‘ | Os. ‘The Weather Weather Bureau Forecast Warm, humid. (Details log: » * } ‘THE PON Lac ee ith YEAR\ < kk kK PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. 1 WED mdse JULY 22, 1959—52 PAGES Cuniy Sewer '} Snub Romans and Greeks FACULTY HUDDLE — Four history instruc- tors at Michigan State University Qakland make plans for a eourse m the development of Western civilization which all students will be required Seated (from left) are Dr. Matthews, group chairman of the history sec- Richard J. Burke, MSUO Plans ‘Different’ History Course to take. tion, and Dr. Pontiac Press Photo Behind them are (from left) Gerald M. Straka, instructor in history, and Dr. Peter Amann, assistant professor of history. Another member of the history section is Dr. William Kluback, assistant professor of history, not in the photograph. philosophy. George T. instructor in Skips Classic Approach The philosophers of Greece and’ plans for what will be taught in ,and experiences of ‘Western’ civ- the empire-builders of Rome will) the classrooms, be downgraded in history courses at Michigan State University Oak- land. That decision was arrived at by) chairman, said: four MSUO faculty members who| will teach the university’ s basic) | thing if it is to avoid being al | superficial course in western civilization. The four instructors me{ Mon- day and Tuesday on the caim- pus to decide the content of the | history course at the university | which opens in the fall. It was the first meeting of a faculty ‘quately even to introduce the stu-| group at MSUO to make specific ‘dent to all the modes, traditions Dr. porting the people of West Ber- | lin, Get Out Raincoat! and Cool alacoat kg Says We to Finish Week Must Cut Debt = Before Taxes Partly cloudy, warm and humid with a low of 68 is the weather-| 1 . man’s forecast for tonight for the He won't Assess Nixon, Pontiac area. | Rockefeller on Chances Temperatures will continue near a high of 84 and low of 63 for the | for ‘60 Nomination next five days. Friday and Sat-| 4 a.m, ....70 19 a. m. 6 a. m. ..70 Noon ....+... $8 a. m, 8 1 p.m. ...... then little change through Monday. | ; . F : = President Eisenhower said Rainfall will total near one- half inch as widely scattered today there must be some: thundershowers tonight and payment on the huge na- tomerrow and again Sunday or Monday. The lowest reading preceding : e| 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac was | The President, at a news| 70 degrees. The thermometer re- ‘conference, identified him- | corded 8 atl pm. ° lself as the source of news Idispatches Tuesday saying, Summit Road Still Open’ - Ike jamong other things, that he sees no real hope for any Will Take Any Progress. as Justification for tax cut during his last 18 Heads-of-State Parley months in office. Eisenhower, in those news dis- patches, also said the chances for any summit meeting with the dim. At his meeting with reporters today the President said sub- | WASHINGTON (UPI) —Presi- stantially the same thing, but dent Eisenhower said today the, road to a summit conference is open as long as any kind of ar- rangement can be made in Geneva! william McGaffin of the chiceee! that looks like progress. Daily N | He Said continued negotiations) eSy (ews icaled | Esecnhower's will not cause an erosion of the, attention to the series of news Western position in Berlin, as some ‘spatches Tuesday which ex- fear, because the West will stand Pressed Eisenhower's views firm on its basic principles of sup-| many subjects but did not name the source. hope for progress at the foreign ministers talks in Geneva. question, and said that if McGaffin wanted to know whether he had had a He said his position has not | hardened against a summit con- ference as a result of the Geneva stalemate. But as the conference has dragged on, he has lost some of his earlier hopes for some- the answer was yes, he said. The President called the proce: | ilization.”” | Explaining the decision to play Matthews said the history \down ancient Greece and Rome, Course will take only a limited \Dr. George T. Matthews, group|segment of civilization for inspec- {tion and analysis. “And a “No single course can do every- large part it is, even so,”’ he added. ' The faculty members agreed catch-all, designed’ to) that they will concentrate on very, dure an experiment. Then he s he wanted to do something for the! reporters who have covered him He reiterated that he would nev-| regularly — on good trips and bad’ er order the use of nuclear weap-|trips away from Washington as ons in areas where our friends) well as in the capital. might suffer. pn the point of taxes, Eisenhow- 'UP To HERTER (= balralresagy whether in believes He said it is not terribly im-| Se portant how long the Geneva con-) He replied that the govern- thing really productive coming from Geneva. } yield up to students only rubrics ; s . : the development Western s0- and intellectual ornaments to be cial institations = ideas fron admired but not understood. | the close of the Middle Ages * * * te the present. *‘No one course could hope il “Within the economy of time at ‘our disposal, it is not wise to jattempt to start with the stone Bell Will Spend Cry Tomorrow, §2.8Million Here Susan Says Improved Facilities to Fifteen American beauties will Poles, vie tonight in the Miss USA finals | cial Include New Cables, Equipment Michigan Bell the Pontiac area, it was announced today. The company will spend $1,300.- 000 during the rest of this year. and $1,500,000 in 1960, said Ray-| mond H, Storm, Pontiac district manager. The outlays will bring the com- pany’s expenditures here te more than $10 million since 1956, he said. Part of a $171 million construc- tion program throughout Michigan. the sown into $1542,000 for new cable, poles an dother outdocr facilities; $312,000 for additional equipment for the central office in Pontiac: and $1,011,000 for equipment on customers’ premises. ¥ * * There was no announcement con- cerning the number of new cus- tomers the company expects. to ‘serve in the Pontiac area. The number of telephones here — not counting extensions — has jumped fro 30,983 in 1948 to 86,055 at the beginning of this year. NEW PHONE BOOK Pontiac expenditures break’ ithem, Telephone Co. plans to spend $2,800,000 in the 18,ty was eliminated from the con- months to improve facilities in| test last night as the original 46 At. the some time, Storm an-| ‘nounced plans for a new telephone | test which she never thought of book for the area which he said) would make it more convenient. Next spring, Storm said, direc- tories will be distributed with a single alphabetical listing of all telephone users in Pontiac and /surrounding communities served by 10 other freon ma Auburn Heights, Birniingham, Com- merce, Drayton Plains, Mayfair, Rochester, Royal Oak, Southfield, Troy and Walled Lake. ' A new classified section will be issued in Janvary, he said, com- (Continuetl on Page 2,\Col. 3) 4 ’ 7 (pees. the ancient Jews and the Greeks as so many courses try ference continues. He made it, Ment should start to pay off | clear he was leaving it up to Sec-) the big national debt, Estimates | retary of State Christian A. Her-| are, he said, that interest on the | off, as far as the United States a year from now will total about is concerned, $8,700,000,000, * * * When you have to pay ouf that GENEVA (UPI) — Soviet For-| muen in interest alone. the Presi- eign Minister Andrei Gromyko was} ident said, it is the better part reported today to have drafted a! lof wisdom to start whittling the to do,’ Matthews declared. “Rather we should start- with | the close of the Middle Ages, re- ‘garding the beginning as a plunge jinto the middle of things (as all, ,courses in history must), picking, |up ancient strands only when they) are needed.” It was agreed that political, and economic fnatititiong| ,of the Miss Universe. contest, but! (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) new Berlin truce offer in hopes) gett so a tax cut canibe justified urday may be somewhat cooler, | WASHINGTON 7, itional debt before any tax’ © reduction can be justified. - Russians had grown increasingly — on | When McGaffin started to ask a i Eisenhower interrupted Works is pumping water like never before. | Oakland County Drain Commis. A new record was reached last week. On July 16, there. group of newsmen in to dinner, Were 21.3 million gallons pumped, breaking a four-year-| ball,” received the news incredu- —*old record of 21.1 gallons ‘us. fer when the talks should break debt im the fiscal year starting | | 'They Spit at Me: » Why Go?’---Nikita | WARSAW guest, why should I go?” * Thus Soviet Premier N the sudden cancellation of to Scandinavia. “I only want to go to can be helpful,” Khrushchev told newsmen at a Soviet Embassy reception his “friendship tour” of P “Maybe I will go later,” ‘NOT STEP TO PEACE’ “My visit to Scandinavia would not have been a step to peace, but would hav “I think well of the at the reception. “They beat us and then Peter (the Great) beat them at Polta I have nothing against Erlander nor against Premier H. C. Hansen of Den- mark. (AP)—“When they spit in my face, a * SR REO ei ‘State’ sOpinion “Slams Plans for BMile Drain Attorney General Says Full Support and Credit Pledge Unlawful Si i. Be alla casth et LS: * ikita Khrushchev explained his three-week August visit By HARVEY ZUCKERBERG The Oakland County Drain Commission today learned its $4,400,000 bond issue drafted to finance the Eight Mile Road storm idrain has been branded as “illegal.” Attorney General Paul L. # Adams yesterday advised ithe State Municipal Fi- ‘nance Commission to reject , ithe county’s application on places where my message Tuesday night celebrating oland. he added. PERO OR e led to sharpened tensions.” Swedes,” Khrushchev said va. I consider we are quits. (Swedish . Premier Tage) s\the basis of “pertinent “But when a government newspaper (which he did ' State Supreme Court de- not identify) comes out against my visit, that is another | cisions ” J pair of shoes.” * ence, Khrushchev replied: “I think nothing. Why because a horse has a big our minister of foreign affairs. Let him think.” added that he still does have | © Ss, eee ee eee aR |" Pontiac’ s Water Works | reak 4-Year-Old Record “re creser pan ot the wo In the face of the presen * Asked what he thought about the Geneva confer- §@, | “The drain bonds which are ‘sought to be issued in the Eight . Mile Drain application with the |pledge of the full support and icredit of the county are not in ;accordance with the law and the Commission (Municipal Finance) Should disapprove the application,"’ | Adams said. A group of Southfield residents have opposed the application since it was filed last Decem- pod — they would be over- * 4 must I think? Ask a horse head for thinking. We have emaibe} te SF Sa ae “gee Ree Tage Awe. | Posed 3.7-mile-long drain would be | located in Southfield Township with t dry spell, Pontiac's Water a portion of it in Oak Park. ,sioner Daniel W. Barry, who has | termed the issue a-“‘political foot- “Ford Profits $5.22 a Share | Earnings Spiral _ Last Year's 29 Cents in. | 2nd Highest 6 Months DETROIT (®—Ford Motor Co’s comeback from the recession was 900,000 for the first six months of! 1959, equa] to $5.22 a share, Ford's six months consolidated net earnings for this year were of saving the East-West conference! lin the future. from collapee. But “en ps ‘And payment on the debt has: ipomatic moves made the out- not yet started, he observed. look darker than ever The news conference The West expected the new over these other topics: | Offer to be a minimum conces- | POLITICS — Eisenhower de- wo | sion that might avert an im- clined to assess New York’s Gov. mediate conference collapse and Nelson A. Rockefeller as a possi- with it the danger of a new bility for the presidency on the | (Continued on n Page 2, Col. 7) | Republican ticket. lSusan W estergard won't be among The 20-year-old Southfield beau-' ‘American contestants were pared down to 15 finalists. “I'm not going to cry now, but to tell the truth, I think PU cry later,” said blonde, green-eyed Susan as she left Memorial Sta- dium in Long Beach, Calif., aft- er last night’s initial judging. Susan and other contestants had paraded in bathing suits and eve- ning dress before a crowd of 3,500. Susan was representing Michigan. * * * News of the defeat was taken philosophically by Susan's mother, Mrs, Bjarne Westergard, 26060 W. Nine Mile Rd. “What was to be was to be,” she said. “But I do hope Susan won't be too disappointed. It’s been a wonderful experience for her anyway. and I'm sure she'll never forget it.” MAY STAY ON Susan may stay on in California until selection of Miss Universe climaxes the contest Friday, or she may visit friends on the West Coast, or she may come straight home. Mrs. Westergard isn’t sure which. Susan’ was defeated in a con- | entering until after she had been | selected as a contestant in the Michigan finals July 4 at Walled Lake Amusement Park. Her boss, the manager of the John Roberts Powers Agency in Detroit, had sent her picture and application in to the contest un- beknown to her. Susan is office manager of: the agency. * 2: Although a loser last night, Su- san had consolations, Her flight, to California last Wednesday was (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) tee Who Sold These Cans? CLUES TO, BLOOMFIELD ARSON — These are cans that contained fuel oi] used by arsonist YR Be Bi? Bis Sees In Today's Press ee WAP ht RED Comics 44 County News 20... .5cccces 7 cy Editorials |... . 6 / Markets 2.2.00... ..5 0.0005, 45 \ Fortine Press Phote | Obituaries . -.,, 6 Hanley (left) and Sgt. Oramel O'Farrell, head | SP0r ------e ose. a < of the State Police arson squad, say they are lteter " 96 to set fire to the Bloomfield Township hone of concentrating their investigation on finding who TV & Radio Programs i sold the caris of oil. The emptied cans were left |- wien Earl oT in the burned out house at 205 Harrow Circle. Women’s Pages 13-16 “ | , ¥ / f . 4 / ; / . . 4 { : Le os se ee ee ee) We eee eS a ee a ee ee ea ae a ee ee Se et Sa Detroit Teamsters agent Charles O’Brien last = Redford State Police | Det. Hubert somo about 18 times its net for the same | Period of 1958. The company issued ; ranged its 1959 half-year report yesterday. ‘have measured 27 For the first half of 1958, Ford. reported a profit of $16,100,000) equal to 29 cents a share. Ford was the first of the auto manufacturers to make g 1959 | six months report, Similarly fa- vorable reports are anticipated later this month from Ford com- petitors. The earlier first quarter reports from the industry indicated the up-| ward trend, The vastly increased Ford nig ings came with rallies in duction and sales to near second higs this year after the 1958 reces-| sion. * * * Six months sales totaled $2,954,- 300,000, compared to $1,987,300,000: for the like 1958 period. oe = cluded car sales of about as against about 594,000 sng va like period of jast year. The sales figure was the sec- ond highest in the company’s his- tory for a half-year period, The record of $3,009,500,000 was set in the first half of 1957. Ford’s tractor and truck sales. also were well up this year. Truck. sales were 177.311, against 115,915 and tractors 32, 902, compared with 26,693. * * * Ford closed at $75.75 a share on! the New York Stock Exchange yes-! terday. The company said quarter earnings this year were $151,100,000, or $2.76 a share, com-' pared to a loss of $13,700,000 for the same quarter last year, Over ‘tric pumps will be able to work | reflected today in a profit of $285,- its second ‘established in July of 1955. Ms. is hard for me to believe : y : ¢ might have failed somewhere If the Pontiac plant worked con-| ” on the line,” said Barry. \tinuously at full speed it could | “Similar bond issues have passed ‘pump up to 27.4 million gallons, approval easily. This one ap- | during a 24hour period. The Water) peared perfect.”’ ‘Department is currently installing | ia new transformer bank at the! Adams said a copy of the advise- | East boulevard plant so that elec-| ment front his office to the State | Municipal Finance Commission has (been sent to Claude Stevens, attor- t jeven aster, increasing the plant’s \ney for the Drain Comani capacity by 2.5 million gallons a |day soon. |ASKED TO BE HEARD But water demands faN off Stevens had said he wanted te during the night so that the plant be heard if an adverse opinion were *| never works at capacity during |‘Mdicated. He will be invited to at- a full 24-hour period. tend next Tuesday’s Commission | Meeting in Lansing, Adams said. The heaviest strain on the plant! is during lawn-sprinkling time,| , Stevens, who drafted the yas 8:30 to 9:30 p.m., Herbert Parker,| ‘We, sald this morning he had assistant superintendent of wae net yet reccived the attorney reported general's on why the is- On July 14, the plant ennai sue was branded MMegal, itself during the peak hour, pump-| “This is a very unusual thing,” ‘ing briefly at a rate that would) Stevens said. “I cant see any 7.8 million gallons'reason why the bond issue could a day if the pace had been kept up, be nearer as unconstitutional, for 24 hours. * * ~*~ * * “The Drain Code does state that | This set a new record for peak there showld be a pledge of the jhour pumpage, said Parker. The {ull faith and credit of the county, old record for peak hour pumpage but we haven't been rejected on was 25.5 million gallons, also set that before.’’ in July, 1955. Stevens cited Aud. Gen, Frank ‘The old record was broken on §S. Szymanski, a member of the ‘six other occasions this month, (Continued on Page 2, oe 2) Parker said. | ~ On July 7 the plant pumped at a rate that would have equaled 25.9 Cost iw Living in June Soars million gallons; July 8, 27.4 mil-. to Record Peak FO lion gallons: July 9, 25.7 million | WASHINGTON ® — The cost gallons; July 10, 26.2 million gal-| lons; July 13, 26.4 million gallons “of living rose four-tenths of one per cent in June to a record and July 15, 27.3 million gallons. high. This was the largest 7 Crewmen Killed as AF Tanker Falls | maztiy,ineresse im 14 mont | day that all major items in the | ANDOVER, N.H. (AP)—An Air'| living costs of city families ad- ‘Force plane crashed in flames vanced. and all seven crewmen ‘Perished | Commissioner Ewan Clague of | | early today. the Bureau of Labor Statistics + &* * said the upsurge of prices was Officers at Pease Air Force Base| not a sign that the index is about to take off.” He saiq the increase was largely seasonal, due to a sharp advance, chiefly in fresh fruits and vegetables. x + * The price index is six-fenths | Of one per cent higher than a year ago. The inerease will mean wage boosts of 1 or 2 cents an hour for about 600,000 workers whose union contracts have escalator clauses calling for periodic ad- justments of wages to the cost af living. Average take-home pay for the single man in factory ,employ- ment was $73.66 a week, and for the worker with three depend- - ents it was $81.21. The compara- from which the plane was flying, on a routine training mission said ‘all seven bodies were recovered. The victims were not identified, Pending notification of next of | The craft was identified as a KC97_ propeller-driven tanker plane. * * * The crewmen of a companion jplane flying a mile to the. rear ‘and a state trooper on the ground said they saw the plane plummet. ‘in flames through an overcast. Delivered Only Aria NEW YORK (UPI) — An am- bulance stood by the stage en- trance throughalt last night's concert at Lewisohn Stadium. But the singing star, Graciela Rivera, for whom it was waiting, just in‘ case, made it through the concert and home in her ma- ir f 2 in Historical Geography Michigan State University today! Wednesday and , Thursday eve- announced a new course, “‘His-) aings from 7 to 10 p.m. at the torical Geography of the United) MSUO Continuing Education States,’ which is availablé to Pon-| Center. tiac area residents this summer. | Course instructor will be Robert *« * * 1S. Vogel of the MSU Department The course, which carries three of Geography. term-hours of graduate or under-) |. Seer graduate credit, will be given at DUAL ANALYSIS Michigan State University Oakland “The principal objective of this tomorrow through Aug. 13. course,”’ explained Dr. Vogel, “‘is; to reconstruct the geography of _ various periods of the past “It includes an analysis of beth the cultural and natural , environment that existed at the time.”’ The class wil] meet Monday, The course begins with the na- ‘ture of the knewn parts of the United States during the colonial) 3 Widows Sue H i Fi e copter irm period and follows the spread of settlement westward across the| Bloomfield Hills Mother country at various periods in his-' tory, according to the instructor. | Asks $600,000 in Death t * | Topics include the Atlantic sea-, of Husband ‘board at the opening of the 19h) Wayne County Sheriff's Dept. INSPECT OAKLAND WATER PATROL — County Sheriff's Dept. Lake Patrol is setting the pace for Michi- gan and the rest of the country in water safety. Detroit and after the Oakland Patrol. Shown here (from left? are Sheriff BIRMINGHAM—An early morn- ing blaze at the Arcadia Manufac- turing Co., 1081 Eton Rd., caused an estimated $12,000 damage, most- ly confined to stock. * * * Three Birmingham fire trucks fought the flames for an hour and a half. The fire was reported by Bir- mingham Pelice Sgt. Malcolm Ross and Patrolman Donald Moo- nen at 3:27 a.m. today while on routine patrol. . No one was injured in the fire which was confined to the plastics firm’s shipping room, a 30 by 30 foot area on the ground level. * * * Cause of the blaze has not yet been determined, according to Bir- mingham Fire Chief Park Smith. He estimated damage at $12,- 000 and said a waiting shipment of plastic-covered work gloves was destroyed in the blaze. “Damage to the building itself Pontiac Press Photo The Oakland Frank W. Irons, Ray Carr, president of Carr Craft Boats, and Oliver Beresford, Detroit police inspector. In the boat, Sgt. Donald Kratt, head of the boat patrol, shows equipment to Fred Whitman, assistant superintendent of the Wayne County Sheriff's Dept. Crime Laboratory. The boat is one of 14 Carr Craft boats being used by the lake deputies. officials are shown here taking a . They plan to organize their own ver and Lake St. Clair, patterned was only two to three per cent of total damage,” said Smith. “The entire loss is covered by adequate Asks Crackdown ‘|: ; insurance. on Use of Huron AA May Be Worst Year Since 1955 The building is of concrete block [class meeting. as Teen Hangout ‘century, the Ohio River and Lower) long look at a local patrol boat A Bloomfield Hills woman was Great Lakes region to 1830, the water patrol on the Detroit Ri totaling $1.400,000 in U.S. District Plains and bordering regions to — sn saree Court at Detroit yesterday. '1870, and the Rocky Mountains to s copter Co. with two counts of,said. Parents Battles negligence and breach of warranty! Interested adults can make res- vitcims of a ‘copter crash in War- MSUO or can enrol] at the first ren in March, 1958. Those who fell to their deaths in the one of three widows to file suits: Northwest (1820-1870). the Grext The widows charge the Bell Heh-|the Pacific Coast to 1870, Vogel , in the deaths of their husbands, ervations for the class by calling Inoculate Kids * *& * Garavaglia, 40; his brother, Juie, | mishap were Louis * County Sewer Bonds 28: and their pilot, Ja A. Ken-| A B d d ‘II I’ nadty, 3 The Brothers (eae on a fe fan e eda business trip for their firm at the | time. (Continued From Page One) Mrs, Audrey Garavaglia of 508 | State Finance Commission, as E, Long Lake Rd., Bloomfield | another opponent of the measure. Hills, widow of Louis and the | mother of three children, is ask- | ing $600,000 in the lawsuit. quoted Pointe Woods, widow of Jule, is, we want to.” asking $500,000. She has one child. The widow of the pilot, Mrs. | cae ane aires os rol Michigan State Supreme Court ewe S three chi-' it the bond issue is rejected dren. , s «ts | officially Tuesday. Stevens said it is possible he Szymanski, recalls Stevens, was | last December as telling, the Southfield protest group in Mrs. Briget Garavaglia of Grosse Lansing, ‘‘We can turn it down if! would take the matter to the | - tor Marriage’ | EDINBURGH, Scotland (UPI) —The British Medical Associa- | ® . ® Polio Cases on Upswing; | . | Mayor Philip E, Rowston has p asked the city to crack down on tion has been told it is not al- | ald IC ns ances oun teenage drivers who use W. Huron ways bad for parents to fight in | street areas as a hangout spot. | front of their children, | x * * | “it is better that the children | WASHINGTON (AP)—The Unit-, children six months to six years | _ ee ed States may be going through! of age with a booster shot six The mayor called for elimination | to 12 months I ; of nighttime parking on Huron in 2 ater. Four injec. | 4 the vicinity of Chippewa road and tions spaced about a mouth apart i ll | i i its worst polio year since the Salk) vaccine was introduced in 19565./ were recommended for children | under six months. io of Huron. should sometimes see their par- | ents quarrel and so become inoc- ulated with small doses of mari- | tal disharmony," Dr.. D. Stafford Clark of London's Guy's Hospital told the BMA convention. “They would become immun- ized against it and know that it was a normal kind of thing hap- | | pening in marriage.” Cases of polio are increasing ‘each week, The number of para-| ilytic cases is almost double the) ‘total for the same period last! .. “ j oo ‘ |polio disease year, through July! ” . year. _{11, there have been 940 cases, 604| SMH” Rewston sald. _ A spokesman for the Public of them paralytic. This compares| “Beer bottles were found there |Health Service released figures to- with 567 cases in the similar 1958 over the weekend, although the |day that showed the mounting in- span. of which 282 were paralytic. land is private property.” jcident of polio in July. For the year beginning Jan. 1,! Rowston explained that the “Teen-agers are using this va- he —_ : ~ oo | From April 1, the start of the cant area as a picnic ‘iat construction and heated concrete made further investigation of the fire’s cause impossible this morn- ing, Smith declared. Firemen from two engine com- panies and one ladder company fought the flames, The fire was the second in five days at the manufacturing firm. Firemen were summoned Friday when an overheated firepot caused extensive fumes but no damage. dale as minister was announced Monday by the Pulpit Committee of Birmingham Unitarian Church. * * * Election of the Rev. Lester Mon-| q aye . We _ E ih | y \'/ ; THE PON'TIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1959 | 4 a: Zi i : MSUO Offer Ing Course |The Day jin Birmingham Blaze at Plastic Firm Brings $12,000 Damage day, the Senior Mens Club will hear a talk by Harold Smith of Delta Airlines. His topic will be “Important Things.” During last week's meeting, the Senior Mens Club defeated the Bushnell Retired Mens Club of De- troit in a shuffleboard match. S. V. Norton Service for S. V. Norton, patron of music and art and a retired General Motors Corp. executive, will be held 1 p.m. Saturday from Bell Chapel of William R. Hamil- ton Co. Place of burial] hasn’t been confirmed yet. Mr. Norton, 76, of 65 Lone Pine Rd. died yesterday at his second home in West Palm Beach, Fla., after a long iliness. He was a trustee of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra and with his late brother, Ralph, founded the widely-known Norton Art Gallery at Palm Beach. * * * Surviving besides his wife are three daughters, Mrs. Malcolm Mc- Fawn and Mrs, Kenneth Corless, both of Huntington Woods, and Mrs. Ruth Ferguson of Bloomfield Hills. Muskegon Gets New Editor Former Pontiac Press Reporter Takes Over Chronicle Post MUSKEGON i — Retirement of C. D. McNamee as editor of the Muskegon Chronicle and ap- pointment of Robert C. Herrick, city editor of the Flint Jourhal, as his successor was announced to- | The Rev. Mr. Mondale, presently | with the Ethical Society of Phila-| \delphia, will conduct opening serv. | day. John A. MacDonald, president of Booth Newspapers, Inc., which publishes the Chronicle, the Jour- | i | pa 3 Count Lot gd bad 174 bag igs a there have been 1,208 cases through youngsters park along Huron and them paralytic, in the w nd-| July aivtic. (aa jem 5 ie ty neuen July 11, 791 of them paralytic. |Chippewa, then “loll around” the ing July 179 cases, 111 para-| compared with 734 cases. 385 385 of] grounds next to their cars. ices Sept. 13 when the church re al and (six other Michigan news- jconvenes in its new buildings on) ‘ il jLone Pine road at Woodward ave-| Peete er i“ changes will, be police nue. The congregation is currently —_ The fatal crash occurred a hait-| Drain Commissioner Barry held! mile south of 11-Mile road between no hope for approval, despite Mound «and Van Dyke roads in whatever means and efforts Ste- lytic, in the week ending July 11. them paralytic a year ago. t Brin {3 088 ae The worst outbreak this year| = * = 7 _ ’ | The spokesman said reports in- has been in the Des Moines area.| If parking were illegal, Witnesses said the helicopter was} flying at low altitude when it suddenly exploded and plunged to “It looks to me like they're go-, the ground. RainsDampen vens might use in his appeal at the coming meeting. * * * ing to turn it down,” he said. The _ attorney was _ slightly more optimistic, with reservations. Stevens said, “I will know what other avenues are open after I see the statement from Lansing.” | | : . | idicate an even greater increase|jowa had 105 cases up to July 11, | would have a weapon to keep teen- Boast Fund for the week ending July 18. | compared with 9 in the first 27)agers from congregating, Rowston ; | j|weeks of 1958. It had 58 paralytic! believed. to Build New Oakland _DETROIT ‘—Parke, Davis & cases, compared with four a year| The Commission recently called| C th Co. announced today the aa of earlier. |upon police to crack down on teen-| ourmnouse | distribution of its new 4-in-1 vac- | There have been considerable age hotrods speeding on W. Huron cine designed to protect children | increases in polio in New York, during the night hours. Oakland County sold 23 lots yes-, ®8#inst polio, diphtheria, whoop- |Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Minne-| ee | terday for a total of $13,988, to ig cough and lockjaw. |sota, Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas, | be used to bolster funds for the) The vaccine, known as “Quad- | Virginia, South Carolina, Tennes- How Thoughtless of Him! building of a new courthouse. rigen,”” givcs simultaneous pro- see, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkan- ke * tection against the four diseases, (sas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas, | ! | Sale Will recessed for the summer. The appointment of a new min- | ister follows the death last May of the Rev. Walter B. Pedersen. | The Rev. Mr. Mondale has| served in Unitarian churches in Hingham, Mass.; Evanston, I1., and Kansas City, Mo * * * He is a graduate of Hamline Uni-. Herrick, 48, joined The Pontiac Press as a general reporter in 1935 and became sports editor in 1987, In 1938, he became edi- tor of the Capitol Bulletin, a weekly at Lansing. He moved to the Flint Journal as a reporter in 1939, ‘After his return from war serv- ice, he served as editorial writer of the Flint Journal from 1946 to LONDON (UPI) —The News |V@rsity and Harvard Unitersity and| October 1958 when he was named Parke, Davis said. Southern Plains; : Fair Elsewhere © : New History Course | Bids were opened by the County) - ry * 'Board of Auditors. All but one} By The Associated Press thunderstorms Plan ed b MSUO lof the lots announced for sale were | the southern n y ;purchased. No bid was received) si s band The company said Quadrigen plains and into the Ohio Valley) for a lot in Milford with a mini-| reduces from six to four the number of injections required rumbled through | . rom and bere were widely scat-| (Contimeé From Page One) | mum asking prite of $300. (oF immunization by other vac- te Patches of dampness else-| The amount received yesterday) © |” where around the country. proeee be, reed: in history was more than $4,000 over the to- Pla Davis recommends & & | . }tal minimum price of $9,850 set) ¢ . Paaabesy injections at | Heaviest rainfall during the; “Our aim is not gross cover- for the property. | four-to-six-week intervals for | sas City show the larger propor-| tion of those stricken are in the Arizona, Washington and Califor-| nia. Studies in Des Moines and Kan- Chronicle today ran a_ front- Page cartoon showing an angry Mrs. Khrushchev berating a | glum Nikita. Mrs. Khrushchev | was holding a newspaper whose headline reads: “Mr. K. a lower socio-economic groups. Surgeon General Leroy E. Bur-| ney has repeatedly urged intensive | campaigns to vaccinate everybody, under 40. cels Scandinavian tour.’’ Mrs. K. said: ‘‘Very clever. Now you tell me where else we can _ book rooms in August." early morning hours fell in Ark-| age of all things, but analysis of | the author of several books on lib- city editor, succeeding Ralph Cur- eral religion. ry, who was named editor of the ; _ a ' Journal. At its meeting in Birmingham, jie is married to the former Community House at 10 a.m. Fri-| Doris Cook of Grand Rapids and jhas a daughter, Julie, 12. | Herrick has been with the Flint | Journal for 20 years, except for | four years during World War Il when he was in the army. He is a native of Waukegan, Summit Road Open, ansas and Tennessee. Jackson,’ Tenn., was given a 1.10-inch soak-| ing and Fayettesville, Ark., mea- sured a 1.06-inch wash-down. * * & The Kansas highway patrol said) locally heavy rains at Kingman, in the south central section of the State, were flooding U.S. Route 54. Skies were generally fair to| ‘Informal lecturing by the in-|«semi-improved” -parcel in Madi- partly cloudy elsewhere over the StTuctor to his class will undoubt-| map, but a smattering of rain! fell over the northern plains, the| but there will be no formal lec-'month decided to dispose of the Labor James P. Mitchéll is going cooling-off period would not change far northern Great Lakes, in tures, delivered by some ‘star’ to county-owned properties, believing beyond mere profits and labor their positions although he has not, the southern'a mass audience of students,” Florida and from Rockies into the southern plateau states. _ & ok t Thunderstorms late Tuesday took on a violent aspect in the West. A farmer and his son were killed by lightning at Glenn Ulin, N.D., and heavy rains loosed flash floods in three west central Texas towns. Twisting ~ winds whipped Falls City, in south Texas. Rain fell too fast to drain in Brownwood, Coleman and Rising Star, Tex., and 3.80 inches in four! hours sent the Copperas Creek} out of its banks briefly at Rising, . Star, Coleman measured 8 inches! Western tradition,”” . Matthews said. Emphasis in the basic history classes will be upon discussion among students with the instruc- tor. | | { i] certain limited features of the | | x * * | | edly be part of the total technique. Matthews declared. Matthews said the aim of the class meetings would not be for students “to recite’ bu; the ex- pioration and analysis of certain ideas or points of view based upon er growing out of reading | assignments. Because of limited library facili-| ties, there will be limited outside, reading. | “But the students will find they'll! have plenty to do,’ Matthews promised. | Each instructor will exercise con- siderable freedom as to emphasis, | | John C, Austin, vice chairman of the Board of Auditors, termed the response ‘very good.” He said the money would be turned over to the county treasurer for distribution to the courthouse building fund. Sold were 14 vacant lots in Pon-| tiac, 8 in Avon Township and mae! Mitchell to Dig Deeply for Steel Strike Facts | WASHINGTON #—President Ei- for a long struggle. Eisenhower | 80-day | son Heights. | The union seeks a 15-cent-hourly | The Board of Supervisors last senhower said today Secretary of'reportedly feels that the annual package increase, claiming | that the industry can afford it. 2 * 2 * eye | yt isi the lots could bring in tax dollars Costs in steel strike fact-finding |ruled out the possibility of invok- The indaste Shas feted, caine | when purchsed. ‘activities. jing Taft-Hartley. |; : : [en Eisenh told h | The United Steelworkers Union’ yo he ee ne onl Eisenhower is news con- i : mers ‘woul ice i The supervisors reported the lots | ference that as his representa- ‘Strike has idled a half million i ese inflation. Pre as surplus, unoccupied and “of) tive Mitchell will look for all of WOrKers in basic steel and shut strike steel wages averaged $3.10 no useful purpose to the county.”"| \down nearly 90 per cent of the : . : ‘ oe ee | the facts pertinent to the steel : : an hour. Most of the property was secured) wage dispute jnation’s steel production. Another | by the county over the years when) ; . 45,500 workers in such allied fields | * * * previous owners could not pay (In this, the President said Mit- as coal, railroads and trucking al-. The fact-finding will not inter- taxes, chell even will go beyond profits!so have been idled as a result|"Upt the mediation that has been! ee jand iaies costs. Eisenhower did,of the strike. ee on wg » an effort to set- ‘18 ‘not elaborate on this point. x *« * itle the strike. Federal mediators Michigan Bell Plans Big Outlay Here ~*~ & &* Vital defense projects, however,|Meet again with both sides today. (Continued From Page One) Each side has charged in the ave been assured of enough steel; Both sides said after Mitchell's | 'Steel dispute that the othet is at-|t0 last until September, federa] announcement that they would co-| loperate with him, ‘tempting to bring about an infla- Officials reported Tuesday. tionary settlement. Says Eisenhower (Continued From Page One) | cold war crisis. The Wsstern thing more than a delaying tac- tic, however. Some diplomats said Gromyko might seek to win time by pro- posing to rsume negotiations on; “postpone”’ discussion of his de- mand that both Germany’s talk over reunification on Soviet terms during such a truce. 1 NIXON IN MOSCOW Conference sources said Gromy-) ko, given a last chance to save, try to keep it going until Vice President Richard M. Nixon con-' fers in Moscow this weekend with, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. | x * * Success of the Nixon mission it- self appeared endangered with a new Soviet attack on the United States today in the Communist} newspaper Pravda, Pravda angri- ly denounced the U.S. Congress for calling for prayers for enslaved East Europe and accused the U.S. of planning anti-Soviet provoca- lil, attended Jackson, Mich., | schools and won recognition as | an outstanding high school ath- | lete. He made the Associated | ministers did not expect any- | Press all-state high school bas- ketball team in 1929 and won honorable mention as quarter- back of the AP’s all-state foot- ball team the same year. A graduate of Michigan State University, he was captain of the basketball and golf teams in 1935. McNamee, 69, is a native of Vernon, Mich., and was graduat- ed from Corunna High School in 1910, He started newspaper work while still in high school as a part time reporter for the Owosso Press- American, now the Owosso Ar- gus-Press, in 1908. McNamee joined the Detroit News as a reporter in 1911 and later became state editor and tele- graph editor of the old Detroit Tribune. He joined the Muskegon Chronicle staff in May, 1917, Pigeons! Grab a Parasol BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI)— Mayor James W. Morgan said point of vieW and pace in the pining alphabetically communities DETROIT UP—A truck driver cations. yesterday that pigeons have be- sf rainfall from three days of study with his students, Matthews served by the Auburn Heights, | told police he was beaten today arms: « | said. |Commerce, Drayton Plains, Pon- ae making a delivery to a 13 36 chelt it — SKIPS itiac, Rochester and Walled Lake ctery adjoining the st-ikebound The Weather | xchanges. | Great Lakes Steel Corp. Plant. “Instructors should feel free © peeks Nosy Rares Sovet,,| sree wT sae prom chair N YECENITY — Partly ad r air- cloudy and continued; warm and humid suits his s,”” the ere today. High 88. Sligh{ chance for after- man added, neon or poe Weane aaa ok ete d . t éloudy and warm tnight an ursday. ‘The ily ing assignments Lew ht 68. High Thursday 88. slight daily reading 8 chance of afternoon er evening thunder- are heavy and will place even the changes serving more than 100, jbest students under pressure to’ communities around Detroit will be | increase reading speeds,’ Matt- grouped into three directories and. shewers Thursday. es Teday in Pontiac at e : "= west temperature preceding 3.a.m | hews asserted. At 6 a.m.: Wind velocity 3 m. p.h) * * * Direction--Southerly. cae: ; Sun sets Wednesday at 8:02 pm. We shall try to show our stu- dents new ways of looking at the Sun rises Thursday at 615 am Moon sets Thursday at 806 a.m. ’ Se : | world they live in,"’ Matthews said, Moon rises Wednesday ai 9:03 p.m Thomas Myers, 34, of Flat Rock, said a tall, heavy-set man in a blue shirt dragged him from his cab and slugged him on the Storm said that population growth in the metropolitan area prompted the consolidation of area telephone | numbers into fewer books. Pravda linked the U.S. action with the Nixon visit and the open- ing of the American exhibition in Moscow on Saturday. come such a problem in one city park that he has received a request for a parasol renting concession, Russians Are Soreheads head, Myers said the man called him a scab and threatened him with more violence “if you try to run picket lines again.” Myers had made a delivery to | the E. I. Du Pont du Nemours _ & Co. plant in Ecorse, He was | treated for head cuts at a hos- pital. He said that the 29 telephone ex-| | Six classified sections. I'll Cry Tomorrow, Downtown Temperatures ‘in discussing the aims of the ‘ Mi Mi hi ————————— __ 722 ne ¢useecuss bi Pam : rod course. ays SS iC igan | Eisenhower has spoken out time $ am. 7201 pam #0 6“‘It is important that students | after time against any agreement 4 i a es |be taught to ask questions — and (Continued From Page One) which_would feed inflation. Tuesday in Pontiac | Tuestions which are meaningful.” her first airplane ride and her first nie ne said that in his mignest seceded downtown) = | He pointed out that tacts will trip to the West Coast. * | ae oh rte Mitchell is Lowest temperature ........ 61 | be imtroduced where they serve a . & at the law says the Mean temperature .......... 73 | onight’s winner will mix with secretary of labor must de in Weather—Sunny, | as a groundwork tor, ideas 53 foreign lovelies Thursday in | any dispute that aff One Year Ago in Pontiac | viewed im the courses. the international beauty contest. | fare of Qe ectiie: = igeet temperature oe | Much of the reading will be The finalists are: _ Mitchell’s move is without pre- Bene semeperature ceienb gen wintten | ortaiel me oe he said. Miss Alabama, Pat Sullivan: vom adhe he knows of no Highest ae ‘ . |Miss Arkansas, Donna Sue Need- OMer Secretary of labor who has “anita. aa Other members 6f the history ham; Miss California, Terry Lynn /@¢ted in a similar manner. 96 in 1940 aa $2 in 1947, group who visited the campus for tuntingdon; Miss Colorado, Diane | It is expected that the White Today's Temporstare Chart | the two-day gin were Dr. Rich- |] ee Gardner: Miss Florida, Nanita House will use the information -he mi Memptis 9071 ard J. Burke Jr., Dr. Peter H./Greene: Miss Georgia, Dorothy Provides as a basis for deciding $i Miemi Bich 9 \ii/ Amann, and Gerald’ M. Straka. — Gladys Taylor; Miss Iowa, Kay Whether to invoke the national SBE Ba es ame Oe Nn: Mi Losin, Mary CMEC prove of Be Ta New Yor 7] , |Margaret La Bianco. | ey Act. ‘ ston & ws meetings. ' Miss Maine, Carolyn Komant; | re a, ef * AP Wieephote ~ * - . |Miss Maryland, Diane White; Miss| Under Taft-Hartley, the federal ' . r . : Lous 4 The population of west Germany |Missouri, Barbara Stell; Miss Ne-'government could issue an 80-day in iG tae ik sig Weike fetes ae ace os &. 6. Marie a3 64 has increased 6.4 per cent since vada, Joy Blaine; Miss New York, antistrike injunction if necessary.) '"8 ‘e sae Noe ee ek ee Mer Seattie $7 92/1950, while the population of East Arieney Nesbitt; Miss Texas, Car- But it was felt this would ac-| !ast big paychecks until the steel strike ends. This scene was Traxerse Ct Germany has decheased about 6.3 elgean Douglas, and Miss West complish little at this time. repeated at steel mills across the nation, as workers braced fog, a -financial drought which could come from a prolonged strike, per cent, Virginia, Wilda Sue Estep. Both sides appear to be dug in « {" Pillow Famine Bad MOSCOW (UPI)—A Russian newspaper today lamented a pillow shortage that has produced an oversupply of head- aches for Moscow residents. * x * It takes months of intensive searching to come across a pillow in Moscow, said the newspaper Moscow Pravda. “When a buyer finally is in line to receive some bene- fit of the output of the single Moscow pillow factory, he finds the products smell so much of feathers they virtually cackle,” the paper added. . The paper said the situation always was bad enough, but it is even worse now with a new government regulation requiring prospective pillow purchasers to show a properly stamped passport before they can take their head-rest home to rest their weary heads. WHAT NEXT? “Today you have to produce a passport. Tomorrow they'll demand a certificate from your-place of work, then maybe your birth certificate, then, finally, they may de- mand your record from the trade union committee.” “Why is there no increased pillow p Moscow Pravda. tion?” wailed _ ~The newspaper pointed out that a request for the one pillow factory in Moscow to expand had been circulating for years in the five organ tions whose permission is needed. ' x &® “Do pillows really exist?” asked the newspaper. a ng ARI THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, gUL Yi 22, 1959 Is Your Land Contract We may be able to convert your -LAND CONTRACT into a mortgage, thereby bringing you more security and at the same time reducing your monthly payments. Come In and Talk It Over! HOME LOANS ARE OUR SPECIALTY — We Buy Land Contracts — % CURRENT Ino ) RATE : ON SAVINGS Pontiac Federal Savings Home Office: 761 W. Huron Street 16 E. Lawrence Street, Downtown Branch Rochester Branch, 407 Main Street 4416 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains ¢ > 7s vse Fs - . See ene BOUND FOR SEA — Liberty Bell replica is assembled at Corona. N. Y. Giff of copper industry, itll be placed aboard Navy's aieeatve carrier es ndence. Vienna “Awaits Opening of Huge Propaganda Batt! VIENNA (» — Vienna is looking estimate now is for 15,000 foreign forward to the opening next week- visitors The propaganda battle began in Vienna's streets last weekend when placards in five languages were hoisted by the Austrian youth end of a huge east-west propaganda battle in its streets. The occasion is what the Com- munist sponsors call ‘‘The seventh — d world festival for youth and stu-/0'84nizations. These proclaimed: dents for peace and friendship.” ‘This so-called world youth fes- ‘It begins with a massive show tival is organized by the Com- ‘Sunday in Vienna's soccer stadium Munists and paid for by them. We| # and continues for =. | Aug. 4. ing 10 days until] Austrian youth are not participat- in it and, in fact, protest against it. But we nevertheless welcome foreign youth here and we want to show you our lovely M ro » “es . 4 and Vienna’s press calt it A icity and the advantages of de- pie oe ee | mocracy. We want you to take swindle to ensnare the worles ‘fj! advantage of freedom of youth, which we never should | ctiethiaey eee ° have permitted to come to Vi- enna but which we are now de- termined to expose for what it is.” The first festival delegations, ~\from Red China and North Korea There's one of those new for- arrive tomorrow. eign cars that gets more | The Communist organizers said miles to the gallon. Best part is, ‘at first that 17,000 foreign dele- you only have to pedal it uphill. gates would come to the festival . Some marriages break up “. Then India sharply cut passport because the husband likes to spend issuance, the United Arab Repub- an evening out with the boys; lic decided to keep its youth away others break up because the wife ‘altogether and others restricted likes to do the same thing.—Earl attendance. The _latest published Wilson. Austria's overwhelmingly an- ti-Communist youth organizations here and welcome sions, we are uncompromising opponents of communism you in discus- Bradley Tells House Probers Legislation Is ‘Bradley, ‘legislation is indicate | anything to do with buying while he was in the Army and has had | active. ~ know how to negotiate a contract.” | icific recommendations about pos- . legislation, but Ji” ‘engages selling to the government! ,former associates to be re assigned, ‘movement and freedom of speech; when we will tell you why) than 50) ‘has been exaggerated and private! |companies 'a captain who would know where Indicated as Safeguard WASHINGTON # — Omar N. ‘a $75,000 job in private industry, told House investigators Tuesday * to guard against possible abuses in the em- ployment of retired officers. Bradiey, former chairman of the, Joint Chiefs of Staff and head of | the Veterans Administration, | talked freely with a House armed services subcommittee about his! own affairs, including his present post as board chairman of the Bulova Watch Co. and its research! subsidiary. | Bradley said he never had nothing to do with selling to the | government since becoming in- | “T wouldn't! “In fact.’’ he said, Bradley steered away from spe-| sible correcting said *‘ a time lag”’ after an officer! leaves active duty and before he_ would be a good idea. He said two or three years, allowing time ‘for might be long enough Bradley, who as a five-star gen- eral technically never retired but is always on call, told the subcom-| mittee he still receives $20,543 a year in Army pay and has an office | and secretary to handle the milj- tary mail that keeps coming in. He said he thinks the influence of former generals and admirals a might do better to hire | the papers are in the Pentagon.” EOKA Leader Voices His Opposition f British ATHENS (UPI)—Forme leadew George Grivas states that he is against the inclusion of Cy-! a prus in the British wealth Grivas also indicated he will campaign for pensions for EOKA members who fought against the British for their island’s inde- Common- | pendence. C No place in Nova Scotia is more, than 50 miles from the sea, even at) ithe ‘Most inland districts SPECIALS for THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY and MONDAY REMEMBER! No Carrying Charges on Wyman’s Budget Plan! No Bank or Loan Company! You Pay Right in Our Stores! NO CREDIT PROBLEM at WYMAN'S (Not Exacily as Pictured) : : mE a foe Really two roorhs in one. Beautiful spacious sofa makes large Lane bed for two persons. Matching chair is built for comfort and made for reol relaxation, Both pieces upholstered in the latest long wearing fabrics. Choice of colors, sturdy hardwood frame. Outstanding construction. Sofa has large roomy bedding compartment, 2 beautiful end tables, | cocktail table, 2 handsome matched decoratot lamps, sofa bed and init chair complete this once-in-a-lifetime 7-piece mpney- -saver, JUST LIKE TWO ROOMS for the PRICE-OF-ORE: FREE PARKING AT BOTH, STORES FOR OUR CUSTOMERS! FREE PARKING You Can Use One Account for Purchases at Both Our Stores! FREE BE SURE TO DELIVERY. ASK FOR WHEN Wyman’'s Blue Trading PROMISED! Stamps . . . Good tor Valuable Premiums OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY EVENINGS ‘TIL 9:00 “SAVE '80 on this beautiful. @=PC. protien G ROOM Regular $239.95 T 4 9” Only $15°° Down Easy Terms to Suit poe Pocketbook WYMAN’S Pontiac’s Progressive FURNITURE STORES 17 E. Huron St.