The Weather U.S. Weather Burean Forecast ’ ‘Fair, cooler tomorrow. | \ (Betaile) Page 22 * « “Tih YEAR” Exriis “PONTIAG MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1959 —36 PAGES | x _ He's s Angling for a Big One A FAMILIAR siGut — One of many Pontiac and Oakland County trout fishermen who got off to a hopeful start on the opening of the state's ~Greenwood. -A 1959 season today was Frank postal employe here, Greenw ood, 26, was. Conditions Called Ideal Here snapped in a stream near: the city. Some 100,000, or more arden trouters were expected to be out today, most of them on waters in the northern Lower Peninsula. + de ° 3 Pentiac Press Photo Beats Him Into Sabmineiég. Grocer Captures Holdu Thundershowers to Dampen City This Afternoon Predicted thundershowers for the Pontiac area late this afternoon will drop temperatures to a low of 40 degrees tonight. - o* * * Fair and cooler is the, weather- man’s forecast for Sunday, with the high reaching around 50. To- day’s variable winds at 10-20 miles an hour will become northwesterly lat 15-25 miles tonight and tomor- row. * * * The outlook for Monday is partly cloudy and continued cool. Forty-six was the lowest tem- rose to 71 at 1 p.m. Negro Taken State Trout Season Opens Today by Hooded Mob By H. GUY MOATS | Pontiac Press Outdoors Writer j te A fine day with a slight over-| cast this morning greeted Michi-; gan's trout-fishing legions on the’. opening of the 1959 season. Con-| ditions in this area were des-| cribed by many as ideal However, there were few early itive jure was the good old time-| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) reports of unusual catches or quick success, from the sgpre or more, area waters. . As expected, Oakland Coun. ty's lakes were jammed, with all boats at Elizabeth Lake's livery, at Oxbew and Union Lakes among others taken out by daybreak. Off Shaw's dock at Oxbow, one) fisherman landed a two-pounder. | A number of smafl rainbows were reported from Gregg’s at reel Lake by early anglers. Upstate, the big annual National a generation, National Guardsmen were rolling into east. | mother. Trout Festival got underway at) Kalkaska, with Judy Perry, 17,! Kalkaska High School senior,: named qeen last night. Walt! Nowak of Alpena is the trout | king. normal, with some even lower than ysual.’’ Based on reports yes- rday, that northern streams were high, heavy and “dirty,” ‘Kendall figured area anglers oe be smart to start the sea- son at home.” ; * “* * Most popular, and most produc-| tested ‘‘garden hackle,” plain Mr. Angle Worm. Weather has not been warm enough, even in this section, to bring out fly hatches, giving the ‘‘purists’”’ tough time. Practically all district waters including about 20 lakes in Oak- Violence in Kentucky Ww Mine Fire, Blast a rather): Drag Suspect in Rape Out of Jail’ by Heels, Abduct Him POPLARVILLE, Miss. (AP) — Masked and hooded, a mob to day crashed into the courthouse cell of a Negro accused of raping a white woman, clubbed him into submission, and vanished in the rolling red clay hills of Pearl Riv- er County, Miss. Sherrif W. 0. Moody apparent. ly believes the Negro is dead, even while his posse scours the countryside. “I'm certain he’s either been} . layed final Senate action on tion bill. iremoved from the area or dumped jin some water,”’ he told newsmen. Victim of the mob was M.. C. Brings Out Guard Parker, 23, who awaited trial on HAZARD, Ky. (UPI) —For the second time in Jess than charges of raping a young white xk x \ém Kentucky coal fields today to police a violence-punc-| Only blosdstains haphazardly ‘uated coal strike. Gov. A. B. Chandler sent strike area yesterday afternoon after a crowd of more had dragged’ Parker into The Oakland county and area than 500 pickets congregated at a non-union mine at) night. some 2,000 troops into the deployment included many areaCombs, Ky., and dynamite blasts destroyed property, residents, who for some reason or} other would rather try their luck here than undergo the long drive into northern sections. However, northbound automobile traffic.) bearing fishermen, was reported, to be about the same as in other) years, promising a heavy north- ern concentration of hardy fol- lowers of the sport. On the local trouting front the | conditions were regarded as very good, In the opinion of conservation officers of this dis- | trict, they are much better, and | area waters probably will pro- | duce more ‘fish for less effort than those of the north country. | Officer Warren Kendall, Roch-| ester, was one who saw opening day trouters doing all right, righ ‘was set afire. |which police said apparent- ly was set when mine, Ty out furniture and office equip-| ‘ment. there and at nearby Viper.+ if Violence flared anew to-| day as the tipple and prep-| aration plant of the huge ‘Ashlo Cog! Co., Combs, Ky., The fire, ; guards changed shifts at 6. a.m., spread to the Wash- ‘ington plant and the firm’s ‘offices were evacuated. State Police troopers helped car- The Ashio firm, owned by the Sunfire Coal Co., was the site of about home. yesterday's mass picketing * = . | which led to the sending of the “Most streams in this district, guard. said Kendall, are, clear, about ; - —---— __--__--—_-; Hazard Police Chief R. D. Cisco | said, “It looks like they’re going! 102 Land Safely asTiresGive Two Planes Make It Okay at Grand Rapids Despite Blowouts GRAND RAPIDS t® — One hun- dred and two passengers had brief but harrowing frights as their two Capital airliners landed last night at Grand Rapids. One plane came down on a blown tire; the other blew its four main tires -in landing. The plane that landed safely on four of its five tires carried 34 pas- sengers, The one that blew out all four main tires carried 48. No one was hurt in either land- ing and neither plane damaged. Capt. Russell Irwin, flying a four engined DC 4 from Detroit to Chi- cago found his hydraulic braking system gone when he touched down here. He hit emergency air brakes that snapped the 40,000-pound plane to a stop in 600 feet. The impact of the braking blew the two sets of giant tires on either side of the fusilageé. The nose wheel tire held as the big ship wonbied to a rough stop. Fifty-four passengers had “got down safely .about. three hours earlier as Capt. Lowell. Huff brought in another DC4, this one headed from Chicago to Detrait, with one of its under-wing tires flat. & to lose the whole thing. A pumper’ truck from Hazard arrived shortly after the fire began, but the blaze apparently had too much of a) start in the coal dust-permeated wood. * x Chandler described the pickets at the Ashlo mine as ‘‘so unruly and so defiant that I feared for the ‘lives of the State Police officers) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) | Gary Cooper Converted to ‘Catholicism HOLLYWOOD cooper has been Catholicism. * | * * | But the 58-yefir-old western ac- itor, not noted Yor talkativeness. | says he doesn't w&nt to ‘‘make a big thing of it’ and would prefer not to say anything more. * * * Cooper had, beef an Episcopali-' an. His wife, Rocky, and daugh-) er, Maria, already were of the Roman Catholic faith. * * * Mrs. Cooper told newsmen Fri- day her husband had been study- ing Catholicism for three months -and joined the Catholic Church about two weeks ago in Beverly: Hills. Sergeant Got His CINCINNATI, Ohio (UPI)—Mrs. Mary Lou Rockey, 20, won a di- vorce yesterday after she testified that her Army sergeant husband. spanked her because she couldn't, spell and pronounce words in Army, manuals. scattered around the second floor cell, down the stairs, and along a tiled corridor indicated the path the FOUGHT HARD Parker fought hard at first but quickly gave up the struggle un- der the bludgeoning of his attack- ers. C. J. Mondy, a prisoner, told what happened. bd * * “Why did you do it?” yelled a "hooded raider. “I didn’t do it,’’ screamed Parker continue to voice inno- cence and under continued shouted queries finally began naming oth- ers who ‘‘did it.’’ Then he pointed to one of the other five Negro prisoners. “He did it.” he cried. . * * * Then his captors dragged Park- er out of the building by his heels, his head thumping on the steel treads of the stairs. When they dumped Parker into the getaway car, the Negro screamed and howled and re- newed his struggie.. The car roared away. For 15 miles around, voluntere searchers, highway patrolmen and sheriff's ‘deputies sought Parker; and the mob, without success. w * * Five jittery Negro prisoners watched the abduction, silent un- der the threat of violence. “Keep your d--- mouth shut,” jone of the nine or 10 raiders who came -inside the cell block -told a /prisoner. “There are 200 or 300\t men outside.’ Rights’ Rider Stymies Vote on Labor Bill Senate Wrangle Over Substitute Amendment Delays Final Action’. WASHINGTON (?)—A bit- ter row over a compromise for the McClellan “‘bill of rights” amendment has de- the Kennedy labor regula- * Another attempt will be made today to pass the bill. In Robbery Drama a ‘VITO CRAPAROTTA TONY CRAPAROTTA Waved Butcher Knife Thursday night the senate; handed McClellan a stinging de-; feat on a major amendment to the Kennedy labor reform bill by re- jecting 52-39 his formula for clos- ing a gap in labor-management re- lations. Plans of the leadership on both sides to finish with the measure Friday night evaporated in a big verbal explosion when a substitute for the bill of rights proposal was called up. The furore even included a per- sonal attack on Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson (D-Tex), with some senators charging he was trying to force them to vote on a substitute they had not read. Johnson then suddenly adjourned the Senate until today, despite pleas of some /of his colleagues that it be adjourned until Monday. It appeared the substitute wa- McClellan amendment would be adopted when the dust settled in the Senate today. Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark) He said he was “fully consulted’ on it, and that it would meet ob- jections of some of his fellow Southerners to his original propos- al, But, there was. a question as to whether final passage of the bill could come today. Sen. Barry Gold- water (R-Ariz), told a reporter he as too weak, and that he might “call up 90 amendments now to -|keep this thing going.’’ He has more than that number printed. The Senate met 13 hours Fri- day and seemed to have settled all the major floor fights except for rewriting the bill of rights améndment. Huddles went on all day among interested senators on the floor and in the cloakrooms to try to draft the substitute. It was not agreed upon until late in the evening, and then was offered by Sen. Thomas) H. Kuchel (R-Calif), Republican whip. Dulles’ Cabinet Chair Given to Him as Gift itered down version of the original} was strongly against the substitute|- Beat vp Guaman PEPE L ET MRS. MARY MORGAN JAMES D. STROUD Glad He Was Caught Stole Dad’s Revolver to Face Rough Sledding It could be the lull before the storm Moriday when the Oakland County Board of Supervisors meets to approve the county’s proposed 1960 budget af $13, 997,018 for tax WASHINGTON (UPI)—State De- partment associates of John Foster) Dulles have purchased the chair) the used at Cabinet meetings as a gift for him. Associate White House Press Secretary Anne Wheaton said the chair would-remain in the Cabinet room, however, for Dulles’ use as the newly appointed foreign policy consultant to thé President. The chair is marked with a silver plat ebearing Dulles’ name and the dates of his service as _secre- tary of state before his resigna- tion. allocation purposes. The storm is bound to come May 20 when the Tax Allocation Board holds its* first of six hearings to set! This year, like last, the town- 1959 tax rates. ships and schools have prepared To meet its suggested operating, their operating ‘budgets on the) budget for next year the county|® asis of what they'll need next, will require nearly half or 6.52 year. All are expected to show, of the 15-mill taxing limitation|increases due to natural growth, which must be split between the, and expansion. county, schools, and townships. | So it is obvious here, too, that Few expect that the county will) they will be demanding larger get what it is asking. shares of the allocation, (Editor's Note: This is the. first of a two-part series telling how a group of Royal Oak businessmen have taken it upon themselves to redeyelop that eity's downtown shop- ping district. Already under - wey, the project is designed to beautify and revitalize the business district, reversing the current trend which has seen downtown shopping on the decline). By PETE LOCHBILER Royal Oak businessmen have undertaken to revitalize their down- town business district through a $2,610,000 plan to be financed by the businessmen themselves. Already pushed halfway to re- ality, if the plan wins needed legis- lative .permission and passes a court — test, construction turning downtown Royal Oak into a shop- ping mall could get under way as early as next summer. The plan has captured the im- agination of many key people in . bf Royal Oak, including the city gov- ernment, which is enthusiastically supporting it. Pontiac, where the future of the downtown business district is a question that arises every- day, might well take a close look at the Royal Oak experiment. Some of the important steps) under the Royal Oak plan are: 1. Eliminate vehicular traffic in the shopping mal] area. * x * 2. Beautify the shopping district. with landscaping effects. 3. Create a vast off-streét park- ing system surrounding the snop-) ping mall: 4. Make the parking. tree, not metered. 5. Widen nearby streets to han- dle all the through traffic. 