; The Weather Tuesday: Warmer Details page twe 112th YEAR McCarthy Mum on Threatened: Vote of Censure Continues to Press for Boston Probe Despite Flanders’ Attack WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. McCarthy seemingly unconcerned over a proposed vote of censure, launched a renewed public exploration today of his charges that Reds have in- filtrated the nation’s de- fense plants. , He has said plants in the| Boston area are involved. | He first announced plans to open the hearings in Boston last Saturday, but was dis- suaded by Senate GOP leaders. The Wisconsin senator gave no advance hint of his Senate Inves- tigations subcommittee’s specific agenda for the day’s session, the | first regular open hearing it has | held in months. Nor did he have much to say ever the weekend about the cen- sure move, effered by Sen. Flan- ders (R-Vty and ticketed for Senate consideration tomorrow, except: that- he feels “no con- cern” about it. Flanders stoked his anti-Me-_ Carthy drive in advance by re- leasing a planned Tuesday speech likening the Wisconsin senator to Germany's onetime dictator, Adolf | Hitler. McCarthy, reached at home, had no comment. He has called Flanders, who is 73, ‘‘senile.”’ Today's subcommittee session marks McCarthy's return to a con- troversial Red-hunting role that came to an abrupt halt last March That was when the investigative group, caught in the swirl of; charges and countercharges be- | tween its chairman and top Army | reading was 66 in downtown Pon- | officials, ruled out further probes | until a spetial inquiry into the | Army-McCarthy dispute could be | held And during that stormy in- | quiry, which ended June 17, McCarthy alleged 133 subver- sives had found their way into defense plants and that the hear- ings were blocking his plans to dig them out. Defense officials cept a list of the 133 and do the ferreting on their own, but at latest word had yet to receive | the names from the senator. Mc- | Carthy had stipulated they must not be made public, and the Pen- tagon balked at that provision As the subcommittee went back to work today, presumably to tackle the 133 names McCarthy | says he has, three Boston area men | said they had subpoenas to testify | —two of them for today and one | for tomorrow, “| All three said they will invoke | the Fifth Amendment against self | incrimination if any questions are (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) é, agreed to ac- } Maj. John Eisenhower Assigned to Washington FT. BENNING, Ga. » —Pres- ident Eisenhower's son, Maj. John Eisenhower, is being temporarily assigned to Washington as a mil- itary aide The major, presently stationed here, said yesterday that he will work with the White House liaison office, leaving here about July -22. “They have some business they | want me to handle and I will be | assigned essentially as an aide,” | he said. (R-Wis), | Pa. j Be, . ‘THE PONTIAC PRESMIAKE OVE | ___& & & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JULY 19, 1954 —26 PAGES AOITERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE s a SUSPECT IN STABBING — Antone Bombagi, 4, suspect (center) of 161 Pingree St., | stabbing of George Spencer, 30, of : ° Orion Township, was returned to the scene for ques- Visit Scene of Fatal Arcqument in the fatal 1255 Baldwin Rd., —--4+ Warmer Weather and Cloudy Skies Forecast for City Warmer weather and partly cloudy skies are forecast for the Pontiac area Tuesday The U. S| Weather Bureau says it wil be fair tonight with a low of 64 to 68 and a high of 86 to 90 tomorrow At 8 a.m. today the temperature tiac, but the mercury rose to 82 at 1 p.m . Saturday's temperatures ranged from 62 to 90 a ‘Universe Aspirants to See Movie Capital LONG BEACH, Calif., (INS) — The 80 choice beauties vying for the Miss Universe crown get their first glimpse today of fabulous Hollywood—the magnet that lured them to the west coast from the far corners of. the globe Ever since their arrival last Thursday and Friday their activi- ties have been centered in the contest city of Long Beach, but today they are to be guests at Universal-International Pictures. That is the studio where a handful pf them—perhaps four or five—will be given contracts at the close of the current week- long Miss Universe beauty pageant. A studio program that will con- tinue all afternoon and into the evening has been arranged for them. They will meet the stars, pose for pictures and in the evening be fet@d at a big dinner. 'Wriggles Into Top Place | SUFFOLK, Va. (#—Bill Shaffer, 12: won gq prize in a playground pet show here with his entry of a three-inch earthworm. 30,000 Attend 18th Annual Truck and Coach Picnic An estimated 30,000 persons streamed into Walled Lake Amusement Park Saturday for the 18th annual GMC Truck and Coach Fami The division’s employes, enjoyed an all-day program ly Picnic. their families and friends of games, hobby exhibits, product displays, rides, movies and other events. Feature attractions were and a series of sport events enabled employes and each the employes’ hobby show called “Sportorama” which member of their family to win GMC sport shirts for’ skill in golf chipping, arch- éry, shot put, softball throwing; horseshoes, bas- ketball and bait pe 6 The hobby show and spor orama continued through- out the day. Forty hobby exhibits, enough to fill the park's roller rink, included, wood carving, radio controlled See Pictures on Page 15 model airplanes, oil painting, “skin diving equipment, black light art, ceramics, and wildlife displays of . foxes, woodchucks, raccoons, pea- cocks, There were also photography dis- plays, floral arrangements..and a host of other interesting and color- ful exhibits. rabbits -and pheasants. An extensive product display, made up of the division's latest truck and coach models featuring the recently announced Gfey- hound Sctnjcruiser, was exhibit- ed throughout tie park area. -’ Children consumed 36,000 serv- Hings of free ice cream and enjoyed free use-of-the.park rides between noon and 4 p.m. ’ Husband Is Held in Probe | Indochina Armistice Sho d ri ® Pentiac Press Phete murder, admitted to Oakland County Sheriff's De- tective Delos Anderson (left) and Malon France, that he does not remember scuffling with Spencer behind he home where Spencer boarded, after the two men tioning Sunday. Bombagi, held for investigation of | quarreled about Bombagi's wife, Lulie Mae, 31. of Orion Triangle Slaying A Pontiac industrial worker is being held today for | investigation of the fatal stabbing Saturday night of an ‘unemployed construction worker following an argument over the suspect's wife. Detectives Delos Anderson and Mahlon France -said the argument was the cli- max of an earlier quarrel between Bombagi and his | wife, Lulie Mae, 31, when they left a Lake Orion tav- jern with Spencer. | Accompanying them were the ‘victim's landlord, Oscar Murdock ‘of 1255 Baldwin; Murdock's wife, | Katherine; their two children, and |Mrs. Margie Kowalski of Lake | Orion When Mrs. Bombagi insisted on driving the family car, Bom- bagi stalked off and followed them later im a taxi to the Mur- dock home. There Bombagi found Spencer and his wife together in the back- the two men scuffled, witnesses said. Deputies Melvin Glover and Wil- liam Rollison said Bombagi fled after the stabbing and was arrested a short time later at the Variety Store near Mill Lake, about a half mile south of the Murdock home. Prosecutor Fred Ziem said state- ments were taken this morning from witnesses. No warrant has been issued. Ziem says Bombagi admitted the stabbing of Spencer during the quarrel but said he “blacked out.” Les A search will be made this after- noon for the murder weapon, term- ed ‘‘a sharp instrument’ by doc- tors who treated Spencer. 2 Youths Lectured for Mailbox Prank Two boys who poured a bottle of pop into a mailbox over the week- end get a stern lecture from juvenile authorities at Pontiac Police Department. The youths, aged 14 and 15, poured root beer into the letter slot of the box at S. Jessie and Elms Sts. through “pure mis- chievousness,” Pontiac Post Of- fice officials said. Letter carrier Charles Smalley, 35, of Clarkston found about 10 soggy letters in the box Saturday afternoon. Hé wiped them off quickly so the addresses would not be hopelessly smeared. All the letters were legible. He called his superior, Robert W. Jockwig, foreman of mail car- riers. Jockwig reported the inci- dent to police and a check of the neighborhood led to the pair's ap- prehension. Usmean's town &. Vovntry, tel-Heren Open every night ‘til 8 p.m. > yard, an argument followed and | George Spencer, 30, of 1255 Baldwin, Orion Township, died in Pontiac General Hospital of a stab wound in the ‘heart following a quarrel with Antone Bombagi, 48, of between 60 and 85 and Sunday's 16] Pingree St., after Spencer allegedly taunted Bombagi with, “I can take your wife away from you any time.” Oakland County Sheriff's*— Probers Batfled in Thorne Death Call ‘Mystery Woman’ but Fail to Establish Evidence of Murder CHICAGO (®—Police said they have no evidence of murder, sui- | cide or foul play as investigation into the strange death of mail ortier heir Montgomery Wa Thorne entered the second mey. The inquest resumed today with seven witnesses called, including Mrs. Rita Geigner, 50, described as a mystery woman. Coroner Walter E. McCarron has said he suspects foul play in the death of the 20-year-old Thorne nine days after he made a new will virtually disenheriting his mother and making 18-year-old Miss Maureen Ragen principal beneficiary. A coroner’s physician’s autopsy report indicated Thorne died of a combination of alcohol, a sleep- ing pill and morphine, but. criti- cism of the report led to further technical investigation. Thorne was found dead in his apartment June 19. Thorne’s body was exhumed and a panel of pathologists was named to study the case..Their report is expected about the, end of this week. Mrs. Geigner’s demand for ad- vance reports on the results of both autopsies prompted McCarron to subpoena her. She described herself asa friend of Mrs, Marion Thorne, mother of tha, dead youth. Thorne’s new will left half of his reported $2,600,000 fortune to Miss Ragen, a fourth to her mother Mrs, Aleen Ragen, and an eighth to his mother and another eighth to an aunt, The first will, drawn shortly after his 18th birthday, left the entire estate to his mother. Sgt. Thomas Mulvey, head of the police investigation, said a month's study of the evidence does not indicate violent death, either at Thorne’s own hands or by others. In Today’s Press TV-Radie Programs... ; 2 Want Ads -. W0, 98, 98, 26 Women's Pages 11, 12, 93 own Nea For Health or Homesickness Quintuplet Marie Dionne Leaves Quebec Convent WATERLOO, Que. (AP)—Marie Dionne, the quintup- let who took a nun’s first vows two months ago, has left the convent and gone home. A church official said she had departed temporarily for health reasons but her family said she was homestick. The palace of the Roman Catholic archbishop in Que- bec issued this comment: “It is not known at this time if she will return.” The mother superior at the Quebec..convent of the Servants of the Blessed Sacrament, which Marie entered as a postulant last November, said the 20-year-old gir! left Drawer Yields Body of Girl, 18 Police Across Nation Alerted for Indianapolis Hotel Slayer INDIANAPOLIS uF — Police watching automobile licenses over a third of the nation and techni- cians with microscopes studying body tissues sought today to solve j the death of an 18-year-old small- town girl room. z 5 The body