a Ee s : ft " . A : : the Weather . ‘U.8., Weather Bureau Ferecast Cool tenight. - EKair tomorrow. (Details Page 2%) eT ee ee eeeeeeyeEyEEEeEeEEEEE———————————E- eee eet 17th YEAR - kkkke PONTIAC, UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL —_} ~ Raise Giant Crucifix — RISING INTO THE SKY — This giant bronze figure of Christ is shown here | crane yesterday afternoon for a@ So foot redvood ¢: Catholic Shrine. usSS at a The huge cruci Sa et PLACED ON THE CROSS placed on the cross and secured looking Burt Lake in the Indian area | Michigan Bell- Planning veing hoisted by placement upon n Indian River fix, weighing 18 tons, was create world. Ps noted sculptor from Birmingham. is beheved to be the largest of its kind in the Special Pontiac Press Photos ‘d by Marshall Fredericks, world- The crucifix Tall Statue of Christ Litted High INDIAN RIVER (# — A towering crucifix, which its creator terms the largest in the world, stands today at the Catholic shrine out-| side this northern lower Michigan town. A 31-foot tall bronze figure of Christ was placed yesterday on a 55-foot cross of redwood that stands atop the shrine’s Calvary: Hill on a bluff overlooking Burt Lake. The height of the cross is the equivalent of almost five sto- ries. Placing of the figure yester- day climaxed four years of work by sculptor Marshall Fredericks of Birmingham. Fredericks has plans eventually. to add 14-fooi figures ot the Apostle John, Mary Magdalene and Mary, the moth- er of Christ, at the foot of the cross. The redwood cross, made from a single California, giant tree, weighs 14 tons, tons. There is a span of 23 feet between the nails in the figure’s outstretched hands. Christ wears no crown of thorns because Fredericks wanted ‘‘to eliminate the suffering and agony for the observer, and give the face an expression of great peace and strength.’ * * * Neither doeS the body bear a spear wound, Fredericks said re- search shéwed the wound was in- * flicted after death and he wanted — Four-ton figure of Christ is by workmen. Today, it stands River, northern Michigan resort t Big Expansion for Area . Anticipating continued g rowth in the Pontiac area, Michigan Bell Telephone Co. is planning an expansion program here to service 3,10 of next year. — "+ The company is also planning more private, one- ‘creased facilities to mcet. The Weather Ahead? an expected demana for Just Plain Pleasant Sunny skies and not much change’ in temperature is the weekend forecast for the Pontiac area. To- night will be fair and cool with a low of 55. : * * * Northerly winds at 10-20 miles an hour will diminish tonight. Part-| ly cloudy is the outlook for Mon-' day. 4 + * * * Fair and not much change in terriperature is the Sunday forcast] for all of Lower Michigan. The! ‘bureau said Upper Michigan will be partly cloudy and. warmer, * * * ‘ Sixtyeseven was the lowest tem- perature in downtown Pontiac pre- ceding 8 a.m. At 1 p.m. the read- ing Was. 76. Tom Sawyer Censored LISBON, {(UPD—The film Spain “Tom Sawyer's Advent. | 0 new customers by the end to portray Christ as he looked just before he died, ‘‘when he reached Thailand Worried Over Laos Attacks SAIGON, Viet Nam (P — Thai- land’s Foreign Minister Thanat Khoman’ said today he is con- cerned over attacks on Laos: army posts in the north by Communist guerrillas. “We are all worried about , events in Laos,’’ he said. ‘Not party telephones and. in: more long-distance tele-. phone service. | These are the main aims of a| proposed $2,800,000 expansion pro-| gram in the Pontiac area during the next 18 months,’ details of. which were disclosed today by) Raymond H. Storm, Pontiac dis- trict manager. | ipo Snag are budgeted | pa as of a $171 million expan- | sion program in Michigan, he | said. | ~The company plans to spend $1,011,000 here for equipment on customers’ premises, Storm said. Most of the equipment will be for new customers, but some will be replacements for existing cus- tomers, he added. S NEEDS FOR FUTURE ‘ In order to handle the 3,100 new customers forecasted, the company is scheduled to spend $312,000 in new central office equipment in Pontiac, Storm said. t & Storm pointed out thafJittle, if any, of the expenditures will go to meet existing demands for new, or tures” openéd) here today, Span- | Détter, telephone service. ‘ unsuitable for children ung@r 12 ‘ish authorities Sir gl as | hae old. . j “Expansion in the past en- abled us to keep up with present (Continued of Page 2, Col, 8) only Thailand, but I am sure many other countries area are worried.” The Communist activity began recently in the northern Laos Province of Samneua. Laotian and were reported battling more than 1,000 Communist rebels. | The Laotian government charges! the figure four in this | \Matual Respect or Era of Fear’ ASSOCIATED PRESS ele ik 3 Nixon hurls Warning at Re Motorboat | Navy frogman. Escaped Lifer Being Hunted — Set Up Road Blocks in U. P. for Man Convicted Here in Slaying State Police and sheriff's depu- ‘ties manned road blocks across ‘Michigan's Upper Peninsula today ‘as the setrch for an escaped Mar- quette Prison lifer continued. The manhunt was concentrated in wooded areas near Marquette. Police in Minnesota and neigh- | boring Wisconsin also were alert- ed for 29-year-old Mike Gisondi who broke out of Marquette Pris- on yesterday by hiding in a gar- bage truck. Gisondi and Harold Hummel /were convicted of first degree mur- ider in Oakland County Circuit C6urt here and sentenced to life imprisonment March 9, «1953. The two were convicted of slaying two men in a brawl! at a Hazel Park tavern on Aug. 16, 1952 mel in Arkansas, Both waived ex- tradition Michigan. | Gisondi, a native of Aliquip- pa. Pa., drew a knife on a trusty truck driver once outside the walls of the prison, The driver _ said Gisondi fled into wooded land just south of U.S. 41. f | Prison officials said it was not |known how Gisondi got into the garbage truck. But Warden Ray- mond Buchkoe said the fugitive _‘deubtless had a shield ready and ‘lay down behind it because prison guards probed the load with iron bars before releasing it.” Prison officials said they were certain Gisondi spent the night in wooded areas near the prison. How- ‘the highest pinnacle of his exist. CV¢T: heavy road blocks were main- atop the shrine’s 20-foot Calvary Hill, 75 feé@t in the air, over- ‘| ee # exis itained at highway points near the *Michigan-Wisconsin border and road blocks were set at the Straits of Mackinac Bridge. Drugged by Rock ‘n’ Roll KNOXVILLE, Tenn. «tUPI)— Disc jockey Jack Hill plans to ' stop playing rock ‘n’ rol records so early in the morning. Hill put a rock ‘n’ roll number on early yesterday morning and promptly fell asleep. It took his relief man. | constant phone calls and severai | Squad cars to get him baek in | the groove. t A-H Fair to Open Aug. 11 | Oakland County's 1959 4H Fair | will open Tuesday, Ang. 11, at “troops moved into the area Friday| te Pontiac 4-H Fairgrounds, not next Tuesday as indicated in yes- terday’s Pontiac Press. the Red insurgents are equipped | by Communist North Viet Nam. He Recovers .Fast JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI)+ Arthur Mack, 32, was treated for a bullet wound in the leg in ree- ord time. He was released from a hospital after he pulled up his pants leg, took off his artificial leg: and twisted it. A_ bullet dropped to the floor. ‘I told you I was shot in the leg,” he said. r IS Rae tons, Lee: f In Today s Bet Fegs sachin jae es pe Te Charch News ........., .. 8 Comics 22.0... wees, 21 Editorials ................... + Home. Section .........,. 15-20 Obituariées .. & ee re 12-13 Stay Alive |. ee. Theaters veo. 9001 TV & Radio Programs 23:29 Wilson, Eart ‘.. «10 6-7 “Afraid the Cost Will By MAX E. SIMON 1 Six Liftle League baseball players, one with a cast. on his foot, were rescued after being tossed into water | 10 feet deep yesterday when a ‘large inboard motorboat in which they were riding suddenly flipped over on Lake | Sherwood in Commerce Township. Tragedy was averted by the boys’ coach and an ex- | and were returned to Overturns but Six Little League | Baseballers Rescued — Vi | The coach, Robert Weinberg, 33, of 1187 Pleasure, ——-—+*St., Milford, swam to the| laid of eight-year-old Ricki 'Yeager who was sitting in 'the rear of the boat when it flipped over. The Yeager boy's leg was in a cast, the result of being injured in an auto accident a week earlier. Weinberg kept the floundering bey’s head above water until other boats on the lake pulled | them both out. Clark Jeffers, 38, a Lake Sher- | /wood maintenance man, was work-! ‘ing on shore when he heard shouts | | from the water. TREATED FOR SHOCK An ex-Navy y frogman, Jeffers, rushed to a rowboat, reached the, capsized craft, and dove in after! ;Bruce Erickson, 9. who was, trapped in an air pocket ‘under the boat. { * * * Weinberg was treated for shock. ‘by Dr. W. D. Hackett after the | ‘incident. The youths were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ferryman, 4815 Surfwood St., Commerce Township. The Ferrymans, whose son Tom, | is a member of the team, had t Both fled the state. Gisondi was/'PVited the boys to the home "al Governors Con erence | captured in California and Hum- celebrate the complehion® of the q . , baseball season. Nine persons were in the boat when it tipped over. Occupants were six Little Leaguers: Mrs. Ferryman’s father, G. H. Cole of Middletown, Ohio, 69-year-old re- tired associate director of research for the Armco Steel Corp.; Wein- berg, and the Ferryman’s 13-year. old son, Frank Jr. Weinberg was bringing the boat into shore when the accident oc- curred. Za ? a a The 18-foot, Century cabin cruis- (er, valued at about $6,000, was; approximately 100 yards from the | beach when it turned over. , The cause of the ‘accident is unknown. Milford Police said | that Weinberg was near hysteria | when he returned to the shore. | | “Where are they? Where are, they? Are they all okay?” police | quoted him as shouting over and over, x ‘ xt ke _ Cole, who was visiting the Fer-! /rymans, shouted instructions to the , boys near the boat while Weinberg jswam to Yeager. x & * “All of the boys were calm. We, |were lucky,"’ Cole said. “Most of. (them could swim and the boat. _was equipped with cushion life pre- | servers.’ | A few minutes after the ac- cident, the boat sank. | The Little Leaguers themselves, were unaware of: the near trag-| i edy. When they returned to shore, jtheir first questions were about i" possibility of recovering their! (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) | | Go Up’ By PETE LOCHBILER “I'm afraid the cost will go up.” That was City Manager Walter K. Willman's glum reaction to the State Health Department's deci- sion to scrap Pontiac’s present plans’ for more sewage treatment facilities and call for new ‘ones. How. far-reaching the decision will”"be depends on what steps the city and state agree are necessary eee \for Pontiac to curb Clinton River pollution in compliance with an or- der being readied by the Water Re- sources Commission. Up to Thursday, the state had been giving tacit approval to the plan for $3,300,000 in improve- ments which Pontiac voters three times rejected in as many years. ' The $3,300,000 plan had been ap- proved by the State Health De- partment as recently 4s this spring’ and was deemed adequate to cope with Pontiac's pollution Sroblera.