—2 Stores—18 W. Pike $t. amc amit | a five-star general with) E B Retired Officer r B Law Advised DOKA | See te OSMUNS SALE Famous Makes Vo OFF - SHOE up to BROKEN LOTS: $4.56 a pair or 2 pr. for *8.00 (While They Least) “The Store That Never Compromises en Quality” Tel-Huron _ Center Open Mon., Thurs., Fri., Sot. ‘til 9 P.M. CHO © STOKLEY. APPLE SAUCE © PHILLIPS TOMATOES e OUR FAVORITE PEAS No. 303 Cans 8 for e Oven Ready Fancy Young Tender Hen TURKEYS Any Size, 6 to 12-1b. Weight c b. DARTMOUTH Frozen ORANGE 6 8a 6 oz: Cans 6 1 00 DEL CREST FRESH GROUND COFFEE I1-Lb. Bag — oe mas i ii f i PLASTIC TOP WALNUT TABLES 18”x28” End Table... .$32.50 36” Cocktail Table ... .$32.50 30”x18” Step Table. ..$36.50 3-Way TRUNDLE SET Solid Hard Rock Maple It's a Bunk! It’s a Twin. It’s a Trundle Set! Sold complete with 2 quality Stearns & Foster extra firm Bunkette mattresses and inner- spring units. Complete $] AA.5A CONTEMPORARY 73°” WALNUT SOFA Oil walnut frame, beige upholstery, zippered foam cushions. Reg. 199.50 2 | 79.50 Transitional 78° SOFA Choice of beautiful custom fabrics foam rubber cushions! Fruitwood legs; choice of oa or con- temporary arm. 5199. 50 STEARNS & FOSTER MATTRESS and BOX SPRINGS Premium quality in smooth or tuft- ed styles. All feature offset coil innerspring units with “seat edge” construction firm. Guaranteed! 7 $39.00 SS INCLUDED EXCEPT A FEW FAIR TRADED OR ESTABLISHED CONOVER CHAIR............. MATCHING OTTOMAN. . Chiair measures 3 Hi 4”, “ai: ite eight 9 $79.00 - $29,95° Ottoman is Clearance! Fadss EXPRESSION DINING, BEDROOM GROUPS ’ So gracefully correlated with modern, Colonial or provincial furnishings... | as featured in LIVING. Aristocratic famous BROYHILL EXPRESSION, walnut in soft Autumn Brown tone and finish which is resistant td heat and liquids. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 22,1959 DOUBLE DRESSER, CHEST and BED & Other Matching Pieces Available $269.50 complete Reg. 359.50 - ANNUAL e . Seat = X 1935; seat to top of back 1745’ Rich Antique Brown Maple finish. Mine other finishes available. SALE from a score of leading manufacturers nae ANTIQUE MAPLE sALE 526,95 BOSTON ROCKER | | DANISH WALNUT ARM CHAIRS Linen textured fabrics; zippered re- versible- tushions; polyfoam cush- reductions up to A() 0 off regular prices "Reg. 49.50 . $39 389.50 TRADITIONAL SOFA, light blue $269 50 _ et cover, foam cushions, back. Custom ...... 354.50 TRADITIONAL SOFA, turquoise, $239.00 tufted back and skirt. Custom-made ..... 299.50 DANISH MODERN SOFA. Wood trim $199 50 arms; foam cushions, back. Beige/Br. Stripe 389.50 MODERN PILLOW-BACK SOFAS, $279.00 foam reversible seat and back cushions . CHERRY STEP TABLES Leather Tops. Exception buy: Reg. 49.95—-NOW .................. $29.95 77.50 OCCASIONAL ARM CHAIR; foam cush- $54 50 ion, walnut legs. Beige cover. Soiled ...... 104.50 MODERN SWIVEL ROCKER. Belge cov- - $79 50 er. Slightly soiled .................. 178.50 MAPLE BUFFET AND HUTCH TOP $149.50 Famous Cushman make .................. 238.50 MAPLE DROP-LEAF TABLE with $179 50 4 matching chairs ................. 00.80. 269.00 SOLID CHERRY BUFFET — CHINA $219.00 Oo 257.00 SOLID CHERRY GATE-LEG DROP- - $2 19.50 LEAF TABLE. 4 matching chairs ..... MAPLE “MILKING STOOLS” handle For Early American rooms. 3-legged stool with Reg. 3.95—-NOW ................... $2.95 EVERYTHING PRICED ITEMS 1680 South T COLONIAL HI-BACK 80” SOFA 73” iil $199.50 sr» $169.00 Foam rubber seat and backs, in beige and brown only Cw elegraph Road LOUNGE CHAIR 129.95 PINK DINETTE SET. Table 35x48 ex- = tends to 60”. 4 chairs ......0-.ccccccscsscies $89.50 129.50 HI-BACK BARREL CHAM. Foam sane ex ion; solid covering . $99.50 59.95 DANISH MODERN RECLINING CHAIR. §¢ 19.95 Plastic seats, black or white: wal. arm tF-Fd 233.00 MODERN 55” LOVE SEAT: foam E seat and back cushions.. Charcoal cover .. $199.50 219.50 WROUGHT IRON DINETTE SET. Oak $89 50 table top; 4 matchcing chairs by Woodard ot 24.95 MODERN POLE LAMPS. Bronze = black, beige ........ cc. csseuseceeuceueeece $19.50 164.50 WROUGHT IRON SECTIONAL. Foam seat, backs: plastic-fabric comb. Light blue $|: 39. 95 ) frame eee eee 38.50 WROUGHT IRON TEA CART. Re- $29 50 movable tray. Sky blue or white .......... aa et 39.95 RATTAN CORNER TARLE 27x27 $17 Formica tops) ac ss cece gseccewiescsstncns 3450 RATTAN COFFEE TABLE, 18x36 $15 s Formica top ....... cece cee cece eee ee 342.00 RATTAN CURVED SECTIONAL By, 3 pce. Inner spring rev. ibaa $159.50 curved corner table. Formica top . 79.50 SLEEPY HOLLOW RATTAN § 49 50 CHAIR AND OTTOMAN ...... “ A INTERIOR DECORATING SERVICE WITHOUT ADDITIONAL COST AT FAMOUS CONOVER COLONIAL Upholstered Furniture Finest quality upholstered furni- ture designed by Philip Bost in true Colonial style, with rugged construction for lifetime use fea- turing their famous trouble-free frame with double cone, hand- tied coil decks on special web- Width 3214”; Height 37” bing. Platform SPECIAL ORDERS IN SPECIAL Rocker $99 5() FABRICS AT SALE PRICES SPECIAL ORDERS ALSO INCLUDED SALE PRICES M APLE HUTCH CHINA CABINET = W 34” D17” SC eg. 109.50 SOLID HARDROCK 99 MAPLE 60° HARVEST TABLE Reg. 89.50 $79.50 60” BENCH — Reg. 54.50 $49.50 SOLID HARDROCK MAPLE COLONIAL LAMP every eae Phe ALL ACCESSORIES Greatly Reduced! e OPEN THURS., FRI, MON. EVES. AIR-CONITIONED AMPLE PARKING EASY BUDGET TERMS “vA Z a a a as ESDAY, JULY 22, 1959 10 Grand Award Number Holders will receive anything they wish for Prices effective fru Set. July 25th pictured in the New Holden Red Stamp “Magic World of Gifts” We reserve Se rents Limit Catolog. Geese 550 Award Number Holders (10 at each National Food Store) will receive their choice of any 3 - book item in the New Holden Red Stamp Catalog. Don’t fail to drop your wish in the “Wishing Well’! Round YES—NOW YOU CAN ENJOY GENUINE U.S. GOV. GRADED “CHOICE” BEEF AT THE SAME PRICE YOU’D PAY FOR INFERIOR BEEF ELSEWHERE! NATIONAL SELLS ONLY U.S. CHOICE! YOUNG TENDER NO. 1 SELECT SLICED ; HILLSIDE ~- HICKORY SMOKED SLICED BEEF LIVER . 49° BACON a NATIONAL’S FULLY COOKED c SMOKED HAMS~-~—-» 4 SAVE 20: Vani no 93 | ppm SAVE 25 Top Taste Yellow Vanilla Wafers "~ 33 on New, Tea Bags... 512) PAM Aluminum Foil :21'|2R¥ FRY Es & -I thought what branch located at 7200 Cedar Bank} They: would back up to the rail- road at the west end of the prop- erty. The corporation will draw a map ‘showing its ideas and suggestions for development of the industrial property for C. of C. use. It will include proposed set-backs for the buildings and other requirements, Reid said. Pass Pay Hikes for Police, Fire SOUTHFIELD — The City Coun- cil here has increased the yearly Salary of its administrator and given pay hikes to all members of the police and fire depart- ments, * * * City Administrator Robert J. Mc- Nutt was given an increase of |$1,000, bringing his salary up to |$15,000 a year. The 23-man force of the fire department will receive annual raises ranging from $156 for cap- tain and chief to $139 for its. four sergeants and one lieuten- ant and $104 for the remaining members who are either me- chanics of firemen. The captain of police will re- ceive an increase of $364, the one lieutenant will get a hike of $156; four sergeants, $130 and 15 patrol- is said to be large enough to hold’man, $104 annually. All pay hikes will be retro- active to July 1, the council agreed, ROCHESTER’S MAIN STREET — This isan acrial view look- ing north on Rochester’s Main street. It shows this progressive community's business district with its modern store fronts, wide thoroughfare and space for parking behind a number of the build- ings. . It is expected that Rochester will become an even more — thriving cohsesislty sa pering in The Pontiac Press. Re ae Phote with the influx of stydents and faculty at) nearby Michigan State University Oakland open this. fall. This is another in a series of aerial photos ap- which is scheduled to Ae | ap yo hs. Sigh: psi, go ht man aby . ae > a THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1959 a d Ui 0 ] Demanding Castro Returnto Restore Relations | HAVANA (AP) — Cuba's giant after the administrative details in} AMMAN, Jordan (AP)—Jordan , | Confederation of Workers called|which he has no interest while|and the United Arab Republic re-| | a one-hour genera) strike Thurs-| devoting his own time to his lang|Portedly have agreed bd ® plan | st: Fidel Costro| reform: orosem. ito restore diplomatic relations, day to demand that Fide prog | broken off a year ago. retern to ss governement. There is considerable specula-| 7, secretary general of the, Secretary General David Salva-| tion that Castro will announce his, Arab League, Abdel Khalik Hass-' dor called on the confederation’s|decision Sunday at the giant an-|ouna, told a news conference the million members to quit their jobs|niversary. celebration of his July Plan agreed upon should reopen! from 10 to 11 a.m. to make known) 9¢ yevolution to which he has sum- the frontiers between the two na-) : labor's desire for the revolution-| | oned a half milli meant,| Uns soon. ary chief to return as the govern-| . ; ution §=peasants The two nations broke off re- | ment’s leader in name as well as from the provinces. in fact x * x * * The cabinet held its first regu-that country’s monarchy. Iraq's) , Castro quit as prime minister) ;4) weekly session Tuesday night King Faisal, a cousin of Jordan s| Friday in a maneuver that forced) since Castro pulld out. He was/King Hussein, was killed in the! out Manuel Urrutia as president.’ yo¢ present, increasing speculation '€¥V9"- There has been talk since that he that he might not return to the might put. in a front man to 100K} jog he said he did not want in the . rc rn as place. Boy, 6, Battered, Burned * * In an eight-hour session, the! ‘cabinet (1) repeated its rejection SPECIALIZED SERVICE Atlantic north of Puerto Rico has!beneath to Death in Clothes Dryer than $100,000 worth of TNT. Four U.S, research ships were conduct- EPHRATA, Pa. (AP)—Six-year- ing a seismic shoot—the biggest old Park S. Fisher Jr. liked to ocean seismic shoot on record. Cuban Workers to ‘Strike Jordan, UAR Agree. ‘Charge Is Over_the Side’ | Seismic Shoot Prepares fo (Thig te the seoond in a series of articles deal: with efforts to find the ideal spot ,to drill through to the center of the earth. Researchers aboard the Columbia University ship | Vema probe the ocean floor off the coast of Puerto Rico and find the | for mapping below-the-bottom rock Three and nine-pound charges ee é honting —— nen “re fired for ships close at hand; ts 9 a4 ~ ales = “th. utilized on land as an aid to tind-|74 = so ponerse oe fart Bacog ing oil, At sea, it’s relatively new. €T 4Way; full-sized depth charges picnic.? [a * + containing 300 pounds of TNT for By LEONARD emGEt The record ocean shoot by Vema/the most distant vessel. ‘ poe een . yon and three companion research| * * * NLS d _ ema tO G1D0DS.| whine w: < ire ston | iships was part of the first step! chots , Vema to Gibbs. This is shot VAS. omar one it the most ambitious! ane = rns be 4 alien te the _ Fifty-five pounds, 24-inch fuse, .aventures in deep-sea exploration} yer Sure and spot tines te wat (ie s corded, The depth of the water Project undertaking: no lations July 20, 1959, alter the estimated burning time 50 sec-!in history — the Mohole project.!and the ship's position must be Iraqi revolution which destroyed nds. One minute warning NOW.” within a year or two, U.S. scien-|determined for every shot. Ex- Gibbs back. Roger and out. |tists hope to drill a miles-deep' plosive charges must be made up ~*~ * _. {hole clear through the earth’s ang armed with fuses and deto “Over the side, over the side.;crust to find out what the inside nating caps. Disastrous prema- The charge is over the side.” of the earth is made of. The'tyre explosion can result from a During the past few weeks, the;miles-deep shaft will be drilled) sjiy — easily possible on a roll- the sea because the ing deck — of the crimping tool resounded to the explosion of moré/earth's crust is thinner below the ysed for attaching fuses to deto- oceans than on land, nating caps We were searching an area of * « * the Atlantic called the Outer Listening is an intricate process, Ridge for a drilling site. also, Hydrophone cables must be eTV HI-FI © RADIO of Castro’s resignation and asked ihis return; (2) created a commis-| turn things on, his father recalls. Tuesday the elder Fisher found * * * The shooting began the morning slacked at the right instant for f |waves generated by the shot come | in. Recording equipment must be, started, film developed within two f | i t 4 i minutes to show whether records © are being obtained, \ & Five men are needed for a shoot- ing party, five for receiving. The} © runs made for a]: ‘long shooting long day, for there were numerous | ,other tasks to be ‘aboard the research ship. Vema had, beside the three men in the coring’ gang, only nine in her scientific party—including two ivisitors, Even the visitors—an ob- server from the Office of Naval Research and I, a reporter—were put to work * * * The end result was a pile of hydrophone records and other re- search data that will tell eventual- ly whether a suitable site for the history-making Mohole project has been found, carried outif ©: And | Firestone Vacation Service Don't take chances... let us safety check your car y' © TAPE RECORDERS ‘sion to contro! stocks, bonds and In a_ seismic shoot king-size | after the four ships loaded ammw-' the phone to float free and undis-| Exploring Deep Tomorrow: @P, A. SYSTEMS ® OFFICE INTER-COMS ® WEBCOR FACTORY SERVICE | BLAKE RADIO-TV bs ie : : ‘his son battered and burned to «-fipecrackers” are tossed into thejnition at the U.S. naval base at \other financial certificates, and | Roosevelt Roads, P.R. It went on (3) set up another commission to/‘¢ath in an electric dryer In the oa The explosive charges gene- contro] potato imports. laundry Sulit of the Fisher home rate sound waves that travel to in nearby Denver. ‘the ocean bottom, Some of the/interruptions only for other re- — Dr. Edward J. Kowalewski, de- ound waves bounce off the bot- search work or movement of the The population of West Germany puty coroner of Lancaster County, tom. some travel through the/ships to new stations. | ka, is 2,000. The nember of peo-|said the boy apparently turned 0 oan floor before being bent back) Three ships—strung out on a line {ple who visit the historical gold the dryer and crawled inside. He iato the water, Listening ships/40 to 60 miles long—listened. The aS ‘ple who visited the historical gold |issued a verdict of accidental’ )i¢ up the traveling waves with|fourth ship steamed down the line, : — 7 ‘ ea town fh 1 1588 was ae Ideath, ee _ |hydrophones, which provide cluesidropping charges as it went. ' ° No Disturbances at High School Yet | NOW DO DISHES FASTER, CLEANER Little Rock Registration Continues Under Watch | New Imperial DISHMASTER LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) —jregistration was a little below Registration—under police surveil-| average but this was expected be- Rock’s four high schools re | ._ : llth grade students were sched- | School is scheduled to open Sept. juled to sign up for classes this 8. ' fall. | Registration by Negroes at once- | Officers watched Tuesday as 429 white schools does not mean they ‘seniors registered peacefully in|will be permitted to attend there. \Schools which were closed against after registration is complete, the integration last year. Included in| school board will invoke Arkansas’ ‘this group were five Negroes who pupil placement law to assign stu- expressed a desire to attend Cen-|gents to the various schools. FIRST MODEL CHANGE IN 12 YEARS Dishmaster, always the world’s most popular dishwasher, now washes even faster, cleaner and more economically ® Diamond-bored, bronze valves! ® New and larger detergent tank! NEW FACTORY BRANCH on WOODWARD at SQUARE LAKE DEMONSTRATION, SALES and SERVICE ; tral High, once an all-white school. | "i * * _ No Negroes attempted to enroll Two private schools, which en- im Tiel oe res the two other | oiled about 400 students last year, <* . announced they had no plans to * 2 ioperate this fall Four of the five were € Baptist High, which had 365 stu- = i ge poo yang Rien dents, and Trinity Interim Aca- troops during the 1957-58 term. Police said there