The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast Showers tonight, tomorrow. ; _ Details Page 2) THE PONTIAC PR , 117th YEAR . kKakkeke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUS ST 11, en — 1959 —26 PAG ES ) Sy ° ¥ pas wv ER ~ UNITED PRE&S INTERNATIONAL oo ASSOCIATED panes eee —Eeee eee = Is Postmastership Reuter insist Ss Employment Le ps to Record Scared Boy = sorean and Moans Report for July ~ Political Football? By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. This is borne out in the fact Congress may adjourn before that not since 1953 and the tenure Michigan Senator Patrick V. Me- of former Postmaster George L.; Namara acts on Robert C. Miller’s Stockwell has the cily had any- confirmation as Pontiac postmas-|thing other than an ‘‘acting” post-_ ter, an aide in the senator's office} Master. disclosed yesterday. McNamara said he was sampl- Capitol Hill have tried to-gain con- ing reported opposition to Miller’s|firmation of a full-fledged GOP appointment from post office em-| postmaster here, only to be stalled ployes. Republicans say this is ‘by Democratic senators. a “political dodge.”’ A A A Today Miller is carrying around ‘the political tag of ‘acting’ bead lof the huge office. Before him ‘came another Republican, Leslie 1H. Dean. who served eke years Whatever it is, Pontiac’s post- | mastership has been a rich pol- itical plum teetering between the two political powers in Wash- ington. State to Miss Warming Trend, Cloudy Skies Will Continue The weather man is gloomy and . repetitious with his forecast for About $40 Million Due ji. pontiac areca. Saturday as Deadlock Tonight. Wednesday and Thurs- day Over Taxes Continues LANSING «® — Local school dis- rshowers. tricts appeared likely today to miss the first installment of 1959-60 state Brees and the high tomorrow 88.) The lowest recorded temperature | uid funds. Under the aid acts of econ in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 years, the initial distribution—ex- a.m. was a The reading at 1]. was 80. pected to be around 40 million dol- P-™- lars this year—would be due Aug. 15. which falls on Saturday. But the new school aid law, "Hoffa Threatens subject of a House-Senate we Vote Retaliation pute, is tied up in a conference committee, leaving no authority for distribution of 20 mililon dol- | lars in. funds accumulated for aid 5 \oader Charles E. Halleck purposes, \(Ind) said today that Teamster issue in representatives are making WASHINGTON (UPI) — House One of the points at in the payment timetable that:men who vote for an administra- would sét the date for the first tion-backed labor reform bill, 1959-60 distribution back to Aug. 25: 7 '‘Teamster President James R. Local districts already are owed Hoffa are leading opposition to the’ 24,700,000 from fiscal 1958-59. ‘substitute bill with threats of politi- The prospective arrearage thus cal retaliation against will grow to about 65 million col- tatives who vote, in favor of it. lars on next Saturday unless law-, “Mr. Hoffa's people are differences before then. to get the Hoffa (Shelley) bill * * * through,”’ Halleck said. They will try again tomorrow. when the Legislature meets again after a sixday layoff. Grand Rapids Struck The House and Senate are about by Hail, Rainstorms 10 million dollars apart, with the) House favoring the higher figure | but willing to split the difference. thunderstorm — struck The Senate has shown no hurry Rapids area early today, accom- to compromise, on this basis. !panied by wind gusts up to 45 miles Meanwhile, the State Adminis- jan hour and, the weather bureau . . ‘said, hail up to half-inch size. trative Board was expected to | | Since that time Republicans on! _ the U.S, Weather Bureau 1e-' orts, it will be partly cloudy and duly’ Miller's appointment, an aide four Republicans and four Dem-| “mer with a chance of scattered ‘of the senior Michigan senator John EF. thon aoa | ‘all conference is a proposed change sorts of threats’ against congress- | represen- | here makers resolve present school aid with all sorts of threats — trying) GRAND RAPIDS — A fierce) the Grand, and finally gave up and retired last year without ever our con- , firmed. | «Republicans, like Oakland , County Congressman William 8S. BroomfieJd, who nominated Mil- ler for the maximum $10,000 job, charge frankly that Democrats hope of Miller and other GOP post- master nominees in Michigan / and other states hoping by next year to win the White House administration and thus be able to make their own nominations. Democrats, of course. | Although he denied that such was’ ~ | the case today, Democrat McNa- ‘mara said Republicans would en-| igage in the same political game ‘if the shee were on the other foot. * * * ' He cited the case in 1948 when. | Republicans, feeling their Thomas, ‘Dewey stood a good chance of | becoming president, .held off and confirmed but 9 of 56 Democratic) /nominees for postmaster in Michi-. gan. Saying ° ‘we are not deiaying un- ‘said a three- pronged investigation The low tonight will be 64 de- has been undertaken in his and tender for his party’s | similar nominations. | Robert Perrin. administrative assistant, said this includes (1) ‘What happened to Miller's pre- | decessor—whether he was forced lout of office; (2) selection of the jnew postmaster, ‘tions followed; and (3) what is the community's and employes’ atti- tude towards the new man. | Miller said the senator had _ plenty of time for this investiza- | tion sinee his nomination and subsequent recommendation by | Postmaster General Arthur FE. Summerfield in January of thts year. “We're going through the same Halleck said representatives of Process as we always do,” Perrin} | said. “So this fuss kicked up by ‘Summerfield is a false one.’ x * * Summerfield, in whose home city of Flint nominee Charles H. Pratt has been waiting two years for confirmation as postmaster, con- ‘demns the “‘stalls.”’ Out of Oakland's 32 post offices. five, including Pontiac's, are now irun by “‘acting’’ postmasters. The others are Keego Harbor, Orchard ‘Lake, ‘ford. But Broomfield is fast to categorize only the case of Pon- tiaec and Miller where “politics have been injected.’ Perrin yesterday issued a state-| Senate Hearing to stall_ off confirmation | i. e. were regula-! Lathrup Village and Mil-! Be Made Public Sen. Goldwater Sees Labor Leader’s Order as Presumptuous ¢ WASHINGTON (#i—Sen- ‘ate. probers start closed door hearings today on ‘Walter Reuther’s United ‘Auto Workers, with Reu- ther demanding that the ipublic be admitted. | | The hearings have heavy, political overtones. They were billed as a preliminary inquiry demanded by the ‘Republican members of the committee on their allega- jtions of corrupt or im- ‘proper practices by some of Reuther’s subordinates. The UAW usually supports Dem-’ ocratic candidates. - The committee is composed of! ocrats, including Sen Kennedy (D-Mass), a ‘likely con-, presidential | ;nomination next year. Reuther made public a al gram. to the committee chair- | man, John L. McClellan (D- | Ark), demanding that the doors | be opened. TOT SAVED FROM CAVE-IN — Billy Curtis. 4, is lifted from a six-foot water ditch that caved in on him by Fireman William Devine, left, and Fire Lt. Donald Cook. The boy’s father, Ira, of ‘Des Moines, Iowa, arrived home just in time to He accused its Republican mem- bers of scheming to use the in- quiry as a device to smear his: | union, McClellan told a renuden he Has 67.6 Million on Work Rolls Jobless Total Stands 1.5. Million Less Than Year Ago Ad . i | WASHINGTON (AP) > Employ ment hit another high in July. The number lof jobs rose about one quar- 'ter million while unemploy- ‘ment declined by nearly the same amount. The Labor Department reported July employment reached a record 67,594.- 000, up 252,000 from June and an increase of 2,415,000 -over July last year. Unemployment declined by 238.- 000 to 3,744,000 in July. This was 1,550,000 less than July 1958. Employment’ had also reached a record in June. The number _ of workers with jobs has been steadily increasing all year. | Seymour Wolfbein, deputy assis- tant secretary of labor for man- power, told a news conference that the July figures reflected a con- tinued basic improvement in the over-all employment. situation. wk ok * The July increases were record- | ed despite a rather sharp drop in AP Wirephoto | farm employment because of poor help dig him out. Pilly’s older brother Donald, 9, /weather in many farm areas, pat- was also buried up to his neck, but managed to | ticularly in the South. free himself and run for his father. Billy was in | On the other hand, the large the dirt for nearly an hour but is in good condi- | pymber of teenagers seeking tion. . | temporary jobs == which forced - orm ee eS personally would be reluctant to, make it a public hearing until he knew more about it. He said the: antic Dad While Governor Takes Nap ! up unemployment in dune by | 600,000 — diminished in July. , Many of the youngsters found © work. Republican members never have; told him the full nature and scope! of evidence they plan to produce. Digs an Hour Pe dees Goldwater (R-Ariz).| to Free Son who long bas been feuding with) Reuther, criticized the UAW head's telegram and said if there: Long s DES MOINES, from committee Republicans. i x & * ' year-old-son, | “It's highly presumptuous to at-)| cave-in. tempt to tell a committee of Con-| The boy was screaming some- trapped by a ditch: swift defeat, h The July survey was taken in 'mid- month just as the nation- | Wide atcet strike began. Little of Legislature Quits =e. reflected in the Faly figures. Iowa (AP) — A! BATON ROUGE, La. (?i—Frustrated Gov. Earl K.: | —— : _ ' ‘desperate father dug frantically Long today planned to ‘‘carry my fight to the people” dean ous Sere ghowen bil are any leaks they won't come With his bare hands for almost after a rebellious Legislature killed his special seSsion approximately 100,000 workers have ‘an hour Monday to free his 4- ‘before it was an hour old. ‘been laid off in. allied industries such as coal, railroads, ore ship- Long, trying to rally forces after a stunning and ping and some construction work. ad‘his sights set on a downtown New gress how to operate,” Goldwa-| thing awful, the father, Ira Cur- ter said, ‘‘Sen, McClellan has been’ tis, said later. When the screams doing a good job and he doesn’t | stopped, tension rose. need Reuther’s help to do it.” “He must be gone, he couldn't oa * * ‘have Jasted that long.”” a vouth Goldwater denied that the Re- Said quietly. |publicans had asked for the se-| But finally Curtis, with the help, crecy of closed hearings. said that was McClellan's deci-| out—alive. He was taken to a hos-| | sion. The Republicans have charged Buying Revives —————~~*Orleans rally tonight— ‘home grounds. of his po- ’ 8 s - It's Fair Time litical foe, Mayor DeLesseps ‘Morrison, one of his; opponents in the December If] Pontiac The bureau recorded .37 inches ment to The Pontiac Press indicat-|there is evidence of improper of rain in the first 60 minutes after'ing that Miller. once a ory handling of flower funds raised by (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3 IWAW members. Shoemaker Hits MSUO Why Give Greeks theBoot? hold another special meeting to- day to dole out available money | in the treasury’s general fund. State Controller: James W. Mil- ler said the next new obligation confronting administrators is Thursday's payroll to 26,000 state employes, amounting to about $5,500,000. State Treasurer Sanford A. ithe storm started about 5:30 a.m.| Three boys were playing in a After Sharpest Break shuffled from the Legislature ash-. ditch near Billy's home when the, ‘en faced, walls suddenly caved in. Billy’s' of Year Yesterday iof lawmakers applauding their ad- older brother, Donald, 9, was: |journment victory, buried chest deep. A neighbor) NEW YORK «®—Buyers rushed! But his cronies brushed aside behind him the echoes “$5,019,307, Aud. Brown reported the general fund’ balance at the close of business! yesterday at about seven millions. | The stack of unpaid warrants: (checks) to state suppliers built up again to 24,358 totaling Gen. Frank S. Szymanski reported. The warrants are being held up for lack of cash. By MAX E, SIMON Michigan State University Oak- has land’s introductory ‘history course) doesn't rate too high in the eyes! of a 64-year-old Pontiac shoemaker. who has been dubbed ‘‘The Philos-, by his customers. opher”’ Ike Urges Teens Form ‘Vigilante’ Traffic Guard WASHINGTON (UPI) — Presi- dent Eisenhower has suggested to a group of teenage driving experts that they organize a. ‘“‘vigilante committee” to help cut down high- way death tolls. Greeting contestants in the eighth annual teenage safe driving roadeo, Eisenhower noted yester- day that the 1959 highway toll is expected to hit a ‘‘tragic’’ 40,000 persons. He told the boys they “tell other people what better do” should they'd to be safe drivers. In n Today's S joe RS LE RETR MEPEC 8 soccccecccccees AB County News ,.....eseee0.-15 Editorials Markets .,cccccccccceccecss 19 Obituaries ......cccccveeenee Sports ...cccccocseseseces LG? Sadeeccee sce ceseces@ Theaters ........2.eseceee0+ 10 TV and Radio Programs... 