| PROBLEM WORSE “Now it appears that Pontiac's! pollution problem is far worse! than the Héalth Department sus-! pected,” Dr. Albert E. Heustis,| state health commissioner, stated! yesterday. Willman said the first step in. grappling with the change in the| pollution picture would be a series! of conferences with the Health De-| partment, | a er ee He said that the city's engineer consultants, Jones and Henry, would be called in. The Toledo firm drew up the present .plans for treatment plant expansion “We will have our consultants tonfer with the State Health De. partment to determine just what ic) Speaks Bluntly in Farewell to Soviet People Hints He’d Like Visit to U: S. by Khrushchev, but Stays Uncommitted Leaves Michigan | MOSCOW (#i—Vice Presi- |dent Nixon warned Soviet 'Premier Nikita Khrush- ichev today of an “era of fear, suspicion and tension” ‘if Russia tries to commu- nize foreign countries. | In a> farewell speech broadcast by radio and tele- vision, Nixon called for a “just peace based on mu- tual respect rather than the peace of surrender or dictation by either side.” Nixon spoke out in blunt terms in summing up the results of his nine days of good will talks and | travel inside Russia. “Putting it bluntly, beth of our peoples want peace but both of us also possess great strength | and much as we want peace, | neither of us can or will tolerate AP Wirephoto s ’ LET’S HEAD SOUTH — The writing on the plane (partially | ao pushed around,” Nixow obscured) reads ‘Air National Guard.’ Gov. Williams was granted | S#'¢- permission to use an ANG plane to fly to the Governors’ Confer- He hinted he favored inviting ‘Khrushchev to visit the United ence in Puerto Rico after a squabble raised by Rep. Alvin_Bentley | : ‘States but stopped short of saying (R-Mich). Williams is shown leaving Lansing's airport yesterday for the conference. Departing with Williams are (from left) “yer iv pt « Si , H ay" Ireace SPeCre , " Executive Secre tary Sidney af Woolner, Press Serr ars oe ‘to Washington, -_ Weber and Jack Euthrich, a State Police aide. Col. Howard E. “| 5 i * * Derby (in white suit), acting state adjutant general, sees them off. Nixon noted that First Deputy Williams Takes Spotlight 22" ‘ident Eisenhower when he returns Frol R. Kozlov have’ visited the United States and he added sig- inificantly: “We should explore ways of in- creasing contacts of this type.” Nixon pledged that the United States would strive unceasinglty for peace even though Khrush- -| chey and American leaders ‘dis- } | agreed sharply” on key world SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (UPI)—Michigan’s Gov. G. problems. ‘Mennen Williams was due here today with bathing |_ Nixon's speech was carried on a — ; : . “ |TV network extending in a radius Suit and briefcase for some time in the sun and the of about 300 miles around Moscow national spotlight. where there are several million t cease . ’ A ry i | Williams, the nation’s senior governor, was prepared ve vching ons ed te worm ~~ *for a prominent role in the union. . [sist annual Governors’ | IMPORTANT STEPS 2nd Death Laid ‘Conference. 4, It was impossible to estimate j . . 7 r | The 48-year-old potential candi- the total number of viewers and ba . to Poorly Cooked date for the Democratic presiden- listeners. build . tial. nomination brought along, As important steps toward build- Hom e-Canning charts, mimiographed statements) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) ae and other materials prepared for! = IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (AP) — delivery at what he hopes will be! The paralyzing poison in a jar of! national forum. i | f home-canned beets claimed _ its} | second victim Friday night. Of the, _ He alse had a two-man task . four who survive, one is near) force to help promote his pro- death, two are in serious condi. &T@™—and himself, a if nt tion and the last may be out of ~ * * | danger. “We have a very attractive pack- | : x ke age,” said his executive secretary, . : All six were felled by dreaded Sidney H. Woolner. ‘‘Nobody is go_| Traffic Deaths i Past botulism — a nerve-attacking poi- ing to miss a sale.” | Month at 126; Figure Is son produced by bacteria which x & . grow in improperly cooked food.| Williams, who will be attending | Serious Setback A doctor here calls it one of the his 11th Governors’ Conference, | most deadly poison’ substances*was scheduled to arrive late in the EAST LANSING &® — Death known to man day on a National Guard plane reaped an increased toll on Michi- Fifteen-year-old Wanda Nelson that left part of its original cargo gan highways for the fourth con- died in her iron lung Friday even- behind because of a controversy secytive month during July, State ing. Early Thursday, Aaron Gru-,over National Guard regulations. Police reported today. well, 74, a east Idaho farmer, he also’ Woolner and Press Secretary | There were 126 traffic deaths in ted. "| Paul W. Weber accompanied Wil- the state during the past month, liams, who originally planned te a six per cent increase over the “ | als + . - |119 killed in the same month a an’t 1 also bring his three children, le- | 11 C Win ‘Em All | gal adviser Alfred B. Fitt and |year ago. Delayed death reports VIENNA, Austria (®—Three | SPeechwriter John Murray on the (are expected to swell the total. men are suing the official Vienna | ard plane. weatherman for the’ price “of | Williams changed his plans after | clothes they ruined on a rainy (Rep. Alvin Bentley (R-Mich) sug-| weekend. His forecast had been: gested to Secretary of Defense Neil! Sunny and warm. Police said there have been 732 -highway deaths so far this year, an increase of 42 over the 690 during the same period last (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) | year. The increase represented a ser- _ious setback after three years dur- |ing which the state reduced deaths more than 10 per cent annually. Willman Glum on Sewage Setup =e the first six months of the year parallels ence. For seven months, however, the Michigan death count is up six per cent. Police said the gain is dae most- ly to an increase in cars and miles traveled caused ‘by an fmprove- ment in economic conditions. a the nationwide experi- is demanded in the way of ex- ;Dec. 31, 196] as the deadline to Ld y 5 , . “Regt = pansion,” Willman said. |have sufficient facilities in oper-| “When we have reviewed our,ation to curb pollution. plans and altered them to meet the| * & Ok state’s demands, then we will] If the city doen't meet this know how much extra it is going December’s deadline or next July's to cost.” \the Water Resources Commission. Under the Water Resources Com-|is empowg¢red to seek a Circuit mission's order, the city has‘ until Court writ “backing up its orders. Dec. 1 to submit new plans that! 4¢ appeared that the city’s big will meet with Health Department! stumbling block would be finane- approval. ns | ing. Willman indicated that the city’s | power to act éndependently of the: state had been surrendered now CHICAGO W& — Some 17,000 traffic deaths—a five per cent in- crease—were reported on the na- tion's highways the first six months of 1959. . The National Safety Council. said Voters turned: down general’ ob- ligation bond issues for the plant that the Water Resources Commis-/‘" May 1957, November 1958 and| Friday the increase a sim. sion has decided to intervene. — Os past Apel: lar period in 1958 was attributed “The major decisions are. in the} Tt will be up to the City Corf-|to heavier travel. . hands of the state now,” he said. Mission to decide whether to ap-| The Couneil also reported there The Water Resources Commis- Pea! once again to voters to ap-'were 3,150 traffic. deaths in June, sion gave Pontiac until July 1,/prove general obligation bonds or the sixth st-aigkt mon‘Khy boost 1960 to award construction | cone |to let the city default on the July: 1, over a coarres punting peripd in tracts for more facilities and set; (Continued on Page 2. Col. 7)\ ‘1958. ; 4 74 See Mae Ean, Gs. s ; ¥ ; i S ;he would recommend this to Pres- _ throughout the Soviet a ie ha SE = E “a, y es oy Ss asia ~ pg Rage ec Bey eae a . ic i a F i wee oui es ‘ re e ; - ‘POMP AND CIRCUMSTANCE'’—Lining up prior to marching into Pontiac auditorium to strains of ‘Pomp and Circum- Northern and Central summer school students were among 54 receiv- ing their graduation diplomas last night. Giving stance,’’ these Pontiac Los Angeles Mayor Nixon Warns Russians Hunts Cash for Dems in Broadcast to Reds LOS ANGELES (UPI)—Confi- dent that Los Angeles will remain High School's- was Dr. Russell 39 Central Northern. education, Pontiac public schools. students graduating and 15 Pontiac Press Photo the main address, ‘‘Frontiersmen, 1959 Models,” Curtis, coordinator of secondary There were from (Continued From Page One) the site for the 1960 Democratic ing better Soviet-U.S. understand-| tem says it will carry the speech National Convention, Mayor Nor- ing, the vice president proposed ris Poulson today sought a means these steps: to raise $360,000 needed to bring’ it here. . * * -* Poulson and Bart Lytton, liaison man for the convention, met last Thursday to discuss means of rais- ing the money in case wealthy oilman Ed Pauley and the host commitiee whose job it is to raise the money fail to do so. a eo Pauley and Democratic Nation al Chairman Pau tler are en gaged in a dispute oveX5,000 tick- ets to the convention whi said was promised the ho mittee. Butler says the commit. tee can have no more than 1,500 ‘tickets. Pauley has threatened no to raise the money unless he gets the tickets. Canadian Air Cools Nation Over Weekend “""“BY The Associated Press air poured into the midcontinent’ today’ as most’ of the nation en- joyed pleasant weekend weather. | P2dio Moscow headquarters.- It) - e |was an hour-long appearance. * * * This new assault, following on, the heels of an earlier cold. air. advance, began a mercury drop’ threughout. the. region. * * x “* Vigorous thunderstofm activity which buffeted widely scattered, points Friday had narly dissi- pated in the early morning hours.’ * * * Scattered thundershowers _ still splashed parts of Missouri, Kan- sas and Arkansas. Showers and thunderstorms also were reported 1. Khrushchev and Eisenhower should agree to talk directly to each other’s peoples in “regular | radio and television broadcasts.” 2. All of Eisenhower’s foreign policy speeches should be printed in the Soviet Union in return for printing all such speeches by Khrushchev in the United States. 3. A new “sharply expanded” exchange of persons should be agreed upon along with more cul- tural exchanges. 