; : i : SM ali St he | ASSOCIA PRESS INTERRATIONAL Tews ears MICHIGAN, T PRIVATE CAMPUS — Central Michigan College Senior Dave Whitlock of Rochester had his own privaté campus this summer, as he camped out while attending the school's summer session. He lived in a tent pitched six m iles from the school, and said he never slept better in his life. Not during classes, either. Rochester College Senior Has Own Private Campus ,,,, . ,*..’ A college senior, majoring in nispodilos certainly Clellan (D-Ark) asked, knows a lot more about the value of money than about the rugged life of the outdoor cam psite. sc hen Co sesame: fs ace ==" Ready for Vote for C. E. Wilson’s Cabinet Pos ant closed its doors on the regular school year this June.) dictment on charges of tying Rochester when Central Michigan College in Mt. Pleas-| But Whitlock, a Korean War veteran attending under oath to a grand jury in- classes on the GI Bill, de--- cided to apply his college; learning to his own pocket-’ book, save money from his gov- to school, and in the process He Potala to Dispute Problem: ipa! anain ine ees GIVEN 10 Meany took an accelerated course in outdoor living. In order to save on meals and room rent, the 1950 Rochester High School graduate pitched a tent near the Chippewa River, six miles off) campus, There he lived during the eight-weeks summer term, with a eot, an oi] stove and an oil lamp for eccasional peeks at his text books, During the days Whitlock would) be at college, going to classes, studying’ and editing “the college newspaper, At night, the Air Ferce yet- eran would return to his camp- | site where there were only birds | and chipmunks to discuss eco- nomies with. Couples driving cars ina nearby) lovers’ lane provided little com-) pany for serious discussion. on monetory theories. _, * * * Whitlock found the best thing to do was go to bed, since the sun shining in his eyes usually woke «him up around 5:30 a.m. When the sun didn't wake him, the birds did. And they started morning raucousness even ewer * succeed Dave Beck as pre sident, ‘of the Teamsters, said the report) earlier. It the rain didn’t bother him — Whitlock put up his tent in a 30-mile-an-hour, rainswept gale and after that all other storms were easy — neither did people. “Evidently everyone thought I was a little odd or something,” he says. “As if, like Greta Garbo, I wanted to be alone.” Summer school exams were over last week and Whitlock returned home to his parents’, Mr, and Mrs. Carl H. Whitlock, 1266 Wash St. * ® 2 To add to the money already saved, he’s working as a machin- ist in the factory where his father is a-business agent. A nice normal existence now, Whitlock say4.. He even sléeps in: a bedroom and takes his meals with the family, indoors. Billy F Resumes Crusade: NEW YORK Evangelist, de tonight with a ‘took last - off, ‘Billy Graham resumes his New/} + lest AFL-CIO Builders Ask President for Formula on Jurisdictional Issues APLANTIC CITY, N.J. @—The AFL-CIO Building and Construc- tion Trades Department has hand- ed the problem of solving jurisdic. tional disputes in the building trades back to George Meany, lpresident of the merged union. | By a unanimous vote at the de-) |partme nt’s special one-day meet- ‘ing yesterday, the group asked in le fiect for a clarification of a letter ‘sent by ‘Meany to the department) last July 1. The letter suggested a form- ala for selving jurisdictional problems, No resolution was proposed sug- ‘gesting the department disapprove | because of) ithe AFL-CIO merger the old jurisdictional question, al-' ithough the Teamsters Union said. gation would support such a reso- lution today. But Midwest Teamsters head! James R. Hoffa, who hopes to presented by a jurisdiction study committee contains ‘the meat of the resolution.” Labor Tieups ‘in Washington last week its dele- Maximum 88, and the normal min- conte m pt, UESDAY. AUGUST 6, 1957—30 PAGES Terms Are Lil er ral ‘Modern osPan Will Snip Lamb’s Tail . . Management- F How to remove a lamb's tail in utes, but if you want a winning; mind the shock of not “having his} Beverly said judges had only one ‘three easy steps. ‘demonstration, you have to use tail.” . This is one of the many things|charts and explain the procedure,” Beverly ‘one can learn to do when browsing Beverly said. ~ iRochester High School in from June, was graduated Probed Today 4-H Queen to Be Crowned Tonight tine Interest . s “ Z z Phe * criticism to make the last time she me Rates Hi [ demonstrated the tail-cutting proj- : Cash Outlay for Vickeas- Cut One-Half; Charges Selection of the queen jis ex- | legedly engineered by NeW: pected to be made by 8 p.m. at | York racketeer Johnny Dio, the fairgrounds on N. Perry St. today comes under scrutiny) #4 Walton Bivd. ef senators investigating Chopping off the tail of the 1957 improper labor - manage-j|kin to Little Bo Peep's pet won't) ment practices. . jallow sheep much of a wag. but) “Sweetheart” is the term. according to the pretty 18-year-old. used for labor contracts in pelea? coy oo > en which union officials and : . | * * * i employers allegedly reach| She is Beverly Sanders, daugh-| terms to benefit themselves, ter of Mr. and Mrs, How: ard San-, “io Pies te Pal ders of 1625 W. Hamlin Rd., Roch-| ers or €@ wWOrkKers ester a ie by enn Jann Dio THEY DEMONSTRATE 10, Also nown as on JiO- ae « r ? te | guardi, was convicted in . New |... wien alata: eerie York court last month of a union |@" oe ee ae St eee of +H members which will dem- ‘shakedown conspiracy involving. | itwo New York electroplating [ouetrate) someeict te eet; things| firms. He has not yet been sen- they have Jearned in club work to-/ tenced on the charge. eeeedae mee ‘ during a dem-| Sire > “OH *s Testimony at that trial in- * * * dicated that the Equitable Re- search Associates, Ind., witch he Beverly, who owns six sheep now and has aspirations ef a flock of -set w s he “s cae aves a csiuaity ena aes about 50," claims there are sev- : oars val why a lamb’s tail era _ down raeket to sell labor peace must be snipped. | for a price. reasons An important one is that ‘They | take one dollar per 100-weight off | fer each sheep that has a “tail | when you try te sell it and that’s | a lot when you have a large | fleck,” she enphasized. Dio himself is expected to be Summoned later as a witness, Sleek, wavy-haired Milton Holt, secretary-treasurer of Teamsters! [Local 805, refused to tell more | ithan his name, and Flushing, N_Y., address. He declined to say uetts | er, Dio actually controls this lo- for the demonstration, She'll use a’ WHICH LAMB HAS THE TAIL? — : Pentiae Press Phete demonstration contest at the Oakland County 4-H Qub Pair which opens today. ““Herkimer*’ will be Beverly Beverly has made a mock lamb, Sanders, junior leader of the Clinton Valley 4-H Club, compares “Herkimer” (left) a mock lamb I, jacknife as the weapon, she made with ‘Melody’ (right) one of her six the victim of a how-to-eut-off-alamb’s-tail dem- “Tt only takes about three min- = live sheep. Rewery- will \eenlomiacsen in _ onstration. - Holt even invoked the Fifth — ara mane — - ‘Amendment when Chairman Mc- “Do you care what you are doing—you and} ithose- like you | . struct the work of your govern- Supporters Will Block. WASHINGTON (INS!—A spokes-, and Gamble Co. te secretary of Attempts to Amend man for Neil H. McElroy defense, the spokesman replied: Measure Further | firmed today that the Cincinnati. awe. industrialist is being actively con- The spokesman, although admit- ; sidered as the successor to Defense ing McElroy is a top candidate to priprly oe ie cae WASHINGTON W — Sapper teTS Secretary Charles E. Wilson. boss the nation’s armed forces, Procter and Gamble, iy adou ton & of a jury trial amendment closed’ jy added. however, that “ho con. Said he has net been offered the director of the General Electric Co Both witnesses said their an the door today to any further Sen- clusions” have been reached post outright and Chrysler Corp., iswers might tend to incriminate ate changes in a civil rights bill t * + ° * + é iim contractors. the Eisenhower administration : * He emphasized that*ft is an ‘'im- vestigating Dio's activities. . Kazansky of Monticello, prosperous looking record-| ing ‘secretary of Teamster Local con ment. COMPANY DIRECTOR McElrey conferred secretly with of financial interests in companies ‘doing business with the govern- Lower down-payments and a higher interest rate for homes purchased under FHA guarantee went into effect today. 3 The more liberal mort- - gages will make it easier to buy a house, particularly low-cost homes, and are intended to bolster Pome. | construction. | Builders said the double ~ action will result in a shot in the arm for the housing industry which has been seeking government relief for two years. The changes reduced by about one-half the cash outlay required for. purchase ef medium - priced homes insured by the Federal Housing Administration. The greatest reduction in down- | payments will be at the lowest price level and the smaliest in the highest price ranges, In addition, the FHA hiked mort- gage interest. rates from 5 per cent to 5% per cent and placed controls on the amount of discount that can be charged. | ~*~ * * The Veterans Administration ‘Also, ‘imposed discount control over = ihome loans. but the interest ra ‘remains at the 442 per cent m ‘mum which Congress refused to inerease. ‘TO SPUR HOUSING * The action was taken under. the see ‘through the 17th Annual Oakland SUN HEDRS She was one of five teens who won| Ct ‘Sweethéart’ Contract County 4-H Club Fair which Opens a, Nded: © ‘4H scholarships granted by the’ “They didn’t approve of the io- Alle dl Was Made b tonight at T. | Beverly added: “It should be @ National Farm and Garden Associ-| dine being in, a chow mein bet- gealy Y Highlight of tonight's program Sunny warm day so the lamb won't ation, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Hiked to 5% Pct. - Johnny Dio ‘ ‘will_be the crowning of the 1957) s - - Fair Queeti, Eleven girls have, fares ¢ Se been entered by their own 4H WASHINGTON (#) — A. aubs throughout the county. j “sweetheart” contract al- ii i <= Civil Rights il McE briny Definitely Considered 2.2.2 ling programs which have been re- sponsible for about oné-half of all homes buiit and sold since World War IL. The so-called “tight money” (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) , Saurews omwcrs Lansing, State McElroy is a ==" Call Road Truce é * * * seems 0 e verge of diso Z Ash ts Another witness. Sam Getlan, ° a c ‘ . —_—= a for two hours yesterday at portant step’ for the government - » ~_ ” former reside Pox Judge $ Disputa py 4 » 5 5 S f * swore he never had heard of @ Sen. O'Mahoney (D-Wyo) said 5 ee sea \ a for al dare —- hares a tock. fag rica ie aalpaiy to Negotiate Differences Teamsters Union local in New he and others will block any at- ag aad _ a oT ee when he became secretary in 1953. on Highwa $ York which had listed him as its tempts to get a unanimous. con- jcussed “problems that would be “It hasn't reached the stage — unre pation seer g Y ipresident in 1956. Nor, he said.'sent agreement, necessary to re- connected with a move- of this where he can say yes or no.” Wilson has announced his in- | did he cast a vote recorded aS\gpen the bill to amendments, kind.” One of the “problems" pre- tention of resigning but no date | LANSING — A trpce inter- has been set, primarily because the administration has had dif- ficulties finding a successor, However, it is now believed. he will step down shortly after tak- ing a vacation in’ Michigan late this menth. McElroy has been mentioned as having been cast by him in the fore jts expected passage by ve Asked if he meant a switch ‘sumably discussed with Wilson yes- jelection of New York Teamsters Senate tomorrow or Thursday. | frem being president of Procter terday is the question of disposing Joint Council 16. . : a _— ; os | Senatorial argumeent over the With any alterations thus left to uneertain House action, the . . jury trial provision continued at Fi I st c a d y Doing . W e I] | sen. davis RNY), mm adver ALLEL Operation Today Fair, Pleasant Days in Store for Pontiac Sen. Javits a possible successor for the. past. ‘cate of a strong civil rights n meas- six months. Lately, two other can-| The Pontiac area can expect ure, disputed the contention of : . . : didates popped up—General Elec- imore sunny and pleasant weather. Democratic Leader Lyndon B WASHINGTON «® —. Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower underwent an trig President Ralph J. Cordiner, the U. S. Weather Bureau says. Johnsdr_of Texas that jury trials! operation today for a ‘‘benign’’ condition, not a tumor. The White {author of the incentive pay plan |The temperature will dip to 54-58, would be needed in only a few House said the operation was ‘not serious."’ . for the military, and Clarence B./ ‘tonight, but tomorrow it will rise cases. The First Lady, 59, was reported to be in ‘‘good condition’’ fol- Randall, chairman of the board to a high near 80. * * * lowing the surgery. of Inland Steel Corp. * * * The amendment, sponsored by * 7 + * * * Temperatures will average near O'Mahoney and others. would re- Reports that MeElroy ‘or slightly below normal in the quire such trials in all ‘ederall Fe = : . inside track became more next five days, with the normal/court cases involving criminal) fein |e Senet iad ENS nash FS as . , (alent last Saturday when he con- | These cases arise! Presidential press secretary James (. Hagerty said Mrs. Ei- (firmed he would visit Washington imum 62. A slow warming trend where. a judge desires to punish) Semhower entered the operating room about 8 a. m. and the sur- for an undisclosed purpose. He will start later this week with aja defendant who fails to comply, gery was coneluded two hours later. flew into the capital from Cincin- ichance of light showers about! with the court's order or complies! While the operation was in progress, the President was meeting nati yesterday and remained over- Thursday. itoo late to make it effective. | at the White House with Republican congressional leaders. night. * * * x * * i * * * | There were reports that he has| In downtown Pontiac, the low-| President Eisenhower has been. ia White House appointment soon, est temperature recorded preced- | represented as likely to veto the ‘but Presidential News Secretary Hing 8 a.m. was 55. At 1-p.m, the!measure unless this provision is ‘James he Hagerty laughingly de wed them. The operation was performed at Walter Reed Hospital by an Soon after the operation, Mrs. Eisenhower was able to talk with the President by telephone. Haggerty said he would visit her this | afternoon. anna etree np eaten eseneebastbneressae =n Youths Invited to Air Views at Meeting Tonight \thermometer registered 74. limited to voting. rights cases. By SYLVIA de STEIGER If people keep busy, they stay out of trouble, This common thought, which op- poses idleness and loafing, can be connected with Pontiac’s teen- age reereation problem. | As in all gréups of society, there are good and bad teen- ‘agers, Usually, the bad ones, if _ caught, are directed to a juvenile officer. In trying. to straighten ‘them out, he gives them encour. | agement and on What to do, to keep them busy and out ot mischief. . Discussions of Pontiac's rice. tion for teens with lo¢al juvenile } Madison Square Gar. ‘officers indicate facilities are in- adequate. Some pie tone even sg-| Seek Plan to Keep Teenagers Busy, Out of Trouble find some answers to the teen rec: ireation problem tonight. in, aid gis “Poday"s testis are living 2 7 . . James \R. Lafnear suggest that, if) business,” says Lafnear. tonight by Navarre at Madiron nich faster pace and want more comes sesamin ces cians ithe idea of a teen center matefial- | i and 5 Janior High School, 1275 N, Per: | asi » we | County News .........., we “If delitiquents tell fis they’ got hes excitement and __ thrills,” Ne | Rat ‘izeg, there should be: more than’ mquents tell fis they’ go ry St. at 7:30 p.m, | : Labiadahd. | | ray ). Betitorials oi)... 6. ceed iis (6 lone | ‘into trouble because they . had [s Marketa ..0.¢....600.505 eee : nothing. to do, it’s just an alibi,” Nayarre said giscussion of the ‘Gomh) gitts are'even losing their! Obituanlés .......6 0)... < | Tho comers “Gay fel, FRI fort abn, . : possibility,of a drag strip for teen- femininity because, . through their), Sports... ech dewalt 19, tt [number from four to six, located! es ke as of ‘as well as an open.foruny on ‘natural desire to be with boys, they Theater ...........<.0.-. oy in various parts of the city, general teen problems will be held. \don't want to’ be left wi. - Eve Radio’ rogram . +99. | Their. reasons were two: parents ‘Latnear, also an active Jeader eee & Wilson, art ; 9 idon't ‘or, shoultin't. want their chil: in'the Pontiac Boy's Club, said this Williara one age iia! it Park | — has ihe ‘ fast. ik got, — 5. od $45 13, it 15 ‘dren ty have, to. go ap the center {Continued .on~ ge 9 Col. rp i . : j at: | a (oer ; Me i). oe KO fee’ i 4 bt! aw de = : L | : og} « / tog ce ee AY ake 5 1% ‘t } 4 a J “ ; y Bde ts g | - es : e fa : i % ees ly : 5 - . pee f E “he fey : ‘ fi “* ee a work because. of insufficient activi- ing Association, who helped organ-|behind in providing facilities for'dances in Pontiac don't go over of town for nightly entertainment: ties to keep teens busy, ize a drag-strip teen association initeens. We need something such as with teens. Yet, they work fine in most teens wouldn't have sufficient MEETING TONIGHT New Baltimore, and Arthur J.ja teen center which will be open| Lake Orion and Auburn Heights, transportation i Bogue, manager of the Pontiacito boys and girls and under adult according to him. Juvenile and Safety Deputy branch of the American Automo- supervision, " he pointed out. °! “By : “Ses meeti with teens we Steve Navarre, Oakland C ou nty bile Association, will attend the) Navarre said it has been proved) “hope to po ste Pics: a Sheriff's Department, will try to meeting, | | what the young people want and “ why they don'{ support facilities | offered to them,” he concluded. Pontiac Police juvenile officers, * Set. Henry O. Hoyt and officer “Kids need a place where they can mingle with, their friends | and sip a coke for several hours +.» @ place for them, yet under supervision. This would help keep them off of the street corners. They tan't do this in a drag store because they take up too much space hinder the ownér’s : PLAN GIRLS’ SESSION A simil t « s being Diane fr a Ne a Today’ s Press varre , said, An open meeting for area teen- agers, called “Teénagers. Speak Their Mind,” will he conducted had the) prev-| ivened today in a court battle -be- itween the city of Lansing and the State Highway Department over traffic control on a portion of iU. S. 16, main Detroit-Muskegon . partery The disputants, at the urging of Circuit Judge Marvin -J. Salmon, agreed to suspend hearings on an injunction sought by the stafe-in an ieffort to nega their differen- ces Salmon called for qa report at 9 a.m, Wednesday. He “said two close neighbors ought to be able _ to arrive at a better working relationship than te fight their controversy out in court. The state asked the restraining ‘order to prevent the city from in- terfering- with its edict for one- way traffic on portions of U. S, 16 and M78 in northeast Lansing. Since July 29, the city has de- |fied the Highway Department one- way order. On that day, city em- iployes masked the _state-erected jone-way signs and dispatched po- lice patrols to guarantee two-way joperation. IF NEGOTIATIONS FAIL... a. ‘Judgé Salmon will go ahead with hearings.on the in- junetion request by Highway Com- ‘missioner John C. Mackie unless the parties report progress in their efforts to negotiate. The state contends one-way traf- fic providesmore efficient con- trol and is safer, The city dis- putes this, and has been backed ‘business under one-way operation. Before the truce, City Clerk Millie Brewn said from the wit- ness stand that the city never officially had turned over the affecte tions of city streets to the stat for tise as ‘trunklines, She implied that for \this rea- json,-if no other, traffic coritrol- jurisdjction remained in the city! If no agreement can be) the case is expected to Supreme, Court to) to the r spell over oe — cities, ferer’s awe. & em, aa _ Sten ee & pure WASHINGTON (INS) — a i i Ht up by merehants fearing loss of . out te mesure ot sate cota # 1 | & Jan ecu: ~ for U.S. Sale or Barter With Foreign Nations WASHINGTON w — — The Senate/hicles. has passed and sent to the White House a bill increasing to four billion dollars the amount of farm surpluses which the government ean barter or sell to foreign na- partering—but no sales—with Communist satellite countries of barred from criitestion in ‘the Biinoat Cheered enthusiastic audience rected to Defense Minister Geor- boomed out over the public ad- mers killed by lightning are usually hot burned, they are paralyzed. : So, artificial respiration is as important for struck swimmers as it is for drowning vietims. ‘® Lightning strikes boats and auto- moblies, but all-metal cars (apart from convertibles) are safe havens. Boats near land are safér than boats far out to sea: Boats or ships with tall masts are most likely to be struck. Swimming or bathing is never en permissible during _ lightning storms. The Weather Foll U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Sunny and pleasant teday with slighti — cca t temerag x eg y ot 4 te 6 mi Today in Pontiac nauk temperature preceding $ a.m. 8 a.m. shee — 10 + 1§ m. Direction: West -N “4 a aes Sun sets today at rte nae Sun rises Wednesday 5 ro ‘am. Moon sets Wednesday 2.51 p.m. Soon rises today at 5:03 p.m. — _— oe ee Monday in Pontiac fas recorded psbarsedaia eee >\on in an atriosphere of rising crit- vis) 12-State Milk Strike dman Strife -MANAMA, “Bahrain British, jets swept over rebel-held terri-/ tion The Royal Air Force Venoms and Meteors flew eight sorties against the forces of the rebel Imam of Oman yesterday and claimed to have damaged two ve- *€ Wr O® The ground forces are reported drawn up for an attack against the Nizwa fort, which the British believe is headquarters of the Imam’s troops. The rebels are fighting for a religious leader who is challeng- ing the authority of the Sultan of Muscat of Oman, who asked for British help to put down the re- volt, a LONDON (®—Britain’s top mil- itary leaders conferred today on plans for a quick end to the Oman rebellion which threatens to em- broil thig country in a new Mid- @e East crisis. © 2 * * While the meetings were going TROUBLE SPOT—Map shows another trouble spot in the Mid- icism, Arab League representa- tives both in Cairo and the United Nations were weighing the pros- pects of appealing the Oman reb- Romance Is for the Birds _ NEW YORK ® — Penelope the platypus has waddled out on her amorous mate Cecil in a tiff over his duckbilling and cooing. Penelope wasn’t lovesick; she was just sick of love. So she packed up and pulled out of the platypusary at the Bronx Zoo. Keepers are combing ponds in the zoo for the rare Australian mammal with the duckbill, web-feet and broad tail. Penelope and Cecil are the only platypuses living outsidé Australia. The lovers’ quarrel started about a month ago. Cecil began dragging Penelope about their pool. She didn’t cotton to his ways of wooing. The two were separated. But Cecil found a way of wiggling through to Penelope's sleep- Se pees In desperation Penelope promptly promptly performed the seemingly im- possible. She squeezed under a heavy wire mesh screen and escaped. Cecil seems upset. He spends a lot of time scratching his furred head, appareritly wondering where reluctant Penelope has wandered. Declare GM Dividend NEw YORK @ — Directors aX Scheduled Aug. 14 DETROIT @ — Plans for a milk strike designed to tie up deliv- FHA Liberalizes . Mortgage Terms Battles Against = Federal Taxes Platypus Lovers Break Up; already, her own ground forces, open Britain once more tagged with Sr ne en oe ing last year’s Suez invasion. Sabin Desires Reform; Says System Weakens Moral Fiber of America NEW YORK (INS) — A modern- passengers entering the station.: U. 8. TAKE NOTICE — Ever try to find a redeap in a busy metropolitan railroad station? The British have the same trouble, . but the British Railways have done something about it. They are providing ‘‘do-it-yourself”’ luggage carriers for the use of passengers, such as this seaside-bound mother and daughter. The lightweight carriers, which can tote about 400 pounds, are spotted on platforms so debarking passengers can get luggage to taxi stands with a mini- | mum of delay. Others are strategically located at taxi stands for | Denver: Sees Facility ‘Miniature’ Capitol Exists in Denver DENVER - (INS) — A miniature the Denver Federal Center, the day David has taken on a new Goliath—the nation’s sprawling tax * And in an effort to tum the spot- light on what he calls the “facts of life and the startling story” of —_ s tax laws, Sabin recent- y published a booklet entitled » Quit Kidding about Federal Zhukov May Replace Bulganin New Red Sh WASHINGTON — Diplomatic officials speculated today that new jobs may be in the offing for Sov- iet Premier Nikolai Bulganin and Defense Minister Georgi Zhukov. The speculation about another Kremlin shakeup was inspired by the circumstances surrounding party boss Nikita Khrushchev’'s rendezvous in Romania last Thursday and Friday with Yugo- slav President Tito. The caption ing tyke adds pointedly, “You're worried look what I'm fac- 56 (Continued From Page One) snglmarket has been blamed for the|# " decline of one-third in the volume|@"t of new homes during the past two years. Higher interest rates combined with “reasonable” discounts are éxpected to draw more money for FHA housing, Lower down- payments will create more buy- er demand in the sagging mar- ® Under the new schedule, the re- quired ctsh outlay will be 3 per sey and six New England states. his organization were not satisfied with an agreement made by the Michigan Milk Producers Assn. The agreement, effective Aug. 1, set the price at $5 a hundred- weight, an increase ab 9 canta, Refrigeration Store Robbed of $547 in Cash A break-in at Daubenspeck Re- frigeration Store, 12 N; Cass Ave., resulted in the theft of $547.44 in cash Monday, Pontiac police re- with the Detroit dairies last week.