_ to make concessions to the Rus- S tela Herter his government be- The Weather fe : Us. Weather Bureau Forecast (Details Page ¥)- 147th YEAR * eR Re PONTIAC, PICHIA FRIDAY, JU L Y, a1; 1959 —40 PAGES. | SS a s City Force Nixon to Anawer Soviet Hecklers, _ Give TV Report = : From ue ‘News Wires MOSCOW ~- Vice President Richard M. Nixon re- turned today ffom a flying Siberian-Ural trip and prom- ised to answer Soviet hecklers in a televised speéch to the Soviet people Saturday Nixon also is expected to in a Germans Fear Yrap at Geneva : Von Brentano Pleads With Herter to Stand Firm in Final Days GENEVA (UPI) — Western sources reported | today that Soviet Premier t ; Nikiti Khrushchev may | receive an invitation in the next few days to visit the United States. ° It was learned that. the Western Allies here al- ready have been informed of the possibility that President Eisenhower might invite Khrushchev — to pay an early visit, pos- | sibly this fall. | | | > 4 * GENEVA (AP)—West Germany } | that Nixen would do so, \the Russians to hear and see his | address. | answer sore of the questions I | give my impressions of the Soviet night. give a nationwide television report to the American peo-| ple after he stops off ‘in He called off all appointments at | the American Embassy tonight as! well as most of tomorrow. At Mos-} cow airport, Nixon in effect urged 'SVERDLOVSK, Soviet Union (—Vice President Richard M. | Nixon is not going to stop off in Geneva’ to pick up Secretary of | State Christian A. Herter on his. way back to the United States. | ,When asked about speculation | press | spokesman Herbert G. Klein re- plied with ‘an emphatic “No.” a on Talking into a microphone, he! said: “When I speak tomorrow night at 8 o’clock I will discuss and got during the trip. I will also economy, the managers, workers and people." Nixon called his fast - moving, five-day trip outside Moscow ‘‘very ‘interesting."’ The Russian people, he said, are very friendly to Amer- iWays |Michigan 141 Pry Congress Deals Blow to State Highway Plans | Mackie Sees Cash Cut | Crippling County Link for Expressway State Highway Commis- “ stoner John C. Mackie today} charged Congress with deal-_ ‘ing. a crippling blow to ‘Michigan’s 1% billion dol-| Poland for a three-day visit. lar, five-year highway pro- ‘gram. Among the projects af- ‘fected is a 44-mile expréss- way link through Oakland| -; County. He accused C ongress of welching on a deal in its proposed cutback | iin federal funds which, i‘ it OES | through, would seriously affect. Mackie’s road building program ~The Oakland County express. | way, 44 miles of reloceted U.S. *10 from the south to a connec. tion with the Fenton-Clio Ex- pressway, Is a major segment | in the 1,000-mile program. It is an extension of the Walter, P. Chrysler Expressway to begin from downtown Detroit. * * * “The department was stunned apd dejected by the federal high way bill reported out of the House Committee,”’ and Means said Mackie. CUT 141 MILLION The bill reduces highway. aid to ji million dollars in 1960, 1961 and 1962. inally called for, according to/ Mackie, was $278,600,000. The cut would reduce -the total to $136,- today urged the United States to icans even as the people of the | 800,000. stand firm against any pressure, sians in the final days of the Big Four foreign ministers conference, reliable. informants said. The plea Was made directly’ to! U.S. Secretary of State Christian A. Herter by Heinrich von Bren- tano, West. German foreign minis- | ter, at an hours conference, these sources added. * * * + West Germany fears a diplomat- ic trap may be sprung by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko before the conference ends or recesses, Wednesday. FEAR CONCESSION , then use ‘from ‘the West. < . ssociates said Von Brentano lieves any. .Berlin solution based on “the latest Soviet proposals would weaken the Western | Pest tion in Berlin. One aspect of the Soviet pian that alarmed the Germans was the proposal for curtailing propaganda and subversive activ- ities in Berlin. * * -* The West Germans said that under the laws of Communist East Germany, almost anything pub-) lished: or spoken in West Berlin could be- construed as_ hostile propaganda, Through an East- West agreement, Von Brentano feared, the Reds would try to force suppression - of Western néwspapers, radio broadcasts, ser- mons ahd published reports of the flight. of refugees from East to West eastoce |American . scientists could devote ‘United States are toward the peo-| ple of the U.S.S.R,.. “I found a common interest in finding ways to peace,"* ‘he said. “T heard on every side the word ‘mir druzhba’—peace and friend- ship.” x * * and his 30-member official party, Nixon, accompanied by his wife flew into the Soviet capital aboard a Russian TU104 ‘jet. It whisked) him in two hours from the Urar that the long hours of urgent la- 'W. Carleton. Warrick in his office them industrial city of Sverdlovsk; miles away. 2 SEEMS TIRED a During flight, .he dictated part of his address to a secretary. Hearranged to spend six - hours drafting it further tonight, Nixon seemed tired after his 5,000. mile tour in the Soviet Union. : In ending his stay in the Soviet hinterland, Nixon appealed for world leaders to settle their politi- cal disputes so that Soviet and their full time to, peaceful atomic ‘work instead of atomic bombs. * * * Nixon toured a building of. the atomic power station being built at Beloyarsk, some 60 miles from Sverdlovsk, and told the scientists: “We feel as I know you do “The‘cut amounts te a break | of faith by Congress,”. said Mackie, “‘We have been desperat- ly gearing our engineering, right of way and design toward a record 1960 tion ' year. “We are in’ our ‘third year of the prog Arow and on schedule. Mehigan woul be far out in front in ways. It seems incredible 959 |bor may have been spent in vain.’ The basis of Mackie’s “break in. faith” charge is the alloca- tion of Congress with various * o Expand Sewag Morning After Railroad Mishap in Wisconsin: in which at léast 100 persons were injured. Seven cars of the speeding train deft the The sum orig-, Suspect Getting 17 Stay in Hospital - Truth Serum Agrees to Take Test, as Police Still Probe Murder of Doctor - The man who said he found Dr |moments shortly after the 7l-year- ‘hospitalized today with injuries received when a speed-. jing passenger train derailed at the edge ACCIDENT SITE — A twisted rail speaks a silent epitaph as workmen and officials around the scene of yesterday's train derailment AP Wirephete mill tracks and three slid halfway down a. 100-foot embankment before they were stopped by a clump of trees. It was thought that heat might have snapped a rail, causing the accident, After Train Wreck MENOMINE, Wis. (UPI)—Eleven persons still were humid is the ar At least 100 persons were injured ne all, returning+— =— ‘home from summer camps. three cars remained on the tracks. | near normal $3 high and normal ‘They continued on to Chicago and} $3 lew for the next five days with children old physician was shot twice by a Forty-seven persons were} |gnman was to take a truth serum) test sometime today, state highway departments when | The man, Lloyd J. Tunnel, 53, Morial Hospital. the 1956 Federal Highway Bill was passed and-the federal gas | (Continued on Page 2, Pre b) Queen Wants People + State Police Post _—- incon- fo Get a Good Look TRENTON, N. S. (AP)—Queen Elizabeth II arrived in this foggy maritime yrovinces city today and! insisted on riding in an open car so the local people could get. a better look at her. * * * The Queen also had ordered her| jof 1755 Willaims Lake Rd., Water-. ford Township, jinv estigation of murder. Tunnel] was arrested Monday night. Lie detector tests Tuesday and Wednesday at the Redford clusive, Tunnell, a patient of Dr. War-. rick, admitted after the first test that. he lied when hé told. police ‘he did not Jeave the physician's office from the time he found the doctor until police arrived. He at first balked at taking the. truth serum test, but finally agreed | ito submit late yesterday. Arrange-| ments have not” yet been com- that’ this is the most hopeful use Plane to take of from Charlotte-| pleted. of the atom. We all look to the| time where we will be devoting | our efforts to this opening of great new vistas rather than the produc- tion of atomic weapons.” * * * At the same time, Vice Adm. Hyman G. Rickover, who helped create the first American nuclear- powered submarine, linvited the di- rector of the Soviet atomic pow- er plant here and his staff to visit (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) town, P, E. L., Airport as soon as she got there so Nova Scotians would not be kept waiting for her here.* Officials were going to de- lay the takeoff. time an hour be- ;eause of fog.. * * * plane put down at this northern Nova Scotia industrial town after a 20-minute flight. The Queen's blue - and - silver The Queen asked that a plastic out my weather—be removed. ° F rom High Up in the Heavens YEW OF EARTH — The Air thése pictures yesterday in Washington, and said they were made with a camera nose’ cone of a Thor missile fi Canaveral, Fia., on July 24. Tn the left, . the main stage’ of the Thor drops away i Force released mounted in the red. from Cape the picture on © the missile rose -aP Wirephote a EU ic te conanennnelie The Flor- ida Atlantic coast line cilfves from top to bottom of: the picture. On the right, the Grand Bahamas and Great Abaco Island and the shallow water. between them are shown. The Air Force said. to approximately 300 miles above night for treatment of a back ail- ment. strewn on. the floor. t “T'H do anything to clear my- self,” Tunnell was quoted as say- ing by police. ; He does not fit the description rick. * * * Dr. Warrick diéd Saturday eve. ‘ning at Pontiac General Hospital, Meanwhile, Internal Revenue © agents visited Dr. Warrick’s office — the © yesterday and photostatgd psysiecian’s records. Police said the revenue agents indicated samethin g was “‘un- usual,”’ but did not elaborate. Polio Cases Increase polio cases, reported by states increased to 177 last week, ! : Beet ee ie In Today's s Press * Markets WASHINGTON #® — Paralytic |” the [© is in custody for’ \cago, } | | of the gunman. given by Dr. War-! = highest weekly total “of the year. |_ Mrs. Bertha Risskin, 78, Chi-! was critical condition. iShe received only bruises in the laccident but suffered a heart! attack on the way to the Meno-' minie hospital. « The Chicago and Northwestern