ee The Weather | U. 8. Weather denies Forecast Cooler tonight; showers tomorrow (Details on Page 2) THE PONTIAC PR / 117th YEAR’ kk kkk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, CRAKE OVER PAC UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL "ASSOCIAYED PRESS ‘Quakes S x kek * xk &k * x &k * £ lectrical Paralysis NEW YORK (UPI) — The worst power failure in New. York Cityldies and flashlights. One dealer re- history paralyzed a vast area of|ported he sold 3500 candles in two, Upper Manhattan for up to 13 hours|hours. Other dealers were charg-| yesterday and early today, leaving|ing five cents for candles that usu- half a million residents sweltering /ally sell for a penny. during the most intense heat wave of the season. * x & There was a heavy run on can- | Some children boight up huge. stocks of tgese candles and went: ‘around sell them ‘for as much | i] * ‘The heaviest one-day use of pow- as 10 cents. er in the city’s history—attributa- ble to 90-degree heat—was blamed for the massive power failure which knocked out all electricity in a 500-block section of the Upper East and West Sides, leaving ten- ants without cooling devices, eleva- tor service, lights, radio and tele- vision. * * * By 3 a.m. EDT today, power had been restored to the West Side area affected—from 59th street to 110th street and from Central Park west to the Hudson River, Service to the East Side section was off in a stretch bounded by 73rd and 110th streets and the East River and Fith avenue. This area was expected to be back to normal by daybreak. . The power failure, resulting from peak use of air conditioners and fans, occurred at 2:49 p.m. EDT yesterday when seven gables of Consolidated Edison Co. burned ut on the west side, knocking out elec- trical service in the area. SHUTS OFF OTHERS The company in turn decided to shut off the remaining 13 cables of the network, situated in the East Side, because, officials said, they would not have been able to handle the load along. To have left them on, Con Ed officials explained, could have touched off a power shortage that might have lasted months instead of only hours. The power failure, coming on one of the hottest days of the year, disrupted some subway service for hours, knocked out elevator’-serv- ice in towering apartment bui ings that abound in the affected area, forced some .restaurants to close and shut off the police depart- ment’s traffic light network, result- ing in a chaotic situation for cars, Cadillac Head Sees ‘60 taxis, buses and trucks. * * * Twelve hospitals in the area, forced to use auxiliary power, can- celled all but emergency opera- tions. One hospital was -forced ta transfer 200 units of blood plasma to an unaffected hospital. . In another, a 17-year-old boy ‘Was about to undergo an appen- dectomy when the power went off, He was transferred to an- other hospital, At another hospital a baby was delivered by flashlight. x &* * Oppressive Heal Plagues Nation Summer's Punch Takes Zip Out of Millions as Muggy Weather Holds By The Associated Press Summer’s dog days, the season of high temperatures, excessive humidity and short tempers, had a lot of people barking and growl- ing today—about the weather. Midsummer's stiffest one - two punch took a lot of zip out of mil- lions as the long spell of muggy weather held a sticky grip across the country. The oppressive heat has held fest for a week and longer in many areas. Temperatures daily have soared into the 80s and 90s and above 100 in some sun-baked. regions. Little or no relief comes at night, with high humidity -shoving the discomfort index to the point ‘of ‘‘miserable.” Showers and rainstorms have afforded temporary relief. The wet weather has been a daily fix- ture on the nation’s weather map, mostly in the form of showers during the afternoon and evening. Some violent thunderstorms and heavy rains also have occurred during. the heat wave. Monday’s weather was typical. Thunderstorms broke out in all of the Southern states from Dag- gett, Calif. and Las Vegas, Nev., eastward to Georgia and Florida during the afternoon. The heavi- est activity was in the warm hu- mid airflow from Texas to south- ern’ Michigan eastward into the Appalachians and extended into the Atlantic coastal areas by night time. : ‘Little: change in the heat, ‘hu- “tnidity and showers was indicated for, the soutiiern plains and most ie ‘arena. cnet of Gop AMlestéstppt: Riv. «. UNFILLING EXPERIENCE that cavity will have to wait another day.’ Thousands of extra policemen’ were rushed into the affected area, 'rte neighborhoods in the West! |The police saturation proved ef-| fective. Early today a police official (Continued on Page 2, Col. = UPL Telephoto ‘Miss Schlansky, but That's all New York Oe dentist I; J. Lauer could tell*his patient when his drill — and many larger pieces of machinery — went dead in the midst of a mas- sive Manhattan power failure Monday. The failure was blamed on peak use of air-conditioners and fans during a prolonged heat wave. Prices Same If Steel OK FROM OUR NEWS WIRES DETROIT — The auto in dustry may be able to hold the line on prices this year if the steel industry does not raise its prices as a result of the current steel strike, James M. Roche, general manager of the Cadillac Di- vision of General Motors, sa id yesterday. Roche, speaking at a press preview of the 1960 Cadillacs, pointed out that Cadillac held pretty close to its 1958 model prices dur- ing the 1959 model year and said “It is obvious that we would like to hold the price line again this year.” * * * But he refused to say definitely that Cadillac would hold the line on prices again this year. Cadillac, he added, will run into serious production problems if the current steel strike con- tinues* much beyond another month, Roche admitted his company, which will begin 1960 model as- sembly Sept. 8, would be reduced to building a few samples by its Oct. 2‘public announcement date junless its steel supply is replen- ished, “Even after a settlement,’’ Roche said, “It will take some time for the mills to begin operating again and: for supplies to reach fs.’ » » & Cadillac missed one full month of production on the 1959 model year last fal} because of a United Auto Workers strike. Despite this, Roche said, its model year pro- duction of 142,272 was third best in the company’s history, Cadillac was the first to hold a 1960 model preview and was fol- lowed today by Oidsmobile, an- other General Motors line. < Pontiac and Buick will preview their 1960 cars on Thursday =a Friday, Ford Motor Co.’s new Falcon will make its debut before news- men in 21 cities over two-way closed circuit television, the com- pany announced yesterday. The Falcon, Ford’s new smaller car, will be shown and discussed by Ford officials at company head- quarters in Dearborn. Newsmen around the country then will .be invited to ask questions ,over the circuit, . bogge St Noten will be the first of ‘its according to The- atre Network Television Inc. which (Continued on, Page 2, Col. 6) JAMES M. ROCHE Featured Tomorrow Whether you're a parent, or a student returning to school or college next month, you'll want to read The Pontiac. Press Back- To-School section in tomorrow's paper. | . * * * In it you'll find scores of pic- tutes of local teenagers and youngsters modeling what the well dressed student will be wearing this fall. ae 7. « And best of | ail, *® everything here in Pontiac area stores, the setting for most of the pictures. x * Besides* the shopping | there’ be several stories about | what's new: in Pontiac schools | Wiis tat, and—helpful’ advice for tips, “parents with children going an — rs |which includes several high-crime| Decide | wages, AUGUST 18, 1959 — 30 PAGES hake Northwestern T Mitchell Report on Steel Strike Shocks New York fo Be Released Ike, Labor Secretory Action Might |Side, to prevent looting last night. | Spur Negotiations WASHINGTON (#— \President Eisenhower and! i Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell decided today to make public basic facts be- hind the steel strike in hopes of Spurring negotia- tions and a settlement. The information gath- iered by Mitchell as Eisen- hower’s personal fact find- er, will be made public for Thursday newspapers. Mitchell said they will cover prices, productivity, prof- its and a few related matters. The secretary told a news con- ference the information covers a major part but not all of the facts he has been assembling from industrial and government _ sources. Mitchell said the report will be dations for action. we *w * He said he made no action pro- posals this morning in a 43-minute conference with Eisenhower. He told questioners the project- ed release of facts ‘is not intend- ed as intervention. We hope as a result of these background sta- tistics that the parties will bargain a little harder and reach a settle- ment.” Asked whether he interprets this as increased pressure on industry and labor, Mitchell said he would not interpret it at all. He said he hopes the facts will clarify some of the issues and in- form the public on them. * * * The session with the major business item on a list of engagements which brought Eisenhower back to the White House for a one-day break in his work-rest holiday at his Gettys- burg, Pa., farm home. Later in the day he had an ap- pointment with New York's Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. He planned to go back to Gettysburg shortly after that. Mitchell said the voluminous data on the steel strike, now in its sixth week, are in the process of being printed. He said will make them available -and discuss them at a news conference in his office at 2 p.m. EDT Wednesday, “for Thursday release.” A reporter. asked whether material will the other. * * * “T think that is for the public to judge,’’ Mitchell replied. Representatives of both sides of the steel controversy, Mitchell (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) the favor one side. or Back- fo- »-School Tips | : shown may be purchaséd right. In Today’s Press Comics ............. ese e eee p> County News ............... 12 Editorials —-.................. 6 Markets. ................... 23 Obituaries ................... 5 Sports 0... eee, 20-21 Theaters ....... ..19 TV and Radio Programs 29 Wilson, “arl ............ ..29 Women's Pages ......... 17-18 a factual one with no recommen- | Mitchell was Ralph Longo, hopper in 1 Long Island ie a aoe GRASPS FOR LIFE — To let go of the ropes would have meant death for New York laborer 50. Longo held on, was rescued and even wanted to go back to work at the sand He was trapped 90 Death Only Seconds Away Wet sand and went down into stones that had Hits ‘Booby-Trap for Income Tax’ By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. State Sen. L. Harvey Lodge and ‘his 21 GOP colleagues won't wave the flag of surrender to Democrats as long as anything resembling an income tax is part of truce talks. And the corporation profits tax falls into this category, the Oak- land County Republican said yes- terday. “They (Senate Republicans) would go for anything reason- able which would not entail the | Lodge said. Lodge Sees No Truce on Profits Levy: ‘fense director, thun-| ports He was back in his Pontiac law politically - stalemated Legislature was in recess—still unable to come to terms on how to solve Michi- gan’s seven-month cash crisis. rh ee In the light of reports from Lan- sing that Democrats might be will- ing to go along with the Republi- can-favored one cent increase in the use (sales) tax, if-Republicans would buy a corporation profits tax, Lodge was asked if Senate eventuality of an income tax,” |Republicans would accept such a compromise. 