Whe nny it by The Weather __ } } U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast . | . \ \Detallls on Page?) : Mt Vso Ler | = “ { i : sf | \ * i t 71 . . \ . ‘ j PONTIAC, MICHIGAN kkk Kke > * ectec Wiliams Vetoes Bill Providing an Extra Judge Claims Measure Would Furnish Oakland No| Help for 19 Months LANSING (#—Gov. Wil-| liams today vetoed bills to} provide one additional cir- cult judge apiece in Oak-| land and Saginaw coun- ties, He said the need for new judges in terms of crowded dockets was apparent but was due to a clause in each of the bills, providing that . the newly-created vacancy SIGN AGREEMENT — Community Activities the merger agreement for the Brandon group are of Brandon Township has affiliated with the Pon- ‘ (left to right) Mrs. Lavern Boutell, Mrs. B. L. Discussing the Oakland bill, | tiac Area United Fund, to obtain for both areas Hamilton and Mrs. Donald Getz. fer -cotting wp the new jodictal benefits of co-operative activities. Shown signing “To MAL. 1957 1 5s Ca ree + et eae : Rp Sant an LEE OF Nt = nt, “tet tt, A f Come On, June, Get Hot \Rise and Fall of Mercu re Watched in Press Contest in Wife's Death. Come on, June, let’s have some hot days! Everybody wants ‘em, and 2,353 weather fans are especially interested, for that number think they know the day, hour and minute when you'll be at your best. ‘ That number hadentered the Press June weather | Shepherd Held ry. contest when the deadline+ was reached at noon, Pontiac Is Cited for Safety Record boil up to a’ record on the very first day. Entries held 58 on etch Tomorrow We Present: Miss Front Page for June it ... another Miss Front Page. June is one of the year’s happiest months, becafse of the Pleasant things associated with this season . . y roses and the start ‘of summer .. . brides . . . graduation . . . just to.mention a few. ’ And now. we have something more to anticipate. : Another month has passed and we have... . bet you've guessed We cannot tell you who she is or where she lives or what she looks like (she’s charming, of course) until tomorrow. But one Two Tornadoes ‘Strike Colorado ‘Farm District. © WINDSOR, Colo. @—Two. tor- nadoes, hopping a destructive path across farms in northeast-|ination for 9 a.m. June 19. ern Colorado, struck late yester- Heth ; : ; d Fa 282 FE rf Fe ‘ 5 Fe guess is safe: she'll be wearing a cap and gown. Awaits an Examination on Ist Degree Murder, Charge in Knifing | James D. Shepherd, of Birming- await trial, : | Shepherd, 36, is charged with ' today-as a result of the © Britain Reduces [eds Ten Another Controlon Trade | Brag of Monster Bomb ie With Red China | New Strains Foreseen on Relations With U.S.'" as Résult of Decision | WASHINGTON (# — Ay new: strain on relations be-! % tween the United ~ States/| and Britain was foreseen)’ British decision to reduce } controls on trade with Red > China. is _ US. officials said the int : pact would be determined) largely by the degree of criticism in Congress. ls The British action — re-|) ducing China trade con- | trols to the level of those applied to Russia and her) European satellites—came_ while many members of WARSAW i® — An H-bomb so big that it defies test- ing reportedly is claimed by the Soviet Union. Poland’s semiofficial Publicity-Information Agency — API — reported Soviet Communist party boss Nikita © Khrushchev told a group of visiting Polish journalists about the monster bomb at a meeting in the Kremlin “This bomb is so big we cannot test it even inside the vast area of the Soviet Union. We couldn’t even test it in the Arctic. set it off at the North Pole it would melt the i BS é § | F : g A * * * If the polar icecaps ever thawed scientists have es- timated ocean levels would climb more than 70 feet, flooding London, New York and other cities. * * * The API correspondent said Khrushchev told the group to explode the bomb in the most remote northern area of the Soviet Union ‘‘would have disastrous results for the whole of Scandinavia,” and that one bomb of its size “would be enough for Britain or France.” Neither the U. S. ‘Atomic Energy Commission nor the State Department in Washington had any immedi- ate comment. ee ee ee jHoliday Total of 166 Includes +194 Traffic Fatals 16 in State Die in Car Crefhe nd_ >| FROM OUR WIRE SERVICES © '| Death stalked the na- j\tion’s highways as usual S\over Memorial Day but the ;|number of victims claimed ‘|was lower than expected. +| This morning, 94 traffic deaths had been counted, =| At least 120 had been ex- i|pected. Drownings and. "| mishaps brought to 166 thy’ s;over-all toll. J ©| However, with many giti- fizens stretching the y through the , the fatality list continued to Congress were away. for SNOWETS May Follow US: Senate Confirms ferow sd ad Memorial Day. 3 County Postmasters 94 traffic deaths, 47 drownings sjothér holiday-connected / : Peete NS _Srore opposition was antcoat/ Warm Temperature The weather ottiook for Pontiac and vicinity is mild tonight with} scattered thundershowers. After reaching into the 80s today, the is expected to dip to a mercury low of 58 to 62 tonight. - | Tomorrow's forecast is ahs! Rochester. The United States Senate has {2% 35 lives lost from other mis- confirmed appointment of post- masters for three offices in Oak- ham; Bert O. Hobolth, Keego Harbor; and Cole L. Neumann, cloudy with scattered showers pr Sen, Fulbright (D-Ark), a mem-| Color late tomorrow. ye in Insult Plus Injury ber of the Senate Foreign Rela- will average 76 to 80 degrees. tions Committee, aimed -his criti-|) “Gowntowsl Pontiac the lowest) DETROIT (INS) — Burgiars cism at Eisenhower administra- ‘temperature preceding 8 a.m. was| ®@ded insult to injury when they tion foreign policy, saying these at 1 p.m, the temperature stole a safe containing $220 from British meve — despite American urgings to the contrary—is “here | ther evidence of our rather sterile was 80. the Central Shipping Co. in De- troit. They used the firm's de- livery truck to haul away the policy toward China, with no pros- Winner of ‘500’ to Quit | sate. pects of -it leading anywhere.” NOT RECOGNIZED ° INDIANAPOLIS—Sam Hanks, Election Laws Eyed . Untited States also has no trade This cect permit recognize Day auto race, said: the Communist nee govern contract | cial Senate committee today ment, although the British do. The scien fin pa ably go to Monza relations with the Red Chinese. But that’s all. In its statement on the British | see this track, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) | the grandstand. “I'll finish | WASHINGTON (INS)—A. spe- Flaming Aerial Tragedy Marks Memorial Display \stabbing his wife, Elizabeth, 42, to |death Monday night in their home’ jat 1509 Pierce St. Birmingham Justice John,’J. |Gafill scheduled a pre-trial exam- .Gafill signed a warrant or.’ dered by Prosecutor Frederick C, Ziem, who said Shepherd and his schoo] teacher wife had had a history of domestic quarreling since their marriage in January. Ziem said the woman's two young daughters by a previous marriage told him that they saw Shepherd stab their mother as she attempted to flee the living room following an argument Monday night. Shepherd maintains he “‘blacked out” from the time he went to ‘bed at 9 p.m. Monday until almost two hours later, when he discov- ered his wife dying on the living ‘Because of the charge that he faces, Shepherd will. be held with- out bond. 400 Delegates Meeting MACKINAC ISLAND (INS) — ~ ‘ By ARTHUR POUND > (Continuing a story of early Pontiac, reprinted from the current! issue of the University of Michigan Alumnys Quarterly Review). tet i age et lel} He at lif fii: fi Zz | : # \eiealichiama sant ne Naat aya tener a gayle itt a oat" a pene" oe % ’ € 7 ; i i ig + cael ee i: f a Ve as _ r on # “I Was Born in Paradise” =< Freedom-Bound Slaves Aided Be eee ee eg In-Today's Press Ce ee Comes 6. sc cccccccvccesece = County News Sisesseencsnsss OO e ae veeeee +++ oeRO Chee 6 = Farm and. Garden ,.,... 