in | Twin Cities “400,” bound from Minneapolis to Chicago, was de- railed yesterday afternoon while speeding through the western Wisconsin countryside. Seven cars of the ll-car train left the tracks and three of them. \slid halfway down a 100-foot cliff ‘before coming to rest against a ‘clump of trees. * tt, Some. crew members. said they Tunnell told police he found |felt a bump just before the acci- the doctor staggering about his ‘dent. office when he went in Friday ‘highway which parallels the tracks Motorists driving on a said the rails seemed to slide out from under the train. ~ Police found $1,356 in bills ig There, was’ ‘speculation a rail the doctor’s. pockets and $100 might have snapped from the | heat, causing the accident, The diesel locomotive units and fenitgtspsrate PE SR CIE ES # | | } | ee eee ee 1 EERE EE DOERR: TERE Huge Bronze Figure of Christ. | Resting on Indian River Cross arrived early today, unloading a| ® warming trend due Sunday. taken to Menomine Me-| weary but thankful group of pas-| Thumdershowers are likely Mon- 'sengers. os Hunger Striker Sees Light, Feasts on Eggs ANN ARBOR w—The hunger strike of jail prisoner Neale E Hills ended last night over a plate of string beans and scram- bled eggs. *« *« * Hills, 23, ate his first food: in nine days in breaking a fast with which he tried to drama- | tize his resistance to a child | support court order. Besides the eggs and ate. Hills had bread and coffee, giving in to-the arguments = turnkey Theodore Kentros. The turnkey has played a role of counselor to the young father at the Washtenaw County ‘Jail. _* * * “T think he sees the light and he'll be all right now,” Kentros_ said, many’ * of | Costs M ay anyone anticipated. e * itiac to — its facilities. * proposed in the past. e PI hal * After hearing that Pontiac’s present plant is inade- quately polluting the Clinton River into a health ‘menace and public nuisance—the Water Resources {Commission yesterday called for an order to force Pon- Jump Up; Pollution Called We By PETE LOCHBILER LANSING — Pontiac is going to have to ‘expand its sewage treatment plant, probably at a higher cost than x ‘ x * But the State Health Department demanded a new set of construction plans, probably calling fdr a more ambitious treatment program than Pontiac officials had _ “We are going to have to rescind our approval of the city’s existing plans,” said Dr. Albert E. Heustis, state ‘health commissioner. “Apparently Pontiac's pollution problem is far worse than the Health Department suspected.” * | Following yesterday’s hearing, a State Health Depart- ‘ment engineer told the Water Resources Commission ‘that the Pontiac problem is probably twice as bad as | originally reported last year. ’ * * * | The news came as a jolt to city officials, who up to poday expressed confidence that the state would con- | tinue to approve the city’s plans for $3,300,000 improve- /ments to abate pollution. Weatherman Promises Relief ' .From the Heat The weatherman has promised het- and wilted Pontiac residents some respite from muggy high temperatures. = 2 x 2.8 7 Fair, a little cooler, and less forecast for tonight and tomorrow. The low tonight will af of a 100-foot: ibe near 65. Tomorrow -the mercury’ is expected to reach 85 degrees. A report from the U.S. Weather | | Bureau predicts that tempera. | | tures in this area will average day or Tuesday. ~*~ © * * In downtown Pontiac the lowest temperature recorded preceding 8 a.m. was 66, At 1 p.m. the ther- mometer reading was 84. ‘Man Shot in Head Slightly Wounded DETROIT # Lawrence Stephens was shot in the head and lived. (tt *« * The 23-year-old Detroit man was shot yesterday by Det. Val Walker of the suburban Hamtramck po- lice The bullet entered Stephens’ forehead. It went along and around his skull under the skin and came out at the bak of his head. Doctors said the wound was minor, * & * . Walker said he was questioning Stephens ‘about ear robberies at a + \ said. How much more money the city may have to spend aS a result of the State Health Department’s. de- (cision was a matter of con- ' jecture. But the city may have to : heal ; again, almost from scratch, with an engineering survey of its sew. age treatment setup, Dr. Heustis The Grdnr tienen Com. mision staff is expected to have the order ready within & days. Under terms | the city will be Dec. 31, 196) to facilities in operation, or court action. According to a time-table set by the Water Resourses. Commission, Pontiac will have until Dec,-1 to leg approval of expansion plans 2 State Health Depart- te nd July 1, 1960 to award construction contracts. : The Water Resources Commis- ‘sion is empowered to seek a Cir- cuit Court writ if either of the two interim deadlines are not met. Armed with a circuit Court or- 'det, city officials could issue gen- eral obligation bonds to finance the expansion without first going to voters for approval. « Pontiac voters turned down bond | issues three times in the past three years. The Water Resources Commission airéd the charges against Pontiac — during an hour-long hearing in which City Manager Walter K. Willman afd City Attorney Wil- liam A. Ewart appeared in behalf of the city. Two sanitary engineers for the Water Resources Edwin 8. Shannon and Robert J. Couchaine, gave testimony based on a study of the river which they said was made last sum- mer. : Shannon said the pollution. ex- parking lot when the an came“ at/tends almost to Rochester. He said him. with a knife. 255 citi | (Sie wae RR gO RS (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) eek ' INDIAN RIVER—Marshall Fredericks, nationally ac- Michigan resort town. into. place. _- Claimed sculptor who lives in Birmingham, watched ? intently today-as his gigantic figure of Christ was raised ‘ Sand secured to its waiting crdéss at this little Northern He directed the raising of the 30-foot figure, er + to be the largest statue of Christ in the world, as hun- eds of spectators looked on tensely for a slip that - could send four years of work crashing to earth. After four hours the statue was bolted into place. And now a giant crucifix of bronze and wood, weigh- ing 18 tons and ‘rising 60 feet into the sky, is. stand- ing on a hill overlooking a Roman Catholic shrine. : ] Yrne four-ton. figure of Christ was lifted from the | ground by a huge crane, carried gently’ upward to the fdce of the 56-foot redwood cross and bolted securely Anxious workmen stood quietly asthe steel cables at the end of the crane’s 100-foot boom grew taut. Motors, | laboring to the limit of their four-ton capacity, whined. | Slowly the sen’ one Paes to rise on its steel taps [SEE es 5, At 30 feet, workmen detached the supporting frame and the gigantic figure, held up now by:.hooks attached to rubber-coated cables wrapped around the chest, moved into an erect position and began the ascension to the cross on the hill. Commissioned by the Grand Rapids Diocese of the © Roman Catholic Church, the figure is entirely of bronze © three-eighths to one-half inches thick and bolted to- © gether in sections. Fredericks says it is the — of Its kind in the world. Unlike most likenesses of Christ in the Crucifixion; i Fredericks’ figure does not have a‘crown of thorns. a wanted to eliminate. the suffering. and agony for the observer, and give the face an expression of great peace and strength,” the sculptor said. oe lacks-the spear-wounds in« ~~ flicted in Christ’s side after his death on the cross. ~ Fredericks explained that he has tried to portray Christ _ as he looked just before death “when he had reached — The towering figure also _ the highest pinnacle of his “A figure of Christ is always hard for the artist,” Fred (Continued existente on earth.” { on Page 2) - © £4 ISAO OAD ERA SOOT: AONE _ Hit by Cash Cut: : | (Continued From Page One) : tax increased trom ‘14% | t | c n't | | | "Mockin eras he has already Principle Bicker, Dicker at Lansin State Forcing City fo Care for Sewage (Continued From Page One) g Business Taxes ¥ cents to jroads in 1960. The Oakland County | project is slated to be under con-, Senate Action Stalled ‘tract by. 1962. BIRMINGHAM Three Bir- mingham architects won high hon- ors in Belgium's international con- test for the best design for a cultural center in Leopoldville, Belgian Congo. x *k & _— the bottom of the Clinton is lined with sludge which slips through the existing treatment plant either partially disinfected, 9% wholly in some Cases. ; Because Until Monday; Williams Standing By scheduled the spending of 84 mil-| , , is approved, Michigan would be! U Nn er es allowed only. $58,600,000 for 1960. lion dollars in federa} money on! instead of the $96,700,000 as prom-| ised By ROGER LANE the untreatéd sewage EAST LANSING «® — it isn’t LANSING (® — Bipartisan dick- ering over business taxes took the legislative spotlight today with fin- al Senate action stalled until Mon- interest. That was the complaint of Michi gan State University officials today as they had to borrow to meet the speed to build their roads,” said Mackie. “Mackie had secured the “con- sent from all Oakland County stream, fish and plant life are vir- ‘tually non-existent in the river as far as eight miles distant from the plant, Shannon testified. . day on the latest Republican use = ave mai tax. increase package. Couchsine seid he tested the ‘Uy faculty payroll due Friday, atcipalities to expressway * * * river below the pliant on Aug. Philip J. May, MSU comp. alfggments through their -cities, Gov. Williams stood by, willing “20, 1958 and discovered that 3,800 [roller, went to the Michigan with the exception of Southfield. necessary to cancel plans to of oxygen‘consuming maferials National Bank for a $1,500,000 Southfield’s City -Council has attend the Slst Governors Con- were discharged into the river loan to make up money lacking. taken under study the proposed ference in Puerto Rico where he & _ during the 24-hour period, for the $2,600,000 monthly pay- le through its boundaries of the Wil head a 13-state tax and rev- H . roll. Failure of the stage to meed rt ee 7 , ; . : enue panel. He was due to: leave eyeee ee paling materials a $2,322,480 support installment pe toed project. tonic ’ . we - continued to eat lip more and more ee ee Mm | Oakland County homeowners onight REV. CARL W. NELSON ‘ due this month forced the whose properties. are slated for oxygen in the stream as it flowed | particularly away from Pontiac until at a point) seisiiinned The new round of bargaining copdemnation are started spontaneously late yes- ‘~terday. Williams, Sen. Cariton H. | Morris of Kalamazoo, top GOP _tax strategist, and other partici- pants kept lips tightly buttoned amount of oxygen in the river was ticipated fall term student fees, “Mackie reported to these people only 10 per cent. will cost MSU $11,250 in interest. | previously that they would not be * “The interest payment eats up Paid for at least two years, © Heart Ailment * * Fi “During a drought when the the salary we could be paying to| ai) LE sia — Takes p astor water levi is down, the amount of fill @ full professor position on the this meant she and others were Althougk none confirmed it, dis- oxygen there would probably be. faculty.”’ May said. | “rooted to their condemned cussions obviously centered on zero,”’ business activities tax. revisions, Rev, Carl Nelson Dies; now the negotiating area crucial, ; to a final tax settlement after sev-. Served at St. Jolin’s the oxygen content was 70 per- to $21,000 before the university en months’ political werfare. i Lutheran Church /cent | Below the plant, this level was in condition to make a repay- x * * |was not reached again until the-ment in June. Democrats wanted a two per! The Rev. Carl W. Nelson 47, tiver reached Rochester, he’ said. “We haven't seen anybody of- cent surtax on corporation prof- pastor of St. John Lutheran Church Couchaine said that the oxy gen fering to pick up the interest pay- its, as approved last week by the for nearly 13 years, died yester- \¢ve! has to be 45 per cent to sup-' ment,” May said. ‘‘Hedeesn’t seem House, worth 44 million dollars. day efternoon at Pontiac Genera} Port Plant and fish life. - fair to penalize the university fi- _ Morris wanted a bare minimum Hospital. He had been ill with al He testified that the Pontiac ancially because the board of increase in the BAT base rate heart ailment for several weeks. plant would have to trim the (trustees has the authority to bor- of 6'2 mills, with other changes » » & amount of oxygen consuming ma,"Ow where the state does not.’’ Couchaine said. MSU had to borrow $1,400,000 to property for two years with no * * meet & payrol] the first of the year. alternative. i P Interest on t a Hhe said that above the plant, rest on the December loan ran _ “No one will buy knowing its condemned,"’ the spokesman said, “and we can't move to another place until-we get the money for this one.”’ * * * The homeowners fear the cut- back, if enacted, would also mean an “indefinite delay’’ in congemna- tion procedings resulting in ‘‘cap- tive home ownership of condemned property.” . Other. projects that would be ‘the cutback, acording to Mackie, , are: During his pastorate here, he | worked with the relocation com- mittee and congregation of his church in purchasing 33 acres of land on Pontiac road east of Opdyke read for a new church. House Democratic leaders, in an. Plans are presently being drawn limiting any boost in net yield to) He was a past president of the amount of oxygen consuming ma- | }° j ® ’ ~ *& * .|ber of Pontiac Advisory Council.) te 1,309 pounds a day in order Nixon Will Answer The makings of true compro- . . ; Maurice Richmond, State Health| Without some yielding on his : : hrysler Expressway in De- part, Morris faced defections, Department engineer for the Clin-) the eye Expeeeees : - (Continued From Page One) 2 sed E tie : ision after,the hearing that the. 8 ineering of 12 miles of proposec dissolve the Republican Senate's Aug: “®,-1958 tests were mislead-| America and ‘‘see our atomic in- Fisher Expressway. nine million dollars or less. . {Pontiac Pastors’ Assn. and a mem-| terials dumped into the stream m were ther to reach the 45 per cent level. | ise We e. Hecklers Over TV among GOP followers that could! ton River basin, told the Commis-| |troit and right-of-way and engi- ing. Richmond said that Pontiac; spirations.”’ About 115 miles of Detroit-Mus- long-held position of strength. uneasy coalition dependent on) for ite construction. ety aren aclede| “A quick visit’ would be a. lersgplencvin in Livingston, W a: : | = . . 5, s A) b = “*h : ‘. 3. . ome Reveiiows, Uneyes knew) tie was porn in Creston, Iowa. ing materials into the river. more eee and show — x |. *’*~ * * ate probably résted on a er graduating from Augus- suspicion, Some 47 miles of relocation of than twice the amount reported to Rie the Water Resources Commission mover sald. before the hearing, *® * middleground solution. jtana College in Roolefsland, I. Meantime, most lawmakers with a B.A. degree in 1939. he cocked an eye on the Capitol do- received his B.D. degree from . U.S. 25 extending the Ford Ex- Project Director Nikolai Kugu- pressway through Macomb and St * shev said he was grateful for the Clair counties to Port Huton. ings from home where they were so seminary in 1943 with’ - tye Commission was consider- invitation and that he would e About 72 miles of relocation of playing a kind of authorized | "'S"°S oe ’ «¢ ing running a new series of tests the trip if his work permitted U.S. 27 and US. 2. in Crawford, | ee The Rev. Mr. Nelson was or- on) the iver: WHISPERED WORDS Otsego and Coippesta. counties. Richmond emphasized during He added that a Soviet power the hearing that the existing delegation soon to visit Ameri- plant, although antiquated, was ca ‘will be honored to receive -being operated as efficiently ®8 = your invitation.” House members scattered yester- dained iinto the ministry-.of the day when a procedural snag foiled Augustana synod of the Lutheran the aim of majority GOP senators Church in Calvary Lutheran. to ram through their four per cent Church in Minneapolis. “ use tax package, reckoned by its) He began his ministry as pas-\ Pesstble. | Rickover issued the invitation framers as worth 116-millions in tor of Nazareth Lutheran Church After the facts had been pre- after o whispered conversation fiscal 1959-60. : lin Wilcox, Pa., where he served sented, the city put up virtually with Nixon whe then said’ “Presi. Stripped from it were proposals ynti] coming to Pontiac in Janu- no defense. | dent Eisenhower and himself to jump the tax on drug pres-| ary 1947. ‘We admit nothing and deny no- joined in extending it.” criptions from 1% to four per! . ‘thing,’ said Willman nis cent and to take away an exemp-- The Rev. Nelson has also | Kugushev, replying tion on the first $50 of sales al-| Served as president of the Wil. He pointed out that some pol- |said, ‘‘We are convinced in our lowed retailers for their monthly, ©* district of Iutheran church- tution in the Clinton comes from = minds: that your people and ours Thomas, 65 and deaf, was walk- reporting chore. : | @S, Was a member of the execu. Waterford Township and Bloom- ,. this cooperation and we are ing along the Santa Fe. Railroad é. @ «* tive board of the Home for the field Township storm drains feed-~ cured that new discoveries by tTacks near here Thursday night The two features, together, ASed st Jamestown, N. Y., dis- ing into the waters on Pontiac's our scientists will open the way When a freight train approached. | warth two malllion dollars a year, trict chairman of Lutheran | west side, to new conquests and progress.’ Engineer W. U. Gaylord blew, x * his whistle, but Thomas kept were abandoned by Republicans|- Neat ncten = her — | Lynn F. Baldwin, chairman of _ : yesterday in the face of fast ris- pr the Wuees pastors] adv 'the Commission, said this part of Nixon assured him that this rep- walking on the tracks - ing opposition. I District Lather ‘the pollution problem would. be| resented the thinking ‘‘not only of * * © Kick in Pants Saves Deaf Man © From Rail Death OAKWOOD, Okla, (AP)xr- Glen Thomas owes his life 4° a -swift ‘kick in the seat of his pants. to Nixon, e we &® ®! If the pared down financing plan. sed, | prize in the worldwide competition. - ve “The action amounts to penaliz-| consumes natural oxygen in thé the principle of the thing—it’s the jing states that have moved , with! 4.5 miles east of-the plant, the The 90 day note, secured by an: fearful of this latest development. | One such homeowner declared | |slowed or indefinitely delayed by A joint entry by Mr. and Mrs. Douglas P. Haner of 724 Wallace, St. and Gunnar Birkerts of 1830) E. Tahquemenon Rd. won third! They were the only American architects to win an award, | All three are employed by Min-' oru-Yamasaki & Associates archi-) tectural firm located at 1025 ‘E:! Maple Rd. | Statistics released this week by the Detroit Metropolitan Area Re-| gional Planning Commission show! | Bloomfield Township standing 10th | among area communities in num-| ‘ber of dwelling permits issued in| ‘the first half of 1959. * «© + The township's total through, the month of June was 259 permits | for new housing with a high point of 64 reached in March. Birmingham issued 6] housing permits, more'than half of them | Hills, 15 permits were ~issued | during April. In Bloomfield | during the same period. | The Commission included Oak- land, Macomb, Wayne, Monroe and, Washtenaw counties in its an-| alysis. = : Knights UE Columbus Chapter 3869 of Birmingham will install /new officers at 8 p.m. Wednesday ‘at the Council! Chambers, 275 Frank St., Birmingham. | « According to Chancellor George W. Williams, 19 officers will be | installed, State Treasurer John A. Fisher will be a guest at the ceremonies. The Birmingham Knights of Col- umbus plan construction soon of * Swimming Lake Michigan CHICAGO (UPI) — Swimmer | Joe Griffith started his fourth attempt to swim Lake Michigan today. The 31-year-old swimmer, who failed on three previous tries | to swim from Chicago to Michi- | gan City. Ind., is starting this time from Michigan City ‘‘to take advantace of water currents.” De Gaulle, Dag Parley PARIS w — President Charles _ | de Gaulle and Dag Hammersk- jold met today for a private conference. The U.N. secretary general declined as usual to in- dicate the subject of their | meeting, but the Algerian war — | undoubtedly. was discussed. Traffic Killing More CHICAGO (UPI) — The 1959 traffic death rate is running 5 | per cent above last year, the Na-, | tional Safety Council said today. | -A total of 17,090 persons died on — the nations highways during the | ‘first six months of this year, the council said. The 1958 six-month toll was 16,280. j 1 At least one member has health’ insurance in about 73 per cent of all American families. his mother, Mrs. Carl A. Nelson| ‘the case against Pontiac was Who happen to wear a uniform."’