ta Weather Bureas Li Le si me * 8i ~~ Details Page 2. | 115th YEAR . kk * x * “PONTIAC, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, JUNE. bd ~ DIGNITARIES WATCH—Secretary of Defense Charlies Wilson, *" President Eisenhower's representative at the International Naval Review, points toward Hampton Roads after boarding the review- ing ship USS Canberra at Norfolk. With him, from left, are Adm. Jerauld Wright; Capt. C. T. Mauro of the Canberra, and Adm. ’ Arthur Radford, ——— a Warships Break Formation AP Wirephete Salary Hikes, ‘jsalary boosts by the Pon- Board Approves. Long Contracts Starts Court. Action | to Condemn 15. Lots. for School Site The ecmitraces of the Superintendent and assist-| ant superintendent were| renewed for five years with tiac Board of Education last night. The board ‘voted to grant Dr. Dana P. Whitmer .a contract which would raise his salary from the present $16,500 to $17,000. next) year and $1,000 more for, each of the following four years to a maximum of $21,000. They also increased his expense account from $1,500 to not less than $2,000 for the term of the contract. Assistant Superintendent Otto c| Hufzifer recéived an increase from| $11,100 to $11,600 for next. year and] . | § : | | ing four years to a maximum 0 After International Review “NORFOLK, Va. —Ships of the United States and 17 foreign nations broke formation today after a proud international review display that represented perhaps @ final fling of military grandeur for From DSeepreciee anchorage stations that strung many of them. Williams to Air School Aid Bill . Plans Tonight LANSING ®—Gov. Williams has been told ari ‘impossible’ situation” will be created in cigarette traffic if he signs the school aid bill boost- ing the per package tax to five cents, : In a letter. to the Governor urg- [ily é : | é H bre y_in add addition to a cigar- *them out along a double column 14 miles long they beer to close _shoreside review amounted rs a sWan song. WON APPLAUSE But in steaming toward a pre- carious futute in the military pic- ture they won a round of applause from Adm. Arleigh A. Burke, _|chief of naval operations. Northampton. “But if need be, they will still sweep a miine for you or sink a submarine. It's just a harder job with the older equipment.” “The free world is proud of the navies represented here today all dedicated to peace,” Defense Sec- retary Charles E. Wilson mes- saged all ships and aircraft. after yesterday's historic mus¢le flexing. “My congratulations on the smart appearance.of all ships and -(€ontinued on Page 2, Col. 3) Fly Old Glory Friday LANSING - &—Gov. Williams |75 | today called on all citizens to dis- play the Stars and Stripes on Flag Day, June 14. In his flag day proclamation, the ._ governor said: “All of us have a duty to pledge anew on each anniver- sary of Old Glory's adoption ‘our faith in the principles for which it stands.” par fers and little change in temipera- $1,000 a year more for the — $15,600. * * In fate wage actiou: the board! approved a new salary schedule for operational personne] which in-| cluded engineers, custodians and) matrons. The schedule adds 3.6 per cent the increase in the cost. of living per cent of the hourly rate. A secretarial salary schedule) also adopted which will cost tion after 15 years employment. The board voted to end a long drawn-out series of negotions for a! school site in the Franklin road—} Fern street area by voting to seek condemnation action on 15 ots. OFFERED AT $630 ~ board at around $630 each while! appraisals set the value at less) than half that price. Rev. J. Allen Parker voted) against condemnation stating the board had purchased a five acre adjacent parcel without condem- nation. * * * Other board members said the original purchase was at 12 per cent over the appraised value, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) See Thunderstorms - on Weather Horizon - |s-« The weather man has forecast, scattered showers and thunder- storms tonight, with a low of 60 degrees. Tomorrow's Catieok is partly cloudy and mild, high of around un advance prediction from the} Weather Bureau reported) cloudy with scattered show- ture for Saturday. The lowest temperature reecord- ed in downtown Pontiac preceding | 8 am. was 60. At 1 p.m. the mercury stood at 73. | to their wages to compensate for'| and will cost some $23,000 in =. Overtime rates were set at 120 | 'WON’T DISCUSS Inkster Soldier inGirard Case Mayflower Reaches About Lost Girl Supanese Police Say Michigan Man Tossed MAEBASHI, w Japan ys ve | Shell Casings on Range Plymouth PLYMOUTH, Mass. ' sturdy sailing “ship My A dropped anchor today at the en- WELCOME TO AMERICA — At Provincetown, Mass., Wild Horse of the Wampanoag tribe shakes hands with crewmen of the Mayflower II at official reception upon arrival yesterday. AP Wirephote , Chief Harbor : . a (INS)—The| high tide this afternoon for a {wo | flower I1| by the Coast Guard tug’ Yankton for the last mile and a half trip Japanese po.ice officer said today,trance to Plymouth Harbor after inte the inner harbor’s tricky a Michigan soldier has told Jap-'a Smooth trip across Cape Cod Bay waters, hudaae authorities that he — not; ifrom Provincetown. eed Se A oa pete 3.C, William Girard ~ ry, |tossed empty shell casings ontolof the the yoyage across the Atlantic aU. S.. army range ‘before a Jap-\Ocean of the original ship, which) anese woman scrap collector was 337 years ago brought the Pilgrims shot and killed Jan. 30. The officer, who would not be ‘quoted by name or rank, said the’ statement of Specialist 3. C, Vic-) tor Nickel of Inkster, Mich., that,ure craft which surrounded the! Alan Villiers, the famed Australian isailing skipper, and -his hardy, | he scattered the empty shells ‘ ‘at Girard’s suggestion"’ has been in- the shooting. |NOT IN RECORDS Japanese court officials said it) was not among court records in. the case, in which Girard has been! charged with “inflicting bodily in-) jury resulting in death.” Convie- tion could carry a sentence of up) to 15 years in a Japariese prison.) The U. 8S. decision to turn Gir- ard over to Japan for trial has stirred a storm of protest in oe | United States and court action | seeking to return Girard there. U. §. Army officials in Tokyo, refused to discuss reports that) Army investigators had secured a) new statement from Nickel within} the past few days and forwa it to Washington. Kaname Watanabe, - prosecutor who filed the indictment ‘against Girard, refused to discuss Nickel’s present position. He would neither, would facilitate agreement on the confirm _nor-deny existence of any, Nickel statement, although it is known that Japanese police have questioned ' Nickel, several times and that Nickel 1 f considered a key witness, -~ A Japanese scrap collector at the range said today it was “usual” for American soldiers to toss ‘used cartridge cases to the waiting collectors, Wnieucy, tk anlar: ducal: might compel the official “to convict himself out of his own..mouth”’ contrary to the Fifth Amendment} ~ ign pean nel re poet [heal asked Beck if. he “felt hurt’ over “this ruckus,” The husky Iabor leader people I helped finance their proj- ects not a ——~ pwith Dave Beck.’ '” '|/BECK IS RESENTFUL ifrom England to the New World.! WHISTLES, B7LIS , |doughty little galleon shrieked a! welcome as the Mayflower II The lots were offered to the|Cluded in a secret police file on dropped anchor, She lowered her saily at Gur- | net Point, on the outer entrance ‘to Plymouth Harbor, She aw awalted | ‘Arms Proposal Turned Down iby Khrushchev HELSINKI # — Nikita <=) chev today rejected Western. pro-| \posals for control.of disarmament) and nuclear weapon production as/ ‘a “screen to mask plans to con-|® tinue the arms race."* rdeti| However, the Seviet Communist} party boss told a two-hour news| conference the Soviet Union would! agree to the establishment of in- ternational inspection posts in the Soviet’ Union, the United States, Britain and other countries if this banning of nuclear tests. * * * Khrushchev's remarks, made in answer to a reporter’s questions, indicated a stiffening of the Soviet attitude of disarmament. Khrushchev said that “‘no system of control can solve the problem of disarmament because it cannot prevent any state from planning aggression if it wants to.’ At Doesn’ t. Bother Me,’ Exclaims Dave Beck said: “I don't feel hurt over what happened in Washington buat I feel hurt over what hap- pened in my own community. “I feel hurt because of all the one said,|- ‘We never had that cxperiione _,Beck seemed rosentul that ben his charities have not jpeople . . . I acted onthe advice! tive had a chance to ale a good investment he saw no reason why he shouldn’t loan them the money for it.. He said, “It’s a lie that money comes. back to me.” — ATTORNEY TOLD HIM .Then the question came up of his ‘use of the Fifth Amendment at the Senate Rackets Committee hearings, /‘If you ‘answer .one question, you have to answer them all and you may drag in other | Jt marked the successful culmi-} nation of ber historic re-enactment |, Whistles and bells from pleas-| Thousands of residents and tour- we were lined all along the Plym- h shores to catch a glimpse of; ithe gaily-painted English ship's ar, lrival off Plymouth. 