fF The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau _Cooler tonight. Warmer tomorrow, (Details Page 2) Forecast 4 HE | ON TIAC PI €. wd vk 4, = & LP 115th YEAR tr kkewekn PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1958—44 PAGES sare ERE BREE on kok an a a kc tk & + * Scott Racket Probers Hear Former City Teamster Testifies Union Boss Sought New Hearing for ‘Purple Gang’ Head By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL 3r. Ex-Teamster Robert . P.| Scott charged his ex-boss: James R. Hoffa once asked him to “see what you can do” about getting a new trial for Harry~ Fleisher, notorious head of Detroit's “Purple Gang” now in prison. Seott, of 31 Bloomfield Terrace, made his second) appearanee before the Sen-| ate Rackets Committee in) Washington , yesterday to! level charge after charge against the head of the Teamsters Union. He told the McClellan committee that Hoffa, sometime prior to 1948, | approached him and asked him to| intercede with the late Judge George B. Hartrick for a new trial for Fleeces: * * It was not made pen whether} Scott ever did approach the judge. on the matter. Judge Hartrick, who died yes terday in San Francisco hours before Scott testified, sentenced Fleisher, Myron (Mike) Selik, William W. (Candy) Davidson, Pete Mahoney and Sammy Chi- | vas to long prison terms in 1945 for the holdup of the Aristocrat Club in Pontiac on Dec. 2, 1944. -eScott said the five were given) stiff sentences as the -— aon cite Boston, industrialist Bernard Senate would provide college 6S ua an ee -Goldfine for contempt of Congress. ' scholarships and student loans as| a B 2 Possible Teamster Plot . Unlikely in Oakland County By PETE LOCHBILER Torch probers today eyed a possible Teamster con- spiracy extending to Genesee and Wayne counties, but who served as special prosecutor in the case. ‘DEAL’ FELL THROUGH The agreement, Scott testified, was that Sigler had promised the, judge a seat on the Michigan Su-: pene Court in exchange for the 25 to 30 year sentences handed Fleisher, Mahoney, Davidson and (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Jumbo Shots for Hay Fever New Injection Called, 98 Pct. New York Scientist NEW YORK (UPI) — A New York scientist has come up with a new type of hay fever-shot de-)” scribed as 98 per cent effective. ft differs from the conventional anti-hay fever injections in two) ways. Only one shot a year is need ed, in contrast to the from 15 to! shots. And it is made of mineral oil and ragweed extract. The shots! now being used are made of al water base and extract, | Dr. Mary Loveless stressed | that the medication is not now generally available and is still in the experimental stage. She add- ed however that it has been used with good effect on hundreds of patients in five university medi- eal centers. She contended that the mineral oil in the jumbo shot was absorbed more slowly than water in the hu- man system. She explained that this was one of the reasons why the new-type injection given three months before the start of the rag- weed season maintained sufficient strength in the body to last through the hay fever months. * * * Ragweed extract in the new ex- perimental shots as in the old- style ones, is aimed at strengthen- ing immunity to the pollen which causes hay. fever. —— Phe water— have been started two to six weeks before thé onset of the hay fever). season. Normally they are contin- ued two to four times wes until the om frost. “ Circuit! | | | Effective bys i € jeaners seater base —shots—tsuntity 2 2-the-B 580 ee x k Pontiac ‘Man. Accuses Hoffa VAGUE ABOUT GIFTS — Teamister Presi- dent James R. gifts but ‘‘no cash money” relations consultant, George from pressed only a Hoffa testifies he has received Kamenow, whom he ‘discussed, labor contracts. Hoffa ex- vague recollection of just what gifts and favors he has accepted from Kamenow. harges Hoffa sked Help on Trial x * * a Detroit labor with RELATES HOFFA REQUEST—Robert Scott, of Pontiac, a former Teamster Unign official, fells the Senate Rackets Committee James R. Hoffa once asked him to intercede with a judge on behalf of alleged members of Detroit's no- _ torious Purple Gang. Scott said he didn’t do it. kk AP Wirephotes ° os vate waded ‘deeper into its legisla- Itive backlog today to take up al j1*s billion-dollar bill to spur U-S.| ‘education. | The House—with most of its iwork done for this waning session | |—arranged to vote on whether to. Swamp ed by Bill Backlog, ~ Senate Eyes Education Vote WASHINGTON (AP)—The Sen-|The action stems from Goldfine’s:well as measures to raise the level lof teaching, refusal to answer certain ques- | ‘tions’ before a subcommittee in- | vestigating his relations with pres-| lidential aide Sherman Adams, | SCHOLARSHIPS, LOANS The education bill before the; apparently not to Oakland. Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem said a check of county records over the past two years showed no incidents here comparable to the Aug. 3 arson of a Flint dry cleaning pickup station. Attributed to the arson is the death of Flint Team- ster Frank H. Kierdorf, who authorities believe was ac- of Frank’s uncle, Herman, | ‘cidentally burned while setting it, and the disappearance| =. 4 ce * It carries 280 million dollars for four-year college scholarships of up to $1,000 a year each. It also includes 315 million dollars: in student lean funds and 230 million for grants to the states” to buy laboratory equipment for grade schools and high schools. ' Additional . millions are ear- |marked for institutes and training icenters to improve instruction in iscience, mathematics and foreign languages as well as to better the| teaching of general subjects. The Senate passed three major tax bills yesterday in a sudden burst of speed which somewhat brightened hopes for an early ad- journment, All three bills went to conference with the House, which had passed them previously in different form. . * * * First the Senate passed a bulky excise tax revision bill, Then, in a late night session, .it finished work on an equally complex tech- nical tax revision bill and added | - to it a hitherto separate measure designed to give tax relief to small business. : The excise tax revision bill would cost, about 39 million dol- Judge Hartrick Dies Suddenly During Vacation County Circuit Court , Jurist Served on Bench Since 1936 Death came _ Judge Hartrick was born July: 2, farm off FROM IRELAND inally from Ireland, first relocated in: Michigan. Oakland County. Bar a “It comes as a gréat shock to learn of the passing of dudge George B. Hartrick. An extreme- land Circuit Bench and served the people of this State and Coun- | ty well. Assn., but to all.” on the family farm, He there. ~* * * the Oakland County Bar. (Continued on ‘Page 2, Col. 2) _ suddenly yesterday to Oakland Coun- ty Cireuit Judge George B. Hartrick. Hartrick, 67, ‘died . at 12:20 p.m. (EST) while in San Francisco to attend a meeting of the American |, \Bar Assn. Death was at- | tributed to a heart attack ora stroke. 189] to Thomas and-Mary Eliza- beth (Briggs) Hartrick on a tiny Woodward avenue be- tween Eleven. and Twelve Mile _\roads, in what is now Berkley. The Hartrick family came orig- made residence in Canada and finally The passing of Judge Hartrick brought this comment from Wil- liam B. Hartman, president of the ly able jurist, he graced the Oak- “His passing is a great loss, not) only to the Oakland County Bar Hartrick's early life was spent continued to help his. mother and father as -| he began his schooling in the Reyal Oak public school system. He grad- uated in 1910 from the high echaol Then, just three years later, Hartrick received his law degree from the Detroit College of Law. That same year he was admitted to Had he lived, Judge Hartrick might have tried for his fifth six-| year term on the Oakland bench in JUDGE GEORGE B. HARTRICK Fair, Cooler Tonight | With Low Near 60 Fair and cooler with the low near 60 is the prediction fot the Pontiac area tonight with today’s inortheasterly winds becoming light and variable tomorrow. Partly cloudy and warmer with a high of 84-88 is tomorrow’s fore- pe by the U.S Weather Bureau. A low of 64-68 with scattered thun- dershowers is expected tomorrow night. For the next five days, temper- atures will average near or slightly above the normal high of 82 and and Sunday. The mercury soared to a ‘sizzl- ing 90 de Ss ag early morning a cool 64 shortly after 5 a.m. At 1 p.m, the recording was 81. Pravda Already Nyets! ! MOSCOW 9) — Pravda, the Communist party newspaper, to- day denounced President Eisen- hower’s new plan for the Middle East even before he presented it te the emergency |; ion of the United Nations Geueral Assem- bly. . norma] low of 61, Friday will be cooler, Saturday warm again, with cooler’ temperatures Sunday and Monday. Precipitation will total one-third inch with showers. to- morrow night, or possibly Friday for ‘thecthird time “te ma bt brought temperatures tumbling: to Uraes Swift today set forth a sweeping jenduring Mideast peace. , The plan included swift. creation of an einergency : U.N. police force and an international economic dévelop- — ment program. In a dramatic personal | Assembly, the President at hysteria with tactics of “ballistic blackmail.” Eisenhower laid down his pro- posals for peace and economic stability in a prepared major fore- eign policy speech carried coast- to-coast on television and radio, and beamed around the world by the government's Voice of Amer- ica radio, He said his program prs promote a true Arab renals- sance. The alternative, be asserted, is: “The danger that nations under aggressive leadership will seek to exploit man’s. horror of war by confronting the nations, particu- larly small nations, with an ap- parent choice between supine sur- render. or war.” ee oe = keds: yewoich edie Moscow, Eisenhower compared the Krem- lin’s cofduct. with someone who cries “fire” in a crowded assem- ieee points: 1 A sciaad-by United Nations peace force. 2. An Arab-run Mideast €co- nomic development loan fund and a technical assistance program, financed jointly by the Arab states, the United States and other countries, presumably including the Soviet Union, bly. a The President's Proposed ie Creation of UN. Police Force Charges Soviets Foment War Hysteria in Speech — to General Assembly : . Highlights tke’s Speech, Page 8 World’s Toughest Bargainers, Page 23 . Related U.N. Story, Page 2 UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (#—President Eisenhower six-point plan for building - appearance before a tense extraordinary. meeting of the United Nations General the same time accused the _|Soviet Union—without naming it—of stirring up war U.N. Hall Is Dream for Debates UNITED NATIONS, NY, ) —The U.N. emergency General Assembly meets in a debater’s dream world come to life, ee vided for leaders from $1 nations to let the world Imow their wews ‘Remember Sugary’ dent Eisenhower today as he on the five-minute trip. About 3,000 persons car emerged. his hat and waved. the President. the U.N., occupied a front front of the car. “(Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Hotel to address the United Nations. His motorcade was escorted by 85 mennecrces policemen Thousands Applaud Ike. NEW YORK (AP)—Thousands of persons cheered Prest- drove from the Waldorf-Astoria were standing opposite the hotel’s driveway as the President's familiar bubble-dome In response to the cheers, Eisenhower ‘amiied, dotted Several thousand persons lined the route. Another 5,000 waited at the United Nations Plaza. Secretary of State Dulles sat in the back seat with Henry Cabot Lodge, U.S. ambassador to seat. « The American flag and the President’ 8 ang flew at the _ About 20 Hungarians at one point along the route ‘waved a banner, reading: “Ike, remember Hungary, please.” 