7 Rain, Rain, but Still No Relief From the Heat Thundershowers are forecast for thegPontiac area tomorrow. But it wilf remain hot, with the high in the 80s. s Tonight will be mostly fair and ing between 48 and 65, the U.S. Weather Bureau reports. For the next five days tem- peratures will average about four degrees above the normal high of 81 and normal low. of 61. Thursday will be somewhat cooler but Saturday will be warm again, the weatherman said, Precipitation for the period will otal near one inch in showers ind ‘thundershowers Wednesday ind again about Saturday. Sixty-eight ording in downtown Pontiac pre- eding 8 a.m. The reading et p.m. was 80. a little cooler, temperatures rang- | was the lowest re-| | BULLETIN KANSAS CITY WW — Seven or more gasoline storage tanks ex- ploded today shooting flames inte a group of firemen and po- licemen, injuring a dozen or | More. * * * Flames shot 200 feet into the air and engulfed a_ business building across the street. There was no immediate esti- mate on the number of casual- ties. Authorities earlier had or- dered evacuation of the area as the fire, which started in a fill- ing station, spread and began licking at the tanks. x* * * In addition to the firemen showered with flames by the blast, an undetermined number earlier were overcome by fumes and smoke. At least three were rushed to a hospital and eight or more were lying on the ground minutes Monday, Sa fel | AP Wirephete completely buried at times. cement covered him when he the hopper to dislodge some big seeped into it. | | Tremors Center in Yellowstone Park Regions Montana Dam Feared Near Collapse After 4-Hour Earth Siege HELENA, Mont. () — A series of.earthquakes shook the Northwest for more than four hours Monday night and early today. The quakes centered in the area in and around Yellowstone National Park. They were felt in varying inten- sity from British Columbia on the North, to Oregon, across Wash- ington, Idaho, Montana aad parts of Wyoming. Just west of Yellowstone, Heb- gen Dam was threatened with collapse from the original quake at 11:30 p.m, and a series of tremors that followed. A doceor manning Ashton, Idaho's Hospital said he treated half a dezen minor injury cases from West Yellowstone, Mont., this morning, following the night’s earthquake. Northward along the Madison River that flows from the dam, officers alerted hundreds of resi- dents. to prepare for immediate evacuation. The nearest city is Ennis, Mont., 45 miles north, with an estimated 600 residents. THREE PLANES CHECK Three planes — two from here, |another from Butte, Mont. — were isent to the dam before dawn to “Compromise, " Lodge office for a few .days while the|dered. ‘That's a booby-trap com- promise. The corporation profits tax is nothing more than a first step towards an income tax.” He said such a tax would be “unfair” as it would hit corpora- tion-owned businesses and not family-owned, “It’s a matter of fairness,’’ he said. “‘A tax has to fall across the entire board, which this wouldn't.” If this compromise isn’t accep- table to Senate Republicans, what would be? * * . r He named a tax exemption on industrial processing to bring in $18 million or his own bill pro- posing a tax on the transfer of stock ($50 million). “We are perfectly willing to com- promise as long as it doesn’t have any form of a “personal income tax,”’ the cigar-smoking Lodge re- iterated. He became minded that the evenly-split: House had on several occasions worked out a compromise, only to be repelled by what some observers called ‘‘the politically stubborn Senate which won't give an inch.” “We won't be panicked because of political expediency,” Lodge said. ‘‘They might call us stub- born but we are standing irl the way of a whole socialistic struc- ture by doing so.” * * * “And some want me to sur- render now to the principal I've fought against? Not on your life,” Lodge said. * * * Without specifying hew, Lodge predicted the bitter battle in Lans- overcome B by — ‘Dynasty’ Collapses i in Era of Dem Powe (This ts the ou of two articles story traces Williams’ political rise. state ballot in April to his current BY HOLMES LANSING—Political downfall tatorship or—as in the present alliances and enthroned himself state. 37-year-old candidate told the re see!"’ Well, a coming president is ‘ kickS in its American crib, and th | sons under cqmpulsion to “prove and: overused a term) finale. | TIME WINNER “Mennen is going a be president of the United States. You on Gov. G Mennen Williams. Todays ete his slip to fifth place on the struggle with the State Legisiature + ALEXANDER The McNaught Syndicate, Inc. * is always dramatic. This is true’ whether it be the collapse of a royal dynasty, of a despicable dic- { instance—of a personable, adven- | turous, ambitious Prince of Privilege who made certain darkling | as head of a sovereign American porter: ul ‘born’ with almost every baby that at’s as it should be. Soapy Williams is heir to a great fortune and ‘is one of our New Class of rich mefi’s themselves. Today he also is the hero of a small historical drama which is now in its last act. The play is moving toward a very melancholy (‘‘tragic”’ is too overbig , : Six times the big, amiable masttff of a.man has won as Demo- cratic governor in a state which!until last year — returned a’ ‘ . Br Let us begin with a fellow I know whose paper assigned him in | .1948 to follow the first gubernatorial campaign of young G. Mennen Williams. The person closest in knowledge and affection to the | | afloat and under way until, Republican legislature. By genuine charm, by animal energy, re —e ing would _be over r by Sept. 1, -Six-Time Winner Williams in Skid? by sleepless determination, Williams swam against the tide. He kept * at last, the tide changed. je A * Last year Michigan voters chose a state House of Representa- tives with 55 Democrats and 55 Republicans, and sent 22 Republicans | with 12 Democrats to the state Senate. At the same election Michigan | added its second Democratic U.S. senator, Phil Hart, and gave Wil- liams his unprecedented sixth term. But such is the unfailing irony of these historical dramas, both large and small, that the had started on the upward path, unknown whese.only—issue. was dismal fifth. SIGNS OF DECAY » It is a situation of twilight governor’s downfall commenced ‘during the ascendency of the Democratic Party which he himself In the Democratic primary Williams lost 90,000 votes to a near- the shady alliance between the governor and labor leader Walter Reuther. In the general election Wiltams, who hitherto always led the Democratic ticket, ran a * power “where symptons of decay most often appear. Péople in Michigan with whom I have talked are highly sensitive to outside criticism. They say that national ‘reporting on their state has been exaggerated .and distorted. They don't like to read pieces where Williams is depicted as ee ‘ Cs os - Page 2, Col. 3 \,a + : : . old angry. when’ re- | |determine whether the 44-year- concrete structure was in danger of collapse. * x * Hugh K. Potter, state Civil De- said conflicting re- relayed through amateur |radio operators told of leakage and possible cracks in the dam. A Montana civil defense report | said today between 100 and 150 people in about 50 automobiles apparently are marooned in a canyon between Hebgen Dam, damaged by earthquakes during the night, and a dockslide seven miles below ‘the dam, Montana Civil Defense Director Hugh Potter said the report was from the pilot of a State High- | way Department plane which flew ;over the scene. The rockslide has damned the river below the dam, Pofter said he was advised, and the water is rising slowly. . He said this indicated that the dam is holding, at least partially. The resort community of West Yellowstone, Mont., suffered prop- erty damage. Three persons were (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) 116. Freshmen Head for MSU0 Orientation to Be Held in. Day-Long Activities at New University ae The students are coming to Mich-. igan State University Oakland. Approximately 216 members of the charter freshman class will hit the campus tomorrow for an all-day orientation program. It will be the first time students will have taken part in a univer- *__|sity function. Welcoming the group, which will begin studies next month, will be D. B. Varner, chancellor of the university. Most of the morning will be de- \voted to taking of student place- ment tests. Box lunches will be served. : H * * * In the afternoon, the studenis will split up into small sections. [They will tour the campus grounds, including the university's first academic buildings, and see the Student Center now under con- struction. Roy Alexander, director of student affairs, will discuss the student activities program and Herbert M. Stoutenberg, regis- trar, will discuss registration Dean of “the faculty, Dr. Robert G. Hoopes, will discuss the aims of the university. ®x - *& * ; Questioh-and-answer peridds wil] follow the talks. ~ A similar program will be held Ayg. 24 for eppconiciatety ‘another 1153 students. Attendance is voluntary at thew programs. The © day's activities will ‘zat under way at #: 15 Aom and ond at 4 pm. a. * % " a a oem or _ day expelled a party g ae, re * % , if ; df . Bl C5 Eo RSS ‘ Nl a ¢- . THE PONTIAC PRESS, Chile Kicks Out Uninvited Cubans Armed Soldiers | Arrive by Plane Forced to Take Off in. Same: Aircraft Carrying, ‘Good Will’ Newsmen | | SANTIAGO, Chile i? — Chile to) of Phoenix 98 76 Dulath 71 66 Pittsburgh 80 Port Werth © 98 77 &t. Louis 95 15 Gr Rapids 82 64° B te Marie 75 54 Jacksonville 88 78 Seattle 7 84 Keneas City 94 T# Tampa o | anaing 79. 64 Trav City - 62 $8 Loe Angelés 76°67 Washingion 96 76 - 4 This Date in 87 Yearg | “The junior high football pro-| Ike, Mitchell Ready to Release’Report - {Continued From Page One) said, met with officials of the Bu- jreau of Labor Statistics and_re- ‘Viewed in a-preliminary way the, facts which now will be released. | He said no substantial changes | ‘have been made as a result al-| though ‘‘some suggestions both | Sides made were adopted.” | ; Sens, George Aiken (R-Vt) and. ‘Jacob K.° Javits (R-NY) teamed) |Uup in a statement Monday calling’ for Eisenhower to make public the’ facts on the steel strike. | ‘They planned to introduce a) resolution along these lines as a) substitute for one offered by Sen. ‘Stuart Symington (D-Mo) with the| signatures of 32 other Senate Dem- ocrats. The Symington resolution calls’ for greater effort by the President ! to try to end the steel strike Mitchell was asked about the Aiken - Javits proposal and told. newsmen that, no, the decision to- day to disclose the facts so: far accumulated was not in response “te it He said Eisenhower feels that: the information obtained from! Statistics of industry and govern-} ment is of sufficient interest to make it public. Te Car Rams Police Box, Injures Pontiac Driver | David B. Wilson, 20, of 29 ‘Cooley St., was admitted to Pon- i4stiac General Hospital early this 4$imorging after he lost control of, 62 his auto going north on Saginaw: ‘street and smashed jnto a Pontiac Police call box at Whittemore street. Wilson suffered ~ fractured ribs and nose and knee injuries. We was reported in satisfactory con- dition today, 4 pal Gov. Williams in Skid? (Continued From Page One) underling, but they admit what is evident — that the governor owes his position and much of his policy to the labor leader. They cringe at stories about Michigan's ‘‘batkrupt’’ government _ and its “hostile” climate'to industry, but they acknowledge that the state owes about $16 million to contractors and vendors, that the University of Michigan has gone to the banks for interest-costing loans to meet its payroll, and that the trend of new industrial plants in the lake states is toward other locations than Michigan. * * * They would not admit with any willingness what I am asserting —that Michigan is a collapsing state under the dying regime of Mennen Williams who, as it seems today has won his last guber- natorial election. To make the point of power in decay, I report two instances where political leadership has degenerated into something close to authoritarianism. For fairly refined examples of Big Brother Knows Best, these are hard to beat: 1. Governor Williams has vetoed a measure (House Bill 512) to provide that the election of each district chairman ‘shall be by majority vote, using a secret ballot.’ This bill is a Democratic proposal by state Rep. E. D. O'Brien of Detroit. Although it applies | to the general principle of safe-and-secret voting, the O'Brien bill | has a special purpose. It would permit Democratic delegates to district conventions in Wayne County to vote for their choices with- out getting their heads cracked. The several congressional districts in and near Detroit have a long, public, documented history of rough stuff by Reuther’s goon squads. O'Brien told the press that the bill was necessary to free his constituents from ‘fear and intimidation’ by the UAW. DEMS FOR IT State Sen. Harvey Lodge (R), chairman of. the elections com- mittee, told me that he was tempted to let this Democratic bill languish in his committee. But, he added: ‘I was importuned by many Democrats to let them vote for their freedom.’ ‘The O’Brien bill passed both the House and the Senate. The governor's veto was a strong-arm act in support of strong-arm election methods. ~ 2. G6vérmor Williams has brushed off the indicated desire of the Michigan people to meet their financial crisis with the ill-tasting but necessary medicine of an increased sales tax. Opinion polls taken by four different Michigan newspapers’ show that the people seem to favor sales tax over a combined pro- gram of graduated income and corporation profits taxes. The | polls. run 2 to I at the lowest and 9 to 1 at the highest. This seemed so unbelievable that I asked State Senator Lodge | to show me his personal mail. In the last week of July, with the Legislature Still in session and with daily debate on state taxes, | Lodge got 42 letters. which favored additional sales taxes and only two letters which favored income-corporate taxes. The reasons: “cost and nuisance."’ Apparently a majority of Michigan voters believe that a new | revenue bureau by the Williams Administration would cost too | much: money, involve too much trouble, and worsen the economic climate which is already very bad. Yet, at this writing, Williams appears more minded to blame everything to offer any plan of his own. ¢ kk kot Against my own political instincts, | am going al out on objee- than to exaggeraté it. But in vetoing the O’Brien bill, with its purpose of clean elec- ‘tions, and in failing’in leadership on taxation, Gov. Williams doesn’t | look too good in there. He Seems to be showing familiar symptom of @ political downfall which, I take it. is easting a leaning shadow of significance toward the ‘tions and other national affairs. is already in progress. I 1960 clec- i f Me q New students must file applica-| tions before Aug. 25 for admission | ‘this fall to the Lawrence Institute 25! on the Legislature than tivity here. It is better to understate the Michigan predicament | T | Pontiac Press Phote known as the King and Queen -of clowns, were promoting ‘‘The Big Circus,’ a story of the behind- circus. 3-Car Collision Injures Eight _ Chief of Keego Police, Family Hurt in Crash in Waterford Township, Eight Harbor people, Police including Keego Chief James K. 'SiSk, were injured in a three-car Waterford Township late yesterday, y * * * i William M. Harden, 25, of 8415 ‘period, according to Dr. Dana P.| The superintendent explains also 699 additional new qualified stu- Lagoon Rd., told Waterford Town- of that receipts from admissions to gents in_ its day and night col-|ship police when he lost control \football games have declined each year since 1956. Between the years 1956-57 and ever, that an increase 1957-58 the athletic program in- ireceipts is expected from jern’s new football program. ‘of his car on the wet pavement, |spun around, crashed into two on- ‘coming cars and landed in a ditch. Drivers of the two eastbound cars were Sisk, 39, of 670 Second | St., and Mrs. Helen More, 40, of 668 East St., Milford, | Taken to Pontiac General Hos- pital were Sisk and his parents, Mrs. Lillie Sisk, 59; and William Sisk, 60, both of 515 Townsend |St.; Sisk’s wife, Donna Mae, 36; and their two children, Carol Ann, 6, and William A., 4. * * * : Also taken to the hospital were Pendie Phillips, 63, of Kentucky; Lyle Wisterman, 14, of 264 Arbella St., Milford, and Roy Medaris, 13, of 3442 Crandall Rd., Milford. * * * All were treated and released ‘head injuries. He was in satisfac- itendants said. Harden was_ unin- |jured. Fishing Injury Fatal ot Waterford Man A 44-year-old Waterford Town- ship man died yesterday morning at Detroit Osteopathic Hospital, ‘Highland Park, of an injury re- ceived in a freak fishing accident nine days ago. x &« * He was Thomas Johnson, of 2255 ‘Oxley Dr * * * Johnson was hit in the head with a sinker from the line of another ‘fisherman while fishing Aug. 8 at Algonac State Park. _* * & He suffered a fractured skull and never regained consciousness, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1959 Cadillac Head Sees Same Prices in ‘60 . (Continued From ‘Page One) will produce the two-hour. show Sept. 2. If the industry is able to hold the line on prices, or even hold them within reason, the auto in- dustry should approach the record year of 1955 in sales during 1960, Roche said. He predicted the industry would sell a total of 6,900,000 cars, including 500,000 imports, next year, barring unforseen de- velopments in the steel strike. The prediction represents an in- crease of 600,000 cars over antic- ipated sales during the current model year and would put 1960 ] The Day in Birmingham - 4 Commission BIRMINGHAM — In rejecting ‘all construction bids for the Spring- dale Golf Course Service Building last night. at its weekly meeting, the city commission authorized ar- chitect Carl Marr, of Birmingham, to begin with new plans and to ex- plore all possibilities of designing a more practical building. The commission had expected the low bid to fall between $25,000 and $30,000. The lowest-bid sub- mitted was for $50,450. Marr ex- plained that too many extra con- veniences had been added to the plans as the commission reviewed near the 1955 record or 7,200,000 cars sold in the United States. their progress. | The building design accepted , He also predicted the number! ny the city included provisions of cars on the road in the United) tor g kitchen, fireplace, men’s States would increase by one-third! ang women’s locker rooms, an in the next 10 years. * * * “We have 60,000,000 cars on the road now,” he said. ‘‘By the end of the 1960's, we will have more than 80,000,000. Speaking ef Cadillac alone, Roche said he expected his‘ di- vision to turn Out 154,009 cars during 1960, an all-time high for the division and close to its pres- ent capacity of 156,000 cars per year. “I expect that we will have to expand our production facilities sometime in the 1960’s,’’ he said. Although specific details of the /new Cadillac were off the record pending public introduction Oct. 2, Roche said it would represent a “continuity of design’’ and em- | phasize—‘/styling, smoothness and ‘quietness of operation, safety and luxury.”’ x * * Styling of the new Cadillac fol- lows closely the 1959 model styling except that the fins are smaller. Roche said the overal] measure- ments of the 1960 mode] were ex- actly the same as those of the 1959 models. * * * Engine horsepower also is un- changed but the new car incor- porates a host of engineering changes which are not readily no- ticed when looking at it. . records of new applicants in time collision on Cooley Lake road Juice Cuts Out, So Does Gotham (Continued From .Page One) said the crime rate for the areas affected was lower than normal for the night. A full moon shone overhead, helping to illuminate the area and thus lessen oppor- tunities for looting and other crimes. Central Park, normally open to midnight, was ordered closed by police at 8 p.m. As a precaution, however, an additional 1,000 offi- cers were detailed to the park, a haven for muggins and assaults. Some banks, unable to lock their electrically-operated vaults, as- signed special guards to stand by through the night. * * * After some momentary chaos, traffic flowed freely, despite, the absence of lights. Some traffic po- \licemen said it appeared to be mov- ‘ing even more freely than usual. ‘except Wisterman, who received) When dark set in, police installed huge searchlights at key intersec- [tory condition today, hospital at-|tions. Other policemen guided traf- fic by flashlights. The power failure knocked out the television network of the American Broadcasting Co. Ra- dio station WINS was unable to broadcast music, but it remained on the air, with announcers. keep- ing up a stream of steady chat- ter. Thousands of tenants were forced to climb as many as 20 floors to reach their powerless—and swelter- ing—apartments. Many elected in- instead to go out for the evening. * * * Others sat home to read by can- dlefht in the wilting heat, while butter, ice cream and other perish- ables melted in refrigerators. RESTAURANTS JAMMED Restaurants in the affected area did a booming business. Several ran out of food and had to close early, 2 Scores of movie theaters closed La because of a lack of power. | all-purpose room and i space. t City assessor Clark Hagstrom was directed to levy a 1% mill tax on the December, 1959, tax roll for the Twelve Towns Drain proj- ect. According to City Mahager L. R. Gare, it is anticipated that there will be a “‘slight’” increase in the estimated cost of the project but that this increase will be off- set by a larger allocatjon to the state highway department. Gare said that with this in mind, “It is not expected that the cost to. Birmingham will be increased over what was set up in the report of 1957.” storage * * * In the most spirited action of the night, 40 irate residents of Lake- side street presented the commis- sion with a petition protesting the fill operation methods of a man owning property adjacent to the Quarton Lake dam. The petition named Fredrec Hen- Fla., as creating a public nuisance with his private fill operations on the Quarton Lake property. The petition charges Henkel sive noise, reckless truck opera- tion, and also with creating a dust condition hazardous to pub- lic health, According to Albert Riebling of 347 Lakeside street, group spokes- man, the residents have pleaded with Henkel to improve his -fill methods, but he has not listened. 