The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau ‘ogee . Peet coal ee | Fag 7th YEAR = TPONTIAG, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, ‘aeRit 9s a _ UNITED PRESS. INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED. PRESS : AP Wirephoto is led from a AFTER SURRENDER — Billy Joe Wright. left, piec near San Quentin, Calif. by an unidentified guard yesterday after surrendering, Wright and Wiliam D. Werner escaped from San Quentin Prison and held a woman hostage for six hours at the end of a fishing pier. Jail Escapees Who He Hostage Say If Was Blutf SAN QUENTIN. Calif. (AP) — Two small time burg- lars, who escaped from San Quentin Prison and held a woman hostage at knifepoint for six hours at the end of a fishing pier before surrendering Tuesday, say they were bluffing. , “We really didn't want no Hostage, Hast a car to. get away,” said Billy Joe¢————— ~ ee Wright, 26. Auburn-haired Louise Gschwend M4. agreed. “I hope these bovs get a break.’ she declared. “‘They didn't hurt me They gave me a Living Costs Hold at February Level break.” At the beg f the ord nwmeawsszs : she « a begining - Hr! "T tli WASHINGTON (P—The cost of ack and I was faint When I al BSINg.. an meeasered by the gdy: most fainted one of the boys ernment, held unchanged in wrapped ‘my coat around me.” March. ; rapped -m “Ox ari rape ‘ + ‘am The Labor Department an- The + , ' i thee nounced today its consumer price 1 rusty who di taf Was ‘ “499 © . William D. conn aad a" Both bn ides stayed at 123.7 per cent of and Wright had jail-break records nal 1347-49 average, completing Th broke iWay fre m work “ ‘ tener st pried “ relative ey AW) / orice stability on -ord. parties outside the bleak walls of eee * « . record the huge prison 20 miles north of The index has not flactuated by San Francisco, Wight feeing : : ‘ from a grass-mowing parts and Se eee ae maces ak Werner from the prison) quarry - : . : a ™ i “bor Statistics and said, now with guards in hot ‘pursuit stands two-tenths of a point be. Euihng to find a car, they ran jow the all-time high of 123.9 down the half-mile whart-that-1ls per cent touched fast July and into San Francisco Bay near th* again in November. prison entrance The consumer price index for _ Mrs Gschwend, a beauty opera- Detroit edged down .1 per cent for, was fishing there with Dou from February te March, but Harrison 62, a hotelmaf and the March figure was .8 per cent friend of 35 years. Her hustand pelow the level ofa year ago, Bill of Rights for Labor Union Contending some workers need more protection with- ploited and oppressed.’ > Fair Weather Forecast Tonight in Pontiac Area It will Be generally fair and not , 80 cool tonight in the Pontiac area, ‘the U.S. Weather Bureau fore- cast today. The low will be near ~ Members Urged «:: mr + * * Would Be Tacked Onto Thursday will be partly cloudy, Kennedy Bill That Has. and-mild with a high of 62. South- | west winds of 10-15 miles an id Now Survived Z Tests today will diminish tonight, u , *eeming 15-23 miles an hour to WASHINGTON {AP) -- For the next five days high ' temperatures will average in the 50’s and the low near 34-36. { “morrow, | | i { in their labor uONS, Sen. Precipitation wil] total about: John L. McClellan (D- -Ark) ‘one-tenth inch with chance of a proposed todav what he few showers Friday and agaip called a labor bill of rights. SU"d@¥ °F ponday. * = | He offered his proposal as’ Thirty-four @as the lowest read- an amendment to-the Ken- ing in downtown Pontiac preneth:, ing 8 a.m. The thermometer reg- nedy labor regulation bill, istefed 60 at 1 p.m. which survived intact its | first two floor tests Tues- day. “City Centennial | In a prepared speech, MeClel said the Kennedy bill “does not adequately meet the needs «Planners Named. \ union members for the protection rights. It dees not afford , Sarictuary to the ex- of their adequate 20 Business, Industrial Leaders Chosen to Chart 1961 Celebration Urging passage of an effective | _ bill, he said the “invasion of unionism by thugs and hood- Jums hay gone much furthe: and A stride towards the city’s 100th ‘is mere extensive than you | ' . nag . birthday celebration, March 15, think. McClel ct f the Se 1961, was taken today with the oe wairman of the Sen initial appointments to Pontiac's ale hoe er inagement Commiuttre proposed that Jabor unions be re- quired to write into their con- stitutions and by-laws a series of provisions designed to assure tne nights of individual members. * * * Tuesday the Senate turned down Centennial Committee Mavor Philip E. Rowston an- nounced the first 20 members of! the planning body. He planned to name a few more. shortly. The committee is comprised of Pontiac leaders representing the an attempt by Sen. Sam.J many sides of the city’s busi- Ervin Jr. (D-NC) to knock out of Bess and industrial life. the bill all of the changes it makes yy charged ‘in the Taft-Harley law. These planning for spécia! changes are strongly supported b) celebration of the occasion. labor. * century date is 693 days away, af * *« * * * Next the Senate rejected, 67-24, Named to the committee were a move bs Minorty Leader Howard Canfield, Oakland Divi- : ar q ‘= ~ . + ~ Everett M. Dirksen ¢R-II]) to suo sion manager, Detroit Edison Co.: stitute the Eisenhower administra- Norman Dunn, public relations de- tion's Taft-Hartley package for the . partment, Pontiac Motor Division: provisions in the Kennedy bill. Smith Faleoner, executive vice * * * president and director, Pontiac Chief effect of this substitute care Bank: Fred V. Haggard. would have been to add provisions , president, Oakland County AFL- aimed at organizational picketinz (jg Council; William Hart, man- and secondary boycotts. The aa- ager, radio station WPON ministcation “contends? these ; essential to any effective legisia Civile KR. Haskill, president, tion . Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of McClellan said be will offer sim. Commerce; John W. Hirlinger, ilar PRISONS as separ ate amend- manager, Pontiac Area Chamber ments of Commerce; Albert W. Hol- > comb, vice president, Community National Bank; Edward L. Kar- kau, Pontiac District manager, Consumers Power Co.; Frank 8S. Lyvndall, Pontiac manager, Sears Roebuck & Co. / Ralph Norvell, an insarance agent: Monroe Osmung, Pontiac School Board member; Nerman Pattison, president of the Down- town Merchants Assn.: Howard O. Powers, a, distributor; Harry J. 67-27. with events initial a will be Aare Something. They Ought to Know About ‘Jurist’ GOSHEN, NY — Vincent Van Derhoff, af NX. answered an Orange County sum- mons for jury duty with a letter saving: “I get good sense and if you really want me Tl be there.’ (AP) Chester, Wajter, was working as a hotel the North Central Regional Of. He continued: “But first T think Reed. managing editor. The Pon.’ beliman. All live in San Francisco.. fice of the Bureau of Labor Sta. I should square it with you. You ae Press: John A. Riley, assis: * * * tistics said today. seb om only nine years old.’* ‘tant advertising director The Pon- Harrison reealled that ‘Louise Food costs dropped .6 per cent Vincent’s father, of the same€ tac press . let out a scream and I saw they frem February to March; medi- name, died two years ago. * * * had a knife at her neck.”’ He add-. cal and personal care costs were —— James F. Spence, secretary: ed that Wright “told officers, down slightly; and reading and Legvye Contribution manager, Pontiac Manufacturers’ dont come any closer or Tl kill) recreation dropped 14 per cent. ” Assn: Everett C. Spurlock, Pon- her but IT think they were just But these decreases were al} but NEWTON, Towa «(UPI!—Burg- tiac president of the Urban League: biuffing all the time.’ offset by increases in cost for | lars cracked the safe at the New. Wilham L. Treanor, terminal man- Wright and Werner, with Hatii” transportation, housing and | ton Daily News and made off Sager of a trucking firm; and Wil- son carrying. messages between clothing. The price indey for (© with $825 in cash. They left $20 liam, Whitheld. an attorney. them and the guards, demanded a speedboat with penty of gaso- | 1 changed ever the month, line and at another time the keys i other goods’and services Was un. i in-an envelope marked ‘for the , Red™Cross."’ i Norvell, Powers ‘Continued on Page and Riley are 2, Col. 5} to Mrs. Gschwend's car and a half hour start. * * * From Wooden Boats to Secret Missiles Finally the prisoners gave ud) when Marin County Prosecutor William Weissich promised not to: prosecute them for escaping and | they were given a chance to tell BAY CITY (UPI) — The ‘Defoe turned out 51 pleasure ‘yachts, 14! toda¥ Great Lakes freighters, tugs and their grievances fo newspaper-; men, ; ™ eins Shipbuilding Co., which jaunched the first dé@stroyer de- Flash Sub Alarm Aded by Harry J. oe and G. H. White-' SAN DIEGO, Calif (UPT)— miss iles was f Sheriff's deputies spotted a. sub- and WT marine off the coast yesterday, house in 1965. ‘fixed it in a spotlight and flashed | LON the alarm. Reporters dashed to the scene, The U.S. Navy finally admitted it was one of ours—or | “seeret’) maneuvers. . * * ‘riverfront in Bay City. They built only wooden boats at first but won a contract from the U.S. Army Transport Service to build eight steel harbor plant- ers just after Whitehouse sold out | to the two Defoes around the | weer In Today's Press Comien” 6... cece eee ee- 32 | of World War I, Commity, News .. 2060 + 5, 1 The little boatyard couldn't. han- FAitorials ......- reese - 6 die the construction of the 100-foot, Markets .......-+--+000 5, 33 Ipoats so the Defoes moved across | Obituaries .....6 6. cc eee 3 the river and established a new Sports .. 0... eeee eee eee 27-30 yard stretching from the Michigan Theatera ....--10-0r esses 18 | Central Bridge downriver some 2,- TV & Radio Programs ... 39 200 feet to the old Foss Slip, where Wikoom,, Marl -ssseeeres: __ 39 the missile destroyer Henry B. Wil- Women's PAEIR omnis 8688 21-24 | con will be launched. QUITE A RECORD Inventory Reduction Sale Since launching the mine plant- All Books ' Off One areace at erg, the Defoe ship yards has 8 ; ‘ a . : #4 i4 : 2 \ ‘signed from the keel up to carry, ‘Coast Guard, four for the Light- Defoe Firm ‘Men Started Small ship yards, if he could build a plastic boat which would be used ofher commercial boats, 33 for the as a non-magnetic minesweeper. ' He aecepted the challenge, ‘house Service, two 650-foot ore car- ‘ t & miracle no one was hurt additional al-'est plastic vessel, a 30-ton, 1959—30 PAGES ~ * FINISHING UP — Workmen at the Bay City Defoe Shipbuilding Co. finished the launching platform this morning in the shadow of the USS Henry B. Wilson, which was launched eae. and ts in a Great Lakes Contrasts With Shootings Last Night ‘No Violence at Caroli HENDERSON, N.C. (# — About; Boyd Payton, Carolina's directer 350 workers, many of them riding of the union, complained to the went to their governor the mill management had ~ hired new workers for the mulls incident today follow-\ Jocong and third shifts, ing-the worst outbreak of violence * * * in the 23-week Harriet-Henderson' Hodges asked company president Cotton Mills strike. John D. Cooper to bring all data Clusters of strikers watched on available jobs, along with cop- striWer, bullet-scarred autos, jobs without grimly in a steady drizzle as first- jes of the proposed contract. shift emploxes eaters {he Bor "Tuesday night's violence erupt- and ‘south Henderson. plant gates ed 20 minutes before the approx. “under heavy police — protection imately 100 workers on the sec- There were oc casional jeers and ond shift were to leave the shouts of ‘‘scab. plants. Seek New Trial for Thompson Teamster’s Attorneys: ,,, to Dispute Flint Arson The scene contrasted, sharply with Gast night when rifle shotS slammed into cars bearing non- strikers and homemade gasoline bombs burst on the streets. No one was although an official reported injured. said it was a a woman more to- “That's just a sample.” shouted. ‘‘There'll be morrow night.” It was the worst outbreak of dalence im 9% neki ) ee akin indented sity 9 Conviction at Hearing 16.000 near the Virginia line. A new ein: will be sought for The city looked toward a meet-/Flint Teamster official Jack D.; ing today in Raleigh for a strike Thompson who was convicted of solution from Gov. Luther H. Hodges and officials of the mills AESON. * * - and the Textile Workers Union of Thompeon'’s atlornga: — James Arnenics * * ” BE. Haggerty Sr. of Detrow and A stnke settlement was reached Joseph Ro Joseph of Flint — yes last weekend, It came apart Mon- terday filed notice in Gene a ee ene merang Camis Creu Court to olin a their jobs back. phew tral ‘They said the jury decision | against Thompson was contrary to the law and against the great | ' weight of evidence. The Jawyers said they would ar- gue eight major points at a May 195 hearing. ; . | That is one week after Thomp-, ‘tinue with the project only by son, 42, was scheduled to be sen agreeing to rebuild the ship at no tenced for the Aug. 3 arson. of cost. In July 1956, he the Latreille Dry Cleaners outside ‘proudly delivered the world’s larg- of Flint. It was in this fire’ that 54-foot fellow Flint Teamster Frank RKier- : ma N : “though there was no previous de- minesweeper. idorf was beheved to have suffercd i % ny ate . y eda and 152 Navy boats, dncluding}:.. sign for use as a* pattern, and | fatal burns ‘mine planters, landing craft, a, TROLLS HULL OVER a The three men got together to tug, Lpuild a small boat shop on the: sweepers, destroyer escorts and i came up with two thin plastic skins) British rescue ship, a Navy yard: type of | honeycomb submarine chasers, mine- covering a ship rigidity. When the ship was almost com- pleted it was destroyed by fire and! fast troop transports, ~In 1992, the Navy asked Harry | J. Defoe, who then owned the kt wk * * ke * She's a Big One | Tale of Tape on New Ship BAY CITY (UPI) — Here are the specifica#ions of the missile destroyer USS Henry B. Wilson, launched today by Defoe Shipbuilding Co.: ‘ Displacement: 4,500 tons; Overall length: 438 feet; Extreme beam: 47 feet; Power: steam turbin, twin | screw; Armament: dual armed ‘tartar missile launcher; two five-inch, single mount, rapid-fire guns, and asroc and other modern anti-submarine weapons; Crew: 24 officers and 330 enlisted men. ane re lightweight plastic which gave the, ‘method of building a ship's hull up-/ arson April 3 Defoe convinced the Navy to con- |! ship ducing World War II from cuit Judge Stephen : Roth, now the company’s president, William M., jthe contract Defoe also originated the unique, Thompson was convicted of the after a three-week ‘side down and then rolling it over trial, He has been free on a $1,500 for completion. This technique cut bond awaiting sentence ithe time-needed to build one type) Haggerty and Joseph said Ci- who heard the trial, was wrong in re fusing testimony on a dying declar ation by Kierdorf and limiting cross-examination of witnesses. * * * They also said the judge erred in refusing to permit erosstexami ‘nation of Michigan Attv, Gen. Paul! 