e avails ts Next M “Pro bers Calling Hoffa Men; Quiz on ‘Loans’ Status WASHINGTON (—Senate rackets investigators to- day called in a half dozen of James R. Hoffa’s Teamsters Union aides to tell whether money they gave him repre- sented loans or kickbacks. The probers said the subordinates will be asked whether the payments. they made to Hoffa were volun- tary or forced. Hoffa has¢ testified he borrowed the! money but has not repaid it. Chairman McClellan (D- Ark) said it is now “a probality” that the 44-year-old Hoffa will be called here from the union's Miami Beach, Fla., convention sessions for testimony, although he is not un- William Bell, $1,000; Paul Al- len, $2,000; Frank Fitzsimmons, $2,000; Roland McMaster, $1,000; James Clift $1,000,and Herman Kierdorf $2,000. AH are from. De- it Teamsters Union units dom- ated by Hoffa. ICT SHAKEDOWNS. oyer entangle 7 In New York, AFL-CIO investi- gators charged today that’ the Bakery Workers’ UF Speaker ‘3. C. PENNEY ‘Noted Merchant ‘te {0 Address UF Workers and the Textile Union to clean house or face expulsion from the federation. The council was exphcted to re-| . (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) ~ 5Die, 6 Rescued in Mine Blast Safety Crew Trapped Repairing Vent Fan in Talk by J. €. Penney to Launch Special Gifts Campaign Thursday The Special Gifts Division of the 1957 Pontiac Area United Fund drive will kick off its activities Thursday with a meeting for 60 UF workers. * * * Guest speaker at the affair slated ifor the Waldron Hotel at 8 a.m. is J. C. Penney, founder of the | national department store chain.| The Special Gifts Division, un- _ der the leadership of Howard W. Huttenlocher, will seek $74,724 from over 299 contributors who gave at least $100 to the local drive in the past year. traditionally sets the pace for the ‘Pennsylvania Shaft _weitare - character-building “jagencies su ed by UF. WASHINGTON, Pa. —Five of * * 11 miners trapped by an explo-|" sion 565 feet down in a mine they were trying to make safe for fel- low diggers were killed yesterday near this southwestern Pennsyl- vania town. * * * One of the six rescued by he- roie crews using a makeshift hoist is reported im poor condition at the re Hospital. He is James Wright, 59. Killed in the blast which ripped through the Marianna. mine of Bethlehem Steel Corp.. were _George- Demko, 56, Philip Kornet, George Harmuth,- Joseph Smith and Stanley Collins. The five’had a total of 17 chil- dren. Hospitalized with Wright were ‘Mike Knizner, Stanley Majesky, In addition fo the division's solic- itors, the UF's board of trustees, administrative committee and campaign cabinet headed by drive, chairman Dana P. Whitmer will attefd the session. Official kickoff ,of the drive ‘will be Nov. 4, with boned seeking $612,000. A Mite Different, Sir. ATLANTA (INS) — Sen. Her- man E. Talmadge (D-GA) today compared President Ejisenhow- in Little Rock, Ark., with the Russian suppression of the Hun- garian shader ee . The hard core of advance givers) iaton of nds tor the 35 beat. CLQUdY Weather . er’s threat to’ use federal troops . Claims Girard Shot at Woman ‘Just for Joke’ Soldier From Says Slain Japanese Was Enticed on Range SOMOGAHARA, Japan P —A U.S. soldier testified today that William S. Gi- rard just ‘for a joke fired an empty cartridge case that within range. _ Victor Nickel, testifying at an outdoor session of Girard’s Japa- nese manslaughter trial, said he tossed more than 10 brass _cart- ridge cases from a machine gun emplacement they were guarding) pointed ground and said ‘Mamasan, dai Girard “motioned to her that it was all right te go ahead and pick up brass.” Testifying on the muddy firing range hillside where Mrs, Naka Sakai was fatally wounded last Jan. 30, Nickel] said he did not see Girard toss out any shell cases. SHOT IN FUN Presiding Judge Yuzo Kawachi,' wearing a raincoat and broad straw sombrero, asked Nickel: “Did you think Girard shot the woman in fun?’ “Yes, for a joke,” said. Nickel said, however, he did not see Girard scatter brass, as | Nickel contends. “If he did, 1 didn't see him do it.” Nickel testified. Testimony by Nickel, the only American witness to the shooting, varied at least on some points from that given by Girard himself at a morning session. POINTS DIFFERENT The two indicated points approx-| imately 25 feet apart as the spot where Girard stood when he fired) the shots. Nickel's testimony! closer to Mrs. Sakai. * * * to Girard’s motion, come from here to here?" Judge: Kawachi asked, motioning forward with his hands. . * * * “Yes,” Nickel. answered. “I saw her bend over and start picking up the brass . . . Then when she (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Predicted Tonight The Pontiac weather outlook for tonight is partly cloudy, with the; low around 47, Tomorrow will, be fair and cool with the mercury reaching 62. Tomorrow evening it will be fair and quite cool with the temperature dropping to 38. In an extended weather outlook, the U.S. Weather Bureau has fore- cast that temperatures will aver- age four to five degrees below the normal 70 high and normal 51 low for the next few days. A warming trend is expected Friday and Sat- The lowest temperature pre- ceding 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac was 40. At 1 p.m. the mercury Inkster |. killed a Japanese woman after the two enticed her’ at Girard’s suggestion. i Date of Sept. 24 Ike s 2nd Crisis | | | | the indictment against Girard | ‘would put Girard about 5 feet! “Did the mamasan, in response In ‘55—a Heart Attack; ‘Today Faces Decision on Integration Riot NEWPORT, R. L W — Once again Sept. 24 is a day of crisis for Presideht Eisenhower—just as a heart attack hospitalized him. Then, at Denver, the stricken President fought for his life. It was a day of great drama and tremendous tension. | ‘Teday he faces a new crisis, | He has made up his mind te use. feree, if necessary, to com- pel school integration in ato Reek, Ark. There is no question that he made that decision reluctantly. conceive of circumstances under which he ever would be induced to send federal troops into any area in an effort to compel in- tegration. x * * Now, in rioting yesterday Little Rock, he has found these circumstances. He has command- ed the rioters to cease and desist. He must decide, on the basis of what happens from this point on, whether to order federal troops to Little Reck's Central High School. As for that* other- crisis that started in Denver two years ago today, from all outward appear-' ances Eisenhower has weathered that one in fine shape. And his doctor, Maj. Gen, How- ard M. Snyder, says here at the President's vacation headquarters that medical examinations bear out those appearances. “So far as all our tests show regarding his heart, the President is in good condition,’ Snyder told! @ reporter. Living Costs Rise WASHINGTON (# — The govern- ment reported today the cost of living rose two-tenths of 1 per cent in August. It was the 12th con- secutive monthly advance. Nixon Blames Faubus NEW YORK (# — Vice Presi- dent Nixon today said the “‘dis- graceful ‘Little Rock integration situation” is largely the fault of stood at 62, Arkansas Gov. Orval Faubus. it was two years ago today when): Last July 17 he said he could not! BACK TO LITTLE ROOK — In a serious mood is Arkansas Gov. Orval Faubus as he leaves his beach cottage at Sea Island, Ga., with luggage. The governor is returning to Little _his car loaded Desist!'’ proclamation aimed at possible, Rock, scene of tegration violence yesterday. He had been attending a conference of Southern governors at Sea Island. | House press secretary, holds President Eisenhower's ‘ at) ve > + Returning to Scene of Strife , AP Wirephote AP Wirephete PRESIDENTS PROCLAMATION — James C. Hagerty, White ‘Cease and the people of Little Rock. The proclamation makes use of Federal troops in the troubled area - road this morning, as State inline Block Trattic for Parents’ March Parents of children living in the Hudson Covert Ele- mentary School area in Waterford Township again marched their children down the center of Scott Lake Police blocked off traffic. The parents are protesting the lack of school bus serv- ice and safe walking facilities for students attending’ They want! transportation facilities for, all students who must walk on the highways to school. All traffic was halted in front of the school—parents led their chil- dren in and the same procedure will be duplicated this afternoon, when they return from school. This is the second day the par- ents’ have demonstrated-their concern over transportation ac- commodations. Pickets were stationed at the) Covert and other schools in+—- ‘|the district. {t iton boulevard and the bus garage on M59 for the second day. How- ever, no trouble was encountered. | * * * According to the parents, speed; limits of 40 and 45 miles per hour in the township make walking on the narrow roads dangerous, | They say that in many spots slight hills in the road make it im- possible to. see a child until the motorist is too close to avoid an “accident, At the present time there is noth- Board of Education office on Wal- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) | will determine his action. _ fuse is necessary to carry out court- NEWPORT, RI.) — President Eisenhower's headquarters today served fresh notice he is ready to order federal troops to Lit- tle Rock to quash any new ov ke Renews. Warning Hell Use U.S. Army Faubus Returns to Arkansas as More Racial ._ Disorders Follow Integration Riot» LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (P—~ Police hustled off five white men from Central High School area this morning shortly after the officers took up their stations. in the school integration crisis. : -The day’s developments And at Sea Island, Ga., Gov. Or- val Faubus decided this morning jto leave the conference of Southern governors there and return to ' Arkansas. Asked why he had suddenly de- cided to return, Faubus said: “After all, I'm the governor | and a lot of people think I ought te be there.” | The President late yesterday signed a history-making proclama- tion clearing the legal way forjuse of troops if he should decide such ordered integration. * * * outbreak of racial violence} Fifty officers had just been deployed when two policemen apparently rec- ognized the five men in the ‘small crowd that had gath- ered early at the site of an integration battle yester- day. Only a handful of people—one reporter counted 14 — clustered around the barriers when the ar- rests were made. “Those are the North Little Rock boys,”- one officer re- marked te another. He refused to explain his remark. ‘ Apparently the police meant to remove agitators from the scene as they arrived. ' ~*~ © * The city. is trigger-tense. City police and state troopers For the President that was a mo- imentous decision. He had made it. clear time and again he . was) against use of force to compel com- pliance. REPORTED QUIET of Little Rock was reported to him | as “quiet this morning.” : * *® * | Faubus said he did not know what his first action would be but that he thought his appearance there “would be a settling influ- ever they are going to do.” | He said he did not look upon jo proclamation as a threat but, ‘you might term it the cold war.” ~*~ * * | Faubus said that after his recent ap with the President at Newport “didn't think it was very be- coming” on the part of Atty. Gen. ‘Brownell and the Justice Depart- ment to announce that they were sending investigators and attorneys to Little Rock. . Faubus was asked if he thought federal @roops should be sent into Little Rock, ‘KEPT THE PEACE’ “Let me use my guard,” he re- sponded. ‘‘We kept the peace—not ia blow was struck. “It would be a serious and far- ireaching step if the federal gov- jernment should come in without ‘the sanction or request of the gov- jernor of any sovereign state.” | * * * | The governor earlier had. called ‘out the National Guard at Little Rock ‘but disbanded it in response to a federal court order, which he announced would be appealed. Graham Has Solution — NEW YORK (INS) — Evange- ; Faubus said the strife-torn city were busy last night answering calls reporting fights between jwhites and Negroes. Most of them ‘Mob Seems Poohed Out LITTLE ROCK, Ark. @ — A_ | quiet crowd ef about 200 white men and women watched Cen- tral High School today at class. time with a placid detachment that contrasted strangely with shows at 9:30 a.m. - turned out to be “of minor im- portance. ~ WORST INCIDENT A gang fight between about 30 Negro and white teenagers touched off what may have been the most serious incident, State Trooper Louis Cone said that when he told a car occupied by two \|Negro men and three women to move on, the driver attempted to run him down. * * ¥ ‘Cone, who was knocked down by the automobile, said he jumped up, fired two shots at the fleeing car and then gave chase in his own automobile. A city policeman also fired a shot, he said, and two city police cars joined in the chase. Pursuit ended at a deadend street about 12 blocks away when the Negroes’ car bounced into a yard and smashed. into a fence. City police booked Curtis Pat- rick, 22, of Little Rock for dis- turbing the peace and Clarence R. Sanders, 29, of Bunkie, La., an ‘airman stationed at the Little Rock Air Force Base, for disturb- ing the peace, carrying a con- cealed weapon — officers said he had a ‘‘metal club”. — and. assault with a deadly weapon, ‘The latter charge stemmed from Sanders’ attempt to run down Trooper Cone, who suffered a list Billy Graham declared today | bruised leg. the answer to the Little Rock . * * * school. integration problem can The three women in the ear be found ‘‘in Christ.’ - But Won't Have Any Say at Teamsters Convention | The 11 men, many of them fore- men and safety experts, had en- tered the mine nearly eight hours before the terrifying blast let go at. 7:15 agn.__ w* *« A mine spokesman said they were attempting to repair a ven- tilation fan which had forced shut- Just what caused the blast of - truckers could not be determined immedi- that {orm the ately. > . 1,500,000-member oie - oR * union. Families of the victims and hun- oe tet ee By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. If it was up to the dues-paying men behind the wheels of the na- tion’s tricks, James Riddle Hoffa wouldn't stand much of a chance for the presiden- cy of the Inter- national Brother- Midwest locals haven't and won't membership had voted on dele- gates to the Sept. 30 meeting. This ‘supported charges by New York and Pontiac Teamsters that delegations had heen “rigged” with pro-Hoffa members to guarantee his elevation to the $50,000-a-year top-spot of the gigantic union. SELECTED BY VOTE Section “I of Article III of the Teamsters’ constitution says “all delegates to the International con- vention shall be selected by vote at a regular meeting of the local union.” One by one, as the injured were|sters n in Miami Beach | rescued it was learned the others sii ab Riacidotion: ak \ re died. said his local’s rank-and-file f 4 ; ue we “a were several that supported Hoffa’ in his bid for the presidency. A fi-year-old member of Detroit Loeal 299 (Hoffa's ‘‘home’’ local) sgid. “He’s dlways used me all right, and I've been trucking’ since 19. cup of coffee Monday pleaded for | one thing. ‘‘Don't mention my name because-they haye their ways with their scare tactics to make, a) man lose his job,” one trucker) expressed. “te makes no difference what All the men stopping for a quick wee DERE ACB In Today’ s Press FRANCAIS, ee ‘|. A vetéran member of Toledo Comics evi ces SAROCRIOCOORC +) County News ..........555 we think anyway,” said one 77i- year-old member of Pontiac Local 614: “Hoffa hasn't yet and won't do us gny good.” This . six-year member of .the Pontiac local, which has been un- der the Midwestern Teamsters leader's trusteeship since 1953, de- clared there has not been a general membership meeting since April. WHERE’S MONEY? Local 20. was: hesitant in. stating his opinion. “All I want to know is where all that money goes?"* he Dues-Paying Truckers Oppose Hoffa’s Candidacy Hoffa ‘ in the convention delegates.” A 31-year-old steward with a Pontiac building supply firm was emphatic in what he thought of Hoffa and the affairs of Local 614 here. “He hasn't helped us a bit. He’s only helped the gang- sters and hoodlums in the organ- ization. I'm ashamed to belong to Local, 614.” Hauling food north from Indiana, a. 36-year-old and 12-year member of Indianapolis Local 135 said the fiery Hoffa “has no business in the presidency if all they ‘Say about him is right.” * * * Pe “I agree with those New York) fellows. This shouldn't be a picked party but the whole union should say something,” he said. said, He later. said he opposed a Asked if his local informed a Pe ‘because we didn't get a say| him where his $5 per nionth dues went, he shrugged his shoulders and ‘said, “Hm! -I sometimes wonder, I sometimes wonder what I pay it for.” Two new members of the Pon- tiac local driving gravel trucks declared investigators have not yet proved anything on Hoffa. “If those guys can prove he’s crooked, he shouldn’t be in. the driver's seat,”’ one said. JIMMIE TO PROFIT A member of Local 299 in De- troit since 1938 at first refused to state an dpinion. ‘Just gay that the only guy that will profit if he's elected wilP be Jimmie himself,” the 41-year-old trucker said. The owner of his own truck (Continued on Page 2, Gol. 3) were taken to a hospital for treat- ment of cuts and bruises, They - were Patrick’s mother and sister— Rosalee Hubbard, about 50 and Robbie Lee Belt, 19..- and Cath- eryn Ransom, all of Little Rock, STREET FIGHTING Police said blows were struck ‘in the main street gang fight but apparently no one was hurt se- riously, The incident occurred at (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Frieda Could Be Meek as Lamb, Fierce as Lion SPARTANBURG, S. C. DA woman phoned airport manager C. 'R. Moss and asked: ‘“What's- thé status of Frieda?” “She's on the way to bess om port, * he said, ‘ “That close!” the woman ex- claimed, “You do mean Frieda Lamb, my secretary; don’t you?” Moss asked. rca Hea os. Se and Sanger “No,” the woman replied. qo mean Frieda the hurricane,” # ‘ ( > tem? . Highest temperature 2 wie Of cal’ 5 Pay. - Board of Supervisors May Soon Formulate New Policy on Salaries) ert “The Oakland County. , Supervisors today refused to the salary of Robert Y. Moore, chairman of the Board of Auditors, from $12,000 to $15,000 a year. But there were indications as the board began tackling 1958 qalary and budgetary recommendations, that a new policy on department heads’ salaries may be forth- coming. * * * = Ferndale Supervisor Clayton ‘G. Lilly had objected to Moore's gal- ary remaining stationery as» the salaries for positions not filled by appointment got an annual 5 to 10 per cent hike. “I know that our policy in the past has been te set the salaries of appointed officers at the be- ginning of their and not change thém during the two, three, or four-year terms that ov are in office,” Lilly said, “However, wouldn't it be fairer to give the appointees annual cost of living raises as we do for everyone else?" Lilly’s suggéstion that the co adopt a sliding scale of wagés for appointed employes was called “perfectly legal” by Corporation Counsel Harry J. Merritt. * a Before considering recom mended $10,732,014 Gilget, which includes $4,592,472 in salaries, -the board approved the annexation to Holly Village of about 200 acres in Holly and Rose Townships. - No objections to the annexation were heard during a — hear- ing Square Dance Season to Begin Saturday Night Square dancers from all over Oakland. County will be “greliting their partners” Saturday night and heading far the kickoff of the fall square dance season at the Water- ford Township CAI building.» By E, H. SEMS Does bad weather always ac- company a very low pressure sys- Bad weather invariably accom- ies a very low pressure system unless the pressure’ dips only for! a few hours and then rises quickly. A freak situation does occur oc-| casionally. .and ‘momentarily the. weather will hold good, even -as the mercury column falls. But, invariably, this decline, if not reversed, will. bring winds | and probably precipitation. Very low pressure means a val- ley on top of the layer of gases /a “right” surrounding the earth is above you. Air swirls into this valley) from mountains (high pressure’ areas) and sets up a_ counter-. clockwise rotation motion and a weather disturbance — in this hemisphere. - Below the Equator, the motion is reversed — it is clockwise in low pressure areas, ‘counter-clockwise in high pressure (good weather) | systems. ~The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly, cloudy today and tenight. Somewhat. warmer tonight. High teday ‘near 64. Lew tonight around 47, temerrew fair and cool, high near 62. Winds south- west to south at 10-15 miles an — today shifting ‘te northerly late tenight. Outloek for tomorrow night fair and| quite eoei, low eeest 38. Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 am 40 At @ am. Wind velocity 3 m_-p,h. Direction—West Stun sets Tuesday at 6 26 pm Fun tises Wednesday at 6:22 am. 1 Moon Bets Thesdey at 649 pm Mo . nee? at 8:38 am. Dosntsen: Tereperstares é 1 am 12 97 FE) ea ‘ 62! Monday tn Pontiac As recorded downtown) | Lowest temperature coeeee ys 4? Mean temperature FSO SOE 161 S35 ¢ Weather—Rain. 13 in. One Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature .. val Lowest temperature = ........00.: ha Mean temperature... iceesescees 61 Weather—Fair, Warm. eee wenn Highest and Lowest Temperatures Date in #5 Years Tas 88 fm 1691 4 in a8. entays Temperature Chart Alpena 26 Los geles 85 bs Paitimore 8 3) Marffette 61 Bismarck 8 #40 Memphis 16 53 Browngville 7@ €8 Miami 86 (76 Buffalo - 6 44 Milwaukee 60 70 69 67 Minneapolis 57 46! 47 N. Orleans #1 : 3 New York 14 Omaha 65 31 oenix 66 «71 \St. Louis 76° 46 8. Francisco 72 58) 8S. Marie 50 42! Traverse C. 4837 Washington 77 a Seattle a3! Tampa i Li] 4 se fo Hike | ‘Cities Star in Windsor. “lactive in civic affairs of | ever they judged -the situation to “It is the opinion of the staff gnexs of 2,000. 5 [Truckers Oppose 'Hoffa’s Candidacy. * (Continued From Page One) net only -eriticized Hoffa but blasted the labor movement in the same breath. “‘The govern- ment let itzget where it is to- day and there’s no stopping it now,” he stated as he climbed inte his truck cab, iI have to work, don’t I?” ‘GOOD MAN when he becomes president.” * * * | The 46-year-old truck hauler did not praise his local as much as the heir-apparent to the presidency. “I've had a griev- ance up there for a year and | those guys don’t touch it.’’. RALPH W. BEEBE Press Editorial Writer Retires ssiis=cis cece member said: . ‘‘No, Ralph W. Beebe Started -Came Here in 1920 |be so many after him.” | ’ a) rT , After more than 45 years tele = eae newspaper editorial work, Ralph W. Beebe, a member of The Pon- tiac Press staff since 1920, has retired. He. has been an editorial writer since -1943. Senate Labor Rackets Committee | Born Aug. 27, 1892 in Detroit, probe of Hoffa: “Where there’s ‘Beebe graduated from Detroit, smoke there’s fire.” Ind., said Hoffa ‘‘should not be) ‘condemned until proven guilty.” But he said of the current ., {Central High School and the Uni-| . «:} don’t think he should be chosen _|versity of Michigan. He started president,”” was the response of a his newspaper work on the Detroit member of the Teamsters for the Journal in 1912, and worked later ast 14 years. “I think he’s grafted on the Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, enough. He's behind all those mis- Evening Times and the Border goings. He's not fooling anybody," said the Kokomo, Ind., unionist. U.S. Men Testing Brazilian Iron Ore ~~ * He and his wife, whom he married in Detroit in 1916, came to Pontiac in 1920 when he became a reporter for The Press. He became telegraph editor of this paper in 1924 and in 1943 | left the wire news desk to devote | to editorial wri Um = ‘Technology in Chicago are con- tn recent years failing health’ ducting experiments in Brazil to|, has kept him from the office but) ‘determine the economic potential| he continued his editorial work of “low-grade” iron ore reserves from his home in Sylvan Lake. in the Minas Gerais State, where In 1951 he was a member of the the highest concentration of Bradil- American Press Institute seminar ian iron ore is located. for coverage of governmental * * * news, at Columbia University. | "The so-called “lowgrade” ore in es ke Brazil is said to be equal in quality The Beebes have made their to much of the high-grade ore in home in Sylvan Lake for many ‘the rest of the world. fyears and in the past he has been) The economic feasibility of pro- the cessing and shipping this ore from He served two terms Minas Gerais to the coast 300 ‘miles away is being considered. ‘ers from the Illinois Institute of community. on the Board of Trustees. Says: ‘Still Is Integrated’ Little Rock Schoo] Ofticial Denies Fights in Building LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (INS) —|Blossom added that no disciplinary Little Rock School Superintendent | action would be taken against the Virgil T. Blossom said tonight that) istudents who walked out. other than “a little shoving” there) Blossom said he felt certain that -| were no acts of violence committed his actions in no way violated the inside Central High- School after federal] court injunction against] eight Negro students gained ad-|interference with integration. He mission. | added that he said he’went to U.S. Blossom told a news conference | ‘District Attorney Osro Cobb's that he had determined this on the ‘office to discuss the situation but} ‘basis of reports from the teaching ‘declined to disclose what they ‘Navy, Marines ‘talked about ™* Atomic Dye Helps Find Brain Tumors he was looking to- the federal gov-| |ernment ° ‘to make the next move.) CHICAGO — University of Chi- “1 would not anticipate what cago medical scientists are using]| they (federal government) intend a radioactive dye, a mew deep- to do,’ Blossom said. jred tracer called octoiodoflue-| nae > : irescein, to locate brain tumors. WITHDRAWN nw Known as OIF, the dye an- | Blossom s‘ id