 
Mrs, Walter Riggle is chairman 
ments for the exchange students’ 
* * * 
Serving with her are Mrs, Wal- 
, ter Berger, Mrs. Hubert Gingrich, | 
Mrs. William Porter, Mrs, J! H.! 
Stone, Mrs. Ross White, Mrs.| 
Wilbert A, Lewis, Mrs. Earl Wil!   
json and Rosco V. Crowell, 
The students are from Argen-| 
‘tina, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, | 
‘Finland, France, Germany, Greece, | 
Indonesia, Italy, Japan, the Neth-| 
erlands, the Phillippine Islands, | 
Sweden and Turkey. 
  
The sun is so huge that although , 
only 1/100th of 1 per cent of its! 
mass will be used up in the next) 
|3,500,000,000 years, it would stiil 
jtake 57,000 freight cars to haul 
away the mass that the sum con- Construction of the shrine began 
‘sumes in one second.   
      
  
           
    
  ae 
iment. 
land Tayior has announced that he 
lis going west at least for a time, 
itheir duties to the Police Depart- ‘nounced yesterday. 
They are Adam Pengler, 40, of 
| Warren, and Jean Butters, 41, of 
13960 Beach Terrace, West Bloom- 
Chosen from 55 applicants for 
the $4,200 a year jobs, they are The women will be attired in 
long dresses, aprons and bon- 
nets, and the men will wear 
striped vests, string ties and cen- 
tennial bowlers with their suits, 
Some even have hand-engraved 
antique pipes and old-fashioned Lions Loose in New York 
NEW YORK (AP)—There are 
Lions in the streets of New York 
—about. 40,000 of them. Lions In- 
ternational is holding its annual 
convention here, Tuesday they 
staged a parade down Fifth Ave- 
    replacing Wilfred Hook and Rich- 
ard Taylor in the two-man depart- vaale re on : ' piers aéd authen- nue, with representatives of every 
° state and 50 foreign countries 
    
io SS Rubber 
Pats vad HEELS 
    
79° Children 
  NEISNER’S   
  
    WHILE YOU WAIT OR SHOP SERVICE     
Pengler has had nine years’ 
experience with the Warren Fire 
Department and Butters has 
served for six years with the 
Royal Oak Fire Department, 
according to Shaw. 
Hook, a fireman since last 
October, has transferred to the 
Walled Lake Police Department | 
‘due to an asthma affliction. Tay- 
‘lor had been a fireman here for| 
the past two years. 
Last month the City Council} 
acted at a special meeting to 
eliminate the two posts of regular 
firemen by transferring some of 
ment and letting the 18-man auxil- 
iary force maintdin the rest. 
This action raised virogous pro- 
tests from some 200 indignant 
‘residents in the area. 
Their strenuous denunciation of 
the plan—intended to save the city 
some money according to its pro- 
moters—forced the council to re- 
iscind the action, re-establishing | 
‘the two-man permanent force. 
Protestors said they felt the city 
fathers were leaving them open to 
jtoo great a fire risk. 
  
First Mass Scheduled 
MACKINAW CITY w — A first | 
mass will be held at St. Anthony's 
Catholic Shrine here Friday to. 
mark the opeding of the shrine.     last November.           
  
       
     
    
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METER and shay GUN 
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oi” 
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Takes Color - 
         
    
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   LAST! 
  “Judge” Paul R. Bryant warns! among the 25,000 marchers, 
NEISNER’S TO.$1 — VARIETY STORES    Re 
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  BUY TWO PAIR 
SAVE 46c Ivy League plaids, torpoon plaids that are os won      
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waistband, two large, handy pockets. These 
shorts ore comfortable, proctical, and well-made 
for plenty of hard weor, 
  
     
    
        They'll practically live in these oll sum- 
mer. Button shoulder straps, elasti- 
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cloth. Sizes 2 to 6, - 
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Children’s Short Sleeve 
Polo SHIRTS 
    shrink. Short 
ment of 
- Sizes 2 to     
      Little Boys’ and Girls’ 
Washable Cotton 
SPORT SHIRTS rh 
Fally washable, wil not fade or 
on 2 
      
