A ncn _ The Weather Scattered Showers. _ Crataits Page 2) ae ‘Tieth YEAR | weKKK PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WED DNESDAY, AUGU IST 6, 1958 —~34 PAGES Police Offi x *& * Williams Trounces Foe; Local GOP Slate Intact x &k * q © ‘ials Do Ib T pg. + Uk * « * oe + Who's Afraid of a Little Sunshine? Plan to a | Frank Kierdorf ‘Further Today. ‘Discrepancies’ Raise. Republican = ‘ é Republican 4 Democrat x wk * x «x * ” x * * -_ 4 ‘ 5 R bi ! e , H ; ae Further Speculation in Burning of Teamster ix Republicans lection Results hart, Swainson : ae By PETE LOCHBILER to Seek Seats Also Swam His original story’ shat . ‘ga a S ta te Vote : p tered like his body, ex-con- ' I . DEMOCRATIC REPUBLICAN . vict Frank H. Kierdorf faced Iv re 0 in (5,142 out of 5,166 pets.) e ems intensified questioning in Governor ee oe ae } St. Joseph Mercy Hospital 3 Defeat Challenges Williams ......... 384,144 - Goversor See Governor's Victory today. 2 i of Primary Opponents;|Johnson ......... 65,331 Bagwell .......... 256,147| as Boosting Stature for encst poe of bets : Others Unopposed Lt. Gov. © - | Nomination in ‘60 gait ne ea _ \Swainsos ......... 267,458 Lt. Gov. ee F leader’s tale that gunmien By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL Jr. Mohardt ......... 73,174 Brown .......... 235,306) From Our News Wires — turned him into a “human | ” Three opposed Republi- U. = Senator _ ‘ | DETROIT—Gov. G. Men- torch, authorities planned : can officeholders in Oak-|Heft ..-..-.----- 296,741 U. S. Senator nen Williams won nomina- a turn in their investiga- a land County kept a six-man Martin .......... 73, 781 Potter ....... . 259,032 tion to an unprecedented tion. incumbent slate intact for ae sixth term by an almost six- ta, — that eae Leo the fall election as they Vote in County to-one margin — a shady. or illegal activity, instead knocked off opponents” in| : ? , . 4 moet atigehle mot a- of being the victims mot @ savage yesterday’ S primary. DEMOCRATIC ‘ REPUBLICAN ic primary landslide in attack, Was er | ition as . ; wt Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem. met- Three other members of| ! Michigan - history. lwith Pontiac, state Oakland and the ticket, Prosecutor Fred-| Governor Governor | The 47-year-old governor ca county police investigators - erick C. Ziem, Sheriff Frank|Williams .......... 19,383 Bagwell eee 18,055) Overwhelmed Ironwood ‘a sore sone + _W. Irons, and Surveyor Johnson .......... 3,449 Lt. Gov broadcaster wi lli am L. Me rdorf may oaths wf Ralph A. Main, were unop-| Lt. Gov ‘Brown 17.171 Johnson, his first primary cover up for himself and his : posed Seal . * ‘afeuel °° . © : opponent in 10 years, with companions, it was suggested. E a. wainson .......:. 15,342 . | : - The Democratic election of nom-/Mohardt 3.889 U. S. Senator a bigger vote than that for Despite a throat operation yes- inees s for county oa was high ir re ‘ no SO" Potter 000-0... 18,168 both Johnson and Paul D.| terday that helps him breath, but ighted as one candidate won his a nate Bagwell, the unopposed Re- : ae beats ereetn oe ee Hart ............. 18,105 ° Congressman ublican candidat ‘FRECKLED-FACE CHAMPION — Eleven- ee ee. saer a 1956 nominee was defeated by a ° ’ Broomfield 17.132? idate. mma ; : : — 9 @65 evrmemwn - © s6e- ’ _.<__, | year-old Judy Fay Blaylock of 677 Fairview St., | walked off with a $50 savings bond awarded to first-time county office seeker. OVUM 2. ce bse ss 2,995 McGuire 2.098 Returns from 5,142 of Michigan's Lake Orion’ looks as if she is bursting with joy her by The Pontiac Press at the freckled-face wire ...... . ; : oe , looks George D. Hicks, former Pon- 5,166 precincts gave Williams 384,-/ 2. well as freckles. The little sixth grader out- contest held the first night of the Oakland County ongressman tiac police officer, won his fourth , State Senator 144 votes, Johnson 65,331 and Bag-| freckled 33 other contestants last night. She 4-H Club Fair: straight. Democratic nomination Hudson apoognhdocc 12,813 Lod 1 well 256,147. ~ : Bm. RK i for sheriff. David E. Utley, Pon- \Niparko ......... 6.770 noase 12,51 | +— Foe tiac attorney who was against : =s Kuhn ............ 5,866 The vote, which marked the | ‘ * . : : Ziem in the general election in State Senate . first time Democrats polled more R ( 5 ITI agen ac aaeS 1956, wag defeated by James P. Meagher 9.598 County Ticket than half of the state primary e ed e | r (@) Ke yOu Join = a ; ee ee rr ee 8,519 ‘Provecat saren pan inane Entel eve. | . : = pital early us ce. =——( & i. z i e than $750,000. McLay teeta eee 448 Ingle Tee ee ees 1,327 with labor leaders. Williams’ ad-|5 999 freckles’ but instead of talk-| Tomorrow’s high will reach near << *& 8. Police saiq four bandits with, K M 1,159 | visor had predicted Joh wi Ini i Come November it. will be in- Olay 6. owe... 440 Moore ............, , gee pa ie son reat would! ing about her freckles, this typical 86-90 with temperatures cooling He men: the United cag ~ handkerchiefs hiding the lower cumbent William S. Broomfield District 2 McPherson.......... 1,142, Sees ene ee tomboy would rather “play with|late tomorrow with the low around! start pulling its troops out 0 parts of their faces: took part and Leslie H. Hudson seeking Oak-'s , District 5 Both Bagwell and Johnson |the boys, climb trees, swing a/64. Friday will be warmer, but Cie” just as soon @s the United) in “yesterday's daring daylight land County’s seat in Congress. | 1,721 H d claimed there was nothing about jbat, and eat green apples.” ieooler weather is expected. over! States and the government of Leb- robbery. They escaped in a wait- Broomfield, former state repre-|Flack ge asiecvine SOE ee Cort nee 1,992) the primary that would add lus-| She loves music and wants to |e weekend. Precipitation | will pee t hy “A imal no longer) ing car. sentative and senator, yesterday|Seott =... .. 52Q|T eee : 834) ter to Williams’ stature as a pres- | jearn to play the piano. ~ = = .(2Vera8e one-fourth to three-fourths of the oe cnt was ealee corral of eee easily beat out his Republican pri-la, , ; Hummon 339 | dential contender. ; of an inch with showers through ype ited The owner of the store, W. J. mary opponent, Thomas F. Mc- Grant ...... tenses 408" ake es Hee 4 : ; _, | Judy, who is the second youngest) Friday and Saturday. on before U.S. troops went into the) Tobias, said the value of the Guire, of Oak Park, 17 132 to 2,098, |McLauchlin 393 District 6 _“It is my firm belief that Wil-of six Blaylock children ranging! Seventy-four was the lowest tetn- area. He added that any time the) stolen jewelry, which included to win the GOP causation ries ia Ba Rowley 708 liams. will never attain his ambi-|from 8 to 25 years old, wants to}perature in downtown Pontiac pre- legitimate gevernment of Lebanon| diamond necklaces, rings, brace- county’s 18th District seat in the COW .....-. Poooes 247 Wh ] seers |tion to be President or vice presi- become a singer and ‘ ‘make rec- ceding 8 a.m. The mercury rose to asks the United States to pull® out, lets and ear clasps, may run to US. House of Representatiyes. District 3 @Celer .........6--- 4531 Continued on page 28, Col. 4) ‘ords’” when she grows up. She has'9 at 1 p.m. it will leave. more than a million dollars, The 36-year-old Broomfield Cobb Sb oonocanoatc 1,334 thus made it over his first 1958 |Heideman ...... 1,098 ] ae ears mre es) Winners in Important Races Tues lay in County Balloting gain his second two-year term in |. — District 4 Washington. Clarkson ........... 3,085 Throwing up the second barrier District 5 For Congress State Senaté State Representative this year against Royal Oak Devereaux 949 Frm come eee? (From Oakland County) (Representing Pontiac) Broomfield will be Pontiac hard-lR°FT'TSSA +s sees eens r a ware dealer and druggist, Leslie Peisner ........ : .570 H. Hudson. Hudson, also 36, scored) Boghosian 514 a victory over his Democratic foe Ae for Congress, Zigmund J. Niparko, District 6 Hazel Park councilman end former|Hitchcock ........ 1,633 mayor, by a 2-1 margin. McMahon , ‘1311 With all the county’s 295 pre- |Weisg rf 0 cinets reporting, Hudson had ac- Ki Oe ee cumulated 12,813 votes to Ni- cingsley eats Seles sie 508 parko’s 6,770. It was the second =o eae beeretities 19 straight election in which Nipar- ko, of 72 Chestnut St., lost out in ae ey won the primary balloting: Like his November Republican, In Today’ s Pre r ess Hudson, of. 361 Gallogly Red., |#usunnachineaenteneemacommem “prepped” for Congress in the ios Michigan Legislature. The former Comic a soreretnes 7 supervisor from Pontiae-and Wa-|: sovrd OWE ssi slicee, HE terford Township clerk, gave /UP| spare at Mw eveusreereeess sree 6 a possible third term as Pontiac Obituaries lal li + 8 state representative in order to meee sass erecs < 5 try and climb the political ladder Be rt OS to Congress. \ TV & Radic Programs .. 7 33 e4 2 ee ise asa o WANTED — 200 Used Tires. ae ss} Wilson, Earl ...........,. 38 | WILLIAM S. BROOMFIELD L. HARVEY LODGE LEO P, MEAGHER | —L & & Standard Ser, 644 Oakland. howe a Pages | Wo vesves G72 - sf is ° Ae f 3 fos ro _ THE PONTIAC PRES a $, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1958 | fla Wamed by Monitors Teamster Boss Told} to Clean Up or Face _ ‘Get Tough’ Policy "WASHINGTON (UPD)—Court-ap moriitors filed a 204-page|- report today bluntly warning Teamster Union President James ia 2. * |. MRS. DONALD WHITE © the three-man | s Letts appointed . : pe : . “atane 2 sasv ss UF Campaign ‘tion by 13 -and-file Teamsters as | * from the New York area. The com- ; Leader Named led in Federal Court today the} Mrs, Donald White to SNE ; Head Women’s Group PPenounced ‘Teamster keepin Gr ta eS to sipshod the inter} in Approaching Drive HL ie g of 3 The uitien'e weather pattern * Another. wet region was the ex- treme Southeast where thunder- storms and light rain fell in. parts of Florida, Georgia and South The Weather Full U. 8S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy and continued warm with widely h today * throug today 86-90. Lew tonight 64-68. High orrow 86-90. Southwest to west winds 10-15 miles an hour today dim- . Outloek fer temerrew . the Today in Pontiac * Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. 4 At 8 am.: Wind velocity 15 m.p.h Direction—West. Sun sets Wednesday at 7:45 pm. Sun rises Thursday at 6:30 am, Moon sets Wednesday at 12:19 p.m. Moon rises Wednesday at 11:07 p.m. Downtewn Temperatur ssancromodiy Rel Ce Mesos ss Tuesday in Pontiac (As recorded downtown) Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature ' Weather—Sunny. ere veetanreree eeeeve ‘Ome Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature ............... 8 Lowest temperature ...+.- ees s60 see OS Mean temperature ......« po0ecceooee 68.5 - Weather—Sunny. Highest and Lewest Temperatures This in 86 Year: 104 ihm 1918. $3 in 1934 |Meagher, or ¢ ic hh tomorrow, High) » | Lodge, The appointment of Mrs. Donald White, 6251 Balmoral Terrace, Wa- Women’s Division of the forthcom- * 3. << highlight this Mrs, White has been active in Pontiac Area United Fund work ithe Central: Yolunteer Bureau, treasurer of the Waterford Town- ship “Child Study Group and a member of the Watérford Farm and Garden Club. In addition, she is active in the PTA, the Waterford Cancer Society, and is a board member of the Waterford Civie Music Association. Democrats . 'Here Elect ‘New Name Oakland County Democrats have come up with a “new name” in their drive to win the county seat in the State Senate, but the GOP is sticking with its incumbent. The Democrat name is Leo P. Farmington Township real estate broker who for the next two months will try to campaign himself into the Senate. Meagher, 50, of 29097 Utley St., is a newcomer to the Senate race. For the last two political cam- paigns, Fred Elias, Hazel Park restaurateur, has been the Demo- ractic nominée. - Elias, 45, of 1561 Muir Rd., lost out in yesterday's primary. ballot- img by 1,079 votes. Meagher won 9,598 to Elias’ 8,519. * * * On the other side of the political fence, in the Republican race for the 12th District Senate post, the picture was the same as in past years. Challenger for the fourth straight time, Richard D. Kuhn, 32-year-old Pontiac automatic car wash owner, lost. Incumbent Sen. L. Harvey Lodge, Pontiac attorney and resident of Waterford Township, | bowled over Kuhn, also of Water- ford Township, 12,511 to 5,866. The 55-year-old conqueror of * Kuhn will be seeking to serve a |second two-year term in the Senate ‘when the November election rolls around. Lodge represented Pontiac 2 \in the Michigan House of Repre- sentatives in 1947-48. | x © * a member of Senate committees on waste in govern- |ment, elections, and county home rule, lives at 6610 Longworth, St. | His opposition in November, is ‘Meagher, a licensed pharmacist. arena Tog ae temshicn 95 73(f1¢ Specializes in the sale of drug 86 50 Miami 87 80 Stores now. a 3 a eswaukes 81 Ay ‘ : 84 New Orleans 93 76. " i aoe Hi a Boy Drowns at Belle Isle ston 6 51, ? fe Feamuren 'g) gi) DETROIT (Caught in a tangle i. is nh & 8 Mare a2 5s, drowned in the Detroit River off 8 St Traverse C. $8 $3 /Belle Isle Beach yesterday. He 4 i Seattie a 57, was the son of Mrs. Mamie Powell sa % lof Detroit terford Hill, to chairman of the McMahon Out in District 6 Anderson Get GOP Nod to Seek Re-Election tion battles in Oakland County’s six legislative districts yesterday were former Pontiac mayor Arthur. J. Law’s victory in a six-way District 2 Democratic battle, and veg Park incumbent Rep. Wal- te Democratic contest in District 6. The only other incumbent Oak- land County representatives seek- ing re-nomination — Republicans Lloyd L. Anderson and Farrell E. Roberts — won in District 1 and 3 GOP races, respectively. Representatives are: District 1—Republican Lloyd L. Anderson versus Democrat Odin District 2—Republican Mrs. Paul Gorman (unopposed in the pri- mary) against Arthur J, Law. District 3—Republican Farrell E. Roberts versus Floyd L. Cobb Jr., Democrat. District 4—Republican Allen C. Ingle against Democrat James’ Clarkson (also unopposed in pri- ). — District 5—Republican William Hayward against Democrat nom- inee Seymour V. Devereaux. ‘District 6—Republican Mrs. Dorothy M. Rowley versus John C. Hitchcock, Democrat. Separating Law, 52-year-old Pontiac grocer, from his nearest opponent for the Democratic