The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast, Showers tonight, eooler tomorrow (Details on Page 2) 116th YEAR AS OVE! ASSOCIATED UNITED PRESS RU : PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1958-34 PAGES : = - : eat : 3 | : “ é J merican Help on Writer's Cramp? Holiday Tratfic | onan Deaths Reach Predicted 420 CHICAGO (#—The final count of the nation’s traffic accidents during the long Labor Day weeks- ‘Ocal Declines fo Detail Aid = for Nationalists 4 Circuit Judges ‘Debate Petition for Grand Jury end showed 420 deaths, the exact ’ Still No 4 Commitment ee Bs = Je number predicted by the National : State, Local Officials Safety Council. . About U. Ss. Defense : Summoned to Meeting kok of Offshore Islands In addition, the accident ; on Request te . q death toll showed 114 drown. PAIPEL” Fewtmoga* ok ings and 87 fatalities from mis- cellaneous causes, including fires and airplane crashes. The traffic death total com- pared with 445 for the three-day Labor Day holiday last year and the record high for a Labor Day The top U.S. commander _-. jon Formosa said today . |American help is coming to 4 meet the Communist yl threat to the Chinese Na- 2 Judge Clark J. Adams an- nounced to reporters at noon today there will be a deci- sion announced on the peti- tion for a one-man grand jury at 10 a.m. next Tues-| Period of 461 in 1951. The over- tionalist offshort islands, aa all total this year on 621 com- Vice Adm. Roland N. “* pared with 636 in 1957. : _— : He explained the reason * « £ Smoot declined to tell what for the second delay was 10 = The council had estimated 420 help he meant, saying it give the judges further time here? oaths Ore irae - |would be foolish. to give the jt period from 6. p.m, last Friday to study it. to ue Sunday, , Communists military in There have been no - |formation. amendments to the petition, BRITISH TRAWLER SEIZED — Icelandic AP Wirephote |'-ta also refused to say whether this meant U.S. forces would help Ic@landic patrolship Thor, Iceland's extension defend the off-shore islands, a American of the fishing limit to 12 miles this week has authorities said the British trawler Lord Plender for the special jury to in- was fishing within the old four-mile limit off Northern High clude last F riday’s raids on Iceland's west coast, The Lord Plender is putting caused struggles at sea between ships of the two commitment | meagre an alleged gambling ring, he into harbor at Reykjavik after arrest Friday by nations. perce fr to make Dub pub- disclosed. Ste rf p) | y | evs refused | make —— qd C d C Mob Storms British Envoy’s Residence es it i e AP Wirephoto BUNDLE OF BILLS — President Eisenhower, well stocked with-writing tools, goes to work on 135 bills as he takes time out from his vacation at Newport, R. I. Ike took action on 117 of the bills yesterday, signing 105 into law and vetoing a dozen, nearly all of the latter minor. The President must decide on the other he. Oakland County’s four circuit judges were still de- bating the calling of a one-| man grand jury at 11 a.m. Opening Pushed _ Back to Monday by Holdup on Electrical Work Iceland Fish-Stew Boils REYKJAVIK, Iceland (® — A! declared a ban on oeles fisher- newspaper, demanded that Iceland and demands that Britain call its Paul L. Adams and Oak- gunboats and trawlers home. ble for the postponement, Other|ing their nets for cod within 12 pee ee miles of this volcanic island. Reykjavik’s other papers had 18 pieces of legislation _by_ praree Saturday. Eisenhéwer’s action | today. Pontiac Northern High School;mob of several hundred Iceland-| men in the zone. break relations. with Britain, its), +. : on the 117 bills came during a 2"%s-hour work stint at his temporary | ‘The judges met-at 10:10) will not open until Monday, Super-jers hurled brickbats and—smoke!—teelandie anger was reflected in North Atlantic (NATO) ally, | — “ Forewes, : offices at the Newport naval base. He warhed up for the* work a.m. in the chambers of intendent of Pontiac Schools Dana bombs at. the British ambassador's “a EAE ers ainst|, “Don’t negotiate with pirates,” oe session with 18 holes of golf. _— 'P. Whitmer announced today. residence last night in anger over - es ions —ree y ag _ it said. ‘Sever diplomatic relations k r Confer : - Judge Frank L. Doty to - * * British violation of Iceland’stnew|British naval action in Iceland’s| at once,” l e, Dulles to consider the petition for the} He said a delay in receiving) fishing restrictions. ne ee Iceland’s minister of fisheries, | WASHINGTON (AP) — Secree . special one-man jury filed/electrical fixtures and in comple-| The dispute between the two) The bomb | demonsisation last) y uawig Josephsson, is a Commu- | tary of State Dulles will. fly to | ition of work by the electrical con-|North Atlantic Allies continued to-/night was followed this morning) Fi.) in this country’s coalition | Newport, R. I. tomorrow to " ms er | O ns last Thursday by Atty. Gen.) toe was primarily responsi-|day with British trawlers still cast-| With charges of armed aggression . te 2 ‘ y responsi-|day é government. meet with the President. mg . e ° e land County Prosecutor) Pontiac schools open tomorrow. ’ with the Denies Hooliganism — Fesse'c" xen Se ede tt eon ow mavownoos casita Si ea ee At 10:25 a.m., they summoned|,D'. Whitmer advised Pontiac waters to 13 miles Monday sed a the Communist |{celandic coastguardmen. — Defense Department officials for r oa eee ‘Northern students to bring their. ee an intensive study of the situ- Adams, Ziem, Solicitor General) wn lunches when they. report Mon- ~ation. The coast guard reported there ee were no overnight incidents in Ice- Samuel J. Torina, Assistant Atty.! . : : iday, as the cafeteria will be used Gen, Irving Beattie, Assistant @s a study hall pending comple- WASHINGTON (#—Teamsters bigshot Harold J. Gib- Commision Appoints 3-. - Prosecutor Jerome K. Barry Jr.,|tion of other rooms. land's coastal waters where British 4 As the Ngan - ts continued | bens faced more questioning about beatings and bomb- and state Police Lt, Charles A. : My Ps Ml ‘ings today after describing himself as an opponent of Leal. On opening day, he — ~ r | might srry Ry ten 4 violence in labor disputes. ee pag emerged, a 11:08 | ready for use. However, the au- emopt, Snook 5 raat Fu Gibbons, top’vice president of the Teamsters Union) (unwe Smut — polled Cherian, Gite sasaae, 47a. Pont fac ( a [ ou gine — and ruler of its affairs in the St. Louis area, was called place, and said they woulg wait ory Bs - Sans ey poe The British say the 12-raile Brnitl ther.” he mplied ee econd day of! fsa) pant eerie. be used. is illegal and its fishermen have} The Nationalists sald they still a = a ~ = ape . t-| ademe-and- Sinus petitiontl Gh ‘enision ots he ativer| OY commissioners last we | named two NeW /an international right to ) trawl in} were’ getting saben aa eo Tesumony -: Oakland Circuit Court judges for ‘i ve ey trustees to the Pontiac General Hospital board and re-|the zone. —- throu rm Unt Bradford will serve a four-year } «dec. Soviets boarding be a 5 Betttoh es ' ves- | ons, Smoot have | . “At no time in all my activi- son, Leaun’s former wife, that | on opening day aah” grelies term, beginning Sept. 19. He re- B. Buler pringecarer st trustee - oe for ee. ae & ties i re labor movement have | Herman called Leaun, Aug. 2, | .nould report to < to the cafeteria, places Willis M, Brewer, retiring last week to tala over the job of The demonstration at the am- arms : I ever set up saything or any (Continued on. Page 2,.Col..2). | 11th graders to the library and |°°2"d chairman. hospital administrator. ___| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) |1,000 MARINES EN ROUTE roup that could be construed | 12th graders to the auditorium | Kirby will fill the unexpired ; a More ships are on n the way frome ai - a quad.” —S—S~S “|He Finally Made t | Tobby. Signs will be posted to | term of former trustee Charles ot wag etanr-enownen | La ee the Medi ihe United Bradford, 63, of 99 Cherokee Dr. retired from his job as plant engin- eer at Pontiac Motor Division last ‘lyear. He had been employed there’, Yeager, who withdrew from the board after moving outside the city. digect the pupils. *fle-alsoinformed students that those who do not have book cards While saying he: is qppased to States to join the ok th a ie sig be Is toned Charge Murder RADFORD, Va. (UPI)—Wil- liam E. Gilbert has made a po- putes, Gibbons added this qualifi- litical comeback, but it took him should obtain them at the office Kirby's term ends June 30, 1960; cate: eee 1 eS tae $B years to do it. Gilbert, 7, was {between now and-Minday.. Those|Bradford's and Babcock's, June 31a tenes aeiee ee in Holl Blaze About 1,000 U.S. Marines are — so © oe ae veg: elected Tuesday to his second | driving cars to should use} 1962, os -afe é' coming from Okinawa for ma. =, * eicket tine so a eg term as mayor. His first term |the parking lot on the north side * & & Married, Bradford has recently meuvers on Formosa this week- : ie ‘ f : ‘ ‘ . : * pens there | would havé no quar- HAROLD J. GIBBONS ended in 1920. of the building. City commissioners had held off! (Continued on. Page 2, Col. 3)! Flint Man Is Accused| 04: Additional -— fighters haye oe wan an ge . ] of Setting Fire Fatal, to Far Eastern bases. e But Inflation Poses Threat The Nationalist’ detense minis- try expressed confidence that its own navy could deal with Red tor-— Gibbons said it wasn’t his fault to. Companion, 17 that locals under his command are infested with men he conceded have long criminal records. “If the employers hire these people, we're stuck with them,” Gibbons testified. He said he ¢ must accept as a wilon member anyone hired by employers with whom he bargains collectively. In indignant tones, he denied knowing that any of his aides had been convicted of such-crimes as ult and armed robbery before geen them ‘out, among other|five members of an alleged Pon- ‘things, to “convince nonstriking|tiac bookmaking ring. taxi drivers “of. the error of their eo * ways.” The five, including Deputy City Alleged canal Freed on Bond .