A eet a A tte ONC gf PO AOIAe The Weather 
Warm 
Details page two   
  
113th YEAR * *& & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1955—44 PAGES ASSOCIATED. PRESS PREss PHOTOS 
INTERNATIONAL MEWe SERVICE 
  
     
ENGLAND'S ENTRY — Shapely Margaret Rowe, the 19-year-old Tops for Popularity 
s. Drop German Unity Iss   
Indict CIO-UAW 
Over Political 
Activity in ‘54 
Charges Law Violated 
in Use of Union Funds 
DETROIT (?) —A federal 
grand jury today indicted 
the CIO United Auto Work- 
ers Union on charges of 
violation of the federal cor- 
rupt practices act in poli- 
tics. 
The grand jury accused 
the big union of using gen- 
eral union funds to finance 
politiical activities in the 
1954 congressional cam- 
paign. 
This was the campaign in which 
Patrick V. McNamara, Democrat 
supported by the UAW and other 
labor groups, defeated U. S. Sen. AP Wirephoto 
  Miss England who is described as having the kind of figure sailors | Homer Ferguson, Republican. 
whistle at, holds the trophy she w 
the most popular girl in the parade of Miss Universe contestants. The 
parade was witnessed by half a million people. Preliminary selection | 
of a Miss U. S. A. who will compete against foreign beauties began | 
last night. 
Miss New Mexico Near 
U.S.A. Title; on at Long Beach, Calif., for being | A weekly union-sponsored radio 
| program was involved in a grand 
jury investigation of charges 
brought by the Michigan Repub- 
|lican Central Committee. 
dohn Feikens, committee 
chairman, filed the charges with 
the Justice Department last 
March. 
The indictment named only the 
union itself, None of its officers, World Next 
LONG BEACH, Calif. (? — Miss New Mexico, whose 
every little wiggle spells out sex appeal, emerged today 
as the morning line favorite to be crowned Miss U.S.A. 
. But there will be luscious competition from all 14 other 
Soviet Visitors 
Head for School Russian Farm Experts 
Fill Up on American |     
Arkansas, California, Colo- 
rado, Florida, Georgia, Illi- 
nois, Nebraska, New York) 
City, New York State, South 
Carolina, Texas, Vermont, | 
Washington and Wiscon- 
sim « 
Brown - eyed Joan Schwartz, a 
Chicken, Corn crowd-pleaser as the American 
beauties paraded before judges 
= : r¢) _. and an audience of 3,000. She got CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (INS) = epplowe than Miso! 
Russia's jolly 12-man farm dele- Iowa, the state where half of Long 
gation, filled with chicken and Beach came from. (Miss Iowa was | 
corn from a hog farm and “tum-/ eliminated.)   coed from Albuquerque, was the who include CIO President Walter 
Reuther, was named. Reuther is 
also president of the UAW-CIO. 
Organized labor took a large role 
in the 1954 campaign. The UAW 
and other labor groups were 
| among the strongest supporters of | National PGA qualifying round, at 
They .are the Misses) McNamara in opposition to the in-| noon, there were few better than 
cumbent Ferguson. 
The grand jury inquired into the 
financing of the UAW’s weekly 
sponsored program, “Meet the 
UAW<C10,” over WJBK-TV, De- 
troit. Guy Nunn of the union is 
moderator_of the program. 
The indictment, containing four 
counts, charges the union violat- 
ed a section of the act which 
prohibits banks, corporations and 
labor organizations frem using 
general funds for political pur- 
poses. 
A maximum penalty of $5,000 is’ 
prgvided in event of conviction on 
any count,   Pose Is Familiar, but Participants Change 
+ AP Wirephote   
  Pros Find Par 
Hard to Crack Only 3 Break 35 in 
Best Ist Nine PGA Start; Ball’s 33. Pad 
    
BIG FOUR AT GENEVA — Reminiscent of pictures at other con- 
ferences of world powers is this view in front of the Palace of Nations 
at Geneva. President Eisenhower (second from left) talks with Russia's 
Premier Nikolai Bulganin im garden of the palace. French Premier 
Edgar Faure, second from right, and Britain’s Sir Anthony Eden com- 
plete the Big Four group. 
  
Ex-Envoy Escapes 
Rioters in Saigon Besiege   
    With more than half the field | 
turning the Ist nine at Meadow- | 
brook Country Club in today’s 
par cards. Only three managed to 
\Clip the 35-par first nine. 
Best effort was that of Errie 
Balj of Oak Park TL, with a 2- 
under 33. Carry Middlecoff hit 
ene under with 34, as did Dar- 
win White, Aniston Ala. Hotel Room of Mrs. Mesta 
munist students sacked Saigon’s No. 1 hotel today but 
Mrs. Perle Mesta out-talked them when they took axes 
to her door, — 
The students were demonstrating against the Indian- 
Polish-Canadian armistice commission. , 
As some of the rioters+ ys ? 
t 
SAIGON, South Viet Nam (?—Thousands of anti-Com- Press 2 Moves 
fo Better Roads ‘Eye Intercounty Unit; 
Plan Meeting July 28 
With Ziegler 
    
  Among the few 18-hole rounds 
carded at noon were the follow- 
Horner of Montgomery Ala. Wil- 
jlie Hunter Jr., Pacific Palisades, 
Calif., had 36-39—75; Jock Hutch- Ae. Vines. former tennis | tioned suite in the Hotel 
star, 39:35 —74, same as Scuddy|Majestic the former U.S.) | 
minister to Luxembourg LUNCH Together 
| shouted: second for, arsenal [ke AN ZAUKOV 
threw open the door and)   
  planned projects. | the Highway Department's list of 
Oakland Road Commission + 
mybuster” sodas from a milk bar, 
heads for Iowa State College today 
for a two-day visit. ; 
The Soviet visitors spent the 
night at Cedar Rapids after tour- | The Miss U.S.A. winner goes | At the time the grand jury in- | against the world tomorrow and | vestigation began, and ‘since, offi- 
| Friday nights for the title of | cers of the UAW charged 
beautiful “Woman. inson Jr. Glencoe Ill. 37-39—76. : ; 
Michigan players’ 1st nine| “No! We are your friends: We | 
|eards:Pete Cooper of Knollwood | 4re Americans!” 
| 35; Warren Orlick of Tam O’Shan- One of the student leaders who 
ter 36; Wally Burkemo of Frank-   Only Two Interpreters Chairman Lee 0. Brooks said 
- Attend Private Meeting 
of Old War Buddies 
ing southeastern Iowa farm coun- 
try yesterday on the second day| Margaret Rowe, a girl whose. 
of their six-week, six-state junket figure is controversial only in| 
in the United States to study England, was adjudged the most 
American farming methods and} popular girl in the big Sunday | 
equipment. parade that was witnessed by a 
Today they inspect a Cedar , half-million people. 
Rapids meat packing plant, visit! Miss England won that honor in| 
more farms and a county exten-,@ poll condicted by the Long ™ 
sion office .in Waterloo before Beach Independent ang Press-. 
reaching Iowa State. Telegram. Equipped with  the' 
The group, headed by V. V.|Same measurements as Marilyn! Matskevich, first deputy minister | Monroe, Miss Rowe was criticized 
of agriculture, arrived in Cedar, ®S not typically British looking 
Rapids from Des Moines last night When she won the London contest | 
and was welcomed with a Chamber | /@st month. 
of Commerce banquet. | But in Long Beach, she's real 
Several times en ‘route to Cedar | Whistle bait. 
Rapids the Russians stopped their | 
air-conditioned bus to tramp 
  Repub- 
Miss Universe, the world’s most | licans were attempting to interfere 
working with the franchise of 
people, 
* *@ 
Emil Mazey, UAW  secretary- 
treasurer, said the investigation 
was inspired by Feikens and Post- 
master General Arthur Summer- 
field. Summerfield is a Michigan 
an. 
Temperatures Here 
May Hit 90 Today Warm weather will continue to- 
day and tomorrow, according to lin Hills 37, and Bob Gadja of 
Forest Lake 38. 
‘Arry Back ‘Ome 
Hatter ‘Arrowing 
Hexperiences 
DETROIT # — Police were 
somewhat baffled when Robert 
McCormick reported the loss of 
little ‘Arry, his eruvian cavy. 
They weren't much enlightened 
when McCormick explained that a 
  the U. S. Weather Bureau. Temper- | cavy is a short-tailed-rough-haired understood English formed a 
cordon in front of Mrs. Mesta's 
apartment and kept back the 
mob, who laid waste to the five- 
story, government-ewned build- 
ing. 
With Mrs, Mesta at the time 
were her two American secretar- 
ies, Mrs. Jean Anderson, Washing- 
  | New York City; an unidentified 
| American woman visitor; and the 
latter’s baby. 
They were trapped in the suite 
for an hour and a half while the 
| Student cordon outside beat back 
‘several groups trying to break into 
the room. Finally Frank Malloy, | GENEVA ® — President Eisen- 
jhower and his wartime friend, 
| Soviet Marshal Georgi Zirukov, had 
! lunch together today at the Presi- 
| dent's villa. 
| It was the first opportunity the 
|two conquerors of Germany had 
arrived here. Only two interpre- 
ters — an American and a Russian 
— were with them today. 
Assistant White H press 
secretary Murray Shyace said 
the President extended his invi- 
tation “a couple of days ago, and 
it was confirmed this morning.” 
atures are expected to register | member ef the guinea pig family, gene Mt, through fields and 
chinery and crops that interested 
them. . 
Most of the afternoon was 
spent at the 160-acre farm of 
Mr. and Mrs. George Hora, five 
miles northeast of Washington, 
where the Russians enjoyed a 
“typical American farm dinner”’ 
of fried chicken, mashed pota- 
tees and gravy, corn, sliced to- 
matoes, gelatin salad, milk and 
iced tea, topped off with apple, 
cherry and raspberry pie. 
They ate heartily and described 
the food as ‘‘very good.” 
In Kharkov, U.S.S.R., an Ameri- 
can farm delegation touring Russia 
got its first look today at agricul- 
tural methods used in the rich 
Ukraine ‘‘bread basket." 
The 12-member group—counter- 
part of the Soviet farm delegation 
currently visiting the U.S.—toured 
agricultural establishments on a 
48-hour visit to Kharkov, fourth ; 
largest Soviet city. 
The Americans got a rousing 
reception when they arrived in 
Kharkov Tuesday after an over- 
night trip from Moscow. The wel- 
come was more enthusiastic than 
the cordial reception given the visi- 
tors on their arrival in Moscow 
last Friday. 
  