000 cubic yards more of fill dirt for the property before he is finished with the operation. Henkel did not attend the meeting. kel, of 607 Baldwin Ct. and Miami, | and his contractor with exces. | Riebling said Henkel promised 30,-| Asks New Plans for Golf Building The city promised immediate in- vestigation of the problem and a study of the recommendations of- fered by the Lakeside group. These included police checks on truck speeds, and cooperation by the con- tractor in cutting down the dust menace. * * * A petition by the Timely Real Estate Exchange for a temporary connection to the Birmingham sew- er system was referred to Beverly Hills for a formal request. The property in question lies in Beverly Hills, but the exchange desires a temporary connection with the Bir- mingham system until the «Ever: green project is completed. * * * According to Gare such a re- quest must come from the Village of Beverly Hills, not a private property owner. Commissioner Wil- liam E. Roberts indicated that it is the usual commission policy not to extend city services outside Bir- mingham. The architectural firm of O'Dell, Hewlett and Luckenbach Associ- ates, 950 N. Hunter Blvd., has re- ceived a communication from the U.S. Information Agency, Washing- ton, D. C., asking permission to use its display panels as part of a permanent circulating exhibit scheduled to tour the world as an information agency program. The panels requested are the O’Dell, Hewlett and Luckenbach designs of the 11-Mile-Evergreen school in Southfield and the West- view Elementary School in War- ren, The architects expressed pleas- ure that their work was considered an aid to the Information Agency's ‘program. | | New Birmingham teachers have been invited by the Board of Edu- jcation to spend Sept. 1 in a planned ‘program of orientation to the city. * * They will be addressed by Su- |Perintendent of Schools Dwight B. Ireland and Board of Education members, and will be hosted at a luncheon by the Birmingham Chap- iter of the American Assn. of Uni- |versity Women. A bus tour of the \school district also is planned, * * * ; General faculty meetings are scheduled for Sept 2 - 4 as teachers iget ready for opening of Birming- iham schools on Sept. 8. by Series of (Continued From Page One) reporte’”’ injured there, none se- riously. The chief ranger at Yellowstone National Park said all plate glass windows in the town were broken. A chimney collapsed and fell ‘through the roof of the Union Pacific depot there. Several rock slides followed ithe first temblor in the park it- iself. Travel was halted throughout the park. A water main broke at Old Faithful Inn, directly across the street from Old Faithful Geyser. The east wing of the inn was evacuated. A park spokesman said it was possible Old Faithful and many other geysers had been altered by a possible shift in the sub- terranean cavities, : Sidewalks buckled at Boise, \Idaho. A huge wave was reported iin normally placid Skaha Lake, 1150 miles inland in British Colum- i bia. The epicenter was fixed 800 ‘miles northeast of Berkley, in ; south-central Montana. * * Roads from the east, through Yellowstone, “were blocked by rock slides, Traffic from the north |was halted because of the possible ‘flood threat. Tele phone communications were either down or swamped with calls from alarmed resi- dents, Potter said an early report told where the vehicle was assigned i. Earl Wilcox polishes chrome, tri & Py NEW WATERFORD FIRE TRUCK — Water- ford ‘Township's new, $18,000 fire truck gets a little extra attention from firemen at Station 2 . Here, fireman m,' Purchase of . a r Pontiac Press Phote the truck was authorized-by the Township Board seven months ago, but delivery was delayed due .| money. Northwestern U.S. Shaken Earthquakes of two feet of water cascading over the dam. BUILT IN 1915 The dam was built in 1915. It is 87 feet high and 700 feet lacross at the top. It is of con- \crete and earth fill construction. The Montana Power Co., which iowns the dam and reservoir, said the lake holds a third of a million acre-feet of water. Officials began lowering Mea- | dow Lake, north of Ennis, to provide a cushion for any sud- den flood waters from the reser- voir. Potter said estimates of the warning time available to resi- dents of Ennis in the event of a dam collapse ranged from four to 12 hours. k we ek Sheriff's deputies sped along the Madison River valley, instructing residents to load food, clothing stand by to evacuate. There was no need to waken many of the valley residents. Thousands of persons across the _ Northwest were jolted from their sleep at 11:30 p.m. by successions of temblors. There were no re- ports of panic. Dean Stone, managing editor of the Maryville - Alcoa, Tenn. Times, vacationing in Yellow- stone National Park, counted five separate tembliors, the last at about 4:30 a.m. The University of California seismograph recorded tremors well into the morning. Montana last experienced a se- vere earthquake in 1935. Post Office Looks for Lost $142,000 NEW YORK (AP) — Postal in- spectors were busy today trying to find out who's holding the bag ; with $141,950 in missing money n it. . The bag with the money disap- peared early this month after it was received at the Liberty, N.Y., post office for shipment to the federal reserve bank here. It never arrived. * * * The money belonged to the Sullivan County National Bank. Joseph Fersch, president of the _|barik, said the bank had a receipt from the post office for the x *& * “It’s a big mystery,” he said. ‘Postal inspectors are up here. I understand they're ing. all along . the line but has fouhd the money. We've got our receipt, the post office is stuck with the missing bag.” : Postal authorities said the mon- ey bag may have been misplaced to the special equipment that had to be installed “on it. : or misdirected. and water into family cars and .. TEN ed |____ > __, THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AVGUST 18, 1959 (aE ae Houston Schools Ask|pitns’ tnder stuay” eines, 28 Program Bold, Monurffental — Police Jail TV Actor |"sist"noime said, could .be adopted without - Desegregation Delay Like? Assault Charge PORTABLE . . 19.50 Console $29.50 @ New Cabinet @ Reconditioned Head FREE HOME @ 5-Speed Motor DEMONSTRATION @ New Motor FE 5-4049 * Gestantes After Hours OR 3-9702 $1 Free bonus gift. All purpose zigzag Terms 1.25 attachments. Trade-ins accepted. We Per Week rebuild and service all makes. CURT’S APPLIANCES 1077 W. HURON aes fell as b rac - ing bonds. Rockefeller conceivably have suggested that the program (cicr has een able fo: alteae’ (ep could’ have avoided! tax increases |ehould be pal ona voluntary basieg\ es | (O)eonduct ; hte : ithese studies and to serve in his by more of the same. rather than mandatory. But Rocke-) gnc feller rejected*his idea administration. | ‘ « = ® | oo, . As governor, Rockefeller has As it was, he had to use 147, “It won't work unless eVeTy- broken some precedents and set million in bonds and reserves, but: body has one,"’ he protested. la few new ones. he drew tHe line there. His plan,) Rockefeller’s record is studded; a ec + ‘he said, was to return to pay-as- with studies. He likes to appoint ; you-go, partly this year and—he committees and ‘‘task forces’ to Jn an attempt to put BS /hopes—completely next year. jtackle government problems, jhis fiscal program, Rockefeller | “I know this is not a popular Since taking office, he has or- 84iged permission to deliver his | |budget message personally at a joint session of the Legislature. He has used his personal for- itune for what is essentially state Oilman Pauley Bows Out ibusiness. Although Harriman also iwas a millionaire, he did not be- passes to the races and to boxing bouts. So far, Rockefeller has drawn little personal criticism. Demo- crats have concentrated — their |heaviest fire on his fiscal policies, They have suggested that he imposed more taxes than neces- sary this year so he _ possibly could offer cutbacks in 1960—the presidential election year. IMPROVING YOUR emt aa ? | Rockefeller already is at work to regain any ground he has lost. B 'He is assembling a 1960 fiscal- llegislative program amed_ at idoing the trick. | New Yorkers may or may not Los Angeles fo Keep S878" | Rockefeller started out by pick- like the program. But they can ing up the tab for a truly spec- bet that it will show daring, tacular inaugural ball, featuring|sweep and imagination. It will be \three big-name orchestras and a the last one before the presiden- fa} fi, We Live in a r. i= ra Wonderful World... A il /\ We all love life — yet some must i a y leave this world every day. Your U 4s family will have need for our. /N\ y services at regular intervals U r through the years ahead. us ° Why not drop in and see the fine ° = Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, V know the services we provide — u \ and know us. In your hour of nO Y néed, this knowledge will serve A \ you well. if) i Phone VW () FEDERAL Parking A ==) 4 5 4511 On Our Premise ys f= D / i wil=Ill eli; Lonelson- Fohns i= \ FUNERAL HOME 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC Wiz 1960 Dem Convention ballet troupe. He uses his own (eee ees . = tial nominating convention. LOS ANGELES (AP) — The'day to the July convention in re- ruckus over tickets has ended in turn for its $350,000 guarantee to a complete victory for Democrat-| the national committee. -He later jic National Chairman Paul Butler 315) Bee ene a he oe cee You've heard |—and Los Angeles will keep the counts of contact 1960 party convention. | ~ k& * ~~ ek | new sponsoring group was |. lenses ... Butler threw the prestige of his formed, It agreed to underwrite NOW THE office into a showdown over seat- the guarantee and accept Butler's ing with wealthy oilman Edwin C. top ticket offer—1,500 tickets a Pauley. The dispute almost cost day. Butler had threatened to pull _BIG NEWS IS on _|tion program to the De ti Pauley had insisted the cémmit- National Commitee mocratic itee was promised 5,000 tickets a . «* « | ——____— The five-minute meeting of But- ler and local officials ended a at the . CONTACT ¢ LENS | i { ' Cairo Museum Officials are tiny, plastic Contact-less Lenses. As shown of the.cornea. They rest easily on a layer of natural tear, gently separated from the eye. Come in. Try them left, they. conform to the delicate curves this city its first major political the convention out of Los Angeles ° * Home improvements add value to your/ conv : _ |unless his terms were met. - ’ f i i ben: Snes oh oe as fr The new group agreed to an- they don't Oetreet ort roe seeeee, SES ROeU RP eET SS ne property, ae you You convenient, any ost COM- other key Butler demand, opposed ws : , comfortable living. You can convert little- mittee ald the old committee was hy Pauley: transfer of all adver- touch the eye: eS ; 1 ‘ g ont iv sbe is is A f : ; whem met. : k *« * [psing mevente trom! the iconven ‘The most wonderfully improved inviaible lenses used attic or basement space into Use living areas. You can add an extra bath- room, or family room. You can modernize your kitchen. It all adds to the value of. ‘five-month dispute climaxed when ) CONTACT-LESS ‘an | | i : ‘Butler , = CONrACT.tess BIFOCAL tenses ur home. It’s easy to get up to $2,500 for Accuse Six of Stealing pect ralay nea al ihe Ct NOW AVAILABLE! | veuE® & casy to g up ’ sis | The old committee was fr ALL CONTACT-LESS LENSES ARE NOW |, home improvements at Pontiac State Bank—) CAIRO (PB — Six employes have, ‘ne old committee was re-} terms: Up to @ Yeor te MADE AND DISPENSED UNDER | ; . ’ ‘been accused of stealing Egyptian’ placed with one headed by Re- Pay. Come in. No Ap- U.S. PATENT No. 2,809,556 | you don’t need to have your home paid for! lantiquities from a museum 50/ publican Mayor Norris Poulson as pointment Needed. oo 0.4, ’ ; miles north of Cairo. The public)chairman and Ran A. Kimball. ONE POLICY 7+. NOW protects your home against most of the common hazards at a substantial saving in rates. Perhap’s it’s time that you looked into’ this protection. Call us. a Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE 101 E. Huron FE 48284 He said new financial support would be solicited from the busi- ness community, as well as loyal Hours: Daily 9:30 to Democrats, “If there should be any more convention problems,"’ he said. 17 N. Saginaw St.: “none of them will be financial.” DR. B. R. BERMAN, 