3. A constant U.N. check to curb inflammatory propaganda broadcasts to. and from the Middle | East nations, 4. A U.N, study of possible con- trols on arms shipments to Mid- east countries, including Israel, to javert,an East - West munitions race in the area, 5. Unspecified new U.N. moves to guarantee Lebanon's a and independence after Aineri- can troops are withdrawn, 6. An expression of U.N. -deter- mination to assure Jordan's sur- vival as a nation, presumably by replacing British. troops now there with U.N> personnel. . Calling world attention to. the tense situation in Jordan, Eisen- hower warned that “indirect’ ag- gression discernible in Jordan may lead to conflicts i the peace.’’ Hé did not fix blame for this, but said consequences of a far-reaching nature could re- sult. - Eisenhower proposed fast Gen- eral Assembly action on the parts | (Continued on Page 8, Col. 2) an ex-aide to Teamster | Skate Passage Strengthens Nautilus Triumph President James R. Hoffa. | Atty. Gen. Paul Adams said in-, stigators are attempting to link’ ithe Flint blaze with other bomb- ings there and more than a dozen, learly this year in the Detroit area. | t *. “Ef there is a pattern indicating; ‘a conspiracy, then we will defi-) initely ask for a grand jury in-| vestigation, ” said Adams here-yes-| ‘terday afternoon. Revising their theories about | the Flint arson, which caused $14,009 damage to the Latreille in suburban Burton Township, authorities were faced today with the loss of the. two persons they are holding in the probe. In Flint, a hearing was to begin before Circuit Judge Stephen Roth at 10 a.m. at which authorities had to produce evidence against Teamster leader Jack Thompson or release him. HELD UNDER SUSPICION - Thompson, 41, a fellow business agent of Frank Kierdorf’s at Lo- cal 332, has been held under sus- picion of aiding the obnal viele In Pontiac, Ziem and his corps of investigators hoped to ques- | tion once more Myron D. Weiss, |—just six days after its older sis- Second U.S. Atomic Sub Crosses North Pole WASHINGTON (AP)—The Unit- i ed States staked a new claim tow rmastery of undersea plonedringt ‘today after a second atomic sub- ‘marine had crossed under the, North Pole. ¢ The USS Skate reached the |pole at 8:47 p, m. (EST) Monday | ter, the Nautilus, emerged from an historic 1,830-mile trip across the polar cap. The Nautilus ar- rived yesferday in Portland, Eng- land, and got a big welcome, x * * - The Navy released word of the Skate’s achievement last night without any fanfare—in a two paragraph statement, This con- trasted sharply with the special White House ceremony arranged last Friday to announce the Nau- tilus’- voyage. . The bare announcement. last night said the Skate surfaced in an ice field some 40 miles from the | trip. The Navy said the )-the-North Pole to ‘Fadio Word | C was just the opposite from the Yautilus, which began its joacey | from the Pacific, The a ‘long Skate left New London, Conn.) As with the Nautilus, Navy of-,between the world's bwp major ficials did nothing to call atten-|oceans. tion to the military significance But the military ‘danectence of of the transpolar trips, President|the feats was made plain in re- | Eisenhow er cited the Nautilus’|}marks by Sens. ‘Prescott Bush July 30 and entered from the At. ‘achievement as pointing the way|(R-Conn) and Clinton P, Ander- |\toward a new commercial seaway son (D-NM). lantic. Skate, the third U. 8. atomic sub | built, was continuing under-ice | explorations, a friend of ay og Kierdorf. ~ (Continued on ‘age 2, Col. 8) The Skate's path to the seis” < SKATE GROSSES NORTH POLE — Depart- _ment of Defense in Washington photo of the U.S, nuclear submarine Skate, as has issued this the sain: ar Wireprbts “it revealed the Skate had crossed the North Pole while conducting under- ice explorations in * Bush, telling the Senate of the Skate’s. trip, spoke of the Navy's delivery of a ‘‘one-two punch.” Anderson said the submarines may have given the United States the means of preventing war. ‘We now have vast new ocean areas from which to wage war,” Anderson said. , * * “There our submarines can hide, can remain undetected for long periods of time, and can fire missiles at anyone who dares to attack us.” The United States currently is building a fleet of 33 atomic in service, several soon to “go inte service and others in the process of construction or on the authorization list. Cmdr. James F, Calvert, a: vet- eran submarine officer who grad- uated from Annapolis in 1942, is the Skate’s skipper. The Navy said 10 officers, 87 enlisted men and 9 civilian ~technicians—are+ making the Arctic trip, The Skate is expected to return to New Lon- Behind the podium is the of the United Nations. os je et ot of the podium, * “:. °# The big power veto does not apply in the GeneralAssembly, “< ton e Ex-President ireehe Likes Ike's Speech INDEPENDENCE,” Mo. # — Former President Marry Tre man made this comment today on President Eisenhower's speech te the United Nations Cee Assembly: ; “A good, constructive speech on which I hope the United Nations Assembly will act im- mediately.” Truman listened to a broadcast - of the. speech. oe, ee eee eee eee simak iit ae In reas Press , | Re tseginedeg, Oe? tueae News ... eee | Editorials . a terete 6 Markets ..... ets. 1m don late this month throug the Atlantic. pies Every technical facility is pro- ° * Vee SP ee A UPD = A! ‘bettie of 1.700 U.S. Marines be-| gan pulling out of Lebanon today -— the United States’ answer to’ Russian charges; troops bai tars for at “The Marines began their Move} [Delegates to THE: PON TIAG PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1958 rie Es ee fe : ? et a2 ¥ ; tie 3 ae = Grapple With Poverty, Misery of Mideast / p, Magnificent, U.N. ‘Building Houses Debate «UPI correspondent Jack V. Fox | has a returned from Lebanon. In the following dispatch; he contrasts the scene here with that in the New | York headquarters of the United | Nations.) | By JACK V. POX UNITED. NATIONS. (UPI) —The ‘cool, antiseptic corridors and eoun- ‘cil chambers of this glass and stain- iless steel edifice on New York's) East River. seem so remote and) the Américan detached from the glaring Heat and| 'lviolenee of pe Mideast. * * Yet here vacighs the represent- ed lounges and rooms, Here freshly starched schoolgirls duti-. fully listen to the tour “guides, ‘In the delegates’ cocktail lounge, theenew Miss Universe is visiting. She holds court to a ring of diplo- ‘bending attentively over the beau- tiful young girl in an orange-colored ‘dress. x * A few days ago it was the narrow and squalid streets of Beirut that ll walked, shoes gritting in sand ispilled from bags a Lebanese army early today by pulling their heavy: ‘atives of 81 nations meet to gr apple punposts. apes up fo the beaches where JSuly# Wat Abe in- ident Cha- elf his gove ort Was ‘threatened by outside ate Marines.on the beach esti- mated it would take two or three days before ail 1,700 men and are’ ‘placed The withdrawal leaves approx- imately 9,000 airborne troops and 3,000 ences in Lebanon. * * x. The Marines’ boarded landing craft at, Yellow. Beach, ‘the same _ strip they hit nearly a month ago, and were ferried to the ships of the US. fleet standing offshore. ‘would cigse some with the big power struggle in that ancient land and seek some solu-| tion to its poverty and misery. T have just spent a day wan- | dering through the ric’ chly carpet: i _(Continued From Page One) | next April's judicial election. His, present term expires Dec. 31, 1959. He was first elected in 1935, re-elected in 1941, 1947 and 1953 elections. After: bis admission to the Bar, Hartrick opened up an office in Royal Oak and practiced law there unti] he became a‘ candidate for I ithe Circuit . Court judgeship 22) years later. Hartrick’s passing took from the, bench of the Sixth Judicial Circuit of Oakland —: the second old- Busy Sesato Turns fo Education Bill (Continued From Page One) lars a year in revenue. One seq- tion, sought by the motion picture industry, would ease the 10 per cent admissions tax to exempt all portions of a ticket below $1. At present, tickets costing 90- cents or less are exempt. But if -} the price is higher than that, the tax must be paid on the full “amount. This provision js not in the House- bill. The technical tax revision bill loopholes in present law, But it also’ contains benefits for various groups, ADDITIONAL TAX CUT The. Senate version would give *|couples living on pensions an ad- ditional tax cut of up to $240 a year. This is not in the House bill. a It also would permit all news- F come in the year received. timated to give 250 million dollars of annual relief to small firms. storms also states and: in a few other sections, across the country. Heavy rain doused parts of the Atlantic coastal states during the service at Lewes and Milton, eastern Delaware. - In the Gulf states, rainfall was, light in most places but amounts | measured more than 1% inches | at Lake Charles, La. Fairly, “heavy rains also were reported at; Jacksonville, Fla., Lafayette. La., and Athens, Ga. * * * The mercury climbed to 100 de- in. grees and higher in parts of Kan-; sas, Oklahoma, Utah and Colora- do as wel] as in the Southwest desert. © The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Sunny and Pleasant today, high 86-84. Fair and cooler tonight, lew near 60. Temorrew _ Rerun cleudy and warmer, high 84-84% he bege ana winds 10-15 milés an hour img varlable tomerrew, To- ‘in “|The chief provision would permit _/@ faster tax writeoff on new and ;/used equipment bought by the concerns, Rookie Officer Feels He’s ay One in Town . The small business tax measure, | ~ ladded to the technical bill, is es- | There, too, I was struck by a. young woman. She held by either) inand two small girls, their cloth-| ling literally strips of rags held itogether by pins, their thin. little Judge Hartrick Dies Suddenly .in West — jest jurist in length of wsroice. Judge Hartrick first took his place on the bench Jan. 1, 1936. _*% *® * Funeral arrangements are pend- ing at the William Sullivan and ‘son Funeral Home in Royal, Oak. | Survivors are his wife, Ber- nice, three sons, James G., a Pontiac attorney, John, an auto salesman in Alliquippa, Pa., | Philip, ‘im the personnel division ! of Consumers Power’ regi in Livonia, and a daughter; Mrs, Joan Murphy, wife of a Cleve- land. surgeon, and 16 grand- children. ~ There were two other children from Hartrick’s marriage on Dec. 16, 1913, A fourth son, George Paul, died in 1956, and another daughter, Janet, died in 1935. x * * Harlrick and his wife left their Royal Oak home last Friday for what was.to be a month-long va- cation in California, in conjunction with the American Bar convention, He was to attend the conference as a representative of Michigan trial judges. Yesterday morning Judge Hartrick went to a tailor shop on San Francisco’s Geary street to have a coat