Typhoon Nears Japan ~ 
TOKYO (®—Typhoon Fran, pack- 
ing winds of 135 m.p.h., moved 
toward central Japan at 18 m.p.h. 
today. If she doesn't change course 
or speed, Tokyo's Central Weather’ 
Bureau . she will slam 
into Japan southwest of Tokyo 
sometime tomorrow afternoon, inspect ma- | Suzan Ball Suffering 
Relapse of Cancer 
DUARTE, Calif. @ — After a 
complete evaluation of actress Su- 
zan Ball's condition, physicians at 
City of Hope Hospital have an- 
nounced that she is suffeging from | 
a@ recurrence of cancer, 
It was cancer that made it nec-| morning to 87 at 1 p.m. 
essary a her right leg to be am- _ 
putated months ago. The hospi- ‘ : 
tal did not announce fara Oil Magnate Dies 
where cancer has struck again.| LISBON, Portugal (» — sary oll about the same for both days, | 
with a high of 87 to 91 today 
and around 90 again tomorrow. | 
Light variable westerly winds 
today are expected to become 
south to southeast at 5 to 10 miles 
per hour tomorrow. 
Downtown temperature at 8 a.m. 
today was 75 rising during: fhe 
    Unofficial but authoritative | Sarkis Gulbenkian, legendary oil 
sources have said it is cancer of| magnate and one of the world’s’ 
the lung. She has been hospitalized | richest men, died today of a kid-| 
since July 5, ney ailment. He was 86. usually less than a foot long. 
‘Arry, So named because Mc- 
Cormick imported him from 
Australia where Cockney accents 
are heard, escaped 
from a box while McCormick 
was carrying him through down- 
tewn Detroit. 
Police hadn’t far to look. A 
block from where the animal dis- 
appeared they spotted a crowd and 
in the center of the crowd was) 
pair} ‘Arry, thoroughly bewild- 
Officers said he was only too | Britain, Russia and France are 
happy to return to the privacy / attending the “summit” confer- newsmen were i as leeds byedy | e_barred at the gate automobile accident. He was re- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) 
coeeusenaeeeniasisinionisineeatiie Traveling without a security es- 
. 6. ° ; cort of any kind, the uniformed 
Divine Guidance Asked Zhukov sped into Eisenhower's 
for Summit Conference | Lake Geneva villa four minutes in 
advance of the 12:30 p.m. luncheon 
Delivering the invocation at last | jour. 
night's City Commission meeting. Zhukoy was accompanied only 
the Rev. Fred R. Tiffany, of Beth- py the chauffeur of his black Zis 
any Baptist Church, asked the jimousine and interpreter Oleg Lord to guide the four heads of Tyoyanovski. 
state meeting in Geneva as well: Charles E. Bohlen, U.S. ambas- 
as Pontiac's commissioners.   
  ize they are the Big 5, not just Eisenhower's interpreter, 
the Big 4,” the clergyman said.| As was the case when Eisen- 
The heads of the United States. | hower was host to the Soviet del- 
egation at dinner Monday evening, 
ence in Switzerland. ‘today. | Pc sador to Moscow, arrived a few We pray that they may real-| minutes before Zhukov to serve as. | Wayne has not ‘contacted him 
about an _ intercounty planning 
group, but stated “It sounds like 
an excellent idea.” 
Leroy C, Smith, Wayne high- said the 
      Washtenaw and Monroe counties 
| might join later. 
, The Legislature has passed a law | 
ton and Mrs, Lester R. Pridgen, | had to talk privately since they | allowing establishment of such 
| combined committees, with the | 
state highway commissioner as an 
ex-officio member. 
  Anyone for Dominoes? 
Johnson Fit for Game 
Majority Leader Lyndon B. John- 
son is getting along so well in his 
recovery from a heart attack that 
he's even playing dominoes with 
his congressman. 
| An aide said the % - year - old 
/Texas Democrat also spends his 
time at the Bethesda Naval 
Hospital listening to the radio, 
watching television and reading 
newspapers. 
Duke of Kent Hurt 
LONDON i®—The Duke of Kent. 
20-year-old playboy cousin of   
| Queen Elizabeth IT, is in the hee 
pital with head injuries from an 
: ported improving. 
  
Confessions of a Displaced Alligator   
been dragged through the mud. 
For this reason, I have come 
forth (figuratively, no literally) 
to set the record straight, and 
“@lear the name of Mrs. William 
Singleton of Bloomfield Town- 
ship, and her sharp-eyed son 
Danny. 
They were quite right when 
they notified newshounds that 
they had observed me prowling   
|In Today's Press 
      the lagoon behind their home. 
But what could I do? Scream— 
loyalty in submarine 
  County News........ ass. 28, 38 
Editorials .............. seeca@ 
‘ Sports .....05..... 30, 31, 32, 33 
| : Theaters ............°. Serre 
| LOWMAN . wary policemen. | TV & Radio Programs....... 48 
The good name of alligator has | ‘Wilson, Earl............0.9.°@ 
betes 4 a rp (vr ; _f Elusive Visitor Comes Clean after Long Lake Job By AL_A. GATOR 
I was an alligator for the 
FBI. 
1 probed the depths of Lower 
Long Lake, in desperate search 
for submersible subversives, dis- Worst of all, I have been mis- 
taken for turtles, a pair of musk- 
rats, and even a lowly garpike. 
Apparently they didn’t see my 
badge! 
a LJ se 
And then that nasty bunch 
from the Detroit papers began 
towing dead chickens behind 
their boat. Ugh! . Situations like hopes that I would forsake my 
trust, and rush to the rescue 
of the poor damsel,   
Army May Pull Support 
Troops in Far East 
WASHINGTON (— The U. S. Army is thinking of bringing home 
about 17,000 rear echelon personnel 
in an effort to trim its Far East- Forsooth, the “brainwashing” 
of these fiends did not deter me 
from my mission, which is now 
completed. I am off to another 
assignment, with fond regrets of’ 
the disturbance I caused in Oak- . 
land County’s Lower Long Lake. 
In my little alligator - leather 
address book will go the name 
of Agnes, and a description of 
    co   WASHINGTON (INS) — Senate | 
  Big 4 Ministers 
Place Security 
at Agenda Head Russian Bid to Talk 
About European Peace 
Wins Approval 
GENEVA (® — The for- 
eign ministers of the Big 
Four powers today recom- 
mended that their heads of 
government drop the ques- 
tion of German unification 
at least temporarily and 
turn to the European secur- 
ity problem. 
A communique from the 
foreign ministers after a 
two-hour meeting described 
the German question and 
European security as “in- 
ter-related” and said the 
ministers had decided to 
recommend that the sum- 
mit talks switch to security 
this afternoon. 
The statement failed to say 
whether the German question 
would be brought up later. 
The Russians proposed yester- 
day that it be dropped until West 
  
‘arrived in Geneva this morning, 
along with Nelson Rockefeller, 
who handles the U. S. atoms-for- 
peace program. 
The disarmament problem has 
been placed on the summit agenda, 
just after German unification and 
European security. : 
Bloomfield Man 
Dead in Crash Body of Michael Patten 
Found in Wreckage of 
Plane in Montana 
  One of two bodies found yester- 
‘day in the wreckage of a small 
| plane atop a mountain near Boze- 
| man, Mont., has been identified as 
that of Michael Patten, 25, of West 
| Long Lake. road, Bloomfield Hills, 
| Son of Mr. and Mrs. Mare. T, 
i 
  | Patten, the victim was doing 
| uranium prospecting as part of 
his work toward a Master’s De- 
at Stanford University, 
Calif., relatives here sald today, 
The pilot, also killed, was iden- 
tified by Gallatin County, Mont., 
officials as Duncan Johnson, of 
Menlo Park, Calif. 
The two had been missing since 
late Friday, when their single em 
gine plane was last seen flying 
over the rugged Gallatin Mountain 
  more ; welled [eth strength without pulling out] Oakiand County: The elder Patten is vice prest-- 
up in me, but I kept my teeth any of the three divisions stationed “Nice lakes, but excitable resi- dent of the Fred Sanders 
there. n {| dents, with homocidal tenden- which has stores selling cs Then some wise guy. from Sar FE 4 oe. nalyrenayedl wend prone cles.” oe pres gmsan th pale 9 Seow 
=, Ones, comes up with ® | aivisions ‘and ene airborne regi- ors Note: ‘The Press ts tm re | Michael | thom aonb lee mks bea as — and, ts passin nt sion tor & bon Scho fr Beye and ‘ df st. College, Mass 
He tortured her on the beach, Army strength in the Far- East | Sungle, Bidior Al Lowmen anytime by 0 slater, Me. fea Pots , right before my eyes, in the [now totals about 150,000 men, | Easter Sundays.) 5 oe — ler, of Bloomfield Hilla. ( : 
> hac $y < % ‘ Gey a & 
A f yf * f 2 ‘ 
    
de tiie 
      
  
  
   | 
‘Second Record 
Concert Slated 
Tomorrow Night 
With Sunday night's experimen- 
tal recorded concert termed a suc: 
cess, the Parks and Recreation 
| Dept. today completed. plans for 
' another one tonight. 
The “Starlight Concert” will be 
presented at 7:30 p.m. at Oakland 
Park and will feature the music 
of Paul Whiteman an@ Monta- 
vani in a light pops program, 
according to Leonard T. Buzz, 
activities supervisor for the de- 
partment. 
In addition to the musicale, the 
department will present others 
Sunday and Wednesday. The first 
who for many years was active will feature the classics, the sec- 
in Democratic activities, dramatic Gee ecg = other jazz sty- 
" circles, and was Gov. William Com-| Tonight's program follows: 
stock's aide in administrating the |      
       
       
Raymond Green Was 
_ Active Democrat, Also 
Aide to Gov. Comstock 
Masonic graveside services for 
Raymond C. Green, 80 under the 
auspices of Rochester Lodge No. 
S$, F&AM, will be held in Mt. Avon 
Cemetery, Rochester, Thursday, 
following an 11 a.m. service at the 
William R. Potere Funeral Home. 
Mr. Green, a Rochester resident E 
  lY've Never Been ‘in Love Before j burg, Fla., Sunday, where he had |I've Never Been Yn Love i bo een reenerseeeseeeeteeerres Loesser | 
been since last fall. Bewitched ........,:..... Rodgers-Hart | I Talk to the Trees .......-.«.+ 
  Lerner | 
A Rochester merchant and 
later in the ice business, Mr. : | 
Green had been president of the | an american ‘p bans George Gershwin | 
| ? . M. 
Michigan Ice Dealers Assn. for /Out of My Dreams, Rodgers-Hamerstetn | 
a number of years. | Stranger in Paradise ... Wright, Forrest 
C’est Magnifique Cole Porter. 
} 
He was chairman of the Avon Almost Like Being Some Enchanted Evening 
—_ ers-Hammerstein . 
  
“in Love Loewe, Lerner 
Hse eisieieciniaeinernid odgers-Hammerstein 
|They Say It's Pelosi -Irving Berlin 
| ight. . Green produced | : . M. 
playwright Mr. G ee | Rhapsody in ag wo ares Gershwin 
opening the old Idle Hour Theater ‘Finis 
in Rochester with one of his pro- —_—_—_—— 
ductions. He was founder and 
president of the Rochester Dra- Dama es ed 
matic Club and the Raymond 
~ Green Players. | ” Foy.   
"7 eee 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1955 
    