|- cent of the first $10,000, 15 per cent of the next $6,000, and 30 per cent of the remainder. * * * Down-payments will be reduced from $300 to $180 on a $6,000 home, from $700 to $300 on a $10,000 home, from $1,950 to $1,050 on a $15,000 home and from $3,200 to $2,400 on a $20,000 home. © The old schedule on down-pay- ments had been 5 per cent of the first $9,000 and 25 per cent of the remainder of the purchase price. This hike in interest rates, the }compared with 4.4 billion a’ year an heur. and would their parents let them? ported, Mericus McCoy, of 3445 Wat- kins Lake Rd., Waterford Twp., told police that someone had brok- into the store between noon and 1 p.m. yesterday, then pried open a cash drawer, second in eight months, brought talk today of congressional ac- tion to limit any further increases. The American Bible Society is One of the 24 national Bible So- cieties throughout the world. Seek. Plan to Keep Teens Occupied, Out of Trouble (Continued From Page One) organization plus the Ys do offer: a variety of recreational facilities but, the problem of bringing boys ‘and girls together normally still remains in Pontiac. SUGGEST QUESTIONNAIRE ~Hoyt suggests each teen be given a questionnaire when school opens this fall to find out what teens want and if a teen center were available, would they attend claims many times she is at loss when talking to problem girls and trying to suggest recreation to keep them out of trouble. “There is really nothing in ‘Pontiac tor them. A girl's club, comparable to the boy’s organiza- tion is needed,” she added. “It should be orgainzed for girls as young as 10 to 14 Years old so they could be caught before they become delinquent, “With the help of skilled chap- erones, they could be taught use- ful vocational hobbies and pro- jects. “I sympathize with the girls to- day. There isn’t enough work for them in the modern home to keep busy. They need more job oppor- tunities, and such an organization ‘jcould help prepare them,” Mis« Berger theorized. Another help would be organized * * * “Parents don’t discipline and instruct their children enough to- day,” says Pontiac Policewoman Patricia Sweeney. Disagreeing with a teen center alabout 2,800,000. Twenty per cent a Pye tax base for the govern- to get the thoney it needs— and at a greatly pore tax rate.” Quit Kidding About Fed- sielh ieee Taxes”’ ‘e the fourth in a series of booklets written and published by Sabin. He estimates the reading audience has shot over the nine million mark Let's House Construction Falling Off Sharply NEW YORK — In the first four months of 1957, private residen- tial construction throughout the nation totaled 4.1 billion dollars earlier, But publicly financed buildings’ dollar volume totaled 3.7 billion, up from 3.3 billion, and private nonresidential building also ran above 1956 in the period — 2.9 bil- lion dollars: compared with 2.6 billion. Venezuela Buys More CARACAS — United States ex- ports: to Venezuela in 1956’ were valued at $651,221,000, up 17 “per cent from 1955. The United States imported goods worth $697,628,000 from Venezuela last year, 21 per cent more than in 1955. The United States is by far the largest source of supply for the Venezuelan market. 5,000 Make Clocks PARIS — The French clockmak- ing industry, which includes fewer than 100 firms and about 5,000 employes, last year manufactured some 3,400,000 clocks. This com- pared with the prewar figure of of the companies produce 80 to 90 per cent of the total output and employ 75 to 80 per ce com of Oe personnel. 150-Pound Rodent Shy BUENOS AIRES — South Amer- ica'’s largest rodent is the capy- bara, a shy creature that never strays very far from water and-is always ready. to plunge in to es- cape danger. It resembles a huge guinea pig and attains a weight of Estates Drain Bids ‘ldrain will be opned at 2 p.m. Opening Is Aug. 15 Aug. 15 at the Oakland County Road commission, the Waterford Township board learned last night. The township board and the vind commission will share equally the estimated $14,266 cost of the pro- ject, which would give the north end of the subdivision flood re- are : The 778 feet of 30 inch under- ground drain from the subdivision to Maceday Lake will also have 285 feet of new ditching, 1,200 feet of ditch clean, out, seeding and mulching. Included in the ject will be 38 feet of 12 inch road culvert installed, according to the agreement. Queen of 4-H Fair to Be Picked Tonight (Continued From Page One) fle, so I'l] make sure that doesn’t happen again,” she promised. Other events tonight include the announcement of the public speak- ing contest winners at 7 p.m., and a minstrel show by the Macomb County Service Club, the only group participating in the fair not from Oakland County. * * * Tomorrow morning the county 4-H livestock judges will be se- lected at 9 a.m.-A tractor, plow- ing and operators cohtest is sched- uled for 1 p.m. 67,000 Work ra PX NEW YORK—The joint Army- Air: Force Post Exchange System has on its payroll 17,900 civilians in the United States plus 4,500 American cviilians overseas, The ulk of the overseas work force ‘er’s World War II comrade in akeup Seen Bulganin missed those talks— believed to have dealt with prime satellite political topics—and also was omitted from the list of offi- cials joining Khrushchev -m a scheduled visit this week to East Germany. Spéeculating on new Kremlin moves is an uncertain business at best, diplomatic officials conced- ed, but they hazarded guesses that: 1. Bulganin, noticeably sfrinking in prominence since Khrushchev thwarted an attack on his leader- ship last June, might be kicked upstairs to the This powerless post now is held by the aging Klementi Voroshilov. * * * 2. Zhukov, President Eisenhow- Little U.S. land Area Used for Urbanizatio WASHINGTON—The Department of Agriculture reports that ‘all ur- banized areas in the United States take lesg than 20,000,000 acres, or just about one per cent of the ha- _jtion’s entire land area of 1.9 bil- lion acres, Urban areas are towns and cities of 1,000 population and over, About 25,000,000 more acres are involved ‘in. such necessities’ of modern civilization as highways and roads, railroads and airports. To this is added an estimated 10,- 000,000 acres occupied by rural vil- lages and towns with populations of 100 to 1,000. Thus all the land involved in populated places and in the work-| shi ing and living space of the nation’s urbanized and industrialized. so- ciety adds up to about 55,000,000 acres, or less than 3 per cent of the country’s land area. Drinking Less Beer, Strongest in 15 Years LONDON (INS) — Britons are no longer the biggest beer drink- ers in the world but they are drinking stronger and stronger beer. The Brewers’ Society reports that the beer consumed in Britain arms, might succeed Bulganin as premier, giving Khrushchev a chance to cash in on Zhukov’s high personal popularity with the Rus- sian people and making official a general belief that Zhukov now rates second only to Khrushchev 2 a ‘ But ig has eh speculation abroad that the premiership might) go instead to Anastas Mikoyan, the deputy premier and economic expert named to accompany Khrushchev to East Germany.” The State Department yester- day declined comment on such ——— F Biilganin * widely reported to have sided with deposed Soviet leaders Georgi. Malenkov and V. M. Molotov during the fateful Cen- tral Committee struggle last June 22-29, Ever since, he has taken a conspicuous back seat. Zhukov,..on. the other hand, re- portedly helped Khrushchev win in the struggle for power, and apparently has gained stature since. - News Flash ERIE, Pa. (INS)—The decom- , posed bedies of two babies, pos- sibly twins, were found last night among unclaimed packages -\Drama in Council Room — More than 7,000. persubs seek stents Approval _ " The answer to this, they were told, was that not everyone re- ports this problem. Located at the southeast corner .|of Eaton ‘and Derby roads, the for- mer Derby Well site was rezoned began/last night to single-family resi- dence The property is being offered for sale by the city, Franklin Cemetery Assn. Auxil- iary will hold its regular meeting and annual election Thursday, The affair will be a picnic and 1 p.m. luncheon at Birmingham's Spring- dale Park. In the event of rain, the group wil] meet at the Community Hall in Franklin, United Fund Picks Door-to-Door Heads The appointment of two women to head door-to-door solicitation for the Pontiac Area United Fund in Pontiac and Waterford Townships was announced .today by Mrs. George R. Eldred, head of the geo- graphic division. ~ Mrs. Ralph T.Norvell will direct the solicitation in Pontiac Town- ship and Mrs, Donald White, in Waterford Township. Each will have district captains and solici- tors under them. Mrs, Worvell, a native of Pon- tiac, lives at 46 Wenonah Dr. with her husband and two daughters, 12 and 9 years of age. She is ac- tive in’ Pan Hellenic, Child Study Club and United Fund work. Mrs. White, also a native of Pon- tiac, resides at 6251 Balmoral Ter- race, Waterford Hill. She is presi- dent’ of the Waterford Township Child Study Group II, member of the Waterford Farm and Garden Club and active in PTA and Can- cer Society work, She has worked for the United left in rental lockers at an Erie bus station. Coroner Warren W. Woods and Dr. John Fust, pathol- ogist, at Hammon Hospital, said the infants seemed to be fully developed and possibly were twins who perished shortly after birth, Police said the bodies were in a metal box sealed with cellophane, They were found as the bus company was disposing of an accumulation of unclaimed the past year was the strongest on average for 15 years. Total output for the year ended March 31, 1957 was 24.5 million barrels or 882 million gallons, which is about 15 gallons a head. This is roughly the same as the’ previous year. ~~ But, said a society spokesman, | “in terms of strength as well as, equivalent of 2 million gallons of consits sof 44,600 foreigners. packages. strong beer.” year, about 36 per cent more than alt. oh Powe ace eompetet to Pe built in California. of home - type swimming pools are expected to construct some 45,000 back.- yard swimming pools this the 3,000 installed last year. — Fund the past five years. | , Sales & Service R & R Motors, Inc. 724 Oakland Ave. Phone FE 8-6801 : pe OPENINGS sear tg ENGINEERS Excellent Opportunities for LAYOUT MEN Experienced in Layout | and Chassis "Layout: Write, visit or call Salary Personnel Dept. - GMC * donc AND COACH | furnace in the rear of the one For over an hour firemen. bat. (of Correction in. rete tled a blaze at the home of Frank|P!ymouth yesterday. West, 232 S. Anderson St., which caused an estimated $709 damage. ne oe The fire started when an oil|5UPt- Leo Goss, story frame house turned on asithe prison joined the demonstra- the temperature dropped to 55 de-|tion. : Goss said the women left their’ grees at 6 a.m.- West was not home at the time. The fire, which was confined to a jobs after learning that two pris- oners had been placed in isolation. ae eee after an 4 Now Home Delivered On All Nye Dairy Routes @ Extra Sanitary @ Extra Convenient Call, ask reute man, or af your grocers. Flavor Goodness Safely Protected TO YOUR VERY TABLE! —N NYE DAIRY’S PURE-PAK PAPER CONTAINERS NYE DAIRY FE 2-6786 was a member of the New- She iman AME #hurch and the Queen r of No, 15 OES, _ Surviving are a son, Clarence, Pontiac; and a brother and sis- ter living in Louisiana. Service will be at 1 p.m. Wednesday’ from the Newman AME Church with her pastor, the Rev, J. Allen Parker, offici- Home, FRANK H, BECHER IMLAY CITY — Service for iFrank H. Becher, 75, -who died Sunday, was to be held at 2 p.m. today from Muir Brothers Funeral Home with burial in Imlay Town- ship Cemetery. | Surviving are two softs, Franklin of Imlay City and Leon of Pontiac; three daughters, Olive and Mrs. Mable Muir of Imlay City and Mrs. Gladys Bush of Applegate. | MILO . FITCH | LAPEER — Service for Milo ‘Fitch, 73, of 2464 W. Genesee St., |who died Monday, will be held at Yo eet a ony wn genie wx 66 ak bac ts sons, Clarence of Birmingham .|Ora of Dryden; one daughter, Mrs Ruth Beltz of Marlette; two broth- and .jers, Paul and Howard of Royal Oak; one sister Mrs. Essie Shurrer of Ferndale, also seven other {brothers and sisters. VICTORIA M, GLYNN CLARKSTON — Service for Vic- toria Maryanna Glynn, two nia old daughter of Richard and Maxine Glynn, 9520 Big Lake Rd., who died yesterday, will be held at.1 p.m. Wednesday, Rev. Ralph Davidson will officiate with burial in Oak- land Hills Memorial Garden, Novi. * * * Surviving besides her parents are grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Wheatley of Clarkston, Alan Glynn »,|0f Milford and Mrs, Myrtle Patter- son of Keego Harbor, MRS, JOHN C, OTT 67, of 18 N, Roselawn Dr. died this morning at her home. She was ill several months. She was a member of St, Trinity Lutheran Church, the Ladies’ Guild of her church, the Ladies’ Auxil- iary of Metropolitan Club and the Greater Beneficial Union. Besides her husband, she leaves a son, Harold P. Ott of Pontiac; and two brothers. Mrs. Ott’s body will be at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home un- til Thursday noon when it wil] be taken to St. Trinity. Lutheran Church, Auburn at Jessie street for service at 2 p.m, The Rev. 3 common-sense reasons to use New Mobilgas ‘$7 thes 53, ‘49 —Mebiiges Special ‘$2 thr '50, "48, oldor—Mebigne Ry . -GADILLAC ‘S57 thre '49~—Mobliges Spedel ; , SPECIAL if yours is a high-compression car! Should you use this gasoline in your car? . . . Or save money with Mobilgas R at regular price? Consult this simple guide for the answer! LINCOLN MERCURY instant response .. . adds up to more miles per gallon! ‘ST thre '49-—Mebliges Special ‘48 and older—Mebliges & New Mobilgas Special is the only premium gasoline _ containing MC.