of the girl, Dorothy Poore, was found Sunday in a Claypool Hotel room, stuffed in a dresser drawer 4 feet long, 2 feet wide and 10 inches deep. An au- topsy failed to extablish the cause of death, and Deputy Coroner Wil- liam J. Pierce said decomposition may have concealed injuries. Vital organs from the body were sent to the Indiana University Medical Center for examination. Dr. Pierce said the girl may have been strangled or suffo- cated. The hotel manager said the room was occupied last by a man who registered as Jack O'Shea and gave a nonexistent New York City in a downtown hotel he was believed to be driving. The girl, a 1954 high behool grad- uate, had come to Indianapolis from her home in Clinton, a west- ern Indiana town, to look for work. Her mother, Mrs. Hazel Poore of Clinton, said she had taken a Civil Service examination for a typist's job Thursday. O'Shea had said in registering Thursday at the hotel that he 3 not enter the room until Sunday. The maids noticed an odor com- ing from the dresser and called a houseboy. He opened the drawer and found the body, which was clad in a_ slip, brassiere and panties. Coroner Roy R. Storms estimated the girl had been dead 3% hours. The girl's blue jeans and slip- pers and a shopping bag were found hidden in an air vent closet in the room. Miss Poore was registered at the Lorraine Hotel, a block from Clay- pool. She had planned to return to Clinton Saturday night and then to come back here this week to look for work again. ae Mrs. Poore said her datighter had told of being annoyed by two men during an earlier job-hunting stay in this city. Wham-Bang Failure! SUFFOLK, Va. #—Emily Wins- low, 16, under the watchful eye of a state inspector, pulled her car away from the curb at the start of her driving test and bang- ed right into another car passing by. She failed the test. there Wednesday. Marie’s brother - in - law, Maurice Girouard, said at his home here she arrived at her parents’ home in Cal- lander, Ont., early yester- day, accompanied by three brothers and her quintuplet sister Emilie. The latter hit the headlines herself when she became lost in Montreal Friday en route to join) Marie. Commenting on that incident, Girouard said: “Apparently all kinds of rumors started to spread when Emilie approached a police- man in Montreal, The girl simply identified herself and asked for di- rections. She was visiting friends in Ste. Agathe (Que.) and was on her way to St. Charles, Que., to meet Marie."’ The brother-in-law said Marie had come to his home from the convent and that Emilie had Joined her here Saturday. Girouard said Marie—smallest of the quints at birth—seemed con fused and homesick. He added he did not know whether she planned to go back to the cloister, where she took two-year vows of poverty, chastity and obedience May 24. The Montreal Gazette quoted the quints’ father Oliva as saying Marie had written him last week complaining of homesickness. “I suspected from her unhappy letter that she was trying to decide whether to remain in the cloisters 6 Nearwe Up Death Toll to 18 12 Lose Lives in Traffic Accidents in Michigan Over Weekend By UNITED PRESS A dozen highway accidents took as many lives and another six accidents to give Michigan a com- bined traffic - drowning toll of 18 for the weekend, Weekend highway travel was con- spicuously free of the violent mul- tiple-fatality crashes which marred the Fourth of July weekend and others this year. Two of the victims were identi- fied only tentatively from papers found on their bodies. A man identified as William Riley, 30, no known address, died Sunday night of injuries he suffered Saturday when a car in which he was riding hit a tree along the Edsel Ford ex- pressway in suburban Detroit. Another man tentatively identi- fied as Burpee Rankin, 48, De- troit, diéd at Saratoga General Hos- pital in Detroit Sunday shortly af- ter he was struck by a car while crossing a street. One of the drowning victims, Ed- ward Strzalkowski, 60, Lake Orion, persons lost their lives in water | Dies at Home ~ies GN ome ae ad % +* ; 4 ee —- ee j ‘ aed » acelin Retired Official Succumbs at 72 Alfred L. Smith Served as Building Inspector for City and State Alfred Leggett Smith, former city and state building inspector, died at 1:30 this morning at his home at 31 Chippewa Rd. Mr. Smith was 72 years old. He was born in Pontiac Aug. 6, 1881, and was the son of Edward C. and Ada Leggett Smith. On Sept. 8, 1909, he married Grace Stowell here Mr. Smith attended the Univer- sity ef Michigan ag well as Michi- gan College of Mining and Tech- nology at Houghton, Blonde-Hunter Groucho Wed to Tal Brunette SUN VALLEY, Idaho ® — Groucho Marx, who used to chase blondes in his movies, has married a tall brunette who appeared with him in a play two years ago. The mustachioed radio and tele- vision comedian was married Sat- urday to Miss Eden Hartford, 24- year - old Beverly Hills, Calif., model, Marx is 58. Both have been married previously. Escapade Is 4th-Time Mackinac Race Winner MACKINAC ISLAND (®}—Wen- dell Anderson's 72-foot yawl Es- capade won its fourth consecu- tive Port Huron - to - Mackinac Island Yacht Race “in a breeze.” The blue-hulled Detroit giant slipped across the finish line just 27 hours, 55 minutes and 2 seconds Sunday night after Sat- urday’s start 235 miles to the south in Lake Huron. See race toppled into the water while boat- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) details on page 17. Lawyer Works on Dr. Small's Release; to Forget Entire Episode Wife Wants ALLEGAN (INS) Attorney Leo W. Hoffman today said he hopes to be ready by Wednesday for the next legal step toward freeing Dr. Kenneth B. Small, who was acquitted by reason of in- sanity Saturday in the slaying of New Yorker Jules Lack. Hoffman's task now is to prove his client has regained his sanity, so that he won't have to be in- terned at the State Hospital for the Criminally Insane at Ionia. To do this, Hoffman, paradoxic- ally enough, has to overcome the testimony of defense psychiatrists, who said at the trial that Small is still mentally ill. the county jail. Otherwise he will seek a writ habeas corpus. of From his cell at the county after a meeting with Hoffman, Small said: , | “I hope to be’ home with my children within a week.” The 31-year-old Detroit dentist, who shot Lack at a weekend tryst with his wife at a sumptuous Lake Michigan lodge, would not discuss reconciliation plans, except to say: “Let's not go into that. We will both have to regrganize our lives —we have lots of thinking to do.” “I just don’t know what will happen to our marriage,’’ she said. But ‘‘whatever happens, it- will be what is best for the children.” - at Seki ote eo ee oe ae A member of the All Saints Epis- eo 5 a ay . § . Mendes- France Has 36 Hours ‘to Reach Peace French Commies Arrive at Tentative Agreement on Neutral Commission GENEVA (AP) — French Premier Mendes - France went today into the final._ 36 hours of his diplomatic duel with the Communists for peace in Indochina with - what a British spokesman described as “a chance, that’s all.” Another Western official said he wouldn’t even bet on the proposition. The top , Communist delegates here / ong themselves. / e high conf source said Mendes- had pushed away one 7 stacle to peace in a ten tive fashion—the debated question of the International Commission to police the armistice. This source said the French and the Communists séem to have set- tled the composition of the com- mission with Canada, India, and. Poland as the members. There would be last minute changes, it was emphasized. In the past the United has opposed the inclusion of Communist states on the There were munists were ready to accept @ delay of 18 months. Earlier they - Nam was going to be partitioned (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Accidents Claim. Three in County Girl Riding Motorcycle Thrown Over Driver's Head Against Car 1 EREeezay Ao % ‘ya a AN eg Na alg in IO Ram: Ns a i i’ Seen ee ee AAA tt Ndi aan, OSA iA Se 1 2 MAKE OVER PAGE City Commission Agenda Frem Our Birmingham Bureau '_ “BIRMINGHAM — Little chance is seen for a 50-minute meeting tonight as was held last week by the City Commission, since a jam- packed agenda awaits the lawmak- = of“ tonight's highlights. will be a discussion on the outcome oi a meeting attended last week by Additional Birmingham and : oss ble Sewage Project /Will Highlight Heavy. in by the department with the amount | of loss by fire and the amount | of insurance paid both estimated at $32.40 The amount of property endan- gered was shown as $1,325,000 and Studies Wherry Act was $1,118,000. Besides the single general alarm, | jn jts hunt for there were 20 silent alarms for the government's fires and fire investigations, two housing program. for investigation of suspected gas,| The committee, headed by Sen irregularities many Bloomfield Hills social news on | page 11. seven first aid calls, laneous and two false alarms. cm * * Builders Called | Housing Quiz Senate Group Summons Air Project Constructors, WASHINGTON (® — The Senate total estimated insurance ‘carried | Banking Committee today turned to the 1950 military housing law in| - sided | six miscel-| Capehart (R-Ind), summoned| |three builders who shared in a} | reporf*d one-million-dollar profit: City Manager Donald C. Egbert, to hear possible financing methods for a proposed joint sewage inter- ceptor project The interceptor here would serve that area tributary to the Acacia and Bloomfield Village drains, A possible interim agreement with Bloomfield Township to proc- “ ess sewage from the township, will | also be taken up Tonight's meeting finds the cuy | involved in a suit brought by Mrs. | Susan Gardiner, of 607 Hawthorne. | Her bill of complaint, also against | Mr. and Mrs. John H. Rosso and | the Birmingham Park Improve- | ment Assn.. revolves around her | charge that because of an error | in land surveys, property suppos A new slate of efficers has been elected in the Civitan Club, with William Monahan taking over presidential duties, along with D. L. Witters, vice president; Carl Danville, secre- tary; and Robert Rich, treas- | in construction of the Page Manor | project near the Air Force base | )at Wright Field in Dayton, Ohio. | * * * | The builders were identified as Link Cowan, Shawnee, Okla.; Dav-! | id Muss, San Antonio, Tex.; and THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 19, 1954 | Atom Program Detective Subs for Custodian _ Till Help Arrives “Nothing succeeds like hard work,’’ quipped Detective Sgt. John A. DePauw this morning as he guided a push-broom around desks and chairs in the Pontiac: Police detective bureau. “Think of it fellas, if the captain or the chief should walk in and find the floors all messy with ciga- | California today forecast an ad- eae DePauw. recently pro- | | ministration victory when the | feno a Pi = present rank, told ichips are down on the much-de- | Foliowag DePauw's conscien- | Ure Se Git aad es tious cleanup, Winfield Boyl, 31, of dle ; ameron Ave., walked into the Knowland, scheduling = another | station and reported he is to take Twins’ ‘Mother’ Victory Forecast Fails to Appear Knowland Hoping for Revision Vote Today; Pushes Adjournment WASHINGTON Senate Republican Leader Knowland of of Abandoned Babies An unidentified woman church failed to appear at police headquarters Saturday. Rochester Police Chief early session in his drive for con- Woman Phoned 3 Times Claiming to Be Parent who claims she is the mother of the | ™an in his own home town. twin girls abandoned Thursday| The fellow