20 High School ee 19 2 Se eee deans seeeveee’” perienced across this country.,and, under Needless to say, cemetery populated section of northeast) running outSide. Mrs. Herman Trost’s home, ithe rammed their car onto the * -oom = 5 A public relations of- were washing clothes in the base- ae lided with the fuselage of Olson’s ment of their home when alors burst into flame as fiery fuel/Plane as they and two other jet the plane “sprayed over .albegan a rolling maneuver in a area. A .50-caliber machine|final flourish over the cemetery./ from the jet was hurled|But he could give no explanation “screen door and into|of the: accident, “funny, whirring noise”’ sent thet | pom wide .. One of the planes plunged inte (gun the street in front of Mr. and (through plane front lawn and disintegrated. —_' vacant ruins gf a Navy jet plane which ¢rashed in a Minneapolis residen- " of the plane hit thecar at right. Pilot of plane was killed, the ud ‘tial area after a\midair crash with another Navy plane. Portions — a” ee uted to safety. - Jet Crash Kills 1, Hurts 6 MINNEAPOLIS (#—The solem-| ‘The pilot, Cmdr. Newell Olson,| The collision was witnessed by nity’ of a Memorial Day service /38, liaison | for war dead was shattered yes-|ficer at Wold-Chamberiain Naval) services at Sunset terday when two Navy Panther Air Station, was killed. Six resi-| Cemetery. It occurred as a low- jets collided while flying in an/dents of the neighborhood were, flying helicopter dropped poppies aerial tribute over a poppy-strewn injured, one seriously. The pilot; on the cemetery in a Veterans of é ; which} Foreign Wars ceremony. Half a mile away, in a ones ppg in a vacant lot, parachut- Lt. (jg.) John Forsmark, '%, Minneapolis, a _— reservist, told newsmen later his left wing col- Trost living room. The second} Residents found Olson’s body in a six-foot crater in ajthe street. His parachute . was five blocks away. tangled in a tree. a thousand persons attending | Memorial | Hl [E- il t a i PNe, | % > ee 5 Noe a + ee, ae / fe 4 ; e: fs ees $ me, P = ‘ } : : \ : ’ : / v6 f : if, fo ; s Fi 4 J { alle 5 ee . > TTY elgg Caw anes 55 Fe - po EN gE af Ea EE Gy le fe poppe Sa ie f : j | ae Ae é 7 =< é | . fe ' ; i aT é 4; \ ' F | | : : po % cs i A, Ss Fi / an | ; p : A . | . : Nos t 5 = ‘ ‘ Noe MAY 31, 1957 ; Yh : oe es ) ! | es Dahale |The Day in Birmingham er Algerian Rebels Ground Breaking ’ Slated Massacre 275 for Methodist Expansion THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, Chim p ‘Helps’- Crew of Plane: on Flight West ' Township Police Repart Rear-End Collision — A rear-end collision on M58 near Lakeview Dr. was reported at., 7:30 p.m, last night by Waterford Teamster Seen Aiding Probers Fulngary Holds U.S. Students g. Reportedly :Plan Reunion in Rome ROME tINS)—Friends of Rober- | KANSAS a — The three- Township rae . bd S i sai ~ ° Py “. |Man crew _tour-€ ae = r) Action of John~English fen ee will ret the Talia™’ South Carolina Pair airtiner Nationalists Wipe Out movie producer will return to Italy BIRMINGHAM—The First Meth- in July for a reunion with his wife, actress Ingrid Bergman. cat for about half an hour, before A car driven by Morris Johnson, ” discovery, ’ May Have Flushed Out 2, of T13-Marego Ave,j Flint, Seen Being Led Away Entire Male Population ° ° * an additional Church School wing} Birmingham smashed into an auto driven by Beck Jr., Others /.. + at Austria Border yesterday. of Moslem Village fina’ chapel on Sunday at 3 p.m. (ans nr ght eet are tirt|Harold Little, 38, of 3462 Cummings ’ i > wt A | yhe-Sjends said that Ingrid and x * # ALGIERS uw — French officials| Bishop Marshall R, Reed of the|yMCA Family Day scheduled for|Ave., Berkley, according to Town- . WASHINGTON uw — John F. their three children will come to| EISENSTADT, Austria #.— The| A 75-pound rt pe today told of a night of horror|Detroit area will give the address.’ June 15, ° [ship police. English, a leader of cleanup forces Rome in July and will be joined by Austrian Interior Ministry con-| from a pet P Asso during which nationalist rebels} Dr. Benjamin F. Holme, Detroit * * * » * * in the Teamsters Union, may have Rossellini when he winds up his /¢irmed today that two South Caro- massacred af least 275 Moslems Passengers in Little’s car, Mrs. District Superintendent, will give) Featuring Mickey Shore, weéll- accidentally or purposely helped movie chores in India, The whole). Univeral di i sion ae “y < te en a ee — the entire male population of|the invocation and Dr, Arnold F.|known ae ularialone: the affair|Myrtle Clayton, 79, of Maple Ridge 1 Secale reciente fovestigators Sacateltexy. the iscaurces, acided, will lina niversity students missing} ona bel 20 min- a mountain village. Runkel will give the charge to the/wi) be held at Jefferson Beach |Mich., and Mrs, Lena Davis, 54, “a son amd relatives of Teamsters then go to their. villa at Santa Mar- since May 2% are being held in aomaege : m _* oS . fered brulses, They w ted at Communist Hungary. utes out of Detroit. Frontier authorities identified the youths as Myron Gilbert, 20, of _ = 5 oe |Waterboro, S. C., and Warren Wil- . treasurer) nether Sonali Das Gupta *,, jiam Hair, 20, of North Augusta, and guardian of Teamsters purse soa in seclusion In Bem. |> ° Walt Miller of Dallas, skipper strings. His opposition to Beck is. pay ° | Austrian frontier police reported|o¢ the Slick Airlines plane, concen- believed to be the main factor in , ; seeing “‘two young men”’ being ledjtrated on fl while Keck and Keck’s recent announcement he is 4 spokesman for the Indianaway by Hungarian Red police|co-pilot William Wohlgchlegel of fered bruises. They were treated at Pontiac General Hospital and re- — leased. 