}slowed the machine. Just before | of Creston; a daughter, Helen at prepared by Loring F. Oeming, Rickover told the director, “I the engine reached Thomas, the’ home; a brother, the Rev. Y. E. chief engineer for the Commission Would much rather work on firemen punted. Thomas tumbled! Nelson of Kansas City, and two pollution abatement division, and atomic power plans for peace than head over heels away from the| Doctors gathered more than one, a « * million units of serum today for : y Aa ¢, Problem: five members: of an east Idaho! . {is body ‘will be at the Sparks. farm family fighting botulism sisters, Miss Eleanor Nelson of presented by Jerome Maslowski of ©n military reactors.” engine. rae > food poisoning. A sixth member ‘handled separately. | scientists in civilian pursuits but | Gaylord sent his fireman to the Surviving are his wife, Daisy; ~ ** * iscientists like Admiral Rickover'| front end of the locomotive as he fo Poisoned. Family ap, __|Creston and Mrs. Nick Karrall of|the Atto’ General's staff = IDAH A = rney General's staff. O FALLS, Idaho (AP) | Denver, Colo. | -Maslowski summed up the city’s has died. Three survivers are * ® * S Griffin Funeral Home. until noon) «pontiac simply does not have Monday when it will be taken to g big enough sewage treatment the St. John Lutheran Church for pjant to take care of all its sewage. in iron| SeTvice at 2 p.m. What the city needs is a bigger : Ae Dr. O. V. Anderson, conference pjant.": aes pd ee mel president of Augustana Evangelical daughter Wanda. ‘knew Lutheran Church of Chicago, and: _ — , ; the Rev. Ruben E. Norling, De-| The United States purchased daughter, Martha, 4, and Nelson's mother, Mrs. Aaron Gruwell, are in less serious condition. * * * Mrs.* Gruwell's husband, a 74- troit District president, will offi. Florida from Spain in 1819 for ciate. \five million dollars. vear-old farmer, died early Thurs- sare ame. ded exty Tre Bronze Figure of Christ — ently resulted from botulism: poi-. On In dian River Cross soning —,.a toxin found in some! preserved foods. The family ate some home-canned beets Tues- . day. The Weather OUR HIGH STANDARDS OF INTEGRITY ARE REFLECTED IN FINER GUARANTEED DIAMONDS! (Continued From Page One) " ericks sald. “I wondered if I had the right to symbolize him in bronze. I felt I wasn’t worthy.” | Following the figure’s arrival early in the week, crowds | began collecting daily to watch final preparations by Fred- ericks and his three assistants. “Some just stand and watch. Others take pictures. and once in a while someone reaches out and touches a hand or foot. They seem to take comfort in the contact,” Fredericks said. The figure looks down from the top of a steep, grassy hill overlooking a shrine and rows of wooden pews. The cross is of solid California redwood, weighs 14 tons and is the largest wooden cross in the world, says the Rev. Gharles F. | Decker, the shrine pastor. The figure is attached to the cross by 13 bronze bolts, 30 His & Her Rings 14K set with 6 fiery diamonds valued at $190. OUR PRICE Lay-A-Way li You Wish y Lady’s Diamond Solitaire In 14K mounting and in Hig fair with little change, high 85. Nerth te! northwest winds 4-15 miles today berem- ing light and variable tenight. . i ‘ Teday in Pontiac | scone temperature preceding 8 am At 8 am Wind velocity 18 m p h Direction—Nort Sun sets Priday at 7.53 pm Sun rises Saturday at $24 am Moon sets Friday at 4:46 p.m Moon rises Saturday at 2°47 am 2 Downtewn Temperatures 6 11 a.m 6am ‘am ve 4ipm % inches long and two inches thick. The difficult task of , perfect blue white. Val- 10 am 78 matching the bolt holes in the figure with the cross was ued at $250. Thursday in Pentise , the most exacting phase of today’s raising. $ Highest temperature gn. o Funds for the figure were contributed by more than 125 Lowest temperature . 2 5 a 10,000 persons who visited the shrine since its founding in Mean temperature ssa alee 82 Weather—Rain, sunshine. ho&-humid. | Large Selection of Styles Pendants Necklaces, Rings and Ear s of the finest quality. 4] aoa Co We ety 1946 by the late Most Rev. Francis Haas, then bishop of Highest Compesatunk® im Pentiae = ss the Grand, Rapids Diocese. The cross was erected five _ 99 Pt. Sapte | a isiiocol Sern a donation by an anonymous Indiana} Gent's Massive - 4> eather— ny, | . ; | n Mighest and Lowest sTemperstnres The site of the cross is identified in signs only as “Catho- DIAMOND RING KN Diamond Rin gin 1917 nn Date 9 Keone sg, lic Shrine” but Father Decker says the diocese hopes to name | A $950 Vai Pike E Bon acre Thursdays Cpupatenens Chart it for Kateri Tekakwitha, famed “Lilly of the Mohawks,” if | , ‘. at $900. . Aipens 9 Marquette 1 % she is canonized. Biamalck $i 58 Miami Beach 91 The shrine, visited by thousands of persons a year, is lo- $ 7 ) $ 7 iuflio, B13 Minteapots 4s $f| Cated near the corner of U.8.-27 and M-68, south of this : . Enuage® 8 4. es Yor’ ft 4] Cheboygan County community, aa l eine = ye io ne rs} “ Sculptor Fredericks, whose main studio is in Royal Oak, bs L E O N A R D S Deval ast Piiesbor ‘t ‘ ae four years in creating his figure of Christ. e fash- — ’ ay 2 61 5. Prancisco, 64 i : oned two scale models before making the huge fig e. The , io * chao 2 Sf Sault Ste. me §i/-casting was done in Norway. } ; 20 North Perry Street ntown Pontiac : nn : i Sots FR P ining! dedicatton of the figure and cross is scheduled Gar We Are Closed Monday Nights During July and August ’ : -o- \ \: ; | Fae: ~ tp sere te: : : g : bol i . bi. : \ é \ 5 oe 2 p ie’ “ ts ee \ A en, paler \ Ae I'hree Local Architec Pe Win High Belgian Honors a new club house on Southfield road, south of 13-Mile road. - has returned from vacation and will resume his ministry Sunday 42-year-old pharmactst “was sen- at the Congregational Church of tenced to 20 years in prison yes- Birmingham. You Are, God OWOSSO # — William Salan- der, 64, of, rural’ Owosso, was injured fatally yesterday about four miles west of here when his car left M21 and smashed into a ' tree. ‘ i ‘Gift’ Gets Him Time The Rev. Raymond A. Fenner | ae | SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI) — A \terday for mailing a bomb wrapped His topic will be “Wherever| as a Christmas present to a former Is.” girl friend. a SIMMS Comparison Shopper Proves That— You Can Buy Famous DRUGS ~- for MUCH LESS at SIMMS | No need for you to shop prices in other drug stores, our Comparison - shopper did it for you. And here is an Adv-Full of proof. Friday and Saturday Specials. Rights reserved to limit quantities. BDRUG SALES Nationally Advertised h- and — DRUG PRODUCTS. } price | price | price ‘KLEENEX TISSUES Box of 200 Sheets GILLETTE BLADES Pkg. 20 ‘Blue-Blades’ a KOTEX NAPKINS Pkg. 48—Sonitory SAL-HEPATICA 19° Pack of 25 Tablets — LISTERINE Antiseptic—14-Ounces LYSOL GERMICIDE 14-0zs. Disinfectant PHILLIPS Magnesia Large Size Bottle ‘VICKS VAP-0-RUB *Medium Size Jor MURINE EYE-WASH With Dropper—Small __ BAUME BEN-GAY Rub for Aches and Pains - ANACIN TABS Full’Pock of 10000 * ABSORBINE JR. 12-Ounce Bottle MILES NERVINE 8-Ounces Liquid THERMOMETERS Clinical, Oral or ‘Rectal DOAN’S PILLS Aid to the Kidneys fas [5.95 119 19° HEET LINAMENT For Aches and Pains 5-Gr. ASPIRIN Pack 100 Tablets MINIT RUB Lec lle! BAYER ASPIRIN Bottle of 100 Tablets. NOXZEMA Skin Cream—Jor WILDROOT Cream-Oil.in Tube _— ‘BAN DEODORANT | Roll-On Type ne AQUA VELVA Williams Shave Lotion core tet eS OF BRECK SHAMPOO | 1.00 ~ Regular—Oily—Dry paces | TON! PERMANENT ‘12.00 89+ HAIR GROOM TOOTH PASTE Home Permanents DEEP HEAT Twin-Pok—2 Tubes POLIDENT : Powders. Cleans Dentures i. * t yy Je oe = tee ye re ar TS es » 4 f ; a ay es dis ba fo A } | . f e : ; Ae y Pak i : Ge. oF r fo act : : % Ef ey 3 i ‘ \? | | l ) } : (sf ‘ ig p- THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1959) ae a Mackie Sees Xway [The Day in Birmingham _) {Owosso Man Killed 1-Oynce Tube : _ enererrn *{1.13)98*-| 79° ‘USTERINE “Tem 0g [53 (44°/ | is ; * | | s : LY kavhi Victims of ‘Drunknike’ Can Sue Bartenders-Who Let Patrons Get Soused WASHINGTON (UPI) —’A judge tific Studies for the Prevention: of warned bartenders and liquor! Alcoholism. salesmen today that irate wives,| Judge Henry F. Todd of the parents and victims of ‘‘drunk-|Nashville, Tenn., General Sessions niks” could bring lawsuits against|Court told the meeting that more them, law suits were going to be filed A convention on prevention of |28@inst bartenders and liquor alcoholism also brought these $4! when their customers gloomy words for folks who im- e soused or habitual drunks bibe the hard stuff: cause damage. -—The average life span of “Bartenders may have to learn alcebolies ‘is Si years, some 19 the hard way that they have more years less than for non-alcohol- responsibility than “just pouring cea drinks and listening to the troubles —There is nothing safe a drink- the Rage! ar oe ce st : at the bar, : - at ~~ "Ge take which will tender may find himself telling his | ool a police breath test. ltroubles to a judge who may not | There is one ‘bright note. “The/ be such a- good listener.’ | number ‘of women drinkers has! He said a woman could sue any-| dropped 8 ae cent since the end ope she could prove responsible | So We SALEbrate Our Birthday With BIGGER BARGAINS! For over a quarter century, Pontiac and all Oakland County has looked to SIMMS for lowest prices . . . and we've never lefthem down intentionally, HH has always been, and always will be our aim to give each and every customer quality, wanted mer- chandise at LESS THAN THEY EXPECT TO PAY. - All “Special” Prices Effective TONIGHT —6 P.M. Until SATURDAY —10 P.M, Open Tonight and Saturday ‘til 10 P. M. | Bargains Come Naturally at SIMMS Barn 25 rae ago in the depths of the depression when nickles and dimes were ‘big money” we've never outgrown the habit of giving bargains Today, our aim is still) to give the greatest values in our 2 nye Get your share by shopping at SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS MAIN. FLOOR SPECIALS | 2nd FLOOR—SUPER SPECIALS keep up with the- hard-pouring | liquor to their minor children. Pa- | Jonses,” Dr. Andrew C. Ivy of the|trons injured by: qa. drunk could} told the}seek liability payments from a | eel Teac stn aeieeltaee foauels oud eee OTN? BIRTHDAY BARGAIN eee cer ee ee BIRTHDAY BARGAIN ANSCO Snap FILM tue it’s not worth the price to laatinges from person's selling | ak 7 R a . nap