3 
  PUTTING ON THE BITE. — There's no “Good | leaped half over the fence and took a lusty bite out 
Neighbor Policy” at the Frankfurt, Germany, zoo.| of Kithany's left ear. Keeper at left managed to 
Especially when “Toni,” a bachelor hippo, and/| separate the animals, leaving the hippo with the last 
“Kithany,” a maiden elephant,’ exchange opinions | word and the elephant with a shredded ear. 
across the back fence. During one such dispute, Toni * Crain Launches 
Midget Car Fad High Duty Costs Force 
Manufacture of Smaller 
Autos for People 
MADRID (INS) — Normal size 
cars at normal prices being unat- 
tainable in Spain, Spanish manu- 
facturers of motorcycles and other 
machinery have launchej a midg- 
et-car fad. 
Because of high duties, a Span- 
fard pays about $10,000 for an av- 
erage American car. 
The pace-setter among Spanish 
midget cars was the Biscuter-Voi- 
sin, a doll-size two-seater convert-   
New Ordinance Regulates 
Planting Trees in City 
A new ordinance regulating the 
planting and upkeep of shade 
trees along the city’s streets and 
in its parks was passed by the 
City Commission last night. 
Specifically, it covers the land 
lying between property lines on 
either side of all streets, alleys 
and boulevards, plus public parks 
and other areas owned by the city 
or to which the public has free 
access. 
According to the ordinance, no the city may carry: out the neces- | 
sary work ‘‘and initiate such court 
action as necessary to defray all 
cost resulting.” 
The ‘law also provides for the 
parks department to certify all 
installation, altering, moving. or 
razing of buildings, atilities, 
sidewalks and sewers where 
trees or shrubs are invelved. 
A maximum fine of $100 or 90 
days in jail is provided for viola- 
ition of the provisions. The law   ible with a two-cylinder engine 
patented in France. A Barcelona 
plant put out the first models 
last fall and has now reached a 
daily putput of ten cars, 
Though the current joke in Ma- Naming Stalls The Day in Birmingham   
School Boa 
BIRMINGHAM — School board 
members last night approved a 
Board of Education to consider the 
city’s recreation program. — 
They also favored adequate 
study of the matter, with the rec- 
reation board having the final 
word in approving any program 
proposed. 
Questioning discussion grew 
out of a committee report writ- 
ten by City Manager Donald C. 
Egbert, which recommended 
His plan calls for appointment 
of a recreation director by the 
recreation board. This person 
would work with two advisors 
named by the commission and 
school board. 
    Union Merger (scr : clio Balks at Keeping ley, more and more of them are 
AFL as Title of New now seen on the city streets. They 
less than double the price of the 
WASHINGTON up» — Wedding | average Spanish motorcycle or mo- 
bells for the merger of the AFL | 'F Scooter. 
| FRANOO FIRST 
One of the first Biscuter-Voisins 
off the assembly line was presented and CIO bonged on a discordant 
note today with word that the CIO 
will insist on a new name for the idrid is that the 45-mp.h. Biscuter- : 
1 DIVIDE CITY FACILITIES 
Although the committee report 
has not been made public, Super- 
intendent of Schools Dwight B. Ire- 
land said.the ultimate purpose 
|would be to divide city facilities 
so they would serve only Birming- 
‘ham residents. 
“But school facilities scarcely 
could be limited to residents with- 
in our corporate limts,”’ he said. 
| The school district extends be- 
' yond city limits. Since its facill- 
ties are used in the recreation rd Approves 
City Study of Recreation 
Troy Township. 
ff 
ing a little more for, rather 
against the track.” 
* ca 
broken left leg on crutches now. 
After a three-week stay at Wil- 
liam Beaumont Hospital he was 
due at his Frank street home, 
vig ambulance, this afternoon. 
His injuries were suffered in an 
automobile accident on June 27. 
Army Clothing 
Maker ‘Ruined’ 
  Harry ‘The Hat’ Lev Says 
  | 
| 
| | } 
Senate Bribe Probing 
Hurt His Reputation , | 
WASHINGTON (INS) — Harry as a gift to Generalissimo Francis- 
co Franco's baby granddaughters. | 
‘When they were seated inside, it | 
looked as if it had been made to Following the death of his wife * 
Edith, he married Mrs. Jessie in 
Gregory; who died recently. 
Mr. Green is survived by his one can remove, cut, prune or 
deface any tree or shrub grow- 
ing in these areas without per- 
mission of the Parks and Rec- ‘takes effect in 20 days. merged labor federation. 
The AFL has been hoping to re- | 
tain “American Federation of La- board program, children outside 
city boundaries but within the 
school district are entitled to 
participate in the program. 
  Fatal Crash   - daughter, Sylvina Mount of Hough- 
ton Lake, and one grandson. 
Pontiac Federal 
Savings Holding 
Grand Opening 
Pontiac Federal “avings and 
Loan Assn. today opened its new 
- $400,000 contemporary building at 
961 W. Huron St., with a record 
crowd attending the first day of 
the grand opening which extends 
through Saturday. 
Headquarters for this rapidly 
expanding financial institution will 
be at the Huron street location. 
There are branches at 16 W. 
Lawrence St. and in Rochester. 
Fred T. Greene, of Indian- 
apolis, president of the federal 
savings and loan program's 
sixth district, performed the 
ribbon cutting this morning to 
officially launch the grand open- 
«ing celebration 
Each day this week the building 
will be open to the public from 
10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Special prizes 
are being gtven visitors. 
Senate Restores Cut 
Foreign Aid Funds _ WASHINGTON (INS)—Members 
of the Senate Appropriations Com- 
mittee suggested today they may 
have given President Eisenhower 
    Suit Seeks $350,000 
from Estate of Late 
Gordon Wyrick 
A $350,000 damage suit has been 
launched in Oakland County Cir- 
cuit Court against the estate of 
‘the late Gordon F. Wyrick, former 
operator of Gordon’s Flying Serv- 
‘ice at Pontiac Municipal Airport. 
| Wyrick, 41, and five Benton 
Harbor people were killed July 
| 23, 1953 when a twin - engined 
| plane piloted by him-struck a 
| mountain peak in Tennessee on 
| @ flight to Miami. 
Suing is Mrs. Dorothy L. Pax- 
_ten, wife of Gordon Paxton, a 
‘Benton Harbor industrial design- 
/er who died in the crash. Mrs. 
Paxton contends that responsibil- 
‘ity for the accident rested with 
| Wyrick. 
| The crash occurred near Pike- 
|ville when the plane apparently   
|eincountered bad weather condi- 
\tions. The flight was to demon- 
strate the plane to one of the 
other passengers, a prospective 
er. 
|| Specifically named as defendant in the suit is Wyrick’s widow, 
Felicity. No hearing date has been 
set. - ‘ 
Rader Examination 
Postponed fo Aug. 4 The examination on a man- 
    | reation Dept. director. 
{ Neither can anyone plant a tree 
‘or shrub in these areas until the 
species has been approved and the 
planting space designated. 
In addition, the law provides 
that the parks director may order 
the removal of any tree or shrub 
in the city if it “interferes with 
the use of any public highway, 
park or public place or is unsafe 
and constitutes a hazard .. or 
‘constitutes a.center of infection 
for disease or insects.” 
‘moved or corrected as ordered, | 
Men Waive Exam 
on Robbery Count | Two Flushing men, charged with 
‘armed robbery, waived examina- 
| tion when they were arraigned yes- 
|terday before Farmington Town- 
ship Justice Allen C. Ingle. 
| ‘The pair, Richard G. Franck, 
24, and Larry M. Annin, 17, were 
remanded to the Oakland County 
dail pending Circuit Court ar- 
raignment Monday. Franck was 
being held on $50,000 bond and 
Annin on $20,000 bond.   
  If the tree or shrub is not re-!cerned with having emergency Most Cars Lack | 
Emergency Light Survey Discloses Auto 
Owners Fail to Secure 
Warning Devices 
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (INS)—The 
)average American is more con- 
‘lighting equipment in his home 
than in his car. 
A survey disclosed nearly every 
resident of “average’’ Kansas City 
has a flashlight in his home while 
only half the residents carried | 
them in their automobiles. 
The survey, first of its kind 
on emergency lighting, was con- 
ducted for the electrical division 
of Olin Mathieson Chemical 
Corp. Five hundred residents 
representing a cross section of 
the city’s population were polled. 
poled. 
Rodman St. Clair, general mana- 
ger of the division, reported the 
  They are charged with the July 
14 holdup of Novi filling station 
attendant James Killeen. 
Franck was arrested hiding in 
the rear of a downtown Detroit 
apartment house. Police said his 
; apparent plan to shoot his way to 
  more than half a billion dollars slaughter charge of Hugh L. Ra- 'treedom failed when his foreign- 
worth of backing at Geneva. 
_ They referred to the 565 million 
dollars they voted to restore to the 
President's foreigh aid program 
late yesterday out of the 627 mil- 
lion dollars which the House had 
cut from it. 
_ The committee sent to the Senate 
for action tomorrow a bil) pro- 
viding 3,204,000,000 dollars in mili- ‘der, 60, of 270 Pine Lake Rd., 
| West Bloomfield Township, has 
i been postponed from. tomorrow 
‘to Aug. 4, according to Spring- 
| field Township Justice Emmett J. 
| Leib, 
Rader, a Highland Park lumber 
dealer, is charged with negligent 
driving in an accident June 27 
‘resulting in the death of John made automatic failed to fire. An- 
nin was nabbed in a Detroit hotel. 
‘House Set fo Vote 
‘on $1 Wage Floor | WASHINGTON (INS)   
The 
“tary economic assistance to the |C. Welch, 18, of 128 Oakwood Rd., House appeared likely to vote for a 
free world during the 1956 fiscal 
year which began July 1. 
This compares with the $2.638,- 
000,000 voted by . the 
and the $3,266,000,000 Eisenhower 
requested. Farmington. 
The adjournment was secured 
by Rader’s attorney who asked 
Le’b explained. The accused is 
free on $2,000 bond.   
City Asks New Ordinance 
for Cement Mixing Plants 
Because the city lost a law suit 
in Circuit Court, City Attorney 
_ William A. Ewart last night was 
: instructed by the City Commis- 
gion prepare a new ordinance con- 
- trolling cement mixing plants. 
cuit Judge George B. Hartrick 
_ ruled in, favor of F. G. Van Horn f 
Ewart told the Commission Cir- 
& Sons Co., a cement block and 
ready-mix manufacturing firm, in   
The Weather 
 feday 87-01; 
becoming south PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostiy fair 
merrow near #0. ind 
to southeast 5-16 miles 
per hour. 
at 8 
‘Direction 
| Today in Pontiac 
Lowest temperature preceding @ a.m 
: We 
Gun sets Wednesday at 8:04 p.m. 
@un rises Thursday at 5:13 a.m 
Moon sets Wednesday at 8:04 p.m. 
Moon rises Thursday at 7:53 a.m. 
Tuesday in Pontiac 
tAs recorded downtown) 
POMPOPALUTE 6. cece cc eneeeces 
  
      
  the firm's suit against the city 
|over a building permit. 
In February, 1954, the city 
| building inspector issued a per- 
mit to. Van Horn for construc- 
tion of a new concrete mixing 
plant at 115 W. Walton Blvd. in 
a manufacturing 1 toned neigh- 
borhood, 
Opposition arose from neigh- 
/bors.who feared a dust nuisance 
| and a month later the City Com- 
mission adopted a resolution call- 
ing for revocation of the permit 
hibiting a cement mixing plant 
in M-1," Ewart told the Commis- 
sion in reviewing the case. 
| Although the buikiing inspector,   | John Ryan (no longer with the, 
city) refused to revoke the per- 
‘mit despite the Commission's ac- 
oo velocity 8 m.p-b. | tion, Van Horn took the matter. 
to court for a judge’s' ruling. 
Then, several weeks ago, Hart- 
rick handed down his decision that 
the ordinance did not spell out a 
90 | Prohibition of cement mixing 
  
  “and construing the law as pro- ‘dollar-an-hour minimum wage to- 
‘day as the administration fought a. 
losing battle for its proposal of 
House | more time to prepare his case, | only 90 cents an hour. 
The House debated the contro- 
versial issué for four hours yester- 
day and then recessed until today 
before taking a vote. 
Assistant GOP Floor Leader 
Charles A. Halleck of Indiana led 
the adminisffation forces in an ef- 
fort to overturn a Labor Commit- 
tee recommendation for the 2 
jcent an hour boost from the 
present 75 cent wager floor, 
would benefit slightly more than 
| two million workers. 
Roger Lewis Resigns 
_as Air Force Aide   
  nation of Roger Lewis as an as- 
and designated Dudley C. Sharp 
of Houston, Tex., as his successor. 
Wayne Hawks, acting assistant 
nomination would go to the Senate 
today, ,   A dollar-an-hour minimum wage | 
WASHINGTON  — The White. 
House today announced the resig- | 
| sistant secretary of the Air Force) survey found that only 58.7 per 
cent of the persons interviewed 
were confident their flashlights 
would work. 
More than half of those queried 
who did carry emergency lighting 
equipment in their cars had not 
checked their equipment in a 
month. 
Ld * LJ 
“The study makes it clear that 
the average motorist is poorly pre- 
| pared for an emergency,” St. Clair 
said. ‘‘The kind of accident that 
occurs because a driver can't see 
the: car owner changing his tire 
until it is too late is generally the 
serious type of accident.” 
A driver, stalled on a dark road, 
should not step out of his car with- 
out a hand light, he emphasized. 
Baptist World Alliance 
Elects Virginia Cleric 
LONDON i®—Dr. Theodore Ad- 
ams, pastor of the ‘First Baptist 
Church of Richmond, Va., was to- 
‘day elected president of the Bap- 
tist World Alliance for a 5-year 
Lord of Britain. 
’ Dr. Arnold T. Olirn of Washing- 
ton, D.C., was reelected general 
secretary. 
  