20,000 Watch Parade DETROIT (INS) — An esti- mated 20,000 persons viewed a ° machine guns mowed down many) pus of them. The: rebels throats of others and beat some to death. DPW garage for the sake of econ-> : . Sear 90-minute Memorial Day parade na i lection as Team. Home Affairs Ministry said in New through the tangle of barbed wire .N The story was pieced together | Upon completion of these addi-|by the city rather than rented from) 0 ce USA ss Tea Delhi that the 51-year-old produc-lon the border. = a es eee -sangeetiony from the stunned womentolk. tions, the building program,|a fire alarm system. in Detroit yesterday. , Ale : er’s request for a visa extension! Hair and Gilbert set out Sunday persuasion ‘twork| The French said they did notjlaunched with the First They have been notified of an- { a ee Lizaae Mage has been referred to the Ministry|to see what was happening along poop aggre asin to cigowtden know the reason for ‘is inaoneers Crusade 13 years agowill be ac-| mual rental increase from $2% | SIMMS Is Famous for and three other relatives or, Foreign Affairs. the Austro-Hungarian frontier. ‘So did the chimp. She delighted|but speculated that it was another|complished. Dr, Runket has been| to $434, City manager, Harold K. | LOW SHOE PRICES friends of the elder Beck off the ~*~ * * ; American officials said xs soon {in swinging from shelf to shelf and/bloody chapter in the rivalry be-|pastor during this entire period. site a $6 vedertion in Insurance || MMMCEREAIRACERICRSE RI Teamsters payroll two months In Calcutta, Sonali's 35-year-old) as ‘they could substantiate the |handle to handle on the radio rack/tween the two big Algerian na-| Birmingham recorded one ,acci-| With a $59 reduction in insurance | ago, husband Hari said he had asked| reports they would ask the U.8, |behind the crew. She found bottles|tionalist groups, the Algerian Na-/dent for Memorial Day, when Ken-| premium, this ‘would leave a cost / . All LEATHER Uppers. . : At that time Beck Jr, and two Indian authorities not to allow her| legation in Budapest to ask the jf instant coffee and powdered|tionalist Movement (MNA) andineth L. Bone, 23, of 3781 Royal| of $384 per year. I Ohild’s SANDALS. other Beck relatives were teport- to leave India. Das Gupta said he| Hungarian government about |cream on one shelf, managed tojthe National Liberation Front|St.; Berkley rolled his car over at} Fire Chief Park Smith and Fire : ed in Canada — out of reach of assured officials that he was-will-| them. - break both and consumed the con-| (FLN). : the -Adams-Woodward intersection Scott committee subpoenas seeking to ing to take his wife back. ; The youths, students at the Uni- tents. * * * at 2:06 a.m. today. compel their attendance at hear-| Sonali reportedly left/her hus- |versity of South Carolina, had| _Weblschlegel went back into | The village also is on the main} Police said Bone suffered in- ings here. _ | band and family in April to take [been on a hitch-hiking tour - of| tte cabin for a breather. She jmountain route the rebels use in) juries to his right arm, scalp It is reported the group, cut off yp residence in Bombay's Taj |Western Europe. took his seat beside Miller. moving from the Constantine area) ang both legs. He was taken to trom Teamsters paychecks, final-) Mahal Hotel in a room adjoining | An Austrian patrolman at the| “She was real friendly,” said|* the Algiers area. There was) witiam Beammont Hospital, The ly ran out of funds and had to Te) Rossellini’s suite. Eisenstadt frontier station said he|Miller. “Stick out your hand and|SPeculation the attackers might) car struck a city traffic sign and they rent loare Served with Rossellini has denied the ro-/ 0 a eras ss she'd ging tiny — But con pring vi@lagers were be- ato & hit a light pole _ subpoenas on the West Coast: /Mmance rumors. Americans from the frontier barb|wanted to put her back in the —————— on os pavonseat, ae F ~*~ * *& wire barrier at Margarethen crate.” ee ‘ FE. McEvoy, husband of the elder [but her present whereabouts could trapped wreckage of his hocks views and Fred Verschue.R0t be determined. Mrs. Bimal|\OUT FOR EXCITEMENT The plane landed in Kansas City Saree 1 teiy Deore yg Srl’ tay Jeno ae Pears, ald ts ne Bound crew aur beng cere LESS Than Expected : . ’ § family" anice , 22, wo F at here next ing té persuade her to go to’ thelboys took along a camera, politi- ful when they opened the cargo ; a nee Woman Customer i er family home in Lucknow if she|cal publications and other objects|D@tch. '| (Continued From Page j , baa oe pesca ag = — refuses to go back to her husband.|“for excitement” to make the| Six — ssfleaeaper rand highway, careened off an abutment Locked in Stor e ; s Sr.’ complicated money deals. Hungarian Communist authorities PoT”SOGS, mew crew took otf for|nd rolled over With Chickens Verschueren is a top eat Cont Bi ° lift C t | OT oo ee the West + « « P Union auditor on the West Const rifain Lifts Controls ea kee eae Charles 0. Dickensin, 3, of] NEW YORK @ — Frances ‘ r, has pictu ® Flint, was killed when motor: : cats, and earlier witnesses as “a spoiled T d With Chi oe ree oe one one Fleeing Slaves Found cycle flipped end over end three|ly goes to market to buy spl : iue- ON 1fade VI IN@ | wair ana Gilbert tailed to return. 7 : il go dgee docket | Sil hey ier Autran Chatter in Pontiac |sau'be'tw mecdne oar samatan iging” | the AnheusenBusch Co. (Continued From Page One) Youth hostel at the village | of er in Fontiac road. ee | 7 2. a 2 action, the State Department an- |Rust, on Lake Neusiedler a few) - Wilbur J. Bird, 39, of Newaygo,| Yesterday about noontime § Mortician for Animals nounced that the United States |miles from the border, saying) (Continued From Page One) was killed dclwaad tule 6 poultry market. ~ | intends to hold firmly to its pol- they would cross into Hungary) 4 sieves hidden back of the/careened off » county road and|proprietor didn’t see her and srepoccocecsoooooooss | PARIS ail igiorny long f8- | icy of “total embargo” on all = pan Seger a night “just eset. the shop, closing up for the MEN'S and BOYS’ ‘ mous for its dog cat ceme- | American trade with Communist /'° See W! 5 _ would drive directly; Carl M. Schad, 34, of--Lincoln Miss De Santis went 4 | eal rtd = oe —— China. able Aappsencoe ast sell precesy dh = into ps where the refugees Park, died when his car hit a tree.|/to the front window and — Canvas OXFORDS ‘ rtaker. M. Gi s 0 ng , D | } : various pile of coffins and a| The department also described|on their return to college. They oe riagandrarge a pocarniator pis Pape r= tore | Bors’ Sizes 11% to 6 t | sliding scale of fees. the ne daapeointed” by the Brit | ee et come, slong but she/— yor kindly treatment. cura aad 0) mimes ntec one po Shae saseeeee ° : “most disap) -| refused. t: on and. called OMEN 2. eee ae | action : hea Above the carriage potetisen Cong: oe end OTE B6-tnch .....-: | defeat for "American diplomacy. Viol in Leba pl bol Rae progeny ko * + Ss tmch oc | MILD LANGUAGE seek, whispering When she was freed, Miss De 36-Inch . The mild language of the Amer- lo ence In Lebanon half believing the place Santis commented: “I don't ever|E42-Inch .......... P STHE loam Sebel fo ees eee | H Li {8 ed by the soul of want to see another chicken B48-Inch .......... 