nomi- nation, Linwood L, Flack Jr., were 792 votes. . in this Pontiac dis- Law served three terms as mayor of Pontiac, in addition to being a city commissioner between 1942 and 1954 He lives at 27 Miami Rd. ‘Flack was the 1955 local president of the Pontiac Na- tional Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People and is a metal finisher at General Motors: Truck & Coach. * * * After falling 167 votes short two years ago for the District 6 Dem- ocratic... nomination, Hitchcock epolkel ‘McMahon’s hopes fot an llth year in the “Houst. — Hitchcock, 55, of 438 E. Jar- vis -St., edged out 6i-year-old McMahon, 1,633 to 1,311. Hitch- cock js an insurance and real estate salesman from Hazel Park. He has been on the Hazel Park School Board for seven years. : ® Rep.. Anderson, for six years! supervisor of Waterford Township, assured himself a spot on the Nov. 4 ballot when he defeated attorney Anthony Renne for The vote was 2,767 for Anderson and 345 for Renne. _ w* & * | Mrs. Paul (Hope) Gorman, Pon- tiac housewife, received 1,901 votes as the unopposed condidate for the District 2 Republican nomina- tion, She will be pitted against Law in November... Republican Roberts, 36-year-old Keego Harbor lawyer, tallied 3,188 in District 3, to Robert L. Mott's 1,553. This is Roberts’ bid for a second term in the House, . The District 4 Republican nomination race was a hot and close one. The closest fight came in a losing cause. Only 17 votes separated runners-up Highlighting the primary elec- T. McMahon's loss in the| +. i. + Williamson, 17, of 1121 Bielby 4-H FAIR ROYALTY — This happy looking couple were selected last night to reign as queen and king of the 18th annual Oakland County 4-H Fair which runs through Saturday. Grace St., Waterford Over 1,500 at Opening Night A Waterford Township blonde! who wants to become a nurse and| a Lake Orion Community High School, graduate and football play- er will begin their second evening as king and queen of the 18th Oak- land County 4-H Fair tonight at the fairgrounds, Selected over 15 other candi-° dates last night for her beauty, 4-H record, school, community and church work to reign as queen was Grace Williamson, 17, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Frank ‘H. Williamson, of 1121 Bielby Rd., Waterford Township, More than 1,500 attended the fairs opening night. Pick King and Queen fo Reign at 4-H Fair fair, is Walter Cudnohufsky Jr., 118, of 1940 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs, Walter Cudnohufsky. * * * The blue-eyed, natural curly- haired blonde is a June graduate of Waterford Township High School ween Grace, who. possesses an Brective dimple” ‘ott each site ‘of her peaches and cream complexion face, plans to attend the Univer- sity of- Michigan this fall to study nursing. : Following that, ‘‘I want to be an airline hostess for awhile before I return to nursing,” she explained. A member of the Junior Home- makers 4-H Club in Waterford Her ‘partner, the first king to be selected in the history of the ‘Township, of which her parents are leaders, the queen was the Ralph 8, Moore Jr. and Donald N. “McPherson. Winner in this race was Farm-| ington Justice of the Peace Allen} C. Ingle, 37, of 21934 Tulane St. Ingle received 1.327 votes, 168 votes -more than Moore. Ingle is past president of the: 'Michigan Justices of the Peace) | Assn. * i * * * Hayward, Royal Oak city com-' missioner won the District 5 GOP nomination (1,992 votes) over’ Pontiac attorney Brakie J. Orr, (834 votes), The winner is manager of a Birmingham insurance firm. The |was mayor of Royal Oak. He has’ spent’ 17 years on the Royal Oak, Commission either as commission-, er or mayor. : | Mrs. Rowley, former Hazel | Park newspaper editor, sides with Mrs. Gorman in being the only women who will appear on the Nov. 4 ballot.” trict 6 carried 708 votes to 453 votes for Bruce P, Wheeler, Fern- dale autioneer who was his party's choice two years ago. * * After failing to win a Democratic county clerk nomination in 1956, Johnson, 53, of 5912 Longpoint |Beach Dr., Davisburg, was, suc- will pit ‘him against Anderson in the fall District 1 encounter. Johnson, a Pontiac attorney The Republican nominee for Dis-| fight. for Congress and the State Sen- ate, pulled 1,194 votes. His near- est competitor was Robert H. Chapin, life insurance salesman, who tallied 538 votes. The one-time Michigan assistant! 92-year-old former banker once) attorney general, George }, Heide-, man, a Detroit lawyer ‘and Bir-) mingham resident, was the loser to Cobb in the District 3 Democrat-| | lie campaign. | Cobb, who will match votes with) Roberts two months hence, is an expeditor for a Detroit firm, He Clarkson, 33, a Detroit attorney and Southfield resident, sat back unopposed Tuesday and gathered 3,085. He was the Democratic nominee for the same post two years ago. He lives at 23525-Val- ley. View Rd. x Devereaux, a Royal Oak barber, 'Wds given 400 votey more than 90° 70 of weeds, 12-year-old Anthony Cobb icessful in- the nomination which oa ch of his Democratic opponents the District 5 nomination He received 949. The 50- year-old winner is-an official of for who has campaigned in the past t his barbér’s union. == is 35 and lives at 3875. Livernois) Rd., Rochester. Cobb received) '1,334 votes to Heideman’s 1,098. * * * the "so: How City Voted Tuesday ‘nomination for District 1. REPUBLICAN | DEMOCRATIC | * Governor Governor Bagwell /................555 2,225 Williams ..............064.+.-3,899 / Lt. Governor AJONRSOD ccc ieccesayestee Brown 18. Sem vee | Lt. Governor Pottér : *enator 8. [Swainson ................-++4-2,915 ( Congressman : . Mohardat ao 6 1G ae 611) Broomfield .............-4++.-2,079! U.S. Senate ; McGuire .........-...-::s+0.. 243 Hart ........-...-.-.:: “......3,404 State Senator ; Martin =..---< =o. = oo. 438 Lodge Sees ie cinerea ew el elsiatere sels 1,593 . Aongressman Cuhn . 2c eeee TOS FHudSON V2.0... eee eee eee ree 2 ee COUNTY TICKET Niparko 2.25.25 -3- cee sacee . 1,005 Prosecutor ' State Senate ZieM soecc cess Ae EPS E RHEL IOC Oo 2231 Meagher Fee eee nena 1,787 Sheriff Elias ...........006 2. ccs eee ees 1,435 [rons es se eee 2,222 COUNTY ‘TICKET Clerk-Register . Pp. shee eet E ETI eawaom assessor srs A 66 Treasarer iiey Deceeeie ce ewes eee ones ka Sperie 25. ccnecscine seueneen 1,604) Sheriff a L. G. Barry ...0..0c.c00 000s TOO |HICKS oon. cece eee e eer ceeceess 2,236 Drain Commissioner |Stephenson dppboooecr ssesee 783 D. W. Barry Oo ccvee ese sesess+1,429|Dahlerup van sees meres Races 1 Beckett) ee 714 Koester ......--..- 0s sseseees 200 Surveyor . ! Clerk-Register MET) goqnonaccesoes5eer pogadiac 2,002'Kronenberg ..............-.+-1,578 SS ————————— —— JaWOreK cer ekjote Treasurer cave @ revere 2,269 mae Oe Jenson Copple . seEeo eee Drain Commissioner Rice PE See es 2,772 Surveyor Lowney .....:.+.. 4 oe asta 0 veers 2,362 State Representative District 2 eT eer inesiwee 1,721 PlaCK occ cscsca cue ssseacs coe 929 Scott ......... onocsnoe Abbe 522 iGrant «......... Sn BOUDHAGUUOIE 408 ‘McLauchlin ..... wele ae sss sees 308 seEEeonnnRonauoetoaTt 247 Jazzman Ziggy Elman Missing, Wife Reports HOLLYWOOD ® — Ziggy EI- man, jazz trumpeter, is missing, his wife Ruby-told police yester- day. 2 . She sald the 44-year-old mu- si¢ian left their honie in sub- in the family car and has not been seen since. Police said Elman instructed his telephone exchange to cance] all further calls. a Township, out smiled 15 other-queen candid and Walter Cudnohufsky, 18, of 1940 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion, captured the honor from four other contestants to be the first king in the history of the fair. utban Van Nuys Monday night” " "The Day.in Birmingham’. | ‘ iy mo ates winner of the 1957 County Home Economics Award. In 1955-56 she won the dress review contest during achievement day and last year she was in the fair queen’s court, ‘This week she has entered three ‘of her sheep int the fair. Her hob- bies include water skiing, sewing, and reading historical novels, She has been a member of 4-H for eight years. ACTIVE IN. SCHOOL Active in high school, Grace was secretary of the French Club, mem- ber of the Y-Teens, Girls Athletic Assn., Dramatics Club, and played 'a lead in the spring play. * * * “Walt,” the masculine half of the royal couple, is a six-year member 4-H Club. _ One of nine children of which five are in 4-H, he has been’ | awarded a 4-H scholarship to at- | tend Michigan State University | this fall where he will study landscape architecture, © During his 4-H career, Walt has \received award trips to Detroit from the Michigan Milk Producers Assn.; to Traverse City for a con- servation camp;. and was one of itwo in the state to be sent to tour New York and Boston last ‘| 8,440 registered Voters going to: a member of the student council,} | of 4-H belonging to the East Orion| / BIRMINGHAM — A light vote prediction proved accurate for the Birmingham .area in yesterday's primary election. Bloomfield Township had the, best showing with 1,220 of its the polls, In* Birmingham, 2,004 ballots were cast. The city’s total regis-) tration wag 13,139. Bloomfield Hills. had 277 of 1,435 registered electors go to the polls. Voting percentage for the three communities was 15 per cent. Mrs. Jeanne Lloyd, head li- brarian at the Baldwin Public Li- Vote to Continue Annual Meeting Residents in Waterford Back Ban on Hunting With Firearms Waterford Township will con- tinue to have an annual township meeting, and hunting with’ fire- arms in the township will be gro- hibited. These two propositions, which were decided by voters at yes- terday’s primary election, had been debated for some time and both passed by .a large majority. * . * Uk There were 1,160 votes in favor of retaining the annual meeting, and 760 votes in favor of abolish- ing it. . At the last annual meeting held April 5. residents. had voted to place on the ballot the propo- sition of whether to retain or abolish the 60-year-old law that permitted people a once-a-year opportunity to conduct township business from the floor. Before yesterday’s election, hunting was allowed anywhere in Waterford Township with high powéred rifles, providing the hunt- ers had the consent of the prop- erty owners. : * * * There were 1,462 votes cast in favor of enacting a law to prevent hunting in the township, while 522 were against the proposition. There were only 3,012 votes cast in the township. There are 17,624 Voting Light in Primary » jas 15 Per.Cent Turn Out brary in Birmingham, this morne ing announced the appointment of Miss Lee Tuttle to the library staff. A graduate of the University of Michigan Department of Library S¢eience, she was éditer.and writer for the U. of M., television office and woman's editor at a radio sta- tion in Lansing. Miss Tuttle has taught at Michi- gan State University and Heidel- berg College in Tiffin, Ohio. Water consumption in Birming- ham sets a new-record one day and breaks it the next. The all-time high of 6,671,000 ing over Saturday’s record by more than 2,000 gallons. Robert Kenning, assistant city manager and syperintendent of the Water Department, said this morn- ing there is no indication of cur- tailment jn this rising water con- sumption in the city. Should the City of Detroit de- clare, the necessity of restricting water use, Birmingham would be included, he said. Two Birmingham High School seniors, Margo Mensing of 220-Lar- 316 Arlington Dr., have returned home from Indiana University where they atended the 12th an- hual High School Journalism In- stitute. * Both are active on the Highlard, the high school publication. Post Oftices Get 1 Cent Stamps; Supply Short Both the main post office on West Huron street and the down town branch on East Huron street today have one cent stamps ac- cording to Robert C. Miller, acting postmaster, but the supply ‘‘won't last long,"" he added. The branch ran-~out of them Saturday and the main office’s sup- ply was down to broken lots and coils. After calling Chicago to check on a stamp order which was due, 100,000 one centers were sent to Pontiac Monday. be Yestérday, 10,000 were trans- ferred from the main office to the downtown station, The main build- ing still-has 20,000 of the one cent stamps today, Miller added that. there is a shortage of this stamp throughout the nation due to the postage rate "boost which became effective Fri- registered voters. : “day. \ i] CHARLES E. POTTER Républican MEET ON NOVEMBER BALLOT — Senator Charles E. Potter was renominated by Republican year because of their outstanding conservation work, PHILIP A. HART Democrat s in Tuesday’s primary election and will be opposed in November by Philip A. Hart, who won the Democratic nomination over Homer Martin. Potter was unopposefl on the primary ballot for his party. : Doubting (Continued Fron Page One) of an explosno. “This-is very, very possible,’ Ziem stressed. * * * | 3. At the time he was burned, |Kierdorf was probably wearing a |beit and a wristwatch. He had ‘neither when he staggered into the hospital. | 4. The burns were not uniform, | but more severe on the upper left portion of the body, . 