—a unique combination of additives that saves power and gasoline these 4 ways... 1) extends spark plug life ... . 2) controls harmful pre-ignition . . . 3) reduces stalling . . , 4) helps keep carburetors clean—check, engine-formed gum. — ‘AB ond ial saan R CHEVROLET ve—all Models —thebiliges Special 6-cyl—'57, '55 thru '53—~Mebligas Special 6-cyl—"$6, '52, older—Mebligas R 2 CHRYSLER "57, '56, ‘SS, "50, 49—Mebliges ~ page : —Mabtiges & ‘54 thee ‘51, '48, older D&E soTO 57 theu 'S4—Mobliges Specie! "$3 ond eider—Mebtiges R popes : ‘57 thre 'S4-—Mebliges Ane ‘$3 ond stag ee ia PORD ‘ST thew ‘$4—Mobliges joe ss ee Te 4 sheen \ \ _ecrrvo \9teoees wo on sonra. ee “87 nw 35—Motaans edat, Sy ‘57 thre 'S4—Mebliges Special 'S3 end older—Mebliges & NASH 'S7 thew '55—Mebligas Species "54 ond older—Mebliges & OLDSMOBILE ‘S7 thru '49 —Mebligas Special '48 and older—Meobliges R PACKARD "57 thru "49—Mobliges Special “48 and older —Mobligas a RAMBLER 6-cyl—'54, WiLLvs Mobiigas Speoial tor luxury and sport eats euch ae: a CONTINGNTAL® convarra. HLOORADO. BROUGHAM + IMPERIAL JAGUARI ME ¥0—'57—Mebliges 6-cyl—'57 they '55—Mebliges Special New Mobilgas Special has been boosted still higher in octane—today delivers all the anti-knock power your high-compression car can use... That’s why you get quick starts and warm-up, smooth idling, improved, year-’round performance that With new Mobilgas Special you never pay extra for octanes your high-compression car can’t use! New Mobilgas Special contains all the octane your 1957 car requires. Any higher octane is a waste of your money. Try New Mobilgas Special— super special for ’57 | SOCONY MOBIL OIL COMPANY, ING. ‘S57 thre '33—Mobliges Special 'S2 and older—Mobligas R Spedel - older —Mobligas R '56—Mobliges Special STUDEBAKER ‘$7, ‘5S ond older—Mebliges R All model —Mebliges & »ROLLS ROYCEs THUNDERBIRD pe neo apphnror tag eee pa seine — weing Mobilges Special 9 _ CHARLES FREESE \2 p.m, Thursday Muir/Ralph C. Claus, her pastor, will|™@ Coaiics Freese, 70, of 245 Voor|Brothers Fimerel Home with burallotticinte with burial following. in|", ® Professor at the Hebrew Mt. Hope Cemetery. oe. White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. John C. (Caroline E.) Off, . 4 " : NY rown. on ‘COMPANY, ING. 1 Dank Foulkes arly CINCINNATI @® — Dr. Israel TOMORROW Union College for 35 years and|— author of several books of Bible atts: CLARA sTemuna — |™™eniarics, died ees Clara Sterling, 89, of 40% Taylor St. died yesterday after| HIGHLAND, N.C, @—Junius D.|E. “a prolonged illness, Edwards, 67, former assistant di-|— She was a member of the First|Tector of research for the Alumi-/— ond FLOOR Bapti: Cae num Co. of America. died yester- ~~ ie ot day. He was born in Minneapolis, | _WASHABLE FIBRE - _— Secvising wie Jaros sme, Ladtie| a. ao ars : Aris of Rochester, George D. Aris OGDEN, Utah @—Ralph Hardy,\& 41, a vice president of Columbia'E and a sister. Broadcasting System who former-|— Service will be at 11 a.m. Thurs-|ly had been connected with the S - Griffin} United Nations Economic Security | — jolt gail po Saoshe in |Commission, died yesterday. Har- Maplegrove Cemetery at North dy was a native of Salt Lake City. Branch, of Sault Ste. Marie and Albert F, Sterling of Boco Raton, Fila.; you. wait. Strong ~ Kraft-Paper base. your correct roller i The first time a man bets on the CHARLES M. SCHULTZ horses, he plays to win. The rest DRAYTON PLAINS — Service of the time he plays to get even for Charles M. Schultz. 63.. of 2640)... * Children are natural mimics. Airport Rd., who died yeste rday.at They act like their parents — in Pontiac General Hospital p eaten spite of every effort to teach them E will be at 2:30 p.m. Thursday from shod enners—Tent Wilem. Sparks-Griffin Chapel. His body] gy cucae - siaseisania wilt be in Drayton Plains Ceme- ‘Factory Here WEDNESDAYoot te 4 Pr hd. Electric Shaver ~ -17x30-Inch RUBBER Sponge Floor Mat tery, A machinist, he is survived by : his wife, Estelle; a daughter, Mrs..| E ss — of Bloomfield Hills RECONDITIONED : —While You JOHN Woop : Wait Service— SOUTHFIELD ‘TOWN SHIP —\E Service for John Wood, 60, of 30543 Wire Center Everett, who died yesterday in Plastic Dearborn, will be at 3:30 p.m.if i Wednesday from the Sawyer Fu-| Clothes! wad neral Home with burial in Rose-| E 100 Feet ; lawn Park Cemetery. Rev. Merton Wilson -will officiate. 33 I mage oy Bm gh lg Surviving are his wife Elsie, Bisnis 200 Sect. Choice of colors. — ten children Mrs, Jeanette Camp- bell, Mrs. Bernice Scheve both of Ohio, Mrs, Laura Chipman of St.| IClair Shores, Mrs. Sarah Dennis and John of Berkley, Mrs. Anita Proctor of Pontiac, Mrs, Billie Ames of Ferndale, Charles, Betty, 3 PPTTTT TT TTT ldadeteteted 3-Point Suspension — NON-TILT Steel Frame HAMMOCK SET Helen, and Ethel all at home. Also! E Stand & surviving are five brothers, three|E Hammock sisters, and fourteen grandchil- $13.95 Value dren. 2 POF O GSTS TFS S OFS TOTES CTO TO OOO » WIN ‘| > : — This New 1957 { > 4 : l4 Pp 4 Door Ph: ti : on ac Catalina } Mouse ae lq | 1c Value—Each c > Powerful spring po da mouse trap, As ‘ Limit § traps per sen , > > : ‘ Get Your 1p TICKETS pen ‘CANNON’ Now at SIMMS —No Purchase Necessary Evedybody has equal chance to win—nothing to write, no slogans to create ... just ask for. tickets FREE every time you visit SIMMS. 50th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION Honoring PONTIAC MOTOR -Division 20x40-Inch x 29 First quality, terry cleth tev’ Is yellow, pink, blue, tree> colors, Colorfast. on pra Simms joins with the City of Pontiac and all Oakland County to pay tribute to this community's largest ywwwewweveewe eT CCC CCC Ce Oe mmmmemmmmmemmum ~~ NEE sacee BUH employer. Watch this paper daily tor important announcements. : . Extra Heavy — Luxurious 98 North _ Segeow pane, 66x90 Inch CHENILLE Street . St | IMM on: =" a OEE SEER ELE EU Sy eT T ee DRAPES - LOWEST PRICE We've. Ever Offered— Led 1 , 59 ‘“KOOLER KEG” Insulated — , PICNIC ICEBOX PAIR 2 for $3 Closely tufted chenille in solid colors of aqua, pink, blue, brown or green, Selection & t of assotted patterns. Full 66x90 inches. Originally $7.95 4 9 VER» am § 99 Only 34 at This Price *% 4 Gallon — 14x12-Inch * Exactly as Pictured. Ail metal, double thickness walls, fiberglias insulated, Keeps hot or cold. 100% NYLON — Children’s and Ladies’ S-T-R-E-T-C-H ANKLETS Velues to 49e ¢ Per Pair ; ist bong 23 turn-down cuffs. Long wearing, washabiec. Pe es colors 4 white. ee to 8% and 8 to 11. HeeooeeooosoeeooeseseseneSS eeeeeteseesesc: : PICNIC NEEDS —Znd Floor OOOO OOOO OOOO OE z. 7 ahahaha cerrado harlot SOOO OO kk kkk kkk ky SSESESTSESTSSESI IT Fad MESH and PLAIN Styles — PANTIES —~ 22 E Some elastic, some band legs., = Double crotch. White and pas- hemmed, 27x27-inch, Easy to s tels, Sizes 6-7. launder, fast to dry. EE \eeeccccocccccccccasececececsesesecesosenesess | : Fits on Any Adal Toilet Seat Plastic Training Seat Baby DIAPERS T 77 . Ist quality FLANNEL diapers, . $2.19 Value FULL DOZEN New Fall Fabrics ZED f Up to 79¢ Values | 29° 5 PER YARD@ SI DM Medd Added dade de Medd dade de Dodd de sch! Assorted materials” in 52.90 Values -assorted patterns, de- Styles for boys has deflector 66 and colors. . safety strap, Plastic in pastel ; wipe clean with damp cloth, ' > i Z Be aa ee — ¥ i b: i eS, PE EP oS Tipe 2 ae “i Towels. , This Time for Peaceful wis daneie Naclear Engine Experiment Atoms to Explode in Japan Once More) TOKYO (INS) — will soon explode in Japan for the’ debut in the atomic energy age. : first time since Hiroshima and| The atomic reactor — capable Nagasaki were bombed 12 years of generating 50 kilowatts of ago. | electricity — is lecated in Tokal This time the atom explosions | Village approximately 70 miles will be slow and controlled and) north of Tokyo. instead of a destructive blast they, Par on Saeontel, lacie ui — The fission of uranium atoms * « + |will produce heat which will be When the engine or reactor goes transferred to a water boiler. The into continuous operation — by the boiler will power a generator to Short Cot . + Save 240 ‘a Driving Miles rote MILWAUKEE MUSKEGON, MICH. Daily Sailings "East and beet neg en awe rae { this luxury liner. Beautifu lounges—spacious decks a | : Comibatable bedrooms and batha,. . . oe Jtertainment . . . children’s playroom .. . fine 1 food and refreshments at reasonable prices. Muskegon Vicket office and Dock, “THE MART," Tel. 2-264* Detroit Ticket Office 1227 ‘Washington Bivd.—Tel. WO 3-3095 SUMMER SCHEDULE CONTINUES THROUGH SEPTEMBER . (Advertisement) (Advertisement) Stop Pain of Piles! Stop it Today at Home —or money back! IN DOCTOR'S TESTS, NEW STAINLESS FORMULA WITH AMAZING ANESTHETIC ACTION STOPS PAIN INSTANTLY! gredients, including Tr not to re- Sens in any “¥ ther leading S preparation’ ‘Thus substance has a Aremarkableanes thetic sction thes jar While the itching instontiy.1w . while 9 ee cevinn teenie onarkenens or money refunded by maker. Get sensational new stainless nape ts fa A ges a , a, | tmen No offers are now available at druggists. PAZO srsxcw In these doctor's tests, Pazo feliet! Instant relict fer or patient after patient! | Yranium atoms | fall — ‘it will mark Japan's formal aad current ooue of ght. ing up 500 bulbs of 100 watts each. TAKING BUGS OUT Japanese and American ie tists at Tokai Village, carved out, of the wilderness, are taking the bugs out of the reactor to get it in continuous operation. Tokai Village represents a oe tery for forward-looking ele- ments in Japan who have won a victory over atomic-reluctant persons who still recall Hiro- shima and Nagasaki with bitter- ness. : The experience Japanese scien- tists obtain from the reactor — powered by 22 pounds of uranium fuel from the United States — will } be applied to Japan's first com- jmercial power reactors. I Japanese leaders and the Atom. government leaders say Tokal Village is a much-needed prov- ing ground for the great num- bers of atomic scientists the Japanese will need to keep their atom industry “a-flzzin.” In addition to the reactor at To- kai Village, there is an atomic ‘energy laboratory where basic re- search on isotopes and atomic structure is being carried on. LANGUAGE PROBLEM American scientists who helped assemble the reactor last spring were forced to labor doubly hard because of the fact that there is not a single reactor plan written in Japanese. But it won't be this way for long at Tokai as the Japanese re- actor and atomic savvy go into high gear. Planning to Nationalize ‘Few’ Tea Plantations or the 17% socks he wears. Ano is Hospital in San Francisco, where t sandals and argyle socks. FOOT SOLDIER — More than two feet of trouble for the Army is what the tape measure shows. Pfc. John Ano, 23, of Trenton, N. J., is having trouble being fitted by the Army. In fact, after a year of service he still hasn't been fitted with the 16 AAA brogans ictured at Letterman Army e Army. is trying to solve his problems. Until they do, he'll be the envy of all GI's with his Chenabir Chinmnereel Group Plans Display on/' Fire Prevention Week A gala parade and demonstra- tion program to mark Fire Pre- -lvention Week were discussed yes- terday by the Fire Prevents Committee of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce. Tentative plans call for a giant parade up Saginaw street Wednes- day evening featuring the latest in fire equipment, antique equipment (including a steam engine that ac- tually fought the Chicago fire of 1871), bands, drill teams, pretty trick horseback riders, After the parade there will be demonstrations of the latest fire- fighting techniques at the North Side Field and displays of equip- ment, The evening will be ‘culminated boar bpeelarweige ocrbor defending champions, Wat ‘ and the Brooklands Fire Dept. Arrangements for publicity, the jparade and educational displays were discussed by the committee which will meet again in Septem- ber. FBI Adds Charges to Escaped Prisoners PHILADELPHIA ® — The FBI has added charges of theft of gov- ernment property to other charges 500 Battle Flames in National Forest firefighters retreated again yes- Forest and continued looking for) a battleground to end their five- day fight with the: flames. COLOMBO (®—Ceylon’s Marxist agriculture minister, Philip Gune- wardena, told the House of Rep- resentatives today he is going to! nationalize ‘‘a few" efficient large! tea plantations to help small farmers who are getting . poor prices for their tea. Gunew said the volume of production by the big planta- tions was too much competition in ne St tnein, tee Ceeioen a Semana, | for the smallholders, | heavily timbered mountain basin. ‘As 500 firefighters poured into the ;scene 50 miles northwest