'ROARING WELCOME | There a roaring welcome by ar. jexpected 100,000 people, many clad) ment early this morning for in Pilgrim costumes, awaited Capt.'tioning in connection with the dis- Quiz Orion Man mittee. jointly agreed upon in a surprise meeting last night board meeting when Ludy arrived ‘Surprise Session Leads to Accord - of 2 Candidates Schimmel, tudy here to Have All Precincts Tabulated Again A recount of all the bal- lots in Monday’s Pontiac School District board entgees tion will be conducted next © Monday by a board come,” The decision to redid the whole. - district was . of the two persons involved, Louis H. Schimmel and. Lloyd R. Ludy who lost by a scant 12 votes. ‘Schimmel was conducting a to pick up recount petitions at the board office: Schimmel himself to Ludy and took him aside for a conference in which he proposed the total recount as a mutual project. ELIMINATE ALL DOUBTS “We owe it to whoever is the winner to make sure that no doubts be left about his right to hold-his_ seat,” Schimmel said. “And we owe it to the people to be certain the man they want is elected." Schimmel also pointed out a } | Search Continuing for Mary deCaussin, Six, Gone All Night DETROIT (INS) — The | body of six-year-old Mary Decaussin, missing from her | Ecorse home for over eight- een hours, was found today. Theccanse of death was not immediately determined. An Orion Township photograph- er was taken into custody by the Oakland County Sheriff's Depart- appearance of the six - Ecorse Township girl, Mary De- tanned and bearded crew of 32 Caussin, late yesterday afternoon. |Englishmen and an- American cab- jin boy, 17-year-old Joseph Meany |\Jr., of Waltham, Mass. ~ Mayflower If departed from Brixham, England, wiftre she was built on April 20. Today was the 54th day and when Mayflow- | er Ii drops anchor early this aft- ernoon at approximately the same spot where the original Pil- grim ship anchored in 1620, she will better the old time by 12 days, Plymouth was teeming with Pil- grim and Coldnial costumes. Mayflower’s crewmen, too, were! garbed in -costumes of the peried. jist and visitors’ rush of huge pro- ‘portions to be climaxed at the of- |ficial ceremonies starting at three o'clock. Waterfront streets have been closed to traffic in the area of the wooden amphitheter constructed on Cole’s Hill overlooking Plymouth Rock, the Pilgrim landing place, and the Mayflower II's moorings. The 7,000 temporary seats in the new amphitheater were being sold at prices ranging from §2 to boxes at $25 for the day, or $100- for the entire 12 days of the pag- eant, There were still some 3500 seats avilable when the. booths opened .at dawn, Massachusetts Governor Foster \Furcolo arranged for speedy transportation to ‘Plymouth from Cambridge where he attends. the Harvard: University commence- ment, so he can join in the official ceremonies, Stassen Returns to Arms Parley: WASHINGTON — Harold E. Stassen, chief U. S. disarmament negotiator, leaves for London to- ‘America’s: allies. and Russia on ic arms race. He was | ed to be under in- Muy 2 jeome: "him. oe scnaoencenracmmnnsstte scoop aren oie oe ». Seg dire nee™ Ve * a Ree 1 Seer mR saaiteen Legion who helped) What will he do after hott Goanty Rewsoesss-b) jet $18,000 oF the” x WAST pate been ces eidask hs avssesdels eal ‘ Ccthapead $is, replied, Wan. ree HN se tedevees MT Then 149 | it Sa ‘ fs aes aaa wen wie - : peeled Tare as) | But He i ita peal: eda ewer a 4 Plymouth braced itself for a tour-. day to resuine lagging talkg with), \initial, moves for ending the atom-, * x * Orville E. Dibble, 48, of a Coleport St., was picked up at his home by deputies shortly after 6) a.m. on the belief that he may be the man who the girl was last seen with, according to the sher- iff's department, Mary, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Edmund deCaussin Jr., of 12546 Helen St., and granddaugh- ter of Detroit Deputy Fire Chief, Edmund deCaussin Sr., was last seen following a man with a pony and camera, to latest reports igsued by the Wayne County Sheriff's Department. Dibble, thus far, is the only man in the area known to own a pony and makes a business of freelanc- ing in neighborhoods, taking pic- tures of —— on a pony. * * Dibble. was Wayne County Sheriff's Deputies.| Ecorse Township Police have re- ported two phone calls by a man believed to be a crank, saying that! the girl's body could be found “‘on the city. dump.” Just over two years ago the body of seven-year-old Barbara Gaca, of Detroit, was found under similar circumstances .in the West Bloom- field Township dump. An army of more than.1,000, in- cluding an estimated 800 Boy Boy Scouts and volunteers, joined police from Ecorse, Allen Park, Lincoln Park, Wyandotte, and Riv- erview to search for the child last night only a few hours after she failed to return home for dinner. At daybreak the search spread through fields, swamps, and creeks in an eight-mile-square area, This morning the Michigan State Police: issued a nationwide alert for the missing girl. Mrs, deCaussin told gaiice Mary year - old turned over to) limited recount might give pre- cinct workers in the chosen areas | @ feeling their accuracy was be- ing questioned. ‘Ludy agreed entirely, stating he had asked for recounts in three alee only because they were the largest and not because he had | | ber of and to also agreed to split the cost recount which, by law, is ies in Flint Kills Girl, Self Double Slaying Follows — Argument of Couple Engaged for Year | * earlier this week. LEFT TOGETHER Last night Miss Moss went te ® two went away together. At 12:40 a.m., Mrs. Mildred C. TA ni ile fr erin AN a -eharge of violating the state nar-| ; ©xamination and was bound over What does a fd moon mean? Does it indicate warin Griesbach, Prieda Griffith, Virginia wantdartios some say? Does it Hagle, en K. Tallerday, Barbara | 'Haines, Shirley A. Tapscott, Helen 8.| Harken, Hart, Dorothy 8. | Heading. ~ mean it is likely to rain? . partly cleudy and South Highest Lowest temperature -...sceceseseess 61 eee ee oe ~ : 34, pe _ THE. PONTIAC PRESS, TRURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1957_ “Something between your ears, a spring in your feet, and faith in your heart," was the theme of Dr. Charles Anspach, president of Cen- ‘tral Michigan College, the iain | heard the invocation by Rev. Ar- _ speaker for the Waterford Town- nde pis A: ites ship High School commencement, last night. Two hundred and eighty - two |graduates and hundreds of guests vid Anderson, pastor of the Christ| Lutheran Church. Bill Cox, vale-| dictorian, expressed the feelings, . Plan Day Camp Program proms activities will inaugurate af | new feature when they open June| °M** Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Stearnes Se of Battle Creek and Mr. and 2%. A day camp program will be! Mrs. Harold ©. Boothroyd of ~tprovided at Springdale Park, Rob- Pleasant Ridge, Fhe, |The Day in Birmingham : for Playground Activities BIRMINGHAM— Summer play-|- jreturns for the last gasp of Technical Oversight Holds Up School Bil LANSING @® — Speaker George M. Van Peursem said today a leg- islative oversight has been discov- ered that will require of the 1957-58 school aid bill from Gov, Williams until after June 27. That is the date the regular ite 3957 ‘jof the class on their graduation) ~ Tnight. = *« * William Shunck, superintend- ert of schools, ‘Introduced Dr. Anspach. Thad Carr, principal of Water- Arrested in Lee to the Great Lakes Region in the summer of 1835. But in this case, says F. Clever Bald of the University. of Michigan Historical Collections, the ‘war’ was between Michigan and Ohio. Lee who was born 140 “Years [Who ego this year, was called-to Mich-- igan while a lieutenant in the Army Engineer Corps. He as- sisted Capt, Andrew Talcott in heated that it later became known as the Toledo War. - ee ce 8 ee ee "alte xen a plained and another Tine, called Talcott had been Lee’s immed- ate superior at Fort Monroe ~-in Virginia when they were stationed ‘there together for several years): friends. . 1817, a Doundary line had —surveyed--it---aecording ~-to}- pale claim which _included- To-| Brought ( Gen. Lee Scurrying North Talcott was erdered to run a cor- rect line in 1334, He erent = line with for admission to the Union, claim- jing the. requisite population of t|@ress by which Ohio ‘Meanwhile, Michigan “had: asked}; 60,000. Congress wouldn't consent Ciavesase Usdee ef tticy cance out the militia and Governor Ma- son called out the mili- tia and- sent several par- ties into Toledo. ORDERS TERMS Finally, Congress ordered Mich- igan to accept the terms of Con- was given the Toledo strip —and Mictigan as compensation, received the entire Peninsula. Upper and As it turned out, the Upper Pen- insula, rich source of copper and iron and valuable tourist country, Hunting - Clan Air Transport,|. taking observations to establish | the Fulton line, ‘was drawn. Ohio {because of the boundary problem|was worth far more to the state British, will carry air freight,| tiie exact. boundary between Mich- | protested that the Fulton line was [and so the legislature, at acting|than the Toledo strip would have Rhodesia to London. igan and Ohio — a dispute so not accurately run and so Captain Governor Mason's. suggestion, been. ROEBUCK Set records in the sports you . & like best with Ee the sports | name that ds the rest. AND CO. ‘SAVE 30°” DURING THIS SALE CR thcil, Asem me lehee) ° 15 ‘do Features * “instinctive con “4 tinted removable safety glass. No stoop side. “At one time or another half our children will have heart mur- murs,” he said, and pointed out that only a doctor can determine whether they are cause for treat- ment, Inga Swenson has gotten her first, big Broadway break by finding = even taller director. Miss’ Swenson stands shee) barefoot and was getting a com- plex because there aren't many Some of course, may be serious. {roles for girls of her. height. | Murmurs may be caused by a) But when an agent presented her. deformity at birth, or result from to director Tyrone Guthrie for a rheumatic fever, which leaves the tryout in the feminine lead of ‘The heart valves scarred and unable | First Géntleman,” she found new to pass sufficient blood to other|confidence. Guthrie stands 6-foot-. parts of the body. 5. Result: she gave a sterling: Many of the serious murmurs,| reading and won the part opposite, “ * © * The penthouses have 5,000 square feet of space. The one bed- room apartments have 1,253 square feet of space — more space than many three bedroom homes, Dick- er said. The three bedroom apart- ments, which rent for up to $700, have 2,627 square feet of spact and Dicker says that some per- sons have leased two of these apartments and are having their ‘own architects draw plans for. and the ailments connected with|Walter Slezak—another six-footer. ' ——4 W SEARS Givantic Warehouse Sale ROEBUCK AND CO Television Specialties rs Big 17-in. TV “96 d Lightweight cae o basy to v Handy Side Controls. So light weight a woman can carry it! Yet no sacrifice has 17-inch overall diagonal EASY PAYMENT PLAN been made concerning tube size or qualityi Blond-toned cabinet fits any decor. Has convenient luggage type carry- ing handle. Televisions. Main Floor - Big 21-in. Table Model TV 21-in. (overall diagonal) $7 16 dv Big Screen Table Model at a Low Price d Buy Now... Pay Only $5 Down You'd expect to pay more for only a 17-inch TV. Here's big 261 square inches of crisp picture area for eye-easy TV viewing. Attractive leatherette cover, convenient, {top controls: Ideal as a second set. Buy on Sears easy termis. ‘Also a Wide Selection of Floor Samples ee —24- “iN. Table Model TV overall _ Gient 2#in. (overall diagonal) screen with “ ffull 331sq. inch, of viewing area. Set tums lat a touch: for ‘dil.