The Weather 
  | 
fie accidents an hour U.8. Weather Bureay Forecast 
Hot and Humid. 
(Details Page 2) 
        
117th YEAR kaeekx PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1959 —32 PAGES.       | pass 
Grandma’s:99 Today 
  -_ 2 = By 
a 
AP Wirephote 
SHE'S NINETY NINE Grandma Moses of Eagle Bridge, 
N. Y, world famous painter of primitive rural scenes, cut a 
birthday cake celebratins her 99th birthday at the home of a 
Schuylerville, N. Y. vest 
given Grandma by Mr. and Mrs 
today, is marking the day quictly 
munity near the Vermont line 
70s and her works have 
U.S. The) erday. The surprise party was 
Kenneth Bullard. Grandma, 99- 
at her farm home tn this com 
tuok up serious painting in her 
been exhibited in Furope as the 
been reproduced on Christmas cards 
Holiday Death Toll Rises 
lo 3 in Oakland County. The Labor Day weekend accidental death toll in Oak- 
land County mounted Sunday as two traffic deaths and 
a drowning were recorded 
In addition, a Royal Oak man, William Sevald, 76, 
was struck and killed by a car Saturday night while 
he was fixing a tire of his car on the Detroit-Brighton 
Expressway in Livingston County 
Oakland owas sheriff's deputies also reported sev- 
eral “near drownings” on 
area lakes in what is fast, 
State Death Toll 
Stands at 22 ses Se Rd., White Lake ear Oakland's worst 
14 Die on Highways, ?. Curran, 2 friend in 
She 
as well 
also have 
    
ree-day holiday weeken 
in recent years. 
Dead in Sunday mishaps are 
_ 70, of 568 Tower. 
Township; Craig 
of 5975 Upper Straits 
Blvd. West Bloomfield Township; 
8 Drown as Holi Oy ind Robert D. McClusky, 28 of Draws to a Close “700 Vendome St., Pontiac 
Farmer atid McClusky 
| traffie victims, were 
The Curran bey By The Associated Press \ 
drowned in Upper Straits Lake. Traffic and drowning accidents = 
claimed at least 22 victims as the Farmer died at 9:30 last night 
long Labor Day weekend went into at Pontiac General Hospital, less 
its final day than an hour after being struck 
Fourteen persons lost their hves DY @ car on Farnsworth § street 
in traffic accidents as cars jammed "@t Union Lake road, in White 
highways on their way to park< “ake Township 
andl lalce , The distraught driver, Jean E 
. ; Allen, 16, of 9496 Portage Trail, 
The drowning toll climbed to ‘White Lake Township, was also 
eight today as s(ate police (jaien to the hospital where she 
searched =the shores of Lake pent the night under sedation Michigan near Manistique for a } * 
two teenage girts missing since 
Sunday when they apparently She told deputies that she was 
going north when Farmer sudden- went swimming in rough waters. ; y stepped in front of her car) The Associated Press istall and she was unable to stop be- count begins at 6 pm, Friday and fore striking him 
ends at midnight tonicht : , Deputies said Farmer was 
DROWNINGS knocked 20 feet from the point 
Two Manistique teenagers were (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) 
missing and presumed drowned in = . or 
Lake Michigan. Joan Mane Ry 
erse, lo, and Shervl Longtine. 12 
ipparently went swimming near ' (Continued on Page 2, 
_In Tuesday's Pontiac Press   UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL 
s 
Wants Facts on Trouble in Laos   
Ike Flies Back | 
to US. to Ready 
for Khrushchev By-Passes Iceland Stop 
Due to Bad ‘Weather as 
European Trip Ends | 
| PRESTWICK, Scotland 
( — President Eisenhower 
ended his 13-day swing 
through Europe today and 
flew back to Washington to 
prepare ‘for his meeting 
eight days hence with 
Soviet Premier Nikita 
Khrushchev. | 
| Because of bad weather) 
in Iceland, the President | 
canceled his plan to lunch | 
there with Icelandic Presi-| 
dent Asgeir Asgeirsson | 
Instead, the chief executive's 
yellow-nosed jet airliner sped him 
to Washington via Gander, New- 
foundland. 
The President looked relaxed 
and sun-tanned after his three- 
_ day golfing vacation in Scotland, 
vacation to rest up 4 ci « the . 
adie a of conferences with _| NITED NATIONS No Y op eratic Republic of Viet Nam is 
European leaders—a tour which The Big Four were expected to highly indignant at these ac- 
‘his doctors called one of the Announce agreement today to ties,” said the Red Viet Nam 
toughest jobs of his presidency. start arms talks again in a bal. News Ageney. 
After long and intimate talks @) anced 10-nation East-West group “It points out that the deep 
with West Germany's Chanccllor , jin Geneva at the start of 1960 sented root of the present tense’ 
Konrad Adenauer and Britain's Diplomatic sources said Britain, in Laos is the interference of the 
iPr ime Minister Harold Macmillan AP Wirephete = France, the Soviet Union and the United States aimed at turing this 
‘Ike went to Paris to see Presi LEAVES FRUITLESS MEETING Clara band) The trooper vanished last Thursday after United States would announce to- country into one of its military 
dent Charles de Gaulle Souden. wife of mussing state trooper Albert going to question Knight about a burglary. With (day how they planned to resume bases and seriously threatening the 
Soude paves State Police he: arters | as S ‘n are sees ‘ke: View te; Rootand’ te re: woud n, le nes ' ate Police mn acquerts rsink i‘ “rs Soude + are 
lax at his 16-room apartment in ainsing after pleading with ex-convict Alvin irs. Donalc 
Knight to tell her what happened to her hus troopet Culzean Castle. 
On Jeaving Culzean, he shook 
hands with his host and hostess Knight Had Nothing to Tell Her 
  “Please Tell’ She Begs Ex-Convict   Hermanson Area Forecast— 
Hot and Humid US. Asks U.N. 
Today. Tuesday tg Send Mission; 
Reds May Veto pect continued hot and saab 
weather tonight-and Tuesday, says 
the weatherman, Tonight's low 
North Viet Nam Angry 
at Little Nation’s Plea 
for Military Aid   will be’a moderate 69 degrees. 
x * * 
Tomorrow's partly cloudy skies 
‘will show a possibility of tate’ 
afternoon or evening thunder- 
showers. Reaching a high of 92 
Tuesday, the mercury will dip to a . 
low of 69 again that evening. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. 
Southwesterly winds recorded at LP’ — The United States 
4 mes pe our at 9 4 mh spearheaded. & move today ‘ome south to 
southeast, increasing to 20-30 miles to call on the U.N. Security 
later today. Council to send a fact-find- 
      See | x *® 4 ing mission to troubled e¢ lowest temperature prece 
‘ing & a.m. was 70 degrees at , Laos. . 
6 am By 1 pm the reading, The U.S. delegation and 
Disarmament 
Talks to Start Several others were expect- 
ed to submit a resolution 
proposing such a mission 
to the council meeting on 
Laos’ plea for a U.N. emerg- 
ency force to meet any ag- 
gression from Communist 
North Viet Nam 
After Two-Year Halt, North Viet Nam early today 
said it had asked the U.N. to re- 
Big 4 Nations Plan to ject Laos’ request for a U.N. force 
Meet Again in Geneva and branded it illegal 
“The government of the demo- 
and the 
state > they Mrs left, 
wives of Adolph Ploehn, 
both disarmament negolations peace of Viet Nam 
dropped two years ago * * * 
* * * North Viet Nam is not 
| They forecast that the UN. Dis- ber of the United Nations 
armament Commission would be, If the Soviet Union should veto 
summoned to meet late this week the resolution seeking a fact-find- a mem- 
the Marquis and Marchioness of !o hear from the four, take note ing mission, the sponsors could 
Ailsa of the agreement and report to get an emergency session ef the 
r . ‘ R f P T W the General Assembly convening General Assembly within 24 hours 
Hus final words to Lord oe elec S eas O rooper: S | e next. Tuesday by a vote of any seven of the }1- 
who had lived in a wing of * countries on the council 
ancesteral home during Pisa n- 
|hower’s visit, were: “It's been just. wonderful ” ex-convict Alvin Knight turned his! 
. back on the wife of missing state) a om > the > . 
Weather |pesmeitting ihe res) trooper Albert Souden last night dent’s plane will land Oe as she pleaded with him to tell! noon at Washington's 
Airport. Otherwise it will go to her what happened to her hus 
Andrews Air Force Base about jz|band 
miles from the capital “TH pray for you and forgive 
On-his way to the airport the you, but please tell,” Mrs. Clara 
President went an extra three Soudeh, 23. mother of a seven- 
lmiles to the village of Alloway: months-old baby, told Knight 
to visit the birthplace of the Scot Knight, 4%, whose prison ree- 
tish poet Robert Burns , oo 
In the nearby town of Maybole ord dates back to 1838 on Obie 
a crowd of several hundred and Michigan burgiary convic- 
tions, replied, “I am sorry for waved goodby and called, ‘‘Good 
+e i , 2 ~ you and your baby but I can't 
AS ‘+ do anything for you.” 
FisenhoWer spent his Jast day Then he choked. back tears 
in Scotland attending church, re- “This isn't any indication 
ceiving a life membership in the weakening.” he said “I'm sory 
Turnberry Golf Club, and rushing for you” 
: i Ragihoh ne ae ee. But Police Supt. Howard Seiler, : ef skies.)/~ 
The President's fecision’ a on whNistened to the dramatic inte: 
. ’ : Ticie. we » Polic " re ‘airy to Washington wax ot mioti- view at-State Police he adquarte 
vated, Hagerty said. by any spe- here though? Knight was reaching 
4al political development. There? breaking _point> He said thy haa been some thought he might hours-long grilling of “Keg will 
remain in Scotland for another Continue ~ 
iday +. * * 
“He just decided he wanted to “Neither he nor T are going to 
be home Monday afternoon,” Hag- get any Seiler said 
erty said. Seiler said it was the first time 
The President has kept in close Knight showed any great emotion 
Col. 5) State Police said that as of 7 sleep.’ 
questioning for 24 
hours except for brief 
‘Troopers said the ex-convict ap /eontinuous 
recesses 
  
a breakwal] off Manistique San 
day, state police said. Their cloth 
ing was found [ving on the beach 
Mrs. Margaret Rice, 49, of Dear 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) | 
~ ke & the People’ 
Labor Day | a okt s Series on Nikita Khrushchev. 
* Traffic Toll * * Bill Ryan's 
Dr. and Mrs. Fine’s 
_ Education’ t a nnn net Climbs Fast 
By The Associated Press 
Traffic 
Boating You Will Want to Read: 
Pontiac Board of Education's ‘Report to ine interview despite police oo. 
any It's ‘Anti-Labor Day’ peared alert and apparently un 
inerved by the examination. 
SHE INSISTED 
| Mrs. Souden, who insisted on: 
jections, looked pale and drawn 
Asked about Knight's reaction 
to her surprise visit, she said, ‘‘He/ 
turned right away. I think he was'! 
shocked." 
Souden, 29, disappeared last 
‘| Thursday after going te ques- 
Says Leader ‘How to Get the Best 
  
  
Non-boating 
Miscellancous 
TOTAL drownings ...... 
last ex- Ideal weather and the 
tended holiday weekend of the 
summer combined to produce a WASHINGTON (AP) — Bitter- 
mounting death toll on the na- DeSS etched the Labor Day state- 
tion's highways over the Labor Ments of union leaders today as 
Dav weekend ithey pictured labor defending it- 
The National Safety Councjf, S¢lf against a powerful onslaught 
sounded this warning: “There is DY big: business. 
President | 
statement | 
made’ 
tween On thg other hand, 
Eisenhower issued a 
the giant gains 
in the only one way: fo hold down the 
toll and that is by drivers doing 
their part, The toll continues to! stressing. 
motnt alarmingly, Unless. there is by American labor 
a definite improvement in the'tieth century. 
drivers’ ‘behavior, the toll could) + * * 
approach the all-time high. | (Secretary of Labor James P. 
* * * Mitchell, agreeing with the Presi- 
The count wax moving at a rate dent’s estimate of progress, add- 
of more than five dead from traf-ed that labor should move —for- 
| ward and try to raise the ,low 
During last year’s three-day hol-’ lecongmie' status of the migrant 
  iday, there were 42) persons'farm worker, 
killed by motor vetiicles. The, Two issues rankled labor lead- 
council estimated this year'siers as they tried to marshal un-| 
holiday would take a toll of 40.!ion’ “strength ae nation § am 
r 
  inew labor control bill, One was the = of education and political | 
The other) 
was increased resistance by em- * * Labor Day issue 
poyers to union demands for “Big sont leaders are doing | 
higher wages, 
sized by the steel strike 
+ * lmovement,”” Meany said -in a 
Today “might as well be called staternent 
‘anti-labor day,” said James B.| Walter Reuther: president of the, 
Carey, president of the Interna-|United Auto Workers an AFL-| 
tional Union of Electrical Work-'CIO vice president, said “We are 
ets and a vice president of the in troable in America’ 
AFL-CIO | ‘This: has happened. he con- But the AFL-CIO officially | tinued, “because giant corpora- 
named the day “Support the Stee}-'tions exercising monopoly conttol 
@orkers Day” in a move to help over vital sectors of the Ameri- 
the 506,000 steel workers who'can economy are motivated by 
have been on, stpike for eight | selfish policies which deny work- 
weeks, jer. farmers and consumers their! 
George Meany, president of the fair share of the - increased pro- 
AFL-CPO, said kabor would have | ductivity moe possible by our 
ito fight big business with a new | developing téchnology.” |   EAST LANSING uw — Hardened, 
‘territory so tion Knight about a $75 burglary 
at a fartory. 
Arrested Friday in a 
Michigan cabin, Knight 
being in the trooper’s car Thurs 
day. But he insisted he knew 
nothing of what happened to the 
had Souden’s service trooper. He 
revolver. He said he bought it for 
$10 from a hitchhiker 
The search for Souden has cen 
tered in a southeast Michigan area 
x *&* * 
Weary Searchers Find an 
Search Hugged Going 
ARGENTINE | 
trudged slowly oe 
dropped wearily onto rows 
“Boy,” 
with a sleeve of his fatigue 
uniform, “I ngver knew 
“there was so much rugged 
country around here” 
A smallarmy of 
hunting for Trooper Al 
hert W. Souden le: arned-early that misswg 
iam. today Knight had undergone the terrain surrounding this Ben- 
hamlet 
It is 
and 
and County crossroads 
was tough to cover on foot 
a patchwork of hilly farms 
woodlands, marshes, dirt 
gravel road«, lakes and narrow, 
twisting streams bordered = by 
thick cover, 
If Souden's body is buried 
there, or lying at the bettom of 
a lake and that is the prevail- 
ing theory — searchers could 
easily pase within a few feet 
of the grave and never see it. Psee 
That's why they're combing the 
carefully, eae gO 
” Bitterness Marks Union Statements Eisenhower's — statement, re- 
leased by the White House in his 
jabsence, said “One cannot look | 
back over past Labor Days with. 
an issue empha- everything in their’power to weak- | |out a compelling awareness of the went [rom door to door, 
en and destroy our trade union ‘broad and constant improvement |farm families for bits of email ‘Mail Fraud Tall Huge 
in the condition of our people, in! 
the real wages they rec seive, and | 
in the benefits they enjoy. 
“American labor has advanced 
continuously to new heights of ac- 
ee Eisenhower con- 
tinued 
“The rise in our level of living 
~the social ahd economic prog- 
ress of American working men) 
and women—gives promise of con- 
tinuing achievernent.” 
  