6. Last, but not least, finance the changes through special as- sessments on the business district itself, not the whole city. Private initiative got this sweep- ing plan under way and downtown business seems prepared to pay for it. Financing would be through 20- year bonds, to be paid off through special assessments on the central business district. These bonds—amounting to $2,- 610,000—would mostly pay for construction of new parking lots, but in part would cover costs | to pay off the $220,000 in exist- ing parking meter revenue bonds which the city has already ‘ Royal Oak Businessmen Embrace Plan to Turn Downtown Into Shopping Mall issued to finance its existing | lots. | The city has a bill before the. Legislature now which would al- Next year's preliminary. budget is $1,711,295 higher than the cur- rent 1959 operating budget of $12,285,723. * * * Again helping inflate the budget are social welfare and hospitaliza- tion costs. These costs total $3,- 745,740, and represent about 3.7 per icent of ihe $13 million budget. * * Committee, charged to think up a} Set sida is $2,733,700 for welfare way to revise the business trend.jand $1,012,040 for hospitalization. - Most of the county departments |* CESS HIRED _| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) The committee hired the archi- | Increased. County Budget | low it to change the method of tectural firm of Paul Moffett and hah agee ot payment on existing parking lot! associates of Birmingham, which | is eee ee sits { bonds from meter revenues to SPe-iworked up a plan for a four ‘bloc k. classe and eet hope al on Wshinon moe Today's . Press have to rule on the validity of this Get. the heart of the business ais ‘ PRA RN method. Church News ......5--... . 89 * * * Traffic would be eliminated Caiates 22 from the Grand Trunk Railroad ith: A little over two years ago, on The nevik to Seveuth street Fidiforials 2.0... . eee eee 4 businessmen became actively wor-| oy, the south according to the | Home Section ........ wun 15-20 tied about declining sales and va-) architects’ plan: Markets 00.00... ....0000ee 23 ~ cant stores in Royal Oak's central ~ . Obituaries, > . % business district. Some side streets would also be} Sports ................555 12-13 Ban together in their Cham-,Closed in places. For instance | Theaters » 1011 ber of Commerce, the businessmen|Patking plazas would be spotted or} TV & Radio Programs 29 set up what they called 4 Central Second street east of Washington;) Wilson, Earl ............ . to |Business District Redevelopment | sContinues 6 Page 2, Col. 1) Women’s Pages .......... 6-7 ; a * é Merchant, 05, Plays Dumb, Then Lunges Uses Bandit’s Gun to Subdue Him as So Chases Second Thief By MAX E. SIMON | Ignoring threats of two armed bandits, a brave 65- year-old Pontiac grocer last night defied death to leap at one of the gunman, seize his sawed-off shotgun and beat him into submission. The other holdup man _ escaped but was captured by Pontiac Po- lice early today along with three other pergpns who admitted roles in the attempted robbery. After ‘wheeling a cart around son were working. One drew out a sawed-off shot- gun which he had concealed under his blue coveralls, and the other _ a 38 caliber revolver. “This is a stickup. Don’t move or we'll shoot,” the gunmen or- dered. Despite the threat, Antonio inched toward the bandit. “I speak to him in a soft “E ask him what kind of holdup is this.” go after the other bandit as he junged for the man. with the shot- ‘BEAT HIM ON HEAD’ “I grab away the gun from him and beat him over the head until he give up,” Antonio said. At the same time, his son picked ‘up a butcher knife and took out after the pistol-carrying bandit. “My son doesn’t catch the other and is very mad,” the grocer said. “If he can, he would kill the one I catch, but I tell him _ no.” In the scuffle between Crapa- rotta and the gunman, the gun- man tripped over some bottles and suffered cuts to the forehead. and arms. When Pontiac police arrived at (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) as Castro Talks Unemployed Man Says Blast Try ‘Just for Kicks’; Fidel Unaware NEW YORK (UPI) — An unem- ‘ployed riveter who likes to hear iloud bangs was arrested last night jas he was about to explode a jhomemade bomb near the speak- ers platform at a rally for Fidel Castro, Two policemen nabbed John Gregory Feller, 23, in a roped off area back of the bandstand shell in Central Park where the Cuban Premier was addressing -30,000 en- thusiastic supporters. Feller said he was going to set off the bemb ‘‘just for kicks,” and denied he intended to hurt anyone, Police described the bomb as a lethal instrument dangerous up to 300 feet, It was made from an 1l- inch section of aluminum vacuum cleaner extension ctubing, filled with gunpowder, sulphur and zinc, and fused with match heads. Neither Castro nor the cheering crowd listening to him was aware of the off-stage drama of Feller’s Police discounted Feller as a paid assassin but held him on ron ee Sage: ous weapon. . ward. FE 3-9346 tnventory Reduwetion Sate All Ye Ott ® Ww. Bt. Bomber Nabbed arrest. Police whisked Feller to a park police station in an un-. marked F 80 a8 not to rouse the crowd. ; White aimee December from vicinity ry Pine | enn Road and Pine- view Drive. Returh to owner for re- ~ ad a i $s j & i + Si 4 gt point of dispute was. the union's insistence on enforcement of a so- - called protective wage clause. . This would require smail mines to pay the basic union wage of $24.50 a day, $2 higher than the * - Apple growing is one of the where to display home trailers d PLAN BUILDERS SHOW — Three officials of the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce stand outside the Water Street Armory, planning are (from left) uring the forth-- event. Voroshilov Going ROME (UPD—The Italian News Agency Continentale said last night that ailing Soviet President Klimenti .Voroghiloy soon will be replaced by Nikolai G. Ignatev, a strong supporter of Soviet Premiér most profitable of Nova Scotia's farm crops. Nikita Khrushchev, Grocer, 65, Grabs Bandit, Beats Him With Own Gun (Continued From Page One) grocery shortly after 10 p.m., Shortly after 2:30 a.m. several, “T'm glad underneath that this thing has turned out the way it has,” Stroud told police as, he was led away. Mrs. Morgan and Mrs. McColl were living together at the River- side drive address. Smith gave his See We Pelee 69 2 ee t. : Mrs. Morgan told police shé’was Short told police _ tm a process of divorcing her ~~~ to store, with the streetway re- placed by gardens, flower beds, pools and fountains. , Lining the sidewalks would be all-weather canopies, protecting shoppers from rain and snow. * * * The inviting shopping area would only be a short walk from the chain of paved, lighted parking lots which the plan recommends behind the main stores lining Washington and . Main street, two blocks east. The number of downtown ‘mu- nicipal spaces could be increased from 1,306 to 3,404 by purchase of rear lots and demolition of some old buildings no longer thought fit for commercia] serv- ice, it is estimated. _ Thus, the shopping mall would, be able to handle a large turnover of shoppers, it’s figured, who would be able to drive downtown from home, park easily, and find the re- tail goods they seek conveniently near the parking places. The final traffic aspect of the plan would cal] for widening Main street by an additional turning lane, so that prospective shoppers could easily make left or right turns towards the parking lots near where they plan to shop. ~ West street, two blocks west of Washington, and Troy street, four