-angle viewing. Tilted, , ee Buy, now! . \ veins Are Limited ‘ i 154 North UN St. | Phone fe S471 \, Freeze on Use MAGIC: COLD ie Quar AAs Just freeze in your reirigera- tor and put in chest. Deluxe Aluminum Ice Chest 19.95. Holds 25 pound cake of ice. Hinged: reversible tray, Interior hinges. Full inch -of fiberglas insulation. Save now! J.C. Higgins controls gives OF etree > -. 219° Terms Ss Lightweight, easy to ’ carry on top of your car. Smart aqua green colo. 3 big seats give plenty of room. Water Repellent Sleeping Bag 15.88 Filled with extra warm virgin decron*. Rubberized bottom seals out dampness. Full zip- per. *DuPont mal yeeiee: diber Reg. 5.98 Folding Cot ‘5 With Sturdy, Hardwood Frame Folds into compact unit for easy packing. Ideal for camp- ing, fishing and all other outings. Covered with durable, heavy weight jute duck. Center leg reinforced with steel. Reg. 19.95 a™ FATHER’S DAY JUNE 16 ina pair of Gold Bond Shoes. Men‘s and Boys’ Camp Moc ao These black Gold Bond mocs have leather uppers and durable composition Pair Take Your Summer Cottage With You High Wall Tent o New Aluminum Poles . . © Strong Nylon Screens. © Front and Rear Doors Tops in venifiation!' Sree Sewed-in flor stops drafts, moisture. 4-ply mildew’ re-/ sistant thread used throughout. Extra largecanopy ‘ex- tends out G-ft Both front and rear doors. Saved in porch ... soles. Designed for the ut-—— most in summer comfort. A. nice thoughtful gift for dad on Father’s day. - save on Jeepers... pave your wey to easy footing | Boys’ 10 feca 4 Just feel how the cushioned arch and insole rest your feet. Sin resistant' rubber sole, strong Cot ton duck uppers. Men's Stenw YA te 12.449 - Easy Terms ing: ‘along both sides, doors. ow eee wy - 18.95 _ Full 7% horsepower motor at an unusual- ly low price. Position of speed and shift whether going forward or when pivoted for neverse operation. Either way it's eas- ier. Gas tank extra! Fee! Comfortable this Summer... Easy Terms “instinctive” control ® J. C. Higgins 6-Ball Croquet Set 6.66 Light and lots of fun. Rich maple balls. Sturdy bright red carrying rack or wood and tub- ular steel construction. FY “Reg. 7.95 » called its gain of “the land of epetual snows" “an Unfair deal" , SIXTEEN NFA: 2 ~ Sheriff's Job. — fo Veteran of GOLDEN, Colo. Sam's “one‘man army of Bataan,” Art Wermuth, -has slowed down. He's working ~~ day ‘as sheriff of Jeéffer ~~ County, a booming suburban area in the Rocky Mountain {foothills west of Denver, “I lovebeing sheriff,” says the stocky 202- pounder with — crew-cut hair. He's credited with single - handedly killing 116 . enemy Japanese in the Philip: — pines during World War Il. Wermuth, 41-year-old Repub- lican, was appointed last January. to the sheriff's job after a. pre- into income tax. decessor got trouble. . * * * If things develop like he hopes, Wermuth will seek re-election... Wermuth's War career has been just-as exciting as his time in Army service, During the war he won the Distinguished Service Cross, Silver Star, Bronze Star, five Purple Hearts and put in three years and four months in a-Japanese war prisoner camp, VARIED ROLES i”. — Uncle ng only 14 hours a - THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JUNE. 13, 1957_ ; ft a ae barreled cannon in the world. Most Travel By ‘Gar pared with 9 per cent by train, 49 Tax Collector Confirms . {pitalized friend, and a nurse's It proved impractical -because |per cent by. bus, 6.1 by air, one. - |suspicions. were confirmed, . ° ‘in Georgla the firing of the twin barrels could WASHINGTON—Recent surveys ‘half of one per cent by ship. This. Suspicions of Nurse | Finding the agent's temperature ~~ ate nized and the can- adds up to 103.8 per cent but is . . t as be , : _Preser ved in mse! aban were chained to- show that 83.3 per cent of the explained by the fact that salle KNOXV ILLE, Tenn, —An I Dliused Ws ance, aca: mn = lov ernight trips in the United States | persons use more than one meth-|ternal Revenue Service agent vol- ways’ knew those tax collecters are. wrWar is whatigether, broke apart and carried) | ss ly a short distance. jare made by passenger cars com-'od of transportation on a trip. unteered to donate Rood to a hos. col old-blooded. » le-Barreled “Condon I Chal onl Dp: ‘If in Doubt . Give Dad a it Certificate GRESYAAS 100% Dacron Wash’n’ Wear Slacks The -most wonderful slacks for Dad $ . feather-light in weight, superior Guhte wash them ’n’ ready-to-wear - in 30 minutes. Charcoal, light grey, EYES: EVIDENCE —Sheritt / Art — at work. Since August 1945 he's been an impressario of a flying circus, a drug salesman, operator, city marshal of Wichita, Kan., and an oil engineer in Venezuela. After the South Ametiean ven- ture — ended by his wife's ill- - ness — Wermuth settled at her home town of Lakewood, Colo., a Detver suburb. He prospered as an insurance salesman, built a home at Evergreen and acquired a 108-acre ranch at Conifer, Colo. As sheriff of Jefferson County, Wermuth has a staff of 38 and jurisdiction over 12,000 square miles and 98,000 persons. The physical dangers of 18W er four hours of silent climbing) ~ jand 43 chain-smoked cigarettes.” | enforcement pose no problem for Wermuth, who candidly — not boastfully — says “I’m not afraid of anything.” ~*~ * * service: station, beige, brown, powder blue, navy, sizes 28 to 42. Dublin Paper Eyes Marriage Proposals DUBLIN — In an effort to find out how an Irishman proposes to; his girl—as comparatively few do,| ~- according to. statistics—a Dublin) 3 newspaper asked several hundred/ if women who will be getting mar-|~ ried soon. Some replies: “On the! ei top of a bus when Lcasually sprang, the news that I was going to visit|_ my sister in the States.” -“Atop’ Featherbed Mountain aft-) © Short Sleeve Sport Shirts Keep Dad delightfully cool this summer. Real cool sheers, solids and panes in a wide variety of styles. Charge Dad’s , Gifts Lreewens a , ta @ —# eoorrr: “Jocosely, indiscreetly, after an| y i y e > Ym 4 as office party; in a cinema to the) annoyance of people around.” “At! — NESEY: by Shapely Van Heusen His big goal, he says, is to’ Straighten out juveniles who get into trouble. Wermuth and his wife, Patricia, a former parachute jumper in his | bachelordom was. a fate --.worse flying circus, adopted an 8 - year-/than death.” “His mother oe = old boy last year and have applied for the adoption of a girl about | the same age. “Kids are. great, he says. I love ‘em,” Some 20 Dublin schools have. the first traffic wardens. in Eire. | dances, parties and whist parties,|: - until he agreed to stop asking oth- er girls as well.” “At a tepnis ‘club dance, conscious of his bald spot and having first stated that Mark Twain /me,"* Ee P ae . Dad’s Summer Pajamas The Gold Coast, Nigeria Merve , : |Leone and Gambia, together, , | shipped to Brifain 872,598 tons of | |oil seeds, nuts and kernels in a recent 10 months—two-thirds of “I her needs—Accra reports. by Sheer. weight short sleeve, Nitecraft long leg pajamas to keep Dad cool all summer long. One size. fits evry Dad in - a nA @ & a 5 eB 95 : ‘ 4 Argyle or plain styles. A gift he will be sure to use. a ae — Dad's Swim Trunks Dad knows Jant- zen and deserves the best. Boxer or brief styles. $995 & so ve eeeee $9.95 & $10.95 $ by Esquire and , Interwoven by Jantzen Cabana Sets ... Dad’s Shorts and T-Shirts Dads Need by BVD and Hanes iar : a 8800 Neckw By Rabin ei count broadcloth shorts ar ; . in boxer or gripper styles. ¢ SINGLE by Wembley and oulliplinaentor ithe Combed cotton T-Shirts in each Pattee Superba warm months ahead. an attractive package. ’ . Choice of many colors. A new, fresh selec- All sizes. tion of patterns ~ » Dads Like that Dad will enjoy ‘dressed fellow you love. j $350 Te $6°° og % i ree Assamese aceite, " n - Tee foe si ier wt . ‘i having. Patterns, . : : : stripes and a § 495 5 - Jewelry $750 « $950 dies an > Cuff link and tie-bar sets | l & | ae to $9.95 J ic make “teed” the sell : - Dad’s Favorite 0224022444444 44444424222 / mares these a) y on who likes solid comfort: It’s the Zz or mate ic : famous resilient air cushion and flexible “ Somtoo drow idrapes. _ ; Asch Lift that ines tao Sitter i {498 M684... 5.98 ry | id beauty to your wif. 48x84 20x84 ted Charge Dad’s Gifts Take 70. Days to 6 Months ‘Slippers . Evans Park Free Rear of Store While Shopping © Porto-Ped's just the shee for the man ; yw YY »~ ca - + which is needed immediately so THURSDAY, JU NE 13, 1957 | Milford Man Builds 2nd Machine _ That He Can Both Drive and F Ly “Dewey 5 “of Milford has built a second machine that will drive up to 60-miles an hour on the highway, unfold its wings, and “take off like a -big bird,” at 90- miles an hour in the air, ~-Beeause of bad weather condi- _tions yesterday, Bryan was unable to-make a test-flight of his ‘‘Auto- Plane,” at Pontiac City Airport. Officials of the Civi] Aeronautics Administration, along with other investigators and interested spec- tators, were at the airport at 10 a.m. to witnéss the take-off. How- — ever, Bryan was because visibility was zero. He lives with his wife, Marie, and three daughters at 597 Skin- ner Rd., Milford, Some time ago, Bryan tested a ‘flying-mobile’ that he had put to- gether with “baling w ire, a bucket of nuts and bolts, ‘and a pair of discarded wings off an old glider.”