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Ss TH VER PAG _ U.S, Weather Berean Forecas, . 
' Partly Cloudy, Warmer ' : wane : | a 
( o (Details on Page 2) " i: : ; , 
‘116th YEAR. a. a ee a “PONTIAG, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, MAY re 195844 PAGES SnOSpHTERNTIONAL MENG SERVICE 
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    ixol 
Ike Sends kk kw 
Reds Overjoyed 
by U.S. Troubles 
in World Today 
VIENNA o — Communist 
propagandists are having a field 
day with the reports of anti- 
American outbreaks in Lebanon 
and Venezuela and the demon- 
strations in Algiers and Paris. 
Paced by the Sovjet news 
agency Tass and Radio Moscow, 
the satellite radios of Eastern 
Europe joined in pouring out 
the anti - Western news and 
propaganda. 
Ex-Patient Sues x * * 
President Feels 
Reds Inspiring 
Mob Violence Says Economic Woes 
in Latin America Also 
Partly Responsible 
WASHINGTON (@— 
President Eisenhower said 
today mob violence against. 
Vice President Nixon in| 
South America appears to   efuses to 
1,000 Troops. * 
: 
x * * x * * 
  an 
to & BER 
  x * * 
Rioting Students Attack Vice President | ne Home Early Stand By Vice President Stays 
Inside U.S. Embassy 400 Venezuelan Troops 
Guarding Area Following 
Night of Riots 
CARACAS (INS) — An indignant Vice President 
Richard M. Nixon scornfully refused today to heed de- 
imands of Communist- inspired mobs to get out of 
Venezuela ahead of schedule. 
But violent anti-American demonstrators forced 
reflect a pattern of Commu- 
nist inspiration and ex- Dr Sullenberger 'him to remain inside the heavily guarded U. S. Embassy 
ploitation. . in Caracas. ae 
But, he told a news con- 
ference, he believes eco- 
nomic troubles are partly 
responsible for the anti- 
American pasiaianecsaen! $1 00,000 Damage Case 
Against Medic, Hospital 
Says Sponge Left In 
      More than 400 Venezuelan troops and police sur- 
rounded the embassy area while scores of others pa- 
trolled the center of the city following a night of rioting. 
Five hundred Marines from Camp Lejeune, N. C., and — 
_| Dr. Neil H. Sullenberger and AP Wirephotes. Radio 500 rat ers from Fort Campbell, Ky., waited at 
in such countries as Vene-' ‘Pontiac General. Hospital hace ia Seeeeae From Trinidad GO A W, paratroopers m P ad 
zuela and Peru. lbeen named in a $100,000 suit! SMASHED WINDOWS OF NIXON CAR — Here is a closeup U. S. bases in Cuba and Puerto Rico to reinforce the 
x ww * | charging the Pontiac surgeon left. 
Eisenhower said Communist in- a ‘sponge in a. patient following 
spiration seems to be behind the; pester aw 
eci arrison, o demonstrations in some other parts \seward St. charged the surgeon 
of the world, but added that the) ‘performed three operations on, 
unrest in French Algeria may be him for stomach ulcers at the hos-| 
caused by something else. pital last summer, “although the 
Eisenhower spoke ip response | condition could have been treated| 
to a request for hid assessment |by medication without surgery 
of the current wave of anti- of the shattered windows of the car in which Vice President 
Zichard Nixon rode yesterday through jeering Venezuelan mobs 
in Caracas. The car was badly dented by kicks and blows with 
Cee and lead pipe.   
France Battling 
  a “NIKON     od 
operation, July 31. A second opera- 
tion followed to remove the sponge, 
_ question. Then he went on to say he said, and the third was to re- A reporter asked whether the pair the first incision, which he) President saw any pattern of Com-|"1 i. had been improperly| munist inspiration or whether it 
also could be. a case of genuine 
resentment against U. & policies. cuit Court, also names as defend- 
MATTER COMPLEX ants the Hospital board of trustees, 
Eisenhower called it a complex|its medical ‘staff and the city. 
' Not yet served with notice of 
that he does not believe there is|the suit, Dr. Sullenberger indicated 
any single cause of the violence injhe was prepared to refute any 
the Latin American countries. charges of malpractice. He and the 
x * other defendants, have 15 days in 
There are, he added, economic which to file an appearance on the 
factors in the U. S. relationships' charges. . 
with such. countries as Uruguay,| The surgeon and hospital have 
Bolivia, Peru and Venezuela. been at odds since he was sus- The suit, filed yesterday in Cir- 
Gen: Raoul Salan to take over command of Algeria from Harrison, a factory worker and) 
LAPEER has General’s Revolt) PARIS (INS)—All French troops in Metropolitan 
France were reported tonight ordered confined to 
their barracks as a temporary and precautionary 
move. 
4 
PARIS (P—The French government today ordered 
an insurrectionist j unta led by a tough paratroop 
officer. In its first official action since being esate 
early teday,the new Cab-*+ 
inet of Premier Pierre 
Pflimlin also banned- all Holland Greets ublic demonstrations   4 Venezuelans if there appeared to be danger of another 
mob getting out of hand. 
’ Cuba is three hours away from Caracas by air and 
Puerto Rico is two. , 
* x * 
The four companies of elite combat troops were 
flown from the U. S. to the Caribbean bases on President 
‘|Eisenhower’s direct orders when the lives of Fim ck “ 
wife and members of his traveling 
danger upon their arrival from Bogo be Fe Em cotnig 
Dozens of deadly melon-sized pare were hurled at 
the vice president, and at one point he was in extreme 
“danger of being dragged from his auto by a gang which 
  STUDENTS DEMONSTRATE ‘IN CARACAS — A group of 
shouting students carries a “Go Away Nixon’’ banner during anti-   Gangs 
ired the Re 
night to overthrow the mil- 
itary junta which has been 
running the country since 
dictator Marcos Perez Jim-/ 
inez was kicked out in Jan- 
uary. *~ # * 
In Venezuela — where Nixon 
and his party were stoned and pended from its medical staff Nov, 
13..A law suit, in whigh Dr. Sullen- 
berger sought reinstatement and hroughout France and in 
Algeria. 
truth to that, spat upon yesterday — there 
have been rumors, Eisenhower 
said, that the United States is 
trying to impose quotas on such 
ei] exporting nations. There is no 
Eisenhower de- $250,000 damages, was) tossed out 
of court April 11 on ¢ 
the trustees. 
Dr. Sullenberger 
board of trustees pa 
clared, 
  (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) i meeting Thursday,   
Bandits Get $31,500 in Sarnia 
Michigan Bank Car Robbed 
Near Blue Water Bridge SARNIA, Ont. (#—Two pistol-shooting robbers took   is he * * * 
      full command in the North Afri- 
the\can colony from paratroop Gen. 
yest . re! i Jacques Massu. 
. ze questing a final hearing ‘by its 
Then he said that U. S. economic! appeal commiittee. The board may 
- aid and world trade are as vitaliset a date for the hearing at its Massu demanded that Presi- 
dent Rene Coty put wartime hero 
Gen. Charles de Gaulle at the 
politics, This would be a military 
dictatorship. 
The Cabinet told Salan to main- 
tain law and order in the Algerian 
capital of Algiers and to guaran- 
tee the protection of lives and: 
|property. Salan, contmander of all troops) 
failed to make a final appeal tolin Algeria, was ordered to take 
head of a government outside Tulip Festival 
Time Today Wirephoto circuits in this country. United States demonstration over his visit to Caracas, Venezuela.. 
First-pictures of the disorder were flown to Port of Spain, Trini- 
dad, and radioed to New York by Associated Press, for the AP” Crowds of demonstrators finally 
|were dispersed by troops firing appeared bent on lynching him. 
pounded the cars with clubs, smashed the 
windows, spit all over the Americans, hooted continually 
and tore up both U.S. and Venezuelan flags. 
The ineptness of the Lp dl in handling the mobs 
- japparently ins 
leaders to attempt last   
Sending Troops 
    