\ PLAY 
SHORTS' 
Sale 
  
         
  stripe chombroy and denim in Blve, 
Tan, Grey. Sizes 2 to 8. 
GIRLS' Cotton Knit 
MIDRIFFS 
42 N. SAGINAW 
OPEN DAILY Mo ia ‘Mon., Fri, 9809 
&   ae we 
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        fe T A ® 
= ; 
Stocks Push MARKETS Police Shooting | Commission ‘\ 
| ee 4 ‘| : 
: ; The following are top prices | 
Up Slightly cong ie cal or uest Slated ip Market by growers and sold by es | 
et pushed big higher in early|them in wholesale package lots.| Puig e 
trading today but encountered re-|Quotations are -turnished by the by Detective’s Bullet City commissioners last night " Milton on B. Homey 
sistance. Detroit Bureau of. Markets, as of reed to a “let nature take it’s advisable for the state 
re i inated oak were to Be Probed July 9 ag Wess. - to take action against W Waterford 
mainly fractional, some going to al 7: course” attitude in the face of Township, too, H ion oo 
point or so. There were scattered a. Inquest into the shooting of Man- prospects that 7 pnd diy te. campaign against + Soe a 
losers, Detroit Produce ue] Gomez, a Mexican citizen dered ys ts Me ia : oma hans ship pollution of Crystal Lake. 
ae kill tiac police detec- sources Comm 
{ For the past two days the in- * eauits qed by a Foater pours Gets sewage treatment facilities to curb’ Commissioner Wesley J. Wood 
tive, will be held July 9 at 1:30 as i t { complaint. 
dustrials have been trying to (steele Red, DEL pes ces ewes: $3.7 . inton River pollution. voiced a new type 0 
Gearon tah ate 759|P-m. in the Oakland County Court-| - a ai | He said residents in District 6 were 
make new highs but have always Raspberries, lack, 24 pts. )..°::.. 6.50] house City Manager W alter K K. Willman breedi 
fallen below their peaks by, the |Strawberries, No. 1, 16 gts. ........ 5.00 , recommended that position for the @eTy about mosquitoes go 
elose. Brokers said the market bee The Mexican Ministry of For- state board hearing July. at! in the sew "rete va 
was encountering stock for sale |, ous don bchs. —_ " ccces ce 00] em Relations requested the in- which it wil] be decided whether to! the Clinton below existing ‘sew- 
as the list came within range of |Beans, green, fist, bu. 325) quest after Gomez, gq 53-year- issue the order. jage treatment plant, 
the May highs. a ee, round, pu. .-.....-... 250, old manual laborer of 38 W. Wil- Willman said he would. attend) kt 
The threeday July 4 weekend Boots, topped, dot, a 2.38 eS = _— = cea the hearing as Pontiac's represent-| The Ap 3 Regu oe Lgponce4 
. - Broceall, No’ |. dos. behs. ........ 2.50 y ve August Kh. Mar- ative. sion. said Pontiac pollution consti- 
| reat — reluctant to ex Cabbage. bi Si coerecreetre . 135| tinex after police were called to tutes a public nuisance and ® 
= Gabbese, Reds bu 122200000200022 3:00) Gomez’ apartment by neighbors. Commissioners showed no ap- [health menace. It said fish and 
Cabbage, Sprouts, bu. 1.50| They said Gomez was apparent- parent interest in scheduling an- | )j)ant life is being destroyed be- 
New: York Stocks Cauliflower, No.1, dos. 250 ly beserk. oe vero ee fond po win ~ |cause the present plant inadequate- 
are. He. 1, GOR. cosa-cscessecase 1. ; ) provail o city’s $3,300,000 plan |}, treats sewage trial 
Pigurés Oe necmaal SS po eighths| ears. ai we 600 « rane = ae ee a O for more facilities. eS aste. om sad em 
maeensers, ¢ wale S. . 1c. » $.50) s st, . . ; 
senshi By foie ts ee YR) ill be the jury's duty to tin General obligation bond issues to| Last month, a State Health De Allied «118 Kelsey Hay ae Onions, green, ‘5;whether the shooting was in the . _ Fn : . _ Peatioe Press Photo build a new plant and add to the| partment official described Pon- 