|~ 5 Demand Examination. at Appearance Before: Judge McCallum Free on $5,000 bonds today are Robert Guth, 2. of a today which caused the death of his| The Defense spokes- companion, William Mosley, 17. sik fees Adm. Many said At arraignment before Spring-| Communist artillery attacks had field: Township Justice Emmett J./not reached a point at which the Leib yesterday, Guth was ordered] Nationalists would consider it nec- held over in Oakland County Jail| essary to bomb enemy gun posi- without benefit of bond unti} ex-| tions. Such bombing. would spread amination by Leib Sept. 11. _|the vest-pocket -war, Liu said, Leib issued the warrant on rec-| “which we don’t want to do — we ommendation of assistant prose-) want to calm the situation down." nana wae ccrere mer: Weather Schedule: a Wet, Windy Night _ der charge is called for under Scattered (The passing of Labor Day traditionally marks the beginning ‘of & general upturn in trade, industry and employment. The question is year appears = washer the autumn will bring a marked acceleration in the recovery from at has been in progress for several months, United Press Internation asked Sinclair Weeks, secretary of commerce, to appraise the outlook, analysis follows.) By SINCLAIR WEEKS U.S. Secretary of Commerce WASHINGTON (UPI)—Many time-tested signs indicate that the pace of recovery should speed up even faster now ' * Business can price itself out of-the market when con- | that Labor Day marks the end of the normal veeation slow- sumers rebel. Wage boosts that run ahead of productivity * . down. are a boomerang. * * * ; z Ever since late April, the economy has grown strongef Treasurer LaRue E. Gullett, 41.) 1 nth by month and the confidence of the consumer is arid his wife, Gladys, 35, of 301) vioorously reasserting itself. Dick“Ave., -demanded-exemrimation: = owes smn en ee é = * —— — yesterday when they appeared be- Confidence Good as the picture looks, no senate man or woman can be complacent in face of certain inflation signs that -are cropping up. The wage-price squeeze, the federal def- icit, the political clamor for more and more government spending are matters which wise people cannot ignore. * * * The worker must understand that it isn’t what you get n your pay that counts; it’s what your pay gets you. If. unwarranted wage increases spur inflation, a raise is _& loss, not.a.gain..And inflation sabeteges-the-future-by destroying the value of fixed income, insurance policies and pensions. * & * Gibhons labeled as false -testi- -~=_ Mony-by..a..woman. witness,..Mary Lou Bledsoe, that he had arranged with her in 1953 to -decoy a St. -| Michigan law when death oc- curs during the perpetration of ge serious felony stich-as- arson, robbery or burglary. : The fact that Mosley was ap- Pe om SAARI re RE es ac is the priceless ingredient of progress. thundershowers are Louis taxicab driver up a dark street, to be waylaid by a Team- sters strongarm squad. +e Eee fore Pontiac Municipal Judge Ce- cil B. MeCallum on charges of six counts of conspiracy to violate state gambling laws. Workers, confident of job security, spend or invest their wages, Housewives, confident of steady family income, take predicted. for tonight by the U.S. Atrested late Friday - along | hints from advertisements again. This procedure stimulates business, confident of sales, to order materials and produce new and better goods. : It will be a tragedy if we let this economic thief rob bright. “us of full recovery. If we can keep the brake pedal jammed down on inflation, the outlook for the coming months is no difference under the law, Man- del said, * * x 4 Guth is charged with setting fire parently burned accidentally makes| Weather Bureau, with 15-20. mile an hour northwesterly winds. To- night's low will be about 64. -, the temperature turning. cooler, the Showers will end tomorrow with. ( , "| with the Gulletts were Basil W. ‘ , Burke, 459,.of 29 Salmer Ave., In oeay s Press Charles D. Apley, 44, of the couaibaeeerace “gi Same address, and James Pru- zor, of 4 S. Saginaw St. * * * The long range prospect for the coming decade is even brighter with population growing by 3 million a year—re- search turning out new and better products—production geared to meet increasing needs—world trade opening new Saturday to an empty eight-room frame home at 1370 Gage Rd. in retaliation against the owner, who had ordered him and Mosley to keep away from the house. The high near 72. A slow warming trend is forecast for the weekend. : For the next five days tenrpera~ { tures will average three degrees below the normal high of 77 and Let's take a glance at the current quarter. Flourish- ing confidence today is reflected in the rise of the gross national product — the total value of goods and services. More than 65 niilfion people have jobs. Improvements i we Pee Oeitiies ventory picture is much better. And public funds for de- Al through our history, vision and faith have paid off. fense and highways are giving the econorhy a nudge. : They still do. ... $3 lsaid he expected the examination “to take at least two weeks.” Wilson, Earl vueeeeee dragging Mosley away from the flames. - Mosley died Sunday. midnight, At 1 p.m, the reading . ‘was 68. A. Women's —— eeeewene 17-20 saheog ory civvsenseceese 2% | Judge McCallum set examina-| are shown in the factory work week aid the new orders : house had been used for teenage |normal low of 57, Precipitation will - a : waeenbee 2 th ae _}tion selipr fans for joes Sept. foal received by manufacturers. Personal income, consumer a een e erat ron - parties,: gigs io ag ae to ainek ae oy Markets ...vcessieet deseo 2 chell posted the peas eaieivel eee come index are at high levels. - alaska, the new state; Antarctica, the new continent;: | Mosley is believed to have sut-|tonight, "Seorrom aol: Seale oars ee ee gO Housing is on the up again, stimulating the construc- the electronic nuclear space age, the new frontier, they all — his fatal burns when thélover the weekend, , gael | ports... eeeeees veces BEL ys tion industry. and. strengthening the hope- of accelerated tend to create a marvelous new age of optimists, b gasoline he had spread about the| The lowest temperature ec 24 ThentOrs fo. ices ss by : George F. Taylor, chief assistant . . y building exploded as he ignited it. ed rec 8 am. in downtown g “TV & Radio Programe | ..8% |prosécutor for Oakland County, business soon in home furnishings and appliances. The in- optimists and for optimists. Gath wie bereed. leen: stole oii —_ ice mae I _ ~~ ~ * » ge ‘ z is : i » » CHICAGO (AP)--Former Presi- dent Harry S. Truman said today the Soviet Union apparently is preparing for war, has been since 1945, and ‘‘the danger ~we face to- day is a very real one.” Truman said the United States frails. the Soviet Union in arms and missiles and “‘for the first Publi Report Hell Explain Tuesday Union: Stand on Parley) Deadlock With Big 3 DETROIT — United Auto) Workers president Walter Reuther| | said today the union would make a public report on its contract talks with the big three auto mak- ers next Tuesday, Reuther said public officials and community leaders of automotive centers in southeastern Michigan and northwestern Ohio have been invited to attend meetings in De- troit’s Veterans Memorial Building The Day in Binwinghaal | oe aa BIRMINGHAM — City. commis- sioners, mecting last. night, up- held recommendations ‘of the eity Planning Board to deny two re- quests for rezoning. ~ Rejected was the proposed re- zoning of property owned by the ©] \Chiera Co, on Grant street. : * * * Bithe site changed from single to multiple family use, contending jit could not develop the property for high type, single family homes, nor obtain funds for this type of development. The Barton-Comiskey property, \Commissioners Uphold Rezoning’ Request Denial The firm had sought to have] police said, and Ps ody work able gear was second. “They were turned over to Sage |inaw authorities yesterday aftere noon, Brandon Family — of 4 Suffocated Autopsies Establish Cause of Death of « * * “He said there never has been ‘a break in Soviet military prepara- Fair je Running Ahead ~~ of 1956 Record ee] the axis in 1945, At the same Lenieeail on ) — _— ' time, “be said, American med] NAVY BANDSMEN — Posing in the official Sunday. Left to right are Eric Schrader and: added, was “a grave mistake.” | ress uniform of the U.S. “Navy Band are these Keith Swailes, of Oxford, and Paul Allen and Truman, in a speech _ four area men, who are performing with fellow ‘Peter Geiger, of Pontiac. All four ‘have been for the annual natiorial con-|* bandsmen at the Michigan State Fair through ——— jan audit of city books. Finance Oscar Eckman after Deputy City Treas- spa City Commission Requests Full Gambling Investigation A “complete investigation” into! The audit was agreed upon by a member of an alleged gambling by/jalleged gambling activities in Pon-|City Manager Walter K. Willmanlring in Pontiac. -itiac was requested by the Cityjand Director Commission last night, after offi- cials had already taken steps forjurer LaRue E. Gullett was ~ ‘arrested Friday, accused of being Willman was instructed by commissioners at their meeting last night te conduct the gam- bling investigation as the result of raids which cracked the ring. tomorrow and vision audier tk ke MRS. L, G. ROWLEY A Drayton Plains woman, Mrs. L, G. Rowley of 6700 Williams ‘Lake Rd., has been elected vice president at large of the Nation- al Woman's Christian Temper- "| ance Union, Mrs. Rowley is a member of the local branch. She was elected to the national of- fice at the group's 8th annual convention held in Washington this- week. < - Start Competing Today for Miss America Ti 7 competing greta So llaste valhed duom his clts’s laned : which is the fairest of/boardwalk to formally open the girts, all entered in the} Thousands of spectators sat on America Pageant, will spend|bleachers, in rolling chairs and Friday in|stood on peach baskets as 39 il- liminary evening gown, swim-|luminated floats passed by to the ada Ut Gs cea ee America crowned! Fifteen contestants rode on spe- Saturday before a nationwide tele-|iany built floats while the rest bles. The public had a chance to do Heading the paraders was singer bur of Denver, Colo., and her court of honor. Thornberry of Birmingham. The |from_ visiting. states, It was spon- _|ka,.Arkansas and Ohio. hope for an alltime attendance GAN Jury Request fais’s halfway attendance total to iv ~ _ The Weather Before Circuit Judges {Continued From Page One) the night Frank Kierdorf was eant. Commissioner Floyd P. Miles proposed the investigation and it was unanimously acecpted by all six commissioners present. Mayor William W. Donaldson was absent from the city. x * * Although Miles did not spell it out in his resolution, he said. it was “‘implied’’ that this investiga- tion by Willman will look into alle- gations that Police Chief Herbert W. Straley interceded for a parole six years ago for one of the five persons arrested Friday. Willman said he could not