Man Denies Felonious 
Assault Charge Here 
. Charles Clark, 43, of 408 Call- 
fornia St., charged with felonious 
assault, pleaded not guilty when 
he was arraigned yesterday in 
Municipal Court. 
Judge Maurice E. Finnegan set 
next Wednesday for the examina- 
tion date. Clark was released after 
posting $200 bond. He is charged 
|with slashing a neighbor during 
lan argument June 30,           
  Red Cc ross’ 
Sessions Res 
Executive committee meetings 
of the American Red Cross will 
resume in September, announced 
| Rev. William C. Hamm, chairman 
of the Oakland County Chapter. 
However, he said the executive 
committee will remain on call 
  Committee). 
ume in Fall 
  mi 
Wir eg 
: | position that it will Jilt the whole bor’ as the title. This is the name 
the senior organization has used 
since well before the turn of the 
century. 
The younger C10, 
learned, has taken the definite a 
merger idea unless the AFL 
agrees to a fresh name. 
This became known as AFL and 
CIO leaders prepared for a closed 
dinner meeting tonight to iron out 
remaining merger problems. 
Virtually all arrangements for 
the merger have been completed, 
except to name the new group. 
The actual consolidation is sup- 
posed to be sealed at a series of 
conventions in New York city next 
December. 
Unless there’s a brand new name 
there just won't be any merger, 
one top CIO official said. 
However, CIO officials said they 
believed the merger preparations 
are so far advanced that the issue 
of a name would not be allowed 
to stand in the way. 
Two Held on Bond 
After Arraignment 
Charged with an attempted 
breakin of a filling station here, 
two Pontiac men were being held | 
on $2,000 bonds today after their | 
arraignment before Municipal 
Judge Ceci] McCallum. 
Robert Thompson, 38, of 13 Le- 
Grande Ave., pleaded innocent 
while Donald Lockwood, 30, of | 
122042 Baldwin Ave., waived ex- | 
mination. Both are scheduled to | 
appear next Wednesday. 
They were arrested by Pontiac | 
Police Saturday night after fail- | 
ing in an attempt to enter the 
filling station at 910 Joslyn Rd. 
Tearing Up Street . 
Aids Church Attendance       
  the street to be closed and dug ae 
making the area a dusty m 
and parking miserable, Me says. 
But attendance went up—10 to 15 
per cent in church, church school 
and midweek service. 
Music Mutes Speaker 
N Va. @® — Irving 
Kline, automobile dealer, was try- 
ing to speak before the Norfolk 
Advertising Club, Members 
couldn’t cut off the piped-in music 
and Kline was faring second best. | 
“TI can go into a dance if you 
want me to," he remarked wryly.   
  order, 
The Biscuter-Voisin’s moderate 
success has inspired other manu- 
facturers to imitate it, Belver Or- 
tega of Valencia will soon put 
out their “Kapi’’ midget cars. 
There will be a utility model 
costing 21,900 pesetas ($550) and 
somewhat jazzier sedan priced 
at $2,000 pesetas ($813). 
The Automotor plant in Bilbao 
has already finished 12 cars with 
an Italian patent for the 350-cc. en- 
gines. Estancona in Durango is ex- 
perimenting with a series of ten 
four-seaters with three-cylinder, 
Rebellion in Saigon 
Routs Mrs. Mesta (Continued From Page One) 
  first secretary of the U.S. Em-; 
bassy, and an embassy Marine | 
guard rescued them unhurt. 
Taking as many of Mrs. 
Mesta's 17 pieces of luggage as 
they could carry, the group 
picked their way down the hotel's 
itter-strewn stairs to the street, 
where thousands of demonstra- 
tors were shouting and hurling 
stones, 
As Mrs. Mesta stepped into an 
, embassy sedan flying the U.S. flag. 
police fired shots into the air and 
exploded tear gas bombs. 
“To the floor! To the floor!” 
the chauffeur shouted. 
Mrs. Mesta and her party flat- 
tened as the car sped through the 
crowd and down Saigon’s main 
street to the embassy. There she 
took a short breather to recover 
from the excitement, then went 
to the Saigon airport. She took a 
plane for Singapore, continuing the 
world tour during which she had 
stopped here for two days. 
  Scar on Man’s Neck 
Not Barber's Slipup 
stranger walked into the crowded 
Holley-Gordon barbershop and 
patiently awaited his turn. Every- 
body was curious about an ugly 
scar on the man’s throat. Finally, 
he sat down in Check Gordon’s 
chair. 
“You've never been in this shop 
before, have you?”’ asked Gordon. 
“No.” smiled the stranger, ‘I 
got this scar in World War I.” 
Just Joined Crowd 
SAN DIEGO, Calif. w— The 
mystery of repeated escapes from 
the San Diego zoo by three mule 
deer was solved when Frank Bon- 
net, zoo security officer, put a 
close watch on them. They 
mingled with departing crowds at 
the, main gate, he found, and 
nuzzied their way out of the 
turnstiles. 
To Probe Show People 
WASHINGTON @ — At least a 
dozen actors and writers in tele- 
vision, radio and the legitimate 
theater are said to have been sub- 
poenaed to appear Aug. 15-18 at 
a House Un-American Activities 
Committee hearing in New York 
on alleged Communist infiltration 
of the entertainment field. 
Ammonia is composed of one 
atom of nitrogen combined with   
        
Ceal and   ue S   BR         Gee « three of hydrogen. -he —e t  cmea: 
Due to the Death . of — 
Mrs. David H. Gee 
our office will be closed 
. Thursday, July 21, at noon 
Fuel Oil Co. 91 Bake Street 
  BENTON, Ky. —A middle-aged | However, the city’s Springdale 
Park is currently for use by city 
residents only, and might be tied 
into the recreation board program 
if a solution is’ worked out. 
Who will use the new ice skating 
rink has not yet been determined. 
SUPERINTENDENT SPEAKS 
Ireland also said, ‘‘I would not 
be willing to turn school facilities 
over to a recreation board di- 
rector.” He felt a school employe 
would have more of an interest in 
seeing that school facilities are 
properly maintained and not 
abused. 
Under the program now in 
operation, Franklyn Whitney, 
schoel employe, is city recreation 
director, and works closely with 
both the school and the city rec- 
reation board. 
“Dual-headed organizations 
have not been successful in 
many instances that I know of,” 
Ireland stated, in disapproving 
the naming of one director and 
twe advisors. 
Too often it creates a “pass the 
buck’’ type of operation, he said. 
* * Ld 
Several local lads are taking 
part in a program of crafts, boat- 
ing, nature lore, swimming and 
other activities at Camp Ohiyesa 
on Fish Lake near Holly. 
Among those in two of the 16 
new cabins are Charles and Jer- 
ry Aiken, Wayne Beard, Robert 
Fitzgerald, Donald Schmidt, Den- 
nis and Douglas Shaw, David 
Steele, Arthur Stuart, Ross 
Thompson, Charlies and Rich- 
ard Wyant and Dale Porter. 
Fred Roeben and Dick Hubbard 
are two of the Birmingham col- 
lege students serving as Colnse- 
lors. Registrations for the fourth 
and fifth camp periods are still 
being taken at the YMCA here. 
* * *   
City Commissioner Florence Wil- 
lett and Herbert. Herzberg, 
planning technician, reported to 
the City Commission this week 
on their attendance at a hearing (The Hat) Lev, who claims Senate 
investigators have “ruined” him, 
returned to Chicago today to await 
word on whether Federal prosecu- 
The Justice Department is study- 
ing the possibility of calling a 
Federal Grand Jury to look into 
testimony concerning Lev and oth- 
ers involved in military clothing 
procurement. 
The 51-year-old immigrant 
from Poland, who amassed a 
fortune making caps for the 
Armed Forces, announced yes- 
terday that he is “no more a 
millionaire.” 
‘He made a brief return appear- 
ance before the Senate -Investiga- 
tions Subcommittee and denied 
a former employe's death bed 
charge that Lev’s gains from the 
government had been ill-gotten. 
The accusation was made by 
Hyman Roskin, of St. Louis, three 
days before he died of cancer on 
June 29. Roskin told the subcom- 
mittee Lev had bribed government 
officials, but on the stand yester- 
day, Lev called Roskin a gambler 
who had “double-crossed"’ him. 
Lev repeated all his past de- 
nials of bribing military procure- 
ment personnel. He scoffed at a 
charge by Michael Weintraub, a 
former quartermaster inspector 
who preceded him on the stand, 
that Lev had offered him bribes. 
But in carrying out a promise 
to account for some $200,000 in 
cash he passed around in 1952 and 
1953, Lev could only recall where 
$154,000 of it went. A month ago, 
he couldn't account for a penny. 
Almost $100,000 was spent on 
gifts, Lev said, and most of the 
remaining $54,000 on loans. 
Studebaker Operations 
Resume After Walkout 
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (®—The Stu- 
debaker plant of the Studebaker. 
Packard Corp. resumed operation 
today after being shut down by a 
walkout that started last Thursday. 
About 100 workers on the final 
assembly line had left their jobs in 
a dispute over seniority rights. 
  of the Michigan Racing Commis- 
sion, Monday, where the two en       This made about 9,000 employes 
idle. 
  
exists now and has for 
Charles L. Wilson 
  H.:¥, MeNalley, OF 2-7741 : Ralph 
  #4 
The car insurance 
MORE PEOPLE bhe best 
This Insurance Exchange at the Auto Club 
three decades, only to 
please, to protect and to serve. 
It has done these things so weil for so long, no 
one questions that it is the first choice among 
Michigan car owners. Indeed it is so popular 
that more people of Michigan insure their cars 
here than the people of any other state insure 
with any company in America, Why can’t you? 
Detreit Autemeobile 
_Inter-Insurance Exchange 
Thomas 
Rey M. Héod 
Robert G. Jamieson, Generel Manager 
at Autemebile Club ef Michigan 
VISIT OR PHONE YOUR NEAREST OFFICE 
Virgil Keener, 
(Holly) MEleose 7-7451 
 + THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1955 — 4 
ime 
    
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365 days a year! The Universal ‘Jeep’ spreads its cost over hundreds of 
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or weather conditions. It shifts easily from conventional 
2.wheel drive for normal highway transportation into 
4-wheel drive when the going is tough — on or off the road. 
It hauls heavily loaded trailers and with power take-off‘operates 
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    Senate Legislative Work Must Go On 
So Solons Pass 30 Bills in- 10 Minutes | By ARTHUR EDSON 
WASHINGTON ™ — The Sen- 
ate can hustle right along when 
| it wants to, in spite of Sitting Bull | 
_and the inclination of at least one | 
senator to make the same speech 
twice. - 
The eyes of the world are on 
Geneva this week, as the heads of 
four nations meet.. But in the 
Senate, legislative life must go on. | 
am though a senator bows Bhd 
Your Watch 
< Cleamea 9A 90 
is © Regulated 
Watch Bands 
Ladies’—Men's 
Special! 1 95 
Georges-Newports   
  
  
    jewelry Dept. 
  
  
   
    
               GOLD BELL 
GIFT 
STAMPS 
SAM BENSON v/ y 
Pi Perry St 
  
     |no orator in his ability to loft the | th 
| loftiest thoughts, considerable hum- 
| drum business still must be con- 
| sidered. 
This is a side of congressional 
| work-rarely mentioned. But immi- 
gration snarls must be entangled, 
claims against the government 
must be paid, federally owned 
land must be sold. 
In both houses the procedure in | 
| such bills is the same: The’ clerk 
calls eut the number and title of 
the bill. If no one objects, the bill 
is passed. f 
* Es # 
A reporter clocked the Senate 
| during one period when it was 
lreally rolling yesterday. In 10 
| minutes, the normally pokey Sen- | 
| ate passed 30 bills, or one for each | 
| 20 seconds. 
| Naturally this pace wasn't kept | 
jup long, for various reasons. 
| Consider, for example, the case 
iof Sen. Herbert Lehman (D-NY). 
| He had a speec h on}a proposed 
Philippine trade-bitand had sent 
copies of same to the press gallery. 
| Lehman made his speech early. 
| Then the trade bill came up, and 
-here was Lehman with his speech 
already made. 
j * * *   
Most observers felt Lehman re- 
| covered nicely, He grabbed a copy 
|and while he didn’t make exactly 
the same speech, he came close. 
Despite the doubleheader by Leh- 
man, the bill didn't pass. The ob- 
jection was made that it was so 
important it should be given full 
debate later. 
* * * 
But it was Sitting Bull, the great 
Sioux warrior, who really slowed 
the Senate. 
A proposal was made to give | 
North Dakota-a piece of land where   ! of the speech he already has made, | chief “was originally buried.” 
inquire gravely: 
“Not to make a play on words, 
but is not the question before 
lie?” 
Well, one thing led to another, 
and the first thing we kmew the 
| Senate also was wondering what 
had happened to the bones of 
Sacajawea, who guided Lewis and 
Clark. 
For all the talk, no conclusive 
evidence was presented on the 
ting Bull or Sacajawea. 
  and the Senate hurried on. 
‘Mamie Chooses 
‘Green Gown’ 
for Big Three Tea 
| GENEVA (INS)—There's nothing 
| fickle about Mamie Eisenhower— 
| when she likes a dress she doesn't 
/care who else may have a copy. 
| The fashionwise noted that. at 
-a luncheon given by Mme. Edgar 
|Faure for the wives of the Big 
| Three diplomats, the U.S. First 
Lady turned up in the same green 
print dress that caused a fashion 
furore in America last March 
  On ‘that occasion, in Washing- 
fon, Mamie and Mrs. Durriss 
Crane showed up at a function 
in identical dresses—the green 
sported in Geneva. 
It didn’t bother the First Lady 
at all, 
| again, but designer Mollie Parnis 
es publicly and utterly ‘‘deject- 
ed” and pledged it n-e-v 
| happen again.   
    
        
with as few calories as half 
an average, juicy grapefruit. 
Enjoy Coca-Cola.            
          