was Julius Caesar, | night on the steps of a Rochester | ho Jessel figures was as well Mays, Caesar Will Be Even in 2,000 Years ROME wW—Willie Mays will be forgotten in 2,000 years. . This pessimistic prediction, | bound to be contested by New York Giant fans, came today from George Jessel, Hollywood producer and comedian. He made a serious study of what happened te-another | known in his day as Willie is now. “I went to the taxi stand and ~ | said I wanted to see-where Julius Sam | Caesar is,"’ Jessel. reported. ‘‘The the place of Frank H. Hart, 58, of Howlett said the woman phoned guy said Caesar quit and moved urer. Norman K. Winston, | City. Results of recent games played * s s in the YMCA Softball League, put} The military housing program, Electronics Service in the lead,| commonly known as ‘Wherry with a record of five wins and two) Act” housing after its author, the losses jlate Sen. Kenneth S, Wherry (R- * * * said Detroit Edison “‘played its | construction near military centers. best game of the year as it chalk-| lt operated in much the same ed up a 2 to 1 victory over Mich-| manner as the much-probed gen- igan Bell.” Michigan Bell's loss | eral postwar apartment program dropped the team into a tie with | which provided government insur- Albans Food Service for-second| ance for loans to builders, with | Drownings Claim 18 New York | | place, each with a 3-3 record | one significant exception: edly owned by the Rosso's is — —_—-— Builders of pid renta] hous- tually hers | Mrs, Lydia Bunyan ling worked under a_ provision Other items under considera. { Service for Mrs. Lydia Bunyan, | which required them to certify to tion will bé a revised sign ordi- | 80. of 328 W. Brown St. will he | the Federal Housing Administra- | itn that their costs of construc- tion were more than the amount nance, a traffic survey made of held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at ti the Oakland - Willits - Woodward Manley-Bailey Funeral Home with intersection, and paving and side- | burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. | of their FHA-insured mortgage. walks on Eton and (iracefield | Mrs. Bunyan died today in a De- | The mortgage Was. supposedly roads, preparatory to the fall | troit hospital. | available on 90 per cent of build- opening of Pembroke School, | A member of the First Baptist | ing costs north of the area. Church here, she is survived by | Under the general program, now three daughters, Mrs. Pear] Phil- expired. no certification was _re- lips, Mrs. Fred Aldred, both of quired. Capehart estimates that Birmingham, and Mrs, Elmore Ma- under this section of the law }son of Keego Harbor; four sons, | builders reaped up to half a_bil- | Leland of Waterford, Edmond of lion dollars in ‘windfall’ profits A letter from residents of the area boundéd by Forest, Adams, Bowers and Elms requests that the commission consider acquiring for park purposes the property on the north side of Bowers from ert of Birmingham; a sister, 19 Adams to Elm. . * . Three Birmingham college stud- | versity of Michigan to achieve all A records in ten of the versity’s 15 schools and during the spring’ semester. All of the students earned at least 12 hours of academic credit Those from Birmingham are: Colin R. Fisher, 3405 John K., College of Engineering; Iris M. | Leja, 4105 Beach, School of Edu. | cation; and Rebert J. Schoen. hails, 27075 Lahser, College of, | Engineering. s a Tomorrow's YMCA Da-Y _ pro- gram will be a day at a salt} water pool, where youngsters will uni- colleges receive swimming instruction Leaving the Y at 9:30 am. the group will return at- 4 pm * * . The first fatalities since a gas‘ explosion cost the lives of (ve persons in December, 1949. “was reported by Fire Chief Vernon W. Griffith in his list of fire de- | partment activities during June. Mrs. Maureen Couper and her twe young sens, Danny and Lar- ry, died in a flash fire at their home at 1189 Brookwood on June | 14, while Mrs. Couper’s father was rescued by firemen. A total of 38 runs were made . . Detroit Boy Injured | . in Telegraph Crash BLOOMFIELD TWP. — A thir- | teen-year-old Detroit boy suffered a possible skull fracture yesterday in a four vehicle crash on Tele- graph road near Ward road. Reported in good condition at Pontiac General Hospital is Gary | Lee Hurst, a passenger in his fa- ther’s auto, the first vehicle struck in the chain - reaction collision. Police said a truck tractor driv- en by Ernest Brinkman, 49, of | Holly struck the rear of the sta- | tion wagon driven by James | Hurst, 39, of Detroit, Hurst's car, in turn, hit one driv- en by Frank Ziebell, 32, of De- troit. Ziebell's auto crashed into the vehicle driven by Wallace J. Scobell, 37, of Detroit. Injured besides young Hurst was Mrs. Mildred Scobell, 32, wife of one of the drivers. She was treated by her own physician No violation tickets were issued The Weather PONTIAC AND eof 64 te 64. Tuesday | wn Ree and a little warmer. High y 86 te ©. Seattered showers : Light vartaDie becoming southerly & te 12 mp.b Tuesday. VICINITY —t air Teday in Pentiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 am At 8 am. Wind velocit™Y 15 mph Direction: North Sun sets Monday at 8.04 p.m r Sun rises Tuesday at 5:12 a.m Moon rises Monday at 955 p.m sets Tuesday at 10:29 am Dewntewn Temperatures OR. MW... c6c «62 ll a.m 7 we OL. coes 04 12m BB. M....0000.-8 ip m 82 OB. M..cccte.. 8 10 @. @........ 72 Sunday in Ppntia - (As hh ere downtown) ™ ighest temperature... Lowest temperature,............... s Mean temperature................ 5 Weather—Fair. One Year Age in Pontiac Righest ture... 2.2.2... 87 Lowest temperature...,.......... ne Mean temperature................ 76.5 i Weather—Pair. Highest and Lewest Temperatures This Date in #2 Years oe) mm 1992 8© in 1912 SPLLSVSSLVS3 ents were among 128 from the Uni- | | grandchildren and 15 great-grand- children McCarthy Is Silent (Continued From Page One) asked about their political beliefs. The two on call for today were Lawrence W. Parrish, 48, an elec- trical worker at the Quincy yard of Bethlehem = Steel Co. and Charles Wojchowski, 29. an em- ploye of the Boston plant of Allis- Chalmers Mfg. Co Edwin Garfield, 39, also an Allis- Chalmers worker, said his sub- poena was for tomorrow iJ * While Flanders’ tangle with Me- Carthy has mary roots, the Ver- monter’s censure resolution due up for Senate action tomorrow hits squarely at McCarthy's conduct as | chairman of the investigating group : La * * Without specifying what his con- | duct is, the one-sentence resolution | says it ‘is unbecoming a member | of the U.S. Senate, is contrary to senatorial traditions, and tends td bring the Senate into disrepute, and such conduct is hereby con- demned."’ What course would be followed on the censure move tomorrow, if Flanders goes through with it, was still unclear. Senate GOP leaders were anxious to avoid extensive debate on the party-splitting issue, especially in light of the drive to adjourn by the end of this month. . * ° One possibility was a motion to table or kill the resolution, which is not debatable. However, Major- ity Leader Knowland of California was reported under pressure to al- low time for debate and discussion LJ * LJ Flanders himself took note of this in making his speech public two ays in advance, saying there might. be a parliamentary situation not allowing time for others to study the reasons advanced for his action. Also unknown was what support | | Flanders was likely to get. On the | | Republican side, Sen. Cooper of Kentucky has backed his Vermont colleague in the past on this issue. Ld * * “Evidence of some Democratic support came last night from Sen. | Fulbright of Arkansas, who said | he would vote for the censure. Ful- | bright said on an NBC radio-TV | show McCarthy had been respon- | sible for ‘‘a deterioration of our | foreign policy” by ‘frightening | some of our friends’ and making them fear “our own wisdom of how we run our own affairs.” * * * In Providence, R.1., last night, the National Executive Committee of the Young Democrats of Amer- ica voted a resolution asking the Senate to strip McCarthy of his chairmanship, Flanders had orig- bi inally proposed that step, but de- cided to push the censure move instead. ‘Lauds Jackson Felons for Fighting..Barn Fire JACKSON (UP) — Deputy War- den George Bacon today commend- ed inmates who helped fight a $40,000 fire which destroyed a barn at Southern Michigan Prison's north farm. they were free men,"’ Bacon said. - With the aid ‘of prison farm in- mates, firemen from the prison Pontiac, Ralph of Detroit and Rob- | “They stuck to the job as if, by pocketing the difference be- tween the loan amounts and ac- | tual lower construction costs. ‘Chemical Sprays Killing Wildlife, ‘on Flanders’ Attack Naturalist Warns A Cranbrook Institute of Science ! naturalist warned today that care- |less use of chemical insect sprays poses a threat to wildlife and even | domestic. pets | Dr. Marion T. Hall said autop- sies on numerous creatures that have died in this general area show dangerous concentrations of | DDT in their digestive tracts. Birds iseem to be the chief victims. | Spray concentrations of DDT exceeding two pounds per acre in off solution are dangerous to all kinds of animals, Dr. Hall said, Concentrations exceeding one fifth pound per acre are | harmful to fish, | | Dr. Hall suggested that the | | householder seek advice from his |city forester. city parks depart-} | ment technical staff of county agri- | cultural agent before spraying. Nearing Showdown on Indochina Peace | (Continued From Page One) | somewhere between the lith and) | 18th Parallels. A Vietnamese spokesman said sadly today ‘‘there will be a par- tition and we realize we cannot avoid it.” He said his government. still clung to its demand for U. N. su- pervision of the armistice, but that the issue would be decided ‘over our heads.’’ He complained again ithat the Vietnamese ‘‘are kept in | ZOO'S THAT? Young,"’ gorilla ever since |a couple of years ago It's who's been the No. 1 Bushman died visitors daily from his Chicago's Lincoln Park. Highway Accidents, | (Continued From Page One) ing with his two young grandchil- dren. Police said he may have suf fered a heart attack before falling from the boat Shirley Szilagyi, 12, Owosse, fell into eight feet of water while playing on the Shiawassee River dam four miles south ef Corun- na. The girl grabbed a fishing line thrown her by Darwin Un- derwoed, 16, but the line broke and she went under. Kenneth Wiersman, 34, in Kent County | 33, St Shirley Theisen, Mi | and-night debate so far, Knowland “Irwin The cagey Edwin F. Kirbert, Y secretary,!