“Stdpp's Bettery™ 
% EF Lawrence Dewntown | 
Open Tuesday Eve “Ti * 
Fitting School Shoes 
Ne “Th northern 
admitted 
Two squads of state policemen 
Argentine 
said one red-face 
searchers 
     
        
      
       
     
    Informants said the agreement where his patrol car was found s Some diplow hey had 
iFour 12 man police squads, work was sa wand whe amet a druited a The negotmting group will be ing in relays with the heip of resolution ef their own favoring 
400 volunteers, have combed sary th S oe ee Buleerag, Cece revival of the dormant Canadian. 
farms and woodlands around the fran the Communist world and India-Polish International, Con- 
town of Argentine, 20 miles south- the United States. Britain. France| rel Commissien for Laos, a 
west of Flint. The area is dotted Canada and Italy from the ‘Vest. Preduct of the 1954 Geneva con- 
with lakes and streams whieh.) world ference agreements for peace 
have been searched by skin div 2. The negotiations will be. pei and independence in’ French 
ing teams vate and outside the United Na. Indo-China. 
Mrs. Souden had two inter. Gons But they will make use of Laos opposes this plan. So does 
(Continued on Page 2. Col 5) [the UN os Geneva building and the United States and Britain 
* * * clerical aid and will submit reg-, phe council was to hear a re- 
ular reports to the Disarmament port {rom Secretary General Dag 
Commission and through It to the iammarskjold on a letter her 
oy ‘ceived from Laotian Foreign Min- 
‘ister Khamphan Panya. 
J ; ba} » broke off in disagreement in TROUBLE START 
‘lin two years ago in the U.N, The letter reflected trouble the 
_the| royal government of Laos has had 
with Communist Pathet Lao reb- ex niatos to end the arms 
Disarmament subcommittee 
Bix Four plus Canada 
pa * * * els since last May, when a shaky 
I ownship Hall and The Soviet Union said then it 1957 national - unity - and - ea 5 * on 2. a ‘ 
of wooden chairs would go back te them only in a (Continued on rece 3 2, Col. 2) 
d trooper, wiping his brow disarmament includ- 
ing as many Communist and neu- 
. ; tralist countries together as West- 
ern countries—or one taking in all arachl U e rap ing over the same ground more (ON members COMMISSION 
than once This, says State Police . 
Capt. Burt L. Yungfer, is where . . M . _ 
the search will continue to be Prying t to Raise ley In | - if 
coneentrated unless fresh jeads 2 M 
point to other. areas — | 
4 + ¢ $200 for Mate Sylvan Lake Man Hurt Frow dawn to dark the opera Togetherness When Banged Against , continues. Four fresh 12-man . 
squattxmoved into the area teday An year-old wife and her Plane Doing 90 
the fourth ay of the search, re husband, marned only a month 
placing men had been on the ago and separated Friday, are 4 ’T-\earcold Svivan Lake man 
job two days 
400 VOLUNTEER 
More than 400 volunteers joinet ence again living under the same was injured seriously yesterday 
roof. But that roof covers the when his parachute caught in the 
Oakland County Jail tail assembiV of a private plane 
in. Farmers who live nearby, dep-| ck G. Wells, 22, of S382 Har- as he tried. to parachute over 
luty sheriffs from Genesee, Liv- Friday toyal Oak, i hace Howell Airport 
|ingston, Oakland and Washtenaw rigay fOr a me Tug ie By x * * 
lcounties, state conservation men, He pleaded inr in justice: ohn C. Flounders, -of 185 Jo- court, and was when he _ oa sephine St started to jump and inlled te post hls $200 Si 5 his foot got caught in a seat. Try- 
b. Trying, © raise the cash, Su > to regain his balance he was lay morning his wife, Sharon. | obad through the open door of 
took a cab from Royal Oak to },,, plane 
the home of relatives in Birming 
ham. Asking the cab driver for The lines of (Wisc hute became 
entangled in the left —_— of iand policemen from as far as De- 
itroit and Lansing 
Methodically. they plodded 
through corn fields and woodlands, 
‘their eyes always on the ground. 
| Two National Guard heticop- 
ters and a third from Selfridge change as she approached her 
Air Force Base roared ever: destination, she drew a Knife as the tail assembly, ca the 
head. ‘he drew his wallet, police said plane to stall. = 
A 10-man «kin diving team, at), The driver gave her $59. but) Flounders was banged against 
ae policemen, searched along Spotted which house she entered! the plane for 10 to 15 seconds 
ke and river bottoms. Members |When she left him. Birmingham while it was traveling at 90 miles 
it a skin diving club from Ann police recovered his money, ‘and per hour, When the lines broke 
Arbor gave assistance reunited the couple in Oakland joose, he completed his jump 
i * «€ County Jail. But he's on the third) he injured man belonged to 
State Police floor and she's on the fourth. lthe Wolverine Sky Divers, a para- 
eee chute club, and was riding with 
‘two other club members in the 
‘plane piloted by Airport Manager 
L. M. Miller. detectives 
asking | Nine 
ition that might ,put searchers 
the right trail, They poked as WASHINGTON (UPD — 
‘barns’ and woodsheds, into aban- Americans were duped out of an | : ciieeiiiataitias 
idoned wells, into boats tied up estimated $43,742,204 in 139 ma- — . lat docks ' | jor mail fraud cases last year, 
In Today s Press 
  SEARCHERS RETURN ' Postmaster” General Arthur F 
. ; Summerfield said today. He said Each new shred of evidence : goa ON CNR a : _ @ report by Chief Postal inspec- 
sent troopers hurrying to the scene! io David H. Stephens showed | Comes ........-. sa saieun fil lin a line of bright blue patrol cars record : Editerials “ , a number of arrests for eaexexneewand So 
At noon and as darkness mail fraud were made in the | Obituaries .............66 
neared, searchers converged on fiscal year that ended June 30. | Sports. ........46.ccscccs use 
the Jittle township hall where Postal inspectors made 284 | Theatere 2.2 /......06 54404 v 
| women from farms and nearby per cent more mail fraud ar. | TV & Radio premseuns - 
communities are serving meals | rests than in the previous fiscal | Witsem, Bart .........00465 aa. 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) (| year, he said.       Women's Pages ........ 12-6 
r 
eT ee          ee 
  