blocks east, would be widened to accommodate the through traffic that fermally used Washington. But Lafayette street, a block ‘ west of Washington, and Center street, a-block east, would be left open for the benefit of’ ‘traffic te and from the parking lots. This is how Royal Oak pian- ners, in part, hope to urn into a reality the principal that shop- pers want a pleasant, conven- lent place in which to make heir purchases, Does it sound like a pipe-dream? Hard - headed businessman think it’s a practical possibility, to the extent that 31 outside businesses . have recently sent inquiries to the “Chamber of Commerce, asking about the possibility of setting up branches along the shopping mall. Camel e] humps are simply masses of fat, not water storage tanks‘ ~ Mrs. McColl, 22, is -sep- arated from her husband and moved in with Mrs. Morgan three weeks ago. Also in the home were Mrs. Me- Coll’s two young children, a boy and a 10-month-old girl. They were taken to the Oakland County Chil- dren's Home by police. The five involved in the hold- up were booked for investigation of armed robbery. The two. women and the three week at a downtown Pontiac bar. During the week, they all inoved Morgan, who weighs 180 pounds. “We were ajl desperate for mon- ey and thought once we got some we'd all go to New Orleans and start life over.” She said that she went to her father’s home in Birmingham Thursday and stole the revolver from a dresser drawer in his bed- room. “He doesn’t know anything about this,’ she told police. The shotgun was obtained by Mrs. McColl who took it from her husband’s home in Rochester. The men said they had no idea what store they would at- tempt to rob when they left the house last night. *. While Stroud and Short went into the grocery, Smith stayed be- hind the wheel of Mrs. McColl's station wagon. With Short captured, the other two men sped back to the house with each telling the other: ‘‘What fools we've been!” — At first, the four accomplices planned to flee but after driving a short distance returned to the house. “We all agreed there wasn't door, Mrs. McColl courteously admitted them and lec them in- to the basement where the hold- up revolver had been thrown into the garbage. As Antonio prepared to open his store today, he was informed by the Pontiac Press that the others in the holdup attempt had been nabbed, “I'm glad to hear beamed, The fact that last night he was looking down the barrel of a sawed-off shotgun didn’t particu- larly imprecs Antonio when he opened his store at 9 a.m. today. *, &* * “I'm not thinking about being afraid,’ the cheerful grocer said ‘as he reviewed the scuffle with the gunman. ‘I’m not scared. “God is watching over me’ and that,’’ he The camel's thigst-defying reputa- tion springs from its abiljty to oe Wal body tisshes. ae _- | % Mey ~ maybe he wants me to catch the man.” “ coming Builders Show, April 30 to May 3. They Footprints Point Way men became acquainted early this| any sense in running,’’ Stroud said. | 4 to Builders Parades, clowns, yellow foot- prints ‘painted’ on downtown side- walks—all these are atten- tion to the Pontiac Junior ber of Commerce sixth annual Build- ers Show, April 30-May 3 at the Pontiac Armory. The footprints lead straight to the Water Street Armory door, where capacity crowds are expect- ed during the four-day stand. The 55 display spaces have Michigan's Trout Season Opens Today (Continued From Page One) land county, some half dozen streams and four ponds, have been planted with legal-size, or larger fish. So there should be | mo dearth of finny prizes; ‘Cliff Fuller, at the Drayton Plains hatchery, figures that some 11,000 trout, mostly rainbows, were) turned loose this spring. Last fall the district ‘plant’? amounted to about 50,000 fish, and many of these ‘were believed to be carry- overs for this year. Lake fishing probably got most of the early local fishermen, as access to many streams is not too easy. Among waters expected to produce today were Deer lake, Schoolhouse, Union, Oxbow, Or- chard, among others. Alderman lake is another good prospect, but unlike others, has no boat liveries. There should also be good fish- into the Riverside drive home|ing (from bank only, and only)jLowest temperature .,.,..... * piss the holdup plot was con- > Aico) at the a sree rus Guineas a ceived- ponds, Mountain, Davisburg. eee Que ¥ Pontiac “The idea of getting money |2"d Fenton ponds No. 1 and No. 2/ Highest femperature orrsorerca so 88 was no-one person's,” said Mrs. | Easier of access than most Oak-| tt remperature ...sesse ee es 48 Nand streams are Bottoms, ‘Hun- ters, Kintz and Pine creeks in Lapeer county. Clinton river (far , Pentiac Press William Dean Jr., Clyle R. kill and Roger Rummel. Haskill is jaycee presi- dent, Dean’and Rummel are chairmen of the Exhibits long been sold out, according to Clyle R. Haskill, Jaycee dent, and the show promises to overflow into special display areas along Water street. With the traditional emphasis on home building and home im- provements, the annua] show is the principal means by wh Jayeees earn money to carry on their year-round program of civic improvements, x * * | The show will be free public. ‘Jaycees today staged a brief, These are the 10 highest budgets among the county's 24 depart- ments, ‘ Included also in the 1960 budget is $250,806 for suggested four per cent pay raises for. 1,200 salaried county employes. Purpose of Monday's budget ex- amination is to give it tentative | |approval so the Allocation Board . | will known what the county needs in the way of a tax rate to raise $11,796,018 in taxes to meet the majer portion of the ‘budget. The balance will come from $2,201,000 departments. Lee Final approval of the budget will come in September when county officials usually have to do some trimming based on the established tax rate and state equalized valuations on which rates are levied. Paying $5,631,163 in salaries to all county employes makes up a big share of the suggested budgets. Among $1,213,233 in appropria- tions are $490,433 to the Huron- Clinton Metropolitan Authority, $375,000 to the numerous state in- stiutions to which the county pays for the first year of confinement of county patients, $50,000 for housing mental patients tempor- arily until permanent quarters are optained, State University Oakland and $55,000 for soldiers’ . burials. Because the recreation author- ity has asked that participating counties like Oakland pay one- quarter mill, Robert Y. Moore, chairman of the Board of Audi- tors, has had to add $90,433 to the $13,906,584 budget handed supervisors April 14. The addition was necessary, Moore said, because he had Phite | Has- presi- ich the to the in anticipated receipts to different | $30,000 for Michigan| noontime parade in downtown Pon- tiac and promise to have some clowns and other attractions on hand Thursday and Friday eve- nings to amuse downtown shop- pers. The Weather Full U.8. Weather Bureau Report VICINITY — Mostly dershowers today. showers ending ton r and coleer, h winds 10-20 miles teday morrow. Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. 