25 Wilson, Earl ........0000+-+.25 Women’s ~_ vesecseeeeAl-13 -' trade at his Wayné street shop. In fact, John Panos of the Wayne Street Shoe Repair Shop is down- ‘right displeased by the news that! ithe Greeks and Romans have been) ‘given the boot by the new univer- ‘sity. Panos, who was born in Greece, “Pontiae Press Phote ‘THE PHILOSOPHER’ 4 John Panos, an expert shoe repair- man and homespun philosopher, is shown here as he plies his willingly tells one and all how he | feels about the decision of | MSU0O's faculty to start its course in Western civilization with the late Middle Ages. “First explained. * * * | “You can’t understand what's happening today without knowing about the Egyptians, Mesopotam-| ians, Jews, Greeks and Romans,’ he contended. IS AMERICAN CITIZEN Although he emigrated to Amer- ica 44 years ago and is now -an) American citizen, Panos is in-| tensely proud of the land of his’ things come first,’ he ’ | birth. | Greece, he said, is a nation of thinkers. “The ancient Greeks were the | real philosophers—the only phi- | losophers,”’ he contended. ‘SA course in history without Aristotle, Pldto, Socrates—how can it be?’’ is a question he believes, can't really be answered. * * * Panos. who attended the univer- sity at Kalamate in his homeland, as a youth, looks forward to phi-| losophical debates with his patrons. | One of his possessions in which he takes great pride is a book about Plato given to him by Oak- land County Circuit Judge Wil- liam J. Beer, It's not in his shop this week. One of his customers has borrowed it. “Judge Beer calls me aphiloso- A Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) He of other rescuers, got young Billy? Stock Market Democratic gubernatorial pital, where an examination! primary. Annual 4-H Event to showed he had only a few cali Comes Back te Life The governor had little or noth-| Open Tonight; Runs and bruises. ing to say to newsmen after he; Through Saturday Some Oakland County 4-H Club- members literally are putting the ~ finishing touches on the cake in arvi tt, | ‘as = reparation for the big openin oe pte we seek 38. was bur into the steck market today and! the sudden end as an act of de- e a Fair tonight = orenins Donald managed to free himself! pushed prices up for fair sized’ fiance. They. contended that | While some frosted cakes, oth- and ran for his father. igains, The ticker lagged behind nig wow ant ie selitical hae ers were putting up tents, tighten- A + z ue € Li ip , ca av :. * ee ire ppar ; transac : : = ars > eann oods and r Police and fire departments transactions. + + | eat of ithecincident. peor ine celine ga goods ere called, ier v ‘ A es Most stock groups participated. “This will méan 100.000 votes for} h . ; ° : ; nual Oakland Coun- anaes mad he nen in the upsurge, which came after the govennor,” said Lt, Gov, Leth-| iy a Glue Pair will Beats at n i . ne ve moan C i 7" the sharpest price break of the er Frazar. jo siti, With, ‘the ‘pledge. of the Kolng to aie. HM KoMg to aie. \year yesterday. There were some) Frazar, who presides over the . pm. After frantic safety. work, Billy was lifted to Get Their Man, | AtterTearGas | DETROIT (® — Police staged a jtear-gas seige outside an apart- Were On ment here last night. When officers finally. made a/ * cautious entry they found Simon Loveless, 38, lving in bed with a: blanket over his head. He said he- had been sleeping and didn't know, police wanted him to come out. Squad cars sped to the second-, floor apartment after Loveless’ | wife telephoned and said her hus-| band had threatened her and three daughters by a previous mar- ‘riage with a .22 rifle. Officers lobbed everal contain-!one nore.than 45 minutes of stocks which failed to join the ad- Senate, Vance U.S. Rubber opened 87 -cents | higher at $63.37, Chrysler up 50 | Police Tiptoe In, | cents at ° $65.75, International Nickel 75 cents at $103.50, Balti- more and Ohio 50 cents at $44.75 and Du Pont up $1 at $264. The price break yesterday did, not attract any unusual crowd to, the exchange. Only about 50 people’ the visitors’ gallery at the opening, the usual number a! ithis time of yea: | | TECHNICAL CORRECTION An estimated $5,400,000,000 was, sliced from the market value of, listed stocks in yesterday's plunge. Market experts described the drop as a technical correction, which had been overdue after a sustained rise. The sell-off was believed to have been prompted by the forthcoming} Eisenhower-Khrushchev talks. As| analyst put it, people were iTO COST $148,000 'sons.”’ was unsuccessful in hold- ing back an adjournment. stam-' pede, after news got to the Senate! ‘of the-House’s vote to quit, Rep. Ben Holt of Rapides Parish, a disenchanted Leng sup- porter, led the move to end the 2- day session, which would have -cost an estimated $148. 000. Holt said the session for vindictive and personal “We cannot permit the loyalty , "and friendship: we feel for any man to prevail over the mgnts ol (Continued on Page 2, Col. Vote to verre Ike's Housing Veto WASHINGTON ( —-The Senate, Banking Committee in a surprise, “was called! rea-! 4-H Club members. Keith Mid- _ dleton, president of the Oakland County 4-H Agricultural Assn., | will welcome the assemblage, Highlight of tonight’s event will ‘Tbe the seléction of the 4H King and Queen, followed by the freckle contest. Next will be a talent and caval- cade of horses show. Bob Burns land his trick horse will be a star attraction. * * * The big shows and presentation of awards are scheduled to be ‘held in the large outdoor arena ‘in the center of the 18-acre fair- grounds, located at M24 and Wal- ton boulevard. Approximately 3,000 exhibits will be housed in the six permanent jbuildings and 11 large tents on™ 'the fairgrounds, The midway, \Wade’s traveling carnival with 12 ldifferent rides, will run continu- ‘ously. One of the buildings contains: a | cafeteria for the fairgoer appetite fers of tear gas into the apartment! looking for an excuse to sell and| ove voted &7 today to recom- {that deiiaiaia. more than pink-col- ‘but failed to get any response | they found it in the uncertainty of \from Loveless for two hours. The ¢he outcome of the talks. iman came along without resist-) ance when afficers took him into: custody. Experience Speaks GRAHAM, England (UPI) — The chief constable of Glouces- tershire, J. S, H. Gaskaine, of- fered this explanation for traffic congestion: “If you give a wom- an°an inch she'll past in it.”’ * * * Losses in key issues ranged from; a few cents to about six dollars. | A few stocks were hit harder. The market picked up slightly just be- fore the close, but no magressive rally developed. Stocks of defense companies led the downward movement. This apparently resulted from the possibility that.-any thawing of -(Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) ‘mend that the Senate override | President Eisenhower's veto of the | '$1,375,000,000 housing bill. The full committee had been ex- pected to accept a recommenda- tiori made a week ago by its hous- ing subcommittee that the effort to override be dropped. The subcommittee had wriften a |jections to the original legislation. pared-down $1;050,000,000 bill in an effort to meet the President's. ob- housing ton candy and peanuts.” Says Lyle Abel, Oakland Coun- ty Extension Service director, “The fairgrounds are in much better shape than ever before. | We expect our biggest crowd this year."’ The Fair will run ‘through Satur- day. There will be approximately .30 floats in the parade through Pon- tiac beginning at 1 p.m.. tomorrow (Continued, on Page 2, Col, 6) { We’ re All Going to {- ‘ | the 4-H. Fair Tonight, - Are You? | 4 ~ House Plun re, aN ATE ee, Ne rt a i 4 - THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, AUG UST 11, 1959 es Into ve — i . 4 for Floor Battle lke, GOP Minority Back Most Restrictive; All Claim Rackets Checks’ WASHINGTON ‘+ AP) ‘The | House headed today into its bit-| terest fight in a decade over the! shape of new labor-management | controls legislation. | Starting a week of wide open floor battling, the House called up! three rival bills, all avowedly| aimed at checking racketeering| and abuse of power in the labor- management field. All are modi- fications—to varying degrees—of a bill passed by the Senate last April The outcome was conceded ai toss-up by rival camps. The [first/ votes may come late Wednesday, or Thursday. ‘Arrayed in favor of the most restrictive of the three bills were} President Eisenhower and a Re. publican House minority. Supporting what its sponsors| called a moderate middle-of-the-| road approach were a majority of; House Democrats headed by Speaker Sam Rayburn (D-Tex). KIWANIS GOVERNOR GREETED — Representatives from seven local Kiwanis Clubs met the Michigan District Governor of Kiwanis Internationa! Sidney F. Main at a luncheon yesterday at the Elks. Club. Greeting Main are (from left) Dr. Peter Hooger- hyde of the Downtown Kiwanis; Dr. Leigh Hougen of West Bloom- field Kiwanis; Loren Aris of Drayton-Waterford Kiwanis; William j ti th i 10 * by 4Warren Street Labor Fr ght Be Two-Way signal at Warren and N. Saginaw Street, stempel, city traffic engineer. i block The Day in Birmingham Traffic Light at Saginaw gin iNGHAM — The city com- Will Be Removed and mission named Comb and Groves -,, 4/Co., of Detroit, as contractors for No Left Turn Permitted the proposed conversion from oil to gas heat in the Baldwin Public: Warren street in downtown Pon-, Library in its weekly meeting last ac will. be reopened toxtwo-way| Fight. ‘affic at noon tomorrow. | Submitting the lowest bid of The change is possible because 53-176 Comb and Groves’ price fell { the elimination of the traffic between City Engineer Grover Ser- enbetz’s estimated cost of between said Theodore M. Vander- | 53-000 and $5,000. ized the city to vacate an alley, only & |approximately 100 feet east of Saginaw | Pierce street, Punning north and is im- (south from 14 Mile road to Bird! Although Warren is long . (between and Wayne street) it | The commissioners also author- , ‘Detroit Firm's Low Bid ‘Okayed on Library Heat The new plan calls for the City of Birmingham to maintain repairs on Adams road from Buckingham road north to the Troy City limits, at an annual cost to Troy of- $350, and 50 per cent of any repairs on the viaduct. Included in the agreement are rouline repairs including snow and ice removal, but excluding tree trimming. - In its final action of the night the commission appointed Mayor Harry M. Denyes and City Man- ager L. R. Gare representatives to the annual Michigan Municipal portant for the internal circula- street, providing that a 20-foot League meeting in September at tion of downtown traffic, Van- casement is retained for public Mackinac Island. derstempel said. ‘utility maintenance. | ; eee —_ | Taking part in Girl's Nation, the The street has been one-way The commission decided to | citizenship training program of the (westbound) for several years. | give favorable consideration to Turning will be restricted at the | the request because the alley intersection of Warren and Sagi-| was not required for development naw. Eastbound Warren traffic) of abutting property. will not be permitted left turns! northward on Saginaw, nor will : : ata kk ~ : : ‘quest to hold a peanut sale, its) northbound Saginaw «traffic be jain fund raising project, fro mi Christy was appointed associate allowed to turn left westward on 4 p.m, to 6 p.m. on Sept. 25 and Supreme court justice during the Warren, Vanderstempel said. lon Sept. 26 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m,| Gill's Nation inauguration cere- monies, ‘American Legion . Auxiliary in | Washington D.C., is Christy Schad, '17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eu- gene F. Schad, of 623 Bloomfield Birmingham Kiwanis Club's re- Ct., Birmingham. x ke ‘Was granted by the commission. turns at, This is because left ; Warren would interfere. with the x a * . Hubert V. Davis, of 16 Faculty Pontiac Press Phote | left turn slot on Saginaw at Mt. In other action last night the Row, Bloomfield Hills, is attend- R. Brandt of West Pontiac Kiwanis: Main: Horace Hatfield, past |Clemens, a half-block south of CO™™ssion gave tentative ap-) ing a six-week summer institute governor of Division 5; Richard Mineweaser of North Pontiac |Warren, he explained. jProval na 2 eee eee at Bowdoin College, Me. Davis is Kiwanis and Milt Weaver of Rochester Kiwanis. As governor, Main The pedestrian crossing of land. re D Gel Thane iat | Cae coat . ee is the leader of 178 clubs in Michigan with a total membership of Saginaw at Warren will also be ‘crossing Adams road. Hills, 9,300. eliminated, he said, because it A smaller group of Democrats; ———————— = was supporting a third measure, backed by AFL-CIO chieftains and making fewer changes in present law. * * x In advance, of showdown voting later this week, the balance of power appeared to reside in a small but potent coalition of + . . Seuthern and Midwestern con-) ne teen’? at Eociinea) eeicis | servatives of both parties. 2 teeed ' (Continued From Page One) The nation got a preview of the, Many members listening were, ; | forthcoming House debate Mon- leary of possible new wild out- candidate for state representative day night as Rayburn spoke over bursts from Long such as those and president of the Pontiac Re-| as Long Takes Nap (Continued From Page One) ” Legislature Adjourns J Postmastership Ey-Football Star Political Football? is expected there will be a con- tinuous stream of traffic on Saginaw once the traffic signal is removed. Harry T. O'Connor, of 1315 Lyon- hurst Ave., Birmingham, has been promoted to vice-president and gen- House Cuts 10 Pct. : sis ; ' eral manager of the automotive di- Pedestrians will use either the 1] Military Spending ivision of Holley Carburetor Co., of ‘crossing at Mt. Clemens or at! | Detroit. Lafayette avenue, a block north . | QOConnor will be in charge of of Warren, Vanderstempel said. WASHINGTON (UPI)\—A $1,285,-/ sales, engineering and manufac- The State Highway Department 002,700 military construction appro- turing in the automotive division. ‘decided to remove the Warren-|Priation bill went to the Senate, ~ Cleared 7 Weeks Ago Saginaw signal in connection with | ‘day after approval by the House. ’ : 1 . - Don't Skip Greeks, 2 The Democratic senator's state- Set) divergent views (on Miller's ap- |gressive system should be opened | MBS radio network and support-|Which came at the much-publi- publican Club, might — become! less than President Eisen- . : the Saginaw street progressive : ment went on to say: _ Tokyo Slaying Of ight system, now being’ deteloned The House passed the bill late, “In trying to reconcile the Brother-in-Law Vanderstempel said the pro-| Yesterday by voice vote. The mea- : sure carries $278,197,300 or 10 per ays oema er , aN OC _.. in about a month f , cent, ieee ial ae We €" to South boulevard. seen Eniayene hower requested to build military’ ers of all three measures dis-|Cized fiscal legislature in May. another political _ sacrificial goat | pointment) I have been with- | holding my approval of Mr. weeks ago, Joseph P. Crowley, a bases and other facilities in the cussed them on an NBC television! Long collapsed after that oufejamong Pontiac postmasters. (Continued From Page One) program, Each contended his bil] burst and was spirited by his wife | ._*« * * Miller’s nomination.” lformer Yale football star, was! ; - fiscal year ending next June 30. pher. So do lots of my friends,” was best for the nation. to a Galveston, Tex., mental clinic. | _He said since Miller’s Laces “IT am undecided at this point cleared in a_ sensational Tokyo AH Fair Time * * * he said with pride. The programs followed up x * * tion was laid on the senator 5: nether I will continue to do so.” trial of slaying his brother-in-law. | Although it is the last regular, x * * Eisenhower's radio-TV appeal last! The lawmakers also shied away in May he has attempted. ii¢-Namara said. x *« * : money measure of the session, the ‘Did you know that the Consti- Thursday for passage of a bill from a fight orewing os > the gov- | 85 he BAYS he does in all such Miller said the delay was Today Crowley himself iy IS Hear Again Senate still has to act on a num- tution of the United States was strong enough to end labor-man-!ernor's move to ous! Taco Cange- cases, to lean the Vechngs of merely an excuse.” dead, felled on his 50h birthday, | ber of appropriations bills. Half based. on the writings of the agement racketeering practices Josj as chairman of tre Louisiana ne commun) ts . * ; | bad * * the cause not precisely ‘deter-| (Conunued F P ) a dozen spending bills also are,Greeks?’’ he asked. : which he called “a national dis-'State University Board | Y mixed | “They want to hold it up until mined. Authorities indicate he! emynaed Brom Face Oue | still under consideration by House-- That information, he said, was grace."’ | : ets \ political * * *® Rayburn contended that ““power-| yer, ducked « of }.on<’s domes- fyl interests are using the public’ tic trouble with hic nv~ estranged demand _ for a cleanup of!wife, Blanch. And mony viewed racketeering as a smoke screen|the ouster most as undisguised behind which they can impose) retribution. crippling legal restraints on the! eee: anes honest, legitimate interests of the TASENG so And ., working man.” | Long, literally coucht sleeping The bill Eisenhower is backing, | 45 he napped in the mension some Rayburn said, ‘‘would throw the| blocks away. rushed to the Sen- weight of the federal government ate. after he heard the Horse vot- so heavily on the side of manage-|€d 71-25 for adjournment. But he ment” that it. would harm the; Was too late. rights of honest, law-abiding work-| Sen. J. D. DeBlicux of Baton ers. {Rouge had made a motion to end Cangelosi, ‘on colleague and rer-onal family law-) ' “TI found them rather | ithe senator's statement said.’ ‘Some of the opposition seems to: ‘be among postal employes them- selves who indicate resentment | that a career postal man was not) selected for the job.” ' the Democrats could take office may have died from barbiturates. at Raeburn and Saginaw streets.| Senate conference committees. ‘the subject of a history professor and be able to make it a gift to x « * |The parade, with ‘Exploring 4-H ‘at the University of Alabama, who some hard-working party mem- Crowley's body was found by,AS a Family” as its theme, will was born in Greece. ber,” he said. ‘his son Joseph Monday on a bed|proceed north to School street an| World Safety Record “And so," he said, “to under- x * * ‘in his home in Hamden, a New/then on to the fairgrounds. ‘Claimed by Ford Plant (stand the Constitution, you have “If there is a legitimate reason| Haven suburb. He wore trousers! The reviewing stand will be lo-| {to know about the Greeks. | jwhy I should not be confirmed and a sweater, Authorities said cated in front of the County Court-| DETROIT w — Ford Motor Co. “After all. there’s no substitute Those close to the situation said the same reason—employe eben" Miller said. a. | opposition—was given in Dean's \they should bring it out in the he probably died Sunday night house on Saginaw street at Huron Tuesday claimed a world safety for the original.” ‘while his family was at its sum- Street. ‘record for the drop forging in-' “Perrin said it was possible that mer home. Wednesday’s program is as fol- dustry ai ite Canton. Ohio: forge |. 4 Panos said that he was intro- | uced to the ancient Greek | case. Unlike Miller, Dean had |Sen. McNamara might not act on| A toxicological report expected |ing: 9 a.m., judging general exhib- plant. Milasephers at the ase of 1* | been with the Pontiac Post [the position before Congress ad-'today should clear up the cause /its. home economics exhibits, and_| * * * ane ce fcalevcd on wick Office for 30 years. |journs around Sept. 1. Broomfield|of death, he said. Police suspected poultry; 10 a.m. plowing contest;| Ford said its 1,500 Canton em- | school junior’ Big | | i | Miller, before being named to! ‘his present post Feb. 28, 1958, | ‘was on the Pontiac Police force | He appealed for passage of leg-| the session. The word of the House and served as chief investigator; islation to end “the worst abuses spread and leg<lators shouted. for Republican Prosecutor Fred- in labor-management relations |, Let's go home.” ierick C. Ziem. without trampling on the just| _ rights of anyone.” | On the later television show, Willman Seeks Flexibility Rayburn’s stand for a bill pre-! mitee was backed by Rep. sew ASKS Parking Meter Rule art L. Udall (D-Ariz). He contend- ed neithen of the other bills could! City Manecer Welter K. Wille win both Senate passage and-pres-' man wil] ask the City Commis: idential approval. sion to*give him con trol over “We've got to have a compro- new parking meters. mise of reasonable men if we're - ££ * ; going to get legislation,” he aM, Whe manazer <aid mest lstion of * * * i Landrum y meters shoulg be an adminis- Reps. Phil a new meters sh vuld . Pig (D-Ga) trative: responsibility. & and Robert P. Griffin (R-Mich). 4 “Now, when we want to make a few changes, we have to have them approved by an ordinance amendment. which involves a lot of red tape.” he comp'ained. sponsors of the Eisenhower-backed bill, contended neither of the other measures would sufficiently root corruption out of the labor move- ment and safeguard the rights of ; a? union meets. “Minor changes should be up to * * = FeCreli¢ ft Y an inixtra- Ref, John F, Shelley (D-Calif) | ty discretion of the administra said the AAFL-ClO-backed bill he is sponsoring would send the ‘‘scoun., NOTHING BIG PLANNED drels to jail’ without punishing} To be proposed tonight is an honest laborers. His bill was given ordinance amendment that would little chance of passage | allow- Wiliman to nike ely nges “As debate was ready to get un-| from-now on in the pariin: meter der way, both Republican and Setup whenever he thought them Democratic House leaders agreed Necessary tle battle could go either way on} the other two bills. The Weather Full US. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY = Partly PS steed and warmer with chance ef late afternoen or hee © thundershowers today ednesday partly cl@udy with scattered afternoon and eve.- Wind west The manager said that no hig the moment. ismal] “changes, however, experi- if they are needed.” he explained. Today in Pontiac | iti ‘Lowest temperature preceding © om _Also up for initial considera. 6) tion tonight is an amendment At 8 am = Direction 7 Wind velocity 5-8 m.p h West-northwest E | change is under consideration at — menting with a small number of) meters at various locations to see; | setting the legal restrictions on | parking at the new Pontiac Gen- | eral Hospital parking lot. | Scheduled are hearings on as- ‘sessment rolls for four sidewalk projects, including southside of E. Pike street, Paddock to Mariva: ‘east side of’ Stirling avenue, Bal- jtimore to Mt. Clemens: west side of Stirling, Madison to Mt. Clem- _ens; and west side of Tasmania avenue, Michigan to Lois. Also to be aired publicly is the assessment roll covering grad- ing, graveling and curbs and gut- ters on Carlisle avenue, Colum- bia to Ann Arbor. Lie Test Clears Mrs. Tunnell Detectives Seek Motive | i | ' “We are constantly making, for Slaying of Doctor | in Pontiac Office ' A he detector test tient of slain Dr. W. Carleton Warrick, as a team of detectives ‘forged ahead seeking a motive in the mysterious murder of the Pon- tiac physician. ' Silent during all | 1 p.m., parade through Pontiac; |ployes worked more than 3,100,000”. : had the. authority to continue | * x«*‘«- 2:30 p.m., tractor operator’s con- man hours without a lost time’ ‘‘We would read their works.” Miller in his * ‘acting’ job- in-| Crowley's, death came just as test: 7:30 p.m., pledges of 4H injury between March 11, 1958, and he recalled. ‘And then we'd close definitely unless there és a change he was rebuilding the life he'd led members; 7:35 p.m., parade of June 30 of this year. The com- our books for the hard part— the administration after next up until May 1958—that of a pros- floats and judging; 7:40 p.m., trac- pany said the safety record is understanding the basic ideas that year’s presidential ‘perous businessman whose stand-|tor square dance; 8 p.m., tractor continuing. “TI will do just that,” Byoomfield | ing in the New Haven area was/|0Perator's contest finals; 8:30 p.m... x *« * He summed up his feelings this said. ‘enhanced by his exploits nearly |awards; 9 p.m. safety demon- The old record, Ford said, was Way: this furor (30 years ago as a Yale football stration. ‘held by ‘the Buchanan, Mich... “I know it’s only one man’s | over appointments is Michigan's | €°o. , oO plant of Clark Equipment Co. opinion. But it’s not the right ap- Stocks Bounce Back added that if this is the case he no foul play. _ elections. ithey expressed." |. junior Senator Philip A. Hart. * * Lf : A lost time injury is one that proach.” '- He says because he’s new in the | Crowley's wife Betty is a daugh- ‘means at least a one day absence? And, again, he called for “‘first | business he’s leaving th t. ter of the late T. A. Dx Jones from work. [things first.’ 3 we 'Sr.. a famed football coach Ww S een annn _ | master problem’ to McNamara. | . . | ; ; years ago and’a one-time All- \ | Bureaucratic red tape entangles America player. | . jane slows up selections of Michi-) It ‘was T. A. D...Jones -Jr.. 45.1 (Continued From Page One) Plane Engine Outdated? field ide a ne foes He cane Cortes « Susitiess! partner and the cold war might mean smaller | field picks a nominee the name Betty. Crowley's brother, that, Ai F C ] O d ‘first goes to the White House, then! CRowley was accused of killing in defense Pec im the hee lr orce ance S I er [to the Senate, then to the Senate Tokyo last -year. ahead. Moscow Radio reported | ‘Post office and Civil Service Com-| Crowley and Jones arrived in the drop promptly ‘to listehers | mitfee, and finally to McNamara Toky. /5 195 : in the Soviet Union, saying the | A Mic ra Tokyo May 5, 1958, looking for an stback ea Wall Sireet was © in Vigorous Buying WASHINGTON (AP) — The Air was for development of the Gen- Force has canceled a 100-million eral Electric Co.’s J93-5 engine and Hart. oil tanker for their New Haven idollar program for an advanced The action also knocks out of i, * * * : Ifuel oil firm, T. A. D. Jones Co. ss ela BINOME ‘SIMS ERCE laircraft engine using high energy operation a new 45-million dollar | Pontiac's: ‘pastmasiership’ ranks) x ke p ~ ‘chemical fuel. ‘chemical plant built by the Olin ‘richest among the county's 32 as| Three davs_ later, Jones’ bat- Salary is based upon receipts, tered body was found in the hotel \which are -over the million dollar | ;oom the two men shared. Blood |mark. ,|Was on walls and curtains. | Besides the fact that politics | Crowley told police — and held story later in a man- The panic, the Moscow report, It appeared to be another step Mathieson Chemical Corp. near continued, grew out of the prospect jin the switch from manned air- Buffalo, N.Y.. which was to pro- that the Eisenhower-Khrushchevicraft to rocket missiles as the duce the fucl. talks might ease world tension. (chief instrument of modern war-| x *« * AVERAGE DROPS $4.10 {fare. | The JI3-5, engine was an im- I . , to the ree The Defense Department has proved version of the J93-3. Both Se atic chock slaughter trial that lasted nearly Ce ee oh th 00 ED COU nen been under heavy criticism for engines were slated for the B70 office employes is lowered work- 12 months—that he had nothing to } iced on the Associated Press av- Comtinuing development of expen- bomber and the F108 Rapier fight- ing under an “acting’’ boss. In (40 With Jones’ death. erage of 60 stocks. The average “YC new addition, during the temporary | . . dropped $4.10 to $229.20, the sharp- status, Miller and others like Orion Motorist est slip since Nov. 24, 1958. him are not entitled to full pay. | Electronics, steels, chemicals, | * * * Just recently the Senate an- Stands Mute on motors and oils were off the most.| The contract canceled Monday |nounced confirmation of lesset ee political plum postmasterships) HO mMICide Charge in Bloomfield Hills and Holly. . | | “But these weren’t as valuable) A Lake Orion man stood mute |political plums for the Democrats to a charge of negligent homicide 'to hold onto,”’ Miller said. ;Monday before Orion Township’ ~ * * ‘Justice Helmar G. Stanaback. | Also voicing a concern over the! x * * ‘political intrigue in naming post-' Donald D. LaPlante, 30, demand- ‘masters was Roland W. Reese. eq examination on the charge aris- Birmingham postmaster and presi- ing from a traffic accident July _ |dent of the Oakland Chapter of theo" in which a 9-vear-old Oxford’) HAVANA (AP) — Fidel Castro|the Inter-American Foreign Min- 1960. with the B70 slated for pro- National Association of Postmas-'Township girl was killed. |was expected to take to radio and|isters Conference in Santiago. duction 18 months later. : TV today to tell all about the first Chile. They looked on this as a An informed official, who re- missiles. An Air Force spokesman said the prototypes of these planes will not be affected by the cancella- ition. They will use the earlier J93- '3 engine and. still attain the |planned speeds, he said. Expect Castro fo Relate “vento. a. /had an afterburner that would use ‘Boron fuel to give additional Revolt Story on Air Today ==" | The F108 is to be completed in George F. Taylor, chief assist- | 7 : }ant. Oakland n Most of Nation |said the polygraph test taken by Downtewn Temperatures 61 19 am am County prosecutor, x os a u am. m 9am 70 1pm | Mrs. Fontella Tunnell of 1755 Wil- liams Lake Rd., Waterford Town- "Enjoys Pleasant Ship, cleared her. Temperatures | Dr. Warrick, 71, of 263 Chip- | pewa’ Rd., was fatally shot in Sun sete Tuesday at 739 pm Sun rises Wednesday at 535 am “Moon sets Tuesday at 11.50 pm Moon rises Wednesday at 225 p.m = Monday in Pontiac (As recorded downtown: By The Assoc ated Press Highest temperature a _ his downtown office July 24. lowest lsmperature ra | Fairly pleasant temperatures, Money left on the Sete cod ‘ Mean temperature : 7 with the usual threat of showers, | ; nae Weather—Partly cloudy - | prevailed t th ‘| the doctor's trousers lead police | : ! i In most of the country) rob * One Year Age in Pontiac itoday. - a to believe bery was not the Highest temperature |. ; wigeaiaede _ | motive , Lowest temperature es | * * * | , Mean temperature = | Pa w8\ Heavy rain and hail pelted sec-| Taylor said investigation is con- tions of Wisconsin and Minnesota.|tinuing. into past patients of the Eau Claire. in north-central Wis-|doctor in an attempt to find a 50 in 1882 consin, was drenched with nearly | motive. \3% inches of rain in a two-hour! Weather—Pleasant. Highest and Lowest Temperateres This Date in 86 Years 98 in 1044 Monday's Temperature Chart Mrs. Tufinell, operator of a rest Alpena. - 80 §7 Los Angele - : - $ Baltimore 8 Marquette < . $j period. Hail also hit the area. with | home. her husband, Lloyd J., and Brown: ville 98 $7. Minmi Beach se ¢, Mail stones, of 615 inches in di-| the doctor's wife have been cleared Siestonen i ‘shtetansa lh 4 os ammeter: A severe electrical storm) by tests, they voluntarily submit- Chicago $2 Tl New Orleans Ss with wind gusts up to 50 m.p.h.