i tited Strs eee $0.4 Eonneoots ..- 188 Pardiey, Foot doz. behs “* 4 |line of duty, and to establish the COMMAND CONFERENCE — Pontiac's 2nd of Flint, during training exercises at Camp Mec- |old one have been turned down by tiac's pollution problem as ‘‘the 
um 36.1 Bee ss ae 34 Peas, Yo. 1, 3.50| cause of death. Battalion commanding officer, Major Frank D. Coy, Wis. Looking on are Lt. Richard Schurrer Pontiac voters three times in three! a in the state.’’ 
eg ae goa ee & 463 Peppers. ce ie Heal * * * Thompson (second from right), 967 Berwick (left), 437 Lynch St., and Capt. Dale A. Rector, | years. 
} Am Can ..---2 ot Libby McN&L 11-6| Radiupes red, doz. seeeeenesse --- $0; Martinez shot Gomez through the! Blvd., confers with 333rd Training Regiment 4830 Linwood Dr., the battalion's operations ex x * 
Am M é& 95. Pie, ® MY -- $0.4) Rhubarb. outdoor. dos. bchs. ase 0) heart after the Mexican refused to| commander, Col. Harold G. Dumanious (right) officers. “We should appear * petore the Detroiter Cha 
Am Motors \.. 43.6 roew’s ....... 29 /8q Ttal : -++ 2.50) heel his pl : : | state board and. explain what we, [ 
AmNGas .... 62.4 Tone § Gas .. 42 |Squash, Summer bu ** Foo) heed his pleas in Spanish to stop) —= 
' recon reg 2, Loriitard “ py x; vsesse- 3 00) swinging a 14-inch butcher knife. | | have _ to —. then Aus 
i ace: assaf Reckless Boat | Anec'n's ‘wae ie Mann “i Bs Turnips, topped, bu. 22.20.0002... 2. | aera AROUSED | ‘Youth Injured lit will ray up es the state to decide! ec ESS q Ing 
' naconda .... 63. . 52. GREENS Alberto Becerra, Mexican Ib | wae . Armco Stl .... 7447 May D Str ... 50. t consu what to do. 
if Armour & Co. 27.3 Mead CP ..... 4 Cabba °. xo 1. bu. $1.25\in Detroit, said the inquest was C h I t | WALLED LAKE—A Detroit man 
' a as ee Bee we a ee : in Tas nto Willman explained that without | 
; Balt & Ohio i +67 Mergen, Lino 388 ical ny ay ics enallayen a aeeaarst acest 180 soe! for because there were many) ‘ ro s-* = | voter approval of general obliga- Hees eharged yesterday with reck- 
“| Boeing Air... 37.6 Mols Hon 8 Mustard. No. L, DU, ec eee eee ; = ‘que ionable aspects’’ in the shoot-| / : ‘Cou nty Truck ieee ‘bend Mtencing the ty wil | ess operation of a motorboat in a 
Rend aes case a8 —_ a: 33 |Spinagh, bu. .............-sse-s--.-. 1.50| D8- He said Mexico newspapers | U Arlor In rainin inevitably default on the state's | warrant signed by Assistant Oak- 
4 cages BO. ' 53.2 T 6 Akh no-lcoeoducccrecnoces 50| w i is en . : . 
Bore Wai ne $1 Monsen ¢ $3.2 ‘urnips, bu 1.50 were branding Pontiac police as | James S. LaBenne, 19, of Detroit, | erder to build more facilities, \land County Prosecutor Edward H, 
print May .....233. Bot Wheel -.. 184 SALAD GREENS “murderers” and that the Mexican) was in fair condition at Pontiac} |Shigley. 
ra grun Balke ...1024 jfuciier Brass 29 €/gndive, bu. ....6......6-.00-20000 $1.75|Community in Pontiac was up in| |General Hospital today with rib,| ‘Once we default, the state will) Geraid McQuade, 25, will be 
F sevcoe 28-2 Morray Re df ES OO Sa ae ea 1.75 | Ss over the case. Me is, —Members a urrer, ynch St.,' fac 7 injuries then seek a court order by which 
t cue Me en 33: percocet + gen 5; 5m th CAMP McCOY, Wis. —Members ard C. Sch 437 Lynch S e, and leg injories suffered) th k der by which arraigned here Saturday before 
Calum ax ie 223 Nat Carn rR... 64 iottase, besten. be. ce, 238 “What the inquest will show is hof Pontiac’s 2nd Training Battalion! and Lt, Ernest E. McCracken, when his auto smashed into the/the city can issue general obliga- Justice of the Peace Herman A. 