  j 
  
  
“== Raises Storm Dems in Senate Press 
for Inquiry Into Move ‘over their heads and using tear 
gas and the flat sides of machetes.   
HOLLAND  — This Ottawa 
County community becomes a 
throwback today to its Netherlands Trippers to See ‘Who Was That Lady’   
origin with the 29th Tulip Time 
Festival, a riot of color and activ- 
ity which annually attracts thou- 
sands of visitors. 
* * * 
Goy. Williams, wearing the 
wooden klompen he was awarded 
10 festivals ago, takes part with   sie June 23-28. 
lother Dutch-costumed officials in x * * 
a street scrubbing ceremony which, 
/Opens - the four-day celebration. 
* * * “Fair Game.” New Play on Press List 
| A sparkling new comedy is now on the list of five top 
Broadway shows in store for the Pontiac Press theater- 
trippers who sign up for a week's vacation in New York 
“Who Was That Lady?” starring a popular comedy 
team, Peter Lind Hayes and his wife Mary-Healy, has been 
scheduled in place of another show, ATTACK VICIOUS ~ 
This is the final day of Nixon's 
18-day, eight-nation tour of Latin 
America which was labeled “good 
will” but has been marred at every 
ors, None:of the other outbursts 
compared in viciousness with yes- 
terday’s well-planned attack. 
* * * + 
Embassy sourees said the all-out 
anti-Nixon effort mounted by the 
Communists was an indication that 
he had hurt them. during his tour. 
The Reds had expect¢d Nixon on Latin America 
WASHINGTON @® — The Eisen- ‘hower administration's dispatch of 
1,000 fighting men to the Carib. 
figure largely in a Senate inves. 
stop by anti-American demonstra-itigation of Latin American mob 
action against Vice President Nix. 
on, = : 
«x *« * 
The inquiry, by a Senate For- 
eign Relations subcommittee 
headed by Sen. Wayne Morse (D- 
Ore), is expected to highlight a 
Sharp division of opiniof between 
Republicans and Democrats over bean appeared destined today te 
‘Cabinet handed over full power in GIVES POWER 
\In its emergency session, The six miles of tulip lanes 
planted along Holland's streets 
and acres of tulips at area bulb 
farms reached full bloom over 
the weekend. the 
Algeria to Andre Mutter, the new 
minister for Algerian affairs. He 
took over from Robert Lacoste, 
hero of French rightists in. Al- A march of costumed townsfolk 
through Holland's business district The Hayes-Healy production provides a sure-fire 
laugh every 28 seconds, according to a recent review. 
Written by Norman Krasna, it’s concerned with the 
droll deings of a college professor and his wife who get 
mixed up with the FBI. 
The other shows scheduled are “Music Man,” “West the wisdom of the troop move. 
Morse said he wants the State 
Department to tell why it didn’t 
take advance precautions to pre-. 
vent the kind of mob violence to 
which Nixon and his wife were 
subjected in Caracas, Venezuela, | to be easy prey but he kept his 
head and spoke with such frank- 
ness all along the way that he 
clarified many misunderstand. 
ings which existed in South 
America about the U.S. By bold- 
ly taking the offensive he had 
            $31,500 today from a Michigan bank messenger at the igeria. ki 2 ©& sets off a chain of parades, musical, Side Story,” “Two for the Seesaw,” and “Oh, Captain!”"— | driven the Communists to des- |) cen Hrubert Humphrey (De 
Canadian end of the Blue Water Bridge connecting Port | ; ; events, stage entertainment, spe-) @ package that offers music, laughter and drama. peration by the time he arrived \iinn), who joined several other 
The Cabinet's orders to Salam (cial exhibits and band -. competi- : * * * in Caracas, : [Democrats in condemning the or 
Huron and Sarnia. 
’ No one was wounded in the gunfire. The messenger | were designed. to bolster his ap- tions. . 
parent struggle for control with ~*~ -* * 
  was unarmed. 
Albert E. Borg, 65, of Port Huron, was en route from | 
the Michigan National Bank of Port .Huron to the| Massu and his so-called commit. | 4 
| tee for public safety. 
        (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) ‘klompen dance routines. traditional highlight of the, 
community spectacle is the corps 
In Algiers; Massu's commnisees jot 300 high school girls doing ‘The trip has side features, tdo—including tours, an 
after-theater supper, get-together buffet, fashion show 
and stock exchange visit. Deadline for reseryations for 
five shows, air transportation and hotel accommodations 
is May 23.         | Nixon made it known thaf he|der sénding paratroopers and Ma- 
‘was angry and indignant at the rines to U.S, bases in the Vene- 
shameful treatment accorded an Zuela area, calling for a search- 
‘important American official, but ing investigation of U.S, relations 
lone could not tell it by jooking at\with Latin America, 
i) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) * * * 
: Sen, George Smathers (D-Fla)   
Royal Canadian bank in* 
Sarnia when the holdup Venezuelan Publisher Discusses Nixon Riots 2 
  
happened. He was alone in 
a station wagon bearing 
the bank’s name. 
’ * * 
Borg, a 10-year Michigan Na-   Did We Bungle Diplomacy i in South America? tional employe, said the bandits, jstrations, if not thoroughly at least|follow the advice- of their more Republican Union and Christian tion in Caracas into a cheering! told his colleagues “the worst 
thing we could do ‘would . be ‘ta 
send inthe Marines’ to Vene« 
zuela.”’ 
Sen. Styles Bridges (R-NH), 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. x     
Bigeye ay oe ccure | It S Going Up fo 80, 
Even Without Sun (What was behind the violent dem- 
| driving a car with a Michigan li- —_ against b 
cense believed to be PK-7701 fired publisher. of Vv ential group St newspapers and 
. and forced him to a curb at the) magazines gives his answers. The writer was jailed by ousted dictator, ipartly. rature elders. 'Socialists—and the great majority, ovation.. This step was to ‘have 
| However, and I told this to Nixon|of the Venezuelan public opinion ..peied our -hated Security Chief | contribute to a warm reception 
ae) bot (ot newspapers ‘at the meeting, I have just con- emphatically condergns yesterday's by Ni . 
Pedro Estrada from the United! ~ hae 
Ontario Information Center just on Marcos Perez Jimenez last January lished by me was the leader in @ torred with the leaders of the three violence as undemocratic. States. As I once told George N. Butler, 
this side of the St. Clajr river. 
The robbers snatched out his 
auto keys, grabbed the four bags 
of Canadian currency he was 
transporting and fled. for refusing to publish a government 
editorial.) S 
By MIGUEL ANGEL CAPRILES 
CARACAS (INS) — I visited Vice 
President Nixon at the American 
money was to be- deposited Embassy in Caracas and was im- 
Michigan National's credit|pressed by 
rd bo Canadian bank. 
* * i 
|The information center was un- Ultimas: Noticias, 
manned at the time of the stickup. his friendliness, good 
lwill and understanding. So were 
La Esfera and 
‘El Mando, who accompanied me to 
Ontario and Michigan policé@the embassy. 
quickly ordered up roadblocks over 
a wide area. 
holdup car Because of Nixon's personality I 
deplore all the more the incidents 
apparently|to which he was subjected by 
nA north ‘into, the first side|groups of youths on his arrival 
street, witnesses said, and on yesterday. I shall try \to, analyze 
headed east toward London, Ont 
* _*   .'the reasons a demon- 
i +r the editors of my three dailies,’ campaign, 
the arrival of ‘the vice president, 
for a frank discussion of the prob- 
lems facing the U.S. and Vene-       \zuela. 
The main problem was that ot 
the presence in the United States 
| ef Pedro Estrada (former secur: 
ity chief) and Marcos Perez 
Jimenes (exited dictator). — ~ * 
We called for the open discussion: 
  ‘of these problems, in a civil and, Markets .....62..0---.506-- 38 violence. Thése thitgs| might be American 
orderly form, without resort to Obituaries ..............-.. %@ \grouped under the general term of dictators. 
violence of any kind, Sports ....+s+0,--. 30 thru 33 errors in United States poliey” to-- Unfortunately, 
Unfortunately, as ‘Nixon himself! Theaters ...... bo tecsceeere % ward Latin America. . 
told us yesterday at the embassy,| TV & Radio Programs en 
young people are impulsive and, Wilson, Earl .......,....55 iby the Ufited States a week ago Alfredo Stroessner 
quick telitpered and do not always| — — cos 19) thre re might have turned Nixon's recep} ‘Communist fighter.” 
4 in the days preceding| main Venezuelan political parties—, I am sure the Venezuelan gov- 
Democratic ernment junta has expressed these 
same sentiments to Nixon. Accion corcastivagine 
i | We cannot, however, blame all 
In Today's s Press [tat has happened solely on | communism even though it is 
true that some of the demon- 
    All About Men ...........- 47 | straters were members of Com- 
Caewlen. asi. ccvseegecesesss- Th munist youth groups. 
. County Sews ....6..c As I have said in my newspapers, 
Editorials ..... Ugisceeeses. 
Vi 6 many things led to yesterday's shown Latin Americans that North meddling in their homes or their 
Just one’ calculated step taken understand, he praised Dictator - People were incensed at the ease|Who was United States ambassador) 
‘with which a permanent resident's/during the dictatorship, we do not 
| vlon was granted to Estrada. Other ask that the United States inter-| 
applicants go through a trying and|Vene in our domestic affairs. 
lengthy process to get one. But We ask only that our rich and) 
‘Estrada got his in a hurry. ‘most influential neighbor should) 
Another easy step for the United differentiate between the decent: 
States to have calves: would have People living . in the neighborhood 
beet! to have Nixon omit his visit and those who are not so detent. 
to Paraguay. This would have) This does not require his   
visit domestic affairs. This difference ‘of 
‘treatment, namely showing good 
however, Nixon) will toward the good neighbors, can 
not only went-to Paraguay but, I. change thé whole neighborhood, leaders do not 
  
