. From Our News Wires . first deputy premioer of the Soviet - Council of Ministers, will get a The governor | declined to join Miriani in turning his back on the Soviet official when he arrives in Detroit tonight. Williams will gréet Kozlov ‘at the Fort Shelby Hoetl tomorrow night, t clear that, oficially, Kozlov is man told a Detroit newspaper the Cisler, president of Detroit Which: « welcoming delegation her Mi-’ ‘rived at the Detroit Press Chub and. be the guest at a dinner secepltin. itor Co. Rouge River lant at DETROIT — Frol R. Kozlov, sot wanted here, The mayor picceting would be peaceful out of who headed up a group of private} ‘koyan last winter, I. breequely turned down State De- | "partment ~— e the Soviet Kozlov also may eis a siete demonstration reminiscent of the Soviet Deputy Premior Mikoyan when he visited the Motor City last January. A group calling themselves the) ghungarian Freedom F ighters. | planned to picket Kozlov on Tues-' Diayor Miriani has made it ‘day. jrespect to Vice President Richard iNixon who is scheduled to visit ‘Russia later in the summer. against Mikoyan “‘got-out of hand.’ ‘| Kozloy and his group of Russian) 'egg-throwing incident that greeted! delegates touring the United States | AnastaS|were scheduled to arrive at De \troit Metropolitan Airport at 10:30) pan, (EST). They were scheduled! ito go immediately to a hotel for the; night. A formal reception was sched-| However, a woman spokes-juled for Tuesday by Walker L.| Cisler, who also had headed up seiged Mikoyan’'s party as it ar- “hotel where Kozlov is scheduled to; termined to Snub No." all tossed a dozen or more eggs and Police Lieutenant Bruce Grabb,'a.m., with a citizens hosting the Russians for Cisler declined comment on:snowballs at the party.. None of. jassigned to head dowyitown protec. the Detroit ina Gace Club. A Chrys ‘a whirlwind visit and tour of De- Mayor Mirianis refusal to greet the Soviets was struck and the tion for Kozloy) said\ he did ‘not ler Corp. \tour will begin. at 2 p.m. itreit industries, {Kozlov. Miriani said he did not only casulaty was a newsman cOV- anticipate amy trouble | during Koz- followed by @ visit to’ the General | jconsider Kozlov's ‘visit in the pub-/ering the incident, who was spat-jioy’s visit, “Nothing like we had Motors Cot P, Technical Center af Cisler admitted that the at- ‘lic interest, and had suggested the tered with an egg. But it took SOME when Mikoyan was .% anyway,” 3 p.m. . by be’ “a little | |State Department advise emia! 100 policemen to restore order, ihe added. Kozlov will dine at the Fort Shel- —_ ~*~ group WAS | not‘to come. j ~~ *« * Ate ing the night at the by at 5 p.m, and spend the night rying program Miriani said he did not want any According to the spokesman for Fort cuume . a delegation wil ‘ere. The party will leave from planned, repeat of the Mikoyan incident last'the Freedom Fighters, the demon. UAROR Btls &s Detroit Metropolitan Airport for start a tour at 9 a.m. tomorrow at Edison's River Reuge power plant. Chicago at 9 a.m. Wednesday, | Mayor Miriani and other cit officials have’ been invited to t Kozlev will tour the Ford Mo- funcheon and dinner. “We feel we are doing what is January when some 300 Hungarian stration against Kozlov would be | best for Detroit and what is best ‘refugees and other nationality orderly. She said it probably would’ for international relations,” said | groups from. Eastern Europe be-'take place Tuesday night at the The Weather U.8. Weather Bureau Forecast Fair and Cooler (Details on Page *) — THE PONTIAC PRESS | eee nen NR ete 117th YEAR kkek PON'TIAC, UNITED PRESS INTERNA A TION AL ASSOCIATED PRESS MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JULY 6, 1959—34 PAGES Beauty Queen Gets Victory Kiss ~ Formosa Air Duel the Start? Oe Fear New Asian Crisis. 271 Lose tives in Fourth Traffic Across Nation | The victims were Mrs. Roy R. Hendrix, 48, of Orion Death Toll Falls Far Township, who died in a two-car crash, and Jerry B. Under Feared Estimate. oe Si, of Detrott, a drowning victim. Crowded County Roads, Lakes Claim Two Lives Oakland County roads and lakes claimed two lives over the holiday weekend as parks and recreation areas handled capacity crowds. Nationalists Say Winay City China Reds Pile Welcomes Roy al Pair Planes on Coast’ CHICAGO «® — Queen Elizabeth I stepped ashore in Chicago today Strong Possibility U.S Would Get amid the thunder of army artil- * lery, roaring ships’ whistles and Involved the cheers of thousands of spec- jtators massed around Buckingham | Fountain landing. in Any Flareup ue A cordon of police struggled to From Our News Wires jhold back other thousands trying lto approach the reviewing stand! of 350 ——~—* Parks were filled to the ; Balmy Week in Sight ‘brim Saturday, July 4, but |, TOKYO — The battle be- 9) the dock. Traffic ..... 27 ering Ae crowds were a ‘tween Chinese Communist! The royal yacht. Britannia’s Drownings ........178 ittle lighter. ‘and Nationalist planes that #8 brought Elizabeth “and Miscellaneous... 64 fOr Pontiac and Area The sttendanee at Dredge Fark ‘increased tensions in the Prince Philip ashore promptly at —— n Cass Lake Saturday was 36,000 10 a.m. The yacht was moored out: Total..... .513 | Pontiac area weather will re and Sunday 25,000, while at Pontidte \\ not mean Hoffa should be ousted \without tria], indicated he would PROUD MOTHER — blonde, blue-eyed Susan 26060 W. Nine-Mile Rd., Souttlifi kiss from her mother, Mrs. Jessie Westergaard, after being —-* to represent her state in the + “Miss Michigan,” pert Westergaard, 20, of eld, receives a of 48. “Miss Universe’ July 16. The state-level beauty contest was hel at Walled Lake Park, Walled Lake, Susan was picked from 16 finalists out of a field | | se 4 Pentiac Press Photo contest at Long Beach, Calif, | Sunday. i Suit Will Seek Southtield Girl Wins = to Oust Hoffa. Miss Michigan Title 12 Teamster Members Plan to Press Charges Next Month From Our News Wires By DICK Press Subitban Editor A sparkling blue-eyed blonde from Southfield was chosen “Miss Michigan” last Lovely Susan Westergaard, 20, of 26060 W. Nirte-Mile WASHINGTON — An attorney Rd., Southfield, was picked from 48 contestants to repre- buildup of Communist forces along. Gov. William G. Stratton of Illi- traffic laws by police authorities) ing a fuss.” Slack died recentl¥. £ i HANSON night at Walled Lake Park. for a ‘group of rebel Teamster/sent Michigan in the “Miss Universe Contest” at Long’ members says he will take legal) action in a month or two to oust | James R. Hoffa as president of the! big union. Godfrey P. Schmidt said yester-: day the aim of the 12 rank-and-file’ members would be to have Hoffa! disqualified or expelled from the! Teamsters so that he could not be a candidate. to succeed himself, Schmidt, who recently resigned: as a member of a three-man Board of Monitors appointed by a federal court to ride herd on the Team- sters, said he hoped the monitors would join in the action. He said about 263 charges have piled up against Hoffa and his administration since last August, only to lie collecting dust while rank-and-file Teamsters and un- jon officials hostile to Hoffa's regime had been disciplined or | ousted, “These charges are substantial enough to oust Hoffa as provisional | t president’ of the Teamsters, | Schmidt said. | The attorney, who said he did ask Federal Judge F. Dickinson Letts, who set up the Board of Monitors, to name a referee to | examine the charges and arrange for & union trial. ie tae wee idt- was an original mem- |, ber of the Board of Monitors set (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) (AEB ne In T oday’s Press Comics ....\.. Wwersdescoky % ons ie aca 13 Editorials ....\...... 6 Markets ...... ease . B Obituaries .....).....6..5.. 12 I oo 5 ea ges, 22-23 ea Ue * TV & Radio Programs | 33 Wilson, Earl 3 Women's Wes isehess 16-17 imy life,” | ranks to 16 Beach, Calif., July 16-26. was crowned by last year’s winner, Shirley Ann Black, t | ‘of Flint. A “I've never been so happy in the new queen added, | “It's wonder ful — I'm thrilled with winning.’ Judges admitted it was a dif- ficult task, picking one girl t | ‘ j represent the state from a field | | of 48 pretty entrants, The con- test was held in the roller rink at Walled Lake Park before more than a thousand people, .Pre- | liminaries trimmed the girls’ | finalists, The 48 aspirants appeared first: ‘in the afternoon during a bathing suit review, This was followed by a pageant which presented them in formal gowns. By evening, judges had narrowed the field down to the 16 finalists, who returned first in bathing suits and again in formal gowns. “Miss | Michigan” was picked for her beau- ty of face and figure in the con- test sponsored by the Walled Lake Park. 1%7 GRADUATE The winner coaxes the scales to 120 pounds, stands 5 feet six and a half inches, and measures 35- 2315-35. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bjarne Westergaard | 4, and a 1957 graduate of Southfield. High School, Susan has made a fast rise in) the business world of Detroit. TEN dis months ago she was hired as a! receptionist for the John Robert Powers Finishing Schoo!” in De| troit. Today, pn is office manager of the Sey ae ah ere . mes O'Dea, a WXYZ-TV =o bat ne wedding date tions. He urged Democratic iaw- take the peoples’ minds off. cur- ; as heen decided yet. | the United States would become “IT already had the-winner picked, and it — me,” | involved in any flareup. Peiping + exclaimed Susan after she*— Mansfield Hit Chairman Butler ' { Claims His Criticism. of Dem Leaders Is Hurting ‘60 Chances | WASHINGTON (UPT) — Senate! ‘Democratic whip Mike Mansfield | ‘accused Democratic National! Chairman Paul M. Butler today of | endangering the party’s 1960 elec-' tion chances by sniping at its con-; gressional leaders. Mansfield said it would be “far | better’ if Butler supported Senate; Democratic leader Lyndon B.) Johnson and speaker Sam Ray- burn “instead ’ of cio aie rea in, these attacks.” ‘The Montana senator ‘said, | | “We'll have a tough time in 1960 | under any circumstances, but the chairman of the Democratic Na- tional Committee finding taut ‘ wr help te party ows Ma” | 2 = to help the party one bit.” Without naming Johnson or Ray-, ay Butler said yesterday that’ © party's. congressional leaders hrestened the ng seal chances | in 1960 by the ‘conservative: land moderate” stand. He said this) dismayed ‘quite a few Democrats. around the coyntry.” | ie © * . i Unless the Democratic Congress’ ‘shows “initiative” and. takes al “positive ap repo attitude,” ‘Butler said, party faces a “tough evolee! in the next elec- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) 2 | i ‘end could be the start of a’ 'new Far East crisis. flareup for months and r icently warned that the Chi- within striking range of Formosa. hi k- side the breakwater. , : Formosa sa Noe The nation’s Fourth of main fair and cooler tonight. The Lake Recreation Area it was 15,000 A 2i-gun salute began when mereury is expected to climb to a 0,900, | the launch started toward shore. JUly traffic cost 271 lives high of 78 today, dipping to a low) = : | In close formation, a flight of jet during the extended 54- of 57 es | Tratie was thickest Saturday * * with a few tieups on the heaviest | traveled routes, police said, Movement on Dixie highway north of Pontiac was slowed to a near crawl several times: Saturday afternoon because of the large vol- \ume of traffic, the Sheriff's Depart- The Nationalists hav e geal. roared low over > our weekend. A high of a with continued fair,’ ‘been predicting such a the scene. Hundreds of small e-| | pleasure craft followed the barge. It was deadlier than the last two bit warmer weather is, the out. It looked like an amphibious as- day Fourth—that of 1953 when @ look for Tuesday. This morning’s ‘sault, a scene reminiscent of World record 262 highway deaths were northeasterly winds will diminish| nese Reds had decided at a war 11. | counted tonight, becoming light and varias) ary stir) So began the Queen's 13-hour! ible tomorrow milit a But this year’s toll fell far | Temperatures will average near day in Chicago. | repo \things up in this critical >. queen was wearing a short-| short of the National Safety (the normal 83-high and normal 62! — ~ ‘. * part of the world. ‘acne summer dress, elbow- Council's, preholiday estimate of Yor the next five days in this The trafic accident © eccurred It is almost a year since Red length white gloves, a flowered hat! Accidents killed 513 Americans 2"€8, according to the U.S. Wea-| ‘early Sunday on M24 in northern. and a string of pearls. ther Bureau, Showers are likely! shelling of the Nationalist-held off-) lhave concentrated 2,300 planes — "&Uons. about two-thirds of the entire Red, | air force — along the East Coast. and.a knee injury. Lake is also in Mrs. Edith Slack is finally cook- fair condition there. He has in- The traffic death record of the, ig with gas again—20 years and | ‘weekend just past was termed by ® War after she started trying | ‘juries to the head, chest and. left a Safety Council official a proud) *® 40 so. The gas company, | arm. ‘one for motorists and law enforce- | which had promised to move her | es Oe os z ment officers stove to a new home in 19239, Mrs. Hendrix- died en route to ; | finally admitted they'd | the hospital. ‘THOUGHTFUL DRIVING’ | and sent her a new pri why Pe | sun —_ an meee the Geneva foreign ministers COM-| ada’s \ Prime Minister John G. “It shows the efects of thought-| it take so long? Mrs. Slack ex- Oxterd “a al si! Lake alas ference July 13. 'Diefenbaker during the playing of ful driving by motorists and vig-) plained: ‘“‘my husband, Joe. was have fallen asleep at the fie | Today they reported an ominous the anthems, jorous protective enforcement of a quiet man. He didn't like mak- | gr, car, headed north, ended up (Continued on Page 2, Col. 9) She was smiling and looked rest- |” all during the Independence Day; (Tuesday night or Wednesday and] Oxford when Hen- |shore islands started the Quemoy|eq gfter spending all day Sunday Weekend. again Friday or Saturday, Warmer drix’ car collided Oakland troubles jon the voyage from Parry Sound,| Besides the 271 highway deaths weather is predicted for this com-|head-on with one Highway Although this crisis fiztled out | Canaan, to Chicago. ithere were 178 drownings and 64/6 weekend. r jdriven by Charles | Toll in ’59 L. Lake of 6468 late last year, the Peiping re- err ROYAL PAIR ideaths in other types of accidents) 1, downtown Pontiac the lowest Fish cake Rd., | sme has been making ominous | U.S. Chief of Protocol Wiley Bu-| including plane crashes, falls, fires temperature recorded before 8 4.m.\ North Branch. . chanan greeted the Queen and Phil-| and gun accidents. None died from 62 . cigee _ im other Far East | was The thermometer read 77| Hendrix, 50, of motions ip officially. “The royal couple then! fireworks, t ~ ‘ at 1 p.m '3555 _Indianwood | bast Year | Passed down a long line of offi. The count began at 6 p.m. (lo- | Rd. is in fair con- | t@ dete: 41 4 Th Nedileciia Chinese official|cials, including the ambassadors to a? ee ae a ilitary Information Service saidjthe United States trom the United $a! time), Fniday. with We start Finally Makes a Fuss _ ‘tition _at_ Pontiac 3 ‘Kingdom and six commonwealth : ‘today the Chinese Communists) departures, and ended at mid- | SHEFFIELD, England (Upf)— ‘General Hospital, suffering cuts night Sunday, An honor guard of soldiers, | sailors and Marines stood stiffly at attention while the band salut-. * *« * | ed Elizabeth with “God .save the Nationalist Chinese officials have! Queen.” It followed with the predicted a Communist offensive) “Star Spangled Banner.” to coincide with the resumption of prince Philip stood beside Can- ithe straits. | a. on Page 2, Col. 6 (Continued « on ) Page 2, Col. DD Mrs. Slack made the fuss. There were strong possibilities : --——— radio has made a series of | charges in recent days of alleged hr air violations of Communist territory; yesterday. it said a U.S. warship intruded inte Com- munist waters. It issued what it called its 534th “serious warning’ against ‘‘these military provocations.” The aerial battle Sunday was the biggest in the Formosa area in nine months. Air Force headquarters on For- mosa gave this account: Four Nationalist pilots flying US.