the Negroes actual- pnounces the tumor’'s location’ by ly were withdrawn from the sc hool emitting radiation that is easily at noon because Assistant Police getected by -scintillation counters. Chief Gene Smith, directing city; Brain tumors police at the school, had warned mice concentrated thé dye as much’ ‘at 11:30 a.m., “that the situation 4, 39 times more readily than jis not improving — in fact it is surrounding normal brain. tissue getting worse. We would be better jone hour after intravenous injec- joff taking them out.” tion. After 24 hours the ratio was Blossom siad he told smith, | as high as 80 to 1. “Let's take- them out then.” | Blossom maintained that the ‘Accidentally Shovel Cat | school “still was integrated” as Into Deep Dry Well far as he was concerned and EL CAJON, Calif. uw — A kitten staff at the school. Blossom said he did not believe the Negrocs would “be back im- mediately.” He said while the NegrBes ‘ fave to return at any time, | that Negroes could return when- be proper. He said: 70-foot abandoned dry well. This stopped the job of filling’ jat Central -High School that the the well until rescue could be com- igreat majority of the white stu- pleted by Frank Boforth and Mar- , idents are no problem."' jtin Roberts, two U.S. Marines, He reported that approximately who had been working on the job. }450 white students walked out of They lowered a parakeet cage into the cage and was _ hoisted! * °* * out of the well, unharmed. He asserted there had been no pre-arranged plan for getting the Negro chi Idren into the sc hol. iin mobile homes. Asked then why he was a part of thie movement, he laughed and said, |--~ “I think, Hoffa is a good man,” ‘said a member of Loeal 614. ‘‘He’s ‘done us plenty of good as truckers and will probably help us more a | Questioned whether he thought pena Local 486 ‘I'm against him. I think. the whole -——- union His Career in Detroit; needs a good scrubbing. If he} ‘wasn't so crooked, there wouldn't A trucker from Local 142 in Gary, ‘RIO DE JANEIRO — esearch | transplanted to}. was accidentally shoveled into aj THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1957 ot this world Sunday, the first day Week, seem quite contented although mother Rosolona'’s Schnitzel V looks concerned over their ~ welfare since it is her first litter. ARRIVE FOR NATIONAL DOG WEEK — The * nine red pedigree Dachshund pups that entered her seven boys of National Dog ship. Morse is a Schnitzel V and School. Pontiae Press Phote and two girls live in a kennel in” the basement of the home of Mr. and Mrs. Rob- ert Morse, of 507 Kendry Rd., Bloomfield Town- teacher at Jefferson Junior High é Geeg Purpose in Red Arms Shipments UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (INS) — British Foreign Secretary Sel- wyn Lloyd solemnly warned the United Nations today that the est tension at the moment.” to give some thought to ‘‘the dan- gers in their policies of incréas- ing tension’’ by supplying arms and agitating Arab states. Lloyd declared that the deliv- Says Girard Fired ‘Just for a Joke’ (Continued From Page One) saw Girard get up she ran away. -Then Girard fired . started to run.’ FIRED AT MAN Nickel said Girard fired first at a Japanese man farther down the hill and the second time at Mrs. Sakai. When the woman fell, the sol- dier said, “The Japanese started to kick‘ up a commotion. Girard went over and when he came back he was scared.” “He asked, next?’ ’ ‘What'll we do * * * Nickel’s testimony came after Girard had pointed out to the court where he said he stood and where Mrs. Sakai fell. SAW HER FALL “Did you fire one, two or three times?’’ Kawachi asked. “Two times,” Girard replied. Asked which of his shots hit, he replied, ‘‘The second.’ “Did you see her fall,” asked Kawachi. "Yes sit.” The trial is to resume tomorrow. Mass for Tests in Mediterranean WITH U. S. 6th FLEET wh — The mightiest concentration of U. S. naval and Marine forces in the Mediterranean since the war massed today off the Aegean entrance to the strategic Dardanelles for NATO military exercises. * * * The maneuvers, called ‘‘Deep- water,” will continue through land, Greece, Italy, Turkey, Britain and the United States. * * * The Navy said the exercises are the first major test in the Mediterranean of the “new concept of amphibious landing by vertical envelop- ment.”” Forty troop-carrying helicopters are to be used in this phase of the assault. Borrows’ Firm Car COLONIAL HEIGHTS, Va. w— \T. W. Maitland Jr:, saw one of his. sq. their classes after the Negroes ar- into the well at the end of a long company’s vehicles pulling away 61 rived. The school has an enroll. wire. The kitten obligingly crawled here at 2:15 a.m., when none was. scheduled for departure. Police: Pontiac pdlice ; received a report arrested a soldier who said he had, yesterday that someone had brok- |borrowed it just to “ride around.”’!en into Bagley School, 320 Bagley About 2,500,000 people now live| It was an $11,000 tractor-trailer |St.. stealing $42.51 from a cash rig. Middle East is an area “of great- He appéaled to the Soviet Union . after she Sept. 28 with the participation of | sea and air forces of | eries are on such a large scale that some quarters feel “the | purpose behind this is to pre- | steck forward bases for the Soviet Union itself.’ The foreign secretary said Brit- ain views the situation in Syria “with grave concern.” * * * “I do not think that the Syrian people have any idea of how far their true interests are being sub- ordinated to those of the Soviet Union,’’ he declared. ~ “The long term bill will be a} heavy one.” Lioyd told the 82-nation forum that the Russian outline of the Middle East situation, as deliv- ered last Friday by Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, was “utterly divorced from reality.” He added: “I eannot coticeive that they Lloyd Warns U.N. of Mideast Danger ‘The top-ranking British diplomat delivered his government's official viewpoint on the possibilities for a partial disarmament agreement. On test explosions, he reported that all sides, including the So- viets, now agree in principle on suspension of tests and the need for an inspection system. But he feiterated that “the suspension of tests by itself does not stop the arms race” and there was no agreement on ces- sation of production of fissile material for warlike purposes. Lloyd described as “valueless” the Russian promises to renounce the use of nuclear weapons while refusing to allow controlled cessa- tion of manufacture. * * * After hearing Lloyd's address, the assembly was set to return to the Red China issue this after- noon while the Security Council really believe in them (Gromyko's words) themselves." itakes up the equally aged Indian- |Pakistani dispute over Kashmir. Hoxey Cancer Clinic Under Fire U.S. Seeks to. Limit Field Asst. U. 8. Atty. Thomas. state patients. * Shannon said the Clinic the Clinic. PITTSBURGH (AP)—A government attorney said yester- day that pills allegedly used in treating cancer by the Hoxsey Cancer Clinic of Portage, Pa., cost $1.55 per thousand. He added that patients pay an average of $400 for the treat- ment. * * J. Shannon made ‘the state- ments as a nonjury‘hearing opened in U. 8S. District Court. on a government motion to make permanent a temporary injunction restraining the clinic from dealing with out-of- ‘* * John J. Haluska, a former state Senator and adminis- strator of the Clinic, said he will go to the nation’s highest courts to keep the Portage Clinic open. made $200,000 profits in 1956. He said Haluska insisted his salary as administrator be raised from $600 to $1,000 monthly. Check stubs were introduced to show that Haluska received as much as $3,000 a month from ‘ board, ae Day in Birmingham hours were indicated ‘last night when commissioners said they wotild hold special sessions to study the six - part dinance ‘First session is slated for early next week. x * * : ‘The new’ ordinance will ‘con- sider such revision reports as; ex- isting land use and zoning report; proposed zoning ordinance report; proposed zoning ordinance text; revisions of other ordinances; schedule of regulations and pro- posed zoning map. * Prepared by the Plan Board, the new ordinance is‘designed’ to meet alf pessible situations in development in the city, Norman W. Berry, vice chair- man of the planners, has requested that commissioners adopt the new ordinance as early as possible. and controlled along more desir- lable lines, Bloomfield ‘Hills scheduled a Friday session with four Birmingham boys, 15 and 16 years of age. tires, broken windows and_driven across lawns. Three families, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wheaton, Mr, and Mrs, Edgar Mack and Mrs. Eleanor Bordinat have pettioned the city of Birming- ham to change the name of their street. The three houses are located on Merritt Lane, which actually is a short continuation of Midvale street. Property owners say that legal papers use the Midvale address, as does the post office. Tradesmen Visiting the homes, plus guests and persons making delivery are confused and spend many hours searching for homes. Commissioners notified them that a public hearing will be necessary and will be set up as quickly as possible. In connection with the national observance of Kids’ Day, Birming- Police Halt Traffic as Parents March (Continued From Page Orie) situation, according to Superintend- ent of Schools William Shunck. a The school district receives state aid for transporting children who live outside of the 144-mile radius of the school they attend, The Waterford Township school supplementing monies from the state general fund, al- lows children to ride the buses if they live outside a one-mile radius, rather than the 1';-mile distance set by the state. Shunck said that the position. of| the Board of Education is that the district is not in a financial posi- tion to transport all of the chil- dren. x * * . Total enrollment for Waterford Township school district is 10,300. There are approximately 4,000 chil- dren living within a one-mile radi- us who do not receive bus trans- portation. Confidential. Jury Deliberating Again LOS ANGELES (®—The Confi- dential magazine criminal libel case jury resuméd deliberations today after a-defense request for a mistrial was turned down. Today marked the beginning of the second week of the jury’s con- sinderation of the case. Superior Judge Herbert V. Walker yesterday rejected De- ‘fense Atty. Arthur J. Crowley’s ,motion that the jury be dismissed without reaching a verdict. Crowley made his request on the grounds that the jurors do not un- derstand the court's instructions, that they have deliberated long enough, and that the Jewish New Year on Wednesday might have a tendency to force a verdict be- cause three jurors are of the Jew- ish faith. Report Theft at Bagley 50 Migrating Birds Hit Empire State Building NEW YORK t® — More than 50 migrating birds crashed into the Empire State Building in the early morning dark today. Many dead or injured birds dotted the sidewalk in front of the world’s tallest building. ‘An Empire State employe said the birds, of various kinds, struck the 1,472-foot building as they tried to fly out of stormy altitudes. “It happens every year,” he said. Teenager Drops Bible, Ends Up Behind Bars HOLDREGE, Neb. ® — Roy Kirby, 18, says he probably wouldn't have been back in jail if he hadn't dropped his Bible. Kirby, who escaped from jail at nearby Minden, told officers he tried to catch a freight train ofit of town but he couldn’t get a good ‘thold on the train because of the Bible and a bundle he was ‘carry- ing. He said when the Bible and bun- dle fell, he was thrown to ‘the ground and he decided to give up the whole thing. He turned himself ‘box in the store rdom. ia a little while later. Little Rock Integration Crisis at a Glance By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS _#terday. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Five car, charging driver tried to run white men in small crowd at down state trooper. Federal § strifemarked Central High School troop interventfon looms. hustled. away from scene by po-) ; a Slice. . Apparently they recognized|) SEA ISLAND, Ga. — Arkansas by officers as having been in huge Gov. Orval Faubus cuts: short his * crowd which rioted yesterday attendance at annual Southern jwhen eight Negroes entered the, Governors Conference and an- Police fite on Negroes’ ii school while others of their race nounces he’s flying back ‘to. Little drew-attention of the:whites away) ‘Rock today in National Guard ‘from them. Tension heightened by planes. Says thinks his presence lfight of white and Negro teen- at scene will be “a settling in-} lagers niet oars dismissed yes’ Hfluence.”’ Also ’ Urey that “Ty . ie guard” — Arkansas National Guard—be again called out to re- store order. Faubus, barred Ne- groes fromm Little Rock’s Central High School. for nearly _ three weeks earlier this month, assert ing “he called out the troops to maintain -peace and order. The guardsmen were withdrawn after federal court proceedings. a 3 NEWPORT, R.I. — White ‘House aides up éarly at presidential va- cation headquarters to serve no- tice anew that President Eisen- hower is prepared to order federal troops into Little Rock if further racial outbreaks occur, The Pres- ident announced yesterday the full power of the government would be used, if necessary, to enable Ne- groes & fo to class unmolested. ‘inanitsaeis. ‘A ISLAND, Ga. — Gover- nors Southern and border states éxpress shock over . Eisen- hower announcement that he in” 3 A ready to use federal econ Im- mediate reaction of governors is against presidential assumption of federal authority to force integra- tion in the South. YORK — Vice President Nixon lays blame for Pgs Rock disorders at Faubus’ door, assert- ing the governor's handling of the situation ‘had the inevitable, ef- fect. of inapieite extremist ele- — o 29 BUSES USED Some 6,000 childten are trans. ported throughout the school dis- trict by 29 buses now in operation. a x * * ‘The only way that more funds can be made available financially from the state is through legisla- tive action,’ Shunck said. & meeting of all interested par- ents has been scheduled for 7:30 tomorrow night at the home of Ralph Blair, leader of the jro- testing group. Pickets will continue tomorrow, zoning or-| of 18345 Beverly Rd., ing that can be done about the! ing Commissioners to. Study 6-Part Zoning Ordinance — BIRMINGHAM — Svertin dian Kiwanis Club will hold its s z at 1 p.m. Thursday from the Man- ley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in Roseland Park Cemetery. this country and settled in the Birmingham arca in 1925. He was a retired carpenter. His only survivors are two broth- Tense Little Rock — ares overt Awaits Next Move. __ (Continued From Page One) Police havel@ drive-in ‘cafe — a hangout for white teenagers, x * * One white man, Dan Dinkins, —-| Hills officers report the boys|47, was treated for lacerations of have allegedly stolen hubcaps and the face and a depressed skull fracture after being hit on the head by a hurtling rock. His con- dition was not serious. Reports that a 50-car cavalcade was forming in downtow; Little Rock were described by officers as “‘just a bunch of kids.” They broke it up, Between 8 and 10 iteatess were arrésted, Police said, They report- ed.no. arrests of white meh, * * x. “Negroes, armed with all types of weapons, including pistols and razor blades, are attacking. whites. . throwing rocks, breaking car windshields, and throwing bottles into doors of houses,” an officer the’ said. DARK AND SILENT Newsmen who drove by car through Negro districts found them uniformly dark and silent. Where a house was lighted, the lights were switched off at the approach of the car. ~*~ & & ? At Sea Island, Gov. Theodore -|McKeldin of Maryland, a Repub- lican, fired a blast at Faubus. Faubus, from the Southern Gov- ernors’ Conference, issued a state- ment to the people of Little Rock: “Do not under any circumstances attempt to take the law into your hands or use any, methods . . except lawful means." = s 2 Officers at U.S. military bases near Little Rock denied that per- sonnel had been put on alert to move into. Little Rock. Investigators Call Hoffa's Men _ (Continued From Page One) © ceivé late today or tomorrow a recommendation by the eight-mem- mittee were reported to have agreed unanimously last night on the fixing of a 30-day deadline for corrective action by the 1,400,000- member union. Hoffa, now battling for the Teamsters presidency, is a prin- cipal target of the Ethical Prac- tices Committee. The committee last’: week charged corruption in the Teamsters’ top echelons. Sets Police Car on Fire; Uses Cap as Ash Tray TUCUMCARI, N. M. ® — A New Mexico state policeman plead- ed guilty to setting the rear seat of his patrol car on fire. He admitted using his cap as Blair said. an ashtray. SUTHIUUUANNOGULOUGAUUOGAUOUALUUAALIL for trained in office work. rapid advancement and positions, = = = = = = ; = -" 7 West Lawrence St. “fs eae Jaee~ savefaes +onweree pene HALI -DAY wit EVENING SCHOOL Lteced ssa \ Wi es PREPARE NOW BETTER JOBS of TOMORROW Employers are seeking men and women who are Institute offers will prepare you for a successful Se sition in work you enjoy. ose who accept employment with thorough busi- ness training are certain of a sound future through Free review and employment service to VETERAN APPROVED . The Business Institute Call In Person “ Return This Ad for Bulletin HINUOUAVONUNUUUUUAOIAUAEUAU the The training which the the ability to hold good graduates. = ged ereerenees Se beree chevsveses oes TOT OT, Ends Career!» “Dr. Rudolph Matas Dies! troit will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday| John Mitea Detroit, and Adam) vvesoy will officiate. After Outstanding Work |trom: the Ted C. Sullivan Funeral] eece : Home, 14230 West McNichols Rd.|. Interment will be in Glen Eden THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1957 Famed Surgeon in Surgical Techniques work in surgical techniques op- ened broad new fields to medicine,/Charles and Ronald, all at home; \her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Death came quietly to the_kind-|McDonald of Milford; three sisters » ly, stooped surgeon once lauded/and died last night at 97. by another great doctor, William J. Mayo, ag the “greatest ‘sur- geon I have known.” Matas had been hospitalized for two years.|Agnes Glaspie, 75,.of 23 West Bur- Sharp, 66, veteran newspaperman|»... ‘Richardson - Bir Fane | dick St., year Heald ath daomir » pip as} He drew honors from a dozen|day from the Flumerfelt Funeral/scripps-Howard newspapers, died|OQak Grove Cemet nations for his work in “blood ves- “say cage ~~ a Sunday. He had served as editor 7 ni se] surgery, the use of anesthesia Harrison ng laspie, of the ‘Memphis Press Scimitar ifelong resident of Oakland County, died last night at Pontiac Osteo-|the Buffalo (N, Y.) Times and the/sisters, Mrs. Vern Parks of Dur- pathic Hospital, less than a week/!d Mobile Times. In recent years/and and Mrs. Harold Cote of * ¢ .*« and transfusions. The son of a Spanish physician, Matas wag born near New Or- leans Sept, in France, Spain and Mexico -be-|last Wednesday. ® fore graduating from Tulane Uni- versity Medical School here in 1880. * * * sa When he was 80, he said he was through operating, with a few ex- ceptions. On his 93rd_ birthday, his age. “Most people are afraid to ad- mit their antiquity,” he said, ‘but. I am proud of the fact that ‘T've resisted so successfully the ero- Leece, 76, of 7760 24 Mile Rd., sions of nature for ae" manyiwho died Saturday, was to be atjulty in 1950 afjer a 29-year term. 2 p.m. today from Milliken Funeral|He was born in Vienna. He served as president of the|Home here. The Rev. Fred Parr x *& * was to officiate, with burial in Prestonville Cemetery. years.”’ American and International Col- lege of Surgeons. His wife died in 1918. They had no children. . ; Cemetery. Mrs. Krinke died sud- NEW ORLEANS #® — Dr. Ru-|denly Sunday. dolph Matas, whose revolutionary|\ Surviving besides her husband!) ‘9+ 1 p.m. Thursday from Rich- ichildren. and 11 great: pot . 12, 1860, and studied|after the burial of her husband he published two weekly newspa- nison Glaspie of ‘Royal Oak; two|most of his life, died Sunday.” In| poisoning praise _,|daughters, Mrs. Gordon Ashiey of|recent years he had lived in Tes-| , "hang. G' ihe, Obnoxious prairie he Said/Royal Oak and Mrs, Max Ells-|sin, Switzerland. oe ee he was not afraid to acknowledge worth of Tucson, Ariz.; four grand- x *« * ‘children and one great-grandchild. Hattie Sly, Detroit; SAMUEL McCLEMENTS MILFORD — Service for Sam-|four sons, Norman of Brown City, uel McClements, 86, of Brown|Russell of Brighton, and Ray and City, former Milford resident, will|Laurance, both of California; six children, Cheryl, Steven, Deaths Elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MOBILE, Ala. w—Thomas E. one brother. MRS. AGNES GLASPIE . OXFORD — Service for Mrs. and ‘former ‘editor of several) tiome, Milford. Burial will be in .|Milford OES, is survived by two Drummond Island, (Mich. pers, He was born in Butte, Mont./one nephew, Roy Parks egeeery ~~ & : ; RIPON, Wis. —Edwin Barlow, Re p A 72, founder of the annual William) Kare rairie nima members of Oxford Congrega- Tell Pageant at New Glarus, Wis.,'p ed With Extinct: tional Church. 20 years ago, and a promoter of/F AC tinction Surviving are a son, Farrell Den-|Swiss culture “in the United States! cievenne Wyo, (INS) — The Glaspies were founders of the cement works here and were oad a rare animal, the black-footed rret, *- BERKELEY, Calif. — Dr. ; . : Robert Harry Lowie, 74, interna- Pre Murie, author of “A FRANK LEECE tionally known anthropologist, wide to Animal “Tracks,” | UTICA — Service for Frankidied Saturday. He retired from reports the rare mamal is only | the University of California tac-|0U%d in Wyoming now, although it/ Ferrets depended up the prairie ONECO, Fla. @—Dr. John A./dog as their basic food and have Judy, 69, widely known in Ohiojdisappeared as mankind in- Mrs.|for his work with crippled chil-jtroduced poison to kill off the Mrs. Louiseidren in Dayton, died- yesterday. ! prairie pests. Surviving are four sisters, New Mobilgas SPECIAL if yours BUICK - 3 common-sense reasons to use is a high-compression car! New Mobilgas Special has been boosted still higher in octane—today delivers all the anti-knock power _ your high-compression car can use... , That’s why you get quick starts and warm-up, smooth idling, instant response . . . improved, year-’round performance that adds up‘to more miles per gallon! New Mobilgas Special is the only premium gasoline containing MC.—a unique combination of additives The Rev. Gene Kordick, pastor Mr. McClements, lifetime resi-lof the Arena Bible Church, said -tdent of this area, is survived. by[be'd never had such competition re, vices on the way to a Takes Snakes to Church para oad priate hal but- 7 ng eae Just Bored |topped container, Roberts took. hte tt — A - ee] MRS. GORDON KRINKE “\Musdy, Sel Mont: Mrs, Emma drtoin duce Funeral Home, Mil-|church =? but rx didn’t do se hrvoniats Polish Trucks - Service for Mrs.” Gordon/Carbary, Detroit; Mrs. Ella Me-|torg, -Burial will be at Oak Grove|TePtiles m . KAMLOOPS, B.C. ® — Clai two brothers, rattled and writhed all through the 9 and 11 who lit fires (Uvonne A.) Krinke, 30, of De-|Clain, Inkster and Cemetery, and the Rev. William! services hey co Jose: will polish fire engines to work off their surplus energy. Rio de Janeiro means River of Roberts, who stopped for ser- January. - Two seeceeoseeoeeses Established in 1998 160 W,. Huron COROSSSHOH SOLS ELOSEEOOOESOSESHSESEOLEEOEEES % \Fa rmer-Snover. 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Faille, Leather Handbags ee eee eT euee eee eee eee eve to $1.98 Boys’ 3 to 6 Sport Shirts . to $1.98 2-6 Overalls & Slecks .. to $1.98 Boys’, Girls’ 3-6 Pajamas . to $2.98 Boys’ 6-16 Sport Shirts ....... L — 6-12 Underwear . to $5.98 Boys’ 6-16 Gab., Flan. Slecks. . $3.98 4-10 Baseboll Suits to $5.98 Boys’ 6-12 Washable Robes . 49c Boys’ SM, .. 66¢, 88e .. $1.88, $2.88, $3.88 . to $1.65 Disc. Style & Color Hosiery . $1.00 Wesheble Clip Hats . $1.00 Senforized Cotton Shorts . to $2.98 Cotton Full Skirts . to $1.98 Beautiful Silk Scarfs . to $3.98 White & Colored Blouses ... . 39c Print & Swiss Hankies “ee oe see we eee we evens oe eee MEN’S WEAR, ACCESSORIES — Street Floor . $49.50 Men’‘s Benrus Calen. Watches. .$22.88 . $4.98 Slightly Soiled Pajames ........ $2.88 . $3.98 Long Sleeve Soiled Pajomes ..... $1.88 . $1.00 Stretch and Sized Socks ......... 44c . $2.98 Dress Shirts, some soiled ....... $1.44 . to $4.98 Dress Shirts, soiled .. $2.44, $2.88 . $5.95 Dress Shirts, some soiled .....:. $3.44 . $3.98 Dress Shirts, some soiled ....... ine . to $6.98 Orlon Washable Siecks ...... 2.88 ..to $4.98 L. SI. Sportshirts, soiled, $1.88, 31 44 $15.95: Fall Robes .................. 5.88 . $20.00 Fell Robes .................. Soe CIGERIE, FOUNDATIONS — Second Floor § $5.98: . $3.98 . $1.98 . $2.98 . $8.95 . $5.98 . $5.98 . $5.98 - . to $5.00 Small Group Bros . $2.50 . $5.00 . $3.00 . $1.49 . $3.99 Orion Filled Throw Pillows . $5.98 . $1.00 Assorted Ash Trays . to $3.00 Soiled, Box Stetionery . 44¢ to $2. 44 . $1.29 500 Luncheon Napkins . $2.39 Smell Halloween Costumes _. . 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Bros Bros Bras ee ee Foam Terry Cloth Dolls Nyolene Car Seat Covers ee eC ee Cc ce) Pane eee ee eee ey Pe Te Oe ee ee 2 | Cee m eet ee eee we eee ee ee awe eee eee “oe eae sae eee ee eee CHINA, HOUSEWARES — Fifth Floor Reg. $3.98 to $25.95 Lamps, Fixtures, $2.88-14.88 Reg. to $6.98 Silk Lamp Shades ... $2.88, $3.88 Reg. 45¢ to $3.98 Odd Dinnerware ae 8c-$1.88 Reg. $8.98 Electric Heoters .............. $5.88 DOMESTICS, CURTAINS — Fourth Floor . to $1.99 Woven Fiber Seat Pads sis. 44c . to $7.98 Print & Solid Draperies... $3.88 pr. . to $2.98 Drape & Slipcover Fabries. . . 88c yd. . $7.95 80 by 84 Patchwork Quilts . . $3.88 . $12.98 Tailored Lady Lurex Bedspreads, sar 4 . $1.98 Matching Cafe or above . $1.98 Matching Valances for above .... . $5.95 72x90 Lightweight Blankets ... $3.88 . 19¢ Cennon Stripe Bath Towels ....... 