'L. Adams on certain questions, Thomas J..! and carried on and secured ‘14 months to one week. In March 1957, Df&foe went with his two sons to Washington | to seek contracts to build mis: |° sile destroyers, He suffered a heart attack and died before | completing negotiations for the | contract. | -But his two sons, no inane oan Report Clesa Currency . TOKYO (UPD) -— The Finance Minstgy announced its new currency has passed a wash- | ing machine test, and ail the | new monéy ean safely be spent The launching today represents (Continued on Page 2, Gol. 6) Save 's ta '2.,. Steck Reduction Sale! Prices cut on quailty family needs. George's-Newports. 74 N, Saginaw 8t. under water. : vd é, * . iy ' fa The Wilson is the al new / a landslide “ firemen were ' shaw participated in any black- Japanese ;° Rost vital ile Hail Destroyer. as Key ural in Sub Warfare - Seaway Enables Lake © City to Build New Entry in U.S. Arsenal By A, F. MAHAN Jr. BAY CITY (AP) — America’s first guided mis-__ sile destroyer slides down the ways here today as a bold challenge to Soviet Russia’s submarine men- ace. The 4,500-ton ship — the is the largest warship ever built on the Great Lakes. * * * In prepared remarks for the full dress Navy launching ceremony, Rear Adm, Edmund B, Taylor, commander of destroyer forces in the U.S. Atlantic Fleet, described the Wilson as “‘potentially the most powerful destroyer in the world.” He said the launching at the Defoe Shipbuilding Co, yards marks the greatest progress in U.S. destroyer a in 20 years, Mrs, Patrick J. Hurley, wife of a former secretary of war and a daughter of the admiral for AP Wirephoto Navy's first guided missile de- the largest warship built shipyard. ened the ship. POLARIS LIKELY Adm. Taylor said that the ships. ; "anti-submarine equipment is in- ifinitely superior to anything that ‘we have had in the fleet hereto- fore’ and “it is entirely possible” the ship ultimately may be fitted ever for ballistic missiles, sueh as “the INQ- I _ {intermediate range Polaris. ~Faylor, who will tead-a_ flotilla ‘of 28 warships through the St. sttte $ fil Ned with gasoline #e?e Lawrence Seaway later this year, thrown into the streets around the said: . mill gates. The gasoline was set, “Given sufficient numbers of afire them the Navy will be more than State Highway patrolmen and | a match for the 500 Soviet sub- marines which presently pose a |-serious threat to our control of the seas and to our national security.” cal police were on hand to escort, workers fram the plants: When the first auto appeared at. a plant gate, shots rang out from some distance away. Reporters heard the bullets slam autos as the cars drove through contract. the glass-littered streets. launched. Rocks banged again She Sister ing autos, tle tomorrow and at Bath, Maine, | Police said at least 20 shots were Saturday. ifired at the South Henderson plant. ~ * ® 9 or 10 at the North Henderson Three more are scheduled to fol- anil low the Wilson at the Defoe yards e plants were struck Nov, 17 under a 68-million-dollar contract. after failure by negotiators to agree on an arbitration clause in ters for 24 officers and 330 en- contract. About 1,000 of listed men will be air conditioned. company’s 7.200 workers HULL OF ALUMINUM wa ved out. Cooper reopened both Her superstructure will be of mills Feb. 16 wi a contrac s Feb. 16 withot a contract ,aluminum, instead of the custom- “ary steel. She also incorporates Firemen Elect Chief a new hull design. the missiles and the still super-secret irocket assisted anti-submarine mis- siles, plus two five-inch rapid-fire guns. Steam turbines geared to twin (Continued on Page 2 2, » Col. 1) Ss SPRING FIELD, Hl. Fire Chief Francis J. Saunders | is the happiest boss in town, The | incumbent chief was elected by UPh _ permitted, for the first time, to elect thee own chief i “M urder Warrant Asked Against Mrs. Lawrence Oakland County Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem said today a first-degree murder warrant will be issued against Mrs. Sue Lawrence, who police say fatally shot an Independence Township mother of two Saturday. Mrs. Lawrence is scheduled to appear before Town- ship Justice of the Peace William H. Stamp on the charge either today or tomorrow. She is recuperating at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital from a bullet wound in the leg.” inf Hele during a scuffle ith Mrs. Donald etts. Mrs. Lawrence charged the Cre vish 1aws with “repeatedly” call- ing her at home and at work ask- ing for money. ic renshaw, the dead woman. “Ziem_ said issued the | order for the warrant as) investigators were stil looking into Mrs. Law- rence’s story that Mrs. Crenshaw, | 23, of 6220 Snow Apple Dr. and, her husband were blackmailing | "Mra. Lawrence, a Berkley beauty’ “shop employe, he She said they demanded money, saying physical harm might come to her 9-year-old sen, | Wayne Jr. Mrs. Crenshaw was shot twice in the chest Saturday after Mrs, Laws rence went to the Crenshaw home, ‘She said she had gone there to = aa asia . “pay off $500 which Mrs, Crenshaw sanll.” Ziem abit, Ewere's beem had demanded in a telephone call. only hearsay or inference.” « * * Crenshaw, a credit salesman for; Sheriff detectives found. $500 in vitives company in’ Pontiac, has'g small envelope in the Crenshaw taken a die defector fest an whic h kitchen. ihe d@nied any part in an alleged) Detee tives also found a note with” iblackmail plot ithe money in which Mrs, Lawrence Mrs. ~Lawrence,.2, of 2652 Ox- -expressed the hope that the $500 ford St.. Berkley, dated Crenshaw. ‘payment would be the last, De- i before his wmarriage last January,|tective Leo Hazen said, In ® statement given from her| A hospital spokesman said Mrs, bed to Assistant Oakland, tob-| “There's no proof that Cren- | County Prosecutor James E, icharged today), © \ “e \ U.S.S. Henry B. Wilson —' whom the Wilson is named, christ- ~ The Wilsén. is one of 13. such into the Missile-carrying destroyers under is the first to be ships are sched- st the speed- uled to go down the ways at Seat- The 438-foot Wilson's living quare Lawrence was seheduled to be dis- | The Wilson will be armed with — Navy's Tartar surface-to-air- . escape a ie a eat rd tien i ~~ World War II it turned out more " Michigan, Stewart had heen. vice : tie the Wilson to the Great Lakes. N ___ ROBERT B. STEWART ~ American Forging Picks New Head Robert B. Stewart has been|® named president and general man- ager of the: American Forging and Socket Co. in Pontiac. He succeeds Goodloe H. Rogers who recently retired. ‘A graduate of the University of president .and assistant to the president since 1943. Succeeding Stewart is James J. -Rath, former factory manager. The firm manufactures and de- signs pressed metal stampings and assemblies for a variety of indus- tries “It was founded -here in 1915. Bay City Launches. Missile Destroyer (Continued From Page One) propellor shafts will provide power for the 4T-foot wide ship. Completed and shaken down in Lake Huron trials, the Wilson is scheduled for delivery to the Navy in Boston in November 1960, : Only the building of the St. Law- rence Seaway made the construc- tion of the Wilson possible on the Great Lakes. Without the seaway’s 27-foot channels, the destroyer would have been landlocked — shut off from the seas. : * * & Even the launching itself will LAUNCH SIDEWISE It will slide into the water side- wise, the first destroyer ever to! going into the shops and obtain- be launched this way. The side|ing the correct price of all arti- launching is a trademark of Great|cles in the booth. Lakes shipbuilders who don't have enough space to let a ship;slide|obtain contest applications, said "e Fred Niedelson, publicity chair- into the water lengthwise. x% *® * And: the bottle role: over the} Assn. County Courthouse Bids Show Cost Up $178,100 Wilson’s bow to send her dawn the ways will contain fresh water from the Saginaw River and the seaway and salt water from the Atlantic instead of champagne, a 2 * * Defoe has been building Navy vessels since World War I. In than 150 sub chasers, minesweep- ers, destroyer escorts and other fighting vessels and transports. Balmy Weather Fans Across Northern U.S. By The Associated Press Warm eir spread across the northern tier of states today, end-' ing at least temporarily a spell of chilly spring weather. But cool weather continued across southern sections’ from the central plains eastward through the middle Mississippi Valley to the middle Atlantic states. Dry weather prevailed in the major part of the country. Main areas of cloudiness and precipita- tion was in the extreme Southeast and was associated with a cold front extending from the central ‘Gulf of Mexico into the Carolinas and eastward into the Atlantic. The Weather Fall U.S. Weather ome Report PONTIAC AND TCINITY ae ged gapay paves high 57. VPaie — ol i Tomor cloudy me alta High 2. Winds Pgh to- 10- miles teday, diminishing tonight becom- oy: southwest to seuth 15-25 miles Fri- = oa Tedsy in Pontiac a temperature preceding 8 a.m ay 8 a.m.: Wind velocity 0-3 m. ph. Direction—Northeast Sun sets Wednestay at 7.21 p.m. Sun rises Thursday at 5:40 a.m. Moon sets Thursday at 6:03 a.m. Moon rises Wednesday at 6:58 p. m. (City Fire Chief | John Schroeder Retires) “Today After 48 Yebrs). \5th Anniversary i in the center. With Department Retiring Fire Chief John F. ’ |Schroeder will be honored tonight} ’ at a testimonial banquet at »the Elks Temple. This is Schroeder’s last day as! chief. He has been with the fire {department for almost 48 years, -lworking for the city longer than any other full-time employe in Pontiac history. & Seventy-five raped are ex- George D. Eastman, city com: ’ missioners and city department heads. - from neighboring communities, and 10 retired Pontiac firefighters. City commissioners last night paid tribute to Schroeder’s long They passed a resolution citing the 66-year-old chief's ‘qualities of leadership which have won him the lasting respect of his men and the admiration of the fire depart- ment and the cify."’ Commissioner William W. Don- aldson-said he would recommend to subdivision developers that some Pontiac street in the fu- ture bear the name of Schroeder, in honor of the long-time fire chief. rf Tel-Huron Center Will Celebrate Merchants at the Tel-Huron Shopping Center will mark their fifth anniversary by giving away more than $1,000 in prizes during a 10-day celebration. Among the gifts to be given away is a colored television set. During the celebration, Which opens tomorrow and runs through May 2, merchants at the 16 shops also will offer many outstanding values to area customers. To be eligible for the prizes, customers must participate in a “Price Is Right Contest.” A booth will be set up containing articles from the various stores Customers then will fill out blanks available in all stores by Also a hand will be fire chiefs a two-hour open house. well lighted halls and colorful larger rooms ‘make several units door light coming through opened last September. in the school is its gymnasium— so large that a curtain can be drawn dividing it into two stand- ard size gyms. nomics, shop and drafting rooms all have modern equipment. TWO DINING ROOMS ag % St per OFF FOR BALL GAME — The weather was cold, the Detroit Tigers got shellacked, but these 40 Pontiac Press carriers and their route supervisors had the time of their lives last night at the Tiper-Cloveland Indian baigaans' af Piuys Machen. The -Press took the boys to the game as a circulation contest which recently pushed the Freer’ spremition over the 60, a. The Day i in Birmingham, a BIRMINGHAM — A endive and fifty persons are expected to at- tend the 39th annual reunion of the Ruth Shain International Relations Class Friday at the Orchard Lake Coyntry Club. A breakfast will be served at 9: to begin one hour later. dames K. Pollock, Ph.D., writer and authority on Germany, will. speak on “The Berlin Situation; Its Prospects and Implications.” ‘iment of Political.Science at the University of Michigan, has made a specialty of the study of the democratic form of government. * * * Since the end of World War II, |he has made many trips to Ger- Pontiac Press Photo | many to study the politica] scene, reward for being winners in a German elections since the war. He was political advisor to Gen. Lucius D. Clay. service to his community. ————~-— Pierce Junior High Dedication Dedication ceremonies for Wa- terford Township’s new John Pierce Junior High School will be held at_7:30 p.m, tomorrow. . Highlighting the program will be choral numbers by children from) every school in the district and * * gl features spacious, * The school classrooms. Folding doors in the from rliplomernlly-sciners, Saved | tional-glass blocks. The big $2%-million school Classrooms have no “extras” and are streamlined for strict efficiency,. according to Princi- pal Paul O'Neil. Desks, attached to countour seats, make it un. comfortable for a pupil to twist around and talk to a classmate behind hin. One of the most attractive areas -The science, biology, home eco- No purchase need be made to tures of the new school has been \the operation of the one-kitchen, man of the Tel-Huron Merchants jtwo-dining room section. Rather tan one long Jine of waiting pu- One of the most successful fea- In the light of expected annual; rising building costs, Oakland County supervisors expressed gen- eral satisfaction over construction bids opened yesterday for the new) courthouse, | They ran $176,100 more than architects’ estimates. — | .Spokesmen for the architects, O'Dell, Hewlett & Luckenbach of; \Birmingham, weren't alarmed by, what they called ¢ ‘normal’ in crease. * eT te “Telcing into ac¢ount alternates; and substitutes submitted with the bids, we should be able to knock the figure down closer to our es- timates,”” Thomas H. Hewlett said. Low bids for general consfruc- tion (architectural), mechanical, and electrical totaled $3,051,100. Estimates by architects totaled around $2,875,000, : Bids were submitted yesterday for the new six-story courthouse unit to be constructed in the Tele- graph road County Service Center, after a bitter three-year struggle to get it there. DELAY SAID COSTLY And according .to David Levin- son, chairman ‘of the Special Courthouse Building Committee, it was ‘this delay, brought on by a law suit in 1956, which caused the increase in construction bids. | * =<» * Levinson set a meeting for next Down wre Temperatures 6 aM... csaceae. 