4 At 8 a.m.: Wind Direction—South we: Sun sets Saturday at 7:25 p.m. Sun rises Sunday at 5:34 a.m. oe sets Sunday at €:35 a.m. velocity 15-20 m. p. bh st. ™m oon rises Saturday at 10:32 p.m. Friday in Pontiac (As recorded downtown) ihe temperature ...,....06---5.- Highest and Lewest Temperatures This Date in 86 Years 27 in 1928 ‘lin Detroit planned on only a one-fifth mil} to captain in June, 1949, and aS- Wayne appropriation— or $400,000 —which sistant chief in December, 1955. — wit) hold its first meeting at 8 p.m. the county paid last year. Supervisors will also decide whether establishing of a second! ed in the U.S. Army in 1923. probate judgeship should be put! : to a countywide vote next year,! hear a report on new legislation | _|to help out the Department of Public Works, and vote on a new county seal. aah Seacicarfecene sae Bloomfield Woman Hit by Auto, Dies The first Michigan traffic atali- ty of the weekend was recorded today when a West Blomfield Township woman was killed at about 2:45 a.m. while crossing Livernois just south of Norfolk. Ww Detroit Police said Miss Ida LaFleur, 44, of 5510 Pumam Dr., apparently stepped into the path of a-car driven by Univesity of Detroit student Ronald L. McKitrick, 21, He was not held. According to the driver and two unidentified eye-witnesses, Miss LaFleur stepped off the curb just in front of the car. . 49) Pe * ' : . . i MOUNT CARMEL, Tl. (UPD — up drinking, and some just giving will be the concluding talk on a 31,When smoke poured through the up . .°. Sign in a park: “‘Please!four-week missionary conference | west end), Duck creek, Huron oF me 9s. McKitrick was released after the /nsylvania, for 1 river (above Pontiac lake, and at Tignes weuphis” 16 ¢9 accident, but was to make a state-|larger cities will go to fast time, Proud lake recreation area), Kears-| Alpens © 33 Semi Bouck 8 73; ment today at the Wayne County : adand ti ley, Paint, Spring and Trout creeks!Bismark 41.24. New Orleans 7 pp Prowcctor’s Office. stay ‘with standard (nm. + 69 0} t “ * are good couanty {rout raters. Phicare z ss “4 Omaha " a . ; Then then’s Trutiseng creek inicnidaus Hi & Powe & os Fire Hose Starts Blaze Macomb, Ruby creek in St. Clarina’ oR fgets & & o and-Goodings, and south branch "tina $3 2 Sabre” f = > rT; 8B. of the White in Tuscola. West|Houshton # 4 qaniseges 7 {3 combined city hall and fire house Keep Off the Grass. You Were at the church. branch of the Rouge (near North-} Kansas City 8 § Beattie BM ville) is another area trout stream. |Les Anesles $2 3) Tampa 57/_to a smouldering fire hose. |—Earl Wilson. PINS BADGE ON — James R. White smiles a Pontise Press Phete happily as Mayor Philip E. Rowston pins on the in the Fire Department received promotions badge of Pontiac fire chief. White and four others _ yesterday at official City Hall ceremonies. —~ Veteran City Fireman Takes Reigns as Chief James R, White, a veteran fire-| swimming in a pond less than a Chief White is a big-game hunt- man of 31 years, became Pontiac’s' block away from the station. ‘ing and fishing enthusiast and new fire chief yesterday afternoon., 4.°) oy ae ; a . Se s a boy he was fascinated by spends his spare time at his Ca- In an official ceremony at City! the stories firemen told ip their | Hall, White was sworn in as chief picure hours “ /nadian lodge, 30 miles north of-the by City Clerk Ada Evans, | 7 | jun Soo. : le was inspired when the horses x, * Piggerbgicoren pra aan of bygone days trotted out into the’) He is:a-member of Masonic , retired 'street, waiting for their harnesses Lodge 21, and of the Metropolitan 48 years with the department. hte he put on by the firefighters. | Club. Four others were promoted in yesterday's ceremonies. Capt. ‘Vic-! tor Bodamer was promoted to as-) > 4 ¥ sistant chief, Lt. Joseph Beach was, The Day in Birmingham promoted to captain, Fireman Rob- ert Sartell to lieutenant and re /Wayne Sta te Alumnae man Lloyd Benson to engineer. The new "net has wed in oon Meet First Time Tuesday tiac all his life. Born in August of| . y | . ; Soe ert et len dor Liss De- BIRMINGHAM — With 120 of| The Rosary will be recited at ba har in enmuaed “June. oe its potential Birmingham members 7:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Man- /mo n . *.'already enrolled, the newly-formed ley Bailey Funeral Home. State Alumnae Club here * * * Mrs. Reed died Thursday at Tuesday in the Birmingham Com- William Beaumont Hospital, Royal munity House. \Oak, after a short illness. Homer D. Strong. director of, Besides her husband, she {s After his enlistment efided: White 2!umnae relations at the university survived by two daughters, Mrs. Hated for @ brie! apell ai factory |i" Detroit, will speak on WSU’s Alex W. Alah of Detroit and Lor- jobs and then fulfilled his boy-|STewth and its future. ‘aine at home; two sons, Donald C. hood desire of becoming a fireman. The local group is the first . Redford and pavid A. of Lake lea . . unit to be formed outside of Urion: two brothers; and seven | LIVED MEAS STATION Detroit, according to . Marion ‘grandchildren. “ Ee leer OO Pi sedree 5 - ; : i shadow of the Central Fire station. | She said those assisting in)organ.’ Graveside ‘service for Robert { Beau Millard, 61, of Toledo, Ohio, a for- | He lived at 79 Seneca St. and went /2ing the club are Don: ichamp, Ruth Hartman, Peggy Mer resident of Birmingham, will 'Petti, Mary Ritter, Gladys Schla-, be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Rose- | lack, Marjorie Sullivan and Mary land Park Cemetery, Royal Oak. Clocks fo Go Ahead | Thurber. | Mr. Millard died yesterday at | Birmingham members have’ Riverside Hospital, Toledo, after | ‘voted to stress educagion, recrea- an illness of four months. (Or Is lt Back) 1 Hour tics and community affairs with-- The body will be at the Bell bin the club. | |Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Millions of clocks across the na-| Miss Tate said plans already are Co. after 7 pm. Monday. tion will be turned ahead tonight Under way for other new units in-, ® * * and Americans will lose an hour of cluding one in the Pontiac-Rochest-) Mr. Millard retired in March as sleep to daylight saving time. jer area and another at Royal Oak. ‘vice president of the City Auto « * * Stamping Co. of Toledo and a The change-over comes at 2 a.m.| Birmingham Rebecca Lodge |™eMber of Perry Lodge 185, F& Local time Sunday morning. in all) 445 will hold a rummage sale A™. Salem. Ohio and of the Scot- or part of 24 states. Michigan re-| Thursday from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. lish Rite CHapter Valley of Toledo. mains on Eastern Standard Time. at the former Fisher Wallpaper | He was also a member of the But, as usual, the setting of| store, 1303 S. Woodward Ave. |2enobia Temple. Order of the Mys- clocks an hour ahead is bringing) ygrs, Edith Hart, 711 Bennaville | ti¢ Shrine in Toledo. confusion to a few states. St. may be called to have items | He is survived by his wife, Car- In Minnesota, illinois and Pen-| picked up. « |rie: a sister, Mrs. Jarie Millard of instance, most; sears | Troy; and a brother, Fred of Royal The Rev. B.. M. Cedarholm, Oak. but smaller towns have voted ''p. D. president of the Consefva-| Mrs. Cathryn ‘ineeioain tive Baptist Assn> will speak at: . Sian ¥ the 10 and 11 a. m. services to- Service for Mrs. Cathryn Thomp- The new taxes have some folks morrow at the Grace Baptist: 5° %6, of 19135 Riverside Dr., was giving up smoking, some giving Church on Lincoln avenue, This! !