44 . $5.95 Chenille Bath Rugs... «siéi(‘(‘(‘(; $3.88 to 89c Lunch and Dinner Nepkins ..... 22¢ MISCELLANEOUS - —_ Street Floor Reg?$4.98 Complete Elec. Vaporizers ..... $1.88 Reg. $1.50 Hand or Stand Mirrors ........ /88e mg $10.95 Elec. ' Bendage .......$1.88 oh 35.00 sense Vibrator pi cae cess “se er Lipedermic Bath ....... .. .88e = $1.50 Wrisley Bubble Both ....... .. 88 Reg. $1.25 60 pecket Bathofoam Soap ... .3/88c Reg. $1.00 Anell yew Treatment merece ds 2/88¢ 1 [. ©.SPORTSWEAR VALUES © i @ BALLERINA FORMALS © = © PINAFORES © BY oa ge ff 5s gO ae" 20th * oh © © BETTER COTTON BLOUSES © 88¢ Ke PIONS FASHION SAVINGS THIRD FLOOR Reg. to 3.98 T-shirts, solid and plaid shorts, sizes 10-18. Reg. to 8.98 Print skirts, 2-pe. paves oe slipon sweaters. Sizes 10- Reg. to 14.98 2. 88 Everfast print skirts, pastel flared skirts. Sizes 10-18. Reg. 1 1.95 Cardigan and slipon sweaters. Sizes 10-18. 5 © BETTER DRESSES © Reg. to 24.98 Reg. to 24.98 Reg. to 29.98 Reg. 14.98 2-pc. suits in broken sizes for juniors, misses, halfs. _ Reg. 3.98 Reg. 3.98 Cottons, in checks, prints, solids. Sleeveless prints. Sizes 12-20, 1412-2412 © INEXPENSIVE DRESSES ° Reg. 0 8.98 2.88 > 3.88 5.88 Reg. to 10.98 | Reg. to 14.98 . Dacrons, jerseys, cottons, cupioni. Many lovely colors. - In sizes 7-15, 20-20, 1342-20". Reg. 3.98 : Reg. 4.98 61.88 Reg. 5.98 2,98 * Reg. 8.98 3.88 | @ LOVELY FALL MILLINERY @ 3.88 Reg. to 7.98 Velvets. beaver-like felts, many colors. Feathers, rhinestone trims. g8¢ | 1.88 | $8 ‘145 = © CUPIONI, COTTON SUITS © TEENS’, WOMEN’S SHOES 113 pr.-of nationally advertised . 2* shoes for teenagers and women. Broken sizes and colors. Reg. to $9.95 Street Floor oh APPLIANCES, TV — Downstairs ‘ (Floor Models, Demonstrators. Used) ee a eee elene a ee ed . $179.95 Easy Deluxe Elec. Dryer ...... $88 . $159.95 Bendix Semi-Auto. Washer ....$88 . $149.95 30” Deluxe Ges Ranges (3)... .$88 . $179:95 36” Deluxe Range, light, timer, $98 . $179.95 Deluxe Easy Wringer Washer ..$118 . $149.95 Deluxe Wringer Washer ...... $88 . $99.95 30 gal. Gas Aut. Water Heaters (2) ee Reg. $279.95 2" Philco Console TV $12 Used RCA ei Tv L E 3.88 Reg. 3.99 OBE Re Everglaze and drip-dry cottons; sizes 12-20, 141 -20'2. i © COTTON DRESSES © 886 | 1.88 | 4 _ Se eae aie ese saci + “Dewert Modern Building in Little Rock to Battle for Integration LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (INS) — left behing them what officials say is “ome of the finest schools in the The city’s high school for Ne- groes—the Horace Mana—was com-!- . pleted only last year at a cost of a million dollars. It is an ultra- modern. structure with 3¢-class- rooms, 28 teachers and 688 stu- dents. NEARER HOMES 5 The Negro students entering Central High School told Federal court last week that they wanted to make the move because it is! nearer their homes than Horace Mann “@fid because Central High offered certain subjects not taught at the Neges school. * ‘* evel however, the stu- dents admit that their main Massachusetts educator instead of a Negro, as is customary for colored schools in the South, be- cause officials felt that white stu-| dents would one day have to attend it. ~ 5 * * * Horace Mann Principal L. M. Christophe, one of a handful of Arkansas school heads with a doc- torate degree, declined to compare his school with Central High. He would only say: “We are accredited. We have our strength and we have our weakness.” Ed McCuistion, assistant com- missioner of education for the state and for 14 years director of Negro. education, said: “The curriculum at Horace Mann compares very favorably with that of Central High. In fact, they have i AQ: VW a THE PONTIAC, PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTE MBER 2 24, 1957, J | (mares 7 True Life Adventures SECRET WEAPON. _, NASUTE SOLDIERS -~ OF THE EUTERMES FAMILY OF TERMITES MAY LOOK INCAPABLE OF DEFENDING THE i. NEST. THEY HAVEN‘T THE PINCERS OR ARMORED . HEADS TYPICAL OF MOST TERMITE WARRIORS. Walt Disney Productions wey at World Rights Reserved Bur THIS HARDENS wy 9-24 er) ee A NOZZLE PROJECTING - FROM THEIR HEADS SPRAYS A GUMMY +i SUBSTANCE OVER THER ENEMIES. * ANU IMMOBILIZES THE ATTACKERS. Oriental Expert Charges: es China, * * * University of South Carolina's partment of international studies, in an article for the U.S. Infor-. a a Walker declared: ‘Kor han- dling foreign visitors, the Mao regime has applied the same techniques developed by the Soviet Communists over the past four decades,” mation Agency's bi-monthly maga- zine “Problems of Communism.” He explairied that this includes \East German Reds aA — Expel Dancing Hepcats BERLIN (INS) — The Commu- nist East German government ex- pelled a touring West German soccer team from the country for dancing rock ‘n' roll, boogie- woogie and sambas in a restau. rant. | American dances are forbidden.” |Red China ‘Bars Tourists | From. Getting Real Facts WASHINGTON (INS) — An we totam “shepherding’’ of visitors pert ont China states that official in narrowJy. restricted itineraries Communist guides are barring ‘aimed at showing only the favor- ‘foreign visitors from seeing condi: able sights of the ‘ {tions as they really exist in Red DENIED ACCESS . Meanwhile, Walker said, they are |““denied access” to such places The view was set forth by Rich- a8 “Tibet, minority areas, border ard L. Walker, chairman of the regions, the coastline of South de- China, forced labor camps, and ‘New China.” \famine and flood areas.” in Hong Kong that the story of the 1954 fleods, the worst in _ Chinese history, broke.” He added: ‘‘Most of the visitors ‘to the mainland in the late spring, ‘and summer that year knew noth- ing about the ‘seriousness of the situation until they left China. © * * * Walker said that’ a study of ‘numerous accounts of trips to 'China indicated that most were “reports on the same model fae- stories, farms, collectives, Shang- hai kindergarten and other sighis.”’ No foreign visitor yet has been allowed “to reve the countryside at will,” Walker said. He as- serted: “Nene has talked with such controversial purged .in- tellectuals as professors Liang Shuming or Hu Feng.” Instead, Walker said, visitors’ The Communist press reported nearly all fall into a 20-to-40-day the restaurant. manager ordered pattern of a train trip from Can- the cats off the premises with the ton to Hankow and then to Peiping,” miracles by the few travelers words, ‘In our republic such idiotic and sometimes Manchuria or Wes permitted to visit it. He discloses _tern China. ‘Peles Rae Sat of grasshoppers in North Dakota Fs Ey f i ee ee dary mabe damage 19 uh voted trees. saat A strange man in Los Angeles known as “The Voice of Two Worlds,” is offering, free of charge to the public, an astound- ing 64-page booklet analyzing famous world prophecies covering these times. Written in 1952, it successfully predicted that the next great world crisis would be at the Suez Canal. It shows that four of the greatest prophecies could not come true until the present time. But now they can, and the years that change the world are at hand. Great dangers but still greater opportunities, confront forward looking people in 1957, : “The Voice of Two Worlds,” a well known explorer and geog-' rapher, tells of a remarkable system that: often leads to al- most unbelievable improvement in power of mind, achievement of brilliant business and professional sutcess and new happiness. Others tell of increased bodily strength, magnetic personality, courage and poise. | These strange aa were ‘found in far-off and mysterious ‘Tibet, often called the land of ‘Fateful Warning About out Suez Given i in Strange 1951 Prophecy long hidden practices, closely guarded for three thousand ta by the sages, which enabled to perform amazing teats. Me maintains that these immense ‘Powers are latent in all of us, and that methods for using them are now being simplified so that they can be used by almost any person with ordinary intelligence. The 64- page booklet he is now offering free to the public: gives guidance for those who wish to prepare themselves for the mo- mentous days ahead. It gives de- tails of what to expect, and when. Its title is “Beware of These Days!” The formerly sold for a dollar, but as long as the present supply lasts, it is offered free to readers of this notice. For your free copy of the aston- ishing prophecies covering these momentous times, as revealed in this 64- e book, address the Institute Mentalphysics, 213 South Hobart Bivd., Dept. 768-E, Los Angeles 4, Calif. Send no money. Just your name and ad- dress on a rd or in. an envelope will do. Nos obligation. Readers are urged to write ptly, as only a limited num- ‘how he learned rare wisdom and of the free books have been ——— printed. Expert Predicts the same curriculum p'anned. * * * “There are more courses offered at Central High, but that is be- cause there are more students. However, there are more courses offered at Horace Mann than at Little Rock's other white high school, Hall High. * * * o“As tor the faculty, teacher for teacher Horace Mann _ will have more and better college de- grees than you will find at Cen- tral. But that is true throughout * 5 Little Rock school officials call Horace Mann ‘“‘one of the finest schools in the South’’ — Negro or white. Situated on a .22-acre tract in the very heart of Little Rock's! Negro population, it is a complete school unit—lacking only -a football stadium. . ek * But the Negroes can—and do— make use of the 14,000-seat stadium attached to Central High. : Foreign Dolls Collected BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (INS) | —Edith and Rebbie Edgar of Per- rysburg, 0., have a collection of | dolis with " representatives from nearly every country in the United|for general use within another Nations. Their mother, Mrs. Rob- year, he said. ert Edgar, started the collection in x *« * Paris when she was a young girl. Husbands! Wives! Get Pep, Vim; Feel ol Younger » De much iron 016 dow poo 5 bers er raw oysters, 4 ri a i liver, 16 ae : ence on rabies control. End of Rabies Recent Research Finds, New Vaccine; Appears’ to Offer Hope of Safety BERKELEY, Calif. (INS) America’s top expert .on rabies) said that recent field tests on new vaccines offer hope that the dread disease can be eliminated com-!" pletely in the foreseeable future. Dr. Ernest Tierkel, who heads the U.S- Public Heslth Service's; Rabies Research and Control :Cen- ter in Atlanta, Ga., told INS he was “‘much encouraged” over re- cent progress in battle against the disease, * * * Rabies untreated, he pointed out leads to inevitable, agonizing death both in animals and humans. The standard treatment | until recently for human beings has been virtually the same as that developed more than half a century ago by Louls Pasteur. Within the past year, Dr. Tierkel| said, a new vaccine has been de- voloped which appear's to be with- out danger of ill effect ‘to the patient, It has been tested suc- cessfully on patients bitten by rabid animals in California and ‘elsewhere and may be available A newly-developed dog vaccine 1 = Wie, — tn =H == — Medios - Cail OY. Donelson 4 ood tooe =F To the bereaved family, this be- : ~ \ comes most important. For if the. ‘ multitude of details are performed 4 in a spirit of helpfulness, much of the burden’ death is dissipated. that ’ The fine spirit of every member of accompanies Donald He. Jebus 9 The Spirit in Which the Service Is Rendered... - 5 ; the staff of the Donelson-Johns | ~ {Funeral Home is aconstant source {) W of pride to us, and a comfort to ¥ | the families we serve. io Ly, . hy y | ; A Copyright 1957 i A. ©. Hamaker iL, ! ay Phone si FEDERAL 4-4511 cll... : “ Yieejmo< 4 Pa thing zi On Our Premise 5 ’ Donelson- obs FUNERAL HOME 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC is so effective, he said, that its general use can eliminate com-| pletely this source of the disease. Top public health and wildlife experts from western _ states,| Alaska and British Columbia’ gathered in Berkeley over the weekend for a work shop confer- 3-d: uainted” size o pang Stage may size, § save $1.67. All ‘cauion New Way ‘Getdiy Stops * 8 C) ; | ALDRIDGE, England (INS) —. Bleeding Piles William Cleaver got permission | And Yet More Remarkable Say cao Sos ans of hn any thon sands who ha poke gps *, simple pleasant ae | is called RECTORAL A after meals and at bedtime for a days is all you do. No No mess. Doctors are amazed. ecription is now needed. Opeainabis oi Kinsel’s; Simms; Thrifty: J-V: Dun- seith's; Cole's: Lou's: Quality; Slank- ster & Jones; Keego Drug, Keego Harbor; Aris, Horst's, Auburn Heights, Drayton Plains and most drug stores everywhere. Told to Tear It Down from the city council to build a! garage beside his home, built it! land proudly painted it white, had |been using it for several months. | when he got a letter from the coun- ‘cil stating that ‘in view of the |fact you have not yet started work, ‘approval for the erection of your ‘garage has been withdrawn.”’ | Catastrophes are identified as | those accidents in which five or | more persons are killed. on SAVING C Deposit your surplus savings or investment savings at any one banking offices. Community National Bank OF PONTIAC EBA Fo: : a Year ERTIF ICATES of our 8 convenient you can have a DRY BASEMENT stop leaks! WATERPLUG stops ranning water leaks permanently, in minutes. Apply te joints, cracks, holes, seepage areas in basement walls. Forms hydraulic seal with protection for lifetime of structure. Only $1.50, 3 lbs. seal out moisture! THOROSEAL STANDARD, in gra and other beautiful colors, Fills and seals ma- sonry walls above and below ground level. 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In department after department, despite the vast assortments from which she has to choose; it is uncanny how her preference singles out the items of which we our own brarid merchandise. She well knows, and proves by her repeat purchases that Grant Brand merchan- dise is the best value on the market today. Here is what makes it Sixty-two trained buyers, each a specialist in a particular field of merchandise sets the specifications for the manufacturer of each Grant Brand item. Best known companys are selected to make these goods and exhaustive tests, under actual conditions of use prove their serviceability. Continuing quality checks are made to guarantee that every shipment is up to the high standard set for this fine merchandise. Then how can Grant Brand prices be so consistently low, you ask? It's really very simple. Because we sell under our own brands, we spare the ‘maker his normal marketing costs . . . savings we feel properly belong in your pocketbook! Yes, new Grants will save you shopping time and effort, but the savings we feel you will appreciate most are the good solid dollars, so vitally needed in today's hard-pressed family budgets. wean whan TOOmERS SHOES — — of ow oe oe ow =e oe WORK CLOTHES, TOOLS TOODLERS’ APPAREL | THURS., Sept. 26° “Miracle Shopping Grant brands are quality- rigorous lab tests - Son Ox aI = on om oe eo ob oe as oe ow Grogs _ Grant Maid _ i proved by ‘ ae. GIRLS APPARTA | Gooeb Ct ee ee mGe's WEAR, ACCESSORIES GRANT CREST ' 1 ' I ' ' ' r . ed ! ' ! ! ! ' ! ' -— BocessnS essere Isis HOSIERY, LINGERIE, SHOES = = oe ow oe oe oe oe oe oe oe ee - | 1 ' ' ! 1 ! t WOUSEWARES AND DOMESTICS Flight | | I ' 1 ' i ' i] fe ee ee ee oe ow oe oe ot ' ) 1 I { | 1 | ' Mi le”’ Center . * 2135 Phone FE 2-0283 =" ra S. Telegraph Rd. “7S ae _THE PONTIAC PRESS, TURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1957 Baghdad Allies | Ready Defenses Work on Joint Shield Against Red Moves in Middle East LONDON (—The five Baghdad Pact allies and the United States worked today on a- common shield against Soviet penetration and in- ternal subversion in the ‘Middle East. = ‘_ * *© *& a Delegates studied a secret in- telligence report describing moves by Red agents in Syria to bolster antigovernment elements in Leb- anon and Jordan. While neither belongs to the pact, both are friendly to the West. multi-millionaires- by- their. grand- father and father,~but they were! men by their mother, | those two influences ‘have worked’ throughout the individual, yet similar,’ lives. of David, the brain; Winthrop, the charmer; Laurance, the mechanic; Nelson, the energetic, and John. D. I, the slow but sure. MILLIONS AT WORK The five brothers, aged 42 through 51, have put their millions to work in everything from devel- oping special agricultural grasses ‘to Latin American diplomacy, and recently to the distinctly non-es- oteric question of how to keep the baseball Dodgers employed as —_ Bums." . But it was the late ‘Abby Greene ‘Aldrich, daughter of.the millionaire Rhode ‘Island Senator Nelson W. Aldrich, who gave them rock- ribbed character. WED SON . She wed old John D's son, John D, - Jt., and worked with him to Sibelius to Be Buried to Tune of 4th Symphony HELSINKI, Finland (®— Jean Sibelius will be. buried, at his re- quest, to the tunes of his Fourth Symphony. The slow movement from the from getting money to giving it. Tarrytown, N. Y., estate, vout Baptists. Auneush ao tea mate wae ‘than she could ever. spend, she never owned a diamond tiara nor an opera box. Rarely did she leave her children to servants. She raised them herself. liamsburg, Va. RESEMBLED BY SONS Both she and John D. Jr« who is ; still living at the family’s: vere te himaelf building and Thus by the time she died nine years. ago, they had become a fit- ting tribute to an amazingly strong- principled yet humane woman who numbered among her favorite phil- anthropies, for instance, a Negro! pice school she helped establish at Wil- tun’ the’ family ‘enore and) mote as teetenke, she was inter- ested. in a Negro philanthropy. Ozarks of Arkansas, He ap- — a ae alin Glioma: School Mined OKMULGEE, Okla. @ — Five Negro pupils were peacefully in- tegrated in two Okmulgee County schools in eastern Oklahoma yes- terday in accordance with a fed- eral court ruling by Judge Eugene Mother Made ‘Men. Out. of 45 Rockefeller! NEW YORK (INS) — The tive eatiniated otice st 1 billion, dél- Rockefeller brothers were made| ‘ars. general _ superintendent of the huge operation not far from Lit- tle Rock. | * This, then, is the background that made them, bound together by. family loyalty yet divided by distinct interests. Their relation- ship is perhaps best shown by their homes. All have houses on’ the huge family estate, Pocantico. But David's is Georgian, Winthrop's modern, LAurance's a sort of conti- nental modern, Nelson's Dutch co- lonial and John’s a French farm- * * * David is a Harvard graduate, {Winthrop a Yale man, Laurance a ‘Princeton grad, Nelson, Dart- ton alumnus. . Were 'you to see any one of them getting out of a cab in New York City, you’g never look twice. They always appear. as conservative, perhaps Winthrop who reportedly has worn boots into one or two New York nightclubs. 30 Yachts Swamped ITO, Japan — High waves overturned 30 yachts yesterday in Meet. All crews were saved or, swam ashore, Officials said % were injured slightly. mouth, and John D. THI. & Prince: well-dressed businessmen, except! the National Amateur Athletic,” a | ' symphony will be played at the) You can see her sharp, slender | \ ‘ -sreocagelicind ‘taseesing Soviett © Crusty, “aime-giving John D. |state funeral for the confposer in nose on every one of her sons, sip apm —— keteller, eit “rebber baron” |the Helsinki cathedral Monday./but even more you can see her in-| 1 . Magic Taco ene MAKES ALL YOUR POTS AND PANS... influence in Syria, Egypt, Yemen mee philanthropist, left them |The famous composer died at the fluence in the men they. are and| -and other ‘a ab pation’. America’s most fabulous fortune, ‘age of 92 last Friday. the things they do, » The delegates, who began their 2 work yesterday, are members of the Antisubversion Committee of the anti-Communist Baghdad Pact. Britain, Pakistan, Turkey, Iraq and Tran are full members of the pact. The United States belongs only to the organization’s anti- subversion, economic and military branches. * x kk. The Antisubversion Committee will draw up for the pact’s Min- isterial Council a report outlining a joint program to combat inter- nal and external pressures cre- ated by anti-Western plotters. ’ As the Baghdad Pact represent- atives met in London, a Syrian leader made new —— against army chief of staff, told several hundred officer cadets at the graduation exercises of Syria's Homs military academy that the | army must be ready “‘for the, forthcoming battle which imperi- alism might launch -by surprise.’ * Bizry asserted the United States was “caught red-handed” plotting to overthrow the Syrian govern- ment. Science Will Study Drinking Motorists LANSING @® — Drinking drivers will come ander scientific study in a new move to cut Michigan's traffic accident toll. . Leaders of the Citizens Highway Safety Action Committee yester- day directed a subcommittee to collect available scientific data which might permit the state to crack down on drinking drivers . and drinking pedestrians. . Dr. John Rodger of Bellaire, named to head the investigating group, said a wealth of- such in- formation already is available from safety and medical ofgani- zations.. He said his committee will look into the desirability of legislation to curtail highway drinking. . Secy. of State James *M. Hare, “who called the meeting, said the Legislature eventually will have to fix more exact standards to determine drunk driving, possible with scientific testing devices. Meanwhile, he said, his depart- ment needs some “‘rule of thumb” to determine:to what extent alco- hol is responsible for individual accidents and arrests. t Like magic . . . foods don’t burn, ever! Your every pot and pan is transformed into a sSuper-automatic cooking utensil. Foods reach i) your table with all their nourishment, all their flavor. How? New Gas Ranges have the ‘Magic Touch” that takes the guesswork out of cooking ... makes every meal a success... automatically. The new “Magic Touch” top burner “feels” the temperature of the pan... raises + or lowers the flame as needed . . . like magic. The new Gas top burner performs miracles in all your everyday cooking jobs. Warming up leftovers, deep-fat frying, cooking frozen vegetables, frying bacon and eggs. . . . all become automatic operations. And, new Gas Ranges have many other enchanting features that will thrill you. the West. * * * Maj. Gen. 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VALUE , ul 4 BAKE SET Paints with the purchase of any 3 MATCHLESS AUTOMATIC GAS RANGE : Keep That — ; ‘Just Painted’ Look Le me DEMONSTRATIONS OF Magic Touch GAS BURNER - 3 MAY BE SEEN AT ANY OF THESE DEALERS ‘Longer : | — | Win a FREE Thomas Economy Furniture Lake Orion Appliance Oberg Electric COLOR TV 361 S.° Saginaw 158 S. Broadway 435 Main St. During Money-Saving rome Da et p Rochester 7 Downtown upler ageau 1 Dividend Days seers Resear & Co. Plumbing & Heating Recoetter Furniture & Sept. 26-27-28 Pontiac inom ae St. saat Bol ee . Good Housekeeping Shop E. J. Kowalsky Heating Rochester Ho Poochine Mobeastry Peattes 697 Lapeer Rd. Michigan Fluorescent Gilliam Appliance Wayne Gabert Appliance . Pontiac Glass Co, 141 Wad hate Be (eee ee ace We Daliver Pontiac - ; ; Re eae ee \eiieten Electric WKG; Inc. Don’s Plumbing & Heating . FE 5.6441" Like Orton pontiel ome ca - ; ; : | ( | | \ \ / / : % re ; \, “hy F a : I Aj cote : Ise \ / . i i aa i: ~~ 4 ie: if 1 tid Fi i: } : ¢ oo i Se ee a ee er ee ee a Bee: ot Sik oie. ahh bik ct i de Sa ak ik a ak tee NG ae a oe ee |S ee \ ee ee ee ee ee ae ee ee ee ae ee ee a ee eee ve ye . = ee: te ie wand tl ae me ae ck ck ak cas a a i A ts gal a be he Se eee - Gift af Enos De Waters Big Boost for School, Art Center Project - FLINT w The $2,000,000 Flint college and cultural develop- - ment program moved another step nearer completion this week when Enos A. De Waters, a former General Motors executive, added $320,000 to the $1,000,000 he Lah *, ¥ viously had contributed. ' The 83-year-old De Waters served as chief engineer of the Buick Motors Division of GM from 1510 until his retirement in 1930. De Waters’ latest gift brought the development fund to. $16,000,- De Waters’ total contribution of $1,320,000 represents the en- tire cost of the cultural art “ eenter which will bear the names of Enos A, and Sarah De Waters Art Center. Mrs. De Waters, his wife and alse a noted philan- thropist, died in 1949. “The art center originally was] - designed as a two-story building but construction of the second floor had been planned for the future. ; * + * The increasingly heavy enroll- ment at Flint Junior College creat- ed an urgent demand for more classrooms, and officials decided to go ahead with the se¢ond floor; which will include 12 classrooms, | conference roorhs and study rooms. SPONSORS ASSIST The committee of sponsors. of the college and cultural develop- ment fund came to the assistance of the city’s board of education and appropriated the money for the. second floor. De Waters’ latest gift matches) the money put up by the com- mittee of sponsors for the addition. The art center will include a huge gallery for exhibitions, pips working. space for the varibus artists. It will be ready for use in late 1958, Meanwhile, in another phase of the college and cultural develop- ment project, officials -announced | and MSU. ~+rollment totaling over 43,008, have “|started prior to 1952 and finished + A great bulk of ‘the 42 millions Nee EXPENSIVE PARKING — Time was when a man could tie his horse to a hitching post, am- ble inside the nearest saloon, and not worry about his mount for the rest of day. That was United Press Photo owner of this horse in Independence, Mo., has only 20 minutes left of his nickel’s worth. on the parking meter and he'd better hurry if he doesn’t plans for an Oct. 2 dedication of the Mott Memorial Building. * * * The Mott Building. will be used) primarily by the Flint college of | the University of Michigan. the way it was when the west _ it isn’t foo way any longer. ‘Only 25 Others May Be Alive was really wild, In fact,. the sadte = want to return to = a ticket pinned to the jturned yesterday after two boys THE PON TIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1957 U.of — Plan Expansion | | LANSING wm — ‘Ceteeie them, the University of “Michigan and Michigan State University have Ween adding plants during the last five gears at a rate of better than 200 million dollars annually.: If the state Legislature would go along ‘with their present plans, the. two institutions would more than double the rate in the years immediately ahead. * * * These facts emerged from a survey of construction activity on the Ann Arbor and East. Lansing campuses, plus their announced future intentions. : At its last five regular sessions, the ‘Legislature has appropriated a little over 42 million dollars for capital outlay at the U. of M. But with the aid of other financ- ing, the two big schools, with en- been able to add structures costing a total of about 110 million dollars —counting those begun since 1951 and either completed or in course of construction. x *« * The figure does not include work ,. in that year-or later. A breakdown by institution as- signs 53 million dollars in plant) additions to the U. of M., and about 57 millions to MSU. . H@USING AT MSU in projects financed at MSU other than by funds voted by the Legis- lature was put into housing of one sort or another. At the U. of M., than haif of outlays totaling about 26 million dollars. Generally, dormitory charges and student fees have provided Two Boys Find Sightless Man's Seeing Eye Dog Charlies Spencer's sight was re- found Chips, the blind man’s “‘best friend” and -pilot. GAVE MILLION Charles Stewart Mott, three-time mayor of Flint, an automotive pioneer and philanthropist, gave $1,000,000 towards the building as a memorial to his parents, John C. and Isabella T. Mott. The total cost of the building and equipment : was $1,150,000 with the committee of sponsors making up the difference from the general contributions, isurvived. Dr. a H. Hatcher, U of M) president, will be the main speaker at the dedication ceremonies which | will be attended by the faculty) members of the Flint College of the U. of M.: regents, officers and deans .of-the U. of M.; public officials and the U.