ij Can Dry pee see 313 Nat Cpe. ee a8 Lattues, one pga 25 whether there was any. negil-|are chalking up high scores on 25931 Powers Rd., Farmington. rear of an Oakland County Road) ae ape et ee ne, ee ; 
Capital ‘ai it Ny" Sentai. 38.4 MoMAlNG, Wy co oisocece nce c nc cieeees pare, tw play, or whether this [all phases of their training pro- ; sine ae if _— E i iaaiaa truck Tuesday after- srl e explaine S- Walled Lake Police reported 
Gass. dk_ oo ee OF Ay. 45.1 was done strictly in the line of |gram as they scurry through their! Troo C : that seven people 
need AoE Le Nor Pee - $83 Poultry and Eggs duty,” Dr. Monroe said. last days of field exercises here.|Bailey, 6145 Highland Rd., Mil-_ lt gen ard ae — CONSIDERING ORDER | Sunday about Mg ta 
. . tf. Waive . P iti § al 2 p ’ 
Giise & eves. se. Ohio ce *2 DETROIT POULTEY He emphasized that the inquest! ee praised by top Army in- ford; Lt. Albert A. Stragier, 43899 was ‘going et on ‘bese At present, the state is consider-' which allegedly was hazarding 
Glare Equip .. 1.6 Owens CHE, $y 4! DETROIT, June 3 (APyPrices paid|‘‘doesn’t preclude any further court spection teams who conduct/North Gratiot Ave., Mount Clem-|road near Pontiac road, Oxtord|"® 2” order which the city would) bathers in Walled Lake. 
Colg Palm ee Sa re Air . by jlauality, live poultry : trolt for NO 1 action,” throug, rigid inspections of ens: Lt. Francis A. Marvin, 16;Township, when an eastbound be able to keep pace with until one| The craft. which also held three 
| Golum Gas... 22. 5ann Air. 735|, Heavy type hens 17; light type hens x* *« * Army reserve troops and training | for . a year from today. It is possible,| ’ 
N Con x Gas : 0.1 | a — 417 3 os 4 Ws. ge cing A “t3:| He said the jurors will be select-| 47°45: these civilian-soldiers are a ine Ri _ omega en a = om though, that the time-table could —— all of Detroit, reportedly 
‘ Gonsum Pw .. 54.7 Parke 8,0" .'112.2/24) caponettes under § Ibs. 21-22: over/ed by leafing through ishowing an amazing  transition|)°™eS ©. 5n€ : “0 . or re be speeded up so that a court washed Dianne Pratt, daughter of 
Cont Bak ..... 50 19. |5 lbs. 22-24; breeder turkeys, small type y ng through a telephone| 5 . (er Rd., Birmingham LaBenne said the dust was so 
Pa conwace Af yp a : - ing : eee . ‘police officer Leland Pratt, off a 
Cont a a $3 ee osi Cols... 28.5| (includes Beltsville Whites) 26. - book, The doctor said some sil} OM tank to basic combat ‘in- thick that he couldn’t see the truck order would come sooner, if one) raft. She was not injured. 
‘ont Cop Sh ig ventoecs SAS ” fan trainin Helping to make sible the ag . lis necessa: 
Cont Meter ... 11-6 er and should” be Mexicans. | fantry g. go m pos: dven by Jack G , ry ' 2 
Gant Be Phelps D.---- $2 | DETROIT, June 30 (AP) —Eggs fo.b.| Unlike a regular court trial,| Specially impressive is the rec- “high ratings ef the instructions ee yi a ee Oe Commissiotiers expressed little! According to Walled Lake Police 
OPE $5 Phill Pet . 47.6| Detroit in case lots federal state grades:| jurors wi ‘lord of the battalion's instruction) teams are the senior instructors. (70). 2 ers surprise that the state has threat- Chief James A. Decker, the four 
Corn P 18 jurors will be able to ask P 
Curtis Pub... 11.3 Prect s . — Co oe A jumbo 43; extra large able to as QUES) cams These teams have received| They are: M,Sgt. William E, Township, working on the road ened to intervene in Poutiac’s also were throwing beer bottles 
> --- o> Pare Oll....-. 419/443; large 29-48; medium, 31-32; email tions of the witnesses, for it will] thing less See LL eCeIve ie aa ahead of him. onmac’s S°W" into the lake and driving between 
Be Seag .. 33 Repub Sti..... 77 | reported, Checks 6. to 27 be the jury which will render the nothing less than the highest pos-| Bennett, 402 South Harrison St. | | ewandowski was uninjured age treatment problem. = ” 