butten replaced. In the: shop he suddenly col- lapsed. He was taken to Central Eenerpnecy Hospital where he AUTOPSY ORDERED A coroner, who declined to spec- ulate whether the cause was a heart attack or stroke, ordered an autepsy. The Judge was. expected to. fly from the West Coast Aug. 30 Judge Harttick spent almost all of his colorful years in the legal) field. His election in April of 1935 to the Oakland bench marked what observers said was the first “‘southender’’ from the county to be elected as circuit judge in the county. < &-o« The name Hartrick was a well-| ‘known one in that section of |county, especially. The judge had; been a life-long resident of the _,county, living in Royal Oak. sjhas more than 23, 000 policemen, | At the time of his death, he and) Ge felt that n town. | " During a four-hour period, Bett.) | single-handedly: —Broke up a cafeteria brawl at | gunpoint and took three men tothe! oars house. —Disarmed a man brandishing’ a gun at a street corner. | —And, finally, routed 13 persons ‘from a tenement after smelilng fumes. | Bett wound up his tour of duty the hospital, where he was! ‘treated for — exhaustion. he was. the only! Dulles Forced to Move From President’s Suite NEW YORK (AP Searetary of State Dulles — a victim of hotel ‘jvillage and asgistant prosecuting: ‘protocol—had to move out of the! presidential suite at the Waldorf. might partly cloudy and warmer 1 = Seattered thundershowers, lew #t- Astoria yesterday to make way Boday in Pentiae ‘for President Eisenhower, Lowest temperature preceding # a.ri * * * At 8 am: Wind velocity 2-3 m pt Duiles already was staked out Direction—Northeast ae: gs 7 i : Sun sets Wednesday a: 737 pm iin the suite of four bedrooms, din- Sun rises Thursday a: 5 37 am . oct tone Wedeesday ar sah cm, (ine room. hving room and foyer. Moon rises Thursday at 5.06 am Then came word the President Downtown Temperatarts ‘was on his way for an overnight | €am..... . 64 ifam. 76 stay before addressing the United: 7B. 000. ase00 64 ig om, 48) ys OB O.M...kcc.e.- 84 1 p.m gi Nations. Ae pa hago os Bellboys carried Dulies’ bags to ,a Suite one floor above, Teesday is in Pontiac (As recorded do watown! Highest. témperatare .....0.....,... Lowest. temperature . Mean temperature Weather—Sun, = ‘One Year “Are “in Fvettes Highest temperature ... ne Lowest nena gia Mean temperature ........ Weather Mostly fair fair. vewees ae eres Beewenee Highest and Lowest 1 Temperatures This i Date in 66 Years 96 th 1044 50 in 1941) Peonkiy’s Temperataré Chart Alpena + 66 $5 Marquette a7 Raltimere 81 70 Memphis 9 «(72 Bisnmrck #7 60 Miami Beach 88 at ile 466 77 Milwankee 91 -pratta 84 70 Minneapolis 61 Chariestor 67 78 New Orleans 92 Chicago 91 71 New York 81 7 Cincinnati 81 68 Omeha 91 _ Cleveland ‘S82 89 Pellston 79 Detroit 89 Pittsburgh 82 Duluth 7 46 St. bouls 86 4 Fort Werth 100 75 5. Francisco 89 . Rapids 4 6i 8. 8. Martie 77 : ‘Si Traverse C. 85 ot ig vile. 92-71 Washington 88 60 Kaneap City 04 72 Seattle | BT 55 Lox Aggeies 8 7) Tempe 90 | “The new suite is. just as nice as the presidential suite,’’ a hotel spokesman said, He Jumps Off Bridge SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Eilert | Johnson, 70, plunged to his death (from the Golden Gate Bridge yes-! gai ter day. He was the 179th person | te commit suicide [rom the aie | 3) one span. Bx. Officer to y teod judge $e 88 Prioentx 104 a DETROT?®’ i —= Former Army was chil rats iof the Oakland Coun- ‘Col. Gervais W. Trichel is new bed president © the Deftroit chapter,|also director of the Oakland Coun-. ‘Assn. of the U.S. Army. Trichel now is president of the Amplex/ | Division of Chrysler Corp: | dal and the investigation of rack- the formei* Bernice Bos-. i eariee lived at 404 Hendrie St. | Of the thousands of cases | which the judge handled in his | 22 years on the bench, probably the best remembered were his | tenures as a one-man grand jury | in the 1936 Black Legion scan- ets in Oakland County 10 years | later. LONG PUBLIC OFFICIAL Besides the many years he spent in the legal business, Hartrick spent an equal number combining| \this business with years as a public official. He was Royal Oak village as- sessor, supervisor of Royal Oak ‘Township. president of Royal Oak! attorney in the county under Prose- cutor A. Floyd Blakeslee, After‘ Hartrick’s service in the prosecutor's office, he became | a candidate: for Circuit Court | commissioner. He won and held _ this position for four terms. He served as city attorney for alleged Communists today for con-/could take at least two years. If| the cities of Royal Oak and Berk- * * * Edueation of children was of great interest to the veteran jur- ist. He succeeded George A. Don-! ,dero as president of the Royal ‘Oak School District in 1928. He, ‘retired from this position in 1934./ | As a Circuit Judge, Hartrick ‘sentenced notorious Purple Gang.| sters Harry Fleisher and Myron) | (Mike) Selik and three others in '1945 for their part in the holdup lot a gambling house i. Pontiac. | Hartrick’s. many months as grand juror on the investigation® ot the numbers racket in the ‘Ghee ae indictment of 32 persons on | charges of violating state gam- bling laws. } | _| As a. public. official,_the ity Tax Allocation Board. He was. ty Lincoln Republican Club, Hartrick was past district gov- mats—the ambassador from Poland | told also how it cost $7,000 of Local |614 money to find William Hoffa's runaway wife, 10. ¢ite the..Boston_textile- legs and bare feet caked with dirt. One of them clutched a cucumber. tions Headquarters building on * the, light sis uniform of the U.N. discreetly asks ‘for identifi- cation at the entrance to the MEETING PLACE OF NATIONS — Here is the United Na- the East River in New York. Delegates of 81 lands are gathering today for a special emergency session of the U.N. General Assembly on the Middle East crisis. ‘The delegates will meet in the spacious Assembly hall, which is in a building adjacent to the Secretariat building. ‘jand the only moyement the oc- the - military The Day in Birmingham In Beirut, the stiff young Marine on sentry duty held hig rifle ready as he examined newsmen’s cre- dentials at the gate to the com- pound’ where Leathernecks ate ¢ rations. © : Here everything is so beau- tifully efficient. The desks. glit- ter with polish, the draperies and murals are set off by soft lights. The headsets for the simultaneous translation hang ready for use. The chairman's gavel rests on the restrum desk. There everything had been so utterly chaotic. The bazaars one moment swarming with. people, the next utterly deserted at a sudden burst of machinegun fire. The 19 American nurses of ‘a field evac- uation hospital trying to make womanly order of their tent in a sweltering olive grove. Here the movement—escalators noiselessly transporting « secre- taries, newsmen, diplomats from floor te floor. Outside the end- less hum of traffic on the Frank- lin D° Roosevelt Drive that will: go on late into the night. ~ Movement in Beirut, too — the taxis darting through pedestrian crowds, the trucks carrying Ma- rines to their evening shower at the bathhouses. And then the startling hush at the 8-p.m. curfew casional police. Here the cultared and soft voices of the cosmopolites in many tongues. There the horseplay and occa- sional profanity of the: soldiers,, or the streetcorner exchange’ of two Arabs standing nose to nose and shouting. . Today the (rumeutabets dressed and groomed delegates from the world’s nations take their seats in the great Assembly hall to talk about the events touched off when a howling mob, their king assas- sinated, dragged the nude body of their premier along the cobble- stoned streets behind a truck. jeep of Former City Teamster Scott Charges: (Continued From Page One) Selik, and a 20 to 40 year sentence for Chivas. ~~ Scott, former past president of Pontiac Teamsters Loca] 614, said the deal never came off because of Sigier’s defeat in the 1948 élection by Gov, Williams. The investigation. of the holdup of the Aristocrat Club fol- lowed probing of the ambush shoot-) ing of Sen. Warren G. Hooper, who was to have been a Witness before! a grand jury investigation. *~* * * and sentenced in the Aristocrat) Club robbery, Fleisher, along with ‘his brother Sam, as well as Selik and Mahoney, were appealing con- spiracy convictions in the Hooper, murder, They were never accuse of the unsolved slaying itself. ‘Scott fired his first barrage of corruption charges against Hof- fa, once trustee over the Pontiac local, when he testified last Sep- tember. Yesterday, while the fiery Team- sters chieftain was sitting close by, | Scott told the committee how Hof- fa once asked him to “take his (brother Billy out of Pontiac for awhile” as he was being sought by police on robbery charges. The one-time Teamster, who is inow on the Michigan Board of| License Examiners of Barbers, She ran away and Billy was throwing a fit, and Jimmy was raising hell,” Scott testified. Practically everyone listening Hoffa Asked Help on Trial | tow’ Tuesday grined at his an- swers, with the exception of Hoffa himself. Scott; 51, could not see Hoffa, who was blocked from his view by spectators, * * * | Scott became irritated when, ‘Hoffa's: attorney, Edward Bennett Williams, objected over and over Yagain to his testimony. “I understand this man is a ‘narcotics addict,’ Williams said. * wk. Sen. John L. McCidlan (D-Ark) At the time they were convicted interrupted the testimony to ask) |Scott if this was true. As he emphatically denied it, Seott glared at Williams. {William Hoffa’s bill at a Pontiac | hotel. was paid for from Local 614 ‘funds, Scott said. In addition, Scott testified, Hoffa was given! $75 a week in spending money. * * * James Hoffa went to the stand ': earlier to deriy that he had asked Scott to hide his brother. “I have’ no recollection of discussing my | brother with Scott insofar hiding my brother." Scott, who was James Hoffa's choice as secretary . treasurer of the old Michigan Federation | being asked by “fellow they called Chinaman” to set up Wil- Ham Hoffa in the numbers racket in Oakland County. This request was refused, Scott declared, because ‘‘his brother During his hiding from police, of Laber in 1952, told also of | asked Scott why he had never disclosed any of the alleged deal} involving Judge Hartrick and Sig-| ler, Scott replied: “Nobody ever asked me.’’ BIRMINGHAM — A stipped-bo program of college preparatory English will be, started: this fal! in Bloomfield Hills High School, aecortus to Supt. Eugene Johnson and Principal Richard Spiess, The course will be conducted in cooperation with the English De- partment of the University of Mich- igan, Dr, A. K, Stevens, U. of M. English Department professor, ~will visit the high school—one of nine selécted for the course —on Oct. 2 and Dec, 11 te con- » duct demonstration classes. Themes developed by the stu- dents will be evaluated by Dr. Stevens on his return visit. He will discuss! them with the students and explain gradings. He also will give his recom- mendations to the faculty for im- proving the English department of the high school. Johnson said he feels this is an important project for the school WILLIAM MacDONALD Miracle Mile Assn. Names New Officers: New officers for the coming year were elected at the general meet- ing of the Miracle Mile Shopping Center Business Association yes- terday. William MacDonald, manager of _|W. T. Grant Ct. will serve as pres- Further testimony from Scott, a recent Democratic. Candidate in Oakland County, revealed that) James Hoffa also asked him tol, intercede with Gov. Williams to| get a pardon for Frank Camaratta, | Detroit hoodlum now scheduled for | deportation. * we & \" (Hoffa answered this charge by} saying ‘‘I believe some attorney | asked me ‘‘to intercede for CAm-| arratta."') Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Arix) | | inquired of Scott whether he | knew the governor “well enough | | to ask him for a faver.’’ Scott | replied he did. | Owen (Bert) Brennan, Teamsters | |Union vice president and one. oj, |James Hoffa's top aides in De-| troit, once called Scott and asked| ‘is your insurance paid up,’’ Scott | testified. * Asked what he meant, Seott said! pretty bad guys with him’’ who! jwanted Scott to help “‘put a fix’’ | ion Oakland County officials to set: ‘up a gambling house. | Detroit fight promotor Sammy | Finazzo, Scott said, was slated -| to operate the house which op- | erated 30°days “‘becatise some- | one else roust have put the fix on.”’ Scott said he refused to. | (James Hoffa) wouldn't like it.”' * * * to Scott’s testimony in — When Sen. Carl Curtis ¢R-Neb.) Goldfine Contemp! Charge Up for House Vote Today WASHINGTON (UPI) —The ‘House prepared to cite Boston mil-| ilionaire Bernard Goldfine and two! tempt of Congress. Rep. Thomas B. Curtis (R-Mo)) ‘planned a one-man battle against, the contempt action against Gold-, fine, gift-giving friend of President; \Eisenhower's number one assistant Sherman Adams. But his rear- iguard action was almost certain to fail and an-overwhelming House contempt vote was all but assured. Goldfine was accused of con- tempt for refusing to answer 22 questions about his financial dealings, posed by the House influence - , subcom- mittee headed by Rep. Oren oral ris (D-Ark).. He contended the questions were not relevant to regulatory agencies. The subcommittee, insisting the questions were relevant, voted 8-0 facturer for contempt. The parent House Commerce Committee, also headed by Harris, backed tt up by a 30-0 vote. * * * ‘ernor of Retary International. After approval by the House, the group’s inquiry into federal |, the contempt citation would go ito the Justice Department for al- most certain prosecution which jconvicted Goldfine faces a maxi-! | mum sentence of a year in jail! and a $1,000 fine. Curtis told United Press In- ternational he would try to de- feat the tontempt move against Goldfine on the ground that the Harris subcommittee was pre- senting ‘‘an unproved case with dirty hands.” He admitted he had little chance for success but said many Democrats and Re- publicans were “disturbed about the subcommittee’s. conduct.” The other two contempt cases involved alleged Communist news- man Carl Braden and alleged Com- nist organizer Frank Wilkinson. House Committee on Un-Amer-__ ican activities unanimously ap- proved the contempt moves. against them for refusing to ‘angwer ues- tivitied, ace a Braden pleaded his rights under the constitution’s first . “freedom of speech” amendment. Wilkinson refused, to answer as a matter about alleged & Communist ac-|° His refusal to aid William Hoffa jin ‘“‘muscling into Oakland County! Pay i\rackets,”’ resulting in Hoffa hiring! Herman Kierdorf ‘‘to knock me| off,”’ Scott said. ‘ * * * Kierdorf, uncle of torch death victim Frank, is being sought by police in the case. Shortly after Frank Kierdorf stumbled into St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Aug. 3 with burns cov- ering 85 per cent of his body, Pontiac police dispatched a car to check on the “safety” of Scott. Scott had been in Washington | a week before he took the stand | lyesterday. He originally was. ischeduled to testify Aug. 7 but} Robert F. Kennedy, chief counsel | for .the committee, put James | 'Hoffa on the stand before Scott. | x * * Kennedy yesterday. placed inj evidence figures from union files | which, ‘he said, showed that two) former Pontiac Teamsters. officials | drawn $114,719.32 in salary while in prison for conspiracy. The chief counsel identified the men as Daniel J. Keating, for- mer 614 president, Louis C. Linteau, former secretary-treas- urer, and Detroiters Michael Nicoletti and Sam Marosso. They were convicted and sent to prison in 1954 in a $100,000 shake- down of aa builders. * * > Horna” —expiatied-eppet- ofthe} four while in prison saying: ‘'The |- union felt sorry for the wives. of the four.”: ‘Besides,’ Hoffa said, “they {the men) had worked of conscience. “ |pretty hard.” so | leased from a sanatorium last |January and had been under the care of a Detroit psychiatrist. ident, while Leo Zadasko, Craig's Gift Shop, assumes the office as vice president and Robert Terry, jmanager of .the Pontiac State Bank branch office, returns to the office of secretary-treasurer. B, J. ‘‘Budd’’ Sweeney was re- elected executive secretary of the group. Elected to membership of the ‘executive committee were: Ralph Eastridge, J. C. Penney Co.; Don ‘Shaw of the Kroger Co.; Richard} Poole, Poole Hardware; Maurice Firberg, Nadon’s Shop: Phil Brod- ax of youngiend and Marvin Talan of the Lion Store. The Miracle Mile Shopping Cen- ter is located on S, Telegraph and Square Lake Rds. ‘| Drowned. Baby,’ ‘Mother Tells Police DETROIT « — A mother of “5/Brennan replied that he had “two, \three who walked up to a Detroit police scout car and said “I just ;drowned my baby” was held today for investigation of murder. xt ke * Mrs. Gertrude Rice, 43, was! jtaken into custedy last night after| officers found her _ daughter,| Michelle, 18 months, dead in aj bathtub full of water at the. Rice! family’s East Side home. Officers said Mrs. Rice’s hus- \band, Philip, 30, was at work when the drowning took place. The); ‘Rices have two other_ children, jKevin, 6, and ‘Deirdre,’ 4. . Both’ - were asleep. Detectives said Mrs. Rice told them she: decided to drown the baby because “I want to go to jail and not have “any more worries.” , * * * They said the woman was re- Hills High School Plans Special English Course and will be of great value to all students participating in it, - Enrollment in. the Bloomfield Hills School District, along with the sale and exchange of books, will begin Monday, Johnson said. School enrollment has increased 100 per cent during the past three years, he said, Birmingham City Clerk Irene Hanley today announced post- ot the block surrounded by Lawn- dale, Madison, Oakland and Hunter streets, It has been rescheduled for Sept. 2 Clyde G. Murdoch, Rd:, Birmingham, retired last week after 49 years with the De- troit Edison Co. He joined the company in 1909 as inventory clerk in the stores department, At the time of his retirement hé was custodian for the company’s records and docu- ments. —_—— been granted permission by the city to conduct its annual peanut sale on Sept. 27. Proceeds will be used to. finance the club's chil- dren’s activities, according to E. B. Morley Jr., president. Possible Union Plot Unlikely in County (Continued From Page One) Weiss, who is the last known. person to have seen Herman, has. been held since Saturday, well. over the 48-hour limit us- ually adhered to in Oakland County. os A Detroiter, Weiss, 54, has given authorities almost no information so far, Ziem said, because he ap- parently fears retaliation from Herman or ‘‘Herman’s friends." Adams, who conferred here with Ziem late yesterday afternoon, said he now believes only two men were involved in the arson, -instead of three as originally supposed. Although Adams said it has been proved ‘‘sufficiently to my satisfaction’ that Frank was one of the arsonists, Herman appar- ently is no longer suspected of being the other, Adams said he has “no reason to doubt” statements by Herman's Madison Heights neighbors that he was home Sunday. evening at ap- proximately the Same time the fire took place. ~ STILL ‘THE KEY’ However, authorities gtill believe Herman knows enough about the arson to make him ‘“‘the key that could bust this case wide open." Adams believed that Herman’s flight and Frank’s participation in the arson show that it was ‘’ab- jsolutely a Teamster - affair.” Herman, a former, business , agent of doint Teamster Council 43 in Detroit, digappeared Aug. 4 after visiting Frank at St. doseph Mercy Hospital and la- poneiment of a hearing on zoning ~ 1616 Croft Birmingham Kiwanis Club has ~ awe ta). Py pe dete + ie Meat ith igo, Ee En ee nen fa yt ~ ter selling his-T ter Cadilae, Frank died in the hospital Thurs- days Herman's wife Lila was located in Saginaw yesterday at the home of her son Richard. She denied knowledge of Herman's where- abouts. * * * State police tried to enter the home to question the family and search for Herman, but Richard reportedly refused them entry ‘without a search warrant. Adams said he would confer with Wayne County Prosecutor Samuel Olsen about possible Wayne Coun- 'ty links in a conspiracy to ter- rorize dry cleaning and auto wash establishments. Adams said yesterday that it was possible that a bombing at the Skaff Carpet Co. in Flint early in 1957 is connected with the case, A“Skaff Company driver was beaten in late 1956, Adams said, and the beating may have been administered by Frank. Meantime, it was suggested that Herman may be hiding out in Cuba, Robert E. Richardson, Madison Heights Police Chief, recalled the missing Teamster had a friend in Cuba who he referred to as ‘“‘a man who would help me if the need arose.” AF May Make First Try . Shoot for Moon Sunday? WASHINGTON (AP)—Informed sources said today the Air Force may make its first try at launching a moon rocket - next Sunday morning. * If conditions are satisfactory, the three-stage rocket, and two Detroit Teamsters i more than 100 feet tall, may blast off from Cape Canaveral, | Fla., around 7 a.m. EST. If it does not prove pos sible to launch within half an hour’s time, the attempt may be postponed to a similar brief period Monday or Tuesday morning. Those are the three most favorable days this month for a moon shot. . a aa * After Wednesday, the rocket specialist said, any lunar” probe. would have to be postponed until the middle of September. | the vicinity of the moon. TE WHT Take 209 days for the Taner” Vehicle to reach ~ The rocket will be equipped with a photoelectric scan-. ‘ning device which, if it functions properly out in aden could relay closeups of the — back to earth. . 7 * c t ji . i | . i r ‘ v ‘ 4 é S’ T 13, 1958 Modesn Theater in Seoul’ Symbol of Korean Spirit SEOUL wen ~ - Jn. this desins recovery from the ravages of war, -one recently completed building privaTE CAPITAL” stands as a symbol of the Korean But the most significant thing Pee set tn ane. 92m" about the: building of the, theater This building, the Dahan Thea- is this — it was built entirely with ter, is the result of one man’s|private capital. Few of Seoul’s new dream that persisted through a|buildings have been built without long and destructive war, a stil}|financial aid, either directly or in- pain — and “aah ope of directly, from.some official source. setba t normally befall many! phe theater has a little over businessmen in a struggling young] 9 999 seats. But Kim ‘said it would have had another thousand ‘nation, ’ if he had used the standard -eat- : *.. & The man Who had this dream ing arrangement found in most _Asian theaters. and worked to make it becdéme a reality is Kim Kyung Min, the - first mayor of Seoul after the lib-| The huge CinemaScope screen eurving around the stage measures almost 25 by 70 feet. The sound eration of Korea from the Japa- nese and long ore of the city's system is a four-track stereophon- ie affair consisting of: three main above any ot the other modern buildings in: this ancient city. outstanding leaders. This house is one of the largest and best equipped mavie thea- ters in the Far East, and Kim jourers around the walls of the proudly boasts that it “is on a + * * par with any theater in the world: | jim said he also wahted to make a dd . barring none. “ @jthe theater one which the many * For sheer beauty, size and -de- Americans could comfortably aj- sign it is without a doubt far'tend. 