    The Day in Birminghant — ss 
New Secretary Begins 
Organizing ‘Y’ Activities 
gram secretary of the Birminghara|are welcome, 
branch of the Young Men's Chris-| The Birmingham “Y’ Men's 
itian Assn., Conrad Ekkens, has e-\Ciub invites all service-minded 
gun organizing ‘‘Y”’ activities ‘or 
the forthcoming school year. 
x* * 
Ekkens has the responsibility of 
the Gra-Y program and Hi-Y at 
‘Birmingham (Seaholm) Hi zh 
‘School, thus relieving Youth Serre- 
itary George Ewing so that he may 
lenlarge other areas of the youth 
jprogram   men to join as the fall schedule of 
fourth Monday evening of every| 
month. | 
The “Y” Square Dance Club | 
will hold its opening class Oct. 3. | 
This group will meet the first | 
and third Saturdays of each | 
month in a 12-session course. | 
The first in a series of 10 bridge, 
lessons will be offered from 1 to 3 
p.m, Sept. 28 at the Birmingham) 
“Y" under the instruction of Mrs. 
Marie Bosshart. Classes will be di- 
vided into beginners, intermediate 
| Plans are being made to expand ang advanced groups. 
the Gra-Y program in all schools Another “Y' program will be 
|where interest 1s present and :ead- for twomour sessions on Thurs- | ership available, Ekkens said. Last! day evenings on “‘Investing” be-_ 
year's Gra-L clubs at Pierce, Val- |. sc ginning Oct. 1 at 7:30 leywoods, Baldwin, Beverly Adams) The “Y” Young Adult Club in- 
and Bloomfield Village schools will ites all single men and women be- | 
abe given first preference in FeUr-| ween the ages of 20 and 40 to join 
ganizing, he added. : the organization and attend the bi-| 
Remstration moe s being taken | monthly activities planned for the’ itor Tuesday night swim classes at fall and winter seasons. A picric, 
|Barnum gies The sessions Will supper and campfire program for 
start Sept: 29 and areopen t0e0y iris group is scheduled for 6:30 
Y" imember ip.m. Friday on the “Y"”’ grounds. |   In addition, the new program 
secretary will have charge of the 
new and expanding program in 
the areay of junior high school 
youth, informal education classes 
and other adult programs.   
    The Tos ‘ ; nan uhesina Registrations for al] ballet class- 
ve Foastmasters (1ub begins es now are being taken at the “Y"’ meeting tomorrow night. ‘Dinner office for girls 413 to 13 years of, 
, lage The series of 12 lessons will) 
‘start Wednesday, Sept. 23 Pentiac Press Phote . dendy | 
AOW ITS OFFICIAL — Pretty Romeo 1” iv is reigning this weekend over the 27th an ® a | 
Queen Loreler Hlanae, 1%, of Armada fast: nipht noo) Peach Festival celebration which ends to- ue EC remiler Mrs. Napoleon Magniez 
offically crowned by Gov. Williams” in day with the Children’s Parade in the morning, | | BEVERLY HILLS — Private 
‘ HOt ved in Romeo's Memorial Sta the gala Floral Parade at 2 this afternoon and prayer service for Mrs. Napoleon. 
dium bef 1 crowd of some 1,400 spectator {ve lummers’ Parade and \(Maud) Magniez, 30, of 16124 Loch-' 
Rises to 22 in State 
t threo rm 
thrown 
the boat 
collided) with 
Harold bunnell, 49 
1 young, 
‘drowned 
from whl Priday 
h do Frida From Page One) | 
when she 
inter Lake ' Clau 
he was riding in 
erat 
and Philip 
beth of Flint, 
when the bout 
were fishing rented 
oO, 
they 
overturned in Holdridge Lake, 15 
iniles nerth of Pontiac, 
Fran Caray 4 af Petro 
drowned Sunday while swimming 
in Lake PHluron near Forrester in 
Softlae County 100 feet from shore 
Pdward Pawielski, 28 of Muske 
yon drawned Sunday while sain 
ming in Alward Lake, T2 mile 
northoof Lansing 
(raig VP. Curran, 7, of West 
Bloomficld Township, drowned 
sunday oto Upper Straits Lake 
when he toppled off a dock into 
three feet of water. 
TRABEIC: DEATHS 
Winnie 
Chiantd Wil 
Phil PPWek 
Planes 
Hy 1 
Meats 
hodon a) 
i od virial 
tree off I 
his ¢ 
Willian 
Oink, 
ont 
fixing [out 
Kh 
di 
overtime 
Ke 
Jinan F ol 
fi 
Seva fi 
wis struck 
Saturday 
w thre of Plan 
when oa 
brother 1 
Sune b ny 
en by her tut 
ile 
1colliston 
ne fakes oan 
Win Count 
Dee tiowt wa 
faut ony 
culty 
helby 
venelayy 
Allegan fall igure 
hit av tree in 
of Reval 
and killed by a 
night he was 
of his own ear on fis 
the Detroit Brighton Expressway 
In Livingston County 
Jvnne 
kalled Sunday when a oea ain 
Hedy he ropassengrer hata ' 
bea cay TO Hones Marr tes 
Joho €; OO) Piven 1 oof Phen be 
fia i vas gnyured fatally bert . 
daw night yout truck collin 
ear Port Phanen " 
Jamies Peden 39) of Ham 
framek, was strack ond killed Darien V7 of Nbushegran 
by accar near his home Saturday 
Leni 
[hat i} 
Chie 4 if 
hurt ‘I vii 
tis Cae i} pied 
"| Laretta 
puis bath of 
ere hallecdk Sumedoes 
fete Met aere 
prath 
WN TT rah 
pity 
Pain Pre Te 
digs Vong ph thy 
ener 
The Weather 
dull 
PON EIEN 
tloudy hat 
era Tuesday 
increasing to 
Pow tenigtt 
with a We 
Ab 
and humid with chance 
fate aflernoen oF 
Wine 
Ati 
fit tther Bureau Report 
Vie aNeny Barth, 
of 
eventhe thundersahow 
south toe southeast 
miles in afflernaen 
Tursday s high will be 
fom of nb 
Today tn Pontiac 
Iinwe tenn) ‘ iors ft rulitng Rm tt 
Downtown lemperatures 
raf 1} fa a Re 
Ta hoon nA 
Ria I pa wl 
® at 
i @ 
Sunday tn Pomtior 
i jown A} 
Highest te pers ‘ an 
lowest temperatiuss an ah 
Mean temper 
Weather F alc 
a Wart 
One Vear Aga in Pontiac 
Hrahest temperatures % 68 
Lowett temperature -,... a4 
Mean terirperature 6) 
Wealhe Chau) 
Highest and, Lowrst Temperatures i 
hin thate in 8% Years 
$7 in i939 
Bistnarck 
Brownsville 
Buffalo 
\ Chicago 
Cincinnatl 
Cleveland 
Denver 
Grd. Rapids 
Houghton 
Jacksonville 
Kangne City 
dansing 
Los Angeles 
Marquette a v=" Taken by Death 
Holiday Death Toll Coyernor Crowns lerbie Rd., was held Sunday at 
'Manley Bailey Funeral Home, 
Birmingham. Burial will be at 
Maurice Duplessis, 69, 2 p. m! tomorrow in White Chapel 
Was Chief of Province; Memorial Cemetery, Troy. 
onc C | Mrs. Magniez died Friday at her 
Called Political Genius home after. a short illness. Me- 
morial service will be conducted 
(AP) at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday at the 
69, Congregational Church in Bir- 
of mingham. 
Surviving SCHEFFERVILLE Que Romeo Peach Queen SCHERER Que can members of the queen's court and, controversial, iron fisted chief ROMEO Beal spot- Quebec province for 20 years, died besides her husband 
      Donald J Curran. drowned early, evening there will be some 
_| prisoner, Mis 
in three feet of water about eight | widely scattered rain and thunder try marked the corr ion last her majesty stepped into the 
mght of Fomeo Peach Qacen Lore light today are two children, Mariranna and 
lei Hoxw 1 mist by (AON The attendants and the towns! The bachelor lawyer {rom Trois- Celestine, both at home; her par- 
(Nani) Walaa they cepresented were Diana Ro- | Rivieres succumbed to a series of ents in the Netherlands; and one 
Fieve fe Get ae toto berts. Lake Orion, Sheila Dabn cerebral hemontancs that first brother in Australia. | 
Honiconthr Someitien sl ad the Romean Gwen Beer, Utica: Caro struck him Thursday while on a a 
yold lacework or queen 9 Hine Me Millan Oxford. Mary Mar- tour of the mineral-rich area he Fy C . t R . | 
dirk enc le 100 spre tell Romeo alternate, Veachel Bil. helped develop - ONVIC ejects | 
halons wate aie any in yell. Ortonville, Sonja Schatz, Dry Duplessis became premier of : 
Romeo "a -rencon eel 4 den, Carole Bird (second maid of the province in 1936 after found Pleas From Wif 
, honer) Plochester, and Fran Goff (4s the Union Nationale party and | e 
Herbert Vo Miller Fs PTO st md of honors Waterford Molding it into one of the greatest 
went lehoe frcnehp political machines the province (Continued From Page One) 
Lawal utd i ' (oibin was Flower yal and crown bearer has ever known views with Knight = gee ter 
mastercase sere Peggy and David: Lock | ~*~ * * (45 minutes and for five Ammons the dichitaties intra Defeated in) 1939, the party! ro one ee 7 After the governor performed (yunced back in 1944 and Duples-| minutes. She insisted on talk- 
duced te the crowd were Com | the traditional function of his sis held sway until his death, He ing with Knight after hearing 
Sarena oe ° vee “office, Barbara Moskow, stand: represented his home constituency | for the first time yesterday all ” 
Crone, Mrs \\ 4 Pars 1 he ing in for last year's queen, continuously in the legislature! @f the detail of the case. 
sanece preacated the sceptre to this |since 1927, breaking from the! Wives of other state troopers at 
file ame 3 dated year'a reigning beauty. Conservative party to organize the Brighton Post had sought. to 
wiguibile i ferafiveka) eleatte» aig die The three-day festival continties |his own . isoften the shock of the tragedy 
liebe. metas  Baransest dt loday opening with the children’s; He was hailed by some aS @ and it was not until yesterday, 
paride at 10am.) The giant floral savior and denounced by others morning that she read full ac- 
parade starty at 2 pm and fea-as a dictator, but was recognized! counts in’ the newspapers. Wives 
thine 'y floats, 10° high) school by all as a_ political genius He of fellow troopers accompanied 
Wear Searcness bunds the Chryster Kiltie Band was it fierce advocate of provin her from Brighton to East Lansing 
y | ind ofher marching units cial autonomy le decried federal forsthe inlerview 
. The Tth annual celebration interference in| what he consid- , 
Find Area Rugge tloses tomght with the Mummers’ ¢fed provincial affairs ~~ VINTEORS 
Parade at K pam and a speectacu | He fought against federal aid to! In between the two talks Mrs 
corse lar fireworks display at {% 30 universities, refused to participate’ Souden had with the prisoner, 
Continne db YP Ones inthe Trans Canada highway pro- Warden William  Banhan of 
Without choy wivation \Vrney ‘ . ram and did not commit: the Southern Michigan Prison and 
Workers banded ou! snacks fren 3 Die Over Holida province to the National Hospital prison Guard Inspector Chester, 
a stifion wagon in the fields y Insurance Plan Powers,. who knew Knight as a! 
. . Ile refused to participate in fed prison inmate, visited him. 
reece ml Mes per etory in Oakland Count ‘eral provincial tax-sharing agree: | Powers told Knight, “Cut out 
Set nen Basten ke Mer Wala y ments, making Quebec the only ine lying to these officers Tell 
orite “uur pene province to levy its own Income then the truth Y u made uy that Trisiete officer leew yn th (Continued From Page One} tax alae uo : _— up il 
Harney eres ayo onde wath story about the hitchhiker 
mmenoon the Feld eipned wath ceylan on cee ) i. . . Knight had nothing to say 
eee i é } i ‘Ss 
walkin felis tebep ie an how ENS Nation Will Be Police sald Mrs. Souden didn't 
Capt , a ' clistyaet : expect Knight to break right 
Hii ' ‘ds Farmer suffered — compound Fair and Hot, away when she confronted him. 
eabeh Connie est we ve wan and R . L t O He had said he didn't want to | 
wy \ L quiet taturios, atiacuiay {# Aveutaes ainy ater Nn see her. But she reasoned that — 
pola | (cl County Depaty Coroner Dr . ¢ she could impress him with her 
f yal " (irege L: Dunlap of Syiven o Ry The Assoc hates Frese > worry abeut her hesband and eth ie ay 6 aestea ake p. a The weather will be [af®e"er' that he eventually would make | 
| hopes ti anil i ta Connie : most of ine ony a and a statement. | 
faqenill bt Xaahiied ay anarch The Curran boy. sonoof Me and But later in the afternoon | Retore Més. Souden saw the 
Seiler reported yester-| 
Wa pe piaat ny ; \ Wp’ day's police grilling appeared to) ret tt Shore . 1 sto s 
t hited ‘on mre te Jaak a sail tie ee Het ava teak saan * * * have had some effect. | 
hat oe) ORES His father found him in the wa Phe Weather Bureau said the! “Tt don't think it will Tast foo) 
m ley ats Wop The tet had been rain and thunderstorms would  oc- much longer,” he said. “I think 
with Pb father at the home of a cur in a) be It from New Mexico he ts getting to the point where 
O © Kakins, of 391) and Texas eastward across the he is going to crack. He just 
| on 
U.S. Asks for Facts sve svsin'nx 
on Troubled Laos Straits Bled but the boy lower Mississippi Valley and from doesn't care any more | 
, Tennessee and the Gulf states to * * * 
the Carolinas “He gives you the. impression | about 200 min 
tes before he was found, deputies 
iad * * Wh fe Sands that he is about to tell you some- | 
| rs * * Some light rain fe late suneay thing, then he backs up. On oc- 
‘Continied From Pace One) His father and Eakins applied. and early today in the South. but! wasion he has tears in his eyes — 
fw broke artificial respiration and two doe. at Anderson, S.C., one inch o whether that’s due to eye strain 
between the 
how |tors living nearby administered rainfall was noted in six noire, _lor emotion, I don't know,” 
tossed that samce Tats 1A for and ine Cis eld ed Sonate) Lb sida win tee eee Seller said. “1 think we can 
eon troops had been crossing Amine i. oes ~e ing Lotta ‘ leventually ask for a first degree | 
[iG odieaticen (rantier with n an es wi yl inha ain f ee murder warrant. He would not 
CuniniuSE Nor Kiet Nam All attempts to revive him failed | get a warrant until Tuesday if 
On Aw: 7% it said a new and and the boy wan pronounced dead Betters World Record iwe do it then.”’ 
more violent attack ene in whichiOt Attival at Pontiag General Hos tone ‘ive Hits a 
there were elements. fram. North Pal by Oakland County Deputy For*Consecutive Fl : 
Viet Nam and artilery tie from Coroner Dr HE Collins SALT LAKE CITY (AP)—Trap- lke Flies Back to J § veross the border | Deputies sald they believed the | chooter Arnold Riegger of Castle. ~—| 
* « « | tot fell frem the dock, He was pock Wash, hit 200 registered | R d { Ni : 
Ih teed thar an emergency! the tMrd Oakland drowning vie- | clay targets in a tow Sunday and to Qa y Or ikita 
farce be sent aa snon as. possible tim this weekend, Two Flint men ‘bettered the world’s record tor | 
“to stop the aegression and) drowned tn Holdridge Lake, Hole | consecutive Hits (Continued From Page One) | asked Heammirskjold ta apply! ly Township, Friday night. | Riegger has hit 1,207 registered touch with devel te i 
“the appropriate procedure” McClusky died at 9 35 Sunday targets in a row this year. The hia dally aa hee Waa 
Hammarskjold, then on a two morning at St. Joseph Mercy Hos./old record of 1.179 was set in 1988 eid But he ad ee aie weele South American tour, cut it}pital of severe head injuries, jby Hoe Hiestand of Hillstoro,| any new information hace Satan 
a day short, flew into New York! * * * Ohio day, Hagerty’ said. . | 
late Saturday and conferved with| Deputics said he dreve a motor : - —— Eisenhower demonstrated that 
atin erreurs amt thwevcle teenging ty « trend into He Was Big Help he would rather lay “ol than oh ; ithe side of Davis’ Market, 3996. ; eat. He skipped lunch and hur. 
September, kyidie Ortona of It/Aubarn Rd, Auburn Heights, att NEW YORK (UPI) — The | ried to the Ailsa golf course after! aly Ortona Called the council abot 1.330 a.m Rev. John C Murrett, of Buf- ichureh. The sun, which had been, — 48 i" zee meeting uf Hammarskjold’s re * * * | falo, N.Y: a Maryknoll mission- |bright and warm Friday and Sat. 
Sunday's Tecepersiare Chart |" st, The motorcycle had been  im-| ary, said today he had just com- |urday, disappeared behind heavy 
ot sient wen a ol pounded Thursday by deputies and) pleted months of intense re- | clouds, and the President appar. 
i Milwaakee 96 14 Talked for Naught iwas being held at Wall's Service| search for a book on the influ- | ently felt he might not be ab | 78 Minneapolis 91 65 g ie ly ig le to 
68 New Orleans 02 stl aria) es jStation, 3985 Auburn Rd., for the) ence of the Bible on Shake- [get in a last round if he waited | 
uh Mew tock 3 a LONDON (ERD The  So- sheriff's department. speare’s writing when he got’ a [too long. | Pelixton ciety of Lecturers took a poll 
73 Phoenix 106 76) : * * * Jetter from a man in Cranston, * * * 
MM vitiseurgh (8) * of women’s clubs and~study | According to witnesses, McClus-| R.1. ‘Heard about your scholar- | Piaying with U.S. Ambassador, 
1 & Francisco 71 65) groups and found that nearty ky went to the gas. station, got | ly intentions regarding Shake- | John Hay Whitney aéainst New. 
“tke ne oe nag the loctures they scheduled ofthe motorcycle, started it and| speare,”” the letter said. “Am |York corporation executives Wil. 
16 Was ‘ » In the past year were not heard mn on ~ , i aes P x . é 
on mene by 4 Sy mudenee The acrkaeis io then drove ata high rate of speed) forwarding 300 Biblical expres- liam E. Robinson and Alton Jones 
66+ Tampa 27 e socicty called |directly west.across Adams road) sions which | compiled over the ithe President again came in with 
| 63 Gn Jecturers to talk louder, linto the side of fhe grocery store last 10 years.” lan 83. .   ( ; \ BIRMINGHAM — The new pro- will be served at 6:30 p.m. Guests — 
meetings get under way. The ses- & 
sions are held the second and & THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 7, 1959 
Save Plenty on these 
'3', HO PRICES SLASHED on Every Tomorrow morning——~Tuesday—-Simms goes on a price-s 
are so big, we must limit sale to just 3/2 hours .. 
more you buy, the more you save.         
    9a.m.to 1230 60 Ga., 15 Den. Full Fashion 
Ladies’ Nylons-3 *- New fall shades oftan 00 
lars in sizes 8'/2 to 11. 1 
Reg. $1. ‘—Main Ploer Fs or beige. Slight irregu- 
Tre 9 A.M. to 12:30 ONLY ose 
E Original $3.95 Value 
Ladies’ Robes Absorbent chenille in 
pink or blue colors only 
Size 10 only. Save $2.95 —Main Fleer 
Tailored RAYON-TAFFETA 
Ladies’ *2 Slips Full cut slips in red or ¢ 
black colors, Sizes 32 39 
and 34 only. Limit 2 
—Main-fleer 
Ore 9 A.M. to 12:30 ONLY BL 
All-Weather” Style 00 cll 
Ladies’ Rain Coats’ Regular $9.95 value 
Lined coat in full length 
style Matching hat 
Size 16-18-20 only —Main Fleer 
hehe 869 A.M. to 12:30 ONLY BA 99 
IE Handkerchief Top and Pants 
Slight irregulars of 
sellers Sleeveless 
in size | and 2. 
_ American made blankets 
in assorted pastel colors 
Famoys ‘Regal’ brand, 
For misses and girls too 
in sizes 412 to 10 In . 9 a 
Girls’ Playsuits 
novelty pattern, hankie 
tops and pink pedal 
pushers. Sizes !0 
Famous “Happy Time’ 
. 9 P 
Child’s Undershirt 
style T 0‘ 
—Main Vl 
. s 
Receiving Blankets 
25° —Main Fleor 
°** WSs nose °° 
ies’ *2” Sh Ladies oes ] 00 
group. Assorted hi-colors 
in year ‘round styles. 
eee eee 2-Pc. wash ‘n wear In 99° 
—Main Fleer 
39¢ 
First Quality 24x 36 Inch 
“Ballerina or Flat Style 
Blazer Stripes — Elastic Top 
Boys’ Anklets—pr. small lads in sizes 5 ¢. 
G 5") only. Varnety of 
collors. Limit 3 pr For 
cement 
ooo Pw mr erste os »-@ 
Solid Color Cottons 
Yard Goods-per yd. Values up to 59c - ¢ 
remnants, short lot 
etc. in variety of colors 
—BRasement 
coo EP Ww mere ne?) | Saee eee 
No-lroning Crinkle Crepe 
Full size spreads in ran- 
dom stripes. Choice of 
assorted colors Limit 2 
—Basement 
eee 9 A. M. to 12:30 ONLY 
Machine Washable Material 
Boys’ ‘Ivy’ Pants 
of dress and causal styles 
in sizes 6 to 18. Limited 
coc VW ETI han eee 
Ready-to-Hang — Pinch Pleat Regular $295 Choice 1” 
colors 
Rayon Drapes-pr. Choice of 63 - 72 of 90 
inch lengths. Solid col- 00 
ork in limited selection : 
Reg. $2.49 
eee 9 A.M. to 12:30 ONLY BAA 
620-120-127. Sizes — Popular 
Kodak, Ansco Films Regular 50 roll of black 4 
and white snapshot film, 
Fresh date. Limit 3 rolls. - 
eee 9A M to 12:30 ONLY eee. 
SYLVANIA or AMPLEX M-2 
Flashbulbs - 12 for Regular $1.56 carton of € 
12 bulbs to fit most 
popular size flash units. 88 
—Main Fleer 
98 NORTH 
SAGINAW 
STREET    
     Terrific 
Sorry 
m 5-Hole 
Notebook 
Paper 
29 k of 115 sheets. 
f 3 ring Item in lashing binge ...and the bargains 
_ plenty of some, 
no mail, phone or la 
  
  
1” Regular $1.00 
Crayolas 
67° Box of 64 assorted 
color crayolas. Limit 
1 box per customer. 
—Main Fleer 
  
  
2 or 3-Ring 
Zipper 
Binder 
715° Regular 98c value 
Takes 5-hole filler 
paper Sturdy zipper 
open and close. 
—Main Floer 
  
  
Eraser Tip 
5c Lead 
Pencils 
10 For 15° 
{st quality *2 leads 
Meta) bound eraser 
tips. Advertisers mis- 
prints 
—Main Floor 
  
  
350 Sheets 
Filler 
Paper 
17: Regular 98c value. 5- 
hole notebook paper 
fits 2 & 3 ring bind- 
ers 
—Main Floor 
  
  
Reg. $1.95 
5-Cell 
Flashlite 
71° Throws 1500 foot 
beam All metal cas- 
ing, use regular bat- 
teries Betteries are 
extra 
—Main Fleer 
  
  
5-Gr. Aspirin 
Tablets 
100"9: Full -strength USP 
5-grain aspirin. Limit 
2 packs per person 
—Main Fleer 
  
  
Kleenex 
Tissues 
22° Box of 400 sheets in 
pop-up box. Assorted 
colors ‘and white 
Limit 2 
—Main Fleer 
  
  
KOTEX 
NAPKINS 
AMT Box of 48 sanitary 
napkins for feminine 
hygiene. Pkg. of 48. 
Limit 1 
—Main Fleer 
  
  
Alka-Seltzer 
Tablets 
Pack of 8, fast act- 
ing tablets for head- 
aches, etc. Limit two 
packs 
—Main Fleer 
  
  
Lilt Wave 
Refresher 
19° Regtlar $1.25 perma- 
nent Wave, pick-up 
now at this low 
price. Limit 2 
—Main Fleer dividers. 
  