* WEIRD LOOKING In Miao yor of the. appearance of that weird contraption, it’drove on the highway, and flew in the air and Bryan caused plenty of commotion in both places with his brain-child. Since that time, he has. learned much about automebile-plane — combinations, and his trim little machine is a far-cry from the egg-crate he teok off the ground more than twe years ago, - The Continental A-75 engine has a 22-foot wing span. When empty, the one-seater weighs only 720 pounds, and has two nine-gallon wing-tanks for the 80-octane gaso- line that is used, CRUISING SPEED Its cruising speed in the air Is from §5 to 90 miles per hour and “uses about 444 gallons of fue] in one hour, This gives Bryan a 400- mile flying range, he said. Pees 2 mounted back of the pilot seat motivates the vehicle, both on land and in the air, There are hydraulic brakes, and the canopy is made of plexi-glass. ‘When on the road; the wings fold ‘up over the propeller, which js a safety. feature and the over-all height is 7% feet, while on road duty, eae a7 ry 68 GROUND TRAN SPORTATION—Dewey Bryan demonstrates his Auto-Plane with the wings fold- ed, ready for travel on the highways. He took “TOOK 2 MEN ‘The old medel took two men, almost a half an hour‘to attach the awkward wings. The new “Bryan II” takes one man just six _ minutes to mechanically connect or disconnect the airplane wings. It took him two years, and $1,000 to build this. new auto- plane, making it virtually impos- sible for masg production at the present time, He said, “I've 2g bs ag $1,000. NOW IT’S A PLANE — With the wings un- folded, Bryan's Auto-Plane is ready for the air. learned a lot with The builders claim a cruising speed of from 8 to 90 miles an hour, with a flying range of about 400 miles without taking on additional fuel. two years to build the vehicle, at a cost of about bay | Pontiae Press Photos this machine, build « model for actual produc- tion, but this is as far as ] can go, on my own.” Bryan ‘works at the General Mo- tors Proving Grounds, near Mil-| ford, and received five years of mechanical back-ground’ . expe- Tience when he was in the navy. _ Ome thing bothers him. He can- .» mot get car insurance, because it is not a par, and he can’t get plane insurance; because it isn't a plane. Agents are busy trying to figure out just how they can write up the invention that may revolution- ize the entire transportation world. and would. like toh ? New Board Member Likes ‘Pay-as- You- Go’ Financing 4 Pontiac School ‘District’ $, new| board member, William H! An-| derson, is a self-made man with a horror of borrowing. “I managed to build up my own business . without long-term bor- rowing and I think the school system can do the same,” he says. * * * Officials to Seek ~ Hospital Fund - Commission, Trus tees Meet Tonight on Ways to Get $436, 000. - How to get emergency funds so| as to permit-completion of the new city hospital addition will be the Number one problem facing city commissioners and members of Pontiac Genera] Hospital's Board of nee at a joint meeting to- } { } : We will diseuss- ‘ways and mean of getting the money,” said Wil-| “jiam-P, Babcock, chairman of the Seteonts. said that aie board's , first objective is to seek $496,000 te aya ta hospital: | : ot tains chat be ead ee sialon the 2's and sensi Anderson, 44, is a partner in the Columbia Non - Ferous Foundry les Machine Co., of Pontiac. His | format’ education ended with jun- ‘ior high school, but he took extra ‘courses at Pontiac High and has ‘added to his education informally all his life, CURIOUS ABOUT TAXES © It was curiosity about where the ~ ‘taxpayers’ “money. is going that interested’ Anderson in’the school system and iriduced him to make ihis first bid for public office. “But I wouldn't have ‘run for the board if I hadn't been asked to by an individual bere in Pon- tiac,”’ he -said. of the board of education,” An. derson maintained, “but I have certain convictions on how things should be done. “T believe in pay-as-you-go fi nancing, rather than bond issues, because you have to pay for the out of debt and build ph oot as 4you can afford them.” "Tai not);one 08 thon: athe). * think ° the so-called “frills are un-| necessary in school Nor curriculuny planning, | “I have no specific criticisms bonds eventually,-so why stay) cre : igeneral design, with skylights, seems More suited for California or Florida than saichigas, "he commented, “I favor a study commission of tocal builders, educators, architects and laymen te _ad- vise the board on construction so we are certain te get as much building per dollar as possible,” he continued. Atiderson also said he felt the}. board ‘should not purchase. school advance. “I don't know the board’s policy on this matter, but it has been said that some sites have, been, bought 10 years ahead oppose it.’ : * * * aries, Anderson said he thought to attract the best teachers. . He sites more than three years in of time. “Te thie “TS tae sL_ would ~ believes, too, class sizes should be reduced, ‘WANTS GOOD SCHOOLS A soft-spoken, pleasant man, Anderson feels he will have little trouble in fitting in with the pres-| ent board membership. , ‘We all want the same thing, the best schools. at the" lowest_ cost,” he jsaid. . x x *& “I think new faces and new blood.on the board are a good thing,” he stated. “Two terms, jof the new contract follow a “‘pat- ‘{tract, road conductors wil) receive jtry are affected by the agreernent. down from fles Disnuie? 8 Months of Negotiation With 26142-Cent Boost CHICAGO « — Major railroads and the 20,000-member Conductors year contract calling for pay hikes totaling 26% cents an hour. ~The agreement—was_announced by the National ‘Railway. Mediation Board. after negotiations: between the railroads and the Order of Rail- way Conductors and Brakemen, * * * Leverett Edwards,, said provisions tern of those accepted by unions representing about 94 per cent of all railroad employes." Under the terms of the new con- an immediate raise of 1242 cents an hour. This boost is retroactive to Nov. 1, 1956, the end of the last contract period. An additional 7 cents hourly will. be. made effective Nov. 1, 1957, and another 7-cent raise will- go into effect Nov. 1, 1958. The new con- tract also contains an escalator clause that provides for cost of living adjustments. OVER $600 A MONTH Road passenger conductors av- eraged $659 monthly under the previous contract. Road freight conductors earned an average of $647. Contract negotiations began last t. 17 -between’ more than 400 carriers and the union. The union had asked a 25 per cent wage hike when it announced its requests last iJuly 2. Railway workers in nearly every railway terminal city in’ the coun- ~New-3-Year-Pact Ends} Union last night settled an eight-| {month wage dispute—with -a-three-{- A mediation board member, | Some 2,000 union members work in the Chicago area. About 1,000 jeach are employed on train runs from such cities as St, Louis and Buffalo, N.Y. - Traffic on Root Makes Repairs a Tough Chore LOS ANGELES ® — Joseph Petschar had a narrow escape while repairing a house roof. He was almost -hit by a car. Petschar, 72. had just climbed | the roof yesterday | when there was a terrible crash. | A car landed right where he had) been working moments before. ~ | * * * | ‘The auto belonged to Gilbert! Chavez, 51, who had been visiting | a home on a steep hillside street | in back of the Petschar residence. The car started rolling down the hill. Chavez shouted for it to stop. It didn't — not until it shot off a 25-foot embankment to land on Petschar’s roof. No one was in- jured~and after the excitement was over Petschar climbed back on the roof — which needed a lot! of repairing. In aquest of interesting pictures, a photographer proud at MacManus, John when he shot James E. McGuire and Jane Gange. McGuire is an artist and Jane is in General Research. J four feet ten, but she creeps above the personality did himself and Adams (“Mickey”) ally passes “I'm no ane stands half.” five foot mark through the feminine device of high heels. * * * McGuire’s height often occasions speculation, When queried, the crew Four feet { Camera Finds Mana Girl Can Look Up fo at MacManus, John and Adams usu- the question off with a glib, “Oh, he’s seven feet.” This the man himself denies, such ‘ thing,” says he. “I'm only six feet eleven and a There yoff have it. x ‘we »& ten—-six eleven and a half and both with a host of friends at the Center. big oar lang agency at Bloomfield Man-Made Globe Will Fly at Incredible Speed Gold fo Supervise ~ Weed Cutting Here I Gold of Detroit to the summer) jreation Dept: has been announced by David R. Ewalt, pertinent © director. Gold's primary duties will be to’ jsupervise the 1957 weed cutting)! hrogram handled by the depart- ment, ard te assist regular staff! Members in information and serv-' ice requests of the public. | Gold holds a degree in parks and forestry management from Michi- gan-State University. He will—re-| turn to MSU this fall fdr graduate work on a scholarship from the| American Institute of Parks Exe- that is eight years, seem long don’t think I would serve any! longer than-that.” in * & & Married, Anderson has two On the subject of teachers’ sal- g¢ 919 starting pay in Pontiac is too low’’ daughters, one married and the ‘other attending Madison. He lives Spence St. Onetime Prodigy Cleared of Charge LOS ANGELES (# — Sandra Berkova Mazelle, 26, a onetime child violin prodigy, has been cleared of a narcotics chargé. Municipal] Judge Louise Burke dismissed the count against her yesterday on the motion of the district, attorney's office, which said it had insufficient evidence -|te’ prosecute. Miss Mazelle was arrested May|’ 3. by officers awho said they found iption, issued to pocket ofa male friend, . She said she plans to re- mune her’ career as &) violinist.\ enough for anyone to serve. 