® be held at 3 p.m. today from the ‘Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. with burial in White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. | He dropped out of Pontiac Cen- | tral in the 11th grade and enlist- 44 firemen, swiftly traced the source,Once Young and Green Yourself.” - | Mrs. Thompson died Thursday at Mrs. Truman Reed ‘her home after a brief illness. Service for Mrs. Truman Reed,) She was a member of the First { | MONTREAL (UPI) — The St. \Lawrence Seaway, a feat of inter- national cooperation and engineer- jing genius, opened today in a work- jaday atmosphere of line hauling, order shouting and whistle tooting ‘at the gates of the St. Lambert | ks. | The locks are the first in a 130- mile chain through channels built ‘during the past five years at a cost estimated at between 450 to 75 million dollars. The result is a When officers knocked on the |minimum 27-foot-deep waterway leading to the industrial heartland of the North American continent. Thirteen feet deeper than the old seaway, the new waterway will permit larger ocean freighters to make their way to inland ports in the United States and Canada. A 10-nation armada that had been itned up for miles in the harbor during the past few days presented a gay picture of shipping with new flags, freshly painted hulls and bright funnels bearing company emblems, Two Canadian icebreakers, the D'Iberville and the N. B. McLean, the latter with Prime Minister John Diefenbaker and Transport Minister George Hees aboard, led the way into the locks followed by four Canadian lake freighters. Official from the U.S. Seaway Authority were also aboard the D'Iberville. The group was:Jed by « v St. Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation, In addition, a party of newsmen representing papers from U.S. seaway ports wads on hand. . The Dutch freighter Prins Willem George Frederick, bound Colorful Armada of Ships Opens Seaway Today for Toronto, Hamilton, Ont., Cleveland, Toledo, Detroit, and Sarnia, Ont., with a cargo rang- ing from iron bars to grass seed, was the first ocean-going freight- er in line Fifteenth in line was the first L. G. Castle, edminig ator at the panera . a t ant ~, * $ a MONTRE . ‘AL 2 “SOULANGES AND” aw Or” @ LACMINE SECTIONS ~ 47 MULES WITH NEW. Nel FO Aas... a ery Saw Msg. Age ee Pg ee A es < =e | | tore - : ROUTE OF THE SEAWAY — Map shows the major divisions of the St. Lawrence Seaway. Ships from almost ‘every maritime nation were among the more than 50 historic opening today. vessels taking part in the oot eS a Seem 2. 59, of 1870 Hazel St. will be held Church of Christ, Scientist. at 10 a. m. Monday from St. Co-. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs, lumban’ Catholic Church with bur- Charles Stephensén of Birming- ial in White Chapel Cemetery, ham; two brothers, and one grand- Troy. ison, ie : ee Bo RN aaa ce : {American freighter to enter the 75 PEN oe eS AIST ee seaway, the Santa Regina, a Grace 72° ° iS Line ship making its first trip to): Just Arrived! s Chicago from New York. It will start a Chicago-Carribean service | %* way and the Great Lakes will hold R B * * * : 0 S E us t S May 8 to meet the Grace Lines’ ¥ ic luncheon also is scheduled. 2,000 beth and President Eisenhower ~8 on its return. a TEA and CLIMBER Tae A Many U.S. cities along the sea-|) : celebrations when the first ships dock in their harbors. In buffalo, N.Y., there will be: - . an automobile parade to the docks 2-Year— Field Grown Santa Alicia, first American flag- ship expected to dock there. A civ- J ust The official opening will take place June 26 with Queen Eliza- ‘ at This ° Price presiding. About 5,000 official guests will be invited. An esti- meted 50,000 persons are expected to-be on hand for the ceremonies. Body of Newborn Girl Found in Romulus Field DETROIT (® — The body of a newborn baby girl wrapped in a white sheet and mattress pad and placed in a cardboard box was found in a field yesterday in|; suburban Romulus Township. Sheriff's detective Kenneth Grant said the box’was found by a high school youth on his way home from |; school. ‘ * Your Choice of 22 Varieties 98 N. Saginaw St. —Main Floor “ - . Oe eer A A, IR, «1 —— a TIF, PANTTAC PRESS. SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1959 cigs aww ro > Railroads. Go Modern -Electronties Help Run Today’ s? teins: pode gy Mee 3 that ten their very. 6 iva talons j still haul. ‘pearly ha half if of al r inter city freieh - ay te they unction? Here is err on-the-spot look Packie, ‘velltead Soedenker ia over. all income.) : er * * * ‘ OMAHA (#—It’s 4:30 a.m. when the telephone -rings in. the home of William Lohr, 56, a railroad. vet- eran of 35 years. The call is to summon Lohr to report to the yards in neighboring .. Counci} Bluffs, Iowa, in two hours to take outva freight. There have been Lohrs in the Union Pacific as long as Bill Lohr can ‘remember, His son, Allen, 31, like his father is a conductor. At the yards Lohr is met by his brother, Albert,-53, who will ride with him tegey ag coeeraite. * The ‘cies are ae to -the Los Angeles Forwarder, X5, which has ‘been made up during the night from cars brought into the yards from other lines operating to the east. The Union Pacifie is a “bridge” road, operating from Council Bluffs to the West Coast, bauling manv- _factured goods ‘west and raw ma- terials east. So great is the roar of the X5's power, a 179-foot 8,500-horse- power gas turbine-electric en- gine, that conversation close by it giving the ling from which it came, destination, contents. machine cards on each freight car, Buncheg together, the cards rep- resenting the X5's cars are run through a transceiver which re- produdes, in the flash of an elec- trical impulse along a_ wire, identically. punched cards at the North Platte yards 284 miles away. It also reproduces an identical set of cards in the Union Pacific headquarters in Omaha. * * . The train of cards then travels to Cheyenne and Green River, Wyo., to Salt Lake City and Las Vegas and finally to Los Angeles, the same route the X5 will travel. ‘If a car is addeq or removed along the way, a card also will be added or removed. : Tons of punch cards flow into @ new five-story UP headquar- ters addition built to house a big wew electronic brain. The machine also handles payrolls and materials and series con- trol. -- ay .