-of M. band. were rescued yesterday from leaking lifeboat. They said —got away in the Atlantic. ried a crew of %6. * * * Detroit Banker Named ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. w,—'s 5 Men of German Vessel Taken Off Leaky Liteboat Fifth Flu Death LONDON \#—Five crewmen of the German sailing ship Pamir | The operators of the Pamir, tt |Zerssen Co. of Hamburg, quote d a| the survivors as saying they do rio}not know whether the vessel ac- jmore than 25 others could have tually sank. They said their life |boat was launched while the Pam- € * * * The last word from the Pamir, a ia distress signal saying: “Canada Reports : Outbreak Is Spreading Across Nation and tnto Far Northland TORONTO w—A fifth death was They reported only one’ other,ir was still afloat and that they reported today in the influenza lifeboat—Idaded with 25 crewmen'did not see ber go down when disaster and Hurricane Carrie struck Saturday | The Pamir car- came Saturday when she sent out died from pneum@nia after catch- “Heavy ing flu in Rouyn, a northwestern put break ada, A %-year-old religious teacher spreading across Can- ‘hurricane. All sails lost, 45-degree Quebec community ' Their report spurred a search list, danger of sinking.” by 10 ships in the stormy area. Three other deaths have oc- ‘The ship was bound from Bue-;CU!Ted in Ontario and one in Brit- 550 miles southwest of the Azores./nos Aires to Hamburg with: a ish Ss “| It was a race with the violent|cargo of barley. She lft Buenos sea. The five men said high waves Aires Aug. 9. She carried 51 cadets | * * Flu has spread into the -coun- Arthur B. Pfleider’ of Detroit was wanted | five (orlthesr comrades training for the German merchant, try's northland, infecting citizens named yesterday to the executive|overboard to their deaths only committee of the Trust Divisior of short time before a US. freighter the American Bankers Assn. at the came out of the murk to sav group's annual convention here. ithem. (Advertisement) Hips or Back © HURT THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE RIGHT HERE IN MICHIGAN COULD TELL YOU THAT |were spotted earlier |bost still was afloat * * * ‘freighter Saxon. The Saxon despite the buffeting. They were transferred Ja ‘to Casablanca. 0-JIB-WA BITTERS Gea | U.S. Coast Guard officials 1S THE BEST MEDICINE THEY New York said messages from!" EVER USED FOR RHEUMATISM, ARTHRITIS, NEURITIS OR SCIATICA AT ALL DRUG STORES the Saxon indicated Orange-colored lights and flares: in the day, ‘leading to hope that the other life- The five survivors were found bor by the 7,.251-ton -Isbrandtsen Lines ra-/recall Parliament for an urgent jdioed they were in fair condition night to the Military Sea Trans-| ‘port Service ship Geiger for med-| its summer recess Oct. 31 but the) p ‘ical treatment. They will be taken’ ‘Laborites want an earlier session| © the secon jlifeboat had been launched Sun., |day night. But there was no in-! formation as to how long the five the Laborite request, but when an| men had been in their small boat. important issue arises a govern- Hill said an epidemic exists. The a Qavy and 35 regular crewmen. | e Laborites Demand Debate on Economy LONDON (®#—The opposition La- party last night demanded that Prime Minister Macmillan debate on Britain's economic sit! ; iuation. , | * * we Parliament is scheduled to end st| ‘to take up the fmancial situation. ‘that precipitated last week's boost! ‘in the Bank of England interest! rate to 7 per cent in an effort! d to check inflation. * * x Macmillan is not bound to grant In LAZELLE AGENCY, Inc. INSURANCE For Your Every Need @ DWELLING—PACKAGE POLICY © HOUSEHOLD—PERSONAL PROPERTY @ BURGLARY--- THEFT YOUR! Mi icpendenr = & PERSONAL Inserand A INGEN. LIABILITY “s8avis/ ¥Ow fPiast~ a © AUTOMOBILE 504 PONTIAC STATE ‘BANK BUILDING PHONE FE 5-8172 ‘ment normally grants an opposi-, tion demand for Parliament to re-| assemble. ; Expect °30- Hour + Week ANN ARBOR. (INS)--An article! iin ‘Aging in the Modern World,” | ,a University of Michigan publica-| jon. said that by 1975 Ameri- ans may be working 30 hours a! | week. jot Whitehorse in Yukon Territory. ‘Schools there and in two other | territories were closed yesterday. In some areas health officials |said laboratory tests have not yet |determined whethe} the outbreak ‘is Asian flu. But at Amos, in , northwestern lQuebec, officials said there defi- ‘nitely have been cases of Asian flu. Four schools were closed ere, ° t+ tk kk, Schools also have been closed jat Sturgeon Falls, in northern On- tario; Sherbrooke, in Quebec 80 miles east of Montreal; and Trail, C., where more than 500 stu- dents were infected. About 350 of the 2,000 air per- sonnel at a depot at St. Johns, (Que., had flu. Eight nurses were flown in, and emergency hospital junits were set up in several build- +) ings. * * * At Calgary, Alta. Dr. W. H. health officer said thousands of ‘new cases had heen added since | Friday. Drowns in Bass Lake LAKELAND (® — Samuel M. Bitner, 60, drowned ‘in 20 inches of] water last night after he apparent- ly suffered a heart attack while fishing ‘for minnows in Bass Lake Inear his Livingston County home, Spencer, 59, of 45 Virginia Ave., hes has been blind since 1924 liowing an accident, reported to \police his five-year-old doberman pinscher was missing. | *® * | Within 24 hours, Chips was found by Bill Eddy and Jay Bedtelyon in the rear of their home at 58% Franklin Blvd. The boys teported their find- ings to police and Spencer was escorted in a police car to the garage where Chips was barking as if frightened. “I held out the harness and he jumped -up and put his head in it,’ Spencer happily reported. . * * *. : A report that a dog following the same description as Chips was struck by an auto at Saginaw and Huron streets yesterday was he- lieved true since Chips was favor- ing his -hip, Spencer. said. “I think it’s just a bruise,” he said,+"‘but I'll take him to the vet today for a checkup anyway.” State Doctors Honor Champion Physician GRAND RAPIDS « — An 82- year-old Upper Peninsula doctor has been named Michigan's fore- most Family Physician of 1957. . He is Dr. Paul Van Riper, of the Marquette County community of Champion.- Dr. Vgn Riper was selected yesterday by the Michigan State Medical Society house of dele- gates. The group opens its annual convention tomorrow. He is a graduate of the Uni- versity of Michigan medical school iand has been active in Marquette County affairs. A son, Charles, ‘mazoo. lives in Kala- housing represents a [little less). Clark Would Double Rafe in Next Five Years wien of the financing for im: provements undertaken . with other than Iegislative appropria- tions, although the U. of M. bene- fited from, some large gifts. The dormitory charges and stu- dents fees were pledged in support of bonds which provided the cash directly. FUNDS FROM ATOM STU bY At the U. of M., the. Pheonix Memorial Laboratory to develop peacetime uses of the atom, the Ford Nuclear Reactor and medical school library were built with gifts totaling more than three million dollars. Other than housing, a women's physical education building and a Union addition at the U. of M. were two of the larger projects financed out of fees. MSU by this method provided nearly three million dollars for enlargement of its football stadium, more than 1's millions for a health center addition and about $450,000 for a music practice building and| is paying for intramural buildings for men and women plus a student Given Prisoner on Straits Span State Police Use Bridge in Transporting Suspect to St. Ignace ST. IGNACE w-— State Police have used the not-quite-completed Straits of Mackinac Bri to re- turn a prisoner from Mackinaw City tp St. Ignace. Two details of troopers met yes- terday at a barricade on the center) of the five-mile span that links Michigan's Upper and Lower Pen- insulas and William Franklin, 26, was turned over to Detective Har-| old Morrison of the St. Post. ~- Ignace = It marked another “first” in the history of the 100 million — bridge. Franklin, an unemployed labor- er, was wanted here for investiga- tion in the theft of movie and press cameras and an office typewriter from the public relations depart- ment of the Bridge Authority. Morrison quoted Franklin as saying he committed the theft. Herman Ellis, official photog- rapher of the Bridge Authority, estimated the value of the arti- cles at $2,500. ; Franklin was picked up at a Pe- toskey bus station on the report of a man he is alleged to have tried to sell a camera. wreepers econ hl Pebmaey pont got permission from the Bridge Authority to effect the transfer at the. barricade after they learned they would be unable to make im- mediate ferry connections at Mack-) . - inaw City. The barricade; consisting of two, lowered crane booms, was erected to discourage unauthorized cross- ings. The. bridge will not be open for traffic until Nov. 1. ‘Clark Equipment Co. Starts Layoff of 250 BATTLE CREEK (® Equipment Co.'s Truck Division has begun a gradual lay- off of 250 of [ts 1,800 employes in an economizing of operations. Robert Andrews, plant manager, said yesterday the plant is under- doing a realignment to meet with “shifting needs of the national economy.’” He said sales programs are being readjusted with the com- pany “‘tightening its belt and get- ting rid of some of the frills.” They Woke Him Up ATHENS, (INS)—Haled before a judge for slugging two men who came to ,inquire about renting an apartment, janitor John Pappos explained: ‘“They woke me up dur- iVeokas NOW = eGLASS HEAVY 7/32 At Pontiac Mirror and Glass $ of° © 20 YEAR GUARANTEE © PHONE FE 4-5395 aee See nature work wondérs when Michigan puts on her » most lavish, show. Fish, hunt —or hike along flame-hued forest paths. Mail coupon today! Plan a week or week- end away from it all in the Water Wonderland! _ . Exsiting Event! New Mackinac Gridge :epene shout November 1] —| Jow For for a Fall Color Excursicn Michigan - WATER WONDERLAND ing the siesta hour.” through magnificent TOURIST COUNcK. recs ta Laghel Bethan, Lemsing 1, Bihigan Bend me free Autumn Golet Folders and Moratere trom regional sssecistion : adaleae bev ‘Sleep Machine’ for Mental Health . , . MOSCOW. (INS) ~ A’ lading American neuro-psychiatrist __re- perted today that the Russians havg invented a “sleep machine” for treatment of mental illness. fr. Horsley Gantt, director of the Pavlovian laboratory at Johns Hopkins Medical School, also said the Soviets have developed a tech- nique which could be used, per- haps, fe diagnose organic disturb- ances, such as cancer, at an early stage, services: building with ‘aggregate value in excess of nine millions. Only last week, the U. of M. programmed 123 million dollars in new construction for the next five years, counting about 22/4 raillions tor haspital and medical facilities construction. MSU taid out a blueprint for 111- million dollars in capital outlay during the next four years. Presumably, the U. of M. regents and the state board of agriculture, | MSU governing body, are looking to the Legislature for much of the 234 million dollars. Since the Legislature for gen- eral state purposes in 1957-58 ap- propriated only 341 million dollars, their chances