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MADE ONLY BY LEVESTRAUSS & CO,, 98 BATTERY ST., BAM FRANCISCO 6, CALIF. “ ‘__ ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUG Past Kiwanis ‘Pre MAK Eye Retirement Activity. encia superintendent, spoke “What on éarth do you do with, of the importance of having a your tithe when you retire?” four : a retired past presidents of the Ki- aeas pyre wee * ate wanis Club of Pontiac had been| Milliman interjected a serious} asked so often by fellow Kiwanians| note when he advised that retire-| that yestreday they decided to tell] ment is.fun if “we exercise our} all. minds and bodies with some aed “Disclosing their rising-to-bed- . goal in mind.” time schedules were Conrad N. eo" Church, . former Pontiac Press . Milliman. told those at yester- editor; J. Cecil Cox, former as- sistant superintendent of Pontiac|day’s Kiwanis. luncheon at the loudspeakers on the stage and 28] - io fabric and wheels at upper left. than one sense, the Inflatoplane’ photographs above, showing the search, it is easily portable as a ’. A HUFF AND A PUFF — AND IT FLIES — Not much like. a plane is the bundle of engine, . Fully inflated and now an air-plane in more Recently released by the government are the experimental ‘‘Inflatoplane.”’ Built by Goodyear | Aircraft Corporation for the Office of Naval Re- and engine. An air hose or ordinary household vacuum cleaner can be used tg pump up the craft; made of dirigible cloth and Airmat (two Spread out, In- s 45-horsepower operation of the bundle of fabric dered the plane flatoplane is ready to be inflated. Wing and tail assembly are made of rubberized Airmat, fuse- lage is airship cloth. Nelson engine has adequate power. to give it lift and speed for.a flight over the countryside, walls of rubberized fabric connected with nylon threads). The plane is inflated with less air pres- sure than in an automobile tire. Restraining wires give added rigidity. From assembly to flight takes only a few minutes. The Navy or- bilities of rubberized fabric. schools; _ Earl mer superintendent of schools. ty to do after retirement. Klike best of their “‘new lives.” of 6:30 is a luxury,” said Church. “‘Angther luxury is that nap in the afterhoon.” his “green thumb” in his garden, noon at the end of a fish line. that are keepers,’’ Cox Church. Cox, who retired last fall as R. Milliman, for many years a Ford dealer in Pon- tiac, and Frank J. DuFrain, for- All four agreed there was plen- They voiced some of the things they ->-+-“Getting-up-at-8-after-30-years- He related how he loves to test listen to the ball games, and once in awhile spend a leisurely after- This last pastime is enjoyed by Cox also. “And I still get bluegills told Kiwanis luncheon at the Waldron| Hotel not to try and operate any businesses when retirement age rolls around. The last retiree, DuFrain, school superintendent from: 1945 through 1954, added much humor to the_Juncheon_meeting.__ “I sit around:and figure out my| net worth by reading the Wall! Street Journal,” he remarked. “] figured this to be around $150 this that high tonight because I under- stand the market is slipping.” * * * When he’s not doing this, Du Frain said, he “tosses nuts to a red-headed woodpecker outside his front door that he has trained not morning, but don’t think it will bel[ SLEEP.W Pienas are of aioe. sts ‘sleep coats in dacron - nylon - - cotton, lete size ranges. . 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Space becomes aglow with in- tense light, rather than being black. The glow is an ultraviolet light of a particular wavelength which does not reach the earth because it is filtered out by the earth’s air. This is a part of the sunlight meaning atoms carrying no elec- trical charge. The special rocket eyes meas- ured the intensity of this light. 6 Foot Mail Box STEEL Soy 98 North ¥ - ADVERTISED at $6.95 and More. Save NOW! Decorated Rural Mail-Box | SIMM):. to gosouth.” Magazines. You've Seen These 3 Exactly as Pictured @U. &. Post Office Approved @ Standard size —19x8tsx616" : Black Wrought Iron Finish Distinctive decorated top, | brass finished door orna- 5 ment. Complete with flag. Ke So ITHERS Regular $6.95 Value This measurement was the base} for an estimate that there are 1,000 neutral atoms per quart in| space. And it is known that for every atom of neutral gas there are 100 to 1,000 electrically charged hydrogen atoms. 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Save! = KOOL-KRISP ne Wonderfully crisp new Ww onderful buy ! jant stalks rigley’s Top i crop gia MEL.O-SPRED" " 1-Ib. _.Margarine at this Ctn, in er than low price! ‘Wwarters TURKEY, BEEF, CHICKEN OR SALISBURY STEAK . e Morton Dinners Jumbo oS OO . : | ; 24 Size 4 froen Tiel) tien. i tah —f \ "SAVE 1 . : 16 SHORTENING . i | . : — YELLOW CLING SAVE 10¢ ON SWIFT . ‘Ga ON SNOW CROP CHICKEN, BEEF OR TURKEY e | SAVE 11e ON YE ote Swift’ ning Se FRESH FROZEN Morton Frozen Meat Pies 3 pic. /9¥ oe Pp eaches , a LL Pe KIDS LOVE ‘EM — STOCK UP ! ca os 8 Pee Sm 13: 9 emonade ‘les-Fudaesicl _ 2: € LY 3 can Stock your freezer at this won- Popsic es- u gesic es 3": amis is a : derfully low Wrigley price! . . i wa i nec > ) pkgs. € ie EAT BIG, SWEET AND TENDER 303 00 2 of 6 49 : || ea = —_— Green , “ k—Rainbow ed — Save 10¢ on Speciol Ya Poe ee | | «a1 SWIFT'S TRUE FLAVOR kins 60-ct. PKO . | oe ane Meatballs scm 2? Hudson pees __ SOFTER FABRICS | Dh & Spag e ’ FOR FREE DIAPER FOR LOVELIER H Flakes a 7¥ Gy" (. Harnifes MAb IN SPEC. ae 2, 'ese 65° Ivory Instant nas Pink Deter oko TH OR oye. Dreft Pik SPECIAL PACK PURE WHITE FOR Soap var 2\° at ONT: MORE Gifts a FREE 10¢ napa INSIDE SF" lant 79° Ivory Floating . Y 32, ! Mild lyory Snow ams : ge hay (im ESS S , Po ae . : | Prices effective: through Sa 16. 3 oN oY . Eee cn a for | stamp = GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT Stamps ia 700 Pontiac Trail at 46S. Telegraph Rd. 398 Auburn Avenue = 596 N. Perry St. ©: G9-S. Saginaw St.’ Northhill Shopping Plaza 6060 Dixie Highway ae Cor. W. Maple Rd, (Tel-Huron Shopping Center)’ Open 9 to 9, Thurs., Fri, Sot. ‘Open 9 to 9, Thurs., Fri., Sot. _ Open 9 to 9, Thurs., Fri. ~ | (Rochester) : ~* (Drayton Plains) : wk Walled Loke Pie : Open 9 to 9, Thurs. Fri, Set. . \ Ble Seni Vig! hE E ahs pose a ! Open 9 to 9, Thurs., Fri, Open 9 to 9, Thurs., Fri, : Er re Bs a ane a= + mae = THE Soirerae Hees ‘WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1958 Advertising Firm Lists ; Changes on Pontiac, _.. Cadillac Accounts, BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Ernest A Jones, president of MacManus, John and Adams, Inc., advertising agency today announced top ievel personnel changes in the adver- tising agency's operations groups on the Pontiac Motor Division and Cadillac Motor Car Division ac- counts. ke eee > president, becomes Cadillac ac- (Continued From Page One) of his program deeling with the peace force, Lebanon, Jordan, and the curbing of subversive propa- ganda. The regional economic de- velopment plan and arms control he left for handling through other U.N, machinery. * * * The President made it clear the Arabs first of all must agree on the regional development plan. “Should the Arab states agree on the usefulness of such a sound- ly organized regional institution, support it with their own re- senior. vice Sources, the United States would also be prepared’ to support if,” and should they be prepared to on the usefulness of such a sound- ly organized regional institution, and should they be prepared to support it with their own re sources, the United States would also be prepared to support it,’ he said, x *« * “I hope it is clear that I am not, suggesting a position of lead- ership for my’ own country in the work of creating such an institu- tion. If this institution is to be a ‘success, the function of leadership must belong to the Arab sates i'themselves, he said, * * & | High on the agenda, Eisenhower Proposes Middle East Peace Plan jas a sort of atomic-divining rod in locating great underground rivers as a source of water supply. w .*% "The President also called for big-scale effort to conquer disease and disability in the Mideast, He said the United States is ready to ‘join other, governments and the World Health Organization in such an all-out attack. As the President spoke, the United States was pulling the first of 15,000 American troops out of Lebanon—a battalion of about 1,- \700 Marines. He pledgéd anew ithere will be a total pullout ‘‘when- lever this is requested by the duly jsaid, should be action to meet the count supervisor under Charlies F. ‘he said. Adams, vice president and execu-| With Soviet Foreign Minister tive assistant to Jones. Hagerman’s former post supervisor of the Pontiac Motor account is assurned by James H. Graham, who has been Pontiac account executive. as count executive succeeds Graham as Pontiac account executive.