Deas Aine... 12 yaa Drug. . sal Commerctalty graded: ho 38-39: decision. sible grade — that of ‘‘superior.’’| Rochester; Sp. 4 James P. Don- | deputies atl "| Commissioner John A. Dugan and among swimmers. 
Du Post ....280 Reval Dut... G15 Bree ‘at: be 88-31!) meatum 28; gus Chief Assistant Oakland County) Im praising the Pontiac group, abices, 1066 Lone tres BA. BE ee ee : 
Fast Pe i ecrewsy Ot |. 368| extra large 39: large oS: medion 36- 31:| Prosecutor George F. Taylor said, the Army inspection teams ppc gene Got Teeth Into P oblem eae ey Ce ee el aka 
Eaton Mfg ... 72.4 St Reg Fee.-- 48:7 |Grade B large 27. there will be approximately 14 wit-| singled out senior instructor, 8. | *4 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lake. roole should be called. This committee ground lamb and oatmeal, and. is 
El Auto L, J — Roed.... 484 ss nesses, including Martinez, his t. Arthur H. McQuinn, 33399 | Concludin i ol ian in. SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP)—If you| was set up recently to consider the almost always eaten at ‘Scottish 
Bl & Mus... 73 Sehr ome... 184 Livestock partner, patrol ea Sg Quinn, uding the list of senior in- ,.¥6 a GI dental plate, it may,need for more sewage treatment societies and Robert Burns clubs 
mer a [pete ee rolman Gerald Na-| Loon Lake Shore, Drayton Plains | structo » Pfc.. Hubert W. Ed-) see 
RR ....>. 11.7 Sincleir oe! . y structors are _ Hu > : d ; 
Bx Celt? cA pases OP 6 catia See ee varre; Sgt. John DePauw, super-| as the finest enlisted instructor |wards, Jr. 101 Glass Rd., Orton-| Sides precreng or — «<> —— — _ meetings. 
Firestone... 64 Sperry Ra .... 26 || salable 800. catty trade iveatibar steers visory officer at the scene; Dr.| they had ever seen. ville; Sp. 4 David J. Fry, 326 Oak-| h . 
as | pack Se 5s br rey ‘ai. 52.2/8M@ heifers moderately active, steady Isaac C. Prevette, coroner who} : : land Ave., Pfc. Richard T. Gron-| at the Citizens and Southern Na- 
-- 108 Std Ol Ind .. 46.1/% strong; cows steady; early sales good | pronounced Gom 4 Heading the team of instructors, |. i : tional Bank. 
Pree Sul .. 27.8 * 514\to low choice steers 26.25-28.00; few ez dead, and sev- ini i ski, 6821 Westway, Troy, and Sp. 5, 
Frueh Tra .. 27.1 Std Otl NJ... .are training officers Lt. James M. ; Teller Mary Neatherly | asked 
Ae Den matt Stevens, JP .. 33.4|loads choice steers 1,000-1,150 Ibs. 28.50-| eral eye-witnesses. : John H. Mills, 222 E. 4 y { 
Gen Bak m . $3.6 Stevens. JF -: 11:3/20.50; one load mixed high choice and Taylgr, 659 14-Mile Rd., Birming-|J0" H. Mills, 222 Farlmoog Blvd./him for identifiecation when he| 
an * $43 sun Of * 58.5) prime 1200 Ib. steers 30.50; good to low ham: Lt. Donald W . : k *« * 
— Elec a. $49 Bun i pap .. 412|chotce heifers 26.00-27.25; few loads am; . nald W. Ralph, 280 | presented a government check for) 
Gen Fas... $6 Swift & Co .. 422 ae 20.80; standard if ® Daines St., Birmingham; Lt. Rich-| The Pontiac and area reservists! cashing. 
oe ee Bs We. 26 slutility mixed offerings 21 50-24 00: rains Draw -| will train here, amid almost daily; He took out his dental plate 
gr HET DS cee con See eS i en ee ee : ansamer u ype © utchers ee y to — “asion: n the high| which correspon to the number : 
Gillette... 40.4 6 y: : 
foe Bice, Ee enemas De GM Researchers [ars wu ay sh weer oe ck | Be GE wes : °. m ; rf « ! 
Goodyear -.--148 Oo Pec” |.: 3461 and 2 205 Ibs. 16.40; fA rag im rices ° ee __|_ The check was cashed. d 
6S” ---- Pe Our ae Lin .. 41.2} 190-221 Ibs. 16.50; No. 2 and 3 230-260 Create New Unit | Greyhouna ©... 32.7 Unit Aire .... 52 |ibs. 14.50-15.25; No. 2 and 3 260-300 