| manage double track operation ly aa mechanically. cofittolted. Radio; radar and. electronic com- puters take over once locomotives set the cars in motion. Farther ahead are long stretches of track where traffic is manipu- lated ang trains controlled by dis- patehers who see only the blinking lights and switches of a control board. This is centralize@ traffic con- trol (CTC), by which railroads fron: single track line. There are ° [Pipeline Ordered fo Supply, More Gas WASHINGTON @ — - Michigan- Wisconsin -Pipe Line Co., Detroit, yesterday was ordered “by the Power Commigsion to supply suf- ficient natural gas to 14 of its distribution compafly customers so they can serve an additional * jordered the company to revise iis igas allocations.so as to increasé the number of space-heating cus< tomers as follows: Michigan’ Gas and Electric Co., §; Michigan Gas Utilities’ €o.. 1,468; Milwaukee Gas Light Co., 15,454; ...Wisconsin Natural Gas Co.,, 6,100; Madison Gas and Elec- tric Co., 597; Wisconsin Power and Light Co., 2,684; Wisconsin Public, Service Corp., 3,863; Wis- consin-) igan Power Co., - 438; Wisconsin and Light Co., 350; 33,180 space-heating customers. * * * -The commission, modifying an « Houghton t and Fuel Co., 43; illinois Power Co.,'7; Yowa South- ern Utilities Co., 568; - and St, 20,008 miles of CTC on the Union Pacific. Paralleling the tracks every-) tion system. The old telegrapher’ S| key is all but replaced by the tele-' type, the transceiver . and the | road's own telephone system which spans two-thirds of the-continént. | All this’ demonstrates what->the | railroads are trying to do opera-' tionally to boost earnings: Haul’ more freight per train, move it. where is the railroad’s communica-| Gieno BH. Griffin faster 3 and handle it more gen —— “Thoughtful Service” 46 Williams Street Phone FE 2-5841 _ 24- Heur Ambulance Service g examiner's decision filed Jan. 30, ‘Joseph Light and Power Co., 385. jeune ( Sparks- Griffin FUNERAL HOME Rolling along in open country, there is so little vibration, so little’ noise in the rubber-cushioned cab high above the tracks that the train seems to be going no faster than 25 miles an hour. shows twice that. - Fireman John Lapsley, who sits is impossible. Only the UP uses these long haul giants. Their turbines, firet could.not lay down the shovel for a by a thick, crude oil, operate like an airplane jet engine generating electrical power which turns the, wheels. Across the .floodlighted yard in a squat yard office waybills have been microfilmed for the records. A clerk is punch-coding bdsiness Barbara Burns to , Accept Helping Han HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Barbara Burns, narcotics-plagued daughter of the late comedian Bob (Ba- zooka) Burns, waited happily in jail today for her 90-day sentence to expire so she could accept a' “helping hand" job offer from a network TV show. The offer wag made yesterday by Jack Chertok, producer of the new NBC-TV weekly series, “The Lawless Years,” only a few hours after Barbara, 21, pleaded from jail for ‘‘anyone’’ to give her a chance as an actress to save her {rom narcotics. “1 don’ need narcotics physi- eally,”’ she had said. “‘But some- times, when I realize nobody | will take a chance on me be- eause of my conviction, I get that futile feeling that I'm fin- ished—and that’s when I've tak- en the stuff. Acting is the only thing in my life.” When the story was published here, Chertok offered Barbara a job “‘starting as a walk-on” after she completes her sentence, which began nine days ago. “There also will be bit parts,” he said, ‘‘but everything depends on her ability. We'll move her up as fast as she shows she’s ready for it.” Barney Ruditsky, the famed ex- State Partisans Outpoll Judges Officials State Canvass Aftnounces Results of April 6 Election { LANSING Ww — Entries in the. technically non-partisan State Su- preme Court race polled only about two-thirds as many votes as partisan candidates in the April, 6 election, the official state can- vass indacates. Candidates for the two Supreme == Court vacancies collected a total = of 1,630,739. votes and those for two seats on the: University of == Michigan Board of Regents 2,427,- 169. The spread was typical. At- the same time, Supreme Court Justice George Edward, a Democratic nominee, chalked up the biggest victory margin— 268,406 votes over William H. Baldwin, Oakland County attor- ney, his nearest Republican ri- val, Clair White, Bay City college in- structor and Democratic nominee for one of two two-year terms on the new Wayne State University Board of Governors, had the clos-, est call. He edged Warren C. Lam-, bert, Republican, by~ 6,339 votes. DeWitt J. Burton, Detroit Demo- | crat, led them both. *~* -* * The State Board of Canvassers | certified all'the unofficial winners including 76 circuit judges. Demo- crats won 11 of the 14 statewide’ races, including the two Supreme Court seats. William K. MclInally, Jackson banker, racked up more votes than any other candidate—640,526. His nearest rival was Democrat Lynn M. Bartlet, who compiled 620,653 votes in a successful bid for re- election as state superintendent of public instruction, NEW ‘59 WAGONS RADIO $199 | HEATER BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 1 6-3900 ° opposite the engineer and watches signals, recalls the day when he moment ag he stoked the firebox ‘of a steam locomotive on an uphill run * * * At North Platte, the UP’s new classification yard where trains are broken up and new ones for med i in an n operation ¢ e ‘lectronic al- d Job Offer New York policeman on whose memoirs the TV series is based, added: r “If this girl wants a chance, we're willing to give her one.” Barbara broke down and wept in her cell when a matron told her the news. She said: “Thank you, thank you, thank you. I won't let anybody down.” Officials at the Terminal Island Detention Center, where Barbara is serving her sentence, said the TV show's firm offer of employ- ment might mean a shortening of The speedometer | X5 reaches “Westridge of Wa terford” | the 90-day term. T-CLIP SHUF AML SAL Lift! } i. "16 SUPER SPECIALS for Smart Shoppers ‘Who Tike | @. SAVE! a COUPON Specials i: SIM PONS Good Sot. i, | Met An TONITE-6 to 10 p.m. :"* April Zoth ond.” fee te nt A MONDAY-9 a.m. fo 10 pm.“ Ed (Always coc SUNDAYS) lip Chis Coupon a Sanforized, Lightweight Denim 4 ' ‘EZ-FLO’ Reedy Mized White Fl *f a 8 . s a ' ’ a”. 8 Outside Paint s igs poxer veans «: 5 5 Ef ° ¢ ~ a Reg. C us $2.95 59 ry s 6 a a. . $1.00 . . Gallon 1 . ry ~ ith elas- a | , = ne boxer want, | back . Ideal_for fences, bars, "i ‘ thi boat docks, etc. Interior . pocket. aes 1 to: 6s {Choe = 2 or exterior. Limit 4 gals. @. SIMMS—Basement 'a . SIMMS—2nd Floor s SUnGnennusnnoenenneees PLT CL LL lalsllatataatelateletete tats an ; a a aus Clip OTS CONpPOH ian Clip ETE Coupon onan Pressure Bomb —“PAEMOLIVE” w “Ball. Poin POINT . An Address of Distinction C a 8 a oint Pen 7 oe Rapid- Shave Cream = = & Extra. 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North on the Dixie Hwy. to Cambrook Lane, . PO ee tes — S Lit coe oe ae 4 1 Block South of Waterford Stop Light . . Sanueueununeenseuneuensees Faneeneeeus a For Your Inspection Left on Cambrook Lane to Model. +; =e ; EEL) CHS COKPOH pulled Tl aladaly ( lip Chis COupoN anne 0 . HELTMAN G& TRIPP _ OR e Size Tube — F a : Fiberglas~ Insulation — Hot Cold “3-941 | Builders and Developers of Westridge of Waterlord 3-94] | EF enerois ee we amous a 8 : “0 “i : : ' Wildroot Cream-Oil = & BABY DIAPER BAG © TIMI nn HAIR GROOM : = - a 1.95 . Re C 5 «Wie aa Cs 2 8 : et / 2 Value a 59¢ a Blo aes H 4 a Adjustable shoulder straps, HE * ; FE loops for bab: Ss. Pin) peeaeeeien ae Soe LU LUUULUUUUSLUULALL = IT sn T & Thursday April 30 4 P.M. to 10 P. M. TT = F s Friday May Ist 1 P. M. to 10 P. M. PONTIAC Cempliments of Comm \ Saturday May 2nd 10 A. M. to 10 P. M. 