0. D. 5:30—Fri. ‘tik 9 P.M. | ee FE 4-7071 MONEY TO LOAN TO IMPROVE OR MODERNIZE’ YOUR HOME FAST SERVICE and at the Same Time PAY OFF YOUR PRESENT BILLS LOWERING YOUR MONTHLY PAYMENTS FOR EXAMPLE... IF YOU NEED $4,000 IF YOU NEED. $1,500 IF YOU NEED $4 Q00 Spf intact Satie. | | NTIAC | 23 FINANCIAL SERVICES only at your bonk! Teo pay off existing land contract or mortgage 3 see your To pay off any bill like Finance Ce., doctor, ete. | She has been inactive since 1954. | Pd protect ot eaia a nreces na ee pRB. R. BERMAN, 0.D., 17 N. Saginaw 1 appeared. orp.,, as executive chairman. | The government has ordered an| Kimball was secretary of the navy 1 J HOOSE THE LOAN THAT FITS YOUR NEED . beens of ere thcges pa anal President Harry = 1 Please send Free tones “The Better Way to See” . ’ en eee |Cairo museum had been systemat- * * + | Name. i sorrow 36 MONTHS 24 MONTHS 12 MONTHS ically looted for years, Mark Boyar, wealthy real estate} | address $ 500 $16.39 $ 23.34 $ 44.17 developer and financial chairman loc 7a Gite t $1000 $31.94 $ 45.89 $ 67.72 ——e of the Democratic National Com- F City I $ sasae Aes siyaas mittee in Southern California, re- PIONEER INVISIBLE LENS SPECIALISTS _ al ias08 $79.85 $114.71 $219.90 placed Pauley. Le = , . Free Life Insurance Protection With Alt Home Improvement Loans LOW BANK RATES FREE LIFE INSURANCE PROTECTION when it’s a question of money, banker first! carage @ NO BONUS ’ | We WILL LOAN PER MO. AP Wirephote , gr cnn, nie | HE Armas ent cmsaranon fanmwce ED Ar || STATE BANK | , world’s greatest harpsichord. | " 12 YEARS at 6% es hee een eee IG BEAR CONST. This 1 All You Pay For CONVENIENT MEMBER at her Lakeville, Conn., home. J Phone FE 3-7833 INTEREST and PRINCIPAL OFFICES FDIC, 4 , , y holding a referendum election or! . the district would stand to lose ; y HOUSTON (AP) — Houston mein oa dollars annually in) ; | : NORTH HOLLYWOOD, Calif. school frustees told a federal ¢ «© « | By CHARLES DUMAS . bat )—On has dm piatacy Peter judge Monday immediate deseg-| The repart also cifed classroom) ALBANY, N. Y. (AP) ‘__ What hae Moti be teed a fiste “| regation of the South's largest/shortages and what it called the sort of governor is Nelson Rocke-| a scuffle with a doctor | segregated school system could|academic lag of Negro studente! ¢ojjer? Police booked him on suspicion | not be made without: irrep arane behind whites. | There is_no simple answer for) of assault with a deadly weapon. | inpury to:-ell ‘the. school district. ime oars sied a response 10 those who hear Rockefeller touted Dr. Thomas C. Nelson complained an order by Judge Connally (Wo) as Republican candidate Bree i The board pleaded for more months ago to submit a progress! fer pcliaht oa wonder what. hen he Dee note ae 4 ore T ASKER’S time to comply with Judge Ben/report on its compliance to his sort of record he has made in showgirl friend, Diane Bourne. | a \ Connally’s 1957 order to ‘‘deseg-/1957 ruling. The five-volume re- Ajbany. - , 63 W. Huron St regate with all possible speed.” ‘port ran 373 pages. P | It. depends on personal evalua- * s . : tion of a bouncy extrovert who Breck, star of the “Black Sad-| FE 5-6261 ; dle” TV series, said he became thinks and acts big. angry when the physician insisted | * * * : : . ; ; ; on taking a medical report be-| lue! | After Rockefeller’s | first _ six fore sdrnitiing Miss Bourne. He] LUGGAGE $14.95 O. \ Value: months in office, Republican State insisted that Dr. Nelson swung|| 3-Ps- Matched Set . [Shprelsed him’ thus: "He Bas first. TRUNKS—FOOT LOCKERS O ‘proved that he is a leader of ‘Breck's brother, George, also’ Priced Low To Go O | principle and performance as well] two noes who. said he. shoved| EDWARD'S 18s. sexi c Seating, (8 fare air Ber, 4 . Saginaw } ye) = EXTRUDED arlateseae, Hepes male en them around The. Breck were 1 4 . { Democratic Chairman Michael es ee on nnn yf ALUMI H. Prendergast, delivered this) = NUM judgment: ‘The Rockefeller Re-| i . ‘i . +e - | ao i publican administration has shown I F | | i alll 4 Vi STORM. uncanny ability to misrepresent) 4 a a ae [the people, The Rockefeller fail- sa WINDOWS jure has been monumental.” / Te rm — | * * * o ; e They agree only on the adjective (fs B . $ 95 | monumental. / eg INS M | - That's not so surprising because * 6 or ore |. coer !Rockefeller appears to have the Se tember 8 drive gf his billionaire grandfa- p Less than 6..... $21 751eG. |ther, the late John D. Rockefeller. | We Alsou Specialicent | The 51-year-old governor does ; . € Also opeciatize. in |things in the grand manner, with Higher Accounting ALL ALUMINUM |sweep, daring and imagination. —— oo, | He has lived up to his campaign Business Administration @ Siding @ Awnir-gs ‘billing as a man of action. This , : @ Patios e Garports image is imprinted clearly on his! Secretarial Studies @ Com. Doors @ Basem’t Comb. | developing record as governor. | Office Machines @ Porch Enclosures 4 Rockefeller’s first budget cer-| | = | tainly could be described as mon-; | ieee a taxpayers are like: Enroll at The Business Institute to pre- Be . H HOPEFULS TALK — Two men, widely men- York's Gov. Nelson Rockefeller seems to be the f : ‘1 in’ the busi ALL AWN | NG - * = | tioned as potential candidates for presidential purveyor of an amusing point to New Jersey's Pore Or a) sticcessta ee |e ine Only a mont m _ a cel nomination in 1960, have a laugh together. New chief executive, Gov. Robert B. Meyner. ness world. Other courses are available. & STORM WINDOW SALES ltion-dollar budget in the state's lion-dollar budget in the state’s . ok ee . | ; . LW. BOGERT__Ownce ‘history. He called for the greatest) budget. he said, ‘‘but I have a\dered at least 28 major inquiries. ‘plane. for trips. He reached into, Veteran Approved Free Employment Service . WALES OFFICE wakcuuae ‘round of tax increases ever—277 duty to the people. To BEnING Some of them paid off promptly. his own pocket to pay for land-| 3415 W. Huron 8t. FE 3-7800 233 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 8-1123 million—to finance it. re oe ee vtniee a A quick study of the plight of SC4Ping work at the executive r . 5 . ov efi . disaster. 2 Ww e fi ee . . ans | se — — 7 — sg ge Rockerelle ihe: future of our state. rai financially distressed railroads 27510". ao oe The Busi ness Institute leo financing ae Sige t at “Rocky showed “the same and bus companies led to a major | Rockefeller h see the yest f a - | See rere saat asa i is tax-relief law, ted at last) .* ass : o}] pontiac ONE WEEK SPECIAL! \bornly through weeks of battling toush rinded be sae iemas of is adnter ue te alice con Rocke. |TiZorous code of personal ethics, ; P . /more recent programs—a_ highly | r’s leg i eS: : ; . : : ' SINGER Gnu he: won His poll. ‘controversial plan that would re- feller says a healthy transporta- for himself and his administration 7 | fe 2-3551 USED When me fpending overtook quire people to build atomic radia- tion is vital to a sound state ‘hat albany has ever soon His WESC IOWEENCE all eee edocs oc = Ne i free 1€'tion shelters in their homes. |economy. Re eee policy is Aollowed a eee Penal ; | predecessor, . Avere arri- ei. « | Probably because of his stature C!osely that even a dime sent by ec ¢ |man, balanced his budget by dip-} 13 cc x4. -e. school children was returned. He . : |) > spr ae in the business community, Rocke ping into reserve funds and float-- The more politically minded and his aides have spurned free ga A, Fy ; THE PONTIAC PRESS, TU ESDAY,, AUGUST 18, 1959 .\heavy propaganda broadside re- Reds Warn Missile | eee = ro news agency Subs Could Hit U. S. * ar | This came 7 hours after ee 'Washingtone news conference © of LONDON (AP) wet Adm. Arleigh A. Burke, chief of day breadcast a warning that mis“, s S. naval operations, raised ‘the sile-bearing Red. submarines could| possibility enter Hudson Bay from under the ready has arctic ice and bombard the indus- submarines trial heart of America. Soviet Fleet said ‘‘those .people The warning was printed in the with a taste for aggression should| naval newspaper Soviet Fleet, papemaber the arctic ocean is not | and was, part of an unusual yia U. : inland lake.” Umon al- missile-firing the Soviet ballistic med || a New Ildea fora New Era A | | ] O EMPEROR MEETS PRESIDENT — Haile AP Wirephotos Selassie of Ethiopia is shown here as he confers in Yugoslavia, completing a tour of many west- ; With West Germany’s-President Theodore Heuss. ern European nations in addition to Czechoslo- 9 ; | TI be Eps ror left Germany Saturday and is now vakia and the Soviet Union. oe ; 4 OO | a ~ | i Princess Beatrix _ | Hi s Own | Will Have Parade 3 With Mr. kK‘ Irade Secrets UP Broadway He NEW YORK (# — Princess Be2- FOR FATHERS WITH GROWING FAMILIES. One life insurance | oe trix of the Netherlands will get a Bare 4 : - (WASHINGTON (AP)—Vice Pres: Makes Good Living jtracitional ticker tape parade up policy...one low-cost premium covers you, your wife and ident Richar . Nixon says Pres- | 1 ri ‘ident Eisenhower can hold his own, PY Running Whisky Se me SERED children with Nationwide’s new FAMILY POLICy. And 'n forthcoming conferences with) for Tennessee Cities, kok ot | each new baby... after 15 days... is covered automatically |Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush- . . | The Siyearold (princess will ac ; con said that when Khrush.|. KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) —|rive Sept. 11, and on Sept. 14 will! with no increase in premium! "- Sey ee Oe his visi to this| Drunks and bootleggers- keeps/go to Washington to meet Presi-| . . : country the people will see a re- _— town som ot dent Eisenhower. THIS NEW IDEA in family protection offers you up to $15,000 sourceful, able, hard-hitting indi- e prominent east Tennesse€) During her stay in New York | ‘fo 3 s Deh as tical Gi oie. bootlegger delivered his opinion! ghe wilt take part in ceremonies | of life insurance plus cash values’ for emergency use or kk and settled back in the restaurant) marking the 350th anniversary of | retirement income. Protects Mom and the kids, too, and Sen. Hugh Scott (R-Pa), on booth to enjoy his steak. the exploration of the Hudson | . de et . . whose recorded televiston pro-| we'll call him Clem Smith. | River by Henry Hudson. guarantees your children’s right to insurance in the future. gram Nixon was appearing, asked) He’s the proud, lonely mountain- She will also be the guest of . . . . ° sinon how he thinks Eisenhower’ eer-type. He makes a comforta: | 00" 0 Me Nelson A Rocke- Find out how you can save with Nationwide’s con- will do in handling Khrushchev's' ple living buying bonded whisky |.” ; “peculiar diplomatic approach-! in jegally-wet Nashville, hauling | /€ller at Albany. | venient FAMILY POLICY. Just stop by or phone Aes.” _ 4 Holland, Mich., is not included. ' s | 46. i ”* an : eens . . * . . “Anybody who has seen the selling tt bf the Dmckiona fo tin. on the princess’ itinerary. | your Nationwide representative listed below. ‘President over the past 62 years ricate the citizens of bone-dry as I have in meeting after meet-| Knoxville. Pp f 6) § : ing — handling tough problems —; 6 a! re ers as tation < would have complete confidence, Clem maintains the municipal WILLIAM: F PICL ‘in President Eisenhower's ability 80vernment of Knoxville derives) to Tor edoed Boat ° 53 Sop24 |to hold his own in any conference,|@ greater income from bootleg pD Manonnide I ; {not only with Khrushchev but any- Jiquor than it would from tax mon-| ‘Vationwide insurance eae | body else,”’ Nixon replied. ey on legal liquor, explaining: | BARRE, Mass, (UPI)—To see - . 