were no dis- RD. turbances, @ New positive stop valve handles eliminate dripping © New sure-lock wand holder keeps hose in place! a segregationist-backed institution, ek the only private, segregated sch FE 8-2588 |} Supt. Terrell Powell said senior ed about 900 for next term. SE SS eee : During REMODELING SALE 1959 CARS WILL BE ACCEPTED IN TRADE... - | JEROME OLDS-CADILLAC | 290 S. Saginaw FE 4-3566 |/is-'sst esc: sie on day and night for 18 days. with ° lance — continues today at ‘Little | cause registration was so early. ‘ jdemy, which had 27, went out of| business. This leaves Raney High, ; in the city, Raney had about 80 ,students last year and has enroll- turbed by wave slap as the sound “Total Weig ' Ocean Waters. ht Diamond WEDDING RINGS 1, Carat Weddin 14 Carat Weddin 34 Carat Weddin g Ring .. $149.00 g Ring .. $199.00 g Ring .. $299.00 1 Carat Wedding Ring .. $399.00 Plus Federal Tax REDMOND’S Jewelers — 81 N. Saginaw St. | ORS * REP. ae Lo GRR { S890. Dr. B. R. Berman — _ . —Optometrist— e Also Stil! at Same Location Feature 17 _N. Saainaw St. CONTACT FE 4.7071 Rie RCE > ATER BR FEATURING THE LATEST | FASHIONS IN EYEWEAR Optometrists FE 2-3612 2 Arik SR . Charge They | Beat Cripple Jail Two Men Hired’ to Rough Up Customers | OTICE We're on the Home Stretch! of Miami Bar | Y j MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — Two a F lare under arrest on charges of breaking a crippled man’s jcrutches over his head in a bar- room brawl] allegedly stemming from a jukebox war. | State Atty. Richard Gerstein} jsaid two other men named in | | information filed by his office are | sought- by police. | Jailed Tuesday were Leon Field- | an owner of the ‘ Starlight} Co., and James Conger, ac- | icused as one of two men hired! |to start fights in bars where com-/ bach, ; Music Ladies’ Fall The information charged Field- jbach and Conger in the beating of | Fred Nevels, a one-legged patron | |who was sitting in the Sidewalk| —SS Sizes 5-241 Parking (: (HMoenwace« eta Li, |Bar last July 15. | Nevels’ crutches were broken jover his head before his assail- jants dragged him into an alley = jand beat him, police said. z * Watch for our full page color advertisement to appear in im day’s Pontiac Press. Our famous ‘Scratch and Dent Sale” will feature quality furniture with slight imperfections at tremen- dous savings to you. Up to 50% off our regular list prices. Many items are one-of-a-kind, First come, first served. Doors open 9 | a.m. until 7 p.m. Friday: — : ‘] Bf member committee be created by | Mie 2 " | THOMAS/ECONOMY | | ! | The information charged the| ibrawls were intended to “ruin| | business for the bar operators by; eee off their patrons.” | 3. | Proposes Hawaii SCRATCH Have Itg Own | and | IStatueot Liberty |for one of Hawaii's two USS. E | Senate seats suggests a second} . Statue of Liberty be built at the | entrance of Honolulu Harbor. | Republican territorial Sen. Wil-| : j red C. Tsukiyama, 62, white- | ‘ dean of Hawaii legislators of Jap- | janese ancestry, made the sug- | i gestion at a political rally Tues-| | day Items for Ladies, Girls, We Can't List All the Going for the Mere Sum HONOLULU (AP)—A candidate | He said the statue would sym- | bolize to the Pacific and Asia the | same ideals represented by the | original Statue of Liberty in New | York Harbor. | Reg. Sold To $17.98 Ask Senate to Create pene Veterans Group | WASHINGTON (AP)—=A special] bi-partisan subcommittee today recommended to the Sendte Rules Committee that a separate. nine- - SACRIFICED ij ‘ ¥ Sens. Howard W, Cannon (D-Nev) | and Kenneth B. Keating (RANY).| Veterans legislation is handled in| ithe Senate by the Finance and] } F | committees Cannon said the record showed | failed to act on many veterans] bills because of other responsibil-| Reg. to $3.98 Dict CBinbeng BEY Booth deginew Sevect Pontiac ities. | VELL 4500 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD QUITTING BUSINESS SALE Rock Bottom Smash Reg. to $27.98 Reg. to $15.95 4.00 *3.00 RUMMAGE BARGAINS Come See for Yourself. Values to $10.98. 50°51 LADIES’ SUMMER DRESSES "si $ 477 GIRLS’ “ Reg. to $9.98 (‘$477 $377 Dresses 4d Boys and Infants. Different Items. Buy PRICES GIRLS’ and BOYS’ SUMMER P.J.’s NOW LADIES’ BRAS Reg. Styles, 6-Way NOW GIRLS’ BLOUSES Back-To-School 88° NOW STORE HOURS SUNDAY-THURSDAY 10 A.M.-9 P.M. FRIDAY & SATURDAY 10 A.M.-10 P.M. PS Reg. to $1.98 | sis & Strapless Most Sizes Reg. to $2.95 $7 93 Now & Save For Reg. to $1.98 *y FRONT-END = ¢ Pack wheel bearings a Heres what we do—Re- pack fromt wheel bearings. Add @uid if necessary. Ad- just brake shoes Mufflers Priced From 88 uP The use of high quality aluminum, zinc and asbes- tos gives long life. New Battery | uA 8s with battery 5 Trade batteries NOW, be- © fore your old one goes dead. Save time, trouble. 4 ; FREE 60-DAY ' TRIAL OFFER " Faulty shock absorbers are extremely -; DANGEROUS, and are '» not easily detected until it’s too late. See us. . Bik et | , Don’t take chiences: || Drive in today eas ge a ae BRAKE AND e Adjust brakes e Add brake fluid SERVICE thi Fi a 9 i 4 e Align front wheels 3 ¢ Balance front wheels © #358 am * é FIRESTONE CHAMPIONS 12° 15° | SIZE 6.70-15, tubed type, * plus tax and trade-in tire. t Available for all cars Exhaust : Tail Pipes 29 up We have high quality ‘ / pipes, trained mento i. install them. Priced from ra Firestone STORES 146 West Huron FE 2-9251 ae MIR NE a ec i Re / i 4 800,000 who die of diseases i f= / of the heart each year in the U: S., 30 per cent are under age 65. =] We ALL Came | no E Tumbling Down! Lech OR. 7 WAYS TO KEEP FROM DRAGGIN’ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1959 , : R - M4-Year-Old to Train in Moscow Bolshoi Wants British Girl LONDON (#—Russia’s Bolshoi Bolshoi director Assuaf Messerer theater—the big league of the|Visited a dancing school and saw ballet-—has asked a 14-year-old|Ann. English girl to train in Moscow. “One day that girl will be a great This practically assures Ann|dancer,” said Messerer. ‘When Stone of one day becoming a world-|she’s older, I'd like to train her.” class ballerina. : Out of Moscow last week came But the story has a sad side. a firm offer frem the Bolshei In accepting the Soviet offer, | to train Ann with all expenses aan A true story bosed on an actual cese While gathering fruit from a@ tree in my yard, the stepladder tilted end I | fell hard. When I thrust out my left | hand to break the fai! 4 fingers were dislocated! My Hartford Accident Policy paid me $50 a week while I wes totally disabled, and $20 a week while I was partially disabled. Hartford Accident Insurance can be purchased to ft your individual needs. It will pay hospital and medi- cal expenses if you're hurt in an accident — it can also pay a weekly income while you're totally or par- tially disabled See us for full facts about this low- cost plan. im z Oakley — fang, Ann is saying farewell to her | Paid. fatuer for at least five years. Mrs. Stone has worked in a “I hate to lose her,” said Alfredjlaundry to help pay for Ann's Stone, superintendent in an London|dancing lessons here. apartment house, ‘‘ang her mother} ‘‘It’s like a fairy story,’ said is sad, too. Ann at a party given for he by . “The Russian authorities have|her British teacher, Doreen Eng- promised to fly my wife out to/lish. Russia every year for a month, but I'm afraid I won't be able to The maximum time . between go.” drinks ‘for the average camel is Ann’s talent caught the Russianjeight or ten days. It could prob- eye three years ago when the Bol-jably wait longer if it didn't have shoi dancers were visiting Britain.|to work. MOTOROLA LOW-COST CE z HIGH QUALITY 4-SPEED BEN , PORTABLE PLAYER CS . Plays all speed records. Light- SS : weight fabric covered carry- Ce ay nN ing case. hak, 2 9” ONLY 1.25 Weekly eo The Good Housekeeping Thatcher, Economic Gr Oup Producer Alison Evans Bounced Hard, Then Soared Patterson & Wernet 711 Community National Bank Building Pontiac's Oldest Insgrance Agency Accepts Spain or an OEEC Admittance May NEW YORK — Allison Ridley/play the role of Captain Hook. ve Wa Nation Evans is now quite adult—a pro-| Pa e y for 'ducer of playssand one child—ut to Join NATO \25 years ago she was follishly jimmature. Her father, Professor) PARIS (UPI)—Spain’s entry in- M. R. Ridley, Dean of Oxford to the Organization for European | sable (ook per bs fag oA gual best known Captain Hooks in this | Economic Cooperation (OEEC) fanpene | ° ‘ sO Tiers shea century have been Cyril . Rit- | may ease the way for later ad- ana 2 wele youet te 3 sia chard, Boris Karloff, George Ar- | , seeing this lovely, soaring fantasy, liss, Ralph Richardson). mission into NATO, observers ve- There's a great difference in lieved today. It was another giant step back First, she flew from a_ piano audience reaction to plays per- | formed in the open air, as opposed | ‘into the Western family of nations stool and janded ow her knees and followed a 1933 agreement per-|- ‘ . | nae tn ¢ Next, she flew from a bookshelf *° those in a theater. lmitting establishment of U.S. air| nye zs ‘bases. in Spain and the 1955 ad-/and landed on her reverse. George bis cried in- mission to the United Nations. Last, she flew from a monstrous|* 27%, 15 VEry Dig outdoors. | * yS- high-boy chiffonier and landed on|™#lion’ was our most soli¢ draw| So far the Scandinavians mem- |, . head. : in 11 years of operation, bers of NATO have balked at "°F "°8°- ““Charley’s Aunt’, on the other Spain's entry into the Atlantic That did it. All of a sudden, [hand was a flop. Maybe the set- alliance and Spain itself has not | with the keen insight of a child Funny thing about Captam Hook—he's a ‘thing’ with British actors. They'd rather play Hook | \Alison got the impression she, could fly. Georges-Newports lewelry Dept. 74 North Saginaw St. ting is too romantic for farce.” _ campaigned actively for mem- | who’s been burned or battered : * « (Advertisement) | bership. | for the third time, Alison rea- lized that this kid, Peter, didn't Alison, who is married to an But Denmark and Norway as actor but has had no personal ~| get to fly because he had lovely ‘rest a he $ \counci] Monday to admit Spain. ;woman ever since. Tcaaste’ sete Welder ae With OEEC membership went; Mrs. Evans is founder and boss | eoliege had constructed the amphi- membership in the European mon-jof an almost ‘all-female theatrical | theater to present an annual Greek etary agreement plus a_ loan of operation called the “Theater on play. She saw this as a tragic 100 million dollars from the EMA the Green” at Wellesley, Mass. jwacte, asked her alma mater for| fund. This brought to 350 million) : - ; : dollars the amount of loans rs aclecaadaiahie Balr the use of the hall during sum Spain from U.S. and world organi-| zations in the past week. | scheduling plays that she knows Adah Shelly Library . ithe biggest" actors and actreses Reports New Books t.82° say 1 was tatking 'of—‘Peter Pan’,” she shuddered. New books ready for cucmation “We're doing it this year because aor well as neutral Sweden are OEEC : me . Oh mM | members. All three voted with the| thoughts. He had connections. naa meer = Pee ost f | of the OEEC permanent; She's been a smart business- x aching blessings, rent-free. She cannot understand why more colleges, which lie relative- ly dormant during the summer months, do not contribute their theaters to ambitious young ac- | tors and directors who might be backed by local businessmen or civic groups in summer the- | actrical seasons. amphitheater style that attracts the top Broadway stars for rela- tively small salaries by usjng Ali- json’s favorite star-snagging devic?: Peter Pan Got Her Off to Flying Start |!! Congress Blasted ,we knew Eric Portman wanted to; It is goog for the people, who; are hungry for cultural entertain- ment at reasonable prices. It is good for the prestige of the college, because it draws to the campus persons who might never see it than Hamlet, and they'll almost | otherwise. And it is best of all forjof a work free for the chance.” (The | actors, who are traditionally more| amendment, enthralled by a good role than a buck. Point Out Advantages of Express Highways Shop of Pontiac 51 W. Huron FE 4-1555 | Provides for Solons | WASHINGTON (AP) — Machin-) ery for replacing Congress, in| event it is wiped out by an afoan| bomb or other disaster, is pro pro] 78 N, SAGINAW STREET PONTIAC | Posed by the Senate Judiciary jCormmikice THURSDAY SPECIALS ONLY AT BAZLEY'S LANSING tages of expressways were being’ pushed today by the Michigan good roads federation in distribution of} 20,000 brochures aimed at pointing, out economic and safety benefits of this type highway. The federation indicated the brochures would go to people in state and local government, ed- ucation, safety, tourism, agricul- ture, labor, industry and cham- (UPI)—The advan-|tes Kefauver (D-Tenn), Under the proposal, in the form, MEATY BAR-B-QUE c lb. Suggested constitutional) state governors, SPARE RIBS ™ 118. c yt bb. |would be authorized to fill vacan-| CLOVERLANE WITH MEAT PURCHASE icies in the House when disaster, the proposal. Chinese Freighter Sinks TAIPEI (AP) — The 160 - ton) Chinese Nationalist freighter Yung Hsin sank Tuesday night! after hitting a reef off the East, Formosa port of Hualien. All 13) crewmen were rescued. | bers commerce and veterans groups, The brochures indicate express-| ways curb fatalities, help com-| munity growth, increase tourist) trade, attract industry and. make driving pleasant for the motorist. | } It's a summer theater in Greek ™ers, and they gave her their Study Art of Leisure | CHICAGO u — The YMCA sum- | mer ‘Learning for Living’ pro-| gram includes a course in the ‘Art| of Useless but Enjoyable Living.” | Les Paul, instructor of the course, listed such painless sub-| jects as ‘“‘philosophy of cheese,”’| “the art of Chinese food” and! “‘gamesmanship.”’ | ‘include the: following titles: FICTION at the Adah Shelly Branch Library ~ LOWER PRICES! BETTER VALUES! Nagging backache, : headache, or muscular aches and pains may come on with over-exertion, emo- tional upsets or day to day stress and strain. And folks Dry’; Gantz, “Not In Solitude’; | ‘Garth. “The Watch on the Bridge’; | Oliver. “‘The Lion and the Rose”’; | who eat and drink unwisel Pendergast, “Summer's Lease’; | times suff ild bladder “Elephz uy T lau saa thea White, “Elephant Hill”. BET ER restless uncomfortable feeling. 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Files —Hectograph Duplicating Machines — Speed Message Letters —_Collating Machines ——Evans Gathering Racks ——Electric Staplers — Visible Record Systems —Amfile Sorters —YGE Sorters ——Electric Typewriters Electric Mimeograph ~_Envelope Moisteners _ __Snap-out Carboh Systems —Dictating Equipment __Eastman Photocopy Equipment —_5 and 6 Drawer Files __Modular Desks—Save 30% Space ier ii ii nt! i f BETTER VALUE ee Aa a oan 3 “He’s a different man. For the first time he seems to know what he wants to do and where he’s going.” Says a Republican Party man: “He's beginning to understand politics and why you have got to do certain things . . . and why you can’t keep everybody happy. Only it’s about six years late.’ Says another Republican Con- gressman: “We've been ome to get Ike to use his influence for years, get in and fight, use the pres- sures he’s got. He’s always said ‘Why do that? Now he says ‘I'll see to it. We’ll take care of that.’ “Boy, he’s really exerting lead- ership.” Says a man who has watched him closely in the White House: “There was a time there in 1957 and 1958 he seemed tired of his job. He didn’t have much interest|decisions. He trusted Adams, | : : or pep. Now that he’s making his|didn’t .do much thinking about| dency. He can't get re-elected; own decisions for the first time, that’s the law. he’s beginning to like his job a lot better. He seems happier. *x * * ‘‘Nowadays,” says one adminis- tration official, “‘if the President heads into opposition, he talks about taking his argument to the people on TV, or-he threatens an extra session of Congress.” Says one key Republican Con- gressman gratefully: “He’s not missing the little tricks that will help some.of us get re-| elected. Before, he didn’t seem) to think that sort of thing was important.” What's caused the change? There seems to be agreement on that, too. First, Sherman Adams, the White House major dome, resigned. And then Secretary of State John Foster Dulles became ill and died. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, J ee ee ULY 22, 1959 IKE IN ’57: Little interest or pep. Says one man close to the White President became his own Sec- ouse: “Sherm tried to keep details Herter isn’t good at his job. I) off the President. his mind, then gave Ike the pa-|to Ike as Dulles was. The Presi- pers to sign. The President often) didn’t know what went into the| Controversial Novel why things were done. And be Ruled ‘Not Obscene business, When Dulles thought something was the thing to do, Ike always went along. “Then Adams left. General |long-controversial novel, Persons (the man who took Ad-|chatteriy's Lover,” is not obscene. ams’ place) is a different sort of| man. He can make decisions, if) NEW YORK uw — A federal dis- m the mails. Judge Frederick Bryan ruled that the volume was entitled to “the protections guaranteed to freedoms of speech and _ the press by the first amendment. Said the judge: up to the President. “Tke began to understand why you had to do some things for political reasons, what political pressures really meant in prac- tice, what you were going to have to do if you were going to push things through against de- termined opposition. TKE IN ’59: He makes the decisions. retary of State. That’s not to say; He made up| ithink he is. But he’s not so close trict judge ruled Tuesday that the “Lady He thus knocked out the govern- necessary, but he puts a lot more|Ment’s latest attempt to bar it| fro “To exclude this Book from the \Congress. |politics.”” dent is making decisions, mak- ing up his own mind on foreign; affairs. This is doing him a lot | of good.” | And the President has done some thinking recently. He’s not going to be running for anything | after he retires from the. Presi- | He doesn’t want any other office. He’s not looking for any ‘position. He wants to retire, And Mrs. Eisenhower enthusiastically sec-' onds the idea. So he doesn’t feel obligated to anybody. Dwight Eisenhower all his life | has tried to be the conciliator,) |to get along. His fame in Europe, |was based largely on his ability jas a super diplomat. He was ablé | ito weld a mixed bag of star-| | studded military prima donnas | linto a victorious team. President Eisenhower has been| itrying the same technique with And it hasn’t worked | Now fCman vily a “He began to see how govern- |ment works . . . not storybook istyle, but in reality. He'd been mails on the grounds of obscenity; very well. Now he’s made up his, would fashion a rule which could mind to talk cold turkey to Con- be applied to a substantial portion gress to get through the bills| uift Book of the classics of our literature he figures have got to get through | ACCOUNTS too sheltered before. “Then Dulles died. And the free society.” Such a rule would be inimical to a this year and next. He's going to call in congres- BANK at Why Settle for Less Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation s “But Casey, we can’t play in the World Series this year! We’re goin’ on The Pontiac Press Theater Tour in September!” ONLY 3 PLACES LEFT Hurry! Don’t Miss the Fun Trip of 1959 - Only - Reservation Application Sere eoeee Tour City eete I understand that the $189 I have enclosed includes transportation, hotel, theater tickets, plus other extra features mentioned in Press articles. I also understand that if I have any preferences for a room companion or am going with a small group that this information will accompany this reservation. ~ Press Theater Tour: - Please make the following reservation for me on The Pontiac Press Theater Tour to New York City, departing Monday morning, Sept. 14 and returning Sept. 19. o«-. Mrs, -- Miss Pre Cee ee ese eeeseeene TIP ee ee ee ee 2 (Single Room $2 Extra) I agree to participate in the Pontiac Press Theater under the following conditions: I have included the full payment with this reservation ee Chee esegtare -Phone.... @ecvece ee ee OOo reer evee } : , captive flights and once was drop- Match { a . . =A \ : Sixth X15 Test Flight rhs its we a glide} r4-K¢, eae e e wi power back to this desert Diamond . : On n Duties Changing Resated thursday "sane J : ~~ * ® &-Z PAYMENT PLAN 2 ) ; EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE,| Thursday's flight is to be made] BOWARD’S 16s. seginew By RAY CROMLEY my sional leaders with more regu-|Calif, (AP)—The sixth test flight/Wth a full load of fuel aboard the WASHINGTON (NEA) — Some- ‘larity, or pass the word down,|of the X15 rocket ship has been _ a _— we be- thing is happening to President j that he wants action, and that/set back until Thursday, ene fight, pilot aes eee (Advertisement) Eisenhower. if he doesn’t get it he'll do some-| The X15 had been scheduled to ; : field is expected to Bn args the He’s becoming less conciliatory, hing about it. He'll fight. make a captive flight Tuesday|ship’s engines for a brief flight less the man trying to get every- : x * * under the wing of a B52 bomber! before landing. one together. He’s pushing more ia kev political: work: but the test was postponed for ” softened i of his own ideas, giving “a little yy Ae One REY POiCal WOCKEr (PUL! echnical reasons. About 70 per cent of Sweden’s and seothed i more hell’’ to the opposition, it ‘Ike has at last learned that - & * merchant marine seldom touch with : i * *« * conciliation and being the nice; ‘The rocket ship, designed even-|their home ports. But, they earn SINOL mits Says one amazed congressional : Man to everybody doesn’t work in|tually to carry a man to the edge|foreign exchange to protect RESINOL g leader: ot space and back, has made four’ Sweden's trade balance. : — Ta F ive Hit Shows See Rockefeller Center and “Flower Drum Song” Radio City Music Hall ey eee Agel Performance “Redhead”. | Network TV Shows _If I am unable to make the tour I understand that I shall be giveri a full refund providing I give notice by Aug. 15. T understand that reservations will be made in order of the receipt of applications and that my name will be placed upon a waiting list if I am not included among the first 85.I understand that I may participate in all of the schedule of events except, for possible changeés or additions made by some event beyond the control of The tiac Press, : 169” Sept. 14-19 “Pleasure of His Company” _ “Marriage Go Round” BS SBE WOO SO OSOS SASS SEAGRASS HE *. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1959 a it Along the Outdoor Trail } With H. GUY MOATS Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Press ~ Cruising Club Trails fo Interesting Waters By the Préss Outdoors Editor The old song about “Cruising Down the River,” on a Sunday afternoon could well be the theme melody for ha roup of Pontiac area motorboat enthusiasts. | * pts f : and on most holidays during the past two summers the 20 to 25 members of the Pontiac Cruis-: ost every Sunday, ing club pack up, take off for some interesting waterwa about Michigan, or even into Canada. But there's a big differ-| ence than just “taking off.” Each member trailers his boat. The club forms a “bud- dy” sort of caravan, going two-by-two, usually following a 5:30 a.m. rendevous at a Drayton Plains parking area. “Buddies” are designed to aid one another, in case of need enroute to the “dunking” spot. Also, the system breaks J up the trippers to avoid any traffic situations on the road. This year is actually the 3rd for the group, formed to sail new waters, enjoy outings and good companionships. Richard | Carisen of Drayton Plains is generally regarded as the “father F- of the club. Its officers are Harley Hyatt, veteran area amateur | golfer as commodore; Carlsen, vice commodore; Tom Brooks, secretary-treasurer, cruise master; assistant, Jay Smith; George Barbour of Milford, and public relations, Elsi Joyce. VISIT MANY NEW WATERWAYS So far this summer the club has cruised to Mitchell Bay, Dresden and Chatham, in Canada (Mitchell Bay. last week end, where the trip was an overnight stay Saturday), Grand | Haven, Torch Lake, the Saginaw river, a shakedown cruis to Lake Fenton, and at Port Huron. Al Daisley, junior cruise master, handled last weekend’s trip. Past cruisemaster’s cruise is planned for the next jaunt and a “mystery cruise” is coming | up soon. Only the cruisemaster will know where the waters to be visited are located. Trips cover from 60 to 125 miles. All have been made without mishap, or difficulty of any kind, either on road, or water. Boats range in size from 14 to 19 feet, have pow- : er plants averaging 50 hp. . There's a specially-equipped Red Cross boat, flying the : familiar flag, a mechanic's boat, with tools, flying a flag bear- ing a wrench symbol. Cruise flags are orange and bla carrying the club name and owners’ registry number. Elmer the! Bauer’s' boat is the Red Cross “Ship,” Paul Green's y| ” e al Lafayette. northern border. Iliness Hits Holly Canoeists’ Chances Deer Harvest May Be Hiked LANSING — With Michigan’s| The Pontiac arpa's premier ca- & |deer herd faring well numerically | noe racing team, one of the na- Pentisc Press Phote TAKES DERBY LEAD — There's another new leader in the bluegill division of The Press’ big fish derby. inch long, one-pound and 2-ounce ‘gill is proud Dick Smith, 79 Dick took the new leader from a lake near Pontiac's Holding the 10'3- é |but its major feeding range badly tion’s top paddling combinations ment game officials have tenta-'trjp to British Columbia and the jtively set their sights on a harvest |oruelling 144-mile Prince George of 116,000 whitetails during this| marathon. Both Albert and LeRoy fall's deer seasons. |Widing were tired, but in good x * | - overbrowsed, Conservation Depart- has returned from a long, arduous | — They made the trip by jautomobile, carrying their canoes jon top. One of the toughest’ races ever paddied by the Holly pair, they reported that they came through | a terrific test in good shape, ! The figure, a 14 per cent hike! over last year’s kill of' 101,750, would be the highest since Michi-' gan’s record season of 1952. * * * During their informa! review of the state’s deer picture before the Conservation Commission last week, game men explained the anticipated kill mark would be sought by Increasing special sea- son permits and areas covered under ‘‘any deer’ shooting. x * * Recommended regulations for these seasons will be formally pre- sented to the Commission during its August 6-7 meeting at the Hig- jgins Lake training school. This meeting will be open to the public. * * * As informally outlined, 100,500) |special permits would be offered. |Some 55,265 were issued last year. | Thirty-nine areas would be open to |“‘any deer’ hunting, covering 18,- |457 square miles. Last year, 13,- |670 square miles were open in 37 |special areas. TUNEUP JOB — Doing a bit His Wait-4-Me (Y-77) is shown on +f By JOHN BOHANNAN Syndicated Boating Writer mechanic “shop.” All club boats comply fully with safety rules’ When outboard motor electrical and equipment. * x * FISHING’S GOOD—HERE’'S PROOF Primarily a pan-fisherman, Pontiac's Dick Smith, 79 La- fayette, knows how to get the big bluegills, one of which Is| and generators call for a far more the current Press big fish derby leader—at one-pound, two- oxtensive system. ounces. A fat ‘crawler lured Dick’s biggest ‘gill. He’s an installer for Michigan Bell. An unusually big calico was taken this week by Gienn Slankster, 3216 Pridham, KH. The fish was 13% da inches long, 1'4-pounds heavy, taken on Otter lake with } a cane pole rig. Mrs. Slankster, Mrs. John Doyen were along and helped take 8 other gills, 20 bullheads. Albert Gay, 8027 Flagstaff, Union Lake, reports his all- time biggest perch, taken at the UP’s lake Gogebic. It was 1544 inches long, weighed two pounds. His party got 15-20 : ) about that size (his parents Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Gay of Com- merce, Mrs. Gay and Fred Humm of Commerce). Fishing at Five-Channels dam on the AuSable, Robert _ Thrke, 465 Going, took a 3-pound, 17-inch long smallmouth ‘ bass, the biggest bass of his fishing experience. His dad, Her- * man, 389 Prospect, was with him. exciting time on Pine Lake, landing a 2-pound, 10-ounce large- mouth bass. The boys are sons of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schneider tock. of 2594 Pine Ridge and attend Our Lady of Refuge school. They were fishing at Shorty Hook’s place. Mrs. Floyd Sinkler, 907 Opdyke, landed a 4-pound, 12- ounce smallmouth bass on Portage lake, at Chassell, in the UP, while fishing with her husband, brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas West (Walled Lake). Her prize was 19 inches long, 15 inches in girth. Darlene Wieling, 1144, who just started fishing a year ago incher. She lives near the airport. . SEEK INFORMATION ABOUT BANDED PIGEONS Several area residents have sought information re. cently about ownership of pigeons either disabled, flight- worn, or dead, all bearing aluminum bands . . . Any one knowing identity of bands No. AU59, GMC 4-6-8, (found j on beige and white bird by Mrs. Russell Gottschall):; No. 944-AU-59 (gray-barred, injured, died; found by Joey and Danny Fisher), call The Press Outdoor editor. a : >. : 5 ‘ Pontine Press Phote BIG FISH, — Eleven-year-old Darlene Williams Lake school is a good angler. The Me took the fish (big one is a 13-inch rain- Py the Other day, ; : | ei t needs consisted of ignition only, ithe flywheel magneto circuit was quite simple and entirely self- ltricity into motion. One solenoid closes a heavy- duty switch connecting the bat- | tery te the starter motor. The | other closes the intake butterfly Youre the Skipper . (netic device for converting elec-; The alternator-rectifier systems "& ® Winning, also a very busy| of work on his motor, in prepara- tion for coming events was Pontiac's Hank W. Ball (above) active 48-class boat racing driver, who was a winner last two times out. the trailer with which Ball takes it to the various regattas in which he competes. Ball designed and built the hydroplane, his 4th racing boat. Hank Ball Builds Own Racing Boat: A ‘do-it-yourself’ racing boat! enthusiast from boyhood, Pontiac's | |Hank Ball this summer is enjoy- are of simpler appearance, since season. . all solenoids can be contained with-| Hank has campaigned his lin the power head assembly.| swait¢Me.” a 48-class inboard | Direct current generators require) peedster to four wins, several voltage regulators, and these, along’ EP es Pee | Larry Schneider, 9, and his brother Danny, 11, had an. caught two fine trout on Maceday lake, the biggest a 1342- contained, but with bigger engine) valve tg choke the engine. sizes these days, the use of starters! Flooding from over-choking is |prevented either by spring-loading ,with the starter solenoids, are CON-| trailering hig hydro around the tained in junction boxes attached to the inside of the transom. Unless you are familiar with Some outboards use alterna. | the butterfly valve just enough $0 ejectrical circuits and have had tors with rectifiers te deliver the jthat the vacuum created when the) | direct current for charging the |@"gine starts will open the valve, | | battery, while others employ con- jor by a series vacuum switch to) ventional direct current genera. °P€" the circuit. ; tors. When the starter is turning over \the engine, heavy current flows. |For this reason cables must be |kept reasonably short. Where it is Necessary to mount the battery some distance from the motor to jimprove weight distribution or for |stowage convenience, special over- sized cables must be used to pre- /vent voltage drop. * * * Measure the length you need, and your dealer will order them \for you if he doesn’t have them in | If your boat has no protective |motor well, avoid placing the bat- |tery directly under the forward |carrying handle. When the engine itilts it may damage or short-cir- |cuit the battery. A fiberglas battery box is the best deal, protecting both the bat- itery and the boat. In any case, the battery should be firmly tied down Two remote-contro] push buttons ;on the instrument panel lead to each outboard engine through low- |amperage circuits which can be as jlong as you wish. Each button op- erates a solenoid, an electro-mag- circled area) practical experience it's best to have your marine dealer make the complete installation. ENCLOSED CONTACTS—The young woman above is fitting a contact with enclosed solenoids, on her outboard motor (see Motor, a big job, is equipped with alternator- rectifier type of direct current supply for charging batteries. Parks Will Turn Away 28,000 Camping Groups 90 Boats Expected in Lake Huron Race | Midwest for regional, invita. | | | Parseghian Guest at Football Clinic ' MOUNT PLEASANT ® — Ara) sity's brilliant young football coach, will head the annua coach- | ing clinic at Central Michigan Uni- versity Aug. 17-21. Bill Perigo, Michigan basketball coach and Jack Heppinstall, retired Michigan State trainer, will handle other phases of the clinic. High school coaches taking part will be Bill Doolittle of Flint Cen- tral. Walt Pawlowski of Holt, Gus Ganakas of East Lansing and | Charles Hollosy of Detroit Austin. | The clinic is co-sponsored by the, Michigan High School Athletic! Assn, and Central Michigan Uni- versity. Raven Hill Pups Add More Wins in Monroe Match Those Raven Hill Great Danes, Hank and Mary Jane Roberts’ “Sugarfoot” ang ‘‘Susie,’’ have done it again. Raven Hill's Sugarfoot Stomp) went first in the male division of! the 46-months-old puppies and sister Santuzza’s Shadow was tops in the same class for females in the Monroe Kenne] Club Show. Win was 2nd in a row for Sugar- PORT HURON (®— Spokesmen foot and 3rd straight for Susie. | If the puppies do all right in Donald ‘Campbell of LANSING — A lack of camping facilities will force Conservation ;Department parks men to turn jaway more than 28,000 camping \groups at state parks and recrea- tion areas in Michigan this year. After last year when a record 134,509 camping permits were is- sued, Department officials noted a need for balancing campers with camping facilities, principal- ly disposal systems, In too many | cases these systems had been unsanitary conditions. “Since funds were not available for adding or expanding these sys- tems, the Department was forced to reduce usable campsites where these sites exceeded the new limit. Thus campsite cuthacks were im- |posed at Baraga, Porcupine Moun- tains, Straits, Tahquamenon Falls, |Fort Wilkins and Wells state parks jin the Upper Peninsula Lombardo Names Pilot SEATTLE (AP) — Guy Lom- bardo, the band leader whose avo- cation is boat racing, has named Mira Slovak of Seattle to drive jhis jet-powered hydroplahe in an ‘onslaught on the, world speedboat The record of 248.62 miles hour was set Nov, an 1T,. 