3 1l a.m 7 a.m.. eee. 36 12 m.,. 59) 6 OMe: eicewes a 41 B GMs ececes vend "60! * 9am..... 48 10 O.M.... 0655. Tuesday in Pentiac {As recorded downtown) Highest temperature Lawest temperature Mean temperature Weather—Sunny. One Year “Age | ml Penties Highest temperature .. est temperature Mean temperature ....6.6.0056 Weather—Rain ‘Highest and Lewest Temperatures. This Dete tn Years 81 in 1902 n 1875. ewe 3 1 2 ree ee rary 2 48 eee eee ee oes BS . Fecetny's, een sini jwith bids, these were the. nine Baltimore < $8 46 Memphis" 85 a (feneral constra bids sub- Biome Hb at Mitvtuaee Sy 3 (mitted rae nth i Minmrgrais, | A. Z, Schmina & Sone of Detrit Charleston leans 2 n of | D 35 ba 7 Cincinnati $7 38 Omaha 85 31 Pontiac, $2,103, ot O. W. Burke| pleveland = 0 Phoenis sa. 7 CO. of Detroit, $2,127,000; Bryant! Detroit $133 Pittsburgh S433 \& Detwiller of Detroit. ,$2,164,000; (" 7 Pent’ Worth $1 40 8. Prancisco 58 50 Bundy Construction Co. of Pontiac,: ‘e. Boe ee arf) 39 /52179,000, Barton Malow of De-, ville 76 63 Washington 38 48 troit, $2,179,000; Palmer Smith Co. | Peanen city $4 0 penttie $3 gg /of Detroit, $2,184,215; R. E. Dailey |! and two others of the Board of $8’ Supervisors will sit down with architects, who / are expected to have all 38 bids pnalyzed by then. The Board of Supervisors will | receive recommended contracts at its May 4 meeting. Before then, it was emphasized *'by architects and officials, all bids iremain unofficial. |GENERAL BIDS | Taking into pe ra base: bids ionly, and none the nine alter- ‘nates of construction submitted \, q Wednesday: wheh his committee} Co. of Detroit, $2,193,000; and| Perron Construction Co. of Detroit, |$2,243,000. | | MECHANICAL BIDS The top five low bidders—still taking into account just base bids| —for the mechanical trades were: R. L. Spitzley of Detroit, $649,-| 800; Robert Carter of Detroit, $683,700; Shaw Winkler of Detroit, ”|$697,500; L. S. Thornton of Troy, "| $699,800, and Goss Mechanical of Detroit, $707,000. Considering only base bids again, the low five bidders in the elec- trical trades were: ; Schultz Electric Co, of Pontiac, $308,900; Cates Electric Co. of Berkley, $321,557; Sarin *Electric Co. of Detroit, $323,942; Hamill Electric Co. of Detroit, $322,000; and the Hydon-Brand Co. of De- troit, $336,836. Detailed bids were read to the group by Harry M. Denyes Jr., a| designer of the long-awaited court-| house building. He told Levinson and other su- places where savings could effected.”’ All bids remain firm for 45 days, he pointed out. Levinson (center), ’ Birmingham ‘ month. COURTHOUSE BIDS OPENED is inf charge of the Special Courthouse Building Committee, yesterday opened the first of 38 different construction bids on Oakland County's new, courthouse; Robert Y. Moore (left), chair- Thursday pils during lunchtime, two com-; D.\plete cafeterias afford continuous movement of two different lines —each directed to separate din- ing rooms. The new open-wall type kitchen is filled with stainless steel equip- ment—each installed for maxi- mum efficiency and minimum walking space. ‘‘Cooks do.not bump into each other here,” O'Neil pointed out. Opening the dedication cere- monies will be the Rev, Walter Teeuwissen, who will give the invecation. A story written by David Wilson in 1954 on how and why the Isaac Crary and John Pierce junior high schools were .named will read by ‘Claudia Wagner. David is-now a senior at - Waterford Township High School. Crafy pupil Susan Turrell will present the Pierce school to the junior high pupils, and president of the Pierce Parent - Teacher Organization, Donald Redmond, will present the school to the prin- cipal, faculty and pupils. O'Neil) will give the acceptance speech. Student Council President Jerry Goff will also presént a_ short talk. Boys and girl choruses from all elementary schools in the district, the Pierce Junior High School | mixed ehorus and the Waterford Township High School a capella choir will present the musical program, City Merchants Plan Downtown ‘Blossom Time’ Downtown Pontiac will resem- ble a blooming spring garden when Downtown — Spring Value Days arrive the end of the x * The Downtown Merchants Assn. has won permission from the City Commission to stage a flowery version of last fall's suc- cessful Fall Festival Days. John W. -Hirlinger, manager of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, said Oakland County farmers would be invited to display on the downtown side- walks such items as flowers, ‘shrubbery and other plants dur- ing the three-day affair, April 30-May 2. * * The display ‘should prove at- tractive to shoppers and provide a handy mart for home garden- ers, Hirlinger said. | Retail stores are expected to announce special sales in con- nection with the event, he said. Sifts ‘Litter Letters’ CRIEFF, Scotland (UPI)—The trash man is sifting daily the pervisors: ‘‘There are quite a few) contents of a bin outside the local post office. It’s clearly labeled “‘litter,’’ but people persist in fill- ' ing it we letters. “la director of the burget and fi- JAMES C. ZEDER ‘Heads ‘Fair Share’ Torch Promotion James C. Zeder, Chrysler Corp.’ Defoe Firm Small When It Began cret of the Defense Department’ which has described the weapon University succinetly thusly: ing Rocket Assisted Anti-Subma- Long Laké road, Bloomfield Hills, rine Missile, is the latest addition 4re now being accepted. to the Navy's growing arsenal of! modern weapons. The potential of Michigan State Board of Educa-! the ASROC system is so great as to tion, and a limited number of, have caused the Chief of Naval scholarships will again be oferd | (Rocket Assisted Torpedo) pro- for the summer term, acording " |gram and concentrate on the great-;'0 4 theater spokesman. ler range and versatility of its suc-| icessor.”’ P““Mrs. Shain, class, said, ‘‘I do not think there is a man in the United States who knows and understands to- day’s Germany as well as Dr. Pollock does, “I feel that by getting him here} as our speaker, we will be able to! . (Continued From Page One) | situation. Through his knowledge, | (stake in the near future." The ship is equipped to launch There are about 25 reservations’ the Navy's Tartar surface - to - air/stil] open for the breakfast, Mrs. missile and is armed with the lat-, Shain reported. Persons wishing to est antisubmarine weapons, includ-| attend may contact her at’ her! ing ASROC. jhome, 813 Pierce St., before noon x * *. {tomorrow ASROC is a closely guarded se-| | Registrations for the err Program at ‘“ASROC, mean-|Way Apprentice Theater on ei The schoo is approved by the «| The eight-week term os col- ' lege stedents begins” dune 2 lShowdown Vote Nears ‘vice president, has been reap- Pointed cochairman in charge of ithe Fair Share Promotion for the| 1959 Detroit Torch Drive, John C. iCronin, general campaign’ chair- man, has announced. The Zeders| ireside at 1040 Orchard Ridge Rd.) jin Bloomfield Hills. | | Zeder, who headed the promotion} in the 1958 campaign, will be re-| papers for reaffirming the Fair| eeare philosophy by developing fac-} information and promotion eesti to be distributed to more than 35,000 business firms for use in the chapter solicitations. Active in civic affairs, Zeder is it nance committee of the Greater) Detroit Area Hospital Council, Inc..| and a trustee of the Michigan Heart —_— Pontiac Centennial | Committee. Named (Continued From Page One) past presidents of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce. Rowston said he expected to) name the women members of the) committee soon, The committee represents the first concrete step taken in Pon- tiac towards centennial planning. It was formed at the sugges- tion of City Commissiener Wil- liam W. Donaldson, who cau- tioned .that other cities that have celebrated centennials have found it wise to begin planning well in advance of the centennial date, Rowston and Hirlinger visited) Lansing today in connection with! centennial planning there. ard the two Pontiac leaders said) they wanted to observe Lansing’s! centennial operation. They planned to confer with the executive staff of the Lansing Cen- tennial Corp., as well as with city officials and leaders of the Lansing Chamber of Commerce, - + David supervisor who of the bids. om man of the Board of Auditors, opened the rest Among many county supervisors present was Fred W. Smith (right), of Royal Oak, and chairman of the Board of Supervisors’ if Ways.and Means Committee. Pontiac Press Photo | TOW. This is Lansing’s centennial year) Vet Fund Plan to Get Test« FROM OUR NEWS WIRES LANSING — The Beadle plan for using the veterans trust fund to cure state cash ills bore ial on its first Senate floor test today. Lingering ‘doubts of some GOP senators about the gravity of the financial emergency dogged its course. . An uncertain fate awaited the Republican proposal despite qualified endorsement by Democratic Gov. Wil- liams. Sen Frank D. Beadle (R- St. Clair), its author, would venture fo prediction. A showdown vote on passage was likely today or tomor- Leaders of both parties in the Senate, who usually In- | sist on independence from pressure groups, said the plan might not pass unless organized veterans endorse the plan. | “They risked their lives for their country and now we are asking them te come to the aid of their state,” said minority leader Harold Ryan (D-Detroit). ; Ryan and the rest of the lawmakers were invited to drink and dine tonight at the annual legislative dinner thrown by commanders of veterans organizations. * * * . Thre Labor Committee today aimed at reporting an un- | employment compensation bill onto the House floor after committee members previously failed to agree on, amend- | ments. The committee studied a bill proposed by House Dem- ocratic leader Joseph Kowalski of Detroit for extension of | temporary unemployment compensation benefits to about 28,000 jobless Michigan persons. 45 a.m, with the program scheduled’ Dr. Pollock, head of the Depart-, and has been an observer at all! founder of the \Berlin Authority to-Speak jat 39th Ruth Shain Reunion continues. through por 16. Students. will attend casses 14° hours @ day. fear dave 0 week, Monday through Thursday, Classes will be beid 4-5:30 p.m. or 8:3010:00 p.m. or hours will be arranged to fitsthe student’s schedule, Three terms.of dramatic work are scheduled in the sum- mer course, The Senior Mens Club members know who their speaker for: Fri- day’s program will be but do not know what the subject will be. | Edward Moseman of Farmington has been a farmer, taught dra- matics, acted on the stage and at one time was chief counsel for the Standard Accident Insurance Co. of Detroit. Which of his careers he will speak on is not known, The discussion group will sales- manship for their afternoon topic. G. A. Ziegler will be moderator, Past Chief’s Club of Pythian Temple $4 will meet at 8 p.m. Friday in the home of Mrs, John Simetz, 1385 Pierce St. Members lare asked to bring items for the’ bake sae being held the following jday. | | The Womens Fellowship of the the fulfillment of Harry Defoe's get a true picture of the’German Congregationa Chureh of Birming- last project. IT IS TOP SECRET iham will hold two card parties iwe will be better informed of our! \Wednesday The 12:30 p.m. party is for wom- 2 and the one at 8 p.m. for icouples, Mrs, Robert Thompson is chair- jiman with Mrs. Burton Lord is aa aime Schedule dule Service for Restaurateur President of Greenfield Chain Died Monday in | Detroit Hospital Funeral service for Jack Laws rence, 50, president of Greenfield |restaurants will be held at 2:30 |P.m. tomorrow at Christ Church | Cranbrook. Mr. Lawrence died Monday in oman’'s Hospital, Detroit, after a short illness. He lived at 1160 Lake |Park Dr., Birmingham. - Associated with the Greenfield Restaurants for the past 25 years | he was elected president five years ago. Since last August, he | also had been an officer of Pro- | phet & Co. indastrial caterers. He was a member of Corinthian \Lodge 241, F&AM; the Detroit Ath- jletic Club, Orchard Lake Country Club, the National Restaurant | Assn., Rotary Club and was a for- ‘mer director of the Michigan Res- jtaurant Assn. Surviving besides his wife, Eliz- abeth W., at home and two sisters. The body wilk be at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamil- ton Co. until 1 p.m. tomorrow. Burial will be in White Chapel beiaaianle Troy. Doctor Leitch of Detroit Heads Dental Group GRAND RAPIDS # — Dr. Mure iray A. Leitch of Detroit took of- ifice today as new president of the “Michigan State Dental Assn., which }ig concluding a three-day conven- ition at Grand Rapids. The 102nd annual meeting drew about 3,000 delegates. ns Fy Cd better balance! _ Wheels are five inches farther apart. This widens the stance, not the car, gives you road-hugging stability, less lean and