    
       
        
    1, 
Coca-Cola is simply . . . delicious and refreshing. 
Coke has a distinctive good taste, all its own. 
And when you feel the need for a bit of 
quick energy, it’s wonderful how Coca-Cola 
brings you back ... so refreshed ... 80 quickly, TA A My ) 
   
   - It’s delicious and refreshing. 
Four generations 
| have made Coca-Cola by far 
the most asked-for soft drink in the world. 
COTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA Company sv 
THE COCcA- ‘COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF PONTIAC 
“Cake” h @ rapintered wede-mer. © W964, THE COCA.COLA COMPANY 
  
— Wika, Up rose Sen, Douglas (D-Ill) to_ 
Congress, where does Sitting Bull. 
final resting places of either Sit-_ 
But the Sitting Bull bill passed, 
print the First Lady now has | 
as she now has proved. 
would | 
  
                 
         
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‘ j * : : 
PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1955 
        
      nN   
3000, Plunge Kills 2 Fliers Pair Plummets to Death | 
in Air Collision Over 
Maryland; 2 Safe 
“HIGH POINT, Md, @—Two vet- 
Bay day after running into another 
plane 3,000 feet in the air. 
Both _ twin craft were 
from the 
in Washington, a short hop away. 
The two occupants of one plane 
walked away from theirs with 
only slight injuries although it 
broke up after hitting a house. 
The plane carrying Ist Lt. Fran- 
cis D. Viering, 31, of Washington, 
D. C., and Maj. Lud Milistefr, 
Alexandria, Va., carried them al- 
most directly earthward to their 
deaths. 
Their C45 Beechcraft transport 
hit near High Point High School, 
exploded and burned, 
The fliers in the other plane, a 
B25, -were Maj. Leonard H, Bon- 
ham, San Rose, Calif., and Maj. 
W, T. Phillips, Fierence, Ala. . a 
They almost managed to fly 
their crippled craft to Friendship 
Airport about 10-miles away. They 
failed by 1,000 yards, crashing into 
the house of William, James and 
Kenneth Murray. 
Mrs, Argda Hunter, who cleans 
house for the Murray brothers, 
was inside with her two children, 
9 and 7 years old, They managed 
to get out safely, 
Slighted. Suitor 
Sadly Surrenders 
in Walk Protest 
LONDON «—Whether love or 
feet conquered wasn’t clear 
but the jilted suitof stopped his 
pacing. : 
Ronnie Hill, 3i-year-old clerk, 
  * * * 
  But yesterday Ronnie disap-}| Both cars burst into flames. | 
peared from in front of Sally's | Other motorists pulled Weibel from 
walk without disclosing the out-| his car but were unable to rescue 
come of his overnight march. Sally | Jack or Fix. t | 
wasn’t talking either. Weibel was treated for back in- a D S E S I R E 
juries at Scherer Hospital in 
Irs WONDERTUL, oh you| Pigeon, 
can profit from Want ! Start es ‘ . 
TODAY. Call FE 28181, Thirty thousand trillion trillion | - 20 W. HURON STREET ae 
the Want Ads! ‘ electrons weigh an ounce. | -engine 
Bolling Air Force Base |’ 
MOLOTOV GOES HOME — Soviet Foreign Min-| Anni 
ister V. M. Molotov is welcomed aboard the Queen/| Francisco. It was ee | ___ THE PONTIAC 
  versary Assembly of the United Nations at San 
Elizabeth at New York City by Staff Captain R. J. N.| States in nine years. Indian Victim | 
of Wrong Move 
in Enteririg Car 
TRAVERSE CITY ® — James 
Bemis, an 83-year-old Indian, died 
yesterday in a freak accident ap- 
parently because he wasn’t fa- 
miliar with the operation of a cor. 
State Police told this story: 
  loaded with lumber, had boards sticking through the window of 
the passenger's seat in front, 
Bemis came to the driver's side 
to get in. As he slid across the 
seat his foot hit the accelerator. 
Hall’s car, in gear, took off down 
the road with Bemis, who couldn't 
drive, in control. The car slid into 
a ditch and into some trees. 
The boards hit the trees, swing- 
ing them around, hitting Bemis in 
the head, He died of a skull 
fracture... 
‘The first public library in New 
York City was established in 1697. 
    ae. = 
7 % « 
  SsPat ened” PES | Sa Sea’ wt ac eda See + remember the oie Saye el 
ee at tee nee an| I am grateful rah oe fe for a 
Eieesticneemeet crc | 0E an aaete so as 
Spore ke ee eeeee eas hare ptt | et te     
  
a 
Molotov's first visit to the United | 
    
            
    fused to let her leave the car, 
which overturned as he tel 
away at high speed. She alleged | 
that she suffered back and leg in-| 
juries that prevented her from | 
dancing again. Schoen denied | making any advances, 
Brazil became an independent 
nation September 7, 1822. i 
  
  
  Nicholas as he sails for home after attending the 10th 
Deaf Mutes Victims | Dancer Wins $58,000 = Damages for injury 
: M de § ~ id LOS ANGELES —pamages of 
in i ul I, uICI e $58,000 have been awarded dancer 
| Zona Fe for auto accident injuries 
DENVER, Colo, ®—Police said | she claims she sustained while a 
the young estranged husband of a; Passenger in composer Vic 
22-year - old deaf mute shot and | Shoen’s car in Las Vegas, Nev. 
killed her, wounded two others and axe Combep ie eal ope : fused to let him kiss her he _ re- 
then killed himself last night. | 
Clarence H. Williams, 26, the 
husband and father, also was a, 
deaf mute. eo | 
Wounded were Mrs. Marlene | 
Hinrichs, 23, in whose kitchen the 
shootings took place, and Robert ' 
V. Edwards, 31, 
* * ® | 
In the kitchen at the time of 
the shooting were three young) 
children, Claude Williams, 14 CLOTHES » now 4° 
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$495 to $9795 
  
  
     
           
  
    
     
  Saginaw, collided at a Huron Coun- | 
ty road intersection. 
                        months “ old, his 4-month - old . 
brother, Eugene, sons of the slain a 5, » Oh $ 80 a a Men’s Work: Shirts NOW old son Roy, They were not in-| Jace a, 2 Fer $ 3 
jured. Tan, Grey, Blue 
Pair Dies in Flames | : 
1| After Autos Collide Men’‘s Work Pants 
PIGEON ®—Two gars crashed Reg. $2.95 
in flames five miles north of this Pocscard 29-42 Pre. $ Shoes. 
Thumb area community yester-| Colors 
day, killing both occupants of one_ : 
car. F 
Killed were Robert B. Jack, 40, | M n D ac K 
of Detroit, and Harold J. Fix, 62, | ens RESS = $ s 
of Carsonville, Their car and one 
driven by Keith E. Weibel, 32, of Reg. 55¢ 3 ]         
    ‘WOMEN’S VITALITY. Entire Stock of Summer 
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Delicate pastels and white 
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Reg. $15.95 
Now $'] (20 
         
  
      
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    ‘ JOE AGNEW had -his key-ring 
out as he approached the garage, 
and in the moonlight selected the 
  flat key to the padlock on the 
| door, 
FE 2-7257 
‘he found it wasn't even locked. He stopped and frowned when 
Now that was funny. He always 
locked it when he put the taxi 
up at night. Long as he could 
remember, he'd never forgotten 
to lock it before. 
Well, maybe he had been a lit- 
tle excited about calling the po- 
lice and all, he conceded as he 
opened the 
and got uhder the steering wheel. 
Yeh. That must have been it. 
He'd-been going over in his mind 
the story he would tell Irma. Sort 
of building it up a little bit, 
maybe, to make it sound more 
important than it really was, But 
that was just to please Irma. She       always waited up for him no   
  
BAR-B-Q 
HOME-CURED 
Smoked Hams 
BAR-B-Q 
CHICKEN   
DAVE’S MARKET *“ci..wccs ” SIDES OF 
' BEEF' 
For Your Deep Freeze 
“39°     & Death Has _ by Brett Halliday - 
double doors wide} }. 
  
    
matter how late he was, and was 
always pestering him to tell 
all the interesting things that } 
happened to him that day. . 
She never could get it out of 
her head that was just 
like any other kind of work. She'd 
ask him what important people 
he'd carried, how pretty were the 
women and did any of them 
make passes or invite him into 
their houses for a drink when 
he took them home, 
And generally he couldn’t think 
of anything much to tell her, but 
last night had been different and 
he'd been full of it when he put 
the taxi up and went in. 
He was so full of remembering 
about it now as he backed the 
cab out of the driveway to the 
street that he didn't pay any at- 
tention to the dark automobile 
ed inconspicuously at the curb 
half a block away. 
Joe's sixth sense was a little 
lacking when he failed to note 
that the parked car pulled away 
from the curb without headlights 
and swung in behind him as he 
turned the first corner, 
-But he was too full of think- 
ing about how he had finally had 
something interesting to tell Irma, 
and how he'd added on a few 
touches to make it sound like 
he'd been smarter than the police. 
WIFE IMPRESSED 
SHE'D listened to the embel- 
lished story with open-mouthed ad- 
miration, too, making him out to 
be some kind of hero for report-   
  
The 
Good 
Housekeeping 
  
new low, low price. 
51 West Huron St. 
    FREE DELIVERY 
Big liberal trade-in. . 
allowance for your old washer 
Zhe (OOD HOUSEKEEP! Pay No Money 
Down! | 
Get This Brand New 1955 Model 
Only 
Gleaming white inside—and out. REGULAR EASY washing 
action that gets clothes cleaner. Big roller-safety wringer with 
quick-release trip. Now ‘active-water’-agitator action. And a 
of PONTIAC 
Open Friday and Monday to 9 Big Deluxe Family 
EASY WASHER 
Take weeks to pay on easy. 
low cost terms! .. .. .. 
FREE SERVICE! 
      “Slop Phone FE 4-1555 
    
  
GREAT FOR VACATION TRAVEL - NEWEST 
V-8 POWER, RECLINING SEATS, TRAVEL BEDS 
  
  
  
58 W. Pike Street 
    | Now! Big trade-in allowances on. 
the most beautiful performers of them all at 
- JACOBSON’S MOTOR ‘SALES 
  | pany on that sort of special serv- 
j}away from the driveway of 
| might not be smirched. 
furtively.” 
coaxer, the 
porter said. it to the — and all, and 
if there mightn’ t 
be a reward for him if the girl- 
killer was caught as a result of 
his quick-thinking, a 
He'd discouraged that idea, but 
now he remembered the interview 
with the skinny reporter and the 
famous detective, and how the re- 
porter had promised to write up 
a story all about him maybe put 
in, too, ho-y he was on call at 
home at night if anybody needed 
a cab special. If he did put that 
in the paper, Joe Agnew reasoned 
happily, thousands of people would 
read about it and as a consequence 
there might be a lot more calls like 
this one in the future, 
Maybe he'd even be able to build 
up a sort of special clientele in 
time, so he could really be in busi- 
ness on his own and not have to 
split with a company. 
By that time he was on Bis- 
cayne Boulevard speeding 
smoothly nerthward with no traf- 
fie to think about, so he day- 
dreamed happily on, the one-man 
taxy business m toa 
volume that required him to put 
on a whole fleet of cabs, and 
with very special and trustworthy 
drivers, of course, 
Fellows like him who had a sort 
of sixth sense about certain things 
you might say, because he would 
build the reputation of his com- 3 g 
ice and he'd take mighty good 
care that any driver working for 
him was absolutely discreet and 
could be trusted to do a job like 
this one tonight and never-open 
his mouth about it, No sir. Not 
even if the lady’s husband was to 
have her trailed and come around 
and offer to pay him a ‘lot of 
money to tell where his wife had 
been before he brought her home. 
Now, that was a good thought. 
It had never happened just that 
way in the past, but maybe the 
talk with Michael Shayne had 
brought it to his mind and made 
him see just what might happen. 
JOE WONDERS 
SUPPOSE a private detective 
like Mr. Shayne, now, was to be 
|hired by the husband of the lady 
he was going to pick up on 148th 
Street. Suppose , now, that a pri- 
vate eye like Shayne was to be) | taking out a 20-year mortgage in- 
‘payments in the long run by tak- | 
p10 years would be about $2,000. 
      