of here, jwind swept the flames through ithe timber. Forest planned Sawtooth Blaze in 5th Day HAILEY, Idaho @® — Sweating! fight yesterday, but winds, which have carried the flames over sev- terday before a raging timberjeral bulldozed firebreaks, swept blaze in the Sawtooth National|it out of control again. * Horses and helicopters have been kept busy hustling. water to The fire broke out Friday in a'the weary battlers. * Service authorities nnric’ d. to bring water trucks a = into the fight today as the fire burns down a mountainside to a. * * By last night, nearly 1,000 acres more accessible altitude. _ of fir and pine had been consumed but officials hoped to control the morrow. * It will take a week to advance of the fire sometime to-| small fires witan the: tener * They had expected to end the'control, authorities said. burn area once the main blaze is under interior of a luxury sedan! For this automobile that gives you sports car roadability, conti- nental styling, and power to spare—yet actually costs far “less than many low priced conventional automobiles. So, for a new experience in motoring, in a family car that’s a sports car too, be sure to test-drive a 1957 Studebaker i Silver Hawk at your Studebaker-Packard dealer! For the best car values ever... (Il) Studeb ena Mitac ane fae is the one American _ Enjoy Sports Car Styling and Performance in the Economical SILVER HAWK V-8 1 No feed to wait until '58 for a family sports car. Today, the economical V-8 Silver Hawk, companion to the super- charged Golden Hawk, combines all the enjoyment of true sports car appearance and performance with the roomy THE SILVER HAWK SIX...combines low initial cost with unsurpassed motor- ing economy. CORPORATIO HAWE.. ~ sports car enjoyment. aker-Packard - THE SUPERCHARGED GOLDEN > .the car that sets the pace in N a —e i Woek & "Printz Hotoe. Sales. | 1675 Highland Rod. OR 3-5200 ‘i 245 ~ Mazurek Motor Sales 8. Blvd. E three Schuylkill County jail pris- oners incurred by breaking jail Sunday, The men happened to pick an official FBI car as their escape boom" itted walk- The fugitives were spo’ ing along a South Philadelphia street and captured after a short chase yesterday. “= 2 * They took an automobile that had been parked in-a Pottsville, Pa., garage over the weekend by an ‘agent assigned there, Agent U.S. Sending More Jets for Philippine Defenses MANILA @-The United States is sending more jets to bolster the Philippine republic’s defenses. The U.S. Air Force an a squadron of supersonic F100 fighter-bombers will move from Okinawa to Clark Field in mid- August, Last month the Air Force delivered a squadron of F86 Sabre Jet fighters to the Philippine Air Force, Filipino pilots are training in them at Clark Field. The human heart pumps five to six quarts of blood through almost baton twirlers, military units and ; x | ~ WEDN ESD, \ “SAVE Sag ‘BIG Velues - "DOUBLE Stamps, TOO! Reduced lo Clowr / Save on Groups of » LADIES’ DRESSES AND MORE OFF! e WERE $5.9 @ Sines 2 2.88 @ WERE $11.83 0 1 Clour! Save on Groups of --—. Ladies’ SPORTSWEAR = See eso to ee ~ 7 gi ce x3 $ s13.98 ROSE MARIE REIDS ... $9.18 - WIM SUITS _....... 3.88 389 LADIES’ SKIRTS “1... 188 89c NYLON HOSE ...... 1» Mc 1.99 PLAY SHORTS +. 88e 199 SPORT BLOUSES -.. 8c 99 POLOS — HALTERS . 1.97 COTTON SLIPS ......, 97e 4,000 circuits in the human body./ 74 North Saginaw St. DOUBLE STAMPS Follow the Crowds to - Sevings—Our Great August White Sale WHITE SALE SPECIAL! 39e YARD GOODS to Cloar / Save on Groups of GIRLS’-BOYS’ WEAR $2.99 GIRLS’ SWIM SUITS .....,,.$1.57 | ~ 1.69 GIRLS’ SHORT SETS ..,.,.. 89c 1.99 GIRLS’ BLOUSES. ........., .88c 1.59 GIRLS’ PAJAMAS .,..,..... 89¢ 89 BOYS’ SHORTS ..:......,., .33 1.99 BOYS’ SPORT SHIRTS .,,.. 88c 1.00 BOYS’ POLO SHIRTS ...,.. 49c 2.99 BOYS’ SWIM SUITS ...... Save on one group of MEN’S WEAR WHITE SALE SPECIAL! $3 MUSLIN SHEETS J? t8e Muslin Pillow © $2.09 Pequot Muslin one rs) ir WHITE SALE SPECIAL! READY MADE DRAPES WHITE SALE SPECIAL! - Widowed Misery cslalings jeok oe ania, Sod ‘is afraid, dis ‘iste elo, but she won't She nails the windows shut. She let anyone help her. hag five locks on the front door, Her husband could probably have three more locks on the inside this situation, had he bequea’ puts a two-by-four across the door, result of their once-happy life for two, He was a successful attorney. There were no children. They: lived elosely together.. They talked over everything together. They were well-to-do, and they Were ‘self- sufficient. * “2 Be His widow's—tegacy includes a , an income, unreasonable fear, lonéliness, and distrust. FOUR THINGS No man would intentionally leave his wife in such an unhappy situa- tion, Here are four things every man. past 50 should do to prevent misery for. his wife in future years: 1. Allow her to develop her own personality. The shy woman who dedicates herself to her husband and nothing else is asking for a widowhood. of being only half of @ person, —_—— oe eevee ee tee Steet awe 2. Help her develop Friends must be cultivated; they RABBI NATHAN HERSHFIELD PariyioHonot Saat.” Rabbi and Wife _,&, Nesp "er, informed on busi. ard “His Wife Agana A reception to introduce Rabbi and Mrs. Nathan Hersh- ield is being given by Dr, and Mrs. Irving Gordon and Dr. and “ Mrs.* Joseph . Nosanchuck at the Gordon home on James K boulevard Wednesday eve- ning. : x .*..7 Rabbj Hershfield succeeds Rabbi Sanford Saperstein in assuming spiritual leadership of Temple Beth Jacob, +. .-® For the past six years Rabbi Hershfield has served in Char- lotte and Gastonia, N. C. NANCY KAY MEAD Mrs, Clarence Moshier of Lochaven road and David Mead of Front street announce. the ¢@ngagement of their daughter, Nancy Kay Mead, to Richard Charles McClellan. The prospective bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Stanley McClellan of Lochaven road. No date has been set for the wedding. ness and financial affairs and tell her whom to turn to — be- sides you, 4. Encourage her to make con- tacts outside the home where she can be useful, A job or a charity or something that has to be done will be an anchor when she is left alone, * * * Q — “I am 59 and plan‘té retire at 65. My wife tells me I should cultivate a hobby to keep me busy after retirement, but I am too tired at night to do anything but sit." — Percy H. A — Full-time sitting after re- tirement is fill-time dullness, so take your wife's advice. There are thousands of hobby clubs in the United States. There are shelves full of books in your public library listing hobbies and describing spec- ific hobbies. A hobby can make you eager to retire and have more. time to spend on it, and can add. to your income after retirement, Go hobby hunting this weekend. 00,000 U.S. Rakias. Owe Life to Progress Four words — ‘‘It might have been” — have been called the saddest words of tongye or pen, But in one respect at least, they are the happiest we can imagine. * * * According to Health Infor- mation, Foundation, at . least 300,000 American infants are now alive who would have died before their first birthday if the mortality standards of 40 years ago had prevailed last year. * * * Instead, advances in medi- cine and increased public awareness of health infor- Mrs. Robertson Honors Son's Bride-Elect at Tea Mrs. Don Robertson of East. Hammond Lake drive -enter- tained 75 guests at a tea Sun- day afternoon fionoring Susan Strunk, bride-elect of Bruce Robertson. * * * Mrs. Merle Voss and Mrs.- Fred Hoenstine presided at the tea table which was decorated with a white and silver table- cloth, pink roses and white . - ¢hrysanthemums, - Following the tea, Mr. and Mrs, A. M. Robertson enter- tained the bridal couple and out-of-town guests at a buffet dinner in their home on Wash- ington street. The decorations again followed a pink and white color scheme, and the . * table was bride’s cake. DINNER GUESTS Guests of honor included Su- san and Brucé, Mr. and Mrs. Farrell H, Strunk, Mr. .and Mrs. Don Robertson, Audry Horton, Ruth Hadden, Opal Lewton, Mrs. Astrid Anderson, Pauline Herrick and Ethel Her- rick, Carrie Ann Charles and Brooks Robertson also attend< ed, centered with a * * * Susan is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Farrell H. Strunk of Lansing. Bruce’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Don Robertson of East Hammond Lake drive. The couple will be wed in a Sept. 7 ceremony in Lansing. | William Hedeman, a nephevi “pe peed enya i @: if Me are mation have cut the infant death rate by 75 per cent since 1915. Four decades ago, 1 in 10 children died in the first year of life. Now death rate is 1 in 40. * * * Improved prenatal care, more births in the hospital rather than in the home, and regular visits to the doctor dur- ing infancy are some of the main factors in this dramatic improvement. BUT MANY DIE The sto is a long way , however. Although 300,000 infarits were saved last year, 108,000 died — and many of these deaths could have been prevented by better health practices, Don't Scorn Husband's Brainstorm He May Become ‘A-Age Successor to Edison If your husband starts draw- . ing plans on the tablecloth “some night and shows an un- natural interest in space ships, don't laugh. He may turn out to be the. Edison of the atomic age. * * * This is advice from a woman’ who knows. She's a strawberry blonde from Canaan, Conn., who has a happy smile and can afford a mink coat just because she didn’t telephone a psychia- trist when her husband de- veloped symptoms of inventor- itis. Gloria’ Williams isn’t the the — The first week of life is still the most dangerous with respect to fatal illness. Sixty- five times as many infants die during those first seven days as during the entire 12th month of life, * * * Health Information Founda- tion believes that the answer to this problem will come, not through any earth-shattering discovery, but through better understanding and a_ closer relationship | esac hospitals, physicians and the public. By DOROTHY ROE AP Women’s Editor It takes all kinds to make the world of Hollywood. I didn’t think it would ever happen, but I've just met a male Hollywood star who ad- mits that women seldom swoon Bride-Elect Entertained at Shower Jacqueline Garbin was hon- ored at a Dridal shower given Saturday evening by her aunt, Mrs. Hancel Boatright, in her home on Oxbow Lake, * * * Jacqueline is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Garbin of Keego Harbor. The prospective bridegroom, Richard Bennett, - ig the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bennett of Stout street... Franc) The wedding will take place in the First Presbyterian Church Sept, 14, Guests attending the shower from Keego Harbor were Mrs. Garbin, Mrs, John McFall, Jacqueline’s grandmother; Mrs. R. G. Howser, Mrs, Chet Carey, Mrs. Thomas Curren and Mrs. Melvin McFall. Others Wendell Walker, Nancy Walker, Mrs. Ed Thompson, Mrs. George Boatright and Mrs. Joe Kyle, all of Pontiac. * * * Also attending were Mrs. Irwin Brunner from Walled Lake and Mrs. Virginia Oak, Mrs, George Seleske, Mrs. Robert Peters and Lynn Peters from Detroit. viens thy at Va Further- _them to s present included Mrs. KATHLEEN LaFOUNTAIN The Jed W. LaFountains of Drayton Plains announce the engagement of their daughter, .- Kathleen, to Robert Leightley. Robert’s parents are Mr. and Mrs, ~ Gilbert Leightley of North Perry Street. No date has been set for the wedding. Mrs. Edward Collins and son Jack, of Birmingham, together with Mrs. Lee Mayor and son, Kerr, of Birmingham, have re- turned from Ridgetown, O n t., where they visited with Mr. and Mrs, Wendell Snow. The Collins’ daughter, Cathy, has returned after spending two weeks as a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Shannon at Higgins Lake Golf Course. * * * Touring for two weeks in Florida are Wilma Pfahlert of * Sylvan Lake and Joann Heal- ander of Calvert street. * * * Mrs, Virgil Covert and daughter, Linda, of South East boulevard have returned home with her father, W. L. Palmer, ‘and’ Mrs. Palmer after visiting the Palmers and Mrs. Covert's sister, Mrs. Wayne Rust, and family in Cape Girardeau, Mo. Mrs. Covert's son, Marine Pfc. Robert Covert, is home from Camp Pendleton, Calif., on a 30-day leave, * * * “Having a wonderful time” at the Disneyland Hotel in Ana- beim, - Calif., are Mrs, Elsie Welch and daughter, Sue, of Cooley Lake road, * * * Guests of Mrs. Leona Widdis of Central avenue are her brother-in-law and his wife, Mr, and Mrs. Fred Widdis of Brantford, Ont., who will soon jeave for California, * * * Among graduates from Mount Carmel Mercy Hospital Unit of the Mercy School of Nursing, Detroit, who received their diplomas on August 3 were Caro] Flanders of Edison street, Suzanne Trembley of Cobalt street and Jane Web- ster of Rosedale place. Graduating from the St. Jo- seph Mercy Hospital Unit in Ann Arbor was Lionell Kilby of Raeburn street. more, he says he doesn't want he claims. * * * ’ Lanky, quizzical Frank -Love- joy has been married for 17 years to the same woman, and says he knows nothing at all about women, never has under- stood what makes them tick and never expects to. “I don’t win all the fights get into either,” says Frank. “I don't always knock out the LIONELL IMOGENE KILBY Graduating cum laude Sat- urday