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Reg. 69c Yard Ceovececevcccccoscccceoreseeles . Pp fa $79.50 95 Full 46” widths 48° , ‘CRUSADER’ and ‘ENDWELL’ Brands Fits Over Regular Toilet Value vajee = F 0 ROTARY J Men’s Dress Oxfords: KIDS’ TOILET SEAT | viccc: cies oisor tor ssmm | nreis smm precy cia scr amous A . ides Automatic le F udes still 7 . , = As pictured — for ¢€ se $5 | J) projections Wide-angle [16 be 9 = ee Elim Soh 5 holds lens. Superseded mode! ? Pp M strain nauces $6 and. $7 a” peoceepet th past papa CoCo eee oeeeeeeeccoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeees SIRTHDAY BARGAIN ‘ower owers = Quality: : : . Famous “ENDICOTT-JOHN- 4a SON’ shoes. Limited style i selection. Sizes 6 to 12. b PPYTITITIVIIT LILI a ripe Water Repellent — Washable BOYS’ POPLIN » Jackets Cool Cotton Knits i s Gaucho Shirt Reg. $1.95 Gaucho styled shirt with short sleeves, horizontal stripes ~ in 5 3 colors in sises i L 10 to 18. %. black and red.. 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Ideal for working or} : ; POLISH @ 4 DINNER PLATES ‘hunting, Famous Endicott-John-| r Setil. ‘coors Take slides, B & ‘@ 4 DESSERT PLATES th rolling el oa Reg. son guarantee | ie B emest D ree mee W & color snaps $2.50 17 | © 1 SUGAR CREAMER luxe viewfind. automatically — : 3 SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS er All fo and SUGAR BOWL Reg. $7.95<—ALL FOR 3.99 Reg. $2.95 $19.95 C ot: Power. 9% mole patfs anc. 9.87 20-pe. service for 4—break re- : Folds when not : posi eee! dinnerware with = in use. Converts, smart decorations. As pictured. pies to car seat. Reg. $29.95 Buy for if or Se > for 1 10x50 Power............. ° Pag Washable orl.50E CLITA poplin jacket Re $34. 95 : with dpper Sizes Bath & Table Combination HA 20250 Pc 19. 87 is wer....... 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WITH NIXON IN RUSSIA—The Nixons found Leningrad a lot more pleasant than’ Moscow, thought they had a good enough time there. Leningrad reminded them of other places they've been during their active careers—Paris, Venice, Lon- don, Copenhagen. But Novosibirsk an . op wWeil, they ain't exactly Buenos Aires or even Little Rock by a long shot. Novosibirsk is one of those mir- acle boom towns that have been springing up all over Siberia ever since S#ieria stopped being a synonym for a terrorizing w ord. It is called the “Chieago of Si- berja"’. Sverlovsk, off the usual “tourist: circuit; is the. ‘‘Pittsburgh of ‘the Urals.” So if you want fo take a trip to Chicagd and Pitts butgh, Russian’ style; come along Novosibirsk is still wet behind the ears, as the ages of Russian cities are measured. Moscow for example, has-800 years of recorded history. Novosibirsk was founded in 1893. Unedrstandable reason: It was the place to harness the Ob River. That-gave the whole area distinc- tion an put Novosibirsk on the map. Railway runs through there. x * '* The big war made Novosibirsk ~~ Siberia Is A Ce i ae dal ‘ ji . - te fa eee aft se mn Ht move & . ne Se A | j : \ \ ia Ba —_ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 1,' 1959 oe a ee: i : id ; ; a se , ee ‘+ eee Owosso to Get New downtown Owosso two blocks north; Owosso ‘to Be Removed [less than 6 per cent of Owosso's: Tem i = Post Office i n- [West of thespresent post office -+17,000 man’ labor force now idle, . ' | re t Office in 1960 The new post office will be built|From Extra Labor List! 7.’ . ; | i : by private enterprise and leased fi a Bentley sald. : an O OOIMN _1L OWNS |r | Ree. Avin Bert lto the government on @ long term}, OWOSSO .& — Rep. Alvin Bent , \ © |ley (R-Mich) ‘said today that Post-jlease. Construction is expected tol/@Y R-Mich) said today he had ? ; Bees master General Summertielfi has|start by spring of 1960'and be com.|een advised by labor secretary) Automobile registrations went : i : fail es Mitch i * ® Vital industries were relocated injhere in 1917. Czar Nicholas 4nd, int@'the little matter at the House |e the government fas a ¥ psd af shat year, removed from par eth from 35,906,000 to 37,000,000 dur» it with the knowledge that the Ger- mans could never find the place, or produce a ‘bomber that could fly that far... 2 SEEK ENTHUSIASTS Well, the place just ripped out 4 Sverdlovsk its seams. Now it builds heavy ma- lchinery, wants a few more ‘‘en- thusiasts’’ to live there so the population can advance to 1,000,000, is building an 80,000-seat stadium, ‘has the largest publishing house in \Siberia, television, an opera house ‘and is building a. state university. Half of the houses in the city are one-story log cabins se The dope on Sverdlovsk is that it is 350 miles east ef Moscow and out the same west of Nebosibirsk in what was once swamp land. ‘‘The main streets are in relativel¥ good condition,” says a travel ‘folder. The tallest building in. town is eleven stories. It is snow-covered from November until’ mid April. It is a metallurgical gold mine and, uhlike Novosibirsk, is loaded with historic references. * * * The revolutionary movement Besides the Trans-Siberian flourished stronger in this area four gecades and more ago than anywhere else in the Urals. The Soviet government was established jhis family were brought here |eustody. The aforementioned guildbook relates: “The advance in July, 1918, of counter revolutionary forces caused the Soviet of Ye- katerinburg (as it. was then knowh) to fear that Nicholas might be liberated; after a secret meeting a death sentence was passed on the Csar and his fam- | | ly, whe were shot during the night of July 16 in the cellar of the House of Ipatyev—now a mu- | seum of the revolution—and their bodies burned. Shortly afterwards the White Russian and Czechoslovak ° corps recaptured the city and it was) occupied by the Whites under Kolchak. The next year Yekaterin- burg fell again to the Red army." The city’s name was changed to honor Jakov Sverdlov, close pal of| Lenin and first chairman of the! Central executive committee of the! new Soviet government who died| lof typhus in 1919, It too boomed| jthrough its remoteness, when Hit-| ler’s forces ran roughshod over! much of Européan Russia, * * .* Now its got everything, includ ing the Nixons and 70 uacensored reporters whq will want to 46uk) Also Advised McCarthy, Costello, Beck | . By United Press International In a courtroom, the six-foot, 200- Edward Bennett Williams thrives pound lawyer ‘is a commanding on trouble. The 39-year-old defense attorney has climbed to the.top of his pro- fession in less than a decade by fighting courtroom battles for con- tro¢ersial clients. Ni * * * % battled president of the Teamsters’ Union, who is resisting clean-up ef- forts by court-appointed monitors. But the boyish-faced, curly- haired counselor has worked for such ether headliners as the late Sen. Joseph McCarthy, gambler Frank Costello, Confi- Less well known are his legal du-| ington, and his free services for|,, + figure. He shouts his questions to. Famed Attorney Lists Hoffa as Client-' of iormer baseball star Joe Di-| — maggio, _. - Ed, as his friends call him, is a) native sof Hartford, Conn., was) witnesses from the << of the --aduated trom Holy Cross and got room, sometimes striding, some-his law degree from Georgetown. | times standing still. Williams is He got his start by trying damage) equally courts Williams’ best known customer makeup gives way to the brilliant actimates of his right now is James R. Hoffa, em-'lega] performer. _ | ~ ‘ties for Georgetown University, a ~H: leading Catholic college in Wash- entertainers effective in appellate where the actor in his - “He's a cool customer,” said ene attorney familiar with Wil- liams’ techniques. “I've never seen him lose contro! of his emotions in court.” A neat, Ivy League dresser, | Williams has an outgoing personal- ity. He likes to frequent restau-) jrants in Washington and New York lwhere celebrities gather. * * * He has done legal work for many and $s a close friend A claim suits but quit because of the! limited ways “you can get hit in the backside by a streetcar.’’ Now) yearly income range from $150,000 to $200,000. The death of his wife, Dorothy,| at the age of 34 this spring, sad-| dened and subdued the young de- fender. Their three children, al] below-school age, are cared for by Servants in his 12-room home in suburban Maryland. Ninety-five new luxury type motels with a total of 9.- 785 rooms were built in the Unit-| ed States last year at a cost of $138,626 ,000 in of Ipatyev — ‘now the museum of! the revolution. itaken final steps to acquire prop- jerty for a proposed new post office. The building will be logated “in Amateurs buy 60 per cent of all the wallpaper sold in the U.S. “ surplus area classification as of July 31. : Latest government figures show ing 1958; truck registrations from 10,989,000 to 11,200,000 and buses from 268,000 tp 270,000. _—_— -— — <= ame ae eee _——— —— «oe ae ae ee _— er ee ae ee eee ee Se ee ee _——H = —— <9 = = «ee aoe oe a ae cee ee _—_——— —- a Ge ae cee ee YY — a ee ae ae ae ae ee ——_—_——_—— a oe ee ee eee _— GD eee cee ee ——-§— = | ete -_— ee ee ee ee ee cee ee Meee THRIFT 3% ACCOUNTS | pli ee ee en ee -—— oe ee ee ee ee oe As es a 5 eo é SS SSS le ee ee ee You Can Afford The Very Best With An ANA i or BBL Th 1H TN Wi atl N * No "Second Best” . . . No “Tust As “ Good” but the best of all appliances are yours to enjoy NOW while you repay your loan in budget - plann ments. — National eo OF BOOK PONTIA ed monthly install- C Olfices at W. Huron at Tilden—N. Perry at Glenwood Keego Harbor — Walled Lake — Union Lake Lake Orion — Milford — Waterford — Bloomfield Hills MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION _ clients referred to him by thef- Y } American Civil. Liberties Union. * ev * Williams is given high marks for’ competence and integrity even by, his opponents, but he has not es- caped from controversy himself INVOLVED BY CRUM Hig most recent troubles arose 4 from testimony before the Senate Rackets Committee by New York attorney. Bartley C. Crum, which was interpreted to imply that Wil- liams tried to bribe Crum not fo. testify. Williams immediately took the witness chair to deny Crum's i Crum said later he had wat | Previous attacks against Wil- liams have centered on his defense tions, To this, Williams has a stock answer: - - don’t think it’s a lawyer's function to make.a judgment of guilt or innocence of a person who seeks his help. Lawyers are not. supposed to play God.” . Williams’ latest coup resulted in a suspended sentence for Bernard Goldfine, gift-giving friend of pres- idential aide Sherman Adams, on - Oy, SS Sy => Zz fe, — = — Si : | winter rush ‘Get set now | before the big hegins... Order your Shell Heating Oil today! FREE TANK TREATMENT “thy, Lig, Ba HEATING O15 H. H. SMITH) Oil Co.) _ FE 2-8343 . | 590 $, Paddock St. | Fabrics ArOderge dea Y wT STRATFORD Sweep Nylon Molded Foam Rubber Reversible Cushions, too! « * | 4 Piece Sectional AtA Price You’d:' Expect To Pay For Only 2 Pieces oy SAG ' Here's the conversation piece you've dreamed about... 