  Shayne didn't take cases like that. 
All right. Some other private 
eye. One not so famous who did 
take cases like that, 
He was 80 absorbed in his own 
day-dreaming that he paid no heed 
|whatsoever to the car that had Novia ‘Rent’ 
Costs You More Lending Agencies Reap 
Fortune From Interest 
on Long-Term Notes 
By SAM DAWSON 
NEW YORK (—The easier the 
mortgage payments are on your 
current budget the more money 
you'll have to put out’ before you | 
finally get full title to your home. 
Lending agencies are starting to 
stress that paying for a home ‘just 
like rent” costs more in interest | 
payments over the years. : 
* * *   
  Detroit Polio Victim 
Report—45 for Year 
DETROIT #—Six new cases of 
polio reported in. the last week 
have brought Detroit's total for 
the year to 45. This compares 
with 35 cases in the same period 
last year. 
One death this year hes been: 
listed officially as caused by polio. 
There were seven deaths to this 
date in 1954, 
Dr. Joseph G. Molner, health 
commissioner, said 11 of the 45 
polio patients had been given one 
shot of Salk vaccine. Of these 
cases three were mildly paralytic 
and eight non-paralytic, 
MAKE INCOME TAX MONEY 
through The Pontiac Press Clas- 
sified ads. Sell things you don't 
need for CASH, Phone FE 2-8181.   
    
  Plymouth Free Towing—No Block Deposit 
MOTOR EXCHANGE co. 401 S. Saginaw Phone FE 3-7432 
      
  
On a $10,000 loan a veteran can 
save himself more than $3,000 by 
stead of a 30-year one, the North- 
western National Life Insurance 
Co. of Minnedpolis notes today. 
Or, put another way, on each | 
$1,000 of down payment you can/| 
manage to put up, you can save 
over $800 in interest payments on 
a 30-year program, or more than | 
$500 in interest payments on a 20- | 
year schedule. 
* 
Ed 
Many families who'd like a home | 
of their own, or a larger house for 
a growing brood, are discussing to- | 
day how best to finance it: The | 
problem: they can save interest * = 
  
ing the 20-year payment plan in- | 
stead of the 30-year one—but their | 
monthly payments in the mean- 
time will be about $12.50 higher. 
And they may want to use that 
$12.50 toward payments on the re- 
frigerator or stove. 
* * * 
The insurance company notes) 
that under a 20-year payment plan | 
on a $10,000 deal, all borrowed, 
they would in 10 years have paid 
off about $3,900 in principal. It says 
that.-under a 30-year schedule, their 
payments on principal in the first 
Voters OK Bond Issue 
EAST JORDAN (®—Voters have 
approved a $410,000 bond issue and 
an 8.5 mill tax hike to build a new | 
16-classroom elementary school for 
East Jordan rural agricultural dis- 
trict No. 2. The bond issue won 
by a vote of 365 to 152. The millage 
increase was approved 373 to 161.      
  BARBECUED CHICKEN 
to Beat the Heat | 
Just call OR 3-1544 2 
hours ahead and get 
your Bar-B-Q Chicken 
hot. Keep your kitchen 
cool by using our 
Bar-B-O Chickens. 
"1s 2 3/4 Ib. Avg. — EACH 
  
FRESH GROUND BEEF 3 Ibs, $1   
YOUR CHOICE SIRLOIN STEAK 69 ‘ Lb. 
  
CHOICE CUT BEEF POT ROAST........» ROUND STEAK 
  
REMUS BUTTER............00e000004 RIB STEAK 
a9¢   
              DRAYTON FOOD MARKET 4490 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains OR 3-1544     
  
  been discreetly and efficiently be- 
hind him ever since he pulled) 
house. It slowed down to a snail's 
pace behind him as he turned to | 
the right, and his eyes were only 
concerned with looking ahead for 
a glimpse of the woman whom 
he was to gallantly pick up and 
escort home so her reputation | 
(To Be Continued) 
Look, Store, Eye, Glance | 
but Man, Don’t Ogle Her 
KALAMAZOO (®# — Girl watch- 
ing is O.K. but girl ogling is out 
under a new city ordinance. 
  Sponsors said it is aimed at the | 
“obnoxious ogler, the accoster, the | 
-insulter.” 
It does not bar the right to a 
long look or a short stare—‘‘that's 
constitutional privilege,” a sup- 
  
Interpreters on Trains 
Interpreters are now available Ms 
on Italian trains in international 
service as well as on domesitc runs. 
The interpreters as well as the 
ticket takers are authorized to | 
change foreign currency at official | 
rates of exchange. 
  
NEW HUDSON HORNET ¥-8 ironeges « wehaie’ 
as oft: 
_, American Meters 
e 
    
    
      
    if you don’t 
  
  
      
                            GET RID OF IT 
Someone can use what you don’t need. 
SELL IT FOR CASH 
WITH A WANT AD     need it... 
  
  Ralph Sides 
All Rights Reserved 
    
    
To Place Your Ninny QUEER, Gams. r00:s [ioe rn DESK, SUITS , What do YOU | 5GOKS, TOYS BEDS. DRESSec TYPEWRITER THEM IN YOUR 
Se ee ‘AIRS, CHESTS G. RUGS, CAMERA BABY CABS PAINTINGS - 
Want Ad Dial FE 2-8181 
THE PONTIAC PRESS   
  
          
    
     
      
     
    
    
  ‘Seek Solutions 
  THE PONTIAC PRESS,   
‘WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1955. a Me ‘om - — ee 
         / t 
ed 
    ed 
‘a a) 
‘wer Se ee   
Les Angeles Officials 
listen to All and Any 
Ideas to End Condition 
LOS ANGELES (INS)—Someone 
with a Rube Goldberg-like bent for 
the impossible could make a for- 
tune in Los Angeles by conjuring 
up a machine for delivering a 
death blow to the smog menace. * * 
who have given 
serious consideration to some pret- 
ty strange ideas of their own. 
LATEST IDEA 
The latest idea put forth for 
clearing the Los Angeles basin of 
smog takes the form of a gigantic 
fan system, which would simply | 
“blow” the smog over the nearby 
mountains into the nearly unin- 
habited desert beyond. 
The 90-page “Report Number 
@” of the Air Pollution Founda- 
tion claims a series of 540 wind- 
mill-sized fans strategically 
placed around Los Angeles would 
kick up a 9-mile-an-hour wind 
which could conceivably blow 
the smog away. 
The principal objections to the 
fans, each using a 5,000 horsepower 
engine, is that they would require 
20 per cent of the total electric 
generating capacity in the United 
. States. * * * 
Although the report wrote off 
its own idea of the fan system 
by saying that it was ‘‘not deserv- 
ing of the investment of time and 
money,” other plans even more 
fantastic are stili in the plotting 
A THINKER? 
For instance, there is the fellow 
who thought all Los Angeles need- 
ed to have to forget about the 
  collided 
driven by 
siren a 
| 
i 
  Spells Trouble. 
for Youth, 18 
A quick check with headquar- 
ters revealed Lamb, of Bir. 
also wag wanted on 
A quantity of beer was found in 
the car, and since Lamb is only 18 
years old, he was charged with 
possession illegal of . alcohol. 
He paid a $14 fine for the traffic 
Sere rary but he'll answer to a 
  Pontiac Deaths 
Frank M. Chandler 
  ‘Clio Gir Injured 
tin Auto Accident 
| Chrysler Changeover 
"| Burned in Gasoline Fire 
as 
ly over anchor bolts, each deeply the world’s longest suspension sfructure settles gent- STEEL TOWER AT MACKINAC — A 39%3-ton! concrete and steel pillar of one of the Mackinac 
steel section of one leg of the north main tower ne foundations. The two main towers will rise 
embedded in the | | season. 
  
Grains Gaining 
Following Dip CHICAGO  — After starting 
out lower grains reversed their 
trend on the Board of Trade today, 
many contracts Pushing up above 
the previous close. 
Hedging pressure was a factor | 
in sending wheat and feed grains | 
lower at the outset. Soybeans dis- 
played independent firmness from 
the start. In the susequent rally 
soybeans added to their gains and 
wheat and corn quickly recovered. 
Oats tended to lag. 
Wheat near the end of the first 
hour was % to % higher, July: 
$1.99; corn unchanged to 4 hi 
July $1.39%; oats % to % lower 
July 59%; rye % to 1 cent higher, 
July 9644; soybeans unchanged to 
7% higher, July $2.43%, and 
lard 5 cents lower to 10 cents a 
hundred pounds higher. July $11.22. 
Grain Prices 1CAGO GRAIN Ch 
CHICAGO, July 20 (AP) — Opening 
grain: Beep cevvenss 60! 
July eons 1.00% Dee .ncces- . % 
Bep  cecvevee 2.00% Mar .,..... 64% 
sevces 2.00% R 
Mar ..,-cocs 2:03 July ...-coc. 95% 
oa! veeeeee 1.9042 Sep w1% Dec ....00.. 1061's 
July ....005 130% Mar ... 1.04% 
anne Laoag eens 11.30 Pepmomec 2 DP cccccnes 
Mar ..cscere 1.33% Oct . 11.00 
Oats Dec , 10.55 
SUF oc cccns 59 
    
MARKETS Produce 
, DETROIT PRODUCE 
DETROIT, July 19 (AP)—Today’s De- 
troit Union Produce Terminal report: 
Moderate to liberal supplies of most 
fresh fruits and vegetables met with 
light demand this morning. New apples, 
lettuce, medium yellow onions, peaches 
and white potitoes were lower estern 
‘celery was slightly higher while most 
other staple commodities showed little 
price change 
Apples ‘astern bu. bskts. Lodi Trans- 
Us 50 
Williem & Red UB 1 2's inch up 3 75-4 00. 
Lettuce: leeberg type dry pack Calif 
cartons 2 doz 3.00-3.50; Canada crates, 
3 doz. 3.75-4.00 
Onions 50 Ib sacks Calif yellows, 
medium 185-2.25: large 2.00-2.50; Mich 
Yellow Globes medium 2.00, lowa Yellow 
Globes medium 1.60-1.75. 
Peaches: New Jersey *4 bu. bskt. Early 
Red Frees 2 inch up 5.00; half bu. bskts. 
Sunrise 1% inch up 
s: Calif. Tb sacks Long 
Whites U.S. No. 1 size A washed 3.25- 
4.00; Michigan 5@ lb sacks Round Whites 
US. No. 1 size A —— 1.10-1.25; 
Round Reds unchanged Celery: Calif. 16 inch crates Pascal 
  2-214 dos. 3.78-4.25; Mich 16 incb 
Pascal 2-2% inch dos. 2.75. 
DETROIT EGGS 
DETROIT, July 19 ony See fob 
Detroit cases included, eral-state 
grade 
Whites—Grade A fumbo 64-55 wei; hte 
ed average 55, large i: 51 wtd avg 
medium 41-43 wt my | 42. small 30- ‘3 
wtd avg 30',; Grade large 42-45 wtd 
—e | 43; peewees 22 
dad anes A large 46. medium 40; 
bed bol 41; grade C large 27-33 
Commercially graded 
Whites—Grade a ee on -43, penn 
ar 38, small 26-28; ge 
rowns—Grade 4 ait al 3" *4e. me- 
dium 37; grade 
Marsel steady ne Mall at asaas” 
  
CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS 
          New Polio Vaccine 
Released for State 
LANSING (®—The State Health 
Department reported today that |   115,000 more doses of Salk polio ready. vaccine has been released for use Pit, re round fe oir 65-2 
in Michigan. 
Dr. Albert E. Heustis, state 
health commissioner, said the vac- 
eine, the first to be released to 
Michigan since late May, will be 
used to continue the previously 
suspended immunization program 
for first and second graders. 
third of the amount needed to 
complete giving second doses to 
children in that group. 
Dr. Heustis said local health 
departments are being queried to 
see which wish to obtain the vac- 
cine for summer use. 
  
Ruth Ann Amy, 17, of Clio, sus- 
tained possible chest injuries this 
morning when her car struck the 
rear of q parked auto on Huron 
street near Osceola drive, Pontiac 
Police said. 
She was taken to Pontiac Gen- 
eral Hospital where authorities 
| said she was being treated. A 
| Statement from the driver was de- 
‘layed pending completion of} ba 
X-rays,   
Makes 11,000 Jobless 
DETROIT —Assemblies of 1955 
model Chrysler cars will end next 
Monday for inventory and model 
changeovers. 
E. C. Quinn, president of the 
Chrysler division of Chrysler Corp., 
said the division will be shut down 
for about four weeks, while the 
ee ae oe 
ion. 
Eleven thousand of the 17,000 
hourly rated and salaried workers 
will be laid off, Quinn said. 
  