4. The Soviet Union should stop jamming Voice of America , broadcasts to let the Soviet peo- | ve hear American views, and agree to allow more American magazines and publications into | the country. “Through this greater exchange ‘of information between our two: ‘peoples, we not only learn from | ‘each other and improve our way ‘of life but we reduce the suspicion, ‘the mistrust, the fear and misun-; |derstanding and assure the under- | * *« * Nixon spoke from a studio at The speech, in English, was interrupted at short intervals to allow a translation into Russian | by Alexander Akalovsky, an American. The idea was for him to translate it ‘‘thought by thought."’ The vice president stoutly de- fended the ring of overseas mili-| itary bases the United States and) 'its Allies have built up around the baseball caps which were still out ‘world as a defense against possible in the lake. aggression. in a three-state sector, South Car- AGREE TO END BLACKOUT olina, Georgia and Alabama. * x o* vi Russians agreed to end a al news blackout on the at 4:30 p.m. EST. The National Broadcasting Co. says it will carry excerpts at 1:30 p.m. and the full speech at 6:05 p.m. The Mutual Broadcasting Net- nym industry today could look for work says it has formally request- ward to continued production with Aluminum Sat [ a on Strike Threat | On 1949, Japan International Founders’ Days ceremonies in because doctors were not avail- “ ; : } j ; se pete | 7 JX Je. o- posi J / THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1959 ~ | The Day in Birmingham , 2 City Residents Escape _ ‘Serious Injury in Air Crash | BIRMINGHAM — Two Birming-|ing, the plane’s wing hit the power = ham residents and a Grossé Ile| pole. 7 couple escaped serious injury when | x «© ~ their small, single. engine plane; Wiss Parsons soid her mother, struck a power pole while making, yrs) Marc J. Parsons, the pilot a crash-landing near Gaylord last! giq ‘a tremendous job in getting night. lthe plane down.” Mrs. Gustavson was admitted te Gaylerd Memorial Hospital with rib injuries. According to Mrs. Parsons, Nich- * * * En route from Detroit to Pell- ston were William L. Martin, 783 Puritan St., a Chrysler Corp. exec- utive; Miss Nicholous Parsons, 18. 928 Poppleton St.; Donald Gustav- olous, who called last night from son, 26, of Grosse Ile, the pilot,!the hospital, was ‘‘just shaken up and his wife- Marilyn, 26. land jittery.” —— According to Gaylord State Po. | Mrs. Parsons said her daughter lice, the pees oll line broke at |had flown a number of times in $,000 feet, blanketing the wind- commercial planes but this was obscu Gustav- |the first time in a light plane. eae Firs = The four will return home by a - in Sunday night, said Mrs. As he attempted a forced land Deon y gh | The City Commission will dis- Slate Truth Tests sse"sarm ici for Tomorrow Mackinac Island in, its weekly meeting Monday night. Lloyd J. Tunnell Stays in Voluntary Custody * * * The corporate term of the Mu- in Murder Quiz nicipal League expires June 24, 1960, and the extension of this term to 30 years will be the main business at the fall meeting of the League. Plans by Linn Smith, archi- tect, for the proposed addition to Baldwin Public Library wil! be reviewed by commissioners. Final detailed plans have al- ready been accepted by the H- brary Board of Trustees. = A LAST MINUTE CHECK—Making sure that Pontiac Press Photo their caps and gowns were all in place last night Linda Foster (left), 57 S. Eastway Dr., and before marching into the Pontiac Central High ~ Beverly Adams, 223 Clifford St. Linda was gradu- School auditorium to receive their diplomas are ated from Northern and Beverly from Central. | Lloyd J. Tunnell, 53, 1755 Wil- ‘liams Lake Rd., Waterford. Town- iship, in voluntary custody for in- ‘vestigation in the murder of Dr. 'W. Carleton Warrick, will take a \truth serum test at Pontiac State ‘Police Post tomorrow. The test was postponed Friday Japan Gancian School Grows to 775 Since 1949 Mrs. J. A. Anderson of 45 Merrill 'St.. the Comimssion will discuss \possibilities of complying with In Christian University existed only which he reviewed the past dec- But the Steel Walkout on paper. This year, 775 students ade. * 5 gare who up - found Dr her request to resurface the io ‘ E 78 f art-time mem- * jarrick moments after the 71- adjoining her property, or else Drags Into Its 18th Day ate - the: teentis live and work The university was conceived as year-old physician was shot twice tae he city cova the property With No Break Seen in the modern buildings on its a gesture of reconciliation between Monday night. ‘entirely. 312-acre campus outside Tokyo. the United States and Japan be- Lie detector tests Tuesday and “Ten years ago we built this Cause of the war and particularly Werinesday at the Redford State university to serve God and the because of Hiroshima, the large police Post: proved inconclusive, yeopie,”” Dr. Hachiro Yuasa, ICU 8athering was told. » police said. He does not fit the able, according to Pontiac police. * * Smith has submitted a bill for $500 for vlans for the fire depart- ment training tower at the Adams NEW YORK ‘UPI!—The alumi- Upon receipt of a petition from — :plans a rebroadcast at 8:30 p.m. jnto its 18th day with no sign o ed permission from Moscow to oyt the threat of an ‘muinen transmit the speech live and also strike, But the steel strike drag ye president, declared at the recent * * * a break. The American Broadcasting Co. The Reynolds Metals Co. and the n ld e S qa reported it was having trouble qjuminum Workers Intern:‘.ona a getting permiss‘on for either live Union agreed early today to e> transmission or recording, but will tend their present coniract inlet broadcast the speech if either be: jnitely in line with similar exten- comes available. ‘sions signed earlier by other alu- Earlier this week the Soviets minum companies and unions. protested ABC’s handling of the The agreement averted a debate between Nixon and So- |) size py 5,500 of Reynolds’ 1%,- viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev 999 workers and climaxed a mar- claiming ABC's English trans- ginon bargaining session during lation of Khrushchev’s remarks nich the strike deadi'ne had was incomplete. been moved up from midnight to a.m, EDT. Mass Protest Want a Nationw Stir to Show React on Kerala Ouster ABC maintained the translation 2 was carried in full, without ‘‘addi-| tion, deletion or amendment,” * * * Aluminum contract \tern of steel contracts.’ ide ion NEW DELHI, India (AP) — India’s Communist party today or-! settlements dered its followers to stage nation- ‘normally have followed the pat- Wide demanstrations protesting the Masayochi Katsuta. A 23-year-old j9¢y deadline for iack of financing - ‘central government's ouster of the senior and social science major, he arrangements. Beginning as an English-lan- guage institute, it developed into a College of Liberal Arts in 1950. With the graduation of its first four-year class in 1957, the Grad- uate School was opened with the School of Education. Other additions are an allied ‘Institute of Educational Re- search and Service and a Social Science Research Institute, which will later become a_ graduate school of public administration. And this summer, ground will be _ broken for a $425,000 library with shelves for more. than 157,000 volumes. ° Among the students, ten per cent of whom are non-Japanese, is description of the gunman given by Dr. Warr ck. Tunnel! at first balked at aking the truth serum test, iu’ later agreed to submit to it late Thurs- day. ‘I will remain in voluntary cus- cody until | am cleared,” he told police. . Dr. Warrick was shot Julv 24, and died at Pontiac General Hos- pital Saturday - night. Willman Is Glum on Sewage Setup (Continued From Page One) | _ courtesy shown First Deputy Pre- {mier Frol R. Kozlov in his Visit) ‘ ‘to. the United States. Kozlov made an hour-long speech lover a coast-to-coast television net- | |work from Washington which was | well advertised in advance. Six Little Leaguers Saved From Lake (Continued From Page One) * The boys, all area, were members of the Pis- ‘tons team. : They were Ricki Yeager. Rich- Cooler nighttime temperatures! Speech by carrying a series of an- ard Perry, Bruce Erickson, John reigned from the Ohio Valley, nouncements on radio and TV tell- Beyer, all nine, and Jess Wal-, through the Mid and North Atlan- ing Russians to tune in. y | tic states. The midnight reading was 66 at Columbus, Ohio—some 11 degrees below the previous 24- hour standard. .Showers and thundershowers also slightly cooled the Central. Plains. * * * A belt of fair weather extended) from the Pacific Coast through the. Plains into the Ohio Valley. An- other hot, humid day was in pros-| pect for the Southeast with a de-'spot that normally attracts a big) the audience, the 8 o'clock light humor hour. cline in the humidity for North Atlantic area. x * ® The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Fair and a Wiltle coeler today, high near Fair and cool tonight. lew 55. Tomor- rew fair, not much chaiike in temper- atere..high 83. Nertherly winds tncreas- = Seg 46-20 miles teday, diminishing te- Teday in Pontiac _ Lowest temperature preceding 8 am ‘ At 8 am: Wind, veiocity 10-15 m Direction—North to northeast Sun sets Saturday at 7:52 p.m Sun rises Sunday at 5:25 a.m Moon sets Saturday at 5:34 pm Moon rises Sunday at 3:38 a.m Downtown Temperatures € am, 67 10 am 72 am 67 if am 33, am 69 12 M 75 am 69 «| pm 16 Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean tempersture Weather—Suony Ome Year Age in Pontiac Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather—Sunty Highest’ and Lowest Temperatures This Date in 4 Years 96 in 2935 48 in 1947 Friday's Temperatere Chart r Marquette Memphis | Miami B. Milwaukee j 66 755 89 52 96 77) Be 81 61 ggteetecersaccs ”. a, 4 iy 4 BEResseesreses: This was announced at a news eonference by Herbert Klein, the vice president's spokesman, He said three announcements would be made over 10 TV stations that extended the 300 miles outside Moscow, Further announcements were promised over a radio chain reach- ing the whole of the Soviet Mnion. Moreover, Nixon. was put on-a American radio networks have announced plans to breadcast Nixon's speech to the Soviet peo- ple today. His talk will be taped and trans- s0.'mitted here for rebroadcast. LIST BROADCAST TIMES The Columbia Broidéasting Sys of anv. Berlin settlement on the foreign ministers level and looked, instead, for intervention from of ptivate talks between President Eisenhower and Premier Nikita Khrushchev ° * * * for the Soviet Premier to - visit able attention here. 1, _ Western diplomats’ now feel 72, such a visit might represent the ‘e, only way of breaking the dead- % during the nine-week Graewa* powers mainly are concerned now! had been transferred to the prison original discovery or’ use of fire. | lock on Berlin that has developed = . . i ae = ¢| Non of the Western dciegations +4 é lace, 10. The sixth boy’s identi- fication is unknown. Hunger Striker Pays Alimony, Set Free ANN ARBOR ‘UPIi—Neale D. Hills, 23. who went on a hunger strike for nine dys in protest over ‘the divorce laws, paid $500 in back alimony last night and was re- ‘leased from jail. * * * “IT want to get things rolling now on the outside,” he said.