as- an “anti- Sell Your Car Now to Jerome's 
“Bright Spot.” FE §-045%,   Thé weatherman predicts partly 
icloudy with a High of 80 tomorrow, 
Tonight's low will be around 54-58, 
Friday will! Be cooler with a 
‘chance of showers or thunders 
storms Friday or Saturday, 
The lowest temperature in down 
town Pontiac preceding 8 a.m, was 
‘4 degrees, The reading was % at 
p.m.   
Two Win in Nebraske 
OMAHA Republican Gov, — 
Victor Anderson and Nebraska's’ 
      
       
      
  Z 8 Siesta: 
ay St im 1940 34 in 1940 
Tuesday's Temperature Chart 
Givens §9 48 Marquctie 65 64 amore 8073 # Memphis 8s 66 
marek 6? Milwaukee 4 92 
ereenevioe 4 2 panne pate 4 $3 
§ 2w lean 7 
ee? ee 78 6, New York * 66 43 . 6 OS aha 84 9 
Cincinnati 7% 48 Pelleton 73 42 
Cleveland 4 pa —_ 16 Se peers A 4 ittebureh 66 44, 
Detroit ] 84 Bt. Louls 77 $i 
D a B38 @. Prancieca 72 48 
Or. $1 Gie. Marie 74 44 
t ci Prev, City is @ City as ay Angties % 5 Beattie” ee 43 
    p_ moray in its statement, rapped Big:3 a8 Proposal for Outside 
Arbitration Meets With 
Unanimous ‘No’ 
DETROIT —The United Auto 
Workers Union returns to the bar- 
gaining table with the automotive 
big three today after getting a 
resounding unanimous ‘no’ to a 
UAW propogal that contract dif- 
ferences be arbitrated. 
: * oe * 
Tt was the second setback in a 
month for Walter Reuther’s UAW.    MY d BIA: M coy Mrs | 
in Detroit — 
any doubt, there is no honor among 
‘thieves, Detroit police got proof of 
it today, 
her $650 mink stole and pocket- 
book to two Detroit parking lot 
snatchers, 
* * * 
A woman in a full length coat 
but without shoes waited nearby 
as the khaki-clad snatchers fled 
with her stole and purse contain- 
ing $20, Mrs, Vivona reported. 
* * * 
    The big three on April 28 rejected 
his to extend the cur 
rent contracts for three months. 
* * 
The three-year 
General Motors expires May 29. 
Similar contracts with Chrysler 
and Ford run out June. 1. 
REUTHER SILENT 
There was no immediate com- 
ment from UAW President Reu- 
ther on the rejection of the arbi- 
tration proposal he put forth Sat- 
urday. 
GM took less than five hours to 
turn thumbs down on Reuther’s' 
suggestion which it termed ‘‘an-! 
other publicity maneuver.” 
* * * 
Ford and Chrysler took a simi- 
lar stand yesterday, Ford said “‘it 
just does not make sense’’ to sub- 
mit the complicated ‘contract 
  contract with, A few minutes later, a nurse 
_'called police from a nearby hos- 
|pital to report a fight. Through a 
‘window, she said she saw and 
heard two khaki-clad men and a 
barefoot woman in a long coat 
brawling over which was going to 
get a stole. When police got there 
the brawlers had vanished. 
General's Revolt   
  Fought by France 
(Continued From Page One) 
began acting more and more like 
a government, Its members called 
a new conference. 
* * * : 
Massy ordered a virtual mobil- 
ization of all European manpower 
in Algeria and called’ for more 
  questions to outside arbiters. 
the idea as “part of a long cam- 
paign to obtain exorbitant and in- 
flationary concessions” from auto 
companies. 
* * * 
The UAW and GM and Chrysler 
met in day-long bargaining ses- mass demonstrations in downtown 
Algiers. 
stantine, the main cities of east- 
ern Algeria, 
sions yesterday. Ford and the|to work. 
UAW met for only half a day. * * 
* * * Massu’s men controlled 
The UAW, whose members now 
  
  
e* * * 
Mostly fair and warmer weather 
Was reported from the Rockies to 
the Pacific Coast. 
Thunderstorms roared thro h the Southeast yesterday and wh night with some hail and heavy rains in areas from southeastern 
Alabama through southern Geor- gia and most of Florida, 
T he Weather | Full 0.8. Weather Bureay Report 
PONTIAC ed VICINITY — 
te tent t and mperature   
  
  ehange 
temerrow. Low tenight mest | 
high temerrow car %6 Seuth - cases winds at 5. 13 miles an hour | 
Today in Pontiac \ Lowest temperature Preceding 8 am 
a.m: 
Wester! 
Sun sets Wedassoey at 7:45 pm, 
Sun rises Thursday at 6 1] am. 
oon sets Wednesday at 3°59 p.m. 
Moon rises Thursday at 2 32 a.m - 
vee velocity 16 mph. i 
ppeeneees Tem ears eure 
i 
M.......... 16 
Tuesday | in “Pontiac 
fas recorded downtown) 
chest temperature ....... 20000 ...77 
Lowest temperature 2 ...0.-0 0.005 
Mean temperature 
Weather —Sunny Let 
Pe ee ec ees 
One Year “Age tt in Pontise 
cent pom Ss COCO BOUL OOOO 
temperature. tevnce @acvecs es 
Siean te temperature ....ssees 
Weather—Rain 3. 
Highest and 4 Lowest tT tures 
This Date in 86 Years, direct accusation, ‘but that it 
like a case of a lot of 
therefore there is a possibility of 
some fire. .   DETROIT W—If you ever had|_ 
Mrs, Lynne Vivona of Utica Jost! 
But Salan issued a contrary or-| 
der telling Algerians to go back   
‘ 7 senators fo Probe 
[Detroit Bombings DETROIT (#—A wave of bomb- 
    pro- 
hibition days has attracted the in- 
terest of Senate investigators. 
Staff members of the special in- 
vestigating committee headed by 
Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark) 
said yesterday there may be a link 
between the mysterious dynamit- 
ing of small auto wash racks and 
cleaning and barber shops here 
and the underworld in New York, 
Chicago and Miami. 
The committee, |ooking into 
wrongdoing in the labor-manage- 
ment field, currently is examining 
- evidence that members of the 
Mafia, secret brotherhood of crim- 
inals, has extended its operations 
from the East Coast deep into the 
Middle West. 
The. pattern followed suggests 
  
  of the Downtown Pontiac Assn., presents a new, skimmer to Delos |, Monday night’s blast at a subur- 
Hamlin, chairman of the Oakland County Board ot Supervisors, /Pst, Natel Bark, Sareer ‘aim. 
igre . a 
Explosion in Front of U.S, Embassy haircut. The aren Sens Se kat cut here   
Riots Continue in Lebanon BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)—The harmless explosion of a 
bomb in front of the U.S, Embassy this morning began 
the fifth day of rioting against Lebanon's pro-Western 
government and its American ally. Sending Troops Stirs 
The death toll in rioting in Beirut since Monday 
  reached an estimated 20 persons. It was expected to go rege dae rg gr dae in pliohbrs 
highér. At least 32 other persons have been reported killed [protect Nixon and other Ameri- 
since the trouble began Saturday in the north Lebanese jcans, but hopes they are not 
port of Tripoli. needed. 
Sen. Homer Capehart (R-Ind) 
said he favors doing whatever is 
Early Departure 
Scorned by Nixon. Last evening in a with| Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn) 
; Nixon said it isjand M. Jackson (D-Wash), 
    