|ted to. Tunnell was cleared by a ame 8699 Om — 2s eet Tomah. while strong winds|truth’ serum test after two poly- bower ol 64 Pe — is §3 880 ae ative _ |graphs proved. “inconclusive.” peiete 9 By Age gS Sl stat alno tel * | Taylor said ‘‘two or three clues” Gr maples fe 8B Mele 8 chester Mig eth and Ro- were now being checked, one sur. i ton, 16 88 Senttic i} 5} \chester, Minn» the line of thun: | rounding four letters he holds re: jacksanville 83 75 Tam 8) 78 derstorm- imitea oeross north: lati So |e : # Kens City | Trav City 8 60 — ectoss north lating to the doctor's past medical \* * Washington 8 7 TD Midwes: air ins | practice } i } : ers, He predicted it would be “ta mir. . The examination was scheduled lacie’ if Miller was confirmed un-, fF mex! Tuesday. LaPlante, of der the current political setup. | 14 N- Broadway St., was freed | “We're only a year away from after furnishing a $1,009 bond. ,an election.” he said. “And those’ Kornel Sabov, 38, of 895 Glaspie jare the: rules of the game they Rd., father of the dead girl, said play by.” , in his statement to Oakland County jsheriff's deputies. that he was * ° ° . istopped on M-24 waiting to turn Vv . i Belie on This Sign onto Drahner road when the car HOLYOKE, Mass. (UPI)—Po- driven by LaPlante struck his from a behind. lice suggested today that a | + we : ‘i. ne . . | . painted ‘‘stop"’ sign on the pave- | LaPlante said the Sabov car ment at an intersection remain |turned onto M24 in front of kim misspelled ‘‘sotp."’ Not one mo- ‘ | torist failed to obey the sign; authorities said. Everyone Moscow Crowd Cheers aa ” s 4 ° ee sotped” to ctrickle. Justice Warren, Wife MOSCOW ‘>—Chief Justice Earl Warren and his wife, here as tourists, spent today visiting the U.S. exhibition and shaking Choose Right Place PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) — | Amalgamated Flying Saucer Chibs of America today an- | hands with Russians, - nounced that Prince Neas6n, Introduced to a crowd at the billed as a man from another _ exhibition fashion show, the top Planet, will gwe a public lecturé American jurist was warmly. ap- tdmorrow. The place: Odd Fel- | plauded and beseiged by auto. | lows ‘Hall. _ | Sraiph stekers, | . od Ye 4 : \. r é major conspiracy to overthrow! his revolutionary regime and how his forces smashed it. ~ It was generally. agreed the bearded leader would lump to- gether big landowners affected by his land redistribution law and holdovers from® Fulgencio Ba- tista’s army as the nucleus of the conspiracy. He was also expected ito accuse anti-Castro forces, from ithe Dominican Republic to Miami, of ‘helping. * * Officials said the plot had been crushed. Unofficial reports said some 1,500 persons had been ar- continued -over Las Villas Pro- vince, in central Cuba. Remnants of an armed_ band that clashed with Castro's army Sunday reportedly took to the hills in the southern part of the pro- rested, But a telephone blackout) tained. are being held for pre- measure of the gravity of the sit-.fused to be quoted by name, .said uation in Cuba. ihe believed the B70 and F108 * x * {would never get beyond the proto- From reliable sources both in, type stage and -would never go and out of the government, these into production. were developments: roa 1. Camp Libertad on the edge for Our of Havana where the bulk of the Watch conspiracy suspects were reported | being questioned, remained cut; off to all but officials with special BIG U permits. | Friday, Aug. 14 — 7 P.M. ‘2. The telephone blackout to Las We're going te auction off our used Villas was government - ordered } bests. motes ee ee with supervisors monitoring other |] flenmott, dr. Assisted by J. calls inside Cuba. and from } Arneld.. or abeged. | ‘Trailer Load of * * 5 ae i 3. A large riumber of those de-| AERO-CRAFT Aluminum BOATS at BIG SAVINGS This trailer will arrive cautionary purposes and will be réleased soon. . 4, Scattered shooting was heard | tearht ai pivot ge deay lage Ay in various sections of Havana dur-|f selé at preety, te See. ing the night. There were no F beats! vince, where a number of con- spirators’ have been reported ar-' rested, a . Observers also considered = it’ significant that Castro suddenly changed, his mind about going’ to: 4 casualties reported and no ex a ae : . ’ ‘planation of the firing, but the LAYBAUGH Ss police radio revealed that at Jeast 7 ene person had been picked up in ) Oakland cimnection with the gunfire” [i 630 Or alae ’ te 4 REP ARR ARE pe mS NBR HET TE S eMiuaaitirat meaihan Site teen REE RON ETRS emt 7 ng ee ee a pe ee Ge , . Youth Rally t S79Vd HIA0 IYVW q THE PONTIAC PRESS 8 West Huron Street - ~ Pontiac, Michigan TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1959 Owned aad Published Locally by The Pontiac Press Company . Hsroip Presemats President and Publisher Howane A. Prragesarp LI. Jomn W. Prreerzato. Jonumu A, River, ; Vice President and Secretary and Editor ‘Treasu and Business Manager Advertising Director Horay J Reeo Eant M. Taxapwatr Groses C. inwin Managing Editor Circulation Manager Classified Manager G. Massa, Jonpan, Local Advertising Manager Congress Must Avoid Road Building Deficit When the Federal interstate high- way building program was launched three years ago, it. was to be a pay- as-you-go project financed by use taxes on gas, oil, tires, etc. ¥ But receipts are not keeping pace with expenditures due to rising costs for the 41,000 mile network of super roads and the fact that last year Congress speeded up highway spending as an antirecession measure. x *& * President EISENHOWER advocates an increase in Federal gasoline taxes from 3 to 4.5 cents but Congress is unwilling to go along. Unless some- thing is done, Federal officials say the vast interstate road program will be out of money by October. High- way Administrator TALLAMY warns there will be a nine month halt to road work if funds are not provided. * * * The first concern of Congress should be to get the program back on a supportable basis by stretch- ing out the present program. If this is not feasible the President’s proposed inerease in the use tax should be reconsidered. Highways must be built. They are a vital necessity. Pressure groups which Opposé the increase want Congress to use money from the general fund. This would mean deficit financing and is an in- Cy flationary procedure which would . add further complications to future highway construction. Mekong River Project Needs U.N. Assistance Development of . the 2,700 mile Mekong River on the ‘mainland of free to the delegates. Financed ‘privately, these gave news of the conference, world events and anti-Communist articles. xk *«' * This year’s festival, the seventh since 1947 and the first outside Com- munist countries, had a lavish pro- gram of parades, dances, fireworks, sports, automobile races and an art showing. Something for everybody. Sandwiched in between were lectures by Soviet scientists and seminars on critical political problems led by “world authorities,’ Communist, of course. This type of propaganda must be paying off otherwise Moscow wouldn’t continue spending huge sums on the meetings year after year. Kk . * However, Communists have not had ‘things all their own way in Vienna. Non-Communist youths, among them some Americans, stood up for freedom and democ- racy and gave the Communists a hard time in free-for-all debate. What the free world needs .is a bigger and better counterattrac- tion. The Man About Town Isn’t First Time That Diversion of Clinton Flood Water Was Planned History: What reveals things stranger than fiction. One of the biggest problems that faced Pontiac’s first council when the village was incorporated in 1837 was the flood waters of the Clinton River—and it has remained.a problem for 122 years. The plan then was to. take the crook out of the river in the downtown section by diverting the water through a new channel. 'chis was to be excavated from Orchard Lake Ave. (then Andrews St.) near the present railway viaduct to a point where the river goes under South Southeast Asia is claiming the atten- «Saginaw St. tion of all nations interested in as- sisting backward peoples. The four member committee representing the countries through which the river flows— Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Viet Nam — announces th at France has made a 50 million franc contribution, its third, and that India has promised meteor- ological equipment needed for a study of the river. Japan was the first Asian nation to contribute. x * * Rising in East Tibet and flowing through a part of China before en- tering Laos, the Mekong empties by several mouths into the South China Sea. For centuries it has been _a highway for immigration and river commerce. All along its route trib- utaries from east and west flow into it but the river is not navigable for - large ships. kook ok The Mekong could be the source of vast power thereby raising the living standards of the people of all Southeast Asia. But it is too huge a development to be under- taken by that area even with the assistance of France, India and Japan. Further assistance has been asked of the United Nations and should be granted. There is _no question of the need for nor the benefits: which would grow . out of such a project. Vienna Youth Fes Festival Another Moscow Trap For a gathering suffering under a total boycott by the ten non-Commu- nist newspapers of Vienna, the World re made a lot of headlines abroad. : . x & “* Sponsored by the U.S.R.R. and billed as completely non-political it was designed to spread Com- munist ideology among the 17,000 delegates from all over the world. As. counterpropaganda special This ditch would be about 1,200. feet long, and would do away with four bridges over the river, being two on Pike St. and two on Lawrence St., besides adding con. siderable acreage, “after filling,” as stated in history. The lowest bid that could be secured on the work was $1,500, and the council in 1847, when | Rufus. Hosmer was village president, turned it. down as being “too expensive for the gdod’to be expected.” It will be seen that this is aubstanitiatty the same course as recently proposed, at a cost that: would crowd two millions, being over 130 times that of 112 years ago. And we still have that crook and four bridges—and the floods: Word comes to me from Curator of Education at Cranbrook, James A. Fowler, that this Wednesday evening is a top time to view the skies from there through a six inch refractor telescope. If inter- ested, phone MI 4-1600. ‘ An Oakland County man. George Syler of Leonard, has been appointed director of welfare in Lapeer County, succeeding Arnold Nique, who retires on Sept. 15. For over a half century one of Nevada's top educators, : Dr. Ward Church; . who died last week at his home in Reno at the age of 90, was a native of Holly. This. is absolutely the last call for you to énter our freckle con- test at the 4-H Fair. Be on hand at eight o’clock this evening, and you may win $50. ‘The Census Bureau at Washington ‘has named — S Bruce F. Clothier to have charge of this year's agricultural census in the area that comprises Oak- land County. He-lives at North Branch. From Lapeer County comes a note from George Jacobsen - who challenges any Oakland County farmer to beat his yield of 105 bushels / of oats per acre. Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Guenther Any takers? ~ of 282 Prospect St.; golden m= wedding. Mrs, Fredonia Orson of Auburn Heights; sist birthday. Rev. and Mrs. William Combelleck - a wees _Suddenly It Doesn’ t ‘Seem So Rust Proof David Lawrence Says: Thou Shalt Not Do Racketeering WASHINGTON—It’s important to get one thing straight in the big -fight that is now being waged in Congress to get some legislation passed to stop racketeering in labor unions — that nobody is going to wreck the labor-union movement unless it’s the labor- union bosses themselves. The — specious cry that big LAWRENCE business or big management is out to destroy collective bargain- ing is.just a smokescreen to divert attention from the real issues. Not. so many decades ago big business thought it could stop cor- rective jegislation by diversionary tacti¢és, but the country insisted that crime had to be punished and restraints of trade had to be re- - moved so that competition would be free. : The record disclosed by Sen. McCtellan’s investigating com- mittee in the last two years is so devastating that it is amazing to find Speaker Rayburn talking about a ‘middle of the road” approach where crime and co- ercion are the instruments of many labor unions in America. The American people have wait- ed patiently for the labor- -union movement to clean up its own ranks, but this hasn’t happened. No single group can police any other private group. Where there is a violation of the rights of the individual and where there is.crime ,Or corruption or coercion, it be- comes a matter for the law. ct + * The fallacious argument has seen widely spread by labor-union leaders that only a small number have been exposed as guilty of wrongdoing and that, therefore, no laws are necessary. The same argument could be made for the repeal of the laws against murder —only a few persons out of the total population actually kill other ‘human beings. Laws are designed -to protect everybody, including the small mi- nority who are the victims of crime or coercion, President Eisenhower, in his nationwide appeal over tele- vision and radio last week, talked of specific types of racketeering and blackmail picketing. New comes Speaker Rayburn who says a “middle of the road” approach is desirable. This may be practical in controversial matters affecting academic or -abstract issues of governmental authority, but, when the rights of the citizen to be protected in his access to a job are violated or when the worker is intimi- dated by a picket line, this is not a matter that.can be compro- mised by the political approach. tayburn expresses regtet that the issue has become. partisan. The bill recommended by Presi- dent Eisenhower, however, is spon- The Country Parson - pleted during: #t sored by a Democrat and a Repub- lican, each a member of the House of Representatives. There = is nothing partisan about it. The speaker naturally is worried about the division within his own party. If a strong -bill « curbing vicious and corrupt practices is passed, some of the Northern Democrats who owe their election to labor-union contributions will not be happy about it. * x * Speaker Rayburn is eager to re- tain for his party the labor-union support. Politically this is natural, but the country is not ready to accept compromises with criminal activities and ahy ‘‘middle of the road” treatment of abuses. The, instances selected by Ray- burn in his radio speech, to indi- cate that the bill backed by the House Labor Committee tackles Dr. William Brady Says corruption, are in themselves true - but they are only a small part of the story. _ It is what the bill ontits that has produced the — nationwide concern. The omissions mean, as President Eisenhower rightly said, that 70 per cent of the unions would he immunized from the necessity of filing the reports on their finances, Blackmail pick- eting would be ignored. The workers of the United States and their families, moreover, have a right to see their dues money safeguarded. Jimmy Hoffa is today the most powerful labor boss in the country. He has not beén removed from the control of his own union by the AFL-CIO because that or- ganization has no such authority. (Copyright 1959) Sciatic Rheumatism Is a Meaningless Term “My husband = suffered from arthritis. for many year's, until he got your booklet Chronic Joint Disability,"* writes a Connecticut reader. ; “He followed your advice -faith- fully, and