1, Ne Seay Comte * Williams Lake athe remaining. two are pla [for Friday \ evening, s | and |) wa 3 16. “Sleepy *dotin. cutives. Disabled Vessel Wallows:Helplessly SYDNEY, Australia (P—A dis- abled British ship with 673 aboard wallowed helplessly today in heavy seas 600 miles from Wellington, New Zealand. Her main engine broke down last night. The ship, the 8,300-ton Captain. Hobson, was reported in no dan-| ger and help was on the way. The British freighter Port Macquarie Was expected to take her in. tow today and to reach Wellington ’ ‘with her by Monday. } record the transit of the man-made tein, Pretoria and Johannesburg— the takeoff. ‘Moon Watch’ to Track Earth Satellite JOHANNESBURG (# — Twenty, from Florida, fhe earth's first’ staff of the Pontiac Parks and Rec. @°tificial satellite will move across ithe US ithe African skies. And within minutes from the’ time the smal] globe roars into lthe heavens, an 80-man Moon. Watch team will be on the job: in this area. ; * & * The subcontinent of Africa will be the fifst cotmtry the satellite! the earth. Takeoff date for the flight is still unscheduled. : Calculations made by the Moon Watch team at the start and finish utmost importance to the project. Although the satellite, will, be equipped with a tiny radié trans- mitter, Minitraek, with a life-span of two weeks, scientists are du- bious of Minitrack’s chances of surviving the launching blast. This is where Operation Moon, Watch comes into the picture in South Africa. To permit precision cameras to moon, a. definite orbit must be supplied to astronomers manning the cameras. * * * “Observations necessary to caleu- late this orbit will be supplied by teams at Cape Town, Bloemfon- and by Minitrack; if-it- survives First of 3 Youth Dances Tonight at Waterford Three youth ‘night ’ "dances are scheduled this summer by the Wa- terford Township- Recreation De- partment. The first will be held to-|. night from $8 to 12,).at the Com- he * * ed $15, 000 Shé Embezzled arrested her on suspicion of em-| bexzling $20,000 that’ she spent dent abdut_ $5,000 of ifson — and a car ~— and burried ~ saying ee, Stet otal Woman Admits Burniaiy LOS, ANGELES we + A woma bookkeeper who“had .a taste fi “nice things” told detectives who will pass over in free.flighf around+- of the great experiment will be of) The equipment to be used for The appointment of Seymour Minutes after being fired into space précision optical tracking will be la Schmidt camera on loan from| . National Committee for ithe International Geophysical Year. ‘The international radio station) midway between Johannesburg and | ‘Pretoria, at Olifantsfontein, has ‘been selected as the site for the Schmidt camera. Once the orbit has been estab- lished in America by electronie jcomputers on information supplied by Moon Watch teams, the Schmidt- . camera will swing into position. * * * Observation—by the teams and the camera—will only be possible at dawn and dusk, when the satel- lite can be viewed through dark- ness while the sun's rays are still on the small sphere. . Working Hard, Says Johnson «©. WASHINGTON (®—Sen, Lyndon B, Johnson (D-Tex) said today the congressional session ‘“‘has now en- tered the payoff stage.” ; “The months that have been spent in careful, thorough commit- tee work are now. paying off in terms of rapid, decisive action,” the Senate majority leader said in an interview. — * * . Johnson obviously was. hitting back’ at recent comments by Ei- senhower administration spokes- ~{men that the Democratic-controlled Congress had been lagging ‘on parts 6f the Eisenhower program. He noted. that the Senate had bills this week and said it -will take prompt action on other mon- ey bills. BILLS PASS * Two passed yesterday. One car- Tries $5,378,594,800 for the Veterans Administration and sone 24 other \ liridependent federal agencies. The}. jother contains /$2,885,290,781. to op} ‘rate ‘the Labor) and Health; Edu cation and Welfare tie rg Both totals«were le: Presi- t, Eisenhower| requestéd. The |. Miss ~~ Mar} sate > [shake bef friends \ for the\VA and begin to House passed four major appropriations Senate voted less san ‘the House " Congress Isn't ‘Slow’ 4 - must act on five money bills for the next fiscal year. To date the Senate has cut about $1,400,000,000 out of the President's budget requests and some 32 mil- lion dollars below House totals. With Heart Ailment ATLANTA. # — Walter F. George, President Eisenhower's special ambassador to NATO and a former Georgia senator, is in serious: condition with a coronary disease at Emory University Hos- pital, An attending physician said the year-old statesman was_suffer- < ing with ‘coronary: .atherosclero- sis, or hardening of the’ coronary — which nourishes. the heart.” The physician, who asked that. his —_* me was ng anticoagulants, driigs‘ ceed to. preverit the blood from forming clots. « Henig’ ‘arrived in ‘Atlanta by | pe Mn = George Hospitalized used, said 7 Plo Se a] af ~ Record Set by. Musial tech | a ee } "around, one question. ~always pops up. It goes some- 2 14 | “9 —— ~~ From the Press Box By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiae Press TOLEDO—The “‘magical” names of golf, Sam Snead, Carry Middle- _jeoff and Jack Burke, and Doug) Ford of the younger stt had the; 4galleries ~waiting-for-them at -tee-}- farther a ditch érosses the fairway) and then 60 yards of high grass fronts the heavily trapped green. “Someone will have to be hot to birdie this hole,’ said Middle- coff. ha Wally .Burkeme,.-oene.-of.. Michi-, gan's -representative- pros, figures, +off-time-as--the -57th— U.S: Open Championship got under way today at Inverness Country Club. “The threat of rain, which liamp- ered practice rounds earlier this week, diminished and the weather- jman predicted temperatures would reach 80 degrees by -mid-afternoon. There was, however, a forecast for showers late today. { Along with the fears of rain, = many of the entries have picked up the slogan ‘‘pick a hole and weep.” thing like, “Will this be Sam Snead’s year?” Snead is like the Major League slugger who leads in every department, then fails to’ connect in some big event like the All-Star game. He has won every major) | golf tournament worth mentioning, yet his record for the National Open stands at 0-for-16._ - ie: ze There were > times when “Slammin” Sam seemed al- after a couple practice rounds that his ‘‘wail and weep” hole is the to be his year, as it may be his; Franklin Hills ‘pro Burkemo { last. | was slated at the first tee at - The Fleck, Thompson-Demaret 2:40 with amateur champion | 323 pros and 34 amater trio gave the first-hole gallery a Harvie Ward and Masters’ thrill, Demaret sunk a 25-foot putt) Champ Doug Ford in his three-_ : ‘for a birdie 3. Thompson followed, 5°™e- with. a_50-footer, also for a. birdie, ‘The-late.starter amongAhe- Migh-|- land then Fleck just. _Inissed his igan_contingent-is—-Forest-—Lake's. birdie by a fobt. He took a par four, Bob Gajda who was not scheduled Thomson has been chosen by,to tee-off until 3:04 p.m. many as best choice from among Friday, Fleck and trie will start ncn r—onty” ‘the top". snemtnig- ted will eriter the = Sone me p.m. the television cameras will be parked on the 18th. p.m. to 6. 14th, a par-4, 479 yarder with a tight fairway and heavily trapped green. . Along with the 14th, the rugged par-4 holes where experts figure are the 4th, 5th and 15th, all long, inarrow, tricky and heavily trapped. ‘The first big threesome moved out at 9:36 this morning. The gallery moved out with Ted Kroll most sure of breaking the jinx, but on each instance ‘some run of bad luck or one pesky hole scuttled a : title changes. ——_—_—— Most famous fizzle for Snead came in the 1939 Open at Philadelphia. - All he had to do was to gain a par-5. on the 18th to win... A bogey 6 would have This has stemmed trom “the many ‘changes which were made. AP Wirephote LAST MINUTE TUNEUP —Dr. Cary Middlecoff’ blasts a tee shot at Toledo's Inverness CC, in a last course. The USGA feels that the few added bunkers and narrowed fairways should offer no great year’s tep mone by USGA go hi is Tam O’Shanter victory in jones to’ the Invetness Chicago, and Littler has been and Gene Littler. Kroll was tast vinner . after known especially for his three straight Tournament of Champ- ions’ titlein Las Vegas. difficulties to the better golfers. minute tuneup for the U. S. Open Middlecott. and Snead both picked tourney that began today. Middle- coff was one of many Open con-|the 12th as-the hole which may tenders who practiced until near/make them weep: It‘ is a par-5. dusk, yesterday, Shown under/measuring 527 yards and the fair- Middlecoff's club is another en-|way undulates 250 yards from the ae any Mayfield of Jericho,jtee, giving the long drivers lies tied him with Nelson, Craig Were. and Denny Shute, all finishers with 284. “That day I wished I had an ax and a sharp razor blade in my bag,” said Snead. “I would have used the ax on the writer who persisted that I tell him about, the, Roc hester Galf.and Country Club pro Jack Fleck, the: surprise Open ‘Champion of 1955, left the starting tee at 10 am. With him were Peter Thomson, three time British Open champion from Meétbourne, Australia, and Jimmy Demaret, 8 I took, and I would have used the blade owenreet f.” oN. yf = the sidehills. About 150 yards the old pro who figtires this seo . x * & al _— . As a “result Nelson won the Open in a playoff But Chisox Nip Yanks 1-6 rounds. He and Wood fired 68’s on the first 18 holes and in the second round, Nelson shot a 70 as Craig took 73. Actually, Snead’s tough luck started in his first Open he entered at Oakland Hills in 1937. That year he roared back after a poor start to = with 283 for the lead. CHICAGO \—Thousands of fans) theid Ameri ican League lead over filed out of Comiskey Park early| the Yanks to five games, but Man- today shivering because of the tle stole the slugging. show. . . wee-hour chill and the i Ralph Guldahl who was tied with Snead after 54 | display of power by saan ane | ety eee wes terne a holes with 212, started out badly on the first few holes tle. lerowd of 40,033 in the ninth by of the dast round and it looked like Sam had it. ~ ko iblasting a two-run, 425-foot homer A “ A The Chicago White Sox won the into the center-field bullpen that |marathon - ‘game from the New left the Yankees just one run be- At the 8th hole, someone told Guldah! he had to York Yankees, 7-6, and stretched |hind. have a 70 to win. He proceeded to par the next three holes, and on the 12th his approach went into the crowd and it looked like the end for Guldahl as he Bragan Praises Thomas Ci fe eat wa Shins Venegas itt for New Pirate Surge ing with 281. Sam did finish first in one category that year at PITTSBU RGH ww — Manager | Thomas might be a cinch to get i a mass shudder through the. Mantle Blasts Two Long Homers. That one was Mantle’s 18th of the season. He clouted No, 17 into the lower left-field stands in the \first inning. It was the first time this season he has smashed two in one game.” * * * homers in the last eight games— four of them in the last three. He collected four hits in five ning. Mantle is now hitting at a 378 clip, topped only by Ted Wil- 383, and 11 by Chicago. the tournament could be decided: Mantle now has pounded seven) times at bat during the long eve- liams of the Boston Red Sox with’ last night’s game—14 by New York hole to catch finalists and champ- coming in. the younger set to Ww in the title. jat 1:36 p.m., Burkemo at 9:04 a = =e ‘9 kok kk Ow ae Hogan Stricken ¥ With Ailment; Quits Tourney Seven Champions Seek Repeat Triumphs Over - Tough Toledo Course . - TOLEDO, Qhiy (®—Ben Hogan was stricken with a chest and back ailment shortly before his scheduled 9:36 a.m, (EST) tee- off in the National Open Golf Tournament. After a 54-minute = delay ‘for medical treatment, he withdrew,.