say how he would conduct the investi- sat atop custom-made converti- Patti Page, who acted as grand marshal, followed by the current Miss America, Marilyn Van Der- . The first contestant in line was conier with a representative of the pas Aibeme, raverbeivel 142)», anditing firm of Hedkios Sells to outline what should be the scope of the audit. ote * others from 45 states, Canada, Alaska, Hawaii, New York City, Chicago and Washington, DC., followed in alphabetical order.” The Pennsylvania float, with Rosalie E. Samley of Bethlehem aboard, won first prize for floats sored by the service clubs’ and Chamber of Commerce of Bethle- hem and head as its motif “Bethle- hem, the Christmas City.” Runners-up were Georgia, Alas- Hixon Awaits Hearing on First-Degree Charge JACKSON @® — A sorrowing John Hixon spent his second full day behind bars today in the slaying of 16-year-old Cari- lyn Waldron. Hixon, 17, is. to appear in Municipal Court Friday — the day —after— Carityn’s~ funeral — for examination on a =r of first degree murder. The good-looking blond vont struggled against tears as he was brought into court yester- day to be formally. charged. Life imprisonment is mandatory for a first degree murder con- viction. Hixon has admitted he shot Carilyn to death Sunday night when she told him she did not want to keep company with him any longer. _ In jail, Hixon said he had wanted to. kill himself, too, but gation. Miles’ motion followed an un- successful attempt of Commis- sioner Milton R. Henry to have the chief temporarily suspended “anti] a full disclosure of the facts in this case are made to the commission.” Henry’s motion died for lack of a second. Eckman this morning was to * He said the audit was a “safety precaution to make certain no city money was involved in the opera- tion.” Eckman expressed belief time no shortages have been noted. Eckman ordered Gullett’s sus- pension from his job effective Saturday. He also ordered safe combinations te which Gullett, a city employe since 1952, had ac- cess to, be changed. Gullett, 41, and his wife, Gladys, 35, of 301 Dick Ave., were arrested by State Police Rackets Squad detectives along with Basil Burke, 59, of 29 Salmer Ave., Charles D. Apley, 44, of the same address, and James Pruzor, of 4 S. Saginaw St. - Wiltman said he didn't believe that Gullett carriéd on a gambling operation from the City Hall” j x * * Complete results of the investi- gation called for by commissioners will be expected in about two weeks, Miles said. No specific date for its completion was set. Hart Succeeds Piggins DETROIT (UPI) — Million- aire businessman Herbert W. Hart was sworn in yesterday as Detroit Police Commissioner, succeeding Edward S. Piggins -|pear personally next week in the ‘was acting in an’ unprecedented talks. there hadn’t. been, and that at this to hear the union report. Reuther noted that the UAW Executive Board would meet: soon after the public sessions. At that time the union is ex- pected to announce a target com- pany and strike deadline. ’ Reuther’s latest move followed his announcement that he wil) ap- deadlocked contract talks for the first time since the pacts expired last May. * * * . Reuther said that before de- action should: be taken to end the company-enforced deadlock,” the union leadership feels itself re- sponsible “to make a full report to the public on our position on these vital matters.” At the same time, he said, the union leadership wants to learn the opinions and attitudes of as many community leaders as possible. He did not indicate what influence this would have on the UAW’s final decision. Reuther said two separate ses- sions are planned Sept. 9, The first, at 2 p.m., is for the mayors of Detroit, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Bay City, Saginaw, and Toledo and Cleveland, Ohio. The second, at 8 p.m., is for representatives of community or- ganizations in the Detroit metro- politan area covering Wayne, Ma- comb and Oakland counties, Ypsi- lanti, Monroe and Ann Arbor. * * * There was no immediate com- pany comment on Reuther’s move. As the industry contract talks dragged along with no reported progress, the State of Michigan took official interest for the first time, A Wayne (Detroit) County cir- cuit judge, appointed by Demo- cratic Gov. G. Mennen Williams, capacity as the Governor's observ- er though taking no part in the Judge George E. Bowles, former chairman of the State Labor Me- diation Board, was named ‘“‘per- In the letters of invitation termining ‘‘what course of positive}. DONALD 8. BELL Rite Saturday for Ex-Mayor Donald S. Bell, 51, to Be Buried in Birmingham Cemetery Service for Donald S. Bell, 51, former Birmingham mayor who died Sunday in Tucson, Ariz., will be held at 2 p.m, Saturday at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. in Birmingham. He will be buried in Greenwood Cemetery. x & &* Death was caused by injuries re- ceived in an auto accident in New Mexico early in December. ‘Born and educated in Birming- ham, Mr. Bell had been associ- ated with his father, 8. 0. Wylie Bell, who founded the Bell Fu- neral Home. He continued to op- erate the funeral home after his father’s death, it to the William R. Hamilton . Mr. Bell then moved to Benson, Ariz., where he owned and op- erated the Lazy Cross Ranch. x ke * He was elected to the Birming- ham City Commission in 1947, serving unti] 1950. Mr. Bell was elected mayor in 1949. He also served as Oakland County coroner from 1936 to 1940. A great grandson of John Hunter; one of Birmingham's ear- liest settlers, he had been active in community affairs and a mem- ber of the Lions Club. Surviving are his wife, June; a daughter, Mrs. Henry Aughey III of New York City, and a son, Thomas of Benson. * * * * The body will arrive in Birming- ham tomorrow. The family said sonal observer” by Williams at Lansing yesterday. and in 1951 sold , bounded by Hunter boulevard, Oakland ave., Lawndale and M streets, was rejected as a commercial site. The owners had petitioned for any type of business development. Residents in both areas had ob- jected to rezoning, x *& In other business, the Commis- sion withheld. action on adopting an ordinance to enforce the two-way 4stop for drivers a ened buses. Commissioners felt that since ‘many school children are trans- reported in regular public buses, such as ordinance would prove confusing to motorists, Tt was voted to continue paying 25 per cent of the dread disease insurance policies carried by city employes. Last year, the city paid $263 of the $1,036 total pre- mium for all employes. Policies} are issued to individuals or’ on a family coverage basis, Slim trade here has reduced a a reducing salon in Birmingham right out of business. A notice on the door yesterday informed patrons that the Slim Velle, Inc., salon, 310 Brown St., was closed as of Sept. 1. City Treasurer Russell Berger immediately posted a second no- tice, this one for seizure, He said a bill of $1,067.23 on per- = property tax had not been * Patrons, whose wallets were re- duced in advance, began calling Berger and the police to see about getting refunds. Puzzled when he saw an excep- tionally tall driver suddenly grow shorter about 4 a.m. yesterday, Patrolman Edmund Long of the Birmingham Police Dept, stopped the auto to find out why, A 13-year-old boy driving: the ear told Long he had gotten tired standing while driving. He and his two Il-year-old companions, all of Saginaw, admitted steal- ing the car in Saginaw. memorial tributes may be made to the Salvation Army. All three had driven the car, . SEAWAY FIRST — The S.S. North America UPI Telephoto Michigan on the trip which will who resigned to return to pcrvate daw practice. steams out of the Chicago River” into Lake first passenger ship to pass through the entire make her the Seaway, including the new locks, canals and channels. The North America is carrying more than 250 Chicago business, professional and civic ‘leaders on the 10-day cruise. -pGRLBS: Mesto Buiens Revert AND VICINITY — Partly saw, and warmer with a chance of a showers, ip ge $1, seattered Scelecomeotes it. Tomorrow RB tonight i nee a teen near 64, bi ear 72. yey southerly at winds bereming to gee LF TL te- Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. Ats a.m: Wind velocity 15 - 20 m.p.h. Es sets Wednesday at 7:03 p m, mn rises Thursday at 6:00 a.m. feoe cots Thursday at 12:02 p.m rises Wednesday at 4:42 p.m. - Downtown, » Temperatures cone ee hee Tuesday in Pontiac (as fr ed calelntabals Highest temperature .... severest Lowest Pesce TE 2... severe teeeen BB Mean temperature .....-+...s00.... Weather—Sunoy nw f Age Ago in =! ” Weel hain, “oa Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date in 86 Years 45 in 1677 “100 in 1953 erature Chart ved Milwaukee Ee ln * SRBtagtassssesseses saustzuakseesszen BE aeee = 2 # 3 uazsseaseses aut 229 | Sadtedeesseesszece? shew-|to believe + horribly burned in the arson of a Flint dry cleaners. ‘Her statement led investigators caused Frank’s have disclosed. ~*~ * * charges against them. standstill and required grand Jury | action. for a one-man grand jury buat from vacation ef Judge Clark tition. ment of Mary Ann Thon, friend of Harrelson's. two weeks ago. x * * : date. induced the former Mrs. gon to make her statement to Pon- tiae detectives: . that. both Harrelson - and Herman Kierdorf have more’ knowledge of the Flint arson which). death than they) ; | The two teamster leaders were — released when Adams failed to file) Adams admitted then that the _ investigation was largely at a | | He.and Ziem asked papews| Bs J. Adams, so that the entire four- | man.bench could rule on the pe- | Also included in the grand jury 4 petition was a probe of events sur-|* rounding the arson of the apart-| Clothing belonging to Harrelson. tiwas damaged in the apartment!” ig | fire and Adams and Ziem specu- 8° |iated that there could be a-connec-| tion’ between the two arsons, al-| ” though none has been revealed to a ; , It was the apartment arson that! |, Harrel-| : —lacked- the nerve. | (This is the first In a series of nine columns explaining the changes just voted by Congress in the Social Security program. Te get for easy reference a complete picture of the far-reaching changes, be sure to save each of the columns in the series starting today.) By RAY HENRY The changes just made in Social in the United States. \4 The main changes won't go into operation until. Jan. 1, but here, were told to await the return | ' briefly, is what is in store: ‘ If you're drawing payments now, ‘ your February check will be higher. If you~start drawing payments after Jan.