-made Sabre Jets were on a. routine patro] south of the Na-| |tionalist-held Matsu islands when they- were jumped by 12 Soviet- made MIG fighters, Within 13 min- ‘utes four MIGs were shot down. A fifth MIG was downed by planes and anti--aircraft fire on the Palchuan — White Dog — Islands, 11 miles south of the | Matsus. All the Sabre Jets returned safe- ly to their northern Forrhosa base. The Nationalists claim the air ‘battle was provoked by the Com-, imunists the same way last year’s , tension in the Formosa Strait be- (gan with Red artillery shelling. If the Nationalist alarms are correct, why does the Peiping re- gime want a crisis? : It could be part of the Reds’; continuing campaign to test West- ‘em defenses and determination in \the Far East. i contd cee bv Gale Gay a, fr. ie 3 “FUN ON THE , FOURTH — It was & wonderful Fourth 03 July, sunny and bright, for picnickets and water vrithusiasts enjoying \ holiday outings at land Coufty’s lakes and parks. Here's The Reds also could use a new, crisis for domestic purposes — te. Postion Prove 1 part of the giant crowd that filled e Park on Caay. capacity on the United States’ 183rd 2 irthday Satunay: ‘rent problems at home, } ; : : } ! ’ [ f ‘iy f - \ * t r : é ‘ " f £ AQ are sf aun gy ee I a Ce i a ae * 4 hy a f F fi ~ 4, } ___) THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 6, 1959 / Rae NEN peli hip Perils Oil Rig: Lavage aed ag oe Abandon Efforts fo Quell Flames Undecided About Six Companions in Beating Cargo-Tanker Beached Off Louisiana After 37 Are Rescued CAMERON, La. (UPI) — White- hot explosions seared the Belgian cargo-tapker “‘Anvers” today as firefightersr towed it around and surrendered it to roaring flames. * * * | The tanker was beached three | miles offshore here early today | after its 37 crewmen, the captain’s | wife and the captain had been } rescued, but they feared the burn- ing hulk might drift free again and blunder into a nearby off- An 18-year-old Bloomfield Town- ship youth today began a 10-day jail sentence while the Oakland County Prosecutor's Office still was contemplating what to do with six, of his companions. i ~*~ * * | Timothy A. David of 591 Wood-, way Ct. checked into the county jail ‘after his attorney John V.; Manikoff decided he would not ap-’ peal David's conviction last month, in the assault of a Clawson truck) driver in Bloomfield Hills in| March. David was found guilty by + Huntington Woods Justice James Renfrew whe heard the case it Bloomfield Hilts Justice Court when regular Hills Justice Alva | shore oil drilling rig. J. Richardson withdrew. | 3 — eer ap : At least six persons, {wo mem- _ « - ' a ck es bers of the crew of the 9,600-ton . Anvers, two Navy seamen and two Coast Guard firefighters, were injured. None was believed Searing white explosions from | magnesium bars stored in the aed { Before finding David guilty June! 25 and sentencing him to 10 days, in jail, Renfrew dismissed aggra-, vated assault charges against six) other Birmingham area vouths ac-| cused of taking part-in the beating| ef Harold C. Puterbaugh 32, * * * | Renfrew said he dismissed the | charges because Puterbaugh could! not identify the six as being those: who beat him March 12 after the' youths allegedly became angry as he tooted his horn at their car when it didn’t move away fast enough from a traffic light. Puterbaugh did identify David, however. ‘ George F. Taylor, chief :assis-| tant prosecutor, said he planned : to confer with Puterbaugh ee Won Top Ratings, Aw ards before he can decide whether new iam“ “Pontiac Citizen-Soldiers Home 4 Pontiac Press Photo * being accepted. by G. Marshall Jordan, local advertising manager. The new flag became legal at 12:01 a.m. July 4. : IT’S OFFICIAL — Oakland County Congress- / man William S. Broomfield, right, presents the first official United States 49-star flag in Oak- land County to The Pontiac Press. The flag is 5 hold lighted the early-morning sky and the hull of the Anvers| se —e glowed red. Mike Mansfield Hits Deputy Saves Dem Chairman Butler Woman in Lake "(Continued From Page One) {makers to forge a record for 1960) ‘by passing ‘‘progressive”’ bills” ;even if they knew President Eisen- 'hower would veto them. The Day in Birmingham To Ask City Commission for 16-Mile Road Light ’ Pulls Her From Bottom BIRMINGHAM—The City Com-jsystem, either at Quarton road, Big | as Others Help Three mission tonight is expected to hotz| Beater reed, or i6-enile road would 1 ° * i | serve to regulate Woodward tralfice Into Boat in Addison 3 communication from Mr. Colin) «5 at: sak) cannes can ite RECORD SPEAKS | Campbell, 655 Lakeview Ave., iN! nade. | Mansfield retorted, “The rec-| An Qakland County Sheriff's Dep-| einen 8 rT ent he feels! _ Also on tap is a request by City \ord of the past two Congresses un- uty dived to the bottom of Lake-|, enue near 1diike read. Manager L. R. Gare to negoliste \aer = Le : : : b . |for downtown parking facilities, jder Democratic control was re-' ville Lake in Addison Township| Campbell's letter outlines the di- pnd a hearing A ae aditing of RECEIVES HIGHEST REGIMENTAL ‘ Pentiae Press Photo AWARD — Pic. James K. Beck (right, 2402 Division commander, Maj. Gen.- Clyde E. Pontiae Trail, Walled Lake, is shown receiving Dougherty. This award is onegof the highest - the ‘Best Instructor Award” from 70th Training awards in the regiment. ¢ . “ : . Holida Traffic Kills By JOE SINGLETON 333rd training regiment. He was ion, made its initial summer train-| sponsible for Democratic victories | co turday to save a drowning 33- lemma of a westbound driver on Cherry Court : ‘ y | After two weeks of rigorous field first chosen from the 4 companies)ing program of infantry training’ !n = and precios I believe the| year-old Detroit mother’ as fellow|!®Mile road wishing to turn south h & t * |training, members of Pontiac's 2nd which make up Pontiac's 2nd bat-|@nd instructions, This year. Paes on ages Se | deputies rescued her son and an-\0" Woodward avenue, and finding A: Setsec ta the excnmiseion Eom Cross Nation |Basic Combat Training Battalion sented his battalion in the compe-| x * * ii ieee om couple. the only solution is to “look for!) paints out that there are no : : returned home early yesterday tition for the regimental] award.’ Although there was much work! Butler said in a lecal TV inter- | ne t * an opening and zip across. municipal parking facilities in the ‘in this year’s training program,| view that “younger members of } Water Patrol Deputies Mel) He suggests that city engineers northwest quadrant of the central Runner-ups in the battalion's choice, and winner in their indi- ag taag aare prin = Spa | vidual companies were: Pfc. | = aoe “a wore bobo Richard G. Wilton. 5582 Harrel ‘captured the softball regimental He said that the number of 2% special regimental awards, | et. través Plane: Pic. Mubert championship in one-game elimi- highway deaths was held down One top regimental award was |W. Edwards. 4. 101 Glass Rd., |"4ton Contests, but lost their bid) although there were nine million won by Walled Lake school | Ortonville; Pfc. Lawrence T. gg ge omay war Ber- observe the situation for them- selves, preferably around 5 p.m. At this time, writes Campbell, jan existing privately owned park- Woodward traffic is joined by | ing lot, and for adjacent property _ home-bound traffic from a near- in the area. | The proposed vacation would c!- downtown business district. a } : (Continued From Page One) ieee His request is to negotiate for The hard work of these citizen- on an emergency basis,” the coun-| soldiers paid off with top ratings cil spokesman said. ifrom U.S, Army inspection teams Osngrees” will return to Wash. ‘Pierce and his brother Russell ington “in a fighting mood” for | were chasing an overloaded 12-foot the second session of the 86th | rowboat. Deputy Donald Johnson, Congress next year because ‘off-duty at the time, was with “they know they will have to jinem — 5 . have a solid record of accom- | . plishment in order to win re- | As they approached the two. | by office, and the only answer | is the “fook and zip” method. ‘ifect the south 102 feet of Cherry more cars on the roads this week- | teacher, PFC. James K. Beck, | end than during the 1953. Fourth | of 2402 F © Trail. | The ‘best soldier’ award for 3357 Indianwood Rd,, Lake Orion. | vailed across the country today! holiday, they tra See ee ae He was awarded the ‘structor Award’ by Maj. Gen. Six states reported no highway|Clyde E. Dougherty, commander deaths for the weekend—Alaska, | of ele Training Division, in a'were: Pfc Dieter W. Kubfsch, 547\change in the type of training of . special parade and awards pro-|Heights Rd., Lake Orion; Pic. Ed-|this unit. Mexico, North Dakota and Wyo-|gram as the division concluded its|wards and Pvt, Gerald C. Sleep,| They came through with flying Delaware, New Hampshire, New| ming. ltrai we © training. “Texas led the states in traffic deaths with 25. Illinois and Vir- ginia reported 16, New York 15 and/ Beck was chosen from men in Richard T. Gronski, 1016 Rochester. Runnerups Pfe. Harding St., |3440 Woodland Dr., Milford | “The 2nd battalion, which was 12 companies which make up the; previously the 703rd Tank Battal-| men.” ia 14. New Y drownings witht te rent ed *\Three Less Than Last Year and Michigan 13. Rain to Spoil Fair Weather | in South, East | By United Press International A total of 25 persons lost their “By The Associated Press jlives in Michigan accidents over ; < jthe July 4th holiday week-end. Fairly pleasant weather pre-; Authorities reported that 13 of ithe dead -were drowned, 11 died but mph ate and evening showers were indicated in many parts of ,. : the South and. East. — n a home fire. + 2 2 | _A year ago, 28 persons lost Showers sprinkled areas in the, Meir lives im accidents during Pacific Northwest, much of the| teh Independence Day weekend. Ohio Valley, parts of the lower! Six of the drowned died when Mississippi Valley andr southern'a cabin cruiser on which they 25 Died in Michigan Over July 4th Weekend 'Bellevue, died when a pickup truck driven by Clifford Sackitt, 31, of \Battle Creek struck a car riven jby Haynes. Walkinshaw and Wall- |ing were riding in the truck. | A Lake Orion woman, 48-year- |a two-car collision near Oxford in ,Qakland County. ; ° * * * John J. Blyle, 42, of Fairhaven, was killed when his car hit an! jabutment in St. Clair County. His 'wife, Rhoda, 42, is in critical con- plains during the night. Light rain also was reported in scattered sections of Texas, Arizona, Wis-' consin and New York. Only minor temperature changes’ were riding Saturday night in Mus- kegon channel of Lake Michigan? "”” was rammed by a car ferry. Only |. Constantine Dedes, 68, of 19083! ‘Country Club, Detroit Athletic! 42 Die in Karachi Rains itwo of the eight persons aboard | reeland, Detroit died Sunday aft- the cruiser survived the accident. |“ being struck by a car on a | wick Blvd., the battalion command- er said, “I am proud of the men “Best In- Pontiac’s 2nd battalion went to of the 2nd Battalion. They had to; ;work especially hard during this. year’s training program due to the! | dents can justly be proud of these A — i Hear Attack Claims McKenzie in Florida T. Curtis McKenzie, 57, indus- |trialist and former president of | the Detroit Fire Commission, died’ early Sunday at his residence in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., of a heart attack. j President of Klem Chemicals, | Inc., Mr. McKenzie also recently i in traffic mishaps, and one was old Sally Hendrixx, was killed in f0Unded and headed Solar Testing | Co., a firm for testing chemical | Products of companies having no, | testing facilities, in Florida. | Prior to’ their moving, and un- | til recently, Mr. McKenzie and his wife lived on Lahser Rd. and had many friends in the Birm.- ' ingham-Bloomfield area. A former member of Dearborn’ Club and the Hundred Club, he is election.” “We believe we have to try to person boat it began to sink | from water it had taken on. | Its Mrs. Rose E. |colors, and Pontiac and area resi-| ~~ * influence. the Democratic leader- | occupants, ship of the Congress to come along; Kulezyk, of 9120 Pulaski, her four- with the national progarm, rather! year-old son, Frank, and Mr. and than the conservative and moder-| Mrs. Leo Vrabel, of Lakeville, own- ate program which they are trying|ers of the boat, floundered in the to follow,’’ he said. j water. g "dk « Johnson! Mrs. ‘Kulezyk went. under. John- Among ofher things, : ; : and Rayburn, both Texans, have| 0" dived ,in after her.’ He found sought to make big Democratic het body on the lake’s bottom, spending proposals “veto proof”’ by |15 feet under the surface and scaling them down to meet some/hatled ‘her to shore. of Eisenhower's objections. | Johnson worked over the un. These compromise tactics have | conscious mother for 20-minutes been criticized by liberal cee applying artificial respiration be- crats who believe the party should). fore she revived. push broad welfare legislation and! then let the Republicans try to! justify presidential vetoes in the 1960 campaign. The Pierce brothers pulled the Vrabels and the Kulczyk boy into | was taken to Pontiac General Hos- * * * 2 i] Five Sunken Ships Lost | Sheriff Frank W. Irons today | pital for a check up and released. OSAKA, Japan (UPI) — Fw- | pointed to the quick action of John- kada Salvage Co. reported today son and the Pierce brothers as that it’s going to sue the govern- |‘‘surely preventing one drowning ment of Okinawa for the Joss of and possibly four.” s five ships the firm purchased for | Windy City Roars salvage. The ships sunk by U. S. parently were stolen from the Naha. , |the patrol boat. The boy’s mother’ Campbell thinks that a stop light Court, and would retain an ease- ;ment for maintenance of public [aes Edward C. Wahi Rosary service for Edward C. Wahl, 64, of 19264 Riverside Dr., Birmingham, will be held at_8 to- day. at the Bell Chapel of the Wil- liam R. Hamilton Co. { Requiem mass will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday at St. Hugo of the Hills Catholic Charth, with bur- ial in Tonawanda, N.Y. Mr. Wahl 12 Teamsters Plan Suit fo Oust Hoffa (Continued From Page One) up by Letts in a compromise set- itlement of a suit by the rank-and- jfile Teamsters who charged that |Hoffa’s election was “rigged.” died Friday at St. Joseph Mefvy. | He “declined to estimate his} Hospital, Pontiac of injuries suf- jchances of forcing Hoffa’s ouster; fered in a recent fall. or to guess how long the procedure | He was the representative in might take. ‘this area for the Leeds and North- Schmidt also said it would net rup Co., of Philadelphia, a scien- erase corruption in: the union. tific instrument firm. Mr. Waal any more than ‘getting rid of | was a 1925 graduate of the Univer- Hitler” by itself would have (sity of Michigan, and a member ot erased Nazism. But he said it.'the American Society for Metals, would be “a very substantial \the Acorn Rifle Club, and the opev- contribution te a cleanup which (ator of ham radio station W8ED. is long overdue.” ’ | Surviving are his wife, Kathryn | Schmidt said he had received)» and three sisters, jthreats by telephone, letter and) Ernest E. Mann postal card. He said he had M0) service for Ernest E. Mann, 31, Sway to link them with the Team- of Phoenix, Ariz. will be held at ster hierarchy but that he had re-|y ; : : nea | p.m. Wednesday from the Bell ferred them to the FBI and other Chapel of the William R. Hamil- jagencies. ‘ton Co., with burial in Woodlawn | Asked if he expected action on Cemetery, Detroit. ithe threats, he replied firmly: “I | Mr. Mann, die@ Thursday at his planes during World War I,: ap- fl f the Pacific Oce: half | mile off the Okinawan port ot Welcome fo Queen | | (Continued From Page @ne) | ido.”’ chmidt said it was his own opin- inois and Mayor Richard J. Daley 10" that Hoffa could not win re- of Chicago escorted the Queen as|lection in a fairly conducted elec- {home in Phoenix, Ariz., after a brief illness. He had been a long- time resident of Birmingham prior to moving to Phoenix iri 1948 and were reported. | Those who died were Alvin Ken-/Seet near his home. survived by his wife, Gary, onef KARACHI, Pakistan (UPI) —|she reviewed the guard of honor. |tion. He said he thought a nation-/was a former member of St. ° * * * ‘ny, 49, a North Muskegon con-|_ Mrs. Manley Gallop, 59, of Mc-/son, four daughters and one Monsoon rains which drenched xk *& wide poll (Gallup) was right two james Episcopal Church. Fair weather was in prospect/tractor, his wife, Dorothy, 43, their Bain, was killed when the car in| brother. [Karachi all last week killed 42! With prows pointed toward shore, | ago when, he said, it found | Surviving are a daughter. Services were held at 1:30 p.m./persons in floods and collapsing|28 U. S. warships — the greatest |(O@t 7 Per cent of the Teamsters) suzanne W. of Detroit, and one sis- today at Fairchild Funeral Home, houses, unofficial reports said to-\concentration in Lake Michigan |@2"'t eS : jter, Mrs. Robert C. Hupp, of La- Fort Lauderdale. The family re-\day. The floods were hitting West since the war of 1812—lined up in| Pe™inded that many anti-Hoffa | peer, quests that instead of flowers, con-|Pakistan today and scores of vil-|tight formation during the cere. | Union — ders thought the Team-| tributions be made to the-Chil- lages were reported inundated and monies. The white-uniformed crews! =e" chief , would win _ anyey «| dren’s Variety Hospital in Miami.'cut off near the Kashmir border.