4/5 qt. j - x *« * | “They catch you hauling and him now, manning the pumps at 16525 James Couzens Hwy., Detroit, Michigan Phone: UN 1-9380 | Nixon discussed other aspects of ‘selling liquor, They take it and|his filling station, you'd never think €6 the Ejisenhower-Khrushchev talks| fine you. Then they sell it back to|that Basil D. -Izzi was once the) I h e WO rl d a re es O n when he arrived at Virginia | ithe liquor dealers I bought it from/ central figure in a saga of the sea. 4 Beach, Va., Monday to join his in Nashville. See what I mean? | It happened in 1942, early in wife and two daughters for a brief | x we * | World War IJ, when Izzi, then a | ilbevy’ S, lease’! eed | holiday. | Bootlegging is a lonely job for) /19-year-old sailor, was set adrift. y p | If the nation allows the visits Clem, even more so since his wife; along with four shipmates on a “in themselves to indicate a jus-'died several years ago. Being a/nine-by-eight-foot raft after their tification for relaxing our prepar- | bootlegger’s friend is not socially|boat was torpedoed in the South Gilbey’s Distitied London Dry Gin. 90 Proof. 100% Grain Neutral Spirits. W.& A, edness,” Nixon -told’ newsmen, or politically smart in Bible-con-| Atlantic. | Fithev, Ltd., Cincinnati, Ohio. Distributed by National Distillers Products Company. “they could be very, very damag-|scious Knoxville. x ke & | ‘ing to the cause of peace with! [ts citizens, who readily admit Izzi was one of three to survive. > a Justice in which we are interest- | that “bootleggers and Baptists’’|the ordeal of 83 days-aboard the’ ‘ed.’ “ keep the town dry, may be a boot-/raft, with only the fish and birds) x & * legger’s private customers, but/they could catch for food and only | “We do not expect and should | ithey’re not his public acquaint-;rainwater for drink. |Mot expect,’’ -he continued, ‘‘that! ances. this visit in itself.is going to settle | . Bears are near-sighted, but. Uf Jee are sable to our payments. debis or bills when due, ste |some of the big, basic problems lem leaned mgr os their keen senses of hearing and. NATIONWIDE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY - HOME OFFICE, COLUMBUS, OHIO | bt er AN CREDIT cht chuwietiony few mae ee, or parments you cam = we have between the non-Commu-| ape Sect pei es Se that |Smell_make up for this deficiency. ’ | 4 nist and the Communist worlds.” ink people tell their kids | / NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED : if they Aren't yood, old. (Ciesm | Fi ONE PLACE TO PAY Origin of the $ sign is a mystery.; Smith will get them. You know, Member American Association of Credit Counsellors The most widely accepted theory like the bogeyman.” ALL NEW 1960 StIM TRIM _ Quality Console WV is that it evolved from the Spanish | Clem, who is in his early 40s, ; jabbreviation “Ps” for piasters’ or says his life has been a “‘full’” one. Let 14 Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You” ithe same Mexican symbol for |His earliest memory is of lying on Hours: Daily 9 to §.. Wed. and Sat. 9 to 12 Noon. _ Pesos. Scholars have noted in old'the dusty floorboards of a car as ‘manuscripts that the ‘‘s’ gradu-|his bootlegger-father | smashed MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS ally came to be written over the| through a roadblock. _ 116 Pentiae State Bank Bldg. ~ FE 8-0436 “Pp”, making a close equivalent of} je drove his first load of boot- ithe internationally known $ mark.'Jeg liquor into Knoxville at the — ~— ~ —— ~~~ age of seven after his father got drunk and passed out. * * * “T hit a T-model Ford,” he said: nostalgically, ‘‘The farmer jumps) out and hollars ‘whoa — stop!’ I) got scared and stopped. My daddy woke up and I told him what hap- pened, ‘Keep a- going’, " he says and passes out again. | Clem was still chuckling as we | |= [I _ left the restaurant and headed for his car. Two rookie patrolmen passed. “Evening, Mr, Smith,’ they | said respectfully, A sergeant silting in a squad car roared, ‘‘Clem,. you old so-and-so, ; SPECIAL . |where the devil you been? I ain't [pce tytn ler a couple weeks © . August for more operating dependability ~ Clem said he'd been in Florida} TRADE-IN —less service headaches ned they talked! wwbile, a. MLOWAN an NEW SUPER H 20 HORIZONTAL CHASSIS Clem's “place” on the edge of, uses only standard handcrafted circuitry |town. It was an old garage with a for the best in performance. Ux rooms tacked onto the back.) © SPOTLITE DIAL . _"Peo le’ think bootleegers get © FULL POWER TRANSFORMER si a age Jet + “CAPREITY-PLUS" components ore NITH “SUNSHINE” PICTURE TUBE one ‘retire. © a‘ He explained he keeps a carefill INGE — * CIRCUIT pe account of his business dealings; e © CINELENS PICTURE GLASS” . : to avoid Federal income tax eva- ‘ tens a + A NEW 1960 ZENITH TABLE WV Clem said he and “an awful | ile nice boy” from the Internal Rev: | | enue Service went over the ac- | count last year, Clem ended up | “kind of paying a percentage.” | The “percentage” came to $37 000,- “I think enough of my gov! jemuarent to want to keep her a-| igoin’,"’ Clem explained. I asked him what he'd do if iKnoxville were to make liquor legal. ; He stared at me a moment then replied confidently: = “It'll still be dry on Sundays.” | | Train commuters pay about /2 as much as drivers! Of course, Grand Trunk doesn’t hand you a check. _ But you can save close to $200 a year riding GTW to Detroit daily instead of driving your car: It takes about four gallons of gas to drive to work from Pontiac and back. And if you spend 75 cents to park, that’s $1.95 a day. Pontiac-Detroit 46 rides only 528% Commuting by GTW costs only $1.22 a day, a . | | The English . word “‘salary” saving of just under $200 a year. And think . air > ‘évolved from a form of the Latin | : conditioned comfort, time to relax and read,-no | more word for salt, according to the! | «+ ° traffic jams. Be smart. Commute by train. National Geographic Society. It. said Roman soldiers received a “§ Coli WB: Gracey, Ticket Agent, Grand Trunk Passehger Station special stipend to buy, their ra- © New "Royal Classic" styling © Front Mounted speaker @ Handcrafted quality @ 20,600 volts of picture power _ THE PALMER — Medel 02315 21” overall diagonal measure. 262 8q: inches of picture viewing area) THE GREENBRIER ~ Model D-2240 21” overall diag. meas. 262 aq. in. rectangular picture area. In grained Walnut, Mahosany or Blond Oak colors. In Ebony, Maroon or Golden _ Mist Colors, Only f $ 2. rom PONTIAC: John Stetanent OR HARD LAKE: OXFORD: Mey poem a a Shop Phone: FE 2-6967 « H rs ea Oamere na. bose br atoae ea & Appliance Phone: — 4-1558 Wayne Gabert Phone; EM 3-4114 Phone: OA 8- a s — & Appliance HAA rw of ROCHESTER: é AUBURN HEIGHTS: Phone: FRE 4-133 a) py se eat meg & TV Hay Electric - Lynn Jewelry pS gg hme - Te Phone: OL 2-214 Plone: FE 4-3573 tal be aaa r Phone: FE 4-974 ; Phone: FE 8-573t en DRAYTON PLAINS: LAKE ORION: Mee. pa =—— ve jy ty ro Ny ted Appliance Phone, Fh 4-Sa01. — , , Phone: OR 3-260) , Tel. FE 2-2011 , x tion of salt. which they called ~" “salarium”’: and ~ this eventuaily & j became ‘‘salary.”’ rh PARTE |__ ELEVEN * ' g . ‘ ee a aS titaltaieae ie pre. i # é Market Prices Drift Aimlessly prices drifted aimlessly in dull trading early today, * * * Plus and minus. signs matched up about evenly, Most key shares shifted fractions, Chemicals, gains. the strike deadlock continued. crafts and airlines churned irreg- ularly, \|Pears, Sug The market’s lethargic tone Bums, Burbank. %4 bu. paralleled the pattern of recent sessions when prices shuffled un- evenly aoe slow dealings. a point, U.S, Steel and peniehem See Red, bu. . ’ slipped small fractions. a rots, Du Pont added around half a Pasa lie dos. bes. . ‘auliflow point. American Cyanamid and Air | Celery, pascal, ee doz. ae Reduction also stepped fractionally |Goe!” geese, ‘5 higher. Cucumbers, ane ‘Fancy Shoe « * Cucumbers, Pickle, bu. _ ® (ae Fancy, ‘bu. wea Large opening blocks wer e|Dul dos gol oteee down q on 20,000 shares, Chicago Pneumatic tool Seat 1% Stra pk bs at 3144 on 26,000 shares. New York Stocks (Late Morning Quotations) 11 Lose Stripe for Stealing General's Flag SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)—Elev- en Marines paid a stripe apiece Monday for stealing the general's flag from the Marine Corps" Re- cruit Depot. The Marines include a corporal ‘and his Marine bride of one month. The flag was found under - the rug ih the couple’s home. * * * The flag of Gen. Randolph McC. Pate was stolen during a vist by the general July 26. A said it was stolen during the time the colors normal- ly. are lowered, thus arousing no SUSPICION. * The Leathernecks have the right i ce. < hone yh Me ‘ drugs and tobaccos App es, Dutchés. bu. Steels eased a shade as reece The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown _ Detroit Produce FRUITS» esopeucooon0ed $2.25 es, Red Bird. bu 2.715 es, Transpereat bu. .. +. 3.00 Bhiebesrien No. ae 12 pts. . 315 antaloupes, bu. .......+.06 es 3.25 » 3.00 Peaches, Hale ven, bu. . 4.00 Peaches, Red Haven, bu. 3.50 Pears, sd a Boetced . if ars, Bugar, bu. ...... 50 2.25 melon: BUS 62666). -- wen cceenss 2.75 VEGETASLES Bedns, green. flat, DU. ...ece++e-$3.25 Beans, non round, DU. .cecerececes 3-25 ans, Wonders, pe seeeeorese 2.50 ane Lins, etereccsene = woeeee eevee abbage Borcats, Df bu. re eercareveres ee ery, 5o Wee sonees ons, Parsley. root, d sieetacasences Peas, Black Eye, DU. ws. Peppers, Ca — PK. wees + see eeeeeerese Ryd edt Lol Mit eter ot cddph sd etal oll a dot gt eaten sssah ed emt atadl SSSVSassSs SSSRSSassSRssasVRSSSSaussss Courses to be: offered at Pon- tiac Northern starting Sept. 15, are: parent education, American governmental executive, both ziv- ing graduate credit; speech cor- rection and public education in Michigan; Each ceurse is worth two hours credit. Courses at Cranbrook include education of exceptional children, audio visual methods, both start- ing Sept, 16, and parent educa. tion, beginning Sept, 17, : Among other new centers where courses will be held this fall are Almont, Mason and Birmingham. In addition to the off-campus classes, 56 undergraduate evening classes will be presented on the Eastern Michigan University cam- pus offering two to four credit hours for completion of the re- quired work, e A-large solar furnace is. oper- ated by the United States Army at Natick, Mass, ~ 8 ported throughout the summer Condemn Any Attempt at U.N. _ Intervention in Laos Battle TOKYO (UPI) Communist clamor grew today against alleged| : U.S. military actions in Laos, and Moscow openly accused the South- east Asian nation of violating its neutrality. * * One Communist broadcast heard in Tokyo condemned possible United Nations intervention in the former French colony and said the Battles between the inane nist-leqd Pathet Leo rebels and - government forces have been re- and yesterday the Reds claimed to have captured ‘‘vast’”’ amounts of territory, The Laotian government at Viet- iane in what was once French Indo-China has accused the Com- munists of trying to take over the free nation and said the Commu- nist forces of Ho Chi Minh, lead- er of North Viet Nam, has sent arms and troops into Laos. » 4% * The Communists have tried to make the United States the scape- igoat for the cvil war and Russia Pe : a . Figures after decimal point are eighths coreere Red | rate Pk. has joined the attacks, The offi- Admiral ....0. 18.3 Johns Man .., $5.6) Potatoes, New. $0 1 Ib, bags... cial Soviet news agency Tass said AlrReduc .... 86.2 Jones & L ... adishes, red, doz. ......< ese i Allied Ch ..... 120.6 Kelsey Hay .. 49.4|Radishes. white, doz. ...... yesterda y Laos had violated its Allis Chal’ .... 346 Kennecott .. 103.4|Rhuharb outdoor dos. bchs neutrality by: bringing in U.S. mili- Alum Ltd ..... a Kresge, ++ 46 sales Aco Silo if bu tary personnel coa : roger ...... uass. utte . Am Airlin 263 Glass ... 