-1, 1960, it’s possible for them to be larger than any ever paid before. If you’re now collecting dis- ability payments, your wife and children may now be eligible to receive payments, If you become disabled in the future, it may be easier to get payments. than it - has been. = pace aaa er now paying Social Security tax, ~- Security affect almost évery~adutt ~~~ If you're an employer or a ‘work- you'll have more after Jan. 1. ix Here’s a summary of the main changes—with details to come in later columns— PRESENS PAYMENTS: to pay ~~ Paymens to-retired or disabled" workers now range from $30 to $108.50 a month. After Jan. 1, those getting $30 will get $33. Those getting $108.50 will get $116 and those receiving payments in be- tween will get an average increase .€ 7 per cent. Payments to. wives, dependent husbands or dependent children of retired workers now range from $11.30 to $54.30. After Jan. 1, these payments will Ke in- creased an average of 7 per cent, : Payments to survivors of de- ceased workers. now range from _ $30 te-$200. After Jan. 1, the rangé | in payments Will be $33 to $254. : NOTE: Althotigh all. the in- creases in payments mentioned above go into effect Jan. 1, they'll 3° SRA URSIN REE so a a length of the U.S. portion. of the St. Lawrence show up first in the February checks. Social Security checks re- ceived at the beginning of a month are always for the previous month. It will not be necessary to apply for the increases; they'll be paid ‘automatically. FUTURE PAYMENTS: IRS te @ Payments to workers Who retire * at 65 or over or who become dis- abled after Jan. 1 will range from $33 to $127 a month. But, it'll be a number of years before any retired or disabled worker will be entitled to top payment. Payments to survivors of a work.” er who dies after Jan. 1 will range from $33 to $254. DISABILITY PAYMENTS: Dependents of disabled workers have not been eligible for pay- ments, Now they may be. A wife 62 or over will be entitled to collect an amount equal to one-half - of what her husband is receiving. Are You Interested in Social Security? Wife caring for children, regardless — of her age, will be entitled. to an . amount equal to one-half of her ee URE LEP if -husband’s payments. “cent tax ‘on Sainitigs Up t6 “$4,200~~ _ a year—that is, $95.50—and their _, Self-employed persons now pay cssreaennin GLE EES Dependent children, in most cases, will also be entitled to an amount equal to one-half of what their father is getting. - TAX INCREASES: Employes now pay a 2% per employers. match this amount. On Jan. 1, they'll have to pay 242 per 4 cent on earnings up to $4,800 a year—that is, $120—and their em- ployers will have to match the amount. a 3% per cent tax on net earn- ings up to $4,200 a year—that is, $141.75, Next year, they'll have to pay 344 per cent on the first $4,800 -a year of net earnings or a tax of $180. The tax rate for all workers— employed or self-employed—will be increased again in 1960 and every three years until 1969. The hig for employe will eventually be 4! per cent and for self-employed per- “| cock, were members of the original _\the commission. in 1952, : -| road co-ordinator for the Oakland ) q UAW-CIO Intefhational union in tt Dr.,. Bloomfield Township. Parents, Twin Boys | Alpena pathologist Dr, Donald G. Henderson, said today that the | Brandon Township family found dead in a Montmorency County jcabin Monday died ef suffocation. * * * : An autopsy performed late Tues- | day confirmed the earlier belief | that Maurice Groover, 49; his wife, Josephine, 47; and their 10-year- old twin ‘sons, Carl and Paul, died ; in the cabin on the night they ar- | rived there, Aug. 17. The Groover family, who: lived on a farm at 641 Hurd Rd., evi- dently “used up all the oxygen | in the tightly sealed cabin,” ac- . | cording to Henderson, ; \ He said that “the cabin was of ' a solid cement block construction with doors closed tightly and closed windows in steel casings.” * 8: s 4 “The family probably went to bed and slowly used up the avail- able oxygen, with the help of a re- frigerator and lamp running on bottled gas.” Police expect to run a similar test on the cabin to: see if the gas flames have an adequate oxygen supply to keep them burning a long period of time with the cabia closed Icelanders Hit Home of British Envoy (Continued From Page One) bassador’s. residence apparently was in retaliation for the British victories in two hand-to-hand bat- tles yesterday between trawler crews and Icelandic coastguard- men, Soa eee ERIE ver epee a Ee ED eee * * * The state radio in Reykjavik said trawlermen used axes, spikes and streams of water to keep coastguardmen from boarding one vessel to arrest its captain for violating the 12-mile ban. The Brit- ish admiralty made no mention i of this incident, ~« k In the second qdlash, nine un- ‘ trawler Northern Foam and were , trying to head it into port when the British Navy frigate East- bourne sent aboard sailors. The coastguardmen were cap- tured.and put aboard the East- bourne, which tried to hand them back to the Icelandic gunboat Thor. The Thor’s captain refused to accept them, apparently con- , tending the men still should be on the Northern Foam. British Ambassador Andrew Gra- ham Gilchrist was entertaining vis- iting newsmen at dinner when the demonstrators appeared outside Gilchrist played Scottish bagpipe music on his phonograph to cover ‘the noise outside, A smoke bomb | was tossed into the yard and the a fumes drifted into the house. When \ the mob booed, Gilchrist had the i phonograph turned up. Then the demonstrators, most of them youths, began throwing brickbats. Six panes of window glass were broken, One pane shat- tered close to a British girl secre- tary: “If they were cricket. players, they would be better shots,”’ Gil- christ commented. By that time the bagpipes had run out and the ambassador was playing Chopin for his guests on the piano. Name 3 Trustees to Board of Hospital (Continued From Page One) acted as an engineering consult-, ‘| ant to the National Bank of De-' troit during its construction of a new building in Detroit, Kirby, 40, is associated with the | Detroit Building Trades Council.’ A native of Kalamazoo, he has been a Pontiac resident 22 years, Married, with four children, Kirby lives at 91 N. Edith St. | » Babeack,..a.former chairman. of ee ‘the hospital board, lives at 281 | Brewer and Yeager, like Bab- seven-member board appointed by Brewer, a real estate dealer, © is manager of the Secretary of State’s Pontiac branch office and ~ County Road Commission. He. . maintains residences at 15 Ros: ° \ shire Ct. and. 1655 — mr] Ie Sylvan Lake. ‘ | Yeager, . comptroller for *the Detroit, now. lives’ at 2671 Berry — fy Brewer said his resignation has sons, om ber cont. pital board, scheduled for ~~ 18 ~ A é ee - \ ag. SY, 4 hiss THE PONTIAC. PRESS, pS ¢ { T.; WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1958 |HOME sooo | PEACHES Red Haven, Fair Haven PICK YOUR OWN ot our Lake Orion Orchard Choice fruit ats free from } Low disease and ‘worms. trees, no ng neces- sary. Bring the Family and Baskets ‘Jacohsen’s Orion Garden Genter While Perry -. a a fe VOnazie, Geom North ¢ Miles % | ang ene i. 545 W. Broadway | Phone Orion MY 2-268! ie ‘Edythe McCulloch BACK TO SCHOOL If this is your first year in high: school or. college . will feel much more ‘at ‘ease with a few social tricks up. your. sleeye. If it is difficult for you to enter a large gathering try this: slow down your walk as you énter, this has a calming effect and avoids the breathless entrance. Pause at the entrance ‘ and focus on a definite spot (it may be a friend, an avai chair or the .tea table) then walk. directly to it with an assured air. Gloves’ are a big help, wear them for the well groomed look and use them for the. assur- ance they give: YOU in the what - {0 - do - with- your- hands problem. Take all. the time you want removing them, pre-. tend to..concentrate on your oer while yon capture your - poise. : Beau Fe 2-141, ‘choice in coiffures narrows Two Distinct Art.in Science / Hair Styles. Display to Onan) for This Fall “Art in Science,” an éxhibi- | : tion of creative arts represent- You pay your money and pee ~ gi the gene take your choice at the hair- dreaser’s this acanon’ And the. 4 “Cuanbronk Institute: of Sclance down to two distinctly different styles, from which many vari- | jis free during the week, with -ations went ee. a small charge on weekends. The styles are tousled and uncombed on the one hand, and sleekly polished ladylike Empire on the other.’ 5 The tousled hairdo *- popu- lar with the gamin sét ube be. be- tees et Sine oe amor stock, But those who aan sophisti- | Mrs. Karl Weber of Orchard oe re ont ee Lake. An October. wedding is f Reveal Engagement lows of a boulevard announce the engagement of ‘their daughter, Judith Lee, to Daniel Weber, son of Mr. and YET-YOU'RE SO CORRECT ANYTIME 559 ORCHARD LAKE FE 2-012 TWO DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETROIT AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS FEDERAL 4 Look your loveli- } est while you feel _ your proudestl Let Federal’s | expert maternitieres assist you in selection and fit!” OPEN. EVERY _ EASY-CARE COORDINATES MATEY SEPARATES by STARR ‘ s Colton ie ‘te Bath dsloe dctpts with ew” - | button front, 2 pockets. 10-20. 4 |... Capri slack, washable flannel. 85% wool, - 15% nylon. Red, royal, gray. 10-20, 6.99 —. —. planned. Married _ Saturday ‘were Judith Louise | Robertson. and Alfred A. Waters. Their parents are Mrs. Percy 'G. Keeler of Davisburg,° James Robertson of - Detroit, and Mr. and Mrs, Arvin F. Waters of Bay street. MR. and MRS. ALFRED A. WATERS Judith Louise Robertson Weds Alfred A. Waters White Lake Presbyterian Churchjof honor, was gowned in pastel was the setting for the wedding| blue. "She carried a basket of pink ‘ ager William Rankin of Detroit at the ceremony in the presence of| | Shintock of Allen Paik ‘Mr. and’ Mrs. Marshall Bel- | 4 Z F Mary Jean . Gibbs and. Harold | Jerome Russell: were married” Saturday at St. Michael Church. Parents of the couple are Mrs. Anna Gibbs. and Mrs. Judith Russell. 