— - TOLEDO, Ohio ® — Amid some murmuring among the athletes « ’ about closely cropped greens and uncropped rough, a field of 161 _— started today in quest of the 57th -_ National Qpen Golf Championship . at historic Inverness Club. Seven champions were on hand. The others ranged in age from 17-year-old amatetir Jackie Nick- laus of Columbus, Ohio, to 62- year-old wee Bobby Cruickshank of Pittsburgh, who tied for the title 34 years ago but lost the play- off to Bobby. Jones. The Inverness course measures 6.919 yards of treacherous terrain, / windswept as 4 rule, and studded- with 117 traps and hundreds of —— trees. A small stream meanders across seven fairways. AP Wirephete | BIRDIE — LIVE VARIETY — Fofmer National Open champion |" | Ed Furgol, one-time Pontiac area amateur and pro, strokes a | “Old NM is * * Sal “Z | half-grown bluejay that refused to move from a guard rope at In- eanen = oe sa arias do we All told, there were 25 hits in) verness club, Toledo, where the current U. S. Open championship | ee bone hire) to wale ithe field. | got under way today. ‘This is the first time,” Everyone seems to think the Said Furgol, ‘that a - men in the tournament and they split $500. — Another photo finish loss was the 1947 Open at the Oakland Hills, he and Wood were the best dressed [Bobby Te Cece ene ae tat tie sraleny, called ie reason his hustlin’ Pittsburgh Pi-|a sacrifice and Frank laid down a’ rates have beaten the Cincinnati|good one. It paid off because Gene | Redlegs three consecutive times is| Freese came through a moment |Frank Thomas who he called ‘ ‘one/later with the game winning sin- Riviera in Los Angeles. He and Lew Worsham finished ot the most versatile and best igle.” regulation play in a 282 tie. ~*~ *« * . In the playoff round, Worsham shot a 69 and Snead’s, chance to tie was only 30 inches from the cup. The ball rimmed the cup and again he finished second\best. Another near misé in 1949 squelched the oppor-. tunity to tie Cary Middlecoff, and he and Clayton Heafner finished in a second place tie. So, when Sam tees off this afternoon in the opentag|.= 43 in 10 innings. Thomas round of the 57th National Open, a huge gallery ofjhad two singles in three tinies at sentimental well wishers is expected to stand by the! 45-year-old West Virginian as he makes his 17th bid. ~ ito 338, fifth best in the National’ } Ito , (RBI's, = lene _NL Consecutive Game PHILADELPHIA (®—Stan (ThejMack Stadium last night in his Man). Musial continues to break/823rd consecutive game, setting a ashington at Chicago, 8 pin. broke a record set by Gus Subr, New Yor Sia as 8: pias... ee first .baseman, é Sindabex Po ee sy segebal Po Lakhs |Raceway Friday night dimmed) ‘early today when negotiations be- players in the — * * “The worm is fora just a lit-| tle,’ said Bragan. “We're getting White’ S Club Downs ae ee “z= Gidley 9 at Drayton we've tied our season's longest eee streak at four games and| in —— * * * In last night's game, won by the) night at Drayton Plains. . * * * A two-base_ error, jbat to boost “his batting average] i Tipton’s triple in iLeague. His hits < in two runs to give him AOA a, N ~ with his steady four-hit pitch- “And look what he did in\ he 10th‘when Dee Fondy got a leado 7 walk,” Bragan continued. “I Bre Dravins Drug meets Weldon- Thrifty at 7 o’clock and Lakeland = faces front-running Em- manuel vt at 8:30 in tonight's league ga Gidiey , (White No Racing at Yonkers «NEW YORK ® — Hopes that there will be racing at Yonkers White Brothers scored twice in jone of the big reasons is Thom- ithe first inning and- went on to \defeat Gidley Electric 4-1 in Water- ford: ° League softball action last infield|and a long one, ‘single, a wild pitch and Monty|Was delayed and interrupted by. the opening aNtotal of stanza gave White enough for vic- otal of 2itory. Bernie LaRue protected, the ‘|Rogell, Bill Skowron and Hank Bauer, also belted home runs for the Yan-| kees and Walt Dropo and Jim Riv-| era hit homers for the White Sox. Yankee Manager Casey Stengel | ifrankly conceded that: ‘We're not) 1 getting good Coed ne os Sets knocked us around too."" * * - Stengel told ale after the rain-slowed game | , don't worry about us giving up.” Mantle had terse comment on his hitting last night: | “Thit a slider for my first homer | ~_ a mee —— jtournament got under way today said Mickey. |with 18hole qualifying rounds at It was a night. to remember, | too, The game | Pine ate Pee oe. started firing in the qualifiers this morning to determine seven a.m, EST, - Rogell Will Speak at Multi-Lake Party juan ee ee .The tournament is conducted on dents’ banquet have been com-| = drive - alternate shot Sipleted, Affair takes place at the) a «¢ «© M-L clubhouse, at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, June 29. Featured speaker wil] be Billy former Detroit Tiger star. There will also be profes- | rain, and didn’t end until 12: 2 } | | | | row, , j * * * Single 18-hole rounds of match play in all flights will be held iFriday and Saturday, with the I8- hole semifinals and finals sched- Dube didn't want to get away from me.” in Pine Lake Tourney Despite -threats of rain, the 8thiTom Newell and Earl Thompson, Course, most of the field failed to annual Pine Lake Invitational gelf Blaine. Eyngn and Dave McHarg, find the answers -A total of 112 two-man teams | flights of 16 teams apiece for | match play which begins tomor- i The top 16 new champ, at the end of the 72- |hole medal play test which winds jue with Saturday's 36-hole mara- ithon, will come from.a_ talented ‘bracket including tirhe run- | ner-up Sam Snead, Masters cham- ‘pion Doug Ford, PGA champion Jack Burke whose dad tied for \Second: here 37 years ago, and | Peter Thomson of Australia, three ‘time winner of the British Open. © The big hazard is the small and |Slick putting surfaces. Ip yester- Start Fir ing ———— \day’s: last free fling around the " Harry Martin and Tom Lowery,| One pro, after three - putting Randall Ahern and his son Tommy, from 12 feet, said: “The best way and Jim_ sea and Bill Krall:'to handle these greens is to hold — * * - the putter a bit above and behind nt Pontiac entries are jthe ball, then tap the ball lightly | Glenn Harding and Dick Rebert- with the shadow.” | son, and Ralph Norvell and Dr. Peter Hoogerhyde. * * * | Longest overtime game in. Stan- ley Cup history was played March teams in today's 24, 1936 at Montreal with Detroit ;qualifiers will make up the gham-. winning, f-0. They required “_ ‘pionship flight. minutes of overtime. All-Star Ballot 1957: (The 1957 Major League All-Star game balloti : being consi \ee by ane :Pontiac Press ay me ommissioner’s ice, The game will be pl St. Louis, July 9th.) * : Soa American League Position National League _(Player—Team) oo ee (Player—Team) 1B 2B 3B records; but remains unimpressed/National League — and : : WEEneepay’s ; uled Sunday. with his varied baseball talents slashed out a single for'tWee? the trotting track officials| pale!” .ians: Nieman. Bo ar ee eee nena eel ening + ef : nes “iand the Standardbred Owners ‘inals:_ Torre. Mathews, Aaran res;{Will follow. Tickets are available ; Musial appeared at Connie) the first hit of the ball game. The Assn. (SOA) broke d seen: eal, Dodgers: Sievers, ‘lat the clubhouse. : | The defending champions in the : ———|Cards later won, 40, from the}, os rome) Coen comenece. | sae oa fe so . \cliampionship flight; Joe Grace of . Philadelphia Phillies, ys . White Sox. |Detroit Golf Club and Howie Neil- * * * : ison of Piné Lake, are again on He's beén setting these records the firing line, along with last ‘almost as long as he’s been get- year’s runner-up team of Bill Petti- ting those hits, But the boredom ASEBALL LEAGUE Ll ' bene oo Bill Nettle.- of repetition isn’t the reason Stan Grift's 2 3 --k& ®t * jtakes ein g ay 7g ered : : ah 0 3, Bob Babbish and Bill O'Brien jture to be the quiet unassuming,|*t* | Winner Score —_Runnerep mies ee eee comprise the surprixe. team. in pada chat ai 'S"|1895 Horace Rawiins 173-26 holes. Willie Dunn rt Golf Club er boeteO bemeeen hd Gow eable person t is. 1606 “James Foulis 152-3¢ .holes Horace Rawlins Skinnevock Mille G. city Acerca tee, | of four amateurs who qualified cates Ses ty Eo oe fas Sa, A OE a ee ET ae cee Raton oon Po _ nal clu noring their ie Smit 315 G Low. Val Fjohn. Balt. try Club }So8* * com | do, but he t : favorite teammate, someone wea, oceh Val Pit Fitzjohn Baltimore eciznerc= { 5 meme is avent ot ra = : 1900 Harry Vard : AMERICAN LEAGUE asked: 1901 / *Willie Anderson (98) ie Alex ween cae) layer Nunt Chub Romwal | tanam * * Chicago “s" Ss" 3 3 ic amie ee a ter Oe ars 8 3 Richard's 8 3 t notable absence this New York ......:..-29. 2 | 5 “What's the difference between 1903 * Willie Ana vie ClO. 4 2 Drive-1 2 3) Bea Se f+ lois ame ara te tome yo ae Gece a amar atiei «| SRF 6 sere Tom bree Dre ad ene Stee” 491 9 lever played?” . ioe dion Gann - MYopia Hunt Club Try a two-year mon. Sete cadgeisi. i Ie 20s Willie smith CRE “seats ‘B® SB Bw! om this one,” came the: typical] 1907 Alex, Ross 302 Gil Nicholls’ _Philadelohte Cricket hub: International League oply on the Pins Lake title until ashington =... . 1 36 45 s >» | 1908 *Fred McLeod - 322 Willie Smith (83) Myopia Hunt Club i wh WLiGrace and Neilson\came through , . ; ug WEDNESDAYS RESULTS mee ely. ink arg S [i910 Skier emi tii) 298 J. J. McDermott (75 nal, 6G [Police 21 Lane's” { 3|in 1956. Byard is howeve 4% to : mott (75) ated cc. os : i , oe : : Photographers : Macdonalé ith : kin 2 1 Dostal o4 ‘ ak 5 we ae pose ‘over a display of baseballs! 1911 ‘John J McDermott (80) 307 Michel a. veld. Bred 7 (aa "and Chicago G. C. rae Rama 4 TODAY's GAMES spelling’ out the number “823.' 