| were massed on deck, standing at Schmidt said that was just their |attention. : wtp ac Schmidt's statements on legal FIRST FOR CHICAGO action against Hoffa were made _As for Chicago, this is the first as the Senate Rackets Commit- time the city has ever entertained tee prepared to look into al- a British sovereign. An army of leged extortion deals in New Jer- [Planners at work for months, toiled sey and financial transactions in- all through Sunday and late in the volving Hoffa’s friend Ben Dra- night, polishing the arrangements now . for the 13-hour program, At the : a. Dranow, a former Minneapolis Lakes and sori, Robert, 21, and 29-year-old, which she was riding with her nearby parts of the upper Ohio'son-in-law, Richard Schau b,/husband collided with another on Valley westward, including east-/Charleston, W. Va., and William | M66 four miles south of Lake City. ern sections of the northern and|Stong and Norman Burr, both 24, central plains and the upper Mis-/of Muskegon. | China is as large as the conti- sissippi Valley. Clear skies also, Saved were Mrs. Donna Schaub, ‘nent of Europe. were in areas from Cali-'23, daughter of the Kennys, and’ — - fornia. eastward into much of the Miss Nancy Beardsley, 19, Mus. central and southern Rockies, | kegon. ee Se ; Another drowning victim was| The Weather | one-year-old Cynthia Spragg, of Al- Pull U.S. Weather Bureay Report pena, who was trapped in the cab- | in of her father’s home-made cabin perene i : : iw lig "* ry ai and cruiser when it cappsized on Beay- in the upper Great Busy Roads, Lakes Claim Two Lives (Continued From Page One) in the southbound lane, they said. The drowning was Saturady aft- ternoon at Martin- SS ——— Northerly winds 8- an beer, ai. °F Lake in Alpena County. variable ‘tometer. tomers ‘ent and, Richard H. Dewitt, 16, of Grand! eleventh hour, ladies who will meet Lec Oakland | dale .Beach on Picasant, ‘Bieh' On |Rapids, drowned while swimming ie Queen text Philip, or aS : ering 2a ; ent and Lowest. teres. ¥ drowned while swimming in _ Police estimate more than a mil- ag : oo ae same Bate a Be Weare crystal tate , iter talon sastdeaing. sy : | i ADEs e Chinn First traffic fatality of, the hol- 3 a ae e' 7 te iday weekend wag 66-year-old }|said, ‘are expected to line the | imi Beach 96 74| Allgust Waret of Dearborn, who _ [Streets to see the royal couple.’ | ee ee eee WS Fe Som ome: oe for | : ear on % . izabeth { ao ee | ‘jand Philip the biggest : | & & Mae Kirby, 56, of Midland was vs 7 | |reception stuce ‘Soret, London, , ad Staion in Us ” ae Waeer Clk ets Ga Be ‘Be ee epanaapegee fs us ansisco #8 $2 Township, Crawford County.» SUN AND SWIM FANS—The day was warn, Barbara Collom (eft), 2641 Williams/Lake Rd. |, This Petage of GS teosewae "1. Glenn Haynes, 60, of Kalamazoo,, ‘he ice cream was cold—two pretty Waterfotd ‘and Vonnie Stark, 1067 Orchid St. were among William Hate (Big Bill) Thom pe te ‘and Glenn Walkinshaw, 44, and, Township teenagers enjoyed both, at’ Pontiac the thousands who visited the park over the ithe. mayor cried, -“Keep # # Kenneth Walling, 45, both of Rural’ Lake Recreation Arga on the Fourth ¥ duly. holiday weekend. ; | |) “'George out of Chidago.” \ bs ‘ $ ; at yas ai ; a ' : “] iV : ‘ " * nes Ve het “ ¥ f ‘ s Z ¥ eS ee ' : ee : ® : : Fd We : es \ AS : wae : pe oe f F if i Fr i 5; , ‘ * ‘ « } j i re ’| > / =e = MAUE f + The first pharmcopoeia to bei Man Wed 5 Years Ago published in the U. S. appeared jin)... ny about 1778: A nationally recognizea|/ Dies at 105 in Kentucky LOUISVILLE, Ky, (AP)—Jobn edition was not published or gen- erally circulated until 1820. 4 Wesley Beaird, whb attracted na- Brands It Scare Campaign Economic Conference x - = 7 { tavensenest’ — —‘" htiona attention wien te ceca its Anti-Inflation Plan G ; : F bis 100th birthday by getting mar 3 - a Ss h @ jried, died Sunday at the age of) WASHINGTON (AP)—The Con-, The conference's, board mem- iad Times Faster Re 105. Pee oe ference on Economic Progress bers — bowed _ Drove BELL-ANS tab- , |Reuther of the Uni uto Work- i has attacked the Eisenhower ad-! : intestines ss many toting eesti eke, | Beaird entered the hospital Wed-| ministration’s anti - inflation pro-| TS. President A. J. Hayes of the ” fale 35¢ at druggists Sing parts. eert, (eSday. Until shortly before his gram as a scare campaign, | Machinist Union, attorneys Thur- ANS, Orangeburg, N.Y. fordiberal free sample. marriage, he worked for the city x * * onde Arnold sap ea a sanitation de ent. . — avis, government officials in De- (Advertisement) ee _ The conta pl ‘ chin mocratic administrations, Presi- BUGGY? supported group” .of labor dent James G. Patton of the Na- He called himself “half Irish/farm leaders and businessmen. he hd eed! / THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 6, 1959 cea’ pd Protestant Churches Polish Merger Plans OBERLIN, Ohio (AP)—Repre- seatatives of two major Protes- tant denominations met today to translate their vision of a united| church into concrete terms, It was a crucial stage in their | 17 years of preliminary planning) come. and effort. ; posed statement of faith. The whole Christian world,” { Congregational Christian church- es went into their, first joint busi, ness session, their big job was to agree on a common constitution. They also are to act on a pro- These will be “montentous steps in formation of the United Church of Christ,” said the non denomina- tional weekly Christian Century. added, is interested in the out- Wide attention has focused on As delegates of the Evangelical |the merger because it is the first and Reformed Church and the'in this country involving denomi nations of such differences in or- ganization and background, . : | His Cup Runneth Over | SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (UPD| —Somebody who apparently didn't! worry about mixing his drinks threw an empty, wine bottle through it| the window of the liquor store here and made off with a bottle of vodka. | Aluminum is five times heavier i- than the metal lithium. | No Contract N ‘Call Today. Gregory Oil Go, 94 East Walton Bivd. Phone FE 5-6141 Get rid of roaches and ants with Johnston’s No-Reach, the modern brush-on method of insect control. No-Roach is on sale at Cunning- ham’s, Kinsel’s, Simms, Thrifty, Cloonan’s and your favorite drug store. Dist. by National, McKesson, Kerr, Wetherbee. tional Farmers Union and Murray D. Lincoln, president of the Na- | tionwide Mutual Insurance Co. * * * | The conference report charged/ the administration's money pol-| icies were fostering unemploy- ment and higher costs. It urged the government to draw up what the group called a national pro-| sperity budget for the next five years or so with definite goals for or MAHOGANY FINISH ; maximum production and empioy- ment, The report said “this man-. ifestly calls for a much bigger federal budget and a much more: jliberal monetary policy than we now have.” The conference report came a week after one issued by the |Cabinet anti-inflation’ committee’ headed by Vice President Richard M. Nixon. ° } The CEP report did not specifi-' cally attack the Nixon report. But Keyserling told reporters he con-! and. half Indian” and often brag-|Its report released Sunday wes ged, “I been chewing tobacco|drawn up by Leon Keyserling, since I was eight.” who was head of the President's ~* *« * Council of Economic Advisers He is survived by his wife, who| under former President Harry S. is 74. Truman, | MELLOW MAPLE committee a political stump speech and a “paste pot reitera- m@ tion’ of the administration's leg- \islative program. | * * * The Cabinet group had said the | nation is at a critical point re-| quiring prompt adoption of strict-| er curbs on federal spending and removal of the interest rate ceil-| ing on government bonds to avoid what it called the serious threat of, 1 | inflation. | * * * | Keyserling’'s group charged ;“the natural desire of the average |family to be protected from in- “fi flation has been played upon to ‘induce acceptance of regressive national economie¢ policies, which * HAND-RUBBED TOPS * STURDY CONSTRUCTION ¢ SOLID SIDES * LOADS OF STORAGE SPACE IN THE SPACIOUS DRAWERS ANTIQUE METAL PULLS NO MONEY DOWN Includes Bed, Dresser and Chest | deserve help most. * * The CEP jeconomic policies * the 1.50 WEEKLY down the economy and used a have helped those who need help j least at the expense of those who “The real purpose of this scare campaign has now been revealed’ ‘clearly as an effort to repress. |American wages, on the errone-. ous assumption that rising wages /have been the major cause of ris- jing prices and thus weakened our competitive position abroad.” report said federal since |Korean War havg: created more inflation than ever before, used |credit-restraint policies to slow Starts Tonight! Charge Yount Shop Tonight Till 9 o’Clock! Savings for Home and Family! Sorry, no mail or phone orders, no deliveries. All sales final. FASHION ACCESSORIES — Street Floo Pack of 3 Women’s Print Hankies, Were 1.00....... eee... SRO Men’s Boxed Initial Hankies, Were 1.00.................. Soiled Lot of Nylon, Cotton Gloves, Were $2, $3........14 OFF Summer Straw Belts, Were 1.00............... .2/$1 Smokers Tote Bag with Lighter, Was 3.00.................1.50 Fabric and Patent Handbags, Were 3.99................. 1.99 Group of Seam, Seamless Hosiery, Were 1.35 to 195........ 99e Group Millay and Nurses’ White Hosiery, Were 99c....... .69¢ Group of Jewelry Sets, Were 2.00 to 15.00.............. 1 OFF Group Costume Jewelry, Was 1.00..........0eccceeee, os. 2/$1 ’ FASHION CLEARANCE of SPRING and SUMMER WOMEN’S SHOES Were 10.95 and 12.95 Were 10.95 and 14.95 6.90 $8.90 De Roose, Air Step, Life Stride, Joyce, Paradise in hi and mid heels. Straws, patents, calfs, Dildi suedes, many threat of inflation to retard in- vestment in such things as na- | tional defense and education. | j _ * * * | The report said the conference's, OPEN MONDAY |proposed “national prosperity’ | budget’’ would envisage govern-| ‘ NIGHT TIL 9 ment outlays by 1964 abbdut 16% Phone FEderal 3.7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW billion dollars higher for goods and services than is now being | spent, and about 19 billion dollars | higher for social security and re- ¥ . . Up a steep mud-choked wash—Positraction pays off be ss NO MOUNTAIN CAT, MISTER... Thats a Chevy with Positraction! That 3134 Fleetside has the sure-® district officer who drives it footed ways of a big western bob- cat. Roams through high brush country that would buck the life out of most trucks. Crosses streams without benefit of a bridge. Climbs talus grades where pifion won’t even grow. But that’s all routine for this Chevy, equipped with Positraction* rear axle. It’s hard at it every day for the Utah Fish and Game com- mission. Figure about 60,000 miles of mountaineering before this Chevy is traded. And yet the a would bet his badge the tie rods won’t even need replacing! Out in that wild, climbing Utah country, Chevy’s suspension and frame and brakes, its Positrac- tion rear axle and Thriftmaster 6 power are proving themselves under rougher conditions than most test engineers could dream up.. They’re proving that Chev- rolet’s advanced engineering and design ideas pay off—in spades— when the going gets especially Mean and dirty: Through a mountain stream—deep in bes 4 “a Positraction, of course, is a big plus on this job, providing the sure grip needed to dig through mud, snow, loose sand, whatever comes along. Could be that a Positraction-equipped 1/- ton pickup is the answer for your area of operation. Or maybe a 4-wheel drive Chevy. We've got trucks that specialize in getting in and out of any kind of coun- try. Talk to your dealer about your needs. He’ll show you what tough trucks are made of. *Optional at extra cost No jobs’ too tough for a Chevrolet truck! Pcneveoier | ‘yl ne See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer! Avintaquin Canyon. 4 ‘ < ‘ - ‘h _ MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, Inc. 2a zd = ge 631 Oakland at Coss Pontiac, Mich. FE 5-4161 colors, most sizes. Waite's ... Street Floor NOTIONS, STATIONERY — Street Floor Jumbo Zippered Garment Bags, Were 4.98........ 2.88 Plastic Dimette Chair Backs, Were 59c............,........ He Chrome Foldever Overdoor Hangers, Were 79c............ 22e 6-Pr. Back-of-Door Shoe Bags, Were 3.79.............0.... 1.88 42” Plastic Shelf Bags, Were 4.98......... opine ave oelelaleinisieiats 1.44 6-Pr. Chrome Slack Racks, Were 1.98................ coeee 880 ) 3 “ 4 AHS | WY Rtas. | | #SyS* HOME OFFICE: 761 W. HURON ST. ~ . | | DOWNTOWN OFFICE ROCHESTER BRANCH 16 E. LAWRENCE 407 MAIN.STREET Ee a lus op 4416 DIXIE HIGHWAY, DRAYTON PLAINS , a eee ee ae t . = } MS Ee, CP ce ee sew as f f 3 ‘ 3 f ee eee ee oe eee 2 RR Tre * oy ‘ | . ea tip te © eee — } ; “Sia j : ' / 4 $ | | I j : U. S. families spend one quarter oor. + y _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY. 6.1959 an if - fe id wu , A “Chile Was Recily Lost spt « we a nut Their Humor Cah Be Deadly ia a fi Va 7 | Mot. ND UP)—Th ten ay A rT se re Showoffs Are Big Water Hazard IBZ _ ) \deen Steens ended when the ‘lad pong nelle Bplay PA md yin inte Does Your Have Your Car Serviced by the Auto Serviceman Who Uses These Brand Name Parts: WALKER o——- DELCO BATTERIES PENNZONL MOTOR OIL AILPIPES GOODYEAR HOSE & — FITTINGS A C FILTERS DELCO REMY, AUTOLITE and HOLLEY ELECTRICAL PARTS . wre Drive Ke | eseeeseeesee ROCHESTER, CARTER end HOLLEY CARBURETORS GUIDE and GENERAL ELECTRIC LAMP BULBS Distributed Locaily by 367 S$. SAGINAW FE 2- 9129 | MID-SUMMER TERM Y ULY 20 ting Shorthand Business Administration Clerk - Typist Typewriting Comptometer - - Calculator VETERAN APPROVED The Business Institute A Free Demonstration Class in Speedwriting (the Shorthand written with ABC’s) will be held Monday Evening, July 20, at A C and AUTOLITE SPARK PLUGS | , AUTO ELECTRIC SHOP, INC. | 5 STARTS MONDAY ee Shorthand Higher Accounting Special Courses Are Available 7 W. Lawrence St. PONTIAC Phone FE 2-3551 7:00 P. M. The puplic is invited “rugged Atlas Mountains, but pean d - io oe of # hates series "Swim «fo! operation with yuca’ Showoffs” are a pain anywhere, \pools they are a pdsitive menace to life and limb. * * * That is why one of the most im- portant water safety rules is never to “‘show off’ around boats, swim- ming pools or beaches, according to John Moreau, Pontiac YMCA swimming instructor, | lt may be fun to rock the boat | or duck unsuspecting bathers, | but i¢ your victims can’t swim, or should striké their heads on hidden recks, humor very quick- _ ly turms to tragedy. Another trouble with showoffs is that when they’re not getting other prople into trouble, they're getting into it themselves. Many a showoff has had to be rescued because he got himself into a pre- *"lextricate himself, Sometimes those going to his rescue suffer injuries or death, The (one a liquard, ‘ahem’ oleae saving a showoff from his own toibles might cost more deserving people their lives, Another way people get inte trouble is by doing their racing away from shore, “If you're go ing to have a race,» Moreau cantioned, “start i¢ out in the water from a float or a dock and then race toward the shore. land in case something goes wrong far from help.” COURAGE NOT ENOUGH Courage is always magnificent, dicament from which he could not) rescue a drowning person from cue from deep water unless he is “That way you will be closer to}a strong swimmer,” Moreau said. and you have to have help, You|lifeguards to have to go to the may also be able to reach shallow /aid of not only the original victim, water, Should you be racing to-|but a well-meaning but incompe- ward deep water, you might find/tent rescuer as well, Many times yourself in trouble, exhausted and/this means a double tragedy.” HERE ARE RULES be saved by adhering to these sim-| but courage alone is not enough to|ple rules: To rescue a drowning person from deep water requires cour- age, but still more necessary are swimming expertness, physical stamina,’ and the special know!l- edge that can come only from sound training in lifesaving methods. No one should undertake a res- “It's common,” he said, ‘‘for Moreau said many lives could making into the water yourself unless q.lll te, sten it enly results to/abectutely have to. Ty to use a ee lec ora npn ere self, If you are ever faced with CLOVERLANE D Cc such a situation, go for help - Tugs. Lb. fast as you can, BUTT R ONLY 6. Everyone, whether he can swim or not, should practice the) With Meat Purchase ‘ASH M as E L 78 N. SAGINAW ST. PONTIAC TUESDAY ONLY. SPECIALS AT BATLEY'S LEAN MEATY 1.In a remy Serre you ] | 2. Never swim to a rescue when you can use a boat. | Lb. . 