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Chis: COMpOH ae Genuine “KODAK” Kodachrome ~ : Kodak KODACHROME*or EKTACHROME . ® e a a 8mm Color Movie Film = 5 35mm COLOR SLIDE FILM 5 a 8 . a $2.85 $2.05 ROLL 1.94 sf 20 EXP, 1.39 SR a a Cine Kodak $4.15 Lad $2.85 a be MAG. 2.94 = 28 EXP. 1.99 s Fit St fae At Indoor, of outdoor. Fresh Bf joad. (Limit 3 fella). a cameras. (Limit 3 rolls). 4 SIMMS—Main Floor [-- SIMMSMain' Floor » wTrTTTTT TTL a POTTITTT TLL "98 North . | 3 Floors Sree 2°) Pa Vase ARGATE Street BROTHERS BARGAINS - ani Lol tt tinea re Httte: a =. . 3 ion fC ' fe Siren Wie pessectital poss can.took. ‘at a king and I'm just back from New ‘York and Washington where I sat at Fee SR he RET pag ows pn ' fession. x .*.-2 At one-time, the discourse veered to the 1960 elections and I was intrigued by some of the ideas. These were not expressions of personal preference. They were predictions. A few case hardened Republican publishers unblushing- | ly conceded that a Democratic victory was probable in 1960. And on the other hand, some fourth generation. Democrats saw. the un- mistakable image of a majestic — _ pachyderm in their private crystal balls. . oe ee ee ee ee em oe a ee “« 2 eee =e 8 x we kk A count of 18 noses showed eight forecasting victory; and 10 a Republican win, (To keep the: - , record straight, your Oakland County scrivener tossed the nod to the. Dems.) | Fe Pence - A composite opinion of those favoring the GOP was challenging and roughly it ran like this: “If we voted today, the Demo- crats would win, But there's a shift in the thinking. When the Democrats sailed into Washing- ton, they were confident and eager. Newly elected Democrats were ready to buy. practically everything for everyone. The Démocratic Congress accepted the demands of the labor leaders as > sacrosanct and bills were drawn that promised pie in the sky and it had to be delivered a la mode. sions, Some of the voters are a bit aghast at costs and future taxes appal. Day after tomorrow’s accounting will come due, after all. Hence, a taxpayer’s protest could be shaping up now that will smolder slowly and burst into open flame around the Fall® of 1960.” — € ee >» * x * * * Is it possible the labor leaders have * abused their current position of un- * challenged eminence in Washington? ~- *Have they gone too far in their de- . :;mands?. Are their. own members ‘ beginning to protest? And anyway, ‘ the union leaders plus all their mem-— ‘ bers lack absolute control. They need “Mr. Average Citizen — and his good ‘ x *& Perhaps there was a straw in the « (D-Ark) offered an amendment to ‘legislation before the Senate. It » wrote a “Labor Bill of Rights” square- : ly into the middle of Jonn F, KEn- + NEDY’s own hand wrought device that + ignored the labor union member in > favor of the bosses. And as the New : York Daily News summarized it: “The teeth were supplied by ~~ Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark). They consist of a bill of rights for union members. Among these are equal voting rights in union elec- tions, freedom of speech and as- _ sembly, the right to sue union officials, and protection against arbitrary assessments and dues charged and against improper dis- ciplinary action.” ——————————_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—___ THE PONTIAC PRESS Daily Bx Sunday puso} — aaa ce? 2 eee - oe em» Rossen. penness. ionk A, Rivet, pay v hon President “Aastttant Advertising and Advertising Director Mana: Howan H. reese &. Gant M, Teeaeweit, a culation Manager vy tase for 40 cent rite fee by mall ry end ede iountier it is $1200 a other piaces in Mit nmon eet. Ss a " : crrent Trend Coritiniies © Artin ‘sag. pans ter ile. ote: backward somersault and a SOS went out pronto. The faithful shuffled back into line and the MCCLELLAN amendment went down the drain... - w* * * ‘ _Can this be a straw in the wind? . Was it all a sign—or a symbol? And _here’s another. Secretary Robert Anderson’s address to the members of the Associated Press this week demanding Federal economy in a time of good ‘busi- ness has resulted in a record flood - of. mail to Washington backing ‘hint up. Anderson insisted-Con-— gress halt inflation and that the value of the dollar sink no lower. * * * Perhaps the spending is running its course. We can only wait — and see. Inter- esting — yes, very interesting — days are ahead. (Personal message to all subscribers: don’t let your subgcrip- tion to The Press lapse). And In Conclusion . .. Jottings from the well thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Castro, a swashbuckling, cavalier and picturesque crusader will last about a year in the opinion of neigh- _ boring newspaper men. But he'll ride “fhe glory trail until his crystal ball bursts. He’s a challenging and con- troversial man.......... A 92 year old southern colonel was being inter- viewed in the north. “And do you favor segregation?” he was asked. “Never,” thundered the venerable sage. “An integrationist, eh?” The colonel thumpéd his cane violently, “Never.” The reporter was non- plussed. “What do you want then?” The colonel fairly bounced up and down. “Slavery,” he bellowed. x * * While I was in New York, leaf- lets were reported in quantity among the longshoremen on the west side docks advocating Reu- ther-for-President.......... To keep the-record straight, Dulles resigned repeatedly before the President acquiesced. . ..At the big Banshee luncheon in New York, Herbert Hoover got the biggest ovation of all the celebrities Peter Gim- bel, scion of the big New York merchant prince, says parachute jumping is America’s newest and most sensation'craze. . *x* * * JOHN and BETH FITzGERALD sat next to Ear WItson at the Nrxon banquet and Betu asked Eart whether he ever got tired of looking at glamour girls. Eart considered. “Not up to now,” he finally concluded.......... JOHN DALy loses out as the “Voice of Fire- stone” is stilled and also his news cast ends in a fortnight.......... Ep SuL- LIVAN’s sponsor will take a walk and it looks as though the Sunday night show will fold for good. x * * His eminence, Richard Cardinal Cushing, attended a baseball din- ner in Boston in magnificent regalia. When he arose to talk, he opined: “I’m the only man here who showed up in uniform—and I’m not a Cardinal of the National League, either.”.......... Look for some very sensational outer space work early in June with Ryssia and thé U.S. tak- ing a hand .... John S. Knight introduced me to Richard Nixon in Washington and the man sells himself in a big way through a two minute conver- sation. ee ene a ee ee eee eee ene —Haroip A. —— eee _ Castro hasn’t had time yet to think of everything. He hasn't asked the U.S. for a loan. . —— A LARGE number of people have said