| Neb), was designed to stimulate | character stares at hundreds of cage in | gressiona] adjournment the end of this month, said he still hoped the | Senate would reach the showdown | voting stage sometime today, Referring to opposition cries of “giveaway” and “monopoly” eS the Eisenhower atomic program during four days of day- 261 Stanley St., the department's regular custodian who started his two-week vacation today. Superiors immediately gave De- Pauw the further task to ‘‘break in’’ the new custodian. Pontiac Deaths ised to give herself up. She gave police a Detroit ad- dress and description of herself, but a check of the address failed to reveal anyone answering the description, said Howlett. told an interviewer: ‘blanket, are in incubators at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital here. Hospital authorities said the ba- days. “We are not going to put this aside for other legislation and there will be no compromises.” However, critics of the measure, chiefly Democrats and Sen. Morse (Ind-Ore), gave no indication they were yet through with speechmak- ing and one of them, Sen. Gore (D-Tenn), contested Knowland’s assertion they have lost votes in | the process. Francis Marion Corbin, 78, of 17 Fiddis Ave., died early this morn- ing after an illness of five months. Mr. Corbin was born March 8, 1876, in Newton County, Ind. He was the son of John and Leah Martin Corbin. In 1898 he married Hester Herring in Indiana. Mr. Corbin. a printer by trade, came to Michigan in 1909 and to Pontiae in 1926. Surviving are one son, Ivan of one weighed three pounds and 151; ounces. They said they were eating three times last week and prom- The babies, christened Mary and Maurine by the Rev. Harry Paul * * *¢ of St. Andrew's Catholic Church “Actually, I think they've Jost | . . ; on whose steps the twins were some strength inthe last few Francis Marion Corbin | tound wrapped in an old army bies had lost the customary few ounces. At birth they weighed four | 4 : . ‘sand six ounces and four, Annual Hospital Institute pounds and one ounce. Today they tipped the scales at four pounds Miss Mary A. Johnson of St~ Jo- and three ounces and the smaller | seph Mercy Hospital are attending Gore said the long hours of ar- | gument have brought several new ‘supporters to. those who would amgnd the measure providing, for the first time, that private indus- try be allowed to enter the field of peacetime atomic energy de- velopment. The bill, revamping the original 1946 statute, would al- so allow a atomic secrets allies. with America's * ° s limited sharing of | Newaygo, and four daughters, Mrs. Scott Stimer of Linden, Mrs. Ar- thur Coffee of Leonard, Mrs. James Bruce of Waterford and Mrs. Ver- non Davis of Pontiac, Also surviving are one sister, Mrs. Edith Mattox of Lafayette, Ind., and three brothers, James of Earl Park, Ind., George of Mount Ayr, Ind., and Chester of Brook Ind. Service will pe Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. from Huntoon Funeral well, and in probably another day would begin to put on weight. Although calls continue to be re- ceived at both the Oakland County Juvenile Court (now wards of- the twins until their parentage is es- tablished) and the hospital offering to adopt the children, it will be some time before a decision is made as to their future. for a late model blue Plymouth | with a middle aged driver who was Rochester police are still looking Grand | ing critic of a White House order | Rapids, drowned Saturday when|that has been one of the main | he fell from a boat while fishing | topics of debate, although not con- | Methodist Church will officiate. in the Thornapple River near Ada . Clair, fell from a boat and | drowned in the St. Clair River off | St | John A Clair’s Palmer Park, Bigg. 28, Inkster. | drowned Sunday while swimming | The replaced TVA power would | Ave.. died Saturday at St. Joseph in a Romulus Township quarry The body of John J. Sipper, 69 Detroit, was recovered Sunday from the Detroit River A @1 . year - old Bay City girl, Shirley Fisher, died Satur- day at Monroe Mercy Hospital of injuries she suffered cartier in the day north of Monroe on US-24. She was a passenger in a car driven by John 8S. Me- Laren, 20, Bay City, who depu- ties sald lost control of the aute while trying to pass another car. Other traffic victims Rochelle Compannie, 36, Flint— killed late Friday when a pickup truck in which she was mding over- turned on a curve west of Fiint Dean A. Lucas, 35, Grand Rap- ids — whose motorcycle missed a curve and hit a railroad flasher signal at Grand Rapids by a car while crossing a Detroit street John E. Blanchard. 2, Flint— whose car collided head-on with a truck driven by Leonard Goff. Flint. Goff was not injured Rapids — whose car left M-21 and overturned three miles east of Ada. Mrs, Catherine Richardson, 27, Fiint — who died Sunday at Flint's Hurley Hospital of injur- les she suffered when a car driv- en by her husband, Shirl, 30, failed to stop for a ‘‘dead end” sign near Holly. Elvin M. Biggins. 42. Lake City —whose car ran off US-10 and hit ignorance of whatever happens.” . * s A high American source said it | will be very difficult for the Com- | munists to turn down the offer | made by Mendes-France and ‘‘still | make it appear they want peace.” This source said that if the Com- munists block Mendes. France's bid they will lose tremendous ground in their effort to win Asia for the Chinese, particularly in India and | Burma. * * ® It was reported U.S. Undersecre- tary of State Walter Bedell Smith's statement of the U.S. position at yesterday's session of the confer- ence had aroused no objections from the Communist side. Smith stated the United States was pre- pared to help in arriving at a just and honorable peace and that it would honor its obligations under the U. N. charter in the event of an agreement. Mendes-France saw Vietnamese Foreign Minister Tran Van Do early today and then went to see ‘British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden. He conferred with Bedell | Smith later and planned to dine with Eden tonight. The lease on Mendes - France's villa expires Wednesday and there was every indication he was prepared to} move out, in or out of office. The determined French Premier | moved tirelessly ahead with his | busy round of private conferences in an all-out final effort to make | good on his promise to secure a cease-fire by July 20 or resign. | The private sessions of small) groups of delegates continued after | one of the most puzzling confer- ence sessions yesterday of the 12 weeks of negotiations here. Called for insistently by Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov over the objections of Britain and France, the nine-party session lasted only a little more than an hour and provided no new. deve! opments. Mexico has a coastline longer a tree in Midland County near Sanford. Eon Selner, 41, St. Joseph — killed when a car in which he was riding hit a tree and overturned two miles south of Vicksburg. | Mrs. Sybil Freinhoffer, Grand Rapids — killed when her hus- band's car hit a tree at Grand Rapids. . . County Probate Judge Addresses Lawyers Oakland County Probate Judge Arthur Moore addressed northern Michigan lawyers at a legal insti- tute sponsored Saturday by Delta County Bar Assn. in Escanaba. He opened the session at 10 a.m. with a talk on ‘‘Modern Probate Practice and Procedue."’ The in- stitute is co-sponsored by Michigan Law Institute, the continuing legal education arm ofthe” Mihigan State Bar. John Paczas, 61, Detroit — hit} James J. Barscewski, 24, Grand | The Tennessee senator is a lead-| Home, with burial following at preported seen late last Thursday tained in the bill itself. The presi- | | dential directive would have the Tereca Ann McKay | Atomic Energy Commission con- | tract for private power to serve| Tereca Ann McKay, infant the Memphis, Tenn., area over | daughter of Thomas H. and Shirley | Tennessee Valley Authority lines.| Melton McKay, of 35242 N. Cass Cause Three Deaths eee ae took her vows last | ments, duties. Suit Brazenty Stolen KIEL, Germany (INS)—Passers- show window and dressed himself in a new suit from the window display. But the store’s manage- could not be reached by telephone ; by thought it was a publicit) stunt, when a man stepped into a store's | ment called police to report that | a thief had stolen a new suit in| full view of the shopping crowd..: to Palermo months ago. So | tried | down the block. This cabbie said | Caesar lives at the Hotel Eden but j isn't home days. The third guy never heard of Julius Caesar, so I gave up. “It's possible at this rate even Willie Mays wil] be forgotten in 2,000 years.” (For the curious: Caesar, slain tween the Arc of Septiumus Sever- us and the Fountain of the Gods in | the Roman Forum.) Pontiac’ Pair Attending Mrs.\\Elva F. Templeton and |the Twelfth Annual’ Institute on | Hospital Accounting at Indiana University this week. Dr. Basil C. MacLean, New York City’s hospital commissioner, gave | the institute's keynote address to- lee to 253 hospital accountants | from 33 states, Canada and Iran, | The institute, which ends Friday, deals with ‘Achieving the Objec- | tives of Hospital Accounting.”’ Robert J. Vance Life of Virginia's Man-of-the-Month ROBERT }. VANCE During June, Robert J. Vance was the leading agent in Life of Virginia’s Pontiac branch of- fice. In recognition of his out- standing sales and_ service to policyowners he has been named “Man - of - the-Month” by Louis. Pohl, local manager Mr. Vance is a member of the local, state and National Asso- ciation of Life Underwriters and has consistently ranked among his company’s leading agents Life of Virginia's Pontiac office was established in 1928. The company, organized in 1871, is one of the nation's largest and strongest life insurance companies. LIFE INS. CO. of VIRGINIA 426 Riker Bidg. FE 2-0219 Perry Mount Park Cemetery The) siternoon stopping at the St. An- tev. Howar@? Artz of the Free} grew's Cmcte Guraace. Seen by a workman on a nearby church, the blue car is the strongest clue to | the abandonment case : Quintuplet Dionne go to the atomic plant at Padu-| Mercy Hospital, eight hours after leaves Convent cah, Ky. | birth | She is survived by her parents. | (Continued From Page One) G if | Q) itt Service will be Tuesday at } p.m. | jonely, but she can always go back. oer ays ul ing from Huntoon Funeral Home. Bu-/ It has been tough on her being . ‘ | rial will follow at Perry Mount} separated from her four sisters to Housing Switch | Park Cemetery. - | with whom she had lived since | . : they were ooltes: : ST. PAUL W—Dr. Cary Middle- | - | coft, the golfing raloghly “ Accidents in County The Dionne home in Callander | Sunday he walked out on the Ma- | nakiki Open tournament at Cleve- land last week because another | golf professional was put in a room| (Continued From Page One) rand gee serie erste a ae reo for Ps hem he was | about three hours after he sus-| convent aad moved to a ‘flea bag.” tained a skull fracture in a crash ; en The chairman of the tournament | on Lake Angelus Road, about for munhood to serve two sears as had called Middlecoff's sudden de- half-mile east of Joslyn road. novices." : . | parture “‘a lousy trick.” | Oakland County Sheriff's Deputy; Lite at the convent was de- “Sure, I walked out of the tour- Steve Hubbell said the car. driven | scribed as “not difficult or herd ” |nament,” said Middlecoff. here for | by William K. Kinsey, 18, of Dodd’s| but it was along austere lines. ,the National Professional Golfers | Trailer Court on Taylor road, Pon-| with other white-garbed nuns, | Association tournament. tiac Township, turned over twice.| Marie spent her days in prayer “I had a room reservation con-| Kinsey said he lost control near the | and silent work on pritsts’ vest- 'firmed and had it for 10 days.|top of a hill, when the auto struk altar clothes and similar | TheryI show up and they put this a jutting rock in the gravel road- other pro in my room and sent me | way. . some place else. Strzalkowski was pronounced “It was a flea bag. It was in @| dead of a heart attack by Oak- motel and the room was upstairs.