sway. Only Pontiac has Wide-Track Wheels! SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER WIDE-TRACK PONTIAC! are a daughter Judith ° el NP et SAN Spiess om * = casgies : Battor "ee a 4 serves careful study and considera- tion. Two Scientific Teams Studying New Guinea . Two groups of scientists are on their way to explore the ‘island of New Guinea in the South Pacific. The United States is sending a team from the Museum of Natural History under the Archbold Expedi- -tions Foundation to conduct further studies in the biological~ field. The second group, from the Netherlands, is preparing to explore the interior of Western New Guinea where some: hundreds of diatects are known to be im-use. * x * Wartime observation has brought some general knowledge of the région but much of the island still is unexplored. Mod- ern explorers can take full advan- tage of planes and helicopters and the Dutch already have estab- lished an advance base. Scientists can learn in a few hours what used to take months to discover. These expeditions point to the fact that there still are challenging fron- tiers to conquer. The Man About Town 9 Name’s the Same Also Size of Cities; but Managers Are Not Related Committee: What often keeps minutes and wastes hours. x On two visits to Columbus, Ga., the past winter, I was impressed with its resemblance to Pontiac. About the same size, a hustling town, it has grown rapidly and now is its state's second city. Among the other resemblances ts the quite coincidental fact that its City Manager is Joe A. Willman, not even a distant relative of Pontiac's City Manager, Walter K. Willman, although it is such a rare name.: Until. recently there was only one Willman in the Chicago telephone directory, and the Detroit directory has less than a dozen. .Anyway, in Columbus I discovered an- other good town, and Walt and Joe are good friends, the former recently making a short visit to the latter. Percentages of the five top batters in the American League Wednesday morn- ing are: G AB RH Pct Strickland, Cleveland ew 77 6 12 484 Kaline, Detroit S38 2 15 ASE Finnigan, Baltimore atl t 9 49 Howard, New York 6 8 2 It Tats Power, Cleveland S31 9 13) 419 Our suburban community of Franklin has a habit of producing great golfers, the latest being 18-year-old Pete Green, University of North Caroliha frosh, who has just’ divided top honors in the North- South amateur tournament. Violets are jumping ‘the gun on the weather, Mrs. Peter P. Headlee of 4620 Linda Vista St., heing the first to report them in bloom. The master blacksmith at Michigan State University, Jack MacAllen, tells me that this trade, which we thought the auto age had killed, is staging a come- back. In fact, they now have two of the 13-week courses, instead of only one, as for several years past. The horse shoeing incidental to the riding craze is the prin- cipal reason. Here’s a hint to young people: 90 per cent of all the scientists who ever lived are still living, according to Products Engineering Magazine, but most of them are getting old, and need, replacements. alling the opossum a “southern va- ant,” a letter from Rodney Fellman of Pontiac Lake, says it is moving north at the rate of about five miles a year and now is frequently found in Oakland County. Verbal Orchids to- of 4043 Pine Bluff Road; 92nd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brownson of Birmingham; 52nd wedding anniver- sary. Herman Bergston of Rochester; 80th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Heitley of Waterford; 51st wedding anniversary. ‘: Mrs, Adaline Fucher of Walled Lake; 81st birthday. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. McInally of North Branch; golden wedding. Mrs. Samuel Armstrong of Lapeer; 91st birthday. - States to pursue? seul ae oo Nees ote ei NEA Sonics of ae diel GS Pi dfom a, ‘ 5 : Sa we as TE go ee oo a9 a ee ee “Lookit All the Homes I Been Invited To” ‘ David Lawrence Says U.S. Worried About Future of Cuba WASHINGTON — Fidel Castro has had the limélight for several days now, but it is an open secret that hig visit here has sharply increased the worry that the United States government feels about the future of Cuba. This leader of asuccessful revolution gives the impression that he is a dedi- cated. man and LAWRENCE seeks only the good of his people, but, unfortunately, Cuba's destiny is not im his hands alone. If anything happened that sud- denly removed him from the scene, matters would be much worse. For the truth js the Com- munists have a toehold in Cuba and have managed to infiltrate the army, the educational institu. . tions and the labor organizations. Fidel Castro himself is not a Communist but his brother, Raul, who heads the army, has expressed on many occasions his Communist sympathies. The big question is whether the Communist*underground apparatus is in a position to do great harm to the relations between the United States and Cuba. The fear is that it can achieve that -result if eco- nomic conditions grow worse and are exploited in a wave of ‘anti- Americanism. * * * . Fidel Castro is quite right in telling of the tragic plight of his people—the vast amount of unem- “ployment and the weaknesses in the economic structure. His visit here had a profound effect in the sense that it opened the eves of officials to the fact that the Cuban situation is far more urgent—and, indeed, more dangerous—than had been hitherto believed. CUBANS HAVE GRIPES What policy ought the United Certainly the situation in Cuba should not be allowed to disintegrate through inaction at Washington. * * * The Cubans have some gripes. against this country because of tariff matters, especially sugar quotas. There is a breakdown of confidence outside of Cuba _ con- cerning the future of capital invest- ments there. Cuba |. desperately needs a prop. : So the best thing that could be done would be for the United States government to send a commission to Cuba to make a survey. It should be composed of economists and businessmen as well as experts in labor matters. Cuba's finances should be examined and recommendations made as to what is needed to bolster the economy of the country and stimulate the creation of jobs for the idle. Cuba, in short, needs a complete overhauling from the economic standpoint. -If this should involve some finan- The Country Parson ~ “T like to see folks generous, but there’s one thing they alw ays should keep—their word.'" cial help from the United States, this is a matter which surely would be given due consideration after a report is received.from a commis- sion of competent observers with a background knowledge of similar problems in other Latin American countries. ie * * Fidel Castro has for more than two years been living in the hills of Cuba fighting a revolution. His visit to this country probably -ex- posed him for the first time to the - dispassionate examination of the outside world. * * * He is a devoted believer in revo- lutionary doctrines and probably has absorbed much from his fellow-revolutionaries who are more skillful than he is in the ways of national socialism. Un- happily, the impression lingers here that Castro could be used _by others and that he is naive about the tactics of Communist infiltrators. * * x * But. when all is said and done, it is the future of Cuba that is at stake, and the United States, as the next-door neighbor and god- father of the little republic, still has an obligation— by economic means and by—disinterested advice —to help bring stability to the freedom-seeking people of Cuba. (Copyright, 1959) Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE Travel is important to... Maintain our health today .. . If only for a change of-pace ... As we go on our way ,.. It is not good to be entrenched .’. . In one And never feel the community ... freshness of . . . Some different scenery . . . We may get lone- some, too. . . For friends, familiar places and ... The things we always do .. . But now and then a change of pace .. . Is really good for us ... A trip by auto, train or plane . . . A steamship or a bus... . To travel just a little bit... Once in a seldom while... Can bring a rosy color to. . . Our cheeks and every smile. (Copyright 1959). * Dr. William Brady Says: Alcohol Subs for Reality byt Ends as Depressant The narcotic addict (alcohol is a narcotic) who went on periodic bouts tried to explain, in a sober interval, why he behaved so abominably to his 3 wife and children. At times, he said, he just felt the need of a stimu- lant, a bracer or a pick-me-up —he drank because he wanted to feel bet- ter. Every narcotic addict, no matter which drug he takes, gives very much the same reason or excuse if he tries to ex- plain his habit at-all. Whether the addict calls his drug a “siimulant,’ ’a bracer,”’ a “pick-me-up,” a sedative or a tranquilizer, he takes it, of DR. BRADY - course, because he wants to be less aware of how miserable, wretched, frustrated, incom. petent, worthless, untrustworthy, selfish, nafaithtul or contemptible he is. Alcohol is not a stimulant but ‘actually a depressant narcotic in any dose. * * * Now comes a reputable physician who says: “I am not an alcoholic and yet I reject the statement that alco- hol is not a stimulant. It does not, of course, stimulate motor cells but sensory cells or, psychologic- ally speaking, emotion. “Like all stimulation to excess, this one, too, is followed by col- lapse of the stimulated cell—in this case becoming depression or anes- thesia. : “In every other respect I agree with you as a matter of course.” * * * “[ don't know what difference there may be between psychologic- “ally and -physiologically speaking. Whether one drinks for “Dutch courage,” to assauge grief, drown sorrow, help one relax or cheer up, it is alla cme attempt to - substitute make- eve for real- itye_ The trouble with the make-be lieve is that, after an hour or two. of fantasy produced by the narcot- ic, one comes back to reality, wich seems more unbearable than before, and so one anticipates or. craves another drink, and still an- other... Signed tetters, not more than one page or 100 words long pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not dis- ease, diagnosis, or trea ment, will be answered by Dr. William Brady. if a pag ped self-addressed envelope is sent e Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan (Copyright 1959) _ killers. t Voice of the People ‘Americans Should. Lewk to Avoid Being So. Gullible’ | Americans are » constantty bombarded by fantastic cided, ~~ ter, in full page ads, on radio and TV. They use high-sounding slogans and catch phrases to lure us into buying. They’re so clevegly written it takes a discerning mind to separate the wheat from the chaff. * kok It's been said Americans are gullible. We're too quick to accept what we see and hear, too blind to read between the lines, teo lazy to read the fine print. We make little attempt to inquire about facts and fundamentals. We listen to the silver-tongued orator, politician, priest or preacher and meekly nod our assent without question. * * * A wi an once said, ‘‘Doubt is the beginning of wisdom.’’ Where- fo rep should resolve to cultivate the inquiring mind, encourage hon est doubt and subject all creeds, political pacwopiies and the sales- man’s pitch to the clear light of reason. ‘This Health Issue Should Be Forced’ The Department of Welfare in Washington has ordered an lowa city to stop dumping its sewage in the Missouri River. What the Iowa city thinks about if isn't important. If the State of Michi- gan doesn’t‘order Pontiac to cor- rect pur own sewage problem, let's have the federal authorities step in. I voted for the sewage ordi- nance every time and the people they want disease germs and filth should have the correction. forced _on them. Citizen Kane This Reader Has Real Lowdown I've read several election pre- dictions in the “VOP but if you want the lowdown, here it is— Symington. He'll win the nomina- tion and the election without any trouble. Crystal Ball ‘Protect Taxpayers, Not Future Killers’ T see that man who killed the girl was driving more than 100 miles an hour. I saw a man driv- ing at least 70 in Seminole Hills with ‘the police chasing him. He could have killed half a dozen. I suppose he will be scolded and told to be a better man and then let off with a fine or a few days in jail. Only prison talks to possible Taxpayers deserve the maximum protection and not the killers. J. 8. ‘T’ve J ust Learned I’ve Been a Sucker’ I was upstate last week and read an editorial in a weekly newspaper that said when a man or a business looked like they were going broke, they reduced expenses at once, while in Michigan our Governor starts ‘in to spend more and more money. That’s why we are. busted and the laughing stock of the U. S. I voted for Williams every time including the last time, and I never knew until now what a sucker I've been. Sucker ‘This Proves UAW Has Bone Good Job’ New York State has the most Communists in the U.S. and Cali- fornia is second. That shows the UAW has done a good job of kick- ing them out of their ranks in Michigan. Union members are foes of the Reds. Old Timer E. 0. M. svarmeditp Meals Not as Nutritious’ We all eat some warmed-over food, but mothers must not forget . that some df the nutrition is now gone and little children must be watched in this connection so they won't get too many warmed-over meals. Della ‘May Be Too Late When We Wake Up’ - This world will wake up some day when it's too late. The Japs are watching our price structure with a big smile. They can under- sell the U.S. right now in many important items and as we raise wages and costs, we're playing : straight into their hands and they _ will be taking world markets away ~ from us very soon. In fact, they will be underselling us at home with ease and they can already on quite a few items. But the ery in the U.S. is just one thing: “raise, rais@, raise and charge more, more and more.”” © Thomas B. ‘Brown Is the Man for the Democrats’ The Democratic nominee for 1960 will either be Lyndon Johnson r ‘‘Pat’ Brown of California and I think it will be Brown. He cleaned up out there and practical- ly ran- the GOP into the Pacific Ocean, with labor backing him. He would pick up all the Williams’ votes in Michigan. L. J. ‘It’s Up to Parents to Pay for Thefts’ Those parents of the St. Clair boys that did 28 burglaries to buy “scientific equipment” ought to be examined in detail. How could any- one let that go on right under his nose and not actually know some- thing about it? They should be nee 3 accountable for every single Mrs. ©. THOUGHTS FOR TODAY In that I command thee this ’ day to love the Lord thy God, him to His ore ae ster. Case Records of a Psychologist: Don’t Neglect Hubby in Nora is like many supposedly _ innocent wives, who think their husbands are 100 per cent to dlame for such sordid affairs as Ralph entered. But Nora was 50 per cent to blame and so are most wives, for their sins of “omission” are as great a cause of divorce as the more evident sins of commission. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case B-415: Ralph and Nora are the young couple mentioned_ yes terday. They were at the point of divorce because Ralph . had an affair with a bar maid the very night his wife was at the ‘hospital bearing their first baby. Nora_ thought Ralph must have been insane to be unfaithful to her, especially at such a crucial time. Ralph admitted that he was the lowest creature on earth and didn't know why he ever acted as he did. But you readers will kno v hence- forth, if you finish this column to- day. You can thus prevent such future domestic tragedies. In the first place, pregnancy is a normal condition. Such a wife is not a sick person, to be treated like a semi-invalid. * * * Even though Nora's parents cre- ated the impression that Nora was in jeopardy and a ‘‘Medical Speci- men,” Nora could have avoided this tragedy if she had seen this column in advance. For a pregnant wife MUST real. ize that her husband's basic DR. CRANE chungers still continue, regardless of the fact she will bear a baby. ‘regard between Thus, she sMould see that he still gets three square meals per day. The delightful prospect of hav- ing an heir some months later, still does NOT kill a husband's hunger for ham and eggs or other table viands. Nor does it stop his normal erotic , hunger, either, so you young wives must be on guard. Nora is like most wives, who can remain fairly content on a ra- tion of kisses and hugs, without any further extension of romantic themselves and their husbands. And that is especially true durigtg pregnancy, when the young wife is indulging in future plans for her baby's arrival. - GUILTY WIVES “But I was quite content,” protested. That’s not enough in marriage. The husband must also be quite content. And Ralph was definitely NOT content. ‘So Nora failed to pick up her erotic cues and play her cards seductively. Nora Like many wives, she forgot the disparity that exists between the usual husband and wife in sexual hungers. Time and again I have warned you that this same difference exists in their gastric hungers. t+ + -A man demands 3,500 calories of food per cay while his wife may be quite content with 2,500. - And no smart wife would try to ration her husband to her own more limited caloric quota, For she’d realize he would then be half starved when he left home and -thus tend to be tempted by 4 Pregnancy cuside cooks, ches and ame burger joints, | Well, to put it bluntly, the very same thing holds true in the erotic realm. A man demands more “erotic calories’? than his wife does, so she better feed them to him, whether pregnant or not, or he will be more easily tempted by bar maids and other unscrupulous sirens. It isn’t enough to teach people the 10 Commandments. and then send out hungry husbands. For hungry men may develop such appetites they will steal bread or clandestine romance. The best way’ to keep a- hus- band moral is to teach him ethics, but also see that he has no un satisfied hungers when he leaves your wifely arms. * * * Get Kep therefore to reality, and you'll nip divorce in the bud To | help to do so, send fot the book- let “Sex Problems in Marriage, ° enclosing a stamped return en- velope, plus 20 cents (non-profit). gi Ah ng alg Michigan, encloding a 2 oa self-addressed énve lope typing and printing costs chen Le his psychological charts, and rs we (Copyright 1959) — 4 ‘ i d 1 ite a OE me ice Pi _4youth problems. -students: ‘ors they have received. > 2. Be banned “activities. © 3 Be banned from inter-school ‘athletics, including varsity foot- “ball and basketball. 4. Be forbidden to participate . ‘the school office. pos ‘Man Perishes in Fire sos perpen Paps -a cigarette. ce, min, oe eae a . ke Relinquish any offices or hon- from school social * eae 2 : Hal Bayle Says: ; ‘NEW YORK (AP)—~An open. let ter to an old teacher: Well, Miss Wofson, I nen a ot of - grammar has flown, (flowed, flew)—gohe by the bridge since I studied English: ynder you 30 some years ago in old Central Shoal and cy alls cscs ih School in Kansas City, Mo. Them were the—those were the t Like I say, when I see look at them and ask myself, “Well, who raised them, and what monsters?” - x * They do act like they just got Knows ial ¢Geue ceicek, Wel ucslinings babe nae pacha . did ‘they have in mind—civilized and spelling and-all, They can’t spell sour appl, app, apples. © /Miss Wolfson, nobody got out of your class then who couldn't spell sour apples—over and over again. The same with. “Friends, Ro- mans, countrymen. * I didn’t just come here to praise him. Caesar |body was ambitious.” It sticks in my head yet. : * & es, Miss Wolfson, you made old days come alive. I could most see those old Romans, atand- ing so stiff.and tall in their togas, their knives, Then, slash, and another empire had bit the dust. a.) poe Pee Kids today don’t seem to get the same background. Maybe the] v oenettne Sometimes I kind of feel like old inn door, aa woune all afound and everything Inys There nocd alte sg gi 4 Be iain o arvaone oi Ini Liahle _ ‘stead, piek up their diplomas ome for Halting Job | Rehearing Is Refused in $20,000-- Saginaw Damage Judgment SAGINAW @—Teamsters Union |Local No. 486 yesterday was re- HOR MATION 2 And | RESERVATIONS VISIT ANY PLACE ON EARTH thru Pontiac Travel Service | PACIFIC NOTHWEST ‘ Parks) \LAKES ‘YELLOWSTONE, COLORADO - TOUR featuring 3 National Parks FLORIDA and the CARIBBEAN BEAUTIFUL HAWAII 500 Mile Indianapolis SPEEDWAY RACE _ KENTUCKY DERBY Pontiac Travel Service 698 W. Huron St. FE 8-9611 a ee 4 The Canadian Rockies and the (Glacier and Mount Rainier National ing and coercion of his suppliers. fused a rehearing on a $20,000 damage judgment in favor of a Saginaw builder. Circuit Judge Arthur M. Bach of Bad Axe, who handed down the judgment last. “October, held that the union had not shown sit icient cause. == The judgment was awarded Andrew J. Hagniein on | his charges that the Teamsters and other labor | illegally with his construction projects in 1956. Haenlein charge illegal _picket- He said the union did this in an Vacation Cruise on the GREAT attempt to force unionization of| In rejecting the petition for a suit, refusing both to answer his |* the trial. The union asked the rehearing on grounds the testimony did not ‘support the damages award. The janion also contended state courts Hacked jurisdiction. Dr: Bethell, Physician at U. of M., Dies at-56 ANN ARBOR ® — Dr. Frank H. Bethell, 56, a University of | medicare professor .of internal medicine, was found dead on a lawn here last night. | Police reported he probably | | GET ACQUAINTED RICHARDS Boys’ and Girls’ Wear NORTH HILL PLAZA, ROCHESTER died of natural causes, apparent- ly the victim of a heart attack. Dr. Bethell been associated with the Simpson Memorial Insti- tute at the~university for. many years. He was” itsdirector since 1956. The institute engages in he blood disease research. groups interfered | jrehearing, Judge Bach pointed out) ithe union had- ignored Haenlein’s, bill of complaint and to appear at/~ Discoverer’ s End Now Expected Over Weekend WASHINGTON (AP) The satellite Discoverer JI now is ex- pected to spiral down to its death in the earth's atmosphere late Sat- urday night or early- Sunday. It has been in orbit since April 13. This is the moonlet that made history by successfully ejecting a capsule that fell safely back to earth, scientists say, sdmewhere near the Norwegian island of aptimrerete. * * hing capeme has not been recov- radio data from the oreiitee | icated the capsule ex- periment was a success — the first time anything has come back intact after orbiting’ the earth. : * * * Discoverer IJ, fired on a polar |route from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., at first was expected to stay up a month. Later fore- casts had it falling early this week, Tuesday night, however, the Defense Department said new cal- culations showed it would plunge into the atmosphere and burn up this weekend. 2 Widower Miners in Murder-Suicide retired miners , widowers who lived alone in homes 200 yards - Coroner Joseph. Govekar said/,y John Topor, 63, killed Stanley|the Mardula, 72, with a .22 caliber|— 0 nag orn Re be still pad-f, g that ‘canoe, too Proud wiul .worn out reading about all sak for fringe benefite, (dose, views. from all" those win remember one ofthe clever) x * - classes are too large. Maybe M0-ithings you used to do to get us Hiawatha, alone in his canoe, They paddling across a ribbon of moon-|things like | jlight through a purple moor up toljust something offhand and saying all‘ those splendid!trouble. to find a topic, Most of us looked The one that particular appealed| ,, to me was this here one about,) + “The View from my Window,” sou and the minute I saw this sug- , gestion I said to myself, JOHNSTOWN, Pa. —: Two)Duilt for me. * We did have one fine window in our house then, and I still wish apart, were found shot to death Tuesday night in wit ‘authorities|: Could tell you about the things : I saw from it. . called a murder-suicide. It isn't eggsakly my fault thati} Composition *« & * 24 of the | Miss ‘Woltson; 30-yeaty 1, -T st don't hota = 4 Mocmgenge “efter” ‘f against yout, picture outiviss Wolfson—that Is, the grade Well, for old timdg sake, I to the English language was|thonght I'd write you to say hello. slit essuys!And by the, way” my ol. scker tary has left me and the new girl I hired can’t spell for sour ap- ples, and I thought maybe you could tell me of a book that would hardiset her strait. Lord knows who teaches them Miss}the English language today. It is almost as if it was an athema to them, a veritable athema. Your loving. pupil, Roger “gave me, You must have got} COUPON. Shoe Repacr Special Spike or Small Cuban HEEL LIFTS —~al | 9 Pr. 25 students in the class Neisner’s Shoe Repair “That's * Colors” Red and Blue Sizes to 3 S99 WOMEN’S AND MISSES WHITE TENNIS SHOES sizes 814 to 3; 4 to 10 the same subjeck— from their window, 42 W. Seginow *. pistol in Mardula’s home, then went to his own house and fired a bullet into his head. * * * Govekar could offer no motive for-the shootings in a remote area 18 miles north of this western Pennsylvania community. For a Happy Marriage, Just Be Good Natured LOS ANGELES (AP) — Rosa Smith's recipe for a happy mar- riage is simple: Be good natured always. Not practical? Phaw, ‘tis too. She and her husband, retired harness maker Frank Smith, cele- brated their 59th wedding anniver- sary Tuesday. Write for free cocktail and canapé recipes to: Make cocktails equal to those served at P-:. world-famous bars! Just add Holland ‘\ House Gimlet Mix to your favorite Gin or Vodka. So right . . delicious. Other popular Holland House Cocktail Mixes: Martini, Daiquiri, Tom Collins, ioned, Bronx, Side Car and Quinine Tonic, S HOLLAND HOUSE = CIMLEIMX — F Full pint—enough for 82 cocktails | At Food, Drug, Dept. & Beverage Stores Make the Perfect GIMLET cockdail -at home QUICKLY! 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DS Bes we a 4 y « i % ty ‘ ; = . > ES t ‘*, Sie o - = 2 . & hy > ‘® ; = i £ is ¥ ‘ — « . . o a Fe o*, . ; ; : Ee vs | re ey oi™M ; oy * - wooo et x ty yy ; i i PT ‘pei ) rie we lis ei a rte eS Ee {| ERISP, WASHABLE BROADCLOTH CAFE SET _ Valance 9” x 70". COMPLETE SET 27", 30", CAFE AND VALANCE Assorted lace, florals, Solid white, maize pink, attractive modern and brown, Se cary te Wang. Austrian designs. White Each pane! 30” a ‘ and all decorator colors. noted m . SET No .need to launder — ust wipe clean. ““l/Famous Wipe Clean Plastic DRAPERIES 36" PANELS—-FULL LENGTH a f i Heavy Duty SHOWER i. Attractively designed f patterns on heavy duty plastic. White, green, C blue, maize, pink, black. 