- i ‘ : i L i ; Als - that the adjust- maximum F " ds S 4 remain his chief concern.” Commissioners Want to Have Traffic..Violations Bureav Moved _ City Commissioners last night went on record as favoring the transfer of the Traffic Vidlations Bureau from the Police Depart- ment to the Municipal Court. ~ * * P Mayor pro tem John A. Dugan fs expected soon to apppint a com- mittee, of. three commissioners to meet with the two municipal ar to work out details of the switti, The final plan. is subject to commission approval. The change was strongly rec- ommended in the report of the -|should’ be able to. get from the ‘|their independence.” ‘his plan should be acted on to- Andrej Gromyko on hand, Ejisen- * “This world of individual na- tions is not going to be controlled by ;any one power or group of . he said. “Please believe me when | say that the dream of world domination by one power, or a world of conformity, is an impossible dream." . The President served notice that if mecessary the United States again would go to the aid of a! any smali nation, which appeals for help within the spirit of the UN. TL oy * * * - “Eisenhower's 30-minute address to delegates from the 8] U.M. countries included no sensational surprises. In proposing a Mideast stand-by police force, the President put it this way: “The countries of this area should be freed from armed pressure and infiltration coming across their borders, When such interference threatens, they United Nations prompt and ef- fective action to help safeguard ®t * * “Therefore;’ he said, ‘1 be-| lieve this Assembly should take action looking toward the creation of a stand-by United’ Nations| peace force. The need for such aj force in being is clearly demon- strated by recent events involv- ing imminent danger to the integ- rity of two of our members” — Lebanon and. Jordan. *. : * * * _ The President did not. spell out}: the kind of police force he has in mind, But informed officials said! < & In a clear bid for Arab support ‘challenge of the Mideasts critical non or whenever, through action jand general water shortage. He in- dicated the United States is willing to provide atomic isotopes for use x *&* * Highlights U.N. Address Today UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. by the United Nations or other- jwise, Lebanon is .no longer ex- posed to the original danger. . *« * * of Ike's (AP)—Highlights from Presi- dent Eisenhower's addréss today: This world of individual nations is not going to be controlled by any one power or group of. powers. This world is not going to be committed to any: one ideology. As we cherish our freedom, we believé in freedom for others. The danger is that nations under aggressive leader- ship will seek to exploit. man’s horror of war by con- fronting the nations, particularly small nations, with an apparent choice between supine surrender, or war. This tactic reappeared during the recent Near. East crisis. Some might call it “ballistic blackmail.” i The United States reserves, with the spirit of the charter, the right to answer the legitimate appeal of any nation, particularly ‘small nations. ' e Change can and should be brought about in peaceful ways. In this context the United States respects the right of every Arab nation of the Near East to live in freedom without domination from any source, far or near. The United States troops will be totally withdrawn whenever this is requested by the duly constituted govern- ment of Lebanon or whenever, through action by the United Nations or otherwise, Lebanon is no longer exposed to the original danger. ¥ I believe this Assembly toward the creation of a peace force. should take action lodking stand-by United Natfons ne I propose that consultations be immediately under-’ taken by the secretary genéral with the Arab nations of the Near East to ascertain whether an agreement cam be reached to establish an. Arab devélopment institution on a regional basis. . Should the Arab states agree on the usefulness of such a soundly organized regional of his plan, Eisenhower sprinkled his speech with high praise and backing for Arab nationalism. But institution, and should they be-prepared to-support it—with their own resources, the United States would also be prepared to support it, , ‘Cowboy Rejects Key) LANSING (UPI) — Repubii- can gubernatorial candidate Paul D. Bagwell said last night the Frank Kierdorf burning case: showed the need for a grand jury investigation of ‘“‘hood- lumism” in Michigan. “The explosion and burning is in the same pattern as the number of mysterious bomb- ings in Wayne County within the past year — which were obvi- ously acts of enforcement in a jungle law of hoodlumism,” he said, : MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) — One key to a city is apparently of his home town of Chatsworth, Calif.—asked Milwaukee Mayor ‘Frank Zeidler in a letter not to give him a key to Milwaukee when he arrives today te per- form at the Wisconsin State Fair, . They Gain by Accident. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)--A truck-car accident here forced local police to make out two separate reports: The first was quite routine. The second was written after some 20 neighbor- hood children opened a door of the ice cream truck and helped themselves, ; 38 * : 1 wy pd ie ; é -|He Urges Grand. Jury | all that cowboy star Roy Rogers | There are about 35,000 swimming| Lake Titicaca in South Amer- : | ot oe ‘ n Handle at one time. Th in the United States, : ica ig half the. Ike Addresses General Assembly, __ , [He peges Grand Jury | | fan tae at ne tie. “Ie [pny Inthe United. Ste, tanya Ip bal he sve of Lake Ov A. toward the purchase CLEAR AARP PEEP PEEP EEE THIS COUPON WORTH : *7 90 i ‘of this © merchandise Ny . fe ee OA A AA A A Lf A A SD SS DS. constituted “government of Leba-}"~ - 280 $. SAGINAW ST. MAJESTY ~ ANOTHER GREAT CADILLAC TRADITION Traveling a boulevard, or simply standing in wait for its owner, a Cadillac has a majesty of bearing that is uniquely its own. It _ comes of brilliant beauty, of great stature, and of perfect taste in styling. We invite you to inspect these virtues in your | favorite Cadillac soon. Your. dealer will be happy fo assist you. a . STANDARD OF THE WORLD FOR MORE THAN HALF A CENTURY VISIT YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER JEROME MOTOR SALES CO. PONTIAC, MICH. FE 4-3566 FORWARD FROM FIFTY no place did he mention leader- ship of that movement by Presi- dent Nasser of the United’ Arab Republic. Nor did he specifically accuse the U.A.R- of fomenting the cur- rent Mideast crisis by interfer- ence in Lebanon's internal af- fairs—a charge the United States made at the time it sent troops into Lebanon a month ago. , * * * . Eisenhower said that if his Mid- east peace program can be car- ried out, then “in a few short years .we may be able to look back on the Lebanon and Jordan crises as the beginning of a great new era of Arab history." He said that the six-parts of gether. * * * “Within the Near East and with- in this Assembly,’ Eisenhower added, “are the forces of good Sense, restraint and wisdom to | Publie Administration: Service | _ Survey of police department mo- | . rale and efficiency. Similar moves are being taken | in many communities, the report: said, where it is felt that law en- forcement should be entirely sep-| arated from the collection of traf-| - fic fines, The latter is a judicial function, it is said. * * * Commissioners have agreed with | this position, 4s have the two judges, Several police officials, though, including the head of the present violations bureau, have! argued against it; Action on the violations bureau | means that the commission has taken steps to effect two of | the three major recommenda. | tions which City Manager Wal- | ter K, Willman sees in the | PAS report, The report also recommended: the city hire a public safety di-' rector, which was accomplished last .week,.and drop state civil ‘service for city-police. . Although the latter recommenda- make, with time and patience, a framework of political order and| peace in that region.” In dealing with economic stabil-| ization of the Mideast, Eisenhower | @ urged that U.N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjoid consult imme diately with Arab nations to find’ out whether agreement can be reached on creation of an Arab! development institution on a re- gional basis, en ee He did not estimate how much’ money should be put into this pro-| gram at the start, Wi \ aa | a | Some informed authorities said) J they believe the fund should geti under way with about a 100 mil- lion dollars, The money would be contributed not. only by some of| the outside nations but by some of the oil-rich Mideast countries. The president also called for consultation with other nations, as well as private organizations, | which might join in financial sup- port. He suggested the world bank project. | “Should the Arab states agree tion has been discussed, commis- ' gioners have made no decision about it one way or the other, a a ~ _” Plunges to His Death DETROIT. — Paul Peloquin, 92; a construction worker, fell 60 feet to death Tuesday trom @ tour w scafofiding when he was struck bya falling ramp while repairing masonry on an apart- a 1% | oe, ‘a i ' marke J 2. Bees Can’t-Live There _ CASPER( Wyo. (UPI)—A resi- dent. here called Deputy County phone ard asked if bees were zone. The zone in question, ac- | | cording to city code, is a “B” |.zone for multiple residential | apartment dwellings, —_ Attorney, Harry Leimback by | guaranteed legal domicile in the | Mm would be helpful in planning the | @ OUR -GREDIT — INSTANTLY: 17 E.Huron St. OPEN’ FRI. and MON. “til 9:00 P.M. NO compartment. Matching king-size chair. Both pieces _upholstered.in latest fong wearing fabrics in your choice of colors, PL table, and two handsome matched decorator lamps. - _ ey OK’ed m savx YOU PAY WHERE YOU BUY yeu \ PAYMENTS 5 Free Parking Next to Either Store. 18 W. Pike St 4 willy! eet ro ‘Beautiful spacious sofa converts to com- fortable bed for two. Large bedding S 2: beautiful end tables, one cocktail NO FINANCE COMPANY & Easy \ q ms ; * \ 4 PIECE Vis LIVING ROOM. OUTFIT ~~ Reg. $239.95 . Buy Now and Save — Joga ae BBL we wer: | ae etre ms ee Be : foomnieit ‘ THE PONTIAC. PRESS, WEDNESDAY, ‘AUGUST 13, 1958 ye — — ——a = . = 4 : | WILE SU NON i iia Choose Carefully an : Zs : i _ Have You Tried This? aise ianeate nl t e est S x00 noug 4 | yo _ Frosting Plus Pudding } | Hise — e : ee - Er D ne R AL By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN about that and then tell you how|the mistakes of- the first opera-jas concerned with normal fune-|), ; | Fouad Is Puff Fi | | lj Ing . = to select a competent plastic sur-|tion he did, with two mere. tion of the repaired nose as with , dept. stores "Most of us live up to the pic- geon in case you want one. ‘lits new appearance. By JANET ODELL 1 clip vegetable, shortening angst | ture we have of ourselves and few SURGEON DECIDEs ee cl at mute sea awes If you want to locate a quali- | Pontiac Press Home Editor 1 cay suaet s and: ty Be ° e, F s fied plastic surgeon, consult with © _ iti Mertens eryde leup milk ; ‘9 of us have personalities and sect) if you are going to have your! from plastic surgery, but to im- ee : . a Cream puffs have reached 4 3 tablespoons flour : 4 your family physician, your coun height larity since : & vibrant, enough to withstand the| nose operated on, do not expect] press upon you the crucial im-|}, medical society or the Ameri- 4 aap oe in repee ' ity thon Cream shortening and sugar © damage of physical deformity. I)the surgeon to give you one like| portance of selecting your sur- /can Medical Association at 533. | ae an a = vere sear na very thoroughly, Mix milk | might even say that physical de-| your favorite movie star's because| geon with care. A few years ag0 |North Dearborn st. Chicago, Ili a ee atid flour in a saucepan, Bring ~ fects, sometimes small ones, often|it probably won’t fit you. The| I interviewed one of America’s | pois, S leri e with your own raw ma- to a slow hoil and codk until | ruin the happiness of people. plastic surgeon is an artist, a} most distinguished meu. He told | Jp this eolarnn: sometimes We _ terials. What is new in this thick. Cool. Add to ereamed | The bundreds of ttousands of|sculptor, and he shapes each nose| me that from one-fourth te one- | on, [ will bring you the facts about | ee SF palitee Cod mixture and whip until very ee see ee et letters I receive each year from readers have taught me_ that women are apt to exaggerate in : their own minds any defects in beauty they may have, but my classes in figure molding have made me acutely aware that im- _|provement in physical appearance | has amazing and happy effects on personality, ‘Tt can change self-consciousness into self-confidence and depression into gaiety. As a matter of fact, it can change an entire outlook and hag saved many a life from despair. . For these reasons I always have been very much interested in cosmetic plastic surgery. It