00 now priced for your budget! Look at-the long sweep of uphols magnificence .~ scaled for every room size... every decor, _ Advanced styling with overhang arms and semi-shadow box along the cushion line. Immaculately tailored, self covered button . tufting. Legs are glowing walnut finished with brass floor - ie self levelers. As for ae ‘ : ae — you want... custom designed © = ; construction individuali or the custom styling. Frames are hard , with double doweling and. glued corner blocks, for-long, long life. ns sed Arrange this fabu - lous sectional as your imagination dictates « «+ its versatility is unlimited. e fd OPEN FRIDAY. and MONDAY NIGHTS Until 9 P. M. fgemny ‘3 69” TERMS — OF ~ COURSE! 4 o> tered detailing J Saal menencbataierl 8 ata dgNstam ema iia a iiauel ae THE PONTIAC PR ; ae ‘ FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1959 ‘ ” Guied and Published Locally by The Pontiac Press Company ay Hanotp A. Prrecemanp . : _ Presiden and — . Lp II, Joun W. Frrzornato, JOHN A. og ue! . set and : Secretary and Kalter Treasurer Business Manager ° haverticing Passetor Haray J. Reso, iL M. TREADWELL, Managing Editor ~~ It Is Our Area’s Biggest Get Together The annual Oakland County 4-H Club Fair is the one occasion of the year when the rural and city folks _. mingle in a big way. It gives eacha better understand- ing and keener appreciation of the other. It is an outstanding fostering of the good neighbor policy. x * * This year’s fair opens Tuesday 6it the permanent grounds out Perry Street, near the city limits. Very few such fairs have their own grounds. It now is favored with a four-lane traffic approach which at the time of the 1958 fair was under construc- tion and caused some inconvenience. Kt is located directly on one of our state's great highways. This annual event, probably the largest of its kind in Michigan, is primarily an .exposition.of what is being done by the young farmers of our area. They’ve been. planting, hoeing, weeding, grooming, perspir- ing. This not only “includes agriculture, but also gets into the arts and crafts in a big way. Juverffile handiwork reigns supreme. * * * Livestock, poultry, pets and other features arranged by the rising generation, that is to con- tinue the work of feeding and clothing the rest of us, are dis- played in characteristic samples to show us what they are doing. The permanent buildings and added tents are quite ideal. In the language of the street, it is the annual opportunity of a large and very necessary segment of our population to “strut their stuff.” . x~* * * There ts no admission charge, and liberal parking spaces. The nominal charge on the latter goes toward de- fraying the expenses of the fair, which has grown from a very humble start to big- business. Whether you are an urban or rural resident, there’s plenty for you to see at the fair, the former to marvel at what our young farmers are doing, and the latter to gain a greater pride in it. . x * * With the selection of the fair’s king and queen, The Pontiac Press freckle contest, and other fea- tres on the opening night, there follows a five-day program that should make you want to go more than once. J apan’s Premier Kishi on Goodwill Mission Japan’s Premier NoBUSUKE KISHI is on a month long tour of eleven countries in Europe and in this hem- isphere. His trip follows his govern- ment’s announcement that the question of a revised security pact with the United States will not be brought up officially until the next regular session of the Diet. For the time being the Premier is abroad in the interests of -his country and far removed from the noisy opposition of domestic Left Wingers. \ wo O* * ° The Japanesé complain that they are not being treated as equals and that the world i§ not willing to let. bygones be bygonés as has been done in the case of West Germany. They feel, perhaps with reason, that Japan is “the orphan of Asia, ” is disliked by. its neighbors (barred from immigra- - tion to Australia) ee ignored by the West. . \ te sey a The rapid indust Japan and the vastly ity of its goods have ards. To-avoid tariff quotas,. the " Japanese — voluntar y reduced bag ee Af a Manager per cent. cratic country in Asia and has the © Pi . MakemaL, Joapan, Grones C, Inman, oa Advertising Classified Manager Manager exports. However, in the past five years real wages there have risen 20 Japan is the most demo- highest literacy rate. x *& * It is to be hoped that Premier Kishi’s talks with Western states- men will iron out ‘some of his country’s difficulties and that in the months ‘ahead he can bring home to his countrymen the im- portance of Japan’s rearmament and defense telationship with the United States. Whether they like it or not the Japanese are in the cold war too. “THE average woman doesn’ t fol- low any pattern in winding her watch,” says a psychologist. Oh; yes, she does. She winds it whenever she becomes aware it has run down, usu- ally within an hour to a day and a half after it stops. Firry years ago the type illnesses now referred to as virus infections were called the epizootics. ne —— The Man About Town Freckles Contest Occurs on Opening Night of Next Week’s 4-H Fair “Where you can meét 4-H Fair: your friends—and make new ones. © With a $50 U. S. savings bond as the prize, given by The Pontiac Press, this column’s freckle contest takes place at the Oakland County 4-H Club. Fair on — Tuesday evening at eight o’élock. It will follow the selection of the fair’'s _ king and queen, and will be in charge of William Scramlin, the selection of the champ being made - by competent judges. There is no entry charge, and the con- test is open to both boys and girls of 18 years or under. All that is necessary is to be present and volunteer when entries are called for from the crowd. Last year the winner was 11-year-old Judy Fay Blaylock of Lake Orion, who won out in a field of 34 contestants. Her p a national hookup, and all over the country. - This year’s champ not only rn the $50 prize; but will be accorded tlie same publicity. Every liyé-wire freckle faced youngster is invited and urged to enter the contest. And did you ever see a freckle faced youngster that wasn't a live wire? as run in = “The black bass in our lake surely are ‘gluttons,” phones Arthur Bushfelder of Pontiac Lake, who caught'one that had swallowed nearly a yard of cloth tape, one inch wide. A pair of deer in the big woods near the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Swayze in Orion Township have plenty of good wild forage, but like to raid their garden —even in the daytime. : Slyly using the wire in a coat hanger to gain entrance to a locked car was _ Attorney _ - ~ Milton F. Cooney, but it was his own car. Surely rushing the season is Pete Kingsford of Birmihgham, with the first prediction of an early, long and hard winter. He phones. that the squirrels ‘in his neigh- borhood already are gathering nuts and acorns. Verbal Ot Orchids to- ‘Bert Feneley of 27 Charlotte St.; 84th birthday. Mrs. Mary Duffy of Union Lake; 80th birthday. Mrs. Bertha Bidelman of Birmingham; 86th birthday. John J. -Teggerdine of Clarkston; 89th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Stoughton of Keego Harbor; 55th wedding anniver- © sary. ts. Rebecca Olmstead of Rochester; 83rd birthday. \ Mr. and Mrs. Fred Landsworth | of Drayton Plains; 54th pees a versary. | Mrs. Frank Pawlosks of Oxford; 85th birthday. "Colby petits of Clarkston; 82nd birthday. . _Mr. and Mrs, Clifford — of _— ites wedding. | otograph went on_. j fi Me UZRKs=—? David Lawrence Says: The Blueprint Looked So Good, Too . Steel Settlement Must Be Voluntary WASHINGTON — Do the. amier: ican people want a regulated econ- omy—with the government fixing wages. and prices? David J. McDonald, head of the Steelworkers Union, unwittingly comes close to saying, “yes.” This would be one step re- moved from So- cialism. He de- clares that the government “cannot help but get in- volved’ in the steel ctrike and adds: ‘‘We have always wel- LAWRENCE eomed the involvement of govern- ment.” : ¢ As for the steel conipanies, they recognize the possibility, too, but are vehemently opposed to it, believing thaj free enter- prise thrives under a free system of bargaining. Roger M. Blough, chairman of the board of U.S. Steel Corp., has just announced: “Whatever the length of the strike, and whatever the eventual outcome of the negetiations—as long as they are-vOluntary—we in United States“Steel do not intend to rajse~ ‘the general level of our steel prices in the foreseeable fu- ture.”’ -_* bd * Blough said also that his tcom- pany intended to adhere to that pledge. ‘‘in the absence of an in- voluntary settlement mandated by some public body or authority.”’ This, of course, refers to govern- ment pressure or mandate of law. Naturally, labor union leaders in the past have counted on their political influence in government to give them what they want. They are counting today on help from members of Congress to bring pres- » sure on the White House to inter- vene and force a settlement of the steel strike in their favor. WANTS EFFICIENCY , The promise by the steel indus- , try not to raise prices is a wise move. It doesn’t mean the door is closed to any wage increase. It means, conversely, that whatever wage rise is given can be absorbed without a Price increase. It means, of course, that the industry wants the wor ing rules in existing con- traéts revised to make savings and accomplish greater efficiency. Much has been said by the union spekesmen in the last few days about the size of the profits which steel companies now are revealed to have -earned in the first six months of this year. The argument from the union side is that wages caa be increased because of such profits. But this is exactly how inflationary spirals be- gin. The erroneous assumption is that a rate of profits continues in- definitely. ’ * * Unfortunately for the steel com- panies, if they suffer a reverse, union labor will not share in the losses. Wages are almost never reduced. Profits are looked upon by the labor unions as having been earned by their members. The Country Parson We Tih " x iJ ae nf as <<\' Hy ‘ Pb “A man, like a kernel of corn, is hot as great for what.be Is as for what he may become. tas FA “It seems to be forgotten that the stockholders’ and creditors’ money, which makes possible new ahd re- modeled plants with up-to-date equipment, is ustally responsible for the increased profits. Dividends and interest are wages, too. BUYING HEAVY But, in this instance, it was the fear of a steel strike, which be- came widespread more than a year ago, that gave the steel companies twice as many orders as_ they would: normally have had for the same "Period. Naturally, if you.do two years’ . business in one, profits go up for that period. But if wage rates are to be based on such an arti- ficial situation, what is to hap- pen when orders decline and buyers begin to cut down inven- tories as soon as they art assured of a steady supply after the strike is ended? The unions contribute none of the management skill or energy, none of the sales ability, none of the technical knowledge that makes a big industrial company function suc cessfully. ¥ Dr. William Brady Says: You Can’t Get Ne ecessary Vitamins From Daily Diet Notwithstanding the autocratic assurances of some doctors who should know better, that you get all the vitamins and_ minerals you need. from a well balanced or, varied diet, whatever that may mean, most Americans show signs of malnu- trition, manifest in the condition of skin, hair, : nails, eyes, teeth BRADY or gums, and in functional, disorders of all sorts. The child who consumes less_ than a quart of milk daily (four glasses) or the adult who consumes less than 1% pints of milk daily (three glasses)—whole milk, skim milk, buttermilk or the equivalent in evaporated milk or dry milk powder—is likely to have ‘‘an un-- healthy condition of the skin.” Those who consume their quart or 1‘, pints a day show ‘‘an increase in the bloom of their cheeks \and the sleekness of their skins.” People who take little or no milk generally have a poor complexion. It is the vitamin B2, formerly called vitamin G, now known as riboflavin, in milk that promotes the health of the skin. While milk, is the richest feod source of ribo- - flavin, cheese of any kind but particularly yellow cheese, plain wheat, liver, dried beans, beet tops, broccoli, almonds, pecans and peanuts are also good sources of riboflavin. * There was a large grain of truth in the conception of ‘‘milk-fed beauty’, but of course only ridicu- lous hokum in the idea of a milk bath. One must be child-minded in- deed to believe the application of food, nutritive material,, nourish- ment, vitamins, magic hormones or other substances to the skin can or will have any effect, on health or beauty. Child-minded customers spend millions upon millions an- nually trying to prove it isn’t so. In the pamphlet YOUNG, FOLKS AND OLD FOLKS, available FREE if you provide a stamped, self-addressed envelope, I recom- mend. an adequate daily ration of calcium, vitamin D, riboflavin and iodin for poor growth of nails, resulting in brittleness, ridging, pitting or cracking. Please remem- ber this won’t give you normal new nails in a week. It takes. from four to five months to grow a nail. 2 2 & | For years I have been question ing the value of individual testi; monials, because one never knows whether | A. J,»Coincidence may\ not have been involved. But so | Prony followers have assured me \ * to expect. regained the life and sleekness it had when they were younger, and now and then one avers—and why would a lady lie about this?—that it has restored the natural wave or eurl’ which her hair had lost in recent years. I promise nothing. I merely say the iodin ration can do no harm if you wish to try it— - and you haven't tried it until you have taken it daily for at least - three months. Signed letters, not more than on or 100 words long pertaining to per health and hygiene, not disease, diag- nosis. or treatment, will be answered by Dr William Brady, if a stamped, se page sonal if- addressed tea Oe is sent to The Pontiac” Press, Pontiac chigan. (Copyright 1959) Velen of the People AML we . Visible results. All the news and remarks regarding the steel strike-and any other. . _malcr labor dispute lack ene..glement — the real underlying diapite or cause. We now have a straggle between “management” and ton fe leadership” with each trying to i aii its a in relati . the other. * ix * : = 1 The managing hierarchy has got itself into a position of power and control, whereby the owners, the majority of stockholders, have little or nothing to _Say. Union leadership has arrived at a similar place for the individual member has no control over the leaders’ activities. Both management and labor have gotten “too big fer their breeches.” The oan has been brought about by the extension of ownership to mil of stockholders and the growth of industry-wide unions with concentrated power in top leaders. In both cases, leaders “are appointed by a small members. ra rity of selimer stockholders or uhion * ¥ * If all the tacts were presented to the stockholders and union. mem- bers and a free vote allowed, a resounding throughout the land. 31 96 Poplar Dr., Milford By JAMES MARLOW AP* News Analyst — WASHINGTON (AP) — A look- see is a good eye-opener. The exchange visits of Ameri- cans and Soviets—particularly of- ficial-—may have no Immediate, Long - range, -the thinking of both governments Id be clarified and affected. ® The Soviet Union’s two deputy R. Kozlov and. premiers, Frol Anastas I. Mikoyan, came this year to the United States where there is no broad discontent ex- cet perhaps on the racial issue. They looked around, and found a degree of prosperity the Soviets can only dream of. . * * * Vice President Richard M. Nix- on has visited the US.S.R. and— so far as American news reports from there indicate—found hordes of cheerful, hardworking Soviet citizens who showed content with their government or their way of life. Most Soviet citizens now alive never knew any other government or way of life, and life is getting better for them in material things. In both cases what the officials saw should affect the thinking of theit governments, particularly wishful thinking, And what the of- ficials found can be multiplied many times by what the non- official visitors see in both coun- tries. . * * * The late Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, who shaped Ameri- can foreign policy, seemed taken with the idea a number of times that if this country could keep up its “containment” policy long enough the Soviet edifice might topple. ~ He even went so. far one time as to tel] a congressional commit- tee the Soviet system was on the point of collapsing. President Eis- enhower's press secretary James C. Hagerty later had to explain” Dulles didn't really mean collap- sing, Yet this attitude of Dulles, who never got a look around the Soviet Union raises a question: what ee Case Records of a Psychologist: Ignorance Complicates Mildred is smart, for when a wife understands the simplé mechanics of childbirth, she suffers comparatively little pain. For in her mind she can then understand what is oc- _curring and follow the baby's pragress intellioentl». Modern doctors are trying to inform expectant mothers, as shown below. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE C-405: Mildred R., aged 22. is expecting her first baby, “Dr. Crane, I feel nervous,” she began, ‘for I don’t know what k «' “And I am sure thousands of other wives are just like me, so could you give us a brief explana- tion, in simple langua PREGNANCY FACTS Uncertainty is the cause of much for when _a unnecessary pain, young wife can visualize in her own mind ex- actly what is taking place, she keeps _ interested in results and doesn't feel as much pain. But when she is totally in the dark the childbirth, she DR. CRANE has nothing to focus upon but pain, so it looms larger. ‘The unborn baby is suspended in fluid in a muscular womb (uterus) that resembles an in- ‘verted pear. * * * From. the fifth month onward, the baby moves its hands and legs in the mother’s womb, but during E IODIN RATION (for ord ‘the last month, it usually has such pod send a stamped, self- addressed envelope) has improved the condition of their hair»that I am constrained to = they are fight. , Some bf them ies that their graying hair has regained its orig- ~__ inal color. Somesind their hair has a heavy head that the head then sinks down into the “as pelvis. This head then acts like a snow plow when labor begins, for it pushes the soft tissues aside to clear the way for the baby’s body to follow. ~ occur. The birth canal is curved some- what like an “elbow” in a stove- pipe. The baby’s’ head thus pushes against the base of the mother's spine until it finally makes the turn. Mothers can feel this pressure against the inside of their tailbone during the early hours of labor. With the first- baby, labor usually averages from 15 to 18 hours, for the firstborn paves the way for the next baby. The total birth time of the second baby is reduced to about six hours less than the firstborn’s, CHILDBIRTH FACTS When laber begins the mus- cular womb builds up a brief wave of contraction whieh reaches a climax; then subsides, It may be 10 minutes before the next wave ensues, so take advantage of this lull and rest or doze off, if you expectant . mothers are sleepy. Then another contraction will Ultimately, the time be- tween them will grow less and less till they are toming every 3 or 4 minutes. | x. * * The purpose of these jntermittent contractions is to push the baby’s head along the birth canal by very slow degrees Moving the head too fast might rupture a blood vessel and pro- duce a spastic infant, so dén't try to hasten things till your doctor instructs you to do so. In short, don’t hold your breath and push hard. Just gelax your abdominal wall and Ist the. womb - inside do thé aétual pushing until . the doctor finally tells you to hold your breath and add that addi- tional pressure: ae a 2 *-* *" When you are in labor, it is well to cleat the lower bowel and bladder of their contents, since this leaves more room for the baby’s head to mové downward. That's why the nurse’gives the mother an ome and urges her to\'void urine, rs broad dis- . “No Strike’’ Stephen Garrard Exchange of: Visitors May Dispell Illusions , - would his thinking, and perhaps even some aspects of his foreign policy, have been if he had gotten an inside look? * * * Dulles, like Soviet leaders who are convinced capitalistic societies . will eventually. collapse, was a vic- tim of his ewn wishful thinking. He and they wanted to believe