Bal On. ...119.2 Unit Pruit . .. 34 |Iee 13.75-14.35, mixed grades, sows, 300- 
Home Wi ABS UBOME gs SELg00 te, Ut aata. 8: No. 2 and 3 400-80) Cora ay _ ’ TSTANDIN ie eee rH US Lines . 325 Wssiors “anlable 125. Choice and prime| wor, aa The bread grains) A new polymers department has 
nduet Ray 274 US Rub ...... 65 |vealers 33.00-36.00, few up to 37.00; e in moderate demand at firm been established in the General 
ae ee we oe oe riandard and rgod 25.00-33.00; cull and|prices today during the first sev- Motors Corporation research lab- | 
nsplr oe -:: 39.4 | or ees (a6 3, BneeP—Salable 300, Trade not estab-|€ral minutes of transactions on the|oratories to be headed by Dr. a 
ot’ Bus Mch 14a74 Weste EI .... 95 "Shed. Board of Trade but other grains'Philip Weiss, 1338 Southfield Rd., 
me Bey i Wise he ce. 303 and soybeans were steady to Birmingham. 
nt paver «.-18-7 Wootworth _... S3 Birmingham Credit Unit ? — Formerly part of the electro-| RIGID WALL POOLS ba, 
int Tel & Tel 40.4 Young S&W . 4441.) _ : eat ran up advances of, as|chemistry and polymers depart- oe 
34 Crh Coal. , Fnast Ghat ..120.6 Honored at Outstanding |much as a major fraction within! ment, the new organization will 
- . _- ja few minutes despite a rather continue specializing in the field i Vs 
DETROIT. Say as ae i » The Credit Bureau of Birming-/heavy volume of hedge selling. ‘of high polymers casey las- K O05 EL 
y The/ham has been cited as being one : ; os as 
Associated Press. Some of the buying was estab-|tics, adhesives and special coat- 
a ust. Re Ralts vit. stocks of five most outstanding credit lishment of long. speculative posi-| ings | 
Net change .... +24 ot 3\bureaus during the past year in'tions\and on flour mill accounts.| Weiss joined the General Motors 
oon Weds ...3630 1445 960 3203 the Associated Credit “ Bureau’s} Corn. slipped major fracti Prev. Day......340.6 143.8 95.8 228.1, actions on’ Research Laboratories in 1957. 
Week Ago......3363 143.3 94.6 225.6|Fifth District, which includes Mich-| distant contracts. 
Year Age s.1.03088 983 S17 1763/82, Mlinois, Indiana, Kentucky, : ° : 88 
1988 Bator ¥ | 168.1 103.6 30.3 Wisconsin, Ohio and Ontario, Can- Grain Prices News in Brief 
1958 High.......3120 1368 98.7 2143/22. Low....... 234.7 809 72.9 &| Wayne L. Combs, of 861 Coolidge CHICAGO GRAIN | 
DETROIT sTOcKs Rd., manager of the Birmingham _gmesgos July 1 (AP) — Opening) Two fishing poles, a fishing reel, 
J. Nephier Co. Credit Bureau at 139 West Maple) Wheat— BOP eevee ees 67% and a mattress were stolen by, : w 
rane decimal paints are eignthe Rd., received the special any Hood serenade 1.08% Dee. seeesiee ove thieves who broke into the | e| Values to 29.95 
oes, & a, Co.* 23 258 tion during the 45th International Dec- ----..-- 1.95% | Rye— of Frances Timming, 14418 Fagan 
Rows "Gear" Co Soe in is is * Consumer Credit Conference held ‘May none: RR Be cn Rd., Holly Township, Oakland A Spacious 5 Ft. Diameter x 14 In. Deep 
Bee Sitearcos. ila 1z4(recently in Dallas, Tex. Tp 1.28% Mee = ia County* sheriff's deputies reported FLORSHEIM : 
wire. si Be a eet ie. Teeny Yh aa cin JARMAN seeesisee ‘ : + ean aceite 
Rudy Manufacturing co 14” 133] ‘The watermelon is said to have|Mar. “..... 18 Bep 912 | py KORSEAL LINER R $12 00 A 
ledo Edison Co......... ” 17 «1 be = Dec, : i) mmage Sale, 487 S, Sanford, ° . 
Teno. onl sale; bid and asked. joriginated in Egypt. Jul “Sus in ar * l9 to 6 Sat., Mon. & Tues. adv. | eg 
  © HEAVY DUTY NETTLETON Now STEEL MESH 
© EXTRUDED RIM we ) 98 Taylor Made 
Huskies 
Crosby Square 
McCOY HOLDS LINER IN | 
PLACE to 
OTHER SIZES up to 12’ x 18” At SIMILAR SAVINGS 
INFLATABLE POOLS PRICES 
START At $] 98 4 Sizes 
      