3 MR. tnd MRS. HAROLD J. RUSSELL Russell-Gibbs Nuptials Said in St. Michael Rite st’ Michael Church -was the scene of the Saturday morning wedding of Mary Jean Gibbs and Harold Jerome Russell. ‘The Rev. Norman P. Thomas... officiated at the ceremony be- fore 100 guests. S xe Ok OU: Parents of ‘the couple are Mrs, Anna Gibbs of Cornell street and. Mrs, Judith Russell of Third Street. The bride wore a gown of nations and yellow roses. bert Gibbs, the bride's nephew, RECEPTION GIVEN To receive guests at a re- -eeption held at St. Michael Hali, Mrs. Gibbs wore a blue sheath dress with ma.ching ac- cessories and - Mrs. Russell wore a gold brocade dress with matching accessories. Both had orchid corsages. x + *£ ; ‘Following a honeymoon to northern Michigan, the couple will live on Green street. The bride selected a printed sheath dress with red acces- set for her ee out- HAIR CUTS... strled ‘ank closet Short and |... . cool and neat. *. | To Go With ‘the New Look of Fashion Let us create a smart, new coiffure for you—especially flat- for tering, and t in vogue ine me Riker Bldg—Rear of Lobby © FE 3-7186 CROCKER 'S 3} 4 homestreitia'l..'. Be is epee? | candies ee A eee 4 restaurant 857 W. HURON Free Labor on Custom Draperies Big Pn ogee a for Fall... 250 witnesses. x * «* wore green, pink, and yellow re- site pbride. is the, daughter otlepectively and carried baskets of] 58 was his brothers best | NARDIS of DALLAS sexy ak hiaie Ribertecd of De pink gladioli and white chrys- soon. Uahecs eure MAGA ee ° troit. Parents of the bridegroom|@nthemums. sell, another brother; and Del- Mix and Match Mr: and Mrs. Arvin F. W The attendants’ gowns were of : : of Bay utrect. silk organza, ballerina length and - SEPARATES y : featured harem style skirts. Each P n lize Your | A Seerdongh sows of misty |wore a picture’ hat and white ersona 7 and NELLIE DON " pena by. Chantilly type tase titi a” o* im * Clothes ete g Half-Size with sequins was worn by Flower girl Marilyn McMillan AM bride. The bodice of lace — of Detroit is cousin, wore MONOG : DRESSES. . a agus oh eee hot Sua pee tue, Mer. a for Women per oore : i Robes and P.J.’s t ‘| Her fingertip illusion veil fell) Edward McClutchey of Onaway ; ft from a crown trimmed with se-| ert Tufts of Grand Rapids, Ron- Signuee tan Wore thicte “ft DeCor Shop quins, anid white roses and carna-| ald Simpson of White Clond and 6 W.H tions centered by a white orchid| Allen Currie of Grosse Pointe. Midtown Sho 1 uron comprised her bouquet P -718 W. Huron : The bridegroom's cousin,*Glenn|} j91% N. Saginaw FE 4-0539 Griswold; was ringbearer. Ragetyw Bette, of Milford, maid| Mrs, Keeler vere 5 Se pe |} 119 North Saginaw Street, BALDWIN | P IANO JA L E | INTERLOCHEN (National Music re ba dribeman madd welelh “No ow ... we bring you low, low prices an BALDWIN os that have been used this season only at NTERLOCHEN, the National Music Camp. , Becaisse the piano you choose makes a great deal of . difference to the musical education of your children, visit our store and learn why BALDWIN is a.world standard. Be early and take advantage of these once-a- senate. 5 If you desire, you ma’ : the Michi sales tax on ddivecy i sa the monthly irchancs in October. , @ New i. u rantee @ Benc | @ Trade aflowsnous ‘CALBI MUSIC CO. Pontiae’s s Locally Owned Home of Conn Instruments , 2 and Baldwin Pianos and Organs - Phone FE 5.0222 Sioa Loe, low prices! _. __ heck -to-eckool procedure: GOLO goes to the feet of the class! Black and Brown Grey or Black Walking off with all the honors’... our clever little Golos. Light of heart, light of foot — proud of their rich, textured leathers and . their neatly-turned shapes. From books to banquets — there’s a Golo to go with | everything on your schedule! Pauli’s Shoe Store Serving’ Pontiac es and 75 Years 85 N. Saginaw 7 -Ohen Fri. til 9 bar oe y pos =— Ye Sie FT eS AS CUT SS aE | _ome HH PONTIAC PRESS, W D Be Ae . Ap Te =: i Power . She rn i Police “Quell tondcn Raters: “fo Grant Immunity. [2% se dames LANSING @® — Legislation em- searched every corner of her dry: lections for August, 1957, the State| vf oe powering a circuit judge to grant stoe. After hours of hunt- hi |e *- | “although named for P. T, Bar. | | IHARWOOD ie , - ot eel: at ae dea lolanes Poli acaeees "tae France has atetoath con-lor meine Gait teense x ele- sir A | SE ' : tad ce &@ new car- is 3 an ii ae a , Andcbs. leaders of the bands incessantly, |rier, the “Clemenceau,” which has|phantine population, Only twelve munacus mur sPophie”Ea ene | Tn one of the most serious inci- ‘trying to learn if a central argani-'a speed of 32 knots. , . |persons live in Jumbo, eM. Ft ree Me 1). WOLVERINE Thea Back to School! | Am sonst atten "EVERY SUNDAY at 2 P. M Children in Action 4 to 15 FREE — NO ADMISSION — FREE $. TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE RD. . ALL STORES OPEN by 10 A. M. to 9 P.M. DAILY o— FREE PARKING for 5,000 CARS ‘Easier, More Economical : ‘Scotts _ “PENNEY'S OWN SUPERB. ns oo AUTOMATIC BLANKET 94277... | A. thermostatically chnivelled ‘blariket of cot- | ton and rayon — i ah hindne — 2-year | guarantee. | — makes you the lawn SALE ! eas This is the ideal time | to plant next year’s | lawn, _ LAWN SEED | Picture. Brand | "era $750 | ONLY FRESH 0] QUALITY MEATS ale Price = - Rp ip ia. YOU SAVE $1.00. lenis Brand went. mares Sor. $595 mnxOU save $80 | || —-SHINNER’S— HARDWARE | MIRACLE MILE ONLY MIRACLE MILE STORE || ||| OPEN DAILY 10 A.'M. to 9 P. M. | i eee Mon, thru Sat. 9 A. M, | an ~Me scm ansussenannsananacracnsasansantasannanaaaadl - WHERE ‘SHOPPING IS ALWAYS A BARGAIN | $4°9 ~—sI'SALT WATER | ASSORTED WMochifse ieashishle:Gotsor- Pots! ‘chive TAFFY | | COOKI ES with that wonderful wash ‘n’ wear tag }] | Reg. 29 Lb. > Reg 3% Lb. for easy care — Vivid plaids. ) | | 7% OTK Riways Fest QUALITY! Hf WHILE THEY LAST! , ———} a FLAVoRS ~ Women’ s sash Girls’ PRISKIES (LOAFERS) $989 Pre These comfortable loafers for women -and girls come in white, beige, red, brown and. black. ‘BOYS’ S’ WASH " WEAR COTTON-FLANNEL SHIRTS. WHILE THEY LAST! oF PAN || es." ~~ | YARD GOODS Basis obs a | KOTEX | . —_ REMNANTS | i 21” 2 and 3 SPEED $7 +S Saha | 3 BOXES WED. and THURS. ONLY! PORTABLE F ANS sonal heat wise cooking easy, : | $7 00 ; | . . | , | 4 YARDS se Reg. $29.88 ! saves time. , , ‘ 4 00. Bes | Ase. : Ne * QUANTITY LIMITED. Miace( Pp | W. Tf. GRANT co. Mile = , ae LW. T. GRANT Store | RGLNLN Bg BD) | Use Gronts “MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER = | 7) MIRACLE MILE ||, oy aa ES | | it” Plan OPEN DAILY 10.A.M.to 9PM. Wt Plan ——— i / \ & ii \ i ff Four Adventurers Survive, 1 Killed - \ Describes Fatal Ocean Voyage - American cultures could have - back and forth on the Pacific cur- ‘out to be possible econmically be- AUCKLAND, New Zealand (AP) —A crew member of the ill-fa' raft Tahiti Nui IJ tells of the tor- turous voyage from South Amer- ica that ended in the death’ of explorer Eric de Bisschop on a South Sea island reef, Winds blew the raft off course and they had to make a new one in midpassage to keep from being ing, Brun gave this account of their 64% months at sea: oo ee The raft left Chile last Feb. 15 and reached Callao, Peru, March 26. De Bisschop and his four-man erew set sail from Peru April 13 heading for. Tahiti, 6,800 miles away. swamped in the Pacific, said Ad-}week out. Seven weeks later the lain Brun, second in command. * * * De Bisschop, a 66 - year - old French oceanographer, was killed trying to. prove his theory that ancient Polynesian and South ‘maintained contact by drifting rents. The crew survived. His first voyage last year—from Tahiti to South America—ended 400 miles short of its goal when his raft broke up in a storm off x ** * . Brun was reached in the Cook Islands, where he and the other three crew members are recover- Electric Power From H-Blast? Scientist. Teller Thinks It's Possible by Putting Bomb in Deep Hole By ALTON BLAKESLEE GENEVA (AP) — H-bombs in gigantic peaveful_ bangs could cre- ate electric power from deep holes in the ground, Dr. Edward Teller suggested today to the U.N. atoms-for-peace conference. The . explosion in deep. holes would convert water into steam which would rise up to run elec- tric turbines above ground. x * * H-blasts could also crush reck|~ for mining, recover trapped oil, build harbors and canals, or di- vert rivers, said the famous phys- icist who sometimes is called the father of the hydrogen bomb. A test is being considered un- derground in New Mexico, he re- ported. . These peaceful uses -of fusion explosions could come about long before the H-bomb reaction itself is tamed ddéwn for controlled production of electricity above ground, Teller said, adding that controlled fusion “may not turn fore the end of the centruy.” ¢ 2-8 Hydrogen fuel is cheap, and. the explosions would not create any radioactive fallout, or too wide- spread contamination of rock or dirt, Teller continued. Recent stu- dies “have lad increasingly to the expectation that thermunuclear explosions can be brought suffi- ciently under control to be of help in eatth-moving jobs, in mining, dnd ‘conceivably in the production of energy,” he said. x * * Teller said the only real prob- lem would be digging the hole and being able to use it repeatedly. The underground explosion of an atomic bomb in Nevada a year ago showed that such blasts can be confined safely, he said. But radioactive rock created by the nuclear explosion would have to be separated to permit continua- tion of operations. * * * This-is not a hopeless problem, Teller added. He said the explo- sions could even be designed to furnish very valuable radioactive isotopes which could be sold to raft sighted a passenger ship and reported all was. well. Later, storms blew Tahiti Nui Ii north of its planned course and it became waterlogged and unsafe in rough seas. The stern was 18 inches under water. * * * The double forward mast was replaced by a smaller single mast and sail, but the raft settled further. The crew made outriggers The radio broke down after a|® in an attempt to keep the raft on even keel. ; . By this time the raft was three or four feet under water at the stern and the crew was living on top of the e. Unfavorable currents then car- Bisschop the Tahiti Nui IJ. The crew made a new and smaller: raft out of empty water drums: .and timber on the old one. Currents carried them toward Starbuck Island, an uninhabited coral island about 1,000 miles north of Tahiti, When they were about 20 miles south of Starbuck the winds changed, driving them good|Islands to bring back De Bis- on Raft | De Bisschop tried to make land- fall. at two of the Cook Islands, winds. Finally, with food and water short, the raft ‘reached Ra- —— a in the northern Cook Is- x * * With the crew's approval, De Bisschop decided to shoot the reef around Rakahanga before dawn Sunday. The raft hit the reef and capsized. De Bisschop was killed. The French minesweeper Lotus left Tahiti yester@ay for the