Six Indiana Guardsmen 
GRAYLING 
National Guardsmen were burned 
messhall at their summer training 
camp near Grayling. 
      
  
The new shipment is about one- re 
(INS)—Six Indiana | 
‘when spilled gasoline ignited in a lings” stead 
        to their full height of 552 feet above the water this 
    
    
  CHICAGO, July 2 (AP) —Butter ; , . 
steady: receipts 1,380,503: wholesale New York Stocks items on today’s cars. Quinn said 
sare ed A387 —— ar r Nerceasae (Late —— Qoetationss it provides perfectly matched col- 
cars 90 B 55: 89 C 53.6 Admiral ...... 23.3 Harv..... 492! ors on all body panels and assures Eges steally: receipts 12.106: wholesale | Air Reduction. 343 = Nick..... 73 1 finish life f { 
buying prices unchanged: U8. large | Allied Chemicalli44 Int Paper....1062 longer fins ile free from as- 
whites 60-69.9 per cent A's 36, mixed 3. | Allied Strs .... $9.4 Int hoe... 45 | sembly-caused paint cracks and | mediums 31; US. standards 20: dirties ame ia ae = wale ca 3 etek | 23.5; checks 23. current receipts 24.5. pees eel 51:"g7§ Isl Crk Coal., 25.5 i. . 
Am Alrline ,,.. +268 ae 9.2 
cmicago rorators aie yee CHICAGO, July 19 (AP)—Potatoes: Ar- | Am Gas & El.. 46.3 Keisey Hayes.. 34 ar es ropping 
| rivals 107, om track 456 and total U.S./ Am M & Pdy.. 26.4 Kennecott ...116.5 
307: de-| Am Motors .... 9% Kimb Cik...., 50.5 = moderate ao market about Am N Gas ,,,, 56 Kresge, 5S..., 29 
Cariot track sales: Californ Am News.,..... 334 Kroger ....,, 40.7 ong | U U 
‘hites a ® cial pack = m Rad ....., 234 LOF Giass.... 84 
anc North Caro. | Am Seating. 2, Lib McN & L., 17.8 
Sebagos washed 228, unwashed Am wre Ta 14 Ligg & My... &2| DETROIT #—The daily rate of Lorthard .... 22.2] new sales ren Chenin § 3 4 od —— = car for the first 10 days 
Anac Co ec: oa.) Mack Trk.... 30 | Of July averaged 23,850 to continue 
Anac . : 36 is i Poultry Goats Oa a4 Martin. {Gl... 3¢7| a downtrend in dealer inventories, 
Armour &Co 14.7 McGraw H.... 67.2| Ward's Automotive Reports said oe oe, POULTRY Arms Ck .....- 295 Merck ...... 23 
July 19 (AP)—Prices paid | Atchison .....143 Mergen Lino:. 523 yesterday. 
Ee =: nat o! = Detrott fo for No 1 quality an Cot Line... = Mpls Laer a AA The June 1-10 average was 24,000. 
wat hens 26-28 light hens, wre: | Aveo Mig. i. a] Mont Ward... 'se7| New car inventories at dealers oy. rollers or fryers (2%-. ; are Mot cena si san eek whens (Waa geae renee ais Av... 6 eter a et and in transit dropped to 672,500 
Barred Rocks 31; caponettes (4%- quet ...5.. 19.9 orola .... 824|0N July 10 from 675,000 on July 1 
te bey ay wl old roosters 14; ducklings | Beth Steel ..,.140.1 wet pisc.... 40.6 nd rd high 705,000 
30; young hee vy = Ben m turkeys boeing Air .... 56.7 Wat Cash R.., 41.4| @ a reco’ igh of i on 
br vy type turke: i pond Strs .... 17.5 Nat Dairy... 41.6| May 30, Ward's said 
fe tarp etiectngs “hens culty iow | Borden faz Nat Lead. 2. 75.4 ; Li ‘arm offerin: an rel i +o 9%. 
ample. Light type hens short to an|BrisiMy .... 315 Ny central... ae || Ward's sald a 20 per cent in- improved dem ad Fryers about steady. bruni Balke.... 27.2 wie M Pow... 34.3| crease in the daily sales rate at Supplies ample. Demand just fair. Ca-| Budd Co ...... 216 wore w& West. 57.2 : ponettes steady. | Supplies ample. Pair Burroughs m : 311 No am Av... $66| Ford Motor Co. in the first 10 
eman or ¥ sizes i 
quality offerings. y Camp Soup.... 40.1 rea re ES kbd _s days of this month offset a 12.5 
Gan Dry ss: soe oa Ohio Oll.. t 2h 4.7 per cent decline at General Mo- 
CHICAGO POULTRY ees ayy Owens ul Gi..127 | tors Corp. 
CHICAGO, July 18 ‘AP)—Live poul- Sopaat Ait. 33.41 con aw a et : try steady on young stock and capon-/| Carrier Cp ..,. $32 5, Sa ae Air. . a4 | The agency disagreed with pub- ettes. weak on hens; receipts in coops | Case, secs 30-8 Pare os : ; Lin (Priday 672 coops, 72,178 Ib); f.0.b. Cater Trae... 83 on rm Piet... oc ae lished dispatches that new car 
paying prices unchanged to 2? ‘lower: bd oss OB. 
heavy hens 22-26; light hens 186-196; | Chrysier ...... 87.2 Penney, Fle o3-6 ake cen ae et ay reached broilers or fryers 27-28; old roosters | Cities Bvt... sya Peo! Cola... + 381) as high as 820,000 units. 13.5-14; caponettes 32-34, i Gears Baeto... 22 Priner nae a3 Ward’s said the actual figure, 
: { Cluett Pee «++°445  Phileo ..".... 37.8 | @8 Teported by the nation’s new Livestock Cols Paim ...- st ceaiteeer ---- $13 | Cap dealers to their factories, Was 
ea este : 675,000. DETROIT LIVESTOCK peel LESIRCS | ¢ | in toe a. at Ward’ a DETROIT, July 20 (AP)—Hogs—eal- | COMUES «**°> $05 Pure Ol a3 s said an inventory of 820,- oe et) oan) com niGas “Lg RCA . 16.2 | 000 new cars would mean a stock- FS ~ ‘A *, o ove ss 
Cattie—Salable 300. Frean receipts rome gy ahah f Repub 1 sses 187 | pile of 31.2 days and would imply mainly cows; general market very quiet; ee ex Drug ..,. | rod 
not enough @ and choice fed steers os Vero SS Pi Rey Met” oe disaster for many producers. The 
to salty est prices: few calse fully Corn Pd ...... 28.4 aa te B.,:. 483 actual figure of 675,000 cars would 
stea utility and commerce’ steers ery ‘oc +» 29.6) 
and hetters slow, weak, on & lenge | Curtise W bela ee 33 Safeway St.... ans be an investory of only 25.7 days, 
basis; few early sales cows weak Det Edis ..., 37.1 St Jos Lead... 49 | Ward's said. bulk unsold; demand narrow; bulls slow, | Dis C Seag.... 66.2 St Reg Pa . 433 
wee a stockers. and feeders unchanged: | Doug Aire .... 662 Scoville | Mt 38.5 | ew head mostly good ughter steers ww Chem .,.. 54. a 80 
20.00-22.00: scattered sales sutility and be Du Pont .....225.4 Sears Roeb .100.2 Pastel Helps Surgeons commercial steers = wn to 1h ret ~ at =a | od ot = Ofl -... 60.7) 
some vara rassers down to 11.00; lim: Amoi mmons ..., 4 KR — I, 
ed early sales utility cows 11.00-13.25;| El Auto Lite 451 Sinclair O .. 57 | AKRON, 0. (INS) — Pastel col we = canners ani —— "0 80-12 00 zs ar a ioe —— Mob . $6.2 or has been introduced to hospital ‘ew sales cutter and wu y bu j~ er . ‘ ou ac ww, G14 : 
14.00; no commercial bulls sold. Erie RR ..... 233 Sou Ry $4.2 | OPerating rooms for scientific — - Colves—Salable 1%. a re “urongt a-coll -» 428 sta Brena ; 40.1| not decorative — purposes. Pale ‘or limited supply; ve ‘alr’ OT ses ‘ali 60.6 , 
week's advance: moet sales god — Firestone -- 8 8t ou Ind .. §1.2| teen rubber surgeons’ gloves, the low choice ve ac 5 itd Ol NJ 4. ade any 
choses and prime individuals 26.00-30.00; | Pree Sul 78.6 Std Of Ohio ry] first ever m in other color 
utility and semmmeteiel erodes 14.00-18.00; Prew — “ $ Stevens. JP .. 974| except white or brown, have been 
tteri = en 2 Stud P: : announced ; “Saeco pane 100. Broad inquiry for|Gen Dynam’ 54. Sun on. ; HY : by B. F. Goodrich. The supp and prime Genghis als: wy — = wese a: Shiner Pap company says the new color has suf e' weer * Ld 
coreg ag Gen Mills"... 156 Srive 1 Pa’, ogy | Deen found to reduce eyestrain be- 
Gen Motors 134.4 Texas ‘o ....190.8 | Cause it reflects less glare from 
CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Gen Tel ...., 41.4 Thomp Pa *. 4g 3|the bright lights over the operat- CHICAGO, July 19 (AP)—Galable was Gen Time ,.. 36 Timk R-Bear 86.4] ing table 8.500; slow and uneven; general Gen Tire ... 63.4 Tran W Air 31 . lower on all atehers sows 25-50 Tr, | Gillette ..,.. 77.6 Transamer .. 45.7 
Ce ee 33 Gertie 6 te tern tI Chi d j e ees 
butchers 16.00-17.00; | 8 Ce Se nd | Goodyear ees $1 Un Pee ins a Sends Envoys ts mixed > 0 ; : 
7 17.50; 8 deck mos’ sian ah? | Gt, West & .. 215 Unit ers .&4|. TAIPEI, Formosa (®—National- 
of 33.1 regecee ameey eet a few [Oat ene oe yen re ist China is sending a seven-man 
160-180 Ib 15.00-17.00; Ae 1b | Hayes Mfg .. 1.1 US Lines’ ,’. 92.4| delegation to the International Con- 
1800, most’. 400-800 12.15-16.00 iene Fk oe ee; #8 | ference on Peaceful Uses of Atom- 
up to Tb as low as | * es . ealea 5 
a és, se woke’ leaks cntabio calves 300; | Rone 7 Us Tob oe a|ic Energy opening at Geneva Aug. 
Gull, steers and year-| Hooker El pf 1042. Weatger me) 23) 18. iin 80 lower, heifers sleady | toud Her le ete A Bk... 28.3 
to 25 lower; utility’ and commercial cows t * h4 What lei 
slow, about steady; canners and cutters Sena: " Wet a ed % 
fairly active, steady: bulls to 50 /infand St! 1.742 Yale & Tow.’ od lo vealers about steady; stockers | 7, re bet and feeders slow, weak; © & TU h yy PP a oa fed: yearling steers ac’ enith Red. .,.114.4 
* oho ime steers nm * 
earings ‘around 1.100. Ib down 2.35 bg ig ty ay 
4.25; good to, low om nd me | Figures after decimal points are eighths 1. 00; chol ai pri: one 
nu — steers 21.25-: sin rt Baldwin Rubver* ..... High Lgl om 
00; | Gerity-Michigan* "*.... 38 3a ot ane cates, ee coed tas |x Products* eae ©) 18.25: utility ahd com- Masto Screw* ....s006 3 31 
mercial cows 11.25-13.00; a load of high weay Abrasive*..,, 16066 
Land good cows 19.00; can Warne Serewe 1k ES He £ iS wy; Weyne Screw” nissan t 
and pining ages utsity and Sone *Ko sale; bid and =. 
mercial bulls 4. 00; -— and STOCK AVERAGES 
choice gy NEW YORK—tCompiled by the As- mercial 1 ss sociated Press) 
egies 05 De Tenant altos lame slow, a ee weak 10 £0 lower: other he. Jetest Bets Oe . to Prev. 7 Shea *y 331.1 74.9 1724 
i ° 9. Week a0 veone- 240.6 134.2 14.6 173.4 
en ; oe th ago seer 296.1 130.1 73.2 1 
Bees cet ead Rites | tee =: eine te i eeboar “ ie. 
ce Y mostly ehatte {3 @osince bid 114.9 at 1 716 cas Stete ik 
TPE Ne 1 Boise i200! cull to mostly 11084) high ",..°. aie 123.0 683 1982 Ban sin \ 
good éhers i 300-408, P MOBA. How, 655 Se FER 8 TORS : 
‘ if ' ' A etal * , y } : } 
| * y. | ; a Stocks Mired 
in Quiet Trade Growing Output Chrysler Head Surveys. Colbert Sees 
Booming Auto Market 
  at Plant Opening 
President L. L. Colbert says the 
theory that the passenger car mar- 
ket is good for only five or ,six 
million cars annually has been 
.|“completely exploded’? by recent. 
high production and sales in the 
|} auto industry. 
Colbert told a news conference 
| yesterday car production this year 
will be “well above” his recent 
| prediction of 6,800,000 cars. 
At a press preview of Chrysler 
Division’s new $20 million body 
assembly and paint plant, Col- 
bert sald the new expansion is 
“only the beginning" of what 
the corporation plans to do in 
the future. Chrysler already has 
spent or allocated $715 million 
for postwar expansion. 
The trend of increasing compe- 
tition in the industry is making it 
necessary for all companies to 
keep expanding, Colbert said, 
Chrysler Division's new plant is 
  NEW YORK iP — The stock 
market was generally mixed in. 
early dealings today as trading 
becamg quiet after a fairly active 
| opening. 
Most price changes were small. 
| Most steels were up, rails were 
| mixed, copper stocks were gener- | 
jally up. Ramtec iuring shares were 
ie   
a burst of selling near noon but a 
general recovery in the afternoon 
trimmed down most of the losses. 
The Associated Press average 
of 60 stocks dropped $1.00 to $172.- 
80. The market's action was at- 
tributed to a mild case of jitters 
ever the economic significance 
of the Geneva conference. 
Today at the start most price 
changes were in fractions but 
Bethlehem Steel dropped 1% at) 
and General Dynamics was set up 
1% at 54% on 3,000. 
Among blocks appearing on the 
tape initially were International 
Harvester 1,700 up “% at 40%, 
General Motors 1,200 off \%4 at 125, 
Woolworth 2,800 up 4 at 52%, 
Westinghouse 1,000 up *s at 667%. 
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
    Yesterday the market declined in | 
148% on a block of 1,500 shares | expected to be ready for produc- 
tion in time for 1956 models. DETROIT « — Chrysler Corp. | 
| 
    