| tang County Deputy Coroner It was 107 degrees in the room. Isaac C. Prevette after he fell | There was a three-quarter bed for) trom a Boat at about 4 p.m. Sun- me and my wife. I had to carry all! gay on Lake Orion. He was boat- my stuff up and had to pay in ad-! ing with two grandchildren, vance. Ralph Dolenga, 9, and Susan Do- “That's when I decided to leave. a 5 Whee bo suddenly Sh It made me mad and I think it| from the 14-foo¢ metal craft. would have made anybody else} 1. cniaren told Sheriff's Depu- BE danas . ties Melvin Glover and Herbert Middleco { did not name t ed Cross that they threw life jackets given the room he had reserved. | 1, the victim but they fell short. < A witness, Valentine Perkins of County Given OK Detroit, said he recovered the body with a garden rake he had in his . boat just as it began to sink. for Collecting Tax | tm deputies said the tragedy: took place about 400 yards from | Approval for the countywide col- shore in about 80 feet of water. lection of one-half mill tax for the| The body is at Allen’s Funeral education of the handicapped was | Home, Lake Orion. granted this morning by the Oak- land County Tax Allocation Board. -The..tax was endorsed by the voters of the county by a more than three-to-one vote at two elec- tions, June 14 and July 12, making Oakland Conty the first county governmental] unit in the nation to locally finance and contro] its own special education program. Raised annually with the half- mill tax will be between $450,000 and $500,000. The program will be under the direction of the Oakland County Board of Educution and the county superintendent's office, but will be locally administéred. In August the county board will anfounce its plans for the coming i school year's program. SHOPSMITH PORTER-CA Quality Tools ‘ ATLAS @ CAUSING @ DELTA BROWNE-SHARPE @ MILWAUKEE @ DeWALT BLE @ SKIL RENTALS GLENN WING POWER -TOOLS 1437 SOUTH WOODWARD AVE. Five Blocks North of 14 Mile Rooc BIRMINGHAM, Mi 4-0444 DAILY 8 te 6:00 — FRI. 8 te 8:00 than that of the United States. - , s. Convention Site Named GRAND RAPIDS — The 36th annual convention of the Michigan Department of the American Le- gion will be held July 22-25 in Grand Rapids. Look Sharp! The Right Clothes for the Right DRY CLEANERS | Pick Up and Delivery | Phone FE 5-6107 12 Webt Pike Street MATTERS OF DOLLARS & SENSE... ? . Start Your Savings Account Here Today! SAVINGS INSURED TO $10,000.00 PONTIAC FEDERAL A Mutwel Savings & Home Loan Association 16 EAST LAWRENCE STREET A MONTH-BY- MONTH SAVINGS PLAN PAYS OFF! Week by week, month by month .. . every time you poy your bills . . . pay - yourself FIRST... savings account. ina |in 44 B.C., is believed buried be-™- ca hl il i tila oa - cuit oon THE 9 h F to Sl VISIT or CALL rencnomen fear [to cep , MICHIGAN | as Terror Stalks Tunisia... : ‘g FIRST A ID By CHARLES M. McCANN is no detibt communism would United Press Staff Correspondent) like to mreve in if it can t > for France moves these days from France has tried every method ’ i * Bi one crisis to another ie 1 {he situations a North rf rica tepression mnciiation ; SICK ROOM and As the Indochina issue — ap- . “ promise of reforms, ousting of of } INVALID NEEDS proaches its climax in the Geneva | ferais, imprisonment and) banish Conference and in- the Hanoi , — in ; * ment ef Nationalist leader abike ; MEDICAL and Delta, the situation in’ French yi paed ’ North Afric ntering the crisis| : 4 INDUSTRIAL eens lal nily The center of the National : e : + FIRST AID SUPPLIES The Protectorate of Tunisia is WONemert in Tami i the Ne lestour — oO Lew teper being swept by a wave of stark) tu : b pt coll. Li 2-3027 JO 4-6847 terror Party It claims a member veral Bundred thousand } 1621 S. Woodward Ave. No Frenchman in the country rani ncac wuvecot tert nT Royal Oak side can go to bed at night beeen Was started by a band of 3 Doors North of 10-Mile from the fear that his home Wi as othe | FPellagah Bandits ’ ne be attacked and he and his fami They operate in the countrysid | ty slaughtered in their sleep i They now call themselve the na ~ . No Frenchman—and no Tunisian) tonal army of liberation ind ap J Wh s 4 who associates with Frenchmen pear in khaki uniforn rile ellGiltarkeray canappes ina ct es ee Violence has spread recently g the fear that he may be cut down) jag, the cities. The French sus by a blast of machine gun fire pect wa fink between the Fella from a passing motor Cat gah, and the Neo Destour Na | The istuation in the Protectorate tionalists of .Moroceo. where the United ; States has important bomber eile “ - - ; . i l bases, is relatively quiet for the ‘> Ra to cy et ~~ s ° slender handsome tlabib Bourgu moment There could be a new : Ben fet explosion of violence there at any . ne Saat eabed Aaah CAS ite time Bourgudba and his chief aide { = el areested in) January 952 } In Indochina, France can bian : the Communists for its trouble For more hae two . ™ eth Pmus Indochinese Communists aided by | * _* a ae S , GG ee Red China and Red Russia The tod on we Tittle Us = of “ue BEFORE YOU BUY crvesicnin tndoctina started how (off the Tunisian Coast Last Mas } i 1 1 erres fir Phe land ¢ r ) t wement ANY IAN ver, as a Nati Anil m ent oy ae te ee There is little of communism so. far in the Nationalist movements . I ' Tuni N There ade “ Rent a Betsy Ross = im Tunisia and Morocco, There new he aueris France ‘to ' It as reported or Gulbransen ebiika tvanah mas tee to inden SPINET PIANO LOOK?! Pec e i} } ay part ifi.a adiecally ditered muni 2 © Tery thi ve prom of a vreatet , Bring This Coupon! iry. with the promise of a pres With option to purchase up to degree of independence Tf so. it as 6 months. Only $10 a month $ 00 hikely that F have to bid plus cartage. Worth hig j WA GINO ! r | Hudson Household Co. Se . ‘ 390 Nelson St Richard Shelcnunas Oley ‘ . Full Line ef Heuscheld stolen from tis back wed re FE 4-0566 18 E. Huron. Pontiac Necessities turned a ! rear wheel n Reg. 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Weights, Buy at this price for tonite and Tuesday only, POINT ALWAYS Regular 29c Per Quart © 000 000000000000000000000000000000000 0000008 ae ce Gerace sitll anc MR ne B- Maire eA ig ke ha ae Ri a a a AD Jp i be es . é bh IAC PRESS exclusively to the use Bm ge ER im this news- J as well as all AP news dispatches $0.00 Sear. All mall ibeeription payable tes a ir ma su! * are va -¥ Phane Pontiac FE 2-818) 7 MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS MONDAY, JULY 19, 1954 The U.S. Is Growing President Ersennower electrified the Governors Conference by proposing as a “mere start” a $50,000,000,000 ten- year road-building program to prepare for a population of 200,000,000 by 1970. Those ciphers are almost mean- ingless. What the President was telling the Governors was that the United States is growing, and growing so fast that all lev- els of Government are going to have to lift their sights to new horizons. * * * Pontiac school electors testified to their understanding of this growth by voting last month for a school construc- tion program. Oakland County voters are being challenged to stretch their gmaginations and prepare for the future Sepang a courthouse building pro- sal in the August 3 primary. © Ine difficulty in all this expansive sing ahead right now arises from fact that growth in population is fring totally new in America. y kids are graduating from high 1 and entering college who were n the depression. And the depres- uced the lowest birth-rate of od in our history. * * * t after depression came World And it shot the birth-rate to ical levels. The significant ‘ywever, is that after the “war ” and “war babies” the birth- ‘t taper off. America is in a pal population expansien era -rate now at about 4,000,000 a year, that gives this coun- he highest growth factors in * * * lichigan the new babies at the rate of 200,000 a ‘ojecting this ahead, Mich- ll have about 100,000 stu- ra college next year, and F 00,000 in 1970. ucators look for a national SE of 4,500,000, almost record campus population in e height of the GI Bill. 4, there were only about one- many engineering graduates > U. S. colleges as were needed Os. * * * lent EISENHOWER may have set ts high on a road-building pro- sosting multiple ciphers for 1970. da deliberate purpose, however. to alert the 48 Governors and the *. Je to the necessity for planning now eet the needs of a rapidly growing You may never have heard of the ted States Trade Mark Association. ‘Recently it held its seventy-sixth annual ' Meeting, and was appropriately ad- dressed by Mrs. Dapune R. Leeps. Mrs. Leens is assistant U. S. Commissioner of Patents, and is the first woman to hold so high a post in the Patent Office. * * * Addressing the organization dedicat- ed to the preservation of identifying trade marks, Mrs. Lezps told the mem- bers: “Our American business ‘con- cept is based on competition. Free enterprise. envisages competition ° and trade marks are the very essence of competition. Trade marks — those little brand names - freedom of choice in the market _ place. | «fay seem fantastic, but as of » sed States. — * rade Marks Protect You . i of good value. ' * x * Incidentally, Mrs. Lezps had more good news for the association. Since the new Administration took over in™ 1953, she reported an annual savings of $124,000 in administration of the trade mark laws. Twins to Have a Home Spontaneous and widespread _re- sponse to the need of two twin girl babies for a home followed publication of their pictures in Friday's Pontiac PRESS. * * * The newborn babies had been left on the steps of a Rochester church Thurs- day night without any trace of the iden- tity of their parents. They were brought immediately to St. Joseph Mercy Hos- pital in Pontiac where they were placed in incubators. Offers of home care and adop- tion were received from some 90 people within a few hours. Tele- phone calls poured into the hos- pital. Such a response shows the warm, generous impulse which still rules hu- man hearts where children are con- cerned. Regardless of the reasons which may have led their mother to give them up, these babies are wanted and are assured of a good home in which they will have loving care. * * * There may be much of violence and hatred and cruelty in the world, but underneath in the vast majority of human hearts there is friendliness and love and a willingness to share. The Man About Town Low Pollen Count Hay Fever Sufferers Will Welcome This Good News Daffynition Surprise: What the girl got who was tired of working, so got married. Local hay fever sufferers will be glad to learn that the Pontiac area is given a rather low pollen count this year, under 4,000 to the cubie yard of air. This appears to be in spite of the thriving growth of ragweed and slow development of golden rod blossoms. By the way, my hay fever pollen expert tells me that golden rod now is considered to be a lesser offender than before it was better . understoog. ' Pontiac roller skaters of the 1920s are preparing for a reunion which will include a picnic and games of several kinds—but no roller skating “witheut cushions.” One of the first to patronize Pontiac's first municipal parking lot was George Varion of Lake Orion, who phones, “It is a start on solving your city’s only drawback.” The raspberry crop now is being picked, and Oakland County's largest grower, Jay A. Toles, has 30 odd pickers at work at his acreage at 3880 Gregory Road, harvesting a good crop. Incidentally, Mr. Toles has served as one of the three persons on our county’s election board for as many years as he now has berry pickers. Back from several months in Florida and a hospital siege, John R. Taylor says he again is OK after obeying his doc- tor's orders to stop worrying. “I want to commend the Pontiac Press on its handling of crime news,” phones Mrs. Edna Northrup of Birmingham, who .continues, “The big city papers forgot most everything else after that Allegan murder trial started.” The family cat in the home of. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hills of Bloomfield Hills was killed by an auto- mobile. The neighborhood children placed the body in a little box, and were to join in a burial ceremony—but somebody stole the box In answer to several inquiries, the court house clock does not strike any more. Its jarring sound threat- ened the foundation of the statue of justice, just above it. Bet you hadn't missed it. Early potatoes that weigh close to a pound apiece are reported by Harry Dale of Auburn Heights, who says they've grown “in spite of weeds, drouth, too much rain, backache, blistered hands, bugs, dirty hands, advice, hot weather, cold weather, flies and mosquitoes.” Verbal Orchids to— Mr. and Mrs. Alexander R. Leoney of Birmingham; sixty-first wedding anni- versary. / re eee _ “—anaenen Three Men in a Tub Voice of the People —_——— ‘Old Timer’ Will Miss Enjoyable Visits to Haddad’s Sweet Shop Now It’s Closed (Letters will be condensed when neces- ee ee ee ee writer must will not be writer so requests, unless the letter ts critical ip its nature) I noticed the other day that one Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE The formula is something that . « . Prescribes a certain course . « . Like medicine; a way to live . . . Or betting on a horse... It is supposed to guide your mind . . . And help you to survive... . . Just by yourself—alone .. . And as you try your fledgling wings ... It may turn out that you ... Have found a special formula . Quite wonderful and new. (Copgright 1954) of Pontiac's older business places has closed and wonder how many others will miss the ‘Haddad Sweet Shop’ on South Saginaw Mr. Haddad can spin some won- derful_ tales-of Pontiac in the old days and I always enjoyed a chat with him over one of his delicious chocolate sundaes High Time the U. S. Quit Financing Her ‘Friends’ Sure, we give billions to nations in want and then when we ask them to vote with us on Red China they give Uncle Sam the ha-ha and From Our Files 15 Years Ago METAL CYLINDER filled with gold coins found on farm near Coldwater. CITY PURCHASES 38 parking meters 2% Years Ago FORD V-8 autos are advertised at $512.50. SAN FRANCISCO mayor makes pledge to run every Communist agitator out of city. vote against us. Isn't it time to stop financing our ‘‘friends’’? Teacher Just A Smile New He Knows The circus strong man rode out on horseback to challenge a farmer whose great strength had gained him a reputation. The circus man tied his horse in the farmyard and approached the farmer. “Hey!"’ he called, ‘I've heard a lot about you, and I thought I'd see whichxis the better man.” Without answering, the farmer seized the intruder, hurled him bodily over the fence into the road. and returned to work. When the loser had recovered his Breath, the farmer growled, “Got anything else to say to me?” “No,” the circus man panted, “just throw me my horse.” Modern Mother: “Isn't this a rather com- plieated toy for a small child?" Clerk: “It’s an educational toy, madam, designed to adjust a child to live in the world of today. Any way he puts it together. it's wrong. Case Records of a Psychologist Principle of Good Editing of Local Names, Pictures P Craig has been promoted to . a most interesting job, for he is to conduct a monthly “house organ” for his firm. Editorial psychology is fascinating and should be better understood by the staffs and school news- papers, church mimeographed magazines and even you writers of love letters. By DR, GEORGE W. CANE Case L-361: Craig K., aged 32, is to take over a new job soon, “Dr. Crane, my new position in- volves editing a house organ for our smal] factory.”’ he began. “I'm new at this sort of thing. although I've done a little writing in the past. ; “So could you give me some psychological pointers to make our monthly magazine of maximum in- terest to all the employes?” When you have your picture taken with a group and later get to see the proofs, where do you look first? To find yourself! Then you look at those friends you know best, but only casually glance at the total strangers. That ‘is the principle of good editing, whether of a factory house organ or a high school news- paper, or a mimeographed monthly church magazine, People are most interested in “Dad, what's wrong with this school paper?” our 17 - year - old son grumbled about hig high School newspaper last term. “The kids don't care much for it and will not buy it.” So I glanced at it quickly and saw the main reason. The sports page contained an analysis of the New York Yankees, with the va- rious pros and cons concerning the chances any other team would ever be able to defeat the Yankees. There wasn't any mention of the local high school students who were to pay their money for the paper! There wasn't even a box score account of a recent school game where they could see the names of all the local players and their record. No, that teen-age reporter had simply tried to show off his liter- a, Is Inclusion and Stories lem.” . So be sure to name people and discuss their personal problems. For further advice, send for my “How to Write Salable * enclosing a stamped re- turn envelope, plus a dime. It also has a section of prize contesting. (Copyright, Hopkins Syndicate Inc.) } David Lawrence Says: Extremely Bad Phrasing - Deflates FlandersAttack WASHINGTON — What is “‘con- duct unbecoming a member of the United States Senate’ and what is meant by ‘“‘contrary to Senate tra- ditions” and what is “conduct that tends to bring the Senate into dis- repute’’? These phrases, contained in a resolution sponsored by Sen. Flan- ders of Vermont, Republican. could, if properly investigated, take many weeks of hearings be- cause hardly a member of the Senate could satisfy any other member as to what is or is not “unbecoming.” This is true especially if grab- bing headlines and publicity is hereafter to be regarded as taboo Sen. Flanders, who has pro- posed the condemnation of Sen. McCarthy of Wisconsin, Repub- lican, for his “conduct’’ as chair- man of the subcommittee on gov- ernment investigations, has been getting a lot of publicity himself in recent days by his personal attacks on and innuendoes about the Wisconsin senator. Flanders, as a senator, has a right to do this and anybody intro- ducing a resolution to censure the Vermonter for these stunts on ra- dio and television would be acting “contrary to Senate traditions’’ be- cause there is no limitation on a senator's efforts to try to get pub- licity or to smear anyone or to discuss any subject whether or not it is pertinent. The Vermont senator is quoted, for example, as saying that it is no business of the Senate Commit- tee on Government Operations to investigate the presence of foreign spies in private industry as this has nothing to do with govern- mental operations. * It must have been a misquota- tion because just a couple days ago the secretary of defense was telling the Senate Armed Serv- ices Committee that the Defense Department was badly in need of legislation on this very point as many contractors, engaged in defense projects, couldn't fire employes suspected of espionage without involving themselves in all sorts of legal complications. As for the “conduct"’ of a sena- tor, many things might be covered by that vague phrase. The core of the issue, however. is the ex- pression of views or opinions that are unpalatable to other -senators It is the essence of good liberalism that a man should pot be punished merely for the expression of his political views. If the “censure” resolution tech- nique is to become customary, then every time a senator doesn't like the views expressed by a chairman of a committee-he can introduce a resolution and pre- sumably get a vote on whether the toward the best ways of getting rid of spies and subversives in our government: Much has been said about Sen. McCarthy's “‘methods’—as if his procedures are materially differ- ent from those of other chairmen of investigating committees during the last 30 years. Certainly he is guilty of intem- perate outbirsts at times and occasional unfairness due to everzealousness, but former ‘ President Truman was often as imtemperate and unfair and yet “Trumanism” was never the subject of a movement to im- peach. Indeed, it's strange how much time and energy and news space are being used up in trying to censure Sen. McCarthy and yet not a single resolution has been introduced to censure the Truman administration for having con- tinued in its employ Harry Dexter White after J. Edgar Hoover. di- rector of the FBI, had warned against such a course. Speaking of unwillingness to re- ply to questions propounded by a congressional committee, Tru- man refused on technical grounds to answer any questions by a House committee last year and hence has never explained why, after the FBI evidence was given him, he wrote in subseqvent months two separate letters highly commending White for his serv- ices. Was this ‘“‘conduct unbecoming a President of the United States?” or are some senators interested only in attacking the conduct of a man who is vehemently fighting the continuance of Communist op- erations in America and who is exposing especially the abuse of the Fifth’ Amendment privilege? This provision of the Constitu- tion was never intended to permit wrongdoers to conceal the knowl- edge they may have of the guilty acts of others. The FBI cannot prosecute such persons but con- gressional committees can uncover publicly certain facts on which prosecutions can often be based. That's how Alger Hiss was caught and sent to jail (Copyright 1954) Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER international News Service No historian has ever approached Prescott's, ‘“‘That iaboratory of discontent the empty stomach.” It's the story of John Ball's Rebellion, it's the story of the Jacquerie of the Dark Ages. it's the story of the Rice Bow! of Indochina. genes When Napoleon said an army traveled on its stomach he said more than a mouthful. It was a bellyful. Three times a day Probably a more certain recipe for trouble in the world pantries is the jaded appetite. At present we are having trouble with our bananas in Central America and our coffee in ext We also seem to be suffering from a surplus of wheat, corn and rye. We are proud to state the still-billies of Kentucky are doing their uphill best to balance the books. Against Prescott's resentful scarcity we have America's over- loaded vast area. It begins to appearas if Hank Wallace's ever normal granary was a_ well- balanced diet for damming the flood of natiofial digestive juices. In order to keep the prices up here we are giving our groceries away in Europe. Why not yive ‘em away here and keep the prices up over there? That's just a thought that oc- curred while the chef was giving the hotfoot to a crepes suzette. We still. fail to comprehend why a surplus is a threat to our economy. We have never been to a picnic where there were enough rolls to house the hot dogs. Not since Joseph predicted the triple whammy for Egypt has there been a_ standardized silo It's either feast or famine and no seconds. Back in 1917 we wrote: “Ecg on the chin used to be careless- ness. Now it’s boasting.” Let's hope that kind of nutritious braggadoccio doesn't shorten the firing range of our pop-up toasters. THOUGHTS FOR TODAY The tongue of the just is as choice silver: The heart of the wicked is little worth.—Prov, 10: 20. * * * Open, candid, and generous, his — heart was the constant companion of his hand, and his tongue the artless index of his mind.