from Mercy School of Nursing, Detroit, was Lionell Imogene Kilby. Miss Kilby, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Samuel Austin Kilby of Hazel Bend avenue, attended St. Jo- seph Unit, Ann Arbor. Personal News of Interest Graduating from the St. Jo- seph Mercy Hospital Unit in Detroit was Mary Joan Hoff- man of Sylvan Shores drive. * * * Receiving congratulations on the birth of a son, Robert Jo- seph, Aug. 3 at St. Joseph Mer- cy Hospital are Mr. and Mrs. D. J, Fons (nee Marietta Col- fer) of Huntington Woods. Robert Colfer of Wall street is the maternal grandfather. CAROL SUE EMPSON The engagement of Carol Sue Empson to Joseph J. Lam- oureux is announced by her parents, Mrs, Darnel] Empson of Michigan avenue and Glen Empson of Oxford, Joseph is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lamoureux of Downington, Pa., and is a student at Drexel Institute of Technology, Phil- adelphia, Carol is attending Murray State College, Mur- ray, Ky.: No-date has been set for the wedding. Paris | fashion designer Pierre Balmain i is iy year. At left _ white jersey. bot * led his Breischwantz suit-with @: - rom Parisian chee designer } ducing fur in By sab clothes in his collection this . Jacqueline Goddard's new dollectian are thes) “Euridis,” 4 cocktail dress made of satin in center, | ~ a Tal” 4 well ee of ta ee s at roe [:tectheeert | j } assistant with a low ince hl and he doesn't fall in love each week. He ambles in and out of the action with a bored expres- sion. wo¢ : “T kind of like this guy Mc REGULAR GUYS, TOo “T don't treat all women oe ee eee Frank, “I prefer to view them. as people. Some of them can even be good companions, with a sense of humor and an un- derstanding of fair play, Lots of women are regular guys too.” * «* #¢ . Lovejoy is married to an actress, OP gas Banks, with whom he used to work in radio, They have two Steve, 11 and Judy, 14 Be Stylish ‘in the Red’ This Year PARIS (INS) —It's fashion- able to be “in the red” this year and here is how to do it “a la Francaise.” For sports wear combine red with navy blue, white or gray as accessories or complement- ary clothes. TO LOOK DRESSY If you want a red outfit to look dressy wear it with black For a striking effect Paris fashion combine red © with mauve or purple. Red. combined with green and gold looks Oriental. The smartest red Paris styles are by Jean Patou and Made- leine de Rauch. Patou dresses a lady in red for around the clock. Made of red wool crepe the outfit ‘is a town suit with a - wrist-length jacket and an°all- pleated skirt. Under the pleated skirt a second, slim red skirt replaces the petticoat and combines with a decollete top to a cocktail or dinner dress, — ON BEACH, TOO Madeleine de Rauch wants women to look like flames on the beach as well as in the city. She used bright red shan- tung for Indian-inspired ‘“pun- jab pants” with their fullness caught in a band at mid-calf height. They are worn with a strapless sun top and a loose collarless jacket, both of shan- tung in matching red, Another red-hot style is a chiffon shirtwaist dress, a matehing red wool coat, red eloche hat and red kid“ pump shoes. AP. Wirephote j l- THE GREAT - {— AMERICAN | PASTIME 2nd MAJOR HIT! A CHALLENGING DRAMA OF TODAY'S CHANGING M ‘THE POWER AND ue PRIZE ‘OR { DR. HENRY A. 7 North Saginaw. Street Optometrist Phone FE 4-6842 MILLER 4 4 ever built, Manchester, equal in area to three football fi TOPS IN TOPS — Looking like a gargantuan flying saucer, this giant plastic roof, the largest sprawis across the landscape in N.H. The huge translucent roof, the United States pavilion at the 1958 World’s Fair in Brussels, Belgium, Constructed. of 2,100 plastic panels, and will span a elds, will cover sheets over an Corporation, it is more than 340 feet in diameter roof is actually a rim will rest on two concentric rows of gold- colored steel columns. manufactured by the Kalwall 72,000-square-foot roof area. The “sandwich” panel of plastic interior aluminum grid and its © “Better Things in Sight” } Open Friday Evenings © d Closed iain 4 Afternoons SE iL i " TONIGHT et ee By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (®—How does a) ‘million dollars feel? Show Starts | Harry Belafonte ought to know. 8:00 P.M. The onetime janitor, now the hot test attraction in the show business, |will earn more than that in 1957. iI asked him how it felt. “1 can't feel it,” he replied be- Kitchen Timer Aids Salesmen Called Part of Modern, Sincere Approach by Steel Firm’s Agents CHICAGO (INS) — A’ Chicago parea steel corporation has found) )@ new device in the field of selling’ i—a kitchen timer. | Irwin D. Harris, board chairman! of Rolled Steel Corporation in suburban Skokie, says the use of the timer is part of the modern approach in sales, which makes the high-pressure salesman as out-| of-date as high button shoes. * * * Most of the firm's sales are handled by telephone. As _ the saleman talks with the prospective | client, he can observe how much) time he is ‘taking by the timer which is on his desk. BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN | ' | i a DRAMATIC NEW HIT FOR TRACY! NCER ROBERT TRACY: RYAN Hae FRANCS Dean GER -Walter BRENNAN hn ERESON = Est BORGNE Lee MARIN | The object, Harris says, is to | | keep to the point if a sale seems | likely, and if not, to close the | | conversation quickly to avoid becoming obtrusive. Like other firms Rolled Steel once leaned toward the extroverted| selling approach. Now, Harris de- ‘clares, effective selling can be ‘done on the phone by persons who ‘are inherently modest, provided ‘they can develop honest enthusi- asm. . x oe * | “"The startling fact of the matter,”’ the adds, ‘“‘is that introverts have lbecome some of our most succeéss- ‘full salesmen. “Just put yourself in the place ef the steel purchasing agent. You've been deluged by a series ot fast-talking, high-pressure salesmen. .Nobody likes to be bludgeoned inte buying, and such |a@ pressurized blowhard can easily outlive. his welcome, and | that of his company’s wares. “In contrast, a salesman who is ‘less noxious, but obviously knows his business, can gain the confi- idence of purchasers. His very sy- ness may well convey the impres- sion of sincerity.” MA 4-215) AIR-CONDITIONED BOMBAY—India's cotton textile! lindustry has been hurt by a sharp) ‘deterioration in the domestic raw ‘cotton-supply position, While con- ‘sumption has risen to a new high, a trade estimate, places the cur- irent Indian crop at only 4,800,000 ibales ae an earlier estimate of 5,500,000 India’s Cotton Crop Off ‘Hopes to Help Negro Race Harry Belafonte Unspoiled by Million-a- Year Income |fore going out before a packed] . |house at the Greek Theater, ‘‘be- jcause I never see it. Most of ‘it idisappears to the government, ex- penses,. ete, Out of the million, I maybe get only $100,000." With a backward glance at his poor days, | he had to laugh at himself: “Only $100,000!" * * * The dough is a comfort, he ad- mitted, but it hasn't changed his life. “I'm no happier than I was when I was earning $350 a week,” ihe commented. ‘That bought -me iall the things I needed. | * * * “IT don’t throw my money around, I have only an apartment ‘in New York. I still own just one lear. Artistically, I'm still doing ithe kind of work I want to do, iwith no compromises. And my friends are the same ones I've had for years.’ | But the difference now is pow- ier. He has the power to reach lthe widést audience imaginable— the first of his race to do so, He feels deeply the responsibility that goes with such power, For instance, tonight he is ap- pearing on Nat King Cole's NBC |television show. He will receive a couple of hundred dollars and do- nate that to charity. Belafdnte is able to draw $40,000 for a guest appearance. He. explained: “When I found out that Nat was trying to break down the resistance to sponsoring a. TV show starring a Negro, I \told him I’d be glad to go on with ‘him. I said I'd do anything on the ishow he wanted me to. | ~*~ * * | —s is making another gesture playing New York's | Waldorf "Aside Hotel for five == weeks starting’ next month. He == could earn much more elsewhere. | But he is returning because the => hotel booked him as the first Ne- igro to play the Waldorf. * * e. - Belafonte admitted that the ac- ceptance of himself as a perform- ler gets him in places where other Negroes are barred. But he is will- ing to be the trailblazer in hopes that others may follow. “For instance, when they tried to hang the ‘matinee idol’ tag on ithe acceptance of me by a vast audience,” he commented, ‘That is significant:, That 4,407 people out there tonight will accept me as an individual and a perform- er." He plans to reach an even wider audience in the future. He is now’ with 20h Centurv-Fox. I asked if he were limited in what he could, do on the screen becatise he is a Negro. * * * “Five vears »¢o. T mieht have been.” he sald. “‘but not now. iThere’s nothing I can't do on the screen, Procucers realize I can be they were: dienelad by tho finan. cial success of ‘Island in the Sun’ jof possessing atom and hydrogen Would Abolish: Nuclear Arms Mayor Makes Plea on) the 12th Anniversary of Hiroshima Bombing HIROSHIMA W — Hiroshima Mayor Tabao Watanable called for abolition of nuclear - weapons and an end of their testing today, the 12th anniversary of the atom- bombing of his city. Some 20,000 persons assembled ‘in Peace Memorial Park for the annual ceremony, Standing before the white stone cenotaph built on! the spot where the bomb exploded, Watanabe said in a proclamation: “It is only a foolish illusion to try to maintain peace by the might bombs, them. | “Present tests of nuclear weap- ons are undermining the existence of mankind. Radioactive elements, once taken inside the body, not only corrode from within but con- tinue wreaking genetic havoc with the offspring.” and experimenting with New York Mercury Falls Near Record , NEW YORK ‘@-The ones. ture fell toe 57.8 degrees at 5:50 a.m. today — gree above the record iow for the date in New York City. 57.6 in 1934. * cast that the temperature would rise to a high near 75 today, and dip into the upper 50s tonight. two-tenths of a de- The record low for Aug. 6 was * * The U. S. Weather Bureau fore- The chilly weather was attrib- uted to a cool mass of Canadian dollars plunged into the 30s in some mountainous areas-of central and: western Pennsylvania, the weath- er bureau said, Federal Taxes Soar ~ WASHINGTON-Statisticians cal- culate that since the end of World | EXCLUSIVE | Exjoy Wi's'.° SUMMERTIME -FIRST-RUN SHOWINGS HIT PARADE {7 reetereeneesstcrrecesat| PHONE FEGER S| LAND: Fs ‘ rl mm SLENIESEN: VATE ANN MALA POWERS SIDNEY BLACKMER-MILDRED NATWICK wofay Wray NOW thru SATURDAY Atl 280-9:80-9 00-7 90-0005 Cogeactcort TECHNICOLC Plus: Color Parade © Variety Views © Cartoon SUNDAY: WALT DISNEY'S “FANTASIA” As he concluded at 8:15 a.m.— thé time the American B2 sirens and temple bells signaled the start of a minute of silent prayer and the release of 700 pig- eons. The crowd included Prince and) Princess Mikasa, the first et sentatives of Japan's royal family) dropped the bomb Aug. 6, 1945 to attend the memorial ceremony. | The prince laid a flowered wreath; at the foot of the memorial arch. Brazil is officially known as the; Republic of the United States of) Brazil, according to the law. me, my reaction was that it meant! TIMMS = ROTUNDA INN= Businessman’ s seeeeeoeveoaseeeoneeoeeo ooo es ef DAY LAST Walt Disney's Johnny Tremain’ STARTS TOMORROW! | “ET | | 2 LUNCHEON $1.09 Choice 8-Ox. SIRLOIN STEAK French Fries, & Cole Slaw SERVED Every Day 12 Noon "til 4—Except Sunday HEUUUOUHAUUAUOAAAOAUUA JOE’S FAMOUS SPAGHETTI HOUSE —_~ — Soommel ee oe em meet ee — email ooneeil a — mune ee —e —— —e — ee omer ee — ee = — ee ve Cooma — omen | — = =) i * nevotinting a thre-picture deal, a draw. If there were anv doubts, NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH AND PIZZERIA FE 3-7396 1038 WEST HURON ST. wetytints TF wtf anat fae on ee | LAST TIMES TONICHT NOW SHOWING! ae ra lj 5S .052n 1 wannnnnnnnnnne EXCLUSIVE Morne LFF 54500 gy FIRST RUN SHOWINGS! ss; ‘Ter Tt TTT ee See ee eee eee eee eee eee eee ™"eerrrrerrrrrrrerrrrereryYeeerereeereerererererereer Te Two of the Very Best! THE STORY OF NEW YoRK’S FABULOUS SON! An rrr es P 4 > 4 >4 4 Tal for treasure that ever shook the 2 great South west! : 204 } f pe THE WAY TO ih § a ne BOB HOPE: VERA MS "PAUL DOUGLAS ADB Si REN MSH SCORE ESSE WER ETT : GUEST STARS Sima Durante and Jack, Benny PONTIAC RIWVE- Theat -IN a2 _ THE GOLD i f | Astorr.Costeu "CALYPSO JOE” “HOT ROD RUMBLE” WED., THURS., FRI. ll. th lt. ll. lil FRIDA |FIRST RUN RITA EXCLUSIVE ROBERT SHOWING JACK a) PONTIAC 2435 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FE 5-4500 2 FIRST RUNS! Paramount presents BOB HOPE: VERA MILES e bie DOUGLAS THE WAY To THE GOLD Corner WILLIAMS LAKE and AIRPORT ROADS Phone OR 3-2683 ve T - Ni ver Say \ Goodbye” oe hy Sa Ae age @ Sm mi om * PLUS x Maple Rd. East of Walled Lake MA 4-3135 MON. -- TUES. in COLOR and |,..CINe maScore.... THE PRODIGAL ~—~ LANA TURNER: EDMUND PURDOM LOS CALNE HAYWORTH-HITCHUM LEMMON COMMERCE TECHNICOLOR® CinemaScore | produced oy RVING ALLEN ane ALBERT R. BROCCOLI A WARWICK PRODUCTION - A COLUMBIA PICTURE —ALSO— “DESPERADOS ARE/W TOWN Sereenptay by IRWIN SHAW . cirectos ty ROBERT PARRIS a So. South End of Union Lake Road Open 7:00 EM 3-0661 Yk OS Te of the FOREST © PePeett MeTESS BLUE SKY ‘2150 OPDYKE ROAD Phone FE 4-4611 Pepe MAN FROM ED é iy kee LRIO engl ere ee ok See OES we gd Ya esl oad 5 a ae Mee Ca e/ } i eee es rit be kts THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, auGusT 6, 1957 an 1 (Pull Naiplayméak a “Pactor new style wheat was 4 lower to % higher, Sept. $2.16%; corn was By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK ® — The pains of debt that grows ever more costly to manage. The thinking behind much of — or, more accurately, a panna of unemployment. So many people are employed today that the total of personal income is at a record high, This means that consumer spending is at a record high too, And this has con- tributed to the business confi- dence in continuing good times that has sparked the big boom in industrial expansion. * * * Consumer goods are for the most part in ample supply. Not all capital goods are. The urge of so many corporations to build new plants and equip them with this is the goal of full employ- new machinery and tools—and to unchanged to. % higher, Sept. $1.314%; oats were unchanged to \4 lower, Sept. 65 %; rye was % to 1 cent lower, Sept. $1.34%; soy- beans were unchanged to % high- er, Sept. $2.47%; and lard was 2 = 8 cents a hundred pounds high- r, Sept. $13.32. _. Grain ion “CHICAGO GRAIN > STIane Aug. 6 {(AP)—Opening grain: ; Wheat (new) Mar oe 10% Sep cece 2.16% Rye Dee ncoes 2.21% Sep ceene 2.34% Mar cess 2.23 Mar eos 1.40% May cecose 2.17% Ry GW ocacce oe 04% Bep ...cccee 1.34% — ERC .nccrsee 1.38% Sep 1.31 Mar cess 1. seevece 1.27 Lar Mar ..eeeees 1.31 oe oes 13.30 a eevcese 13.57 Bep cesses G6% Deo ....