finally his pain and lameness disappeared. He hasn't lost a day of work since, and the cost was only a frac- tion of the amourft he had paid for al] the shots and pain-killers. He .is eternally grateful. “As to myself, T am 41 years old and have _ twins age 171, and a baby 2'». Both births were natu. DR. BRADY ral and I was healthy and happy while pregnant, but right after the baby was. born I began to have severe, knifelike pains through the left hip that occasionally traveled down the left leg. My doctor diag- nosed -Sciatic Rheumatism and gave me a pain killer that allevi- ated the pain but made me sick to my stomach and. lowered my al- ready low blood pressure to 80, and I began to have fainting spells. “Liver and iron shots raised my blood pressure to 120, but the doctor says no more drugs for Sciatica — I'll just have to suf- fer. And believe me, I do. “Since the Sciatica is more se- vere before and immediately fol- lowing menstrual periods, the doctor tells me I am in the changes and perhaps the Sciatica will go away when I am thru the changes." sit * * * 2 The diagnosis of “sciatic then. matism" is virtually . admission that we don’t know. what the heck is the matter. And the doctor's prognosis? that perhaps you'll get over it in, say, six or eight years, is for the birds. The sciatic is the largest nerve in the body. It runs from the lower spine back of the hip joint - down the back of the thigh and leg. Inflammation of the nerve is called sciatic neuritis or sci- atica. Sciatic ‘‘rheumatism" is _ &@ meaningiess térm. From your. description of your trouble if would. seem likely that it is from pelvic tumor, inflamma- tion or infection. And here's a hutch: Your cal- cium reserve may have been de- pregnancy — are you following a high calcium diet? ~ Caltium, in physiology, is mildly analgesic. That is, it tends to mod- erate or alleviate pain. - ‘* * * ‘Women with id ideas about the “change of life (menopause) Dieaxe “rite. eacieswing @ Samped for my free pamphlet The Meno- pause, The: reader's doctor, string- ing the patient along for six or eight years waiting for her to ‘‘get through the changes,”’ is a dis- grace to the profession. *: * & Sign@d «letters, not more than one ’ ~ page or 100 words long pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not dis- ease, diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. William Brady, if a stamped self-addressed envelope is sent te The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan. (Copyright 1959) his government. Voice of the People Man Remembers Time First. Pontiac t Sold a, The death notice of Alfred R. Glancy and the editorial a few days later in. this paper, in which the birth of the Pontiac car was told, brought back an incident in connection with this automobile which came to life circa April 1926, during the Prohibition era. * * * Those who were present on that April morning may remember that the new Pontiac with its Indian head radiator cap was driven to the front door of the Administration Building" on Oakland Avenue. Mr. Glancy came out ‘saying in part: * * * “This car is named after Chief Pontiac. He was a great man. In fact I think he was a greater man than | am, for if he were here today, he would not be breaking the only bottle of champagne in Oakland County over the head of this car, he would be drinking it.’ * x * After the christening I drove the car down to the Nephler-Oakland Company's salesroom on Perry street where I was employed as Sales Manager. After many demonstrations, I sold it to a Pontiac resident. So, while Mr. Glancy had the distinction of making the first Pontiac, I claim the honor of having sold the first one. 3915 Oakland Dr., Bp iemingham Henry A. Houston Fiery Exchanges Loom at Latin American Parley By PETER EDSON WASHINGTON (NEA) — Both fireworks and explosions are ex- pected at the fifth meeting of Con- sultation of Ministers of Foreign Atfairs of the American States — to give it the full name treatment. It makes a delayed opening in Sentiago, Chile, Wednesday. The United States, hoping vainly for a short and sweet sessioff of not over five days, will send a delegation of about 10 officials. It will be headed by Secretary of S.ate Christian A. Herter, just back from Geneva, and U.S. Ambassa- dor to the Organization of Amer- ican States, John C. Dreier, Other delegations, fecling that the solu- tion of their worries will not be peaceful or simple. are counting on a conference of 10 days or two weeks, minimum. Latin American Communists have anounced that they will hold a meeting in Santiage at the same time. They are counted on to stir up whatever trouble they can, Chilean authorities say they can. handle it. Though the present Chil- ean-government of President Jorge Alessandri is conservative, he has a strong Communist party to deal with. When it was’ first proposed to hold the Foreign Ministers meeting in the Chilean Congress, Cuban Communists protested, The meet- ing was moved to a hotel. When the Cubans announced they might not attend the conference, Com- munists said they would demon- strate in Santiago in Cuba's cause. The main controversy inside the Foreign Ministers Conference will be between Dominican Republic's Foreign Minister Porfirio Herrera Baez and Venezuela’s Foreign Min- ister Ignacio Luis Arcayo, ; Dominican Republic, under Presideht Rafael: Trujillo, lays claim te being grand champion of anti-communism, His govern- ment has reserved the right to speak on the Communist menace at Santiago, though that isn’t on the agenda, Trujillo has the strongest Latin American army — over 25,000 men well equipped and trainej. General Trujillo claims he needs’ this force for self-defense against Comniunist enemies who seek to overthrow Case Records of a Psychologist: Martha has 10,000,000 Ameri- cans in the same boat with her. And, despite all of our modern tranquilizers and sleeping pills, these 10,000,000 keep running back to their doctors, for drugs cannot give a “Worry Wart” the broad perspective that religion offers. Quit being so idolatrous that vou place us medics and your hospital insurance policies ahead of God Almighty. By GEORGE W. CRANE CASE C-414: Martha G., aged 38, is a spinster high school teach- er “But. Dr. Crane," sister began, “Mortha is always running to doctors with some ailment or other, “They usually mollify her with a box of pills. Then she feels pretty good for a few weeks. “But within a month or twe, Martha develops DR... ORANE some other ailmen{. I am sure she must have consulted °5 dif-— ferent physicians in her lifetime. “What is wrong with my sister? Is she a hypochondriac?”’ MEDICAL: WORRY WARTS Yes, but Martha is just like millions of other neurotic Ameri- cans. * her married * * * Recently NEWSWEEK had an interesting discussion of this prob lem and stated that. 19,000,000 Americans consult a doctor each ~week. But what percentage of this group would you guess had .no _ diagnosable physical ailment what- * soever? Well. the figure is 0 per cent “Which means that every week Martha has alraest. 0 O08. 900 Ame: v you try God? Is it any wonder that billions of dollars are needlessly ‘spent on sleeping pills and patent medi- cines and tranquilizers and vita- mins and laxatives? What's the answer? mental outlook! Such hypochondriacs — (worry warts) are focussing their atten- tion within their own epidermis! So they Idse perspective and grow more cowardly. : * * * You can only be brave when vou are focussing on somebody other than vour self! A mother bird thus will never fight a cat to protect herself. A wider But when she forgets self in worry over a fledgling on the ground, that same mother bird Will actually fly past the stalking cat and peck at the latter's eyes. What changes the timid mother bird from a peaceful creature into a fighter that will risk her life against a [eline Goliath? A widened perspective! a * a Religion is thus the best anti- dote for the growing tendency toward neuroticism and even in- sanity. For religion extroverts your at- tention from your ewn epidermis and your “inards” to the needs of Korean orphans or starving Hindu and other defenseless. hu- man “fledglings’” all over the globe. GOD CURES WORRY WARTS All the sedatives and tran- quilizers we medics can prescribe will never cure you 10,000,000 weekly Worry Warts, ‘so wey don't *' * * chickenhearted, reckless ‘So Quit being so anyway. Take a “ hai) view You are going to dir ‘pooner or: later, « why @y = Ube? ower a. Dominican Republic press and radio have for years carried on a vicious day and night campaign against President Romulo Betan- court of Venezuela, This year the attack has also centered on Cuba's Premier Fidel Castro. * * * But to practically all Latin Amer- ican countries, General Trujillo is a dictator who has suppressed De- mocracy in his own country and seeks to destroy it in the Carib- bean, . Trujillo is accused of buying arms all over the world and hiring mercenaries to build up his army, bringing them into his country as immigrants. In blunt language, Trujillo's en- emies are out to get him — overthrow his government, kick - him) out of the Organization of American States, or something. The question is, what and how. without violating the Havana Con- vention of 1928 which bans the or- ganization of expeditions in one state to attack another? There was a grand preliminary row in Washington’s Pan American Union building July 30, during the five-hour meeting of the OAS Coun- cil to agopt an agenda for the San- tiago foreign ministers, Very little about this was carried in U:S. news media, but it was big stuff ‘in Latin America. Portraits _By JAMES J. METCALFE God Rest You, Edgar He loved this world, and loved so well . . All folks he ever knew .. . And to the noblest way of life... . He was forever true... He wrote the music of his heart. . . In friendly, kindly rhyme . . . The Poet of the People through .. . His years and for all time . . . His good example taught us that... Wherever we may roam... “‘It takes a heap o’ livin’ in... A house t’ make it home”... A man of faith and courage and... Of deep humility . . . Devoted to hts duty and. . . His loving family . I knew him and admired him . God bless and grant sweet rest . . . To him who lived for others—our . . . Beloved Edgar Guest i... (Copyright 1959) Let God Be Your Tranquilizer Quit being so idolatrous in the worship of your own lifespan. Open your eyes and include God. Spastic colitis usually indicates fear. So does a lot of high blood preemie and peptic ulcers and insomnia and smoking and drink- ing and over-eating. And think of the millions who are scared lest they get cancer! Team up with God and cut out those unwise fears. . Active church people Jive longer; have fewer divorces, less delin- quency among their children; few- er ulcers and insomnia, lower blood Pressure and make far less calls on us doctors. So get hep’ ® x * id Go to church Sunday so you can widen the windows of your soul. gph mt write to Dr. Geofge W Crane’ tee ss < =. Pontiac FE Pontiac, 4c sta self-addressed enve Me eieten and 2c to cover typing and prin costs when you send is psy cal charts and pam- phiets : ia (Copyright 1959) sociated —_- entitled > 4 } , | EIGHT | | . Reds OK Plan Oxtord Students | Travel to Moscow, for N-Detection on London Bus : | LONDON uw — A lumbering old . London double-decker bus with an Russian Delegate Beat) 5 merican in the co-pilot’s seat! U.S., Britain by Being trundled off Monday on a 4.000-; ciatit “h 'mile trip to Moscow and back. Lee tele ch | The big red bus, decorated with . typieal posters advertising Scotch GENEVA (AP) — The Soviet whisky, carried 40 Oxford Uni-) Union has agreed to a system of versity students. i aftificia] satellites to detect any sneak high altitude explosions’ At the wheel was student John | once an agreement is reached ban- ehranes ane . oe ning nuclear weapon tests, i ocee ee Bm RESRECS | scientist. i * * * i Soviet delegate Semyon K. Riding behind ready to take Tsarapkin beat the United States over when Cochrane got tired, was! and Britain to the punch Monday Carey Parker, 24, of Bryn Mawr, | by giving Soviet acceptance to the Pa., another student. plan at the three-power confer- Parker and Cochrane had a ence negotiating on an agreement two-day instruction course on how | to end the tests. to drive the 7?2-ton bus, which was * * * built before World War II ‘ ’ The satellite detectors were re- * * * commended by a group of US.,) They will travel via British and Soviet scientists Warsaw and Minsk. named by the conference. But the aay received their governments’ “nel Parker said: We want to mect Western delegates have not yet Young Russian people and find | structions to enter formal ap-/out what they really think about proval on the conference record. things. ht, CABINET POSE — Assembled in the White House Cab- inet room are, clockwise around the table, Deputy Assistant Gerald Morgan, U. N. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, Interior Secretary Seaton, Treasury Secretary Anderson, Vice President Nixon. Attorney General Rogers, Commerce Secretary Mueller, HEW Secretary Flemming, AEC Chairman McCone, Budget Director Stans, Civil Defense Director Hoegh, Labor Secretary Mitchell, Berlin. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1959 a? | \ | city in Jamaica, West Indies, is|been covered by the ocean in an being undertaken by onderwater| : f Exploration of a sunken pirate;cameras. The city is said to have earthquake in 1692. Postmaster General Summerfield, State Secretary Herter, Presi- dent Eisenhower, Defense Secretary. McElroy, Agriculture Secre- tary Benson, Cabinet Secretary Gray and Presidential Assistant Persons. Standing in the rear are, left to right, Presidential assist- ants Harlow, Paarlberg, Kendall, Merrimnan, McCabe and Ander- son. The other three, seated back from’the table, are not irentified. U. S. Ambassador James j.| The trip is costing the students ave _ Wadsworth ang Sir * Michael about 50 pounds en each. Wright of Britain said they wel-| They bought the bus — retired | . . comed the Soviet move and would from active service and used tor Asks if Business Can put the scientists’ recommenda- instruction — from London Trans-| Add $18 Million in Taxes tions into treaty language for con- port which operates the city’s! : sideration by the conference. es and bus services. LANSING (UPI) — One hundred Hal Boyle Says: They plan to sell it back to of Michigan’s industrial ambas- : ; set 5 ; -'sadors were asked Monday to give The Irish Easter rebellion in| London Transport when they re-'sadors were asked Monday to gn itax guidelines to the legislature. 1916 began when a German sub-, : | marine landed Sir Roger Case-| | “Can business absorb an addi-! ment, the Irish leader, on the | London’s 1952 smog was .blamed tional 1 Smillion dollars in taxes’ Irish coast. ‘for about 4.000 deaths. without further loss of industrial lexpansion and jobs to competing states.” the ambassadors were i asked in q letter sent by Sen. Clyde | H. Geerlings tR-Holland).” | Geerlings. chairman of the Sen- ‘ate Tax Committeé? said the an- | swer “may prove useful to the con- iferees in the present Michigan tax | struggle. By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK tAP)—''I’m a hob- byist saloonkeeper, and a_ reluc- tant success.’ acerding to Burton Browne, who is making a fortune out of male nostalgia. “Im the only saloonkeeper who is listed in Who's Who in Amer- ica, the Social Register, and Dun *& Bradstreet.”’ An ex-c 0 m- mercial artist | “Either industry can or cannot who once felt ‘absorb an additional 18 muilion lucky if he got $18 for a gag idollars tax increase as suggested iby the Democrats without further cartoon. Browne j D9 ‘Josing industrial expansion and is now head of |jobs to competing states,” Geer-| a large Chicago lings said. advertising firm j | specializing in electronics. But convivial- itv has been a Criticizes New | BOYLF life long hobby jwith the big, bluff, gray-haired Senate Building Architecture jexecutive, And now his hobby has ibecome a big business. He's on Don't overlook the peace of mind that insurance brings, know- . { aes ing thet you are protected day ond night agoinst a devastating WASHINGTON (AP) — The ne ha to Become a «t Cs Penney financial loss. Peace of mind is worth everything to your well- editor of the magazine Architec-|°f chain-store conviviahty. being and it’s our business to help you protect it. Call us. 23-mil-| * x * ee | “In business today you have to Peace Of Mind Perhaps you're one of those fortunate people who have poid insurance premiums for yeors and have never had a loss. The ‘thought moy occur to you, “What do | get for my money?”. tural Forum says the new, lion-dollar Senate office building | In an article in the current is-/“But there aren't very many plac- ; sue, editor Douglas Haskell wrote;es where men can entertain men. ithat. the building, which opened’ «yoy take a client to a SIBDOE | this session, illustrates “‘a state ob for a couple of drinks and {of architectural illness attended |, steak dinner, and what hap- iby extreme’ mental confusion.) 5.n5> By 9:30 you're both -stand- j threatening ‘tc become ‘chronic IN ing outside on the curb wondering | Pilly Le Roof executive asst (what = ilip L. Roof, a . /ant ‘a tfc Capitol architect, said Browne and a group of friends | hat Haskell was a little late with “Over the problem in 1953 by or- ‘his criticism, since the designs 8@nizing a private key club ‘for had been available for years be-/Sentlenttn, deliberately decor- fore Construction started. | ated in the plush decor of 1905. Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE 101 E. Huron FE 4-8284 ee Saloonkeeper Sells Conviviality looks tired, meager and rundown. entertain a lot,’ he remarked. | There the tired businessman, “Surprisingly, we haven't had, could foregather with his pals any objections from the wives,” around the bowl that cheers, said -Browne. “Our waitresses) make deals, be pampered by have to be pretty, but after five} beautiful waitresses dressed in minutes a wife can see they are) scanty turn-of-the-century dance no threat.”’ hall costumes, and sing old-time «\Jost of our members have, songs around an old-time tink]ing daughters as old as the waitres-| plano. ses. It's all innocent fun. The “We picked a 1906 atmosphere,” waitresses — some of them are said Browne, ‘‘because that was young actresses — are for looking, the last time man was really king not pinching,,) Browne said. and millionaires really lived like! «,¢ a member dates a waitress. millionaires.” “his key is lifted—and she is fired.” x * * : | The club was a huge success . from the start. So were later clubs Mueller Brass, Union he organized in Manhattan and Agree to Year Extension the. nation’s capital. ' But they are only the beginning PORT HURON # — A one-year, Today § No. } 100% EXTRUDED ALUMINUM STORM NDOWS Value! “ $10-\95 6orMore....... Less than 6.....$21.95 ea. We Also Specialize in ALL ALUMINUM @ Awnings @ Carports @ Basem’t Comb. @ Siding @ Patios @ Como. Doors @ Porch Enclosures ALL AWNING ~ & STORM WINDOW SALES L. W. BOGERT—Owner SALES OFFICE 3415 W. Huron 8t. FE 3-7800 WAREHOUSE 233 S. Telegraph Rd. PE 8-1123 in Browne's big nostalgia bonan- Contract extension between the za. SO many members complained Mueller Brass Co. and two unions of a lack of robust male convivi- Was announced Monday, promising | ‘ality in their own hometowns that a year of labor peace for Port | Browne now is franchising a na- Huron’s largest employer. i tionwide chain. | The agreement was réached with ! Twenty clubs are already under United Auto Workers Local 44, rep-| 'way—or being planned—in cities resenting 1,500 workers, and the In-) ‘ranging from .San Francisco tg ternational Assn. of Machinists Atlanta, Browne eventually fore- Lodge 218, with 435 members at isees a network of 200, ‘the plant. They are ideal for America’s, The two-year contract, reached booming new expense account’ after a 12-week strike in 1957, was! aristocracy, A lifetime member- due to expire Oct, 14. It includes’ iship costs $25. Any drink—from a provision for a six cent hourly! ginger ale to 50-year-old brandy— pay raise which will be effective! is $1.25. Sandwiches are a nickel. Oct. 15. “When you walk into one of the) ——_H__—_——_— | clubs,”’ said Browne, “you are au- . jtomatically a millionaire, 1906 BOOKS a . a * Light Fiction for | Although they are strictly gen- Vacation Reading tlemen’s clubs, members can] QLD PROF’S BOOK SHOP bring their wives, But wives can’t 9 W. Lawrence St. ‘come alone. Brace-Smith Funeral Homes Insured Funeral 0 | County Births Recent births in the Poritiac area. recorded in the Oakland County Clerk's office are listed below by, the name of the father. , | Arrangement Plan Permits you to take care of the in- evitable out of future income, rather than leaving a financial burden on SAVE i i 2 ingham tise oe ave: Beye M OU Wreavery , pur, ° fo Fad rn } Me etty. 4 ry L e = ar } ; ° er, ° 3 i Gives peace and assurance to those you love. ff sonn B: Wagoner, 972, None Lane | up to i ! | Robert D son, 1832 8S. Bates i Piease ca!! or write us for | James M. Lamoree. 790 Graefieid | l mary! r le : = a = is fs e : : i Hirata nscletorisit 210 or aGR: Wiliam 5. soe khister. 17005 Georgina | % Gerald E oie ies Jr Fak gp Ge ve i William G. McKechnie 7 E. i _Brace-Smith Funeral Home Walia ulin, 1324 E. Lincoln. George D. Mille a a ae . en F 138 W. Lawrence St. FE 5-0738 Earl J. Smith Helena Rubinstein’s ANNUAL BEAUTY SALE |} Buy one... get one free! Limited time only! Est. Since 1886 prereet RA tin, 1809 Cole Everett R. Austin, Charles P. Barker. 4805 Charing Crosn Francis M. Cahouet, 1984 Grae leid Richard Craig. 1714 Witherbee Charles A. Dean, 640 Baldwin Robert A. Dryden, 16121 Lauderdale Elbridge G. Dudley. 1767 Graefield Richard J. Dunn, 1561 8, Bates 714 Community Nat'l James E Davis. 6494 Thorncrest Bank Bld Walter H. Hasler dr. 1185 Winch- ndependen an £- combe } YOUR oad Frank C. Heidel. 1589 Hazel 2 f AGEN Wayne H. 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HOOSE THE LOAN THAT FITS YOUR NEED MONTHLY INSTALLMENTS 36 MONTHS $16.39 $31.94 $63.88 $79.85 Free Life Insurance Protection With Alt Home Improvement Loans 12 MONTHS $ 44.17 $ 87.72 $175.44 $219.30 24 MONTHS $ 23.34 $ 45.89 $ 91.77 $114.70 LOW BANK RATES FREE LIFE INSURANCE PROTECTION FAST SERVICE FINANCIAL SERVICES when it’s a question of money, °- - see your banker first! ONTIAC. | STATE BANK ri LOG Pep Set * true-to-life * THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY: AUGUST 11. 19 59 THIRTEEN F a Panre ae No Variety Going Steady Can Be Dull By JOSEPHINE Low MAN | good old days,” you are wrong 4 moment is absolutely the best time. if what’ | write todny sounds always have felt that the period of/0f all. I am so excited about life’ “the to you like I am living in life in which I am living at the Going steady deprives young men and women of the experience they need the opposite sex. in knowing many types of Understanding Is a Two-Way Street By RUTH MILLETT Half a million teenagers are going to try to understand their) parents, thanks to a three-year program being set up by the Fu ture Homemakers of America. Well, its-about time somebody cot the bright idea that maybe parents could be understved if the teenagers ever gave it a real try. For the past decagle. ‘vhile parents have been doing their best to understand their teenavers and the world they live in, the kids have been led to believe that un- derstanding works only one way. Whenever adults have bothered to discuss the teenage-parent relationship with teenagers, it has been in such terms as what's wrong with parents?” or “what things do your parents do that you wish they wouldn't do?” —and so on. It has become a routine matter to put such questions to panels of teenagers and to submit them as a part of surveys on how young people feel about their elders. So it's heartening to Know that the Future Homemakers of Ameri- ca have decided that it might be a good idea for young people to try to understand their parents— instead of just to cricize them. It's easy for a teenager to list all the things wrong with ee by Sour Whedler Slim, long, elegant panels newest approach to decorative dra-, ma, Use narrow frames, Nature-inspired accents for wall, | door, Easy cross-stitch, choose} colors. Pattern 526: | transfer of two 8 x 21-inch sprays, | color chart, key. | Send Thirty-five Cents ¢coins) for) this pattern add 5 cents for. cach pattern for 1st-class mailing | Send to The Pontiac Press, 124) Needlecraft Dept., P. O. Box 164,) Old Chelsea Station, New York, 11, N.Y. Rrint plainly Pattern Num- ber,.Name, Address and Zone. Send for a copy af 1959 Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book. It has, lovely designs to order: embroi- dery, crochet, knitting, weaving, quilting’. toy’. In the book, a spe- cial surprise to make a little girl happy — a cut-out doll, clothes to color, Send 25 cents for this book. MEET for LUNCH RIKER FOUNTAIN Sealtest Ice Cream PE eng ee! Prices ee nar a strict,” ” ete. parents, such as ‘‘too | “too critical of my friends, take a lot more effort, to try parents insist on It will for a teenager stand whyehis certain rules and regulations that |. jday. ‘and have so many things I want ito do, without the time to do them, | that I rarely ever think of the aa lat all. The current ‘‘going steady’’ rou- {tine is the only thing which makes me feel smug about the past. How| igmuch fun the boys and girls are jmissing today! When I think of the ‘terrific stag lines they used to, jhave at dances in Kentucky, I feel sorry for the young folks to-| Then a girl was considered | “stuck” if she even finished a} |dance with the same man. Now she! is REALLY stuck with one man | for a whole evening. I think that going steady is the dullest idea imaginable, I am sure, it would have made an old woman| out of me at the age of 16. Why| do the girls stand for it? Of course, it all started right after the war!) when colleges were crowded with! veterans and there were three meni! to one girl, My own son, who was any- | thing but the going-steady type, at one time considered it be- cause he hated to have to make dates so far in advance, ‘How. ever, on second thought he de- cided that the penalties were greater than the benefits. Going steady deprives young | men and women of the experience they need in knowing many types -iof the opposite sex, When a girl has dates with many different friends, this develops her social) skill and her personality since she must adapt to the various interests and personalities of the men she sees. It also makes life much more} \interesting for her, Then, too, I firmly believe that a girl is less apt to make a mis- to under- have had the opportunity to learn what qualities she wants the man ‘she marries to have. There will be plenty of time aft- er marriage for settling down to ‘date’’ one man. Better think a ‘seem old-fashioned to the teenager |long time before you throw away or why they object to certain of |this special, carefree fun period in teenagers have been encouraged | to live in their own little world. It will be good for them to take) his friends. For a long time now, | your life! Tomorrow: “‘Bicycle Riding vis, Fun and Gets You Outdoors.” take in marriage because she will ° 4 ne “SS oS SIZES $—10-12 }[ M-—14—16 ey ay SU, Se 4769. j— ‘ican Legion Auxiliary, ‘the auxiliary were announced. * bg * The Americanism plaque ‘won by Chief Pontiac unit ‘Pontiac, Mrs. chairman, George Ault, chairman, child welfare trophy. 377, a tt Community Service plaque for best all around community serv- ice went to Auburn Heights, Mrs, Kenneth Collins, sate) Former Students of Church Class Honor Ex-Mate Former members of a Cen- tral Methodist Church School class taught by the late Mrs. R. B. Dickie, honoreq Esther Carhart, former class member, Friday evening at a coopera- tive dinner held at the East Walton boulevard home of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Andrews, Miss Carhart leaves today by Uf sae. Hol for a teaching position in ams Seattle, Washington. She has just returned from teAching} Plenty of protective cover for kitchen chéres makes this a fa-| Guests at the dinner ineltiied vorite apron, For bathing baby,| Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Paulsen, sew apron in splash-proof terry ad tat Mera ee cloth. A sew-easy Pattern, Tomor-| Cenk and ANS Sohn ahd Er- row's paren Hale Misses’ nest of Lake Orion; R. B. See eal an ae. acount (14- Dicwie’ ‘of Warren, Geraldine ; : Wilkinson, Mr. and Mrs. Fred 16); Large (18-20). Medium size it hy fix. John lakes 2%) yards aoanch: Beith and Mr. and Mrs. Jo ; Beechum. Send thirty-five cents in coins two years in England. Legion Auxiliaries Honored / Fete Local Groups At the state convention of Amer-; awards for test, local units of the 18th district of awarded to Anita Capron of Bir- was Joseph Phillips, Milford unit with Mrs.: won the Past BRONZED for this pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for 1st-class mail-'F Yarns ® Lessons THE KNITTING NEEDLE ing. Send to Anne Adams, care of) The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern) . Dept., 243 West 17th St.. New York! 11, N.Y. Print plainly Name, Ad- dress with Zone, Size and Style: Number. | 452.W. Huron FE 5-1330 Relax ... in Air Cooled Comfort while you have your PERMANENT or SHAMPOO-SET THELMA CROW. Owner RANDALL'S HARPER METHOD SHOPPE SAVE _ Just a few steps around the corner to our Men's. and Children’s Store. Fashion decrees Shoes are elegant this season wardrobe around our collection of Mid-Heelers and Towering Slim Heel Perfection. a good, clear look at the world) Italy became a republic on 2-1424 in which t their parents live. ‘June 10, 1946. . 88 Wayne St. FE - Ne ... pivot your AO” to - 60°: Suedes in Autumn hues... jewel tone patents _..