1912 sonn 3. McDermott “+294 Tom Fo Micemare Coesncy Club of Buffalo! WATERFORD LEAGUE * *« ¢ ; Pi és : Standard) “Take a position like you were a east (7% - ¥ardon (7). Ray (18) The C C.. Be Ndi a ist TS wie le a" af amar want (63) 40 Perce (od |going to bunt,” one of them callled| isis. Jerome De Travers 297 SEY = zm,” £3 Gidley 35 Other outstanding teams entered more at 2 pm—Moore 2-4)/to the league bdtting champion} 1si¢ Sane no ena ships plasty, 22cE ,fimehison Minikehda Club|-#keland =" ¢_3 Weldon i siare Tom Sheehan and Bud Gould, "i ” ny par - Bos im cvelan ‘ ie pm. — Brewer | mai -- times oon 191 “walter Ha Hagen = ps play ae pao War oh aie ee - ‘ ! ox at gy 9 pim—| . "ay! shouted ant mock “ saverhocs c. Rej C adi Pi ~ tobbs' (0-10) vs. Urban (00), -/outrage, “I'm no 1921 James M Barnes _.c| Rejects Canadians, Pistons «Musial’s appearance last night| 1922 Gene Sarazen ; T. Jones Jr, (76) - pita tT. Jo 206 Robert A. Cruickshank (78) Inwood ite Macfarlane _(i-72) 291 ; « Jones, J 293 ees 2, Armour 76) 1 cnet ee Ou) + ie “Billy gen nas 148) Pt paraten 3 287 y ie. Bees Thomas Oak. 282 rty siti Sal Se a “guead ‘gag Oe Hilts : a. 287 | 784 2 in ra ed Selects Green Bay It was believed that Green Bay's. s offer, pda ory with an off-season _ were Ponape =) btedly will not he — to play! ‘football sone < pony Green Bay. Kramer al Ssi@ With thé Pistons. The } L season 't ‘PP leis mic-Decemt after fo. ; art of the basket Ih f, 4 st Ice Cream Popular Prices ‘RIKER FOUNTAIN ‘Riker Bldg. Lobby ri fa i a f EXPERIENCE i i i ; mm. age 52. excellent con: pra 25 years Small Busi- jess management experience /@nd accustomed ‘to ‘5 figure ) income, warts to help you; Will talk full. part time, or consulting arrangement. A confidential discussion carries no obligation. Write ; ‘Pontiac a Box 30. es / i. i University Ceremony: from St. & On Quotas. for Next Year Honors” James. Nance James J. Nance, Ford Motor i vice president and resident hoe! Bloomfield Hills, received an | honorary doctor of laws degree, Lawrenee University, , ‘Canton, New York, at its com- \mencement exercises. Sun day | morning. * x * Nance was speaker at the cere- mony. “In ‘his speech he cited the importance--of—“living--a~-tife ~in' iwhich career is only one of many elements,”’ He also told the gradu- ‘ates, “The liberal arts background jis the best possible background ‘for making a living in the’ in-|. ‘dustrial society.” _ TRAVEL ye he PY ' VACATION TRAVEL TERNATIONAL CREDIT CARD! 2nd Floor, Loans made te msidents _ OVER 85,000,000 PEOPLE WILL CAN GO | FROM BENEFICIAL Loans $25 to $500 on Signature, Furniture or Car 7 WEST LAWRENCE = hone: PONTIAC Lawrence Bidg. FEderal 2-9249 OPEN EVENINGS BY. APPOINTMENT — FOR VACATION FRAVEL ON VACATION LOAN E FOR EVENING HOURS fe pemmating tm iclal wheat areas of the effect next year. County are as follows: . don, hnent- Bidg..-in-Oxferd.- Holly, Rose, Groveland, Springfield aad that part of High- land and White Lake townships north of M59 will vote at Marsh’s: Garden Center, 214 8. Broad St., in Holly. Lyon, Novi, Highland south of M59 will vote at the Lyon Township: Hall on Pon- tiae Trail just SW of New Hudson. Waterford, Pontiac, Avon, Bloomfield, West Bloomfield, Farmington, Southfield and Royal {Oak Township voters will vote at ‘McLouth Steel Plans ‘New Plant in Trenton DETROIT —McLouth Steel expansion program at its main plant in suburban Trenton. - The big steel firm applied for building permits yesterday. M. A. Cudlip, company presi- dent and treasurer, said the pro- gram is designed to increase the firm’s annual ingot capacity by about 250,000 tons. Present yearly eapacity is about 1!, million tons. The additional facilities are expected to be in use by late 1958, Cudlip said. WE SELL WHAT | WE ADVERTISE! a Ask us. 52 GatiON | ELECTRIC These tanks carry complete fac- tory warranty. Edison approved. Now twice as “much hot water! BATH First Quality, A-Grade Nationally Known .3-Pc. Cast Iron Colored = $139" Made to Sell for $219.95. 1—CASH. 2—LAYAWAY. The Polling places in Oakland Addison, Oakland, Orion, Bran- Independence and Oxford ‘tewnship farmers will cast their votes at the Oxford Or Ua Commerce, Milford - and that part of White Lake and|- Troy,? “Corp. plans a. 35 millicn dollar — 3 WAYS TO BUY: 3—NO MONEY DOWN ON F.H.A. Wheat Producers to Vote Wheat producers in the Commer-|the West Bloomfield Township Hall United iStates wil] vote on Thursday, June! ~ 20 as to whether quotas will be = 4460 Orchard Lake Rd, Should there be any question about the wheat program or lo- | eal voting places, however, infor- mation may be obtained from the county. ASC office at 18 South Perry Street, Room 321 Hubbard Bidg., Pontiac. (Phone FEderal 2- 8533. ) ub All persons are eligible ‘to ‘| vote in the June 20 quota ref-" érendum who will share.in the 1958 wheat crop from a farm in the commercial wheat area. on which the' wheat acreage to be harvested, plus any acreage to be placed in the wheat Acre- age Reserve, will be more than 15 acres. 2. If quotas are approved all farmers in commercial wheat states with more than 15 acres of wheat will be subject to quotas, Any “‘excess’’ wheat will be subject to quota penal- ties. Price support at a national —+ average of $1.78 a bushel will be available to producers who do not exceed their farm acré- age allotments. 3. If quotas are not approved there will be no quotas or quota penalties. Acreage allotments will remain in effect. Price support will be available at 50 per cent. of parity for pro- - ducers who _comply with their farm wheat’ allotments. (Fifty ' per cent of parity applicable to the 1958 crop is estimated quotas, not allotments. The law requires that allotments be in elfect every year, unless sus- pended because of emergency conditions. There will be wheat acreage allotments for 1958, therefore, even if quotas are disapproved. as low as $1.25 weekly! a - WE ACCEPT COMMITMENTS SETS Includes We -urge bargain. ‘44° Free Standing Special Purchase BATH SETS REG. $134.50 VALUE -COMPLETE WITH we —— s ertTines 3-PC. WHITE | 6-ft. = wash - -< and closet. © 5gg% TOILETS Here's value - plus! Modern styled, well Includes eleset COLORED BATH SETS. all A-GRADE fittings tub, wash hasin, complete with % $9995 A mun = Le] uM STEEL SUMP PUMP Fully Guaranteed *39* Slight _ Imperfection All Sises of Base and Wall BATH Less Seat : . ‘29” . ae = | Tues CABINETS 21x32” Big 50-Inch Crate Marred and up © Modern Styling 2 Compa 3-Unit Kitchen "@,Storage Compart- ompart. < [Ez | SINK WALL | comsret | atcartncs : CABINETS DOUBLE BOWL Sturdy, all steel construction, white enamel finish. Chrome Trays Stainless door handles. ateassive styling Complete with Reg. $19. aiue sturdy stand & St ] $ 4 5 g. $19.50 Valu faucets. Pirst LS ee $] 4° quality... A : rte Kitchen Cabinets in Stock LOWEST PRIGES ON STEEL PIPE Y2-in, Getvenized $273. %-in. Galvanized $3.58 I-inch Satemntane $5.04 2-in, _ CASH AND CARRY ONLY ‘Wain. Galvanized $6.72 1¥2-in, Galvanized $7.98 Galvanized $10. n 172 S. SAGE Laundry | 23" SINK Wash Basins with fittings ments 21x32-Inch Cast tron 2 Compart- SINKS. 29" Beautiful MIRROR BRITE Finish $ 44 ses 95 NOW “The Store That Values Built” PL UMBING SUPPLY col _ fat Sect et Peed Perino Paing Sr 3 if PHONES: FE “4-1516, and FE : NAW STREET — 5-2100' FREE | » DELIVERY ect | Lake Orion, Priday.and Beturday.. | | | K figure up to 1954, | | | |Telephone & Telegraph Co. today ireported consolidated net income |900,448, equal to 82 cents a sharé compared with $5,514,548, or 88 ‘ble & Radio Corp. because of the “Ves in. Biel E. , 32, of 160 N. ‘asmania St., pleaded guilty to|? drunk driving yesterday before Syl- van Lake Justice Joseph J. Leavy and was fined $90 plus $10 costs. Rummage Sale, All ° Saints Church 9:30 a. m. Friday, Ex- change Street entrance. —Adv. Rommage. Sale, 128 W. Pike St., Sat. June 15, Sigma Gamma Chapter of Pi Omicron National Sorority. 8 to 2. —Adv. Rummage ~-Sale;- Youth Genter,’ Rummage Sale, Sat., June 15th, |First Presbyterian Church, 9 . - —Adv —— Sale, Guild “Ne. 10, Fri. @ p. m. Stevens Hall. Ex-|m ees ‘Street entrance. —Adv. Mao's Forces Purged 800,000 New York Times Says Red Chinese Leader Admits ‘Liquidations’ NEW YORK #—The New York Times said today that Mao Tze- tung has admitted 800,000 persons ” Rh Advances NEW YORK @®—The stock mar- ket, bobbing at the crest of its slightly in early trading today. Pivotal stocks rose fractions to around a point. There was a good scattering of losers. After a fairly active opening, in Early Trading | latest 1957 “high, nudged ahead |>y.them in_w ‘RIC PRUITS: Apples. Nor 4.00-4.50 bu. 5 5.50-6.00 bu. 6.00 16-qt. 5 [ 10.00 a-ak. case; No, 1, 1,00-9.00 MISC. turnover” fell off" “At ~ the “same VEGETAB LES, ‘agus, 1, 1.05-2.00 doz. behs. Beste, No Hy abe: 43 ~doz. “behs; Broccoli, “No x « * Advances appeared among some steels, rails, motors, aircrafts, chemicals and selected stocks. But dils, which have been the pace- formance was backgrounded by a for an investigation of possible mo- nopolistic control of pipelines” by | 1. oil companies. There was little in the way of bullish news to spur the continued recovery from Monday’s break. Some specialties drew investors’ interest, Revlon rose around two in heavy trading. Schering | rose another point, as did Carborundum, Robertshaw-Fulton dropped % at 30% on a big block of 11,300 shares. New York Stocks ; (Late Morning Quotations) ‘has held that conflicts between the ‘rulers and the ruled existed only ‘under capitalism and vanished in 'a Communist society. ‘OTHER POINTS now have been obtained, reported, the Red leader included: | that contradictions, those between the leadeers and | the people, exist under commun- Allen ‘Elec. & Equip. Co.....3 3° 3 ism led to a rule of terror and Baldwin Rubber leas 15.4 16 : Ve espeounencad 4% 24.6 the liquidation of thousands of QO. L. Ol & Chem. Co.*., 240637 | “Conmmunists. Howeil Elec. Mtr. Co.*.... 56 6 : Peninsular M. obte- Co...10 10 10 “ Trop pes 10 10.7 In dealing with enemies US a Meo! Sap aes Se EOS ian ih ‘necessary ° use force,” Mao said.|Toledo Edison Co......... 13.5 13.5 13.5 < * Wayne 8. Products Co.