6'x6' each ih plastic bag. SAGINAW oT. a ALN. as Se i a aires a MUSSOORIE, India uw ~ Tibet's, living | Buddha arrived at this Himalayan ‘resort yesterday to live in exile on the same estate where India’s departed saint, Mo- handas Gandhi, used to stay. The Dalai Lama's special train pulled into the railhead at Dehra Dun after an epic 35-day flight from Lhasa by foot, yakskin ratft, horseback, jeep and rail. - The 23-year-old fugitive from the Chinese Communists climbed into an open car and rode at the \head of a long motorcade along the 21-mile route to 7,000-foot high Mussoorie, a summer retreat for the rich. Prime Minister Nehru is scheduled to come to. Mussoorie ft Thursday or Friday for his first meeting with the distinguished tugitive. Nehru has been widely criticized in India because he has not condemned the Chinese |- - Communist subjugation of ‘Tibet. Mussoorie, queen of the Hima- layan hill stations, had been busy for days getting ready to receive the exalted’ guest. Already he had a familiar name, Chacha Buddha, or Uncle Buddha. His home in exile is a 32-room mansion owned by B. M. Birla, a leading industrialist. Gandhi used to retreat from central India’s summer heat to one of the two guest houses on the estate. The’ Indian leader was living at the New Delhi home of another Birla when he was assassinated in 1948. The Birla mansion is ideal both as a residence and for security reasons. Situated atop a hill, it looks up to the giant, snow-capped ranges extending into Tibet. In steep descent be- low it, terraced rice and fruit fields merge into one long green vista. Eo pe EL J = F i The estate has a long paved! drive on the front and steep drops’ on the other three sides, making it easy to guard. Its vast gardens, with their’ green _carpet beneath the great deodar trees, For ‘ola ara: Supplic 5 See BACKENSTOSE BOOK STORE rome t cc NEW ‘59 WAGONS RADIO $] 99 5 00 HEATER BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER MI 6-3900 Lama gestures as he blesses the him in Tezpur, India. The fugitive god-king was en route to his home-in-exile, Mussoorie, north of New Delhi. His flight has been will be an ideal ‘give the darshan — holy sight — 'to devotees thronging to the cen- iter during his Indian exile Indian Foreign Secretary Subdi- mal Dutt and his aide in charge of Tibetan affairs, J. S. Mehta, have been here for several days supervising arrangements to re- ceive the Tibetan ruler. | Masons and painters have been ‘busy sprucing up the Birla man- sion and fixing things so crowds will be able to have audience with the Dalai Lama. The Uttar Pradesh state gov- ‘ernment is setting up a special office to take care of the ruler - and his entourage of 90 persons. Large Selection STEREOPHONIC RECORDINGS MIRACLE MUSIC AND RECORD SHOP Miracle Mile FE 8-002! For . ORGANS _ Wiegand Musit Center MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER FE 2-4974 The Mussoorie, municipal cor- poration hag earmarked $21,000 to wake the hill station up reas its winter sleep. Orders have gone out to reno- vate the bandstand where an or- chestra used to play during Brit- ish rule, when Britons and wealthy .Indians came here to escape the summer heat of the plains. Mussoorie’s social life waned when the British departed in 1947, although wealthy Indians and for- eign residents of north India con- tinued to come in the summer. It jibecame still duller when, the in U. S. KED BOOSTERS Sizes to 14 | SVS DAD will love them Yorkshire MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER | S. Telegraph ot Square Lake Rd. | | © Brown © Blue © Chino @ CLOTH-WEAVE @ CUSHION INSOLES @ THICK CREPE ~ wa . ae ’ i . as =» as to: ch th ah ho ha onl Ki rk x Om: OU! OM th wee s j , 4 Cue @ ee eee ve Pe ae Ss ae F oO ‘ : ae Ps ge a aoe oe Se a ee s ; a] 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 19: 59 BLESSING HIS GREETERS — Tibet's Dalai crowd greeting an epic 35-day dian military near Poona, laway. trip from Lhasa by foot, back, car and rail. The late Mohandas Gandhi used to stay on this same estate in the Himalay- an resort area. academy moved) place for Tibet's living Buddha to from Dehra Dun, at the foot of the hill station, and was re-located lat Lama Joyn lly Received on| Arrival at Indian Headquarters — ~ AP Wirephote Dalai Lama. yakskin raft, horse- Mussoorie shopkeepers and hotel) owners are hopeful prosperity will} about 1,000 miles return with the arrival of the) 8) Michigan Made Sugar lifts up your energy fast, because sugar supplies energy to the body faster than any other food, it really helps give you that get-up- . thot pep and vitality that makes ls end-go feeling . work eorier—play more fun! \ P csaeaccnenaiees ion y 4 Paces #1 Bk IOMEER 4. }. SUGAR 4); os 4 / ero **teeg ' URE sor TO USE MORE SUGAR Michigan Made Sugar helps you control your weight, because only sugar satisfies your appetite so fast with so few calories. in fact there are only 18 colories in a level teaspoonful. 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FRIDAY, SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. | | a? oS ’ ‘ 4! ae | ave THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNE ESDAY, APRIL 22, 1959 F i ad -HONOLULU—The ‘British cals have had Hawaii’ our 50th state, but Parliament let it get wey: And cheerio for our side. ~ the tourists from Loridon. It happened back in the late 18th Kamehameha died éentury, when King Kamehameha! tiye hut called -his Lb gra (Kah-may-hah-may-hah) the great 1819. Capt. Vancouver ‘had, wired The king was a giant, virile ries eer man—he begat his sitecessor at ches — to “save” him, he the age ‘of 79—apd, like Ha- | Was never converted. walians today, he was delighted x * * to meet visitors fromthe out- side world, So it was that in 1792, ~Capt. George Vancouver -saleq into the islands and Kamehameha, with DAIRY He was the last of the great pa- gans, however. In 1820, the first missionaries came from. Boston. They were followed in the next 20 years by dozens more; their object, to recreat - « tropical New Eng. verting the friendly Hawaiians to Christianity, but in- gradually, over a century, becoming socially and economically powerful, As the poly- glot population of Hawaii foday is inclined to mention, with a wry smile: good—and they did very well.” over the years," it is doubtfup the U. 8. would have had a 50th state in the mid-Pacific. them the strictest prohibitions and "they suctecded, ike cas i They condemned drink ify, fishing on Sunday, traditional hula: dancing. They particularly frowned upon the old Hawajian custom of wear- ing semi-nude ‘wardrobes, and this led to their insisting that the wom- en don ankle-length ang shapeless “The missionaries came to do But without their stern efforts The missionaries brought with all his warriors, gave him a great reception. Vancouver was not only yf touched—he saw a good thing. He | ordered his crew ‘to build the king Hollywood Headlines U.S. Declines Invite fo Red Army Chorus NEW YORK (AP)-—The Soviet deputy minister of culture says the U.S. State Department has turned down a proposal to bring the Soviet army chorus and dance ensemble to the United States, The ground was that its mem- bers are part of a military group, Mother Hubbatde~the he to. the popylar, shapeless ‘“‘muu mun” and “holoku” dresses which UPOP are still de riguer today. 4 OLD TABUS. HARSH ‘Sounds harsh, but’ according toll Sidney Clark, travel writer and) historian, the tabus that pre-dated) the missionaries were consideranly mote rigid. ba toe Death was the punishment for persons of opposite sexes—even husband and wife—eating to- gether. For letting your shadow fall upon a chief of the island—death. Wt iament I Let Hawaii re aes et te He ‘rolled ay: the British flag, gathered together his 16,000 troops,jland. and took over“the other islands| he had missed while.dwadling with They call it spocee, Some elaima fone logors in Qresed chow! S00s, and a few \idividualists pre- Se ee ae \ Te Features At Bssed $:18, 5:23, DICK CLARK «: goes “th , Sans; 4 ; and so will you! CINEMASCOPE ~ For failing to prosffate yourself when the king’s bath water or loin | cloth was carried by—death. | And women received death for eating a banana or a coconut or EASTMAN COLOR CO-STARRING Sandra Dee © Cliff Robertson ' & f , gh ee it fs spelled snus, others like — it ee ee a4" wae wR WORM fia. battleship, a modest 36 feet long . = {but considerably more impressive than the canoes to which the royal K was — * Mitzi Gaynor, Jack Bosh to Produce Film Story EXTRA:-“TRAGEDY U.S.A.”, MAGOO, CARTOON, SPORTS STARTS FRIDAY!!! -- the official indicated. x * * | Two civilian Soviet dance} certain kinds of fish. * * $0 add to these dangers of de-) * * at Overwhelmed «with gratitude; |troupes—the Bolshoi Ballet and mise, the gods of Hawaii demand-' &. Kamehameha- dubbed the ship the Moiseyev Company — have eq frequent human scarifices, and i “Brit4nnia,"" and ordered the Brit- By LOUELLA 0. PARSONS —_— Phil Stivers will also be scored hits here. : lone never knew when he would wi Dep. Minister Nikolai N. 'Dani-)tapped. lov, in an interview which ap-| Well, as they say, no place can! peared in the New York Tinies|be perfect. You haye to pay) today, mvited American offic ials SOMETHING for an ideal climate! to send-the U.S. Marine Band to\—and in those days they didn’t! Moscow in an exchange ef service | jhave federal taxes. on Jack’s show. Duke Wayne dropped by. foe a cocktail last week to say he was celebrating’ his 30th year in the industry. “Today is April 16,” he told me, “‘and I joined the picture HOLLYWOOD — Mitzi Gaynor sends word that. she and Jack} Bean are taking a plunge into inde- pendent film production with Irwin Shaw’s story; “Washington Arch.” Mitzi, who is in New York co- ish flag raised over Hawaiian soil. While his Polynesian warriors pro- claimed, “we are men of Britain,” the king leclared the ceding, of his paradise possessions to England. Capt. Vancouver sailed away to a | | - | wscorf | | COMING FRIDAY “TOM THUMB” DAVID NIVEN . .. BEST ACTOR! SCARED TO DEATH OF WOMEN .. . EXCEPT i - | COMING SOON the homeland in 1795, clearly cer. starring with David Niven in “An. business April 16, 1929.” pecmemers. * ms rc acne, IM THE DARK AND STRANGERS! ; ~ “ROOTS OF HEAVEN” tain that a conquest had been|. ary Waltz,” put her nafe/’ He went on to tell me that a few) bs i WANTED i = - made. avers J rai hes weekend, (months later I was pointed out to| Danilov said the members of the WENDY HILLER ... BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS! Gaia “TONKA” But he could never convince the|° 2 Contact over ‘ |him and eventually he was intro-|¢"Semble are not given military 1,000 COMIC BOOKS TQ British Parliament to take Hawaii] Hollywood is going to have a iduced. “I was so frightened,”’ jtre aining in the Soviet Union. He 100 True Love Story Mags. We Handle Tricks, Jokes, iad Novelties chance to meet dulie Andrews 4 ‘ “ ai ; “AUNTIE MAME”. ROLLS UP FLAG and her bridegroom, Tony Wal- : ton, when they reach here next . F en “PERFECT FURLOUGH Freie Pap b pporesicor ron month in time for Jack Benny’s | Richard Quine sat with my“ “units. _ : j 7 — a spectacular, set for May 23, jdaughter, Harriet, Richard Gully. Julie will marry Tony May 10, ‘and myself at Chasen's after the | the day she finishes on the stage| pre m iere of “It Happened to in “My Fair Lady” in London. Jane.’ |They will leave next day via TWA’s| He said- that he had turned | ‘polar route for Hollywood, to give over the original story by Max. ther a chance for plenty of re- Wilk and Norman Katkov for | Norman to script, and it was he | who came up with the idea of changing the ‘“‘widewer” with two | children to the ‘widow’ played by Doris Day. Richard did a great job of di- ,recting. This is a delightful com- edy, the timing .is so good. Doris, | Jack Lemmon and Ernie Kovacs ‘are a riotous threesome, and it should also promote Steve Forrest's Stock. Columbia has a money- maker here, as does: Doris’ . inde- pendent company. | Curt Jurgens no more than ar- 'rived in town than he had to- report to work at 20th Century-Fox Duke said, “that I completely lost said they are attached to the Red a my voice and didn’t know what to “7™Y because Soviet services are PIPER’S MAGAZIN OureET say.’ proud of their support of artistic ] 5 frock aga INE jseriously. * FIRST WITH THE FINEST * fe| BLUE SKY | 2150 OPDYKE RD. 4 FE 4-4611 | 25¢ ‘til 1:00 P.M. J Py MORTH TELEGRAPH RD Open 7:00 P.M. Show Starts 7:30 P.M. Se reenter The 13 GREATEST -§ SEE! THAT PIXIE OF PARIS— AMERICAN SAR SUAS VERSION cf Den ou'll see more of her than ever before”-N. Y. Post BRIGITTE BARDOT 4 eee 4 for ‘Blue Angel."" “We filmed some scenes in Germany before t q came here,’ he told me. . THE GIRL BIKINI | x *« * i ne IN. THE 3 | Snapshots of Hollywood collected bees ? Ls REVEALING EPSIODE at random: artic? ISLAND ‘ GINA LOLLOBRIGIDA .. an uN PETER VAN EYCK.JEAN CLAUDE PASCAL. snucr -sonime msm - ROBERT SIOOMAK print sy TECHNICOLOR } i PARAP SG At the share party May 8, pretty blonde Jeanne Martin (Mrs. Dean in private life) will do an act with Dean. Maria and Nat Cole were | guests of honor at a dinner party | | hosted by the president of Rio | | de Janeiro. Nat’ has made a fine | impression in South America. STARTS FRIDAY ! — FIRST. SHOWING PONTI AC ha | A birthday present received . by . r Es “MAN OFA ~. Bill Holden was a dozen empty : AREA y THOUSAND FACES” %@ scotch bottles from Marty Rackin : CinemaScort . ae and John Lee Mahin. The gag . ' : back of this is that Bill, who has - 2 ——— py | nePatitis, has been ordered on the| 5 4 wagon by his M.D. | Clark and Kay Gable are having ‘such a great golfing vacation at! ‘Palm Springs that they have de- cided to remain until May 1. PU C VCC VY = oO > < be fe bn hn fn thn bb hn bf Dn hh lh ba hn hn hn i a a hn han nh a ha an naa ee ALG RICHARD WIDMARK ate TRAP” B ym the TRI JE expl it orf Odsed o TOM THUMB RUSS TAMB AN YC POU C CVC CCC CCC CVC UVC C CUCU CC CCC CC CCC CCC UCCOCO OOOO C OOOO OCC CCC CCC CCC CCC CCC COC Creer errr OO TT TO OOOO EEE EEE EEE EEE EE PEE PPE PPP PPP PPP PP PPP PPP PPP PPA PPA PADAG =. THOMAS - in “LONELY RTS” —- e | A new twosome around town is TERRY-THOMA | SUNDAY! Montgomery Clift, Myrna Loy in Lo ONLY H WEARTS ——— hnhoun Cl ‘George Jessel and Robin Raymond. | POPPOPOPEAAS ppped POPPA AA PPPP AD Attn PPPPDP PDP pw j — . e | ri = . e i epee 9 (oe Bob Wagner prefers his coffee steaming black. That’s the way to enjoy all the man-satisfying flavor of Instant Spotlight Coffee. of the INSTALLATION OF THE WORLD’S FINEST AND MOST POWERFUL PROJECTION — LAMPS — to Bring to You the LIGHTEST and BRIGHTEST PICTURE PROJECTED IN ANY DRIVE-IN THEATER IN THE ENTIRE AREA. and We Have Completed the Laying of 14,000 SQ. FT. OF ASPHALT PAVING . NO HOLES—NO RUTS—NO DUST AND OTHER IMPROVEMENTS ——_- Also WE HAVE FOR YOUR COMFORT AND ENJOYMENT IN-CAR HEATERS—HEATED CONCESSION AND REST ROOMS— MAGNETIC HI-FI SOUND— ARTIFICIAL MOONLIGHT . Robert Wagner goes for man-satisfying coffee! jochtonmnnasientheheee mea cee ca Mace en eI MT rn erat og 3 3 COMPLETION | | man-satisfying Instant Spotlight Coffee 602 7 oO . Special Offer Get a coffee mug like Robert Wagner’s when you ‘buy a jar of Instant Spotlight Coffee. Four hand- some Sportsman’ s designs. A) Robert Wagner, star of _ “IN LOVE AND WAR”, Plus a Jerry Wald Production THE BEST IN MOTION PICTURES: for 20th Century-Fox. % . a Don’ t make out your grocery list _ until you see Kroger’ s ad Thursday! MORE FOR YOUR MONEY . >) TOCET LJ * First W ith’ the Finest * We Lead — Others F ollow a a cee \ i a ai S " ¥ ii A, F Ay y ve ee r , ; 4 *¢ Sag / at, ry 4° Oe ‘ “, ¢ Pa ¢ end id / 4 ng y i ae rg ew # é 8 A oa i a ed Lh: - , SoH : ) ae ra a | , . _ , / oy . . be } om . hy 4% j TWENTY-TWO ot SEA GT SB A THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 1959! , Mite, ye . A ‘ : ies (a = T “ 1662 S. Telegraph Rd. SHOP EVERY NITE ‘til 9—SATURDAY ‘til 6 Young at heart Jacket Dress half size 16 to 24/2 in enka rayon, blue or grey spring print clearance | COATS Reduced! ‘28°58 i Famous designer coots in * navy, colors, tweeds, plaids! FORMERLY 39.95 to 79.95 a SUITS Reduced! _ *48°*78 ad fae ee Famous designer suits in fine Forstmann wools, navy telga, tweeds! FORMERLY 69.95 TO 99.95 UNE. Sc Tn aoSe Oe Sale ic Se ek RS masterfully tailored — SKIRT Slim and sleek in 65% dacron and 35% cotton poplin, with two pockets and matching belt 11.95, .complemented by its matching » swirl print shirt. Tab front and roll sleeves, 7.95. ie aan eo eueaee”6 le he es "sisting with the meeting were 5 ‘Some 50 members__of | Fellowship Class of First Bap- | cldss president Edward Lus- | tist Church met in the church '| - cumb, Frank Lanniiig and Mrs. - | building Tuesday | Luscumb. evening for a cooperative din- ‘ The class saw slides of the n | ams sy sites of the Dance Set Saturday | Franklin, missionaries to New ; Pennsylvanians of Pontiac are Guinea, with the Wyclif trans- (holding a dance beginning at 9 p m. lators. Members also voted to (Saturday evening at Hotel Roose- | assist the Voice of Tangier in |velt. sending gospel messages to Russia. _ Cigarette butts and ashes can ' Mr. and Mrs. John McCor- |be sucked up with the hose to mick, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Green| your vacuum cleaner, The dusting and Mr. and Mrs. Murray jbrush attachment helps, too, so Deighton were on the dinner (that yolr ashtrays won't have to serving committee. Also as- |\be washed every day. & Clan Separates oe xX SEF; — A whole colorful. clan of matching tartans. Fashions for fun by JANTZEN. Knit Shirt, Kerchief ...... 