36c — the hope of .department officials aims ives 0 — ‘a w= delicatoanen to Mow te che time to fis your Goer that whatever damage be}. a addock drove headed apy 4 —- ll done to British-American fandinis ‘BEIRUT, Lebanon @®—Pre-elec-|rounds it would buy canned fish for the cats. Gas te Noggheared — ait will be temporary, and can be'tion yjolence in Beirut, yesterday|ward the next Underground ' — wood ia By E. H. SIMs held to a minimum. claimed the lives of eight dem-|near Rochester, ’ . sc pect 6¢ onstrators» and left. some 70 oth-|abolitionists would pass the_run- * ews as a fier Does weather ever remain tiepy Mor sje, United, States ore than’ 200 riot-|aways along toward Mouftt Clem- i M ING i ers wounded: M same? In hot summer spells ig thé) Was been hard to persuade Lake Saint | eeccccccccccccesooees ; ers were arrested. ens, air’ over your town or city. the| Its allies to continne Ughter So | Opposition political leaders wholand Dresden, Ontario, : DETROIT @ — A man. tele- Screen Crepe RUBBER Soles ye as os pee then with the Soviet Union and (c#lled the demonstrations urged|riginal of Uncle See ices Wiel ven «aun tesahell Ged Dc eee ae ee Men’s OXFORDS day, or the day re? supporters to continue a general,® grave which is now a shrine for = o wee WIDTHS ‘ Weather is never the same. The} its European satellites, ; pe tourists. her and a younger brother from a| bedy under a bed im an East Side - a strike in Beirut “until the gov- nick Hu- : 24-Inch .......... Leather Uppers same conditions may exist, but the) ye British move was viewedlernment falls and until the crim-| That was the family story. From|*>f0t high trestle over. the apartment. There, police — eos ps weather you are experiencing tInere as a signaling the general col-|inals who are government offi-jothers outside the family I heard|" River, near South Rockwood.| Edna Boone; 55, apparently - ree 11 iay—the gases that are above YOU!ia5c6 of this policy. Diplomatic of-|cials and employes get their just|that the doctor sometimes carried] Lynn Gail Fairchild, 2 months, | % death. Police Detective Al BOA”) OS! «-- sss sss: i i ~have probably come from hu |fcials said the other major trading| punishment.” in his gig human freight more| of Flint, was found dead in her | bert Evans sald Thomas Wyche. reds of miles away in the past nations—mainly Japan, West Ger-| Four hours of violence swept|awful than runaway slaves—name-| bed. Police said she suffocated. | “Hom he described as the wom- | ay * many, France and Italy—now have|the Moselm quarter of Beirut. It/ly, the occasional cadavers which| , . tet a adel ee ee oes ; | choice but to follow the British|ended only after the Lebanese|medical students then as now oe band, being sought. : In the United States the move-|iead. ° army moved in tanks and ar-|needed to dissect for the advance|and died of © heart attack while) \* 1 ment of weather is generally from| - * * mored cars of their surgical arts, but which|™#"ching J eh west to east and seldom does a] ay. British saiaianss about 200| ‘The Damascus radio saidjwere denied. them by misguided) mortal Day parade at Grand umn ne, yd nee Seem, pn a oe oe Se Lemar 3 nd | was not in your vicinity yesterday.|" Red China, are coming off thei,” sidon and Baalbek.) came to me from old neighbors|ife, Mary 54, died early Friday SHOE DEPT. ayarta hava" catiinahed aint probe rid . years after our family centered ay meme Cnteren Com : , ; comecid pumas hundred miles) “However, these: items were de-|Girl, 6, Hurt Trying = eee ad pnd fesaady snp magree ge | PESERESETI Sos s scribed here as falling generally 4 determined, } ; iy : i : "Tia doce nt mean tae cleared ere a fling gemeal to Leave Driverless Cor ee Cee 3 Special Purchase! Big Savings! PE cannot become moist or cloudy by(SUCh as locomotives, machine tools| Six-yearold Lucille M Pain-/Dog Expecting Puppies Mr, and Mrs. Walter K. | + Another typical -~SAVER” that + | | the time it reaches you. Local con-|{@7™ tractors, trucks and iron andichaud, daughter of Mr and Mrs./Stole Along With Ca iof nearby Door, died early today | +e on wanted, first * } fitions sometimes generate clouds|Stee! sheets too soft to make mili-/Pay! A. Painchaud of 20 Taylor) oe" 9 T after eating about halt » bottle items. More that it always pays to com~ } and precipitation, but usually on a/‘@Ty weapons. Consumer goods !st., was treated for abrasions and LOUISVILLE, Ky, # Mr. and|*SPirin tablets at his home, | * ; a, "cal scale. in general, if the air/never were on the Chin controllthen released from Pontise Gen-inirs, Albert Lang may have. to : | * Look for “MONEY-SAVER” Signs Throughest the Store a | , s to t est, it wil poste . eral Hospital yesterday after the while before know ives Shoes a é ! when it Teaches you and if ralny.|, The British postion, as reportedliront wheels of her father’s attolmany” pupe: tts" had ee ey oe > 4 Styles — DECORATED TOPS it will bring clouds to your area as/here, was that the trade controlistruck her after: she attempted to| The dog — Sallie — was sitting’ Forgets Rings Inside Re aus ae = | | it passes over — though clouds|‘ifferential was impractical andijump out of the driverless car.lin their car when someone stole| ‘pie. ‘en leiae + +e | eastward, and“the experts st{11|that Red China could get through alone in the auto parked in a drive-| Mrs. Lang said Sallie was “ex- | + % +9 | cannot always predict these|Russia the items which the West-lway, apparently bumped the gear|pecting most any time. But shel ooms’e "mes in & pair | —— 1p eee: eS a ! changes, nations were prevented from|shift or pulled it, She jumped outlwas crazy about that car, and as Last ay she put the 159 The: ‘Oriei l oo - a selling to the Peiping regime, fot the auto when it started'to rolliong as she's riding she doesn't! on ata omen Aggy Aig Sry +. BS Made, oe OS $3.95 Va + , : : : ~ [eure who's driving.” ——‘isome “needy person’ would findlj 71.50 Watches, now 47.00 [pg 99-95 Values ae The Weather ae ee at teat able ne ean|Macmillan Visits Queen oe them. Some needy person. appar- Tennent fel + | PONTIAC AND VICINITY. — _— - eT ee |Labor Party Gains . ently did. s | 3 we | of tleedy and warm today, high #0 ton; |1rom the SovietsUnion the volume| LONDON (INS)—Prime Min- a _- | "| Mis, Reinoehl went looking for] f Moctip—sieedy Cand mia 4 with of goods it needs for its industrial- ister” visited | LONDON (INS)—A_ continued ithe shoes yesterday and had aj * “A he. Tomorrow cloudy with seattered|i2Ation, They argue further that) Queen Elizabeth at Buckingham | swing to the left by British voters |sudden terrible recollection. The | 4 : 4 % | Gar henigiores itr cease much Western-made supplies as the| Palace today to dis- | in parliamentary by-elections [rings . . . f pe ’ Your Choice: sf | T"ty Mgeetth winds Increasing to 19/Soviet Union has shipped to’ Red| cusa the possibility of a royal continued today with the Labor |' She told police the rings, both pe # Che ‘ SE se eh oem a Se ant mn | Faecal mtn : I a. : : : - — i * : = «| 4 Lowest temperature, preceding 8 am. ay pe : rs es Trailer Breaks Away ; ; . & od ge omy H ‘ | At § am: wind velocity 15 m.p.n.| Doesn't Believe He Should Be Punished F Car, Hits Pump | Bog : ania * 4 1 San cute Pider ot 0-41 pm. +08 ee : : ees : rom Lar, 1 Rlactagh scala eregsaecr far Fate .= | Moon sets Friday at 10:06 p.m. ~? rreu A. trailer broke from: Pag rd jmenseee. (Consul's Son Not Sorry He Ran Away).t rem test ae” + Dewn . Tempera : es 4 : ‘ae i, | s Pictered Ya 68M Gases $7 a. m.......... ry ‘ te Ae | ae |. T &. Mivcececets¥8 12 m.,.., 2? CHICAGO W—The. teen-age son| expressed fear his son had been| plied: "] don’t gas : jaa \* rah 2 3 eS Pe ewer | 1 oo veeeee 00 Ol og an Itali liph t bj t lai m en t. I deli eve in a police. ty at) +e ‘Ideal for patio, lawn, . porch; F is % | 20 W. Miveags oes 608 a nationwide search for six weeks,| ‘Vittorio Nathan Pa \ ie picnics, ge Dh |. | Thursday’ in Pontise says he’s not sorry he ran @waYinerience Riviera St., was issued a hq Folds into carton for storage. , soe ig rare trom home and doesn't believe hela kick ce aga gg ey ne miata’ gee — temperature ¢..