5. There was no evidence of par- ticles of dirt or grass to bear out Kierdorf’s story that he ‘rolled over and over” on the ground to extinguish the flames, * * * Olsen interrupted a vacation in West Branch ‘to make the exami- nation. He was brought here by state police. : The pathologist was sent for after Chief Assistant Prosecutor George F, Taylor_announced he Jongest, interrogation of the vic- tim. 4 ‘ “He (Kierdorf) is not helping us,” Taylor said. ‘I feel ke knows more than he’s telling me. In ‘my opinion, he could give us informa- tion to help the progress of the case.” a Taylor said the burned mian sticks to his original story,| avoid- ing certain questions as ‘if his ‘Torch’ | mind were cloudy but answering others in a straightforward, clear manner. x * * “My impression js that if he could answer one question clearly, he. could answer them all,’’. Tay- lor said. He said Kierdorf ‘“vehement- ly” denied that the burning had anything to do with the internal affairs of Flint Local 332, of which he is a business agent, Taylor said he couldn't get any answers at all to qtestions that Kierdorf apparently wants to avoid, such as what happened to his clothes after he was burned. x *« & Two Detroit police homicide de- tectives, Lt. John Morin and Sgt. John Ware, took part in the latest interrogation. They said that so far, no Detroit connections with the burning have been discovered. Ware believed that Kierdorf may have been injured during some illegal activity, such as the burning of records or the prep- aration of an arson bomb, If- such were the: case, he :fig- ured, Kierdorf would have reason to keep silent about the nature of the accident and its location, * woe The. possibility would also ex- plain why Kierdorf was dropped ioff on the hospital grounds instead Story of accompanied straight to the emergency room, =~ “If the persons with him were engaged in the same illegal ac- tivity,’ Ware said, “they would try to avoid being identi- trouble.” Kierdorf himself had refused to give his identity or any hint of what might have happened for 15 hours. : Then, under the persuasion of his uncle, Herman Kierdorf, 67, another ex-convict and former business agent of Detroit Teamster Joint Council 42, the torch victim volunteered a story that had this outline, Taylor said: ‘Two men he did not know called at his Flint home Sunday evening. He rode with them to- ward Pontiac, where they said there was a union organizational meeting. South of Telegraph road and Dixie highway, the car turned off onto a gravel road. Kierdorf was forced out at gun point, doused with an inflamable liquid and ignited. He rolled on the ground to ex. served,’ “We don’t want ‘a murder rap,”’ driven to the hospital and dumpéd there, | gallons was pumped Monday, go-_ chlea Dr. and Michal Forester-of~ fied In order to stay clear of - tinguish the flames, was put back- jin the ear after one of the men ob- ‘es e . F = ne i : = “a . SS ff * } & & Yo? o . ¥ f = = : ‘ 5 4 ‘ . : ; : a = : & r : * ; . 4 . . , THE. PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, ‘AU GUST 6, 1958 133, of Detroit, a former North _— ce SE RVICE. SPEC , nfiac an Nearby reas (Ps roe He's for Women Drivers evening in East Detroit at the bank where he was employed. eee aves”. Giek dk. asl SA ee ie hig mother, aea.| Surviving are kis wite, Mar ANN ARBOR (AP)—The much-maligned woman driver | CLEAN OIL — INSTALL Francis. E. Myre, 48, of pane Robert Hamilton of Hazel Park;|@aret; One daughter, Mary Jane,| finally has found a friend—a man. RIBBON — AND INSPECT , Northfield se vad a ae Me his father, Arthur of Oakland, and one sister, Mrs. Albert O’Neill Said Floyd Webb of the Automobile Club of Michigan PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS . : methine” to tillexe ssaanbad JOSEPH C, QUATTY Calif, and one brother, William|° North Branch. at a driver'education institute at the University of Mich- | Hospital after an illness of four Joseph C. Quatty, 61, of 2530/8. of Rochester. . ; igan: ; isd | Offi ; years, ~~ Edison St., died yesterday ° of a JAMES A. REID “Two-fifths of the nation’s drivers are ‘women, and ; i a e ce : He was an employe of General |heart ailment in his home. 0 ote i) we have found they don’t cause anywhere near the number ° OFFICE SUPPLIES — ‘ST : rey ER’ wae | Motors Truck & Coach Division| He was an employe of General! ROMEO — Service for James of accidents that some of us men sputter about. - oe : and a member of St. Michael’s|Motors Truck & Coach Division. |A. Reid, 52, of 294 Fairgrove St., Shey gre castings @nd perhaps we cowd worn & | Miracle Mile Shopping Center—In the Bazaar Area —— Chureh. } Surviving are his wife, Judith; |will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at] lean om ihe © P Open Daily ‘til 9 P. M. FE 8-4545 ; Mr. Myre leaves his. wife, Ferne; |nine brothers and six sisters, Roth’s Home for Funerals with on arm l : ie . : : i his mother, Mrs. Charles (Isabelle)| Mr. Quatty’s body is at the] burial in McCafferty Cemetery. — Myre; three sons and a daughter, /Brace-Smith Funeral Home. '| He died Tuesday. " a A Mrs. Iagene Rowden, Donald and Surviving are his wife, Eliza- will Attempt to Ram ; David Myre of Pontiac, and Rich- THOMAS J. FICK beth; four sons, Alfred, Melvin Compromise Proposal : | ard Myre with the U. 8. Air Force] LAPEER —Service for Thomas|and Gerald, all at home; and Air-| 7) Pick a Ward robe of Gov : ; stationed in Florida. J. Fick, Gyear-old son of the Rev.|man Second Class William who is| Through House y or | Other survivors include twoljand Mrs. Lee R. Fick of 5567|stationed in Florida. grandchildren; one brother and|Davison Rd., will be held at 2 p.m.| Also surviving. are his parerits, WASHINGTON (AP) — Disor- two sisters, Mrs. Alphiline. Beals,|Thursday. from the Elba Baptist|Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Reid of Im-| ,. 44 House farm forces rallied Mrs. Loraine LaBarge and Wilbert|Church with the Rev. Frank lay’ City; a brother, Leland of|® ; Myre, all of Pontiac. Thompson of Marlette officiating.|Fife Lake; and six sisters, Mrs,|for an effort to ram a compromise » The Rosary will be recited at 8|Burial will be in Green's Cemetery Betty Turner of Detroit, Mrg. Neva'farm bill through the House to- p.m. Thursday from the Pursley|at Hadley. Althouse of Pontiac, Mrs. Verna| day. Funeral Home. Service will be at] His body will be at home until Lewis of Birmingham, Mrs. Ger-| j+ would permit cutting price A : aldine Huck of Mt. Pleasant. 10 =m, Friday from St. Michael’s|time of service. Arrangements are| 17. Doris Merith jhe a Aory support levels on cotton, corn and by the Muir Brothers Funeral|,4.° McDade, both of California.|rice but allow planting of more|| Does Your Home. FALL FABRICS. and Send Them EVERY FLOOR AIR-CONDITHONED © Thomas was drowned Monday DA . cotton and make changes in pro- : Decaffeinated Coffee {afternoon in Lake Minnewanna at ver seers grams for the others. | : the Metamora. Recreation Area} AVON TOWNSHIP — Graveside a ee ee: : Give You Only Half three miles trom Hadley. [service for David M. Spencer, 3-] The bill was scheduled for a : a day-old twin son of Mr, and Mrs.|showdown vote postponed from | a Cup of Fi ? - WILLIAM D. JOHNSON | Monday, when it came to the floor : up avor Kaye Gpemer: of 71) Leach Ra under take-it-or-leave-it procedure LAPEER — Service for William|, ; D. Johnson; 88, of 555 Randall Dr., will be held at 3 p.m, Thursday requiring a two-thirds vote for | will be held at 3 p.m. Friday from|@t Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. The| passage. the Muir Brothers Funeral Home.|body is at Moore Chapel of the| If that fails the bill could be) Burial will be in the Attica Ceme-|Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home in brought up later under more lib-| tery. Auburn Heights. eral voting procedure, but House Mr. Johnson, a farmer, who| Surviving besides the parents are leaders have said that is unlikely. died Monday, is survived by his|his twit sister, Daun M., another|They urged passage of the bill so . wife, Lettie; seven sons, James, |sister, Kathleen Fay, and a bro-|a Senate-House conference can Change ToNew Siesta «/Donald, Marvin and William, all|ther, Jeffrey A., all at home. work out final terms, of Lapeer, Richard of the U. S. * * * Ww shable . Col f | Lae ‘army who_is stationed in Texas,|. T. ROBERT THOMAS Although the bill goes far in the | as G os : or ast : Albert of Ravenna and Harry of| CLARKSTON—T. Robert Thom-|direction of lower price supports) | Flint. as, 49, of 5403 Whipple Lake Rd.,/demanded by Secretary of Agri- | : . Also surviving are four daugh-| died unexpectedly yesterday at culture Benson, final action was} , ters, Mrs. Marjorie Evans‘of La-|Pontiac General Hospital. The body| put over from Monday because of J a peer, Mrs, Alice Hunt of Caro, is at Donelson-Johns Funeral} administration Republican opposi-| : And Enjo A Full C Mrs ‘Nettie Adtin a Altea: y see ee taomupyomart they have been driving for a © 36" Wide Pas. : >. of Delicious ” Bearer: “os “great-great|_AVON TOWNSHIP — agar Saeed cates @ White © Gold c f | Flavor Every Time! "néchiren- Sol Bet night’ His body ail ket ®@ Black @Blue. © Red uly. . aches esafitcened coffee oo unten eee ome veld ana pecan, bill vere Sears uae Buy up now for all of your back-to-school sewing. + ~ Dye: Yd. fe fashioned! new Instant Siesta |this afternoon at the Marsh Broth-| HAROLD L. TEWKSBURY members disgruntled because no} gives you pure coffee pleasure . . = Funeral Home for Mrs. Owen milk changes are provided, city rich and robust . . . without the . (Jennie) Kilbourn, 64, of Mar- NORTH BRANCH — Graveside|members suspicious of all farm penalty of tension and sleepless- ies who died Sunday in the Mar-|Service was held yesterday at the/legislation, and diehard foes of springknight Print and Solid BROADCLOTH ness. Try it today! ital. Burial! Westlawn Cemetery in North|any reduction in government price New | a jiete Raprepery Comers: Branch for Harold L. Tewksbury, | supports. - iron Surviving are two. sons, William : of Marlette and Clare of Las Vegas, B azley’s Thursday Instant SIESTA Nev.; three brothers, Emmett, Charles and Leon Brown, all of Eee |. ee" | SUPER SPECIALS! | : on JAMES S. McGUIGAN 97% Caffein Free ROYAL OAK — Service for 78 North Saginaw Ascthst Pine Product of Stendard Brendes Inc. James S. McGuigan, 32, of 729 Whitcomb St., will be held at 1:30) p.m. Friday at Price Funeral - F Home, 2501 S. Rochester Rd., | LOU MOR JEWELRY Troy. Burial will be in Oakview EXPERT WATCH REPAIR Cemetery, Royal Oak. ° Farm Fresh © DIAMONDS WATCHES Mr. McGuigan was dead on Area MIRACLE MILE |/"1%2! 2t William Beaumont Hos- . | Large *) ». 8 9: : EGGS ™ | Bazaar sHOPPING CENTER pital Monday evening after suf. : i fering a fatal heart attack and] This Valuable Coupon Entitles crashing, his car into a tree in|} the Bearer to a 1-Lb. Limit Fresh c erndale. Good | Large Selection ! He was advertising: production REMUS Thurs, lb - y 4 manager at the J. Walter Thomp- = | STEREOPHONIC — [oon'Co. office in Detroit. BUTTER | RECORDINGS "A Marine Corp. veteran of World ns | rate and Plajd GINGHAM i ee eeeeSSEs eee es wide in 36 ec tton. drip - dry © Guaranteed color- With Meat Purchase War II, he was a member of the MIRACLE MUSIC [pavid £. Cleary Post 167, Ameri- Miracle Mile — FE -8-0021 can-—Legien,; in Clawson. Surviving aer his wife, June; two sons, William G. and James “‘Magnisic taste cent Deaths Elsewhere | LOUISVILLE, Ky. ® — G rocessed | makes it < Page, 65, editorial caleucan. vont shrinkage. : : , or the Louisville Courier-Journal : | America’s j ra nearly 40 years, died yester: Fabrics ae | : |day, Page, a heart patient, devel- a - favorite cea ——— after entering e pital last week. He was EF bourbon! born in Gastonia, N. C. ea ji “en iz kt & ik ae NEVER BEFO RE OF FERED 4 OLD sonve — to the vice . Ly . Pp lent, international communi- | OQw cations, Western Union, died yes- S h T if; Savi ff oa CR: terday of a heart attack. He joined] the at uc erritic ings: : | the old Postal Telegraph-Cable Co. oh ee . | LIGHT- MILO [in 1919 and went with Western] Gress : - : 2 86 PROOF Union after their merger, lk Famous : | $471 ef with | pLOKYO (AP)—Dr. Seiya Fu = F T) Si p py) Be See ble or Cabinet Model “cena weet! et ie at ee Pe | u ize orta e€ OF VG inet ode E OU LLERY C0., FRANKFORT, prints, di sterday of s 5 KENTUCKY, KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY itis, emai ae cas Ives . . ' DAILY 10 to 8 Ls ‘MACHINES } urnabout NO MONEY DOWN! Pay 1/3 in Sept... .1/3 in Oct....1/3 in Nov. Or Pay Small Down Payment and $2 Per Week! Call Knit Unmistakably BANFF—this finely tailored dress of 100% virgin wool chenille ‘designed to be worn five GIGANTIC DISCOUNTS BUY NOW. SAVE! Asphalt 5] 69 | Plastic Tile Wall Tile 4%4x4% ; 9"'x9"'x Ye” fasy to Instat ways, all of them r Ist Quality Per Carton Reduced Price Ea. (ce beautiful: collar to, the front, reversed to the back oe. 4 self«tied Vinyl Ashestos Ailes 4° Ft. I the hips for a blouson line.’ In brandy, black, sapphire—all with white collar and cuffs. 1 8 to 16. ° Botan $29.98 @ Full Round Bobbin : @ Full Forward and Reverse @ Fully Guaranteed by White| @ Full Automatic Darner @ Fully Automatic Bobbin Release @ Full Range Speed Control ~ - ile c Seconds high for an empire eee d = , Can Be Used — __ c effect, at the waist onneen | ¥ oP erin : Atle ox 0” E ite 19 for a sheath look, at : Needs Ne Waxing a. Running Ft. : : VINYL TILE || LINO TILE Rubber Tile ES, Parquet es 6" = % Spotter Patierns xis" _ Heavy Duty Sek |] Cia Lead LTHE CO. 1058 W. HURON FE 3-9623 | WPARKING FOR 200 CARS | | y ewe Third Floor . ; | \ “ ; . Waite’s Better Dresses a ; 2 Es a | Charge Your While at Waite’s . x, Fourth Floor! ; ie = s » WEDNESDAY, aucust 6, 1958 a ee : “phe talk on talks continues. As of yesterday, each of the big Ne wage tbted as wanting. or at ‘Yeast being willing to attend, a sum- mit meeting of some sort: +. * But like a chess game there was a sharp divergence of views ‘about the nature of the meeting. _ This difference of opinion found at least one of the Western pow- ers closer to Russia than to its allies... ‘Originally Russia wanted a meet- ing of the Big Four plus India and the U. N. Secretary General, Dac HAMMARSEJOLD. " But now she comes up with a big switch. KaRUSHCHEY now asks an emergency meeting of the 81-member U.N. General Assembly to debate a Soviet resolution ordering Anglo- escheat tee a et ees and - Ttaly’s Prime Minister Urges Mid-East Help ‘Itely’s Prime Minister Amrrore - Fanrant who has concluded a visit to this country, feels that NATO. =) Spot be more than.