  
      This Ady. 
few of others, but the 
orders,      
      For Water—Milk—Juices 
2-0t. Bottles 
718° Regular 98c value. Spill 
proof, screw cap. For 
mixing or storing. 
—nd Fleer 
see: eee 
Fit Standard & Oversize Boards 
lron’g Board Covers 
put on easy off. 
48° Regular 59c seller. elas- 
tic all around. Easy to 
see PW eres eeniags °°° 
Salt-Pepper Shaker Table size set. Salt stays 18 ¢ 
Easy to fill, Reg. 39c. 
—2né Floor 
29c Value —RUBBERMAID 
Steel Wool Holder Unbreakable Poly Plastic 
dry. in damp weather. 
eee 9 A.M. to 12:30 ONLY [AA 
Rubber holder holds steel ¢ ‘wool pads to secour 
corners and surfaces: 
safely 
—tnd Fleer 
Wares eae °° 
Popular 7-Inch Size 
Aluminum Skillets Regular $1.19 value. Al- 
uminum skillet heats fast. 
cleans easily. For frying eee 9 
¢ 
foods —tnd Fleer 
[rr 69 A.M. to 12:30 ONLY ft 
For Hot or Cold Liquids 
‘1° Vacuum Bottle Keapsit by Thermos. Full ¢ 
pint size tor hot or coid 
liquids. . 
—nd Floor 
9 A.M to 12:30 ONLY Bry) 
Full Pound Box — Famous 
Solventol Cleaner woodwork, ] ] ¢ 
Easy to 
coe For walls, 
linoleum, etc 
ase. Regular 29c 
—nd Fleer 
9 A.M. to 12:30 ONLY 
“Burgess” Leakproof 
Flashlite Battery 
10° 9 A.M. to 12:30 ONLY Fy 
Reg. $1.95 Wire Center—Plastic 
Clothesline-100 Ft. ee 
Regular 20c seller. Stan- 
dard cell size. Fresh 
eee 
Strong wire center 
clothes line covered with 8 8° 
plastic. Easy to clean. 
Limit 300 ft.. 
—tnd Fleer 
eer eee 9 A.M. to 12:30 ONLY 
Fits Any Faucet — Reg. $1.19 
SHOWER & Spray 
SHAMPOO 
57 Rubber spray for sharm- 
poo G showers. Ideal for 
pet baths. With nassage 
t 
? —tnd Fleer 
9 A.M to12:30 ONLY [ide 
100% Pure Bonded---Reg. $1.95 
Motor Oil-2 gal. Sealed factory can. !deal 1 17 
for cars. trucks, trat*ers, 
power mowers. 10-20- 
30-40 Grades nd Fleer 
eee eee 
6 or 12-Volt — Sealed Beam 
Auto Headlight-ea. Regular $2.50 value 2 
Sealed against dirt, McG- 
ture .Etc. Limit 2. 
—tnd Fleer 
PY A.M. to 12:30 ONLY | 
Holds 1600 Documents — Metal 
Porta-File a 7 
lock and key. Indexed 
eee Limit 1 chest. 
—tnd Fleer 
yx) 9 AM to 12 30 ONLY 
Popular “Rabbit-Ear” Style 
Indoor TV Aerial 
99° For all sets including co'~ 
ors. Complete with lead- 
in wire, Limit 1, 
—Tad Fleer 
eee 
Famous STAINLESS STEEL 
‘2 Soup Ladies 11 %-inch overall length. 
Stainless stee! head, pac- 
alac handles in colors. 
—tnd Fleer 97° 
     Saar ae SR ee, ee eee RS Ta ae ie ae a ee eS eee 
i 
  
AF to Try Out - 
Small Capsule Wants Men‘s Reactions 
to Closet-Size. Space for 
48-Hour Period 
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) — 
The Air Force has started an ex- 
periment to find out how man 
might react on a two-day journey 
in a space capsule so small he 
can barely move. 
The experimental capsule is 
broom closet size—5 feet long, 2 
feet high, 2% feet wide. 
Trial confinements started in 
mid-July. They will eontinue until 
40 men have been tested at the 
rate of one a week. 
Each of 20 volunteers will spend 
48 consecutive hours in the cap- 
sule throughout a six-month peri- 
od 
The 20 others will be able to 
spend a fair amount of free time 
outside the capsule during the 48- 
hour period. 
Half the mémbers of each group| 
will eat a special space diet of 
fruit juices, meat cubes, cheese, 
roast beef and candies. The others 
will be on a conventional diet. 
The éxperiments at Wright Air 
Development Center, Dayton, 
Ohio, were described in connection 
with an Air Research and Devel- 
bit at the Air Force Assn. conven- 
tion which closed Sunday night. 
3 Auto Accidents 
Injure 4 in County 
Three accidents in which cars 
ran off the road Sunday resulted 
in injury to four people, according | 
to Oakland County sheriffs dep- 
uties. 
William M. Clarkson Jr., 19, of| 
2323 giver Circle, Pontiac Town-! 
ship, driving south on Baldwin road   
  
  near Gallogly road, missed a curve} 
and overturned, said deputies. 
The accident occurred in Pontiac 
Township at 1 a.m. 
Clifford J. Goodson, 25, of 552 
Meadow St., struck a tree when | 
he ran off Bald Mountain road | 
in Orion Township at 8:50 a.m. 
A passenger, Robert L. Sims, 
7, of 141") Oakland Ave. was | 
alse injured. 
Clarkson, Goodson and Sims) 
were all treated at Pontiac Gen-| 
eral Hospital and released. | 
Gerald D. Reynolds, 17, of 489 
Going St. is listed in satisfactory 
condition at the hospital with 
facial injuries. His auto ran into 
a ditch at a curve on Clarkston| 
road in Orion Township at 12:20 
a.m., deputies said. 
Fraternity Liffs 
Membership Bans 
WASHINGTON (AP) — Racial 
and religious restrictions on mem- 
bership have been removed from!) 
    
  the by-laws and rituals of Sigma I took a stroll around the neigh-|work off their enérgies. Phi Epsilon fraternity. 
The removal was voted 134-37) 
Sunday at the fraternity'’s biennial 
meeting. Officers said it means 
that the fraternity’s chapters at 
148 colleges in the nation now can 
select members without regard to 
race or creed. 
Membership had been limited to 
white males of Christian birth. 
am, 
WIN A 1959 
RAMBLER Plus 
500 Gallons   
SPEEDWAY 79° Gasoline! 
Get Detajis and 
Entry Blank from Your 
Rambler Dealer or 
‘79° Station Speedway 
ACT NOW!     
  
IF 
YOU WORK | 
‘IN 
DOWNTOWN 
PONTIAC... 
You Will Find 
It So 
Convenient 
‘to DROP OFF 
YOUR DRY 
CLEANING 
GENEY'S FE 5-6107 
FE 5-6108 (There have been recent and per- 
sistent reports the 
Union an 
By RAY CROMLEY 
WASHINGTON (NEA)—With the 
troubles they're having, the best 
U.S. scientists expect is that an 
American will spend a brief five 
minutes in space some time late 
next summer. : 
If al] goes well, the Astronaut 
will be shot up in a ballistic orbit, 
go about 140 miles, and be para- 
chuted down. 
It won't be until the winter of 
196162 that an American can be 
sent into orbit around the earth. 
Even if things go right, he'll 
In his four and a half hours 
circling the earth at 17,400 miles 
an hour, he'll study the world 
100 miles below through a built- 
in periscope. On command, he'll 
practice minor satellite ‘‘ma- 
neuvers’’—rock his capsule back 
and forth, make it face in dif- 
ferent directions. 
It won't be until well into 
1962 at the earliest that an 
American will circle the earth 
a day and a night—eat, sleep, 
stomp around weightlessly in his 
tiny capsule—for 18 trips around 
the globe. 
The reason for these far-off 
dates is that the space scientists 
have some thorny problems to 
solve. 
They've got to find out if their 
ungainly-shaped space capsules — 
with their squashed-out bottoms— 
will hold together in the terrific 
alr shocks of missile blast-offs. 
The gadgets have proved sound in 
wind tunnels and in minor flights. 
But can they stand the rugged THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1959 
First Man to Enter Space Next Summer--for 5 Minutes shock provided by an Atlas missile 
takeoff? 
For one, they're going to ex- 
periment with coating the cap- 
sules with a special heavy layer complicated something is almost 
certain to fail. 
Eventually there will be a 16- 
with paper and pencil ‘how te {foot escape mechanism on top of! capsule, on top of a 65-foot Atlas) 
missile. 
The launch missile is fired. If 
it misfires the capsule and es- 
  cape mechanism must automat-jother “tasks.” By TVs planted cently was invited to dinner at-al a three-foot parachute tube, cnjtelligent, alert Rhesus monkeys 
top of a seven-foot man-carrying}and chimpanzees will pave the 
chimpanzees will be ordered—by way. 
Once in space, the monkeys and 
  light signals—to press buzgers, do! 
         = fF 
Gives Concert Violinist 
‘Kreisler's Stradivarius 
NEW YORK (AP) — Benno! Kreisler’s chitt was. He looked et 
Rabinof, the concert violinist, re-| it. I look at 1 ae Rabinof said. 
“It's like coming into a big ca- 
blast away from the mis-|in the space capsules, ground sci-|restaurant by a violin enthusiast, “°d"! and spiritual things are i 
2 aid then separate in tow, actu-| 
ating a small stablizing para- 
chute and setting off a cargo para- 
chute to let the man - in - capsule 
down gently.   designed to turn to gas when it 
heats—leaving the capsules and 
their men intact. If the missile works, this is what | 
must happen automatically. 
Sixty to 80 miles up, the cap- 
sule-escape mechanism  sepa- 
rates from the missile; the es- | 
capse mechanism separates from | 
the capsule. The man-in-capsule | 
floats through space for its al- | 
lotted period—five minutes, four 
and a half hours of 24 hours, | 
while jets make it face in the | 
right direction. !   Then a jet in the capsule’s bot 
tom slows it down to re-enter the 
atmosphere. At 100,000 feet, a 
small parachute opens to keep the 
capsule from tumbling end over 
end. At 10,000 feet, the big para- 
chute opens. Meanwhile, aluminum 
foil is released so the capSule can 
be tracked by rescue radar squa 1- 
rons. 
When the capsule hits the sea 
chemicals are released that color 
the water for miles. A revolving 
light begins turning. Several ra- 
dios broadcast homing signals that 
can be heard for hundreds of 
miles 
That's a lot to go right auto-: 
matically. |   FASHION TREND—First as-   tronaut will wear a variation cf The fourth major problem is} 
RETURN TRIP—It will be late this Navy flight suit on his trip finding out whether man can 
next summer before the Mer- to space, but extensive tests re- “take it’’ in space. Before any 
cury capsule comes parachuting main before he dons it for of the seven human Astronauts 
back from space with a man _lanuching. are allowed into space a series 
inside. of carefully-nurtured, specially in- 
  
Jaycee President Sees Shiny Knives for Sale . |   
In New York City on Youth Work By PHYLLIS BATTELLE 
NEW YORK—The national pres- 
ident of the “Jaycees,”’ or Junior 
Chamber of Commerce, is aged 30, 
married, two kids, wears tortoise- 
‘rimmed specs, and has a crewcut | SWitch-blades, and there was a big kids who'll never see a fairway. 
that is only one vitalizing _treat- 
ment beyond Yul Brynner. 
* x * 
He represents 3,700 local organ- 
izations of young men (aged 21 to 
136) who are very much like him. |t© start, for our men. In Houston, | 
Eager and energetic about today, 
anxious about tomorrow, and un- 
worried about yesterday .. . or, 
‘as he puts it, “not beat down too Making it harder for citizens to UP for young men. Like ours. The| 
many times yet.” 
Bob Clark came to the big city 
from his national Jaycee head- 
quarters in Tulsa to help pep- 
talk New York City into taking 
quick and positive action against 
the appalling juvenile  delin- 
quency that has killed and in- 
jured a number of teenagers. 
Fighting delinquency is sort of a 
daycee civic specialty. 
“So the first thing I saw, when was formed in 1920. It is non- 
profit. Its aim, ‘‘to build leader- 
ship among members by providing 
services to the community.” 
* * * 
There are 22 national projects 
the Jaycees are working on for iborhoad where the last murders; ‘Like back in the Middle West, 
‘took place,’ Bob said, “was a in some towns there's hardly a 
window full of knives and guns. kid of 14 who can't diive a ball 
‘They had switch-blades there, all! down the middle of a fairway 225 
shiny and good looking if you like yards. In New York, there are | 
sign: ‘On Sale, 97 Cents.’ "’ 
* * * 
; He poked thoughtfully at 
bridge 
\tacles. | If you'll excuse the pun, the op- 
peaite of fairway ts unfair way. | the benefit of their communities 
the |) TREY <)pet premieces they Sever | —five of them dealing with 
of his professional spec-| ere . | young people's problems. But 
“Maybe that’s the place) x *& * | each local group has its own 
“One thing I know—helping to specific civic schemes; St. Paul, 
|Tex., that’s what the Jaycees did.' smbat this problem is a job for) Minn., daycees, for instance, 
|They set up a crime commission,' — ney Gul Itc cepecially etl tackled 178 lecal projects last 
iwhich forced through legislation ©V°TY9OGY, DUt H's especially Sel) ear. 
|Dbtain knives and guns, and the average Jaycee man is married,| The New York. City chapter Is, ‘ . : ‘undoubtedly, the most  under- 
crime rele over — has two children, so obviously the/ manned per population capita of 
; delinquency problem is something ty. 3.700 locals. For the obvious “But then again, maybe the first in which he has the greatest in-\peason that “in New York City way we can help in New York is terest. When you add this personal! post young men must struggle a 
to pitch in for more recreation for| interest to the drive and ambition pard against competition in their 
kids, I don’t know. The delin-la guy has when he's under 36,!own careers that they feel they 
quency problem here seems to me!you ought to have etioctivenees:") ‘ 
to be much more complex than it x * * civic activities.” 
is other places, with the mixture} Clark’s organization, which sum-| ’* * * 
lof races, and the remoteness of marily retires its members when | The members New York does 
| places where teenagers can in-they reach 36 (they are called faye, however. are dedicated 
dulge in good physical activities to |‘‘Roasted Roosters," and are re-|-TW. kind of " guys who would 
signed to approaching senility),/rather put their foot down, than don't have time to work outside on 
  
  
  HAIR-RAISING ADVENTURE — After help-_ display. At left, dressed in coveralls and sneak- © wae 
ing build the American National Exhibition in 
Moscow, Russian electrician Klava Verkasova, 
31, took advantage of a free U. S. hair style 
given at the Coiffures Americana Beauty Kiosky ~ {put their feet up on a divan and | 
| 
| | |    
      
    entists wil]. watch the primates to! 
see if space confuses their senses. lin case. 
Solving these space problems | x * 
will require a series of 20 to 30 | 
special space and orbit launches 
before man, himself, circles the | 
earth. 
into space. But not tomorrow. j * * * 
  
Richmond Woman, 78, 
Hurt in Plane Mishap the man ito hear it sing again 
RICHMOND W—Mrs. Lena Brei- silent too long.’ ” 
holz, 73, was injured yesterday 
ing an attempted takeoff from an ROR 
abandoned auto race track here. | 
* * * 
The pilot, Clare H. Breiholz, 55, 
said he applied the 
he thought he didn't have sufficient 1946 it came 
power to get the plane safely into. oy y 
the air. 
Voyager turned over on its side * * * 
last played by him 
into the 
acques Gordon, 
of Richmond, was treated at the who does not want to be kn 
scene for leg cuts, shock, bruises 2 * * 
and back injuries } “This violin is cut from a mas 
Breiholz, who was flying his ter's hand. When I play it. ] have 
mother to Ann Arbor for the week 
end, was uninjured. neck. My chin is on jf - 
  After dinner he opened a vio- 
| There was an exquisite fen! 
|ment of redbrown, still glowing 5@8 proclaimed this week Michi- 
| with the varnish applied by the 
So with trial and error—and/ Master violin maker Antonio. Stra-| 
jtime—the first American will get divari. It was made in 1734 
The donor then made one stipu- 
when a light plane overturned dur- !@tion—his name never was to be 
tabinof said the violin once was 
owned by Fritz Kreisler and was 
in Carnegie 
brakes when ji41) more than a decade ago. In 
possession 
St z first violinist 
The four-seat Stinson of the Gordon Quartet. Two years 
later Gordon died. Then it came 
His mother, Mrs. Lena Breiholz jnto the possession of the man 
own 
thrilling feelings going down my 
where 
PONTIAC-OAKLAND COUNTY AREA   
( ee 12 ER 
rE     
R FRI 
[FAR 
NN 107 
FAIR 
Te)   
          Based on U.S. Gov't forecasts of Tide and Barometric Pressure. Fish bite best during high pressure 
10 11 12 13 14 SAT, Sl " 
  EARNS Ze there.”’ 
  