- ‘I feel I have accomplished all I could ‘in jail by focusing attention on my ‘protest against the unfair divorce laws. “Now. as soon as | get a job. lam. going..to start circulating netitions to get the laws changed.” ’’ West Ministers Nearly End kmost officials indicate they would ibe immensely surprised if an of- ficial announcement of an invita- ‘higher up — possibly in the form tion does not come in the near fu- | tare. ' * * * Meanwhile, with only five days lett to negotiate before Secretary. Reports of a pending invitation of State Christian A. Herter re-' the | ithe United States drew consider- foreign ministers talks have taken , turns to the United (States, on the appearance of a_hold-the- i . The Soviets had agreed to let! | Standing and friendship which will Nixon make an uncensor lead to the peace we all want.” Ty speech A fresh surge of cool Canadian N!xon said. : ed radio-| the steel industry and the United in exchange for the! regu’ iomite Milford With Neig Ors ' the pool is peeling the paint off Red regime in Kerala. ‘is studying at ICU under a full | Prime Minister Nehru's govern. tuition scholarship endowed by the .. ment removed the Kerala regime First Methodist Church of Palo Friday and-placer the south In- Alto, California. — ti dian state under rule from New He ts typical of many of the Jap- Delhi until a new “legislature is @2Mese students whose families suf- }, Mayor Philip E. Rowston saw) a slim chance” that the Com- mission might call for another elec- There was no. sign today that |Steelworkers Union were any ‘closer than they were July 15 when the 500,000 steelworkers walked off the job. on. “This is a policy decision that as not yet been made,” the Mayor ¥y ‘elected. fered heavily during the war, and gaig. Federal mediators ei re | Indian President Rajendra Pra- Who otherwise would have been . made no progress in a meeting — signed the proclamation de- unable to go to a university. He However, we have no new arguments to present to the vot- fire station. Although there has been no further consideration of the proj- ect since comr'e‘t>” of the Bir- mingham 1959-60 bndeet, the Commission will consider pay- ment of the bill for Smith's plans. The Commission also will award contracts for its 1959 P-3 paving project which includes the North Woodward avenue access drive from Redding street south, the Southfield road access drive at Wakefield street and the Maple- Bates alley at the Monday night meeting. Big Expansion Planned by Bell (Continued From Page One) demands as they occur. The new expansion program is designed to meet needs which we foresee will develop in the Pontiac area in the coming months. with the union yesterday. - ‘cided on by Nehru’s Cabinet, say- Was baptized a Christian in his No further meetings were sched- ing the Kerala government was junior year and has served as vice ‘uled until Monday, when chief gov- unable to rule in accordance with|President of the Tokyo UNESCO ernment mediator Joseph P. Fin-'the nation’s constitution. |Students' Federation. Others in the ‘negan and his panel will sit down’ Ajoy Ghosh, general secretary Student body come from the Unit-| with both sides at a joint session. of the Communist party, called the ed States, China, Burma, the Phil-| ‘action “an outrage on the consti-|ippines, Germany, Indonesia, Ko- Backyard Pool Causing ers in behalf dof sewage treat- ment plant bonds, The facts were and there’s no particular reason tution.” ivrea and Malaya. - If the city defaulted on the Wa- * * | Initial funds for ICU were ter Resources Commission time- Ghosh said the party would not raised in Japan, including gifts table and a Circuit Court order ‘abandon the public pledge made from the Emperor, the Bank of SUbscquently were issued, the pic- last year to follow only constitu- Japan and former U. S. Ambassa- ture would change. ‘tional methods in seeking power.dor to Japan, Joseph C. Grew. x *e &* | The Communist p arty ordered Fourteen Protestant denominations The City Commission would le- DETROIT (P—It was bound to its organizations in’ India’s 14 in the United States contribute to Sally be able to issue general ob- happen. The backyard swim- states to stage big protest demon- its support through the Japan In- ligation bonds to finance expan- ming pool—néwest in home re- strations Monday. Leaders said: (érnational Christian University sion without first going to the finements — has touched off a they would be peaceful. Foundation, Inc. voters for approval. The bonds neighborhood squabble. The constitution requires that would not be subject to a refer- For th® first time in the Parliament approve the actioly on endum vote. memory of traffic and ordinance (Kerala, which will probably be de- Willman told the Water Re- . court officials, a nuisance com- bated shortly after ay be ae Conference Spotlight pnarees) Conse nel ne ote plaint has been filed by an ob- opens Monday. . epee ferred general obligation bond fi- | sources’ indicated £0 Shine on Williams, jector’ to a neighbor's pool. Authoritative nancing to revenue bond financing. + Mrs. Wanda Dudley said her the government, which has always neighbor’s pool permits large tried to get along with the Com-' groups of youngsters to congre- munists inside and outside India, gate, and has led to loud laugh. took the step regretfully. ter and shouting in the late eve- * * * ning hours. The action came as a result o And that’s not all) Mrs. Dud- agitation against Kerala's Com- STUDIES RULEs ley says water splashing from jmunist | ministry by deers But the governor, after study of groups. T groups said they, ANG regulation : ee s ; her house, ‘would continue efforts to paralyze! would oa the Gdaea nae Sin = Hm ic al geo se tates _ Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Isler.” the administration until the Reds his wife and aides “whose pres- while general tax mone sould pi OP wat - ae co rovers Fig resigned, me new elections. ence is needful to me.” " {into the retirement of cones io or water, Geny teu poe” Reds refused to quit. | ; nuisance. Mrs. Isler said a full- eure ae arated! that result-, Secretary Me Elroy later an- ligation bonds. it was pointed out. time maid supervises the pool .q 15-persons were killed in stab | Wad on the Defense Department and that swimming is permitted yings beatings and clashes with’ Siem to allow New Governor-General only during certain hours. The jojice Authorities arrested more travel to. the One — to of Canada Is Appointe £ pool is off lintits for everyone ‘than 125 persons for picketing gov-; Williams, who has been plagued’ HALIFAX, Nova Scotia (UPI)— Not only would revenue bonds (Continued From Pa: Me Elroy that Wil}; ge One} | higher interest rates), but a de- ae oy tl at Williams would have cis by the City Commission unauthorized persons” aboard the to issue them would be subject [ plane. : -to upset by a referendum, he said: Revenue bonds would have to j | | | ~ enna ae at 9 p.m., she said. ernment offices and engaging in | Court officials are trying (0 (ther forms of peaceful resistance. with acute revenue problems at Queen Elizabeth today approved find if there “re aren “ies a See : sea Ale named to preside at the thé appointment of Major-General aws covering the subject. Carribean conference over a panel George P. Vanier as governor- case comes up next Friday, One-Cent Boost ‘Tuesday on state financial sources. general of Ganada in ae of the ay 7 ww. & \final official acts of her 45-day 3 Convicts Flee in Milk Price Doge, ite srr nda s around to shoehorn in this time,”; The Queen, who leaves here by Coming Soon | was Secretary Woolner’s wry com-|plane for Britain tonight, formally ‘ment. A one-cent boost in the whole- fapproved the appointment of the sale price of a quart of milk went \72-year-old soldier-diplomat. to suc- HOWARD, R.I. (AP) Two into effect here today. coed oe Seni Massey at a tough criminals, and a_ violent) The hike is provided for in a Dlehutake rags aon John mental’ patient today scaled the contract negotiated last spring be- e r @ all but three wall at State Prison, foreed a tween the Milk Producers Assn. members of his cabinét this morn ‘guard to drive them to Providence and the dairies. The penny in- One of Williams’ first appear- ances will be at a panel on civil defense called for 8:30 a.m. to- morrow by another possible pres- idential nominee, Republican Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York. ing. and then escaped in a waiting crease will remain in effect until ° 7 — auto . Jan, 31, 1960, On Monday, the nine governors Ike P ; Authorities identified the prison. The association automatically who toured the Soviet Union a few lans Golf Today ers as Gennaro D'Amico, 38, serv- has increased its price to the dai- weeks ago will report on their trip. After Stormy Trip ing 20 years for.attempting to kill ries, all of which are expected tO oross aHUNDER ~ policeman, and Edward J./pass the boost on to the public. ees . Williams stole some of their thun-| President Eisenhower plans more before the people in the past , they would feel any differently | now."’ | be more costly (in the form of | GETTYSBURG, Pa. (AP) —|: | fort operation. | Although they intend to strive : schoolteacher. for some sort of agreetnent up to) The third escaper was identified rape- killing of an 88year-old|cost 24% cents a quart or 48 cents for the half-galion bottle or carton. the last’ minute, the Westernias Robert Hashberger, 19, who There is no knowledge as to the with how to end the meeting on ajhaspital from the state raental Some scientists believe fire “friendly basis” so as not to gen-/institution” because pt tendencies permitted man to walk with erate an atmosphere of crisis. ‘toward. viplence. ‘tection against savage animal + + i ; | = ? « « * i %, ee re , ' . “¥ - We é first Mi Andrews, 28, serving life for the} Under the increase, milk will der while they were in Russia by fighting a running verbal battle the United States. gin Islands Thursday for a short 4 visit. | Williams plans to hop to the Vir-| Mountains of western golf today with George E_ Allen, a Washington businessman friend. while he was flying to his farm home near here. : | t- Bs Marfland ', “We want»to be in position to meet new demands when and where they develop.” Storm said estimates predict that by the end of 1963, about 65 per ‘cert .of the Federal exchange (Pontiac city) customers will want ‘private, one-party telephones. At present, about 43 per cent of the Federal exchange telephones are ‘one-party, he said. iTO PLACE NFW CABLE | The biggest portion of the ex- ‘pansion program is earmarked for such outdoor installations as new cable, Storm said. | Five miles of new ‘cable, cost- ing $190,000, are planned on W. Huron street, from State street west into Waterford Township. A new main cable on Mt. Clem- ens street from the central office to the city limits is also planned, at a cost of $148,000. The two big projects add up to more customers, better service and better long distance facilities be- tween Pontiac and communities to the east and west, said Storm. Another big cable is planned on S. Saginaw street, costing $37,500, and providing increased service and better long distance connec- tions southward, he said. These big cables are designed as trunklines with which local tele- phone lines connect in much the same way as_ small tributary streams feed into a big river, Storm explained. ° ; Another $350,000 is scheduled . i to be spent on extensions of the ' telephone system to new homes, . subdivisions and areas without | telephone service at present, Storm said. One project faced by the tele- phone company is relocation of telephone poles and cables in the vicinity of the upcoming Oakland iCounty Expressway north of Pon- tiac. It’s estimated it will ‘cost '$50,000 to re-route. the lines, Storm said. . : ~ ancl - Water Damaged BLUE ROCKS LIMITED SUPPLY—ONE TO .