°.0....:-..-83 |should be punished. . + |He- said he once saw safety —_ mounted ha CLOWN. DECORATED TOR—All Metal. . ae x | 4 Mean temperature . ane vehicle.and: having a. s i -—s a Weather—Partly Cioudy But the boy, Vittorio Barattieri,|in a Ne it wae 1 +* id’ T BL m | "| @me Year Age tn Pontine 14, said he's sorry that he story about the coupling since it was wired. | *«e Has iA | re | | Mighest temperature ........6.0 05 $i |his parents so much distress be-|said he we \ ipe iat RM Saas eau UvSe Pa: Megs temperature SEDI s)eatuse of his absence for 44 Vittorio told runt af Bate Service Badia im : _ ° = wut ip Ae *@ be cg State Ave. . Vee "a. | Higest y . ‘ ’ blonde youth : glad” — : ¥ . \ z ; x ‘ : owe “** 44 sn assojhome with his parents from New/didn’t believe he ~ SS «fi :* a ‘teter's Tacpania cars. (OPK City last. night, some ment. Asked if San fb | ; * eae hipene ey 2 gyjhours after he ‘had been away » hee woe | a | a 5 by the FBI. ; — |amnile, “No, not for Me |*& 4! Browgerite % MoMismi” fi]. He had been in New York sinceladded: . “T didn't: a" lf ‘| eG eeaee : $2 sete disappeared from home April|be missed. sacha eee: 1 ee FY i @. Gh. tks seaetin Comh ce Coe igs hed GH os We . be. | beret te Pownte «fe ‘ites Ludovico ‘Barattieri, ha d| whether he | i mt fort Worth $8 %. sigue s\made appeals in newspapers and The « pe f ! 2.) oe co.% %/on the radio and television for him whom she | : if oe Trews chy §3\to eA "4 to spank, 4 Ze shington fx His father, Italian consul gen- Berattierl, | : |" © Pompe PITTI ELITE TIL KOBAR TABLETS-— - *2.29 | com Liver on- 89° 2 | ; First Time at This CUT-PRICE $3.50 Veter np ar a héceeeeeens as:(s ; Former Higher Priced: , POLAROID Regular $3 Value Bosciae ° 00 Salt & Dextrose ....... le. 5 “ . e ms - Mate i ~ «ims Lingerie Makes every shed bright and clear” 87 ~ ETIQUETTE 60c Solar Tan .......5. 39c 79¢ Skol Tan Lotion... . .59ci6 just point and set. Fits the model 89c¢ Norwich Kan Tan... .69¢ Shulton’s Bronze Tan. . .$1.25.0 Holf SLIPS po toe sn mH jo ad — G DEODORANT Sea & Ski Cream, from. , .59c Coomenees. Liquid and is @ Me TI iii) ’ . 98¢ Sprayway Burn Ease = Cream ........... $1.00)0 - e Full SLIPS Domb 266 5 ieee es 59e $1 Skol ‘Burn Ada... - 79¢\@ @ Night GOWNS Latest Model 300-Watt. Super Bright ; $1.25. Norwich Unguentine 98¢ 7S¢ Calahist Lotion ..... 49¢\8 9 196c Noxzema Shave and 35¢ Noxzema Skin Cream. 29 e @ PAJAMAS ~ ARGUS Automatic ‘SLIDE Skin Cream ........ 49¢ -—-69¢ Norwich Poison : PROJECTOR vs ° Your Choice : e e + $62.50 4! 875 : e Value $5.00 ° ; > e Sa a ee $ WHY PAY MORE? ick sh ti . ° SS ote men. inate SUPPORTER bin : $ * Dated PRINTS 3) | ; | encersceconccsoccccoccccccccoocooeccsoooooes ’ ‘Sizes s-M-L pchaan LiguiD : ap ri reap : $ pyrene: ; $i E Nylon HALF - SLIPS : Layaway Now for FATHER’S DAY! Full el 2te cl Ful e |. ae ele ry Pull elastic waist bands. Lavish lace trim. Also |) KODAK SHOWTIME 8 wo. TD bcm 27 his Q3° fc SGtjs NEVER Fee Si in cottons ahd ‘rayon ecetale, All sive | Movie Project C “Evenflo Nursing | Glycerine === sutgoue pret sonaarren' | 4-Gore FULL SLIPS ven ursing % Ret-ceutts vente Os wi a Movie Frojector “Unita c pag re Rigi $ | ee eee ey a ‘ proraand x $115 87 4 & 8-02, OO -Lace-Trimmed GOWNS & ; ; : Complete. EXPERT PHOTO FINISHING bar Value $1.25 Value 25¢ Value P4 e Long length, nylon—iace trimmed, 4. time rayon Fo sedeinsaer cri Knee or Ankle ‘ E Bring SIMMS Your $ ce SE inc as ae wm | HOLDS IN YAWAY : ; Past {1.4 lens gives up to $ foot wide projections. ‘ : 17 jeven to paying the g@Bing rate for ** clerical workers rather than hold-| >. \ing to the old idea that ‘‘prestige’’ _|should make up for about half a i “Includes Tax and Beverage © -- WEST sendin ay ELIZABETH CARE RD. = ¢ of it. All You Gan Eat! ki banks to The BLUE GRASS Boys ARE HERE! Formerly from: WCYB Radio & TV Brigtel, Virginie & Tenn. Come in this weekend aad have your requests played by these Recording Stare—the way you like te hear them played. _ OPEN THIS WEEK-END! The Green Parret ss KEN DUTY ON BASS PLUS—CUEST ARTIST CHUCK SHORT . « » Specializing in Good Food - SUNDAY SPECIAL CHICKEN DINNER dinner, complete with potatoes ond | gravy, chef's seled with dressing, o vegetable, hot roll and butter...... “A-Le-Carte” . . . delicious Sunday | 25 || VISIT OUR COCKTAIL LOUNGE Open Daily 9 a.m. to 2 a.m. — Sundcy 2 p.m. té 2 a.m. PLENTY OF FREE PARKING 1650 N. Perry at Pontiac Rd. “FE 3-9732 \ SPADAFORE'S BAR \ 6 NORTH CASS, NEAR HURON ST. Orharhhnhinihhhochanhnhnthchahe iv < ere haath en es eB By SAM DAWSON It may have been competition ’> \for clerical workers that first led raise starting pay scales. But it is the growth of the ’ -|banking system's operations that _ has led to more top-level jobs. | The American Bankers ‘ Assn. 4\says that each year the nation’s .|15,000 banks have about 1,008 “iibank presidencies and 4,000 other ‘iofficer positions to fill. Since 1940 "\the banks’ employe rolls have ti |swelled by more than 250,000. ~.| The association says. this is be- S las 7 yea ; case ‘ns - aeccas yaPand ;son Danny's graduation from Law- %s\accounts has doubled, the volume! jrenceville. Seventeen-year-old Dan- of bank loans and investments has/Y, Ray said, is the youngest mem- tripled, and banking services have} been greatly expanded. man or woman to move up the ladder, the American Institute of Banking offers courses to pre- . To help the ambitious young “94 Banks Hold Tempting Baits op. | for Career-Minded Youth |pare employes for jobs ahead. NEW YORK @—Your son and|These are open to all bank em- daughter trying to maek up their ployes, men or women, high minds what to be when they get school or college graduates, Bank officers have another pro- gram to help them keep climbing. The American Bankers Assn. has a@ graduate schoo! of banking, of- fering advanced © studies, State} When-a soccer atin: at‘ Louth, bankers associations also spon-| England, shot for a goal the ball y special courses at some” uni-|sailed through the window of a wersities' and individual banks|house and smashed a TY set provide’ on the job training forjscreen that was showing the game. new employes and executive de- Scene! tious, US. were schools are women. — % & * the ABA says that in the eT eamne 3 towns and cities now, a young person entering the business can. look forward to earning from $8,000 to $15,000 a year—when he? works. up to an officer’s post. ‘Hollywood Headlines Stressing the better pay lure, * * * * ford in the fall. * ® Homesick Milland Asks About California Weather LOUELLA 0. PARSONS HOLLYWOOD (INS) imagine Ray Milland telephoning all the way from Engla me that he was. home wanted to know what the weather it lamented, ‘‘since I’m going to} is like in California? While I had Ray on the wire, I ‘tor MGM in July.” | asked him to give me some news. He said that he and Mal are fly- I call it positively brilliant—Co-| ing home June 6 to attend their|lumbia’s idea of remaking “Golden. — Can you to tell k and ‘ber of his class and goes to Stan- “Mal (Mrs. Milland) has gone te Paris with Mrs. Douglas Fair- banks to get some clothes,”’ said Ray. “We come out to California, then I have to fly back to Lon- Enjey Your | _ Faverite don June 15 to finish my picture, Dip” Shaw =~ Flight,’ but Mal stays in fornia for a month decorat- | “Tl: be in Europe still longer,”’ | © Breakfast direct ‘The Fate of Willie Gitbens’ ; : | © Noon Lunches @ Cocktails —s Boy’ as a. musical and havin a & Za Harry Belafonte play the lead. | ZY Le This will demand some changes! ZW made in the role of a conceited young prize-fighter, which brought the unknown William Holden to’ fame some 41 pictures ago. But| Belafonte could certainly act it,' look it, and how he could sing it! 848 S. WOODWARD Near St, Joseph Mercy Hospital At Pontiac City Limits Preps: C. Lockha rt & W. Suith eee “ibe (HN ES . He gets back to this country. in} served to please. ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee Te ee Te ee Exquisitely ..diflerent ... Delightully new, this describes to a *T” the meals served at “China City”... cooked and Beers: Mendsy, Friday 11-16:30 Geterday 11:00-1:30 A, Mi Sunday Neen - 1¢ P. M. CHINA CITY RESTAURANT 1070 W. Huron ee ee ee, ee I ce “Carry Out Orders” July and he'll give Columbia his decision ag that time, I hear noth- DINNERS but bout Harry’ k * | ident in Gee Sun” and of BUFFET ¥4||course what he has done f' mand vice versa—is ‘a wae LUNCHES body’s turntable. STANWYCK TYPE Looks like blonde Anne Francis $ _PONTIAC is trying Barbara 4 umigh's tacts hn “Hired $ LAKE IN N Gan” agile Annie plays a typical $ 7890 Highland Rd. (M-59) « Stanwyck role, being a Texas girl! — about to be hanged who escapes rete Food. a . of. over the border into Mexico, only/ 5 © PM eta. ey pignreg algo A pal Ph. OR 3.9300 houn, a fate most girls wouldn't mind a bit. ee eee “Hired Gun” is for Rory’s and Vic Orsatti’s company, Rorvic, and I talked to both boys over the tele- | Spend an - Dance to Western Music “Every Friday, Saturday, Sundey Dancing Try Our Ne ee : ee Dining at Its Distinctive Best ~ ** / «f Luncheon : Dinner Cocktail Party Banquet Meeting > — ee eee 7Xinysley nn “ PHIONE ialdecer 4-1400 WOODWARD at LONG LAKE RD,, ~~” BLOOMFIELD HILLS I 550 - SCRIB’S Bar and Restaurant 130 S, Telegraph. FE 4-6981 |See... REPTILE GARDENS @ Snake Milking @ Alligators ®@ Crocodiles TOURS School Tours, Church _ Tours, etc. Private Lectures Arranged ae Call OR 3-9422 Western Rattle Snake ra being... ANDY’S KINGDOM 9860 DIXIE HIGHWAY iphone and Vic says shooting starts | June 1 in Mexico with Ray Nazar-| Enjoyable Evening at the Beautiful Commodore Hotel dancing to the Enchanting Orgon Trio . eration called jeono, the first of > of Harold Krohn's “ROYAL TONES” 4195 Dixie Hwy., Drayton OR 3-7161 177 pounds! Lorraine (Mrs. Dick | “Bell, Book and Candle,” on July! 24 and into her father’s “Life off Riley"’ TV series. i ‘UNDERGOES SURGERY Snapshots of Hollywood collected ‘at random: Starlet Joanna Moore, | - Directed by Ray McKinley - Saturday LOOK?! ot Here mney Aio:.. ARS _ “Western Rhythm Boys” with their mountain music _ Featuring: “CISCO” and - HIS ACCORDION. P EVERY FRI. & SAT. NITE "The OLD DUTCH MILL” AUBURN HEIGHTS S Bobs Chicken House 497 Elizabeth Lake Road at Telegraph ** Presents by popular demand “SULLY” AT THE KEYBOARD Daily, except Monday — 9 to 2 DELICIOUS DINNERS AND LUNCHEONS : Visit ‘Our Popular Cocktail Bar - ~ ~ DINNERS TO TAKE OUT CALL FE 3-9821 Jean Seberg arrives June 9 to| ! One Night Only—June 1 Walled Lake WALLED LAKE, Mich. “Pajama Game” opens June 6 at the Riviera in Las Vegas. Bell Phone: MaArket 41881 boys, elevator girls, ete., will — . wear pajamas—or so Benny Goff- stein, here #9 meet the New York 1 COMING SOON! ‘Wate the Pontiac Press for Frank Ross, comic of the Mary | Another of Kaye Trio, welcomes his second. child in September. That makes | Cowbey k's ig Show ; three babies born this year to this. pare idl aaanan. td |group, Mary Kaye and her brother Norman each had their second ba- bies earlier in the year. Come to CLUB TAHOE 4; — a delightful dinner combined. with good ‘music—is your assurance of an enjoyable evening. “DINE and DANCE. _ ey and Hwy, We Invite Banquets and Private Parties ) CLUE TAHOE | on Pict fate [JOIN THE CROWD- FRI.-SAT.-SUN. DANCING to DICK DENGATE and His “ESQUIRES” DIXIE BAR =, SQUARE DANCING EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT |‘Wool Surplus Ending’ , imports have remained low. —Agricultural Economist CORVALLIS, Ore. (INS)—M. D. Thomas, Oregon State College ag- ricultural economist, believes the. U.S, surplus of 58 million pounds of wool may be wiped out by the end of the year. said that woolen mills iin the United States are using more and-more government-stored | Stocks of wool, probably because production in this country has not increased of late and apparel wool DANCING SATURDAY | Neer: THE DIXIE DANGLES , Choice of @NOo Other Menus _ Open Daily at 4:00 Henry s' Boon - 41420 S. Telegraph ee Seracomed Nightly Dancing to the Music of THE HI-Frs * Stars of Radio * Winners of Arthur Godfrey's , Talent * Decca Recording Artists - @ Fried Chicken @ Shrimp = @ Fish @ Drumburgers PULA x te your heme from ane ae dafty! ‘Call FE 8-0483 | {i Pe FOUR MINIMUM COVER ‘CHARGE @ FAMOUS FOR | FILET MIGNON velopment courses for the ambi-| About 80 per cent-of teachers im :. « '* & ‘ é rey's ‘* ~ } ; ed THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 31, dst * ies taice ° b fad ape oe: Jo i teaget s al a age rrr ; desi tite ae oe a 10 = a ~~ * es i By 7 Grain Futures Si Lower CHICAGO Ww — - Buying interest | was lacking in grain futures on the Board of Trade today and ) prices dipped somewhat in most pits, . tk ft The downturn came despite more heavy and unwanted rains in the winter-Wheat belt, and a Quak-! er Oats Co. crop report which was 4 considered pessimistic. a Soybeans, showed some indepen- dent strength on buying by local traders, cash and commission houses. x * * Near the end of the first hour old style wheat was Y¢'to 2 lower, July $2.03%, new style wheat was. ty to 3s lower, July $2.04, corn! ' was Ms to % lower. July $1.30%, oats were % to -42° lower, July 65%, rye was 5¢ higher to 4 lower, July $1.13, .soybeans were % to % higher, July $2.354%, and lard was unchanged to 5 cents a hun- dred pounds higher, July $12.85. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN Sure AGO, May 31 (AP) — Open to da Wheat— (old) Oats— BOL cccenes 2.03% July ... 65% Sept we 2.05%, Sept. ....ce.-: 66s Ol. w.ssanc 2.10% ye Wheat— (new) duly ...ue oo LU2% PUY . .cegeee O4"| Bept. 1.14% Sept. ......-- 2.06% Dec. 1.18% Bs 2.11% _ 120% MO? ..cccs.5: 2.12% ar Corn— July woneebQ. TT July .. seeped Sept. * 3.05 Sept vroesl-3h% Oot. ...i00s 12.77 Dec ooegs 1.25% Nov. 12.12 Mar. ....... 28%, Plan Annual Reunion ROCHESTER—The 328th Field Artillery, 85th Division, will hold its annual reunion in Kalamazoo, June 819. Many from this area will be in attendance. i 3-48 SPECIAL HOUSE PAINT Choose.,, 7 rom white and six selected colors. Buy now and save at this sensible, down- to-earth price! 