This Is Children’s Week 
LANSING (i®—Gov. Williams 
gan Children’s Aid Week through- 
out the state. 
  
Addis Ababa, capital of Ethio- 
jpia, has traffic problems, Sheep 
“Why are you giving this to 4nd camels are still herded through 
|me?” Rabinof, in a story in the, the main streets, slowing down 
iNew York Times, said he asked Movement of automobiles. 
“The man said ‘] want — ——— 
It has been   
  
‘S9 RAMBLER 
8, $1648 HEATER 
Cheese Your Own Equipment 
BIRMINGHAM RAMB 
Mi 6-3900 
  
Cockroaches Written Guarantee 
From Houses, Apartments, 
Groceries, Factories and 
Restaurants. Remain out only 
ene hour. No signs used. 
Rox Ex Company 1014 Pontiac St Bu. Bldg. FE 8-4558     
      
  
     
  
   
     pA AA 
     
     
  |SHOWERS | 
  
  
       
     
2) 4 
ie 6 = 6 2 6 > 6, 6 . 6 
| AM! PML AM. PM.[AM.'OM 
  Ree Wel, 
|| AM. PM.| AM" PM   
  
Nov at Comunity ; 
  That Beek 
ACCOUNTS 
    \   
       
       
Nati 
O F 
Member FDIC. | AM COMPLIMENTS OF    
        
      
a pn |) a 2 , 2 
pm! Oo |         e 6-6), 6 
pm.|AM PM!AM 
   
   PON TIA C 
  
Missile Frigate 
After Halsey 
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A 
new guided missile frigate will | 
be named in honor of the late 
Fieet Adm William F. (Bull) 
Halsey. | | 
| 
* * * 
Navy Secretary William B. 
Franke said the warship was | 
expected to be launched at the 
San Francisco Naval Shipyard 
in September 1961. It is sched- 
uled for commissioning the lat- | 
ter part of 1962. - 
Guided missile frigates are 
a new class warship, designed 
to provide speed, endurance 
and other qualities required to 
operate with a carrier task 
force. 
They will be armed with ter- | 
rier missiles for air defense in | 
addition to anti-submarine wea- | 
pons. 
* 
Halsey led carrier task forces 
to victory in the Pacific dur- 
ing World War II. The retired: 
admiral died in his sleep last | 
month. ers, she is shown working on the exhibit. At 
left, dressed in coveralls and sneakers, she is 
shown working on the exhibit. At right, she dis- 
plays her new American hairdo.     
EM 3-6900 
  12 E. Pike St. 
a .   
  . Modified Stock Cars 
214 HOURS of THRILLS and CHILLS | 
-MICHIGAN’S GREATEST DRIVERS 
The FINEST in MODIFIED Stock Cars 
TIME TRIALS 7:30 RACE TIME 8:30 P. M. 
Racing Every Tuesday and Friday Night 
M-59 SPEEDWAY 8 MILES WEST OF PONTIAC JU 8-1144 
         
     
   
      
    
         
   
       
   
           
     
SIMILAR 
SAVINGS 
on All Other 
Sizes — Black | 
—or White — 
Tubed or Tubeless 
  TT-WEST HURON ST. FE 8-0424   
FF 
         
  
 re   
   
   TWENTY-FOUR 
| 
DRIVE-IN MA 4.5335 
Titits o-FEATURES-3 . PLUS        
      The 3 Stooges 
TENNESSEE WILLIAMS PLAY—BOLD! DARING! 
, won Cat 00 «Hot Tin Roof | 77 BURRITO - Pru. Newatan - Burt Ives 
A. dae Conson Joona Anpencon om WETROCOLON « AN AVON PRODUCTION    
    
         
    
              
    
  
    — 7 JERRY WALD'S remnee 
e CoLoR by ce Luxe ey Cinem.Sc OPE os      
     
       
ithrown its vast network of talent tend to leave a stone uterned ie Hollywood Headlines:   
By JOE FINNIGAN 
UPI Hollywood Correspondent 
HOLLYWOOD — Wanted, one Multi-million-dollar production of hand in the hunt. 
“Theseus.” “The King Must Die.” By: ‘ox production chief, Maurice Twentieth Century-Fox has! The Westwood studio doesn't i (Buddy) Adier, is heading up |unknown actor to play the role of|tray the part and Fox boss Spyros, 
\scouts into the search for a ydung efforts to find a performer to por-| the world to find an unknown 
     
   
  “We are faced with a grave - 
Adler said fearfully. 
‘The King Must Die’ attracted For Your Next Party 
Try a Sausage Tree 
NEW YORK~—Eating can be fun 
* * *   heroics, romance and action. 
“Hollywood has been canvassed 
and searched thoroughly in our 
|determined efforts to find a young 
actor who has the many attributes 
      
   
   
  ROBERT WACNER 
“OUTSIDE JEFFREY HUNTER 
LAW”        
  ALSO 
THE 4 
         
  
    Tet Fase! eervenee ¢ 
seein) 
   IT'S A GAY, GORGEOUS, 
GLORIOUS, LOVE STORY oF 
A BLUSHING BRIDE... 
French hubby with ideas of , 
romance that will tickle you 
with laughter. 
Debowk KERR More delighttul than over 
ani HEAALER Amazing sor of “GIGI” 
in M-G-M’s 
      
  | 
        
      
     CinemaScope and 
mtiROCOLOR 
TENSE WITH HUMAN DRAMA... VIBRANT WITH YOUTHFUL ROMANCE! 
WALT DSNEVS          
  
  
        
      
      
ial; WORKERS 
OF OUR NATION: 
AIR CONDITIONED COMFOR 
NOW! OPEN 10:45 
  rey.¥ KL. 2 ans 
KLAND: OAK Aim CONDITIONED 
NOW! OPEN 12:45        
    
‘as cheapl 
    
   That's what we always say... “Eating is”—(what was 
that clever expression we thought up?)—“an adventure!” 
Like, for example, a neighbor of ours, George Lang, 
sed ; a big man in the resjaurant business re- 
marked to us one night recently that we 
should toss a sausage festival for some 
out-of-town visitors, providing, of course, 
they liked sausage. which the role of ‘Theseus’ de- 
mandg.”’ 
| Of course, this isn’t the first 
‘time Hollywood has sought an ‘‘un- 
/known” for a role, nor will it be 
jthe last, but Adler insists the 
desire for a newcomer isn't predi- 
‘cated on a longing for publicity. 
“Remember, that this is no ordi- 
“Who doesn't like sausage?” we whooped. nary romantic role,” Adler cau- 
“Great idea!” We dozed off a little, as we'd tioned. “In addition to the dra- 
had a nice dinner, and were soon dreaming | ™atic and romantic situations with of sausages. | which the story abounds, ‘Theseus’ 
“You could borrow my sausage tree,” we |is called upon to perform almost ofl ; astounding feats of physical brav- next thought we heard his say—but we put ery and skill 
WILSON it down to our dreaming. | 
“You hang all these exotic sausages from it,” 
and then.we knew we were wide awake. 
   
  | rr e he said — Whoever plays the role there 
| sured dramatic flair but also re- 
| markable athletic ability and the 
courage to face and overcome 
| danger, 
| “You can see, therefore, that it 
jis no mere acting personality we 
‘must unearth, which is why the 
lsearch has been so difficult and 
lour efforts thus far thwarted 
the only) ‘Hollywood has failed us in this 
jinstance,"" Buddy complained. He gave us addresses of marvelous shops where we 
could buy Spanish, Polish, German, Chinese and even 
Venezuelan sausages. The Beautiful Wife and [ spent three 
delightful hours in Yorkville, Chinatown, Second Avenue, 
and Amsterdam Avenue, filling up shopping bags with 
spicy sausages from the old country. 
Finally we had a test run jn our kitchen. 
Tossing down sudsy beers, I enjoyed it, but 1 was 
one 
ke ra * | And, besides, a filmland ‘‘name"’ 
“What's the matter with everybody?” I roared. “Don't Wouldn't ren the stature of Th he picture, Adler insists ou like these sausages? ; 
y . | “Unquestionably, “The King Must 
“I don’t like any sausages!” the B.W. said, and her (|Die’ is so epical an undertaking 
mother and Slugger came in on the chorus. Just because [that the production is bound to 
itranscend any boxoffice name we 
|could select, just as in the case of 
{such great spectacles ag ‘The Ten 
f ‘ommandments’ or ‘Around (be 
|World in Eighty Days’. I had learned to love sausage back in the old country 
(Ohio), the B.W. had gone ajong. I think she should be 
awarded the Croix de Sausaghtor bravery under and over 
the kitchen fire. 
Another eating adventure I had was partaking of the | “Wer thin renasa. we feed that 
French bean specialty—cassoulet | an unknown, given the necessary 
* * * qualifications, could play the 
I would walk a mile or sit a day waiting for beans. Once on’ role. This would result in the 
creation for us of a new box. 
office star.” 
What 
|look like, 
We returned, not exactly without a bean, but close to  aeaueeaiaaneeeuns, 
it, and one night our old friend, maitre d Robert, told us “ONE OF THE BEST 5 
we could have a cassoulet any season as long as we ordered rm PICTURES YOU WILL a 
Ita day ahead. SEE THIS YEARI"s —Archer Winsten Poct the Liberte I had the cassoulet at its best—traveling through 
France later, I bored the B.W. countless times by stopping off! 
to ask for a cassoulet, which seemed to be served always some 
other season should this young man 
Adler asked himself, 
“Tomorrow, then!” we screamed 
We were there and so were the beans Delicious, they were. 
We had asked our French fr lepds, Lito, the Can-Can girl, and @ 
her husband, Marquis de la Passerdiere, to join us. As French- & 
they woul enjoy this French jg       
   
       men, wondrous ample of 
culsine which it had taken us Americans to remind them of. j@ | 
ht ke * ba 
And tt worked out just as we hoped ! 
Except that as Lilo and I were spooning out our hunks @ 
of beans (and sausages!, Lilo turned to Robert and said: a 
“Beans! It’s just like being in the Army agaln, isn't ino” | 
* * * | 
WISH ED SAID THAT: The secret of economy is to live @ 
y the first few days after payday as you did the last 8 
few days before. ; a 
Those politicians who insist they aren't candidates. for @ “ROOM oe 
the presidency sound so sincere that Ike may have to serve @ AT THE ToP 
a third term ... That's earl, brother. 
: COMING WEDNESDAY (Copyright, 1959) FIRST AREA 
| . DRIVE-IN SHOWING 
LTT TAA ros orice owe SICOMMERCE Le tulh Blend 
WASHINGTON (UPL) —The se CECCEL EEL 3 
|Offier here announced that a new   
  
  
    | the taak force turned lowe. on | 
dilemma in regard to this picture,’’ | 
“As a novel, 
worldwide interest as a story of 
| fore must have not enly an as- THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1959 
Talent Scouts Searching ‘op Monarch- Type Actor power, supple, ‘i sinued ad their first Pe 
agile enough to periorm Herculean did in “Diary of Frank” and feats of skill and daring. she etme ‘by ~~ s as 
Move (hen cus of indug's aprrest Cingee | ASN Linda _ Darnell, 
crop of stars hit the’ big time in| Anne Sheridan and Jean Seberg.   
  
“For one thing he should be tall 
\*Theseus,”” youthful monarch in a/Skouras has personally taken a ‘and virile, with a physique sug- 
gesting one of the early Greek 
| gods, since the story is laid in the 
‘martial days of that world- 
'dom i empire. 
“ *Theseus'~ should be close to 
who'll be destined for stardom. | isix feet tall, from 180 to 200 Ibs., 
‘with a body exuding dynamic,   
  
HURON THEATER 
NOW! thru THURS. 
To commemorate ios 
1004 Anniversary of | the 
Miracle at Lourdes... 
      Ip 
FRANZ WERFEL'S s 
The SONG of 
BERNADEITE 
  iiss JENNIFER JONES WILLIAM EYTHE + CHARLES BICKFORD 
VINCENT PRICE - LEE J COBB - GLADYS COOPER 
—— PLUS 
THE SENSATIONAL 
BEST-SELLER...   im BREAKS   
-MON. | ESXeyerega! TUES. 
ALL H- 
  [ BOWERY | 
LOOSE: 
       A 
PicTuRE EASTMAN COLOR 
DURING THE ENTIRE 
Park Free! MONTH OF SEPTEMBER 
The 25c you pay for porking will be deducted from 
the price of your ticket by showing the cashier your 
parking lot ticket!   
  
MORE SENSATIONAI   
ON THE SCREEN! 
DARBY F. Productions, tne. Pr 
    JRSON WELLES DIANE VARS! 
JEAN STOCKWELL ~ BRADFORD DILLMAN 
rs CYA 0 TANCK OUR FLESH mores OUR MURPRY 2. MOAR EVN —INEmaScoPE 0 Pe OMREr OF PEEP rE Een: ~_—T 
COMING SOON “AROUND THE WORLD 
Be Nol 
__“HORSE SOLDIERS” — “TEN 
aoe MMANOMENTS “THE NUN STORY” 
    BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN 
2150 Opdyke Rd THEATER 
FE 4-4611 
  
DEBORAH KERR 
AN AFFAIR Ne 
| CINEMASCOPE crore Mut 
    
  
3rd FEATURE 
COLOR By DeLuxe 
     
       
  
      
  
SCIENCE FICTION 
AT ITS BEST        
  Baie sad ty ATED ARTISTS 
      
  scent orange and black interna- 
tional air matl stamp, intended vwwwwwwwwwwwyw 
primarily for use to Europe and > 
the Middle East, will go on sale > EM 
a } PREMIER The stamp will feature a draw- 
THE HORSE ‘ing of the statue of liberty with é SHOWING 
the slogan “Liberty For All’ im-! > — IN — 
mediateely above and on the left.! > 
® pe ERS The lettering "UoS. mail’ and the > OAKLAND COUNTY 
  denomination “ise are arranged Me Mei Ml tlle tl llr... llr, ll, * FIRST WITH -wwewevvvvvw™. 
    