seems too bad to allow some physical handicap which can be corrected to put the brakes on happy living. For the last two days I have been writing about rhinoplasty, or the operation to correct deformi- ties of the nose. Today I want to give you one last warning to match a particular face. He wants your new nose to look as ff it belongs to you, not fo some- one else. I always shiver a little when I write about plastic surgery for fear some of my readers will styled plastic surgeon and have an operation. Plastic surgery is safe and. successful in the hands of highly trained experts. Dire results may occur if you select your surgeon carelessly. While rhinoplasty seldom car- ries post-operative complications,. poor results may occur when it is performed by incompetent hands. Surgeons occasionally work with patients who have become mouth breathers because of the develop- ment of excess scar tissue or the}. removal of too much mucus mem- brane from the nasal lining. One surgeon tells of a patient who had lost the whole lower third of her nose because an incompe- tent operator had tried to correct FEDERAL dept. stores Enter autumn... PERFECTLY FASHION-SHAPED ‘> AND SO AT EASE IN A NEW bra by Snfit 950 “New Romance” . . . bound to make you fall in love with its unbeliev able-comfort and wonder- {ul support. Of white cotton b’cloth and elastic . . « scientifically tailored for fit. 32-40, A-B-C. JUST SAY Change 9” AT FEDERAL'S third of the operations he per- formed were repairs on botched up jobs by other so-called plas- tic surgeons. | It is good to know that “when | dermabrasion and sandpaper sur- | 'gery for the removal of scars and ‘other skin defects. * * & Tomorrow: Puffs, Circles, a competant surgeon per forms a | Crow’s Feet Rob Beauty, Youthful cosmetic oa! he is inal Looks. --dash—out—to- _the._neatest— self. | business with your hopes to frosting. This recipe came from Mrs. Louis De Yonge of Commerce. She is deeply engaged in PTA work, is president of the Com- merce School group for the coming year. Mrs. De Yonge fluffly and creamy. A tea- | spoon of vanilla’ may, add- ed, if desired, Par] For the pudding bate i package vanilla uaaing ‘not instant) ? 2 cups milk Prepare as directed: on) sie osama tia ae be aha pete «be is also an activé” Worker in Girl Scouting. Ceramics are her hobby. CREAM PUFF FILLING By Mrs. Louise De Younge For the Frosting mixture: No Obligation! You incur no social obliga- tion when a person who does a package. Cool. Fold into frost- ing cream pulls. This ~~ will fill at least 50 bite-sized puffs generously. It keeps well ‘ in the refrigerator. © a The frosting may be ‘used to al cover a large cake. _ 4 W omen are apt to exaggerate in their own minds any defects in beauty they ma’y have. to Change in fact every evening—is to until bedtime. says his wife. friends, or to a ball game, or whatever, he says all he Will Take Time TV Habit . By RUTH MILLETT | Her husband’s idea of how to spend an evening— sit in Frost of the TV set “Even when he complains about how poor the| shows are, he still sits there as though hypnotized,”’ “If I suggest going to a movie, or to visit; Women’s Florsheim 1 Group of Vitality Reg: $12.95 I Group of Teon-age Flats =. Reg. $8.95 | MANY OTHER OUTSTANDING VALUES. _ THROUGHOUT THE STORE == ALL SALES. eS ae ad | TODD'S Shoe Store 20 W. Huron St. TODD'S | MID-SUMMER CLEARANCE ENDS SATURDAY Just 3 More Days Reg. $15.95 to $1 7.22 and Tweedie Shoes 10” Shoes for Women 5e 4" - OUR SALON IS AIR CONDITIONED “Where Service and Quality are Supreme” No Appointinent Needed! Immediate Servic } Clindve: >_> = a ' 2nd Floor. Pontiac State Bank Bldg. ONCE A YEAR SUPERB SPECIAL BUDGET WISE... FASHION RIGHT ()() | Custom ee both eat ibeammamiametent eau ty “Salon rs get a eounictals new restyled haircut a sensational, long-lasting cold for this one low price. 15 WAVE Now *10 | Open Es, ks 9 P.M. Cold Wave Fingér Wave wave wants to do is relax. And re-*———~ laxing to him means watch-|wishes, but that you have to get out of the house once in awhile. too.” -|there are other ways of relaxing I've got cabin fever from being |besides sitting. before a TV set shut up with a TV set night after|with his shoes off, ve won| night — but what can I do about)your battle, making plans once or twice a week|- - But the infant should learn to ' child: may be cross-eyed, and If he feels you aren't trying to force him-te-ge-out with_you,_it_. will be easier for him to say some evening, “That movie sounds good. 1 think I'll go, Once you've shown ‘aes that Young Baby Often Looks Cross-Eyed “MILWAUKEE (UPD) — A baby © takes - turns | developing first oe! side of his body, then the othe The vad will use his right hand, right foot and right eve in all his movements. Then he will switch to the left side of his body for 4 few days or a week. : : » | It is normal for the eye not in use to go off at an angle. - use both eyes together by three months or so. If he doesn't, the ae- vision specialist should be consulted, A New Service Removal of © Unwanted H air _| by Electrology Offered for the first time by a Pontiac beauty salon! A skilled Electrologist will be in our shop every Saturday for consultation and treatments. For a Slender Figure | The Famous _* | —_ Relax-A-Tron This method of figure control can help you take off pounds safely, without the use of drags or tiring ehereinest . CT7om 5 Beauty Salon Riker Bldg. — Rear sa ay Our.Candies Are Made for the Enjoy- ~ ment of Eating CALL FE. 2-9532 aad Fruit Punch HOME MADE CANDIES AND RESTAURANT i 4 HALE SPL AE OEE AE ARAB BAL LI PIE OE IED » Good Food ‘Just Ao Little Bit Better PHONE FE 5-9257 | | 5 ore a pweuwuvruvrCVCCCC TCC CCC CCC CCC Te ee mun ‘119 N. SAGINAW S St. For Years of Enjoyment . . t’s the BALDWIN ORGAN The NEW Exciting Baldwin Electronic Organ It's an Organ, Orchestra, Dance Band and at the flick of the tinger—All 4 Families of Organ Tones, Strigs. Violin, Cello, and many otHers with percussion. Diapason, Flute, Available in: Early you to play FREE stration. _CALBL MUSIC COMPANY. Pontiac's Locally Owned Home of Conn In straments and — Pianos and Organs. Cherry Wood or ‘Contemporary. Clarinet, Sax, Oboe, - "French <-Provineial, We will. teach Come in for a. FREE ares American, ceca gh ae ne - FE gas IE bagesde eee TE STRICHTE TORT ONO i fy We girls shiv- “DEAR ABBY: My _ neigh- so ] thought it best to give been sick and she said, ‘No, belt, with buckle, e : “er white the |' bors moved away and couldn’t | the collie to a friend of mine |” he eats good. We give him po- | ine bas e, at the hent ne ~ men in the of- take their collie puppy with in the country. tato ls and .table-scraps ci ‘fice wear |* and plenty of it.’ This hurt me pebitageith bipentbo, and - de- j es woolen suits because | am a dog lover; HAIR CUTS , . , styled and shaped for SUMMER. ee adhd Stoles, Clutch Capes. | } and Pocket Stoles C ’ or Silver Blue and when they get out they ee . it DEAR FIVE: A comfort- act like they have just escaped Parents of the couple are |, Rich Natur al a from a cage. They scream, ‘Mr. and Mrs. Max P. Per- &. Ranch Mink 4 the house until- after eight. cousin’s only attendant, and pe = = if I am ures, James K. Uhan, the bride- Cy) — in ne m’s_ brother, best DISGU eo 1s , Tr Soh oe S$ 4 DEAR DISGUSTED: Your neigjbor is inconsiderate. Have a talk with her and tell -her if She must let her children out | ‘ go early,.to please’ instruct * them to be quiet, or to stay with them and A them | @ The ultimate in statéreom conifort rics should be dryer-dried sep- chine, washtub, or washbasin. business or professional life. - 4 @ Decor by Raymond Leewy Asse. i - ae. |. arately, Otherwise, starch may . ' . ; Por details, reservations and trans- j ee ; “ portation Grrangements.. see 2 | transfer to unstarched articles, LOUI eSHOP. 4 , . : a Your Dealer in Dreams and moisture in unstarched Soy 50) PERM ANENTS $ h() |e: i + BIRMINGHAM fabrics dilutes starch‘and | ¢ Eke GUM Male and | ee BROWN or BLACK calf a , omplete recut and Set | : , : 2 ae mo GRACE? UMMER REILLY | lengthens drying time | No App’ sag FE 5 8000 | 4 milten rmingha Fo Huron ; : & Fe Don’t Break Date ATR coxornoseilf tnd Floor Next to Buckner Finance =) > usually : ‘ : | : Nadons— For a young man to break a , . | ) 12.95 4 . date with a girl for any rea- , , for Juniors son except an emergency over BROWN or BLACK =": calf which be has no control is unforgivably rude.* Once he has asked. for a date he isn’t free to change his plans. - =. Sizes 5 to 15 : Miracle Mile Shopping Center Telegraph at Square Lake Road Open Daily til 9 P.M. | ea eesti the feathered and forward cut What could be a more exciting way to fook different and glamorous during this Summer. é Get the newest hairshape at no extra charge * : with a Hollywood pertnanent. on an ALL PERMANENTS LE) 4 4 Bi ae aaa posilire itn admit oF ne =] —, | se ] : NONE HIGHER oRCH ESTRA From fashion standpoint, you couldn’t arrive in J 4 YOu GET ALL THIS: RESERVED SEATS ON any smarter opera anywhere this season! 4 : . re * ‘Wash and Wear Haircut Raat ; Grandest feeling pointed-toe last,.all slenderness 4 ba ee yA Pirmenest Wy wh Experienced | | on the narrowest high heel. “The name i inside : bd - licensed! Operator ‘ tells: .they’re renowned for fit. - : . Ea a % Styled Set Ng Dr iiahien digs anit. ee A TICKET TO “GOOD WISHES” Fast...» at Sones “ask x coments Weave for $3.75— ) . | No Appointment Necessary ! [ er A : a HOLLYWOOD SHOP TCE FURL UMPANY i —— ir 559 ORCHARD LAKE FE 2-0127 i 78% North Seginaw St. FE 8-3560 | TWO DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETROIT AND A yok BAZLEY’S INTERMEDIATE POINTS ++ nail Matching Bags 4 AIR CONDITIONED ; for Alligator Calf , . a~ | ere \ + Shoe Salons. . Mezzanine — — : li : \ a ; \ ; ; pct 4 | aa ara : ; \ A . tt ; ee ee ee ee a et be THE ponTtig PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1958 t a TWENTY-SIX. Like it. or Not, Nations Losing Epiiviguality as. World Grows. go “freewheeling along in their heated. Ar ‘ conditioning already has comé to the tropics and the. - trends. Powerful 7 deserts, the at’ work, accelerat-| bo ing peice hu the minute. , for example; mass communications and advertising largely erased the differences in the way people live in widely re- moved sections of the United States. Think of the impact on people around the world when} they see each other on interna-| Think of the ‘impact of jet air- liners, cutting travel time, mak- ing it possible for: more people to go farther from home. (Second in Series) By RELMAN MORIN ‘Associated Press Staff Writer It was a chilling thought. I was somewhere in the Far East when this idea suddenly be- -gan taking shape. It has been haunting. me ever since. Here it is: Are we all becoming. alike? Is.every nation on earth losing its special customs, culture, in- dividuality? Are we all heading straight toward (you'll pardon the expression) togetherness? : It looks that way. It appears that, in the not too) distant future, we may be dress- ing more alike, eating much the same foods, living in a few stand- -jard types of houses, watcha the same international’ TV programs, dancing the same dances,, re- sponding to the same advertise-|ernment protection. ments, developing wer much a .