—George Canning. Dr. Brady Recommends Calcium and D By WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. That hay fever is the manifesta- tion of allergic sensitivity to one In the past five or ten years I have devoted a good deal of . _phiet on Hay Fever, available on ‘written, signed request if you provide stamped, self-addressed envelope. Now, don't tell me you are aller- gic to milk. But if you insist you are, I've already given my advice. While the advice applies to hay fever, I might say here that it applies to hay fever only secondarily. Primarily I recommend Ca and . pRepiytretic and ear D as the best rective for any kind of allergic manifestation, such as hay fever, asthma, eczema, urticaria (hives), angio-neurotic edema (giant hives), migraine (periodic sick headache), “nervous” or neuralgic headache. hyperesthetic rhinitis (temperame ‘Sako | 7 THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, JULY 19, ‘19 . PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, ee | Thousands Enjoy Fun, Games at GMTC Family Picnic | Ps ail + uF, ‘ehvegs. Suse ? : i ver Aet J sae. “"\ » vee 10 oh ~ae CONTENTED — Enjoying his share of the 245 tons | At left above. is part of the 30,000 persons who of ice cream distributed at the picnic is the young | jammed Walled Lake Park for the annual affair son of Henry Cooper, GMC Engine Division employe HOBBY DISPLAY ate display of skin-diving “jUulp < ment was exhibited by MC Truck and Coach employ-s Bt» ms) Charles Dill and Fred Dramevwr in the hobby show PLENTY FOR ALL First 1 ‘ ( line for ice cream are Gary White : + er Xe Oy head, son of Far! Whitehead of ~ ed : the Truck division, and Gary's ~ oe See | brothers, Ronnie and Buddie, and sister, Delores FAMILY PICNIC — Taking time out for a picnic’ dinner are the William Proffitt family and Howard Ewin family. Proffitt is a main tenance employe and Ewin works in the coach division. WHATTA WHOPPER — This was Paul Gaber's exclamation as he measured the foot of a contestant before the men’s foot race. This was part of the new feature ‘‘Sportorama”™ which saw men and youths taking part in various athletic feats such as track events,- basketball and shot putting TRUCK DISPLAY — Two professional models, on hand to enhance the truck exhibit look over a GMC Suburban parked in the outdoor Geplay area. Donors Aid Bleeding ‘Boy MIDDLETOWN, Ohio Towne | southwest Ohio has responded with folk formed aq blood brigade today | hundreds of offers of transfusions. to save the life of 6-year-old Eddie | More than 40 pints of blood have Phillips, who has been bleeding} been pumped into the youngster gteadily since his tonsils were re-/ already. moved 13 days ago. Eddie’s physician said the. boy . His unnamed disease, a certain; was in critical condition but his | deficiency in the blood, prevents| spirits wefe good. , the blood from clotting. He seate] The leeiee Some resh blood and direct t a DIAPLAYS PETS — Amos and Andy, Ken Crisp’s | show. Ken also brought two fox, peacocks, doves and If transfu- fisees ants Ss ee > the hobt woodchuck | sions. Stored blood will not do. pet raccoons, perch on his shoulder during by ja uc ol Prey Ore 4 j & Late stat res SS: 74 Club to Hear mn Candidates ‘Public is invited to the meeting, scheduled for $ p.m. at Hotel Pon- tiac. Incumbent Clare L, Hubbell and all seeking the Republican nomina- tion for Oakland County Sheriff, will speak. ‘State senatorial can- didates scheduled to speak are William S. Broomfield, incumbent; Frank M. Granger, Morey and Anthony Renne. ¢ Republican Club will ) Wminute talks .Thursday candidates competing in the Aug. 3 election for next Novem- eer's Republican nominations as Howard K. Kelley, Richard D. Kuhn, Edward > RY Soybeans Others Firm ~ i i grains firmed on the board of trade today in a development Dealings were active in soybeans at the opening but quickly quieted down. That was because several .i contracts were bid up the 10 cent session and theré were no offers to sell. In other grains the trading pace continued rapid Wheat near the end of the first hour was ‘% to % higher. $2.08%, corn 1% to 5? higher, Jub¥"$1.60',.-oats % to 1% high- er, July 74‘, rye 1% to 2% higher, ( Advertisement) Announce New Way To Shrink Painful Piles Find Healing Substance That Relieves Pain—Shrinks Hemorrhoids New York, N. Y. (Special) —For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the aston- ishing ability to shrink hemor- _rhoids and to stop bleeding — with- ‘ out surgery. In case after case, pain was re- lieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction | (shrinkage) took place. Most amazing of all—results were so thorough that sufferers made astonishing statements like “Piles have ceased to be @ roblem !” The secret is a new healing sub- stance ( Bio-Dyne®) — discovery of a world-famous research institute, Now this new healing substance is offered in ointment form under the name of Preparation H.* Ask for it at all drug stores — money back guarantee. Trade Mark. July $1.09, soybeans 8 cents higher, July $4.0542 and lard 2® to 6 cents a hundred pounds higher, July $16.60 2 School Districts Now Eligible for Aid Two Oakland County school dis- \tricts are now eligible for-federal assistance for school construction by virtue of being in the newly created ‘Defense Area,’’ Congress- ;man George A. Dondero (R-Royal Oak) has announced The school district of the city of Berkley, and a fractional school district including parts of Royal Oak, Oak Park, and Southfield | priority list to be aided, and appli- |eations for such assistance have been approved, Dondero, stated Dondero explained that under the llaw, the federal government makes | grants-in-aid to school districts in which federally-owned war plants | and other government installations |are located. The aid money is in One Full Year Guorantee From Houses, Apartments, Gro- cery Stores and Restaurants. Re- main out only three hours. No signs used Rox Ex Company 1014 Pont. St. Re. Bidg, FE 4-9067 tended to replace taxes that other- wise would be collected on proper- ty which government ownership jhas removed from local tax rolls. Boy s Pet Rooster Takes Top Honors A white rooster owned by J. D Kitchen, McCarroll student, took top honors in a McCarroll School | Playground Program pet show | recently sponsored by Oakland |County Animal Welfare Society. The animal welfare society and |Pontiac Department of Parks and |Recreation are sponsoring a series of pet shows at the 19 playgrounds supervised by the Recreation De- | partment. | Classes in the McCarroll pet show, animal winners and their owners are as follows: Chickens “Oscar Kitchen 131% © Pike “Rooster”; Jim Merd, 563 N a he “Hennie", Danny Herd. 363 N ry Dogs No Contract Necessa FUEL OIL Call Today Gregory Oil Co. 94 East Walton Bivd. Phone FE 5-6141 Spaniel — Carol Cotterman | “Preckles’ joan Maszuerk. 197 Oliver Y (ALA dA Ads <. aaa a. 227 Auburn Ave. FTIIIAAZALLALALALALLALLA SWEATERS “Trixie”. Preddie and Judy Eastman. 478 FE Kennett “Junior Kenneth Kimmel 647 WN Perry “"Cookle Barbara J O'Dea, yee Lowell “Corky Candace Love. 218 Oliver Cats = “Taffy Nancy Rindfues 178 Nelson “Spunky Mike Elibergen wm «6: Kennett “@mokey”; Devid Fletcher, 518 E Kennett Rabbits *Pluffytalil Mary Ann Edwards 188 Wolfe . “Thumper”. Kitty Daugherty 197 Wolfe Powder Puff", Sharon Daugherty, 197 Wolte “Cocoa Evelyn Daugherty. 197 Wolfe Oliver | “Noah”. Carol Love 218 Fish “Slippy”. Pegay Johnson, 404 Edison SKIRTS Phone FE 4-3431 SOSOSCESES EE STEHEEEE ES SEOE SESE O MOO SEOs Jump, CHICAGO \w—Soybeans raced up the 10 cent daily limit and other market which was based almost entirely upon weather limit advance permitted in a single | July | pens to 10) 2 | Township are high enough on the re PPP eee ee ee. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 19, 1954 | DETROIT PRODUCE DETROIT (UP)—Wholesale on public farmers’ markets reported by | the Buresh of Markets pples, oe 5 . 50 16-pt case. No 1, +.00-450 24-pt case; red, 6.00 20-3 60 1 6 | ' 1% , N | fancy. 250 % Cabbage ™ red, No sprouts, No 1. 1 [RS 88 dos 3.80 Corn t bers. No 1, 5 : | hothouse No. 1 1.25-1.78 dos 1,. 75-1.00 dos techs ohirabi, No 100-150 bu Leeks. behs. behs | Onions, green, ‘behs. Parsley Pea of Fa #3 S2FF-F38 Parsley, curly. root, No. 1, .75- E fi | No. 1, 250 50-ib toes, new, No van ‘ 7% dos behs; 1.00 dos behs; No 1, $ Squash. Italian, No. 1. % bu; No 1 .7&1.25 pk basket; summer, No. 1. .76-1.00 % bu: uash, hot- bu; Escarole, bleached, No. 1 2 : Lettuce, butter, No. 1, 2.00-2 head, No os oF ae : Lettuce, head, No. 1. ~ 1. foeoe . %%-1.00 bu Greens Collard, No. 1. 15- No. 1, .-1.00 : 6 bu S No. 1, - wees gma 125-180 bu. Turnip, No. 1, .76-1.00 bu DETROIT EGGS DETROIT ‘AP)}— s, tod. Detroit, cases included, federal-state grades Whites—Grade A, jumbo 68-42, weight- ed average 60, eh $1-62, wtd avg S1%. medium 43-44, w avg 44, small 30, grade B. large 4)-45, wid avg 4%. wees 23 Browns—Grade A large 51, medium 43. small 30; grade B, large 43-44, wid ave 43%; grade C, large 28-34; wtd ave 30; peewees 22-23, wid ave 72% Checks 23-24. wtd avg 23% CHICAGO BUTTER AND £0G8 CHICAGO (AP) — Butter steedy, re- ceipts 1,561,680, wholesale buying prices une 83 score AA 565; 93 A 585; oo B &4; 8 C 48, cars: 90 B S45; oc @# | @ges firm: receipts 93468: wholesale | buying prices unchanged; U8 large #4, UB. mediums 39, US. standards 34, cur- rent receipts 30; dirties 25.5, checks 24. CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO (AP)—Potatoes: arrivals 106; on track 306: total US shipments 463; supplies moderate, demand rather slow; market for whites slightly weaker; reds about steady; California Whites 6450-500, Round Reds $4.80-5.10 - Poultry CHICAGO POULTRY oreriagg 4 ani —— recet ) coops; f.o.b. y' pr unchanged heavy hens A rin Fi — hens 13.8-14.5: fryers or boilers 34-28, old roosters 13.5-14; caponettes 27-30. DETROIT -POULTRY (AP)—Prices paid per pound fob. Detroit for No 1 quality live poul- wr to 10 am | hena 18-22, light ¢ 16-17; heavy brotiers or fryers (3-3% >; gray | crosses 27%. Barred Rocks 29 . Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) — The Detroit live- stock report Hog: jable 50. Market eround 28 cents lower; fewer small lots choice 180- 220 I. barrows and gilts 24.50, with sorted choice 1 and 2 at 24.78; few 160-180 Ibs. and 225-250 Ibs. 23.50-24.00; sows 1675-1875; few 400-600 Ibe 14.25-16.25 4 Cattle—Salable 250. Today's market slow, weak. Compared last Thursday supplies liberal; — active early, slow late; good clearance; chotce and prime fed steers steady; lower grades unevenly steady to 80 cents lower; cows unevenly 80 cents to $1.00 lower; bulls, stockers and feeders steady; choice to low prime fed steers 23.50-25.00; fully two loads prime 1000-1115 Ib. steers 25.25; bulk good to low choice steers 19.50- 23.00: several lots choice and prime 633-842 Ib. heifers 2000-2300; wtility and commercial gress steers and ere 1300-1600. some commercial te good | lots 17.60-20 60; most utility and commer- | etal cows 9 00-1200: few bettter holstetn cows early to 12.50 and some of hetfer type, to 14.00; canners and cutters 1.0- 0.50: bulk utility and commercial bulls 1400-16 50; bulk good and choice stock- ers and aren 18.50-21.50; medium and 7. Market mostly steady today. Compared last Thursday; market moderately active: su liberal; 21.00- individ vealers steady; bulk mostly 25.00, few high chaice and - wals 26.00-27 00: practical top 36.08; com- mercial and good mainiy 15.00-230 00; cull and gtility 8.00-14.00; few commer- bap te choice slaughter calves 13 00- Sheep — Salable 25. Thursday's market unchanged. Co last week; sup- r 3 z 8 $ 3 ? 