In the right with a jet airplane 
silhouctted superimposed over he meu THE      
        
    est of all large animals when ft 
comes to hunting, [It can make 
its way through the deepest vege- 
jtation without a sound. “A   
     
   LOVE AND ADVENTURE 
AS BOLD AND DARING 
AS THE 
m CASTING! | 
            
    NW COLOR 
_ At 2:58 - (6:23 - 9:48 o~ : — ae 
    ee NA EXPhbn re IN RUMEN NSE! 
) EDDIE ALBERT IN 5 
>; “ORDERS TO KILL” : 
With LILLIAN GISH t 
At 1:25 - 4:50 ~ 8:15 ? 
NPP AR IIa Pino te $ 
“Diary of a High School 
mee 
STARTS FRIDAY Kim Novak — Frederick March tn 
“MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT” “Ghost of a bee Strip 
Hollow” 
  
      
      wow! 
SOUTH wee OF UNION LAKE RD. AT more EM 2-06 BOX OFFICE OPEN 7 P.M 
GIANT FIREWORKS 
DISPLAY TONITE! 3 — FEATURES — 3 
VIBRANT WITH ACTION AND YOUTHFUL ROMANCE! 
URES? ~ TECHNIC OLOR OT 
    
     
   
  fase. y an Sate ) 
De Uvth WG [E87 
NEW BONGS SWWEN 
Alfw fx faae yt 
iyfO Favorit OD 
STANMADS!   
  canh aes 
Kt ae 
culkin (AYP OG wi en OU ee ee 
  Xa RRAEERES SAAN REAR AN AEE EERRRAAANAASIERAAAAIINY 
             
  Open 6:30 P.M. — Show Starts 7:30 P.M. 
A TREMENDOUS 4-UNIT FAMILY PROGRAM Dk kk I IO ok TIRE IKK AIK HEAR KR RK RK KD 
  
bl ln li Ml i i Li i di di 
THE FINEST * 
    q 4 
} & TONIGHT x | > : , 
> AREAL BANG-UP 
> HOLIDAY PROGRAM 4 > ‘rwwewewewevwrerv7-vwvvvee 
¥   
~_wrrereererrerevrerYrYT*   
“ORCHIDS! Danny Kaye Gives Rt The 
_ Millen Dollar Touch!” 
en WALTER WINCHELL 
  _wwerwwevwewe?°*»YTYeTrTTTTTeTTrrCT i i i ti i i i hi hi i li i i i i i i wewevreveerrrrrvrvrvrryrY 
“see LAUGH Attraction! Presenting An 
ATOMIC 
Fireworks 
Display Thrills Galore 
_wrrererwevrervT. Tr "wwrrwewrerTerowrrveewereT eee 
rere YTY 
    
    
ERE ESER ELSES SELES USELESS SEE eee e eee eeeeeees: 
r¢ a 
4, Vee UU OT UCT UC UTC Oe 
ALSO-First Pontiac Showing 
ADVENTURE’S MIGHTIEST HERO 
Lives His MIGHTIEST ADVENTURE ! ~t 
4 
S = itety nr a3 
i 
    » Kh me RERERM MEM eee Re eRe eM eM ewe He RY HM HK Me YY HM HH HY H HM   
  SO agg ee oo/ i 
  _ — nn re : THE PONTIAC.PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1959 
‘Men of Two Worlds’ ecia .          
    
  
    
      
     
        
    
   
    
          
          
     
        
    
                 
  
  
    
    
    
        
      
  
        
        
    
  
       
        U.N. Guards Israeli-Arab ‘Peace’ 3 uarags israell-Ara Feace ° 2. ) . * 
By ELIAV SIMON Je omen eae oe von Horn who are based at'to stop any fighting which might * JERUSALEM (UP!) — When the/istice Commission — 45 observers|Government House in Jerusalem flare up, the UN observers are un-|. » British quit Palestine in 1948, the|based in Damascus \Syria) and}perform @.the functions of a mil-|armed. They are familiar figures . Jews establi the State of Is-| Tiberias (Israel). The>size of the) itary headquarters group. They/in Israel as well as in the neigh- . rael in part of the territory and the!Israel-Lebanese MAC, which has keep in contact with the UN rep-|boring Arab countries, but espe- 4 ? 
Kingdom -of Jordon annexed the Only three UN observers, is indica-|resentatives on the Mixed Armis-jcially in Jerusalem itself, site of . ) 
rest. tive of the peace and quiet.on this/tice Commissions and are also in/the IsraelJordon MAC as well as M4 But at the same time a third) border. close touch with the UN Secre-|of the UN Headquarters staff. : 
power came onto the scene—the *« * * tariat in New York. ae * aa By _ 
sical a i : the end of the Palestine War, there 
no, more. than afew. hundred| MEFS seven members, but this ts | To assist them on the spot aes Ltiy peace in the Holy Land} _ BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES in mar vars tutor aecis| pou ane cody Man of cian advisors and ag shin may bisa wp along == 2 both Israel and Jordon and its) 4, woveott it wars aco on [2 ress officer, Albert Grand, ofithe frontier for almost any rea- WHOOPEE! . moral influence is perhaps greater) me the tae “= _ [Belgium — one of the very iew|son—or for no reason at all. But | CABLEGRAM FORYA than that of any other power in|) oo . be = re men in Jerusalem who has io ere a proper peace is concluded; [= ea ’ 
the world. | — ea kee ringed telephones on his desk linking him|between Israel and her neighbors, [7 vE x SPN 
The world organization was the | selma “* . with two mutually hostile coun-)the UN will be around, in strength) =F PLENOR. 
midwife of the 1947 decision to | : _ | ies. | ee on thes eet, 22 et owe tee — = . solve the Palestine problem by The 10 officers headed by Maj.| As men of peace whose job is flames. I K in Wp) 
partition. When, in 1948, Jews | ° — 
and Arabs tested this solution by | BOARDING HOUSE i 7 force of arms, it was the UN | : 
which stepped in to try to restore HIS THUMB BY ALL MEANS / rg j 
peace. x 
Now, 11 years .later, the mid THERE'S A HITCH-HIKER, LOOKS grit Flr wife is still on the scene, but in) MEN =~ WHAT'S THE’ TIRED UM 
the guise of a guardian to watch VERDICT g LET 5 GWE POINT OF VIEW, 
eaon eeeny oetice on the ‘Re HIM A ; BUSTER! BY BE- 
rab-Israe ers and to see 
that, even if no official peace LIFT: Seen THE BERRYS 
treaty has yet! been signed, war ~/ | f) Paphaps “pole ohio | does not flare into the open again. TO OURSELVES! ior chal atlas DONT ACT SO SILLY 
The nerve center of the UN ww KAFF-KAFE / = | A a in Sates Cy 
Truce Supervision Organization TO rates ATHOUT 
is a palatial building on the south- » : 
ern outskirts of Jerusalem which | 
once was the residence of the! 
High Commissioners in the days! 
of the British mandate. Old tra-! 
ditions die hard in the Holly Land, 
and to this day it is still referred 
to as “Government House.” 
Sandwiched between the Israeli 
and Jordonian tines, the building! , 
is in neither country. The legend 
over the main gateway proclaims | 
it to be the Headquarters of the! 
United Nations Truce Supervision) 
Organization in Palestine — prob- 
ably the only spot in the whole 
country still officially designed as 
Palestine. 
The headquarters staff are lit 
erally men of two worlds, and 
among the privileged few permit- 
ted to enter both worlds gt will 
One gateway out of Government 
House leads into Israel, the other | 
into Jordon. The UN personnel, | 
in white-painted jeeps bearing 
huge UN markings on the sides 
and roof, are a familiar sight in 
both halves of divided Jerusalem 
Altogether there are about 100 
UN observers from 12 different 
countries, ranging from the U.S. 
to Ireland and from Belgium to 
  New Zealand. But the majority YOU GO TO TH’ QUICK-WITTED \ SAY MUCH-- | [T TOMES I'M » of these are ‘im the field’ and DOOR AN’ JUST ENOUGH TO LET'S YOO- | HUNGRY AN’ 
_serve with the various Mixed APOLOGIZE AN’ GRAB MY SHIRT |} HOO HIM CHILLED--T'LL 
! Armistice Commissions on Is- | TELL HIMIT WAS / ONTHRUN, | OUT AN’ GIT OUR rael’s borders with Jordon, Le- SUCH A HOT DAY DON’T THINK / NEGOTIATE } CLO'ES/ ER- bonon, Syria and Egypt, respec- 
tively. 
At Government House itself is| 
the headquarters staff of some 10 
officers, headed by UN Chief of 
Staff Maj. Gen. Carl von Horn, 
of Sweden. In addition to the UN 
observers, there are a number 
of personnel who serve in a purely! 
administrative capacity as secre-| 
taries, drivers, telephonists, etc. | 
The observers serve for a two-, 
vear spell of duty, on loan from| 
the armed forces of their own! 
countries. They draw the same! 
| pay as they would in their own} 
| army,:but an additional UN al- 
: lowance of $10 a day. There is also 
the advantage of duty-free liquor| 
and other goods provided by the | 
UN commissary. | 
At present there are 32 UN ob-| 
servers attached to the Israel-| 
Jordon Mixed Armistice Commis-| 
sion (referred to as MAC for! 
short). This is based in Jerusalem, 
and halds its meetings, attended by 
Israeli and Jordonian representa- 
tives, in a shell-scatred Gate bor- 
der, a few miles north of Govern- 
ment House. 
Biggest of the UN MAC staits |   
  
DONALD DUCK (ITARIAN 
  me = “ oS 
~> —™ ST ~ HIMSELF = q-7 jak mec Se Pat, Off.   
            
OUT OUR WAY 
      
  YOU GOT A SHIRT 
ON, SO IT’S BEST 
      
   
         
        
    
RESIST TAKIN’ 
A DIP~-- 
1 SQ 
1 cinder 
«= waft tuk 
M Meg. U ro oF 
  WE SIMPLY COULDN'T} I CAN BE 
    
  BORN THIRTY YEARS TOO SOON     SAY, JIS OH, I DON'T 
CAUSE 1WAS \ THINK HE'LL \ SHI 
                              WITH HIM 
FROM HERE... 
OR FURTHER! USED! 
JTRWw GIMME THAT 
RT-- LOAN 
       WLIAMS #1969 by NEA Service, be. q-7                
             
          
   
    
      
  By Walt Disney 
  
TO a a YOU -22* THIS iN 
T POST OFFICE WRITE IT HA 
: CULTS TO WRITE AT HOME ? CHAN . 
. A LETTER 
4/DU) / 7. 
tf 5/DD/ Bg er} Nr / 1), 
POY Vee er 
  Peteiharted by Ring Pawtnres Reacts 
            
  
  
  
(i For real 
chewing 
satisfaction 
be sure it’s 
WRIGLEY’S 
SPEARMINT America's Favorite. 
  
  You'll Find 
PROFITABLE 
OPPORTUNITIES Every Day in the Pontiac 
Press Want Ad Section 
Take advantage of this easy way 
to solve your buying end 
telling problems 
To,Place Your 
WANT AD — 
DIAL FE 2-8181 |   
  
      
  
      
        
  
         
          
  
  
      hip Mast       
  
  
  
    
  
     
         
    
        
  so - © OFF by ER Berwin, tak, TR Rep GA Pen, On 
By Leslie Turner              
         
     
   
           
      
   hy Sik YEARS SINCE WY LAST 
TWE GREAT [7 ENGLISH TOUR. OLGA...BUT 
SHANOU AMDT, THEY STILL RECOGNIZE ME! _/ WOW YOU LOVE 
ZE SPOTLIGHT. 
DAWLING! YOU 
COULO NOT Live 
WiSOUT IT} 10 TRADE ALL MY 
SUCCESS TO BE IS 
  
       
  m * ante ut Ag 
By Ernie Bushmiller   
  
     
            
         
    
       
  
          
    
MORTY MEEKLE 
       
      WERE YOU LATE 
AGAIN THIS 
MORNING, 
MEEKLE 7 
                 
           
                 
    $-7 © 00 ty ar eran ee TR ag OA Pe OF       
  
          
        
          , HECK, I JUST WOKE YOU OH, I'M NOT REALLY SUT MY DREAM ©’ FINDIN’ 
UP IN TH’ SHOW SO YOU | | PEEVED BECAUSE YOu GOLD MINE WAS MUCH A 
SHOOK ME Aw. cope MORE EXCITIN’ THAN TH’ COULD SEE TH’ PICTURE / 
3 an MOVIE /! , 
        ie ee ee ee! 
RX            ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1959   
  
  
    
      
  
    
    
  
  
        
  
  
        
  
  
    
  