Cook schop’s body and the four surviv- ing crewmen, In addition to Brun, the 27-year-old navigator, the crew consisted of Juan Fischer, a Chil- ean mining engineer; Jean Pelli- sier, 26, a French oceanographer, and Juan Burenois, 28, the Chilean north. cook. JASON, YOU'RE A SHREWD ! : OBSERVER OF THE LOCAL ES Ta MIND, BUT YOD. YOUR ADVICE FRIENDS ARGIN' A POLITICAL POLL 7.15 pasa ne Teun COR QO STiL eRaye® AROUND TH CHANCES WOULD B WM-HAK/ FRANKLY, 1 HANE © | NO DESIRE FOR PUBLIC OFFICE, BUT WHAT DO YOU THINK MY BEIF L SHOULD BOARDING HOUSE L 1S RELUCTANT TO PREDICK, MISTAH MADORAIF IT WAS A 948 /, Yok We NN San~ : N EDGES FROM BETTIN® ON DEWEY IN se ibe tate = : z3) — peaucHer, & Freysé reduce the cost of the blast. HALF ACRE CASTLE a) I WONDER IF DADDY SHOULD GET A CREW CUT ? THE GIRLS You'll Find PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES. Every Day in the Pontiac Press Want~Ad Section Take advantage of this easy way to solve all your buying and selling problems. To Place Your WANT AD | DIAL FE 2-8181 er vena © 4 “Well, good — they've decided to make up!” 5 but was driven off course by|- THR PONTIAC- PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1958 Tien " BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES Me oF py enger Mart re hn ANOTHER MILLION-BDCR || BUT, DUD, HOW COULD NOUR | [/YOU'RE Ri VP 1 HIS. FACE! |) TARING & VACRTION \F WE WANT TO GO A. OR SOMEONE ELSE'S! |[INVITE HERTO — 5 @HE COULD SUREL a a | } 4 — igs oS i e Wee |\ AE ad BL) ie ; 1958 by NEA tne. TM. . THE BERRYS PETER..IF YOU CARRY MY LIPSTICK AND COMPACT, A PURSE ! I WONT NEED PACT, Tit ot THEM We YOUR, POCKET? pyr Yh" i. , vill, Me 4 \ 4 - vital nae wish pill HT y W, i By Carl Grubert ae | DONT BE Heb Oe i : || obese eve —7 cw ee Titi; “RY uu ti'Vines. “= ‘ 4 EASY _ ss _ CAPTAIN alia TL SIT HERE AN’ KEEP ME EYE ~ YOU) WILLARD, . RUN BUT DON'T PULL UP yaa degra ANY OF TH CONFOUND IT; KID... - T'S FOUR HE WAS IN TOS, THAT ONE! : AGAIN, AND UH... {GIRL WHO RUNS} SEE ME A . OH, YEH, OOOLA D With / COUPLE gam _ OOP? A TIMES... 4 x ae * 5 a eee 4 ee = 5 i a eo eo n- re ee dic Gace * Lee | fe bi i DID YOU STOP AT THE eS CROSSING fF ON THE WAY} + SURE, KIDS...AN‘ IF THIS ISN'T ENOUGH SOAR I'LL. GET MORE/ I'M SO GLAD TH’ BOYS ARE BEGINNIN’ T’ THINK O° CLEANLINESS / I’LL TAKE THEM OUT A TOWEL! GRANDMA, BUT > NEED A TOWEL. By Walt Disney SS ea aria eMC Shy -terday appealed the order, handed down after Lana Turner’s 14-year- old daughter fatally stabbed John : in the actress’ home. Judge Allen T. Lynch ruled that eggs would remain a ward of poe ce tan dlagga judi- CHICAGO mre grain futures market was steady to firm today in early dealings on the board of trade with buying apparently well Spread among all interests: j “ k® * Dealers said both commission houses and speculative trade were on both sides of the market, how- ever, indicating some evening up operations and perhaps a_ rein- statement of positions liquidated in yesterday's sell-off. Trade was very slow near the end of the first hour, with wheat unchanged’ to % cent a bushel higher, September $1.86%; corn % to % higher, September $1.26%; oats % to % higher, September ve rye % to % higher, Septem- ber $1.25%; soybeans 4% to % cents a hundred Ibs. higher, Oc- tober $12.25. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN rec Sept. 3.—(AP) — Opening higher, September $2.24%; lard 3 FAIR CHAMPIONS — Donald Boyd, 11, of 1740 W, Clyde St., Milford, proudly cuddles his champion Cheviot ram and ewe. The two animals won top awards in the Junior Show judging at the 109th annual Michigan State Fair in Detroit this week. Donald is a member of the Milford 4-H Club. “sti Big Question Mark By DAVID J. WILKIE DETROIT @®.— The auto in- dustry’s pricing plans for 1959 continue to offer a big question mark to prospective new car buyers. Few industry analysts expect the auto makers to hold the pres- ent price line, stimulating as that might be to new car buyirig. The ear manufacturers do not yet know what their over all operat- ing costs will be, Still té be determined is how much higher weges will go when a new contract is agreed upon between management and hourly- rated workers. Wage increases in car company plants also usually are followed by wage advances ‘lin supplier shops. But, for competitive reasons, price increases on 1959 cars are likely to be smaller than those made when .1958 models were introduced nearly a year ago. The first hint of car price trends for 1959 will come with the public presentation of Buick’s new cars within the next couple of weeks. Buick will be the first 1959 line to reach’ the market, ‘Og Auto Prices Depend on Labor Negotiations model. Profits do not appear until sales have reached a certain unit tetal, After that point is reached, profits increase rapidly; by the same token the losses mount quickly where the sales level is not maintained, The manufacturer has to fig- ure on something more than the break-even point, So there is more than an even chance that price increases will accompany the public introduction of most 1959 cars, ss Regardless of where the sug- gested prices on 1959 model cars may go, the industry will have a larger number of extra-cost ac- cessories to sell during the year ahead. . * * * Chrysler will have swivel type seats that swing out for the driver age through temperature control and otherwise. General Motors’ United Motors Division has announced a porta- ble emergency starting unit that may be used even in the limited space of a one-car garage. The unit has its own - recharging feature that operates on any 110-15 ,volt, alternating current outlet. Discontinued _by several car makers is the fuel injection sys- tem widely heralded a couple of years ago as a major engineering advance. Its cost was too high for wide acceptance. Another item dropped is United States Rubber Co.’s colored side- wall tires. They, too, received énly-limited” acceptance. New York Stocks MARKETS lees vecees 34 Kimb Clk... 615 x « * Allied Ch a8 Rreser’ 7. teal, It is one of the paradoxes of lied Strs ... 47.1 Lehn & vs. 32.3 the automotive market that, while 4 The following: are top prices Allis chal... 261 LOP Glass .., 88.2/}; sd rd i Pa 2.25 ‘Alum 14d 29.3 Lib McN& 113/ higher prices might retard sales z “*"" 11-97|L?vering sales of locally grown ascee ae : : Alcoa coer 184 Ligg &M 71 |volume, the over all sales total } produce brought to the Farmer's/Am Airlin “:'°! 21.7 iokh aie” BAY h Gi beari : : AmCan .,.-. «+ 464 Loew's 192)/has a direct bearing upon prices. Market by growers and sold by|am Gyan ’’|.!: 50.4 : ; Lorillard 70 |If the industry knew in advance them in wholesale package lots. Am M& iy .. 41.1 Lone S Cem .. 37. ; : : Quotati furnished by the| A™ Motor? --- 13 Low a Nash |. 73 what its unit volume would be in Detroit Bureau of Markets, a of|4 Am News. .°°"" 214 Mack Trk ..» 3-3/2 given model year its initial Tuesday. Aim Tel & ble iit Martin -¢o |, 33.1/Prices might be substantially dif- oe Armco Sti ..|. 88.1 May D strs .. 423/ ferent. , Produce Armour & Co. 191 Merck. ..... 651| This involves the traditional Aveo Mfg ..... 8.2 Mergen Lino . 44.4) break-even factor in car praduc- Balt & Ohio .. 38.2 Merr Ch&S ,. 16.3} ,. é ab wits . Beth Steel .... 46.5 Mpls Hon .... 98.4|tion. The car maker ‘invests a Apples, Duchess, fancy, bu.. Air ... 44.4 M .. 94.7) oj i be gt eS Bohn me: 18° Mansa Gh |. 343/e reef and production of his new c pts. ... on en "Bound’ to Soda’ Use [Cantetoupe, bun 2 ot: Serden ss, a emt Ward’; 30 Pine of | ae pore Wap. 352 Murray'¢p ... 381 . MM. ver cvccecvesess r ‘s . ~ ie . Federa Troops or Watermelon, bu... ..ceccsrcceess rise M wialswie 69.4 one ae S. mi r Brun Balke ... 47.2 Nat Cas a3i/ Pe ’ ew Little Rock Jntegration VEGETABLES Buad Co... 16 Nat Dalry --- $63 4 = SS esescgecde eessese = Cal Pack coe re Nat ate, 106.4 | : ee ee ee Sl Selum a 2 145 No Am : LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPD |Gaulifiower, doa.“ ns..s020.5000055 300] S8mpd Soup's. 426 Nor Pac... 46.2 pees 'Goy, -Faubus warned Se a a a4 Gdn Pac ..... 283 “Onis oii 40.4 . ; that if marshals were used| Corn’ fezet*S pecs) MO Seteue Go. eg Coen She aa if uC ion [0 he . sWeet, 5 doz. .......... rae : ; s supplier watching the others to see |to enforce Negro integration any-|Cucumbers, dill size ,bu. ......... Bh 22 Pac GeE 88) ne walks 00/ Cy ee fe Ae a we » ta hd pl 51 “bound to offer opposition” to any |Fon'=*>! 16 1% - 80, param Pict .. 422| August Trend, Down y eeeeenerere Cluett PRP @ 42.2 P rke Da 91 6 . ‘ogg Be J toa 60 ib... **7- 3-09] Socs Cola ....116 Bernt, oe *.! 95.6 c d S Faubus could amswer such 4| peppers hot ou. --.....cce.cccc., 1.48) SoepPam = GLE pe 1 443, COMpore to ame move by the federal government |Persley Root, (bchs.) doz. .......... 1.00 Colum Gas ... 19.7 Pepsi Cola .. 24. M h L Y : Potatoes, (bag) 50 Ibs. ........s... 1.10 Gon gage 7 33 Ptizer . ..... 73.3 ont ast Year a bill 4 ga by the Arkan- red. (bebs.) dog. e.-s =~ 90 oe Pe ae paewe D 843 sas Legislature a special anti- ; . (bebs. - <@Consum Pw 62 Philco . ..... . integration session last week. The|squash. summer. ‘Se bu. o"..2- $9] SP# Ft (i) 837 Phil Pet... 86°) DETROIT i — The auto indus- ; : ’ . Toc’ . 64. bill would allow Faubus to close a ee (bskt.) 14° ibe.” i$ Cont Can . 49.6 Pure Oil ..... 383|try’s big three all report sharp re- ps, topp Shane SCHERE SDUCOC Cont COP&S . 11.5 RCA oS ogy FP : - ti for this Ai any integration-threatened school. canees Cont Mot ioe Repub st! ... 58.3/ductions in production for this Au- Faubus has not signed the bill but) ....oce bu ec eececeeeee no| Copper, Rng. 2¢ i Rex Drug --- 3° {gust as compared to August of last sees ‘q Rey Tod B ef Aszoed b 28 Dut... 44.2/ 7 Baloway i ce ae —_ were the —_ for t ap 3 e first eight months of this year 45 Mf .. Down, Ct 4 psogdeg or ag jas against. the same period last in| cele: doz. 1.75| East Kod 3 Simmons «...+ 84) Fora, Chrysler and G 1M ry cabbage, doz. ....... ae e: 2 peens --- 0 era eneral Mo- + €atennl nf |Endive pleached. bu. .............. 50) Ea’ M Sinclair ..... + €0 ashington nor local federal of-|Eiarcie, he hear S3e| El & Mus ..°. 54 Socony |. : {}4|tors all made their reports yester- would comment on Faubus’ |Lettuce, head. (crate) 3 doz. ...... 3.50) Emer ad --- $3 Soe Eee *lday. Romaine, BU. ..cccscscccensvecsese Le . * soe : pete) _“--- 22 Sper BA. By] Generel Motors said it built 70,- Pairb Mor ... 40 “| do not want to provoke an “ 8 i Bg HS OM Cal “ts Aba] 5a7 cars in of asaitiet Suthadn State ink nd Eggs ord Mot .