+. smartly tailored reptiles, supple ealfskins and Italian hand-worked leathers for every step of the new season. lies House of Fashion SHOES I. MILLER JOHN MARINO PALIZZIO THOMAS CORT JOHN SABATINI and a host of others 100 . Woodward Ave. at E. Maple _—BIRMINGHAM— - 16 W. Huron FE 2-0294 In the Pan American doll con- second prize in Class 1 was /mingham unit The poppy poster contest second place winner in Class 3 was Roch- ester unit. Eighteenth district award for presidents parley for all- around activities went to. Auburn Heights. Junior activities plaque was won by Chief Pontiac unit 377, Mrs. Verner Macom, chairman. -BABY’S SHOES BY EXCLUSIVE NEW DUCTYL PROCESS Every Mounted Style REDUCED ys LIMITED TIME ONLY ri ean "Style 45 Ferret Stand it! | 8x 100r5x7 frame SPECIAL Reg. $16.95 $127) bronze These: drastic reductions are possible because the folks who do our baby shoe plating must keep their skilled workers busy between seasons. SPECIAL Style $1 Onyx Paperweight Genuine imported onyx serves as 8 regal setting for baby’s first shoe and will be cherished forever. 1496 $41% Danish Moderne Styles a'so on sale. Solve your gift problem with this gorgeous new concept of the baby Style 71 Bookends Reg. $15.95 shoe bronzing -art and SAVE! bookends as low as $9.38. Other SPECIAL $5 Here's a gift to thrill Dad or Grandpa . . Baby's first shoe beautifully bronzed and mounted on a smart ashtray. “IMPORTANT! Genuine BRON-SHOE so'd metal DUOQTYL plating process soid only in retail’ stores’. . . Never thru the mails. Have baby's name and birthdate engraved on your order... Only 10c per ietter. Style 49 Ashtray g Reg. $7:95 SALE ENDS AUG. 24 bring Shoes in TODAY JEWELERS ne Bloomfield 1662 S. Telegraph Rd. | FASHION SHOP Shop Every Night ‘til 9 — Saturday ‘til 6 DAY WONDER SALE TUESDAY ONLY! Bargain Close-Out of All Summer If Your Size Is Here, Its Original’ Apparel It’s Half Price Summer Blouses Values to 6.95 ‘2 And ‘3 Summer Dresses Values to 29.95 Values to 69.95 Sportswear Entire remaining stock shorts, 5°15 15°25 tapered pants . «+. Print skirts, bermudas, summer skirts. Regardless of Original Prices 2 Swimsuits Entire Stock All Famous Makes 2 To “4 Y2 Off Cocktail Dresses Values to 49.95 ] 5 ° ‘20 Spring Coats Values to 49.95 *T 5 To ‘20 Values to 6995 25 To *3 > Swirls - Housecoats Values to 7.95 $37 To *4” Summer Bags Values to 10.95 “9 » SB Sport & Beach Shoes Values to $5 *] 50 To *3 Famous Make Waist-Cinchers Were 7.95 to 9.95 * Bras Values to $5 Now $5 Now $3 (Discontinued Styles) , 6.00 Umbrellas Now $4 + 11.95 White Pique Coats $4 5.00 Beach Towels Now $3 Jewelry 25¢ » 1.00 } t i 4 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1959 Automation Aids Dock Workers Contract Gives Coast Men Portion of Extra Machinery Profits SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Pacif- ic Coast dock workers will get a cash share of increased produc- tivity resulting from automation. An unprecedented three - year agreement granting that went into effect Monday between the Inter- national Longshoremen’s and Warehousemen’s Union and _ the Pacific Maritime Assn. The 17,000 ILWU members — longshoremen and clerks—ratified the pact under which the employ- ers will contribute 1 million dol- lars the first year as the work-' ers’ share of increased productiv- ity. * * * The 1 12 million dollars & a rough estimate of the share due workers .the first year from in- creased productivity because of increasing container shipping, more powerful loading cranes,' and other developments in mech- anization. : a 3 * The union pledged not to inter- fere with installation of new dock Theaters Offer Reduced Rates to Senior Citizens Pontiac's two Butterfield thea- ters, the Oakland and Strand, have announced formation of a ‘‘Gold- en Age Movie Club." Y * * * Ladies over 62 and men over 65 bership in the club, which will give them admittance to either theater at reduced rates. People in these age brackets may contact the manager of either theater to fill out a regis- tration form. They will be give- en an identification card entitl- ing them to a 50-cent discount at any performance, according to Arthur H. Sanford, Manager of Pontiac Butterfield Theaters. er obligations,’ Sanford explained. * * * “When membership is sufficient, we plan to organize special free events such as bridge morning matinees, and extra entertainment for the additional relaxation of members.” Pontiac Burglars Centralize Work Local, years old will be eligible for mem-' , “There are no club dues or oth- get-aquainted _ socials, | in Heavy Trading NEW YORK wW — The stock market rebounded ‘smartly early today from yesterday's sharp set- back. Trading was heavy. Leading issues rose from frac- tions to about 3 points. The recovery was general. The, most ground was gained by issues) which were the biggest losers in yesterday's shakeout, the worst 'since last November, Brokers noted that the mutual | funds and institutional buyers began to take up offerings yes- terday afternoon at the sharply. lower prices and this led to a steadying of prices above their Mart Rebounds | s % 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 FRUITS Apples, Dutches, bu. ......cssesee. $2.50 Apples, Rea Bird, DUS Se ience ee ene 3.00 Apples, Transparent, bu. ......000.. 3.00 Biackberries 16 qts cesar eereoeees O.UU Blueberries, No. 1, 12 pts. .. a) les Cantaloupes, bu... ..._...... -. 3.50 Peaches, Hale Haven, bu. “.. -. 4.00! Peaches, Red Haven, bu. . 3.50 Pears, Clapp’s, bu. : . 3.00 Pears, Sugar, bu. ees « 25u Plums. eurben ye bu. .. 2.25 Watermelon, bu. ......-+e0. eee. oe» 3.00 *%é¢ VEGETABLES green. flav, DU. .ieoeses green, round, bU. ..ce..cceese Beans. Beans, lows. Traders were ready today to pick; up what they regarded as bargains! at drastically reduced pices. New York Stocks (Late Morning Quotations) machine for speeding cargo ic c doz. behs. ..... Sas seeleees 95 HICAGO GRAIN achinery g Figures (etter: decimsi) point Sre <ignthal cae e Tae beans) S38 cee aug. 1d AB) — -Opening has been struck down by federal handling, Employers agreed to Admiral ..... 18 Kellogg... 374 Celery. pascal, 2i9 doz. ..........0. 275 / BTAE Gats tuew type) rt maintain the present work force, . | Air Reduc 86 | Kelsey Hay ... 466 Coane coe URS. oospeneeeerne 2+ 100) gen oe pee Gero court Littl except for attrition by retirement} Strike Several Houses ‘ict Sis 387 Kennecott ++ 108 Cucumbers. ‘dill, Pancy ..0...060... $75) Mar aie Dee ne e Little Rock school. board is- and health -resignations. H S . dates Lid .. qou Kresge, SS ... 34.6) /Coctmners: el as sonore $00) May Sasi 1.98" ace DE ECIOS Be aan sued a statement saying it was } sree! . cu fs, siicers creer Bln oo ; a ee Reis LS ‘ Pr : The contract, which runs to on harper treet an Am Airlin 23 Lor Gass *2.. ae Dill, dos. bens Foo wen neoten 00/7) 960 st eeeee 184 sh nee TSH, confident “‘the people of Little June 15, 1962, carried an 11-cent-- Two on Mohawk ae eS. Mie eg ates tad nite Gee al Po 1.86! Dee vi... - 13614) Rock will accept this challenge to an-hour wage increase for long- - Am Mardy .. 931 Lockh Aire ... 273] [Koblrabi. doz, bens... Bien aa vumesc: Takis) Resume the peaceful operation of shoremen, to $3.08: and 14 cents Am Motors -. 441 Tne Tae 0) ea es ate. nattd (drums) its high schools. There is no rea- for ship clerks, to $2.93, The in-|. Pontiac Police reported several) Am N Gas .. (7¢ Lone 8 Gas ... 416 /Onions, green, doz. ...... pie May ooo. 1.167. son to anticipate anything else.” J a S ‘5 Lorillard .... 43.1/0 50 Ib. bag ..... 50 | ; eet creases are retroactive to June|break-ins and attempted break-ins) Am Tel & Tel 85 [outa Nash. #3 [Parsley curly dos Ochs... rol The school board has assigned 15. expirati Id _|on Harper street and Mohawk road anaconda... 62.6 Mack Trk ... 44.2 Parsley root. doz. wepecessessces) tcc) a three Negroes to Central,and three , expiration date of the old con h lage wec 1. Manning ....-+ re Peas, Black Eye, bu. ............... 5.00 . . ; tract. early this morning. Armco Stl... 744 Martin Co ... 43.2) Peppers, Cayenna: PK. wcceseveceeee 1.75 Second Oil Firm to Hall high. It used a court-ap- * * * * Armour & Co 29.6 May D Str... ‘33 Peppers, hot, bu. ......--+-+-+2--- 2 00 proved pupil placement law to N : : Atchison ... 29) Merck 80.6; Peppers, Pimiento, pk. ........ se... 1.75 . , fr. and Mrs. Leslie Irwin, of| Aveo Corp : 133 Merr Ch & S 193) Peppers, Red sweet, Pk. .......... 2.00 Ups Gas Prices keep out some 55 other Negroes Soviet Exhibit 488 Harper St., reported their home) Beit *,02,---: Sag Mpls Toms -o. tar t/ Peppers. eweet, bu. ee en who applied to attend the white . had been entered by burglars who peeing a : ~ Monsen Ch pen Radishes, red, ae : iagscocs Lees in Pontiac Are schools, Closes: Attendéd removed a rear door from its|Bond strs ..' 23.1 Ree pige an Tl eerie ceree oe - 1 a x * * oses; Aft hinges. Bere wart: 2, Meme a, cae sleet Aa te ae El wv seesnd major oi to-|__ Support for another last-minute ° e * * * Briggs Mig .. 105 Murray C aa 28 2 2.00 ‘on major oll company to- se tionist maneuver w: t . — Brist My... 37.1 y Cp ... 28 |Squash, Butternut, % bu. 0 : grega as no by Over M illion Nothing was found missing at Brun Balke .. 98.6 ee cack Role” paves! tal ib ee }o9)4ay announced a 1.8 cent a gal-jevident. A boycott of Main Street . . . _|the Irwin home but $2 was taken Burroughs, |. 2 Nat Dairy me a3 Squash. Summ ne Me ba. . a = lon increase in wholesale prices|stores began Monday, ‘Amis Guth- NEW YORK (AP)—The Soviet/from a purse at the home of John/ ¢slum, ‘Soup OT Net Lead. 1ne |qurnice ba ers, ees ween 150 in Pontiac and the Detroit area,|"idge. attorney for the segre- ‘Scientific and Cultural Exhibition| whitson, 492 Harper. Gan Dry... 21.3 NW Centrai .. 27.4|furnips topped bu. mene 2.50 ; ; ; gationist Capital Citizens Council, has ended its 42-day stand here. , : Cdn Pac . 20.2 Norf & West 96.6 | Standard’ Oil Co.’s price boost) -.) f a3 i One ci a , Police believe the burglars | Capital Airl .. 163 No Am Av 381 GREENS istiswea ; called for the “‘‘buyer’s- strike, e city official said it was the ne ron Se aw: (eee he NEE Steg: Sit canoes: Bo 2 i - lagi the lead of Shell Oil Co.,/charging that Main Street mer- best-attended event in New York! ™®V omc) house _ |Cater Trac 1046 Ohio Oil ....: ei apes oN alas hg which announced a similar increase| chants were helping Negro lead- since the 1939-40 World's Fair other trying to gain entry, They |Ches & - 1.2 Owens Cng 84.4/ rustard. No. 1, bu. 50 Ss ; * | attempted to force open the front | Eh). £48 Owens Tl GI 99 | gorrel. bu ° sacl sepelanc III 13s] yesterday. ers to obtain integration. Fair. = * baa ¢ 476 aad Clark Faulo 022 pee GO @ Rl & spinach, ba. cece. Spaces 2.25 * * * . - But spot checks of stores showed Atttendance was estimated at} 00rs of houses a , 484 Coca Cola ...152¢ BSn,ALW Alr.. 28 | swiss Chard. ae eae vee Lib] : lentvilol customers and Chambe 1,100,000, compared with about 45) 498 Harper. Cole Palm (1.400 BODREDL | -° Q2 Turmips, Du. se scceeeesee 1.50, Other companies said they were|Penty of customers and Chamber 400,000, pare ) Colum Gas .. 216 pare Da... 444 still studying the increase, but it|/of Commerce officials ignored the million for the fair. At the home of Margaret Ebert,/€9" PGi," 59.3 Penney. JC. 1104, SALAD GREENS eases x &* * Consumer Pw 363 Pa R --+ 16-4/Celery Cabbage, G08. ...--.++--00- $2.50|WaS expected they would follow threat. 480 Harper, the thieves cut a Gon Br Perr: hb6 2 Pepsi Cola fae Beier: Ba eee PIN 200) suit. Guthridge also urged persons Exhibition Director General front porch screen but couldn’ t! Gon Bak 545 ee Do oH A gacarole ne Alexei N. Manzhulo said just e-|force the door_to the house open. ES cn este P Bhilco INT 35 | Lettuce atone 4 scien heap Shell gaia their ore Monday night’s closing that « «« * Mot: toe Ebill Bet oe ttuce. head, bu ealers probably would up the hig i 1) 87. & : 83.3 Le Jeaf, DU. ....scccteresceeee 2.25 he thought the exhibition had been| an attempt was made to rakes : 22 Pure Oil . 2) | Romaine set sesesens. 150 ee of gasoline two cents instrumental in creating an d sac é a gallon, putting the customer | a rear door lock at 444 Harper, Curtis Pub ... 116 Republic ‘Bu, . 16.3 : at:osphere of mutual trust be- and the rear screen on a house Bere - Spee 31 sia at 29.9 cents - gallon for tween the United States and the arper was cut but the pi an ee gs Ren ee 96.1) - regular grade gasoline and 33.9 Soviet Union. at 468 H 3 ue beat 45.1 Rey Tob - 54.2 Poultry and Eggs for premium. house wasn't entered, police re-inow chem |." 864 Ro al Dut : 444 DETROIT POULTRY : Du Pont... 964 Safeway St... 37. id its i ‘ ported. * -. * Du Ait 38.1 charg de $)-6| DETROIT (AP) — Prices paid per|, ee said it genie aa Car Refuses {0 Turn . maten ttc’ #8 rie Sears Roeb .. 447 ound ey. Detroit for No. M 1 quality eeting competitive conditions. MOUNT CLEMENS ww — The ’ Hanns Michkelsen, of 153 Mo ley auto L ..2) 822 ieee te “ay Heavy type hens 17-18; Light type ~~ ** strikebound Cross Co. claimed - ~ hawk, and Choren Manukian, of|EI & Mus .... 67 Sinclair) “i/77 g9.2|hens 9-10; cee anne Both Standard and Shell said production hit 35 per cent of p {S T 163 Mohawk, reported attempts hadjerie rR "13.1 Socony ....+0. 45.1) Oover 5 5 ibs “922-24; Turkeys heavy type| prices have been subnormal for , u in ! OSpI a aie tof front and side |EX-Cell-0 “111: 45.4 Sou Pac ...... $9.2) Youn bens © more tha: normal yesterday because of 55 pegs ve ee a Fairb Mor ... 8 S0u RY Boos el DETROIT EGGS e than a year. Standard said! men who are working, eating and bee cs __,,,,,doors on their homes. SE Ss a Sta Brand... i14| DETROIT (AP) — Eggs FOB Detroit in| ‘he latest price increase “‘only par- —— . ide th = 1 ‘- hil A car thet ot going xiraight, Bas beet) Std Oil Cal .. 525) case lots federal state grades: tially restores’’ price reductions in Sulean pom Workers’ picket” the according to i iver, overturn Freep Sul :... 30 Gis oo pes Ss — Grad “mn > extra | th = ates ° ° Std Ol NJ .|; 52.6 -4 dium 26-30;| the past 18 months. i Commerce Township this morn-| VJich igan Sale Ss lEruchavre --- 28. Std Oil On ... §76|smaill 18-21; Grade B large 32; Browns— gates. ing and sent its seven occupants Gen Dynam .. 495 pai Rls + He Grade Aexize large 41; large 38; medium : : * *® * to Pontiac General Hospital. ars ane 29:2 Sun Oil ...:.. 60 |” Commercially graded: N B f . The company said the men were --++ 968 Suther Pap ... 39.2 '‘s—_G : : : eG of Foreign C Orel a Tel 781 swift & ‘Co. He sates mre is rye ane aan EWS In re working a 10-hour day, spending Charles L. Coffey, 21, Detroit 7 ] |Gen Time 87 Jenn Gas ... 343) small 1642; Browns — Grade A jumbo 36; theih off-time in a dormitory : a: . | . Texaco ....... 84.4 ¥y-93 44; - : : : told Oakland County sheriff's depu- Tumble In june [Genenco. vies 67.6 Tex asi 313 pes daree, 33- af i bere |32%s 3342; me mie Goldi, of 82 Green St.,| which the automation machinery ties he was approaching a curve ber Prod .. 576 Jextron : reported to Pontiac Police early/tirm had furnished with cots, tele- j LANSING — A downturn last Ghiette 31. Timk R Bear. 56.6 today th are | ; ’ on ive road at Charms road , ; sirsticha Gee e? oe SS eee AE - 193 Livestock adh ay ere someone. broke into his|phone and television set. Food and “turned the wheel but the|Month in foreign car regi Gooey nee 91 Twent Cen ... 