    
  
      
  
  
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  Storm in Senate - | 
The government of President Camille Cahmoun was | armed Services Committee, want- 
Seer Mnarens Seely Fema he meets Mareen ed to know if Smathers would 
“close your eyes” it the Venesue- 
a eis distewtamebs dak Mave vosbed thle Cay eustiai lan government failed to protect 
Mediterranean republic subsided again inte sporadic | Nixon and his wife. 
shooting during the curfew last night. With the lifting of “T for one am for protecting 
the curfew shooting increased and mobs returned to the (dignity of the “United States,” 
streets. Bridges said, “I am not for turn- 
4a * * * ing the other cheek.” 
  because of the danger of more winsiams ‘remy thers tum Us — Here ace fear gusam | 
nce, the current news where anti-U.S. feeling is running high. Anti- 
Nixon agreed, but he showed | American rioters stoned Vice President Nixon in Venezuela (*); 
-his displeasure with the govern- French rioters sacked a U.S. Information Service office in Algiers 
ment for falling to protect his | (2); French demonstrators against government policy toward 
party by canceling a dinner for | Algiers threatened to march against U.S. embassy in Paris (3), 
= eet Yo retus- | and rioting continued in Lebanon (4) where two U. S. Information 
week. (ey Bees enerpelan ———————e 
    
BIRMINGHAM — With the out- 
door work season getting into high 
gear, Birmingham City Commis- 
sioners approved the necessity of 
installing a storm sewer on Lake- 
patk drive between Raynale and 
Redding roads, Plans and cost esti- 
mates will be prepared by the en- 
gineering department prior to the 
public hearing on June 9. 
* * * 
Residents at the hearing Monday 
brought up the question of road 
paving. 
of necessity have 
been set for June 2 en the sur- 
facing of Lakeside avenue, Pine 
street, Midland avenue, Lake- 
park drive, and Willow Lane in 
the Quarton Lakes Estate subdi- 
vision. The Redding road paving 
‘will come up at that time without 
plans or estimates. 
thelto the Water Authority Board. 
Mayor Carl Ingraham has ap-| 
pointed William Roberts and Wil-| 
oo 
“Tag Days" =e et 
be offered on a “first come, first 
that no request be made before 60 
days prior to the desired date. 
  
  lLakepark Sonn Somer “ 
Installation Approved 
  | 
ae | t 
served” basis, with the stipulation’ Congregational Church of pict 
at the:church Friday. Mrs, Harri- 
son Goodhue, chairman, and men- 
bers of Circle 2 will be in charge. 
Doors will open at 7:45 a.m. 
  An old fasshioned hoe-<down is 
into an out-of-doors dance hail. 
the dancers through the square 
dances. 
  
Crippled Plane Makes It 
DETROIT ww — A United Air- 
lines DC-7 carrying 61 passengers 
from Los Angeles to Philadelphia 
landed safely at Willow Run Air- 
port Tuesday despite a locked 
brake on one of the main landing 
gears. One of the tires blew out 
just before the plane came to a 
stop. No one was injured. 
    ham will sponsor a rummage sale) 
Don Parry, local caller, plus an’ 
unnamed guest caller, wil] direct 
  | 
|    
      
   
             
     
      MAYNARD BAKER Optician  ¢ 
Manager of Nu-Vision Op- 
tical Co. for many. years 
here in Pontiac has an- 
neunced that he is leaving 
NurVision t®. open his own 
optical company. - He plans 
on locating here in the city. 
The time of opening and lo- 
il be announced 
later. He- welcomes all: his 
friends whom he was able 
to serve in the past to come 
in and see him when he 
opens his new 
  
        
         
          
        
   
    
        
     
      working . 
ever before! 
20% increase . 
Call it what you will! 
i) 
most discriminating! 
increasing! 
done it.” 
co 
eater:   O.K., IKE!! Harwood is cooperating! We are doing our share 
to keep our economy sound . 
BIGGER VALUES! We are giving our customers bi 
That's the reason 
. . April ‘58 over April ‘57!! 
DISCOUNT ?? Harwood’s prices on men’s. 
suits—starting at $39.75 are RIGHT! 
and see for yourself—the superb fabrics, the fine 
tailoring — the correct styling—will satisfy the 
INCREASING!! Harwood’s list of new suit customers is constantly 
Each satisfied customer tells another 
that “‘ohly Harwood can do it—and Marwood has 
Deluxe Tuxedo Rental Service Pontiac's Finest for Proms, Weddings. eic. 
SPECIAL FOR SHORT TIME ONLY 
Coats retaflored to smart single 19" Pee ee eetew aoe eee Ce diane soseege . « to keep people 
er values than 
larwood had a 
Come in 
        
  
representatives. | PAYING for a MORTGAGE 
Is EASIER Than Paying RENT! 
  Our PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS open end conventional Mortgages include in their monthly beyane Interest, Prinei- 
pal, Taxes and Insurance. 
Each time you make a payment your equity i in your property, 
increases in value. Each monthly payment is a sound invest- 
ment in your family’s future. Home ownership is the American 
way of life. Over 70% of the people of Michigan are now home- 
owners. We can make it’easy for you too, to own your home 
. . . come in and talk with one of our friendly, courteous 
WE SPECIALIZE IN a LOANS 
CURRENT > Ye 
All Savings Accounts Insured up to $10,000 
by an Agency of the U. 8. Government e 
WE PURCHASE LAND CONTRACTS. 
Pontiac Federal Serine 
Home Office: RATE ON SAVINGS 
    OPEN Mon. thru Fri. 8 A. M. to GO teak OPEN Mohday Thru Saturday « Rochester Branch: 5:30 P.M. Sat. 8 A. M. te Noon HARDWARE 9 ALM. to 9 PLM, , 3 ul a; 407 Main St, \ oe Sano i \ [ ea : f 
J ; : ’ | ’ \ \ > \ 4 3 , ‘ / “, . \\ z * . { 1 7 . . ; ‘ 
\ aa 
    
  
  
         = - . ae | Sorat a = Be See eS 5. mo tere are eect Sve anmnene sremaelre gre  Fin f z E) oes ¥* i e Seg 3 | won j eS . 7 De ; . ; a beh ce : A ‘ 3 ‘ee s i * 
Fr | pon, “aie 2 ¥ = ex { os Pee \ bis | . “— + * > ; ae Bae. ee ee attain | 5 . <a % : «| . : a . a : ‘ # \ 1 ’ : : ae . uh es ez ’ “ ry bd ‘ : : 
4 \ © 5 : x é Be ' 5 ae e “# . 1 : Pe \ - ee “ . ; . a t ty eer * : : q 4 . % « * 4 : e 3 F bs 
\ . : * rT : ee : 4 FA j : 
%, < . ¢ . f 5 By $ . <. a ; 
= ; . . = z . aoe 2 oy a iy 4 4 . Ff * } vie) 4 a ae 
  
  
    