-:, 13.45 Dec. cceas.s 68% ‘'atomic weapons in the United ion ly guarded in the past. Carefully Guarded in Past WASHINGTON i — The House! Armed—Services Committee has published testimony which may disclose for the first time the lo- cations of six secret stockpiles of States. Such information has been close- Testimony released by the com- Borge Mixes MARKETS | Testimony May Disclose Atomic Stockpile Areas ividing “technical, logistical a 'training services” to the mili mittee over the weekend ghowed the subject came up in a routine session when Brig. Gen. William R. Shuler was asked why more money was needed for entertain- ment at bases operated for the Armed Forces Special weapons Project. Shuler, Army construction direc- tor, replied that the special weap- ons project was charged with pro- ‘* * * And, he added, the project also was responsibile for “all national y te Zé Soybeans Prosperity Behind Economic Ills: a;do all of this right now if not soon- er—is What has led.to the tight money situation, and the rising price level in the view of the Treasury officials. Full employment, with a scar- city of labor in many of the skilled trades, has set the stage for the annual increase in the wage scales. Tie the business expansion boom | to a tight labor market and you! get the demand and supply situa- tion that keeps prices rising, ‘As long as employment is so high and the total of personal incomes | so high there will be little real eonsumer resistance to high prices. And so the spiral goes nier- rily on. These are the pains of prosper- ity. But just as the body in time can fight off many diseases, so can the .economy, There are some built-in remedies, put such a pressure on the in- vestment fund market that credit became tight and .interest rates started to climb. As they rise they cut off the: ability of first this and then that company or municipality to build a new plant or a new public facility, As the boom lev- els off some of the pains are al- leviated. ¥ * * Also as industries have expand-| lowing ed they have built up greater ca- pacity to produce, A striking ex- ample is the aluminum industry,| 1956, which in a very few years has gone from a state of acute short- age to one of abundance and at least temporary oversupply, Many other industries-are now in posi- tion to produce more than they can market, The resulting com-| petition for sales’is the best bet the consumer has that prices won't be boosted out of sight. The rush of business to amend Ey Market lower | in Quiet Trade a down a point. Sinclair and Royal Dutch were off %4, * * * was several * * news ba¢kground was fairly Boeing was ahead a point division lv Motors were unchanged to a * * * Down fractions were Republic Steel, Lukens, Olin Mathieson, Westinghouse, Baltimore & Ohio and Loew's. Johns Manville was up a frac- Wie e's 4 Defense Wilson have denied re- ports that Wilson and President Eisenhower disagree on a pro- posed new budget system. ; * * * “There is no difference of opin- ion whatsoever,’ Wilson said in a statement yesterday. “Definitely misinterpretations,” mt rm Po upper peninsula. He military editor of the Battle Creek Enquirer & News and editor of the Petoskey Evening News, nanra go iE Sa me said White House press secretary James C. Hagerty, commenting on newspaper accounts which said Wilson's views~ conflicted with Eisenhower's. shade higher. Steels, rails, chem-|Ontted icals and metals were lower. Kennecott fell back more than omni a point and DuPont two points. ay ‘on No. __ Pontiae State “SA dune 6 a8 with ose of” business on in accordance call made by Commissioner of the Thank. Section visions G2 ct the Michizan ag with other lan and cash items in process of collection. § 2,814,204.83 12,044,941.51 371,183.17 renews _, GOR 50,000.00 haane and discounts inated ing $976.04 overdrafts) 10,579,334.08 Bank premises owned +» $357,256.00 “ae end 56,139.27 ures — 812,395.27 Investments and other as- gets We ne J represent- premises or other DON'T LET YOUR MONEY You can invest $40, or more, monthly out of your income. You don’t have to. wait until you have the = amount to select © fee tate “vestment and pa it this easy way. Thats: tag A Mutual Funds are so po with aa. of average pce top in, write, or r = information on Mutual WATLING, LERCHEN . a Oo B Chopin and H ens Detroit Produce stockpile sites” for atomic weap- ina ben! Member New York Stock Exchange - . ollo’ t P ons and for some testing areas. tion after the Federal Housing Teal estate ......4..560- 28,138 53 ond other leading exchanges for Wrigleys The f wee Se OF prices pea The men ‘stationed at project]. Administration announced lower|Other assets .............. 135,138.40 a—s —_ rg Be pts A bases, the = said, are on minimum down payments on| Total —_ $08, 428.228.19 Several hundred persons were duce brought @ Farmers’) 5. nour mission . onl oe ut homes insured by the agency, Demand depoeABTIES | 716 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. guests of Wrigleys Supermarkets | Markets by growers and sold by wea eral.” . Partnerships, and FE 4-2895 allo arise in ‘gen ra . “7 n orn corpo : E last night at the firm's annual C lthem in wholesale package lots. | i< N Y k S k upence ap 11,414,165.04 | Fest, held this year at Will-O-Way Quotations are furnished by the De-| ew York Stocks partnerships and corpora- is ye } Then, oo ck say- e sesce gees 9,843,020.09 - on West Long Lake Road. Bar-/troit Bureau of Markets, as bat the bases were atomic stock- {Late Morning Quotations ts of bi | Monday. ng ~ ac ’ ent iinelu ding becued dinner was served at ta 4 sci |pile sites; the general named six Admiral ..... 102 mM Cent ...... 51 |. postal savings) . 425,970.69 set in the orchard behind er, | Avon aa an $4.00 bases scheduled to get snack bars Allted “Cn "2: ust Reet Bee .. 4 a Et —- Roe sige — ee |Apples, Red Bird. Danson sestaseees 475,and other off-duty entertainment Allied Stre : 34 In eu. 43 Depo Me of banks a4 15, THE MIDYEAR strings of Japanese lanterns Apples, Transparent, bu... ..0-.... oct ] |Other deposits tcc 2 ‘addi 1 r he 5 ag 16-ais. beseeeers 8S was released on $100 bond peat) P Comw Ed... 39.7 St Reg Pap .. 31.5 sag i ta ae “he Le wr Au. 2 ape an aa paar mag een aM Se EE BE 3H] (TALLTALES by KING EDWARD wxroxarmta delta blue and Bermuda grass. |!>s. 1980-2080; mixed grades 160-180| G J. Finn, 32, of 2073 Wil-| | vances by two other major rubber’ student at Oregon State College cos eae Shs —— ma Other varieten were less Tespon:|MEaiit' Shante ab. —chte foto Bech Fae’ Keoso Harter, mantacturers, Goodvear Tire fant son of Mir and Mek, Reig. St Set «SE mame ss a] | tt was scold the dy the hotel HT” Now! With hole in i t . FF Sever, +teeeee ° — sive in varying degrees. ear — ‘Mater, hosters” around| pleaded guilty to drunk driving) Rubber Co. and the B. F. Good-!Eaton, of 2811 Orange Grove Dr.; |Copper Rng |. 284 Sou Pac .... 44 caug re ‘OlKS pou tip. Try one today... ~ 25c higher: lower grade slow, irich Co, |and Midshipman 3.C. Geo R.|Gorn_ Pa - 31.2 Sou Ry ..... #43 water out of the windows and Ser yesuesl saaety. wel igacn Gane: @ "Monday before Sylvan Lake Nis-' ; rge Curties Wr .. 395 Sperry Ra... 243 . See Paroled Michigan epened oety “Eh bes wets dectin’; :|tice Joseph J. Leavy, and asl x ke sagt, a _— at the University | Deere ae et et ee a slid down the icicles stockers an ers 8 y: of Pennsylvania, and son of Geo " 38. fed “steers 950-1200. Ibs. 24 00-|Sentenced to 30 days in the Oak-| Firestone said recent advances! TE Dis C Seag ‘| 28.7 Std O1 Ind . 50.7 *f. . 26.00. few mixed high , choles and lowliand County Jail after failing to/in wages and higher costs of ma-|E. faatd = = Pearl St. ee oe ee a os ~ Ki NG Lifer Shot by Police Several loads ‘at letter price one load|pay a fine of $100 plus $15 costs.|terials and transportation made) igaaaa ‘DuPont 197.2 Stevens, JP .. 21.8 ll W ARD ©. [Beerege’ prime 1'i3e We steets 28.00: ithe increase necessary. | est Kod” 1092 gun Om sl. te , {ED Mike W. Victor, 40, of 56545. ’*~ * * El Auto L .. 38 swift @ Co .. 33.1 MIAMI, Fla. few good to low choice steers 22.00- ia M "3 E erly “4 - (®—Police said yes- tao ‘be ot, BO ia ys Locust Rd., South Lyon, plead-| The general price advance in| ' | Emer Rad... $a billig? ag Hs CIGARS erday that Bernie H. Lanway,'cnoice to low prime heifers 24.80, good/ed guilty to charges of drunk driv- the industry followed negotiation of| |Erie RR ..... 18.1 Tex @ Bul .. 26.6 ; 61, shot to death in a gun battle|to low choice ae peer ff 0.25 00 0: |ing before West Bloomfield Town- 4 AqenmalA claire 4 chaae! | pected : po a Textron oa"? 13.9 ‘ ; with a policeman Sunday night,|2iu"? cows Tsay, tye ioad geod|ship Justice Elmer C. Dieterle®,,1>centsanhour, wage package ‘Food Mach. 814 Timk R Bear 48.1 Iesssatia Cash Yow eee 6 et was a paroled lifer from Michigan 6¢ 9 We. yearling stock, steers an ade on| Monday, and paid a fine of $90 ‘Union two weeks ago. | Freept ‘Sut 54th, SS . ¥, State Prison and had it much venue slow, steady: choice and prime plus $10 costs. |Gen Bak .,.. 10.7 yPwent Cen ... 27.2 . ne . of his adult life behind bars. — | ealers, 24.00-31.00; good to low choice [Gen Bee s.r Uneered 4 He was sentenced in 1937 as a|i9,00; culls 10.00-14.00. . Special Sale Thurs. and Fri. a |Gen Dds .... 484 on Pac... 30 ° fourth offender after being convict-|_, sneer, —,Selabie $00. Bulk, early re-|corner Baldwin & Indianwood Ps Discovery Took Time : | gen Beton hg ale ie ia” 3 == 714 Community Nat'l ed of an attempt to rob a Saginaw ter ewes in increased supply; early trade e | le en Shoe - 74.7 oni Fruit 2. 43.2 Ik ——— BALTIMORE-It was not until Gen Tel ..... 40.2 | home of $18,000 in jewels. The|shit tinscid: ewes steady to weak: two| ‘The ip counts Gen GARY DOROUGH | Gen Time"... 224 UB Gas Cp -. 343) aan Bank Bldg. burglary was foiled by the house-|lots mostly choice 80-00 1b. spring Lake re are counties in r- |1909 that investigators discovered Gen Tire “*... ar = 2S os anooenetets holders. who attacked . with|2" 0? 2640: cull to choles ewes 3.00-6.00. gia, second only to Texas which) that infantile paralysis was caused Birmingham students partict-| Qt pr'1'1: 72 van Raat “2. aH ee ; ; < in Oat oe ri! has 254, by a virus. pating were: Midshipman 1.C. Don-| $oog™ch. *: 8 West Un ‘Tei in Phone FE 4-1568-9 Sunday night a Miami woman Poultry - | edie rig agi _— - agertF Gren Fawe ». If teas mn. eal reported a holdup attempt. Lan- DETROIT POULTRY Cr Mrs. Jere iy Do — =a mene Bk Sedwet a3 ' AP) — Pri ° : rough, of 32262 < ser 41. Z way was cornered in a vacant lot paid per pound, fo: Dero eh ag Beaconsfield Dr.; and Midshipman| G%!,, O81 --:-138, Zale, #, Tow 31-6 and after tiring one shot, fell with ity live poultry wu 10 a.m: | Hersh Choc .. 61.4 Yngs | . Mf three bullets in his head WHreayy Teas 18-21; caponettes | (4%-8 3.C. Richard C. Sneed, a student! Hlomente” 2. Ba Gardner Den 3.6 Richard H. DeWitt Donald E. Hansen 1 , peor boas pedo N _— _jat the University of Missouri, and| Hooker BI 1... 323 Res, FE 5-3793 Res. FE 2-5513 son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Radioactive Fallout Hits DETROIT EGGS | Sneed, of 848 Madison Ave. STOCK AVERAGES Homeowners’ Policies — ob. j — - * New High in Lansing Derrole, eases “ineiuded, federal state rare — was Midshipman) NEW, YORK— (Compiled by the As-lf Accident Insurance Fire Insurance grades: c- Earlene, & mudett at 0 38 eo Automobile Insurance Life I w Ini ; a (-Althoagh oti farlace mek: cane orgs a rue M-: Yale University, and son of Mrs./. 