\ CUSTOMER SLTG case Slaybaugh’s | . 630 OAKLAND Ah ‘ , : a ; 2 : M : ’ ‘ bf : f | & “when he walked opposing pitcher Delock . 3 : Fornieles (Ww. ot? ° ae Pg 2 / h THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1959 ‘ -Bosox. ‘Three Detroit xk & * ant Even Giv kok x * * |Chisox Keep Pressure on by Dumping Nats Y Swe” erry By The Associated Press Homers Wasted on 6-5 Defeat Nine Hurlers ‘Work’ in 3-Hour Contest; Tigers Leave 15 Stranded DETROIT ® — Al Kaline called it ‘‘the worst baseball game I’ve ever seen.” Manager Jimmie Dykes said: ‘“‘It pennant race. Take Cleveland. The their No. 1 relief guy, Jim Perry, Things are getting’ a little bit hectic in that American League failed ’em—but they’ve managed to stay close because the same relief man has won two in a row las a starting pitcher. The lean right- fisnder blew a Indians'3-0 lead, but hung on for a 5-4, dropped out of the lead because; victory over Baltimore last night that left the Injuns just one game back of Chcago. The White Sox kept the pressure on by beating Wins 2nd_ as Washington 7-1 behind: the four- (hit pitching of Barry Latman. Kansas City’s winning streak ;came to an end at 11 games as the New York Yankees ae the third-place A’s 11-2. Boston beat Detroit 6-5, The Injuns came from behind with two runs in the eighth on a was a night of frustration. Just brutal.” ‘ Boston's manager, Billy durges, said “this kind of base- ball will make an old man out of me, ” GDHK ES troit Tigers Platts made golfers out of the 31,916 paying spectators.| * * * And those who are arguing that baseball is not ready for a third Major League could get more than enough ammunition to support their cause by reviewing the thing they foisted off as ‘baseball at Briggs Stadium last night. The fact is, the Red’ Sox. and the Tigers looked like third. ; leaguers, Former Tiger manager Bucky Harris would have said afterward ‘‘well, the best thing to do is forget it as quickly as possible.” and another ex-Detroit pilot, Bill Norman, would have said ‘“‘we weren't pretty.” x * * There were nine persons on the pitching mound during the three hour and 14 minute marathon. One did some pitching and that one. Mike Fornieles, got the vic- ee via an official] scorer’s ruling —despite the fact that the Red Sox were winning 6-5 when Fornieles entered with two out in the eighth. It was only fair that Fornieles be the winner. He gave up only BOSTON TRIPLE — Pumpsie Green of the Red Sox beat the relay for a triple in last night's 6-9. one walk and no hiis, | The other Boston pitchers four of them — issued 14 walks. * * x The Tigers collected three home runs, but only two other hits. And all the homers came with the bases; empty. Two came in the fifth, one an inside-the-park job by Kaline and the other a line smash into the right held 4 seats by Gail Har- ris. By The Associated Press The way this Willie McCovey’s; going he'll be playing for the’ National League in Monday’s All-' Star Game. The 6-4 first baseman, a .377: hitter at Phoenix in the Pacific Another run scored in the same inning when second baseman Pumpsie Green and first base- man Pete Runnels played Al- phonse and Gaston with pitcher Tom Morgan’s easy pop-up and let it drop between them, Ted Lepcio scoring from second base. sensational 4-for-4 debut with San Francisco by singling home an eighth inning run that beat Pitts- burgh 4-3 last night. That kept the Giants in first. Lepcio hit a home run in the seventh and the Tigers scored their, fina] run in the eighth on two walks, a single and a sacrifice By. * * The Tigers dena 15 runners. Four pinch hitters flopped. Three times the Tigers left the bases loaded. Southil Out Crna Legion Meet loaded home run in the fourth inning when he reached over the nine-foot screen and snared : DETROIT u — Favored Edison Chris! b load . : ae ae oaded smash 5,.+ of Detroit met Midland today in the finals of the Michigan Amer- ican Legion baseball championship. | Edison gained the finals with a 13-3 victory. over Escanaba: yester- day. Midland which only has 12 players on its squad, eliminated Grand Rapids 12-4 in the semi- finals and brought its tournament But the Tigers could not score record to 2-1. off the fastballing righthander.| If Midland can upset Edison in Couldn't even get a hit off him,' today’s morning game, a final and matter of fact. Boston starter Earl Wilson, mak- ing his Major League starting de- but, was overwhelmingly generous. He walked nine batters in less than four innings, twice loading the bases on walks. * * * loading the baseston walks. Frank 1953. Midland is seeking its first Sullivan retired only one batter, state title. getting Chrisley oh Jensen’s tre- | The winner will represent Michi- mendous catch, before retiring gan in the National Regionals Aug with a sore shoulder. 22-26 at Princeton, Ind. Starter Jim Bunning took the loss: for the Tigers, and he deserved to. day, Grand Rapids defeated South- Bunning, who had beaten the Sox field 13-1 before its defeat at the four straight times this season and hands of Midland. & had a 12-5 lifetime mark against them, lasted only four innings. Reliefer Ray Narleski deserved \Top- -O- Michigan to lose,” too, ‘but rules forbid hav- ing two losing pitchers in a cngie| Outboar d Race But he departed deciding game will follow, Edison with two out in the fourth after is after its first state title since, In a quarterfinal game yester-' “Contest Away t x * tarter bases-loaded walk and Billy Mar- tin’s sacrifice fly. The Orioles, who left 11 men on base, had tak- én a 4-3 lead with an unearned run n the sixth on an error, sacrifice and a single by Bob Boyd, who had three of their nine hits. * * * Perry (7-3), a 90 winner over Washington with a two-hitter as a starter last Sunday, had lost 8-4 in relief against Boston Tuesday, when the Indians fell a half-game behind, He struek out seven, walked five before being lifted for a pinch hitter in the eighth against losing reliever Billy Loes (4-4). Al Cicotte “pitched a hitless ninth for the Indians. | The White Sox, unbeaten in their last four games and winners in eight of. their last ‘nine, put it away with three-run bursts in the second and third innings against Pete Ramos (10-13), who lost his fifth straight as the _ last-place Senators dropped their 13th in a row. Earl Torgeson hit his eighth homer in the third for the Sox, after a walk, error, singles by ha Jim Landis and Jim McAnany and Luis Aparicio’s sacrifice fly had scored three in the second. * * a three-hit shutout until the eighth, when rookie Bob Allison smacked | his 27th home run. Three home runs—by Yogi Ber-. - AP Wirephote wild game at Briggs Stadium won by Boston, Eddie Yost awaits the throw. _ place Milwaukee beat St. Louis: 6-0 behind a three-hitter by Bob ‘Buhl, who hadn’t pitched a com- \plete game since June 11. Third- | iplace Los Angeles, also a half- | game .behind, beat * * * Cincinnati: beat the Chicago Cubs 5-4 in the other NL game. The Giants twice came from be- | hind against the Pirates, who: blew a 3-2 lead in the eighth. That’s when McCovey, hitless in three trips against left - hander’ Harvey Haddix (7-9), ripped- a two-out single that brought home Willie Mays, who had walked and then stolen second. * * * Ed Bressoud and Daryl Spencer hit solo. home runs for the Giants, who had only six hits. The Bucs ‘had seven off right-hander: Jack Sanford (9-9), who won his second | ° \straight after being winless for ‘more than a month. Dick Stuart, Bob Clemente and Don Hoak each had two hits and drove in a run for the Pirates. * * * That opening line about Mc- Covey making the All-Star Game may not be a gag at that. NL President Warren Giles an- nounced yesterday that Dodger . aMERE SW LEAGUE Lost Pet. Behind game. He walked three batters in! pets ae eee 3 do Soe the -eighth inning and Lepcio M ay Be D rT Opp ed Kansas ‘City Sen 30 io $00 914 shared in the mess by committing New York 45 ‘So 1% his second error of the contest be-| CHEBOYGAN (UPI)—There, a a a saa Isa tween Narleski’s walks, may not be a 12th annual Top- washington |. 30 4a Narleski finally forced across: what proved to be the winning run ficials said today. A meeting at Conway race head- Delock. Pete Burnside finished up! quarters yesterday included a re- for the Tigers after Dykes tired port that this year’s race, the llth of seeing Narleski. annual running of the 87-mile race, was a financial] failure, The race 'Q-Michigan outboard marathon, of- gton 43 YESTERDAY'S RESU its New York 11, Kansas City 2, night Cleveland 5, Baltimore 4, night Boston 6, night in, ' | 4 DAY'S GAMES (Times Eastern Standard) Wasiingion at Chicago, 1:30 p.m.—Pas- cual (11-9) vs. Pierce (12-11) Baltimore at Cleveland, 1 p.m.—Brown (7-6) vs. Locke (2-1). POSTON ae apen yy Went $387 in the red. Minar (7-4) va. Kucks Gey Oe > rete i 4 - ait .. A meeting is scheduled at In- On ties Heyes 1:30 p.m.—Casale (7-6) Geiger oft $411 Curmey Ff 3008) dian River Sept. 15 to decide |," ,, TOMORROW'S GAMES cBusby a) 100 Berberet © 4001 whether to discontinue the race. Washington a Guise & 2 rl Jensen ri 5000 \Lepeio 3211! The budget for this year’s race, secretly hpgrnonis eae 1:30 im. Maisoe we tees Glencer tegeirated as one of the biggest out-|. MONDA yh? enact act 1898 Bunning P #88 8|board regattas in Ameriéa, was oe Wilson p» 2011 Morgan p 101 1 $4,4000, Officials said most of the Nee hea Pal, Gobind Sullivan p Be Hee 100 ¢:funds were used for trophies and/san Francisco ...57 45 399 — " z Milwaukee .......55 44 556 \% entre Pp 1001 Burnside p 606060) cash prizes. is Angeles . 47 552 Ye mieles p 0900 fGroth” Tat cago . 1 495 64 vie 7 om eae ae = 5 _— *| Pittsburgh .. 