*.. la 1.6 *No sale; bid and asked. “We in ae also have used force to deal with enemies of the ‘people. The total number of those ity. forces number 800,000. This is “Since then we are no. longer jusing methods of terror. Instead jwe have substituted persuasicn jand education. If one persists in using the methods of terror in solv- \ing internal antagonisms, it may ead to transformation of ‘these |antagonisms into antagonisms of |the nation-enemy type, as hap- ‘pene int Hungary.” Dow Talks Merger With Ohio Company | MIDLAND w — A Dow Cherm- | ical Co. spokesman says Dow is | “talking merger’ with a Cleve- ia and firm ‘‘but that doesn't mean | we are negotiating: 3 * * The spokesman said yesterday that Dow is discussing a possible merger with Dobeckmun Co., | manufacturer of flexible pack- | aging, gift wraps and metallic yarn, The talks reportedly began about a month ago and no offer | has been recived by Dobeck- mun as yet, Dow-Jones business news service said in a dispatch from Cleveland. * * * Dobeckmun also was reported to have been dickering with sev- | eral other companies in merger possibilities. It denied most of the reports, Earnings | i i | | | in the March quarter totaled $5,- cénts a share in the first quarter in 1956. Net sales this year totaled |$142,002,231 against $108,749.136 a iyear earlier. The consolidated statément excluded Arerican Ca- arge mihority stock interest held P | The Times dispatch, which said Ww textual excerpts of Mao's Speech, that other main points made by 1 Stalin’s failure to anderstand ~ who were liquidated by our secur-) NEW YORK (® — International!. . : Detroiter, 21, Injured Attempting to Pass Bus Biltmore’ Ave., jured yesterday when he a ed to pass a school bus y Saar ‘on, @ hill, according ‘to = Township police. way drive, Witnesses tol Wa rs, were ragged, Their per- in call from a Senate subcommittee |; 00 WHR Wem mien hme m, Seune Aibuying prices unchanged; 65 per cent 0-2.00 ae oe So eadiahes. 0. 1, .65-. aw doz) pet - 1.00 . behs.: oi — 4. UL r Ne. 1.5052.00 135-150 je Sorrel, No. Spinach, No. 1, 1.50-2.00 b No. 1, 1.35-1.75 bu. nd Oo AND SALAD eae ‘en 00 =. Loree No, erate. Lettucg¢, No, 1, 2.50-3.00 bu. Lettuce, 1, 1,00-1.50 bu. Lettuce, Romaine, No. 1, 1.602.00 bu. EGGS: Large, 11.50-11.00. ,Y-dor. case; medium, 9.00-9.50; small,’ ue 00. émcaco BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO, June 13 (AP) — Butter etay, receipts 1,880,000; wholesale buy- ing prices rarer to Yq higher; 93 |score AA $9; A 59; 90 B 56%; 89 C 55; cars 90 B ied 89 C 55's Eggs steady; receipts 14,500; wholesale or better A white 29'2; mixed 29% mediums 27; standards 28; dirties 25%: checks 25; current receipts 26%. CHICAGO POTATOES ‘Nisei * miral ,..... 11.6 East Air L .... 38 were ‘“‘liquidated” by Chinese Air ed no $0.3 Bast x 5 ae etl * A angie R uto ¢ Communist security forces between | 4ii5 Chal vote 343 E : i s : Pha Ilng Alum wetee OF rie: =eOKSS October 1949 and the beginning of|ajcoa - 100. Ex-Cell-O...... eB 1954 ‘ op = Bocod me pve BOORG 7 . m Can ...... : ae Am Cyan ..... 84.3 Nat Gyps..... 40 ‘we 2 « Li = Am Gas & E! . 36.5 Nat Lead 1131 A Times dispatch from Warsaw am u & Fdy . 303 NY eke ‘ ay : : ’ * ™m ovors * . said Red China's top leader dis-jam n Gas 2 ; Nor! & West «. 66. ; i i j 1 Am News : 3 No Am Av .... closed that figure in his much-) sm <3 noe pac 3 discussed speech to party leaders Am Seating ... 283 Nor Sta Pw... 17 : ae b 5 « |Am Smelt .... 62.2 Nwst Airlin... 14 in Peiping last February. Am Sugar <2 3 Ohio Ou : . 4h | rysier wens & iNOT PUBLISHED Cin Mil M |... 416 Owens IlG! .. 61. A a ey ER HR ext 0 ao’s s as Clark Equip Pan A r. =a : Climax Mo 74 Panh Epi . 63 | not been published, but a COM-\Coca Cola ,,..1064 Param Pict ... 35 ‘densed version has been circu-/Cols Palm .... 9) Parke De... 94 ‘lated among Polish Communists' col Ges : ne P RR ee a : wenee eps: ‘©. é and parts of it previously have, gon Eaton 431 Pfizer... B84 , . Con N Gas... 4 Phelps D~ . _ been ae Western cor \Gonsum Pw i oops ae 13 ; nts in Warsaw. C Pw Pf (4%) 914 Philip Mor ... aimee \Sont Bak ae 32.6 Phill Pet | <-. $13| | iCont n : -Pillsby Mills . | The pnd incNaed arm Drs ‘Cont coPas 127 ma ee: : 3 rxis' eory that contraditions Cont Mot ..... Proct & —_ ks of (COMtOl..... 672 Pullman - aa | exist, not only in the ranks of Copper Rng)! 33 Pure Oil ....,. 472 _ the masses but also between the (Cort Swe 2°: 421 Rovub wu SI uy 4 c . epuo Sti ,,... | masses and the party. woop hha gneeterh + ‘ Rex rus a | : son . yn Me : : Dis C Seag ... 322 Rey TobB.... 544 _ This represented a departure jou Aire .... 73 Rock Spe ..... from Soviet doctrine which long Dow Chem 671 Royal Dut .... 58.2 {Du Pont 197.3 STOCK AVERAGES NEW YORK— (Comptled by the As-| |sociated Press) : 30 15 18 Indust. Rails Util. toca: rev. day ...... 273.7 126.6 7099 185.9 Week ago 269.9 1243 77.0 183.7 onth ago ..... 2710 1266 768 184.6 Year ago . 256.8 142.2 73.2 181.5 1957 high ...... 273.7 134.7 17.5 185.9 957 low .....-- 40. 118.4 12.2 1 1966 high ...... 276.3 155.1 76.0 191.5 leW .1...... 244.0 126.6 60.6 171.6 DETROIT STOCKS (Cc. J. Nephier C.) Pigures after decimal points are eighths High. Low Noon Government Sues 2 Detroit Firms DETROIT (#—The Federal Gov- in damages from two Detroiters and their firms -who were fined $140,000 for fraud in cost-plus de- fense contracts. Named in the civil suit was Ed-|> ward Mardigian, owner and presi |i dent of the Mardigian Corp., and of the Marco Manufacturing Co. * * * Tt also named Rudolph Stonisch, vice president of the Mardigian'> firm and treasurer of the Marco|p company. The civil suit included Elgan Taylor, sales manager of the two firms, against whom criminal charges of fraud were dropped ‘in the original case four years ago. The fines paid by Mardigian and Stonisch in 1953 were the largest ever imposed by Federal District Court in a single case here. They were found guilty of conspiracy to defraud the gov- ernment of more than $650,060 by padding payrolls on cost-plus contracts. Matdigian was fined $40,000, Stonisch $16,000, The Mardigian Corp. $60,000 and the Marco Co., $24,000. ; * * *” The government's civil suit claims a loss of $32,186 on the damages in that amount, It also asks $2,000 damages onan each of 231 false invoices filed with the government for the con- tracts, which were for parts in the Cll9 “Flying Boxcar” cargo| > planes, “David R. Luoma, 21, of 20203 troit, “was in- The accident happened. on Park- ge Park. 60 |lower; mostly on weights under 230 Ibs; 6 around 210 Ib. sorted for grade 20.75: 33; Its 100-Millionth Ton ernment has filed suit for $526,373 "0S J slow, steady to 25 lower: hi defense contracts and asks double m broilers or fryers 2344-24: Ca der 4% Ib. 25-25%; Township Board Condemns Barn CHICAGO, June 12 (AP)}—Potatoes old: Arrivals 7:j on track 61; total U.S. ship- ments 1.068; supplies light; dem Ti mod: rate: market steady; no track sales repezted. New: Arrivals 196; on track \26@: supplies increastng; demand slow; market slightly weaker. Cars: California long whites (washed) 3.35-3.50, round reds (washed) 3.75-3.85. * Livestock a . CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, June 12 (AP) — Salgble hogs 6,500: slow and uneven; generklily 25 lower on butchers; instances 35 to 40 sows weak to mostly 25 lowet; a few ‘around 450 lbs and avier as much as '$0 lower; fair shipping demand, 2-3 190- |228 Ib. butchers 19 50-20.15: -mostly 3 lots below 19.75; relatively little over 20.00; severa) lots 1-2 200-220 Ib. 20.25-20.50: a few late as low as 2000: 70 head 1 2-3 260- Tb. 18.00- 230-250 Ibs. 19.25-19.75; Ib. 18.75-19.25; a few 3 280-310 18.75; a deck 3 around 340 Ib. 17.50; larger lots 350-400 Ib. sows 16.00-17.00; a few selected lots 306-340 Ib. 17.25-17.75; most 425-550 Ib. 14.75-16.00. Salable cattle 17.000; calves 200: fairly active after a low start; steers and. heifers steady to 25 lower: mostly steady other classes 8 23.00-24.50; “73.00; a agers ifers 22.00-23 75: covera loads high choice and low prime 24.00-24.25; some prime heifers _ — sold: utility end opment! cows 14.50- 16.80; canners and cutter 20071453; a ie Semtvotent canners Tec. 50; bulls 8.75 di : 8 we ¢ vealers 26.00 apts 000; old crop lambs and yearlings full i lower: si jam st shorn lamhs 1 grades 17.00 good to prime spring lambs a see td Rd., Dray- ton Piains. where Mr. Curn will in a ‘\, GEORGIA, JUNE 12, 1957, JANE E., \, o Avondale, , Sylvan , 0" Lee will be announced later by ‘Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. 8.. GQODRICH. JUNE 1957, — 340 W. Dawson Milford: age 75; beloved Tohend of Iva ‘Goodrich: dear father of Leonard Goodrich and Mrs. Louise Warden; de M ia rk Pu- neral service will be held Satur- day, June 3. at 1:30 p.m, from Ri Bird Puneral Home, _Miltor Se ee GREGORY, JUNE 1967, ALMA ope ‘Flint (formerly of Pon- dear mother of tlac Wellington R. ‘purtt: dear sister wi Hart officiating. wll sy << Oak Bill Cemetery, Funeral arrangements by Brace- smite Pune ineral Homie. FytSZ, EMMY 1, 173 Ma Bivd., Birmingharp: land Mond Eu- — mother of Mt rges and Walter Fae Sister of Mrs. Lucius Gilman, Byron feat, wandehiiren. Pat" Matter : fi Batley’ Puneral Home, 163 Oak. land, Birmingham. to be held Saturday at 1 p.m. from ch Suntiery, Fait venmeats at. tri be ma Anert- LL, JU 1957, “WALLACE 1 ame 44: beloved _ Yon of; Mrs. ' Grace Hill: dear brot of Eugene and Robert Hill, Mrs.’ Mary Williams. Funeral. service will be held Pri- day, Juhe 1 14, at 130. p.m. from Huntoon 1’ Home = |Publicly, ey ek police that Luoma appanealty lour|contly, PE ee! MN ee) 8 control of his car which skidded] , os Ws Fot the parent International Tele-| more than 150 f rolled over and The other phone \& ‘Telegraph’ Corp. sone ee i Sh | coon ig Rag ft sa Mme coarter bot wan. 08.294 was | taken to. Pontiae| Clarkston, for aS ork} 2 cents a share com- Hoan wits ey lots on tHe tr ‘pared with $8,539,568) or 49 cenits a face hyd tog road, ‘rt ped as reported ia ng. ‘jes Se w/o) THE PONTIAC PRESS. . 7 THURSDAY, JUNE 13,1957 a a iversity ‘Hospital in Ann 1 Arbor. |to recognize anyone and does not » young mén andi Boy Remains in Coma . | A hospital [ spok esman said last. ‘respond to voices, From Sleeping Sickness ANN -ARBOR (® —. An Upper nus, ‘ol Alston, Peninsula youngster, who has con- { tracté@d sleeping sickness, ne mained in a coma today at Uni- Houghton County, | known as sleeping, sickness or) was on ' “the danger list” in “erit-\prain fever. They could not predict i¢al conditio n.” : ~ |when he. would come out of the The molesron said the boy failsicoma, Report Busy Ore Week ‘night that 9 year old Charies £2 _ Doctors said Charles is suffering| CLEVELAND «® ~ Iron ore ship- from encephalitis, more commonly|ments from upper Great Lakes to 21,062,228, which ‘is_ about! jported yesterday, Shipments of 3,- than) doubled since 1940, fp “oH \062,342 tons, compared with. 2,981,-; i (287 in the similar week of 1956, lraised this ‘season's total tonnage | ATHLETES FOOT GERM. HOW TO KILL. IT. " oe - IN ONE HOUR, ‘ports exceede ree million tons 1,200,000 tons under a year ago. | Hf .net ema 2 your 409 back at any in the week ended yesterday, the’ | Crue counter. 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