  MEN’S THICK SOLE CANVAS 
OXFORDS 
and Gore $ 
LOAFERS   
    PROFESSIONAL SWIM MASKS Reg. 2.00 Now 1.25 eee ee eee ee Se nee ee ee ee ee ee a Sl A A oe SS ee 
LIFEVESTS COAST GUARD APP. Reg. 4.00 Now 2.98 ee ee ee NT eS TS Se ST SE ee 
LARGE SWIM FNS Rep, 8.00 Now... 1.98 
Complete Selection of Sand. and 
Water Toys and Outdoor. Games 
| TOYTOWN ‘SUMMER FUN 
HEADQUARTERS 
8B N. SAGINAW ALL SIZES Values to 6.95       
    
    "nang sel Pony ee eh 
exchange students, visited the-plant yesterday. The 16 foreign 
students, who were guests of Pontiac families for the past three 
' days, have just completed a year of study in high schools of near- 
by states. Petey PO OTS ee sinks ardent Sande Poot. =. , tiatigh exhale 
students sponsored by the American Field Service take a close 
jook at truck assembly operations during a visit to GMC Truck 
& Coach Division here yesterday. T. C. Fellows, superintendent 
of the truck diviston, describes the work to (from left) Liliane 
Lauthelin of France, Kikumaro Nakazawa of Japan, Tim Roth of In the Heart of Downtown 
Pontiac, Next to Enggass 
Jewelers ‘and Cunningham's 
Bee Denmark and Fritz Jantschke of’Germany, Some 35 teenagers, a) ‘ : ‘