We Give 
  
  HOLDEN 
RED STAMPS One for Every Dime You Spend   
    
   
      
     
            
    
    
      Libby's 
FROZEN 
STRAWBERRIES a 4 10 Oe. $7 00 
  
ORANGE 
JUICE 
Evaporated 
PET 
MILK Safe for Baby's Formula © 
3 a | by | Libby's Frozen   
  
     
= SAVE 55° =: cams WITH THIS COUPON ile fr pees . WITH THIS COUPON. 
WESTON’ Ss TOP TASTE RANCH STYLE 
CRACKERS © Thick Sliced Bacon 
215° 225 = Redeem this Coupon at NATIONAL FOOD STORES. Coupon Redeem this Coupon et NATIONAL FOOD STORES. Coupon 
expires Seturdey, Mey 17. Limit 1 Coupon per family. This expires Seturdey, Mey 17. Limit 1 Coupon per family. This 
Coupon hes no cash value. Coupon hes no cosh value. WITH THIS COUPON 
Page & Cox Grade “A" Lerge, White 
  Top Taste Ranch Style Thick Sliced 
Weston's Saltine 
ade i= “= - BACON 2 2: eal _ = EGGS 2. se 
      =z: : a ros —- “2 : 
4 » - - * ; = cy 
ae | i> th: - 7 , . v 
4 : ‘y + * 
cs le Ee: fae c-3 ‘ “404 " 
- — 
7 
» Swift's S Shortening 
| SWIFT'NING.   
    
   "> 3 Chats Dati 4 Yellow: Quorténs 
‘SWIFTS CHEESE | TOPTASTE DIXIE PR PRIDE Oia | SPREAD | | MAR | @ BISCUITS” 7 
#59: 10° Swift’s Luncheon Meat 
PREM 2-89 Peanut Butter 3 ‘len $42 Stokely Peas 2 2 “c. _ 3 3° 
American Deluxe Imitetion Strewberry Americon Deluxe 4A Or. 49: 
PRESERVES = '* 39° GRAPE JAM             
    
  
    
    RED SALMON ‘= 59° instantCoffee ‘* 97° 
American Deluxe 
  
  
  ‘arn CHUCK ROAST Cut and trimmed the 
National Value Way 
to give you more ~   
       
meat, less waste for 
your money. 
  
     
  ROMAN 
CLEANSER) 
  . All Purpese 
CLOROX BLEACH 
  223    Lb. Netionel’s Lean end Sweet—Family Size 
     oo r 3 , Smoked Piomles . 39: 
  
Yon Camp’ s * xa 
} a 
we 
7 BONELESS BEEF Ib. Pork Chops ». 49: 
National's Lean, Tenderized Beef . Veal Legs ua 79: 
ISTEAKETTES = (9 ecricnic Cornish Hens 2 TQ 
National’s Rindless, suger yered 7 Whole or Half Benunschwet er . 59: 
{SLAB BACON O05 Shine = 69   
      | Ripe Olives Mt. Whitney Guest 
  Nedishen Towthouss Hand Soap Scouring Pads Liquid Detergent Swift's "OZ" 1. Rug Cleaner 
Crackers | Boraxo | Chore Girl | White Wave| Peanut Butter) Glamorene | 
              at ae 
  #35: | e2h | 525 | 2 6% | 351] ~~ 91 
    _ THE PONTIAC PRESS. i a er = | _— aes SEVENTEEN, ioe 
        
  
  
       
  
    wr * ae ‘legal : : rr aN 
ae t J & . 7 ws _ ‘i s . = | “ is ; -_ 
_THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1056 
Retailers Anxious to Clear Decks fa °59 7 Red Ss helion’ s tour last summer, ‘The .Skeltons| made by the body in “several |the Commisson and serve without:   
Now’s the Best Time to Purchase Car; 
Dealers Wont Cut Prices Any Lower 
By DAVID J. WILKIE 
AP Automotive Editor 
DETROIT w — If you need a 
uew car, Bow is the time to buy it. 
That may sound like a promotion 
pitch. It isn’t. It’s’ a suggestion 
that could save you a couple of 
hundred dollars or more. 
WANT TO SELL 
Retailers across the country 
have about 777,000 new cars om 
hand. They want to sell every one 
of them before the 1959 models 
come out... That means they are 
in a bargaining mood, They will 
-sell at any price that leaves a 
reasonable margin of profit. 
Because of production eyts 
dealer inventories are declining. 
There will be further cuts during 
the remainder of the present 
model year. The cuts will re- 
duce the dealer inventories to | 
the point where distress selling | 
may be avoided in the final 
weeks of the model period. 
The industry is forecasting a 
normal cleanup of outgoing mod- 
els. That would avoid the wild, 
below-cost selling of other model 
yearends. 
TALK CONSIDERABLE 
There has been considerable 
talk about the industry holding 
the price line or even cutting 
prices on 1959 models. But the 
talk has been solely among per- 
sons who believe they know the | 
answer to most of the industry's 
problems. 
The car makers eee said any 
cost increases, especially in 
wages, will bring price increases, 
Aside from production cost in- 
creases there is a huge invest- 
ment, estimated at 1!) billion 
dollars in new model design, to | 
be amortized. 
Business will have to get worse 
than it is now before there will be 
any substantial price slashing at 
the manufacturing level. So, if 
you are waiting for a price cut 
amounting to more than the dis- 
, counts presently obtainable at 
retail, you are likely to be dis- 
appointed. 
DEALERS BARGAIN low those put on the 1958 cars. gain with you too, about the excise 
* 
Some intending new car buyers 
are. waiting“ for 1959 models. 
They have read that the change- 
over from current models will 
begin earlier this year. Indica- 
tions are most makers will wind 
up the 1958 model year earlier, 
but that dees not commit them 
te ‘earlier introduction of next 
year’s cars. 
The shutdowns could be extend- 
ed, They have been in other years. 
They will be this year if retailers 
need more time to, liquidate out- 
going models. - 
The industry carried approx- 
imately 100,000 outgoing models 
into the 1958. model year.. They 
had to be sold at prices well. be- 
They competed: with the “new 
models for several months. 
The industry's self - imposed   e 
avoiding this situation again this. 
year, The first step, of course, 
is to make sure there is no need 
for the circus-type of merchan- 
dising. © 
Promotion stunts that offered 
new cars at ‘“‘only a few dollars 
above factory invoice,’ were com- 
mon in the 1955 and 1956 cleanup 
periods. There were some in late 
1957. They generally were unprofit- 
able to retailers. 
  
12 Americans Aboard 
Ship Aground on Reef 
KONG KONG (®#—Twelve Amer- 
ican passengers are 
aboard the U.S. freighter Presi- 
dent Hayes, aground on a coral} 
reef in the Paracel Islands 400) 
miles southeast of Kong Kong. 
The American President Line 
ship also carries 59 crewmen un- 
der Capt, O. A, Larson, all Amer- 
icans. ‘Mother Sees Son, 
reported | Friend Die in Crash | 
PETOSKEY, Mich, ® — A 
horrified mother stood “dumb- 
son and another airman crashed 
in their small plane and burned 
to death before her eyes el 
day, 
“They waved to us when hey 
got about 50 feet in the air,” 
said Mrs, Geneva Allen. “Then, 
when the plane was about 100 
feet up it nosed over and dived 
right into our field. I could see 
them in the cabin and I couldn’t 
get close enough to help them 
because the plane was ao up.” 
« * * * 
Dead are Airman 1.C, Melvin 
Allen, whose parents the two 
were visiting near here, and Air- 
man 2.C, Jonathan Lincoln of 
Great Neck, N, Y., the pilot. 
Both were stationed, at Wurt- 
smith AFB, Oscoda, Mich. 
  The platypus, rarely seen out- 
side its native Australia, is duck- 
billed, web-footed, fur-bearing, 
water-dwelling, egg-laying, young- 
      suckling and poison-spined. founded and helpless” while her. Son Eulogized 
as Friend of Pope 
HOLLYWOOD  — The body of Red Skelton’s %year-old son was 
laid to rest with this eulogy: 
“A president (Eisenhower) and 
4a pope were his friends. Hundreds| 
of thousands of men, women’ and) 
children who had never seen him 
were his friends, Surely then, this 
was a special child who had 
touched so many lives.” 
* * * 
Many celebrities were among 
the crowd of 1,000 who turned out 
yesterday for the simple Protest- 
ant funeral rites for Richard Skel- 
ton. The youngster died Saturday 
night after a 16-month illness of 
leukemia. 
Parker, Vincent Price, Hugh 
O'Brian, Johnny Weissmuller and 
Max Baer, ex-heavyweight boxing 
champion. All are family friends. 
* * * 
Pope Pius XII sent a personally 
blessed crucifix. It was entombed 
with the body. 
The Pope met Richard when 
      Skelton took him on a European Among those present were Fess; are not Catholic. 
* * * 
- The eulogy, written by Gene 
Fowler, was delivered by another 
close friend of the family, actor 
William Lundigan. 
* * * ‘years at least.” 
— The Commissioner, Milton R. 
Henry, said the FEPC’s activities| ° 
“are of great interest to the peo- | 
ple in my district and they would 
like to know what the board is 
doing.” pay:   
  coffin was lifted into the hearse} 
voted his life to making people 
tears. 
  