3.98 Nassau Shorts . .6.98 Cloche Hat ...1.98 Slim Skirt ..4 48.98 Pleated Skirt ..9.98. Sleeveless Blouse 4.98 700 W. Huron {= PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11% S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg.. Pontiac, Mich. Enrollments Available in Day ot Evening Classes Write. phone or call in person tor Free Pamphiet PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 — — Bloom 1662 S. Telegraph Rd. ASHION SHOP The glow of iridescence | ... the latest for any-weather wear Only $10 Car coat with a won- derful fashion flair ‘in iridescent, water-repellent ¥ | cotton poplin. For rain-or- | shine, anytime. With | push-up sleeves, brass i buttons, Softly-full back | with button-accented | detachable belt. Color- matched iridescent lining. ' Green, blue, gold. Sizes _ Evan-Picone | 7 to 15. 2 q b Ci) 3U Attend Baptist Dinner |. |’ right, Mary Walouist of the Philip- t Pine Lake Branch of Women’s National Farm and Garden Association is holding an International Square Dance Saturday evening at Bloomfield Hills High School. The dance is-for the scholarship fund for International Farm Youth. Exchange Program. Among Foreign Youth Exchange students who will be present—in native costume—at the dance are, ‘left to operation. pines, Lawrence Foote of Italy, and Allaire Schlicher. of Uruguay. The IFYE. program is sponsored by 4-H Peterson. a TWO DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETROIT AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS ’ . | {f° oof speed x weve MOP ee raze ee ec oe ee a ee ee le ee CL eh ee a >» »--* & s&s Clubs of America. Kopta will be callers. available atthe door or by calling Mrs. West Bloomfield | a ae a a a ee a ee a a a Soa O Pentiac Press Phete . Assisting with arrangements are, left to right, Mrs. Carl R. Giese, publicity; Mrs. Kenneth D. Peterson, tickets; Mrs. Charles Lawrence, chairman of the plan- ning committee, and Mrs. Russell Kock, president of the club. Necklaces are riding high this spring. Even bibs take on the mien of a choker in a season ded- icated to ‘‘high’’ fashion. . We Buy All Types of WASTEPAPER NEWSPAPERS 50c 100# CORRUGATED 70c 100# Pontiac Waste Material Co. 135 Branch FE 2.0209 VEGETABLE STEAKS delicious - tender and nutritious A TASTE a, “aa” Delicious & popular vege- table entree’ for something different in taste and Natural Health Foods 8 Mt. Clemens St. -| FE 4-4601° | i [21G-2AG SEWING MACHINES - Brawd New — In beautiful con- sole. Selling out floor samples and demonstrators. Full Price § A7® ‘ &% Only For Home Demonstration Call CAPITAL APPLIANCES FE 5-9407 . WNF&G Associa- tion supports the exchange program as part of its work in international co- Mrs. Charles Tickets will be Mr. and Group to Stage “MEET for LUNCH RIKER FOUNTAIN Sealtest Ice Cream Popular Prices Riker Building Lobby Broadway Hit To open their spring community itheater season, Township Players ‘of ‘Wesst Bloomfield will present jthe Broadway hit, “Anniversary. iWatz,"’ a comedy by Joseph Cho- ‘dorv and Joseph Fitlds. | Franklin Donegan is director and: Mrs. M. A, Klopp is pragucer of GETTING MARRIED? ithe play, to be presented May 1416 at West Bloomfield High WEDDING INVITATIONS hool RECEPTION CARDS SCNOOL, Reasonable Prices Because the’ play is abut a WELCH’S couple on their 15 anniversary, free tickets are offered to all cou- ples having a sth or 16th anni- versary on the days of the play. CARDS-GIFTS _.. NORTH WT OL CC It’s Tony’s 29th Anniversary and Your Opportunity to Save Plenty TONY’S $8.00 BUDGET PERMANENT | Complete 50 with Set ......... a5 4 LJ ets OD % oe | bs HAIRCUTTING $2200 = 4 ts an -art—Not fust a job % ‘ vet us prove to vou \ o. fs that there is a difference : BEAUTY AND. elephone BARBER SHOP _ MAIN FLOOR | | FE 3-7186 a, ony 5 RIKER BLDG. ‘ * Ann. Al tn, th, Bs the, A lr, ht. i an i, ie, ln Btn. ni. i. Mi, i. i Bh Ae hr th thn, re thn te he. site he th FORMULA 10-6-4 FOOD for LAWNS eTUny ~TREES Value “POWER MOWER Tit 2% = P. Clinton , Recoil M BAG arora seme 3 3 88) none $ » 88 “ Steel Base Binannce , ; _ SUNBEAM 20” Electric $3 HP CLINTON ENGINE — 4-Cycle — Steel Deck. — Large Wheels — Recoil: Remote Starter $109.95 Value — ‘Chrome Handles — Fingertip Controls — :L MOWER *: WHILE sf 95 Adjustable Cutting Height — Full 1 Year 42 eer Guarantee on Motor ; ROSE FOOD with Each $0-lb. Bag - Covers $,000 sq. ft. SELECTION | 5 Positions $5.95 ALL-PURPOSE | DEEP FRY COOKER | <<: GO" ne HOUSE PAINT) GYM SET DELUXE Galvanized with cover CHOICE COLORS AARPAAAPPPPPPPPPPPALY RAWLINGS Westinghouse — GENUINE SHETLAND ) : LOOK 88° Cc vm TOASTMASTER TWIN BRUSH Vsiccell We believe this grill : WHAT aa ym R ‘LOOK ()§ SHAMPOO owes price in Pon. Complete Only 6 Ft., 9 Ft. 12 ¥¢. ‘Electric Cc . e : ° | EXTENSION CORDS sens bw Ge 5 | REG. 16.95 gCleans a 9x12 rug ADJUSTABLE . $7 2 88 4 { 1 mannannnnnnnnnnnnonnonnnnnnonsnonennne | 5 ei eaaee § in 30 minutes.§ LARGE WHEELS. — | qq been Hs BASKET | Your . c : : $ 88 i Professional & Wn nnn nnnprrnnnnenene~—nror—rrrrrror, : meee , looki | ete fo verti SHABE LOUNGE ; Chip and Dip ox [Ex TEPER 5-POSITION i — Ree! for aeake ToL ? NEW Ald Lua . , TRAYS -Ass t Colors 4 88°] iia lB | DORMEYER RUG CLEANING Re” | ———" ey Rust-Proof Aluminum ~ | 12-INCH Attachment FREE | 9 tame Fl c | Velon Web | ||IGE CREAM scoop 88 BF ERY PAN | ou 995% i 100 Fe—Stecl Core—Plastic Op CANISTER SET re abat a GARBAGE : CLOTHESLINE 88 4-Pc. $ 89 Pan-Cover-Controls ) PLASTIC C ANS 1 roms , Automatic Controls DI NNERW ARE 20 GAL -_ CARLOAD SALE i Onl 05 s 88 = cup, saucer, me Big to 3 f 88 : PAINT NOW!N=-. 6 | essere ise gl eine {| SABE [m2 + om 7 4 a8 Only 4 . - $ Thermostat Break and Stain Resist- Alcoa Aluminum 32 ont. Safe in auto. washers OFFICIAL LEAGUE 8- PLAY b °° | WHITE—-PINK ousin —$2.49 Value. | TURQUOISE $1 Housiog we BALLS 97° | LT. and DK. GREEN Fire King STAINLESS Autographed Model DARK GRAY ‘7 Glass Cover STEEL AAAAAARARADRPDPDDPON t m ) Giant 6-Qt. Size DINNERWARE } BASEBALL iF PORCH . RESISTANT Outstanding 4 xifives BATS $1.29 » : _ WAAAY J ;- | & DECK ¢ aryminum panes tnt 4 spoons CATCHERS’ MASKS, 6 Ai IL rome Uh ENAMEL PAINT | $ 95 4 TEASFOONS GLOVES — FIRST ‘oe — Reg. $19.99 24 s Se 3" BASEMAN MITTS Full 2’ Cross Bars, 2 Swings, $ 88 S$ 79 $979 a | et BIG SELECTION apes Erte: Trapeze Bar, - me GAL. $ ALL PURPOSE 3 TEASpROASTS. GOONS FRIES, SERVEx, WARMER $, ETEREQ) GOLF creer cr aaa , Ld Wom aioe “f taa pin ~~} toe riar f romny armour {GRASS SEED = SD | nipenion MARINE FISHING RECORDS 3 Championship wr = sauaamaaa ctcmaamaaaaa ep |) ENAMEL } ENAMEL SUPPLIES $reg. 3598 © GOLF BALLS GARDEN HOSE 97 , SAAANAAAANAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANAAN WATER RESISTANT S$ 49 ‘STAYS BRIGHT LONG WEARING : A $2.95 a | 69 @. Value 88 7 §-Year Warranty DN Tas 415-00 $ Steel Tines, Lawn _ - 5 eo} ) SAVE | wens ji GRASS RAKE. ! POPULAR TUNES mm if ) MIDDLECOFF LAWN SP RI NKLER ena 0% ROBOT Pree a ‘erent OY Pic! : WHITE ONLY VINYL LATEX, WATER RESISTANT MASONRY PAINT FOR STUCCO, CONCRETE, ASBESTOS SHINGLES, ones, With 10 tb. fine Each a R . Reg. $ 99 BRICK, PLASTER, CINDER kes $11.98 for WEEDS $9.00 > RH 49 dex. $8.95 or CEMENT BLOCK—WOOD SIDING INSECTS z Value . ROLLER OR BRUSH Hundreds of Other Models FERTILIZER Aluminum 3 CU. FT. 46.95 § 99 | STEEL BED : ann ein Value j RODS -- REELS -- LINE - NADCO 55 $ Grass Stop i ORS | AL. 3 | ©A\ 3 ALGONAC WATER KING—BRONSON $ git VINYL LATEX ; BIG DISCOU NTS § petits avcilebe ei ted ~INTERIOR PAINT { New tours : oo es > , | ; HIGH FASHION , tarts FREE Ses = ROUND POINT | | 9:30 -- 9:00 , a. ROU fi : PARKING Continuous Coil ey» VC RRCCn | RADE siemisa | ‘SHOVEL SHAKESPEARE—OCEAN CITY— Complete FOLDING — ‘3 GOLF gq | a Wheelbarrow *5?7 Large Wheel DRIES FAST ° SATURDAY Corrugated Aluminum { $ |; | scruppaste feumir $ 9:30--7:00 932 WEST HURON ea ae qio| 189 3 85. 98 Value | 1000 3.00 OPPOSITE. HURON THEATER | Only American Made __| a Grein Prices : CHICAGO GRAIN - CHICAGO, April 22 (AP)—Grain open- hea’ Oats (old) -Thé following are top prices May . ..0. 201% May ........ 86% 6 ee TRS RS ee: ‘$sy,\covering sdles of locally grown fo a @ tees wo iad oe prodike brought to the Farmer’s a Ee aoe %|Market by growers and sold by e Bept. ...... ‘86 ithem in wholesale package lots. May . ..e0.. 127 Dec. une 68 uly ne pen - are Quotations are furnished by the} + 8 OH a seeesae bal bat roo ie pad ‘'' 19, {Detroit Bureau’ of Markets, as of Merch .,... 1.20% Sept. 1.25 | Monday. Lard tarums) | | ; a vimecba & 10.40) veiron Produce RUITS em 0 U - “en tisha DU... eccenseee 84.00 wwe wl sevcecenesoccoes sO) 80 bene ly a DU. .ccccesesccecces 1.7 S | Celery ‘apped, bu seseesannies aes 138 0 to al 'Horshradish, No. 1 pki .......... on 415 |Leeks. tachs.s dos sacceeecess 2.00 'Onions. dry (bags) BOT. III) 650 oe oe ibehs } dos. .. 2000. eae ibe snips aoe eeeee cr | ‘Potatoes (bag) “so tbe." 2 21:25 S amb é for Williams’ . —— es, hothouse (bchs.) dos. eos 1.66 Job Postponed Until auvar> mnmune, wens) dou. i-- 13 A | Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT, Apri! 21 (APy—Prices paid ‘per pound, f.0.b. Detroit, for Ne. 1 quality ve poultry: ae type hens 18-21; P LANSING um — Democratic hope- , fuls reportedly have been told to’! wait until summertime before go- ing after the job Gov. Williams has| Summer, Is Report | light type hens te eee MARKETS |Market Crests held so long. Fe - = geared ope broilers and fryers N t ; i | : 4 bs. whites 19-20; Barred Rocks 2i-;| News from corporate annual | : ai we ids a logk ix j The high command of the party 2 '96, caponettes over 5 lbs. 2544-27: tur- ‘i - po i dential candidate Says the West is f eys 2” type hens 28, heavy (ype; meetings was encouraging. — ‘protecting Berlin only by threaten-' s in Michigan held a meeting last recid 2, er ; ae 1 ar and ho stay ‘ night in which the hopefuls appar-’ oerecr eas American Telephone continued) “ Ing a nuclear war a ping 4 sent ked ff th ito back away from its recent ad-). ’ bluff won't be called. ' ently were as to put o eir) perroit. A “ia pril 21 (AP)—Eggs, fo b . %for-1 stoc uit. ; 4 Norman Thomas, sixztime Socia In effect, th , ‘ " vance on the. }for-L stock split.! campaigning. n elec e party Detroit. in case lots, federal state ist party nominee, said last night asked for a truce among Williams’ *7*4¢* /It_ dropped another 2 points or so. Cee eee mato’ = rare - ; , Whftes: Grade A jumbo 36 exjre 32-! AT&A when-issued stock, based! — that “it is nonsense to think we would-be successors. 134, wtd. avg. 32%: large 3044-34, wid | | é. can go on forever this way in! , avg 31, medium 26-28, wtd. avg -27'2:\ on the split, was off about a point.) \ Educators $ 1 dency. He appeared on a taped 2900° utiity cows 1950-2100. canners iwe fight a ground war in Russia's ae ; television interview from New York #54 cutters 15 00-18.50 i backyard?.’ inisters: last night and said he thinks he. {08% selebic $60 Butchers opening New York Stocks i Thomas said that America’s. : : as ignt : around 2$¢ lower, mixed US No 2 and (Late Morning Quotations? as n “ as Doctors | has something to offer the nation 2.120.240, oy 16 00 ew meas; a lot Figures after decimal point are eighths foreign policy originally was aimed) . { as president : No 1 195 tbs. 1700, nothing done gumiral 201 Int Tel&Tel 381 ‘at maintaining a balance of power, Now we have the latest 1950 z 4 others _ Air Reduc .. 88 Isl Crk Coal 407 ‘but all it can now hope for is a Model, 2-way dictating trans- -'_ * * Vealers—saiable 128 Steady rhoice Allied Ci 32 Johns Men .. $83 bullance of jenvor ms cribing machine deat ever} > , ; don ay and prime 35 09-4000, standard and goed Allied Btrs ... 60 Jones & L 9 s;r r . - wine . ‘ ¥ f 3ut_the governor did not say 37 'q9°%s'00. cull and utility 1600-2700 Allis Chal .... 294 Kennecott. ..113 1 ARMENIAN DAY — Two participants in Fensise Eeess Ehets business and professional fan { flatly that he was a candidate for gheep and iambs—salable 1200 Bulk Alum Ltd » 301 Kro 30... Armenian Day glance over the shoulder of City as a day of memorial. They are Walter Dakesian cannot. afford to- be. without ( the top job. ‘gupply shorn lambs good to low choice Alcoa pal 3) ca ge hen . ; Sa Tere: 'S , _— Sees | 0 - ” at r tune sends. mest good snd choice shorn am sats zt 1164: Commissioner Robert al andrv (center) to (left), 2401 Tufts St., Royal Oak, and George trang er 0 oy e ‘ % fs 4) ' z n melt fhe QO joac m Can 3 127 eS ' iho na. cmereen er ea praia gat eels Tso M evaktee ewes Am Cyan 58 3 : i, read a mayor's Pie warns st on serine Saturday Arafelian, 101 S. Jessie St. * Plus $11. 