1, as ee Ti Dill stocks lier mane from dangerous levels, radioactive wid. avg. 40%: medium 39-40; wid. avg.) ene” Lawrence McFarlane, of 705 Canal| Week seo 1.214 ite tea iso) Liability Insurance Plate Glass Insurance aout it a new hig In Lang’ Severe eS wee Macc dnd WBE BE MEL] Rer~tary Insurance Bonds—All Types 7). an: datum ; es . b : last Friday, the State Health De-|S*'8 ren a ve. oie: grade C The up visited Val i ye oT ioe lite 122 168.0 Tenants’ Policies partment reports, large 20; checks 22%. cect Mhisala Para'so, | 1986 high 1... 276.3 168.1 76.9 191.5 The peak reading probably re- Commercialt ee ee a So Chile; Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; |1956 low ......, 244.0 126.2 69.6 171.6 wet a Udntiie toate binat te ee dont; wwomts: Gade A. tambo bi gas and Culebra, Puerto Rico before The punishment that the wise suffer who refuse Nevada, the Department said. Fall-|meaiam 38; rade Sai eee ales returning, te Iorieli, Ve. DETROIT STOCKS to take part in the government is to live under . iy ; gras (C. J. Nephier Ce.) men out pyle —. high , Pigures after decimal points are eights. Se soremnen ot wens ; ~—Plate, 378 B.C. zoomed new F riday . High Low Noon Banks Handle Charges len _Blee. . and subsided on Saturday, | 9g Baldwin Ruther Coe oA ae NEW YORK — A new charge |Roes, Gear ‘ - Merger Is Brewing: account plan is being tried out by Hows Recsurngo $b See Us Now! Crankshafts and Beer dbanks in the New York area. Un- The Pro het Co. yates 10 104 Tor ison Co. 13.4 134 134 Protect all... not just part Wayne Screw 2.1 : *No sale; bid and asked. of ka gpg aha: furnish complete theft insurance for - . everything you own... fur ’ _ Fete Hoffa’s Candidacy niture, clothes glasses, boats, SNEED = McFARLANE | pETROIT (INS)—A reception noble, Beat el eg ag a-trelaing crvian & honoring James R. Hoffa's can- min Gmiarer. Poeur| didacy for president of ‘the p abet Cite souieiing in inate Bay was| Teamsters Union will be held Sonarman Thursday. évening at the Sher-— aton-Cadiliac Hotel in Detroit. Joint Council 43: and | 0 am — sic cuptury” is the te of this aunts dead, tereh and pir yachts ips m,.Hol- Wayne County / Federation of | tre At nN Cao sae em ee : GATS ht toh Power, Official Soy WASHINGTON @ — The Navy plans 60 ships—including So nehinbig’ leone aad 38 eer se h otes : waminentort om — ne Soy mapa $ Appropriations ry fabio = flr ed ps. accgared | money bill today: and told the Air Force not to make its new acad- emy ‘‘a monument to governmen- tal extravagance.” x * - ene ee De lions Jet Marland and Vira en ae 169,000 requested for) *'s construction at the new Air Force wee vessels — into mothballs . the Navy said there would be lit tle effect on fighting power be-| the new a | ve ot ba ite vessels scheduled to join the fleet by next June, * * * While the elder stipe are being and 1 Dozen Relatives at Dock to Meet Jesuit Returning After Red China Ordeal pello, a small community north It approved $1,581,590,587 of the HAY MAKER — This device — sect Wes stil palithaibt? tl: ufacturer’s “hay in a day” system — is a crop dryer. It eliminates the threat of weather, enabling the farmer to dry hhis hay or grain overnight. The crop dryer is hooked up to a crop drying wagon. Heated air is forced through connecting ducts and held by a can- vas cover. The dryer can handle as many as four of the drying _ wagons at a time. The wagons hold 2% tons of hay. The dryer is being demonstrated at New Holland, Pa. In N ew Mexico Dam Collapse 2 Drown in LAS VEGAS, N. M. (®—A min- ister and his young daughter drowned in the flash flood which swept the Las Vegas area early yesterday after 2.79 inches of rain| age fell in the mountains to the north. The victims were the Rev. Emil LaPorte, 41-year-old pastor of the Flash Flood‘ water tossed his car off the road into a gulley. Sheriff Bob Martinez said dam- appeared lighter than was ex- a i About 25 persons were evacuated from their homes in Las Gallinags Canyon, 17 miles north of Las Vegas. A dozen to Southwest Bible Fellowship in Las Vegas, and his 10-year-old daugh- ter, Laura. * * * LaPorte was driving near Sa- 4 0 “iit i 2% tele j i control, can’t do Waldo Ave.. Pontiac. 18 families were evacuated from the Gallinas—Riv- * of New Mexico. Only light rain fell here. The mountain downpour burst the dams on three small lakes. up- stream and their 90 million gal- A S-year-old girl was dead on ar- Hospital, a Margaret Elrod, daughter of Ryan Rd.,. Shelby Township, Ma- comb County, was hit by an auto driven by Thomas Wells, 30, of 35 He hopped in his car, then lost his pursuer. bush, Whammo! Another crumpled fender. Smallfield abandoned — ship. As he hiked away, he heard repeated crashes as his wife _ slammed her car again and again into his. Booked on a charge of as- gault with a deadly weapon, Mrs, ee admitted all, put” she told officers, _ “you would have done the same ig yourselv Woman in Fair Condition jfront of Wells’ car. * -® .* Wells told police he did not have jtime to avoid her. He was released after questioning. of Family Killed in Airplane Crash MONROE, La. A father, his three sons and two grandchildren were killed yester- day when their plane crashed in an empty field. * * * The single. engine aircraft ap- parently stalled and dived into the soft earth, almost burying itself. Only a piece of the tail was visi- ble, * w * Killed were the grandfather, J. W. Johnson, 73, Monroe; Wil- liam Noble Johnson, 45, and his I?-yearold daughter, eanmmnaties Calif., pilot and owner of the plane, Mayor Shot by Foe Has 2nd Operation DETROIT ww — Garden City Mayor James Tierney, shot five times July 25, has undergone a jsecond emergency operation and still: is in critica] condition. * * * Mrs. Lottie Kulasezewski, 47728) hanks. —- ee river north of town and it was 1,5 Wiis Dut ee putaaien of mined twe'ts ge et do ps some of the houses along its Pacts Boost Syria's (Dependence on Reds just north of M59, when she ran in CAIRO W— Western diplomats in Cairo consider Syria has in- }creased its dependence on the Soviet Union as a result of Rus- sia's reported agreement to offer the Arab country technical and economic aid and to let Syria post- pone paying for the arms jt is buying ~— the Fs a Arab siassmenss Pad yesterday the agreements were reached in fense Minister Khaled -el Azem, Army Chief of Staff Gen. Tewfik Nizam el Din and Soviet officials. The Soviet aid offer. was report- ed at 200 to 300 million Syrian pounds.(65 to 100 million dollars). Syrian government circles were said to regard the Seviet moves as a victory for Syria. ‘Cairo dip- lomatic sources felt it meant a further swing toward the Soviet camp by President Nasser’s clos- “i ollowing Egypt's ‘lead, Syria has bought arms from Communist bloc. nations over the past two Capac Girl, 6, Killed in Bike-Truck Collision CAPAC ® — Hazel Diane With- un, 6, of rural Capac wag killed last night and her 14-year-old sis- ter, Florence, critically injured when the bicycle on which they were riding collided with a pickup truck on M2] east of here. Sheriff's deputies said the driver of the truck, Raymond G. Stock- meyer, 31, of Reese, was released after making a statement: Stock- a Pigeons Go to Judge of Las Vegas, when the surging| heard a roar and water) Moscow talks between’ Syrian De| #4 | total balance of $78,000, Another. parcel of 114 acres off Walton boulevard near Indian- x *& * Deadline for payments of this year’s taxes was set last night for’ Sept. The taxes were due Jan. 1. LATE TAX PENALTIES The board voted two penalties for residents who fail to pay by Sept. 1. A flat 6 per cent of the total tax will be charged, in addi- ‘tion to an extra one-half per cent for each month’s delay since the first of the year. Clerk James Seeterlin was authorized te advise township payment was set for Sept. 1. In the monthly police report pre- sented by Capt. Millard J. Pender, there were only seven traffic tickets. issued by the depleted police department. They all were handled by Justice of the Peace Donald Adams * = * The department answered 497 calls, made 32 arrests and report- ed 38 traffic accidents. They drove police cars a total of 718 miles. In the treasurer's report for duly, there was $41,178 received and $37,366 disbursed, leaving a meh who have not applied for a peddler’s licenses apparently are selling equipment door-to-door, said Johnson who warned that, before buying equipment, resi- dents should check with the fire department, Group OKs Fay for State AF Bases construction. “ps Sted ad adhinitta Loe ome eee mesrtoge N EE Egg = iquested for administration of the Ryukyu Islands put rejected the airport at. Burke is 60 million dol-jentire $9,200,000 sought fora new q Waterford OKs electric power plant for the is- lands. It said the islands now are using less than 40 per cent of the plant. @ to sell package liquor at 4568 Dixie Hwy. fo 2 of 3 Charges Board members said they had hesitated over Dunsky’s applic | MOUNT CLEMENS @ — Floyd Tem nc prema bea [yeery toe af neers since was organized in April. in the embezzlement of $75,166 in An explanatory letter from the/state license-plate volved in granting new licenses, |office in St. Shores, ples ha boned guilty to a charge of embezzie- night. USS Sees 4 w @. 4@ - Her husband, 48, pleaded guilty . ok wa Con,|to & charge of aiding and abetting proved gece eissman ,|the embezzlement Maximum sen- Circuit Judge James E. Spier continued $100,000 bond on both. +|No sentence date was. set; - The Thorpes were arrested June 4—in—€orpus’ Christi—Tex>—They] had been sought 15 months over Canada, the United States and Commerce Picnic Slated for Wednesday COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — Plans have been completed for a Commerce Methodist church Sunday School picnic to be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday at the John F. Ivory Polo Grounds in. White Lake Township. Ali members of Sunday School and Vacation Bible School class- es and their families have been invited te attend, Features planned include pony rides and a weinie- roast, Ice cream and soft drinks will be served. In charge of picnic arrange- ments are Mrs, Russell Thompson, Mrs, Gerald Maynard and Mrs. | Milton Hogg. Soles Resistance High WARREN, Ohio # — Sales re- sistance has reached a new high here. A local magazine salesman told Sheriff's deputies a woman an- swered his knock with a pistol in her hand, kept it pointed at him during what he described as a “brief and unsuccessful sales pitch.” Death Notices PRFECE. AUGUST 3. 1957. CHARLES 245 Voorheis Rd. are 76: dear father of Josevh and Wally G>ath, Puneral service wtil he held Wed- nesday, Arqust 7 at 10:30 4.m. from the Huntoon Punera! Home with Rev. James Luther officiat- ing. Interment in Oakland | County Cemetery. Funeral ar- ° a np by Huntoon Fune om which taken to Vanderbilt tor servi at 2 p.m. at the Communtiy wrence Runvon eéfictating. - mt in Corwit! Ta = tery. Punerat Atrantements the Spart«-Oriffin Fees sh r mother of Clarence Hood: dear sieter of Dante’ Harris and a Nettie Green. Peneral set. em be held wenvenaay Arent Tat i om %y Fame. or Sone 4. aT CAROLINE F.. 18 Roeetaen Ir. 9-9 @T: be- loved wife nt Jahn GC. Att: fear mather of Parola Dawatanntohns oral Home and will he taben tn the Church at noon on Thurs. — . Avaner 5 jou, ~Charles MM gnén Af; Pa, Dravton Plaine, Mich. gee #9: he. Jowedt hushant of Mra. Betetio 7, S-hnltg: dear fethep of Mre F'stne math fear brether of Mee Ortrran, he elt Theratas, seretce froma Bat) Bao front Sowrtes | Griffin Chena? E output of the existing nenerens fheiiies Plead Guilty | Veornees Sol | FUNERAL HOME carne 5 The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 SHOE and ering department, - 1 pei dy fon aggpenec to qualify, dt ety Sate gt CASH WANT AD RATES Limes 1-Day }Days 6Days 2 81.50 «681.06 8682.18 3 1.50 2.70 3.06 4 1.280 14a 6.04 6 2.25 4.06 6.00 6 2.70 4.06 1.20 q 3.16 6.07 40 8 3.60 4.48 9.00 ® 4.05 12 86 10.80 TE ONONONS eRe ENE ed to « large na rtunit $5,000 -_ uyear. ¥ Ret, needed. Apply 100s 104 Huron, 10 to 11:30 a nn REPAIRS SERVICE refrigeration, Experi a ae litles, mode y of work, Call MY P20i oF appointm or see service mgr. AL HANOUTE CHEV~ BUICK-LAKE ORION. ATTENTION DRIVERS B a . ers, i aute havlawey drivers & « paulaway a with late model Doage tr : a ee ae ee ‘argo handling record 2 fat seats ving need ap pg Deal ae Co. Eldon Ave. Detroit ume. Pontiac — UTE OPEN IN "Ae ) ie, Hoty i area. ried. m age Mean Must meat ar +, &— “able to hendle ac . @ bourse per day, $100 per week polar Brosh, betueen # at pa. wi =. _FE 23-2318 a EXPERIEN B P. CED UTCHER, __piy_ in person, 1535 Union Lk. EXP. DRIVER SALESMAN mou ke Orion. Walkers | Cleaners. Lake EXP. R ROUTE - MAN, COLLINS Se. A Woodward. Roches- Exp. Structural Steel Detailers AND Exp. Structural Steel Checkers | PAID HOSPITALIZATION ° PAID HOLIDAYS PAID VACATION PARAGON CONSTRUCTION CO. 44000 Grand River Novi, Mich. “Testa e Ra Pag Finance Representative Terrific opportunity for one drive & initiative ' % * represent our . Demo, onl ‘eall Mr, Jeffrey cn REY FORD SAI. — itech Sk : tunities * want m pensation r- ‘and other “pestis if ‘an’ at Big _ Hwy. Help Perr we A BEAUTY OPERATOR WANTED.