of getting any very isizable proportion from this source ‘would not = too rosy. ‘Boarder No. 93” Starts Routine. at Cheam School LONDON (INS) — The clanging of a bell at 7:15 this. signalled the’ first day of school for Prince Charles—‘‘Boarder No. 93" at Cheam. ~ ~ After a quick wash, Charles had breakfast at 8 a.m. He then began sorting out his clothes and sports gear in pre- paration for commencement of the school term. It was perhaps athe first time the eight-year-old heir. apparent to the British throne had ever sorted out his own clothes. Charles was taken to Cheam, about 50 miles from London, by ie ok t The psychiatrist said that the new ‘‘sleep machine” puts patients into a deep sleep during which appear. Soviet scientists, he sald, in another advance,-are now able to predict manic depressive attacks in advance and prevent. them. Gantt spent four and one half lyears in Russia in the early 19208 studying under the ‘conditioned reflex"’ biologist Ivan Pavlov. At that time, he found the Paviovian technique was used to treat neurot- ics and psychotics in Russia. * * * But present-day Russian psychi- atrists, he said, treat mental pa- tients with the. “‘sleep machine.” The contraption is operated by electricity. It repeats a tiny gal- vanic stimulus until the patient falls into the deep sleep. John Martin Urges Probation Increase NEW YORK (#—John B. Martin de., many of their nervous troubles dis- the Queen and Prince Philip. They former Michigan auditor gen- school, remained a few minutes then left ‘him to face life on his own for the first time. * * * Unlike the other boys at the Prince Charles—c alled simply Charles by his classmates— dressed in a black tie today in mourning for his great uncle, King Haakon of Norway who died Sat- urday. The Loses Hand in Chopper eral, was among civic leaders from five states who urged in- creased prison probationary serv- ices yesterday at a study group meeting in New: York. , * * * TheeGrand Rapids attorney said it costs Michigan $1,200 tc $1,600 yearly to keep a law violator in prison and only $150 to $250 year'y \to supervise an offender on proba- | tion. * * * The civic groups said at a news BAD AXE (®—Donald Kirsch, 18,|conference that crowded prisons Huron County. of Route 1, Harbor Beach, lost, were causing huge tax expenses his right hand Monday when he and that many prisoners could caught it in a corn chopper while | advantageously be put on proba- working on his uncle's farm in'tion at great savingg. if facilities were available. 46 WILLIAMS ST. Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME “THOUGHTFUL SERVICE” PHONE FE 2-584) i 2x4x8’ Fir (These Are Not the Be oa and CARRY st) Circle Drive for Lumber—Hardware-Building Supplies OPEN SATURDAYS ‘til 5 Save on Roth’s Cash and Carry Plan Easy Loading f Wome. PONTIAC MIRROR & GLASS | ; ~~ XS City & Zone ute DRIVE SAFELY ° 732 W. Huron St. FE 4-5395 1 C) Upper Peninsula Development Bureau 2 (-) East Michigan Tourist Association 2.() West Michigan Tourist Association 4 [) Southeast Michigan Tourist Associotion \ | ' Ll aad i . \ : f is, eS eS ee pe sige we Se gk ait otl en I Paes e ae ; it Wh Ate, Ride a i ial a ee os. ok ine ge thie . A A OES “Nn “aH. PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER o41957 my } hia Ns “fe Ve - : . ' § Wea tee : 2 | . 4 ' mar F . 7 ioe) y Vans © gl ( aeatay I... |New Vee Pee bu eee Stock Market [ MARKETS Trained Boy Saves Announce Plan' Nerorattaboretoves | Bounces B ack “ee (Coal Miner's Life 2 loving ae op we i ag Ky, a Kern | TOLEDO W#—Sale of National Laboratories, Inc., of Toledo to on Car Repairs “The cov- ' Lehn & Fink Products Corp. of ering of. locally pro- always had @ ; New York has been completed, it NEW YORK ww — The stock}duce a to apse ad oo — the Buyers of Used Aufos aes range ey: : “ market rallied briskly in early|/Markets.by growers ; sei | Retaining its present name, ‘Na- as trading , today. } them in whoelsale package lots. Ween Men T SRAENINE. 8 HOR: Protected for Full Year ional Laboratories will be incor- Prices bounced back partially|Quotatioas are furnished by the) "Si." elit dune wee we Under Firm Warranty porated as an independent sub- after falling to. nearly a two-year|Detroit Bureau, of Markets, as of _— - $ sidiary, one of 16 such Lehn '& low in yesterday's sharp setback.) —— “i - DETROIT (INS) _ ee oe Fink units throughout the world. used cars “will be peetecteditor ‘al Officials said Plans. are under _ \way for sizable future é€xpansion - Leading issues were up from fractions to a point or more. Steels ' and oils were in-special demand. = Cai . In fact, General Motors traded Co about unchanged te news that some 16,000 of its workers are to lant, bu be idled “indefinitely because of|ketiremt (och, strikes at supplier’ plants. , * * * U.S. Steel was ahead around a point. Republic Steel and Youngs- pe: town rose fractionally. Small gains Pum were posted by Sinclair, Standard | 234 Oil (New Jersey) and Gulf Oil. Gains of about a point or better were made by Chrysler, Douglas Aircraft, United Aircraft, Zenith, ‘Sone Kennecott, Phelps Dodge, West- inghouse Electric, Southern Pa- clfig and Baltimore & Ohio. Smaller gains were made by Boeing, Goodrich, American Cy- anamid, Du Pont, Southern Rail- way and Schenley. sociated Press): 30 18 15 = 60 Indust. Rails Util. Stocks| nose 2474 104.1 71.0 166.2 ago 258.1 111.5 71.9 172.9 -257.3 115.4 72.3 173.8 ago -285.6 129.6 71.1 176.1 1987 high ......280.0 134.7 77.5 188.8 ..240.6 104.1 71.0 166.2 ih «276.3 155.. 76.0 191.6 -244.0 126.2 689.6 171.6 DETROIT STOCKS 4 (C. J. Nephier Co.) Figures after decimal] points are ths Low Noon Allen Elec & = Co. * 26 390 —ao eyo Mesa ke 15.2 15.4 15.4 eee * 24.4 25.4 cL Oil & Chem. > one ee Fe | Hovell Elec, Mo. Co. .... 54 64 64 Peninsular Met. Pd. Co. ..10.3 10.3 10.3 The (= B eeuonce * 93 10.0 Rudy Manufact, Co * 108 113 Toledo Edison Co. Add Bi 123 Wayne Screw Pd. ous © 80 89 © sale; bid and asked. Sun to Become Hotter CLEVELAND, (INS)-Dr. Ja- each of laxes her. , . . ere eee Se eddtet tite tests ttdetet tet eee ete teeters # Sasesass shuseesssusscecsaussssssess2 shsksszess += me 7s he ed ad See je, bleached, bu, tees Lettuce Head (crate) 3 dos... ss, # the motorist punched him in the Police said they haven't de- cided how many charges to file. 2\Confederate ‘Soldier’ Saved by Sheriff APPOMATOX, Va. ® — The marble statue of a Confederate soldier is back on its pedestal here after a three-year absence and Sheriff David T. Robertson is the modern hero of this Civil War surrender ground. The statue was-toppled by Hur- ricane Haze] in 1954. It shattered into many piecs. Souvenir hun- ters carried some away. Pleas by Robertson in newspapers caused return of the souvenir pieces. Af- ter three years he got all to- gether with dental cement and the statue was rededicated. Israeli Bonds Sold TORONTO (®—About a million Israel were sold last night at a rally of the Toronto Israel bond organization attended dy Abba Washington. Ke ee @ & dollars in bonds for housing inj}v Eban, Israeli ambassador be One day recently they. - were standing on a coal loading plat- caught in the conveyor. The arm was crushed and Montgomery was about to be mangled. Remembering what he had been taught, Jimmy reached up and stopped the machine — probably saving his friend's life. Plan fo Establish Decimal Coinage Currency Council has been formed in Melbourne to establish and fos- ter a decimal coinage system. Australia now has the pounds, shillings, and pence system; five Australian pounds are equal to four pounds sterling or $11.20 U.S. Chairman of the council is Sir Leslie Melville, vice-chancellor of the Australian National University. The council will seek the support of the federal government and of 200 of the country’s most powerful organizations. A Royal Commission recom- mended the introduction of the dec- imal coinage system to Australia MELBOURNE ® — A Decimal] - form when Montgomery's arm was/ . ¥ PLAYMATES — Kidding around with a kitten is great fun, especially when you're three years old and the world is a great big pince for en- joyment. ae Mo., on GM Layoffs Caused by Strikes Corp. says some 16.000 employes Pontiac assembly plants across the country will be idled indefinitely because of strikes at two GM supplier pla * * * A spokesman said yesterday that assembly work on 1958 models is being held up because stampings are not available from the strike- bound Mansfield, Ohio, and Marion, Ind., factories. The two plants fabricate stampings for the Buick, the three divisions. * * * the model changeover period. Members of the’ United Auto Workers union struck the Mansfield and Marion plants last week in disputes over local issues. News in Brief Sauerkraut dinner $1.00 adults. Serving from 5 to 7 Roose- | velt Temple. 22 State St. Wed. Sept. 25. . —Adv. Betty Wolfe, of 736 W. Huron’ St., reported to Pontiac Police, ing the day, someone had broken into her apartment, stealing $30) . in cash from a jewelry box. | Rummage Sale, Mon. through Decker. 993 Mt. Clemens. —Adv.! Pontiac police received a re-) port early this morning that some-| time during the night, someone broke into the gas station at 836 Joslyn Rd., breaking the cigarette machine and escaping with $5 in nickels and $10 in wrapped pen- nies. Sale Wed. and Thurs.| 1160 S. Lapeer Rd. Lake Orion. | —Adv.| DETROIT # — General Stotors| | in seven Buick, Oldsmobile and’ Those idled include some work-: ers who were laid off earlier for was a sudden splurge of defense 4F€ about ready to spend freely as the United States re- 28ain for autos, ar automatic washing m Sun, 9 a.m. to 9 p. m. Leroy) U. S. Economy k Looking for Another Shot in Ar By SAM DAWSON | NEW YORK.i2-—Wanted: thing new today to give the econ- omy a boost. less. Then, just when industrial ac- 'tivity was turning down, there | | spending ‘armed to fight the Korearr Wa |and prepare itself to meet any Comniunist threat. | * * * The peak of defense spending |passed and cutbacks in defense, jorders sent industry downhill for a time. sumer spending spree of 1955.; ‘Savings were drawn down and) credit totals were built up to rec- ard highs, Business boomed while! iit turned out all the big ticket ‘items Americans wanted to_buy,) * x * This spree ran its course. Con-| sumer spending has stayed high) but such increase as it shows now) is largely a matter of higher | |prices, and industrial jseeking the most to buy. But in turn the consumer spend- ing spree was succeeded by a record expansion in business) | spending for capital goods last year and this. The economy has jbeen boosted once again to new ‘heights. | * * * this spending new Now for United Press Phote Zelda Waits and her playful pet are having more fun entertaining each other at In- than most pow nurs ever know, ~ |Bishop pointed out, Credit Corp. full year against costs of. repair Jot National Laboratories operations or replacement of major mechani- pere. The firm produces and dis- cal parts under a plan announced tributes cleaning supplies for busi- in Detroit today by Universal C.1.T.\ ness and industry. : . x kk. “This is the first time such a nationwide organization has of-| fered a car warranty program,”’! Rude said at a news conference. | ;“It will not only protect used car| ‘buyers against costly repairs, but | iwill be an additional sales tool for) lauto dealers The program will be administ- | ered by the Car Warranty Corp., | a new subsidiary of C.1.T. Fin- ancial Corp. Harold Bishop, former executive vice president | of the service insurance com- | panies, has been named presi- | | dent of the subsidiary. The value of the warranty, Bishop explained, is illustrated Ly) the average costs of repairs cov- | ered. “An average engine overhaul,”’| “would cost more than $300:6To overhaul an automatic transmission could amount to more than $200, rear axle repairs would average $60, fand replacement of steering mech- anism parts would average more than some $40." When a dealer wants a car to bear the Car Warranty Corp. | guaranteed seal he calls the nearest C.LT, office to arrange for an inspection. A specially trained inspeetor will test and inspect the car and apply of topping out, with a decline be-| some-' lieved likely next year. Most of the business statistics: fare high—if you close your eyes) The long business boom is show- to the part that inflated. prices) lhighway 'get going, strong next year. Others believe the the like. * settle | time. * consumers | x But until any of these, las yet undetected thing, develops, | wants,” he added. the majority now seems ready to} Business Notes Miss Sally Soutar, 25, of Detroit, |W. Huron St.- The announcement was made by|* manager Russe!l G. Gustav- . ‘son. Miss Soutar has six years of ewes 4 foot high, lowner- mittee of |Adams, Inc., 'vertising Company, nounced by firm president Ernest | on return of said documents {n~ good A. Jones. The 1ipment shows signs, plants and equi; har 2,000 Picket Lone Star Factory , toc EGGS 20, Years ago. New York S ks DETROIT. Sept. 23 (AP) —_ Ease, fem Admiral ...... 34 Johns Man ... 40.1 re en meee TILLII 49.1 Jones vee S11] Whites: Grade i i Allied Ch ..... 19) Kelsey Hay -. 38-4 weighted average $4.