32 |equasn. Butternut, % bu. Am Can wees. 44.3 Lib McN&L .. 12.2/Squash, Delicious, Yo DU. ..e+e.eeee a Am Cyan ..... 60 Lockh Airc ... 27.7|/Squash, [tal., seeeveecece Am Met Cl .... 25.2 Loew's Inc 31.1| Sauash. sgumm % 2. se eeeecene Am Motors ... 43.4 Lone 8 Cem .. 31.1) Tomatoes, outdoors, 14 Ibs. oo... eeee Am N Gas a Lone S Gas .. 41.2|Turnips, bu .........0.--.sereeeee Am Smelt . 44.6 Lorillard ..... 444) Turnips. topped bu. ....sessses Am Tel & Tel . 80.1 Manning .... 28 GREENS am Tob <..... 97.6 Martin Co 41.6 " Anaconda .... 644 May D Str ... 48.4/Cabbage. No 1, ou. ..... 50 “ AnacW&C ... 57 Mead * 45.5)Collard, No. 1, bu. ....- 50 Armco Stl .... 13.5 Merck ....... 79.§|Kale, bu. ....... e005 ee a) Armour & Co . 29.5 op Ch & § 19.6|Mustard, No 1, bu. ....... -50 Atchison ..... 28.3 Mpis Hon 130 rrel, DU. ....+0---- eee 18 Avco Cor - 13.5 Minn P&L 35.4|Spinach, bu. .........-+ a. 25 Balt & O - 45 Monsan Ch 52.5|/Swiss Chard, DU. ....scceeseeees eeoe 1.76 Beth Steel .... 546 wont Ward 49.4/Turnips, bu. © ......-- sere eee eeee 1.50 _ Boeing Atr ... 31.5 woot wheel ... 19.2 Bond Stre «.-- 34 sotorala 22.111 oon e GREENS en eenOUCd my Celery Cabbage, doz. .....-css+e0. $2. Bore Warn... 443 Murray CD... 208) p Give, bu. - Me eek UII. 200 Briggs Mfg ... 122 Nat cash R .. 58.6 Escsrole. ou. .....--6 ergececccce-. 2.00 Brist My ..... 37.1 Nat Dairy 52.7| Lettuce, Bibb, PR ccwcscec cesses eoee 1.75 Brun Balke ...101.2 wat Gyps * gag [Lettuce Boston DU. ....ssecceeesees 229 dd) Come. ce 27) Nat Lead ...129 |Lettuce, head, bu. ......--.+++++--- 1.75 purrousns . NY Central .. 27.4|Lettuce, leat. Ws seeeseceesevamecse 278 Calum & H... 23. Nort & pves = Romaine bu. .....-s+esevee seee.- |. Can Dry <2 5 = 22, Nor Pac... 81.7 Cdn Pac _.--- 8 Nor Sta PW .. 23-7 Copied Aled 163 Only OM as. rr Poultry ond Eggs Case, JI 20.5 Owens Cng ... 87.5 Ches & Oh Jc. 1) Owens I GI” 994 DETROIT POULTRY Chrysler ...... 646 Pac G & El .. 62.5 pes ee 17 (AP) — Prices Cities Svc 55.5 Saeed Air aaa ce ie L ae s Detroit for No. 1 an S50 ot aual 2 Je ‘pou Sale Poa bal — Param Pict .. 45 avy type hens 16: light type Bens Colg Palm “39 Parke Da _ ... 46 10: heavy type broilers and fry Colum ose 21.4 Sey Jc “Ne fi = Bee wnies "ds “caponettes under § on Edis ..... ‘y Pa RR_....ee Con N Gas e26 Pepsi Cola 32.6) 5 7 pe pe Young hens 23; heavy type | young Cont Can... 49.6 Phelps D ..--: 60.7 ———— Cont Cop& 8. 13.7 Bhilco .....+. 25.4 DETROIT EGGS Herat pee Proct G28 tee nah ee Se aa’ tole federal, sinte BUD COOK JOME Oo... < . = (je Pure Oil ..... 41.4| grades coe Pa ae CAM ee cs 62.5 : miwhites Grade it bo ree By arge arge medium Curtis Pub ... 121 Republic Stl 2 || small 18-20; Grade B large 32; Browns Det Edis _ 44. Rex ‘Drug 43.2|—Grade A extra large 42: large 40; rea Ou en S Dis C Sea 74.4 Reyn Met 96.4|medium, 28; small 18: checks 21%. Dou aie 43. Rey Tob 55.2| com rejally graded: / Dow. ch F 84.6 Royal Dut ... 44.1 Whites—Grade A jumbo 36: extra . Du P em © Safeway St .. 39. large 34-35; large 33-. medium 25-26; u Pont ..... 270 y : small 17; Browns—Grade A jumbo 36; in 0 Ola 0 East Air 36.6 St Reg Pap .. 52.4)extra large 33-34: large 33; medium East Kod . 886 Scoville Mf ... 25.2) 95-26: small 16-16%; rade B large Beton MiG oes: S18 err olla, cc eel oe At C Cheley, Estes Park, o . 51 Shell Of) ,.... é é Fl & Mus ... 7 Simmons .... 54.6 ameP. HEY: ESTES: AE: miner eae 15.2 es seeeee ae icact le Colo., as Waterford Township's e -».. 14.7 Bocony ...... : ivestoc j i Ex-Cello-O ... 462 Sou Pac 70 ri i Firestone 344 Bou RY a veeee $4.2 serxorr tuvesrock redey Coma 1° Pan en ood Mach .. 54 perry sus 23.5 : tudent Council Leadership Confer- Ford Mot ... 7 std Brand . 73.64 OIT, Au 17_ (AP)—‘(USDA)— ; Freep Sul , af Std Oil Cal... 51.1 Cite Maladie Bulk early supply;ence is Bud Cook. Frueh Tra ... 286 Std Oil Ind ... 47.2/slaughter steers and heifers, good to * t Gen Bak 12.4 : Oil 3 . 61.5 averege choice b predominating, | cows : ; t -) 99.7; comprise around r cent, abou inni - - Gen Dynam .. 497 See head stockers and feeders in early. sup. ge pane the confer a ba opening trade yearlin ers an , een oc - 90.1 cathe Pup 2 33 ig active. fully. steady” heavier ence wih en Saturday. Gen Motors... 545 Swift & Co... s6 | steers steady ee eee eee eSS;| Cook, 17, of 426 S. Roslyn Rd., G Tel & Tel 75 Tenn Gas .... 35.2) choice steers 26.00-27.25: bulk choice Gen rime. 083) 2Ut8e ee 84.6| steers 900:1200 1, 27-40-24.50: few loads| #8 President of the Waterford Gen Tire ave aoe Oo Sul = bleh chetce 40 prince 1500-1080 ih clcers Township High School Student Gillette 222. $i Timk R Bear’. $72 fo prime, several loads nigh sB°oo;| Council. He is the first WTHS ae A : a. 8 i. Goodrich ..... 89 Treneeme 31-1| most good to low choice helfers 25 00- sident ttend f Goodyear"... "135.4 at Cen . 2s mwierate th choice heifers uh 25-77-00: president to attend the confer- wicle sisi ea . 0 a 00; v St feng os Bee Alt hal RAR Stan A ele SP) So inten of Student Cwencis, Greyhound .. 21.5 Unit Aire ..... d 50. at of Student uncils. Gulf On... 112.4 att Fruit 20.6) Hogs—Salable 800. Butchers _ opened Hammer Pap 36° Ug Lines ..... 30.6] eee ean eee gC Digher: most] Meeting for the eighth consecu- Hooker Ch’... 405 Us RUD «+e: 63 | butchers 15.00-15.25; mixed No. 1 and 2itive year, the conference aims Indust. Rays. 33.2 US Tome 2.2. oes | poze db butchers, 15-$0:15.65; few jotsit, cive training skills of group Ing Rand .... 68.6 : : Spree Orban : pjohn ........ 46.5) 2 3 270 lb. butchers 14.25-14.50; izati Inland Stl .. 52.1 Ven Real... 38.6| Non “3 270-300. Ib. "43 7814,00; "mixeqileadership, teach organization leek ro sal Wide e gal Kena Want uae te aes a ek le | eae emphasize extra-cur- Int Bus Mch 420 White Mot oon 54.4 315 Ib; 12.50: No. 2 and ‘ °.»lricular and community affairs and erie son Oi ns . r r é Int Nick 103 Woolworth... 57 | Vealers—Salable 250. Fully steady;|' provide practical experience in aper 128.4 Yale & Tow .. 36.2) choice and prime 36-00-40. 0 lew prime solution of problems. pos oe Ae rele + cece net ae a 41.00: a tandard eg i = ~ ngst . 133. cull and utility 17.00-2 Is] Crk Coal 375 Zenith Rad ...102 Sheep—Salab] 700. Slaughter lambs TOCKAVERAG in eee ater Real Estate Class eder lamhs.ateady; most NEW vou Aug. Te icompuca by mood and choice slaughter sprin aa the Associated Press) 21. 0; utility to good 18. ithe! ; bt Ue cull to hoice slau hter ewes 4.00-7. et or ities wer eh Indust. Rails util. stocks a and choice feeder lambs et change ......—.4 = ad ° ° Reon iadky “34d it gee Bes Beginning in Fall Week .ago M60 1387 994 2307 Off : Month ago .....346.7 140.9 98.4 231. E : ; i en ago, sacean 371.0 108. Bh 182.6 er s xtension The University of Michigan Cer- gh io. -6 147.6 102.6 236.8 i i 1958 Low 002.1 306.1 1338 93.7 211.5 Courses at PNH tificate Program in Real Estate ied Hig igh cscs. 312.0 136.5 08.7 3163 will offer courses in 24 cities in- Mca ccek : 6 i cluding Pontiac this fall, accord- DETROIT STOCKS and Cr a nbr ook ing to program Supervisor Charles Figures after dectnes points” are eighths ane H. Sill. Mucins Eoulp oo. “te ey Foon Eastern Michigan@Jniversity will| Birmingham and Royal Oak are Rote Ge Rubber Co.* ; 22/Conduct off-campus extension|also among those cities which will oss Gear Co.*........0.. rey 44.4 am ee eee 2.4 44-4) courses at Pontiac Northern High|carry the progr: designed fora; Howell Elec. Motor ¢ Co.*:: 114 12° |School and Cranbrook this fall.|those in real estate who want ad-| Fe cet Coe 34 1h {This will be the first year that/ditional training as well as for) § Rudy Manufacturing Co.* 118 11|Cranbrook is included in the ex-|those planning to enter the real/j Toledo Edison Co.. 6.1 16.1 16.1 t i *No Sale; bid- and asked. ension program, estate business, Certificates are awarded on suc- cessful completion of an efght- rr a ay, the street from several Central school lets out at Little Rock. E Lik ALL ALONE — Jefferson Thomas, right, stands alone across High School white students as verything is quiet as integration proceeds, but it’s a lonely business for the Negro student. Free-for-All in Auburn Heights Nine youths were arrested last night when Oakland County sheriff's deputies broke up a free- for-all gang fight in. Auburn Heights. Residents near the Auburn Heights School, 260 S. Squirrel Mother Aids Bride-to-Be By RELMAN MORIN SOGNE, Norway (AP) — Mrs. Nelson A. Rockefeer went today with her son Steven and his ‘Nor- wegian fiancee, ‘Anne Marie Ras- mussen, to see the Lutheran church where the young couple will be married Saturday. New York's first lady said she -}expects to be busy for the next three days helping with the wed- ding arrangements. “Of course it’s the prerogative of the bride’s parents to plan the details,’ she said, ‘‘but when- ever my advice is asked, I will help them.” Mrs. Rockefeller said she also hopes to see Boroeya Island, where Ann Mari was born. Th Rasmussens lived there until two years ago when her father, Krist- ian Rasmussen, sold his fish ex- porting business and grocery store and retired to the little mainland community of Sogne. The island is about two miles offshore. Steven met Anne Marie when she was working as a maid in the Rockefeller home in New York. “We all became very fond of her.’ said Anne “Marie’s future mother-in-law, ‘‘She has met all members of the family are ex- lpected to arrive in Norway by plane Friday. There are four other Rockefeller children: Rodman, Mrs. Robert L. Piersen, and Michael and Mary, who are twins. Mrs. Rockefeller said no friends are coming from the United States. She said the Rockefellers had “a very strong suspicion’ last spring that Steven planned to marry Anne Marie, She repeated that she and the governor are ‘very, very happy’ about the marriage. “Our children lead their own lives,"’ she said, ‘‘and J think they should.” Insurance Executive Wins Top Aide Post Ralph D. Clingaman, 2792 Pine Heights Dr., has been appointed assistant to the president of Mid- western United Life Insurance Company, Fort Wayne, Ind. Clingaman, who is now the com- pany’s pakigen sales manager, will assist Philip J. Schwanz, presi- ident. f The Pontiac #man joined Mid- ™ western United in £1948 and has served as general agent, field super- visor and then sales manager for B Michigan in 1957. In his new posi- course program, © The fee for most courses will be $27, according to Sill. | Additional information may be obtained from the local University of Michigan Extension Service of- fice, Hospitalize Woman for Accident Injuries A Pontiac woman, Geneva H. Shelton, 54, of 591 Mansfield St., was in satisfactory condition ats St. Joseph Mercy Hospital today with injuries suffered in an acci- dent late Monday afternoon. Pontiac police said she was driv- ing north on Woodward avenue when she lost- control of her auto and struck a utility pole near South boulevard. . i. * & CLINGAMAN will have primary. responsibility for recruiting agents for the Airm and developing new territo He tion, Clingaman and his wife and two children 4 ill relocate at Fort Wayne. I Confederate Veteran Growing Weaker HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)—Walter Williams, 116, the Civil War's only surviving veteran grows weaker by the day, his daughter says, , “He took a little liquid nourish- ‘ment during the day but he keeps getting weaker,’ said Mrs. Willie Mae Bowles late Monday. night. The Confederate veteran has She suffered a fractured jaw and mujtiple cuts and bruises. f * been on the critical list for more than a week, —, eee g Rockefeller’s | our other children, They’re ex- cited about coming over for the 16 other = high wedding.” school educators, Gov. Rockefeller and other working with 12 Arrest 9 Youths in Fight Rd., called deputies at 10 p.m. to report teenagers creating a dis- turbance in the neighborhooc. Four carloads of deputies ‘rushed to the scene. When they arrived there were about 30 youngsters milling around or fighting in the school yard. Nine were caught. ance were: * * * Bendelow St., Richard D. Sylvain, | 18, eo Bendelow St., James E. Cooper, 17, of 326 Bald win St., all of Rochester; Blvd., Avon Township. The others arrested and eharged al- Pontiac residents, were: Gran Midland St.; 18, of 369 S. Anderson St.; David A. Groves, armed with clubs or knives. Business Notes and summer employe of Pontiac Motor, is attending a one-week educational] conference at the Gen- eral Motors Technical Center ‘in Warren. Cheek will join two central office staffs, for the wind-up of GM's Summer Program for high school science teachers. The group will CHEEK engineering offi- cials as well as make their own at GM plants and. applications of subjects relative to their teachings. The Northern High teacher has been assigned to the chassis draft- ing department of Product Engi- neering at Pontiac Motor. Cheek’s specific assignment* entailed the compilation of data on Pontiac V-8 engine design, “It was just beginning to break out into a real free-for-all when we pulled up,”’ said one deputy. The youths scattered. * * * Arrested and charged with creating a disturb- Jimmie A. Robtoy, 24, of 3429 and | and Robert A. Griffin, 22, of-108 South ville C. Crawford, 18, of 26 N.