90 Michigan's cash emergency makes , ("0% gg (DS St fe 8. Bmuebber ems aAmMA Pay 18 Loew's rs _ — : "5 00-16 00 * ACK 'S pone s! . it mandatory for the administrative ee = ape a3 Lone 8 Gai ‘ Shows No Remorse pment Us xen : ' ‘ ne is Mack Trk board to stay on the job for the STOCK AVERAGES o Am News 44 Soria Ce ner a Fl ene or a P yr Dt) > o Tess + he Tt " present and delay campaigning for ‘Comptiec by Th “4 56 “i ec ts eo = —* Tel io 4 | ree demonstration at your — the gubernatorial nomination until, ietuat Bathe. etl Btects -Anseconds 656 6 ta If dj eS DETROIT \» — Impassive and convenience in your office. , 8 , rev da «+ JHM6 14 o2 228 7 nee t 70 4 . “ a . 2 legislative problems are settled. Week 40 237.9 140 8 100 § 7145 qimour & Ca. 288 52 aa ne a ia a nk Parola e - _ _ Month ago 322.) 7 a 7 Atchison 29 7 = awaited in a jail ceil today the G nf al rint Year ago ..... 2425 900 101 1652 Balt & Ohio .. 46 . ; : er . 1 1939 high ..4... 3346 144.2 1026 2287 Beth Steel 517 5 law's action for his strangling of Lodge Calendar Hered ees * jm} ae oe cba Boeing Air. 404 ‘ 0 S 10 em five-year-old Marvin Zdanowski. & Office Supply sé h seees 1 ‘ #143 Bohtt Alum .., 28 "3 ~ Special_c unieation Cedar. 1958 low ..... ..247 809 129 1566 Bond Sirs .... 236 | Ritola, 47, husky Dlinois mental Lodge na P&AM Clarkston Bor eee este Ao : hospital fugitive, said he waylaid 17 W. Lawrence Thursday, April 3 7pm Work in» Bore Warn _ 33 Government Is Takin Saturday has been set aside in occurred at the hands of the Turk- i Killed Marvin Monfay “be . EL A. degree. Gordon Stayt, W. “ Tr Man Ne hew Bri a My were g Pontiac as Armenian, Memorial ish nation wiping out half the pop-| anise he Rigi soy 1 - ich Free Parking and Bus Tokens ¥ acy. y ' p usd Ce ow asa Major Steps to End Day - : " - julation of the little country. pet.” " “Ritola has an obsession’ For Our Customers ri .|Burroughs .... 414 . Mayor Philip FE. Rowston pro- Mz . . ion | " : i . any Armenians f{led_ their ’ ’ Cal Pack sel Chronic Joblessness claimed the event last mght as a , that spies pursue him. — Calum & H 231 country, emigrating to the United ews in re Paag alk Soup = 52 tribute to the contributions of na- Giates, and many oi Péatiac’s | Marvin, son of deaf mute spay , T i hi Cdn Pac 205 By SAM DAWSON turalized Armenians in Pontiac and sider geucwation of Avimediaws | parents, was abducted on his YO1r — roy Man am is c 1 Airl .. 244 ‘ | ; » Armeni tonle’s r 1 - : ° 2 An unsuccessfal attempt to break 16 year-old nephe ere sérioUs Carrier Cp... 446 J AP Business News Analyst to the Armenian pe »ple contin first arrived in this country 89 to kindergarten. He was 16-year-old nephew were seriously 16 a] > hattle . a ; Slanks iJ Drug : 7 Case. JI w+ 225 ROME (AP)—Unemployment is UME battle against oppression, then _ strangled and his body placed in | into Siankster and Jones Drugs. injured yesterday about 1.50 p.m. Caer Trac’. 935 Batke Da i om eae employ F ‘ ~ the loft of a garage behind his | 284 State St. was reported tO.when gheir milk truck collided Ef? FU Ey Pt. &5 , Benner JC 1074 today’s most stubborn problem in More than 100 Pontiac resi- Pontiac Armenians are proud to. por . ae ) atl 0 RR 76 it States 1e ge , rmeni sce . mS feet : ‘ ne. , Pontiac Police yesterday The with @ gravel truck at the inter- palms Equip 634 pe Oe 1 the United States. It's the biggest dents ef Armenian descent are ‘relate that the brave Armenian drugstore owner, Ro C_ Clifford, a eetion of 16-Mile and Crooks Rds ee hone see heeds 5 129 bugaboo In Italy, too expected to attend memorial nation was not crushed bv the: Ritola, onetime Michigan farm-, . = at ,O€ Ou 120 Deis st & il . . aut as J " t 7210 Terrell St...Waterford Town- Gpopoe G Simpson, 27, and Rob- Colum Gas .. 225 Phileo 26 «The chef similarities: in both services at 8:30 p.m. Saturday’ 1 ours er, was held on a police charge of . 2O0TER ae SON, 2i, “Con N Gas 5 Pill et 505 . beeen — of i . ‘ . kee Carry la SS« b ia _. ship. said it was the. spcond al- ert Carmichael. 16, both of 90 C Pw Pt i416) os Proct & G #22 countries there a! fin the Armenian Bait, ats Ferry The country grew strong again, murder. | tempted break-in in eight days Tacoma St ate te ported in cone Bak . 486 Par Ou yi joblessness and wome’ a Ave. The public is invited. so stretis that in the early 1920s Wayne County authorities were. = of, ont Can -« 453 : 4 a os “i art of th ibay force . an . “ - —_— eee wel © wanes Aden A. Murdock. 37, of 41823 S@Usfactory’’ condition at St. Cont CoPas . 141 poe Ee 3) } BrowIne part af the 1 w i Mass will be celebrated by the it was able successfully to defy expected to seek a formal murder 7 “hs Rd. W: led Lake ° said ° Joseph Mercy Hospital in | Pontiac eet a e468) oval’ Dut re * * ud ,. . Rev. Souren Papakhian, pastor of Communist Russia, throwing off warrant against Ritola. This would | 5 ee wa § ee me pe _,... this. morning Copper Rng .. 782 Safeway St we, The chef differences’ 1° US sy Sarkis Armenian Apostohe.its Communist chains for one glor- require a court appearance and Sti k B th Sides! fine of $15 plus $25 costs yesterday beeae 4 S44 Bt Reg Pap 497 packets are mostly in industrial Chure Detroi asses of Rus: a probable sanity examination. Cky On Bo / g att 4%. a drunk s ffered severe head |C¥TUs Pub. 13° Scoville Mf 99 1 PQCK -hurch in Detroit. ious Month, until masses of Rus- after pleading guilty: to a _drun — hse the = i 9 Deere - $8 Sears Roed 44 “areas hard hit by the recession x * * sian troups, quelled the revolt. Ritola, who once had a farm in’ New transparent. “Scotch” frivi e Jest BI - pos- e dis. She! 1 55 3 we raver - -_ . . . “ne E be = charge before W sat —— ain “ evine pani teackared Doug Aifc aaa Sinclair. 6s and where recovery has brought) Rowston and €ity Commissioner Thg battle against Russian ddém- the East Jordan area, escaped last: Brand Double-Coated Tape is > shir cticp or - . « : . - i field Township Justice Elmer € sine _ kos aS spokesman said. ee Pits Be ac| | 8S greater revival in production than Robert A. Landry will be honored inane continues even today, with fall from the Galesburg, Ill., state the modern way to mount Dieterle. els pital spokes East Air 1 4 Baten a 34 Fin rehiring Italian pockets are guests during a short program the Armeniin. Revolutionary Fed-, hospital. He had beenconfined | photos, clippings, drawings Mrs. Marvel Terrian, of 2391 Arnold R. Harriman, 57, 302 N. Eat tao te . ae Std Brana eis largely geogr aphic rather than In- sponsored by the two Pontiac chap- eration conducting its activities on after a knife attack on aman ae and samples. Needs no drying ' Joswick St. Pontiac Township, Troy St., Royal Oak, was driving A & a see . 5 on Gy my <3 dustrial. 2. The U S. govefnment ters of the Armenian Revolutionary a workdw ide scale, often secretly Chicago. ' time. Neat and clean. Get told Oakiand County sheriff's depu-, the gravel truck when the acci- Erie RR. ; a) Std Ol! NS 2 iftervened only in. moderation.’ Federation. iwithin the borders of Soviet Russia. . this amazing tape today at 2 va 7° =o dent occurred, He was treated for Ex-cel-o °° 402 113. The Italian government is making: Also speaking will be Detroit ; z ; : ties that someone entered her home sph H tal and /Foed Mach .. 472 626 a farte cuma ow the renpes _ ‘ | One reason for the little coun- Wat Offi i | Meet : ; 29 Fro or billf jqibruises at St. Josep OSpital dNGiporg mot 637 434 heroic efforts — some with the representatives of the federation try's troubles with it wkbece | ater icials ee and stole $32 from her billtolc released yesterday iFreepot Sul . 1102 771 help of Amerigan dollars — to al- and the St. Sarkis building con Ty's froudies © s neighbors | hile she was at work rereased yesnenady: ‘Frueh Tra 24 gy eID OF she ‘<< . a and the St Sarkis buvaing Com: i that it has stood as a Christian SING UP lealtt ia ° . : Police said Harriman told them! ge. penam . #0 222 leviate a mu more permanent mittee bulwark for nearly 2,000 years LANSING —The ee ‘ . , ' “the Jig as green ¢ Yt Gen Ele R83 ean a Pee ; : eX 7 . “s * Department reports some wa- Someone broke into ‘Al's Bar, “the light was green and T don't Gen Fie ; s42 problem NATIONAL OBSERVANCE ” : oa Ss 4, , reca vo brak WiGen Milt aa 217 * * * Only a little more than 100 years terworks operators _attendeg, one-: : 369 E. Pike St, and stole two recall putting on my b On “| oa ue ee 207 Armenian Day is being observed. 4). wy im leat ‘ t ae Ct lag ‘niet - oes in the® first | nant. ts, tat ry bottles of wine and $5, it was re- Slowing for the light"” Officers re ae Bs 404 The industrial recession touched nationally, on Friday in most cities 20°T Me ceath “la ved cae oes tA i at Battl Creek, Ad- ported to Pontiac Police yester- were unable to question Simpson Gen Tire 88 259 Italy lghtiy compared to the ag a day of Armenian national Armenia was proclaimed a Christ- halt of April a e ek, Ad- la to eam or the youth as yet. There were Gilecte | I "27 harp drop in the United States. a entene ian nation, one of the first countries rian, Mount Clemens, Traverse Ss, ou tracts, dd’ , 5 nas iGoeb r 0 SMart OU g ava cue . tes Sia . no witnesses reported at the scene. Soaasen . 89 Ga Industrial unemployment rose * * * to take such a step. ; City aan Hollagd. — Multiplies The Rev. R. A. Carr, 522 How. sctia i< st tas a only slightly here, Industrial It was 44 years avo — in 1915 land Ave., reported the theft of a E | ] nel Grevhoun id ue 884 covery. was quiek in the United — that the Armenian massacres To 999,999,991 power mower from his garage to Xp osion In un ‘Holland F 14 sr States. Italian industrial output is — _ 2 : " Pontiac Police. yesterday. omeessom 7 a West en rel an’ rising but at a slow pace lif & a est J k 3 . rummage sate, Friday, aoe Kills 3 at Dam Site ice, 22 eS 24th, 9 to 4 p.m. Our Tedy Queen ire Rand 1986 witean # Co. aaa! Chromic unemployment is most Tonig ews egin of Martyrs Church, 32460 Pierce, . 4 pit 5 fnisnd BH ee Woalenrth S87 Jy in the south of Italy, where in- lOWwroOm 0 tfice urni ure Birmingham. 3 blocks South of 14- ORO\ ILLE, Calif. (AP!—Threeiint Bus Mch 580 0 yar @& Tow WI | Mile = between “Southfield” and men were killed and two injured @ Rait GE Zen ees ze dustry now is making a tentative Daecavar Holidg | Greenfield. adv. ict ‘Int. Pa: 1194 feneces .,. entry. nudged along by a worried ¥- uesday when dynamite exploded {int Paper ....1194 Genesco z +. ; ; Int Shoe 363° Upjohn of Kal 447 government Rummage Sale. First Presby- in a small tunnel at the site of tnt Siiver 44 : Pika cp /gave the American coal industry;tion and tax needs to the Michi- AA Private Detectives Wayne Beedle, of 689 E. Pike St.,/* Licensed—-Bonded—FE 5-5201 president of Greenfield. Restau- started ta. cross, ane of the few shots in the arm in gan Federation of | Democratic é m e ® & Offi S$ adv.irants in the Detroit area, died ‘ecent ‘years, seemed likely to|' Women in Lansing Saturday, He iP t & ff \ ce upp % ‘yesterday in Woman's Hospital The boy was knocked down DY Close down Furopean coal mines. will be joined by Rep. F. Charles. enera rin ing ice upp y 17-W. Lawrence : A kangaroo up to ne age here. Lawrence, 50, was born in the car, but not seriously hurt, 44, any Italians in Belgium would: Raap (D-Twin Lake}, State Con- : ; 7 of three months bounds to his Grand Rapids. He had been with! Police said. ‘have been thrown out of work. The troller James W. Miller and Clar- {7 WwW Lawrence St Pontiac Free Parkin?’ and Bus Token mother's- pouch. at the slightest the restaurant chain for 25 years| The boy was treated at Pontiac. fléw has stopped and they're still ence W. Lock, deputy state rev- . ‘ For Our Customers — sign of danger. ‘and its president for the last five.| General Hospital and released, working. enue commissioner. After Four Days NEW YORK (#-—-The stock mar- i ket moved unevenly early today at the crest of four straight days| of historic highs. Key stocks showed gains or losses of fractions to about a! point. The market was mixed from the start in active trading. The ticker tape was late for a %minute | period. . Oils and aircrafts were lower.| Steels, motors, chemicals, coppers| and drugs were irregular. Airlines| edged off. The market had apparently| reached a king of ‘‘rest period,”’| brokers said. On the past couple, of sessions, while the popular | averages ‘of pivotal stocks rose. ‘there were more losers than gain- ers in the list as a. whole. Meanwhile, the -business news background continued good. | THE PONTIAC PRESS, oy 4 bese: % VETERAN JOURNALISTS HONORED — ‘WEDNESDAY, APRIL * <> ia hal iat inst Seven men who have ' served in the journalism profession in the Detroit area for a total of 430 years were given trophies last night as part of the 50th anniversary of Sigma Delta Chi, national professional journalism fraternity. Seated, from left, are Joe Haas, Pontiae Press column- ist, with 62 of his § 82 years in the > business, David J. Wilkie, Asso- said last night. Romney called for a divistoia of lthis economic power, which, he said, jeopardizes the national in- terest. : * * * The motors executive cited the current threat of a major steel strike this summer. “The steel in- dustry situation today is in direct conflict with the national principle of having power divided,” Romney Romney spoke to an audience of about 400 persons at the annual dinner of the New York Financial Writers Assn. Inc. AP Wirephote ciated Press; Lee Smits; s¥ndicated outdoor columnist; E. L. “Ty Tyson, sportscaster for WJR; and standing, from left, C. B. Davis, Detroit Times, W. K. Kelsey, Detroit News, and E. A. “Batchelor, editor of the Detroit Athletic Club News. yeneset ‘Nonna Thomas - Talks to Newsmen DETROIT W—A former presi- Last year U.S. automotive ex- ‘ports totaled $1,465,000,000. a eas NOW... mm 1959 JANRUS em 5