‘Commission Orders 
FEPC to Report 
Pontiac’s Fair Employment 
Practices Commission has been 
ordered by the City Commission to 
‘cent activities. 
Manager Walter K. Willman last 
chairman, 
but one Commissioner observed 
  Skelton broke down when the) 
for the procession to the mauso- 
leum, The comedian who has de-' 
laugh made no attempt to hide his. 
make a routine report on its re-| 
The order was given to City | 
night to pass en to the FEPC | 
Irving Steinman. No | 
criticism of the FEPC was made, |   FEPC members are apenas by ve =e 
SPECIAL ALL THIS. WEEK 
HALF SOLES$ 4 79   
  
e MEN'S e WOMEN'S 
@ CHILDREN'S e 
Genuine Oak Leather or 
  aa PR. ATT. Durable Composition as 
LADIES’ LIFTS| RUBBER HEELS Prime Leather or Composition Men's e Women’s e Children’s   
    FRESH 
SPIKE SPRINGY 
OR SMALL C Go. Cc 
certs | CROWN ONLY tes} RUBBER 
PR. ATT. “ 2-o HEELS opp qT 
WHILE U WAIT OR SHOP SERVICE 
NEISNER SHOE REPAIR At Rear of Main Floor         production control is aimed at that no formal report had been     
THE BIG EVENT THAT ALL 
PONTIAC HAS BEEN 
WAITING FOR! 
   
      Most dealers probably will bar- | 
  
  WOMEN’S 
Black & White 
  -CHILDREN’S 
BAREFOOT 
SANDAL 
Brown 
    
PANCAKE 
Sizes 
4to9 
    NEISNER | 
Shoe. Store| | |. 
4 — 
in the Basement 
     
                 
       
        
    
2 tor 1.50 
band front, ———turquotve, send. Sizes 7 . te 4 
All Steel 
6.98 
Value 33 
Heavy Duty 
IRONING BOARD PAD. 
83° Washable POPLIN © 
SLIM JIMS 
77° 
Senforised, elastic back, 
Black, red, 
Adjustable 
IRONING BOARDS     
  
ors. 
White, 
ee nage 
   3 
re e for Ri brooches, neck- 
aet.8 ee lec, breoplets, pameeee Cc 1ét quality, Assorted satin pat- 
- astic brief, end ~ ed ak “det plus tox * , : or w " x + 
legs. Wie pie pink, blue, mach oa “expensive ied mint, cof loo! 
  _ Machine washable, 
Se Cone bared coliers. ce, jewe or 
nailhead trims on tin. Reg. 
en weave rayon, 
maize. Sites 32- x. 
| Women 
PANTIES 
Sizes 5, 6, 7 ‘ ° DRIP-DRY COTTON DRESSES 
55 
womer's sieeveiess BLOUSES & 
VT: ‘fast col- 
‘an or Johnny 
pink, blue, 
2 for 
    REMEMBER -— ~ Everything You Buy at i 
Neisner’s Is Guaranteed - ‘s, “ Sleeveless or cap sleeves, Some full 
coat styles. Prints and novelty stripes 
that look much more expensive. 
12 to 20. Half sizes 164/, to 249. - 
ay PLA 
Costume 
JEWELRY   
Sizes 
> 
1.50 
‘Girls’ 2 e- 61 EEPERS 
AN Te ¢ ironing necessary. As- 
, sorted prints, 
Sizes 4 to 14 
Reg. 1,00 
  Reg. 3% 
and RINGS Plisse crepe. Guaran- 
teed washable. 
Children's Boxer 
Y SHORTS 
     BIG 
SPORT 
= or smell figures. Short sleeves. 
i medium, large. , 
No 
and dark colors. One 
SALE! Men's 
color fast Cotton 
A Terrific Value! Cotton plaids, checks 
Men's Nylon Stretch 
ANKLE SOX Long - y eed comfortable. As- 
sorted fancy patterns. Both - 
10-13. Reg. 39 pares ) 
            oa 
1T’x1T” Men's White Setin Stripe 
HANDKERCHIEFS 
310-77:  NEISNER’S- $1 — VARIETY ST 
    
      
              
    VALUE 
      SHIRTS \¢/4 eA 
      
      
    
          
    
        
      
       
             
         
  Small, 
   
  Sizes 8 to 16. 
Attractive prints or plaids. Short sleeves, 
‘Large selection to choose from. 
      Misses’, Women's 
and Children's 
Nylon Stretch * 
ANKLE SOX . 
3-73" Reg. 1.00 
One Size fits: sizes 6 to a, 
One size fits: sizes 9 to 11 
White, pink, 
blue, maize       
    
     size 
a 
a 
      
         
               
2 i i maaan 
    
    Ea 
= = 
     
     
   
      - MBS, JACOB BAYMA 
"Mrs. Jacob (Mary) Bayma, 639, 
of 1018 Premont Ave. died yester- 
day morning of a heart attack in 
“Saratoga Hospital, Detroit. She 
was ill more than a year. 
Surviving are a daughter and 
three sons, George of Richmond, 
Benjamin of Pontiac, Mrs. Irene 
Parrish and Chester Bayma, both) 
of Detroit; a brother and a sister, 
and 10 grandchildren. 
~ Prayers will be said at 9 a.m. 
Friday in the Harold Glenn Fu- 
neral Home, 1370 E. Seven Mile 
Rd., Detroit. Service will follow 
at 9:30 a.m. in the St. Louis 
Church, Seven Mile at St. Louis 
street with burial in Mt. Olivet 
Cemetery. 
MES. THOMAS J. SMITH 
Mrs. Thomas J, (Ermina Maude) 
Smith, of 223 Elm St. died yester- 
day after an illness of several 
days. She was 82. 
Surviving are her husband; three|!y Tuesday morning at his home. 
daughters and two sons, Iva Smith 
of California, Mrs. Isabelle Lilley- 
man of San Diego, Calif, Mrs. 
two great-grandchildren 
Her body is at the Dudley H. “| Surviving are one son, Orrin| 
nj Romeo, and Mrs. Edward Neu- 
.|man of Rochester. 
_|C. Leist, 68, of 4086 W. Commerce    = eee 
, ey Nes 
La 
      