&, military a) liance. "An economics profesor 50 year old should prove by joint economic pro}- - ects that it is interested in the wel-. es ae to help the emerging nations. He “ment; but nothing came of it. A new billion dollar World Bank to grant promising loans for economic assist- ance has been proposed by Sen. Monnoney. This fund would be available to applicants who could not meet re- quirements of the present World Bank which also is assisting under- developed and overpopulated areas. West Germany already has recog- nized this need by joining with ‘~“France in a $500 million paces to develop North Africa. x * * Italy’s government, a consist- ent friend of the West, has spe- cialties of. geography and trade with Arab and North African countries. Prime Minister Fan- FANI’s proposals should be given mr ——eewl consideration. Suoormnc all the politicians and diplomats in the world would bring permanent peace, but it would be a long-drawn-out process, as those who shot them would take their places and others would have to shoot them, and -so on. é Kal THE PONTIAC PRESS Published by Tus Powtiusc Press Company 48 W. Huron st. . Pontiec 12, Michigan : Trede Mark Dally Except Sunday Reser. Baserrr, Joun A. RILtr Executive Vice President Assistant Advertising and navertising Di Director Manager : Bana M. Tegapweit, ; “Et —_ Circulation. Manager |. Preroena.s, . Advertising vi Rosert B. T Gronce C. Inman, -< mane Battor Classified Manager to the tty oral seen printed fm this a a ~ The Powrisc Perss carrier fo cents pnw Ba Srvie > te cg i) 08 year; elsewhere tye in the United vie in class taster at ther Kills scum Talks President Eisenhower quickly accepted the Krushchev proposal. It is too early to determine just what this will mean. But it definitely looks like any early summit talks are off. The United States government wanted a Security Council meeting with the chiefs of government sitting as Council delegates. Britain endorsed the Security | Council idea, but said that the real work of the conference would be carried.on by the chiefs of government meeting. as a kind of Council subcommittee. i We Pee France, like Russia, figured a meet- ing limited to the Big Five and em- phasized that it should have no con- nection with any special meeting of the Security Council. For the past three weeks this has been the sequence of exchanges. To date nothing is definite as to time and place. Out of all this aecond guessing one thing remains certain: That is Ahat the meeting when it is held will be one of the biggest propa- > ganda battles of the post war area. x * * The Russians are past masters at this sort of thing. They will most certainly seek to indict the United States and Britain for aggression in the Middle East. We should be pre- pared, and not let this deter us from being hopeful that out of the meeting will emerge some concrete progress. The Man About Town Quick Returns ’ Rose and Holly Townships Were First in the County Speed: What now has even taken over the election ea oe se ee ; First of Oakland County’s 295 ‘ieetton ‘boards, to report the result of Tuesday's primary was that of Rose Township, with one precinct. It was exactly 25 minutes after the polls closed that Supervisor J. Wesley Duncan was giving me the returns. Closely fol- lowing was _Clerk Jess E. Furbush of Holly ‘Township with the results in its two precincts. The returns from these two townships were the first to be re- ceived by The Pontiac Press. + ‘Former Pontiac residents, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Gorton, - who have spent several years in Los Angeles, have returned to Michigan to celebrate their golden wedding, at 109 Sycamore. St., Durand, on Aug.-12. Mr. Gorton is president of the Michigan State Association of Los Angeles, also Presi- dent of the Federation of State Associa- tions there. Toeal tall corn honors rest with Ray Wilson. of 1121 Voorheis Road—eight and one- half feet. Make The Pontiac Press booth a meeting point with your friends at the 4-H oY Fair. See you there? Ul Many farmers in the Pontiac area, like ‘Henry Morseman of Avon Township, report a big crop of young pheasants, many saying more than they’ve noticed in any previous year. Making good on what he promised me five weeks ago, when he was completing his first 1958 cutting of alfalfa, Perry OQusnamer of Rochester, now is at the second cutting. He expects to get two more. A carrot that grew through a brass ring is being exhibited by Alex. Frankfort of Waterford, who lost the ring off his garden hose last summer. Verbal Orchids to— Mrs. Daniel W. Symons of-Birmingham; eighty-seventh birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Buell Hanford > of Waterford; fifty-fifth wedding anni: versary. Harley M. Carmody of Keego Harbor; eighty-fifth birthday. Mrs. ‘Bertha Bidelman of Birmingham; Vi aah birthday, \ ‘ “Is Your Tare. fo 0 Carry It” David Lawrence Tey Big Steel Strike Looms Ahead WASHINGTON—Next | year may see the biggest steel strike in American history. For the steel industry, which has just absorbed abouts half of the automatic in- crease in wages —fixed by a pre- vious contract made in boom times—cannot af- ford to do so again. In 1959, when the labor contracts are up for renewal, a strike seems cer- . tain unless there 7S is afi abandonment of demands for higher wages by the unions. If the steel companies had put up their prices this time to offset entirely the full labor costs, the increase of $4.50 per ton an- nounced recently would have had _to rise to around $7 or $8 a ton. The statisticians in one major steel company say that, if there had been no price increases since 1955, it would today be operating $30,000,000 a year in the red. The steel companies, moreover, have to find a way not only to meet the direct increases in wages imposed by the industry- wide union in steel but to offset the price rises for the raw mate- rials the ‘steel companies buy which are themselves affected by the upward trend in steel wages. * * * Thus it is estimated that, apart from the $7 or $8 a ton of in- creased costs due to direct wage increases, anothér item of at least $1.50 a ton has to be absorbed which, comes from the higher costs of wages in brick plants, alloy plants, acid plants, and in the purchase of such materials as aluminum, vanadium, nickel and zinc. ‘ * * * What is the answer? It is to be found in greater productivity per man-hour by labor or in tech- nological improvements through larger and larger capital expendi- tures. The latter course has thus far saved the steel companies from bankruptcy as they have intro- duced new mechanical gadgets Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE An LQ. test may indicate ... _ That you are very smart ... But that is no assurance you .. . Will play a brilliant part ... For it is not how bright you are ... That scores success for you. . . But how you live from day to day ... And what you really do ... You may. be quite ingenious ... And yet what does it mean. . . Unless you use that gift from God . . . To help the human scene? ... You could devote your talents to... A life of shame and crime ... Or you could just ignore the world . And while away your time... No 1.Q. rating ever,is . . . True cause for pride or praise .. . Your laur- els on this earth depend ... On your unselfish ways. (Copyright 1958) _The Country Parson “Our mistakes in life are tike highway‘ efrors--they not only endanger us but may cost the lives of others as well.” and bigger and better power plants. But to do this cocaine millions of dollars of more capital, and. the investor is not attracted to industries which don’t give a substantial return on the money invested. Since the steel industry recent- ly raised its prices, a howl has gone up from spokesmen for a Congressional committee, An as- sistant .attorney-general at the Department of Justice in charge “of antitrust laws speaks of the possibility of an investigation to see if any statutes were violated. But why is the obvious over- looked? Hasn't anybody hereto- fore ever heard of industry-wide bargaining — -the practice sanc- tioned by Federal law which im- poses a uniform wage cost on the steel companies? Senator Kefauver, chairman of a Senate subcommittee on ‘mo- nopoly’’ problems, asks: “Why are identical price in- creases put into effect by all companies at the same time when each has different costs? This is the key question.” Of course, it is the key question, and it has been ever since the Congress permitted labor unions to group together in a single mo- nopoly in each industry. Each company has to base its prices on what kind of earnings and rate of return on the invested dollar must be obtained to attract the investor. This also means a rather uniform pattern. A com- pany that_thinks- 4t can ‘get larger volume by cutting prices is likely to find itself mistaken and also bankrupt. (Copyright, 1988) Dr. William Brady Says: } Iodin Ration May: Corre Low Basal Metabolism A reader writes: “I was discharged from the Air Corps for ‘low basal metabolism.’ I had suffered no ill effects what- ever, .and there have been none since I was discharged. The — — medical school gives me a clean bill of health, but now I can’t enlist in any branch of the service be- cause of the Air Corps discharge.” (P. H.) I ean't believe the Air Corps or service of defense DR. BRADY js so stupid. ‘Low basal metabolism” is not a diagnosis. Rejecting a man, otherwise fit, merely because the machine reg- isters low, is not sound medical practice. : To any Yankee Wiseacre read- ing this screed and smiling in his superior way at my audacity, I say this: Your medical merchant, having sold you a $5 BMR (basal metabolism test) for $35 can’t do a thing about it or for you that an honest doctor would not have done with the information elicited by proper medical exam- ination. In other words, I’m trying to tell you that the metabolimeter (appa- ratus for measuring basal metab- olism), however useful in the physiology laboratory, serves but one purpose in practice—the gad- get impresses the simple layman. PREFERS TEMPERATURE TEST Time and again I have cited here the report by Dr. Barnes who found in a study of over 1,000 cases that the basal temperature test proved a better index than the basal metabolism test. To the best of my knowledge, no one has con- troverted the fair and logical con- clusion drawn by Barnes, namely, that’a clinical thermometer and a little intelligence will enable a real doctor to get all the informatio about the state of metabolism that he can get by the use of the met- abolimeter. Hypothyroidism, functional de- ficiency of the thyroid gland and low basal metabolism are, in my judgment, pretentious ways of saying ledin deficiency. Generally there’s nothing wrong with people who have low basal metabolism that a suitable jodin ration won't | correct. For instructions sefid me a self- ‘ addressed, stamped envelope and ask for the pamphlet THE IODIN | RATION, a any branch of the: Let no knucklehead infer that I advise anyone to take medicinal jodine or iodide. * * * _ Signed letters, not more than one page ot 100 words long —“ to persona] health and hygiene, not disease, diag- nosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. William Brady, if a stam self. addressed envelope is sent to Pon- tiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan. (Copyright 1958) Voice of the People | Minimum Speed Limits Should Be Maintained f. Limits ne ee pe oe Village authorities regarding the high ratio of traffic fines in comparison to the rest of the Village budget. The letter stated that the Village police don’t give tickets un-_ necessarily, but due to the bad driving conditions on the roads, must "keep the speed limits low, Therefore, some drivers who don't have any regard for the safety of others soon find themselves paying xk & * About 13 years ago my wife and L moved to the west side of Cass Lake from Ferndale. We drive a great deal through the Orchard Lake Village roads, especially on Commerce Road and Old Orchard Trail. When I first became licensed to drive in 1929 a very fine Sunday school teacher impressed me with the fact that not only are traffic fines unnecessary, but disobedience to civil laws is unchristian. I determined to always drive within the speed limit. I have seen them give tickets to folks who were driving just a few miles over the posted speed limit. Of course, they should, otherwise why; bother to call it a “‘limit’’? * & Oo Here is a suggestion for the Orchard Lake officials which. will make-it possible for them to abolish all other taxes and get by 100 . per cent on traffic fines. Give their police the right to ticket the very slow drivers on Commerce road. These people are a real menace, often blocking as many as 25 cars, while loafing along the winding highway on which nobody can pass,. It is possible to make laws forcing drivers to maintain minimum speeds, as witness the Detroit expressways, where the police ticket anyone going under 40. The minimum speed on Commerce road shout for the privilege. be 30. Cass Lakesider kok ok Feels Awed By Power I am no mastermind of theology but I do have sufficient elemen- ‘tar¥ intelligence to observe and feel awed by the power of God's creations. Therefore, I must con- tradict the opinions expressed in Ernest Coleman's article, ‘‘Reli- gion Must’ Go If We're To Grow.” ee ae: The religious beliefs held by what he calls our ancient and ignorant ancestors led to — - founding of our nation. Their x *« * As to a free thinking country, perhaps he has heard of a Russia _.. that I have not. If we are of same reference, I hope I never acquire such freedom. I am proud of our editors, in- structors and all categories of our citizenry that comprise our nation as one whose delight is in the law of the Lord. Have faith in our growth. Re- member— “And he shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth his fruit in his season; his leaf also shal] not ~~wither; and whatsoever he doeth shall. prosper.’ ‘‘For the Lord knoweth the way of the righteous; ses the way of the ungodly shall anne ‘Coleman, do you remember Hitler? L, D. McLauchlin ‘Driver’s Protected Against Driver’ The new—tcouft ordered) fence along the, 18th hole at Pontiac Country Club is to. protect the cautious driver from: the erratic driver, d.C. R. No Longer ver Have Starting Point Every once in a while the free world is mentioned. What is so free gbout a bureaucracy other than a steady diet of baloney? How do you measure freedom seeing that you no longer have Hitler to give you a starting point? The people of Alaska: will find cents @ pack when I was there in 1343. 4852 Oakgrove ‘Those Honored Honor Him’ People might be interested in a few facts concerning the pianist, Van Cliburn, who was victorious in Russia's music competition. A member of Calvary Baptist Church Joseph Gynac _in New York City, he is a double tither (20%). Last year he sang in the Billy Graham choir in Madison Square Garden. He has a well- thumbed Bible and prays before his concerts. Who says God won’t honor those that honor Him? Darlene Grant Drayton Plains compen All letters for “Voice of the People — contain the edit all letters. THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Hath the poor and needy, hath speiled by violence, hath not restored the pledge, and hath lifted up his eyes to the idols hath committed abomination. — Ezekiel 18:12, x * To escape from evil we must be made as far as possible like God; and the resemblance consists in becoming just and holy and wise.