1960 Opdyke, Pontiac Rd: OPEN: Mon., Twes., Thurs., Fri. 8:00 a. m. to 8:00 p.m. ~— Wednesday, Saturday - 8:00 a. m. te 6:00 p. m. Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. , | No. 28-32; “27-28. ° Produce DETROIT PRODUCE PRICES MONDAY — Apples, Northern i = Apples, Steele ibu, | VEGET ae 3.25-3.75 LES, MISC: Asparagus, No. a Be . behs. Beets. “ae No. 1. 1.50-2.00 bu. Carrots, topped 1, 1.25-1.15 bu. Chives, doe. Horseradish, No. : oo-1.38 & _jbasket. Leeks, No. 1, 1.25-1.75- hs behs. Onions, ary, No. 1, 2.50-3.00 §0-Jb. bag. Onions, green, No - 90 dos behs. Onion Sets, No. 1, 2.00-3.56 32-1b. bag. Parsley, =. No. . Parsley, js Petsteen . Radishes, No. 1,+.85+1.10 doz. 1.00 doz, hs. — 1, sts 25 dos. bis Hagtabes seams kedueuee : Rhubarb, barb, outdoor, No. 1, .75 Tomatoes, hothouse, No. 1, 3.28-3.75 8-Ib. basket. GREENS: Collard, Wo. 1, 1.75-2.25 bu. Kale, No. 1, 1.50-2.00 bu. Mustard, No. ¥, 1.75-2.28 bu. asp’ No. 1, 1.50-2.00 bu. Spinach, No. 1, 1.80-2.00 bu. Turnips, | 1, 1.76-2.26 ay CE AND SALAD G |tuce, Bibb, hothouse, Noe 1, kk. basket. Lettuce, leaf, No. 1, 00 = Lettuce, Remaine, No. 1 1.76- 2.25 b Baas: Large, 11.50-12.00 30-doz. case; medium. §.50-10.00; smal 8.60-9.00. 5 fancy, DETROIT EGGS . May 29 (AP)—Eggs, cases included, federal, umbo, 37-40; . wid. avg. 36 30; small 37; DETROIT Detroit, grades Whites: a A avg 39; 31- f.o.b. state wid. medium Ps wid. av grade B einige 28 28-33; wtd. avg. 32. ' a jumbo 37-348; wtd at a: lar, 50-38; wtd avg. 32. grade Posie! 23-26; wtd. avg. : Checks 24%4-27; wtd. avg. 25. hites: Grade 314e-3242; large 7; grade B large jumbo 31-33; large | B' latge| | ———- Market about foagans ipod spotty and ranging fair to eal ity offerings from nearb clearing readily and short o’ Receipts from Midwestern areas are Commercialiy-graded: A jumbo 37; extra la 28'y-324a; medium 25- 28. Browns: Grade A medium 24-25; grade eid Oils — [Make Gains , "No. 4, V0.0 ped. advanced in early trading today. 138-1150 ‘jtions to a point. There was a scat- -|tering of small losses. Aircrafts iwere off, bebs.| production was reduced at two githe eve of the Memorial Day holi- y,|added more than a point, ,| Sinclair, Texas Co, and Reyal “Press Attache Severely Injured | NEW YORK w-—Steels and oils made gaifis as the stock market Pivotal issues were up from frac- ~*~ * & After -a fairly active opening, turnover became very quiet. Anaconda and Kennecott per were a bit higher as r big African properties. The stock market was riding for- ward on the momentum of Wednesday's surprising rise on day, But many were absent from Wall Street today because the holi- day meant a four-day weekend in many establishments, * * * U. S. Steel and Bethlehem were up good fractions, Lukens Steel Gulf Oil was up around a poinf. Dutch also rose, Du Pent was up better than a point as was Allied Chemical. Mo tor shares were narrowly mixed. Rail shares were irregular also. Illinois Central was off. Balti- p-'more & Ohie wag up a bit. Also ahead were U. S, Rubber, plentiful. The quality of p \¢lining and dealers are more astticah, CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO, May 31 (AP)—Chicago Ps rg Opn age orien gy Henny il Nai bic ‘ ceipts 1, 5 ; * ces . B 56% tec 48 cara Bi ak bess Ro Dutch up by ee ; ; a yal at on s unsettled; recei 17, eee: whole- sale buying — unchan mi nite yw | 2,000 shares; hod Fe off % a r; r cent or rAW pal 35: 24:|29%, On 1,000; and Shell idirties 2549: checks 26; current receipts &- Up % at 25% on 3,500. CHICAGO POTATOES GCAO te one pas New York Stocks old: Arrivals . tack 138; total ‘vs shipments 880: supplies very light: de- (Late Morning Quotations) mand moderate; market about steady; no track sales reported: pe 3S Arriva 98: reek 199; su) mare pee rate; weaker somtrel senses ey #s +. ++ 38.3 wil et Bi wee er; J aeons : a #iRie ‘Californie, Mane 3 46-3530 , Call- |Al Ch 90.3 Auto L . Fi ifornia Round tg ih 78-3.00 Strs ... 45 & Muy .... Allis Chal ,,, 34.5 or sane slum Lid 2.) 464 a. ee Poultry ao grin os Me Pee Bites 4 DETROIT POULTRY a rag ee 9 DETROIT, May 29 (AP) — Prices paid|Aim Alrlin ... 18.1 Gen : ene _ —— f.o.b. Detroit = No. 1 eeal- Am Bak .... 44 Gen coos O65 ty fi poultry up to 10 a m COn oo... 41.3 Gen Pads. .... 44.5 19-20: light t 12-14;/Am Cyan... 8) Gen Mills ||” 63 heey aan or fryers on Ya tbe.j):|Am Ges & E1301 Gen Motors .. 42.6 whites 25: gray crosses mM & Fey 393 Gen Ghee ... 25.2 Rocke 25-26: caponeties tae Ibs.) am = pon * Be ‘Gen Tel ...., 425 Comment: Market about stendy. Re- Am News... 338 Gee Tire’ os celpts were good and ample most|Am Rad ..... + 15 Gillette os 826 sizes, with large-size metts scarce.|am Smet... 68.4 Goevel Br .,. 40.4 ers, ducks ond treater tur-/Am Tel.@ Tel 1787 Goodrich ../°° 4.8 keys are eee to-s fair demand. 7 Visgose a Goodyear ..., 5 "9g Orah Paige .. 84.6 CHICAGO POULTRY Armeo 8... } oF BL --- 38 CHICAGO, May 31 (AP) —Live _poul- aw a Oreyhound Tae4 sles buying a fnchanged “hears Aft ues Hotlang Fea : A ; i hens lon hens 13%; eld|Atl Retin ..... 4 anor M3 om e123 MP, teens ‘| Hooker El ... 44 --- 3-2? TB Coat ..... 4.5 Fi Vos. 3 Indust Rey - OT e.g. BB £4; a cteees wee vettock ee Bt Meaty Ee Alum .. DETROIT LIVESTOCK Strs .... 16.7 Int Harv ... 38.6 Warn ... 42.1 Int Nick ..,.111.1 DETROIT, May 29 (AP) — Hogs B M #1 Int Pa 108.7 |Salable 250." Active; butchers 60-75 cents |Britt My... te7 Int F 90.7 jhigher, sows 28 cents to mostly 50/5044 co... 903 Int Silver || 39:7 lcents = ber; most mixed lots Hos No, Burroughs __...47.3. Int Tel & Tel 36.1 13 3 dutchers 180-240 Ibe 19.25-\Coium & Hi. 121 Pepsi Cole .. $2.7 18.75: mixed No. 1, and 2. 190-230 W8\can Dry... 18 Pfiser ........ 6.1 19.16-20.00: few. sorted No. 1 20.28 and on tee... at pe DD... 84.7 20.38: 240-300 Ibe. No. 2 and 3 18.00-/CoDetP aii’: 3¢ Philos ....... 15.4 19.00; sows 300-400 fag S\carrier Cp ... 88 Phill Pet... a3 1400-1535; stagsand go doot00 Case, JT... 161 Pills ae Cattle—Salabie Duh cory so-|seet tise «- 02 En ort) eeipts cows; on er is Mixed | Ches & Oh .. 62.2 Puslma 62.7 jyearlings offered: cows active, fully oll “* 43 Pure OU 413 steady; other classes unchanged: few Roe ...321 RCA... ...... 38.2 jstandard to low good mixed yearlings ~. 4 Repub Stl ... 53.4 | 18.50-21.50; small jot av ¢ rties Wr ..... Rex . 9 |1010. wb. steers, 23.35; few lote xe We eraceer a4 Reyn Met » O11 yearlings unsold; utility Se7s jhce- 16-50 ay 2 an, © Rey Tob 68.6 pared latent fod’ seers and beiters| Deus cate. fe Roc, See $$ t rs AOS ‘weak to mostly cents lower; cove chem . FS a Det _ |active, strong to 6@ cents higher; bulls) DU Pont ...-. - steady age oe cents = le tb. 25.00; good low choice steers 20. 25; ndard low 18.50-30.35; wt {it steers 117.00-18.80; — = c mi. niga eg es choice tb. heifers 22. 