Shoemaker; a brother, Roy Hos-) 
ner and three grandchildren, all of 
Romeo. ei 
MRS, ELMER HAMILTON 
OXFORD — Committal service 
will be held at 7 tonight in the 
Bossardet-Mabley Funeral Chapel 
in Oxford for Mrs, Elmer (Min- 
nie) Hamilton, a former Oxford 
resident, She was fatally injured 
Sunday in an auto accident near 
Onaway. * 
Service was held at 1 p.m. 
today at the Carr Funeral Home 
in Onaway. 
FRANK W. KLEINHANS 
ROMEO — Service for Frank 
W. Kleinhans, 77, of 150 W. Hol- 
lister St., will be held at 1 p.m. 
tomorrow at Roth's Home for 
Funerals with burial in Romeo 
Cemetery. 
’ Mr. Kleinhans died unexpected- 
A fruit grower, he had lived in 
Romeo for 65 years. Pontiac and Nearby Areas | Mr. Sutton died Monday. night 
at his home. 
A lifetime resident of Oakland 
County, he fs survived by his wife, 
Erma; a son, Raymond of Gabbs, 
Nev.; a sister, Mrs. Hugh Stack 
of Holly; a brother, Ellis of 
Cleveland, and two grandchildren. 
Deaths Elsewhere   
a column, ‘‘Among the Folks,” for 
the Blade. 
fe * * 
WINNIPEG, Man, (#—Lewis St. 
George Stubbs, 79, removed as 
Manitoba Surrogate Court judge 
in 1933 after being found guilty 
of judicial misconduct, died Mon- % THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 14.'1958 
  
  WH INSTRUCTIONS: AT'S MY LINE? . Bach word is reloted to my work. Un- 
scramble as few os possible to guess my line. - Answer 
appears under crow, reading downward. : : 
| AM AN Pee ees eens & HE 
    
  
  
  
  
  
          
        
        
  iNform, 
© ‘What's My Line,Inc. skill, editor, Scoop, criTic. divUlge, repoRt, pAper, 
    
« 
  
  ‘Sky Party’ Planned the Cranbrook -Institute of Sci- 
ence; Bloomfield Hills. 
Portable telescopes will be set 2 Ask Examination 
in Bad Check Case       OKs Budget for Detroit [The new budget called for no in. crease in the current tax rate. It 
DETROIT — Mayor Louis|calis for, tax supported expendi- 
Tuesday approved the city/tures of $124,741,232 at a tax rate 
budget for the 1958-59 fiscal year./of $24.938 on each $1,000.   
when arraigned before West 
Bloomfield Township Justice Elmer 
C. Dieterle on a charge of passing 
a worthless $50 check in a Dray- 
ton Plains supermarket. 
In the Oakland County jail be- 
cause they couldn't post $10,000) 
and $2,500 bonds, respectively, 
were John Bradley, 28, and Mrs. 
Bradley. car. 
Barry said seven $50 checks had 
been passed in the Detroit area 
last week by the pair, with. the 
one in Drayton Plains included. | 
This one was printed by Bradley) 
former Detroit Chevrolet dealer he) 
  
       
       
    
  for Certain Lin¢oln Head Pennies 
TOLEDO, Ohio (—Fred L. Mol- «J —_ R. Hoover, 26, both of De- Do you sert your change at cashier's or at the grocer’s? 
lenkopf 70, city editor of the To- gree Oaldand County Prose- You have perhaps found or handled a valuable United States 
ledo Blade from 1926 to 1949 and 1 MAXICL K J ty id the | coin. Just to illustrate: Certain Indian Head Pennies are worth 
former managing editor of the old og Cutor Jerome F. Barry Jr. eavillac|| 9600 each; Certain Lincoln Head Pennies, $100 each; Nickels, 
Toledo NewsBee, died Tuesday parol rai ere ine oP i ececered(f $7900 each; Dimes, $2,500 each; Quarters, $2,500 each; Half- 
after suffering a series of strokes + Nona items foe srenadadle Dollars, $3,250 each; Silver Dollars, $2.500 each. Their date 
i itten s for producing fraudulent it “does not imply great uity as certain coins minted 
See ieee rue ee eee Ceci [seed desvere) Eceneas) = Se as recently at Abs Soa EO Ten Dellsrs each, the reason 
on a form bearing the name of aj - WE PAY 
$100.00 EACH 
    
  
Two brothers, James of Mount 
Clemens and Ernest of Richmond, 
also survive. 
WILLIAM C. LEIST 
MILFORD ‘TOWNSHIP—William 
  Cemetery.   
  
  g 
ae kek 
: EE a 
3 Ff 3 
  
Pontiac Jaycees to Elect   
11958 Officers Tonight 
The Pontiac Area Junior Chamber 
of Commerce will vote tonight on 
  because it’s 
CROW & ‘LIGHT + MILD 
86 PROOF 
647, 
  THE OLD CROW DISTILLERY CO., FRANKFORT, 1958 officers. Two candidates are 
running for president: Clyle R. 
Haskill, owner of the C. R. Haskill 
photographic studio, and Donald E. 
Five other position also will be 
filled. The meeting will begin at 
7 p.m. at Scrib’s Restaurant, 130 
S. Telegraph Rd, 
Find Chemist's Body 
GAYLORD (INS) — A missing 
57-year-old Dow Chemical chemist 
was found dead today on company 
property near here. State police 
said Gabriel Hittrich of Midland, 
had been shot through the head 
with a 12-gauge shotgun found 
near the body, ‘Troopers called 
Hittrich’s death a suicide and said 
he had been despondent over poor 
health. Hittrich had been missing   
  WENTUCKY. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY since Saturday.     a / 
Ds If 
/anti-knock ‘ 2 I 
‘ TCP \ adds — 
7ti- iiss   
to \ “Get rid of Spark Plug ‘Miss- 
greatest cause of power loss. 
Put your car in 
this spot’ 
    Many Excellent Opportunities 
are available for well-trained young 
men and women in business, profes- 
sional, and government offices. 
PREPARE for one of these positions by 
enrolling in either Day, Half-Day or . 
Evening School. SUBJECTS included 
in all courses have PRACTICAL appli- 
tion to the business office. 
  
  h¢ Approved for Veterans’ Training - > 
* 
The Business Institute 
7 West Lawrence Street, Pontiac FE 2-3551 
Call in Person. Phone or Return This Ad With Your Name and \ 
Address for Our Bulletin.     
    
          today’s maj@r cause of power loss, 
spark plug “miss.” TCP additive does 
this by neutralizing harmful combus- 
tion deposits—and so restores 20 to 30 
lost horsepower! . F YOU'RE LOOKING for the power 
] your engine once had on hills and 
on getaways, now’s the time to make 
your moye—over to the white Super 
Shell pump. - 
  Super Shell has an aviation “power 
pack” to provide the higher octane 
needed to prevent knock. But in to- 
day's engines anti-knock alone is not 
enough. . What's more, Super Shell’s aviation 
ingredients provide extra combustion 
energy that converts automatically to 
extra miles in every tankful. 
Switch to Super Shell with TCP 
That’s why there’s TCP* in Super today. 
Shell to restore full power by ending *Ghell's Trademark for thie 
edditive developed by Stoll Reoeceeke 
ell wi uper 
The most powerful gasoline any car can use—Plus | ! : | Hae ae fer 4 { 
{    h TCP 
| @ 2 . we Ni 4 “s \ or 4 
{ 3 4 a DS rice i a v\; ef ui yee eee gy day. His removal came in the|by Local Astronomers used to work for, Barry said. Phin ee his — — ae of a legal and political ca- Y _ | UP so that members an. visitors y te the Viroqua Coin Co. Dept. BA-242, 
@ sons, James, Edmund reer that made his name known! Tomorrow night,. the Pontiac-| will be able to obseve Jupiter and) First elevated transport line built! 
;|Raymond, all of Romeo, Clare of| 46. Canada. He was born in|Northwest Detroit Astronomer’s| Saturn following a business meet-|in New York in 1867 was a finan- 
ee ee ee es posed Turks Island, British West Indies.| Assn. will hold a “sky party” ating which will begin at‘8 p.m. 'cial failure. : — 
Page, Mrs. Myrtie Kulow and 
Mrs. Mary Werderman, all of ; 
      
     
     
(33441418 
    
    
  
Use Regular Grade? 
Get the one with TCP _ 
Now Shell Regular Gasoline gives 
you the benefits of TCP, plus higher 
octane than the finest premiums of 
only a short time ago. 5 
# < : : f 
— 
    i   
i sf CP ‘for Anti-Miss |. |   
      
  
  