—Plato. Case Records of a Psychologist: Don’t Mistake Infatuation for Love Girls beware that you don't mistake infatuation for true love! They feel much alike when you are in the throes of both, but one is selfish whereas the other is unselfish. And be sure you read about Amnon’s supposed true love. Then send for the sex booklet mentioned below. Pass it around among your friends and classmates for it gives you the true facts. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE Y-381: Thelma G., 17, is infatuated with a classmate. * * * Dr. Crane, we ‘ge; are REALLY in @ love,” she _ posi- tively informed me, “though my parents think we are just infatu- ated. “And Bob wants me to run off and elope with him. He says there is ho point in wait- ing. I felt we DR, CRANE shouldn't do that, so he said I didn’t love hint. And now he in- sists that I give myself to him just to prove my love. “Tt am weakening, for I really and truly love him and want him to know that I do. But I realize my mother would veto what he demands. * * *; “So who is right? Is it wrong to live together before you are mar- ried?” BEWARE TRIAL MARRIAGE Trial marriage is a_stupid thing. For it demands that the girl make ALL the concessions. And in true love, man and wom- an are to operate on a 50-50 mas Beware, too, of that fallacious” argument that the girl must al- ways be the one to “prove” her aged" love by submitting to mice Sex: . ual relations. It is just as logical that the boy also ‘“‘prove’’ his love by treating her with respect and honor. True love and sexual infatuation resemble each other in several ways, so Thelma may think she is “really and truly’’ in love, yet wake up a few months later to the fact she was omy —— infatu- ated. For example, in both true love ; . and sexual infatuation, you feel giddy and gay while with the. other person. You may also grow trembly and breathless. ‘You may get “butterflies” in your stomach and your knees may grow weak or wobbly. You may pine for each other until you actually become sick - abed. AMNON'S FALSE LOVE In the Bible, King David’s son Amnon likewise thought he loved the beautiful Tamar (II Samuel, Ch. 13). ° _ we oF He was so smitten with her that he finally took to his bed, ill. And he consulted a love adviser. But after he finally forced Ta- mar to submit to his desires, his supposed love turned out to be simply sexual infatuation. : And he then had her tossed out of his house, despite her tears and pleading. Sexual, in- fatuation thus can change to nausea and hatred within:a mat- ter of a few seconds. For the sake of jolting Thelma, I reminded her that a boy who truly loves a girl, is interested in HER fature happiness ahd — fare. x * * Illicit sexual affairs rob a girl of her spunk and independence; which are her chief attraction to men. They may infect her with BOTH gonorrhea and syphilis, for these two venereal diseases are different but can be con- tracted at the same time. They may force her to drop out of school before graduation be- cause of pregnancy. _ x * * And what happens in that event? On my desk were 5 lefters from girls ranging in ages from 16 to 23, all of whom had succumbed to that false argument that they must “prove” their love. Two of the boys fled into mili- tary service as soon as they found the girls were pregnant. Two more ran away to parts unknown, leaving the girls to face the music and bear their babies out of wedlock. The 5th boy callously told the girl he wasn’t interested in having '. kids, so she better look around for some other guy who'd marry her, Then he started dating a girl friend of his former victim, braz- enly _—. her! x -«* So send yn my booklet “Sex Problems ‘of Young People,” closing a stamped return envelope, plus’ 20 cents / (non-profit), It is widely-used in the schools. - Always write to Dr, Geo fh care of The Pontiac Press, Poation hi clos eines anaes or his psychological logeel "charts asé vem (Copyright, 1958). (ihbieiinan ntti aittaaat Oath nein, sa ee ee , IR ee LO BTEC TI P aaBar AT NR ART PALIT s jad cyl Aeneas ee + + ya . : a ® ¢ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, ‘AUGUST 6, 1958 2 chile d- From Inner Tube ° TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. (AP)j - — Nearly exhausted after drifting helplessly for six hours on an old innertube, two Children were‘ res- cued seven miles out in Lake Michigan at dusk last night. Their weak cries for help at- tracted the attention of a_fisher- man. ". & * The fisherman, vacationing De- treit’ Police Lt. ‘Thonhas ‘Turkaly, found ‘T-year-old Philip Morris clinging to the side of the inner- tube and holding his 5-year-old sister Jeanette in the center. el mines in Kentucky~ have poured out more than 2.3 billion tons since 1806, or almost 5 per cent of the-27.2 billion tons mined in the United States as a whole. hmises and hopeful trapezes. excuse to say, “I told you 50,” andito be sold, But the whim of Saint- =a woman no longer is threat enemies. ‘ [Young, Parisien | Upsets World of Fashion#= By PHYLLIS BATTELLE Everywhere, toes was shock—| the trapezoid line. And now respond, “So's your Saint. even as designer Patou did in the! pleasant for some women, and) they’re stuck with him.” |. Laurent!” comet days of 1929, cry “My God, NEW YORK — Along Seventh) most men. : can -stand it no more!” after] ; Of Course, most other Paris de- long as the young designe Be ret Avenue this week, there is dark) pu deadly ifideed for store > buy- signers have continued to show As as the young : / sion at too many bomely ladies’ silience. Only the grinding sound]... and fashion makers who fioW that pea evolutions of recommended skirts gt last | knees? i] DONT GIVE A GREAT MANY PEOPLE the avérage woman has a perfect] sumably the styles will continue new dresses — which he did | ade millions of friends and/ Any girl of 29 could have told) turn down the short @heasised fl Laurent is & tremendous paycho- ened with complete dowdiness in And in the United’ States, wherel} them — but the multi-million buck] trapezes they had advised her peg ae | last year’s: clothes. She can be |«pianned obsolescence” is as im- “You cart aivays trast fick she'd have to buy—or élse. “ “ iii. & sing mas : oe iy Sa a boy ‘of 22 - Ray 21 We Waveln re chemise and trapete bad! peasuns behind Seta Laurent s has all’ the economic character- 3 It! wast « $0 shocked, Yd have not been fully accepted, particu- . | = grace: , udden switch in fashion, Was it\istics of a Volkswagen. — So it was that the young suc- |to laugh — at the irony of it,”/Jarly in the U. S. Women werel® . : . shock? Was he wily endugh eessor to Christian Dior, Yves jsaid a. salesgirl in the French waiting. By this fall, had all the| ‘2 Saint-Laurent, decided he didn’t | room of a local swankery. Paris moguls gone along with the wet aggerd Bes. well? mt be ae in Bod the world’s chiet pro- like the looks of this summer's “They (the wholsale dress in- Eng Chae pudd pave ‘had to: ne girl, and switched.to a different wedi. TRUSSES $B.50 and up chrifty Drug Store a ruvire + FITTING" nooM ‘ dustry) have only themselves to “ blame. They proclaimed this “Ned the ‘hold-outs” have a hero With the blithe freedom (some| guy as the great genius. They |who. is not to be debunked, even|f would call it gall) of youth, he| copied every move, They taught |by the most self-possessed sales- turned.his back on the giddy child us to say ‘This is similar to the girl, - The next time one of same with. the near-nude kneecap, and) Yves Saint-Laurent ‘line — the |speels the “It’s the: look, . and elected for a five-inch hemline| most influential man in fashion,’ | you'll have to get used to it’) drop and a sophisticated woman. | te persuade women to accept routine, a vindictive womap will >. tare 10 A. M, » to 9P Only | ‘Just 228 to Sell at This Low Price! Many Other Summer Clearance Items Up to- ‘om ; ; 7 : SUMMER . 2 CLEARANCE Reg. $1.00 to $1. 29 Sleeveless Bl ls T, GRANT CO. | | (MIRACLE MILE) 3 Ba. 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Inspecting the wreck- 52, of Oxford to his death in a age is State _ judging teams that will represent "the county at the state show later this month will take pines Friday evening. v\Wants to’ Annex \Parts of Texas. » AUSTIN, Tex. @ — Texans, sti! grim after that Alaska busi- ness put ‘em No..2, aren't taking jee Jegislator who wants his state to annex West Texas, " ..%.. ¥. 2g! EN state representation, bettag whisky, more tourists and better fishing, etc. ; > ee Chest Veaders Named Trio to Ss pearhead Drive Community Chest cam , town: ‘ship | ‘officials and Karl W. Bradley, " piacative director of the Pontiac Area - United Fund, an- nounced today. Joseph Taylor, manager of Dane- er's Dept. Store, has been selected materials to aid the township campaign, Local volunteers, how- ever, direct the drive and estab- lish the goal, All three campaign leaders gre members of the Orion Community | ‘Ham-; Chest Board of Directors. melef also is the township’s repre- sentative on the Pontiac Area Unit-) ed Fund’s governing Board of Trus- campaign chairman. Serving as his | itees. immediate lieutenants will be N.| Peter Hammelef, the 1957 cam- paign chairman, and Mrs. ail Dacey, 463 Park Island. Rd. : x *« * Hammelef, as commercial divi- sion chairman, will direct the solic- * iting of downtown businessmen, at- torneys, doctors, teachers, gov- ernment offices and trades people. Mrs. Dacey will head the door- to-door residential soliciting in the township, The campaign goal has been " pegged. at $6,850, the same as last year. This.is ‘an absolute mini- mum figure,” Taylor said, - * * * «“Each of the 45 community serv- ice agencies. included in the -drive was closely budgeted by the Pon- tiac Area United 'Fund to insure that - Orion received ‘maximum _/_._. ‘service for | every dollar. donated |; locally. This year’s camapats marks the second year the Orion Com- _naunitt Chest has-been. | op set epi cgarnenf supplies professional «taff eet, patteney and preceetionsl affiliated | with the Pontiac Area United | | ee AP Wirephete Police Trooper Janies Welch. Sane Clarkston Pair : |Honeymooning jin Michigan CLARKSTON—Honeymooning in northern Michigan. are newlyweds Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Gardiner, who were married Saturday ‘eve- ning at the First Methodist Church in Clarkston. ‘se. * * s) _ The former Sally Jane Bauer, the bride is the daughfer of Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Bauer of 6111 Middle Lake Rd. Parents of. the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. James Gardiner of 4703 Monterey St. ; The bride chose Anne Lawrie of {Clarkston as her maid of honor. ‘Attendants were the bride's sis- , |ter. ‘Shirley, Bonnie. Abbott, Dixie Ox. ‘Parks and Hazel Miller, all of Oat larkston. . * "2 in Toledo where the bridegrom "jis ‘stationed with the U. S. Coast Guard. Kanskotion aad MOUNT CLEMENS 7 — A pro- posal to merge Clinton Township was defeated by a 557-vote mar- gin © yesterday. went against the proposal, 2,347 ored it’ 1,851 to 485. SALLY GRAY The engagement of Sally Gray to Gary Stallard has been an- nounced by her parents, Mr. and - Mrs. Everett Gray of 8325 Ea- ton Rd., Davisburg. The prospec- tive bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Lyman P. Emery of 5175 Whipple -Lake Rd., Clarkston, and Mr. Wayne Stallard of Seal Beach, Calif. An Aug. 30 wedding : ds being planned, . | pansion of the city’s jas taxpayers rejected a $306,000 ‘}to 938 margin. The couple will make their home| with the city of Mount Clemens Clinton Township! to 424, while-Mount Clemens fav-! | witnesses Hatd: Pressed * Voters in the village of the two areas into a city. By JOEL Suburban News Editor Farmington Loses Bid for Annexation i RIPPA Le . Rochester and a’ 3%-square ‘|mile section of Avon Township: rejected by ari almost 3-1 margin a proposal that would have incorporated - Thus was settled—at least temporarily—a heated issue, fought in the ‘township, in the county and even taken to the'Supreme. Court before it was put to the electorate in yesterday’s primary election. . ‘ . PTS i The vote was 1,346 to 531.) Proponents of the Roch-| ester proposal weren’t alone in defeat, howevef. Oak Park saw its plans for ex- Department of Public Safety and City Hall facilities washed down the drain bofid issue by a walloping 1,646 The city of Farmington, hard- its bid to annex eight square miles in the southwestern por- tion of the township. Residents | In the township area declined to be taken in by the city, 391 to 74. City electors favor annexa- . tion, 425 to 205. =, _ Annexation requires majority ap- proval in both the city and the arpa to be taken in. - Another ‘“‘no” was voiced in Mil- ford Township where voters reject- ed a 2-mill tax increase for one year to finance construction of a township hall: and adjoining fire station. The margin of defeat was just 15 votes. Reversing the tide somewhat was approval of a village incorp- oration proposal in Farmington Township and a tax levy ‘hike in Highland Township. Residents in a 2'4-square mile area just northwest of the city of Farmington voted 107 to 13 to create the village of Quaker Town. - Highland Township voters okayed a one-mill tax increase for 10 years for the purchase and maintenance of fire equipment-and to pay a full-time crew. of seven * * * * Indieative of the interest in the Rochester issue is that of the 2684 ballots cast in Avon Township's six precincts, 2252 were inthe three precincts. where residents were ‘voting on incorporation. Elected to draw up the charter, had the city been approved, were John L. Dahimann, 789 votes; Wil- liam C. Chapman, 784; Wayne Y. Holman, 783; Clarence M.. Burr, TA; Stowell A. Collins, 742; Dr. Glenn R, Brooks and James C. Hill, 725 each; Edward A. Potere, 718; and Roy Rewold, 670. * & Other candidates were Max K. Mallon, 644; Richard L. Justice, 581, and Langley E. Smart, 553. Incorporation was, opposed by officials of the township and many residents and businessmen in both the village and the town- ship who feared the city would greatly increase taxes and scare out industry. : Blocked by legal action for nearly two years, the issue got the go-ahead last March