50° 3 485 7M Grounded out st aia ais wenani Cards Recall Rookie i, — “ 3 ‘1 PH elphia 14 ath: t-Grounded gut for. Suite TF op LOUIS (AP}—The St. LOUIS shia RESTERDAY'S RESULTS freee | 8 es Cardinals recalled Bobby slag | mgr 5. Chicago 4, night POA Boston 10, Angeles 5, Philadelphia 4, pignt 20-year-old rookie right-hander, from their ‘Rochester farm club’ Kaline. ari ee §-Bunning, ” in the Triple A_ International League Friday,in a move to bol- Won... FF eT Pe Sister their pitching staff. ae tees. gy To make room for Miller ‘the! Red: Birds asked waivers on catch- er Ray Katt to, grant him his un- + conditional release so he may be- | come a full time coach for the’ club. Bunning N 1. oveouwoor os 3. oF ee Hee Oooo e Oe 2oOnw a San Francisco 4, Pittsburg! h 3, nig DAY'S GAMES itteburgh at San Bog 3: | ‘Witt (0-7) la 30 p.m.— vs. S. Jones (1¢10). Louis at Milwaukee, a p.m.—Brog- innati, 0 p.ti.—Hobbie (9-10). Philadelphia “Les Angeles, 10 p.m— Owens (7-8) vs. Koufax (5-2). TOMORROW'S GAM —— at Cincinnati, 1:30 p.m at Milwaukee 2, a | p.m. ia an gd trebawee.. eo om eles 1% Phtlage Pitisbur AY's ban Star Game at Los McCovery Sparks Giants Again :Charlie:Neal, whose absence trom| ithe original squad left Los ' geles fans howling, will oe Cardinal Bil White for the second “classic.” Neal's selection, likely to lure Coast League just two night's ago,|9-4 as Don Drysdale struck out| Monday’s game at Los Angeles followed up Thursday’s somewhat 14 and won his sixth in a row. Coliseum, was made, said Giles, | because White has an ankle in- jury. wk &. we White played the whole game ‘for the Cardinals last night, and place by a half game. Second- have lost 10 of their last 11,‘then/had one of their three hits: off |Buhl. The club, playing “‘out of /necessity”’ according to a Giles ‘spokesman, wants. him to under go treatment Monday. * * * . The only othershits off Buhl, whose last completé game was.a five-hit. shutout over the Cards, were singles by Don Blasingame. The big right-hander walked just one and struck out five -for an 8-6 record and his third shutout. The Braves didn’t -have a ‘hit off Dean Stone, an AL, castoff making his first National League start, for five innings, Hank Aaron added his 28th home run, fourth in three games, in the eighth as the Braves made it three in a row and eight out of nine. ~ * * Los: Angeles scored four in the first while chasing Gene Conley (9-7), eighth on a homer by Norm Larker, subbing for the injured Gil Hodges. Drysdale (14-6), the major league strikeout leader with 173, fanned Joe Koppe for the final cout after the Phils had scored once in the ninth and had the tying run on base. x * * The Reds came from behind, then blew a 4-2 lead on George Altman’s two-run homer in the ninth before Johnny Powers’ pinch-hit homer beat the Cubs with two out in the ninth. Jim Brosnan (5-5) won it in relie after Don Newcombe again gave way to a groin injury. Don Elston (5-4) was the loser. Cawley Wins Hurdles Race in Norway | OSLO, Norway (—Ray Nor- ton, Warren Cawley and Bob Davis gave the United States three victories Friday. in the fi- nal phase of the Yankee Track Meet at Bislet Stadium. then got the big run in the’ ra, Elston Howard and by the fifth-place Yankees while) Don Larsen and Bobby Shantz; combined for a four-hitter against! the A’s. Shantz (5-3) won it, iin five innings of relief. Ned Gar- iver (8-10), ‘the. stubby right-hand- er who has beaten the Yankees only once in four years, was the loser, giving up Berra’s clinching 14th home run with a man on base ‘in the third, College Stars an. Seek to Smooth Rough Spots Il. (AP) | EVANSTON, Philadelphia a few more cash customers to College All-Stars Friday studied, films of their Thursday scrim- mage and then tried to eliminate workout on the Dyche Stadium practice field. Baltimore Colts of the National jury. However, Bob Reifsnyder, 240- a sore shoulder. The squad will have another double workout to- day and then have a Sunday holiday. Aussies Call New Pair in Zone Finale Zone Davis Cup against Cuba today. The Aussies took a tennis Garrido, Reynaldo’s brother, 6-1, 7-5, 6-3. blanking the A’s on two singles, their mistakes during a double The Collegians, girding for the! Aug, 14 clash with the champion Football League, emerged from the scrimmage without serious in- pound. tackle from Navy, nursed MONTREAL (AP) — The Aus- traHans called on a new doubles combination of 20-year-old Rod Laver and 22-year-old Roy Emer- son to wrap up theif American final 2-0 lead yesterday when Emerson crushed Reynaldo Garrido 6-0, 6-4, 6-4 and Neale Fraser defeated Orlando The American-European Zone fi- MINNEAPOLIS and Mike Souchak | Pol. * x *& Barber, lof Souchak stalked him again. | Twice in the last four years the litle man from Los Angeles has ‘been on the brink of tournament) victories only to have them plucked away by great Souchak finishes. This weekend the stakes are higher. After a remarkable 3 under-par 65 at Minneapolis Golf Club course yesterday, the 43- year-old Barber is in a position PUTT DROPS — Things were looking up for Mike Souchak after he sank an 8-foot putt on the par 4 No. 5 in the PGA tourney Friday. A hot run on the greens had him 2nd to leader Jerry | Barber at 136 entering today’s 3rd round. Barber, Souchak Tilt Goes Into 3rd Round (AP)—The Da- | another cut to the low 60 due Latman, pitching because Dick|vid and Goliath struggle between after the round. Donovan was sidelined by eerhe Jerry Bane scores lof the National PGA Ue oyaiee (cae in the PGA Championsh | Dow tiny and frail looking, |Gene Littler Hector held the lead at the halfway point cary et i ae Lopez—powered a 13-hit barrage but the broad, ominous shadow Lionel Hebert .... career with one of the most glam- orous titles in the game. * w- * Heading into todays third round Barber was 6-urfder-par at 134, \two strokes in front of Souchak, ithe gentle-mannered mauler from jthe Pennsylvania coal ‘Both had first-day 69s. Arrayed behind Doug Sanders at 138, defending champ Dow Finsterwald and Gene Littler at 139 and Cary Middle- coff, National Open champion Bill 2 Casper: and Lionel Hebert at 140. All the leaders save Casper and Littler cracked 35-35—70 par in the searing sun yesterday. Barb- er’s 65, including a hard-to-believe 30 on the front nine, was the finest round ever played on the course. Souchak shot a 67, Sanders 66, Finsterwald and Middlecoff 68s, Hebert 69, Littler 70 and Casper 71. x * * . With that kind of line-up after 36 holes’ the 41st annual PGA was considerably more’ than personal duel between Souchak and Barb- er, But for the third round their threesomes—was the focus of the whole tournament. Barber, only 5-foot, 5 inches and 135 pounds, gave no quarter tu Sanders and Doug Ford off the tee in their threesome. Reputedly one of the shortest drivers in big time golf, he got out further than his partners a couple of times. And when it came to the irons, Barber won all the blue ribbons. He put an approach 10 inches from the pin on one hole, wedged into the cup from 60 yards on another and putted home from 20, nal. is scheduled for Philadelphia|17, 15 feet and points lower. holders at Brookline, Mass. Aug. United States at Forest Hills Aug. 28-30. Everybody Threatens to Sue Jesse Bowdry SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Jesse Bowdry of St. Louis ran out on a fight Thursday night and every- body threatened damage suits Fri- ‘day. Bowary, No. 4 light heavyweight| contender, refused to battle Sixto cause Bowdry’s co - manager, Bernie ‘Glickman, was refused a license. . A free tennis clinic sponsored by the Pontiac Parks and Recre- ation Department, will begin Mon- day free of charge to those desir- ing to learn the fundamentals of the game. Two of the Recreation Depart- ment’s summer staff members, Claudia Wasik and Harry Wen- zel will be the instructors, They will be assisted by. some of Mrs. Jean Hoxie’s students and mem- bers of the Pontiac Central ten- nis team. j ‘ Miss Wasik, « PCH graduate, is: Two-Week Tennis Clinic Starts Monday at PCH a sophomore at Eastern Michigan College where she is majoring in secondary education. * * * ' Wenzel is on the PCH faculty. He is a graduate of Tufts Univer- pe and the yrversty of Michi- oom will be TON _ Service will be held at 3:30 p.m. ORTONVIELE Rosary will be a at said for Harvey J Blaser, 67, of Monday at Sparks-Griffin Chapel Ortonville at 7:30 — comorraw with burial in Perry Mt. Patk at the Melvin A. Shutt Funeral Cemetery, Home, Pontiac. Service will be F . - . held at 10 a.m. Monday at St. HERBERT L. FRAIN : - Vincent de Paul Church. Burial Herbert L. Frain, 63, who lived at 35 N. Shirley Ave. with his ic we follow ab Mi Hope: Cemetery: Mr. Blaser died yesterday at Veteran's Hospital, Ann Arbor. Surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Henry Veretlen of Romeo, Mrs. Lewis Nieman of Flint and Mrs. Charles Cupp of Pontiac, and sev- eral nieces and nephews. « ETHYL V. VANSKIVER . an 4 Se deel. ORTONVILLE — Service tor tWice—at 20 feet and -at ee | Miss Ethyl V. Vanskiver, 59, for- H. D. McKnight, a certified mineralogist, says the strike at imerly of Ortonville, will be held at 2:30 p.m. “tomorrow at Muir’ Brothers Funeral Home, Almont. Burial will follow at Lynn Town- ship Cemetery. She died yesterday at Port Hur-| on General Hospital following a Short* illness. ' Surviving are two nephews and one niece. ter, Mrs. Charles Sibra, died Thursday at the Veterans Admin- istration Hospital, Wood, Wis. after a three-week illness. A machinist, Mr. Frain was a retired employe of General Motors Truck & Coach Division. Surviving besides his sister are: two brothers, Gordon of Pontiac and Alfred of Lansing. Service will be held at 1:30 p.m. Monday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mt.) Park Cemetery. MRS. WALTER V. JURY Mrs. Walter V. (Crystal) Jury, 57, a former Pontiac resident, died yesterday morning at her, home, 1247 N. E. 147th St., North | Fla. She had been ill six| ‘Governor Kills Bus Tax Relief Vetoed Bill Would Have. Refunded Gas Levies for 26 Months ! cut short the efforts of ailing local a bill which would have refunded |gas and weight taxes paid by pri- ‘vately owned local firms for a \26-month period starting Jan. 1. Dames of Malta, the Orange 1nd, |In lieu of weight taxes, they would: ~ Rebekah Lodges. |have paid a flat $25 per bus. | Surviving are her husband; a) daughter, Mrs. Ruby Ruby of The action came as a blow to j iami ; ’ | than 29 bus firms whieh | North Miami; two grandchildren; | ™Ore her parents; two brothers ‘ and’ stood to retrieve more than $300,- | two sisters. . 000 a year in taxes. Some are — Service will be held at 3 p. m., !