Berry Farm in Buena Park, Her   LOVELY DISH — Serving up salad is 18-year-old Donna Schurr, 
' prettiest waitress in California. Despite the fact that she was named 
|**Miss California of 1955°" she continues to wait on tables at Knott's 
    to Peddler Law New Ordinance Ousts 
Bells ori Ice Cream 
Vendors’ Trucks 
Ice cream peddlers in Pontiac 
face further harassment from the 
city, 
missioner John E. Carry, (District 
6), the City Commission last night 
instructed the city attorney to add 
another “tooth” to the new “‘get- 
tough" peddling ordinance passed 
several weeks ago. 
While the original ordinance 
states that street vendors may 
not ring bells or otherwise sound 
noisemakers to attract custom- 
ers, Carry pointed out the bells 
often are hung so loosely that 
they jingle anyway merely from 
the motion of the truck. 
  contest-winning statistics: 36-24-35. 
  
By DAVID J. WILKIE 
DETROIT (#—The next major   | build the engines. Gasoline Turbine Motor 
Next Auto Improvement 
The engine is 
subjected to tremendous stresses. 
The division will close down next | development in automobile power | The metals required are high on 
Monday for four weeks for the | pants well may be the advent of the critical list in every defense 
changeover from 1955 cars. Of the | the gas turbine engine. But few | program. 
117,000 hourly and salaried em- industry experts expect to see it The engineers have not yet 
ployes. about 11.600 will be laid in production model car much be- worked out satisfactory alternate 
off. Some:of these will be retained | 
| during: the first week of the layoff , 
| for inventory purposes 
Chrysler's new models wilj be 
introduced to the public the lat- 
ter part of October. 
Chrysler Division President E. 
C. Quinn said the long period for 
layoff is necessary for combining 
the new plant facilities with those 
of present operations. 
Quinn described the new plant 
as “the largest single expansion 
in our division's history and the | 
| most modern facility of its kind in| 
(the industry.’’ 
Painting of car bodies will be 
,done automatically. Small tripper 
arms on the paint lines start and 
stop sprayers as paint is needed. 
Under a new ‘‘automated’’ sys- 
tem, fenders, hoods and bodies will 
be assembled first and painted 
later. The plan was developed as 
a result of the wide variety of 
color combinations and chrome   
      
  
  fore 1960. 
The industry's stylists and en- , 
gineers currently are working on 
cars that will not go into produc- | 
tion before 1958 and even later. | 
‘None of these models anticipates | 
the use of-a gas turbine engine. 
* * » 
But they are being designed with | 
much higher powered gasoline in- | 
ternal combustion engines in| 
prospect. Designers of this type | 
from the top possibilities of this 
power plant. 
The conventional type of power | 
plant already is heading toward 
the 300 horsepower mark for pro- 
duction line models. Chrysler has 
demonstrated it can do even better 
than that with modifications of its 
| present stock engine. 
The next couple of years will 
bring several such engines in the 
higher priced model cars. But 
the engineers insist they are not 
competing for higher speed po- 
tential. 
E. M. Braden, Chrysler division’s 
general sales manager, who has to 
answer a lot of questions about 
high horsepower engines, says the 
horsepower increases in today’s 
cars are not designed to increase 
speed. Instead, he says, they are 
being “‘converted into better accel- 
eration in the ordinary driving 
|ranges, providing greater safety.” 
This is accomplished, Braden 
adds. “by gearing down the en- 
gine’s output.” 
GREAT ASSETS 
Actually, he says; horsepower 
in any sense. 
engineers tell us that to raise a 
car’s top speed five miles per hour 
it is necessary to raise the engine 
horsepower by 40." 
What has been accomplished, 
Braden says, is to provide greatly 
improved low and cruising range 
performance, improved economy 
and greater sturdiness and de- 
pendability. 
If this sounds like over-simplifi- 
cation Braden has more figures 
that he says support his view. 
“Compare our new 250 horse- 
power V-8 engine with the orig. 
inal in-line 135 horsepower el 
which it replaced. The top speeds 
of these two engines, as in- 
stalled in a standard car, show 
only a small increase in favor 
of the new engine. But the 
maximum torque figure, which 
is the engineer’s index of nor- 
mal speed performance, is 30 
per cent higher in the new en- 
gine, and it is attained at a 
higher engine speed, giving bet- 
ter acceleration in the highway 
cruising range.” 
Like other major car producers, 
Chrysler has a gas turbine engine 
at a well developed experimental 
stage. Test cars thus powered 
have been driven about Detroit 
streets. 
Chrysler reports it has overcome 
the problem of terrific heat dissi- 
patjon by the simple process of re- 
capturing the heat and utilizing its 
power potential. The problem of 
high speed reduction also has been 
solved. 
There is no fuel problem. The 
engine uses just about any kind of 
fuel. 
LJ * * 
But there are problems. Mainly 
they have to do with the scarcity 
and cost of materials needed to                     
  
          WATCH DOG SZ 3 
CRAWFORD- DAWE - GROVE INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS 
  ET COMPLETE 
HOME 
‘INSURANCE 
COVERAGE BE YOUR 
INSURE WITH and speed are “hardly synonymous | 
For example, our | matérials or alloys. 
News in Brief 
Opal Wallace, 94 E. Howard St., | 
reported to Pontiac Police the 
theft of a black and white bicycle 
‘last night. The bicycle, valued at 
$15, was taken between 9 and 10 
| p.m. while parked at Howard and 
Saginaw Streets. 
of engine say they still are far! Pontiac Police last night arrest- | by 
ed Patrick Murdock, 17, 16] W. 
| Chicago’ St., on two traffic 
rants charging speeding and an- 
‘other for running a red light. 
Duane Newman, 20, 22 McNeil 
St., paid $100 fine yesterday when 
he pleaded guilty before Municipal 
Judge Maurice E. 
driving under the 
liquor. influence of 
The Bargain Box, 465 8S. Wood- 
ward, Birm. will be open during | 
July. Good bargains in used cloth- 
ing. MI 4-4528. —Adv. 
Rummage sale Sat., July 23,' 
Cass Lake Rd. across from Mac's 
Collision, Keego Harbor. —Adv. 
Rummage sale. Youth Center. 
Lake Orion. Fri. and Sat. —Adv. 
If your friend's in jail and needs 
bail, Ph. FE 5-9424 or MA 56-4031. 
  Fisher Body Executive 
Moved to Grand Rapids 
GRAND RAPIDS ®—J. B. Dorn, 
| production manager of General 
Motors Corp., Fisher Body Divi- 
sion at Grand Blanc since 1953, 
has been named manager of 
Fisher Body Plant No. 2 at Grand 
Rapids, 
He succeeds James J. Edwards, 
who has been assigned temporarily 
{to the general manager's staff, on 
special assignments. 
“Dorn, a native of Bronson and 
an cag ineithag graduate of the 
University of Detroit, first joined 
Fisher Body in 1927 as a cost 
clerk. He served as comptroller of 
the firm’s plants in Detroit and 
Hamilton, Ohio, before moving to 
i Grand Blanc tank plant in 
  war: | 
Finnegan to| 
Keego Cass Woman's Club, 2012 | The new provision would require 
the removal of the bells from 
trucks. : 
The new action was spurred by 
the report of a child being struck 
by an auto while crossing behind 
an ice cream wagon last week, 
It was frankly stated by the 
commissioners that they would 
like to drive the frozen confection 
hawkers from the city by sheer 
weight of restriction. Laws banning 
them from the streets have not 
‘held up in court.   
Army Recommends 
Channel Deepening 
| WASHINGTON (INS) The 
| Army Engineers recommended to 
|Congress today a 110 million dol- 
lar project to deepen all channels 
| connecting the Great Lakes to a 
| controlling depth of 27 feet. 
| The Army report, sent to the 
/House and Senate Public Works 
| Committees, estimated this would 
save 10 million dollars annually 
permitting shipments of iron 
ore, stone, grain and other com- 
modities in larger vessels. 
The channels involved are St. 
Mary's River, Straits of Macki- 
inac, St. Clair River, Lake St. 
iClair and the Detroit river. 
Business Notes 
H. G. Little, president of Camp- 
| bell-Ewald Co., has announced the 
| resignation of Edward E. Roth- 
| man, 508 Linden St., Birmingham. 
Rothman, a senior vice president 
and general manager of the adver- 
tising firm, was an account execu- 
tive and served in several man- 
agerial positions from 1921 to 1936. 
He was named to his present of- 
fice in 1949. Little said the resig- 
nation becomes effective July 31. 
A Helpful ‘Yehudi’ 
IOWA CITY & — Tom Coad got 
a big surprise when he went home 
to supper — someone had painted 
his porch and front steps. He 
doesn't know who did the job, but 
he knew his business — the color 
blended wel with the rest of the 
house, Coad says.   
  
  
  
  
NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING 
Notice is hereby given of 6 bite 
hearin be held by the Pontiac Town- 
ship Leas Board at the Township 
Hall on Wednesday night, July 27th 
1955 at 7:30 p.m. to consider the follow- 
iug changes in the soot Mee: 
To ter ee e from Ve 2t : 10. 11, 12, 13, 14, 
18,16. if in Perry-Waiton Subdivision in Section 11. 
Persons interested are requested to be 
by those interested, 
sd GORDON HAMILTON, Chairman, 
p Clerk. 
duly & ‘be 1968         
DRUG WED., THURS., FRI. DARRELL'S 
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Camels, Old Gold, 
Chesterfields, 
y Strikes, 
Phillip Morris 
ve   CIGARETTES Popular Brands—Reg. Size 
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30 Carton 
    
BONDIFIED MONEY 
FOR 
          Ph. FE 2-8357       SALE ANY TIME 
Open Daily 8:30-10; Friday. Saturday ‘til 11 
-DARRELL’S DRUGS, Inc. 37-39 S. Saginaw, Corner of Wate 
In Oakland Theater Building f FREE PRESCRIPTION: 
DELIVERY SERVICE Tee MY Added 
Acting on the motion of Com- - 
  
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