°..416 Std Oil Ind hi nd 17,278 trucks. In Au- salle ar gen Rootry anc’ tae Freept gut. H4 Sid OU BY i gust of 1957 it ‘built 246,698 pas governments, - POULTRY e ‘ a : “but I am bound to offer | DETROIT sept 2 (AP) Kees f0..| gerdzer Den . 414 Stevens, JP .. 23-2) conver cars and 36,606 trucks, to any such move by pte cases inc federal - state bos om -@, Sun Oil ..... . ;: Ford said it built 85,947 cars and federal_government.” | |, Wn es: rade A jumbo 58: extra | Gen Motors. 33 See Pee °: 37.2/16,976 trucks last month pared 5 Large 5 en , | rae E . 41.2 nd 26, 52 ks z nore 51%. Medium 36-37 wtd avg| Gen Tire ‘97 Sylv El Pd to 167,157 cars a cks in p pert wt calomel fo a Ss. Grade B large 47-48.| G ad: ily Temas Co... 717 the Legislature would not be used] ‘4 ,*"§, # | Browns: Grade A. extra Gilets Aa Tex @ out .. 213 /August of 1957. hinsas-a “whip” to threaten Se Goebel Br .-. 3° Thomp Pa .. s53|, Pus far this year Ford has pro- by 5 i ae araded codyear ..., a94 Timk R Bear 42.7 duced 759,519 cars and 148,485 “gd lege aes Pandy a | oe ree A, dumane S183: extre Grah Paige .. 16 Tran wer”. 93.5|trucks. For the same -period last : seis: all 3425i4- Grade B larce 36\Greyhound ... 161 Twenty Cen .. 35 jyear the production was 1,336,882 As to when he might sign the seb: bree baie: aedam |Oull OO ...... 110.7 Underwd — ... 18.5) one and 241. 206 trucks bills passed by the lawmakers, he 32¥g-38: email ‘S100% Grade B) large| Bevel Cros -. 4 Us Carbide .. 188 Chrysler rans ied Augiet crodec: said: Homestk ” 3916 un it Air Lin 29 “This integration crisis is a day- DETROIT EGGS Hooker ns Se Unit Aira, Soa Hoe ie vent of 26% caex eee to-day situation—one that needs| DETROIT, Sept. P)—Prices pald|indust Rays. 1968 Un Gas Cp “: $83 /2494 trucks compared to 112,862 is rm Douliry -b. Detroit, Ftor No. 1 qual Ing Band ... 83 US Lines ... 30 (Cars and 7,008 trucks in August of “Meanie, new opposition to in| Ze Bear™ atte EMM, esate Gop BE Rie, HE Last year / = b 137 heavy type broilers ane |Interlak Ir ... 216 US Tob ..... 27.2| Inseight months this year Ch f 33\4 Ib. avg.) whites: 18-20 b ig’ ¥y rys- tegration, in the form of the Ku parred rocks 20- 1: caponettes (over ae Pus) Mech hot Walgreen ‘\ler reports 391,385 cars and 38,726 Klux Klan, was reported in Little| 5 Ibs), 22-24. Turkeys, heavy type. young = ary -T ward Bk Pf a | Meru of the ©) hens 27-28, young toms 24. bel pple vee ine West Un Tel 24.7| trucks, Last year the eight months . |Rock, bers segrega- Int Shoe a2 Wests A Bk 256 ficures were 943,057 cars and 557,- tionist capital Citizens Council re- . Int Biiver -< ee Werle Bt ~ 88 lao trucks . E, G. |ported that at least 15 of, their Livestock Isl Crk Coal 42” Wilson & Co! 26.6| For the eight months period this Woolworth .. 48.6 e elg Ss pe -Baumgartner,-The-former-Jane jnumber had-been approached for Jacobs ....... 8.1 yay DETROIT LIVESTOCK ~}Johns Man 45 ale & Tow 303) tyear GM reported. 1,538,111- pas- Burns, the bride, is the daughter |membership. Jones & L -., 53 Young S&Ww | Palin Aene aces Mt P ee paso, 2, (AP) cate: Sa Kelsey Hay 1. 30.1 Yngst 8h & T re g/senger cars and 243,273 trucks. For an eal the late “= — The number who have joined | steers and heifers, quality rather at-|Kennecott .. 94 |the: first eight months of 1957 the ee -Metemeete’s ane the Kian is not kmown, since [Souinating with Noe mecise Cet STOCK AVERAGES production was 2,128,149 passenger , paren are | klansmen are sworn to secrecy. |choice steers 950-1100 ibs.: cows com-| NEW YORK—(Compiled by the As-|Cars and 315,710 trucks. y - Mr, and Mrs. Robert Missel of. fries sromnd) 30 Ber cont of “ren: aced| sociated Press): er sup avera, choice 1417 North Lane, Rochester. The |. The Rev. Wesley Pruden, presi-| fom” 4 loads high choice 96-1195. 1b Indust. Ralls vil, stocks. newlyweds will make their home |dent of the Citizens Council, said/ steers 27.75; two loads mixed high qheise Net change .....+13 2 i Display Will Feature 7 he had been toki by one of the and prime 1060 Ibs. and 1160 Ibs. 28.00:|Noon Wed. ... 2772 1122 on Third street in Rochester. ry 0 good to high choice 700-900 Ib. heifers|Prev day ..... 275.9 112.0 819 1458 3 Photographic Products organizers, from Dallas Tex., that 24.50-26.25: load high choice 850 Ib. heif- | Week BGO ..000. 75.1 1118 81.4 be ed ‘ = Ts 26.50: utility and s ard steers | Month AZO os...271.8 108.8 823 the 50 members needed to obtain! scarce. few sales 21.00-24.50: few utility) Year ago ......2597 1145 1726 11 Fourt tati f pho- For OFf Suppl a national charter was reached|*24, standard heifers | 20.50-26.25; few|1998 high 1... Wh Mgt $27 les, ee ee nM! upplics See sahanen a that the Littl k uulity ‘cows 1050" 00: few strong wie ioe low .+++..234.7 809 729 156.6 tographic equipment firms will be eg ce egw heal eta ae 19ST low .cccl..2960 ‘te 662 1se9/00 hand at a photographic show BACKENSTOSE BOOK STORE = We stop for nothing when policyholders ~ “need service =~ Insurance is concerned with in a 40-degree arc to facilitate ease of entry and exit. The center front seat is stationary. _ the things closest to your heart — your family, home, ‘business, car and other per- sonal possessions. So natu- rally, you expect prompt, personal insurance service when you need it. And we go overboard to see that you getit. + J THATCHER, PATTERSON & WERNET 7 Community Bank Bldg. Phone FE 2-9224 a i, ge \ 3 offered as option, extra cost equip- announced today it will have swivel | front seats in its 1959 model cars, ito be introduced in mid-October. {accommodation for-both driver-and this week. The U.S. Supreme Court will meet Sept, 11 to decide on the question of whether the Negroes will be admitted to Central when Sept, 15. Chrysler Cars to Offer Swivel Front Seats DETROIT (® — Chrysler Corp. | + The seats, * * providing individual front seat passenger, glide outward | A conveniently placed lever controls the outward movement of the seat as the door is opened. The driver or passenger seats himself with legs outside the car, lifts his feet and with the weight of his body swivels the seat back into locked position. Paul C. Ackerman, engineering vice ptesident, said the. swivel seats are as strong structurally and anchored as securely in the car as are conventional seats. = * * * The seats will be standard equip- ment on Plymouth Sport Fury models and the DeSoto Adventurer and Chrysler 300. They will be ment on most other models. Klan will be organized sometime ; the school starts its fall term °*™% feeder lambs steady: cull to choice slaughter sheep 4.50-10.00: a feeder) 3 ‘Transportation Service ‘Offered to Bay City BAY CITY. (UPI) — The Bay, - | City Commissiog. last ‘night heard two new offers for public trans- } portation systems in the city. [2 service in the city’ May 14, it has purchased busses from Bal- cer Bros. routes for company is also starting an inter- city bus service between Bay City and nearby Essexville.. Crisis Spurs Weddings Salabie 600. Butchers 25 cents| 19.25-19.75. Mixed grades sows 300-400 18.00-18.75: 400-600 ib. 17.00-17.75. Vealers: Salable 300, steady; choice and prime vealers 31.00-36.00: standard good 25.90-3100; cull and utility 16.00-25 . Sheep: Salable 1,000. Largely a slau ter sheep run; moderate showing feeder lambs. Slaughter lambs in limited sup-| ply, not fully established ep and load choice and prime partly shorn 4-H club lambs 25.50: most g and choice 60-75 Ib. lambs 19.50-21.50. “Baléer” Bros.” dis@oritinued’ bis| | leav-| ing this city of 52,000 without a/ transit system. | However, Bay City policemen said they plan to establish six! routes of commuter service to central Bay City. And the Bay City Cab Co. said| and will start seven school pupils. The -TAIPEI, Formosa (UPI) — The Formosa Strait crisis sent the marriage rate soaring today—212 Nationalist Chinese soldiers were married in Taipei City Hall in a mass ceremony solemnized by Premier Chen Cheng. ts U.S. No| 2 & 3 260-300 Ib. ‘Purchase Book Tower jbeing presented from 2 to 10:30 ip.m, Thursday at Pontiac Federal Business Notes Robert L. Saffell of 584 Town- isend Ave., Birmingham, has been, named account manager of the , Pontiac Motor Di- F Vision account at) = MacManus, John} #@ & Adams, Inc.,! * Bloomfield Hills ¢ savertis ing) © agency. * He joined & the agency in Au- gust, 1954. He has been traffic man- ‘ager, automotive traffic supervisor, and post, will be responsible for co- ‘ordination of all phases of Pontiac advertising, including print, radio and television. SAFFELL | DETROIT (P— A group of 10 Detroit investors has purchased the Book Tower and annex, third largest skyscraper in Detroit. De-| tails of the. transaction were an-. nounced Tuesday by Irwin I. Cohn, president of Book Tower Co, The investor’s, group headed by Emanuel J. Hatris, prominent De- troit Tea] estate financier. Terms of the sale were not disclosed. 4 Canada has a land area of 3,846,- in his new] |} ‘Savings and Loan Building, 761 W. /Huron St. Some 24 photographic products | will be displayed at the public ses- sion, according to John L. Hascall Jr., owner of Eppert’s Camera jShop, 57 W. Huron St., which is | sponsoring the show. Brothers End Lite as They Lived It —Die Together brothers were aging bachelors — Roman 65 and George 63. Their health was poor. Each had to use a cane, They had lived together for many years. And they worked to- gether, operating a little company that ‘manufactured bridal veils. Business had been bad for years, * * a Last night the Rebush brothers made a token $25 payment to an- other manufacturer in’ their office building who had befriended them and lent them money from time to time. with the world as they joked with their benefactor. * * * - They sat down at a desk in their little sixth-floor office in the mil- linery district and typed a note: “We have no money, no relatives, no friends. No religious service. Bury. us in. potter's field.” With that, they went to a win- dow and leaped to death—to- gether. Stole ‘59 Car Photos, Gets Probation, Fine Placed on three years probation and assessed $100 court costs was James M. Crainiof Pontiac, who pleaded guilty to stealing pictures of the 1959 Dodge from a Bloom- field Hills art studio, Crain. 