™ financial trouble. Monday at the Lithgow Funeral Center, North Miami. oe ‘raids on our much needed high-| THOMAS P. KEESLING way funds." Also, hé said, it might Service was held this afternoon damage the market for Michigan at the Donelson-Johns Funeral highway bonds by diverting con- Home for Thomas P. Keesling, stitutionally earmarked highway nine-day-old ‘son of Mr. and Mrs. revenues ‘to private concerns. John Keesling, of 80 Lorberta St.,) Highway officials told the ene Waterford Township. The infant ernor the plan “‘could cost the, had been ill since birth and died highway department, counties and | Friday afternoon at St. Joseph Cities dearly in terms of higher! Mercy Hospital. interest rates upon future bond Surviving besides the parents are issues.” two brothers, John P. and Kevin State M., and a sister, Janie Frances, She was a. member of the | Williams said the measure would: ihave ‘‘opened the door to further all at home. Burial was in Mt. Hope Catholic Bureau, the Michigan Construction; Cemetery. _Eqitpaent Dealers Assn.. cham- , bers of commerce and others REV, CARL W. NELSON joined in protesting against the Servicefor the Rev, Cari Ww. Dill. Nelson, 47, of 745 Owego Dr. will The governor also vetoed a bill | “—~ -———| intended to levy “points” against , | a person convicted of driving | ; without an operator's license as — set forth in the secretary of state’s point system for keeping | track of driver convictions. | Macomb County | Strike May Yield | a Fortune in Oil : MOUNT CLEMENS (UPI)— oii driller who made a strike in Macomb County said today his dis. ° covery could result in a new multi-| million dollar field. * * * Charles J. Moskowitz, 35, Mount | Pleasant, said his drillers hit oil, Daughter of Columnist at 2,505 feet in a farm pasture in Syes for Divorce Chesterfield Township, six miles' As it passed the Legislature. however, the bill prohibited charg-' ‘exactly opposite to its original urpose,’’ Williams said. A two-thirds majority in both’ jthe House and Senate is needed ito override a veto. \AF’s Scientists Look Into History of Thunderstorms WASHINGTON (AP)—Air Fore re] scientists are tracing the complete | ilife histories of thunderstor ms) near Flagstaff, Ariz. * * * Air Research and Development| Command scientists are studying) | LANSING Gov, Williams has the growth of cumulus clouds over Was robbed of $3, 478 yesterday by the San Francisco Mountains.' /bus companies to get tax relief. They are gathering data on the) ‘customer and her two children, The governor yesterday vetoed | /minute-by-minute growth of clouds! ithen stole their car for a getaway. ‘as observed by aerial photogra- phy, by radar and electric field meters. The project is called ‘‘High Cue.” * * * A similar but less elaborate, /study in the same area last sum- mer demonstrated that cumulus ‘clouds, contrary to previous be- jliefs, do not grow at a steady rate ‘but by pulsation. Scrutiny of ear- lier cloud photographs showed that pulsation had been present in most ‘clouds but always had been over- looked previously. Buick to Complete. ‘59 Run Next Week FLINT — Buick will complete, its 1959 model production next highway commissioner week, it was announced today by away. ohn C. Mackie. many county road; Edward D. Rollert, general mana- commissioners, the Michigam Farm ger of General Motors. 'Two-Car Crash in Ohio * * Model year production will total 284.089 cars when assembly oper-, ations are shut down at Flint and the Atlanta BOP plant on Aug. 6, and at the six other BOP plants Aug. 7, Rollert said. Buick ‘manufac vred 241.908 cars during ithe 1958 model run. i Rollert said about 7,000 hourly ,workers would be furloughed at ‘Flint by the annual inventory and imodel changeover. | About 85 per cent of the nation’s An|in8 points against such drivers grade schools have no gymnasiums St. Vincent Hospital at Toledo with but the number is decreasing. a skull fracture. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, This Well-Digger |Strikes Gold but It Doesn't Glitter WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP)— -Horace J. Tuttle is a well-digger with. a problem. He's struck a vein of gold ore he can’t mine. His firm drilling at a new hous- ing development has struck gold | 194 feet tapparently is a low-grade gold ore vein. - | But the two won't turn Winston- Salem into a gold rush town, McKnight says. the ore can’t be imined, ‘It’s too near the city and jthe law wouldn't allow it,” he} says sadly. | ~~ Robber Takes §3,478 at Bank Woman and 2 Children Terrorized at Trailer in Dearborn Twp. AP Wirephote DAVID GOES FOR DIP — ‘David Eisenhower, the President's | grandson, and 12 other boys stopped over in Cleveland en route home from a -five-week vacation in Estes Park, Colo. David slept DETROIT u» — A branch of the, ‘City Bank in Dearborn Township | The ii-yearald. boy la gunman who terrorized’a woman, C°Mpanions went for a swim in * * =. The branch is set up temporarily. in a sleeping bag on the porch of a home in suburban Lakewood. was photographed when he and some of his Lake Erie. The boys continued their motor trip with Jack Thompson, owner of a Colorado ranch. ‘But I Prayed and Prayed’ lin a house trailer. | Manager Frank T. Warner, 35, ‘was alone in the trailer office when lthe robber, wearing dark sun- glasses, entered and pulled a gun.: I The manager turned over mon- GRAND CANYON, Ariz. (UPD ey in the cash drawer but locked = _+- prayed and prayed, all day,| the door to the cash section of © ‘every day.’ the safe. When the gunman was |" + + « told only coin money was left, he | asked for the keys to Warner’s | car. When Warner said he didn’t have his car that day, the man turned in the wilds of Grand ‘Canyon, his gun on Mrs. Rita Bosman and-wandering about lost in heat demanded her car keys. ‘intense as 120 degrees. The Sa-) After she dropped them on the yannah, Ga. youth's natural in- floor, he ordered her, her two chil- stincts and common sense told the, dren and Warner to line up against rest of the story. the wall and fled. ASHES KNIFE “” Mrs. Bosman's station wagon 5 S Soke from a dese Sess bout folr blocks) UWens 4 was abandoned a a last night to talk briefly to news-| jmen, A deeply religious youth, he | | SBEvived conditions which took | | Kills 2 State Residents WAUSEON, Ohio w — Two Mich- igan residents were killed and a! the lives of his two hiking com- panions, another youth and Catholic priest. and tried to attract’ “Td take a ees day in an intersection collision of every day two automobiles. their attention. Killed were Marguerite Brooker, a 7 | aa ean W Reman “Kennedy Caling for Nikita Visit who was in critical condition in N ew Seal of Approval Dearborn, Mich. They were’ pas-' sengers in a car driven by Mrs. Dem Senator Talks in Wisconsin; Is Testing. 4 Poland’s Gomulka sling Maxine Campbell, 57, Rapid City, ' Political Strength aoe eee Wis. (UPI)—Sen. FE. Kennedy called for a sum- Used-Gommon Sens as; ‘northeast of here yesterday. | LOS ANGELES (AP)—Ellen P. He said Bernhardt Drilling Co., Arnold, daughter of Washington i Detroit, contract driller on the job* columnist Drew Pearson, has sued, made the strike on the farm of he: husband, George, for divorce. | William Miller on Sugarbush Road, *| She charges _ cruelty. about a mile west of M59. | She asked court approval of a _ (This appraisal of Vice President This weekend Vice President x * * | Settlement by which they agree ‘to Preece “who has spent Richard M, Nixon is going to! Kennedy Moskowitz said it was a good divide community property and ™ost of the last year in that country.) boland Intentionally or not, his vored a Khrushchev visit to the grade “sweet, high-gravity crude|providing for support of her and . By STANLEY JOHNSON iof the Polish public and the peo- Richard M. -.“', oil, worth about $3 a barrel.” [their three children, Andrew. 1;) | Y ° & and Joseph, 5. VIENNA ( — The Polish Com- ples of Communist nations that of Russia. is a Los Angeles Munist chief, Wladyslaw Gomulka, Go mulka is also Washington's. oday has every reason for a fair-haired boy. * x * “We are delighted he is coming, ,times at odds with both its Soviet) but what is his motive?” was the Over Nikita, Nivon Okay Re he S. Khrushchev last night d urged, fhat the Soviet boss be invited to the U. S. * * ba Nixon's current tour George Jr., - Godfrey Off to Hawaii, i.tyer 2 37, wyer and the son of Thurman t Looks Fit After Surgery ‘and presidential hopeful | shrugged off Nixon’s tour and his recent sharp debate with ‘Arnold, former assistant U.S. at-)Warm smile. torney general in charge of anti- The leader of a country some-| SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Arthur trust prosecution, He spent the night here after | any manner which might discour-|don’t think it was especially harm- age its people from hoping for ful.’ Kennedy said. eventual peaceful evolution from He added that the Vice Presi- Soviet domination. dent's trip would have ‘‘no lasting x * effect on Nixon's chances of being The US. thesis, backed by ¢lected President.’ about 130 million dollars in loans _ Kennedy was here to gauge his ‘and other Help, is that Poland has Wisconsin political Support and to moved peacefully toward greater Peak belore theNNational Associa- ‘independence and this tendency | tion of County anc Prosecuting At- should be encouraged by every torneys. | Bieans: _.| He told the attorneys that U.S. sources say the Nixon visit “racketeers who have operated is one of these means. under the guise of businessmen” Nixon was invited formally by pose one of crime’s greatest the chairman of the Polish State threats to society. Council, or president, Aleksandr} Zapadski. The reasons for issuing | “I am_ talking about the ‘Teal the invitation seem clear: eart of the matter,” he said, “‘the « « * ‘growing power of the organized ; derw = imi Ye Poland is an intensely national- EEO the criminal syndi istic country. and even dedicated cates which have achieved controF Communists boast of their inde-| pendence.and the “Polish way.’ gitimate business enterprises.” They feel Nixon's visit will dram- | atize their standing and the free-| Betty Hutton’ s Husband dom Poland. enjoys _ within the| : Soviet bloc as compared to Czech- ‘Cross-Files Divorce oslovakia, for example. SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)— Poland, through its plan for an |Betty Hutton’s husband,’ Alan W. atom-free zone in central Europe| | Livingston, i cross-filed for di- and a big power disengagement) yorce, there, a plan named for Foreign) poth alle ge —e eruelty, Minister Adam Rapacki, likes “| Alan W. Livingston entered a present itself as maintaining an’ denial Friday to the entertainer’s initiative in foreign affairs. Per-. on, es in he , haps Nixon will discuss these sub-| april’ 3 Te saa “he ie ok oe ager oo _— “ut have titled to any sum for support or eon Se SRure .o _maintenance because she earns! Berlin. ‘more than $150,000 a year. News in Brief chev .recently finished a visit to flying from his Leesburg, Va.,) DETROIT «—Burglars broke Poland. He made it plain to both ‘rm via Washington. into the Palmer Park apartment Stalinists and the liberal internal The entertainer expected to tape of Herbert B. Wh'te, president of opposition that. Gomulka is his - Honolulu the first of a series a Ferndale Tool Manufacturing chosen and trusted lieutenant in { our-long shows for use next , Watches valued at $8,000 yvester- Poland Former bitterness be- ll ‘tween the awa: was forgotten. * > * * + Finally, the Poles believe . Nix-, on’s visit will boost their prestige | and bargaining power with the| West, with other countries of the Best Carpet. Cleaners. Owned Soviet bloc and, above all, with and operated by Jim Bradford. A the Soviet Union. umber of years, experience With What effect all this will have! lone of Pontiac's largest carpet {) CMAT IN CAPITAL — Chris Schad (left) of Birmingham and Nance. Boardman of Hancock enjoy an inf. rmaj talk with U. 8. Civil Netense sponsored by the American Legion Auxiliary, currently in session at, American University, Washington, D. C. Chris is the daughter of Mr~ in the nation’s capital. The and Mrs. Eugene F. Schad of 623 Bioomfield Ct, ad the =r annual Girls } ig oo if / ¢ . . : * { \ » _« ' : « ‘ . : ‘ ‘ 4 . ak 4 re zy ze + é 7 2 » " é .