    — . | 
‘ ‘Santa Claus’ Waterford Girl BOX REPLIES po | 
: At 10 a.m, Today there : 
Bitten by Snake | {wore reptice at Ths Press | ‘ : Fonen! office in the following ' 
British Car Makers wamp Detroit ActorlsDead ‘Doing Fine’ | ise * ce ' ; . Phone » 
iA Waterford Township eight-year} | 2, & 1. 8 18, 14, 18, 27, a. ee | 
By TOM A. CULLEN these spluttering babble car, “And it must sell for under fivejelor of Greek extraction, imme- Edmund Gwenn, 81, oe a an all today accord- Py 4 < = 4 - a ym Stinched irene beats 
LONDON (NEA) — British auto) types, It must be as fast and jhundred poupds (about $1,400), diately got to work. First, he took) Known for His ,Roles ora ontiac General 97, 99, 103, 127, 118. ; gon 4-5800 
makers have blood in their cys al nippy - as anything comparable |purchase tax included.” a square body and put inch! | Kindly Old Hospital after being bitten by a , fo Tt. Garage. Landucaped 
as they prepare to battle Detroit | Issigonis, a quiet, untidy bach- wheels at its extreme cornecs.| OS Kin ly . Men rattlesnake Sunday afternoon. 4% per : 
in the American billion dollar This was to give the prototype , x “ke '* Cos : = 
small car market. eee room and improved sta-| HOLLYWOOD (UPI) —British-| Laurie Jo Kuder, daughter of Pp Pp ance on FHA. FE we | 
News about the small cars com- . , a born actor Edmund Gwenn, who Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Kuder, of The Pontiac Press $450 DOWN ) 
ing soon from Detroit's Big Three n, in order gain more won an academy award for play-\6219 Waterfront Dr., was playing 3 bedroom brick. Full basement. 
(General Motors, Ford and Chrys- space, he turned the engine sidc- ing Santa Claus, died ‘ lay 9d t/on the front lawn while her par- ESS WANT ADS Heath take” ges Meat 
ler) is being received calmly in ways. the age of 81. ents prepared dinner over a bar- DIAL FE 2-8181 sennols and stores. RLTR. 
SU) Fn XS ai The aie re sfincie which the The veteran performer was becue grill some 40 feet from her. UL 32-2930 . | 
“The Big Three are too late,” British Motor Conporetion lal ms D2med best supporting actor of} She bent down to touch her From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. out, 2 bedrm. home. Ol furnace, | 
one of Britian’s motor magnates will) sevalution! the ll car 1946 for his portrayal of Santa| shoe and suddenly the unseen AD errors should ere Near = Te 
told NEA, “We can top every i ndustry bat Claus in the movie ‘The Miracle} snake struck at her, hitting one nated ametianeny The —SNEAR GENERAL TAL 
selling point they can make, iil Minnie is now available in two,/°" ‘Ath Street,"’ capping a career) hand, Laurie screamed, Her fa- — a j ch. oak floors,” oll. furnace, sides, we have the experience almost identical versions (only the that spanned 64 years on stage,| ther rushed to her side. for that portion of the thet car OTe OFEER : 
in building such cars. yaa radiators differ): the Austin Seven|*reen and television. “Our biggest problem was solved ment which has been ren- ~ ; : 
Inaathy y oneenvers eonticeniy A \and the Morris .<ini-Minor. He would have been 82 on the |by state troopers from the Pontiac aaa eed Paul M. Jones, Real Est. predict Britain's small cars will 4 26th of this month. ’ Kuder related. He said he are made be sure to get 832 W. Huron 
widen the U.S. beachhead which 4 Only 16 feet long, she has front Seo : ‘ie huistled Laurie into our “kil) number. ° PE 4-8550 FE 8-1275 
they share with German. French 4, | wheel drive, fully independent | }ie died of complications of pneu. 4nd his wife hustle ur Adjustments will be given IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. HU- 
eit Tiatian mnelies. ’ {| suspension, can park in 12 feet |monia at the Motion Picture their car and started for the hos- Ciaatia sims dev eve Teas sucteen year Meal i alle 8. 4 ; : . | pitz = s me for advertise- kitche 4 ‘To spark the battle, the Brit- of space and will sell in the U.S. Country Hospital where he had pital, + * & ments containing type sizes Moun. MY 20013 or FE $3085." Mace ; ag j for approximately $1,400. been hospitalized since May, 1957, ; — eae IN ROCHES ish Motor Corporation has just 7 aff as terrible. We akg is 13 o‘cioex fnoon the 
unveiled a sensational baby car we tt following a stroke. The traffic was inp ay peavaes ta Cute & cosy 2 bedroom, all white 
called Minnie ABy comparison, the Corvair,| Gwenn, who was best known as Couldn't get anywhere. te e = Has fenced yard, besoment, oil 
k * t smallest. of the new models & Movie performer for~his char- Saw the troopers and told them ADVERTISERS that we are proud to show. $10,- Pa . , ‘what had happened. They took The deadline for cancella- : 
Two years ago Sir Leonard planned by Detroit's Big Three, acterizations of kindly, humorous | Laurie and iad ther to the bow ts of tr sient Want Ads SEE IT NOW—TODAY y! 
Lord, boss of BM.C., called nis is 14 feet 7 inches long, is priced Old men, was born in London a) ital.” publication after the first FRANK M. SHEPARD, REALTOR chief engineer, 52-year-old Alec at $2,000.) |Sept. 26, 1877. \P tnsartian: aBe = 
Issivonis, into his Birmingham Minnie gets 50 miles to the gallon| In May, 1957, he suffered a CASH WANT AD RATES 2 ser a home in Village. By - 
office for a talk and can hit 70 miles an hour, |stroke following an earlier heart . = Day 3D ede °* 
Said Sir Len. “Alec, we've got * * jatfack and kidney trouble. He eat otices read pny noel ce G 
fo produce a car for the millions. Nor is Minnie tbe only British lentexed the Motion Picture Country ; ‘S i. aa | 
A teal people's car. ‘MINNIE’ AS A MORKIS-MINOR — One new weapon in a |surprise. The new Triumph Her r-|Hospital in nearby San Fernando PARMER. SEPT. 6, 1959. PLOY 5 250 450 6.70 , 
7 y Confident British drive*on the U.S. small car market. ald, made by Standard’s of Cov-| Valley in October, 1957, where he 368 Town St.; age 70 Puneral s [Gog i ro} 
Cyathea: deal cag tear ies entry, features a complete body was confined to bed or wh L scene ae $ 400 «120 1106 . Job—not a halt car, not one uf 2 one y| a whee Pursley Funeral Home. 6 450 810 1243 Beautiful Rancher ——_—__-__—_-—-——_— a _frreetyling, dropping “unitized” con- chair. —- + ANSEN, SEPT. 5. 1959, ALBERT te 600 =(0Ss«é3:«80 ¢ room. 3 bedroom bene 
; struction in favor of an indepen- He returned to London twice in pellet po ea prec 16 xo i gerryee 
. ‘ : dent chassis. It also is priced (0.1956, hoping to improve his health band o . pally Poor vexerly noe place. Full basement, auto. 
sell at about $1,400. with a change of scenery and cli- mond, Sally. Ann and. Yvonne Dial FE 2-8 181 nee ene taree 
; * * * mate, but came back here to spend Hansen and Mis. = “ener y ; \ rourhout Approximately 
Ford's of Daganham, the Brit- the rest. of his days. Reason’ hey Manson Marry Ban- and ask for a friendly Borges cipuntcnt ares. 
" . ish subsidiary of the Ford Mo- eee eo Me Want Ad Sales Clerk 
tor Company, has two secret small) . Friends sald he was survived Alice Moore and Mrs. Mary Ger- — For Sale Houses 6 10 Acres 
CRAIG P. CURRAN ‘day morning and was dead on Association of Letter Carriers, Odd-|cars sti under wraps. S a brother and es sisters in sucess Gent. ban) bm, irom Nee erese ae terme wal bee 
Craig P. Curran, two and a half @rrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- fellows 406 of Gran Rapids and] Rootes of Coventry is bringing) =. tay ee Saad | alone" otticiating™ inter: Site wenuon:  arcaea ga: eee ie cert bons: 
vear old son of Mr. and Mrs Don-| pital. |Past president, retired of Postaljout new models of the Hillma.| Gwenn’s real family name was ner wes oil te te cake as 72 Mew secast: 308 Thlsd: PE eniek < nease seatdes ies 
ald J. Curran of 5975 Upper Straits! ls Mr. Hiller “ss employed by ee vee Re ' and Sunbeam. |Kelloway. He was the son of an the Pursley. Funeral 1 Home : nel, Call for appointment.” 
Bivd, Orchard Lake, drowned at State Barber Shop e is survived by his wife, * * * official in the British Civil Service| HILLER, SEPT. 5. 1959, Sa lee s, . . 
Upper Straits Lake Sunday. | Surviving are one son, Laurel Jr.) Leona, a son, Fred A. of Dearborn; British car makers make no (Who wanted him to follow in his 23 Pairgrove Ave, ; ae ts: dear East Side 
of Sepulveda, Cal, three grand-\(wo daughters, Mrs. Edward To- footsteps. dear brother of Mrs. John Ims- A very sharp § room. 3 Funeral arrangements are pend- © pu 3 secret that they are styling their | I land, Mrs. Edward Calshan and bedroom home with dining 
ing from C. J. Godhardt Funeral ‘children, and three sisters. bin and Mrs. Henry Ross, both of| new models with the American | At the age of 17, when Gwenn Mre Donald Larson: sise sus- pore ai apipaoo] LLlorsag Ne me Keego Harbor. Service will be held at & pom Grand Rapids, three brothers and buyer in mind. With an eye to definitely announced his intention vet bi Mrinal, rrcaarcaog roy All BROS ge q_ pest yas, price med 
/ this evening at Voorhees Siple,@ sister, the American woman, Restes, tor jot going on the stage, his father bed Goes Oe ee wumee . vine pet 
ALBERT Hf. HANSEN Chapel. Following service Mr. Service will be held at 3 p.m.| example, has equipped its Hill. | disowned him and threw him out LaPountain officiating. Pollowing GILES REALTY CO 
Albert HH. Hansen, 54, of 102,Hiller’s body will be taken to Wednesday at Pursley Funeral] mans and Singers with aute- °f their home. There followed taken to Sioux Pails, 6:D."Inter- A DATE IN DRAYTON oo 2 SsicpewinlGex 
S ; ‘ater : fi S. . al. H > a. > ' ment in Dell Rapids, 8 T th derful little 2 — = tary St, Waterford Township, Sioux Falls, S. D. for burial | Home with burial at Oak Hill) matic transmission, more lug j10 years of struggling, during MATHEWS. SEPT 4. 1950. MYRTLE eidreses elie hk hes Guilty MULTIPLE LiSTING srnvice : was dead on arrival at St. Joseph mews:  jremetery. Kage space. |whic h he toured and played in any- May, 97's Orchard Lake Ave ; age room, large kitehen and living a 
Mercy Hospital Saturday morning.| MBS: MALTON LAWRENCE | The fy thing and everything. ay eee ein aate || | Gsitpenia nalcaee ee s i : < ‘meas > > de er o rchie . . Meee ee a anencmnter at the|_ WASHINGTON Service for. MRS. CECILIA SALAZAR Pada foci momen he cant | It was George Bernard Shaw, Mathews. Mrs Leonard Petrie MILLER 
Emmanuel Baptist’ Church, was Mrs. Halton (Mildred) Lawrence. Mrs. Cecilia Salazar, \who recognized Gwenn's talent Be ee eee one Tun. Save $3,000 71, of 191 | plains about the gear shift in for- = Sept. 8, at 2 
died Sunday at her eign cars. Automatic transmissic ° day pm. from the and picked hi € : pi ked him for a role in a Pursley Puneral Home with Rev. The seller's loss is your gain. formerly employed by the Portiac 38, of 19601 27-Mile Rd, will be Rockwell St WATERFORD AERA 
      held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the home after Shaw play which gave Gwenn, a Willard Stall fficiatl In- On this long brick rancher in 14g baths, 1 floor, built “_ 856. Tank Company Ip aM J fist. Church. Burl af an illness of several jg still largely a novelty in Europe th et : & = at ee ee Sek Min Cemetery. Clarkston. 4 bedrooms. 1's baths 3 begrooms, 24 fi. ving room. Surviving besides his wife, Davis ethodis nurch, urial months * |! e age of 27, his first real suc- Mirai Mathewslwill Hella etate at Nice piitchen with eating cae jake b acti Owner in California. : : > eautiful living room ining t t ll. R able dow FKmily, are three sons, Nels, Fred, will follow in White Chapel Me- She is survived by -her sons,| All in all, British car-makers| °°": It was Shaw also who See Y SEPT cine OBERT vestibule entrance. storms and rowed {0 Bone ten ee 
erick. and Raymond, all at home: ‘morial Cemetery, Troy Rudolph, Sunday and Joseph, all have reason to feel optimistic. The *© lected him for his first talking D. 2700 Vendome.. Avon Town. low price of $13,000 sensed Pave) = ould suggest you see this one. 
four daughters, Sally Ann, Mary ww L. mre nee wi dead on AP of Pontiac British baby cars are priced to, | picture. hie seed) verse Harpers ¢ FAMILY. INCOME toute aegte 
, : ; » vival Friday at St) Joseph Tey — . . . ” i ot, 200x t. 10 minute drive Jou, and Yvonne. also at home ay ph Mercy Service will be held at 130 p.m j unde rsell the American compact . Ogio ci ehariea maker — . Just What You Want from city, 3 apartments furnished, 
Mrs. Willi: Hammick of Hospital, Mount) Clemens, after ,,, : ‘lcars. In 1958, the four best-sell - ; : . full basement. rec. room, sepa- and Mrs ham mn : Wednesday at Melvin A. Schutt . ’ ur St-selling TIC en Thomas, John Arthur, Michael. flere tt is — 3 bedrooms. tiled vate! andy erm tiecsenedl cee 
Ky. tour brothers,taking an overdose of sleeping foreign makes (Valkeswagen, Re- ‘ Patrick, Terry Lee and Ronald bath, Jarge utility. large living iver inanes! patie) tneaalicl Gare: Middlesboro, Ray McClusky; dear brother of 
  . -.) Funeral Home with burial at Perry’! . ; 5 
and three sisters. A fourth sister, Pills. Her body will be at Roth's Mi, Park Cemetery “TY nault,. British Ford and Fiat) all but Weddin Roy L. | McClusky. a Sab pater dd pelle; Clarkston location, with fs GE etsye ene. ° : . ' rm ' * € % © = Mrs Anna Kelly of Clarkston, also Hlome for Funerals ‘Romeo, until sold at well under $2,000. g arnl arvice’ will beitelarWeanes: walking distance of ROS. pied) end certainly thet price | 1a 
tomorrow noon. THOMAS ere ee cos day. Sept 9, from Huntoon Pu- WHITE BRO right — $22,500 — less than $6000 
SUPVIVES 3 ? 4d. WAGG Oo OWS east neral Hore with Rev. Harlow OR 31295 er unit. You can go wrong only 
ervice will be held at 3 p.m] 5urviving besides her husband) s tor Th 7 y 64 White officiating. Interment in Open Eves. ‘til 9: Bunday 10 ‘til 6 y waiting too long. Call at once. ; , ‘ , ervice for Thomas J. Wagg, 64,| Perr t ck Cemetery r 5669 Dixie Hwy. ban sdavy a Pursiey Funeral Home | Are two daughters, Mrs. Marlene! » Of, McClusky will Be ta state at the LOADED WITH CHARM & ‘of 480 Maxwell St., wil DETROIT (—Seventeen guests 5 RM. HOME ON % ACRE LOT. UALITY — 7 rooms and hath. with burial In Ottawa Park Ceme- Jagiello of Milford and Mrs. Joyce t., will be held at g Menieee tuewst Bose $6,500 FE 5-1084. Seecusgu, garage. 3 pearecue & m. Wednesday at — 10 of them children — were| cee, BEPT. 4, 1959, MARY, FOR- , OWNER We 
    
  
        
      
    
  
  
  
    
    
  