3. If you must swim, try to take} along some means of support such as a board or inflated inner tube. 2-Ib. Pkg. 4, If the victim is near the | shore and you can’t swim, push a | beard or other buoyant ebject out to him so he can hold on until help arrives, 5. If you can’t swim, don’t try to save a victom in deep water. You will likely come to grief your- | BAZLEY’S CLOVERLANE Cheese Spread 59° BRING THIS AD AND RECEIVE 1-L8. LIMIT OF OUR OWN rules of artifical respiration. i Vanish From Algerian Monastery Rebels Take Two Monks ALGIERS (AP)—The chant of “Salve Regina” echoed through the chapel of the Thibarine Trap- ‘pist Monastery during evening vespers when a five-man rebel team entered the gate which never closes. The men—wearing French para- trooper uniforms—asked to see the father superior. “We have an unpleasant mis- sion,” the leader told Father Jean- | Marie. ‘‘We have to take you and | two other monks with us.” “My duty is to guard my spirit- ual community,"' replied the sup- /erior. “I would rather die than abandon it.’’ The rebels did not insist. But ;two other monks—Brother Math- jeu and Brother Luc — packed their belongings and followed the rebels into the night. “Don’t worry,” the rebels told Outside the monastery the group was joined by 12 other guerrilla fighters. Together they disap- peared into the darkness, | The incident occurred last French military in nearby Medea, some 60 miles south of Algiers. A pursuit was ordered in the behind the rebels and that chances of finding the group were dim. For more than 20 years, the Thibarine Monastery of Notre Dame de |’Atlas—Our Lady of the Atlas Mountains—has served as a haven for the area’s impov- erished Moslem population. The monks refused a French army garrison for protection. “We trust in God,” they told French officers. Cecil Is Dead 3 Years After Zoo ‘Wedding’ MIAMI, Fila, “lonesome, lovesick’® camel who figured in a fancy z00 “wedding’’ in 1956, is dead. Robert Mattlin, Crandon Park Yoo director, said Ceath resulted from an obstructed intestinal tract. Three years ago The Miami Her- ald conducted a drive to buy a mate for Cecil. Cecil and the mate — Cecilia — full-dress nuptials. They had a son, ana zoo for a zebra and ante- Expects Litfle Help — for Wheat Industry French army said it was 12 hours| chairman and ranking Republican) thing. Similar views came from vetoed one wheat bill passed by Congress, House Group to Probe (AP) — Cecil, the'Lobbying on Weapons ings on reports of lobbying, influ- ence or pressure activities in sup- port of weapons dividual services will get under way Tuesday before a House, Armed Services investigating sub- committee. (D-La) said his subcommittee will were joined in widely publicized) subpoena for questioning any for- mer generals and Cequel—since traded to the Hav-| working for defense contractors, | who do not volunteer information, the| lope—and a daughter, Manana. about their present activities, | WASHINGTON (AP) — The) member of the Senate Agriculture| Committee say there's little chance for adoption of legislation! at this session of Congress to aid the wheat industry, bogged down with a record surplus. Chairman Allen J. Ellender (D- La) said Sunday the initiative} would have to come from the House and that it would be use- less for the Senate to propose any- Sen. George D. Aiken (R-Vt). President Eisenhower recently | saying it would only; make a bad matter worse. | ; | | WASHINGTON (AP) — Hear- | or in-| Chairman F, Edward Hebert admirals. now For Living Rooms, Family Rooms and So-o-0-o0 Low Priced ! New in styling, comfort and lasting service. Casual Pine is made of Western Pine and left in its own natural lovely satin soft finish to harmonize with any and all color schemes: Cushions are Full 3”, fully reversible, with rubberized curled hair and covered in that so practi- cal durable, washable, leather like Breathable U.S. Naugahyde. Choice of Salmon, Chocolate Brown, Charcoal, Lime Green: 3 Passenger Settee ..............$ 98.00 JUST ARRIVED & IT'S GREAT! CASUAL PINE! 2 Arm Club Chair............... 39.50 2 Passenger Love Seat....... cases 69.50 2-Piece Sectional (Not Shown)..... 139.50 3-Piece Sectional (Not Shown)..... 124.50. Step Table ...........4...224-- 16.95 Cocktaif Table v.20... 6s sees s 18.95 End Table ............00050- 14.95 10% DOWN-TERMS OF COURSE! OPEN MORAY -" FRIDAY TH 9 P. M. ~ ” PARK BEHIND. STORE...1T'S FREE $. SAGINAW AT ORCHARD LAKE AVE. / j f ra ; a | < is . ‘ f i. a8 } * Fa * 2 , J. ‘ : YOU'LL LIVE BETTER, YOU'LL SAVE! OVALE ENS for babies and toddlers 0800060000606 600888000° Seeeosessoseseoeseees FPSSESPO SSSA SS SOS OOS : Toddlers’ :: ‘esting Bib 3 . Infants’ . ; ° ° 2 3 loth, Pl ° : ress and °; > Pinafores : Neccesccoececececons 4 & : + ¢€ : o eb eeSeSeseceeeesesos : Slip Set : : 88 $$ Diaper Shirts $ $ ‘ : : 2 3 3/88c 2 3 : 3 New, fresh, print § S covexuceduvcaccedes : 88 : SGered, machines 3 Hand-made and hand $ 3 washable, little or § 3 Groce aud’ alhe ete’ ¢no ironing. Sizes 1s $ Machine washable s ° ® to 3. . . size, S. tJ feccccccccccccccccee? Infants’ Diaper Sets 2" 88' § Cotton plisse. Hand : embroidered motifs, ® : $ pear! buttons, ma-§ $ chine washable. Sizes $ o 4 to 1—1%. : MTTITITITITITILT TTT: \ * \ L°< Waterproof Pants . 4 = 88° Plastic - coated rayon, waterproof. Easy pull on style. Covered waist and legs, elastics. Sizes 0 to 2. Bottle Sterilizer. Alumi- num. Holds 7 bottles, nipple jar. 1.88 gececcoceesereeeen es Toddler Boys’ Sport Shirts TRAINING PANTS _Cotton knit triple crotch. Soft. 1 to3 7 3 Et 5 2 EE Spatterns, short ® $ sleeves and little or no : Gironing. Machines $ washable. Sizes 114-4, $ Meocccesesesosssesoe? Penney’s has rigid speci- fications to assure you the best on everything you need for your baby. And, you get the most amazing savings! Fabrics are fine and gentle. Tailoring is careful. Everything is made for long wear and comfort. At this low price, it pays to get all baby’s needs at Penney’s now! Baby Quilted Acetate Blanket Nylon filled. 5-inch binding! Sizes 36 x 50. 1.88 SHOP PENNEY’S ... You'll Live Better, You'll Save! Fitted bottom crib sheets, Muslin. Taped. Easy for Mom! 88° Tiered, full-sweep taffetized cotton slip. Nylon trim. 1 to 4. 88" Penney’s Downtown / Open Monday and Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. All Other ~ Weekdays 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Penney’s Miracle Mile Open Every Weekday, Monday Through Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. he THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY 6, 1959 “ \ Record Crowds Throng Area oat Races, ireworks Are Featured Bright and sunny skies b! in all the area communities wi July celebrations Saturday The second annua! } Pontiac Tow ture” according to members tions. Among the ceninen were the Dos! rac tug o° war between ihe cal past of the Amenmcan Legion township voi- unteer 2 amd the f fire works dismay wich was the finale of two-day program. Drvder s arn & iG fires. eke Vee ee 2-2 sae treet Was blocked eff Saterday far ts “Boom Day” celebrator aomeg Lee a smal! Western toen with beoths set up in front of store buildings and al] kinds of farm impiements on display neardy ‘A large crowd gathered a; the Community School for the deli- cieus chicken barbecue which was served on the schoo] lawn. The chickens were broiled over a large open pit fire, hundreds | at a time. + Meanwhile, baseball games, tug) o wars and other activities were in progress on the school athletic’ field during the afternoon. The all-| day event was sponsored by the! Dryden Area Development Assn. WELLIAMS IN UTICA Utica Lioms President Vern Skaug said today that Saturday's 13th annual Fourth of July was “more successful than last year.’’| * * * Skaug stated that there were be-; tween 15,000 and 20,000 persons) lining the parade route in the! merning. Gov. Williams again was, honorary parade marshal. Ses § 'N.M., ‘Then afternoon and night winds Her attendants were Judy Jam- briska and Geraldine Czerwinski. The best service club float in} the parade was the Romeo Lions Peach Festival publicity float. Rid- ing on it were ‘Miss Romeo,” Sheila Dahn, and her two maids, Mary Martell and Margaret De- vine. * * * The top winner in the most beau- tiful float category was the Algo- nac City entry, and in the most patrioti¢ division the National Bank of Detroit with its statue-like figures portraying the Mount Sura- bachi flag-raising ceremony on Iwo Jima. AT ROCHESTER The Rochester Kiwanis “4th O- Ram-A"’ ‘also drew a large crowd | ae oa * nsh ip pt ‘OF ed i<) a te 3, events Wnki + > Tugs o° War, sucht ee hich wa out record crowds staged Fourth of Jomecoming celebration in be a “most successful ven- of the sponsoring organiza- oh favorable | the | the mast e Clinton River. drew mee os th €S OF) iis 1,700 Fight Forest Fire re. 4th Day in California ‘AP) — men fought stubborn has of STERRAVILLE, Calf A grimy army of 1.700 on teaday to contain a mountain forest fire which barned over & square miles brush and timber Each day for four days since a careless camper set the fire Nast Thursday, smoke-blackened| convicts. rangers, Air Force men, volunteers and Zuni Indian fire- fighting experts from Gallup, have checked the blaze ac ross ‘have whipped the blaze | canyons. Thus far it has destroy- ed an estimated 27 million buard ifeet of timber. CROWNS ‘MISS UTICA’ of the Independence Day parade. two maids of honor, rode on ately following the coronation. Zoning, Gravel Fees OXFORD TOWNSHIP—The Zon- ling Board's public hearing on re- |zoning two parcels of land and iraising permit fee charges for igravel and sand mining operations lis set for 8 p.m. tomorrow in the 'Township Hall on West Burdick i street. The Zoning Board is asking ap- iproval to rezone two parcels of : = ‘land located east of M24. One is _—=ans G. Auer itwo lots in the Berns and Olive Richard C. Ashby, of 212 Squir- | subdivision to be rezoned from res- rel Rd., Pontiac Township, re- | idential to commercial classifica- cently‘ received his bachelor of tion. The other is a 37-acre plot! science degree in marketing |on Thomas road which the board to the Rochester Senior High School athletic night, according to club chairman’ Milton Weaver. number in attendance at close to 3.000. The program opened with top amateur talent, and then featured: an hour-and-a-half show by profes- sional artists. The finale was a giant fireworks display visible for! miles. Intersection Accident | Injures City Youth | An 18-year-old Pontiac youth was treated and released froth Pontiac) General Hospital Saturday morn- ing after being injured in a two-' car accident. John B. Cox, 18, of 437 N. Sagi-| naw St., suffered eye lacerations: when the car in which he was riding, driven by Donald R. W il-| son, 21, of 23 Cross St., collided’ with one driven by Joseph J. age ison, 54, of 6637 Roselawn Dr, The accident occurred at the’ intersection of E. Blvd. S. and Elm! Street, Wilson was ticketed for! making an improper left turn. DONNA KAY O©OLTON Mrs, Sarah Colton of 118 Rob- » in Rd., Commerce, announces the engagement of her daughter, Donna Kay, to Daro E. Jasken, son. of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jasken of Almont. An Aug. 1 iam Nea planned. v field Saturday; He estimated the! jduring the three-day event w WATER DRAGON — One of the most un- usual entries in Lake Orion's Centennial Venetian Boat Parade yesterday was this green dragon fashioned of wire and crepe paper by Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lohr, of 809 Pinegrove Rd. The gala Mark Lake Orion Centennial With High Jinks, LAKE ORION — This village's) The committee in charge still centennial celebration was marked) goes not know what group entered A poe are ian = canal ithe prize winner for the most hu- oth 0) pe hich | Morous float. Its title “Old ended last night. ) Yeller.” There were some 90 units in Sat-| Another event which highlight-: urday’s centennial parade, accord-|eq the three-day celebration was ‘ing to Charles B. Starrs and Wil-| the coronation of ‘Miss Orion” Fri- |Ham Kopp, centennial co-chairmen.' day night by popular band director’ The Senior Citizens Club entry |1¢X Beneke. The queen was Diana won first prize in the best pad ‘Roberts, 17, daughter of Mr. and) | tennial theme category. Most at- iMrs. Kenneth Roberts of 1494 W. | tractive "organization was the Clarkston Rd., Orion Township thet diger ralhponpgr dior dat x *® | | was tractive entered by a local busi- Prizes also were awarded for | — was Brady’s Market, the best untrimmed/ beard, the The most attractive youth entry, bes# trimmed ‘beard, the oldest was the one designed and miade by’ man with a beard and for cos- | the Girl Scout Day Camp group. | tumes best representing 19th cen- | The most colorful entry in pa-| tury dress. rage, according to the judges, was’ jthe Lake Orion Maccabees float, ‘and the best designed was \Dor-May. Gift Shoppe entry, * * * Sunday’s program opened with the a Centennial Venetian Parade. on jthe lake with a number of boats, — Gov. Fourth of July visit to Utica Saturday to crown the queen of the 13th annual Lions celebration there, and to march atthe head tiara on the head of this year’s queen, the Lions float in the parade, immedi- Oxford to Consider 70 Sign Contract on Sewer for MSUO Campus | | Thieves Must Be Blind from the College of Commerce | wants rezoned from agricultural to SEOUL, Korea (AP) — Thieves; and Finance at the University of | residential, stole more than $1,200 in scrip) Detroit. He was affiliated with | Also up for consideration is a from a safe in the U.S. 7th Divis- Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity. | proposed hike in the initial fee for; ion post exchange Sunday night.| Richard now is employed at the | gravel mining permits from $50 to| The 8th Army provost marshal | Genera] Motors Transmission $2,000, and the establishment of a! said about $9,000 more in the safe Plant at Willow Run. yearly renew: al rate of $0. was overlooked. boat parade was but one of the many colorful events staged over the weekend in Lake Orion which was celebrating its 100th birthday with a “Centennial Spectacular.” ihome Saturday afternoon by Pon- »! * bd Chain Reaction ‘Accident Hurts 2 Police Say Teenager Smashed Into Car He Believed Was Moving. METAMORA TOWNSHIP—Two teenagers were injured -§aturday | when the car in which tney were riding hit another causing a chain, reaction accident on Palmer road | west of M24, the Lapeer County | Sheriff's Dept. reported today. Patricia Humble, 15, of 4630, Attica Rd., Attica, and Paul | Pickett, 17, of 1133 Pratt Rd., Metamora Township, both suffered | cuts, bruises and head injuries. They were taken to Lapeer County General Hospital. Patricia was released from | the hospital yesterday, and Paul | was reported in satisfactory con- dition today, hospital officials | said. ‘ | Driver of the car was Thomas L. Nass, 16, of 1220 Palmer Rd.| He was ticketed for failure to have his car under control, police said. * * * | Nass told officers that he thought ,that the three cars stopped be- ‘hind another vehicle halted in the ‘middle of the street’ were moving. {His car piled into the ones ahead, \police said, but occupants of the other cars weren't hurt, although jsome were shaken up. The car which had stopped on' ‘the crest of the hill was driven’ __.