|take hold with the girls. same tastes. tk © * Fantastic? . Of course, but. look over your shoulder. Only “yesterday, a low - slung European car was so rare on On Formosa, -the the | Stetson. road that you stopped to stare at + ¢ it. Few Americans ever heard: of a vodka martini, much less tasted it. Foreign movies were confined to small, arty theaters in the big cities. Who would have dreamed that a Japanese actréss would win an Oscar? aed yesterday, Coca-Cola’ in- roll! — ‘Soon, they were yelling for gov- other day, Chinese tot had a birthday. Which gift wrecked the party? A cow- boy ‘suit with chaps and 10-pint One night, some Indonesian stu- dents gave a musical ‘program. True, they played native songs— but they had transposed the state- ly Indonesian rhythms to-a weird form of mamba and samba, plus a touch of Dixieland and jelly- Everything Is Is Cheaper There. Hong Kong Real Shopper's Paradise HONG KONG—As a free port, remembering that prices are can be had for slightly less than import} quoted in Hong Keng dollars, |the list price. | which are about six to dne of the U. S. variety. Dividing prices by six makes everything seem cheaper. A watch, for example, with a $60 tag on it is really only $10 by American count, The Chinese merchants, by the|ters at slight-of-hand iway, have a taste for price hag- gling, and just about everything which levies almost no~ duties, Hong Kong is an Oriental bargain basement fer American shoppers. Shopping fever is con- tagious, and spending sprees are __ justified by the fact that every- _thing is cheaper in Hong Kong | than elsewhere. * * * = Hong Kong’s bargains tempt the _ average traveler to prolong his) “stay. As a matter of fact, Pan) Robert Murphy Returns From Mideast Mission ‘PARIS (® — Robert- Murphy flew home today from a Middle East trouble-shooting mission for President Eisenhower that began pattern. shortly after the Marines landed in Lebanon four weeks ago. American World Airways reports that its main: problem in Hong Kong is rerouting passengers. who want to extend their visit. The island is, of course, a focal point for round-the-world flights via To- kyo and Manila or Bangkok. x * * Merchandise, particularly bro- cade, jade and antiques, originat- ing in Red China cannot be brought into the United States. Reliable shops, however, will supply Amer-| icans with a Hong Kong certifi- cate of origin for their goods. Tourists will avoid shock by School System Gets Percy Jones Gym BATTLE CREEK i ---A gift! from the government which will save taxpayers more than one million dollars has been announced by Battle Creek school officials. x« *« * The U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare approved transfer of title to Percy Jones gymnasium. at Percy Jones Gen- eral Hospital to the Battle Creek | school system. Transfer of the acitity with- out cost to the city awaits only an appraisal and signing of | final papers. The gymnasium was, built in 1928 as é = ' Legs, thighs or breasts with rib. Get the portions you prefer! = SREEN BEANS .. chuck roast 45° *y Blade cut for tender eating treat for the whole family. spring lamb ‘sale SHOULDER LAMB ROAST............. Ib. 59¢ duicy, tender eating. SHOULDERLAMBCHOPS............ lb. 69e f Blode cut. Tasty! : LEG OFLAMB................... ... lb. 79¢ home-grown savings! fe tien one _ lb. 10¢ Snappin’ fresh from Michigon fields. CABBAGE ............ . head 10¢ Michigan's contribution to cole slow. e LEMONS . *o@¢@@ @ @ @ @ @ *e* doz: 59c Sunkist beauties ter homemade cia: WATERMELONS 20-25-Lb. Avg.—Each eoeeeene 5-49: 29¢ Jumbo, juicy and flavorful for delicious eating or canning. salad fixing. For crisp summer nme! Ni ST A A SRNR! Ee Genet SY lene SY ce pn ~CRISCO All vegetable for the frying. ) ‘SAVE Ide seae7F rf WALDORF TISSUE | Zang Match your both and Scotties too. | SCOTTISSUE 8 rois $9 | Stock your cupboard with Scotts now. WAX PAPER ,... 4 rolls $1 Cut-rite mmoles it stronger—seals better. | SCOTTIES ....4 it $I-E | hoose from pink, ba Or white os eens ie WHITE ONLY eee ee ee ee ee ee ae ee ee —— | : oes, i ( ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1958 7 ~ r 7 Dene Pc ies ein Futures List ikaie to County Party C NEW YORK ® — The | SSeS EeeMarel fi é i reeaiMarket Firmer_ | pa Ha sald t today. ‘Precinct delegates. to the Oakland County Republi Pe CHICAGO & ‘Jeonvention tonight and the County Democratic vaciien ~\ REPUBLICANS . “It the current trend market The grain futures|*omorrow are listed below by precincts. eecens Beruley 2 Loyd H. winard Sa August ind .continues, firmed up somewhat in They we lected Precines _ 3 Marie Johnson 8 Edward N. Schneider _—Atwtust_may be as good, a month| een Ceereming onthe Board ofl At t Lae aol heel oye bes peigaagan “ol } Sete as {Wiliam te Tresor, 7 Sueenea # Rost swelled. by ‘hedging Rea eeleter: Sere He Bowed As the ep sed i Sn ae er eee a eel | AD gine F man Bere, # Seine roms || ba . mem 5 Roy M. ere Ps wiord Ls SE ee ee appeared 141 delegates to attend the Aug. 30 st bers. will pick) § Gans. wiedman - 5° —— restate ; ( ‘At « worst, , however, to be state convention in 1 1 1 August will/lifted more ' Rapids. De Grand| 1 Harry Maur 0 Sadie P Stiwart B. Owen be secorid only to June. A stilljrather by speculative buying] sates mocrats gathering Thursday will elect 114 dele- ; Ray Sg oe 13 Margaret ©. Mill y° : — further pickup is seen in ather than. any general demand|°* to the Democratic state convention slated for A “Preemai ie Precincts 4 , ber when automotive faces although Brazil was authorized by in the same city. r Aug. 23), ,, 14, Daniel J, Hardenburg 1 Thomas C. Tiley e rs will|the . Department of - P. Dickerson 1g 2, Claude Garvey © Feally begin to take hold.” — ‘lover night Agriculture| At the state conventions, delegates fill th 3 farthe D. Wis 1 3. 1 A bad eekly cautioned. that/U. S.- helt poi fbegsee _— ? on thelr state tickets, and adopt party mat te vacancles 3 Charles Waren Io S° crarence 0. Bas |'3 metalworking industry/! Brazilian currency. n|i— - 6 Thorn = gue _ Farmington T + ; has seen the worst of inet . , en Geet ibe ha Precincts +e n 1 Jean Be sion, it isn't out of the woods yet. a Se slow and offerings B orF avant Bo, W. Mardenburg, Jt. 3 Joseph T. Brennan, Jr : i Vincent E- Priest Se er on the bulges. M ARK 1] Bonald-A Henderson 36- | poeeeeen ie 3° done. Kent 4, Marie Payton N A . ee a S ower 12 Arthur. Iverson, J. ye $5 iP Mecullous il Senne. Bolan. 38. Otte Kent. oF prancte J. Btephetison e 2 er near the end of the first hemes 2a¢ ie 13° x =H Lawrence ae . WS i in ri hour, September $1.84%; corn |. wenry be Woolfenden 30° ae Sores 31° oy & Margaret Kormonay. Es ; e 1s higher, September $1.8: oats Fest ene prices i seine weg ie nan ici, x Femmes Thoma i, “Coop Gretta “A Wabtor bike valued at $05 was |Uncnansed to % lower, September is beenste of locally grown in ul = . yes Prselmets aes rl Rapeerbalt _ exawaon Be erry Ht, Cooper 1 Gatdon oe - reported tolen 63%; unchanged a A + ms it to the aber or 2 Bristol 34° nd Precincts : Highlang si from the ; rye to % highe ee mn * E, Hunter 5° Precincts - ye ; 36 Leone J. Sim : : yard of r,|™ by growers and sold _ |3 Charles J. Mu 3 1 Lout mons > te. “Leonard Parker, 68 N. Merrimac eet $1.24%; soybeans %%|them in wholesal agen | 4, Treas Giacoubt _* William A. Gerling 2 ele eet 2 swine rH Gaies 3 je Cony St., Tuesday, according to Pontiac 59% higher, September $2.23%; Quotations package lots) new 4 [hi- ae e Holly 5 pene eee! Oe ce Se Police. lard 3 cents a hundred Ibs. + .,,| Datroit are furnished by the| pwr j YORK (-—Stocks drifted Verginaten Cty 39. Doris Bronce! 14 Jack MvAlpeters sf Pe i pitiag . ees wer in quit early trading today.| 3 ROGGE Boe Cixi: | Ren ciee Es, | ef ) . s use TY : + 49° 1* bed Dare, told Pasian Police poe | hago were some wider declines E Sea verre &, Sot t. Baten 3, Laster coe 3 Arthur ; * yesterday that someone had chi Of an average class of 200 enter- Produc stocks affected by adverse news.| } Betty J coong poten ’ ” Royal Oak City iaecha "ee ¢ ee sf eee Al Len / his 12-foot rowboat, valu 2 at ing the U. S. Coast Guard Acade- ' uce ’ *” * x ; or ee 1 Helen gin , 1 ete ee rtd al J. Anderson i Bes } from its mooring . = my, only about 100 continue to be FRuiTs: There was a 3 Gordon ©. Haupt 2 Mary Morrison * iatiterd. ge Benert, S. Daa -— d ; mooring place on: the| graduated A e good sprinkling of| 5 Virginia R. Starr 3 alberta H Williams ; 5 4 west side of Galloway Lake. _years of at the conclusion of four| Slactverries tefaien 10 gts: <2... 3s0|Small gains, particularly in the|% Christene Greene” $ Howard K Kelley =} Beabeth 6, Hil 10 Joltn Sareea § Ror | ; training. eesecos, cgfae Doe wee schoo ce _ The = got a boost| §, Bvelyn B. po pea : Payflls A. ulburt 7 Bilsabeth 8, Hubbell 4 Harold, ee ‘ areld ey . sour a is’ seeeeen Presid isenhower signed'0, 9* Mary R. mas . Precincts - 13 Zeno Cri ~ ; Peaches is. ef Helen G. Bon 1 Geor 16 J ~ | Beaches | Red Haven, bu. ......... 488 pe gl federal aid for the finan-|}3+ oe 10 Earl ©: Pinkerton }. Pras W. Steman 14 Shenbey Me Wikees = 1, Evelyn 0. | | Buy Wetermelons, bu.” . eseeeeees AM pressed roads. 13, Robert L. Payie eae = Hiasel Fare 13. Joseph : VEG Volume ‘ Block 1 Frank J. Volt 1 Charle is ious = ow and Save Bone aM ees RL contmaca to aceon meee eka os, |i teh 2 i : Rots. jevet. fccccerovesccays AG tape : ts ; Melen A. Leonard 41 : x | JUST A FEW Galiflower doe. juss scssssceseeee | neers — 2° day 8, Bullock ig, Ruth Gon a } Eevtevteetige | $ Mier eziveier if clarence | a doz. —. th oasticaese iss Picanasn Ml —_ quipment/ nee J, Miler 2 Robert Ke, BeCinnis . beck Davidson 1° mes F. He ee August NEW pg ai aie. A shaeebone ahi i= directors took no sa pgs a CB ; M. Rowley a Eivig @ Gress rossa _ 1 Lee P ig coe ieeieats 10 dosent W erke | ve “bu. ses» -85)mon dividend, The "| 8 William Husband 3 ee oreieman 3 Rove. Parent i ote Edward. Reerent sbehs.. des reported company also| 9 Mabel P. Spencer 28 Wallace A. art V. Parenti Homer 1.” Pitus Ewa : fash ibchs dos = Re Po: -— lower earnings.|{¢ Qatar A oe den aes 9. Deel. x, poe Tee ‘ ington “Weeds 21 Pauling a oe Peppers, : x * la z 28 J. P. Preish- ad Je Maxwell. M. Lowe "39 Maureen . Parsi 9 £. Gs 2 Faye Moskowi SPECIAL SAVINGS 1 tatve oe She 200 F yey Aircraft fell a point or Huntington Weeds 5 5 FS cv eemer Ye wae 3 Davie Paul 30 Andre ON DEMONS Redes a, an, SS: 1B camings of 0 a hare ve 820 [Eaeret. , eee . meee LAE g ’ ONSTRATORS! Round commer ee 13 in the same period last year. 4 Alvin B. Balden” z, William J. Bedson is ps } Miia Bee bee -_ ga Turnips. topped. as American Precinet 4 Gersid J. Rey : “gee ae 3 4 aarti nc | Oa ae Pipommen to |} HiwynB Barr BW. io ae dl s yo tn aaa .** $, Eimer MOTOR SALES [@82<"ccB gee ig yf elong a Sag 3 : Ty pomitfettlererany a , je BU. conscowennesssessnees 1) oder wants coms ened a | y 2, 8. William Boger + i Wwume D. Perce it 210 0 - mel ba Se es 190\off a shade. or | Madison Metehts IT" © sentutieta rep, | 3 Rovere, We Blowene ie rchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 fissmen ULI Gi] go na 13, Emanuel Christensen 3° pores { Riware ©, “Augurtine 13. Robert steen TTT TTT 9° * : chard. bal 300222000) sa ie Ohio, pase hare Baltimore 3° Se te 2, Helen Chapman § De oes ire . ae eee ew York Central, Wool-| {. °*" P*at# Precinet 4 Hugh G. Allerton, Jr. | & S.., | Sie Thor Endive. worth, Loew's, Eastern Air Lines, | $° 1 Raion Ted Miller 5 Peer G. Finn i : Syren nomas, K s ae Eee wiBleaced ba... a World Airways and : ‘Op feclnet — \"