  Brineat of Detroit; a son, Edward | 30) P the . . . BY OWNER FOR SALE. 4 BED- den, newly painted, neat as a tery. . . merly of 66 Williams St.; age 78; ra 
, Ivinson of Miami, Fla; and her Parks Griffin Chapel, with burial 30 Firemen in Flint mncee Bi Guin 3 rv beloved wife of Clinton McGee: iwear sauces On eee cain te ave ‘your family ye ln Owner 
LAUREL J. HILLER mother, Mrs, Beulah Beeman of '" Waterford Center Cemetery. feast yesterday. Scams deer Kner at ue. Pred mortgage. esti. for 612.980 ot ee were 
' 23 Fair. Wast He died S , ! But the wedding went on as L. Ward; also survived by nine MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE. $1 ~"s owe. wee © 
Laurel J. Hiller, 58, of 23 Fair ashington, e died Saturday. Mr. Wagg FLINT w—Thirty firemen were scheduled. grandchildren. Funeral service N ode eee ees iti@e etter 
grove Ave, died suddenly pSatur- MRS. GEORGE. MATHEWS was a watchman for Red Star overcome by smoke Saturday in oe “o be gage ned gr 8. at _ dae, S. GE > M: i Tr rc Surviv ape ; pm rom rmer-Snover ree: : 
Mrs. George (Nyrtle May) Math.| Inie, - ie aah Sr “ oe | battling a fire that swept through| ae tees eS | ee ce) ene oon Willian Miller ewe, 6). cl 8145 Orchard Lake A = Johns 0 daughters, Mrs. Wallace the fouf-story S.8. Kresge building 884 Helen Mazaris, 18, of Wind. lie in state at the Parmer-Snover Realtor FE 2-0263 ones ‘ , 62, of 9Ty Orchard Lake Ave Johnson of Pontiac and Mrs, lin downtown Flint. | sor, Ont., were married several _ Funeral Home. Saye ‘Open wt Pag 
| m Its oe tlead shit) arrival at Pontiac Morley Russell of Florida, three| *~ «© | hours after the guests were ene a eed Head pole 
Genera! Hlospital Friday. jsisters, one brother, four grand-| Firemen estimated damage at taken te. three hospitals with 59° beloved husband of Mrs. Mary 
Surviving are her husband, one childre 1 three gree . Ronle 7 Gest son jot ee rend Bre ' e children and three great-grand- one million dollars. | acute stomach cramps. Hus Noble: dear father of Mrs. 
r) son, Archie; and two daughters, children. 7 Violet Barnerd, Mrs. Betty Pax- 'g 
Mrs. Leonard Petrie and = Mrs Twenty five ‘firemen were | The couple attended the dinner sec atmaircon, telsntere, Rich. O 
in peec Kenneth Johnson all of Pontiac treated and released and five Put did not eat any of the main Roy W Noob yeier wierd snd ° ; Service will be held at 2 p. m. FLOYD A. FARMER remained at a hospital for ob- ‘Greek dish made of rice and Ruth suite, s Mra Grace Strass. 1 Acre Nothing Down a . sm ee bes Se ry ; almer an arry Noble; also 
Need ‘Elbow Room’ Tuesday at Pursley Funeral Home| WILLT E LAKE TOWNSHIP —| ervation. poe gravy sauce. Police said ae rited be 32 Grandchildren cea With beautiful landscaped lawn. 
ee with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery, Floyd A. Farmer, 70. 368 Tow * * * the dish, called rice pilaff, appar- two great-grandchildren Funeral — 2 extra large bedrooms, GIs — Heres a real neat 
. ye mer, (0, 368 Tower ently made the guests sick service will be held Tuesday, Sept. iuvely living room with fireplace. and clean 2 bedroom bun- n Economy, Says — St. died. at Pontiac General Hos Dense smoke came from mer- ™ at i pm. from the Van Valken- Wall- cet carpeting in every galow near that ever in- c ROBERT DPD. MeCLUSKY ital Sund . . . | Seven persons were reported in burg Puneral Home, 22250 Grand room anc 9x12 music room. 2 car creasingly popular Union : pital Sunday after being hit by a|chandise stored on upper  floors.| : River, Detroit, near Lahser road. garage. Many other excellent fea- Lake area. There's a large 
Governor on Labor Day} Avon TOWNSHIP — service for car Sunday evening " |The fire was believed to have “tious Condition today and prob- us Nehle Wilk he's state we the mares Weil: rads fos omeall Rom? mani y at, fue Lamenkes Robert D. McCusky, 27, of 2700] His body is at the Pursicy Fu-| started in a doughnut machine on “LY Will remain in the hospital Van Valkenburg Puneral Home $52 Per Month already been appraised and a . pre ; me , nici * : \ : t's ready t y 
DET ROUT ie —Ceav, Wiliams sald Ow at Husteen - lobar feenel: Heme, the serond hom. int lenat a eS ane 30i6 a llr Neeesr at ee ae ena cout beat Duet Maseptienally wih lac mentnly caymeate, 
ee : ; nari a oon unera ome, ee loved husband of Leona Randall: neat and clean with oak fioers, in a Lahor Day speech today that) | . . ac : sepa ' . ow fath { Fred Randall, | aluminum storms and screens DANIEL ee the American economy needs “el- Pontiac, Burial will follow in Perry ROY W. NOBLE The dinner was at the home of aes gather el roe a Coe | Fully Meveitae 3 Com tortabie BcHOOL Distmicr 
ine pacer cen auifoeedton 2! Mount Cemetery. ORCHARD LAKE — Service { runetteé or |Luis Gotsis, 65, of Redford Town- Edwarg iHelen) Tobin; dear bedrooms Built in “$5 with ail large 2 bedroom. Diastered NOP F : . . 7 ~} a : . $7. . t I ‘ . _| Mr. MeClusky was fatally in- Roy W. Noble, 49. of at ai le , iship, who also was stricken. About brother of Kar! i shandall. Clyde BO fgg Total price. § Git nuts heats Enjoy the 
: +o |jured in . ‘ Bl d Sh 33 8 e dinner. Mrs Doris Winters. Funeral serv- i shade trees. Leave the chii- Willams, addressing Detroit's *| esterday. a motorcycle accident. will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday onde, es 5 attended the dinner ice will be held Wednesday. Sept beaut alr Hills eaiit Ga 2 dren oe vim the fenced 
Haber Day celebration, attacked) er iving are his wile, May; one|at Van Valkenburg Funeral tome, | Miss Europe | | Heme in Rev Malcom Buon | Min fel eyet Caton pul | miler SO thinset Republican: cronamic (policies: ate daughter, Sharilee seven sons, Ro Detroit with burial at Evergreen Pp Announce Dodge Dart Hill Cemetery. Mr Randall a vai ule" bath. Ful basement. convenient terms on ‘ar sald the GOP and President E1- her ie rs Cemetery, Gi ie in state at the Pursley Pu- Attached breezeway & 2 car ga- ance. vert L., Thomas, John Arthur, PALERMO, Sicily (UPI)—Aus- ito 0 Into Production nachi rage. Lovely corner lot 90x136 enhower are overdoing the infla- y u ral Hom S senhower are raoing hua Mr. Noble died Frid tp a — By appointment only, ITs AND INVITING ' Michael, Patrick, Terry Lee and =: uday at Pon-\tria's Christine Spazi h SALAZAR, ener 6, 1950, CECILIA R tion threat with a tight) money I tiac General Hospital, He i | ristine Spazier, who start-| | DETROIT uw — The new Dodge Diaz, 191 Rockwell St.; age 71; TED LLOUGH. REALTOR ape ale gal grey rg Dalley tonald Ray; two sisters, Melissa! ’ a ospita e is sur- ;ed the contest as a brunette and! 1, t will int lucti thi dear mother of Rudalph, Sunday oth cen Cass-Elisabeth Rd water, The home regal ae 
UE McClusky and Mes Stanley Clark, |Vived by his wife, Mary; four’ finished a blonde, was elected Miss {%) Wih Ro info: production aus and Joseph Salazar. Puneral serv- FE 5-1284 can be. Large living room. 2 
® e * both of Pontiac; a) brother, Roy, daughters, six sons, two sisters: Europe early today pecek at Detroit st bul = a a 30 Ped priests Coney oe See Sunday 15 = ns oe Sta’ lets ged mane . 2 : , y. . en ce 
The Democratic Governor sald {McClusky in the US Army: and 8nd two brothers. Also surviving * & & [Angeles and Newark, Del, th lens Hermandes testa’ otticiay Neat Modern Home — mill take about ooue tank i ; Kisenhower’s veto of the housing [his parents, Mr. and Mrs, John @he bis: father and mother, Mr | Miss Spazier, daughter of a Vi The be ie. ed today, in A. tne interment in Perry Mt Park on 11 Fertile Acres dle with low payments te a ¢ + ’ ' rye F § te ( emetery a 7] 4 a 
bill was an example of “hia (G. McClusky. jand Mrs. Hue Noble, 32) grand- ennese hair dresser, ix listed aS ah Sie car and nee “aye ff in state at Melvin Ay Schutt. Pus Sor ats ganas close in cubarey iain penny wise, pound foolish polttey, : ; ichildren and 2 great-grandchildren |19 or 20 in the. offic ial records. e . Re _ Neral Home ae Bungalow of 4 rooms and utility LESS THAN $400 mortgace 
He said this reflects a policy HARRY DPD. RANDALL | a pean enerneneigs 2 will be competitively sized and} WaGa. SEPT 5 1959. THOMAS J, room. Full bath, basement, oi! costs will purchase this 
: ; Harry D Randall, 68, of 38 °N But there is no doubt about her 4 with Plymouth, Ford and 480 Maxwell St, age 64, beloved furnace, water softener. storms trim, neat 2 bedroom ranch 
that evant staat tata |, ove D, Nara ot ot A Nee, Brazil Reverses Seasons “1h *alistien, which are sean. PHC Mr, Toes Ree et ttttnaeer | Hak Bele ektricarnie | Suite, hates eh Eseroeetes RranNEh in coal tesa cre Ma oven Gy oath pe . 12 tne! eure ibage: ° end note Morley “hue dear ‘cg is ob = = Hbeasies Rood sized ‘eating area in ne c i er i mn a i + 5 - e ‘ fe KC. 7 & 
& * * ’ : puny ater 6 pevert| RIO DE JANEIRO — Summer- * * * ‘ Mre ES orn it Laat % 3 ‘Beare { LE kef t ENtchen, Nicely Jendseaped ; week illness. | Nicole Perio of France was acc | Nichel aaa Rey Wage. ales sur ec room aketron lot Fall p rice ce 200 already 
Asserting that Eisenhower needs! 4 retired US. Postal carrier, he ,t!Me in Brazil is December to Feb- ‘ Lodge Calend | vived by four grandchildren and Smell Down Payment appraised, eeene 8e- n “imaginative policy,” Willams wag a member of Metropolitan|"ary and the winter months run ond and Marte, Buccella, of Italy cage <ciencdt Weal shes Cie pan cae Quiet and seciuded neighborhood.” ministration. SHIGA. << haw .| third in the balloting, which lasted ST ae ae eee Aree hard shore, good fishing. Excel- LOVELY 2 nud Amer a show seh Club, past president of National! rom dine) through August, until nearly 4:00 ms PRs Sat Dee a eo the. aparke- Guttin Punctal Nome. iene besement “automatic ving ioe new! rieamine ved, ona a 1 ‘ f Ww : ‘ Se net reenactment essa ese mre coe *ptem r ¥, . “Potluck” in- Interment in Waterford Center poset 5! 4 ooTs, newly ecorated 
“anxious. fo use all the tools at ner ea poring dish to peas ne Cremer? ae maf ety ge diate Stile passesclan ae Tmodern keene win ae 
its disposal and to invent some ® ” ~~ Stated neral Home . Gi -F k 8 eating area 
ee ee ie Wee te Mike Cameroon Is Smart Mammal oe ery AMC | cord of Tas  1 1rOUX-F TONKS Bavement oor ‘is thed ior a * orthy ribe ——AGY. PRD PRG RE ce OENERAL REAL ESTATE Nicely landscaped. Priced at ® * ° = . WE WISH TO THANK OUR 4395_Dixie Highway OR _3-0701 as w = ereess 
“The Republicans don't: compre- h t T f . * friends and neighbors for their 1,500 DOWN in t A another ; pay. ‘rent a 
hend the nature of the inflation Impnau In Talning Or pace News in Brief iner Gurna oc eeeat bereer Near “ . Vincent's rooms & _ aay 
threat,” Williams sald. “They op- =e in the Dons | of our beloved pee ice carden: eel meee O' NE]I Realtor 
erate as if the inflation danger pane eee ather Aubrey 4s 
comes solely from consumers with PORES ed An ami-*| gress about Mike and 0 other | bit.” Paul Dowell, of Crestline, Ohio, ae inden ef stone Baia Chern eo petri FE Sno x PE 74098 38 ems able little fellow named Mike chimps at) Holloman who are Mike is o nf nix chi : reported to Oakland County Sher- and GMC employes and pallbear peed 
too much spending money, The! @ : ~ ; Mike ts one of six chimps pur- ers. Wife, sons and daughters CORRE tact ie Abel the danger commen ie ameroon is) going into orbit’? heing used in what he described chased in the Cameroons, hence | itt s Deputies Saturday that some- — ‘Funeral Directors 4 ‘a ER REALT N] H 
much from those corporations in around the earth some day just s ‘direct preparatory tests for | his name. lone stole four jackets and fouri A.~W-D ATO! 
ition to set their own prices,| (2 SHOW those seven astronauts | manned flights.” blankets, valued at $80, from his COATS STARTER HOME a ie Hor © se a oan PEICEE| ce (Project Mercity how its ee Me and the other “chimp Car while it was pa ste pes: Or wil finish. ‘complete & HARGER CO. iblicans are unw 0 recog: : ' s parked FUNERAL HOMB shed on outside. 
hie this | done. A former luttwatte test pilot | Mauts” are being trained t taurant at Perry and Opdyke) Draxten_Piaing __OR_ 3-787 full basement. tis acre Perry | CLAREStOW s : * ® as © perform tasks while in orbit: oads Pontiac Townshi SPARKS-ORIFPIN CHAPEL Acres. MY_}- Bedroom Brick & Frame Se with 20 years experience in avi- hed » ds, ac Township. Thoughtful Service FR 2-58¢1 500 DOWN MS Rw Le : Mike doesn't say much about | ation medicine, Von Breckh was | [" order, to oon Be $ oO oe Willlams, defending labor ware! nig chances of being the first ' man efficiency under similar | John Ravenscroft, 74 Dwight St. Ae vine renee with fireniec ene — 
demands, proposed a permanent mammal to retu . fel t responsible for some tests conditions: of weightlessness. reported to Pontiac Police that $60 onelson- Johns Rice kien. x Of Bald 
fact-finding bureau for Washington tn safely to | which determined the human Preity income ee furs worth of toolg and clothes were 
stolen yesterday from his truck 
at the rear of 156 Oakland Ave. 
; NOTICE © OF PUBLIC SALE 
Notice is hereby given by the under- earth from orbit—or any- 
thing else for that matter 
_That-is, unless yot can (nder- 
stand chimpanzee talk Instead of reacting fo an in- 
strument panel, the chimpnauts 
watch three lights. When one 
flashes they know they - must body could withstand most of 
the stresses of space flight. 
“Now we're well along tn 
tests that will lead, we hope, to publicize data on wages and 
costs. He alo advocated more, an- 
titrust prosecutions “as a means 
of eliminating the number of cor- ed “Designed for Punerais™ 
Voorhees-Siple = ee ae i ee . 
FUNERAL HOME arrel on eects Ambgiance or Motor   
            
  
      
      
      
                porations able to administer} “But he's aq bright little | to the first manned flight th pull a certain lever within five jjigned inet on Tuesday, @ept. 22. 1680 B Gail or further sam mrces.” chup.” eld Dr. arolé 4. Vou | rt around the earth” he | Seni or fet # mild electric gh i seman, wie Wecmace| Cemetery Lots S| foxy tm ae . . : public sale of @ “~~ location . 
41 000 5 r the aero-medical field labora: “a. ; Mike is quick to pull the lever [peering cortal nember »ToeTezTse3, wil 4 Preheat ne Lore. cat ceramic x bath, cup. a 
- , a q. t. tory at, Holloman Alr Force But first we're going ‘to use | now. Von Breckh is anxious jtns ection thereof may ve mode. at Whit rec, rm., <a heat, Downtown Corner Base, N.M. - | our chimps —- ballistic trajec- to know whether he will be just \eecety » a so pong oe. nicely 5314 kernsr: HURON | . tories to start,: gradually be- | as quick in the unfamiliar en- Dated “« —————— FE , Commercial Building And unless he changes by | coming longer and longer until | vironment of space in a weight- IATES DIRCOUNT CORP. Ms thi Dov tnaw Strect hae, leading deck the time we es ready to make | there's a complete orbit. We | less condition. Lincoin Park “ 2) pen wn ; 4 levator and shoveepme ‘ sped a — say late | would like six or eight success- | Two other lights are red and BY B. KEITH, | come ‘tale ms haeee, Oe re = on saps he ‘Most | ful recoveries df chimps before | green. If the chimps pull the Sept. 6. 1, ‘be ve gL gee Bet stare CALL LU 4-1230 .§| famous chimp ‘of all time. we start with humans ard since | lever near the green light they PUBLIC SALE ae eaters! * * * Mike's the. amartest of the get food. It they pull the one 1037 Pontiac, Serta) No. Pas n te eh Pg Re 
LEHO CORP. — REALTORS Von Breckh talked at the 10th chimps in. traint he'd |Convertible Coupe Gale to be held 10:30 antached he ranch. % acre lot. Z 9245 Michigan Ave, Detroit 10, Mich. Siwcchational Aciranauticsl Core | oa “a n : ~ Rage ~j near the red light they get |e an. | 17, Ag siti Pontise State ¥. screens Piet ches beth. 
so \ ably be our rst choice for or | nothing. he wont, 8% / rage Ve ma oh sien" Me = 
* ? i | ‘ f if 4 
\ 
’ .