|away before anyone could see the' llicense number, investigating of-: ‘'ficers said. a Pontiac Press Phete Williams paid his traditional he places the PRinestone Gwen Beer, who with her Here, ‘Philippines Police Seek ‘Headhunters in Luzon MANILA (AP) — The Philippine constabulary today launched aj major drive against Ilongot head-| hunters after the discovery of the headless bodies of two men in the north-central Luzon mountains. It was the latest in a series of killings linked to savage tribes-' men who take heads of Christians PONTIAC TOWNSHIP — The Township Board has scheduled a special meeting for 6 p.m. today at the Township Hall, mainly. to sign the contract authorizing the Oakland (County Dept, of Public Works to proceed with the sewer to serve Michigan State Univer- sity Oakland. for tokens of their bravery and Harold K. Schone, director of present them to _ prospective the county DPW, will be on hand | brides. ’ to answer questions, a Pontiac Press Photo Pageantry attractively decorated for the event. In the afternoon there were swimming and rowboat races and log rolling and water skiing dem- onstrations. * * * The gala celebration ended on a more solemn note last night with a united church service on the Junior High Sehool football field Pontiac Man, 72, Found Dead in Home John B. Scherzer’ 72, of 729 Mel-. rose Ave., was found dead in his. tiac police officers, A shotgun was: beside his body. ‘ Officers investigated the home, after a neighbor, Edward Froodle, | 725 Melrose Ave., reported that’ Scherzer had not been seen in the neighborhood since Thursday.. lights of Dryden's ‘Boom Day” celebration Muller of Caro. Saturday was the chicken barbecue served all Dryden Area afternoon and evening in the Community School yard. Hundrelds lined oP) for the succulent of town. Schne ane! Into New York, Blows ‘Em Down NEW YORK (Satchmo) Armstrong, less than | a week out of an Italian hospital , pet. Armstrong had hee scheduled | to appear at the concert on the night of his 59th birthday, but | pm pot sick.” Armstrong said had been forced to cancel be- jater. “1 came just to play.” cause of his illness. The Arm- “_ ~ strong All-Stars appeared with : : wild Bill Davidson as guest Reject Canton Separation trumpeter, and several other | jazz groups. were program to replace the headline | attraction, a or | Wheels aré five inches farther apart This widens the stance, not the car gives you road-hugging stability, less lean and sway. Only Pontiac hgs it! NO MONEY DOWN-50° Weeki! Open Monday Night Until 9 P.M. Armstrong walked onto the Holiday Shindigs +’ ' CHICKEN BARBECUE — One of the high- chickens broi stage just before 1{ p.m, as Johnny Dankworth and his or- chestra were completing the finale, Someone handed him a trumpet, He blew a few tenta- tive notes and the astounded crowd whooped to its feet and began a ragged chorus of “Happy Birthday.” (UPI) Louis The performance lasted about é 15 minutes, BERN, Switzerland (AP) — added to the day by vote of 80, 233 to 2 a) Bey ‘ wR OG “ea . SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALE “I didnt come here to prove move to separate the Swiss canton firms, of Bern into French and German- ,Commerte in Frankfurt and since ge parts was Dae Sun- '1956 with the Counsul of the Fed- 2.692. ‘eral Republic of Germany. aes ae ba ] ‘ ae ies a te Baths Pentiac Press Photo led over an open coal fire by Bill The event, sponsored by the Development Assn., also featured games and rides, plus booths set up in the center Rotarians to Hear Berlin Crisis Report | Bloomfield Hills Rotarians will ‘get an inside look at the hot Berlin crisis Wednesday noon when they hear Dr. Ferdinard R. H. Fried- after a bout with pneumonia, Armstrong shushed them with ensburg IV, German counsul for strolled onto the stage at Lewi- his theme song, “Sleepy Time Michigan and Indiana, at their. sohn Stadium in Manbattan Sat- Down South."" Then he blew weekly luncheon at the Fox and | urday night and blew his trum. | it0,“Back Home Again in In- | Hounds Inn diaria,’’ and “Gypsy. Friedensburg, who lives in Grosse Pointe, during the Hitler regime was arrested by the Ge- stapo and tried at a special ‘“‘Peo- ple’s Court.” In subsequent years he has been attorney to the Courts of Justice of the Allied Military Government in the French Occupation Zone A lega}- advisor to various German ° with the Department of _ WIDE-TRACK PONTIAC ! R Regular Price $2 A terrific value—you get all 3 pieces at a price you'd ex- pect to pay for one. Beauti- ful finish, compact, sturdy and designed for large pack- ing space. « & tt te HALF PRICE! 3-Pc. LUGGAGE ENSEMBLE 9.95, Now... $7 4* Phone = \ re THE PONTIAC Fain, MONDAY, UL) 6, 1959 | -\spoon applesauce into his little protesting weariness in her voice, his mother said, “Why.can’t you ever watch what you're doing?” She got her mop and started to wipe up the spilled milk. it up never entered her mind. Traveling through Britain on a two month Euro- pean study tour in comparative education are Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Davis of Edgefield. Here they pose in front of historic Windsor Castle. Windsor, Eng. Mrs. Davis teaches at Wisner School. John H. Corbin, Bride Make Home in Ypsilanti ' Residing in Ypsilanti fol- lowing their June 14 wedding are Mr. and Mrs. John H: Cor- bin. The bride, the former Jan- et Schick, is the daughter of ton of Waterford and Kenneth Mackley of Richmond, uncle of the bridegroom. * x * The bride is a graduate of _Mr. and Mrs. Edward T. Capital University, Columbus, Schick of Westerville, Ohio, Ohio, and teaches in the Water- -Mr. and Mrs. Hiron F. Corbin ford Township School System. of Stirling avenue are the Mr. Corbin, a graduate of East- bridegroom’s parents. A floor-length gown of white lace and tule fashioned with a beaded sweetheart neckline, fitted bodice and long tapered sleeves was the bride’s choice ern Michigan University, is in the graduate school there, Iced tea is believed we be of American origin. knocked over his who let other people overwork us, Dave’s mother feels a good deal of resentment at her healthy children’s endless demands on her, But she’s only half-aware reese! + ] Kids ‘Don't Care How Hard Mom Works By MURIEL LAWRENCE Dave’s mother was trying. to ot M1 seems such « mean, wn natural s afraid to perc pun peony ’s \mouth when Dave glass of milk. There was a pause, Then, with is, Dave can’t late her resentment into cent meaning, Which is must try to. translate it need to prove that she does, So when Dave spills his milk the need overwhelms her, and there isn’t any room in her mind for ee Sees ee ee up, Like a puppet pulled by in- visible’ strings she gets her mop and proceeds to do his work for him. Which is unfortunate. Because 6-year-old Dave doesn’t register the work his mother is doing for it makes no sense whatever for child guidance experts to tell for|ner that Dave needs to learn to correct his own mistakes, She's too absorbed in her own need to prove MOP | herself loving and patient to have any interest in his need. The only way she can use their wise counsel is to become fully aware of her resentment, As long as she fears it as ev vil, The idea of asking Dave to wipe It couldn’t, For, like all of us how well you can help Mother.’ i After removing the last load from a clothes dryer leave the door ajar or run the dryer | about five minutes, PERMANENT oe with haircyt June, July and pth eee eee enone Hes ; | OTHER PERMANENTS _ . PERSONALIZED HAIRCUT “There Is a Difference” Tony’ sBeauty and Barber Shop Riker Bldg. FE 3-7186 near ne | } | AUTHORIZED HOOVER DEALER ALL MAKES REPAIRED 90-DAY CUARANTEE FREE ESTIMATES | FREE PICKUP and DELIVERY ON ALL SERVICE performed at Grace Evangeli- cal Lutheran Church, Wester- ville. She wore a. lace cap ‘ with a fingertip veil of illu- sion, and carried a caseade of white roses. * * * | for the ceremony, which was | | | Mrs. Joan Germer of Colum- bus, Ohio, was matron of hon- or. Other attendants were Jan- | et Grimes and Marilyn Rodg- | ers, both of Drayton Plains. | The bridegroom's brother, | Dale Corbin, was best man. | A-1 Vacuum Cleaner 21 Water St. FE 4-3777 SALES and SERVICE | Ushering were Joseph Reming- | MEN’S PLYMOUTH SHOES ‘ Discontinued Patterns <' Reg. $14.95 to $16.95 : ES: i MEN’S FLORSHEIM SHOES ALL SUMMER SHOES AND DISCONTINUED PATTERNS = | Reg. $19.95 to $23.95 : a ° NOW 416.80 _ ONE RACK OF MEN'S DRESS SHOES 3 Reg. $9.9 , eg. $9.95 to $16.95 iow $4.88 HURRY ON THIS ONE MEN’S B. F. GOODRICH - CANVAS HI-BOYS SHOES dente See Reg, $7.45 NOW ONLY 54.88 | WOMEN’S VITALITY SHOES ALL SUMMER PATTERNS - : Reg. $12.95 _ Reg. $ to 14 Now $9.80 WOMEN’S FLORSHEIM “Entire Summer Stock” R ae eg. $17.95 to ee $14.80 WOMEN’S HEYDAY CASUALS Just the Thing for Walkirg or Sport Reg. $12.95 now °7 95 ONE RACK OF WOMEN’S Vitality-Tweedie Shoes Values to $16.95 $ NOW AT 4.88 Hurry — These Won't Last Long ALL SALES FINAL NO LAYAWAY NO PHONE ORDERS | Shoes for the Entire Family 20 West Huron St. | = "MIDSUMMER CLEARANCE! | . PARK AT OUR FRONT DOOR... SORRY... No Phone Calls, No C.0.D.’s No Returns, All Sales Final! Shop Every Night ‘til 9 P. M.— Set. ‘til 6 P.M. Starts Tomorrow 9:30 A.M. hundreds of summer dresses, fine cottons, better dresses, GARNER oi RNA Ma White Nylon Stoles © 4.19 t White Pique Dickey’ S| : 1.79 Many Items Are Perfect to Wear for Fall Dresses by Carlye, David Crystal, Lanz, Schrader, Arkin, Harou, Peggy Hunt, Jean of California, Mr. Mort, Beaumart, Serbin and famous California designers in silk prints. Linens, Imported Cot- tons, sweater dresses, print costumes, silk shantungs, silk shirt- waist, Arnel and cotton, crepes. Juniors’ 9 to 15. Misses’ 8 to 20. MMOL, 655 Value ro cane emcee a? * 2.98 Values TODD'S SHOE STORE} | | conmmoumirememmmemrrimemenm GP@SS@S formerly $] 2 dresses formerly $ 24 sold to 19.95 . .New sold to 39.95 ...... Now NOE RES SE EE ES SS former! $ ri f dresses formerly $] 8 dresses y _ 53 2 | Silk Print Blouses sold to 29.95 ...... Now sold to 49.95 ...... 1095 Values 6. 79 : 5 dresses formerly $2 2 dresses formerly $ 3 8 3 c sold to 34.95 ...... Now sold to 59.95 ...... : 14.95 Values 879° e ‘th RES SIE Tk — | Half-size dresses Cocktail Dresses ee ee ee niet 144 to 222 zy § —_ Summer Formals | Nylon Tricot Robes == | Women's Sizes 38 to 42 Fecauerls 9008 ay GAGE were 895 to 10.95 ¢ Formerly 19.95 to 39.95 Ormerty IAA 10 07-99 «597. | | ow 14828 || sow $24"542 a ° é : Navys and Pastels ‘ Fes SEI Sg NE RE we: © = One Group of Dresses Were 1 — — Sheer wools, dark prints, silk tweeds. 34.99 2 OFF ‘ Cotton Skirts Perfect to wear all fall! 79.95 1662 S. Telegraph Rd. toppers, skirts, blouses, sweaters, bags... were 8.95 to 12.95 4.99 Prints and Plaids Spring Coats Sacrificed . . . ideal for fall wear! Values to 49.95 Values to 79.95 NOW $19 to $28 NOW $33 to $42 Fine Forstman and Wool Coats in Navy, Grey, Beige, White imported Cetmere Cou wow 569 and S09 Wool and Jersey Toppers Values to 39.95 ‘ . .Red-White-Beige-Yellow Size 10 to 16. Car Coats ar" $8 and $10 Rain Coats pian porting Values 10 29.95 Now «318 and $22 2s ei SECA ME ON nc = Vs Summer Blouses Velues to 4.98 229 «nt 329 Whites, Prints, Colors Drip-dry cottons - NOW $19 to $24 Values to 16.95 NOW ¢ Bloomfield {ASHION SHOP ) Our Greates July Clearance cocktail dresses, formals, summer suits, spring suits, coats, Now % to % off LOE eS MM sao “| ss 4 . values to a 5.50 e - values to 10.95 4 values to % 18.50 EPS AEME SILL LER BEE ARES nae ' were 27.95 .. now 18.60 1 were 29.95 ..now 19.90 3 Off © y were 32.95 ..new 21.90 ; © Skirts were 19.95. ... mow 13.60 | bow SELLA LELELLLEL LEE LOOE LAE OED TERI SE RRS NOW = tele 2 Sizes 12 and 14 Silk Swits were 59.95 1 Size 16 Beige Forstman Tweed Suit was 99.95 .... 2 Size 12 Green G Navy Walking Suits was 59.95 . 2 Size 12 afd 16 Bardley Tweed Suit wits 59.95... 1 Size 12 Beige Demi-Fit Wool Suit was 69.95 .... 1 Size 16 Black Forstman Suit was $115 ..... o...mow $69 Just 7 Leother Coats White Beige Size 8 to 14 were 59.95 new...+.. Regular 3.98 Values Gabardine and Chino Summer Bags, Purses Straws, Vinyl, baskets, imports 277 and 359) —— and 7? 8" Md our famous make : , Cashmere Sweaters discontinued styles and colors many with matching skirts Fine Flannel Skirts Were 14.95 to 19.95 sg and $] 3 Whites, pastels and plaids in Evan Pincone and Mayflower SIS ie SE EON DS =e a-ak CON Li Bs RE yee 1] ; i SEE AEA RRR. ar! : We ay y ee | L, THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 6, 1959 T 7 t aad . Check Beached Barrel Death, T es | ; T = Lif . d | bee 0 tiade “wheck* oil inhi ve the fg tresiaparted naples ee are | for Radioactive. Waste hi 25 | (Oat Disneys 7 - A | {000 each for study of|to and from school at the public’s|and a PORT ORFORD, Ore. #—A bar- Stir Contusion ft rue I e ventures tne toler io, . : x Sear J | Jester “ABC.” which washed up| 22 Ohared Town | SCARED i on the beach here Satirday may| MAROTTA, Italy (UPI)—Death! be an empty container. and taxes may be a certainty, but TH That theory was advanced byjin this little village they are so|” to DEA Rear Adm. Frank T. Watkins, com-|complicated you could spend .all =a ecbeahage inion. goa Geiger counters showed the bar- arotia de- rel to be radioactive but the Navy /P® pends administratively on three said the counter action was caused |2¢@rby bigger towns—Fano, Man- by reflection of sun’s rays on the|4!fo and San Costanzo. sand. Since Marotia is a_rich re- sort center, all three want to keep their chunk of it. As a result there are three mayors, two bish- ops and —alas—two tax offices. The problems caused by this ~~ multi-administration are amazing. In some areas, for example, when “, a citizen wants to telephone a friend two houses down the street, he must place a long-distance call through Pesaro, 15 miles. away. To carry a jug of wine across town, a person must pay taxes on the wine in two different admin- MASTER istrative areas. . ique problem. A i America’s Largest Seling — loosed to be buried in the ceme. ITSELF TOO MUCH TOILET TANK BALL} |tery of the area where he paid his MAY SUDDENL.... Noisy running toilets can waste over | taxes. 1000 gallons of water @ doy. The, But if he dies in a different area, ; Model DH-2980 G | B SO DEHUMIDIFIER PUTS AN END TO WATER PAMAGE CAUSED BY HIGH HUMIDITY! poaresey #3421 PLIOM SUOTJINporg Asusig, WV 6961 @ THAT HAS EXERTEV reschers have devoloped what may efficient, patented Water Moster# | inore’s a stack of paperwork for Lu yy TOOLS tank boll instontly stops the fi! ,, vs we COLLAPSE AND DIE Gi) | , flow of water alter ech fushing. [| “exPorting” the corpse back to}, at = | WON’T RUST! TRAVELERS % TOURISTS * VACATIONERS * | ; STOPS ANN | | woop rot! AMAL Ss | S| N ‘N Nd an —— mS “4 J \ A) SS ASI is, | PIPES RSS a fe | WON'T DRIP! SOMETIMES A GUDDEN FRIGHT | a. Exceptional Travel Values by Ocean Liner WILL BRING ON THIS FATAL. SHOCK. : DRAWERS * S.S.AQUARAMA x Distributed by King Features Syndicate. 