when the State Supreme” Court affirmed Circuit Court dismissal: of a writ of mandamus preventing the Oak- land County Board of Supervisors from setting the election date. Statute requires a two-year lapse before. another incorporation pe- tition can be filed. He Insults Witnesses; Judge Doubles Term ALEXANDRIA, La, fuPI) — Orville Chellette,convicted of disturbing the peace at a cafe, had his sentence doubled from 30 | to 60 days when he turned to the who had testified against him and shouted: “That's ail right; the rest of you. liars can go home now." _#* Shae Blanchard Repeats Vows ROCHESTER — In a candle- light ceremony Saturday evening at St. Paul's: Methodist Church in Rochester, marriage vows were exchanged by Sharon Lee Blan- chard and Robert F, Potere, Per- forming the rite was the ‘Rev. J. Douglas Parker, pastor, The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde F. Blanchard of 1950 Washington Rd. Her husband’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Potere of 325 Charles Rd. For her wedding, the bride maar a gown of silk taffeta with a chapel train, Re-embroidered Alencon ace sprinkled with seed péaris accented the neck- tine. - Her fingertip veil fell | from a headpiece of stephanotis and tiny gems, and she carried a cascade bouquet of stephanotis, ivy_and sweetheart. roses, Her sister-in law, Bianchard of Rochester was the matron of bonor, Attendants were Miss Barbara Howlett of Roches- Mrs, Anna a” MRS. ROBERY ¥, POTERE . Sanders, Bill Lindeman and Ed _ bride’s parents’ home, - _ester—— | was graduated in June from the ter, Miss Fra nees Warner of Wayne, Miss Rose Marie Albright of Allen Park, and Miss Nancy| Prov! Plastéw of Detroit. * eo Clifford W, Johnson of Pleasant Ridge was the best man while the ushers were Del Blanchard, Allan Grabman, all of Rochester. The ceremony was followed by a reception on the lawn of the Upon return from their two-week honeymoon in northern Michigan the newlyweds will make their home at 209 W, Fourth St., Roch- : * * r- ~ | The bride ‘attended the -Univer- sity of Michigan for two years and Henty Ford Community College as-a nurse. Her husband, who also attended* U. of M., is a prelaw pressed for expansion area, lost.) ipresident of the giant Eli Lilly | + ¥ Race Minorities Get More Jobs Big Department Stores | Take Lead in Wiping Out Discrimination LANSING w®—Job coberteniies groups are expanding steadily in Michigan’s retail -trade industry, the State Fair Employment Prac- tices Commission reported today. “Since the end of World War II, when doors’ of most retail business houses were closed to. minority group workers seeking jobs, . the field the commission said. Large, inde- pendent department stores have taken the lead in wiping out job discrimination, it said. * * * The commission cited these Fea- sons: 1. The idea of fair employment practices is no longer a contro- incorporated into state law. 2. A continual shortage of qual- ified clerical, sales and super- visory personnel influenced busi- nessmen to review their employ- ment practices in order to re- cruit the best available em-_ ployes, 3. Businessmen recognized the swift growth of. minority groups, proportionately, in Michigan's ma- jor cities, together with their ex- panding purchasing power. * x ** ly 10 per cent of its claims load involved retail firms. Three. of try, contpared with 43 per cent for all other claims, it said. . Balloon Flight to Take Ofticer to Edge of Space MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPI)— An Air Force captain today pre- ;pared for—a-solo balloon flight to; the fringe of space, expecting to soar to 100,000 feet. in a hermet- ically sealed capsule. Capt. Grover J. Shock is sched- uled to be launched from an open mine pit near Crosby, Minn., Mon- day for operation ‘‘Man High IT.’ The first of such projects was last summer when Lt. Col. .David G. Simons, now heading the opera- tion, reached a record height of 102,000 feet in a balloon. Last week another plastic bal- loon reached. 82,000 feet with two men aboard after a launching from the Crosby site. Will Divorcee Face Charges Thursday? INDIANAPOIS ® — Authorities at General Hospital today refused to confirm rumors that Mrs. Con- nie Nicholas will be well enough to appear im court tomorrow to face frem hospital staff members and the 42-year-old divorcee’s lawyer that she will be discharged from the hospital's prison ward in time! for the hearing on the death of! Forrest Teel, 54, executive vice! & Co. drug firm. But hospital officials still listed | Mrs. Nicholas as ‘serious but -im- roved” in her recovery from a 60-hour coma brought on by taking) 75 sleeping capsules shortly after Teel was shot to death in his parked Cadillac last Thursday. Pony Express Higher SALT-LAKE CITY (P—‘'Don't feel too bad about the new four- | cent postal -rate,”. advises Salt Lake ‘Tribune columnist Dan Valentine: ‘‘The Pony Express | used to” charge $5 for ‘half an ounce.’ |Oks $50,000 pee WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- SHIP — The State Municipal Fin- ance £ West District approval to- borrow. $50,- 000 on advance of state aid pay- mission has given the oomfield Township School student at Wayne State University. ments. a, , for members of: racial minority), has opened up. considerably,| versial subject, but a public policy The commission noted that near-| every four claims are adjusted satisfactorily in the retail indus-| a preliminary charge of murder-| ing her drug executive sweet- eart, Newsmen got the impression| an _ RIDING THE DISC — Ann Lucas, 18, (left) and Robert Storey, 20, show water skiing skills - Water Carnival Bellevue Island. IRENE TAYLOR Mr. and* Mrs. John Taylor of a 2874 Woodelm St., Rochester, | have announced the engagement ' of their daughter, Irene, to James Rowan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rowan of 2879 Alex- ander St., Rochester. A Septem- ber. wedding is being planned. Re-Elected as President of Reminiscence Club DRYDEN — Bill Shorman has Reminiscence ‘Club, made up of former pupils and teachers of the Dryden School, _ The group, which held‘ its annual "}reunion reeently at the Gen. Squire Club, named Mrs, Evelyn Caroloss as its secretary-treasurer. The world’s largest supply of colored grahite is in the St. Cloud, Minn., quarries. they will display at the Lake Orion Boat Club .|dren must be accompanied by a Ten New: Teachers At Lake Orion 4 Pontiac Press Phote Sunday. om Lake Orion. Both take’ to the water naturally, being residents ot - Water Carnival Sunday LAKE ORION —. A parade of boats ‘at 1t a.m. will open the Lake Orion Boat Club Water Carnival ‘Sunday on Lake Orion. ‘The watef show pill get~ under way. at 1 p.m, with skiing, canoe racing, canoe tilting, log rolling and swimming, contests for every- one up to 14% of age. Chil- parent who must sign their appli- at Imlay City High been re-elected: president of the) IMLAY CITY — The Imlay City High School faculty will have 10 new teachers when the fall semes- ter begins next month, Supt. Alvin ‘Norlin afinounced. , * * * Additional course offerings and the adoption of'a six-hour schedule for the school day will require two more teachers than were on the! staff last year, he said, “ke *« * | New courses-~will include me-) chanical drawing, art, French, gen- | eral science and sheet metal work. | It t's ‘Centennial Farm’ HADLEY TOWNSHIP — A tract! of land in Hadley Township has been designated a ‘centennial farm” by the Michigan Historical Commission. Owned and operated | by George H. Brigham, 5835 Brig- ham Rd., it has been in the family since 1836, The farm originally was purchased from the federal government by Aaron Brigham, grandfather of the present owner. ‘cations for entrance in the events. Merchandise certificates will be awarded. winner's. The first time'in several years such an event has been planned, the carnival replaces the annual beat races, James Norton is the general chairman, Mike Caldwell has charge of boating events; Elmer Hartwig, swimming; Stanley Usi- lac, log rolling, and Roger Buysee, -| Skiing. * x * The carnival will be followed at 5 p.m, by an invitational inboard boat race. Three trophies will be presented. No hydroplanes can” enter: Historically famous bourbon- today America’s favorite! oO —_— CROW LIGHT + MILO 86 PROOF $471 4/5 Qt. Code No. 920 THE OLD CROW DISTILLERY CO., FRANKFORT, RENTUCKY. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY | | | | Gold Rush Days Special Reg. $339.95 “It Swivels” = ae é 00D HOUSEK WIN A FREE LOT IN OUR 49th STATE! Take Advantage of Our ‘Gold Rush Days’ Specials MAYTAG Automatic Washer 178” Free Installation — Free Delivery wiTH TRADE | Introductory Reg. 7 388, 95 of Pontiac — | 51 West Huron ‘OPEN MON. and FRI, . THL 9:00 St. Motorola 1969 - 21” Console with 4-Speakers 1-¥Yeor Warranty on All Parts free Service Contract—Free Delivery 239" : Delivery! Installation! 1-Year Service With Your Present TV reas . NEEDS MONEY ‘came right out of Johnny’s skull) and went back to Washington.” | ments of a workable system, and, | , ¥ it THB PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1958 His Satellite Plan Shocks Pentagon Brass Boy Scientist Gets Security Check \ By HARRY MILLICAN NEW YORK (UPI) — The trou- ble with being a 12-year-old scien- tist — even if you do design a manned satellite so similar to top secret Pentagon plans that you have to undergo a security check — is that it just doesn't pay enough. That’s the complaint of Jonathan “Johnny” Orovitz, boy space expert. Squirming restlessly on a divan in the comfortably-furnished liv- ing room of his family’s three- bedroom house in Kew Garden Hills, the pudgy, brown-haired lad admitted readily in an interview that he had enjoyed all the public acclaim accorded him. . But he said so far none of it had brought him any closer to attend the California’ Institute of Technology, where he hopes to! become a real ‘‘space engineer.” “It isn’t that we’re any more mercenary than’ anybody else,” his short, plump, black-haired mother, Mrs. Beatrice Orovitz, 43, said. “It's just that it takes every cent we earn in our little women’s wear shop to get along. We'll find the money for Johnny's college somehow when the time comes, but we were disappointed - when all the fanfare about him _pro- duced not even a. single scholar- ship offer.” HAS ‘SPACE BUG’ Jonathan, who acquired the | “‘space bug’ last November when Russia sent its dog-carrying Sput- nik II aloft, got an idea early in June and promptly drew a three- foot-long, cardboard-mounted plan for a’ satellite rocket capable of taking a man into space for two! | weeks and then returning him safely to earth. Then he typed out a letter and sent the whole works to Roy W. Johnson, director of the Ad- vanced Research Projects Agency, the Pentagon’s new space coordinating organization. A few days later he got the first reaction — in an entirely un- expected form. A government gen- tleman from Washington came to call on him and spent several hours asking searching questions. x * * storekeeper, end another son, David, 9, who can't decide _be- tween big league baseball or sing- ing like Elvis Presley — gathered around a brand new encyclopedia. They discovered that the Na- tiona] Science Foundation, estab- lished in 1950, not only gives cash grants to scientific undertakings, but also passes out scientific scholarships. All of them jumped to the conclusion that a scholar- ship was what Johnny would get. Disillusionment came fast when they contacted the founda- tion. The organization, it seems has money for scholarships for post-graduate work, beginning a! the pre-doctorate level, but noth about settling Johnny on a tele-;on, designing of a larger and more vision quiz show, butMrs. Orovitz| advanced satellite — and trying to put her foot down. ; wheedle a new ‘bicycle from his * *® * ' mother. : “t simply won't stand for it,’’; she said. ‘To begin with I have- hg wey of ‘kaowing just how |Double-Deck X-Way thorough Johnny's knowledge is,’9n Couzens Mall OK'd and I do know he’s a tempermen- 2 tal. child. Suppose he missed the DETROIT w — Construction of! very first question, which he very,a double-deck expressway in the! well might. Can-you imagine what center mal! of James Couzens High-. this would go to him after all way on Detroit's Northwest side this fame?"'/ - jhas been approvd by the City! “+ * |Streets and Traffic Commission. | In the pheantime, Jonathan is *~ * & much tog busy to worry about’ Th $33,000,000 project would ex- where his college tuition and ex- tend 3% miles to link the northern penses will come from. There are end of the Lodge Expressway with! hig studies when schoo! opens |Northwestern Highway at Eight ing for a boy still in junior high school. stud flight that he can lay his hands|a public hearing for Aug. 15. The parents thought fleetingly again,’ summer day camp now,-|Mile- Road, The City Council still] everything about space must approve the plan and has sei! “There must be a thousand dif-! ferent ways to ask ‘who helped | you with this’ and he used every) one of them,"’ Mrs. Orovitz re-; called. ‘“‘He finally became con- | vinced that the ‘whole business | Two weeks later, Jonathan got | a letter from Johnson praising | his design and containing a para- graph that solved, so far as Mrs. @Orovitz is concerned, the mys- tery surounding the visitor from Washington. “Your design has all the ele-| in fact, is not very different from one of a’ number of systems that have been. under consideration,” Johnson wrote. ° * x * “I didn’t have a college educa- tion and I don’t know whet John- ny is talking about half the time,”’ said Mrs, Orovitz, “but I caught on_to thisall right. They thought — somebody in the Pentagon had leaked some information which eventually got to Johnny. Can you imagine that?” Johnson also wrote that he had turned Jonathan's design over to the Nationa] Science Founda- ‘tion, and that’s where the build. up to a big let-down began. The entire Orovitz family ‘in- cluding Jonathan's father, Louis, 51, a commercial artist turned) = és, ' HALF ACRE CASTLE OUT OUR WAY oo | | illf STEP ON | JUMP MAS | ii | IT AN’ WE'LL | . SOMP OUT! | SAVE THE /' HE DON'T | HATS AND <4. : SEE THAT ¢f, | | LUNCH-- | : BOB WiRE } | i dH 1 SEE A All! FENCE! i ! BARN/ { | Wy i 4 Ty Hl i i / BOARDING HOUSE . y Yj VEL OO “ - ry. yy Y WML Lae ete 2 EGAD, SERGEANT/= & { WHAT'S THIS Z (T'S NOTA THAT'S MY OWLS CLUB & COIN LOOKS LIKEA & MEDAL IT IDENTIFIES - 2 ickcinee & sone oe BS ME AND IT PROVES THAT & AT IT THIS MISCREANT STOLE MY BRR w AT THE TOP IT SA WALLET, AS I SUSPECTED! SR "OWLS CLUB” a» AT “we TL CLAIM THAT rtenenttn BOTTOM IT SAYS “FOR VALOR" MONEY ~~ OR WHAT uw iN THE MIDDLE THERE'S IS LEFT OF IT A PICTURE OF A KEG OF aw AS MINES | BEER/a~ NOW WHAT | A TH te * 5 WILL PREVAIL =p-6 Mal j y hy W ZO: ff das , \ 2 /Al) i % ‘ i da | i) i | reall NS nes In " ‘ why ' UN ; r aseeen sl mi PC ) 4 ys RK) nk \ ery os OS TRWILLIAMS TM. Reg. US. Pat OFF“, O-6 ® 1948 by NEA Serviced, Ine, a il Us cus " eli dl | MURA Uy Nunta ‘ BORN THIRTY YEARS TOO SOON John Morris BLOW ANOTHER SMOKE FOR ME, ME WEEMS HUH, PLEASE! yee A [SHE SURE HAS PLENTY T WON'T HAVE MY SON IN SUCH AN ENVIRONMENT.” COME, JEFFREY TAM CAREFUL HOW 1 SHAPE MY SON'S ae LiFe 4 1}SEND | ‘i By Franklin Folger ee am) i be t ve ofiee . You'll Find | PROFITABLE | OPPORTUNITIES | Every Day in the Pontiac Press Want Ad Section Take advantage of this easy way to-solve all your buying and _ ‘selling problems, To Place Your WANT AD , DIAL PE 2-8181 sa ae aoe | “Ob, Lhad looked forward to your bringing little Bobby.” * _ BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES \AMEDIGTELR GETER 1 WeNG UP, BOO ONL. QNETW LEGVE 2OOR |} ROUSE, OUTMOUIT SARS | | PRY TWING WO ERHONE, WARCONT |] END CHEET CVE GIT On THE BEACH —; os TVAS VS. SVEN . AER TS. LDRE@MED VD BE! gums si 2 Tage r-< © 1048 by NEA Service, tne, TM, Reg. UB. Par OF. ~ By Carl Grubert Coe ee IS ONLY 6600 YARDS... eee Srryaes a EXACTLY 354 MILES/ A MILLION MILES/ “fesse coed AN GO ON/ THE-COURSE WW YEAH, AS. THE CRow FLIES. [BuT How RIGHT: DOWN THE MIDDLE OF THE FAIRWAY / tthe em By McEvoy and Strieber —_ DIXIE DUGAN I'LL HAV! TO Check ALLEY. OPP AINT THAT \ YEH, SO BLOW, BLS... WHAT ae \) Rye es Sy Oe cog \ SSS ERE ‘Wy MR. OUGAN’S 9 SiMe Lae ei Ri. OH ~ OF COURSE ! COME WITH ME. iP NEW, o.