1958, by of Great‘ Brit- iet-propelied Biuebird. ae \ 4 } ain in over-taxed creating dangerous -— , In the northern Lower Peninsu- la, campsites were reduced at Aloha, Burt Lake, Harrisville, Hartwick Pines, Higgins Lake, \Hoeft, Interlochen, Otsego Lake, ‘Silver Lake, Traverse City, Wil- iderness, Wilson and Young parks. | Cutbacks were made at Lake- ‘port, Sleeper and Warren Dunes| iparks and Metamora, Pinckney, Island Lake and Waterloo recrea- tion areas in the souther Lower /Peninsula. for the Bayview Yacht Club, spon-|several upcoming matches, the sors of the annual Port Huron to Roberts plan to enter them in the Mackinac yacht race, said Tues-|pig Chargin Valley show in Cleve- day 88 entries have been received land on Aug. 23. for this year’s race up Lake eal “0 Solunar Tabl Officials said more than 90 boats! s | may be registered for the 285-mile; olunar lable Enjoys Winning Season tional and other sanctioned re- gattas. “The “Wait” is his fourth speed-| boat, all of which have been de- signed and built by the driver. He a basic Crosley four as his power plant. “This is by far my best boat” says Hank. But he added quickly, “Tt will not be the last one.” Ball's latest win was at Colum- ._Ky., and probably later on at Buffalo, N.Y. and Madison, Ind. regattas, Usually several carloads of Parseghian, Northwestern Univer- | friends go along on Hank’s racing | trips. There were nine persons in the group that accompanied him to the Columbus regatta. Hank does all his work in. his shop at 2210 Scott Lake road. ‘Duckerbird’ Takes Place in Obedience Top dog in the Detroit Sports- men’s obedience matches, during last weekend, at the State Fair grounds, was an Oakland County golden retriever. The winner, also winner of the utility class, was the well-known Cll Duckerbird Atomic, 3rd, owned by Charles Franks. Franks also had another winner in open B class, |. with his springer, Sho Hunt Bon- don Tango CD. Duckerbird had 1994, points, Tango 199. . Other area dogs included: Mrs. Maria Hayes (Troy) with Ch, te a ree icki, dachshund, ih novice B; Linda Armstrong's tage | retriever Golden Lady 19344 for a 193%; H Burkette, novice A, Wins Gold Cup Sail SANDHAMN, Sweden ® — De- fending champion Ernie Fay of Houston, Tex., Tuesday won the first round in the Gold Cup sailing races. Piloting his 3-year-old 5.5-meter Sabre with skill, Fay crossed the finish line more than two minutes ahead of Olympic champion Lasse Thoern of Sweden. Norway's Crown Prince Harold was third, In Gold Cup competition, the first boat to win three round is declared the winner and. awarded the cup. 2nd at Prince George | finishing 2nd to their traveling | companions, the Osceda team of Ralph Sawyer and Jerry Wag- ner, friendly rivals of years’ standing. The Widings will get a brief rest before getting ready for the Aug. |2 Five-Channel (AuSable), Aug. 9 ‘Caseville, and the annual Pere Marquette river test at Luding- ton on Aug. 16. Iiiness that hit Albert prior to the race, after the boys had turned in some fast practice runs, hit their chances when the big race came off. They were only 12 min- utes back of Sawyer and Wagner. the winners. Winning time was 13% hours, three below the 1958 fig- ure. George river at its highest point in years, and one seven mile stretch of rapids proved a tough obstacle, Fifteen canoes started, but only nine finished. The Widings say the Canadian course was one of the best they had ever paddled. They, and their families are already talk- ing about making the trip back to Prince George next summer. The Holly men were lavish in their comments regarding the splendid treatment afforded them during their stay, The Michigan Association of Canoe Racers may also take part in the 1960 trek. Bar Bathers at Fish Sites | LANSING — Seven public fish- ‘ing sites in southern Michigan | does all his motor work, also, using have heen closed to swimming, | wading, bathing and loitering by the Conservation Department. As designed, the ban will return these sites to their original use as public acess points. All seven j|are too small to permit a multiple use arrangement. The restriction covers sites at Duck lake, Calhoun county; Dia- mond lake, Cass county; Woodland lake, Livingston county; Lakeville, Maceday and Union lakes, Oakland county; and Gravel lake, Van Bur- (en county. | NEW ‘59 WAGONS | mame $1995 BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER MI 63900 ‘ Now No Money Down, 24 Months to Pay Automatic Transmission Our Specialty Mofor FE 3.7432 MOTOR EXCHANGE CO. 401 S$. Saginaw St. Expert Tells \ | BUHL, Idaho (\—Ever tote home a mess of fresh-caught fish and ‘had the little lady greet you: “Get those stinkin’ things out of |my kitchen, The\'re just a bunch jof bones anyway.” | Maybe youyean’t do much with | the slight odor, but take it from a Professional fish packer — a wo- jman at that — you can do some- |thing about the bones. _~ | Mrs. Paul Hunt works for a |trout processing company in South- ern Idaho and some days she de- bones a thousand fish. plant, use a special plastic holder jto grasp the fish while they clean jtheti, You'll have to rely,on a istrong grip or the kids, She and other boners in the: race by the Friday night deadline. | A.M. PM. Last year's race was won by!anu, a a ve | Dyna, owned by Clayton Ewing of/rri ; . 9:15 3:08 9:40 3:25 Green Bay, Wis. The Dyna finished 8) - 88 E38 1038 448 [eecond in this year's Chicago toes, ooo Se ES ee | Mackinac race. Wednes 12:25 6:40 12:50 17:05) How to Bone Fish | Here is the way Mrs, Hunt pro-|cut toward the tail and under the iduces.a tasty, boneless filet of) backbone, slicing the caudal (tail) | ‘trout or similar fish: |fine attachment. Do this on both | 1. Eviscerate the fish (not in ‘the kifchen) and wash it with cool | water, : 2. With a sharp knife, cut along) both sides of the dorsal top fin to a depth of one-half inch. | Lift out the fin. 3, Filip. the fish on, its back, head toward you, Cut through the ribs along a line from the rear of the backbone to where the bone ends at the head, again cutting about. a: half-inch, deep, Cut on both sides of the ‘backbone, Turn the fish with the head away. Near| each, side. x the tail and from the point where| 5./If the little. woman js sltra) you began.your backbone cutk, | sensitive, lop off the head and tail, ’ \ | \ 1 * - 2 FA ‘2 9 —— A ’% sides also, The entire backbone, | 4. The fish is now bonelsss ‘ex-| cept for the head, tail and ribs, the sharpest Khife in hand, skin | and pee) the ribs and their thin | covering of tissue carefully trom | 3599 Orchard Lake Ave, SKIN OWING ; PINE LAKE INN : NEW and USED EQUIPMENT — INSTRUCTIONS FE 5-5375 Priced to save you money! Every summer item is Priced to go! Reductions to 50%! Many year ‘round garments included in a@ store-wide clear- ance! Wide selections of suits, coats, pants, shirts, etc. Harwood int (908 W. Huron _¥ Camplete Tailoring Service — Taxede Rentals * TAILORS & CLOTHIERS Heavy water, with the Prince . ii aE ¢ _ # month, ~ Lively Trading Spurs Market NEW YORK (®-—Stock market prices spurted higher in lively trading early today, Steels and motors led the up- swing, stretching yesterday’s brisk gains. MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce brought to the Farmer’s Market. by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Monday. Detroit Produce Key shares posted advances! les, Duteh EROtrs _— ed today. j : j |Apples, Dutchess, bu. ...... eeeccee- . ranging from small fractions tO @lAppies, Red Bird, bu. ||. .112.2°... 3.35 Best Carpet Cleaners. Owned point or so. Small losers sprinkled Apples, Transparent, bu 3.50 ” : . 5B Blueberries; No. 1, 13 pts. 22......., 4.25/80d operated by Jim Bradford. A the list. Cherries, sour, 16 GES. «servers $4.00 omg’ 2 years Cree wih . « erries, sweet, CE qoccnnococe) ,one oO ‘on § largest carpe U.S. Steel and Lukens ran up [Currants, red, i6 gts. .......000--. 6-28 cleaners. Quality cleaning of car- close to a point. Bethlehem |Respperties, black, 24 gis. "1227.27. $00|Deting, rugs and furniture. Free added a fraction. Colorado Fuel |Raspberries, Red, 24 ats. .......... 7.50/ estimates at your convenience. Cal) & Iron picked up about a point. VEGETABLES \Jim, FE 2-2442. adv, Ford, which reported sharply Beers green, At, Bu. o.--o0-000.822 higher first half earnings, paced a Beans, war DU. ..... es. ‘ Name Gen Taylor . : : eels, Opped BU, ....+e. 00 « firm motors group by picking up|Beets, No.1, doz.’ bens. ‘ around 1!3. General Motors and pabhene pee Oo fe . . American Motors advanced nearly Cabbage, Curly, bu. 1.38 @xican irm ed i Ppa ra 4 . Jk eodoocodogegoomer < . point. Cheyaler was about a Cabbage _ Soroute, bu. 22 200 _ alf point higher. mrrots,, BUS 222. oc ccc 0 ce- weoee 3. + . Carrots, doz. bchs. ................ 80) NEW — . Max- * * * Celery, Wi. oes osc bebe seeitenns seen -90 E YORK : Gen fax s Celery, dos. ‘stks. 20050701 ‘99| Well D. Taylor, retired, former > bd ™ : ome eltcronics, a fetaure of yes-|Corn, Sweet. 5 doz. ||... 150! Army chief of staff, is the new ' ; Cucumbers, dill, Fancy 4.15 terday’s recovery, continued to/GiCumpers, Pickle pe 007 5.25| chairman of the Mexican Light sprint ahead. Motorola soared|Cucumbers, slicers, Fancy, bu. .... 450 ly 4 pbcatiaes Dill dos. be a5) and Power Co. Ltd. mane a ee eee a eae . and Zenith jumped more Kohlrabi, don beh sa aeoen susan ise) Taylor will succeed William H.! é ’ * & Boacononasenmcns : an Parsley. curiy. doz. bens. .....0... : -3o| Draper Jr., who will retire as| ‘arsie roo OB miccreclc cule a1 5 re) i j : chairman on Sept. 30. Peas, A. eee Peceece . 4.50 New York Stocks toot Pe ep pk. ‘ i” *” * * 8, Ot, ate ewes encenes o ae . : (Late Morning Quotations) Peppers. sweet. ir oe : 1.50 The appointment of Edouard Figures after decimal point are eishths Radishes red,’ dor. es, : 1.19 Suarez as.chairman of a newly Admiral 3.6 K wees S84) ReGtsnes, waite, dos. 2... - 1.10) formed finance committee also Air Redcc | 3 Keltes Hay’. < azg Rhubarb outdoor dos. behs......... Os a Susr as f Allied Ch 134 Kennecott ._. 103.6 eenece: ac lar a SoCbesoacads Loe! was announce c Suarez was for- Allis’Chal’ .... $26 ee lig "1: $27! Tomaties, hothouse, 8 Ibs. ........ 200 Merly minister of finance of Mex- Alum Ltd .... 372 Kroger . (poe cee, eatdeers, 16 We io ecccues Co [tn Alcoa eae) Sass... 73. |Turnips, bu. siren © aie Siecle ecto se | : ; am Airlin oon 293 Voy teat 12.1| Turnips, topped, DU. ......eeeseees 2.75) Luis G. Legorreta, chairman of iiss aeodd pe: Ligg & My ... 91.4] > : ithe Banco Nacional de Mexico, Ain M&Fdy ,. 93 Lockh Aire "., 30.1) GREENS and John W. Snyder, former U.S Am Motors ... 486 Loew's ....., 31.1/Cabbage, No. 1, é + ony ’ 1. Am N Gas ... 61.2 Leet oes oe epee Mee |secretary of the treasury, were lew ‘O ete . et eee seats enece usveus ecw e | se | Am rei: Tel sv3 Lou & Nash... 87 |Mustard, No 1, bw. /named members of the commit-| Am b ..... 984 ree Tre ... < poner Socnoose4 eerece | tee Anaconda .... 63 Manning 29 |Spinach, bu .. ......000- | = Armea Stl bodes ay o S Swiss chard, bu. | * * * Atchison ee 207 Mead cP : a6] EPS = 60| Mexican Light and Power is = Avco } oo erck ...-08 4) b N Fs j j rj >ad | Bick Gn .. 664 Mk Chis 8 celery Cabb SALAD GREENS bis Canadian corporation with hea Beth Steel se i Mpls Hon ...147.4/ 56 51), Su ege, dos. ....... --. $2.50 offices in Toronto. It provides Sac kan 3 ne PAL... 35.5) Escarole, ot - SEES 2.00 electricity for some 5,300,000 peo-| ” Bond §trs 22.: " F ce p UE. nccecwccensneccoce | i iu rille in! Borden go.g Mont Ward .. S8-Tirettuce Boston. bu. JINN 235/ Ple_ in 423 towns and villages in Borg Warn 44 , Lettuce, head, bu. .....cceccaseeues 125| Mexico. Brisgs Mi 11.4 Mot Wheel 19.6 Lattoce, leat b “ | Ls ey 11@ Motorola ...- 21.6 i ce *~ Us reece ee ser eeeeen id : Brist My. 18 Mueller” Brass 282/Romaine bu oo... eee 1.50, : | Budd Co 3 Murray cp ... 28-6) R s . oe Bae epresentative Diggs Burroughs .-- o! wat cash R., 3 Poultry and Eggs D IV | Calum & H .. 26.2 Nat Dairy $2.7) coms Boup me Lite oe | DETROIT POULTRY Fil sd ® an ry ra at ea y L DETROIT, July 20 (AP)—Prices paid es t or vorce Cdn P | 29:7 t 29.4 Capital Airl "17.2 os Perea : 47-3| per ound f.o.b. Detroit for No. 1 qual- | ul | Carrier CP ... $01 Nor Pac ...... 52.4", ave es ne 17-18: light type hens Cater Trae) 113-4 ne ee as Patt peavy, type brotlers and fryers, 3} DETROIT —Rep. Charles C. Con Ill Lt pf . 33.2 : coo : ce) s., whites 19-20; caponettes under| ,- * . : Owens Cng ... 88.4 : oe : 'Diggs Jr. (D-Mich has filed suit ao Ohio . 3 Owens lil Gl .. 97.4 pies: 20-31: over Ibe. 22-24; turkeys, | Bgs r. ‘i d a Giles Bye a «Pac “G&Kl ... 62.4| y type young hens 2¢. for divorce. He has been marrie Clark Equip .. 83 nok Eat Air. af DETROIT EGGS 12 years. Goca Cole’ ..1824 Parke Da .... 46.1 DETROIT, July 20 (AP)—Rggs, t.0..| The circuit court case was sup-| Colg Palm ... 41.6 Penney, JC ..112 | Detroit in case lots federal-state grades: fon Bes a Ay Hepat Col 31a seal: large Soke noates ‘eee wae h ndi hearing Frid Con is = Pepsi Cola .., 1 | 40-41; rge ~J8; medium ; sma -i¢c ari rl Con N Gas . 49.5 ricer Seis sereiers 38.4 22; grade B large 31-35: browns—Grade| © atgcs pee * Sears soe Consum LAP ie 565 Phileo ....... 30.2 x extra large 40; large 33-38; medium 28-|0N a property settlement. ‘on wpfi c 1: 5 A . . at : Con Pwol 4.16) 85 Broct ra Gs: 82:31 Commercially eraases Diggs and his wife, Juanita, Gt Gee a sk Tee Ol ..... $4) etee 2 rede A jumbo 37-30 guizajhave three children. : RCA ...-2005. -34; large -34; mediu -28; : c= ae i; Repub Stl ... 75 6! Tade B- iarge 26; browns—Grade A Diggs was elected to congress Copper Rng | 233 Rex Drug .... infin ee a get ae | from Detroit’s 13th district in 1954 644 Reyn Mot ..,.116 | 31%2; -27; -| . eT eae ey Ris Tos 52.7) and was re-elected in 1956 and eT a Livestock : 1958. Previously he served three 5.2 way ewe i : Dow. Chem “38 6 St Reg. Pap + $2.4) ivestoc years in the state Senate. He was uPont 258.2 file Mi .. 24.6 ichi t East Air L... 406 Sears Roeb .. 623! DETROIT LIVESTOCK Michigan's first Negro congress- East Kod - 96 ghell Oil ..... 76.6' DETROIT, July 21 (AP) (USDA) —/man. Eaton Mfg 9.6 Simmons +. 56.2 Cattle—Salable 700; trade moderately ac- E} Auto L - 495 Sinclair ...... 59 itive, fed steers and heifers steady: cows aust eee St BOCORy — sseoee = steady with Monday's late 50 cent decline , OU Pac ..eee- ‘S| bulls 50 cents to mostl 4 lower; most B A A etek ie Sou Ry .-'.., 55.6|choice steers 900-1100 ib. 27.75-29.00; good OxXer rt ragon Firestone 147. Sperry Rd .... 25.5)to low choice 26.00-27.75: standard and Food Mach ....49.6 Std Brand .... 67.6/low good 23.50-26.00; utility 22.00-24.00; / 4 ] Ford Mot -(977.6 Std Oil Cal .. 51.5/good to low choice heifers 25.00-26.75: In. Taw Freepot Sul ....29.3 td Oil Ind .. 45.5 standard 23.50-25.00; utility 21.00-23.50; Frueh Tra .....272 Std Oil NJ ., 51 | utility cows 1850-1900, few 19.50; can- ° s Genesco... 354 Std Oil Oh ... 56.6/ners and cutters 1450-1850: utility bulls 1t x-vW1ie Gen Bak .. 12.6 Stevens, JP .. 32.4/22.50-23.50: light cutter bulls 20.50-23.00. Gen Dynan td eee On. ay ree ee eieeey: papely large- ‘ Um MOT ow. wee y teeders; few mixe ‘ood an choice é — as ee panne Pt Suther Pap 39 |spring slaughter lambs 22.50-23.00; about VAN GUYS, Calif. (AP)—Boxer Gen Mills ....109.4 ricki ard ie ay Bl ead, choice feeders 58-6 tb.| Art Aragon is free of an assault ex . 5 .00-20.00; cull to choice slaughter ewes } re eee lh Textron .-. 27.7/4.00-7.00; nothing done on ain bape and charge brought by his divorced Gen Time .__.892 Tim R Bear.. 55.6)yearlings scarce. lwife but his boxing prowess is Gen Tire ......74.3 Trans W Air 23 Hogs—Salable 500; butcher and sows) cui} Gillette ..51.3 Tramsamer ... 31 /25-s0c jower: U.S. No. 1 and 2 and No, 1; 54 ed. Goebel Br... 3-4 Rp 190-230 Ib. 14.75-15.00; No. 1-3 and No. 2} When a witness told the court Grah Paige». 26 Un Carbide "146 230-280 Ib. 13.23-14 00; 360-308 ike nts'| Tuesday that Georgia Aragon Gt No Ry... 544 Unit Air Lin.. 43.4[3335: sows 2.%5-10.00- boars Booto as | Knocked Art ¢ during a brawi Greyhound .. 22.2 Unit Aire 1 32 $|. Vealers—Salable 125; steady: choicejat her home July 12, Aragon Houkee ch. uns Ua, Gav CP ‘". Sea]and Brive, 1400-380; good 30.00:3400. shouted from his seat in the court: Ill Cont ..... 476 Upjohn ...... -2/17.00-26.00. room: “ ipped, y onor. Tidus Res z 291 Us Lines 33.4|! 