7-6 WON'T STICK! DAILY SAILINGS JUNE 25 THRU SEPT. 7 : : Your car on or off in seconds ; I U.S. Department of Asricatwe! Children See Crash Kill Father | | . PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE nonswelling w which ma } 698 W. Huren St. FE 8-061! ae a micas a sari Car Races Bri Ing Tr agedy «~ ee ee) ‘windows, drawers and doors. Ends Damage From —— x | JUNCTION. CITY, Kan. (AP) —, COFFEYVILLE,+Kan. (AP) — |Among the 3,000 spectators at;Two stock cars, their wheels ‘Sunday night's stock car races| locked, crashed into a crowd of, ‘were the wife and seven children! spectators during a Fourth of July| lof driver Gene Rodien. race. The children wore white cover-; Two women were killed. Eleven! alls with the number of their fa-\ spectators and the two drivers MODEL poseet MAYTAG Fully Automatic WASHER | , ; thers,car, on the back, 4 __ [were inte | DH-2981 : ; i i - speedwa tk + * ( With Automatic “Suds-Saver” and [years ago, the 3L-year-old Rodien| sya sockson of Coffey. Shown $119.95 Mildew ' Built-in “Lint Filter’ Agitator Big 10 pound capacity—6 position wash and rinse temperature control — water level control for smaller loads. Re-use the sudsy water. *229"... No Money Down — Free Delivery and Installation Free I Year Service — 5 Year Warranty land his family had been fixtures. nd 4 ville was killed when the cars!f the new Gibson Trimline dehumidifier eliminates moisture * * * : lunged off the track. Miss India| : : . In a spectacular six-car pileup, | esti ton of Coffeyville died a damage and the discomforts of high humidity in game and |Sunday, Rodien was killed. The; | a hospital Sunday. rooms, basements, laundries and workshop...turns these jother drivers walked away from! Another victim, Jane Page, 9, areas into livable, usable space. Just plug in and imme- y pee wreckage. ; of Coffeyville, is in critical condj-| diately Gibson starts wringing moisture out of the air... Dampness! | A seventh car dodged the pile-| tion, One of -her feet had to be| Removes as much as 8 gallons of moisture a day from = up but in doing so it hit a high) amputated: your moors. >. ; ‘bank in front of the grandstand * * * | d d r . . ' : jand overturned. The driver suf-| Driver Harvey Shane of Par- i ves dollars in. repairs |fered a severe cut above his right) sons, Kan., tinted severe facial! Operates for pennies a ay... sa pa wes ‘cuts, The other driver, Happy Rodien,. a construction worker Hart of Tulsa, Okla., escaped with | from Salina, Kan., ‘vas running minor injuries. ME 6647-83 | second in the race when he was | or c Woods, part in Can- If he had won, his purse would! Lake of the s, part in have been $60. ada and part in the United States, j}has an area of 2,000 square miles. | RCA WHIRLPOOL | + esecoe te: “as =—— = . ‘dien’s wife and seven children. . . idrivers and ‘spectators for Ro- Fully Automatic | ET Red I | po) DEHUMIDIFIER fesse wikis. | Meet the ADAM AMES Family... Stop dampness, mildew, rust, corrosion. Handles 12,00 cu. ft. Cee eee eared 2 Dn aelations : ft] $ | DEL MAR, Calif, (AP) — Ser- - . = 8 S” $1.50 eat designer, was =e in a new story strip full of the tender- ¢ Weekly San Diego County Fair. s at the ness, fun, heartache and excitement of PONTIAC linterpreter anyway. “He says,” the interpreter re- i “Do you have house trailers in| | Russia?” a newsman asked. of growing up together Yeger replied in a word: | ; 1.60 | ““Nyet.”” ; SOREL | The newsman’ knew what the SY get |) Aa | word meant, but he asked Yeger’s : a ght ea As iss ‘that they do not like hous- OPEN MON. AND FRI. /es on wheels in Russia. They pre-' 5 1 Ww. HURON ST. ‘ ‘TIL 9 P.M. . FE 4-1555 fer a more permanent, stable ty pe . ‘of housing.”’ EE SE OE IR Oe SR NEE A A ER gh Adele Al ADVERTISED) ‘SPECIALS SBR SIE IS ES WECe dcautanale | WALL TILE REGULAR : : J, 13%sF 50% Off | |. PRICE a * 12x12" Size “En ¥ Fix up that recreation room. Reg. 6c, NOW. : eo Pa _ : . Beare Aa wt se Genuine Inlaid. 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MONDAY, JULY 6, 1959 18-Hole It's Finsterwald vs. Wall Today for Buick Title Dow, Art in 282 Tie; Middlecoff’s 65 Falls One Stroke Short By BILL CORNWELL GRAND BLANC—For the second censecutive year the Open golf tournament is going to) run five days, but this time for an entirely different reason A year ago the Buick tourney was carried over to a Monday by heavy showers that rained out the second round of action. Now it’s a plavcff instead of a washout that extends the 1959 Buick event te another Monday as Art Wall Jr. and Dow Finster- wald go 18 holes for the cham- pionship today at Warwick Hills Golf and Country Club. Beginning at 1 o'clock this after- noon, Wall and Finsterwald battled head-to-head over Warwick's 7,280 yards for the $9,000 top prize after winding up in a first place tie yesterday with 72-hole totals of 282, six strokes below pai *® * * ws Deadlocked Saturday at the 54 hole mark with 220s, Wall and Finsterwald stuck together through Sunday’s drama as each golfer, fired par 72 following a double- bogey and bogey finish on the me green. Wall staggered to a mani | | | even by the All-Star game,” said | Dykes the day he } $52,000 Buick! Playoff Nece x * * rere Cuneltes Sweep in 10, 5-4 Layoff DETROIT ® — Jimmie ‘Dykes Tigers a 1-7 mark in overtime established a goal of 500 by the action “ Star break and the Detroit “thls threedav tayell is a Tigers had to back up to reach it blessing,” said nvhes whe bs “Pll be satisfied if we're all beginning to wear the pained expression so many Detroit man- came map- agers wore in recent years. ager two months ago. ‘Then - “Once we get those injured guys we can work from there. back, we'll be all right. We're The Tigers were 2-15 at the time not out of this race by a longshot.” and .500 seemed miles away * * * But the Tigers are 500 — with Al Kaline should return to center- 40 victories and 40 defeats. And field when the Tigers resume Dykes isnt’ happy about it American League play Thursday The 5-4 loss to front-running night: at Kansas City. Second base Cleveland in 10 innings yesterday man Frank Bolling may require an was Detroit's fourth straight. It additional day or two before he's was the second straight in extra ready innings and gave the wounded But the way the Indians are A Sorry 18th for Both Disconsolate Wall Sure essary at Blessing to Tigers | Dow Feels Same Way GRAND BLANC “Its pretty a double-bogey s xion the 18th hole disheartening to play golf as well.in the windup of the Buick Open as I did and then have a finish tourney like that.’ The speaker was Art Wall Jr., the year’s leading PGA money win- ner, whe for one day at least let ‘$9,000 slip through his fingers with “I have no complaints and ne regrets about what I tried to do,” Wall said, ‘‘its just one of those things that happen.” “However, it certainly dis- jcouraging to end a _ tournament! \that way. You play a real bad |hole with all those people watching Buick Open 1s Warwick kt wwe a k * moving, it could be no one will Kuenn catch them. They have a two-game lead and a six-game buige over fifth- place Detroit. was called, out at second trying to advance after a run- scoring single in the, seventh., Kuenn, extending his hitting streak to 20 games, appeared to beat the | throw. But umpire Nestor Chylak | The Tigers had a_ splendid decreed otherwise and set off a’ chance to slow them dewn yester- raging debate. jay and faltered. It was the same CLEVELAND DETROIT brh bi brhb in the second game of the July 4 girickrass 5 126 Yost 3b ‘ con 0 doubleheader. Power lb 5120 Kuenn cf 5@11 oubleheade Minoso if 5120 Maxwellif 4010 * * * Francona cf 41 4 9 Berberetc 50600 rt : { estan ok Colavitorf 501 Chrisley rf 560600 M e Just fold up in extra in- Hamner 3b 4000 Osbornelb 3120 nings,’’ Dvkes moaned. Baxes 2b 4000 Bridges2> 4110 . a: ; ET 3 . Brown c 412.1 Veal ss 4122 The Indians struck quickly in Garcta p 3000 Foytackp 2000 the ; F . Stein. Score p 0000 Morgan p 1000 he 10th yesterday. George Strick- Q°VS3 1e8C Bunclsges 0466 land sliced a double to right. He Bell p 0000 came in with the-clincher on Vic fotais 405 152- Tota 33483 Power's hard shot that eluded A—Popped out for score ‘in 9th first baseman Larry Osborne for cleveland 011 001 010 1-5 an error. The run became earned Detroit aie a2 oe eet when Tiger castoff Tito Francona ak —Osborne 2 ae Cleveland 30-13. F troit 0-14 IP—Baxes, trickland, singled for the fourth consecutive power: Bridges, Veal and Osborne 2 time Veal, Bridges and Osborne. LOB—Cleve- land 6; Detroit 7 Rhubarbs spiced the earlier 2B—Yost, Strickland HR—Brown SB rn : Power, Framcona. 5—Foytack . . - . action and had the crowd of COSTLY MISS — Art Wall Jr., 16,686 hooting With displeasure. Garcia id : ary | *% There were three incidents with Score | bs 2 3 @ 1 2 green in the final round of the the umpires and all three went royteck Cas M3 Ml ‘ 3 i ‘ at Warwick Hills. » 2 “J! « « ' , against Detroit. Bunning 4, 0.0 0 @ o Ist place plus $9,000. Now he’s Most painful was when Harvey igh sures ney: Soar Shy 1k hele playott today for the crown. A— 16,676 Bosox Win Pair for New &2>4Pik ES the spot that he putted from, misses a three-foot putt on the 18th Buick Open golf tourney Sunday If the putt had dropped, Wall would have won Twice Snapping Two world title fights will be na- | ‘tionally televised this week. Al- | |phonse Halimi of France defends |his bantamweight crown Wednes- | day night against Joe Becerra of | Mexico in the new $6,000,000 Sports |Arena at Los Angeles (ABC-TV, \9 p.m., EST). Jordan risks his wel- | terweight championship against 19- /year-old Denny Moyer on Friday levening at Portland, Ore. (NBC-TV | 9 p.m., EST), i , * x * 7 4 Tony Brooks of Britain won the Grand Prix de Europe auto race at Reims, France, with a record- breaking speed of 127.3 miles per hour, He drove a Ferrari, Phil Hilt of Los Angeles, driving an- other Ferrari, was 2nd. * * * Judy Eller, Joanne Gunderson, Barbara MclIntire and Anne Quast were the favorites today as the 59th annual Women’s Western Am- ateur golf tournament got under way at Exmoor Country Club in Chicago. x * | Round Table clipped one-fifth | of a second from the American | grass course recorg in winning the $85,000 Stars and Stripes Handicap Saturday at Chicago's Washington Park. Hillsdale con- playing Dow Finsterwald in an — tinued his winning streak at Hol- lywood Park by capturing the $53,650 American Handicap for his 7th stakes victory this year. * * * Entries are now being accepted Hor the Pontiac Parks and Recrea- ‘tion Department’s annual City |Mixed Two-Ball Foursome golf jtourney, which will be held this | Saturday at Municipal golf course. Defeat Orioles Muskegon Yacht Only State Victor in Queens Race with his left foot planted in | bogey six at No. 18, taking four ;you, then walk off the green feel- blews to get en the carpet and | jing like an idiot. and I'm sure then blowing a three-foot putt. Dow feels the same way as | do,"’' ‘ , at lamented Art Dew, playing right behind Art in coreboard : eye et . the final three e, nearly fol-| Pacis gl win. "ss ues Intoe lowed in Wall's footsteps. Needing) »,,,, . : z Fcwaested ust a par to win, Finsterwald also ‘tournament. at "Wareich Mille "Coase bogted ine — nok: ati “Warwick eae four knocks to get home, but \Club. Par for 72 holes is 288 ¥ Hills Country Club to tie Wall for he Nided his Binch putt for & ;Dow Pinsterwald 71-68-71-72—282 the championship with a 72-hole +° rt a Tt T1-67- 12-73—2: 729 ¢ + 5 bogey five to knot the score. |Cary Middlecoff 15.72-71-66—983 | SCOre Of 282, six under pat |Jerzy Barber 10-72-67 —283 , ® Wall toured the sprawling War- Jay Heber: 68-73-74-69—284 Wall, 1959 Masters champion Pete C wick course in regulation 36-36 ken Venton style. Finsterwald, on the other) pene pastel hand, fought back from a 39 on,Don Fairfield 72-69-74-69—284 75-70-69-71—285 73-69-13-71—286 | 72-14-69-71 —286 | 73 a 70-68 —287 with the baseball bat grip, and Finsterwald, 1958 National PGA champ who is one of the most | Losing String White Sox Nip A’s, Pascual 7-0 Winner Over New York MUSKEGON (?—B-B II of Mus- kegon was the only Michigan boat to capture a divisional title in the 22nd annual Queens Cup yacht race from Milwaukee to Muskegon on Lake Mié@higan Saturday, Three out of four titles- went to i 7 . > the front side with four birdies for | Hike, Souchak 2 ee coment Sees See ee | oad ming 33. \'Ted Kroll pg leg = fessional golf history, were wag- . ae Laglighngh late. ing an 18-hole playoff at War- There were approximately | \Greme Lettie 72-75-78-6¢—298| Wick today for the title. 29,700 spectators watching yester~ (Bi! Collins 74-69-75-71—280 To the winner goes a fat check day’n vity and th: field of 61 |D°2 January 72-73-72-12—289 wets J: : acti |Dutch Harrison 71-75-73-71—290 | for $9,000 while the loser will pock- | pros and five amateurs treated | Bob Rosbure 15-70-72-74—291 Henry Ransom 70-23-76-73-291 et 2nd place cash totaling $4,600. | them to a thrilling show. |Mike Homa 72-72-13-78—292| Finst id i Wall > f \ Billy Maxwell 22- "4. 12-74 —292 insterwa anc a are lacing It was a day of hot streaks and !Bert Weaver 73-72-14-73—292 each other in a playoff for the 2nd |Monte Bradley 68-78-73-73—292 great rounds. It was a day that | joe Campbell 13-11-7672 292 saw Gene Littler set a new course er beeeer ar 72- agi amy | record with a brilliant 66 and Cary ne Besselink -T2-78- 78- T1293 | - ve Ragan 9-69-74-71—293 | Middlecoff shatter-it less than (WO | Pred Saerkine 75-78-72. 712-303 | Rouy, Sat with" Ga even. more 38 Gaby 70-16 18-16 383 ope. ~13-T1- 93 brilliant 65. Ford 13-13-12-78—293 x* * fem Snead 71-76-71-70—294 fe Vossier 72-75-75-72—294 It was a day when big Julius | Wee Ellis Jr 72-T1-73-72—294 Boros made a tremendous bid to/heties Sitford Sab baat Ee am ‘ i win by shooting a record-setting 31 Chandler Harper 71-11-73 -73—294 Waiter Burkemo 73-75-72-74—294 | on the front nine before running + om Nievorte 70-80-71 -74—295 out of gas and luck. It was a day | Mike Dietz 16-73-72-74—295 ;Eddie Draper 73-76-75-71—295 that saw little Jerry Barber rifle| sob Tosxi .. 1414-15272 —295 Freddie Haas | Jack Burke Jr a@ 67 and miss a chance to tie the| 20-15-10-73-—208 Leo Biagetti Jefry Magee Tommy Jacobs John Barnum . leaders by lipping the cup with a) Mason Rudolph’. 78-72-72-74—296 | 10-footer on the 18th green. Al Baldtee Thora 74-16—298 The blazing finishes by Middle. Frank Beles 16-67.76-77 08 silent neve: cbed tem te feria 14- 72 share 3rd place at 283. Pete Cooper and Jay Hebert closed with 69s to take 4th at 234. Ken 75-79 -70-74—298 | - |Jeack Pleck 12-75-16-74—298 Venturi was all alone in Sth spot {Jim Turnesa . 78-48-78-74—298 with 285, while Boras and Arnold | 70° "hates -71-79—299 | A—Bob Panasiuk A—Tom Draper |A—Harold Brink jA~—Cliff Taylor *Tied for ist place ten hol "pinvort to- day for championship, 1 p.m. Winner reerives $9,000. runnerup $4,600 A—Amateur MONEY WINNERS ules moots and Barber—$2,600 each, oope Palmer came next at 286. Middiecoff's 34-31 scorecard list- ed seven birdies and an eagle deuce. His eagle came on the 10th) green where he backspun a 100-) yard wedge shot into the cup and) the Doc followed this with birdies |, -18-7 $—310 | > r and Jay Hebert $2,200 each: | on 11, 12 and 13. | Venturl—-i. 900; Boros and Palmer— ail re * 61.680 each: Fairfield and Souchak -$1,450 each; sry Hebert, Kroll, | Ransom cae hesbene 0078 each; Campbell, Bradley, Weaver, shots and there were ‘‘birds"' on |ganeer i and Home—$675 each; Casper. the 2nd, 4th and 5th holes. Middle-| Besselink. Ragan. Hawkins, Goalby, | (Whitt and Ford—$355.71 each: Snead coif barely missed birdie putts on on |Vossier. Buss Siftord. _Dickinson, Harper oq &n urkemo — $174.29 each; Nieporte 6. 7 and 9 and he putted only 28 Bitte Toski and Eddie Draper—sii2 56 times during the round. each: Haas. Burke, Rudolph, Mayer, | Balding, payer: $82.50 each h Littier hit every green in regu- Comeee ine Sed ST lation except the 5th on his way | to a 34-32 performance. He birdied six holes, visite only | one sand trap and hod no bogies. | Boros, five strokes behind at the start, birdied five of the first six holes and actually led the field by! one stroke as he walked to the | 7th tee. ~ * & But it was then that his putter, which had been knocking in every-| thing, stopped working. Boros failed to card a single birdie the! rest of the way and he bogied four! holes coming home for 40 blows | and a closing 71. Barber birdied five holes and never bogied in his stretch drive. Don Fairfield made six birdies | to close out with 68 while burly | Mike Souchak birdied five straight holes—11 through 15— and had six altogether for a finishing 69. Jay Hebert had “birds” on 10, ll, 12 and 13 and a total of six.; Cooper got three birdies and bogied hone to complete the list of seven who broke 70 Sunday. Defending champion Billy Cas- per soared to 78 yesterday and ', finished 11 shots off the pace. Six-! teen players equalled or bettered: par of 28 for the 72-hole distance. WEEKEND FIGHTS The Associated Press BERLIN ~— Gustay Scholes. 