15-35 : to low fers 20.00.21. standard to .00-19.50; utility nesters ‘§ 16:50-18.00; majority utility cows 15.00- 16.80; few to 1100; eat and nd ‘cutter canners os cutter grades ie sos. ; most prime spring lam choice slaughter ew: by CHICAGO, May 29 (AP) — Salable ve and uheven; ROAD OILING = _ ASPHALT ons - ® All Work Guoraniced CALL US TODAY AAA OIL Co, Lt 2-1044 “TR 3-0200 — it as A F fy is i H i : ra i i tiff ee a Hi nan ti ipP.m. and then it began to get eight Scneauerek. Americans tough wei their =o a. se pe age last Pridey is final article of « cea gods, com- prising the first inside, eyewitness story of what actually happened at the invaded American Embassy. The author, we sy Press Atiache Alexander C. Boas was the os severely Progen of ti Americans during riots that swept the Chinese Hetieeatiot capital.) By ALEXANDER C. BOASE TAIPEI (INS) — It was pitch- black in the U. S. Embassy's bomb shelter where we were huddled as Chinese mobs attacked in nine suc- cessive waves. ‘> On the opposite wall was an ex- haust fan. With so many people in such a small room, we thought that as long as the fan kept going we would be able to breathe. GOT STICKY It kept going until about 4:30 sticky and stuffy in there. going to fight them off. ALL LEFT SHELTER I don’t understand Chinese but apparently they were ordered to come out. All went out of the shel- ter. That left eight Americans. We got over to the back of the | Shelter against the wall. Most of us agreed that to use a gun would be complete suicide. I remember thinking if we showed we weren't going to fight them they might be satisfied with just smashing up the equipment. °No sale: bid and asked. St. Patrick Slates Season’s . Fish Pry Series” Indust Raid Util Stocks ange ..... 412 —3 ..3 +4 tod = 5 97.0 126.1 712 1841 Prev. day ... ies 208.8 125.4 712 163.7 Week ago oore 770.6 123.4 TTS og | Month ago ,,.. 266.0 1243 by 181. Year ago ...... 251.8 330.7 J 178.6) 1967 high .,..00 271.4 124.7 77.8 186.1 ese high’... 2d desl 70d OTS }| nies : & : see ee aeeiesee 244.0 126.2 69.6 171° er DETROIT STOCKS ; (Cc, J. Nephier Co.) Pigures after decimal points are eighths ‘High Low Noon ) i wip. Co. ,. 3. $. 3. eldwin' p Bovey. coos Ab 164 164 Ross Gear ‘Co. cocene OS. a Fl G. L. Oll & Chem Co...,.. 23 28 owell Elec . one * 86 61 Peninsular Met. Pd. Co. oo * 0, 103 The bg ron CO ..cccce ao © 104 103 Rudy M peop Co. ..... * 1 165 Toledo Edison Co. 13.8 138 13.5 Wayne Pd. Co. . * 14 16 is oe 2 8 a a 28 a g i tf fre ~ 4 } ri i Be s Efie i a é | : 5 1G tis 7B i g g d “tseemed the Chinese police were swouldn't let us out. lane. Somebody tripped me again. A Chinese policeman picked me up “and tried to put me in a pedicab. I just waved him away. JEEP UP AHEAD Then I saw a jeep up ahead, It running alongside me trying to help” me. i cnmnedl Mt ¥ esta pest eaaah the jeep I would be all right. The Chinese people helped me into it, Right away a crowd gath- ered around the jeep. Then the driver couldn’t fing the key. The crowd reached over the po- lice spitting on me and hitting me. Then I saw Paul Meyer (embas- sy counsellor) being pushed into a jeep on the right side. I could feel the jeep being pushed and shoved this way and that. I was sure they were trying to overtum it. * * * I didn’t want to be in it if it turned over:>-I told Paul ‘‘Let’s get out.” But the Chinese police In the meantime we were be- ing stoned, They hit the jeep windows, shattering them. I think £ prayed harder than I ever did before in ‘my life. Then a Chinese pushed his face close and spat at me. He ‘Sald “You speak Chinese?" I said no. He said “You killed Chinese, shot them.” TRIED TO START Meantime, the driver had gotten a pair of pliers and was reaching in trying to get the jeep started. Eyewitness Tells of Chinese Riots: Mobs H urled Rocks, Swung Clubs He got a wreng connection somehow and had to undo it, It seemed an eternity just sitting Finally he got it connected—but it wouldn't catch. A few of the Chinese. police: began pushing and the driver would let the clutch out _|trying to get it, started, x * * Several young Chinese lay ane in-the road trying to stop the jeep. The police reached down and pulled them out of the way. Other Chinese saw what was happening and they tried to do the same thing. The police would tackle them and push them away. Then, about three busloads of Chinese security police arrived. I_was never so happy to see\} ig. They got Paul and myself and pat us inside on the floor. The police got the car off carrying sten guns or something. We finally got to a dispensary|E pital, so they got another bus and | made us lie on the seats this time. * Survives 19 Days After Plane Crash RAWLINS, Wyo, @"It's cer- tainly a blessing to be alive.” Those were the first words Mrs. of her husband late yester- day on a snow-shrouded mountain- * * * The 45-year-old Duluth, Minn., housewife survived her ordeal for days—more than a week longer than searchers sought the wreck- “You can't imagine how — the - 2 fi se E e. = Hell it au BE g = & i i Find Woman on Mountain His wife first told rescuers died four days after later that he died seven mit St., from Pontiac General Hospital yes- terday for chest injuries received a telephone pole. Kinell was going] north on U.S, 10 about %& m north of Andersonville Rd. in Wa- terford Township. found in a used car lot, reportedly stripping a car. Arfested were Har- | old E. Pohl, 17, of Clarkston, and a l6year-cld companion. The to his parents pending further ac- tralman tion. . Pa Clarence Smith reports some parts were in Pohl's car, B'nai Israel Rummage Sale. Jimmy Day Amveis | Sale, The meeting will be held. at 8) * Five to Be Confirmed oe Ad Agency Velors | BUT | Swivels — OVER 100 CHAIRS - — Loungers — Rockers — ~ Recliners—Occasionals” So san Kinds~It's. Impossible to Describe. Them MANY ARE CLOSE-OUTS. AT COST _AND LESS — ik cine eee tren, 20% PARK FREE! DAYS _ SACP M | James L. Elwell, 53, of 126 Bum-_ was treated and released SS ee ee ee Police arrested two teenagers for investigation when they were, younger of the two was released |. Clothing and household needs. New and used. 14 E. Pike. Adv. . nace p.m. Monday in the Clarkston High || gymnasium Ordered Ou of US. WASHINGTON @ — The United States has ordered an assistant military attache at the Hungar- ian legation to leave this. country by Monday,’ apparently in retalia- tion or a similar action by Com- mun&t Hungary last month. * * we The State Department yesterday declared the presence of Lt. Karoly Meszaros “no longer agreeable to the United States government.” It gave no reason for the decision. Last month, the Soviet satellite government in Budapest accused| Capt. Thomas R. Gleason of es- pionage and gave him 48 hours to get out of Hungary. Gleason was assistant U. S, military attache there. LAKELAND, Fila. @—Jay Curtis Smith, 89, president of the Ledger Publishing Co., publisher of the Lakeland Ledger, and former ed-. itor and publisher of the Sey-. mour, Ind., Tribune. died yester- day, ~ : «we Be, PORTSMOUTH, Va. w — Col, © R. Wing, 65, father of former screen actress Toby Wing and survivor of the Battle of Bataan in World War II, died Wednesday, He was born in Tacoma, Wash. * * * SPRINGFIELD, Mo. ®—George Charno, 61,- Kansas City attorney and national legal adviser for the American War Dads, died yes- -|terday. EARLY AMERICAN —-. “HAY-C 6361 36-Mile Road, fireplaces, 4-car frame g tween 2 and 6. Please cil - MELVIN F. 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