303 - jhome through a window and had supplies came from four freezers. . . : vas reported today by Secretary | Goodyear cron aves tol ot car kept going straight.” wa po y Grah Paige .. (2.6 Un Carbide ana t DETROIT LIVESTOCK stole a pair Of pants and a wallet ce ; af State James M. Hare. Gt A&P fl oe ass DETROIT Aug. 10 (AP) — (USDA) — | containing $32. Cross officials said the men Two passengers, Penny Des- * * * (Gt No ae ee a ‘ Unit Air Lin 386 Saucnicr neere and boilers, these om were regular production em- jardins, 16, of 23060 Majestic St., | Titles -issued totaled 1,771 as Gulf Ou _....114 Pale, Aire 4 | Drise atound oS pen cone Carly Supply; Nineteen windows were reported| ployes. Oak Park, and Mary LaVerdue, | against 2,061 in June. fara r >: 33 un Gas Cp ... 353|fominating: cows comprise about’ 1o|broken yesterday by vandals at a 16, of Detroit, were reported in iHomestk ..... 412 US Lines 32.3 per. cent. these, Sota a cmon Eastern Junior High School, 25 S UAW Local 155 struck last week toda Hare noted the decline oc- | Hooker Ch... 412 oe: Slaughter steers and heifers stead , ‘lin an organizational dispute. the hospi SOUY 8 | curred when business was spurt. {2p'Rant’.: ge’ Us, Too"... ana] meray Aeleg! mont cap gues rune an the top of a flag. *.* + IIS Se onfand Stl... 50.~—S«C«w pjiohn a... cholic 8 .50; e - oo ing ahead and most domestic nee Cop wea ina Van Raal 33.3 Bulk choice. steers b. 27.50- School, 441 Oakland The 55 men represent more than James Atchison, 21, Carolyn R.| cars showed spirited sales gains. Interiak Ir'..! 281 West Un Tel 38.4/2850: few loads high choice to prime ‘akland Ave., accord- a third of the: 150 men the com- Steed, 17, Robert McFarlen, 18 sigs Int'Bus Men’. 4174 Weste A BE .. 12 /8901120, Ib. | steers | 2415-29 2° s0-2¢ 00" |ing to city police, Charles Murphy, 17, of Detroit, He aala ft alent fy 5 wan: pote dll os, Wests Eli---- 808) most good to low choice heifers 25.00- pany maintains constitutes its Coff 72 it, O "| ing in foreign car appeal im [ht pater (7) We fv eaoa ny Gal, ae SS yo eee eee, ayaa an en Thomas McKay, of 99 Florence|work force. The union says Cross and ey were treated for minor) wichigan. nt Shoe 355 Woolworth 56.8) utility. steers and heifers 20.50-23.00:|St rted to Pontiz lice Mon-|h roduction f f 200 injuries and released. Int Tel & Tel.. 345 Yale & Tow | 34 | Cows S0c higher. utilit cows, 18.00-19.00:| 4. EE POSTER LO EOnBE POP CE MOD aS a Piccucaa Hones On ae The accident occurred about| Volkswagen registration dipped Johns Man B72 Ynght. SRAT 135 | Soe Sei vi abo. se tchers and sow Hay Seat ehiing eqmipment valued eee othe Des g + ‘ cne iJ Hy 12:40 a.m. from 602 to 463, Opel from 175 to Jones & L .... 752 Zenith Rad 1022 opened ieeeady:, Most, mee nes “J more than $30 was stolen by} Pickets contend only hated of an: 5 E 0: OU, P m 31 to 22. K AVERAGES ers 14. ° m . ! Students Getting Smarter| However, bucking the trend were soNEta TORK: (Compiled by the As-]265 1 tPA atin number. 1100-230 "Tb. Building materials valued at $25/ine union claim. Renault which gained from 235 in| 3015 - 60, | 14.85-15.00: number 3 and 3, 240-270 ib.| were stolen yesterday from a home > AD M PI) — Am- ga Indust. Rails vul Stocks | 13-75-14.00. number 3 270-300 I> od? 2> under construction at 11 Victory; A grinder who claimed 12 MHERST, Mass. (UPI) June to 284 in July, the English | Net change ....+11 28 +. 8 : og 4 as , Co di i Noon” today “ll i3aa'8 13975 99.2 229.8] 19.75-12.25: two loads mostly number 1/Dr., according to city police. years with the firm but wouldn’t herst College students are getting Ford, up from 152 to 171 and the Prev. day 3437 1370 992 229.21 800 Ib. ‘sows BSO10S00 2 nnd * SOP oe give his name sald workers had smarter. Officials saidvof the 269 | Fiat, up from 132 to 162. Week ago 35o0 1423 90) 235-4) _Vealers Salable 200. Steady: choice|_ Rummage. St. Theresa's Thrift) iost overtime, raises and bonuses who received bachelor degrees: Month ago 346.3 145.2 97.9 231.8] and prime vealers 36.00-40.00: standard|Shop. Every Thurs. 674 Sunset.| S# eve , iii ece i eg: Year a 2748 1007 821 185.0 [Op y this year, 46.8 per cent were honor ; 1958 high aes cdr eit elias sl ctce seen, eee cul (end) (ality ‘| Orion. —Adv.! When the union came to the | gradustes, the highest percemage|R@POrt Population Rise [12 joy, rash Ws $21 2118) Shee salable, feo. Linted (sail Ss, 3 ‘ 5 b ig oe 2. 3, SUpDDIY slaug ig ambs, ewes, ee er in Amherst’s: history. LITTLE ROCK TI . 1958 low 234.7 80.9 729 1566|iambs all steady, two small lots choice . A 2 — The poulation to prime spring lambs 24.75; scatterin ng ood and choice lambs -21.50-23. tilt: y of Arkansas decreased by an esti-, ty to. good sambs. 9 3150; cull to In Chicago § Sewer Pipe Highest mountain in Iceland is meet 58 percent between April They Celebrated Boubly rpmtost “good to Cneice: feeders! Tabs 6,241-ft. Orafa Jokull. 1950 and July 1954. Pontiac Motor E You May Be Short Wo If you do not work a may be eligible for S. If in doubt file for S. office or contact your Committeemen. NOTICE! . §.U.B. Benefits for a enough money to disqualify you from draw- ing a State Unemployment check OR a waiting week, but the amount earned is less than 65% of your take home pay, you You Can File for Out of State Unemployment 1. Signed, Local 653 mployees Local AW. Eligible for rk Week full week, but earn “U. Benefits. U. B. at the S. U. B. local union S. U. B. | ' / Church and Parliamentary | Club. Chapel Memorial arc | Beans, Ky. Wonders, bu. . Beans, Lima, bu. .......... Beene aeiese |Beans, wax, bu. Beets, topped, bu. Beets, No 1, . Broccoli, pt t ecm pene . Cabbage, bu. ...... o Cabbage. Curis, bu. ... Cabbage. Red, bu. ...ce. ee poese Sprouts. bu, ... Carro BOR SSSA AGE SG BS mt et ee BED mrwoaset Saas wae o-iws SoSesSSSassage Se WEST HARTFORD, Conn. | (UPI) — Joseph Torneo wasn't too ‘surprised when his wife gave birth to twins. After all, he’s a “twin, and it was his birthday. Eraser Uses Pumice CLEVELAND — A pencil eraser is made of rubber impregnated with parts of pumice. Death Notice MRS. EMERY A. CLARK Mrs. Emery A. (Bessie M.) _ Clark, 65, of 3551 Baldwin Rd., Lake Angelus, died this morning at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. She had been ill more than two years. A former resident of Pontiac, ishe was a past president of MOMS of America ‘Unt 2 and a mem- \ber of the Gingellville Baptist Study Before coming-to Pontiac, Mrs. Clark had taught school in Clinton Pa. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Lewis W. Loch of Silver Lake ‘and ‘Mrs. Philip’ LeMire of East | Detroit; a son, Emery A. Jr.; ;seven grandchildren; six great- | grandchildren; a sister and two | brothers. Service will be held at 1: 30 p.m. Thursday at the Donelson- ‘Johns | Waterford Board OKs’ Hatchery Road Lights The Waterford Township Board last night voted approval to install six street lights on Hatchery road from Hedge street to Brightwood street. Residents had petitioned for the lights approximately two months ago. Jim Seeterlin, township clerk, said an assessment of $2.11 will be levied for each of 64 lots along the street. The Board also approved pur- chase of two cars for detectives in the Police Department at $3,675. Board members rejected bids for a police interceptor vehicle until the 1960 models are available. Rank Has No Bearing on Class Arguments DAYTON, Ohio At the Air Force Institute of Technology at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, a lieutenant can tell a colonel: ‘“T don't agree with you.” The Institute offers officers &d- vanced training in engineering, logistics, installations engineering and business, Officers of all ranks mix and argue in class, and one instructor says: ‘There are strong, | | Funeral Home with burial in White disagreements and rank “doesn't! - enter into this. at all,” | MARKETS | Soybean Prices Jump-Out Front CHICAGO — The September soybean futures contract jumped well out ahead of the rest of prices today in light early dealings on the Board of Trade. * * * The grains were about steady except rye which ran up as much as a cent within the first several minutes on word of additional de- clines in the small commercial, supply. A small volume of export busi- ness overnight steadied nearby wheat deliveries. Yugoslavia bought about 350,000 bushels of hard and cyprus, 350,000 of red. * * * Short cov ering was credited with the brisk gain in September. soy- beans. Grain Prices LITTLE: ROCK, Ark. ()— Seg- gregationists today planned a ral- ly to ask Gov. Orval E. Faubus to do something about impending integration of two white high schools here, The Little Rock School Board said it expected peaceful opera- tion of the schools when they open Wednesday. * * * Margaret Jackson, president of the League of Central High School Mothers, said, ‘‘we are inviting every patriotic citizen to meet us, on the Capitol grounds, to “‘pay tribute. to our great governor and tell him that we need and want his continued leadership in our fight against federal dictator- ship.” She said she had received ‘doz- ens of calls’’ from people want- ing to know what could be done to stop integration, * * * Faubus has remained silent on his plans to take a hand against the impending desegregation. But he has said he does have plans. The governor stopped integration in the high schools last fall by closing them. But the law he used s od a it a at Capital to Seek Aid of Gov. Faubus not to patronize firms which had Negro employes. The segregationist leader said he opposed violence at the school openings—such as that which oc- curred at Central in 1957 when nine Negroes entered, Federal troops restored order then. * * * Reports that “‘simulated wide- spread violence” would be staged. Pan Rally at Central were carried by the Arkansas Gazette. The newspaper said city officials had heard the capitol grounds rally would flow on to Central high, where fire- crackers would be exploded and faked fist-fights staged to create an illusion of mass disorder. But Police Chief Gene Smith and Mayor Werner Knoop said they had not heard any such reports. VANCOUVER, B. C. — Auto en- gine ‘‘rumble’’ can be silenced by careful selection of gasoline and oil, three members of General Mo- tors Research Laboratories told the Society of Automotive Engi- neers’ international West Coast meeting here yesterday. “Rumble,” they said, usually oc- curs in a car “while passing or climbing hills with loads. It re- sults from excessive pressure build- up in the combusion chamber when hot engine deposits set off several “flame fronts’ in the air-fuel charge — in addition to the normal ignition of the spark plug. R, F. Stebar, W. M. Wiese and R. L. Everett of GM Re- search Fuels & Lubricants De- partment said this pressure buildup’ makes a ‘“‘low-pitched,. rapping” noise or resonance in’* the crankshaft main bearing zone of the engine, Unpleasant to the ear, rumble also robs an engine of some of its power. Their tests indicated “certain (crankcase) oils from combustion chamber deposits which cause more rumble than other oils.” Generally, the new 10W-30 oils had better ‘rumble ratings” than oth- ers. . * * * The GM men found ‘that fuel af- fects rumble in two ways: (1) by deposits it forms in the combus- tion chamber when it burns, and (2) by its inherent resistance to deposit ignition when exposed to high temperatures and pressures in the combustion chamber during the compression stroke, Most effective in silencing rum- Plant Becomes Home for 55 at the Cross Co. plant. ‘‘We’ll stay in here until ‘we beat them,” he said. The grinder said i. another representation election is held the union will close. A temporary injunction against mass picketing was dissolved last Friday when the union agreed to permit peaceable entry through the gates. There had been several minor picket line disturbances. GM Lab Men Tell How to Quiet Engine Rumble ble were fuels with phosphorus ad- this is because phosphorus com- bines with tetraethyl lead during combustion, forming lead-phosphor- us compounds that are less likely to cause deposit ignition. Thus, *antiknock advantages of tetraethy] lead are maintained and, at the same time, rumble is mini- mized by phosphorus. x Amateurs Buy Paint PITTSBURGH — About 400 mil- lion gallons of paint dre sold to amateur painters yearly. FULLY DIVERSIFIED INVESTMENTS When you invest in one of — the. leading Mutual Funds, you buy a share in 80 to 100 or more selected securities, giving you full diversifica- tion, We'll be glad to help. you choose a Fund which will give you-a fully diversi- fied investment. Drop in, write, or phone. e. WATLING, LERCHEN | | Pontiac, Michigan rs a ot eB Member New York Stock Exchange end other leading exchonges Wa —s Lerchen & Co. 1402 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. ’ Please send me more. information f about Diversified Investments. j Name seer FOP eneneretesedeoer I address Be ee eeeees g City eee eR Re reteoe Locates Her Lost Pup . CHICAGO (UPI)—Mrs. Dorothy Hudson, 35, of Anchor- age, Alaska, had a joyful but muddy reunion in a sewer pipe with her little lost dog yesterday—the climax of a ‘needle- in-a-haystack-type search in a city of 220,000 dogs. - Mrs. Hudson had flown ta er, Mrs. Edith Becker, and couldn’t bear to leave her dog, an 11-year-old mongrel called Wahine, behind. So Wahine fol- — lowed in a crate in another plane. x * While being fed at Chicago’s Midway Airport, the lone- * some, frightened dog escaped son, already in Miami, hurried back to Chicago, determined to find the dog she couldn’t abandon. * . xk OCU “She's worth nothing really,” Mrs. Hudson said, she’s my pet.” Mrs. Hudson was undaunted at the odds against finding Miami, Fla. to visit her moth- his cage and fled. Mrs. Hud-, “but the dog. There are 220,000 dogs in Chicago and an estimated 1,000 running loose every day. She set up search headquarters in a nearby motel and enlisted the aid of children in the neighborhood in the _search. Finally, Wahine was spotted in fields near the airport over. the weekend but Mrs. Hudson was unable to get close. “She was too scared,” Mrs. Hudson said. « * Then Bruno Stahlbasch,. x: * 14, of Mound, Wis., visiting relatives here, spotted the dog yesterday in a sewer pipe. Mrs. Hudson donner coveralls and crawled in after Wahine. x * * “at first she didn’t know then I ‘touched her and she couldnt get away from her.” Mrs. Hudson wriggled out me,” Mrs. Hudson said. “But began licking me all over. I with Wahine in her arms. She gave Bruno a’ $50 reward and Wahine a pint of <a to devour. One let’s We Help Renters Become Home Owners Come in real soon and homes and see how we can help you own one of your own. have a chat about to a Mortgage and Capitol Savings 75 W. Huron St., Pontiac CUSTOMER PARKING Convert Your Seasoned Land Contracts Established 1890 Acquire Your Deed! , & Loan Assoc. FE 4-0561 IN BACK OF OFFICE Oe ditives. The GM researchers said . - FOR INVESTMENT SECURITIES and - ACCURATE QUOTATIONS ~ CALL C. J. NEPHLER CO. FE 2-9117 818 Community National Bank Bidg, CONST TO COASE™ a en al ele ad