1 t Meri, dutpoinied “Hane-Werner Wi West Hans-Werner W . , yy tas Eoanbuts, 15 der Gesopien maa Swedish idol, his country’s first eka Téahe-~ ee’ Logan, Bo home Saturday after flight from . ‘Geor igane wreee” doe Habana, Puer > \ \ 14-73-76-13-—296 | ; chipped back and canned , Walker Cup star University, |\Warwick, had very time in their pro careers. Art de- feated Dow last summer in Rubber City Open at Akron, Ohio, Sinking a birdie putt on the 2nd ‘hole of their sudden-death duel | Both players took four strokes | | to reach the green on No. 18, | a 453-yard par four hole. Wall struck a tree with his 2nd shot and he chipped over the green’ with a wedge. Then he chipped back within three feet of the pin. but muffed the putt for a six. Finsterwald hit iron. He didn't make it and, Wall, chipped over the green. Dow an 18- inch putt for his five that forced 7 today's playoff SHORT PUTTS Long-hitting Jack Nicklaus, the from Ohio State Buick event with a 288 total, par . Michigan’s low amateur was Tom Draper of Brimingham, who finished far down the list at 306. The state pro delegation fared poorly with Wally Burkemo of Franklin Hills leading the group even | at 294 for earnings of $164.29. Pontiac's Gene Bone, host pro at little success on the golf course, but he did turn out to be a good prophet. Gene predicted that 282 would be the winning score. Bone failed to sur- | Vive the hole cut, a AP Wirephote BACK HOME — Ingemar Johansson, back home with the world | heavyweight ‘title, waves his famous right hand to welcoming fans at Torslanda airport north of. Goteborg, Sweden. The %-year-old world bexing champion, artived New York. Yesterday he and his fiancee, Birgit Lundgren, had a close call in a stock car ride. , two teains started in the firgt row. heat time was “en -p.h, t the, a bad tee shot! ‘and went for the green with a 2-) like | was low amateur in the, ee ee WIMBLEDON HEADLINERS—The new king and queen of the tennis world, Alex Olmeda and ee AP Wirephote of the U. §. Davis Cup team, and Miss Bueno of Maria Bueno, share the spotlight at the ball in Brazil won the singles titles for a South American London Saturday night after the Wimbledon sweep in the Wimbledon. generally acecpted as tennis ries of amateur tennis. championships. Olmedo, the world se Peruvian star Drives 100 in Race Car Ingemar Brushes Death FALKENBERG, Sweden (UPI)— racing track. Then he and his fi. Ingemar Johansson, who wasn't @ancee, pretty Birgit Lundgren, | bit fazed by, Floyd Patterson, | Le ; , squeezed into a Ferrari racing car emerged pale and shaken vester- day from a brush with death at and Ingemar drove down the track. | AMERICAN LEAGUE Won 100 miles per hour, 1s . Lest Pet Bebind . f , Johansson had the speedster (.),,iang Zz World heavyweight champion Jo-| rolling at more than 100 m.p.h. = a 35 sa ; ; 519 y hansson, who stopped Patterson in’ as he approached a treacherous New? York ‘0 3 313 “ the third round of their title bout.) hair-pin curve where even expert Washington ~~ A om. | 37 3 came here yesterday and was in-! drivers slow down drastically, ansas«City . 33 06430~—CO484 itroduced | to the crowd at the auto aon so me _ The crowd gasped. Ingemar slammed on the brakes and skid- | ‘ded dangerously, but safely, around YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Washington 7, New York 6 Boston 9, Baltimore 6, first game Boston . Baltimore 3, second game Baltimore il. Boston 5 Cleveland 5, Detroit 4, 10 innings ithe curve. Chicago 4, Kansas City 3, 10 innings l Ings hir When the car stopped, Birgit was SATURDAY’'S | RESULTS me with shock and” Johansson Washington 10, New York 6. New York 7, Washington 4. first game second game was also pale and needed a few e e i ; Cleveland 6, Detrojt 1, first game moments to regain his composure. ae inning Detroit 9: second game | : * i 8 in anode QS Johansson, who is receiving the chicago ansas City 4. first game : rUraT ics Ae wansas City 8. Chicago 3. second game plaudits of his countrymen for his TODAY'S GAMES Start 16tt ; title triumph, said Saturday that No eames afsnetuled —— ar r « E' Starting in 1 position proved his return bout with Patterson a)-ster Game at Pittsburgh jan insurmountable obstacle for might be held in Los Angeles be- | Holly’ s he seaiagetg oe ye canoe \cause that city has offered promo- NATIONAL ation Bet om —racing team of Albert and LeRo Milwaukee 4403 Widing si Yiter Bill Rosensohn a guarantee of en’ Sramnicts OE sa iding, in yesterday's Midwest In-}¢1 590.000 Los Angeles 47 -.37—Ss«560 ! . : . 39 32 3 terni ation: 11 marathon at Lupton- However, Rosensohn said in Los Gueese po a a in Omar. The boys finished third, ‘Angeles that the bout, if held with- St. Louis x ew 8 Cincinnat! 35 4 438 f) back of arch- -oppofients Steve Kolo- jin 90 davs as called for in the re-| Philadeipbia 9 48 77 (15 ; talph Sawyer—Jerry Wagner (2nd,:turn-bout contract, probably would YESTERDAY'S RESULTS ‘ y 4 3, Cincgnnati 5, first game after a gruciling 87-mile battle. ‘be held in New York. ppd 3. Cinelanati 2 recood game Winners’ time was 8:38.0. the; 11 innings Wi { xo’ 19 ) | Milwaukee 5. Philedelphia 0 idings 9.0. | Los Angeles 4, Chicago 3, first) game & | Los’ Angeles 5. Chicago 3. secbnd game , St. Louis 4, San Francisco, 2, first San Francisco St. Louis 2. — Pittsburgh plage A calaie tty cinhati A Dr ayton Plains skipper WON | gan’ Francisco 10, St. Louis 3 for British Columbia, where both | Chi 2, Lo les 1, first c ° Ly eles rst game and a Royal Oak inboard geles 5, Chicago 2, second game pairs will paddle in the 130-mile | perv ne dim a hot finiah af th ri Prince George race July 11. \pi ot was 2nd.in a inish at the Philadelphia 2, Milwaukee 1, night . |Ecorse Wa Festival tices Sun- ) awe ot Eu seared Crowds, reported much bigger) day. fhan a year ago when the Holly} Henry Ball, Drayton Plains, pair won, lined-the = route, drove his “Wait-4-Me” to victory |. Sunday. in the 48-class. His best heat was) ‘Win Polo Opener The Widings dréw to 3rd position! 47 m.p.h. after game — The Widings, teaming up with | Area Inboard Boats | Sawyer und Wagner, in one sta- ‘Among Ecorse Leaders tion wagon, leae this weekend | |\No games scheduled TOMORROW'S ete All-Star Game at Pittsburg! * the way, with Kolonich and Ken- Byers of Columbus, Ohio, in the, Diamond B, 6-5, in. the, opening! dall in front all the time. The one-|findl beat of the 7-liter class. Best' match of the season i suburban \Oak Brook. \ Ds | bases loaded. | 10th-itining hit to make Chicago | ‘and a 9th-inning blast by Al Smith Wisconsin .boats. Dyna, out of Green Bay, finished the 85-mile BALTIMORE (P—"Slow down, Tce in a corrected time of 7:28.48 You're racing your stuff," Billy '° Dreeze to a Ist division title acing your stuff, k ‘ Jurges told Tom Brewer. iq iz Caroline of Milwaukee took sec- ond division honors in a corrected time of 7:53.20 B-B II captured the third divi- sion title with a corrected time of 8:12.18, and Sabre of Sheboygan, Wis., won the special division with a corrected time of 7:51.0. Hylaria of Holland, Mich., beat Milwaukee's Gypsy to take second place in the first division ‘“‘Hustle,’’ the Boston Red Sox’ new manager commanded his players. They did, won a double- header and broke a seven-game losing string. “It's terrific, just wonderful,” the enthusiastic manager said aft- er Sunday’s twin victory over Bal- timore. “They really hustled. They all hustled” Ted Williams, dropped as low as sixth in the batting order for the first time in 20 years, raced Zaidan ee Pontiac Skaters Win Regional set up a run, and saved the Red Sox from serious trouble with Sue Welch Gains 2 Titles; Rolladium Will a great running catch. with the Sammy in only White. who had driven two runs in the last five ; weeks, broke out of a slump and 7 batted in five’ in one game Send 30 to Nationals It all added up to a 9-9 and Thirty Pontiac Rolladium skat- ers were looking forward to the North American championships to be held in Beston July 25-Aug. 1 itoday after taking team honors at jthe Great Lakes regional meet in ‘Columbus, Ohio, over the holiday ‘weekend in a five-day event. The 30 compiled 31 placements in the regional to become eligible for the national which will give the Rolladium the largest team in the country at the tourney. A total of 13 took Jst placés competing with skaters from Ohio, Wisconsin, | Illinois and Indiana, Sue Welch featured the outstand- ling Roelladium showing with two | championships. She won the novice ladies figures and novice ladies |singles free style. Sue also had a ij hand in 2nd and 3rd place finishes, The top local finishers in the Great Lakes were: 1ST PLACE Louis Parker and Mary Alice Clouse in senior dance; Tom Gregory and Karen Swanson in intermediate dance; Sue 6-3 sweep over the Orioles. | juventle ineke, javenile oe singles Jeanne ildebrand, juvenile lsingles free style; Marcia Murthum, sen- for ladies figures; Viria sane inter« }mediate Indies figure: McDonnell, |Patty Blazak, Ed Guw a Maurine |Murthum in junior fours; Rolland Lund jand Robyn White, juventle pair; Kay |Pantel, juvenile B girls speed; and Scott ine? juvenile boys singles free 2ND PLACE BILLY JURGES * * * dance in senior men’s figures: Frank Baumann, now 3-1, Poesy ouniat, Cecilia rimont, : , . Oles, Karen Swanson in senior fours; ihe second game from Hoyt Wilx Byivia Ritchie, intetmegiate Ipates fie. helm (9-4). Wilhelm started the’ ures: Cecilia Darina in, Reve ce ledivs F singles free style; Judy ie season with nine straight victories, d ith, figures; Dannie Reidl aad Carci but now has Jost four in a row.|Rye, junior pairs; R and |Sue Welch, seniof pairs; Harrity, juvenile Luis Aparicio singled, stole 2nd iD boys speed; and Deineke, uvenile Cc |boys speed. and came home on Nellie Fox’ | D | Martins and Sue We Sones, Parker, Martins, Sue Welch and Sylvia Ritchies, senior fours: ry Clouse, intermediate ladies big Ds So Park- er and Sylvia Ritchies in intermediate ‘pairs; Lund, juventle boys singles free [stvie: ~— sch and Diane Grassi, pare, Lund, juvenile boys fig- Seees id's icky Speck, juvenile A speed. esssnJA Widget Fans 13 of 15 ih, intermediate White Sox reliever Turk Town the winner over the Kansas City Athletics, 4-3. An 8th- -inning homer by Aparicio}? ‘had enabled the White Sox to tie) |the scere. Losing piitcher Ned Gar- iver knocked in a pair of Kansas City runs with a homer and a! Rick Lions pitched a one-hitter single. land ‘struck out 13 of a possible Camilo Pascual.of the Washing- 15 batters in a 7-0 Ultra Stone - ton Senators pitched a four-hitter|yictory over Moose in a Widget the first 45 minutes and} Royal Oak's Jim Miller was! CHICAGO ~The Oak Brook-|to shut out the New York Yankees,| exhibition game Sunday, raced behind the two leaders all (nipped at the finish by Geroge| Detroit CCC polo team defeated | 7-0, with ‘the help of homers by’ Class F weekend scroes. were: Roy (Sievers, Harmon Killebrew|Aces (Hall). 11, Little Senators 2, ‘his 28th) and Jim Lemon. Pascual Baldwin 24, Warriors 2 and Ultra ‘Stone 9,. Eastside 5. ween 10 rome. et NPIL EE _THE PONTIAC PRESS. ¢ M NDAY, J JULY 6/1989 Wedding? Must | BeaMistake | Everyone Tries to Hush Tie of Gangster’s Girl, Congress Secretary | - ; 42 : . : Nuclear Negotiations Resume at Geneva GENEVA (UPI) — The. three- _ power nuclear negotiations resume today after an extended weekend recess, with growing expectations of an early “boost” from the Big Three foreign ministers, ‘ x * *& _ United States, British and Soviet atom scientists scheduled another round of meetings today to com-? plete their overdue recomemnda- tions of latest detection methods for high altitude nuclear explo- _ sions, Demand Good =~ {or Wheat, Rye. CHICAGO (®—Wheat and rye and chemicals paced a vigorous/@U0tations are furnished the| futures were in good demand to- stock market toward another new| Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of/4ay in early transactions on the Vigorous Mart. | MARKETS Off fo New High |=r= NEW YORK (#—Steels, motors thers in wholesale amar tte Babe MIAMI BEACH (UPI)—Authori- ties speculated today about a lavish but secretive wedding at which a reported 200 of Chicago's gangland elite saw the daughter of the Windy City’s No. 2 hoodlum married to. the son of a U. §. con- gressman’s secretary. igttien eee mame oe ie a eee en by growers and DIAL IN HAND—Looking something like the sole and heel of Oar Edue: . Bid Bond must be forfeited to the * * today. ding Board Trad grad A ‘ The experts, ow to — Tra = and soybeans a ae eo x~ & & a shoe, this proposed new teley design is called the Dial- “‘ propeaal ta forms not properly filled out meet two successive deadlines | Most key stocks showed gains of) - Detroit Produce Dealers said there appeared to) “I suppose the heat’s on in Chi- aeHendegs Fe Dene Seated be cartoer Teartes tes seser WA check. on out to . in a few New Jersey homes and offices. Shown is a plaster mock- up made in Indianapolis. Transmitter is at left. for their report last week, were fractions to a point. be a heavier volume of hedge’ cago’”’ Miami Crime Commissioner eaurrs f AY \ ae . + . \ \ expected to finish their work.| The market took off from its pre- eo Stlling in wheat than on any pre-! Dan Sullivan said. “They certain- oo pecifi= within the next few days. Fourth of July explosion when it! Cherries, sour 16° gta eM |vious day this year but that it/iy made a special attempt to keep estione er sate “ore in * * * ‘jelosed the trading week Thursday Currants, ‘red, 18 Sts 6 cae > corrssompaienaes improved out of the limelight.” . . right to relect any or all Bids in | They were authoritatively report-|2t @ record-high despite the un- Sacencee er os ny ate is The wedding and _ reception Campaigns in 98 Degr ee Heat informalities therein. alee { ed to have reached agreement in|C¢rtainties of a three-day weekend. The arrivals of 459 cars over . EDMOND L. WIDE, "principle on scientific and technical es the three-day holiday weekend | “CT? Siven Saturday by Sam ; ; tee., Roose of Beaeptieg on scientific and techni Confidence remained high and flat, DU. oo... .ee eee 82 (Mooney) Giancana fer -his ik I N E h t _ STATE OF DAN means of.identification of nuclear; the outlook for second quarter Beank green, sound wee S00; Were somewhat larger but ap- pretty a year-old daughter ong S Cal x aus 10n Gn i og eos es eee explosions above 30 kilometers, or! earnings was excellent. The eeu topped, bu...) ssc 333| view 4 eee os a , = Bonnie and Anthony Tisci, son of nile Division. ine Petiti me ee eke tape tagged behind tins BS gis Al Vat “tant lore te ataicpy| te secrsary wo Rep. Kowiand ter Stiff Weekend Tour gr ist ssimmes actions for a 10-minute spell. Cabbage, bu. ........ +: 200) Libonati (D-Ill). Estimated cost : ‘ : Cabbage, bu wee... eee ‘: 250} Biver. To: oT yiliem Motley, father of said But a number of details still re-| U.S. Steel advanced more than Cabbage, Se ad acces 5p 338 was $10,000. x having been filed in this mained to be settled and a final'a point and Youngstown Sheet was | Gerras® Sprouts, bu. -.... : 1! Corn: and old crop soybean eqn Giancana, who appeared last) WINNFIELD, La. (AP) — Gov.|home here, which he refers to as | Court alegne et he et report drafted which will incor-|around a point ahead while other Cauliflower, No, i, doa 2.59 tracts led the setbacks with losses before the Senate Rackets|©!! K. Long, his waning strength|his “‘pea patch.” He arrived near|‘re unknown. and the said child has porate two sets of American and|leadi mia nia 1.25\running to major fractions of a)™onth before the Senate Racke further by an uous violated a law of the State, and that po leading steels showed small gains.|Uhives. No 1. ; tt Committee investigating the prosti- sapped tr by arduous | exhaustion, # . said child should be placed under the Soviet ideas, General Motoros and American Cucumbers, ri eee 5.s9jcent. After an hour, wheat was)'-0F 2 . weekend campaign trek, planned ~*~ * * Jurisdiction “of this “Court. é ucumbers, slicers, bu. ., % to % cent a bushel higher,|tution and pinball rackets in -Chi- : , In the Name of the People of the State NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEATING Motors were around a point ahead. | Dill doz. oc! eee Si ouly 1. “A % | dubbed at his ¢ with al, return today to the state capital! Long’s enemies presumably were|.¢ yichigan. You are hereby notified - pcThe, Onion Township Zoning Board wi Other automotive stocks made faa to bes." ....:.. duly PSs. can 4 to 36 lower,|coeo, oom ; : ~ vee” his|2t Baton Rouge, hopeful of again|prepared for his advent on the|thet the hearing on sald petition wil 30. 1980 at tet on Monday, July: noderate gains. Parsley, curly, doz. bens... g\July 1.23&; oats % higher to 1%)handkerchief when he gave his|picxing up the reins of state ad-|capital’ scene, from - which hejCenter’ Court ‘House Annex, 12808, West ownship Hall, 571 8. Broadway, Lake Parsley, reat, G05. ...........- lower, July (new. type contracts) daughter away. ministration was forcibly removed May 30 for|Biv4, im the City of Pontiac in seid Orion, Michigan, | for the purpose of| Litton Industries opened late, (Pens. Net Du sour ro #3? 