|peting, rugs, and furniture. rfiunist Poles and on the inhabi-| estimates at your convenience | tants of other East European wh y do it, youre, Call Jim. PE) countries remains to be seen. ese 2-242. — Adv ey told newsmen he fa- Godfrey, looking fit following his’ allies and the West is now receiv- reaction of some Poles this report- poring before the television © April lung cancer operation, F dale Fi Head ing a sort of seal of approval from ey talked to. They recalled it has _—- leaves today for a 10 - day tele- erncate rirm rea both sides. ‘long been U.S. policy not to indi The debate did not make ‘‘any vision taping trip to Hawaii. Suffers House Burglary Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush-\cate approval of a government in great contribution to peace, but I over an increasing number of le-|_ on the vast majority of nén-Com-' ‘cleaners. Quality cleaning of car-|_ and scraped the rust off my knife.’ he said. jsun to dry to attract an airplane, | ‘but it never did any good.”’ That was the fervent explanation He bore few signs of his struggle, clergy by Safety Administrator D. ‘today of John Manson Owens III,/with nature except a deep tan,|K. Kelly. 15, of how he survived seven days|a few scratches on his left arm, The: booklet was ; mailed out just, walking at the start of the traditional peak! and feet bruised from ‘around barefoot on rocks and sand. | | He was picked up by a daring | Army helicopter crew yesterday | morning and was remarkably | composed after his ordeal. Owens said he ate the pulp of| |cactus and mesquite beans. ‘HE ATE BEANS He displayed a three-inch long looking much like a wax, ‘you eat them and but I didn’t: bean, bean and said * get a star content, know that before.” Owens said he slept in the san each night. During part of his stay! third was injured critically yester-. He said he saw planes overhead jn the Canyon he floated down the Cblorado River in a raft he made. Asked if he had any Boy Scout | training or if he had ever dene ' much camping out, he said. ‘ I just depended on tear’ ‘n- | stincts.” __He said he had full recollection lor of each di day after he lost his com- | panions. “I thought I liked to drown,” he said. ‘WAVES PANTS In his frantic efforts to try t catch the eve of plane an dheli-' “Then I'd flash it in the He said he decided to iget off the raft three days ago ‘when he hit rough water at Chance Rapids. County Lags Blamed The Detroit Regional Planning Commission has cited a lack of sewage, drainage and water fa- cilities as cause for a decline this year in Oakland County hous- ing construction. * * * Commission _ statistic show that Oakland County -com- munities granted 11.3 per cent fewer permits the first half of 1959 than .over the same period last year. * * * from 1958, to 2,640. Only Bloomfield Township rep- - resented ‘the county among the leaders, in 10th place. Sewer and drainage projects in the lower half of the county have been hampered by legal squabbles in Lansing. FORESEES SURGE Still at issue is legality of finan- cing the multi-million dollar 12- Town Drain and also the- Eight Mile Drain System. The Planning Commission fore- sees a surge of residential build- ing when the sewer, drainage | reports | The county dropped 337 permits | Home Building Declines and water problems are rectl- tied. The first six-month totals. of building permits issued by Oak- land County governments in 1959 are as follows: Addison Township . “ 5 Tourist State | Asks Clergy to Aid Safety ‘Safety Officials have called on the | dergy to help put over the theme “that we should not leave God ‘behind when we enter our auto- /mobiles."’ A booklet of suggested sermons| was mailed to the New Mexico e “SANTA FE, N. M. (AP) — State; wooa Troy ...........- Walled Lake Waterford Town nship | West Bloomfield Township | White Lake Tewnshin fay sees he J Wixom ; el 2 cmuese Relbd 1 Wolverine Lake . eave gqeyenenserecags be Creek Farms ................ Total: 2.640 Answer te Previous Puzzle of the tourist travel season. It in- ‘cludes one-minute sermons which could be used for each of 12 Sun- iday services, timed to run | October. 6 Negroes Assigned | to White Schools (AP) LITTLE ROCK, Ark iThe Little Rock School Board hag, q assigned six Negroes iwhite public high the board intends to said today. the fall term at ‘three white high | were closed last year in the inte-' gration dispute. . * ® * Three Negroes were’ assigned to 14“ 8 Ye ie aa Central “High~School and three to,——— a Hall High under the Tirst tise of into to ONCEe- located in the Village of Romeo, Sta schools which of ‘Michigan an Arkansas pupil placement law, District of the e board chose the pupil as-. Slteration ‘signment system in order to obey, Svan NATIONAL BANK PONTIA Ss Ponti Michiga |NOTICE OF SHAREHOI!I D * MEETING | Notice is hereby given that. pursuant lige. call of tts directors, a specia) meet- ng of the shareholders of Community | National Bank of Pontiac will be held ae - bach poms at 30 North Sag- ‘in str the City of Pontiac. State of trchinas. on Saturday, August 22nd 1959. at 1000 am. for the purpose ™~ of considering and deter .nining y vote whether an agreement to merge the said bank and the Romeo Savings Bank, te under the provisions of the laws of the United States, shal) be reopen poids! and conn ee. and ie the le : ose of voting upon any other matter in September, a board member [; incidental to t the proposed merger of the (ive banks greement A copy of the aforesaid *xecuted bv a majority of Fifty-five Negroes registered for; the directors of each of the two banks. Little Rock's. providing for this merger, ts on file at the bank end may be inspected dur- schools which ng business hours. ‘iv 17, 1959. A. G GIRARD President | July 18. 20. 21, 22. 23. 24. 25, 27. 28, 39, 30 ene ae § 6 7. 8 10. 11,12 1 19. "58 ADVERTISEMENT POR BIDS The Board of Education of the School City of Pontiac, Mich- will receive Bids for Parking lot and extension at Pontiac Central High schoo Sealed Bids will be received and pub- ja federal mandate for integration licly read aloud at the Office of the of the Little Rock School District. ‘Pontiac Miehigan at 9 am. on Th and at the same time hold deseg-, 0 regation to a minimum. coper pilots, Owens said he even Chief Justice Warren ai oe between President took off his pants and waved them ‘Eisenhower and Russian Premier in the air. The pants were jeans) GL down to knee-length. ; 'make on last run over the Can- in Moscow (AP) to ‘Tour’ WASHINGTON Chief ,, ‘Moscow this summer, but as-€@ Michigan. and also will be lyon, even, though the boy had been! tourist—not as an American of- given and theh they saw the letter “H”’ | visit cannot fail to convince a lot U. S. in return for Vice Presidentifof help) which he had made on! phasized that ‘ the ravine wall from rocks. uy dead by most people, ‘ficial. The State Department the character of a private visit” Ranger Dan Davis, who took a it announced Friday that the The Massachusetts Democrat in the helicopter rescue of, the'chief justice and Mrs. described him as one of the; would be ever sometime during their August and boy, ‘smartest lseen. youngsters he'd in the Soviet Union! September travels. vv for six days. AP Wirephote MISSING YOUTH ALIVE — John Manson Owens III, 16, of Savannah, Ga.,' telephones his parents from a hospital at Grand Canyon, Ariz., to tell of his rescue ftom deep in-the Canyon. Owens, whose two companions died on their hike into the mile-deep gorge, survived searing heat, treacherous trails and deadly river currents The youth was found,on a sandbar. by an Army heli- copter crew. He was fatigued, footsore and hungry but otherwise unharnted. * . The helicopter crew decided to justice Earl Warren will visit Architect. Warren) ‘ afor You .-° |: Anyone may save in this Credit: d of Education. 40 Patterson Street, urs- ‘day. August 6, 1959. Bidders will be required to furnish: \satisfactory Performance. Labor and ‘Matertal Bonds in the full amount of |the Contr: |. All Bids. pmittea ifor a period of 30 day | An acceptable Bid Bond or Certified check in the amount of 5% of the |amount of ine Bid must accompany each Bid submitte Plans and Specifications for the above may be obtained at the office of the Wm. . Zimmermenn = As- sociates, 831 W Huron Street, Pontiac. on file et ithe Detroit Offices of F. W ge Cor- |poration and Builder's and Traders’ Ex- enenne nan remain firm Board of Education reserves the The em- cient . retect a - bids. and to waive orma es erein. ‘the trip will have, BOARD OF EDUC ATIO! pe THE SCHOOL DISTRICT THE CITY OF PONTIAC. od ae GA LTER GODSELL. Secreta? _Suly 25. Aur. Be _5e. | HERE IS A CREDIT UNION Union. Since 1952 savers have been paid 4% Jividends. — Savings accounts include Life * Insurance at no extra cost! 4% DIVIDEND Get the Details PONTIAC CO-OP FEDERAL ‘CREDIT UNION 40 E. Pike St. | i FREE Humidifier With Each Installation During August and September Our Lowest Prices in Years! _ Save on Furnace Installations During August and September Custom duct work done Lan Whe) | SINCE 1900 J* MARS HEATING FREE. ESTIMATES. ~\ NO OBLIGATION ' FE 8-2824 | OR 3-1486 Avon Township . 64 rkley = ...... 28 Beverly .-Hills ......... 13 Bingham Farms 5 Birmingham. 61 Bloomfield PAUP) se sesame ane 18 Bloomfield Township .... 259 Brandon Cette EIRE EBRD ce . 4 Clarkston ... PES 5 Fase 2 Clawson. Lo 9 Commerte Tow nship : Anes i3 Farmington = Gace seas 64 Paresingise Township scans cin 2 ré2 \Ferndale .. 12 Prenkiin) 2 ee ee 12 Groveland Beers . ne wae 9 Hasel Park 2.) 6sossws ss aeons «: 36 Highland Togaship San 2 HE 14 Holly Fownship .................-- 9 Holly Bee og uate q Bastingcen Woods . wae 4 Independence Tomnakip ote 348 > Keego Harbor F : 2 Lake Angelus 6 Lake Orion Li Lathrup Village 18 Leonard 1 Lyon Township | 9 Madison Heights .......... 204, opt rtale Toenay neeeas 7 Milford svayentnens : 111 No “ Seer eee © ees eee oro 3 Satend Township ................ 18 ER oe opereiase: ceergyaierennsrainrennietniole 63 Grehaye CONG ees ee 4 Orion Township ....-........-...-. 49 Oxford Township ......,.+.-.+.... 16 ONIORG oon se ee ees ee ee 1 Sep ie ; 1 Pontiac aohapeiayeats rates trons 163 Pontiae Township, itseesausese se 20 Quakert town .............-....... 1 wie: Sites HEE renee 89 Rose Township hae 7 peter Oak ..... ....... seo... 183 Royal ere Township isles 4 eee tele 2c 1 Southfiel CIES «, © hci SEE 4 222 South an 2 Springfield PTownship aviy van Lake .....