25, of 55 Parkdale St.. received the sentence yesterday Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland. He was charged with larceny from a building. Crain pleaded guilty Aug. 18 of taking five photographs of the new Dodge from the New Center Studios, 70 E. Long Lake Rd. He then attempted to have the owner of the firm, Charles Carson, pay him $2,000 for the return of the pictures. Police said he had threatened to turn the photographs over to General Motors Corp., if he didn’t receive the money. Police broke up the plan when they arrested Crain as he picked up ‘‘pay-off’’ money planted by police. or passenger about to enter the car; there will be new gadgets designed to improve gasoline mile- NEW YORK (AP)—The Rebush ° The brothers appeared at peace 5 afternoon from Oakland Countv| - es ’ , Lodge Calendar Re ular communication Tee : a No. yt F&AM. PA ihicction of two board ionere: Marion B. Holmes, Shake Neh n Brief Ralph D. Zolman, 41, of 1478 Vinewood Ave., pleaded guilty yes- terday to drunk driving before Mu- nicipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum. He was sentenced to serve two days in jail and a $100 fine or 22 days. NEWS IN BRIEF Roger G. Vaughan, 19, of 487 Omar St., pleaded guilty yester- day to reckless driving. Judge Ce- cil B. McCallum placed him on probation for four months and or- dered him to attend driver's school, GM Truck Near Average Output Other. Divisions Fall Far Below Production Level of August ‘57 General Motors Truck & Coach Division was the only GM automo- tive division with August produc- tion approaching the output for the same month of 1957, a production report indicated today. During the past month, GM pro- duced 87,825 passenger cars and trucks in the United States and Canada, compared with 283,304 dur- ing the same month of 1957. 1958, production was pegged at 1,811,384, compared to 2,444,739 for the same months last year. Completing the model year, Pon- tiac had 35 units off the lines in August, compared to 29,129 for August last year. * * * Division ‘and their monthly and eight-month ‘totals are: Lower-Priced Stocks Favored NEW YORK (® — The stock market continued its advance in active trading early today. Lower-priced stocks remained in * * * Among pivotal issues the gains ranged from fractions to about a point. A number of stocks were unchanged. The market was nearing its uation’ in Detroit caused some uncertainty. The ticker tape was late for a period of fourdminutes, lagging a minute behind the_pace of floor transactions. Pri re mixed at the opening then gradually tilt- ed to the upside. * * * Artloom, whose gyrations yes- terday brought a restrictive ruling from the New York Stock Ex- change, was unchanged at 23 on an opening block of 12,000 shares then showed a gain of more than 2 points in later trades. Schenley was up 1% at 32% on an opener of 5,000 shares. . American Motors and Stude- baker-Packard continued active and fractionally higher. Allied Chemical rose about a point. Smaller gains were made by Goodyear, International Niekel, dak, Westinghouse Electric, Lor- illard, Standard Oil (New Jersey) and Merck. ‘The U.S. Air Foree’s F106A is the world’s fastest and highest- flying all-weather jet interceptor. It’s fop speed has not been re- vealed. But, the B58, another U.S. Air Force bomber, has a speed officially acknowledged as more fhan 1,300 miles per hour. Toanne Granger of Oxtord Weds in Methodist Church Ceremony’ 000 square miles, but.a population of only 17- million, about that of} « 4New York State, MRS.’ JOHN P. LOVELL OXFORD — Oxford Methodist Church was the scene Saturday afternoon. of:.the. marriage of. Jo-| anne Creighton Granger to John P. Lovell, The candlelight rite was performed by the Rev. Fred Clark before an altar banked with sprays of greenery, shaggy dahlias and bouquets of carnations. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Granger of 4494 Granger Rd., Oxford. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Nyla’ M. Lovell of Madison, Wis., Frank Lovell of Racine, Wis. _The new Mrs. Lovell wore a gown of. white Swiss organdy, featuring an appliqued inset in the back bodice , with a short train forming from a cascade of pleats, Her - veil fell from a pill box of matching ma- terial, She designed her own gown as and Maid of honor was the bride’s sister, Sara Jane. Attendants were | Miss..Eleanor. Sanders..of Birming- hain and Miss Suzanne Betts of Bay City, cousin of the bride. David L. Matson of Madison was the best man, while the ushers were Sam Tagart of Milwaukee and ist Lt. Walter C. McCrillis of Bunker Air Force Base, Ind. The reception was held in the church parlors immediately after the ceremony. Following their honeymoon in| northern Wisconsin, the couple will make their. home in Madison, where the bridegroom is doing graduate work in political science at the University| of Wisconsin. He is a, graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. A graduate of Michigan State University, the bride, has been an|_ art teacher in the Royal Oak well as those worn by others in the bridal party. All were made in ‘Ba at i eg school system, “She also taught for a year in Army -schools in Baum- , |holder, Gena: For the first eight months of | American Cyanamid, Eastman Ko-| | a “i i Forms New Union — BOISE, ‘dake (AP)—A group of dissident Teamsters Union’ mem- bers yesterday formed a new un- ion, Atty. Tony Fredericks said the new group—General Truckers Assn, of Ameriga—would try to gain recognition as bargaining agent for employes of Consolidat- ed Freightways in the Utah-Idaho Teamster district. * x,* : He said more than 75 per cerit of Consolidated’s teamster em- ster employes have applied for membership in the new organiza- tion. The firm is one of those idled by the Teamsters dispute with cen- tral California truckers. x *&* * Fredericks said the group was formed as a result of growing dis- satisfaction of Consolidated em- ployes with Teamsters representa- tion. CHARLENE MCCARTHAR Graduating from Henry Ford Hospital School of Nursing Sat» urday will be Charlene McCarth- ar, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald McCarthar of Lincoln- August August 8 Mos. shire street, Waterford Town- 198 1957 1978 1957 : Chevy ..61,865 137,206 885,547 1,067,830; Ship, Charlene is a graduate of Pont. .. 36 29,129 136,71 253,890 j j Qids -... . “2 : 39847 203.176 284.850 Waterford Township High School. ‘UiCc: ve 5 ' K NOTICE OF PUBLIC. SALE —— ar wewae apna! wires Plesesr py hereby given by the unders sign at on d pt Coach .. 4.277 5,508 42.635 48,583 signed that on Wedn sap § a Bivd., East, Pontiac, Oakland County, | Michigan, public sale of a 1957 Chrysier 4 Dr., bearing serial number N5729337, iwill be held for cash to the orn bidder. bag = oe thereof may be mad at 245 East, Pontiac, Oakland Marroaped _— the place of storage. UNIVERSAL C.L.T. CREDIT CORP. Room 401, 28 N. Saginaw, Rontise. i an McBRIDE, Age 6-827 - m Sept. 2, 3, ‘68. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Notice is hereby given by the under<- ;Signed that on Wednesday, "Bept. 21 1958, ‘at 10 o’clock a.m. at 147 8. Saginaw, ‘Pontiac, Oakland a Michigan, ublic sale of a 1957 Ford 4 Dr., bear- ng serial number DIGG103031 held. for cash to the highest Inspection thereof may be made at 147 8. Saginaw, Pontiec, Oakland County, Michigan, the place of storage. Dated 8-29-58. z UNIVERSAT, CLT. By C. E. HARTLEY Jr. Agent 236-78801 Sept. 2, 3, °58. high for the year once again. | NOTICE or PUBLIC BALE Business news remained favor- 1954 Buic ek 3 P teh at 0. 2 ile Public aa & e edness able over-all, but stiffening in- | 4.) Sept. 10 1008 ct 10°50 acm: at 6 terest rates and the labor sit- Foatiae Bisie. Bank Bidg., Pontiac, ichigan. Sept. 2, 3, °38. Death Notice ~_— ALEKS, SEPT. |. 1958, FRANK AN- thony, 4041 Walton, Drayton Plains; beloved infant son of Joseph ‘3. and Syivia N. Aleks: dear brother of Mary Jo end Joseph J. Aleks Jr; dear grand- eon of Mr. and rs. Prank Nograsek and Anthony Aleks. Graveside service was held at 11 a.m. today at Catholic section of Lakeview Cemetery with Pev. Fr, FP. J. Delaney officiating. Puneral srrangements by Coats Fyneral Home. 3141 Sashabaw Rd., Dray- ton Plains GROOVER, AUG. 24, 1958. MAU- rice A., 641 Hurd Rd.. Ortonville; age 49° beloved son of Afthir R and“ Hettie W. Groover; dear brother of Perry Groover, teach Bernice Francis and Elm Gage. Puneal service will "be held Friday, Sept. 5. at 2 p.m. from the Bossardet-Reid Funeral Home with Rev. Fred Clark and Rev. Ellis Hart officiating. Interment in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, Oak- wood, Mich. Mr. Groover will le in state at the Bossardet-Reid Funeral Home, Oxford. GROOVER, AUG. 24, 1958, JOSE- phine A., 641 Hurd Rd., Ortonville: age 46. Puneral service Hie Be held Fridav. Sept. 5. at 2 from the Bossardet-Reid Fanersi Home with Rev. Fred Clark and Rev. Ellis Hart officiating. Inter- ment in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery Oakwood, Mich. Mrs. Groover will He in state at the Bossardet-Reid Puneral Home, ae , AUG 1968, CAF CARL A, ; oles) 641 Hurd Rd. Puneral services = be hele nae, Sept. 5, from en Bossatdet-Reid Puscrat Home with Rev. Pred Clark and Rev. Ellis Hart. ‘officiating. Inter- ment in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery,— akwood, Mich. Carl and Paul will He in state at the Bossardet- Reid Funeral Home, Oxford. OLSON, SEPT. 1, 1988, JAMES H H., 648 E. Lincoln, Madison Heights: age 24; beloved hushand of Mrs, Joyte B. Olson: dear father of Connie,L., Bruce and Michael] Ol- son; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. William L. Olson; dear brother of William R. Olson: grandson of Mrs. Goldie M. Crelley. Funeral service will be held Thursday, Sept. 4, at 2 p.m. from Voorhees- Soe Chapel with Rev. Earl e ape in state at Voorhees-Siple Puneral __Home after 8 p.m, today. BOURNS, SEPT. 1,. 1958, PATRICIA nn zi. —— Rad,, Milford; ie eet Wuehter of Joseph and poretar, some dear grand- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Sat and Mr. and Mrs, James Booth. Graveside service will be held today at 3:30 Grove _ Cemetery, Rev. a Linon officiating. Puner arrangements by obs gene -Bird Funeral Home, Mil- noe AND, SEPT. 1958, SARAH 55.N. Roseliwel: age 67; dear me ther of Mrs, ‘Henry Stormer, William Robertson and Robertson; Georgina Harrop and Reineir and Frederick Tapson; also survived by 15 grandchildren and 13 great- greaadchiidren. Funeral service will held eeserdar. Sent. 6, ab 1:30 p.m. from All Saints Episcopal Chureh with interment in White 1 Cemet The Order of “i mar, we have their serv- ice at i iday at Sparks- Griffin *poaerel 9 Home. Mrs, Hol- jand will be at the Bparks-Griffin Set Home until noon Satur- SEPT. 2 es. {GES ea Dr., pS déar poe " is ead * eyser, ineral service w held = Sept. 5, at 2 3m. from van Giatkston, wit ment te in White Lake Cemetery, “Miss Keyser will tie in state at the Sharp Puneral Home after 2 p.m. today. fast z, te : ke: | ! ————