6658; rye % to %2 higher July x we . ; Coualy, on the Sn 4eF eel aaie hearing com he re-soning| 4 % to 1 epers, Cayenne, pk. .... 50 ro 1 4] He spent the night at his farm mental treatment at a Galveston, | 1959, at nine o'clock in the forenoon, from Residential #1 ne Commercial the; Tising 7% 11644 on 9,400 shares (Peppers, hot, pk. ........ 1.22%; soybeans unchanged to 4% . i pea eee and you sre hereby commanded to sp- following describ aging and stretched its gain to about 3. Pcppers. sweet. pk. ..... Slower July 2.234 But little else could be learned ex., institution. pear personally at said i. : aa. camer eae * the, North: Most other electronics were frac. |Radishes, ag dos 222222: 5 . * about the affair. Guests slipped| Long won release from mental) ,,/1,ce'ng JorP'inis sammons afd notice North, Range 10 East, Or Orton Township,| tionally higher al h Ra Radishes, White, G08) «...cc:ccssess unobtrusively into town, attended Pores June 26. In the next/shall be served by publication of » copy ee ee eens Soe vata stadia | ~*|:!COe el ee Grain Prices the ceremony at St. Patrick's 10 days, he moved erratically fhe Pontiac Press, « newspaper’ printed Section 30, thence Bast 198 feet; thence Squash, Suminer, "34 bu. Roman Catholic Church and the about the state from Winnfield to|#nd circulated in said County. | Kerth 300 00 ‘tect: sinence West, 198 feet and A few small losers dotted the EN ee ——— ony CHICAGO GRAIN = t the } i Fon Covington, New Orleans, Baton Wma Py oe Cour 4 oy ony Seng Fae rey arene ote ne mans these) were: Minar ee ee feceteeees, 0 toes ca Hoel.) (eal lanl es . Rouge, and finally, on a spectacy-|2i, ty Seige Oo he Northerly “side of Maybse Road in|Ol (New Jersey), American Tele- OE, ORIere Nee satanenermee snes Wheat— Oats (new)— a mo lar barnstorming tour Saturday in| a E. MOORE, ald Town ey; of Ove phone, General Electric and U. S. REENS July -2.5oce 1.87% July ........ 67 | quietly. ' Seal Judge of Probate (Signed) SCHERLY GREEN cubase. Mee Sep. 19135 Sep. 68's which he launched his 1959 cam-| (a true copy) Chairman of the Orion| Gypsum, Collard, No. 1, bus ....2.620200 4B lead iene ee 70%« The hotel even Wenied that the paign for re-election. 1; J. VAacAgnee. me Bo wy aks ie Alcoa was up about a point. Ana- 150 May 198% ~~ Ryen reception took place. ‘There is M Thefts Reported Y Pontiac police. at 480 Orchard Lake Ave., WaS} [ong finally turned in for the armel Soty er ert 7 (tus eopr) ERS SS oy EY em rerpednane ie fried: 40: extzw:i ‘employed in business and industry, x * * entered by burglars who broke a/nignt after sitting for a time in. is gee Sy ging Probate Register, Juvenile Division! Armour & Co. 363 Mettin Ge _... $0-4/37-38;, large 36-38; medium 90-31; small according to the president of the| Oliver Walls, 75, of 3140 Fishgr|window on the side of the build'a rocking chair. protect your family’s future. A = Atch On sess 308 May | D gir 0-4 86; browas—Grade 4 large 35; medium American Assn. of Workers for the St., Walled Lake, told police the al It has a been determined ect your family's future. SCHOOL ELECTION SOD he & 38. Blind, Inc. bandit entered the 464 Auburn Ave.|What is missing. » +. op: There’ ha obli iven to,the qualified |oting Air’... 31) Mergen, Lino | $01 | Dragging Detroit River | [heres "©, charge or obligat ghecters ates tp bereby Bistrict No. 3 Fri, of pee Oe Fe ee tae. H. A. Wood, of Raleigh, N.C. hotel at 3 a.m. and aske him if x * & gging for this interesting : of Oakland, tate tndcpendence., County Bohd Sire.) Be Mpls Mop, 1338 Lodge Calendar said nearly 35,000 blind persons/anyone named “Abernathy” had] The apartment of Betty Chris-|After Sailor Disappears |f Clarence Shelton would lel to anual School Election for the election | Bore Warn". 42g Minn P&L .... 34 out of a total of 350,000 are work-|checked in! tiansen,390 .E. Blvd., was broken give you your copy. , Telephone -E = “ottcers will on Mon-| hives Mi 0 om Ward .... Pontiac Shrine No. 22, W. 8. J..\ing alongside their more fortunate When he checked the register. into and some alcholic beverages) DETROIT « — Harbor Master J him today. It's vafuable. It’s lis will be treme $200 | Beit My... 12.6 Mot fie... ie1|Wed., July 8th. Annual Picnic, 6:30 t i i fi wd Poli fr am. to 800 pm. in on | Brun Ba 104 otorola_... 116.4/P. m., 2026 Scott Lake Road. Bring|©°U" SDSItE Dh ARMTKON CONDE Walls said, the bandit grabbed — eee sotey ‘arageed the Derek | . Elementary Sehool, "6505 Waldon Road, |Buéd Co ------ 284 Mueller Brass 02 own table service and dish to pass. | ies. his shirt collar with one hand | The Pontiac Auto Broker of- River fer’ a sailor reported mise. Dated oy ot Jame, AD. 1000 Sos e ni es = any » Scribe. Adv.|" wood spoke Sunday at the | and produced a butcher knife | fices at 1260 N. Perry St. were ing the « ies Navy destroyer visit- duty 1.2.6, 1,8 9 ane Com Sue. Nat west - $4 opening session of the 33rd con- | with the other. broken into but nothing was re- ing a“. t t sae : a “t good . e 5 » 4, 6, Cdn Pac |... 29.5 "138. vention of the association at the : ported missing. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Capital Alri". 17 NY Central. 286 News in Br ief Statler-Hilton Hotel. The conven- a ee ee Navy officials said Boatswain The Board of Education of the Bloom: |Carrier Cp ... 42.4 No Am Av.... 46.1 ‘en cola Hvsia may be the same man who earlier! Fishing equipment valued at $80\ Mate 2.C. Theodore L. Wheeler, eld Hills Schoo istrict No. 2, of the paw on gt WEP ed bond HEED. ~~) y- in the evening tried to rob a De-|was stolen from the car of George!gg of Boston, may have fallen Feceive bids on the materials. lsbor and Ches & Obie. 124 Ohio O11 ee 412 Beatrice Kioginis, 125 N. Perry| He said some $1000,000,000 a year troit hotel at knife-point, Tipolt, 17 O’Riley St., while it was overboard from the U.S.S. Samuel et ee I ee ate cis. Sa ai". #3 Owens ai se a iat 4 —— Police }is spent on réhabilitation of the ~ * parked in front of his home. . Roberts. Le Lake, Road at Quarton | Oe a in e weeke at someone blind by private and public agen-| A man fitting the Pontiac holdup} The vending machines of oa Wheeler returned from shore until’ 12:00 o’clock noon, tr. */Cluett Pea .... 53 h Ep! .... 466/Stole her purse containing $45 in|cies. man’s description threatened a|Goodyear service store at 30 S. z 4 . y, Ce 148.3 leave yesterday and said he would SL ek ete ying Dene Soe ale =< "E Peeeyee Ht cash while she was in a bar at * ti clerk at the Mayflower Hotel: 17729(Cass ve. were emptied of, °0'%|seep on the bow deck of the a ke Roads, joBloomfield Hills, Michigan. |Colum Gas ... 224 Penny, JC 11.6 54 S. Saginaw St. Efforts to. aid the sightless have|Telegraph Rd., at knife-point atjby burglars who broke a window because of: the heat. The shi = enete gh gee! ments, icon N Gas ... 51.6 Pepsi Cols .... 3.2 brought progress in their rehabili-|11:45 p.m. but fled empty-handed|on.the side of the building. An un- h of : ar on, fi eat the oftice of and Laird, |Consum Pw .. $63 Pfizer ......-. 38.6 Eres theft of power mower tation and employment, more|when a woman in the hotel lobby|determined amount of cash was, pe = Ht hes oe at ; ‘gan, and may be Each! icont Can |.... 471 Phill Pet ..... 47 | ued at $40 from the Hudson trained workers for the blind and| screamed. taken. a.m. His blanket still was on Fiero with the office of Wilcox and|Cont COP&S . 153 Proct & @ | #14|Hardware store at 1467 Baldwin better public understanding of what the deck. Eeitinage® CB Set OF documenta vo |Gont Miter "-" Ut Eure Ol ------ ShelAve., was reported to Pontiac|the blind can do, Wood said ._* * The Board of he Bloom-|Copper Rng 24 Repub sti... 79.1'Police over the holiday weekend. | Some 300 association members— ; ; The Roberts is one of four ect i Sooo soe Be ARs See eas Betas ga Cate Cosy anaglabout ‘hall of whom are visuany CONS Legislature Balloons Bill destroyers which came to Detroit] CLARENCE SHELTON oj EETRGESS SRO rr « pial Bad aE os BE. elteaptns Hi [eE@ owen at this tne of thetyear [bandicapped, are attending the :; Tastiyst over toe July 4 wound. eee Spent ot She wits" stp” BTS Bevo 1" SR wb: Wp 0a pres are lower alo. in| convention. The association works! ZY Cy UTI CY Costs State Plen ty SI |] FE 2-0219 1080 W. Huron Se ¢(VU Pont .....- ‘ cot’ os < ‘ : Roeb ... 48.7 ; . Hus Schoo see ace, Brom Bact Rod’..... fo Simmons": $46/and July. and retail prices. will|ounty: Canada, Mexico and latin Raid Mobile Opium Den | , Michigan, eld |e ton Mig .... 79 Sinclair ...... ' rica. OF EDUCATION /|E! Auto L .... 48.4 Socony ...... 43.6 Probably increase some about’ Au- |“ LANSING —While lawmakers; such — who are paid on a day Bloomfield Hills Schoo! /E! & Mus .... |7.2 Sou Pae ...... 72.5, gust 1. We wish to offer you our wrangle over Michigan’s financial| to day basis. When the Legisla- |BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) —! District No. 2 Emer Rad . 21.7 Sou Ry ...... 58 lowest price as it means a sav- * . A P JEAN B. MARTZ [Erie RR... 12, Std Brand -:: $45) :09°Gn next winter's heating cost. Ex-Mining Executive troubles, the Legislature itself is} ture quits for the year, they do | Police today announced the cap- ney nek Piresigpe ogy sta ou ind: 1 Place your p rder_ soon and save.|Dies in Ann Arbor having some money problems of its| too. ture of a mobile, air-conditioned; ach ... 51. -» 52. vlock Coal & Bldg. Supply Co. own, There's also the cost of printing;opium den. Authorities flagged) court for ior the County of Oskland sures Free nou i Stevens. 2 3 3 $1 Orchard Lake Ave, FE 3-101.) xn ARBOR um — Funeral serv-|,, The Jonger they argue, the morejthe House and Senate calendars down a small British truck and| "in the Matter of the Petition concern-| G8tdner Den . 54.4 Suther Pap’... 426 en ice was held in Ann Arbor today it costs. — the bills up for debate or final|found four Chinese’ smokers en p Walker, Minor. Cause No.|Gen Dynam .. 63.7 Swiftg®,0° - $22 for John M. Bush, who for many| The, 1959 session, already the action — the journals which record|sconced in easy chairs in the van eng, PRMID Walker, tather of said\Genesco’.... 30) Tv y..: 223/Red China Plans Crops — |years was prominent in the min- second longest in history, figures|the procedure of both houses and/ puffing on pipes. | been tied in this/ Go? Fat, -----,844 Trans W Air 23.6 __ jing and timber industries of Upper ee the books which list the status of oart ee: that the Present where-iGen Motors .. 55.1 Transamer ... 29.2) TOKYO (AP) — Communist) Mich j 83 rs ol Every day the lawmakers as-\every bill introduced spoute of the father of sald minor child!Gen Tel ..... 696 Twent Cen ... 36-7) cy; ichigan. He was 83 years old. ble, t vers shell out about ' are said child has vio-'Gen Ti 92 Underwd ..... 26.3;China today announced plans for} He died Saturday ‘at the Michi-|/S°™Dle, ‘@xpayers shell out abo) fated'e law of the stave, and that S20; gee Time -- $26 Un Carbide |. 1404 ti ; $2,000 in addition to the fixed year-| LITTLE THINGS MOUNT child should ‘be placed ‘inder the jutae| Giese”... eS Un Pee cen. 347|Planting more than 600,000 more gan Union where he had lived for| >" law-| Little things like electrici ction of this Goebel Br... 35 Unit Air Lin .. 412/acres of late crops to offset food|the past two years. around costs of running a law- mee ee Cay, PO Fe ¢ aime of the Peo le of the State! G rich... 99.8 Oak Aire ..... 52-4 roeses caused by recent floods.| Following service at St. Francis making body of 144-members. = and office supplies also aaa Se helt ot en Bined Coles pees orn kt ° ss ais pone ae 35 Rice, maize, sweet potatoes and of Assisi Roman Catholic Church, Most of the extra cash Is for se | Senies, Cow t House Annex, 1260B =. me Be - Be Us Lines SOCEE: 32.6\other autumn crops are being|the body was shipped to Ironwood,| the 70 employes — secretaries, The bill to finance general | | gouniy on thet den aay of Su = Guif Ou mt Us steel ae sowed, Peiping radio reported. his former home, for burial. page boys, sergeants-at-arms and os ical tow or as over R M oO d e rn F yA e nine o’c in the forenoon, . Wo ccks ns 4.2 . , or 'e! 8 = Bear Dersonauy ct tale heating’ °° *™| Hooker Gh °°: $85. Wet Oa tei. Se ; signature, will give the House Xe —— sree beret, his rummons and noice| BUG RAY 7 Weatg'er és h4'Practice What You Preach’ d eee ne nm 0] - rc Rebar ece we eet BE Rin Be : vate tise Uses cetyl ADD-A-ROOM Printed and circulated in said County.|fct Bee Meh 4a0° Yale & Tow .. 317. a : — ey ,, Witness, the Honorable Arthur §E.jInt Harv : 84. .eet "130.4 , extra long session. oe. 8 — ‘Moore, ine of said Court, in the City;Int Nick ..... wit Ze ith Rad ...126 mer | Cd eCdc S O e [ S a = : o Pontiac in said County, this ts day|Int Paper .. 122.6 igre j nis e ay of July, AD = The Senate will get $563,000, also! ‘ . ete co . \ nm oudge of Propate para ett AVERAGES ress) NEW YORK (AP)—The Soviet Union has German cruel treatment of your people. a or B ASEMENT i ence Regier, Yavenie Birigion nent rise ubistott,| Set UP a direct pipeline to find out what I have not seen pictures of your treat- Legislators will wind up a five- J July 6, 1958 Net change 0. $44 wi wai effect the Soviet Exhibition has upon Amer- ment of the Poles or the people of Lat- pa Mnbagin Speer poe po Reig Gina Gris leg Wie aae ames EER BLZ) foun viewers Sis, Repent. t9 masdien 'a: 088" forthe 13th day of the session. | Fra Zpraai P Wednesany Sal st sgrs|Month aco --:--33e i972 $68 gaze). Visitors have been aaked to give thelr im- — «7 missed seeing your typical Russian home | Only the 117-day marathon of, or at'7:30 p.m. to consider the following |190 high 1... 3983 ta agg ed] pressions in several guest books scattered ” 7 change to the. Zonin iene ae beni inne '9n7 Gane dump and your labor camps slave camps. 1933, another year when the Leg- m2, change trom “feesidential to Com-|i968 high 2.223120 1388 get aie, S8FOund the 10-million-dollar, six-acre cultur- “Reading the insults and lack of under- |islature was beset with financial - — 831, $32, 832, $34 and 598, Huron 1958 low 11... 234.7 80.9 729 156.6; al and scientific exhibit. tandi problems, was longer. ps oie bel Subdivision, Fo a standing recorded in this book almost makes With To gunship. g sages pn os ; . Perhaps the books will be taken back me ashamed to admit these are my country- |, |. as ca gi on | Knights” 0 "of Pythtas on Voorhels Business Notes to Moscow for careful scrutiny by cold’ men.” parole Fhe “aiaiay a on Tae aeins pecs tn cemmbes , war strategists. If so, here’s some of x *& * a record : Ho de present. se goning Map together! Ot Realty, 254 S. Telegraph) what they'll read: - “I'm sorry so many of my countrymen If so, your first stop is at Benson’s. | with ‘a Tit Se Salar, tere Bint, totay sanomneed t hae Riedy nee ts watchin te have taken this book as an opportunity to [Burgess Seed C ny | We can help in getti | . Supervisor and may be examined ty| iatley W. Levely, former superin “ : age hurl insults and criticism. We are not all oo icy hkl 7 ee we Oe eee 1 those interested oie. tendent of the “TJ saw this on July 4, 1959, a late com- a wed ane inf pr 00 Founder's Widow Dies ready for building save you money : ciate Watertore ‘toun.|Post Office Fed- memorative of American independence— eed uninformed. Congratulations ee Sl ere : , ship Zoning Boar _ feral Station, as a thank God for it.” on your wonderful exhibit and the great | KALAMAZOO (UPI) — Mrs on construction and materials, and Ct Waterford, Towaeht hp|sales respresenta- “Russian music is for the birds—if they'll. Prosress your-country Has made. Margaret Burgess, 78, widow of help you with a FHA Loan if needed. jtive. Levely, 97 take it.” “Maybe these so-called comments real- | H@try_ W. pag see founder and : 4 Jllinois St. tk / ly facts wouldn’t be writen if the Rus- /Pvsient esa mec toe! ‘ “Why don’t you practice ‘what you preach _sians really strived for ‘peace, but let's pital yesterday after a lengthy and. the world situation might be a little face it, their ultimate goal is-the over- _ijiness. i , better?” throw of our government.” — Her. sons, Eldon and David, are Cie a a Its Bang the ‘srowease that counts—it’s “twenty years ago we looked down at you. werd poe b pAb: co ae 3 tio - good i Today we fear and respect you. Good luck. | midwest. The com Let my people go. A Jew. \ More power to you.” aap ti Pe et rfeergee and Allegan a year “L note that you display vividly the “Forward to communism, Bill.” later moved to Galesburg.