¥ =f (% © 1900-by MEA erwion, tents TAR Rage WA Pat, GOT CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner ES THIS IS DR. J0SS SPEAKING! |, MBET ME ON THE BEACH Sy AT ONCE—ALONE! ALREADY! i BUT THIS HAS GONE i SHOT. AND WAS RESPON ea) NSB! HE MAY I'M WATCHING A BLOw- |, _ BY=BLOW ACCOUNT ON Tv" DOING, ‘NANCY 2 THIS WEAT “REPORT iS A HER .. o 4% + + atarere *, A © 1960 by NEA Service, the. T.M. Rog. U.S. Pat. OFF. GRANDMA | wee ee? E | | THEY HAVE A DANDY SHUCKS, KIDS, YOU-KNOW|- ." |AN'GOT'TH | | WESTERN SHOW...LOTS] -| | I NEVER > THA ) a oor. » INDIANS} | | THEA 10 Eset oe Coo eC OCC ESTEE OEE eee ee ee one! ec tal ad ay ibe * ‘ ? ‘ AE SR AE RR IE RE BR RE MRE ARE A AR I RS ie AE NO i SM: A lh li: Sag Ngee Ae lke A SE: ie eagle: ag Ae ae le: ae ae aga aaa a . r 1 . i hun Ras GIT sas cana oar umamndieecine-asttdits -raonT Rane ea A a c eer Pitas & A ae eam a I i i i 2 A _THE PONTTAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. avaust 6, 1958 _ Ve. 233 S. Telegraph Rd., Facing Ruth St. Pontioc m: PEELE EEE EE Eee EEE AIR-CONDITIONED OFFICE —FOR RENT— — In New Bujlding— Approximately ~ _ 600 sq. ft. $150 “7 * per month, Avoil- =... able now. i | Savings & Loan Assn- . Huron St. , FE 4-056! eet th ‘ss wie i} 3 oe * ve | | os ; i t J . | ~ ‘ \ q —_ $60,000 a year in subsidies. ‘service since May 15 when Balcer jcircles and Gov. losses. | Nhu Returns to Saigon . -Dinh--Diem,-returned—ta Saigon ; today after a one-day trip to | two former French territories. | the results. M@ ized the city to enter into a con- \éwicz, of Hamtramck, won 27,861. tract with Balcer Bros. Motor! ‘to 14,822 over Russell S. Brown Coach Co. to provide service at|Jr., who quit as a Wayne County $3,850 a week. If fares fell below |parole officer to make the race. ‘that figure, the city would have’ The race, in a. district divided been empowered to spend up to!almost equally between Poles and | Negroes, was regarded as a sensi Bay City has been without bas tive affair in high pena Williams was quit because of financ ial quick to declare neutrality. Brown is a Negro. The margin of the Marchowicz eetumi surprised some. observers. : offman rah away from his two; SAIGON «® — Mgo Dinh Nhu, jopponents, cue. his nearest brother and chief advisér of rival, Prosecutor Luther I. Daines South Viet Nam President Ngo of Van Buren County, about _— te—one,. Fred M. “Alger ‘Jr, niger ing President Eisenhower's poli- ,cies, ousted conservative Richard urand yesterday in a battle of ‘Republicah big leaguers over a lowly precinct delegate post. Bros. Cambodia to try 4o settle the long: border dispute between the Nhu refused to tell newsment _iPlymouth_ dating their stocks, They look for an orderly cleanup of the 1958 models, without greatly increasing the discounts they have offered through most of the current model | year. The industry already has held its first press preview. of 1959 a - Station Wagon Tops in,’58 Plymouth Line DETROIT (##\—For the ‘first time| 22" a station wagon model was the most popular body style in the _line, 1958. production figures show. eet The‘ custom 4-doer- suburbans. ac- counted for 13.8 per’ cent of the total 1958 production. In 1957 the: cent of production. station wagon - model was 7.4 per? Sales, 39° Oakland Ave., has re- turned from one week of the Na- tional Audio ‘Visual Association held in Chicago, . ) mire he ee inet of te ann et spon- sored by poaee Me, Institute of Sci- ence, Los Angeles ‘Robert A, Fisher, a former Bir- mingham resident, has been ap- pointed resident trust office for the Michigan National Bank in the ‘Lansing area, Fisher is a graduate of Harvard College and the Uni- versity of Michigan Law School and has attended tax seminars and trust and estate planning sessions at The Graduate School of Banking at Rutgers University and The Practising Law Institute in New York City. Predicts GOP Score MANCHESTER, N.H, (UPID— Republican National Committee Chairman Meade Aleorn predict- ed last night the GOP would regain control of the House but faced a “tough” battle in the Senate. : To Visit Military Chiefs LONDON (#—The U. S. Army chief of staff, Gen. Maxwell Tay- lor, flew to London today from Paris for a two-day visit to see Britain’s service chiefs, ~ es Death Notice MARION, et eit} 4, 1958, DONALD Marion; dear father of Steven Micheel Wendy Lou and Scot Leland Marion: dear brother of Robert D. Marion, Lola uf. Tsn and Mildred Funeral service Thursday, “August T at 1:30 p at Christian Temple Church, 505 Auburn Avenue with Rev. John _ L. Sheffield officiating. Mr. Marion will lie in state at the Parmer-Snover Puneral Home un- = Thursday am. when he will ne taken to the church. MYRE, AUGUST 5, 1988, Francis E., see Northfield, age 48: be- loved husband of Ferne Myre; beloved son of Mrs. Charles Myre: dear father of Mrs. Nlagene Ward, Monald, David, and Richard Myre; dear brother of Mrs. Al- —_— Weve, — —— La- ment at Mt. Recitation of the Rosary will. be at 8 pm. Thursday evening at Purfsiey Pescral Home. Mr. Myre will He in state at Pursiey Funeral Home. Quarry. AUGUST 5. 1958, 250 Edison, age 61; Joseph beloved ‘ ments will be a at a later date by Brace-Smith Pune- ral_ Home. SPENCER, AUGUST 5, 1958, David Mitchale, 2710 Leach Rd., Avon Twp.; beloved hay twin son of Kaye and mencer; dear brother of Jeltrey Allan, Kathleen Pay, and twin Daun Michal Spen- Graveside service will be held ery t. Park Cemetery Thursday afterncon et arrange! Chapel of Hegre Puneral Home, Auburn F Heights. ft dear father of Lois Kay Thomas: dear brother of R. W. Thomas. Funeral service will ld Priday, art Cee oo Puneral Home with Rev ale shey officiating ge “White Chapel Cemetery. Thomas is at Donelson-Johns Puneral ‘Home, THORNDYCRAFT. AUGUST 5. 5, 1058, Edgar, 3119 York St.. Avon Twp.. ace 54: dear husband of Dorothy Thorndycraft: dear son of Mrs. Albert Thorndycraft; dear father of Ernest Thorndyeraft and Mrs. Barbara Manninger: dear brother ef William Thorndycraft, John Thorndveraft, Mrs. Pred Moore, Mrs. Arnold Henderson. Puneral service will be held Friday, August Chapel of ‘sparks- 4 Regular Communication of Roosevelt Lodge No. 510, Fé ane) 22 State eo p Nar hewn Aug. 7 7:30 ,p.m. Degree fo. lowing meetfng. Marion B. Holmes, WM News in Brief Pontia Police wondered yester- day whether to. look for a dog or a human after it was reported that someone had broken into the Mich-|. igan~Animal- Reseue_League, 790}. Featherston St., and stolen three bags of dog food value at about$5. James Anthony, of 466 Highland ae [Stocks M a Housewivis Believe It’s Already Here . os hans U. 5. Consumers Fochg Inflation Threat Li cred i ety Eon] arly als a et oe ‘ : y growers iy (Editor's Note—Is the stock mar- Sh het right shout more inflation "be: | e's tn1kip ten pon-teeup: fation ise renin borrows more and more ‘Waterford hits pavetiy tigange. ew ot NEW YORK i= The stock Ry aut 2 cP {How much “mores about what “the thfeat, He’s’ talking about the in- from the commercial. banks, But Raid Home of Suspect) netroit Bureau of M ety *he|market was mM in early trad- following article, first in a series of famil s out—|¢reases in the price of metals and jhe also notes that while there's a” arkets, @S Ol/i.> today after lower ning,| ‘three, ‘Sam Dawson. AP busihess y pay Held With 2 Oth Wociaadany. ng today ja opening.) “Set oe ona tne“ bopeet the higher prices|*ther basic materials, the higher likely to be too much money i ers Key stocks ally had frac-| on the consumer, gher prices’ age scales, the greater: trans-|around, there aren't too few goods . Produce Bones ORS D5 Em Serta ees) By SAM DAWSON for mieat, the in| portation costs — all pushing him|for it to chase — the capacity to - The arrest of three men has led higher and some oilg, also made AP beck hewn creased cost of! toward. raising his prices. to you.|™ake more goods is already in area police and sheriff's deputies)... tency FRUITS eas headway. 4 ae | Avalys t her husband's get- oe 4. "go eso E for demand to call scovery of more than $4,000 TTI NEW - , i ‘ “4 athe — “4 ; eet erate) 18 Qi... t30 Trading , turned quiet shortly en ond. neh ‘ell vr Be wee Pi ae ped Peng honk areal ee Inflation is no economic: theory Waterford Township Police Chief Raspberries, "ad 1erkiaed eis bis... esg/atter the/ opening rush in which | inflation is already here. pies ing the chil-ithing yet but a tossu for the consumer, It hits him Millard Pender, State Police Detec- a the Sind tape momentarily fell! She isn’t talking about what she oon healthy ¢ pa Ss cencnten tte pra from the|Where he lives. For him it sim- tive Alfred Strilecky, and Oakland) Brens. wee, Wyo cor EBB behind in reporting transactions. | doesn’t buy — the higher priced; DAWSON latest rent boost {increase in the money supply ply means that the cost of living County Sheriff's Detective Harry Broceolt (behs. J GOR. veeeeee esses aes The market appeared to be |ton of steel or pound of copper.| Ask the businessman and he'll/which seems sure as the govern-| 895 UP- i‘. * Maur found the loot in: the home) carrots. pallery bu...) ‘*'"* as, taking a breather after two hec- of one of the men, Donald Worth- Celery. ‘doz stalks... “" E80) the ‘sessions. There was little in a more. inflation 19 realy com um, 24, of 740 Young St. Cucumbers, ail sae ba, o0000.0°...5 gs] the way of major business news = -~ al saselabreror ever \ nasa de v*+ 83| to affect investor sentiment. om epee yh pag pew aighare lao ean 1 fee Somenc Es big enough, your income won't en from. the Ace Auctiép Sales [onicns. ‘green (bchs.) doz. :.,.,,./.-..90|/ Getty Oil, yesterday’s most ac- buy what you need, let alone what pe 2616 Dixie Highway, Water (Propers. pot. Bus oe eames 2-Sitive stock, rese a major fraction you'd like to have if you could. ae soe about two weeks | Peas, bu. viii. 330lin heavy trading. Standard Oil f ~} to get Potatoes, new (bag) 50 Ibs, 125 If you're ucky enough. io ago. Radishes. red. “oehs.) dor, 38 (New Jersey) and Royal Dutch your income boosted along with Soest of the stolen property has|Redwbes vate, thehs.), dec. -.---- Ag /also worked higher. However, Gulf the cost of living, you're likely to been traced back to burglaries as Fomatses. notase Bip. count JS 238 and Union Oil of California gave) end up in the same old rut any- much as a year ago, said Maur. | Turnins, topped, bu. ..:...-....--5- | 2.25, Up fractions. + way — just keeping even with s arrested were Easton GREENS * * : what in time can become a los- Ray, 24, of 691 Brown Rd., Pontiac Cabbage. bu. ........----e.-++++ .. 1.00} Boeing, Douglas -and General ing game. and Billie White, 25, ofigein te IIc: {00 Dynamics were up a shade in‘the For the consumer a new threat 118, Church St., Ortonville, said = }25| aireraft group. of inflation comes on top of what detectives. ve ae ARMOR, DAL .-ccsccasogesaressessss 225, Small gainers included U.S. looks bad enough right now. By Worthum and Ray were ar- - SALAD GREENS Steel, Chrysler, Goodrich, U.S. official figures what $1 would buy taigned on breaking and entering eae here Fe sev receeennens 27 under: Westinghouse, Southern 10 years ago and $1.20 would buy in the nighttime charges yesterday | Lettuce. head, erate) 3 dor. ".052.- 3 $0) Railway and Eastern Air Lines. last year, it takes $1.24 to buy before Waterford Township Justice| Romaine b . cscs * now, If you talk about what a Patrick K. Daly. : ee ; Goodyear lost about a point. Also buck Leia Se ee an _Ray waived examination and Incumbent Ticket own were -Bethlehem, General to talk paw about whe ¥ was bound over to circuit court Motors, American ,Telephone & buy. for arraignment on August 11. ni Telegraph, Kennecott, Kaiser + & «* | = was held on a $5,000 bond. of GOP Intact ene, General Electric and) Food prices average 8 per cent orthuim demanded examination | iggett yers. higher than last year, The Agri- and was held on $10,000 bond. a — culture Department says 60 per The date of his examination has (Continued From Page One) cent of the increase is due to been set for August 20. er was Wallace E. Rice, 14,529 | New York Stocks . farmers’ getting higher _ prices See ; ,.| votes, and surveyor, Robert J. (Late Morning Quotations) and 40 per cent to marketing White is Sean to be sn Lowney, 14,267. Pigures after decimal point are eighth» concerns’ getting more. Meat ‘prehended by Waterford Township} Winner in the Democratic nomi- Air nedue 104 Kelsey Hay ...36.3 prices seem high in the store. — . 