that they” were seeing what they wanted to see President Eisenhower is knowp to feel that are appreciable. pressures within the Soviet Union which might persuade the Krem- lin ,to accept a tension-easing agreement: That makes sense and is a long way from envisioning a Soviet collapse. x « * It is reasonable to believe that the more the Soviets learn about the material advantages of the people ‘in the non-communist countries, the more they will want the same, and the more the pres- sure on, their masters to meet their desires. It’s _also reasonable to believe that as more Soviet citizens are educated they will feel an in- creased. right.to assert themselves in the -conduct of a government which affects. them, Travel is 4 part of their education. * *« * The exchange visits which bring more and more. Soviet citizens to - this country, — where they get a close-up view of what personal freedom means—should-be a force shaping attitudes when they re- turn home, ; But again it: would be wishful thinking to believe that Soviet cit- izens would want or would accept everything they see in America, Smiles Lots of devilish little young- sters. get their hides tanned without going out into the sun. e *® Kids. try out places where there : are “No Fishing’’ signs and find out the signs are Fight. sé Childbirth | At the hospital, the doctor _ makes an early rectal examina- tion with his index finger so he can feel through the wall of the rectum and detect how widely dilated the neck of the womb has become. This indicates about how long © it will be before the baby’s head And can squeeze through. the reason for a rectal examination instead of the vaginal, is to avoid introducing any possible bacteria into the birth canal. * * * fter the baby’s head is born, the shoulders and trunk easily slide outs. Then it may be another 15 to 30 minutes before the after- birth (placenta) tears loose from the womb and is pushed out. For further facts; send for my booklet ‘Facts About Pregnancy,” enclosing a stamped return en- velope, and 20 cents. 7 Always write to Dr. George W. Crane in care of The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan, enclosing a long 4c stamped, self-addressed fon and 20c to cover typing and .prirfting costs when you send for his psychological charts and pam- phiets ~ (Copyright 1959) The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republi- cation of all local news | tg in this y Pein oy soil as well all news dispatch The Pontiac ‘Bress fs delivered by earrier for 45 cents a bone where ‘ not would echo Rae saad es i af 's “nr rt ES Te eee - * oe ~ = "> . . % “ * ees ~~ ot 4 vd 2% i? 2a we trh & Re 2% ~ $79Vd HINO IVA. | PORT ee Py. EN "Sr sacwv ate phe eaten THE PONTIAC pages FRIDAY. JULY 8], 1959 ean | ee Neacaian Devices: 4 - Defective in Saginaw, SAGINAW (UPI) — A number! Telatively high percentage of of measuring devices and scales in Saginaw County found to be defective, according to weights ' William E. Hoffman said half of the on taxicabs on the city were found 5 to ' tests started last October. ‘cent recheck disclosed one-quarter | of the meters still were defective. show whether the) meters were | \ cheating epstomers or giving | \them an extra long ride for thier ' | Money. Hofiman said tests also revealed inaccuracy in ready-weighed pack-| ages df meats and groceries sold \in Saginaw Valley area groceries and supermarkets. He estimated 1,000 of 6,700 ready-weighed pack- lages were falsely weighed® and labeled. The examiner said managers of official the stores blamed inaccuracy on re- | carelessness by emctoyes have been and measures examiner | Hoffman. meters be inaecurate when t : A standard railroad rail is 39! He did not have information to eet long. | Pontiac Press Phote ‘ wthort ‘ommunity Club, which is trying 1 BREAK GRO ND FOR PARK SHELTER vthorne Community Clu which is trying to t wu for park improvements. With her 1s Mrs. George W. Grey Sr. handle $2,500 | _park imp ais n ground-brea! c HEAVY-DUTY LATEX COATING for indoor and outdoor wall surfaces Combi vines colorful 1 Beauty with extra resist- ance to ‘weathering and wear. Bonds with surface—seals up pores and cracks. No , “wetting down” or priming .needed. Mix with water to increa se coverage 50%. Now - on sale! Oakland Fuel & Paint 436 Orchard Loke Ave. “FE 5-1650 PARK FREE REAR OF STOKE expansion bonds; 17- 21« DOUB Choose from white or yellow gold; “some with hundreds of styles. to choose from. Here's a ‘2-day trade-in event you can’t afford to miss! aturday Only! 20 for 99.--NO = tT leet (ic ome (ew (meme nit) arid 25-jewel styles; 108 NORTH SAGINAW * of opera were both born in. #842.| Kennebec es |i The first two Americans stirs Lonisd Cary. was ae in ounty,. Maine. operatic careers, - and Anna retired to Connecticut, , Two thirds of South Carolin After) 10,732,000 acres —- ar@, planted both | With trees, Most~ are pine and .|eypress.’ —— Clara Louise Kellogg was borf) brilliant | in Sumterville, 5.C., sata MISTER! DO YOU HAVE TOGET HIT ON THE § HEAD TO MAKE YOU REALIZE HOW MUCH YOU HURT YOUR POCKETBOOK BY NOT TAKING ADVANTAGE OF MY CHANGE OF POLICY SALE OF SALES! $54.00 MEN’S SUITS ... NOW $23 $32.50 MEN’S SPORT “- NOW $] 6 NOW $99 $4950 MEN’S SUITS ........ , : 344,50 MEN’S $10.95 MEN’S DRESS" PANTS, NOW $5” SUITS ........ $5.95 POLISHED NOW $24 COTTON PANTS . NOW-$ $3.85 MEN’S SPORT SHIRTS, NOW $4” ALL WOMEN’S WHITE UNIFORMS AT BUDGET PRICES — BUY cc, BUY. And Don’t Let Anyone Tell You Different | WILL PROVE IT! 1 RENT PERFECT FITTING TUXEDOS FOR WEDDINGS §SAM BENSON. ¢ PARK FREE IN ANY LOT 37 North Saginaw St. — Pontiac NOW § ‘3° $59.50 MEN’S SUITS .... e FREE BUS TOKENS LE TRADE IN EVENT at WEC | your old Watch if it’s worth 10 > a wee Shenae ceeds Low as — 50¢ Weekly MONEY DOW * Phon € 3 | / p erg! Open ‘Mon. and Fri: Evenings to'9 P.M. i lg ee ee } € a o£ he Jee 74 ee FS mess j ~ re fu <7 WINDOWS “Rela Se Lag! BER CO: ‘BUY DIRECT aith SAVE Call taday for winds fae Suse Fbecks See aA ow feel Se oh PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JLLY 31, 1959°- Distributed by Northern Wholesale Compan enclosure or breezeway. We sell win- 4 _o dows direct or will do the whole job . Stariley, the Same People That Make Those Quality Tools | ourselves. pr SIV aaa | * STANLEY. aaa ro ee 4 -~Bring the Out-Of-Doors Indoors...} i Jalousites | F se eee re In All Weather| {2a asi You pay less— : in a STANLEY door! or HO MEEO TAL «buts cone euate an SLIDING WINDOW , tra strong extruded, al ¢ alumiftium construction. . Here is truly modern design adding to the beauty of hy E Ip «scores bacen pe ne ee &. _ lower wheels permanently ing sill thot drains off water instantly, at iuhiicated: the Stanley Aluminum Sliding Window we ott . has a fixed sesh that provides tighter. ¢ 4° © Weatherstripping assures meeting rail for complete weather ~ ie } complete sealing under protection. Available with interchange -d ~ the mos i gbie screen and stor th. Sure ine est trying weather oF il . ‘round ; prisingly low e cad he vindow'’s . ; _ congitions. ih a fae " iis ; = smooth, easy operction is.@ delight € f leo Simple, cléan lines. et, iving comrer?r.. a . - : . to every homeowner. | _— Sins oe Ones are sem .. vester . JRLOY SIE As Low As $11.88 Each : _ rolling wi © Finger-tip | all ae 3 movable in either direction. all day, ever aye jt he year aro Average 9°x12° Porch STANLEY. 4 ROR NZ $f the ing space a cs Wi AIMMANEIA ~ . FOR ONLY | a e Pa i et an 4 Easy toinstall .. SHH é fo cleaa, Put Vike 2 ’ eal escheat $PRAQ LARGE 8' PICTURE WINDOW e. Make it your family room or den. : ‘. “ & sonnei “EXTRA SPECIAL : a #8030, READY TO INSTALL $57.95 ” : : ame . . % 2 ni ran nenend 0 FOR SULLY r SATE you can copend on “EXCLUDING poons\ ei ebuise by Northern Wholesale td ev 55: GAL LON al Medium Width 7 ALUMINUM =©—-_ SQ “HFoL j Endosed Spun Mineral Wool Center INSULATION Sap g9 FIRST-QUALITY . 0 POEs Blanket type full encased with ia a sits Cth Et peat Awake tae Superior AWNING | -1ipch Thick “PLASTER E ee: ‘HOUSE PAINT | famous | -ggos |ammenie|EST BOARD | High 7 & Necessery to i $y C ‘ B eitul -§0-ft. “2-in. Plastic Above, In Quantities of 10 or more. Now *& LAWN . = SLOkG MOEEAEE ; - 99 pees Garden Hose | >. ) : Only = GI | EDGING c trter taut is anane i ew “ wo . —««#R 14nz0 Garace Ashestos SIDING | ————__— BP ineiing Rootna. || | ES tom SYA up ner so. | eee PAINT ROLLERS : Fir Siding . ; Zz a : ee . : of aa eal P . 7” Roller Onl ¢ 9 Inch j 5929" Lawn Chairs : } ™ Outside eet me 98 $1.49 . eg. 9 . - fs t TB Now! S288 | sre see ots pages ~ | FLUSH DOORS | Paint Roller Covers... 2 59 ty ; = we — “~ $488 HK With Lights 1 a I BiG 25” cUT-4 CYCLE te 1 4 95 “GALVANIZED GUTTER by " a bis Guaranteed | S , i ' POWER MOWER . | now ony tp 5 bs. Top Quality BRASS. BUTTS} NUMBER ONE LOOK! . _ Grade A ; peat Engine - 4 START and STOP CONTROL Nome 39: ‘DIMENSION 4x8x14 Plywood Fir 1 Side ...-. $ 3,79 Gr ace Seed | ~| WEST COAST 4x8x14 V-Grooved Mahogany .. ... §,45 Reg. $2.98 Reg. $99.50 S$ E 3888 4x8x34 One Side Fir Plywood... 7.95| new $498 4x8x5¢-inch Fir Plyscore....... 5.45 | ONLY : 4x8x34 Birch Plywood, 2 Sided... 14.95 Architect 33 “> 3Y2x3' —_— Fad A STEEL AREA WALLS For Basement Windows . Width High Price . aa , ye xd 8 to 16 Clothesline .ore",, 2m Bar| 2X6 8 to ib 50 ft.—Reg. $2.98 FLASH LIGHT fsiomt s7.19/2%8 S8toiG Ye 2x10 8tol6 = : _ i MARTHA WASHINGTON § 50 —S vee MES | RANGE TOPS == *69° $115 ! fo FREEZER fi: °4Q5)_ teem Clese-Out | Increase Living Area | with folding stairs | fe FAST z- SELLING: MitroraeCheame-=Elantescent Light Plate Glass Reg. $49.95 Bia 9g $6. 95 Price ALL THE BEAUTY OF FINE WOOD PANELING oe Ba ROYAL fold. te . q ing stairs are i i Md safel Guaren. MES 4 teed by Public rey H Lisbilitytrsurarce * . No weights or pul eam 4 leys * Easy opera: 3H tion ¢ Convenient J metal handrail * Treads securely joined end tie. tod reinforced. $19.95 Close-Out of Continuous Piano LAY THAT DUST WITH geron ALUMINUM | DOW CLORIDE | RAILING| iis °9 93 Zia » 7 ee 15 | axe ond 1212 White Fir See FRAN s7qa5 Hh | Only WEA: eee ai J execrricaL SUPPLIES Hinge Aluminum Doors } a AMEATHER nee. soos vane $9195 Jaws —_ ae: SHEATH ING ae ae oe se ors, fol seein ead Extra Special == $ 00 ELECTRIC POP-UP : Si onaee : Duplex Cover Plates. .9¢ A Real Fisherman’s Value Nice Stock ™ iM cal 23—28x6'8” . @ Switch Cover Plate . .9 ROD & FIBERGLAS Ix12,Shiplap $110 _ " TOASTER z vcard ol Water” {REEL <0 i ICNIC COOLERS == 5G] omy $973, Car Top Carriers. . °3* ff 250-coil ...... 3¢ fi. RI | vay |P re 3.95 Yat LOD | or U