26.00 m: I slip » your h r ing mans OS Ue opr 101 x» *« ® I Stl... 51.2 - ieepie Cop |... 392 Se 242 W t Fi ht Willi The witness was Barbara Shey, Interlak Ir... 29.5 Wa ~ 48, on ams ‘ if de : Z at pus Mch. 437 West Un Tel 42.3 Ig | | 20, a Reseda, Calif., dance instruc Int Harv ..... 55.1 wet . .- ey . tor who accompanied Aragon to ¢ es ‘4 es 1 . . : Int ree 1383 White Mot |. 34 On FI t B | his ex-wife’s home the day of the Int Shoe 35.5 Wilson & Co 43.7 ec ion l e 0 domestic brawl, Int Silver .... 46 Woolworth . 59.4 . h didn’t Int Tel&Tel . 38.5 x ale & a. = Mrs. Aragon said she n thse Man. 388 Zenith Rad .1234| LANSING (®—~ A Detroit Dem-|want to put Art in jail, that he Jones & L .., 77.6 : ocrat last night suddenly called/acted on impulse, and she admit- DETROIT STOCKS off his plan to try to upset Gov.|ted she bit him and called Miss (C. J. Nephier Co.) ae r fter decimal points are eights nianres © High Low Nove Allen Elec. & Equip. Co... 2.6 26 Baldwin Rubber Co. ... * 19 21 Ross Gear Co. .......... * 40 42 Grt Lks Ol] & Chem. Co. * 13 1 Howell Electric Motor Co. * I1 12 Peninsular Metal Prod. Co. - * 12.2 13 The Prophet Co. ........ 17 17 I~ Rudy Manufacturing Co.. 11.6 11.6 11.6 Toledo. Edison Co 16.2 16.2 16. Firecracker Blast Injures 12-Year-Old A 12-year-old Clarkston boy was treated at Pontiac General Hospi- tal for burns suffered yesterday when a fircracker exploded nexs to him. ‘Bruce W. McVittie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Warren D. McVittie, of with firecrackers at a lake, behind his home. He lit one and dropped it toward the water but it exploded above the surface, his father told sheriff's deputies. Detroit Edison President to Tour Soviet Plants DETROIT (UPI)—Walker L. Cis- ler, president of Detroit Edison Co., was to leave today for a month-long tour of electric power installations and~ manufacturing plants in the Soviet Union. In Moscow. he expects to meet First Deputy Premier Frol R. Koz- lov, whom he hosted while the Soviet official was visiting Detroit earlier this month. Cisler will be in a group of 10 American electric-power executives than who will be in Russia mo i al harm than good to try to fight the | Williams’ veto of a Wayne County | election bill, | “It would probably do more veto,’ said Rep. E. D. O'Brien after conferring at length with the iDemocratic House floor leader, Joseph Kowalski of Detroit. O’Brien said he was “surprised and disappointed” that the gov- ernor’s first veto of the session yesterday struck down a measure sponsored by a Democrat, him- self. The bill would have required a secret ballot by precinct dele- gates in selection of congressnonal district party chairmen. As it is now, the choice is us-| ually made by roll call, disclos- ing the candidate preference of each .district convention delegate. In rejecting the bill, the gov- ernor said tt violates a basic Democratic principle — namely, that precinct delegates are account- able to voters of their precincts. Destructive Thieves Ransack Irish Tavern The Irish Tavern, 4703 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Waterford Township,, was ransacked early yesterday and five cases of beer and an unde- termined amount of money stolen, ac¢ording to the owner, Walter Summers, He told Waterford Township Po- lice. that when he came to work at 10 a.m. the back goor was open, and vending machines, pool tables and juke boxes wete smashed. ri Ohe out of every 60 workers in News in Brief Mrs. Ira Hatfield, of 9215 Fun- ston St., White Lake Township, told Oakland County sheriff's deputies yesterday someone had stole $15 worth of clothing from a clothes- line in her backyard. Burglars took an estimated §6 and assorted bottles of soft drinks from vending machines at the Indianwood Country Club in Orion Township, sheriff's deputies report- PONTIAC DONS RUSSIAN PLATE MOSCOW VISIT — The special! Russian language license ‘plate which will “Bonneville Vista’ to visitors at the American National Exhibition opening in Moscow on July 25 is shown by Nancy Kelly, GM secretary. Be- hind her are the license plates of the other GM car divisions represented in the GM _ exhibit. Reading top to bottom, the translations are: identify a Pontiac Sst egre % ~ “* ieee FOR Ville”’ Buick Convertible ‘Electra 225,"’ Oldsmobile Sport Sedan ‘“‘Super 88,’’ Cadillac Sedan ‘‘De- and Chevrolet Sport Sedan ” “Impala. The cars bearing these plates plus a Chevrolet Russian. Corvette comprise GM’s representation among 21 American-produced automobiles in the ex- . hibition. Mr. and Mrs. Average Russian will re- ceive an illustrated product GM's full range of cars — specially printed in booklet showing ‘She Hits\Insuranceman With a Giant Law Suit LONDON (UPI) —A Belgian di- vorce who said she had been described as “Washington's No, 3 hostess” is suing a British insur- ance broker for the six figure sal- ary she says he owes her for ar- Vets Fund Move Crushed Again Rebel GOP Senator Fails as Republicans Reaffirm Stand ‘LANSING \—A_ rebel Repub- lican “move to spring loose the veterans trust fund t pay Michi- gan’s most distressed creditors was crushed in the Senate last night. A 19 to 11 vote of rejectioi under- scored the fastness of the majority Republican stand for sitting on he 50 million dollr fund until Demo- crats accept their proposed use (sales) tax increase, And it was a sharp rebuff to Sen, John A, Stahlin (R-Beld- ing), author of the defeated plan, who was accused of econ- *ducting a race for Congress from the Senate floor, Stahlin denied it. Bitter words marked the 40-min- ranging introductions to top U.S. officials. “sk t The divorcee, Mrs, Martha Brus- set, 50, did not name any exact figure when her suit against Lloyds’ of London agent Edward Lumley opened here yesterday, * * * But she contended that Lum- ley owed her “133,000 pounds plus” — more than $372,000—~ for the five years she worked consultant woman,” Mrs. Brusset testified she had given many lavish parties in Wash- ington, and had visited the White House ‘‘more than once,” She said she gave her parties “so that people could meet.” DENTES BLACKMAIL The 50-year-old divorcee testified that she had been in love with Lumley and had had a heart at- tack and attempted to commit sui- cide when he broke off their re- lationship in 1956. She denied a suggestion that her suit constituted blackmail, Mrs. Brusset, who formerly had been married to a Belgian diplo- mat, showed up in court looking slim and elegant in a black Dior silk suit. * * * “What did you do to earn $78,- 400 a year?” Fearnley-Whitting- stall asked her, “I introduced nearly 50 peo- ple to Mr. Lumley,” Mrs. Brus- set replied. “One of them was the French ambassador to the Pinch Isn’t Felt Yet Steel Strikers Line Up for Pay \eials had the U..S, is employed in “hospitals. i¢ ! t \ ssed, preventing disclosure of |tionwi str itg/July 15. 2 oe ee ‘ tnawkle Meel strike entered 12) Steelworkers also may draw two were idled in Pittsburgh. Shey an uncomplimentary name. Municipal Judge William Rosen- thal said that although he would dsimiss the charge ‘I do not con- done your molesting or striking your wife.” Business Notes - Radio Station KJBS, Deland, Fla., has appointed Donald E. Lord to its announcing staff. Lord was graduated from Pontiac Cen- tral High School in 1951. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Lord, 43 Robertson Ct., Clarkston. Lord prepared in radio-television techniques at Brown Institute of Broadcasting and Electronic in Minneaplis, Minn. Previously he attended Northwestern Bible Col- lege in Minneapolis and Macales- ter College in St. Paul, Minn, Detroit-Windsor Tunnel Fare Increase Refused DETROIT #®— A proposed fare increase for the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel has been turned down by Canada’s Board of Transport Commissioners. * * * The Detroit and Windsor Tunnel Co. had asked that the one-way fare for a car and single passen- ger be raised from 60 to 65 cents and the cost of a commuter ticket be increased from 40 to 45 cents. The company said the increase was needed to avert a deficit be- cause of declining traffic, Detroit and Windsor city offi- any increase at hearings before the transport com- _ |second week today but most steel-| | workers have yet to fee] any pinch | ‘in the pocketbook. similar pays coming. In another two weeks, most steelworkers will |collect three or four more days’ City Mulls Over Center Proposal Investors Ask Pontiac to Lease Development Costing $921,000 City commissioners have under study a prospectus for a $921,000 community cenfer in southwest Pontiac. The city is being asked to consider a leasing arrangement | to help finance its construction. | x * * The prospectus was presented, by Commissioner Milton R. Henry,| who is backing the project. | Figures on construction and op- erating costs were submitted over the name of William Goodman, Pontiac department store owner and landholder, Goodman heads a group of in- vestors who are willing to put up private capital to build the building, he said, if the city is willing to lease it for 25 years at a rental fee of $60,000 a year. Goodman said this rate would net investors an annual, 614 per cent profit on their investment. According to, his figures, it was estimated that the city could make a net profit of about $8,000 a year on the community center, at the same time gaining another $12,000 a year in property taxes from it. * * * Goodman estimated the com- munity center could gross $157,000 ‘a vear and net $68,000. These profits would come through operation of a 16lane bowling alley and a 15-square foot | skating rink which. he said, to., gether with a 10,000-square foot! multi-purpose area constitute the main recreation features planned for the center. Goodman said he is prepared | to sell as site for the center a | five-acre parcel at Gillespje and | Branch streets at a price of $40,000. The prospectus listed as other initial expenses $670,000 for con- struction of a one-story building and a 300-car parking lot and $211,000 for equipment. Henry believed that the city could operate the cénter “as a completely self-sustaining enter- prise.”’ |. He said that reports. are being readied on a posibl@ design for the building and the need for recrea- checks Tuesday and others have) |94T W. Huron St., and Ronald L. tional facilities to combat juvenile weeks vacation pay if they wish. | works. * nearby Homestead * * PITTSBURGH (AP) — The na-;Pay for work up to the strike laid off Tuesday. That brought the| jtotal to 1,000. Some 100 truckers | night with state revenue experts Meanwhile, an agreement was) some of the 56 other signers of the Cars parked bumper-to-bumper|reached permitting some 1,000 bills, 28 from each party, Tuesday as U.S. Steel Corp. paid supervisory and salaried employes | Many drew full two-week pay-|off some 10,000 employes at its|of Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp.|The House Taxation Committee to come and go freely at the'sent the four bils to the House \firm's Pittsburgh and Aliquippa, floor last night withut any recom- “This strike is silly. I sure hope Pa., it’s over very soon," said Harry from pickets. The company agreed — a majority — to bring them up 39-year-old father of|to drop court injunction proceed-|for debate. chedwick, six, ry, except Harry. Every day I lose money means a tremendous loss to my family.” Steelworker Edward Davis com- mented; ‘Nobody wanted to strike and ‘very few men wanted a raise in pay. However, we are glad to strike if it means holding on to some of our benefits.” In addition to the 500,000 strik- ing United Steelworkers, the shut- down has idled some 45,500 work- ers in allied industries. Hardest hit are railroads, coal mines, truckers and Great Lakes ship- pers. In Cleveland, a spokesman for 18 trucking firms which haul steel said 500 more truck drivers were 4% Smashup Injures Father, Two Sons A Waterford Township father and two sons were injured Tuesday when their car smashed into the rear of another auto in front of 3738 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Water- ford Township, Oakland County sheriff's deputies reported today. Robert J. Lang, 33, of 3832 Faber Dr., and his sons Richard, 9, and John, 5, were treated at Pontiac General Hospital and re- leased. Lang told deputies a car ahead of him stopped quickly and with- out warning. The other driver, James L. Kling, 18, of 1210 E. Lincoln Rd., Royal Oak, said an auto ahead of him had suddenly stopped to turn left and he was forced to stop to avoid a collision, Pontiac Students Taking Supermarket Course Two January graduates of Pon- tiac Central High Schoo] are par-| ticipating in supermarket distri-| bution, a new education program offered at Western Michigan Uni- versity, Kalamazoo, Garner Grogan Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Garner Grogan Sr., of Bunch, son of Mr, and Mrs, Her-| bert Bunch, of 675 Second St., will) alternate periods of on-campus! classes with periods of supervised’ work experience in co-operating! supermarkets. The two-year curriculum, be-. leived to be the first of its kind) in the United States, prepares | young men for management ca-| reers in the supermarket | try. About 200,000 silver fox fur pelts) = are produced yearly by fur farms. { try “Nobody worries about Har-/|ings. In Detroit, the McLouth Steel |a flat rate income tax package Corp. with keeping 15 maintenance men|(R-Tipton), tax committee chair- inside its plants. There was no| man, was again on the verge of comment from the union. ute debate labeled by one Senator a farce. Both Democratic Gov. Wil- liams and the GOP leadership were described as ‘‘blind.”’ Sen, Clyde H, Geerlings (R-Hol- land), who applied the tag to Wil- liams, disputed Stahlin’s appraisal of the state's cash situation as acute and answered his criticism of GOP Senate tactics, Stahlin said that he approved last April 23 when the GOP ma- jority took its present position on the trust fund. Meanwhile backers of the Le- sinski-Green tax compromise plan worked feverishly today to patch gaping holes that would triple business taxes paid by thousands of Michigan firms, The four-bill package, hastily ‘drawn last week by Reps.T. John Lesinski (D-Detroit) and Allison Green (R-Kingston), would couple /a use (sales) tax increase with a United Nations.” — “What did he want to do — insure the Suez Canal?” the law- yer asked. ‘‘Were you supposed to stroll through the salons of Europe and if you met anyone who wanted to insure their motor car, you sent a postcard to Mr. Lumley?” VALUABLE TO BUSINESS “He wasn’t interested in motor cars,”’ she said. ‘‘He was only in- terested in big business." * * * Mrs. Brusset said her contacts. among congressmen, government officials and diplomats made her valuable to American businesses. Before joining Lamiey in 1951 she had worked for various other companies.at up te $80,000 a year, she said, She testified her job provided business profits tax, her with a $2,500-a-month expense = account, an eight-bedroom house in Washington, two Cadillacs and three servants. She also maintained a house at Franconia, N. H., she said. * * * American lawyer John M. Hees- ing, former president of two cor- porations that employed Mrs, Brus- set, testified yesterday that she : was “friendly with eight to 10 : ambassadors in America and aldo with top people at the United Na- tions.” The pair huddled late into the jto iron out bugs that embarrassed * * * works without inteference|mendation, This requires 56 votes Meanwhile there were signs that charged striking pickets|drafted’ by Rep. Rollo G. Conlin ~ Dairymen of the U. S. have an income estimated somewhat in ex- cess of $4.6 billion each year. a Hose vote. * This announcement is neither an offer to sell nor a solicitation of an offer - to buy any of these securities. The offering is made only by the Prospectus, NEW ISSUE atte ail 1,200,000 Shares Common Stock (Par Value $1) The Public Offering Price will be the Net Asset Value plus an underwriting discount as set forth in the Prospectus It is anticipated that the initial public offering price will be deter- mined and ammounced on July 27, 1959, but such price may be determined and announced during a period of not more than one week prior to or after such date. Colonial Energy Shares, Inc. is a diversified open-end investment company into which Gas Industries Fund, Inc., a diversified Open- end investment company, was merged in June, 1959. Colonial Energy Shares, Inc. emphasizes investment in common stocks and securities having common stock characteristics and its investment objective is long-term capital appreciation through participation in growth in the use of energy. ~ ° enna A copy of the Prospectus may be obtained from the undersigned. Watling, Lerchen & Co. Members New York Stock Exchange , 402 Pontiac State Bank Building, Pontiac, Michigan FEderal 4-2895 Please Send Me a Prospectius on COLONIAL ENERGY SHARES, INC, * i ; j NOMO so kscsvccecsciscs eee CeCe Te P eee CEL er eCererehererery i ert Se Seer Tree : “ * i ‘ | Address ee ee ee ee ee | CPE EECe SCENE SES EOS TROS PESO SD CCRC ESSE TESST OE | z j \ 1 Cily |, eee .. Stete eee