| Miles J. Navarre, Dennis C. Bush, 19, of 98 Roselawn Ave.; t7, of 9F N. Astor Ave.: and Everette E. Grif- fin Jr., 24, of 322 E. Third St. x * * Deputies said there was no evi- dence that any of the youths were Glenn Cheek, Pontiac Northern High School mathematics teacher: GM divisions.and' hear addresses by comments -regarding experiences’ LANSING (P— Legislative tax bargainers were to huddle today over a-business tax formula that one of them saw as “going down a blind alley” and another said might lend itself to a “‘lot of chisel- ing.’ “Talk about explorations. We're where Columbus was in 1492,”’ said Sen. Harold M. Ryan (D-Detroit). He referred to a sliding-scale plan authored by Sen. Carlton H. Morris (R-Kalamazoo) that would allow losing and low-profit concerns credits against the Busi- ness Activities Tax (BAT). With it would go an increase in the basic rate of the BAT. The tax credit proposal, newly researched by the state revenue department, was at the top of the agenda as House-Senate conferees groped for a possible compromise to end the seven months tax stale- mate. * * * It carried the main hope for de- vising an 18 million dollar levy on business demanded by the house to round out °a tax package built around a 120 million dollar a year increase in the use (sales) tax. The tax credit proposal,. depend- ing on the ceiling selected, would grant anywhere from four millions to $9,300,000 a year in. tax relief based on 1957 collections. ceiling revenue loss and recapture the additional would require a boost in the BAT rate from 6% to 10 mills—more than 50 per cent. business doesn't want. I don’t see much chance of coming to agree- ment along that road,” he said. * * vor a high ceijing (80 per cent) and substantial relief, Senate conferees a lew ceiling (20 per cent) and more modest dollar relief. Ryan said that to offset the high revenue needed “We'd be doing exactly what * Furthermore, he said, state rev- enue experts conceded they had to rely on ‘‘guesstimates’’ in predict- ing the dollar effect of whatever might be done. That is what led to the “bind alley’’ remark. Sen. Clyde H. Geerlings (R- Holland), with Ryan and Morris a member of the six-man con- ference committee, was less pes- simistic generally but saw an important hazard in the high- ceiling credit. Geerlings said he was told by spokesmen for some medium-sized, family-owned or closely held con- cerns that ‘‘they wo ‘d just see to it that they don't show a profit.” In the 30 to 50 per cent ceiling range, he said, there obviously Generally, House conferees fa- would be less incentive for such DETROIT (UPI)—Soviet Pre- mier Nikita Khrushchev will by- pass Detroit, Chic and Cleve- land during his tour of the United States next month, the Detroit i\Fress Press said today. Lack of time as well as local hostility demonstrated by big East- -lern European minority groups: to x \ Rockefeller, Ike Talk on Defense New” York Governor to Meet Top GOP Men Concerning Future By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (AP) New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller comes to town today to report to President Eisenhower on civil de- fense and to talk politics with strategically placed Republicans. The President interrupted his stay at his Gettysburg farm home long enough for a flying trip to Washington for a series of White House conferences. | Eisenhower arranged to ‘discuss iwith Rockefeller: recommenda- Nikita May Skip Detroit, Cleveland and Chicago companies to try to show so low a profit as to qualify for credits against tax. * * * “At ‘BO per cent, there would be liable to be a lot of chiseling,” he said. * * * Chances that House conferees would accept the: range deemed reasonably safe by Geerlings did not appear too favorable. News in Brief A dozen automobile tires valued at $200 plus an estimated $10 worth of tools were stolen by thieves who broke into the Vicdike Service Station, 66 way, Pontiac state police reported yes- ‘Dixie High- Independence Township, terday. W. A. Foster, of 6631 Walthy Dr., Clarkston, reported to Pontiac po- lice Monday that someone stole a from his car while it was parked at a tavern. Pontiac police reported the theft of an M-1 .30 caliber rifle from the Pontiac Army Reserve Center, at 40 Walnut St., early this morn- ing. Haddassah Rummage Sale — Thurs., Aug. 20th, 9:30 to 3:30. 82 W. Huron, cor. Cass. Ady. \ set of golf clubs valued at $150 _ lesser Soviet lights earlier in the year are the factors which caused Khrushchev to scratch those ‘cities off his itinerary, according to the Free Press. The newspaper said the Khrushchev tour would take in Washington, San _ Francisco, Coon Rapids, Iowa, and New York, with Pittsburgh and Los Angeles as possibilities to be added. Coon Rapids, Iowa, is the location of Roswell Garst’s farm where Soviet officials often have visited. The state department in Wash- ington declined to comment on the Free Press story but it was pointed out that Detroit was not on the list of places the Russians asked for in assembling data for the Soviet Premier’s forthcoming visit. Unofficially, the’ state department had expected that Detroit would be skipped. Soviet Deputy Premiers Anastas Mikoyan and Frol Kozlov, who made separate visits to Detroit earlier this year, met hostile re- ceptions. Mikoyan was a target of shouted insults, snowballs and egzs when he came to Detroit last NOW IS THE Many well selected common stocks are excellent invest- ments right now. They're also ideal to include in your — plans for the future. Invest- ments can be made monthly out of income, if you wish. Drop in, write, or phone for our recommendations, WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. York Stock Exchange other leading exchanges P poner | Watling, Lerchen & Ce. § 402 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. J : Pontiac, Michigan — u Member N U Pitase send me mere information t JP about Diversified Investments, ' | Name SOC UO COLES OURO COUCCOO IOUS | FES SECOUCEC IC COCO COUCE SOO t City 4 mvaueo enum eco anes es assests oll winter. Kozlov was picketed at his hotel during his tour of Detroit auto plants in June. In both cases, the demonstrators were refugees from Hungary and other European nations under Communist domina- tion. | ee eee tiens of the annual Governors’ Conference for a national do-it- yourself shelter building program) for protection from nuclear fall- out. Before and after this meeting, the New York governor planned | to see influential Republicans We Help Make Home Plans Come True with varying degrees of interest in the possibility that he may; seek the 1960 GOP presidential| nomination, “Among these. is Sen. Sen. Styles Bridges (R-NH), who is plugging Vice President Richard, M. Nixon for the nomination, | _ If Rockefeller decides to take on Nixon, most politicians think he will have to contest the vice pres- ident in New Hampshire’s first- in-the-nation presidential primary next March, Rockefeller said Monday he has set no deadline on a decision Wayne W. Weaver, 616 Third St., was among 230 students from the; United States, Canada and nine. other countries who recently at-. tended the sixth annual School for Credit Union Personnel at the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. Weaver, assistant treasurer-man- ager, Chief Pontiac Federal Credit Union, attended the two-week school, co-sponsored by the Credit Union national Assn. and the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hartwick, 582 Rosewood Dr., Waterford Township, have returned from Lancaster, Pa., where they_at- tended a factory training school on the operation of their new mo- bile feed processing plant. Their new mobile mill is de- signed to enable them to take the their asking farmers to bring grains to the mill. Sams Inc. at Clawson Nearing Completion ‘Sams, Ific.’s newest store, locat- ed at the Clawson Shopping Cen- ter, 14-Mile and Crooks roade, is nearing completion, according to two of the owners, Herman and Bernard Osnos. This store is the first step “th the expansion plan announced by Max Osnos, president of Sams, Inc., last January. The project calls for several new stores in the next few years. Sams originated as a small cor- ner store over 40 years ago in Detroit. Araphoe Glacier, near Boulder,’ Colo., is a mile long, a mile wide! and two miles above sea level. a feed plant to the farm instead of whether to seek the nomination, and that political opinion polls| would play only a minor part in, ithis decision. To Sentence Youths. After Plea of Guilty Two Pontiac 18-year-old youths will be sentenced by Oakland Coun- ty Circuit Judge William J, Beer Sept. 8 for burglary. Richard Ayotte, of 293 Voorheis, Rd., and David McAboy, of 17 Al- lison St., yesterday pleaded guilty to breaking and entering in the, nighttime when arraigned before Judge Beer. Pontiac police arrested the pair, ‘along with a third youth who was } | Planning to built a new home...or buy one already built? Whatever your plans may be, we can help to make them come true with a low-cost mortgage loan, geared to your budget. Capitol Savings & Loan Assoc. Established 1890 ° later released, early this month after they discovered the youths} emerging from a wooded area near; Pontiac Northern High Schoel. De-; tectives found a stolen cigarette! vending machine hidden in the 75 W. Huron St., Pontiac FE 4-0561 Customers Parking in Back of Office woods. Continue Hunt for Plane, 3 Flint Area Passengers MACKINAW CITY @® — The search for a missing plane with three Flint- area persons aboard was concentrated today in this area where a log book and inspection card from the plane were found yesterday. The plane, flown by Clayton D. Chamberlin, 52, of Flint, disap- peared’ in stormy weather Friday in the Upper Peninsula. | Ireland's daughter, Kathleen, 13. 4 on a flight ‘from Flint to St. Ignace = | With Chamberlin were Rioberl = Ireland, 39, of Fenton.Village, and 3 &, FOR — ‘INVESTMENT SECURITIES and ACCURATE QUOTATIONS CALL. C. J. NEPHLER CO. FE 2-9117 ‘ 818 Community National Bank Bldg. ’ LISTED & UNLISTED SECURITIES MUTUAL FUNDS OUR FACILITIES EXTEND FROM COAST 20 COAST