64. 30s S88 Well, live hogs are bringing 11} el r of Allied Ch .... 85 Kimb Clk ..,.. t Police and sheriff's - gr —— Sag “puna? y fps pio fe Ie ey | per cent more now than last sum- they were spotted sitting Kronnberg, Allis Chal 2.. 26.6 Kroger ........ 78.4 mer; beef on the hoof 22 per cent behind the Ace Auction Sales firmjold manager of, the Royal Ouj-|4lm 144 .... 22 LOF Gls -..-86 at 2:30 a.m. Saturday. Berkley Secretary of State's office. Am Aurlin 2° 918 Ligg & My ....723 more, Sat ont ed « ers - re os ; found. burglary tools in tk * am pee, G2 fomen ate oo Mfown as touch by weather ard on and booked them “of, 71 N. Altadena|A™ M&Pdy ".. 38.1 Lone 8 Cem ...38 marketing problems as by pure at the Oakland County Jail for in-|,ve received 9,916 votes to 7,086 Am N Gas... 59.6 Lou & Nash ./.73.6 monetary inflation. It's in other for his opponent, Emil F. Jaworski, Am tel's Tei 1a2.2 Martin Co"... 33-7 a fields that the consumer may be i, Bee was discovered in} 41, of 691 Stanley St., a worker in| Anaconda ene oe — ~ Iiart noxt. s attic after authorities 1. ‘Aircraft Division of Chrysler| Armour & co 183 pet ee : Pontiac Press Photo - & «£ had obtained a warrant to search| "8° Atchison ...., 23. Mergen Lino ..38 PREPARE TO CANOE — These three ex- tion Wis. ‘Left to Tight are Fulton Leach, 15, of * didn't bring th me. baa FS nat & Ohio. ‘ 31.4 Metr Ch & & - oi4| Plorer scouts were among the 14 members of 2210 Lake Angelus Rd.; Douglas Card, 15, of 794 eae w ee that sary — ’ ego —— _fperks pg Posting Ate * 63 — Pas 20.33 Post 2%, Wever School, who left this morning Alpeana St.; James Card, one of the three ad- |expected, so’ any new inflation Ingrid Can't Be Sure Yet hopes ei ors bane , wi te WE Bond Sirs ...:174 Monsen, ce + oe - 3 for a two week canoe trip in Region Seven Canoe __ visors on the trip, of 794 Alpeana St., and Richard would start from a high level. ROME ~The Rome prose- liam K. Benson, a Ford. gers Bere Ween 2-0-2 Oh Wheel .-. 6 '| ‘Base on White Sands Lake near Boulder Junc-, Gould, 15, of 1040 Lake Angelus Shores. _ The average consumer spends sen ae miliwright from Rochester. ist My ‘..,.69.1 Mueller Br ... 29 14 per cent of his income on dur- cuter today age the court at of Se Jan BB Balke .-.424 Nat Bie =e is , able« goods. Their average price ruling annulling proxy mar- Benson, i 5 i me WO ewes: " a! ‘as! f Z . . : * reco! high i N - plage of Ingri’ Bergman and |tellied 12,330 to 4,036 for his Demo-\ést Pack iat) Rat Bey 0-0 S03 i |Shutdowns Earlier Than Usual tgp eeeh mnt of th 3 ber 1957 at 110.9 per cent of the Roberto Rossellini. cratic oppgnent, John W. Copple,|Gaimpp ‘sor 431 Nat heed RS 1947-49 average, and it slipped . if oe E c + vas i is : i y ‘ - 7 — hotel accountant from Pontiac at OS = +107 Nor Pee Sih [ d lid V Auto Price Cuttin Dro ig back only to 109.6 per cent in One of the Few » x«~ *&* * Carrier ae 39.7 Feel = 30.4 y an 5 € 0 € June — before the rise in metal Case, JI ......-20: i Gl 742 ‘ rices which bring the new threat. Wome Owners Who | Te rece ov. tire coms Fa BE REEL HY] ccomined FromPase oe) FON Previous Years ° |i gous sees rach a ret newly-created position of clerk and Chrysler... $34 Param Pict - MA! dent of the United States,” John- last November at 117.4 per cent _ Don't Need a lregister of deeds will be between! Site ave." ta? Penney woos eae : lof the 1947-49 average and slipped Kronenberg and 34-year-old Mur-| Clerk Eoulp .. 49 RR_...... 14.3|800 said. By DAVID J, WILKIE Buick show d ly to 116.5 per cent by this Cluett Pea ... 41 epsi Cola. 234| ‘He not only will never be . maodea. . ed its broads jonly > Pe ° ; phy, incumbent register. €ocoa Cola |: 1117 7 ly changed J ag : ig Palm ... 64 pores p= — president,”’ said Bagwell. “Tl am AP Automotive Writer yc es cars a week ago, Sev- une. * It was the second time that BrdA --. 33 phil Pet 482\confident he will never be gover-| _DETROIT — The international eral others are scheduled for Au- : ' . West, court willeer< Ser Berke :| co rats oo Pere O8 «.... $o.4(nor again.” situation and the possibility of a| Sst and September, mda aig t Ae sega ley, has lost to M in a |Con N 7 é. A ee ccees 352 strike in th iese seem likely to ea nomination race, sae he Con Bak | = peggy Eas -43:3| Johnson conceded defeat about lincrease ca. ape page ghee leialltsee itorene retreat tele- months ahead. But standing in Ute trailed Murphy by 3,700 votes for |Camt COP&S.. 11 Reyn Met"... 553) 11:30 p.m. But Williams, who immediately ahead but no car vision and trade wings are threatening rises in. oth- c “ : a. ee z publication repre- nd the Republican tomination for |Covr Mot... 82 Rey Tob B -. 755! manched ham ‘sandwiches while | maker is changi ae i : : er prices now — in durables, a ‘register. er | Seaport, Reged Det: 283) eee to roturm al ble ler code! chotgenier shuniowns ‘sentatives at Miami Beach, Fla../in the gost of the services you've . Curtis Pub |. 9 Scovill. Mf 36 lier model changeover shutdowns. early in September, The cars are “. t Edis... 39.7 Scars Roeb .. 30.7| Lansing home, did not issue his | The industry usually experiences | sched ic i ion | come, to demand. Louis G. Barry was unsuccess- — 45 Shell Oil .... 814! victory statement until 1:30 p.m scheduled for public introduction And if monetary inflation really ful in his attempt to step out of|Dic:¢ Seac .. 312 Simmons .... 40.2) ‘#9 Pm. ja sales upturn in the final weeks about mid-October. takes hold,\ prices could rise all his job as-Sylvan Lake city man-|BOW® AN «384 Bocony. 022). $13) All 18 sitting Michigan congress-|0f a model year. This results large-| Soyeral other makes will reach| a z the tine. ager into the county treasurer’s| Dv Pont 195.4 Bou oo seeee $15imen were renominated in Tues-|ly from dealer price cutting in the|the market in September but the one office. Barry was Sparks’ first|Eest ko'..1116 Sperry Rd’... 202|day’s, primary, including Demo- cleanup drive. There will be some) ars that account for the greatest Toniorrow: What will more in- primary opponent since 1935. | Er aute'ly |. 343. Std Ocal $14 jratid Reps. John Lesinski Jr. and Such price slashing this year but) <\1¢s volume are scheduled for Oc-| flatioh do to business and its ~~ *&« + El & Mus §. 54 std Oil Ind ‘t 492|\Thaddeus M. Machrowicz who/it is not likely to be néarly a8) tober introduction recovery? Barry's trother's bid for drain ERERE” "bs EE SESE © Bt overcame strong oposition, widespread as it has been in pre: sss ong nonegal remained intact as Firestone Ce Stud Pack. oat esse Fang were brushed Tin most instances the auto com- downed Becker, i “$$ sun oi -.. es [aside by Reps. Charles C. Digg z er living in So tifield. This year! cent Sul $38 Guther Pap. 4 lin the 13th District, Louis C. Ra-|Panies closing down earlier than rerks. Daniel Barrf's try tor algormmer Des’. 3° Suet pa) 3¢¢|baut in the 14th, Martha W. Grif-/USual for the changeover planned imin am usinessma n : 8 4 -- 38.6} ’ } i Loo. 4S ae diceed two-year term ac drainion pean H* Tero bu. ws|fiths in the 17th, Clare E. Hoff-/* somewhat longer production sus- => aCe commissioner. Gen Elec... 638 Textron .... 126/man in the 4th and William S. pension. This was to facilitate the MOST PEOPLE DO! n Mtors 22. 4.6 TroreR. hear s2.¢/Broomfield in the 18th. inventory cleanup before 1959 mod- bod . Lawson, the Democratic win- |Gen Mis ..... 662 Tran W Air .. 13.7 x * * els were introduced, The cracking, burning, or | "°F ee allay odours Gen Time .... 3 Teen cen .. 311| Hoffman, colorful 83-year-old'vet-| A sudden upsurge in new car ares Gq | 1eams ers one of the pheempedie ge 7d Farmington ‘Townshi justice in| eee es So un care lesen of 24 years in Congress, and} demand egel aeierl std ont epvered oy or our PACKAGE April, 1957. He is 33 rie liv ‘ Goodrich 6&4 Un Pac 306 Broomfield, 36-year-old freshman! troduction of the new models. POLICY for home owners. 28136 Sybil Ct., Fanaington. * Gran Paice - 3 Unit Air Lin 31 |from Royal Oak, are Republicans.| The strike threat will loom a® | A Birmingham businessman told|payoff to a Teamsters official to TRE Seprrenont package also Hicks, 52. of 16 N > hb - Gt West 8 Pi 1588 ve Gu oe veo) pas ial pPemocrats. tb — as Pi panes makers and the Senate Rackets Committee in|settle a union dispute. covers: ft, personal lia- ae . Jonnson Ave., ound ... 15.6 O28 yines..” even incumbents, 10 of them their workers 0 agree on a |Washington yesterday that he put} Appearing before the committee i nearly all of - |defeated another ex-policeman, a Holland Pits US Rub... 37 s4Republicans, had clear fields. new contract. up a ae a $17,500 alleged geist B. Watkins, of 587 Pi threa' * Farmington Township supervisor, Homestk .. 40 US Bteed .... 703 major = = po ac gprencgsr aber sn a a nt Stay 126 US Tob ...... 266) By far the closest battle was The former contracts expired). Henley St., partner in the Grand us today for.com- (1956 primary, to ane out a =i Thland sil 100° war ak Pf as | Waged in the 16th District, |nearly two months ago but so far ieee: 1250 W. Lafayette St., ition. this year. "Vee C2 . 353 wel eo - 221) where Lesinski bid for a fifth there has been no general. work art and a former city com- pear Eg west ~ 93, term nomination against three |Stoppage. , ‘amie ok Int Bus Mch .369 Westg El . . 605 el e . R-PATTERSON Eee Int Harv .....373 White Mot: $45| opponents, but notably Carl Stel- s * " Watkins and other Detroit laun- ? PA $0 mo Lge = 621 to 5.553 for; tet Peer ne ‘ ies ee , 24 lato, president ot Ford Local 600 | The industry's retailers had an) -| dry officials were called by the & WERNET [Francs J Sermon, nperonor fet BAe" "RE Yat on, HE tine Ue” Ant» Workers estimated 6700 new cars in sock seis to relate deal of 6 711 Zommunity National Bk. Bldg. | +. Johns Man | 44.6 Ynest 8h & T 109 | Union. on July 1. This was down about reported payment to 2 Teamsters peater, and 1,559 for HerbertiJones & L_....472 Zenith Rad .. 922) t , Phone FE 2-9224 "iKoester, retired Detroit policeman. | a tot Democrat defeated on el a el tenn ee in 1949 to stave off a s Stellato 2 8 to 21,050 on the Ea Trrittiititiittitiy yee ier Co. mate there has been an even Senay neg een ws dle! hy ogy Of ets from CR districts 4 greater “drop in dele soci ovrt Bail sa Mi Allen Elect. & Equip, Co. th 26 09 +! isince July 4 because of sharply retary 0} gi Baldwin Rubber C 134 14.4) * * * curtailed output, 7 stitute, a trade association said H AW N I N G S M@ GL one chem eae 26 77 || _Lesinski, who has worked closely| ne the payoff arrangement was made - i Howell Biect Moe 61 61 61 With labor during his eight year! But the stock of sats hand with Joseph Holtzman, a labor " re) Mithe Prophet Gone...” 2, 2t\tenure, was stung by- Stellato’s| represents considerably more consultant and friend of Teamster r Pp to 4) Off M Rudy Mig Co a 74 74 74 candidacy and some of his tactics. than a normal supply, It prob- czar James R. Hoffa. “7 @ wacne Boee p. aoe 146 146) ably is in excess of a 40-day Balkwill said Holtzman said he Ml eno ale. Gla ene ceccas fo 75 Republican state candidates | i supply rrent sal evels. - B oe . a “ee pointed to the sec idence | dale Se gel could get. = Contract along tne = ‘All Jobs Custom Fitted Pag sap ogee lace ace ll ec ines the sie cutine | 5 Bay City Votes Down - | particularly the UAW, in Mich. “om leet require $25,000 for he = ALL MATERIALS and WORKMANSHIP See dv {or Bus li igan Democratic politics. | One problem that develops for services, “7 | iay or Bus Line . ‘the retailers as they enter the out-, kwill added that they even- | GUARANTEED — Ifowever, in union affairs Stel- going model cleanup is that while t me der ar on iste to | . BAY C itv i?—Bay City voters lato frequent] iy has been at odds they have plenty of cars on hand — P h , com- s M gave a firm no to a plan to sub. with UAW Chief W > Db stallments. He told the co © Call L. W. Bogert FE 4.6089 Mi vidize c ie bas) eres ihe eed ieputeat a ee ances, they = gale grietle have exactly ey ‘ mittee he assumed that Hoffa . he yesterday’ s election was 6.437 affairs nationally as well as in men denen or combinations VINCENT B, WATKINS got part of the payoff. = i] . , : “| against to 1.518 in favor. Mi chigan. + * * + several Detroit laundry owners = A Awning & Storm Window Sales a eas ~ *& * | For the most part, however, few told the committee they helped fi- = a The proposal would have author- | In the first district, March-' dealers expect any difficulty liqui-| Lodge-Calendar nance the payment to Holtzman at the rate of ” ie each truck they * operated, Sen, Irving M. Ives (R-NY) told Watkins todl the committee he part of the payment, Asked if he regarded it as a ligitimate transaction, he said, “No, sir, I think it’s morally wrong,”? -Watkins served on the Birming- ham City: ‘Commission ‘for three years for 1952-55, one, year as mayor. grote. * ou 2 1st, e© ported to—Pontiae Pehee+ Thesday -thdt someone had stolen the radio, headlights -and dome light from Wis car while it was parked at a gas- station at Pad- | dock and Wilson’ ate al Focal Directors. “A BOMETEO. ATMOSPHERE” FUNFRAL HOM E.. Balkwill the payment was a vVio-| . Aadv.|lation of the Taft-Hartley labor law. put up more than $1,000 as his ‘ \. Drayton Plains ‘ Donelson-Johns patel for Punerals” te Ks GRIFFIN FIN CHAPEL monet wa orvice FE 2-5841 Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance service or Motor Cemetery Lots 5 RRY MT. PARK "perees Suse or € CEMETERY. graves $275. Box REPLIES At 10 a.m, today there were replies at the Press office in the boxes: t, 5, 14, 1, 22, 28, 'y, 55, 56, 60, 62, 63, 64, 66, 67, 69, 71, 72, 74, 76, 77, I as 115. i i? The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Af errors should be tted immediately. The esa assumes no — rtion of the advertise. ment which has been ren- dered valueless throuch the error When ot are made get your. “ki! number.” We adjustments will be eiver without ft mts Sota bro ih = sdvertise m tyne sizes er > seg voll sd agate ‘Hoe. ia 2: o'el * @ to publication. ‘ant Ads may the ‘et ingertion, | pe canceled trp te 8:90 km a.m. 7 oe = s 4 is ‘ei eed atinns call attending a meeting at De- troit’s Lelarid Hotel, where, accord- ing to one witness, Hoffa okayed a contract between “the laundry. and Teamster Local eg ay ¢ t CASH WANT AD RATES + Lines 1-Day Days @Daye 2 - notre 3 be Sse ay ie RE Ye . “ee NB : fd ey i $8 405 19 8 ; 5 ra &