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    again was|Aprist Roners apy vic". Northern Apples, Steele ahs disses Seseed 
Trade had become very slow] . vnanvastue 
toward the end of the first hour. 
At that time wheat was 1% cent/asparagus, (bchs.) dos. ...sesse.s08 
| higher to \y% lower, May $2.17%; —_ bu. eae ecencerenere o 
| May Seierz , -4 AGOB.D coves teoeeee wanes 
| $1.25%; .oats unchanged to 4% lower, hives, FOE Se Dad ope 4 
May 64; rye % to % higher, May|Lects ioches)” dos. s'..cccscsssss 2 
& 
a 
s 
= AEF BOND. onic renew svuencs 
Root, (behs.) GOB. cevcccrsee 
eeenee 
  a hundred ibs lower to 3 cents| heart buts ae Ee 
higher, May $12.65. 
  Kale, bu. «cena ucnddagaceuascostases 
Grain Prices Spinach, bu wert i) iy) 
* Se 
CHICAGO, May (ne * Opening rr May 13. (AP) f, 0. b. grains Ditde wchalek’ tobe 
May * us May = a Whitee—Orade 4 jum 40; exten tates 
= lecneeesa I seas 42-43, wtd. avg. 42! verge, ; wed. 
a. opeers it = cipessed st avg. 4144; medium 3-31; “3 aie 
Dee. srsoree b U | ee oe. F 
amar, 5... EO Bie «-.--.-- BF 1. etd eva, 44s large Gi; medium May ..s.60-+ Lom Bep. . iis” 3s. Gente © e. 
Jly 1.29% Dee ...:..:5 i Checks avg. 31%. 
Bees Sct! Hig aay Sse. 129 Whites: Grade Ah large 28-29; medium Mar. . ee Ll eters 52 tied . A I 
Pha» a adel A, large 38-30%; me 
Lodge Calendar Poultry Cedar 
Lodge No, 0, F & AM, © 
News in Brief ~ Ledge Wo, OF. & AM, Clareston, DETROIT, May 13 ( “paid A. degree. — Prank ‘Vargo, W.M.|per pound Pay a ee a a Pst? mm, Tomatoes, hothouse, § Ib, (bskt) .. GRkens 
  
% 
18. 4 26. lings   
land Ave., pleaded guilty to Livestock 
West Bloomfield Township Justice 
Elmer C. Dieterle, Tuesday, and|™ 
paid a fine of $85 plus $5 costs. 
: 1230 Ib. steers commissioner, reported to Pontiac) S7%¢* 22 mS ft AL parked 
eral Hospital. It is valued at 
The Longfellow School, 
Astor St., was entered by lil Med [ | Rummage Gale : Church, W. Maple, B’ham, Thurs., "May ish 9 to 5, and Pri, May; 9 to 12. 
Rummage Sale -- Fri, May 16 8 
_ Caneeh. a wodene 
Fri., May 16th, 10 to 12, 
$2. Stores, t Insures fur 
George’s-Newport’s, 74 N. —, ber 1957. 
Sale — Youth Center, 
Lake Orion, Pri. & Sat. — adv 
Airline Adds Flights   TEE sac ttie-Anlable 290 Ray trode, sei 2 oe, ot Oe to. etl   
New York Stocks. 
(Late Morning Quotations) wee 
DETROIT LIVESTOCK 
DETROIT, May 13 (AP) (USDA) — 
rly trade slaugh- 
                  wrasse 
Caveenue ofS 
a5 =z Ss = 2 - 
eee 
= 
  
  
44"I Seles -Climbing Steadily ‘for Studebaker-Packard gs, 
the 
Rummage Sale — Stevens Hall,|45, period, while truck sales rose 
  
Petrillo Plans to Retire 
NEW YORK ( — American Air-| Tetire in June as 
  
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ee weenaesewi? NEW YORK (INS)—James C. soystessss emo 
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Pontiac City Affairs   
To Air M24 Project e A public hearing will be held 
Tuesday on city plans to join with| night. 
the State Highway Department in 
widening HIE bce wll [res BG 
assie 8 1 j sf 
i! s 8 
is 
5 
‘ Eg 
: 
ments. ey One Se tan ae 
x *« & year, the other is to be this 
  
Se ee i re a ee a ee ey “* oe *« . . ee. * 
SRSRSSAPsstocesargsts on 3 ania 
  
    
              
   
        
             
       © NEW PURCHASES 425 to #500 
or on other plans 
purpose come to General 
your 
COME IN + PHONE + WRITE on your name only 
To get cash for vacations or 
for arly other worthwhile 
  
     conronation 
. 69 West Huron Street Federal 3-7191 
       
HSaresenSHy SSS On oOvwoau 
  
2 Pontiac Men Injured 
r Cars Collide 
  3 Alert Officers - Nab Two Men 
in Stolen Auto . 
” Fast thinking on the part of three 
Pontiac police officers led. to the 
- NEW YORK « — The Stocklarrest of two men. last night in a 
  stolen auto. 
Wondering what a driver would 
weather, the officers gave chase 
on Pike and down Marshall street. 
The pair jumped from their car 
and ran between houses but were 
apprehended at the~ corner of 
Michigan and North Edith streets. 
Held for investigation of auto 
theft are Daniel C. Polasek, 21, 
of 245 Nelson St. and Gerald L. 
Spencer, 19, of 40 Clarence St. 
The two admitted stealing the 
car from Rogers Sales and Service, 
ppediaitferent license plates for it, 
Losses were taken by U.S. Steel,/py an Oakland County Sheriff’ 
Chrysler, Radio Corp., cueerma lee = - deputy in Auburn Heights. 
Death Brushes 
Family of Five They Barely Escape as 
Midnight Fire Destroys 
Waterford Home   
  
Wilsons Finally 
Able to Thank 
City Commission 
  from an extended vacation. S | | P passe EAL | ESTATE : 
wane ce ron) OC! | Er | Saye roe the had s still bea: . 
about it, ie sest, cand es pease Tor meebo mig hip only knoe tg , tion hag remained unnoticed in ses 
his. brief ease ever since. S Funeral Directors 
years L 
wert certelety tagret ® be: FUNERAL HOME 1 
cause theirs was such a wonderful 
gift to this area and we were Donelson-Jo s 
case a resolution thanking ' . Primate : Are 
“Ana I ra ; PHOU gaa! alle me : and 
nme Voorhees-S Cost Estimating Man : FUNERAL HOM A tor 
s LE 
lLate. City Inspector =e eee ae fas | SD . _ The Pontiac Press Sara 
The late Harvey L. Stout has 
reindeer || Sel econ) i ae as ! 
  
  want with gloves in the warm), ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1958 aa ears. 3° 
Probation, $25 Costs Vehicle Production 
[Down 186 in 1 Week  DETRORS (INS) — U. S manv| - 
facturers motor vehicles 
  
Steel Output Gaining 
‘ DETROIT (# — Iron Age mag- 
azine says steel output in the De- 
troit area is expected to reach 
about about 51,680 tons or 38 per 
cent of capacity this week. Area 
steel mills operated at 85 per -cent 
of capacity this week last year. 
Production last week was 45,832 San Francisco 
to Get $50,000 . 
for Not Farming 
ties were fully informed of the 
facts and still wanted the city to 
  tons or 33.7 per cent of capacity. cS, 
* 
  
ms 
  
* + by the Wayne County Board of|* The land is south of the city|Supervisors. Lane 
           
__ Cemetery Lots 5 Help Wanted Female 7) W     
_ |_Death Notices | sengoge sais caret   
  
  A Watertord Township tamily of 
"sa.4\tive barely escaped death as they 
‘\fled from their blazing home in 
‘ltheir nightclothes at midnight last 
    
NOr AZPre 
    
  
  
      
  
  
z Ww. 
officiating. Interment in 
Cemetery- Baby Lind   
    
  
  
  
IN LOVING ORY 
hus! and father, 
who d 
     
         
  
  
      
          
  
5 Work Wanted Female 11   
PE _ bist) RVIC’ SERVICE, #3 
* RONTINC owes G 
up ver, 
ce ie oe 7 
  
  
  
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ee! with S tees desire to make 
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rticulars write 
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