4 smal) lots ce | and prime «pri > some utility to low good »s gers 19.00-21.00; cull to choice slaughter ewes 3.00-8.00. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) — Galable 5,000; general trade active, uneven; butchers mainly steady; sows steady to 25 higher; most sales choice 180-230 Ib butchers 23.00-24.25; latter price for a few loads and lots choice No 1 and 3s 190-215 Ib; top 2450 for one load; 240-270 Ib 21.00-23.00; 280-300 Ib 19.50-21.00; a few 325-360 ib 18.00-19.00; a few lots 150-180 i> lights 23.0-23 5; la lot choice 330- 400 «ib 6sows§«616.25-18.75 with lighter weight sows 19.00-18 50; 425-600 Ib 13 76- 16.25, good clearance. Salabie cattle 1,500; calves 200; siaugn- ter steers and heifers nominally steady, and Get $25 903500 0 Se ee com on Signature, Furniture, Auto : | vealers steady to Weak; a load - mercial to low good 1100 steers 18.50, a few utility to low commercial steers . > “W by Certainl e ics that's the prompt - heifers 22 78" uility"grase, heifers. down rte erg Iie a gives you at : cows 1200-18-00; most utility 9.50-11.50; effort et your loan to your individual ¢ pos oud eae ial bl 13.56.1885 = = —— — e| to commercial 10.00-17.00. the moot suitable payment dace, You will .|'% prime native spring lambs 30-00-28 00: find that you always get cerdial, courteous ¢ con ta ge ige Meret service. That's why men and women—mar- : 19.00: cull te good slaughter ewes 4.00- ons cod aaa: fas co eee phone first. Or, i oe convenient, write or = B . ° Pp come in to Provident today! : | usiness Briefs ident L | ~=- . TOV en = oan asad 7 Total claims paid by the Mich- 2nd Floor « Lawrence Bidg., 7 WEST LAWRENCE ST. Gerald Harvey, Manager « PONTIAC « FEderal 2-9249 Loans mode te residents of all surrounding towns igan Employment Security Com- mission in the 1954 fiscal year ending June 30 were more than —— 40h. oe WASHERS REPAIRED & SERVICED COMPLETE STOCK OF PARTS FOR ALL MAKES Electric ALL MAKES Motors Repaired . + Phone FEderal 4-2569 “> double of those paid in 1953, it other weights scarce; scattering 300-400) Con small; trad active, prices firm; Ik good ae aoe native spring a MARKETS ||Market Busy, Quite Mixed NEW YORK ™ — The stock market was mixed today with the aircrafts sharply higher and the Oils lower. The split in direction carried prices up around 2 points at the outside and down between 1 and 2 points in the early afternoon. The pace of trading was below that of Friday when 2,540,000 shares changed bands in a declin- ing market. Aircrafts were out in front at the start of trading with large blocks on the tape, and the oils moved lower. As trading prog- ressed, the split widened. Also higher were the railroads, motors, and metals. Lower were the steels, and chemicals. Stocks advancing included Grum- man, Dynamics, Boeing. Lockheed, Republic Aviation, Va- nadium, Chrysler, Santa Fe, and Radio Corp. Lower were Bethlehem Steel, Sears Roebuck, American Smeit- ing. Allied Chemical, Standard Oil (NJ), Cities Service, and Texas Co New York Stocks Figures after decimal points are Adams Ex .. M6 Johns Man .. 44 Admire! 236 Jones & L .. 3%. Air Reduc 1. 264 Kelsey Hay 321 Alleg L Ot 32.2 Kennecott . me lied Ch 492 Kimb Cik .. 67 Allied Strs 463 Kresge 88 .. 02 Allis Chal .... 996 Kroger . Vs Alum Ltd on3 Lehn & PF .. ok Alum Am... 83 LOP Oless .. 59 37 Lib . pe m Airlin .... 1 McN&L oe Am Can “4 — & My c. Am Cyan a ip = aire . 16. Am Gas 1 . resalt po aan Lone ® Com ws Am M & Pay... 266 ° Am Motors... 111 Meck Tre... 4 am N Gas . “aT Marsh * 904 eo 1 May D our. 343 Am Gesting .. 295 7 "39 Am Smelt. 31 MiG“com Pet. 81.8 Am Sti Pa. 302 MOG Str pa | 324 Am Tel & Tel 17.3 oe! 88 Am Tod see Monsan ° . sore Mont Ward . 67.5 Am colen 312 Motor ‘Pa .. 175 Am Zine . 195 Motorola .... 43.7 Anac Cop .... 387 wuelier Br . 28.1 Anac W & C.. 522 Murray Cp .. 23.5 pebeontingrd co - wet Cash R a — . tehison le La Dairy _ 3 Atl Cet Line. 124 Nat Gyps .. 3223 Atl Refin -. 324 wet Leed .. 516 Atlas Pdr .... 455 wat Steel .. 864 Aveo Mtg... 5 wat Thee .. 8 Bald Lima 102 wy Air Bre . 202 Batt & Oh 23 6NY «(Cent (tC. 22.2 Beech Nut M4 Nie M Pe ne Bendix Av Ls] Nort & West... 41.1 Benguet .. 1 No Am Vv.... 404 Beth Steel . %7 Nor Pac .. 834 Boeing Air 623 Nor Sta Pw... 183 Bohn Alum 212 Nwest Airiin... 161 Bond Gtrs 137 Ohte Ot... .. 902 Borden eaux 4 Oliver o a Briggs MI . 4 Owens 4 Brist My - 717 Peckard 3 Budd Ce ..... a. — W Alr ad Burroughs ; Calum a@n.. 0 — Pict =. Can 131 e . on oe hn Pe RR... 183 Capital Atri 10.3 Pepsi Cols 14.6 Carrier Cp .. 925 Pheips D..... .. Case JI ... 162 Philleo ier. as Cater Trac ... eng Philip Mor Celanese 2 Phil Pet.. 6e.2 cont, He aaa Me Cort-teed . 19 ~Pit Plate * oe6 Chee & On .. 383 Prect & O.... Se Chi & NW I'S seme A seeeee 383 Chrysler ~ Oe... 322 Cities Bve ‘ ,° a —— = 2 eae oO be6 Cluett . 4 Coca Cola 1166 Rao Pict "s4 Coig Palm... $04 Rock Sps 1988 Cot Gas 142 gateway St... 455 exer 3 Raat &. Consum Pw pad ee ur. 71 Cont Can 3 AL RR sea Cont Mot 92 rs Roeb aa Cont Ot 43.7 oe O8....... 4) Copper Rag 3® ) «=6gimmons ..... 362 Corn Pd . 7%. Sinclair O.. « Cunn Drug «a Gocony Vac.... 404 atlas oH Bou ee B Det ts ; 4 Bou Moug Aire. ao faa cece as Dow Chem 4 + ope | Du Pont 136.4 Btd . 38.1 Seri. Bis See Be Air “ Kod .. #1 eta OF NJ “7 El Auto L 377 Std Ot) Oh... 374 5l & Mus In 25 Stevens JP.... 28.3 125 Stew Wer . 06 Gnd John .... 99.7 Sedeneber a 174 ~ e Swift @ Co... 481 eg ep oviv Pe... 303 exas eoee Preemie <3 TG Su. ee Gen Elec |...) 442 _~... Gen Pde 73 Time R Bear... 471 Gen Mille > e¢4 Tren W Air... 169 Gen Motors . 803 oe HEE Gen Retrac 48 - TR Steed 88 om * §o9 Underwd...... Gen Tel .... 341 OB Corvide... SO2 ee 384 Unit air Lin.. 24 Goedel Br TA * 647 caserich a Gan Aire... a4 it a r 70 ee TE ee West 8 196 U 8 Rud 4 Greyhound . 24 U 8 Smelt . a1 Guif on . es U 8 Smelt , M2 Hayes Mf 46 Uo 8 Btee! $22 Hersh Chee .. 40.6 U @ Steel pf...1%*2 Holland FP .. 141 G9 @ Tod...... 173 mar a. Gs Doe ee Houd Her 18.2 ie... 17.1 ™ Cent... a3 bade a) LE a .2 Indust Ray .. 466 est AF 43.2 Inland Stl... 624 Westg A Bk... 244.7 nspir Cop 284 Westg EI 60.5 Interlak Ir 417 ite 35.7 Int Harv 32.3 Woolworth 43.3 Int Nick 434 Yale & Tow a7n4 Int Paper 776 Yngst Sh & 473 Int Tel & Tel 204 Zenith a 712 Isl Crk Coal 147 STOCK AVERAGES NEW YORK — Compiled by the Asso- ciated Press » 18 18 Indust Rails Util Stocks Prev day .... 1762 O77 62.7 1306 Week ago 1767 06.3 62.0 130.0 Month ago 1707 O41 661 12860 Year ago .._.,. 1383 68 52.4 1954 high 1771 9@3 627 1316 | hod CIOS 1439 78 854 108.0 1953 high 1818 836 86.8 1163 953 low ..... 102 7358 SOS 995 STOCKS Hernbiewer & Weeks Pigures after decimal points are eighths High Low Noon Baldwin Rubber* ‘ 13 136 D & C Navigation* oes 13 144 Gerity-Michigan “ese 43 33 83 Kingston Products* .,... . a> 6 (63 Masco Bcrew* SSeS co 26 2.7 Midwest Abrasive* 54 60 ‘| Rudy Mfg* .. 47 5 Wayne Screw* 50 13 #14 *No sale; bid and asked by. Man’s Shouts Edward Anderson, 63, of 883 Stanley Ave., told Pontiac Police Detective Olin E. Hoffman that News in Brief An undetermined amount of mon- ey was taken from a vending ma- chine at the Crappin Service Sta- tion, 194 Auburn Ave., Sunday night, according to Pontiac Police. Entry was made through a rear window, Charlies A. Scott, 32, of Holly, was sentenced to five days in Oak- land County Jail Saturday when he pleaded guilty to reckless driv- ing before Orion Township Justice Helmar G. tanaback. Scott was also fined $50 and $25 costs. Mrs. Shirley 0. Hartwick, 4, of 157 W. Drahner Rd., Oxford, was fined $50 and $10 costs when |she pleaded guilty Saturday to | reckless driving before Oxford | Township Justice Fred F. Stevens. | West Bleomfield Township Jus- tice Elmer C. Dieterie Saturday fined Marion S. Lewellyn, 4, of 413 Avon, Flint, $50 and $25 costs when Lewellyn pleaded guilty to reckless driving. ff your friend's in vail. Ph PE 5-5201.C. A Re-elect Clare Hubbell Sheriff, Republican. Vote August 3rd. Adv Te buy or sell in Waterferd, Drayton Plains or Clarkston area see White Bros. Rea] Estate. OR 3-7118. —Adv. Power. Struggle Seen in China Gossip Tells of Fight Between Communism’s No. 2 Men HONG KONG wW—Political gos- sip in Shanghai says a fight for and needs Mitchell said, ‘‘but this one sounds a lit- er than most of them and iy mba t TE 2 : f i: ¢ called China's No. 2 Communist “Chou isolationist of Chinese communism, Liu Shao-chi the expansionist,” it can safely embark on large ex pansion. Korea proved that. Chou is supposed to advocate the mod- eration even in infiltration. Liu, now is the time to spread fast.” 3 Thugs Grab $300 in Station Holdup Three thugs, one brandishing a .32 caliber pistol, robbed a Pontiac gas station manager of $300 Satur- v5>52 = 3 ¥ 3 7 a|5 2 i 1 County Deaths il i aj E shall be deemed a separate Section 4. That any person. firm or corporation v the this ordinance sha upon .conviction thereof, be punished by & not ex- ceeding one hundred dollars ($100.00) Bection 5 That the various sen- tences. . sections, rases end clauses of be severable, and the invelidity of any sentence, ragre: ph or clause not invalidate the remainder of this ordinance Bection That affects the public health, safety and welfare and shall be given fect upon publication in any new eir- ones - B= of ties. ees Nays: 6 Dated: July 12. 1964. . GRETA V. BLOCK. Clerk July 19, 1064 Death Notices CORBIN, JULY 9. 1954, PRANCES Pontiac, age father of Mrs. Scott with Rev. Arts offictat- ing. Interment at Pery Mt. Park Cemetery. 3083 . eee 62: beloved father of Warren Gray. Mrs. . Percy and Gerden Oray; dear brother of Mrs. Joha Puneral will be -held Tuesday, July 20, at the Hunteon et 2 pm with Rev. Lola Tien officiat Ma ing. Interment at Oak Mill tery. Y. Y it. i984 TERECA Ann, 363% WN. Cass: beloved in- auita JOLY i,t Leggett, 31 ner. Puneral will be held W ‘The family asks to flowers. Memorials may be made to the All Saints Memoria! or the American Society. Mr. Smith iM tie im state at the Kirkby Pune to : And friends from day to Gay. On sever will the one I love. from mory pass away. Wife and Pemily. Flowers 3 SCHAFER'S FLOWERS Donelson-Johns Voorhees-Sivle FUNERAL HOME Ambulance rvice. « ad er Moter Cemetery Lots 5 WHITE CHAPEL — CHOICE LO- us tone — $280, 3 for $150. BOX REPLIES FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 a : . i i : i i ei i i 3 ge cat, BAPE £5. '¢ Dave s 61.35 -* ; ie be i ‘ i i Salary ent L Sa ee see Fie Va fhe —_ Automotive esman APPLY Must have own tools and read details. Steady, year around work. Reply Box 12 Pontiac Press stating qualifica- tions and experience. be tog, WE oe obere Experienced A-1 Truck Mechanic Good wages, and working Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. PE +0461. heating general mainten- oe. wife on Sin te kitehen. Permanent room and board. 9450 «a combined salary to i : 2 2 H > 4 ha A = a 35 ef | Ee 2 E oft \*s ; a Zz < “3 5 ay fi i si H 3 ‘ ? inte ager ron. : p.m. Mon. end Tues f with compan: po experience nec bans ~' oe —— located __Help Wanted Female 7 work neighborhood sentative. Mrs. Margaret Dareer. re 27061 10 aw and r 7 pm. ot ere aa So he Mid Dept Dp. 8 Chicago 4. BOOKKEEPER. STENOORAPH? STENOGRAPHER general office work. FE First 5-116. LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE SALESLADY La fenced. Galesy pins see 8 dave Der . Peo ‘s Clothing. § N. Sag- 7 ~ Sportswear Saleswomen Permanent position pays both ary and commission weekly. ter than average working hours. 3 _ ARTHUR'S GET WHAT YOU WANT through Waht Ads. Phone FE 2-8181 to place £“Wanted Ad” to- day!